by: Anne
McCaffrey
NOTE: this book
has two names, in the uk where this book was purchased its entitled: "Red
Star Rising" but in the U.S. its called "Dragonseye"
Life in the Weyrling Barracks and at the College
Weyrling Barracks and Bitra Hold
Fort Hold and Bitran Borders - Early Winter VI
High Reaches, Boll Holds, Ista, Benden Weyrs, Ista Hold, High Reaches,
Fort and Telgar Holds
The Trials at Telgar and Benden Weyrs
Turn 5 End at Fort Hold and Telgar Weyr
New Year 258 After L(anding) - College,
Benden Hold, Telgar Weyr
Cathay, Telgar Weyr, Bitra Hold, Telgar
When the
volcanoes rumble and the powerful storms begin brewing on Pern, it means one
thing: Thread. For 257 years Pern has been free of the life-destroying Thread,
but now the Red Star has reappeared in the sky and soon the deadly Threadfall
will follow. In the holds and weyrs across the land, the genetically-engineered
dragons of Pern and their human riders begin feverishly training to combat the
Thread, for only dragon fire can destroy the silvery invaders. But, incredibly,
one Lord Holder refuses to believe the Thread will fall again, and he may
endanger the entire planet.
Rukbat, in the
Sagittarian sector, was a golden o-type star.
It had five
planets, two asteroid belts, and a stray planet it had attracted and held in
recent millennia. When men first settled on Rukbat's third planet and called it
Pern, they had taken little notice of the stranger planet, swinging around its
adopted primary in a wildly erratic orbit - until the desperate path of the
wanderer brought it close to its stepsister at perihelion.
When such
aspects were harmonious, and not distorted by conjunctions with other planets
in the system, the wanderer brought in a life form which sought to bridge the
space gap to the more temperate and hospitable planet.
The initial
losses the colonists suffered from the voracious mycorrhizoid organism that
fell on them were staggering.
They had
divorced themselves from their home planet, Earth, and had cannibalized the
colony ships, the Yokohama, the Bahrain and the Buenos Aires, so they would
have to improvise with what they had.
Their first
need was an aerial defence against the Thread, as they named this menace. Using
highly sophisticated bio-engineering techniques, they developed a specialized
variant of a Pernese life form which had two unusual, and useful,
characteristics: the so-called fire-lizards could digest a phosphine bearing
rock in one of their two stomachs and, belching forth the resultant gas, create
a fiery breath which reduced Thread to harmless char. The second of their
unusual qualities were the ability to teleport and an empathy which allowed
limited understanding with humans. The bio-engineered "dragons" - so
called because they resembled the Earth's mythical creatures - were paired at
hatching with an empathic human, forming a symbiotic relationship of unusual
depth and mutual respect.
The colonists
moved to the northern continent to seek shelter from the insidious Thread in
the cave systems which were called holds.
The dragons and
their riders came, too, housing themselves in old volcanic craters or Weyrs.
The First Pass
of Thread lasted nearly fifty years and what scientific information the colonists
were able to gather indicated that Thread would be a cyclic problem, occurring
every two hundred and fifty years as the path of the wanderer once again
approached Pern.
During this
interval, the dragons multiplied and each successive generation became a little
larger than the last, although optimum level would take many, many more
generations to reach. And the humans spread out across the northern continent,
creating holds to live in, and halls in which to train young people in skills
and professions. Sometimes folks even forgot that they lived on a threatened
planet.
However, in
both Holds and Weyrs, there were masses of reports, journals, maps and charts
to remind the Lords and Weyrleaders of the problem: and much advice to assist
their descendants when next the rogue planet approached Pern and how to prepare
for the incursion.
This is what
happened two hundred and fifty-seven years later.
Dragons in
squadrons wove, and interwove sky trails, diving and climbing in wings, each
precisely separated by the minimum safety distance so that occasionally the
watchers thought they saw an uninterrupted line of dragons as the close order
drill continued.
The skies above
Fort Hold, the oldest of the human settlements on the northern continent, were
brilliantly clear on this early autumn day: that special sort of clarity and
depth of colour that their ancestors in the New England sector of the North
American continent would have instantly identified.
The sun gleamed
on healthy dragon hides and intensified the golden queen dragons who flew at
the lowest level, sometimes seeming to touch the tops of the nearby mountains
as they circled Fort. It was a sight to behold, and always brought a thrill of
pride to those who watched the display: with one or two exceptions.
"Well,
that's done for now," said Chalkin, Lord Holder of Bitra, the first to
lower his eyes, though the fly-past was not yet over.
He rotated his
neck and smoothed the skin where the decorative embroidered border of his best
tunic had scratched the skin. Actually, he had had a few heart-stopping moments
during some of the manoeuvres, but he would never mention that aloud. The
dragon riders were far too full of themselves as it was, without pandering to
their egos and an inflated sense of importance: constantly appearing at his
Hold and handing him lists of what hadn't been done and must be done before
Threadfall. Chalkin snorted. Just how many people were taken in with all this
twaddle? The storms last year had been unusually hard, but then that wasn't in
itself unexpectable, so why were hard storms supposed to be a prelude to a
Pass?
Winter meant
storms.
And this
preoccupation with the volcanoes going off. They did periodically anyway, sort
of a natural phenomenon, if he remembered his science orientation correctly. So
what if three or four were active right now? That did not necessarily have to
do with the proximity of a spatial neighbour! And he was not going to require
guards to freeze themselves keeping an easterly watch for the damned planet.
Especially as every other Hold was also on the alert. So what if it orbited
near Pern? That didn't necessarily mean it was close enough to be dangerous, no
matter how the ancients had gone on about cyclical incursions.
The dragons
were just one more of the settlers' weird experiments, altering an avian
species to take the place of the aircraft they had once had. He'd seen the air
sled which the Telgar Foundry treasured as an exhibit: a vehicle much more
convenient to fly in than aboard a dragon where one had to endure the
black-cold of teleportation. He shuddered. He had no liking for that sort of
ultimate cold, even if it avoided the fatigue of overland travel. Surely in all
those records the College was mustering folks to copy, there were other
materials that could be substituted for whatever the ancients had used to power
the vehicles? Why hadn't some bright lad found the answer before the last of
the air sleds deteriorated completely? Why didn't the brainy ones develop a new
type of air-worthy vessel? A vessel that didn't expect to be thanked for doing
its duty!
He glanced down
at the wide roadway where the gather tables and stalls were set up. His were
empty; even his gamesters were watching the sight. He'd have a word with them
later. They should have been able to keep some customers at the various games
of chance even with the dragon rider display. Surely everyone had seen that by
now.
Still, the
races had gone well and, with every one of the wager-takers his operators, he'd
have made a tidy profit from his percentage of the bets.
As he made his
way back to his seat, he saw that wine chillers had been placed at every table.
He rubbed his be ringed fingers together in anticipation, the black Istan
diamonds flashing as they caught sunlight. The wine was the only reason he had
been willing to come to this Gathering; and he'd half suspected Hegmon of some
prevarication in the matter. An effervescent wine, like the champagne one heard
about from old Earth, was to have its debut. And, of course, the food would be
marvellous too, even if the wine should not live up to its advance notice.
Paulin, Fort Hold's Lord, had lured one of the best chefs on the continent to
his kitchens and the evening meal was sure to be good: if it didn't turn sour
in his stomach while he sat through the obligatory meeting afterwards. Chalkin
had bid for the man's services, but Chrislee had spurned Bitra's offer and that
refusal had long rankled in Chalkin's mind.
The Bitran
Holder mentally ran through possible excuses for leaving right after dinner:
one plausible enough to be accepted by the others. This close to putative
Threadfall, he had to be careful of alienating the wrong people. If he left
before the dinner... but then he wouldn't have a chance to sample this champagne-style
wine, and he was determined to.
He'd taken the
trouble to go to Hegmon's Benden vineyard, with the clear intention of buying
cases of the vintage. But Hegmon had refused to see him. Oh, his eldest son had
been apologetic - something about a critical time in the process requiring
Hegmon's presence in the caverns - but the upshot was that Chalkin couldn't
even get his name put down on the purchase list for the sparkling wine. Since
Benden Weyr was likely to get the lion's share of it, Chalkin had to keep in
good with the Benden Weyrleaders so that, at the Hatching which was due to
occur in another few weeks, he'd be invited and could drink as much of their
allotment of wines as he could.
More than one
way to skin a wherry!
He paused to
twirl one of the bottles in its ice nest. Almost perfectly chilled. Riders must
have brought the ice in from the High Reaches for Paulin. Whenever he needed
some, he couldn't find a rider willing to do him, Bitra's Lord Holder, such a
simple service. Humph!
But of course,
certain Bloodlines always got preferential treatment.
Rank didn't
mean as much as it should, that was certain!
He was
surreptitiously inspecting the label of a bottle when there was a sudden,
startled intake of fearful breaths from the watchers, instantly followed by a
wild cheer. Looking up, he saw he had just missed some sort of dangerous
manoeuvre Ah, yes, they'd done another mid-air rescue. He saw a bronze dragon
veering from under a blue who was miming a wounded wing: both riders now safely
aboard the bronze's neck. Quite likely that Telgar Weyrleader who was such a
dare-devil.
Cheers were now
punctuated with applause and some banging of drums from the bandsmen on their
podium down on the wide courtyard that spread out from the steps to the Hold
down to the two right-angled annexes. Once again, both the infirmary and the
teachers' college were being enlarged, if the scaffolding was a reliable
indication. Chalkin snorted, for the buildings were being extended outward,
wide open to any Thread which was purportedly supposed to start falling again.
They really ought to be consistent! Of course, tunnelling into the cliff would
take more time than building outside. But too many folks preached one thing and
practised another.
Chalkin grunted
to himself, wondering acidly if the architects had got Weyrleader approval for
the design. Thread! He snorted again and wished that Paulin, chatting so cosily
with the two Benden Holders as he and his wife escorted them back to the head
table, would hurry up.
He was dying to
sample the bubbly white.
Rattling his
fingers on the table, he awaited the return of his host and the opening of the
tempting bottles in the cooler.
K'vin, bronze
Charanth's rider, put his lips close to the ear of the young blue rider sitting
in front of him.
"Next time
wait for my signal!" he said.
P'tero only
grinned, giving him a backward glance, his bright blue eyes merry.
"Knew you'd
catch me", he bellowed back. "Too many people watching to let me
swing and give Weyr secrets away!" Then P'tero waved encouragingly at
Ormonth, who was now flying anxiously at Charanth's wingtip. Though unseen from
the ground, the safety-tethers still linked the blue rider to his dragon. P'tero
unbuckled his end of the straps and they dangled free.
"Lucky you
that I was looking up just then!" K'vin said so harshly that the brash lad
flushed to his ear tips. "Look at the fright you've given Ormonth!"
And he gestured towards the blue, his hide flushing in mottled spots from his
recent scare.
P'tero yelled
something else which K'vin didn't catch so he leaned forward, putting his right
ear nearer the blue rider's mouth.
"I was in
no danger," P'tero repeated. "I used brand-new straps and he watched
me braid'em".
"Hah!"
As every rider knew, dragons had gaps in their ability to correlate cause and
effect. So Ormonth would scarcely have connected the new straps with his rider's
perfect safety.
"Oh,
thanks," the rider added as K'vin snapped one of his own straps to P'tero's
belt. Not that they would be doing more than landing, but K'vin wished to make
a point of safety to P'tero.
While K'vin
approved of courage, he did not appreciate recklessness, especially if it
endangered a dragon this close to the beginning of Threadfall. Careful
supervision had kept his Weyr from losing any dragon partners and he intended
to maintain that record.
Spilling off
his blue before K'vin had passed the word was taking a totally unnecessary
risk. Fortunately, K'vin had seen P'tero dive.
His heart had
lurched in his chest, even if he knew P'tero was equipped with the especially
heavy and long harness as a fail-safe. Even if he and Charanth had not
accurately judged the mid-air rescue, those long straps would have saved the
blue rider from falling to his death.
Today's
manoeuvre had been precipitous instead of well-executed.
And, if
Charanth had not been as adept on the wing, P'tero might be nursing broken
ankles or severe bruising as a result of his folly.
No matter how
broad, those safety straps really jerked a man about in mid-air.
P'tero still
showed no remorse. K'vin only hoped that the stunt produced the effect the
love-struck P'tero wished. His mate would have been watching, heart in mouth,
no doubt, and P'tero would reap the harvest of such fear some time this
evening. K'vin wished that more girls were available to Impress green dragons.
It made that facet of Weyrleadership considerably easier to deal with. There
were still a few, of course, but with parents keenly interested in applying for
more land by setting up cot holds for married children, fewer and fewer girls
were encouraged to stand on the Hatching Grounds. While being a dragon rider
didn't prevent a girl from having children, if that's what she wanted, it did
prevent them from owning land. Still, grandchildren, even the Weyrborn, could
claim land. Though, in actual fact, more Weyrborn preferred to stay in the Weyr
even if they didn't Impress.
The dragons who
had taken part in the mass fly-by were now landing their riders in the wide
road beyond the court.
Then they
leaped up again to find a spot in which to enjoy the last of the warm autumnal
sun. Many made for the adjoining cliffs as space on Fort's heights filled up on
either side of the solar panels.
Dragons could
be trusted not to tread on what remained of the priceless installations. Fort's
were the oldest, of course, and two banks had been lost last winter to the
unseasonably fierce storms. Fort, being the largest as well as the oldest
northern installation, needed all its arrays in full working order to supply
heat for its warren of corridors, power for air circulation units and what
equipment still worked. Fortunately a huge stockpile of panels had been made
during the first big wave of constructing new Weyrs and Holds. There would be
enough for generations.
Weyrleaders
sought their tables on the upper level with Lord Holders and Professionals,
while riders joined whatever company they preferred at tables set up on the
huge expanse of the outer apron. Not a sprout of vegetation anywhere on that
plaza surface, K'vin noticed with approval. S'nan, Fort's Weyrleader, had
always been fussy and rightly so.
The musicians
had struck up sprightly music and couples were already dancing on the wooden
floor set over the cobbles. Beyond the dance square were the stalls, tents and
tables where goods were being sold or exchanged. There'd been brisk business
all day, especially for items needed during the winter months when there would
be fewer big Gathers.
The various
Craftsmen would be pleased, and there'd be less for the dragons to haul back.
Charanth was
now circling over the annexes which had been started to increase living space
for both Pern's main infirmary research facility and teacher training. The
dormitories were also going to house volunteers who were assiduously trying to
save the records, damaged during last spring when water had leaked down the
walls of the vast storage caverns under Fort. Riders had offered to spend as
much time as possible from their training schedules to help in the project.
Everyone who
had a legible script was acceptable, and Lord Paulin had done a bang-up job in
making the copyists comfortable. The other Holds had contributed material and
work forces.
The exterior
buildings of the College were designed to be Threadproof, with high peaked
roofs of Telgar slate and gutters which led into underground cisterns where
errant Thread would be drowned.
All the
Craftsmen involved, including those destined to inhabit the facility, would
have preferred to enlarge the cave system, but there had been two serious
collapses of caverns and the mining engineers had vetoed interior expansion for
fear of undermining the whole cliff-side.
Even the
mutant, blunt-winged, flightless photo-sensitive watchwhers had refused to go
on further subterranean explorations which, their handlers insisted meant
dangers human eyes couldn't see. So build they did: stout walls more than two
and a half me tres thick at ground level, tapering to just under two me tres
under the roof. With the iron mines at Telgar going full blast, the necessary
structural beams to support such weight had posed no problem.
The new
quarters were to be finished within the month.
Even today
there had been a work force, though they had taken a break to watch the aerial
display and would finish in time for the evening meal and entertainment.
Charanth landed
gracefully, with Ormonth right beside him so that P'tero could remove the
tethering safety straps before they could be noticed. As he was doing so, M'leng,
green Sith's rider, came up to him, scolding him for "putting my heart in
my mouth like that!" And he proceeded to berate P'tero far more viciously
than his Weyrleader would.
K'vin grinned
to himself, especially as he saw how penitent P'tero became under such a
harangue. K'vin rolled up his riding straps and tied them to the harness ring.
"Enjoy the
sun, my friend," he said, slapping Charanth on the wide shoulder.
I will. Meranath is already there, the bronze dragon said, his tone slightly smug as he executed a
powerful upward leap, showering his rider with grit.
Charanth's
attitude towards his mate, Meranath, amused, and pleased, his rider. No-one had
expected K'vin to accede to Telgar's Weyrleadership when it fell open after B'ner's
death nine months before. Who would have expected that the sturdy rider, just
into his sixth decade, had had any heart problems? But that is what the medics
said killed him. So, when Meranath was ready to mate again, Telgar's senior
Weyrwoman, Zulaya, had called for an open flight, leaving it to the dragons to
decide on the next Leader. She'd insisted that she had no personal preference.
She had been sincerely attached to B'ner and was probably still grieving for
him. There had certainly been no lack of suitors.
K'vin had sent
Charanth aloft in the mating flight because all the Telgar Weyr wing leaders
were expected to take part, as well as bronze riders from the other Weyrs. He
had no real wish to lead a Weyr into a Pass; he considered himself too young
for such responsibilities. He had observed from B'ner that the normal duties of
an Interval were bad enough, but to know that a high percentage of your
fellow-riders would be injured, or killed, that the lives of so many people
rested on your expertise and endurance was too much to contemplate. Some
nights, now, he was racked by terrifying dreams, and Threadfall hadn't even
started.
On the
occasions when he was in Zulaya's bed, she had been understanding and calmly
reassuring.
"B'ner
worried, too, if that's any consolation, Kev," she said, using his old
nickname and soothing back sweat-curled hair as he trembled with reaction. "He
had nightmares, too. Comes with the title. As a rule, the morning after a
nightmare, B'ner'd go over Sean's notes. I figure he had to have memorized
them."
"I've seen
you do the same thing. You'll do well, Kev, when push comes to shove. I know
it." Zulaya could sound so sure of something, but then she was nearly a
decade his senior and had had more experience as a Weyrleader. Sometimes her
intuition was downright uncanny: she could accurately predict the size of
clutches, the distribution of the colours, the sex of babies born in the Weyr
and, occasionally, even the type of weather in the future. But then, she was
Fort Weyrbred, a linear descendant of one of the First Riders, Aliana Zuleita,
and knew things. It was odd how the golden queens always seemed to prefer women
from outside the Weyrs, but sometimes a queen had a mind of her own and chose a
Weyrbred woman in spite of what had become custom.
However, just
like his predecessor, he constantly reviewed accounts of the individual Falls,
how they differed, how you could tell from the Leading Edge of Fall that this
would be an odd one. Most often the accounts were dry statements of fact, but
the prosaic language did not disguise the presence of great courage: especially
as those first riders had to figure out how to cope with Thread, easy or hard.
The fact that
he was a several times great-nephew of Sorka Connell, the First Weyrwoman - and
Zulaya pointed this out more than once - constituted a secondary and subtle
reassurance to the entire Weyr.
"Maybe
that's why Meranath let Charanth catch her," Zulaya said, her face dead
serious but her eyes dancing.
"Had you,
I mean... did you think of me... I mean...", K'vin tried to summon
appropriate words two weeks after that momentous flight. He had been
overwhelmed by her response to him that night. But afterwards she had seemed
very casual in her dealings with him, and she did not always invite him into
her quarters, despite the fact that their dragons were inseparable.
"Who
thinks at all during a mating flight? But I do believe I'm glad that Charanth
was so clever. If there is anything in heredity, having a distant great-nephew
of Fort Weyr's First Weyrwoman - AND from a family that has put many acceptable
candidates on the Hatching Grounds - as Telgar's Weyrleader gives us all a
boost."
"I'm not
my many times great-aunt, Zulaya", She chuckled.
"Fortunately,
or you wouldn't be Weyrleader, but blood will tell!" Zulaya had a
disconcerting directness but gave him no real hint how she - the woman, not the
Weyrwoman - personally felt towards him. She was kind, helpful, made
constructive suggesnons when they discussed training programmes but so
impersonal, that K'vin had to decide that she hadn't really got over B'ner's
death yet.
He himself was
obscurely comforted that his distant great aunt had managed to survive Fall,
and he would attempt to do the same. As, he was sure, would his two siblings
and four cousins who were also dragonriders, though no others were Weyrleaders.
Yet. Still, if his being of the Ruathan Bloodline which had produced Sorka, M'hall,
M'dani, Sorana and Mairian offered reassurance to his Weyr, he'd reinforce that
at every turn during the Pass.
Now, at
probably the last large Gather Pern would enjoy wider Threadfree skies for the
next fifty years, he watched his Weyrwoman leave the group of Telgar holders
she had been talking to and stride towards him across the open eourtyard.
Zulaya was tall
for a woman, long-legged - all the better for bestriding a dragon's neck. He
was a full head taller than she was, which she said she liked in him: B'ner had
been just her height. It was her colouring that fascinated K'vin: the
inky-black curly hair that, once freed of the flying helmet, tumbled down below
her waist.
The hair framed
a wide, highcheekboned face, set off the beige of her smooth skin and large,
lustrous eyes that were nearly black; a wide and sensual mouth above a strong
chin gave her face strength and purpose which reinforced her authority with
anyone. She strode, unlike some of the hold women who minced along, her
steel-rimmed boot heels noisy on the flagstones, her arms swinging at her
sides. She'd had time to put a long, slitted skirt over her riding gear and it
opened as she walked, shpwing a well-formed leg in the leather pants and high
boots.
She'd turned
the high riding-boot cuffs down over her calves and the red fur made a nice
accent to her costume, echoed in the fur trim of her cuffs and collar which she
had opened. As usual, she wore the sapphire pendant she had inherited as the
eldest female of her Blood.
"So, did P'tero
win M'leng's undying affection with that stunt?" she demanded, an edge to
her voice. They've gone off together and she looked in the direction of the two
riders who were headed towards the temporary tents along the row of cots.
"You might
have a word with both later. They're afraid of you," K'vin said, grinning.
"For that
piece of stupidity, I'll make them more afraid," she said briskly, hopping
a step to match his stride. "You really should learn how to scowl menacingly."
She glanced up at K'vin and then shook her head, sighing sadly. She had once
teased him that he was far too handsome to ever look genuinely threatening,
with the Hanrahan red hair, blue eyes and freckles. "No, you just don't
have the face for it. Be that as it may, Meranath's going to give out to Sith
for allowing a blue to put himself in danger."
"Get'em
where it hurts," K'vin said, nodding, because Meranath was even more
effective as a deterrent with the dragons than any human could be, even the
dragon's own rider. Damned fool stunt!
"However,"
and now Zulaya cleared her throat, "the Telgarians thought it was Just
marvellous!" she added in a gushing tone. "Especially since they won't
get much chance to see the dive in real action." Now she grimaced.
"Well, at
least Telgarians believe," K'vin said.
"Who doesn't?"
Zulaya demanded, looking up at him.
"Chalkin,
for one."
"Him!"
She had absolutely no use for the Bitran Lord Holder and never bothered to hide
it.
"If there's
one, there may be others for all the lip service they give us."
"What?
With Second Fall only months away from us?" Zulaya demanded. "And
why, pray tell, do we have dragons at all, if not to provide an aerial defence
for the continent? Oh, we provide transportation services, but that's not
nearly enough to justify our existence."
"Easy,
lady," K'vin said."You're preaching to the dedicated."
She made a
disgusted sound deep in her throat and then they had reached the steps up to
the upper Court. She put her hand through his arm so that they would present
the proper picture of united Weyrleadership. K'vin stifled a sigh that the
accord was only for public display.
"And
Chalkin's already into that new bubbling wine of Hegmon's," Zulaya said
irritably.
"Why else
do you think he came?" asked K'vin as he deftly guided her away from the
Bitran, who was smacking his lips and regarding his wine glass with greedy
speculation.
"Though
today's also a chance for his gamesters to profit. One thing sure, I hear tell
he's not on Hegmon's list," she said as they reached their table which the
Telgarians shared, by choice, with the High Reaches Weyr and Hold leaders and
those from Tillek. The senior Captain of the Tillek fishing fleet and his new
wife completed the complement at their table.
"That was
quite a show you put on," said the jovial ship's master, Kizan, "wasn't
it, Cherry, m'dear?"
"Oh, it
was, indeed it was," the girl replied, clapping her hands together. While
the gesture was close to an affectation, the young wife was clearly awed by the
company she kept at this Gather and everyone was trying to help her cope. Kizan
had let it be known that she came from a small fishing hold and, while a
capable ship's master, she had little experience with a wider world.
"I've
often seen the dragons in the sky, but never so close up. They are so
beautiful."
"Have you
ridden one yet?" Zulaya asked kindly.
"Oh,
heavens, no," Cherry replied, modestly lowering her eyes.
"You may,
and soon", her husband said."We came overland here to Fort for the
Gather, but I think we'd better see how good our credit is."
"Very
good, Captain," said G'don, the High Reaches Weyrleader, "as you've
never applied to us half as much as you're entitled to."
Mari, his
Weyrwoman, nodded and smiled encouragingly at Cherry's almost horrified reaction.
"What?"
Kizan teased his bride. "The woman who sailed through a Force Nine gale
without complaint is nervous about flying on a dragon?"
Cherry tried to
respond, but she couldn't find words.
"Don't
tease," Mari said. "Riding a dragon is considerably different to
standing on your own deck, but I don't know many people who refuse a ride."
"Oh, I'm
not refusing," Cherry said hastily, startled.
Just like a
child frarffil of being denied a promised treat, K'vin thought and struggled to
keep from grinning at her.
"All of
you, leave her alone," said the Telgar Lady Holder, scowling at them. "I
remember my first ride adragonback."
"Back that
far, huh," said her husband, Lord Tashvi, eyeing her blandly. "And
yet you can't remember where you put that bale of extra blankets."
"Don't
start on that again!" Salda began, scowling, but it was apparent to the
others at the table, even young Cherry, that the Telgar Holders often indulged
in such sparring.
"Have you
not opened your wine?" asked an eager voice and they looked round at
Vintner Hegmon, a stout, grey haired man of medium height with a flushed face
and a reddened nose which he jokingly called an occupational hazard.
"Do us the
honour." said Tashvi, gesturing to the chilled bottles.
Hegmon complied
and, in his experienced hands, the plug erupted from the bottle neck with speed
and a plop. The wine bubbled up but he deftly put a glass under the lip before
a drop could be spilled.
"I think
we've done it this time," he said, filling the glasses presented to him.
"I say, it
does look exciting," said Salda, holding up her glass to watch the bubbles
make their ascent. Thea, the High Reaches Lady Holder, did likewise and then
sniffed at her glass. "Oh, my word," she exclaimed, putting a hand to
her nose just in time to catch a sneeze.
"The
bubbles tickle." Try the wine," Hegmon urged.
"Hmmmm,"
Tashvi said and Kizan echoed the sentiment.
"Dry, too,"
the Captain said. "Go on, Cherry," he urged his wife.
"It's
quite unlike Tillek brews. They tend to be foxy and harsh. This'll go down
easily."
"Ohhh,"
and Cherry's response was one of sheer delight.
"Oh, I
like this!" Hegmon grinned at her ingenuousness and accepted the approving
nods from the others at the table.
"I quite
like it, too," Zulaya said after letting a sip slide down her throat. "Rather
nice."
"I say,
Hegmon, wouldn't mind a refill," and Chalkin appeared at the table,
extending his glass under the mouth of the bottle the Vintner held.
Hegmon kept the
bottle upright and regarded the Lord Holder coolly. "There's more at your
own table, Chalkin."
"True, but
I'd rather sample different bottles."
Hegmon
stiffened and Salda intervened.
"Leave
off, Chalkin. As if Hegmon would offer an inferior bottle to anyone," she
said and waved him off.
Chalkin
hesitated between a scowl and a smile but then, keeping his expression bland,
he bowed and backed away from the table with his empty glass. He did not,
however, return to his own table, but moved on to the next one where wine was
being poured.
"I
could..." Hegmon began.
"Just don't
supply him, Hegmon."
"He's
already insistent that I give him vine starts so he can grow his own,"
said Hegmon, furious at such importunity. "Not that he'd do that any
better than any of those other projects he starts."
"Ignore
him," Zulaya suggested with a flick of her fingers.
"M'shall
and Irene do. He's such a toad."
"Unfortunately,"
said Tashvi with a grimace, "he's managed to find like minds."
"We'll
settle him at the meeting", said K'vin.
"I hope
so," Tashvi said, "though a man like that is not easily convinced
against his will. And he does have a following."
"Not where
it matters," Zulaya put in.
"I hope
so. Ah, and here's food to soak up all this lovely stuff before we're too
muddled to keep our wits about us this evening."
Zulaya waved at
the wine cooler. "I doubt there's more than two glasses apiece, scarcely
enough to muddle us, though it's lovely stuff." And she sipped
judiciously. "Hegmon is generous, but not overly so. And here's our
dinner..." She sat back as a swarm of men and women in Fort colours began
to distribute platters of steaming foods among the tables. And bottles of red
wine.
"You spoke
too soon about muddling, Zuli," K'vin said, grinning as he served her
roast slices from the platter before passing it around the table.
They had finished
their meal and all the wine before Paulin rose from his table and signalled
those in the upper Court to follow him into the Hold for the meeting. Dancing
was well under way in the square and the music made a cheerful processional.
K'vin hoped the
musicians would still be playing when the meeting ended. Despite the height of
her, Zulaya was so light on her feet she was a pleasure to partner and, because
he was so tall, she preferred him as her partner too. And a full orchestra of
professionals was far more entertaining than the half-trained if enthusiastic
players currently in the Weyr.
Different
music, too.
"Ah,"
said Zulaya appreciatively as they filed into Fort's Great Hall, they've done a
great job of freshening the murals.
"Hmmm,"
K'vin agreed, craning his neck around and impeding Chalkin's entrance into the
Hall. "Sorry."
"Humph,"
was Chalkin's response and he glared sourly at Zulaya as he passed, shrugging
his garments away from touching them.
"Consider
the source," K'vin said when he thought Zulaya might fire a tart comment
after the Lord Holder.
"I want to
be at Bitra when the first Fall hits his Hold," she said.
"Isn't he
lucky, then, not to be beholden to us, but to Benden?" K'vin asked wryly.
"Indeed,"
agreed Zulaya and allowed herself to be guided to Telgar Weyr's usual seat at
the big conference table. "I wonder did anyone get any sleep in this Hold
the past week," she said, stroking the banner of Telgar's colours that
clothed their portion of the table.
"Makes
such a nice display," she murmured as she pulled out the chair which also
sported Telgar's white field and black grain design.
The table
itself was made up of many smaller units hooked together, forming a
multi-faceted circle: Telgar's Weyr and Hold leaders were between High Reaches
and Tillek since they were the northernmost settlements. Across from them were
Ista Weyr and Hold, and Keroon Hold, with their brilliant colours. Benden Weyr
was seated with Bitra on one side and Nerat and Benden on the other. The Chief
Engineer, the Senior Medic and the Headmaster were also included in the
meeting. Fort, traditionally the senior Hold, with Ruatha and Southern Boll on
either side, was at table centre and this time was the Chair.
"Now, if
any of us still have our heads after Hegmon's fine new wine, let's get this
over with so we can get in some dancing," said Paulin, smiling around the
table.
Chalkin banged
the table in front of him with a very loud "Hear, hear!"
K'vin stifled a
groan. The man was half-drunk, if not all drunk; his face flushed red.
"I'm sure
we're all aware of the imminence of Threadfall."
Chalkin made a
rude noise.
"Look,
Lord Chalkin," said Paulin, scowling at the dissident, "if you
managed to get too much of the champagne inside your skin, you can be excused."
"No, that's
exactly what he wants," said M'shall, Benden's Weyrleader, quickly. "Then
he can claim anything decided today was done behind his back."
"If he can't
shut up, we can always hold his head under the tap until he sobers enough to
remember common courtesy, put in Irene, Benden's Weyrwoman. He doesn't like
getting his Gather clothes wet." Her expression suggested she'd had
experience enough to know.
"Chalkin!"
Paulin said, his voice steely.
"Oh, all
right," the Bitran said in a surly tone and he settled himself more
squarely in his chair, leaning forward on his elbows at the table. "If you're
going to be that way..."
"Only
because you are," snapped Irene. Paulin gave her a stern look and she
subsided, though she kept narrowed eyes on Chalkin for a while longer.
"Three
independent calculations were made and there's no doubt that the Red Planet is
getting closer spatially speaking."
"Is there
any chance of a collision?" asked Jamson of High Reaches.
"Fraggit,
Jamson," Paulin said, "let's not bring that up."
"Why not?"
said Chalkin, brightening.
"Because
that... improbability has already been discussed to the point of nausea,"
Paulin replied. There isn't a hint in any of the information collected by our
forefathers to indicate there is any chance of a collision between the two
planets. Or that they considered the... improbability for any reason.
"Yes, but
does it say anywhere that there can't be?" Chalkin was obviously delighted
with this possibility.
"Absolutely
not," Paulin said simultaneously with Clisser who was not only the College
Head but the senior of the trained astronomers.
Paulin gestured
for Clisser to continue.
"Captains
Keroon and Tillek," and he paused in reverence, "both annotated the
AIVAS report which included data from the Yokohama's records. I have repeatedly
reworked the relevant equations and the rogue planet will Pass Pern on an
elliptical orbit that canNOT alter to a collision course with us. A matter of
celestial mechanics and Rukbat's gravitational pull."
"I'd've
brought the diagram of the orbits involved if I'd had forewarning."
Clisser gave Chalkin a disgusted glare.
"Bad
enough it brings in the Thread. Do you want to be blown to smithereens,
Chalkin?" asked Kalvi, chief of the mechanical engineers.
"And I
checked the maths, too, so I concur with Clisser and everyone else who's done
the equations. Why don't you, if you're so worried?" Chalkin ignored the
jibe since he had never been noted for scholarship in any field. He was also
well pleased with the reaction to his remark. No matter what they said, there
was no proof that they were really that safe.
"Now,
calculations indicate early spring will bring the first Threadfall of this
Pass. There are several Falls which could be live, depending on the weather
conditions, mainly the ambient temperature, at the time of Fall." Paulin
reached under his table then and hauled up a board on which Threadfall areas
had been meticulously delineated.
S'nan cleared
his throat, moving restlessly, as if he felt Paulin should not have usurped a
Fort prerogative. "The first two will be in Fort Weyr's patrol area, the
second two in High Reaches and the third two in Benden's. These are due to
occur in the first two weeks, about three days apart. The second Fall in Fort
territory and the first one in High Reaches happen on the same day - different
flows of the same Fall. Also, we know from the records that there will be live
Falls over the Southern Continent for about a week before the Falls commence
here in the North."
"S'nan,"
and Paulin turned to the Fort Weyrleader, "may we have your progress
report?"
S'nan stood,
holding up his ubiquitous clipboard. (Rumour had it that that item had been
passed down from the Connell himself.) He peered down at it a moment. The old
Leader of the premier Weyr on Pern resembled his several times
great-grandfather, though his silvery hair was more sandy than red.
Privately, K'vin
didn't think Sean Connell had been such a martinet, even if he had promulgated
the rules by which the Weyrs governed themselves. Most of these were common
sensible even if S'nan managed to pursue them into the ridiculous.
"The first
Fall," S'nan began, and there was a touch of pride in his voice, "would
start over the sea east of Fort Hold and come ashore at the mouth of the river,
passing diagonally across the peninsula and out into the sea in the west. The
second two Falls, which will occur three days later, will be over the southern
tip of Southern Boll." He used his stylus and, at his most condescending,
touched Paulin's chart.
"This one
may go south far enough to miss land entirely, and in any case will be over
land for only a short while - and over the western tip of High Reaches, again
proceeding out to sea, and 50 over land for only a short time. The third Fall
will start on the south coast of the Tillek peninsula, east of the site of the
Hold: and proceed out to sea, again over land only for a short time."
"Thread
giving us all a chance to get accustomed to fighting it?" asked B'nurrin
of Igen.
"Your
levity is ill-placed," S'nan said, but there were too many grins around
the table for his reprimand to affect the irrepressible young Weyrleader. He
cleared his throat and launched once more into his discourse. "The next
two Falls will be the most dangerous for unseasoned wings," and he shot a
stern glance at B'nurrin as he found the proper Thread path.
"The first
will start over the sea in the east and proceed over Benden Weyr and Bitra
Hold, ending almost at Igen Weyr. This would normally be flown jointly by
Benden and Igen Weyrs.
"The
second will start at the northern end of the Nerat peninsula and proceed across
it, over the east coast of Keroon and the east tip of Igen, and end just
offshore from Igen. This also would normally be a joint Fall, flown by Benden
over Nerat, Igen over the northern part of Keroon, and Ista over the southern
part of Keroon.
"We really
do know what Falls we fly, S'nan," M'shall said.
"Yes, yes,
of course," and S'nan cleared his throat again.
"However,"
and his glance went to the Lord Holders seated around the table, "it was
decided at the last meeting of the Weyrleaders that, since any of these would
be the first Fall in our experience, every Weyr would supply a double-wing at
the initial engagement. Thus each Weyr would have first-hand experience."
"I still
think we could all get that by hitting those first Southern Falls," B'nurrin
began. If the dragons miss, it's not going to fall on anyone's head or ruin any
farmland."
"B'nurrin!"
M'shall said sternly before the startled S'nan could open his mouth.
K'vin privately
thought B'nurrin had a good idea and had backed him, but they had been
overruled by the older Weyrleaders. K'vin suspected that if he were to take
some wings down South for that first Fall there, he'd be likely to find B'nurrin
practising there, too.
"I still
think it's a good idea," the Igen leader said, shrugging.
Pretending such
an interruption hadn't even occurred, S'nan went on. "As was customary in
the First Pass, Lord Holders will supply adequate ground crews and have them
assembled as directed by the Weyrleaders. In this case, Weyrleader M'shall."
He inclined slightly towards the Benden bronze rider.
"Master
Kalvi," and he bowed courteously to the Head Engineer, "has assured
me that his foundry has turned out sufficient HNO3 cylinders to equip the
ground crews, but the HNO3 must be made up on site. As in the First Pass, the
labour and material are supplied by the engineer corps as part of their public
duty. You all should have received your full allotment of tanks by Year's End."
S'nan paused and peered at Kalvi who rose to his feet.
The Fort
Weyrleader was precise in his language, scorning to use the term Turn for a
year which was coming into use among the younger generation.
"I've
scheduled every major Hold with three days of training in the maintenance and
repair of the flame-throwers and a practice session which, I think," and
Kalvi grinned, "you will find comprehensive as well as interesting."
He shifted his stance and would have gone on, but S'nan held up his hand and
gestured Kalvi to sit.
With a bit of a
snort and a grin, Kalvi complied.
Now the Fort
Weyrleader turned his glance to Corey. "I believe you also plan a
three-day seminar to instruct major and minor hold personnel in burn control
and Thread --- ah first aid. "
Corey did not
rise but nodded.
"Lords
Holder must assign suitable medics with every ground control unit, or have one
member of each trained in first aid and supplied with kits containing numbweed
fellis juice and other first-aid medications," S'nan continued.
"Now,"
and he flipped over the top sheet, "I have done pre-Pass inspections of
all Weyrs and find them well up to strength, with sufficient cadet riders to
supply the wings with phosphine rock during the Pass. I have discussed all
aspects of flight tactics and Weyr maintenance with the respective Weyrleaders."
K'vin writhed a
bit on his chair, remembering the exhaustive inspection carried out by S'nan
and Sarai: they'd even inspected the recycling plant! Then he noticed that G'don,
the oldest Weyrleader, was also squirming. So, the Fort pair had spared no-one
in their officious search for perfection.
Well, they were
heading into a Pass and the Fort Weyrleaders were correct to want every aspect
of dragon riding at the highest possible standard and readiness. In the
propagation of dragons, the pair had found no fault with Telgar Weyr: it had
had the largest clutches of all the Weyrs in the last three years as the
dragons themselves answered the tide of preparations for the coming struggle.
K'vin was
hoping that Charanth's first clutch would be larger than any that B'ner's
Miginth had sired; maybe then Zulaya would warm to him.
The two junior
queens had done well in their latest clutches, producing more of the useful
greens and blues. Telgar Weyr would soon be full! They might have to shift out
some of the excess population to other Weyrs, but that could wait until the
yearly review.
"And, in
conclusion, let me state that we are as ready as we can be." Far more
ready than the First Riders were," G'don remarked in his dry fashion.
"Indeed,"
echoed Irene of Benden.
K'vin contented
himself with a smile. Unbidden, a little wiggle of fear shot up from his belly
to chill him and he gave himself a shake. He came from a Blood that had
produced First Riders and contributed many sons and daughters to the Weyrs.
And you ride me, Charanth said firmly. I shall be formidable in the air. Thread will
fly in the other direction when it sees my flame.
And that was
not all draconic boast, for Charanth had fracked up the Weyr Record for the
length he achieved in flaming practice. Together we meet Thread, not just
you on your own. I shall be with you and we shall overcome.
Thanks,
Charrie.
You re welcome, Kev.
"You've
got that look in your eye, K'vin," Zulaya murmured for his ear alone. "What's
Charanth's opinion of all this?"
"He's
raring to go," K'vin whispered back, and grinned.
Charanth was
right to remind him that he did not fly alone: they were together as they had
been from the moment the bronze had broken his shell in half and stepped
directly towards a fourteen year old Kevin of the Hanrahans waiting on the hot
sands of Hatching Ground. And Kevin had realized that that was the moment all
his life had been aimed at Impression. He'd seen his older brother Impress, and
his second oldest sister, and three of the four cousins currently riders. From
the moment he was Searched out, part of him had been sure-sure-sure, with all
the fervour of an adolescent that he would Impress favourably.
The negative
side of his personality had perversely suggested that he'd be left standing on
the hot sands and he'd never live down such a humiliating experience.
"In
conclusion," S'nan said, "let me assure this Gathering that the Weyrs
are ready."
With that, he
sat down to an approving applause. "I hope that the Holds are too"
Not his voice end on an up-note but he raised". Only did his thick brows
questioningly at the Fort Holder.
Paulin stood up
again, shuffling until he found the right clipboard and cleared his throat. "I
have readiness reports in from all but two major Holds," and he glanced first
at Franco, Lord Holder of Nerat, and then tilted his head towards Chalkin. "I
know you received the forms to fill in."
The tall, thin
bronze-skinned Neratian raised his hand. "I told you the problem we have
with vegetation, Paulin, and we're still trying to keep it under control"
he grimace.
"Not easy
with the excellent weather we've been having and the restriction against
chemical deterrents. But I can assure you that we'll keep at it. Otherwise, we
have emergency roofing for the seedling nurseries and sufficient stores of
viable seeds to replant when that's feasible. We're also continuing our
research into dwarfing plants for indoor propagation. All minor holders are
fully aware of the problems and are complying. Everyone's signed up for the
ground-crew course. "
Paulin made a
notation, nodding. "Agriculture's still working on the problem of an
inhibitor for your tropical weed types, Fran."
"I hope
so. Stuff grows out of pure sand without any cultivation at all. "
Then Paulin
turned to Chalkin who had been polishing his rings with every evidence of
boredom.
"I've had
nothing at all from you, Lord Chalkin of Bitra," Paulin said.
"Oh, there's
plenty of time."
"A report
was required by this date, Chalkin," Paulin reminded, pushing the issue.
Chalkin shrugged.
"You all can play that game if you wish, but I do not believe that Thread
is going to fall next spring, so why should I bother my people with unnecessary
tasks..." He wasn't able to finish his sentence for the acrimonious
reactions from everyone at the table.
"Now see
here, Chalkin - -."
"Hey, wait
a bleeding minute"
"Just
where do you get off. "
Bastom was on
his feet with indignation.
Chalkin pointed
one thick be ringed finger at the Tillek Holder.
"The Holds
are autonomous, are they not? Is that not guaranteed in the Charter?"
Chalkin demanded, rounding on Paulin.
"In
ordinary times, yes," Paulin answered, waving a hand to the others to be
quiet. He had to raise his voice to be heard over the angry remarks and
protests. However, with..."
"This
Thread of yours coming. So you say, but there's no proof" Chalkin said,
grinning smugly.
"Proof?
What more proof do you need?" Paulin demanded. "This planet is
already feeling the perturbation of the rogue planet. "
Chalkin
dismissed that with a shrug. "Winter brings bad storms, volcanoes do
erupt."
"You can't
so easily dismiss the fact that the planet is becoming more visible... "
"Pooh.
That doesn't mean anything. "
"So,"
and Paulin again had to quell angry murmurs to be heard, "you discount
entirely the advice of our forebears? The massive evidence that they left for
our guidance?"
"They left
hysterical."
"They were
scarcely hysterical" Tashvi bellowed, "And they coped with the
emergency, and gave us specific guidelines to follow when the planet came back.
And how to calculate a Pass. "
"Hold it,
hold it," Paulin shouted, raising both arms to restore order. "I'm
Chair, I'll remind you," and he glared at Tashvi until the Telgar Lord
resumed his seat and the others had quietened down.
"What kind
of proof do you require, Lord Chalkin?" he asked in a very reasonable tone
of voice.
"Thread
falling..." someone muttered, and subsided before he could be identified.
"Well,
Chalkin?" said Paulin.
"Some
proof that Thread will fall. A report from this AIVAS we've all heard about
Landing is under tons of volcanic ash," Paulin said, and then recognized S'nan's
urgent signal to speak.
"Nine
expeditions have been mounted to investigate the installation at Landing and
retrieve information from the AIVAS" S'nan said in his usual measured
tones. As he spoke he searched for and found a sheaf of plastic and held it up.
"These are
the reports. And?" Chalkin demanded, obviously enjoying the agitation he
had aroused.
"We have
been unable to locate the administration building in which the AIVAS was
located. "
Why not?"
Chalkin insisted. I remember seeing tapes of Landing prior to the first
Threadfall. "
"Then you
will appreciate the size of the task," said S'nan, "especially since
the blanket of volcanic ash covers the entire plateau and we have not been able
to locate any landmark by which we could judge the position of the
administration building. And since the housing was similar, it's difficult to
establish where we are when we have dug one out of twenty feet of ash and
debris. Therefore we have not been able to establish the location of the
building."
"Try
again," Chalkin said, turning his back to S'nan.
"So you
have done nothing at all to prepare your Hold for the onslaught?" Paulin
asked calmly, reasonably.
Chalkin
shrugged. "I don't perceive a need to waste time and effort.. "
"And money"
murmured the original heckler.
"Precisely.
Marks are hard enough to come by to waste them on the off-chance... "
"OFF-CHANCE?"
Tashvi erupted out of his chair. "You'll have a revolt on your hands.
"
"I doubt
that," Chalkin said with a sly smile.
"Because
you haven't bloody seen fit to warn your holders?" Tashvi demanded.
"Lord
Telgar," Paulin said repressively, I'm Chair." He turned back to
Chalkin. "If the rest of us, however misguidedly, do believe in the
forewarnings - backed by irrefutable astronomical evidence of an imminent Pass
- how can you deny them?" Chalkin's grin was patronizing.
"A
space-borne organism? That drops on a large planet and eats everything it
touches? Why wasn't Pern totally destroyed during previous visitations? Why is
it every two hundred years? How come the Exploration Team which did a survey of
the planet before it was released to our ancestors to colonize... how come they
didn't see any evidence? Ah, no," Chalkin said, flicking the notion away
from him with his be ringed hands, "ridiculous!"
"My
calculations were confirmed by -" Clisser said, feeling that he was being
maligned.
"There was
evidence of Threadfall," Tashvi said, bouncing once more to his feet. "I've
read the report. There were hundreds of circles where vegetation was just
starting to grow... "
"Inconclusive,"
Chalkin said with another flap of a hand. "Could have been caused by one
of the many fungus growths. "
"Well
then, when this inconclusive evidence comes dropping out of the skies onto your
Hold, don't bother us," Bastom said.
"Or come
crying to my Hold for help," added Bridgely, completely disgusted by
Chalkin's attitude.
"You may
be sure of that," Chalkin said and, with a mocking bow to Paulin, he left
the Hall with no further word.
"What are
we going to do about him?" Bridgely asked, "because sure as night
follows day, he will come running for aid to Franco and me. "
"There is
provision in the Charter," Paulin began.
Jamson of the
High Reaches stared with wide and disbelieving eyes at Paulin.
"Only if
he believes in the Charter" Bastom said.
"Oh,
Chalkin believes in the Charter all right," Paulin said sardonically. "The
patent conferring the title of 'Lord Holder' on the original major northern
Stakeholders is what gives his line the right to Hold. And he's already used
the Charter to substantiate his autonomous position. I wonder if he also knows
the penalty for failing to prepare his Hold. That constitutes a major breach of
the trust."
"Who
trusts Chalkin?" Jamson put in.
"The trust
which holders rest in the Lord of their Hold in return for their labour,"
finished Paulin.
"Ha!"
said Bridgely. "I don't think much of his holders either. Useless lot on
the whole. Most of'em kicked out of other holds for poor management or plain
laziness."
"Bitra's
badly managed, too. Generally we have to return a full half of his tithings,"
M'shall said. "Half the grain is mouldy and timber unseasoned, hides
improperly cured and often rancid. It's a struggle every quarter to receive
decent supplies from him. "
"Really?"
Paulin asked, jotting down notes. "I hadn't realized he shorted you on
tithes."
M'shall
shrugged. "Why should you know? It's our problem. We keep at him. We'll
have to keep at him over this, too, you know. Can't let him away with a total
disregard for the upcoming emergency. Not every holder in Bitra's useless,
Bridgely."
Bridgely
shrugged. " Good apples in every basket as well as bad. But I'd really
hate to have to cope with the problem come springtime and Threadfalls. Benden's
too near Bitra for my peace of mind."
"So what
is the penalty for what Chalkin's doing? Or, rather not doing?" Franco
asked.
"Impeachment,"
Paulin said flatly.
"Impeachment!"
Jamson was aghast.
"I didn't
know Article Fourteen, Jamson," said Paulin, "Dereliction of Duty by
Lord Holder".
"Can you
give me a print-out on that, Clisser? Perhaps we all should have our memory
refreshed on that point."
"Certainly,"
and the Head of the College made a note in his folder. "In your hands
tomorrow."
"So your
system's still working?" Tashvi asked.
Copies of the
most important official documents were made in quantity by my predecessor,"
Clisser replied with a relieved smile.
I've a list if
you need any... handwritten but legible." Paulin cleared his throat, calling
them to order. "So, my Lords Holder, should we proceed against Chalkin?"
"You've
heard him. What option do we have?" M'shall wanted to know, glancing about
the table.
"Now, wait
a minute," began Jamson, scowling. "I'd want to have incontrovertible
proof of his inefficiency as a Lord Holder as well as his failure to respond to
this emergency. I mean, impeachment's an extreme step."
"Yes, and
Chalkin'll do everything he can to slide out of it," Bastom said
cynically.
"Surely
there's a trial procedure for such a contingency?" asked Jamson, looking
anxiously about. "You certainly can't act without allowing him the chance
to respond to any charges."
"In the
matter of impeachment I believe that a unanimous agreement of all major Holders
and Leaders is sufficient to deprive him of his position," Paulin
declared.
"Are you
sure?" Jamson asked.
If he isn't, I
am," Bridgely said, bringing one fist down firmly on the table. His
spouse, Lady Jane, nodded her head emphatically.
"I haven't
wanted to bring it up in a Council before," Bridgely began.
"He's very
difficult to confront at the best of times," said Irene, setting her lips
in a thin line of frustrations long borne.
Bridgely nodded
sharply in her direction and continued.
"He's come
as near to bending, or breaking for that matter. What few laws we do have on
Pern. Shady dealings, punitive contracts, unusual harsh conditions for his
holders."
"We've had
some refugees from Bitra with stories that would curl your hair," Jane,
Benden's Lady Holder said, wringing her hands in distress. I've kept records."
"Have you?"
Paulin said. "I'd very much like to see them. "
"Autonomy
is a privilege and a responsibility, but not a licence for authoritarianism or
despotic rule. Certainly autonomy does not give anyone the right to deprive his
constituents of basic needs. Such as protection from Threadfall. "
I don't know
about going so far as to impeach him. I mean, such an extreme remedy could have
a demoralizing effect on all the Holds," said Jamson, his reluctance
deepening.
"Possibly..."
Paulin began.
"Not being
prepared for Thread will certainly demoralize Bitra!" Tashvi said.
Paulin held up
his hand as he turned to M'shall. "Please give me specific instances in
which Bitra Hold has failed to supply the Weyr."
"Jane, I'd
like to look at the records you've kept."
"I've
some, too," Irene added.
Paulin nodded
and looked round the table. "Since his dereliction of primary duty in
regard to preparation against Threadfall could jeopardize not only his own Hold
but that of his neighbours, I feel we must examine the problem as quickly as
possible and indict him..."
Jamson jammed
up an arm in protest, but Paulin held up a placatory hand. "If, that is,
we do find just cause to do so. Just now, he was acting as if he'd had too much
of Hegmon's new wine. "
"Ha!"
was Irene of Benden's immediate response, a cynical reaction echoed by others
around the table.
"We cannot
allow personal feelings to colour this matter," Paulin said firmly.
"Wait til
you read my notes, " was her wry answer.
"And mine,"
added Bridgely.
"But who
could take his place?" Jamson asked, now querulous with anxiety.
"Not a
task I'd like so soon to Thread," Bastom admitted.
Paulin
grimaced. "But it may have to be done."
"Ah, if I
may," and Clisser raised his hand. The Charter requires us to find a
suitable candidate from the incumbent's Bloodline" he began.
"He has
relatives?" Bridgely asked, mimicking surprise and consternation.
I believe so,"
Franco said, "beyond his children. An uncle If they're of the same Blood
as Chalkin, would that be an improvement?" Tashvi wanted to know.
"They do
say a new broom sweeps clean," Irene remarked.
"I heard
that Chalkin did his uncle out of succession by giving him an isolated hold."
"He got
him out of the way fast enough, that's sure," said Bridgely. "Some
mountain hold, back of beyond."
"All of
Bitra is back of beyond," Azury of Boll remarked, grinning.
A replacement
is not the most immediate concern," Paulin said, taking charge again, if
we can persuade Chalkin that all of us can't be wrong about Threadfall."
Zulaya this
time snorted at that unlikelihood. "He'll admit he's wrong only when
Thread is eating him... which might solve the problem in the most effective
way. Bitra's in the path of the first Fall."
"Remiss as
Chalkin appears to be," Jamson said, "Bitra Hold may be better off
with than without him. You don't learn the management of a Hold overnight, you
know. "
Paulin gave the
High Reaches Lord a long look. "That is very true, but if he hasn't even
told his people that Thread is coming and he opened up his hands to show dismay
at such an omission. That's a dereliction of duty right there. His prime duty
and the primary reason for having a Leader during a crisis. As a group, we also
have a responsibility to be sure each of us is performing duties inherent to
our rank and position."
Zulaya
shrugged. "It'd serve him right to be caught out in the first Fall."
"Yes,
well," and Paulin rattled papers. "I'll accept reports of malfeasance
and irregularities in his conduct of Bitra Hold. "
"We'll do
this properly, gathering evidence and making a full report on the problem. Now,
let's finish up today's agenda. "
Kalvi, you wish
to broach the subject of new mines?"
The lean
hawk-nosed engineer sprang to his feet. "I sure do. We've got fifty years
of Fall and we're going to need more ore: ore that's closer to the surface than
the Telgar deposits. "
"Thought
they would last us a millennium," Bridgely of Benden said.
"Oh, there's
certainly more ore down the main shafts, but it's not as accessible as these
mountain deposits which could be worked more efficiently." He unrolled an
opaque plastic map of the Great Western range where he had circled an area
beyond Ruatha's borders. "Here! High-grade ore, and almost waiting to leap
into carts. We'll need that quality if we're to replace flame-thrower
equipment. And we'll have to. He said that with a degree of resignation. I've
the personnel trained and ready to move up there - which I'd like to do to get
the mines going before Threadfall starts. All I need is your OK."
"You're
asking to start a hold up there? Or just a mine?" asked Paulin.
Kalvi scratched
the side of his nose and grinned. Well, it'd be a long way to travel after the
shift is over, especially if the dragons are all busy fighting Thread." He
unrolled another diagram. One reason I've backed this site is that there's a
good cave system available for living quarters as well as coal nearby for
processing the ore. The finished ingots could be shipped down river.
There were
murmurs among the others as the project was discussed.
"Good
thing Chalkin left," Bridgely remarked. "He's got those mines in
Steng Valley he's been trying to reactivate. "
"They're
unsafe," Kalvi said scornfully. "I surveyed them myself, and we'd
have to spend too much time shoring up shafts and replacing equipment. The ore's
second rate, too. There isn't time to restore the mine, much less argue with
Chalkin over a contract. You know how he can be, haggling over minor details
for weeks before he'll make a decision." He contorted his long face into a
grimace.
"If you,"
and he turned to the others at the table, grant this permission, I'll have a
chance to noise it about the Gather this evening and see who'd be interested in
going along in support capacity and necessary crafts."
"I'll second
it," said Tashvi magnanimously, raising his hand.
"Good.
Moved and seconded. Now, all in favour of the formation of a mining hold?"
Hands shot up and were dutifully counted by Paulin.
"Chalkin's
going to say this was rigged," Bastom remarked caustically, and that we
drove him out of the meeting before the subject came up.
"So?"
Paulin said. "No-one asked him to leave and he has a copy of the agenda
same as everyone else." He brought his fist down on the table. "Motion
carried. Tell your engineer he may start his project. "
"High
Reaches Weyr," and he turned to G'don. "Telgar," and he included
K'vin now, "can you supply transport?" Both Weyrleaders agreed. If a
new hold was to be establislied, as many riders as possible from their Weyrs
should become familiar with its landmarks.
"There won't
be that much extra to protect against Threadfall," Kalvi said, with a grin
for the dragon riders. "It's all underground or within the cliff caverns.
We'll use hydroponics for fresh food from the start."
"Any more
new business?" Paulin enquired.
Clisser raised
his hand, was acknowledged and stood, glancing at the assembled: falling into
his lecture mode, K'vin thought.
"Lord
Chalkin's attitude may not be that unusual," he began, startling them into
attention to his words. "At least, not in times to come. We, here and now,
are not too distanced from the events of the First Pass. We have actual visual
records from that time with which to check on the approach of the rogue planet.
We know it is a rogue because we know, from the excellent and exhaustive
reports done by Captains Keroon and Tillek, that the planet was unlikely to
have emerged from our sun. Its orbit alone substantiates that theory since it
is not on the same ecliptic al plane as the rest of Rukbat's satellites.
"I am
assiduous in training at least six students in every class in the rudiments of
astronomy and the use of the sextant, as well as being certain that they have
the requisite mathematics to compute declination and right ascension and figure
accurately the hour circle of any star. We still have three usable telescopes
with which to observe the skies, but we once had more." He paused.
"We are,
as I'm sure we all must honestly admit, losing more and more of the technology
bequeathed us by our ancestors. Not through mishandling," and he raised a
hand against objections, but from the attritions of age and an inability,
however much we may strive to compensate, to reach back to the same technical
level our ancestors enjoyed." Kalvi grimaced in reluctant agreement to
that fact.
"Therefore,
I suggest that we somehow, in some fashion, with what technology we have left
at our disposal, leave as permanent and indestructible a record as possible for
future generations. I know that some of us," and Clisser paused, glancing
significantly to the door through which Chalkin had so recently passed, "entertain
the notion that our ancestors were mistaken in thinking that Threadfall will
occur whenever the Red Planet passes Pern. But we can scarcely ignore the
perturbations already obvious on the surface of our planet the extreme weather,
the volcanic eruptions, the other cosmic clues.
"Should it
so happen in centuries to come that too many doubt - not wishing to destroy a
flourishing economy and happy existence - that Thread will return, all that we
have striven to achieve, all we have built with our bare hands," and
dramatically he lifted his, "all we have around us today," and he
gestured towards the music faintly heard outside the Hall, would perish.
The denials
were loud.
"Ah,"
and he held one hand over his head, "but it could happen.
"Lord
Chalkin is proof of that. We've already lost so much of our technology.
Valuable and skilled men and women we could ill-afford to lose because of their
knowledge and skills have succumbed to disease or old age. We must have a
fail-safe against Thread! Something that will last and remind our descendants
to prepare, be ready, and to survive."
"Is there
any chance we could find that administration building then?" Paulin asked
S'nan.
"Too close
to Threadfall now," M'shall answered. "And it's going into the hot
season down there which makes digging anything enervating.
"However,
I most emphatically agree with Clisser. We need some sort of a safeguard.
Something that would prove to doubters like Chalkin that Thread isn't just a
myth our ancestors thought up."
"But we
keep records... " said Laura of Ista Weyr.
"How much
plasfilm do you have left?" Paulin asked pointedly. "I know Fort's
stock is running low. And you know all that happened to our Repository."
"True. But
we've paper" and she looked over at the Telgar Holders, Tashvi and Salda.
"Look, how
can we estimate how much of forestry acres will survive Threadfall?"
Tashvi asked, raising his hands in doubt.
I've the timber
jacks working non-stop, cutting, and the mill's turning out as much lumber and
pulp as it can."
"You know
we'll do our best to protect the forests," K'vin said, though privately he
wondered how good their best could be since even one Thread burrow could
devastate a wide swath of timbered land in minutes.
"Of course
you will," Salda said warmly, "and we will stockpile as much paper as
we can beforehand. Old rags are always welcome." Then her expression
sobered. "But I don't think any of us can know what will or will not
survive. Tarvi Andiyar's survey when he took Hold indicated that most of the
slopes were denuded. Ten years before Threadfall ceased, he had seedlings in
every corner of the Hold, ready to plant out. We were just lucky that natural
succession also occurred in the three decades after the end of First Pass."
"That is
yet another item we must record for future generations," Clisser said.
"The
ultimate how-to," put in Mari of High Reaches.
"I beg
pardon?"
"What to
do when Threadfall has Passed is even more important than what to do while it's
happening," she said, as if that should be obvious.
"We've got
to first survive fifty years..." Salda began.
"Let's get
back to the subject," said Paulin, rising to his feet.
"The Chair
concurs that we ought to have some permanent, indestructable, unambiguous,
simple way to anticipate the rogue planet's return. Has anyone any ideas?"
"We can
engrave metal plates and put them in every Weyr, Hold and Hall where they're
too obvious to be ignored," Kalvi suggested. "And inscribe the
sextant settings that indicate the Pass."
"So long
as there's a sextant, and someone to use it accurately," Lord Bastom said,
"that's fine. But what happens when the last of them is broken?"
"They're
not that complicated to make," Kalvi replied.
"What if
there's no-one trained in its use," Salda put in.
