HE ROSE AND STEPPED out from the tree, with the gun at ready. What a perfect place to set a trap, he thought. One would be looking at the pug marks, never at the space between them, for the space between would be neutral ground, safe to stride out upon. Oh, clever Cytha, he said to himself. Oh, clever, clever Cytha! And now he knew what the other trouble was—the great uneasiness. It was the sense of being watched. Somewhere up ahead, the Cytha was crouched, watching and waiting—anxious or exultant, maybe even with laughter rumbling in its throat. He walked slowly forward until he reached the third set of tracks and he saw that he had been right. The little area ahead was smoother than it should be. “Cytha!” he called. His voice was far louder than he had meant it to be and he stood a