Ontogeny
land they entered as they descended the southern slopes of the Grantens was almost desert. Yellow grass covered the ground, interrupted by th
at meat at last night's supper. There was nothing larger than a small village on the path they would be taking through Wilterland, nowhere they'd be able to buy
re," said Crane as he knelt to examine some rabbit droppings. "Beef, pork,
ntion," replied Tallion. "Besides, it's too
d Crane. "You kn
tracker. How long have
ion with you. Your last
o was be
f the old timers, been wit
me and the Brigadier. Real ch
member the name of
had a tracker. So
aren't worth catching. Thin and scrawny.
, just from the state of those droppings. If you were a decen
here, just look at what they've got to eat. I
hair like the pennants flying from the walls of a castle, as if his large, muscular body was a fortress that could resist the might of a
than scrawny rabbit. Partridge, grouse, all good and
eeper," he said. "I'll put a few snares out, then we'll go take a look over that hill." He reached in
be partridges
re might be s
ge. 'Course, you've got to hang it for a few days to get the best from it, and you need some seasoning. Pepper and ga
pes on rabbit, that's all. I'm sure the Brigadier will
ot any herbs
ve a long list of all the stuff you'd
I had any
you said. You implied yo
in case. My dad always said to carry a bit of pepper around, just in case someone tries
e. "If you really don't like rabbit, I might be able to rustle up a couple of hedgehogs. There's good eating on them. Pity the soil's
ave partridge. What
☆
each other. "Are you sure this
d Spencer, slinging the brace of rabbits over his
aken us back to the camp. You should have
ess grassland that surrounded them. "Okay, let's go to the top of that hill. We'll be able to see
r looked over to see a jaycat looking at them, it's yellow eyes fixed on the rabbits carried by Spencer. It trotted forward a few paces, eyeing them warily, a
ow us all the way back to camp,
eat them," mused S
arper, wrinkling h
ads of places. The Carrowmen
ll t
tasty. Like beef, if you prepare it right. Maybe we can lure our friend into coming in close..." He reached for an arrow from the quiver strapped across his b
Harper dreamily. "Would be nice to get back and f
, unless there's yellowface deer. They live in gra
might have found a patch of woodland, hidden from sight behind
free samples to passers by. Or a meat stall doing bus
sour look. "It's ea
s fun
"There!" cried Harper, pointing off to the east. "W
nting finger with his eye
st to the right o
a dead tree b
ught. "There must have been," he sa
encer, pointing in another direction.
p!" insisted Harper.
ope of the hill towards the other two men. Ha
☆
ng towards the hill. "Oh, It's o
asked Dacson. His hand wen
revealed itself. "I think they've just got too much energy," he sai
sked Spencer as he skidded to a stop beside them. "Got two rabb
t open to show them the five carp it contained. One was a giant, nearly two feet
g there, on its side. I wouldn't eat it if I were starving! Mine are go
of breath, Harp?" laughed Smith. "Shame w
" suggested Dacson. "Why not offer him your f
in spots." He looked up at the sun, now low on the
you brought a
istol. As he aimed, though, a second cat came trotting up to join the first, followed by a third. "He brought his family. Let's invit
," said Smith, shaking his head s
tance." Harper scowled as he holstered the gun. "I
ty, you just
he south. "Camp's nearly a mile away. We need to get
sty grassland. Dacson in the lead,
ld always eat one of the horses," said Spenc
d walk the rest of the way
are small, they c
aving a horse is a death sentence, and we'll probably be passing through places like that b
loody hell, it w
r. Not when you're one of the Brigadier's own men. He only
le up when we're in a tight spot. Good mor
hree men..." Spencer gave him a hurt loo
t. "There's always globs," he said.
