POWERS
THAT BE
ANNE
McCAFFREY ELIZABETH ANN SCARBOROUGH
Chapter
1
Stiding
in the crowded processing center of Petaybee's spaceport, Yanaba Maddock eyed
the side door as a drowner would eye a drifting spar. Unobtrusively making her
way to it, she hoped it wasn't locked. It was, but the lock was not proof
against the skills she had acquired in her years as a company soldier,
investigator, explorer, training officer, and, most recently, long-term
resident of a medical facility. Automatically checking to see if her activity
was being noticed, Yana slid the door open just wide enough to accommodate her
thin body. She paused to pull on her gloves: she had been warned in the
briefing-and she always took briefings seriously-of the danger of bare skin
sticking to frozen surfaces.
For a
moment she leaned back against the slide panel, to secure it in case she had
been observed. Then the cold air hit her. She knew from previous cold-weather
training not to inhale the freezing blast that whipped around the corner of the
building and slammed into her face.
"The
temp-er-actch-chur of Planet, Terraformation B, commonly called Petaybee, at
certain locations during certain points in lime during the winter can range as
low as minus two hundred degrees fare-in-height," the computer aboard the
shuttle from ship to port had cautioned. "That's cold, troops. Do not
touch metal objects with your unprotected epy-dur-mus. Do not run, or the air
will freeze into small icicles in your lungs and lacerate them. Wear or carry
your winter gear with you at all times. Do not count on a nice warm vehicle for
warmth. For one thing, there is a shortage of nice warm vehicles on Petaybee,
because machinery that doesn't freeze and crack in the extreme cold is
expensive. For another thing, even the expensive equipment breaks down, and you
may find yourself stranded. The tem-per-atch-chur at Kilcoole Space Base today
is minus fifty degrees fare-in-height. Some of the locals have been known to
regard this as relatively tropical by comparison with what they consider real
winter. Bear in mind that summer to these same individuals consists of two
months of fairly constant daylight as warm as fifty-five to sixty degrees above
zero, still twelve to seventeen degrees colder than regulation shipboard
settings of seventy-two degrees. So button up your outer gear, 'cause the wind
blows free, and take good care of yourselves, remembering at all times that
your ass belongs to the company. That is all."
Yana
had smiled to hear the computer briefing given in the gruff voice and speech
patterns of a senior NCO, but she was no more inclined to ignore the warning
than she would have been had it been issued by a flesh-and-blood top sergeant.
Minus two hundred, huh? Good thing she'd gotten here during a "heat
wave." Icicles lacerating her already trashed lungs would do nothing for
her convalescence.
Fumbling
with outerwear that had been broiling her in the facility, she pulled her scarf
across her mouth, flipped the hood to her head, pulled it down over her
forehead, which was fast becoming wooden with cold, and tucked the scarf
securely up to her eyes before she tied the hood under her chin.
Cold
though the air was, and despite a taint of overheated oil and space fuel from
the snow-rimmed plascrete landing pad, the freshness of it-warmed by her breath
as she inhaled through the muffling fabric-was clean! One of the small joys of
her life were those first moments of breathing fresh, unadulterated, unrecycled
air. the real stuff.
She
inhaled through her mask, tentatively at first, because her lungs were still
not working as well as they should-one of the reasons she was the perfect
candidate for Petaybee in the eyes of her employers. Gradually she began to
take deeper breaths; she wanted to flush the dead air of a spaceship out of her
poor abused lungs. They would have even more of a chance to heal here in
Petaybee's unpolluted atmosphere than in the rarefied aisles of that medical
complex back on Andromeda Station.
She
took in one deep breath too many and started to cough, gasp, and choke until
her eyes teared with the spasms. Panting with short chest inhalations, she
managed to get control again. The tears froze on her cheeks and she brushed
them away. Grimly she thought that you could have too much of a good thing-even
air. And she had better get back inside: for all she was wearing garb
appropriate to the new climate, she could feel her fingers and toes numbing.
She spared one look at the horizon; the great bowl of a blue sky without so
much as a defense shield over the spaceport, and the ice-covered land and
wondered if she really had made the right decision.
Slipping
back inside, she pushed the hood off, pulled down the scarf, and scanned her
nearest neighbors. Only one of them seemed to notice that she had left and come
back. He blinked and frowned before turning his attention to the screen at the
far end of the long hall where the names of those to be processed were
blinking. Y. MADDOCK was one of them.
She
moved forward, squeezing past people until she came to the more eager layers of
folk, packed tightly as they waited for release.
"Maddock,
Y," she said to the official, offering her plastics.
"ID,"
he said without looking up from his terminal.
She
extended her left wrist, and with rough fingers, he turned it so he could see
it, bending her hand painfully.
"You're
cold!" He looked up now, seeing her as a person, not a number.
She
shrugged. "Leaning against that door."
"Humpf.
Didn't you attend the briefing?" He frowned. "Don't touch metal
..."
"Even
inside?" she asked with the innocent inquiring look she had used to
flummox brighter men than this one.
He
frowned, and then the terminal required his attention, her plastic having
jumped out of the processing slot. It skidded halfway across the worktop before
he caught it. Yana kept her face straight: he looked the sort not likely to
appreciate chasing anything, much less plastic.
A slip
of film extruded from the slot by her hand.
"That
has your work number, which you will memorize, work assignment, living
quarters, ration status, travel and clothing allowance, and the name of your
official guide as well as his office hours. Your travel pack has already been
delivered to your quarters." Then he paused and startled her by smiling.
"You can take one of the waiting vehicles outside the terminal. Major
Maddock. Welcome to Petaybee."
Amazed
by both the courtesy and the unexpected smile, Yana thanked him and moved
smartly out of the way to make room for the next person in line.
A
translucent roof shield protected the area outside the passenger terminal. It
was filled with the sounds of confusion and impatience as the processed
arrivees, most of them lugging their precious 23.5 kilo personal-allowance sacks,
searched for each other or for transportation.
"Yellow
slip, huh?" someone said in her ear, pulling her hand down to peer at it.
The
someone was a young girl, so bundled in furs that only her face was visible,
and that slightly obscured by long wisps of fur and, possibly, her own hair.
She appeared to be in her early to mid-teens; her keen gray eyes were alive
with intelligence and interest
"I'm
cleared for yellow, too," the girl added, and her mittened hand shoved a
plastic square under Yana's eyes. The woman grabbed her hand for a longer look
at the official-looking plastic. The girl didn't resist, though her eyes
widened slightly at the strength of Yana's grasp.
The
plastic-covered printed documentation that licensed Buneka Rourke to convey
passengers in an authorized snocle within the environs of the port but no
farther. There was a large A in the right-hand corner and a renewal date
sometime later on in Petaybee's year.
"How
much?"
Buneka
Rourke blinked and then grinned companionably. 'From here to your place, it's
on the PTBs."
"The
PTBs?" Yana wasn't sure she had heard correctly.
Buneka's
grin broadened, and her eyes twinkled with mischief. "Sure, PTB-the powers
that be. Petaybee," she added. "You didn't know that's where this
planet got its name?"
"The
briefing said it was Planet, Terraformation B," Yana said.
The
girl waved her mitten dismissively. "They would manage to make it sound
dull. But it's really named after them-the Powers That Be that move us from A
to B or Z or wherever they gotta plug holes or clean up disasters or fight
wars. C'mon. Let me get you out of this mess and give you a proper welcome to
Petaybee." The girl tugged at Yana's sleeve, pointing to a
battered-looking but clean orange/yellow snocle with fluorescent numerals,
MTS-80-84, that matched those Yana had seen on the plastic ID. But as Yana
stepped off the curb, a big figure intervened.
"Yellow
ticket? I take yellow tickets." The man glared menacingly at the girl.
"You doan wanna ride with this flitter-face. She turn you over into snow
drift. No one find you. Yellow ticket deserves big, warm snocle." He
gestured toward a large, sleek affair.
"I've
already-" she began.
"Terce,
she's legally mine."
"You
ain't cleared for yellows," the man said, hunching belligerently over the
girl. He was a tall enough man, but the furs made him even more bulky.
"Am,
too." She waved her ID at him; snarling, he batted at her hand, dismissing
her qualification. "I got a passenger all legal, Terce," she went on.
"You weren't even here."
Yana
deftly inserted herself between them and made eye contact with the intruder.
"I've already accepted Rourke's assistance, but I thank you for your
willingness to transport me."
"I
gotta, dama . . ."
At
first Yana thought he was swearing at her and then realized that he was bowing
with great subservience. There was an edge of anxiety in his voice and manner.
"You're
safer with me," the girl said, glaring such a challenge first at Yana and
then at Terce that Yana sensed that more was at stake than just a fare.
"Look,
girl, another yellow ticket." Terce gestured toward a man whose yellow
ticket was plainly visible in his hand, "you take 'im." Then he took
a firm hold on Yana's upper arm and began to swing her toward his vehicle.
Deftly,
almost automatically, Yana disengaged her arm and then strode across to the
battered little MTS-registered snocle.
"Dama,
dama," Terce cried, real concern in his voice.
Yana
ignored him, lengthening her stride when she heard the triumphant exclamation
from Buneka, followed by the sound of boots slithering across the snow mush
behind her. Yana hit the door release on the passenger's side, then paused a
moment to catch her breath before she slung her sacks onto the rear storage
shelf. Still chuckling over her success, the girl slid into the driver's scat.
"You'd
better button up. This thing takes longer to warm up than Terce's fancy
sleigh."
"And
I'm safer with you?" Yana asked at her driest, as she rearranged her hood
and scarf and belted into the seat before slipping her hands back into the fur
mittens.
The
girl's eyes crinkled. "Well, Terce is known to do 'errands' for folk. My
hunch is he was there on purpose to collect you. If you'd wanted to go with
him, you could have, of course, but you didn't. So you didn't know he was there
to meet you. So ... you're safer with me-especially the way he was acting. He's
not very bright." Her remark was couched in a kindly tone but held a hint
of caution nonetheless. She glanced over at Yana, her eyes bright, alert.
Well, Yana
mused. An hour on the planet and intrigue starts already. Never a dull moment,
no matter what the spaceflot about Petaybee was. PTB! Powers that be. She
chuckled at the thought but let that also be an answer for her driver.
The
chuckle turned into one of her coughing fits, and between spasms she fumbled in
her sack for her bottle of syrup. She was suddenly weak with the effort it took
to draw enough breath between explosions that threatened to blow her ribs
apart. The fur mittens made her hands clumsy, and she almost dropped the bottle
before she could peel a mitten from her shaking hand and get the plastic cap
off. As soon as the syrup began to coat her pharynx, the spasm eased. She
cradled the bottle in her hands, against her chest. The preparation had a lot
of alcohol in it, but she still wouldn't risk it freezing.
The
girl slowed the vehicle and looked back at her with wide eyes. Poor kid looked
as if she were wishing that she had let Terce take her fare.
"Are
you-all right, Major?"
Yana
gulped another swallow of the syrup, this time feeling the warmth spreading
into the poisoned cavities of her damaged lungs. Every time she coughed, ;-he
images flashed through her brain of the graphic films the doctors had shown her
when they had explained why she was no longer fit for active duty. As if the
fact that she couldn't laugh or hoist a duffel bag without a paroxysm of
coughing wasn't evidence enough of her disability. Still, she was alive, which
was more than the others were. She recapped the bottle, tucked it into her
parka pocket, and pulled the mitten back over her hand. It was already going
numb with cold. She noted with satisfaction, however, that there was no blood
on either mitten.
Catching
the girl's anxious look, she said, "Don't worry, Rourke, it's not
contagious. Took a little gas at Bremport Station was all."
"From
the sound of that cough, you must have had a nasty time of it," the girl
remarked, speeding up slightly again but proceeding more cautiously than
before, as if afraid the jarring would set her passenger off again.
"You
might say that," Yana said, thinking of the others. The hell of it was,
she had been through a lot worse in her younger days and had come through
without a scratch. Bremport was supposed to have been a routine training
mission-new recruits, a couple of them from Petaybee, she remembered. She
remembered just about everything from that mission, over and over again.
Using
the technique she had learned a long time before from one of her old sergeants,
she switched her focus, letting her eyes rest on the panorama of blue and white
nothingness, the featureless landscape soothing her, helping her blank her
mind, the cold in the air matching the cold inside her.
Ground-hugging
vegetation pierced lumps of snow with frozen spines. Then she noticed that the
snocle track was on ground slightly lower than the rest of the terrain.
"You
guys dig a new road here, huh?" she asked her driver.
Rourke
snorted. "Not a bit of it. Do you think they'd be spendin' money on
improvements for the likes of us? This-is the river!"
"No
kidding?" Yana looked out and down. Where the snow had blown away in one
patch, she saw the translucence of powder blue ice. "Anybody ever fall
through the ice?"
"Not
lately. Even this late in the winter it's still between minus seventy-five and
minus thirty most of the time."
"If
everything is frozen, what do you do about drinking water?" Company
leaders automatically considered such details.
"Oh,
that. I'll show you." The girl grinned and continued on.
After a
few moments the ground had more rise and fall to it. Beside it, stunted trees,
rooted and branched in billows of snow, began appearing closer and closer
together until they formed a sparse forest on either side of the snocle. The
girl veered the machine over toward the trees, and around the next bend, Yana
saw a little pavilion set up on the ice, smoke rising from a hole in the top.
Rourke had been decreasing the speed of her snocle and now drifted to a gentle
stop.
The
tent shook slightly from within and what looked at first like a bear emerged.
"Slainte,
Bunny!" the bear said with a wave, dispelling the illusion. The fur-clad
man lumbered forward, lifting his great fur boots high above the snow. His face
bristled with icicles from the ruff around his mouth and nose, which was only
lightly frosted, to his beard, eyebrows, and mustache, which were thickly
encrusted with ice.
"Slainte,
Uncle Seamus!" The girl waved back and cut the motor. The man's eyes
flicked up through his personal icicles to glance at Yana, a searching look for
all its brevity. "This is Major Maddock, Uncle. She's going to be staying
at Kilcoole."
"Is
she now?" He included Yana in his wave, and she nodded at him.
"Do
you have some thermos or two for me to take to Auntie, since I'm passing her
way?" Bunny asked.
"Now,
that would be very good of you, Bunny. I've two now, and I'll have more later
when Charlie and the dogs come along. This dama doesn't mind stopping on her
way, does she?"
"Nah!
She won't mind. Will you, Major? You wanted to see how we got water. Come look
in the shed."
Moving
a little more slowly than she would have liked, Yana climbed from the snocle.
Out here, on the river, the cold immediately clenched its fist around her face
and thighs, the only parts of her that weren't encased in synfur. She hoisted
the muffler around her nose, but the sweet smell of wood smoke still came
through. She wondered if it would set her coughing again. But there was Bunny,
encouragingly holding up the flap of the tent and pointing to the fire burning
in a circle around the rim of a long black hole in the ice. An insulated
container on a length of line stood beside the hole, along with two other
containers, which Seamus now gave Bunny.
Yana
took a couple of steps toward the tent before the smoke from the fires wafted
toward her. She felt her throat seizing up and stepped back, silently cursing
her weakness. How the frag was she going to survive on a cold planet if she
couldn't breathe in the presence of fire?
Bunny,
her shoulders bowed as she hauled one of the thermoses with both hands so that
the container bumped against her shins, nodded to Yana to return to the snocle.
Yana was relieved not to put her lungs through any further ordeal. She turned
with more enthusiasm than was prudent and her feet promptly slid on the ice
underlying the thin covering of drifted snow. She placed her feet more
cautiously then, and managed to make it back to the snocle without falling.
Seamus
set the other water thermos in beside her and ran a mitten across his face, an
accustomed gesture that dislodged some of his facial icicles. "Welcome to
Petaybee, such as it is, Major. You need something, you just ask Bunny
here."
Yana
nodded. "Thanks." It was just possible that, if her official guide
turned out to be anywhere near as inept as she herself was in this environment,
she would find Bunny's unofficial assistance more useful.
They
arrived at Yana's new quarters long after darkness had fallen, though by Yana's
calculation it was no more than late afternoon. She looked at the small single
house standing alone on pilings beside others of similar construction. It had
one window and one door that she could see in the gloom, and the window was
small. Whatever. It was bound to be roomier than some of the berths she'd had,
and compared to her place on the ward at the space-station hospital; it looked
palatial, as well as incredibly private.
Bunny
hefted her duffel out of the snocle for her and pushed open the door. The
interior was spare, white as the outdoors, and contained a cot, a small table
on which rested her survival pack, a chair, and a stove for heating and
cooking.
"It's
too late for you to inprocess today. Sorry it took so long," Bunny said.
"Look, wait here and I'll get some blankets. You'd better take this water,
too. No one's given you your ration." She nodded toward the thermos on a
shelf beyond the stove. - "That's for your auntie, isn't it?" Yana
asked. "And I can scarcely take your blankets, too."
Bunny
shook her head. 'They won't care about the water, and I can spare the blanket.
You'll be issued your own tomorrow."
She
drove away in the snocle and, in a short time, returned on foot, carrying a
bundle of puffy cloth and a packet. "Smoked salmon strips," she said,
indicating the packet.
"What?"
"Fish.
It's good," Bunny said patiently. "You'll like it."
Yana's
day had started back at the station hospital nearly thirty hours earlier, and
she couldn't face anything more taxing than rolling up in blankets and going to
sleep as fast as possible. "Thanks," she said.
"Okay,
then. Shall I pick you up in the morning to meet your guide? I could get the
blanket then, too."
Aha,
Yana thought, a little blackmail here to ensure the continuing custom. Very
enterprising. "That'll be fine," she said with a weary lift of her
eyes that would have to pass for a smile. Bunny showed her how to light the
stove before she left and promised to help her organize more fuel the next day.
Without
waiting for the room to warm up enough for her to remove her outerwear, Yana arranged
the chair at the head of the cot, sat down, and stretched her legs out on the
bed. She had chewed only a couple of bites of the oddly spiced salmon strip
before she fell asleep, as she had for the last few weeks, sitting up.
Bunny
Rourke returned to her aunt's house after delivering the blankets to her client
and returning the snocle to its special shed.
"I'll
need to check it out again in the morning," she'd told Adak O'Connor, the
dispatcher and guard.
"No
shuttles due from SpaceBase for another week," Adak said, removing his
headphones and turning away from the radio that connected him to SpaceBase and
the few other places on Petaybee that had such advanced equipment. He scowled
at his record book, which contained the schedules for the port and kept track
of the whereabouts of the vehicles-both of them. Bunny was licensed to drive
one, Terce the other: they were the only authorized drivers to and from
Kilcoole. The shuttles belonged to InterGalactic Enterprises, known as
Intergal, the omnipresent if not omnipotent corporation responsible for the
existence of Petaybee, and the boss of all Bunny's people. Bunny had qualified
for her license only because one of her uncles was an important man and owned
his own snocle as well as dogs. When Bunny's parents had disappeared, Uncle had
taught her to drive the snocle to help her make her own way in the village so
she wouldn't be a burden. She was Uncle's driver on the rare occasions when he
preferred the snocle to his team. She also made the trip out to his place to
keep the machine running for him and repair it when it broke down- usually from
neglect. Her uncle was a brilliant man but not mechanically inclined. Bunny
took after her Yupik granddad: she could fix anything. And six months ago, on
her fourteenth birthday, she had obtained her license to ferry passengers from
Space-Base to Kilcoole and back.
"I
know there's no shuttles," she told Adak, "but my fare has to
inprocess in the morning."
"Can't
she walk or go by sled?"
"Nah.
She's an important dama. An officer. But she's puny. Said something about being
at Bremport."
"The
massacre where the Shanachie's boy was killed? Ah, the poor dama. And how is
she puny?"
"She
coughs. Bad. But she seems nice. Anyway, the snocle is authorized for official
functions, so I want to take her round to the outpost as quick as possible so
she can settle in, like."
"Good
child. You've taken to this dama, have you?"
"She's
sleepin' this night under the quilt Auntie Moira made me."
'Then
by all means lake the snocle in the morning, but mind you, no
sight-seein'."
"Thanks,
Adak," she said. "I'll bring you one of Auntie Moira's cakes in the
morning when I come, shall I?"
"That
would be very welcome, Bunny. Good night now."
"Good
night," she said, and headed back to the shed behind her aunt's house.
Ever
since her older male cousins had turned a little too inquisitive about her
development, Bunny had preferred to sleep out here, in back of the kennel where
Charlie kept his team of noisy and protective dogs, who warned her of anyone
approaching. She wasn't really scared, though. Most of the people who came to
see her brought her things-fish or moose chops, zucchini or tomatoes in the
summer-though some came just to visit. She was personally related to a large
percentage of the village, and she knew who would help her and who to avoid.
There were a few people she didn't want coming to her place-Terce, for one, but
he was scared of Charlie's dogs. Mostly, everyone looked out for her. That
would have made her feel like a child except that she looked out for them, too.
That was how it was in Kilcoole. She was actually very adult for someone her
age, trusted with the responsibility of living on her own and holding down her
own job.
Approaching
her house, she was greeted by the hounds, who set up a good welcoming howl as
she walked quickly through them, unclipping the lines from Pearse and the lead
dog, Maud.
She was
pleasantly surprised to see smoke rolling up from her chimney to the sky. As
she followed its path she saw the lights were on display tonight: a simple pale
green band whipping across the black sky, dancing and twisting and sequined
with stars. The smoke from the chimney smelled grand-nutty and warm. Maud
whined and stuck her long muzzle in Bunny's pocket. The dogs were more used to
Bunny, who had time for them and who usually fed and exercised them, than they
were to Charlie, who was their owner. Bunny petted Maud absently. Even with her
stove getting a head start on the chill, without her quilt she would need the dogs
for warmth tonight. She would let them in to get toasty by the fire while she
ate her supper.
The big
red dogs with their thick soft coats took up most of the floor space in the
little shed. It contained her berth, a scrounged unit cut out of one of the
dead ships at SpaceBase, a shaky tabletop pegged into the wall and placed so
she could sit on her berth to eat, plus the stove and the shelves she had built
from old storage crates to hold her few belongings. She had the three books
left her by her parents, a set of tools-a gift from her uncle upon obtaining
her license-and a selection of shells, rocks, and mushroom-shaped tree tumors,
as well as hand-me-downs from the cousins and what little gear she had. On the
table was a mare's-butter candle; it gave a fairly bright light, though it
didn't smell very good. Her shed was built of stone, of which Petaybee had
plenty. She had caulked it with mud two breakups earlier and reinforced it with
some plasti her cousin Simon had scrounged for her at the SpaceBase when he
first joined the corps, before he shipped out. The plasti had originally been
used to repair the bubble around the SpaceBase garden, and it did well in the
cold, never cracking or contracting.
Something
plopped down beside her onto the table and mewed up at her. She reached down to
stroke the rust-and-cream stripes of one of Aunt Clodagh's cats, though which
she couldn't say since so many of the Kilcoole felines were orange-marmalades.
The cat pawed the door, and Bunny smiled and followed, chattering to the cat.
"So
Clodagh already knows about my passenger, does she, and left you here to tell
me to report? Glad to, cat, as long as there's a bite in it for me."
The
dogs in the shed had ignored the cat; the ones in the yard did not bark as it
led her through the kennels. No one's dogs even barked at Clodagh's cats. They
went where they pleased and knew where everything was and what everyone was
doing-as did Clodagh.
Chapter
2
The official
guide-only a second
lieutenant, Yana noted-stood up
when she entered the room. "Major Maddock," he said, saluting and
flashing her quite an energetic smile. "Lieutenant Charles Demintieff, first
Petaybee military liaison officer, at your service, dama."
"Relax,
Lieutenant," she said. "I'm reporting to you, not the other way
round."
"Yes'm.
It's just that I've read your file, and we don't get many heroes back
here."
"Most
heroes don't make it back anywhere," she said.
He
laughed as if she had said something extremely witty. 'Then we're luckier still
to have you, Major. Colonel Giancarlo from SpaceBase snocled in this morning to
welcome you personally. When you've had your chat with him, we'll go over the
routine stuff."
Walking
into the adjoining room, Yana felt as wary as if she were entering the bridge
of an enemy-held ship. If the SpaceBase brass wanted to talk to her, why hadn't
he done it at Inprocessing and saved himself a long, cold ride?
The
colonel, in contrast to the lieutenant, did not look happy lo see her. His
insignia was one she had seen only occasionally:
Psychological
Operations, a euphemism for the Intelligence branch. She reported, and he waved
her into a chair while he continued typing something into a terminal.
"Well,
Major," he said after she had been sitting there long enough to become
impatient and uncomfortable in her heavy gear. "What do you think of
Petaybee so far?"
"Seems
friendly," she said cautiously. He was testing her somehow, but she wasn't
sure for what. "The air is clean, pretty cold. Fairly primitive
technologically. New recruits from here need extensive training in the simplest
equipment, and it's pretty obvious why, from what I've seen of my quarters and
the village. Am I missing something?"
"If
you are, you're not alone," he said, his eyes shifting from the terminal
to hers and boring into them. "There shouldn't be anything here that we
didn't put here. This planet was nothing but rock and ice when Intergal claimed
it. The company terraformed it, upgrading it from frozen uninhabitable rock to
a merely arctic climate. For the last two hundred years, it's been useful as a
replacement depot for troops, a relocation center for the peoples who were
being displaced by our other operations. Because the climate is rough on
machinery, only SpaceBase contains much in the way of modern comforts. The
transportation needs of the inhabitants are mostly supplied by experimental
animals bred for the purpose."
"Experimental?"
Yana asked. "Like lab animals?" She had been born on Earth but had
spent her childhood being shunted with her parents from one duty station to the
next. Lab rats and monkeys were somewhat familiar to her, along with a number
of different alien species, but she was unfamiliar-except from pictures-with
the beasts she had seen on her way here today.
"Not
exactly, although I suppose their ancestors did some time in a lab-originally.
The company hired Dr. Sean Shongili to alter certain existing species to adapt
to this climate. That's how the resident equines, felines, and canines, and
many of the aquatic mammals come to be here."
"1
see," she said, but she didn't. The dogs obviously worked as sled animals,
the cats to keep down rodents. But she couldn't understand why Petaybee
supported equines, too. Horses, from what little she knew of them, seemed
rather inappropriate for such a climate. And considering the need for hacking
and burning holes in ice to secure water, wasting such effort on domestic pets
seemed totally unproductive.
"Well,
Intergal doesn't, entirely," the colonel said, as if he had read her
thoughts. "The animals we commissioned are here, but there have been
sightings of other types that indicate perhaps Dr. Shongili and his assistants
were a trifle more creative than was covered by their authorization. The
current Dr. Shongili, also Sean, is certainly an odd bird, not what you'd call
a team player. We've monitored his records, however, and can't find any
evidence that he's been exceeding his instructions. We could, of course, move
him, but this is not a research area favored by many in our employ, and the
Shongilis have done so well at producing viable species for arctic conditions
that we're reluctant to remove the current Shongili without more concrete
evidence. Trouble is, unauthorized species are not the only anomaly. Something
else is going on here-our satellite monitors have detected deposits of
important minerals on this planet. When we dispatch teams, they either can't
find the location of the deposits, or else they simply don't return."
"That's
why psyops is interested?" she asked, relaxing a little.
"You
got it." Suddenly he grinned at her, an expression that did not make him
any more attractive. "That's where we can help each other, Major."
"Sir?"
"You're
here this morning technically to be demobilized. You're a medical retiree due
to spend the rest of your days on this iceberg, which is unfortunate for you.
However, your experience as an intercommand investigator, and your earlier work
with preliminary data gathering landing teams, is of some interest to us,
despite your disability, as is your record of combat experience. You don't
realize it yet, of course, but being a combat veteran carries considerable
cachet in this place where most families have at least one, and usually
several, relatives in the corps. Furthermore your genetic stock is similar to
these people's." He eyed her, and Yanaba knew he was assessing the
sprinkle of white in the black hair that Bry used to claim had an auburn cast
under bright light, the high cheekbones, the rather bleached-out olive
complexion, and the slightly tilted green-gold eyes. Her body had once been
lean and athletic, but weeks of illness had reduced her to brittle gauntness at
a weight she might have enjoyed had her strength not deserted her along with
the extra kilos.
"How's
that?" she asked, mystified.
"The
people on this continent are a mixture of Irish and Eskimo-we've resettled
cold-weather natives all over the planet to assist the others in assimilation.
In this area it's Eskimo: in other settlements, ethnic Scandinavians and
Indo-Asians."
"I
don't exactly fit then," she said, smiling as tolerantly as possible.
"Well,
of course, you were practically born into the company, but your father was
Irish and your first name, Yanaba-"
"Yanaba,"
she corrected. "That's Navajo-my mother's people. It's a war name, like a
lot of traditional Navajo names. Means 'she meets the enemy.' The Navajo, by
the way, were desert dwellers, not snow people."
"Close
enough," he said. "Desert can get damned cold midwinter." He
dismissed her objection with a wave.
That
told her she had made a tactical error by showing up his ignorance before she
heard what he wanted. But she had a fierce loyalty to her family. All she had
of them now was the history recorded in the computers for her by her parents
before their deaths. It was about all she had had in her life that hadn't been
Internal-issued.
"We
think you can fit, Maddock," he told her. "And we want you to do just
that, because we need to know what's going on. We want you to get to know the
people, find out what or who exactly is responsible for these problems: if
Shongili is concealing experiments in producing new life-forms on this planet,
we need to know about it. If the geologic survey teams are being deliberately
ambushed and eliminated, we want to know that, and we want to know whom we have
to deal with. You don't have enough technical knowledge to locate the deposits
yourself, but we want you to find out who's preventing our teams from locating
them. If there's some kind of sabotage or incipient insurrection brewing, help
us put a stop to it."
"Wouldn't
it have been more effective to recruit a local informant?" she asked.
Giancarlo
snorted. "There's something screwy about all of them. They all stick
together all the time, and every time I've had one of them in my office for any
length of time, they start sweating and turn red. Why would that happen if
they're not scared, hiding something? Even Demintieff sweats like crazy every
time he comes in while I'm here. This office is always freezing when I arrive,
and even while I'm here, he keeps that outer office way too cold. These people
also have gatherings that nobody from SpaceBase is invited to, and if you ask
one of the new recruits from here about it, they just shrug."
"You
haven't actively interrogated anyone yet, then?"
"No
real excuse so far. What would I ask? Why do you people sweat so damned much,
and how come I don't get invited lo your parties?"
Yana
nodded.
He
leaned forward and stabbed at the desk with his finger, as if the gesture would
somehow make his words plainer. "We need someone loyal to the company to
gain their confidence, find out what's going on."
"What
if they just sweat because they're used to the cold, and they have orgies or
something at their parties and don't want to mingle with outsiders out of
embarrassment?"
"Major,
perhaps I didn't make myself clear. You were injured at Bremport; you saw what
happened there. I shouldn't have to tell you what swamps of insurgency these
colonial planets can be. Unauthorized life forms have been spotted on this
planet. Research-and-development teams have disappeared into nowhere. You can't
tell me these circumstances aren't related. What you have to tell me instead is
how they are connected with each other. Do you read me?"
She
nodded, cautiously, and evidently mistaking her caution for hesitation he
pressed on.
"You
said something about your quarters. They're pretty standard for down here, but
we certainly have the wherewithal to make them more comfortable. Also, you're
not full retirement age yet, nor eligible for full pension."
"I
have a medical discharge, sir."
"Not
exactly. Not yet. Actually your disability status as of now is"- He tapped
a key. -"only twenty-five percent. That won't generate much of a pension.
If you were on covert active duty, however, you could do a lot better. We could
even throw in hazardous-duty pay."
"Sir,
with all due respect, while I wouldn't sniff at the money, the doctors back at
the hospital . . ."
"You
can't contact them from here, Maddock. And in the event you need further,
fairly expensive care, the transport from here back to there would be beyond
your means, unless, of course, Intergal foots the bill. I'll expect progress
reports via Demintieff on a weekly basis unless, of course, something comes up
that I should know about instanter. Demintieff will take you around, introduce
you to people . . ."
Whatever
this guy's specialty was, Yana reflected, it wasn't the gentle art of
psychological persuasion. He was about as subtle as a photon torpedo. But she
owed Intergal her life and had spent her life in its service. She wasn't going
to turn them down just because this hammerhead thought he was blackmailing her.
Besides, she could use the pay.
"With
respect, sir, I think maybe Demintieff should do the bare minimum of guiding me
around. Seems to me I'd be better off on my own. I'd be less suspect to any
possible terrorists within the area if an indigenous civilian helped me
acclimate rather than a uniformed professional."
"Good
thinking, Maddock. This conversation never happened, of course." He dug a
sheaf of old-fashioned hard copy from a case at his feet. "However, this
contains a full briefing on what we know and suspect thus far. Familiarize
yourself with it and burn it."
"Yes,
sir."
"Enjoy
your retirement, Maddock."
Bunny
Rourke was sitting on the edge of Lieutenant Demintieff's desk when Yana and
Colonel Giancarlo emerged. Neither Bunny nor Demintieff was perspiring unduly
as far as Yana could nee, although at the sight of the colonel, Bunny fled
through the doorway with barely a nod to Yana. ..,
"Demintieff!"
the colonel snapped.
"Sir!"
"You're
to report to SpaceBase. Congratulations, son, you've been chosen for duty
shipside."
"But,
sir . . ." The lieutenant, formerly so cheerfully obsequious, looked as
stunned as if the colonel had suddenly kicked him in the balls. He evidently
did not feel that congratulations were in order.
"Grab
your gear on the double and you can ride back with me, soldier."
"Permission
to say good-bye to my family, sir," Demintieff said with some difficulty.
"Permission
granted as long as you can do it within the next forty-five minutes. Duty
calls, son."
"Yes,
sir."
"Maddock,
in view of this man's reassignment, you are authorized to requisition civilian
assistance during your civilian orientation process or until the position can
be reassigned."
"Yes,
sir. May I suggest my driver, Miss Rourke, sir?"
"Sure,
Colonel, Bunny will look after the major," Demintieff put in, rather
gallantly, Yana thought, in view of his own evident distress. "She's my
own sister's cousin-by-marriage and a very good girl."
Seeing
this side of Demintieff, and realizing how well connected he was locally, Yana
cursed herself for making suggestions before she got the lay of the land. He
would have done as well as Bunny from the standpoint of gaining the trust of
the villagers, but now he was being sent away from home, an assignment he
obviously did not relish, to provide a reason for the change in routine. Damn
fool shouldn't have enlisted if he didn't want to serve shipside, she thought
fiercely, but she had trouble meeting his eye. Giancarlo returned to the inner
room, and Demintieff' s eyes were brimming shamelessly as he turned toward her.
"Dama,
would you and Bunny mind very much givin' me a lift up to Clodagh's? My gear's
there, and Clodagh'll see to it that my family in Tanana Bay get
notified."
Yana
could only duck her head as the lieutenant scooped up a tightly wrapped bundle
from his desk, started to hand it to her, then carried it out to the snocle.
Bunny
was starting the engine when Yana and Demintieff emerged from the building. She
started to say something when Demintieff climbed in beside her, leaving Yana
the back section, but Demintieff cut her off with "Take me to Clodagh's
quick, Bunny. They're shipping me into space." In his distress, his voice
had thickened into the same oddly precise brogue coloring of Bunny's and her
Uncle Seamus's speech.
Brilliant
start, Major Maddock, Yana told herself. Everybody on this damned planet seemed
to be related to everybody else.
"Okay,
Charlie, but I'll have to drop you and Yana off and take the snocle back. I'm
only checked out for another fifteen minutes. I'll hitch up the dogs to take
Yana home and bring you back over here."
"If
there's time. Giancarlo may requisition your snocle to take us back to
SpaceBase, though Terce brought him out. You'll look after my dogs, won't you,
Bunny? They already think you belong lo them, and I want them to be well cared
for; they've been with me since they were pups." He dug through layers of
fur and found
•i
wallet, then handed her a wad of bills. "Here's to help you with their
food."
She
released one hand from the wheel and accepted the money, stuffing it in her
parka. "No problem, Charlie. I'll keep on looking after them. You didn't
know about this reassignment?"
"No
idea. He decided just like that."
Yana
found herself leaning forward, wheezing into Demintieff s ear: "You'll be
going to Andromeda Station to inprocess and for assignment. When you get there,
unless he's gone now, the master sergeant in charge of deployment is Ahmed
Threadgill. Tell him Yana Maddock sends her love and reminds him of the time
she alerted him to the Ship Police raid. He'll know what I mean." Ahmed
would know she was calling in the favor and that he was to look after her
friend. It wasn't much, considering the way she had caused however so
inadvertently the situation, but it could keep his hide intact.
"Yes,
Major Maddock. Thank you, dama."
She
clapped him on the shoulder, a little feebly, and sat back until Bunny skidded
to a halt outside a house a little larger than Yana's own quarters. The
morning's exertions had left her panting and trembling with fatigue, but she
still took note of this house. The snow in front of it was full of huge
strangely shaped lumps, and the crusted snow all around them was lightly dotted
with what looked like some kind of shit, which vaguely shocked ship-bred Yana.
Stiff oval nets with points at each end hung over the door, three pairs of what
were unmistakably skis leaned against the side of the house, and from the back
of the house issued a high-pitched keening, like a woman screaming.
"I'll
take you back in a minute, Major, if that's okay," Bunny called back as
Yana climbed out of the vehicle. "Besides, you'll want to meet Clodagh.
She was asking after you last night at supper."
Charlie
Demintieff grabbed the bundle of cloth from the snocle, and Bunny drove away.
The
screams erupted again and Yana hung back, tensed, listening. Charlie, who had
already taken a step toward the house, turned ponderously in his furs, saw her
staring, and touched the elbow of her coat with his mitten.
"That's
just the dogs," he said, his mouth spilling clouds of condensation into
the air, as if his words were freezing there. "When our dogs were first
made, our grandfathers called them banshee-dogs because of that sound, but
they're just saying hello."
Yana
nodded, hearing her own breath rasping in her ears above the screams of the
dogs, and willed herself to relax and follow Charlie to the house. A feline
with rust and cream markings stood on the roof above the doorway and looked
down at them as if considering a pounce. On another corner of the house sat the
cat's twin, resembling pictures Yana had seen of the gargoyles decorating
ancient Terran architecture. Another of the creatures sat in each of the
windows flanking the door.
Just as
Charlie reached the door, it opened before him and was filled by the largest
woman Yana had ever seen. Of course, people on shipboard were required to keep
their body weight to a certain level, a requirement necessitated by the narrow
passages, small hatches, and the close confinement of the rooms. Also, anyone
in space had to be able to fit into the suits and, should it become necessary,
the cold-sleep shells. The rigors of shipboard life plus the uninspiring
quality of the nutritious but mostly tasteless rations guaranteed that regulations
were easily met by all personnel.
But
this woman! She was like a planet herself, or at least an ovoid meteorite, a
large round entity unto herself-imposing, to say the least.
"Charlie,"
the huge woman said as she opened the door. "I hear you're leaving
us." She threw a hard look over his shoulder to Yana, as if divining her
role in the matter.
The
woman fell back, and Charlie Demintieff stepped into the house, holding aside
the standard-issue gray military blanket that covered the inside of the door so
that Yana could enter.
Demintieff
stripped off his hat, muffler, and gloves and loosened the front of his coat;
Yana followed suit. The house was small and close, but not as warm as Yana
would have expected. Nevertheless, as Giancarlo had indicated, the woman's
upper lip and brow were dewed with perspiration. Yana wasn't sure, however, if
the moisture on Demintieff's face was sweat, tears, or melting ice from his
hair and eyelashes.
The
woman embraced Demintieff, her caress oddly delicate and tender for such a
massive being. Demintieff returned her embrace with every evidence of
affection.
"Don't
worry, Charlie," the woman said. "Natark is hitching his team now. He
should be in Tanana Bay by tonight."
Demintieff
showed no surprise that the woman had anticipated his news, but simply said,
"Thanks, Clodagh. I just wanted to say good-bye. Bunny's taking my
dogs."
"Good.
Good. Bunny treats them well," Clodagh said, making no further attempt to
comfort him but seeming to share his sadness. She offered neither a look nor a
word of false encouragement that he was likely to return: they all knew he
probably wouldn't.
"This
is Major Maddock, Clodagh."
"Ah,
the dying woman," Clodagh said. It should have sounded tactless except
that her tone was vaguely ironic, indicating that she was only referring to
Yana's own opinion of herself, as if they had already had a long discussion
about it. A soft smile and the penetrating gaze of Clodagh's tilted blue eyes
also showed that she meant no offense but simply cut straight to the heart of
Yana's concerns as she had to Demintieff's.
"Come,
sit, have tea. Charlie's sister and the rest of the family are on their way.
Bunka will bring you to supper tonight, if you'll come, but right now we have
to talk about Charlie."
Even as
she spoke people began arriving, until the room was crowded with bodies that
smelled of wet fur, smoke, and wet dog. Clodagh's house boasted a big table
with four chairs set close to the stove. Yana, still in her parka, was soon
stifling from the heat of the stove, but as the room filled up, she had no
elbow room to remove her coat. One of the cats jumped up on the table and began
sniffing her coat and her face. She let her hand drop to its marbled fur and it
purred and took her gesture as an invitation to settle onto her thighs.
