"True," Ross said, but his tone temporized-and Eveleen knew, without asking, that he felt the same sense of danger that gripped her.
"Come." Misha jerked his head, impatient to be gone.
No one spoke again until they had descended to the ancient transport station that the Russians had found.
"We spent three days riding this thing. Finding where it went. Where it still works," Misha said as they waited for one of the flat cars.
When it came up, they squeezed in, lying flat as Eveleen had the first time, and once again commenced a long ride, swooping downward. Concussions of air at intersections testified to the size and complexity of the system. It was miraculous that it still worked-that, somehow, there was still energy to run it.
Finally Misha stopped the car, which hummed beneath them. In the dim bluish light, he looked back at them. "This station here"-he gestured upward at an archway and glowing light-"is on the west coast of our island. As you see, the transport goes on. I think it crossed beneath the bay to a smaller island off to the west. We have seen the flyers retreating there when the sun sets; we think that is where they live. And I a.s.sume that this transport goes there as well, but I don"t know. Want to test it, or find another way across?"
Eveleen said, "Test it."
At the same moment Ross said, "I"m not in the mood for a night swim."
Misha smiled faintly. "Then we go."
He faced forward again, leaned back-his yellow hair brushed over Eveleen"s knees-and activated the car.
Again it dove downward, so fast her stomach seemed to drop. Then, quite as suddenly, it swooped up again, and she had to swallow to keep her ears from popping painfully. There were no intersection concussions this time.
When the car stopped, all three climbed out.
"Here is what happened," Misha said as they walked toward the ramp leading upward. "We circled back for one last check at the Yilayil graveyard-just in case. We were careless-not enough sleep, maybe too sick." He shrugged. "It was clouding up, and we forgot to check for shadows. They came on us quite suddenly. I got under cover, Viktor did not. When I came out, I saw two of them holding him in a kind of net. They flew west, high, fast."
"So it"s probable they took him here," Ross said.
Misha shrugged again. "Where else?"
And why? Eveleen thought-but she didn"t speak out loud. They were here to find out why.
Cold air fingered their faces, and Eveleen pulled her rain jacket tight against her. Misha paused, checking his infrared and his flashlight.
Ross and Eveleen also had flashes clipped to their belts; in silence, Eveleen gripped hers, but she did not turn it on.
Misha led the way, scanning with the infrared. No warm bodies showed up on the screen.
Ross murmured, "Why do I think that the First Team ended up here?"
"There were no flyers in their time," Eveleen whispered back. "Not in any of the records-or were there, Misha?"
He shook his head. "No. No flyers."
Ross grunted. "Well, it was a nice solution."
"This mission has no easy solutions," Misha retorted in a sardonic voice.
"It"s had no solutions at all, so far," Eveleen shot back.
Misha laughed softly, then paused again. They"d reached the entrance to the station. It was nearly overgrown with ferny plants. They tromped over thick moss and scrubby brush, then pushed through the hanging boughs.
Obviously the flyers did not know about the station, or if they did, they didn"t use it. The three were the first ones in centuries to step that way, Eveleen could tell even in the darkness.
Misha had fixed his flashlight so that it emitted a thin pinhole of light. He sinned it carefully, then clicked it off. Eveleen blinked in the sudden darkness, until her eyes began to adjust; whatever he"d seen was enough to orient him, but he was used to moving about in jungle at night. She was content, for now, to follow.
They found themselves on a rocky ledge that was once some kind of road. Flat portions, broken by hearty plants, made walking easier.
The road was built into the side of a cliff. They rounded a hill, and below them, quite suddenly, they saw dancing lights.
Too late they heard the swoosh swoosh of great wings beating; Eveleen looked up sharply, to see five long shapes dive down on them. of great wings beating; Eveleen looked up sharply, to see five long shapes dive down on them.
Misha"s hand went to his side-his weapon. He didn"t unclip it, though. Eveleen kept her own hands away from her sides, balancing lightly on her feet. Adrenaline flooded her system, temporarily banishing malaise, headache, tiredness.
Ross had gone still. "Wait," he said.
Misha gave a short nod; he"d decided the same.
The five winged creatures surrounded them, and one of them gestured below. The distant yellow light outlined a sharp face with bluish highlights; the creature looked excited.
It opened its mouth, and began to speak. Eveleen heard a stream of non-Yilayil gibberish, and wondered what was being said. It sounded hauntingly familiar.
Then she heard a sharp indrawn breath from Misha.
Ross looked up. Eveleen"s heart thumped. "What?" she croaked.
"This language," Misha said, his voice suddenly hoa.r.s.e. "It-it is-Russian."
CHAPTER 25.
GORDON SAW SABA lying on the ground.
No one else was in the cave. His footsteps hissed and grated as he ran heedlessly down the worn stone steps to the vast floor.
There Saba lay, utterly quiescent, her body, slender and graceful the last time he had seen her, now dangerously thin and frail.
"Saba. Saba," Gordon breathed, and knelt at her side.
He placed fingers to her neck, and grat.i.tude flooded through him when he found a pulse-rapid and light, but steady.
She sucked in a deep, shuddering breath, and opened her eyes.
In the weird glow from the multiple light sources, she stared up at him, her black eyes reflecting the harsh light.
"Saba."
"Gordon? Are you real?" The whisper was the merest ghost.
"I am." A strangled laugh escaped him. "You left your com on. That was quite a concert."
"It was real, then?"
"Well, I heard real sounds, all right-but I don"t yet know what you heard that might have been different. Can I help you?"
"Yes. Please." She lifted a hand.
He bent and slid his arm round her shoulders. So light, she was!
He rose, lifting her-and realized that his strength had been sapped as well.
"I can walk. Just help me balance," she murmured.
