«Yes,» J said thoughtfully. «I was in an RAF bomber over Germany, about to parachute behind enemy lines. I'd heard about them from the Air Force lads, but I didn't believe in them, thought they were airborne folktales, like the gremlins. They often followed Allied bomber squadrons on their missions over the Axis nations, and the flyboys called them Foo Fighters. Yes, that night I saw one just like this, only smaller and dimmer.» He was thinking, There were men under heavy mental stress on those missions. Can mental or emotional stress awaken the same slumbering powers that KALI cart?
Hall, watching his radar screen, broke in, «Your Foo Fighter, if that's what it is, gives off radio waves on the radar wavelengths, and from the way they register, I'd say old Foo is some sort of electromagnetic field, not anything solid. And he seems to be about ten or fifteen times larger than he looks. The outer part of him is visible, nothing but pure energy, and outside the visible spectrum, in the ultraviolet and infrared and beyond. I'm just guessing, though. The damn radar is going crazy! I can't tell anymore, even approximately, how far away he is or where he's located in relation to us.»
«Is the radar getting worse?» J demanded.
«By the second!» Hall answered fervently.
«Then I'd say Foo is getting close,» said J. «We may already be within his outer edge.»
«Here he is!» Salas the copilot cried out.
The wing on his side had become illuminated by flickering blue light and now, as all turned to look, the bright ball of blue-white fire came alongside, not more than a few hundred meters away, drifting with a languid slowness that belied the fact that it was traveling well into supersonic speeds. The instruments on the control panels were registering rapidly changing impossibilities, and J noticed the hairs on the back of his hand standing up and swaying as they had done only once before, on the night of Blade's last return from the X dimensions.
As if racing the hopelessly inferior aircraft, the Ngaa pulled into the lead, passing them with frustrating ease, then rapidly outdistancing them. The instruments resumed some semblance of normality. The hairs on J's wrist stopped swaying.
Captain Ralston sighed with relief. «He's going to leave us alone.»
The Ngaa slowed.
«Oh, oh,» murmured Ralston.
The Ngaa wheeled in a gleaming arc and came rushing toward them, accelerating.
Salas shouted, «He's going to ram us!»
«Hang on!» warned Ralston, throwing the big jet transport into a steep shearing turn, veering away from the impending collision. The Ngaa shot past in a bright blur.
Salas was muttering something in Spanish, perhaps a prayer.
Ralston's anguished voice rang out. «What's that damn fireball doing, anyway?»
J said grimly, «Mr. Foo is trying to communicate with us, in his own quaint way. I believe he is trying to persuade us to turn around and go home.»
«What Mr. Foo wants, Mr. Foo gets,» Ralston said with feeling, hand closing on the master throttle lever between his seat and Salas's.
J touched the pilot's elbow. «No. Wait. We can beat Mr. Foo.»
«Are you insane?» howled Salas. «If that fireball hits the fuel tanks in this plane, we'll go off like a bomb.»
«Mr. Foo won't do that,» J said firmly. «We have Richard Blade on board, and Mr. Foo needs Richard Blade.»
The Ngaa had swung into sight up ahead as they spoke. «Here he comes again,» groaned Ralston.
J commanded, «This time don't veer away. If he wants to ram us, let him.»
Ralston hesitated a moment, then sighed, «Aye, sir.»
Salas whispered, «Madre… «
The Ngaa was on a collision course, accelerating, blindingly bright like a welding torch. J braced himself for the impact. Ralston sat frozen, gripping the wheel with white fingers.
The cockpit filled with shimmering blue-white light and then… the Ngaa passed through them!
There was no impact, but J was somehow aware of a rushing movement in the brightness, as of an unseen, unheard, unfelt wind, a hurricane of nothingness, and in the midst of the nothingness was a consciousness, a mind that was ancient beyond belief and intelligent in ways so different from man that words like superior and inferior lost all meaning. And J felt, for an instant, a rush of nameless emotions no man had ever felt before and stayed sane. And J glimpsed, as if in a memory of a nightmare, a city that was made of living matter, that hung, breathing, in a violet sky beneath a glowering red sun, above a planet burnt clean of the last trace of vegetation. And J knew, because the Ngaa knew, that someday soon that great red sun would explode.
Then, inexplicably, the Ngaa was gone.
J sat blinking, his head aching, his eyes watering numb and uncomprehending. Captain Ralston continued to hold the wheel, pale, eyes glazed. Salas leaned back, eyes closed. Bob Hall sat at his navigator's table, swaying, mouth hanging open. The jet droned on. The full moon stared in at them impassively.
At last J whispered, «Are you all right?»
The others nodded, apparently unable to speak.
«Where did it go?» J asked, beginning to find his voice.
«I don't know,» Ralston said, as slowly as if he were relearning the English language, rediscovering the meanings of the simplest words.
They searched the heavens, but the Ngaa was nowhere to be seen.
«Thank God,» Bob Hall murmured.
Suddenly the cockpit door burst open with a crash and Zoe stood there, dark hair disheveled, wide-set eyes wild. «Richard… «she cried. «He's broken free!»
J began unsnapping his seat belt. «What about his nurse? His two guards?»
She staggered into the narrow cockpit. «He's killed them!»
J stood up and looked through the doorway. Richard, clad only in a hospital gown, was advancing slowly up the aisle, steadying himself by gripping the backs of the seats. Though the light was dim, there was no mistaking the dark wet bloodstains on his gown.
I'm unarmed, J thought, as a vision of his old Webley service revolver hanging in its holster in the closet of his office flashed through his mind. Perhaps it's just as well. Wouldn't want to hurt Richard. J was afraid, but not that afraid.
Ralston's voice was low, guarded. «Shall I flip the plane over on its back, sir. That should… «
J answered softly, «No, not yet.» He stepped through the doorway, outwardly calm. «Richard! What are you up to now, you young scamp?»
Richard halted a few paces away, a puzzled frown on his face. The expression changed, became alien and opaque, then changed back again. J received an unmistakable impression of two separate personalities struggling for control of Blade's features.
«Richard,» J called again. «You know me. It's J.»
«J?» Blade closed his eyes, swayed, and almost fell.
J advanced a step. «You remember me. I know you do. Come along now, no more of this nonsense.» J watched uneasily as Richard's fingers curled into fists. Richard could easily kill a man with one blow of his fist, and J knew it. Killing had always been a routine part of the work of the Special Branch.
J became aware of a curious blue glow in the cabin, a pulsing, shimmering light that was brightest around Richard Blade, but moved over every surface, sometimes so dark a blue as to be all but invisible, sometimes so light as to be nearly white. It was a breathtaking display, like aurora in a polar sky, like reflections in a sea grotto. Here and there a tiny spark arced between two neighboring metal objects, and the bracing smell of ozone was strong. J thought, The Ngaa is here.
Barely audible above the drone of the jets was an irregular crackly hiss, and as he listened, J fancied he could hear voices in the hiss, as of a multitude of whisperers. What they were saying J could not quite make out, though the whispers grew steadily louder.
Richard shuffled forward, then halted. The aircraft shifted in its course and the bright moonlight fell on his face like a searchlight. Richard closed his eyes and turned away from the brightness, his features half in light, half in shadow, beads of sweat clearly visible on his forehead. Richard was struggling, J saw, harder than ever before, harder than he had ever had to struggle against enemies who were outside him, not inside.