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"I'm sure that's what the Ancestors said." Holrosh watched his monitors intently. "Now help me, Contractor!"

Kelat palmed the control on the gurney that held the support capsule. It hummed as it came to life and he shoved it toward Holrosh.

"They're taking Broken Trail!"

"We have to let them. We ca

She is an Eye. I will keep her safe. If the Hand will reach and the Eye will see, there are still ways to fetch her back to you. I will keep this Eye safe as I kept you safe.

"Stop!" ordered a voice in the Proper tongue.

Kelat and Holrosh froze. The voice came from the walls, it came from the ceiling and the floor.

"You will not remove her," it said. It was neither a man's voice, nor a woman's. "She is not yours."

The crabs had paused in their work like single-phase statues, or like drones suddenly switched off.

Kelat touched his suit's wrist controls and opened the helmet's speaker. "Who are you?"

"We are the Nameless Powers. This is our Realm. You will leave it now and leave the People alone."

"No," said Holrosh stolidly. "This is the Home Ground. This is our world stolen from our Ancestors."

Kelat glanced down. "Holrosh." He gestured to the floor. The entire surface gleamed with gel, the same blue-grey stuff that had swallowed the Beholden whole. "Holrosh, leave it. We need to get out of here, now. I hold your name," he reminded the Bio-tech, committing a gross impropriety in doing so. "Walk out of here."

Holrosh saw the layer of gel covering the floor. His hands fell away from the tank controls. He walked toward the entranceway, picking his steps carefully so he wouldn't fall on the slick surface. The crabs returned to their work, scraping away the products of Vitae technology as if all the metal and polymer and silicate was as insubstantial as sand.

Holrosh vanished through what was left of the membrane. Kelat glanced at the pressure monitor on his wrist. There was no air left in the chamber. The gel had not receded into the floor.

"Jahidh?" he said, trying to force a measure of stern assurance into his tone.

"No," said the voice.

Kelat's heart slammed once against his ribs. "The artifacts," he whispered. It had to be, that was the only other answer.

"The world," the voice told him.

Kelat felt the littlest finger on his right hand, the one he'd had regrown, try to curl up. "This is our world," he said. "This is the work of our Ancestors. It is ours to claim. You are ours."

"Never yours. Three thousand years have passed and you still don't understand that. Leave here now, Aunorante Sangh, or never leave at all.

"Leave."

Kelat turned and fled. Shame followed fast on his heels. Holrosh was right. This was the Home Ground. This was what the Imperialists, what the whole of the Vitae, sought to claim. This was the war the Ancestors had left for them to fight and he was ru

The world had ordered him to leave, though. The work of the Ancestors had ordered him. How could he defy the work of the Ancestors? How could any of them? His ears rang with the memory of the voice that had surrounded him like the walls of the chamber did.

How can we defy the Home Ground itself if it does not want us back?

He crossed the decimated threshold and kept on going. He joined a stream of Beholden and full-ranks. Even Witness's green suits flashed in the flood as they all tried to remember how to evacuate calmly. They followed the lines of lights toward the shaft that had been rigged with a ladder, which was supposed to be a temporary measure until the Engineers designed a practical mechanical lift.

When Kelat reached the ladder, he climbed as fast as he could grip the rungs. A thin film of gel still clung to the bottoms of his boots. He felt the soles of his feet begin to itch, as if the gel had reached them already. His wrist terminal said his suit was sound and sealed, but the itching did not go away.

"Who are these new ones?"

These are their security perso

"What's that they're carrying?"

"Solvents, incendiaries, glues. Can we defend against them?"

Easily.

Kelat climbed out of the hatchway and onto the remains of a rained building's main floor. Past the foundations, the Home Ground's surface was alive. No crabs crawled through the near-vacuum. Instead, smooth, crystalline fingers as thick as a human torso thrust themselves out of the ground. A trio of living silicate vines wrapped around a transport and squeezed down. Kelat's disk vibrated from the screams. A scarlet-suited security team launched themselves at the fingers, spraying solvents or glues from tanks on their backs. The fingers ignored them and continued to squeeze. The Vitae inside continued to scream.

"Keep moving! Keep moving!" The order came across his disk. Kelat forced his feet to keep going, forced his eyes to stay fixed on the shuttle pad that he could just now see between the colored backs of the other perso

Inside his glove, his regrown finger spasmed painfully.

Beware your own creations, Vitae, said a voice from childhood lessons inside his head. Beware your own creations.

We thought it was the human-derived artifacts we needed to tame. We thought the world was ours already. How do we fight the ground we're standing on? When it's ordered us away, what can we do to defy it?

Security was trying. A pair of them fired off an incendiary from a tripod-mounted launcher. It arced through the air and burst against one of the crystal fingers as it stretched toward a second transport. The crystal shriveled like a burning leaf. The sparks died quickly in the thin air. Another incendiary went up and the finger collapsed into ash.

The dust started to ripple. It hunched up under the security team's feet. A whip of silicate wrapped around the Beholden's ankles and dragged them down. More screams. Kelat's hand slapped his helmet over his ear. He wanted to shut them out. He didn't want to hear them die. They were dying. No question. They were being pulled under the dust and scrubbed to pieces, just like the equipment in the chamber. They'd be made into more dust for the Nameless Powers to use against the Vitae.

Perhaps it's right and proper, part of him wanted to laugh. Now they, too, are the work of the Ancestors. Dust coated the tips of his boots. He could feel it against his feet, working its way up his ankles. It lay against his skin, waiting for him to slow down. Waiting for him to ignore the orders he had been given to leave here.

Kelat stumbled across the edge of the shuttle pad. The ship waited like a gleaming haven. Dust crept across the edges of the pad and he bit down hard on his tongue to keep from screaming. It was coming for them. All of them. They weren't moving fast enough. They weren't moving well enough, just as they hadn't come in well enough. They were unworthy and the Ancestors would take them back to become part of the real work if they did not obey orders.

Security flanked the shuttle doors, bodily restraining anyone who panicked. That was good. That was right and proper. All proprieties had to be observed now. Kelat moved, quickly, calmly, just like all the evacuation drills dictated. He climbed up the ramp. He didn't push. He didn't cry. He found an empty seat and he sat. His finger twitched, but he did not. He would not. He was calm. He was not panicking. He was Vitae and a Contractor. He was in control although the world itself had gone mad. He had not. He would not.

The Engineer next to him had switched on the seat's terminal. The camera picked up the sight of two aircraft streaking overhead toward the World's Wall.

"Maybe they've found what's causing this," suggested the Engineer. "The bombs seem to have some effect."