<h2><SPAN name="THROG_JUSTICE" id="THROG_JUSTICE"></SPAN>17. THROG JUSTICE</h2>
<p>The musty stench was so strong that Shann could no longer
fight the demands of his outraged stomach. He rolled on his
side, retching violently until the sour smell of his illness
battled the foul odor of the ship. His memories of how he
had come into this place were vague; his body was a mass
of dull pain, as if he had been scorched. Scorched! Had the
Throgs used one of their energy whips to subdue him? The
last clear thing he could recall was that slow withdrawal
down the cleft inside the skull rock, the Throg not too far
away—the sound from the entrance.</p>
<p>A Throg prisoner! Through the pain and the sickness the
horror of that bit doubly deep. Terrans did not fall alive into
Throg hands, not if they had the means of ending their existence
within reach. But his hands and arms were caught
behind him in an unbreakable lock, some gadget not unlike
the Terran force bar used to restrain criminals, he decided
groggily.</p>
<p>The cubby in which he lay was black-dark. But the quivering
of the deck and the bulkheads about him told Shann
that the ship was in flight. And there could be but two destinations,
either the camp where the Throg force had taken
over the Terran installations or the mother ship of the raiders.
If Thorvald's earlier surmise was true and the aliens
were hunting a Terran to talk in the transport, then they
were heading for the camp.</p>
<p>And because a man who still lives and who is not yet
broken can also hope, Shann began to think ahead to the<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_173" id="Page_173"></SPAN></span>
camp—the camp and a faint, thin chance of escape. For on
the surface of Warlock there was a thin chance; in the
mother ship of the Throgs none at all.</p>
<p>Thorvald—and the Wyverns! Could he hope for any help
from them? Shann closed his eyes against the thick darkness
and tried to reach out to touch, somewhere, Thorvald with
his disk—or perhaps the Wyvern who had talked of Trav
and shared dreams. Shann focused his thoughts on the young
Wyvern witch, visualizing with all the detail he could summon
out of memory the brilliant patterns about her slender
arms, her thin, fragile wrists, those other designs overlaying
her features. He could see her in his mind, but she was only
a puppet, without life, certainly without power.</p>
<p>Thorvald.... Now Shann fought to build a mental picture
of the Survey officer, making his stand at that window,
grasping his disk, with the sun bringing gold to his hair and
showing the bronze of his skin. Those gray eyes which could
be ice, that jaw with the tight set of a trap upon occasion....</p>
<p>And Shann made contact! He touched something, a flickering
like a badly tuned tri-dee—far more fuzzy than the
mind pictures the Wyvern had paraded for him. But he had
touched! And Thorvald, too, had been aware of his contact.</p>
<p>Shann fought to find that thread of awareness again. Patiently
he once more created his vision of Thorvald, adding
every detail he could recall, small things about the other
which he had not known that he had noticed—the tiny arrow-shaped
scar near the base of the officer's throat, the
way his growing hair curled at the ends, the look of one
eyebrow slanting abruptly toward his hairline when he was
dubious about something. Shann strove to make a figure as
vividly as Logally and Trav had been in the mist of the illusion.</p>
<p>"... where?"</p>
<p>This time Shann was prepared; he did not let that mind
image dissolve in his excitement at recapturing the link.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_174" id="Page_174"></SPAN></span>
"Throg ship," he said the words aloud, over and over, but
still he held to his picture of Thorvald.</p>
<p>"... will...."</p>
<p>Only that one word! The thread between them snapped
again. Only then did Shann become conscious of a change
in the ship's vibration. Were they setting down? And where?
Let it be at the camp! It must be the camp!</p>
<p>There was no jar at that landing, just that one second
the vibration told him the ship was alive and air-borne, and
the next a dead quiet testified that they had landed. Shann,
his sore body stiff with tension, waited for the next move
on the part of his captors.</p>
<p>He continued to lie in the dark, still queasy from the
stench of the cell, too keyed up to try to reach Thorvald.
There was a dull grating over his head, and he looked up
eagerly—to be blinded by a strong beam of light. Claws
hooked painfully under his arms and he was manhandled
up and out, dragged along a short passage and pitched free
of the ship, falling hard upon trodden earth and rolling
over gasping as the seared skin of his body was rasped and
abraded.</p>
<p>The Terran lay face up now, and as his eyes adjusted
to the light, he saw a ring of Throg heads blotting out the
sky as they inspected their catch impassively. The mouth
mandibles of one moved with a faint clicking. Again claws
fastened in his armpits, brought Shann to his feet, holding
him erect.</p>
<p>Then the Throg who had given that order moved closer.
