Acorna's
People
By Anne
McCaffrey and Elizabeth Ann Scarborough
Published ??? 1999 ???
One
On the
planet of Laboue, within the opulent chief residence of Hafiz Harakamian, in
one of the hundreds of finely crafted, hand-joined cabinets of rare and
lustrous woods in which he kept his smallest and often most precious
collectibles, Acorna had once seen a display of brilliantly bejeweled and
decorated eggs. Created hundreds of years ago by a man named Carl Faberge for
the collection of a Russian czar not nearly so wealthy as their present owner,
the eggs had dazzled the eyes of the young girl with their richly colored
enamels, their gold loops and whorls, their swags and bows of diamonds and
glittering gemstones, and their tiny movable parts-the delicately wrought
scenes that unfolded from within their interiors.
Now, a
fathomless distance from Uncle Hafiz's home and many years later, it seemed to
Acorna as if the eggs had magically grown to giant size and lofted themselves
into space, where their colors shone even more brilliantly in the blackness of
infinity than they had in the memories of her childhood. They formed a festive
flotilla visible from the viewport of the Balakiire.
The
flotilla had been growing in size since the Balakiire exited the wormhole that
deposited them just beyond the atmosphere of narhii-Vhiliinyar, the second
Linyaari home world.
The
imagery was further borne out by the seemingly endless number of Linyaari
space-farers, the denizens of those bright ships, who paraded across the
comscreen to welcome the Baiakiire delegation home.
Melireenya
introduced Acorna to each of the officers as they appeared on the screen, so
that Acorna felt that she was already at one of the receptions or parties her
aunt and -Melireenya were threatening to give in order to introduce her to
Linyaari society and, most especially, to prospective lifemates. Acorna was so
excited by the sight of the egg-like ships and the spectacle of her people's
home rotating almost imperceptibly beyond them that she could hardly pay
attention to the images on the comscreen.
The
Linyaari welcoming her to this world all looked so much like her that they
could have been mistaken for her by her human friends. The figures on the
comscreen were pale skinned and had golden opalescent spiraling horns growing
from their foreheads, topped by manes of silvery hair which continued to grow
down their spines. Like her, they had feathery tufts of fine curly white hair
adorning their legs from knee to ankle, to just above their two-toed feet.
Their hands, like hers, bore only three fingers, each with one joint in the
middle and one where the finger met the palm.
After
the life she'd led, it was a little overwhelming to be among so many others of
her kind. All of the equipment and utensils she could see and touch were
designed for people like her. Nothing had to be specially adapted to her
anatomical peculiarities. Nothing about her appearance was unusual to the
Linyaari.
However,
as like her as these people were, they were all, even her mother's sister and
those aboard the Balakiire, still strangers-strangers who took a proprietary
interest in her without actually knowing her very well. Although she had ceased
to be regarded as a child by the humans she had grown up among, she seemed to
be regarded by her Linyaari shipmates as little more than a youngling.
This
was a new sensation for her. Acorna had been jettisoned in a life pod from her
parents' ship as an infant to save her from the fatal explosion that claimed
the lives other parents and the attacking Khieevi. She'd been rescued soon
after and had grown up among humans. Specifically, she had been raised by her
three adoptive uncles-Calum Baird, Declan "Gill" Giloglie, and Rafik
Nadezda. Back when they'd found her they had been miners working in the far
reaches of the human galaxies. These days they'd gone on to other things.
Rafik, for example, was now the head of the House of Harakamian, the empire
founded by his uncle Hafiz Harakamian, an uncommonly wily merchant and wealthy
collector.
When
Acorna had first met Hafiz, he'd wished to add her to his many treasures, to be
displayed along with the beautiful Faberge eggs and the incredibly rare Singing
Stones of Skarrness guarding his courtyard. However, her value to Hafiz as a
collectible had sharply decreased when Hafiz learned she was not a solitary
oddity but merely a member of a populous alien race.
Acorna's
relationship with Hafiz, and the one between Hafiz and Rafik, had improved
after that to the point that Acorna now used the name Harakamian, along with
that of her good and gentle mentor Mr. Li, as a surname. Dear Mr. Li had passed
on a few months ago, but the more durable Uncle Hafiz had recently married his
second wife and was now enjoying his retirement in her company.
Acorna,
along with her uncles and Mr. Li, had succeeded in rescuing the children
imprisoned in the camps on Kezdet, a planet whose economy had once depended on
the exploitation of child labor. They had been ably assisted in this task by
the intelligent and resourceful siblings of the Kendoro family, Pal, Judit, and
Mercy, themselves former victims of the camps. Together, Acorna and her friends
had been instrumental in changing the planet's laws and ridding it of the
Piper, the ringleader responsible for the most heinous of the abuses. They had
gone on to establish a mining and teaching facility on one of Kezdet's moons,
Maganos, to nurture and educate the children they had rescued from the horrors
of the labor camps.
Later,
Acorna and her uncle Calum, while trying to locate her home world, had helped
quell a mutiny among the Starfarers, human voyagers on a large colony ship.
After being forced to watch their parents' murders during the rebellion, and
the subsequent bloodshed, murder, and exploitation that the ship's new masters
were intent upon, the children of the ship were able, with Acorna's help, to
wrest control from the mutineers and destroy them. In the process, they rescued
the famed meteorologist Dr. Ngaen Xong Hoa, and his weather control system. The
people who had seized the ship had used Dr. Hoa's new system to destroy the
economy and ecology of the newly colonized planet Rushima. The mutineers were
spaced by the triumphant youngsters, just as the mutineers had spaced their
victims, when the children regained control of the ship.
While
returning with Dr. Hoa to repair the damage to Rushima, Acorna, her adoptive
family, and the children fell under attack by the Khieevi, a vicious bug-like
race responsible for the death of Acorna's parents. Fortunately, Acorna's aunt
Neeva and the delegation from narhii-Vhiliinyar had arrived in time to warn
everyone of the impending invasion. With Acorna's help, the resources of Kezdet
and the Houses of Harakamian and Li had been mobilized to rout the Khieevi.
In the
course of all this, Acorna had become something of a mistress of disguise, and
had used her horn to purify an entire ship's poisoned air and the waters of
Rushima as well as to heal the wounded in all of the hostile encounters with which
she'd been involved.
This
was all quite aside from her abilities to divine by seemingly magical means the
mineral content of each individual asteroid her uncles wished to mine, an
ability which had earned her their respect while she was still quite young. So
Acorna had actually packed a great deal of activity into a relatively short
life. Consequently she did not feel particularly childlike most of the time.
Nevertheless,
she was a child to her mother's sister Neeva, a Linyaari Envoy Extraordinaire,
or vw^haanye ferllii She was considered a youngling by all the other Linyaari
aboard the Balakiire as well: Khaari, the navigation officer or gheraaiye
mallvii in the Linyaari tongue; Melireenya, the senior communications office or
gheraaiye ve-khanyli; and Thariinye, the young male whose function was still
not exactly clear to Acorna, even after their travels together, but who seemed
to think that without him, the mission could not have succeeded. What had been
taken by Acorna's human friends for talent was apparently standard issue for
her race. And many of the talents the other Linyaari possessed seemed to have
been carefully developed. For instance, none of them needed words to
communicate with each other and all of them could read the thoughts of the
others on the ship-including hers, a fact which she found rather unnerving at
times. She had so very much to learn. Fortunately, if her shipmates were
typical examples, her people were kind and forbearing.
"Khornya,
this is my counterpart in the Gamma Sector, Vt^e^haanye FeriUi Taankaril,"
Aunt Neeva told Acorna. Khornya was the Linyaari version of Acorna, the name
given her by her human "uncles." The introduction pulled her
attention once more from the spectacle of the ships outside the viewport. Acorna
dipped her horn, as did the vLfe()haanye ferllii, a woman who, like Aunt Neeva,
Khaari and Melireenya, was of an indistinguishable age, at least
indistinguishable to Acoma.
"Khornya,"
Aunt Neeva said, nodding to the woman on the comscreen and relaying her
thoughts to Acorna, "the vife^haanye ferlili is the mother of two handsome
sons who have not yet found their lifemates. She regrets that she is about to
embark upon a mission, but hopes you will feel free to call upon them for any
assistance you need in adjusting to your new home."
Acorna
smiled and nodded at the woman again. No actual words had been exchanged
between her aunt and the dignitary. Even across the vastness of space, it
seemed that the senior space-faring Linyaari could read thoughts. Acorna
occasionally felt she was catching on to how it was done, but found the process
frustrating even with people standing in front of her. Particularly when they
responded to thoughts she would not have voiced, given a choice. But her grasp
of the Linyaari tongue was not yet complete and the crew of the Balakiire found
the need to communicate with her in spoken words tedious. Neeva assured her
she'd get the hang of things soon enough. But Acorna still worried.
And so
went her homecoming, with the space around her new home planet dancing with
egg-ships full of Acorna-like beings, all of whom seemed curious about the
formerly presumed dead daughter of the illustrious Feriila and the valiant
Vaanye, all politely inquiring as to where she'd been all this time and what
she'd been doing, all seemingly with unmated sons or nephews or widowed fathers
and uncles, all shepherding the Balakiire into port and docking alongside her.
Acorna
emerged from the Balakare behind her Aunt Neeva and just ahead of Thariinye to
find the docking bay crowded with Linyaari, some even holding a banner aloft.
Behind the uniformed Acorna-like space travelers streaming from their ships to
add to the party, a mass of multicolored creatures similar in form to the
space-farers crowded onto the docking level, strumming, blowing into, pounding
upon, brushing, and stamping a variety of musical instruments. The docking bay
was filled with strange but wonderfully harmonious and joyous music.
Even
before Aunt Neeva could explain, Acorna was overwhelmed with happiness. This
was the welcoming committee. They didn't even know her, and they'd brought the
brass band and the welcome mat. Aunt Neeva gave her a hug.
"We
are all so glad to have you back, Khornya," she said, waving her hand to
indicate the smiling Linyaari. Tears came to Acornas eyes as she nodded an
acknowledgment to all those who'd turned out to meet her.
At last
she would truly belong. At last she would no longer be an oddity. What a relief
that would be. "And I am so glad to be here. Aunt Neeva," she said.
"I can't tell you how glad."
Aunt
Neeva looked a little puzzled, an expression that seemed common whenever she
was dealing with her niece. "But you just did, child," she said.
"You just did."
Comdor
lurched and shuddered and flung its captain and the human part of the crew-both
parts consisting of one Jonas Becker, CEO of Becker Interplanetary Recycling
and Salvage Enterprises Ltd. against the bulkhead. As quickly as Becker fell,
he was released, and rose to the ceiling like a ballet dancer in slow motion,
while the rest of the crew, twenty pounds of grizzled black and gray Makahomian
Temple Cat, drifted past him, the cat's extended claws grazing what remained of
Becker's right ear.
"Dammit,
RK, have you been pissing on the GSS panel again?" Becker groaned. RK,
whose full name was Roadkill, growled back in his version of a friendly purr.
His claws were flashing in and out, blissfully kneading the air, and beads of
happy cat drool floated up from between his formidable fangs. His good eye was
closed in an excess of feline ecstasy. Becker had never seen a cat who loved
zero G the way RK did-but then he had never seen a cat anything like RK before
either. The cat's stub of broken tail moved back and forth like a rudder as it
floated by.
Becker
gave the Gravitation Stabilization System panel a boot as he passed it. The
force of his kick sent him soaring upward to bang against the console of a
fighter ship strapped to the ceiling above the control panel of the Condor. There
wasn't a whole lot of room in his vessel to store cargo, and Becker utilized
every cubic centimeter of extra space. This left him no soft place to land
when, after a couple more shudders, the ship's gravity stabilized and Becker
and RK tumbled back to the deck.
Becker
massaged his hip. He'd banged it against one of the packing crates of cat food
he had unloaded from RK's original home ship. The cat, always interested in
those particular crates, rubbed himself between it and Becker. As usual, Becker
was surprised at how soft the cat's coat was in comparison to his personality.
Becker had lost the little finger of his right hand while trying to salvage
Roadkill. The cat had then been nameless, of course, the spitting, hissing,
clawing sole survivor left aboard a derelict Makahomian spacecraft along with
the corpses of his former shipmates.
Becker
didn't like to talk about the loss of his second finger, but it had to do with
what he referred to as "RK's adjustment period," the time when the
cat had recovered enough from his injuries to start feeling at home. When
Becker went to sell a couple of choice bits from the inventory soon after he'd
acquired Roadkill, he'd found them slick with yellowish liquid and stinking
worse than a musk otter in heat. The cause was obvious-and so was the need for
a solution.
Becker
consulted the library he had rescued from a landfill on Clackamass 2. He was a
sucker for information in any form: hard copy, chip, what have you. It came in
handy when he wanted to identity or figure out how to operate some of the
inventory.
He dug
through quite a few moldy, torn books before he found the copy of How to Care
for Your Kith/cat he'd stashed in the stall of the spare head. The book advised
that when a male cat began "marking his territory" by spraying it,
the only way to stop the behavior was to have the cat neutered. Beckers
business kept him a long way from a veterinarian, but back when he was a kid on
the labor farm on Kezdet, he'd helped with the calves and goats. He'd figured a
cat couldn't be that much different, so he attempted a little home surgery on
RK. Turned out he'd figured wrong. The attempt ended with them both having
surgeries of a sort RK was now one nut short and Becker had another stump in
place of his right ring finger next to the stump of the little finger the cat
had shredded during the original rescue. You had to love an animal like that.
"That's
okay, man," he told the cat, scratching it behind the right ear, which,
like his own, was only partially there. The cat's purr increased in volume
until it sounded like a whole pride of lions right there in the cabin.
"Those gravity systems are worthless anyway."
He knew
he had a replacement system someplace among his cargo, probably a better one
than the one he'd installed six months ago. Only problem was he couldn't do
these particular repairs in space. To the best of his recollection, the piece
that he needed was buried so deep he'd have to unload the cargo hold to find
it. As usual, the ship was packed too tightly to have any room inside to
conveniently shift the cargo while he looked. He could maneuver around and
manage it in a pinch, of course, but why bother?
"So,
cat, looks like it's dirtside for us again. I was going to pass up this next
trashed-out planet and head back for civilization, but it looks like we need
another pit stop first. The way I figure it, with this one, we've pretty much
replaced the whole ship since we last headed back to Kezdet-we'll basically
have a brand new Condor by the time we dock there again."
This
wasn't unusual. On the average, he replaced most of the Condor about three
times a year. This was an occupational hazard, or maybe a hazard of the kind of
personality that occupied Backer's occupation. He hated to pay full price for
anything when there was so much good stuff, only a little used, laying around
for the taking. He was an expert at improvisation, refitting, retooling, and
emergency landings on remote hunks of rock in the middle of space. He could do
mid-space repairs, too, but it was so much easier to land somewhere with a bit
of gravity where he could suit up, toss stuff he didn't need out the hatch
while uncovering what he did need, close the hatch, pressurize the ship, make
his repair, then retrieve and reload his previously discarded cargo.
He
ended up making some pretty rough landings occasionally, but he wasn't much
worried about scratching his paint job, and the Condor wasn't so big that he
needed a lot of level area for a landing pad. He headed for the planet he'd
selected for this minor emergency. If the rock had an oxygen atmosphere, he'd
even be able to empty the cat box and let RK out to do a little business.
Sometimes
they found some of their best cargo on these pit stops. Lately he'd run across
a whole string of planets, all pretty well stripped of resources on the one
hand, but chock full of possibly profitable debris on the other hand. Becker
lived for debris. His big regret was that he had not yet devised a way to strap
extra cargo to the outside of the Condor, but so far he hadn't found a way to
do so that would allow him to enter and exit atmospheres without burning up the
merchandise.
The
Condor landed on what seemed the only level bit of ground for miles around.
Soil and vegetation had pretty much been stripped from the rock around this
little basin in the wreckage, but here bluish grass-like plants still
grew-until the Condor's descent singed them, anyway. It was a rough landing.
The atmosphere was tumultuous-roiling clouds of various red and yellow gases
filled the sky. That was okay. According to his instruments'-if they were
working properly, and they seemed to be -it was still breathable out there.
Even if it wasn't, he had a good protective suit if he needed it. It was the
one item he bought not only firsthand but also top of the line. He never knew
what the conditions would be like out here in the boonies. While he could use
the robolift for most reloading, loading, and hauling jobs, some of them he
needed to do by hand. It took him a day and a half to repair his system. The
first full day, with RK's enthusiastic participation, he devoted to rooting
around among the derelict shuttles, escape pods, and command capsules in his
inventory, looking for an outfit in better shape than the one he was using. As
usual, much of what was on top of what he wanted landed on the ground outside
the vessel until he found what he was looking for.
He
eventually rounded up a replacement system and patched it in. RK
"helped" again, trying to stand between him and what he was doing.
Every time Becker reached past the critter, RK's low snarl warned him off. When
the cat tired of that game, he sat beside Becker and periodically reached up to
sink a single claw into the man's thigh. Finally, Becker opened the hatch again
and the cat leaped out without a backward look. The work went amazingly swiftly
after that.
Prior
to reloading his cargo, Becker suited up. He was a little more cautious of his
own hide than the cat was. Taking a work light, a collection sack, a tin of cat
food to lure his roaming partner back aboard again, and the remote to the hatch
and the robolift, he popped the hatch and disembarked. All he had to do now was
throw his stuff back aboard and find Roadkill. While he was looking, he might
as well take a stroll and scope out the local real estate.
The
grass around the Condor was singed for about thirty feet from where the vessel
sat, and Becker thought it was a real shame about that. All around the basin,
bedrock lay tumbled as if something had reached in, pulled it up, and stirred
it around. What a dump. Only this one little patch showed any real signs of
life. Of course, it could be the planet was just in the process of giving birth
to life, or it could be a failed terraforming job, but his guess was that this
planet had at one time been alive. The little patch on which he stood was
probably one of the last, if not the last, vestiges of that life. Damn shame,
of course, but without ruins like this, he'd be out of business. Only problem
was, the devastation here was so complete, there wasn't much left, even for
him. The other planets they'd come across lately had been much the same. Each
of them had a few useless remnants that gave him the creepy feeling that a
perfectly good civilization had been destroyed fairly recently.
It was
Roadkill who pulled him from his contemplation of mortality.
In
fact, it looked as if the cat had dug up something, and was smacking it around.
Space mouse? Not very likely, with no signs of plant or animal life around,
excluding themselves and the puny patch of grass they occupied.
Whatever
it was, RK was in love with it. Becker couldn't hear anything, but he could see
that the cat's sides were pumping up and down with the force of his purring.
A few
feet further on, something gleamed in the beam of the work light, and Becker
bent to examine it. Like the object RK was mauling, the thing was long and
thin, maybe had been pointed on the end at one time, but the tip was broken
off. There were definite spiral markings on it, he saw as he brushed away the
soil. It glistened in the light, refracting rich shades of blue and green and
deep red from its white surface. It looked like a big, carved opal. Pretty
thing. He tucked it in the sack and swung his beam around. It flashed on
several other pieces like the one he had, all broken and sticking up through
the soil. He took a couple of other specimens, and made a note of the precise
coordinates of this location so he could land here again, in case this stuff
was valuable. Then he grabbed RK and headed back to the ship.
He
finished reloading his cargo. As usual, he left a few of the more expendable
pieces behind to lighten his load. He had inventory scattered all over the
galaxy now. Well, most of the sites where he'd stashed the stuff were
uninhabited, so it would keep. He could reclaim it if he found a market later.
Finally, after he got the cargo stowed aboard once more, Becker lugged RK, the
new treasure firmly clamped in his fangs, back onto the ship.
First
things first, he decided. He set their course back to Kezdet and lifted off. It
wasn't like he wanted to go to Kezdet.
He
hated the damned place, but it was-unfortunately-the Condor's home port. The
ship had originally been registered to Becker's foster father, Theophilus
Becker, who bought Jonas from a labor farm to help with the business when the
boy was twelve. The old man had died ten years later, leaving the ship, the
business, and his private maps of all manner of otherwise uncharted byways and
shortcuts through various star systems and galaxies for his adopted son. Becker
had spent every possible minute in space in the years since.
Once
the ship was out of the planet's gravity well and the course was set, Becker
turned the helm of the ship over to the computer. Too exhausted to fix himself
anything else to eat, he opened another can of RK's cat food and ate that
before settling down for some sleep. The cat, who had of course been fed as
soon as the two returned to the ship-otherwise nothing else could have been
accomplished-was already sacked out on top of the specimen bag containing the
strange rocks they'd salvaged from the planet.
Becker
pushed the recline button on his seat at the console and slept at the helm. His
bunk was full of cargo. Besides, he couldn't get to it for the stacks of feed
sacks full of seeds he'd picked up several weeks before.
He woke
up finally when a paw on his cheek told him he'd better do so if he didn't want
another pat, this time with the claws bared. He looked up into RK's big green
eyes. Something was different about that cat, but he couldn't put his finger on
it. He fed both of them again, checked his course, and emptied the collection
sack onto the console. Time to get a better look at what he'd acquired.
He didn't
figure he needed to use gloves with these specimens, since the cat had been
carrying one around in its mouth with no ill effects since they'd found them,
so he dug a couple of the spiral rocks out and ran a scanner over them. No
radiation, nothing to poison, burn, freeze, or sting him. He knew that, having
just picked them out of the sack with his bare hands.
RK
crowded in close as Becker examined the objects, stroking them, turning them,
trying to chip a piece off one with a rock hammer. The stones had a strange
feeling to them-a sort of hum, as if they were alive. Maybe they were. Damn, if
these were sentient life forms, he'd have to take them back. He was going to
have to check this out with an expert. He dumped the rocks back into the
collection bag.
There
wasn't much else to do, so he slept again. When he awoke, it was to find RK
standing on his chest. Becker thought the cat must have been sleeping on his
arm, because his right hand tingled as if it had been numbed from the cat's
weight. His right ear felt funny, too.
That
was when he realized what was different about the cat. Two green eyes blinked
back at him, the good one and the one RK had lost in the crash. The cat's right
ear was also whole and perfect. At that point the cat stood up, stretched
itself halfway down Becker's leg, and stuck its tail in his face. Becker was
stunned to see that the tail had straightened out, lengthened to a luxuriant
and elegant appendage, and now waved quite handsomely. Below the tail, well,
yeah, that missing part had returned there, too.
Becker
lifted his own right hand and saw that the stubs of his fingers had regrown.
His hands looked just as they had before he'd come into contact with RK-maybe
minus the odd scar. He touched his ear. That felt whole again as well. What in
the name of the three moons of Kezdet was going on here? How could this have
happened-not that he was complaining. The only thing he could think was they'd
run into some kind of healing force on that derelict planet. If the planet was
capable of this kind of miracle, it was no wonder somebody had wrecked the
place looking for the secret. As soon as he sold some of this cargo and
reprovisioned-he was getting tired of cat food-he was going right back there to
see what he could find.
"Mercy,
Roadkill, when we get to Kezdet we're both gonna be so damned good lookin'
we'll have to watch out they don't snag us for the pleasure houses." Not
that he didn't intend to go there straightaway himself. And he'd take Roadkill
with him.
Hell, they
didn't call those places cathouses for nothing. Must be a lady cat or two
around there would appreciate the attentions of a handsome space traveler like
his buddy.
The
trip back was real pleasant. For one thing, the cabin and hold didn't stink.
Not even a little bit. Becker had to keep looking around to make sure Roadkill
was still aboard because the whole ship had stopped smelling like cat piss. It
was a smell you got used to, but it was nice to get used to not smelling it.
For another thing, they were making really good time, even though they had been
traveling vast uncharted distances from theirwell, Becker's-home world.
Theophilus
Becker had been much more than just a junk dealer-er-salvage broker. He was a
salvage broker, a recycling engineer, and an astrophysicist. Jonas's new
master, who liked to be called Dad, was also just a tad on the reckless side.
The man liked nothing better than riding the wild wormhole, finding the quirks
in quarks. He'd known how to detect those places where time and space pleated
up, accordion-style, to be shot through for a shortcut by a space-farer with
the guts to use them. Jonas had learned a great deal from Theophilus.
So it
was a matter of only a month or so before Becker, with RK trotting along beside
him like a dog, showed up in front of his favorite bawdyhouse. A girl he didn't
recognize came to the door. She was fully dressed in a long-sleeved coverall
fastened clear to her neck, not the attire he was accustomed to in this place.
"Oh,
Lord, not another one," she said.
"You
don't sound glad to see me," he replied, smiling. It had never been
customary to bring flowers or any other greenery here-just a few hundred
credits and the courtship was complete.
"When
will you men get the word that this is an honest establishment for making
safety belts for flitters now? The Didis are history."
"History?"
Jonas felt stupid. "I like history. What do you mean, history? Where's
Didi Yasmin?"
"In
jail, where she belongs. Where have you been? Outer space?"
"As
a matter of fact, yeah," he said. "Why is she in jail?"
"I
haven't got time enough to tell you," the girl said. "But you might
try asking some of the kids on Maganos-little girls she forced into
prostitution." She glared at him.
"Hey,
not with me! No, don't look at me that way. I like big girls-grown up girls,
women, actually. I never-aw ..."
His
hostess's attention was diverted by Roadkill, who was rubbing against her
ankles. She reached down and petted him, then picked him up. "What a pretty
kitty," she said.
"Lady,
I wouldn't do that," Becker said. "He'll take your arm off."
But RK,
the traitor, lay happily purring in her arms, butting up against her chin with
the top of his head, shamelessly cadging caresses. Becker wished he could do
the same thing.
"What's
his name?" the girl asked.
"RK,"
Becker hedged.
"What
does that stand for?" Now she was tickling the traitor's tummy. It was
white. Becker had had no idea that the cat's belly was white. RK never wanted
him to do any tickling. Quite the contrary.
"Refugee
Kitty," Becker lied, knowing that the truth would not go down well with
her. "I found him on a derelict ship-his people had been killed in a freak
accident and he was in a bad way."
He
hoped this would elevate him in her estimation from a simple child molester to
a child molester who was at least apparently kind to animals. "And my name
is Jonas. Jonas Becker. What's yours?"
"Khetala,"
she said.
"Nice
to meet you," he said.
"I
can't say the same to you, Mr. Becker. You'll find Kezdet has changed quite a
bit since the Didis and the Piper got what was coming to them. Maybe you
considered the houses harmless fun, but I was forced to work in one before the
Lady Epona liberated us. I don't share your attitude."
"Hey,
I understand. I was slave farm labor myself but I got adopted out. I " She
was staring at him stonily. Even he knew it wasn't the same. His voice drifted
off into confusion and he reached for RK, who took a slice at him. Becker
ignored the cat's reluctance to be dislodged and firmly, if painfully,
extricated him from Khetala's arms. "We-uh-nice meeting youwe'll just be
going now."
She
turned on her heel and went back inside. One good thing about meeting her. He
wasn't in the mood any more for what he had always let pass for love. So it was
time to get back to work instead. He'd always found making money a fairly
acceptable substitute for most pleasurable pursuits.
Before
he went to the trouble of renting a container cruiser and offloading his cargo,
he made a few inquiries about the state of the market. He was gratified to find
that the Lady Epona who had so thoroughly cleansed the planet of evil hadn't
minded junk, presumably as long as its purveyors weren't htterbugs.
The
nano-bug market was still flourishing. He took a look around before settling in
for the day. It was getting harder to find a real good deal any more. The
original Mars probe, still in prime condition (because it hadn't worked in the
first place), had been recovered by a guy who used to work for Red Planet
Reclamation-the outfit that was supposed to return planets to their pristine
condition after the minerals were stripped. The guy wanted enough of it to
build a whole new planet from scratch. Becker shook his head and moved on. He
also found a great booth for rockhounds. He was particularly attracted to four
new gemstones he hadn't seen before-bairdite, giloglite, nadezdite, and
acornite. Bairdite was a multicolored opaque stone with a pebbly crystalline
surface striped both ways with red and yellow-probably iron and sulfur
deposits. Giloglite was the color of serpentine, only translucent and cloudy.
Nadezdite was a transparent purple with gold flecks, and the acornite was a
blue-green stone that cleared in the middle to the most gorgeous deep teal
transparency he had ever seen in any rock, real or manufactured. The sequence
of names sounded familiar to him, but he couldn't quite think why.
He and
RK checked out the food booths. There was a meat chili advertised as the specialty
of Ma'aowri 3. It smelled really good to him, but RK took one sniff and backed
off. When Becker tried to get closer, RK gave him a look that was hard to
fathom, but left him thinking that maybe the meat in the dish was a little too
close to home for comfort-whether to him or RK he wasn't sure. He passed up
oddly shaped fruits, cheap fructose candy and waxy chocolate, various roast
beasts, some fairly bizarre vegetation, and assorted other delicacies too alien
to identify. He finally settled on a good old-fashioned gyro and a cup of cat,
then returned to the stall he'd rented and began to unload his container into
it.
After
Becker had displayed his wares as temptingly as possible, he sat in the
throne-like command seat he'd taken from an otherwise totaled Percenezatorian
battle wagon. RK lay on the collection bag from the last trip. It had become
his bed of choice. He had been willing to part with only the smallest and most
broken piece of that funny opal-looking mineral. Becker kept that piece in his pocket
as a deal-sweetener. It was eyecatching enough that maybe somebody would decide
that his wife couldn't live without it.
As far
as sales went, the day was pretty slow going-the usual looky-loos, a couple of
rich teenage boys looking for ways to jazz up their cheap transportation.
Becker figured he would offload what he could here and then move along to Twi
Osiam to do some major trading and restocking. About then, she came along, her
entourage trailing behind her.
She
wasn't really his type-too young, for one thing. She had a figure like a
twelve-year-old boy who had been dead of starvation for a year or two. Her hair
was long and curly in the back and short and spiky in the front. But she was
fashionably and expensively dressed in the furs and skins of several now
extinct species. Amazing that clothes that cost so much could cover so little
of what was, to his eye, fairly pointless to reveal.
Her
entourage consisted of four men a little older than she was, all of whom ranged
restlessly behind her. "Stay," she told them, in a tone Becker would
have been a fool to try to use on RK. "Helloo," she cooed to him.
Well, he had been right. He'd returned to his natural drop-dead handsomeness
and now women found him so irresistible he'd get tired of it. Except, oddly
enough, for Khetala. Later.
"Helloo,
yourself," he said. "What can I do for you, princess?" he asked,
judging correctly which endearment she would prefer. RK, on the other hand, was
clearly not about to try and flatter this customer. His back -was up; his tail,
in its fully recovered state, would have made an excellent bottlebrush, his
eyes were slits, his ears were flat, and he was hissing like a tubful of
vipers. Becker stepped in front of him, to block his cat's view of this
doubtlessly well-heeled customer as well as to block the customer's view of
him.
"I
was hoping you could advise me," she said. "I was told you know just
everything there is to know about slightly used equipment."
"Not
everything, but more than most," he agreed.
"I'm
starting a small business and it would be a big help if I had just a teensy
little fleet of ships all to myself. I can get some very good bargain
spacecraft, but they all need parts here and there and I was just
wondering-hoping actually-that you would have a few things."
"Like
what? "
She
snapped her fingers and one of the men appeared and recited by rote a string of
instruments, equipment, systems, and parts. Becker suspected the man wasn't
actually a flesh and blood type, but an android. For one thing, he didn't pause
for breath during the whole fifteen minutes it took to recite the lady's
shopping list. For another thing, while he was talking, RK peed on his foot and
shredded his lower leg and the guy didn't seem to notice.
"Yeah,
I got all that," Becker said at the end of the recitation, looking closer
at the guy. Yep. Android. Its foot and lower leg were smoking slightly. Cheap
model. Bad wiring job. "You want takeout or shall I deliver the stuff to
the hangar of your choice? Part of it is still aboard the ship." The lady
would be cleaning him out, actually, a fact that made him a little nervous.
He'd have to make enough money from this sale to cover his expenses while he
collected more inventory. Luckily, he was already planning to go back to all of
those desolate planets and pick up the bits and pieces he'd left behind. And
while he was at it, he'd check out what had done the healing job on him and RK.
"Oh,"
the lady said in an arch voice, "how much?" Becker named his price.
About a half dozen times more than the stuff was worth. She smiled and
methodically cut it down to a pittance. He named a price more than four times
what the merchandise should bring, and the bargaining began in earnest. The
problem was, he was nearly selling out here. It would put him out of business
until he collected more salvage. He wanted enough profit to float him and RK
for a good long time, with enough left over to at least maybe take a little
vacation, preferably somewhere there were still Didis or pleasure houses in
operation.
"Look,
I'll tell you what," he said. "I wasn't going to show you this, but
you're a pretty lady and I can tell you have exquisite taste. You give me my
original asking price and I'll throw this in for free." He reached into
his pocket and drew forth the bit of spiral stone that RK had let him keep.
"Give it to your jeweller, he can cut and shape it into a fabulous suite
of jewellry for..."
The
"woman's eyes widened when she saw it, and she snatched it from his hand.
She began to laugh. Not a pretty laugh either. "Where did you get
this?"
"Found
it," he said, with a shrug.
"Found
it?" She laughed again. "On whom? I mean, where?"
"Now
that would be telling," he said. "Just be glad you've got it and
nobody else does. A rare find, princess." Part of him thought that if she
liked it so much, he should show her the rest of the stones, but that would
mean trying to get RK off the specimen bag. Frankly, he liked the cat a lot
better than he liked this woman. He already deeply regretted letting her have
this sample for nothing-well, nothing except making her pay a lot more than
she'd wanted to for the items she needed.
"Yes,
indeed," she said. "What a pity you can't get more. I have an
excellent market in mind." She thrust her skinny chest toward him.
"We might even go into partnership."
"Gee,
just my bad luck. But you know how it is," he said with a shrug.
"Sometimes you just happen onto a good thing and you may never find it
again." He wouldn't part with any more of the spiral stones until he knew
what she knew about them that made her so interested in the one he let her
have. The things were probably worth a lot more to someone else than what she
was offering him.
"Pity,"
she said, her eyes as hard and narrowed as RK's. For some reason she seemed to
doubt his veracity. Good. That made them even.
She
handed him a big wad of credits. They were issued in the name of Lady Kisia
Manjari. He counted and pocketed them.
"Great.
It's a deal then."
"If
you'll step aside, I'll have my crew reload your container and use it to
transport my merchandise," she said.
"Fair
enough. Come on, RK," he said to the cat, and grabbed the specimen bag RK
was sitting on. The cat spat at the woman again.
Oh, no,
you don't," she said. "I just bought everything here, including that
mangy creature. I know a laboratory that would love to get such a
specimen."
Sorry,
lady," he said. "You bought everything on the list that your singed
android friend there read. And the cat's not on that list. I can't sell him
under any circumstances. Federation law prohibits it. RK here isn't a creature.
He's my partner. A sentient being. The brains in the outfit really."
"I
want it," she said and beckoned to her men. RK left bloody skid marks on
Decker's arm as the cat leaped over him and raced off, to be lost among the
stalls. Becker grabbed his arm and dropped the collection bag on his foot, but
recovered quickly, fumbling to close the mouth of the bag before Kisia could
see what he had. He didn't dare look around too much, so he didn't see that one
of the artifacts had slid out of the bag and rolled under an oxygen recycling
unit.
"Told
you he was sentient," Becker said, grinning up at her to make sure she was
meeting his gaze and not looking too closely at anything else. "Sorry
about that. I'd help you load your stuff but I have to find my partner
now."
He
nonchalantly tucked the collection bag into his belt and tried not to clank as
he walked away.
Acorna
wanted a graze and a good long gallop more than she wanted anything else in
this world at the moment, but before she could say so, her thought was taken up
by all of the others.
"A
meal? What a good idea," exclaimed a nearby dignitary, as if she had
spoken her wish aloud. She had been introduced to this person onscreen but she
couldn't recall who he was exactly. Someone very important.
"Yes,
something to eat, and a good run. What a splendid idea!" Thariinye agreed,
and others concurred with nods and other gestures of affirmation. The young
male had also spoken aloud.
Neither
of them had apparently read the part of her thought in which the galloping and
grazing was being done by herself, alone, with the wind blowing through her
hair, down in that field below. She put the thought away as antisocial,
something she didn't wish to appear to be, especially now, when she really
wanted to make a good impression on her native people.
So she
smiled and nodded and avoided being trampled while the assembled masses poured
out of the spaceport and onto the broad plain separating the port from the
town. The plain was lush with lovely grasses, foreign to her but tasting
deliriously of lemon and pepper, with a hint of cinnamon.
The
people who had joined the Balakure's crew to celebrate their homecoming happily
pulled up and munched the grasses, while wandering from one area to another
chatting, laughing, and calling to each other. Acorna slid a sidelong glance at
one of the nearby Linyaari. He was not white like her fellow space travelers,
but a deep red color with a rich black mane. Others in the crowd were black,
brown, golden with white hair, or gray with hair that was lightly dappled with
a darker tint.
Neeva
smiled at her, catching her thought. "You didn't know we came in
colors?"
Several
grazers glanced at them in a startled sort of way, then looked politely away.
"We
should either speak aloud now or you must keep a tight focus upon me, my
dear," Neeva told Acorna. "You send quite well, you know, and will
have half the planet privy to your inner thoughts if you're not careful."
"Sorry.
It's going to take some getting used to, guarding my thoughts so that everyone
can't hear. I'm still not quite sure what, or even when, I'm
transmitting."
"You're
very strong, dear, if somewhat new to this. You tend to-well, sometimes you
shout a bit. Most people won't deliberately intrude upon your thoughts, but you
have to try to control your broadcasts. It's not like it is on shipboard where
we're in sync with each other, thanks to long-term close association. People
here on narhii-Vhiliinyar tend to use thought-speak mostly only among their own
kinship groups or close friends. They tend to vocalize at events like this,
both to maintain their own privacy, and to avoid intruding on the thoughts of others.
Most would no more try to listen in on your private thoughts than they would
try to eavesdrop upon your private audible comments."
"I'll
try to be more careful," Acorna promised quietly, watching both white and
multicolored Linyaari sitting crosslegged in the field or simply lying down,
rolling over to get a new nibble when they'd worn out the old spot. No one
seemed to mind about their clothing getting mussed. Acorna decided it was time
for a change of subject. "No one mentioned to me that Linyaari came in
varied colorations. I was a bit surprised, that's all. You and the other
Linyaari I've met until this moment are white like me, so I thought we all
would have the same coloring."
Neeva
made a wry face. "The color of our coat, or lack of it, among those of us
who travel in space has until recently been a matter of pride to us. It shows
our people who we are, and where we have been. The white coloration is known as
becoming star-clad, -wearing the white and silver of the distant stars. A space
traveler proudly sheds his or her color the way a child sheds his or her toys.
We're not sure why, but a Linyaari's natural coat color bleaches to white
during his or her first space voyage."
"It's
not genetic then, as coloring is among humans?" Acorna asked.
"Not
the white coloring, no." She said, "Since the evacuation, when many
people who would have preferred to retain their original pigmentation lost it,
being star-clad has come to be considered, at least among some circles, as an
abnormality that should be addressed. Our researchers are being asked to study
it as a 'condition.' The last I heard, they had postulated that the change is
caused by a combination of factors: the deprivation of natural light during a
typical space voyage, which results in the destruction of certain
photosensitive pigmentproducing elements in our skin; and the lack of certain
nutrients in our diet which are only found in plants native to Vhiliinyar, and
which will not grow successfully in hydroponics gardens. We can store the
plants in seed form for transport to suitable new environments, of course, but
during the space voyage, we simply have to do without them, with the resulting
effects on pigmentation. Between the two processes, Linyaari space-farers lose
all coloration in their skin during the course of a typical space voyage."
Acorna
looked down at her own arms and hands, trying to imagine them red or black or
any of the other colors she saw around her. "Will I change colors now that
I'll be in the sun and eating the right nutrients, then?"
Acorna
imagined, in rapid succession, herself in each of the colors she saw on people
around her, then herself with bright purple skin and a violet mane. Everyone
nearby was clearly listening in, in spite of what Neeva said was polite. There
was a scattering of laughter around her, and a few frowns. She deliberately
broadcast an image of herself rainbow-colored. Conversations all over the
meadow stopped and the laughter turned to embarrassed coughing. Even the frowns
looked puzzled, and more people stared at her with politely quizzical
expressions. Hmm.
Neeva
laughed. "You can see, Khornya, that you'll need to learn to refine your
range when you send thought-images. Some of our people have no sense of humor,
and they will now think that you are not one of us at all, but some strange
second cousin to the Linyaari who started life as a-what is the little lizard
from those vids? The one who changed colors?"
"A
chameleon," Acorna said, blushing. "Can I send an apology?
"Perhaps
it would be better to leave well enough alone for now," Neeva replied,
still amused. "Otherwise, they will see your blush and think you are
trying to tell them you were originally pink. But in answer to your question,
sister-daughter, once starclad, always star-clad. The varicolored Linyaari you
see here are younger than you are, born on narhii-Vhiliinyar since the
evacuation." She sighed and stood up. "You know, I haven't spent a
great deal of time on-planet since shortly after your parents disappeared, so
perhaps the experts who see being star-clad as a disease are now close to
finding a 'solution.' Perhaps I could return to being gray with spots if I
wished. As it happens, I most emphatically do not wish to. I like what I
am."
Acorna
chewed thoughtfully on one last mouthful of the cinnamon-flavored grass. She
caught several frankly annoyed stares and thought less strenuously. She was
getting the distinct impression that it was rude to chew and broadcast at the
same time. Oh dear, she hadn't been here long at all and already she was afraid
she'd get a reputation for unfortunate behavior. It was hard fitting in when
she didn't know the rules. . . .
She
lowered her voice and moved closer to her aunt, and tried not to think too
loudly. She was beginning to feel rather overwhelmed. For one thing, while no
one was deliberately sending to her, under the vocalized chatter and laughter
she was aware of a constant buzz of random thoughts. For another thing, even
though her aunt had told her that the evacuation had happened after her parents
and she, as an infant, had left Vhiliinyar for their pleasure cruise, somehow
she'd thought narhii-Vhiliinyar would more closely resemble the place she saw
in her dreams-that wonderful land with rolling fields leading to snow-capped
mountains, with crystal clear rivers and streams cascading into waterfalls and
pooling into emerald lakes and ponds when they weren't winding through green
fields and wildflower-filled meadows. Nice, cuddly, furry animals drank from
the waterways and birds darted everywhere.
Here
the hills rolled slightly, the mountains were conspicuously absent, and the
plains stretched off to the far horizon. She saw only the Linyaari people; no
other large life forms at all. It was a pretty enough place, but lacked the
gorgeous scenery and amazing biodiversity other dreams. Of course, she hadn't
seen the entire planet yet. It was unlikely the whole place was like this.
Possibly there were many more interesting places on it.
An
older white Linyaari male joined Acorna and Neeva.
"
VLfei)haanye Neeva," he said, inclining his head.
"Aagroni
lirtye, what an honor it is to see you again, sir."
"The
honor is mine, Vi^e^kaanye."
"Allow
me to present my sisters daughter, Khornya. Khornya, Aagroni lirtye is one of
the founders of narhiiVhiliinyar. His team located this world. He headed the
terraformmg committee, determining what would be needed by our people to
sustain life here, and he customized and implemented the programs and processes
necessary to create a new habitat for us." "An awesome
responsibility, sir," Acorna said. "I'm glad you realize that, young
lady," lirtye said. "I could not help but overhear how disappointed
you were at the lack of certain topographical and biological amenities we
enjoyed on the old home world."
"Oh,
dear. I am trying very hard to learn not to think so loudly, sir, but I can't
seem to find the volume control on my mind." She smiled
self-deprecatingly, hoping he would have a sense of humor.
It
appeared that he didn't. "I see no reason that you should be less than
honest," he said with a frown. "But you must understand how little
time there was to prepare. Some of the features of the old home world were not
only unnecessary, but were at times dangerous. A flat and fairly uniform
planetary surface was most efficient for terraforming under the circumstances.
This planet had such a surface. As for the other fauna, while we introduced all
the essential species-single-celled life forms, invertebrates, and some of the
smaller vertebrates like birds and reptiles-during the course of the
terraforming process, we were still in the process of gathering breeding
populations of the larger vertebrates to transplant when we were notified that
the evacuation of our people was to take place immediately. The Khieevi
invasion had overtaken Caabye "
"That
was the third planet from our sun back on Vhiliinyar, Khornya," Neeva
interjected.
"We
had no time to waste. Getting our people off the planet and on the way to
safety took priority. We had to mobilize our entire fleet-those ships that were
not already away from the planet, that is."
Acorna
did not need to invade his thoughts to realize that he was making a posthumous
reprimand aimed at her parents because they had taken a spacecraft-and the
director of weapons development, which was her father's title and position
-away from Vhiliinyar at such a critical time. Though how her parents could
have predicted the moment was at hand so quickly when the speed of the final
Khieevi invasion took everybody by surprise, Acorna couldn't imagine. Nor could
she imagine that her parents would have left the planet if they'd had even an
inkling of the fate that awaited them. But she wasn't about to point either of
those observations out-if she could help it-to this man.
"In
anticipation of the Khieevi invasion, we had furnished this new world with
sufficient dwellings, equipment, and provisions to sustain us for the first
year. We crowded our people into the colony ships in a mad rush to escape the invaders.
We loaded whatever animals we could as well, but the populations were small,
and have not flourished here, probably due to a lack of genetic diversity. We
have teams searching other worlds now to find similar life forms to supplement
and replace the native creatures we lost to the Khieevi."
"I
meant no criticism, sir," Acorna replied softly. "You were
responsible for saving our people and making this new world. No one, least of
all me, could possibly find fault with that. I was only thinking of the world I
saw in my dreams."
"Yes,
I saw," he said, and turned on his heel and walked away.
Neeva
and Acorna exchanged looks.
(I
thought being psychic meant that everyone would understand everyone else,)
Acorna whispered to her aunt.
Neeva patted
her shoulder and "whispered-vocally-in response, "Some people can
hear nothing but their own inner voices shouting at them so loudly that they
come to believe the shouting is coming from others. The aagroni was a zoologist
before he was assigned to the terraforming project. The loss of so many of the
native animals was shattering for him."
Acorna
gazed after the man who had disappeared into the throng.
"Never
mind him, Khornya," said Neeva. "The man is a relentless
perfectionist. Despite his efforts, like all worlds, this world is less than
perfect. Of course, Vhiliinyar was less than perfect, too, but no one remembers
that now. So the aagroni does not count the lives he saved or lives of all the
children born on this new world when he measures his accomplishments. He is
acutely aware, however, of every single complaint about the weather, the lack
of animals, the monotonous scenery, the bugs, and natural upheavals that are
all too common on a recently terraformed planet."
Just as
Neeva finished speaking a breathless young person skidded up to them, almost
falling in her haste to reach them.
"Your
pardon, Vue()haanye Neeva," the young person said. Her skin was a soft
mocha brown and her hair a darker brown adorned with large white splotches. She
was almost stammering in her haste to convey her message. "The Vilzaar
Liriili wishes to see you immediately on a matter of some urgency."
"The
Vu-zaar Liriili?" Neeva asked. "When did Liriili become
viizaarl"
"A
ghaanye ago, Vw^haanye Neeva," the girl said. "When Viizaar Tiilye
stepped down to pursue Haarha Liirni. "
Acorna
consulted the vocabulary she'd learned from the LAANYE, a translation device
usually used by Linyaari emissaries to sleep-learn the languages of other
species. In her case, a LAANYE had been recalibrated so that she could more
rapidly learn Linyaari. A viizaar was some kind of high political office. The
other term the girl used seemed to mean "higher learning." And Acorna
knew a ghaanye was roughly a year and a half in Galactic Standard time.
"We
were just coming to report in," Neeva said with extra warmth in her voice
to reassure the girl, warmth that was quite at odds with the dismay Acorna felt
emanating emotionally from her aunt. "I know Liriili will be so pleased to
meet Khornya."
The
messenger girl looked Acorna up and down quickly, even a bit skittishly.
"So you're the one who was captured by the Khieevi," she said.
"How did you get away before getting tortured and killed?"
"Captured
by the Khieevi? But I wasn't captured by the Khieevi," Acorna said,
confused. The two of them fell in behind Neeva and Melireenya as they made
their way to the road to the city. Khaari had found old friends among the
greeting committee and was, judging from the exchange of lively facial
expressions, deep in animated conversation with them. Thariinye, flanked by two
younger female Linyaari, followed Acorna and the messenger.
Acorna
became aware of a mental exchange between her aunt and Thariinye.
(Thariinye,
where do you suppose this child would get the idea that Khornya was captured by
Khieevi?) Neeva asked.
(Not
from me. I only said that the beings who intercepted Khornya's pod after her
parents' death were barbaric and in some ways Khieevi-like. I never said she
was captured,) the young male replied.
Acorna
and the messenger girl looked at each other. Acorna was all too aware of the
psychic communication that took place between the mature adults. But according
to what Acorna had learned, psychic ability only began manifesting itself in
the Linyaari youngsters at puberty. This girl was definitely prepubescent.
"I
wasn't kidnapped by the Khieevi," Acorna told the young Linyaari. "I
was brought up among an alien species called humans. My adopted uncles were
very kind, as were many other humans I encountered. I'm sure you would have
found Mr. Li in particular most. . . Linyaan-like. Am I using that correctly?
There were other humans who were pretty barbaric, it's true, but my contact
with the harsher aspects of humanity has been limited."
The
girl looked extremely disappointed, and for a moment Acorna thought it might be
the sort of bloodthirstiness she knew from the children on Kezdet.
"I'm
sorry to have got it wrong," the girl said. "I didn't mean to upset
you. I was hoping that you had been captured. I mean, not that I wish you ill,
but especially when I saw that you looked so unharmed, I was hoping you had
been through the torture and survived it because. . . . Oh well, it's not
important right now. You didn't endure it, and I'm glad you're all right. My
name is Maati, by the way. I know that you're Khornya."
"In
your-our language-yes. At home I was called Acorna," Acorna said, allowing
the subject to change since the girl was evidently too flustered by her mistake
to make a great deal of sense. Acorna did not find the child easy to read and
wondered if this was because Linyaari children lacked psychic ability. It was
clear from this youngling that the lack meant that the children not only lacked
the ability to receive thoughts but also to transmit them nonverbally,
consciously or unconsciously.
"Acorna?
That's an odd name," Maati said. "So is Khornya, for that matter. I
mean, the word means 'one horn.' All of us have one horn and nobody has more
than one, so what's the big deal?"
"No
one else where I was living had a horn," Acorna told her.
"They
didn't? How did they heal things when they got hurt or sick? And what if the
water was muddy in the stream where they were, or there was a fire and the air
was smoky? How did they fix it? "
"Sometimes
they didn't. If they were hurt or sick, and I wasn't handy, they went to medics
who fixed them with all sorts of tools and tonics and pills. As best they
could, anyway. And if the water was muddy, they drank muddy water or went
thirsty. If the air was smoky, they breathed it or moved to where there was
cleaner air. Again, unless I was handy."
"I'm
surprised they let you come home if they're that backward and you were that
useful to them," Maati said stoutly.
Acorna
sighed and refrained from trying to explain any more about human society.
They
were walking across the edge of the field now. The sky was a clear cloudless
turquoise. Acorna saw the road from the city to the spaceport just ahead of
them. Standing on the road were several men in elaborately decorated uniforms,
each uniform a different color. Standing beside them, decked out in beribboned
and bejeweled blankets that matched their attendants' uniforms, were animals
that looked something like horses-except that they had horns, just like the
Linyaari.
"Madam,"
one of the men said, though he said it in Linyaari, of course, "our
Ancestors will now convey you to the home of the vazaar."
"Ride?
TheArtc&^to/v?" Neeva sounded shocked. "When did we start using
the Ancestors as transportation?"
"Ancestors?"
Acorna asked, intrigued. She reached out her hand and touched the velvet nose
of one of the gorgeously blanketed creatures. Up close, though they mostly
looked like Uncle Hafiz's horses, they also looked a tiny bit like goats, with
little beards on their chins. They were somewhat more slightly built than the
horses she'd seen in Hafiz's stables. But they were entirely identifiable as
something else she'd been associated with by her human companions all her life.
"These are Mr. Li's ki-Lin!" she said. She looked at Neeva. "You
didn't tell me about them."
"Well,
no," Neeva said. "One doesn't speak of the Ancestors off the home
world, not even among one's closest companions. They do not care for offworlders,
no matter how Linyaari, knowing about them. In the past, they have had great
reason to be frightened of other species. Not of Linyaari, of course. The
Linyaari have, since the Ancestor's great tragedy and rescue by the Ancestral
Hosts, evolved from them, but their kind are long-lived and adaptable. These
are descendents from the original species. Most are far older than any of us.
Their species, all of the Ancestors, remain as they always were, unchanged
since those long-distant days before our kind had yet to be born."
To the
man in the fuchsia uniform standing beside the fuchsia-blanketed unicorn Neeva
now repeated her question. "Ride the Ancestors ? "
Acorna's
normally serene aunt was clearly so taken aback she'd shouted without meaning
to.
The
fuchsia-clad man rubbed his temples and grimaced in pain. Very slowly, as if he
was unaccustomed to speaking aloud, the man said, "Yes, Vme()haanye Neeva.
It is the wish of the Ancestors that you and your crew ride upon the backs of
these Ancestors to Kubiilikhan. It is traditional."
"Traditional?
Since when? I am not aware that we ever rode upon their backs since-well, since
the Linyaari race began."
The man
rubbed the area around his horn, as if continuing to block pain, and said,
"It has become traditional over the past ghaanye and a half, VLie()haanye.
Since the Ancestors noticed that in the continued absence of flitters, our
space-farers have been walking into Kubiilikhan from the spaceport. The
Ancestors feel that this lacks dignity. They feel that a lot of two legged
creatures simply walking down the road to the capital provides no sense of
circumstance or occasion befitting the importance of our space-farers."
"Now
that is odd," Melireenya said. "Back on the home world, the Ancestors
never quite approved of space-farers. Such dreadful things had happened to them
in space, you know."
"During
the evacuation, madam, the Ancestors became aware of the important functions
those who brave the perils of space fulfill these days on behalf of our people."
"I
don't understand," Acorna said, feeling a little like the girl who had
fallen down a rabbit hole in a rather odd old story she had once read while
aboard her uncles' mining ship. "The ki-lin here are our Ancestors, and
they want us to ride them because there are no flitters? Why aren't there any
flitters? Isn't it awfully hard to get around on the planet just walking or
maybe riding on-on the Ancestors?"
Aagrom
lirtye, who was in the group of people rounded up by messengers to go to the
viizaar's house, spoke up. He demanded of her as if she were stupid, "How
much room do you think a space fleet has when it has one chance only to
evacuate an entire planet full of people and the essentials for helping them
survive? Flitters are large. They take up vital room that is better used by
other cargo. They are easily replaceable. Organic creatures are not."
Acorna
couldn't help herself. She had to reply to that. "Of course the living
must come first, sir. But wasn't it difficult to settle the planet without some
sort of small scale ground transport?"