"My fleet
captains use sextants daily," Bastom said. "The instruments are
invaluable on the sea."
"Mathematics
is a base course for all students," Clisser added, "not just
fishermen."
"You have
to know the method to get the answers you need," said Corey, the Head
Medic, speaking for the first time.
And know when
to use it., Her profession was struggling to maintain a high standard as more
and more equipment became unusable, and unusual procedures became erudite.
"There has
to be some way to pass on that vital information to future generations,"
said Paulin, looking first at Clisser and then scanning the faces at the table.
"Let's have a hard think. "
"Etching
on metal's one way... and prominently placing tablets in every Weyr and Hold so
they can't be stored away and forgotten."
"A sort of
Rosetta Stone?" Clisser's tone was more statement than query.
"What's
that?" Bridgely asked. Clisser had a habit, which annoyed some folk, of
dropping odd references into conversations: references with which only he was
familiar. It would lead to long lectures from him if anyone gave him the
chance.
"On Earth,
in the late eighteenth century, a stone with three ancient languages was
discovered which gave the clue to translating those languages. We shall, of
course, keep our language pure."
"We're
back to etching again," said Corey, grinning.
"If it's
the only way..." Clisser began and then frowned. "No, there has to be
some fail-safe method. I'll investigate options. "
"All right
then, Clisser, but don't put the project aside," Paulin said. "I'd
rather we had a hundred sirens, bells and whistles going off than no warning at
all." Clisser grinned slowly. "The bells and whistles are easy
enough. It's the siren that will take time. "
"All right
then," and Paulin looked around the table.
Toe-tapping
dance music was all too audible and the younger holders and weyrfolk were
plainly restless. "No more new business?" He didn't wait for an
answer but used the gavel to end the meeting.
"That's
all for now. Enjoy yourselves, folks." The speed with which the Hall
emptied suggested that that was what all intended to do.
"Cliss,
what on earth possessed you?" Sheledon demanded, glowering. He was head of
the Arts faculty at the College and constantly jealous of what free time he had
in which to compose.
"Well,"
and Clisser looked away from Sheledon's direct and accusing glare, "we do
have more records and are more familiar with the techniques of accessing them
than anyone else. Information and training are what this College was
established to provide."
"Our main
function," and Danja took up the complaint she wanted spare time in which
to work with her string quartet, "is to teach youngsters who would rather
ride dragons or acquire many klicks of Pernese real estate to use the wits they
were born with. And to brainwash enough youngsters to go out and teach whatever
they know to our ever widely-spreading population."
Dance music
swirled about them, but Sheledon and Danja were so incensed that they seemed
oblivious to the rhythms that were causing the other three at their table to
keep time with foot or hand. Danja shot Lozell a peevish look and he stopped
rattling fingers callused from harp strings.
"I don't
think it'll be that hard to find some way to indicate a celestial return,"
he said in an attempt to appease the wrath of Sheledon and Danja.
"It isn't
the 'hard' that bothers me," Danja said acidly, " but when will we
have the time?" She stabbed her finger at the as-yet-unfinished extension
to the teaching facility.
"Particularly
since there is a time limit," and she shot another dirty look at Clisser. "Winter
Solstice."
"Oh,"
and Lozell grimaced. "Good point."
"We're all
working every hour we can spare from classes on what's urgent right now,"
Danja went on, gesturing dramatically and pacing up and down the length of
their table.
While Sheledon
closed in on himself when threatened, Danja exploded into action. Now her
nervous movements knocked the chair on which she had placed her violin and she
reacted, as quickly, to keep the valuable instrument from falling to the
cobbles. She gave Lozell a second nasty look, as if he had been responsible.
Sheledon
reached across and took violin and bow from her, putting them very carefully on
the table which had been cleared of all but wine glasses. Absently he mopped a
wine spill near the precious violin, one of the few usable relics from Landing
days. He gave it a loving pat while Danja continued.
"Like
today," she said, resuming her pacing, "we taught in the morning,
managed to eat something before we spent an afternoon painting so that there
will be some finished rooms for the summer term. We had five minutes to change
and even then we missed the fly-past which I, for one," and she paused to
jab her thumb into her sternum, "wanted to see."
"We've
played two sets," she went on earnestly, "and will undoubtedly still
be playing when the sun rises, and tomorrow will be a repeat of today except no
Gather, so we get a good night's rest to prepare us for more of the above,
except maybe get a little work done on next term. Which starts in a week, and
then we'll have no time at all since we now have to prepare the teachers who'll
be graduated to carry The Word to the outer extremities of the continent."
She gestured eastward in a histrionic fashion, then flounced down on the chair
the violin had occupied. "So how are we going to find time to do yet more
research, Clisser?"
"We always
do find the time," Clisser said, his quiet rejoinder a subtle criticism of
her rant.
"Use it as
a history class project?" suggested Lozell brightly.
"There you
have the answer," said Bethany who had merely, as was her habit, watched
the fireworks Danja was so good at sending up. "My juniors could use an
independent project."
"So long
as we have power to run the library," Danja added sourly.
"We will,
we will," Clisser said, with bright encouragement.
"Kalvi had
his engineers up on the heights during the fly-past working on the sun panels.
They'll hook them up to the main banks tomorrow. "
"Other
people worked today, you know. "
"Well,
that's a big consolation," said Danja acidly.
Clisser
refilled her glass. "And we'll need some catchy tunes and good lyrics,
too, I should think. Something to teach students from a very early age so that
they learn all the signs of a Pass before they learn to ask questions about it."
"One and
one is two, two and two are four?" Danja sang the old multiplying song,
then grinned wryly.
"The song
remains an effective teaching aid," Clisser said, filling his glass. "Shel,
would you put on your composer's hat and whip up some simple effective tunes?"
Sheledon nodded enthusiastically.
"I've been
saying for years that we ought to incorporate more basic stuff into a musical
format. Jemmy's good at little popular airs." Most of his songs were
geared to show off the talent of his soprano spouse, Sydra, who taught history
and, in her spare time, was chronicling the early years of the colony.
Bethany's face
lit up with a great smile. Jemmy was a favourite pupil of hers, and she was his
staunchest champion.
Even Danja
looked mollified.
"So,"
Clisser went on, having solved one of his immediate problems, what shall we do
in the next set?"
"Just like
that?" Danja demanded. "What'll we do in this set? Clisser, will you
get real!"
Clisser looked
hurt. Bethany leaned over and patted his hand, smiling encouragingly.
"What did
you mean by that, Danja?" Clisser asked.
"Don't you
realize what a huge responsibility you just so casually... and Danja lifted
wide her arms, flinging her hands skyward in exasperation, laid on us all?"
"Nothing
we can't solve, dear," Bethany said in her gentle manner. "With a
little thought and time."
"Back to
time again. Do we have time?" Lozell was back in the discussion."Especially
if the winter's even half as bad as it was last year... and it's supposed to
be, with that damned Red Planet leering down on us... how are we going to cope?"
"We will.
We always do," Sheledon said with a sigh of resignation."Paulin will
help us out. And certainly the Weyrs do."
Danja glared at
him."We've changed tunes, haven't we? I thought you thought we didn't have
time."
Sheledon
shrugged diffidently."I think Lozell's idea of making a survey a class
project will solve that problem. And, if Jemmy can whistle up some lyrics, I
can certainly churn out some tunes. Or maybe Jemmy can do both in his spare
time."
Sheledon's face
softened into a wry grin. He had had a tussle with himself, not to be jealous
of Jemmy whose brilliance was multi-faceted. Though he wasn't officially
graduated from the Hall, he already ran several smaller study groups and seemed
able to do a bit of everything - on a high level. The consummate Jack of all
Trades, Clisser called him.
"And what
if, by leaving it to the student body - who are, as most students, indifferent
researchers - the best notion is missed?" Danja asked.
"That's
why we're teachers, dear," said Bethany. "To be sure they don't miss
an obvious solution. They can at least save us having to sort through pounds of
material and present us with the most viable options. We can put Jemmy in
charge; he reads the fastest and his eyes are younger."
Just then, the
instrumentalists on the stage wound up their last number and received an
enthusiastic ovation from both the sweating dancers and the onlookers drinking
at the tables.
They filed off
the stage.
"All
right, what set do we do, Clisser?" Sheledon asked, tossing off the last
of his wine as he got to his feet.
"Those
seniors did a lot of fast dance music," Clisser said.
"Let's
give everyone a chance to catch their breaths and do some slow stuff... the old
traditionals, I think. Start with 'Long and Winding Road' - Put everyone in a
sentimental mood."
"Hmmm...
then we can get some supper while the juniors do what they so erroneously call 'music',"
said Danja, who had considerable contempt for the contemporary loud and
diatonic musical fad.
"Can't
please everyone all the time," Clisser said, collecting his guitar. He
drew back Bethany's chair for her and offered her an arm.
Smiling in her
gentle way at the courtesy, she picked up the flute in its worn hard-case, her
recorders in their leather sleeves and the little reed whistle that had won its
maker a prize that year. It had a particularly sweet, clear tone that young
Jemmy had been trying to reproduce with other reeds. Then she limped forward,
seemingly oblivious to her clubbed foot and awkward gait, her head high, her
gaze directed ahead of her.
Jemmy joined
them from his table, automatically taking Bethany's flute case from her. He was
drummer for their group, though he had been playing guitar with others.
Unprepossessing in physical appearance, with pale hair and skin and oversized
features, he was self-effacing, indifferent to his academic achievements. While
not in the least athletic, he had won the long-distance races in the Summer
Games for the last three years. He did not relate well, however, to his peer
group.
"They don't
think the same way I do," was his diffident self-appraisal.
That was, of
course, accurate since he had tested off the scale of the standard aptitude
tests given prospective scholars.
His family,
fishers at Tillek Hold, didn't understand him at all and at one point thought
him retarded. At fourteen he had followed his siblings into training in the
family occupation. He lasted three voyages. Though he had proven himself an
able navigator, he had had such constant motion sickness - "never
acquiring sea legs" - that he had been useless as a deck-hand: a source of
much embarrassment to his family. Captain Kizan had interested himself in the
lad and recommended the boy be trained as a teacher, and sent Jemmy to Fort
Hold for evaluation. Clisser had joyfully accepted him - finding such an avid
learner was a real boost to his morale. And, when Clisser had seen how Jemmy
galloped through even the hardest lessons, he had set up an independent study
programme for him. Although Jemmy had perfect pitch, he couldn't sing and
started playing instruments to make up for that lack in himself. There was
nothing he couldn't play, given a few hours of basic training.
Although his
family, and indeed the Lord Holder Bastom, too, had expected him to return to
Tillek to teach, Clisser had argued hard that anyone could teach the basics to
hold children: he would supply a suitably trained candidate. But Jemmy must be allowed
to continue at the College Hall, benefiting the entire continent.
What no-one at
the Hall mentioned beyond their most private sessions was that Jemmy seemed
intuitively to know how to fill in the gaps left by improper copying or damaged
records. His notations, short and concise, were models of lucidity. The College
could not afford to do without his skills and intelligence. He wasn't a good
teacher, being frustrated by mental processes slower than his own, but he
could, and did, produce manuals and guides that enhanced the basic texts the
settlers had brought with them. Jemmy translated 'Earth' into 'Pern' If his
peer group did not enjoy his company, he enjoyed that of his mentors and was
fast outstripping all of them in knowledge and practical applications. It was
also well known if tacitly ignored, that he idolized Bethany. She was
consistently kind and encouraging to everyone, but refused to accept any
partner. She had long since decided never to inflict her deformity on offspring
and refused any intimacy, even a childless one.
Clisser
wondered, though, as he and Bethany made their sedate way to the stage, if
Jemmy might not breach the wall of her virginity. He was certain that Bethany
cared more for the Tillek lad than anyone else in the thirty years he had known
her - student and teacher. She was a lovely, gentle woman; she deserved to be
loved and love in return.
Since there
were ways of preventing conception, her prime concern could be taken care of.
Clisser thought the age difference was immaterial.
And Jemmy
desperately needed the balance that a fully rounded life experience would give
him.
Clisser and
Jemmy provided support for Bethany to ascend the un railed steps to the stage
and then, with a swirl of the long skirts that covered the built-up shoe she
wore, she settled herself in her chair. She placed her flute case and the
recorders where she wanted them, and the little reed flute in the music stand.
Not that this group of musicians required printed sheets to read from, but the
other groups did.
Danja lifted
her fiddle to her chin, bow poised, and looked at Jemmy who hummed an A with
his perfect pitch for her to tune her strings. Sheledon softly strummed his
guitar to check its tuning and Lozell ran an arpeggio on his standing harp. The
continent's one remaining piano - his preferred instrument - was undergoing
repairs to the hammers: they had not yet managed to reproduce quite the same
sort of felt that had been used originally.
Clisser nodded
at Jemmy, who did a roll on his hand drum to attract attention and then, on
Clisser's downbeat, they began their set.
It was several
days before Clisser had a chance to discuss the project with Jemmy.
"I've
wondered why we didn't use the balladic medium to teach history," Jemmy
replied.
"It isn't
history we'll be setting to music."
"Oh yes,
it is," Jemmy had contradicted him in the flat and tactless way he had. It
had taken Clisser time to get used to it.
"Well, it
will be when the next generation gets it - and the next one after that."
"That's a
point, of course."
Jemmy hummed
something, but broke off and sprang across to the table where he grabbed a
sheet of paper, turning it to the unused side.
He slashed five
lines across it, added a clef and immediately began to set notes down. Clisser
was fascinated.
"Oh,"
Jemmy said offhandedly as his fingers flew up and down the lines, "I've
had this tune bugging me for months now. It's almost a relief to put it down on
paper now that I've a use for it."
He marked off
another measure, the pen hovering above the paper only briefly before he was
off again. "It can be a show piece anyhow. Start off with a soprano - boy,
of course, setting the scene. Then the tenors come in - they'll be the dragon
riders of course, and the baritones Lord Holders, with a few basses to be the
Professionals... each describing his duty to the... then a final chorus,
s.a.t.b., a reprise of the first verse, all Pern confirming what they owe the
dragons. Yes, that'll do nicely for one."
Clisser knew
when he wasn't needed and left the room, smiling to himself. Now, if Bethany
was right and this term's students could perform the research satisfactorily,
he could make good on his blithe promise to the Council. He did hope that the
computers would last long enough for a comprehensive search. They had got so
erratic lately that their performance was suspect at most times. Some material
was definitely scrambled and lost among files. And no-one knew how to solve the
problem of replacement parts. Of course, the pcs were so old and decrepit, it
was truly a wonder that they had lasted as long as they had. Was there any
point these days in holding a course on computer electronics?
Which thought
reminded him that he had interviews with two sets of parents who were insisting
that their offspring be put in the computer course since that was the most
prestigious of those offered. And the one involving the least work, since there
were so few computers left.
Where would
they practise the skills they learned? Clisser wondered.
Furthermore,
neither of the two students concerned had the aptitude to work with mechanical
objects; they just thought it was what they wanted. There were always a few
cases like that in an academic year.
"And one
set of Holder parents who did not like their daughter associating with lesser
breeds without the law" as Sheledon put it.
"As if
there was room, or facilities, for more than one teachers' school. Or the
private tutors some Holders felt should be supplied them because of their
positions. Ha! As it was, the peripatetic teachers were going all year long,
trying to cover the basics with children in the far-flung settlements.
Well, maybe one
day they could site a second campus - was that the word? - on the eastern
coast. Of course, with Threadfall coming, he'd have to revise all the schedules
as well as instruct his travellers on how to avoid getting killed by the stuff.
He had seen footage - when the projector still worked - of actual Threadfall.
He shuddered.
Accustomed as
he had been all his life to the prospect of the menace, he still didn't like
the inevitability. The reality was nearly on them.
The Weyrleaders
could waffle on about how well prepared Hold and Weyr were, with dragon
strength at max, and ground crews and equipment organized, but did anyone
really know what it would be like? He swore under his breath as he made his way
to the rooms that still needed to be completed to receive occupants in five
days. He'd work on the syllabus on his lunch break.
A sudden
thought struck him so that he halted, foot poised briefly above the next step.
What they really needed was a totally new approach to education on Pern!
What was the
point of teaching students subjects now rendered useless here on Pern? Like
computer programming and electronic maintenance? What good did it do the
Pernese boys and girls to know the old geographic and political subdivisions of
Terra? Useless information. They'd never go there! Such matters did not impinge
on their daily lives. What was needed was a complete revision of learning
priorities, suitable to those who were firmly and irrevocably based on this
planet. Why did anyone NOW need to know the underlying causes of the Nathi
Space War?
No-one here was
going to get in space - even the dragons were limited to distance which they
could travel before they were in oxygen debt.
Why not study
the spatial maps of Pern and forget those of Earth and its colonies? Study the
Charter and its provisions as applicable to the Pernese citizenry, rather than
prehistoric governments and societies? Well, some of the more relevant facts could
be covered in the course to show how the current governmental system, such as
it was, had been developed. But there was so much trivia - no wonder his
teachers couldn't get through the lessons. Small wonder the students got bored.
So little of
what they were presently required to learn had any relevance to the life they
lived and the planet they inhabited.
History should
really begin with Landing on Pern well, some nodding acquaintance with the
emergence of homo sapiens, but why deal with the aliens which Earth's
exploratory branch had discovered when there was little chance of them arriving
in the Rukbat system?
And further,
Clisser decided, taken up with the notion, we should encourage specialized
training - raising agriculture and veterinary care to the prestige of computer
sciences. Breeding to Pernese conditions and coping with Pernese parasites was
far more important than knowing what had once bothered animals back on Earth.
Teach the miners and metal workers where the spatial maps showed deposits of
ores and what they were good for; teach not the history of art - especially
since many of the slides of Masterpieces had now deteriorated to muddy blurs -
but how to use Pernese pigments, materials, design and tailoring; teach the
Great Currents, oceanography, fish-conservation, seamanship, naval engineering
and meteorology to those who fished the waters... As to that, why not separate
the various disciplines so that each student would learn what he needed to
know, not a lot of basically useless facts, figures and theories?
For instance,
get Kalvi to take in... what was the old term, ah, apprentices... take in
apprentices to learn fabrication and metal-work?
And there'd
have to be a discipline for mining, as well as metal-working. One for weaving;
farming; fishing. And one for teaching, too. Of course, education in itself was
designed to teach you how to solve the problems that cropped up in daily
living, but for speciali ties you could really slim down to the essential
skills required by each. As it was, that sort of apprentice system was almost
in place anyhow with parents either instructing their kids in the family's
profession or getting a knowledgeable neighbour to do it.
Kalvi had both
sons now in supervisory capacities in his Telgar Works.
And there
should be provisions to save other kids, like Jemmy, and see that they were
able to develop a potential not in keeping with their native hold's main
business.
Adminster a
basic aptitude test to every child at six, and the more specific one at eleven
or twelve, and be able to identify special abilities and place him or her where
she could learn best from the people qualified to maximize the innate
potential.
Even in
medicine, a new curriculum should be established, based on what was now
available on Pern rather than what the First Settlers had had. Mind you, Corey
was constantly regretting the lack of this or that medicine, or equipment and
procedures that would have saved lives but were no longer available. Clisser
snorted; too much time was spent bitching about 'what had been' and 'if only we
still had' instead of making the best of what was available in the here and
now.
What was that
old saying?
"Ours not
to wonder what were fair in life, but finding what may he, make it fair up to
our means?" Well, he couldn't remember who had said it or to what it had
applied. But the meaning definitely applied!
Pern had great
riches which were being ignored in the regret of the what had been. Even Corey
had to admit that the indigenous pharmacopoeia was proving to be sufficient for
most common ailments, and even better in some cases now that the last of the
carefully hoarded Earth chemicals were depleted.
Basic concepts
of maths, history, responsibility, duty, could indeed be translated into music,
easier to transmit and memorize. Why, anyone who could strum an instrument
could give initial instruction in holds, teach kids to read, write and do some
figuring, and then let ffiem apply themselves to the nitty-gritty of their life's
occupation.
And music had
always been important here.
He put his foot
down on the step, pleased with this moment's revelation. A whole new way of
looking at the education and training of the young, and entirely suitable to
the planet and its needs. He must really sit down and think it all through...
when he found the time.
His laugh
mocked his grandiose ideas and yet, they'd had to revise and reform so many old
concepts here on Pern: why not the method in which education was administered?
Was that the word he wanted: administered? Like a medicine? He sighed He did
wish that learning was not considered an unavoidable dose. Certainly someone
like Jemmy proved that learning was enjoyable. But then, insatiable appetites
like his for knowledge, for its own sake, were rare.
Clisser trotted
up the last of that flight of steps in considerably better humour. He'd find
the time, by all that's still holy, he would.
Zulaya beamed
at Paulin. "Yes, she rather outdid herself, didn't she?" She turned
to regard her queen fondly as the golden dragon hovered proprietorially over
the fifty-one eggs which would, by all the signs, hatch some time this day.
All morning
dragons had conveyed in guests and candidates.
"Aren't
the Weyrs over-producing a trifle?" Paulin asked.
Benden and Ista
Weyrs had also had Hatchings in the past month.
He had lost two
very promising holder lads to the Weyrs; a felt loss, as the boys could no
longer journey easily between Hold and Weyr as riders were freer to travel, and
to learn and practise other professions during an Interval.
"Frequent
clutches are one of the sure-fire signs that there will be a Pass," Zulaya
said, "obviously looking forward to the days when the dragons of Pern
started the work for which they were engineered. Have you heard that song the
College sent out?"
"Hmmm,
yes, I have," and Paulin grinned. In fact, I can't get it out of my mind.
"Clisser
says they have several more to play for us tonight."
"Just
music?" Paulin asked, scowling.
"It's a
device we asked them for something permanent so that no-one can deny the
imminence of a Pass." Zulaya patted his hand encouragingly.
"You can
ask what progress he's made on that project." K'vin, coming up behind
them, casually laid a hand on his Weyrwoman's shoulder, acting as
proprietorially of her as her dragon was of her clutch. Amused, Paulin coughed
into his hand and hurriedly excused himself.
"He's
worried about that fail-safe," Zulaya said, also amused by K'vin's show of
jealousy but not about to remark on it.
"You're
looking very beautiful in that new dress," he said, eyeing it.
"Am I?
Why, thank you, Kev," she said, twisting her hips to make the skirt whirl.
Which reminds me..." and she held out a fold of the rich crimson patterned
brocade which she had had made for this Hatching. "Fredig suggested tapestries,
hanging in every Weyr and Hold, depicting the return of the Red Star - with the
formulae in the borders. Make an interesting design, certainly."
"Colours
fade and fabrics certainly deteriorate."
"We've
some that graced houses in Landing. That Earth Moon scene which was made, as I've
been told, out of synthetic yarns which are more durable than what we have now
cotton, linen and wool. And even they are looking worn and losing colour."
"I'll have
them washed You'll have them thread-worn. - ooops," and K'vin grinned at
the pun.
"Which is
not what is wanted but there's no reason, Kev, not to have a hundred different
reminders. Something set in stone." the Weyrleader said in a more sober
tone.
"Even
stones move - - Only prior to a Pass.
"Only how
to perpetuate the critical information?"
"I think
everyone's worrying too much. I mean, here we are," and Zulaya gestured
broadly to include the Hatching Ground and the Weyr around them.
"Why else
have dragons? And Weyrs set apart to preserve them, if not for a very, very
good reason? They're the planet's only sure defence." A sound - subliminal
more than a real noise - alerted them.
It issued from
Meranath who reared to her hindquarters, spreading her broad wings; her eyes
glowing brightly green and beginning to whirl with excitement.
"Ah, it
starts," Zulaya said, smiling in anticipation. -Oh, I love Hatchings!"
Hand in hand, the two Weyrleaders raced to the entrance and called out the
news, scarcely needed, for the Telgar dragons were already reacting to the
queen's maternal croon with their deep masculine humming.
The Weyr Bowl
became active with dragons a-wing in excitement, flipping here and there on
seemingly unavoidable collision courses: with the Weyrlingmaster herding the
candidates forward: with parents and friends of the lucky boys and girls
rushing across the hot sands to take their places in the amphitheatre: hustling
to get the best seating for the Impression about to happen.
K'vin sent
Zulaya back to keep Meranath company as he urged people inside, checked the
nervous white-clad candidates who had been halted in a clump near the entrance
until the spectators were all seated.
"You've
long enough to wait on the hot sands as it is," T'dam, the Weyrlingmaster,
told them. "Singe your feet, you could, out there."
All this time
the humming was rising in volume: Meranath joined by all the other dragons in a
chorus of tones that Sheledon - and others had tried to imitate but never quite
succeeded. Meranath's throat was swollen with her sound, which continued
unabated and seemingly without her needing to draw breath. Soon, as the volume
increased, her chest and belly would begin to vibrate too, with the intensity
of her humming. K'vin was aware of the usual response in himself, a jumble of
emotions; a joy that threatened to burst his heart through his chest, pride,
hope, fear, yearning - oddly enough, hunger was part of it - and a sadness
that, on some occasions, could make him weep.
Zulaya always
wept at Hatchings - at least, until Impressions began.
Then she was
jubilant, picking up on her queen's acceptance of her clutch's partnering.
In Fort Hold's
storage, there were file boxes full of early psychological profiles about the
effect of Hatching on riders, dragons and the new weyrlings. The bonding that
occurred was of such complexity and depth that no other union could be compared
with it: almost overwhelming in the initial moment of recognition, and
certainly the most intense emotion the young candidates had ever experienced.
Some youngsters
had no trouble at all adapting to the intense and intrusive link: some suffered
feelings of inadequacy and doubt. Every Weyr had its own compendium of
information about what to do in such-and-such a situation. And every weyrling
was assiduously trained and supported through the early months of the
relationship until the Weyrleaders and Weyrlingmaster deemed he/she was stable
enough to take responsibility for her/himself and her/his dragon.
But then, a
rider was the dragon, and the dragon the rider, in a partnership that was so
unwavering, its cessation resulted in suicide for the dragon who lost his mate.
The unfortunate rider was as apt to take his life as not. If he lived, he was
only half a man, totally bereft by his loss. Female riders were less apt to
suicide; they at least had the option of sublimating their loss by having
children.
When the little
fire-lizards, who had supplied the genetic material to bio-engineer the larger
dragons, had still been available, a former male rider found some solace in
such a companionship. Only three fire-lizard clutches had been found in Ista in
the last five decades, though it was thought more might be found in the
Southern Continent, but that quest had so far been futile. The vets had decided
that some sort of odd disease had infected the creatures on northern warm
beaches, reducing their numbers and/or their clutches. Whatever the reason,
no-one had fire-lizard companions any more.
As soon as most
of the guests had crossed the hot sands, T'dam allowed the candidates to make a
loose circle around the eggs. There was no golden egg in this clutch - a
circumstance which had both relieved and worried the Weyrleaders.
They had five
junior queens, which was quite enough for Telgar's low flight wing. In fact,
there was no dearth of queens in any of the Weyrs, but there was safety in
having enough breeders.
Only five girls
stood on the Hatching Ground vying to attract the attention of the greens.
There should have been six, but one girl's family had refused to give her up on
Search since they claimed a union had been arranged and they could not go back
on that pledge. As K'vin thought that a good third or even half of this clutch
might be greens, he hoped there'd be enough suitable lads' to impress the green
hatchlings. His study of Thread fighting tactics also indicated that greens
with male riders tended to be more volatile, apt to ignore their Weyrleaders'
orders in the excitement of a Fall: in short, they tended to unnecessarily show
off their bravery to the rest of the Weyr. On the other hand, the green dragons
were valuable to a Weyr for their speed and agility even if they didn't have
the stamina of the larger dragons. A careful wing leader alternated his green
riders, resting each at least an hour during a Fall.
There had been
a monograph on the advantages of female over male green riders in Threadfall.
Although the text allowed the reader to make his own decision, K'vin had fallen
on the side of preferring females when Search provided them.
Certainly their
personalities were more stable and they posed fewer problems to the
Weyrleaders. Young male green riders could go into emotional declines if they
lost their weyrmates and be useless in Fall, sometimes even suiciding in their
distress. On the other hand, since the greens were sexually very active, there
was more danger of female riders becoming pregnant, unless they were extremely
careful.
Even
spontaneous abortions due to the extreme cold of between required sensible
convalescence.
"Taking a
short dragon-ride" was now a euphemism for ending an unwanted pregnancy.
Another good reason to have a few female green riders in the Weyr: less
embarrassment.
According to
Zulaya, though, there had been few such terminations since she had become
Weyrwoman. Probably due to the fact that too many holds had lost relatives to
the last bad winter fever. Or possibly because everyone wanted to have enough
children to extend their legitimate holdings or establish new ones.
The draconic
humming - what Clisser called a pre-birth lullaby was reaching an almost
unendurable level, climaxing when the first egg cracked open. The spectators
were exhibiting the usual excitability, jumping about, weeping, singing along
with the dragons. They'd calm down, too, once the Hatching had begun.
And it did.
Three shells burst outwards simultaneously, fragments raining down on nearby
eggs and causing them to crack as well. K'vin counted nine dragons, six of them
wetly green, and revised his third of greens closer to half.
The hatchlings
were so dangerous at this stage, ravenous from their encapsulation, and some of
the nearer candidates hastily avoided the bumbling progress of the new-born.
Two greens seemed headed for Weyrbred girls but the blonde from Ista, already
noted in the Weyr for her quick wits, stepped beside one and Impression was made
for both.
Three of the
other greens made for lads who had demonstrated homosexual preferences in their
holds. The remaining green, after lunging out of her shell, stood, weaving her
head back and forth, crying piteously.
T'dam called
out to the remaining girls to converge on her.
The brunette
girl from Ista made for her and instantly the little green covered the
intervening distance, squeaking with relief.
K'vin swallowed
against the emotional lump in his throat: that instant of recognition always
brought back the moment when he had experienced the shock of Impression with
Charanth. And the glory of that incredibly loving mind linking with his: the
knowledge that they were indissolubly one, heart, mind and soul.
We are, are we not? Charanth said, his tone rough with the memory of that rapture. Despite
the fact that Charanth, like the rest of the Weyr's dragons, was perched up
along the ceiling, K'vin could hear the dragon's sigh.
Zulaya grinned
up at K'vin, aware of what was taking place within him, tears flowing down her
face as the high emotional level of the Hatching affected her.
Absently K'vin
thought that the glowing bulk of Meranath behind Zulaya made a great background
for her beautiful new gown, red against gold.
Then another
dozen or so eggs split wide open and the raucous screeching of starving little
dragonets reverberated back and forth on the Ground. There was a piercing
quality to these screams like lost souls. As each hatchling met its rider, the
scream broke off and a mellow croon began. That quickly segued into a piteous
hungry appeal which was almost more devastating than the earliest screech the
weyrlings made. K'vin's stomach invariably went into empathetic hunger cramps.
The noise of a
Hatching, K'vin thought, was unique.
Fortunately, because
human eardrums were not designed to deal with such decibels and cacophony, it
didn't last too long.
He always felt
slightly deafened - certainly ear sore - by the end of a Hatching.
He was suddenly
aware of another sort of babble and fuss going on just outside the Hatching
Ground. He tried to see what was happening, but he saw T'dam striding over to
investigate so K'vin turned his attention back to the pairing of the last few
hatchlings, two browns and the last green. Two lads were homing on the green,
desperate expressions on their faces. Abruptly the green turned from them and
resolutely charged across the sands to the girl who had just entered.
K'vin gave a
double-take. There were only five girls, weren't they? Not that he wasn't glad
to see another. And she was the one the green wanted, for the hatchling pushed
aside the boy who tried to divert her.
Then three men
strode into the Ground, furious expressions on their faces, with T'dam trying
to intercept their angry progress towards the lately Impressed green pair.
"DEBERA!"
yelled the first man, reaching out and snatching her away from the green
dragonet.
That was his
first mistake, K'vin thought, running across the sands to avert catastrophe.
Damn it all. Why did this marvellous moment have to be interrupted so abruptly?
Hatchings
should be sacrosanct.
Before K'vin
could get there, the green reacted to the man's attempt to separate her from
her chosen one. She reared, despite being not altogether sure of her balance on
wobbly hindquarters. Extending her short forearms with claws unsheathed, she
lunged at the man.
K'vin had one
look at the shock on his face, the fear on the girl's before the dragon had the
man down and was trying to open her jaws wide enough to fit around his head.
T'dam, being
nearer, plunged to the rescue. The girl, Debera, was also trying to detach her
dragonet from her father, for that's what she was calling him.
"Father!
Father! Leave him alone, Morath. He can't touch me now I'm a dragon rider
Morath, do you hear me?" Except that K'vin was very anxious that Morath
might have already injured the man, he was close to laughing at this Debera's
tone of authority. The girl had instinctively adopted the right attitude with
her newly hatched charge.
No wonder she'd
been Searched and at some hold evidently not too far away.
K'vin assisted
Debera while T'dam pulled the fallen man out of the dragon's reach. Then his
companions hauled him even further away while Morath continued to squeal and
writhed to resume her attack.
He would hurt you. He would own you. You are mine and I am yours and
no-one comes between us, Morath was saying so ferociously that every rider heard her.
Zulaya joined
the group and, bending to check the father's injuries, called for the medics
who were dealing with the minor lacerations that generally occurred at this
time. Fortunately, Morath had no fangs yet and, although there were raw weals
on the man's face and his chest had been badly scratched by unsheathed claws -
despite their newness - he had been somewhat protected by the leather jerkin he
wore.
By now, most of
the newly-hatched were out of the Grounds, being fed their first meal by their
new life companions. The spectators, beginning to dismount from the ampitheatre's
levels, managed to get a peek at the injured man. Undoubtedly they would
recount the incident at every opportunity. K'vin hoped the embellishments would
stay within reason. Now he had to deal with the facts.
"So,
perhaps you would tell us what this is all about?" he asked Debera who,
confronted by the Weyrleader and Weyrwoman, was suddenly overcome with remorse
and doubt.
"I was
Searched," she said, urgently stroking Morath who was trying to burrow her
head into the girl's body. "I had the right to come. I wanted to come,"
and then she waved an indignant hand at her prostrate father, "and they
didn't even show me the letter telling me to come. He wants me for a union
because he had a deal with Boris for a mining site and with Ganmar for taking
me on. I don't want Ganmar, and I don't know anything about mining. I was
Searched and I have the right to decide." The indignant words rushed out,
accompanied by expressions of distaste, resentment and anger!
"Yes, I
remember seeing your name on the Search list, Debera," said Zulaya ranging
herself beside the girl in a subtle position of support. The alignment was not
lost on the older of the two men attending their fallen friend.
"You are
Boris?" she asked him. "So you must be Ganmar," she went on,
addressing the younger one. "Did you not realize that Debera had been
Searched?"
Ganmar looked
very uncomfortable and dropped his eyes, while the scowl on Boris's face
deepened and he jutted out his jaw obstinately. "Lavel told me she'd
refused."
At that point,
Maranis, the Weyr's medic, arrived to have a look at the wounded man. When he
had examined him, he sent a helper for litter-bearers. Then he began to deal
with the injuries, pulling back the tattered jerkin, provoking a groan from the
dazed man.
"Well,
Boris," Zulaya said, at her sternest. "As you seem to be aware,
Debera does have the right..."
"That's
what you weyrfolk always say. But it's us who suffer from what you call 'right'
Making more trouble, Boris?" asked Tashvi, arriving just then with Salda.
"You
agreed, Tashvi," Boris said, with little courtesy for his Lord Holder. "You
said we could dig that new mine. You were glad to have me and my son here
start. And Lavel was willing for Ganmar to have his daughter."
"Ah, but
the daughter seems not to have been so willing," Lady Salda remarked.
"She was
willing all right, wasn't you, Deb?" Boris said, staring with angry
accusation at the girl who returned his look by lifting her chin proudly.
"Til they
came from the Weyr on Search."
"Search
has the priority," said Tashvi. "You know that, Boris."
"We had it
all arranged," the father spoke up, now his pain had been alleviated by
the numb weed Maranis had slathered on his wounds.
"We had it
arranged!" And the look he gave his daughter was trenchant with angry,
bitter reproach.
"You had
it all arranged," Debera said, equally bitter, between yourselves, but not
with me, even before the Search.
A wistful moan
from Morath interrupted her angry rebuttal.
"She's
hungry. I have to feed her. Come along now," she added in a far more
loving tone. Without a backward glance, she led her green dragonet out of the
Hatching Ground.
"I'd say
that the matter was certainly not well arranged, then," Tashvi said.
"But it
was," said Lavel, jabbing one fist at the dragon riders until they came
round, "putting ideas in her head when she was a good, hard-working girl
who always did as she was told.
"Then you
riders tell her she's fit for dragons. Fit! I know what you riders get up to,
and Debera's a good girl. She's not like you lot."
"That's
quite enough of such talk," said Zulaya, drawing herself up, insulted.
"Indeed it
is," Tashvi agreed, scowling angrily. "The Weyrwoman will realize
that you're not yourself, wounded as you are."
"Wounds
got nothing to do with my righteous anger, Lord Holder. I know what I know, and
I know we had it all arranged, and you should stick up for your holders, not
these weyrfolk and all their queer customs and doings, and I dunno what'll
happen to my daughter." At that point, he began to weep, more in
frustrated anger than from the pain of the now well-anaesthetized injuries. "She
was a good girl until they come. A good biddable girl!"
Tashvi gestured
peremptorily to the two litter-men to take the man out. Then he turned back to
the Weyrleaders.
"I did
approve the new mine, and Boris and Ganmar as owners, but I'd no idea that
Lavel was in any way involved."
"He's a
troublemaker from way back," Tashvi said, absently shifting his feet on
the hot sands.
Zulaya gestured
for them all to leave the Hatching Ground.
Despite the
extra lining she'd put in her boots this morning, she was uncomfortable
standing there, and Tashvi was wearing light pull-ons.
"And it's
not that he doesn't have other daughters," said Salda, taking her husband's
arm to speed up his progress.
"He's got
upwards of a dozen children and had two wives already. At the rate he's been
making these arrangements of his, he'll have himself sufficient land among his
relatives to start his own Hold. Not that anyone in their right mind would want
him as a Lord Holder."
They paused
outside the Ground now. Adroitly, Zulaya and K'vin chose a position so that
they could also keep a weather eye on the newly-hatched, who, with the help of
their riders, were rapidly devouring the piles of cut meat prepared for their
initial feeding.
Debera's
situation was unusual. Most families were glad enough to have a child chosen on
Search, because of the advantages of having a dragon rider in the family: the
combination of the prestige accrued to the Bloodline as well as the
availability of transport.
Listening to
the vitriol in Lavel's criticism of Weyr life upset both Weyrleaders and Lord
Holders. It was true that certain customs and habits had been developed in the
Weyrs to suit dragon needs, but promiscuity was certainly not encouraged.
In fact, there
was a very strictly observed code of conduct within the Weyr. There might not
be formal union contracts but no rider reneged on his word to a woman, nor
failed to make provision for any children of the pairing. And few Weyrbred
children, reaching puberty, left the Weyr for the grand parental holds even if
they failed to Impress.
Right now, the
festivities had already started in the Main Cavern, with the instrumentalists
playing a happy tune, one that reflected the triumph of a successful Hatching.
Although the new riders were still feeding their dragons or settling them into
the weyrling barracks, once the sated dragonets fell asleep the new dragon men
and women would join their relatives.
Zulaya wondered
if she should remind Lavel that the female riders were housed separately from
the males. He obviously had no idea at all how much care a new dragonet
required from its human. Most days the weyrlings fell into bed too exhausted to
do anything BUT sleep. And had to be rousted out of their bunks by the
Weyrlingmaster when they failed to respond to their hungry dragons' summons.
The young lad,
Ganmar, sulked, looking decidedly uncomfortable in his present situation.
Zulaya doubted that his heart was the least bit broken by this turn of events.
Of course, if he had to work with that father of his building a new hold, maybe
a pretty girl to bed at night would have been a major compensation.
"What I
should like to know," Salda was saying, "is why Debera arrived here
so late, on her own and with you evidently in hot pursuit."
"You
realize, of course," and the stern expression in Salda's eyes was one
Zulaya knew well, "that we - Lord Tashvi and I - would not be at all
pleased to find that Debera has been denied her holder rights."
"Holder?"
Lavel snorted and then moaned as the injudicious movement caused him pain. "She'll
not be a holder now, will she? She'll be lost to us for ever, she will."
"And any
chance of bagging her legal land allotment," Salda said with mock remorse.
Lavel growled and tried to turn away from the Lady Holder.
"You've
claimed more than most as it is. I trust Gisa is in good health? Or have you
got yet another child on her? You'll wear her out the same as you did Milla,
you know. But I suppose there are women stupid enough to fall for your
ever-increasing land masses. Ssshish," and Salda turned from him in
disgust. "Get him out of my sight. He offends me. And sullies the spirit
of this occasion."
"He's not
so wounded he can't travel," the medic said helpfully.
"Travel?"
Boris exclaimed, pretending dismay as he had glanced in the direction of the
Lower Cavern where the roasts were being served.
"I could
find him a place overnight," Maranis began hesitantly.
Just then four
young weyrfolk led up the visitors' horses which they had recaptured.
"Ah, here
are your mounts, Boris," Zulaya said. Let us not keep you from a safe
journey home. You should easily make it back before dark. Maranis, give Lavel
enough fell juice to see him to his hold.
"Lads,
help him mount. Come, K'vin, we're overlong congratulating the happy parents."
She linked her right
arm in K'vin's and her left with Lady Salda and hauled them along across the
Bowl.
"A very
good Hatching, I'd say," she began, without a backward look at the three
dismissed holders. Nineteen greens, fifteen blues, ten browns and seven
bronzes. Good distribution, too. Good size to the bronzes as well. I do believe
every clutch produces dragons just slightly larger than the last."
"Dragons
haven't yet reached their design size," K'vin said, answering her lead. "I
doubt we'll see that in our lifetime."
"Surely
they're big enough already?" asked Salda, her eyes wide.
Zulaya laughed.
"Larger by several hands than the first ones who fought Thread, which will
make it all that much easier for us this time round."
"You know
what to expect, too," Tashvi said, nodding approval.
Zulaya and K'vin
exchanged brief glances. Hopefully, what they could expect did not include
unwelcome surprises.
"Indeed we
have the advantage of our ancestors in that," K'vin said stoutly.
Zulaya gave his
arm a little squeeze before she released him and strode to the first table
where the families of two new brown riders were sitting. K'vin continued in
with Salda and saw her and Tashvi settled at the head table, where he and
Zulaya would join them after they'd done their obligatory rounds of the tables.
Then, making a private bet with himself, he started at the opposite end of the
wide Cavern.
By the fourth
stop, he had won his bet: news of the unusual Impression of the last green
dragon was already circulating.
"Is it
true," the holder mother of a bronze rider asked, "that that girl had
to run away from her hold?" She, and the others at this table, were
clearly appalled at such a circumstance.
"She got
here in time, that's what's important," K'vin said, glossing over that
query.
"What if she
hadn't come?" asked one of the adolescents, her expression avid. "Would
the dragon have..."
She stopped
abruptly - as if she'd been kicked under the table, K'vin thought, suppressing
a grin.
"Ah,"
he said, bridging the brief pause, "but I'm sure you saw that other lads
crowded round, ready and willing. The dragonet would have chosen one of them."
That was not
exactly true. Which was why every Weyr had more than sufficient candidates on
the Ground during a Hatching. Early on, the records mentioned five occasions
when a dragonet had not found a compatible personality. Its subsequent death
had upset the Weyr to the point where every effort was then made to eliminate a
second occurrence, including accepting the dragonet's choice from among
spectators.
There were also
cases where an egg did not hatch. In the early days, when the technology had
still been available, necropsies had been performed to establish cause. In most
of the recorded instances, there had been obvious yolk problems, or the
creature had been mis formed and would not have survived Hatching. Three times,
however, the cause of death could not be established as the foetus had been
perfect, with no apparent deficiency or disability. The message was handed down
to dispose of such unhatched eggs between immediately: a duty performed on such
rare occasions by the Weyrleader and his bronze.
"I saw her
ride up," said the girl, delighted to recount this fact. "And then
the men who tried to stop her."
"You must
have had the best seat in the house," K'vin told her, grinning.
The girl shot a
vindictive glance around the table. "Yes, I did, didn't I? I saw it all!
Even when the dragonet tried to eat someone."
"Was that
her father?"
"Suze,
now, that's enough of that," said her own father, and the older boy beside
her must have pinched her for she shot straight up on the bench and glared at
him.
"Yes, it
was her father," K'vin said.
"Didn't he
know any better than to strike a dragon's rider?" asked Suze's father,
shocked by such behaviour.
"I think
he has perceived his error," K'vin said dryly and caught Suze's startled
reaction. "What has your son (and Charanth, as he always did, supplied the
boy's name from his dragon's mind so quickly that the pause was almost
unnoticeable), Thomas, decided on for a rider name?"
"Well, I
don't think Thomas dared to hope," his mother replied, but her expression
expressed both her pride in his modesty and her delight in his success.
"He never
liked being a Thomas," Suze said, irrepressible.
"He'll
pick a new name," and she gave a snide sideways glance at her parent.
"And here
he is, if I don't miss my guess," K'vin said, gesturing towards the lad
making his way across the Cavern floor. K'vin had lectured the candidates on
their responsibilities to their dragonets so he was familiar with many of them.
This Thomas, or whatever, bore a strong enough resemblance to both sister and
brother to make him easily identifiable. He hoped that a facial resemblance was
all Thomas shared with his sister. She was a spiteful one.
"Well
done, young man," K'vin said, holding out his hand.
"And how
shall we style you now?"
"S'mon,
Weyrleader," the new bronze rider said, still flushed with elation. He had
a good firm handshake. "I considered T'om, but I never liked the nickname."
"You said
you'd..." Suze got yet another kick under the table, for she yipped this
time and tears started in her eyes.
"It's
easier to say," S'mon said. "Tiabeth likes it." Now he showed
the delightful confusion of pride and proprietariness so many brand-new
weyrlings exhibited while accustoming themselves to their new condition and
duties. As K'vin remembered so vividly, that took time.
And there was a
T'mas in the first group at Benden.
"He's long
dead," his father said, not altogether pleased with his son's choice. "Thomas
is a family name," he admitted to K'vin. "I'm Thomas, ninth of my
line."
The boy looked
at his father with that curious aloofness of independence that came with being
a newly paired dragon rider sort of "you can't tell me what to do any more"
and "this is my business, Dad, you wouldn't understand."
"Tiabeth
and S'mon," K'vin said, lifting the glass he'd been carrying from table to
table and drinking a toast to the partners. The others made haste to repeat it.
"Eat, S'mon.
"You'll
need every meal you get a chance to eat," he added and left the boy to
follow that very good advice.
At each
subsequent table, he heard more speculation about the late arrival of Debera.
There had been embellishments: one had her father bleeding to death. Another
variation suggested that Debera had been the reluctant one and her family had
insisted that she try to Impress, having been Searched. Young Suze had had the
best seat in the Hatching Ground after all, despite being so far from the
centre that she hadn't had a good view of Impression, but a perfect one for
what was happening outside. So he edited the facts to keep the incident from
getting out of hand. Fortunately, the music the band was playing, and the
lyrics, provided a happy distraction. Most of the music was new. Clisser's musicians
had done their job very well indeed.
K'vin avoided
having his glass filled too often and used slices of the roast wherry and beef
to sop up what was required by the obligatory toasting of the new riders.
He had almost
completed his circuit when he saw the Telgar Holders and T'dam leading Debera
in, all moving towards the head table. Salda and Tashvi rose and went to meet
her half-way. She still had a dazed look on her face and glanced, almost
wildly, around the crowded Cavern.
Someone had
given her a green gown which showed off a most womanly body, and the style of
it as well as the colour suited Debera.
The deep, clear
green set off her fine complexion and a head of curling bronze-coloured hair
which was now attractively dressed, not straggling unkempt around a sweaty
distraught face. No doubt Tisha, the head woman had had a hand in the
transformation. Zulaya had once said Tisha treated all the weyrgirls like live
dolls, dressing them up and fussing with their hair. Nor was Tisha herself
childless, but her excess of maternal instinct was an asset in the Weyr.
Salda put an
arm about Debera, her head inclined to the shorter girl as she chatted;
evidently determined to make up for the lack of family members on what was
generally a very happy occasion for holder or crafter. Had Debera seen the last
of her relatives? No matter, she was in the larger, extended family of the Weyr
and could find more amiable and sympathetic replacements.
Zulaya was
introducing Debera to Sarra, the sun-bleached blonde from Ista who was chatting
away with such animation that Debera smiled - tentatively, K'vin thought, but
with growing self-confidence.
"You got
Morath to sleep all right?" he asked, joining the women.
I thought she'd
never stop eating," Debera said, a slightly anxious frown on her face. Her
green eyes, K'vin saw, were also emphasized by the colour of the gown. Tisha
had done her proud.
"They're
voradous," said Zulaya, with a kind laugh. "And so am I. Come, let's
all be seated before there's nothing left for us." Salda gave a
good-natured snort, grinning down at Debera.
"Not
likely. We've been sending you the fatted calves for the past week in
anticipation." She turned to the girl as she passed her over to K'vin. "One
thing sure, girl, you'll eat higher on the hog here in Telgar than you ever did
at home. And not have to cook it!" Debera was so clearly startled by such
jocularity that K'vin took her hand, guiding her to the steps up to the
platform on which the head table was placed.
"I think
you'll be very happy here, Debera," he said gently, "with Morath as
your friend."
Immediately the
girl's face softened with joy and her eyes watered. Her look of vulnerable
wonder struck such a responsive chord in him that he stumbled in following her.
"Oh, and
she is more than a friend," she said, more like a prayer than a statement
of fact.
"Come, sit
beside me," said Zulaya, pulling out the chair, and signalling K'vin to
take the one beyond. They were not in their usual centre table position, but
quick eye contact with Salda and Tashvi had the Holders pulling out those
chairs as if such placement was normal.
"Listen to
that melody. How lovely" she added, tilting her head as the music, not
quite martial but firm, was stopping conversation throughout the Cavern.
"So are
the words," Salda said, eyes widening in surprise, as well as delight, at
what she heard. When her husband started to say something, she hushed him.
K'vin was happy
to listen, too.
Sheledon, who
had insisted on using the Telgar Impression as the debut of some new music, was
very pleased that conversation had trailed off and everyone was hearing what
was being sung. Now was the time to spring the big one on them. As soon as the
coda on what Jemmy called 'Dragonlove' had finished, he held up the music to
the 'Duty Ballad' and then pointed it at Sydra who would sing the boy soprano
part.
They hadn't
found a lad with a suitable voice yet, but she could whiten her voice to
approximate the tone. At Sheledon's signal, Bethany piped the haunting notes of
the intro and Sydra rose to sing the opening verse.
All right, they
didn't have enough trained voices to really sock the Ballad to this audience -
in his mind, Sheledon heard what a full chorus would sound like - but the
excellent accoustics in the Cavern were a big help. And the music captivated.
Sydra managed to sound very young and awed..
Gollagee came
in with his fine tenor as the dragon rider. Sheledon was right on cue with his
baritone part and then, with Bethany singing alto and the Weyr's own musicians
adding their voices, they wound it all up.
There was just
one split second's total silence - the sort that makes performers rejoice - and
then everyone was standing, wildly cheering, clapping, stamping their approval.
Even the
dragons joined in from outside, caught up in their riders' enthusiasms. Sydra
kept bowing and urging the rest of the musicians to stand and accept the
accolades. Even Bethany stood, a few tears trickling down her cheeks at such a
unanimous reception.
They gave five
encores of the Ballad - with people adding their voices to the chorus as they
quickly picked up on the words. When Sheledon ruefully waved off a sixth
repeat, there were calls for the Dragonlove song which was so appropriate for
this evening.
All in all,
Sheledon decided as he caught Sydra's smiling face, a very successful debut!
Jemmy had outdone himself and Clisser would be delighted. Perhaps there was
something to Clisser's notion of redesigning the educational system so less
time would be wasted on unessentials and the Real Meaning of Life could be
addressed sooner.
It was the
Weyrwoman, Zulaya, who noticed Debera's increasing nervousness.
"Go on
back to Morath, m'dear. You're exhausted and you'll need your sleep."
"Thank
you, ah..."
"We make
no use of titles in the Weyr," Zulaya added. "Just go. I've given you
permission, if that's what you were so politely waiting for."
Debera murmured
her thanks and rose, wanting to slip out as inconspicuously as possible. She'd
felt so awkward and unsocial, even when everyone, even the Lord and Lady Holder
- she couldn't reconcile their behaviour with her father's stories about them,
but she intended to forget everything he'd ever told her - had been so
incredibly kind and easy. She thought they would expect her to give an
explanation of her unusual behaviour, but they'd supported her instantly.
Really, it was as if her real life had started the moment she and Morath had
locked eyes.
It had, she
decided as she made her way along the side of the Cavern wall, head down so she
needn't make eye contact with anyone.
She saw only
smiles from folks as she passed them, smiles and courtesy.
And certainly
none of the lascivious behaviour that her father had often said was prevalent
in the Weyr.
Of course he'd
told her a lot of things. And not told her others.
Like the fact
that an official announcement of Search, with her name on it, had been
delivered to the hold so that she'd know when to come, to be available for the
Hatching.
No, she'd had
to find that, stuffed in the cupboard where bits and pieces that could be
re-used were kept. No-one at Balan Hold, especially her father and stepmother,
Gisa, would have thrown out a whole sheet of paper that had a clean side that
could be recycled. How she hated that word! Cycle, re-cycle. Use, re-use. The
concept dominated every aspect of Balan Hold.
And they were
not poor in material possessions: not the way some holders were. But poor Balan
Hold had been in spirit ever since her mother had died.
She'd been
looking for something else entirely when she found the sheet. Not that she knew
the day's date, but it was obvious that the announcement must have come some
time before, the paper being soiled and the creases well set. Maybe even weeks.
She had been ready to accept Ganmar as an alternative to continued living in
her father's house. She'd known that she'd have to work as hard, if not harder,
setting up a new hold, chiselling it out of rock above the mine, but it would
have been hers - and Ganmar's - and something she could design to her own
wishes. Not that she'd been inclined to believe any of the blithe and
extravagant promises Ganmar or Boris had made her. All they wanted was a strong
body with lots of hard work in it.
But she had
seen a lot of dragons in the sky the day before, most of them carrying
passengers. Balan Hold was not that far from Telgar Weyr - not even by surface
travel. So, the moment she'd read the message, she'd made her plans right then,
without any have ring.
She'd been
Searched: she had the right to be there. No matter how life in the Weyr might
be, it couldn't be worse than what she now endured. And if she could be a
dragon rider Debera had tucked the paper into her hip pocket and slammed the
drawer shut. She was alone in the kitchen, and sun was streaming in, almost as
if adding light to her resolve.
She didn't even
go back to the room she shared with her three half-sisters, but grabbed her
jacket and made for the paddock where the riding horses were kept. There was
no-one about in the yard: all were at work. Assignments had been given out over
breakfast, and everyone had better show their father completed chores or there'd
be no lunch break until they were done.
She didn't even
dare collect a saddle or bridle from the barn because her eldest brothers were
restacking hay - they'd done a sloppy job of it the first time round. She just
grabbed up a leather thong.
Since she'd had
the most to do with the hold horses, she'd have little trouble managing any of
them with just a lip rein.
Bilwil would be
the fastest. She had probably three hours before the midday meal when her
absence would be noticed.
By then, she'd
be well up the track to the Weyr.
With one look
over her shoulder to see if she was being observed, she walked quickly - as if
she were on an errand to the paddock.
Bilwil was not
far from the fence which she climbed - the gate would be too near the vegetable
garden where two half-sisters were weeding.
They loved
nothing better than to report her idling ways to either their mother or her
father. Two brothers in the barn, the next pair out with him in the forestry,
and her stepmother in the dairy hold making cheese. Debera had been grinding
wheat for flour when the cotter pin had snapped. That's what she'd been trying
to find in the drawer; a nail or something to replace the cotter pin so she
could continue her task. So Gisa wouldn't miss her for a while to sound an
alarm. For until flour had been made there'd be no bread and Gisa wouldn't want
to turn that heavy stone, not pregnant as she was.
Bilwil nickered
softly when she approached him she grabbed his forelock. No-one had bothered to
rub him down last night and his coat was rough with perspiration from yesterday's
timber hauling. Maybe she should take one of the others.
But Bilwil had
lowered his head to accept the twist of thong around his lower jaw. She could
scarcely risk chasing a better-rested, less amenable mount about the paddock so
she inserted the rein, grabbed a handful of mane and vaulted to his back. Would
she be vaulting to the back of a dragon tomorrow? She lay as flat as she could
across his neck, just in case someone looked out across the paddock, and kneed
him forward towards the forest.
Just before
they reached the intertwined hedging that marked the far boundary she took one
brief look back at the hold buildings - windows chiselled out of the very rock,
the uneven entrance to the main living quarters, the wider one into the animal
hold. Not a soul in sight.
"C'mon,
bilwil, let's get out of here," she'd murmured and kicked him sharply into
a trot, heading him right at the fence, a point not far from one of the tracks
through the forest.
It was a good
thing Bilwil liked to jump anyhow, because she'd given him only enough room to
gather himself up. But he was nimbly over and had planted his left front foot,
swinging left at it in response to her pull on his mouth and her right heel as
he brought his other feet down. In moments they were among the trees and
quickly reached the track.
Bilwil tried
once to pull to the left, to go back to the hold, but she kicked him sharply
and he went right. They were far enough from the hold so that his hoof heats
wouldn't be audible - not unless someone had their ear to the ground, which was
unlikely. Noses would be to the grindstones, where hers no longer was. The
thought made her grin, though she was not as yet safe from discovery.
As soon as the
track widened, she set Bilwil to a canter, enjoying the one activity in which
she took any pleasure.
She stopped
several times, to rest her own backside as well as Bilwil's and found late
berries to eat. She really ought to have snatched up the last of the breakfast
cheese or even an apple or two to tide her on the way.
It wasn't until
she reached the final leg of the journey up to the Telgar Weyr that she was
aware of pursuit. Or at least spied three horsemen on the road. They could well
be visitors, coming for the Hatching, but it was prudent to suspect the worst.
Her father could be one, and possibly Boris and Ganmar the other two. Either
way, she had to get to the safety of the Weyr before they caught her up. How
had they made so much time in pursuit of her? Had someone seen her after all
and run to alert Lavel?
A long tunnel
had been carved in the thinnest wall of the Telgar Crater as access for surface
traffic. It was lit with glow baskets.
Bilwil was
tired from the last long, steep climb on top of yesterday's work. She thought
she heard male voices yelling at her and kicked Bilwil into a weary trot. No
matter how she used her heels on his ribs, he wouldn't extend his stride. Then
she heard the humming - as if it emanated from the walls around her. She knew
what that meant and she gave a cry of despair.
After all this,
she'd be too late and there wouldn't be a dragon left for her to Impress. Even
if she had been Searched. How could she possibly go back? She wouldn't.
She knew her
rights. She'd been Searched. She could stay at the Weyr until the next clutch.
Anything was preferable to going back to what she'd just left. The union with
Ganmar would not have been any real improvement, although she had been
determined to establish a proper relationship with the young miner. He looked
impressible. Her own mother had told her that there were ways of handling a man
so he didn't even know he was being managed. But Milla had died before she
could impart those ways to her daughter. And Gisa, who had probably given up
all thought of a second union if she had been desperate enough to partner her
father, was a natural victim who enjoyed being dominated.
More hoof steps
sounded in the tunnel and, desperate to reach her objective, Debera kicked
Bilwil on. The gallant animal fell into a heavy canter that jarred every bone
in her body but they made it into the Bowl.
Debera could
see that not only was the Hatching Ground full of people, but also new,
staggering dragonets But, as she got close enough, she saw there were still a
few eggs. Her pursuers were catching up. She had no need to halt Bilwil at the
entrance; he stopped moving forward the moment she stopped kicking him. She
slid off and raced towards the Hatching Ground just as her father, Boris and
Ganmar caught up, yelling at her to stop. To come to her senses...
She wrenched
herself free of grasping hands just in time to reach Morath. And finally came
into her own.
Now, as she
made her way back to the weyrling barracks, she was as tired as she had ever
been in her life and far happier! As she rattled the door in her nervousness to
open it, T'dam poked his head out of the boys' barracks next door.
"Back, are
you? Well, she hasn't moved so much as a muscle. And I don't think you will
either, will you?" She shook her head, too tired to speak. She opened one
side of a door wide enough to accommodate wing-trailing dragonets and slipped
inside, turning to close it after her but T'dam came in as well, reaching up to
turn the glow basket open. As well he did, because Debera would have knocked
into the first of the dragonet beds.
These were
basically simple wooden platforms, raised half a metre above the ground, ample
enough for dragons until they were old enough to be transferred to a permanent
weyr apartment. The rider's bed was a trundle affair to one side of the dragon's,
with storage space underneath and a deep chest at the foot.
She skirted the
bed, relieved she had not awakened the occupant, and got to Morath's, the next
one in. And hers.
There were
several items of clothing on the chest.
"Tisha
sent in some other things since you weren't able to bring any changes with you,"
T'dam said. "And a nightdress, I believe. Open the glow above the bed and
then I'll shut this one."
When she had
done so, he closed the larger one and then the door behind him. Immediately he
had, she examined Morath, curled tightly on her platform, wings over her eyes.
Was that how
dragonets slept? Wondering at the good fortune that had happened to her this
day, Debera watched the sleeping dragonet as dearly as any mother observed a
newborn, much wanted child. Morath's belly still bulged with uneven lumps from
all the meat she had eaten.
T'dam had
laughed when Debera worried that the dragonet would make herself sick with such
greed.
"They
repeat the process six or seven times a day the first month," he'd warned
her. "You'll end up thinking you've spent all your life chopping gobbets
until she settles to the usual three meals a day.
"But don't
worry. By the end of her first year, she'll be eating only twice a week - and
catching her own at that."
Debera smiled,
remembering that conversation and thinking that T'dam had no idea what a relief
it would be to have such an easy job, the doing of which would be a labour of
love and so gratefully received. She held her hand over her beloved Morath,
wanting to caress this so-beloved creature but not wishing to disturb her -
especially when Debera was all but asleep herself. She lingered though, despite
weariness, just watching Morath's ribs rise and fall in sleeping rhythm.
Then she could
no longer resist fatigue.
She was the
lone human in the weyrling barn... no, barracks.
Well, the
others had their families to celebrate with.
Who'd have
thought that Debera of Balan Hold would be sleeping with dragons this night?