Meanwhile,
furs and scarves and quilted fabric brushed by her and she wondered that people
didn't singe themselves on the hot stove as they wished Charlie Demintieff
farewell. Yana's debilitated lungs labored harder as the room filled, the lack
of oxygen smothering her. She began deliberately taking deep breaths as first
one and then another of Charlie's friends and distant relations stepped up to
crowd around him near the stove, envelop him in a furry hug, and step back away
to make room for the next person. Yana couldn't imagine having so much family.
Clodagh
stood among them, not as tall as some of the men but distinguishing herself by
the space around her. Her hair, Yana noticed, was quite beautiful, cloaking her
shoulders in shining black waves, the black of a hue that somehow was not too
harsh with the woman's fair skin. Her cheeks were pink with the heat now and
she was perspiring freely, glowing like some benevolent "un. She didn't
appear to be as old as Yana, and yet she effortlessly carried an air of the
kind of authority generally conferred only by well-seasoned maturity.
Just as
Yana thought she was going to have to fight her way through the crowd for air
or black out, people began filing back out the door with last good-byes for
Charlie, and suddenly it was the four of them again, Clodagh, Charlie, Bunny,
and Yana.
"We
have to hurry," Bunny told the dejected-looking young officer. "1
need to drop the major and get you back."
"Okay,"
he said.
Clodagh
put something in his hand with a soft pat before he pulled on his mittens. As
they were leaving she said, "Major Maddock, will you come to supper
tonight with Bunka?"
Yana
nodded and waved, and turned back toward the path between the houses to face
four excitedly yapping dogs strapped to a low sled.
"Climb
in, Major," Bunny said.
"You're
kidding. There's not room for all of us."
"You
ride, and Charlie can drive. I'll run along beside," Bunny said,
"just as far as your place."
Yana
looked at the low, insubstantial-looking sled and the four wriggling,
whimpering dogs, who were having their pointed red ears and muzzles scratched
by a kneeling, sad-faced Charlie Demintieff. Their faces looked more like those
of foxes or cats than those of the dogs Yana had seen pictured. Their coats
were very thick and their legs fairly long and muscular, but their paws were
covered in little booties. Every time one of them could get close enough to
lick at Demintieff, it did.
"How
far is my place, anyway?" Yana asked. She had not formed an impression of
any vast distances within this town; on the contrary, the snocle rides had been
brief.
"Just
down the road," Bunny said gesturing. "But you're not used to the
cold and . . ."
"And
I'm an invalid?" Yana asked, hitching her muffler up higher on her nose.
"The dying woman, eh? Not dead yet, Rourke. Not by a long shot. You take
Charlie back-and Charlie?"
"Dama?"
"Don't
forget to look up Master Sergeant Threadgill and tell him what I told
you."
Charlie
nodded once, briefly, his chin set. Bunny tumbled into the sled and settled
herself for transport while Charlie, one last time, whistled to his dogs, who
obediently trotted off toward the company station.
Yana
sighed, sending a plume of her breath up against the crisp blue sky, and began
trudging in her heavy gear in the direction of her new quarters. Damn Giancarlo
anyway. If he wanted her to spy for him, did he have to start off by doing
something that, if the truth were known, would alienate the whole village from
her? Of course, there was always the possibility that he, like Yana, had had no
idea that Demintieff was one local boy who happened to be stationed close to
home because he wished to be. But Giancarlo should have known before he went
off half-cocked. If this assignment had any significance at all, he definitely
should have had Demintieff checked before he decided to replace him. That kind
of rashness could blow this mission.
Mission?
This was supposed to be her new life! Not that it looked as if it was apt to
amount to much. She ought to thank Giancarlo for giving her something to occupy
her mind, to keep from going nuts here on this ice ball.
Feathers
of smoke curled up from the houses; if there were any shops or supply stores,
they were indistinguishable from the dwellings as far as she could see. Each
step in her bulky primitive clothing was like walking in heavy gravity. She
couldn't bend her head easily to see the path before her, or her muffler would
fall down and her hood ride back on her head. But by turning her head slightly,
she saw that many of the houses contained kennels full of dogs and had
mysterious-looking lumps out front just like the ones she had seen in Clodagh's
yard. Two of the larger places had not only houses but outbuildings, and in one
of the yards two horses were zigzagging back and forth in the snow. Yana
thought (here was something strange about the horses, but she couldn't quite
decide what. Never mind. She'd return to her quarters and read the briefing.
She needed to find out what was regular about I his place before she could
determine what was irregular.
She
made it to her door with only one slight mishap, when "h<- slipped once
more on the ice and had to recover from a coughing fit before rising. She
hadn't hurt herself seriously otherwise. How could she, with so many layers of
clothing? A passerby-impossible to tell if it was a man or a woman in those
wrappings, but the person was short-stopped and waited for her toughing fit to
abate, then gave her a hand up. She felt like a bloody baby, and wanted to slap
the person's hand away, but as soon as she was on her feet the person said in a
muffled voice, "You got to walk a little duck footed when it's slick like
this."
She
watched the person waddle away; then, feeling sillier than ever, she fell into
a waddle gait until she reached her own door, the last one on the row.
Something
bright flashed ahead of her as she opened the door, and she stiffened, until
she heard a thud from the direction of the table and beheld one of the orange
cats sitting upon it, nonchalantly cleaning the snow from furry paw pads.
To her
relief, the log she had left burning in the stove earlier that morning was
glowing coals. She wasn't sure how long such primitive material was supposed to
last, but she had the impression it needed refurbishing frequently. She
stripped off coat, gloves, muffler, and coverall and sat down on the chair in
her uniform. She had best strip off the insignia. She sighed. That would be
admitting to her present status. Whatever. She wondered what she would do for
clothing here when her uniforms wore out. She had no other kind of clothing,
having been shipside most of her life. Considering the assorted outerwear she
had seen in Clodagh's, perhaps the locals had indigenous sources and supplies.
She would have to ask Bunny where she got her furs. Meanwhile . . .
She
spread the brief on the table, while the cat looked on inquisitively. The
report contained a short history of Petaybee and its settlements, as well as
maps showing the resource sites and the spots where the missing survey teams
had last been seen.
Petaybee:
third world from star XR798 in the Valdez system. The original evaluation team
found no life forms, sentient or otherwise, on the planet: the rocky surface
was largely frozen during most of the solar year. The Whittaker Effect was
suggested as the best terraforming package for the planet and was inaugurated.
Colonization was feasible, and procedures were initiated as the planet warmed.
The only landmasses available were in the polar regions, where the climate was
sub arctic, with a long extremely cold winter, temperatures frequently as low
as or lower than -100 degrees F, summers barely two Terran months. Daylight is
intense and almost constant during the summer, but dwindles rapidly into total
darkness for most of the winter. Suitable colonists were chosen from ethnic
groups accustomed to such conditions.
Knowing
Intergal's ways, Yana doubted the "ethnic groups" had been asked
their choice in the matter. She kept reading.
. . .
following initial seeding, adjustments were made cm-site by company staff
members among the colonists. The team determined that although the planet could
support life of a primitive sort, most low-level machinery and electronics
would not withstand the cold. Therefore, biological alternatives were
developed. Company botanists perfected food and fodder crops, and other
domesticated plant life specially designed for the Petaybean growing season.
Summer thawing of rivers and shorelines is facilitated by the planet's network
of subterranean hot springs, which to some extent warm the surface water, which
becomes warmer as it deepens, preventing all but the shallower streams from
freezing to their total depth. This deep water, along with hot springs
occurring on the planet's surface and open year round, and small quantities of
melted snow, provide hydration for plants, humans, and animals.
Company
geneticists also altered existing animal species to conform to the requirements
of the Petaybean climate. The following species were developed under company
auspices: Petaybee curly horses, for nonsnow and heavy-duty transport;
foxhounds, intelligent hybrid dogs for pulling sleds; domestic felines,
originally for fur-bearing purposes but later to control the vermin, the
development of which was not authorized. Additionally, fur-bearing species able
to sustain themselves in the wild were introduced and specially adapted for the
climate-wolverines, wolves, bears, lynx, as well as caribou, reindeer, wild
sheep, and moose.
Sounded
right to Yana. Just about what one would expect a fully stocked subarctic Earth
clone to have. She had done the Service and London interactive holos as a kid.
The only thing missing so far was the malamutes, as in Malamute Saloon, and the
fox-hounds seemed to be standing in for them. Too bad there wasn't a
continental mass along the equator that would be more temperate. But even with
long-term terraforming, one couldn't always choose appropriate sites for
continental masses, though she didn't know the geology involved in supporting
Gaias.
She
skimmed past the description of ocean and river dwellers, noting that some
long-extinct species on Earth had been revived for this planet, making the
terraforming valuable for that purpose if no other, in her estimation. Five kinds
of whales populated the ocean: orcas, humpbacks, grays, rights, and the small
so-called pilot whales, as well as dolphins, otters, seals, walruses, and all
of the fish and plant life necessary to support them. The only odd thing about
Petaybee was that the oceans were still many times warmer deep down than they
were upon the icy surface, since considerable geothermal activity was still
taking place following the terraforming. This same activity accounted for
volcanos, hot springs, earthquakes, and the odd domes the Irish-Yupik-descended
colonists of this continent called "fairy hills," the report noted.
Yana
flipped forward. Nothing irregular here yet that she had to memorize and eat.
Nothing she shouldn't know-or be able to ask about, for that matter. If it was
here and it was authorized to be here, it was no doubt a matter of public
record.
The
next aberration she found was a notation that it had been unnecessary to
develop a methane-based energy system when, by the time enough colonists had
settled the planet to make such considerations a priority, it was discovered
that the smallish alder trees transplanted to this planet had somehow mutated
far beyond the alterations of the company botanists, into a completely new
hardwood that made unusually long-burning and hot fuel. That explained why her
home fires were still burning, anyway.
But in
the last part of the report, she began to wonder if the computer's word
processor hadn't gotten scrambled with some kid's IAH game. One of the
expeditionary team members, prior to of complete disappearance, had reported
via land-to-ship voice transmitter that she had seen what appeared to be a
unicorn, Unicorns were definitely not among the authorized species for this
planet, or any other. The official theory, the report went on to say, was that
the woman had suffered from snow blindness or hallucinations induced by
hypothermia. This climate was hostile to those not bred to adapt to it, the
report rationalized. One team member who did return from that expedition appeared
to have aged at least a decade and had
patently gone insane, babbling about hearing voices from the soil and tree
roots, though the reports he .we of crystal caverns led the authorities to hope
that there was some thread of reality in his ramblings.
The
locals, both company employees and dependents, denied knowledge of crystal
caverns or any of the other anomalies but did admit that sometimes they too
suffered from cold-induced hallucinations, particularly when out on the trail
with their teams.
Yana rubbed
her fists through her hair and put the report in the stove. Like a lot of
company paperwork, it didn't actually say much that couldn't have been conveyed
in a short verbal briefing. Disgusted, she watched the papers burn, the cat
poking its nose around her arm to see into the stove as well.
"I'm
going to have to take you back to Clodagh's tonight, kittycat," she told
it. It blinked golden eyes at her. "At least with "o many like you
stalking about, she's unlikely to have missed you."
Just
then there was a thump at her door, and she called out to whoever it was to
come in. By the time she realized no one was coming and had closed the stove
door to investigate, the area in front of the house was as empty as it had ever
been-but a bundle of wood sat beside the stoop.
Yana
pulled it inside, although it could as easily have remained out in the dry,
freezing air. She wanted whoever had brought it to know she had found it and
planned to use it, since so far she wasn't sure how she was supposed to acquire
provisions and today, at least, she didn't have enough energy left to
investigate. She had given the bed quilt back to Bunny, thinking she would get
a new one today. Belatedly she realized that the bundle Charlie Demintieff had
been carrying might have contained her thermal blanket and other authorized
survival gear. In the confusion, it had been left at Clodagh's.
The cat
looked up at her expectantly, and she sat back down at the table, wishing she
had a console to work on. Nothing to read, write, work at, or interact with
unless she wanted to put all those clothes back on and tramp about in the cold.
The cat looked up at her and mewed.
"Just
as well we're taking you home tonight, beast," she told it, giving it a
stroke. "Otherwise I'd go buggy, landed with so much solitude all of a
sudden."
As if
it understood her, the cat chirruped and hopped down from the table, where it
began chasing the toggle string of her parka with every evidence of great
concentration and ferocity. It leapt high with front paws spread and twisted in
midair to land squarely upon the coat's drawstring. Then the cat sat down, gave
its paws a lick, and looked up at her expectantly. Other than the coat's
drawstring, there wasn't a single thing to dangle or roll in the cabin.
Finally
Yana took off her webbed uniform belt and dragged the buckle on the floor for
the animal to hunt, while it did its best to entertain her. After a while, they
both fell asleep by the stove, Yana with her head on the table, the cat curled
by her elbow, while the winter-muffled village of Kilcoole remained unnervingly
free of clanging, computer beeps, and the hive like activity of spacers. Yana's
sleep was light and her dreams fragmented with scenes of a surgeon using a horn
growing from his head as a scalpel, twenty young troopers convulsing while
clawing at a hatch as poison gas slithered into a hold that looked something
like a crystal cave, and a tiny man she knew was Charlie Demintieff being
pounced at by an orange cat.
Diego
Metaxos hadn't been all that thrilled about being dragged down to Petaybee to
watch his old man in action as a geological surveyor. In all of his sixteen
years, he had never been planet side, and he expected life on Petaybee to be as
dreary and routine as life on board ship. But when he saw the place, he was
glad he had come, and when he met the dogs, he was even gladder. By the time
the lady let him drive her dog team, he had been convinced that this trip was
the most brilliant thing that had ever happened to him.
At
first he had been freaked out by the whole idea of the expedition, and with
good reason. Even the shrink on his dad's ship had told him that he had had a
lot to be freaked out about recently. First of all, his mom had fallen for a
company exec who liked Mom fine but didn't want any other attachments. Mom, a
senior astrophysicist, had never exactly been the warm type, and Diego had
spent most of his life moving with her from ship to ship, or watching her come
and go from various assignments while he sat in front of a teaching computer.
Lots of the places Mom was assigned, there had been no one his own age, and
very seldom did he find an adult who wanted to be bothered with someone else's
kid. At the last couple of stations, he had begun to pal around with a few of
the younger corps troops, listening to their casual conversation and admiring
the hard-core way they handled themselves, but he was always conscious that he
wasn't really one of them, and in case he forgot it, his mother made no bones
about her displeasure in his choice of company. Then, too, about the time he
started to gain a little acceptance and make one or two friends, they moved to
a new station. He then had to fall back on the resources he had developed since
he was a little kid, a good imagination and a quick brain. He didn't really
need any friends. Both his mom and his dad were brilliant, self-sufficient
people, and he was, too. All he had ever needed was computer access, and he
could entertain as well as educate himself. He was good at languages, having started
out speaking both Spanish and English from when he was a little kid, and he
enjoyed reading actual old hard-copy stories in both languages when there was
nobody he wanted to hang around with, so he got by.
He had
gone to visit his dad and Steve about once every calendar year, and that was
okay. He really loved his dad, even though he was a little on the
perfectionistic and ultra serious side, except with Steve. Steve got him to
knock it off, to relax and laugh a little. Steve was always finding neat things
to share with them. He had given Diego his first hard-copy book-a
Spanish-language text of Don Quixote-for Diego's ninth birthday.
"Pay
close attention to Sancho Panza and Dulcinea," he had kidded Diego.
"I'm a little of both." He struck a flamenco pose.
No
wonder Dad and Mom hadn't gotten along. Even if Dad hadn't discovered he was
gay, he and Mom were too much alike, both studious and serious and very
literal-minded. So Diego didn't mind Dad and Steve's arrangement all that much;
it just had never occurred to him that he might end up living with them.
He had
just begun to get used to that-and he had even come to find out that Dad had
wanted him all along but had been second best when it came to custody because
in the eyes of company management theirs was a less-preferred sexual
orientation to Mom's. Diego didn't see what difference that made. Nobody tried
to tell him which way to swing, even if he had been ready to do any swinging of
any kind. So far, he hadn't met anyone who instilled in him a desire to
implement the procedures his manuals and texts described.
So he
had just been getting used to his new situation and settling in when Steve had
come down with some kind of virus just before Dad was due to take off for this
mission to investigate something or other on Petaybee. That was when Dad had
gotten the bright idea that Diego should come along, too, as his assistant
instead of Steve, and "broaden his horizons."
In
fact, he hadn't actually seen a horizon before, since he was in it, by dirtside
reckoning. Pointing this out had caused Steve to rasp at him not to be a
smartass and to give new experiences a chance. So he had come along, and to his
surprise, the landscape of Petaybee looked more open and spacious than, well,
than space.
But
where space was black, Petaybee was blue and white, even when it turned dark,
as it quickly did on their way from SpaceBase to the dinky little town where
their guides met them. The sky was sort of dark ivory, and he could still see
Petaybee's sun, like a small snowball hanging in the sky, as well as its two
moons, one organic and one company-manufactured, in the sky.
Being
here was sort of like being inside the moon, all pale and shining. SpaceBase
was a hole and the town was ugly, but the countryside was really pretty
fascinating, and the snocle ride into Kilcoole seemed all too short. The place
was so much like something from his books, and yet so different that he knew he
would never forget it even if he didn't decide, as his father obviously hoped,
that he would become a great geologist like his old man.
Then,
when they started unloading the equipment from the snocle, and a whole fleet of
dogs, about fourteen to a sled, pulled up in front of the station, he started
getting hooked.
The
dogs were the most beautiful creatures he had ever seen. They were red as a
Mars moonscape but delicately featured with foxy, intelligent faces. At first
their barking scared him a little bit, but then the lady-when she spoke he
could tell she was a lady-driving his sled said they were friendly and he could
pet them if he liked. They were soft! The tops of their coats were a little
icy, but when he took his mitten off and dug into their fur with his hand, it
was as soft as anything he had ever felt, and warm enough to keep his hand from
freezing before he stuck it back into the glove. As he was bending over to pull
the mitten back on, the dog licked his face. "Hey, boy!" Diego said,
and hugged him.
"Girl,"
Lavelle, the driver, said. "That's Dinah, my leader. She likes you, and
she's a good judge of character."
"Leader?"
"The
dog I talk to, and the one who tells me and the other dogs what's going on up
ahead, what to do. As you can see from this arrangement, mostly all the other
dogs see is the rear end of the dog in front of them." The dogs wagged
their curled feathery tails and grinned as if that was a great joke they all
shared.
He rode
with Lavelle while his dad rode in the sled in front of them. The other members
of the expedition, two women, one a seismographer and one a mining engineer,
and the man his dad said was a soil mechanics specialist, all of them Doctor
Somebody-or-other, rode in the other sleds.
It was
a great ride, bundled along with the supplies into the furs on the sled,
bumping and whisking over snow and ice while the dogs ran ahead, tails
bouncing. But the best part was when, once they were well out of town with
nothing much in the way, Lavelle let him drive.
"When
you want them to go, yell to Dinah, 'Hike!' and 'Gee!' if you want them to go
right, 'Haw!' to the left, 'Whoa!' when you want them to stop. Dinah will do it
and see that the others do it. She's a smart pup. You stand here." She
showed him the rough hair-hide strips along the runners where he could put his
feet without slipping. "The brake is here. Step on it if you want to stop,
but you won't stop very quick on ice."
The
other sleds all passed them, but Lavelle didn't care. As soon as he had his
hands on the handlebars and his feet on the treads and Lavelle had strapped on
the nets made of wood and babiche-rawhide strips-he shouted "Hike!"
to Dinah and off she went, the others pulling with her, whining a little at the
sound of a new voice.
Dinah
was, as Lavelle said, a smart dog. She wasn't about to let the other sleds stay
ahead of them and passed them easily, falling in behind the first sled, the one
his father was riding in.
The run
to catch up was the best part, with the wind biting into his face and blowing
his breath back, the whole white-and-blue world framed in the icicles clinging
to his lashes and the ruff of his hood. As soon as they slowed down to fall in
behind the other sled, he got cold, then bored at having to stay so far behind.
Lavelle, loping beside him with a funny knee-high gait to let each cumbersome
snowshoe clear the snow before she set it down again, began telling him about
the great races her grandfather had told her about, the ones they used to have
in the old days in Alaska, which was part of a country back on Earth.
"One
of the biggest races they had back in those days developed from a dogsled relay
that took emergency serum from a big city to a little town called Nome far
away," she told him. "People admired the stamina and skill it took to
do it, and so they made a race out of it. Whole towns sponsored dogs and their drivers,
and people all over the world knew about it. Another race they had ran along
the route the mail sled used to take. It spanned two countries, and drivers
from all over brought their teams to compete. In both races, they still took a
little mail with them to deliver at the end."
"Why
did they need to send the mail by dogsled?" Diego asked. "That's
silly when they could use computers."
"Some
places they didn't have computers, sometimes," she shouted back. "And
sometimes folks just liked to prove they could do things in the old ways and
still survive like their ancestors did. They were learning to be tough like
them, you know?" She grinned, a very white grin in her sun-darkened face.
"Tough like us."
He
grinned back, but he thought privately it was a little backward to do things
the hard way instead of learning new skills. But then, he was now doing things
the old hard way and he was learning new skills.
They
camped that night and he listened to his father talking about rocks and stuff
for a while, over rations that were much the same as what he ate on the ship.
Then Lavelle slipped him a stick that smelled strong, but very spicy and
interesting.
"Eat
it," she said. "It's good. Smoked salmon. I caught it and smoked it
myself."
He
nibbled on it and she sang him a peculiar song about catching that particular
fish. She said the song was her own song, though the tune was to an old Irish
song her Grandmother O'Toole had taught her, "The Star of the County
Down."
The
chorus went:
"From
SpaceBase down to Kilcoole town On out to Tanana Bay The wild fish swims but I
caught him And he's our food today."
He fell
asleep quickly in the heated shelter. The next morning when he woke up, looking
forward to maybe driving the dogs again, soft powdery snow was sifting down
from the sky. He knew, scientifically, that the snow was part of this world's
ecosystem, but at the same time it seemed strange that he had spent so much
time above this planet and had never been on it before. His father explained
that snow was white rather than clear because it was a dense accumulation of
light-reflecting frozen water crystals, but Lavelle showed him that each flake
was a different, beautifully ornate design. He had to ride in the sled because
Lavelle said they were nearing rougher country, and she had to be vigilant for
the place the expedition was seeking. She promised to let him drive again on
the way back.
He
spent a lot of time lying in the sled, catching flakes on his mitten and trying
to memorize the shapes before they melted.
"Maybe
tonight at camp I'll make you some snow ice cream," Lavelle said, bending
over him so that her breath blew icily into his face. "I've got some seal
oil and dried berries with me, and a III lie sugar."
"Seal
oil?" he asked.
"Yeah.
Gives you instant energy on the trail. Don't knock it till you've tried
it."
He
pulled a face, and she pushed his ruff down over his eyes.
But the
storm picked up as they moved, and twice the Petaybean guy, who seemed to be
Lavelle's husband, asked Diego's d"l her and the other men if they wanted
to camp, but they said to keep on, that their instruments were showing them the
way. The snow no longer fell in single, beautiful flakes but in clumpy sheets,
HO hard that it was all Diego could do to see the tails of the dogs In front of
him, never mind the other sleds. All around him the world was white, and the
sled moved more and more slowly, while Siggy, as Lavelle called the Petaybean
guy, tried to break trail, keep track of the sleds, and persuade everyone to
stop.
The ride
had become much rougher, and although he couldn't see anything, Diego knew they
had left the plains, because the dogs were tugging the sleds up and down little
hills and, finally, up a long, long pull.
He
heard Siggy yell something, and then he heard Dad cry out and the woman in
front, Brit, whistle and call "Whoa, you
mutts! Whoa! Oh, shit!" and multiple sounds of slipping, cracking,
and sliding, but by that time the dogs had reached the summit and were
plummeting down, too.
A man
screamed, and several heavy things rolled and tumbled just as the sled was
suddenly airborne, and Diego felt himself flying more surely than he had ever
flown in the spacecraft he had lived in since he was a baby.
Lavelle
called, "Whoa, Dinah! Back girl!" and Diego felt her hand pull on his
ruff. For a moment she had him; then the sled jarred again and she fell and his
hood was free, and he was falling from the sled, rolling, tumbling, into the
snow, over and over, until his feet struck something soft at the same time his head
struck something hard, and there was darkness.
Chapter
3
Yana
tried to take the cat back to Clodagh's that evening when Bunny picked her up,
but the cat refused to cooperate. When she tried to pick it up to carry it
outdoors to Bunny's waiting sled, the cat escaped, firing a warning volley
across her knuckles with its claws, and hid.
Yana
explained this to Clodagh while the big woman finished stirring the contents of
a pot on the stove. Delicious smells came from the pot and from the oven.
"Keep
him," Clodagh advised her. Looking around the room at the four identical
felines lounging on various furnishings, she added with a slight smile, "I
have extras. Besides, they go where they wish and do as they choose. You seem
to have been chosen."
"Yes,
but what am I supposed to do with it?" Yana asked.
"Feed
it," Bunny answered. "That's the important thing. And let it in and
out as it likes, unless you want to keep an indoor tray for it."
"They
do all right outdoors for prolonged periods," Clodagh said. "They've
been crossbred for that, so they don't lose their tails and ears to frostbite
the way their ancestors did. But they usually prefer a fire and a lap most of
the time. They're good company."
"Mm,"
Yana said noncommittally. "I need to find out where to get things: food,
clothing, wood. Someone brought a load and left it beside my door. Do you know
who it was so 1 can thank them?"
Clodagh
shrugged. "Could have been anyone. One of Bunka's relatives, maybe.
Someone who knows you need more than the PTBs provided for you. Speaking of
that, don't forget your pack tonight. Not that that flimsy blanket will do you
a lot of good. You'll need a proper one."
"Where
can I buy one of those?" Yana asked.
"Not
at the company store, that's for sure!" Bunka said. "They don't have
anything there but obsolete spacer stuff." She crossed to Clodagh's bed
and pulled aside the standard-issue blanket to reveal another-full of lovely
soft yellows, blues, and pinks-underneath. "Here, feel."
Yana
leaned over and felt. The blanket was thickly woven or knitted-she had no idea
which-of some heavy, long-haired material. It would be wonderfully warm.
"It's
beautiful," she said.
"Speaking
of that, here comes Sinead and my sister Aisling now," Clodagh said.
"Sinead gathers the hair for spinning from the horses and dogs and
sometimes the wild sheep she hunts and Aisling spins, dyes, and weaves the hair
into the blankets. Perhaps they'll make a trade."
Another
woman entered the room. She was almost as round as Clodagh; her face and hair
bore a resemblance to Clodagh's, as well, but the newcomer had a much dreamier
look about her. She was followed closely by a small, wiry woman who helped her
off with her wraps.
"Welcome,
sister, Sinead," Clodagh said, smiling at the two women. "We were
just talking about you. Have you eaten?"
"Nah,"
said the shorter and slighter-built of the two women, shucking her outer
garments off with great dispatch. "We heard you were entertaining tonight
and came to gawk." She stuck out a hand to Yana. "Sinead Shongili
here. Nice to meet you. Did you make it home okay without falling again?"
"You
were the person who showed me how to waddle!" Yana exclaimed.
"None
other. And this lovely lady is Aisling Senungatuk," Sinead said, fussing a
bit over Aisling, who was settling her ample form into a rocking chair Clodagh
had pulled from a corner of the room. Aisling smiled warmly up at her partner and
indicated that she was comfortable.
"Yana
was just admiring the blanket you women made for me, sister," Clodagh told
Aisling.
"I'll
put you on my list, Yana," Aisling promised in one of the loveliest voices
Yana had ever heard.
"Yeah,
the blankets they send you from the company are all crap," Sinead said.
"I need to gather some more material for weaving, but my Aisling can make
you the most gorgeous damn blanket you've ever seen, can't you, love?"
Aisling
nodded, her eyes dancing when she looked at her partner. "You bet."
"I'm
afraid I haven't got much to trade you for it," Yana told them,
"apart from some obsolete insignia. Had to give away any souvenirs, and
bring only what I couldn't do without. Baggage allowance didn't give me any
latitude there. You don't know where I can get a small computer, do you?"
Sinead
gave a merry laugh. "You've got to be joking."
Clodagh
said, more gently, "Oh, no, dear, that's not for the likes of us, goodness
me no. Nobody here in Kilcoole has such a thing. We're just poor ignorant ips
you know, and the PTBs like it that way."
"Ips?"
"The
inconvenient people," Aisling elaborated. "That's who they got to
colonize this place. They wanted our land on Earth, you see, and promised us a
new place in exchange. Frankly, we had nothing to say about it. Evicted, we
were. No one could afford to own land anymore. So we came here, as they
intended." Her eyes dropped as she finished the statement; then she turned
an apologetic look to Clodagh. "Sorry. It doesn't do to get me started.
And we should be going now. We didn't really mean to interrupt supper. We just
came to see if there was anything we could do to help." She nodded in
Yana's direction.
"Thanks,"
Yana said, and Clodagh showed them to the door, Sinead darting three steps
forward and two back for each measure of her partner's statelier progress.
When
they left, Clodagh pulled a bottle and some cups from the shelf over the
cloth-draped cabinets along one wall and asked, "Will you be havin' a drop
with your supper, dear?"
"Pardon?"
"Clodagh's
home brew," Bunny said. "It's good. Gives you good dreams."
"I
don't know. With all the medicine I've had lately . . ."
"It'll
do you good," Clodagh said. "Has medicinal properties. You can't get
sick drunk on the stuff-just a little pleasantly blurred. You look as though
you need blurring, my dear."
"Clodagh's
the local healer, so you can trust her on that score," Bunny told Yana.
"Just
a little then," Yana agreed. The spicy smells from the stove were making
her long to put something in her mouth. If not food, then drink was not a bad
alternative.
But
with the drink came a heaping bowl of some sort of noodles and a red meat
sauce, accompanied by hot, crusty bread. She burned her lip on the first
mouthful, something she had never done with prefab ship food.
"This
is delicious," she said when she had had a few cooler bites. "What is
it?"
"Moose
spaghetti," Clodagh told her.
There
was another knock at the door. Bunny hopped up, slurping in a strand of
spaghetti, and opened it. A rush of cold air and a parka-clad figure entered
the room at the same time.
The
person, a woman, pointedly did not look at Yana as she unbuttoned her coat.
"Sedna,
how's it going?" Clodagh asked her.
"Oh,
fine. Just wondered if you had some mare's butter I could have. We're about
out."
"No
problem. Say, Sedna, have you met Major Maddock yet?" Clodagh asked.
Sedna
shook her blond curls and then allowed herself to look squarely at Yana, a look
which told Yana that meeting her was more the point of the visit than the
mare's milk. She thought she vaguely recognized the woman from Charlie
Demintieff's send-off earlier that morning.
"Major
Maddock," Clodagh began.
"Yanaba,
please, Clodagh, or just Yana," she said.
"Yana,
this is Sedna Quinn. How's your boy's earache, Sedna?"
"Better,
Clodagh, since you made up that poultice."
"You
got time to eat?"
"Nah,
I got to get back and help Im scrape that moose hide. I'll bring you
some-"
"Well,
say, if you're that busy, why don't you take some of this moose spaghetti home
for supper? That way you won't have to fuss."
So
Sedna sat at the edge of her chair with her coat half-buttoned while Clodagh
dished up a containerful of the pasta.
"So,
Bunny, pretty sad about Charlie, huh?" Sedna asked.
"Yeah,
too bad. I hope he's gonna be all right. It'll be lonesome up there, I bet. I
wish they'd given us time to send him off good, make a song for him. He'll miss
the breakup latchkay and everything."
"I'll
make a song for him, even if he won't hear it" Clodagh said.
"Maybe
you could record it or write it down and Bunny could take it in when she's back
at SpaceBase," Yana suggested.
Sedna
straightened her back, gave Yana a pitying look, and said primly, "A song
has to be sung from one person to the other to be any good."
"I'm
sorry," Yana said. "I don't know your customs yet. It's just that I
could see how much you all liked Lieutenant Demintieff and I know how important
it is to a soldier to hear from friends, whether they're dirtside or on some
other facility."
"It's
okay, Yana," Clodagh said. "Sedna, Yana's going to be staying with us
here so she'll find out soon enough. The fact is, Yana, nobody here knows how
to record much less write."
Yana
sputtered with surprise. "They don't? You don't? But how the hell can that
be? The Petaybean recruits I've met all know how; Bunny surely must know how to
have passed her snocle test."
Bunny
shook her head. "That's all done on comm link- verbal and visual cues. And
of course the company teaches the soldiers to read, at least enough to get by
in the corps, in basic training and at the officers academy down at
Chugiak-Fergus, but other than that . . ." She shrugged.
"Surely
the colonists who first came here . . ." Yana insisted.
Clodagh
shook her head. "Only those who were high officers in the company already.
Oh, sure and some of our great-grandparents maybe knew a little bit at one
time-maybe as much as the company teaches soldiers now-but back then, so the
songs tell us, everybody had fancy machines to talk to them and show them
pictures of what needed to be done. The company apparently didn't think we
needed the machines as bad as we needed other stuff when they sent us here, and
such things were far too dear for the likes of us to import once we were here.
So there's just , a few of those machines on the planet, the ones the company
needs to keep here for their own business. As for your written books, well, I
don't suppose anybody had a clue where to find many of them anymore, except for
the special ones the scientists had. So we sort of fell back into just talking
and singing and telling about what happened, like people did way back a long
time ago."
"We
do okay without that stuff," Bunny said, with a defensive edge to her
voice that was immediately tempered by wistful-ness. "Except, sometimes,
like now, but still there are some people who can . . ." She turned to
Clodagh.
"Including,
if I'm not mistaken, your own Uncle Sean, Bunka," Sedna said. "Is
that so, Clodagh?"
"Of
course. He's a Shongili." To Yana, Clodagh explained, "The Shongilis
were originally of Inuit stock but already had careers as valued Intergal
scientists when Petaybee was founded. Scan's and Sinead's grandda was the most
respected man in our hemisphere until his death." With what seemed undue
pride she nodded emphatically. "Shongilis definitely can read-books and
books if they want to. Even Sinead can-Aisling's seen her do it, but said
Sinead told her mostly she'd rather read animal tracks instead and rely on her
own sharp ears and long memory for stories and songs like everybody else."
Bunny
bounced up and exclaimed, "I forgot! That's right! Uncle Sean can not only
write, but he has stuff to write with and a recorder. He could do it!"
"Your
uncle is an important man, a busy man, Bunny," Sedna said, horrified.
"He's got problems to solve for the whole planet. We can't go bothering
him with every little thing."
"Charlie
being shipped out isn't really a little thing, though, is it, Sedna?"
Clodagh asked. "No, I think that's a good idea. If Yana knows how to read
and make recordings, too, and if you'd help us do it, Yana, we wouldn't need to
bother him very much. He could just loan her the machine. You think he'd do
that, Bunny?"
"He
will if I ask him and tell him it's your idea," Bunny said. "I'll go
up to his place in a couple of days, next time I don't have any fares to and
from SpaceBase."
"Maybe
Yana'd like to go with you. I bet Scan would like to meet somebody else who
knows writing."
"How
about it, Yana? You're not scared of the dogs, are you?"
Yana
shook her head, grinning. "No, I'd like to ride in that contraption."
As advertised, the home brew was starting to blur her.
Sedna,
a container of moose spaghetti in hand, said goodbye; she crossed at the
doorway with yet more drop-in guests, one of whom Yana had already met. Bunny's
Uncle Seamus was less encrusted with snow and ice this time and was accompanied
by a tiny woman with short, wavy silver hair.
"Slainte,
Clodagh! Bunny said you were having the major over for dinner and Moira and me
wanted to bring her some fish. Here you go, Major," Seamus said, and
handed her a string of stiff frozen fish as if he were handing her a promotion
to executive vice-president of Intergal.
"Thanks,
uh... Seamus," she said, pretending to admire them. She didn't have any
idea what to do with them, so she hung the string over the back of the chair,
where it was instantly the object of much interest from the cats.
"Get
away, you lot," Clodagh said, wading through orange fur to rescue the
fish. The cats stood on their hind feet and batted at the string as she held it
aloft. "Better hang them outside until she's ready to go, Seamus." '
"Right,"
Seamus said, casting an odd sidelong glance at Yana.
She
waved and said thanks again, and planned to ask Bunny later about the etiquette
involving gifts of fish.
They
stayed a short while longer, and while they were there two more people came by,
a rakish-looking girl introduced as Arnie O'Malley and her little boy, Finnbar,
who chased the cats. Finally, all of the extraneous guests left, the girl
calling, "Wait'll you see my new latchkay dress, Clodagh! The lads will be
making songs about me for years to come."
"That
Arnie, always showing off," Bunny said disgustedly.
"What
are these songs everybody talks about?" Yana asked. She was full of food
and on her third glass of home brew and was feeling pleasantly relaxed and even
a bit sleepy. "Are there a lot of musicians in this town?"
"Nah,
only old man Ungar and his bunch," Bunny said. "But everybody makes
up songs."
"Even/body?"
Yana had never personally known anybody who wrote songs, or admitted to the
practice.
"Yes,"
Clodagh said. "We make songs about everything, even one about the reason
we make songs, but that particular song belongs to Mick Oomilialik. Maybe he'll
sing it for you at the latchkay."
"What's
that?"
"Oh,
it's a big feast and sing where we get together to talk things over. My Inuit
ancestors called such a thing a potlatch and my Irish ancestors called it a
ceili, so one of the first batch here combined it into latchkay. Anyway,
everybody makes songs to sing then about what's happened during the last
season. Sometimes villages get together and share food and news."
"So
you only have them once a season?"
"Except
for weddings, funerals, and other special events, yes."
"Well,
what might you write a song about, for instance?"
"Charlie
having to leave is one kind of thing. 1 might write a song pretending I was
Charlie."
"And
you can make up music and everything?"
"Oh,
no, not usually. Mostly we use the old tunes. And there's drumming, too,"
Bunny said. From Clodagh's wall she pulled down a circular drum, holding it in
one hand and using the other to extract a stick from the back of the drum.
"Our
drums can be used like Inuit drums and beaten with a wand in strict time,"
Clodagh explained, "or if you want to use it like an Irish bodhran, you
beat it with that little stick. Or your fingers, if you're real clever. When a
song is first presented, we use only the drums so everybody can hear the words.
Later on, if the song's owner permits it, others sing along and other
instruments join in."
"I
can sing her one of mine," Bunny said.
Clodagh
looked mildly surprised. "Okay. I'll drum. Which one?"
"About
getting my snocle license. Irish Washerwoman."
"What?"
Yana asked.
"Oh,
'Irish Washerwoman' is the tune," Clodagh told her. "Our ancestors
liked each other well enough but it was easier for the Inuits to adapt to the
Irish music than it was for the Irish to adapt to the Inuit. Of course, some of
us don't have the voice for Irish melodies, so then we sing in the Inuit
way."
"It's
more like chanting," Bunny said. "So our singing is like us-all mixed
up. Anyway, here's my song:
"Oh,
I'm getting my license to snocle today
from the big shots although I'm a Petaybee
maid
You'll forgive me if I'm very vocal, hooray!
But I'm
getting my license to snocle today.
"That's
all there is," Bunny finished. "But I sure was happy about it, even
if it's just a short little song. I didn't want to brag too much."
Clodagh
said, "Here, I'll sing you a song in the other style.
"Before
it awakened the world was alive. It brooded in a shell of ice and stone. Alone,
thinking of its own mysteries, Deep dreaming. Jajai-ija."
Clodagh
was chanting slowly and deliberately, and the effect was that of an eerie tune,
similar to some styles Yana had heard on shipboard holos and in company pubs
throughout the galaxy. The last note of the verse was very low, almost
guttural.
"Then
came the men with their ships, their fire Awakening the fire within the world
Sundering rock, cutting river channels, Great holes were gouged for ocean beds.
Jajai-ija.
"Painful
was the awakening, the beginning As only beginnings can be painful But the pain
roused the world from dreaming Melted its blanket and dribbled water in The
mind of the world Jajai-ija!
"Awake,
the world grew leaves Awake, the world grew roots Awake, the world grew mosses
and lichens Awake, the world knew wind. Jajai-ija!
"Then
came more men and the world grew wings The world grew feet and hands. The world
grew paws and claws. The world grew feathers and fur.
"Noses
smelled the new world and mouths tasted it Fangs tore it and fins and scales
swam through The new waters. And the tails of the world Wagged, happy that it
had been given a voice. Happy that it woke up. Jajai-ja-jija!"
Yana
nodded appreciatively, while pictures of ice caves and snow plains and various
disjointed animals somehow connected to the planet's surface kaleidoscoped in
front of her eyes. The blur had become audible as well as visual. When Clodagh
was done, Yana smiled and thanked her for the song and the meal and refrained
from saying that the Corps of Engineers terraforming department might well wish
to adopt that song as their anthem if they ever heard it. Clodagh began clearing
the table, and Bunny pulled on her parka.
Although
Bunny was willing to drive her home, she let Bunny take her dogs straight back
to their kennels and walked back. Blurred and blithe, she carried her pack and
her string of fish, enjoying the snapping freshness of the air, thinking that
maybe the world in Clodagh's song had lungs, too - healthy ones.
