Tash flicked another switch and the speed globe jumped out of her hands, bouncing onto the forest floor. “Get going!” she rasped, stomping her foot in the globe’s direction. The computerized ball bounced away into the underbrush.
Whoever had been approaching from Tash’s left suddenly stopped, listening as the speed globe bounced through the bushes before it, too, stopped.
The Ithorian started forward, but as it approached the speed globe’s location, the ball shot away, making more noise in the brush.
The Ithorian followed.
While this had been happening, Tash hadn’t wasted a moment. As fast as she could, she slipped on her gravboots. As soon as the buckles were snapped, she hurried toward the nearest tree-and nearly fell on her face.
She’d forgotten how heavy the boots were.
Picking herself up, she dragged her feet to the trunk. She lifted one foot and planted it against the smooth black bark. Then, with a silent hope that the Force was with her, she activated the gravboot.
The mini-tractor beam powered up, and she felt her foot clamp down. It worked! Quickly, she hopped up and stuck her other foot onto the trunk.
Then, step by step, Tash walked up the side of the Bafforr tree.
It wasn’t easy. Even though her feet stuck to the trunk, gravity still pulled her body toward the ground. She had to use all the muscles in her legs to keep herself from bending backward like a branch too heavy with blumfruit.
Tash had just reached the lowest level of branches when she heard several sets of footsteps burst out of the brush beneath her, converging on the spot where she’d been standing. She froze, trying not to make a sound.
Below her, Zak, Hoole, and the Ithorians had gathered around Hodge. One of the Ithorians held up the speed globe. Hodge took it, then dropped it on the ground in disgust. None of them spoke. Tash suspected that they didn’t need to. They were all thinking with one mind-Spore’s.
Tash hoped that the branches around her would hide her from sight, but the Spore-victims didn’t even look up. The Bafforr tree would have been impossible to climb.
Tash’s legs started to tremble. Inside the gray-boots, her ankles ached.
A moment later, the victims of Spore dispersed, hunting the ground for any sign of their next prey.
Tash forced herself to walk a few feet to the nearest thick branch and crawled onto it. As soon as she had caught her breath, she looked around, trying to figure out her next move. She had to warn the Tafanda Bay, or any other herd ship she could find.
First things first, though. She had to get safely away from Spore. But how?
The answer came to Tash so quickly and easily that she almost laughed. She didn’t know if she’d figured it out for herself, or if it was the Force, or if it was yet another message from the Bafforr trees. All three seemed to be getting mixed together. Whichever it was, the solution popped into her mind as a single word.
Connections.
Just as the Bafforrs seemed to be connected as one mind, their branches had grown close together, sometimes touching, sometimes intertwining so that at the tops, one tree could hardly be distinguished from the next.
Tash crawled along the branch she was sitting on until she reached the branch of the nearest tree. Carefully, she switched trees, and continued on her way. Sometimes she had to climb down to reach a good branch; sometimes she climbed up. It wasn’t easy. Within minutes her hands, arms, and legs were scratched, but slowly, she covered distance.
Wherever Spore thought she was, that wasn’t where she was going to be soon. Tash allowed herself a momentary smile.
Then the smile vanished. The branch she had just climbed onto suddenly wrapped itself around her body and pulled her down toward the ground. More branches snared her arms and legs.
She had crawled into the vines of a vesuvague tree.
CHAPTER 16
Tash struggled, but she knew it was no use. The tree was too strong. It had pulled her down from the Bafforr branches and now held her near its own trunk, a meter or two above the ground. Every time she struggled, the vesuvague squeezed a little tighter.
Either it would crush her, or it would keep squeezing until she couldn’t move. Then it would wait for her to die of thirst.
She gave one final struggle. The tree fought back, wrapping a thin vine around her face. Her mouth was covered. It was getting hard to breathe, and her vision started to blur. Soon another vine would cover her eyes, and she’d be blind and helpless.
At least, she thought, I won’t be caught by Spore. Just before the last vine fell into place, she saw a figure walk toward her. Through her bleary eyes, she could just make out the hammerheaded silhouette of an Ithorian. It reached out to touch her.
Everything went black.
Tash opened her eyes with a start.