She certainly hadn't. She slipped out of the fine dress now, smoothed the soft
fabric of the green gown one last time as she folded it. It had felt so good on
her body and was such a becoming colour: quite the loveliest thing she had ever
worn. Gisa had got all her mother's dresses which ought by custom to have come
to her.
Debera shrugged
into the nightgown, aware of the subtle bouquet of the herbs in which it had
been stored. Once she'd had time to gather the fragrant flowers and leaves for
sachets with her mother.
She pulled back
the thick woollen blanket, fingering its softness, and not regretting in the
slightest the over washed and thin ones she had shared with her step-sisters.
The pillow was thick under her cheek, too, as she put her head down, and soft
and redolent of yet more fragrances. That was all she had time to think.
Back at the
College, Sheledon, Bethany and Sydra arrived a-dragon back full of the ardent
reception they'd had at Telgar Weyr.
"I don't
know why we didn't think of Teaching Ballads before now," said Sydra,
slightly hoarse from all the singing she'd done the night before.
"Too bad
we hadn't the selections ready for the other two Impressions," Sheledon
said, for he invariably saw disadvantages everywhere. "Are there any more
upcoming?"
"Well,
there're Year's End celebration" Bethany replied.
"We tend
to stay here for them," said Sheledon, not wanting to miss the feasts that
Chrislee generally provided for those holidays. The senior teachers at the
College invariably were included on the Fort guest list and never missed such
opportunities, even if they had the option of returning to their native hearths
for the three-day celebration.
"Maybe
this once," Sydra began, looking at Sheledon, "we should go home and
spread the word."
Bethany
frowned. The full chorus and accompaniment is what makes the songs so
effective.
Sheledon
frowned. "We can certainly organize substantial groups for the main Holds.
The dragon riders always come as guests anyway, so they'd all get a chance to
hear..." Then he smiled down at his wife, settling an affectionate arm
across her shoulders. "You sure did the boy soprano bit well. But I think
we'd best get the juvenile voice for Year's End. You're hoarse today."
"Halllooo
down there," and they all looked up to see Clisser, bending far out from
an upper window and waving at them.
"Did the
Ballads work?" he yelled, hands to his mouth.
The musicians
looked at each other, Sheledon counted the beat and they roared back. "THEY
LOVED US!" Clisser made a broad OK gesture with both hands and then waved
them to go to his office in the original section of the facility.
They reached it
first, still elated with the success of their performance, an elation which
began to disperse when they saw Clisser's expression.
"What's
the matter?" asked Bethany, half rising from her chair.
The computers
went down and Jemmy thinks they're totally banjaxed now" Clisser said
glumly, flopping into the chair at his desk, his body slack in despair.
"What
happened? They were working perfectly," Sheledon said, scowling. What was
Jemmy...
Clisser held up
one hand. "Not Jemmy. One of those students hacking around." Sheledon's
expression suggested dire punishments.
Clisser shook
his head. "Lightning."
"Lightning?
But we had no storm warnings."
"Fried all
the solar panels, too, although at least we can replace those. Corey lost her
system, what was left of it, including the diagnostics she's been trying so
desperately to transcribe."
Made speechless
by such a catastrophe, Sheledon sat down heavily on the corner of the desk
while Sydra leaned disconsolately against the wall.
"How much
is gone?" Bethany asked, trying to absorb the disaster.
"All of
it," and Clisser flicked his fingers before he clasped them together
across his chest, chin down.
"But...
but, surely, it's only a matter - -" Sheledon began.
"The
motherboards are charcoal and glue," Clisser said dully. Jemmy's gone
through every box of chips we had left, and there aren't enough to rebuild even
a few meg - and that wouldn't operate the system. Even part of the system. It's
gone," and he waved his hand helplessly again.
There was
silence for long moments as those in the room struggled to cope with such a
massive loss.
How much did
the students... Bethany began, cutting her sentence off as Clisser waved,
almost irritably, to silence her.
"Surely
they saved something."
"Something,
but nowhere near what we need, what was waiting to be copied, a mere fraction
of what we need to know."
"Look,
Clisser," Bethany said gently, "what have we really lost?"
He jerked his
head up, glaring at her. "What have we really lost?"
"Why,
everything!" Sheledon and Sydra were regarding Bethany as if she had run
mad.
"The
history we are already seeing as irrelevant to our lives now?" she asked
softly. "Descriptions of archaic devices and procedures which have no
relevance on Pern since we no longer operate an advanced technological society?
Isn't that what you were doing anyway, Clisser? Changing the direction of
teaching in line to what is needed in this time, on this planet, and
disregarding I don't know how many gigabytes of stored information that is
irrelevant! Now that we don't have to worry about all that," and her hand
airily dismissed the loss, "we can forge ahead and not have to concern
ourselves with translating useless trivia for posterity. So I ask you, what
have we really lost?"
Silence
extended until Sheledon uttered a sharp laugh.
"You know,
she may be right. We've been knocking ourselves out copying down stuff that won't
work here on Pern anyhow. Especially," and his voice hardened, since
no-one back on Earth cares enough to find out what's happened to us."
Sydra regarded
her husband with a blink. "Not that old Tubberman homing tube business
again?" Sheledon went defensive.
"Well, we
know from..."
"the
Records" Sydra said with a malicious grin, and Sheledon flushed, "that
the message tube was sent without Admiral Benden's authority. Without the name
of a colony leader on it, no-one on Earth would have paid it any heed if it
even got to Earth in the first place."
"Someone
could have come and had a look-see," Sheledon said.
"Oh, come
now, Shel," said Bethany, as amused by his sudden switch for he had always
derided the Tubberman Tube Theory. "Pern isn't rich enough for anyone to
bother about."
"So the
precious records said, but I think that was to save face."
"They
should have checked on us to see how we were faring. They got awfully
proprietary about the Shavian colonies that were the basic reason for the Nathi
Space War."
"That was
over three hundred years ago, Shel," Bethany said in her patient
teacher-tone.
"And it is
totally irrelevant to now," Sydra added. "Look, the loss of the
computers is undeniably a blow to us, but not something we cannot overcome."
"But all
that information..." cried Clisser, tears coming to his eyes.
"Clisser,
dear," and Bethany leaned across to him, patting his hand gently, "we
still have the best computers ever invented..." and she tapped her
forehead, "and they're crammed full of information: more than we really
need to operate - -"
"But...
but, now we'll never find out how to preserve vital information -- like early
warning of the return of the Red Star."
"We'll
think of something," she said in such a confident tone that it penetrated
Clisser's distress. And briefly he looked a trifle brighter.
Then he slumped
down in even deeper despair. "But we've failed the trust placed in us to
keep the data available."
"Nonsense!"
Sheledon said vehemently, crashing one fist down on the desk-top. "We've
kept them going past their design optimum. I've read enough in the old manuals
to appreciate that. Every year for the past fifty has been a miracle. And we
haven't, as Bethany says, lost all. A gimmick from the past has failed, like so
many of them have. And we're now going to have to bypass the easy access to
data they provided and sweat through books! Books! Books that we have in
quantity.
Clisser
blinked. He shook his head as if mentally rejecting a thought.
"We have
been planning to ignore much of the old data," Bethany said gently. "What
was most important to us..." and her hand indicated the Pern of the
present, has been copied well, most of it," she amended when Clisser
opened his mouth. "If we haven't needed it up to now, we never will."
"But we've
lost the sum total of human..." Clisser began..
"Ha!"
Sydra said. "Ancient history, man. We've survived on Pern and it is PERN
that's important. As Bethany said, if we haven't needed it up to now, we never
will. So calm down."
Clisser
scrubbed at his skull with both hands. "But how will I tell Paulin?"
"Didn't
the lightning affect Fort, too?" asked Sheledon and answered himself. "I
thought I saw a work force on the solar heights."
Clisser threw
both hands up in the air. "I told him we were checking the damage."
"Which is
total?" Sheledon asked.
"Total!"
and Clisser dropped his head once again to his chest in resignation to the
inevitable.
"It's not
as if you caused the storm or anything, Cliss", Bethany said.
He gave her a
burning look.
"Was the
system being run at the time?" Sheledon asked.
"Of course
not," Clisser said emphatically, scowling at Sheledon. "You know the
rule. All electronics are turned off in any storm."
"And they
were?"
"Of course
they were."
Bethany exchanged
a look with Sheledon as if they did not credit that assurance. They both knew
that Jemmy would work until he fell asleep over the keyboard.
"I tell
you," and Clisser went on, "everything powered went down. It's just
luck that the generators have all those surge protectors, but even those didn't
save the computers. The surge came in on the data bus, not the power lines."
"Which
were dying anyway. They were now dead, really, truly dead," Sheledon said
firmly. "Rest in peace. I'll go and tell Paulin if he's who you're worried
about."
"I am not,"
and Clisser banged his fist on the table, worried about Paulin. "And it's
my duty to tell him."
"Then also
tell him that our new teaching techniques are in place and that we've lost
nothing that future generations will need to know," said Sydra.
"But...
but how do we know what they might need to know?" Clisser asked, clearly
still despairing with that rhetorical question.
"We don't
know the half of what we should know."
Bethany rose
and took the two steps to the beverage counter.
"it's not
working either," Clisser said in a sharp disgusted tone, flicking one hand
at it, insult on injury.
"I shall
miss the convenience," she said.
"We all
shall miss convenience," said Clisser and exhaled sharply, once again
combing his hair back from his forehead with impatient fingers.
"So,"
said Sydra with a shrug of her shoulders, "we use the gas-ring instead. It
heats water just as hot, if not as quickly."
"Now, let's
all go and get a reviving cup, shall we?" She took Clisser by the hand, to
tug him out of his chair. "You look as if you need reviving."
"You're
all high on last night's success," he told them accusingly, but he got to
his feet.
"As well
we are," said Sheledon. "The better to console you, old friend."
"Clisser,"
Bethany began in her soft, persuasive voice, "we have known from our
reading of the Second Crossing that the artificial intelligence, the AIVAS
turned itself off. We know why. Because it wisely knew that people were
beginning to think it was infallible: that it contained all the answers to all
Mankind's problems. Not just its history. Mankind had begun not only to
consider it an oracle but to depend on it far more than was wise. For us. So it
went down.
"We have
let ourselves be guided too long by what we could read and extract from the
data left to us on computer. We have been too dependent. It is high time we
stood squarely on our own two feet..." She paused, twisting her mouth
wryly, to underscore her own uneven stance, "...and made our own
decisions. Especially when what the computers tell us has less and less
relevance to our current problems."
"You said
it, Bethany," agreed Sheledon, nodding approval with a little quirk of his
mouth.
Clisser
smoothed back his hair again and smiled ruefully.
"It would
have been better if this could all have happened just a little -" and he
made a space between thumb and forefinger, "later."
"When we
found what we need for the dragon riders You mean, a fail-proof system to prove
the Red Star's on a drop course?" Sheledon asked and then shrugged. "The
best minds on the continent are working on that problem."
"We'll
find a solution," said Bethany, again with the oddly calm resolution of
hers. "Mankind generally does, you know."
"That's
why we have dragons," Sydra said. "I could really murder a cup of
klah."
An insistent,
increasingly urgent sense of hunger nagged Debera out of so deep a sleep she
was totally disoriented.
The bed was too
soft, she was alone in it, and neither the sounds nor smells around her were
familiar.
I really am most terribly hungrey and I know that you were very tired
but my stomach is empty, empty, empty. MORATH Debera shot bolt upright and cracked her poll on the underside
of the dragonet's head because Morath had been leaning over her bed.
"Ouch! Oh,
dearest, I didn't hurt you, did I?" Standing up in the bed, Debera wrapped
apologetic arms about Morath, stroking her cheeks and ear knobs reassuring her
with murmurs of regret and promises to never hurt her again.
The little
dragon refocused her eyes, whirling lightly, but with only the faintest tinge
of the red of pain and alarm which dissipated quickly with such ardent
reassurances.
Your head is much harder than it looks, she said, giving hers a little shake.
Debera rubbed
underneath the jaw where the contact had been made.
"I'm so
sorry, dearest," and then she heard a giggle behind her and swivelling
around, half in anger, half in reflexive defence, she saw that she was not
alone in the weyrling barracks. The blonde girl from Ista... Sarra, that was
her name... was sitting on the edge of her bed, folding clothes into the chest.
Her dragonet was still curled up in a tight mound from which a slight snore
could be heard.
"Ooops, no
offence intended." Sarra said, smiling with such good nature that Debera
immediately relaxed. "You should have seen the looks on your faces. Morath's
eyes nearly crossed when you cracked her."
Debera rubbed
the top of her head, grimacing, as she descended from the bed.
"I was so
deeply asleep... I couldn't think where I was at first."
"Morath's
been as good as she could be," Sarra said. "T'dam said to dress for
dirty work. We're supposed to bathe and oil them after their first nap of the
day." That was when Debera remembered the pile of things she had not properly
sorted the previous night.
Does dressing take long? Morath asked plaintively.
"No, it
doesn't, love," and, turning her back in case Sarra might be embarrassed,
Debera hauled off the nightdress and threw on the garments on the top of the
pile - not new, certainly, but suitable for rough work.
The socks were
new, knitted of a sturdy cotton, and she was especially grateful for them since
the pair she had had on yesterday had already been worn several days. She
stamped her feet into her own boots and stood.
"I'm
ready, dear," she said to the little green who stepped down off the raised
platform and promptly fell on her nose.
Sarra jumped
the intervening bed to help right Morath, struggling so hard to keep from
laughing that she nearly choked. Once Debera saw that Morath had taken no hurt,
she grinned back at the Istan.
"Are they
always this?"
Sarra nodded. "So
T'dam told us. You'll find a pail of meat just outside the door. We get a break
this first morning," and she wrinkled her nose in a grimace, "but after
today, it's up at the crack of dawn and carve up our darlings' breakfasts."
There was a long snorting snore from Sarra's green and she whirled, waiting to
see if the dragonet was waking up. But the snore trembled into a tiny soprano "ooooooh"
and then resumed its rhythm.
"Did she
do that all night long?" Debera asked.
I am SO hungry.
Debera was all
apologies, and so was Sarra who sprinted ahead to fling open both leaves of the
door, making a flourishing bow for their exit. Morath immediately crowded against
Debera, pushing her to the right, her young nose detecting the enticing smell
in the two covered pails on the rack outside the barracks.
Debera lifted
the pail down while Morath impatiently nudged off the cover and seemed to
inhale the gobbets.
Debera allowed
her to fill her mouth and then started shielding the pail with her body.
"You will
chew what you eat, Morath, you hear me? You could choke to death, and then
where would I be?" Morath gave her such a look of pained astonishment and
reproach that Debera couldn't remain stern.
"Chew,"
she said, popping a handful of pieces into Morath's open mouth. "Chew!"
she repeated and Morath obediently exercised her jaws before spreading them
wide again for another batch. Debera had not tended the orphaned young animals
of her hold without learning some of the tricks.
Whoever had
decided on the quantity, Debera thought, knew the precise size of a dragonet's
belly. Morath's demands had slowed considerably as Debera reached the bottom of
the pail and the dragonet sighed before she swallowed the last.
"I see she's
had breakfast," said T'dam, appearing from behind so suddenly that Morath
squawked in surprise and Debera struggled to get to her feet. T'dam's hand on
her shoulder pushed her back down.
"We're not
formal in the Weyr, Debera," he said kindly.
"Now, lead
her over to the lake there," and he gestured to the right where Debera
recognized the large mounds as sleeping dragonets
"Then,
when she wakes up from this feed she'll be just where you can bathe and oil
her." T'dam grinned. "Before you can feed her again, though..."
and then he motioned to his left. "Are you squeamish?" he asked.
Debera took a
good look in the direction he pointed and saw six skinned carcasses, swaying
from butchering tripods.
Weyrlings were busy
with knives carving flesh off the bones, or at the table chopping raw meat into
dragonet morsels.
"Me?"
Debera gave a cynical snort. "Not likely."
"Good,"
T'dam said approvingly. "Some of your peers are."
"Come now,
Morath," he added in a totally altered tone, loving and kind and
wheedling, you'll need a little rest and the sands by the lake are warm in the
sun.
Morath lifted
her head, her eyes glistening bluey-green as she regarded the Weyrlingmaster.
He is a nice man, she said and began to waddle towards the lake; her swaying belly
bulged lumpily with her meal.
"When you've
settled her, Debera, be sure to get your own breakfast in the kitchen. Good
thing you're not squeamish" he said, turning away, but his chuckle drifted
back to Debera's ears.
It's awfully far to the lake, isn't it, Debera? Morath said, puffing.
"Not
really," Debera said. "Anyway, it's much too rocky underfoot right
here to make a comfortable bed for your nap."
Morath looked
down her long nose, her left fore knocking a stone out of her path. And she
sighed. She kept going, Debera encouraging her with every slow step, until they
reached the sandier ground surrounding the lake. It had recently been raked,
the marks visible between the paw- and tail-prints of the dragonets Debera
urged Morath further on to the sand, to an empty spot between two browns who
were tightly curled with wings to shield their eyes from the autumn sun pouring
down on them.
With a great
sigh, Morath dropped her hindquarters to the sand, with an I'm not going a step
further attitude and sank slowly over to her right side. She curled her tail
about her, curved her head around under her left wing and, with a sweet babyish
croon rumbling in her throat, fell asleep.
Once again,
Debera could barely bring herself to leave the dragonet, lost in the wonder of
having been acceptable to such a marvellously lovable creature.
She'd been
lonely and lacking in love for so long - ever since her mother had died and her
oldest full brother had left the family Hold.
Now she had
Morath, all her very own, and those long years of isolation faded into a
trivial moment.
"She's
perfectly safe here," Debera told herself finally, and forced herself to
leave Morath and make her way across that quadrant of the Bowl to the kitchen
caverns. Enticing smells of fresh bread and other viands made her quicken her
steps.
She hoped she'd
have enough restraint not to bolt her food like her dragonet.
The kitchen
cavern at Telgar Weyr was actually a series of caves, each with an entrance,
varying in size, width and height.
As Debera
paused at the entrance of the nearest and smallest one, she saw that hearths or
ovens were ranged against the outside wall, each with a separate chimney
protruding up the cliff face. Inside, the many long tables where last night guests
had been entertained were reduced to the number needed by the regular
population of the Weyr.
But the
interior was busy as men and women went about food preparation tasks.
"Breakfast's
over there," a woman said, smiling at Debera and pointing. "Porridge's
still hot and the klah's fresh made. Help yourself."
Debera looked
to her left to the farthest hearth, which had tables and chairs set invitingly
near it.
"There'll
be fresh-baked bread soon, too, and I'll bring some over," the woman added
and proceeded on her own business.
Debera had only
just served herself a heaping of porridge - not a lump in it, nor a fleck of
burn - and a cup of klah when two boys, looking bewildered and not at all sure
of how to proceed, wandered in.
"The bowls
are there, the cups there," Debera said, pointing.
"And use
that hunk of towel to hold the pot while you spoon out the cereal. It's hot."
They sent her
tentative smiles - they must just be old enough for Impression, she thought,
feeling just a trifle older and wiser. They managed - but not without slopping
gobs of porridge into the fire and jumping back from the hiss and smell - to
get enough in the bowls and to pour klah into their cups.
"C'mon,
sit here, I won't bite," she said, tapping her table.
They were
certainly not a bit sullen or grouchy, like her younger half brothers
"You've a
green, haven't you?" the first one asked. He had a crop of black curls
that had recently been trimmed very close to his skull.
"Course
she has a green, stupi" the other lad said, elbowing the ribs of the
first. "I'm M'rak, and Caneth's my bronze," he added with a
justifiable smirk of pride.
"My bronze
is Tiabeth," the black haired boy said, equally as proud of his dragon,
but added modestly, "I'm S'mon."
"What's
yours called?"
"Morath,"
and Debera found herself grinning broadly. Did all new riders feel as besotted
as this?
The boys
settled into chairs and began to eat, almost as eagerly as dragonets
Deliberately Debera slowed the rhythm of her spoon.
This porridge
was really too good to gulp down: not a husk nor a piece of grit in it.
Obviously Telgar tithed of its best to the Weyr, even with such a staple as
oats for porridge. She sighed, grateful for more than Impressing Morath
yesterday.
The boys
suddenly stopped, spoons half lifted to their mouths and, warned, Debera turned
quickly. Bearing down on their table was the unmistakable bulk of Tisha, the
head woman of the Lower Cavern. Her broad face was wreathed with a smile as
generous as she was.
"How are
you today? Settling in all right? Need anything from stores? Parents will pack
your Gather best, and you really need your weeding worst," she said, her
rich contralto voice bubbling with good humour. "Breakfast all right?"
"Bread's
just out of the oven and you can have all you want." She had halted by
Debera's chair and her hands, shapely with long strong fingers, patted Debera's
shoulders lightly as if imparting a special message to her along with that
pressure.
"You lack
something, come tell me, or mention it to T'dam. You weyrlings shouldn't worry
about anything other than caring for your dragonets. That's hard work enough, I'm
telling you, so don't be shy, now." She gave Debera a little extra pat
before she removed her hands.
"I didn't
think to bring with me the gown you lent me last night," Debera said,
wondering if that's what the subtle message was.
"Heavens
above, child," said Tisha, big eyes even wider in her round face, "why,
that dress was made for you, even if we didn't know you'd be coming." Her
deep chuckle made her large breasts and belly bounce.
But it's far
too good a dress... Debera began in protest.
Tisha patted
Debera's shoulder again. "And fits you to perfection. I love making new
clothes. My passion really, and you'll see: I'm always working on something."
Pat, pat. "But if I'd no-one in mind when I cut and sewed it last year, I
couldn't have worked better for you if I'd tried. The dress is yours. We all
like to have something pretty to wear on Seventh Day.
Do you sew?"
she asked, eyeing Debera hopefully.
"No, I'm
afraid not," Debera answered, lowering her eyes for she remembered her
mother with work in her hands in the evenings, embroidering or sewing fine
seams in Gather clothes. Gisa barely managed to mend rips, and certainly
neither of her daughters was learning how to mend or make garments.
"Well, I
don't know what holder women are doing with their young these days. Why, I had
a needle in my hand by the time I was three -", Tisha went on.
The boys' eyes
were glazing over at the turn of the conversation.
"And you'll
learn to sew harness, my fine young friends," she said, wagging a finger
at them. "And boots and jackets, too, if you've a mind to design your own
flying wear."
"Huh?"
was M'rak's astonished reaction. "Sewing's fer women. "
"Not in
the Weyr, it isn't," Tisha said firmly. "As you'll see soon enough.
It's all part of being a dragon rider. You'll learn."
"Ah, now,
here's the bread, butter and a pot of jam."
Sure enough,
another ample woman, grinning with the pleasure of what she was about to bestow
on them, deposited the laden tray on the table.
"That
should help, thank you, Allie," Tisha said as Debera added a murmur of
appreciation and S'mon remembered his manners, too. M'rak made no such delay in
grabbing up a piece of the steaming bread and cramming it into his mouth.
"Wow!
Great!"
"Well,
just be sure you don't lose it, preparing your dragonet's next meal,"
Tisha said and moved off before the astonished bronze rider had absorbed her
remark.
"What'd
she mean by that?" he asked the others.
Debera grinned.
"Hold-bred?"
"Naw, m'family's
weavers," M'rak said. "From Keroon Hold."
"We have
to cut up what our dragonets eat, though, don't we?" S'mon asked in a
slightly anxious voice.
"From the
the bodies they got hung up?"
"You mean
cut it off the things that wore the meat?" M'rak turned a little pale and
swallowed.
"That's
what we mean," Debera said. "If you like, I'll do your carving and
you can just cut up. Deal?"
"You bet,"
M'rak agreed fervently. And gulped again, no longer attacking the rest of the
bread that hung limply from his fingers. He put the slice down. "I didn't
know that was part of being a dragon rider too."
Debera
chuckled. "I think we're all going to find out that being a dragon rider
is not just sitting on its neck and going wherever we want to."
A prophecy she
was to learn was all too accurate. She didn't regret making the bargain with
the two youngsters - it was a fair distribution of effort - but it did seem
that she spent her next weeks either butchering or feeding or bathing her
dragonet with no time for anything else but sleeping. She had dealt with
orphaned animals, true, but none the size nor with the appetite capacity of
dragonets. Morath seemed to grow overnight, as if instantly transferring what
she ate to visible increase - which meant more to scrub, oil AND feed.
"It's
worth it, I keep telling myself," Sarra murmured one day as she wearily
sprawled onto her bed.
"Does it
help?" Grasella asked, groaning as she turned on her side.
"Does it
matter?" put in Mesla, kicking her boots off.
"All that
oil is softening my hands," Debera remarked in pleased surprise, noticing
the phenomenon for the first time.
"And
matting my hair something wicked," said Jule, regarding the end of the
fuzzy plait she kept her hair in. "I wonder when I'll have time to wash it
again."
"If you
ask Tisha, she'll give you the most marvellous massage," Angie said,
stretching on her bed and yawning.
"My leg's
all better."
She and her
Plath had tripped each other up, and she'd pulled all the muscles in her right
leg so badly that at first they feared she'd broken a bone in the tumble. Plath
had been beside herself with worry until Maranis had pronounced the damage only
a bad wrenching. The other girls had helped Angie tend Plath.
All part of
being a dragon rider T'dam had said, but he exhibited sympathy in making sure
he was at hand to assist her. too. Nothing you won't grin about later.
Although the
room in which Lord Chalkin sat so that the newly-certified Artist Iantine could
paint his portrait of the Lord Holder was warmer than any other chamber in
Bitra that Iantine had occupied, he sighed softly in weariness. His hand was
cramped and he was very tired, though he was careful not to reveal anything to
his odious subject. He also had to do a bang-up job of this portrait as fast as
possible, or he might not leave this miserable Hold until the spring.
Fortunately
this first snow was melting and, if he finished the painting, he'd leave before
the paint was dry. And with the marks he'd been promised!
Why he had ever
thought himself able to handle any problem that could occur on a commission, he
did not know.
Certainly he
had been warned: more about not gambling with any Bitrans, to be sure, had he
had any marks to wager. But the warnings had been too general. Why hadn't Ussie
told him how many other people had been defrauded by the Bitran Lord Holder?
The contract had seemed all right, sounded all right and was as near to a total
disaster as made no never mind. Inexperienced and arrogant, that's what he was.
Too
self-assured to listen to the wisdom of the years of experience Master Domaize
had tried to get through his thick head.
But Master
Domaize had a reputation for letting you deal with your own mistakes -
especially the ones unconnected with Art.
"Please,
Lord Chalkin, would you hold still just a moment longer? The light is too good
to waste," Iantine said, aware of the twitching muscles in Chalkin's fat
cheeks. The man didn't have a tic or anything, but he could no more be still in
his fancy chair than his children.
Impishly, Iantine
wondered if he could paint a twitch - a muscle rictus - but it was hard enough
to make Chalkin look good as it was.
The man's muddy
brown, close-set eyes seemed to cross towards the bridge of his rather fleshy,
bulbous nose - which Iantine had deftly refined.
Master Domaize
had often told his students that one had to be discreet in portraying people,
but Iantine had argued the matter: that realism was necessary if the subject
wanted a true portrait.
True portraits
are never realistic, his master had told him -and the other students in the
vast barn of a place where classes were held.
Save realism
for landscapes and historical murals, not for portraits.
No-one wants to
see themselves as others see them. The successful portraitist is one who paints
with both tact and sympathy.
Iantine
remembered railing about dishonesty and pandering to egos.
Master Domaize
had looked over the half spectacles he now had to wear if he wanted to see
beyond his nose and smiled that gentle, knowing smile of his.
"Those of
us who have learned that the portraitist must also be the diplomat make a
living. Those of us who wish to portray truth end up in a craft Hall, painting
decorative borders." When the commission to do miniatures of Lord Chalkin's
young children had been received at Hall Domaize, there had been no immediate
takers.
"What's
wrong with it?" Iantine demanded when the notice had stayed on the board
for three weeks with no-one's initials.
He would
shortly sit his final exams at Hall Domaize and had hopes to pass them creditably.
"Chalkin's
what's wrong with it," Ussie said with a cynical snort.
"Oh, I
know his reputation," Iantine replied, blithely flicking a paint-stained
hand, everyone does. But he sets out the conditions," and he tapped the
document, "and they're all the ones we're supposed to ask for."
Ussie smothered
a derogatory laugh in his hand and eyed him in the patronizing way that
irritated Iantine so. He knew he was a better draughts man and colourist than
Ussie would ever be, and yet Ussie always acted so superior. Iantine knew his
general skills were better, and improving, because of course, in the studio,
everyone had a chance to view everyone else's work. Ussie's anatomical sketches
looked as if a mutant had posed as the life model... and his use of colour was
bizarre. Ussie did much better with landscapes and was a dab hand at designing
heraldry shields and icons and such peripheral art work.
"Yes, but
you'll have to live in Bitra Hold while you're doing it, and coming into winter
is not the time to live there."
"What? To
do four miniatures? How long could it take?" Iantine had a seven-day in
mind. "Even for very small and active children, that should be sufficient."
"All
right, all right, so you've always managed to get kids to sit still for you.
But these are Chalkin's and if they're anything like him, you'll have the devil's
own time getting them to behave long enough to get an accurate likeness. Only,
I sincerely doubt that an 'accurate' likeness is what is required. And I know
you, Ian..." Ussie waggled a finger at him, grinning more broadly now. "You'll
never be able to glamorize the little darlings enough to satisfy doting papa."
"But, The
last time a commission came in from Chalkin," said Chomas, joining in the
conversation, "Macartor was there for nine months before his work was
deemed satisfactory".
Chomas jabbed
his finger at the clause that began "on the completion of satisfactory
work". "He came back a ghost of himself and poorer than he'd started
out."
"Macartor?"
Iantine knew of the painter. a capable man with a fine eye for detail, now
doing murals for the new Hall at Nerat Hold.
He tried to
think of a reason why Macartor had not been able to deal well with Chalkin. "Great
man for detail, but not for portraiture," he said.
Ussie's
eyebrows rose high in his long face and his grey eyes danced with mischief.
"So, take
the commission and learn for yourself. I mean, some of us need some extra marks
before Turn's End, but not so badly as we'd go to Bitra Hold to earn'em. You
know the reputation there for gambling? They'd sooner stop breathing than stop
gambling."
"Oh, it
can't be half as bad as they say it is," Iantine replied.
The sixteen
marks, plus keep and travel expenses, is scale.
Ussie ticked
the points off on fingers. "Travel? Well, you'd have to pay your own way
there."
"But he
specifies travel" Iantine protested, tapping that phrase impatiently.
"Hmmm, but
you have to pay out for the travel there and account for every quarter mark you
spent. Take you a few days to sort out right there. Chalkin's so mingy no
decent cook stays with him, ditto for housekeeper, steward and any other staff,
so you may end up having to cook your own meals if he doesn't charge you for
the fuel to cook with. The Hold's not got central heating, and you'd want a
room fire this time of the year in that region. Oh, and bring your own
bed-furs, he doesn't supply them to casual workers."
"Casual? A
portraitist from Hall Domaize is not classified as a casual worker,"
Iantine said indignantly.
"At Bitra,
my friend, everyone's casual," Chomas put in. "Chalkin's never issued
a fair service contract in his life. And read EVERY SINGLE WORD on the page if
you are foolish enough to take the commission. Which, if you had the sense of
little green apples, you won't." Chomas gave a final decisive nod of his
head and continued on his way to his own work station, where he was doing fine
marquetry on a desk.
However, Iantine
had a particular need for the marks the commission would bring him. With his
professional diploma all but in his hand, he wanted to start repaying what he
owed his parents. His father wanted to avail himself of Iantine's land
allotment to extend his pasturage, but he didn't have the marks to pay the
Council transfer fees; never a huge amount, but sufficient so that Iantine's
large family would have to cut back on what few luxuries they had to save the
sum. It was therefore a matter of self-esteem and pride for Iantine to earn the
fee.
His parents had
given him a good start, more than he deserved considering how seldom he had
been at the hold since his twelfth birthday. His mother had wished him to be a
teacher, as she had been before her marriage. She had taught all the basics to
him, his nine siblings and the children in the other nearby Benden mountain
sheep and farm holds. And because he had shown not only a keen interest in
learning but also discernible skill in sketching - filling every inch of a
precious drawing book with studies of every aspect of life on the hillside hold
- it had been decided to send him to the College. His help would be missed, but
his father had reluctantly agreed that the lad showed more aptitude with pen
and pencil than shepherd crook. His next youngest brother, who had the
temperament for the work, had been ecstatic to be promoted to Iantine's tasks.
Once at the
College, his unusual talent and insights were instantly recognized and
encouraged. Master Clisser had insisted that he do a portfolio of sketches:
animal, mineral and floral. That had been easy to collect since Iantine constantly
sketched and had many vignettes of unsuspecting classmates: some done at times
when he should have been doing other lessons. One in particular - a favourite
with Master Clissex - was of Bethany playing her guitar, bending over the
instrument for intricate chording. Everyone had admired it, even Bethany.
His portfolio
was submitted to several private craft Halls which taught a variety of skills,
from fine leather tooling to wood, glass and stone workings. None of those on
the West Coast had places for another student, but the woman who was master
weaver in Southern Boll had said she would contact Master Domaize in Keroon,
one of the foremost portraitists on Pern, for she felt the boy's talent lay in
that direction.
To Iantine's
astonishment, a green dragon had arrived one morning at the College, available
to convey him back for a formal interview with Domaize himself. Iantine wasn't
quite sure what excited him most: the ride on the dragon between, the prospect
of meeting Master Domaize or the thought of being able to continue with art as
a possible profession. He had been in a worse state on his return because
Master Domaize, having set him the task of sketching himself, had accepted him
as a student and sent off a message to his parents that very day, arranging
terms.
Iantine's
family had been astounded to receive such a message.
Still more
astonishing had been the information that Benden's Lord and Lady Holder were
willing to pay more than half his fees.
Now he must
earn as much as he could, as soon as he could, to show his family that their
sacrifices had not been wasted.
Undoubtedly
Lord Chalkin would be difficult. Undoubtedly there would be problems, but the
marks promised for the commission would pay the land transfer fee. So he'd
initialled the contract; a copy was made for Master Domaize's files and it had
been returned to Lord Chalkin.
Chalkin had
demanded, and received, a verification of Iantine's skill from his Master and
then returned the signed contract.
Best re-read
it, Ian, Ussie said when Iantine waved the document about in triumph.
"Why?"
Iantine glanced down the page and pointed to the bottom lines. Here's my
signature, and Master Domaize's, alongside Chalkin's. That is, if that's what
this scrawl is supposed to be." He held it out to Ussie.
"Hmmm,
looks all right, though I haven't seen Chalkin's hand before. My, where did
they find this typewriter? Half the letters don't strike evenly." Ussie
passed the document back.
I'll see if
there're any other examples of Lord Chalkin's signature in the files,"
Iantine said, "though how... and why would he deny the contract when he
himself proposed it?"
"He's a
Bitran, and you know how they are. Are you sure that's your signature?"
Ussie grinned as Iantine peered with a suspicious glare at his own name. Then
Ussie laughed.
"Sure, I'm
sure it's mine. Look at the slant of the t. Just as I always make it. What are
you driving at, Ussie?" Iantine felt the first twinges of irritation with
Ussie's attitude.
"Well,
Bitrans are known to forge things. Remember those bogus land transfer deeds
five years ago? No, I don't suppose you'd have heard about them. You'd've still
been a schoolboy." With an airy wave of his hand, Ussie left a puzzled and
worried Iantine.
When he brought
the matter up to his master, Domaize could produce a sample of Lord Chalkin's
signature on a document much creased and worn. Domaize also put his glasses up
to his eyes and peered at his own name on the current contract.
"No, this
is mine, and I recognize your slanting t-bar." He put the document in the
to-do tray. "We'll copy it into our workbook."
"If you
have any trouble though, at Bitra Hold, let me know instantly."
"It's much
easier to sort things out when they start, you know. And don't," and here
Master Domaize had waggled a stern finger at him, "allow them to entice
you into any games of chance, no matter how clever you think you are. Bitrans
make their living at gaming. You can't compete at their level."
Iantine had
promised faithfully to eschew any gaming. He'd never had much interest in such
things, being far more likely to sketch the players than join the game. But
gambling was not a thing that the Master would have meant, Iantine was
learning. What did fall into that category: especially the nuances of the word
satisfaction. Such a simple word that can be so misconstrued. As he had done.
He had done not
four miniatures, but nearly twenty, using up all the materials he had brought
with him so that he had had to send for more from Hall Domaize since the wood
used in miniatures had to be specially seasoned or it would warp, especially in
a damp environment like Bitra Hold. He had done the first four on the canvas he
had brought with him for the job, only to discover - along with a long list of
other objections from Lord Chalkin and his wife, Lady Nadona that canvas was
not satisfactory" If it isn't the best quality," and she ran one of
her almost dragon-talon nails across one canvas, snagging a thread so badly the
surface was unusable, "it doesn't last long."
"Skybroom
wood is what you should be using."
"Skybroom
wood is expensive."
"You're
being very well paid for these miniatures," she said.
"The least
we can expect is the best grade of materials."
"Skybroom
wood was not stipulated in the contract."
"Did it
have to be?" she demanded haughtily. "I made sure that Domaize Hall
has the very highest standards."
"Master
Domaize provided me with the best canvas," and he pushed his remaining
frames out of her reach. "He said that is what he always supplies. You
should have stipulated skybroom wood in the contract if that's what you wanted."
"Of course
it would be what I wanted, young man. The very best is none too good for my
children."
"Is there
any available in the Hold?" he asked. At least with skybroom you could
clean off unsatisfactory work without the risk of damaging the surface.
"Of
course."
That was his
first mistake. Nevertheless, at that point he was still eager to do a proper
job to the best of his abilities.
However, what
skybroom there was turned out to be substantial lumber, being cured for
furniture, and not thin enough to be used for miniatures: miniatures' which
were now twice the ordinary size.
"High on
the list of unsatisfactory" were the poses of the children, although these
had been suggested by the Lady Holder herself.
"Chaldon
doesn't look at all natural," Lady Nadona said. "Not at all. He looks
so tense, hunching his shoulders like that."
"Whyever
did you not tell him to sit up straight?" Iantine forbore to mention that
he had done so frequently, and within Lady Nadona's hearing. "And you've
given him such an odious scowl."
"Which had
been Chaldon's natural expression."
"Standing?"
he suggested, cringing at the thought of arguing any of them into standing for
the sittings". He'd had enough trouble getting them to sit still. They
were, as Ussie had foreseen, not biddable and had such short attention spans
that he could never get them to strike the right pose, or assume an even
halfway cheerful expression.
"And why
on earth did you paint on such a small canvas"?
"I'll need
to use a magnifying glass," Lady Nadona had said, holding Chaldon's
likeness away from her as far as her arm would reach.
Iantine had
known enough about his patroness by then to suppress a remark about her
farsightedness.
"This is
the customary size for a miniature -"
"So you
say," she replied repressively. "I want something I can see when I'm
on the other side of the room."
As she was
generally on the other side of her room whenever her children were in her
vicinity, the need was understandable. They were the messiest pre-adolescents
Iantine had ever encountered: plump, since they were indolent by nature,
dressed in ill-fitting apparel since the Hold's seamstress was not particularly
adept, and constantly eating: generally something that ran, smeared or left
crumbs on their chins and tunics. None of them bathed frequently enough and
their hair was long, greasy and roughly cut. Even the two girls showed no
feminine interest in their appearance. One had hacked her hair off with a
knife...
except the long
tress she wore down the back, strung with beads and little bells. The other had
thick braids which were rarely redone unless whatever fastened the end had got
lost.
Iantine had
struggled with the porcine Chaldon, had realized that the child could not be
depicted naturally and tried to retain enough resemblance so that others would
know which child had been painted.
"But his
portrait was unsatisfactory". Only the youngest, a sturdy lad of three who
said nothing beyond 'No' and carried a stuffed toy with him from which he could
not be parted, was deemed marginally 'satisfactory'. Actually the dirty bear
was the best part of Briskin's portrait.
Iantine had
tried to romanticize Luccha's unusual hairstyle and was told that she'd look
better with proper hair which he could certainly add in if he was any good at
all. And why did she have such an awkward expression on her face, when Luccha
had the sweetest smile and such a lovely disposition?
(Especially
when she was busy trying to unite the Hold's cats by tying their tails
together, Iantine had added mentally. Bitra Hold did not have a single
unscathed animal, and the spit-boy said they'd lost seven dogs to accidents
that year already.) Luccha's mouth was set aslant in her face, the thin lips
usually compressed in a sour line.
Lonada, the
second daughter, had a pudding face, with small dark holes for eyes, and her
father's nose: bad enough in a male, but fatal for a female.
Iantine had
also had to buy a lock from the Hold steward to prevent his sleeping-furs from
walking out of the narrow little cubicle in which he was quartered. He knew his
packs had been searched the first day; probably several times by the variety of
smeared fingerprints left on the paint pots. As he had brought nothing of real
value with him - not having many possessions - he hadn't worried.
Holds usually
had one light-fingered person, and the Hold steward usually knew who it was and
retrieved what had gone astray from guests' rooms.
But when Iantine
found his paint pots left open to dry out, he protested. And paid for a lock.
Not that he felt all that secure, for if there was one key to that lock, there
could be duplicates. But his furs did remain on his bed. And glad he was to
have them, for the thin blanket supplied was holey and ought to have been torn
up for rug lengths long since.
That was the
least of his problems at Bitra Hold, however.
Having heard
all that was wrong with the next set of miniatures he managed to produce, a
third larger than the first, Iantine began to have a somewhat clearer grasp of
just how the parents envisaged their offspring. On his fifth set, he nearly won
the accolade of satisfactory". Nearly. Then the children, one after
another, succumbed to an infant disease that resulted in such a rash that they
could not possibly sit".
"Well, you'd
better do something to earn your keep," Chalkin told his contract
portraitist when Lady Nadona had announced the children were isolated.
The contract
says I will have room and board - - -, Chalkin held up a thick forefinger, his
smile not the least bit humorous. When you are honouring that contract - But
the children are sick Chalkin had shrugged. That's neither here nor there. You
are unable to honour the specific conditions of the contract.
Therefore you
are not entitled to be fed and housed at the Hold's expense. Of course, I can
always deduct your leisure time from the fee... The smile deepened
vindictively.
"Leisure..."
Iantine had been so enraged that the protest burst from him before he could
suppress it. No wonder, he thought, shaking with the control he had to enforce
on himself, no-one else at Hall Domaize would sign with Bitra.
"Well,"
Chalkin went on, as if he were a reasonable man, "what else does one call
it if you are not engaged in the lab ours which you are contracted for?" Iantine
had to wonder if Chalkin knew how necessary it was for him to earn the exact
fee promised. Iantine had held no conversations with anyone in the Hold; they
were so sullen and uncommunicative a group at their best - which was usually at
mealtimes - that he hoped he'd be spared them at their worst. He had
steadfastly refused to have a little game with cooks or guards, which accounted
for a good deal of the general animosity towards him. So how would anyone know
anything about his personal life or his reasons for working here?
So, instead of
already being on his way home with a satisfactory contract fulfilled and the
marks for the transfer fee heavy in his pouch, Iantine spent his leisure time
touching up the faces of Chalkin's ancestors in the main Hall murals.
"Good
practice for you, I'm sure," Chalkin had said, all too amiably, as he made
his daily inspection of this project. "You'll be better equipped to do
satisfactory portraits of this generation." Pig faces, all of them, with
the ancestral bulbous nose, Iantine noticed.
Oddly enough,
one or two of the ancestresses had been very pretty girls, far too young and
attractive for the mean-mouthed men they had been contracted to. Too bad the
male genes dominated.
Of course, Iantine
had had to make up batches of the special paints required for mural work,
having initially had no idea that such would be required. He also found his
supplies of the oil paints drastically reduced by the repeated 'unsatisfactory'
portraits. He had the choice of sending back to Hall Domaize for additional
supplies and paying transport charges, plus having to wait for them to reach
him - or finding the raw materials and manufacturing the colours himself -
which was the better option.
"How much?"
he exclaimed in shock when the head cook told him what he'd have to pay for the
eggs and oil he needed to mix into his pigments.
"Yiss, an'
that doan include cost of hiring the equipment," the cook added, sniffing.
The man had a perpetually running nose, sometimes dripping down his upper lip.
But not, Iantine devoutly hoped, into whatever he was in the process of
preparing.
"I have to
hire bowls and jars from you?" Iantine wondered how the cook could have
become infected with Chalkin's greed.
"Well, if
I ain't using em, and you is, you should pay for the use, seems like." He
sniffed so deeply Iantine wondered there could be any mucus left in his sinus
cavities. "Shoulda brought yer stuff with ye if ye'd need it. Lord Holder
sees you usin" things from his kitchen and one of us'll be paying for it.
Won't be me!" And he sniffed again, shrugging one dirty white shoulder as
emphasis.
"I came
with adequate supplies and equipment for the work I was hired to do,"
Iantine said, curbing an intense desire to shove the man's face in the thin
soup he was stirring.
"So?"
Iantine had
walked, stiff-legged with fury, out of the kitchen.
He tried to
tell himself that he was learning, the very hardest way, how to deal with the
client.
Finding the raw
materials for his pigments had proved nearly as difficult since it was, after
all, coming on to deep winter here in the Bitran hills. He discovered a hefty
hunk of stone with a rounded end that would do as a pestle, and then a
hollowed-out rock that would act as a mortar. He had found a whole hillside of
the sabsab bush whose roots produced a yellow colour; enough raw cobalt to get
blue, and the paw berry leaves that boiled up one of the finest pure reds with
neither tint nor tinge of orange or purple. With the greatest of luck he also
came across ochre mud. Rather than rent" containers, he used chipped
crockery he unearthed from the midden heap. He did have to pay the price of
best oil for the substandard stuff which was all the cook would sell him.
And that mark,
he was sure, would never be passed on to Lord Chalkin as fee.
He managed to
get enough saucers or mugs - they used a very cheap pottery in Bitra Hold - to
hold the different colours he needed. He hadn't quite finished the repair work
when Chaldon recovered sufficiently from the rash to be able to sit/ stand once
more.
Chaldon had
lost weight during the fever which accompanied the emergence of the rash. He
was also lethargic and, as long as Iantine could think up funny stories to tell
as he worked, he stayed reasonably still. Calling himself the worst kind of
panderer, Iantine made the boy resemble the best looking of the ancestors he'd
relimned. The boy was certainly pleased and ran off to find his mother,
shouting that he did look like Greatgranddaddy, just as she always said he did.
The same ploy
did not quite work on Luccha's portrait when she had recovered. Her skin was
sallower, she'd lost hair and too much weight to improve her undistinguished
looks. While he had aimed for her great-grandmother thrice removed, she didn't
have the right facial structure and even he had to admit the result was
unsatisfactory.
"Her
illness," he'd mumbled when Chalkin and Nadona recited the long catalogue
of dissimilarities between their daughter and the portrait.
He did better
with Lonada and Briskin who, several kilos lighter, had the look of his
great-uncle - pinch-faced, lantern jawed and big-eared. Iantine had judiciously
reduced the size of those ears even as he wondered what artist had got away
with such unflattering appendages on great-uncle.
He redid Luccha's
after the other two: she'd put on some weight and her colour was better - not
much, but better. And he set her eyes wider in her face, which improved her no
end.
Too bad it
couldn't be done to the model. He vaguely remembered that the First Settlers
had been able to remodel noses and bob ears and stuff like that.
So, grudgingly
and after making him touch up each of the four not-so miniature paintings to
the point where he was ready to break something - their heads for preference
the Lord and Lady Holder considered the four paintings satisfactory. The final
critique had lasted well into the night, which was dark and stormy: the winds
audible even through the three-metre-thick cliff walls.
So, as he
descended wearily but in great relief to the lower floor cubicle, he became
aware of the intense chill in this level.
The temperature
in the big Hall had been somewhat warmed by the roaring fires in the four
hearths, but there was no heating down here.
In fact, it was
so cold that Iantine did no more than loosen his belt and remove his boots
before crawling on to the hard surface that was supposed to be a mattress. It
looked and felt like something recycled from the ships of the First Crossing.
He curled up in the furs, more grateful than ever that he'd brought his own,
and fell asleep.
Arctic
temperatures swirling about his face roused him. His face was stiff with cold
and, despite the warmth of his furs, when he tried to stretch his body his
muscles resisted. He had a crick in his neck and he wondered if he'd moved at
all during the night. Certainly it was cold enough to have stayed in the warm
of the furs. But he had to relieve himself.
He crammed his
feet into boot leather that was rigid with ice and, wrapping his furs tightly
about himself, made his way down the corridor to the toilet. His breath was a
plume of white, his cheeks and nose stung by the cold. He managed his business
and returned to his room only long enough to throw on his thickest woollen
jumper. With half a mind to throw his furs around him for added warmth, he ran
up the several flights of stone steps, past walls that dripped with moisture.
lIe paused at
the first window on the upper level: solidly snowed closed. Then he went up the
next short flight and opened the door into what should have been the relatively
warmer kitchen area.
Had every fire
in the place gone out overnight? Had the spit-boys frozen on their bed-shelf?
As he turned his head in their direction, his glance caught at the window. Snow
was piled up against the first hand's breadth of it. He moved closer and looked
out at the courtyard, but it was all one expanse of unbroken snow. Indeed,
where the courtyard should have stepped down to the roadway the snow was even,
concealing any depression where the road should have been. No-one moved
outside. Nor were there any tracks in the expanse of snow-covered court to
suggest that anyone had tried to come in from one of the outer holds.
"Just what
I needed," Iantine said, totally depressed by what he saw. I could be
trapped here for weeks!" Paying for room and board.
If only the
kids hadn't come down with measles... If only he hadn't already freshened up
the murals - - How would he survive? Would he have anything left of his
original fee - that had seemed so generous by the time he could leave this
miserable Hold?
Later that
morning, when half-frozen people had begun to cope with the effects of the
blizzard, he struck another bargain with the Holder Lord and Lady: and very
carefully did he word it. Two full-sized portraits, each a square metre on sky
broom wood to be supplied by Lord Chalkin, one of Lady Nadona and one of Lord
Chalkin, head and shoulders in Gather dress, with all materials and equipment
to make additional pigments supplied by the Hold; maintenance for himself and
quarters on an upper floor, with morning and evening fuel for a fire on the
hearth.
He completed
Lady Nadona's portrait without too much difficulty she would sit still, loved
nothing better than to have a valid excuse for doing nothing. Half-way through
the sitting, though, she wanted to change her costume, believing the red did
not flatter her complexion as well as the blue.
It didn't, but
he talked her out of changing and subtly altered her naturally florid
complexion to a kinder blush, and darkened the colour of her pale eyes so that
they seemed to dominate her face. By then, he'd heard enough of the supposed
resemblance between herself and Luccha so that he improved on it, giving her a
more youthful appearance.
When she wanted
to change the collar of her dress, he improvised one he remembered seeing in an
Ancient's portrait - a lacy froth which hid much of the loose skin of her neck.
Not that he had painted that in, but the lace softened the whole look of her.
He had not been
so lucky with Chalkin. The man was psychologically unable to sit still -
tapping his fingers, swinging one leg as he crossed and uncrossed them,
twitching his shoulders or his face, making it basically impossible to obtain a
set pose.
Iantine was
nearly desperate now to finish and leave this dreadful place before another
snowstorm. The young portraitist wondered if Chalkin's delays, and the short
periods in which he would deign to sit, were yet another ploy to delay him -
and rake back some of the original fee. Though Chalkin had even invited him to
come into the gaming rooms - the warmest and most elegant rooms in the Hold - Iantine
had managed to excuse himself somehow or other.
"Do sit
still, Lord Chalkin, I'm working on your eyes and I cannot if you keep moving
them about in your face," Iantine said, rather more sharply than he had
ever addressed the Lord Holder before.
"I beg
your pardon," said Chalkin, jerking his shoulders about angrily.
"Lord
Chalkin, unless you wish to be portrayed with your eyes crossed, sit still for
five minutes! I beg of you." Something of Iantine's frustration must have
come across because Chalkin not only sat still, he glared at the portraitist.
And for longer
than five minutes.
Working as fast
as he could, Iantine completed the delicate work on the eyes. He had subtly
widened them in the man's face and cleared up the oedemic pouches which sagged
below them. He had made the jowly face less porcine and subtracted sufficient
flesh from the bulbous nose to give it a more Roman look. He had also widened
and lifted the shoulders to give a more athletic appearance, and darkened the
hair.
Further, he had
meticulously caught the fire of the many jewelled rings.
Actually, they
dominated the painting, which he felt would find favour with Lord Chalkin who
seemed to have more rings than days of the year.
"There!"
he said, putting down his brush and standing back from the painting, satisfied
in himself that he had done the best job possible: that is, the best job that
would prove 'satisfactory' and allow him to leave this ghastly Hold.
"It's
about time," Chalkin said, slipping down from the chair and stamping over
to view the result.
Iantine watched
his face, seeing that flash of pleasure before Chalkin's usual glum expression
settled back over his features.
Chalkin peered
more closely, seeming to count the brush strokes although there were none, for Iantine
was too competent a technician to have left any.
Watch the
paint. It's not yet dry," Iantine said quickly, raising his arm to ward
off Chalkin's touch.
"Humph,"
Chalkin said, shrugging his shoulders to settle his heavy jerkin. He affected
to be diffident, but the way he kept looking at his own face told Iantine that
the man was finally pleased.
"Well? Is
it satisfactory?" asked Iantine, unable to bear the suspense any longer.
"Not bad,
not bad but..." and Chalkin once again put out a finger. "You will
not smear the paint, Lord Chalkin," said Iantine, fearing just that and
then another session to repair the damage.
"You're a
rude fellow, painter."
"My title
is artist, Lord Chalkin, and do tell me if this portrait is satisfactory or not!"
Chalkin gave
him a quick nervous glance, one facial muscle twitching. Even the Lord of Bitra
Hold knew when he had pushed someone too hard.
"It's not
bad. Is it satisfactory, Lord Chalkin?" Iantine put all the pent-up
frustration and anxiety into that question.
Chalk in
shifted one shoulder, screwed up his face with indecision and then hastily
composed his features in the more dignified pose of the portrait before him.
"Yes, I
believe it is satisfactory."
"Then,"
and now Iantine took Lord Chalkin by the elbow and steered him towards the
door, let us to your office and complete the contract.
"Now, see
here. If it is satisfactory, I have honoured that contract and you may now
settle with me for the miniatures," Iantine said, guiding the man down the
cold corridor and to his office. He tapped his foot impatiently as Chalkin took
the keys from his inside pocket and opened the door.
The fire within
was so fierce that Iantine felt sweat blossom on his forehead. At Chalkin's
abrupt gesture, he turned around while the man fiddled with wherever it was he
had his strongbox. He heard, with infinite relief, the turn of the metal lock
and then silence. A slamming of a lid.
"Here you
are," said Chalkin coldly.
Iantine counted
out the marks, sixteen of them, Farmermarks, but good enough since he would be
using them in Benden which didn't mind Farmer-marks.
The contracts?"
Chalkin glared but he unlocked the drawer and extracted them, almost flinging
them across the desk at Iantine, who signed his name and turned them back to
Chalkin.
"Use mine,"
Iantine said when Chalkin made a show of finding a good pen in the clutter on
his desk.
Chalkin
scrawled his name.
"Date it,"
Iantine added, wishing to have no complaint at later time.
"You want
too much, painter."
"Artist,
Lord Chalkin," Iantine said with a humourless smile and turned to leave.
At the door he turned again. "And don't touch the painting for forty-eight
hours. I will not come back if you smear it. It was satisfactory when we left
the room, so keep it that way."
Iantine returned
to collect his good brushes, but left what remained of the paints he had had to
make. Last night, in a hopeful mood, he had packed everything else. Now, he
took the stairs up two and three at a time, stored his brushes carefully,
stuffed the signed and dated contracts into his pack shrugged into his coat,
rolled up his sleeping-furs, looped both packs in one hand and was half-way
down the stairs again when he met Chalkin ascending.
"You
cannot leave now," Chalkin protested, grabbing his arm. "You have to
wait until my wife has seen and approved my portrait."
"Oh, no, I
don't," said Iantine, wrenching free of the restraining hand.
He was out of
the main door before Chalkin could say another word, and ran down the roadway
between the soiled snow banks. If he was benighted on the road in the middle of
a snowstorm, he would still be safer than staying one more hour at Bitra Hold.
Luckily for
him, he found shelter during that next storm in a woodsman's holding some
klicks away from the main Hold.
"Guess
what I found?" P'tero cried, ushering his guest into the kitchen cavern.
Tisha, he's half frozen and starving of the hunger," the young green rider
added, hauling the tall fur wrapped figure towards the nearest hearth and
pushing him into a chair. He deposited the packs he was carrying on to the
table.
"Klah, for
the love of little dragons, please."
Two women came
running, one with klah and the other with a hastily filled bowl of soup. Tisha
came striding across the cavern, demanding to know what the problem was, who
had P'tero rescued and from where.
"No-one
should be out in weather like this," she said as she reached the table and
grabbed the victim's wrist to get a pulse.
"All but
froze, he is." Tisha pulled aside the furs wrapped about his neck and -
then let him take the cup. He cradled the klah in reddened - fingers, blowing
before he took his first cautious sip. He was also shivering uncontrollably.
"I spotted
an SOS on the snow - lucky for him that the sun made shadows or I'd never have
seen it," P'tero was saying, thornughly pleased with himself.
"Found him
below Bitra Hold..."
"Poor man,"
Tisha interjected.
"Oh, you're
so right there," P'tero said with ironic fervour, "and he'll never
return. Not that he's told me all..." and P'tero flopped to a chair when
someone brought him a cup of klah.
"Got out
of Chalkin's clutches intact..." and P'tero grinned impishly, "and
then survived three nights in a Bitran woodsman's hold --- with only a half cup
of old oats to sustain him."
Through his
explanation, Tisha ordered hot water-bottles, warmed blankets and, taking a
good look at the man's fingers, numb weed and frostbite salve.
"Don't
think they're more than cold," she said, removing one of his hands from
its fevered grip on the hot cup and spreading the fingers out, lightly pinching
the tips. "No, cold enough but not harmed."
"Thank
you, thank you," the man said, returning his fingers to the warm cup. "I
got so cold stamping out that emergency code."
"And out
of doors in such weather with no gloves," Tisha chided him.
"When I
left Domaize Hall for Bitra Hold, it was only autumn," he said in a
grating voice.
"Autumn?"
Tisha echoed, widening her fine eyes in surprise.
"How long
were you at Bitra Hold then?"
"Seven
damned weeks," the man replied, spitting out the words in a disgusted tone
of voice. "I had thought a week at the most." Tisha laughed, her
belly heaving under her broad apron. "What under the stars took you to
Bitra in the first place?"
"Painter,
are you?" she added.
"How'd you
know?" The man regarded her with surprise.
"Still
have paint under your nails." Iantine inspected them and his cold-reddened
face flushed a deeper red.
"I didn't
even stop to wash," he said.
"As well
you didn't, considering the price Chalkin charges for such luxuries as soap,"
she said, chuckling again.
The women
returned with the things Tisha had ordered.
While they
ministered to the warming of him, he clung with one hand or the other to the
klah. And then to the soup cup.
His furs, which
had kept him from freezing to death, were taken to dry at one fire; his boots
were removed and his toes checked for frostbite but he had been lucky there,
too, so they were coated with salve for good measure and then wrapped in warm
towelling while warmed blankets were snugged about his body. Salve was applied
to his hands and face and then he was allowed to finish the hot food.
"Now, your
name, and whom shall we contact to say that you've been found?" Tisha
asked when all this had been done.
"I'm
Iantine," and then he added in wry pride, "portraitist from Hall
Domaize. I was contracted to do miniatures of Chalkin's children.
"Your
first mistake," said Tisha, chuckling.
Iantine flushed.
"You're so right, but I needed the fee."
"Did you
come away with any of it?" P'tero asked, his eyes gleaming with mischief.
"Oh, that
I did," the artist replied so fiercely that everyone grinned. Then he
sighed. "But I did have to part with an eighth at the woodsman's hold. He
had little enough to share, but was willing to do so."
"At a
profit, I'm sure."
Iantine considered
that for a moment. "I was lucky to find any place to wait out the storm.
And he did share." He shrugged briefly, and a dejected look crossed his
features as he sighed. "Anyway, it was he who suggested I make a sign in
the snow to attract any dragon rider I'm just lucky one saw me." He nodded
thanks to P'tero.
"No
problem," the blue dragon rider said airily. "Glad I came." He
leaned towards Tisha across the table. "He'd've been frozen solid in
another day!"
"Were you
long waiting?"
"Two days
after the storm ended, but I spent the nights with ol' Fendler. If you're
hungry enough, even tunnel snake tastes good," Iantine added.
"Ah, the
poor laddie," said Tisha and called out orders for a double portion of
stew to be brought immediately, and bread and sweetening and some of the fruit
that had been sent up from Ista.
By the time Iantine
had finished the meal, he felt he had made up for the last four days. His feet
and hands were tingling despite the numb weed and salve. When he stood to go
and relieve himself, he wobbled badly and clutched at the chair for support.
"Have a
care, lad, filling the stomach was only half your problem," Tisha said,
moving to support him with far more alacrity than her bulk would suggest. She
gestured for P'tero to lend a hand.
"I need
to..." Iantine began.
"Ach, it's
on the way to the sleeping cavern," Tisha told him and drew one of his
arms over her shoulder. She was as tall as he.
P'tero took up
the packs again and between them, they got him to the toilet room. And then
into a bed in an empty cubicle. Tisha checked his feet again, applied another
coat of numb weed and tiptoed out. Iantine only made sure that his packs - and
the precious fee were in the room with him before he fell deeply asleep.
While he slept,
messages went out - to Hall Domaize and to Benden Weyr and Hold, since Iantine nominally
looked to Benden. Although Iantine had taken no lasting harm, M'shall
recognized yet another instance of Chalkin taking unfair advantage. Irene had
already sent in a substantial list of abuses and irregularities in Chalkin's
dealings generally with folk who had no recourse against his dictates. He held
no court in which difficulties could be aired, and had no impartial arbiters to
make decisions.
The big
traders, who could be counted on for impartial comment, bypassed Bitra and
could cite many examples of unfair dealings since Chalkin had assumed the
Holding fifteen years before. The few small traders who ventured in Bitra
rarely returned.
Following that
Oather and its decision to consider deposing Chalkin, M'shall had his sweep
riders check in every minor bold to learn if Chalkin had duly informed his
people of the imminence of Thread. None had, although Lord Chalkin had
increased his tithe on every household. The manner in which he was conducting
this extra tithe suggested that he was amassing supplies for his own good, not
that of the Hold.
