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incapacitated, Koojai would carry out the operation on his own. It was also neces-sary for him to keep
an eye on the inexperienced man and to make sure that he carried out his functions at the same time. It
would never do to swing the upper boom one way and the lower another.
Karkri, having secured himself in the seat at the bow, then told his crew that they were out for air
sharks, too.
"We need meat, men. Meat to feed us and the blad-der-creatures. Even if we killed every one of
the thir-ty giants in the pod ahead of us, we still would not have enough. So when the sharks come nosing
around to tear at our quarry, we will tear at them."
The boat passed the ship. Ishmael saw Namalee stand-ing on a catwalk on the starboard side,
and he smiled at her. She smiled back and then she disappeared.
Ishmael saw that the bow of the ship was now opened and asked Koojai about it.
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"When the ship enters the brit-cloud, it will act like a wind whale," Koojai said. "The tiny
creatures will billow into the funnel-like opening, and they will be caught in nets and reaped. They are
hard on the teeth if a man tries to crunch them raw, but cooked they become soft. They make a very
nutritious and passablypalatable soup."
There were four other boats out. One was teamed with Karkri's, and it sailed about a quarter of
a mile to the north on a parallel course with his. The common quarry was a leviathan the color of a ripe
plum. Koo-jai said that it was a bull, and it was the rear sentinel of the pod. It rolled from side to side
and traced an invisible wiggly line on the horizontal plane as it tried to keep all four boats in its sight. Then
it was within the red cloud, and a moment later Ishmael's boat plunged after it. But the crew had placed
goggles over their eyes and wrapped thin skins around their mouths. Thousands of tiny parachute shapes,
each about the size of a pumpkin seed, pelted Ishmael. They broke up against the hard skin of his
goggles and smeared them with red. He had to keep wiping away at them to see anything, though there
was nothing to see even when they were clean.
The impacts felt as if enormous hands were gently patting him all over his body. He turned his
head away and saw that Koojai had slipped off his mouth-protec-tion for a moment. He collected a
mouthful of the red creatures and then replaced the mask. After he had chewed gently for a minute, red
juice trickled from the corners of his lips.
Presently Karkri ordered that everybody should scoop out with one hand the piles of tiny bodies
col-lecting on the bottom of the boat. Ishmael, keeping one hand free for handling the lines, scraped up
handful after handful and cast them to one side. Butothers fell in a reddish snowstorm and piled up, and
the boat became sluggish.
There were spaces within the cloud free of the brit, however, for some reason of which no one
had in-formed Ishmael. The illumination within was like twi-light, and the monster ahead had become
quite black. There was also less wind, and the sails did not belly out so fully. This loss of speed was
matched by that of the whales, who had gained weight while going through the cloud. They had taken on
great cargos of the brit, which were being distributed through the stomachs looped like spaghetti strings
along the bones of the tail.
Ishmael dipped his hand again and again until the brit, like seeds, had been scattered outward. By
then the two boats were about two hundred feet apart and about three hundred feet behind the great
tail-fins. There they stayed, unable to catch up with the beast, and then they dived into the semisolid
cloud again.
Once more they emerged into a cleared space, as if coming from a forest into a meadow. This
time they found themselves between two of the monsters, the second meal having slowed most of the
pod. And, after being bailed out again, the boats increased their speed. Soon Ishmael's was even with the
whale's head and drawing up to the eye, red as the heart of a forge, big and round as a factory chimney,
yet seeming small in the Brobdingnagian skull.
The beast rolled forty-five degrees each way on its axis, striving to learn if there were other
hunters below or above it. Then it steadied and sailed on, though it could have evaded its pursuers by
discharging a bal-last of water or loosing gas. It would not if it followed the age-old ways of its ancestors;
a whale never seemed to learn that a lance would fly out for the hole in the skull about ten feet back of
the eye.
Karkri stood up, his feet shoved under straps on thefloor. He raised his goggles and he checked
again the coiling of the line around the fore post. Then he raised his free hand, the other holding the long
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thin bone shaft with the long thin bone head, and he made a short chopping movement.
Koojai stood up also. He twisted the end of a short stick of polished brown wood and then
hurled it into the air straight up. It turned over and over, high above the upper mast, high above the head
of the beast. Almost at the same time, a similar stick appeared on the other side of the head. Both
exploded at one end. Smoke curled out in streamers that described circles as the sticks, still rotating,
began to fall.
The twisting of one end had broken off a chemical which flowed into another and set off a
generation of gas. This ruptured the thin end and, with the inrush of air, the chemicals began to burn.
The sticks were the signals that the boats were ready. Whoever threw the first stick waited until
the second gave its signal before taking action.
Karkri balanced himself, rocking a little, the floor giving way to each shift of weight and the boat
also rocking. Then he hurled the lance and the line, thin almost to the point of invisibility, followed. The
shaft tore through the skin of the beast and disappeared.
Karkri had sunk to one knee after the throw. Now he fell back and grabbed the strap and
buckled its wooden tongue to hold him fast to the bow position. The line whirled off a spindle as the
beast loosed from its under-side several tons of silvery water. It rose swiftly, rotating its wing-sails so that
they would present the least sur-face to the air during its ascent.
Ishmael had but one chance to look at the leviathan, and then he was busy furling the sail. Koojai
worked to draw up the sail of the undermast. The rudderman waited for the jerk that would either snatch
the craft upward or break the line.
Karkri waited with his bone knife in hand. He could do nothing now but hang on until the beast
got tired, but he must be alert for the situation that would require cutting of the line. [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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