She
hung the fish outside the door, as they had hung at Clodagh's, up high, the
effort costing her another coughing fit that doubled her over in the snow until
she was afraid she would freeze to death. She crawled inside and started to
spread the blanket on her bed, then saw by the moon's light through the windows
that there was already a soft brown fur spread over it, the cat peacefully
curled on top of it. Yana gratefully joined the little animal, glad of its
steady, contented breathing and its warmth.
Warmth.
Diego shuddered to life, staring out through eyelashes frozen together, feeling
himself dragged. He rolled over. He hurt bad. His dad had him under the arms
and was tugging him, sliding him, inch by inch, over the springy, snow-covered
surface.
"I'm
okay, Dad. I can do it," he said, and rolled over, away from his father.
Dad looked as if he needed Diego to pull him in turn. His lips were cracked and
bloodless, but there was a great deal of blood elsewhere, frozen on his face
and parka ruff from a cut on his forehead.
"Cave,"
Dad said, shouting against the wind. "Under-the ledge. Limestone-"
"Tell
me when we get in there," Diego yelled back.
Somewhere
very far away dogs howled, and he thought maybe he heard voices, too, but they
didn't sound close. That Dinah was something, though. Maybe Lavelle would let
her loose, so she could come and find them.
"We'll
be okay, Dad," he said, as much to reassure himself as his father, but
even to his own ears his voice sounded no louder than a whisper compared to the
wind.
They
crawled toward the piece of shadow looming under the side of the hill amid all
the white. Snow drifted and blew in front of it.
His father
took a laser pistol from his pocket. "Wild . . . animals," he said,
and they crawled into the opening.
They
huddled inside, listening to the wind howl outside. Diego's dad looked bad to
him; he seemed to have doubled his age in just a few minutes. His black hair
was iced over, and the thick black eyebrows that normally made his dark eyes
seem so penetrating were dead white with encrusted snow and ice. His expression
was not so much scared as dazed, and the blood from the cut was running again,
pretty freely. Diego's own face was wet, too, as was the ruff on his parka.
Then he realized that was because it was warmer here in the mouth of the cave.
"Dad,
let's go on back in. It's warm in here. Come on, let's keep out of the cold
till the storm's over."
He felt
more like his father's father than his son then, and that was as scary as being
stuck out in the blizzard. But Dad nodded a little stiffly and followed him.
The
passage sloped sharply downward for a time, and it was very narrow. Dad had to
squeeze sideways and kneel to get through one part, but it had grown so warm
that Diego took off his hat, mittens, and muffler and stuffed them in his
pocket and unfastened his parka. About this time he began to hear the humming
from inside the cave, as if it housed some huge machine. For all he knew, maybe
it did. The company had made this planet, hadn't they? At least that's what
they claimed, though Diego privately thought it was pretty weird to create such
a physically inhospitable place.
The
path bent sharply to the right, then to the left, and seemed to stop. Diego
groped toward the wall in front of him, his hands touching strange
indentations, like grooves swirling in some sort of design.
With
his touch, the wall gave way and a soft, eerie light from within sent a shaft
to meet them. Diego pressed forward into the room, where flame-colored liquid
bubbled up in a central pool and the walls glowed with phosphorescence, where
roots and rock formations twined and curled into strange designs in the
elongated, rough shapes of animals and men, and where the humming was so loud,
so perfect, so beautiful that after a while Diego thought he must be hearing
the voices of the angels he had once read about-and they were telling him
things. He listened so closely that he could not hear his father screaming.
Chapter
4
Yana
awoke the next morning at the cat's insistence. It stood by her head and, every
time she tried to go back to sleep, poked its nose in her face. She seriously
considered throwing it across the room, but then decided that both it and she
needed something to eat. She could hardly inflict corporal punishment for a
reasonable demand.
She had
a collapsible pot in her survival kit and still had the water left in the
thermos jug Bunny had loaned her. She set water on to heat and retrieved one of
the fish from the hook outside her door, but from there on she had no idea what
to do with it.
There
were still some food pellets in her personal baggage, so she gulped down a
green one and a pink one and set the fish on the stove to thaw. When it had
well and truly stunk up the cabin, she gave it to the cat, who danced with
delight.
"Don't
tell Seamus," she said to the cat. "I think he meant for me to cook
it, but between you and me, I never learned how to cook a meal, just get the
basic pills I need down my gullet."
The cat
looked up through slit eyes, purring and growling over the fish at the same
time, its expression clearly saying, "Your loss is my gain."
Yana
was used to the close confinement of a living area within a hostile environment
but found that despite her fatigue and illness she had trouble remaining inside
her cabin for more than two hours at a time. It was cold outdoors, and the gear
she had to wear to be outside was heavy and clumsy, but she could by God
breathe the air, however gingerly.
During
the few hours when the sun made the sky bright blue and the snow sparkle, she
would have clawed her way through the door to get out if she'd had to. With all
of its current landmasses clustered near the poles, Petaybee's light and
darkness cycles closely resembled those of the polar outposts of Earth, where
both extremes seemed to last for months at a time. Fortunately, she had arrived
late in the dark cycle, so she got some differentiation between night and day,
though not as much as she would have gotten in the artificially regulated watch
cycles aboard company corps spacecraft.
She saw
someone sliding past her cabin on long skis and rushed outside without her hat
to ask them where they had gotten the skis.
The
young boy flushed with more than activity. "They- uh-they're made around
here," he said finally, but she could see the Intergal logo on his boots.
"Could
I buy a pair at the company store, do you know?" she asked, thinking she
had yet to find the damned store.
He
didn't say anything but slithered hurriedly past, which told her they probably
were neither made on Petaybee nor sold at the store: more likely they had been
"relocated" illegally from SpaceBase.
Down
the street, someone carrying a package emerged from the doorway of one of the
houses. The figure, of rather greater mass than most, walked-waddled-glided
toward her on the ice, and Yana recognized Aisling, the blanket maker she had
met at Clodagh's.
"Slainte,
Yana," Aisling said.
"Uh
. . . slainte, yourself, Aisling. Say, I'm trying to find my way around the
village. Can you show me where the store is?"
"Sure.
I just left there. Why, what do you need?"
"Nothing
in particular. I just wanted to know what was available."
"Not
much, but come on, I'll show you. Mostly, we try to make our own from what the
planet provides. Some of us trade what we make at the store for the few things
they have that we can't manufacture ourselves. Our stuff never stays in the
store, though. I think they're sold for triple, maybe four times, what we're
paid, on ships and space stations and to other colonies. So mostly we deal
directly with each other. You know, one of my blankets for one of the good
skinning knives Seamus makes, or Sinead will trade a moose hindquarter for a
mountain sheep fleece for me or enough mare's butter for our lamps. Old Eithne
Naknek often trades the sweaters she knits for food and wood, and we all trade
hides to cut for boots and parkas. When I can get cloth, I can make real pretty
things for latchkays. Used to do that a lot, but since the SpaceBase closed to
civilians, you can't hardly get fabric anymore."
"I
can see where I need to get to know who to go to for what," Yana said. She
could also see that she was going to need some barterable commodity other than
company scrip to get by. She had never tried hunting for food before. Most
planets where she had touched down had still been too new for anyone to be sure
what was palatable and what was poisonous; and anyway, there was always the
awkward possibility of ending up inadvertently lunching on one's host species.
Aisling
took her into the store. From the outside, it looked like just another house;
inside it seemed even tinier, with the stove dominating the room and counters
all around the edges. Flanking the stove were two tables, sparsely littered
with bags of nutrient tablets and uniform neckties and buttons, as well as
trousers in
very small
sizes. Aisling was scanning the shelves beyond the counters.
"Look,
Yana. There's a good small pot. You better grab it. We've got one, but anything
useful goes quick."
Yana
purchased the pot. Looking further for something useful, she saw only small
machine parts, burned-out chips, and multicolored wires.
"Sinead
takes the wire and welds it into designs on tools and pots," Aisling told
her as they left. "And uses the chips for jewelry. You should come over
for supper sometime and we'll show you. Though everybody will be bringing
things to trade or gift with at the latchkay."
Yana
said she would like to do that, and Aisling continued on her way.
Two
days later, as Yana was slowly waking up with a cup of hot watery beverage
between her hands, she was jolted out of her semi-trance by the sound of dog
feet and dog whines and howls outside. Bunny's face, framed by her parka ruff
and mittens, appeared in the window. Yana waved at her to come in, and Bunny
stuck her head in the door.
"If
you still want to come with me up to Uncle Sean's place, come on. I'll wait out
here with the dogs, but you better hurry. It's a good two-hour trip, and we may
have to track him down once we get there."
Yana
nodded and, after throwing two more logs in the stove for good measure, pulled
on her boots and tugged her coverall and coat over her uniform. Grabbing
mittens, hat, and muffler, she walked outside. The cat followed her.
"You
sit there," Bunny told her, indicating the appropriate place in the sled.
She wrapped furs and quilts around her. "It'll be cold sitting still.
Later on, when you're feeling better, I'll show you how to drive dogs. Driving
keeps you warm."
Then
Bunny put in Yana's lap a pair of the big oval nets Yana had seen hanging over
Clodagh's door. "You always want to have all your survival gear with you
when you leave the village," Bunny said. "I don't think we'll need
snowshoes, but you never know."
Something
warm landed on Yana's thighs and burrowed under the furs. She bent over and saw
a familiar orange face peeping out at her.
"Oho!
Bunny, can you get rid of the cat?"
"It's
okay. That's one of Clodagh's cats, and they go everywhere." With that she
whistled up the dogs, pulled the brake up from the ice, and pushed with her
foot, as if the sled were a scooter. With much wagging and anxious whining, the
foxy-looking red dogs began pulling the sled down the icy expanse between the
houses, around a corner, and out onto the river again.
For a
while the ride was serene, the sled swooshing over white still lit by the light
of moons and stars, Bunny occasionally calling to the dogs or to Yana to look
at one set of tracks or another and pointing out "snow goose,"
"fox," or "moose," accordingly. Then she whistled more
sharply, shouted "Ha!," and the dogs made a rather sharp turn up over
the bank of the river and through the slender, snow-draped trees.
The
sled bounced along from there, the dogs frisking up hills and running down
them, the sled sometimes suspended breathlessly in midair for a moment as it
went over a bump. Bunny kept control with the brake and her voice, and once the
lead dog, Maud, turned back to look at her and whined when Bunny called out
"Gee!" Bunny promptly called out "Ha!" instead, and Maud,
satisfied, turned back to the trail. Mostly the dogs trotted at a leisurely
pace, and Yana got a good view of their excretory functions as they stopped to
mark the trail every once in a while.
Finally,
however, the trail turned downward for a long time, and then a vast treeless
straightaway of ice and snow stretched clear to the horizon, broken only by
huge, jagged, upright ice teeth that seemed to be shifting ever so slightly
against the brightening sky. The howling of dogs close at hand occasioned
answering howls from Bunny's dogs.
Bunny
whistled the dogs to a stop then, and Yana saw that the coral-tinted squarish
hill between them and the giant ice teeth was not actually a mound of snow
kissed by the rising sun, but a building painted in that unlikely shade. As the
dogs trotted to a halt, they rounded the corner of the building, and Yana saw a
snocle similar to Bunny's sitting before half a dozen small houses, each with a
howling red fox-hound on top of it, caroling a greeting to the newcomers.
"Here
we are," Bunny said. "And it looks like he's at home, too."
Yana
had formed no preconceptions about Bunny's relative, apart from expecting him
to vaguely resemble someone of the blood kin she had already met. But Dr. Sean
Shongili wasn't like anyone she had ever met, either here on Petaybee or
anywhere else in her lifetime-despite the fact that she had the distinct
feeling that she had encountered him before.
Bunny
had rapped on the door, singing out a cheerful "Slainte, Uncle Sean,"
a greeting lost in the canine chorus. She urgently beckoned Yana to hurry up,
but Yana had to disentangle herself from the furs and the cat before she could
stagger to her feet. That long, cold ride in a less-than-comfortable position
had stiffened all her joints. She hated to appear less than agile and forced
her body to move with something near a semblance of normality.
The
door she approached pulled inward, and with snow glare impairing her vision,
Yana could distinguish only a medium-sized form, for once not distorted by
layers of clothing. The man was actually in a shirt with the sleeves rolled up
to his elbows and the collar open.
"Uncle
Scan, I gotcha home! I've brought Yanaba Maddock to see you. And 1 gotta favor
to ask. In Clodagh's name." On those words, Bunny put a hand on Yana's
back and propelled her into the house.
Blinking
to adjust her eyes, Yana looked about a room that sprouted unusual shapes from
every surface, wall and ceiling, a veritable djinni's cave of wonders and a
heinz of unassorted utensils, tools, parts, and, as usual, felines. These were
six times the size of the one left curled in the sled furs and not a one of
them was orange-colored. Fine heads turned, and autocratic amber, yellow, and
green eyes assessed her. In a basket near the fire, a black and white bitch
with a harlequin face lifted her head, sniffing, moved her foreleg to hide the
pups that nursed her, and remained alert the entire time the visitors remained
in Scan's cabin. That was the sum of Yana's first impression. Then the man
dominated the scene.
Scan
Shongili smiled, and his eyes did, too: sparkly silver eyes that looked
straight into hers, clever, "seeing" eyes that were bright with an
unqualified welcome, a decided change from the superficial social manners that
were usually all she was accorded and many degrees more kindly than Colonel
Giancarlo. But Giancarlo had a mission for her, and he probably never regarded
his mission personnel as remotely human.
Shongili
wasn't much taller than she was; a subtle aura of great strength, intelligence,
and charm emanated from him, though charm was a quality she had never
trusted-until now. He was a lean man, which for starters she liked, with a
narrow face, slightly broad at the eyes, which were wide-set and large;
cheekbones that were more Magyar than Indian; a generous mouth with finely carved
lips, white, even teeth just visible behind them; and a purposeful chin and jaw
line. Not a man easily persuaded from his purpose.
"Well,
now, so you're Major Maddock," Scan said, and she hurried to pull off her
right glove as he extended what looked like an abnormally long-fingered hand.
But it was warm and grasped hers just firmly enough for her to sense, again,
the unexpected resources in him. In fact, the touch of his skin on hers was
slightly electric, stimulating.
Then
the silver eyes blinked and something in the altered look made her frown
slightly, confused, for all that there didn't seem to be any diminution of his
welcome or smile.
"Has
everyone on this frozen ball of ice heard of me now?" she asked, slightly
petulant. She forced a smile on her lips to make her words seem more of a joke
than they had sounded in her own ears.
"Good
news travels faster than bad on Petaybee," Scan said. He moved with lithe
grace to the ever-present stove of a Petaybee home, pouring three cups from the
equally ubiquitous steaming pot. "Actually, I have the only radio link
with the town around. Adak at the snocle depot gets downright chatty if
anything interesting happens-such as Kilcoole getting a new citizen, and a war
hero at that. Here's something to warm your guts after such a long sled ride,
Major."
"Thanks,"
Yana said, ignoring the war hero comment and hoping to restore herself to his
good opinion after that flash of aggro. "You're very kind."
His
silver eyes glinted as he handed her the cup. "Bunny would skin me alive
if I never asked you where your mouth was," he said, and winked with pure
mischief before he presented Bunny with her mug.
"Too
right, Unk," Bunny said, "and Scan makes a good bev."
Yana
clasped it in both hands, to warm numb fingers, taking her time about sipping a
liquid she knew would be too hot to drink immediately. The rising steam carried
a spicily inviting odor to her nostrils.
"Charlie's
gone, I hear," Sean went on, hitching his hips up onto the nearest flat
surface.
"Yah!
With barely time to say good-byes, and no song," Bunny said, then cocked
her head at him, smiling winsomely. "Which is why we wondered if we could
have the recorder. The major here knows all about equipment like yours, and she
volunteered to help us send him a letter. To make up for his sudden departure,
like."
Sean
flicked a gaze at Yana, and she quirked her lips in a smile.
"Charlie-boy's
not the one to irritate folk," Sean said. "Wonder why they posted him
off-planet." But he put his cup down and, with a single fluid movement,
spun on one heel to an overburdened wall cabinet from which he unerringly
extracted a recording device. Not, Yana realized as she saw the face of it, an
obsolete affair but nearly state-of-the-art from the last time she had been
issued one. The cabinet was crammed with technological gadgets of all kinds,
half of which she couldn't put a name or use to. She watched as Sean
negligently pushed back into place equipment that would have been worth a small
fortune on any planet, much less a technologically starved one like Petaybee.
"Half
of it doesn't work," he said, without seeming to have noticed her
attention. "Petaybee's hard on any kind of instrumentation and
machinery."
"How
do you manage your work then?" she blurted out.
He gave
an diffident shrug. "I improvise. We do a lot of that on Petaybee."
He handed her the recorder. "Do you understand this type?"
She
examined the display keys more closely and nodded, deciding to limit her
comments. "Had one almost like this on my last assignment." She slid
the thin rectangle into a thigh pocket. Then she nodded at the big cats.
"I haven't seen anything like them here."
"Them?"
Shongili looked half-surprised, half-amused. "My track-cats. When they're
of a mind, they'll even pull a sled."
"They're
big enough." Yana moved slightly on her buttocks. She was near enough to
the stove to begin to feel the heat. She shrugged her jacket open a little
more. "Do they always look at a person like that?"
Scan
laughed. "They're always interested in new things."
"Did
you design them like that?"
Scan's
mobile eyebrows developed a quizzical quirk. "Design them? They designed
themselves," he said with a shrug.
"Yes,
but I thought you and your . . ."
"Not
them. What he did; what I do is check on adaptability, not evolution or even
mutation, but something in between as each species makes subtle improvements to
survive in conditions their ancestors never had to cope with. Petaybee is a
prime example of survival of the fittest."
"He's
off," Bunny said with an air of resignation, and let herself fall backward
into the chair she had been perched on. There she struggled out of her outer
layers, preparing to endure. She shot Yana a grin to quell any apprehension.
"Like
cats whose ears are no longer susceptible to frostbite?" Yana asked,
remembering Clodagh's offhanded comment.
"Exactly."
Scan grinned. But the humor in his silvery gaze held more than acceptance of
her statement. He was probing, too, and a lot more deftly than Colonel
Giancarlo could.
"Why
haven't you done as much for the humans stuck here?" Yana asked, not quite
certain she could tease this unusual man, but suspecting she could.
"Ah,
them." Sean waved a hand. "We genetic manipulators aren't allowed to
help humans. They have to do it the hard way."
"Have
they?"
Sean
cocked his head, his amusement not one whit diminished. "I'd say there
have been . . . adjustments made. Learning what furs, for instance, are most
suitable for the purpose of keeping human bodies warm."
"That's
intellectual, not biological," Yana said.
"Mankind's
intelligence distinguishes us from the animals, my dear major. And allows
adjustments much faster than animals can alter their genetic codes."
"Do
they? Here on Petaybee?"
"Over
the last two hundred years, they'd have to, to survive. Wouldn't they?" He
drained his cup. "Of course, the original Admin was sensible about some of
the species they sent, which helped."
"Which
ones?" Yana asked.
Bunny
snorted, obviously knowing the answer.
Scan
grinned, a grin of pure unadulterated mischief. "Why, the
curly-coats." When Yana cocked her head at him inquiringly, he beckoned to
her. "I'll show you."
"They're
his pride and joy, Yana. You're in for it," Bunny said, propping her feet
up on a footstool and obviously not intending to join Scan and Yana.
"I
asked."
"The
curly-coats are equines," Sean said, and as he cupped her elbow with his
hand, she experienced the same electric shock of contact. "Originally from
the Siberian area of the Eastern Hemisphere. They exist comfortably in extreme
temperatures, having a spare flap in their nose that closes off frost. They
survive on vegetation that wouldn't keep a goat alive. Small, sturdy, able to
maneuver on tracks even a sled has trouble running."
He led
her down a corridor from the main room, past closed doors, and into a link
between the house and a spread of other buildings that she took for research
and laboratory facilities. The link passed in front of other closed doors, some
with security keypads. She was adept enough at sussing her immediate
surroundings without appearing to do so, yet she had the sense that Sean was
aware of her automatic scanning. They came to the end of the link, which opened
onto a paddock with snow fences keeping the drifts from its surface. In the
paddock were a dozen small horses, curly-coated to the point of being shaggy,
with long fur icicled under their throats, and long feathers curling down from
their sturdy barrels and down their short thick legs. At first she wasn't sure
which end was which, since the manes were as long as the tails and just as
thick. There were several brown animals, but most were a creamy color; they
were all browsing on what looked much like the icicled spines she had seen on
the riverside three days before.
"You'd
never spot half of them in this terrain" was Yana's first comment.
Sean
chuckled, apparently pleased by her remark. "They're survivors!"
"What
do you use them for?"
"A
variety of things. Their milk we can drink, fresh, frozen, or fermented, or
make into a butter which we use in our lamps."
"I
have," she said, restraining herself from wrinkling her nose.
"It
smells but it's better than nothing. Their coats we can comb and use for
wool." Yana thought of the warm soft blanket she had seen in Clodagh's.
"We can eat their flesh, drink their blood-" He glanced at her to see
if that repulsed her, but she had eaten far worse than curly-coated equines in
her time- worse and tougher than these little animals looked. "We can ride
them, use them as pack animals, use them as extra blankets if we're caught out
in bad weather. They don't object to sleeping with humans . . ."
She
looked at him then, for the undertone to his comment was both risible and
dogmatic. His silver eyes glinted with the mischief that seemed an essential
part of his public self.
"They
are amenable to anything we can think up for them to do. And they never
complain or balk." Thai seemed to be of A paramount importance.
"They've saved many a team from hypothermic death and starvation. In fact,
you can bleed them quite a bit before they are weakened."
"Useful."
"Indeed."
"Were
they used by the teams that disappeared?"
Sean
was surprised at that question and scratched the back of his neck. "Been
given a few ghouly stories to keep you awake at night?"
"Not
ghouly to me," she said with a shrug. "I've been first-team on a few
company planets, a couple where I'd've been glad to have a few curly-coats
along."
"Oh?"
She
could see interest sparking the glint in his eyes. He leaned back against the
plasglas, propping his arms on the wide sills, apparently not affected by
contact with the cold surface, whereas she could feel the frost of it oozing
into the semi warm link.
She
gave a laugh. "Don't get me started on that phase of my life. It's
over." She made a cutting gesture with her hands.
"Then
it's time to sing about it. You came through."
"Sing?
Me?" She ducked her head in denial. "Not me- couldn't carry a tune in
a bucket."
Sean
smiled-almost challengingly, she thought. "Inuit chants can't be called
tunes, not without a stretch of the definition, but they do grab the mind and
make audiences listen. I think they'd like to hear your songs."
Yana
was not affecting modesty: she just didn't think any of her experiences were
worth hearing about, and certainly some of them she wouldn't talk, much less
sing, about.
"I'm
serious, Yana." He spoke her name with an odd lilt. She shot him a quick
look and saw that he was, indeed, serious. Then his expression turned sly.
"The spring latchkay's coming up soon.
You'll
be coming, and there are some folks hereabout would like to hear a song about
Bremport."
"Bremport?"
She went rigid.
He laid
a light finger on her arm. "You were at Bremport. Charlie picked up on
that when he got a copy of your orders and the briefing on your medical history."
"That
should have been confidential," she said, feeling less guilty about
Charlie than she had the day before.
"Charlie's
older brother Donal was at Bremport, too, so it was of more than casual
interest to him. So were three other sons of Petaybee and two daughters, and us
here knowing nothing about their deaths but that they are dead."
Damn
Charlie anyway. Giancarlo had been right to transfer him-the boy's loyalties
had been too mixed for him to be an effective company representative here. Still,
she couldn't blame him, but-damn. She remembered to exhale then, and swallowed
hard on all the things she didn't wish to remember about Bremport.
The
swallow was a mistake. Somehow it went down wrong and she started to cough.
Hard as she tried to limit it to the one cough, another burst past her lips,
and the next thing she knew she was racked by a paroxysm. She fumbled in her
coat for her syrup and dragged the bottle out. But she moved too swiftly: it
flew from her groping fingers and smashed on the stone floor of the link. As if
the loss of the syrup were a signal, the coughing fit intensified. Scan's very
strong fingers gripped her arms, supporting her convulsing body and he began to
hurry back the way they had come, though she had trouble keeping on her feet.
She had to bring her knees almost to her chin to keep the spasms from tearing
her abdominal muscles.
"What's
the cause, Yana? The gas at Bremport?"
She
managed to nod a yes. Then he was assisting her into a laboratory, flicking up
lights, and settling her onto a nearby stool before he sprang across the room
to the large array of cabinets there. Without fumbling, he poured out a dose of
a clear yellow liquid and returned to her side.
"Something
of Clodagh's that makes cowardly coughs evaporate on its fumes," he said.
"We all take it now and then."
Yana
was in no condition to object to anything anyone might consider remedial.
Between one spasm and the onset of another, she knocked back the liquid-and
rolled her eyes, inhaled, and then exhaled gustily, for the medicine had a kick
in it that could only reduce any cough to tatters. And the next spasm didn't
materialize.
Surprised,
Yana took several short breaths, fully expecting each one to deteriorate into a
cough. Scan regarded her with a growing smile curling his lips.
"See?
Guaranteed effective."
"What
was in it?" she gasped respectfully, still aware of the taste of it in the
back of her mouth.
The
mischief returned to Scan Shongili's eyes. "Well, now, that I don't know.
Clodagh won't pass on the secret of her elixir. She just makes it."
Yana
was aware of the plethora of laboratory equipment from slidetrays to electronic
microscopes-and not obsolete ones, at that. She waved her hand at them.
"You
look as if you could analyze the contents . . ."
"Ah
. . ." Sean held up his hands. "It's unethical to plumb the secrets
of another professional. I do animals; she does humans."
"But
isn't there an overlap somewhere along the line?" Yana asked.
"How
so?"
"Those
cats of hers. And you've cats that are totally different."
Sean
grinned so broadly that Yana knew she would never get an honest answer on that
score. "So I do." Then he turned from her and went back to the
cabinet. He held up the bottle. "I can spare this since it seems to have
been so effective for you."
Yana
hesitated. She had had to use up far too much of her personal baggage allowance
for enough bottles of the syrup to see her through her recuperation. But there
was no question that Clodagh's was more effective. She sighed, cutting that
loss and accepting the bottle. Maybe it would suffice to see the cough to an
end before she had to go back to the prescription stuff.
"Clodagh
makes it up in huge batches every fall to cope with coughs," Sean said,
tucking the bottle securely in the inner vest pocket. "You can get more as
you need it."
Yana
felt another twinge of resentment against a system that did not supply her with
enough money for even basic needs, much less medicinal niceties.
"Can
you give me a few helpful hints about this place?"
He
regarded her in surprise. "Bunny's good at that."
"Yes,
but when I ask how I am to repay someone for leaving fuel by my door when I
haven't asked for any, or giving me fish I don't know how to cook . . ."
He
laughed with kindly amusement at her disgruntlement. "I see what you mean.
It's so obvious to her that she doesn't realize how new and confusing it could
be for you." He tucked her arm under his and guided her out of the
laboratory, firmly clanging the metal door closed behind him. "Well, now, everyone
knows you're new, and new to the ways of Petaybee, so they're helping you out.
Old custom . . . especially for people they want to like ..."
"Want
to like . . ."
The
silver eyes glinted. "They like heroes. No, they genuinely do," he
amended when she snorted in disgust. "You're worth your weight as a role
model . . ." Then he took a second look at her gauntness. "That'll
improve," he said kindly. "So they'll sort of ease you into the
environment the best way they can. What you do"- He held up one admonitory
finger when she started to protest. -"is return the courtesies to the next
stranger who arrives on our frozen shores. Or," he said, giving her that
sly sideways glance that challenged her, "you compose a song to chant at
the next latchkay."
"I
don't think they really want to know about Bremport," she said very
slowly.
His arm
pressed hers encouragingly against his side. "They're tougher people than
you realize. And they have a need to know, Yana. As much as you have a need to
sing about it, even if you don't know it." His eyes were somber.
"Whatever,"
she said noncommittally, not willing to accept the truth, or the inevitability,
of his suggestion.
They
walked the rest of the way back to the main house in silence, a silence that
was the most companionable one she had enjoyed in many a year. Scan Shongili
was a most unusual man. Where under what sun could she possibly have
encountered him before?
Chapter
5
When
they reached the house, they almost ran Bunny over: she was in the process of
reaching for the door latch just as Scan flipped it up. Seeing her face, Yana
knew that something had happened-something bad.
"Message
from Adak, Scan. A hunting party found one of the lost teams."
"They
did?" Scan took the hands that Bunny had held out in an unconscious appeal
for comfort. "And?"
"There
are five still alive . . ." Her voice trailed off.
"Which
five?"
Yana
read into that question that he was amazed that anyone had survived.
"Two
of theirs this time, three of ours."
He
dropped Bunny's hands and started to gather items about the room, cramming them
into a pack at the same time he put on outerwear. He was ready in one circuit
of the room.
"Where
are they?" he asked.
"Clodagh's."
As if that should have been a given.
"Drive
us there, will you, Bunny?"
"Sure!"
And the girl began to shrug into her wraps.
Yana
wondered at how lightly Sean Shongili had dressed for a long drive in freezing
temperatures. He hadn't even rolled down his sleeves or done up his shirt
collar, and the smooth pelted fur jacket he donned wasn't nearly as thick as
Bunny's or hers. He grinned as he caught her expression.
"I'll
be warm enough."
Then he
hurried them out to the sled, where the dogs were already standing in their
harness, yapping as if infected by the urgency that possessed the humans.
With
deft movements, Scan settled Yana into the sled, bundled the furs about her,
ignoring the cat's attempts to get into her lap, and gave her custody of his
pack, telling her not to let it fall off.
Then he
snugged his hood over his head, tying it under his chin, and shoved his hands
in the thick fur mitts that were fastened by thongs to his sleeves.
"Come
on, Bunny!" he yelled, and whistled at the team; the dogs strained against
their harness even as Bunny wrenched the brake free of the ice and paddled with
her foot to set the sled in motion.
The
sled bumped forward, Yana clutching the pack for fear it would tumble off her
fur-encased lap. If she had thought the outbound trip was fast and jarring,
though she knew that Bunny had gone easily for her sake, the inbound journey
was another matter. Scan ran beside Maud, the red leader dog, urging her to her
best pace, chivying Bunny down steep inclines when she would have taken safer
routes.
Yana
hung on, determined not to close her eyes when the sled tilted at alarming
angles and the landscape seemed to fly past her. She was particularly aware of
the increased speed when the sled thudded from one hummock to another, crashing
her bones together. Or when the cat, who had somehow crawled back under the
rugs, sunk its claws through her pants leg to keep from being thrown about.
Stands of hardwoods that had seemed miles apart during the outward journey
streaked past her with barely an interval between them.
The
abrupt arctic daylight had waned by the time they neared the settlement and saw
its lit windows blinking welcomingly through the trees at them. The dogs slowed
as they reached Clodagh's, making their way through a welter of other teams
parked there. Scan grabbed the pack with a flash of a grateful grin at Yana and
charged up the steps, Bunny right behind him as soon as she had hauled on the
brake.
Grunting
but telling herself that of course she understood their haste, Yana peeled back
the furs and extricated herself from the sled. The cat jumped out and
disappeared under the pilings. Oddly enough, as Yana straightened up she found
that she wasn't nearly as stiff this time. She felt for the bottle of Clodagh's
elixir and wondered what it contained. Then, hesitant about intruding, she
climbed the steps to the porch. She could hear the subdued buzz of many voices
even before she opened the door and slipped inside. The warmth was like a blanket
surrounding her, but the press of people almost made her withdraw.
Peering
over and around the bodies packed inside the room, she could see no part of the
injured survivors, though there was a long clear space in one corner of the
room where they might be lying obscured by the crowd. Clodagh's head and hips
appeared from time to time, and once she saw what looked like the top of Scan
Shongili's head. Bunny was standing by the stove, where she was precariously
dribbling coffee into two cups, trying to keep from spilling any as she was
repeatedly jostled.
Yana
hoped one was for her, and it was: Bunny threaded her way through the throng
and offered Yana a cup. She reached eagerly to accept it, for the warmth on her
hands as well as her innards. She blew across the surface and at the first
careful sip wondered if Scan used Clodagh's recipe or if it was the other way
around.
"Could
you see? Arc they going to make it?" she asked, nodding toward the corner.
Bunny
nodded, her eyes dark with worry.
"Ours'll
recover a lot faster'n theirs, so there'll be more questions an' tribunals and
inquests and stuff."
Which
Bunny felt were irrelevant, Yana decided. "Isn't it just that your people
are better acclimated?"
Bunny
looked disgusted. "Of course they are and we try to explain that to them,
but they"-the pronoun was used in contempt-"never admit the fact.
Their people should somehow be better able to cope when most of 'em's never
lived outside at all. And," she added with perplexity in her voice, "that's
not the real problem anyway. The real problem is that they think they have to
know everything about everything, and they don't. Even we who live here don't.
But we know enough to pay attention to what the planet tells us, and they don't
seem to pay attention to nothin'."
Yana
sipped, letting the warmth thaw the ice in her blood. Maybe she would do better
if she ran like the others did. She had done nothing but sit, and she was
whacked-whereas Bunny's face was ruddy with stimulation, and Sean hadn't even
looked puffed when he had grabbed the pack off her lap. Everyone in the room
had settled down to what might be a long wait, one of many they endured with
great patience. Yana felt her own running out, complicated by a growing sense
of claustrophobia in a room packed with folk she didn't know well enough to
wait equably with. She shifted her feet restlessly, wondering if she could
withdraw without giving offense. Not that that was so much a problem, since she
doubted anyone would notice one less body in the room except with gratitude. A
more realistic concern was whether she could make it through this bunch to the
door. And if and when she did, what would she do then, back at her cold and
lonely cabin? That half hour in Scan's company had emphasized the disadvantages
of solitude. She had felt oddly alive and on the alert in his company, the
first time she had felt that way since Bry.
"Look,
this might take hours," Bunny said, and Yana glanced sharply at her.
"I've got to tend the dogs."
"Could
I help, so I'll know something about their care?" Yana asked, hoping to
delay the onset of bleaker hours alone.
"Sure."
Bunny grinned, pleased at her offer. "It's not all that hard."
"If
you say so," Yana said, and bundled back up in her winter gear to walk
beside the team as Bunny drove it back over to the kennels at her Aunt Moira's.
It
wasn't hard, exactly, but it required Yana to concentrate as she followed
Bunny's example in removing the harness, checking it for wear, oiling it, and
hanging it up properly, then checking the dogs' paw pads for any cuts and
applying an ointment concoction of Clodagh's between the toes before chaining
the animals up.
"You're
lucky," Bunny told her. "I cleaned the dog yard and put down fresh
straw this morning already, so you don't have to do that part."
Having
shown her what to do, Bunny retrieved some pre-chopped chunks of fish and other
meat from a barrel outside her door and went into the house. When Yana had
finished the dogs, she went inside and saw that Bunny was boiling the preboned
meat, mixing with it what looked like hardened bread dough and fat. She finally
crumbled up some suspiciously familiar pink-and-green tablets that looked like
vitamin-mineral supplements of the kind issued to company troops. While the
mixture heated, Bunny thawed snow on the back of the stove. Once it was melted,
she and Yana used the same container to water each of the dogs in turn. By then
the mixture was cooked to Bunny's liking, and they distributed it to the hungry
animals.
Some of
the dogs picked at their food like company diplomats at a high-level formal
dinner; others wolfed it down with great gusto, growling over it, their jaws
snapping as they ate.
'They-uh-seem
to enjoy their food," Yana observed as the dog nearest her savagely gulped
down his carefully prepared meal as if it were a bear, just-killed.
Bunny
shrugged, grinning at the vagaries of her charges. "They do, right enough.
And if one doesn't get it down fast, another'll try to snag it. That's one
reason we chain them apart. Cuts down on meal fights."
"That
cat of Clodagh's that followed me home seemed to want to eat the fish Seamus
gave me frozen solid," Yana said.
"Nah!
He might bat it around a little and gnaw at the edges, but he'll wait for it to
thaw, or better yet, for you to cook it for him."
"The
same way you cook for the dogs?"
"Of
course not. The same way you cook for yourself."
"I
don't," Yana admitted. "I'm ship-bred, you know. Food supplements and
healthful nutrient bars for rations. Occasionally we get something else, but
only the crew members assigned to cook for special functions learn to cook. So,
how would you cook it to feed yourself and, uh, guests?"
Bunny
grinned at the folly of the people who ran her world but didn't know how to
feed themselves, then patted Yana on the hand and said, "Don't worry. It's
not hard. I just stew it with a handful of my aunt's herbs and it makes right
good eating."
Yana
thought that over for a moment. Then, taking a breath, she asked, "Tell me
which herbs make that sort of fish palatable."
"Sure,
but you ain't had a chance to get any yet. So I'll scrounge enough. Meetcha at
your place."
Yana
had her stove fire going nicely when Bunny arrived with a small sack of the
things she had filched from her aunt's kitchen.
"Aw,
don't worry about a pinch of this and that," Bunny said when she saw
Yana's worried expression. Then in short order, she demonstrated the art of
concocting a fish stew from the herbs, a handful of rice, and chunks of what
cooked into edible root vegetables. Bunny used all the fish from the string.
"Because a stew gets better the longer it's alive. All you gotta do is
freeze what's left overnight and thaw it on the back of the stove when you're
getting hungry. I'll also show you how to make pan dough."
She
did, and Yana ate a gracious sufficiency. Bunny was still mopping up the stew
juices with some of the pan dough when Sean's unmistakable voice called out,
"Slainte, Yana!"
Bunny
was closer to the door and, at a nod from Yana, went to open it.
"Ah!
Any left in the pot?" he asked, sniffing expectantly.
"Wouldn't
Clodagh feed you?" Bunny asked, catching a plate and a spoon from the
shelf on her way to the stove.
"She
had enough, and I needed a little space," Sean said, undoing his coat and
hanging it neatly beside the others on the door pegs.
"Who
got out this time?" Bunny asked as he settled at the makeshift table so
comfortably that Yana stifled the apologies she was about to make.
He
paused long enough to ingest a spoonful before he answered.
"The
Yallup group," he said, jamming a piece of pan bread down into the juices.
"Lavelle, Brit, and Sigdhu made it; they'll be grand with some rest and
decent eating, though Siggy lost another toe. The odd thing"-Sean wriggled
his spoon about as if the movement would solve the oddity-"is that two of
them made it."
"Yeah!"
Bunny looked awed by that.
Shouldn't
outworlders survive on this planet if their native guides were efficient? Yana
wondered.
"Who?"
Bunny went on.
"The
team geologist the Yallups sent, father and son, Metaxos by name, Diego and
Francisco. Damn fool brought his kid along for the experience." Scan
spaced his phrases, eating in between gouts of information. Bunny snorted at
the folly of folk's notions of experience; Scan grinned, light from the
mare's-butter lamp on the table dancing in his silver eyes. "The son'll
sing about it. The father .. . now, that's where the trouble begins. He's aged.
The boy said his dad was mid-forties. Looks closer to ninety."
"Ohhhhh!"
Bunny drew out her exclamation, rounding her eyes, apparently finding great
significance in this.
"Does
hypothermia age you?" Yana asked.
"On
Petaybee it can," Bunny said tersely. "So did they find
anything?" She leaned conspiratorially close to Sean, her eyes glistening
with eagerness in the lamplight. "The usual?"
Sean
snorted, sopped up more stew on a piece of bread, and ate it before he
answered. Yana thought he deliberated over his reply.
"More
or less the usual. The kid gave some pretty concise descriptions. Caves,
glistening lakes of free water, horned animals, sleek water beasts-you know,
the usual." He broke off more bread, affecting keener interest in the
business of eating than telling.
"Ahhhh!"
Bunny let out another of her pregnant syllables.
"If
you're deliberately speaking in parables, I'll go walk the cat," Yana
said, rising.
Sean's
arm reached out and pulled her back down to her chair, grinning an apology.
"People
lost for weeks, gripped by hypothermia and close to the edge of starvation,
tend to hallucinate."
"But
you say he gave concise descriptions ..."
"Vivid
ones, though not necessarily accurate," Sean said, but Yana had the
feeling he believed them. "Then the Spacebees arrived and took them all
away. Rounded on Odark's people for not bringing them directly in to SpaceBase.
But Terce was at the base and you were with me out at the lab, so what were
they supposed to do? Clodagh's is certainly on the way, and closer." Sean
took a deep breath, suppressing his disgust. "They needed aid as soon as
could be. They got it. I'm not sure the geologist will pull through,
though."
He
chased the last of the juice in his bowl with the last of the pan bread. Yana
debated the protocols in her mind and had her hand on the stewpot to offer more
when Sean held up his hand.
"That
does me fine, Yana, and you share a portion. More would be considered as
impolite as too little." He pushed his chair back from the table, smiling
at her.
"What
did ours say?" Bunny asked eagerly, sitting forward again.
"Not
much. Too busy warming up and far too glad to have been found to deal with more
than that right now."
Yana
nodded. She knew what Sean meant. "They'll be debriefed then?" she
asked.
"Oh,
and how!" He tilted the chair back, balancing himself with one foot on the
table leg.
"Front,
back, inside out, and outside in," Bunny agreed, shaking her head as if
she felt sorry for the victims. "Did they find anything? I mean, anything
real?"