Those in more
isolated situations would certainly have a hard time obtaining even basic food
supplies. That constituted a flagrant abuse of his position as Lord Holder.
When Paulin
read M'shall's report, he asked if Chalkin's holders would speak out against
him. M'shall had to report that his initial survey of the minor holders
indicated a severe lack of civic duty.
Chalkin had his
folk so cowed, none would accuse him - especially this close to a Pass, for he
had still had the power to turn objectors out of their holds.
"They may
change their minds once Thread has started," K'vin remarked to Zulaya.
"Too late,
I'd say, for any decent preparations to be made." K'vin shrugged. "He's
really not our concern - for which I, for one, am thankful. At least we rescued
Iantine."
Zulaya gave a
wry chuckle. "That poor lad! Starting his professional career at Bitra,
Not the best place."
"Maybe that's
all he could aspire to," K'vin suggested.
"Not if he's
from Hall Domaize," Zulaya said tartly. "Wonder how long it'll take
his hands to recover?"
"Thinking
of a new portrait?" K'vin asked, amused.
"Well, he's
down an eighth of what he needs," she said.
K'vin gave her
a wide-eyed look. "You wouldn't."
"Of course
I wouldn't," she said with an edge to her voice. "He needs something
in his pocket of his own. I admire a lad who'd endure Bitra for any reason. And
Iantine's was an honourable one in wanting to pay the transfer fee."
"Wear that
red Hatching dress when you sit for him," K'vin said. Then he rubbed his
chin. "You know, I might have my portrait done, too." Zulaya gave him
a long look.
"The boy
may find it as hard to leave Telgar Weyr as it was Bitra. With a much fuller
pouch and no maintenance subtracted And soap and hot water and decent food,"
Zulaya said.
"According
to Tisha, he'll need feeding up. He's skin and bones."
When the
singing woke Iantine, he was totally disoriented.
No-one had sung
a note at Bitra Hold. And he was warm!
The air was
redolent of good eating odours, too. He sat up.
Hands, feet and
face were stiff, but the tingling was gone. And he was exceedingly hungry.
The curtain
across the cubicle rustled and a boy's head popped through.
"You're
awake, Artist Iantine?" the lad asked.
"Indeed, I
am," and Iantine looked around for his clothes.
Someone had
undressed him and he didn't see his own clothes.
"I'm to
help you if you need it," the boy said, pushing half-way through the
curtains. "Tisha laid out clean clothes." He wrinkled a snub nose.
"Yours
were pretty ripe," she said.
Iantine chuckled.
"They prbably were. I ran out of soap for washing three weeks ago."
"You waz
at Bitra. They charge for everything there," and the boy threw up both
arms in disgust. "I'm Leopol," he added.
Then he lifted
the soft slippers from the pile on the Stool.
"Tisha
said you'd better wear these, not your boots. And you're to use the salve
first." He held up the lidded jar.
"Dinner's
ready." Leopol then licked his lips.
"And you
must wait your meal until I'm ready, huh?"
Leopol nodded
solemnly and then grinned. "I don't mind. I'll get more because I waited."
"Is food
in short supply at this Weyr?" Iantine asked jokingly as he began to dress
in the clean gear.
Odd how
important simple things, like freshly laundered clothing, assumed the level of
luxury when you've had to do without.
Leopol helped
him spread the salve on his feet. They were still tender to the touch and even
the act of applying the salve made them suddenly itchy. Fortunately the numb
weed or whatever it was, reduced that sensation.
When he had
relieved himself again and gingerly washed face and hands, he and Leopol made
their way to the Lower Cavern where the evening meal was in progress.
The lad led him
to a side table near the hearth which had been set for two. Instantly cooks
descended with plates overflowing with food, wine for him and klah for Leopol.
"There
now, Artist man," the cook said, nodding appreciation as Iantine attacked
the roast meat, eat first and then the Weyrleaders would like a few words with
you, if you're not too tired." Iantine murmured thanks and understanding
and addressed himself single-mindedly to his food. How long had it been since
he'd eaten a decent meal?
He would have
had additional servings of the main course, but his stomach felt uneasy: too
much good food after several days of semi-fasting, probably. Leopol brought him
a large serving of the sweet course, but he couldn't finish it all because the
back of his throat felt raw and sore. He would have gone back to his bed then,
but he saw the Weyrleaders advancing on him. Leopol made a discreet exit,
grinning reassurance at him. Iantine tried to stand in courtesy to his hosts,
but he wobbled on his numbed feet and dropped back into the chair.
"We don't
stand much on ceremony here," Zulaya said, gesturing for him to stay
seated as K'vin pulled out one chair for her.
He carried the
wine-skin from which he filled all the glasses.
Iantine took a
polite sip - it was a nice crisp wine - but even the one sip made his stomach
feel sourer.
"Messages
have been sent, and acknowledgments received, that you've been rescued," K'vin
said, grinning over the last word. Master Domaize was becoming worried, so we
saved him a messenger to Bitra."
"That's
very good of you, Zulaya, K'vin," Iantine said, thankful that part of his
training at Hall Domaize had included knowing the important names in every
Hold, Weyr and Hall.
"I
certainly appreciated P'tero's rescue." Zulaya grinned. He'll be dining
out on that one for the rest of the year. But it proves the wisdom of sweep
riding even during the Interval."
"You
should know," Iantine blurted out, "that Lord Chalkin doesn't believe
there will be a Pass."
"Of course
not," K'vin replied easily. "It doesn't suit him to. Bridgely and M'shall
would like a report from you, though, concerning your visit there."
"You mean,
there's something that can be done about him?" Iantine was amazed. Lord
Holders were autonomous within their borders; he hadn't known there'd be any
recourse.
"He may do
himself in," Zulaya said with a grim twist of her lips.
"That
would be wonderful," said Iantine. "Only," and now honesty
forced him to admit this, "he didn't really do anything to me."
"Our Weyr
artist may not be trained," K'vin said, "but Waine informed me that
it doesn't take seven weeks to do four miniatures."
"I
actually painted twenty-two to get four that they liked," Iantine explained,
clearing his throat grimly. "The hooker in the contract was the word 'satisfactory'
"Ah,"
Zulaya and K'vin said in chorus.
"I ran out
of paint and canvas because I brought only what I thought I'd need." He
lifted his hands, then rubbed them because they were beginning to itch again. "Then
the children all got measles and so, rather than have anything deducted from
the fee for room and board, I agreed to freshen up the Hold murals... only I
hadn't brought that sort of paint and had to manufacture the colours."
"Did he
charge you for the use of the equipment?" Zulaya asked to Iantine's astonishment.
"How did
you know?" When she only laughed and waved at him to continue his telling.
Iantine went
on, "So I excavated what I needed in the midden."
"Good for
you," Zulaya clapped her hands, delighted by his resourcefulness.
"Fortunately,
most of the raw materials for pigments are readily available. You only have to
find them and make the colours up. Which I'd have to do anyhow. Master Domaize
was good about passing on techniques like that.
"Then I
finally got them to accept the miniatures, which weren't exactly miniature size
any more, by the way, just before the first blizzard snowed me in." Iantine
flushed; his narrative showed him to be such a ninny.
"So? What
did you contract for then?" Zulaya shot K'vin a knowing look.
"I was a
bit wiser. Or so I thought," he said with a grimace and then told them the
clauses he'd insisted on.
"He had
you on the drudges' level at Bitra?" Zulaya was appalled.
"And you a
diploma'd artist? I would protest about that! There are certain courtesies
which most Holds, Halls and Weyrs accord a student of a craft, and certainly to
an artist!"
"So, when
Lord Chalkin finally accepted his portrait, I made tracks away as fast as I
could!" K'vin clapped him on the shoulder, grinning at the fervour with
which that statement came out.
"Not that
my conditions improved that much," Iantine added quickly and then grinned,
"until P'tero rescued me." His throat kept clogging up and he had to
clear it again. "I want to thank you very much for that. I hope I didn't
keep him from proper duties."
"No, no,"
K'vin said. "Mind you, I'm not all that sure why he was over Bitra, but it's
as well he was."
"How are
your hands?" Zulaya asked, looking down at him as he washed his itching
fingers together.
"I shouldn't
rub the skin, should I?"
Zulaya spoke
over her shoulder. "Leopol, get the numb weed for Iantine, please."
The young artist hadn't noticed the boy's discreet presence, but he was glad he
didn't have to walk all the way to the cubicle to get the salve.
"It's just
the after-effects of cold," he said, looking at his fingers, and noticing
what Tisha had - pigment under the nails. He curled his fingers, ashamed to be
at a Weyr table with dirty hands.
And a deep
shiver went down his spine.
"I was
wondering, Iantine," Zulaya began, "if you'd feel up to doing another
portrait or two? The Weyr pays the usual rates, and no extras charged against
you."
Iantine protested.
"I'd gladly do your portrait, Weyrwoman."
"It is of
yourself you were speaking, isn't it?" That first shiver was followed by
another which he did his best to mask.
"You'll do
it only if you are paid a proper fee, young man," Zulaya said sternly.
"But..."
"No buts,"
K'vin put in. "What with preparations for a Pass, neither Zulaya nor I
have had the time to commission proper portraits. However, since you're here...
and willing?"
"I'm
willing, all right, but you don't know my work and I'm only just accredited."
Zulaya caught
his hands in hers, for he'd been wildly gesticulating in both eagerness and an
attempt to disguise another spasm.
"Artist
Iantine, if you managed to do four miniatures and two formal portraits, and
refresh murals for Chalkin, you're more than qualified. Didn't you know that it
took Macartor five months to finish Chalkin's wedding-day scene?"
"And he
had to borrow marks from an engineer to pay off the last of his 'debt'?" K'vin
added. "Here's Waine to greet you. But you're not to start work again
until you're completely recovered from the cold."
"Oh, I'm
recovered, I'm recovered," Iantine said, standing up as the Weyrleaders
did, determined to control the next set of shiverings.
After they had
introduced him to the little man, Waine, they left him, circulating to other
tables as the Weyr relaxed.
There was
singing and guitar playing from one side of the room, cheerful noises, above a
general level of easy conversation. That was something else which Iantine only
now realized had been totally absent at Bitra Hold: music, talk, people
relaxing after a day's work.
"Heard you
ran afoul of Chalkin?" Waine said, grinning and ducking his head. Then he
brought from behind his back a sheaf of large-sized paper sheets, neatly tied
together, and a handful of pencils. "Thought you might need em, like,"
he said shyly. "Heard tell you used up all at Bitra."
"Thank
you," Iantine replied, running his fingers appreciatively over the fine
sheets and noticing that the pencils were of different weights of carbon. "How
much do I owe you?"
Waine laughed,
showing gaps in his teeth. "You been at Bitra too long, Artist man. I've
colours, too, but not many. Don't do more'n basics."
"Then let
me make you a range of paints," Iantine said gratefully, gritting his
teeth against yet another onslaught of ague. "You know where to find the
raw stuff around here, and I'll show you how I make the tints."
Waine grinned
toothlessly again. " That's a right good trade."
He held out a
hand and nearly crushed Iantine's fingers with his enthusiasm. But he caught
the paroxysm of almost uncontrollable shivering which Iantine could not hide.
"Hey, man,
you're cold."
"I can't
seem to stop shivering, for all that I'm on top of the fire," and Iantine had
to surrender to the shaking.
"TISHA"
Iantine was embarrassed by Waine's bellow for assistance, but he didn't resist
when he was bundled back into his quarters and the medic summoned while Tisha
ordered more furs, hot water-bottles, aromatics to be steeped in hot water to
make breathing easier. He made no resistance to the medication that was
immediately prescribed for him because, by then, his head had started to ache.
So did his bones.
The last thing
he remembered before he drifted off to an uneasy sleep was what Maranis, the
medic, said to Tisha. "Let's hope they all have it at Bitra for giving it
to him!"
Much later
Leopol told him that Tisha had stayed by his bedside three nights while he
burned of the mountain fever he had caught, compounding his illness by exposure
on the cold slopes. Maranis felt that the old woodsman might be a carrier for
the disease: himself immune, but able to transmit the fever.
Iantine was
amazed to find his mother there when he woke from the fever. Her eyes were red
with crying and she burst into tears again when she realized he was no longer
delirious.
Leopol also
told him that Tisha had insisted she be sent for when his fever lasted so long.
To Iantine's
astonishment, his mother didn't seem as pleased to receive the transfer fee as
he was to give it.
"Your life
isn't worth the fee," she told him finally when he was afraid she was
displeased with the missing eighth mark he'd had to give the woodsman. "And
he nearly killed you for that eighth."
"He's a
good lad you have for a son," Tisha said with an edge to her voice, "working
that hard to earn money from Chalkin."
"Oh yes,"
his mother hastily agreed as she suddenly realized she ought to be more grateful.
"Though why ever you sought to please that old skinflint is beyond me."
"The fee
was right," Iantine said weakly.
"Don't
take on so, now, Ian," Tisha said when his mother had to return to the
sheep hold "She was far more worried about you than about the marks. Which
shows her heart's in the right place. Worry makes people act odd, you know."
She patted Iantine's shoulder. "She wanted to take you home and nurse you
there," she went on reassuringly.
"But
couldn't risk your lungs in the cold of between. I don't think she liked us
taking care of you!" She grinned. "Mothers never trust others, you
know."
Iantine managed
a grin back at Tisha. I guess that's it."
It was Leopol
who restored Iantine's peace of mind. "You gotta real nice mother, you
know," he said, sitting on the end of the bed. "Worried herself sick
about leaving until P'tero promised to convey her again if you took any turn
for the worst. She'd never ridden a dragon before."
Iantine chuckled.
"No, I don't think she has. Must have frightened her."
"Not as
much," and now Leopol cocked a slightly dirty finger at the artist, "as
you being so sick she had to be sent for. But she was telling P'tero how happy
your father would be to have those marks you earned. Real happy. And she near
deafened P'tero, shouting about how she'd always known you'd be a success, and
to get the whole fee out of Chalkin was quite an achievement."
"She did?"
Iantine perked up. His mother had been bragging about him?
"She did
indeed," Leopol said, giving an emphatic nod to his head.
Leopol seemed
to know a great deal about a lot of matters in the Weyr. He also never seemed
to mind being sent on errands as Iantine made a slow convalescence.
Master Domaize
paid him a visit, too. And it was Leopol who told the convalescent why the
Master had made such a visit.
"That Lord
Chalkin sent a complaint to Master Domaize that you had skived out of the Hold
without any courtesy and he was seriously considering lodging a demand for the
return of some of the fee since you were so obviously very new at your art, and
the fee had been for a seasoned painter, not a young upstart." Leopol
grinned at Iantine's furious reaction.
"Oh, don't
worry. Your master wasn't born yesterday. M'shall himself brought him to Bitra
Hold, and they said that there was not a thing wrong with any of the work you'd
done for that Lord Chalkin." He cocked his head to one side, regarding Iantine
with a calculating look.
"Seems
like there's lot of people wanting to sit their portraits with you. Didja know
that?" Iantine shook his head, trying to absorb the injustice of Chalkin's
objection. He was speechless with fury. Leopol grinned again.
"Don't
worry, Iantine. Chalkin's the one should worry, treating you like that. Your
Master and the Benden Weyrleader gave out to that Lord Holder about it, too.
You're qualified, and entitled to all the courtesies of which you got none at
Bitra Hold. Good thing you didn't get sick until after Zulaya and K'vin had a
chance to hear your side of the story. Not that anyone would believe Chalkin,
no matter what he says."
"Did you
know that even wherries won t roost in Bitra Hold?" Convalescence from the
lung infection took time and Iantine fretted at his weakness.
"I keep
falling asleep," he complained to Tisha one morning when she arrived with
his potion. "How long do I have to keep taking this stuff?"
"Until
Maranis hears clear lungs in you," she said in her no-nonsense tone. Then
she handed him the sketch paper and pencils that Waine had given him on his
first night in the Weyr. "Get your hand back in. At least doing what you're
best at can be done sitting still."
It was good to
have paper and pencil again. lt was good to look about the Lower Caverns and
catch poses, especially when the poser didn't realize he was being sketched.
And his eye had not lost its keenness, and if his fingers cramped now and then
from weakness, strength gradually returned. He became unaware of the passage of
time, nor did he notice people coming up behind him to see what he was drawing
just then.
Waine arrived
with mortar, pestle, oil, eggs and cobalt to make a good blue. The man had
picked up bits of technique and procedures on his own, but picking things up
here and there was no substitute for the concentrated drill which Iantine had
had: drills that he had once despised but now appreciated when he could see
what resulted from the lack of them.
Winter had set
in but on the first day of full sun, Tisha insisted on wrapping him up in a
cocoon of furs to sit out in the Bowl for the good of fresh air". As it
was bath-time for the dragonets Iantine was immediately fascinated by their
antics and began to appreciate just how much hard work went into their nurture.
It was also the first chance he'd ever had of seeing dragonets He knew the
grace and power of the adult dragons and their awesome appearance. Now he saw
the weyrlings as mischievous - even naughty, as one ducked her rider into the
lake - and endlessly inventive. None of this last Hatching were ready to fly
yet, but some of the previous clutch were beginning to take on adult duties. He
had first-hand observation of their not-so-graceful performances.
The next day he
saw P'tero and blue Ormonth in the focus of some sort of large class. As he
wandered over, he saw that not only the weyrlings from the last three Hatchings
were attending but also all youngsters above the age of twelve.
Ormonth had one
wing extended and was gazing at it in an abstract fashion, as if he'd never
seen it before. The expression was too much for the artist in Iantine and he
flipped open his pad and sketched the scene. P'tero noticed, but the class was
being extremely attentive.
What T'dam was
saying slowly reached through Iantine's absorption with line and pose.
"Now,
records show us that the worst injuries occur on wing edges, especially if Thread
falls in clumps and the partners are not sharp enough to avoid em. A dragon can
fly with one third of his exterior sail damaged" and T'dam ran his hand
along the edge of Ormonth's wing.
"However,"
and T'dam looked up at Ormonth, "if you would be good enough to close your
wing slightly, Ormonth," and the blue did so.
"Thank you
" T'dam had to stand slightly on tip-toe to reach the area of the inner
wing. Injuries in here are far more serious as Thread can, depending on the
angle of its fall, sear through the wing and into his body. This," and he
now ducked under the wing and tapped the side, is where the lungs are and
injury here can even be fatal." There was a gasp around the semi-circle of
his students.
"That's
why you have to be sharp every instant you're in flight. Go between the instant
you even suspect you've been hit."
"How do we
know?" someone asked.
"Ha!"
T'dam propped his fists on his thick leather belt and paused. "Dragons are
very brave creatures for the most part, considering what we ask them to do.
But," and he stroked Ormonth in apology, "they have exceedingly quick
responses... especially to pain.
"You'll
know!" He paused again. "Some of you were here when Missath broke her
sail bone, weren't you?" and he pointed around the group until he saw
several hands raised. "Remember how she squealed?"
"Went
right through me like a bone cutter." a big lad said and shivered
convulsively.
"She was
squealing the instant she lost her balance and actually before she snapped the
bone. She knew she would hurt even as she fell."
"Now, you
don't have quite the same immediacy in Threadfall since you'll be high on
adrenalin, but you'll know. So, this brings up a point that we make constantly
in all training procedures, always, ALWAYS have a point to go to in your head.
During Fall, it had better be the Weyr since everyone here," and now the
sweep of his hand included those Iantine recognized as non-riders, "will
be ready to help.
"DON'T
make the mistake of coming in too low. Going between will have stopped Thread burrowing
further into your dragon..." A muted chorus of disgust and fearfulness
greeted that concept."So you can make as orderly a landing as injuries
permit. What you don't need is a bad landing which could compound the original
Thread score. Start encouraging your dragon as soon as you know he's been hit.
Of course, you may be hit too, and I appreciate that, but you're riders and you
can certainly control your own pain while seeing to your dragon's.
"HE's the
important one of you, remember.
"Without
him you don't function as a rider.
"Now, the
drill is," and once again he swept his glance around his students, "slather!"
He picked up the wide brush from the pail at his feet and began to ply it on
Ormonth's wing: water, to judge the way it dripped. The blue regarded the
operation with lightly whirling eyes.
"Slather,
slather, slather," and T'dam emphasized each repetition with a long brush
stroke. "You can't put too much numb weed on a dragon's injuries to suit
him or her," and he grinned at the female green riders, "and the
injury will be numb in exactly three seconds at least the outer area. It does
take time to penetrate through the epidermis to what passes for the germinative
layer in a dragon's hide. So you may have to convince your dragon that he's not
as badly hurt as he or she feels. Your injured dragon needs all the reassurance
you can give... No matter how bad you think the injury looks, don't think that
at the dragon. Tell him or her what a great brave dragon they are, and that the
numb weed is working and the pain will go away.
"Now, if a
bone has been penetrated - - -
"Why, you've
got P'tero to the life," said an awed voice softly in Iantine's ear, and
he shot a glance at the tall lad standing behind him: M'leng, green Sith's
rider, and P'tero's special friend. Iantine had seen the two riders, always
together, in the kitchen cavern. Oooh, is there any chance I could have that
corner?" And he tapped the portion which contained P'tero and Ormonth.
M'leng was a
handsome young man, with almond-shaped green eyes in an angular face. The light
breeze in the Bowl ruffled tight dark brown curls on his head.
"Since I
owe P'tero my life, let me make a larger sketch for you."
"Oh, would
you?" And a smile animated M'leng's rather solemn face.
"Can we
settle a price? I've marks enough to do better than Chalkin did you!" He
reached for his belt pouch.
Iantine tried
to demur, pleading he owed P'tero.
"Tero was
only doing his duty for once," M'leng said with a touch of asperity. "But
I really would like a proper portrait of him. You know, what with Threadfall
coming and all, I'd want to have something..." M'leng broke off,
swallowed, and then reinforced his pleading.
"I've to
do a commission for the Weyrleaders..." Iantine said.
"Is that
the only one?" M'leng seemed surprised. "I'd've thought everyone in
the Weyr would be after you."
Iantine grinned.
"Tisha hasn't released me from her care yet."
"Oh, her,"
and M'leng dismissed the head woman with a wave of his hand. "She's so
fussy at times. But there's nothing wrong with your hand or your eye... and
that little pose of P'tero, leaning against Ormonth, why it's him!"
Iantine felt
his spirits rise at the compliment because the sketch of the blue rider was
good - better than the false ones he had done at Bitra Hold. He still cringed,
remembering how he had allowed himself to compromise his standards by
contriving such obsequious portrayals. He hoped he would never be in such a
position again. M'leng's comment was bal to his psyche.
"I can do
better But I like the pose."
"Can't you
just do it? I mean," and M'leng looked everywhere but at Iantine, "I'd
rather P'tero didn't know... I mean..."
"Is it to
be a surprise for him?"
"No, it's
to be for me!" And M'leng jabbed his bwastbone with his thumb, his manner
defiant. "So I'll have it."
At such
intransigence, Iantine was at a loss and hastily agreed before M'leng became
more emotional. His eyes had filled and he set his mouth in a stubborn line.
"I will,
of course, but a sitting would help."
"Oh, I can
arrange that, so he still doesn't know. You're always sketching," and that
came out almost as an accusation.
Iantine was -
thanks to the lecture he had been overhearing considerably more aware now of
the dangers dragons, and their riders, would shortly face. If M'leng was
comforted by having a portrait of his friend, that was the least Iantine could
do.
"This very
night," M'leng continued, single-minded in his objective, "I'll see
we sit close to where you usually do. I'll get him to wear his good tunic so
you can paint him at his very best."
"But
suppose..." Iantine began, wondering how he could keep P'tero from knowing
he was being done.
"You do
the portrait," M'leng said, patting Iantine's arm to still his objections.
"I'll take care of P'tero - - -" and he added under his breath, "as
long as I have him."
That little
afterthought made the breath stop in Iantine's throat. Was M'Leng so sure that
P'tero would die?
"I'll do
my best, M'leng, you may be sure of that!"
"Oh, I am,"
said M'leng, tossing his head up so that the curls fell back from his face. He
gave Iantine a wry smile. I've been watching how you work, you see." He
extended a hand soft with the oils riders used to tend their dragons. Iantine took
it and was astonished at the strength in the green rider's grip.
"Waine
said a good miniature - which is what I want," and he patted his breast
pocket to show the intended site of the painting, "by an artist is priced
at four marks. Is that correct?" Iantine nodded, unable to speak for the
lump in his throat.
Surely M'leng
was dramatizing matters? Or was he? In the background, Iantine could hear T'dam
advising his listeners on the types and severity of injuries and the immediate
aid to be given to each variety.
What a bizarre,
and cruel, lecture to give to the weyrlings!
And yet - the
thought stopped him - was it not kinder to be truthful now and ease the shock
of what could possibly happen?
"This
evening?" M'leng said firmly.
"This very
evening, M'leng," Iantine agreed, nodding his head.
When the green
rider had left him, it took the young artist some long moments before he could
return to his sketching.
Well, this was
one thing he could do as a gift to the Weyr for all their kindnesses to him -
he could leave behind a graphic gallery of everyone currently living in Telgar
Weyr!
Classes were
also being held that same day in Fort Hold. in the College assembly room,
Corey, as Head Medic, was conducting a seminar for healers from all over Pern
who had been flown in for a three-day clinic. This included a first-aid session
dealing with both human and dragon injuries. She was assisted by the Fort Weyr
medic, N'ran, who had originally studied animal medicine before he had
inadvertently Impressed brown Galath. Galath, on this occasion, was outside,
enjoying the sun, while a green dragon, who was small enough to fit in the
Hall, was being used for demonstration purposes much as Ormonth was at Telgar
Weyr.
"Now we
have been able to duplicate the records of Doctors Tomlinson, Marchane and Lao
which include some fading photos of actual injuries. Lunch is fortunately
sufficiently in the future," she said with a quirky smile. Then her
expression turned sober. "The verbal descriptions are worse, but it's
necessary to impress on all those who have to deal with a man began and his
ground injuries how incredibly fast," she ticked off one finger, how
horrendous Thread is," another and then with a sigh, "and how quickly
we must act to..." her pause was longer now, "...to limit suffering."
Murmurs
answered her and she could see that some of the audience had paled. Others
looked defiant.
"From what
I, and my staff," and she indicated those in the front seat, "have
determined, there is little option. The alternative of getting into cold
between as the dragons can is not available to us."
"Yes?"
"Why not?
If that's an alternative..."
"For them,
not us," she said firmly. "Because all the records emphasize the
speed with which Thread consumes organic material. Too swiftly to call a
dragon, even if any were available, in your locale. A whole cow goes in less
than two minutes."
"Why, that's
not even time to..." voice trailed off.
"Precisely,"
Corey agreed. "If a limb is scored, there's the chance it could be
amputated before the organism spreads over the body."
"Shards!
You can't just..." another man began.
"If
survival means loss of just a limb, it can be done."
"But only
if you're right there." Corey recognized him as a practitioner in a large
hold in Nerat.
"And many
of us will be right there," Corey said firmly, "with the ground
crews, sharing their dangers and hopefully saving as many as we can."
She managed a
wry smile. "Any body of water handy is useful since Thread drowns.
Quickly, according to reports. Depending on the site of the injury, water can
impede the ingestion long enough for an amputation to be performed. Even a
trough is sufficient." She glanced down at her notes. "Thread needs
oxygen as well as organic material. It drowns in three seconds."
"What if
it's burrowed into flesh?"
"Three
seconds. Flesh does not have the free oxygen necessary for Thread life. Ice,
too, can retard progress, but that isn't always available either.
"Let us
assume that we have, somehow, halted the organism's progress but we have a bad
scoring and/or an amputation. Numbweed, numb weed numb weed And bless this
planet for inventing something it didn't know we'd need so badly. In the case
of an amputation, of course, proceed with standard practices, including
cautery. That at least would eliminate any final vestige of Thread. There will
be significant trauma so fellis recommended if the patient is still conscious.
She glanced
down at her notes. "Tomlinson and Marchane also indicate that the
mortality rate, due to heart failure or stroke, is high in Thread injuries.
Lao, who practised until the end of the First Pass, notes that often patients
who had received slight scores, successfully treated, died from the
pathological trauma of being scored. In preparing our groups fcr this problem,
do stress that Threadscore can be successfully treated."
"If we can
move fast enough," a man said facetiously.
"That's
why it's important for a medic to accompany as many ground-crew teams as
possible. And why first-aid procedures must be taught to every Hold and Hall
within your practice. There are only so many of us, but we can teach many what
to do and cut down on fatalities.
"And,"
Corey went on, "we must emphasize that all nonessential personnel is to
STAY safely indoors until ground crews report the area safe.
"Now, we
will go on to dragon injuries since these, too. will occur and those of us on
the spot may need to assist the dragon and rider. They will have the one
advantage we can't provide - the chance to go between and freeze the attacking
organism.
"But the
score will be just as painful.
"The
larger proportion of draconic injuries are to the wing surfaces... if you
please, Balzith," and she turned to the patient green dragon and she
obediently extended her wing as the medic conducted that section of her
lecture.
When they had
adjourned for lunch, prior to discussing other problems - such as hygiene and
sanitation within small and medium holds where the amenities were not as
efficient as in the larger population centres, Corey was approached by Joanson
of South Boll and Frenkal of Tillek Hold, both senior medics.
"Corey,
what is your position on... mercy?" asked Joanson in a very thoughtful
tone.
She regarded
the tall man for a long moment. "What it has always been, Joanson. We
have, as you realize, quite a few persons in this audience who have not
received full medical training. I cannot ask them to do what I would find very,
very difficult to do: administer mercy." She gave Joanson a long stare,
then glanced at Frenkal who seemed to enjoy the ethical spot she was in.
"We are
sworn to preserve life. We are also sworn to maintain a decent quality of life
for those under our care." She felt her lips twitch, remembering that
there were occasions when those two aims were in conflict. "We must, each
of us, reflect on how we will face such a desperate situation: whether to cut
short a final agony is necessary, even ethical. I don't think there will be
much time to consider morals, ethics, kind or cruel, at the time we are forced
to take action."
She paused,
took a deep breath. "I do remember seeing the tapes the Infirmary used to
have, showing very graphically an animal being eaten alive by Thread..." She
noticed Joanson's wince.
"Yes,
eaten alive because Thread caught the hind end of it. I think, if it was
someone you knew, you'd opt for the quickest possible end to that." Since
they were not the only two who approached her on that subject, she was almost
glad when the lunch break ended and she could address the less vexious matter
of amputation.
Everyone needed
a refresher on that procedure, especially an emergency type of operation when
there might not be time for all the preliminaries that made for a neat stump.
She did have the new bone cutters - well, more axes than the traditional
surgical tool - for distribution afterwards. Kalvi had brought them with him.
"Best edge
we've ever been able to make on a surgical tool, Corey," he told her with
some pride. Had them tested at the abattoir. Cut through flesh and bone like
going through cheese. Gotta keep'em honed, though. And I've made eases for the
blades so no-one slices off a finger by mistake."
Surgeons were
not the only ones with a ghoulish sen se of humour, Corey decided.
Meanwhile, in
the Great Hall of Fort Hold, with Lord Paulin seated in the front row, Kalvi
himself was demonstrating to those who would form the Fort ground crews how to
use and service the HNO3 cylinders, taking his audience from assembly of the
parts and then a quick rundown of common problems likely to be encountered in
the field, Every small holder within Fort's authority was present; many had
brought their elder children. All had come on foot, their own or on horseback.
Fort Weyr, like the other five, was beginning to restrict dragon rides.
Lord Paulin
understood and approved.
"We've had
it far too easy, using the dragons the way our ancestors would have used the
sleds and airborne vehicles," he was heard to say when one of his holders
complained that he had been denied his right to a dragon ride. "We haven't
been breeding horses just to run races, you know. And the dragon riders have
been far too accommodating.
"Do us all
good to walk or ride. You have, of course, extended your beast holds to shelter
all your livestock?" There had been moaning over that necessity, too, with
complaints that the engineers should really have spent more time trying to
replicate the marvellous rock-cutting equipment with which their ancestors had
wrested living quarters out of cliff-sides.
Kalvi had come
in for considerable harangue over that, which he shrugged off.
"We have a
list of priorities: that's not one. Nor could be."
"We still
have two sleds in the north, but no power to run em."
"Never did
find out what they used," he said. "No way of duplicating such power
packs either, or I'm sure our ancestors would have. Otherwise why did they
engineer the dragons?
"Anyway,
renewable resources make more sense than erudite or exotic imports."
When the main
lecture was concluded, everyone was told to reassemble after the noon meal for
target practice. This was vastly more interesting than having to listen to
Kalvi waffle on about how to adjust the wands of the HNO3 throwers to give a
long, narrow tongue of fire or a broader, shorter flame. Or how to clear the
nozzle of clogged matter.
"You've
got almost as much variation in flame as a dragon has..." Kalvi said as he
slung the tanks to his back, his voice slightly muffled by his safety gear. "You,
there, the hard hat has a purpose. Put it on your head! Lower the face screen!"
The offender immediately complied, Kalvi scowling at him.
"The
effective range of this equipment is six metres on the narrowest setting, two
on the broader. You wouldn't want it to get closer to you..." He was
fiddling with his wand. "Damn thing's stubborn."
He took out a
screwdriver and made a slight adjustment.
"ALWAYS..."
he said loudly and firmly as he held the wand away from his body, "keep
the nozzle of the wand pointed away from YOU and anyone in your immediate
vicinity. We're flaming Thread, not folks.
"NEVER...never...
engage the flow of the two gases without looking in what direction the wand is
pointing. You can also burn, scorch, sear things without meaning to. CAN'T YOU,
Laland?" he said, aiming his remark at one of his students.
The man grinned
and shifted his feet nervously, looking anywhere but at his Master.
"Now,
signal the topside crews, will you, Paulin?" said Kalvi, setting himself
firmly on both feet and aiming the wand up.
Paulin waved a
red kerchief and suddenly a tangle of 'something' catapulted off the cliff,
startling everyone in the crowd behind Kalvi.
Those with
wands raised them defensively and others gasped as the tangle separated into
long silver strands - some fine, some thick and falling at slightly different
rates. As soon as they were within range, Kalvi activated his flame-thrower.
There was a
brief second when the fire seemed to pause on the ends of the launched strands
before the flame raced along the material and consumed it so that only bits of
smoking char reached the ground and the rock that had been tied to the leading
edge. There was a roar of approval and great applause.
"Not bad,"
Paulin said, grinning as he noted the new alertness in the crowd.
"Well, we
tried for the effect we just delivered," said Kalvi, turning off both
tanks. "Used a retardant on the rope, too. Had plenty of description of
how Thread falls, and this is as near as we can get.
"Now,"
and he turned back to his students, "it's best to get Thread before it
gets to you or to the ground. We know there are two kinds: first the ones that
eat themselves dead - they're not a problem, even if they are in the majority
and messy.
"Records
tell us that the second kind find something in what they ingest that allows
them to progress to the second step of their life-cycle; our ancestors never
could do much with investigating this type. They only knew that it existed. We
know it existed, too, because there are areas here in the north which are still
sterile two hundred-odd years since the last Fall. If this type gets the
nourishment it needs, above and beyond organic materials, then it can
propagate, or divide or whatever it is Thread does. This is what ground crews
were needed for. This is the type we don't want hanging around and burrowing
out of sight. Our ancestors thought Thread had to have some trace minerals or
elements in the dirt but, as they never figured out what, we're not likely to
now." Kalvi heaved a sigh of regret.
"So,"
and with a wide sweep of his arm, "we incinerate all the buggers the
dragon riders miss!" He paused and looked up the cliff-side where the
catapult crews were waiting.
"OK UP
THERE?" he yelled, hands bracketing his mouth.
Immediately in
response, red flags were waved at intervals along the cliff.
"All
right, in groups of five, range yourself parallel to the red flags you now see.
When we're all in place - and out of range of anyone's wand," and Kalvi
gave a wry grin, "I'll give the signal and we'll see how you manage."
The results
were somewhat erratic: some men seemed to get the hang of their equipment
immediately, while others couldn't even get the right mix on the gases to
produce flame.
"Well, it
happens," Kalvi said in patient resignation. Should make'em climb the
thread back up the cliff he added.
"Do'em good."
"Take too
much time. THROW DOWN THE NETS," Kalvi roared and then grinned at Paulin. "Thought
we'd have some trouble. We'll get our mock threads back up and in use." "How
much did you bring?"
"Yards,"
was all Kalvi said with another grin.
By the time the
short winter afternoon was closing into darkness, all the holders had had a
chance to sear thread despite hiccups and misses. The mock thread supply ran
out before they lost interest in the practice.
"Now I don't
want you to overdo it on your own," Paulin said to those nearest him as
they walked back to the Hold.
The practice
area had been some distance up the North Road from Fort Hold, where there were
neither beasts nor cot holds that could be affected.
"HNO3 isn't
all that hard to manufacture, but the equipment is. Don't wear it out before it's
needed."
During their
practice, the main Hall had been rearranged for the evening meal and the
trainees were as hungry as gatherers.
"Tomorrow
we'll clean the gear," Kalvi announced while klah was being served, "and
you'll strip down and reassemble the units so I'm sure you know what you're
doing. The man who does it fastest and best will get Lord Paulin's reward."
A loud cheer resounded through the Hall.
"Morale's
good," Paulin said to Kalvi who nodded, well satisfied with the way this
first instruction session had gone.
If all of those
meetings planned for the Head Engineer at the other major holds went as smoothly,
Kalvi thought he might even get a chance for a few days off to fish in Istan
waters. In the frantic search during the run-up to the Second Pass for
materials long left in storage, some reels of stout nylon fishing line had been
found. The bar-coding on the carton had been damaged so there was no way of
knowing how long ago the line had been manufactured, but Kalvi was eager to put
it to the test with some of the big ones that swam in the tropical waters. This
sort of synthetic material was extremely durable and would certainly take the
weight of pack fish which could sometimes be quite substantial.
A third group
made up of teachers - novices and experienced were gathered in the College's
spacious refectory.
Today this
convocation had the happier task, learning and rehearsing the new Ballads which
were to be used in teaching the young.
On the second
day the Fort Weyrleader would instruct the peripatetic teachers on how best to
shelter themselves if they should be caught out during Threadfall.
Clisser had
been inundated with complaints that the Weyrs were restricting rides which had
been the accustomed mode of transport. Not all the teachers were familiar with,
nor competent to ride, the sturdy horses that had been bred for long-distance
and mountain travel. He was going to have to reassign a lot of his older
teachers, yet another headache.
But for this
three-day period at least, the emphasis would be on the music and the new
curriculum. Not that he hadn't had contentious reactions to that. He was
beginning to think that Bethany had had the right of it when she suggested that
they, like the first Settlers, had relied too heavily on easy access to
information. Oddly enough, some of the older teachers loudly approved the new
curriculum.
"High time
we brought things up to date, with relevance to the life we're leading here,
not what folks had there," Layrence of Tillek said, "stuff we'll
never have, so what's the point of quizzing them on it?"
"But we
have traditions we must uphold," Sallisha said, her brow creased in a
frown. Which made Clisser realize once again that her reputation for being a 'right
wagon' was not without merit. Traditions which they must understand to
appreciate what we have."
"Oh,
Sallisha," and Bethany smiled in her soothing way, "we're incorporating
all those traditions in the Ballads but stressing what they need to understand
of the life they have here."
"But our
glorious past..." Sallisha began.
"Is past,"
Sheledon said forcefully, scowling right back at her.
"All past,
all gone, and why dwell on contacts our ancestors severed for their own good
reasons?"
"But - -
but - - - they should know - - -" Sallisha began again.
"If they
wish to know more, they can read it" Sheledon said, "for advanced
study. Right now, they have to cope with the problem of Threadfall."
"And that's
far more important than which planets outlasted the Nathi bombardments and who
was World Leader in 2089," said Shulse. "Or how to plot a parabolic
course around a primary."
Sallisha glared
implacably at the maths teacher.
"Of
course," Shulse went on, "I do approve of mentioning such history
where it pertains to Emily Boll as Governor, or Paul Benden as Admiral of the
Fleet, because they are part and parcel of Pernese history."
"But you
have to show students the overall picture - - -." Sallisha was persistence
itself.
"And some
students will be vitally interested, I'm sure," Shulse said, "but I
agree with Clisser that we have to streamline the material to be studied to the
point where it has relevance to this world and our civilization."
"Civilization?"
Sallisha said at her most scornful.
"What? You
don't call what we've made here 'civilized'?" Sheledon loved to tease the
literal-minded Sallisha.
"Not in
terms of what our ancestors had."
"And all
that went with a high-tech society - like prepubescent addicts, city gangs,
wild plagues, so much tech fraud that people were stuffing credits in their
mattresses to protect their income, the..."
"Spare me,"
Sallisha said contemptuously, "and concentrate on the good that was done."
Sheledon gave a
chuckle. "D'you know how dangerous it was to be a teacher on old Earth?"
"Nonsense,
our civilization," and she emphasized the word, "revered professors
and instructors on every level."
"Only
after they were allowed class-room discipline." Sheledon began.
"And the
use of stunners," added Shulse.
"That is
not a problem on Pern," Sallisha said loftily.
"And we'll
keep it that way," said Clisser firmly, " by adjusting what interests
our classes and dispensing with irrelevancies."
Sallisha
whirled on Clisser. "What you decide is relevant?"
Clisser pointed
to the files along one wall of the library in which they were talking. "I
sent out questionnaires to every teacher on the rolls, and to holders, major
and minor, asking for input. I got it, and this curriculum," he lifted the
thick volume, "is the result. You've all received copies.
"And the
Teaching Ballads will be part of the package you receive during the conference."
Sallisha
retired with poor grace, sulking as obviously as any intractable student would.
He wondered if she saw the resemblance in attitude. However, Sallisha was a
very good teacher, able to impart knowledge at the level needed, and was
therefore supervisor of Southeastern Pern. But she had her little quirks - like
everyone else in the world.
Making the
children memorize the Teaching Ballads would improve their retention of words:
a skill that Clisser realized he had lost with his dependence on technology.
But then, one of the reasons the Colonists had come to Pern with its limited
resources was to revert to a society that was not so dependent on technology.
He read accounts of persons who never left their home place, contacting others
only by electronics, living as teremites. Not so much out of fear of the
outside world as indolence.
No-one could be
indolent on Pern, Clisser told himself, and smiled. What a wasted life to
remain in one place all one's days! Well, perhaps here on Pern, events - like
Threadfall had forced them a little lower on the technological scale than the
Settlers had anticipated, but they had adapted to Pern and were adapting it to
their own use. And would meet the menace with a fully developed, renewable air
defence force, He hoped.
Clisser sucked
in his breath in a sort of reverse whistle. Everyone on the planet - with one
notable exception - was girding their loins and securing their premises against
that attack.
Preparing was
one thing, but enduring fifty years of an aerial attack was another. Briefly he
reviewed the accounts published by the besieged colonists on Sirius III and
Vega IV when the Nathi started bombarding the planets. Day after day, according
to the history tapes, the worlds had been shelled with dirty missiles,
rendering the surface uninhabitable. Whole generations had grown up on colonial
planets, living in deep shelters.
Clisser smiled
to himself - not much different from the cave holds in which the Pernese now
lived. And indeed those accommodations had benefited by the Sirian and Vegan
experiences - using the magma core taps to provide heat and solar panels for
power. Humans had survived under far worse conditions than pertained on this
planet. At least on Pern, you knew when and where Thread would fall and could
mount effective defences And yet, the scale of Threadfall was awesome and failure
had appalling consequences. Failure usually did.
Therefore,
Clisser hoped that the music which had been composed as psychologically
uplifting would have the desired effect: developing the morale and encouraging
the effort.
Briefly he
wondered what would have happened on old Earth, during the National period, if
there'd been a common extraterrestrial enemy to unite the diverse races.
Jemmy and
Sheledon had certainly written some stirring music, martial as well as hopeful.
Some of the less ambitious tunes had a tendency to stay in the mind so that you
woke up in the morning whistling one or hearing it in your head: the mark of a
good melody to Clisser's way of thinking. And they had scored the music for
various solo instruments or combinations of those readily available, so that
even inexperienced players in the most isolated Hold or Hall would be able to
accompany singers.
Jemmy's
riddling song was a delight and Clisser hadn't quite got all the answers yet,
but it would prove useful during the hours of a Fall to distract folk about
what was happening outside. Bethany's lament - the first song she had ever
composed - was next on the programme and he settled back to listen to it.
But his mind,
working overtime in anxiety over the success of his new programme, refused to
be caught up in the music.
Among other
things, WHAT was he going to do about Bitra Hold? The last teacher he'd sent
there had left, voiding his contract with Chalkin - not that Clisser blamed
Issony when he'd heard the way the man had been humiliated and threatened by
unruly holder children - but children had to receive rudimentary education. You
couldn't afford to let one whole province lapse into illiteracy.
To be sure,
children learn at different rates; he knew that, and learning should be made as
interesting as possible, to lay the foundations for further study and for life
itself, for that matter.
That was the
purpose of education: to develop the skills required to solve problems. And to
utilize the potential that existed in everyone - even a Bitran, he added
sourly.
Maybe he should
reappoint Sallisha to that area? Then he chuckled. Not much chance of that. She
had enough Seniority to refuse point blank.
He made up his
mind then, with the lovely phrases of Bethany's song soothing him, to bring up
the problem of Chalkin, Lord Holder of Bitra, in the next Conclave. Something
had to be done about the man.
During the
final evening meal in which all three groups joined up on the Fort court for a
dinner featuring three whole roasted steers, Clisser heard Chalkin's name come
up and homed in on the group discussing the man.
"That's
not all," M'shall was saying, a deep frown on his usually amiable face, "he's
put up guards at the borders, and anyone who wants to leave can take only their
clothes with them. Nothing else, not even the animals which they may have
raised themselves."
Clisser had not
realized that the Benden Weyrleader had arrived, but his presence was certainly
fortuitous.
"You're
speaking of Chalkin?" he asked when the others acknowledged his presence
and made room for him in their circle.
M'shall gave a
scornful laugh. "Who else would turn folks out of their holds right now?"
"I've just
heard from one of my travelling teachers, Issony, and he's quit and nothing
would persuade him to go back to Bitra. But even they have to grow up literate."
"Ha!"
M'shall's scoffing was echoed by the others.
"School
hours keep Bitrans from other jobs which earn their Holder more marks. What did
he do to Issony?"
"He'll
give you chapter and verse if you ask him. In fact, it would do him good. I
understand one of your riders rescued him."
"We do a
lot of rescue work in Bitra," M'shall said, not at all pleased by the
necessity.
"But only
non-Bitrans," he added.
"Now,
look," and Bridgely seemed about to explode, "I will not succour all
his refugees. And I will not lift a hand to help him when his Hold is overrun
by Thread."
"Ah,"
and M'shall raised one finger in a sardonic gesture, "but you see, he
doesn't believe Thread's coming."
"Wouldn't
we feel silly if he was right after all?" said Farley, one of the other
minor Fort holders. "Oops, wrong thing to say," he added when coldly
repressive stares rejected his witticism.
"Chalkin
has always been contrary by nature," Clisser said.
"But never
such an outright fool."
"Well, he's
exceeded even 'damned fool'," Bridgely said. "Is your teacher,
Issony, here now?"
"Well,
then, bring him up to Fort. We're about to do something definitive about
Chalkin."
"Right
now?" Clisser couldn't help looking over at the roasting carcasses and
sniffing at the succulent odours they were producing.
"I expect
to eat, too," said Bridgely, relenting.
"I just
finished eating at Benden," M'shall said, but his nose was twitching at
the aromas. "Ah, well, we could have a slice to allow you to enjoy your
meal."
"Timed it
just right, didn't you?" Farley said with a grin for their obvious
interest in the roasting meats. "Can something be done about an
irresponsible Lord Holder?"
"Read your
copy of the Charter, Farley," Clisser advised.
"And how
long have border guards - - -" and Paulin paused, made indignant by such a
measure "been in place?"
He'd assembled
those concerned in his office at the Hold when they'd finished eating.
Issony was on
call if his testimony was required.
"As near
as we can figure out, about seven days," M'shall said.
"As you
know, we've been canvassing all the holds to see who, if any, of Chalkin's
people has been told about the imminence of Thread."
"Surely
they'd have heard that much at Gathers" Paulin began.
"Ha!"
Bridgely put in. "Very few of his folk hear where or when Gathers are
being held, much less attend them."
"That isn't
right," said Paulin, shaking his head.
"Frankly,
Paulin, I'd say his tithing of them is punitive. None of them ever seem to have
a mark to spend even when they do bring work to sell at a Benden Gather. Not
that they're encouraged to travel at all."
"Even to
Gathers?" Paulin answered his own query. "No, he wouldn't encourage
them, would he?"
"Not if he's
afraid they'll compare conditions in another Hold. Also, he doesn't like Bitran
marks to go past his borders. And gets every one those high rollers have when
they attend those friendly little games he runs," M'shall said.
"I must
confess I hadn't known how restrictive he is." Paulin spoke in a very
thoughtful tone of voice.
"Well, how
would you?" Bridgely replied, absolving him. "You're west coast. We
know because we see so few Bitrans at east coast gathers. Oh, his gamesters
attend every one."
"Hmm, yes,
they're ubiquitous, you might say," Paulin murmured under his breath. "So,
if he's had to close the it would appear that some holders panicked when they
learned Threadfall is indeed expected?"
"Indeed,"
Bridgely agreed with a grim expression, "and when delegation got the nerve
to approach him, he had them beaten out of the Hold. I saw the lash marks so I
know they aren't lying. They said they'd never seen him in such a temper.
"He
announced that the dragon riders are trying to get extra tithing on false
pretences by spreading such rumours. He was also quite damning about the new
mine being opened above Ruatha when good Bitrans could have worked the Steng
Valley ones.
"The world
is against Bitrans?" Paulin asked in a droll tone.
"You got
it," M'shall agreed.
"Chalkin
also refused to accept delivery of HNO3 tanks." added Kalvi.
"Wouldn't
pay for them, you mean" M'shall said. "That's what Telgar riders told
mine."
"Either
way, there'll be no ground crews."
"I think
he's gone far enough to warrant impeachment," Paulin said with slow
deliberation.
"As a Lord
Holder, it's his duty to inform, and prepare his folk, for Threadfall. That's
why the Holder system was adopted: to give people a strong leader to supply
direction during a Fall and to provide emergency assistance. By closing his
borders, he's also abrogated one of the basic tenets {;vchsafed in the Charter:
freedom of movement. He's turned autonomy into despotism. I'll send all Lord
Holders and Professional Heads particulars..."
"Oh,"
and he glanced at - Clisser in dismay, "we can't make quick copies any
more, can we?"
"One
dragon rider could contact all the other Lord Holders," M'shall suggested.
"Or one messenger on this coast and another on ours. That makes only two
copies needed."
"I'll
request a rider from S'nan," said Paulin, reaching for a pad.
"That'll
please S'nan no end," M'shall said. He's not been least bit pleased with
Chalkin's defiance. Simply isn't done, you know," and M'shall grinned as
he mimicked S'nan's prim tones.
"We must
take action against Chalkin now," Paulin stated, "rather than leave
it until the next formal Conclave at Turn's End. Time's running out."
Then he turned
to Clisser. "Which reminds me, Clisser, any luck on finding some method of
irrefutably determining the return of Thread?" Clisser jerked himself into
alertness. "We've several possibilities," he replied, trying to sound
more positive than he was.
"What with
the loss of computer access, it's taking longer to sift through ways and means."
"Well,
keep at it..." and then Paulin touched Clisser's shoulder and smiled, "along
with everything else you're doing.
"By the
way, the teaching songs are very good indeed." Then he put a finger in his
ear, drilling it briefly as he grinned more broadly.
"The kids
sing'em all the time, not just in class."
"That's
what we intended," Clisser said with droll satisfaction. "Shall I
wait for your message?"
"No need
for that, my friend, but thanks for offering."
"This I
will take pleasure in penning." And Fort's Lord Holder grinned. "And
I'll remember to keep a copy for the Archives.
"By the
way, wasn't there some ancient way of making copies... something that would
transfer the writing to the next page under?"
Clisser bowed
his head briefly in thought. "Carbon copying, I think you mean. We don't
have it, but Lady Salda might have some ideas. We've got to figure a way to
make multiple copies or else spend hours copying." He gave a heavy sigh of
regret.
"I'll
leave it to you then, Clisser," said Paulin. "Thank you all. Now get
out here, the lot of you," and he grinned at the Benden leaders and Kalvi,
"and enjoy the rest of the evening while I get on with this task. Not that
I won't enjoy it in some respects," he added, picking up his pen and
examining the tip.
At that polite
dismissal, they all filed out of the office.
Clisser thought
that Issony looked disappointed at not being able to recite his catalogue of
complaints against Lord Chalkin; so he made sure that Issony had as much of the
good wine as he wanted.
Iantine asked
to be allowed out again on the next sunny day, so he was in the Bowl when the
travelling traders arrived. The entire complement of the caverns flocked out to
greet them.
Iantine furiously
sketched the various scenes around him: the big dusty carts with their multiple
teams of the heavy-duty ox-types which had been bred for such work. They had
been one of the last bio-engineering feats from Wind Blossom, whose grandmother
had done such notable work creating the dragons of Pern.
Iantine had
seen traders come and go on their routes since childhood, and fondly remembered
the stellar occasions when the Benden trading group had arrived at their rather
remote sheep hold. More specifically, he recalled the taste of the boiled
sweets, flavoured by the fruits which grew so abundantly in Nerat, which the
traders passed out by the handful. Once, there'd been fresh citrus, a treat of
unsurpassed delight to himself and his siblings.
For a remote
holding, having travellers drop by was almost as good as a Gather. To Iantine's
surprise, weyrfolk were equally delighted. Despite the fact that they could
usually find a dragon to convey them wherever they wanted to go, the arrival of
the traders was even better than tithe trains.
(The tithe
wagons were a different matter, since everyone had to pitch in to store the
produce given to the support of the Weyr.) And traders brought the news of all
the Holds and Halls along the way.
There were as
many clusters of folks just talking, Iantine noticed, as examining goods in the
stalls the Liliencamps set up. Tables and chairs were brought out from the
Lower Cavern; klah and the day's fresh bread and rolls were being served.
Leopol, always
on hand for Iantine, brought over a midmorning snack and hunkered down to give
the artist the latest news.
"They've
been setting up sheltered halts," he said between bits of his own sweet
roll, "along the road to here. They won't stop doing their routes just
because Thread's coming. But they gotta prepare for it. Half of what they got
on those big wagons right now is materials for safe havens. Course, they can
use what caves there are, but no more camping out in the open."
"That's
going to cramp their style," and he grinned broadly.
"But if ya
gotta, ya gotta. See," and one jam-stained finger pointed to a group of
men and women seated with the two Weyrleaders.
"They were
all hunched over maps spread out on the table. They're checking the sites over
so's everyone here'll know where they might be if they're caught out in a Fall."
"Who
trades through Bitra?" Iantine asked with considerable irony.
Leopol snorted.
"No-one in their right mind! Specially now."
"Didja
hear that Chalkin's closed his borders to keep his own people in? Didja know
that Chalkin doesn't believe Thread's coming?" The boy's eyes widened in
horrified dismay at such irreverence.
"And he
never told his holders it is?"
"Actually
I got that distinct impression while I was there," Iantine said, "more
from what wasn't said and done than what was. I mean, even Hall Domaize was
stocking food and supplies against Threadfall. They'd talk enough about odds
and wagers at Bitra, but not a word about Thread."
"Did they
sucker you into any gaming?" Leopol's avid expression suggested he yearned
for a positive answer.
Iantine shook
his head and grinned at his eager listener.
"In the
first place, I'd been warned."
"Isn't
everyone warned about Bitrans at Gathers?"
"And then,
I didn't have any spare marks to wager."
"Otherwise
you'd have lost your commission fer fair, Leopol murmured, his eyes still round
with his unvoiced speculations of the disaster Iantine had avoided.
"I'd say
Chalkin's gambling in the wrong game if he thinks ignoring Thread will make it
not happen," Iantine said.
"Shelters
are going to have to be huge," he added, gesturing towards the solid
beasts who were being led to the lake to drink.
Either they
were accustomed to dragonets from coming to Telgar Weyr, or they were so
phlegmatic they didn't care.
However, the
weyrlings had never seen them before in their short lives, so they reacted with
alarm at the massive cart beasts, squealing with such fright that dragons, sleeping
in the pale wintry sun on their weyr ledges, woke up to see what the fuss was
about. Iantine grinned.
He did a rapid
sketch of that in a corner of the page. At the rate he was going, he'd use up
even this generous supply of paper.
"Well,
they've had to use a lot of sheet roofing, I know," Leopol said. "The
Weyr contributes, too, ya know, since the Liliencamps have to detour to get up
to us."
Iantine had
never given any thought to the support system required to serve a Weyr and its
dragons. He had always assumed that dragons and riders took care of themselves
from tithings, but he was acquiring a great respect for the organization and
management of such a facility.
In a direct
contrast with what he had seen at Bitra, everybody in the Weyr worked cheerfully
at any task set them and took great pride in being part of it. Everyone helped
everyone else; everyone seemed happy.
To be sure, Iantine
had recently realized that his early childhood had been relatively carefree and
happy. His learning years at the College had also been good as well as
productive; his apprenticeship to Hall Domaize had proceeded with only
occasional ups and downs as he struggled to perfect new techniques and a full
understanding of Art.
Bitra Hold had
been an eye-opener. So, of course, was the Weyr, but in a far more positive
manner. Grimly, Iantine realized that one had to know the bad to properly
appreciate the good. He smiled wryly to himself while his right hand now
rapidly completed the sketch of the Weyrleaders in earnest collaboration with
the Liliencamp trail bosses.
That Bloodline
had been the first of the peripatetic traders, bringing goods and delivering
less urgent messages on their way from one isolated hold to another. A
Liliencamp had been one of the more prominent First Settlers. Iantine thought
he'd been portrayed in the great Mural in Fort Hold, with the other Charterers:
a smallish man with black hair, depicted with sharp eyes and a pad of some sort
depending from his belt, and Iantine had of course noted them several writing
implements stuffed in his chest pocket, and one behind his ear. It had seemed
such a logical place to store a pencil that Iantine had taken to the habit
himself.
He peered more
closely at the trail bosses. Yes, one of them had what looked like a pencil
perched behind one ear - and he also had an empty pouch at his belt: one that
probably accommodated the pad on the table before him.
But, even with
such wayside precautions, would such traders be able to continue throughout the
fifty dangerous years of a Pass? It was one thing to plan and quite another, as
Iantine had only just discovered, to put plans into operation. Still,
considerable hardship would result in transporting items from Hall to Hold to
Weyr during Threadfall, especially since dragons would be wholly involved in
protecting the land from Thread. They could not be asked to perform trivial
duties.
After all,
dragons were not a transportation facility; they had been bio-engineered as a
defensive force, and conveying people and goods was only an Interval
occupation.
He wondered if
the traders had any paper in their great wagons.
Not that he had
even a quarter mark left in his pouch, but maybe they'd take a sketch or two in
trade.
As quickly as
he neatly could, he filled his last empty page with a montage: the train
entering the Weyr Bowl, people rushing out to meet it, the goods being
exhibited, deals being made, with the central portion the scene of the trail
bosses discussing shelters with the Weyrleaders. He held the pad at arm's
length and regarded it critically.
"That's
marvellous," a voice said behind him, and he twisted about in surprise.
"Why, you
did it in a flash!" The green rider, her dragonet lounging beside her,
smiled self-consciously, her green eyes shining with something akin to awe.
Leopol had pointed this new rider out to him the other day and related the
circumstances of her precipitous arrival at the Hatching.
"Debera?"
he asked, remembering the name. She gasped, slightly recoiling from him in her
startlement. Her dragon came immediately alert, eyes twirling faster with
alarm. "Oh, say, I didn't mean to."
"Easy,
Morath, he means me no harm," she said to the dragon and then smiled
reassuringly up at him. I was just surprised you'd know my name."
"Leopol,"
and Iantine pointed his pencil to where the boy stood in earnest bargaining
with a trader lad about the same age, "used to tell me everything that
happened in the Weyr while I was recovering."
"Oh, yes,"
and the girl seemed to relax and even managed a wider smile, "I know him.
He's into everything. But kindhearted," she added hastily, glancing up at
Iantine. "You've had some adventures, too, or so Leopol told me."
Then she
indicated his sketch. "You did that so well and so quickly. Why, you can
almost hear them bargaining," she added, pointing to the trader with his
mouth open.
Iantine regarded
it critically. "Well, speed is not necessarily a good thing if you want to
do good work." He deftly added a fold to the head trader's tunic, where he
now saw there was a bulge over the belt.
"Let's see
if the subject likes it." He was amazed to hear the edge in his voice. She
glanced warily up at him.
"If that's
what you can do quickly," she said reassuringly. "I'd like to see
what you do when you take your time."
He couldn't
resist and flipped over pages to where he had made a sketch of her oiling
Morath.
"Oh, and I
didn't see you doing this." She reached out to touch it, but he was
flipping to the page where he had sketched her and Morath listening to T'dam at
the lecture.
She'd had one
arm draped over her dragon's neck and he thought he had captured the subtle
bond that had prompted the embrace.
"Oh, that's
marvellous," and Iantine was amazed to see tears in her eyes. In a
spontaneous gesture, she clung to his arm, feasting her eyes on the drawing and
preventing him from turning the page over.
"Oh, how I'd..."
"You like
it?"
"Oh, I do,"
and she snatched her hands away from his arm and clasped them behind her back,
blushing deeply. "I do." and bit her lip, swaying nervously.
"What's
the matter?"
She gave an
embarrassed laugh. "I haven't so much as the shaving of a mark."
He tore the
sketch out of the pad and handed it to her.
"Oh, I
couldn't... I couldn't," and she stepped back, although the look in her
eyes told Iantine how much she wanted it.
"Why not?"
He pressed the paper against her, pushing it at her when she continued to
resist. "Please, Debera? I've had to get my hand back in after my fingers
freezing, and it's only a sketch." She glanced up at him, nervously and
with some other fear lurking in the shadows of her lovely green eyes.
"You
should have it, you know, to remind you of Morath at this age." One hand
crept from behind her back and reached for the sheet.
"You're
very good, Iantine," she murmured and held the sketch by fingertips as if
she was afraid she'd soil it. "But I've nothing to pay."
"Yes, you
have," he said quickly with sudden inspiration and gestured towards the
traders still in their group about the table.
You can be a
satisfied customer and help me wheedle another pad out of the traders in return
for this drawing of them.
