There were islands out here, the OOB's pictures from space said so, and so did the Pilgrim's own memories. But it had been long since he ventured here, and he had not expected to see the island kingdoms in the lifetime of his current members. Now suddenly he was going back. Flying back! The OOB's landing boat was a wonderful thing, and not nearly as strange as it had seemed in the midst of battle. True,
复件 (40) air max, they had not yet figured out how to program it for automatic flight. Perhaps they never would. In the meantime, this little flier worked with electronics that were barely more than glorified moving parts. The agrav itself required constant adjustment, and the controls were scattered across the bow periphery -- conveniently placed for the fronds of a Skroderider,
HIIT 25 ClassStretch 10 Class, or the members of a pack. With the Spacers' help and OOB's documentation, it had taken Pilgrim only a few days to get the hang of flying the thing. It was all a matter of spreading one's mind across all the various tasks. The learning had been happy hours, a little bit scary, floating nearly out of control, once in a screwball configuration that accelerated endlessly upward. But in the end, the machine was like an extension of his jaws and paws. Since they descended from the purpling heights and began playing in the cloud tops, Ravna had been looking more and more uncomfortable. After a particularly stomachs-lurching bump and drop, she said,
Core Cardio & Balance, "Will you be able to land okay? Maybe we should have postponed this till --" unh,
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larger image Dre Beats Studio Ferrari RED Limited! "-- you can fly better." "Oh yes, oh yes. We'll be past this, um, weather front real soon." He dived beneath the clouds and swerved a few tens of kilometers eastwards. The weather was clear here, and it was actually more on a line with their destination. Secretly chastened, he resolved to do no more joy-riding ... on the inbound leg, anyway. His second passenger spoke up then, only the second time in the two-hour flight. "I liked it," said Greenstalk. Her voder voice charmed Pilgrim: mostly narrow-band, but with little frets high up, from the squarewaves. "It was ... it was like riding just beneath the surf, feeling your fronds moving with the sea." Peregrine had tried hard to know the Skroderider. The creature was the only nonhuman alien in the world, and harder to know than the Two-Legs. She seemed to dream most of the time, and forgot all but things that happened again and again to her. It was her primitive skrode that accounted for part of that, Ravna told him. Remembering the run that Greenstalk's mate had made through the flames,
shoes on clearance, Pilgrim believed. Out among the stars, there were things even stranger than Two-Legs -- it made Pilgrim's imagination ache. Near the horizon he saw a dark ring -- and another, beyond. "We'll have you in real surf very soon." Ravna: "These are the islands?" Peregrine looked over the map displays as he took a shot on the sun. "Yes, indeed," though it didn't really matter. The Western Ocean was over twelve thousand kilometers across, and all through the tropics it was dotted with atolls and island chains. This group was just a bit more isolated than others; the nearest Islander settlement was almost two thousand kilometers away.