<h2>XV.</h2>
<p>The truck rumbled up to the
perimeter gate and stopped. Krannon
waved to the guards through
the front window, then closed a
metal shield over it. When the gates
swung open the truck—really a
giant armored tank—ground slowly
forward. There was a second gate
beyond the first, that did not open
until the interior one was closed.
Jason looked through the second-driver's
periscope as the outer gate
lifted. Automatic flame-throwers
flared through the opening, cutting
off only when the truck reached
them. A scorched area ringed the
gate, beyond that the jungle began.
Unconsciously Jason shrank back in
his seat.</p>
<p>All the plants and animals he
had seen only specimens of, existed
here in profusion. Thorn-ringed
branches and vines laced themselves
into a solid mat, through which the
wild life swarmed. A fury of sound
hurled at them, thuds and scratchings
rang on the armor. Krannon
laughed and closed the switch that
electrified the outer grid. The
scratchings died away as the beasts
completed the circuit to the grounded
hull.</p>
<p>It was slow-speed, low-gear work
tearing through the jungle. Krannon
had his face buried in the periscope
mask and silently fought the
controls. With each mile the going
seemed to get better, until he finally
swung up the periscope and opened
the window armor. The jungle was
still thick and deadly, but nothing
like the area immediately around the
perimeter. It appeared as if most of
the lethal powers of Pyrrus were
concentrated in the single area
around the settlement. Why? Jason
asked himself. Why this intense and
planetary hatred?</p>
<p>The motors died and Krannon
stood up, stretching. "We're here,"
he said. "Let's unload."</p>
<p>There was bare rock around the
truck, a rounded hillock that projected
from the jungle, too smooth
and steep for vegetation to get a
hold. Krannon opened the cargo
hatches and they pushed out the
boxes and crates. When they finished
Jason slumped down, exhausted,
onto the pile.</p>
<p>"Get back in, we're leaving,"
Krannon said.</p>
<p>"You are, I'm staying right
here."</p>
<p>Krannon looked at him coldly.
"Get in the truck or I'll kill you.
No one stays out here. For one thing
you couldn't live an hour alone. But
worse than that the grubbers would
get you. Kill you at once, of course,
but that's not important. But you
have equipment that we can't allow
into their hands. You want to see a
grubber with a gun?"</p>
<p>While the Pyrran talked, Jason's
thoughts had rushed ahead. He
hoped that Krannon was as thick
of head as he was fast of reflex.</p>
<p>Jason looked at the trees, let his
gaze move up through the thick
branches. Though Krannon was still
talking, he was automatically aware
of Jason's attention. When Jason's
eyes widened and his gun jumped
into his hand, Krannon's own gun
appeared and he turned in the same
direction.</p>
<p>"There—in the top!" Jason
shouted, and fired into the tangle
of branches. Krannon fired, too. As
soon as he did, Jason hurled himself
backwards, curled into a ball,
rolling down the inclined rock. The
shots had covered the sounds of his
movements, and before Krannon
could turn back the gravity had
dragged him down the rock into the
thick foliage. Crashing branches
slapped at him, but slowed his fall.
When he stopped moving he was
lost in the tangle. Krannon's shots
came too late to hit him.</p>
<p>Lying there, tired and bruised,
Jason heard the Pyrran cursing him
out. He stamped around on the
rock, fired a few shots, but knew
better than to enter the trees. Finally
he gave up and went back to
the truck. The motor gunned into
life and the treads clanked and
scraped down the rock and back into
the jungle. There were muted
rumblings and crashes that slowly
died away.</p>
<p>Then Jason was alone.</p>
<hr />
<p>Up until that instant he hadn't
realized quite how alone he would
be. Surrounded by nothing but
death, the truck already vanished
from sight. He had to force down
an overwhelming desire to run after
it. What was done was done.</p>
<p>This was a long chance to take,
but it was the only way to contact
the grubbers. They were savages,
but still they had come from human
stock. And they hadn't sunk so low
as to stop the barter with the civilized
Pyrrans. He had to contact
them, befriend them. Find out how
they had managed to live safely on
this madhouse world.</p>
<p>If there had been another way to
lick the problem, he would have
taken it; he didn't relish the role of
martyred hero. But Kerk and his
deadline had forced his hand. The
contact had to be made fast and this
was the only way.</p>
<p>There was no telling where the
savages were, or how soon they
would arrive. If the woods weren't
too lethal he could hide there, pick
his time to approach them. If they
found him among the supplies, they
might skewer him on the spot with
a typical Pyrran reflex.</p>
<p>Walking warily he approached
the line of trees. Something moved
on a branch, but vanished as he
came near. None of the plants near
a thick-trunked tree looked poisonous,
so he slipped behind it. There
was nothing deadly in sight and it
surprised him. He let his body relax
a bit, leaning against the rough
bark.</p>
<p>Something soft and choking fell
over his head, his body was seized
in a steel grip. The more he struggled
the tighter it held him until
the blood thundered in his ears and
his lungs screamed for air.</p>
<p>Only when he grew limp did the
pressure let up. His first panic
ebbed a little when he realized that
it wasn't an animal that attacked
him. He knew nothing about the
grubbers, but they were human so
he still had a chance.</p>
<p>His arms and legs were tied, the
power holster ripped from his arm.