"Oh,
but..." She had shot a quick, frightened glance at the traders and then,
in as rapid a change of mood, gave herself a shake, her free hand going to her
dragon's head as if seeking reassurance. The dragonet turned adoring eyes to
her and Debera's eyes briefly unfocused, the way Iantine had noticed in riders
who paused to talk to their dragons. She let out a breath and faced him
resolutely.
"I would
be glad to say a good word for you with Master Jol. He's by way of being a
cousin of my mother's."
"Is he
now?" Iantine said with fervour. "Then let us see if kinship is
useful in trading."
"I can't,
of course, promise anything," she said candidly as they moved towards the
group. She found it hard to keep the sketch from fluttering. "Oh dear."
"Roll it
up," he suggested. "Shall I do it for you?" he added.
"No, thank
you, I can manage." And she did, making a much tighter job of it than he
would have done.
The conference
was ending as they approached and the participants began to separate.
"Master
Jol?" Debera said, her voice cracking slightly and not reaching very far. "Master
Jol," she repeated, projecting a firmer tone. Iantine wondered if she was
afraid the trader wouldn't recognize her at all.
I"s that
Debera?" the trader said, peering at her as if he didn't believe his eyes.
Then a broad smile of recollection covered his face and he strode rapidly
across the distance between them, hands extended.
Debera seemed
to shy from such a warm welcome.
"My dear,
I'd heard that you'd Impressed a dragon." Iantine put a reassuring hand at
her waist and gave her an imperceptible forward push.
"Yes, this
is Morath," and suddenly her manner became sure and proud. Dragon and
rider exchanged one of those melting looks that Iantine found incredibly
touching.
"Well,
well, my greetings to you, young Morath," he said, bowing formally to the
dragonet, whose eyes began to whirl faster.
Debera gave her
a reassuring little pat. "Master Jol is my mother's cousin," she
explained to Morath.
"Which
makes me yours as well, my lass," Jol reminded her.
"And very
proud to have dragon rider kin. Ah, you're so like your mother. Did you know
that?" Iantine watched as Debera's expression turned sad.
"Ah, now,
I didn't mean to grieve you, child," Jol said with instant dismay. "And
how happy she would be to see you." he paused and cleared his throat so
that Iantine knew the trader was hastily amending what he had started to say, "here,
a dragon rider."
"And out
of my father's control," Debera finished with droll bitterness. "Had
you heard that too, Master Jol?"
"Oh,
indeed," Master Jol said, grinning even more broadly, his eyes twinkling
with a slight hint of malice. "I was right pleased to hear that, indeed
and I was."
"Now, what
can I do for you? Some Gather clothes, good lined boots - you'll have come with
little if I know your father." Such plain speaking momentarily made Debera
uneasy, but her dragonet crowded reassuringly against her.
"The Weyr
has furnished me with everything I need, Master Jol." she replied with
quiet dignity.
"Master?
Am I not cousin to you, young woman?" Jol asked with mock severity.
Now her smile
returned. "Cousin, but I thank you, though I do have a favour to ask..
"And what
might that be?"
Debera flipped
open her sketch and showed it to the trader. "Iantine here did this of me.
and he has one of you..." On cue, Iantine offered his sketch pad, open to
the montage.
"Only Iantine's
used up his pad and, like me, hasn't a sliver to spend."
Master Jol
reached for the pad, his manner altering instantly to a trader's critical
appraisal. But he had only cast an eye over the sketch when he paused, peering
more closely at the artist.
"Iantine,
you said?" And when both Debera and Iantine nodded, his smile quirked the
line of his generous mouth.
"I place
the name now. You're the lad who managed to escape unscathed from Chalkin's
clutches." Jol offered his free hand to Iantine. "Well done, lad! I'd
had wind of your adventure."
He winked, his
expression approving. "But then we traders hear everything and learn to
sift the fine thread of truth from the chaff of gossip."
Then he turned
back to the sketch, examining it carefully, nodding his head as his eyes went
from one panel to the next.
He gave an
amused sniff as he took a longer look at himself, pencil cocked behind his ear.
"You've
got me to the life, pencil and all, and he touched the tool to be sure it was
in place. May I?" he asked courteously, indicating a desire to look at the
other pages.
"Certainly,"
said Iantine, making a polite bow. He could have kicked himself when he swayed
a bit on his feet.
"Here now,
lad, I know you're not long recovered from your ordeal," Jol said, quickly
supporting him. Let's just take a seat so I can have a good look at everything
this pad seems to have on offer."
Ignoring Iantine's
protests, Jol led him to the table he had just left and pushed him onto a
stool. Debera and Morath followed, Debera looking very pleased with this
consideration.
And Jol went
through the pad as thoroughly as Master Domaize would have done, making
comments about those Weyr folk he knew, smiling and nodding a good deal. He
also knew when Iantine had left a pose unfinished.
"Now, what
is it you require, Artist Iantine?"
"More
paper, mainly," Iantine said in a tentative tone.
Jol nodded. "I
believe I do have a pad of this quality paper, but smaller. I bring some in for
Waine from time to time. I can, of course, get larger sheets."
"It's not
as if I'll be staying around the Weyr until your next round."
Master Jol
dismissed that consideration. "I've stores at Telgar Hold and can forward
what you need in a day or two." He gave Iantine a thoughtful glance. "You'll
not be leaving here all that soon, I'd say." He took the pencil from
behind his ear with one hand and the pad from its pouch at his belt with the
other.
"Now, what
exactly are your requirements, Artist Iantine?"
"Ah, He
wants to make sketches of every rider and dragon in the Weyr," said
Leopol, who had eased himself unnoticed close enough to hear what was being
said.
"So you've
many commissions already, have you?" Master Jol asked approvingly, pencil
poised over the fresh leaf of his pad.
"Well, no,
not exactly, you see," Iantine stammered.
"You've
three I know of," said Leopol. "P'tero for M'leng And the
Weyrleaders."
Iantine almost
bit Leopol's nose off. "The Weyrleaders're different. I will do them in
oils, but the sketches are to thank those in the Weyr who've been so kind to
me."
"Doing
portraits of an entire Weyr is quite an undertaking, and Master Jol scribbled a
line. "You'll need a good deal of paper and plenty of pencils. Or would
you prefer ink? I stock a very good quality. Guaranteed not to fade or blot."
He looked at Iantine expectantly.
"But I've
only this sketch to trade with you," Iantine said.
"Lad, you've
credit with Jol Liliencamp Traders," Jol told him gently, touching his
pencil to Iantine's shoulder and giving it a little push. "I'm not
Chalkin, mind you. Not any way, shape or form." And he gave a burst of
such infectious laughter that Iantine grinned in spite of himself.
"Now, give
me your requirements straight. But to ease your mind, if you'd finish off this,"
and the pencil end tapped the montage, "in water colour, I'm ready to give
you two marks for it.
"Oh, and I'd
like this one of T'dam giving his lecture..." he added, flipping to that
page. "That'll show some folks that dragon riders do nothing beyond glide
about the skies. A mark and a half for that."
"But...
but..." Iantine floundered, trying to organize his thoughts as well as his
needs. Debera was grinning from ear to ear and so was her dragon. "I've no
water colours with me." he began, wishing to indicate his willingness to
finish the montage.
"Ah, but I
just happen to have some, which is why I suggested them," said Jol,
beaming again. "Really, this meeting is most serendipitous," he
added, and his smile included Debera. "And this," he touched the
montage again in a very proprietary fashion, coloured up a bit and with glass
to protect it, "will look very good indeed in my wagon office. Indeed it
will. Advertising, I believe the ancestors called it."
"Ah,
Master Jol?" called someone from one of the trade wagons. "A moment
of your time."
"I'll be
back, lad, just you stay there. You, too, Debera. I've not finished with the
pair of you yet, so I haven't." As Iantine and Debera exchanged stunned
looks, he trotted off to see what was required of him, tucking the pencil
behind his ear again and folding up his pad as he went.
"I don't
believe him," Iantine said, shaking his head, feeling weak and breathless.
"Are you
all right?" Debera asked, leaning across the table to him.
"Gob-smacked,"
Iantine told her, remembering a favourite expression of his father's. "Completely
gob-smacked!"
Debera grinned
knowingly. "I think I am, too. I never expected."
"Neither
did I!"
"Why? Don't
you trust traders?" Leopol asked, sounding slightly defensive.
Iantine gave a
shaky laugh. "One can trust traders. It's just I never expected such
generosity."
"How long
were you in Bitra?" Debera asked tartly, giving a long look.
"Long enough,"
Iantine said, grimacing, "to learn new meanings to the word 'satisfactory'"
Debera gave him a little frown.
"Never
mind," he said, shaking his head and patting her hand. "And thank you
very much for introducing me to your cousin."
"Once he
saw that sketch, you really didn't need me," she remarked, almost shyly.
"I believe
you ordered these," said a baritone voice. Rider and artist looked up in
astonishment as a trader deposited an armful of items on the table: two pads,
one larger than the other, a neat square box which held a full glass bottle of
ink, a sheaf of pens and a parcel of pencils. "Special delivery."
With a grin, he pivoted and went back the way he had come.
"Master
Jol does pride himself on his quick service," Leopol said with a wide
grin.
"There
now! You're all set," said Debera.
"I am
indeed," and the words came out of Iantine like a prayer.
Lord Paulin's
message to the other Lords Holder and Weyrleaders received a mixed reception:
not everyone was in favour of impeachment, despite the evidence presented.
Paulin was both
annoyed and frustrated, having hoped for a unanimous decision so that Chalkin
could be removed before his Hold was totally demoralized.
Jamson and
Azury felt that the matter could wait until the Turn's End Council meeting:
Jamson was known to be conservative, but Paulin was surprised by Azury's
reservations. Those who lived in tropical zones rarely understood the problems
of winter weather. To be sure, it would be more difficult to prepare Bitra Hold
in full winter, which was Azury's stated concern, but some progress could be
made to prepare the Hold for the vernal onslaught of Threadfall.
Preparations
ought to have begun - as in every other Hold two years ago: larger crops sowed,
harvests stored and general maintenance done on buildings and arable lands, as
well as the construction of emergency shelters on the main roads and for ground
crews. Not to mention training holders how to combat Thread burrows.
There was the
added disadvantage that Chalkin's folk seemed generally dispirited anyhow -
though that should not be used as an excuse for denying them news of the
impending problem.
And who would
succeed to the Hold? A consideration that was certainly fraught with problems.
In his
response, Bastom had made a good suggestion: the appointment of a deputy or
regent right away until one of Chalkin's sons came of age - sons who would be
specifically, and firmly, trained to Hold properly. Not that the new Holder had
to be of the Bloodline, but following the precepts of inheritance outlined in
the Charter would pacify the nervous Lords. To Paulin's way of thinking,
competence should always be the prime decider in succession, and that was not
always passed on in the genes of Bloodlines.
For that
matter, Paulin's eldest nephew had shown a sure grasp of hold management. Sidny
was a hard worker, a fair man, and a good judge of character and ability.
Paulin was half tempted to recommend him for Fort's leadership when he was
gone. He had a few reservations about his son, Mattew, but Paulin knew that he
tended to be more critical of his own Blood than others were.
He would
definitely suggest Bastom's idea to the Council: good practice for younger folk
to have actual hands-on experience in running a Hold. Considering the state
Bitra Hold was in, a team would be required. Such an expedient would certainly
reduce the cry of 'nepotism', and give young men and women a chance to display
initiative and ability.
When the last
of the replies came in, Paulin gave the young green rider a message for M'shall
at Benden Weyr on the result of the polling. The Weyrleader was sure to be as
disappointed as he was. He tried to convince himself that they could still get
Bitra Hold right and tight in time for Threadfall.
But the sooner
it was done, the better. He hoped M'shall could get back to him about locating
the Bitran uncle, and whether he was competent to take Hold. Otherwise a Search
must be made of legitimate heirs to - -
"Fraggital!,"
Paulin muttered, pushing back from his desk and sighing deeply in frustration.
One could no longer do a quick search on the Bloodline Program for a
comprehensive genealogy. Surely that was one program Clisser had printed out,
and copied. "Well, we'll need a copy of whatever form that program's in,"
he told himself, sighing again. To cheer himself up, he reviewed the progress
report from the new mine.
They wanted
permission to call the hold CROM, an acronym of the founders: Chester, Ricard,
Otty and Minerva.
Paulin didn't
see a problem with that but, as a matter of form especially right now - the
request should first be presented to the Council. During the Interval so many
procedures had been relaxed and the leniency was now coming back to plague
them, as in the case of Chalkin becoming Lord Holder. At least Paulin was
consoled by the knowledge that it was his father, the late Lord Emilin, who had
voted Fort on that score.
That evidence
of bad judgment wasn't Paulin's error even if it was now up to him to rectify
the situation.
There was an
abrupt rapping of knuckles on his door and before he could respond, it swung
open: the Benden Weyrleader, M'shall, brushed past Mattew to enter.
"We've got
to do something NOW, Paulin," the Weyrleader said, his expression grim as
he hauled off his riding gauntlets and opened up his jacket.
"You got
my message quickly enough... Bring klah, Matt," Paulin asked, gesturing
for his son to be quick.
M'shall's face
looked pinched with the cold of between and more.
"I got it.
And that's not the end of it. There's rough weather in Bitra and people
freezing to death because they will not leave the border," M'shall
announced.
"Will not?
Or cannot?"
"More
cannot than will not. Though Chalkin sent down orders that none of the 'ungrateful
dissenters' could expect to reclaim their holdings - - - punishment for defying
him.Way irrespective of the fact that he's putting their lives at risk by his
notion of Holding.
"How many
are involved?" Paulin's sense of alarm increased.
M'shall ruffled
thick greying hair that had been pressed down by his helmet. "L'sur says
there must be well over a hundred at the main border crossing into Benden with
women, children and elderlies.
"There are
as many or more at other border points and no shelter at any, bar what the
guards are using. The refugees have all been herded into a makeshift pen. What's
more atrocious, L'sur saw several bodies hung up by the feet which seemed to
have been used as target practice. Benden Weyr cannot ignore such barbarity,
Paulin."
"No, it
can't, nor can Fort Hold!" Paulin was on his feet and pacing. If that's
what he calls Hold management, he has to be removed."
"My
thinking, too," M'shall agreed, running agitated hands through his hair
again. "Another night like last and those people be dead of exposure and
starvation. Bridgely concurs with me that something has to be done, now, today.
And it's getting towards a cold night now, there. I've come to you for Council
authority since Bridgely says we'd better do this as properly as possible."
He paused,
bitter. "Such a situation is not supposed to happen. Those people aren't
defying him. They're just scared to death and desperate for security, which
obviously they don't expect to find in Bitra." He hitched himself forward
in the chair. "Thing is, Paulin, if we hand out supplies, what's to keep
the border guards from just collecting them the moment we take off? So, I think
I'll have to leave a couple of riders as protection.. which'll give Chalkin a
chance to cry 'Weyr Interference'."
Paulin felt
nauseous. That sort of thing was straight out of the ancient bloody history the
settlers had deliberately left behind: evolving a code of ethics and conduct
that would make such events improbable! This planet was settled with the idea
that there was room enough for everyone willing to work the land that was his
or hers by Charter-given birthright.
"There's
no interference if your riders stay on your side of the border. Besides which,
Bitra Hold looks to Benden Weyr for protection."
"Thread
protection," M'shall corrected.
"In a matter
of speaking," and Paulin's smile was grim, "this is partly Thread
protection. They're looking for what they should have had from their Lord
Holder, and who else should they turn to but the Weyr? No," and he brought
one fist down sharply on the desk. "You're within your rights - - if you've
riders willing to volunteer for such duty."
"L'sur's
stayed on, or so his dragon told Craigath."
"But no
firestone," and Paulin held up a stern finger, "much as some might
like to show force."
"Oh, I've
made myself clear on that point, I assure you," and M'shall gave a bitter
twist to his lips. "And we haven't had any training at Benden recently, so
there's not a whisper of flame in any of the dragons. As for disciplining the
guards, a short hop and a long drop between would be my preference, but..."
and he held up both his hands to assure Paulin of self-restraint.
At that point,
Mattew returned with a tray, steaming cups of klah and soup and a basket of hot
breads which he deposited on the table and left.
M'shall didn't
wait for Paulin's invitation but grabbed up the soup and blew on its surface,
sipping as soon as he dared.
"That hits
the spot and if you've a cauldron of it, I'll take it back with me." He
grinned, licking his lips. "It's certainly hot enough to survive a jump
between."
"You may
have it, cauldron and all."
"L'sur has
stayed on, you say? How about riders at other crossing points?" Paulin
asked, stirring sweetener into his klah. M'shall nodded.
"Good.
Their presence ought to inhibit any further violence."
"But that
presence was only a deterrent, not assistance. He would like to do more than
send soup but his position at this point, even as Council Chair, might be
compromised. At least the Weyr has a right to take action, and so does
Bridgely," he added thoughtfully. He thumped his fist again. But I will go
personally to see both Jamson and Azury; especially since Chalkin has used such
extreme measures. I'm hard-pressed to see the reason for them."
M'shall
shrugged. "Fort holders have every reason to trust you, Paulin. Bitrans
never have had any with Chalkin holding."
"What I'd
like to do is haul the indecisive like Jamson and Azury - and show them what's
happening at Bitra. They probably think we've exaggerated the situation."
"Exaggerated?"
M'shall was indignant, and it was as well the cup was empty of soup when he
planted it hard on the table. "Sorry. What's wrong with them?"
"They
wouldn't behave in such a manner. lt's hard for them to believe another Lord
Holder would."
"Well,"
and M'shall nearly growled, "he would and he has."
There was a
more circumspect knock on the door which Matt opened, showing in K'vin.
"I just
heard about the border trouble, M'shall. Zulaya had Meranath bespeak Maruth, so
Charanth and I thought to catch you here," the young Weyrleader said, his
expression as grim as Benden's.
"So he's
blocked the western borders as well?" K'vin nodded.
"Telgar
has no grounds to object to his closing his borders, but he's deliberately
killing people, turfing them out in this weather. I can't, and won't permit
people to be treated like that." He fixed an expectant stare on Paulin.
"M'shall
and I have been discussing the intolerable situation. I've already polled the
Lord Holders with a view to taking immediate action. The response was not
unanimous so even as Council Chair, there is little I can do - officially, that
is. But, as M'shall pointed out, the Weyr has certain responsibilities to
protect people. By stretching a point, you could say they're Thread-lost,"
and Paulin's smile was wry, "escaping a Hold which is unprepared. So the
Weyrs can move where the Council Chair may not."
"That's
all I need to know!" K'vin slapped his riding gloves against his thigh to
emphasize his approval.
"Of
course," and Paulin held up one hand in restraint, "you must be
careful not to give Chalkin due cause to cite an infringement against Hold
autonomy."
"Not if
that includes deliberate mistreatment of people he's already misled," said
K'vin, his voice rising in alarm.
"This is
not the time to jeopardize the neutrality of the Weyrs, you know," Paulin
said, looking from one to the other. "Thread hasn't started falling yet."
"C'mon,
Paulin," M'shall began in protest.
"I'm with
you in spirit, but as Council Chair I have to remind you - above and beyond my
private opinion, that we don't have the right to interfere in the government of
a Hold."
"You may
not, Paulin," K'vin said. "But M'shall and I do. There's truth in
what you said about Weyrs protecting people from peril.
"From
Threadfall." Paulin reminded the younger Weyrleader.
"From
peril," K'vin repeated firmly. "Freezing to death without shelter
from inclement weather constitutes peril as surely as Threadfall does."
Paulin nodded
approvingly. "I may even forget that you visited here this morning."
He grinned. "M'shall, you don't happen to know where Chalkin's remaining
uncle lives?"
"I already
thought of that and he's not there," replied M:shall. "Place was
empty. Too empty. I know Vergerin was alive and well last autumn."
"How do
you mean 'too empty'?" Paulin asked, jotting down the uncle's name.
"It had
been cleaned out too thoroughly. Not," and M'shall held up one hand to
forestall Paulin's query, "as if it had been set to rights after a man's
death, but as if to prove no-one had been there at all.
"But
Vergerin had cleared vegetation back from his front court, as every smart
holder should."
"Someone
had thrown debris all around to disguise the clearance."
"Has
Chalkin anticipated us?" Paulin asked in a rhetorical question.
Then he looked
from one dragon rider to the other.
"Rescue
those folks before either the weather or Chalkin's bullies kill them. And I'd
like interviews from them, too, once they're not afraid to talk to outsiders."
Just as M'shall had his hand on the door knob, Paulin added, "And not so
much as a trickle of flame, please. That could get magnified out of all
proportion."
K'vin pretended
wide-eyed shock at such a notion. M'shall glanced around. "I didn't hear
that, Paulin," the Benden Weyrleader said with stiff dignity.
"As if we
would..." K'vin remarked to M'shall as they strode out of Fort Hold.
"I'd like
to," said M'shall, in a taut voice, "that's the problem. But then, I've
known Chalkin longer than you."
Craigath and
Charanth were already on the court, awaiting their riders.
"You'll
take the western and northern crossings, K'vin?" M'shall asked as they
separated to reach their bronzes.
"Have you
been checking on numbers for transport?"
"Yes, and
had sweep riders checking in ever since Chalkin closed the borders. Zulaya will
warn Tashvi and Salda that we're proceeding. We'll take all to the Weyr first.
The entire Weyr is organized to help."
"You're a
good man, K'vin," and M'shall grinned at his colleague.
"So let's
do it!" The Benden Weyrleader launched himself up his dragon's shoulder
and swung neatly between the end ridges.
We go to help? Charanth asked
K'vin.
"Indeed we
do. Tell Meranath to have Zulaya put our plan into operation. I'll meet my wing
at the Falls road. And I think we'd better ask Iantine to come along."
When K'vin
returned to Telgar, the first rescue wave was ready to take off at his signal.
He paused long enough to haul Iantine behind him on Charanth.
"Get as
much down in black and white as you can, Iantine. I want Chalkin nailed by the
evidence."
Iantine was all
too happy to comply with the request. It would be one way of paying back the
arrogant Lord Holder for his snaking ways and meanness. But, no sooner had Iantine
dropped to the hard-packed snow of the border point than his attitude changed
to horrified disgust. Using an economy of line, he sketched the pen" -
ropes looped around trees and the shivering knots of people forced to stand for
there was not enough room to sit down - in the churned mud of an inadequate
space. He drew the haggard faces, the chilled bodies bent inward from cold, or
those clumped together to share what warmth they had. Some had been stripped of
all but what covered private parts, and they had been surrounded by their
fellows in an attempt to keep them from freezing.
Some were
standing barefoot on the rough rags and boots of their neighbours, feet blue
and dangerously white from frostbite. Children wandered weeping with hunger and
fatigue, or slumped in unconscious bundles in the mud at the feet of the
adults. Three elder lies were stiff in death. Bloodied faces and bruised eyes
were more common than the unmarked.
The guards,
however, were warm with many layers of clothing, good fires with cooking spits
turning to roast the meat of such animals as the refugees had brought with
them.
Others were
tied or penned up for future use. Such belongings as the refugees had brought
with them were now piled at the side of the guard house or in the barrows or
carts lined up behind. Iantine faithfully recorded rings and bracelets, even
earrings, inappropriately adorning the guards.
They had been
alarmed at the arrival of the dragon riders as many as could retreating into
the shelter of the stone border facility.
That had made
it considerably easier to move the refugees. Of course, many of them were in
such a state of shock and fear that they were as frightened of the dragons and
the riders as of the brutal guards.
Zulaya had
brought weyrfolk with her, and their presence reassured many. So did the
blankets and the warm jackets. And the soup: the first sustenance many had had
since they had left their holds.
What Iantine couldn't
put down on paper were the sounds and the smells of that scene. And yet he
did... in the open mouths of the terrified folk, their haunted eyes, the
contortions of their abused bodies, their ragged coverings, and the piles of
human ordure because the guards had made no provision for that human
requirement, and the abandoned belongings and carts.
Now that he had
seen real privation, Iantine realized how lucky he had been in his brief
encounter with the Lord Holder of Bitra.
Iantine returned
with the last group, letting his hand rest only in between, sketching as they
flew, propping his pad against P'tero's back.
"You haven't
stopped a moment," P'tero shouted over his shoulder.
"You'll
freeze your hand up here, you know." Iantine waved it to prove its
flexibility and continued to sketch. He was adding details to the men who had
been hung by their heels and used in target practice. The men had been cut down
- one of the first things the rescuers had done.
Iantine had
only had time enough to do an outline but the details - despite all the other
sketches he had made that day - were vivid in his mind's eye, and he had to get
every one down on paper or he would feel he had betrayed them.
When the young
blue rider deposited him in front of the Lower Cavern, Iantine, still filling
in substance, managed to get himself to a table near enough the fire to get the
good of the warmth - and increase the fluidity of his drawing. His fingers
gradually thawed and his pencil raced faster.
A touch on his
shoulder startled him half out of his chair.
"It's
Debera," and the green rider placed klah and a bowl of stew in front of
him. "Everyone else has eaten. You'd better," she said severely,
wrenching the pencil out of one hand and taking the pad from the other. "You
look awful," she added, "peering closely at his face."
He reached for
his pad but she slapped at his hand, swinging it out of his reach.
"No, you
eat first. You'll draw better for it. Oh, my word!" Her eye was caught by
the scene and her free hand went to her mouth, her eyes widening in shock. "Oh,
they couldn't have."
"I
sketched what I saw," he said, exhaling in a remorse that came from his
guts and then inhaling the tantalizing odour emanating from the stew. He looked
down at it, thick with vegetables and chunks of meat. They really could do
miracles with wherry here. He picked up the spoon and began to eat, only then
realizing how empty his stomach was. It almost hurt receiving food, and that
nearly made him stop eating altogether. Chalkin's prisoners had been without
food for three or four days.
"They're
all fed now," Debera murmured.
Iantine gave
her a startled glance and she patted his shoulder reassuringly, as she often
patted her Morath.
"I felt
the same way when I ate earlier on." She sat down across from him. "We'd
been going flat out to feed them when Tisha made us all stop to get something
to eat, too." She started turning the pages of his book, the look on her
face becoming more and more distressed at each new scene of the tragedy.
"How could
he?" Iantine reached over and gently pulled the sketch-pad from her,
setting it down, closed, between them.
"He gave
the orders." Iantine began, "And knew just what would happen when he
did, I know."
"I've met
some of his... 'guards'. Even my father wouldn't have one about the hold."
She tapped the pad. "No-one can ignore that sort of evidence." Iantine
gave a snort. "Not with dragon riders verifying what's in here!"
He finished the
last of the stew and stretched out his legs under the table, scrubbing at his
face, still tingling with his long hours in the unremitting cold of the border
crossing. "Go to bed, why don't you, Iantine?" Debera said, rising.
She glanced
around the cavern, which was occupied by only a few riders and folk finishing
their evening meal. "They've all been sorted out and you'll be lucky if
you have your room to yourself. But I'd better get some sleep, too. That Morath
of mine! She wakes positively starved, no matter how much I give her."
Iantine smiled
at the affection that softened Debera's voice.
He got to his
feet, swaying slightly. "You're right. I need sleep."
"Good
night, Debera." He watched her, striding purposefully out of the cavern,
observing the proud tilt to her head and set of her shoulders. She'd changed a
great deal since she Impressed Morath.
He grinned,
picked up his pad and slowly made his way to his quarters.
He wasn't
sharing with any refugee, but Leopol sprawled on a bed-pad along one wall and
didn't even stir as Iantine prepared himself for bed.
There were more
refugees than originally estimated and while the resources of the two Weyrs
were stretched, the Lord Holders immediately sent additional supplies and
offered shelter. Some of those rescued were in bad shape from the cold and
could not be immediately transferred to the sanctuaries offered by Nerat,
Benden and Telgar Holds.
Zulaya had
headed a rescue team of the other queens and the green riders. She came back,
seething with rage.
"I knew he
was a greedy fool and an idiot, but not a sadist. There were three pregnant
women at the Forest Road border and they'd been raped because, of course, they
couldn't sue the guards later on a paternity claim.
"Are the
women all right?" K'vin asked, appalled by yet another instance of the
brutality. "We arrived at the North Pass just in time to spare three lads
from very unkind attentions by the guards. Where does Chalkin find such men?"
"From
holds which have tossed them out for anti-social behaviour or criminal
activities, of course," Zulaya replied, almost spitting in anger. "And
that blizzard's closed in. We moved just in time. If we hadn't, I fear most of
these people would be dead by morning. Absolutely nothing allowed them! Not
even the comfort of a fire!"
"I know, I
know," he said, as bitter about the sadistic behaviour as she was. "We
should have treated those guards to a taste of absolute cold. Like a long wait
between. Only that would have been a clean death."
"We still
can," Zulaya said in a grating tone. K'vin regarded her in astonishment and
she glared at him, clenching her fists at her sides. "Oh, I know we can't,
but that doesn't keep me from wanting to!"
"Did you
take Iantine with you? I thought of how useful on-the-spot sketches might be."
"In fact,
he asked to come. He's got plenty to show Lord Paulin and the Council," he
said. He swallowed, remembering the stark drawings that had filled one pad. Iantine's
quick hand had captured the reality, made even more compelling by the economy
of line, depicting horrific scenes of deliberate cruelty.
The Weyrleaders
introduced themselves to the first of the refugees, and started off by
interviewing an older couple.
"M'grandsir's
grand sir came to Bitra with the then Holder," the man said, his eyes
nervously going from one Weyrleader to the other. He kept wiggling his bandaged
fingers, though N'ran had assured them the pain and itch had been dulled by
fellis and numb weed "I'm Brookie, m'woman's Ferina. We farmed it since.
Never no reason to complain, though the Holder keeps asking for more tithe and
there's only so much comes out of any acre, no matter who tills it. But he'd
the right."
"Not to
take our sow, though, his mate added, her expression rebellious. We needed that
un to make more piggies to meet the tithe he set." Like her man, she laid
a stress on the pronoun. "Took our daughter, too, to work in the Hold when
we wanted her land grant. Said we didn't work what we had good enough so we
couldn't have more."
"Really?"
said Zulaya, deceptively mild as she shot K'vin a meaningful glance. "Now
that's interesting, holder Ferina."
K'vin envied
Zulaya's trick of remembering names.
You could've asked me, Charanth said helpfully.
You've been
listening?
The people needed dragons' help. I listen. We all do.
When the pity
of dragons has also been aroused, surely that's enough justification for what
we've just done, thought K'vin, if the Council should turn up stiff. I must
remember to tell Zulaya.
"But he
says we got it wrong and we ain't had no teacher to ask," the man said. An'
that's another thing - we should have a teacher for our kids."
"At least
so they can read the Charter and know what rights you all do have," Zulaya
said firmly. "I've a copy we can show you right now, so you can refresh
your memories."
The two
exchanged alarmed glances.
"In fact,"
Zulaya went on smoothly, "I think we'll have someone read you your
rights... since it would be difficult for you to turn pages with bandaged
hands, Brookie. And you're not in much better case, Ferina."
Ferina managed
a nervous smile. "I'd like that real well, Weyrwoman. Real well. Our
rights are printed out"?
"In the
Charter and all?"
"Your
rights as holders are part of the Charter," Zulaya said, shooting K'vin
another unhappy look. "In detailed paragraphs."
She rose to her
feet abruptly. "Why don't you sit over there in the sun, Ferina, Brookie?"
And she pointed to the eastern wall, where some of the Weyr's elderlies were
seated, enjoying the warmth of the westering sun. "We'll make sure you
hear it all, and you can ask any questions you want."
She helped the
two to their feet and started them on their way across the Bowl as K'vin
whistled for Leopol.
"Go get
the Weyr's copy of the Charter, will you, lad?"
"You want
me to read it to them, too?" the boy asked, eyes glinting partly in
mischief and partly because he enjoyed second-guessing errands.
"Smart
pants, are we?" K'vin said. "No, I think we need T'lan for this."
He pointed towards the white-haired old brown rider who was serving klah to the
refugees. "Just get the Charter now. I'll request T'lan's services."
Leopol moved
off at his usual sprint and K'vin went over to speak to the elderly brown
rider. He had exactly the right manner to deal with nervous and frightened
holders.
Bridgely
arrived in Benden Weyr, his face suffused with blood, torn between fury and
laughter.
"The nerve
of the man, the consummate nerve!" he exclaimed and threw down the message
he carried. It landed closer to Irene than M'shall, so she picked it up.
"From
Chalkin?" she exclaimed, looking up at Bridgely.
"Read
it... and pour me some wine, would you, M'shall?" the Lord Holder said,
slipping into a chair. "I mean, I know that man's got gall, but to
presume... to have the effrontery."
"Ssssh,"
Irene said, her eyes widening as she read. "Oh, I don't believe it! Just
listen, M'shall."
"This Hold
has the right to dragon messengers. The appropriate red striped banner has been
totally ignored though my guards have seen dragons near enough to see that an
urgent message must be delivered. Therefore I must add..."
She peered more
closely at the written page. "His handwriting's abominable. Ah. 'dereliction'
- -".
"Really,
where does he get off to cry 'dereliction'?"
"- -of
their prime duty to the other complaints I am forced to lay at their door. Not
only have they been interfering with the management of this Hold but they fill
the minds of my loyal holders with outrageous lies. I demand their immediate
censure. They are not even reliable enough to perform those duties which fall
within their limited abilities."
"Limited
abilities?" Irene turned pale with fury. "I'll un limit him!"
"Especially
when we've had an earful of how he treats his loyal holders." M'shall
said, his expression grimmer than ever. "Wait a minute. What's the date on
his letter?"
"Five days
ago," Bridgely answered, with a malicious grin.
"He had to
send it by rider. From what the fellow told me, Chalkin's sent messengers to
Nerat and Telgar as well. He wants me, you"ll see in the last paragraph,
Irene," and Bridgely pointed to that section of the missive, "to
forward it by a reliable messenger to Lord Paulin, registering his complaint
with the Council Chair. I suppose," and his grin was droll, "I'll get
another one when he finds out about yesterday's airlift rescue."
"The
man..." Irene paused, unable to find words. "When I think of how he's
treated those poor people And when he's called to account, he"ll probably
whine that his guards exceeded their instructions..."
"...and he's
fired them all," said Bridgely with a cynical shrug.
"Oh,"
M'shall said brightly, "not all of them." He scratched the back of
his head. "Ah they wanted to know why they couldn't get to ride a dragon
if the riffraff could."
"You didn't,
M'shall," Irene exclaimed, her eyes wide with delighted anticipation, "drop
them off on the way, did you?"
"No,"
and M'shall shrugged with mock regret. "But I felt it might be wise to...
ah, sequester? Yes, that's the word, sequester certain of them should they be
required to stand before the Council and explain exactly what orders they
received."
"Oh,"
and Bridgely turned pensive.
"Oh, I was
selective, you might say," and M'shall's face was grim. "I found out
which had had a hand in those killings and took testimony against them from
bereaved witnesses. Not even guards, acting under a Lord Holder's orders, may
execute without trial, you know."
"Oh,
indeed, and you've acted circumspectly," Bridgely said, nodding with
understanding. "Really, I don't think this can wait until Turn's End. And
I shall so inform Jamson and Azury."
"I'd be
happy to take you myself," offered M'shall, "and speak for the Weyr.
In fact," and the Weyrleader reached for Chalkin's written message, "you
could deliver this at the same time, Bridgely."
"You are
all consideration, Weyrleader," Bridgely said, gesturing grandly and
looking exceedingly pleased.
"My pleasure
at any time, Lord Holder." M'shall swept his arm in an equally grand
gesture.
"Whenever
you can spare a moment from your duties, Weyrleader?"
"Why, I do
believe I can spare an hour or two now, since I perceive that it is an
appropriate time to visit the western half of the continent."
"Oh, will
you two stop your nonsense and GO!" Irene said, laughter in her voice
though she tried to look reproving. But their antics relieved the tension in
the Weyr.
"Now
really, M'shall, Bridgely," said Jamson, fussing with his robes as he
shifted uneasily in his chair.
High Reaches
was invariably a cold place and today, in Jamson's private office, was no
exception. The Benden Holder was glad he had riding flirs on and made no
attempt to open his jacket nor unglove his left hand after the usual handshake
with Jamson. He noted M'shall did the same. "I cannot believe that a Lord
Holder would treat the very people he depends on in such a way. Not in
midwinter."
"With my
own eyes I saw it, Lord Jamson," M'shall said in an unequivocal tone. "And
I thought it wise to ask several of the guards to stay in the Weyr so you may
learn what their orders were."
"But here,
Chalkin complains that you have not accorded him the courtesy of conveyance."
Jamson frowned.
"If you
had seen what I have, Lord Jamson, you migh find it hard to oblige him," M'shall
said, his face stark.
"Really,
Jamson, don't be such a prick," Bridgely said, under no similar restraint
of courtesy with his peer. "Nerat and Telgar are taking in refugees as
well as Benden. You can speak to any you wish to, to determine the extent of
Chalkin's perfidy."
"I'll
gladly convey you where you wish to go." M'shall offered.
"I've my
own Weyr," Jamson said stiffly, "if I need transport. But it's not
the weather to be travelling about in unnecessarily at all." Which was
true enough, since the High Reaches Hold was cloaked in snow crusted as hard as
ice on the ground.
"Agreed,"
said Bridgely, trying hard not to shiver and wondering at Jamson's parsimony
with fires, or if the heating system in the Hold was another victim to
technological obsolescence. "So you will grant that only a dire need would
bring me out, asking you to change your mind about taking immediate action
against Chalkin. People would have frozen to death on Bitra's borders last
night!" And he pointed vigorously eastward.
"He doesn't
mention that in this," Jamson said, peering at the letter on the table.
"Doubtless
he'll circulate a longer letter on that score," said Bridgely with deep
irony. "But what I saw required me to give aid without any delay to
meditate."
"As you
know, Lord Jamson," M'shall put in, "Weyrs are also autonomous and
may withhold services with sufficient justification. I feel perfectly justified
in refusing him basic courtesies. Come, Bridgely. We're wasting Lord Jamson's
valuable time. Good day to you."
Before the
astonished High Reaches Holder could respond to such peremptory behaviour, the
two men had left the room.
"My word!
And I always considered M'shall to be a sensible man. Thank goodness, G'don is
a solid, predictable Weyrleader - One simply does not impeach a Lord Holder
overnight! Not this close to Threadfall." Jamson buried his hands more
deeply into the sleeves of his fur-lined jerkin.
Azury was so
shocked he did not even comment on M'shall's dereliction of services.
"I'd no
idea, really," he said.
In direct
contrast to High Reaches, Southern Boll's weather was hot enough for Bridgely
to wish he'd worn a lighter shirt.
Although they
were well shaded from the morning sun on a porch decorated by a blooming plant
with fragrant pink blossoms tangling in clusters, he had to open his collar and
roll up his sleeves to be comfortable. Azury had ordered a fruit drink and by
the time it came, Bridgely's throat was dry enough to appreciate the cool tang.
"I know
Chalkin's not exactly... reliable, and Azury then grinned wryly. And I've lost
sufficient marks in his little games of chance to wonder about his basic
honesty. But..." and he shook his head. "A Holder simply doesn't keep
his folk in the dark about something as critical to their survival as Thread.
Does he really think it won't come? That we're all foolish or stupid?"
"He is
both foolish and stupid," Bridgely said. "Why else did our ancestors
bio-engineer the dragons? And develop a totally unique society to nurture and
succour the species, if not for future need?" He glanced at M'shall who
merely raised his eyebrows. "It isn't as if we didn't have graphic proof
of the existence of Thread, which was part of our education. Nor tons of
records annotating the problem. It's not something we thought up to
inconvenience Chalkin of Bitra!"
"Preaching
to the converted, Bridge," Azury said. "He's ten times the fool if he
thinks to brace the rest of the planet on this score. But," and he leaned
forward on his wicker wood chair which creaked slightly, "Holders can spin
great lies."
"And I can
spot a whinge and a bitcher as fast as you can, Azury," said Bridgely,
moving to the edge of his chair which also reacted noisily to the weight shift.
"Like this chair. You can interview any of those we've taken in... and the
sooner the better, so you can judge the condition they were in before we
rescued them."
"I think I'd
better have an eyes-on at that," Azury told him.
He raised one
hand quickly. "Not that I doubt you, but impeaching another Lord Holder is
nervous-making."
"That's as
may be, but having a Hold that is totally unprepared for the onslaught of
Thread - one that's adjacent to me," and Bridgely jabbed a thumb in his
chest, "is far more nervous-making."
"You've a
point there," Azury admitted. He looked over his shoulder and beckoned one
of the attendants, asking him to bring his riding gear. "You said that
Jamson's reluctant? Doesn't impeachment require a unanimous verdict?"
"It does,"
Bridgely agreed, and set his lips in an implacable line.
Azury grinned,
thanking the attendant who had quickly returned with his gear. "Then you
also need me to add weight to a second delegation to High Reaches?"
"If you
feel you can turn Jamson's opinion?" Azury stamped into his boots. "That
one's just perverse enough to hold out, but we'll see. Tashvi, Bastom and
Franco are involved, and I know Paulin is agitated... Who does that leave?
"Richud of
Ista? Well, he will go along with a majority." He rose.
"Now, let's
leave before I swim in my own sweat."
Azury
interviewed each of the fourteen refugees still housed in Benden Weyr as unfit
to be transferred elsewhere. He then had a chat with three of the guards.
Not that they
were in a chatting mood, he said, his light blue eyes vivid with anger in his
tanned face, but they may soon have second thoughts on how much their loyalty
is worth to Lord Chalkin.
"They do
claim," and, as he grinned, his teeth were very white against his skin, "that
they were outnumbered by the influx of so many ranting, raving maniacs and had
to use force to restrain them until they could receive orders from the Hold."
"That
conflicts with what the ranting, raving maniacs say, doesn't it?" M'shall
replied.
"Oh,
indeed," Azury agreed, grinning without humour. "And I do wonder that
the guards came out of the ranting and raving mass unscathed while all of the
maniacs seem to have a variety of injuries. Clearly the truth is being pulled
in many directions."
"But it
lies there, limpid as usual, to the eye that sees and the ear that hears."
"Well
said," Bridgely nodded.
"So let's
speak with Richud."
It was harder
to find the Lord Holder of Ista because he had taken the afternoon off to fish
- his favourite occupation.
The harbour
master was unable to give any specific direction for a search.
The dolphins
went with him. Circle your dragon, and see can he spot them? Small sloop with a
red sail but a lot of dolphins. Richud claims they understand him. He may be
right," and the elderly man scratched his head, grinning with amusement at
the notion.
"They do -
according to the records," Azury said. "My fishers always watch out
for them in the Currents."
"Well, as
you wish," the Harbourmaster said and went back to his tedious accounting
of creel weights lifted ashore the previous seven days.
Craigath flew
his passengers in a high-altitude circle, spiralling outwards from Ista
Harbour. It was he who spotted the craft and, with mighty use of his pinions,
dived for it.
Despite the
broad safety band securing him to his position, Azury grabbed frantically at
Bridgely who was sitting in front of him and Bridgely worried lest his own grip
bruise the dragon rider
M'shall merely
turned his head to grin back at them. The words he spoke - for his mouth moved
- were lost in the speed of their descent.
Bridgely
watched the sea coming nearer and nearer and arched himself slightly backwards.
He'd ridden
often enough not to be alarmed by dragon antics, but never at such an angle or
speed. He tightened his hold on his safety straps and argued himself out of
closing his cowardly eyes. Just as it seemed as if Craigath would impale
himself on the mast of the sloop which wasn't all that small to Bridgely's mind
- the bronze went into hover, startling the two crew who were watching Richud
struggle with a pole bent almost double by his efforts to land the fish he'd
hooked.
"Any time
you're free, Lord Richud," shouted M'shall between his cupped hands.
Richud glanced
once over his shoulder, then again, and lost control of pole and fish - the
reel spinning wildly as pressure ended.
"Don't
creep up on me like that! Lookit what you made me do! Fraggit! Can't I ever get
an afternoon off? Oh well, what catastrophe's hit us now? Must be something bad
to bring the three of you this far south."
He handed his
pole to a crewman and came to the starboard side.
There was still
some distance between him and his visitors.
"I'd ask
you aboard, but the bronze would sink us," he said.
"No
problem," M'shall said and his eyes unfocused as he spoke to his dragon. Can
you get us a little closer, Craigath?
Craigath, eyes
gleaming bluely and whirling with some speed, set himself down in the water,
wings neatly furled to his backbone while with his left forearm he took hold of
the safety rail, pulling himself and his passengers closer to the hull of the
ship. The sloop began to heel over at the strength of the dragon's hold.
The wind left
the sail and the boom started to whip round when, just as abruptly, the sail
caught wind again and the ship resumed her forward motion and speed.
M'shall
laughed, thumping Craigath on the neck in appreciation of the completed
manoeuvre.
"What'd he
do? How'd he do that? What under the sun?" Richud was looking at the
dragon, back at the ship, and then at M'shall in confusion.
"He's
paddling to keep up so you won't lose headway," the Benden Wayrleader
explained.
This is fun. I like it, Craigath informed his rider.
"He's
enjoying himself," said M'shall.
"He won't
snap the rail, will he?" Richud asked, staring with some apprehension at
the huge forepaw clutching the metal upright.
The dragon
shook his head. It is fragile so I don't hold it hard.
M'shall paused
a moment. Good lad. "He says he's well aware of its fragility."
"He didn't
say that," Richud replied, shaking his head in denial.
"Fragility?
His very word. Craigath's got quite a vocabulary. You know how Irene speaks...
Well, he has to keep up with Maruth, doesn't he?" The dragon nodded.
"Well, I
never, Never seen Ronelth or Jemath swim like this either," Richud
murmured. "So, what urgent matter brings you here?"
"Chalkin
must be impeached as soon as possible. A Hold is autonomous until it exceeds
its rights," Bridgely said, and went on to give the Istan Lord Holder
details of Chalkin's heinous behavior.
"I'd no
idea he'd evict so many. Surely it's winter up there and they'd be in danger of
freezing?"
"They
would be and have been," M'shall said.
"Their
condition was appalling, Richud," Azury told him. "I went to Benden
myself to see. And the guards..." He dismissed them with a wide gesture. "You
know the sort Chalkin hires."
"Yes,
tough necks layabouts, ruffians and scoundrels like those Gather artists of
his." Richud paused in thought. "Has that impeachment clause ever
been used?"
"No, but
it was put there as a safeguard. And there are a lot of people in Bitra who
need their safety guarded especially this close to Fall."
"Agreed. I'll
go along with you. Only," and his tone turned entreating, "not when I
have an afternoon off to fish?" Craigath let go of the rail and the two
groups drifted apart.
Suddenly the
bronze shuddered from pate to tail.
I like that. Do it again.
Who are you talking to, Craigath? M'shall demanded, having had to clutch the neck ridge and lift his legs
high above sudden waves sloshing Craigath's sides. His passengers had reacted
as well to keep from a wetting.
Doll fins rubbed me.
Playful, are they? Well, another time, my friend. We still have work to
do. "Sorry
about that. The dolphins were tickling Craigath."
"Dragons
are ticklish?" Bridgely asked, startled.
"Their
bellies, yes."
Dolphins flowed
from under the dragon now, leaping up in the air and diving neatly back into
the water as they sped off after the sloop.
"So what
do we do now? Beard Jamson again?" asked M'shall, stroking the bronze's
neck affectionately. He was amused to see that Richud had retrieved his pole
and was evidently baiting his hook.
"We'd
probably have to drag Jamson down to Benden so he can see for himself, as you
had to, Azury," Bridgely said, shivering as he thought of having to return
to the frigid High Reaches.
Take the pictures, suggested Craigath, to his rider's astonishment. Dragons did not often
offer unsolicited opinions, but then M'shall considered Craigath very
intelligent.
"What
pictures?" he asked.
"Pictures?"
echoed Bridgely. "What pictures?"
Maruth says there are pictures. At Telgar.
"At
Telgar?"
"Oh, that
young painter," M'shall and Bridgely said in unison.
"What
painter?" Azury wanted to know.
Bridgely explained.
"Very good
idea, if Jamson will accept the proof as genuine," the Southern Boll
Holder said, sceptically.
Which was
exactly what happened.
"How can
you be sure these are accurate?" asked the High Reaches Lord Holder when
he had leafed through the vivid and detailed drawings on Iantine's pad. "I
think the whole matter has been exaggerated out of all proportion." He
closed the pad halfway on the stark sketch of the hanging men.
"And you
won't even accept my word, Jamson?" Azury said. "I've just been there
and spoken to these people..." He riffled through the pages and came to
one of a holder he'd interviewed.
"That
fellow, for instance. I spoke to him myself, and I've no trouble accepting the
truth of his story. He was four nights in an animal pen with no food and only
the moisture he could get from snow, with his wife and elderly parents.
Incidentally, they died of exposure despite all that Benden Weyr could do to
try to revive them."
"I do not
see why, Azury," Jamson said at his most pompous, "you do not content
yourself with running your own Hold. Leave Chalkin to run his. He has the
right."
"But not
the right to inflict atrocities on any of his people." Azury's reply was
heated.
Jamson regarded
him coldly. "A few lazy holders."
"A FEW?"
Bridgely exploded in frustration which, even as he did so, he knew defeated his
purpose. "A few hundred is more like it, Jamson. And for that many we
should all stir ourselves!"
"Well, I
for one shall not, Bridgely. And that's final." He folded his arms across
his chest and sat there, glaring at his visitors.
"Jamson,"
Azury said in a very controlled, calm voice as he pushed Bridgely to one side
and leaned across the desk towards Jamson huddled in his furs. "I, too,
was sceptical when Bridgely came to me, unwilling to believe his report, much
less his solution to the problem. One does not lightly impugn the honour of a
peer. and I could not understand why Bridgely was so agitated over a few
insignificant holders. Then, too, Bitra is too far to affect anything in my Hold.
"Though I
quite took his point that Thread must not be allowed to burrow unchecked
anywhere on the northern continent. So I conceived that it was my duty, my
responsibility, to personally investigate the allegations.
"I have
the witness of my own eyes and ears now. As well as the disparity between what
the guards told me and the evidence of my own eyes. The Bitran situation is
dire and must be rectified. We cannot, as intelligent, responsible leaders,
allow such a situation to fester and spread. It affects the very roots of our
society, the strength of the Charter, the fundamentals on which this whole
society is based. We cannot ignore it as the internal problem of an autonomous
Holding.
"You as an
honourable Lord Holder owe it to yourself to investigate the situation. Then
you can come to a considered judgment. At least, set your own doubts to rest by
going, as I did, to Benden and gather first-hand information."
"I have no
doubts," Jamson said. "The Charter clearly states that a Lord Holder
has autonomy within his borders.
"What he
does is his business, and that's that. I should certainly protest against
anyone poking his nose in my business. So I suggest you take your meddling
noses and spurious charges out of here, right now!" This time he rang a
hand bell and, when his oldest son opened the door in response, he said, "They're
leaving. See them out." Bridgely took in a deep breath, but a sudden short
blow to his midriff by Azury robbed him of wind to speak and he was Ihelpless
as the Southern Boll Holder dragged him out of the room.
"No matter
what you said, he's not in a mood to listen," Azury told him,
straightening Bridgely's jacket in a tacit apology.
"Lord
Azury's right, I'm afraid," M'shall agreed.
"You came
about Bitra?" the son asked, leaning against the heavy office door to be
sure it was tightly closed. "I'm Gallian, his eldest and acting steward."
"You've
heard?"
"Hmmm, the
door was a bit ajar," said Gallian, not at all penitent about
eavesdropping, "and during your last visit too."
"Father's
memory's slipping a bit, so one of us tries to be nearby for important visits.
He sometimes gets details muddled."
"Any
chance you can unmuddle this visit to get his cooperation?"
"May I see
the sketches?" He held out one hand.
"Certainly,"
Bridgely said and put the pad in his hand.
"Awful,"
Gallian said, shaking his head as he viewed the distressing scenes and peering
briefly with intent gaze at one or two.
"And these
are accurate?" he asked Azury.
"Yes,
inasmuch as I verified the condition of some of these people now at Benden
Weyr," Azury replied.
The bell
jangled. Gallian thrust the pad at Azury.
"I'll do
what I can. And not because I already consider Chalkin a thief and a cheat. I
must go. See yourselves out, can you?"
"We can
and will."
"What
could the boy do?" M'shall wanted to know as they ran quickly down the
steps to the front door and out into the icy air.
"One can
never tell," Azury admitted. "Shards, but it's colder than between
here. Get me back to my sun as fast as possible."
"Would a
stop at Fort Hold be too much to expect from you?" asked Bridgely,
grinning at the southerner's chattering teeth.
"No, and I
expect it's a tactical necessity in this struggle with Chalkin."
M'shall nodded
approvingly and, vaulting to Craigath's back, lent a hand to the other two to
mount.
The ambient
temperature at Fort Hold was not warm but a decided improvement over High
Reaches. Warmer still was the greeting Paulin gave them, insisting on a hot
mulled wine when he heard of their adventures.
"I don't
expect Jamson will change his mind, especially now he has been specifically
asked to do so," Paulin said when his guests were settled near the good
fire he had on his office hearth. "Jamson's always been perverse."
"Then the
son is unlikely to be able to alter him?" Bridgely suggested humour. K'vin
knew that Zulaya found it amusing to sit for a portrait at all, and was
twitting him about what he should wear to be immortalized. K'vin also knew
about Iantine's project to do miniatures of all the riders. Ambitious,
considering there were close to six hundred in the Weyr at the moment. On the
one hand, K'vin was grateful these would be the gallery, while on the other
hand, he dreaded those who would become casualties.
"Will it
make it any easier not to have pictures?" Zulaya had asked the other night
when she had required him to tell her why he was so preoccupied. "We have
nothing to remind us of the first occupants of this Weyr. I think I would have
liked that. Gives a continuity to life and living."
K'vin had
supposed it did, and decided that he had to have a more positive attitude.
"It's not
as if we knew who will not be here this time next year," she added. "But
it'd be nice to know that they were here."
"How much
longer, Iantine?" Zulaya asked plaintively. The fingers of the hand she
had resting on her thigh twitched. "I can't feel my feet or my left hand
any more."
Iantine gave an
exaggerated sigh and laid down the palette, scratching his head with the now
free hand as he swished the fine brush in the jar on the table. "Soon,
Zulaya. You should by rights have had a break some time ago. But the light's
perfect and I didn't want to stop."
"Oh, help
me up, K'vin," Zulaya said, holding out a hand.
"I don't
usually get a chance to sit still so long."
K'vin was glad
to assist her and she was stiff enough so that her first steps were awkward.
Then she recovered her mobility and walked firmly to the easel.
"My word,
you did do yards today, didn't you? Filled in that whole panel of the dress
and... have you got my eyes crossed?"
Iantine
laughed. "No, step a little to this side. Now back again. Do the eyes seem
to follow you?"
Zulaya gave a
little shake, widening her eyes. "They do. How do you contrive that? I
must say, I'm not so sure I like me watching everything I do.
K'vin chuckled.
"You won't, but your presence hanging in the Lower Cavern may spur the
lazy to complete their tasks more quickly."
"I'm not
sure I like that idea any more than having me leering at me up here." She
turned to the table, mostly covered by Iantine's paraphernalia. "I had
klah sent up not too long ago," and she cast an accusing eye on Iantine. "It
should still be hot."
She unscrewed
the lid and steam obediently rose. "It is. Shall I pour for all of us?"
Which she was doing even as she spoke.
"Maybe I
should leave now?" Iantine suggested, looking from one to the other.
"No,"
she said quickly.
"I wanted
to be sure your sketches were safely in your possession," said K'vin,
taking a chair.
"And, did
they solve the problem?" Zulaya asked, spooning sweetener in the cups and
passing him his. "Come, sit, Iantine. You must be more tired than I am. I've
been sitting the whole time."
Iantine grinned
as if, K'vin noted with a twinge of jealousy, totally at his ease with the
Weyrwoman. Few were, except Tisha who treated everyone like an errant child or
Leopol who was impudent with everyone.
"So? What's
the result?" She indicated with a wave of her hand that he should speak
out in the portraitist's presence.
"M'shall's
disgusted. They still don't have a unanimous decision about impeachment. Jamson's
the hold-out."
"He's not
always dealing with a full deck," Zulaya said succinctly, "at least
so Mari of High Reaches Weyr told me."
"And he's
getting worse. Thea takes charge when she can, and that older lad of his."
"Gallian's
my age," K'vin exclaimed. "Can't they get around that?"
"Short of
making Jamson abdicate, no. At least according to my understanding of the
Charter. And it just got refreshed." She gave K'vin a droll smile. "As
well I listened in to what T'lan was reading."
"I'd
forgotten the half of it myself. Have you reread it recently?"
As it happened,
a blizzard covered most of the eastern mountain ranges and all of Bitra when
the trial was convened. The winds were too fierce over Bitra for even a dragon
to penetrate. The storm had not yet reached Benden so they, and representatives
from every Weyr and Hold, were present: with the exception of Lord Jamson of
the High Reaches who was very ill of a respiratory fever.
The Lady Holder
Thea came, annoyed that Jamson had a legitimate excuse for his absence and had
sent Gallian in his place.
"It might
have done that stubborn streak of his some good to hear just how that Chalkin
conducts his Hold. Oh, he'd've spouted on about autonomy but he most certainly
is against any harm coming to unborn children." Thea gave Zulaya a
significant nod, reminding those around her that she had borne fourteen
children to Lord Jamson in the course of her fertile years: sufficient to
substantially increase the borders of the Hold when the children were old
enough to claim their land grants.
Held in the
capacious Lower Cavern at Benden Weyr, the first of the two trials was a
sobering, well-conducted affair. At one time there had been trained legists on
Pern, but the need for such persons had waned. Most arguments were settled by
negotiated compromise or, when all negotiation efforts failed, by hand-to-hand
combat.
Consequently a
spokesperson for the accused guards had to be found: one of the teachers from
Fort Hold who specialized in legal contracts and land deeds reluctantly agreed
to officiate.
Gardner had not
been very enthusiastic about involving himself, however briefly, with rapists
but he recognized the necessity for representation and did his best. He had perfunctorily
questioned the victims as to the identity of their alleged assailants and tried
to shake their testimony. The three women were no longer the frightened,
half-starved wretches who had been so abused. Their time in the Weyr had done
wonders for their courage, self-esteem and appearance.
Gardner even
insisted that they had been rehearsed in their testimony, but that did not m
gate the circumstances of the grievous bodily and mental harm inflicted on
them.
"Sure I
rehearsed," the oldest of the women said loudly. "In me mind, night
after night, how I was flung down and done by dirty men as wouldn't have dared
step inside a decent woman's hold with such notions in their head. I ache still
rehearsing..." and she spat the word at him, "what they again and
again and again." For emphasis she slammed one fist into the other hand.
Gardner ceased that line of questioning.
In the end, he
managed one small concession for the the right to be returned to their Contract
Hold, following the trial, rather than have to make their own way back to
Bitra.
"Fat lot
of good that'll do them," Zulaya muttered under breath when he won that
point. "Chalkin hates losers and the guys have lost a lot more than their
contract."
"I wonder
what sort of tone Chalkin's next letter of protest will take," Irene said
with a malicious chuckle. Paulin had received a thick screed from the Bitran
Holder when he discovered the unmitigated interference of assorted renegade
dragon riders in his affairs and the abduction of 'loyal holders' from their
premises. "If he dares make one." She went on.
"Oh, why
did it have to snow so hard? I'd love to have had him here when his guards said
they 'was only following orders to keep the holders from leaving'! M'shall
would have gathered him up in a ball and rendered him spitless
M'shall had
assumed the role of prosecutor, claiming that right since it had been his
riders who were first on the scene. He had been exceedingly precise in manner
and in his questioning.
"Poring
over the Charter and what books Clisser could send him on legal procedures,"
Irene told Zulaya with a broad grin. "It's done him a world of good. Taken
his mind off the spring, you know."
Zulaya had
nodded approvingly. "He'd have been a good legist or did they call them
lawyers?"
"No,
barristers."
"Yes,
barristers stood before the judge and handled the trial procedures," Irene
replied.
"Gardner
wasn't half bad, you know. He tried," Zulaya remarked. "I'll even
forgive him asking for mercy for those miserable clods.
"After
all, he had to appear to work for his clients," she added tolerantly. "I'm
glad we had Iantine sit up close. I want to see his sketches of the trial. I
could wish he worked as fast with my portrait."
"Your
portrait is scarcely the same thing as annotating a trial. And he's to come to
Benden when he's finished with you two, you know."
Zulaya was
pleased to hear the pride in Irene's voice when she mentioned Iantine. He was a
Bendenian.
"You mean,
when he's finished sketching our riders?"
Irene gave a
wistful smile, tinged with sadness. "You'll be glad he did. I wonder will
he do the same thing for us at Benden?"
"Whatever
he can fit in, I'm sure. That young man's got himself more work than he can
handle."
"If he can
get it all done before.. oh, the jury's back." The twelve men and women,
picked at random by straw from those who had come to observe, had listened to
all the evidence. Tashvi, Bridgely and Franco had sat as judges. Now a silence
descended over the room, so intense that a cough was quickly muffled.
The three
rapists were accounted guilty as charged and three more were sentenced as
accessories, since they had helped pin the victims down. The penalty for the
rape of a pregnant woman was castration, which was to be carried out
immediately. The others were to receive forty lashes, well laid on by Telgar's
large and strong stewards.
"They were
lucky there isn't Fall," Zulaya remarked to Irene, Lady Thea and K'vin. "Otherwise
they could also have been tied out during the next Fall."
Despite
herself, Thea gave a shudder. "Which is probably why there are so few
cases of rape recorded in our Hold's annals."
"Small
wonder," K'vin said, crossing his legs again. Zulaya had noticed his
defensive position and her lips twitched briefly. He turned away. His Weyrmate
had nearly cheered aloud when the verdict was delivered
"You can't
do that to me," one of the guards was roaring now as he belatedly realized
the significance of the verdict.
He had been the
leader of the men stationed at the eastern border crossing. The other
defendants were too stunned, their mouths moving in soundless protest, Morinst
being loud enough to drown out any complaint they could voice. "You're
none of you my Lord," he'd railed at three Lord Holder judges. You've got
no right to do this."
"And you
had no right to rape a pregnant woman!"
"But
Chalkin ain't even here." The man writhed in the grip of his guards.
"Chalkin's
presence would have had no effect on the trial or the verdict," said
Tashvi, at his most repressive.
"But he
should've been here!" Morinst protested.
"He was
invited to attend," Tashvi said without regret.
"He's
gotta know. You can't do nuthin' without him knowing. I gotta contract with
him."
"To rape,
torture and humiliate?" Bridgely asked in too soft a voice.
