Hunters of the Red Moon Read online




  Hunters of the Red Moon

  Marion Zimmer Bradley

  and Paul Edwin Zimmer

  Copyright

  copyright © 1973 by Marion Zimmer Bradley and Paul Edwin Zimmer

  cover art copyright © 2011 by Larry Dixon

  Table of Contents

  Copyright

  Table of Contents

  CHAPTER ONE

  CHAPTER TWO

  CHAPTER THREE

  CHAPTER FOUR

  CHAPTER FIVE

  CHAPTER SIX

  CHAPTER SEVEN

  CHAPTER EIGHT

  CHAPTER NINE

  CHAPTER TEN

  CHAPTER ELEVEN

  CHAPTER TWELVE

  CHAPTER THIRTEEN

  CHAPTER FOURTEEN

  CHAPTER FIFTEEN

  CHAPTER SIXTEEN

  CHAPTER ONE

  That speck of light had been hanging in the same part of the sky, it seemed, for a long time.

  Dane Marsh lounged on the prow of the Seadrift, naked except for trunks and a loose shirt flung over his sunburned shoulders, and watched the unmoving point of light. Sun on the wing of a plane, he thought. Sign of life, the first in days. Human life, that is; plenty of flying fish, dolphins; depends how far you want to go down the scale to call life; billions and billions of shrimp and plankton.

  But we're off the regular jet plane routes, and way off the shipping lanes. The last ship I sighted was that tanker nineteen days ago.

  He wondered if it was a plane.

  He entertained himself briefly with the thought of men in business suits, women in nylons and furs, seated in orderly rows, maybe even watching a movie, eighteen hundred miles from the nearest coast. Out here, where two hundred years ago Captain Bligh and twenty-two men sailed for weeks and months in an open boat, starving and burned up by the sun, and now Pan American Airlines flew over the same area in a few hours, just time enough for an American first-run movie and a couple of drinks.

  I wouldn't mind one of those drinks, right now, with ice in it, Dane thought. Seadrift did pretty well, all things considered, in the food and drink department, what with freeze-dried chow mein and beef stroganoff, but he would like a long cool drink with ice in it, served to him by one of those pretty stewardesses. A refrigerator on a thirty-foot boat would be stretching things a little.

  Damn it, that plane doesn't seem to be moving. It's just hanging there. One place.

  Obviously, then, Dane told himself without moving from his idle vantage point, it couldn't be a plane. Reflection on a cloud, or something.

  For miles around, in every direction, the Pacific was quiet, slow ripples moving, almost imperceptibly, out of the east and dying away toward the sunset. Seadrift was ghosting along, her vast acreage of spinnaker set to catch the lightest of airs—a light breeze usually sprang up about sundown—but for the moment, even the solitary crew was superfluous. Dane Marsh knew he should get up, check the self-steering, go below and make himself a pot of tea, put out a fishline for any stray overnight catch, but the cumulative effect of sun and sea and silence held him half hypnotized, staring at the distant and unmoving light which looked more and more like the typical circular flash of sunlight on bright metal, the wing of a distant plane. He liked the idea that it was a plane, that there were other human beings within sight, if out of reach. Stewardesses in miniskirts.

  It's been two hundred and eighty-four days, by actual count, since I saw a woman who could speak English. Or even one who couldn't. Why the hell did I ever get this notion, anyway? Sailing around the world alone in a small boat—it's not as if I'd be the first. Or even the fastest.

  It seemed a good idea at the time, that's all.

  So what if he wasn't the first? These days, everything worth doing in the adventure line had already been done. Climbing Everest. Sailing around the Horn alone. Reaching the North Pole. Everything except going to the moon, and that took a kind of education and sponsorship he never could manage.

  I envy the first guy to hike around it on foot. Now there's an adventure for some lucky bastard, someday....

