And Jazz promised himself that he would . . .
Down beside the sphere, Vyotsky quit cursing, laid aside his gun and turned to the bike. He saw the seat laid back on its hinges and his face twisted into a grin. Tucked loosely into a pocket of one of his packs he had a small bag of tools. It was the last thing they’d given him on the other side, and he’d been in such a hurry that he hadn’t stored his tools away under the seat. Then the sneering grin slid from his face and he breathed a sigh of relief. He’d not once thought of those tools since Simmons took the bike off him. If he had, then for sure he’d have thrown them away somewhere in the last couple of miles.
Now he unhooked a small kidney-pack from his back harness, got the tools out and loosened the front wheel. He stood on one of the forks with his foot wedged under the wheel, bent his back and hauled on the other fork one-handed until he could feel it giving, then slid the wheel free. Now it was only a question of straightening the forks. He picked up the front end of the bike, half-dragged, half-wheeled it over to a pair of large boulders where they leaned together. If he could jam the twisted forks into the gap between the boulders, and apply the right amount of leverage in the right direction . . .
He upended the bike and got the forks in position, began to exert leverage – and froze! He stopped panting from his exertions, stopped breathing, too. What the hell was that? Vyotsky raced for his gun, grabbed it up and cocked it, looked wildly all about. No one. Nothing. But he’d heard something. He could have sworn he’d heard something. He went warily back to the bike, and –
There it was again! The big Russian’s skin prickled, broke out in gooseflesh. Now what – ? A tiny voice? A tinny, metallic calling? A cry for help? He listened hard, and yet again he heard the sound. But it wasn’t a whisper, just a tiny, distant voice. A human voice – and it came from one of the magmass wormholes!
That wasn’t all – Vyotsky recognized the voice. Zek Foener’s voice, breathless and yet full of desperate hope, eager to communicate with someone, with anyone human in this entirely alien world.
He flung himself face-down beside the wormhole, peered over its rim. The smooth shaft was perfectly circular, about three feet in diameter, curving sharply inward toward the buried base of the sphere and so out of sight. But just where the shaft disappeared from view . . . there lay a small radio like the one Vyotsky carried in his own pocket! Obviously it had been Simmons’s, and he’d discarded it. Every time Foener’s voice came, so a little red monitor light flickered on and off on the control panel. It warned of reception, that light; it advised its operator to turn up the volume.
‘Hello?’ Zek Foener’s voice came again. ‘Hello? Oh, please answer! Is anyone there? I heard you speaking but … I was asleep! I thought I was dreaming! Please, please – if there’s anyone out there – please say again who you are? And where you are? Hello? Hello?’
‘Zek Foener!’ Vyotsky breathed, licking his lips as he pictured her. Ah, but a different woman now from the acid-tongued bitch who’d spurned his advances at Perchorsk! This world had seen to that. It had changed her. Now she craved companionship. Any sort!
Vyotsky took out his own radio, switched it on and yanked up the aerial. There were only two channels. He systematically transmitted on both of them, and this was his message:
‘Zek Foener, this is Karl Vyotsky. I’m sure you’ll remember me. We’ve discovered a way to neutralize the one-way drag effect of the Gate. I’ve been sent to seek out any survivors of through-Gate experiments and bring them back. Find me, Zek, and you find your way out of here. Do you hear me?’
As he finished speaking, so the red light on his set began to flicker and blink. She was answering, but he couldn’t hear her. He turned up the volume and got broken, crackling static. He shook the set, glared at it. Its plastic casing was cracked, and the miniature control panel in the top was badly dented. It must have got damaged when he was flung from the bike. Also, its proximity to Simmons’s discarded radio was jamming reception on that set, too.