Morinst clamped
his lips shut. He struggled more violently as the bailiffs aimed him towards
the exit... And his punishment. Not that he could escape either the sentence or
the Weyr. The other two were still too stunned to resist their removal to the
infirmary where the verdict would be carried out. Those to be lashed were
brought outside, though not all the audience followed to witness the corporal
punishment.
When that, too,
had been completed and the men removed to have their wounds treated, the
observers filed back into the Lower Cavern.
While this was
scarcely an occasion for celebration, except that justice had been served, a
substantial meal had been prepared. Wine was the first item sought and served.
"You were
superb, M'shall," said Irene when her Weyrmate joined her, a newly opened
skin of Benden wine on his shoulder, "and do please give me a glass.
Though I'm sure you need one more than I. Nice of Bridgely to supply it,"
she added to Zulaya.
"I think
we all need it," the Telgar Weyrwoman said, glancing over to where the
three plaintiffs were celebrating with considerable enthusiasm. "Well, let
them. Now what do we do?"
"Well, we've
the second trial to get through. I hope it goes as well," M'shall said.
"No, with
them," and his Weyrmate pointed to the three women.
"Oh. That
them. They say they just want to go back to their homes. Not going to let
Chalkin take it because they're not there holding their places." He made a
grimace. "Some of them don't really have much to go back to. Chalkin's
bullies burned what was flammable and pulled down what they could. I'd say the
storms kept more damage from being done. But," and he altered the grimace
to a grin, "give'em credit. They do own what they hold, and now they know
it. It may give them a tad more backbone next time they're chivvied and more
pride in what they do. They've also asked for ground-crew training."
"Nothing
like losing something - however briefly - to make you value what you have,"
Thea said. "On the practical side, though, I think High Reaches can supply
some basic items.
"Anyone
organizing that?" She glanced about at others in the group. "D'you
have numbers yet?"
"Actually
we do," Zulaya said, including Irene in her nod.
"Three
hundred and forty-two - no, forty-three with that premature baby. It's very
good of you to offer, Thea."
Thea snorted. "I've
reread the Charter, too, and know my duty to my fellow creatures."
"You
wouldn't also happen to know how many poor wretches hold in Bitra?"
M'shall had
that answer. "Of course, you can't tell if Chalkin doctored the last
census or not, but he's supposed to have 24,657 inhabitants."
"Really?"
Zulaya was surprised.
"But then,
Bitra's one of the smaller holds and doesn't have any indigenous industry -
apart from some forestry. The 5 down to what's needed locally. There're a few
looms, but no great competition for Keroon or Benden.
"And the
gaming," Thea added with a disgusted sniff.
"That's
Chalkin's main industry."
"Well, he's
lost a lot on this gamble," Zulaya said.
"Has he?"
K'vin wanted to know.
The second
trial was almost anticlimactic. Gardner again presented the seven defendants
accused of allegedly 'causgrievous bodily harm and death' to five innocent men
and while Gardner again stipulated that the men had only been obeying orders to
restrain 'by any means' anyone trying to s the border out of Bitra Hold, their
putative domicile, it claimed that unnecessarily severe restraint had been used
caused the deaths of persons who should not have been ied lawful" exit,
this being a usurpation of their basic "tered Right to freedom of
movement.
The subsequent
mutilation and/or torture of the seven, the prosecution said, was not inherent
in the order to 'restrain by any means'. Chalkin had no right to take the lives
of any holders without due cause and/or trial by jury.
The day's jury
retired and, within half an hour, unanimously rendered a verdict of guilty. The
men were sentenced to be transported by dragon back to the eastern islands with
a seven-day supply of food, which was the customary punishment for murderers.
"Are there
many on the islands?" Thea asked. "I mean, there have been others
sequestered there. Even families, I read, but that was years ago."
Zulaya
shrugged. "Telgar's never had to take anyone there, so I wouldn't know."
"Benden
hasn't," Irene said, "at least not as long as we've been Leaders."
"My father
sent two," Paulin said. "And I do believe that both Ista and Nerat
have sent killers there."
"Chalkin
did, too," Gallian surprised them by saying. "About four years ago. I
don't know where I heard about them. Some sort of real trouble down in his
Hold, and he had Ista transport them since the men originated from that Hold."
"Oh, I
remember now," Irene said. "M'shall only mentioned he was glad he
hadn't had to do the transport."
"Maybe we
should send Chalkin's men there when they can travel," Zulaya suggested.
"No, let
him see that we won't tolerate his methods of Holding," Irene said, her
tone implacable. "Maybe he'll come to his senses."
"That'll
be the day!" Zulaya said facetiously.
When snow had
melted sufficiently to allow any travel out of Bitra, Chalkin did send another
blistering note of protest to Paulin, making it plain that he intended to
demand compensation at the Turn's End Conclave for the ritual disfigurement of
men "only doing their duty". This time, however, an elderly green
rider collected the message when the urgent banner was seen flying from the
panel heights of Bitra Hold. F'tol endured a long harangue from Chalkin that
letter had better be delivered, that dragon riders were parasites on the face
of Pern, that there'd be some changes made or... F'tol was neither intimidated
nor impressed.
Stoically he
took the letter and responsibly delivered it.
Whether Chalkin
knew, or cared, that the refugees had been returned to their holdings was not
known. F'tol was reasonably sure that would have been included in the tirade,
since Chalkin seemed to have included every other shortcoming, mistake and
venial sin ever committed by a dragon rider
Both Telgar and
Benden Weyrs made daily checks on the returned, to reassure them as well as
those concerned with their welfare. Of course the conditions in Bitra, with
dragon-high drifts blocking major roads and tracks, made it improbable that any
of Chalkin's men would have been able to move, much less go the distance to the
far-flung properties.
Benden Hold and
Weyr became the latest winter victims as the blizzards which had hovered over
Bitra made their way eastward, coating the eastern seaboard, even down into the
northern section of Nerat which hadn't seen any snow since the settlement of
the Bendens in the early decades of the First Pass.
The dragons
were the only living creatures who didn't mind snow, since their tough hide was
impervious to its cold as well as between.
They muchly
enjoyed the snow battles that the weyrfolk indulged in, and then the warmth of
sun intensified by the white landscape so they lounged in reflected be spite
the more northerly position, Telgar Weyr got only a hand span of snow and made
do with that. The young were fascinated by the stuff and by having to crack ice
of the lake to bathe. Bathing a dragon had become a hazard, but T'dam allowed
the weyrlings to suds up a *ago net and allow it to rinse itself off in the
frigid water. But y washings resulted in some distress for the rider.
"I've
chilblains again," Debera complained to Iantine, showing him her swollen
fingers when he came out to watch her tend Morath.
The little
green was a favourite subject of his because, he told Debera, "she has a
tremendous range of expression on her face and gets in the most incredible
positions." Debera was far too besotted with her dragon to disagree with
such an impartial opinion. If she herself figured in every sketch Jantine did,
she did not wonder about it. But the other green riders did.
"You
should get some of Tisha's cream. It stopped my fingers from itching," he
snapped his fingers, like that!"
"Oh, I
have some of that," she told him.
"Well, it
doesn't do you any good in the jar, you know."
"Yes, I
know," she said, ducking her head, her tone low and apologetic.
""Hey,
I'm not scolding, he said gently, putting one finger under her chin and lifting
her head. "What'd I do wrong?"
"Oh,
nothing," she replied and pushed his finger away, giving him a too-bright
smile. "I get silly notions sometimes. Don't pay me any mind."
"Oh, I don't,"
he replied so blithely that she gave him a startled look. "Just go on with
lathering up that beast of yours He turned to a new page and removed the pencil
from behind his ear. Go on."
"Iantine's
gone on you, Debera," Grasella said, eyeing her barrack mate shrewdly.
"Iantine?
He's sketch-mad. He'd do his big toe if he had nothing else to pose for him,"
Debera replied. "Besides, he'll leave soon for Benden."
"Will you
miss him?" Jule asked, a sly look on her face.
"Miss him?"
Debera echoed, surprised at the question.
I will miss him, Morath said in such a mournful tone that the other dragonets turned
towards her, their eyes whirling in minor distress.
"What did
she say that's got them all upset?" Jule demanded.
"That she'd
miss him. But, love, he's not Weyrbred," Debera told her dragon, stroking
her cheek and then her head-knob."He can't stay here indefinitely."
"If anyone
asked me, I'd say Iantine would like to," Sarra put in.
""No-one's
asked you," Angie replied tartly.
Has he ever
done anything, I mean, beyond sketching you, Deb?" Jule asked with an avid
glint in her eyes.
"No, of
course not. Why would he?" responded Debera, and flustered. That was the
trouble with having to sleep with the others. They could be terribly nosy, even
if they weren't as mean as her stepmother and sisters had been. She t pry into
where they were when they were late in at
"I give up
on her," said Jule, raising her hands skyward in asperahon. "The
handsomest unattached man in the Weyr and she's blind."
"She's
Morath-besotted," Sarra put in. "Not that any of us is much better."
"Most of
us..." and Jule paused significantly, "know that, dragons may now be
a significant factor in our lives, are not everything, you know. Even old T'dam-damn
has a weyrmate, after all."
"We don't
have weyrs yet," said Mesla, speaking for the first. She took everything
literally. "Couldn't have anyone in here with you gawking."
Debera knew she
was blushing: her cheeks felt hot.
"That hasn't
held you back, I noticed," Sarra said to Jule, cking her head knowingly.
Jule smiled
mysteriously. "From the only Weyrbred resident this barracks, let me
assure you that our wishes can ence our dragons' choices."
"They won't
rise for another eight or ten months," said though she had obviously taken
heed of Jule's remark.
"Jule,
suppose your dragon fancies a dragon whose rider can't stand?"
"You mean,
O'ney?" and she grinned at Angie's discomfort.
The girl
overcame her embarrassment and snapped back y enough.
He's
impossible, even for a bronze rider. you ever heard him go on about how his
wing is always ps in competitions! As if that was all that mattered!"
"To him it
probably is," Grasella said, but, "Jule, I'm more ried about the blue
riders. I mean, some of them are very nice guys and I wouldn't want to hurt
their feelings, but they don't like girls."
"Oh,"
and Jule shrugged indolently, "that's easier still. You make an
arrangement with another rider to be on hand when your green gets proddy. Then
the blue rider gets his mate, if he's got one, or anyone else who's willing -
and you'd better believe that anyone's willing when dragons are going to
participate. So you bed the one you like, and the blue rider his choice, and
you ALL enjoy!" The girls absorbed this information with varying degrees
of enthusiasm or distaste.
"Well, it's
up to yourselves what you do, you know," Jule went on. "And we're not
limited to this Weyr, either.
"Oh!"
and she let out a gusty sigh. "I'll be so glad when we can fly out of here
anytime we want."
"But I
thought you were arranging matters with T'red?" Mesla said, her eyes wide
with consternation.
"Well, so
I am, but that doesn't mean I might not find someone I like better at another
Weyr. Greens like it, you know".
"Ah, but
can we go to other Weyrs?" Sarra asked, waggling a finger at Jule. "In
four-five months, we'll have Fall and then we'll really work hard, ferrying
firestone sacks to the fighters." Her eyes gleamed brightly in
anticipation and she hugged herself. "We'll be doing something a lot more
exciting than having just one mate and plenty of kids."
Debera averted
her face, not wanting to take part in such a ridiculous discussion.
Something bothers you, Morath said and slowly lowered her head to her rider's lap. I love
you. I think you re wonderftl.
Iantine does, too.
That confidence
startled Debera. He does?
He does! And Morath's
tone was emphatic. He likes your green eyes, the way you walk, and the finny
crackle in your voice. How do you do that?
Debera's hand
went to her throat and she felt really silly now.
Can you talk to
him, too? Or just listen to what he's thinking?
He thinks very loud. Especially near you. I don t hear him too good far
away. He thinks loud about you a lot.
"DEBRA?"
Sarra's loud call severed that most interesting conversation.
"What? I
was talking to Morath. What did you say?"
"Never
mind," and Sarra grinned broadly. "Have you got your Turn's End
dresses finished yet?"
"I've one
more fitting," Debera said, although that subject, too, caused her
embarrassment. She tried to argue with Tisha that the beautiful green dress was
quite enough: she didn't need more.
Tisha had
ignored that and demanded that she'll choose two colours from the samples
available: one for the evening and another good one for daytime wear. Everyone
in the Weyr, it seemed, had new clothes for Turn's End. And yet, something in
Debera had delighted in knowing she'd have two completely new dresses that
no-one had ever worn before her. She had, she admitted very very quietly to
herself, hoped that Iantine would notice her in them. Now, with Morath's information,
she wondered if he'd notice at all that she was wearing new clothes.
"Speaking
of weyrs," Mesla said.
"That was
half an hour ago, Mesla," Angie protested.
"Well?"
"There
aren't that many left and the bigger dragons would have first choice, wouldn't
they?" she went on.
"Don't
worry," Jule told her, "some'll come free by the time we need them."
Then she covered her mouth, aware of what she had just implied. I didn't mean
that. I really didn't. I
mean, I wouldn't
think of moving in."
"Just shut
up, Jule," Sarra said in a quiet but firm voice.
There was a
long moment of silence, with no-one daring to look at anyone.
"Say, who
has the salve?" Grasella asked softly from the bunk beyond her, breaking
the almost intolerable silence. "My fingers are itching again. No-one told
me I'd have to cope with chilblains while dealing with dragons."
Angie found it
in her furs and passed it on.
"After
you," Debera said softly as she gave it to Grasella.
The easy
laughing chatter was over for the night.
*
*
*
"I haven't
had much time," Jemmy told Clisser in his most uncooperative tone of voice
when Clisser asked how he was coming on the last of the History Ballads. "Had
to look up all that law stuff."
"Why'd you
have to take so much trouble with those fragging guards? They shoulda all been
dropped on the islands, right away. None of this trial farce."
"The
trials were not farces, Jemmy," said Clisser, so uncharacteristically
reproving that Jemmy looked up in a state of amazement. "The trials were
necessary. To prove that we would not act in an arbitrary fashion.
"You mean,
the way Chalkin would have," and Jemmy grinned, his uneven teeth looking
more vulpine than ever in his long face.
"Exactly."
"You're
wasting too much time on him." Jemmy turned back to reading.
"What are
you looking up?"
"I don't
know. I'm looking because I know there's something we can use to check on the
Red Planet's position, something so simple I'm disgusted I can't call it to
mind. I know I've seen it somewhere." Irritably he pushed the volume away
from him.
"It'd help
a great deal if the people who copied for us had had decent handwriting. I
spend too much time trying to decipher it." Abruptly he reached across the
cluttered work-top to the windowsill and plonked down in front of him a curious
apparatus. "Here's your new computer." He grinned up at Clisser who
regarded the object - bright coloured beads strung on ten narrow rods, divided
into two unequal portions.
"What is
it?" Clisser exclaimed, picking it up and finding that the beads moved
stiffly up and down on the rods.
"An
abacus, they called it. A counter. Ancient and still functional." Jemmy
took the device from Clisser and demonstrated.
"It'll
take the place of a calculator. Most are down now. Oh, and I found the designs
for this, too." He fumbled around his papers and withdrew an instrument
consisting of a ruler with a central sliding piece, both marked with
logarithmic scales. "You can do quite complicated mathematical
calculations on this slide-rule, as they called it. Almost as fast as you could
type into a digital pad." Clisser looked from one to the other. "So
that's what a slide rule looks like. I saw one mentioned in a treatise on early
calculators but I never thought we'd have to resort to ancient devices. And
mention of an abacus, too, actually. You have been busy reinventing
alternatives."
"And I'll
find that other device, too, if you'll leave me alone and don't dump more
vitally important, urgent research on me."
"I'm
hoping," Clisser said at his most diplomatic, "that you can give me
something to show before the Winter Solstice and Turn's End."
Jemmy shot
straight up in his chair. cocked his head and stared at Clisser so that Clisser
leaned forward hopefully, holding his breath lest he disrupt Jemmy's
concentration.
"Fraggit,"
and Jemmy collapsed again, beating his fists on the table. "It has to DO
with Solstices."
"Well, if
you've gone back to abacii and slide-rules, why not a sun-dial clock?"
Clisser asked facetiously.
Jemmy sat up
again, even straighter. "Not a sun-dial," he said slowly, "but a
cosmic clock - a star dial like... stone stone SOMETHING."
"Stonehenge?"
"What was
that?"
"A
prehistoric structure back on Earth. Sallisha can tell you more about it if you'd
care to ask her," Clisser said slyly and was rewarded by Jemmy's rude
dismissal of the suggestion. "It turned out to be rather an astonishing
calendar since it accurately predicted eclipses as well as verifying Solstices
dawn." Clisser stopped, looking wide-eyed at Jemmy whose mouth had dropped
open to form a soundless 'O' as what he said astounded them both.
"Only that
was a stone circle... on a plain..." Clisser stammered, gesturing dolmens
and cross-beams. Muttering under his breath, he strode across to the shelves,
trying to find the text he wanted. "We must have copied it. We had to have
copied it."
"Not
necessarily since you've been on these relevant only historical entries,"
Jemmy contradicted him.
"I
remember accessing it once. It's only that we'll have to adapt it to fit our
needs, which is framing the Red Planet when the conjunct io is right." He
was scrabbling amongst the litter on his desk for a clean sheet of paper and a
pencil.
"The first
three he found were either stubs or broken. That's another thing we've got to
re-invent... fountain pens."
"Fountain
pens?" Clisser echoed. "Never heard of fountain pens."
"I'll do
them tomorrow. Leave me to work this out but," and Jemmy paused long
enough to grin diabolically up at Clisser's befuddlement, "I think I'll
have something by Turn's End. Maybe even a model... but only if you leave now."
Clisser left, closing the door quietly behind him and pausing a moment.
"I do
believe I've been kicked out of my own office," he said, pivoting to
regard the door. His name, which had recently been repainted, was centred in
the upper panel.
"Hmm."
He turned the sign hung there on a nail to DO NOT DISTURB" and walked away
whistling the chorus from the 'Duty Song'. He'd catch Sallisha before she
climbed up the stairs to his office. That would please her. Well, it might.
He hurried down
the steps and met her coming in the door.
"I'm not
late," she said, at her most caustic, her arm tightening convulsively on
the bulging notebook she carried.
He was in for
it.
"I didn't
say you were. Let's take the more comfortable option of the teachers' lounge."
"My
conclusions are not something you'll wish to discuss in public," she said,
recoiling. She might be one of his best teachers though the rumour was that
children learned their lessons to get out of her clutches - but her attitude
towards him, and his proposed revitalization programme, was totally hostile.
Clisser smiled
as graciously as he could. "It's empty right now and will be for at least
two hours."
She sniffed
but, when he courteously gestured for her to precede him, she tramped on in an implacable
fashion. Like a Morinst to his Clisser shuddered and hurriedly followed her.
The lounge was
empty, a good fire crackling on the hearth.
The klah
pitcher rested on the warmer and there were, for a change, clean cups. He
wondered if Bethany had done the housekeeping.
The sweetener
jar was even full. Yes, it would have been Bethany, trying to ease this
interview.
As he closed
the door, he also turned the DO NOT DISTURB" sign around and flipped the
catch. Sallisha had seated herself in the least comfortable chair - the woman
positively enjoyed being martyred. She still held the notebook, like a precious
artifact, across her chest.
You can not
exclude Greek history from study," she said, aggressively launching into
an obviously prepared speech.
"They've
got to understand where our form of government came from to appreciate what
they have. You have to include..."
"Sallisha,
the precedents can be covered in the outline, but not the entire culture,"
he began.
"But the
culture determined the form of government." She stared at him, appalled by
his lack of comprehension.
"If a
student is curious enough to want to know more, we shall have it to give him.
But there is no point in forcing hill farmers and plains drovers to learn
something which has absolutely no relevance to their way of life."
"You
demean them by saying that."
"No, I
save them hours of dull study by replacing it with the history of Pern."
"There is
scarcely enough of that to dignify the word 'history'."
"Yesterday
is history today, but do you want to repeat it?
"'History'
is what happened in the life or development of a people... we," and he
tapped his chest, "the Pernese. Also a systematic account of us," he
tapped his chest again, "with an
analysis and
explanation. From the beginning of the Pern colony. That is history, grand and
sweeping, surviving against incredible odds and an implacable menace,
daring-do, ingenuity, courage, and of this planet, not of a place that's only a
name. It's better than our ancient history - if it's taught right."
"Are you
impugning my -"
"Never,
Sallisha, which is why I particularly need your complete cooperation for the
new, enriched, relevant curriculum. On average, your students rank higher in
their final examination papers than any other teacher's... and that includes
the hill-farmers and the plains drovers. But they never again use the
information you imparted. Pern is difficult enough... with an external menace
to contend with... Let them be proud of the accomplishments of their ancestors,
their most recent ancestors. Not the confused and tortured mindlessness the
Pern colonists left behind.
"Furthermore,"
he went on relentlessly as she opened her mouth to speak, "the trials at
Telgar and Benden have proved that not enough time is spent teaching our people
their rights under the Charter."
"But I
spend..."
"You
certainly have never been remiss, but we must emphasize," and he slapped
one fist into the other palm, holder rights under their Lord: how to claim
Charter acreage, how to prevent what happened in Bitra."
"No other
Lord Holder is as wicked," and her mouth twisted with disgust as she
enunciated the last word, "as that awful man. Don't think you can get me
to teach there now Issony's left!" She waggled her index finger at him and
her expression was fierce.
"Not you,
Sallisha, you're far too valuable to waste on Bitra," he said, soothing
her. Bitra would need a more compassionate and flexible teacher than Sallisha.
But I'm amazed at just how many people were unaware of the Charter Rights. And
that's wrong. Not that I think the cowed folk up in Bitra would have dared cite
the clauses to him... even if they had known about them. I mean, it was
appalling to realize just how few people who attended the trial KNEW that
ordinary holders had the RIGHT to freedom of movement, and lawful assembly, or
to appeal for mediation for crippling tithes.
"Why haven't
the Lord Holders impeached him?" she wanted to know, her fierceness
diverted towards a new victim. It's patently obvious he is unfit to manage a
Hold, much less one during a Fall. I cannot see why they have been waffling
about over the matter.
"Sallisha,
it takes a unanimous decision to impeach a Lord Holder," he said with a
light admonishment.
She regarded
him blankly for a moment. Then flushed.
"Who's
holding out?"
"Jamson."
She clicked her
tongue irritably. "And that's another place you mustn't send me. The cold
would exacerbate my joint problem."
I'm aware of
that, Sallisha, which is why I wondered if you'd consider Nerat South this
year?"
"How much
travelling?" she demanded, but not unappeased.
"Six major
holds and five smaller units, but all within reasonable distance. And, of
course, your journeys would fall on Threadfree days.
"Excellent
accommodations and a very good contract. Gardner made sure that everything complies
with your wishes as regards conditions." He reached into his jerkin pocket
and pulled out the document. "I thought you might like to see it today."
"Sweetening
me up, are you?" she said with an almost coquettish smile, hand half
outstretched to the sheets.
"You are
my best teacher, Sallisha," he told her and extended his hand until her
fingers closed around the contract.
"This won't
make me approve your butchery of pre-Pernese history, Clisser."
"It's not
intended to, but we can't have you in danger on the plains of Keroon."
"I did
promise to come back."
"They will
understand."
"There are
some really fine minds there."
"You will
find them wherever you go, Sallisha, you have the knack." Then he hauled
out the larger sheaf of papers, the new syllabus. "You may find this much
easier to impart to your students." She eyed it as she would a tunnel
snake.
"So,"
Paulin asked Thea and Gallian in the comfortably warm High Reaches solarium
where the High Reaches Lady Holder received her guests, "is there any way
we can get him to change his mind?"
Thea shrugged. "Not
by reasoned argument, that's for certain. He was indignant that 'a Lord Holder's
right to deal with his own folk' had been set aside for the two trials."
"Not that
he objected to the sentences. 'That was only right and just, and they should
have been sent to the Islands as well, for they'll only make trouble of a
different sort now,'" Gallian added, mimicking his father's thin, wheezing
voice. "If he would only give me authorization to deal with all Hold
matters..." and he raised his hands in helplessness.
"He's too
sick."
"Wait a
minute. He is sick," Paulin interrupted, "and your weather here is
only aggravating the respiratory problem, isn't it?" Thea's eyes widened
as she jumped to a conclusion.
"If he was
sent to Ista or Nerat to recuperate, why he'd have to authorize Gallian - -",
she began.
"Precisely."
"What
happens when he recovers and finds out what I did knowing, as he's made sure I
do, his views on impeachment," Gallian said, "and finds out I've gone
against him? I could very likely lose my chance of succession."
"That not
likely, dear. You know how he carries on about your stupid 'younger brothers',"
said Thea reassuringly, laying a hand on her son's arm. "You just know
when to stand up to him. You've always had a flair for dealing with people. As
for the nephews." She threw up her hand in despair.
Then her face
clouded. "I really am worried about these constant chest infections.
Frankly, I don't think he's going to last much longer." She sighed in
regret. "He's been a good spouse."
"Can you
get your medic to recommend the warmer climate?" Paulin asked
sympathetically.
"He's been
doing so constantly," Thea said, setting her mouth in a firm line. "I'll
make it so. Somehow! I couldn't live with myself if I didn't. For his sake as
well as those poor wretches."
Gallian looked
uncertain.
"Don't
worry, lad," said Paulin. "You've already got full marks in my book
for cooperation. And, as long as I'm Chair, you've my support. The Conclave
doesn't necessarily have to abide by the deceased's wishes as to successor. But
we've got to take action now.
"Even
waiting until Turn's End is dangerous. We rescued those people, their rights
were upheld in a duly assembled court, and Chalkin's in some state of mind over
that." Paulin's laugh was mirthless. "We can't let him take his
vengeance out on them, or we've spent a lot of time and effort to no avail.
With this thaw setting in, he'll be able to move about. And I think we all have
a good idea that he'll retaliate in some fashion."
Thea shuddered,
her comfortably plump body rippling under her thick gown. "I won't have
that on my conscience, no matter what my Lord Jamson says." She rose.
"Jamson
spent such a poor night, I'll catch him now, before he can put up any more
objections. One thing's certain, he doesn't want to die. He likes Richud more
than Franco.
I'll suggest
Ista Hold. I wouldn't mind the winter there myself, In fact."
And suddenly,
she straightened her shoulders, "I think I'm gomig dowd wifa gold, too..."
and she altered her voice appropriately, sniffing. "He might just humour
me where he wouldn't do a thing for himself. If you'll excuse me?" Both
men had stood when she did, and now Gallian strode to open the door for her as
she sailed gracefully out, grinning mischievously as she left. Gallian returned
to his guest, shaking his head.
"I've
never gone against my father before," he said anxiously, his expression
unhappy.
"Nor would
I urge you to do so, lad. I appreciate your doubts, but can you doubt what
Chalkin will do?"
"No, I can't,"
and Gallian sighed, turning back to the Fort Lord Holder with a resolute
expression. "I suppose I should get accustomed to making decisions, not
merely carrying them out."
Paulin clapped
him on the shoulder encouragingly. "That's it exactly, Gallian. And I'll
guarantee, not all the decisions you'll be called upon to make will be the
right ones. Being a Lord Holder doesn't keep you from making mistakes: just
make the right wrong ones!"
Paulin grinned
as Gallian tried to absorb that notion. "If you are right most of the
time, you're ahead of the game. And you're right in this one for the good
reasons which your father declines to see."
Gallian nodded
his head. Then he asked more briskly, "Will you have some wine now,
Paulin?"
"You've
your mother's way with you," Paulin said, accepting the offer. "Which
you will find is an advantage... Not, mind you, that I in any way imply a lack
in your father's manners."
"No, of
course not," Gallian agreed but he smiled briefly, then cleared his
throat. "Ah, what happens to Chalkin when he's removed? I mean, it's not
as if he could be dropped on the southern islands, is it?"
"Why not?"
Paulin replied equably. "Not," he added hastily when he saw Gallian's
consternation, "that he would be placed on the same one as the murderers.
There is a whole chain an archipelago of them."
"Aren't
they volcanic?"
"Only
Young Island, otherwise they're tropical and quite habitable. But one is
certain then that the... ah.. detainee cannot leave and cause reactions. Which
Chalkin would certainly do if he was allowed to remain on the Mainland. No, the
most sensible and most humane solution is to put him where he can't do any more
harm than he's already done."
"Then who's
to take over managing Bitra?"
"His
children are too young, certainly, but there's an uncle, not much older than
Chalkin at that."
"I heard a
rumour though that Vergerin and Chalkin had played a game, the stakes being an
uncontested succession."
"My father
mentioned that, too, early on when impeachment first came up. Said he ought to
have insisted that Vergerin stand in spite of what the old Neratian Lord
wanted. Chalkin's spouse is Franco's sister, you know."
"I'd
forgotten that. Amazing," Paulin added.
"Franco's
totally different, but then his mother was Brenton's first spouse.
They were
discussing the ever-interesting problem of heredity when the door suddenly
opened and Thea came in, almost bent double.
"Great
Stars, mother!" Gallian rushed to assist her. "Why, what's the
matter? You're so flushed."
She slammed the
door shut, waved aside her son's help and collapsed in her chair with laughter.
"What's so
funny?"
"Oh, your
father, dear..." She wiped tears from her cheeks and some of the 'flush'
came away, too. She looked at the handkerchief and rubbed her cheeks more
vigorously, still laughing.
"We did
it! He's going to the warm. I left him writing to ask for Richud's hospitality.
I said I'd have a message pennon flown, but your rider would take it, wouldn't
he, Paulin? When he takes you back to Fort?"
"Indeed,
he will. or rather I'll take it to Richud myself and ask him to connive with us
to keep Jamson from knowing what's happening off the island," said Paulin,
grinning with relief.
"But why
are you laughing, Mother? And why the face paint?" Gallian demanded.
"Well,"
and she flitted her handkerchief, beaming at the two. "What he wouldn't do
for himself, he'd do for his ailing mate," she said, again assuming a
stuffed-nose voice. "So first I had your sister go in and fetch Canell, as
if there were an emergency. I primed Canell to back me up, and it was he who
suggested the rouge. So when I came into your father's room, I arrived moaning
over my aches and pains which had developed so rapidly overnight. And sneezing
constantly fortunately, I have a small sneeze so I can imitate it... Then
Canell took over - really, the man was quite convincing. He got alarmed over my
rapid pulse and flushed face. He made much of worrying about the condition of
my lungs and the strain on my heart. So between us, why, Jamson agreed to take
me south to Ista until I'm completely recovered. So there!" She beamed
from one to the other, quite delighted.
"Mother!
You are the living end."
"Of
course," she said patronizingly. Then she surprised both men by sneezing. "Oh,
good heavens!"
"Hmmm,"
said Gallian with mock severity, "that's what happens when you tell
stories. You get what you pretended you had."
"He's sent
someone looking for you, too, son.""
There was a
polite tap at the door. Gallian went immediately to answer it, opening only
wide enough to be seen.
"Yes, tell
Lord Jamson that I'll be there directly."
"I'll wait
with Lord Paulin until you can get the letter, Galli," she said, pouring
herself some wine. "This is to fortify myself against my cold and any
relapse I might have taken.
"Another
small glass for yourself, Paulin? To toast my debut as an actress?"
"I wish
you'd thought of that ploy earlier."
"So do I,"
she said with a little sigh. "But I hadn't such an overwhelming need to
before. Those poor people! Who will take over from Chalkin once you get him
out? And what will happen to him, for that matter?"
"That has
to be decided."
"We were
just discussing that, Mother," Gallian said.
"There's
Vergerin, the uncle on the father's side."
"But
Vergerin gambled his succession rights away," Thea said sternly.
"You heard
that, too?" Paulin asked.
"Well, you
know that Bloodline," Thea said. "Always gambling. On the most
ridiculous things, too, and for the most bizarre wagers. But to gamble on the
succession?" Her expression showed her disgust over that wager.
"Perhaps
Vergerin learned a lesson," Gallian remarked a trifle condescendingly,
Paulin thought.
"Perhaps,"
Paulin said. If we find him alive."
"Oh, no!"
Thea's hand went to her throat in dismay.
"If the
Council votes to impeach..."
"Not if,
Gallian, when," said Paulin, raising his hand in correction.
"When they
do, how do they go about getting Chalkin out of Bitra Hold?" Gallian
asked.
"I think
that will require thought and planning," Paulin replied.
"But go
now and see your father, Gallian. Mustn't keep him waiting. He might change his
mind."
"Not when
Mother's health is at stake," Gallian said and, with a final grin, he left
the room.
"Promise
me, Paulin, that Gallian's chance at succession won't suffer because of this?"
asked Thea, earnestly gripping his arm.
"I do
promise, Thea," he said, patting her hand.
Four days
later, when Lord Jamson and Lady Thea had been safely conveyed to Ista Hold,
the rest of the Lords, Ladies Holder and the Weyrleaders convened an emergency
meeting at Telgar Hold and formally impeached Lord Chalkin for dereliction of
his duties and responsibilities to Benden Weyr, for the cruel and unusual
punishment of innocent holders (Iantine's drawings were submitted as well as
the proceedings of the recent trials), for refusing to allow the Charter to be
taught so that all would know their rights as well as their responsibility
(Issony gave testimony on that account) and for denying these rights to his
holders without due reason.
Gallian soberly
voted 'Yea' in his turn, having duly exhibited his authorization to act in all
matters concerning High Reaches Hold.
"So, now
what do we do?" Tashvi asked, clasping his hands together with an air of
relief at a difficult decision completed.
"Obviously,
we inform Chalkin and remove him," Paulin said.
"No other
trial?" Gallian asked, startled.
"He just
had it," said Paulin. "Judge and jury of his peers."
"It would
be against all precedent to employ dragon riders to effect his removal," S'nan
stated flatly.
Everyone turned
to the Fort Weyrleader, showing varying degrees of surprise, disgust, anger or
incredulity at such a fatuous statement.
"Impeachment
is also against all precedent, too, S'nan," M'shall said, "because
this is the first time that Clause has been invoked since it was written
two-hundred and fifty-odd years ago. But it's now a matter of record. However,
I disagree that the dragon riders should bow out. Fraggit, S'nan, one of the
main reasons for getting rid of him is that he has not helped to prepare his
Hold which we are honour bound to protect. I'll drag him out of there myself if
need be."
Irene beside
him nodded vehemently in his support and then glared at S'nan. Sarai, S'nan's
Weyrwoman, regarded Irene in horrified dismay.
"If you don't
grab him first, he'll just flit out of that warren of a Hold of his, and who
knows what he might do then?" Irene said.
Then she
blinked and cocked her head, puzzled.
"You know,
I don't know enough about the interior lay-out of Bitra Hold to know where to
find him, much less grab him with all those bodyguards he has around him.
Franco?" "What?" The Nerat Lord Holder responded nervously. "I
can't tell you what Bitra's like. I've never been in more than the reception
rooms even if Nadona is my sister."
"How
curious," Bastom remarked.
"What will
we do when we do get him out?" Franco asked. "Who's to Hold? Those
kids of his are too young."
"The
uncle, Vergerin..." Paulin began.
"What
about a regency till they're of age?" Azury Suggested, cutting across the Fort
Lord's beginning.
"Or a
promising younger son from a well-conducted Hold?" Richud of Ista asked,
looking about brightly.
"We know
the Bloodline's tainted with the gambling addiction," put in Bridgely.
"That
trait can be remedied by strict discipline and a good education," Salda of
Telgar said firmly. "As the seed is sowed so will it ripen."
"Vergerin." Paulin said again, raising his voice to be
heard above the various arguments.
"Him? He
gambled his rights away..." Sarai of Fort Weyr said at her most severe.
"Chalkin
cheated." said M'shall. "He did in every high-stake game I ever heard
of."
Irene gave him
a very thoughtful stare.
"So I
heard!" M'shall repeated.
"VERGERIN"
and Paulin roared the word, stunning everyone into silence, "must be
considered first, since he is of the Bloodline. That's a stipulation of the
Charter which I intend to follow to the letter. He is missing from the property
where he had quietly resided since Chalkin took Hold."
"Missing?"
"Chalkin
do it?"
"Where?
Why?"
"Vergerin
would have had training from his brother in Hold management," Paulin
continued, and I believe that the records state that Kinver was a capable and
fair Lord Holder."
"He
gambled, too," Irene remarked in an undertone.
"But he
didn't cheat," M'shall said, giving his Weyrmate a stern look.
"We all
adhere, do we not," Paulin went on, "to the Charter Inheritance
Clause which stipulates that a member of the Bloodline must be considered
first? Now, if Vergerin is available."
"And
willing," M'shall added.
"And able,"
G'don of the High Reaches Weyr amended in a firm voice.
"Able and
willing," Paulin echoed, "we would then be following the Charter -"
"We've set
one precedent today," Bastom said. "Why not give Bitra a break and
put in someone trained and competent? Especially since there's so much to be
done to get that Hold cleared for the spring action."
"Good
point. How about a team? Give some young, eager scions some practice in
day-to-day management?" Tashvi suggested.
"All those
with younger sons and daughters available for the job, raise your hands,"
said M'shall, not quite as facetiously as he sounded.
"No, you
have to replace Chalkin with a member of the Bloodline," S'nan said
loudly, pounding the table with both fists.
"Then it
has to be Vergerin."
"If we can
find him."
"ORDER!
ORDER!" and Paulin banged his gavel forcefully until silence prevailed. "There!
Now, we can think again. First, we must remove Chalkin."
"What good
does that do if we've no-one to put in authority in a Hold that will be totally
demoralized to find itself leaderless?" S'nan asked, so incensed that he
was speaking faster than anyone had ever heard him talk.
"Ah, but
we put in a new Holder so quickly no-one will have time to become demoralized,"
Tashvi said.
"I suspect
that we will," Paulin said. "Vergerin is not in his known holding,
and indeed the place looks to have been deserted for some length of time."
S'nan was
aghast. "Chalkin has removed him?"
"Probably
to that cold storage he's said to have in his lower levels," M'shall said
grimly.
"Master
Domaize insisted that we learn the rudiments of architectural draughting,"
the young portraitist said.
"There's
another level," Issony put in, tapping the right-hand corner of the paper.
"You were lucky not to visit it." He gave a snort. "Chalkin calls
it his cold storage." The teacher glanced around the table. "A lot of
small cubicles, some horizontal, some vertical, and none of them longnough or
wide enough for the poor blighters shoved in'em."
"You can't
be serious?" S'nan's eyes protruded in dismay
"Never
more," Issony said. "One of the kitchen girls spilled a tub of
sweetener and she was immured for a week. She died of the damp cold of the
place."
"Then,"
as Iantine's pencil slowed, "There're steps down from his rooms here. They
come out in the kitchen. He's always complaining that delicacies disappear from
storage, but I know for a fact he's the one snitching." Issony grinned. "I
was trying to get some food one night and he nearly caught me at it."
"There's
an upper level over this section," Iantine said his pencil poised. "But
the door was padlocked."
"Supposedly
due to subsidence," said Issony with a bit of a snort.
"But there
wasn't as much dust in the hall as usual in his back corridors. I think it
could be an access to the panel heights."
"We'll
have a dragon up there, too," Paulin said. He wasn't the only one to stand
behind the artist to watch him work.
"Quite a
warren. Glad you looked about you when you were there, Iantine." He patted
the young man's shoulder in approval. "So how many... ah... discreet exits
are there?"
"I know of
nine, besides the front one and the kitchen door," Issony said as he
pointed out the locations.
Paulin rubbed
his hands together and, waving everyone to resume their seats at the table,
stood for a long moment looking at the floor plan.
"So, let
us not waste time and let us agree on the... ah... strategy here and now.
Irene, I appreciate your willingness to be bait, but let us use surprise
instead. Issony, Iantine, when would the Hold be at its most vulnerable?"
The two men
exchanged glances. Issony shrugged. "Early morning, about four-five o'clock.
Even the watchwher's getting tired. Most of the guards would be asleep."
He glanced towards Iantine who nodded.
"So, we
will need dragon riders."
"Let's
stick to those of us in this room if we can," M'shall suggested.
"It's
totally improper to hound a man in his own Hold," began S'nan, starting to
rise from his seat.
G'don of High
Reaches, seated just beyond him, pulled his arm to reseat him.
"Give
over, S'nan," he said wearily.
"You're
excused from the force, S'nan," Paulin told him, equally exasperated.
"But...
but..." Even his Weyrmate shushed him.
"There're
more than enough of us quite willing," said Shanna of Igen with a
withering glance at the dismayed Fort Weyrleader.
"Good.
Then we'll cover all the exits."
"There's
one window in the kitchen that they always forget to lock," Iantine said, "and
I don't think they ever feed the watchwher enough. He's all bones. Something
juicy might occupy him. And I think the window's beyond his chain's reach."
"Good
points, Iantine," said Paulin. "Through the window, then, and we'll
infiltrate immediately up to Chalkin's private quarters through the back
stairs."
"The
hidden door's the panel next to the spice cupboard."
"If you
take me along, I can find it in a jiffy," Issony suggested, his eyes
bright with anticipation.
"If you're
willing..." Paulin said.
"I am,
too," Iantine added.
"I rather
thought you might be," said Paulin, and then rapidly issued the details of
the plan.
With the exception
of S'nan, all the Weyrleaders were involved and even young Gallian was
persuaded to come.
"I might
as well be hanged for the sheep as the lamb," he said with a fatalistic
shrug.
"You'll
not suffer from this day's work, Gallian," Bastom assured him. It's a
unanimous decision and our presence there will make that plain to Chalkin. He
has no allies among us," the Tillek Lord said, with a reproving glance at
S'nan who sat with face set in such a mournful expression that Bastom was
nearly sorry for the punctilious Weyrleader.
"So we are
agreed, Lords, Ladies and Leaders?" Paulin said when he was sure everyone
had grasped their roles in the deposition. "Then let us refresh ourselves
and rest until it's time to depart."
Except for the
fact that the watchwher did not succumb to the choice bits of meat brought to
lure it from its duty and M'shall had to have Craigath speak sharply to it,
entry was obtained.
Whoever should
have heard the watchwher's one bellow did not.
Issony had no
trouble entering by the unlocked window and opening the kitchen door to that
contingent. Those who were assigned to watch the various other exits from the
Hold were by then in place. Iantine sped through the kitchen and up into the
main reception rooms where he opened the front entrance and the rest of the
group entered.
Meanwhile,
Issony had found the hidden door in the kitchen. Although the stairway was lit
by dying glows, there was enough illumination for Paulin and the arresting
Lords, Ladies and Leaders.
Paulin opened
the access door at the top and entered Chalkin's private apartments first.
Behind him came eight Lords and Ladies Holder and M'shall, who insisted on
representing the Weyrs. To their surprise, the room was brightly lit, glows
shining from wall sconces so that the sleeping figures in the massive
fur-covered bed were quite visible. All three of them... Chalkin's portly frame
bulked the largest under the sleeping furs, though his head was covered by a
fold of the fine white bedsheet.
One of the
girls woke first. She opened her mouth to scream, but did not when she saw
Paulin's abrupt gesture for silence. Instead, she slithered across the
mattress, sheet held up to her chin, to the edge of the bed and grabbed a
discarded dress from the pile on the floor.
Paulin
indicated that she could clothe herself. As smoothly as she moved, or perhaps
because she had the sheet up to her chin and let in cold air, the other girl
was awakened. She did scream.
"As loud
as a green in season," M'shall said later chuckling at the memory. At
that, Chalkin didn't rouse.
His guards had
been alerted though and charged into the room, to be flabbergasted by the sight
of so many armed folk in Chalkin's most private apartment.
"Chalkin
has been impeached for failure to prepare this Hold for Threadfall, for abuse
of his privilege as Lord Holder and for denying his holders their Charter-given
rights," Paulin said in a loud voice, sword drawn. "Unless you wish
to join him in his exile, put up your weapons."
To a man, they
did just that as the reinforcements, led by Iantine, burst in from the hall.
That was what finally roused Chalkin from a drunken sleep.
Later Paulin
remarked that he'd been disappointed at such an anti-climactic outcome of their
dawn invasion.
"S'nan
will be reassured," K'vin said. I think he was certain we intended to
humiliate Chalkin."
"We have,"
Tashvi said with a chuckle.
Lady Nadona,
though she took a strong case of hysterics Irene took some pleasure in applying
the slaps that cut her histrionics short decided that she could not leave her
darling children to the mercies of unfeeling men and women, and would sacrifice
herself to remain behind while Chalkin went into exile. She was exceedingly
well acquainted with her own rights as granted by the Charter, down to the
Clause and relevant sub-paragraphs.
Chalkin showed
every fibre of his cowardice, trying to bribe one Lord Holder after another,
with hints of unusual treasure if they assisted him. If anyone had been in the
least bit tempted, their resolve was strengthened when the broken, shivering
wrecks were released from 'cold storage'.
"The place
was full," Issony said, looking shattered by what he had seen on that
level. "Border guards, most of them, but they didn't deserve that from
Chalkin!" Even the hardiest of them would bear the marks of their
incarceration for the rest of their lives.
"Iantine?
Did you bring... ah, you did. Do a quick sketch of them, will you?" Issony
asked, pointing to the two so close to death: the two who had been castrated
for rape. All that could be done for them was to ease their passing with fellis
juice. "To show S'nan. In case he has lingering doubts as to the justice
of what was done here today."
"Any sign
of Vergerin?" Paulin asked when all the cells had been emptied.
"No,"
M'shall said grimly. That shouldn't reassure you any." He jerked his thumb
at some of the stretcher-bearers who had previously been the 'cold storage'
guards. They said there were four dead ones who were slipped into the lime pits
day before yesterday. We may have moved too late for Vergerin." Paulin
cursed under his breath.
"Did you
ask if any had heard the name?"
M'shall
grunted. "No-one down there had a name."
Paulin winced. "We'd
best send for the Holder team."
"I have
dispatched riders to collect the deputies already. They should be here."
There was a
commotion in the Hall, with cheering and shouts of welcome.
"They can't
have got here this soon," M'shall said, surprised.
Both men went
to investigate.
A tall man was
shrugging out of thin and dirty furs and smiling at the riders clapping him on
the back or whatever part of him they could touch.
"Guess who
just walked in?" B'nurrin of Igen cried, seeing Paulin and M'shall.
"Vergerin?"
Paulin asked.
"Optimist,"
M'shall muttered, and then, taking a second hard look at the face no longer
hidden by a big furred hat, exclaimed, "It is!"
"It is?"
Paulin hastened across the broad Hall.
"Has the
family eyebrows," M'shall said with a chuckle.
"Where've
you been hiding, Vergerin?" M'shall?" Vergerin peered around, a hopeful
smile breaking across his weather-beaten face. He did bear a facial resemblance
to Chalkin; as if Chalkin's features had been elongated and refined. "You
don't know how glad I was to see all those dragons on the heights. I figured
you had to come to your senses and get rid of him." He jerked his thumb
ceiling-ward You've no idea."
"Where did
you hide? When did you hide?" Paulin asked, clasping Vergerin's hand and
shaking it enthusiastically.
Vergerin's grin
turned wry. "I figured the safest place was under Chalkin's nose." He
gestured in the general direction of the cot holds
"He houses
his beasts better than his folk, so the smell of me is at least clean horse
manure. I've been earning my keep at the beast hold."
"But your
holding has been empty."
"By my
design, I assure you," Vergerin said, running a grubby hand through greasy
hair and smiling apologetically.
"I've a
strong survival streak, my Lords Holder, and when I realized my nephew really
was not going to do a single thing about the imminence of Thread, I thought I
had better disappear before he thought of possible retaliation - - and me as
his only too obvious replacement." He had unwound the layers that clothed
him and stood with a quiet dignity in the midst of the warmly-dressed riders
and Lord Holders. It was that innate dignity which impressed Paulin. Nor was he
alone in noticing it.
"Admittedly,
my Blood claim to the Hold was squandered foolishly but then, I should have
known that Chalkin was likely to cheat that night, if ever, with such stakes.
It took me quite some while to figure out how he managed it, for I'm not
without knowing a few tricks myself, and most of those that can be played on
the unwary."
He gave a
self-deprecating little smile. "I forgot just how hungry Chalkin was for a
Lord Holder's power."
"But you
kept your promises," Paulin said, nodding approval.
"The least
I could do to restore self-esteem," and Vergerin executed a little bow to
Paulin and the others.
"Dare I
hope that you wish to keep this Bloodline in Bitra Hold?" He cocked one of
his heavy dark eyebrows, his glance candid and accepting.
Paulin did a
quick check of the expressions on the faces of the other four Lord Holders who
had arrived on the scene.
"You will
certainly be considered by the Conclave when it meets at Turn's End,"
Paulin said, nodding. The others murmured agreement.
Loud
protestations of innocence suddenly broke up the tableau as Chalkin, bracketed
by Bastom and Bridgely, was walked down the main stairs. The tears of his wife
and the frightened shrieks of his children added to the tumult.
At the last
landing, Chalkin halted, wrenching his arms free from the two Lords as he flung
himself down the stairs at Vergerin.
"You! YOU!
You betrayed me! You broke your word! You did it.You did it all!" Bastom
and Bridgely, moving with creditable speed, managed to recapture Chalkin and
restrained him from physically attacking Vergerin, who did not so much as
recoil from his nephew.
"You did
it to me. You did it all," Chalkin said and shrieked louder than his
children when Vergerin, with an expressionless face, slowly pivoted away from
him.
Then Lady
Nadona saw Vergerin and her cries turned raucous with hatred. "You've
taken my husband and now you stand there to take my Hold, my children's
inheritance - - Oh, Franco, how can you let them do this to your sister?"
She fell against the Neratian's chest.
Franco's
expression was far from repentant as he quickly unwound her plump arms from his
neck with the help of Zulaya and the Istan Laura. Nadona was still in her
nightdress, with a robe half-closed over the thin garment. Richud had the two
boys by the arm, and his spouse the two weeping little girls who certainly didn't
understand what was happening but were hysterical because their mother was.
Paulin took
Vergerin by the arm and led him towards the nearest door, which turned out to
be Chalkin's office.
Decanters and
glasses were part of the appointments and Paulin hurriedly poured two glasses.
Vergerin took his and drank it down, the draught restoring some colour to his face.
He exhaled
deeply.
Paulin,
impressed by the man's control in a difficult situation, clapped his shoulder
and gripped it firmly.
"It can't
have been easy," he said.
Vergerin
murmured, then straightened himself. "What was hardest," and his
smile was wry, "was knowing what a consummate idiot I had been."
"One can
forgive almost anything except one's own stupidities." Despite the thick
stone walls the screams and bellows continued, the sound altering slightly as
Chalkin was hauled out of the Hold and down the courtyard steps.
Lady Nadona's
shrieks became earsplitting and then abruptly ceased, at which Paulin let out a
sigh of relief. Irene might have knocked her out but she'd probably fainted.
Either way the silence was welcome.
More shouting
and confused orders! With an exasperated sigh, Paulin went to the shuttered
window and threw it open on the most extraordinary scene: five men struggling
to lift Chalkin to Craigath's back while the dragon, eyes whirling violently
with red and orane, craned his neck about to see what was happening. Abruptly
Chalkin's body relaxed and was shoved into position on Craigath's neck. M'shall
leaped to his back and waited while two other Weyrmen roped Chalkin to M'shall
and then added the collection of sacks and bags which would accompany the
former Lord Holder into exile.
Craigath took
off with a mighty bound and brought his wide wings down only once before he
disappeared between.
"An island
exile?" Vergerin asked, pouring himself another glass of wine.
"Yes, but
not the same one we sent the guards to. Fortunately, there's a whole string of
them."
"Young
Island would be the safest one," Vergerin said dryly, sipping the wine.
Then he made a face, looking down at the glass. "Wherever does he get his
wines?"
Paulin
smothered a laugh. "He's got no palate at all. Or did you like the idea of
your nephew on an active volcanic island?"
"He's
quick-witted enough to survive even that. Does Nadona stay on?"
"Her
children are young, but you would be perfectly within your rights to relegate her
to a secluded apartment and take over the education and discipline of the
children." Vergerin gave a shudder of revulsion.
"Oh, there
might be something worth saving in them, you know," Paulin said
magnanimously.
"In
Chalkin and Nadona's get? Unlikely." Then Vergerin walked to the cabinet
where Hold records should be kept and, on the point of opening the doors,
turned back to Paulin.
"Should I
start right in? Or wait for the Conclave's decision?"
"Since we
didn't know whether or not you had escaped Chalkin's grasp, we decided to let
competent younger sons and daughters see what order they could contrive.
However, since you would know a lot more about this Hold than they could, would
you take overall charge?"
Vergerin now
exhaled and a smile of intense relief lit his features. "Considering what
I know of the state of this Hold and the demoralization of its holders, I'll
need every bit of assistance I can muster." He shook his head. "I don't
say my late brother was the best Holder in Pern, but he would never have
countenanced the neglect much less Chalkin's ridiculous notion that Thread
couldn't return because it would reduce the gaming he could do."
There was a
polite rap on the door and when Paulin answered, Irene poked her head in.
"We
managed to get the kitchen staff to prepare some food. I can't vouch for more
than that the klah is hot and the bread fresh made."
Vergerin looked
down at himself. "I couldn't possibly eat anything until I've washed."
Irene grinned. "I
thought of that and had a room, and a bath, prepared for you. Even some clean
clothing."
"Fresh
bread and good hot klah will go down a treat," said Paulin, gesturing for
Vergerin to precede him out of the room.
"No, my
Lord Holder, after you," Vergerin said with a courtly gesture.
"Ah, but
my soon-to-be Lord Holder, after you."
"I didn't
realize I smelled that bad," Vergerin said ruefully and led the way out.
He was looking
about him now, Paulin noticed, as if assessing the condition of the place. He
stopped so short that Paulin nearly bounced off him. Pointing to the inner wall
where Chalkin's portrait by Iantine was ostentatiously illuminated, he pivoted,
eyes wide, his expression incredulous.
"My nephew
never looked like that," he said, laughter rippling through his tone.
Paulin
chuckled, too, having his first good look at the representation. "I
believe it took the artist some time to paint a.... satisfactory portrait of
your nephew."
"With so
little to work on... but I can't have that hanging there," Vergerin
exclaimed. "It's... it's..."
"Ludicrous!"
Paulin suggested. "Poor Iantine, to have had to prostitute his abilities
to create that!"
"That will
do for starters." Paulin leaned close to Vergerin, trying not to inhale
because the warmth of the Hall was increasing the pong of manure emanating from
Vergerin's clothing.
"I don't
think you'll hurt the artist's feelings by removing it from such a prominent
place."
"Would he
consider repainting it to a closer likeness to the model?" Vergerin asked.
"That would remind me of my youthful follies as well as how not to manage
a Hold."
"Iantine's
here - helped us get in, in fact. You can ask him yourself."
"After I've
had that bath," Vergerin said and continued on his way to the stairs and
cleanliness.
Younger sons
and daughters were conveyed in from every major Hold, dressed and prepared to
work hard. If some were disappointed that Vergerin had been found, they hid it
well which did them no disservice.
By the time a
substantial breakfast had been served, Vergerin had had a chance to speak to
each of the eight young folk and decide what areas of responsibility they
should assume.
Irene put a
wing of Benden riders at Vergerin's disposition to use in contacting the larger
holdings in Bitra and announcing Chalkin's impeachment and exile.
By then M'shall
had returned. "I dumped him... and his packages, on Island 32. You'll need
to know that for the records. It's rather a nice place. Too bad he gets it."
"Did you
have any trouble with him?" Paulin asked.
M'shall looked
amused as he unbuckled his flight gear.
"With the
wallop Bastom gave him? He was still unconscious when I left him. Near a
stream." M'shall made a face. "I should have dumped him in it. Serve
him right for what he did to those he had in cold storage."
By mid-morning
matters seemed to be in Vergerin's complete control and the Council members
felt able to leave Bitra Hold.
Iantine begged
a ride from K'vin for himself and Chalkin's portrait.
"When are
you coming to Benden Hold?" Bridgely wanted to know, catching the young
portraitist coming down the courtyard steps.
"Lord
Bridgely, I am sorry not to be ready quite yet," Iantine said.
Bridgely jabbed
his finger at the painting. "You're not letting that take precedent, are
you?" And he scowled.
"No,
never," Iantine said, recoiling slightly. Then his grin fled.
"Not that
it will take me long to change the face on it. But it's last on my list. I've
to finish K'vin's portrait, and a few nire of the Telgar riders, and then I'll
come. I can probably make it after Turn's End."
"Well, I'll
give you until then, young man, but no longer," Bridgely said, sounding
aggrieved. Then he smiled to Iantine's obvious anxiety. "Don't worry about
it, lad. I just want to know where my lady and I fit into your appointment
calendar."
With that he
walked away.
K'vin was
hiding his grin behind his gloved hand. "One can be too successful, you
know," he said. Then he gestured for Iantine to mount Charanth, while he
held the painting which he passed up to the artist when he was settled. "I'm
glad you're going to fix this."
"Lord
Holder Vergerin specifically requested me to. And I must say, I'm glad to do
the sitter - justice."
"Justice?"
K'vin laughed as he landed neatly between the bronze neck ridges. "I think
that's possibly a dirty word to Chalkin now!" Iantine grunted as the
dragon suddenly launched himself.
Not only was Iantine
going to be able to set right that inaccurate portrait - he felt he had
demeaned himself and Hall Domaize by succumbing to Chalkin's coercion, in spite
of having no viable alternative - but he had given himself more time at Telgar
Weyr. And Turn's End was nearing: Turn's End and the festivities that the
mid-winter holiday always incurred. Maybe then he could come to some agreement
with Debera.
Dragonriders
could and often did take mates from non riders It would have been easier if his
profession was one that he could offer the Weyr in return for staying on in
Telgar.
But, once
Morath was able to fly, Debera could fly him wherever his commissions took him.
That is, if she
felt anywhere near the same about him as he did about her. Never in his wildest
dreams had he thought he'd be in a Weyr at all. He could almost have thanked
Chalkin for being the catalyst on that score: almost. Until he remembered the
stark horror of what Chalkin had done at the borders and in the cold storage
cells.
He shuddered.
"Thought
you'd be used to this by now," K'vin said, leaning back to speak into Iantine's
ear.
"It isn't
this," Iantine said, shaking his head and grinning.
He thoroughly
enjoyed flying and, after the first experience with the utter cold and
nothingness of between, had not been nervous about that transfer. He took a
firmer grip on the strings about the painting. Charanth was now high enough
above Bitra Hold to go between.
Meranath,
bearing Tashvi and Salda as well as Zulaya, zoomed up beside his right wing:
the dragon's golden body gleaming in the bright morning sun as her riders waved
at him.
As he waved
back, Iantine was surprised to think it was still morning. The invasion of
Bitra Hold had begun in such early hours that the day was not that old. So much
happened these days!
BLACKNESS! Iantine
couldn't feel the cord on the painting, his butt on Charanth's neck, and then
they were out in the sun, hanging over Telgar's familiar cone.
Far below,
above the prow of Telgar Hold, a sparkle showed that Meranath had arrived. The
big bronze now turned gracefully on one wing and headed down towards the Weyr.
For Iantine,
this happened all too swiftly, for he saw so much more from this vantage point
than he did from the ground: the dragons sleeping in the sun on their weyr
ledges, the younger riders practising catch and throw with firestone sacks,
even the weyrlings getting their morning scrub around the lake. Debera would be
among them. He tried to see if he could identify her, and Morath, but at that
height details were lost. Two dragons, browns both, were eating their kill
further down the valley. Another rider burst into the air above a watch rider
who gestured broadly for him to land. Then Charanth had spiralled close enough
to be identified, too, and welcomed back. Iantine could feel a rumble in the
bronze's body. Did dragons speak out loud to each other? He had to tighten his
hold on the painting or have the wind of their descent pull it free.
As they
dropped, K'vin turned his head. "At the Cavern?"
"Please,"
and Iantine nodded, struggling to keep a grip on the painting. Not that losing
it would bother him, but then he'd have to waste another board.
He swung his
leg over and slid down Charanth's shoulder as quickly as he could.
"My
thanks, K'vin," he said, grinning up, having to shield his eyes from the
sun.
"Not
needed. You more than earned it with today's doings." Charanth rumbled
again, his gently whirling blue eyes focused on Iantine who saluted him in
gratitude. Then the bronze leaped up, flapped his wings twice and was landing
on the ledge of the Weyrwoman's quarters.
"You're
back, you're back, and safe," and Leopol came racing out of the Lower
Cavern, leaping towards Iantine who put out a restraining hand so the boy
wouldn't carom off the edge of the painting.
"What have
you done now?" Leopol demanded, taking care not to batter it.
"It's to
be redone," Iantine said, knowing the uselessness of avoiding Leopol's
interest.
"Oh, the
Chalkin portrait?" Leopol reached for it and Iantine pivoted, putting his
body between it and the lad's acquisitive hands.
You're clever,
aren't you?"
"Yup,"
and Leopol's grin bore not a single trace of remorse.
"So? What
happened when you deposed him?" Iantine stopped in his tracks and stared
at him.
"Deposed
whom?" Leopol planted his fists on his belt, cocked his head and gave Iantine
a long and disgusted look, finally shaking his head.
"One, you
rode away on a Fort Weyr dragon. Two, you've been gone overnight so something
was up. Especially when the Weyrleaders are gone, too. Three, we all know that
Chalkin's for the chop, and four, you come back with a portrait and it isn't
one you've done here." Leopol spread his hands. "It's obvious. The
Lords and Leaders have got rid of Chalkin. Impeached, deposed and exiled him.
Right?" He grinned at the summation, cocking his head over the other
shoulder.
"Right?"
he repeated.
Iantine sighed.
"It's not my place to confirm or deny," he said tactfully, and
started again for his quarters.
Leopol dodged
in front, halting him again. "But I'm right about Chalkin, aren't I? He
won't get ready for Threadfall, he's been far too hard on his people and half
the Lord Holders owe him huge sacks of marks in gambling debts."
Iantine stopped.
"Gambling debts?" He brushed past, determined to get to the dubious
safety of his room without giving anything away to such a gossip as Leopol.
"Ah,
Iantine." Tisha caught sight of him and moved her bulk through the tables
with surprising speed and agility to intercept him.
"Did they
catch Chalkin all right? Did he struggle? Did that spouse of his go with him,
which frankly would surprise me? Did they find Vergerin alive? Will he take
Hold, or does he have to wait till the Conclave at Turn's End?" Leopol
bent double with laughter at Iantine's expression.
"Yes, no,
no, yes and I don't know," he answered in reply to her rapid-fire
questions.
"You see?
I'm not the only one," Leopol said, hanging on to a chair with one hand to
keep his balance while he brushed laugh tears from his eyes with the other,
thoroughly delighted with himself and Iantine's reaction.