"We
had steps, ramps, and ladders . . . and we had feet, young lady!" the
scientist said. "And each transport ship had a shuttle fleet which was
perfectly adequate for transporting people and supplies to various locations
around the planet as necessary. Our current dwellings and devices are quite
sensibly easily portable, and as a people we've always kept the complex
machinery we require in our home environment to a minimum. Flitters were,
during the chaos of the evacuation, simply a convenience that took up room we
needed to transport the Ancestors to our new home. The Ancestors, after all,
are sentient beings. They could hardly be left to the nonexistent mercies of
the Khieevi."
He
shook his head at the general stupidity of his fellow beings and allowed an
attendant to lead him to his designated Ancestor.
"And
afterwards," someone said in a small voice, "even though the council
did get around to ordering flitters eventually, they've been on back-order for
almost an entire ghaanye."
"I
don't quite understand," Acorna said. "You mean it's been three years
and you haven't even started replacing them?"
"It's
all right, dear," Neeva told her. "You need not understand everything
right away. There will be plenty of time to explain later."
"I'm
just surprised that. . . never mind. Since the Ancestors wish to make such a
sacrifice, please tell them I am deeply appreciative," Acorna said,
dipping her own horn toward the unicorn. She turned back to Neeva and whispered
to her in a quiet aside, "It was just a surprise that the Linyaari have no
more mundane form of ground transport when they have such a glorious space
fleet." She indicated the ships neatly docked nearby, so many fanciful eggs
in a crate.
"The
ships were necessarily brought along during the evacuation. We used everything
flyable in our haste to leave our old home before the Khieevi came. The
flitters were expendable, though, as were many of the technological devices
we'd commonly used back on the old planet. We concentrated on saving the
biological wealth of the home world. As is always the case in any forced
migration, there were things we lost along the way," Neeva said.
"We
have all we need to sustain us," the attendant replied, overhearing the
quiet conversation. "The Ancestors in their wisdom indicate the path of
truth, as usual. By their example, they show us how to use what is important to
substitute for that which is less so."
"It
takes time and credits to resupply a transplanted world," Melireenya said,
as, after a deep bow to the unicorn blanketed in blue, she was helped by the
creature's attendant to mount. "Fortunately, our space fleet was equal to
the demands that we made of it, both during the evacuation and now. Good engineering
and buying quality paid off when we were in dire circumstances."
"The
ships weren't manufactured on your old home world?" Acorna asked,
surprised.
"Only
partially. They were assembled off-planet by manufacturers who cater to our
trade and then brought to us to be customized to our specific needs and tastes
by Linyaari technoartisans."
"I
see. But why off-planet? I thought, with the LAANYE and the other devices I've
seen, that you-we-were a highly advanced technological society with the infrastructure
to support a great deal of industry."
"Having
the capability isn't the point, child," said another of the Linyaari
greeting committee.
The
attendant of Acorna s Ancestor cleared his throat and said, "The Grandmother
says that in the day of her own grandmother, the Ancestral Hosts did a great
deal of manufacturing. It was very messy. It took up valuable grazing area and
required either living workers who would much rather be elsewhere or else
mechanical workers who themselves had to be manufactured."
Another
attendant chimed in, as if reciting a litany. "It was a pernicious system,
which devoured increasingly more grazing area as time passed. Fortunately, the
Ancestral Hosts took advantage of space travel and relocated much of our
manufacturing to other worlds where the beings didn't mind living without
adequate grazing area. These days, even though we have a large community of
techno-artisans who are superb designers and engineers, the vast majority of
our manufacturing is done under Linyaari supervision on other worlds."
"Which
is a very good thing," Melireenya said, "because we're always in need
of grazing land."
A
Linyaari woman wearing a long multicolored robe said, "The example of the
Ancestral Hosts has served us throughout our history. Most of our people feel
that living a life centered in plants and creatures is much more Linyaari than
dealing with metals and tools."
"But
our people don't mind if others spend their lives working with metals and
tools," Neeva said wryly. "And some of the Linyaari find their
calling in doing just that. Just as some of us live our lives in space or on
other planets. Our people trade with other worlds for the items, materials,
parts, or processes we need to have manufactured."
"What
do we trade if we manufacture nothing ourselves?" Acorna wanted to know.
"Think
about it, Khornya," Thariinye said. "What problems do industrial
societies have that we can cure?" He didn't wait for her to answer.
"Pollution, of course! Their manufacturing processes create toxins we can
neutralize."
"But
mindful of the example of the Ancestors," the attendant intoned, "our
envoys, emissaries, and tradesmen do not disclose the true source of our
power."
"Of
course not," said another of the white-skinned Linyaari greeting
committee. "Our trading partners do not realize the purification power
lies in our horns. They think it is a mechanical process-centered in these
little devices we take with us which they believe effectively dispel pollution
and contamination on their worlds. Though they've also figured out the devices
only work in the hands of Linyaari technicians."
"Thus,
profiting from the examples of the Ancestors and the Ancestral Hosts, the vast
majority of our people can live a pastoral lifestyle uncontaminated by the
processes which would compromise those things we value," a golden-colored
Linyaari concluded.
Neeva
interjected, with a mixture of amusement and annoyance, "Fortunately for
those who embrace only the agrarian lifestyle, our people are not of a hive
mentality. While we sometimes communicate telepathically, that by no means
indicates that we all agree, or think alike. There are many of us who find
endless pastoralism stupifying, boring and tedious. Some Linyaari prefer to
study science and physics, to enjoy the challenge and adventure of space travel
and other more technological pursuits. We have many among our kind who are
inventors, who design the devices, techniques, and programs we need, and adapt
alien technologies to our purposes. We space-farers serve our people as envoys
and traders to supply new markets for Linyaari skills and goods, and to bring
back those things our people prefer not to manufacture for ourselves."
"And
we are content that you do so, Vue()haanye, and even grateful for the many
conveniences, improvements, and innovations you bring us, so long as you do not
undertake to do your work here, or make us join you out there," said
another white-skinned Linyaari with a slight shudder. "One journey in the
blackness of space will serve most of us for a lifetime. And how you can live
out most of your life inside a large machine, however beautifully decorated, is
beyond me."
"I
must admit," Khaari said, "after ghaanyi in a space ship, I do love
coming home-to the agrarian life where one grazes, not from a hydroponics tank,
but in a real garden or field with bugs and birds and unexpected treats among
the wildflowers and weeds."
"There
are not many birds here, honored lady, the pendot•n-een-uniformed attendant of
the peridot-blanketed Ancestor Khaari rode said sadly "Great grandfather
here sadly misses their singing."
"As
do I," said the aagroni sadly. "As do I.
( Kisia
Manjari's pout at losing the junk man and ^56.^ y^L his -wild cat as
victims rapidly disappeared •"^ ^.when her sandaled foot encountered a
hard object on the ground. "Ouch!" she said, and bent down to pick up
what she had thought was an offending rock, in order to fling it after Becker.
Then she saw what it was.
"Two
unicorn horns? That girl only had one. Daddy," she said to her father, a
figure she alone could see. She saw him as she always saw him now, dressed in
his finest ceremonial clothes with the blood just beginning to flow from the
wound in his neck, the way it had flowed the day he died. "Where did the
other one come from? The junk man said he gave me the only one. He said he had
no more. He was lying, the low-born space scum."
"You
must never let people get away with lying to us, Kisla. You should punish
him," her father told her.
"Oh,
yes. I will. Daddy, of course I will. I'll make him tell. But if these horns
are real, which one is hers, do you think?"
"Kisla,
I think this is a grave matter upon which you should consult your Uncle Edacki.
He will be able to advise and help you."
"Yes,
Daddy, I'll do just that," she said. She turned to her staff. The androids
were quite accustomed to Kisla's seemingly solo conversations and paid no
attention to them. "I want you to finish loading the container and then
stop at the registration office and find out the junk mans name and where his
ship is docked. We'll be wanting to pay him a call later. Right now I am going
to visit my guardian. In the meantime, take these things to my personal hangar
and have the workmen begin integrating the useful parts into my vessels. Await
my instructions there."
"As
you wish. Lady Kisia," said the latest model among them. Since most of
Uncle Edacki's human servants were too slow and stupid to suit her, he had
instead given her four of his androids for her staff. They were obedient, and
were not always crying or bleeding like the human servants.
Count
Edacki Ganoosh gave his ward a slow, appreciative smile as he handled the
unicorn horns she had brought him. Kisia ManJan was psychotic, of course, but
she was not as stupid as many people assumed. And perhaps the craziness would
lessen, over time. After all, it was bound to be a shock to a young girl to see
her father kill her mother and then himself after being denounced as an
arch-criminal in front of the most respected citizens of Kezdet. He'd been
there that night, and it had certainly shocked him. Since Kisia was a very
self-centered girl, one might have assumed that discovering that she was adopted,
and had been born the illegitimate daughter of a prostitute, would have been
the main shock of that night to her, but once it turned out that her parents
had died before the state could officially confiscate all their holdings, and
that she, Kisia, was their only heir, that part of the horror seemed to have
slipped her mind. The government had still confiscated most of the Manjari
empire, but Count Edacki, as the girl's appointed guardian, had pleaded that
the girl was not a criminal and should be left with certain holdings among the
Baron's legitimate enterprises, enough to constitute a solid trust fund for her
upkeep, education, and a hefty income for the remainder of her life. Count
Edacki secretly suspected the girl also knew of certain secret holdings the
government had not yet located. Large holdings, he believed. It was such a
difficult job to gain the trust of an orphaned child. The count was thus
pleased for more reasons than one that she had decided to show him the unicorn
horns.
"Excellent,
my dear Kisia. You've done well," he said, stroking the horns and
wondering if it was true what the legends said of such horns having aphrodisiac
properties.
"I
don't need you to tell me that. Uncle," Kisia seethed. "I need you to
help me find out why there are two and which one belongs to that girl who is
responsible for the deaths of my parents and the theft of my property."
"You
are impetuous, little one," he said, laying the horns aside in order to
rise from the soothing bath of rose-colored gelatinous mud from the fragrant
swamps of the Haidian rain forests. Having dismissed his valet at Kisla's
insistence, the count was forced to wrap himself in his massage robe of the
deepest purple plush. He then made himself comfortable on the bed-like couch that
bracketed the gel pool. "While it is certainly possible that one of these
may belong to Acoma, I believe word of her death would have reached us, and it
has not. However, these horns might well belong to one of the others other
kind."
"What
others?" Kisia demanded.
"Why,
the other unicorn people who came to fetch the girl a few months ago."
"I
knew nothing of this," Kisia said.
"My
dear, you were still distracted with grief. That and the legal affairs your
late lamented father left concerning your legacy. I did not feel it was a
proper time to trouble you with the news then. Oh, yes. Four others, I believe.
It seems Acoma was not a goddess, as the little child laborers believed, but
simply an alien creature who, being as highly evolved as they are all generally
supposed to be, took it upon herself to correct what she considered our less
fortunate social behaviors and economic practices."
"These
horns could belong to them then, to those other unicorn aliens who came to get
her?" Kisia asked. She could see a plan dawning in Uncle Edacki's eyes.
"Oh,
yes. Or any others of her race, though they were unknown to our species before
your little friend arrived."
"She's
no friend of mine." Kisia spat.
"No,
of course not. I was being facetious. The junk man will have to be questioned,
of course. If there are two of these, there may be more, and he must tell us
where he obtained them."
"I'll
take care of him," Kisia said.
"Yes,
my dear. But be careful. We don't want him to die before we've learned all that
we need to. In the meantime, I think we really must sacrifice one of these to
determine its properties and composition. I have heard miraculous things about
Acorna. That her horn could heal and purify and even no, now I'm confusing rumor
with ancient legend."
Kisia
had seated herself on the edge of the couch beside his head and now she leaned
over him and spoke into his ear. "Don't misunderstand us, Uncle. If there
is a profit to be made from these, we want it, Daddy and me. But most of all we
want that girl, and all of her family, and all of her friends dead, the same
way she killed my family and chased away all of my friends."
The
count smiled up at his ward. The truth was, Kisia had never had any friends at
all, but it would do no good to mention that. Nor to point out that she had, in
the same breath, referred to the late Baron Manjari, her adopted father, as if
he was still alive, and yet also admitted that her whole family was dead.
Count
Edacki patted Kisla's hand. "Have no fear, child. I think that if these
horns prove as useful as they are said to be, Acorna and her kind will soon
become hunted throughout the galaxy as any other creature with a built-in
treasure would be hunted. There are already those who seek them. But with
these"-he tapped one of the horns-"and the use of a bit of research
and a few contacts used wisely, I believe we may contrive to be the first to
find them."
Once
the skinny girl disappeared, and her henchmen had loaded Becker's container
with the goods she'd bought and left, RK crept out from under the table where
he'd hidden, jumped up on its surface, and scattered the stones there as he
made himself comfortable among them.
And
that was where Becker found the cat later, entertaining the strokes and pats of
the children of the stone vendor and idly batting one of the smaller and more
precious stones back and forth between his paws. The rock glinted blue, green,
aqua, then back to blue again as the cat rolled it from paw to paw. "Nice
cat, mister," a boy of about five said. "What'llya take for
him?"
Becker
cocked an eyebrow at him. "That's the second offer I've had today."
"Don't
be dumb, Deeter," a girl of about seven -with the same red hair and
freckles said. "You don't buy and sell cats like this. Can't you see he's
a Makahomian Temple Cat? They're sacred, you know. Probably part of this man's
religion. I bet he's a priest or something."
"Pope
at least," Becker agreed. "Him, I mean. I just work for him."
The
vendor himself was rooting around in a box and when he stood up this time,
Becker finally remembered his name.
"Reamer!
You're Rocky Reamer!" he said.
"You
got it, buddy," the man said. It was clear he was the daddy of these kids.
He had the same red hair and freckles. "And say, I thought I recognized
you, too, but if you're the guy I'm thinking of, you look a little different.
It's Joe Becker, isn't it?"
"Joe,
Jonas, whatever," he said. "Yeah, that's me, Becker. You know what? I
just remembered why those stones I was looking at earlier sounded so familiar.
What were the names again? Giloglite, bairdite, and nadezdite?"
"That's
it," Reamer said. "They're from new deposits the kids on Maganos
found and named for the Lady's uncles. See, that one with the red and yellow in
it that has a kinda plaid look to it? That's for Calum Baird, who's a
Caledonian Celt like me. We had a geology class together once. The serpentine
looking one is for that Irish partner of his, Declan Giloglie, and the flashy
one for his nouveau richenw himself, the heir and current manager of the House
of Harakamian, Rafik Nadezda."
Becker
grinned. "That's what I thought. So Rafik's uncle made him heir, huh? I
never could tell if he hated the old man or admired him."
"A
little of both, I guess. You know those guys, then?"
"Yeah,
we been chasing each other around the same big rocks for years. They were
looking for the unoccupied ones and I was looking for the occupied or formerly
occupied ones, so we didn't get in each other's way much."
RK had
knocked the stone he was playing with off the table and was allowing himself to
be distracted by a string dangled by Deeter.
Becker
picked the stone up from the ground. "And what did you call this
one?"
"That's
acornite."
"Where's
it from? A planet where all the plant life is also mineral? You maybe grow
already petrified oak trees from it?"
Reamer
s face was blank for a second, and then he grinned and chuckled.
"No,
silly," the little girl said. "Don't you know anything? It's named
for the Lady, of course!"
"I
thought her name was Epona ..." Becker said. "If it's the same one, I
mean. I was told that was who was on Maganos, anyway, and you said that's where
Gil and Calum and Rafik are these days."
The
little girl looked unsure of her information at this point and turned to her
dad, who said, "Nah, that's one of what you might call her titles. See,
she and old man Li-he died this year, did you know? "
"Delszaki
Li died? Shards, I thought he was immortal in spite of the wheelchair."
"Nope,
he finally died. Turned out he was head of the Liberation Movement that saved
Kezdet. Li had already done some of the groundwork for the revolution, but
nothing really got moving until Gil and his buddies brought the Lady down here.
She didn't know much about politics, but she knew for sure she didn't like to
see kids being sold into slavery. Took her about a year to bring down the
houses and the Piper and start up the education and mining center on Maganos.
Of course, it helped that she also forged an alliance between the houses of
Harakamian and Li so she had almost unlimited money behind her. Anyway, the
kids got real superstitious about her and some of them thought she was some
kind of goddess, depending on the religions they'd had where they'd come from.
So they call her Epona, Lady Lucia, or the Lady of the Light, but her name's
really Lady Acorna Harakamian-Li."
"Maybe
I'll go look up my old buddies then," Becker said. "I'd like to meet
this lady. I was a slave when I was a kid. If it hadn't been for my adopted
dad, I'd probably be dead now."
Reamer
rubbed the red heads of his offspring. "I'll tell you what, buddy, it sure
makes me feel better knowing those places have been shut down. In case anything
happens to me, I don't have to worry about my kids getting sent to the mines or
some godawful thing."
Becker
thought for a minute, then pulled out the collection bag, carefully extracted
one of the opalescent objects, and kept it concealed in the palm of his hand
except to open the hand a little to let Reamer have a look. "While I'm at
it, I think I just made a big mistake letting some of this go to a customer. It
didn't come from Maganos, but I've never seen anything like it anywhere. Do you
know what it might be?"
"Ho-oh-oly
hematite!" Reamer said, touching the thing as if afraid it would burn him.
"Where did you get that, Becker?" His voice was not very friendly
this time, and his blue eyes had gone ice cold. "Kids, I want you to leave
the cat alone and go get yourselves some candy," he said, dropping a
credit in each hand.
"But,
Dad ..."
"Scat!"
They
ran off and RK emitted a mournful and, for him, curiously resigned mew,
watching his new friends disappear into the crowd.
"That's
why you look different. You were missing an ear the last time I saw you!"
Rocky said. It was an accusation.
"What
about it?"
"People
say the Lady's horn can heal. Then you turn up with one like it and your ear
fixed, so what am I supposed to think?"
"Keep
it down, will you? Jeez! I found it, I tell you. Does this lady of yours
control everything? Wipes out child labor, closes the pleasure houses, and now
you're about to kill me because she has a horn like mine? So what? Maybe she
found hers the same place I did."
"I
don't think so," Reamer said coldly.
"No?
Why not? She might have."
"No
way. Hers is growing from the middle of her forehead. At least it was, the last
time anybody I know saw her."
The
crew of the Baiakiire and the dignitaries among the greeting committee rode the
Ancestors into Kubiilikhan with as much pomp and circumstance as the Ancestors
could give them. Acorna feared that if dignity was what the Ancestors wished to
impart by having others ride them, in her case it was rather a lost cause. Her
long legs dangled below the belly of the Ancestor she rode, so that her feet
were almost as low as the unicorn's cloven hooves.
Riding
the Ancestors certainly didn't make the trip quicker, either. It took almost an
hour to ride the two or three miles between the spaceport and the town, which
at first seemed to be a tent city of massive gem-hued, gold-trimmed, tasseled
pavilions the size of the circus tents Acorna had seen pictured on vids and in
the books at Uncle Hafiz's. Walking would have been much quicker. The ki-lin of
legend were supposed to be fleet of foot. If so, you couldn't tell it by the
Ancestors, who kept their pace to a slow, deliberate strut.
Maybe
it's because they are so ancient, Acorna thought, and immediately felt an
impression of reprimand at the notion.
(We're
as spry as we ever were, impudent youngling, and can beat you in a race any
time, any place, just try us.)
Oops.
She was sure the thought hadn't been loud or deliberately sent, and no one else
seemed to have picked up on it, but the Ancestor she was riding rolled a rather
challenging eye back in her direction, and snorted.
The
Ancestor's attendant noticed the eye rolling. He stepped away from his charge
for a pace, stroked the Ancestor's nose, and cast a reproachful glance at
Acorna.
By that
time their party arrived at the first structures in the Linyaari settlement.
She supposed, since the spaceport was nearby and they were being taken to see
the vlizaar, this place must be the main city on the planet, but it was not of
any great size.
The
circus-tent-like buildings of the city were clustered around an even larger
central circus tent, where each section sprouted another tent-like tower from
its center. Actually, these dwellings were not so much like tents as like the
pavilions she had seen depicted in films of ancient Earth medieval encampments.
Each was, like the attendants' and Ancestors' costumes, decorated in a
different gaudy hue, and liberally trimmed with loops, swirls, swags, fringe,
and tassels of contrasting metal or fabric or rope.
These
pavilions had no windows of the sort Acorna was used to, but each section of
each tent had a large arched doorway open to the outdoors and several had whole
wall sections removed.
"Behold
Kubiilikhan, our principal city, honored lady," the attendant said.
"It's
very colorful," Acorna said politely. And tried to think the same thing,
though the attendant frowned a bit so some of her concerns were clearly leaking
through her guard. "But you must suffer greatly from the dampness during
the rains."
Maati,
who had fallen back from her trot at the head of the procession, laughed.
"No, wait till you dismount. Excuse me, Great-grandmother, but she's got
to see this!" the girl said with an affectionate but not particularly
reverent pat on the nose to the unicorn. The Ancestor snorted, but rather
fondly, Acorna thought, very much in the same way a tolerant grandparent might
act toward a well-loved but rambunctious child.
Acorna
dismounted with a horn dip to the unicorn, who ignored her. She followed Maati,
who was now stroking the silken-appearing wall of the large purple pavilion.
"Feel!" Maati commanded.
Acorna
reached out and touched the fabric. Surprisingly, she found it hard and
unyielding. Rapping on it with the backs other fingers, she heard a metallic
ting. "Its solid?" she asked.
"Yes,
and you can open the pores so the air comes through nicely-but not the
wet."
"And
you don't get chilly during the cold season -you do have a cold season?"
"Oh,
sure, outdoors when we're grazing. But then we can just go inside, close the
flaps, and adjust the pores so that they heat the air as it comes inside. Very
scientific," she said, as if she hoped that it being scientific would
please Acorna.
"It
certainly is," Acorna agreed.
Neeva
beckoned her into the tent. "Come along, Khornya. Liriili is not a
particularly patient person."
Acorna
followed her, with Melireenya and Khaari close behind. Maati scrambled to get
ahead of Neeva and while Acorna's eyes were still adjusting to the dimmer light
inside, she heard Maati say, "Grand Viizaar Liriili, presenting
Vi)e()haanye Feriiii Neeva, the crew of the spacecraft Balaklire, and Khornya,
sister-child to VifeDhaanye Neeva and daughter to the late Vaanye and Feriila
of honored memory."
Viizaar
Liriili was, Acorna saw, seated at a desk. Like the other space-farers, she was
pale skinned and silver maned, and her eyes, when they met Acoma's, were deep
pewter-gray. Her golden horn was twined with glittering silver thread and she
wore a gown cut to compliment her rather sturdy figure in a fabric that matched
the thread. Her mane was cropped short around her face and neck and her face
was a bit longer than that of any of the other Linyaari. In fact, she rather
resembled the Ancestors.
Thariinye's
unguarded thought came to Acorna, (What a beauty!)
The
Viizaar's eyes twinkled as they rested upon the handsome young male for a
moment, and then she turned her attention to business. "Vi^e()haanye
Neeva, dear Melireenya, Khaari, my child, Thariinye, we are all so delighted at
your return especially in view of the terrible dangers you faced to warn
others. And most of all, Khornya, we are thrilled that you have finally
rejoined us."
"I
am thrilled to be here," Acorna assured her. "You will of course be
joining us at the reception this evening, Viizaar Liriili?" Neeva
inquired.
Liriili
smiled, "I will be there, certainly, Vife^haanye Neeva. You will be happy
to know your instructions were all implemented and everything is in readiness.
Unfortunately, neither you nor your core crew members with the exception of
Thariinye will be there, I'm afraid. As you were disembarking, I received an
urgent message from one of our trading missions. I must discuss this with you
privately and then you must leave again, as soon as you have had time to
refuel."
"But
my lifemate is expecting me!" Khaari cried. "He is on that trading
mission, Khaari," Liriili told her.
"That
is one reason I wish the Baiakiire to undertake this particular task."
"But
what about Khornya?" Neeva asked.
"Why,
she will stay here, of course, and learn to know her people and attend the fete
as you have planned. While she will sorely miss your guidance, we will try in
your absence to make sure that she is not lonely and learns what is needful for
her to know."
"Excuse
me, Vii-zaar Liriili-" Acorna interrupted as politely as possible. She did
not much care for being discussed as if she was not there.
"Yes,
Khornya?"
"It's
just that-well, even though I was very much looking forward to doing these
social events with my aunt and friends, I really would rather not attend them
by myself. Is it possible to postpone the reception so that I could accompany
them on their mission?"
Liriili
laughed. "My dear Khornya, you will hardly be by yourself! I shall be
there, and Thariinye, and most of the cream of Kubiilikhan society including
many young males most eager to make your acquaintance!"
"Yes,
ma'am, but I'd rather be with my aunt. Perhaps I can be useful on the
mission."
"You're
very young and have a great deal to learn," Liriili said as if that
settled the matter.
"Khornya
is a very capable young lady, Liriili," Neeva told the viizaar, and
projected images of some of Acorna's adventures.
"I'm
sure she is, VLte<)haanye Neeva," Liriili said, then turning to Acorna,
repeated, "I'm sure you are, my dear, but you are not yet versed in our
ways sufficiently to undertake a mission of the delicacy this one requires. And
there will probably not be enough room for you on the return trip. Or for
Thariinye, which is why we are not sending him. So you young ones may as well
remain here and enjoy yourselves. The reception can hardly be postponed.
Everyone has been working ever so hard preparing it and many, many people will
be most disappointed if you are not there. Run along with Maati now. There's a
good girl."
"Excuse
my persistence, Viizaar, but what is this mission?" Acorna pressed her
case. "Maybe I could help. I have good friends in many high places."
The
viizaar gave her an exaggeratedly patient look. "That may be so, Khornya.
But whoever you know and whatever you have done before is irrelevant to this
mission, which I cannot discuss with you because you are not fully conversant
with thought transference, and I am reliably informed that during unguarded
moments your every fleeting notion is broadcast to the whole of the planet;
information could be disclosed that I have no wish to disseminate at this time.
In your aunt's absence, Thariinye can continue your tutoring in our communication
forms and customs. Now go please go with Maati and freshen up. There is not
much time before your shipmates must leave, and I must brief them. In
private."
"Yes,
ma'am," Acorna said, feeling more like a schoolgirl than she ever had done
when she was of the age to have been one.
"Excuse
me, Liriili," Neeva said, dropping the title in her annoyance. "I
would like to take leave of my niece before we are sent back into space, if you
can wait a few more moments before briefing us. I had to wait three and a half
gkaanyi to find her and who knows how long it will be before I see her
again?"
"Very
well, but be brief, please. We have much to discuss," Liriili said, and
turned her attention to the others.
Leading
Acorna outside the pavilion, Neeva touched horns with her and Acorna,
impulsively, hugged her aunt as if she never wished to let her go, which indeed
she did not.
Neeva's
eyes were full of tears when they stood at arm's length again. "Oh, that
insufferable woman!" she said. "This had better be a truly urgent
mission or I am going to have her before the Council!"
"You
think she'd send you out again without a good reason?" Acorna asked.
"When you've been away so long?" She frowned. "I thought if
everyone could read each other's thoughts and feelings, they would be
kinder."
"We
are, but there are still jealousies and insecurities and all of the other
baggage that goes with being sentient. And Liriili has more than her share of
those emotions. She isn't really a bad person, and she can only do just so much
without the sayso of the Council, but she has no love for our family. While I
doubt she'd try to actively harm you, don't count on her for help either. Just
stay out other way until we return, if you can."
"I'll
do my best, Neeva. But return soon, please?" Neeva ran her fingers down
her niece's face and smiled. "We'll do our best, youngling. You know we
will. Now you go with Maati to my pavilion and get ready for the party tonight.
I've ordered some things sent over for you to try on. I wish I could be there
to see the faces of the young males when they set eyes on you!"
"Farewell,
mother's-sister, safe journey and quick return."
"Farewell,
sister-child, till we meet again."
"Let's
go through the courtyard," Maati said, taking Acorna's hand and pulling
her away from the pavilion. "I always go that way when I can."
"Why-oh,
I see," Acorna said, as the child stepped onto the path paved with several
sets of the Singing Stones of Skarrness, similar to the ones Uncle Hafiz had at
his compound on Laboue.
"Yeah,
look," Maati commanded her, and proceeded to play hopscotch-and a little
tune-across the courtyard.
Acorna
smiled, applauded, and followed suit with one of the tunes she used to
hopscotch on Uncle Hafiz's stones. She found it as hard now as she had then to
stay unhappy when the stones sang.
Maati
led the way to a pavilion at the far side of the town. "This is the
vife()haanye's home. Oooooh, look at the dresses!"
Walking
into the pavilion was like walking into a particularly well stocked closet.
Gowns of every color, cut, and description lay and hung on every possible
surface and protuberance. Also in abundance were gleaming gemstones and little
pointy objects, like hats, the size and shape of her horn. These were decorated
variously with gems, with flowers, with pompoms, with ribbons, and gilt
threads.
"Pom-poms?"
Acorna asked.
Maati
giggled. "They're all the rage at the moment especially among the girls of
color who are entering society." She stuck one on her own slightly smaller
horn. The effect, with her dark skin and mottled hair, of the yellow and pink
pom-poms, was certainly festive and not quite as clown-like as Acorna had
supposed.
"Why
do people decorate their horns?"
"Well,
it's not just decoration. The covers also mute telepathy to some extent,"
Maati said. "It's for flirting, too. I mean, this way if a girl likes a
boy, she doesn't have to show it right away and neither does he. Before anybody
can read anybody else's mind, they can kind of see how the person they like is
acting first, or if there's anybody else interesting."
"I
see," Acorna said. "When is the party?"
Maati
shrugged. "It starts at moonrise, in about three hours."
"I'd
better get busy then," Acorna said. All of the gowns were far too
elaborately decorated for her taste, with layers and layers of different
colored skirts, and frills, lace, ruffles, bows, and flowers completely
covering whole bodices or skirts. Fortunately, life in a society where women
were normally much shorter than she, and the occasional necessity of disguising
her horn with an elaborate costume, had taught Acorna to be an excellent
seamstress herself. She narrowed her eyes to blur the bewildering details of
the gowns so that she could get some idea of their background color. Turning
slowly, she spotted a lovely soft mauve-rose brocade fabric and reached for it.
It was the undergown of a dress with a rainbow assortment of skirts that stuck
out like tutus from the hipline to the ankle.
Without
the tutus the rosy underdress was slightly too sheer so she looked around again
until she saw that one of the flowing veil-like overskirts of another gown was
a beautiful lilac color that complemented both her own complexion and the color
of the undergown. That would do.
When
she had bathed and dried her hair, she slipped into the rose-mauve dress and
pulled the length of lilac fabric under one arm and joined it at the opposite
shoulder, pinning it, after some deliberation, with a stunning brooch of pale
amethysts and rhodolite garnets set in silver. The brooch had earrings that
matched.
She was
able to locate lilac slippers in the mass of shoes that was spread everywhere
dresses and jewels were not.
"Horn?"
Maati reminded her.
"Oh,
yes," Acorna said, picking up the lilac horn cover that matched the outer
skirt. "This means no one else can read my thoughts, then?"
"Well,
not clearly anyway. You know, so if you think something-well, about
reproduction, you know, the other person" Acorna giggled at the younger
girl's attempt to sound adult while discussing the mating rituals of which she
was not yet a part. "I think I get the idea. I will try not to broadcast
so loudly I overpower the muting effect of the horn cover." She looked at
the cover again. "But this spiral of wisteria has to go."
"Maybe
just a few at the base of your horn?" Maati suggested, looking dismayed to
see the pom-poms and wads of the purple flower Acorna called wisteria falling
to the floor.
"Yes,
that's nice. Thanks."
"The
decorations are so pretty," she said, sadly, picking up the culled
flowers.
Acorna
was firm. "Less is more," she said.
Maati
looked baffled by the idea.
No
sooner had Acorna dressed than a great herd of seamstresses, jewelers, and
cobblers descended upon the pavilion to carry the excess merchandise away.
"We'll
deliver daytime ensembles for your approval tomorrow morning, Khornya."
"Oh,
please don't bother," she said. "If Maati will show me where your
workplaces are, I would love to see where you make these pretty things."
She had
the horn cover firmly in place then and could afford a diplomatic fib. The
creators of the two dresses she had altered to make her gown tried to hide
their frowns but a couple of the others were eyeing her with a speculative
expression.
As the
last of the clothiers departed with their wares, uncovering Neeva's furnishings
and returning the pavilion to some semblance of a dwelling, Thariinye arrived.
"I'm
sony, Khornya," he apologized-with some effort-aloud. "I thought you
would be dressed by now."
"Oh,
but I am dressed!" she said, twirling. "Like it?" He didn't say
anything for a moment, then realized, with an expression of relief, that she
was wearing her horn-hat, as she thought of the ornamental shields. He gave her
a huge false grin and nodded so hard she thought he'd shake his own horn off.
He was a budding diplomat, after all. In the mainstream of Linyaari culture
there would be little opportunity to lie and he was unaccustomed to the
practice. She supposed she should give him credit for knowing when a fib was
called for.
He
quickly donned a horn-hat that coordinated with his own ensemble. It had a
three-dimensional stylized red fabric bird perched on the tip to match the
birds quilted, stuffed and embroidered on his flowing waistcoat, the cummerbund
at his waist, and perched on each shoulder like epaulets, and delicately poised
upon an oversize codpiece.
Acorna
politely broke into a fit of coughing to disguise the portion of her reaction
not softened by the horn-hat. Linyaari fashion was going to take some getting
used to. Strange that in her travels around the galaxy she had never for a
moment entertained an ethnocentric attitude, had never even considered that the
clothing or customs of others might be ridiculous. She supposed she felt more
strongly about the Linyaari customs because they were, after all, her customs
and she was supposed to adhere to them. One of her disguises as a Didi would
have fit right in but her own natural style definitely did not.
"I
saw the crew off on the new mission," Thariinye said. Acorna was glad his
tone was grave. It helped her keep a straight face. She heard just a hint of
censure in his tone, as if she should have been there to say goodbye, too. But
surely he had heard her being ordered by the vi'maar to ready herself for this
occasion?
They
did not speak as they crossed the Singing Stones again, enjoying the music
instead, as it blended harmoniously with the Linyaari music emanating from a
pavilion even larger than the one the vlizcmr occupied. This one had bundles of
flowers decorating it on the outside, and streamers of ribbon added to the gold
tassels. People were flocking into it-or perhaps a better expression was that
bouquets of people were gathering themselves into the pavilion and onto the
dance floor spreading all around it like a carousel containing only unicorn
people.
Ridiculous
as the dresses and men's clothing looked individually, collectively they were
rather breathtaking, like a field of multihued blossoms, studded with brilliant
stones and even ribbon that looked amazingly like flowing water.
Several
of the men wore bird costumes such as Thariinye's, while others wore designs
depicting other animals, or elements such as fire and water. One or two had
embroidery resembling the fleet of starships. A few had celestial themes to
their clothing. The total effect was far more attractive than Acorna would have
imagined.
To her
surprise, the huge tent was used not for dancing, but for the reception line
and dining. Her graze of the afternoon had worn off, and terraces and tiers of
all sorts of vegetation growing right from the soil inside the pavilion looked
delectable. The pavilion had a large central panel which opened to capture
sunlight. It was now raised, to admit the fresh breezes and an excellent view
of the heavens that so recently had been Acorna's home.
"Ah,
Khornya, Thariinye," the viizaar said. "Please stand next to me to
greet your guests. My aide will introduce you to each."
Thariinye
saved them both by saying, "Certainly, Vuzaar Liriili, but if we may have
a moment to dine beforehand? I haven't-that is, neither Khornya nor I have
eaten since landing and the journey was quite long."
The
viizaar beamed up at him again. "Of course, dear boy. But I'm afraid the
line to meet Khornya is already quite long. Why don't you harvest some of the
most succulent foods and bring them to her to sample?"
Thariinye
demurred charmingly. "I'd be happy to, ma'am, except that Khornya's
peculiar upbringing makes it impossible for me to guess what her tastes might
be."
The
viizaar glanced pointedly at Acorna's gown. "I do see what you mean. Very
well then, but return to us quickly. The line is getting longer."
Following
the viizaar's hand, which waved at a line that stretched out beyond the
pavilion and across the dance floor, Acorna saw that the viizaar was not
overstating her case.
"Just
a little snack then," Acorna said placatingly. But the viizaar didn't
acknowledge her remark.
The
pavilion was arranged more beautifully than one of Hafiz's gardens, she saw as
she followed Thariinye through the crowd, which was partaking only lightly of
the gorgeous flowers and leafy greenery sprouting and blooming from floor to
ceiling on cleverly designed terraced platforms, with little walkways between
levels like paths up a hillside. A fountain in the center of the structure
splashed and sparkled and watered some particularly succulent-looking reeds and
grasses. Thariinye need not have worried about Acorna's tastes. She loved
everything. Her native food at least was very much to her liking.
After
sampling a few of the plants on the lower level, however, and gathering a few
to munch on while greeting the long line, she said to Thariinye, "I
suppose we'd better return now, then."
"No
hurry," he said casually. "Its just a formality anyway. The viizaar
realizes that you and I are meant to be lifemates and the others are only here
to make the process appear to be fair."
Acorna
looked up at him, blinked several times, and said the first thing that came to
mind, the sort of thing Delszaki Li used to say when faced with something
preposterous. "Really? How very interesting." Suddenly, returning to
the line seemed very attractive indeed.
"The
other guests . . . ? " she said, with a lifted eyebrow, and a wave back to
the reception line. "We wouldn't want them to think us
inconsiderate."
"Yes,
of course-oh, wait! Is that rampion? I wonder -where they got that! I don't think it was native to the old planet.
Want to try something really wonderful?"
"Perhaps
later," she said, moving toward the line. "Suit yourself," he
said. "You go on ahead. Everyone knows me already. It's you they want to
meet."
Acorna
was amused and annoyed at the same time. How quickly the young male's
priorities could change! She slipped back into the receiving line, between the
viizaar, who was reluctantly deep in conversation with the oldest Linyaari
Acorna had seen so far. The woman's face was actually lined and her neck and jowls
sagged slightly. Acorna found that sign of mortality oddly comforting among so
many smooth and flawless faces. The aide-a white and silver veteran of space
like herself, the viizaar, and Grandam-acknowledged her return her with relief.
"Grandam
Naadiina has been holding up the line while you were gone. The rest of the
people are starving," the aide whispered. The male before her was as young
or younger than she was, she could see, as his skin was golden and his hair a
pale cream. "Now then, Khornya, this is the scion of Clan Rortuffle,"
he said, from memory, not from reading a list. "Hiirye, meet
Khornya."
Acorna
tried her best to be gracious to Hiirye and gave him a big smile. He stepped
back, flustered, and did not accept her hand. Instead, he pulled the aide aside
and whispered urgently to him, then retreated. Several other males dropped from
the line as well, following him.
Acorna
wished again she could read minds better. "What was the matter with
him?" she asked the aide, but the aide had turned to the viizaar and begun
a frantic whispered consultation with her. Meanwhile, the Grandam Naadiina
turned back to till the place in line vacated by young Hiirye. Acorna saw the
youth, rather than continuing on to eat, had been going down ihe line, talking
excitedly to other people. Each person he spoke to abruptly left the party.
"Really,
child," Grandam said. "These affairs Liriili insists upon foisting on
us are tiresome, but did you really need to become so hostile?"
"Hostile?"
Acorna asked.
"You
bared your teeth at that boy in an extremely aggressive fashion. I'm sure he
mistook you for one of those ..." Grandam looked around to make sure no
one else was eavesdropping, then put her lips close to Acorna's ear and said,
"Khieevi. You scared the living daylights out of the lad."
"Oh,
dear!" Acorna remembered now the thought patterns she had heard from her
aunt and shipmates about the peculiar custom humans had of baring their teeth.
They understood, because of their contact with her people, that an open smile
was a gesture of good will. But this was not yet known to the rest of the
Linyaari. If only Thariinye's appetite had not gotten the best of him, he could
have explained. His smile and social lie earlier about her dress showed, or so she
had thought at the time, his willingness to try to adapt customs familiar to
her in order to put her at ease. Now she wondered. Perhaps he had been actually
baring his teeth in the Linyaari sense of the gesture after all?
Whatever
could she do to correct the appalling impression she seemed to be making?
"Calm
yourself, girl, you look as if you're about to fly apart," the grandam
advised.
"But
what will they think of me?"
Grandam
snorted. "No less than you should think of them, particularly Liriili,
dragging you out to this thing before you've had time to rest from your journey
and have a bite to eat. And before you've been properly introduced to your new
home and had a chance to meet people in the normal way. It was unforgivable,
her sending Neeva and the others away and leaving you alone among strangers
except for that uppity young stud, Thariinye." She snorted. "These
young ones are making such a fuss over culture, but culture begins with
kindness. I was just saying so to Liriili when you bared your teeth at that
young ass. Not his fault, of course, but I daresay in your position I would
have done the same."
"Oh,
but you see, I wasn't trying to bare my teeth at all-I mean, I did bare my
teeth, but where I come from, among the people I grew up with, one shows one's
teeth to be friendly, happy-it's an expression of greeting and cordiality, not
at all one of hostility. I have been told, actually, that it isn't viewed the
same way among your-our-people, but I got a bit flustered and ..."
"There,
there, child. You needn't explain to me."
She
firmly took Acorna by the elbow and led her to the highest of the tiers where
the delicious foods grew. In a long and rather shrill Linyaari utterance that
sounded eerily like "Hiiire me!" Grandam Naadiina stopped the music,
the dancers, the talking, and drew all stares to herself and Acorna.
Acorna
noticed, meanwhile, that both viizaar and her aide had left the pavilion
hurriedly, looking worried. She suddenly had the feeling that the crowd's
reaction had more to do with Liriili's exit than her social grace.
"My
children, you have all gathered here to meet our long lost kinswoman, Khornya,
daughter of the late lamented Feriila,
and Vaanye. She only just this afternoon, as many of you know because you
were there, arrived on the planet from a journey of many months. Her closest
relative and only acquaintances among us had to ship out immediately on another
mission, leaving the child here among us. Yes, her accent is strange and her
dress is a bit of the old fashion instead of the new, and because she was not
properly instructed, she greeted a prospective lifemate with an expression
interpreted differently by the culture from which she comes than it is in our
own, but she is a good girl, I can tell, a nice girl, and she'll be glad to
meet any of you later on when she's had a proper chance to rest, collect her
thoughts, find her way around, and get a decent meal or two under her
belt."
As
Grandam spoke those words, many people stopped dancing. Rather than paying
attention to their elder, they were looking toward the flap of the pavilion
where Liriili had exited as if they were waiting for something to happen.
Something far more important to them than Grandam's slap on their collective
wrists. They were waiting, Acorna thought, for Liriili to return and explain
what business had compelled her to leave.
Kisia,
precious, you look fatigued," Uncle Edacki said.
"I
confess that horrible junk man and his nasty beast upset me, Uncle. He cheated
me-told me he was selling everything but kept the cat and more of the horns he
lied about having. You just can't trust anyone these days."
"No,
indeed, pet. It's a hard cruel world and it distresses me that you've had to
learn that so young in life. But fortunately, I am here to protect you and see
to it that you don't wear yourself out. Now then, if you want the junk man,
it's a simple matter of sending your droids over to collect him and the cat and
checking his computer banks for information about how he acquired the horns. No
need for you to go yourself."
"I
can be there when he's questioned though, can't I, Uncle? And have the nasty
cat to play with?"
Whatever
you wish, dearest. But you'll want to be at your best so run along now and let
Uncle Edacki handle it." I'm sure you know best. "I'll need the
horns, dear one."
She got
that sly, calculating look that reminded him so other, unlamented father.
"I can let you have one, I suppose. I'll keep the other." She handed
him the more broken of the two.
"Here,
you take this one. I think this one I have is probably hers."
He
sighed and smiled as if it didn't matter that he indulged her this time.
"One will do nicely, thank you, Kisla. Now off you go. Leave it to
me."
When
she had gone he sprang into action, after his own fashion. The first thing he
did was call her droids away from the hangar where they had been unloading her
cargo.
"KEN637,
your mistress tells me you were instructed to check on the whereabouts of a
craft belonging to a certain dealer in salvaged goods?"
"It
is docked at outer bay four niner eight, sir," the droid replied.
"Very
well. I would like for you and your friends to call upon the gentleman at his
ship and invite him to my warehouse, the one on Todo Street, number nineteen?"
"I
know the one, sir."
"Yes,
and the animal, too. But first, have him show you around his computer banks.
And if he is not there when you arrive, access them yourself. Your mistress
wishes to know where he obtained the horn he gave her."
"Certainly,
sir. Suggested force level, sir?" Unlike the androids in early science
fiction epics, those employed by Edacki Ganooshs various corporate enterprises
had no programming prohibiting them from harming human beings.
"Maximum
without damaging any of the components."
"Yes,
sir."
With
the tip of his finger, Ganoosh then accessed the considerable data banks on the
unicorn girl and her associates.
Many of
these files had been compiled by Kisia's late father, the baron.
He
found a number of useful connections. The first name he noticed was that of
General Ikwaskwan, the leader of the Kilumbemba mercenaries, a group he himself
had employed from time to time. The reason that name particularly caught his
attention was that he had been intending to contact the general for some time
on another matter.
It
would be late in the day in the Kilumbemba Empire, but the general was a man of
business and if he was presently unemployed, the man would no doubt be thrilled
to hear from Ganoosh. The comscreen showed nothing but static for a few moments
and then, in a very distracted tone, from off screen, Ganoosh heard Ikwaskwan's
voice saying, "Nadhari, by the Gods, woman, this is business. Untie me
before you accept incoming calls."
"Certainly,
Ikky," a woman's deep and sultry voice purred. "And if I do, I assume
I have your promise?"
"Yes,
mistress. Never again shall I sleep when you have rubbed my back with oils
before I do likewise unto you."
"Very
good then." There was the sound of a kiss. "I know it's difficult,
Ikky, after all these years of rape and pillage, for you to remember that we
women have our needs, too, and in an alliance such as ours, it is imperative
that you meet them graciously. There, now, I return your dignity."
"Yes,
my ferocious flower." The sound of another, more prolonged kiss. Very
prolonged. Ganoosh cleared his throat.
"Ah!
Nadhari, it is Count Edacki Ganoosh. Count, you have met my second in command.
Colonel Nadhari Kando?"
"I
have," Ganoosh said. "Though we were not formally introduced."
The woman had been glowering menacingly by the side of Delszaki Li when they
had met, looking as if she would cheerfully bite off the head of anyone who so
much as frowned pensively in the direction of her employer. Now, she stood
naked, obviously female but extremely well muscled, behind Ikwaskwan. Ganoosh
was as unmoved sexually by the sight of her as he would have been looking at
any other dangerous predator. She regarded him with a long stare that made him
feel as if he were the one who was undressed, or perhaps dressed in the hunting
or culinary sense, then slowly she shrugged her lithe muscles into a dressing
gown patterned with glittering fireworks.
"Hmm,"
she said, in his direction, then muttered to Ikwaskwan, "The officers will
be waiting for their briefing" and turned and left.
Ikwaskwan
gave Ganoosh a rather silly grin and winked and shrugged as if to say,
"Women."
Ganoosh
chuckled far more indulgently than he felt. Even hardened mercenary killers
weren't of the same caliber these days.
"General,
I'll come right to the point. As you know, our government here on Maganos has
undergone a great purge of corruption and through the good works of Delszaki Li
and his ward, we are finally free of the tragedy of child slavery."
"I've
been meaning to send my congratulations for some time, Count," the general
said dryly, "but I haven't found just the right card to express my
joy."
"Now,
now, no need to be bitter just because your people are now deprived of the
income they received for delivering war orphans to our facilities from time to
time. You surely must realize that while this dreadful injustice has cleansed
us of moral turpitude, it has also created a great hole in the labor force of
the planet's economy."
"I
had understood you were going to mechanize?"
"Hideously
expensive, as you know. It occurred to some of us-me, for instance-that rather
than giving machines skilled jobs that can be done less expensively by human
beings, we should perhaps find another labor pool. Now, you have occasion from
time to time to fight in wars where one side or the other is totally
devastated."
"When
my troops are involved, that is inevitably the case, the general said.
"Rather
than execute the wounded or allow the survivors, if any, to either be butchered
or starved, why not bring them to us? We could reeducate them into useful
professions. We'd be saving lives, really, and making the universe a better
place. NO one could object to that."
"Humph,"
the general said, stroking his whiskers with the big knuckles. "The only
problem with that is it would • ^ certain amount of restraint and gentleness on
behalf req troops. Usually by the time we finish with the losing side, We not in any shape to work for themselves
or anyone I "
"This
brings me to another issue. A question really. I have heard rumors-perhaps
myths-of the healing power demonstrated by the unicorn girl who was the ward of
the late Mr. Li."
"She
was also the ward, remember, of Hafiz Harakamian," the general said.
"The Lady Acorna is not a being to be trifled with, as I know from recent
experience."
"Realty?
Tell me about it, do."
"She
is not just any girl, for one thing. She's a member of a race of unicorn
people. A very sophisticated people no one on this side of the universe had
heard of before, but who apparently have been making contact with other worlds
for some time. My troops formed an alliance with Li and Harakamian against an
old enemy of these Linyaari, as they were called, and liberated a planet called
Rushima. Afterward-I could hardly believe it myself-Lady Acorna and the others
of her species healed all of the wounds as if they had never occurred. I heard
that a time or two she has revived the dead, though I didn't personally witness
those events. Not only that, but some young renegades aboard a Starfarer's ship
were heard to say that she had purified poisoned air aboard their ship, and the
people of Rushima claim she gave them a magical device to purify tainted water
that had covered their world. Purified the whole world's water supply. I hear
it's the horn that does it."
Ganoosh
was fairly purring to himself. "How wonderful! How marvelous! Why, just
think, if you had a Linyaari medic among you, or someone who possessed the
power of their horns, you could instantly heal your wounded and send the same
People back into battle after battle. Your troops would be Poetically
immortal."
Hmrnmm,
yes . . .and so would these poor souls you would bring to me for reeducation.
Frankly, some of the jobs that used to employ children will be a bit riskier
for adults. There could be increased on-the-job injuries. How wonderful again,
if we were to have such healing power to keep our workers whole and
productive."
"As
far as I know, Lady Acorna's people don't hire out for such things though,
Count. I think you're barking up the wrong tree there."
"Perhaps
no one has made them the right offer?" "They're," the general
spat, "pacifists. Wouldn't even fight to save their own planet from these
big bug things we destroyed to liberate Rushima. They're plenty scared of them
though."
"Hmmm-do
these bug creatures have any allies, I wonder?"
"I'm
told the only use they have for allies is at meal times." "And
perhaps it wouldn't be necessary to have an actual member of this alien race to
which the girl belongs to work the wonders. If the power is all in the horn,
all one would need is the horn."
"Yeah,
but where would you get one of those?" Ganoosh smiled. "I'm a
resourceful man. And I do appreciate our little chat, General. Think about what
I've said. See if you can come up with a proposal, a bid, for a solution to
these little problems. And I will continue to research this matter."
"I'll
do that, Count. But-uh-please, if you don't mind, utilize the code we set up
for the last job I did for you after this. Nadhari is rather softhearted and
sentimental about her former alliances. I wouldn't want to upset her "
"I
understand perfectly. General. Good day, and er, victory and glory to your
armies."
"The
same to you. Count."
Hafiz
Harakamian, eh? There was an interesting footnote or two on his dealings in
Manjari's files. For instance, there was the first wife, whose death Manjari
had helped fake when the lady, unfulfilled by her marriage to her inattentive
and unappreciative spouse, had wished to return to the spotlight she had only
begun to occupy in the recreational sex industry that was one of the pillars of
Manjari's empire. That wife, as her beauty waned, had retired into a profitable
position as Didi of a house of pleasure. She was a particular favorite of
Manjari as she had also divulged a great deal of information about her former
spouse and his enterprises, associates, and most helpfully, the layout and
security system of his compound on Laboue.
The
poor girl had been languishing in prison with the other Didis at the behest of
her former husband's ward. Ganoosh clicked his tongue. How sad. How very sad.
Fortunately, he, Count Edacki Ganoosh, would be able to effect a happy ending.
He lay back on his couch, his hands steepled over his abdomen and his face
wearing a smile of satisfaction. Family reunions were so touching. He must
arrange for one between this poor, ill-rewarded servant and her bereaved
husband, who, unfortunately for the lady, had recently remarried.
The
information she had provided Manjari over the years would prove useful in
effecting the reunion as the proper surprise that made such occasions so
memorable.
And of
course, she should have a wedding present. Ganoosh picked up the piece of horn
and fondled it, imagining he could feel its much-vaunted healing and purifying
energy coursing through his being. Couldn't have that now, could he? Being
purified was the last thing he wanted. Picking up a heavy crystal ornament, he
smashed the horn to powder. There now. That was a start. He kept a bit for
himself-the aphrodisiac powers might work as well powdered as whole, and were
far easier to slip into some victim's beverage that way. He himself, of course,
needed no such stimulant. Bringing out the baser emotional and physical
responses in others served him very well in that regard.
With a
bit of a chemical additive from one of his other business ventures and a bit of
a lure of the sort Harakamian was well known to covet, this was the perfect
bait. If anyone knew where the unicorn girl and her kin were going, or how to
find the planet where all of those magical horns on the hoof lived, it would be
Harakamian.
With
the right messenger, the right bait, and-ah, the properly dramatically
delivered tale surrounding the gift-not too much, of course, just enough to
lead the rival in the right direction Harakamian was quite likely to be
concerned enough for the welfare of his ward to wish to personally check on her
welfare. And where Harakamian could go, so could Ganoosh. Or Kisla. Dear little
Kisia, who soooo needed to be healed from the death of her beloved parents and
who would not hesitate to murder each and every unicorn person while they
slept.
Nadhari
Kando showered and dressed in fatigues prior to reviewing her troops. As the
sonic waves cleansed her skin of sweat and sex she felt the need to be cleansed
of something else as well. Edacki Ganoosh, hmm? Now, what would he be calling
Ikky for?
Ganoosh
was not in the same league with the Piper-at least, not while Manjari had been
alive-and the investigation into the child labor and sex industry businesses
hadn't turned up anything conclusive linking Ganoosh's businesses to Manjaris.
But he was the appointed guardian of Manjari's adopted daughter, twisted little
piece that she was. He also controlled the few legitimate enterprises the
council had allowed Kisia Manjari to retain for her maintenance, as they had
been very meticulous about not punishing the child for the sins of her adopted
parents.
And now
he was calling Ikky on private business. This didn't sound good for the hopes
she had had for the general. She shook her head at her own foolishness. He was
a good looking man, fit and steely like herself and well able for the games she
enjoyed. Bedding down with him, to use the term loosely, was a bit like a good
day in battle, kept the body honed and the wits sharp. But she had felt, as she
twisted his arm to join the forces of Li and Harakamian in battling the
Khieevi, that he had taken some pleasure in helping the comparatively
defenseless settlers of Rushima. Of being a good guy for a change, or at least
of working for the good guys who were for once the highest bidders. It was
that, more than the blackmail or his attractiveness, which had made their fling
turn into more of an alliance.
