It’s not my battle, Emma told herself. These aren’t people. If they are humans at all they are some kind of predecessor species. Really, they are just two breeds of animals fighting for space. But one breed was at least hollering simple words — “Stone!”
“Stone, Blue, Blue!”
“Away, away!” — and she couldn’t help a deep sense of gratification every time one of those spindly Elf bodies went down, under Runner fists and feet.
Now Stone broke out of the squabbling pack. He had two Elves clinging to his back. One had its teeth sunk into his shoulder, and the other had torn off part of his scalp and a section of his right ear. Stone was howling, and blood poured over him from the glistening crimson wound in his head. More Elves swarmed over him, scratching, biting and beating. Stone went down, and rolled over into the water.
Emma heard an anguished scream. A woman burst out of the squabbling pack. It was Grass. Some of the Elves had closed in a pack around something that struggled, yelling, brown limbs flashing. It was a Runner child — perhaps Grass’s child. Grass threw herself at the Elves” backs. They drove her off easily, but she came back for more, twice, three times, until at last a chipped rock was slammed against the side of her head, and she fell to her knees, grunting.
The Elf-folk slid into the forest with their prize, their screeching cries of triumph sounding like laughter.
…And still Emma could find no pulse. She sat back, arms hurting, lungs aching. She was aware of Maxie watching her, a little pillar of desolation, ominously silent. “Oh, Maxie, I’m sorry.”
Stone was still in the water, on all fours, head lolling, his hair soaked, the water swirling crimson-brown under him.
Fire stood over him. He was holding a boulder, Emma saw, a slab of worn basaltic rock as big as his head.
Stone looked up, blood congealing over one eye. He raised a hand to Fire, reaching up for help.
Fire slammed the rock down on the crown of Stone’s skull. There was a sound like a crunching apple.
Stone slumped. Thick red-black blood diffused in the water.
Fire stood staring at the body. Then he turned to Emma. His gait and eyes held a glittering hardness she had not seen before. She shrank back, scrambling over the ground, away from Sally’s body.
Fire squatted down before her. His powerful, bloody fingers brushed her neck. She shuddered at his touch, feeling the burn scars on his palms. He pushed his hand inside her flight suit, and his hand closed around the Swiss Army knife. The lens was open. He snapped off the lens attachment as if breaking a matchstick.
Fire looked at the lens, and at Sally’s body, and at Emma. Then he backed away from her, stinking of blood.
Maxie was a few feet away, backed up against a tree. His gaze was sliding over Runners, blood-stained sand, the river.
Emma stood, cautiously. Keeping her eyes on Fire, she reached out for Maxie. “Come on, Maxie. This is no place for us, not any more. It never was…”
“No!” Maxie pulled away from her, his face twisted.
She thought, Now I’m the woman who killed his mother. Nevertheless, I’m all he’s got. She made a grab for him.
He ran along the beach.
“Maxie!”
Before she had taken a couple of strides after him he had joined the Runners, who were clustered together, fingering their wounds. She caught one last glimpse of his small face, hard resentful eyes peering back at her. He seemed to be pulling off his clothes.
Then he was lost.
There was a cry, a grisly, high-pitched cry, a child’s cry, eloquent of unbearable pain. The woman. Grass, stood and peered mournfully into the forest. Emma slid into the gloom of the forest, for she had no other place to go.
Reid Malenfant:
Events unfolded quickly now, faster than they had for the Apollo astronauts. The Red Moon’s gravity, stronger than Luna’s, was pulling hard at their falling spaceship, dragging it into a curve that would all but skim the atmosphere.
Nemoto murmured to herself, still working through her tasks as calmly as if they were in just another simulator in Houston… Malenfant tried to focus on his checklist. But he kept looking up at the strange, shifting diorama beyond the window.
Suddenly he saw the dawn.
Light seeped into the edge of the great disc of blackness. At first it was a deep red, spreading smoothly out around the curve of this small world. Then the band of light began to thicken, growing orange-yellow, and finally shading into blue. The light was coalescing at its brightest point, as if gathering to give birth to the disc of sun itself. And now Malenfant saw shadows of low clouds in the atmosphere; they drew clear dark lines hundreds of miles long over deeper air layers. The surface began to pick up the first of the light — it was an ocean, dark and smooth and sleek, glowing a deep bloody red. And still the light continued to leak into the sky, diffusing higher and higher.
This was a sunrise, not on airless Luna, but on a world with an atmosphere actually deeper than Earth’s — and an atmosphere left laden with dust by a chain of great stratovolcanoes. It was a startling, full-blooded dawn, somehow unexpected so far from home.
For the first time Malenfant’s thoughts swivelled from Earth, his departure point, and turned with a rush to the world he was approaching. Suddenly he was eager to be down on the ground, to be sinking his fingers into the soil of a new world, and drinking in its air.
Emma Stoney:
The light seeped away, and the shadows turned a deeper green.
She moved as silently as she could. But still she was aware of every leaf she crushed, every twig that cracked. And each time she heard a rustle or snap, she expected an Elf to leap out at her.
She didn’t know where she was going, what the hell she was doing. But she knew she had to get away from that beach.
The screaming began again, startling her. It was very close, very loud. She crouched down in the bush, staring, listening, too frightened to move.
And she glimpsed movement, through a screen of trees to her right. Smart, Emma. You walked right in on them.
They were the Elf-folk, of course. They had the Runner child spreadeagled against a bare patch of ground. His eyes were wide and staring. Elf teeth closed on the boy’s upper thigh, and came away bloody, huge ape lips wrapped around a handful of meat.
The boy thrashed. Emma saw how his eyes turned white. And he screamed, and screamed, and screamed.
After that — as Emma watched, frozen in place by her fear of detection — the boy was steadily dismembered: the drinking of blood, the biting-off of genitals, the startlingly efficient twisting-off of an arm. And through all of this the boy was still alive, still screaming… There was a hand on her shoulder.
She gasped, swivelled, fell back in the bush with a soft crash. Someone was standing over her, a shadowy figure.
It was not an Elf, or a Runner. It was a woman. She was wearing a loose tunic of skin, bound around her waist with what looked like a rope plaited from greenery. There were tools stuck in the belt, tools of bone and wood. Her body looked shorter, stockier than a Runner’s. Her face protruded. She had no chin. Her skull was large, larger than a Runner’s, but she sported a thick ridge of bone over her eyes, and there were prominent crests of bones at her cheeks and over the crown of her head.
Not a human, then. This was one of the powerful, shadowy creatures the Runners had called a “Ham’. Emma felt savage disappointment, renewed fear.
But the other beckoned, an unmistakably human gesture.
Still Emma hesitated. Somewhere on this brutal world were the people who had taught the Runners to speak English. If she couldn’t get back to Earth, then if her destiny lay anywhere, it was there — and not with this Ham.