His hand-claws clasped a small metal plate surmounted by
a hoop of thin wire over which was stretched a web of
threads glistening in the sun. Holding that hoop on a level
with his mouth, the alien clicked his mandibles, and those
sounds became barely distinguishable basic galactic words.</p>
<p>"You Throg meat!"</p>
<p>For a moment Shann wondered if the alien meant that
statement literally. Or was it a conventional expression for
a prisoner among their land.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_175" id="Page_175"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Do as told!"</p>
<p>That was clear enough, and for the moment the Terran
did not see that he had any choice in the matter. But Shann
refused to make any sign of agreement to either of those
two limited statements. Perhaps the beetle-heads did not
expect any. The alien who had pulled him to his feet continued
to hold him erect, but the attention of the Throg with
the translator switched elsewhere.</p>
<p>From the alien ship emerged a second party. The Throg
in their midst was unarmed and limping. Although to Terran
eyes one alien was the exact counterpart of the other,
Shann thought that this one was the prisoner in the skull
cave. Yet the indications now suggested that he had only
changed one captivity for another and was in disgrace
among his kind. Why?</p>
<p>The Throg limped up to front the leader with the translator,
and his guards fell back. Again mandibles clicked,
were answered, though the sense of that exchange eluded
Shann. At one point in the report—if report it was—he himself
appeared to be under discussion, for the injured Throg
waved a hand-claw in the Terran's direction. But the end
to the conference came quickly enough and in a manner
which Shann found shocking.</p>
<p>Two of the guards stepped forward, caught at the injured
Throg's arms and drew him away, leading him out
into a space beyond the grounded ship. They dropped their
hold on him, returning at a trot. The officer clicked an order.
Blasters were unholstered, and the Throg in the field shriveled
under a vicious concentration of cross bolts. Shann gasped.
He certainly had no liking for Throgs, but this execution
carried overtones of a cold-blooded ferocity which transcended
anything he had known, even in the callous brutality
of the Dumps.</p>
<p>Limp, and more than a little sick again, he watched the
Throg officer turn away. And a moment later he was forced
along in the other's wake to the domes of the once Terran
camp. Not just to the camp in general, he discovered a minute<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_176" id="Page_176"></SPAN></span>
later, but to that structure which had housed the com
unit linking them with ships cruising the solar lanes and with
the patrol. So Thorvald had been right; they needed a Terran
to broadcast—to cover their tracks here and lay a trap
for the transport.</p>
<p>Shann had no idea how much time he had passed among
the Wyverns; the transport with its load of unsuspecting
settlers might already be in the system of Circe, plotting a
landing orbit around Warlock, broadcasting her recognition
signal and a demand for a beam to ride her in. Only, this
time the Throgs were out of luck. They had picked up one
prisoner who could not help them, even if he wanted to do
so. The mysteries of the highly technical installations in this
dome were just that to Shann Lantee—complete mysteries.
He had not the slightest idea of how to activate the machines,
let alone broadcast in the proper code.</p>
<p>A cold spot of terror gathered in his middle, spreading
outward through his smarting body. For he was certain
that the Throgs would not believe that. They would consider
his protestations of ignorance as a stubborn refusal to
co-operate. And what would happen to him then would be
beyond human endurance. Could he bluff—play for time?
But what would that time buy him except to delay the inevitable?
In the end, that small hope based on his momentary
contact with Thorvald made him decide to try that
bluff.</p>
<p>There had been changes in the com dome since the capture
of the cap. A squat box on the floor sprouted a collection of
tubes from its upper surface. Perhaps that was some Throg
equivalent of Terran equipment in place on the wide table
facing the door.</p>
<p>The Throg leader clicked into his translator: "You call
ship!"</p>
<p>Shann was thrust down into the operator's chair, his
bound arms still twisted behind him so that he had to lean
forward to keep on the seat at all. Then the Throg who<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_177" id="Page_177"></SPAN></span>
had pushed him there, roughly forced a set of com earphones
and speech mike onto his head.</p>
<p>"Call ship!" clicked the alien officer.</p>
<p>So time must be running out. Now was the moment to
bluff. Shann shook his head, hoping that the gesture of negation
was common to both their species.</p>
<p>"I don't know the code," he said aloud.</p>
<p>The Throg's bulbous eyes gazed, at his moving lips. Then
the translator was held before the Terran's mouth. Shann
repeated his words, heard them reissue as a series of clicks,
and waited. So much depended now on the reaction of the
beetle-head officer. Would he summarily apply pressure to
enforce his order, or would he realize that it was possible
that all Terrans did not know that code, and so he could
not produce in a captive's head any knowledge that had
never been there—with or without physical coercion?</p>
<p>Apparently the latter logic prevailed for the present. The
Throg drew the translator back to his mandibles.</p>
<p>"When ship call—you answer—make lip talk your words!