She'd
known he was getting restless, though, and from the men she had heard some
things she didn't particularly like. She had been, in fact, thinking for the
last couple of days of bailing out.
She
bloused her trousers in her boots and took the back way down to the quadrangle
where her men would be waiting. The com suite was on the way. She thought it
might be wise to leave a message with the kids on Maganos and maybe
Harakamian's security forces as well, asking them to check for new activity on
Ganoosh's part.
But as
she drew level with the door to the communications suite, she heard Ikky's
voice. One thing about being a CO. Your voice did tend to carry after all those
years of barking orders.
"What
I want you to do," Ikky was saying, "is go back into our banks. Find
the signals we received from that Linyaari ship when we were all on Rushima, up
against the bugs. Isolate their signal, analyze it, and send word to our allies
to do the same thing, and so forth, until they find it again."
"And
once they find it, sir?"
"Jam
it from going any further then track it to its source. Keep me posted and when
we have contact, I'll issue further orders."
"Very
good, sir."
Nadhari
managed to be well down the long corridor before Ikky entered the hallway
himself, but she felt his eyes between her shoulder blades and she knew he
would know that she had heard. Normal people, maybe, wouldn't jump to such
conclusions. But she and Ikky were trained by the same people and they thought
very much alike. He knew. She had to make an effort not to stiffen, waiting for
him to call after her, or even shoot her, perhaps, though that was less likely.
But what he did was reenter the com shed.
When she
finished reviewing her troops and returned to "write her letter
home," Sergeant Erikson told her the computers were down, even though she
could see very clearly that they were up and running. He kept his hand near his
side arm as he said it and she knew that this was the sergeant's rather
respectful way of telling her Ikky had made the com suite off limits to her.
The
androids, KEN model numbers 637-640, stood at docking bay 498 staring at the
Condor. It did not compute.
"I
have tried the proper codes," said KEN637, "and the hatch will not
open."
"I
have attempted a manual override of all known computer codes for opening
hatches with the result that we now have access to every other ship, flitter,
chopper, and pizza delivery fly-by on the planet, and still the hatch will not
open," said KEN638.
"I
have tried hammering on the hull with all of my nonorganic attachments,"
said KEN639, "and still the hatch will not open."
"Perhaps
a can opener would be of benefit," suggested KEN640, the one with the wet
and smoking shredded pant leg. Fortunately for the other KEN models, they did
not have olfactory sensors as part of the standard equipment.
"What
is a can opener?" asked KEN637.
"An
antique device for accessing the hatch of food containers and opening
them," KEN640 said.
"Where
may we obtain one?" asked KEN639.
KEN640
opened a panel in his forearm and his own array of nonorgamc tools swung into
view: a hacksaw, chisel, fingernail file, scissors, screw driver, two different
knife blades, and a rotary tool with several different burrs attached. And-a
corkscrew. And finally, a flat piece of metal with a knobby bit and a cutout
crescent shape. "Here!" KEN640 announced.
"Oh,
is that what that is?" KEN637 said, opening his own arm. "I was wondering.
I had noticed it in your assembly before and wondered what it was and why we
earlier model numbers didn't have one."
"I
believe I was designed as a special commission. My original employer had some
rather old-fashioned tastes."
KEN637
said, "Perhaps you should try it on the hatch then. From my observations,
I would say that Jonas Becker, CEO of Becker Salvage and Recycling Enterprises,
Limited, also has antiquated tastes."
KEN640
obligingly mounted the movable scaffolding that the androids had brought from
the central facility of the loading docks. Modern vessels all had a fairly
standard hatch location but the older ones were often made by a variety of
manufacturers with a variety of specifications.
KEN640
was still replacing his auxiliary components into his forearm while he mounted
the scaffolding. Suddenly, his foot, which had developed a short and,
consequently, and involuntary twitch from the attentions of RK, slipped off the
top rung. He threw himself against the scaffolding to catch his fall and escape
damage. The scaffolding banged hard against the hatch, which flew open,
showering several tons of spare computer components, ancient nose cones, small
flitters, and one long stretch of metal grating down onto the other KEN models,
who had been standing directly beneath him, looking up to see what the ruckus
was about.
KEN640
lost his grip and made one last leap to try to regain purchase on something to
stop his fall-and found it. His fingers closed on the edge of the hatch. He tightened
his grip and swung himself aloft and into the hatch. As he slid away from the
opening, the hatch closed behind him. He banged on it. Nothing. He pushed with
all his might. It remained sealed shut.
"Assistance!"
He projected his vocalization so that it would carry to the units below.
"Assistance is required. My sensors do not detect any accessible openings
into the ship from here, and no means to operate the opening to the outside.
Please assist me at once."
When
time passed and he received no assistance, nor could further searches discover
a mechanism to either allow him inside the ship or out of it entirely, he shut
himself off to conserve power. Kisia Manjari did not appreciate it when her
units wasted power.
Just
before his visual sensors shut down, however, they replayed a fleeting image
he'd seen-of the debris from the hatch superimposed on the prone forms of the
other KEN units, who presented during this flash an uncharacteristically
two-dimensional appearance, as if they were mere splashes of plastiskin,
machined parts, and various lubricants smashed onto the pavement beneath rather
than their usual selves.
Back at
the nano-bug market, Becker was recounting his life story to Reamer and his
family in an attempt to persuade Reamer that he was not the kind of guy to go
bumping off idealistic young unicorn ladies to get at their horns. After all,
he hadn't even known what they were till he showed them to Reamer, had he?
The
redheaded rock hound was just starting to relax his suspicions again when the
remote alarm went off. Since it sounded like the Klaxon horn on an old bicycle
playing the first bar of "Dixie," everyone heard it. RK growled.
"That
would be the skinny little princess and her heavy metal boys trying to board
the Condor," he told Reamer. "I hate it when people do that. Maybe I
forgot to leave off the NO TRESPASSING sign. Or maybe she came before I got
back to pick up the rest other purchases."
"Kisia
Manjari is nobody to mess with," Reamer advised. "I'd stay away if I
were you until she has what she wants, then go back and pick up the pieces of
your vessel."
"Good
advice, huh, RK?" Becker said, thinking it over. Then he said,
"Naaah, a man's vessel is his castle. Besides, she won't be able to get in
without this." He tapped the remote, which was also the source of the
alarm. "C'mon, RK." The cat hopped up on Becker's shoulder and the
man began jogging back toward the flitcycle he had brought along for personal
ground transport.
"Wait
a minute," Reamer told him. "Manjari and her droids could trace your
movements through the market to us. I don't want to wake up in the middle of
the night to find that particular woman anywhere near my bed or my kids
insisting I answer a lot of questions about you when I don't know anything to
tell her."
"So
better you should come along and find out all my secrets so you'll have some
juicy stuff to save your collective asses with, right?" Becker said.
"Come on, then."
Reamer
called to the woman in the Ogonquonian Ornamentation booth, "Watch the
kids for me, okay, LaVoya?" and sprinted after Becker.
Becker
had purposely docked as far out in the boonies as the docking bay went because
he didn't like a bunch of officious inspectors messing with his vessel. The
problem was, security wasn't very good out here either. A lot of semiderelicts
were warehoused in this part of the bay until they could be refurbished or
junked, and it was very tricky trying to tell if the Condor was one of them or
not. However, if anyone had been passing by, they'd have noted that the Condor
was evidently crewed by untidy personnel, as a large pile of miscellaneous
technogarbage was heaped on the pavement to one side of the ship.
"Looks
like the princess came by, okay," Becker said, scratching his chin. "Guess
she went back for more help. Whatever she wanted seems to have been too heavy
for these guys."
"Are
you kidding?" Reamer asked, most sincerely, because it was hard to tell
with Becker sometimes. "She sent her goons to break into your ship! I bet
she was after the horns"
"Shhh,
not so loud," Becker said with a finger to his lips. "Now that I know
what they are, I wish I hadn't mentioned it. In fact, I need to pull a
disappearing act real quick now, before her highness returns with more goons. Look,
tell you what hang onto this." He gave him a piece of the horn. "I
swear to you I didn't get it off of anybody alive and didn't even see any
bodies. RK and I found these things lying around on a trashed out planet. You
decide what to do with it. I'm outta here."
He
thumbed the remote, which played another tune Reamer didn't recognize, and what
appeared to be an exhaust chute for a Mythenan toxic waste transport extruded a
broad platform that Becker and RK stepped onto.
"Don't
you get beamed up?" Reamer asked, as Becker and RK ascended into the
chute.
"Nah,
that stuff makes the cat nervous," Becker said. "Say bye to the kids
for us."
"You
got it," Reamer called back, waving. Becker had forgotten the flitcycle so
Reamer climbed back on it and proceeded to put as much distance as possible
between himself and the pile of junk with the squashed androids at the bottom.
Reamer
was thinking hard as he bombed through the back streets, trying not to make a
clear path to the nano-market and his kids. Despite his customarily mellow
attitude, education from the school of hard knocks had taught him a healthy
amount of street-smart paranoia. Damn the red hair anyway. Between that and his
height, he sort of stood out, and anyone who had seen him riding with Becker
was likely to identify him to Kisia Manjari. Neither he nor his kids would be
safe now. Even if nobody had spotted him on the way to Becker's ship, the
nano-market was a hive of gossip and it wouldn't lighten Kisia Manjari's purse
by much to find out that Becker had spent quite a bit of time at Reamer's
booth. The nice, anonymous life he had built for himself and the kids, not
attracting attention, not violating laws but at the same time not possessing
anything anyone else would want enough to hassle them for it, was now totally
blown. Well, these things happened. It was time, maybe. The important thing was
to get the kids to safety and also to let Baird, Giloglie, and Nadezda know
about the horns.
Reamer's
heart settled back down in his chest when he saw his children working the crowd
as usual, sizing up prospects for the Ogonquonian Ornaments with the same
expertise they used to determine who could be tempted by the rocks and minerals
in their own booth.
"Come
on, Deeter, Turi, we have to pack up and get out."
"But,
Daddy, -we've paid in advance for our space for the season," Turi, his
little business manager, objected.
"Baby,
haven't I told you there's things more important in life than money? Now hop to
it!"
He was
thinking fast about where they would go from here. The authorities were only
nominally clean, even in these reform days. Kisia Manjari's guardian, the
count, was a man of vast influence and many of the security patrolmen were in
his pocket. They were far more apt to frame Reamer on some charge and detain
him at Kisia s convenience than they were to be helpful. It was all fine when
the Lady and her uncles and Delszaki Li had lived here but without their
physical presence . . .
Reamer
suddenly remembered the little story Becker had told of going to the pleasure
house and running into Khetala. Reamer had had a similar encounter with her
himself, for similar reasons. But she was one of the Lady's people, one of the
children Acorna had saved from the mines. Khetala would know what to do about
the horn. She could help him and the kids escape Kezdet, too. She would help
them. She had to.
The
eyes of every person in the pavilion were focused on the opening. The flap
spread wide. Dancing stopped although the band played on. Then, abruptly, the
band stopped, too, and Liriili, horn uncovered, strode through the crowd
gathered outside, then the crowd inside, and stepped up onto the bandstand,
where she appropriated the tiny amplifier. "I am calling an emergency
council session in the fli-zaar's pavilion immediately. Meanwhile, all prep
crews of all space vessels are to report to their ships and prepare for
takeoff, and all other crew members are on standby. Commanders of the ships and
all emissaries, envoys, and ambassadors will please attend the council meeting
now."
Then
she strode off, a great number of the white-skinned Linyaari following her, or
leaving the party behind her.
Grandam,
apparently undeterred by affairs of state from reminding people of their social
graces, led Acorna down from the heights of the grazing platforms and she
herself went to the bandstand and picked up the amplifier. "My children,
those of you whose presence is not required elsewhere, please remain and dance
with your loved ones as long as you may. There is still much good food on the
platforms and many of you have not yet met Khornya."
Acorna
protested. "This seems to be an emergency. Whether people meet me or not
is hardly important right now.
But
from several directions she could hear low mutterings to the effect of,
"She seems to have brought trouble with her."
"Good
manners are always important, " Grandam told her crisply. "Besides,
you'll give people something to take their minds off of more worrisome matters.
I must attend the council meeting, child," Grandam told her. "Young
Maati can show you the way to my quarters when you're ready."
"I
want to come, too," Acorna said. "If something has happened to the
Balakiire, to Neeva and the others, I want to know."
"I
doubt you'll be permitted to attend, child. But if the emergency concerns the
Balakiire, be sure that I will let you know when I return, and also, I will see
to it that you are given a berth on one of the outgoing ships. If you'll excuse
me?" Acorna had no choice but to agree.
The
revels had been most effectively stopped by Liriili's announcement but still
everyone stood around waiting for further developments. At last Liriili and the
council members, including Grandam, returned to the reception and the viizaar
addressed the grim-faced, ridiculously dressed crowd.
"My
people, I'm sorry if I have caused you undue alarm. The council, however,
agrees that although there is no major emergency that we are aware of, nothing
really to become overly concerned about, prompt action may forestall future
emergencies. The Balakiire ~" Acorna held her breath.
"The
Baiakiire, which was just dispatched to investigate a disturbing report from
one of our trade missions, sent us a message that they were unable to receive
transmissions from either the trade mission in question or any of our other
ships or missions abroad in space or on other worlds. It is the belief of the
communications officer that some sort of universal equipment failure is
responsible for this silence. For that reason, in order to reestablish
communication as soon as possible as well as to ensure the safety of our people
in space and on other worlds and, if they are in any danger, to evacuate them
as soon as possible, we are deploying the remainder of our fleet to simultaneously
travel to all of the known destinations of our other ships. They will in all
likelihood simply assist with the repairs of our transmitters, but if their
assistance is needed in other ways, they will be there to provide it. For this
reason, for all of our space fleet personnel, shore leave is cancelled and you
should report to your duty stations by mid-sun tomorrow."
Acorna
and Thariinye both rushed forward to volunteer to go back into space but the
viizaar only smiled at Thariinye and said, "You're needed here."
Then, ignoring Acorna, Liriili turned to go. Acorna, with two quick steps,
placed herself in front of the viizaar. "If my aunt is in danger, I want
to help. I need to be on one of those ships."
Liriili
regarded her very coolly. Acorna saw that the viizaar once more had her
horn-hat firmly in place and besides, the vuzaar seemed to be even more adept
than most at concealing her thoughts. "If it becomes necessary for our
ships to evacuate our people from space or other planets, excess personnel may
cost lives. I cannot possibly take the responsibility for that risk simply to
allow you to indulge your curiosity, Khornya. I hope as you spend more time
among us, that you'll become less selfcentered and willful. Perhaps among the
barbarians, your Linyaari intelligence made you best qualified to make
decisions and lead expeditions, but here you are a mere child among those older
and wiser than yourself. Your aunt left you among us to learn our ways, so I
suggest you apply yourself to that goal and leave the crisis to those of us
trained to deal with it."
Fortunately,
at that moment Grandam rejoined Acorna, hearing only Liriili's last stinging
words.
"Come
along, Khornya. I tried to convince the council that you should be sent out on
one of the ships being dispatched, but I was overruled. Certain know-it-all
youngsters agreed with Liriili that you hadn't had a chance to evolve enough to
be useful on a mission yet. Humph. Well, we older ones are considered by some
of our so-called respectful descendants to be relics of a less-evolved time,
you know." Her expression was wry. "That's why I thought perhaps as
long as you are stuck here, you might be more comfortable staying with me. We
less evolved types should stick together, don't you think?"
Acorna
gratefully agreed.
"At
least we know, since word of the malfunction or whatever it is that is
occurring that's keeping our people from being able to contact us-came from the
Baiakiire, that Neeva and the crew are safe. As a precaution, the ships going
up now are having their com units equipped with special filters and boosters as
well as the repair equipment for existing transmitters. New communications
programs are being installed tonight as -well by the prep crews, with extras
being sent along for the ships already abroad and of course, the main
receivers, transmitters, and computers are being checked for some sort of fault
in their space relay systems as well."
"What
do you suppose could be causing the problem?" Acorna asked.
"I
don't know. Perhaps a meteor storm between us and the closest transmitters in
the relay system? Maybe some kind of mechanical difficulty in the transmitters
themselves or even a programming flaw? A sun going nova? Liriili is right about
one thing-I'm sure the problem, whatever it is, is one our crews are well
equipped to sort out by themselves."
"You
don't sound as if anyone believes there really would be a need to evacuate our
people elsewhere, more as if the silence is a technical problem. In which case,
why'not just send out crews to the most likely areas of interference? If there
is a larger problem, all of your-our-ships could be cut off from communication
with the planet, maybe even each other, and we would have no idea what was
occurring. Wouldn't it be wiser to risk fewer personnel?"
The
animation left Grandam's face and her mouth settled into a grim line. "We
are hoping that this is a technical problem. If so, the council's reasoning is
that the more ships we deploy to the most places, the sooner the problem will
be mended. The communications channels are a lifeline to our ships, and through
them to our allies, as well as a lifeline for us. It would be impossible to
devote too many resources to their preservation. And in case there is a more
ominous threat"-Acorna heard with her mind rather than her ears that the
council was most deeply afraid of a new, heretofore unheralded attack by the
Khieevi "we need to cover all options as quickly as possible so we can
learn of the danger, assist if possible those affected by the threat, evacuate
those it does not yet affect, and have our ships return home." She paused
and said, "We would not need them for evacuation from narhii-Vhiliinyar.
We do not, at this time, have an alternative home ready so evacuating this planet
is not an option."
"But-if
nothing else, people could go to Kezdet, Maganos moon, Rushima. All of the
human worlds are compatible with our species."
Grandam
took a deep breath, let it out, and said, "Of course. There are other
worlds as well. But until we know there is a threat and if so, where it comes
from, we would hardly know where to run, would we? The personnel in space could
well be safer than those of us here on narhii-Vhiliinyar. One option seems
about as good as another. If this place is not safe, Khornya, is any
place?"
She
shuddered and Acorna realized that the elder was not only deeply worried but
also deeply frightened. Since there seemed to be little either of them could do
about the situation, Acorna deliberately changed her focus.
This
was not hard to do once they arrived at the Grandam's pavilion. It shimmered
with a ribbon of silver streaming around teal green under the light of the two
moons, one blue and one golden, and although there was nothing about it that
seemed lamiharly cozy it nonetheless exuded a charming warmth and hominess.
Grandam
Naadiina waved her hand and soft light emerged from beautifully patterned glass
pillars that upheld the center and corners of her pavilion. The flaps farthest
from them were open so that once more the moons were visible, and all the
stars. Naadiina beckoned Acorna to follow her toward the flap, where three soft
beds were arranged. On one of these lay Maati, sound asleep.
"I
like to sleep with my face to the stars, and my memories of my lifemate on the
old world," Grandam said, peeling off her gown and sliding beneath the top
blanket of the bed. Acorna did the same, grateful to be rid of the makeshift
finery.
"Maati
lives here, too?" Acorna asked.
"Yes,"
Grandam said. "I think her parents felt that I could use the assistance
and would be grateful for a strong young person to run my errands. Since it has
become clear that they were not coming back, and Maati was orphaned, she has
remained with me. She hardly remembers them and is useful as a page for Liriili
and other government officials."
"I'm
so sorry," Acorna said. "What became other parents?"
"They
could not adjust to the loss of their two sons, Aan and Laarye. They tried
to-they were here almost two ghaanyi and had time to conceive and give birth to
Maati. But her mother went into a deep sadness and at last the two of them
announced that the only way to solve this sadness was for them to return to the
old home and try to learn what had become of their sons. They have not been
heard of since. This may be a good thing. The Khieevi have not sought to
entertain us with films of either them or their sons being tortured to death,
so perhaps they met with a diversion along the way or perhaps their boys were
rescued in some other way and they are pursuing them still."
"But-I
thought everyone escaped when you left the old world. Neeva gave me that
impression anyway. You mean you left children behind?"
"What
could we do? The need to evacuate happened quite suddenly. And they were young
men, not children. We had learned of the Khieevi before, of course, and we had
already located this planet as our refuge and had our plan in readiness. But
not everyone could be gathered in time for the evacuation. A few-very few, I'm
happy to say-were left behind to save the majority. Maati's parents could not
accept that their sons could not be found. They would have stayed behind to
search but we could not allow that, much as we hated to leave anything behind
for those monsters. It was agony to leave at all. I myself could scarcely bear
to leave the grave of my lifemate on the same planet with the Khieevi."
"Will
you tell me about your lifemate, and what it was like on the old world?"
Acorna asked.
"Oh,
yes. But aren't you tired after your journey and the so-called reception?"
Acorna did not have to be very psychic to feel the scorn in the old lady's
tone.
"Not
really," she replied. "But I was overwhelmed. I don't think vlizaar
likes me."
"The
vilzaar was already prejudiced against you long before you arrived, my
dear," she replied. "Your mother was chosen by the lifemate Liriili
had already decided was her own. Unfortunately, Vaanye didn't agree."
"Oh,
that must be it then. Neeva mentioned some bad feeling toward my family. But it
doesn't seem sensible to take it out on me."
"Prejudice
and jealousy are seldom sensible. Liriili's is not a flexible or forgiving
nature."
"I
thought that people who could read minds would be incapable of that kind
ofpettiness."
The old
lady grunted. "Except when they are healing, and really concentrating on
extending empathy, or dealing with some crisis among their nearest and dearest,
most people have psychic communication down to a very superficial art. One's
thoughts and feelings have many layers, contradictory layers at that. And even
in thought, some people are more reserved than others-or repressed, perhaps.
Liriili is used to filling her mind with the details of administration and can
use those to mask her feelings even from herself, as no doubt she is doing in
your case.
"Oh.
Speaking of feelings, is it true that it's already decided that Thariinye and I
will be lifemates?"
Grandam
hooted and in the dark her eyes twinkled like the stars as she rolled on her
side and grinned at Acorna, only baring her teeth just a little. "Who told
you that? Thariinye? I can see that he did! Of course no one has decided such a
thing! Except maybe him! You've nothing to worry about there." "I'm
glad," Acorna said. "I want it to feel-right." "You're a
very clever girl. Are you very sleepy?" "No, not really. I feel
rather restless, to tell you the truth." "That makes two of us. Would
you indulge an old lady and tell me of your life? Neeva indicated in her
reports that you had had some adventures. I should very much like to hear of
them. Since coming here, our people have been a rather dull lot, and I do like
a good story."
"Very
well," Acorna said, and began with her earliest memories of her uncles and
the mining ship.
She had
not quite finished when both of them fell asleep. The next morning, Acorna
awoke to the sound of birds singing and a stream burbling very nearby. She sat
up.
The
stream was running right behind her head, as a matter of fact, down one glass
column, across the floor of the pavilion, where it was joined by the waterfall
flowing down the glass column on the opposite side of the floor. Acorna cupped
her hand to dip out a drink, and found that the water was actually covered by
glass. So were the singing birds that flew from another column, across the top
of the pavilion, to disappear into the column opposite the one where the flight
had begun. Within the bird's path, clouds drifted with seeming air currents
and, at the base of the pillars, the branches of bushes seemed to bob in a
breeze.
Acorna
yawned and stretched. The pallet beside hers was empty. Then she noticed that
beyond the bird column, the flap was closed and voices were coming from the
other side.
She
rose and pulled on the undergown from the previous night, wishing she still had
her flight suit instead.
The
front flap opened, and Grandam Naadiina entered the pavilion. Her arms were
full of various items, bouquets of wild flowers, notes, and sheaves of edible
grasses and big leafed vegetables.
"Here,
let me help you," Acorna said, rushing forward to relieve her hostess of
some of the burden.
"You
may as well take them all. Young males haven't left such tributes to me in a
long time."
"You
mean these are for me? But-why?"
"Your
welcome home reception was interrupted and your guests did not get properly
introduced. I suppose these are by way of being an apology, if not an
invitation, on behalf of some of your guests. Perhaps some of them were fellows
who are going off planet now and will have no chance to meet you until they
return." She paused. "Besides, the Ancestors seem to approve of you,
whether or not Liriili does. The opinions of the Ancestors carry a great deal
of weight with our people."
Acorna
shook her head, disbelieving, as she deposited some of the edibles-the
wildflowers were edible, too-on one of the low tables near the eastern wall of
the pavilion. There was no kitchen facility, or rest room either. Like Acorna,
the Linyaari of course tended to graze, eating only fresh vegetables and grasses,
so a food preparation area was unnecessary. They buried their waste in the
ground, too-or in an area of the hydroponics gardens, as Acorna and her
shipmates had done aboard ship. There was no taboo about this. Linyaari
recycled food with a clean efficiency that made the waste excellent fertilizer,
Neeva had told her. Acorna's human upbringing made her wonder at the lack of
squeamishness about this function, but then, humans often used recycled urine
for water while on long voyages, too, and the connection was at least one step
more remote in this case.
"I'm
glad they approve," Acorna said. "It was rather difficult to
tell."
"It
always is, for anyone other than an attendant. Your brow is wrinkled. Why is
that? What's bothering you?"
"Just
that I made a fool of myself last night, and then there was the emergency and
here I am being given gifts, when everyone is so very worried. I don't want
people to give me things because they feel guilty or intimidated. I want to
make friends, to learn to know and understand our people."
"You
are a very sensitive girl and your attitude does you proud. However, many of
the people last night, including our leader, were most ungracious to you and
the gifts show that they realize that. The emergency no doubt kept some of them
from making complete asses out of themselves. These gifts are actually quite a
healthy sign-that in spite of the crisis, some of them cared enough about your
feelings to apologize. Once this would not have been at all unusual but our
people have changed, since the evacuation." Her voice drifted off, sadly.
When she spoke again, it was to change the subject. "Now then. Tell me
more about your adventures."
Acorna
was surprised. She was not used to talking as much as she had talked the night
before. It was easy to talk to Grandam though. The funny thing was, sometimes
Acorna knew that Grandam didn't merely hear her words-that she saw Acorna's own
memories as well, felt what Acorna was feeling as she remembered, felt as she
had felt while experiencing the events the memories recorded. But with Grandam
Naadiina, Acorna didn't worry about what was thought-talk and what was verbal.
She knew without needing to question that Grandam understood what she was
trying to communicate, however she communicated it. And that, Grandam's
willingness and ability to really know her, was what had drawn her out. It had
been that way somewhat with Neeva and the others, but there had always been
their own thoughts, their considerations of what was and was not Linyaari, that
got in the way.
Grandam
smiled at Acorna in the brief pause the girl took before speaking and nodded.
"I see that you have shared enough with me already. It has been my
pleasure hearing your tales. They are so different from anything else one hears
on this planet, among our people. Never fear, granddaughter, that you are
unworthy. Our people don't yet know you or understand you but they will."
Acorna
took a deep breath and straightened her spine. "Not if I don't make the
attempt to get to know them, Grandam. Apparently I cannot help out with the
crisis in space, but perhaps I can at least offer comfort to those left behind
here on the planet. The gifts have given me an opening. First, I must try to
learn who sent each bundle and thank them, and visit with them, and not bare my
teeth." Her mouth curled in a smile but she determinedly kept her lips
closed. "I must also speak with the people who designed the dresses they
so kindly sent-and pay for the two I altered to suit myself."
"That
is not necessary, you know. It's all been put on Neeva's account at her
instruction."
"Nevertheless,
I fear I insulted them and after I saw how everyone was dressed last night, I
better understood the intent of the designers. I would like to tell them
so."
"That
would be most gracious, my dear. They are very silly though, these
fashions."
Acorna
could not truthfully debate that point, but continued. "Be that as it may,
I was told that there was a possibility that some day I would return to Kezdet
and Maganos and my human friends as an ambassador of the Linyaari. I don't seem
to be making a good start of it yet. So perhaps, since I don't yet know exactly
what it is to be a Linyaari, I should begin to explore that and in the process,
practice ambassadorship by trying to represent the culture from which I've come
in a more positive manner than I seem to have done so far."
"Bravo!"
said Grandam Naadiina. "You have a splendid attitude with which to begin
your work, I must say. And perhaps with your broad experience of other worlds,
you will be able to ease some of the fears people have for their loved ones in
space."
Acorna's
mind was already so busy planning her day she simply nodded to acknowledge
Grandam's approval. "And also, I would like to meet some of these
techno-artisans Maati was telling me about, the ones who design, alter, and
adapt the technological trade items to Linyaari tastes."
"They
have their own community, actually, but it's not too far from here to walk,
though the path is a bit overgrazed. And you must realize that many of them
spend considerable time on other host planets, learning the basics and keeping
up with the new developments. A few of them will be on the crews shipping out
but by no means all."
"So
they spend a lot of time in space?" Acorna asked. "That's very
interesting. No one in any place I have ever been has ever seen a being like me
before the Balaklire came looking for me."
"Is
that so? In some parts of the universe we're quite a routine sight, you know.
But those are peaceful parts, and if they cease to be peaceful, we cease to be
seen there." Her tone had a wry twist to it that made Acorna realize with
some surprise that the words had been thought and not spoken, for she saw an
image of Linyaari techno-artisans in training hastily vacating a planet where
hostilities were erupting.
"Is
this all right to wear to go calling?" Acorna asked, indicating the gown
she had worn the night before.
"My
dear, it wouldn't bother a soul if you went out unclothed altogether. We aren't
fussy about those things around here, not for modesty's sake, anyway. But the
weather does turn suddenly. Allow me to loan you something. You'll be pleased
to know extreme fashion is only utilized in formal clothing. For daytime wear
we are rather more practical."
Grandam
raised the lid of one of the low tables, and inside were folded a variety of
garments. From among these, she selected a simple knee-length tunic with long
full sleeves and a neckline cut low in back to accommodate the hair that grew
down Acorna s spine and that of every other Linyaari. Acorna slipped it over
her head.
"Very
comfortable," she said.
"Yes,
but it does need a touch. It's a bit too floppy on you. Here, this will do
nicely." Grandam handed her the most gorgeous belt Acorna had ever seen.
The edges were intricately braided and interwoven of some strong but supple
material, while the body of the belt was patterned with faceted gemstone beads
woven into the design of birds and water, flowers and distant mountains with a
stream flowing the length of the belt. Acorna had to stroke and admire it a
moment before buckling it around her waist. The buckle continued the pattern of
the belt in a slightly wider motif of a very tall mountain with one sun setting
and another rising on the other side of it.
Grandam
smiled. "It suits you. Niciuye made it for me to wear for our ceremony of
union when we were still courting. Unfortunately, it lacks a few Diich'<fe'
of meeting around my waist these days. The scenes, as you may have guessed, are
from our original home world. It was the only home Niciirye knew."
"What
became of him?" Acorna asked. "If it isn't too painful for you to
tell me?"
"Not
at all. He was even older than I and died peacefully in his sleep. He was well
enough, and an excellent healer, but his parts were simply worn out. I begin to
understand that problem myself. I do miss him though-his foolishness as much as
his guidance. Ah well. I hope you can find someone you care for and who cares
for you as much."
Acorna
sighed. "Right now I'll settle for not making an outcast of myself."
"I'm
sure when people get to know you, they'll be sincerely glad you've come. I
think you will have much better luck talking to one or two people at a time.
You are not a shallow person, and small talk is essentially a shallow form of
communication. It will not be necessary when you are alone with other
individuals. Just be yourself and be willing to take each person as you find
him or her and you'll do well."
"I'm
sure you're right," Acorna said. "Now, how do I find these
places?"
"I'll
send for Maati." Grandam poked her head out of the tent, ready to call.
"Oh,
no, surely with the crisis, the vilzaar will need her more than ever today.
Really, if you'll just tell me, I'll find my own way. I don't want Liriili to
have another excuse to resent me."
It was
Grandam Naadiina's turn to sigh. She moved back into the tent. "I suppose
you're right. Very well then, I'll draw you a map. When you're ready to visit
the techno-artisans, come back here and I'll take you myself. I've left a
heating unit with Kaakiri for repair and it should be ready by now."
Hafiz
Harakamian regarded his second wife, his most lusciously beautiful bride, with
alarm bordering on panic. "Karina, my little pomegranate, you grow thin
and pale!"
Indeed,
half of her second chin had disappeared, and the lovely little roll of belly
below her amethyst-encrusted lavender bra and bolero and above the
amethyst-studded band of the diaphanous lilac harem pants she wore was eclipsed
from its usual full moon to little more than a quarter.
"Tell
me, oh my garden of delights, why do you wither away to nothing? Is there some
wish I have not fulfilled? Some food you crave I have not had fetched from the
corners of the universe to delight your delicate palate? Some garment you would
desire to swathe your so lovely figure"-and he almost drooled as he said
it, for his new bride was all that he had hoped she would be "that I have
not had made for you from the finest materials by the most talented and
skillful seamstresses available? Some redecorating, maybe, you'd like to do to
our homes?" he asked in desperation, as the first two questions were
meeting with no response but a slight trembling of her lower lip and flutter
other eyelashes.
"Oh,
Haffy, my darling figgy pudding hubby," Karina said, for she was not to be
outdone in hyperbolic compliments to her wealthy husband who, if he was not
exactly handsome, still had a wonderfully compelling personality, tremendous
vitality, enormous charisma, quite startling capabilities in the bedroom, and
marvelous taste in women-not to mention oodles and oodles of lovely money,
"you have done everything to satisfy my body but my spirit remains
unfulfilled."
"Why
is that, o beloved whose face is like unto a blossoming white rose, whose eyes
are brighter than the twinkling stars, whose ..."
She cut
off the flow by burying her face in her heavily beringed hands. "I fear I
allowed myself to be distracted from my own spiritual journey by the suddenness
of our passion. So overcome was I with the newness of our love that I grew
complacent about what I knew was my true calling, my greatest spiritual
quest-to aid Acorna and her people and teach them to channel their energies and
use their gifts in a proper"-and profitable, for Karina thought wealth was
very proper-"manner."
"But,
my little oasis of carnal conviviality, Acorna went with her people to learn
their ways and will soon return to us. Surely you need not pine?"
She
sighed deeply. They were sitting beside the fountain in the courtyard, where
they had just partaken of a fabulous meal. She had only picked at the third
course and had barely touched her sherbet. She popped another of those little
chocolate egg truffles into her mouth though. Haflz was right. She had to keep
her strength up. "Oh, Hafiz, my wise and wily warrior in the world of
wealth, you are such a debonair fellow, so learned in the ways of commerce and
the battle of the marketplace, that in your munificence of spirit you no doubt
saw the beautiful Linyaari beings as like yourself, as sophisticated as they
were soignee.
"But
I, who communed with them on both a deeper level and a higher plane than any
among our own kind, recall their childlike innocence, their need to be nurtured
and tutored along the great spiritual pathway that it has been my privilege to
travel lo these many years. Their incredible healing and purifying powers which
really need sharp management so they don't go exhausting themselves by giving
all that valuable stuff away.
"I
was to have been Acorna's mentor in just such a way, but now our lovely Lady of
the Light has gone with them to this secluded home world of theirs, a place
where no one can find them, a place where our beloved Acorna and all other
potential are lost-not to mention the potential of a whole planetful just like
her! -to me and all who love her."
Hafiz
scratched his bearded chin, pondering the words of his wife, words which he had
come to learn had many levels of wisdom.
Then he
shrugged as if it were all a small matter. "Acorna said she would return,
and her people were of the opinion that she would be given honors and rank
among them and sent to us as an envoy. I'm sure she and they will be with us
again soon, O my heart of butter. And this home where they live is only in
space, beloved, not in that land where our esteemed friend and colleague Li now
resides. And if these people can locate it in space, so can the finest
engineers and navigators in my employ-that is to say, the finest engineers and
navigators available. And this planet, if need be, could be visited. Especially
by a friend."
"Friend?
Why, you are practically the only family she has! Apart from your nephew and
his friends, she had only Mr. Li. And while I am in constant contact with him,
his guidance is lost to her. In fact," she added shrewdly, "it is his
guidance in this matter, his insistence that Acorna and her people should still
have access to our advice and assistance, that has caused me to dwell on this
matter while neglecting my diet."
Hafiz
was momentarily incensed. "You have been having clandestine visits with
Delszaki Li, my old rival, and neglecting to feed the body upon which I have
lavished so much love?"
"He
is dead, Haffy," she said reasonably.
"But
you entertain his counsel!"
"My
darling, it is my calling to succor such spirits, to keep open the channels of
communication between the planes. I cannot reject the spirits any more than you
can reject a profit!"
"But
Li himself organized her departure, outfitted her ship ..."
"Yes,
but he says he always intended that one or more other guardians should go with
her. Had she not left prematurely, I would have intercepted her and been aboard
the vessel that carried her away the first time. Of course, it didn't occur to
her aunt to invite me along. What with us being newlyweds and all." She
blushed, a blush that cast a roseate dawn upon the exposed globes above her
overflowing bodice.
Hafiz,
never one to be outdone at the bargaining table, even of love, reached for her.
"Perhaps I am at this moment too distracted with concern for your health
to consider these matters, my little couscous. Come, I cannot speak of this
further until I have once more personally inspected the possible damage your
dietary deprivation has wreaked upon your beauteous body."
Karina,
who was not yet over the novelty of having a man so besotted with her that,
while he insisted she wear her flowing robes in public, it was only so that she
could wear, if anything, skimpy little outfits like this one for him and him
alone to drool over in private. His hands were very skillful and the look in
his eyes made her feel, as always, quite faint with desire. Besides, he was
always more reasonable afterward. As for Hafiz, he was even more aroused than
usual, recalling the words of his voluptuous vixen, the ones where she pointed
out that there was a profit to be made in the talents of Acorna and her kind.
His Karina was not only lusciously lovely but also had a head for business-a
true helpmeet at last!
Before
he had time to explore this side of her along with the others, a discreet cough
from behind him made him turn toward the lacey latticework of the door leading
into the garden. "Your pardon. Lord and Master and gracious lady, but a
matter of great urgency has arisen that requires your presence, Master,
something you and you alone must attend to."
"And
so I will when it pleases me," Hafiz said with a glower at the servant,
who had been in his employ since boyhood and certainly knew better than to
interrupt him when he was engaged in the pursuit of marital bliss. "It
should be obvious to you that it does not please me now."
"Yes,
Great Lord. But I swear to you upon the Three Books and by the Three Prophets
that though you reward my impertinence with a thousand lashes for this
interruption, you would redouble that punishment if I neglected my duty in
informing you of this matter."
"This
is so?" Hafiz asked. He had not risen to his present position by ignoring
urgent business when it was brought to his attention, even when it was so
wretchedly inconvenient as it was now.
"Even
so, Great Lord and Master," the servant said with a bow.
"Ah,
very well then." He kissed Karina tenderly on the cheek for he dared not
kiss her lips or he would never leave, gave her belly a longing stroke, shoved
the gold enameled dish wrought with nightingales and piled with chocolate
truffle eggs into her hands and said, "Eat, my dainty doe of
deliciousness. You will need all of your strength when I return."
"As
will you, my love," she said in a sultry voice that all but drove him mad.
Didi
Yasmin, currently unemployed since the combined forces of Delszaki Li and the
peculiar horned girl had put all of the pleasure houses of Kezdet out of
business, was still in mourning. This fact distressed her, as black was not one
other better colors. But a son was a son and hers was dead and her husband and
supposed widower no doubt had something to do with it. Therefore, he should pay.
Would pay.
He
would never miss it, she thought, looking around at the thick red-patterned
carpets, the crimson and emerald silk-covered cushions of the divan, the
endless cabinets of lustrous and exotic woods filled with equally lustrous and
exotic treasures, the masses of fresh blooms plucked from his gardens, which
were cooled by no fewer than a thousand flowing fountains.
And he
owed her. She had given him the son and heir he demanded of a wife and he had
wasted the boy and given away his empire to that asteroid-hopping nephew of
his. But the worst of all was that he had had the gall to remarry without even
bothering to make absolutely certain she, his real wife, was dead.
True,
she had gone to elaborate lengths to fake her death so that she might return to
her own profitable career in the sex industry, but it had always galled her how
easily and with what apparent relief he accepted the exaggerated reports of her
demise. He had been glad, back then, to have the boy to himself. She had been glad
to leave her son as well, then. She had found motherhood extremely taxing,
despite a whole platoon of nannies, and even then had hated to have anyone
thinking she was old enough to be someone's mother!
But it
had suited her purposes and those of her employers that she keep track of both
her husband and her son. Her son had frequented the houses other colleagues and
even, on a couple of occasions, had graced her own establishment, though of
course he didn't recognize her.
A fine
boy, a strapping boy. Too bad he had caused such damage to the women he had
used that they had to be replaced, at great expense, of course. After that, she
reluctantly banned him. As for her dear husband, she was kept well informed of
his movements and interests through those enemies she had happily supplied with
detailed maps of his compound, an inventory of his most treasured possessions,
the names of all of his personal guards she could recall, and other readily
marketed information.
It was
these people who finally secured her release from prison and these people,
also, who engineered her arrival at this same compound where once she had been
mistress, who got her past the guards, and who supplied her with one other
little thing.
Hafiz
delighted her by gaping at her as if she were indeed the ghost he supposed her
to be.
"Yasmin!"
he gasped, as his well-fed and gorgeously robed form appeared from among the
glittering beads of the curtained doorway.
"Greetings,
husband," she said sweetly. "I was told you have recently remarried.
I am assuming from this that you have recently embraced at least Reform
Neo-Hadathian customs and have become polygamous, since we two are still
legally twined in wedded bliss." His face was turning the exact shade of
scarlet she had hoped to see. She smiled sweetly. "No, no, my darling
husband, do not imagine that I object. A senior wife can always use a young one
to relieve her of some of her more distasteful duties. But I am surprised she
is not here to greet me as well. Is this new girl perhaps indisposed? I had so
hoped to meet her and see if she can live up to my standards'-and of course, to
instruct her in her duties to me, as your first wife and khaSliu."
Hafiz
stared at Yasmin, with whom he had once briefly been so infatuated and whom he
had long believed to be dead. He had never mourned her properly, it was true,
for despite her beauty as a young woman, and her apparent ardor, she had not
been a very good wife. She was vicious, vain, and somewhat stupid, so much so
in fact that like many petty criminals her own emotional shortcomings even got
in the way of fulfilling her greed at times. And Yasmin had been a very greedy
woman.
Unfortunately,
it seemed she was also alive, because she did appear to be breathing even
though she very much looked the part of a ghost. Her once-charming face had
been resculpted, had had its wrinkles repeatedly removed by poison and knife
blade so often that her skin looked as if it had been stretched over her skull
bones like the skin of a goat on a drum. It was shiny, not from youthful
moistness and freshness, but rather, it appeared, from some sort of pickling
process that made it look thick and coarse. Little veins had broken in her
cheeks.
Her
mouth was puffy with the injections she used to keep it from falling back into
its former thinness-but back then, though thin, that mouth had been ready for
bawdy laughter, and that was part of what had attracted him to her. Now it
looked as if it pained her to speak. Her eyes had had the lids lifted and brows
tattooed above them.
Thick
eyelashes had been implanted to augment her own. But none of this disguised the
dull, stony glare of her eyes. Beneath black veils trimmed in a tasteless
manner in black spangles, her hair was stiff with gilt metallic dye.
"Yasmin,
you are dead by law if not in fact, and even if you remain my wife, it is only
in name, and that will not be for much longer, now that I know it is a problem.
Had I realized that you still lived, I would not have divorced you before, for
the sake of our son, but now that he is gone "
"Murdered,"
Yasmin whispered, her eyes narrowed to slits. "Foully murdered and yet I
understand that you, his father, did nothing to avenge him! Have in fact, it is
said, with unseemly haste replaced him with that asteroid-hopping nephew of
yours as your heir."
"Tapha
had it coming. He was our son, it is true, but it is also true that he was a
vicious and ignorant pig." "He didn't get that from my side of the
family." Hafiz waved his hand in dismissal. "No matter. There is no
longer any your side of the family. Your side of the family, apparently through
your own contrivance, is extinct. And you have not been a member of my family
in many years. It grieves me to tell you, oh dear departed mother of our late
unlamented son, that I would have disinherited Tapha even if he lived. The boy
managed, despite his legitimate birth during our marriage, to be a bastard of
the worst kind."
"You
have no sense of family! It is a good thing that I have returned, as your
khaSine, to instruct my junior wife."
Hafiz
looked as if he were about to explode, and said in a slow, dangerous voice,
"You will not speak to her, you will not so much as lay eyes upon her. You
are not khaSlne. You are no longer even my wife."
He took
a deep breath and began chanting the expeditious ancient Hadathian method of
ridding oneself of unwanted marital attachments, "I divorce you, I divorce
you, I-"
Before
he could say it the third and decisive time, she interrupted in a shrill, high
whine that would not allow him to ignore it.
"You
think you can cast me out, just like that, kill my son, marry another, and
dismiss me as if I were someone of no consequence?"
"I
am certainly about to," Hafiz told her.
"There's
no need to get so unpleasant. As you recall, it was I who left you. I was only
testing you," she said with a poisonously sweet smile. She pulled a
beautifully jeweled box from her robes and offered it to him. "I confess,
I was afraid you might react this way, that the shock of my resurrection would
prove too much for you and that the years we have spent apart would have put
too great a strain on your affection. Still, although I do not care for the way
you've treated me, I am a broad-minded woman. And to show there are no hard
feelings, I have brought you a wedding present. One I know will be of great
interest to you."
"I
have no wish for your gifts-but, ahhh-is that a rare Terran early nineteenth
century inlaid vermilion and jade snuffbox similar to the one from the court of
the French emperor Napoleon Bonaparte?" He must at least inspect such a
treasure. His fingers itched to do so, as they did with any fine and rare
collectible object. Perhaps he was only imagining the sneer that crossed
Yasmin's red swollen mouth?
"The
very one. The emperor himself gorged his very nostrils from this same box, oh
avaricious husband. And now it holds a new rarity, a treasure of particular
meaning for you. Go ahead, take it."
He
started to accept it from her hand and then thought better of it. "No, you
open it. Show me. It would be like you to have had it fitted with some poisoned
clasp ..."
"You
wrong me, beloved," she said, and wondered how the man who sold her this
box had known that Hafiz would say this. She touched the catch and the lid popped
open. "You see? Nothing in it but fine sparkling powder, like ground
moonstones or opals."
"I
do not traffic in drugs, Yasmin," Hafiz said huffily. He didn't either.
Not any more. Not for many years. Well, not on a regular basis. It wasn't
really profitable any more.
"Ah,
but, husband, this is no drug of the sort to which you refer. This is a very
special powder indeed. It will heal any wound, neutralize poisons, and will act
as an amazing aphrodisiac to any man or woman who takes only a few grains in a
drink or food."
"This
is so?" Hafiz asked. "That is a wondrous thing indeed, mother of my
deservedly-deceased son. And something I will happily accept if only you will
tell me, why is it that you, who have never, so far as I could discern, borne
love for any part of me but my wealth, bestow this upon me? As a gift," he
reminded her hastily. A gift was, after all, a gift, though for a remedy with
such powers as this powder was said to have, he might well have paid a great
deal.
"Because,
dear husband, it is said to come from the horn of a humanoid being who has but
a single horn in the center other forehead. Since you once showed favor to such
a being ..." She laughed, and taking a deep breath, blew the powder from
the open box into his face, and into his eyes, blinding him with a starry swirl
that also, somehow, silenced him and made him swoon so that when he regained
his senses he was lying upon the central pattern of the Garden of Paradise
carpet, and the living ghost of his late wife had vanished.
He was
one with his home world, gray-brown and broken, and to an onlooker would have
been almost indistinguishable from the rubble. He no longer knew which was rock
and soil and which part of his own body, except for the pain. He had had no fear,
when the ship landed, that either the small furry animal or the cumbersome
monster who kept flinging things in and out of the vessel would notice him.
But he
watched when they landed once more with far greater trepidation, and with
relief that he had already removed from its resting place the sacred trust that
undoubtedly drew the outsiders.
The
House of Harakamian chemists reported ?????
that the powder -was a mixture of the ground pollens of the rare
Wahanamoian Blossom of Sleep and another substance difficult to analyze, but
appearing to be calcified tissue of the horn variety, about which they could
say nothing further except that one of the men who had cut himself accidentally
a little earlier spontaneously healed upon coming in contact with the powder.
Hafiz
mentioned nothing of this to Karina. Until he could finalize his divorce to a
supposedly dead woman, he did not wish to jeopardize his marriage by mentioning
the inconvenient vitality of his late spouse to his present one.
But he
was very troubled indeed. Surely, Yasmin had obtained the powder through her
underworld contacts, which he was certain she had, as who else would have
financed her all these years while she plied the trade that she seemed to feel
made her a star? But if these people had somehow contrived to murder Acorna and
the delegation from her home planet, Hafiz felt sure they would have said so
more directly-he himself would have done that, though he was often the most
indirect of men. Therefore, this powder was a warning. And yet-where could the
horn material have come from?
A
sickening thought occurred to him. Before he had met the Linyaari, they had
broadcast as a warning vids of the Khieevi torturing Linyaari prisoners. Was
there some faction of the sort of worm with whom Yasmin consorted so low as to
actually have contacts among the Khieevi who would sell them Linyaari horn?
If so,
this was a very grave matter. Acorna and her people should know of it at once.
Hafiz wished to contact his nephew and heir about the matter but decided on
balance it was best to do so in person rather than trusting the com units.
Hafiz was far too practical to be overly brave, and Yasmin's ability to come
and go without his knowledge had shaken him profoundly.
He
forbade his house staff to say anything of the surprise visit to Karina until
he could decide how to tell her himself and ordered the entire compound
searched for the presence of his late wife. As he suspected, she had
disappeared utterly and completely while he lay drugged on the floor of his own
home.
At
last, only three hours' time from when he had last been at Karina's side, Hafiz
appeared in the marital bedchamber, where his bride lounged upon their
connubial couch. She had been sleeping, he thought, but had awakened at his
step.
"Karina,"
he said, "You have convinced me. Our ship is being prepared and we shall
soon depart for the Linyaari home world to visit Acorna and the others."
Karina
would have known at once that something was amiss even if she had not already
encountered a deeply troubled and no doubt deluded woman claiming to be Hafiz's
true wife. She naturally assumed that the woman was a ghost, since Hafiz's
first wife was dead. Of course, she could have been one of the holograms Hafiz
was always constructing to surprise a person in odd nooks and crannies, but why
would he make an ugly hologram that claimed to be his wife? Had to be a ghost.
Karina attempted to soothe and comfort her, to tell her to go back into the
light, but the specter had merely looked annoyed. Presumably she had then gone
on to haunt Hafiz, or had just come from haunting him, as the very next time
Karina saw him he was behaving in a very peculiar fashion, as those who had
received visitations from the other side sometimes did.
For one
thing, Hafiz addressed Karina by name instead of calling her by one of his
lengthy endearments. For another thing, he gave up without even a token tussle,
totally unlike him, and let her have her way about seeking out Acorna's people.
And for a third thing, he hardly ever did anything in haste, but always with
slow and deliberate preparation.
His
sudden acquiescence so alarmed Karina that she backtracked slightly.
"My
darling, perhaps we should wait a little after all," she said, easing him
down beside her with a light tug on his hand. "You look unwell. You
perspire and your color is not at all good. I think you need a course of some
of my special herbal teas and perhaps we should burn a cinnamon candle tonight
to ease your-"
"Pack
it, beloved!" he said. "Pack all of the tea and candles you wish.
Pack your gowns and jewels, pack your cards and stones and your crystal ball.
But we cannot deprive Acorna and her people of our guidance for another
day."
Nor
could they wait a moment longer, he thought privately, for Yasmin to return and
spoil the honeymoon any more than she had already done. Hafiz worried his first
wife's troublemaking would be even more distressing next time-and more obvious
to Karina. He wouldn't allow that. Women were extremely difficult to
understand, even for a man of his considerable amatory experience. But what
worried him more than Yasmin's tricks was that the security of his stronghold
had been breached. If he was to go, it had best be in all haste, before
Yasmin's unsavory associates followed her here.
In the
meantime he had ordered a complete restructuring of his security strategies,
changes in locks, codes, and passwords, and that the compound be totally
remodeled and its defenses reinforced. In his early days of affection-very
well, lust-for Yasmin, he had shown her everything -everything.
He
deeply regretted that now, for even though he had added and altered several
systems since the time of his first wife, still she knew too much. He and Karma
would not truly be safe here, in his own home, until the presence of Yasmin was
purged.
His
personal vessel was kept in readiness at all times and well equipped for his
comfort on journeys around most of his customary haunts. He commanded that it
be readied for an extended cruise and had retrieved the data plotted by Calum
Baird and Acorna for their originally planned journey to the Linyaari home
world.
They
would travel with the bare minimum crew-pilot, navigator, physician, and
communications officer, plus one trusted personal attendant for each of them,
including the ship's officers, who must be relaxed and at peace to do their
jobs well.
Hafiz
himself was a competent pilot but for such a long journey, and one that had not
actually been previously successfully completed by anyone of his acquaintance,
he preferred to employ a specialist.
He
would have preferred to take along his personal chef, the hairdresser and
dressmaker, manicurist, massage therapist, valet, lady's maid, and other
servants they were accustomed to, but most of these functions could either be
performed by the personal attendants or were well within the ship's ability to
provide electronically. For entertainment, they would have his holograms to
amuse them and add a bit of spice and variety to the atmosphere. He had been
constructing and collecting holograms most of his adult life, first as a
business and now as one of his little hobbies. They were lightweight, took up
no actual room, and could be surprisingly useful.
In the
interests of maintaining security-both his own and that of the Linyaari, he
decided that perhaps they had best rough it on this journey. His skeleton crew
was handpicked and had been raised and educated within the House of Harakamian.
They were loyal and trustworthy.
Then there
was the additional problem that, in the interests of establishing rapport with
Acorna's people, he felt he could not carry the usual arsenal on board, or any
obvious security guards. Although the crew and attendants were well trained in
security functions, that was not their primary job. Perhaps braving the unknown
without sufficient weaponry or an army at his back was foolish, but there were
always the ship's builtin defenses that could be deployed if necessary. He
doubted even the Linyaari would suspect they were there. Given his mission, it
was either go this way, or not at all.
In the
unlikely event that Acorna's people did spot his ship's defenses, the Linyaari
would simply have to understand. He was sincerely attempting to come in
peace-very possibly at the expense of his people's safety, as well as his own.
He could only hope their departure would be rapid enough that Yasmin and
whoever it was she worked for would be unable to launch a pursuit.
Karina
was rather distracted on the journey from Laboue to Maganos.
"What
troubles you, my love?"
"My
spirit guides keep looking over their ectoplasmic shoulders, darling. I'm just
sure they're trying to tell me I've left something important behind or perhaps
we forgot to turn off some major appliance-"
"You
are having a flashback to your days of penury and poverty, flower of my soul.
You have servants to see to those things now, remember? "
She
gave him a wan little smile. "So we do, O beloved. Still, I wish the
communication was clearer. It's very disorienting to spirit guides moving from
planet to planet, you know. They get very attached to the places from whence
they entered the other side."
"Indeed?
You are a fountain of information, best beloved among women. I had no
idea."
Oh, yes!
"Tell
me, love of my life, is Delszaki Li still among your otherworldly
friends?"
Uh, my,
yes.
"Then
tell him your husband said that he's to explain himself at once and stop
worrying you, precious pearl of psychic perception."