Gordon let her feet touch ground, and together they proceeded slowly up the steps, each of them soon breathing harshly.
They stopped when Saba made a sign. Both sank down onto the steps, Saba leaning against the stone wall. Gordon undipped his canteen and they both took deep swigs of water.
Saba leaned her head against the rough wall. Her face in the dim lighting was drawn, but her eyes were steady and alert. "How"d you get in?"
"Over the last couple weeks I marked at least three ways around those green guards," Gordon said with a grim laugh. "And I found that this building is riddled with enough tunnels to make the New York subway system look simple. I"ve been exploring them during the early morning hours. I even found your room. And I mean to take you there right now-unless you think my presence will endanger you."
Saba canted her head, her eyes going unfocused. Gordon watched in dismay, hoping she was not about to fade out on him-but then she blinked, and saw him again, and smiled faintly. "No. No trouble."
He didn"t ask. He could be patient.
When she was ready, she nodded, and again they moved up the stairs, drunken-sailor style.
"It"s not... as far... as I thought," she panted when they had neared the top-but still she had to stop and rest.
This time, though, it was a short rest. She gulped some water, drew in a deep breath, and straightened up. They continued on, straight to her room.
No one was about. Saba reached, palmed the door open, and they pa.s.sed inside. Full-spectrum lighting, somehow calibrated to be comfortable for the human eye, clicked on.
Gordon helped her to the narrow bed, and she collapsed gratefully. "I have a lot to tell you," she murmured. "Let me catch my breath."
Gordon looked around the chamber. It looked comfortable; his attention was immediately drawn to the unfamiliar computer system. "Is this the Yilayil terminal? May I turn it on?"
She nodded.
He touched the keypads, noting how different they were from human keyboards. The screen lit, and some of the pads glowed faintly.
Yilayil script flowed across the screen. With difficulty he made out some of the words, then he shook his head. He"d make no sense out of this system. He closed it down again.
Saba said, "First, tell me, please. What did you hear? I mean last night."
"Voices. Whistles, trills, chants, and a lot of percussives that I could not identify. I heard you speak to someone. I only caught a few words, something about you being ill. That was the most distinct voice. Then there was just the chanting, on and on and on, until it either ended or your battery ran low: it faded suddenly into quiet, then silence. I tried to raise you, couldn"t, so I reported to Irina, and moved in myself to check things out."
Saba opened her eyes. "The Yilayil are not..." She paused, then frowned slightly. "That"s not true. They are are the predominant culture, and all others are shaped to them, but the drive to conformity is not engendered by them merely for the sake of dominance. The issues behind the predominant culture, and all others are shaped to them, but the drive to conformity is not engendered by them merely for the sake of dominance. The issues behind ti[trill]kee ti[trill]kee are a response to yet another, greater..." Her voice suspended, and once again her gaze went diffuse. are a response to yet another, greater..." Her voice suspended, and once again her gaze went diffuse.
This time the reverie, or whatever it was, lasted far longer.
Gordon drove his teeth into his lip, fighting for patience. He sat at her side, waiting, and again she blinked and focused on him.
After a few seconds, he prompted, "There is someone else behind the Yilayil ti[trill]kee ti[trill]kee?"
Saba breathed in and out, her brow furrowed in perplexity. Then she said slowly, "The harmony is Yilayil, but it is an attempt to understand the incomprehensible. Almost, I wish to say, the-the ineffable, except that carries spiritual connotations, does it not? And these are are finite beings, that is ones with corporeal existence, I am quite sure of that-though as yet I am sure of little else concerning them." finite beings, that is ones with corporeal existence, I am quite sure of that-though as yet I am sure of little else concerning them."
"So there is yet another race here, is that it?" Gordon said.
"Yes, but they exist outside of time."
"Impossible."
She shook her head slightly. "It"s true. I don"t know how, but I know this much: they knew I was coming. They gave me Zhot, and Rilla, and the Virigu I know. The carving out front was waiting for me. From each I have learned many things. Rilla has looked out for my comfort. I believe it is she who programmed my room, turned on my computer. The Virigu, I have come to realize, are in some ways empaths. They sense emotions, and perhaps-in some way-patterns of thought."
Gordon nodded. "Go on."
"As for Zhot, he seems to be the prime communicator.
He kept trying to get me to "taste color" and the like, at the same time as I had to learn to think outside temporal limitations. It"s, oh, a little like Zen, I think. Koans of synesthesia, to break apart the unity of the sense that bars the time sense. Perhaps the ent.i.ties even knew that music would be the metaphor, the catalyst, for understanding... It sounds egocentric, doesn"t it, to surmise that music has developed here in preparation for my coming?"
"I can believe anything, if you present enough proof," Gordon said with care.
Her slim, dark fingers pressed against his wrist. "Ah, my anchor, my link to reality." She laughed soundlessly. "Here"s what I can discern. These ent.i.ties are not in constant communication with the House of Knowledge, or the beings in it. That would overpower them, remove their free will."
"How do you perceive them, then?"
"Voices, in the mind-through the music," Saba said.
"I heard nothing like that," Gordon said.
She looked at him. "Did you understand everything you heard? Did you taste and feel the music? Did you"?" She trilled a Yilayil term that he did not comprehend at all.
"One of the temporal verbs?" he guessed.
She nodded. "It takes all the senses to comprehend the deepest symbols, and when one is able to do that, one can- partially-hear them them."
"And so?" he prompted.
"And there is some event nigh, something important. We are crucial to it."
Gordon thought of the disappearance of the First Team. He did not like what he was hearing. All the clues added up to something drastic-like human sacrifice. And Saba was lying, weak and enervated, in the midst of what might be the enemy.
Gordon repressed a sigh.