  Reluctantly, Dane Marsh hauled himself up from his lazy perch. Work to be done. The sails were slamming in the first wisps of the oncoming night breeze; he adjusted the jib and the poled-out spinnaker slightly and set a new tack, then went down to root out some supper. Belowdecks the cabin was stifling in the heat; he had debated taking advantage of the quiet sea to cook something hot, but the steambath effect discouraged him. He opened a packet of rye crackers and a tin of cheese, dumped lemon crystals into drinking water and stirred in sugar, and carried the food and drink on deck, to catch the breeze.

  The light lingered long in these latitudes at this time of year, and the sun lingered, low and red on the horizon, making a crimson and scarlet track across the barely-moving sea. A tiny crescent of moon, a mere scrap of silver, hung low and dim above the setting sun. High above, a glimmer of the evening star—

  No, Dane Marsh thought incredulously, it's the same damn light!

  He knitted his brows, determined to solve the puzzle. A plane? Hell no; the oldest prop plane would have been miles out of sight-range by now. A jet would have been long gone while he was watching it. Satellite? No; they move. Weather balloon? Well, maybe one could drift this far off an inhabited coast, possibly with the wind from Australia, but it would be a real freak.

  He bit into his crackers and cheese, watching the strange light which hung, seeming to brighten, in the slowly fading red twilight. It seemed self-luminous and was now the apparent diameter of a golf ball.

  Some weather phenomenon, no doubt, but one I've never seen in fifteen years spent mostly at sea.

  Oh, well, he told himself, if there was one thing you learned at sea, it was that you've always got more to learn. This old world still had plenty of surprises left for people who kept their eyes and ears open, Dane thought, munching at his crackers.

  It was getting bigger. Now it was the apparent size of a small dinnerplate, and had elongated somewhat from round to oval.

  I wonder if this is what people are seeing when they report seeing flying saucers—excuse me—Unidentified Flying Objects! This was sure as hell some kind of flying object, and it was about as unidentified as he ever saw!

  Now he could see that it was definitely solid, although without any idea as to its actual distance he could not judge its size. He watched, in growing wonder and wild surmise, as it settled slowly down toward the surface of the water and grew ever greater, greater, more huge and unbelievably contoured.

  Flying saucer? Flying skyscraper, more like it!

  It was bigger than an ocean liner; bigger than a tanker.

  No plane ever built was this size. Not even the Russians...

  Fear surged over him. Not, yet, the obvious fear of the great vessel, but—to a man of Dane Marsh's type—a deeper, more compelling fear.

  Have I freaked out? Loneliness does weird things to people...

  He fought for calm, setting his teeth and reaching out to grip the familiar mast of the Seadrift. The smooth white paint he had just renewed two months ago, already specked with the relentless eroding of the salt. His own hand, calloused with handling ropes and spars. His pulse, a little elevated with fright, was still perceptible and pounding steadily away, and his eyes were clear, for when he moved his head and blinked the huge strange thing had not moved.

  Well, I'm not nuts, anyway. Not dreaming or hallucinating.

  Therefore, even if there isn't any such thing, that thing is definitely there. If I'm seeing it, and there's nothing wrong with my eyes, it must exist.

  And therefore—his breath caught in his throat at the next, inescapable step of his logi
c—if no country on Earth has ever built anything remotely like this, it must somehow come from outside.

  He discovered that his arms and legs were ridged, in the heat of the tropical sunset, with gooseflesh. Outside. In one great step, his awareness had transcended the slow steps of scientists toward the stars. There was something out there.

  And it swept over him, with a shuddering thrill. Did I think there weren't any adventures left?

  Hard on the heels of that came a sudden icy fear. All this time, and they had kept their very existence secret; what would happen to him if they happened to notice him watching them? He did not yet believe they were malicious. Why should they be? A spaceship capable of traveling interstellar distances (what strange metal was that hull, pale with a shimmer like a peacock's wing?) would pay no more attention to a little ship like the Seadrift than he, Dane Marsh, paid to a flying fish. (But then, what did he do when a flying fish landed on his deck in the morning? Sometimes he threw it back. But if he happened to be hungry, he fried it for breakfast.)

  Dane Marsh began, moving swiftly and steadily, to tack his ship to wear around. He was curious, yes, but he'd rather watch from a safer distance. He had no desire to end up in a sort of galactic frying pan.