Karina
giggled. "Oh, Hafiz, you are so cute when you're indignant. I couldn't say
that to Mr. Li. But I will mention that you are concerned, too, and see if he
can offer enlightenment. I must meditate in solitude to concentrate my
energies. Now, where is that twenty-carat amethyst crystal you gave me?"
"I
believe you loaned it to the physician to try to communicate with his bacterial
specimens, my love."
"So
I did. Well, I'll simply have to borrow it back. I must have the proper tools
of my profession, after all. Can you manage without me for a while,
beloved?"
"Each
moment will be as a dagger in my heart, sweet and succulent spouse, but I will
valiantly endure."
They
kissed and she departed.
To the
communications officer, Hafiz said, "Please alert Maganos Base to have my
nephew standing by when we arrive."
A
moment later the Maganos communications officer said in the high and low
cracking voice of a boy going through puberty, which he no doubt was since the
moon was now a training facility for youngsters and the trainees provided the
personnel for almost every phase of the operation, "Shahrazad, this is
Maganos Base. We weren't expecting Mr. Harakamian!"
"We're
aware of that, Maganos Base. That's why Mr. Harakamian wishes to speak to his
nephew. Can you contact him please and put him on screen?"
"I'll
try, Shahrazad. Just a tic."
But the
face that appeared on the comscreen was not Rafik's but Calum Baird's. Hafiz
placed himself in front of the communications officer so that his own face and
voice would appear on Baird's screen.
"Ah,
senior and ugliest wife of my nephew, how goes it?" Hafiz asked,
delighting to see the color rise above Baird's red beard at the mention of
their first meeting, when Baird, as well as Acorna, had worn veils and a long
gown to promote the idea that Rafik had become one of the fundamentalist
polygamist Neo-Hadathians.
"Not
so bad, oh robber baron who makes All Baba's forty thieves look like rank
amateurs," Baird responded. "But I regret to tell you that Rafik had
to go to Rushima. Dr. Hoa had a spot of trouble he had to discuss with
him."
"In
that case, don't wait up for us, my friend. We will go to Rushima instead for I
must speak with my nephew personally. Ah-Baird?"
"Yes?"
"How
is my nephew's junior wife? Has anyone heard from her or the other members of
the harem?"
At
first Baird looked puzzled and then he said, carefully, "We last heard
from them as they were leaving this quadrant, about twenty days ago. They were
all well and uh-looking forward to being united with their families."
"I
see. And Baird?"
"Yes?"
"Your
last cruise with the junior wife-would your plans have brought you to the
destination you wished? Did the other harem members give you a clue?"
"Why,
yes, as a matter of fact, they did. We would have come within-uh-the anteroom
of the seraglio, so to speak. Why?"
"Oh,
no reason. Just curious. A small wager I had with my own navigator. Nothing of
any importance."
"Right,"
Baird said, in a tone that clearly meant "pull the other one."
"Shahrazad
out," Hafiz said cheerfully.
"Have
a nice voyage," Baird replied sweetly and with an exaggeratedly effeminate
wiggle of his fingers. His bushy eyebrows were twisted with concern, however,
and Hafiz knew that the Caledonian understood something of the nature of the
business the Shahrazal had with Rafik.
The
Condor contained certain modifications that were not purely born of mechanical
necessity. A bank of multifrequency scanners was arrayed directly in front on
the control console. Next to the cargo, these scanners were the most important
item contained on the ship, aside from the captain and first mate.
Becker
was constantly keeping a weather eye and ear open for distress signals, blips
where there shouldn't be blips, homing beacons, any sort of indication that
some vessel, station, planetoid, or whatever might now be or have been in
trouble in the recent past. Of course, Becker had a first aid kit and was
perfectly willing to assist survivors if necessary, but his interest was not
solely humanitarian -or alienatarian, as the case might be. He simply wanted to
know where trouble had been, where vessels or settlements might be abandoned,
leaving behind equipment and other good stuff for an enterprising scavenger.
His scanning devices were aided by other sensors that detected the physical
presence of largish items in the Condor's vicinity and, just as usefully,
detected the absence of the usual detritus, an indication that one of the
useful holes or folds in space might be at hand. While some of these things
could be plotted, others sometimes occurred where they never had before.
"Space moths," Becker Senior had postulated. "Damn space moths
been chewin' in this sector again. Shall we see where this one goes, boy?"
It
wasn't that it hadn't ever occurred to Theophilus Becker that he might guide
the Condor into one of these little byways in space that made life jolly for
astrophysicists and never find his way out. It was that neither he nor Jonas
usually had an actual schedule or anything so he felt free to poke around.
While it was certainly possible they could become lost in infinity, as the old
vids were always postulating, the senior Becker held the opinion that there was
a pattern and a predictability to these wrinkles in the space/time continuum
within a given area. It was an opinion he hadn't shared with much of anyone but
Jonas, who figured what was good enough for Dad was good enough for him and
took the same cavalier attitude toward wormholes and such, new or used.
Normally
he didn't go out of his way to pay these instruments undue attention as long as
they were working. If he didn't notice, RK often did and would sit staring
pointedly at one screen or another until Becker did likewise.
But he
was a little nervous about being followed by Kisia Manjari and company and also
was on the lookout to restock the inventory as soon as possible.
As soon
as he had cleared Kezdet and her moons, he turned his attention to the
scanners. He hadn't expected to be sought real soon, actually, but one of the
short-range scanners was keeping up a continuous, pulsing bleep. It had to be
close, but he couldn't see its source on any of the screens.
"Well,
doggone it anyway," he said, "Where are you, little bleep?"
It
bleeped again. Still nothing on the screen though he looked fast, as if he was
expecting the visual manifestation of the sound to be playing peekaboo with
him.
By the
time the Condor had cleared Kezdet's solar system and warped through a couple
of wormholes, Becker was getting pretty tired of the beep. He also noticed that
RK wasn't hanging out on deck much any more. When they were back to cruising
through what was usually calm empty space, Becker went below decks with a can
of fish he'd picked up on Kezdet before hitting the pleasure house, intending
that RK should be able to take it as an offering to his temporary mate. There
was quite a bit of time before the Condor hit the next "black water,"
as Theophilus Becker liked to refer to the pleated, holey portions of space -where
he found his best shortcuts. "RK? Hey, cat! Where the hell are you?"
He
finally found the cat by the smell and the noise. Since acquiring the sack of
horns, Becker hadn't smelted RK's particular perfume but right now C-deck
reeked of it. Which reminded him that RK was once more a fully functional male
cat with the begetting capabilities and prerogatives thereof, supposing there
had been a lady cat who was interested.
Which
fortunately there wasn't. Becker didn't even want to think of a ship with a
whole bunch of little Roadkill clones playing hide and seek through the cargo.
Mean-while,
if the cat was going to stink stuff up, Becker would just have to wear nose
plugs or carry a hanky with something pleasanter to counter the stench-garlic
maybe. If it worked with vampires, maybe it would work with cats.
It
better, because Roadkill was damn sure going to stay fully equipped. No way was
Becker going to go through that again. It made his two formerly missing and now
mostly restored fingers ache just thinking about it.
Finally,
the stink led him to the cat, claws scrabbling at the side of the cargo hold
that opened to the outside. This hold had been the airlock of the hatch of an
ancient model of Antirean space craft, and it fit well into a hole Becker had
to fill during one of his impromptu redesigning sessions of the Condor.
"Mrrrrow!"
RK said, looking up at Becker as if to say, "It's about time you got here,
you damn fool. Help me out with this, huh?"
Becker
had rigged a bin-style entry door to the hold that opened outward. The door was
totally slimed with RK's personal signature testosterone blend.
"Okay,
cat, why didn't you say so before?" Becker asked, but realized he had been
busy at the controls when he wasn't sleeping. Besides which, RK was used to
keeping his own counsel. He knew how to get Becker's attention when he wanted
it. He had obviously just preferred to work on his own so far. Becker had to
admit that he couldn't have improved on the job RK had done on the cargo hold door.
It was well and truly slimed-a piece of feline artwork in its own way. Becker
had to find a piece of cloth to wipe off the mess before he could punch the
button that opened the hold.
The
hold door fell open, rather than sliding. And lying on the inside of it was
what looked like a dead man.
A
familiar-looking dead man-and not just familiar looking. Becker knew who the
fellow was from the torn and stinky pant leg.
"No
wonder you were carrying on," Becker said aloud to Roadkill. "It's
your old scratching post, hitching an unauthorized ride."
He put
his hands under the android's armpits and started hauling him out of the cargo
hold. There was a pulse. Funny. These older models didn't have a true
circulatory system. There was something strangely familiar about that pulse
though, and as soon as Becker hauled the guy back to the command deck and heard
the little steady bleep again, he knew what it was.
"Well,
RK, here's our little homing pigeon, giving away our position with every beat
of his heavy metal heart. Shee-it. I wonder if you can hear this thing through
wormholes?"
Kisia
Manjari pitched a fit when she saw what had become of her mechanoid henchmen.
"He killed them!" she told her uncle. "Smashed them with his
junk then took off with one of them stole it. Stole my KEN unit! He can't get
away with that-oh, no."
"Certainly
not, my dear," Uncle Edacki said smoothly. He could see the scene in
question on her portable comscreen.
"Most
unwise of him indeed."
"I
wonder why KEN640 doesn't answer when I try to reach him," Kisia said.
"He is still operational, according to his sonid button. He should answer
and obey my command to kill the junk man and bring his ship back here."
"Hmmm,
perhaps," Uncle Edacki said. "But, Kisia darling, are you sure that
would be the best use of this fortuitous situation?"
"What
do you mean fortuitous? They were my units! Now who will help me assemble my
fleet?"
"I'll
get you some others. But for the time being, you say you are still receiving
the signal from 640's sonid, and 640 is presumed to be with Becker in his craft
going-where? To their next destination. Which will be-where do you
suppose?"
"Back
to where he found the horns?" she asked, the light dawning finally.
"And
the sonid signal, with its tiny trail of electrons" "Will let me
track him and everything!" Kisia said, very excited. "Oh, Uncle, may
I?"
"Yes,
sweetie. You are doing so well today-first finding the horns, then cleverly
arranging for your unit to be captured so we can track Becker by the signal.
Just for that you may handpick a crew and take command of the MQcu) in order to
follow Becker's trail."
"Oh,
Uncle, you are the best!" "Nonsense, my dear, you've earned the
privilege." Edacki Ganoosh signed off with a feeling of satisfaction at a
job well done. He would have his horns one way or the other now, both with
Kisia tracking her android to find Becker s source, and then there was the
little matter of sending the Pandora to follow a similar sonid implanted in
certain key employees-such as Yasmin, who was even now emitting her signal from
her hiding place aboard the Shahrazad.
Honestly,
the things a girl had to do to get out of jail. Confronting her
almost-ex-husband wasn't so bad-there had always been a better-than-average
chance he might try to buy her off, if she had been able to act sad enough
about poor dead Tapha. Well, she hadn't. Tapha was no great loss to anyone. And
really, she would have almost paid for the opportunity to see Hafiz's face when
he realized what the powdered horn was. That made up for all the cracks about
her acting and dancing ability when they were married.
Actually,
what with being supplied all the security codes she didn't already know, it had
been no trouble to smuggle herself aboard the Shahrazad, like her bosses told
her. It wasn't that Yasmin wasn't perfectly comfortable either, even though she
felt that as Hafiz's senior wife she should have been occupying the master
suite instead of the quarters generally assigned to the pedicunst. She chose
those herself because, as the pedicurist was one of the lesser servants, her
quarters were farthest away from those of the family and other crew members.
Here Yasmin could be as inconspicuous as a little mousie while all the time the
transmitters she would sprinkle about the Shahrazad could send signals back to
her bosses so they could monitor its movement.
But
what got to Yasmin was that it was just too, too cruel of the bosses to make
her go along on a "honeymoon trip" with Hafiz and that big cow he had
married, thinking to replace her.
Never
mind. She'd fix the wedded bliss stuff. It had never been all that blissful for
her. All those cracks Hafiz had made about which end she thought with, all that
worry about trying to keep her looks so her rich husband wouldn't get ideas.
Keep her looks, hah! To think of all the dieting she had done to keep her shape
and here he was with that-that-rhino-whale in purple robes!
So even
though she was supposed to keep a low profile and let the Shahrazad lead her
bosses to the unicorn people planet, where the bosses would then put her in
charge of punishing Hafiz and his new playmate, Yasmin couldn't resist playing
a few little tricks. Well, if a girl couldn't turn a few tricks, the least she
could do was play some, huh?
She
had, of course, bugged the boudoir. She really couldn't imagine failing to do
so. It was a standard security measure in the brothels. Kept the girls from
cheating by keeping tips for themselves, or the customers from becoming
enamored with a particular girl and trying to run off with her.
She was
delighted, on hearing the pillow talk between her husband and his new
"wife," that neither of them had told the other about their
encounters with her. These little deceptions on their part opened many exciting
possibilities for troublemaking on hers.
Her
familiarity with Hafiz's tastes and habits helped, as well as Karma's penchant
for "meditation" and believing her superstitious nonsense about
dreams and communication from the dead, that sort of thing.
Yasmin
might not be a brain but she was a very practical woman, in her own way, with
no sentiment in her makeup. She believed in the physical, and in what she could
buy and sell. If anybody thought she was jealous of Hafiz's new bride, or even
of the lap of luxury Karina had fallen into, they should just think again.
After all, she, Yasmin, had abandoned all of that to follow her personal star.
But she
thought it was really insulting that Hafiz had been able to forget her, to
replace her with someone he actually claimed to like better! She, Yasmin, was
the unforgettable beauty, the succubus who haunted men's dreams. How dare
another woman think she could fill Yasmin s place in Hafiz's bed!
Of
course, despite her considerable premarital experience, Yasmin had been little
more than a gifted amateur when she married Hafiz compared to what she knew
now, but she couldn't imagine how, after tasting her own charms, Hafiz could so
much as bear to look at that fat, ugly, insipid cow who was not fit to fill
Yasmin's douche bag!
When
Karina returned to her "meditation chamber" to consult her spirit
guides, as she had done before, Yasmin hovered on the floor above, listening
through the replicator that was connected in the same spot on the wall through
both levels. She'd discovered how easy it was to hear Karina's spiritual
rantings quite by accident while planting one of the transmitters in the
replicator shortly after the journey began.
Karina
tended to "meditate" out loud when nobody was around.
"Yoo
hoo, Mr. Li! It is I, Karina, your dear friend and faithful follower. I ask you
to manifest answers for me. Hafiz that's my husband, you know him, Hafiz
Harakamian, you did business together in life? He wishes to know what you would
have us do. You see, Mr. Li, I keep getting this image of you looking back over
your shoulder. Are you disturbed, gentle spirit? Are you disoriented by this
departure from your home planet? Or-" The fat woman paused and her voice
quavered as she asked, "Are you trying to warn us somehow?"
Yasmin
couldn't think of any reply to that so she waited. And waited.
So did
Karina until she said finally, "Mr. Li, you know you can tell me. Come on,
what is it that's troubling you? Funny, but I can't even get an image. It's as
if there is some sort of interference in the ether. Oh well, perhaps you're not
feeling very sociable today. Hmm. Are there any other spirit guides who wish to
make contact? I am here to help you."
Yasmin's
lips curled back in a snarl that would have earned her a severe scolding from
her cosmetic surgeon for making unsightly creases in his work. While it was
true that while in a vertical position, Yasmin was not an imaginative woman,
she was after all an entertainer of sorts and as such had a highly developed
flair for the dramatic. She wasn't about to pass up an opening like this one.
Wishing
she had the gauzy veils she had danced with and discarded in one other old
numbers, the better to haunt Karina with, she settled for letting her low voice
rumble through the replicator. "Beeeewaarrre ..." she said, trying to
sound all dead and ghostly.
"Well,
yes," Karina said. "I do realize that I should beware of a great many
things. I'm afraid you'll have to be a more specific er-entity. Can you tell me
who you are? I've never encountered a haunted replicator before."
Yasmin
was far too clever to give her own name, of course, especially since she had,
very much in the flesh, confronted Karina, who nevertheless had failed thus far
to mention the visitation to Hafiz. From that omission, Yasmin gathered that
she must have been mistaken for one of Karina's less corporeal acquaintances.
The fat idiot thought she was a ghost.
Yasmin
quickly stripped her right ring finger of the four rings she had piled on top
of the dinky gold wedding band in the shape of a snake Hafiz had bought for her
and sent the wedding band down the replicator chute. On the inside of the ring
was her name entwined with Hafiz's, and their wedding date. Yasmin hated to let
go of even that insignificant amount of gold, but it would almost be worth
Karina's weight in gold to see the stupid sows complacency shaken up.
Yasmin
saw Karina's plump fingers with the medium amethyst ring surrounded by
moonstones scrabble in the replicator bale and remove the ring. "Uh,
thanks," she said. "A serpent-how, uh, emblematic of mother goddess,
in a creepy crawly sort of way. But I am puzzled, oh spirit. I don't see what
it has to do with anything."
Yasmin
was trying to form a suitably cryptic clue, something to imply that Hafiz had
murdered her and maybe a whole harem of other girls and kept their bodies
locked in a subcellar someplace. Something like that to really put a scare into
the smug little wifey. But before she could let out with so much as another
ghostly moan, somebody knocked at the door. "Madame Harakamian, please
join the master on the bridge and secure yourself for landing."
"Hearing
and obeying," Karina declared.
Yasmin
made haste to secure herself for landing as well. It would be very helpful if
the lot of them left the ship so that she could have an opportunity to plant
additional monitors throughout. She was having a certain amount of remorse
about the ring now-gold was gold after all-but the stupid slut would probably
lay it down somewhere soon and Yasmin would be able to retrieve it.
The
Rushiman administrator, who was deep in negotiations with Rafik Harakamian,
insisted on throwing a banquet for Rafik's uncle and his new bride. Hafiz had
been instrumental in gathering the forces which helped Rushima repel the
invasion of the Khieevi and it had been his ward, Rafik's "niece,"
who had purified the putrid waters of the planet and ultimately arranged for
Dr. Ngaen Xong Hoa, the meteorologist turned weather manipulation wizard, to
help heal the planet's climate.
That
same climate had been damaged by Dr. Hoa's techniques, while the man was being
coerced by another group foiled by Harakamian's niece. So it was for his
connections, as well as his wealth and power, that Hafiz was made welcome on
Rushima, and Hafiz, with his typical perspicacity, understood this distinction.
He was uncharacteristically grateful, particularly in view of the possible
threat to his ward, of whom he was as fond as he was capable of being.
His
business with Rafik was of the first priority, however, and since he did not
wish to discuss it in front of Karina, he had, with the complicity of the
captain and his Rushiman relatives, made certain arrangements to keep his
beloved busy while he was otherwise engaged.
Therefore,
when they disembarked, Hafiz gave the captain a wink and the captain addressed
Karina. "Wise and enlightened mistress, during your meditations I was in
contact with my sister, who has settled here on this isolated world. The people
here are in much need of spiritual guidance and insight. My sister, on behalf
of a delegation of the particularly troubled, hoped perhaps that you would be
so beneficent as to share your gifts with those most in need."
"Certainly,
Captain, I would be happy to," Karina replied with a gracious nod of her
head and a queenly wave at the ragtag populace assembled to greet them.
"And since this is the request of a family member of yours, I will happily
provide my services at a very great discount."
"Barter
is the usual method of exchange here, madam," the captain said.
"Hmmm,"
Karina said. In the old days, when she travelled to fairs and festivals
throughout her home world, she had acquired many small bits of jewelry and
stained glass doodads, hand-carved salad forks and once, a Mytherian
fang-cleaning device, in exchange for readings. Now that she was a person of
considerable means, these things would be more of a liability than an asset to
her well-ordered home.
"Very
well, then. Captain, I'll tell you what. Suppose you arrange the means of
payment. What I cannot use, because we are traveling and our space is somewhat
limited at the moment, perhaps we can take credit for on future exchanges with
these people. I have been given to understand that due to the turmoil caused by
the recent wars, the crops have not been particularly plentiful. I would not
wish to take food from someone's children at this time." And of course, at
a later time, the pickings would no doubt be better.
"My
lady is gracious, as always," the captain said. "I shall be happy to
perform this task for my lady and for my sister's adopted people."
First,
however, Rafik, quick and graceful as ever, sprang forward to plant a kiss on
each of Karina's cheeks and each of his uncle's. Mercy Kendoro was beside him
and she greeted Hafiz and Karina a bit more sedately. She was not as yet one of
the family but Hafiz thought she would make a fine addition. Broad hips, good
for making children. And rather lovely, in an otherwise delicate sort of way,
and very clever, too. Rafik was choosing his wife far more intelligently than
Hafiz himself had-the first time, at least. Hafiz noted this with relief as it
was another sign of the boy's suitability for the responsibility of leading the
House of Harakamian.
Karina
and the captain separated from the group to greet the captain's sister, who had
been briefed ahead of time, and her fellow seekers of enlightenment. The
remainder of the crew was invited to the community hall at Rushima's chief
settlement and Hafiz gestured that they should accept. After all, this trip was
from all indications to be a fairly long one and who knew when another
opportunity for shore leave might arise? They were to return in time for
refueling and taking aboard a few more provisions to top off the ample
quantities loaded aboard at Laboue.
When he
could be sure they were alone, Hafiz filled Rafik in on the visit from Yasmin.
He did
not, of course, come straight to the point, but told the story in proper
narrative fashion, building suspense so that when he spread his hands in alarm
to show his reaction to the powder Yasmin had blown in his face and how he had
lost consciousness, Rafik, used to drama as he was, widened his eyes with
alarm.
"I
presume there is some point to this. Uncle, to drive you from your home and
honeymoon and into space other than a visit by your former wife who wished you
to sleep?" Rafik asked.
"Nephew,
has the responsibility I have laid upon your shoulders caused you to become
impatient and rude? I am coming to it, I am coming to it, and all shall be made
clear. You see, I had the powder analyzed. In addition to the sleeping powder
there was powdered horn-and the powder, as it touched an injury on one of the
technicians analyzing it, healed that injury." Hafiz let the sentence hang
in the air, where it would soak into his nephew's brain like rain into thirsty
soil. "Linyaari horn? But how did they get it?" "Alas, Yasmin
was not disposed to disclose such information, though had she not disappeared
by the time I awakened, I assure you I could have persuaded her
otherwise."
Rafik
went quite pale for someone whose usual skin color was the same golden tan as
Hafiz's. "Acorna?"
Hafiz
shook his head, a small, careful gesture. He could see the horror and fury
building in his nephew's eyes. "We do not know that, Rafik. The universe
is wide-it could have come from anyplace. But just in case, Karina and I are
making a social call upon Acorna's newfound kinsmen. We will use the charts
prepared by Calum Baird and Acorna for their journey. Once we are sure all is
well, we shall return."
"And
if all is not well? " Rafik asked. "I should go with you."
Hafiz
shook his head and waved both hands in negation. "No, no, no, no, my
nephew who is like a son to me, you are my heir, the new head of my household.
Think of the many enterprises that would fail, the people who would lose their
employment, the joy of our enemies, if both of us should perish. You are needed
here. If there is a need, we will signal you."
"How?
No one here has ever received a transmission from Acorna's home world. It is
quite probable that our transmitters and other devices cannot penetrate the
depths of space within which the Lmyaari planet is located."
Hafiz
shrugged. "True, it is possible. But trust me, I will think of something.
I was sailing among the stars long before your birth, puppy. I am a resourceful
man."
"Also
true," Rafik said. "But-"
"My
son, is it not written in the Three Books that however small and randomly
picked the pebble, if the aim is true and the intention firm, it may yet strike
its mark?"
"Still,
Uncle, I would feel better if you took an army of other pebbles with you."
"And
if all is well with Acorna and the Linyaari? Do you think these people who so
prize their privacy would welcome an army? Perhaps one old man and his nubile
bride, perhaps even the crew of their ship, but an army? Do I remember
incorrectly that these are people so peaceful they would not even fight the
horrible Khieevi?"
Rafik
smiled and laid his hand on his uncles shoulder. "Maybe I am wrong when I
remember that an elder relative of mine was so frightened by clips of these
same Khieevi that he would not leave his compound, much less go face them
without an army behind him. Are you mellowing as you age. Uncle Hafiz?"
Hafiz
shrugged and scratched his chin. "Perhaps. Or it could be that I do not
think these Khieevi, horrors that they are, would have given Yasmin the horn
powder without taking parts of Yasmin in return. Therefore I do not feel it is
Khieevi with whom we are dealing.
"And
I am also of the opinion that anyone less savage than the Khieevi can be bought
off. And as my dear Karina does not seem to sense the possible harm to Acorna,
I see this journey as both a way to reassure myself and her other adopted
relatives of our girl's safety and as a splendid opportunity for commerce. One
which I would not have sullied by the presence of an army, for who knows to
whom each individual soldier owes loyalty? No, my son, this pebble must fly
alone-in a manner of speaking. But my aim is as true as the charts drawn up by
Acorna and your ugly senior wife, and my intentions, though more diversified
than those of which the Three Books speak, are nonetheless pure. I remain
convinced this is the best course of action. Karina and I and our handpicked
staff will go alone. We will go cloaked and shielded, of course, and if we find
danger, we will return for assistance."
Rafik
continued to frown and Hafiz saw with amazement that it was not only Acorna he
worried about but his wily Uncle Hafiz, who had chosen his nephew over his son
not only because the son had stupidly gotten himself killed but because the
nephew was the only family member who could outsmart him.
It
brought a brief sentimental tear to Hafiz's eye, which he quickly blinked away
as an unproductive waste of moisture. Perhaps he was mellowing. Ah well, that
was what a new marriage and retirement were for. But now was not the time to
relax his vigilance or dull his wit. He clapped Rafik on the back. "Come,
my son, let us see how your new aunt fares at reading the fortunes of these
farmers."
Karina
had done readings on credit for four mangy chickens, a basket of half-spoiled
assorted fruit, a primitive handmade wooden musical instrument whose tone much
resembled that of a squealing pig, the squealing pig that resembled the musical
instrument, and a set of tea towels embroidered with the patches of the various
branches of the Federation service that formed the career path of the
embroiderer, who was a burly bearded six-foot-two tractor mechanic with hair
the color of butter and eyes like razors.
"Please,"
Karina said wearily to the captain. "I grow fatigued with the power of my
visions. No more, please, no more."
"Just
one, Madame Harakamian, oh please, just one," begged a young boy leading
what appeared to be a very elderly and crippled individual who looked as if
what was left of her hair had never made the acquaintance of shampoo. "My
granny sorely needs to see you, ma'am. She's been waitin' on you for weeks and
weeks. I'm sorry if we're late, but she has a mighty hard time gettin'
around."
"Oh,
come now!" Karina said, snapping just a teensy bit. She had been enjoying
getting used to leisure and luxury, and these locals had put her through a very
grueling day for a few pounds of garbage she would have had to have been very
hungry to eat even at her poorest. "How could she have been expecting me
for weeks and weeks? My husband and I decided on our journey quite suddenly,
made first contact with anyone outside of our own staff only a few days ago,
and have not actually been traveling for weeks and weeks."
"Nonetheless,
ma'am, she was expectin' you. Granny has her ways, she has. Now then. Granny,
sit a spell and visit with the purty lady."
Karina
paused. He did seem a very bright boy, after all, and with excellent taste and
eyesight, so she gestured to the chair vacated by the last seeker of
enlightenment and the boy helped the crone be seated.
"Now
then, Madame," Karina began, shrewdly guessing that the old lady probably
didn't want to know when she was going to find her true love, "can I put
you in touch with some departed soul of whose happiness you wish to be
assured?"
The old
woman fixed her with one clouded eye and one quite bright green one and said in
an insultingly mocking voice, "No, Missus, you cain't put me in touch with
some dead person. I can do that for my own self if I've a mind to."
Where
do these people come up with their atrocious accents? Most of them had been
required to have quite good educations before being allowed to settle here not
so very long ago. And how did this woman get so old. Surely the original
settlers would have had better genetic material than that!
The old
woman, as if reading her mind, cackled at her. "No genes gonna keep me
from lookin' old when I'm a hunnert and three years old, Missus. Kept me from
bein' fat earlier on though. Looks good on you though, if I do say so, and
pleases that husband of yours. Oh, good, here he is now. He can hear what I
have to say to you, too."
Karina
was glad for Hafiz's presence as he came to stand behind her, taking one other
hands in his.
"If
you don't wish me to contact the departed for you, then what is it you
wish?" Karina asked very sweetly, considering.
"I
wish you'd quit jawin' and let me tell you what I come to say. I want to put
you in touch with the living, girly-girl. I reckon as how you and your man are
off to help that horny headed gal come to save us from them buggers awhile
back. It's your man been in touch with his dead, only she weren't dead, and
she's been in touch with you, too."
"Why?
What do you mean?"
"You
got yourself a new golden ring in the shape of a pie'^on'iu serpent, ain't
you?"
Karina
dug in her pocket and pulled out the ring.
"Look
inside of it, you darn fool."
Hafiz
groaned and tried to snatch the ring away but, failing, covered the lower half
of his face with one hand.
"Hafiz
and Yasmin Forever Entwined," was inscribed on the inside of the band.
"A
wedding ring?" Karina asked.
Hafiz
groaned again. "Yes, beloved. I can explain, my heart."
Karina
turned back to the place where the old woman and her grandson had been. The
chair was empty, the table vacant. She looked at Hafiz, then, truly baffled.
"But-how
did you-where did she go?" Karina asked Hafz and the captain.
"Where
did who go, madam?" the captain asked. "The golden-aged woman who was
just here? She and her grandson?"
"I
saw no one like that, Madame Harakamian," the captain said.
His
sister replied, "Machinist Johansson was your last reading, Madame.
There's been no one here until Mr. Harakamian arrived."
Karina
looked from one of them to the other. "You're wrong. There was a young boy
and a very old woman just here. She said she was one hundred and three years
old."
The
sister exchanged looks with a couple of the other people who had already had
readings. "It couldn't be."
"Couldn't
be who?" Karina demanded. "Who was she? How did she know about the ring?
Where did she go?"
It
didn't occur to her that, as the psychic reader in the room, perhaps she should
not have had to ask.
The
captain's sister looked abashed. "I can't say for sure, Madame, but the
only person ever did live here by that description was old Alison Ward as used
to run the herb farm."
"Well,
yes, Naima, but her grandson died in that avalanche years and years before old
Alison passed on."
"Passed
on?" Karina asked. "I'm sorry, but she was right here, sitting in
this chair."
"Oh,
old Alison will do that from time to time if she reckons there's something you
need to know. Don't let it upset you none, ma'am," a rawboned farmer said
gently. "It's just her way."
While
the locals were all saying things like "you can't keep a good woman
down," and "Alison always did have to get her two cents' worth
in," they all nevertheless continued steadfastly to deny having seen the
crone or her grandson. Karina, who found she was far more disturbed than she
expected to be at having once more encountered what was apparently a quite
genuine apparition, turned to Hafiz.
"But
you saw her, didn't you, darling?"
Hafiz
shook his head slowly, and pointed to the ring. "I do, however, behold
that band, the very one I gave to my first wife, who up until recently I fondly
believed to be dead. Tell me, Karina, where did you get it, and when, and why
did you not mention it to me?"
There
ensued a heated discussion-their first argument! as to why neither of them had
told the other about Yasmin. Fortunately, Hafiz was not so distraught by his
current wife's omission to mention encountering his first wife that he
neglected to order the ship searched from stem to stern.
Yasmin,
hardly the sort to trouble herself to escape through any possible handy ventilation
systems, emerged, roughly escorted by three crew members and four or five
enthusiastic locals. She smoothed her skirts against her thighs and glared at
them defiantly.
"Get
your hands off my husband, you fat bitch," she said to Karina.
Hafiz
thundered, "All bear witness! Yasmin, I divorce you, I divorce you, I
divorce you! There! Now, what were you doing aboard the Shahrazal and where did
you get that powder you blew into my face?"
"Yeah,
honey, what's the matter?" Karina asked in a voice she hadn't used since
middle school. "Didn't you have the price of a flitter ticket? Is that why
you stowed away?"
"I
regret only that we did not discover your presence aboard before we
landed," Hafiz said. "The customary punishment for stowaways is spacing.
I would have greatly enjoyed pushing you through the lock with my own two
hands."
"Bully!"
Yasmin said. "You'll get yours when my friends catch up with you."
"Where
did you get the powdered horn you blew in my face, daughter of evil but idiotic
ifrits?"
"That's
for me to know and you to find out," Yasmin said.
Hafiz
turned politely to the planet's administrator and asked, "Have you a very
dull axe, like the one you use to butcher wood for your fires, perhaps?"
"Sure
thing, Mr. Harakamian."
While
the administrator was sending for the required implement, Hafiz whispered to
Rafik, "Already I regret the necessity for us to arrive unarmed among
Acorna's people, to demonstrate respect for their customs and possibly their
religious beliefs, you understand."
"Under
these circumstances, I can understand that regret, Uncle," Rafik said.
"Alas,
I was unaware of Yasmin's presence and her onboard activities. There are other
ways to defend oneself than conventional weapons, of course. As you'll see when
they bring me that axe. Nonetheless, I shall have to reevaluate our internal
defenses in light of this breach of security."
When
the axe arrived, it was handed to Hafiz, who bowed graciously to acknowledge
the generosity of the person or persons who lent it to him. To the
administrator he said, in a voice loud enough for all to hear, "I hope you
have no quaint native customs forbidding the execution of criminals? I assure
you, my former wife has been convicted on many counts of many heinous crimes."
"No,
sir. Out this far from civilization, we don't have the luxury of bein' overly
forgiving. You just go right ahead, sir."
Karina
saw her husband accept the axe. He nodded to the captain and Johansson, who
grabbed Yasmin s arms and maneuvered her into position, her neck exposed and
pressed against a handy tree trunk.
Karina
held her breath. She could not believe he would do this without recourse to
judge and jury.
The
crew and the settlers looked extremely calm about the matter, however.
Hafiz
took in a deep breath and swung the axe back over his head.
Yasmin,
who had known him in his younger and more impetuous years, did not take the
situation at all calmly. "Wait! Stop! You can't do this!"
Hafiz
lowered the axe and smiled. "Rest assured, seed of a syphilitic she-camel,
that I can, and I shall unless you answer my questions."
"I
don't know where the powder came from," she lied. "The lawyer who had
me released from prison gave it to me. He told me to give it to you and then
follow you."
"Follow
me?"
"Well,
hide myself on your ship." She reached into her decolletage and pulled
forth what looked like a tiny jewel. "I've been wearing this, you see. So
they could follow you."
"Follow
me why?"
"I
don't know-robbery, I guess." Hafiz raised the axe again and Yasmin
squealed. "Aiyee! I -I don't think they know where the horn powder came
from either. They wanted you to lead the way to the unicorn girl."
"Aha!"
This made sense to him. They were business rivals, these patrons of his former
wife, and wanted to make contact with the Linyaan for nefarious reasons. They
hoped Hafiz would lead them to Acorna's people. That made very good sense.
"Administrator,
perhaps you need a spare field hand," he said. "If you keep this one
in chains, she may be useful to you. But keep her among women only. If she is
left alone with men she will be on her back in the twinkling of an eye."
Yasmin
spat at him but was led off to the detention cell, to be fitted for chain
jewelry. Karina called after her, "Just think of how much karmic clearing
you'll be doing, dear! It will stand you in such good stead in your next
incarnation!"
"May
it come quickly," Hafiz growled. He ordered the ship swept for further
transmitters and four more were discovered.
Then
the Harakamians and their crew turned their attention to the celebration being
held in their honor. Karina wore something even more floaty and lavender and
silver than usual and Hafiz thought he had never seen her looking more radiant.
"You are a precious pearl among women, my love," he told her.
"Lesser females would have upbraided me for concealing a not quite-former
marriage."
She
dimpled at him. "Hafiz, you are so cute sometimes. Obviously you meant to
divorce her-and you did, once you knew she wasn't dead. I am attuned to the
secrets of the universe, you know," she said. Besides, the servants
gossiped, comparing the current Mrs. Harakamian to the last onefavorably, she
was happy to hear. "I do know you'd been married before. I am only a
little regretful for your sake that you chose someone with quite as many Pluto
problems as that woman undoubtedly has. But then, we all have our lessons to
learn, don't we?"
"Yes,
my beloved."
Karina
sighed and looked deeply into his eyes. "However, oh mountain of manhood,
while you are not now a widower, or a bigamist, but instead have become a
properly divorced man, you have nonetheless had your wicked way with me under
the guise of a false marriage. I was never a legal wife and so now am only your
concubine, your plaything, your-"
He
looked back into her eyes, but his hands itched to make the contact more than
visual. "A grave matter indeed, my sumptuous slave of scintillating
salaciousness. One we should discuss immediately, perhaps, in our bower aboard
the Shahrazadi"
"And
shame me further before all of these good people?" she breathed, but took
a step backward. "Oh, master, you are too cruel."
He
snapped his fingers and the planet's administrator, Rafik, and the ship's
captain all came running. "I wish to remarry my wife at once. Captain?
Administrator? You will say the words."
"We're
not on board at the moment, sir," the captain said. The administrator
quickly stepped forward and said, "here is a ring"
Karina
slipped off her amythest wedding ring and gave it to the man, who said,
"By the power vested in me, I pronounce you man and wife."
"So
it has been said, so it will be written, so let it be done," Hafiz said.
"You are satisfied, my flower of feminine virtue?" "Not yet,"
she breathed and gave him a wink worthy of Yasmin during their heated youth.
"But I expect I will be when we return to the ship."
Hafiz
responded by kissing her hand repeatedly, his kisses going higher and higher,
up her sleeve and onto her shoulders, portaging the wisp of fabric that covered
the shoulder until he ended at her neck, at which time they were called to
dinner.
The
community hall was not quite large enough for all of the settlers who came from
miles around to enjoy the party, so tables were set up outdoors. The weather
was ideal for such alfresco dining, thanks to the manipulations of Dr. Ngaen
Xong Hoa.
"Useful,
this weather wizardry," Hafiz said, scratching his beard.
After a
bit of preliminary table hopping, Hafiz, Karina, Mercy, and Rafik took one
table, and were soon joined by Dr. Hoa and the planet's administrator. However,
some matter or other required the administrator's attention and he was called
away.
Dr. Hoa
leaned in and spoke confidentially to the three members of the House of
Harakamian. "I wish to go with you, Mr. and Mrs. Harakamian. My work is
done here and indeed, I have repaired all of the damage I was forced to do
while I was a prisoner aboard the Haven. My only wish now is to retire to a
place where I will not be asked to exploit my discovery any further."
Before
Hafiz could speak, Rafik raised his hand, palm out, to stop him, and said,
"Uncle, I have known for some time of Dr. Hoa's wish to leave here for a
place where he and his discovery will be safe. He wishes to go-where you are
going, and regretted that he was not able to accompany our mutual friend there
when the first opportunity arose." Rafik, of course, was deliberately
employing vagueness and circumlocution in the event that the conversation was overheard.
"Therefore, I took it upon myself to inform him of your destination."
"So
long as he is the only one, nephew," Hafiz said with a nod to Dr. Hoa. A
long journey with the man might provide Hafiz with the opportunity of
convincing the doctor to allow the House of Harakamian to market some small
portion of his enviable discovery. "Dr. Hoa is of course always welcome in
my home, whether it be on land or in the cosmos." "You are too kind,
sir."
"In
fact, I have been pondering a certain dilemma that has occurred due to the
tender sensitivities of my wife and me for the beliefs of our dear little
Acorna and her people. Perhaps you will be able to advise me."
Dr. Hoa
nodded, though he looked a little wary. Hafiz, however, felt certain that the
simple homely solutions he was beginning to envision to his security problem
would not be offensive to Dr. Hoa's beliefs, any more than they would be to
those of Acorna s people.
As soon
as the banquet was finished, they made their apologies and took off again. Dr.
Hoa smuggling himself aboard with the crew to avoid embarrassing
confrontations-or good-byes.
None of
them were aware that the detectors used to find homing transmitters were unable
to separate the signals given from the transmitter from those emitted by
another similar device-such as a replicator.
Rocky
Reamer and his children, shepherded by Khetala, arrived on Manganos moon base.
Khetala had been concerned when she saw the children that they were leaving
their home she was very big on children having a home, since she hadn't had
one.
But
Turi and Deeter fielded her careful questions about what they were leaving
behind with questions about what lay ahead. They were tired of the nano-bug
market, and had knocked around the planet with Rocky since they were babies,
living in a motley collection of used recreational vehicles tastefully
outfitted as combination bedrooms and merchandise warehouses for the jewelry
and rocks. They each brought with them their few changes of clothes, a couple
of their favorite stones, and, for Rocky, his tool kit, and left the rest for
the other traders to scavenge.
Rocky
didn't care. Possessions came and went. His family was with him and they were
going to be safe, and that was what mattered. Not only that, but he had been
able to help Becker and was helping the Lady Acorna and her extended family,
and he was sure that was the right thing. To be able to be safe and do the
right thing was a terrific combination, as far as he was concerned. He breathed
a lot easier once Kheti's little craft left the planet, and he and the kids got
a big kick out of taking the trip off-planet, the first they could remember,
together.
Jana,
Chiura, and the other children Kheti had protected while in the mines had heard
from the communications officer of the day that their friend was returning to
the base. They rushed forward to meet her. Reamer's kids jumped up and down in
excitement to see so many other children jumping up and down, even though they
weren't quite sure what all the fuss was about.
Close
on the heels of the former child slaves were Acorna's "uncles," Calum
Baird and Declan Giloglie, accompanied by Judit Kendoro.
Giloglie
and Reamer exchanged cautious nods, acknowledging their long-ago acquaintance
in a geology class, and Khetala made introductions and explained the situation,
then asked Reamer to produce the horn.
Reamer
hesitated for a moment. "Do you really think-in front of all these kids-I
mean, it's pretty serious and from what I've heard they look at Lady Acorna as
some sort of goddess."
Kheti's
hard brown face turned up at him and she said, "These kids, as you call
them, have already lost most of their illusions. If Acorna is truly in danger,
they will want to know and they will want to help in any way they can. If this
horn belongs to her or any of the other Linyaari, someone is going to find that
we're plenty adult enough to make them pay dearly for harming our
friends."
So
Reamer showed the horn and everyone looked. Some wanted to touch it and some
put their hands behind their backs and looked frightened. One girl, Jana, began
to cry softly.
"I
remember when I'd been beaten in the mines so badly I could hardly move and
Acorna touched my wounds with her horn and healed me -it was the first comfort
I had had in years and years. This just can't be hers, Kheti. It just
can't."
Calum
Baird regarded Reamer suspiciously. "Did you bring this straight to
Khetala for her to bring it here?"
"Yes,
sir, I did. Becker was having trouble with a lady who seemed to want to rob him
or kill him, so he and the cat took off."
"I
guess that would explain why he didn't come to us himself. That and the fact
that if he thought the horns were valuable he'd want to secure his
source," Baird said. "Who was the lady? Did your friend say anything
about going to see Hafiz Harakamian by any chance?"
"No,
sir. The lady, and I use the term loosely-I'm sorry to be so judgmental but
it's true-is about three nuggets shy of a payload. Her name is Kisia Manjari.
Her father used to be a big shot."
"We
know all about her and her father," Baird said shortly.
"Oh."
Reamer blinked. "Oh, of course you do. You guys and Lady Acorna helped
bring him down, didn't you? Well, anyway, Becker and the cat figured they
should make themselves scarce but he didn't say anything about visiting Mr.
Harakamian. He said he knew you guys, though, so maybe he met him through your
partner, Rafik."
"It's
possible," Baird said thoughtfully. "Laxmi, can you secure a channel
for us to talk to Rafik? Uncle Hafiz was headed for Rushima. Let's see if he
got there."
They
were told that the Shahrazad had just left, but that a spy had been discovered
onboard. When Rafik told them who it was, Gill let out a low whistle. About the
time his cousin Tapha had been killed, Rafik had regaled his partners with a
few stories about Tapha's dear departed mother, Uncle Hafiz's first wife.
"So
she's still alive, huh? That whole family is amazingly hard to kill," Gill
asked. "Well, Yasmin's interference probably explains the unexpected
journey Hafiz and Karina are taking in the middle of their honeymoon."
"Oh
yes," Rafik said. "My honored aunt blew some powder in Uncle's face
that turned out to have ground Linyaari horn as part of its chemical
composition. You can well imagine where he's going now."
"Yes,
but do you think it's wise for the Shahrazad to go alone?" Calum asked.
Raflk
repeated the conversation he had had with Hafiz, adding that Dr. Hoa had gone
with the Harakamians.
When
the transmission ended, Judit was shaking her head. "I don't like it. I
just don't like it at all. Maybe an army isn't a good idea, but Hafiz and Dr.
Hoa going together-it just sweetens the pot for unscrupulous people like the
Pipers daughter." She gave Kisia Manjari's father the nickname the
enslaved children had called him when he was still an unknown evil controlling
their destinies on Kezdet.
A
moment later, the communication with Rushima was reestablished and Mercy
Kendoros face appeared on the screen. "Judit? I think its about time we
got in touch with our brother and the Starfarers, don't you think? If the
Pipers daughter and some of his old network are able to penetrate even House
Harakamian's defenses, we need to be thinking about security. Has anybody heard
from Nadhari Kando?"
They
continued talking about a lot of people, most of whom Reamer had only heard of,
if that, in grave tones that suggested danger. It was way too heavy for Reamer.
He'd done his job and brought the trouble to the attention of the people who
should be able to fix it, and had managed to take himself and his kids out of
harm's way. He didn't want to hear any more. He didn't want to know any more.
He was a peaceful sort of guy who mostly minded his own business and let other
people mind theirs.
All he
wanted was a place to make his living and raise his kids without somebody
trying to kill or imprison them. Security arrangements were best left to people
who enjoyed being on red alert all the time. He personally was not one of them.
He
drifted to the back of the throng of adults and children crowded around the
comscreen. A boy too small to see over the heads of the others admired Reamer s
belt buckle, which he was at eye level with.
"That's
beautiful, mister. What's the stone?"
"Turquoise.
Pretty rare now."
"I
like the frame you put it in. Is that metal silver?"
"Yeah.
I made it myself."
"Wow!
I wish I could do that."
Reamer
shrugged. "It's not that hard. I brought my tools and a few supplies with
me. Want me to teach you how? "
"Boy,
do I! I'd love to make something like that with an acornite in the middle. It
would make me feel somehow-you know, closer to her."
And so
Reamer and his kids stayed on Manganos moon. Reamer began teaching the other
kids more about looking for gemstones and how to set them in precious metals.
Baird and Giloglie looked in once in a while and expressed the wish that they
had time to learn.
Khetala
stayed, too, at the insistence of the Kendoro sisters, who felt the younger
woman would be in danger from Kisia Manjari's contacts if she returned to
Kezdet right away.
And
then one day, while Reamer was teaching laser torch work to the little boy who
had first expressed an urge to learn metalwork, a new ship called for landing
clearance on Manganos. The duty officer, Jana that day, called out to the rest
of the people in the com center, community hall, school, and administration
building rolled into one, that it was the Haven and someone had better fetch
Mercy-Rafik and Mercy had returned from Rushima by that time-and Judit. Their
brother was aboard.
Reamer
went over to the com station to see what all the fuss was about as the Haven
docked, the hatch opened, and out poured dozens of children of all ages, plus
one guy a little younger than he was and another guy a whole lot older, and
very familiar.
"Johnny
Greene!" Reamer cried when he saw his old friend.
"Well,
I'll be, if it isn't Rocky Reamer!" Greene responded, pumping his hand and
clapping him on the back. "Who set off enough blasting powder to get you
into space after all these years? I thought your feet were rooted
dirtside." Reamer explained.
He had
first met Greene through some rock hound friends, years ago, and Greene had had
him make a piece for some lady he was interested in back then. They'd hit it
off and since then had run into each other off and on over the years when
Greene was dirtside, where he liked to cruise the nano-bug markets, or needed
another piece of jewelry, or had found some interesting mineral specimens he
wanted to unload. Though up until now Reamer had been a wayfarer and Greene had
been a spacefarer, their paths crossed often enough for them to know they liked
each other. When you had similar interests and some of the same friends, it
could be a pretty small universe.
"I
didn't know you had any kids," Johnny said, when introduced to Turi and
Deeter. "When did you get married?"
"Right
after you were on Kezdet last," Reamer said, pretending to look only at
the tops of his children's heads to hide the fast blinking he had to do when he
talked about Almah. "We had a good life for a while there." He tried
a grin and managed it. "Now Turi has to look after us."
"They're
a handful, too," Turi said in a dry way that made Johnny laugh.
"But
look who's talking," Reamer said, indicating the scores of young people
and children that now swarmed into the building. "These all yours?"
"Not
by a long shot," he said. "The Haven is a Starfarers ship. These kids
are the survivors of the original crew. The ship took aboard some banditos
pretending to be refugees, and they overpowered the adults in charge of the
ship and spaced them. Fortunately, Calum there"-Johnny lifted his arm to
wave at Baird who was crossing to meet him "and Acorna were able to help
my buddy Markel liberate Dr. Hoa, who was being held by the bandits, and
provide sufficient diversion that the kids of the original Starfarers' Council
were able to regain control of the ship and do unto the bandits as they had
done unto the Council. I was already aboard as tech crew and the bandits didn't
bother me, so I was able to help Markel and the others when the opportunity
came. Pal Kendoro also came aboard later to help out. He got a hail from his
sisters and the whole ship felt like it was time for shore leave. So here we
are."
Reamer
shook his head, laughing. "Never a dull moment, eh, Johnny?"
"Not
if I can help it. Though there were times when I wished life was a little less
exciting, to tell you the truth,"
Greene admitted.
Later,
in the dining hall, when the moon base community was taking its evening meal,
the Starfarers Joined them. Adreziana, Pal Kendoro, Johnny Greene, his friend
Markel, and other members of the Starfarers' Council sat at a table with Baird,
Giloglie, Nadezda, and the Kendoro sisters. Normally the adult administrators
spread themselves throughout the dining hall, making themselves available to
hear any problems or complaints from the student/residents. But the kids were
all aware by now of the Linyaari horns that had been found and everyone was
anxious to make sure Acorna and her people were well and that no harm had come
to them.
Reamer
Joined the table at Baird and Gill's invitation. Khetala was there, too. He
smiled at her as he sat down, but Kheti never seemed to smile. He thought that
what had happened to her in the slave labor camps-and after-when she had been
taken by the Didis must have been pretty horrible for her to be so grim.
The
other kids from her camp had told him how she had protected them and taken heatings
herself to save the younger, weaker ones. And then when she grew too big to
work the mines, she'd been sold to the Didis. After Acorna freed her, she had
gone right back to the house where she had been brutalized and raped, to help
the other girls there learn skills that would let them earn their livings
without having to sell their bodies.
Reamer
felt ashamed that he had never actually considered that the girls he had
occasionally enjoyed in the past might not be enjoying themselves at all, or what
might have been done to them to make them flexible and willing parties to any
whim he happened to have. His face flushed to match his hair every time he saw
Kheti now, or found her looking at him.
Turi
and Deeter were at another table that had been joined by some of the younger
Starfarers. His kids were listening wide-eyed to the adventures the travelers
were telling about their most recent journeys. Poor kids. He had never had the
wherewithal to take them off Kezdet. He had been so terrified, after Almah's
death, of ending up unable to support them and having them taken from him and
sent to the camps.
"Rocky,
would you tell 'Ziana and Pal what you told us about the horn?" Judit
Kendoro asked. The horn Reamer had brought with him was making the rounds of
the table.
He
repeated his story. The frowns of the Starfarer captain, her advisors, and the
council members deepened as they listened.
"You
say your uncle has gone to find Acorna alone?" 'Ziana asked Rafik. She was
a bright young lady and not hard to look at. Reamer thought. He could see Pal
Kendoro shared his opinion.
Rafik
nodded. "It's a big ship but he took no extra weaponry with him, for fear
of alienating the Linyaari. Of course, his people are all well trained at
hand-to-hand combat, and the ship is equipped with certain long range weapons
that would be almost impossible to disable. Still, for threats like the one
posed by Yasmin or her employers, he doesn't have much protection. I could see
that it worried him, but he told me he would deal with it." Rafik
shrugged. "If anyone can take care of himself in a wade variety of
circumstances, it's Hafiz."
"Still,"
'Ziana said, "they should have some backup. Not to invade
narhii-Vhiliinyar, of course, but just to make sure they don't come under
attack."
"I
wish Mr. Li's forces were still available to us," Pal said. "House of
Harakamian has that kind of resource," Rafik said. "But I don't think
Uncle would appreciate it if I undermined his decision by sending an armed
escort after the Shahrazad."
"No,"
Mercy said. "It would be hard for Acorna's people to understand that an
unarmed Harakamian arriving on their world followed by an armed House of
Harakamian escort is not the same thing as an armed Harakamian. Besides which,
the course mapped out by Calum and Acorna to narhii-Vhiliinyar is not common
knowledge. It shouldn't be."
"We
could go," 'Ziana said. "We're known to Acorna and the people who
were with her. Even though we're armed, we've a shipload of children. We won't
be suspected of trying to incite a war or coerce anyone, but we could still
guard Rafik's uncle."
"We
owe Acorna and all of you big time," Markel said. "Not only for
helping us free ourselves from our parents' murderers, but for healing our
wounded and helping us restore the good name of the Starfarers by taking Dr.
Hoa to repair the damage his weather-control device had done while we were
controlled by Nueva Fallona and her Palomellese gang."
Pal
interjected, "That's true enough, Markel, but even though the current crew
of the Haven has won a couple of battles and has some weapons, you're not an
army or a police force. And as you yourself said, you are, when all is said and
done, a ship whose crew is mostly comprised of children."
"That's
to our advantage though," 'Ziana pointed out. "We're Starfarers. We
go everywhere and everyone knows it. No one will suspect we're deliberately
guarding the Shahrazad. They'll believe us if we say it was a chance
encounter."
"I
see that," Pal said, "But we're still not soldiers or police. Many of
our number are still under twelve."
"Some
of the fiercest fighters in history have been kids," Markel said.
Kheti
had been very silent, but now she said, "It's good to know how to fight to
protect yourself and others but Pal is right. We are none of us professional
fighters and if Kisia Manjari and her uncle are using some of the same network
her father once employed, they are very professional indeed."
"Training
is all we need," 'Ziana said. "That and maybe a little advice. And
the coordinates where you believe the Linyaari home world to be, Mr. Baird. We
won't need your course." She glanced at Johnny Greene. "We Starfarers
have our own methods of navigating."
The
Council members were all nodding. Reamer could see Pal and the others were
outnumbered. Pal sighed and said, "Okay, but if/^w adviser could give one
more piece of advice the one member of Mr. Li's staff who is still available,
as far as I know, is Nadhari Kando. If you have to have one trainer and adviser,
she's the one."
"The
last I heard, she was staying in General Ikwaskwans compound, helping train his
troops," Mercy said.
"Now,
that's handy," Pal said. "If we need extra fire power it's right
there. We could apprise the general of the situation, too. With your
authorization, Rafik, we could retain the Red Bracelets on a standby basis in
case your uncle runs into further problems."
