"I know," Ger said, after the creature had moved away. "I"ll disguise myself as a Man, walk through the gate to the reactor room, and activate my Displacer."
"You can"t speak their language," Pid pointed out.
"I won"t speak at all. I"ll ignore them. Look." Quickly Ger shaped himself into a Man.
"That"s not bad," Pid said.
Ger tried a few practice steps, copying the b.u.mpy walk of the Man.
"But I"m afraid it won"t work," Pid said.
"It"s perfectly logical," Ger pointed out.
"I know. Therefore the other expeditions must have tried it. And none of them came back."
There was no arguing that. Ger flowed back into the shape of a log.
"What, then?" he asked.
"Let me think," Pid said.
Another creature lurched past, on four legs instead of two. Pid recognized it as a Dog, a pet of Man. He watched it carefully.
The Dog ambled to the gate, head down, in no particular hurry. It walked through, unchallenged, and lay down in the gra.s.s.
"H"m," Pid said.
They watched. One of the Men walked past, and touched the Dog on the head. The Dog stuck out its tongue and rolled over on its side.
"I can do that," Ger said excitedly. He started to flow into the shape of a Dog.
"No, wait," Pid said. "We"ll spend the rest of the day thinking it over. This is too important to rush into."
Ger subsided sulkily.
"Come on, let"s move back," Pid said. He and Ger started into the woods. Then he remembered Ilg.
"Ilg?" he called softly.
There was no answer.
"Ilg!"
"What? Oh, yes," an oak tree said, and melted into a bush. "Sorry.
What were you saying?"
"We"re moving back," Pid said. "Were you, by any chance, Thinking?"
"Oh, no," Ilg a.s.sured him. "Just resting."
Pid let it go at that. There was too much else to worry about.
They discussed it for the rest of the day, hidden in the deepest part of the woods. The only alternatives seemed to be Man or Dog. A Tree couldn"t walk past the gates, since that was not in the nature of trees. Nor could anything else, and escape notice.
Going as a Man seemed too risky. They decided that Ger would sally out in the morning as a Dog.
"Now get some sleep," Pid said.
Obediently his two crewmen flattened out, going immediately Shapeless.
But Pid had a more difficult time.
Everything looked too easy. Why wasn"t the atomic installation better guarded? Certainly the Men must have learned something from the expeditions they had captured in the past. Or had they killed them without asking any questions?
You couldn"t tell what an alien would do.
Was that open gate a trap?
Wearily he flowed into a comfortable position on the lumpy ground.
Then he pulled himself together hastily.
He had gone Shapeless!
Comfort was not in the line of duty, he reminded himself, and firmly took a Pilot"s Shape.
But a Pilot"s Shape wasn"t constructed for sleeping on damp, b.u.mpy ground. Pid spent a restless night, thinking of ships, and wishing he were flying one.
He awoke in the morning tired and ill-tempered. He nudged Ger.
"Let"s get this over with," he said.
Ger flowed gaily to his feet.
"Come on, Ilg," Pid said angrily, looking around. "Wake up."
There was no reply.
"Ilg!" he called.
Still there was no reply.
"Help me look for him," Pid said to Ger. "He must be around here somewhere."
Together they tested every bush, tree, log and shrub in the vicinity.
But none of them was Ilg.
Pid began to feel a cold panic run through him. What could have happened to the Radioman?