pointed it out. "Look a
uld make out an obviously
ion, till suddenly the trees ceased on the opposite bank and the buildings and towers of a great city broke the sky. Elevated highways looped tower
temple is in there. After all, Argo's la
tar is that big?" bre
et across?"
ready started do
m," said Geo, climbin
trokes, Geo felt familiar hands suddenly grasp his body from below. This time he did
d river to the other. He switched from skulling into a crawl now, wondering how to scale the stones whend them on the broad ridge of concrete that walled the flowi
few minutes' walk the building walls had reached canyon size. "Now,
rom the top of one of these
ound themselves in a huge hollow room. Dim light came from a number of white tubes set around the wall. Only aN ELECTRI
it, in sma
Down Th
inders, across the
room turned about them, sinking. At last they stepped up into a
opened it. Natural light fell in on them as the others came to see. They entered a room
e happened to i
roadway must have crashed into
insane angle. The railing was twisted, but there were
imb that?" asked Geo. "It
Urson want
gh to see if there's anythin
son in a reco
ad twisted away, but the road itself mounted surely between the sheerin
in they avoided the right-handed road. A sign, half the length of a t
M
News, Communicati
e building, Snake suddenly stopp
it?" as
ward. Then he pointed
rts?" as
d to the bui
ne in there thi
achine, Snake
in there that's hurting your head?" interpret
e no
ed us before didn't hurt
sing housing of WMTH. "Mayb
y here, and if we see anything, we'
he ran forward, he could get out the other side
xious?" as
ing to get us out of trouble if we
nt as the yellow tinge in the sky turned blue. "I guess it
r a moment, the
d to the others
ck, and lights flickered all
nd the opposite railing. When they reached the next turn off that led to a still higher ramp, Geo looked back. Snake's miniature figure sat
of the turns
g," Iimmi a
trying to get to the top of," rumbled Urson, "we
hurry," Ge
stairway, they mounted another eighty feet to a broader highway where they could look down on the band of li
ere just about to enter a dark section when a
uddenly gone. A little farther, Ge
d woman rose from the ground, and began to walk backwards
as running away fro
Iimmi's jewel. "I wish we have
i agreed. Th
tch of functioning lights. The rib cage marked sharp l
back now?"
an't hurt you
e live one we saw?
now," Geo whispered in
one stopped, and then the other a few steps before the first. Then they dropped. Geo couldn'
" asked
," sai
Go on,"
isappeared a minute before. "They don't seem dangerous," G
said. "What's
e sky. No, not the sky, but from the roadway that crossed fifty feet above them. Looking d
elly-green under the white flare. Impaling its membrane on the skeletons, the mass flowed around them, faster, covering them, molding to them. There was a final surge, a shrinking, and its shapelessness contracted into limbs, a head, fee
ts hands from its sides. Then, behind i
Urson. "Wha
" Iimmi answered, backing awa
o said. "Loo
gures standing quietly behind them
arted to climb. He was also, he realized, high enough to get some idea of the city, which stretched, beyond the transparent covering of the steps, away in a web of lighted roadways, rising, looping, descendin
they reached the top entrance. Geo had only gotten half cle
house which flopped against the entrance. They edged by its pulsing, transparent sides. The la
rd them. Something was happening at the front. Figures, three or four o
an extended darkened section. A moment later there was a
e of the road tore away and the girders descended, webbing toward the ruined stump of a building from which
know," sa
them. Suddenly the figures fell to the ground, and flesh rolled forward
d another yard with a sick sound. "Hurry up," Geo added. With Urson in the middle, they started out along the twenty-inch wide girder. Lit from
ilding into which they were descending was th
four feet to the next small section of concrete. Once he saw something, let out a low whistle, but continued to lower himself to the straightened girder. Urson made the turn ne
then continued down, slowly.
ing, smoking, splashing off into the darkness. Here and there something half human would rise either to look around or to pull the collective mass further on, but then it would fall ba
point in the pale, sherbert-colored light, globbed
any farther?
t look it,
urface steaming, and then fell with a sucking noise, down into the hundred
ly over his hand, wrist,
entacles till now, pulsed to the edge of the jagged road, draped itself over the web of girders, and flungof the road, missed, and plummetted like smoking bullets. It hurled a great pseudopod back toward the safety of the road; it fell short, flopped downward, and the whole mass shook beneath the smoke that
nd. "My arm hurts,"
again, carefully. "Any ideas
s, I'm glad it d
red before them
t?" asked Urs
t something
it?" ask
," said Geo
he lower highway. Iimmi's memory proved good, and for an ho
is other hand. "I must have pulled hell out
his hand and rub
ny too," Iimmi said. "Like
thing," said Ge
Iimmi said, "Well, thi
d, now, the boy jumped off the rail, grabbed their sho
d so," said Urson. "I w
n spirit, if not in
e no
get headaches like that, you'd better teach us what to do with the
and tugged
rry," Geo said. "W
sted rail, was the mouth of a street that led into the waterfront. Snake, Iim
asked. "My arm is really shot.
them. Like a wounded thing it emerged from behind the broken highway, bul
he moonlight, the ruined piers spread along the waterfront to e
street, fill it, and then pour across the broken sto
ng was yanked from around his neck. Second, pain seared his arm as if the bones and ligaments were suddenly
ark shapes of leaves. Was he being carried? And his arm hurt. There was more drowsy half consciousness, and once a great deal of pain. When he opened his
d. (Not only could they see, this time; they could hear the thinking.) Just don't feel up to praying this afternoon. I am before the door, and above it, a black disk with three white eyes on it. Through the door, up black stone steps. Wonder if anyone will be up there now.
to call it success o
are ... sa
don't think I've taken my eyes off this thing for more than two hours since the
report to Ha
o say anything now.
do something with the City of New Hope
re they rea
pile? It was all it could do to get to the waterfron
ld you call them?
wouldn't call
ed. Now come on, look innocent, in case they come out. I hope the Old Man isn't watching. Guess they're not coming. And down the stairs again, the black stone walls moving past. Out another door, into the garden, dark flowers, purple, deep red, some with blue istone urn has one handle above. It's about eight feet tall. One, two, three: jump, and ... hold ... on ... and ... pull. And tr
bottom, beyond the folds of the edges where the top had been twisted tightly together, are the tiny scraps of copper, a few long pieces of dark metal, a piece of board, some brads. To this my grubby little hand adds the spool of copper wirdr
n again. Some
n and get to work. Here we go. Open the bag, and turn the conte
he wire to the metal, and maneuver the spool around the end of the rod. Around. And around. And around. Here we go round thethe distance: "And what
ir," as metal and scraps and wires
r twenty must report to afte
ch. There are mirrors along the vestibule, huge slabs of glass that rise thirty feet, reflecting the blue and yellow light back and forth from the colored windows of the temple. In the mirror I see pass: a dour-looking pr
d almost everyt