"That's
a good idea. Pal," Rafik said. "Meanwhile, I can speak with
Federation officials about possible sentient rights violations. Trafficking in
the horns of non-Federation peoples known to be sentient surely must break some
kind of law."
"And
I can get the authorities on Kezdet off their duffs and launch an investigation
into Ganoosh's illegal activities," Gill said.
"I
think someone could just try using the secure channels on the com lines instead
of everyone going rushing off into space," Judit suggested.
Calum
shook his head. "I wondered why Hafiz didn't do that instead of seeking
out Rafik in person. Even when he spoke to me, he used a kind of personal code.
I realized that he suspected his own security had been breached. As a
precaution, I took a look at our equipment and programs. They're all manufactured by Kezdet-Kom, which is a
wholly-owned subsidiary of Interlay Enterprises, which is owned by a company
owned by Ganoosh. Our security programs are manufactured by another of his
puppets."
"Just
can't get good help these days," Gill growled.
"We'll
go find her," 'Ziana rejoined
Kheti
said, "I'm going with you. Pal has been out of the camps too long. I can
identify quite a few of Manjari's perverts for Nadhari and the general if they
need me to. If the Piper's cronies are causing trouble again, I want to
personally make sure they're stopped. None of us will be safe until that whole
machine is destroyed, once and for all."
"I
think that's a little beyond the scope of our mission, Khetala, but you're very
welcome," Markel said. The other council members nodded assent.
"Daddy,
we should go, too," Turi said. Reamer had been so engrossed in watching
the proceedings that he hadn't noticed his kids had wandered over to stand
behind him, where they had apparently been taking in every word. "The horn
is ours. Mr. Becker gave it to us to help the Lady and her people. We should be
the ones to take it to them."
Reamer
didn't much like conflict of any kind and the idea of kids doing battle with
people like Edacki Ganoosh scared the living daylights out of him. But so did
the idea of his kids being plucked up like ripe fruit for Kisia Manjari and her
uncle to use as they wished.
If
there were going to be lessons for youngsters on how to take care of themselves
from a former captain of the notorious Red Bracelets like Nadhari Kando, Turi
and Deeter should be in on them. Him, too. Not that he'd be much good at
combat. But maybe he could repair weapons or something. Bound to be able to
make himself useful one way or the other. And it sounded like a wild adventure.
Johnny
Greene clinched it by growling into his ear, "If the manure hits the
ventilator in Kezdet, you and the kids will be well out of harm's way coming
with us to see Nadhari and the general. You don't think the Kendoros and
Acorna's uncles would agree to the Starfarers taking on the recruiting mission
unless they thought that was the best way of keeping the Starfarers our of
harm's way, do you?"
"Yeah,"
Reamer said, hoping he wouldn't be sorry. "Count us in,too."
The
entire city-or village, as it seemed more to Acorna-was filled with the sound of
people bidding farewell, the sight of people touching horns, and a long hue
trudging up to the spaceport, duly accompanied by the Ancestors at their
deliberate pace which would make any space traveler itch for warp speed. In a
matter of an hour or two, the Faberge egg crate spaceport was emptied of ships.
Grandam
Naadiina, who had been so reassuring the night before, looked suddenly much
older as she gazed skyward watching the eggs bounce into the air and disappear
beyond the clouds. Then she became very busy about her quarters for quite a
while. Maati's lower lip trembled. "What if they don't come back? "
she asked aloud.
"The
whole fleet? Not come back? Don't talk foolishness, child," Grandam said
briskly, but Acorna knew the old lady was as upset as the child.
Thariinye
appeared at the open flap. "Just thought I'd check up on you ladies.
Liriili felt it was important that at least one responsible, well-traveled male
remain dirtside to look after the women and children and show a bit of
leadership for the other males."
Grandam's
mouth quirked with annoyance.
Thariinye
continued. "Of course, I could have had my pick of berths, but I wished to
honor Liriili's wishes. The poor lady is overwhelmed right now with so much
happening."
"She's
hardly the only one," Grandam said sharply. "Khomya was going to go
visiting this morning but I hardly think people will be in the mood for guests.
Perhaps this would be a better time for her to see the compound of the
techno-artisans. Thariinye, perhaps you could demonstrate a bit of that
sterling leadership capability of yours by showing Khomya the way?"
"Certainly,
Grandam," he said with an eagerness that indicated spending time with
Khornya was exactly what he washed to do.
The
walk was not long but it was very dull. Thariinye went on at great length about
his importance in different organizations and families. Acorna saw some long
blue grasses she would have liked to ask about, but he was in the middle of a
story of how he came to be elected the garange of the Order of the Irriinje,
which he did bother to explain was the name for a noble bird which, on the home
world, had lent its name to the similarly noble members of the organization.
His babble was annoying, but she knew him well enough to realize it was partly
because while the emergency had galvanized him to action, there was no action
required of him. His nervous energy had nowhere to go. Had she not had so much
else to worry about herself, she might have reacted the same way.
Once
they reached the techno-artisans' compound, however, the trip became very
interesting indeed. The pavilions were as large as landing bays and had a great
deal of shiny machinery and many comscreens, plus huge bins of various metals,
rocks, and gemstones. Acorna was enthralled by the central area of the huge
main pavilion, where a large eggshaped spacecraft in the process of having its
outer decoration applied brooded over the bustling techno-artisans. It rather
looked as if the egg was presiding over the chicken yard, instead of the other
way around.
"The
hull was shaped two pavilions over," the artisan in charge told her. He
was a fraternity brother of Thaarinye's and had been introduced to her as
Naarye.
Beyond
the ship under construction, in the background, sat two gigantic hulls, their
hatches gaping and cavernous. Hulking as they were, they had escaped her notice
at first, as other work proceeded in front of them and regardless of them, as
if they weren't there. Unlike the ship in the middle, which looked like a
flitter by comparison, the leviathans had plain dark paint jobs with no
decorations.
"I've
never seen such large ships used by the Linyaari," Acorna said. "What
are those for? Are they here for repair? Is that why they aren't up at the
port?"
Naarye
shook his head. "Now those are a piece of Linyaari history, Lady. It just
happens that right now they're a piece nobody wants to look at. They're the two
big evacuation transports that brought the people of our fair city from
Vhiliinyar to Kubnhkhan. The port was built after we arrived, and they're too
big to fit up there; besides, nobody much wants to look at them. It takes a
crew of at least twenty people fully trained and checked out on that particular
model to fly them and far more fuel than we could scrape together at a moment's
notice."
Acorna
could only imagine that the monster ships would need to escape the planet's
gravity well.
"We
could have them operational again if we absolutely had to, but it would take
time and plenty of muscle to tune up the drives, fuel the vessels, and get them
out of here, especially if we hope to leave both them and the pavilion intact.
We keep them here because it gives our people a little sense of security
knowing they're available, but at the same time, the people don't want to be
reminded they might need them again."
Naarye
was being more than polite to her but he, too, was clearly affected by giving
the transport ships too much attention, so Acorna returned his courtesy by
changing the subject.
"I'm
fascinated by the decorations on the ship you're working on and the others I've
seen. The BaLikilre's pattern, for instance, was quite different. Do you
determine the designs personally?" she asked. The craft in front of them
was being adorned with multicolored panels forming a sort of flame pattern,
outlined in what appeared to be gilt.
Naarye
beamed and waved his hand in a lordly way toward the spacecraft.
"Handsome, isn't it? It is the pennant pattern of Clan Haarilnyah, the
oldest clan extant among us. In answer to your question, we"-and here he
said a word in Linyaari which was unpronounceable to Acorna, even though she
was becoming more facile with Linyaari every day. She understood it to mean
outer hull embellishment specialists "adapt the designs for the hulls from
the pennants of a clan or an individual distinguished enough to have a personal
banner. We are doing it in rotation according to both their geographical and
astrological position on Vhiliinyar in relation to the moons and also according
to historical date, in inverse order. We keep very strict records. No one must
be offended."
"Of
course not," she said. "I'm afraid I don't yet have enough of a grasp
on how your-our-society works to understand the importance of the order you
mention, but I'm sure it's very fair."
"Actually,"
Naarye said with a twinkle, "it's entirely arbitrary and meant to sound as
complicated as possible so that if anyone takes offense because their pennant
has not yet been represented, we can make a baffling enough excuse that they
will get off our backs, grateful not to have to hear the explanation of how a
geographical and astrological position can be plotted according to moons we can
no longer observe and translated to some sort of time order sequence. This lets
us do whichever design strikes us as prettiest and most appropriate for the
ship at hand."
She
chuckled.
Naarye,
pleased at the reaction to his wit, gave Acorna a frankly curious glance.
"So you are still learning our ways, then, aren't you?"
"Yes,"
she said.
"I
saw you at the reception last night but didn't get a chance to say hello,"
he told her. "Before the evacuation I worked with your father on the
development of some defensive weapons against the Khieevi. Unfortunately, your
family disappeared and the invasion struck before we could test them. He and
your mother were fine people, though."
"Thank
you," Acorna said.
"Did
you know that your great-grandmother was responsible for the design of our
ships?"
"She
was?" Acorna asked, and found she was eager for more information about her
family. "What was her name? Did she travel off-planet to study, too? Did
she have many children? And what would her pennant have been like?"
The
artisan smiled. Like her, and the majority of people in this pavilion, he was
white-skinned and silver-maned. His features were not quite so regular as
Thaarinye's, however, and the skin of his face had a rather rough, dry
appearance, with ridges where his goggles lay against his cheeks and brow, just
beneath the horn. His hands were blackened, too, and his clothing speckled with
pigment-purple and fuschia on the top layer, along with bits of glittery stuff.
He
answered, "Her name was Niikaavri of Clan Geeyiinah. She didn't find a
lifemate till late in life, I understand, after she had been traveling in
space, learning of alien technology and studying for many ghaanyi. She designed
the first egg ship with the outer hull in the pennant of her lifemate, as a
bonding gift. Her own pennant-ta da! -you see before you."
"Odd
that it wouldn't have been one of the first," Acorna said.
He
wagged a finger at her. "Don't you start on me, too. The truth is, she
never knew what it looked like. Distinguished historical persons are often
awarded a special pennant posthumously. This one is a fairly recent design
actually not conceived until we left Vhiliinyar and came to this world. You do
understand, don't you, that besides beautification, outer hull embellishment
has a very serious function as heat and friction shielding material?"
"No,
I didn't know that."
That
information and other new ideas she gathered as she talked to the
techno-artisans intrigued Acorna throughout her tour of the fascinating if
baffling processes and techniques performed by the artisans. The most
entertaining artisans were those who stamped the large casings and decorative
moldings-they performed this function with both hands, equipped with a special
glove that joined the fingers in a single block on the end, and feet, and their
work resembled a kind of wild stomp dance that they did with great
concentration and precision, but also with a touch of amusement at their own
antics. Acorna clapped appreciatively and they bowed toward her before
returning to their work.
In the
next building, the artisans were busy designing flitters. "Oh, so you are
going to get them?" she asked.
"Oh,
yes," the designer told her. "We have the prototype nearly complete.
It's non-polluting, and very beautiful to behold. Once its finished and we have
customized the model, we will return it to Kaalin where it will be
manufactured, then shipped back to us fully assembled."
Acorna
admired the design, which made a Linyaari riding in one of the airborne
vehicles look as if he were a winged creature, the wings spreading out just
behind the rider's shoulders, at the joining of the clear overhead canopy with
the body of the flitter. The wings were purely decorative of course, but
decoration was no small part of technology to the Linyaari, Acorna was
learning. Everything the Linyaari artisans made was stunningly beautiful.
Speaking
of beauty, Thariinye was quite a favorite with the younger females who worked
in the compound. Acorna almost feared she and Thariinye would be asked to leave
because of the disruption he caused among them. But the techno-artisans seemed
glad of the distraction. She spoke with many of them about their relatives or
friends who were studying or trading on other planets, and their worries were
almost palpable.
When at
last she returned to Grandam's, leaving Thariinye to stroll away with a pretty
techno-artisan on each arm, it was dark already.
Grandam
was not inside and Maati was already asleep. It took Acorna a long time to
settle into sleep, and during that time Grandam returned and touched horns with
her, acknowledging Acorna's concern. "I was called out to another general
council meeting, pet," she said wearily. "We're still receiving
signals from the ships dispatched this morning, but so far none have identified
the reason why we are not receiving the more distant signals."
The
following morning Acorna tried to visit the homes of the people who had left
their gifts at Grandam's door the previous day.
She
carefully gathered the nicest grasses she could find as a peace offering, then
set out for the home of the young male she had grinned at. At the flap of his
pavilion, she inquired if she might come to visit.
After a
few moments the flap was opened by an older female, who announced that her son
had gone off visiting his former schoolmate. She projected a picture of a
lovely black haired, black skinned Linyaari with a white blaze from her horn
down the center other mane/hair to the middle other back. Also in the thought
was that the girl's full coloring, her long face, very down-turned, slightly
flared nose, and curveless arms and legs were far more beautiful than Acorna's
pallid coloring and somewhat shorter jaw line and nose.
"I'm
happy to hear that, ma'am," Acorna replied. "I simply wanted to
apologize for my social error at the reception. Where I was raised, baring
one's teeth is often a sign of friendliness and welcome rather than hostility,
as it is here."
"You
must have been raised by rather strange people," the woman said with a
lift of her brow.
"Very
good people, actually but, well, I'm glad your son is enjoying time with his
friend and not-"
"Not
in space?" she asked dryly. "He serves a vital plantside function as
a communications officer. Our people do not do space given a choice. It is good
of you to apologize, but quite unnecessary. We were all very fond of your
parents, of course, and Neeva is a fine lady, so when we heard you were
returning, we were anxious that our son meet a girl from such distinguished
stock. We hoped he would find in you some of those qualities that make the rest
of your family so admirable. But with your, shall we say, unusual, background,
I fear you just aren't really suitable for our son. So you needn't bother to
call again. Now, if you'll excuse me, I have much to do. Good day." Acorna
was glad tent flaps could not be slammed.
Other
than that, no one was actually rude to her but, as the pavilions all had both a
front and back flap, and the people Acorna was going to visit could undoubtedly
hear her coming long before she arrived, it simply appeared that everyone she
wanted to see was extremely busy that day, each going about his or her typical
Linyaari day, whatever that was like. From what Acorna could tell, it seemed to
consist of grazing. Far away. She sighed and nibbled on the handful of grasses
she had. Making friends was going to take a while.
Somehow,
she decided, as irrational as it was, because her arrival coincided with the
crisis, she was being held responsible for it.
Grandam
Naadiina was busy with the council and often came home late. She briefed Acorna
on what developments there were, but actually, there weren't that many. The
main thing that took time was the Linyaari desire to reach consensus in
decisions, which required a great many discussions and much trying out (at least
hypothetically) of different tacks until one they all agreed on worked. Of
course/in this case, without more input from the persons off planet, not much
could be decided. Grandam Naadiina was a bit disgusted. "It's a wonder we
ever got off planet before the Khieevi arrived," she said. "I'll bet
it took them less time to invade our world and turn it to rubble than it did
for the council to decide what we would call this world."
Maati
was exhausted when she came home at night, after running errands and carrying
messages all day long.
Acorna
spent much of her time visiting with the technoartisans, who didn't seem to
mind if she watched them work or asked questions. Daytimes not spent with them
were difficult for Acorna, who nevertheless tried very hard to learn all she
could of the rest other people.
Linyaari
always seemed to be walking in pairs or larger social groups, and when she
approached, they were always heavily engaged in intense conversations about
matters she had too little knowledge of to even ask an intelligent question. On
the rare, desperate occasions when she tried to interrupt, people would
politely but pointedly excuse themselves and turn their backs to continue their
conversations. Even the business establishments seemed to be closing just as
she approached.
"Is
there no school I could attend, no class to take, no tutor on Linyaari culture
to teach me what I need to know? " Acorna asked Grandam Naadiina.
The old
lady looked rueful. "We learn our own culture from our parents, from
growing up in it. There has never before been an outsider-so there has never
been any need to teach how to be Linyaari to one of our own. And truthfully,
you seem fine to me. Except for that smile at the reception, I cannot tell you
any particular thing you are doing wrong. If you had grown up among us, no one
would criticize or complain of any of your words or actions. But you did not
grow up here, you see, so even though you are Linyaari the others still see
you, if not as a barbarian, at least as someone not Linyaari. And neither I nor
the Ancestors can tell them differently. Ours are a very stubborn people about
some things."
"I
see," Acorna said. She did, too, and she didn't like it. As different as
she had been among the people who raised her, still, many had been willing to
give her a chance, to at least find out who she was. They had not just fed and
clothed and educated her, they had loved her, even when they must have found
her appearance and her behavior extremely strange. They had simply worked
around her differences and helped her adapt to their world. Here, where she
looked so much the same, she felt different as she had never before felt in her
life. Remembering Gill, Calum, Rafik, kind Mr. Li, the clever Kendoros, and
wily Uncle Hafiz, she could have wept with longing for them.
She
shook her head slowly. She would never have imagined that her own people, the
people Neeva and the others had said could read feelings and heal wounds, as
she could, would be so hard for her to reach. "It is almost as if they are
afraid of me," she told Grandam.
"Perhaps
they are," Grandam Naadiina said. "Your arrival has shown me that our
people have become very skittish since our exodus from Vhiliinyar. I don't
really know what to tell you, dear, except to be patient with them."
Acorna
nodded and did her best.
When
she returned for the fifth time to try to pay the dressmakers, they were
closed, as they had been every time she approached. She noticed that the
pavilion beside theirs was quite busy, however. Two lines of Linyaari went in
and out.
One
line consisted of pale-skinned, silver-maned Linyaari such as herself. They
were going in.
The
other line was comprised of the more colorful, and presumably younger Linyaari,
spotted, brown, black, red, gray, golden, so many different colors of hair and
skin colors.
Acorna
decided that since she had nothing better to do and these people did not appear
to be engaged in private conversation, she would, very quietly and trying hard
not to think any alien thoughts, join the line.
She
told herself simply to be receptive, to learn what the line was about. What she
heard were remarks such as, (Brilliant! I don't know why no one has thought of
this before!) (It's the very latest. Everyone is doing it. Except those who you
know-go oat there all the time.) (And to think, remember when we were children,
and everyone wanted to look like that? All colorless and bleached out? This
look is so much healthier!) (I think it's only because it is so much younger looking-perhaps
because we've become conditioned to think of Linyaari of color as the young
ones who did not endure the journey and who do not remember the home world.)
When
she reached the pavilion, she began to notice that some of the multicolored
Linyaari emerging were wearing the same clothing as the strictly white Linyaari
who went in. So. Acorna couldn't help smiling. Gill might say they were now
horned horse people of a different color. When her turn came, she was offered a
smock by an attendant wearing a horn-hat. This was interesting. Acorna had
thought the horn-hats were only for formal wear but perhaps those working with
the public sometimes wore them to partially shield themselves from the
multitude of thoughts, feelings, and attitudes coming at them from several
directions at once.
"Please
enter the minipavihon, remove your clothing, don the smock if you wish, and
ring for your personal colorist," the attendant told her. Acorna was
moving away as she heard the attendant repeat herself four different times.
That would be a good job for a robot instead of a sentient being! Or a shelf
full of smocks and a recording!
But
Acorna went inside, took off the dress and the beautiful belt, put on the
smock, and rang for her "personal colorist."
The colorist
was of a reddish brown color, with her mane golden streaked with white.
"What do you recall as being the skin of your birthright?" the
colorist asked.
From
the friendly way she spoke, the colorist no doubt had failed to recognize
Acorna as the pariah of the planet. Acorna said, "I was born in space and
so I have always been this color."
"A
shipborn and you want to try color? "
"Yes.
Is-is that forbidden or somehow against custom?" she asked, fearing she
was making another social faux pas.
"Oh,
no, my dear. Simply very daring. The star-clad and the space-going caste have
always been, shall we say-vain-of their lack of coloring up until the great
transference. Now, with most of us having been bleached out by the
journey-" The colorist's golden eyes were rueful as she spread her arms
and shrugged.
"You,
too-you used to be the same color as me?" "Still am, darling, under
the cosmetics and dye. Tomorrow I could be black if I liked, or roan. But
today, this is the real me. Now then, what, do you suppose, is the real
you?" "I hardly know. Are there-rules about color?" "Not
really. Of course, your paints tend to breed paints and that sort of thing, but
we Linyaari have been very open about that for generations. You can be anything
you like at all. I myself am not exactly au naturel." She tossed her head
so that the fringe above her golden horn flipped in a saucy way. "I call
this look aural sorrel. None of us were ever born this way but so what? It is
my art to improve upon nature. So, sweetie, how about you? What'll it be?"
Acorna
was tired of trying to blend. "Stripes," she said. "Zebra
stripes."
"Zebra?"
Acorna
projected a mind picture of the beast she had viewed vids of while still a
child aboard the mining ship. The colorist giggled and began working on her.
"You'll
stand out for sure in these," she said. "I must say, it's rather an
attractive look."
"I
seem to stand out whether or not I wish to," Acorna said. She had made
herself conspicuous, to some extent out of rebellion against being isolated
from her fellows, but her unusual appearance had the opposite effect, at least
on some of the younger Linyaari. They commented favorably on the stripes and
asked about them, then invited her to a ring-toss tournament.
Watching
the boys and girls catching circlets of flowers on their horns and tossing them
back and forth, keeping them away from the opposite teams, made her feel
unusually young and giddy again, a feeling that continued until a loud crack of
thunder heralded sheets and spears of red and green lightning splitting the sky
as an earthquake might split the ground, and torrents of rain poured down on
everyone, washing all of the colorful paint jobs down into the grass, beating
the flowers into the mud and making footing so slippery that many people
stumbled and fell running for shelter.
A great
wind came up, so forceful that Acorna fully expected to see the pavilions
tumbling along the ground like wheels, but of course, the structures only gave
the appearance of being fabric and poles. They were actually quite sturdy. In
fact, the storm gave her an opportunity to observe another feature of the
buildings. As the ground flooded, the floors of the pavilions rose, extruding
ramps leading up from the ground to the raised floor. The central poles pulled
in, too, so as not to attract the lightning. In fact, other poles suddenly
appeared on the outskirts of the compound, specifically raised to attract the
lightning.
"Power
collectors," a very wet Grandam Naadiina told her.
She came
in shortly after Acorna and laughed to see the running black dye on her skin
and hair. Grandam herself was thoroughly drenched but after a brisk toweling
for all three of them-Maati had been closest to the pavilion when the storm
broke and hot herbal teas all around, Acorna was back to her original color of
hair and skin and all of them were a great deal drier.
It was
a very noisy night, but the miraculous pores of the pavilion fabric kept out
the damp and most of the wind, leaving only a heady feeling due to the ions
charging the air.
"Tell
us a story, Grandam," Maati begged. "Tell the one about how the
Ancestors left their old home to come to Vhiliinyar."
"Very
well," Grandam said. "Long ago, very long ago, before the first
Linyaari was born, the Ancestors lived among other species on a distant planet.
As they do even now, and as they have passed down to the Linyaari as their
legacy to us, the Ancestors possessed horns with the power to heal and to
purify air and water.
"They
were, as we are, peaceful creatures, who desired nothing more than harmony
among themselves and with all the other animals. They were shy and fled at the
first sign of trouble, and would stand and fight only to defend themselves or
one another, or occasionally some weaker animal preyed upon by a stronger one.
They lived high on the mountains and deep within the forests and their powers
were valued by all so that they had no natural enemies.
"And
then one day to the forests and the mountains came a new species that walked on
hind legs, as we do, and carried tools and weapons with its forelegs. These
creatures were not overly bright, they were not kind, and they were very, very
arrogant. They cut down forests and diverted streams and rivers. They dug up
plants and laid bare the ground to plant crops of their own choice. Some of
these crops the other creatures, including our Ancestors, found quite tasty,
but the newcomers were selfish and did not wish to share and slew any animal
they could find who wished to sup upon their crops.
"The
Ancestors thought that some misunderstanding was occurring. They believed all
creatures to be reasonable, as they were, and except for food and mating needs,
to be peaceful, as they were. But it was quite evident these new creatures-men,
as they were called - were not understanding their place in the scheme of
things.
"The
Ancestors decided to attempt to communicate with them but they feared the
males, and so they would attempt to find one of the younger females when she
was alone and converse with her, show her how the air and water could be pure,
show her how wounds could be healed. This was a grievous mistake, for the most
part.
"The
young females told the males, who felt that the horn's power was inconveniently
attached to large, swift, shy creatures who knew where and when they wished to
deploy the power. The men began systematically to hunt our Ancestors until many
many of them were dead or captured.
"Of
the captured Ancestors, some were slain but some also escaped, after observing
the ways of the men in their dwellings. They felt that some of the things the
men could do were very great powers as well. "But overall, it was a tragic
situation for our Ancestors, and they used the power they had always had to
communicate with other species and each other to cry for help. As they were
hunted and harried, the cry became louder and more desperate until at last it
was heard.
"Off-world
spacecraft arrived and offered refuge to the Ancestors, taking them aboard but
at the same time, causing an atmospheric disturbance that produced a great
flood that covered all of that planet. The Ancestors grieved to see many of
their fellow creatures destroyed, but they found it hard to grieve for men.
"The
beings who had found them were the Ancestral Hosts. They, too, communicated by
thought, but unlike the Ancestors, they stood on their hind legs like men. They
took the Ancestors to Vhiliinyar. Over the years, the Ancestral Hosts, because
of the love between the two species, began to genetically blend with them.
Eventually, a race arose made of the best of both the Ancestral Hosts and the
Ancestors-the Linyaari. Gradually the space-faring race blended with our own,
and then left, or perhaps just died away, for they were shorter-lived than the
Ancestors.
"But
the Linyaari remained, and many of our Ancestors remained, and we all
remembered, to remind us of the dangers the Ancestors had once faced on that
other world, and to teach us that while we must sometimes share our gifts with
others, we must also beware and keep our home hidden from them, lest our
enemies find us once more."
"We
are the ki-lin" Acorna said excitedly. "Or rather, the Ancestors are!
My guardian, Delszaki Li, told me of the Ancestors from mankind's viewpoint. He
came from a very old people whose memory predated the great flood of which you
speak. They revered the Ancestors almost as much as the Linyaari."
Grandam
yawned. The herbal tea was taking effect. "I'm glad our story pleases you,
Khornya. I haven't seen you look so animated since you arrived."
"I
think I'm finally starting to adjust," Acorna admitted, sleepily.
But the
next morning, as she was leaving for the technoartisan compound, Acorna was
intercepted by a breathless Maati, whose eyes were round, wide, and wet.
"Khornya, Khornya, I came right away to tell you. We're not getting the
routine signals from the Balakiire anymore."
"Since
when?" Acorna asked.
"Earlier
this morning, about three kii ago." A kii was roughly fifty-seven minutes
of Galactic Standard Time, Acorna had learned. "Everyone else is finding
out now but I wanted to come to tell you myself," Maati said.
"Khornya, I'm sorry." The young girl began to cry, which helped
Acorna to control her own fears enough to put her arms around the child, hug
her, and rock her.
"There,
there, Maati. They've probably just been affected by that same problem that's
blocked communications from the other missions-the one all the ships went to
try to fix. Grandam says most likely it's some sort of equipment failure and as
soon as one of the crews identifies it, it will be fixed and we'll be hearing
from everyone again."
"Do
you think?" Maati asked.
Acorna
was glad that Lmyaari children weren't psychic, so that Maati couldn't tell how
frightened for Neeva and the others she really was. "No doubt. If the
Balakiire has lost contact, that means they're also closer to the source of the
problem. The others won't be far behind on their way to their own destinations,
so probably one of them will have an answer for us soon.
But the
answer, as the days progressed, was that with one ship after another, contact
was lost. Relatives and friends were informed of each successive failure to
receive a ship's signal. In the interests of security, signals would not be
sent from the planet to a ship which could no longer be heard from. Everyone
knew that the Khieevi could be listening, and find narhiiVhiliinyar by tracing
the signals. That was not a thing that could be risked. All over Kubiilkhan,
all over narhii-Vhiliinyar, eyes turned heavenward as the planetbound searched
skies which were silent except for the sound of thunder and the clatter of rain
and hail.
It
seemed as if the storms brought with them such an unescapable wash of anxiety,
regret, fear, and grief that Acorna paced with restlessness.
"Grandam,
I feel so useless. I need to be active, to be of service. You and Maati come
home exhausted every night. Can I not relieve some of your burdens somehow? If
not yours, then perhaps Maati's? Surely if a child can do her job, I could,
too."
"Hmmm,"
Grandam sighed wearily, sinking onto her pallet, which was still dry thanks to
the raised floor. The inside of the pavilion was dark now and confining rather
than cozy with the flaps closed against the rain. "A very good suggestion,
Khornya. Our people need more than ever to stay in touch with what's happening,
with the crisis, with what the government is doing about it, and with each
other. I, for one, would welcome your help."
While
heading toward Nirii, the crew of the Balakiire distracted themselves from
worrying about what might await them by imagining the parties they were
missing.
(I just
hope we'll make it back in time for Acorna's bonding ceremony,) Khaari joked.
(I
think you're being a little premature,) Neeva responded. (I'm afraid if the new
viizaar has her way, my niece will be put to work picking seeds from the grass
and replanting them by hand or some such chore. Liriili is unbonded herself.)
(I get
the feeling she prefers it that way,) Khaari said. (I think you are being too
hard on her.)
(Not
intentionally,) Neeva said. (But Liriili is a very complex person, I fear all
of her thoughts and motivations are not known even to herself-possibly that is
what makes her such a good administrator. She would convince herself that
whatever she was doing or not doing was for Khornya's good or the good of the
planet.)
(If you
mean sending us to Nirii, at least we've learned we have lots of company. Other
ships were dispatched not long after we left,) Melireenya put in.
(I
wonder that they didn't leave more of the fleet on narhiiVhiliinyar,) Neeva
said. (What if the Khieevi should attack while we're gone?)
They
all shuddered and tried to suppress images of all the people planetside biting
down on suicide capsules.
(That's
not going to happen,) Neeva said firmly. (The Khieevi got a taste of their own
medicine at Rushima and will not think we're such easy targets again.)
(At
least not any time soon,) Melireenya said. (But after this current crisis is
dealt with, our government needs to put a bit more thought into defensive
strategies and weapons again.)
(And we
must find another world to evacuate to. It's not enough to keep ships and
personnel on hand at all times should evacuation be necessary. We need a place
to go,) Khaari said.
(No,)
Neeva countered. (Wishful thinking is no substitute for the kind of defense we
saw at Rushima. We simply cannot just keep running from world to world and
letting the Khieevi destroy everything we leave behind. When we return home, I
believe we should approach the Council about getting our trade allies to join
something like the Federation Khornya's people belong to. I believe the time
has come to take a stand.)
As they
approached Nirii, it was decided among them that Neeva, as the ambassador,
would take the shuttle to the surface, landing in the Linyaari-occupied
district of Nirii's principal continent's principal city. The rest of the crew
would remain aboard the Balakiire in orbit around Nirii.
Because
the crew of the Balakiire did not know what to expect, the ship had not made
her usual contact with the com base in this sector of the planet. When someone
of Neeva's stature paid a visit, it was customary to do so. But under these
circumstances, the notice was waived as an unnecessary risk. Neeva stepped out
of the shuttle and onto the empty docking bay. Normally between five and ten
shuttles stood here at any given time. As she gazed around the cavernous space,
Neeva knew that something very wrong had occurred here.
She had
made her landing cloaked and under cover of darkness, a moonless night with a
light snow falling from a dark pewter sky emptied of light. The rest of the
city was full of lights, all white, all small, and seemingly strung along
orderly grids. This time of night the streets and skies were empty. Though
there was no curfew and little superstition on Nirii, the people were
nonetheless extremely conservative and self-contained. They conducted their
business during the day and their home life at night, period. Like the
Linyaari, they were inclined to use thought-talk, but they did so only
privately, among friends and family, after heavy mental shielding was released.
There had been no crime here for a number of years, nor had there been any war,
making the people of this planet ideal trading partners for the Linyaari,
particularly since they were a highly scientific and technologically inclined
people.
The
Linyaari district was not required to follow Niriian customs but usually did,
in Neeva's experience. But she saw no signs of life, no footprints of people or
animals or any other species as she walked down the street between two of the
four large dwellings that faced each other across a square. Centering the
square was a park where athletic events, lectures, entertainments, and meetings
were held. The building appeared, at least from the outside, to be totally
deserted. She entered the door to the building on her left. It was unlocked,
and irised open at her touch. This wasn't too surprising. The residents of
Nirii did not lock their doors as a rule.
The
building felt sterile, devoid of life or any evidence of it.
The
doors to the cubicles had been removed, and gaped at her as she walked past
them, peering into empty apartments containing no furnishings, mementos, or
equipment. Each building had contained eight apartments, and all of these were
empty, in each and every building. Neeva could catch not a whisper of thought,
not a spark of raw emotion.
She
returned to the outside, her skin crawling with the unnatural silence and
emptiness of the places where some of the best and brightest of her people had
lived while learning, teaching, trading.
As she
stepped out onto the park, her feet disturbed the layer of snow on the ground.
She noticed that the native grasses her people had planted here were untended,
dead. Nor had there been anything remaining to eat in the indoor gardens that
each apartment customarily boasted. There had, in fact, been no way to tell
which room served which function, so completely empty had the former dwelling
places been.
But
beneath her feet the soil, snow-covered as it was, was beginning to tell her
something at last. Anger and fear, confusion, interrupted sleep, interrupted
mating, longing for loved ones who were not there, the cries of frightened
children and some, not much, but enough to scare any resisters, actual pain.
She was
so busy absorbing these impressions that she failed to hear the snow-muffled
footsteps of the party approaching her until it was too late to run back to her
shuttle.
Leading
the party was the large, double-horned, heavily built form of her old friend
and primary negotiating contact, Runae Thirgaare, along with some other
Niriians unknown to her. And behind them, four uniformed people who looked very
like those who had sheltered Khornya.
"Vue()haanye
ferilli Neeva," the Runae said to her with less warmth than usual in her
greeting. "I am afraid we can no longer welcome you and your kind among
us."
"Why
not?" Neeva asked. "Where are the others?"
One of
the uniformed strangers stepped out from behind the Runae. "We will take
you to them, VLfe<)haanye feriiu Neeva," a hornless woman almost as
large as the Runae said. "We are Federation forces and have detained your
people to assist us with our inquiries into certain criminal irregularities we
are investigating at this time."
(Runae, please, speak to me yourself. What is
happening here? You know I have only just come from my own world. What crimes
could my people have committed? You know us as well as your own!)
(Not
quite as well, VU^haanye. Your people are inclined to some wildness and
peculiar practices. They are unpredictable. Ours is a well-regulated world. We
have no idea what trespasses you may have committed elsewhere. It's to be
expected, of course, of those who are deprived of the stabilizing influence of
a second horn. I'm sure there is nothing to worry about. These people are from
the regulatory body for a large federation of allied worlds far beyond us. We
are, at their behest, considering membership at this time. So you see that of
course we must respect their request for extradition.)
"For
what criminal irregularities are we being charged?"
Neeva
demanded of the hornless beings.
"We'll
explain it all along the way," the woman said. She looked very familiar to
Neeva. Her uniform particularly looked familiar. Wasn't it very much the same
one as was worn on Rushima by the troops that had assisted in the repulsion of
the Khieevi attack?
Neeva
pondered this as she was hustled past her own shuttle, which was being
transported to the same place she was, a larger vessel with some
official-looking markings on it. It wasn't until the uniformed woman began to
push her into the hatch, pushing down her head so that her horn did not catch
on its upper flange, that Neeva recalled that the troops who had assisted on
Rushima were not allied with any Federation. They were a private army of
mercenaries under the command of one General Ikwaskwan.
Grandam
"was as good as her word. Acorna joined -ssfc ^ ^ .-Maati and several
other couriers in carrying ^^f messages back and forth from the governmental
compound to the citizens at large. Despite grave concerns about the situation
in space, Acorna felt better than she had done since her arrival now that she
was able to be useful and somewhat a part of things. Being a government
messenger also gave her a much better idea of the communities in the area and
the scope of settlement on narhii-Vhiliinyar than trying to make contact on her
own had done.
Besides
the central compound, mostly composed of government officials and workers and
their families, many of which included one or more members who were now on
active duty as emissaries in space, and the large techno-artisan compound,
there were many other petals to the flower that formed the populated area of
narhii-Vhiliinyar.
Naturally,
Acorna had realized there had to be more people than she had met thus far. From
the air she had seen what looked like a large flower garden spreading out over
the continent upon which the Balaklire landed.
Now she
realized that this flower garden was but a single bloom-the center was the
government compound, and extending from it, connected by road and common
grazing fields and plains, were the technoartisan compound, an educational
compound (mostly for those who wished to study offplanet cultures-it was
assumed that Linyaari would need no studies in how to be Linyaari,
unfortunately for Acorna), an agricultural experimental farm where new food
stuffs were developed and tried, and other functions.
One
compound was mainly devoted to very senior elders who did nothing but
contemplate higher philosophies and mathematics. The remainder of their
compound was staffed by junior people who studied with the elders and supplied
their practical needs. Grandam Naadiina said she had gone through that phase
fifty ghannye ago and found it far more entertaining to be with the younger
folk in the central compound. They were much more amusing, and laughing, she
said, helped her stay youthful.
Narhii-Vhiliinyar
had no mining and very little manufacturing, despite the bins of raw materials
in the techno-artisan compound. Those were all imported.
Surrounding
these compounds were the communities whose labor and expertise staffed the
various enterprises, while beyond them, in semicircular clusters, were smaller
units of the same sort, independently producing other products and supplying
other services to their communities. Beyond the plains were low mountains and
there, she was told, was where the Ancestors dwelled when not performing the
ceremonial functions they had taken it upon themselves to offer.
Acorna
could well understand why Maati was so tired at the end of every day. She could
also understand why the young girl did not need to be in school. Walking and
even running to the various homes, businesses, agencies, and other message
stations within the central compounds was quite educational in and of itself.
Thariinye
complained that Acorna had so little time to walk out with him and accept his
"tutelage" and indeed, when she was not on duty, she was far too glad
to be off her feet to wish to walk anywhere with anyone. So she was quite
surprised when carrying a message to the agro-farm one day to sense great
hostility from a young woman, with ruddy skin and black hair who was sorting
seeds into packets for distribution throughout the planet.
"Have
I done something to offend you?" Acorna finally asked, though she couldn't
imagine what it might be, aside from the usual prejudice she had felt when she
first arrived.
That
had diminished somewhat now that she was frequently seen to be serving an
important function among her people. She supposed it was also that she was
harder to avoid and too busy to notice, most of the time, any lack of
friendliness.
The
woman's anger and dislike were evident not just in unvoiced thoughts, however,
but in the stiff way she held herself, the angry way she wrestled the seeds
into their packets and sealed the packets as if imprisoning the guilty seeds
for life. It was evident in the flashing of her big green eyes as she darted
glances at Acorna while she was delivering her verbal message from Liriili, and
in the snappishness of her voice when she finally attempted to dismiss Acorna.
"Isn't
it obvious? First you bring trouble to us so that my father is sent off-planet
to solve it-"
"Wait,
wait. What trouble? Who is your father?"
"Aagroni
lirtye. He criticized you and you used your influence to have him sent away."
"My
Influenced "Acorna said. "Feel free to read my thoughts. I have no
influence here. If anything, I have the opposite of influence. And I have
nothing to do with the problems that sent your father off-planet."
If the
woman took her up on her offer, she did it very quickly, and she looked away
for a moment, confused, and then back up. "And then-and then there's
Thariinye. Why won't you release him?" the woman demanded.
"Release
him?" Acorna asked, quite baffled.
"You
don't care for him, you don't even like him, I can see that, so why are you
taking him as a lifemate? He means nothing to you and he m-means everything to
m-m-m-me!"
"You're
telling the wrong person this!" Acorna said. "You should tell him if
you feel that way! I have no claim on him whatsoever. He was the first Linyaari
male I met and is an old shipmate with whom I've shared certain adventures, but
it's his idea entirely that we should be lifemates, not mine!"
The
girl looked puzzled, and wiped at the tears of anger and frustration that
flowed down her cheeks. "I can tell you're speaking truly, but I
thought..."
"What
I think," Acorna said with sudden insight, "is that Thariinye is no
more interested in me than you seem to think he is in you. I believe he likes
all of the attention from all of the eligible females and doesn't wish to
settle yet with one-by seeming to choose me, when he must know I don't feel
that way about him-I suppose he feels free to take his time making another,
more suitable choice. He's not unkind and I doubt it occurs to him that he is
causing you pain."
"It's
true he-he doesn't know how I feel. I knew he was promised to you and so I
concealed my thoughts, thought pointedly of plowing furrows and planting when
he was around and"-she blushed-"I suppose he took my metaphor
literally." She sighed. "He is such a lusty fellow, it was very hard,
I mean difficult, I mean ..."
Now
Acorna was amused. "I definitely think Thariinye is the one you should
talk to. Good luck."
Her
amusement faded as she went about her other errands. It was true that Thariinye
was not her choice for a lifemate, but on a whole planet of beings similar to
herself, with many eligible males, she had not thus far met anyone who was.
In
fact, Pal Kendoro, who was not even the same species as she was, inspired more
warm feelings in her than almost anyone she had met here so far except Grandam
and Maati.
So if
finding her a mate was part of the reason for her being here, it wasn't working
out. And she would much rather be taking her chances with her aunt and the rest
of the Balakiire's crew, or any crew, than stuck down here with no real purpose
and no ability to influence events or people.
What if
the Khieevi had returned, what if the radio silence was because the ships, the
crews, the other planets even, had all been destroyed, invaded?
Acorna
firmly shook her head and put that out of her mind. It did no good to worry
about such things. For the first time in her short life, it did no good to do
much of anything but wait and watch and hope for the best. She did not think
she was going to be very good at it.
"What
do you mean 'detained,'" Melireenya asked the official on the comscreen.
She had a hard time believing she was having this conversation. The Niirians
were the last people she would have expected to behave even rudely to the
Linyaari ambassadors or tradespeople. Niirians were courteous and ethical, like
the Linyaari themselves, punctilious and moral almost to a fault.
"We
do apologize, madam, but the circumstances were totally beyond our control, as
we explained to Vue^haanye Neeva. Probably your ship will only be impounded for
the time it takes to retrieve your original representatives and return them to
you, but in the meantime, our orders are very clear."
"Not
to me," Melireenya said. "And I'm good at reading minds. So please
enlighten me. What is it that your orders say?"
"All
Linyaari coming within our spheres of influence are to be detained for
diplomatic reasons. I'm afraid I'm not privy to the reasoning behind this. I am
so sorry to be the bearer of such distressing tidings, madam. You have been a
good friend for many years."
Melireenya
softened. The young official's voice held genuine consternation and his horns
seemed to droop with shame. "As you have been to me, Snoraa. I suppose
there is no alternative but to trust our old friends one more time?"
"None,
I fear. But I will take it as a personal matter of honor that no harm befalls
you or your crew."
"I
appreciate that assurance, Snoraa. Did you issue the same courtesy to my
lifemate?"
From
his silence, Melireenya guessed that Snoraa had-or at least had concerned
himself with the fate of Hrronye and his students.
"May
I speak with the vifeDhaanye, please?" she asked politely. Neeva had taken
the shuttle to the planet's surface, feeling it a wise precaution until she
knew what had become of the missing Linyaari and why they had sent a distress
signal home.
"The
vmeShaanye has been detained as well and is presently incommunicado, madam.
Please dock your ship in bay one one four and present yourself and your crew to
the guardians who will greet you there. I will do what I can to assist but my
job, you understand, is to insist upon your compliance with my orders at this
time."
Melireenya
had attempted to send another message back to Vhiliinyar. Like her previous
attempts since coming within the planet's orbit, her transmission met with no
response.
Unable
to contact base for further orders and worried about what was happening to Neeva,
she saw no viable alternative but to comply. From the transmissions they had
been receiving from the other Linyaari spacecraft, she and Khaan had determined
that most of the fleet, if not all of it, was now deployed. Unlike the
Balakiire, the rest of the ships were not investigating a distress call, but
rather a widespread radio silence on behalf of the diplomatic, trade, and
educational missions stationed on various planets. She opened all channels in
an attempt to reach the other ships, to apprise them of Nirii's odd behavior,
but was met with the same silence that greeted her calls to home base.
Something was very wrong.
She
sent out a general Mayday, with no response whatever. Her only consolation was
that none of this seemed even remotely like a Khieevi attack or invasion.
But as
she prepared to land, she felt a deep sense of panic like none she had ever
experienced. She thought that the elders must have felt this way in the old
stories when, attempting to make contact with a hostile species by
communicating with its least dangerous members, the young females, they found
themselves instead surrounded by armed males and were taken into captivity, the
purpose of which they did not truly understand to this day.
Her
fears were well founded. No sooner had she landed than a team of uniformed
people, not Niirians but very much like the people among whom Khornya had been
dwelling when the Balakiire located her, boarded the ship. Two of them forcibly
removed her from the command seat while two others removed Khaari from hers and
still others swiftly took over the controls at both of their stations and
demanded the access code to the ship's computer.
"Who
are you?" she demanded. "What gives you the right to tamper with a
sovereign Linyaari vessel? I demand to see Runae Thiirgaare at once."
"Take
it easy," a burly young man who seemed to have no hair at all told her.
"You are under arrest by the Federation Forces and your ship is being
impounded."
(Don't
worry, Melireenya,) Khaari's thought came to her. (They will have difficulty
impounding us unless we cooperate.)
(Then
why do I feel us lifting up again?) Melireenya returned.
(Oh,
dear. This must be one of those tractor beams we've been hearing about that
allows us to be towed by another ship. I didn't see one, though, did you?)
(No.
But they may have been cloaked.)
Over
the com system, Snoraa's voice could be heard demanding that the vessel ask for
clearance but the uniformed people paid him no heed.
"What
are the charges?" Melireenya asked. "And for that matter, what are
the mysterious crimes that our people are supposed to have committed?"
She was
picking up a welter of feelings and confused thoughts, most of them violent,
angry, or lustful toward her or her fellow crewmen, or disrespectful of the
bovine-like Niirians. They were lying, that much she knew. All of them were
lying. But they were following orders, which was how they earned their living.
"Well,
let's see, ma'am, what were those charges again? Resisting arrest, fleeing
custody, failure to render assistance in a medical crisis, nondisclosure of
residence, crimes of omission against the various environments under Federation
protection. That's for a start. When we think of others, we'll let you
know."
"That's
nonsense!" she said. "Narhii-VhiIimyar is not part of your
Federation!"
(And to
think, we were just discussing whether or not it should be,) came Khaari's
thought.
"Oh,
yeah, that's the other charges," said the uniformed ruffian.
"Criminal trespass, entering Federation galaxies without a license,
abduction of a Federation citizen."
"Abduction?
The only person who accompanied us was the niece of Vi<fe()haanye feriLii
Neeva and she came willingly and eagerly to her home world."
"We'd
just like a chance to check that out, ma'am," he said. "Suppose you
set this egg back on course for your home world and we'll ask the citizen in
question ourselves."
"We
can't do that," Khaari said.
She had
been watching the woman who took her seat trying to access the navigation
system.
(Create
a diversion, Melireenya,) Khaari said. Melireenya screamed and lunged forward,
pointing and screeching out the words to a Linyaari poem she remembered from
her youth.
Khaari
took advantage of the distraction to slip in closer to the woman sitting in her
seat, who had swiveled around to see what the commotion was. Khaari was able to
make two swift keystrokes before the woman turned back.
(There!)
she said. (Thanks.)
(Were
you able to delete the course information?)
(Naturally.
Had we been able to complete our sequence before they boarded us, it would have
done so of its own accord. It's a good thing we Linyaari have good memories for
navigation.)
The
woman in the navigator's chair swore something ugly and violent.
"What's
the matter. Brill?" the man with no hair asked.
"It's
gone!" she said. "I had almost accessed the route when-you erased
it!" she said to Khaari.
"It's
self-deleting," Khaari said, which was true enough. "After all, we
know where we've been already."
"Yeah,
but how do you know how to get back there?" the man asked.
"That
is a matter of planetary security," Melireenya said. (If they can talk
like petty bureaucrats, so can we.) "Now then, speaking of abductions, if
you are the people who have abducted our ambassador and other members of our
diplomatic community, we must insist you release them and us immediately."
"Yeah,
'well, tell us who is going to make us and how we can get to talk to them and
maybe we will," the man said.
Khaari
was staring at them. (Those aren't the uniforms of Federation Forces,
Melireenya.)
(I
noticed that. These are the same uniforms worn by the troops on Rushima.
Mercenaries. Now, what do you suppose they are up to?)
(I have
the unhappy feeling we're about to find out.)
There
was no doubt in Becker's mind whatsoever that he should space the android. The
damned things had homing beacons that left indelible electron trails for the
owners to follow in case of loss, theft, or, on very rare occasions, defection.
Furthermore, there was no way to remove the damned beacons that Becker had ever
heard of. Even if he inactivated or destroyed the android completely, the
beacon would take the lickin' and keep on tickin.'
Of
course, if he spaced the android, the homing device would go into space, too,
and kinky Kisia could follow it into infinity for all he cared.
The
thing was, Becker just could not quite bring himself to throw out something so
useful, so potentially salvageable. So ultimately valuable. He hadn't actually
tried to deactivate the homing beacon on an android before. People abandoned
androids very rarely and if an android happened to be the sole survivor of an
unfortunate space accident, it was unlikely there'd be anybody left to follow
the beacon, even if whoever found the droid could not legally claim salvage
rights. Surely if he tried, he could do it. But Kisia wasn't a problem to be
sneezed at.
RK
jumped on the droid's chest and kneaded big rents in its tunic. This was
accompanied by a lot of drooling and the cat rubbing the top of his head under
the android's chin, then rubbing the sides of his mouth against the droid, cat
lip curled upward as if smelling something nasty.
"You
don't think you marked this thing enough already, huh?" Becker asked.
"Come on, cat, we have to space this dude."
But
when Becker started to lift the android a second time to haul him to an
airlock, RK took a swing at him that would have ripped his hand open if it had
connected. The cat's back was up and his tail bristled.
"Hey,
look, I know he followed us home but you can't keep him, dammit, and neither
can I. He's bugged."
For a
cat in the business RK was in, the feline member of the crew did not seem to
take technical difficulties as sufficient reason for infringing on his
territory. He snarled menacingly, ears flat, eyes narrowed, back feet clawing
on the androids chest much in the way bulls were known to paw the ground before
charging.
Becker
swore and sat back on his haunches, hearing the cat on the one hand and the
steady bleep on the other. "I've got half a mind to leave you both off on
some rock and let him take care of you if you're so crazy about him,"
Becker said. The cat remained unimpressed. They both knew that Becker would not
do this, however unreasonable RK was, as the android would sooner or later
attract Kisia Manjari and he would not wish her attentions on his worst enemy,
much less his usually more or less convivial shipmate.
"Okay,
okay. Will you let me haul him up to the bridge then so I can watch where we're
going and probably, who's coming with us, while I try to disable the
beacon?"
The cat
marked the android again, then lightly jumped to Becker's shoulder and wound
purring around his neck, claws close to his jugular, just in case he tried
something funny. Becker hauled his and everyone else's asses up to the bridge
just in time to spot one of those rare wormholes, uncharted by anyone but
Theophilus Becker.
"You're
beautiful, baby!" he said, blowing a kiss as the Condor dove into the
hole.
He
wasn't sure how effective those electron trails were through wormholes but with
any luck at all, maybe he could buy a little time this way.
The
hole spit them out in the same chewed up galaxy where he had discovered the
trashed planet with the horned cat toys.
Becker
returned his attention to the android. Now he really had to get that
transmitter disabled. He dug in to the task at hand. The cat looked on as
anxiously as an expectant father.
Becker
kept hoping that if he fooled around long enough, the cat would do what he
usually did and get bored and wander off someplace to sleep, but of course,
that was what Becker wanted so no way was RK going to do that.
Becker
was concentrating so hard he was sweating, and meanwhile that annoyingly
regular little bleep continued. After a while, RK's possessiveness subsided
enough for the cat to start noticing the bleep, too, and taking an interest in
it. An intense interest. The cat stalked up and down the recumbent length of
the robot, across the open control panel, waving his newly fluffy tail under
Becker's nose as he walked between Becker and what he was trying to work on.
"Look,
cat. A little cooperation would be appreciated."
RK,
much to Becker's surprise, backed off a little, looking offended, sat down and
began washing his right front paw. Both ears, now that he had two again, were
cocked forward at an extreme angle. Becker stopped working for a moment to
watch the control panel again.
When he
glanced back at RK, he saw that the cat's ears twitched very slightly with each
bleep, and the critter was hunkered low, into stalking posture, his hind end
wiggling with suppressed excitement as if he was about to spring.
"Don't
look now, cat, but unless the digital navigation system is on the blink again,
we're homing in on the planet where we found the horns. What do you think?
Should we give it a fly-by? I think we've probably got enough time to disable
the transmitter. We've been weaving through wormholes like a demented spider.
It's gonna take Kisia and company awhile to get here. I vote we land and get
this over with, then split."
RK did
not vote out loud, but instead sprang for the android's neck, where the cat
began biting and digging at the plastiskin with his claws.
"Oh,
is that where the homing beacon is coming from?" Becker asked. "Okay,
if you'll move your furry carcass I'll see if I can disable it and reprogram
this dude."
With a
little physical persuasion, and the inducement that the man was actually doing
what the cat wanted him to anyway, RK eventually subsided and Becker was able
to concentrate totally on the android-so totally, in fact, that he lost track
of time and place. He felt peckish and grabbed a handful of cat food but, after
having to fish some of the food pellets out of the android's inner workings, he
gave up on snacking.
He had
set the Condor on voice control for most functions. The voice control had the
voice of Buck Rogers. For a while, Becker had used the usual ploy of having the
computer sound like a husky-voiced woman, but he'd found he wasn't getting much
work done. He was always heading back to port to find a pleasure house. Now he
used the voice of a heroic space voyager. He figured that would help him be
proud and happy to be voyaging among the stars.
So,
with Buck's backup, and having committed himself to the task of debugging and
rehabilitating the android, Becker gave it his full attention. Locating the
main axis of the homing beacon wasn't the only problem. The damned thing was
thoroughly integrated with both the central nervous system and the circulatory
system of the android. The wiring had to be
removed
completely and redone with minimal harm to the KEN unit.
Becker
was very good at this kind of thing, when he wanted to be. It was one of his
talents, prolonged intense focus on a single complex problem. Unfortunately,
although the ship was still under his command, the part of his brain not
devoted to working on the android was occupied fully with the problem at hand. The
ship told him about wormholes and black water, space pleats and folds, and he
took physical control long enough to negotiate through or around these, but all
the best part of his brain function was devoted to the problem lying on his
ship's deck. He really didn't register how long his work was taking until the
Condor came within the orbit of the planet where they'd found the horns.
