CONFIDENTLY, MOONEY started down the steps toward the egg and the moving figures that flitted soundlessly around it. Harse was not the only time traveler, Mooney saw. Good, that might make it all the simpler. Should he change his plan and feign amnesia, pass himself off as one of their own men? Or— A movement made him look over his shoulder. Somebody was standing at the top of the steps. “Hell’s fire,” whispered Mooney. He’d forgotten all about that aboriginal law; and here above him stood a man in a policeman’s uniform, staring down with pale eyes. No, not a policeman. The face was—Harse’s. Mooney swallowed and stood rooted. “You!” Harse’s savage voice came growling. “You are to stand. Still?” Mooney didn’t need the order; he couldn’t move. No twentieth-century cop was a match for

