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“That’s not good,” said Whit.

“Doesn’t matter. We haven’t been able to talk to anybody anyway. I can jury-rig something later.”

“Okay.”

A frown creased her forehead. “But I think we’ve lost Bill.”

A large sea animal surfaced near them, a thing that seemed mostly tentacles. Then it slipped back beneath the surface.

“Bill? Do you hear me?”

More lamps blinked.

Digger realized what a good thing it was to have a human pilot along. “Can you fix him?”

More fingers across the screen. “No. He’s gone.”

Digger felt a wave of remorse.

“It’s only a software program,” she reminded him.

“I know.”

“When we get to one of the other landers, he’ll be there.”

“Can we still find the mission?” asked Whit.

“That shouldn’t be a problem.” She went back to her status screen, changed the display, and made a face. “There is one thing, though—”

The moment stretched out. She continued poking at the screen while Digger waited, holding his breath.

“We’ve lost Bill’s memory banks. I should have realized.”

“Why’s that a problem?” asked Digger.

“That’s where Lykonda was stored.”

“Are you saying we can’t use her?”

Julie nodded. “She’s kaput.”

Whit looked over at him, having assumed his most reassuring face. “We’ll have to talk to them directly.”

“Won’t work,” said Digger. “We’ve had experience with that.”

“What else do you suggest?” Whit was wearing a bright green shirt, as close as he could get to the styles favored by the Goompahs, and a coffee-colored vest.

“What do you think would happen if they saw the lander?” Julie asked.

“Don’t know,” said Digger. “They’d probably panic. Jump overboard.”

Another bolt hit nearby. They were passing over an island chain. “Pity,” said Whit. “A whole world to explore. The ultimate odyssey, and they run into one of these clouds.” He gazed at the islands. There were eight or nine of them, big, covered with forests. Rivers cut through them. As they passed overhead, hordes of birds rose from treetops.

Digger was more concerned that they’d take a second bolt up the rear end and wind up fried or in the drink.

“Odyssey,” said Whit.

Digger looked at him. “Pardon?”

He was opening his notebook. “I have a thought.”

THE THREE SHIPS were moving steadily, if slowly, south. Trees and shrubbery pushed down to the water’s edge and spilled into the ocean. The sun was approaching the horizon.

The Regunto was immersed in a sense of foreboding, a conviction that the thing in the sky was on top of them, that it would come for them that night. Krolley was on deck constantly, strolling about as casually as if there were nothing to worry about. Telio had to concede he feared nothing. But under the circumstances, courage and defiance were not virtues.

A few of Telio’s shipmates were gathered aft, talking idly. A couple were in the rigging, getting ready to come down. No one was supposed to be up there after dark, unless specifically ordered.

The night before, when they’d passed beneath the cloud, the sky had been black and threatening and streaked with lightning in a way he had never seen before. He would not be on duty again until morning, and he thought it would be a good night to spend in his bunk, belowdecks, away from the spectacle.

The Hasker was still ru

There was a sudden commotion near the rail. Several crewmen were jabbering and pointing. Toward the Hasker. He joined them and was surprised to see that the other ship had put up a signal and was engaged in turning toward shore.

The signal consisted of three pe

That was extraordinary behavior since the fleet commander was on the Regunto.

One of the officers went after the captain, who’d just gone below.

There was a harbor coming up ahead, and the Hasker had anchored in its mouth.



Then Telio saw what appeared to be a canoe, a couple of canoes, ru

“What’s going on?” demanded Krolley, who appeared on deck like a summer thunderstorm. He was not happy.

Everyone pointed.

Three young females sat in each of the two canoes. They were half-naked, despite the coolness of the evening. But incredibly, they wore the green-and-white colors of Savakol!

He stared.

“We’re home,” said one of the crew. And a cheer went up. They’d done it. Completed the mission.

But it wasn’t true. Telio wasn’t the only one there who knew the home coast too well to mistake it for this wilderness. But how then did one account for the Korb females and their Savakol colors?

He sca

“Hard to port,” said the captain. “Bekka, signal the Benventa. We’ll lay up alongside the Hasker.”