"Like
the deposits they thought sure they'd locate?" Sean's voice was level, but
there was a silent laugh in his eyes, as if he knew something no one else did
and treasured the knowledge. "No, they didn't find the sites, though
Lavelle and Brit swear they should have, for they had updated and accurate
readings and should have been right on site when the storm hit them. They dug
in, of course." Bunny nodded, and Sean went on. "No time to make a
decent icehouse, but Siggy's a dam fine survival artist."
"They
owe their lives to him, I'd say," Bunny remarked stoutly in support of
Siggy's abilities.
"They
do indeed, and the boy, Diego, said as much several times." Sean shook his
head. "I hope they go easy on the kid with this debriefing nonsense. He
was telling the truth or I've never heard it."
Bunny's
mouth twitched irritably. "They wouldn't know the truth if it bit
them."
"And
it has." Scan and Bunny locked eyes, sharing some private knowledge.
"I must get back," he said, rising and walking to the door to collect
his things.
"Have
you a light?"
He held
up the long cylinder he extracted from a pocket. "I'll be fine. That
rib-sticking stew'll see me home." He grinned at Yana, tipping the
cylinder to his forehead in gratitude. "Yanaba, Buneka!"
The use
of formal names surprised Yana, but she smiled and nodded in acknowledgment. He
was gone in a swirl of cold air. Peering out her small window, Yana saw him,
the cylinder held over his head as he jogged off at an easy pace, quickly lost
in the night.
"Isn't
he taking a dogsled back?" she asked Bunny.
"Scan?
Not that little distance."
"That
little distance took us nearly two hours."
"Oh,
he's a good runner. Lotta times when we go out, he breaks trail for me. Sled'd
only slow him up." Bunny lifted the thermos and shook it. "I'll bring
you more water tomorrow. Thanks for the chow. G'night!"
A
second swirl of cold air saw her away, leaving Yana alone, confused and with
plenty to think over.
Over
the next couple of days she didn't see much of either Bunny or Scan, nor hear
anything about the rescued men, although she did glimpse figures in Intergal
regulation winter-survival uniforms lumbering through the streets more than
once. The conversations she had with others in the settlement never touched on
the subject she knew was in everyone's minds, as if the people thought they
could will the incident into nonexistence by carefully avoiding it Clodagh
appeared on her doorstep the first morning, a lumpy bundle in one big hand and
four cats at her heels. They promptly entered and did a quick recon before
settling near the stove while Yana politely invited her in, though she was
damned if she knew what to offer in the way of hospitality. She still hadn't
had a chance to get in any supplies, and her fish stew was not going to last
four days if that was all she had to eat, breakfast, lunch, and dinner. Her
stomach was learning to demand food, not the bloat of nutrient pills.
"Did
a quick round," Clodagh said, plopping the bundle down on the rickety
table and untying it. A variety of small packets, some of them squares of cloth
tied with a narrow thong, were revealed, and a half-dozen small jars. Three
seemed to hold salves, pink, white, and green; the largest of the others held
salt crystals, the second a dark powder, and the third a red-orange powder.
"We've good salt supplies from the caves so don't worry about asking
anyone for more when you go short but hot stuff"-and her big fingers
closed about the dark powder-"is hard to come by, and you don't need much
to flavor the pot. This"-she indicated the red-orange powder-"is good
for the trots. Just enough on the tip of your finger put on your tongue and
swallowed with a sip of water. Tastes awful but sure stops the bo-wells."
Yana had never heard the word spoken quite that way. "When your crapper's
full, just tell Meqo. She's manager of the dung heap this winter. The white
stuff is good for frostbite. Use it even if you're not sure you're bit. Does no
good too late. The pink is for chilblain-keeps 'em from cracking. Watch your
toes for the itch . . ."
"I
know about chilblains."
"Sure,
and I 'spect most company soldiers do at that," Clodagh said amiably.
"This greeny stuff is antiseptic. You might have some of your own-no?
Well, this is better'n anything Intergal ever whomped up. These," she went
on, gesturing at the small packets, "are spices, hots, sweeteners: reckon
you can tell which is which by the smell of 'em." Then she hauled a much
larger white sack from the folds of her parka. "Flour, single
ration." A small tightly covered pot followed. "Risings, and soon's
you take a schmerp, add some flour to keep it going. Keep it warm at all
times." After a rummage in her clothing, a small quilted wool affair
appeared, and the yeast pot was wrapped inside it. "Beans." A sack
was pulled out of a pocket. "Three kinds. Puto says she has more she'll
add when she gets back here. Navarana and Moira say you can join them in the
woods when the time's right to collect your own wood pile." From another
source, a hatchet emerged and was formally presented to Yana. "I'll need
it back, a'course, when you can get one of your own. Aisling'll have some yarn for
you." Keen eyes peered into Yana's. "Unless you don't know how to
knit?"
Yana
shook her head.
"Nah,
a company person wouldn't need to, would she, drawing supplies direct from
Intergal? Well, Aisling's patient, and there's nothing she likes better than to
start someone off on the right foot, iffen they're willin'."
"I'm
willing," Yana said firmly. "And thanks, Clodagh. I really appreciate
all your help."
"Pshaw!
You'll do the same in your own turn. Ippies stick together, cocking a snoot at
the company for all they're so superior!"
With
that she swung her ample bulk about with unexpected grace and was out the door
before Yana could say more.
Chapter
6
The wind
roared down the pass from the mountains, through the foothills, and across the
snowy plain that hid treacherous muskeg, rattling the snocle with bullying
gusts. Bunny sat inside in full outdoor dress, watching the big shots prowl
around and point as if they knew what they were doing.
They
didn't. Even after they hauled Siggy's team back out here, way before the team
had had a chance to recover from their ordeal, they knew no more than they had
before. Of course, being stupid ips, Siggy and the others had no idea what the
technical readings actually said, but this was where the storm swept down upon
them, losing both ips and company men in a whiteout. Bunny had been in whiteout
conditions herself several times along the river with the snocle and going back
and forth between Scan's place and Kilcoole. White snowy ground underfoot,
white sky overhead, and white haze and snowfall obscuring any other features of
the surroundings, whiteout was disorienting and dangerous. It was a little like
she'd heard space described, only white instead of black.
You
could either keep driving, if you knew your trail, and hope you'd come out on
the other side or find a landmark, or you just stopped and waited it out. The
sensible thing to do, this far from any villages, would have been to bed the
dogs down and wait it out, but the geologists had brought a lot of equipment
and only allowed space for as much food as they felt they would need on the
strict timetable they had set for themselves.
Lavelle
told the company men, "We said, 'You better stop here until we can see
something' but they said, 'Aw, no, we'll just be usin' our instruments.' Only
problem was, their instruments broke 'cause of the cold."
The
company men insisted that the instruments had been made for this climate and
that it was impossible that they would break, and Lavelle had just shrugged.
Thereafter she didn't know much except that the sleds had gotten separated, and
the other three had been lost, drivers, dogs, geologists, equipment, food, and
all. She had been driving the sled with the boy in it, so she had had room for
a few more supplies. Brit had been driving the sled with the father, with Siggy
running between them to keep them connected, as he had tried to do with the
other sleds before they got lost back up to Moose Lake. Maybe they hit a thin
patch of ice. Then, as they were coming down a pretty steep slope, the sleds
overturned and both passengers were thrown out of the sleds, to roll down the
hill and vanish.
"Didn't
you think it was a little strange, them just vanishing like that?"
"No.
What I thought was strange was that they couldn't find us. We were hollering
like everything and the dogs were barking. Brit wanted to start searching,
thinking maybe they were knocked unconscious, and we did look around where they
should have logically been. But when we didn't find any holes or anything,
Siggy said the safest thing to do for everybody was stay put, light a fire,
keep warm, and make noises all the time while the whiteout lasted."
'Trying
to save your own skins, huh?" asked Colonel Giancarlo, the one who had
sent Charlie away.
"No,
no," said a younger captain with a handsome weather-beaten face and a much
pleasanter manner. "Very understandable," he said soothingly to
Lavelle, who had started to bristle. "What happened then?"
Lavelle
looked straight at the colonel and said, "Then the weather cleared a
little and Dinah kept whimpering, so I unhitched her. She run off and pretty
soon we heard her howling; then she came trotting back with the boy. He said
she dug through a drift to get him but his father was hurt and could we come
and help him pull his father out. He got trapped in sort of a little avalanche,
but fortunately, there was a cave in the side of the hill where he was trapped.
They made it to the cave, but the snow blew back against the entrance again and
it was real dark. The boy said he knew we wouldn't find them there but it was
shelter and he'd been afraid to leave for help for fear he wouldn't find him
again. He'd called out but we didn't hear each other for the wind."
"You
didn't even try to find the others?" Giancarlo snorted contemptuously.
Lavelle
had started yelling then, a rare event for the gentle and mild-mannered woman.
"We didn't even know where the heck we were, mister! If Odark hadn't found
us, I don't know if we'd have any of us made it back alive. Siggy couldn't even
walk by then, and Brit and I would never have been able to dig the father out
without the dogs helping us."
All the
while the conversation was going on the boy, Diego, stood out there in the cold
listening to them natter on, his face closed except for the occasions when
something said or done seemed to make him angry; then his dark eyes would glow
like fresh-stoked embers in the snow-burned red rawness of his face.
Bunny
didn't know what to make of any of it, except that she was tired of acting just
smart enough to drive her snocle, but dumb enough and friendly enough so that
the big shots would keep talking in front of her, continuing their
interrogation as she drove them to the ill-defined area where the party had
been discovered. Terce was carrying on as if he had already become part of the
inquisition, and the company men didn't make a move without consulting him.
It took
two days on the snocles, driving them out to where the hunting party had run
across the survivors, and then, with the recent snowfall in these parts and the
wind blowing drifts everywhere, they could only approximate the location. Bunny
shivered. She was out of the wind here in the snocle, and the sky was clear,
but outside the wind picked up veils of snow and flung them across the
landscape. Behind her, the trail was already drifted over in places. The
company men had sent Terce back to make camp at the halfway point with Odark
and Brit. Lavelle and the boy had remained behind to "assist with
inquiries," and try to help them determine what had become of the other
team members.
Bunny
opened the door and climbed out of the snocle, trudging over to where the men
stood arguing. Diego's adrenaline seemed to have run out while the company men
wrangled around him. He had been radiating tension and at times anger at the
interrogation, but now he slumped against Lavelle, who put her arm around him.
He looked exhausted. He really shouldn't have been out here again so soon, but
his father couldn't be moved. Siggy definitely had to rest and look after his
frostbite, or gangrene might get the rest of his foot. Clodagh had given him
some stuff, but the company men had taken him back to SpaceBase and "accommodated"
him in a separate room from the crazy man, Diego's father, until he could be
moved with the others to "another facility." Bunny didn't know what
that meant, but she didn't like the sound of it.
"Excuse
me, folks," she said to the party, "but we better make tracks while
it's daylight."
"I
say when we move," Giancarlo told her. "You do realize, lady, that if
I decide to, I can see to it that your license is revoked?"
"Oh,
yes, sir. I know what an important man you are-how important all you people are.
And that's why I'm telling you. If we don't get going now, I might lose my
snocle instead of just my license, or another hunting party might have to find
us. Our weather here, sir, as you may have noticed, is tricky. It has lots
of-uh, different things-"
"Variables?"
the captain suggested helpfully.
"Yeah.
Those. Lots of variables. And right now a bad storm's making. Also, sir, that
lad looks to me as if he's all done in."
"She
has a point, Colonel," the captain said. "Maybe we should make for
camp now that we've seen the approximate site and come back better equipped
when the weather clears."
The
colonel glared but waved his mitten toward the snocle.
Diego
Metaxos sat by himself in the corner of the shelter while the soldiers
cross-questioned Lavelle. He wished they would let her alone. She had tried to
help them-in fact, he thought, she had helped him a lot. And she could help him
more, if only the interrogators would go away so he could talk to her.
Dad's
delirious ravings seemed incredible to those men, and Diego knew they hadn't
really believed him either when he had tried to tell them about the cavern,
even though he was obviously unhurt. In a way he didn't blame them. Now the
whole thing seemed like a dream to him-or it would have, except that his father
had emerged from the same time and place looking as if he were still trapped in
a nightmare.
Diego
wasn't sure exactly what he and his father had gone through. All he knew was
that their experience of that time in the cave had to have been wildly
different for Dad than it had been for him, because while he felt fine,
something awful had happened to Dad in there. Even after the icicles had melted
from his hair, it remained white, and his face was drawn and sunken, like a
skull's, the skin dried and far more wrinkled than it had been. The worst part
was that except for the initial babblings, he wasn't responding too much of
anything, just staring straight ahead, as if he couldn't see at all. The
doctors said he was in some kind of severe shock, but how could that be? He and
Diego had been together, and whatever it was Diego had experienced, it hadn't
been anything to produce such an effect-at least not in him.
At
first, he had told the rescuers and the company investigators everything, but
when he saw their immediate skepticism, he had sense enough to clam up,
beginning to doubt and second-guess his own perceptions. He needed to sort it
all out, and he didn't intend to say any more until he was sure Dad would be
tended to by someone who cared about him as more than an employee or a subject
for study. Unfortunately, civilian dependent teenaged sons didn't have much
clout with the company hierarchy. Dad needed Steve, and he needed him quick.
And
maybe when Steve came Diego could talk with him and go over everything again in
his own mind. But right now he shied away from thinking about it.
One
thing was for sure, and that was that the company investigators weren't going
to be able to answer any of Diego's questions. They were too busy
third-degreeing everyone for answers to listen to questions.
The
girl was looking at him funny. Most of the time she stared straight ahead,
pretending to listen to the men as they talked amongst themselves or barked
questions at Lavelle. But when they were looking the other way, or at each
other, the girl's eyes slid sideways, trying to meet his, and her mouth opened,
as if she were about to speak.
Finally
she got up and went outside, and he thought she had to go check on her snocle
or pee or something. When she came back, she casually sat down beside him. None
of the company men seemed to notice.
"I'm
Bunny," she said, sideways out of her mouth.
"I
know. I heard them talking to you. I'm Diego." He realized he was talking
out of the side of his mouth, too. But he felt relieved that someone was
finally talking to him rather than around him, and he knew immediately that
this girl understood that what had happened to him and his father was not just
another academic problem or fact-finding mission.
Her
eyes gleamed the same way the dogs' eyes had gleamed in the darkness, and her
lowered voice reminded him of the whisper of the sled runners on the snow.
"I
know," she said. "Are you scared?"
"No-well,
scared about Dad, maybe. But otherwise, no."
"You
ought to be," she said in a tone that implied she knew something he didn't
know.
"Why?
Is it going to storm again or something?"
"Probably.
But I don't mean that, I mean them," she said, nodding to Colonel
Giancarlo and the others.
Diego
shrugged. "They're just doing their jobs, trying to find out what
happened," he said. He watched Giancarlo's fierce expression as the
colonel tried for the fiftieth time to catch Lavelle in a lie, and added,
"Not that they seem to believe anybody."
"They're
like that. Look, I'll be around. If you need anything, let me know, okay? I
mean, with your da sick, is your mum going to come down here, too? Does she
need a place to stay? My people would help."
He felt
another flare of resentment and gave her a dirty look, then decided that wasn't
fair. She was just trying to be nice- maybe nosy, too, but at least she wasn't
browbeating anybody the way Giancarlo and the others were. "Nah, my mom's,
uh, not available-but I think Dad would want Steve here."
"Who's
that?"
"His
assistant, and his partner," Diego said, daring her to make something of
it.
But she
just nodded and said, "Okay, I'll see if I can find out what's being done
officially, and if nothing is, we'll try to do something unofficially. I just
wanted you to know you've got friends here. Night."
"Buenas
noches," he whispered back.
You did
good, Bunka," Clodagh said later, when Bunny had returned to Kilcoole. She
had dropped Giancarlo off at the company station to await word from the head of
the search party, and delivered the others back to SpaceBase before returning
to the village. "The boy is alone. Do you think he saw anything, or was it
just the father?"
"No,"
Bunny said. "I think he did, too. I can't say why-he's denying he
remembers a thing now, but they wouldn't believe him if he told them the truth
anyway. The father's in the high-security ward at the infirmary. The flot
around SpaceBase is that he's crazy."
"Poor
boy," Clodagh said, her eyes blinking rapidly through the steam from the
teacup she held to her lips. "All alone. I can't feel much for his father,
but the lad is so young to be left to the company wolves, especially when he
has passed through what he has. If only we could initiate him, it would be
better. Has he no one?"
"Just
this Steve," Bunny said. "He is Dr. Steven L. Margolies, assigned to
the same branch and regular duty station as Metaxos. I found that much out from
Arnie's soldier boyfriend at the communications shed. He put up the name
Metaxos on the computer and it was there, under the info on Metaxos. I don't know
how we could find Steve though."
Clodagh
shook her head regretfully. "It's not really our place to find him, but
the boy will need help when he goes back out there-" Her head jerked up.
"I wish Charlie was still here."
"Maybe
Yana can help," Bunny suggested.
"Maybe,"
Clodagh said slowly. "But be careful. Charlie was one of us. He would
know, the way you do, what the boy is going through, as well as how the PTBs
are. We don't know Yana so good yet."
"Sean
likes her," Bunny said.
"He
does, does he? What did he say?" Clodagh smiled a very pretty smile that
transformed her face, her eyes twinkling with gleefully prurient interest.
"Nothing,
but I could tell," Bunny said. "Don't worry, you'll be the first to
know-well, maybe not the first . . ."
"Yana
could be a good ally, but she's real closed up. That's better than being too
friendly, I guess, but I'd feel better about her being here if we knew more
about her."
"Give
her a break, Clodagh. It's not her fault she was born at the wrong time and
place for you to have delivered her the way you've done half of us. I'm going
to go down there now and see if she has any ideas. Don't worry. I won't give
anything away."
Over
the next ten days Yana gradually accustomed herself to the new environment. She
slept a lot, in between the necessary chores of keeping warm and eating. She
kept Clodagh's medicine near her so that every time she felt the tickle that
was the prelude to a cough, she could take a swig and forestall a spasm.
Whatever was in the stuff was far more efficacious than what the medics had
given her on Andromeda. She practiced taking deeper breaths of the marvelous
fresh air of Petaybee, expanding her capacity, flushing out the last of the gas
from the depths of the lobes. She would never be much use here on Petaybee if
she couldn't even breathe without coughing.
She had
just finished making another futile trip to the virtually useless company store
when she saw the snocles pulling into corps headquarters way up the street.
Some game or the other was definitely afoot, but until the trouble came looking
for her, she would conserve her strength. She needed all she could muster to
withstand her own cooking, she thought, as she attempted to make a meal for
herself and the cat. Other than the fish she had been given by Seamus and the
one pan she had been given, she had found damned-all of any use through company
channels in Kilcoole.
The
trouble did indeed come looking for her a short time later. She was in the
middle of browning the fish when someone pounded at her door. She opened it to
see Giancarlo standing there.
"Maddock,
where the hell have you been and why haven't you reported in?" he snapped
before she could invite him inside.
"Nice
to see you, too, sir," she said with a growl, pumping his hand and pulling
him inside. On the stove, the grease she was cooking the fish in crackled and
spat. The cat scooted under the bed. For some reason, Giancarlo's appearance
suddenly infuriated her. Maybe it was because she was frustrated trying to keep
house with the charity of the villagers because the store was so ill-stocked
there was little her meager funds could buy to keep her alive. Maybe it was
because they were no longer on shipboard or space station and so it didn't look
like the corps to her. Maybe it was because this guy was the kind of petty
martinet she had always hated and had sworn she would get back at when she
retired. Maybe it was because he was such a contrast to the polite and kindly
locals. But she thought it was because after killing everyone around her and
half killing her, the company still allowed brass-assed spooks like him to
threaten to withhold medical treatment and to dump her unprepared in a place
like this in order to use her. A couple of years earlier she would have taken
it for granted that they had the right, that Giancarlo had the right. Now she
felt anger rising up inside her high enough to choke her if she didn't vent a
little of it.
"Do
sit down and tell me how, sir, I'm supposed to contact you with no radio, no
computer, no transportation, no contact person, not even a bloody goddamn pen,
sir, or a fraggin' piece of fraggin' bloody paper, sir. While you're at it,
tell me how you expect me to maintain cover and gain the trust of the people
here when you, sir, come barging in shouting my name like the ship's bloody
paging program. Sir."
She sat
down in the chair, leaving him to remain standing or sit on the bed, she didn't
really care which, while she crossed her arms and glared up at him.
"I
see discipline has relaxed after only a few days of pretending to be a
civilian."
"I
am a civilian, sir. Maybe an employee, if the company cares to issue me
anything to do my bloody job with, maybe not."
"You,
uh, seem to be feeling better," he said lamely.
"Yes,
Colonel Giancarlo, I am. Even we invalids have our good days. A weapon. I
forgot. If I'm doing espionage here, I ought to have a weapon. If for no other
reason than to hunt my own fraggin' food. They do that here. They have to. Have
you seen that company store? What's the company trying to do here, sir? Incite
another Bremport?"
"That's
enough of that, Major. What I want to know is why the hell you didn't inform us
about this latest fiasco with the geologic team."
"Could
be because I had barely arrived when it happened. Could be because I wasn't
briefed on who was here and who wasn't to begin with. Could be because I have
no means of communication, no liaison officer since you so impetuously
dismissed the one who was already here-"
"We
had reasons to believe his loyalties were divided," Giancarlo said. He was
sweating now, bundled up in his outdoor clothing while the stove radiated heat
throughout the room.
About
then she realized that the stove wasn't just sending heat waves: the fish pan
was billowing smoke. She began coughing, but she was so angry that, still bent
double from the spasms, she grabbed her knife, stabbed the burning fish, and
flipped it over in the blackening grease, still glaring at Giancarlo when her
eyes weren't clenched shut from the spasms.
Giancarlo
began coughing, too, and rose as she stumbled for the door and flung it open.
They both stepped into the open air, breathing deeply, while the smoke rolled
out the door.
"I
want no repeat of this omission in the future," he said. "Meanwhile,
I'll look into the problem of your special equipment. Good evening,
Major."
She
coughed and managed to blurt out "Colonel" only when he was well down
the street. She covered her mouth and nose, reached around the corner of the
door for the hook containing her parka, and grabbed Clodagh's cough syrup and
her muffler. Downing a swallow of the syrup, she rubbed the muffler in the snow
and, holding it across her mouth and nose, dashed back into the cabin. She
forked the burned fish from the pan and flicked it onto the snow for the cat to
salvage later. Then, with the door still open, she put on her parka and sat
outside, waiting for the smoke to clear.
Fraggin'
bureaucrat! He was one lousy grade above her and thought he was some kind of
fraggin' deity. Idiots like him had assigned Bry that mission that had gotten
him killed. Idiots like him had cut costs by shortchanging the colony on Bremer
until the colonists had grown tired of watching each other and their children
die of curable diseases and starvation, and had rebelled. What was that saying
about "penny wise and pound foolish"? Damn!
"Are
you okay, dama?" her across-the-road neighbor, whom she hadn't yet met,
hollered out his door.
"Fine!"
she called back.
"I
saw smoke," the man ventured, diplomatically not referring to the rest of
the row.
"Burned
my dinner," she said.
"Want
to come over while your house clears?"
"No,
thanks," she called, trying not to sound as belligerent as she felt.
"I'm out here for my health."
When
she had literally and figuratively cooled off enough, she went back into the
house. The odor of burnt fish was still very strong, but enough smoke had
cleared so it didn't bring on another coughing fit. She kept swigging on
Clodagh's bottle every so often to fend off hunger pains while she scoured the
pan with her knife and fought off the cat, who kept climbing her leg, mewing
piteously. It naturally wanted no more to do with the burnt fish than she did.
Bunny
knocked on the door and let herself in before Yana could answer.
"Come
in, sit down. No, better yet, I'll be glad to feed you fish if you cook the
dinner," Yana told her.
Bunny
shook her head and took the pan away from her, filling it with snow to melt on
the stove and plopping the fish in-all of them. Yana had forgotten to take the
rest of the string back outside, and they had all thawed.
"How
did they expect you to live down here when they didn't teach you how to
survive?" she asked.
"That's
what I was just asking my good buddy, Colonel Asshole Giancarlo, when he came
to give me his hail-and-farewell address."
"I
heard," Bunny said.
"You
did?"
"Yeah,
all up and down the street. People thought you might be burning him at the
stake or something until your neighbors saw him leave. They said you sure
looked mad, dragging him inside. Then the smoke started billowing out of your
house. You threw him out the door with burning fish and sat out in the
cold."
"How
could you know?" Yana asked, mortified at the picture she probably had
presented. Some clandestine operative she was. Giancarlo would probably send
some mercenary hit man after her after this incident, but it was worth it.
Asshole. "It just happened."
Bunny
shrugged. "It's a small town, Yana. By the way, your face is black all
down the middle from your eyes to your chin."
"Shit."
Yana pulled out the tail of her uniform blouse, dipped it in the fish water,
and scrubbed. "Did I get it?"
"Not
all. Your nose is still dirty."
That
struck Yana as funny, and she began laughing so hard she started coughing
again, realizing as she fell into hiccoughs that she was also slightly drunk
from Clodagh's cough syrup. She collapsed on the bed.
"Oh,
shit, Bunny, what a week," she said, her laughs subsiding into a flurry of
silly intermittent giggles.
That
started Bunny laughing, too. She put a plate on top of the pan for a lid and
sat down at the table, laughing louder than Yana until her laughter started
Yana off again.
"You're
as bad as me," Yana said finally. "I'm a fine 'zample to the younger
gen'ration."
"I
sure would have liked to see you haul that Giancarlo in and kick him out,"
Bunny said. "I been driving him around for days and he's-he's-"
"Yeah,
isn't he?"
"He's
been browbeating Lavelle, even though she told him what happened. And he has
poor Dr. Metaxos locked up in the crazy ward and won't believe what Diego tells
him, and Diego's all by himself and can't find his other father ..."
"Other
father?"
Bunny
nodded. "His father's partner, Steven Margolies. You know, they're like
Aisling and Sinead, and they're Diego's folks, but nobody's even let the other
father know about Dr. Metaxos. If Charlie were here, he could maybe have gotten
a message to this Steve through people he knew at SpaceBase, but now there's no
one in town who can help Diego, and you can bet Giancarlo won't do it."
"My
my. You've sure taken up this Diego's cause in a short period of time. I
thought he was in shock and half out of it."
"He's
not. He's just worried about his da and nobody will believe him."
"What's
he look like, Bunny?" Yana asked her.
"He
has really dark eyes, very big, and his hair is- Yana, you're laughing at
me!"
"Yep,
I thought so," Yana said. "He's cute, is he? 'Sokay, Bunny. So you
like this boy and nobody will help him and Giancarlo was his usual charming
self to your buddy, so you're glad I told him off and you came to tell me so?
Or did you really just come down to cook me dinner so I wouldn't starve to
death?"
"Well,
I was talking to Clodagh ..." Bunny's face grew a little sly as she turned
and pulled two steaming and fragrant fish out of the pan and arranged them on a
plate. Carefully she picked the third one up by the tail. The cat was no
laggard and had snagged it out of her hand before she could lay it on the floor
for him.
"What
I told Clodagh . . ." Bunny began, managing to stand between Yana and the
fish.
"What?"
Yana said, sobering now so that Bunny stopped playing and settled into the
chair, handing Yana the knife so she could carve into her fish.
"Was
maybe you could help Diego. You know, maybe you could ride in with me to
SpaceBase next time I have a run and like wear your uniform and maybe Arnie's
boyfriend would help you get a message to that man you said would help Charlie.
Maybe he could let Dr. Margolies know what happened and-well, you did say he
was in deployment. Maybe he could get him down here."
"Military
deployment, Bunny."
Bunny
shrugged. "It's all just PTBs anyway, isn't it? Can't they pull strings or
something?"
"Hmm.
Maybe they can. If anyone could, Ahmed could. Or if not, he'd find out who
could." And in the back of her mind, it occurred to her that she could
also use her full uniform and access to SpaceBase as an opportunity to
"requisition" some of the equipment necessary to the duties Giancarlo
seemed to think she was so derelict in performing. If at some later date he actually
got around to issuing her duplicates, she could trade the items for other
locally produced items. She wasn't really qualified for this kind of
subterfuge, having never actually been a supply officer, but she figured
necessity was going to have to be the mother of invention in this case.
Yana
was very popular that evening. Bunny hadn't been gone more than a half an hour
when there was another knock at her door. She opened it to find Scan Shongili
leaning against the doorframe, astounding her again with how much less bulky he
was than everyone else.
"Come
in," she said. "You'll catch your death. A virus or something . .
."
The
silvery eyes glinted with amusement and his mouth quirked at the corner. She
had an unauthorized urge to brush back the lock of silver-brown hair that fell
boyishly forward onto his forehead.
"I
hear you've been taking on the Intergal high command," he said, stamping
his feet outside and entering, shrugging off his light jacket before even
closing the door.
"Oh,
that." She waved her hand dismissively, pretending more nonchalance than
she felt. She was probably going to have to do a little creative groveling over
that sooner or later if she was going to be able to help the boy-or maybe not.
She was no longer feeling so smug. The smart thing for Giancarlo to do was to
cooperate with her if he wanted results; but, although he was far from stupid,
for someone in his specialty, he did not seem to have learned the value of
cooperation, though no doubt he found it in himself to cooperate with those of
higher rank. She would worry about it later, she thought, realizing at the same
time that the effects of the cough medicine's overdose hadn't quite worn off.
She was using a lot of her mental energy to keep from throwing her arms around Shongili's
neck and planting a kiss on the warm smile with which he was favoring her.
"Uh,
sit down," she said, brushing her own hair back from her face and hoping
her hands had gotten washed somehow in the midst of all of this and she wasn't
resmearing herself with ashes. "Can I burn you some tea?"
"Please.
I just got back from running with the search party."
"Any
trace of the others?"
He
shook his head and sat on the bed. She lifted a finger to tell him to wait,
ducked outside, dipped up a pan of snow from a high drift, where animals hadn't
been able to reach it, and returned to plop it back on the stove.
"No,"
he said. "Not a trace. And it started snowing hard again, so we had to
give up for the time being. If your friend the colonel would just release
Lavelle, I'll bet Dinah could help. She's the best leader of all of the dogs,
and if our people are still findable, she'll locate them. We've been out for
three days now."
"You
must be exhausted."
"A
little. I just came by to ask if you'd finished with the recorder yet."
"Oh,
frag! No, I haven't, really. Clodagh came by once, too, but I completely forgot
to ask her when she wanted to do the song for Charlie. If you need it, maybe I
could-"
"No,
no, that's okay." He peered over her shoulder. "Your water's
boiling."
"Thanks."
He took
a deep breath and said, "What I actually wondered was, well, while you've
got it, have you given any more thought to making the song about
Bremport?"
"Oh,
Scan," she said, sitting back down hard. To her annoyance, she began to
cough again, not because she had to but out of reflex. "Scan, I just can't
do that. It's too soon. A lot of it's classified. And I just don't want to
think about it. People here don't want to hear it, either, trust me."
He
reclined on the bed, propping himself up on his elbow, and gave her a long hard
look. "I could say the same thing, Yana. Trust me. You need to do this. We
need to hear it."
"Sean,
I can't. I'm no songwriter and I can barely stand to talk about it. Anyway, I
only saw one small, awful part. The rest I've put together from what I was told
before or since about Bremen"
"I'd
like to hear about it," he said, quietly insistent.
"Did
you have someone there? Did you know someone there?" she asked.
"You,"
he said, making and holding eye contact. "At least, I'm trying to know
you."
That
unsettled her for a moment. She put some of Clodagh's herbs in a bag and
steeped them in the tea water while she thought. Maybe she should talk about
it, not only because Shongili wanted to know, but because she was still furious
about the whole thing. She couldn't keep popping off at superior officers on
whose goodwill she was dependent and get away with it.
"Okay,"
she said. "Since you think it needs to be told to everybody else, let's
turn on the recorder. I don't believe I could go through this twice." He
said nothing, but raised his eyebrows inquiringly and she said, "My coat.
In the pocket."
He
moved with natural, lanky grace, rolling across the bed and onto his feet,
striding the step or two to the doorway and extracting the recorder, rolling
back across the bed with the machine in one hand. He set it on the table beside
her chair and punched in the recording sequence.
She put
the cup of tea beside him, then realized it was her only cup. Giving a shrug,
she carefully raised the pan in both hands and sipped the tea from the lip
before settling down again.
She
could have gone next door and borrowed a cup, perhaps, but she didn't know the
people and she felt that if she interrupted this moment, it wouldn't return.
She might never again have the courage to discuss it. She certainly would never
again have the kind of total attention she had from Scan Shongili.
"I'm
not sure what's classified," she said to begin with. "Except that I'm
not supposed to tell you how the terrorists infiltrated the station." She
shrugged. "Hell, I don't know that for sure anyway, though I could
speculate. The thing is, Scan, the deaths were unnecessary. None of those
people had to die. None of them should have. The terrorists were after food,
medicine, and supplies."
"How
do you know?"
"Because
I lay there on the floor playing dead, watching them loot the place, and that's
all they bloody well took."
"We
heard that they systematically ran through the place executing everyone they
found alive," Sean said.
Yana
shook her head. "There was no need of that. I think they did make sure of
a few of the crew, but the station commander and supply officer just happened,
by pure coincidence mind you, to be visiting another ship that day. My ship. It
had just transferred supplies, and I was bringing fresh recruits over to
familiarize them with a Class One station and demonstrate some of the
equipment. I-um- I was just showing them how the snorkel worked."
"The
what?" Scan asked, leaning forward.
Her
voice had been clear and matter-of-fact so far, but suddenly she was having
trouble forcing it above a whisper. Her throat began to spasm and she started
coughing again. Scan held out the bottle of Clodagh's medicine, and she took a
good swig before she continued.
"The
snorkel. It's for short repair jobs in airless sections of the ship, so that
you don't have to suit up. There's an exchange unit in it that returns oxygen
for CO2, breath for breath, without the need to carry heavy tanks or wear a
full space suit that might be too bulky to do some of the inside repairs in
tighter places. Also, you can send snorkeled personnel into certain areas of
the ship without having to flood the whole area with O2. New invention. They
discovered the exchange material on Bremer."
She
stopped and watched him. She had lit the lamp earlier, and now its glow and
that of the moons and stars through the window illuminated the room. The planes
of his face were shadowed, and his eyes held hers, silently pulling more out of
her. The tension was broken when the cat jumped up onto her knees and settled
down, purring, as if knowing she needed reassurance that she was here, on firm
ground, with living people and in no immediate danger, instead of back there.
He
nodded slowly, an almost imperceptible movement.
"I
stepped back into an air lock with the mask in place and let the inner door
close. The students were looking through the view plate and watching me on the
screens on either side of the door, as I explained the mask to them.
"I
saw the vapor pouring in through the ventilation duct before any of them did,
but I couldn't speak to them because of the snorkel. I signaled them to stand
back and hit the O2 button for the lock, waited a beat, and hit the exit panel
for the door. But then I realized the vapor was pouring in behind me, too. 1
heard an explosion-felt it really-and the door jammed half-open between us. The
recruits were coughing and crowding the outer door."
She
stopped for a moment and took a swig of cough syrup, seeing the faces in front
of her. "An eighteen-year-old girl blocked my way back into the hold. She
was trying to get through to the outside, I guess, and was coughing so hard she
couldn't straighten up. People were vomiting, crying. The girl's nametag said
Samuel-son and she had almost white hair, cut into a crew cut. You know, trying
to look the part of a company cadet. Her scalp was bright red through her hair,
and her eyes were bulging. I exhaled into the mask, tore it off, and tried to
wrestle it over her face, but she fought me. I-uh-had to knock her down to get
past her, into the room. I put the mask back on and breathed into it but the O2
that came back wasn't pure. I must have let some of the gas leak in while I was
trying to rebreathe her. The yellow vapor was still swirling, and through it I
saw the viewscreens. Masked figures were running around, carrying weapons and
containers, grabbing all the new supplies. My first thought was that they were
station crew investigating the gas in the ventilation system. But that didn't
jibe with the weapons and the way they were ignoring the people dying under
their feet. I tried buddy-breathing with the nearest cadet who still had some
life in him, and he seemed to realize what I was trying to do, but when he
breathed into the mask, it fouled it, and he died too. They all died. Every
damned one of them died and I just lay there, playing dead, on the floor
breathing through the contaminated mask, exhaling the gas and CO2, sucking in
poisoned oxygen while the terrorists ran through the station. The alarms were
blaring and the station computer calling for help, but the last thing I saw was
the masked face of one of the terrorists through the viewport leading to the
main corridor.
She
looked surprised to see us lying in there. I had my face against the floor so
the mask wouldn't show, and I was wedged among the cadets' bodies. I
did-not-cover myself with glory."
She
didn't realize until he pulled a rag out of his pocket and wiped her face that
she had been weeping. She took the rag from him and scrubbed at her face
vigorously, not wanting undeserved sympathy.
He
withdrew gently, asking, "How did you get out?"
"The
station computer alerted the ship's computer, and they sent medical teams and
oxygen. It can't have taken very long, any of it, but I was unconscious by
then. I woke up at Andromeda Station, unable to move. I was on an automatic
respirator. Four or five of us survived, I understand, but we weren't allowed
to meet. Once we were well enough to talk, we were questioned for weeks about
how we managed to survive the others. At first I think they thought I was in
league with the terrorists. But then some of the administrators on Bremer got
scared and turned over the terrorists. We were exonerated, they were executed .
. ." She shrugged, at a loss for any more to say. "Some song,
huh?"
This
time he rose from the bed and put his arms around her. She tried not to cry,
not to play for sympathy. She had no need of it. But she developed a very
sudden and crucial need for being held against Sean Shongili-since he had
volunteered.
"I-urn,
I can't tell you anything specific about the kids from Petaybee," she said
into his shoulder.
He
hugged her more tightly and she relaxed into him, closing her eyes, relieved to
have talked about it. Relieved that so far he hadn't told her what she should
have done instead of what she had done to save the kids who were in her charge.
He
surprised her then by saying, "Get dressed."
"What?"
"You're
not tired, are you?"
"I
wouldn't want to try to go to sleep now, no," she said, wiping her face
with the heels of her hands so she could look him in the eye.
"I
want to take you somewhere."
"Where?"
"A
place we use for cleansing. Come on."
She
pulled on her quilted pants and parka, her mittens, hat, and muffler, and stuck
the cough medicine back in her pocket.
"Let's
take this, too," Scan said, sticking the recorder into his own pocket.
"You
don't still think I could sing . . ."
"We'll
see what you think," he said, prodding her toward the door with a hand
that lingered between the bottom of her cap and her folded-down hood, at the
base of her hairline. A rush of longing for him made her feel weak-kneed and
ashamed at the same time, as if she were exploiting the tragedy to hold his attention.
She sat
with him in the cab of his snocle, the motor obscenely loud in the silent
village. In a moment they were through it, past Bunny's sleeping dogs and
Clodagh's house, past the company station and out onto the snowy plain.
The
machine slid over the snow and parted drifts, spraying white glitter in its
wake, the engine's hum the only sound, as if they were riding the wind. After a
few moments Sean leaned forward and pointed up, and she looked above her to see
a long weaving band of rainbow-striped feathers undulating across the sky like
the warbonnet of an old-time cinematic warrior.
They
watched and rode in silence. A big cat sprang away from them; then the lights
of their snocle snared a wolf and they had to tack around him to keep from injuring
him. They didn't really need the lights, it seemed to Yana. The snow reflected
back the light from the moons and stars and the aurora, casting deep shadows
against which prominent objects were etched in a sharp relief. For the first
time, she saw that the settlement was within sight of hills and mountains, off
to the east and southeast. They passed between the first pair of hills and cut
behind them, following a winding pass that didn't assail the mountains
directly, but nudged gently into them. Within this shelter was more of the
vegetation she had seen along the river, tall conifers and a great deal of
brush.
It was
darker here, in the shadows of the hills, and Scan stopped the snocle.
"We
have to walk in," he said. "There's no way to get back there by
snocle or sled, but it's an easy walk."
She
nodded and followed, thinking she could use the crisp air to clear her head of
cough-medicine fumes and the leaden emotional aftertaste of Bremport. She could
taste the gas on her tongue again and smell it deep inside herself.
The air
here was not as cold as that at the village. Stunted trees and brush grew along
the man-made walkway fashioned of carefully pieced bits of flattened machine
hulls and suspended over the snow and humped mounds of undergrowth.
Sean
had been taking the lead, and now he reached back for her and pulled her
forward.
"Look,"
he said, pointing to a large animal watching them from the shadows.
"It
looks just like I do in this getup," she said of the burly furry form.
"That's
because you look like a bear," he said, his voice husky, whether from
whispering and cold or emotion she couldn't tell. "This is all muskeg
underneath here, spongy, swampy. You'll soon see why. Berries stay on the
bushes much later than elsewhere, which is what interests him." He nodded
at the bear. "Come, we're almost there."
And
around the next bend she saw the rising steam, curling above the snow-laden
tops of larger trees, and two steps farther she saw the pools and the falls.
