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they did, they were not necessarily poisonous. They were going to die, anyway, so why not test the
berries?
"Go ahead," Vala said. "It's your theory and your desire. Eat some!"
She was smiling peculiarly at him, as if she were enjoying the conflict between his hunger and fear.
"No," Palamabron said. "I will not be your guinea pig. Why should I sacrifice myself for all of you? I will
eat the berries only if all eat at the same time."
"So you can die in good company," Wolff said. "Come on, Pala-mabron. Put up or shut up-old Earth
proverb. You're wasting our time arguing. Either do it yourself or forget about it."
Palamabron sniffed at the berry he was holding, made a face, and let the berry fall on the rocky floor.
Wolff started to walk away, and the Lords followed. About an hour later, he saw another side-canyon.
On the way into it, he picked up a round stone which was just the right size and weight for throwing. If
only he could sneak up close enough to a fudger and throw the rock while it was looking the other way.
The canyon was a little smaller than that in which the Lords had made their first hunt. At its far end was a
single tempusfudger, eating the berries. Wolff got down on his hands and knees and began the slow crawl
towards it. He took advantage of every rock for covering and managed to get halfway across the canyon
before the animal no-ticed anything. It suddenly quit moving its jaws, sat up, and looked around, its nose
wiggling, its ears vibrating like a TV antenna in a strong wind.
Wolff hugged the ground and did not move at all. He was sweating with the effort and tension, since the
starvation diet had weakened him considerably. He wanted to jump up and run at the fudger and hurl
himself upon it, tear it apart, eat it raw. He could have devoured the entire animal from the tips of its ears
down to the tip of its tail and then broken the bones open to suck out the marrow.
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He forced himself to stay motionless. The animal must get over its suspiciousness soon, after which
Wolff could resume his turtle-like approach.
Then, from behind a rock near the fudger, another beast appeared. It was gray except for red wolflike
ears, had a long pointed face, a bushy tail, and was about midway in size between a fox and a coyote. It
sprang at the tempusfudger, coming up from behind it just as it was looking the other way.
Its teeth closed on air. The fudger had disappeared, escaping the jaws by a fraction of an inch.
The predator also disappeared, vanishing before it struck the ground.
Three animals appeared, two fudgers and one predator. Wolff, who liked to tag unknown things, at once
called it a chronowolf. For the first time, he was seeing the creature that nature-or Urizen-had placed
here to keep the fudger from overpopulating this world.
Wolff now had time to figure out what was happening with the leapers. There had been two. Then there
were none. Then, three. So the original fudger and the chronowolf had jumped ahead. But the fudger had
stayed only a microsecond, and leaped back also. So that he had reproduced himself and now there
were two for the wolf to chase.
Again, the animals vanished. They reappeared, four in number. Two fudgers, two chronowolves. The
chase was on, not only in space but in the strange gray corridors of backwards-forwards time.
Another simultaneous jump into the tempolimbo. Wolff ran to-wards a boulder around which grew a
number of bushes. He hurled himself down and then peered between the bushes.
Seven again. This time a wolf had come out of wherever he had been just behind his quarry. He hurled
himself forward, and his jaws closed around the neck of the fudger. There was a loud crack; the fudger
dropped dead.
Seven living, and one dead. A fudger had gone back and then for-ward again.
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The living vanished. Evidently the wolf did not intend to stay behind and eat his kill.
Then six were jumping around the plain. Savagely, a wolf bit an-other wolf on the neck, and the
attacked crumpled in death.
Nothing for three seconds. Wolff ran out and threw himself down on the ground. Although not hidden
behind anything this time, he hoped that his motionlessness, combined with the terror of the fudgers and
the bloodlust of the wolves, would make them not notice him,
Another wolf had been born out of time's womb. Parthenogenesis of chronoviators.
Two wolves launched themselves at each other, while the third watched them, and the fudgers hopped
around in apparent confusion.
The observer predator became participant, not in the struggle be-tween his fellows, but in the hunt. He
caught a fudger by the throat as it hurtled by him in its blind panic.
A fudger and a wolf died.
The living flickered out again. When they came back into his sight, a wolf gripped a fudger's neck and
cracked it.
Wolff slowly rose to his feet. At the exact moment that one of the wolves died, he hurled his stone at the
winner. It must have caught the motion out of the corner of its eyes, since it vanished just before the stone
would have struck. And when it shot out of the chute of time, it was going as swiftly as its four legs would
take it towards the exit.
"I'm sorry to deprive you of the spoils of victory," Wolff called out after it. "But you can resume the hunt
elsewhere."
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He went to call the other Lords and to tell them that their luck had changed. Six animals would fill their
bellies and furnish a little over for the next day. [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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