Warlord of Kor eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 125 pages of information about Warlord of Kor.

Warlord of Kor eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 125 pages of information about Warlord of Kor.

“Well, I don’t know if it’s better,” said Rynason.  “It may not even be as attractive, for that matter.  But have you considered that maybe when the Outsiders pulled out of our area they simply moved on elsewhere?  We’re so used to seeing dead cities that we think automatically that the Outsiders must be dead too, which I suppose is what’s bothering you about finding the Hirlaji here alive.  But it might be worse.  That whole empire could simply have moved on to this area; we could be on the edge of it right now, ready to run head-on into a hundred star systems just crowded with the Outsiders.”

Manning stared at him, and the expression on his face was not quite anger.  Something like it, but not anger.

“The ruins we’ve found here were built by the Hirlaji,” Rynason said.  “I saw them building when I was linked with Horng, and these are the same structures.  But the design was copied from older buildings, and I don’t know how far back I’d have to search the memories before I found where they originally got that kind of approach to design.  Maybe back before they developed telepathy.  But this race simply isn’t as old as the Outsiders; they came out of barbarism thousands of years after the Outsiders had left those dead cities we’ve been finding.  The chances are that if the Hirlaji were influenced by the Outsiders it was sometime around thirty thousand years ago ... which means the Outsiders came this way when they left those cities.  That would mean that we’re following them ... and we might catch up at any time.”

He stopped for a moment, then said, “We’re moving faster than they were, and we have no idea where they may have settled again.  One more starfall further beyond the Edge, and we may run into one of their present outposts.  But this isn’t it.  Not yet.”

Manning was still staring at Rynason, but it was a curious stare.  “You’re pretty sure that what you’ve been getting out of that horseface’s head is real?” he asked levelly.  “You trust them?”

Rynason nodded.  “Horng was really afraid; that was real.  I felt it myself.  And the rest of it was real, too—­I could see the whole racial memory there, and nobody could have been making that up.  If you’d experienced that...”

“Well, I didn’t,” Manning said shortly.  “And I don’t think I trust them.”  He paused, and after a moment frowned.  “But this direct linkage business does seem to be the best way we have of checking on them.  I want you to get busy, Lee, and go after that horse’s thoughts for us.  Don’t let him drive you out again; if he’s hiding something, get in there and see what it is.  Above all, don’t trust him.

“If these things are the Outsiders, they could be bluffing us.”

Manning stopped talking, and thought a minute.  He looked up under raised eyebrows at Rynason.  “And be careful, Lee.  I’m counting on you.”

Rynason ignored his paternal gaze, and turned instead to Mara.  “We’ll try it again tomorrow,” he said.  “Get in a requisition for a telepather this afternoon; make sure we’ll have one ready to go first thing in the morning.  I’ll check back with you about an hour after we leave here today.”

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Project Gutenberg
Warlord of Kor from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.