"Sean,
it's beautiful," she said, taking in the upper pool, closest to them,
where water bubbled up from the center in a fountain and formed a deep wide
well reflecting the moons and stars in its ripples. Some hidden current sent
the water cascading into a second pool and a third. A narrow path, almost free
of snow, ran alongside the banks, leading in steps down to the lowest pool.
Scan was already shucking his clothing. He turned and grinned at her.
"You'll
dry out better if you only get your hide wet. If you can't swim, there's a lot
of places where it's shallow enough to wade, but you'll prefer total
immersion."
She had
already begun to unfasten her outer clothing. He jumped into the water with a
flash of moonlight on his pale muscular backside. She caught a shadow-darkened
glimpse of him sliding over the falls and heard him laugh.
Hoping
this wasn't another of those instances where everybody else was freezing their
butt off while Shongili was warm and under-or in this case un-dressed, she
quickly finished stripping and much more quickly waded into the pool, then
glided into the water. The pool by the fountain was indeed warm, almost
uncomfortably so, and it unknotted her chilled muscles and soaked her through
and through with its heat until she felt lazy and languorous. The water carried
a hint of sulfur and mint. She kept as much of her under the surface as
possible, diving repeatedly.
The
diving caused a ringing in her ears that sounded almost like music. She swam
underwater as long as possible, listening to it, hoping to remember which tunes
it called to mind.
She
surfaced long enough to catch her breath before approaching the waterfall. It
wasn't a long one, a drop of just a few feet, and the lip of the fall was
smooth beneath the tumbling water. If Shongili could do it, so could she, she
thought, but she flipped over and went down feet first, her knees, belly,
breasts, and face momentarily tweaked with the bite of the icy air.
The
water in the lower pool was a little cooler, a little easier to swim in without
falling asleep, but as she was surfacing, something flashed between her legs
and up behind her.
She
flipped around and grabbed, thinking to find Shongili, but her hand touched wet
fur instead of wet skin and she found herself looking down into the laughing
silvery eyes of a large gray seal.
She
hadn't thought seals liked fresh water, especially not warm fresh water, and
especially not inland streams, but perhaps this was another of Petaybee's
permutations that Scan wanted her to see.
The
seal flipped up and back under her and dived down into the lower pool. Where
the hell was Scan? She felt a cold droplet on her face, and another, and looked
up to see that light snow was floating down from a sky now only partially
clear. She shivered and dove under, hearing the music again. This time, perhaps
because of the closeness of the falls, she could almost hear the singing of
lyrics as well.
The
seal somehow or other had propelled itself back into this upper pool and now
came up under her, as if inviting her to hold on to it while it swam around and
around.
Yes!
She did hear words, not lyrics after all, but spoken words, low and murmured.
She thought perhaps Scan might have returned and was talking to her from the
land. When she raised her head, however, he was nowhere near, though the
murmurous words continued to the soft water music. She glimpsed the seal under
the falls for a moment, and she decided she would get out of the pool. But
first, she'd warm up beneath the water pouring from the hot pool above.
There
was a narrow ledge under the pool, and as she climbed up on it, she saw the
flash of gray fur again as the seal darted in and out. Ignoring the creature,
she stood and let the deliciously warm water play over her face and hair,
cascading down her shoulders, back, hips, and calves, caressing her face,
throat, breasts,
belly,
and thighs. The water continued its tune, and listening for the rhythm, she
realized suddenly that the air pressure had changed around her. It wasn't water
alone that was caressing her, stroking her abdomen, counting her ribs with
splayed fingers, cupping her breasts . . .
"By
the powers that be, I welcome you home," Scan's voice said, as if reciting
a line from a song or a poem. His lips slid beneath her ear and kissed her
throat, and she turned in his arms, knowing full well that this was probably
going to mean no end of trouble at some point but not caring at all.
His
skin was slick with water but almost as well furred as the seal's. She turned
in his arms and threw her own arms around his neck, kissing him hungrily. When
the kiss was done, he held her for a moment, then looked down at her with
silver eyes confusingly like those of the seal. She blinked and retreated a
half step. The laughter in his eyes saddened briefly into wistfulness, then
brusqueness as he held her away from him and said, "We'd better go now.
You get out and get dressed. I'll be right behind you."
As if
now was a time to be formal? She pulled away from him and dove back into the
cooler pool, swimming briskly out and deliberately letting the cold touch her
bare skin before dressing again.
Frag,
what was it, anyway? Had her revelations been too much for him after all? Or
had he really meant this little swim to be therapeutic and just gotten
momentarily carried away when it became erotic instead? Maybe he had a serious
interest elsewhere. Maybe he didn't like women. No, she had had definite
evidence to the contrary. Angry and baffled, she pulled half-frozen clothing
over her wet body and began walking very briskly indeed back down the pathway.
Halfway
back to the snocle, he joined her, resting his hand lightly on her shoulder,
the thumb of his glove brushing her cheek.
"I
think you'll find you can write that song, now," he said.
She
wanted to hit him but satisfied herself with pulling away and riding in silence
all the way back to her cabin. But, after he left and her frustration died
down, she realized he was right.
The
frustration didn't stay with her. He had wanted her as much as she wanted him,
she knew, and there had to be some reason why he had insisted they restrain
themselves. When she thought back on it, she could see the cold snowflakes
falling into the steaming water and hear the music beneath the falls again. She
activated the recorder and spoke into it.
"Having
only air for food, They gave us poison to breathe Even those who had never
harmed them Even those who would have helped them Even those who were only
children Even those who were very like them.
"Holding
a piece of their own world, I survived Breathing through their own soil, I
lived I could not save anybody, not even all of myself. They did not help
anybody, not even themselves. They died, as those around me died, and the Food,
and the medicine were taken back. In the station, people choked and died On the
planet, people starved and died When captured, the killers bled and died I was
sent here to die, too, here where the snows live, The waters live, the animals
and the trees live, And you."
Chapter
7
Bunny
knocked on Yana's door early the next morning. "I'm heading out to
SpaceBase. Can you come now?" Yana had had very little sleep, between the
ride out to the hot springs and back, and staying up late to record the poem.
That had stimulated her far beyond her expectations; she had been unable to
rest, kicking herself for not confronting Sean Shongili last night when it
would have made sense. Now, except for a lingering twitchy nervousness, the
encounter seemed hard to believe. She was both glad and sorry that he lived so
far away: glad because she would not have to face him; sorry because there
would be no chance meetings, no possibility of seeing him unless one of them
deliberately sought the other one out.
What
the hell! She had better things to do. She hauled herself out of her bunk and
pulled on a uniform blouse that still bore insignia. She hadn't removed her
rank from her fatigue jacket yet either, and she slipped it on under her parka.
"Are
you feeling better this morning?" Bunny asked owlishly as they set out
down the river.
"As
opposed to what?" Yana snapped.
Bunny
didn't seem offended; she just smiled and said, "Well, you were so upset
over that Giancarlo making you burn the fish and then . . ."
"When
you left me, I was doing fine, wasn't 1? Was that supposed to change?"
Bunny
glanced away from the river road and over at her, then back again. She looked
disappointed.
Yana
heaved a sigh and leaned back in the seat. She would have preferred to sleep
until they reached SpaceBase. "I'd like to know who it is who's keeping a
log of my activities and guests- then I could set the record straight when
necessary. I'd hate for the whole village to be wrong about something. And that
cough medicine of Clodagh's should be a controlled substance, by the way."
"He
really likes you, Yana," Bunny said.
"Buneka,
I'm not going to discuss this with you," Yana said firmly, settling
herself and closing her eyes. After a few moments of not sleeping, she asked,
"He hasn't always been by himself, has he?"
"Sean?
Oh no, he used to have lots of girlfriends when he was traveling around the
world. He almost married Charlie Demintieff's sister Ruby once, but she changed
her mind at the last minute and married a guy from Baffin Point instead. How
about you? Lots of old boyfriends?"
"Bunny!"
"Well,
but have you had? We know all that stuff about each other."
"I've
had a few boyfriends, I guess you could call them, yes."
"Anybody
serious?"
"My
husband," Yana said shortly, not wanting to dig into her memories of Bry
so soon after talking about Bremport. Couldn't these damn people leave anything
alone? And why did she feel like she had to answer anyway? "He died,"
she said shortly.
"At
Bremport?" Bunny asked almost reverently.
"No.
Not at Bremport. Ten years ago. During a shuttle malfunction. Bunny, 1 really
don't want to talk about it. Now then, what was the name of Diego's friend
again?"
As Yana
suspected, entering the base from the outside was different from being
inprocessed through the cattle chutes. In places like this, with little of
intrinsic value on the premises-by Intergal standards anyway-personnel were
bored and security was lax.
"Whew,
this is a hard, ugly-looking place," Yana said to Bunny as they pulled up
to the gate.
Bunny's
mitten described an arc around the perimeter. "There used to be lots of
little businesses around here: bars, pleasure places, shops for the soldiers.
Sometimes they'd bring in extra equipment that wasn't actually needed and trade
it for something to send to families on other colonies or stations. But about a
year ago, that all stopped and the company had the whole corridor bulldozed and
you had to be a soldier or have a pass to come onto the base. We found out
later about Bremport." She shrugged. "The elders were glad when the
base closed. They said the soldiers were corrupting us, but heck, half of them
were from here anyway, and related to us, so when their families were allowed
out here, lots of us could go into the shops and buy cloth and other stuff that
never makes it out to our store."
Yana's
parka was uniform issue, and she opened it to let her rank show as they passed
the gate guard, who nodded at Bunny's ID and saluted Yana. The guard hut was a
small "instant" building of composite material in a pale pastel. In
the lights of the base- and the entire base was so strongly lit that Yana
wondered that they couldn't see the lights clear from Kilcoole-she noticed that
the buildings all had some sort of a pastel tint: anemic pink, bilious green, jaundiced
yellow. All of the colors were watered down with the familiar omnipresent gray,
so that the squat, rectangular buildings merely stood out in ugly relief from
the snowy surroundings but achieved nothing so frivolous as beauty or gaiety.
The buildings were set in precise rows, down which the arctic wind roared.
Beyond the hunkering buildings, abandoned launch gantries towered awkwardly,
swaying in the wind like the writhing legs of dying insects.
Bunny
pulled up to a building much like the others except that it bore a letter and a
number-C-1000. "There's my fare," she said between closed teeth, then
jumped out, ran around to hold the door open for Yana, and said with a large
obsequious smile, "I thank you for your patronage, dama. Please remember
to ask that Rourke be sent for when you wish to return to our village
again."
"Don't
overdo it," Yana growled between her teeth and in a louder voice said,
"Could you direct me, Rourke, to the infirmary and the communications
depot?"
Bunny's
fare, in the usual anonymous company parka and muffler up to the eyes, walked
around the front of the snocle and squinted at Yana.
"Major
Maddock? Yanaba Maddock?" he asked.
Startled
to be recognized so soon after arriving on the base, she counted to three and
turned slowly to face the man, raising a rapidly icing eyebrow.
"Yes?"
The man
pressed his padding against her padding and gave her a stiff hug. "With
all due respect, Major, I thought I'd never see you again. When I heard you
were on Bremport. . ." He was struggling to unwrap his scarf and hood from
his face.
"Rumors
of my demise were greatly exaggerated, as the man said," she told him. By
then, he had pulled the hood back to reveal the longer-than-regulation bronze
hair and smiling brown eyes she recognized from her days with the survey teams.
"Torkel!" she said.
"Small
universe, eh?" It was a very tired but often true spacer's joke.
"What
are you doing on Petaybee?" she asked.
"I
was wondering that myself until I met you. Can I buy you a cup of something hot?"
"Sir
. . ." Bunny began.
"I'll
make it worth your while to-uh, cool your heels, Rourke. Shouldn't be too hard
around here."
"Yes,
Captain," Bunny said. Then she spoke more boldly, surprising Yana.
"Sir, would it be possible for me to go see Diego? I mean, I just
thought-"
"Good
idea," Torkel said. "A pretty girl his own age ought to cheer him up
some. Building ten-oh-six. If anybody questions you, tell them I authorized
it."
Yana
wasn't surprised that Torkel was confident in the amount of weight he swung as
a mere captain. The fact was, as she and a few others had reason to know, his
rank had little to do with his true degree of power. His family had developed
the terraforming process used by the company to create colony worlds such as
Petaybee, and his father currently sat on Intergal's board of directors. Torkel
was a very competent officer, but he had been a captain longer than it took
most to make general. Generals had a lot hidden from them, whereas captains
tended to end up in the thick of things. No one had told Yana this, but she had
figured it out, from shipboard conversation and a few remarks Torkel had made
in jest.
It was
a joy to sit across from him over steaming cups and energy bars in the dingy
little canteen. They had removed hats, hoods, and mufflers but still wore their
coats unfastened and peeled back, for the canteen was not well heated. Torkel
studied her face as if he was memorizing her.
"It
really is you. I can't tell you how I felt when I heard about
Bremport,
and then heard that you were there that day. I wanted to execute the terrorists
personally."
"I
know the feeling," she said dryly.
"You're
looking wonderful. Better, really, than the last time I saw you."
"Really?
It's amazing what a little toxic gas can do for a girl's complexion. I did lose
quite a lot of weight and I haven't gained much back, trying to-" She
started to say, "trying to figure out how not to burn my food," but
he was already interrupting, leaning forward and looking deeply into her eyes.
"No,
it's not that. You're more relaxed-less locked up inside yourself. I guess it
must have been that we met each other so soon after your husband's death . .
."
"Or
so soon after your divorce," she reminded him. He had been going through
the female crew members at an astonishing rate by the time she had left for
another unit. He had never come on to her before, though, but always treated
her as a senior officer, with respect and what friendliness she had been able
to allow. Still, if he thought she was less locked-up now, she had either
become much better at hiding her feelings or she must have been more of a mess
than she realized back then. "What brings you here, Tor-kel?" she
asked, to get the conversation back on firmer ground.
"Oh,
I'm sort of troubleshooting," he said. "Nobody's sure exactly what's
going on. Minerals we can spot from space but can't locate on the surface,
teams disappearing, unauthorized life-forms cropping up. The company asked me
to evaluate the situation. I thought maybe you might be on the same mission,
and we'd be working together again?"
"Well,
I am in a way, but more covertly," she said. "I'm living in the
village."
"Among
the locals? That's pretty rough. How badly were you injured at Bremport?"
"I
got a discharge, but I'm recovering," she said, and realized that it was
the truth. The pains in her chest no longer plagued her and the cough was much
less frequent, thanks to Clodagh's syrup. "Anyway, Torkel, I'm glad I ran
into you. Giancarlo is a little unreasonable."
"I've
noticed he was pretty heavy-handed dealing with that native woman."
"How's
she doing, by the way?"
"She
and the others are probably going to be sent offworld to be interrogated
further. Nothing anybody says really adds up, Yana. Fifty teams have been sent
down here in the past ten years, and this is only the second time that we've
had any survivors at all."
"How
is the boy?" Yana asked quickly.
"He's
scared. Alone on a hostile world . . ."
"Torkel,
I think Giancarlo's been filling you full of shit about the natives here.
They're nice people, and they know a few things the company could learn to its
benefit."
"Sure
they do. That's what this is all about," he said with a wry lift of one
side of his mouth. "And I'm not surprised to hear you have a high opinion
of them. I'm sure you bring out the best in them. Even the ips know a good
thing when they see it." He held her hand in both of his and kissed it,
which both pleased and slightly alarmed her. If Intergal had a Prince Charming
equivalent, it was Torkel Fiske, but she had never expected him to come after
her, even in passing.
She
patted his hands with her spare one, pressing her advantage. "No, they're
very caring people. They're not only worried about Petaybeans who are being
held, they're also very concerned about the boy. His father, too, of course.
Has anyone gotten ahold of his father's partner?"
"Partner?"
"Yes,
it's on the computer. A Steven Margolies, Metaxos's assistant."
"Yana,
you're brilliant as ever. I didn't know anything about this. I'll have the man
sent for at once. Metaxos is no good in the condition he's in now. The boy,
now, he might help us if we keep him on-site and with Margolies, a man
intimately familiar with Metaxos's work. That's a good rationale for relocating
the whole family unit to Petaybee."
"Won't
Metaxos need better care than the infirmary here can provide?" she asked.
"I heard his condition was pretty bad."
"Oh,
care here's going to improve shortly. We're bringing in more troops and support
teams to try to crack this case. Between the two of us, there's even some talk
of evacuating the planet and doing some serious mining until it pays
back."
"I
thought it was a high-recruitment area."
"It
is. Has been very good. But lately there have been fewer new recruits despite
the austere conditions. Seems like the natives just don't want to leave."
He smiled at her again, his eyes, even in this light, clear and a beautiful
light brown, the color of Clodagh's tea. "If you're going to be here, I
won't want to leave either."
"Good,"
Yana said, softening her briskness by smiling warmly at him. "I can't
imagine anyone handier to run into right now. Giancarlo, as I mentioned, is
being difficult. Now then, Torkel, repeat after me: 'Is there anything you
need, Yana?' "
He
leaned closer, and she could feel his breath as he said, stroking her palm with
his thumb, "Is-there-any-thing- you-need-Yana?"
"I
have a list," she said.
What
sorta hold you got on the captain?" Bunny asked as she helped Yana load
the snocle. "He tol' me to come back and get you."
"It's
called the 'old buddy network/ " Yana said, trying not to feel smug over
the haul she had just made. "By the way, a burst went out to Steve
Margolies. Diego'll have company here real soon."
Bunny
paused in hefting the pack of "clothing, winter wear, one of each"
Yana had freed up. "That's great, Yana. Only how?" She gave Yana a
searching look.
"I
suggested that maybe the dad would come round faster if he had the support of
his family unit." Yana hesitated then, not sure if she should confide in
Bunny some of the plans for Petaybee that Torkel had mentioned. "You may
be busier than ever soon," she heard herself adding.
"How
so?"
"They're
bringing in more troops and some support teams."
Bunny
snorted. "What good'll those do 'em if they don't believe what they been
told!"
"Intergal
is trying damned hard to find those minerals they can see from up there."
"Yeah,
they do keep trying, don't they?" That amused Bunny. "There. All your
gear stowed safe and tight. Let's get home. I got dogs to feed." When they
had reached the main road out of SpaceBase, she had other questions.
"Who's this captain dude, anyway? The colonel really snapped to when he
arrived, like he wasn't expected and not all that welcome, either."
Yana
chuckled. "His name's Fiske, Torkel Fiske. Son of the family that
developed the terraforming process used here."
"They
did Petaybee?" Bunny turned very wide eyes on Yana. "How come you
know him?"
"Served
on the same ship a coupla times. That's all."
"That's
"//?"
"That's
all, Bunny," Yana said in a tone to discourage further queries. And yet,
it started her to thinking. Torkel had sure acted glad to see her. Now, when a
guy like Torkel Fiske could bed practically any female he wanted, why had he
been so attentive to her, Yanaba Maddock? Mad he actually known, all along,
that she was on a covert mission in the village? He had sounded genuinely
surprised. Or was he just surprised to have run into her at Space-Base? Had he
meant what he said, about the possibility of evacuating everyone from Petaybee
so they could blast the planet apart to find the minerals they had been after
for so many years? "Ever wanted to get off Petaybee, Bunny? Get to see
other worlds, where the living's a bit easier?"
Bunny
shot her a quick glance. "Why would I want to leave Petaybee? I belong
here, Yana. Not just because I was born here. I belong here! I belong to this
planet." Then she clamped her lips shut and concentrated on her driving.
She had
returned to her normal cheerful self when she slowed the snocle to a stop
exactly parallel with the steps to Yana's little house.
"I'll
unload, Yana," she said. "You go tend your fire. Some of this stuff
won't do for freezing."
"Only
if you agree to eat with me?"
Bunny
grinned. "You mean, you want me to cook for you again?"
Yana
waggled a package of dehydrated veggies at the girl in mock threat. "I got
me things even I can't ruin."
There
had been a most curious selection of foodstuffs available at SpaceBase, as well
as basic things like flour, beetshug, and powdered yeast in a can big enough to
supply the entire village for the next decade. She had several big tins of
pepper and other hot seasonings. She would use those to trade. She had acquired
a ream of paper, a box of inked styluses, and a ream of message tapes: the
whole village could send one apiece to Charlie. Compared to the village store,
the SpaceBase BX was a cornucopia of useful and occasional unlikely
commodities.
In an
inside pocket she had as neat a little pair of infrared night binoculars as
could be found, just the thing for seeing distances on a snow landscape. She
had a first-aid kit though some of the contents had long since passed their
expiry dates, but she had wanted the compact field instruments more than the
medicines. She had a heavy-duty thermal sleeping bag, another quilt, clothing,
skis, snowshoes, an ax, a hatchet, cross- and hacksaws, and enough nails and
screws to set up a carpentry shop. And much to her delight, she had discovered,
lying dusty on a bottom shelf beneath items of uniform apparel, several lengths
of prettily figured fabric in bright colors, no doubt left over from the days
when the soldiers' families were allowed to visit and trade on the base, too.
Also
scattered among the more strictly utilitarian goods, she found other items
apparently for sale or trade with civilians: beads, belts, glues for several
different types of jobs, a carpenter's last in her foot size, three each of
plates, bowls, and cups, a big skillet, two more pots, and a multiple knife
with a six-foot run-out cord she had already attached to her belt.
She had
a pail of multiple vitamins and minerals with an expiry date two years hence,
and three boxes of the trail rations designed for Petaybee conditions. There
had been cartons of those, newly shipped in, or so the quartermaster had told
her. Plus a big can of freeze-dried coffee and another of real tea, and a few
other comestibles that, as she had told Bunny, she knew she couldn't ruin in
the serving.
She set
about opening the cans she chose to serve, slopping the contents into
appropriate pans and arranging them on the stove, which had not gone out. She
had coaxed it to a more active state and was determined that this time she
wouldn't be distracted from her task.
Clodagh's
cat had watched her put things away with very interested eyes.
"Taking
inventory, cat? How good do you count?"
The cat
blinked insolently at her.
She had
the meal prepared, rather proud of herself at producing more than a single pot
of edible food. Bunny was certainly appreciative. Then, after dinner, Yana
presented her with a length of the pretty fabric, the blue, which she felt
would be a flattering color for Bunny. She was totally unprepared for the joy
and prolific thanks, the hint of tears in Bunny's eyes.
"I
never had anything this grand before, Yana," the girl said softly, holding
the fabric to her face and rubbing it across her weather-chapped cheek. Then,
with a wide smile, she beamed at Yana. "I'll be the belle of the latchkay
in this." Her face dropped and she frowned. "That is, if Aisling can
make it up in time for me. She's awful busy as it is."
"Aisling
does your dressmaking, too?" Yana had been counting on the woman's
services herself, and she ran through her barter goods to think what would be
most appropriate.
"Yup,
when there's something to do, and something to make with," Bunny said,
still caressing the fabric in her lap. "What did ya get for
yourself?"
Yana
unfolded the deep-green-figured length.
"Ohhh,
now that's ace, Yana, you'll look great in that!"
"Think
so?" Yana held it up against her. She hadn't had much in the way of
feminine frippery in a long time, not since Bry, who had liked her in
nightgowns. Which he promptly took off, a habit that had tickled her errant
humor.
"Yes,
I think so. And Sinead has some beads that would bring out the background
green. Why, I can see it made up already. Wait a tic!" And Bunny was out
the door, hauling on her parka as she went.
Yana
folded her length up carefully, her ringers savoring the smooth finish, and set
about clearing up the remains of their supper. She saved a dollop of the
protein in the pan and put it down for the cat, who sniffed it then pawed
around it as if trying to bury it.
Bunny
returned with a flourish, Sinead and Aisling behind her. Without taking off her
parka, she rushed over to the chair where she had put the blue and held it up
for the two to see, letting the folds fall about her. "See? Isn't it the
most gorgeous stuff you've ever seen?"
Yana
thought she had never seen anyone get so much pleasure out of cloth.
The
rest of the evening was taken up by discussions of styles and decorations for
both latchkay blouses. Aisling had taken charge of the two lengths, holding
them up against Yana and Bunny, draping them this way and that to see how the
finished design would fall and, Yana noticed, smoothing the fabric as if her
hands, too, had rarely felt such quality. Sinead was sent back to their cabin
to bring up certain trimmings and beads, to be sure that the colors matched,
and then that the patterns of beading and decoration were approved.
"Hear
you got up to my brother's place," Sinead murmured when Bunny and Aisling
were deep in the consideration of cut and style. Her eyes were intent on Yana's
face. "Did he show you around much?"
"I
think he did. Saw the curly-coats, and those great cats of his."
Sinead
grinned, but her expression was as secretive as it was inquisitive, so Yana
didn't know why Sinead had brought Scan up in the conversation. Could Sinead
possibly know about their trip to the warm springs? That was their business.
"No
seals?"
Yana
managed to hide her reaction to that softly delivered query. She turned her
head and met Sinead's keen eyes easily. "One. It seemed to like fresh
water, though, which I thought was a little strange."
Sinead
eyed her a long moment and then, with a cryptic grin, turned away. "We got
a lot o' strange beasties on Petaybee."
"Oh?
Why haven't I come across any yet?" Yana asked good-humoredly, despite the
fact that her pulse had begun to race. This was exactly what Giancarlo wanted
to know. Did Sinead realize that?
"I
think you have to discover them for yourself. Like the seals. Tell you what,
why don't you come check the traplines with me sometime? You might be surprised
what you see when you know what to look for. Sometime soon maybe."
"Thanks.
I'll take you up on that," Yana said, careful not to sound too excited.
Sinead
turned back to arranging beads, wires, and trimming for Bunny to inspect.
Then,
before Yana could quiz Bunny on the barter aspects of the new clothing, Aisling
and Sinead had folded up the two lengths, cleared away the trimmings, and were
out the door into the dark cold night.
"I
didn't discuss price with 'em," Yana said to Bunny.
"Naw,
that comes later, if you like what they do. And they're good, Yana. Aisling
sews like a dream, and Sinead is a wizard with the beads and trims. You don't
need to worry they'd muck up material like that! And gee, I've never had such
pretty stuff for a latchkay blouse." The girl's eyes shone. "I can't
thank you enough ..."
"Pshaw!
That's my thanks for your help, Buneka. But the latchkay's coming up soon,
isn't it? Will the blouses be finished in time?"
"Sure."
Bunny grinned. "They left so they could start. You wait and see. We'll be
the fanciest-dressed females there!"
Diego
was surprised to see the snocle-driver girl again, but at the same time, in one
part of his mind, he knew he had been waiting for her. Or if not for her
exactly, he had been waiting for something to happen to relieve the heaviness
that had fallen on him since he had returned to SpaceBase. He had come outside,
the cold air being a change from the smelly stuff inside his quarters. It was
also something to do, and the only sure way he knew to keep from trying to
choke that dickhead of a colonel who kept on and on with questions Diego was
sure his father didn't even hear. Why didn't they leave his dad alone?
"Diego?
Hi. It's me, Bunny," the girl said, keeping her voice low and looking
around her, as if she was worried about being seen.
"Hi.
Did you bring me a cake with a file in it?"
"Huh?"
she asked.
"Just
an old joke I read in a book someplace. Sorry. Nice to see you again but-"
"Look,
I just came to find out if anybody told you yet."
"Told
me what?" Diego demanded. He hadn't meant to be surly, but that's how it
came out. He was feeling pretty impatient with all of the guessing games and
little hints being passed over his head all the time.
The
girl merely looked at him, exasperated, then said slowly and patiently, as if
talking to a very small child, which he supposed was how he was acting,
"My friend, Major Maddock, got her friend the captain to send for
Steve."
"She
did?" Diego sat upright, staring at her. "How d'you know?"
"She
told me. Didn't anyone tell you?"
"Nope.
Wow, that's great," he said. He'd be okay; Dad would be okay, if Steve was
coming. Steve would straighten everything out. Steve would believe him, even if
the colonel and the others didn't, and Steve would know how to handle these
assholes, get them to leave him and Dad alone. His relief was so intense it
scared him. Maybe this was some sort of scheme, raising his hopes like this.
"You sure?"
"Sure,
I'm sure." She gave a disgusted flick of her hand. "I don't go about
spreading rumors. Wanna come to the latchkay?"
"Latchkay?
What's that?"
"Party.
Everyone's coming. Good singing, good music, good eating," she said, and
Diego could see that she was excited.
"Dunno,"
he said. "I don't feel much like going to a party with Dad the way he is.
Besides, I'm not sure Giancarlo will let me." § Bunny grinned smugly.
"So don't ask him. Ask Captain Fiske. Just tell him that Major Maddock
told me to ask you, and he'll let you come for sure. He likes her."
"Yeah?
Well, as long as my dad's condition doesn't change or anything, you know, I
guess I could. Nothin' else goin' on around here."
Her
grin broadened. "You'll be glad you did," she told him. "Get to
meet a lot of good people and hear some good songs."
"That'd
be a change. Sure is no one here you could call 'good.' What kind of
songs?"
"Ones
my people know. Ones they write about us and our history. Good songs," she
said.
If
things had been normal, if he were back on the ship and his father had never
come here and he had never come here and they had never found the cave, he might
have made a smart remark, might have said something to make fun of her. But now
that seemed like kid stuff. She was serious, and he felt as if he owed it to
her to be serious, too. "What are they like?"
"Well,
some are things you sing and some are things you chant. Some rhyme and some
don't. But they all tell you stuff about things that happen to people, things
that happen on the planet."
"Like
poems?"
"I
guess so. We just call them songs. What're poems like?"
He
grinned and said, "Wait a minute," and went back to his bunk, pulling
one of his precious hard-copy books from his pack. His nose was half-frozen,
but he didn't care. He took the book back out and thumbed it open to a page.
"Here's one I bet you'll like.
"
'A bunch of the boys were whoopin' it up At the Malamute saloon . . .' "
He read
her the whole poem, and she really seemed to like it, and then she recited
something of hers, what she called a song. He had to admit it was pretty good,
but he suddenly felt too shy to tell her then that he had tried a few himself.
Besides, he was about to freeze to death standing outside the ugly blocky
building talking poetry with a girl who dressed like a gorilla. "Guess I'd
better go check on Dad," he said apologetically.
"Is
he any better today?" Bunny asked.
"He'll
be a lot better if Steve gets here. You sure you're not spoofing me about
that?"
Bunny
shook her head slowly. "I don't do that kind of trick, Diego. None of us
would."
She
left then. Diego watched her drive off in the snocle, wondering how a girl got
the chance to drive one of the few decent vehicles on this iceberg. Maybe when
Steve got here ... He wouldn't let himself count on that. Not that he still
thought Bunny would lie to him: Why should she? Why would she? But maybe it
wouldn't be as easy as she thought. Maybe Giancarlo wouldn't let Fiske send for
Steve. He liked Bunny, but she hadn't been around company crews like he had-she
couldn't know how untrustworthy people could be, how unreasonable. She sure was
a funny girl. And she really seemed to like this place.
Chapter
8
A
scratch on the door heralded Sinead's arrival at some O-dark-hundred hour. Yana
was on her feet instantly and opened the door, dancing about on tiptoe as the
cold of the floor ate through her bedsocks.
"I'll
stir the stove," Sinead said, loosening her outer garments. "You'll
need something warm in your belly today. Sometimes I think it's colder just before
spring than it is midwinter. Good day to check the traplines though."
As she
busied herself, pouring water from the thermos into a pot to heat, shaking down
the ash from the embers, Yana inserted herself into the layers she felt she
would need on this expedition.
"Wha
. . . arrrre ... we trapping?" she asked, her teeth chattering. She
wondered that everyone in Kilcoole seemed to have whole teeth. She was certain
one morning her front ones would crack off.
"Whatever's
willing," Sinead said with a droll grin.
"Which
leaves me no wiser."
"It's
a good time to see what's available," Sinead repeated. "The time of
year when some are more happy to die than live."
"How
can you tell which is which?"
"You'll
see. Here, drink this!"
Yana
was quite willing to, cradling the cup in her hands and occasionally,
carefully, holding it close to her cheeks to warm her cold face. As carefully
as she wrapped her quilts about her prior to falling asleep, her face insisted
on being out in the open, and was always cold in the morning.
Sinead
had made a single serving of porridge, as well. "Aisling fed me," she
said with a grin. "Can't get out of the house in the morning without being
stuffed."
Yana
grinned back, for a moment envious of Sinead, who had a caring partner who saw
to her comfort. Then, warmed by the hearty meal, she was ready to go. Sinead
had damped down the energetic blaze so that there would be coal to start up
again when Yana returned. Clodagh's cat went out with them and whisked away on
some business of its own.
"D'you
have one like that?" Yana asked Sinead as she settled in the sled.
Sinead
gave a snort. "No one has Clodagh's cats. They have you."
Yana
agreed heartily and pulled the fur up to her face just as Sinead shouted to her
lead dog, a big shaggy brindled female she had named Alice B.
There
was no one else about as the dogs pulled the sled quickly down the main track
of Kilcoole, though some houses showed lights. They were soon out into the
forest, and Sinead urged her team to the left, down a long slope and then onto
a wide expanse of white. Here and there Yana saw what looked to be the tops of
square fence posts jutting up from their winter blanket and wondered if this
was where the village grew its crops in the short summer season.
When
she saw the leaders suddenly drop off into nothing, she just had time to take a
firmer hold on the driving bow before the sled abruptly nose-dived down the
steep slope.
They
crashed past more of the spired vegetation she had seen on her first ride on
Petaybee; then the surface became smooth again. Another one of Petaybee's many
rivers? As they then traveled up a slope on the other side, she decided her
notion was correct. Frozen bushes shortly gave way to trees, growing thicker as
they progressed along the trail Sinead was following. The track led slightly
uphill and then dipped downward again, across another clearing and into more
forest, with Sinead pulling ever left, toward the slowly brightening eastern
sky.
A time
or two Yana's sharp eyes caught the glimmer of lights through the trees, and
she smelled woodsmoke. On and on the dogs ran, barking now and then, evidently
from sheer joy. Sinead would laugh and urge them on.
They
had been traveling upward of an hour, in and out of forests, when Sinead called
Alice B to a halt by a small shack. More of a lean-to actually, Yana thought,
rising from the sled, rather pleased to find that she wasn't as stiff as usual.
Nor had cold half crippled her. Was she actually becoming acclimated to this
frigid planet? Probably she would become accustomed to the cold just as summer
arrived, and by that time any temperature above freezing would roast her.
She
helped Sinead unhook the dogs, check their feet, and set up their picket line.
Then Sinead swung to her back the pack that had been Yana's cushion on the trip
out. She passed a second, smaller pack to Yana. From the sled she took a long
bundle, which she unwrapped to display three spears with sharp pointed metal
ends and one with a wicked-looking barb and hook that Yana thought might be a
harpoon, though she had never seen such an instrument before. Two bags and a
large Y-shaped affair, which she could identify as a hefty slingshot, had also
been packaged with the weapons.
"Ever
use one of these?" Sinead asked, passing over the slingshot.
"I
spent much of my childhood in domes where something like this would have been
frowned on," Yana said, testing the feel of grip in her hand and the give
in the slings.
Sinead
gave a snort. "You handle it like you know anyhow."
Yana
grinned. "One learns." She took the bag of small stones that Sinead
handed over. "What's the other? Your slingshot?"
Sinead
hefted the bag. "A variant-matched stones attached to long strings. You
get them swinging in circles in opposite directions like this. When you've got
enough momentum going, you twirl them overhead until the tension's right, then
loose them to tangle the feet of whatever you want to bring down."
"I've
seen that sort of thing a time or two. And where you'd least expect it."
Her
pack settled, Sinead entered the lean-to and emerged with two sets of
snowshoes, handing a pair to Yana. She knelt to attach hers and then they were
both ready, Sinead leading the way into the dense forest, only slightly
illuminated by the rising sun.
They
had traveled about half an hour, Yana judged, when Sinead stopped to kneel by a
heavy evergreen bush. Hauling the skirt of branches to one side, she pulled out
the oddest-looking wicker contraption Yana had ever seen, with the smaller end
turning back inside itself. It held two gray-furred long-eared animals of good
size.
"Thank
you, friends," Sinead murmured, and then with a deft twist of strong
gloved hands she wrung their necks.
Yana
was startled. "They weren't dead yet?" she asked, surprised more by
that than by Sinead's quick dispatch of them.
Sinead
shrugged. "They came to die." She hummed-though Yana was certain she
caught the sounds of words, as well-while with quick movements she wound cord
from an outside pocket about their hind legs and secured them to a hook
protruding from her pack.
Then,
continuing her odd humming, she put a handful of pellets in the oddly shaped
trap and replaced it under the bush. By then Yana had figured out that the trap
let the creatures in through the clever inverted neck, which, apparently,
couldn't expand as an exit. Like a fish trap she had once seen, where fish
could swim in, but not out.
"You
don't trap them dead?" Yana asked when Sinead fell silent. She had the
oddest notion that Sinead had been singing some sort of a ritual requiem.
Sinead
shook her head. "No, we live-trap. It is our way. But it means I must run
the trapline every three, four days, or they would also starve."
Yana
shook her head, surprised. "You said it was a good time to die? Were those
rabbits waiting here for you to kill them?"
"So
it would appear." Then Sinead rose and started off to the left again.
They
had emptied ten similar traps, and Yana now carried a share of the catch, when
Sinead, holding up her hand for Yana to tread more warily, stole toward a
thicket. Parting the branches so carefully that only a few grains of snow fell,
she motioned for Yana to look into the small clearing. A large buff-colored
reindeer stood there-on three legs, the fourth broken at the knee and hanging
at an obscene angle. The deer had been cropping the bushes around it, and the
snow had turned to muddy slush where it had trampled the clearing in its food
circuit.
Sinead
moved back, holding up one gloved hand to indicate Yana was to stay put. She
slipped out of her pack, laying it quietly in the snow, and with spear in hand,
she crept around the thicket. Yana watched as she disappeared into another
portion of the undergrowth. Then she heard a grunt, a whirring noise, and a
thunk as the spear found its target, and then an uninhibited crashing of
bushes.
"Okay,
Yana," Sinead called cheerily, and Yana pushed through the thicket and saw
the spear sticking out of the deer's head, right between its eyes. "Grand
pelt on this buck," Sinead said, running her hand down the side and back
of the dead beast.
"This
isn't one of your humane traps, is it?" Yana asked, looking about the
clearing as she hunkered down beside the hunter.
"Not
a trap, but I've seen does have their young in places like this."
"You're
a mighty hunter, Nimrod," Yana went on, observing how much of the spear's
metal point had entered the beast's skull. "That was some throw."
"The
idea is to cause as little pain as possible. Skull's thinnest right between the
eyes. Minute the point hit its brain it was dead. Which it wanted to be with a
break like that," Sinead said, pointing to the broken leg. "Hadn't
done it but a day or two ago, either. Bone ends not frozen through. 'Mother
thing about a head kill is the skin isn't marred. C'mon. We got real work to do
now."
To
Yana's surprise, Sinead had her help drag the carcass from the little clearing.
"Doe might need it come spring, and it don't do to leave death scent
around."
They
gutted the animal, a procedure Yana found somewhat less distasteful than
dissections of alien creatures she had witnessed during her search-and-discover
days with company expeditionary parties. Sinead demonstrated the technique with
almost ritualistic care and put the offal in a sack she had obviously brought
for the need. She kept out the liver.
"Lunch,"
she said, "but I'll just put the rest of this-which we can use-where
nothing can reach it." She hung the sack high on the branch beside the
carcass, which was already stiffening with cold. "We'll come back for it.
Gotta finish the line."
Then
Sinead beckoned Yana to follow her as she took up her trapline again. They had
acquired several more animals, two already dead in the live traps, when Sinead
decided it was time to eat. She built a little fire and, with sharpened twigs,
skewered slices of the liver.
The
cooking smelled as good as the eating tasted. Yana licked her fingers, shoving
them into her parka to dry them on her shirt when she had finished eating.
Sinead heated a pan of water and made some tea, which they took turns drinking.
"So,"
Yana said. "So far these all seem to be fairly standard critters, the kind
that would have occurred in the northernmost parts of Earth back in the old
days. I had kind of hoped for something a little more unusual."
Sinead
looked across at her, a slight smile on her face. "Day's early."
"Do
you ever catch those freshwater seals?" The shock of Sinead's reaction to
that casual question made Yana try a hasty apology. "What'd I say wrong?
You're the one asked me had I seen them."
"You
see a seal, dama, and you be respectful." And there was no question of the
menace in Sinead's manner.
Yana
held her hands up in surrender and laughed shakily. "Sorry. Didn't mean to
put both feet in my mouth. Are seals special?"
"Very,"
Sinead said in an unequivocal tone. Then she, too, lightened up, the tension
draining out of her body. "Petaybean seals are one of the more unusual
beasts: on the surface they may look like the ordinary Earth species, but
they're very much a product of the planet and they must be protected. Not many
people ever get to see a Petaybean seal." Unexpectedly Sinead grinned, her
eyes intent on Yana's face. "You see one, you be respectful," she
repeated pleasantly.
"You
can count on that!" Yana said fervently.
Sinead
rose and neatly covered their small fire with snow; and then they were on their
way again.
Nine
traps later, with some carcasses whose pelts had caused Sinead's eyes to
glisten with pleasure, Yana realized that Sinead was swinging to her right.
Maybe they were on the homeward leg. Yana hoped so. Her back and calf muscles
were beginning to protest: individually the dead animals weighed little, but
she had fifteen dangling from the pack now, and her legs were feeling the
strain of unaccustomed snowshoeing.
