He looked at her.

'Are you afraid this may turn out to be a Company artefact?' he said carefully. She nodded.

'There is an old kung story,' said Marco softly, his voice like the currents in a quicksand, 'concerning a lord who had a high tower built. Then he called various wise kung together and said, "I will give my finest oyster farm and the famed kelp beds of Tchp-pch to the kung who can determine the height of that tower using nothing but a barometer. Those who fail will be exiled to the dry lands because that's the way it goes for the not-wise-enough."

So the wise kung tried and, although they could find the height to within a few chetds, this was not considered accurate enough and they were sent to the dry lands.'

'I like folk tales,' said Kin, 'but do you think this is--'

'Then one day,' said Marco loudly, 'the wisest kung, who hadn't hazarded an answer yet, took his barometer to the home of the lord's master builder, and said, "I will give you this beautiful barometer if you will be so good as to tell me the height of the tower."

'

A shadow loomed over them as Silver thrust her fangs over the deck awning.

'Forry to interrupt,' she said, 'but you might be interefted in thif...'

They looked past her. Most of the men had stopped rowing and were staring up into the sky.

Kin stared with them. There were three specks moving across the haze like high-altitude jets.

'Vapour trails,' said Marco. 'Obviously They have come looking for us. We won't have to go and offer them our barometer.'

'What can you see, Silver?' Kin asked. The shand twanged a fang.

'They appear to be flying lizards,' she said. 'The method of propulsion seems mysterious, but we may learn more, since they are losing height fast.'

Leiv tugged at Kin's arm. Around them men were methodically tossing oars and bundles into the water and diving over the side after them. The little man seemed to be desperately searching for words. Finally he remembered one.

'Fire?' he suggested, and tumbled her backward into the sea. The coldness numbed her, but she knew enough to twist and kick out convulsively. Treading water and gripping a handy oar she watched the sky. The specks had made a wide turn and the distant double thump of a sonic boom rolled across the sea. Marco and Silver had stayed on the boat, staring.

Soon three lizard-shapes with theatrically bat-like wings glided over the wave tops to circle the boat in perfect formation, treading the air with two sets of cruel talons. Wisps of smoke trailed from their dilated nostrils.

Then they drifted towards the north, becoming specks again as they made another turn. They also gained height. If they were aircraft, thought Kin, I'd say this was going to be a bombing run.

As the first dragon plummeted towards the ship, Leiv put one hand firmly on her head and pushed her underwater.

She bobbed up furious, her ears ringing. The water was steaming. Smoke was rising from the boat.

There was a sudden mound in the water beside her and Marco surfaced, gasping and cursing. A bigger splash further along marked Silver's return from the depths.

'What happened? What happened?' gasped Kin.

'It hovered and breathed fire,' said Silver.

'And no bloody lizard does that to me!' screamed Marco. He struck out for the charred hull, rocking it violently in his attempt to get aboard.

Another beast drifted down. There was a quiet splash as Silver somersaulted and kicked away for the green depths.

There was also a groan from the water-treading men as they saw Marco uncloaked for the first time, grasping an oar with all four hands. As the dragon homed in it was bright enough to tread air just out of reach of Marco's impromptu weapon, wingbeats making spray patterns on the sea while it gathered its breath.

Something white shot through the water like a cork and gripped a pair of hovering claws. For a second Silver and the startled creature hung there. Then the wings met with a clap as they shot down into the sea, and Kin heard a distinct hiss.

The third dragon must have been the brightest, thought Kin. The brightest always fought last. It was too late for it to stop its flight. Instead it passed over the boat with its wings spread like parachutes, and, as it thundered by above his head, Marco screamed and leapt.

He was wearing his lift belt. The dragon tried to twist in mid air, tumbled, regained its balance and tried to flee for height and safety. It didn't work.

On the other side of the boat the water foamed and a wingtip beat the surface listlessly. Then the hull canted sharply. Silver was climbing aboard.

The men around Kin shouted and struck out, laughing as they heaved themselves up the side.

High above the dogfight the surviving dragon screamed and disappeared speedily into the east, giving Kin a short and tantalizing glimpse of its high-speed propulsion. Those horror-story wings were too clumsy for anything except ponderous flight. To travel fast, the dragon folded them along its side, bent its head back under its body, and exhaled. By the time it was too far away for Kin to see details its breath was yellow-hot.

She followed something else down the sky as it tumbled lazily. It was a dragon head. Shortly afterwards, although to the silent crowd on the boat it seemed much longer, the body followed, wings still spread wide, spiralling slowly with Marco climbing to its back and still hacking with the knife. When he hit the water a cheer went up.

It turned to anger when they saw that Silver was dragging her dragon aboard, still alive. When the men moved hurriedly aside they gave Kin a good view.

The beast flopped mournfully on the deck, water streaming from its wings. It raised its dripping head towards her and sneezed, violently.

Two jets of warm water hit Kin on the legs.

Marco was helped aboard by all four arms. His comb blazed blood-red and, as he stood up amid the admiring crowd, he raised his black-stained knife over his head and yodelled:

'Refteg! Ymal refteg PELC!'

Kin looked across at Silver, who was unscrewing her fangs. The shand grimaced.

'Tell me again about his being officially human,' she said. 'I keep forgetting.'

'What,' asked Kin, 'do you intend to do with that?' One of the men beside her had drawn his sword and was offering it proudly to the shand, hilt first. Silver ignored him.

'It's dead,' she said, 'but we have the body. I would very much like to know how an organic creature can breathe fire.' She grabbed the corpse by neck and tail and dragged it aft.

Marco swaggered over to Kin.

'I triumph!' he shouted.

'Yes, Marco.'

'They declare war on us! They sent dragons! But They reckoned without me!'

'Yes, Marco.'

'Together They conspire against me yet I overcome!' he screamed, eyes glazed. Then his expression faded.

'You just think I'm a paranoid kung, don't you,' he said sulkily.

'Since you mention it...'

'I'm proud to be human. Make no mistake! As for the other,' he said, turning, 'just because you're paranoid doesn't mean They aren't out to get you.'

She watched him stride back to the men, who clustered around him. Frightened of everything except immediate physical danger. And as human as a tiger.

Silver was gazing ruefully at the dumbwaiter. It was not damaged, but the plastic panelling would never be the same again.

When the men were at the oars again Kin took out her suit toolkit and arranged the dragon corpse as best she could on the tiny foredeck. The kit was small but comprehensive. A marooned spaceman could use it to survive on an alien world for years. Some had. Kin selected a medical scalpel.

Later she opened the kit fully and found a multichisel.

A minute later she reached in and assembled the vibro-saw. The screeee as it skidded and juddered over scales set her teeth on edge, but she didn't switch off until the blade broke.