Song of confusion, with the words the swarm repeated over and over, not only by Charlie but by all his flock.
The hardest part of all was yet to come. “You must leave the swarm,” sang Dalehouse. “They will be safe. We will return. But now just you and I must fly to seek a ha’aye’i. ”
It took time; but the message ultimately seemed to get across. It was a measure of the balloonist’s trust in his friend from Earth that he was willing to embark on so fearful an adventure with him. The members of the flock never left it by choice. For more than an hour after they had dropped to a lower level and left the flock behind, Charlie’s song was querulous and sad. And no ha’aye’i appeared. They left the Food Bloc camp far behind, drifting down the shore of the sea-lake and then across a neck of it to the vicinity of the Peeps’ tattered colony. For some time Dalehouse had been wondering if the Texas computers had really given him the right words to sing. But then Charlie’s song turned to active fear. They dipped low under a bank of clouds, warm-weather cumuli that looked like female balloonists turned upside down, and from one of them dropped the predatory form of a killer.
Danny was uneasily tempted to slay this first one with his own carbine. It was frightening to see the ha’aye’i stoop toward them. But he wanted to demonstrate his gift to Charlie.
“Watch!” he cried, clumsily grasping the grip that had been designed for balloonist claws. He circled the swelling form of the airshark in the cross-haired sight, designed for balloonist eye patches, feeling the low vibrations of Charlie’s muttered song of terror. At twenty meters he squeezed the trigger.
A dozen tiny metal spikes lashed out at the ha’aye’i, spreading like the cone of fire of a shotgun shell. One was enough. The shark’s bag ripped open with a puff of moisture. The creature screamed once in pain and surprise, and then had no more breath to scream with. It dropped past them, its horrid little face writhing, its claws clutching uselessly toward them, meters away.
A bright trill of surprise from Charlie, and then a roaring paean of triumph. “This is a great good thing, ’Anny ’Alehouse! Will you slay all the ha’aye’i for us?”
“No, not I, Charlie. You will do it for yourself!” And hanging in the air, Danny showed him the clever little crank that worked the elastic cord, the simple breech that the cluster of needles dropped into. For a creature who had never used tools before, Charlie was quick to grasp the operation. Dalehouse had him fire a practice round at a cloud and then watched patiently while the balloonist painfully wound the winch for himself and loaded again.
They were no longer quite alone. Unbidden, the swarm had drifted after them and was floating half a kilometer away, all their eye patches rotated toward them, their distant song sweet and plaintive, like a puppy’s lonely begging to be let in. And down below, the Peeps’ camp was near; Dalehouse could see one or two upturned faces curiously staring at them. Let them look, he thought virtuously; let them see how the Food-Exporting Powers were helping the native races of Klong, if they had so little to do with their time. There were only a handful of them left of the original expedition, and their much-boasted reinforcements showed no signs of arriving.
Reinforcements. Reminded, Dalehouse began the rest of his message for Charlie. “This gift,” he sang, “is yours. But we would ask a gift of you, too.”
“What gift?” sang Charlie politely.
“I do not know words,” sang Danny, “but soon I will show you. My swarm-mates ask you to carry some small things to other places. Some you will drop to the ground. Some you will bring back.” Teaching Charlie how to point the cameras and sound-recording instruments was going to take forever, Dalehouse thought glumly; and how were they ever going to tell him where to drop the clusters of wolftrap sensors and seismic mikes? What seemed so simple on Earth was something else entirely on Klong -
“Beware, beware!” sang the distant, frantic voices of the swarm.
Tardily Danny looked around. The ha’aye’i’s rush caught them unaware. It came from behind and below, where Dalehouse had not thought to look. And Charlie, fondling his new toy and trying to understand what Dalehouse wanted of him, had been careless.
If it had not been for the distant shrieking of the swarm, the creature might have had them both. But Charlie spun faster than Dalehouse, and before Danny could unlimber his carbine the balloonist had shown how well he had learned his lesson by killing the killer. Either of them could have reached out and caught the long, wicked claws of the ha’aye’i as it fell past them; it was that close.
“Well done!” yelled Dalehouse, and Charlie pealed in rapture:
“Well, well done! How great a gift!” They rose to rejoin the swarm -
Lances of golden fire reached up faintly toward the flock from the Peeps’ camp below.
“My God!” shouted Danny. “The fools are setting off fireworks!”
The rockets exploded into showers of sparks, and all through the swarm balloonists were bursting into bright hydrogen flame.
TEN
WHEN DULLA WAS AWAKE, which was not much of the time, he was only blurrily conscious of what was going on. At first there had been a recurrent which, which that he could not identify, and some person who seemed vaguely familiar manhandling him into whatever it was that was making the sounds. Then pain — a lot of pain. Then long periods when people were talking to him or around him. But he felt no impulse to answer. In his brief conscious times he discovered by and by that he was no longer in pain. The treatment the Greasies had given him had been unpleasant, but it seemed to have done the trick. He was alive. He was rehydrated. The swellings had gone down. He was no longer blind. He was only very weak.
When he woke up and realized that he was not only awake but actually seemed able to keep his eyes open for awhile, Feng Hua-tse was standing by his cot. The Chinaman was looking very stretched out, Dulla thought with some contempt; he looked even worse than Dulla himself felt.
“You are feeling better?” Feng asked sadly.
Dulla thought it over. “Yes. I think so. What has happened?”
“I am glad you are feeling better. The long-noses brought you here from the place of your beetle friends. They said you would live, but I didn’t think so. It has been a long time. Do you want to eat?”
“Yes — no,” Dulla corrected himself. “I do, but not at this moment. I want the w.c. first.”
“Shall I help you?”
“No. I can do it myself.”
“I am glad of that, too,” said Feng, who had been functioning as bedpan orderly for all the days of Ahmed Dulla’s recovery and longer before that than he cared to remember. The Pakistani raised himself painfully from the inflatable cot and moved slowly toward the slit-trench latrine.
He gazed disapprovingly around the camp. One of the noises he had been hearing identified itself for him: a slapping, rasping sound that turned out to be the waterwheel. So at least there should be power. But where were the promised floodlights, the growing crops, the comforts? Where were all the people?
Feng had followed him and stood gazing mournfully as Dulla relieved himself. “Why do you stand there?” snapped Dulla, tying up his pajama cord and making hard work of it. “What has happened? Why has so little been done?”
The leader spread his hands. “What can I say? There were ten of us. Two died with you in this venture you found so necessary. One other died here. Two were so ill they had to be returned to Earth — by courtesy of the Greasies. We had no one well enough to fly the return capsule. The Italian is asleep, and the two women are gathering fuel.”