  His arms felt heavy and clumsy as he lifted them to haul on the ropes; then a curious buzzing sound, a tingling, began to ring in his ears. He was possessed with a sense of frantic urgency, but it seemed as if he were wading through a sticky pool of molasses; it was an effort to lift his foot from the deck, and the growing sense of unreality swept him with renewed terror.

  Is this all a hallucination, then? A bad dream turning into a nightmare?

  With savage effort, he twisted his head around so that he could see the great looming ship. Slowly, slowly, a hatchway was opening, and a blinding light shining from inside, but Dane Marsh hit the deck and lay there, clawing faintly as he struggled to rise.

  By the time the deck swayed under the strange alien step, he was unconscious, still struggling in his dreams.

  They were off the jet routes and way off the shipping lanes, and no other eye on Earth saw the great ship before it winked out of normal space five miles above the central Pacific Ocean. The Seadrift was found, empty, drifting, five weeks later by a yacht bound for Hawaii....

  CHAPTER TWO

  Dane Marsh came up to awareness with a savage pain in his throat, rising up out of confused nightmares of wild beasts clawing at his jugular vein, of spurting blood and smells which somehow roused an atavistic terror (lions, fresh blood, the faint rottenness of something dead), and then, all at once, he was conscious. His eyes, flicking open, took in all at once the white cold surroundings, the two forms (nightmare! Man-tall, but flat-faced, furred—a lion's mane!) bending over him. The needles still in his throat. He ripped, tensed swelling muscles, struggled to cry out, but only a tearing numbness lanced with split-second prickles of agony burst his throat.

  He was strapped down. Tied, hand and foot, not a muscle to move—

  Tortured!

  He squeezed his eyes shut again, in spasmodic horror, then, fighting for calm, slowly opened them. His throat was numb, now, without pain; had they tried to remove his vocal cords? The two lion-faced creatures had hands not too unlike human hands, working delicately about his throat, but now he felt no pain at all, only an odd numbness. Well, whatever the hell they were up to, he couldn't have moved an eyebrow to stop them, so they couldn't mean him all that much harm if they went to this much trouble to anesthetize him.

  He looked around. Odd metallic things hanging from smooth bulkheads; unidentifiable, but they'd have been equally baffling, he supposed, in a really up-to-date hospital. He studied the two lion-faced things. They had hands with, he realized, a double thumb, moving with extreme deft suppleness, and the hands were encased in thin cloth of some sort. They both wore coverall garments of gray-blue fabric. He wished he could see what they were doing with his throat. There was a sudden wrench as one of them twisted and adjusted something there, then he felt the painless prick and tug; they were sewing him up. One of them touched him briefly with a long light-tipped wand, and spoke aloud.

  "You'd think sooner or later some of these savages would realize we're not trying to hurt them, but they all fight like fiends," the first one said. "This one's not as bad as most. Is he hooked up yet?"

  Dane Marsh blinked. Were they speaking English? No, if he listened carefully he could hear the curious guttural syllables, but they made sense....

  "I think so, I'll try him," the second, slightly taller one said, and bent over Dane Marsh. "Please don't struggle, and we will let you go; we don't want you to injure yourself. We have simply equipped you with an implanted translator disk. See, now you can understand what is said to you. Please tell me if you can hear and understand what I am saying."

  Dane Marsh found that the straps holding him to the table were slackened slightly so that he could sit up, although his wrists were still strapped down. He ran his tongue over dry lips. He felt parched. His voice felt hoarse and strange as he said, "Yes, I can hear you all right. What—where am I? How did I get here? What do you want with me?"

  "All right," said one to the other. "Successful. I don't like the ones where they never do understand, and we have to treat them like cattle. Nice work."

  "Mmm, yes. Not much area for the disk in this one. I was afraid I'd cut a nerve. I haven't had much luck with proto-simians. Okay, take him back to the rest, then."

  Dane shouted, "Answer me, damn you! What do you want with me? How did I get here? Who are you people, anyway?"