As he
was just then managing to extract the last of the homing beacon, the Condor's
computer had to clue him in. "Captain Becker, do you wish to land? Or
would you prefer to crash in a dramatic, explosive ball onto the surface when
at last we have orbited until we run out of fuel?"
Becker
looked up from his task. The extraction of the homing beacon had been
successful. The bleep was gone, though it was almost as if he could hear the
echo of it in his head, he'd been listening to it for so long. RK had finally
gone to sleep and had opened one eye when the computer spoke.
"What?
Oh, guess we should crash. No, just kidding, Buck."
"Not
funny, Becker. You programmed me with a sense of humor, but I did not find that
amusing. I was already implementing the orbit by the time you said no."
"Of
course I programmed you with a sense of humor-otherwise I'd have taken a
crowbar to you years ago. The cat isn't much for laughing at my jokes."
"I'm
waiting, Captain Becker. This planet, however, is not. It continues to exert
its gravitational force upon me."
"Oh,
yeah, okay. Let's set down in that green patch where we found the horns the
last time-you have the coordinates, right?"
"Accessing
. . . can't seem to find them, Captain Becker. Will that open volcano crater do
just as nicely?"
"What?
Huh? Are you crazy? Of course not!"
"Just
kidding. I accessed those files nanoseconds and nanoseconds ago!"
"Now
I know why usually I run the ship myself and talk to the cat!" Becker
grumbled.
He
figured he would have plenty of time to put the android back together after
they landed. He'd have to wait to dispose of the deactivated beacon in space
again. He certainly didn't want it to lead Kisia Manjari to this planet. He
finally returned his attention to the landing procedure.
"How's
it going. Buck?" he asked the computer. "A-okay, captain. There is
just one little thing I thought you might wish to be aware of, however."
"What's that?"
"The
tail of a space liner seems to be extruding from the outer atmosphere. It looks
as if it means to set down beside us." "I don't suppose we could take
evasive action?" "You're kidding again, right? Where would we take
it? Between the last few centimeters of atmosphere left-well, not any more
-between ourselves and the ground? Sorry, Captain, we've landed. The other
craft must have been cloaked." "I don't suppose we have that
capability, do we?" "Afraid not. Besides, they know where we
are," the ship said.
"Well,
just a minute then." He spoke to the comscreen. "Hey, you, with your
tail hanging out, identify yourself! This is Captain Jonas Becker of the
Condor, flagship of Becker Interplanetary Recycling and Salvage Enterprises,
Limited. My company has already got dibs-staked salvage rights, I mean, on this
planet. Uh . . ." he continued, as there was no answer, "... I don't
suppose you're a derelict in distress looking for a-tow, are you?"
Kisia
Manjari's face appeared, grinning, on the comscreen.
"Nope,
I didn't think so," Becker said, disgusted. "What's the matter,
princess? Forget your receipt?"
"Oh,
no. Captain Becker. It's just that you go such interesting places and find such
interesting things, I wanted to come along. I sent my droids to find out where
you were going next, but you killed them. Well-all but the one whose track
we've been following."
"There
now, RK, what'd I tell you?" Becker said to the cat. "Another fine
mess you've gotten us into!"
"Oh,
is the nice kitty there? I still really really want to play with it,"
Kisia said. "I've heard so very often that there's more than one way to
skin a cat and I really want to find out."
By now,
Becker had a visual on \}\eMu)(U, totally uncloaked and a largish dot in the
multihued twilit sky.
"You're
a sick cookie, you know that, don't you?" Becker asked.
"Why,
thank you."
Meanwhile,
he opened the emergency cat flap in the hatch. Normally, from the hatch's opening
to the ground on a given planet was a bit of a leap for RK, and the cat used
the robolift for an elevator in the same way that Becker did. But Becker had
rigged the flap up for just such occasions as this-not that there'd been many
occasions such as this, but Becker had a healthy imagination and a goodly
amount of paranoia. He turned off the comscreen, grabbed RK before the cat had
a chance to protest, and shoved him down the chute that led to the cat flap. He
then opened the cat flap with the remote. He got a visual of RK sitting among
the grass on the ground, licking himself vigorously, and then, as the other
ship landed, bolting for the rough ruin of the landscape beyond the grass. RK
would have sense enough to steer clear of Manjari, as long as he was free to do
so, Becker knew. Becker was pretty sure he himself could outmaneuver her, but
RK shouldn't be trapped in the ship. In fact, if he left the ship himself, he
might succeed in escaping her and it might not occur to her to attack the
Condor. After all, the only thing he could think of that she wanted from him
was the horns and this was where they'd come from. She had what she wanted. If
she couldn't find him, she'd more than likely take her booty and run off to do
whatever it was she meant to do with it. Finance a fleet made from a higher
caliber of cast-off parts, maybe.
He
didn't suit up this time. It would just slow him down and he already knew he
didn't need to for this atmosphere. He did slip on antigrav boots, however, the
ones he wore on planets with gravity far heavier than that of Kezdet. He didn't
want to take the time to lower the robolift. Instead, he opened the hatch and
jumped out. The boots bounced him back up a couple of meters, and he sprang for
the hinterlands, as if he was Jack wearing the seven league boots from one of
the old fairy tales Dad had encouraged him to read in between physics texts in
an attempt to give him back a little of the childhood that had been stolen from
him on the labor farm.
He
should be able to get away before Kisia emerged from her ship, he thought,
feeling very cocky as he left the grass for the rocks. It wasn't until the bolt
from a stun gun mounted in the ship's side sliced through him that it occurred
to him, in one last flash of thought, that Kisia probably had no need to leave
the ship to bring him down.
None of
the people who invaded the holy place were able to see him, so well did he
blend with his surroundings. But he saw them. Saw the first spacecraft land and
the small furry animal, the same one who had come before, first fall from the
craft's belly, only to twist in midair and land on all four paws. It
momentarily licked itself, then came running-straight toward him. None of the
people had seen him, but the small furry creature headed his way immediately,
past the sacred place and into the rocks where he lay concealed.
The
other ship descended and as it did, a man bounced out of the same ship as the
one that had carried the animal. The second ship landed, and a bolt of light
shot from it. The man was on his third bounce, almost safe behind one of the
hillocks of rubble created by the Khieevi when they destroyed this world. The
man was the same one who had come before with the animal. He had the same
smooth face and forehead. He did not look like a Khieevi and he did not act
like a Khieevi. The Khieevi did not run in fear. They caused others to fear.
The
animal had reached the hidden one, had greeted him with soft twinings and loud
rumblings, seeking sanctuary. It had watched, wide-eyed, as the man fell. It
had changed its body so that it grew to twice its size and the pointed ears lay
flat on the head. The rumbling had given way to the sound air makes when
escaping the lungs of someone punched in the stomach.
The
second craft landed. Four people came out of it. There was a small one with a
loud voice, and three larger ones. The small one moved with certainty, the
others had less.
The
small one walked right to the man, pointed to him, and indicated that the
others should carry him. They did so, carrying him back to the grass between
the two ships. The small one began to kick the body all over.
That
was when the little animal burst from the rocky cover and leaped across the
grass, into the midst of these intruders who, although they looked like the
first man, appeared from their actions, from their-energy-to be Khieevi after
all.
The
hidden one shook and felt sick. He could not bear the Khieevi again, he was
sure he could not. They had hurt him beyond repair before. He could not face
them again, not even to save their new victim, for he knew he could not save
him.
The
little animal had less experience, though. It dove straight into the middle of
them in a howling, angry whirlwind of fury, blood, snarling, and screaming. The
blood appeared to be mostly from the small biped in the center. The noise
seemed to be coming from all of them.
And
then, all at once, another light bolt and the furry creature fell to the
ground. A silence fell upon the group.
The
people still standing looked much different now. Their clothing was torn, one
of them covered an eye with his hand, and their faces were a network of
scratches. The small biped had her-for the voice sounded female to the hidden
one-hand to her throat and red blood streamed from between her fingers.
She
sent a vicious kick into the body of the little beast and it flew to the edge
of the grass.
Then
she began once more to beat the unconscious man, until one of the other men
stopped her.
The
hidden one rocked and cried and grieved and wondered if perhaps-perhaps the
little animal could be saved without the Khieevi noticing. There was enough
power nearby to heal it, if the wounds were not already fatal.
On his
belly, the hidden one slithered toward the edge of the grass where the small
body lay.
Becker
had definitely had better days. The pain in his leg was intense. Kisla's
kicking reminded him of the time he had dropped one of those Myrathenian
morning stars on himself while trying to store the damned thing. Lots of little
sharp pains. Speaking of which, it looked like Kisia and her gang had lots of
little sharp pains themselves. RK had apparently come back; their faces
definitely bore his signature. But where was the little demon anyway? Becker
raised his head to look around. The eye that wasn't busy swelling shut saw the
small furry body by the edge of the-moving -rock.
Kisla's
boot aimed at his jaw. Becker caught her leg in one hand and jerked. She fell
on her butt. Somewhat to his surprise, though her crew showed him their
weapons, they did not intervene. Come to think of it, he wasn't all that
surprised that they didn't. These were humans, not androids. Working for Kisia
probably had a few uncomfortable side effects.
"Shoot
him!" Kisia screamed.
"Calm
down, princess. What did I ever do to you?" he asked. His voice was a
little slurred. Apparently one or more kicks had done more damage than he
thought.
"You
cheated me is what! You destroyed my droids--" "You poet, you,"
he said.
"And
you lied about the horns! You said there was only the one! You lied! I found
another horn. Where are the others?"
He
sighed painfully. He really had to get rid of her and go see about the cat.
"They're right here-all around. I just took a sample or two."
"He's
lying," one of the crewmen said. "There's nothing here. I've been
looking."
Kisia
kicked herself free of him and stood up, but she stood back. "Okay, time
to make him tell! Let's take him back to the i • lf ship.
"Before
we go through all that, why don't I check his computer banks and see where he
found the horns, and if this is the place? Meanwhile, you can keep him on ice
while we make a more thorough search for the horns." This was proposed by
a sane-sounding man, a high-ranking member of Kisla's new crew, judging by the
decorations on his uniform.
"I
give the orders here," Kisia said.
"Yes,
ma'am. I'm just trying to suggest a fast way to check on what the man's told
us."
Kisia
liked to give orders but she wasn't stupid. The guy was making sense. She
hesitated.
"With
your permission then," the man said, not making it a question, and turned
to go.
Becker
sat up again, unhooking the remote from his belt. "Here, buddy, you'll
need this. Red green blue red." He could cooperate with sane people. It
wouldn't do to get Kisia excited again.
It was
a good move. The other two crewmen tied Becker up-well, taped him up, having
apparently brought along a roll of silver tape just for the occasion. They only
let Kisia get in two more kicks before they distracted her by rooting around,
looking for horns. During the time they were doing this, Becker noticed that RK
was no longer lying where he had been. That was interesting. Could the little
guy fake being hurt? Nah, surely not!
After a
while-Becker didn't know how long as his consciousness seemed to fade in and
out, along with Kisla's dainty little foot-the crewman who had gone up into the
ConSor returned. He was carrying the sack that contained the horns. Becker
groaned. He'd gotten used to a sweet-smelling spaceship and had been sort of
hoping Kisia wouldn't find the horns so he could heal himself.
"Well?" she demanded.
"This
is the place all right. Not on any of our maps but the coordinates are the same
ones he marked before. Here are the horns. This all there were, buddy?"
"I
didn't think so," Becker said truthfully. "That's why I came back.
But the light's not that good. Maybe we took them all the first time." He
tried to shrug but his shoulder had stiffened up too badly.
"Your
droid is a mess," the crewman continued his report to Kisia. He brought
out the mess of wires and syn-tissue that Becker had extracted from the droid.
"Here's the homing beacon. You know, your uncle-I mean you-figured Becker
here would make a beeline back for where he found the horns. This very likely
is the place."
"Maybe,"
she said. She had the sack now and was pawing through it. "Where did you
find these, junk man?"
"Lying
around on the ground here. Don't ask me why. I didn't get it off any living
girl, if that's what you're thinking."
"That's
too bad, but it can be remedied later," Kisia said.
And
just then a series of explosions shook the ground, shooting blossoms of dirt
and fire in a more or less straight line toward the Mu)<u.
"What
the hell is that?" one of the crewmen asked.
"Asteroid
shower?"
"This
planet has obviously undergone some kind of destabilization recently," the
fellow who had boarded the Condor said. "I don't think we'd better hang
around very long. Want to take Becker here along with us, ma'am?"
Kisia
grinned through her sharp little teeth as another explosion rocked both the
MQ<u and the Condor. "No." She snatched the remote from the
crewman's hand, threw the unit to the ground and stomped on it, grinding it
under her heel. "We'll leave him. No food or water here except on his
ship, which he can no longer board. He'll have to eat the cat-hey, where did
the cat go?"
Another
explosion erupted beside her before she could answer. She kept her mouth shut
as the crewmen herded her aboard the MQiu, which prepped for takeoff in record
time. The ship rocketed back into space like a scalded cat.
Speaking
of cats . . .
Becker
passed out, only to awaken when something wet hit his face. Cat drool. RK,
looking no worse for wear, stood on his chest, kneading sharp claws into it. He
no longer lay beside the Condor. It was dark, and he didn't hurt anymore. Not
anywhere.
If
someone had offered to make Edacki Ganoosh king or emperor of the universe, he
would have turned them down. He did not wish to have ultimate power or ultimate
responsibility or ultimate visibility. He far preferred the joy of playing
puppet master and pulling the strings that manipulated people and events for
his amusement. Presently, he was both very happy and highly amused.
His
network's tentacles had extended far beyond his customary haunts, into new
galaxies where his allies had allies who had allies and those allies had allies
who were quite accustomed to dealing with people who fit the description of the
Linyaari. Also, like the Linyaari, these particular people were said to be
quite advanced and peaceable and law-abiding by nature. Ganoosh, though he was
not fond of abiding by rules himself, was very fond of such people. They were
so much easier to control. Sometimes he wished his ward were more law-abiding
but then, if she were, she probably still wouldn't be alive now. She would have
been much less trouble, but also much less useful.
He was,
in fact, quite anxious to hear from the dear girl. The Mu)(U had not
communicated for a very long time. The willful child was probably just trying
to keep her dear guardian in the dark. He was greatly pleased at how quickly
Ikwaskwan had taken control of the situation, his mercenaries now patriotically
serving as Federation peacekeepers, traveling to the farflung, non-Federation
worlds that had been harboring the Linyaari renegades. These staunch uniformed
troops let the non-Federation worlds know that continuing to aid and abet the
Linyaari would sadly lead to a show of force on behalf of the Federation, which
could not allow such people to just go running out of its jurisdiction after
committing the interesting array of offenses Ikwaskwan and the others had
dreamed up. As Ganoosh had suspected, the worlds frequented by Linyaari were as
staid and peaceful and law-abiding as the unicorn girl's visitors had claimed
their own world was.
Ganoosh
considered it a great pity that the Khieevi Ikwaskwan's men had helped defeat
had no known allies or common language or communication with any other race. He
felt that such ferocity as they were known to exhibit could be of value to his
enterprises.
The com
unit sent forth a blast of the static that it was patented not to emit and then
Kisla's voice preceded her indistinct image on the comscreen. "Oh, Uncle
Edacki, we have failed! Daddy is furious with me, I'm afraid, and says I am not
fit to command a starship. Please please please don't be mad at me! It was the
crew's fault really. They were such sissies when I wanted to torture Becker.
They didn't even want me to kick him around or kill the nasty cat."
"Calm
down, sweetheart, and tell Uncle Edacki all about it now. You must remember the
crew are corporate employees, not information-gathering specialists. I should
have thought to send one along but I was trusting to your natural talent. I can
scarcely believe you got your hands on the man and did not find the place from
which the horns came or secure any more of them."
"Oh,
I found it, all right. At least, I found the place he got the first ones from.
But there weren't any more and there are only a dozen or so in his sack."
"I
have a hunch he is holding out on you, darling girl. Do ask him again
nicely."
"I
ca-a-a-n't," she wailed miserably. "He got away? "
"No
I sort of, you know ..." She made an approximation of the sound of a laser
burning through flesh. She did it very well, and it was a difficult and
unpleasant noise to reproduce.
"Did
you let your enthusiasm get away with you before you investigated thoroughly,
Kisia Manjari?" Ganoosh asked her sternly.
"Nooo!
Really, Uncle! We checked his computers and according to them it was the right
place. But after I zapped him, these little explosions started going off
everywhere and the MQcD was about to be hit so we took off and left him. We can
always go back if you want us to, and take his ship and check the computers
again."
"No,
no, my dear, that would most likely be unproductive. I should have known
persons such as the late Mr. Becker would have no truly valuable finds to share
with us, no matter how prettily you asked."
"You're
not cross, are you. Uncle? Perhaps you could send me to the school, you know,
where your information extraction specialists learn their trade. I know I can
very helpful in this work if you'll just give me another chance."
"Oh,
precious, don't fret your little head about it. Of course I'm not cross with
you. You did get more horns. All the horns Mr. Becker had. And I have no doubt
but what, if a school for information extraction specialists existed, you
would, except for that little tendency toward impatience of yours, be at the
head of the class in no time. In fact, with your natural talent, I'm sure you
could be an instructor."
He saw
her well enough now to discern that she was blushing with pleasure. Positive
reinforcement worked well with this girl.
"I
have so much faith in you, in fact, that I want you and the Mu)a^ to undertake
a new mission."
"Oh,
goody! What is it? Do I get to extract information?"
"Certainly,
my darling girl, and from a wealthy and pampered pair of newlyweds, one of whom
is a very close personal friend of your own close personal enemy . . ."
"Which
one?" she asked eagerly and he could see her taking inventory of people
she knew of who filled his description. "Oh, Uncle, you don't mean that
wily old sheik, do you?"
"Now
who is wily? You figured that out immediately. Bright girl. Good girl. Yes, I'm
afraid the stupid Yasmin allowed herself to be found. To buy her own head she
betrayed the tail I had on her. I expected no better, to tell you the truth.
However, Harakamian's ship the Shahrazad has just left the Rushiman orbit.
Fortunately, Yasmin apparently did not feel it necessary to tell her captors
about the secondary monitoring devices she placed aboard the ship. We are still
able to get a fix on the Shahrazad without difficulty."
"Can
I kill Yasmin for you when we get back?" Kisia asked. "She shouldn't
have tattled on our surveillance ship."
"I'll
think about it. Patience, remember, darling. Yasmin has her limitations but she
may still prove useful if I can retrieve her from the settlers-preferably after
she's done a bit of hard penal labor to remind her who her friends are. No, I
want you to follow, properly cloaked and shielded, until such time as you can
board the Shahrazad and take the Harakamians prisoner. At that time you may use
any methods you wish to determine the course Hafiz is employing to reach the
unicorn girl's home world."
Kisia
was beaming. "Uncle Edacki, you are the but. I'll find out for you at
once!"
"Make
it so, sweetie. And Kisia? Lovie?"
"Yes,
Uncle?" Her impatience was now again evident, along with a certain
defensiveness, like a dog who was afraid its treat would be snatched back.
"You're
not to go there once you find out. Just relay the information and detain the
Harakamians until I give you further orders."
"Awww,
Uncle!" "Kisia!" he said warningly.
"Oh,
all right. May I hurt them while I detain them? Even if I can get the
information some other -way?"
"There
will be sufficient opportunity for that, dear heart, once we have the
information you are after. Hafiz Harakamian has many secrets and I'm sure you
will enjoy cajoling him to confide in you once I tell you what it is I wish to
know. But that can wait. Now, scoot! You've a job to do. Commander Kisia!"
"Yes,
Sir," she said, blew him a kiss, and the screen went dark.
Some
aspects of Ganoosh's plans were going even better than he could have hoped.
His
teams had found an entire chain of planets destroyed by the Khieevi. While the
planets themselves were depressingly without commercial value, one of them had
a serviceable moon. With the help of biosphere-type prefab experimental
stations, it was soon able to support sufficient personnel for his purposes.
Ganoosh installed his teams of scientists and security forces. The former were
told what to look for and the latter were told where to find subjects. Nothing
could be simpler.
General
Ikwaskwan reported back to him via remote relay, and the reports were
enormously satisfying to both Ganoosh and the general.
One by
one, the Linyaari trade partners were being identified -occasionally by the
Linyaari taken into custody, and more often by the trading partners themselves.
A few of the trading partners had proved awkward, but forceful persuasion
generally was all it took to sway them into surrendering their Linyaari guests,
and the location of any trading partners they knew about. Two large, secure
wards were currently filled with the white, single-horned humanoids. If things
went well, there would soon be more. More horns and more likelihood of breaking
one of the Linyaari and finding the location of their home world.
When
the most recent arrivals were herded into the biosphere, General Ikwaskwan was
in residence, listening to the complaints of the scientists. These
unimaginative men claimed that they had all of these subjects, but unless the
subjects could be observed doing whatever it was they supposedly did, the
scientists would be unable to proceed. Linyaari were extremely stubborn, for a
peaceful people. They seemed to be able to communicate without words, leaving
the scientists continually feeling as if they were being discussed, even though
the Linyaari never spoke in their presence, not even to complain, once they
realized what the scientists wanted.
"Sedate
them," Ikwaskwan said. "Put them in cold sleep until you need them. I
don't care."
"I
thought so!" a loud, nasal, feminine Linyaari voice rang through the
sphere. "General Ikwaskwan! Are these your people? There has been some
mistake. You know who I am. Please tell them to release me and my crew and our
people at once."
Ikwaskwan
didn't know the lady in question at first. For a heart-stopping moment, he
thought he had actually captured Harakamian's niece, Acorna. But no, there was
somethingolder, about this woman. "Madam, you have the advantage of
me," he said, with a mocking, courtly bow.
"I'll
refresh your memory then," she said, dragging her captors nearer to him.
He signaled for them to let her go. "I am VL)e()haanye ferliii Neeva of
the Linyaari people of narhiiVhiliinyar. I demand to know the meaning of this
outrageous imprisonment of myself and my people. The trumped-up charges your
people used to abduct us are so patently ridiculous, I'm amazed you were able
to take us without a formal protest from our hosts."
"Your
hosts stood to gain a great deal by the transaction, madam, if you know what I
mean," Ikwaskwan said. "Besides, we were able to convince them that
while you may be wellbehaved in your own sector, you were definitely a
criminally disruptive influence in ours. You are to be congratulated on finding
so many supremely stodgy allies."
"Neeva,
save your breath," said another of the newcomers just as loudly, as if she
thought they were all deaf. "There's been no mistake. Obviously he is no
longer an ally."
"Very
astute, dear lady. I put my superb mercenary forces at the service of the
highest bidder. As you see, the highest bidder has changed since our last
meeting."
(Neeva!
Is it really you? Oh, beloved lifemate, how I have longed to see you, but not
here and now.)
Ikwaskwan
was rather amused to see the fight go out of Neeva as her attention was drawn
to the others of her kind in the biosphere. He hoped what was said but so far
unproven about this race was accurate. Otherwise they were a waste of good air
and food, as far as he was concerned.
He
shrugged and left them to the scientists. He was ready to return to his own
compound for a time and reunite with Nadhari. He had some rather splendid plans
that would make good use of her. He planned to put her at the service of
Ganoosh, whether or not she was willing.
The
titillating but distracting struggle for power between them would be over for
the moment, if he did so, but it would be delicious to break her time and time
again. Of course, the real point was to see how thoroughly these supposedly
miracleworking Linyaari could put her back together again. She would never
forgive him, of course, but that was part of the fun of it. The joy in
conquering a woman was in playing the last trick and this, surely, would be the
best trick anyone had ever played on Nadhari. Just to be sure he would be the
one doing the taking, not the other way around, he brought along a company of
the best troops he had who had not been trained by her.
When
the remaining communications officer buzzed the cornlink in her room to tell
Nadhari she was being hailed, she asked, "The general, I presume?"
"As
a matter of fact, ma'am, no," the officer said. "This is another
party. They've been cleared to speak to you, with your permission."
"You
have it," she said abruptly. She hadn't spoken to anyone outside the
station since the day Ganoosh called Ikky. Ikky had pretended nothing was
happening, and Nadhari, aware of her precarious position, had gone along with
the pretense, while keeping her senses tuned for an opportunity to turn the
tables, escape, or at least get a message through to let the Kendoros know of
the alliance.
Fortunately,
she hadn't needed to maintain appearances for long before Ikky and most of his
troops departed.
She
switched on the comlink. "Colonel Kando?" The halting question came
from a young Starfarer girl she recognized from the Khieevi invasion of
Rushima.
"Yes?"
"We
would like to retain your services as a combat instructor, please," the
girl said.
Nadhari
watched a figure move into the comscreen. When the face appeared, she saw with
relief that it belonged to Pal Kendoro.
She
knew she was being monitored and tried to figure out what she could say to tip
them off to her situation.
"Hello,
Pal, long time no see. Are you running a day care facility these days?"
she asked.
"You
know better than that, Nadhari," Pal said. "Look, we've come to try
to recruit your help, and the general's if he's available. We would like to
dock and speak with you face to face, if possible."
"I
don't think that's a good idea. Pal. I'm not at liberty to receive guests right
now and the general isn't here."
"Be
that as it may, we've come all this way to talk to you. We request permission
to dock. We have reason to believe there's a threat to Acorna and her people.
House Harakamian has authorized us to retain your services and the gen "
"This
isn't a good time to talk about it, Pal," Nadhari said. "The general
already knows "
Her
transmission was suddenly interrupted by the smooth and friendly voice of
Sergeant Erikson. "Permission to land granted. Haven. Just come on in and
set 'er down. We have a lot of vacancies right now."
Damn!
How could she warn them off now?
She was
both pleased and surprised to find that her door irised open to her touch as
usual, so she had not been confined to quarters. There was a trap in this
situation somewhere. She knew it, and if she could keep the Haven from falling
into it, she had to try. She sprinted for the docking bay.
The
canopy was open and the Haven was already landing before she could pull on her
pressure suit and gravity boots. She waved at them to go back as she stood in
the transparent viewport between the air lock and the open landing bay, but of
course they didn't understand. They thought she was greeting them. Damn. If
she'd had a rock she'd have thrown it. The Haven set down as trustingly as a
child settling onto its mother s lap.
Immediately
afterward, as if by magic, Ikwaskwan's flagship suddenly appeared above the
bay. It had been cloaked, she realized. Lurking. It probably picked up the
Haven's signal from some distance away. Ikky apparently felt he had some
business with the Haven, because Erikson would never have welcomed them without
orders to do so.
What
was the general playing at now?
The
docking bay boasted a huge comscreen with loudspeakers and Ikky's face appeared
before them. Nadhari pulled on her helmet and stepped out into the bay. Despite
the bulkiness of her suit, she felt naked without a side arm.
The big
face on the comscreen looked down at her as if she were a bacteria under a
microscope. "Nadhari, you didn't tell me you were expecting visitors or
we'd have tried to make it home sooner. This is my lucky day! I get to see you
again and also those plucky Starfarer kids."
Plucky?
Oh, God, if he was being that phony the kids were done for, too. But if he was keeping
up pretenses, she had one other own to try. The mike in her helmet worked.
"It was unexpected. They came on behalf of House Harakamian to retain our
services. Thye've brought us. General, a substantial offer," she said,
almost hopeful that it would work. Money was Ikky's native language. Maybe
House Harakamian could buy him off?
But as
the flagship came to rest beside the Haven and the dome of the docking bay
closed over them, a weapon she had not been aware of was deployed by Ikky from
the safety of his ship. The air in the bay turned oddly greenish and a strong
noxious-smelling mist soon filled the interior of the docking facility.
She was
staring at it in horrified fascination when Erikson and five other mercenaries
entered the lock. She was suited up, and clumsy. They wore simple gas masks and
were armed. She tore the mask off one of them and broke Erikson's leg, but they
didn't fire on her. Instead, three of them subdued her while the others
snatched her helmet off before raising their weapons. When the stun bolts hit
her, the last thing she saw before the world faded to black was Erikson's
satisfied smile.
She was
not conscious when the Haven was boarded, after the hatch had been forced open
by masked troops to allow the ship to fill with gas. One by one the Starfarers
were carried out of their own ship and aboard the general's, while Nadhari
herself was tenderly scooped up by Ikwaskwan and later just as tenderly chained
to his berth aboard the flagship. She did not feel this either. The flagship,
full of this unexpected human bounty, began the voyage back to the experimental
station, leaving the Haven, standing alone in the docking bay, forlorn and
seemingly empty.
Roadkill!"
Becker cried, and the cat jumped back as if scalded. But there was nothing
wrong with the critter. Not a thing. "Hey, buddy, I got hit and from what
I could see, you got hit. Why don't we hurt? If we already died and went to
heaven, it's a lot darker than advertised up here."
"Riidkiii?"
a voice asked. It was not the cat's voice. The cat was washing vigorously,
taking inventory of all of his parts. A gray, shambling, lumpish form appeared,
hovering over Becker. The face was long and the forehead had a caved-in look to
it. Matted, filthy hair surrounded it. The figure was pointing to the cat.
"No,
man. Roadkill. Road. Kill. It's a joke."
"Riid.
Kiiyi." The figure tried hard, but his tongue couldn't seem to cut
through.
"Yeah,
see, the joke is from back before flitters, when we all traveled in wheeled
conveyances which rolled on the ground along paved stretches on planetary
surfaces called roads. Critters like RK here-okay, Riid Kiiyi, if you
insist-critters like him would wander out on the road and get squashed. Like he
almost did."
The
figure stroked RKs back and the cat rose up to meet the clubbed-looking hand.
Becker had thought something was wrong with the hand before, and now he saw
that each finger lacked a knuckle, and the hand didn't have enough fingers. The
guy's feet were screwed up, too. They looked more like a goat's feet-cloven
hooves-than like a person's feet.
"Riid
Kiiyi Khieevi?" inquired the figure-a male, Becker decided, from the
overall stance and bearing of the creature.
"No,
Riid-Roadkill isn't whatever you said. Roadkill is a cat. A Makahomian Temple
Cat, to be precise. -Makahomian Temple Cats are bred from ancient Makahomian
Cat God stock to be defenders of the temples of-ah-Makahoma. They are very
fierce fighters. I guess RK kinda thinks of the Condor as his temple now and
me-I must be the pope at least! That's how come the little guy waded into
Kisla's gang, even when he could have got away. Nice kitty," he said, and
petted RK, who growled a little.
That
was when Becker noticed that the funny looking guy had a little boxy device he
had positioned between himself and Becker. Becker touched it. "What's
this?"
The
other guy pointed to Beckers mouth and made a shadow duck quacking in the
flickering light cast on the wall by the fire burning in the-cave? It had to be
a cave they were in. When had the fire been lit? Becker didn't remember a fire.
Maybe he wasn't yet one hundred percent recovered. Must be still lapsing in and
out of consciousness.
So-Beckers
mouth, quacking-speaking maybe-then the man made a sweeping motion with both
hands that clearly meant exchange-and pointed to his own mouth.
"Linyaari."
"That
your name? Linyaari? I'm Becker. Me. Becker," he said, feeling like the
lead character in one of those ancient icons of classic film, Tarzan. He pointed
to himself. "Becker." To the cat, who rose up again, to allow himself
to be stroked, "Roadkill." Back to himself: "Becker." He
pointed to the man again and asked, "Linyaari?"
The man
made a sweeping motion with both hands and arms to indicate either the whole
cave or possibly the whole planet. "Linyaari." Then pointed to
himself. "Aari."
"Art?
You're Art! Hi, Art. Jonas Becker. Much obliged for the rescue."
"Muk
oblii!" Aari responded. "Hit, Biickir." The filth on his face
ran with wet streaks, glistening in the firelight. "Hit, Riid.
Kiiyi." The cat climbed onto Aari's folded legs and began to purr.
Over
time, Becker wasn't sure how much time exactly, Aari's grasp of Standard
improved. Aari encouraged Becker to talk and used different words as Becker
brought them up. The little translator didn't give Becker much of a grasp of
Linyaari, which was clearly the language and race that Aari belonged to, and
the race that had once occupied this planet.
The
coin dropped after Becker had more sleep under his belt. This planet was the
one with the horns. The horns that had been mistaken for a very personal horn
belonging to the Lady Acorna, the unicorn girl. That must be her race.
Linyaari. The same as this guy.
Except
this guy didn't have a unicorn horn. Maybe only the girls did? Nah-quite
unwillingly, Becker looked more closely at the injury to Aari's forehead. Then
he threw up what was left of the last handful of cat food. Oh, great, pretty
soon he'd be hacking up hairballs, too.
But
what he had seen, when he looked, was that there was a place where Aari
probably had had a horn. Now it was a deep, partially scarred-over crater that
gave the guy the appearance of having a crushed forehead.
Aari
saw him looking and pulled the matted hair down over the wound as far as he
could, shaking his head and weeping again.
"Aari,
buddy, what happened here? What happened to you?
"Khieevi,"
he said, and then made motions where his horn should have been that made Becker
want to vomit again, only there was nothing there to vomit, just as there was
nothing more on Aari's forehead for anyone to torture him with.
"How
in the hell did you get away? How did you survive?" Becker asked.
"Vhiliinyar,"
was the only Linyaari word Becker heard and then, the funny thing was, he sort
of understood the rest of what had happened without actually being aware of
anything Aari was saying. At first he thought that the universal translator
gadget was actually working both ways, and then something made him realize that
he and Aari were reading each other's minds-and a third mind as well.
RK very
carefully sunk a single claw into Becker's leg and Becker knew beyond a shadow
of a doubt that RK could hear and understand the thoughts of both of them and
could have transmitted thoughts, too, if he'd wanted to. The cat just preferred
body language. As far as he could see, RK wanted Becker to try to learn Cat. It
was beneath a cat's dignity to speak human Standard, Becker figured. Then it
hit him.
"Hey,
you're telepathic! And so are we, when we're with you!
Aari
shook his head and picked up one of the horns, then made a sweeping motion with
his hands, and an exchanging motion between his head, Becker's and RK's. Then
he pointed to his own forehead, made a negative swipe with his hand, and hung
his head.
"So
we understand each other telepathically because of the horns, huh?" Becker
asked.
Aari
sighed deeply, shook his head to indicate that wasn't the case, shrugged, and
looked perplexed. RK sunk his claw into Becker's leg again and fixed him with
another stare, which to Becker's somewhat rattled brain seemed to say that RK
had been reading his mind all along; he just didn't much care what Becker
thought. Becker guessed he was reading the cat because-well, he had always read
the cat, really, but now he had nothing better to do so he noticed.
Aari
smiled a little, and Becker could tell the Linyaari was reading him. Aari
projected a few careful images that showed him with his horn, communing
wordlessly with other people that looked just like him. So, he had been
telepathic when he had his own horn. Fair enough.
Becker
didn't ask again what had happened to the guy's horn but Aari grimly showed
them how it had been when the Khieevi were about to finish him off and, having
broken his body, excised his horn in a particularly slow and painful way. He
backtracked to show them how he had been captured. Aari had stayed behind
during the Khieevi invasion to help his brother, who had been stuck in this
cave, badly injured, too far away from the spaceport for them to get help from
the ships departing with all of their people during the great evacuation. Aari
had been unable to reach him in time to heal him.
The
Khieevi had captured Aari when he was out gathering rope for the rescue, and
had begun long, long tortures of their captive, all the time probing, probing,
as if trying to feast on his grief. They had captured some of the translator
boxes from previous diplomatic missions-LAANYE, Aari called them-and used them
to communicate with him, to interrogate him, though they surely learned little
that could be of help to them. What he knew that they might have wished to
know, he never told.
Aari
did not speak of his brother, or of the new planet his people had found. The
foremost thoughts in his mind were grief. His brother would be dead from his
wounds by now, so he grieved, and grieved more as the Khieevi destroyed him,
along with his planet. He grieved for the loss of his people, for the
simultaneous destruction of his own body and the body of his home world,
grieved at the pain, and the memories of better times. And all the time the
Khieevi stood by jeering and gloating over their methodical ravaging of the
beauty and life force of a planet and one of its children, the only one within
their grasp.
"Did
they kill all those other people, too?" Becker wanted to know. "I
found all those horns."
"No,"
Aari said, and Becker felt triumph in the thought as Aari carried a light to
the back of the cave. It was filled with horns and bones, carefully arranged
into individual skeletons whenever possible. "These are the bones of my
Ancestors. When you landed the first time, you discovered our graveyard. The
residual power of the horns kept that area living when the rest of the world was
destroyed. The Khieevi never knew of this sacred place, and I did not tell
them. They found me some distance from it.
"When
the instability they caused in Vhiliinyar by their destruction caused the
planet to drive them from its face, leaving me behind for dead, I dragged
myself back here, and slept among the horns. Most of my wounds were healed-you
cannot imagine the shape I was in before then. I did not resemble anything
Linyaari. But the Khieevi had done something to me that prevented the horns from
truly healing me, though nothing could block the process completely.
"And
so-" His eyes rolled slightly up, to where his horn had been. "And so
even the healing power of the horns did not make me truly whole again, for
among the Linyaari healing rests not only in the horn but in the guiding
intelligence and empathy of the healer. After the Khieevi tortured me, I was
incapable of participating in my healing. The horn merely knit together that
which was broken. Except for my own horn. All of the horns of our dead could
not give me back my own horn.
"Still,
the healing was enough that I could gather a few of the horns that lay on top
of the ground and return to the cave. But the Khieevi had held me a long time
and my brother had lain injured for a long time, waiting for my return to
rescue and heal him. He was with the Ancestors, beyond the power of the horns
to heal."
"But
even without your horn, you can still read minds and everything, right? 'Cause
you were telepathic before and-"
"The
horns are like-um-things on the heads of insects?" Aari put his hands up
to make antennae and Becker supplied the word. "They transmit our thoughts
but the ability is in the Linyaari. Without my own horn, I cannot make myself
heard. I do not know how. But surrounded by so many, many horns, I have many
antennae. You have antennae, too, and Riid Kiiyi."
"I
get it. I think," Becker said. "So, tell me, why didn't you let me
know you were here when I came the first time?" Becker said. "I would
have helped you. I could have taken you to your people at their new
place."
"You
were robbing graves," Aari said with a little shrug. "I thought you
might be Khieevi of another sort. Besides, I feel shame-at my own appearance. I
do not wish to see my people again-well, more precisely, I do not wish for them
to see me as I am now. They will shudder to look upon me. But I could not let
the bones of our Ancestors be defiled any more. So when you left, I disinterred
the Ancestors, and brought them here to a new place."
"That's
why there weren't any horns there. Well, look, Aari, it's a good thing you did
that because that gal you saw kicking the shit out of me? She has some use for
the horns, and I can almost guarantee you it isn't a happy one. Good thing your
home world here decided to pop off a few explosions "
Aari
pointed to himself again.
"You
did that?" Becker asked. "How?"
Aari
walked to the back of the cave and picked up something that was obviously a
very nasty weapon. He pointed to it, said, "Khieevi," and made a booming
sound, then set it back down.
"Is
there anything to eat around here, by the way?"
"Oh,
of course. Excuse my rudeness." Aari bent down, there was a tearing sound,
and he returned with a big handful of grass.
RK put
it better than Becker could have. He looked at the grass and meowed piteously.
Aari
looked crestfallen and again Becker caught an impression of overwhelming shame.
"You
will starve because I cannot feed you that which you need to sustain life. Riid
Kiiyi will starve also," Aari said.
"Not
if we can help it. We just have to find a way to get back into the Condor.
Kisla-baby tap-danced on my remote."
The
three of them returned to the former graveyard. The grass was dying already,
turning brown and brittle without the power of the horns. Becker found the
pieces of his remote where Kisia had left it. It was smashed so badly even he
couldn't fix it.
They
tried a couple of horns but the horns didn't seem to work on electronics.
However, Becker did have some emergency backups. Not easy ones, not convenient
ones, but he had them.
By
standing on Aari's shoulders, he was able to grasp a tail fin and haul himself
to within reaching distance of a particular area near the hatch. Touching that,
he whistled the bar of "Dixie" that was the opening code. An encoder
implanted inside the hull translated his whistle into electronic code. Then all
he had to do was slide back down the tail fin and drop to the ground before the
robolift descended on his head.
He and
RK climbed aboard and chowed down. He grabbed the spare remote he had stashed
in the ventilation duct, and then he and RK returned to the surface with a bag
of freezedried veggies for Aari.
The
Linyaari was busy hauling loads of bones to the Condor.
"I
must set aside my shame now and ask you to take me to narhii-Vhiliinyar, the
new home of my people. I must take the remains of our forebears with me. This
world has become unsafe even for the dead."
For
Markel, the Haven's ventilation system was home sweet home. He had hidden in it
and made his way around the ship after the Palomellese bandits had killed his
father.
Trained
in warfare or not, the Starfarers did have one advantage over the Red
Bracelets, and that was that they knew their ship. When it became clear they
were caught in a trap, Markel had naturally suggested the ventilation system as
a hiding place for the younger ones and the ships "guests." He,
Johnny Greene, and Khetala, along with the Reamer family and Starfarers under
the age of five, would hide in the ducts from Decks A to D, which could be
blocked off from the rest of the ship and supplied with their own oxygen.
Of them
all, only Markel realized that this section was also where many of the bandits
had been gassed to death while trying to pursue him, Acorna, Calum Baird, and
Dr. Hoa after Markel had rescued Acorna. As he lay flat in the duct, not
speaking, hardly breathing, with perhaps a hundred other bodies lying in the
same fashion down the length of the ducts, he thought he could still smell the
lingering pong of the poison gas they had used. But, of course, that was
ridiculous. It had been many months since the Palomellese had been overwhelmed,
gassed, or spaced.
He
waited for the cries of his shipmates below-for 'Ziana and Pal to shout orders,
a surrender, anything. Their faces had appeared on the comscreen and so his
friends could not be hidden from any possible attackers, lest their enemies
realize they were not dealing with all of the Starfarers. But he heard very
little from below-no screams, no shouts, just sighs and slight shuffling
sounds, before the boots of the enemy tramped across the Haven's decks and
retreated again, even more heavily.
The bay
vibrated with the noise of other ships taking off. And still no noise from
below.
Markel
had positioned himself strategically above the supply lockers, a bit separated
from the others so that if he was discovered, it might be presumed he was
alone. Or if the others were discovered, he might not be, and would be able to
help them escape.
Johnny
Greene was above his duty station, the computation and navigation room.
Khetala, Reamer, and some of the more mature children were placed among the
younger children, to keep them quiet. Not that there were many among the very
young who couldn't fight and think extremely well under pressure. But the
little kids were also the smallest and the most easily captured.
Markel
took a deep breath and lifted the seal that was also the entrance to the room
below. The acrid stench of some kind of gas caused his eyes to water and made
him feel sleepy. He managed to wrestle the seal closed, and let his drowsiness
pass while he thought about what to do next.
He
didn't know what kind of gas it was, though judging from his own reaction, it
was supposed to knock people out, if not kill them. There were gas masks in the
lockers. If he could hold his breath until he could access one of the masks and
put it on, then he could get masks for the others. He could also check out the
status of their shipmates and see what damage was done to the ship.
He
would have liked to have communicated this plan to Johnny but the distance was
great and time was short. Before they'd hidden, they had all agreed they would
wait until they heard from him, or at least send someone to check on his
position before anyone else acted. He was the acknowledged expert vent rat of
the crew. Admiral of the vent rats, even.
The
vent rat admiral held his breath and opened the seal again. Quickly, he dropped
down, letting the seal close behind him as he slipped out so it would not allow
much of the gas into the system where his shipmates hid.
The
maneuver was tricky and cost him precious seconds. The greenish gas draped the
room heavily but Markel held his breath and lay on his stomach, crawling for
one of the lower lockers. The air was always better close to the floor, in case
he had to breathe before he got to the lockers. He figured he was going to have
to. He couldn't see the lockers from here. The vent opened into the middle of
the room and the lockers were along the sides.
Then
his hand, outstretched to help him swim-crawl through the miasma, touched
something soft and fleshy-warm. He heaved himself up so his eyes were level
with his hand. Annella! Annella Carter lay there, knocked out by the gas but
still breathing, though very shallowly. And as he drew closer, wondering how on
earth he would manage to hold his breath one more second, he saw that she held
a gas mask in her outstretched hand. Her other hand, holding two more masks, lay
near an open locker door. He knew at once that she had grabbed the masks to get
them to him and the others in the ventilation system, but had already breathed
too much gas. It had knocked her out before she could get her own mask on.
He
fitted a mask over his face, then put one on her. After he got masks to Johnny
and some of the others, they could clear the ship of this gas and work to wake
her up, if the mask didn't do the trick. But right now he had to try to save
the others. Carrying as many masks as he could hold, he ducked out into the
passage and down the next one which led to the computation/navigation center.
He saw
no more bodies, living or dead. The door to the locker area was concealed
behind some pipes, so the enemy had missed it-and Annella-when they boarded. He
wished he knew what had gone on while they were in hiding. Really, he'd have to
talk to Johnny about rigging the vents with visual surveillance equipment in
the future. Maybe bunks and hot and cold running water and battery powered
lights, too. He grinned at his own wild ideas.
Tapping
on the vent, he waited until it was pulled open and shoved a mask up at Johnny,
who took it, then reached back for the other masks. The vent closed
again-Markel assumed everybody was masking up. Johnny and other masked
shipmates finally began dropping through the ceiling. Markel directed them to
the lockers, to gather more masks for their remaining shipmates in the vents.
All of
this was done in eerie green silence. The only sounds on the ship were clanking
chain sounds of opening and closing locks, seals, and hatches, and the soft
sound of Markel s shipmates' phantomlike movements-or maybe elflike movements,
in the case of some of the smaller kids.
Market
himself made for the main hatch, warily, laser cannon in hand, alert for any
intruders who had remained behind. But none had. Nor had they left behind any
of his other friends. The gas was even thicker outside the ship than it was
inside. He closed the hatch behind him and went to search for the ventilation
control of the docking bay. He didn't locate it, but he did find the
pressurized transparent control shed. This was not full of the gas. Once
inside, he was able to remove his mask as he studied the controls, finding by
trial and error the panel that opened the overhead portal that allowed ships to
take off and to dock.
This he
opened. The green gas was sucked into the vaccuum of space. When all tinge of
green was gone, he closed the portal once more and adjusted the oxygen,
pressurization, and ventilation fans. The air in the bay was soon breathable.
He returned to the ship, opened the hatch, and allowed the bays vented fans to
pull the gas from the interior of the Haven. Johnny Greene called softly from
the open hatch. "Rocky used the healing horn to help Annella. She'll be
grand now."
"Fine.
Nobody's tried to kill me for at least ten minutes. I don't think much of
anybody's left here."
"Good.
Then maybe we should take advantage of that hospitality the general
offered."
With
Johnny's help, Markel raided the airlock adjoining the bay, and two of the
adjacent, unattended rooms. With the general and his troops gone, the place was
virtually deserted. Johnny found station security headquarters, and took out
the guard. There was only one. He had been watching reruns of the Haven's,
capture. For a few mesmerizing moments, Johnny and Markel stood over the body
of their unconscious captive and watched first Nadhari Kando, then their
shipmates, being gassed and dragged or carried aboard the general's flagship,
now painted to look like a Federation Forces vessel. So that's what those
footsteps had meant. Thoroughly angry now, Markel and company had disabled the
monitors and raided the unattended areas of the base. They took all the weapons
and food they could find, and-as an afterthought on Johnnys part-any uniforms
they found lying around. They also removed all of the pressure suits from the
lock. Johnny downloaded a copy of the flagship's course from the computer in
the security room. The security room guard was still unconscious, so they tied
him up and took him along.
It had
taken them three trips back and forth to the Haven and about forty-five minutes
to accomplish all this, before Markel, loaded with the last of the booty,
returned to the Haven. Johnny, wearing one of the purloined pressure suits,
opened the canopy and boarded the Haven through the air lock. Once they were
well away from the generals compound, Johnny adjusted their course to follow
that of the general's flagship.
Becker
had never felt awe for anyone except his dad in his whole life until he met
Aari, but his respect for the maimed Linyaari grew on the journey from the old
Linyaari home to the new one. Aari knew exactly how to get there. In spite of
having endured tortures that would drive anyone else insane, he had kept the
memory of the Linyaari escape route, drummed into him since boyhood, not only
intact, but also secret from the Khieevi. He tidied up the Condor, which was,
thanks to Kisia Manjari, almost vacant. Becker still had the money she'd paid
him back on Kezdet, money that had nearly emptied his ship. Come to think of
it, Becker was almost willing to bet Kisia's credits were somehow fraudulent.
He didn't trust anything about that venomous little psycho.
After
cleaning the holds, Aari had reverently placed each Linyaari skeleton, from the
most recent one of his brother, to the most ancient fragments, side by side
throughout the ship. Becker helped him until Aari saw the android. Both men
realized just how useful that android could be in the current situation. The
horn would not work on its electronics, which Becker had already mostly
repaired, but did a great job on shredded plastiskin. Soon the reprogrammed,
aesthetically pleasing, and now very helpful KEN640 was back in business as
official assistant keeper of the Condor's charnel holds. With KEN640 s help,
every skeleton was loaded aboard the Condor's holds. Aari slept there every
night among the bones of his ancestors.
Away
from those holds, Aari had a tougher time talking to Becker. He was trying hard
to pick up Standard and Becker was trying hard to pick up Linyaari, and
Roadkill wasn't interested in speaking anything except Cat. Which meant that
Aari and Becker indulged in a lot of communication through body language and
charades. But that was more of an exchange than Becker usually had with the
cat. Becker was enjoying the trip and the company.
RK
apparently felt the same way. He showed Aari the sort of kitty cat affection he
had not thus far deemed appropriate to bestow upon Becker. He sat on Aari's lap
and took to sleeping beside him in the Linyaari graveyard. The KEN unit came in
handy for changing the litter box. He was not the brainiest droid in the
universe, but he was rehabilitated, thanks to Becker's new programs, and no
longer said things like, "Do you wish me to tear his arm from his socket
now, or would you prefer I punch out one eye in a painful and maiming, yet not
lifethreatening, manner, Lady Kisia?" It had taken Aari and Becker both a
lot more work to get KEN640 over some of these socially unacceptable
utterances. These guys might be computers on feet and have opposable thumbs,
but the computer was only there to operate the feet and thumbs in a useful way.
KEN'S processor was an idiot compared to, say, the ship's computer.
KEN was
also somebody who could play gin rummy with Becker when Aari was feeling
antisocial, which happened fairly often. It didn't take a rocket scientist to
figure out why a guy who'd been left behind by his people, who felt he'd failed
to take care of his brother who died while the guy himself was being slowly
tortured to death by alien invaders who were also destroying his home world-why
a guy like that might need a little down time once in a while. And Becker was a
rocket scientist, albeit an idiosyncratically privately tutored and self-taught
one.
Aari
didn't spend all of his unsocial time in pity-party mode, however. His Standard
improved by leaps and bounds as he watched the store of ancient films and clips
stored in the ship's computer, as well as read the hard copy books.
"Did
you see this one, Joh?" he asked, pronouncing Becker's first name with a
sort of a whuff through his nostrils. Aari was brandishing the How to Care for
Your Kittycat book. Becker noticed that RK for once was not clinging to the
Linyaari like a fuzzy leech.
"Yeah.
Skip the part on interfering in a feline's sex life. I tried it and RK was not
amused. That cat on a bad fur day could give those Khieevi bugs a run for their
money."
Aari
looked puzzled and retreated to the now-cleared-of debris berth in the newly
organized crew's quarters to pursue the cat care trends of several hundred
years ago.
Becker
hardly recognized the Condor. The KEN unit had tidied up the ship so that things
were stored and catalogued and there was actually room to move around. Becker
wasn't at all sure he liked it. The other way had been sort of cozy.
After a
while he found that having two other-well, one and a half other-people on board
was distracting, so he had the KEN unit turn itself off between bouts of
housekeeping. And Aari was busy studying or brooding (or both) a lot of the
time, so that wasn't too much of a problem. Becker's real adjustment was that
RK was spending most of his time with Aari and Becker missed the onery feline.
He was
thinking that he had been a real sucker to think that because the cat tried to
rescue him from Kisia and her men that it meant the animal harbored any
affection for him. Why, he showed his fuzzy puny side more to Khetala on first
acquaintance, or to this Aari guy, than he ever did to Becker. As Becker was
thinking this, he felt a familiar pain in his thigh and looked down to see RK
sitting there, switching his tail back and forth, and looking expectantly up at
Becker.
As soon
as Becker paid attention, the cat sprang up to his shoulder, lay against his
neck and purred with a noise that rivaled that of the rustiest rattletrap
engine of an outmoded junker ship. "Aw, RK. I didn't know you cared."
RK
backed down and proceeded to rub his face all over Becker's, marking him in one
of the less objectionable ways the cat had of performing that task. And it
occurred to Becker that he really hadn't previously actually solicited the
cat's actual affection-theirs had been a more rough and ready relationship.
Man-to-man or cat-to-cat as it were, depending on the viewpoint. Of course
Roadkill loved him. Otherwise the cat would have found himself new quarters the
first time the Condor docked.
Becker
suddenly realized he was also thinking a lot like a cat and he looked at RK
suspiciously. The cat, whose fur was lightly coated with white dust from the
Linyaari boneyard, blinked back at him three times and intensified the purr.
Thereafter
on the journey, the cat spent a little more time on the bridge and after a
while so did Aari, asking Becker questions about the things he was learning and
trying out words on him, getting his accent corrected. Becker, in return, tried
to learn Linyaari words and phrases. The little box, a LAANYE in Linyaari, took
only a bit of tampering with on Becker's part, with the technical assistance of
Aari, to translate in both directions.
Meanwhile,
they came within shouting distance of narhiiVhiliinyar. "Shall I hail them
or will they be less freaked out if you do it?" Becker asked Aari.
"My accent isn't as good as it should be yet."
"I
will speak if only you will not turn on the visual projector," Aari said.
He had stayed with the bones for days on end the first time he got a look at
himself in Becker's shaving mirror. "I do not wish to frighten my
people."
He did
anyway.
Becker
got his first visual of a Linyaari female when the communications officer, a
white-skinned, white-haired girl with a pretty shiny spiraled horn growing out
of her forehead, said, "Please adjust your visual transmission. Condor. We
are not receiving you."
"This
is Aari of Clan Nyaarya, narhii-Vhiliinyar port," Aari repeated. "Our
visual projector is temporarily out of service. Request permission to
land."
There
was silence, while the communications officer presumably conferred with someone
else, and then her skeptical voice said, "Aari of Clan Nyaarya was lost to
us during the evacuation of Vhiliinyar prior to the Khieevi attack. Please
adjust your transmission and properly identify yourself."
Aari's
voice was tight as he said, "I have been imprisoned on Vhiliinyar by the
Khieevi but escaped them, and have been rescued by the captain and crew of the
Condor. I have recovered the bones of our forebears from the sacred cemetery,
to save them from plundering and bring them back to their children for
reinterment. Now please give us permission to land so that I may rejoin my
family."
"Really?'"The
communications officer forgot to use the official language and lapsed into
vernacular Linyaari. "You actually escaped the Khieevi after they captured
you? I'll have to apply for official permission but-oh, welcome home, Aari!
Everyone 'will be so happy to see you!"