ore globs he'll be the next thing on the menu! I think he is a glob that went straight to human in one step
re," said Dacson, looking around the a
eplied Harper. "You might have
ike three inches
said Spencer. "The others'll have had
☆
d popped it into his mouth. "At least we've found something t
m the other man. "A yellow faced deer! An actual yellow faced deer and all you had to
he past, in combat. He came to life in battle. A light came into his eye, an energy came into his body. He was fast and deadly, a terror
the shot. I can actual
rewarded by a look of disgust. It was the only thing he could do that brought any kind of reaction from the other man, and so he'd been doing it almost continually since leaving c
be essential to his thinking processes. If he stopped talking, it was as though his brain stopped working, as if new thoughts could only enter his head if he
us to starve to death out here. Starving to death
him crazy like that he might have decided to find out, but there was something about Spooner that freaked him out a little. He gave the impression, somehow, that if he ever did snap out of his mood, if he did start speaking, he might say fr
re somewhere, and it won't be the only one. If you see it, j
owing away from it. The deer won't go far from it. Harp and Spence went that way, I know. If there're deer there, they've either caught them already
n the midst of Cowley's thick mane of greasy black hair. He knew how his face would disappear in an eruption of red spray, invisible to him from behind except for a momentary mist that would appear around his head like a brie
ded himself. There would be no way to conceal his guilt. They'd hear the shot, they'd notice Cowley's absence. They'd kill him as a murderer, but the satisfaction he knew he'd
nities. A chance would come for him to satisfy his needs in perfect safety. He could wait
spoke!" He said. "You actual
though, and went back to exam
☆
of the smaller ones," he complained, then wished he hadn't spoken. Griping only went up the chain of command, not d
n a year ago, with a brood of half turned rabbits back somewhere. This one
at from your p
y past. I pai
can be useful to us. I would have just shot
xt travellers to pass this way would have that
with us. Tell me, if you hadn't been ca
ight up until he went back into the ground. It's a good
ame to Blane and he carefully laid the deer down on the ground. Then he made a hand signal to Cotton, the sign for a stealthy approach. Cotton grinned. The Sergeant wanted to carry out an impro
looked in their direction, dashing forward to the next scrap of cover whenever he looked away. Where was Malone? If he was asle
e had no trouble picking him off. Not that Blane would have used a rifle. The noise would wake up the whole camp. A bow and arrow would be better, but being far less accurate he'd gave to be much closer
e gave a start of surprise at the exact same time. Malone yelled, jumping to his feet and fumbling for his
ruefully. "It's just us. Stand easy." Cotton
" Malone turned his back on the other two men as he adjuste
al sense, I suspe
e'd been approaching the camp from the other direction you would have b
the batman indignantly. "It just takes a couple of minu
lled Quill from the c
led back Malone. "It's j
got any
ing and failing to
You'll find a deer fifty yards back tha
rgeant could reprimand him further and Blane and
et?" asked the Serge
off to the north. "One of them's Harper, I think, to judge from the shuff
out the B
pointed off to the east. "I think he wanted to
☆
rigadier thought it had happened more recently, possibly as a result of a lightning strike. The blackened remains of fairly large bushes stood within the
ions said that he should have come with a couple of men in case of trouble, but he thought the chances of the cottage actually being occupied were small. There were no trade routes or large towns within fifty miles, nothing that a ga
cover to watch the building for a few minutes. No horses tethered outside, not on his side at least. No sign that the undergrowth had been trampled down recently. No smoke rising into the sky. No sounds above the gentle sighing of the wind and
o have survived, but the inner door connecting the still intact eastern half of the building with the fire gutted western stood half open, allowing him to see part of the floor and the far wall. There was no movement th
lly scorched by fire, the rest warped and half rotted and with the remains of a coat of paint flaking and peeling away. As he approached the door, though, he was brought up short by a d
ome kind of accident, thrown from a horse or something. He'd crawled in here to die, knowing no help would come for him and that he faced a slow death from starvation. He'd kno
tiny globules of transparent flesh that split off and wriggled away in search of small, damp cracks in which to make a new life. The traveller had hoped that some of them would be adopted by worms and beetles and begin the long climb back up the ladder of life. Some of them might even become hu
eeds growing in the light slanting in through the empty window. He saw that the light was growing dim and red as the sun dropped towards the horizon and decided that the time had co
n, while Cotton was cutting up another haunch they'd cooked earlier into thin strips. The rest of the deer lay nearby, still waiting to be cooked, while Cotton scraped
e first to see him. "Come on in, Brigadier!" he called out.
ded Smith. "Got a nice bi
Malone as the Brigadier reached him. "I didn't l
A nice big bit f