"I'd like
to hear all, Iantine," Tisha said and deposited the klah mugs and the
plate of freshly baked cookies on the table nearest him.
"Do sit.
You've had a hard day already and it's not noon yet."
"I'll take
it and put it very carefully in your room," Leopol said, grabbing hold of
the wrapped painting and then snatching it out of Iantine's unconsciously
relaxed grip. "And I won't look until you tell me I can."
"No, wait,
Leo," said Tisha. "I want to see what Chalkin considered 'satisfactory'"
"Do I have
no privacy around here?" Iantine demanded, raising his hands in
helplessness." Is there no way to keep secrets?"
"Not in a
well-run Weyr, there isn't," said Tisha. "Eat. Drink. And, Leo, take
the basket I made ready for K'vin up to his weyr. I didn't see Zulaya and
Meranath, so she may have stopped over at Telgar Hold."
His knees
weakened, as did his resolve, and Iantine collapsed into the chair Tisha had
invitingly pulled out for him.
"Shall I?"
Leopol asked in his best wheedling tone, one hand on the cord knot.
"I'm not
sure I could stop you," Iantine said, and caught the pad he had stuffed
inside the wrapping as Leopol made short work of opening.
Iantine put the
pad to one side. He didn't really want to show the latest drawings he'd done.
The two castrati had died shortly after he had finished the sketches. He
intensely regretted how pleased he had been with their sentences. Had they had
any idea of what additional torment Chalkin would inflict on them when they
asked to be returned to their Hold?
No, or they
wouldn't have gone. Then Iantine caught Tisha's sharp eye on his face and
wondered if she had read his expression which he had tried to keep blank.
Fortunately, the much-glamorized Chalkin stared out of the painting at them and
Tisha's first good look sent her into gales of laughter, with Leopol whooping
nearly as loud.
The head woman
had an infectious laugh under any condition: a mere chuckle from her would have
anyone in her vicinity grinning in response. Iantine was in sore need of a good
laugh and, if his inner anxieties kept him from joining in wholeheartedly, at
least he was made to grin.
Tisha's
amusement alerted the rest of the weyrfolk to Iantine's return, and the table
was shortly surrounded by people having a good laugh over what Chalkin had
considered to be a 'satisfactory portrait' of himself. He sated their curiosity
by giving a brief report of what had happened.
Everyone was
much relieved that Chalkin was not only no longer Bitra's Lord, but also that
he had been exiled far away from the Mainland.
"Too good
for him, really," someone said.
"Ah, but
he's lord of all he surveys, ain't he? Suit him!"
"No-one
was hurt?"
"Who's
going to take Hold there now, with so much to do close to Fall?" Iantine answered
as circumspectly as he could, though he was amazed at how accurately the
weyrfolk had guessed what had happened. They also seemed to know a great deal
about a Hold that was not beholden to Telgar Weyr. He didn't think he'd talked
much about his uncomfortable stay at Bitra, so they must have had their
information from other sources.
Weyrfolk did
get to travel more than holders, so perhaps their level of information was more
comprehensive.
Riders drifted
in, early for the noontime meal but just as interested in what had happened at
Bitra Hold. Some of the older ones remembered the wager that had cost Vergerin
the Holding, and other details about that Bloodline that certainly showed them
well informed.
Iantine was
grateful for the klah and cookies Tisha had brought and equally pleased to have
Leopol bring him bread, cheese and the sliced wherry meat that was being served
for lunch. He did have a moment's anxiety when he saw K'vin, at the edge of the
crowd, gesturing for his attention. Maybe he shouldn't have said a thing.
He told Leopol
to take the notorious portrait to his quarters, bundled his pad under his arm -
because he knew nothing would keep Leopol from looking all through it - and
then made his way to K'vin.
Since he had
obviously told all he was going to tell, he was allowed to pass, with
good-natured mauling on his way.
"I'm
sorry, Weyrleader, if I was speaking out of turn."
K'vin regarded
him with widened eyes. "Speaking out of turn? Ha, they had probably
figured out everything on their own. What could you possibly tell them that
they didn't know?"
"How many
people Chalkin had in those appalling cells," Iantine said, blurting out
the words before he realized what he was saying.
K'vin put a
sympathetic arm around his shoulders. "I think I'll have a few bad dreams
over that myself," and he gave a deep shudder.
"Perhaps
you'd best get some rest."
"No, I'd
rather not, if you'd something else for me to do," Iantine said
truthfully. He didn't even need to stop off at his own quarters as his tubes of
oil and brushes were already in the Weyrleaders' quarters.
K'vin's
solicitous expression brightened. "I've some time now, and you've the
painting to finish of me... unless you'd rather redo Chalkin... but Bridgely
made it very plain to me that he'd like you at Benden to do his commissions by
Turn's End. You're much sought after, you know."
Iantine made a
disparaging noise in his throat, embarrassed by his notoriety. K'vin, grinning
at his reaction, slapped him lightly on his back in affection.
"So what's
it to be?" the Weyrleader asked.
"You, of
course. Did you..." and he hesitated, not wanting to be thought pushy, "did
you like Zulaya's portrait?" K'vin gave a low laugh and turned his face
away. "You've done her proud, Iantine. Proud."
"She's easy.
She's beautiful," Iantine said.
"Yes, isn't
she?" Something about the tone of his voice made Iantine wonder at such a
response. They were Weyrleaders, together, weren't they? They always made such
a stance of a good partnership.
But Iantine was
getting as good at hearing things that weren't expressed as he was at seeing
all that could be seen. Not his place to comment, though, despite a growing
admiration for K'vin as Weyrleader.
Zulaya was a
bit reserved, he knew from having spent so much time painting her, but she was
much older than Iantine. And older than K'vin, too, for that matter.
"That gown
was perfect for her," Iantine remarked to break an awkward silence.
"Yes, she
had it made for the last Hatching," K'vin said and the smile he turned
towards Iantine was easy, relaxed.
Iantine wondered
if all he'd seen that morning hadn't skewed his judgment. They were at the weyr
stairs now and climbed up. At the top of the steep flight, Iantine was glad he
wasn't even out of breath.
"You're in
good shape," K'vin said, with another friendly slap to his back to push
him on into the high-ceilinged entrance to the weyr.
"I'd need
to be, wouldn't I?" Iantine replied with a droll laugh.
He paused
briefly, his eyes seeking the weyrlings at the lake. Yes, Debera was there,
oiling Morath. He'd have a chance to talk to her later: maybe even take dinner
with her and show her Chalkin's portrait before he made the changes.
Could he, he
wondered as he watched K'vin change into the Gather clothes he wore for his
portrait, add to that face what went on in that man's miserable soul? Was he
good enough to attempt such a portrayal?
Amid all the
frantic preparations for Turn's End, Clisser braved S'nan's displeasure to
request transport to the Telgar Engineering Hall to discuss the feasibility of
the Stonehenge installation for Pern's purposes. Well, Clisser kept his request
to a need to discuss something vital with Kalvi since S'nan felt such bells,
whistles and signals should be unnecessary if the Weyrs were kept on their toes
during Intervals.
Jemmy had
meticulously drawn a replica of the prehistoric stone circle, plus another of a
reconstruction of what it had originally looked like, and such description as
might be valuable to Kalvi and his team.
Kalvi took one
quick, almost derisive glance at the drawings, and then a second, more
respectful one.
"Eye Rock?
Finger Rock? Solstice?" He gave Clisser a broad smile. "I do believe
it will suffice and rather neatly."
Then he
frowned. "Couldn't you have given me a little more time? Solstice is only
two weeks off.
"I..."
Clisser began.
"Sorry,
friend," Kalvi said with a self-deprecating smile, "you'd be busy
with rehearsing and all that. Hmmm. Just leave it with me. I think we can
contrive something." and he riffled through Jemmy's sketches. "Hmmm,
yes, the lad has real talent."
"Don't you
dare seduce him away from the College," Clisser said, assembling as fierce
a frown on his face as he gave to wayward students.
Kalvi grinned,
pretending to recoil in terror but his eyes were on the drawings. "We'll
manage." He gave an exaggerated sigh. "It's what we're good at."
Clisser left, reassured that he would not fail the Conclave on this matter.
Traditionally
the Lords Holder and the Weyrleaders and the invited heads of the various
Professions - met in Conclave the day beftre Turn's End - the Winter Solstice -
to discuss what matters should be brought to those who would assemble for the
festivities. Should a referendum figure on the agenda, its details would have
been previously circulated. It would also be read out that evening in every
main Hold and Hall. If voting was required, votes were cast the morning of the
First Day of Turn's End, the results counted and returned to the second
traditional sitting of the Conclave on the day after Turn's End, when the New
Year started.
The tradition
was even more important in this 258th year after Landing with the Pass so
imminent. Although Vergerin had been in charge but twenty days before the
Conclave, it was obvious that he was taking a firm, but just Hold on Bitra.
He was also
working his assistants hard but fairly. None of them had any complaint to
register when adroitly queried by their fathers or mothers. Vergerin's first
official act had been to send riders to every single known holding and announce
Chalkin's removal and that as many as could attend Turn's End at Bitra Hold
would be made welcome. Vergerin paid for additional supplies out of his own
funds.
(No-one had
found Chalkin's treasury; nor had he taken it with him into exile. Nadona had
denied any knowledge of its whereabouts and moaned that he had left her without
a mark to her name.) Altering a previously made decision, the Teachers' College
planned now to supply a Turn's End concert to Bitra. They would bring the
copies of the Charter which Vergerin had requested, to be given to each small
holder. That would deplete to a few dozen the printed copies left in the
College Library, but Clisser felt it to be in a very good cause.
The Turn's End
music featured Sheledon's ambitious 'Landing Suite' - which made mention of the
Charter - the audience would have a better understanding of what the music, and
indeed, the printed Charter, was all about. Bitran holders would no longer be
kept in abysmal ignorance of their Charter-given rights.
Consequently
when the Conclave sat, the first order of business was to confirm Vergerin as
Lord Holder of Bitra. He was not abjured to train his young relatives, Chalkin's
sons - to succession although he was in conscience bound to see them well taken
care of, educated and prepared to make their own living as adults. He was
relieved of his promise to forego having legitimate heirs and promptly
installed at Bitra a nine-year-old son and a five-year-old daughter. No-one
ever knew who their mother had been. Vergerin made it plain that he was
interested in acquiring a spouse suitable to hold as his Lady.
Clisser was
called on to report on the matter of an indestructible and unambiguous method
of confirming a Pass, and said that Kalvi and he had agreed on the mechanism
and it would be installed on the eastern face of every Weyr. Kalvi looked
suitably smug and nodded wisely, so Paulin allowed himself to be reassured. He
wanted no more problems like Chalkin to arise again! Ever! And now was the
moment to prevent them.
The matter of a
new hold being established and named CROM came up, and there was considerable
discussion.
"Look,
they are entitled to use their Charter-granted acres, and that amounts to a
fair whack of land," Bastom said, unexpectedly coming down on the side of
the applicants. "Let'em call it a hold."
"Yes, but
they want autonomy and besides, they're too far from any other Hold up there in
the hills," Azury put in.
"It'll
have to prove it's self-sufficient," Tashvi said, looking reluctant to
admit that much. Which was understandable since Telgar was also a mining Hold.
"They have
to follow the rules, same as everyone else," Paulin said in a neutral
manner. "And supply basic needs to Contract workers."
"They're
in good shape to do so," Azury remarked dryly, "what with the profit
they can expect from supplying high grade ore at the start of a Pass."
"Consider
them on probation," was Bridgely's suggestion, and that was the motion
which was carried.
There were a
few more minor details to be discussed but these were carried as well. This
year there was no referendum to be presented to the population.
"However,
I want every one of you to give a fitly report of the trials and Chalkin's
impeachment to the assembled," Paulin reminded the Lord Holders. "We
want the truth circulated and believed: not a mess of rumours."
"Like the
cannibalism!" Bridgely had been highly indignant over that one. "Sadistic
Chalkin was, but let's squash that one now!"
"How under
the sun did such a rumour ever get started?" Paulin asked, appalled. S'nan
looked in a state of shock, staring incredulous at the Benden Lord Holder.
"The 'cold
storage', I suspect," Bridgely said, disgusted.
"We didn't
coin the term," said Azury with a shrug.
"Well, we
don't want it circulated," M'shall said angrily. "Bad enough having
to live with the facts without having to debunk the fantasies."
"We do
want the swift justice meeted out to the rapists and the murderers to be well
publicized, though," Richud put in.
"That,
yes! Speculation, no," Paulin said. He rose, and tapped the gavel on its
block. "I declare this session of the Conclave dismissed. Enjoy Turn's End
and we'll meet in three days' time."
He intended to
enjoy every moment of it for the year he'd put in.
He noticed a
similar determination on other faces, especially young Gallian's. Apart from
the Chalkin affair, Jamson had no need to fault his son's management of High
Reaches. Though maybe that bit about cannibalism could be whispered in Jamson's
presence. That would certainly alter his opinion about impeachment. Somehow
Thea was still 'ailing' and had persuaded her spouse to stay on in Ista for
Turn's End. That gave more opportunity for the Chalkin affair to die a natural
death.
Turn's End was
a holiday for everyone except for those involved in the ambitious 'Landing
Suite' debut at all the Weyrs and the major Holds. Clisser was run ragged with
rehearsals and last-minute assignments, and understudies for those with winter
colds. Then he had the extra burden of preparing for the precise calculations
needed to set up the fail-safe mechanism to predict a Pass. Torn between the
musical rehearsals and observing the installation of a permanent Thread-Fall
warning device, he opted for the latter. Of course, his role was supervisory,
as the more precise location had to be conducted by teams of astronomers,
engineers and Weyrleaders on the eastern rim of all six establishments. He,
Jemmy and Kalvi were to set the mechanism at Benden, the first Weyr to see the
phenomenon, then skedaddle on dragon back to each of the other five Weyrs to be
sure all went smoothly.
It was
imperative that the first installation, at Benden, had to be spot on in case
there might be a distortion at any other.
Though Clisser
doubted it, not with Kalvi fussing and fussing over the components. Clisser had
been over and over the requisite steps to pinpoint the rise of the Red Star.
Once that 'circular eye' was set on the Rim, they could install the pointer,
the finger. But the 'eye' had to be spot on! The teams had been in place for
the past week, with pre-dawn checks on the Red Planet's position at dawn. All
that was necessary now was a clear morning, and that seemed to be possible
across the continent which had enjoyed some bright clear, if wintry, skies.
Fine weather was critically important at Benden, for the other Weyrs could take
adjusted measurements from that reading if necessary.
Kalvi was still
fiddling with the design of what he was calling the Eye Rock, which would
bracket the Red Planet at dawn on Winter Solstice. His main problem was
adjusting the pointer... the position at a distance from the Eye itself at
which the viewer would stand to see the planet. The pointer had to accommodate
different physical heights. Old diagrams of Stonehenge and other prehistoric
rings had surfaced.
Actually
Bethany's students had found them after an intensive search of long-unused
documents. Fortunately for Clisser's peace, Sallisha had gone to Nerat for the
Turn's End celebration, ready to start her next year's teaching Contract. He
was spared any reminder from her of how important it was to keep such ancient
knowledge viable.
He had
rehearsed arguments, in case he had a letter from her, about the fact that, in
the crunch, someone had remembered.
He was quite
excited - if freezing - to be on Benden Weyr's Rim with the others, telescopes
set up, aimed in the appropriate direction while Kalvi and Jemmy fiddled with
their components. Kalvi had put up a cone for the pointer; the notion being
that a person resting their chin on the cone's tip would see the Red Planet
bracketed just as it cleared the horizon. They'd have to try it with folks of
various statures to be sure that the device worked, but technically, Clisser
thought it would. Kalvi was the shortest, he was tallest, M'shall was a
half-head shorter, and Jemmy between the Weyrleader and Kalvi. If all could see
the Red Planet in the Eye, the device would be proven.
Well, it would
really be proven in another two hundred and fifty years or so with the Third
Pass!
But this moment
was exciting. He slapped his body with his arms, trying to warm himself. His
feet, despite the extra lining, were frozen; he could barely feel his toes, and
his breath was so visible he worried that it might cloud his chance to see the
phenomenon.
"Here it
comes," said Kalvi, though Clisser could see nothing in the crepuscular
dawn light. Kalvi was looking at his instrument, not the sky.
A tip of red
appeared just over the bottom of the Eye a breath or two later. A redness that
seemed to pulsate. It wasn't a very large planet - from this distance, it
wouldn't be, Clisser thought, though they had the measurements of it from the
Yokohama observations. It was approximately the same size as Earth's old
sister, Venus. And about as hospitable.
Somehow,
Clisser thought - and told himself to breathe as he watched, the wanderer
managed to look baleful in its redness. "Hadn't one of the other Sol
satellites been called the red planet"?
"Oh, yes,
Mars. Suitable, too, since it had been named after a war god."
"And
equally a suitable colour for a planet that was about to wreak havoc on us. How
could such an avaricious organism develop on a planet that spent most of its
orbit too far away from Rubkat's warmth to generate any life form?" Of
course, he was aware that very odd Life forms had been found by the early space
explorers. Who had blundered into the Nathi, to name another vicious species?
But the reports
on this mycorrhizoid gave it no intelligence whatsoever. A menace without
malice. Clisser sighed. Well, that was some consolation: it didn't really mean
to eat everything in sight, people, animals, plants, trees; but that was all it
could do.
Which was more
than enough, Clissser thought grimly, remembering the visuals of recorded
incidents. That's another thing he ought to have done - a graphic record - even
a still picture would make vividly plain how devastating Thread could be. Iantine's
sketches done at the Bitran borders had impressed the Teacher immensely. Though
it was a shame to waste Iantine's talents on a copy job. Anyone could copy; few
could originate.
Meanwhile, the
red edge crept up over the Rim of Benden Weyr. "THAT'S IT!" Kalvi
cried. He was lying on his stomach, the iron circle in his hands. "I got
it. Cement it in place now. Quickly. You there at the Finger Rock. Eyeball the
phenomenon. All of you should see it bracketed by this circle." The
viewers had lined themselves up and each took a turn even as Kalvi raced back
to grab a look from this vantage point.
"Yup, that'll
do it. You got that solidly in place? Good," and the energetic engineer
turned to M'shall. "As you love your dragon, don't let anyone or anything
touch that iron rim. I've used a fast-drying cement, but even a fraction out of
alignment and we've lost it."
"No-one'll
be up here after we leave," M'shall promised, eyeing the metal circle
nervously. For all he knew that the ring was iron, it looked fragile sitting
there, the Red Planet slowly rising above it.
"But that's
going to be replaced, isn't it? With stone?"
"It is,
and don't worry about us messing up the alignment later. We won't," Kaivi
said, blithely confident, rubbing his hands together and grinning with success.
"Now, we've got some more dawns to meet."
"Yes,
surely, but take time for breakfast."
"Ha! No
time to pamper ourselves. But I was indeed grateful for the klah." Kalvi
was gathering up his equpment, including five more iron circles, and gesturing
to his crew to hurry up. "Not with five more stops to make this morning.
The things I talk myself into!" He looked around now in the semi-dark of
false dawn.
"Where's
our ride?"
"That way,"
M'shall said, pointing to the brown dragons and riders waiting around on the
Rim.
"Oh, good.
Thanks, M'shall" And rings clanging dully where they rode on his shoulder,
Kalvi gathered up his packs and half-ran, his crew trailing behind. Clisser
sighed and followed.
Well, he
thought, he'd be well inured to the cold of between.
They'd have an
hour and a half between Benden and Igen, but then only half an hour from Igen
to Ista to Telgar, where they'd have a little over an hour and time for
something hot to eat before going on to Fort. High Reaches was actually the
last Weyr to be done, which really didn't salve S'nan's pride all that much,
but sunrise came forty-five minutes later in the northernmost Weyr due to the
longitudinal difference. However, S'nan couldn't argue the point that Benden
had to have its equipment installed first since it was the most easterly.
Clisser had
heard the talk about S'nan's continued distress over Chalkin's impeachment. The
Fort Weyrleader was not the oldest of the six: G'don was, but no-one worried
about his competence to lead the Weyr. S'nan had always been inflexible,
literal, didactic, but that wouldn't necessarily signify poor leadership during
the Pass. Clisser sighed. That was a Weyr problem, not his. Thank goodness! He
had enough of them.
He'd catch some
rest when they finished at Fort Weyr so he'd be fresh for the final rehearsal
at the Hall. If Sheledon had altered the score again during his absence, he'd
take him to task. No-one would know what to play with all the changes.
Get this
performance over with and then refine the work. It was, Clisser felt, quite
possibly Sheledon's masterpiece.
"You're
riding with me, Teacher," a voice said. "Don't want you walking off
the Rim!"
Clisser shook
himself to attention and smiled up at the brown rider. "Yes, yes, of
course."
"Here's my
hand," and Clisser reached up to it.
"Oh, thank
you," he added to the dragon who had not only turned his head but
helpfully lifted his forearm to make an easier step up.
Then he was
astride the big dragon, settling himself, snapping on the safety strap.
"I'm
ready." Clisser did catch his breath though when the dragon seemed to just
fall off the Rim into the blackness of Benden's Bowl.
He grabbed at
the security of the safety strap and then almost cracked his chin on his chest
as the dragon's wings caught the air and he soared upward.
They were
facing east, and the malevolence of the Red Star was dimmed by the glow of
Rukbat rising, altering the rogue planet's aspect to one of almost negligible
visibility, almost anonymity, in the brightening sky.
Amazing!
thought Clisser. I must remember to jot that down.
But he knew he
never would. And Pernese literature was thus saved another diarist, he amended.
Clisser saw that the rider, too, had his eyes fastened on the magnificent
spectacle. He must savour this ride.
The dragon
veered northward, pivoting slowly on his left wing-tip. The dragons would soon
have more important journeys to make. Clisser did observe the majestic snow
capped mountains of the Great Northern Range, tinted delicate shades of orange
by the rising sun. What Iantine could make of such a scene! Then abruptly all
he could see was the black nothingness of between.
"What
happens if you wear your fingers out?" Leopol asked Iantine.
The artist hadn't
even been aware of the lad's presence but the comment - because Iantine was
sketching the scene of the dragonets so fast that his elbow was actually aching
- caused him to burst out laughing, even though he didn't pause for a moment.
"I don't
know. I've never heard of it happening, though, if that's any consolation."
"Not to
me, but for you," Leopol said, cocking his head in his characteristically
impudent fashion.
"I'll miss
you, you know," Iantine told him, grinning down at the sharp expression on
Leopol's face.
"I should
hope so, when I've been your hands, feet and mouth for months now," was
the irrepressible answer. "You could take me with you. I'd be useful,"
and Leopol's expression was earnest, his grey eyes clouded. "I know how
you like your paints mixed, your brushes cleaned, and even how to prepare wood
or canvas for portraits." His pathetic stance could have persuaded almost
anyone.
Iantine chuckled
and ruffled the boy's thick black hair. "And what would your father do?"
"Him? He's
winding himself up for Threadfall." A discreet question to Tisha had
produced the information that a bronze rider, C'lim, was the boy's father; the
mother had died shortly after Leopol's birth. But he, like every other child of
the Weyr. had become everyone's child, loved and disciplined as the need arose.
"He doesn't half pay attention to me any more."
Which was fair,
Iantine thought, since Leopol had become his shadow. "Tisha?"
"Her? She'll
find someone else to mother."
"Well, I
will ask, but I doubt you'd be allowed. The other riders think you'll Impress a
bronze when you're old enough."
Leopol tossed
off that future with a shrug. What he could do now was more important than what
might be three or four years in the future. "D'you have to go?"
"Yes, I
have to go. I'm in grave danger of overstaying my welcome here."
"No, you're
not," and Leopol looked significantly towards the lake where the weyrlings
were having their customary bath. "And you haven't drawn all the riders
yet."
"Be that
as it may, Leo, I'm due at Benden to do the Holders, and that's a commission I've
been owing since I started my training at Hall Domaize."
"When you
do those, will you come straight back? You haven't done Chalkin's face like he
really is, you know, and it isn't as if you were doing anyone else out of a
place to sleep." Leopol's face was completely contorted now by his dismay.
"Debera really wants you to stay, you know." Iantine shot him an
almost angry look.
"Leopol?"
he said warningly.
"Aw,"
and the boy screwed his boot toe into the dirt, everyone knows you fancy her,
and the girls say that she's gone on you. It's only Morath who's the problem.
And she doesn't have to be. Soon as she can fly, she'll have a weyr and you'll
have some privacy."
"Privacy?"
Iantine knew that Leopol was precocious but...
Leopol cocked
his head and had the grace not to grin.
"Weyrs're
like that. Everyone knows everyone else's secrets." Iantine hung amid
irritation to relief in the information about Debera and amusement that his
carefully hidden interest was so transparent.
He had never
thought about loving someone so much that their absence could cause physical
discomfort. He never thought he would spend sleepless hours reviewing even the
briefest of conversations; identify a certain voice in a crowded cavern; have
to rub out sketches of imagined meetings and poses which his fingers did of
their own accord.
He kept close
guard on his sketch-pads because there were far too many of Debera - and the
ever-present Morath. Morath liked him, too. He knew that because she'd told him
she did.
That, actually,
had been the first encouraging sign he'd had.
He had tried,
adroitly, to figure out how significant that might be, as far as Debera's
awareness of him was concerned. He'd ask while he was sketching a rider, as if
he was only politely enquiring about what was closest to his model's heart
anyway.
It appeared
that a dragon could talk to an yon she/he wished to.
They did so for
reasons of their own, which sometimes they did not discuss with their riders.
Or they did. None of the other weyrlings, even the greens with whom Iantine was
now quite familiar, spoke to him.
It was Morath
who counted.
Not that the
green dragon - who was the largest of that colour from that clutch - ever explained
herself. Nor did Iantine ask.
He merely
treasured the immense compliment of her conversation.
She did ask to
see his sketch-pad once. He noticed the phenomenon of the pad reflected in
every one of the many facets of her eyes.
They'd been
bluey-green at the time, their normal shade, and whirling slowly.
"Do you
see anything?"
Yes. Shapes. You put the shapes on the pad with the thing in your hand?
"I do."
How much could a dragon see with that kind of optical equipment? Still, Iantine
supposed it would be useful when Thread was falling from all directions. As the
dragon eye protruded out from the head, it obtained overhead images, too. Good
design. But then, dragons had been designed, though no-one nowadays knew who
could have managed the genetic engineering. It was one thing to breed animals
for specific traits, but to begin from the first cell to create a totally new
creature? Do you like this one of Debera oiling you?" He tapped his pencil
on the one he'd done that morning.
It looks like Debera. It looks like me? and there was plaintive surprise in
Morath's contralto voice. That was when Iantine realized that Morath sounded
very much like her rider.
But then, that
was only logical since they were inseparable.
Inseparable!
That's what bothered him most. He knew that his love for Debera would be
constant, but any love left over from Morath for him could scarcely match his
commitment.
Did it have to?
After all, he was totally committed to his work.
Could he fault
her for being equally single-minded? There was, however, a considerable
difference between loving a dragon and loving to paint. Or was there?
Maybe it was as
well, Iantine thought, tucking his pencil behind his ear and closing his pad,
that he was going to Benden after Turn's End. Maybe if Debera... and Morath
were out of sight, they might also go out of mind and his attachment would ease
off.
"You got
your Turn's End clothes ready? Need ironing, er, anything?" Leopol asked,
his expression wistful.
"You did'em
yesterday, and I haven't worn'em yet," he said, but he ruffled the boy's
thick hair again and, looping his arm over the thin shoulders, steered him to
the kitchen. Let's eat."
"Ah, there's
not much to eat," Leopol said in disgust. "Everyone's getting ready
for tonight."
"They've
been getting ready all week," Iantine said. "But there's bread and
cold meats set out."
"Huh!"
Iantine noticed that Leopol had no trouble making himself several sandwiches of
what was available, and had two cups of soup and two apples. He noted that he
had no trouble eating, either, though some of the smells emanating from the
ovens - and all were in use were more appetizing than lunch.
He intended to
enjoy himself this evening.
Then Leopol,
eyes wide with excitement, leaped from the table.
"Look,
look, the musicians are here!" Glancing outward, Iantine saw them
dismounting from half a dozen dragons. They were laughing and shouting as
instruments were carefully handed down from dragon backs and carisaks were
passed around. Tisha sailed out, her assistants with her, and shortly everyone
was in the Lower Cavern and being served a lunch considerably more complicated
than soup and sandwiches. Leopol was in the thick of it, too, the rascal, and
the recipient of a huge wedge of iced cake. Iantine selected a good spot
against the wall, sharpened his pencil with his knife and opened his pad. This
was a good scene to preserve. If he got them down on paper now, maybe he could
listen to the music this evening without itchy fingers.
As he worked,
he realized that Telgar had rated some of the best musicians, called back from
wherever their contracts had taken them, for Turn's End celebrations. He'd
finish in time for the concert, and that would be that for the day!
It wasn't, of
course. But then, he found it hard not to sketch exciting moments and scenes.
Especially as he didn't want to leave this pad anywhere that it could be
casually opened.
And he could
listen to the music just as well while drawing.
Sketching also
kept his hands where they should be and not itching to go round Debera's
shoulder, or hold her hand.
Sketching did
allow him some licence, for he could always apologize that he didn't realize
his leg was against hers, or that their shoulders were touching or that he was
bending his body close to hers. After all, he was so busy sketching, he wouldn't
be noticing externals.
If Debera had
found the contact unpleasant or annoying, she could have moved her leg away
from his, or moved about on the bench. But she didn't seem to mind him
overlapping her from time to time in the zeal to get this or that pose.
Truth was he
was totally conscious of her proximity, the floral fragrance that she used
which didn't quite hide the new smell of the lovely pale green dress she was
wearing. Green was her colour and she must know that: a gentle green, like new
leaves, which made her complexion glow. Angie had told him the colour of Debera's
Turn's End gown, so he'd bought a shirt of a much deeper green so that they'd
go together. He liked the way she'd made a coronet of her long hair, with pale
green ribbons laced in and dangling down her back. Even her slippers were
green. He wondered if there'd be dancing music, too, but there usually was at
Turn's End. Although maybe not, what with the 'Landing Suite' first. He bent to
ask her to reserve dances for him, but she shushed him.
"Listen,
too, Ian," she said in a soft whisper, gesturing to his pad. "The
words are as beautiful as the music." Iantine glanced forward again, only
now realizing that there were singers, too. Had he been that rapt in being next
to Debera without Morath?
I'm here. I listen, too and Morath's voice startled him, coming into his head so unexpectedly.
He gulped.
Would the dragon always be able to read his mind?
He asked the
question again, more loudly, in his own head.
There was no reply.
Because there was no reply? Or because there was none needed to such an obvious
question?
But Morath hadn't
sounded upset that he was luxuriating in Debera's proximity. She had sounded
pleased to be there and listening.
Dragons liked
music.
He glanced over
his shoulder to the Bowl and could see along the eastern wall the many pairs of
dragon eyes, like so many round blue-green lanterns up and down the wall of the
Weyr where dragons made part of the audience.
He began then,
obediently, to listen to the words, and found himself drawn in to the drama
unfolding, even if he'd known the story from childhood. The musicians called it
the 'Landing Suite' and this verse was about leaving the great colony ships for
the last time. A poignant moment, and the tenor voice rose in a grateful
farewell to them where they would orbit over Landing for ever, their corridors
empty, the bridge deserted, the bays echoing vaults. The tenor, with creditable
breath control, let his final note die away as if lost in the vast distance
between the ships and the planet.
A respectful
pause followed and then the ovation which his solo had indeed merited burst
forth. Quickly Iantine sketched him, taking his bows, before he stepped back
into the ensemble.
"Oh, good,
Ian. He was just marvellous," Debera said, craning her head to see what he
was doing. She kept right on clapping, her eyes shining. "He'll be
delighted you did him, too." Iantine doubted that, and managed a smile
that did not echo the stab of jealousy he felt because Debera's interest had
been distracted from him.
She likes you, Ian, said Morath as if from a great distance, though she was ranged with the
other still flightless dragonets on the Bowl floor.
Ian? he echoed
in surprise. Other riders had told him that, while dragons would talk to people
other than their own rider, they weren't so good at remembering human names.
Morath knows my name?
Why shouldn't I? I hear it often enough. And Morath sounded sort of tetchy.
Morath may
never know just how much that remark means to me, Iantine thought, taking in a
deep breath that swelled his chest out.
Now, if he
could just get her by herself alone. But she's never alone, now that she's
my rider.
Iantine stifled
a groan which he wanted neither dragon nor rider to hear and compressed his
thoughts as far down in his head as he could. Would it all be worth it? he
wondered. And tried to divorce himself from Debera for the rest of the concert.
He didn't pay
such close attention to the second and third parts of the 'Landing Suite',
which brought events up to the present. A cynical section of his mind noticed
that Chalkin's impeachment was not mentioned, but then it was a very recent
incident which the composer and lyricist would not have known about. He
wondered would it ever make history? Chalkin would love it. Which might well be
why no-one would include him. That'd be the final punishment anonymity.
Dinner was
announced at the conclusion of the Suite, and the big Lower Cavern was
efficiently reorganized for dining.
In the scurry
and fuss of setting up tables and chairs, he got separated from Debera. The
panic which that caused him made it extremely clear that he could not divorce
his emotions from the girl.
When they found
each other again, her hand went out to him as quickly as his to her, and they
remained clasped while they waited in line to collect their food.
Iantine and
Debera finally found seats at one of the long trestle tables where everyone was
discussing the music, the singers, the orchestration, how lucky they were to be
in a Weyr which got preferential treatment. There was, of course, a tradition
of music on Pern, brought by their ancestors and encouraged by not only the
Teaching Hall but also Weyr and Hold. Everyone was taught how to read music
from an early age and encouraged to learn to play at least one instrument, if
not two or three. It was a poor hold indeed that could not produce a guitar or
at least pipes and a drum to liven winter nights and special occasions.
The meal was
very good - though Iantine had to concentrate on tasting it. Most of his senses
were involved in sitting thigh to thigh with Debera. She was quite volatile,
talking to everyone, with a great many things to say about the various
performances and the melodic lines that she particularly liked. Her cheeks were
flushed and her eyes very bright. He'd never seen her so elated. But then, he
knew he was feeling high with an almost breathless anticipation of the dancing.
He'd have her
in his arms, then, even closer than they were now. He could barely wait.
But he had to,
for of course on First Day, ice-cream, the special and traditional sweet, was
available and no-one would want to miss that. It was a fruit flavour this year,
creamy, rich, tangy with lots of tiny fruit pieces, and he was torn between
eating slowly - which meant the confection might turn sloppy since the Lower
Cavern was warm indeed - or gulping it down firm and cold. He noticed that
Debera ate quickly, so he did the same.
As soon as the
diners finished, they dismantled the tables and pushed back the chairs so that
there'd be space for the dancing. The musicians, re-assembling in smaller units
so that the dance music would be continuous, were tuning up their instruments
again.
When all was
ready, K'vin led Zulaya - respendent in the red brocade dress of her portrait -
on to the floor for their traditional opening of the dance. Iantine caught
himself wanting to sketch the distinguished-looking couple, but he'd hidden his
pad in the pile of tables and had to content himself with storing the details
in his mind.
He'd never seen
Zulaya flirt so with K'vin and the Weyrleader was responding gallantly. He did
notice some riders talking among themselves, their eyes on the two Leaders, but
he couldn't hear what was said, and while the glances were speculative it wasn't
his business.
Next the wing
leaders handed their partners out on the floor for three turns before the wing
seconds joined them.
Then Tisha -
partnered by N'ran, the Weyr medic - whirled very gracefully in among the
dancers. The first dance ended, but now the floor was open to everyone. The
next number was a brisk two-step.
"Will you
dance with me, Debera?" Iantine asked, with a formal bow.
Eyes gleaming,
head held high and smiling as if her face would split apart, Debera responded
with a deep dip. "Why, I was hoping you'd ask, Iantine!"
"I get the
next one," Leopol cried, appearing unexpectedly beside them and looking up
at Debera, his eyes exceedingly bright.
"Did you
sneak some wine tonight?" Iantine asked, suspicious.
"Who'd
give me any?" Leopol replied morosely.
"No-one
would give you anything you couldn't take another way, Leo," Debera said. "But
I'll keep you a dance. Later on."
And she stepped
towards the floor, Iantine whisking her away from the boy as fast as he could.
"Even for
a Weyr lad, he's precocious," Debera said, and she held up her arms as she
moved into his.
"He is at
that," Iantine replied, but he didn't want to talk about Leopol at all as
he swung her lithe body among the dancers, and eased them away to the opposite
side of the floor from Leopol.
"He'll
follow, you know, until he gets his dance," she said, grinning up at him.
"We'll see
about that," and he tightened his arms possessively around her strong,
slender body.
Will I dance when I'm older? Iantine clearly heard the green dragon ask.
Startled, he
looked down at Debera and saw by the laughter in her eyes that the dragon had
spoken to them both.
"Dragons
don't dance," Debera said in her fond dragon tone
Iantine had
noticed that she had a special one for Morath.
"They
sing," Iantine said, wondering how he was ever going to eliminate Morath
from the conversation long enough to speak about them.
She'll listen to anything you say, Morath's voice, so much like Debera's, sounded in
his head.
Iantine grimaced,
wondering how under the sun he could manage any sort of a private conversation
with his beloved.
I won't listen then. Morath sounded contrite.
"How long
do you think you'll be at Benden, Ian?" Debera asked.
He wondered if
Morath had spoken to her, too, but decided against asking, though he didn't
want to discuss his departure at all.
Certainly not
with Debera, the reason he desperately wanted to stay at Telgar.
"Oh,"
he said as casually as he could, "I'd want to do my best for Lord Bridgely
and his Lady. They've been my sponsors, you see, and I owe them a lot."
"Do you
know them well?"
"What? Me?
No, my family's mountain holders."
"So were
mine."
"Were?"
Debera gave a
wry laugh. "Don't let's talk about families."
"I'd far
rather talk about us," he said, and then mentally kicked himself for such
a trite response.
Debera's face
clouded.
"Now what
did I say wrong?" He tightened his arms on her reassuringly. Her
expression was so woeful.
She's been upset about something Tisha told the weyrlings yesterday. I
know I said I wouldn't interfere, but sometimes it's needed.
"You didn't,"
Debera said at the same time so he wasn't sure who had said what, since the
voices were so alike.
"But
something is troubling you?" She didn't answer immediately, but her hands
tightened where they gripped him.
"C'mon,
now, Deb," and he tried to jolly her a bit. "I'll listen to anything
you have to say."
She gave him an
odd glance. "That's just it."
"What is?"
"You
wanting to talk to me, dance with only me and Ooooh," and suddenly Iantine
had a hunch. "Tisha gave all the riders that don't-do-anything-you'll-be-sorry-for
at Turn's End lecture?"
She gave him a
startled look, and he grinned back at her. "I've been read that one a time
or two myself, you know."
"But you
don't know," she said, "that it's different for dragon riders."
"For green
riders with very immature dragons."
Then she gave
him a horrified look as if she hadn't meant to be so candid.
"Oh!"
He pulled her closer to him, even when she resisted, and chuckled. All those
casual questions he'd asked dragon riders explained all that she didn't say.
"Green
dragons are. how do I put it, kindly? Eager, loving, willing, too friendly for
their own good."
She stared up
at him, a blush suffusing her cheeks, her eyes angry and her body stiffening
against the rhythm of the dance.
They were about
to pass an opening, one of the corridors that led back to the storage areas of
the Weyr. He whirled them in that direction despite her resistance, speaking in
a persuasively understanding tone.
"You're
the rider of a young green and she's much too young for any sexual stimulation.
But I don't think a kiss will do her any damage, and I've got to kiss you once
before I have to go to Benden." And he did so. The moment their lips
touched, although she tried to resist, the attraction that they each had for
the other made the contact electric. She could not have resisted responding -
even to preserve Morath's innocence.
Finally,
breathless, they separated, but not by more than enough centimetres to let air
into their lungs. Her body hung almost limply against his, and only because he
was leaning against the wall did he have the strength to support them both.
That's very nice, you know.
"Morath!"
Debera jerked her body upright, though her hands clenched tightly on his neck
and shoulder. "Morath dear, what have I done?"
"Not as
much to her as you have to me," Iantine said in a shaky voice. "She
doesn't sound upset or anything."
Debera pushed
away to stare up at him - he thought she had never looked so lovely. "You
heard Morath?"
"Hmmm, yes."
"You mean,
that wasn't the first time?" She was even more startled.
"Hmmm. She
knows my name, too," he said, plunging in with a bit of information that
he knew might really distress her, but now was the time to be candid.
Debera's eyes
widened even more and her face had paled in the glow light of the corridor. She
leaned weakly against him.
"Oh, what
do I do now?" He stroked her hair, relieved that she hadn't just stormed
off, leaving all his hopes in crumbs.
"I don't
think we upset Morath with that little kiss," he said softly.
"Little
kiss?" Her expression went blank. "I've never been kissed like that
before in my life." Iantine laughed. "Me neither. Even if you didn't
want to kiss me back." He hugged her, knowing that the critical moment had
passed. "I have to say this, Debera, I love you. I can't get you out of my
mind. Your face... and..." and he added tactfully because it was also
true, "Morath's decorate the margin of every sketch I draw. I'm going to
miss you like... like you'd miss Morath." She caught in her breath at even
the mention of such a possibility.
"Iantine,
what can I say to that? I'm a dragon rider. You know that Morath is always
first with me," she said gently, touching his face.
He nodded. "That's
as it should be," he said, although he heartily wished he could be her
sole and only concern.
"I'm glad
you do know that but I don't know what I feel about you, Ian, except that I did
like your kiss." Her eyes were tender and she glanced shyly away from him.
"I'm even glad you did kiss me. I've sort of wanted to know - - -"
she said with a ripple in her voice, but still shy.
"So I can
kiss you again?"
She put her
hand on his chest. "Not quite so fast, Iantine! Not quite so fast. For my
sake as well as Morath's. Because," and then she blurted out the next
sentence, "I know I'm going to miss you... almost... as much as I'd miss
Morath. I didn't know a rider could be so involved with another human.
"Not like
this. And," she increased her pressure on the hand that held them apart
because he wanted so to kiss her for that, "I can't be honestly sure if it's
not because Morath rather likes you, too, and is influencing me."
I am not, said Morath
firmly, almost indignantly.
"She
says..." Debera began as Iantine said, "I heard that."
They both laughed
and the sensual tension between them eased. He made quick use of the
opportunity to kiss her, lightly, to prove that he could and that he did
understand about Morath. He had also actually asked as many questions about
rider liaisons as discretion permitted.
What he'd
learned had been both reassuring and unsettling. There were more ramifications
to human affairs than he had ever previously suspected. Dragonrider-human ones
could get very complicated and the green dragons, being so highly-strung and
sexually oriented, were the most complex.
"I guess I'm
lucky she talks to me at all," Iantine said. "Look, love, I've said
what I've wanted to say. I've heard what Morath has to say, and we can leave it
there for now. I've got to go to Benden Hold and Morath has to... mature."
He gently tightened his arms around his beloved. "If I'm welcome to come
back... to the Weyr, I will return. Am I welcome?"
"Yes, you
are," Debera said as Morath also confirmed it.
"Well,
then," and he kissed her lightly, managing to break it off before the
emotion that could so easily start up again could fire, "let us dance, and
dance and dance. That should cause no problems, should it?"
"Of
course," the words were no sooner out of his mouth than he knew that
having her so close to him all evening was going to be a trial of his
self-control.
His lips
tingled as he led her back, her fingers trustingly twined into his. The dance
was ending as he put his arms around her, so they managed just one brief spin.
Since he now felt far more secure, he did let Leopol partner Debera for one
fast dance, or he'd never hear the last of it from the boy.
Other than that
surrender, he and Debera danced together all night, cementing the bond that had
begun: danced until the musicians called it a night.
He was going to
hate to be parted from her, more now because they did have an understanding -
of sorts - but there was no help for it.
He had the duty
to Benden Hold.
On the first
official day of the New Year, 258 AL, Clisser had a chance to review the four
days of Turn's End. Frantic at times, certainly hectic despite the most careful
plans and the wealth of experience, the main performances - the First Day 'Landing
Suite', and Second Day Teaching Songs and Ballads - had gone very well: far
better than he had anticipated given the scanty rehearsals available for some
of the performers. The tenor, for instance, had been a bit ragged in his big
solo; he really should have held that final note the full measure. Sheledon
glowered from the woodwind section: he'd've sung the part himself, but he hadn't
the voice for it.
But then, the
only solos which Sheledon wouldn't find fault with would be Sydra's, and she
never failed to give a splendid performance.
Bethany's flute
obbligatos had been remarkable, matching Sydra's voice to perfection.
Paulin had been
on his feet time after time, applauding the soloists and, at the finale,
surreptitiously brushing a tear from his eye. Even old S'nan looked pleased -
also fatuous, but on the whole Clisser was relieved at the reception. He hoped
the two performances had been popular elsewhere on the continent. A great deal
of work had been put into rehearsals by folks who had little spare time as it
was.
The Teaching
Songs and Ballads had been just as well received, with people going about
humming some of the tunes. Which was exactly what the composers had hoped for.
Fortunately, honours were even between Jemmy and Sheledon for catchy tunes. He
caught himself humming the 'Duty Song' chorus, which had gone particularly
well. He wouldn't have to deal with a laborious copying of the Charter once
youngsters learned those words off by heart. It certainly fitted the bill.
Copies of all
the new songs were being made by the teachers themselves, who would then
require their students to transcribe them, and that saved a lot of effort for
his College.
Really, a
printing press of some kind must be put high on the list of Kalvi's engineering
staff. They'd managed quite a few small motor-driven, solar panel gadgets; why
not a printing press? But a printing press required paper and the forests were
going to be vulnerable for the next fifty years no matter how assiduous the
Weyrs were in their protective umbrella.
One tangle of
Thread could destroy acres of trees in the time it took to get a ground crew to
the affected area.
He sighed. If
only the organics plastic machinery were still operating... but the one unit
housed in the Fort storage had rusted in the same flooding that had ruined so
much else.
"Ours not
to wonder what were fair in life," he quoted to himself, "which is a
saying I should have made up to remind me that we've got what we've got and
have to make do." He couldn't help but feel somewhat depressed, though.
There had been
some high moments these last few days, and it was hard to resume normal
routine. Not everyone on the teaching staff was back, though all should have
checked in by late evening. He'd hear then how the performances went elsewhere.
He'd have to wait to learn how the new curriculum was working. By springtime he'd
know what fine tuning would be needed. He could count on Sallisha for that, he
was sure.
By springtime,
Thread would fall and the easy pace they had all enjoyed would be a memory.
Ah, that was
what he had to do - he'd put it off long enough write up the roster for ground
crews drafted from students over fifteen and teachers. He'd promised that to
Lord Paulin and, what with everything else, never produced it. He pulled a
fresh sheet of paper from the drawer, then stopped, put it back and picked up a
sheet from the re-use pile. A clean side was all he needed. Mustn't waste, or
he'd want soon enough.
Lady Jane
herself led Iantine to his quarters, asking all the gracious questions a
hostess did: Where had he been for Turn's End? Had he enjoyed himself? Had he
had the opportunity to hear the splendid new music from the College? What
instrument did he play? What did he hear from his parents?
He answered as
well as he could, amazed at the difference between his reception here and the
one he'd had at Bitra. Lady Jane was a fluttery sort of woman, not at all what
he would have expected as the spouse of a man like Bridgely. She must be
extremely efficient under all that flutter, he thought, contrasting the grace,
order and appearance of the public rooms with those at Bitra, and seeing a vast
difference between the two.
No low-level
living for him here, either. Lady Jane led him on to the family's floor, urging
the two drudges who were carrying the canvases and sky broom wood panels to
mind their steps and not damage their burdens.
She opened the
door, presenting him with the key, and he was bemused as he followed her into a
large day room, at least ten times larger than the cubicle at Bitra, on the
outside of the Hold so that it had a wide, tall window facing northeast. It was
a gracious room, too, the stone walls washed a delicate greeny-white, the
furnishings well-polished wood, with a pleasing geometric pattern in greens and
beige on the coverings.
I do know that
artists prefer a north light, but this is the best we can do for you on that
score Benden's Lady fluttered her hands here and there. They were graceful,
small hands, with only the wide band of a spousal ring on the appropriate
finger. Another contrast to the Bitran tendency to many gaudy jewels.
"It's far
more than I expected, Lady Jane," he said as sincerely as he could.
"And I'm
sure it's far more than you had at Bitra Hold," she said with a
contemputous sniff. "Or so I've been told. You may be sure that Benden Hold
would never place an artist of your rank and ability with the drudges. Bitrans
may lay claim," and her tone expressed her doubt, "to having a proper
Bloodline, but they have never shown much couth!" She noticed him testing
the sturdiness of the easel. "That's from stores. It belonged to Lesnour.
D'you know his work?"
"Lesnour?"
"Indeed."
Iantine dropped
his hand from the smoothly waxed upright. Lesnour, who'd lived well past the
hundred mark, had designed and executed Benden Hold's murals and had been famed
for his use of colour.
He'd also
compiled a glossary of pigments available from indigenous materials, a volume
which Iantine had studied and which had certainly helped him at Bitra.
Lady Jane
pushed open the wooden door into the sleeping room, which was not large but
still generous in size. He could see the large bed, its four posts carved with
unusual leaves and flowers: probably taken from Earth's botany. She pointed at
the back to the third room of the suite: a private toilet and bath. And the
whole suite was warm. Benden had been constructed with all the same
conveniences that Fort Hold boasted.
"This is
much more than I need, Lady Jane," Iantine said, almost embarrassed as he
dropped his carisak to the floor of the day room.
"Nonsense!
We know at Benden what is due a man of your abilities. Space," and she
gave a graceful sweep of her hand about the room, "is so necessary to
compose the thoughts and to allow the mind to relax."
She did another
complicated arabesque with her hands and smiled up at him. He smiled back at
her, trying to act gracious rather than amused at her extravagant manner. "Now,
the evening meal will be served in the Great Hall at eight, and you'll dine at
the upper table," she said with a firm smile to forestall any protests.
Would you care to have someone put at your disposal to help with your
materials?"
"No, thank
you most kindly, Lady Jane, but I'm used to doing for myself." Maybe he
could have borrowed Leopol for a few weeks? There was certainly enough space
for the boy to be accommodated in with him.
So she left,
after he had once again expressed his profuse thanks for the courtesies.
He prowled
about the rooms, then washed his hands and face, learning that the water came
very hot out of the spigot.
The bath had
been carved out of the rock, deep enough for him to immerse himself completely
and sufficiently long to lie flat out in the water. Even the Weyr had not such
elegant conveniences.
He unpacked his
clothing so that the wrinkles would hang out of his good green shirt and began
setting up his workplace.
And then sat
down in one of the upholstered chairs, plunked his feet down on the footstool,
leaned back and sighed. He could get accustomed to this sort of living, so he
could! Except for the one lack - Debera.
He wondered briefly
if Lady Jane would flutter while she posed for him. And how would he pose her?
Somehow he must put in the flutter of her, but also her grace and charm.
He wondered
what instrument she played with those small hands. If only Debera weren't so
far away Iantine might not have been pleased to know that Debera was at that
very moment the subject of discussion between the Weyrleaders at Telgar.
"No,"
Zulaya was saying, shaking her head, she has now retrieved the relevant chart
from the storage cabinet and brought it to the table. K'vin hastily cleared a
space.
"Then look
along the Kahrainian coast where the Armada had a long stop for repairs."
That's all been gone over so often."
"And not
much retrieved. Anyway, it's not so much what we find but more that we went for
a look," Zulaya said with a droll grin.
"The
entire Weyr?"
"Well, the
fighting wings, certainly. Leave the training ones here, give them
responsibility... and see how they like it."
"J'dar had
better be in charge," K'vin said, glancing to see if she agreed.
She shrugged. "J'dar
or O'ney."
"No, J'dar."
Oddly enough, she gave him a pleased smile. He hadn't expected that, since she
had specifically named O'ney, one of the oldest bronze riders. He tried to
defer to her judgment whenever possible, but he'd noticed that O'ney tended to
be unnecessarily officious.
"Now, this
is as far as grubs had migrated on last winter's check," she said, running
her finger along Rubicon River.
"How're
the grubs supposed to get across that?" K'vin asked, tapping the contour
lines for the steep cliffs which lined the river, gradually tapering down above
the Sea of Azov.
"The Agric
guys say they'll either go around or be carried across the river as larvi in
the digestive tracts of wherries and some of those sport animals that were let
loose. They have been breeding, you know."
Zulaya was
teasing now, since she knew very well that Charanth had had to rescue him from
a very large, hungry orange and black striped feline. Charanth had been highly
insulted because the creature had actually then attacked him, a bronze dragon!
The incident had been a levelling one for both rider and dragon.
"Oh, and
don't I know it! I'll not be caught that way twice."
"It grew a
mighty fine hide," she said, her eyes dancing with challenge.
"Catch your
own, Zu. Now, let's see... should we check and see if any of the other Weyrs
want to come? Make this a joint exercise?"
"Why?"
she countered with a shrug. "The whole idea is to get our wings away for a
bit for something besides Fall readiness."
"Meranath,"
and she turned to her queen, who was lounging indolently on her couch, her head
turned in their direction and her eyes open, "would you be good enough to
spread the word that the Weyr's going off on exercise," and she grinned at
K'vin, "tomorrow, first light? That should startle a few."
"Undoubtedly,"
and glancing at Zulaya for permission, K'vin made a second request of Meranath.
"And ask J'dar and T'dam to step up here, please?"
The sun will be much warmer in the south, Meranath said, and we will all like that, K'vin.
"Glad you
approve," he told her, giving the gold queen a little bow. He was also
considerably gratified that she was using his name more. Could that mean that
Zulaya was thinking of him more often? He kept that question tight in his mind,
where even Charanth wouldn't hear it. Did she really approve of his leadership?
Zulaya never gave him any clues despite her courtesies to him in public; though
he certainly appreciated that much. He didn't seem any closer to a real
intimacy with her, and he wanted one badly. Would he ever figure out how to
achieve that? Could that be why she had suggested this excursion?
"How long
has it been since there was an update on the grubs?"
She shrugged. "That's
not the point. We need a diversion, and this makes a good one. Also, someone
should do it for the Agric records. And we'll probably have to go down during
Fall to see if the grubs really do what they're supposed to do."
"Do you
want to put us out of business?" he asked.
Zulaya shook
her head. "As long as Thread falls from Pernese skies, we won't be out of
business. Psychologically, it's imperative that we keep as much of the stuff as
possible off the surface of the planet. The grubs are just an extra added
precaution; not the total answer."
The two
Weyrleaders had forgotten to caution their dragons against mentioning the
destination, and it was all over the Weyr by dinner-time. They were besieged by
requests from weyrfolk to be taken along. Even Tisha was not shy about
requesting a lift.
"Some of
the bronzes would need to carry two passengers," K'vin said, doing some
quick calculations.
"The
weyrlings would have to stay," Zulaya told him, that necessity causing a
brief hitch to the euphoria. But she shrugged.
"We'll
make an occasion for T'dam to take them down once they are flighted, but they're
weyrbound this time."
"That
wouldn't be until after Thread has started," K'vin said, looking doubtful.
"Sure, we
know when it falls, north or south, and a day off for the auxiliaries is no big
thing. Plan it for a rainy day, here," Zulaya said, "and they won't
mind for the sun down south." So that issue was settled.
The entire Weyr
assembled, loading passengers and supplies for an outing that was now scheduled
for three days.
K'vin allowed
they would need that long to make a diligent survey of grub penetration. He
brought with him maps and writing material so he could make accurate records.
The morning had
its moment of humour: getting Tisha aboard brown Branuth had been a struggle,
involving not only Branuth's rider, T'lel (who laughed so hard he had hiccups),
but four other riders, the strongest and tallest.
Branuth, an
extremely quizzical expression on his long face, craned his head around to
watch and got a bad cramp in his neck muscles doing so. T'lel and Z'ran had to
massage him.
"Stop that
and get up here, T'lel," Tisha was yelling, her thick legs stuck out at
angles from her perch between the neck ridges. "I'll be split. And if I'm
split, you'll suffer. I never should have said I'd come. I should know better
than to leave my caverns for any reason whatsoever. This is very uncomfortable.
Stop that guffawing, T'lel. Stop it right now. It isn't funny where I'm
sitting. Get up here and let's go!" Getting Tisha aboard Branuth had taken
so much time that everyone else was in place and ready to go by the time T'lel
did manage to take his place in front of Tisha.
"Not only
am I being split, I'm also been bisected by these ridges. Did you sharpen them
on purpose, T'lel? No wonder riders are so skinny. They'd have to be. Don't
dragons grow ridges for large people? I should have had K'vin take me up.
Charanth is a much bigger dragon. Why couldn't you have put me up on your
bronze, K'vin?" Tisha shouted across the intervening space.
K'vin was
trying to preserve his dignity as Weyrleader by not laughing at the sight of
her, but he didn't dare look in her direction again. Instead he swivelled his
torso so he could scan everyone, pleased to see all eyes on him, rider,
passengers and dragon. He peered upwards to the rim where more dragons awaited
their departure, poised well clear of the newly positioned Eye and Finger
Rocks. Now he raised his arm.
Charrie, they
are to assume their wing positions in the air.
They know, Charnath
sounded petulant, for this was a frequent drill. K'vin slapped his neck
affectionately with one hand while he gave his upheld right arm the pump.
All the dragons
in the Bowl lifted, swirling up dust and grit from the Bowl floor with a
battery of wings, and then those on the Rim lifted, sorting themselves out in the
air to form their respective wings. Zulaya and the other queens rose above the
others.
And in
formation in jig time, too. Let's go, Charrie.
With a great
leap, Charanth was airborne. One wing-sweep and he was level with the wings,
another and he was in front of the queens.
Heads turned
upwards and Charanth dutifully angled himself earthward so that all could see
the Weyrleader.
Inform the Weyr
that our destination is the Sea of Azov.
I have!
K'vin pumped
his arm in the continuous gesture to signal, Go between! The entire Weyr
blinked out simultaneously.
Steady, he
cautioned Charanth, pleased with that disciplined departure. Now we go!!
Three seconds
he counted, and then the warm air above the brilliantly blue Sea of Azov was
like the smack of a hot towel in his face. Charanth rumbled in pleasure.
K'vin was far
more interested in discovering that the ranks of the dragons, wing by wing, had
arrived still in formation.
He grinned.
Please inform
the wing leaders to take their riders to their separate destinations.
One by one the
wings disappeared, with the exception of T'lel's which had picked the Sea area
for their excursion site.
The queens
started to glide towards the shore too, for they carried quite a few of the
supplies which Tisha would need to set up her hearths for the evening meal.
Let's wait and
let them all get safely to the surface, K'vin told Charanth, although part of
him wanted to see how Tisha managed to dismount Branuth. He was therefore
somewhat surprised, and at first a little concerned, when he saw a brown dragon
detach itself from the main wing and glide in a landing, on the water, just
short of the shore. Charanth had his head down and was observing the effort.
Branuth says she ordered it. She's swimming free of his back.
Charanth
sounded amused, too, and K'vin chuckled.
That was much
more dignified.
Branuth says it was easier on him, too, but he doesn t think he should
do the same back at Telgar.
Not with the
water that cold this time of year.
We can now land? Branuth says the sun is warm.
I thought you wanted to hunt. Later. NOW I want to get warm all over.
Charanth's
preference was almost unanimous as the dragons spread out on both the pebbled
beach and the shore line which was covered with a shrub that, when bruised by
large dragon bodies, gave off a rich pungent odour which was not at all
unpleasant.
Tisha had some
of the weyrfolk off finding kindling and stones to make camp-fires, and to see
what fruits might be ripe, and another group set to fish where boulders had
tumbled down in to the Sea like a breakwater.
"I'm going
for a long swim," Zulaya called out to him as he and Charanth glided to a
landing. She was already stripping off her jacket. "Meranath wants one,
too." She touched down long enough to strip off the rest of her clothing, which
she left in a neat pile on a boulder before making her way to the water.
"What
about the grubs?"
"They'll
wait," she yelled over her shoulder, wading out until the water was deep
enough for swimming.
We don t have to go find grubs now, do we? asked Charanth plaintively, and the
eyes he turned up to his rider whirled with a yellow anxiety.
No, we don't, K'vin
said. Grubs were an excuse to leave the Weyr for a few days.
He shucked his
clothes and dragon and rider joined the others in the warm Azovian waters.
It might not
have pleased K'vin to learn that almost every rider procrastinated over the
stated objective of the journey south: grubs were, in fact, probably the last
thing on anyone's mind. Sunning, swimming in the pleasant waters, hunting for
dragons and food-gathering for humans took precedence and space and time for
absolute privacy.
P'tero and M'leng
asked permission of V'last, their wing leader to take their dragons hunting.
"Remember
what K'vin told you about the sport creatures down here," V'last said,
serving the same warning to the other riders wishing to hunt their dragons.
P'tero and M'leng
nodded obediently but, as soon as they left the clearing where their wing had
landed on the Malay River, they laughed at the very notion that any creature
could be dangerous to their dragons.
"It's
really hot here," M'leng said, glancing back at the river.
"We'll be
hotter after we've hunted the dragons," said P'tero.
"But once
that's done, we really don't have to do another thing until dinner."
"So let's
not come back here until just before," M'leng suggested, laughing
recklessly. "Or we'll end up having to hunt or fish or gather."
"There're
enough weyrfolk with us to do all that - and enjoy," P'tero said, rather
condescendingly. "Let's get out of here." He made a running jump and
neatly vaulted onto Ormonth's blue back. M'leng simultaneously boarded green
Sith.
"What
shall we go after?" M'leng asked.
"Whatever
we see first," P'tero replied and pumped his arm to send them both aloft.
M'leng preferred him to be leader.
They didn't
have far to go to see grazing herds of runner beasts, smaller than the ones
they were accustomed to seeing in the Holds. But when they also saw other
dragons in the sky, gliding in to hunt, P'tero signalled M'leng to fly on in a
south-westerly direction. They hadn't gone very far before both found it
necessary to strip off their flying jackets, and then their shirts which were
winter weight anyhow. P'tero admired M'leng's compact body. The green rider was
small boned which had always delighted P'tero, with a surprisingly strong and
agile wiry frame. He was also winter-white, right to his collar. He looked so
funny, as if he had two different skins.
Then the blue
rider became fascinated with the tropical terrain around them, subtly different
from the north's warmer Holds. Nerat was rain forests and vast tracks of almost
impenetrable jungle except along the western side, whereas Ista was sharp hills
and deep valleys, also densely vegetated.