Say bad sickness here—need help. Code man dead—you
talk in his place. I listen. You say wrong, you die—you die
a long time. Hurt bad all that time——"</p>
<p>Clear enough. So he had been able to buy a little time!
But how soon before the incoming ship would call? The
Throgs seemed to expect it. Shann licked his blistered lips.
He was sure that the Throg officer meant exactly what he
said in that last grisly threat. Only, would anyone—Throg
or human—live very long in this camp if Shann got his warning
through? The transport would have been accompanied
on the big jump by a patrol cruiser, especially now with
Throgs littering deep space the way they were in this sector.
Let Shann alert the ship, and the cruiser would know;
swift punitive action would be visited on the camp. Throgs
could begin to make their helpless prisoner regret his rashness;
then all of them would be blotted out together, prisoner
and captors alike, when the cruiser came in.</p>
<p>If that was his last chance, he'd play it that way. The<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_178" id="Page_178"></SPAN></span>
Throgs would kill him anyhow, he hadn't the least doubt
of that. They kept no long-term Terran prisoners and never
had. And at least he could take this nest of devil beetles
along with him. Not that the thought did anything to dampen
the fear which made him weak and dizzy. Shann Lantee
might be tough enough to fight his way out of the Dumps,
but to stand up and defy Throgs face-to-face like a video
hero was something else. He knew that he could not do any
spectacular act; if he could hold out to the end without
cracking he would be satisfied.</p>
<p>Two more Throgs entered the dome. They stalked to
the far end of the table which held the com equipment,
and frequently pausing to consult a Terran work tape set in
a reader, they made adjustments to the spotter beam broadcaster.
They worked slowly but competently, testing each
circuit. Preparing to draw in the Terran transport, holding
the large ship until they had it helpless on the ground. The
Terran began to wonder how they proposed to take the
ship over once they did have it on planet.</p>
<p>Transports were armed for ground fighting. Although they
rode in on a beam broadcast from a camp, they were prepared
for unpleasant surprises on a planet's surface; such
were certainly not unknown in the history of Survey. Which
meant that the Throgs had in turn some assault weapon
they believed superior, for they radiated confidence now.
But could they handle a patrol cruiser ready to fight?</p>
<p>The Throg technicians made a last check of the beam,
reporting in clicks to the officer. The alien gave an order
to Shann's guard before following them out. A loop of wire
rope dropped over the Terran's head, tightened about his
chest, dragging him back against the chair until he grunted
with pain. Two more loops made him secure in a most uncomfortable
posture, and then he was left alone in the com
dome.</p>
<p>An abortive struggle against the wire rope taught him
the folly of such an effort. He was in deep freeze as far
as any bodily movement was concerned. Shann closed his<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_179" id="Page_179"></SPAN></span>
eyes, settled to that same concentration he had labored to
acquire on the Throg ship. If there was any chance of the
Wyvern communication working again, here and now was
the time for it!</p>
<p>Again he built his mental picture of Thorvald, as detailed
as he had made it in the Throg ship. And with that to the
forefront of his mind, Shann strove to pick up the thread
which could link them. Was the distance between this camp
and the seagirt city of the Wyverns too great? Did the
Throgs unconsciously dampen out that mental reaching as
the Wyverns had said they did when they had sent him to
free the captive in the skull?</p>
<p>Drops gathered in the unkempt tight curls on his head,
trickled down to sting on his tender skin. He was bathed
in the moisture summoned by an effort as prolonged and
severe as if he labored physically under a hot sun at the
top speed of which his body was capable.</p>
<p>Thorvald—</p>
<p>Thorvald! But not standing by the window in the Wyvern
stronghold! Thorvald with the amethyst of heavy Warlockian
foliage at his back. So clear was the new picture that Shann
might have stood only a few feet away. Thorvald there,
with the wolverines at his side. And behind him sun glinted
