Hendricks said nothing. Everything was slipping away from him, faster and faster. Darkness, rolling and plucking at him. He closed his eyes. Hendricks opened his eyes slowly. His body ached all over. He tried to sit up but needles of pain shot through his arm and shoulder. He gasped. “Don’t try to get up,” Tasso said. She bent down, putting her cold hand against his forehead. It was night. A few stars glinted above, shining through the drifting clouds of ash. Hendricks lay back, his teeth locked. Tasso watched him impassively. She had built a fire with some wood and weeds. The fire licked feebly, hissing at a metal cup suspended over it. Everything was silent. Unmoving darkness, beyond the fire. “So he was the Second Variety,” Hendricks murmured. “I had always thought so.” “Why didn’t you destroy him sooner?” he wanted to know. “You held me back.” Tasso crossed to the fire to look into the metal cup. “Coffee. It’ll be ready to drink in awhile.” She came back and sat down beside him. Presently she opened her pistol and began to disassemble the firing mechanism, studying it intently. “This is a beautiful gun,” Tasso said, half-aloud. “The construction is superb.” “What about them? The claws.” “The concussion from the bomb put most of them out of action. They’re delicate. Highly organized, I suppose.” “The Davids, too?” “Yes.” “How did you happen to have a bomb like that?” Tasso shrugged. “We designed it. You shouldn’t underestimate our technology, Major. Without such a bomb you and I would no longer exist.” “Very useful.” Tasso stretched out her legs, warming her feet in the heat of the fire. “It surprised me that you did not seem to understand, after he killed Rudi. Why did you think he—”