There
was no way she would complain, but she was tiring. Still and all, she had
surprised herself with the day's work. Far cry from what she had been like
first off Andromeda. A healthy life in the outdoors, with untainted air to
breathe and decent food to eat, was certainly providing cures never found in an
Intergal medical cabinet.
Yana
heard the cracking sound almost as soon as Sinead, who dropped to her knees.
Yana did likewise and watched with bated breath as Sinead crept forward. She
motioned for Yana to come up, but also signaled her to proceed quietly. Yana
had done her share of stalking-of beasts in her expeditionary days, of people
in her days as an investigator-and moved appropriately. The cracking continued,
a cracking and a thumping. Again Sinead moved forward, stepping with extra
care, inserting herself into one of the ubiquitous thickets that grew
everywhere. Yana let the branches close around her as she followed Sinead.
Instead of peering up over the thicket, Sinead began to part the lower
branches, crouching down to look through. She waved Yana to a point beside her,
and Yana realized that she could almost see through to what looked like a
riverbed. With exquisite caution, she slowly made an obscured peek hole in the
branches and barely stifled her gasp of astonishment.
Animals
that she first thought were some of Scan's curly-coated horses were standing
about on the frozen river. One was butting at the ice, obviously determined to
make a hole from which it and its companions could drink-and it was butting
with a short, stumpy curled horn that grew out of the end of its nose bone. The
critter was putting its all into the exercise, sometimes dropping to its knees
with the force of its blows, then heaving back to all fours and springing from
powerful hindquarters to beat again at the ice. The rear view exposed some
obvious male appendages; checking the others of the group, Yana came to the
conclusion that the horn seemed to be a perquisite of the male of the species.
Suddenly it gave a triumphant bellow and began rearing up, coming down hard to
stomp at the ice with its sharp hooves. The others in the small herd did
likewise and then backpedaled as a black hole appeared in the white surface.
Sinead
turned to grin broadly at Yana and then signaled her to withdraw. They jogged
quite a ways down the track before Sinead stopped.
"Was
that a unicorn I saw?" Yana asked, panting and wheezing just a bit from
the exertion.
Sinead
grinned with humorous malice. "There ain't no such animal and neither of
us is virgin, though me more than you, 1 guess."
"I
didn't see any in Sean's herd. And he showed me the stallion."
"This
is a wild curly. They need the horn to get water in the winter."
"Does
the horn fall off in the summer then?"
"Don't
know. Never saw a horned curly trying to break ice in the summer." Sinead
was off down the track before Yana could press her for more information. Well,
she had been promised unusual animals-and she'd got 'em.
To
Yana's surprise they were back at the lean-to much sooner than she had
anticipated. She helped Sinead hitch up the team to the sled and deposited the
frozen small animals on the sled bench, and then they made a straight line back
to where the deer was hung. Nothing had touched it.
By the
time they reached Kilcoole, Yana taking turns with Sinead to ride the sled
runners, it looked the same as it had when they left: no one about on the
frozen track and lights coming up in the cabins as they passed.
"Need
help skinning any of these?" Sinead asked as she deposited a fair half of
the produce at Yana's feet.
"I
wouldn't mind," Yana admitted. "Though I could probably figure it
out, I've never really done it before. I have done a little trapping and
hunting, but seldom for food; mostly it was for specimens that needed to remain
intact for examination and analyses."
Sinead
took charge, demonstrating the technique of placing the slits and peeling the
coats back, stripping away connective tissue. "Ruining the hide wastes
part of the critter's gift to you, so you want to do it right. Sharp knife
helps." She helped Yana skin out her share, watching until she was
satisfied that Yana had the knack. Yana found she learned skinning with a lot
more ease than she did cooking.
Sinead
pointed up to the crossbeams. "If you tie your catch up high out here on
the porch, nothing'll get 'em. I'll bring back your share of the reindeer when
we've butchered it. And its hide. You have more need of it than we do."
With
Yana's profuse thanks trailing after them, Sinead and her dogs went on up the
track to the cabin she and Aisling shared.
Chapter
9
A week
later, Yana noticed unusual activity at the Kilcoole meeting hall. When she
went up to investigate, she was put to work by a laughing Clodagh, who was
organizing every available body to assist in the good work. By midday the place
had been swept clean, the floor washed, the trestle tables set up, and the
chairs placed around the walls. The platform was erected where singers and
players could be seen, and heat was pouring forth from the two fireplaces and
the big fuel-drum stove. The breakup betting board had been hung from its
accustomed hook, the dates and two-hour sections newly inscribed, waiting for folk
to place their wagers as to the day and the approximate hour when spring would
crack winter's ice and the rivers would once again begin to flow with wet
water.
The
latchkay stewpot, the biggest kettle in Kilcoole, occupied its burner, and
every time the lid rattled with steam, a delicious odor wafted free. The big
coffeepot was ready to go on-no need to do it yet or the coffee would walk out
of the pot and demand dancing space. Mugs waited in platoons, and someone had
donated a whole pail of sweetener. Soon the cakes and pies and other baked
goods would arrive, and the other dishes the village's best cooks would
provide.
With
the hall set up, Yana hurried back to her cabin to complete the rest of her
civic duty and prepare her hot dish. Bunny had suggested beans, probably
because they were relatively foolproof, Yana suspected. However Yana, who felt
she was doing quite well with the cooking lessons, not only seasoned them with
the pepper Bunny had recommended, but actually got cocky enough to add garlic, just
because she liked the flavor. She also threw in a heaping handful of dried
tomato and capsicum flakes, because the dash of color made the plain beans look
more festive.
She had
just taken the beans off the stove when, rather to her surprise, Aisling and
Sinead came by with the finished blouses. She was amazed that they had finished
the garments so quickly, especially considering the intricacy of the
ornamentation. Hers fit beautifully. Its V-neck was tastefully decorated with
beads cunningly sewn on to the material's design, a sort of appliqué. The full
sleeves were gathered into a tight cuff, also beaded, and the bodice of the
shirt fit close to Yana's lean frame, but not so close that it didn't soften
the spare lines of her thin body. And there were pockets, also bead-trimmed,
into which Yana could stuff her hands when she didn't know what else to do with
them. The open collar was also cleverly decorated, with beads made from
segments of some of the wires Yana had seen in the store. In exchange for the
blouse, Aisling gratefully accepted Yana's proffered bags of those spices Bunny
had said the two could most use.
By the
time the other women left, it was time to bathe and dress for the main event.
Usually, Yana just took a spit bath in kettle-heated water, but she wasn't
about to put her new blouse on without a proper bath. The hot springs, while a
few miles away, was not an impossible walk, and on several occasions since Scan
had introduced her to it, Yana had trekked there for a dip. Usually there were
other people enjoying the water, so she wasn't surprised not to encounter the
"special" seal she must treat with respect Had she been properly
respectful that first time? she wondered. On this latchkay morning, the entire
village was in and out of the pool, sprucing themselves up for the long-awaited
celebration. There were such splashing and carryings-on that the communal
bathing deteriorated into a sporting event. At which time Yana left, wrapping
up well for the walk back to her cabin.
"Slainte,
Yana," Bunny called cheerfully as Yana reached her porch. "Want you
to meet Diego," she said, pointing to the well-wrapped figure in her sled.
"Here, give this to the major . . ." Bunny shoved a water thermos
into his hands. "Major Yanaba Maddock, this is Diego Metaxos." She
gestured with her hands for Diego to get a move on.
Yana
felt for the boy, knowing how stiff a body could be after one of Bunny's sled
rides, as he unfolded, a little awkwardly, balancing the water thermos.
"How's
your father doing?" Yana asked, walking to the front of the porch to take
the thermos from the boy. Seeing his haunted expression, she felt even sorrier
for him.
"She"-and
he jerked his mittened hand over his shoulder at Bunny-"said you'd made
them get Steve."
"I
didn't make anybody do anything, Diego," Yana said with a self-deprecating
laugh, "but I did suggest-to someone who has the power to authorize such
things-that it might reassure your father and improve his condition. And
yours."
"Yeah,
thanks." He started to turn back, noted Bunny's frown, and turned back, a
halfway smile tugging his cold and cracked lips. "I mean it, Major
Maddock."
Now
Yana could see why Bunny could be interested in the boy. Not only was he around
her age, but he was tall and well built, with longish wavy black hair and
intense dark eyes with curling lashes any girl would envy. And that little
smile of his held a certain charm. It was certainly an improvement on his lost,
haunted look. What had he seen in the caves that had produced that effect? Not that
Petaybee wasn't daunting to anyone suddenly plonked down on its surface.
The two
turned to go, but Yana suddenly remembered the blouse. "Wait! You'll want
this for the latchkay," she said, ducking back inside. In a moment she
handed the blouse to the girl.
Tears
sprang up in Bunny's eyes. "Oh, Yana! For me? It's so beautiful!" She
held it up in front of her parka and swung around to show Diego, who pretended
indifference, but Yana thought she saw a flicker of admiration behind the boy's
nonchalance.
Bunny
hugged her. "Thank you! I'll go get dressed right now."
Yana
watched Bunny, with Diego walking beside her, jump onto her sled and skim down
the street, the plume tails of the dogs wagging as they knew themselves near
home, and food.
With a
satisfied smile, Yana went inside her nice warm house, to dry her hair and get
ready for the latchkay.
To
Yana's surprise, there was a knock on her door just as she was about to leave.
She had been hearing people going past her door, on foot and with dogsleds, for
the past half hour, though it was only midafternoon. She spent the time
primping, trying to make her own appearance worthy of the blouse, admiring the
way the garment added sparkle to her eyes and brought out highlights in her
hair, even making her skin glow with unaccustomed color. The knock startled
her. Bunny, probably.
Before
she could reach the latch, the door swung slowly open and a well-snowed
figure-for it had begun to snow again-stood in the doorway. She recognized the
finely decorated gloves as Scan Shongili lifted his hands to push back the hood
of his parka.
Yana's
heart did an unexpected flip-flop. And got even more agitated as Scan grinned
at her.
"If
you thought you were going to weasel out of singing tonight, think again,"
he said, stopping inside and closing the door. "But I see you have dressed
for the occasion. Nice shade on you," he added, nodding with approval. He
stepped up to her, putting a finger on the beaded work of her collar and
tracing the design. His smile deepened and his silver eyes gleamed. "A
combined effort, if I do not mistake the fine Italianate touches of Aisling and
my sister." '
Yana
swallowed, unaccustomed to being complimented on her appearance and
inordinately pleased that Scan had. "They were very good to get it
finished in time for the latchkay."
"Nothing
Sinead likes better than a race against time," he said with a second
cryptic smile. The intentness of his gaze reminded her of Sinead's regard
across their trapping campfire.
"You-you
should have seen Bunny's face when I gave her the blouse they made for
her," Yana said, knowing she was babbling. She reached for her parka,
which Sean took from her suddenly nerveless fingers and held for her. Feeling
slightly foolish, she turned, shooting her arms out for the sleeves. Deftly he
slipped the bulky parka up and onto her shoulders, settling it with a little
flick of his hands across her shoulders. Then his fingers brushed the nape of
her neck and she had to suppress a convulsive shudder. The memory of their
hot-spring interlude flooded her, and she hoped she wasn't blushing. So she
flipped her hood up, pressed shut the parka fastenings, all with her back to
him, before she jammed her hands into her gloves and collected the bean pot.
Turning resolutely, she smiled at him, just as if she hadn't gone through all
kinds of mental acrobatics over the simple act of his helping her into her
coat.
"Let's
go. My debut awaits!"
"I
hear the boy's alter-parent is on his way down. Good idea," he said as
they stepped into the well-rutted roadway.
There
were folks behind and in front of them, and every house had lights on to
illuminate the way to the hall. Yana hadn't appreciated just how many people
lived in and around the village.
"Is
everyone on Petaybee here?" she asked, trying to estimate attendance from
the steady traffic and the numbers of sleds already parked in front of the
hall.
"Everyone
who matters to Petaybee," he answered, grinning at her.
She
mulled that over. "Why should I matter to Petaybee?" she finally
asked.
"Why
shouldn't you?"
She
wanted him to explain that remark and to stop being so cryptic, but before she
could speak, someone hailed him from a passing sled. He cupped her arm in his,
shielding her from the snow spray, as he called a cheery reply. Then they had
to pick their way around sleds and sled dogs, careful not to tread on animals
half-buried in the lazy snow that was adding new depth to the old.
They
could hear the happy noise of many cheerful voices, the scrape of fiddles, the
wheeze of an accordion, the tootle of a tin whistle, the bass thrum of a
bodhran as they reached the front door. Light flared out onto the sawdust that
coated the well-trodden snow as the door opened, letting out a puff of warmed
air, redolent of leather, clean linen, and herbal scents.
As soon
as Sean was identified, he was absorbed into a welcoming group that effectively
divorced him from Yana. She shrugged, impressed by his popularity, as she
hauled off her outerwear and tried to find a spare hook on the line down the
left-hand wall. She gave up and tossed her parka onto the growing pile in the
corner, then slid out of her boots and tied their drawstrings together before
setting them down beside the pile.
An arm
snaked around her waist and she was pulled into a tight embrace. She was about
to struggle when she realized it was Sean. Then she was guided out and onto the
dance floor and found herself, willy-nilly, pumped about in an energetic polka
by her grinning partner.
Those
on the sidelines seemed determined to encourage him to grander feats of speed
and agility. She clung for dear life to his shoulder and his guiding hand as
the room swirled in dizzying circles about her. Three or four weeks earlier she
would have been coughing uncontrollably after the first turn about the room,
but now she didn't even feel the need to reach for Clodagh's cough medicine.
She was breathless, of course, but it was with the sheer momentum of the dance
as she was swept away in Scan's arms while other dancers careered around them.
She had better not have a coughing fit here. She could be accidentally stomped
to death if she lost her footing! But it was all very exciting. She had
never-not even when Bry was being extra sociable-danced quite this
uninhibitedly. It was unbelievably exhilarating-dancing with a whirlwind. She
didn't know how Sean kept his balance, much less how he kept dancing so
lightly, and yet she who, a mere five weeks before, had barely been able to
walk without doubling over with lung spasms could now-almost-keep up with him.
Whether it was due to the romance of the moment or the beneficial effects of
Clodagh's cough medicine she didn't know, but she loved it.
The
dance stopped only when the musicians needed to catch their breaths and moisten
their throats. Weak and breathless, Yana was obliged to hang on to Sean for
fear of falling, and she shivered with reaction to the closeness of the hard,
strong body that supported her, and the hands that clasped her body with a
touch that sent peculiar ripples up and down her arms and legs. She knew she
should pull free and didn't want to-not in this lifetime.
Sweat
was trickling down her face by then, and she was afraid if she didn't attend to
that she would disgust her partner. Except, just then, he laid an equally moist
cheek against hers and laughed in her ear.
"You
offworlders sure can rob a body of breath with your dancing!" he said.
"Me?"
she exclaimed in amused outrage, and pushed back to be sure he was teasing her.
His
silver eyes gleamed with mischief, and he pulled her back to him, leading her
off the floor toward the immense bowl of punch, which no doubt consisted
largely of Clodagh's blur-maker. Yana didn't care what was in the punch: she
would welcome the moisture to unparch her throat. Fastidiously, she found her
one cloth handkerchief and blotted the sweat on her face. Sean was likewise
engaged, nodding and grinning at folks as he released her to get them two full
cups.
"This
is perfect," she said, after rolling the drink around in her mouth.
Scan's
arm around her waist pulled her close against him. "Helps the nervous
performer," he murmured in her ear.
"You
had to remind me?" she demanded in a mock-accusatory tone. She had managed
to forget that upcoming ordeal.
"Stick
with me, babe," he answered in a mock-gruff voice, "and you won't
need to worry!"
"You
intend to get me suitably drunk?"
"No
one gets drunk on Clodagh's punch," he replied with fake indignation,
adding with another wicked leer, "but you'll be so blurred it won't
matter."
"Here's
to that," she said, and chugalugged the rest of the cup. He took it from
her hand and passed it to the lady serving to be refilled.
"Hey,
too much of this and I'll forget the words," Yana protested.
Sean
shook his head, handing her the cup. "Some words you don't forget, Yanaba."
He laid his fingers lightly on her shirt above her heart. "Some words come
from there and, once spoken, can't be forgotten."
She
gave him a long look, awash with a few unblurred anxieties, like why he had
insisted in the first place, why she had let him in the second-and in the
third, should she go through with it?
"Have
you placed your bet yet?" he asked, pointing to the breakup board and the
knot of people about it. Someone had just chalked in a mark. Scan grinned.
"Tolubi's out by two days and six hours."
"How
d'you figure that?" Yana regarded him suspiciously.
He gave
an indifferent shrug. "I'm not allowed to bet I've been right so
often."
"Can
I?" '
Sean
gazed steadily at her. "You could. But, knowing that I'm always right,
would you?"
Yana
returned his gaze. "If you're always right, I'd be taking an unfair
advantage."
"You
could still place a bet." His tone was bland and his eyes lazy.
"A
sure thing's not a bet," she said. "And I'm not a betting woman
anyhow." She gave him a droll smile. "I always lose, and I wouldn't
want to spoil your record."
Sean
laughed at that, his eyes twinkling, and she knew her response had pleased him.
"What
would my prize have been?" she asked.
"Don't
know what it is this year," he replied. "Usually credit at the
company store, or pups, if there're some good ones due in the spring
whelpings."
The
music started up again, a two-step, and before she could protest, Sean had her
out in the middle of the floor dancing with him, one strong arm clipping her
waist so that she couldn't duck away, the other hand with fingers inextricably
laced around hers.
She had
time during that dance to see the crowd, standing and sitting around the big
hall, and she wondered if the entire "native" population of Petaybee
had somehow managed to assemble in this one spot. Kids raced about the edges of
the dance floor, tripping over feet, howling with hurt and being comforted by
whoever picked them up and dusted them off; babies were traded off as dancing
partners were claimed. Little girls danced with their grandfathers and teenaged
boys asked their aunties and grandmothers to dance or showed the steps to
smaller cousins; a few of the older kids, looking self-conscious, waited to be
asked to dance by a member of their peer group, but often little girls and
grown women danced together, as did some of the men and boys- whoever didn't
have a partner danced with any other available body.
Yana
spotted Bunny, who was looking remarkably lovely and feminine, in close
conversation with Diego near the food table: Diego had already started to munch
on a meatroll, and Bunny was nibbling on a hunk of something in one hand.
Sean
was an excellent dancer, possibly the best she had ever been partnered with,
and for once her feet seemed to know which way to go. She dreaded stepping on
his toes, especially as he had discarded his heavy boots and was wearing some
beautifully beaded moccasins.
Between
dances, Sean kept her mug full and piloted her about the hall as he met and
exchanged some of his cryptic remarks to men and women.
"Who
are these folks?" she asked in his ear as he maneuvered her to yet another
couple.
"The
parents of the Bremport victims," he said.
"What
the frag! That's unfair, Sean." She tried to pull free, but his grip was
implacable.
"Why?
They know you're going to sing. They've wanted to meet you. They have. You're
their last link with their dead."
"Oh,
frag it! That's not fair. To me, Sean."
"Yes,
it is, because now you'll know which faces to look for when you're
singing."
"Is
that why you're attached to me like a limpet?" she asked bitterly.
"So I can't escape this ordeal?"
"It
won't be an ordeal for you, Yanaba, but a release," he said softly and
with such great tenderness that she felt weak-kneed. Damn Clodagh. She was
blurring.
About
then, she noticed that Bunny and Diego had not once parted company.
"Yes,
Diego'll sing, too. You aren't the only one," Scan said, observing the
direction of her interest. Then he chuckled. "Will the miserable like some
company?" He began to propel her in their direction.
Some
quality of the look with which Bunny was favoring Diego made Yana dig her heels
in. "No, Scan, we won't interrupt them."
"No."
Scan looked at the young pair, his mobile face thoughtful. "No, I don't
think we will. Bunny's handling him like a trooper."
"Handling
him?" Yana bristled.
Scan
shrugged, his expression bland. "Keeping him company, if you like. You
know more people here than he does."
Just
then Sinead and Aisling danced up to them, Sinead leading, as always. Both wore
superb leather shirts, Aisling white, Sinead buff, with elaborate decorations
which were so tasteful that jewels could not have been better displayed.
"Enjoying
yourselves?" Sinead asked, her expression bland, but the slightly arch
tone of her voice seemed to convey some hidden message evidently intended for
Sean.
"Now
that you mention it, I am," Sean said, equally archly, locking gazes with
Sinead. "How about you, Yana?"
"Oh,
I am, indeed I am," she replied. Sinead nodded and kept walking.
"What's
up with your sister?" Yana asked Scan, as he whirled her in a pirouette to
the other side of the room.
"Don't
let her worry you for a single minute," he said.
She
caught an odd twitch to his mouth, a twitch of minor irritation, she thought.
Well, sisters had been irritants to brothers since the worlds began.
About
the time she was beginning to wonder if the music makers had been trading off
with others who looked identical to keep up such an amazing barrage of dance
tunes and tempos, the current ones put down their instruments and left the
little stage.
Somehow
Scan had timed it so that he and Yana were at the seemingly bottomless punch
bowl as the last note died away. He pressed yet another cup into her hand.
"I'll
be too blurred to sing," she said, trying to put it down.
"Drink
it. You're on."
With
what seemed to her like unceremonious haste, he then guided her across the
floor to the platform.
"No,
no, Sean," she protested, noticing herself to be the center of attention.
In the sudden way these people had, everyone was settling into a quiet mode all
around the room as Sean led her inexorably to the stage. Even the children were
quiet, the babies remarkably all asleep.
"Yes,
yes, Yana."
"Why
me?" she protested, but her feet seemed willing to follow Sean.
"You're
the hero."
She
tried to wrench her arm free of his grasp, but his fingers merely tightened,
and then she was stumbling onto the box that was the step up to the platform.
She stood there, miserably aware of being the focus of so many eyes, so much
unwarranted attention, of her coming ordeal. How could anything she said, or
sang, help ease their losses?
Scan
held up both arms and what little noise there was died completely.
"This
is Major Yanaba Maddock," he announced, turning slowly to take in everyone
patiently waiting. "You all know her. She will sing." Then, with an
oddly formal bow, he gestured for Yana to sit on the single chair that was now
centered on the stage.
She
sank limply to the chair, feeling the hard seat grind into her tailbone. Sing?
She was supposed to sing now?
A soft
beat registered, and she saw Scan, the bodhran in one hand, gently fingering
sound from the skin. She blinked and suddenly began the chant that had come to
her. She hadn't rehearsed it since that day, weeks before, when Scan had coaxed
the words from her. But they were there, on her tongue, and in the proper
order, in the precise rhythm of the drumbeat, and her voice was saying them.
She was unaware of anything else because her mind was back there, in Bremport for
those few surrealistically macabre and devastatingly helpless and horrible
minutes, and she wondered that she could enunciate any words for the pain in
her chest, the constriction in her throat, and the unwept tears that pressed
against her eyelids. She wished she were even more blurred than she knew she
had to be, to let go like this. To perform, as if by rote, any duties that had
not been drill-inspired over centuries of practice.
She
heard, from a distance, her own voice, and she had never realized she could
sound like that: a husky rich contralto that dipped and rose. She wasn't really
aware of what she was singing until she got to the final lines.
"I
was sent here to die, too, here where the snows live The waters live, the
animals and the trees live, And you."
As the
last of that vowel drifted into nothingness, she bowed her head, tears
streaming down her cheeks and falling into her hands. She couldn't move and
didn't know what she was supposed to do next. Maybe Scan would liberate her.
Then a
pair of work-roughened hands slid across hers, pressed gently, and withdrew
only to be replaced by another set of hands. By the third pair she looked up,
for their touch was like a benison, healing her grief, staunching her tears.
She could even smile as yet another set of parents laid hands on hers to mutely
offer their appreciation. Seeing the tears in their eyes-tears of an odd sort
of sublimated sorrowing-hers began to ease, along with the constriction in her
chest, the tight bands about her heart.
The little
ceremony completed, Scan collected her and brought her wordlessly to Clodagh's
bowl, where the woman herself ladled a cup for her and solemnly inclined her
head in a regal bow of approval as the cup was handed from Clodagh to Sean and
then to Yana.
Then
Sean put his arm about her shoulders and drew her to sit in a space that
magically appeared on a bench against the wall. His shoulder touched hers, his
hip and thigh brushed hers. She felt drained but exultant, no longer sad but
infinitely relieved. She sipped the punch, keeping her head down, unwilling to
make eye contact with anyone as she savored what was, as Sean had said, a
healing.
The
little susurrus of soft voices, expectant, made her look up to see Bunny
leading Diego to the stage.
"This
is Diego Metaxos," Bunny said, arms above her head and turning around
slowly to the audience just as Sean had done. "He must sing."
Yana
hoped that she had shown as much composure as Diego did. He sat down with more
grace than she had, his hands splay-fingered on his knees.
"I
am new come, in storm, here. , A storm of heart and mind and soul. I sought and
found storm with Lavelle She saved me when the sled crashed down. With the heat
of her body she saved me. With the wit of her mind she saved my father, too.
Saved me to see the cavern that all say I didn't see."
His
tone was rich in irony and his tenor young and surprisingly vibrant though Yana
suspected he had never sung before audience either.
"But
I saw the caverns and the water and the carving of wind and water.
I saw
the gleaming snow, like jeweled cloth.
I saw
the branches waving, the water talking,
The ice
answering, the snow laughing.
I saw
The animals of water and earth and they were talking, too.
They
were kind to me and answered all my questions
But I
do not know what questions I asked.
I do
not know what answers I heard.
I know
the cavern, the branches, the talking water,
The
speaking ice and the laughing snow. I know
That
you know it, too. So hear my song
And
believe me. For I have seen what you have seen.
And I
am changed. Hear my song. Believe me."
He
threw his head back as his last passionate note died away, and threw out his
arms, entreating their response.
It
began as a very low murmur of approval, growing as more folk entered the
answering chorus, as more people began to drum their feet on the floor, as a
crescendo of sound beat on Yana's ears until she almost put her hands over
them. But if she had, she would not have heard the answer.
"We
believe! We believe! We believe!"
She had
jumped up and was shouting along with everyone else. Because she could not
doubt the boy. Everyone, at the same instant, swarmed across the floor toward
him. Bunny was on the platform, hugging him, and suddenly he was crying, with
the same sense of relief that Yana knew she had just felt.
Singing
the Inuit way had much to recommend it.
Yana
was still caught up in the emotion surrounding Diego's song when a voice spoke
in her ear. "Now that was very moving."
The
voice belonged to Torkel Fiske, who prevented her from turning with a light
touch on her shoulders. Sean was no longer beside her. "Very touching. I'm
so glad I convinced Giancarlo to let the boy come here today. Obviously he
needed to vent his emotions and I do find it curious that when he insists here,
in his poetic mode, that the nonsense his father has been babbling was real,
the villagers agree with him."
"Maybe,"
Yana replied in a sardonic tone, "that's because the villagers are more
observant than the company."
"Oh,
but the villagers are the company, too. Perhaps a branch that's had
insufficient attention in the past."
"Ooh,
that sounds ominous," she said as lightly as she could.
"Maybe
a little prophetic," he admitted, breathing into her hair. "I hope
nobody will mind that I came. I just had to see for myself about this party you
and Diego were so excited about. Could I talk you into a dance, or are you
able?"
"I
seem to be managing," she said, looking around for Sean. "And there's
no dance music playing," she pointed out, feeling ridiculous, standing
there in her homemade blouse, uniform pants and stocking feet like something
out of a gothic novel. "Look, Torkel," she said, shaking off his
hands to turn in his arms. "You've been a godsend and I'm very glad to see
you, and I'm flattered by your interest. Under ordinary circumstances I'd be
very tempted, but, well . . ."
"Oho!"
he said, his eyes smiling down at her while his mouth twisted with mock
disappointment. "I'm not the only one to appreciate you, huh? I was hoping
the locals would be too backward to notice. My estimation of this place
increases by the minute."
Thank
God his ego was strong enough that she didn't have to worry about losing his
friendship-and his assistance-by declining to play. She kissed his cheek.
"Asshole."
He
prolonged the contact with a hug that ended with sagged shoulders. "Oh
well, so much for the reasons I was looking forward to coming."
About
that time Aisling approached them and held out her arms for a hug, too, giving
Yana a graceful way to extricate herself from Torkel. "Yana, I just had to
tell you how beautiful your song was, how much it meant to me and everybody
else."
"Thanks,
Aisling. And thanks again for making this gorgeous blouse."
Aisling
flushed with pleasure. "That's okay. It looks beautiful." She glanced
at Torkel inquisitively and with just a tad of something Yana took to be-well,
not hostility, but suspicion.
"This
is an old shipmate of mine, Aisling, Captain Torkel Fiske. He arranged for me
to get the material and for Diego to be here today."
"Oh,
that was real nice of you, Captain," Aisling said, sticking out a
long-fingered hand for him to shake. Torkel, typically, raised it to his lips
instead.
"Hey,
Yana." Sinead appeared behind her partner and stuck her hand out to
Torkel, too. "Tell this guy for me that Aisling and I share
everything," she said.
Again,
the tone was friendly but the undercurrents were guarded and, in this case,
more markedly hostile-but not because Torkel was kissing Aisling's hand. Yana
thought perhaps Sinead might be being possessive of her on Scan's behalf.
"Torkel,
Sinead Shongili."
The two
regarded each other like fencers assessing each other's strengths; then he
kissed Sinead's hand, after which she surprised him by kissing his, then licking
her lips.
"Um,
hairy knuckles. My dad had hairy knuckles."
"I
like her," Torkel said, turning to Yana and pointing to Sinead.
"Me,
too," Aisling said, putting her arm around Sinead's shoulders.
"Listen,"
Torkel said confidingly, taking in not only Yana but Aisling and Sinead,
"maybe you women can help me with something I've got to do which is going
to be real hard. Maybe you'd even know if I ought to do it now or wait until
this party is over."
"Sure,
Torkel," Aisling said.
"What's
the matter, man?" Sinead asked.
"I
need to find out who is next of kin to a woman named Lavelle Maloney."
"Lavelle!"
Sinead said. "Has something happened to her? Where is she?"
Torkel
gritted his teeth and patted the open air with his hand in a calming gesture.
"I really think I should tell the next of kin before I tell anybody else,
don't you? But, well, I think they'll need your support when I've finished
talking to them."
"Oh,
no . . ." Aisling said.
Sinead
touched her partner's forearm gently. "Why don't you go tell Clodagh and
Scan they're needed and I'll take Torkel and Yana to get Liam." To Torkel
she said, "Lavelle's husband has been sick a long time. He didn't come
today. We'll get her boy Liam to come with us back to her house to tell his da.
Her daughter lives at Tanana Bay, and her other son is in the Space Corps,
stationed on Mukerjee Three."
Yana
saw Scan then, one arm around Bunny and the other around Diego, hording the
kids toward her, speaking earnestly to Diego. Close behind him came Clodagh,
and Sinead stopped as she met them.
Clodagh
held up her hand and twiddled her fingers impatiently, as if staving off
Sinead's news. Then she, too, headed toward Yana and Torkel.
She
knows, Yana thought as Clodagh sailed toward them like a liner through an
asteroid belt. She already knows. But how?
Torkel
was intercepting Sean and the kids. "Diego, son, you have great
talent," he said.
Torkel
looked so handsome and fatherly congratulating Diego, Yana thought. He had
wisely chosen not to wear a uniform, despite the apparently official nature of
his visit. He wore instead a heavy sweater patterned with moss green, rust, and
cream that set off his hair and eyes to good advantage, and a pair of
rust-colored woolen trousers. He was bigger than Sean, she saw, and more stockily
built, and of course their coloring was very different; one russet, the other
silver, like fire and ice. Except, she remembered with an inward blush, there
had been nothing icy about Sean Shongili thus far in their acquaintance.
"Sean,"
Sinead was saying, "this man is here because something has happened to
Lavelle."
Sean
squeezed his eyes shut and his lips thinned with pain, but that was nothing
compared to Diego's reaction.
"What?
What's happened to her?" the boy demanded of Torkel, his eyes blazing and
his fists clenched. "What did you dorks do to her?"
Torkel
looked genuinely pained. "Nothing, son. We're not sure what happened, and
won't know until we get the autopsy report."
Sean's
head snapped up. "Autopsy?"
"I
take it she is dead then?" Sinead drawled with a contemptuous roll of her
eyes.
Torkel
blew a deep and frustrated sigh. "Please. Let's tell the relatives
first."
"Sinead,"
Clodagh said softly, and the woman plunged into the crowd.
Diego,
who at first had seemed moderately pleased to see Torkel, suddenly blew a
gasket. "Goddamn you guys, you killed her!" he cried. Sean had hold
of him, which was a good thing, because Diego was lunging for the captain and
spitting with anger. "You guys just kept after her and kept after her and
wouldn't believe her or us or anybody. So you fraggin' tortured her to death or
something! Damn you. Why couldn't you let her alone? Why can't you let us all
alone? You don't know the truth when you hear it. She told you what happened.
Dad and I told you what happened, and you beat her up because you didn't
believe her and she died."
"No,
son, I-"
"If
you didn't have my dad there, I'd never go back to that place. Never! Let us
go. You're too dumb to-"
Clodagh
was interrupting him with soothing noises, but she didn't really know the boy.
Neither
did Yana, but she knew the reaction. The boy had simply had one too many
profound traumas in a short space of time. His singing had been a highly
emotional probing for him, opening a deep wound for healing. Before the healing
could take place, Torkel's revelation had assaulted him with a new pain on top
of the other.
"Metaxos,
listen to me," she said in a calm but very firm voice. "We can find
out the truth. There'll be a report. They'll return her body. I'll go back with
you to SpaceBase personally and find out what happened if I have to go retrieve
Lavelle myself."
Diego
jerked his head to turn his scaring glare on her. "You're one of them. How
can 1 trust you?"
"Oh,
Diego, come on," Bunny said.
Just
then Sinead arrived with a stony-faced young man in low. "Captain Fiske,
this is Liam Maloney, Lavelle's son."
"My
mum's dead, isn't she?" Liam asked Torkel. In contrast to Diego, Liam
seemed outwardly very calm. Almost as if he'd been expecting this, Yana
thought.
"Well,
yes. I wanted to tell you and your father together."
"No
offense, Captain, but I don't think Dad wants to see any of you people right
now. I'll tell him." He turned to Clodagh, who put her arm around him as
if he were still a baby, and as they moved away, he buried his head against her
massive breast.
"Okay,
Captain, now that you've done your duty, I think the rest of us need to know
what's going on," Scan said.
"Come
on back to my place," Yana said quickly, including Scan, Bunny, Diego,
Sinead, and Aisling in her invitation and finally, with a sympathetic glance at
Torkel, adding, "I'll make us some real coffee."
Chapter
10
How did
she die?" Scan asked.
"We
can't be sure yet. The autopsy report 'wasn't in when I left SpaceBase,"
Torkel said. "Probably delayed effects of exposure. Acted like respiratory
failure, apparently. The medic suspected she may have frostbitten her lungs
while she was out there and nobody realized it until she had already been
transferred via shuttle to headquarters. The old man isn't doing so hot either,
although the girl, Brit, doesn't seem to be suffering any ill effects. They're
to be transferred to Andromeda medical facility for further observation."
"Don't,"
Scan said. "Send them back here. Keep them at SpaceBase if you have to,
but they will soon sicken and die if you send them offplanet. They're adapted
to this planet and these conditions. They'll die elsewhere. Bring them
back."
"I'm
not sure I can do that," Torkel said, just a hint of belligerence creeping
into his voice. He didn't say it, but Yana could feel the resentment building
in him: here he was trying to be such a great guy and let the locals in on what
was happening, and they tried to tell him how to do his job.
"Why
not?" Diego demanded angrily. "Are you having too much fun
questioning them?"
Torkel
heaved an exasperated sigh. "Son, I'm trying to be patient with you
because I understand how upset you must be about your father. Your dad's
partner is on the way down to look after you and should be arriving on one of
the first troop shuttles. But I've had about enough crap out of you. You've
been raised by Intergal. Surely you know that we don't use rough stuff on our
own people . . ."
He
appealed to Yana, but she said nothing. The terrorists from Bremer had been
interrogated. They had, at one time, been Intergal's own people.
Sinead
said diplomatically, "It's just that we're a very close-knit community
here, Captain Fiske. People will worry about Sigdhu and Brit even more now with
what's happened to Lavelle. I'm not saying it was the company's fault, but you
know, we're used to a different kind of atmosphere here than what you have on
the stations and ships. Our air is fresh, even if it's cold, not endlessly
reprocessed."
"Glad
you enjoy it," Torkel said with an ironic lift of his eyebrow. "The
company provided all of the amenities of this planet."
"We
need our own back here on the surface, man," Scan said, and Yana realized
that he was at a disadvantage not knowing who Torkel was. "My family has
been accommodating the species of this planet to its peculiarities for four
generations now and between you and me, the company hasn't provided a lot of
what's here. There are major adaptation problems for our people . . ."
"And
you are, sir?" Torkel asked politely, but with an edge in his voice to
match the one in Sean's. They stood across the room from each other, each with
his feet spread and his arms poised, like a pair of gunfighters squaring off. •
The
cat, which had been lounging on the middle of the table washing its underside,
suddenly leapt up, sprang to the door, and meowed urgently to go out. Yana
crossed between the men to open the door, and when she turned back, they had
relaxed so that they were merely glaring at each other, but no longer
posturing. She stepped quickly between them, gesturing to each to come closer.
"Captain
Torkel Fiske, descendant of the terraforming Fiskes, this is Sean Shongili,
descendant of the genetic-engineering Shongilis," she said quickly, as if
officiating at a hailing party for newly recruited officers. "You guys
want to go to opposite corners and come out flashing credentials?"
They
didn't seem to hear her for a moment; then Torkel suddenly grinned fondly at
her and reached out to squeeze her shoulder.
"Trust
you to try to defuse a situation, Yana. God, I've missed you. Shongili, I am
actually extremely pleased to meet you. Excuse me if I came on a little strong,
but we were all shocked by that poor woman's death when she had been so
instrumental in saving young Diego here and his father."
"I
think I can help, Torkel," Yana intervened again. "Let me see that
autopsy report when it comes in. And please, I think there's been enough
evidence gathered so far to show that Petaybee is not exactly what the company
ordered, and Sean may be right about the adaptive failures."
Torkel
shook his head. "That doesn't make much sense, Yana, when half the
existing Intergal force was recruited from Petaybeans originally."
Yana
shrugged and held out a cup of coffee, wishing she had acquired more cups from
the BX. He took the cup in one hand, and then took her hand in his other.
"The
recruits are young, Captain," Sean said. "Their growing isn't over,
nor full maturation reached when they leave Petaybee to join Intergal."
"That's
as may be, Shongili. Yana, we'll talk about this later. I can see now that
everybody's too upset to listen to reason."
"I
can take you and Diego back, sir," Bunny volunteered. Yana noticed that
her young friend had very wisely kept her mouth shut throughout the
conversation, retaining an enviably neutral-at least as far as Torkel was
concerned-stance.
"Thanks,
young lady, but 1 brought my own," Torkel said. He turned to Diego as if
to say something, but Diego's black scowl made him think better of it.
They
were pulling on winter gear when there was a knock at the door. Yana opened it,
and there was the cat, sitting squarely in the middle of the doorstep, and
Clodagh, in only a light jacket, stocking cap, and knitted scarf, right behind.
"I'm
glad I caught you, Captain, Diego," she said, with a slightly softer look
at the boy. "Adak just got a message in and brought it to the latchkay
looking for you. Dr. Margolies is at SpaceBase now."
Torkel
nodded his thanks and started to turn to Diego, but Clodagh stopped him.
"Captain,
I was thinking maybe, you know, if your doctors think Dr. Metaxos won't get any
better, maybe he and Diego could come here to live with us? Dr. Margolies, too,
if the company wanted to station him here. Maybe he could do the work you need
better if he lived with us?"
Yana
wondered what Clodagh was thinking of. She knew the villagers had responded
well to Diego at the latchkay, but in many close-knit communities, Dr. Metaxos
would have been held indirectly responsible for Lavelle's death. Maybe these
people were just unusually generous, but she couldn't imagine they would
welcome a known company agent on the premises. On the other hand, theoretically
Scan was a company man, too.
Torkel
looked as flummoxed as she was by Clodagh's offer and said with his customary
charm, "That's very kind of you people, and I'll certainly suggest it to
Dr. Margolies and to Colonel Giancarlo. It might indeed be convenient to have
Dr. Margolies based here in Kilcoole, at least for the time being, and good for
young Diego to be around people his own age again. At least until the company
comes up with some permanent solution for his problem."
Clodagh
shrugged. "It's no problem to us, Captain. You might not realize it, but
what happened to Dr. Metaxos has happened to quite a lot of people on Petaybee.
This planet can be kinda hard on certain folks."
"Thank
you for your concern, ma'am."
Yana
had her coat on before he stepped a foot out the door. Hooking her arm in his,
she said, "Tell you what, Torkel. How 'bout if Bunny takes Diego back to
base and I keep you company on the way out and ride back with her?"
"I'd
like nothing better," he said.
