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They resembled humans, but were considerably shorter, and with quite different bodily proportions. Their hooded and layered garments, obviously designed to turn away rain, did not disguise the fact that their spines arched forward almost as semi-circles, predisposing them to waddle with out-thrust bellies and faces tilted upwards. Their legs were short and stubby, but not as truncated as their arms, which angled outwards from the shoulder and ended where the human elbow might have been placed. Massive hands, which seemed to have only five fingers, clenched and unclenched as they walked. It was difficult to see much of their faces, but they seemed pale and hairless, the features all but lost in folds of fat.

“Elegant little fellows,” Bartan commented. “Is that the enemy?”

“Do not be complacent,” Sondeweere said over her shoulder. “They are strong, and they seem to have little fear of pain or injury. They are also fanatical in their obedience to authority.”

Toller saw that the Farlanders, possibly on their way to jobs, were regarding the passing transporter with interest, buried eyes emitting flickers of amber and white. “Have they noticed you?”

“Possibly, but such curiosity as their dull minds can muster is probably directed towards the vehicle—motorised transporters are still quite rare. I am privileged in a way.”

“How well organised and equipped is their army?”

“The Farlanders do not have an army in your sense of the word, Toller"Maraquine. A world state has been in existence for over a hundred years and internecine conflict has been outmoded, thanks to the symbonites, but there is an immense body of citizenry with a title I can best translate as the Public Force. They single-mindedly execute any task assigned to them—flood control, forest clearance, the building of new roads…”

“So they are not trained fighters?”

“What they lack in individual skills they make up for in numbers,” Sondeweere said. “And I repeat—they are very strong in spite of their lack of stature.”

Zavotle aroused himself from a contemplation of inner pain. “They are not like us, and yet… How can I put it? They have more points of similarity than of difference.”

“Our sun is close to the centre of a galaxy, where the stars are very close together. It is possible that all the habitable worlds in this region of space were seeded with life aeons ago, perhaps more than once. An interstellar traveller might find humans or their cousins on many planets.”

“What is a galaxy?” Zavotle said, initiating a long question-and-answer session in which Toller, Wraker and Berise participated, eager for the gifts of knowledge which Sondeweere had acquired both from the symbonites and her own powers of deduction, enhanced beyond the understanding of ordinary men and women. For Toller, the realisation that each of the hundreds of misty whirlpools visible in the night sky was a conglomeration of perhaps a hundred thousand million suns came as a blend of mind-stretching delight and poignant regrets. He was simultaneously uplifted by the scope of the new vision, and depressed by two other factors—his personal inadequacy when confronted by the scale of the cosmos, and sorrow over the fact that his long-dead brother, Lain, had been denied his rightful place at the intellectual banquet.

As the transporter continued its hissing and puffing way through a thickening chain of villages, it gradually came to Toller’s notice that Bartan Drumme was the only member of the company to have excluded himself from the precious communion with Sondeweere. He looked uncharacteristically morose and apathetic, not even bothering to change his position to evade a persistent dripping of rain from a leak overhead, and—while drinking very little—was protectively nursing a skin of brandy he had brought from the skyship. Toller wondered if he was downcast at the prospect of going into battle, or if it was beginning to sink into him that the woman he had married and the omniscient, awesomely gifted being they had met on Farland were two quite different people, and that any future relationship between them could not resemble that of the past.

“… not like the burning of fuel, as in a furnace,” Sondeweere was saying. “Atoms of the lightest gas present within a sun combine to form a heavier gas. The process yields great amounts of energy and that is what makes a sun shine. I’m sorry I cannot give you a clearer explanation at this time—it would take too long to expound the underlying principles and concepts.”

“Could you explain it in your silent voices?” Toller said. “As you did when we were still in the void.” Sondeweere glanced back at him. “That would help, undoubtedly, but I dare not enter into any telepathic communication. I told you that the symbonites are aware of me at all times, and the closer I get to their ship the more I will become a focus of their attention, because it is the one place in all the land which is forbidden to me. Were they to pick up the slightest wisp of telepathic activity their interest in my movements would at once be translated into direct action—and that is something which will happen soon enough.”

“They should have destroyed the ship,” Berise commented, traces of sourness still in her voice.

“Perhaps—but they have no way of knowing how many symbon spores may remain on Overland waiting to create more human symbonites.” Sondeweere cast Berise a smile which perhaps hinted that her preoccupations were far removed from personal rivalries. “Also, the ship was not built without considerable sacrifice on their part.”

“The sacrifices may not all be on one side.”

“I know,” Sondeweere said simply. “I told you that at the outset.”

Chapter 18

The transporter made an abrupt turn to the left and within minutes its comparatively smooth movement had given way to a bumpy and lurching progress which drew creaks from the chassis. Toller raised himself and looked out in front, past Sondeweere’s white-clad figure, and saw they had left the road and were now heading across open grassland. The horizon seen through rain-spattered glass was almost flat and the terrain was quite featureless except for a scattering of squatly conical trees. “How far now?” he said.

“Not far—about twelve miles,” Sondeweere replied. “This will be uncomfortable for you, but we must proceed with all possible speed from here on. Until now the symbonites had no real cause for alarm, because the highway leads to many destinations, but on this course there is only…” She broke off with a sharp intake of breath and her grip on the tiller failed momentarily, allowing the vehicle to pull to one side. Those beside Toller sat up straighter, hands straying towards weapons.

“Is anything wrong?” he said, half-knowing what had happened.

“We are discovered. The alarm has gone out—and sooner than I had expected.” Her voice betrayed no anxiety, but she advanced a lever and the sound from the engine increased. The protests from the chassis grew louder as the vehicle gained speed.

Toller felt a stirring of the old squalid excitement. “Can you tell us anything about what lies ahead? Fortifications? Weapons?”

“Very little, I’m afraid—intelligence of that nature is hard to gather.” Sondeweere went on to say that, to the best of her knowledge, the symbonite ship was kept in an ancient meteorite crater which served as a natural revetment. She believed it was further protected by a high fence along the crater’s rim. There would be armed guards, whose numbers she could not predict, and their weapons were likely to be swords, and perhaps pikes. “No bows? No spears?”