But here a vast
grassland, similar in some respects to the plains of Keroon, spread out in all
directions, dotted by up thrusts of bare yellow rock, occasional copses of
angular trees with fronds spilling from the crests, and large, wide branched
trees like islands. The dragons' flight over some of these caused flocks of
wherries and other avian forms to debouch in frantic escape. Can I eat them?
Ormonth enquired of his rider, speeding up in case he was allowed to give
chase.
What? Those
tough mouthffils? P'tero asked scornfully.
Then he cupped
his hands and shouted at M'leng: "Ormonth's hungry enough to eat wherries!"
"Sith
wanted to, as well. We'd better feed them," M'leng yelled back. "Over
there!" and he pointed to one of the rock piles. One of the spreading
trees had grown right up against the pile, shading the long incline to the top.
P'tero thought
the formation looked like the prow of a ship, with midships plunging into the
sea of ground. And the tree a muchly misplaced mast.
M'leng nodded
vigorously in approval and pumped his arm, nudging Sith into a wide curve so
that they came up to the prow to land. A fine breeze blew against them from the
south, cooling the perspiration on their bare torsos.
Immediately
they landed, the two young men stripped off their heavy flight pants and boots.
They had to put their socks back on, for the rock was far too hot for bare
feet.
M'leng, who had
good distance vision, covered his eyes with one hand, peering to the west where
a long dark line seemed to be moving.
"Oh, good,
herd beasts." He hauled Sith's head round and then pushed it in the right
direction. "See? You can eat those. Much better than wherries. Off you go,
now!" And he gave Sith a thump of dismissal.
"Follow
Sith, Ormonth," and P'tero shoved the blue's head to the right. Hunt with
her and you can't get into any trouble that way.
"We'll
watch from here." Ormonth shifted weight from one diagonal to the other,
his whirling eyes with a trace of anxious yellow.
"What's
the matter with you?" P'tero demanded, wanting both dragons to be away so
that he and M'leng could have some real privacy.
And if the pair
were busy enough hunting and eating, they'd pay no attention at all to what
their riders were doing.
Smell something!
"M'leng,
does Sith smell anything?" P'tero was annoyed, but you didn't ignore your
dragon.
"Different
smells down here, that's all." M'leng shrugged, his eager expression
indicating that he wanted the dragons away as much as P'tero did.
"I'll keep
my eyes open," P'tero assured Ormonth and slapped him peremptorily to be
on his way.
The two launched
upwards at the same moment and P'tero watched with some pride in the blue's
elegant flight attitude as he made height before he would glide down towards
his prey.
M'leng slipped
in under P'tero's arm.
"Oooh,
your hide is hot. We'd best be careful not to burn in this sun."
"We'll be
all right if we move a lot."
"And we
will, won't we?" They enjoyed each other's company so much that neither
was aware when the breeze altered to the west. It still cooled their bare
bodies, drying the sweat they had generated. They weren't even aware of much
until two things happened at the same instant: Ormonth's angry scream
reverberated in P'tero's skull, and he was rammed down hard against M'leng so
that he cracked his chin on the rock as sharp things tore into his buttocks.
ORMONTH he
shrieked mentally and vocally.
M'leng was limp
under P'tero as he writhed in agony from whatever was attacking him.
"HELP ME!"
he howled, struggling to turn and see that was trying to eat him!
A dark shadow,
and the air pressure above him seemed compressed: a most hideous roar sent a
carrion stink and hot breath across his bare back! The talons were ripped from
his flesh, causing him to shriek again. Something heavy and furry was being
hauled across his tortured legs and away! He caught a glimpse of green hide and
then blue...
And then
something large and tawny that seemed to come from nowhere. A blue tail curled
protectingly around him. Above his head he heard Ormonth roaring, which turned
to shrieks of pain and anger, but mostly anger. He was mentally assailed by
vivid images and emotions of revenge that were totally alien to a dragon mind.
As waves of
almost unendurable agony gripped him, he realized that Ormonth and Sith were
rending whatever had attacked him into shreds; showering blood and gobbets of
hot flesh all over him. Then he realized that he was lying on top of M'leng,
who was suddenly being pulled away. To his horrified eyes, he saw a great brown
paw, dirty big yellow claws unsheathing and curling into his weyrmate's back,
blood welling up. Despite the pain in his legs and back, he lurched across M'leng
and beat at the paw, struggling to lift the claws out of his lover's body.
More noise,
more draconic roars, and suddenly there was space above him, letting in fresh
air and the sight of other dragons. Two were attacking the tawny lean creatures
that were swarming up the rock out-thrust. The dragons hauled them backwards by
their tails or hind quarters while the creatures writhed and roared and spat
defiance, turning to attack the dragons. One had curled itself around a brown's
forearm, slashing out at a dragon face.
"M'leng, M'leng,
answer me!" P'tero cried, turning his lover's face towards him, slapping
his cheeks. Booted feet stopped by M'leng's head.
"Oh help
us, help us!" he pleaded, clutching at the boots.
"Help me!
I'm dying!" The pain in his legs was so awful.
"Who's got
the fellis? Where's the numb weed?"
As P'tero felt
himself slipping into oblivion, he wondered how under the sun Zulaya had got
here, and if he was dying.
P'tero didn't
die, although for some days he wished he had.
The shame of
being attacked, of endangering M'leng, of being responsible for the injury of
nine dragons - when K'vin had particularly warned everyone to be careful - was
almost more than he could bear. M'leng might say that P'tero had saved his life
- although he had to have his chest wound stitched but P'tero knew that was
incidental in the sequence of the attack. Both Sith and Ormonth had suffered
from the fangs and claws of the attacking felines, for the creatures had not
been easily quelled. Meranath nursed a bite on her left forearm and a slash on
her cheek. P'tero hadn't yet been able to look Zulaya in the eye. V'last's
Collith's worst injuries were his forearm, gashed to the bone by the powerful
hind legs of the female attacking him. The dragon-lion battle had been fierce
while it lasted, for the lions had no fear of the dragons and the entire pride
of some fourteen adult beasts had joined battle with them.
Meranath had
reacted instantly to Ormonth's shriek - in fact, so quickly that she actually
left Zulaya behind. The Weyrwoman had been astonished: dragons simply didn't do
that. Though later, Leopol told P'tero, she had laughed about it - since she'd
been swimming and would not have appreciated being hauled dripping wet to
companion her dragon.
She'd followed,
quickly enough, with V'last, K'vin and others who answered the mayday call.
"She was
some put out, too," Leopol went on, relishing the telling, "because
the dragons made a mess of good lion fur well, what they didn't eat."
"The
dragons ate the lions?" P'tero gasped.
"Sure, why
not?" Leopol shrugged, grinning. "The entire pride attacked the
dragons. But they let the cubs go, you know, though some folks thought they
ought to get rid of all they could find. V'last said Collith said they were
quite tasty, if a bit tough to chew. Waste not, want not. But Zulaya really
would have liked a lion fur for her bed."
P'tero
shuddered. He never wanted anything to do with lions ever again.
"You
should a seen yourself brought in, P'tero," Leopol added, gesturing to the
temporary quarters which had been set up to tend the badly injured riders. "Charanth
himself carried you back in his arms."
"He did?"
P'tero's chagrin reached a new depth.
"And O'ney's
bronze Queth brought M'leng in. Your wing helped Ormonth and Sith back.
Actually, they came in sort of piggy-back on Gorianth and Spelth. They were
pretty shaken, you know."
P'tero had
heard echoes of that journey from Ormonth who, bless his heart, had never once
criticized his rider: another source of infinite distress to P'tero. The blue
had been intensely grateful to his weyrmates for their assistance, as he couldn't
leave his rider out of his sight. It had been all the other dragons could do -
although Leopol did not relate this - to reassure Ormonth and Sith that neither
of their riders would die.
The Weyr had
set up a hasty camp to tend the injured for some, like P'tero and Collith,
couldn't risk being taken between until their wounds had scabbed over. K'vin
had sent to Fort for Corey to stitch the worst injuries. Maranis, the Weyr
medic, was more than competent for the dragons' wounds, but he needed
reassurance on his treatment of the two injured riders. Messengers had gone
back to Telgar Weyr to reassure those whose dragons had reported the accident
and to bring back more equipment for an extended stay.
In their
innocence, the two young riders had chosen a site just above the cave home of a
pride of lions. P'tero had never even heard of lions. Evidently he could thank
Tubberman for their existence, for they'd broken out of Calusa and bred quite
handily in the wild.
"They
were," Leopol told him with great relish, "some of the sport beasts
that Tubberman had been experimenting with. They had got loose, after killing
Tubberman."
This was not
much consolation to P'tero while he lay on his stomach to let the deep fang and
claw-marks heal.
He worried
endlessly that M'leng would no longer love him, with such a scarred and imperfect
body. M'leng, however, seemed to dwell so on P'tero's heroism in protecting him
with his own body that the blue rider decided not to mention the fact that it
had been entirely involuntary. M'leng had been unconscious from the moment of
attack, and had a great lump and a cut on the back of his head as well as the
chest wound.
Zulaya had
arrived to see P'tero trying to remove the claws from M'leng's back, so there
was little the blue rider could say to contradict the Weyrwoman's version.
Tisha, coming
to give him fellis early one morning, found him in tears, positive that he had
lost M'leng with such a marred body.
"Nonsense,
my lad," Tisha had said, soothing back his sweaty hair as she held the
straw for his fellis juice to his lips. "He will only see what you endured
for his sake, to save him."
"And those
scars will heal quite nicely, thanks to Corey's neat stitching." The
reference to the skill of the Head Medic almost reduced him to tears again. He'd
caused so much fuss, he said.
"Indeed
you have, but you've livened things up considerably, young man, and taught
everyone some valuable lessons."
"I have?"
P'tero would just as soon not have done.
"For one,
dragons think they're invulnerable... and they aren't. A very good lesson to
take into Fall with them, I assure you. Cool some of the hot-heads, so certain
that it's just a matter of breathing fire in the right direction.
"For
another, the southern continent has developed its own hazards.
"Did the
Weyr ever find out about the grubs?" P'tero asked, suddenly recalling the
reason for the excursion.
Tisha burst out
laughing, then stifled it though P'tero's tent was a distance from any others. "There,
lad, you've a good head as well as a brave heart. Yes, they completed the
survey faster'n any other's ever been done." P'tero learned later that the
grubs had infested yet a few more kilometres westward and southward towards the
Great Barrier Range in an uneven wave of expansion. Their progress into the
sandy scrub lands east of Landing had slowed to a few metres but the
agricultural experts were not particularly concerned; they were more eager to
have the rich grass and forest lands preserved.
"So the
trip hasn't been a waste?" P'tero asked, relaxing as he felt the fellis
spreading out.
Tisha gave him
more maternal pats, settling the furs and making sure nothing was binding
across his bottom and legs.
"By no
means, lovey. Now you go back to sleep..."
As if he could
prevent that, P'tero thought as the fellis took over and blotted out conscious
thought as well as the pain.
It was three
weeks before P'tero's wounds had healed sufficiently for the trip back. The
makeshift infirmary had more patients since there were other hazards besides
large, hungry and territorially-minded felines in the southern continent: the
heat, unwary exposure to too much sun, and a variety of other minor injuries.
Leopol got a thorn in his foot which had festered, so that he joined P'tero in
the infirmary shelter until the poison drained.
Tisha and one
of the weyrfolk came down with a fever that had Maranis sending back to Fort
for a medic more qualified than he in such matters. The woman recovered in a
few days but Tisha had a much harder time of it, sweating kilos off her big
frame, to leave her so enervated Maranis was desperately worried about her. K'vin
sent to Ista to beg a ship to transport her back north, since he could not
subject her to trying to climb aboard a dragon.
Her illness
depressed everyone.
"You don't
really know how important someone is," Zulaya said, having come down to
reassure herself on the state of the convalescents, "until they're
suddenly... not there!" Her remark quite sank P'tero's spirits. And Tisha
was not there to jolly him out of his depression. But M'leng was, and appeared
in the shelter.
"How dare
you be so self-centred?" the green rider said in a taut, outraged tone of
voice.
"Huh?"
"Tisha's
illness is not your fault. Leopol wasn't wearing shoes when he was told to, and
so his infected foot also isn't your fault. In fact, it isn't even your fault
that we picked that rock out of all the ones we could have picked. It was bad
luck, but nothing more, and I don't want to have Ormonth upsetting Sith any
more. D'you hear me?" P'tero burst into tears. Just as he'd thought: M'leng
didn't love him any more.
Then M'leng's
gentle arms went around him, and he was pulled to M'leng's lightly bandaged
back and comforted with many caresses and kisses.
"Don't be
such a stupid idiot, you stupid idiot! How could I not love you?"
Later, P'tero
wondered how he could ever have doubted M'leng.
When the
convalescents did return to Telgar Weyr, they found Tisha once more in charge
of the Lower Caverns. If her clothes were still loose on her frame, she was
tanned from the sea voyage back from the mouth of the Rubicon and looked
completely recovered.
Some of the
green and blue riders in the wing had freshened up both P'tero's and M'leng's
weyrs, with paint and new fabrics. The worn pillows had been replaced with
plump ones.
"Because
Tisha said you'd need to sit real soft for a while longer," and Z'gal
sniggered into his hand. "Lady Salda let us have feathers from the Turn's
End birds." Then Z'gal's lover, T'sen, brought an object from behind his
back. P'tero stared at it, puzzled. It seemed to be a pad with very long
thongs.
"Ah, what
is it?" Z'gal went into a laughing fit which annoyed T'sen, who scowled
and kept pushing it to P'tero.
To sit on, of
course. It'll fit between neck ridges. We measured.
Belatedly, but
as effusively as he could, P'tero thanked T'sen for such a thoughtful gift. It
wasn't so much his bottom that needed padding, but the muscles in the buttocks
and down his legs that needed strengthening and massage to get them back in
full working order. Of course, M'leng had been assiduous in the massage
sessions, but P'tero was now concerned that he'd be fit for fighting when
Threadfall began.
M'leng had been
wounded in a much better site; he wouldn't miss a day's fighting.
There was wine,
biscuits and cheese for a small in-weyr party.
M'leng capped
the return celebrations by presenting P'tero with a flat, wrapped parcel.
M'leng's eyes
were shining in anticipation as P'tero untied the string, wondering what on
earth this could be.
"Iantine's
back, you know," M'leng said, breathlessly watching every movement of P'tero's
hands.
The other riders
were equally excited and P'tero felt a spurt of petulance that they all knew
what this was and were dying to see his reaction.
Naturally, the
picture was face down when he finished unwrapping.
P'tero was
stunned silent when he turned it over and his eyes nearly bugged out of his
head at the scene depicted.
"But...
but... Iantine wasn't even there!"
"He's so
good, isn't he?" Z'gal said. "Did he get it all right? M'leng
described it over and over."
P'tero didn't
quite know what to say - he was so bewildered.
So much of it
was what he would have given his right arm to have actually happened. The lion
was clawing his backside, M'leng was sprawled under him, and there were more
lions climbing up the rock, their vicious intent vivid in their posture, their open
mouths showing fangs longer than a dragon's.
P'tero was
posed in an obvious act of defending his lover, his head turned, one arm
upraised in a fist aimed at the attacking lion's head. But that wasn't the
worst of the inaccuracies: both riders were fully clothed.
"P'tero?"
M'leng's voice was quite anxious.
The blue rider
swallowed. "I don't know what to say!"
Where am I? Ormonth wanted
to know, evidently viewing it through his rider's eyes as a dragon sometimes
could.
"There!"
and P'tero pointed to the dragons high up in the sky, wings straight up in a
landing configuration, claws unsheathed, ready to grab the attacker, eyes a mad
whirl of red and orange.
"Of
course, I was unconscious," M'leng was saying, "but that's what
Ormonth and Sith would have been doing. Wasn't it?" And he jabbed P'tero
warningly.
"Exactly,"
P'tero said hurriedly. And it probably was, although he hadn't seen it since he'd
been looking in the other direction.
"Everything
happened so fast it's almost eerie how Iantine has got it all down in one
scene!" The amazement and respect in his voice was not the least bit
feigned.
"Now,"
and M'leng pointed to the wall, "we've even got a hook for you to hang it
on." "Wouldn't you rather have it?" P'tero suggested hopefully.
"I've a
copy of my own. Iantine did two, one for each of us," M'leng said, beaming
proudly at his lover.
So P'tero had
to hang the wretched reminder of the worst day of his life on his own wall,
just where he couldn't miss it every morning of his life when he woke up.
"You'll
never know how much this means to me," he said and that, too, was quite
truthful.
No-one thought
it the least bit odd that he got very, very drunk on wine that night.
Lana'th comes,
Charanth told his rider.
"So
Meranath tells me," Zulaya said before K'vin could speak. "He wants
to know all about our trip south."
"I thought
he'd given up on that notion to practice on the first Falls in the South,"
K'vin said. He tried to sound diffident.
Then Zulaya put
a finger across her lips and pointed to the sleeping Meranath, a signal to K'vin
to guard his thoughts to Charanth outside on the ledge. He nodded
understanding.
"You don't
fool me, Kev," and then she waggled her finger at him. "You and B'nurrin
would give your eye-teeth to be in on the first real Fall - even if it does
take place in the South where nothing could be hurt. Or, for that matter,
saved."
"The grubs
haven't spread across the entire southern continent, you know."
"That has
nothing to do with seeing Thread for the first time in two hundred years."
He answered her
droll smile with an abashed grin.
"We don't
need to have the dragons stoked up or anything," he said.
"Yes, but
do you really want to have S'nan reproaching you for the rest of your career?
That is, if you have one as a Weyrleader with this sort of antic in mind."
K'vin gave her
a long look. "And don't tell me you like the fact that Sarrai will be
leading a queen's wing in Falls before you will."
Zulaya rocked
back in her chair just enough for K'vin to realize he had made a palpable hit.
She was honest enough to grin back.
"We don't
even know that's what's on B'nurrin's mind," she said.
That's exactly
what was, however, even after both Zulaya and K'vin enumerated the problems
they'd had on that ill-favoured excursion to the southern continent. However,
almost the first thing B'nurrin did was a repetition of Zulaya's signal to
shield their thoughts from their dragons.
"In the
first place, we wouldn't be landing anywhere. And I don't mean for whole wings
to go, Kev," B'nurrin said, "not like it makes sense to do with the
first actual Falls we do get - wherever that actually is..."
"And you're
hoping S'nan doesn't get first go," Zulaya said with a malicious grin.
"Too right
on that," B'nurrin agreed in a sour tone. He really gets up my nose, you
know. I don't see any harm in having a look. I mean..." He paused,
steeling himself a moment and staring straight into K'vin's eyes, "I'll be
frank.
"I'm
scared I'll be needing clean pants half a dozen times the first Fall I have to
lead.
"I've
wondered about that myself," K'vin admitted drolly.
Out of the
corner of his eye, he was rather surprised to notice a fleeting expression of
approval on Zulaya's face. "Surely B'ner had never mentioned that even as
a remote possibility"?
"So, I
figure, if I get a good look at it before I have to act brave and unconcerned -
- -"
"Anyone
who isn't concerned about Thread's a damn fool," Zulaya put in.
"Agreed."
B'nurrin nodded at her, grinning. "So, will you join me?"
"Because
if two of us go, neither of us will be as much to blame?" K'vin asked, one
eye on Zulaya's face.
B'nurrin
scratched his jaw. "Yes, I guess that's the size of it."
"We're the
first you've asked?"
B'nurrin gave a snort. "Well, I
certainly wouldn't suggest it again to S'nan after the way he's clapped my ears
back twice now. I figured you were more likely to than D'miel, though, you
know, I think M'shall might come. If the weather's wrong at Fort and High
Reaches, Benden's might be the first actual Fall we meet."
"M'shall
might just be amenable at that," Zulaya said, "though he's the last
one of the whole lot of you to doubt his abilities."
"That's
true enough," said B'nurrin, "then his enthusiasm got the better of
him. But look at it this way, even if old S'nan gets to fight this Pass's first
Fall over Fort, we'll have been to one before him, so to speak." The Igen
Weyrleader grinned with such boyish delight in the scheme that K'vin had to
chuckle.
"How long
is there between Southern's first and ours?" he asked.
He was
astonished to see that Zulaya was already unrolling Telgar Weyr's Thread chart
onto the table.
"Roughly
two weeks," she said.
"So we
could have gone and seen and not jeopardized the readiness of our own Weyrs,"
B'nurrin said, adding one more argument in favour of his idea.
"The first
possible Fall over Fort is number seven. Number four is over the Landing Site,"
Zulaya went on, tapping her finger on the various Thread corridors. "Five's
no good, but six starts offshore of the mouth of Paradise River, not far from
where we just were."
"What about
the first three?" B'nurrin asked, craning his neck to see. "Oh, not
really as good for good coordinates, are they?"
Then he looked
up in a direct challenge at K'vin. "Will you join me?"
"I'd like
to," K'vin said decisively, pointedly not looking in Zulaya's direction.
"I think I
would, too," she said, surprising both men. When they regarded her in
amazement, "Well, queens' wings fly a lot lower into danger than the rest
of the Weyr does. Makes it quicker for me to change my pants, but that doesn't
mean I want to have to." Then, when they grinned with relief at her, "So,
does Shanna want to come, too?"
Grinning even
more broadly, B'nurrin said, "Only if you were going."
"At least
one of you at Igen Weyr has some sense," said Zulaya. "Let's just sit
on the idea for a few days. Just to be sure."
"Who will
know, if we don't mention it?" B'nurrin asked, swivelling around to
pointedly regard a sleeping Meranath.
Paulin took
Jamson with him to Bitra Hold. The older Lord Holder was still furious with his
son for voting High Reaches Hold in the impeachment. But he had been unable to
fault his son's management during his two-month convalescence. This had indeed
restored Jamson to vigorous health, if not tolerance.
The change in
Bitra was obvious from the moment Magrith dropped to the courtyard and Vergerin
hurried down the steps to greet his guests.
He had been
alerted.
S'nan had
insisted on being allowed to convey the two Lords Holder for he had been as
stunned by the impeachment as Jamson.
"My word!"
the Fort Weyrleader said, staring about him.
Magrith was
staring too, and Paulin had to suppress a grin since the dragon was looking in
one direction, his rider in the other.
The courtyard
was neat and the recent snow swept from the paving which showed fresh cement
grouting. The road, in either direction, was no longer bordered by straggling
bushes and weed trees. The row of cot holds sported fresh roof slates, repaired
chimneys and painted metal shutters, all obviously in good working order.
Although some of the upper windows were already shuttered tight, the faade was
no longer festooned with dead vine branches. Sunlight glinted off solar panels
that had been cleaned and repaired.
Piled under a
newly built shed were HNO3 tanks, racked for easy usage, with the hoses and nozzles
hung properly on pegs. Kalvi had told Paulin that he'd been asked to deliver
the Bitran consignment within a week of Vergerin taking Hold. And the following
week he had sent his best teachers to instruct in their use and maintenance.
Vergerin wore a
good tunic over his trousers, but they were made of stout material and he had
obviously been working before his guests arrived. He greeted Paulin affably and
responded courteously to the introduction to Jamson, whose response was frosty.
"You've
done a lot since you took over, Vergerin," Paulin said, giving the man the
encouragement of his public support. "I wouldn't have believed it
possible, frankly."
"Well,"
and Vergerin grinned in the most charming way, "I found Chalkin's hoard,
so I've been able to hire in craftsmen."
"Even the
nearest holders aren't accustomed to me yet and timid?"
"Scared,
more likely," said Paulin dryly.
"That,
too, I'm sure, but I've done what I can to supply them with materials to make
their own repairs. The Hold was in an appalling state, you know."
Jamson grunted,
but his eyes widened as he saw the quiet order and cleanliness of the first
reception room. S'nan made approving noises deep in his throat and even ran a
finger across the wide table with its attractive arrangement of winter berries
and leaves. A drudge, in livery so new the creases hadn't been lost, was
hurrying across the hall with a heavy tray.
"My office
is quite comfortable," and Vergerin gestured for them to enter.
Paulin noticed
that the heavy wooden door gleamed with oil and the brass door plates were
polished to a high gloss.
The interior
had been totally replaced, with work-tops, tidy shelving and bookcases. A scale
map of Bitra Hold was nailed up on the interior wooden wall; beneath that was
the northern continent and, oddly enough, the Steng Valley. Did Vergerin plan
to reopen the mines there? A fire burned on the hearth, three upholstered
chairs cosily arranged, while a low table evidently awaited the tray. Polished
metal vases on the deep window-ledge held arrangements of bright orange berries
and evergreen boughs: altogether a different room under Vergerin's management.
"There's
klah, an excellent broth which I do recommend, and wine, mulled or room
temperature," Vergerin said, gesturing for his three guests to take the
comfortable chairs.
"You've a
new cook as well, Vergerin?" Paulin asked, and pointed to the steaming
pitcher when Vergerin grinned." I'll sample the broth, then." Jamson
didn't mind if he did, too, but S'nan wanted the klah.
"You
remember the back staircase, Paulin?" Vergerin asked, taking the broth as
well and pulling up a straight chair for himself.
"I do. Was
that where the marks were hidden?"
"Yes, in
one of the steps." Vergerin chuckled. "Chalkin must have forgotten
that I knew about that hidey-hole, too. It's been a life-saver, both to return
unnecessary tithings and to buy in supplies. One thing Chalkin did do correctly
was keep records. I knew exactly how much he had extorted from his people."
Jamson cleared his throat testily.
"Well, he
did, Lord Jamson," Vergerin said without cavil. "They hadn't even
enough in stores to get by on this winter, let alone have reserves for Fall. I'm
still unloading what we couldn't possibly use from what Chalkin had amassed."
Vergerin gave a mirthless laugh.
"Chalkin
would have weathered all fifty years of the Pass from what he had on hand...
but none of his people would have lasted the first year. Let alone have the
materials to safeguard what they could plant out. Bitra being established after
the First Fall, there were no hydroponics sheds although the tanks are stored
below." Jamson gave another snort.
"And the
gaming"?
"Have you
curtailed that?"
"Both here
and elsewhere," Vergerin said, flushing a little. "I haven't so much
as touched dice or card since that game with Chalkin."
"What
about his games men?"
Vergerin's
smile was grim. "They had the choice of signing new contracts with me -
for I will not honour the old ones or leaving. Not many left!"
S'nan barked
out a cackle of a laugh. "Not many would, considering the hazards of being
holdless during a Pass. You have done well, Vergerin." He nodded in
emphasis.
"You've
had a second chance, Vergerin," Jamson said, waggling his finger, "so
see that you continue to profit by such good fortune." He had finished the
broth and now stood. "We will go on a quick survey of the holds, if you
please."
"Of
course," and Vergerin rose hastily, pushing back his chair. "By
horse."
"No, no."
Jamson dismissed that. "You've no need to accompany us. Better if you don't."
"Now, Jamson," Paulin began, for it was discourteous of the High
Reaches Holder even to suggest Vergerin stay behind.
"Certainly,
as you wish." Vergerin motioned them to pause at the map and indicated
directions. "We've managed to complete all the necesssary repairs on the
holds adjacent to or not far from the major link roads. Those high up have had
to wait on supplies. I can't overdo my welcome at Benden Weyr, though M'shall
has been far more obliging than I thought he'd be."
"It's to
his advantage to oblige," S'nan said stiffly, at the merest hint of
criticism of a Weyrleader.
Jamson had
opened the door into the Hall and stopped so short, staring at the opposite
wall, that Paulin nearly walked up his heels.
Jamson muttered
something under his breath and, pointing at the wall, turned to Vergerin.
"Why under
the sun are you hanging his portrait there?" he demanded, almost outraged.
Paulin and S'nan
peered in the direction indicated.
And Paulin had
to laugh.
"When did Iantine
get a chance to redo it?" he asked.
Vergerin, who
was also broadly grinning, answered "I got it yesterday," and he
walked across the Hall to stand beneath it. "I think the likeness is now
excellent."
There was a
moment of silence as they all viewed the portrait, now altered to an honest representation
of the former Bitran Lord close-set eyes, bad complexion, scanty hair and the
mole on his chin.
S'nan sniffed. "Why
would you want his face around at all, Vergerin?"
"One, to
remind me to improve my management of Bitra, and two, because it's traditional
to display the likenesses of previous Lord Holders." He gestured up the
double-sided staircase where hung the portraits of previous incumbents.
Jamson
harumphed several times. "And Chalkin? How's he doing?" Paulin
shrugged and looked to S'nan, for only dragon riders could get to the exile's
island.
"He was
supplied with all he needs. There is no need to exacerbate his expulsion by
further contact."
"And his
children?" Jamson asked, eyes glinting coldly.
Vergerin
grinned, ducking his head. "I feel they have improved in health,
well-being and self-discipline."
"They
stood in great need of the latter," Paulin added.
"They may
surprise you, Lord Paulin," Vergerin said with a sly smile.
"I could
bear it."
"As the
branch is bent, so it will grow," Jamson intoned piously.
"Come this
way," Vergerin said, putting a finger to his lips to indicate silence.
He led them
down the corridor, towards what Paulin remembered as one of the gaming rooms.
They could hear muted singing: Paulin instantly recognized the melody as one of
the College's latest issues.
As they got
closer to the source, he heard the words of the 'Duty Song.' Jamson gave
another one of his harumphs and sniffed.
Carefully
Vergerin opened the door on a mightily altered room.
The students -
and there were far more of them than Paulin had expected - were seated with
their backs to the door. The teacher - and Paulin was surprised to recognize
Issony back at Bitra - gave an additional nod to his head to acknowledge their
presence as he continued to beat the tempo of the song.
Children's
voices - even those who couldn't carry the tune - are always appealing; perhaps
it is the innocence of the tone and the guilelessness in their rendition of the
song's dynamics.
Even Jamson
smiled, but then the verse they were singing was about the Lord Holder's
responsibilities.
"Which
ones are Chalkin's?" Paulin whispered to Vergerin.
He pointed, and
only then could Paulin pick out the children in the front rows: the girls on
the one side and the boys on the other.
They were much
better clothed than the others but no less attentive to their teacher, and
singing lustily: the older girl had the most piercing voice. Somewhat like her
mother's, Paulin thought.
Vergerin
motioned for them to withdraw, grinning.
Issony's been
right that those youngsters needed competition.
"The
holder kids need no incentives; they want to learn, and Chaldon is determined
not to let mere holders get better grades than he. Oh, there's still whinings
and pleadings and tantrums, but Issony has my permission to deal with them."
"And he
does. Most effectively."
"Nadona?"
Paulin asked.
Vergerin raised
his eyebrows. "She's learning much the same lessons as her children, but
she's not as quick a study, as Issony would say. She has her own quarters,"
and he inclined his head towards the upper levels. She stays within."
"And
leaves you to get on with the real work?" Paulin asked in a droll tone.
"Exactly."
"Hmm, yes,
well, that's it here, I think," Paulin said, and then made much of
fastening his riding jacket to indicate his willingness to depart on the
inspection tour. "Do you agree, Jamson?" Jamson harumphed, but the
fact that he did not have questions Paulin took as a good sign.
When they left
the house, men and women were busy putting on the flame-thrower tanks.
"I've
scheduled a drill. Have to make up for lost time, you know," Vergerin said
by way of explanation. Jamson and S'nan exchanged such fatuous glances that
Paulin did his best not to laugh out loud.
Vergerin caught
his eye and winked, then bade a polite farewell to his guests before he
returned to the ground crew.
"Well, he
obviously learned a thing or two," Jamson said in a sanctimonious tone as
they went down the steps to the waiting bronze dragon.
"Yes, it
would seem he has," S'nan said, and then frowned slightly. "Although
I cannot like him turning loose Chalkin's games men. They'll cause trouble at
Gathers, mark my words."
"No more
than they've always done," Paulin said, giving Jamson a discreet helping
hand up Magrith's tall shoulder.
"Probably less
without Chalkin exhorting them to squeeze more out of innocent and guileless
holders."
"No
gambling should be allowed for any reason in a Weyr", said S'nan, as
portentous as ever.
Paulin mounted
silently, hoping that these two would see sufficient in a quick swoop to
reassure them about Vergerin's worth and the wisdom of Chalkin's impeachment.
The brief visit had satisfied him especially the sight of Chalkin's much
improved portrait. He must send a message to Iantine at Telgar Weyr; Bridgely
had said the artist had returned there as soon as he was finished at Benden
Hold and enquired when he and his spouse could hope to have a sitting.
During the rest
of the inspection circuit, Paulin addressed the more important problem of
subtly reinstating Gallian in his father's favour. Paulin didn't know if it was
working, and probably wouldn't until Jamson died and the succession was in
question. There were so many instances of visible repairs and clearings that
Jamson could certainly see how poor a Holder Chalkin had been. For once, S'nan's
critical comments were a positive encomium of Vergerin's effort at taking Hold.
Paulin was well
pleased he had taken the trouble to accompany Jamson. He hoped Lady Thea would
be able to tell him that Gallian was off the hot seat.
"You are
not saving the entire world from Threadfall by yourself, P'tero," said K'vin,
glaring up at the young blue rider.
He was nearly
beside himself with rage at P'tero's utter disregard of common sense. "You
are not going to impress M'leng. If this is how you see your role in
Threadfall, I think you'll be a long time on messenger duty."
"But,
but..."
"Furthermore,"
and K'vin pointed a finger fiercely under the boy's nose, "Maranis tells
me that your wounds are not well enough healed for you to be back on duty."
"But...
but..." and P'tero, eyes wide with fright, recoiled from his Weyrleader's
fury, clutching the neck ridge before he over-balanced. The pad which T'sen had
given him now slipped, the ties torn loose some time during the exercises.
Blood spotted
it.
"Get down
here," K'vin roared, pointing to where he wanted P'tero: on the ground. "Right
now."
P'tero obeyed
as promptly as he could, but he was stiff from sitting so long during the day's
manoeuvres and from the barely healed flesh of his buttocks.
K'vin caught
him by the shoulder and whirled him around.
"Not only
new blood, but old stains," he said, his voice trenchant with scorn and
fury. "You're off duty."
"But...
but... Thread's nearly here!" P'tero cried in anguish, almost in tears
with frustration and the fear of being unable to show M'leng just how brave he
really was. Not mock-brave, like the lion attack, but brave in the air.
"And
Thread'll be here for fifty years, young man. That's plenty long enough for it
to fear you and Ormonth in the air!
"Report to
Maranis immediately. You're grounded!"
"But I
have to be in the first Fall wings," P'tero cried, anguished.
"That wasn't
the way to get there. Go to Maranis!" K'vin didn't wait to see if P'tero
obeyed. He stormed across the Bowl, the temptation to shake sense into the blue
rider so intense that he had to put distance between them.
Ormonth tried to keep him from flying today, Charanth informed his rider.
K'vin halted,
now glaring up at his bronze dragon who was settling himself on his weyr ledge
to get what sun remained.
Then you're as
bad as the pair of them! K'vin had the satisfaction of seeing Charanth quail at
his fury.
From now on,
you are to report to me - instantly - when any rider, or his dragon, is not one
hundred percent fit for duty. Do you understand me?
Charanth's eyes
whirled, the yellow of anxiety colouring the blue.
His tone was
remorseful. I will not fail you again.
If they had been in real danger, I would have warned them off, Meranath said, entering the
conversation.
I didn't ask
you! K'vin was so irate he didn't really care if he offended Meranath, or her
rider. But he was not going to lose riders from foolish and vainglorious
actions. There were fifty years of Thread fighting ahead of them, and he was
not going to lose partners or risk their injuries due to some cockamamie notion
of what comprises courageous actions.
If you think that I would jeopardize a single rider...
K'vin took the
stairs up to the queen's weyr three at a time, trying to work out his rage
before he had to confront Zulaya and explain why he thought he could speak to
her queen in such a peremptory fashion.
I should be
informed of ANY unfit rider or dragon, at any time, anywhere. Meranath and you
should know that or, by the first egg, why are you senior queen?
"Because I
am her rider!" Zulaya came storming out on to the weyr ledge, her eyes
sparkling with indignation.
"How dare
you address my queen?"
"How dare
she withhold information from ME?" Zulaya stared at him, surprised, for K'vin
had never reprimanded either her or Meranath, though she had to admit privately
that he could have legitimately done so on several occasions she would be
embarrassed to admit.
"Did you
know about P'tero's condition?" he demanded, and she backed into the weyr,
away from him. He was rather magnificently furious, eyes blazing, face stern,
the epitome of indignation.
"Tisha
remarked that Maranis wasn't pleased with him assuming duty. The scar tissue is
thin."
"And you
said nothing to me?"
"He's only
a blue rider."
"EVERY ONE
OF MY RIDERS IS IMPORTANT TO ME!" K'vin roared, clenching his fists at his
sides because they wanted to grab something to release the pent-up fury in him.
"Threadfall
is two days away. I need to have a Weyr in full readiness. I need to be sure of
everyone I ask to face Thread in two days' time. I don't need secrets or
evasions or..."
"K'vin,"
Zulaya began, reaching out a hand to him, "Kev, it's all right. The Weyr
is ready perhaps tuned a little too tight, but that's all to the good."
"ALL TO
THE GOOD?" and K'vin batted her hand away, "when we have unfit riders
taking positions they couldn't possibly manage in their condition?" He
began pacing now and Zulaya watched him, smiling with relief and pride. He was
going to be a splendid Weyrleader, much better than B'ner would have been.
He halted just
short of where she stood - his eyes, brilliant with his anger and frustration,
fixed on her face.
"What on
earth can you find to grin about right now?" he demanded - suspiciously,
for there was a quality in her smile that he'd never seen before.
"That you're
in full control," she said, leaving her smile in place.
"Oh, I am,
am I?" Then, as she had always hoped he would, he took her in his arms and
began kissing her with the full authority of his masculinity and his position as
her Weyrleader, without a trace of hesitation or deference. Just what she had
always hoped she'd provoke him to do.
K'vin was still
very much in complete control even very early the next morning, before dawn in
fact, when Meranath told them that B'nurrin and Shanna were waiting for them.
"Waiting
for what?" K'vin asked, pulling himself reluctantly away from Zulaya to
reach for his pants.
It is time to go, Charanth added.
"Go where?"
asked K'vin in a querulous tone of voice.
"Go where?"
Zulaya echoed sleepily.
South, they say,
Meranath and Charanth echoed.
Suddenly K'vin
remembered. Today was the day they would go to see Thread. He said that very,
very quietly in the back of his mind where Charanth might not hear it. Both
dragons had been asleep when B'nurrin had made his visit.
Which was just
as well, or the whole Weyr might have been privy to the notion of a pre-viewing
of Thread.
"B'nurrin
wants us to join him," K'vin said, giving Zulaya a cautionary look.
She frowned for
a moment, then her face cleared abruptly as she said, "Oh." With a
conspiratorial grin, she was out of the bed, trailing the sheet on her way to
her riding gear.
When they
passed each other once in the course of dressing, she pulled his head down to
her mouth. "I could bring my flame-thrower."
"Might as
well paint your destination on your forehead," he murmured back. "We're
only going to watch."
"Yes,
watch." Then she asked more loudly, "Where do we meet B'nurrin,
Meranath?"
"We know
that, too, remember?" K'vin said, grabbing Zulaya and giving her arm a
little shake. Then he mouthed "Landing."
"Yes, how
could I forget?"
If the dragon
and rider on watch on the Rim wondered why the two Weyrleaders were slipping
away long before dawn, neither asked and the rider gave a cheery swing of his
arm as they passed over him.
Ianath says to count to three and then go, Charanth told his rider, still
mystified.
Landing is
where we're going, K'vin replied, glancing across the space between his dragon
and Meranath. Zulaya showed him a thumb's-up signal to signify she had had the
same message. Visualizing the arid sweep of desolate volcanic ash from Mount
Garben down to Monaco Bay, K'vin nodded his head three times.
GO!
Abruptly
Charanth rumbled deep in his belly while his mind said in surprised shock OH!
K'vin felt him shift. Consequently he was perhaps not as surprised as he might
have been to realize that the airspace around them, and Meranath and Zulaya,
was well occupied. With that extra sense dragons had, the two had averted a
collision. In fact, as K'vin swivelled about to check, the only two Weyrleaders
he didn't see were S'nan and Sarrai, although they might well have been among
those who winked out of sight between so as not to be recognized.
K'vin caught
flashes of blue, brown and even one or two green hides in the southern sun
before they disappeared. Nor was this meeting composed now only of Weyrleaders
and dragons; some thirty or so bronzes and browns were present.
The sight was
too much for K'vin's sense of the ridiculous and it was a good thing that he
was clipped into his safety harness. He was seized with such a laughing fit
that he reeled back and forth against Charanth's neck ridges.
Had every rider
on Pern been possessed of the compulsion to come here this morning? Of course,
the particular site of Landing was well known to all riders. But for so many to
decide independently to come here... Probably every one certain he or she'd be
the only ones daring enough!
Nor was K'vin
the only one laughing hard. Right now he was more in danger of wetting his
breeches from mirth - not fright at seeing Thread for the first time. Which
reminded him why he was here. Again that realization became universal.
Laughter faded
as every dragon and rider irresistibly turned north-eastward.
It was there,
too, the much-described silvery-grey haze on the upper levels of the blue sky.
Not a dragon wing moved, not a rider recoiled as the silver stuff began to drop
on to the sea. THREAD! And so aptly called. THREAD!
The word seemed
to rumble from dragon to dragon and K'vin had to grab hold of the neck ridge as
Charanth started to lurch towards what he had known all his life as his
adversary.
I have no firestone! How can I flame it? What is wrong?
Why have you brought me here where there is Thread and I have no fire to
char it!
It's all right,
Charanth. We're here to watch. To see.
But it is Thread! I must chew to flame. Why may I not flame when there
is THREAD!
Glancing wildly
around him, K'vin realized that he was by no means the only rider having the
same difficulty with a frustratedly zealous dragon, rapidly trying to close the
gap to Threadfall.
I've seen
enough, Charanth. Take us back to Telgar.
But THREAD? And the bronze
dragon's tone was piteous, confused and horrified.
We leave. Now!
Leave? But we have not met Thread.
Not here or now
or in this place, Charanth.
It took K'vin
every bit of will-power and moral strength, and Charanth's faith in him, to
overcome his bronze's impassioned protest.
Then, all of a
sudden, Charanth stopped flying towards Thread.
Oh, all right! The tone was
that of a petulant child forced by a senior authority to follow orders totally
against the grain.
What?
The queens say
we must go to the Red Butte.
Then let us go
there. K'vin did not question the order, being far too glad that one was given which
the dragon would obey.
The Butte was a
training landmark in lower Keroon, a laccolithic dome so difficult to mistake
that it figured in all weyrling training programmes. And there the would-be
observers managed to get their dragons to land. Even the queens eyes were
revolving at a stiff red-orange pace, but some of the bronzes were so
distraught with anger that their eyes pulsed wickedly, revolving at incredible
speed.
K'vin was
almost relieved to swing down from Charanth's neck. But he, and the other
Weyrleaders, all kept one hand on their dragons, leg, shoulder or muzzle: some
contact was maintained. In a wide outer circle were the brown and bronze riders
who had also been rescued": they remained mounted, soothing their dragons,
allowing their leaders the centre for discussion.
It was M'shall
who spoke first. "Well, that was one good idea gone awry," he said in
a droll tone. "Great minds, all of us!"
"Except
for forgetting one simple rule," Irene added, pulling off her flying cap.
Her face was still pale from the fright she must have had.
K'vin glanced
at Zulaya who was wiping sweat from her face, so he knew none of the queen
riders had had an easy time to get their queens to insist on the disengagement.
"Dragons
know what they're supposed to do when Thread falls," M'shall said,
nodding. And then he started to laugh.
K'vin grinned
and, when he heard G'don's bass chuckle, saw no reason to hold his laughter in
any longer. B'nurrin was howling so that he had to clutch at K'vin to keep his
balance. Even D'miel looked properly abashed, and Laura's giggle was infectious
enough to increase the volume. Beyond the inner circle, the rest of the riders
caught the joke on themselves and joined in the laugh. It was a good release
from the fright that they had all just had.
"Did
anyone happen to notice a Fort rider disappearing in guilty retreat?" M'shall
asked when the laughter died down.
He'd been
checking the identity of those on the rim of this informal assembly.
"They'd be
the last to admit coming," said Irene.
"I doubt
that, Renee," G'don said. "S'nan runs a strict Weyr, it's true, but I'll
wager there're a few renegades among his wing leaders."
"I know
there are," Mari agreed, blotting her eyes which were still merry from
laughter. "It's just such a hoot that we all..." and she ringed them
with a swirl of her hand, "thought to come and have a peek."
"It's not
going to inhibit any of the dragons, is it?" Laura asked, turning pale at
the sudden thought. "Turning them off like that?"
D'miel wasn't
the only Weyrleader to dismiss that notion derisively. "Hardly! It's
increased rider-credibility a hundredfold. They now know without doubt that
what we've been telling them since they were Hatched is true!"
"Oh, yes,
it would, wouldn't it?" she said, relieved.
"I myself
wouid like to thank the queen riders for exerting their powerful influence on
our bronzes," G'don said with a formal hand over his heart as he bowed to
the five queen riders.
"The
advantage of having three very senior queens," said Zulaya, and two very
strong-minded young women.
Laura blushed
while Shanna stood even straighter.
"All right
then," M'shall began, having taken note that most of the male dragons'
eyes were resuming normal colour and speed. He took a step towards the centre
of the sandy circle and cupped his hands, turning as he spoke. "All right,
then, every one of you. This is a meeting that never happened and isn't to be
referred to in any Weyr for any reason. Do you understand me?" The
tesponse was loud and clear.
He nodded and
stepped back towards Craigath. "We'll meet..." he said now to the
other leaders, "where Thread first... officially falls North."
"We've
sweep riders out all the time," G'don reminded them.
"And we're
all very sure that S'nan has, too," B'nurrin put in, grinning.
"So we'll know
when and where to meet again."
"Wait a
moment more, G'don," K'vin said. "Why don't we rotate the wings that
meet that first Fall, wherever it is?"
A little cheer
from the outer circle gave instant approval to that suggestion. "That'll
give even more riders a chance for at least a little experience before the
individual Weyrs have to meet Thread on their own.
G'don paused at
Chakath's side, looking around to check the reaction to that idea. "In
hourly intervals?" he asked.
"Make it
two hours to allow wings to get properly into the routine," M'shall
amended.
"It's not
that we're green riders or anything," B'nurrin put in as protest.
"Two hours
makes more sense than swapping around every hour." D'miel said
thoughtfully.
"I'd agree
on two," said G'don. "We'll bring the matter up to S'nan; he deserves
that much from us. I'll initiate the idea," and he grinned again, since S'nan
would listen to him as the oldest Weyrleader where he would summarily dismiss a
younger man. "I'll let you know when we'll meet to make the changes we've
already agreed to." Red dust swirled up in a cloud around the Butte as all
the dragons leaped almost simultaneously from the ground.
Bitter cold
weather and winds swept down from the icy poles of Pern on the day that S'nan set
up a meeting with the other five Weyrleaders to discuss the rotation of wings
which G'don had suggested to him. Freezing weather was likely to do Fort Weyr
out of its chance to be the first Weyr to meet Thread in this Fall.
That S'nan
keenly felt deprived was obvious. Throughout the meeting he paced the floor,
pausing to peer out of the slanting corridor to the sleet falling heavily into
Fort Bowl.
He had only
half his mind on the discussion. B'nurrin was all but laughing, only the kicks
he received under the table from K'vin keeping him from bursting out. Not that
K'vin could blame the Igen Weyrleader, for the meeting was a charade: each of
them giving soberly presented reasons for the two hourly rotation while S'nan
said little more than monosyllables. He kept his expression blank. it was
Sarrai's petulant expression that was honest.
"She's
been dying to get all of us under her wing," Zulaya whispered to K'vin
when the Fort Weyrwoman's face was turned towards her anxiously pacing mate.
"Don't
think she will, love," K'vin said, the endearment coming easily to his
lips now. He sighed. "You know," and he moved his lips close to her
ear. I'm almost sorry for the old man."
Zulaya gave a
little snort. "I'm not!" Then she altered her expression to one of
earnest attention as Sarrai looked over at them for whispering.
Thread came
down as black dust, sifted in with snow or sleet.
Fort sweep
riders brought buckets of it for S'nan to see and mournfully wave off. High
Reaches were even more diligent in their efforts to locate live, dangerous
Thread.
Some riders
even suffered frostbite, so earnestly did they watch for the reappearance of
the old enemy, although one long piece of frozen Thread was brought for G'don
to examine. The stench of it as it melted was enough to dispose of it
completely.
By the time of
Benden's First Fall - by the numbers, Ten - the weather pattern had shifted
sufficiently on the east coast to a warmer front so that a good deal of that
projected Fall would be considered 'live and dangerous'. The call went out to
all the Weyrs of Pern.
K'vin and
Telgar Weyr's two full wings of dragon riders reassembled in the upper right
quadrant of air above Benden Weyr, not a rider out of alignment. Below him the
Weyr was ablaze with lights in this dark pre-dawn time, lighting the bellies of
the dragons in their ranks. He wasn't sure if the Telgar contingent got there
before the units of the other Weyrs, but they were certainly all present and
accounted for at the designated hour and in the assigned positions. Everyone
would have preferred a daylight defence, but Thread didn't need to see to Fall.
And according
to Sean's reports of early morning or late evening Falls, the silvery stuff
would be luminous enough for the practical purpose of flaming it out of the
sky.
This First Fall
of the Second Pass would start across the high mountains, still deep with
winter snows, and would thus fall harmlessly. Much would probably fall as black
dust in the still frigid temperatures of that area though quite likely, on
other occasions, Fall would merely be observed until it moved inexorably down
to habitable lands. Today was the exception.
The final
decision by the Weyrleaders had been unanimous - when M'shall had made S'nan
put it to a vote - to ride the entire Fall over the ranges, harmless or not, to
see it for themselves. Everyone was too keyed-up over the first three 'dud'
Falls to wait any longer to go into action. Of course, some of the peaks jutted
at altitudes where oxygen had thinned to an unsustainable level even for dragons.
But it could be seen in actual descent and the general aspect of this Fall
judged.
"The wings
would be rotated after two hours, giving as many as possible a chance at the
real thing". K'vin briefly thought of P'tero's vain attempt to be included
in the fighting force Telgar would launch. Maybe he should have put the blue
rider in, sore ass and all, to prove that there was a lot more to fighting
Thread than having the guts to do it. But to include P'tero would have been to
exclude a perfectly healthy and less erratic rider. K'vin had not selected M'leng
of the green riders chosen for the First Fall. That would ease any discord
between the pair: that one had gone and the other had not.
Basically, they
were good weyrmates having a reasonably stable relationship ever since P'tero,
who was the younger, had Impressed Ormonth.
Movement and a
shift in air pressure caught K'vin's attention and he looked down at Benden's
Rim.
Craigath warns us, Charanth told his rider. Three, two, one...
GO!
The command
came from many minds and many throats in the dark above Benden Weyr. The
blackness of between was more intense but scarcely less cold than the
atmosphere above the peaks where the wings re-entered real space. K'vin was
glad of the wool fabric across his mouth and nose, though it did not altogether
warm the thin air he inhaled. Below, the snowy mountains gave off a curious
light of their own. Belior was setting in the west and K'vin looked around, to
the east, and saw the baleful orb of the Red Planet, vivid amongst the stars.
Spits of fire
blossomed in the darkness all around as eager dragons belched. Too full a belly
of firestone, K'vin thought with professional detachment, but he could hardly
fault rider or dragon for over-priming.
For two
centuries they had waited for this moment: centuries of training and lives
lived so that dragons - and riders - would be here, right now, waiting to
defend Pern.
Yet this was a
first, too. For Pern had had no dragons the first time Thread had fallen. And
the planet had been so close to total disaster before the first eighteen
dragons had emerged from between above Fort Hold to flame the parasite from the
skies and give hope to the beleaguered defenders. K'vin had always been struck
by the courage - he should make P'tero read those entries - of the despairing
Admiral Paul Benden in his diary written just prior to that magnificent
triumph.
Even in his
most recent reading of that journal, his throat closed over as he read the
words: And then that young rogue had the temerity to salute and say, "Admiral
Benden, may I present the Dragonriders of Pern?"
More spurts of
fiery breath and every dragon head turned slightly northward.
It comes! Charanth said,
rumbling deep in his chest, a vibration that K'vin felt through his legs. He
was aware then that the only warm part of him was what was pressing against his
dragon's neck. His nose had no feeling of the fabric across it. Maybe they
should drop down a thousand feet or so.
And K'vin
looked towards the central block of the massed wings, where M'shall and
Craigath waited. It was the Benden Weyrleader's call, not his.
Then he saw it
- or rather the mass of something lustrous against the black of night, like a
banner spread from some distant source in the sky, a banner that rippled and
spun. The pace of his heartbeat picked up. He felt an odd coldness in his guts,
but it could simply be because it was very, very cold at this altitude.
Charanth's
rumble increased and a little spit of flame spilled from his mouth.
Steady, lad!
I'm not moving! It is! And I can flame this time!
K'vin could not
reproach Charanth for that snide reminder.
And, oddly
enough, he also felt no fear as he regarded the advance. There was this sense
of inevitability, that he would be here, at this moment in time, to observe
this phenomenon, to be part of this defence.
Closer and
closer the waves of Thread came as the massed wings watched. The leading edge
was now falling visibly on the mountainsides. In this cold air not even the
steam of its dissolution was visible.
Thread was falling
in a steady stream, freezing dead in the snow.
A steady
stream, no tangles, no bare spots.
Craigath says we regroup at the second meeting point.
Agreed.
Oddly enough, K'vin
did not like even to regroup, though there was nothing Thread could have done to
harm the snowy mountainsides and it was foolish to waste time and flame here.
But it felt
like retreat.
Charanth had
broadcast the order and took them between.
The air was
noticeably warmer at the altitude of the new position.
He rubbed at
his nose and cheeks to bring blood to the surface. Even his fingertips felt
numb from the cold.
False dawn
began in the east, the Red Star paling slightly in the greying skies. And
Thread suddenly looked more ominous. More dragons spewed flame and he told
Charanth to warn them to conserve their breath.
Suddenly the
wait was chafing. They had waited so long, hadn't they? Two hundred years! When
would they begin?
But Thread fell
on snow, and K'vin was close enough to Leading Edge now to see the holes it
made in the whiteness.
NOW! Craigath's
command reached K'vin's mind in the same moment that Charanth roared, full
flame erupting from his mouth, as he beat his wings to power his forward surge.
K'vin clutched
at the flight strap, felt frantically for the rope that tethered the firestone
sacks to the neck ridge in front of him, and clamped his knees as tight as he
could to his bronze!
His right arm
raised and pointed forward, as if any rider had missed Craigath's command or
the roars that emerged from dragon th oats across the sky.
They were
flying in ranks, Telgar being the second and slightly behind the uppermost
wings which were from High Reaches. There was sufficient air between the two
layers of dragons so that flame from one level would not interfere with
another; and a corridor for manoeuvre as well. Every Weyr had drilled its wings
for this strategy until it was instinctive to stay within the plane assigned
them.
The moment when
Charanth's breath sizzled up descending Thread was a transcendental experience
for both partners.
Charanth
sustained his flame magnificently, crossing this cordon, and then they were
out, beyond Thread's fall and turning. K'vin spared a glance at the rest of his
wings and saw them pivoting simultaneously, all those long, long hours and
years of practice resulting in a perfect manoeuvre. His heart was like to burst
in his chest with pride. Below and above him, other wings were turning, all now
flaming to catch the next band of falling Thread. And the next. And the next.
Meranath and the others are here, Charanth announced, dropping his head to peer far below.
They are? Turn.
K'vin looked below and saw the unmistakable arrow of golden bodies in their
low-level position, the flame-throwers which the queen riders used spouting
here and there as they disintegrated stray strands escaping the higher ranks.
Does Meranath
fly well?
Meranath flies very well, Charanth said proudly.
Tell the wings
it is time to execute the first change-over, K'vin said. He swivelled his body
around to watch that manoeuvre, holding his right arm up high, sweeping his
eyes across Telgar's wings. He dropped his arm and counted nine or ten dragons
still flaming. Then they, too, went off. He counted to five and suddenly full
wings flew behind him. He raised his arm high in recognition of their arrival,
which was all he had time for because the wall of Thread advanced to flaming
distance and Charanth was ready with his fire. So far he could find no fault
with the performance of Telgar's wings.
It seemed no
time after that when he realized his sacks of firestone were empty, and he had
Charanth call for more. It surprised K'vin to notice that they had flown from
night into day, for the sun slanted right into the eyes as they flew east
again. There was good reason to use tinted glass in the goggles.
Z'gal and blue
Tracath made the drop, swooping in neatly just above his head and depositing
the new sacks across Charanth's neck.
K'vin pulled
the release knot of the empty sacks and saw Tracath swivel and dive beneath
Charanth, Z'gal deftly catching the limp ones and disappearing instantly
between.
Tell Tracath
that was well done, K'vin said.
They were over
the northern-most edge of Benden now, above pasture lands, forests and small
farming holds. The need for accuracy and complete destruction of Thread was
more crucial now. The queens' wing was more visible, gold against the dark
green or brown of fields not yet verdant with spring growth.
Sacks had to be
replenished again. He called in the second change-over of wings, only then
realizing that he was beginning to tire.
Are you all
right, Charanth?
I flame well. My wings beat strongly. We are together. There is no
problem.
The calm,
strong tone of his bronze was like a tonic. Yes, they were together, doing what
they had been bred and maintained to do.
Meranath says we are over Bitra Hold now. They were turning west again, back
for another run. K'vin did notice that there seemed to be less Thread falling
now, even gaps between the sheets of it. This Fall is nearly over?
K'vin wasn't
sure if Charanth was pleased, surprised or disappointed. He, for one, was
enormously relieved! He had survived the ultimate test of the Weyrleader.
They did one
more pass eastward and then there was no more Thread visible above. A cheer
echoed from rider to rider, and all those within K'vin's range pumped both arms
in jubilation.
We should land
at Bitra Hold, in case we are needed for burrows that might have escaped us, K'vin
told Charanth. Tell the wings well-done, and all but J'dar's may return. He
will wait with us for the all-clear. It is M'shall's pleasure to tell us that!
Any casualties?
That was the
traditional Weyrleader's query, though reports would also be made to him during
the Fall so that he could assess what replacements might be needed.
Today only some minor burns from char. Nothing bad enough that anyone
cared to report to you.
K'vin wasn't
that pleased that news had been withheld, but he could understand the
reluctance of any rider in today's Fall retiring for a mere char burn. Now he
noticed that he had quite a few black spots on his own riding leathers, but
nothing had penetrated through to his flesh. Would that every Fall would be so
trouble-free! And the next one which Telgar flew would show up the foolhardy.
He'd have to give the entire Weyr a hard bollocking to prevent the cocksure
from disaster.
Today the
queens' wing would join the wing leaders at Bitra Hold, though traditionally
they stayed aloft to assist ground crews.
Zulaya sought K'vin
immediately she was on the ground and embraced him, seeking his mouth to kiss
him with enthusiasm.
"We did
it! We did it!"
"This
time," K'vin said, hugging her tightly to him. He could almost have
thanked P'tero for getting him so angry. It had done the world of good for his
relations with Zulaya.
The way she
looked at him now, the way she had to touch him... Well, they were truly
weyrmates.
M'shall was
moving among the riders, slapping one on the shoulder, thanking each Weyrleader
for participating in this almost scatheless Fall, a wide smile plastered on his
face.
"I'd say
that this was a normal Fall," S'nan was saying rather portentiously.
"How can
we possibly tell?" G'don asked.
"The
records, man, the records," said S'nan, glaring. "It's exactly as
Sean described Fall #325, in his records of 11 AL. Exactly."
"Oh, Fall
#325?" asked B'nurrin, his eyes dancing." Myself, I felt it was more
like #499 in 12 AL."
"B'nurrin?"
M'shall's raised eyebrows suggested that the irrepressible young Igen
Weyrleader should stop baiting S'nan.
"We got
off much too easily," said D'miel of Ista, shaking his head. "I mean,
we were all on a high. I for one was expecting far worse."
"Isn't it
nice to be disappointed?" K'vin said, but he agreed with D'miel.
Everything had gone too well.
"Nonsense,"
said G'don. "We were all flying our best riders."
"We've
been keyed up for weeks, and nervous. And I don't mind admitting I was,"
he added, glancing around him, but he winked at K'vin and B'nurrin. Others
nodded agreement. "So we were very cautious."
"It's when
we're so accustomed to the menace that we're liable to be careless, to take
unnecessary risks, to stop watching out of the backs of our heads."
A murmur of
agreement and nods greeted that observation.
"We must
never relax our guard during Fall," S'nan declared, again sententious. "Never!"
"We'll
have to be doubly cautious during the second Fall over south Benden and Keroon,"
Zulaya said softly to K'vin.
"Well, I
for one was pleased with the way the wings performed. Not much got through,"
he repeated. "Between the upper flights and the queens' wing, only four
incidents of burrow, and those were handled with great dispatch. Thanks to
Vergerin."
The Bitra Lord
Holder was directing the distribution of Hegmon's sparkling wine to those
crowding in his courtyard.
"Only
think what might have happened if Chalkin was still here!" Irene said,
raising her glass towards Vergerin.
"Who wants
to think what might have happened?" Laura of Ista Weyr demanded, laughing
with exaggerated relief.
"For one
thing, we wouldn't have this champagne," Irene replied.
"That's
for damned sure!"
"How'd you
get the sparkly out of Hegmon, Vergerin?" G'don wanted to know, cradling
his glass lovingly.
"We're old
friends, you might say," Vergerin replied with a droll grin.
"Did any
wing report injuries?" asked M'shall, his expression turning sober.
"Nothing
above char burns in mine," K'vin said. And that was what the other wing
leaders reported one afler another.
"Well, we're
fragging lucky if that's all. Though I shudder to think how careless the
average rider can get," M'shall said.
"We'll
have to keep them on their toes."
"And on
their dragons," his weyrmate added.
"Look at
it this way," said B'nurrin, grinning from ear to ear, "We've only
five thousand eight hundred and fourteen more Falls to attend, give or take a
few, before it's all over for another two hundred years!" There was a
moment of dumbfounded silence as that fact was absorbed and then B'nurrin
ducked away before the wrath of his peers could descend on him.
"But Fall
has begun," K'vin said softly to Zulaya, standing proudly beside him, "and
we have met the enemy again.
"What a
time to be alive."
"And
riding a dragon!"
And thus began
the Second Pass of Thread on Pern!