He felt strangely naked without it.
The powerful hands grabbed him
again and he was hurled into the
air, to fall face down across something
warm and soft. Fear pressed
in again, it was a large animal of
some kind. And all Pyrran animals
were deadly.</p>
<p>When the animal moved off, carrying
him, panic was replaced by a
feeling of mounting elation. The
grubbers had managed to work out
a truce of some kind with at least
one form of animal life. He had to
find out how. If he could get that
secret—and get it back to the city—it
would justify all his work and
pain. It might even justify Welf's
death if the age-old war could be
slowed or stopped.</p>
<p>Jason's tightly bound limbs hurt
terribly at first, but grew numb with
the circulation shut off. The jolting
ride continued endlessly, he had no
way of measuring the time. A rainfall
soaked him, then he felt his
clothes steaming as the sun came
out.</p>
<p>The ride was finally over. He was
pulled from the animal's back and
dumped down. His arms dropped
free as someone loosed the bindings.
The returning circulation soaked
him in pain as he lay there, struggling
to move. When his hands finally
obeyed him he lifted them to
his face and stripped away the covering,
a sack of thick fur. Light
blinded him as he sucked in breath
after breath of clean air.</p>
<p>Blinking against the glare, he
looked around. He was lying on a
floor of crude planking, the setting
sun shining into his eyes through
the doorless entrance of the building.
There was a ploughed field outside,
stretching down the curve of
hill to the edge of the jungle. It was
too dark to see much inside the hut.</p>
<p>Something blocked the light of
the doorway, a tall animallike figure.
On second look Jason realized
it was a man with long hair and
thick beard. He was dressed in furs,
even his legs were wrapped in fur
leggings. His eyes were fixed on his
captive, while one hand fondled an
ax that hung from his waist.</p>
<p>"Who're you? What y'want?"
the bearded man asked suddenly.</p>
<p>Jason picked his words slowly,
wondering if this savage shared the
same hair-trigger temper as the city
dwellers.</p>
<p>"My name is Jason. I come in
peace. I want to be your friend ..."</p>
<p>"Lies!" the man grunted, and
pulled the ax from his belt. "Junkman
tricks. I saw y'hide. Wait to kill
me. Kill you first." He tested the
edge of the blade with a horny
thumb, then raised it.</p>
<p>"Wait!" Jason said desperately.
"You don't understand."</p>
<p>The ax swung down.</p>
<p>"I'm from off-world and—"</p>
<p>A solid thunk shook him as the
ax buried itself in the wood next to
his head. At the last instant the
man had twitched it aside. He grabbed
the front of Jason's clothes and
pulled him up until their faces
touched.</p>
<p>"S'true?" he shouted. "Y'from
off-world?" His hand opened and
Jason dropped back before he could
answer. The savage jumped over
him, towards the dim rear of the
hut.</p>
<p>"Rhes must know of this," he
said as he fumbled with something
on the wall. Light sprang out.</p>
<p>All Jason could do was stare.
The hairy, fur-covered savage was
operating a communicator. The calloused,
dirt-encrusted fingers deftly
snapped open the circuits, dialed a
number.</p>
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