By the
time she came back on screen, the Condor's fuel supply was running dangerously
low.
The
communications officer's face was closed again as she said, "Aari, the
ship may land long enough for you to meet a greeting committee who validate
your identity, but all nonLinyaari personnel aboard the vessel must remain
aboard and the vessel itself must depart immediately after you have been
identified."
"Tell
her we're out of fuel," Becker said.
"The
Condor will need to refuel," Aari said.
"Permission
denied," the communications officer said.
"Gimme
that thing," Becker said, and took the portable transmitter from Aari.
"Look, lady, I know your people have been through a lot," he said in
the best Linyaari he could muster. "Aari explained all that to me. But
he's been through whatever you people use for hell himself, and my crew and I
went through a lot to get him here. The least you could do is have the common
courtesy not to make us take off again without enough fuel to get to the next
stop."
Another
long silence before she returned to say, "Permission to land granted.
Prepare to be boarded upon docking."
The
Condor was forced to land in a field outside the regular port, as all of the
docking bays were hollowed into deep ovals, the wrong shape for the ship's
alien tail. Becker sent down the robolift. He was busy talking to Aari and
didn't notice RK scooting out down the emergency cat flap chute. The cat
depressed the exit mechanism himself and landed neatly on the deck of the lift,
thereby forming his own greeting committee.
Aboard
the Condor, Aari was letting Becker know that he was just as glad the
inspection committee was going to come aboard instead of the other way around.
He was seemingly as afraid to meet his people again as he had ever been of the
Khieevi.
Becker
turned on the outside visual and saw Roadkill being lowered with the robolift.
Four of the white unicorn people, three females and one male, and two brown
male ones plus one small female spotty one, stood below watching as the cat
joined them. The little spotted one clapped her hands but was held by one of
the white females, while another gently reached onto the lift to receive RK,
who jumped up to meet her. While the women were occupied, the white male and
the two brown ones climbed onto the lift. They did not look happy about it.
In the
middle of the night, Thariinye appeared in the flap of Grandam's pavilion,
insisting that Grandam, Acorna, and Maati all rise, dress for a long walk, and
hurry with him to viizaar's pavilion immediately.
When
they got there, VHzaar Liriili's eyes showed white all around the pupils, and
Acorna could smell her fear, strong and goatishly acrid.
Grandam
asked, "What in the name of the Ancestors is wrong?" None of them
asked why the problem couldn't wait until morning.
"An
alien ship is entering our atmosphere," Liriili told them. "It
refuses to transmit visuals, but the person who initially contacted us claims
to be Maati's brother Aari, who was missing at the time of the evacuation along
with Maati's other brother, Laarye. You know as well as I do, Grandam, that
it's absolutely inconceivable that anyone escaped the Khieevi or the
destruction of the planet."
Acorna
cleared her throat. "I escaped."
"What?"
Liriili asked and Acorna read her clearly to mean, "How dare you interrupt?"
"Everyone
presumed all were lost when my parents' ship exploded, but I escaped. Perhaps
Maati's brother did, too."
Maati,
who had never known her brother, glanced agitatedly from one of the adults to
the other, her sleepiness completely overcome by the excitement.
"I
believe it is a trick," Liriili said.
"How
can that be?" Grandam asked. "No one knows of Aari and Laarye except
a few of us."
Liriili
shook her head violently. "Everyone we have sent into space has
disappeared without so much as a hailing," she said. "I can't help
but believe they have come to harm. If they haven't actually fallen into the
hands of the Khieevi, then they've run afoul of some other race, one that seeks
to know us. Our people may have been interrogated for anything that would get
the captors past our defenses."
"Yes,"
said Grandam. "That may be true. But it may also be true that somehow Aari
has found his way home. Though I can't think how."
"In
an alien vessel with a very bad-tempered alien with an atrocious Linyaari
accent, according to Saari, the duty officer at the space port. Here is a tape
of the transmission."
She
played it for them.
"That's
a human!" Acorna said.
Liriili
glowered at her. "I thought that might be so. One of your people. Who is
it?"
"How
should I know?" Acorna asked. "It doesn't sound like any of my
friends."
"It
doesn't?" Liriili was surprised. Acorna was a little amused in spite of
herself. The viizaar sounded like the old joke that -went, "Hi, I'm
Mirajik. I'm from Mars." "Hi, I'm Sarah from Earth Prime."
"Earth Prime? Oh, say, I have a friend from there. Do you know John
Smith?" The vllzaar seemed incredulous that since Acorna knew some humans
they would not be the same ones currently on the "doorstep" of
narhiiVhiliinyar.
"No,"
Acorna said, trying to keep both the amusement and her own excitement out of
her voice. It would be good to hear Standard spoken again. "But if you
need an interpreter, I'll be glad to help in any way I can."
"Very
good of you, Khornya," Grandam said. "I'm sure that's why the viixaar
included you in this group. And I am here as the elder and Maati because if
this is indeed Aari in our midst, she should be there to greet her brother. And
Thariinye?" The last was a question aimed at Liriili.
"Thariinye
also speaks the tongue of Khornyas adopted people and can serve as a second
interpreter."
Acorna
made a noise of protest. What Liriili meant was that Thariinye was supposed to
report if she was translating truthfully or not.
"I
am keeping this party small," the viizaar continued. "A couple of the
other young men will accompany us but there is no need for everyone to know
about this until we have determined the nature of the intrusion. I have asked
my vice-vit.zaar to be prepared to evacuate the city in the event that we are
being invaded again, however. I can only hope we can prepare for our escape in
time."
"How
about the ships Khornya and I saw the other day, Liriili?" Thariinye
asked. "I am a qualified pilot. I could certainly fly any of them. And I
can organize a crew among the elders who have retired from active duty."
"I
hope you will not be called upon to try, but it is a noble thought,"
Liriili said.
"Before
we go running off in all directions, I think we'd better see what's coming our
'way," Grandam said sensibly. "There's no need to alarm the Ancestors
yet. Besides, even in an emergency, the Ancestors move at a stately pace."
"Yes,"
Thariinye agreed. "So stately a pace that a full invasion could wipe
everyone out before we arrived at the spaceport."
Liriili,
with a slight nod to acknowledge the jest-and that only because it came from
Thariinye, Acorna thought inclined her head in agreement and they set out, the
vllzaar, Grandam, Thariinye, Maati, and two young males, presumably as a
security presence.
Watching
the ship land, Acorna relaxed. The tail looked Federation, but that was a
Mythenan toxic waste chute if she ever saw one sticking out the bottom, and the
hull itself was composed of a strange patchwork of metals, not to mention the
somewhat eccentric structural design of the nose. Where the hatch should have
been was what looked like a pocket of some sort. As the ship landed, it caused
the ground to quake. The engine sounded as if it was about to fall to pieces.
(That is no battleship, Liriili,) she said with a smile, in thought-talk. She
was getting much better at it, fortunately, since verbalizations would have
been drowned out in the roar of the landing. (It is not any one sort of ship at
all. It looks like a junker to me.)
(The
alien aboard claims that it is out of fuel,) Liriili replied. (He demands that
we refuel it.)
(I'd
believe him,) Acorna said. (That vessel looks like it H needs all the help it
can get.)
(It
could be a trick,) Thariinye said. (To lull us into complacency.)
(It's
working for me,) Grandam said. (And-does no one else feel it? I have a definite
impression of a Linyaari aboard.)
(I felt
that, too,) Liriili said. (But there is something wrong about it. Something
terribly wrong.)
The
noise stopped and another series of sounds began, with first a thunk, then a
whoosh, and then, slowly, the hydraulic hum of a platform being lowered out of
the Mytherian toxic waste chute.
Suddenly,
Maati clapped her hands and pointed. "Oh, look!" she cried aloud.
"Look at the furry little alien! He must have come so far in that big old
ship! I'll bet he's hungry, as well as needing fuel." She ran over to a
patch of fairly healthy looking grass and pulled it up, along with some purple
flowers Acorna had learned were very tasty.
Tears
formed in Grandam's eyes and her voice choked a little as she said, "The
little alien reminds me of a pahaantiyir." Acorna caught a thought-picture
of a furry cat-like being.
"It
does, doesn't it?" Liriili asked, sounding teary herself. "I had the
dearest little pahaantiyir when I was at home, but it ran away just before the
evacuation and I couldn't find it in time."
Maati
was reaching forward, coaxing the "alien" with her bundle of
succulent grasses and flowers. "You'll find these delicious, alien
entity," she said politely.
"I
doubt it," Acorna said. "That looks to me very much like a Makahomian
Temple Cat. They are carnivores, I believe."
The cat
gave her an indignant look and daintily stepped forward to sniff the flowers,
then began to eat one. Just one. All of the Linyaari watched it with awe. It
sat back on its haunches, surveyed its audience complacently, and began to
wash.
Acorna
reached over and lifted the cat into her arms, then handed him over to Maati.
The youngling squealed with delight as the creature snuggled against her neck
and then settled into purring.
"The
alien likes me!" Maati said
"I
wouldn't be too impressed," Acorna replied with a smile. "This fellow
is probably not the captain. Nor does it appear to be Linyaari, so it can
hardly be your brother."
Thariinye
and the other young males stroked the animal, too, as did Liriili.
"It's
so soft," Maati said blissfully. "Since they sent the lift down,
perhaps they mean for us to board," Acorna said.
"It
could be a trap," Thariinye said.
"I've
only heard of cats practicing mind control when they are looking for homes or a
meal," Acorna said. "I very much doubt this one is a spy. I would
like to see who inside the ship. Perhaps they have news of my friends."
"You're
not going up there without me," Thariinye said. "Unless-uh-unless you
think it best."
"I
think it best," Liriili said. Firmly putting her hands behind her to stop
petting the cat. "It is why you were sent for. And you two-go with
them."
"Yes,
Viizaar," the two young males said in tandem. "I want to go see if
there are more of these-kaaats?" Maati said.
"Mrow?
" the creature said. "You must stay here until we know if it is
safe," Liriili said.
"But
you said my brother ..." "Someone who claims to be, yes. It is best
that Khornya and Thariinye handle first contact."
Acorna
stepped onto the platform and was followed by the males. The cat leaped from
Maati's arms and sat on the platform with them.
The
platform rose through the tube until it was level with one of the decks. A
stocky, barrel-cheated, curly-haired man with a bristling mustache watched
their arrival, then reached forward to help Acorna off the platform. "Hi,
there, ma'am, boys," he greeted them in a deep and slightly gravelly
voice. "I don't know which line to use-'We've come in peace' or 'Take me
to your leader.' Aari tells me you folks aren't used to visitors."
The cat
jumped from the platform and onto the man's shoulder, to curl around his neck.
"I see you've already met our leader, or the self-appointed glad-handing
committee anyway."
The
funny thing was that he was using all of these Standard idiomatic expressions,
but in the Linyaari tongue. Acorna understood him but she could also understand
the puzzled expressions on the faces of the other three Linyaari.
"My
name's Jonas Becker," the man continued, as the males joined them on deck.
"I am captain of the Condor here, and Chief Executive Officer, Chairman of
the Board, and-until recently Chief Cook and Bottle Washer of Decker
Interplanetary Salvage and Recycling Enterprises, Limited. It was going to be
Becker and Sons but my dad didn't get around to changing the sign before he
died so there's still only one Becker. And you folks are?"
Acorna
was grinning again, enjoying the fact that Becker, whom she liked at once and
from whom she was sensing very positive energy, would know that she was being
friendly while the other three Linyaari would probably be under the impression
she was fearlessly baring her teeth at the "alien." This man reminded
her a great deal of her beloved uncles. The same brand of individualistic and
independent intelligence, curiosity, and kindness radiated from him. "I
was named Acorna by my foster parents," she told him. "In
Linyaari-our language-1 am known as Khornya."
"Bingo!"
he said. "I mean, no kidding? I've been hearing about you all over the
place, Lady Acorna, nothing but good things, and here you're the first person I
meet when I get here. Pleased to meet you, ma'am, and I mean that sincerely. I
used to be a farm slave on Kezdet when I was a kid and what you did for those
children was wonderful, from what I hear. I know your daddies, too. Good
men."
Thariinye
cleared his throat in a gruff, manly sort of way. "We are told you were
permitted to land because you claim to have a Linyaari aboard?"
Becker's
demeanor altered subtly to be as gruff as Thaarinyes and twice as threatening.
"I didn't claim it, no, sir. Aari himself did."
Acorna
touched Becker's arm lightly. "My people are unused to visitors. They have
had some bad experiences, especially recently. Please do not take offense. May
I present Ambassador Thariinye, who was among the party that came to Manganos
to bring me back to narhii-Vhiliinyar, and these fellows are"-she caught
their thoughts-"liryn and Yiirl."
Becker
nodded, a short and wary and not nearly so friendly gesture. "Boys,"
he said in acknowledgement. "Well, Aari got a little shy all of a sudden
when he saw you coming and he's back in the holds sorting out the graveyard. I
guess if we each take a few loads of bones down we'll have it dirtside soon
enough."
Thariinye
and the other two males looked, if anything, whiter at the mention of bones.
Becker examined their faces for a moment, and then seemed to be looking them
over in general, and Acorna as well, then he said, "Make yourselves at
home. I'm going to go check on KEN and see what's keeping Aari. He's probably
working so hard back there he didn't hear you board."
(That
is very strange behavior for one gone so long from us,) liryn said.
(Well,
he is very old, from back before the evacuation,)
Yiirl
replied. (Perhaps he grows forgetful.)
(You
were certainly friendly to that Becker person,)
Thariinye
said.
(He's a
good man,) Acorna replied. (Could you not feel it?) (Hmph, No. He didn't have
the same energy -with me that he did with you. He is very hostile and
suspicious and, I would say, can be violent.)
(We
shouldn't judge him without knowing him,) Acorna said.
(Not
much chance of that, fortunately) Thariinye said.
(You
realize, of course, he and this ship must leave immediately after refueling.
Their presence contaminates and endangers all of us.)
(I
hardly see how,) Acorna was thinking when Becker, looking extremely troubled,
reappeared and crooked his finger at her. Thariinye started forward and Becker
said, "Hold it, sport. Just the Lady Acorna for now, please." He
started up the ladder connecting the decks.
"Very
well," Thariinye said. "But do not try any unacceptable behaviors
with her or I will cause you to be remorseful that you did."
(Why,
Thariinye,) Acorna shot at him in passing, (that sounded hostile and aggressive
and maybe even violent.)
She
climbed to the upper deck where Becker waited for her.
"Aari's
in a bad way, to tell you the truth. Lady Acorna," Becker said. "I
met him when I was hurt worse than he is, and I hadn't met any regular people
like you then-but looking at you-well, let me prepare you. Those Khieevis
messed him up pretty bad. He's missing his horn, that's the most obvious thing,
but from the looks of you people, there's other stuff that hasn't healed right
either. The way he explained it to me was that he was all busted up when he
collapsed in the cemetery and the power in all those old horns healed him,
except the Khieevi had done to him something that kept the healing from
proceeding normally. Without someone who knew what they were doing to guide the
healing, his bones just knit together wherever one end touched the other. I
guess now that he's almost safe back home again and doesn't have to be on alert
all the time, the impact of everything he's been through is starting to hit
him. I found him curled up in a corner sobbing his eyes out. I thought maybe if
you came back alone with me and talked to him, told him it would be okay, that
his folks are looking forward to having him back, it would be better."
"I'll
do what I can," Acorna said, grateful to the man for his thoughtfulness on
behalf of the former captive.
They
clanked across open metal grating on their way back to some of what would have
been cargo holds and crew's quarters on a standard vessel. Following Becker
into one of the holds, Acorna heard the clatter of bone on bone. Then a monster
arose before them.
Even as
hunched up and crooked as he was, Aari towered over Becker and was taller than
Acorna. But his joints did not articulate properly and there was a huge hump on
his back. His legs bent incorrectly and his head was at an odd angle-and then
there was the stomach-churning sight of that sunken-in forehead.
She
tried to take this all in only on a physical, visual level and not think about
it, not react to it at all. The expression in his deeply haunted eyes showed
that he could read her before she sent or he received a thought.
She
extended her hand to him-horn touching would be inappropriate in this instance
with no other horn to meet it. "I am called Khornya. I was born in space
after the evacuation and have only just arrived here myself. But welcome
home."
He
dipped his head, and though he was trying to sound composed, his voice trembled
as he replied, "I was Aari. I thank you."
And
then, from behind her, she heard the clatter of hard soled feet on metal
grating. The three males entered the hold behind them, and made gasping noises.
(What
is it?)
(I
think I'm going to be sick!)
(They
really made a mess out of you, didn't they?) from Thariinye.
Acorna
closed the distance between them before Aari could retreat farther back into
the hold. She took his hand with hers and this time did lean her horn against
his cheek, for healing, for calming. (They are young and stupid and know
nothing of anything outside this world,) she told him. (I'm sure the physicians
here can put you right in no time.)
Thariinye,
who was thoughtless but not intentionally unkind, realized his error at once
and crossed to them as well, also, with only slight reluctance, laying his horn
against the newcomer. (Khornya is right. I was rude and cruel. The physicians
will be sent for at once.)
"Maybe
before we unload the Ancestors' bones, you people would want to take Aari to
some kind of hospital or clinic with you?" Becker asked, and Acorna
realized that he, too, had a definite, if somewhat limited, ability to read
thoughts.
"I
will go below and discuss the matter with the viizaar. But, my brother,"
Thariinye said to Aari, "would you not be happier if we brought physicians
to you before you meet your little sister and old friends again?"
Aari
gave him a glance full of bitterness. "You mean so that I don't frighten
them? You are very thoughtful, my brother."
"Okay,
that's it," Becker said. "I think we'll just stow the moving of the
bones until your docs see what they can do for Aari, here or there, I don't
care. Just get off my ship for now, all you guys. Lady Acorna is welcome any
time she wants to come, but the rest of you do me a favor and wait for an
engraved invitation, huh? Tell your leader lady that I still need fuel and I hope
they got a long hose on the gas pump at the spaceport to bring the fuel to me
since I can't get to it."
(Very
hostile and aggressive,) Thariinye told Acorna in passing.
"I
heard that!" Becker said.
"I
think I should go, too," Acorna said. "You will need someone to speak
for you. Not that my opinion is much valued by the vuzaar, but if Grandam
Naadiina, the elder, backs me, they will have to listen."
Aari
almost smiled at her. "Is Grandam still with us, then?" "Very
much so," Acorna said.
"I
would like to see her. She will not be frightened of me, though she may be sad.
Grandam was always kind to Laarye and me when we were small."
"She
has taken care of your little sister since your parents" Pain spasmed over
his face and she realized that if his parents had been lost before they reached
Vhiliinyar, he would not have known he wouldn't be reunited with them here.
"Oh, I'm sorry. You shouldn't have found out that way," she said.
His
broken hand rested on her shoulder, comfortingly. "I knew they could no
longer be alive or they would have been here to meet me. It was my choice to
remain behind, not theirs to abandon me. You only confirmed what I knew
already."
Acorna
hurried to catch up with the others and Becker lowered the robolift once more.
This time the cat stayed firmly onboard, sitting protectively between Aari's
feet.
"I'm
happy to report. Count Edacki, that the experimental station is now fully
operational and the testing has begun." General Ikwaskwan gave the news to
his employer on his private and secure channel. "Our technicians are going
over the computers of the captured Linyaari ships, trying to find a way to open
the navigation programs and decode the course to the home world. It seems there
is an autodestruct device on such programs, but we are unsure as to how it can
be reconstructed when thecreatures-wish to return to their home world."
"Perhaps
you can cajole our guests into providing you with the information
verbally," Ganoosh suggested.
"Well,
there's a little problem with that, sir. Except for three of the captives, the
ones who came for the Acorna girl a few months ago, none of these creatures
speak anything resembling Standard. We tried forcing the ones who do understand
to translate, but they refuse and there is no budging them. Torture doesn't
work. They don't say anything, even though they feel it. They pretty well heal
immediately. Or die. We've almost lost the ambassador-whatsername-the one who
is Acorna's aunt. At least that's who she said she was. It's hard to tell. They
all look alike. It's hard to tell the men from the women even.
"Hmmm-are
they being recalcitrant about using their other powers?"
"Oh,
no siree. We've got that under control. Put one or two of them in a gas chamber
and the air is sweet as springtime when you let them out. Poison one of them
with drain cleaner and it's crystal clear water before you know it. That's well
documented. You can feel free to dump toxic waste, pollute anything you want,
and what we have here is a cure-all. Of course, I'm not sure how well they'll
perform outside a controlled environment."
"It's
not like you to mince words. General." Ganoosh smiled. "You mean
outside of captivity. Well, there are some other little tests I want you to
run. I have had my ward divert her course, but soon she will be arriving with a
very important guest, I hope, and possibly some information regarding the
location of the central nesting place of our fine horned friends.
She
will also have with her some horns which have been removed from their original
owners. I would like you to do some testing to determine the qualitative
difference in the performance of the horn on a live animal, as opposed to one
that's detached. If it is not great, well, then "
"I
understand perfectly, Count Edacki. I wish also to report, by the way, that I
have myself devised an interesting and entertaining way of testing the horns'
healing powers."
"How
is that?" Ganoosh asked.
"By
reviving the idea of the Roman amphitheater and gladiator contests. You'll
recall my associate, Nadhari Kando?" the general asked.
"You
haven't made her privy to our little secret, have you? The woman was in league
with that bleeding-heart Delszaki Li," the count said with some disgust.
"We
seem to have solved the problem of Nadhari's tender heart with liberal
infusions of drugs that produce hostility and aggression. They seem to overcome
her natural inhibitions to violence, which were never all that strong
anyway." Ikwaskwan's smile was feral.
"I
recall that from another conversation we had," Ganoosh said.
"We
lucked upon a ship full of children, enemies of your late associate, the Piper,
I might add. They had hoped, I understand, to enlist Nadhari to teach them the
art of war. So I am accommodating them. Have a peek," he said.
The
general switched the view on the comscreen so that Ganoosh saw an amphitheater
constructed by building bleachers up the sides of a biosphere bubble. The
soldiers in the bleachers were protected from the combatants by walls of reinforced
plascrete. In the center of the ring, tethered by the neck and foot to a
pillar, was Nadhari Kando, the lithe and dangerous-looking female Ganoosh had
seen previously in Ikwaskwan's company. She was armed with daggers and whips.
And a tall, rather lovely teenaged girl, dressed in what was apparently
Ikwaskwan's scanty idealized version of a Roman toga, was forced into her path
by soldiers carrying laser prods. The girl had only a dagger and a net.
An
anguished cry rose from somewhere in the background.
"'Ziana!
No!"
"Is
that her name?" Ganoosh asked.
"Yes,
sir. She is Adreziana Starborne, the captain of the Starfarer children I spoke
of. How touching. She is trying to talk to Nadhari through the drugs, you see?
But Nadhari is no more likely to listen to her than the lions once did the
Christians,"
"And
the male voice I heard just now crying her name in such a tender fashion?"
"That
would be Pal Kendoro, Count Edacki. Like Nadhari herself, a former lackey of
Delszaki Li. A friend of Nadhari's, actually. The old Nadhari, that is, not
this new, improved model."
"It
is unfair and unchivalrous of you to send that sweet child out there to face
the madwoman on her own, General. May I suggest a refinement?" "Yes,
sir, of course."
"Bind
the lovers together. Two love birds with one stoned warrior woman." He
began to giggle. "Oh, that tickles my fancy! Yes it does! I shall have to
come out there immediately to view it in person. Save that spectacle for me,
will you?"
"No
need. Count. No matter how badly Nadhari hurts them or, if they are lucky, one
of them hurts her, the Linyaari will certainly cooperate to heal such innocent
hides. We can recycle both Nadhari and the children indefinitely, if the
healing powers work as well as we've been led to believe." if.: "Splendid, General, splendid! How I
have missed these little entertainments-the sort the Didis used to dream up to
interest me back in the old days before the unicorn girl showed up. How very
fitting that her own species should make such pleasures feasible and cost
effective again."
^vL
/fasLti "wanted to know where her brother was ^ / \/1 anc^ ^^y ^e ^^ not come out with the others.
"He
was hurt, Maati," Liriili told her when the child refused to leave.
"The aliens we fled when your parents came here hurt him very badly. He
does not want you to see him until we can heal him."
All of
the adults were now trying to project calm and patience like crazy but Maati
had learned a thing or two as a government page.
"You
didn't want him to come!" she said. "You were scared of him. But he
wouldn't hurt me. He's the only family I have and I'm the only family he has. I
want to see him."
Acorna
said, "You will, Maati. You will. But he was hurt by the way people look
at him and he doesn't want to be pitied. He wants you to look up to him, not
feel sony for him. So we have to go get the physicians now and bring them right
back here to heal him."
"I
want to be there," Maati said firmly. "We are family and I want to
help him. If I was hurt and he knew it, I bet he would be there. My parents
would have been, wouldn't they, Grandam?"
"Yes,
Maati. And I see no reason why you shouldn't come, . if too. Thariinye sent the adults in the group a somewhat
distorted mental picture, in Acorna's opinion, of Aari and Becker. Grandam
gasped and Acorna, who had been trying hard not to project, snapped at him.
(Well,
Grandam said she didn't see why,) Thariinye declared in his own defense.
The
other two males had scurried off immediately, looking distinctly unwell.
"Thariinye,"
Liriili said. "Please ask the communications duty officer to contact the
physicians' college and have Baaksi Bidiila and Baaksi M'kaarin come here at
once with their staff and any necessary equipment."
"Yes,
Viizaar Liriili," Thariinye said, relieved to be away from there for even
a moment. "At once."
When he
had gone, Liriili confronted Acorna and Grandam. "It is not helpful that
you two judge him or me or the others for reacting in this way to One who has
been so badly maimed," she said. "The Khieevi sent the vids of our
people under torture to us in order to deliberately terrorize us. As you can
see, it works. Our people are not cowards, but we are peaceful. We're healers.
We would never do anything so dreadful to other living creatures. It is
horrifying to us in the extreme. To see what can be done to us while we still
live and breathe and walk-well, that would be far too upsetting for most of our
people to be able to continue functioning. Such a sight would upset the balance
and harmony we have achieved since coming here. Besides, it is in the best
interests of Aari himself that he be healed before he rejoins us."
"How
bad is it?" Maati wanted to know. "I'm his sister. You shouldn't all
try to keep this from me."
Before
Liriili could tell her what she'd seen in Thariinye's image, Acorna described
Aari's wounds herself, focusing on the pain in his eyes. Maati started to cry,
big grieving tears rolling down her cheeks. "Nooo! Why did they do such a thing?
Poor Aari! I want to help him."
Grandam
patted her shoulder. "You shall, child, you shall. Liriili, I feel it
would be a good idea if Acorna, Maati, and I went to the communications shed
and asked to be allowed to speak with Aari."
"I
really discourage any further communication with those aliens until we can
bring Aari back among us," Liriili said.
"Child,
I do understand your objections and your responsibility to the rest of our
people, but in this case, our responsibility to Maati must come first-if she
feels she can handle this, then we must not stand in her way. Aari is her
family, almost all the family she has left. Hasn't she lost enough? Hasn't her
brother? We left him behind once for the sake of us all; isn't it his turn to
come first, now that he's back among us?"
"I
will bow to your wisdom, Grandam. But I still feel that the sight of Aari would
be unnecessarily frightening to the public. The images projected by liryn and
Yiirl alone will be giving many of our people nightmares."
"In
that case, Viizaar," Grandam said, "perhaps if you feel so strongly
about that, it must be your immediate priority to return to the city and give
our people the correct and actually and we seem to have overlooked this-quite
joyous news that one we all believed was lost has not only returned, but is the
first person to have survived capture and torture by the Khieevi; that he is in
the process of having his wounds healed, and should soon be among his friends
and loved ones once more. Meanwhile, since according to Thariinye, Acorna is
the only one of us capable of reasoning with the belligerent Captain Becker,
she, Maati as next of kin, and I as a friend and elder from the boy's youth,
should remain to help the physicians with their work and provide moral
support." Grandam's words were clearly an order to the flustered viizaar.
"As
you wish, Grandam." Liriili withdrew and headed back to the city. The rest
of them walked to the communications shed.
The
communications officer gladly ceded his seat to them and watched as Acorna
hailed the Condor.
"Well,
Lady Acorna, fancy seeing you there. What's on your mind, hon?" The honest
face of Jonas Becker reflected pleasure at the sight of her in his viewscreen.
"Captain
Becker, Grandam Naadiina, 'whom you heard Aari say he knew and was fond of, is
here, and she would like to speak to him. Aari's younger sister, Maati, who is
Grandams ward, is here as well. Maati has been informed of the nature of Aari's
wounds but she wants very much to speak to him and well, I think it would be
best if she could speak for herself."
"Right.
If you think it's best, then I'll try to get him in here. But those jerks who
were here with you are not welcome aboard this vessel again. I hope everybody
understands that."
Acorna
smiled. "I believe you made yourself abundantly clear on that issue,
Captain." She looked around. "Thariinye doesn't seem to be here now,
but Liriili asked him to send for the physicians. They should be arriving soon.
We three would like to return to your ship with them, with your
permission."
"Granted,
with pleasure," he said. "Wait a minute and I'll see if Aari will
come out to talk to his sister."
"I'm
not entirely sure this contact is authorized," the communications officer
said.
"No?"
Grandam said. "Well, it is. Liriili appointed Khornya and me as her
liaisons in this affair. Khornya is already showing great talent as an alien
ambassador, don't you think?"
"Yes,
Grandam," the officer said meekly.
"That's
a good lad," Grandam said with an indulgent smile.
A
moment later Becker appeared back on screen. Behind him loomed a tall figure
with a cat wound around his neck. Maati had her jaw thrust forward and set. As
Aari's ruined face appeared on the screen, she blinked twice but that was all.
Aari also blinked, so perhaps he didn't see her, first instinctive reaction.
Acorna thought he was trying not to weep again.
"Welcome
home, elder brother," the little girl said, sounding less like a little
girl than Acorna had ever heard her. "I am Maati, born here on
narhii-Vhiliinyar to our parents before they returned to search for you and our
brother. They-they never found you?" She had tried, Acorna knew, not to
make it a question but could not quite keep the note of hope from her voice.
"To
my sorrow, no. It is also my great sorrow to tell you that our brother has
passed this life, but it gives me more joy than I have known in all of these
ghaanye to see you and to hear your voice, younger sister. I am Aari, born many
ghaanye and a world before you, but I am your kinsman and I love you
already."
"And
I you," Maati said. "Aari, when the doctors come, tell your friend I
will come, too. I'll lay my horn upon you and keep you from any pain and speed
your healing."
Tears
did fall from Aari's eyes as she spoke. "My gratitude, Maati," he
said, but his response was almost drowned out as both Acorna and Grandam said,
"And I will do the same," in response to Maati's declaration.
"My
gratitude, Grandam Naadiina, and to Khornya, who has already-my
gratitude."
"Okay,"
Becker said. "But if you ladies are coming you'd better step on it. I see
a bunch of people coming up the road right now. I'll send down the robolift for
you so you'll be on board when they arrive."
"Thanks,
Captain Becker," Acorna said.
"Thank
you, lady. You, too, ladies."
The
physicians were those most skilled in the healing arts, much more than the
average Linyaari. Many of them, Grandam told Acorna, had studied off-planet,
where there were more ills to be healed. Most Linyaari were never ill or hurt
for more than a few moments, or at least not until they found the next
Linyaari. In fact, being a physician on narhii-Vhiliinyar was largely an
intellectual rather than a practical profession. The physicians didn't gasp when
they saw Aari, but they shook their heads, regarded him with clinical interest,
tried a few applications of their own horns with little effect, and then turned
to look with interest at the piles of bones in the holds beyond their patient.
"So
you say, Aari, that after you were injured you dragged yourself to the burial
place and the power of the horns of our departed forebears healed you of your
injuries-at least to a degree? As much as the lasting damage done to you by the
Khieevi would allow?"
"Yes."
The
physicians looked uncomfortably at each other. "Unfortunately, given the
special nature of the tortures inflicted by the Khieevi, the horns' healing
power only knit that which was broken-it did not straighten anything into
proper position first. Khieevi take special pains when working with Linyaari to
try and short-circuit the healing processes."
"I
had suspected as much," Aari said dryly, regarding his own misshapen arm.
"But
now that your arm is healed this way, there is little we can do. The tissue is
not injured, as far as our abilities are concerned. As for your horn-well, a
transplant might be possible when Maati is older, if she could spare a piece of
her horn. But she and it are too immature to risk that at this time. And such a
procedure has never been tried, you know. No one has-ever survived such an
injury in the past."
"Oh,
do try!" Maati cried. "I don't care if it hurts. It can't hurt
anything like Aari has hurt. Please, can't you do something for him?"
One of
the doctors, a female, Bidiila, knelt beside Maati and took her hand. "We
wish we could, youngling," she said, and Acorna could see she was close to
tears herself. "But he has suffered great harm at the hands of our
enemies. Some will see his wounds and blame him for receiving them, as
irrational as that may be, but some will be as wise as you and know that he is
living proof of Linyaari courage and fortitude. You must be very proud of
him."
"I
am," Maati said, taking the doctors hand and trying to put it in Aari's,
"but he hurts so terribly-am I the only one who feels it? Can nobody help
him?"
Aari
gathered her up and stroked her hair with his broken hand, shushing her.
"I am used to it now, little sister. Please don't weep for me. Did you not
hear what they said? Later, perhaps, when they know more, they can do
more."
"But there must be something they can do
now," the child insisted.
"Well,
actually, there is," Becker said. "We could break the old injuries,
one at a time, and you could reheal them. That should work." He looked at
the doctors and cocked an eyebrow. Acorna translated.
"We
do not do such things, Captain. Even in a therapeutic way, and to heal.
Injuring any living creature is an act of violence and not our way."
When
Acorna gave Becker the doctor's reply, he shrugged and asked, "They don't
mind finishing the job if I do the dirty work though, do they?"
Acorna
translated. "They have no objection."
Acorna
asked Becker, "What do you have in mind? "
"Well,
first, I just want to make certain of something. The way Aari healed me and RK
when we were hurt, you can do that for him? I mean, make it so he gets patched
up completely almost at the same time he's hurt so he doesn't feel anything for
more than say, a split second?"
The
others looked dubious, but Acorna, who had had considerable experience with the
healing properties of her own horn, nodded. "Yes. Probably even more
effectively than Aari healed you since he had to use the dead horns to
accomplish the healing."
"Well
then, all we have to do is rebreak the places that have set wrong and heal them
again. I hate to put Aari through it, but it's the only solution," Becker
said. "Your docs may have principles against it, but I don't."
Bidiila
said, "I personally have never encountered old fractures such as these.
Few of us have. When one can heal almost any wound immediately, one seldom sees
old wounds, and even then, usually they have received some sort of attention
prior to ours that keeps them from being in such sad shape as Aari's."
"I
understand, doc. You people don't want to do it because the way you see it,
hurting people is the opposite of healing. Me, I don't have any problem with
breaking a few bones, especially in a good cause." He touched Aari's
shoulder. "How about it, buddy?" he asked Aari. "You willing to
let me bust you up a little so your medics can heal you right this time? I
can't do much about the horn, but I got me a crowbar that will do a good job
with a few surgical strikes. They promise it'll only hurt for a little
while."
Aari
only glanced at the doctors, who, except for Bidiila, had backed off slightly.
"I can bear pain at the hand of a friend," he said. "Part of the
pain of the torture was knowing that my captors intended their cruelty and
delighted in my pain. They even amplified it. I know that you will be sharing
it and helping me bear it."
"Maybe
Maati and you other ladies should leave now," Becker told Acorna.
Acorna
didn't need to translate. Maati was shaking her head, and clinging to Aari. Grandam
said simply, in clear thought-speak, without hesitation or question so that
even Becker could understand her, (Your concern for our sensitivities does you
credit, Captain, but Aari will need our support more than ever. We will stay in
contact with him as you perform your task. In that way, he may feel far less
pain.)
Becker
nodded. The other doctors were all protesting but Bidiila spoke to them sharply
and, although they looked away as Becker fetched his crowbar, they remained
close. Aari reclined on a table and Grandam, Acorna, and Maati stayed close by
his head, their horns touching his face and neck, and their hands on his arms
and shoulders. Becker, without fear or squeamishness, and with the efficiency
he might give to hammering some bent object into shape, brought the heavy tool
down sharply on the misshapen part of Aari's leg. Aari let his breath out in a
huff and a high-pitched whistle, and by then the doctors were closing in,
applying their horns to the fresh wound as they manipulated the leg so that it
would set correctly.
"You
okay, buddy? " Becker asked Aari gently. With great effort, Aari said,
"Yes." And in a moment, after several deep breaths, added, "My
left foot now, please, Joh."
Maati
had buried her face against his mane and Acorna felt that he was more concerned
about her reaction than about the pain, which was dulled by their contact and
quite brief compared to what he had endured walking around with misaligned
bones, twisted tendons, and atrophied, overly strained muscles. Each break and
healing found him breathing easier, though all of them, especially Aari and
Becker, had sweat running from every pore. Worse yet was that the sound of
Aari's crunching bones was drowned out only by the high, eerie keening of the
Makahomian Temple Cat, who cowered beneath the table.
The
process took hours and Acorna was very weary, as was Grandam. Acorna could see
that Grandam's horn and those of the doctors were all becoming translucent, as
hers had when she had cured the wounded following the battle between Rushima
and the Khieevi.
Aari
opened his eyes only after he had healed from the last break. Becker, )SLW set,
functioned like a machine but his voice was always controlled, and always
gentle and concerned when speaking to Aari or any of them. He knew that he was
hurting to help the healing and had to keep a firm grip on himself so that each
blow did not cause him almost as much pain as it did Aari.
When at
last they were done and Aari sat up, straight and five inches taller, Acorna
went to Becker and laid her horn against his forehead.
"Thank
you, Khornya," Aari said. "I wish I was able to do that, too. You are
spent."
"We
are all spent," Grandam said.
The cat
shot from beneath the table. Maati caught and held him, soothing him with a
touch of her horn that soon had the beast purring.
Bidiila
said, "We have been thinking about your horn, Aari. It is a new problem,
as I said, but did you not say your brother perished on Vhiliinyar and that you
have brought his bones back for reburial? Do you feel that his spirit would be
offended if we took a small piece from his horn, which would have similar DNA
to yours and therefore be less likely to be rejected, and tried to coax it to
grow on the root of your own horn?" This was done, with Aari's and Maati's
agreement. "Now you can come back with us," Maati told her brother.
He put his hand up to the bandaged place where the horn implant had been.
"I don't think so. I'll still be an outcast."
Acorna
said, "Maybe you could wear a prosthetic hidden by a horn-hat."
"A
what?" Becker and Aari asked together. Acorna explained and Becker said,
"Yeah, we could give you a fake horn inside to stiffen it. Nobody would
know if you didn't want them to."
"Aside
from the people all over the planet who already do, thanks to those who were
here earlier," Aari said.
"Never
mind them. You want to see your old friends, and what this new world is like,
or not?"
Acorna
thought it was a good thing Becker didn't really wait for an answer.
The com
unit came on again and the officer on the other end said, "Captain Becker,
the people have gathered to rebury the bones of our dead."
"Okay.
We'll get them onto the robolift and send them down load by load."
"I
will need to supervise," Aari said. "I am the only one who still
knows who was buried where and remembers the clan designations of each body.
Where would I find a-horn-hat?"
Bidiila
reached into her lab coat pocket. "Take mine," she said. "I have
several others. They come in handy when you spend the day listening to minor
complaints from patients who should have had the sense not to overgraze."
Becker
had gone to work with a torch and hammer on a piece of lightweight alloy and in
no time fashioned it into the semblance of a horn. A slot on either side held a
band that slid beneath Aari's mane to hold it in place. With Bidiila's
horn-hat, it was difficult to tell him from another Linyaari.
The
three women stayed aboard the ship and helped Aari and Becker load the robolift
time after time. Then Becker remembered something and came back with what
looked like another man, albeit one somewhat scarred and with a peculiar skin
tint. This, Acorna learned, was a KEN unit, an android, and he was able to work
five times faster, if not more accurately, than any of them. Aari had to
indicate to Becker whose bones were whose before riding down with each load and
supervising its disposition. The road to the spaceport was lined with Linyaari
of all clans, all come to claim the bones of their dead.
"How
did they find out so fast?" Becker asked.
"Thought
transference is a very swift form of communication when used correctly,"
Grandam said. "I suspect Liriili set up a relay of some sort to inform the
clans."
"Will
you look at that guy? " Becker asked, nodding toward Aari. "I was the
pounder and he was the poundee and he is working rings around me. You'd think
he'd been sitting around watching the stars go by all morning instead of
getting every bone in his body rebroken and mended."
"He
is a very determined young man," Grandam said. "He had to be or he
would not have survived all that he has."
When
Aari returned for the last time, he carried a single skeleton, this one
carefully wrapped in the thermal blanket Becker had given Aari to sleep with.
"Grandam,
I was very careful with Grandsire Niciirye but I brought him back to you. I do
not wish you to be concerned, but Grandsire's horn is missing from his
remains."
"His
horn?" Grandam asked, and Acorna saw that she was trying to picture her
lifemate as Aari was now. "Not the Khieevi?"
"Captain
Becker will explain," Aari said. "I must go below now.
"Thanks
a lot, buddy," Becker said.
Aari
allowed himself a small grim smile. "You have nothing to worry about, Joh,
even if I had not already hidden your surgical instrument. We are a nonviolent
people. Grandam will not cause you much physical damage for desecrating the
remains of her lifemate. I do not know if that will be true for the others
whose kin are missing their horns. Those bones I have left in the hold for now,
but Grandsire's at least I can return."
His
voice contained elements of black humor, but his emotions were hollow and cold
with grief, as they came to Acorna. His thoughts had been harder and harder to
detect as the bones and horns left the ship and it came to Acorna that he might
be lonely without them.
She
turned back to Becker and to Grandam, who was watching the salvage man with a
curious mixture of pain and reproach. "You are a grave robber.
Captain?" she asked.
"I
take full responsibility, ma'am," Becker said, and pointed at RK, washing
on top of the control console. "It was the cat's fault. Your old planet is
a mess. We landed there looking for salvage. Some of your people's horns were
laying around on the ground. It was night, the light was poor, and I thought
since the cat liked them I'd pick up a few and see what they were. Well,
honest, they really were just laying around."
"So
you took them?" she asked, the reproach still there.
"I'm
a salvage expert, for pity's sake!" he said. "I pick up stuff nobody
claims-and it sure didn't look like there was a living soul there at the time.
I didn't even know what they were till we got back to Kezdet and a couple of
people thought they belonged to the Lady Acorna or her shipmates."
Acorna
was a little startled at the idea at first but it made sense. She and then her
aunt and the others were the only Linyaari the people of Kezdet and Manganos
had met.
"One
fellow was ready to turn me over to the cops for murder, and one nasty
little-female individual, an old enemy of Acorna's-tried to kill me more than
once to take the horns. Then she followed us to your old planet and took the
horns I had with me. If she hadn't I swear I would have returned them, I don't
care how much they were worth."
"Were-worth.
Captain?" Maati asked, touching hers.
Grandam
looked horrified, and Maati said, "Oh, no! You mean like in the story of
the Ancestors? How the people didn't want them, they only wanted the horns? But
dead horn? Healing using dead horn doesn't work nearly as well as healing done
by a living person!"
"It
works better than no horn at all, I'm afraid, honey," Becker said.
"And there are a lot of us out there in the galaxy without healing
horns."
"You
say this woman knew me?" Acorna asked. "Who is she?"
"Kisia
Manjan." Becker filled her in on Kisla's attempts to murder him and RK.
Acorna
sighed. She had hoped that perhaps when Kisia learned of her own humble birth
from her adopted mother, the girl might have been cured of some other
arrogance, but apparently she was even worse. Becker's thoughts were not as
easily discernible now, nor were the cat's thought patterns as clear as they
had been with the bones aboard, but from what she could tell, Kisia was more
badly disturbed than ever.
"Could
she have followed you here?" Acorna asked Becker. Becker shook his head.
"We lost her this time. Aari scared her away with a Khieevi weapon."
Grandam
looked vaguely shocked but Becker said, "It simulated explosions in the
earth-maybe it was a mining tool instead of a weapon to use against people-he
said they used things like that to destabilize the whole planet. Anyway, it
worked, and she took off. She only found us that time because of a homing
device on the droid, but we got rid of that finally."
Acorna
sighed. "That's good, then."
"I
also have an-idiosyncratic way of navigating that's unpredictable to me as well
as other ships. Besides which, I had no idea where we were going. We steered by
Aari's memory of what he had been told was the evacuation route before the
invasion."
Grandam
sighed. "I think that whatever the others do, I shall bury Niciirye in the
field beyond my back door. And Captain-if you-if you should recover the horns,
by any chance, I wonder if there is any way you could somehow return them to
us? It is a very important link between us and our dead. I don't know why;
maybe scientists would say that an extraordinary amount of DNA material is
encoded in the horn and survives death. But however it is that it works, it is
a connection and now-"
She
looked away but Acorna felt Grandam's pain as if it were her own, a sudden cold
void, an open pit of grief she had never before sensed in Grandam.
It took
nearly a week-a ghiirl-ghaanye-from the time the bones were unloaded from the
Condor and ^handed over to their descendants for the Council to decide where
the burials were to take place. During this time, the bones stayed in the homes
of their respective clan members.
The
presence of the dead from the past cast a pall over the living that was at
least partially connected to their fears for those who were currently voyaging
through space and had been out of communication for days now, completely
silent.
Grandam
had accompanied Aari to a Council session where he told the story of the
cemetery's unwitting desecration and how he had preserved the bones against
further pilfering. He described the thought-images he had received from Becker
regarding the unwholesome interest in the horns by some of Becker's fellow
humans. The Council, Grandam said, had become rather agitated after hearing
that, both concerned about the possible invasion of other horn-seeking aliens
and troubled that there could be some connection between the alien interest in
the horns of the Linyaari dead and the lack of contact with the space-faring
Linyaari.
Liriili
had dismissed that concern (rather shrilly, Grandam noted). "These
particular aliens are galaxies away. This one found us only because of Aari's
memory. And these humans had never seen one of us before Khornya." The
viizciar did not say that she wished the aliens had never seen Khornya, that
she could almost wish the girl had perished with her parents rather than be the
instrument of bringing such danger upon them. But Grandam heard the thought,
even concealed. And worse, she knew that others on the Council shared it. The
possible threat from aliens preoccupied the Council during that session to the
extent that discussion of burial sites was temporarily tabled.
Later,
Aan told Grandam, "I hope they will put the burial ground somewhere
protected, where the graves will not be disturbed again. A cave would be good.
Like the one I hid them in on Vhiliinyar. The bones were easy to guard there,
and the cave could always be collapsed upon them if outsiders came to disturb
them again."
Grandam
told Acorna about it later, when Aari had returned to the Condor with food for
Becker. "I got the strongest impression that what he intends to do the
rest of his life is guard the burial ground."
Acorna
could not suppress a shudder. "I suppose that's what the Khieevi did to
him that none of our horns can touch."
"Yes,
well, perhaps. But it's nonsense. That is a brilliant young man. He excelled at
every aspect of our culture and had already traveled to other worlds as an
ambassador and educator. He is like a shell, from which the little creature
within has been stolen. No-I exaggerate. Perhaps his essence is only hidden,
but hidden from himself as well as from others."
Later,
when the Council decided that each clan would be responsible for burying its
own dead in separate burial places, Aari insisted on attending all
reinterments. The clans whose dead were not returned to them with the rest of
the bones did not mention the missing remains, which Acorna found odd. However,
the entire city of Kubiilikhan was actively, prematurely, mourning the ones now
believed to be lost in the cosmos and so a few absent dead from the past
mattered less than the burial of the many bones reclaimed.
Acorna
accompanied Aari as he attended the first reinterment.
The sky
looked like an open wound that day, yellow, with huge red and burgundy clouds
boiling in the west, split now and then by the green lightning she remembered
from before. The pavilions creaked, extruding and retracting their ramps like
snakes' tongues, raising and lowering their floors as the breezes and dampness
shifted.
Aari
was very quiet and Acorna felt from him confusion and grief, and sensed this
might be coming from the Council's decision to have no central burial place, so
that even the tenuous position he had found for himself as guardian of the dead
was now lost to him.
This
was confirmed when she noticed that when a few people addressed him, he ignored
them.
"Aari,"
she said softly, "Techno-artisan Maarye just greeted you."
Aari
looked genuinely startled. "Oh. I'm sorry. That was real then?" He
passed his hand over his face. Healed and wearing the prosthetic horn Becker
had devised for him, he seemed a handsome, stalwart example of Linyaari
manhood.
"Of
course it was real," she said. "You looked right through him."
"I'm
sorry. I should apologize. I've kept company with phantoms for a long time,
Khornya. They don't generally expect manners, or even answers."
Thunder
cracked just then and the rain drenched everyone within a single moment. No one
ran for cover, however. This was a solemn moment. All of Kubiilikhan and most
of the rest of narhii-Vhiliinyar was here. All of the clans had at least sent
representatives, gathered up in the shuttle belonging to the new ship being
assembled by the techno-artisans. Only one communications officer remained on
duty at the spaceport, and even that officer was frequently relieved so that
everyone could attend the appropriate burials.
The
rain was welcome, even fitting. It made the new ground softer for burial of the
old bones. The Ancestors were in attendance, and that alone kept the procession
from speeding its slow, mournful pace.
This
was the burial ceremony of Clan Neeyeereeya, the clan with the most members to
be interred, and the most above ground, though many of the latter were far too
young to remember those buried on the world they had never known.
And
yet, the atmosphere was as heavy with sorrow as the sky was with clouds.
Clansmen with heads bowed against the torrential rain carried the burial
baskets containing the remains of their kinfolk to dark holes in the long blue
grass. Acorna had sorely missed her dear, departed Mr. Li, but though her loss
had been new while these losses were old ones, she had not previously
experienced the raw expression of grief she felt from the other Linyaari.
Unlike the grief of men, this feeling carried no morbidity about it, no
consciousness of the flesh rotting or ghoulish fascination with death. There
was no threat or anger here, only a kind of wounded wonder at the mystery of
how a loved one who had walked, slept, and eaten beside you could be rendered
to a few calcified fragments.
She
picked up the clearest image of bones, not these bones wrapped for this burial,
but of the bones of the Linyaari missing in space, as their relatives and loved
ones imagined burying them. The grief for the long-dead kin was only part of
the loss being mourned here. The planetbound Linyaari cried for future as well
as past deaths, grief joined with fear for the safety of the missing husbands
and wives, fathers and mothers, sons and daughters, brothers and sisters.
Acorna suddenly felt tremendously protective of her own people, and wished she
could do something, anything, to help.
Aari
stood perfectly still as horns touched in silent remembrance, and then,
startlingly, clearly even to him, a keening began inside him, low at first,
then rising and falling, until it turned into a melody and Acorna realized he
was singing. As the first chorus began, other voices rose to join his, those of
the older Linyaari, and then, more tentatively, a few of the younger ones,
singing their lament for those missing as well as the dead.
Where
do you graze now that you've gone away? I no longer see you; we no longer play
together at sunrise, together at night, Gone is your laughter and gone your
eye's light.
Your
horn now is Pull, it cannot ease my heart, It cannot cade my pain now that we
are apart. I deck you in silence, I deck you in crowd, I look for your face in
the shape of the cloud.
Is that
your laughter in the voice of the dream Where we drank together when our world
was green? My colors are dark now that you've gone away and I cannot hear words
that you used to day.
They
tell me you live in my thoughts and my dreams, Someday you'll return in a
newborn youngling. But my tears keep on falling till someday you do, And
they'll make anew river I'll name after you.
The
song continued throughout the burial and on to the next and the next until the
dead of all of the clans were buried. The procession ended at last at Grandam's
pavilion, where she and Maati stood beside the burial baskets of Grandsire
Niciirye and Aari's and Maati's brother, Laarye. Grandam joined in the song,
and Maati, too, their tears indistinguishable from the rain washing down their
faces as the baskets were gently put in the ground.
Acorna
had sung with her people as the verses were repeated over and over again, to no
music but the beat of the hard Linyaari feet pawing the soaked ground and
throwing mud back over the baskets.
She was
crying, too, for the parents she had known so short a time, for Delszaki Li,
for all of the children she had not been able to save, but most of all she was
finally feeling what had made this place so cold and strange and distant, how
the heart had been cut out of her people when they left behind the continuity
of their own lines, when they left behind their home. Acorna cried for little Maati,
who was left alone except for Grandam and her strange, sad brother. But it was
for Aari himself that she cried hardest, Aari who had suffered as no other
Linyaan had ever suffered, and lived, who had been abandoned and who had lost
everything he had ever held dear, including a vital part of himself. And yet,
when he had the chance to save himself, he had thought mostly of saving from
pillage the bones of his people. Acorna had the distinct impression that he
might never have returned except for that mission.
As the
last strains of the song drained into the ground with the rain, Acorna noticed
that people were standing closer together, males and females touching horns,
arms around each other's backs and waists, -walking away side by side, gazing
into each others' eyes. No one was wearing horn-hats today except Aari, and
increasingly the thoughts being projected were unmistakably amorous.
Acorna
felt a rather embarrassing warmth flooding through herself as well, and
Grandam, wiping her eyes and nose on the sleeve of her garment, smiled at her.
"It's a natural reaction, child. During these hard years our population
has fallen off and as the song says, our loved ones will only return with
future generations'-so our bodies tell us it is time to start making
babies."
Before
Acorna could reply, she saw Thariinye coming toward her and warm feeling or no,
she stepped behind Aari, back into the shelter of Grandam's pavilion. This did
not seem to be the smart thing to do either as other people, couples, were
disappearing into the nearest pavilions with an urgency that left no doubt that
they were taking care of needs far more interesting than a wish to escape the
rain.
Acorna
turned away from the dispersing crowd.
Suddenly,
the front flap of Grandam's pavilion burst open and Captain Becker ran into the
middle of the room, panting, the uniformed communications officer close on his
heels.
He was
shouting. "Okay, okay, I know I'm not allowed but this is an emergency! I
need to find Aari and Lady AcorKhornya. Now! Where are they?" he demanded
of Acorna, evidently not able to see her in the dim interior of the pavilion,
darkened both by rain and out of respect for the ceremony.
"I'm
here. Captain Becker. It's me, Acorna. What's the matter?"
Aari
ducked inside behind her. "Joh?"
"I
just got a Mayday on my remotest remote scanner. It's from a ship called
Shahrazad, Lady Acorna, registered on a planet called Laboue to the House of
Harakamian."
"Uncle
Hafiz!"
"Yeah,
that's right, Hafiz Harakamian. They're under attack."
"This
is nonsense!" the communications officer sputtered as Becker's arrival
began drawing a crowd, including Liriili. "We picked up no such
communication!"
"No,
well, maybe that's because you people don't want anybody to know you're here so
you don't look very hard," Becker said. "But I have equipment that
lets me pick up signals two galaxies away. Can you get somebody to sell me the
damn fuel so I can go help them?"
"I
will come, too, Joh," Aari said. "My work here is done and Grandam is
taking good care of my sister."
