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Keje and Adar, Naga, and a dozen guardsmen accompanied him. Despite the wonder that nearly forced a grin when he gained the deck, and the pleased curiosity he displayed when piped aboard by Gray's hastily assembled side party, Nakja-Mur wasn't happy.

"You are breaking me!" he growled when the captain met him with a salute. Matt blinked questioningly like Chack had taught him to do.

"Breaking you, my lord? I thought here, just as on the great sea Homes, the High Chief was the steward of the people's surplus—to be spent for the safety and benefit of all." Chack had quickly trotted up to join them and he translated the captain's words. Keje and Adar's subtle blinks of amusement indicated they no longer needed Chack's help.

"Of course you're breaking me! It's my duty to be a good steward, as you say, but it's also my duty to see the surplus wisely spent!" He looked about, speechless, and seized upon the sight of the paint kegs lining the pier. "There, do you see? Do you realize that's half a season's production of paint base? Do you have any idea what that costs?"

Matt shook his head. "You agreed that Walker should have anything Baalkpan could offer in the way of provisions and supplies if we would help you prepare for the Grik."

"Yes, but . . . paint?!" Adar leaned over and spoke into his ear. "Yes, of course I know iron rusts, but . . ." He stopped, and looking around again, he shook his head. "I apologize. They said your ship was iron, but I only now truly realized it. But, come, what difference does a little rust make?"

"My Brother," interrupted Keje, "once rust takes hold of iron it is not easily discouraged. That's one reason it's rarely used at sea. By us, at any rate."

"Well, but what of the scores of workers toiling northeast of the city, pounding a hole into the earth! What's the meaning of that?"

"Fuel, my lord. As we discussed. Walker must have . . . I believe you call it `gish,' for fuel. Without it she can't move. She can't fight."

"But gish is plentiful in the north, in the coastal marshes. It bubbles from the ground, it pools, it reeks! It's of little use to any but seam sealers and makers of rope. New holes need not be made to take it up!"

"I'm afraid so. Walker needs more gish than can easily be imagined, and there must be a ready source close by."

"The People use wind to good effect," Nakja-Mur grumped.

"No doubt. So do the Grik. But Walker's much faster than either— that's one reason she fights so well. To do that she needs gish, and lots of it. I told you all this," Matt said with some frustration.

"He doesn't know, my friend. He hasn't seen," soothed Keje. "He looks out for his people." He grinned. "And your ship is costing far more than the Grik yet have."

"He can pay now, with treasure, or later with blood," Matt snapped.

"He knows. He just doesn't like it. Believe me, on the whole, he's pleased. He's had many complaints, however, not least about the training your Marine person started. These land folk don't have strong bodies and are not used to the exertion required of warriors."

"Sergeant Alden knows the best warrior skills of our people, at least as far as land tactics are concerned. Lieutenant Shinya knows swordsmanship, and his methods are quicker and more lethal than yours." Gray suppressed a snort. He still thought Shinya belonged in the chain locker.

"True, but since Nakja-Mur decreed that all should learn rudimentary warrior skills, some ask why they must learn to fight when their treasure is paying you to do it for them."

Matt shook his head. "That wasn't the deal. I said we'd train them and help them fight. We won't fight the Grik alone."

"He knows."

Nakja-Mur spoke and Chack translated once again. "Two flasher-fishers arrived this morning with news of three Grik ships, nosing about in the strait. They didn't believe they were seen, but the Grik have never been so close. We're not ready to fight and I fear we will never be. All these preparations you make—the paint!—do not seem to make us more ready to fight!"

"We'll fight them first, if we must, until your people are ready. That was the plan from the start. But to fight, my ship must be ready!"

Off in the distance, they heard the low rumble of thunder.

"What will you do about the Grik in the strait?"

"If they enter the bay, we'll destroy them. If they linger nearby until we have fuel, we'll hunt them down and destroy them. You have my word.

But you must talk sense to these complainers!"

Nakja-Mur looked steadily at him for a moment, then jerked his head downward in a Lemurian nod. The distant thunder continued to build, but it was drowned out by the number four boiler blowing tubes. They all looked aft and skyward as the soot settled on the deck and those working there.

"Goddamn snipes!" bellowed Gray, striding purposefully toward the aft fireroom hatch. "There's wet paint up here!" Captain Reddy stifled a grin. The thunderous drone rose a little higher in his consciousness.

"Maybe the High Chief of Baalkpan would like to tour the ship?" he said, but tilted his head, listening. With a start, his eyes widened in recognition and he glanced at the crow's nest. Empty, of course. Garrett was on the fire-control platform, however, and he'd heard it too. Their eyes met as realization dawned. The general alarm began to sound.

"General quarters! General quarters! This is no drill!" came Larry Dowden's voice over the speaker. "Captain to the bridge!"

Matt darted from the midst of the Lemurian delegation, ran through the chaos of the weather deck, and clattered up the ladder to the bridge.

With no one to tell them different, the Lemurians followed after him.

Men and 'Cats scampered everywhere, some purposefully, others less so, and Nakja-Mur was nearly sent sprawling by an ordnance striker carrying ammunition belts as he rocketed up from the companionway.

"What's happening?!" he angrily demanded.

"Something interesting, certainly," Adar replied.

Matt was gasping by the time he reached the fire-control platform. He snatched the binoculars someone offered and began scanning the sky.

"There, sir. Aft, bearing one two oh! Coming right up the bay from the strait! It's . . . it's an aircraft!"

"Agreed!" Matt snapped. "But what's it doing here and whose is it?

Stand by all machine guns, Mr. Garrett, but hold your fire!"

They waited tensely, the men exchanging nervous glances while the clattery radial engine drone slowly grew more pronounced. Chack and Keje had joined them.

"What is that flying thing?" Keje's voice held an edge.

"Airplane," Matt murmured absently.

Keje glanced at the defensive preparations under way. "And I thought the Grik were a strange menace," he muttered. "You will fight this aarplane? It will attack?" Keje cast a quick glance at Big Sal, moored helplessly to the pier. He'd never heard of a flying creature large enough to threaten people, but he'd seen coast raptors snatch fish from the water, and he suspected how vulnerable they would be to something as big as what he saw now. Obviously, by their actions, the destroyermen believed it might be dangerous. "Will it attack?" he asked again, more insistently.