With
somewhat forced heartiness Scan said, "Well, back to the latchkay for the
rest of us. Bunka, make sure you girls are back in time for the night chants.
Major Maddock will want to hear those."
For
someone who had appeared so ardent earlier, Torkel Fiske was strangely silent
during much of their two-hour snocle ride to SpaceBase. The river trail was
wide and flat, streaks of clear ice showing black where the snow had drifted
away, the moons gleaming white, mirroring the planet's surface. As the snocle
cleared the trees and approached SpaceBase, white, blue, and red lights in the
sky shot skyward or fell like multicolored snowflakes toward the landing pads.
"Looks
like Kilcoole's not the only place there's a party going on," Yana said
jokingly to Torkel.
"Hmm,"
he said, and in the closeness of the warmed air in the snocle, she could smell
the musky cologne he wore. The man who has everything, she thought as she
admired his classically handsome profile. She ought to be more moved, she told
herself. She really ought.
"Yana?
I thought you were medically retired here. Yet there doesn't really seem to be
anything wrong with you that 1 can detect. Has it occurred to you that you
needn't cut your career so short? I could arrange for light duty for a while,
until you get back in the swing of things."
"What
kind of light duty did you have in mind, Torkel? To tell you the truth, it's
not bad here."
He
snorted. "You could have fooled me. But actually, I thought maybe as long
as you were here and you have the rank and the 'in' with the people, you could
relieve Giancarlo. He's really blown it by letting that woman die while she was
offplanet. It's that kind of stupidity that triggered the Bremport
massacre."
"You've
been reading my mail on that one," she said. "That guy has zero
finesse."
"Exactly.
Now, I don't have to tell you that at times you need a pretty heavy whip hand
if you're going to accomplish a mission that people may not understand the
rationale behind, or that may cause some temporary inconvenience. People hate
change. But I think someone who already gets along with them ..."
"I
see," she said. And she did. Someone who already got along with them was
in a better position to betray their trust and kindness. Still, she might be
able to help ease any transitions, which would not be a concern of Giancarlo's.
"And
we could work together again. I need a strong superior officer to keep me on
the right track, you know," he said, reaching over and squeezing her knee.
"Hoo
boy, you were serious about that whip-hand business, weren't you?"
He was
negotiator enough to know when to drop the subject and give her time to think
about it, which she did as they slid into SpaceBase, the lights from the
landing and departing shuttles spreading multicolored pools across the snow for
the miles surrounding the base.
While a
holiday air had prevailed at Kilcoole, it was definitely business
even-more-than-usual at SpaceBase, where parka-clad soldiers scurried from the
landing pads to a row of prefab warehouses that had not been there on Yana's
previous visit. In fact, other troops were still assembling three more of the
structures, while heavy machinery moved crates into the existing buildings.
"What's
all this?" Yana asked. "Looks like an invasion."
"Watch
your mouth," Torkel said, "if you want to be a positive influence for
change. This is the expeditionary force I told you about. We're using SpaceBase
as a supply depot for this continent. My father will be coming down later to
supervise the more technical aspects of the operation but basically, from here,
we'll launch probes and set up base camps close to the points we've identified
from space as having the greatest potential for the resources we're
seeking."
"Is
this going on planetwide?"
"Not
at the moment. Look, love, I can't say any more unless you choose to renew your
active-duty status and your security clearance, okay? So think about it. And,
by the way, come in for a physical so I can shove your status-change papers
through in a hurry. You look pretty good for someone with banjaxed lungs and a
medical discharge."
"It's
all this clean air and country living," she said breezily.
"Great,"
he said, with a touch of grimness. "But don't be surprised if there are
more traffic jams than usual around quaint and charming Kilcoole in the near
future."
He
plowed into an infirmary parking place willy-nilly and was out of the snocle
and around to open the door for her before she could undo her seat belt.
Bunny's snocle was already there, and she and Diego looked to be engrossed in
urgent dialogue inside the vehicle.
"Can
I meet Margolies without a security clearance?" Yana asked sweetly.
"Just so 1 can reassure the populace as to Diego's family situation?"
"Of
course," Torkel said. "I imagine he'll be in visiting Metaxos."
Bunny
and Diego emerged, looking expectantly in their direction.
"We
might as well form a welcoming committee," Torkel said with an overly
hearty grin at the kids. "Come on."
Diego
spotted Steve Margolies the moment they walked into the infirmary. He sprinted
the length of the hall to embrace the older man, heedless of the presence of
the medics, Torkel, Bunny, Yana, and even that of his father, lying on a
hospital bed open-eyed and propped into an upright position with pillows. The
room had only three other patients, and the ward on the opposite end of the
corridor showed an unbroken line of empty beds.
Margolies,
balding, bearded, and not quite portly, looked as glad to see Diego as the boy
did him. "I came as quickly as I could, Diego," he said.
"I
knew you would, Steve. I knew it."
Torkel
stuck out his hand. "Torkel Fiske, Dr. Margolies. I had you sent for as
soon as I learned of you from young Diego and this lady. This is Major Yanaba
Maddock, currently retired and, uh-"
"Hi,
I'm Bunny," Bunny said, also soliciting a handshake. "I hope you and
Diego and his dad can come and live with us in the village."
"That's
very kind of you," Margolies said, startled but amiable. "But right
now I think Francisco needs the care he can get here."
"Have
you found quarters yet?" Torkel asked.
"No.
I came straight here after inprocessing."
"Well,
then, look, Colonel Giancarlo and I are going to have to have a more extensive
conversation with you later but I think right now the thing for me to do is to
go make sure you are lodged at least in the same building with Diego. Yana,
Bunny, I think we should leave this family alone, don't you?"
The
infirmary corridors were teeming with new personnel and new equipment, and the
building itself had been enlarged with newly attached modules at either end. Technicians
were feeding data to computers, and medical personnel were stocking shelves and
unpacking boxes. Yana wondered briefly why, with a half-empty infirmary, they
were adding to it. She didn't like the look of that, actually. They must be
expecting a great many more troops-and casualties.
They
said their farewells, Torkel taking leave with just a hint of a lingering look
in his eye for her as he strode off to do whatever it was he was going to do.
Which Yana had a pretty good idea was not confined to simply seeing that the
Margolies-Metaxos boys were comfy.
She and
Bunny climbed in the snocle just as he turned around and waved, and Yana waved
back until he was out of sight.
Then,
as Bunny started the engine, Yana said, "Develop a mechanical problem,
Bunny. I'm going to go back in there for a bit. If anyone challenges you, or
stops to help you, drive off and come right back on base after a few minutes. I
shouldn't be long."
Bunny
gave her a hard, measuring look, then shrugged. "Okay, but whatever you're
up to, be careful."
Yana
flipped her an abbreviated salute and headed into the clinic.
For the
first time since her release, Yana felt fortunate to have spent so long in a
large medical facility. She walked back in as if she knew exactly where she was
going. Purposefully, she pushed back thoughts of what would happen if she was
discovered and her presence in the facility officially queried: Torkel might
not even be able, much less wish to, bail her out, and she could easily lose
her pension with Integral and face time in a detention center. But right now
was the best time for her to obtain a copy of Lavelle's autopsy-before anyone
thought to doctor it up for official reasons.
She
entered the Staff Only lounge, which was as empty as it was bound to be with so
much activity going on outside, pulled off her new blouse, and hung it on a
hook beneath a patient gown. Pulling on a scrub top and a paper cap, and paper
shoes in place of her cold-weather boots, she hung a surgical mask around her
chin and, taking a deep breath-without a hint of a cough, she noted
distantly-to ease the tension in her guts, padded briskly back down the hall.
At
Andromeda, as at most company infirmaries, convalescing patients did routine,
nondemanding chores to save the professional staff work. Even officers did it,
and were glad of it, for it helped stave off the boredom of being separated
from their own work and their own lives. During her own convalescence, Yana had
spent considerable time helping in medical records, requesting and transmitting
data from central files. She could at least see if the autopsy had been
performed on Lavelle yet-and if it had become a classified file or not.
She
walked straight into the vacant ward opposite the one containing Diego's
father, careful to keep her back to the boy and his guardian, and sat out of
sight, around the corner, at the nursing-station computer. She typed in the
access code she remembered from her days in the hospital-no longer than six
weeks ago, which seemed incredible, considering how well she felt and how far
she had come. She breathed a sigh of relief as the code worked. In a closed
system, where for the most part only company troops and employees had access to
the facility, the need for security was not as tight as it would have been on a
world containing a variety of corporate or military entities. On shipboard,
space station, or wholly owned planetary subsidiary, Inter-gal was the only
game in town.
Then
the machine purred along for a moment and she punched in AUTOPSY REPORT, and
suddenly the screen filled with data. She hit PRINT, scanning while the
document printed.
The
lungs had been congested, so Lavelle had indeed had pneumonia, but that was not
listed as cause of death. Her immune system had suddenly and fatally collapsed,
unable to cope with half a dozen systemic viral infections. The autopsy noted
that this alone was surprising, since tissue samples-muscle, blood, skin, and
bone marrow-all indicated that she had been in the physical shape of a woman
half her chronological age. Also, a small inexplicable node had attached to the
medulla oblongata. That was strange enough, but the autopsy report also cited
the presence of an unusually large and highly developed lump of "brown
fat" weighing an astonishing 502 grams: its blood vessels had ruptured. A
footnote by the examining physician explained that while two hundred grams of
brown fat were normally present in human babies at birth-to ensure NSHP,
nonshivering heat production- the substance atrophied when babies grew big
enough to adjust their own temperatures to cold. It was odd enough to find the
brown fat active, and far odder to find it so enlarged. There was also a thin
subcutaneous layer of a dense fatty tissue. A minor mutation to protect
inhabitants against the cold? Then she remembered seeing a similar fatty layer,
thin but present, in the animals she had skinned after the trapping expedition.
Reading
on, she was vastly relieved to see that there was no sign of any external
injuries or evidence of drugs in the system that might have indicated that
Lavelle had been tortured or abused in any way during interrogation. Stuffing
the printout in her pants pocket, she shut off the computer, rose, wiped her
eyes like any machine-weary tech, and made herself shuffle back down the
corridor to the lounge to change again into her latchkay blouse before
rejoining Bunny in the snocle.
Chapter
11
How do
we know that this is for real?" Bunny asked when Yana showed the autopsy
report to Sean, 'Sinead, and Clodagh.
"It
is," Sean said unequivocally.
"Then
you know about this brown fat stuff, the node, and the anomalous fatty
layer?" Yana asked.
Sean
nodded and Clodagh's eyes glistened.
"It's
why only the young can go off Petaybee," Clodagh said.
"Their
brown fat hasn't developed the same mass that adults' have?" Yana asked.
There
was a long pause while Sean, Clodagh, and Sinead exchanged secretive, and
almost embarrassed, glances. Bunny just looked from one to the other, perplexed
and hoping to find an answer in their faces.
Finally,
Sean nodded. "Something like that, Yana. It's pretty complicated, and
frankly nobody, including me, understands all of the functions of the adaptations.
You may have noticed my research facilities for anything much beyond simple
animal husbandry are a bit limited. A lot of it the planet simply seems to do
on its own. I haven't found anything about deliberately introducing such
changes as the brown fat and the node in any of the notes my predecessors left
behind, but I do know they exist from examining the corpses of other
Petaybeans."
"I
can understand how you might not know how the changes got here or what they
consist of if you're not responsible for them, but there are still a few things
I think you can explain," Yana told him.
Had she
not grown up on space stations and ships, where humans were the dominant
life-form but by no means the only life or even the only sentient life, she
might have been a little more shocked by what they were implying, that humans
were being altered by a planet to suit itself. As it was, she was vaguely
annoyed with herself that she was reminded of old vids of aliens who took over
the bodies of innocent earthlings.
She took
a deep breath and began confronting the issues that disturbed her concerning
Lavelle's physiology. "Let me get this straight. You folks here on
Petaybee are all Earth stock, right?"
"That's
right," Clodagh said. "My ancestors were sent here from County Clare,
County Limerick, County Wicklow, and Point Barrow, Alaska. Scan's and Sinead's
are from Kerry and Dublin and northern Canada."
"You
know all that?"
"If
you'll remember right, Yana, I told you most of us can't read or write. It's
part of my job here to remember these things." Clodagh grinned. "An
old Irish profession."
"Well,
tell me this: if you're Earth stock, like me and like most of the company
corps, how come only you people can't be moved from where you were sent? I
mean, even if the young can go and the older ones can't, it hasn't always been
that way, has it? Why is that brown fat stuff affecting you now and it didn't
to begin with? Surely at first the company occasionally recruited people who
were a little more . . . mature."
It was
Scan's turn to look perplexed-and somewhat worried. "Yes, they did. But
mostly they've preferred to recruit the youngsters, and it's never seemed to do
them more harm than military service does anyone, that we know of. And you have
to understand, Yana, that our people have been adjusting to the planet and the
planet to us for a couple of hundred years now. The physical changes found in
Lavelle's body were adaptive changes to this world. Some people adapt more
readily and more completely than others-and the more exposure they have, the
longer the period they have to become accustomed to something, the greater the
chance of a profound adaptation. Lavelle was very much a woman of this planet.
She lived most of her life outdoors, she ate only what she caught or grew, like
many of us, and she was well into her fifties. Here, she was very tough. But
her body was used to cold weather, Petaybean midwinter cold, far colder even
than you've experienced so far, to clean air and pure water and real food. I'm
afraid she had lost whatever resistance she had to other conditions in the
process of becoming suited to the extremes of Petaybee. Our peculiar weather
conditions would never have killed her, but in exchange for that protection,
her body relinquished certain other immunities. Besides which, she had a very
strong emotional attachment to her home place."
"I
hardly think emotional attachment alone could have caused her death," Yana
said.
"It's
possible, Yana," Clodagh said. "It's possible. It's hard to explain
to you when you've been here such a short time but maybe when you witness the
night chants, you'll understand a little better. With Lavelle being the kind of
woman she was, I knew, Sean knew, really all of us knew, that she was as
unlikely to survive away from Petaybee as that colonel would out in the
mountains without a parka. If we'd known that they'd planned to take her
offplanet, we'd have protested, tried to stop them somehow."
"Lavelle
would have protested," Sinead said in a bitter voice, her small rough
hands knotted at her sides. "She must have told them. She didn't need to
know what her insides looked like lo know she would die offplanet."
Yana
gave a gusty sigh. "And much as 1 hate to say so, she could've told them
till the sun turned cold and they wouldn't have believed her."
"Now
they do?" Clodagh asked, her face impassive.
Yana
shook her head, in anger, frustration, and a whole lot of other conflicting and
negative emotions. She was tired. She was confused and disappointed and even
somewhat disillusioned, something she had never thought would be possible
again. This had seemed to be such a simple, happy place, and now it had a
secret. All she wanted was to get some rest.
"It's
time to go now," Sean reminded the others as he tucked his hand under
Yana's elbow. "You haven't missed the chanting, Yana. It will revive
you."
Feeling
the familiar surge of attraction for him mingle with all of the doubts, fears,
and unanswered questions rolling through her mind, she wondered if he could be
lying, if in spite of his protestations he was somehow tampering with these
people's genes so that they would never be able to leave. She had the oddest
feeling that he was definitely hiding something, and that worried her more than
any of the other secrets Petaybee held. Was Sean responsible for the problems
Giancarlo had mentioned when she had first arrived? And if these people knew
they were being changed, as some of them seemed to believe, why did they put up
with it?
Yana
regarded Sean for a long moment as his silver eyes appealed to her. Gazing up
at him, she tried to see him as some sort of psychopath mad-scientist monster,
and all she could think of was how wonderful it had been to dance with him
tonight, and before that, their encounter at the hot springs. His expression grew
less sad and serious as he watched her face, and she knew he could see her
resolve to stay detached melting.
Then,
with her voice wavering with unaccustomed indecision as much as weariness, she
said, "Oh, frag, Scan. I'm really bushed. Nothing short of eight hours'
sack time is going to revive me."
A sly
smile kindled in his eyes and curved his lips. "Wanna bet?"
Clodagh
unexpectedly touched her shoulder, her eyes gentle with sympathy. "You
come, Yana. You'll see."
The cat
came out with an authoritative "meh!," provoking Yana to an
exasperated laugh. She rubbed her forehead with an impatient gesture.
"You
guys are bent on brainwashing me into a proper Petaybean, too, aren't
you?"
"Something
like that," Scan said in very good humor. He knew he had won. If he hadn't
exactly convinced her, she would at least let her wishful thinking override her
better judgment for the time being. With a deft movement he closed the opening
of her jacket, flipped her parka hood onto her head, and started pushing her hands
into her gloves.
"Lemme
do that," she said, feeling a surge of almost childish rebellion. She
didn't want to feel completely manipulated just because she was willing to be
reasonable. But she didn't resist as he guided her along, following Bunny, Clodagh,
Sinead, and Aisling back to the hall, which was still resounding with the
sounds of merriment within.
Outside
the door, a girl stood chatting with a man who was stirring the contents of a
huge metal drum, set up over a small, fierce fire. As they passed, the man
nodded, smiled, and smacked his lips appreciatively at the odors wafting up
from the delicious-smelling concoction, soup or stew, in the big barrel.
Clodagh took an exaggeratedly deep sniff, fanning the aroma toward her with
both mittens.
When
they entered the meetinghouse, Yana had to pause to adjust to the
temperature-and the odor-of the hall, which had been packed solid with
energetic folk for the past eight or nine hours.
If
these dancing, singing, talking, gesticulating, laughing, crying people were
really the cruel victims of a malign curse that doomed them forever to bondage
to a hostile planet, they were either blissfully unaware of it or they plainly
didn't give a rat's ass.
And
suddenly, neither did she. She liked this lot better than the whole Intergal
company corps and the board of directors put together, and if there was
something wrong with them, well, she had been told to investigate and that was
what she was doing. Sort of.
The
room was hot, but she didn't mind; it was redolent with food, sweat, and other
odors, but there was also a sensation that defied a name, although she thought
it had something to do with the great good humor, the fun, the joy these people
were projecting. How they had kept it up the whole time she had been gone, she
didn't know. But patently they had! She grinned up at Scan and saw that he was
sweating; she felt the first moisture beading her brow, too.
As if
their entrance were a signal, the music ground to a wheezing stop and the
dancing couples stood looking toward them expectantly. Clodagh, Scan, and the
others stripped off their parkas, and Yana removed hers. In a corner of the
room a bodhran rumbled like marching thunder and a banjo began playing in a
minor key. Someone began singing in a husky tenor, as if his throat had endured
too many cold winds and the smoke from too many fires. He sang a lonely,
homesick sort of song about the green fields of planet Earth, then followed
with a rollicking, humorous parody contrasting Earthbound living to life on Petaybee.
The next song was a similarly silly one about the last man on the planet who
could read, which Yana knew was an exaggeration since at least the
company-sponsored people read memos and orders and such.
That
song changed the mood of the evening, and every instrument but the drum
stilled. The drum slowed from the bouncing beat of bodhran to the steady muted
thump of a heartbeat.
Without
exchanging another word with anyone, Clodagh began singing the song she had
sung for Yana over dinner the first night.
Thump.
Thump. Thump. Thump.
The
drum pounded in even, measured time as Clodagh was joined by everyone else as
soon as she had sung the first line.
Thump.
Thump. Thump. Thump. The air swirled with smoke from the fire, on it riding the
evaporated breath and sweat of the two or three hundred people cramming the
hall. Yana felt them so strongly around her that it was as if they all wore the
same skin; the drum was the beat of their collective heart.
As the
last droning word of Clodagh's song died away, someone else took up a new song,
one that Yana had not heard before.
"Lost
the song, lost the words, lost the tongue
Lost
the skill to read our own tracks.
Lost
the skill to mark our trail.
Lost
the symbols to read the spoor of others.
Lost the
pictures that once replaced them.
Lost
the voices that told us we did not need them.
Lost
the earth for want of the songs. Ajija."
The
voices swelled around Yana as several more drums took up the beat, so that the
walls of the lodge itself seemed to pulse with the tempo. Sean's voice sang in
her right ear, Bunny's in her left, Clodagh's in front of her, and Aisling's
behind her. She found it difficult to think of the report, difficult to think
of anything, in fact, except exactly what was happening all around her, inside
her. She breathed in the air that the others had breathed before her, she
swayed to the beat of the drum, and although she didn't know these songs, she
realized that her own mouth was opening with all those other mouths. This was a
sort of spiritual communion, with those around her, that had nothing whatever
to do with a religion, or a ritual of any sort. Happening, that's what it was.
A Happening. It was happening just as much to everyone else in the hall as it
was to her. Words were irrelevant: feeling was important. She just had to be
singing something as the song continued, a new voice leading it.
"The
new song stained the soles of our shoes
The new
song bathed us.
We
drank the new song.
We
breathed it, taking it into ourselves for life
And for
life to the song giving forth breath."
And
another voice, older, cracked, sang:
"The
new song spoke to us in the new tongues.
The
howl of a dog, the curly-coat's whinny,
The
fox's bark.
The new
song walked on the feet of the cat.
It spoke of its secrets in the death-squeal
of the rabbit.
It
sings its secrets from its own mouth
To the
ears of those who can listen.
Let's
not leave it to sing alone any longer
But go
to the center and add our voices
To keep
it company for a while
And
learn from it new harmonies. Aja ji."
Yana
had no idea how long or how often the song had been repeated, but suddenly
everyone was putting their parkas on and, to the continued beat of the drum,
filing through the door, out into the night. A brilliant band of light snaked
overhead, punctuated occasionally by small dots of colored lights descending.
More traffic at SpaceBase, she realized. It seemed incongruous and unreal after
the chanting to think about ships landing.
Scan
was nudging her forward, sandwiched between himself and Clodagh. "Is it
over now?" she asked.
"Not
yet."
"Where
are we going?"
"To
the hot springs. We chant as we walk. You'll see. It's very beautiful."
He
squeezed her shoulders encouragingly, and she was not at all surprised, for
some reason, to find that she was no longer tired.
With
the beat sustaining her, and everyone else, they marched on; totally unlike any
Christian soldiers, she thought irreverently. She was surprised when they
reached the hot springs in what seemed like a very short time. She had thought
the springs were much farther away from Kilcoole. The rising steam occluded any
details that daylight might have illuminated. The procession- no, procession
was not the right word any more than "ritual" or
"religion." Okay, she thought, this informal
early-morning-after-the-night-before gathering made its way around the spring
and seemed to disappear. Startled, she blinked, felt Scan's fingers tighten in
reassurance, and then realized that the line led under the waterfall. She
hadn't suspected before that there was any access there. But then with the
steam and the sheeting of down-spilling water, she hadn't looked.
There
was just sufficient space for a body, knowing where to go, to sidle past the actual
cascade of water without getting more than a dusting of spray. Then she had to
adjust her vision to a curious lambent light that was both soft and clear. She
could see the walls of a passage curving gradually downward, and the bobbing of
heads as people descended. The air was remarkably fresh and invigorating.
The
downward movement continued, with people silently merry. Yana tried to figure
out why those words seemed so appropriate: "silently merry." But they
all were glad to be here, together, and moving toward whatever destination lay
down there. She became aware that Scan was giving her occasional quick glances,
as if reassuring himself that she was accepting this "happening." She
didn't know what else she could have done but go along with everyone else, if
only to discover what she could of the hidden places of Petaybee, and its
secretive inhabitants. Yet . . . the palpable merriness of everyone around her
denied the prospect of threat or harm. And she felt so good about coming!
How
long the downward slope wound its way, she couldn't tell, for the soft rhythmic
beat of the bodhrans urged them onward, yet the drum sound did not echo, but
was oddly absorbed by the walls. Then, suddenly, they were there! In a vast
luminous cavern, all blues, greens, soft pastel variations of those hues in
serrated layers, streamers, bands, patterns. She wished she could ask Diego if
all of this looked familiar to him. She was certain she was in the cavern he
had described-if not the same one, then a similar one. For there was the water
he had mentioned, the odd formations that did look like natural vegetation in
their apple green, and ice-sculptured animals in weird and bizarre shapes.
People were seating themselves in random groups, murmuring pleasantly, merrily,
to each other, with an air of expectation about them.
Clodagh
moved to the right of those in front of her and Scan guided Yana in that
direction. Sinead, Aisling, and Bunny veered, too. Clodagh went beyond any
other group, to a sort of promontory of pale sea green ice, and plumped herself
down, cross-legged, a position that Yana found both remarkable and enviable in
a woman of such proportions. Clodagh settled herself solidly and smiled as
Scan, propelling Yana in front of him, moved beyond and above her. He motioned
for Yana to be seated. She was somewhat surprised to find that the surface
wasn't the least bit cold. Scan folded himself down beside her, close enough so
that their shoulders were touching. She wondered about his constant tactile
contact with her: she had never noticed him being touchy-touchy with anyone
else. She didn't know if she was offended- no, she wasn't. Not at all. When he
wasn't being just plain reassuring, even possessive, she found she liked Scan
touching her for any reason. She had always maintained a physical aloofness
with most people, male or female, saving touch for caress, rather than for
identity or possession. When Bry turned touchy-touchy, she knew what would soon
follow. She folded her arms about her legs and hooked her knees up to her chin.
Sean assumed a similar posture, as close to her as possible. He grinned and
gave her a totally impious wink.
The
surface under her buttocks seemed to get warmer. She wiggled, realized the heat
was all over, and undid her parka, only then noticing that everyone else had
already done the same. A steam or mist seemed to be rising all around them,
hiding the people on the other end of this crescent. She didn't think the body
heat of even so many people could have such an effect on this huge cavern.
Sean
was watching her, a half smile curving his lips as if he expected, and was
pleased by, her actions.
"So?
What now?" she asked, leaning into his strong shoulder so that only he
heard her.
"Relax,
Yanaba. Just take it easy, and take it all in. We're including Petaybee in the
latchkay and introducing you. In a moment the planet will respond-just accept
it, okay?" His lips barely moved, but she heard each word distinctly. His
fingers flicked out in a subtle gesture.
That
was when she became aware of the change in the lighting. Whether it was a trick
of the mist or not, the lambency had taken a deeper, golden hue, and through
her tailbone she felt a vibration. Conversations died off, and a respectful
silence spread. Clodagh seemed to elongate from coccyx to poll. Bunny, too,
straightened her spine. Much as she wanted to, Yana could not turn her head to
see if Scan was responding, for she herself was caught up in whatever it was.
And what was it? she asked herself, as she felt each vertebra in her back
stiffening. Vibration and warmth pulsed up her spine to her brain stem. Then
she was taking deep breaths, inhaling from the gut, filling her lungs-lungs
that could now expand to full capacity with neither pain nor wheeze.
She had
the weirdest sensation that her brain was expanding, too, the scalp lifting
from her head bones-not at all an uncomfortable feeling; more as if she was
lightening up all over. Of their own accord her eyes closed-so that she could
concentrate on these internal expansions. She was aware, too, of her blood
flowing in her veins, juices moving throughout her organs, as if some agency
was cleansing her inside out-the way one inflated a mattress, a survival bubble
tent, or the tire of a ground-effects machine. There was no pain or discomfort
involved-only this sense of being filled in every physical crevice and bodily
cavity, this lightening.
She was
then inexplicably aware of a different sensation: one of completeness, one of
belonging, one of perception and acceptance beyond her physical self. She
fought that briefly, lost, and was rewarded with a euphoria she had never
experienced even in her closest moments with Bry. It was like, yet unlike,
orgasm; inexpressibly satisfying and rewarding. She exhaled slowly-for the
lightening feeling had apparently occurred during the course of her one deep
inhalation. Immediately she pulled air into her lungs again, wishing to achieve
that almost vertiginous state of full extension, that delicious lightening,
that . . . quasi-mystic belongingness.
Something
very gentle, like a feather flicking dust from a delicate surface, flowed
across her mind, chiding her for being greedy. All she really needed would be
given.
Yana
blinked her eyes open, for the thought was alien to her: it had been implanted
in her mind. She blinked again. The mist had dissipated. And so had the people
who had accompanied her to the cavern. Clodagh was gone, Bunny and Diego,
Sinead and Aisling! Before she could panic, there was pressure against her
right shoulder.
"I'm
here," Sean said, a ripple of laughter in his low voice. When she turned
her head, his silver eyes caught hers and then he nodded. Exhaling a totally
worldly sigh, she let herself sag, no longer upheld by whatever had had her in
its thrall. She felt a shaft of regret for what was no longer in touch with
her.
"How
long?" she asked Sean, gesturing about her.
"How
long did it feel?" he asked, taking her hand in his warm one.
"Like
one deep breath."
He
nodded again, his eyes slightly hooded, but his smile was full of satisfaction.
Then he held her hand up, examining it closely before he turned it palm up and
kissed it. She could not control the shudder that crackled up her spine. He
laid her palm against his warm cheek and made eye contact.
"It
was more than one breath, wasn't it?" she asked.
He
nodded, and she could tell from his caution that the time that had passed had
been much longer than he felt it safe to admit, before gauging her reaction.
Slowly,
carefully, sorting through her memory of the experience and her reactions,
reaching the logical conclusion of something that defied logic, she asked,
"You people weren't just being poetic when you said Petaybee is alive,
were you? It is, isn't it? And it-it hypnotizes you or puts you in a trance or
something. Like Diego?"
Sean
nodded. "Most of the time it's like it was for you and for Diego, but for
those too rigid to accept the possibilities, it can be extremely
traumatic-induce shock, madness, even death. Not just with outworlders. You may
have noticed young Terce, the other snocle chauffeur?"
Yana
nodded. She hadn't seen much of Terce since she had arrived, but she remembered
Bunny saying the boy wasn't too bright.
"He
didn't react well to this experience. Most children easily accept it, but Terce
... Maybe he just had too linear a turn of mind or something, but it terrified
him and he's never tried again. He sometimes lurks on the edge of the latchkays
but he won't join in. But there was no malice involved-just a ... lack of
communication." He shrugged. "There's much more to this planet than
instrumentation can detect, Yanaba. You've experienced a central part of it
tonight."
"A
rite of passage?" She wanted to sound skeptical or cynical or even
facetious, but that wasn't the way her words sounded even in her own ears. She
dropped her voice to a whisper. "I passed?"
Scan
laughed with such real mirth that she had to grin. Then he pulled her against
him, arms tightly cradling her body to his chest, rocking both of them back and
forth.
"What
do you think?" he asked teasingly.
"I
don't know what to think. I'm not exactly the religious type . . ."
"Religion
has nothing to do with it, Yana. We weren't worshiping. The planet is alive.
It's only courteous to communicate. There's-a relationship involved," he
said, quite lightly and happily. She realized that he was more relieved than he
cared to admit that she had come through her-introduction-without trouble. He
continued his rather nonchalant explanation while draped around her, nibbling
her ear. "The company wants us to think that everything on the planet came
from them, but that's not the case.
This
planet has a mind, and has developed resources, of its own. Living here, most
of us know that and accept the gifts, the protection, and in return, we offer
it companionship and-I don't know, expression, I suppose."
"But
why? Why does it not only accept you but give you so much? If it really is a
living, thinking being, it could as well resent you for occupying its surface.
What does the planet get out of you-us-being here?"
He
smiled lazily again and ran his finger the length of her spine.
"Scientifically speaking? I haven't a clue. But I do have a theory: I
think that the reason probably is-maybe-that Petay-bee likes us."
"That's
it? It provides for you, lets you live here and allows you this . . ." She
searched for a word. "This blissful form of communication just because it
likes you?"
"That's
about the size of it." He nodded. "And it protects us from its own
extremities as well, don't forget, with the adaptations." He gave her a
delicate nibble on the back of her neck to punctuate his remark.
"That
didn't ultimately provide enough protection for La-velle," she reminded
him, trying to sound rational when all she wanted to concentrate on was how to
twist in order to nibble him back.
"It
can only protect its people here, Yana. Miracles are seldom things."
"Will
I grow the adaptations? The-what was that ugly term?-brown fat and the
protective layer under the skin?"
"If
you need them."
She
pressed a thumb roughly across his bare forearm and gave him a quizzical look.
"Oh,
yes I have it," Scan said comfortably. "And a few other
accommodations you'll just have to find out for yourself. Some of us are more
fully adapted than others. I, for instance, am even more a creature of Petaybee
than Lavelle."
"I
don't believe it! You don't look different. And you don't carry an extra ounce
of flesh anywhere," she said, almost accusingly. She was remembering his
body all too vividly.
"Are
you sure?" he said in a teasing voice, and his hands began to wander
across the skin of her back and arms.
That
was the first moment she realized that she was as naked as he was. When had
that happened? Yet their nudity did not surprise her, seeming as natural as if
they had just shared a sauna- and she had wanted to see his finely muscled body
again. Did this damned planet grant three wishes? Had she taken hers without
knowing what she really wanted?
Of
their own accord, her hands began to caress his warm silky flesh, the muscles
excitingly firm beneath her fingers. Then Sean added the persuasions of his
lips to those of his hands, and Yana responded with an ardor she thought she
had lost too long ago to ever regain it. He was so silky, so strong, so agile,
suddenly so demanding, and she found she had a few demands of her own. His
chuckle seemed to beat against her diaphragm and against her breasts, forcing
an echo from her as he rolled himself into her with a speed and skill she had
to admire. He filled her as she had never been filled before, and the ascent
into ecstasy was almost more than she could bear ... than they could bear, for
Sean, in mind and body, was subtly, and impossibly, linked to her in a way that
she had never experienced before. She was herself, matching the urgency of his
rhythm; she was him, sheathing and unsheathing with a power that he, too, had
never encountered in a long life of couplings.
They
both called out at the same time, in the same voice of joy that was colored
with an agony of regret for so ephemeral a moment. As they clung to each other,
breathless, unbelieving, that moment seemed uncannily elongated-and all too
brief.
"Yana!"
Sean murmured in her ear, his tone reverent.
"Oh,
Sean!" With strengthless arms, she pressed him against her, burying her
face in his neck. The million things she wanted to tell him remained unsaid,
for words would shatter the sense of bonding and she felt she had to preserve
it, extend it.
For the
first time in her adult life, sleep overcame her after sex. Sometime later,
Sean shook her gently by the shoulder, kissing the corner of her mouth.
"Hmmmm."
She didn't wish to move. She wanted more of him and put her hand out to pull
him back to her. But he was dressed. That effectively brought her fully awake.
"We
must leave now, Yanaba," he said, his eyes tender and his hand gentle as
he began to dress her.
That,
too, was a novel experience, being dressed by a lover. She helped him even
though she didn't want to.
When
she was jamming her boots on, he took her hand, pressing it against his leg,
and with his free hand, tilted her chin up so she met his eyes. She had to
catch her breath against the lovingness in their silvery depths. He stroked her
cheek with a touch that reminded her of another one.
"Sean,
if you were taken off-planet-if they hauled you in for questioning like
Lavelle? Would you die, too? Torkel was-"
He put
a finger to his lips. "I know. And I can't stay here-" And she knew
he meant Kilcoole, not just this cavern. "But I will return to
you"-and the slight emphasis made her heart bump- "whenever I can,
Yanaba Maddock." He dropped his hand to her breast, over her heart, and
pressed in hard. "Am I in yours as you are in mine?"
"Yes."
Why she could admit it so easily she didn't know. Except that it was true. And
it didn't matter if he never did return to her. She would love Sean Shongili
for the rest of her life.
His
lips brushed hers as gently as he had stroked her cheek.
"Come,
we have to hurry." He turned abruptly and led the way out.
As they
moved up the slope, it seemed to her that the light behind them gradually
dimmed. It was dawn when they ducked out from under the cascade. Dawn of which
day, Yana wondered.
Chapter
12
Yana
was still pleasantly disoriented from the experience in the cave and bemused by
lovemaking as they walked back to the village. She was not exactly sure how far
they had come from the hot springs when Scan pressed her hand in farewell and
disappeared into the trees. Considering their conversation and his sudden
insistence that they leave the cave, she was hardly surprised.
The sky
resembled a healing bruise, staining the morning with yellow-brown haze and,
even out here in the woods, smelling like a spaceport, which was unusual.
Mostly the smells about Kilcoole were delicate and crisp, refined by the cold
to mere essences, but now the stench of hot ship-shielding filled the air and
cast a pall over the woods. How many troops had landed since she left
SpaceBase?
As she
walked out of the woods and into the long clearing preceding the village, one
of Clodagh's cats-the one who lived in her own cabin? she could never be
sure-trotted up to her, and a short time later Clodagh appeared.
Her
beautiful smile livened her face as she embraced Yana and kissed her cheek.
"Welcome, neighbor. I knew there would be no problem for you."
"Scan's
gone, Clodagh."
"Very
wise. You should find somewhere to go, too, Yana. The soldiers are all over the
village now. They came the morning we returned from the chant."
"When
was that, Clodagh?"
"Yesterday.
Don't worry. It didn't take you long for an offworlder. Giancarlo has gone up
to Sean's place with the others, but he was asking for you, too."
"I
need to find Torkel Fiske before Giancarlo finds me. Is he here, too?"
"I
don't think so. Bunny will know."
"Where
is she?"
"Somewhere
between here and SpaceBase. They been keepin' her and Terce and Adak all
awfully busy. Adak will know where she is though."
As it
turned out, they didn't need to go to the snocle shed. They met Bunny,
accompanied by another of the cats, coming down the street toward them through
a village that had changed during the time Yana had been in the cave. Snocles
ferried uniformed and parka-clad figures up and down the streets, and similar
figures wandered between the houses, trying to look as if they were patrolling
something. Snocles were parked willy-nilly along the streets. Many of the
vehicles were loaded with equipment, and Yana saw two trains of the machines
heading away from the village. Several houses farther on, winter-uniformed
corps members were slapping together another of the prefab buildings.
"As
you can see, we've been invaded," Clodagh said. "Slainte,
Bunny."
"Slainte,
Clodagh. Yana! Oh, Yana, you did great. Isn't it wonderful?" Yana was
momentarily confused all over again as Bunny gave her a welcoming hug, then
realized that the girl's words referred strictly to the earlier portion of
Yana's encounter with the cave, not to the more private events occurring
afterward.
Still,
the relief behind Bunny's joy reinforced Yana's recognition that not everyone
found the communion wonderful, or even pleasant. The cave-no, the planet-could
and did damage those it rejected, or those who rejected it; she wasn't sure
quite what the criterion was. She was just immensely glad to have been found
satisfactory.
She
grinned back at the girl. "That it was. Even more wonderful than you can
possibly imagine. But right now, Bunny, I need to find Torkel Fiske fast."
"That's
dead easy," Bunny said. "He just left the station for SpaceBase. I'll
take you out there. I'm trying to be there when Colonel Giancarlo is here, and
here when he's there, so he doesn't remember his threat to take away my
license."
The
usually silent riverbed was now a high-speed thoroughfare, vehicles skiing back
and forth, passing each other. The ride to SpaceBase was nerve-racking, because
it was obvious, even before Bunny began to veer out of the way of poorly driven
snocles, that not every driver was as capable as she was on such a treacherous
surface.
Bunny
dropped Yana at the headquarters building and drove off even more cautiously
through a great deal of snocle traffic, toward the infirmary, where, she told
Yana, she hoped to find Diego.
As
opposed to the bustle outside, headquarters was quiet- stripped of personnel,
Yana thought. The door to an inner office stood open, and through it she could
see Torkel's bronze hair shining in the light from his console.
"Hello,
Yana," he said when she strode in, closed the door behind her, and sat
down. He barely looked up at her, which under most circumstances would have
been a rather refreshing change from his pronounced attentiveness of the past
few days. "I'm on comm line with my father. I'll be right with you."
She
waited while he returned to his conversation.
"Great,
Dad, see you soon. Over and out," he said aloud, tapping the final key. He
was still smiling as he turned expectantly to Yana and asked, "What can I
do for you?"
"You
offered me Giancarlo's job. I want it."
He
grinned. "Is it my turn to say, 'But this is so sudden'?"
"Torkel, he's making a balls of the whole thing. Listen, we have got to
talk seriously about what's going on here on Petaybee and the company's
interface with the natives
"Yana,
let me remind you of a point that others seem to be forgetting: the natives are
transplants of barely two hundred and fifty years ago from Earth.
Johnny-come-latelies as our projects go. And from my conversation with your
buddy Shongili, it seems to me they're awfully damned possessive for
sharecroppers on company property."
"That's
because you only know part of what's been happening. Look, Torkel, Giancarlo
told me to find out what's been going on with Petaybee and the unauthorized
life-forms, and I think I have. Both the natives and my own experience confirm
my conclusions. I think you'll agree, after we've talked, that the mining
operations can't be started precipitously, and any mass transfer of I he
inhabitants of this planet is out of the question."
"Excuse
me, Yana. Dear. The company makes the decisions; not you, not me, and certainly
not the illiterate dregs the company was kind enough to resettle here." He
gave her his best company-negotiator's poker face. The set-to with Scan had
either done some serious damage to his goodwill, or that goodwill had been an
act.
"Torkel.
Dear. At least hear me out, okay? You did ask."
He
relaxed again. "Okay. Shoot."
"Before
you slap my wrist, let me remind you that I was retained by the company to
investigate, and I took that as my authorization to do so, not only in what's
happening here on Petaybee, but also in
company records pertaining thereto."
"You
accessed Lavelle Maloney's autopsy file?" He asked with a
one-wolf-to-another-wolf grin.
"That's
a roger."