"Me
too," Acorna said. She thought someone would protest but Liriili actually
looked relieved.
"I
will also come," Thariinye said.
"No
way," Becker told him. "You make a crowd all by yourself, buddy.
Unless you Linyaari happen to maintain a cavalry, which, since you're
pacifists, I'm inclined to doubt, all I want from the rest of you is refueling
and we're outta here."
"Make
it so," Liriili said with great relief to the communications officer and to
the spaceport personnel among the crowd. She didn't bother to hide her
thoughts, and Acorna and everyone else could read her clearly. Liriili was more
than a little pleased to see the backs of the contentious Becker, and the
troublesome Khornya. And Aari's presence was, as she had predicted, upsetting
to many of the inhabitants. He didn't truly belong among normal Linyaari any
more. Yes, off-planet was a very good place for them all, as far as Liriili was
concerned, as far out into outer space as they could possibly go.
Acorna
turned as she heard feet galloping up beside her. Maati called out to her to
wait. She did so-there was no immediate need for haste. The Condor -was being
refueled with one of the several mixtures that would power it.
"I
like diversity, in case you didn't notice," Becker said to the world at
large since Aari was already back in the ship and Acorna had turned to meet
Maati. The Linyaari fueling the ship did so quickly and efficiently but paid
the human no undue attention. "The hatch is the Mytherian toxic waste
chute, got the robolift off a Pachean tanker, and the nose cone is from a
Nupiak asteroid breaker. It can take any one of a dozen different fuels and
runs good on all of them or a mix."
Maati's
demands drowned out Becker's voice to Acorna. "I want to go with
you!" she cried. "How can he leave again when I just got him?"
Grandam,
panting a little, caught up with them.
"Maati,
we're answering a distress call. It will be dangerous. Your brother is going to
help Captain Becker and I'm going in case someone needs healing," Acorna
said.
"I
can heal, too!" Maati said. "I helped Aari. I did! He said I was the
most help of everybody. I want to go into space, too, and be star-clad like he
is and you are, Khornya. Make them take me along."
Grandam
put her hand on Maati's shoulder. "Maybe next time, child. This time I
need you here. We have lost too many already."
"Well,
then, he should stay, too," Maati said stubbornly. "He only just got
here. Captain Becker hasn't had him always. He can do things by himself or with
the cat or-Khornya can help him."
"Being
traded in, am I?" Acorna asked, chiding just a little. She squatted on her
heels and said, "Maati, I don't think Aari can stay right now."
"Why
not? We healed him. All but his horn."
"The
thing is, we didn't. Not entirely. He is not used to being with people any
more."
"I
will tell you a state secret, child," Grandam said. "Do you know why
the Council decided that the graves should be spread out according to
clan?"
"I
don't care about that!" Maati said.
"No,
but Aari does. Do you know that if we had buried them all together, all he
wanted to do here was what he has done these last few ghaanyl and made himself
guardian of the graves'
"You
felt that, too?" Acorna asked.
"He
broadcasts quite well, even without a horn," Grandam said. "I-rather
think he believes he belongs with the dead, no matter how much the living may
care for him."
"That's
Khieevi!" Maati declared. "Why would he think that?"
"That's
just it, Maati," Acorna said. "He spent a long time with the Khieevi,
You saw some of what they did to his body could you feel what they did to him
inside?" "Yes," Maati said. "Yes, but he'll get
better." "Yes, he will," Acorna said. "But he needs time to
get used to being alive. If he stays among our people now, they will never
forget how he is now, and it will be much harder for him to grow into his life
and become again the man he once was or could have been. Captain Becker may be
a little Khieevi around the edges, but he is a good man and he does not let
Aari go into himself too much. I will go and make as sure as I can that he
comes to no harm and comes back to you. Then, when you're a little older, you
can come into space with us if you like."
"Into
space-with you? Aren't you coming back, Khornya?" "I'm not
sure," she said. "But my adopted uncle is out there in trouble."
"So
is your aunt, don't forget, child," Grandam said, taking Maati by the
shoulders. The girl was only partially mollified and later, as Acorna, Aari,
and Becker watched the ground from the comscreen, they saw her looking after
them as the ship lifted off.
Twenty-One
The
Shahrazad was still transmitting her distress signal when she was boarded.
Hafiz had taken the helm after the captain was hit by falling debris from the
first volley fired against the ship. It had come from nowhere, before the
Shahrazad was able to deploy her shields. Their attacker was cloaked.
Fortunately,
the Shahrazcad was as spacious vertically as the villa on Laboue was
horizontally. And there was only one entrance, on the lower levels, and in
between, the ship had a labyrinth of defenses.
Karina
watched, with a sort of horrified fascination, as pressure-suited individuals
entered the main air lock, brandishing large, gleaming, fearsome-looking
weapons. The leader, a small person, shucked off her garment to reveal a
form-fitting silver garment much like the ones worn by ancient film starlets in
vintage Asian space operas. The invader fluffed her hair and demanded of the
ship at large, "Hafiz Harakamian, your guests have arrived. Surrender now
and save yourself a great deal of pain later."
Hafiz
smiled and said softly to the computer, "The baths."
Dr.
Hoa, standing nearby, nodded, and pressed the control buttons for the little
bubble of weather he was not averse to using as a weapon under these
circumstances.
Kisia
and her phalanx of soldiers blasted open the air lock from the inside, as Hafiz
had known they surely would do, disrespectful as they were of his investment in
the finest, smoothest, and most aesthetic possible technology. The blast caused
the onion-domed portal to the air lock to disassemble into a waterfall of beads
which then tinkled away to a mere shimmer of energy as they were penetrated.
Once
outside the lock, the invaders were quickly lost in a miasma of swirling steam.
The last Karina saw of Kisia or her soldiers for quite some time was the sight
of Kisia pulling frantically at the neck of her silvery garment. The invaders
mopped sweat out of their eyes and tore off whatever bits of clothing they
could spare. They were desperate to keep themselves from broiling in the 135
degree steam heat of the artificial Turkish bath generated by a combination of
Hoa's weather wizardry and Hafiz's design for another homey little luxury he
had planned to add to the Shahrazad.
After a
bit, though, the invaders flashed their weapons again, and another of Hafiz's
elegant portals was blown open. "The camels, please," Hafiz told the
computer.
"What
will those do, Hafiz?" Karina asked. "Where have you been hiding
camels?"
"They
are holograms, my beloved," Hafiz said. "Only holograms, but we have
arranged for them to appear to spit great boluses of the most noisome and slimy
mixture ever to spoil the high tone of a caravan. Sadly, we did not mix the
stuff with acid or poison or something a bit more lethal for fear of harming my
own people. These are delaying tactics only, you understand, but perhaps this
spawn of scum-born scorpions will find it sufficiently distracting that we will
buy time until assistance may arrive. Meanwhile, the navigation officer is
deleting our course from the ship's computer."
"Won't
Yasmin have warned them about these things?"
Karina
asked. "You did say she knew all of your security precautions."
Hafiz
smiled sweetly. "Not these. The good doctor Hoa and I have been amusing
ourselves with these little diversions only since we left Rushima-while you
were involved in your spiritual activities, o pot of passion."
The
camel charge was a sight to behold and it certainly did have the element of
surprise. If only Hafiz and Dr. Hoa could have made the camels spit something
as deadly as it was disgusting, Karina thought, so that these miscreants could
be sent back to their creator to have their spirits adjusted and be refitted
for their next lives as lizards, snakes, and insects of various species.
The
girl pirate's head was encased almost immediately in a blob of green goo. Soon
enough, all the invaders were wiping their eyes, coughing from the fumes, and
otherwise displaying their displeasure at the welcome they were receiving from
the Shahrazcu). They realized quickly enough that the camels were holograms, of
course, but that did not stop them from slipping and falling on the pseudospit,
causing their weapons to discharge accidentally. Two of the invaders were
wounded in the struggle.
The
ship's computer tracked their progress on the diagram of the hull's interior
and showed that the next portal they blasted open led them through a maze of
halls that caused them to actually go back the way they had come, though not
through the Turkish bath.
Instead,
the hologram this time was of a vast and endless desert and the walkway
designed to help load the ship before takeoff was looped to operate treadmill
fashion. The invaders walked, then ran, then walked, but never escaped the
desert hologram, nor its arid climate, also courtesy of Dr. Hoa and the ship's
computer. By the time someone had the presence of mind to shoot into the
simulated rolling sand dunes beneath their feet, the tongues of all of the
invaders, at least the human ones, were hanging out, and they were looking
parched dry and burned from the sunlamps, fixtures from the ship's spa, that
augmented the artificial climate.
The
desert disappeared, the portal opened, and the very hot and weary invaders
stumbled through to the desert oasis.
"Dancing
girls," Hafiz said. The diagram showed that the invaders had climbed
through the desert up to the next level. The oasis looked as inviting as it was
supposed to, and featured a hologram of Hafiz's favorite garden with a
fifteen-layer cascading fountain looking like a waterfall. At this point,
Karina noticed that all of the crew except for themselves, Dr. Hoa, and the
fallen captain had disappeared. "Where?" she began.
"Watch,"
Hafiz said. "In deference to the pacifistic nature of our dear Acorna's
people, we brought no deadly weapons but this does not mean my crew has
suffered a lapse of their very fine training that makes them the most skilled
of warriors in all manner of martial arts and hand-to-hand combat. See you, my
blossom, this is what the intruders will behold." And a squad of
improbably endowed and incredibly agile and flexible dancing girls-well,
persons, as Hafiz had added a pair of dancing boys to the troop, all muscles
and flashing dark eyes, with skills to match those of the women. Clad, but not
very, in peekaboo veils of glowing, translucent silk in emerald, sapphire,
garnet, raspberry, saffron, all were likewise adorned with jingling coins of
purest gold fluttering from between lush breasts, cascading over rippling
abdominal muscles, twinkling with the twitching of hips, sliding over sinuous
arms and necks, and flirting from between brows and just under the lower
eyelashes where coy veilings began. Two dancers for each invader, Karina saw,
and the invaders, who surely knew this must be a hologram also, could not quite
bring themselves to shoot. In fact, as the dancers kicked up little sprays of
water from the quite-real fountain, quite-real water touched the parched,
would-be conquerors, who disregarded their weapons long enough to drink, to
wash their hot faces, to reach for proffered flesh.
Meanwhile,
the crew members, clad in blue from head to toe, including transparent
facemasks, were concealed by the dancing holograms. They snatched up weapons
and disabled the invading troops before any of them knew what was happening.
Kisia
Manjari squealed as the dancing boys disappeared and she found herself hoisted
aloft by two blue clad crewmen.
"Oh,
Hafiz, you are wonderful!" Karina cried. "You've saved us! Was it
your ancient Hadathian spirit guides who told you how to do all of this?"
"Very
close, o luscious lemon drop, it was the strategy of an ancestor portrayed in
one of my collections of rare and venerable vids. The occasion was an athletic
contest but the principles were much the same except we had to employ holograms
and our own humble resources instead of the living creatures at the disposal of
my ancestor."
"The
invaders have been taken prisoner and the ship secured, my Lord," one of
the blue-clad crewmen said across the ship's computer's com system. "What
shall we do with them now"
"I
haven't decided," Hafiz said. "The crocodile pit or being staked out
in the desert. What do you think, my darling?"
"Oh,
Hafiz, that's so very unevolved. Besides, the crocodiles would probably give
Ms. Manjari professional courtesy, or perhaps die of indigestion. Why not just
confine them to the ship's dungeons until such time as they may attain
enlightenment?"
"Yes,
my angel, but I am very cross with them. Because of them we may not continue
our journey. Perhaps we should teach them the joys of spacial liberation?"
"It's
a thought," Karina conceded. But they had delayed a bit too long.
Kisia
Manjari broke loose from her dancing boys and pushed a button on her
inconsequential left breast. "MQtU, send over the second, third, and
fourth phalanxes! And watch out for the biohazards and the dancing girls!"
Her
former captors recaptured her, menacing her with her own weapon. She simpered
at them, "You wouldn't blast a girl for making a little call, would
you?"
Karina
looked at her husband hopefully but he shook his head. "Alas, we have no
second line of defense."
"Shahrazad,
this is the Condor. You still in one piece?"
"Condor,"
Hafiz said. "We are just barely. We are about to be boarded a second
time."
"They're
probably coming through that piece of oversized tubing linking their ship to
yours, right?" the voice asked.
"That
seems a safe assumption," Hafiz said.
"None
of your people coming through, right?"
"No
one but pirates."
"Okay,
we're on the case, but Shahrazad"
"Yes,
Condor?"
"Dibs
on what's left of the tubing afterward. We're a salvage ship."
"With
my compliments. Condor."
"Okay,
then. Brace yourselves. You may get a little shook up."
Acorna
had not realized quite the extent of the adventure she was in for merely by
becoming part of the Condor's growing crew. "How close are they, Captain
Becker?" she had asked.
"Only
a wormhole away," he replied. "Looks stable, and it should let us out
within striking range of the target. Hold onto your horn-hats, boys and girls,
here we go." He had taken what he said was the unprecedented move of
strapping the cat in, too, a procedure which caused RK's ears to flatten
against his head. RK's tail would have lashed as well but it had no place to
go. "Sorry about this, shipmate, but we gotta make up some time
here."
He
called back to the rest of them as he plunged the Condor into the first hole,
"Salvage and recyclings usually a more leisurely kind of business, you
understand."
Acorna
smiled. He reminded her so much of her uncles. And Aari, for the first time
since she had seen him, seemed to be actively enjoying himself. Or maybe not.
He was baring his teeth. Was that hostile or had he just been around Becker too
long? No, she thought he was happy, tie felt happy to her.
The
ship jolted as it surged out of the wormhole and through the first of the two
"pleats" as Becker called them. "Little speed bump there, ladies
and gentlemen. Black water, as my daddy used to call it. Space rapids.
Yahoo!"
One
more of those and suddenly they were no longer in empty space. They were making
visual contact with two similar ships, both posh spaceliners, connected by a
long white umbilical cord.
Becker
hailed the Shahrazca. Acorna nearly wept with relief to hear her uncle Hafiz's
voice apprising them of the situation.
She was
about to ask to speak to him when Becker declared he had dibs on the tubing and
accelerated, aiming the Condor's nose between the two liners.
The
tubing was no impediment at all for the Nupiak asteroid breaker nose cone.
Space-suited bodies tumbled like corpuscles on a microscope slide of a broken
capillary. Gravity boots were locking onto hulls and gloves grasping the gloves
of spinning crewmates. Acorna was glad to see that most of them were managing
to save themselves but even gladder to see that in order to do so, they had to
let their weapons twirl out into the blackness of space.
Acorna
and Aari watched for a moment, and Acoma thought again how terribly lonely it
would be to go drifting in space till you died. She glanced at Becker, and at
the pressure suits on the wall. Becker looked completely serious for one
moment, then got up, threw pressure suits and jet packs at them and said,
"Okay, boys and girls, salvage time. You too, KEN-bo, but you won't need a
suit, right? When that little -female individual was kicking the stuffing out
of me, some of her boys stopped her from making it worse so I guess I owe them.
Besides, I want that tubing! And then we'll make a house call on your uncle.
Lady."
Acorna
was well used to maneuvering in jets and pressure suits from her childhood
mining asteroids with her uncles, and Aari also had used them before his
captivity on Vhiliinyar. Fortunately, Acorna's horn was not so long that it
required a special helmet. Maneuvering in space was a lot like swimming, using
the jets as fins, grabbing the drifting crewmen and bringing them back to the
Shahrazad and shoving them through an airlock before going after the next one.
They
managed to pluck two off the hull of their own ship where they clung like
barnacles before that ship took off. As soon as they shoved the last one aboard
Becker said, "Lady, you may want to visit the Shahrazad and make sure your
uncle is okay. Aari and KEN, unless you like family reunions, come on back to
the Condor and we'll eat our humble din-din of plant seeds and cat food and
hope Acorna brings us back some highclass chow from her rich relative."
Acorna
waved and climbed through the airlock. The previous hitchhikers had been taken
into custody by the Shahrazad's crew but once she drew off her helmet, Hafiz
himself was there to embrace her and welcome her aboard. As they repaired to
the ship's lounge, she felt it suddenly lurch, and saw a bolt of light zipping
across the view screen from the Shahrazcad to the departing Mu)a<f. The
Mu)cu exploded in a ball of flame.
From
the corn set, she heard Becker yelling, "Yahoo! Instant karma for coming
to the rescue, Aari, my man! Lookit the salvage! See ya later, Lady!" and
the Condor with a wee waggle of its chassis zoomed off to retrieve its prizes.
"No!"
cried Kisia Manjari, bound hand and foot to a chair in the corner of the
lounge. "It's not fair! That junk man can't have the nice new ship my
uncle gave me. Daddy, do something really nasty to him and his horrible
cat."
Acorna
saw that Kisia's eyes were turned up in her head so only white showed through
her lids.
"As
you see, dear Acorna, we are playing host, somewhat unwillingly, to an old
schoolmate of yours."
Acorna
rose and crossed the room, kneeling beside Kisia and looking into her face. She
started to touch the girl's head with her horn but Kisia jerked away, batting
at her with manacled hands.
"She's
had some sort of psychotic break," Acorna said, recoiling slightly from
the ugly chaos of the girl's mind. "She followed Captain Becker and took
away the horns of the Ancestors he had gathered. She tried to kill him to make
him tell where the Linyaari home world is."
"And
no doubt it was for the same reason that she pursued us," Hafiz said with
a heavy sigh.
"I
wonder if she knows anything about the disappearance of my people," Acorna
mused.
Before
she or anyone else could pursue that line of inquiry, a familiar voice
penetrated the room. "Shahrazad, this is the Haven. We received your
Mayday. Shahrazcad, come in. For the love of all the moons of Mithra,
Shahrazad, don't tell us we're too late and that explosion was you! Please come
in, Hafiz, you old camel molester, you."
"Mr.
Greene," Hafiz said to the room at large. "There are ladies present,
if you please. And no, quite happily, the explosion was that of a ship called
the Mu)<u registered to Count Edacki Ganoosh. The MQcu attacked us and
launched a boarding party. We managed to capture most of the party, and then we
blew up the ship, once it uncloaked, in order to forestall future
difficulty."
The
sound of youthful cheering and squealing and one shrill celebratory whistle
overcame Greene's transmission for a moment.
"Johnny,
it's Acorna," she said. "What are you and the Haven doing out
here?"
"We
originally came thinking to give safe escort to the Shahrazad, Acorna, but
things have gotten a little complicated. What are you, doing there?"
"That
also is complicated, Johnny," Acorna said.
"Ladies
and gentlemen and children of all ages," Becker's voice crackled in on top
of the others, "I think it's time we all had a little real-time
interfacing here. What say we pop over to the nearest dirt, set our respective
vessels on their tails, and climb aboard Shahrazad so Mr. Harakamian can entertain
us in the style to which it would be nice to become accustomed while we tell
our respective war stories, hmm?"
"A
very sound suggestion. Captain Becker," Hafiz said. "Please, bring
your excellent crew."
"Bring
the kitty, too. Captain," a young voice piped up.
"That
request was brought to you by Ms. Turi Reamer, jeweler at large, Becker,"
Johnny Greene said.
"'Course
it was," Becker replied. "I'da known Turi's voice anywhere, Greene.
You best not be coming between me and my lady friends now, John, you
hear?"
"Lordee,
I can tell you are on a salvage high, Joe. Get much from the wreck?"
"I
did not. It's in a bazillion teeny pieces all moving rapidly away at warp
speed. Not really worth my while."
"Gentlemen,
when you have finished your bonding ritual, perhaps we might agree upon a place
to meet?"
"There's
a puny little planetoid not far from here that doesn't seem to have any life or
want any," Becker said. "Let's set down there."
This
they did. As Becker, Aari, RK, and the KEN unit boarded, Acorna and the
Harakamians greeted them.
"What
a splendid specimen of a Makahomian Temple Cat you have on your shoulder, Mr.
Becker!" Karina said, clapping her hands. "I understand they are
among the most enlightened of all creatures. It is said that when the
Makahomian elders and priests begin to consider their next incarnations, the
most favored of all possible fates is to be born again as a Temple Cat."
RK
licked his paw, swiped it across his whiskers, narrowed his eyes, and purred
appreciatively.
Becker
was more single-minded. "I'd like to have a look at the human space
salvage you and Aari retrieved, Acorna, if your uncle doesn't mind," he
said. "Like I said, a couple of those guys who were with Manjari were not
half bad. I'm sort of hoping they were among the survivors."
Acorna
was pleased that he had dropped the "Lady" part now. It meant that he
was starting to consider her a friend, instead of some legendary character he
had heard about on Earth, which had been how he had regarded her before.
Uncle
Hafiz waved his hand graciously. "Please consider my dungeon as your
dungeon," he said.
Becker
strolled up to the force field where Hafiz had confined the miscreants. The
hologram behind them showed a Crusades-style dungeon, complete with sound
effects of someone being dismembered in the background. Acorna was very glad it
was just a hologram.
Becker
said, "I like the ambience, sir. Amnesty Interplanetary would be less
enthused, I'm sure, but if they ever come aboard because someone who deserves
this has the brass to complain, there will be nothing anyone can put a finger
on in the way of cruel or unusual punishment." Kisia Manjari was by now
confined in a separate cell. Karina Harakamian kept sending troubled glances in
the deranged girl's direction.
"Can
you wall off her cell from visual or auditory contact for a little while,
please, Mr. Harakamian?"
"My
dear Becker, we are fellow entrepreneurs, businessmen, and adventurers. Do call
me Hafiz, my friend, and I shall call you ..."
"Becker's
okay, but Aari here calls me Joe." "Joh," Aari said, and looked
challengingly at Uncle Hafiz. Acorna was pleased to note that either Aari's
appearance was so much improved by his surgery, prosthesis, and horn-hat that
the Harakamians noticed nothing unusual, or else Aari's wounds had only been
particularly repugnant to Linyaan. Hafiz smiled and said, "And you too, my
dear fellow, must call me Hafiz. Our beloved Acorna calls me uncle. I
practically raised her, you know. Why, I am all but a kinsman to your
people!"
Acorna
stifled a giggle and Aari gave Hafiz a slow baring of his teeth, rather like
Decker's more wolfish grins. "I am Aari, Uncle Hafiz. I have lost much of
my own family and will happily adopt you, since you wish it."
Oops.
She wished she and Aari could thought-speak as easily as they had been able to
among the horns of the dead. She could have warned him. Uncle Hafiz was a very
nice man in many respects but he was not exactly to be trusted-not even by
members of his blood kin.
"Splendid,
splendid." Hafiz erected a hologramatic wall in front of Kisla's cell,
adding some decorative manacles with a skeleton dangling from them on the
outside, a burning brazier with implements of torture heating in it, and, as a
finishing touch, a dish of greenish gruel crawling with virtual maggots. It
matched the decor of the interior of her cell nicely, though that now was
wholly blocked by a slimy looking stone wall. Had Acorna not witnessed some of
the conditions in the child labor camps of Kisia Manjari's adoptive father, the
Piper, she would never have believed human beings could incarcerate each other
in such dreadful nonhologramatic conditions.
RK sat
with lashing tail and narrowed eyes watching as Becker paced with his hands
clasped behind him, studying the faces of the men Acorna and Aari had rescued.
They were all men, which did not surprise Acorna. Kisia Manjari would have no
other women in her entourage. Her ego was such that she would see any other
woman as competition.
"I
think I recognize a couple of you fellows," Becker said. "Pardon me
if I don't quite remember your faces. I was dying at the time. But you failed
to kick me when I was down and I like that in an enemy, fortunately for you.
Now then, I'm wondering if any of you, being the lickspittles of Kisia Manjari
and her uncle as you must be to find yourselves in this charming accommodation,
would care to redeem yourselves a little further and fill us in about your
employers' plans. You understand we're wondering why we have been singled out
for the honor and distinction of being Kisia and Ganoosh's enemies."
Acorna
saw them hesitate, and quite without shame she used some of the new skills she
had acquired on narhiiVhiliinyar to give her wily old uncle a small psychic
push in the right direction.
"I
can assure you," Uncle Hafiz said suddenly, an inner smile lighting his
eyes as if the brilliant idea he had just had was his very own, which, for all
Acorna knew, it may have been. Perhaps her push was merely giving him the sort
of cue an actor needed to speak his lines at the proper time. "That the
man who proves to be of the most assistance to us will no longer need be in
anyone's employ,
"So
grateful for his services shall the House of Harakamian be that it shall reward
him so that he will believe he has found the universe's most generous djinn in
the most secluded and luxuriously appointed bottle in the universe. Should he
be kissing his own mother on the lips, his identity would yet be a mystery to
her when our physicians have concluded his transformation and yet, so handsome
a-what is that idiomatic expression you so charmingly employ, o incomparable
jewel among jewels, when referring to my personal physique and sexual
prowess?"
"Studmuffin,
Lord and Master," Karina replied with a demure lowering of her lashes and
a coy curtsey.
"So
handsome a studmuffin shall he be that all women will desire him and all men
admire him. A far more attractive retirement program than being left adrift in
space, would you not say, gentlemen?"
There
was only a moment of silence before one of the men Acorna had rescued, one
whose face wore a careworn expression that was perhaps the result of a troubled
conscience, spoke up. "I'd do it for a new job and protection for my
family, Mr. Harakamian. I understood that I was being employed to pilot an
executive liner to take VIPs to business appointments. This kidnapping and
torture stuff and posing as Federation Forces was not in my contract."
Acorna
did not stay for the bidding war that ensued, each prisoner vying to give the
most accurate details to which he was privy concerning Ganoosh's operation and
plans. For at that moment, Johnny Greene and what remained for the crew of the
Haven were boarding the Shahrazm). Acorna ran to greet them. It was so good to
see her old friends again! She could hardly wait to see Pal Kendoro and 'Ziana.
She wondered if 'Ziana realized yet how much Pal cared for her. And if Markel
and Johnny Greene would be there.
Markel
and Johnny were there, it was true, and Khetala, who stepped forward and hugged
Acorna in an embrace that quickly degenerated into sobs. Acorna wondered what
could be upsetting her so until she realized that here were Johnny, Markel,
Khetala, red-haired Annella, a tall red-haired man with two children of the
same coloring, and a passel of very young children. And that was all.
"Kheti,
where are the others?" Acorna asked. "Johnny? They're not on the
Haven, are they? What happened?"
Johnny
took a deep breath. Becker and Hafiz had by that time noted that something else
was amiss and joined Acorna and Karina.
"Well,
honey, there's good news and bad news," Johnny said. "The bad news
is. General Ikwaskwan is working for the bad guys. He and a bunch of his fake
Federation Forces troops came home to roost about the time the Starfarers
arrived to pick up Nadhari Kando for combat lessons. Ikwaskwan gassed Nadhari
and our ship and took most of the Starfarers prisoner. If it hadn't been for
Markel knowing how to use the vents and suggesting them as a safe space, we,
too, would be guests of the general."
"Was
that last part the good news?" Acorna asked.
Johnny
shook his head. "No, the good news-though it's also kind of mixed-is that
we know the course the general's ships took when they returned to their lair.
We followed, and we know exactly where it is, but we couldn't take them on with
only kiddy power to draw on. While we were trying to decide what our next move
was, we picked up the Mayday from the Shahrazad."
When
that and all of the other information had been shared and a plan requiring
Acorna and Aari to be in two places at once had been formed, Hafiz Harakamian
demonstrated the skill upon which his first fortune had been founded.
"My
enemies have told many lies about me," Hafiz said. "Among them is the
tale that my earliest enterprises involved the sale of addictive substances,
with hints that these were illegal drugs. As any of my people can tell you, I
am a devout man and am guided by the Three Books and the Three Prophets. I
would never consider such a thing. However, in one way, my enemies are correct.
My fortune was founded on items that many find addictive. You will have noticed
some of my specialty work here aboard the Shahrazad. Mr. Greene, I believe,
will recall when I fulfilled my family obligation to make a profitable business
of my own before I was named heir by running my business from a storefront on
Todo Street."
Johnny
snapped his fingers. "Harakamian Hologramatics! Fondest Fantasies
Fulfilled! I remember it! I loved the holo of the music session in the Dublin
pub."
"I
think Dad mentioned your company a time or two, too, now that I think about
it," Becker said.
"Why,
Uncle Hafiz!" Acorna said. "I knew you had wonderful taste, but I had
no idea you were an artist as well."
"Oh,
yes, my dearest, and now, with your help and Aan's, I will create the vision of
a lifetime. Meanwhile, the rest of you get to work."
"We're
on it, Hafiz," Becker said. "C'mon, folks," he said, and the KEN
unit as well as the crew of the Haven followed him to first the Condor and
then, laden with various tools and spare parts, back to the Haven.
Day
after day and hour after hour the tortured bodies of the children -were dragged
into the bubble-badly bruised, broken,
and cut; some with ruptured organs and splintered bone. The Linyaari on the
healing rotation did their best for them, working until the healers were past
the point of total exhaustion.
And all
night long another team worked on Nadhari Kando, healing her flesh and bone,
cleansing her spirit of the drugs which caused the disciplined woman warrior to
behave in a way her sense of honor otherwise would not have allowed. The
Linyaari were reaching their limits and feared they would soon become too
exhausted to help.
It
would have been different if the Linyaari had been given time to rest between
rotations but they were not. Ikwaskwan's pet scientists were deliberately
pushing the unicorn people to the limits.
Melireenya
had often been taken to her ship and interrogated again about the computer
system. Every Linyaari underwent this, usually in the middle of the night or
before a long-delayed mealtime. Not that the meals were in any way adequate.
Bales of old hay were all that Ikwaskwan provided for food for the Lmyaan.
After
the interrogation, Melireenya had been shoved into the gas chamber. She had
needed healing herself afterwards. So depleted had her horn become from the
interrogation, it took much longer to purify the air than usual, and she
absorbed some of the toxins before her system could purify them. Then it was on
to the dismal swamp known among the inmates as "the pool." It took
her hours of lying on her belly with her face almost submerged in scummy,
stinking sewage to clear this water.
There
were several different gas chambers and several different pools, actually, so
that many Linyaari could undergo the same ordeals at once.
Melireenya's
joy at seeing Hrronye, her lifemate, again was quickly dampened when others
told her in whispers of thoughtspeak that they had been separated from their
own families and told they would not see them again until they gave the
soldiers the information they demanded. Nobody did, of course. The location of
the Linyaari home world and the secrets of the horn were as locked into
Linyaari psyches as their own DNA codes. Those who traveled from the planet
learned from their superiors how to navigate from memory, and it became a part
of them along with their newly white skins and silvery manes.
But she
seldom saw Hrronye now, and wished she had dared embrace him, as they were kept
apart anyway on the tedious deadly treadmill of torture called the "duty
roster."
By far
the worst part of it all was the healing. At first, it was not so bad. The
average Linyaari in good physical condition could heal a deep -wound within
moments. And there were many Linyaari in the compound. Only four were assigned
to heal at the same time, and this was after their resources had been depleted
by the other "duties," lack of sleep, and increasingly, by
malnutrition.
Neeva
had tried to reason with Ikwaskwan. "This is hardly a fair representation
of our skills that you are seeing, General," she said in her best
diplomat's manner. "We could show you so much more were we properly fed and
rested."
He had
actually reached out and run his hand down her horn, a violation of privacy
that ran very deep among their people. Neeva had tried to pretend it did not
distress her but of course it did. "And we could feed you so much better,
dear ambassador, if you would tell us the location of the place where we might
find your native grasses and other foods. If you continue to refuse to satisfy
our very reasonable curiosity, why then ..." He stroked her horn with his
fingers again and when she winced away from him, she was forced to stand still
by two of the soldiers, and he repeated his repugnant gesture several more
times. "The horns will survive all of you, I'm told. Perhaps they alter to
their translucent and less useful state because, while on a living member of
your species, they are less stable-having to self-heal as it were. It may be
that detached horns, having fewer frivolous demands made on their powers, will
be of more use to us. I understand these things have aphrodisiac properties. Is
that true?"
"How
would I know?" Neeva asked, undiplomatically. He retaliated by grabbing
her horn with his fist and yanking on it so that she sobbed with pain and
humiliation. "One way or another, dear ambassador, I will have yours for
myself."
This had
been too much for her lifemate, who, like other Linyaari present at the pond
where she approached the general, was listening.
"Leave
her alone!" Virii demanded, stepping forward, only to be grabbed by two
more of the soldiers. He had spoken in Linyaari, of course, but his meaning was
taken by Ikwaskwan, who wagged a scolding finger at him. "I'll have yours,
too, stud. I wonder-are they a pair? How interesting." He had nodded at
the pond. "Let's see how long it takes these two to purify that. Make sure
it's good and foul."
The
soldiers had eliminated in the pond and then forced the heads of both Neeva and
Virii into the filth, not bothering to make sure their noses and mouths were
clear of the water. No one else had been allowed to help. It was horrible. In
the shape they were in it took both of them almost ten minutes to purify the
water and by the end of it both had nearly drowned. Thereafter they underwent a
joint interrogation session. Melireenya and the others had not so much as dared
to whisper while the interrogation was broadcast throughout the compound.
Today
it was rumored something even worse would happen. The architect of this horror,
the one who had retained the services of Ikwaskwan and his mercenaries, had
arrived during the night. Ikwaskwan told everyone he had special entertainments
planned for their distinguished guest.
(They
almost make you miss the Khieevi, don't they?) Khaari asked sadly. (At least
with the Khieevi, we were never sure if they understood what they were doing to
us or not. The calculation of this is repulsive.)
The
tournament was about to begin and during it, Melireenya had been specifically
chosen for healing duty. Her horn was translucent, difficult to see now in some
light, and it had even begun to droop. It was awful enough to think of its
powers failing while she was up to her ears in fouled water or breathing
poisoned air or enduring the mistreatment of the interrogators-but worst of all
for her was the thought that it, and she, would fail in the middle of trying to
heal a massively wounded child.
So far
this had not happened but it now took all the Linyaari on duty many many long
moments to heal each and every wound. All the time the victims were in terrible
pain.
Now the
soldiers and their masters had assembled in the stadium, and this time all of
the Linyaari and all of the children of the Haven were being forced to watch as
well. The lovely young captain 'Ziana of the Haven was bound at the wrist and
ankle to that young man who would someday, if they lived through this, surely
be her lifemate.
Poor
Nadhari was healed once more of all but the massive amounts of drugs Ikwaskwan
had injected into her system. The last three nights she had seen patients still
undergoing healing. Once the drugs were leeched from her system, she had begged
them to kill her, or to at least let her die so she could no longer be used in
this fashion. But of course, no Linyaari could do such a thing.
The
soldiers were using their prods to push the young couple out to Nadhari when a
soldier came running through the crowd and bounded up to the box where
Ikwaskwan and Ganoosh sat waiting for the maiming to begin. The soldier saluted
and said something to Ikwaskwan, who looked very pleased, which was not at all
good, and nodded to him, then held his hand up to the soldiers below to desist
for a moment. The first soldier bounded down the steps and out of the stadium
bubble. He was headed in the direction of the bubble where the captured
Linyaari ships were stored and the interrogations took place.
A
moment or two passed, and Melireenya was wondering, along with the other
Linyaari linked in thought-speak, what fresh horror was about to be visited
upon them. Then the light shifted and the top of the bubble was filled with
oversize faces and forms of richly dressed Linyaari people standing in front of
colorful pavilions with a stately hill in the background cradling more egg
ships than could possibly be left on narhiiVhiliinyar.
"Dearest
ambassadors, tradesmen, students, and scientists, this is your vilzaar
speaking," said the woman, who was not the viizaar at all, not unless
Khornya had rapidly risen to power. She was speaking in her rather broken
version of Linyaari, so Melireenya was inclined to doubt she had become the planet's
administrator already. Beside her was a fellow who was vaguely familiar, and
yet, different somehow. Melireenya was far too weary to try to place him.
"Dr. Vaanye" Khornya indicated the man beside her who was hardly old
enough to be the Dr. Vaanye who was her late father-"has finally succeeded
in widening the band of our broadcast so it can reach to the various planets
upon which you should now be posted. We have had no word of you in a long
while. Have you lost your way home? Have you forgotten how to contact your
loved ones? In case such a disaster is happening, we will rebroadcast our
coordinates on this band only."
Ikwaskwan
was impatiently gesturing to a soldier who dragged Neeva and Virii, bound at
wrist and ankle like the young Starfarer couple, out into the arena.
"Well,
Ambassador? What's the message?"
Neeva
raised her filthy face, her mane matted and chunks of it torn loose in parts,
her horn barely visible.
She
spat.
Ikwaskwan
roared. "Let Nadhari have them both and bring me their horns when she's
done with them!"
Melireenya
and Khaari passed a signal between them and Melireenya sprang up and cried,
"No! General, please don't hurt them any more! I'll tell you what it says!
I know it will harm the rest of my people but I simply can't take it any more!
Please let Neeva and Virii go and I'll tell you anything you want to."
Khaari
ran into the arena after her and tried to pull her back. "Melireenya, you
don't know what you're saying. You mustn't betray all of us for one person, not
even Neeva."
Perhaps
the general would not notice in the heat of the moment that they were both
speaking Standard, for his benefit.
The
message overhead was in a loop, repeating over and over again. Melireenya,
babbling, stumbling over her words, forgetting the Standard that she had
learned from Khornya's people what seemed like ghaanyi and ghaanyl ago, told
Ikwaskwan what the transmission said. She hesitated over the coordinates until
he threatened Neeva and Virii again, and then she allowed herself to cave in
under the weight of his cruelty, as she had wanted to do for days. She lay in
the dirt of this strange moon beside her poor tortured friends and wept and
wept and wept until she thought her weeping would never cease. When at long
last someone, Khaari, thought-touched her and she looked up, everything around
her had changed. The most drastic change was that the bleachers were empty,
with most of the soldiers, Ikwaskwan and Ganoosh, gone. Although the broadcast
was still playing and replaying overhead, it was infused with far more light,
and Melireenya realized that this was because there were no longer the shadows
being cast by the towering fence of bullet-shaped troop ships that had
surrounded the biosphere bubbles. All of these ships were also gone, and the
atmosphere outside the bubbles was clouded only by settling dust and debris.
The bubbles still resounded with the roaring of the troop ship drives as they
lifted off.
That
roaring seemed to continue for an awfully long time, Melireenya thought. With
the games over, Nadhari was netted, sedated, and Melireenya and the other three
on her shift -went to work healing her. This day there were no wounds except
the psychic ones from the drugs and the shame she suffered to be so badly
misused. So far this day she had maimed no one.
The
lone sentry left to guard the Linyaari ship bubble was surprised to see two
troop ships land so soon after the others had left. He thought he understood
when he saw the cadre of uniformed Federation Forces men and women pushing one
of the corns in front of them. This one was lipping off to them in her own
horsey-sounding babble.
"Got
another live one for the general," the short, barrelchested master
sergeant said. "He's gonna want to interrogate this one personally."
"Well,
he'll have to do it when he gets back from the Linyaari home world then,"
the sentry smirked.
"What?"
"Didn't you get the message? The stupid corns broadcast to all of their
ships, which we intercepted, of course, the coordinates to their planet. The
general and the boss have taken off with most of the personnel to check it
out."
"No
kiddin'? Well, we'll just park her with the others then. What'd they have in
the mess hall tonight?"
The
sentry told him while the rest of the cadre marched the corn past him, and past
the ships, into the biosphere where most of her kind were kept.
"Where'd
you find her?"
"Pleasure
house on Rahab Three."
"No
kidding? You mean somebody wanted to do it -with one of..." The sentry
didn't finish his sentence. Something banged against the backs of his knees,
knocking him into the sergeant. The last thing he saw was the sergeant's belt
buckle as the newcomer raised both fists and brought them down hard on the back
of the sentry's skull.
Acorna
heard the thump when the sentry hit the ground and saw only a brief flash of
movement as Aari penetrated the biosphere. He had an uncanny talent for taking
on the coloring of his surroundings, she saw. It was augmented by smearing
himself with soil, but it was more in the way he became whatever was around
him, though she would have said if asked previously that it was impossible for
anyone to blend with a plastic bubble.
Khetala
was giving the next trooper they encountered the same story Becker had about Acorna
being a special prisoner they'd found in a pleasure house. Meanwhile Reamer
guided her to the bubble where many other Linyaari were crammed into a place
far too small for them. They were very subdued. At first she thought they all
wore horn-hats to mute their thoughts, but then she saw that their horns were
in very bad condition that they were emaciated and filthy, their bones
protruding and their postures drooping.
She
began to pick out the ones who looked the strongest and ablest and used her
horn judiciously on them, meanwhile broadcasting in thought-speak, (We have
come to take you home. Please be ready. Do as you are directed and with any
luck, we will all leave here safely.)
(Khornya?)
Her name spoken in her aunt's thought-speak sounded as if Neeva was seeing her
as a ghost. Acorna waded through her people until she found an adjoining bubble
where four Linyaari were laying horns on Neeva and a male Linyaari, and also on
someone who vaguely resembled the Red Bracelet who had once been Delszaki Li's
chief of security, Nadhari Kando.
(Neeva!)
(We are
doing what we can for her, Khornya, but she and Virii have been badly abused.)
(Melireenya!
Khaari, I am so glad to have found you. Stand aside a moment-no, wait.) She
laid her horn on all of them and in a few moments, except for looking very
thin, they had recovered to the point that they once more resembled her old
shipmates and her aunt.
(Oh,
Khornya! You see how low we have fallen. Thanks be that your horn is still
fresh. Can you help Nadhari? They have almost killed her with their wicked
drugs that make her do terrible things to us all.)
Nadhari
was feverish, and her eyes were staring, the blood vessels in her neck and
upper chest standing out like those of her arms, seemingly in spasm. Acorna
laid her horn against them and Nadhari relaxed.
Becker
poked his head in. "Khetala, Reamer, Markel, and Hafiz's people have taken
care of the guards. You got enough pilots for the Linyaari vessels?"
"Yes.
But none of them are very strong."
"That's
okay. They don't have to fly far. I swept all the ships for homing devices.
Learned that lesson once already. Let's go, then."
"It
is a fortunate thing that all of my gardens are not of the illusory
variety," Hafiz said as he, Acorna, and Aari watched the Linyaari former
prisoners stripping his hydroponics gardens like locusts in a field. The
gardens in the Linyaari ships, which could have fed the prisoners, had been
deliberately killed by Ikwaskwan's men or allowed to die.
"Very
good," Acorna agreed. "Our people are looking much improved. But we
need to get them home -where they can graze and rest and have the wounds to
their spirits salved."
"I
hope," Aari said in a voice so tight that it came out rather high,
"that their families will not fear them, too."
Acorna
laid her horn against his shoulder. "Your family did not fear you. Maati
was very put out we didn't bring her along, in fact."
In the
lounge and on the mess deck, the Starfarers were putting all of the gourmet
selections in the Shahrazad's replicators to the test, while Karina and the
staff busied themselves at other replicators on other parts of the ship, fixing
food for the youngsters to take on their journey home.
Becker
stuck his head through the onion-domed port, nodded to Aari and Acorna, and
said, "Saddle up, crew. Time to go back in the sky now."
So they
left Hafiz and the Haven in charge of the former prisoners, both human and
Linyaari, and boarded the Condor once more, setting off for the coordinates
that the hologram had given as those of narhii-Vhiliinyar.
Acorna
was a little surprised to see Nadhari Kando, Neeva and Virii, and 'Ziana and
Pal already aboard. "I'm amazed Johnny Greene isn't here, too," she
said.
"He's
still back on the Shahrazcad generating those messages with the coordinates,
sending out fresh holovids every little once in a while just to keep Ganoosh
and Ikwaskwan interested," Becker told her. "I figure they've been
traveling maybe forty-eight hours by now, but using my special navigational
methods, we'll be there several hours before them."
He was
correct as, Acorna was learning, was usual. The Condor arrived at the
Federation outpost well before the mercenary fleet. When the post commander
heard the stories of the Linyaari ambassador, the legendary Nadhari Kando, and
the young Starfarers, he was at first hesitant until Acorna said, "I can
only bring you the words of my uncle, whom the Linyaari people regard as a sort
of honorary kinsman and who considers all of my people to be under his
protection while they are outside their own territory."
"Yes,
ma'am," the Federation commander said. "And your uncle, can you give
me a name?"
"Hatiz
Harakamian," she said. "You may have heard of him. Patron Emeritus of
the House of Harakamian? My other uncle Rafik Nadezda is the current patron and
he naturally shares Uncle Hafiz s concern. In fact, Mr. Kendoro and Ms. Kando
are close personal friends of Uncle Rafik's as well as mine."
The
commander's demeanor changed. "You're Lady Acorna Harakamian-Li! At the
behest of Mr. Rafik Nadezda, the Federation has been investigating certain
crimes against it and unaffiliated races."
Acorna
nodded.
"And-uh-two
other uncles-your parents seem to have had a lot of brothers, ma'am."
Acorna nodded. "Two other uncles were so insistent that we send Federation
troops that there is a detachment on the way already. I'm afraid your uncles
were so upset that they had to be forcibly detained to keep them from coming
along. No civilians on troop ships, ma'am. I'm sure you understand."
"If
you could just send them word that you've spoken with me and I am" she
started to say fine but then amended it to, "I have survived, Mr.
Harakamian is safe, and we are among friends, I would appreciate it."
"Roger
that, ma'am." Within a few hours real Federation ships began arriving from
outposts all over nearby quadrants, creating a formidable welcoming committee
for Ikwaskwan's fake ships.
When
Ikwaskwan's troops arrived, bristling with weapons but speaking words of peace
to what they fondly supposed to be the Linyaari home world, they were flanked
by the real Federation ships, locked into tractor beams, and escorted to the
outpost, after a brief skirmish ending in the Federation's favor and providing
so much salvage for Becker that he had to put it on the tractor beam to tow
behind the Condor.
"Now
then, Aari, here's something my daddy taught me about towing salvage. You
always tow it at a thirty degree angle from your flight pattern. You know why
that is?"
"Perhaps
so it does not hit your ship if you must suddenly cease acceleration or reverse
course?" Aari asked.
Becker
looked disappointed, Acorna thought. He loved to lecture. "Very good. But
that's not all. You know what else?"
"No,
Joh," Aari said.
"Well,
it's the ions we leave behind in our wake, see. They discolor some of the
metals, pock others, can completely ruin a good load of salvage so it's not
worth jack. This way, you tow it at an angle, you don't get hit in the butt or
ruin your cargo. Only problem is, we can't tow through the worms and pleats so
we gotta go the long way."
"Joh,"
Aari said. "The scanners."
The
scanners had picked up the cloaked vessel ahead of them, now uncloaking to turn
on them. The comscreen never brightened. It didn't have to.
"Ahh,"
Nadhari said in a hoarse and cracked voice. She had spent hours giving her
deposition. "Ikky's flagship."
Becker
bared his teeth at her in the grin Aari had learned to mimic. "So,
Nadhari, I heard about what this old boyfriend of yours did to you. How about
we send him a little love letter?"
Nadhari
returned the grin with the first one of hers Acorna had seen since they left
the biospheres. "Oh, Becker, sweetie, can we."
"For
you, no sacrifice is too much," Becker said. "It's a good place to
die--for them. We got black water behind us-everybody strap down."
Acorna
reached for RK to secure the cat, as well, but he had made other plans. He lay
inside the same harness that held the unhealthily thin form of Nadhari Kando.
Becker
said, "Nadhari? Pretty name. Makahomian, isn't it?"
A bolt
of light snapped toward them.
She
nodded just before he said, "Okay, here it comes, three-two-one, reverse
thrusters!"
Acorna
didn't quite take it all in. One moment the ship loomed large on their screens
and the Condor seemed to be standing still. The next moment, Nadhari's smile
turned down, everyone unstrapped themselves and Aari unpointed at the
comscreen. And in the midst of it all, several tons of wreckage were slingshot
from the tractor beam on their starboard side.
After a
moment or two the Condor slowed, and all movement reversed once more for a
forward thrust. They reemerged from the "black water" just as the
first red ball of light was dimming and the pieces of Ikwaskwan's flagship were
making that part of space a dangerous place to be.
Nadhari
Kando laughed and Becker winked at her. "Sending them a frag-load of
salvage ricocheted their shot right back at them." He shook his head
regretfully. "Just like the sick sucker to explode in too many pieces to
make it worthwhile to collect."
"I
appreciate your sacrifice, Becker," Nadhari said.
"Then
it was worth it," he said, with grim satisfaction.
Karina
was the one who thought of the brilliant idea of taking some of each of the
grasses favored by the Linyaari and putting them in the replicator. And
belatedly, Becker and Aari remembered the sacks of seed that had been blocking
the crew quarters before the KEN unit cleared them out to make room for the
bones. With these resources, the Linyaari were soon restored to relative
health.
Karina
again offered her services and Hafiz's to Acorna for her spiritual training.
Neeva, who overheard the offer, thoughtspoke to Acorna, (Ask her to tell you
how she manages to shield her thoughts so well, Khornya. When we first met her,
just about the time we thought we had made contact, her mind became a complete
blank.)
"Karina,
you were the first contact for my people when they came to fetch me,"
Acorna said. "You learned thought-speech before I did, I'm told."
"Oh,
yes," Karina said, "And thanks to my heightened level of
enlightenment, I was able instantly to communicate with your species."
"Didn't
you find it difficult at all? I certainly did-I have had so much trouble sorting
out the thoughts of those around me from each other and not broadcasting every
little notion."
"I
had just the opposite problem, to tell you the truth," Karina said
confidentially. "I would start receiving them and, knowing they were
trying to reach me, I naturally made my mind completely open and blank to
receive their thoughtsand then I could hear nothing at all."
"Hmmm,"
Acorna said. "I'll have to try that."
"What?"
"I
said, 'imagine that,'" Acorna replied. "When you were expecting just
the opposite, I mean."
While
everyone worked to regain the strength they needed to make the journey home,
Acorna and her aunt talked.
Acorna
was almost startled to find that of everything that had happened to her, what
she wanted to talk about most was Aari and what had been done to him. After her
aunt's ordeal, Acorna felt that she would understand what Aari had undergone.
"Maybe you can make our people understand, help him fit in again,"
Acorna said.
"Do
you think that's still necessary?" Neeva asked. "Look. Does he seem
to be having a hard time fitting in now? "
Indeed,
he did not, but was grazing with the others, listening to them talk and
noddrng, occasionally adding something of his own.
"He
seems fine now but when we get home, when everyone's normal, will they be so
upset by memories of their own ordeal that just seeing him or me might bring
back, that they will be afraid to look at-well, especially him again?"
"Khornya,
we're not all like that. You must realize that this particular crisis affected
you and the people at home as well as us. We spaceborn and spacechosen are your
kind, but because of circumstances, none of us stayed dirtside while you were
there. You met only the most conservative element of our society. And the most
fearful, because they look to the past for their strength. They have a strong
aversion to change of any kind. And they don't like anyone who is the least bit
different. Don't get me wrong. It is necessary that there be both traditional
or agrarian, and progressive or technological and scientific Linyaari. The
traditionalists give us our stability and sense of self and we -we give them
the ability to continue to live. I don't suppose they mentioned that it was
necessary to partially reform narhii-Vhiliinyar to make it habitable for our
people?"
"Not
in any detail," Acorna said. "Well, it was. Thanks be to the
Ancestors that Grandam was there to help you."
"And
Maati." "And Maati," Neeva agreed. "My point is, you are
one of us. Aari is one of us. Nothing can change that, ever, not distance or
time or even the sort of thing that has happened to Aari-and almost to all of
us. Wherever you are, wherever we are, you are still ours and we are still your
people."
Except
for the inclusion of the Condor, Acorna's second homecoming was almost a
reversal of her first. This time the bright Faberge egg ships bounced toward
narhii-Vhiliinyar rather than from it, and only one lone ship, the new one
she'd seen the techoartisans working on with the clan colors of Acorna's illustrious
clan ancestress, bounced up from the planet's surface. Thariinye beamed at them
from the comscreen until Becker switched it off.
"I
don't like that guy," he grumbled. The Linyaari band was there to greet
more than one person this time, Acorna could see from the viewport of the
Condor. Grandam and Maati alone separated from the crowd and walked across the
field to wait for the robolift to lower, and Acorna and Aari to join them on
the surface. The vilzaar herself had extended the invitation to the welcome
home fete to Becker as well, but if she had reversed her opinion of Becker, the
same was not true of his opinion of her.
"Bureaucrats,"
he said. "They're all alike."
Maati
gave Acorna a brief horn touch and then held onto her brother's waist with both
arms until he picked her up in his and hugged her. Acorna touched horns with
Grandam. "Perhaps we'd better leave them to catch up with us,"
Grandam said.
They
walked slowly and silently toward the crowd. The returnees were being given
wreaths of flowers by those greeting them, and there were many tears and much
laughter. Neeva was explaining to Liriili that without the good or
"Linyaari barbarians" their people would never have survived the bad
or "Khieevi barbarians."
"In
fact," Neeva said loudly enough for all to hear, "we Linyaari now
have a kinsman among the barbarians. Khornya's uncle Hafiz, who fed us and
helped us regain our health after our imprisonment, said that since he was
Khornya's kinsman, he felt that all of the rest of us were also members of his
clan, a very wealthy and aristocratic lineage of merchant traders."
"Hmmm,"
Liriili said, "It is wise to keep one's assets in the family. Perhaps we
should send emissaries back to this new uncle of our people to discuss a favored
trade agreement."
"I
believe that would please him a great deal," Neeva said. "Some of us
who spend much time off-world learning and bringing back technologies and trade
items need to spend more time at home for a while, as we recover. This
Harakamian is a genius at making holograms. Perhaps he could be persuaded to
produce some hologramatic learning programs for the various guilds?"
Liriili
gave Acorna a guilty, but still slightly frosty smile. "Perhaps. Perhaps
Khornya would care to discuss it with him on our behalf? Now that she has spent
time among us, in my estimation she is ready to assume her own mantle as
videShaanye."
"Perhaps,"
Neeva said.
"But
surely she will want to stay home and rest for a time, too," Grandam
said. At that moment, Acorna looked
across the field and saw Maati walking slowly toward them, alone. Acorna fought
her way through the crowd to the comscreen and hailed the ConSor.
"There
you are, Acorna. If you can tear yourself away from that mob down there, you
might want to join me and Aari and the cat again. The board here is lit up like
a pinball machine all of a sudden. We have us some serious salvage
opportunities and they won't wait forever. Stay there or come along. What's
your pleasure?"
Acorna,
Grandam, and Neeva exchanged looks and thoughts. They were her people, it was
true, but so were Uncle Hafiz, Rafik, Gil, Calum, the Kendoros, and so many
others.
On the
comscreen, over Decker's shoulder, she saw Aari's face, regrets and sorrow
mixing with anticipation of rejection and-just a little-hope.
Grandam's
eyes twinkled. Acorna turned back to the Condor and then swung back toface
Liriili again. "I'm honored by the ambassadorship, of course, but for
right now, there is still something I must try to"-she glanced once more
at the comscreen, the cat's impatiently flicking tail, Becker's welcoming
expression and most of all, Aari, and said aloud, in answer to
Becker-"salvage."
End of
Acorna's People