10 The Riddle


Bone-weary as they all were, it was well into the afternoon before any of them awoke.

Brant stretched tired muscles and yawned a jaw-cracking yawn. Then he got up and went out of the narrow cave to relieve himself. He found Harbin already up and dressed.

“I figured you’d still be snoozing,” the big Earthsider grunted. The older man smiled ruefully.

“Old bones don’t rest easy,” Harbin admitted. “People of my age don’t need that much sleep, you know. After all, the Big Sleep is nearer for us than for you young folks.”

Brant grimaced and spat. “Hell, Doc, you’ll see me in my grave, more than likely. Anybody else up?”

Will Harbin shook his head briefly. Stepping away from the cliffwall, Brant scanned the ridgeline with slow and careful gaze.

“Any signs of company?” he inquired.

Harbin shook his head again. “None that I can discern,” he said. “But I hardly suppose that they will be on our track this quickly.”

“Let’s hope not, anyway,” Brant growled. “Another ride like the one we had last night will about do me in!”

Agila emerged from the mouth of the cave shortly thereafter. He ignored Brant as best he might, greeting his employer briefly. Before long, the delicious smell of food being cooked was on the air. Brant sniffed hungrily.

“Soup’s on, I guess. That means the women must be up.”

They broke their fast ravenously, and seldom had hot food tasted better to any of the travelers.

Later on, having fed the lopers, Brant saddled his beast and rode out into the midst of the dunes. Climbing to the top of the tallest one he could find easily, he spent a long time carefully searching the ridgeline with his binoculars. Eventually, finding no slightest sign of their pursuers, he remounted his steed and rode back to the cave, reporting his discovery, or lack of any discovery, to the old scientist.

“Thing is, do we hole up here or keep goin’?” Brant concluded.

“I thought you were the leader of this miniature expedition,” Harbin remarked lightly.

The other shrugged. “Doesn’t matter who’s boss. You’ve got the brains and all the know-how; I got the muscle and the wilderness experience. So what d’you think? Stay, or keep movin’?”

Harbin chewed it over thoughtfully. Finally, he said:

“Our friends will have to split into two groups, one riding north and the other heading south, since they have no way of knowing in which direction we went. Just as you surmised yesterday. And, that is, if they are still tracking us.”

“So?”

“So, even if they come this way, and are still riding the high country, they’ll have no chance of seeing us, providing that we keep to the cave.”

Brant shook his head. “Wrong, Doc. What if they have a pack of hunters?”

Hunters were small, fleet domesticated reptiles used by the Martian natives for much the same purpose as Earthsiders use hunting dogs. They possessed a remarkable sense of smell, and could easily have detected the odors of cooking food or fresh droppings from the lopers, even from the ridgeline.

Harbin scratched his nose. “I didn’t see any hunters before,” he said. Brant shrugged.

“Neither did I. But that doesn’t mean they don’t have ‘em. If I gotta gamble my life, I’d like it to be on a sure thing.”

“So you think we should keep moving, eh?”

Brant looked stubborn. “Goes against my grain to run from a fight,” he admitted heavily. “But they outnumber us and probably are better armed. We got a good head start on them right now, and it might be smart to hang onto that advantage.”

“We simply can’t keep running forever,” Harbin observed shrewdly, “and I, for one, would like to be sure they are still after us, before I continue this flight from a trouble that may, after all, no longer be there.”

“Not bad thinking, I guess,” nodded Brant. “Besides, the lopers are still tired from that all-night ride. Let’s hang around here for a while more, keeping a sentinel posted out on the dunes. We can take shifts. And there’s something else … ?”

“Which is?” prompted the scientist.

Brant looked at him squarely.

“I want to find out why they’re after us, whoever the hell they are. Any ideas?”

“None,” said Harbin. Brant continued looking at him.

“Let’s be square, Doc,” he suggested. “I got some cops on my tail ‘cause of a fight in a barroom back in Sun Lake City. I know it isn’t cops we saw watching us from the high country. But outside of that, I’m clean. Oh, sure, you can’t live a life like mine without making enemies, any more than you can make an omelet without cracking eggs. But there’s just nobody that wants me bad enough to chase me into this part of the world. How about you?”

Harbin told him frankly that he was open and above board, and the sincerity in his voice was enough to convince Brant.

“But what about the two women?” the scientist asked. Brant made a negative gesture. Then he told Harbin how he had encountered the two staked out to die, and had rescued them. He concluded:

“Being outlawed and left to either die or fend for themselves on their own is punishment enough for their nation,” he said. “I know the People well enough to know that.”

“So do I,” said the scientist. “That only leaves… .”

“Agila,” growled Brant. “How much d’you know about him, anyway?”

“Not very much,” Harbin admitted. “Only what he told me, which was cursory. He’s an outcast, too, like the two women, but it might be that he is not exactly as innocent of wrongdoing as he wanted me to think at the time.”

“Let’s both keep our eyes on him, then,” suggested Brant.

They agreed.

Later that evening, Brant went out among the dunes to relieve Zuarra from sentry duty.

“Have you sighted anything?” he asked. “On the ridgeline or anywhere else?”

“Nothing, O Brant,” she replied.

“Good!” he grunted. Then he mentioned briefly the matters he and the older man had discussed concerning Agila. And he asked her if she had noticed anything at all peculiar or out of the ordinary in the man’s behavior.”

“That one!” the woman sniffed contemptuously. “Zuarra has as little to do with the lean wolf as she may manage.”

“You’ve never talked, then?” he inquired.

“As little as possible—since that night when he would lay unwanted hands upon Zuarra, and Brant felled him with a blow of his fist. Besides,” she added stiffly, “that one now spends as much time as he can find in whispered converse with Suoli.”

Brant suppressed a smile. All women are given to jealousy, he thought cynically to himself. Even those that eschew the embrace of men and choose their own sex for solace.

He began the slow, laborious climbing of the dune to its crest, wherefrom a clearer view of the surrounding country could be had. But before returning to their encampment, Zuarra turned to speak to him again. A sudden thought had struck her.

“Yes?” he inquired.

“It may perchance mean nothing at all, O Brant,” the woman said hesitantly. “But Zuarra has noticed, of nights, before he seeks his pallet, the lean wolf removes something from his baggage, and sleeps with it cradled against his breast. It may very well have naught to do with our present predicament, but Zuarra wonders if Brant has noticed this puzzling act of Agila.”

He shook his head. “No, I haven’t. And it may, after all, mean nothing, as you suggest. Or it may be the answer to the mystery of why the unknown strangers are on our trail … of what shape is the thing you speak of?”

She shrugged. “Circular and flat, but I have never caught a good look at it, for the wolf keeps it wrapped in oiled silks, and hidden in his baggage during the day. I but idly noticed it in passing, that is all.”

The woman nodded contentedly, and mounted and rode off in the direction of the camp, leaving the Earthsider alone with his own thoughts.

There had to be an answer to this puzzle, and Brant was determined to find it out, whatever the risk or the cost.


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