on the gem-patterned skin of more than one Wyvern.</p>
<p>"Where?"</p>
<p>That demand from the Survey officer, curt, clear—so perfect
the word might have rung audibly through the dome.</p>
<p>"The camp!" Shann hurled that back, frantic with fear
than once again their contact might fail.</p>
<p>"They want me to call in the transport." He added that.</p>
<p>"How soon?"</p>
<p>"Don't know. They have the guide beam set. I'm to say
there's illness here; they know I can't code."</p>
<p>All he could see now was Thorvald's face, intent, the
officer's eyes cold sparks of steel, bearing the impress of a
will as implacable as a Throg's. Shann added his own decision.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_180" id="Page_180"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"I'll warn the ship off; they'll send in the patrol."</p>
<p>There was no change in Thorvald's expression. "Hold
out as long as you can!"</p>
<p>Cold enough, no promise of help, nothing on which to
build hope. Yet the fact that Thorvald was on the move,
away from the Wyvern city, meant something. And Shann
was sure that thick vegetation could be found only on the
mainland. Not only was Thorvald ashore, but there were
Wyverns with him. Could the officer have persuaded the
witches of Warlock to foresake their hands-off policy and
join him in an attack on the Throg camp? No promise, not
even a suggestion that the party Shann had envisioned was
moving in his direction. Yet somehow he believed that they
were.</p>
<p>There was a sound from the doorway of the dome. Shann
opened his eyes. There were Throgs entering, one to go to
the guide beam, two heading for his chair. He closed his eyes
again in a last attempt, backed by every remaining ounce of
his energy and will.</p>
<p>"Ship's in range. Throgs here."</p>
<p>Thorvald's face, dimmer now, snapped out while a blow
on Shann's jaw rocked his head cruelly, made his ears sing,
his eyes water. He saw Throgs—Throgs only. And one held
the translator.</p>
<p>"You talk!"</p>
<p>A tri-jointed arm reached across his shoulder, triggered a
lever, pressed a button. The head set cramping his ear let
out a sudden growl of sound—the com was <ins class="corr" title="Original reads 'activited'">activated</ins>. A claw
jammed the mike closer to Shann's lips, but also slid in range
the webbed loop of the translator.</p>
<p>Shann shook his head at the incoming rattle of code. The
Throg with the translator was holding the other head set close
to his own ear pit. And the claws of the guard came down on
Shann's shoulders in a cruel grip, a threat of future brutality.</p>
<p>The rattle of code continued while Shann thought <ins class="corr" title="Original reads 'furiuosly'">furiously</ins>.
This was it! He had to give a warning, and then the aliens
would do to him just what the officer had threatened. Shann<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_181" id="Page_181"></SPAN></span>
could not seem to think clearly. It was as if in his efforts to
contact Thorvald, he had exhausted some part of his brain,
so that now he was dazed just when he needed quick wits
the most!</p>
<p>This whole scene had a weird unreality. He had seen its
like a thousand times on fiction tapes—the Terran hero menaced
by aliens intent on saving ... saving....</p>
<p>Was it out of one of those fiction tapes he had devoured
in the past that Shann recalled that scrap of almost forgotten
information?</p>
<p>The Terran began to speak into the mike, for there had
come a pause in the rattle of code. He used Terran, not basic,
and he shaped the words slowly.</p>
<p>"Warlock calling—trouble—sickness here—com officer dead."</p>
<p>He was interrupted by another burst of code. The claws
of his guard twisted into the naked flesh of his shoulders in
vicious warning.</p>
<p>"Warlock calling—" he repeated. "Need help——"</p>
<p>"Who are you?"</p>
<p>The demand came in basic. On board the transport they
would have a list of every member of the Survey team.</p>
<p>"Lantee." Shann drew a deep breath. He was so conscious
of those claws on his shoulders, of what would follow.</p>
<p>"This is Mayday!" he said distinctly, hoping desperately
that someone in the control cabin of the ship now in orbit
would catch the true meaning of that ancient call of complete
disaster. "Mayday—beetles—over and out!"</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_182" id="Page_182"></SPAN></span></p>
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