  One of the lion-faced things said, "This is the part that always gets me. When they start asking for answers. It's a lousy job, all things considered." He prodded Dane with the light-tipped wand; Dane flinched with the sharp, painful electric shock.

  The other creature said, "No need for that, Ferati, he isn't one of the dangerous kind. Anyway, there's a tangler field up there if we need it." He looked at Dane, warily loosing his wrist straps and said, "It isn't our duty to answer your questions, but they will be answered in due time. You have nothing to lose, and everything to gain, by being patient. In a few minutes someone will come to take you back to your quarters. Now if you will go peacefully, perhaps we can make you a little more comfortable. Is your mouth dry? That's only the aftereffects of the anesthetic and the tangler field they used when they brought you on board. Here, try this." He handed Dane a disposable cup of some liquid; Dane found he could move one hand. He sipped it gingerly and found it was sour but remarkably thirst-quenching.

  Over his head one of them said, "I wonder if he's going to be one of the more intelligent and tractable ones."

  "Hope so. The Old Man is always talking about getting a couple of real wild ones, but last time—"

  A speaker on the wall buzzed and one of the lion-faced creatures said without looking up, "Right away," and, taking the cup from Dane, indicated that he should stand up. "Go over to that door. Someone will be there to take you to your quarters...."

  Dane dug in his heels stubbornly. "Not until I get a few questions answered," he said. "I know I'm on board a spaceship. But why? Where do you come from? What are you going to do with me?"

  The being who had shocked him with the wand made a threatening gesture. "I already told you; it is no part of our duty to answer your questions. Do as you're told and you won't get hurt."

  Dane put his head down and rushed. He actually seized the lion-headed creature with one outstretched hand, giving a sharp judo twist.

  And the roof fell in on him and he disappeared.

  When Dane Marsh woke again he was in a cage.

  That was his first impression; shadows of slanting bars running up and down between him and the light, which was bluish-white and pale. A cage.

  He stirred, sat up, dizzily clutching his head.

  On second look, more prison than cage. A large barred room, lined on one wall with sleeping bunks, netting crisscrossed in front of them—he supposed, to k
eep the occupants from falling out during fast maneuvers. In the large room there were about a dozen people.

  People; loosely. About half of them were human like himself, or with differences too minor for him to see at once. None were the lion-faced breed he had met in the place where he had awakened before, which he supposed was a sort of ship's hospital. But only half of the occupants of the room where he found himself were very much like himself. The others were—different.

  There was a being at least eight feet tall, who reminded him strangely of a spider; gray and fuzzy and with strange large eyes; and he had a confused impression of more arms and legs than there ought to be, although he couldn't quite figure out why. There was one who was squat and powerfully built with leathery skin or leathery clothing and a face-mask of the same. It was too much for Dane Marsh to take in all at once.

  My God, am I in a zoo? Just one of the animals?

  "Not a zoo," said a woman, standing by his bunk, and Dane realized he had spoken aloud. The words sounded strange but Dane seemed to "hear" them resonating against the disk which the lion-things had implanted in his throat. He supposed it was a mechanical translator of some sort; he couldn't even begin to imagine the technology which had created such a thing. "No, you're not in a zoo. Not quite. You'd probably be better off if you were. This is a Mekhar slave ship."

  He started to swing his legs over the bunk; the woman bent and helped unstrap the webbing from the front. He said, "How long was I out?"

  "A couple of hours. They must have used a tangler set to stun—they have one in the hospital, and I imagine they captured you with one."

  Dane thought back to the last moments on the deck of the Seadrift. "Yes. My arms and legs kept moving slower and slower and I finally must have passed out. It was a nightmare."

  "It was real enough," the woman said somberly. She was about Dane's age, with red hair waving loosely, uncombed, and wearing a sort of loose shirt and trousers which looked like what a Russian or Israeli girl soldier would wear. "Are you from one of the worlds of the Unity? Slaving is forbidden in any of the Unity star-systems, but the Mekhar ships do it anyway; it pays well enough for them to risk it."