The sailors cheered again.

A second fire started near the first, and Telio heard distant voices singing. Young females again. Doing one of the mating chants from back home.

“We’re obviously not the first to reach here,” said the captain, sounding disappointed. If he was, he was alone.

“I think it’s from up there,” said one of the officers, indicating the fires. A drum began to beat. And then several more joined in.

Barbar Markane, who found trouble with everything, shook his head and said they would be prudent to stay away. Stay on the ship, he advised. It’s Shol’s work. “Don’t go there.”

THE CREW OF the Benventa had to run for their lives. They had just reached shore when someone spotted the blue line on the horizon, just visible in the encroaching twilight. At the top of the ridge, the crews of the Hasker and the Regunto were trying to figure out why someone had made a pair of large fires, then abandoned them and, stranger still, where the females had gone, and how they had managed to hide their canoes. The drums and the voices had fallen silent, and except for the fires, it was as if none of this had happened.

It was hard to say how the seamen and their officers might have reacted to so unsettling an event, had their thoughts not been instantly diverted: The Benventa crew was scrambling desperately up the side of the ridge, yelling at the tops of their lungs about the ocean.

The ocean. Telio turned and looked in its direction and watched in horror as the sea rose up, swallowed their three ships, roared inshore, crashed into the harbor, and surged up the ridge. Some of the crewmen tumbled down the other side in a desperate effort to get away from it.

The top of the wave boiled over the crest. It knocked Telio down, put out both fires, and then, exhausted, began to recede.

The chief mate, who’d thrown himself behind a small boulder, got unsteadily to his feet and looked around. Some of his mates were on the ground; others clung to trees. “A miracle,” he said.

“But the ships are gone,” cried the sailors.

Everyone watched the water go down. The captains stared aghast at the magnitude of the disaster and, responding quickly, assigned their officers to find out who was missing. A quick count indicated they’d lost about twenty, including Markane. It was sad, heartbreaking, but had it not been for the intervention of the Savakol females, they would all have been lost.

How did one explain such a thing?

While Krolley considered the implications, a voice, a male voice, spoke out of the wind. “Stay as high as you can,” it said, in an odd accent. “There are more coming.”

BLACK CAT REPORT

Ron, we’re watching a tidal wave approach Brackel. I’m sorry to report there are still a lot of Goompahs who elected to stay inside the city. This view is from a surveillance package that we’ve been told was inserted along the waterfront. You can see the wave in the distance. Our information is that it’ll be about three stories high when it arrives. The real problem, though, is that it’s traveling hundreds of kilometers per hour, so the chances of the folks inside the city aren’t good.

The picture keeps breaking up because there are numerous electrical storms in the area. But we’re going to try to stay with it. If you look closely, you can see that there are a few residents who are over in the shelter of that large building at the end of the pier. They seem to be watching the wave.

Ron, I wish there were something we could do—

chapter 49

On the eastern continent.

Monday, December 15.

BLACK CINDERS WERE falling out of the sky, trailing fire. Something ripped into the sea out near the horizon and sent yet another wave—though much less ferocious than the others—against the shore. The wind howled, sometimes from the east, sometimes cold and icy out of the south. The ocean maintained a steady roar.

The sun disappeared into a thunderstorm, and the world got dark.

The AV3 was on the eastern side of a ridge, shielded from the waves, across the harbor from the Goompah sailors. Julie had recommended they not try to fly the damaged craft through the storm-laden skies, so they’d lashed it down, and she’d gone outside and replaced the long-range ante

Nobody was going to sleep well. Rain hammered on the hull and the winds howled around them.

“In the morning,” said Julie, “when you talk to the Goompahs again, what are you going to tell them?”

“If there are any left,” said Digger.

“There’ll be some left. You need to figure out what you’re going to say.”

“Why say anything?”

“Because,” said Whit, “they’re going through a terrifying experience. When it’s over, a little reassurance wouldn’t be out of place.”

“Hell, I don’t know.” Digger looked around the cabin. “How about, ‘My children, all is well. Come down off the hill.’ How’s that?”