He
shrugged. "I would have preferred you to go through channels, but I see
your point. And if you can explain to her friends that birth defects caused her
death, rather than our interrogations, so much the better."
"They
weren't birth defects, Torkel."
"No?"
"No.
According to Shongili and the others, they were anatomical adaptations
engendered by contact with Petaybee."
"Really?
Is there any proof of this?"
"Tests
on any mature Petaybean will yield similar anomalies, Scan says."
"I
see. We can run the tests on Sigdhu and the other woman then, I suppose."
"You
can, but you need to bring them back to Petaybee ASAP and run the tests here.
From what I understand, the adaptive mechanisms making the inhabitants suitable
for a cold planet of this type would make them exceedingly uncomfortable in
temperatures you find normal. And recycled air would contain viruses and
bacteria which their immune systems couldn't handle. That's what actually
killed Lavelle Maloney, and what may soon kill the other two if they aren't
returned here." Before he could say anything, she continued. "Torkel,
until the company can figure out a way of adjusting these peoples' highly
sensitive immune systems to all of the free-spinning viruses and bacteria on satellites
or other planets, the kind of move you say the company's proposing would amount
to genocide."
"That's
a fairly dramatic statement to extrapolate from the autopsy of one off-planet
Petaybean, Yana. Besides, it's the Petaybeans themselves who are making this
necessary, with their guerilla sabotage against our geographical and mining
exploration expeditions."
Yana
cocked a cynical eyebrow at him. "There're no guerillas on Petaybee,
Torkel, no sabotage! If anything, it's the other way round."
"How
so? The company owns the planet. The company terraformed the planet. It has the
right to extract mineral deposits."
"The
company might own the right to inhabit the surface of the planet, Torkel, and
under normal circumstances, it might have the right to harvest certain
resources the terraforming process sowed. But owning the planet itself?"
She slowly shook her head. "This planet was here way before Intergal was
formed or terraforming was invented. You don't own this planet."
Torkel
gave a scornful snort. "If the company doesn't, who does? Not the
inhabitants that the company put here."
She
awarded him a pitying glance. "No, they just occupy it. The planet owns
itself. It's sentient, Torkel. A living entity."
"Now
you sound like Metaxos and his boy." Torkel threw up his hands in
exasperation.
"That's
because I've seen what they saw. Or, rather, 'seen' isn't exactly the right
word. Felt it, experienced it, heard it, been touched by it. Whatever. The
locals say it's a way of communicating with the planet, and you have to be
willing to be touched by it or you can become disoriented enough to be in the
same shape as Metaxos. Or, like some of the other missing teams, if you're too
far from help, die as a result."
He
regarded her a long moment. "And Metaxos aged in this process?"
"That's
a possibility. The phenomenon can take a lot out of someone who resists
it." Something occurred to her suddenly. "Do I ... look any older to
you than I did the last time you saw me, Torkel?"
"No.
Younger if anything. There's a glow about you that, if you had ever given me
any encouragement would make me jealous." He briefly dropped his lids over
his eyes.
She
smiled like one of Clodagh's cats after a snootful of fish. "Other than
that?"
"No.
So you contend that you've been through the same thing as Metaxos? And didn't
fight it, so came out revived? So where did this happen? In one of these
illusive mineral deposits?"
"I
didn't find any deposits." Yana was unsettled by that shot.
"I-found-myself in a quite ordinary cave formation, same kind I've seen
other places occurring naturally under hills. According to the spatial map I
received with my briefing, the cave isn't in one of the spots where your
instruments have detected mineral wealth." She tried another tack. "Look,
the locals accept me to a greater degree than you, Giancarlo, or anyone else.
That makes me the best qualified to organize this operation in a way that won't
be harmful to the natives or the planet."
Torkel
gave her one of his suave smiles, which she had begun to find infuriatingly
smug and condescending. "Yana, get real! We own the planet, and the
natives are technically nothing more than employees. Also, it seems to me that
you're treading-you should pardon the expression-on thin ice here. Are you
really offering to do this job, or have you, in fact, gone over to the side of
the people you were supposed to be investigating?"
"Why
does it have to be sides?" she asked, leaning forward and willing him to
keep making eye contact with her. "If this is a company planet and the
inhabitants are company employees, isn't the company interested in the
potential above and beyond the usual? This may be something entirely new here,
Torkel. Something that would be useful without the expense of reterraforming a
planet." She could see that "expense" was a key word, and he was
definitely mulling over the "entirely new" notion. "At any rate,
we'll need to delay any evacuation or even the transfer of a single Petaybean
until we've developed some means to compensate for their dependency on the
planet."
"Fresh
air, freezing temperatures, and no microbes to attack their disabled immune
systems." Torkel shrugged. "That should be easy enough."
"If
that's all there is to it," she said darkly. 'That's what I know now, and
I'm only scratching the surface. Please go carefully here."
"Oh,
we're being careful okay. Since you're so concerned, you'll be glad to know
that my father has been following all of the events here, too, and he's seen
the Maloney woman's autopsy report, as well. Since he understands the brief
evolution of this planet better than anyone, he's decided to personally conduct
an investigation to rule out any malfunction in this planet's development
resulting from the terraforming process as a cause for the aberrant occurrences
you mention. That's Dad-nothing if not conscientious. And he likes nothing
better than a new scientific mystery. Me, I'm a simple, practical kind of guy.
I think the explanations for all of this are probably traceable to fairly
uncomplicated sources."
There
was a knock on the door. Torkel stood and walked over to it, stepped into the
hall, had a few low words, then opened the door wider.
Giancarlo
stood there, along with Terce, the snocle driver. Torkel shrugged.
"I'm
sorry, Yana. And very disappointed to have to say this to you. However, Terce
here corroborates Giancarlo's suspicions that you've entered into a secret pact
with the guerillas and betrayed the company. I'm afraid we're going to have to
hold you for questioning, pending complete physical and psychological
examinations and testing, as well as the standard interrogation."
"Torkel-"
she began. "Captain Fiske. That young man is one of the fai-"
"In
light of our conversation," Torkel said, cutting her off midword,
"I'll see to it that the investigation is conducted here on Petaybee for
as long as possible, but it may be necessary to move you to more sophisticated
facilities."
She
stood and did an about-face, forbearing to tell him that being moved would
probably not harm her in the same way it would the Petaybeans.
Giancarlo
glared as she started past him. She kept her eyes straight ahead, focusing
slightly over his left shoulder, as if he weren't there. With a hand jarring
against her shoulder, he stopped her in her tracks, his expression guarded but
hostile.
"We're
also looking for Dr. Shongili, Major Maddock. You could save yourself an extra
charge of obstructing investigations if you'll give us some idea where he might
be found."
She
said nothing.
Bunny
Rourke's snocle was her dearest prerogative, if not possession, but she didn't
bat an eyelash when she saw it was gone from the place where she had parked it.
She had
been all set to take Diego and Steve Margolies back to the village, to let
Steve meet Clodagh and the others and talk with them about what had happened to
the Metaxoses. Steve had the same specialty as Dr. Metaxos and, if only he
could be convinced to keep an open mind, that would give them one more ally to
avert what Bunny knew in her gut was going to be a catastrophic change in
Petaybean lives.
She had
felt it in the cave during the night chant-just the least tremor, nothing
someone unacquainted with the planet, like Yana, would notice, but the planet
was worried, fearful. Sean had felt it, too, she knew, but she was also sure he
had been clearing his mind of any negativity to help Yana. They were waiting
for Steve to finish talking with Dr. Metaxos's doctor, so she and Diego had
gone to start the snocle while they waited.
"I've
got to go now," she said, turning to Diego. "They've taken my snocle,
but I think you and Steve should get the first ride to Kilcoole you can."
"Maybe
the major can get one for us from her buddy, that Fiske guy," Diego said,
not understanding.
Bunny
shook her head even as she pulled away from him. "No. If the major was
okay, my snocle would still be here."
"I'll
come with you." Diego still didn't get it.
"I
have to go on foot. You'd freeze."
"Nah,
it's warm today. I-"
"No.
Meet me later. Bring Steve and we'll introduce him to Clodagh. I got to go
before they catch me, Diego. Bye."
She
didn't hear whether or not he returned her good-bye as she ducked between the
buildings, behind piles of unassembled equipment, her white and gray rabbit-fur
parka blending with the snow as she circled around to the river and headed back
toward Kilcoole. There, she would pick up Charlie's dogs and go somewhere:
Sinead's old trapper's cabin, maybe, the one Sinead had lived in before she had
hooked up with Aisling. The PTBs wouldn't know the location of that one.
She
hoped Diego would tell Yana what she had done, and then she realized that what
she had told Diego was true: Yana wasn't okay. That redheaded captain, the nice
one, either hadn't been able to help her or hadn't been as nice as he seemed.
All the more reason she needed to get back to the village and try to get help.
Behind her she heard more shuttles landing and smelled the fumes from the hot
housings on the spacecraft as they touched down. There were so many of these
company people with their machinery and equipment and all of Intergal's
resources. The company men acted as if her people had to do anything they said,
and for the first time, she was scared that they might be right.
She
didn't run: running attracted attention. She tried to move with the rhythm of
the wind and the snow, except that today the snow wasn't blowing, it was
melting. Diego was right. It was a very hot day. She shed her parka as soon as
she thought she was safely out of sight of SpaceBase and the river road.
She
could hear the roar of the snocles on the river; an altered sound now, sort of
muted, wet, splashy, accompanying the sound of the engines and the swish of
snocle skis on ice. The day was really very warm. Warmer than it ever got even
during the middle of the short Petaybean summer, when most of the snow was gone
and it was no longer necessary to have a fire in the house. But how could that
be? Actual breakup usually didn't come for weeks, and then usually gradually, a
crack in the ice one day, a soft spot the next, and then the ice began to move.
Never was it this hot so early in the season.
In the
distance, the sound of an explosion was muffled but audible. She wasn't
surprised. She had seen the explosives loaded in corps snocles setting out from
Kilcoole in a northerly direction earlier in the day. They claimed to be
"exploring," which meant they were blowing sores on the face of the
planet.
Though
the explosion sounded distant, the shock waves made the ground beneath her feet
shudder.
Her
boots were made of hide, suitable for dry snow. She had another, waterproof
pair she wore for early and late winter, but she hadn't thought about changing
into them yet. She could have used them now. The soft moosehide soles of her
boots were soaking up icy wetness from the melting snow. If she didn't reach
Kilcoole by nightfall, when, despite the unseasonable warmth of the day, the
temperatures were likely to drop below freezing again, her feet would freeze.
Maybe she should have stuck closer to the river. But she thought that it would
be quicker, and safer, to cross-country to where Uncle Seamus was ice-fishing.
She planned to ride the rest of the way home with him.
A
breeze blew against her, but it was a warm breeze, soft and friendly. She took
off her hat and mittens and stuffed them in her parka pocket, unbuttoning her
outer sweater as she walked.
There
was another distant explosion, and the ground bucked under her feet as if the
whole planet had writhed in agony. Why did they have to do that? It occurred to
Bunny that somehow the planet was generating the unusual heat, the early
breakup, in response to the assault on it. Such a thing had never happened in
Petaybee's inhabited history, but then, that history was relatively short.
The
ground continued to tremble as she walked, more cautiously now, through the
woods. Here she could keep close enough to the riverbanks to avoid getting
lost. Where the snow hadn't drifted too deeply against the riverbanks, she even
caught glimpses of the snocles through the trees.
How
long had it been since she had taken Yana out to SpaceBase? Only a few hours,
surely, and already the river had changed. The ice looked patchy now, long blue
streaks showing where the runners had carved their tracks. And it didn't look
like the rest of the ground anymore. It was shiny, with a glaze of melted snow
over the top. She didn't remember the river ice ever melting so fast, but then,
she didn't remember ever seeing as much traffic on the river, either. All that
friction and weight surely added to the melting process. And this was the
warmest day for this time of year she could recall in her whole life.
She was
across the river from where Seamus usually set up his ice-fishing tent when she
heard the sharp Crack! as if someone had fired a pistol right beside her head.
Some of
the people in the speeding snocles were trying to brake on the ice, others
slowing, veering in confusion. Yet others who had experience with such
treacherous conditions were trying to pilot.
She ran
closer to the bank, plunging into the snow up to her knees. Seamus was running
from his tent, at first moving wildly about, then stopping, staring at the ice,
and finally darting out in front of the snocles waving his arms, urging them
toward the banks. Two yards beyond where he stood, between him and the oncoming
snocles, the ice parted in a foot-wide gap, the side nearest town already
buckling under the weight of the snocles that had just passed over it.
"Get
off! Get off!" Seamus was yelling to the snocle drivers. "Drive onto
the banks!"
A giant
icy chunk broke off and plunged into the blue water bubbling up between the
slabs. The ice, which had been substantial enough on the drive to SpaceBase
with Yana, looked glass-thin! Along the edges of the river, it was creaking and
she saw cracks forming there, too. The level of the river seemed to be rising.
One
driver, either not understanding or not believing Seamus, zoomed straight for
him, and plunged nose-first into the crack, the snocle runners and windshield
submerged in the swirling water and wedging the crack even wider.
Seeing
the tail sticking up out of the river alerted the next few drivers, but
unfortunately not before three more, two coming from SpaceBase and one from
Kilcoole, skidded out of control. The one from Kilcoole ran into a snow bank on
the edge of the river. Bunny plowed through the snow to reach it, hopping over
a two-inch-wide crack in the ice, feeling the surface, which only hours before
had been solid, bouncing under the sopping soles of her boots.
The
other two snocles had both torn into the back of the partially submerged
vehicle, sending it deeper into the river. Fortunately, snocles had reinforced
cabins and the drivers of the two that still had their runners on the ice
scrambled unhurt from their seats. But Seamus was leaning across the crack,
trying to pry open the sinking vehicle's door to extricate the driver.
Bunny
pushed the snocle on her side of the crack back toward the center of the river.
The vehicle slid easily on the ice, even laden as it was with equipment. Bunny
knew the trick of it, having had to haul hers from deep snow or off black ice.
The
driver clumsily wrenched open the door and spilled onto the ice, scrambling
ineffectively to gain his feet.
"Get
back in!" Bunny yelled to him. "Go get help from town!"
"No
way am I gettin' back in that thing, babe!" the soldier yelled at her and
ran for the bank.
More
snocles were jamming to a stop just short of the crack, which was widening by
the minute as pieces crumbled into the river. The drivers crowded toward the
crack, trying to help Seamus save their comrade.
"Lie
down! Form a chain!" one driver yelled-the first smart thing one of them
had done, Bunny thought.
Torn
between climbing in the snocle to drive to the village for help and going to
the aid of her uncle and the driver, Bunny chose the latter. She dove into a
belly flop, skidding across the ice faster than any of the other would-be
rescuers could walk, and grabbed one of Seamus's ankles just as he managed to
snag open the door of the imperiled snocle. The driver half jumped, half fell
out of the vehicle and into the river just before the ice cracked wider. A
piece of ice broke off, and the turbulent waters enveloped the rest of the
snocle, the outstretched arms, head, and upper torso of the driver on the other
side of the crack, and all of Seamus except the ankle to which Bunny was
clinging.
His
momentum dragged her forward but she held on, flailing in the water with her
other hand, trying to grasp some other portion of him. She knew her actions
might be holding his head underwater, but at least she could keep him from
being pulled under the ice.
Something
grabbed at her hand then and she caught her uncle's arm, letting go of the
ankle to grab his forearm with both hands. It was then that she suddenly
realized that the water was warm! Not ice cold, as it ought to be, but almost
hot. She had no time to think about what had caused that, because Seamus's
head broke the surface just as Bunny
felt the ice under her chest loosen.
"Here!
Over here!" cried the soldier on the other side of the crack. By then they
had already hauled the driver of the sunken snocle out, and some of the other
soldiers were hurrying him up the bank. "Come over here, old man, that
little gal can't handle you."
Seamus,
nodding in agreement, lunged away from Bunny and over to the soldier, who was
immediately joined by a second man. Together they pulled Seamus from the river.
Bunny
slithered backward until she felt more solid ice under her. She slid until she
came up against the abandoned, still-running snocle. Levering herself onto the
driver's seat, she gunned the snocle down the softening ice so hard it flew
across the gap at the side of the river and up onto the bank. She kept to the
woods on the way back to Kilcoole to warn the village of the unseasonably early
breakup, all the time wondering how that had happened.
After
Bunny's precipitous departure, Diego Metaxos and Steve Margolies headed back to
their quarters.
"So,
what is it with you and this girl?" Steve asked in a kidding tone.
"Are her intentions honorable?"
Diego
felt himself flushing uncomfortably. He had thought once Steve got here
everything would be okay, but even with Steve, he felt edgy and uncertain. The
only time he had felt good was that day in the village, when he had chanted his
poem and all of the people had understood it. After he had met Steve, and Steve
had spent some time at Dad's bedside, Steve, Captain Fiske, and Colonel
Giancarlo had spent hours closeted together, and that bothered Diego. The last
couple of days, except for short visits with Frank at the hospital, Steve was
occupied in organizing what he called his expedition.
Diego
hadn't had a chance to talk to him about that and seized the moment.
"What
are you planning to do when you go back out there?" he asked Steve when
they were safely back in their quarters.
"The
same thing your dad was trying to do, only with more support. Locate the
deposits, mark the spot, take samples."
"Must
make you feel good, taking over from Dad," Diego said. His voice contained
a bitterness he hadn't known he felt-at least not toward Steve.
"Hey,
son." Steve stopped stuffing articles in a bag and turned to face him. His
brown eyes looked wounded. "It's not like that. I'd like nothing better
than for Frank to be well and leading the expedition, but he'd want me to carry
on his work, now, wouldn't he?"
Diego
shrugged. "Maybe. Maybe not."
"What
do you mean?"
"Did
you ever think that maybe he's like he is because he didn't want to keep
on?"
"What?
You mean, he willed himself into the state he's in now"-Steve was clearly
incredulous-"because he didn't do a good job the first time? Diego, my
boy, that is not clear thinking."
Diego
shrugged again, a disgusted lifting and dropping of his shoulders. It hurt to
think about Dad. It hurt to think about Lavelle. He didn't even want to think
about losing Steve the same way and he realized he was pulling a number on him,
trying to guilt-trip or scare him into not going.
"I
don't know, Steve. Maybe the mission isn't such a good idea, huh? What are they
going to do if you find the stuff?"
"You've
been too much in the company of Bunny and the villagers, Diego. Be sensible.
The company has a lot of bucks invested in this planet."
"You
haven't given it a chance," Diego shot back. "I thought you would
take care of Dad when you got here but all you've been doing is taking over his
job. You're just like all the other company geeks. You don't give a damn about
us, this planet, or anything else except the fraggin' company!"
"Diego
. . . son."
"I'm
not your son," Diego said hotly, storming toward the door. "Good-bye.
I'm going to see my dad. And hey, if you come back in the same shape he's in,
I'll get you an adjoining bed!"
When
green-coated men and women decide to give you a going over, you let them get on
with it, cooperating when you have to. Especially when hovering over the
proceedings is a block-shaped marine with piggy, close-set eyes: the kind you
just know likes to twist arms and has some mighty painful nerve blocks he's
dying to practice on a live and wriggling body. So Yana went along with the
procedure, privately resenting every intrusion, draining, pricking, probe, and
order. When she could, she sneaked glances at the scans, trying to remember
from all-too-recent experience if she could detect any alterations,
improvements, or changes in the results. She did better with X rays, and could
even find the thickening around her innumerable repaired broken bones. Then one
of the medics, the skinny woman with the jaw like a vise, altered the screens
so she couldn't see the ones of her lungs-the ones she most wanted to check
out.
"It's
my body," she said in a growl of complaint. "I got the right to
look!"
They
ignored her, as they had done since she had been ordered into their presence. She
did catch terms like "unusual remission," "minimal
scarring," "regenerative," and "improvement": the last
two words she liked hearing very much, but she would have liked to know where
the improvement and regeneration had happened. Actually, she didn't need them
to tell her that her lungs were sound again-lungs that she had been told would
never completely heal from the gas she had inhaled on Bremport. Petaybee had
done that for her. Would they believe it had been the planet? Probably not!
The
medics were deep in consultation for a long while after the last of the
examinations had been completed. One or another kept glancing at her as if she
had grown tentacles or oozed slime or perhaps turned into a new sort of
humanoid specimen they could dissect for the good of Mankind.
Ignoring
the tension in her guts, Yana forced herself to relax-as much as anyone could
on the hard examination table. She succeeded well enough so that she was jerked
out of a doze by a rough hand.
The one
she had come to think of as "Ornery-eyes" indicated, with a grunt and
a jerk of his thick thumb, that she was to accompany him. The medics didn't
pause in their discussion to observe her departure. Then she noticed that
Ornery-eyes was sweating, great circles under his armpits and down his shirt
back. Out in the corridor she could appreciate why: they must have turned the
heat up as high as it would go. He jerked his thumb in the direction they were
to take.
Automatically
she memorized the turnings as he prodded her left or right, or straight ahead,
and down the stairs. She wished she'd had a chance to see a layout of the
SpaceBase complex. It was ingrained in her that she should never waste the
opportunity to dekko a place, even if she might never need the info. Then she
felt a series of concussive shocks through her paper-slippered feet, and she
winced. That wasn't from any hard landings-unless someone was being awfully
careless with shuttle vehicles.
Her
escort grabbed her arm, pulling her back a pace and jamming her right up against
a door. The thumb indicated she was to enter. She pondered briefly about
knocking, but when the thumb jerked threateningly again, she shrugged and
opened the door.
A man
of medium age, medium build, and medium coloring, with the unmedium insignia of
a bird colonel on his collar, sat at a small desk, studying the small screen.
To her surprise, he looked up the moment she entered, waved the marine out of
the room, and beckoned for her to be seated on the only other piece of
furniture in the nondescript office. He also turned off the screen.
"Major
Maddock, I'm Colonel Foyumi Khan, that's K-H-A-N," he said with a trace of
a smile.
"Psych?"
He
nodded. "Routine reassignment testing," he said in a manner designed
to reassure-but somehow she wasn't. "You appear to be in excellent
physical shape considering your condition just six weeks ago. This planet seems
to suit you."
"It
would be more accurate to state that I suit it." -
His
eyes widened just slightly. "Oh?" he asked encouragingly. "How
do you construe that?"
"My
improved health, of course," Yana said, trying for innocence. This shrink
was altogether too smooth. She was almost flattered that Intergal had assigned
her an interrogator of his quality. "Great place for R and R."
Through
her feet she felt another of those distinct tremors. Khan noticed it, too, and
he frowned slightly, glancing down, then back up at her. She returned his
regard quizzically, though she had already decided that the quakes were not
being caused by someone crashing a shuttle onto the landing field. Somewhere
blasting was going on, and Petaybee was wincing away from Intergal's latest
assault on its mineral wealth. Damn Torkel! He hadn't heard a word she had
said.
"And
you feel that this ... ah ... planet is totally responsible for your improved
physical condition?"
"Well,
breathing fresh air that hasn't been recycled for who knows how long with what
additives from however many stations it's been serviced in is a good start when
you've burned lungs. Then there's regular hours, clean living, a natural diet
free from technological additives, winter sports, and stress-free
companionship. Those're surefire prescriptions for renewed vitality."
"I
see. And this stress-free companionship? It means a lot to you?"
Yana
shrugged. "I'm a company employee. I go where I'm told, do what I'm told,
and when it's pleasant duty with nice folk, I'm grateful."
"Grateful
enough to sell out the company to retain the nice folk?"
She
chuckled then, noting the evenness of his return gaze, the blandness of his
face. Behind those sat a very smart man.
"Why
should I sell out a company which has provided me with what I need? Especially
when I'm trying to convince the company that they're about to throw the baby
out and recycle the dirty bathwater."
"The
bathwater?"
"Colonel,
I was sent out to see what I could learn. I learned something that Captain
Fiske finds unacceptable. He's evidently quite ready to take the word of the
man he originally intended I would replace and a short-witted snocle driver
with a beef against me. All because he's run smack dab into something he can't
understand."
"And
you understand it?"
"No,
not at all. But I do concede that it's happened, along with my"- She
chuckled. -"inexplicable return to health."
"So
you're grateful to the planet for this?"
She
could see him grappling with that notion and nodded. "The planet is more
than Fiske is willing to accept."
"But
you do?"
"I
do. And, if he'll only credit an old shipmate with the sense to tighten bolts
when she sees 'em loose, he'd do himself, the company, and me a stupendous
favor."
"Which
is?"
"He-and
Intergal-can gain a lot more from Petaybee than consumable minerals!"
"And
what can they gain?"
"Working
knowledge of a new sentient life-form."
"Which
is?"
"This
planet."
He
brought his chin forward in a nod that ended abruptly. He looked at her and
smiled: not a really reassuring smile, but the kind one might give someone who
might not be playing with a full deck. Yana raised an eyebrow and deliberately
laid one arm on the desk, hand relaxed on the surface, as she hooked the other
arm along the back of the chair, assuming as indolent and relaxed a position as
she could. She had given enough of the psych tests she knew were upcoming to
know how to act: open, relaxed, easy, as if she hadn't a care in the world. She
even hauled her right ankle up to her left knee, as if to leave herself
completely open. This room was hot, also, and she didn't want to show any
perspiration-even if the bird colonel was.
He shot
the expected questions at her and she gave him back the answers, pausing
briefly now and then to consider-as was wise of her to do-but not pausing long
enough for him to consider it an evasion or hesitation. It was working, with
him and with her, because the more complicated the shrink-questions, the more
she relaxed, since she knew exactly the sorts of answers required. They hadn't
really looked at her records, had they?
Suddenly,
in the middle of posing a question designed to reveal any sexual aberrations
she might have, he stopped and stared at her-as if seeing her for the first
time.
"You
know all the parameters of the answers, don't you?"
"Wondered
when you'd figure that one out, Colonel."
He
leaned back as far as the uncomfortable chair would let him, crossing his arms
on his chest. "So what's behind all this? Give me a straight answer."
"I
already did, Colonel. I've known Captain Fiske a long time. He asked me to do
some nosing about for him since I was billeted in a Petaybean village. I did. I
gave him my report. He doesn't care to believe it." She shrugged at such
vagary. "It's not the first time commanders have refused to believe
reconnaissance reports and taken more comfortable rear-echelon theories."
She shrugged again, reaching up to scratch her head as if puzzled by such
irrationality. She was sweating, and that wasn't the way to put across her
point of view. Except that the colonel was sweating more profusely than she.
"Hey, did they turn up the heat around here just so I wouldn't get a chill
in my paper wrapping?"
Now the
colonel was free to take out a cloth and mop his face and neck. "Heat's
been rising steadily. I thought this was the cold season down here."
"The
locals are already taking bets on the exact day and time the ice on the river
will crack and be carried away downstream."
He gave
her a side look, then grinned. "How'd you bet?"
"Me?"
She chuckled. "I don't have enough money to waste on foolish bets,
Colonel. But the earliest of those dates chalked up is weeks away." They
felt another rumble underfoot, one considerably more authoritative than any of
the others.
The
colonel clutched at the edge of the desk as the monitor rattled on its stand.
In the same second, Yana grabbed the side of the desk.
"Someone's
planting too much semtex," the colonel said with a frown.
Yana
grinned, having thought of another answer to the whammy they had just felt.
"Spill
what you know, Major," the colonel advised, "while there's still a
chance for you to get straightened out on this. Unless, of course, you think the
planet's fighting back?"
"If,
that is, I was a bettor, Colonel, I think my money'd be on the planet."
Just
then the door burst open-resisting a little, for it was slightly off kilter
from the last quake-and Fiske came in, his eyes narrowed in anger. Behind him
were Giancarlo and Terce.
"All
right, Yanaba, where is he? How's he doing this?"
Yana
took great satisfaction in maintaining her calm while three sweaty, angry
perturbed men threatened to overwhelm her. "I assume that the 'he' you
refer to is Dr. Shongili?"
"You
know it is." Fiske, jaw out, took the necessary step to loom over her in
the chair.
"I
don't know where Dr. Shongili is, Captain Fiske. How could I since I've been .
. . involved . . . here for the past four or five hours."
"He's
somewhere on this planet ..."
"I
hope so," Yana murmured.
".
. . And I'm going to find him and find out how he's doing this." Fiske
flicked his fingers at the ground.
Yana
did not have to pretend surprise. "You think he's blowing his planet up to
thwart you?" She actually had trouble suppressing her laughter. "He's
got no explosives. The company has 'em all. And why would he want to blow his
planet up?"
"I
don't know how he's doing it, but he's responsible."
"Using
what?" Yana fired back at him. "Or, maybe," she said, turning
devious, "he's told the planet to resist, to hamper, to impede your
efforts to strip it of its natural resources."
Fiske
jutted his jaw out again, clenching his teeth over whatever it was he wanted to
blurt out in frustration. Instead, he transferred his feelings to the grip of
his fingers on her arm as he roughly hauled her up from the chair.
"You're
coming with me!" And he began to frog-march her out of the room.
"Like
this?" she asked. Part of her paper skirt, soaked with her perspiration,
had been left on the seat of the chair. She had also lost one of her paper
shoes in his haste to get her moving.
"Captain!"
the colonel barked in a tone that could not be ignored, even by Torkel Fiske.
"You will permit the major to dress before she leaves this
installation."
Chapter
13
No
doubt in an effort to humiliate, harass, or annoy her, Giancarlo signaled
Ornery-eyes to stay in the room where Yana was to dress herself. It would take
a lot more than Ornery-eyes to perturb Yana. She was slightly flattered that
Giancarlo thought it would! Ignoring her audience, she took advantage of the
dressing-room shower to enjoy a quick wash before she dressed. She smiled as
she noticed that she had been given ordinary-issue clothes, not winter gear.
Torture could take many subtle forms: freezing wasn't a common one.
When
Ornery bustled her down the corridor to the assembly point, Yana was reasonably
sure she'd had the best of that deal. For when they got outside, it was nearly
as warm as the facility had been-and she was far more comfortable, in the
lighter garments, than any of the others were.
She was
shoved, just ducking her head in time to keep from cracking it on the
doorframe, into a ground vehicle, which was already inhabited by several
squads, sweating in their winter gear. They were conveyed out to the field
where a troop copter waited. She caught a glimpse of other air-assault vehicles
and some big land cruisers. She also saw two dark circles, one of considerable
size, where the field, plascrete and all, had subsided. She wondered if the
planet knew what to target or if it just pulled the plug where the terrain made
it easiest.
They
had barely gotten settled when the bulky vehicle tilted to one side.
"Lift!
Lift! Lift!" Torkel yelled as the pilot made as if to investigate the
damage.
Yana
privately enjoyed the planet's antics very much, though she was crammed in the
backseat between Giancarlo and Ornery-eyes's massive torso. The latter had
folded his arms over his chest and was staring straight ahead, ignoring the
almost- 180-degree view afforded by the bubble-shaped Plexiglas windshield.
Yana, however, took the scene in eagerly.
Craters
pocked the surface of the great field. As the vehicle came around and headed
north-northeast toward Kilcoole, she saw the village below; then, as the copter
angled off toward the mountains, she gasped as she caught glimpses of the
river, seamed with dark, steaming cracks. Its surface was littered with
snocles, either capsized into the cracks or stranded on larger blocks of ice. A
few, back toward SpaceBase, were being off-loaded by men stripped down to their
shirts, while farther ahead men and women scrambled to save each other from
drowning and pulled each other ashore. A couple of snocles were attempting to
find snow firm enough for the runners to ski on while one soldier broke trail,
planting markers to show where the snow had not yet turned to slush.
Yana
hoped that Bunny's snocle wasn't out there among the stranded, or that the girl
hadn't been arrested when Yana was. She also wondered just where Scan was, but
one thing was sure: he wouldn't be where this copter was taking them.
It
landed in the pasture that had once held the curly-coats. She thought she
caught sight of one of the dark ones, hiding in the copse, but it could have
just been a big brown-branched bush the height of a curly-coat. The house, when
the troopers entered it, weapons drawn, had the feeling of a deserted place. At
least that was what Yana sensed from the still, cool air inside. Not so much as
a whisker of one of Sean's unusual big cats, either. Torkel led the way down
the link to the laboratories, Giancarlo with him, Ornery hauling her along in
their wake.
"I
want every disk, file, paperwork, notebook, everything," Torkel called
over his shoulder to the lieutenant in charge of the squads. "Everything
taken back to the base. I want this place under strict surveillance and rigged
to catch anyone who steps inside."
"The
animals are all gone," Giancarlo said savagely. "He obviously got
back here to let them all loose. We could have learned something from
them."
Yana
could see from the condition of the pens that they hadn't been occupied for a
while. That must have been the first thing Scan had done when he had separated
from her.
"You
certainly didn't expect to find them here, did you, Colonel, tamely waiting for
us?" Torkel asked, resuming his pose of amused condescension.
"Dammit,
Fiske, I told you we should have moved in on him earlier, right after that
all-night binge the natives had."
"But
I thought that was too good a chance for my undercover operative to miss,"
Torkel said, leaning against the wall. Just where Scan had leaned, Yana
thought, the first day they had met. "Is that where everyone got their
orders, Yana? Is that where you switched sides?"
"I
haven't switched sides, Captain Fiske. I'm still a company woman, trying to
help the company all I can."
Giancarlo
raised both fists, and she stared back, daring him to carry through his threat.
"You
both wanted me to see what I could find out. I did just that," Yana went
on. "Not my fault I can't tell you what you want to hear. No one's told me
what that is."
"Terce
said you'd sold out," Giancarlo shouted. "He saw you go with the
others, to plot treason."
"Where'd
he see us go?" she asked, hoping her hunch was correct. "We were in
the hall until daybreak and then most of ui went to the hot spring to clean
up."
"That
fat woman, the one with all the cats, is the ringleader."
"Clodagh?"
Yana allowed her incredulity and astonishment full rein and laughed. "If
that's what Terce told you, Colonel, you must be the only one on Petaybee who
doesn't know that he isn't playing with a full deck."
Just
then the comm unit bleeped, and Torkel toggled it on. He listened, and in the
next moment, disbelief, consternation, and finally horror swept across his
face.
"Back!
Back to the copter!" His arm swept them before him with great urgency.
"Shuttle's crashed!"
Yana
wondered from Torkel's reaction if his father, old Whit-taker Fiske, had been
due to arrive in that particular shuttle. Briefly she considered departing in
the confusion. Ornery was up ahead of her in the corridor: she could slip away
very easily right now. But she was certain she had weakened Giancarlo's
accusation. She could do more if she hung about. Maybe, with a little luck, she
might get Torkel to listen to what she was saying. And, if his father wasn't
dead, maybe she could beat some sense in that old man's head. She would
certainly prejudice the case she had been making by doing a flit right now.
Petaybee ought to have one advocate in the company's court. Sauntering, she
caught up with Ornery just as he realized she wasn't nearby.
"Miss
me, big boy?" she asked, and walked past him, out to the waiting copter,
where she slid in next to Giancarlo, leaving Ornery to compress his mass into
the space between her and the copter's bulkhead. Ignoring the commotion and
Torkel's demand for more information on the accident from the copter pilot, she
was perhaps the only one looking out past Ornery toward the river, newly freed
from ice thrall. She sat up straight, unable to believe her eyes, as a dark
object that she first thought was a boulder turned into a seal and suddenly
moved with astonishing speed and grace to slip into the water.
Now,
how long had that been there? Had it actually been watching the house? Or was
her imagination working overtime?
The
regeneration is all the more remarkable as it's so totally improbable,"
the medic was saying to his companion as they preceded Diego down the hospital
corridor. "Never saw anything like this. And in such a short time. Woman
was hacking her lungs out and not likely to live the year out."
The man
beside him asked a question that Diego could not hear, but he figured they had
to be talking about Yana.
"No,
no, can't be a transplant. I'd believe that more than a natural remission but
there're no scars: not even a 'scope hole."
They
turned to the right at the next corridor and he went on, thinking hard. Bunny
had mentioned that Yana's health had improved since her arrival on Petaybee. He
snorted. His father's sure hadn't. What if ... And he halted in his tracks for
a long moment. Then he was jolted out of his reverie by tremors underfoot-
which reminded Diego of other half-understood remarks by Bunny. Why wasn't she
around when she was needed? Why had she skitted out of the base as if something
was after her?
More
than anything now, he wanted to get Dad to Kilcoole and Clodagh. Petaybee had
messed his dad up and now Petaybee could damn well cure him, like it had Yana!
It was,
as Diego had hoped, slack time in the ward. Dad was sitting up in his chair,
and dressed, which might have been a battle. Diego had stuffed another parka
under his own, a real drag with the heat so high. Even his dad was sweating a
bit. Diego got (he wheelchair and, for the benefit of the other men in the
ward, started his chatter.
"Dad,
you wouldn't believe the weather out today, so I'm goin' to take you for a
little stroll. See if we can't chase the cobwebs out of your head. Here now,
easy, you just sit tight, huh?"
His
father, as usual, didn't acknowledge his words with so much as a lifting of the
eyes.
Diego
wheeled him out of the ward, down the hall, and onto the ramp outside the
infirmary.
For the
first time he became acutely aware of how noisy it was at SpaceBase, of the
change in the temperature and the air. Snocles that had once zipped down the
snowy paths between buildings were racing their engines to escape being mired
in slushy, melting snow. New vehicles, forklifts and track-cats, toiled to move
the tons of equipment freshly delivered to the loading docks. One of the
smaller track-cats was trying to shift a snocle entrenched in a snow bank.
Suddenly
the ground bucked, the boardwalk collapsed at one end, and the wheelchair
jerked from Diego's grasp and rolled down onto the ground.
Diego
jumped down and caught it before it turned over and dumped his dad in the
slush. People ran past him, ducking for cover, as another jarring crash from
somewhere nearby shook the ground. When he looked up, he saw that both the
track-cat and the mired snocle, engines still running, had been abandoned by
their drivers. The track-cat was just a few yards away, but the wheel-chair was
stuck in the slush.
"Come
on, Dad, you're going to have to help me," Diego said, his fingers
fumbling to unstrap the wheelchair's safety belt. He placed his father's arm
around his own shoulders and tried to haul him to his feet, but Francisco was
dead weight. Diego looked from the aged, uncomprehending face to the alluring
track-cat.
He
changed tactics. He slid his father back into the chair and darted for the
track-cat. It couldn't be much different from driving anything else, and he
already knew how to drive hovercrafts and had watched Bunny drive her snocle.
He released the tow chain and flung himself into the driver's seat, fumbling
for the throttle.
After a
little experimentation, he managed to get it into reverse and backed it over to
where his father sagged in the chair. Leaving the snocle idling, he hopped down
beside his dad, pulling the limp and unresponding arm back across his shoulders
and attempting to hoist the older man up once more. This was hopeless! Dad just
hung limply and could do nothing. In another minute the driver would return, or
someone would pass by and see them, and then this perfect chance would be lost.
"What
the hell are you trying to do?" someone said suddenly behind him.
Diego
nearly jumped out of his skin, then recognized Steve's voice just as his
father's partner stepped in front of him.
"I've
been searching all over for you. I heard the explosions . . ."
"We're
fine," Diego said hotly. "And we'd have been even finer if you hadn't
caught us. I've got to get Dad out of here and I will somehow." He raised
his chin defiantly and stared Steve straight in the eye.
Steve
stared back, looking at Diego as if he were crazy; then all of a sudden he
shrugged. "Okay, Diego, it's your call. But I go, too." And he picked
Diego's dad up in his arms as if the stricken man were a baby and climbed up on
the companion seat in the track-cat.
Diego
scrambled into the driver's seat and, after a try or two, shifted the cat into
forward gear and headed toward the village.
Bunny
roared into the snocle shed. Adak was red in the face
and
waving his hands, arguing with a uniformed soldier, but she had no time to be
polite about interrupting them.
"Adak,
quick, we've got to rouse the village! The river's breaking up way early, and a
lot of snocles are trapped on the river. Seamus fell into a crack bigger than a
tree saving one of the drivers, and the others pulled him out."
"You
run and tell Clodagh, Bunka. She'll let the village know, and I'll get on the
radio for help."
"I
told you, sir, I'm relieving you of duty," the soldier said.
"Good.
Then you get on the radio," Adak said. "And I'll use this vehicle to
try to rescue the stranded drivers."
"You
can't do that, sir. That's a company-issue snocle, and not a private
vehicle," the soldier said. "Besides, I don't know how to work this
thing," he added, staring at the microphone.
"Fine,
then I will, and you go help the drivers, but keep your snocle off the river
and for pity's sake stop standing about arguing, man," Adak snapped.
Bunny
grinned as, without further argument, the soldier climbed into the snocle and
gunned it back down the tracks it had just made. Bunny sprinted out of the shed
as Adak was pulling on his headphones and picking up his microphone.
Whatever
he was saying over the radio was lost, however, because all over town the sled
dogs had begun to howl with the plaintive screams of tortured souls. As Bunny
passed by Lavelle's place on her way to Clodagh's, she was even more surprised
at the antics of Lavelle's dogs. Still tethered to their kennels, some were
standing on the roofs and howling; others were lying on the ground, whining and
baying in turn. Dinah, the lead dog, had become a frantic canine acrobat. She
raced to the end of her chain, then back and forth and in frenzied circles
until her lead was tangled in her legs and around her collar, and her neck
would soon be rubbed raw from the friction. Bunny stopped to untangle her.
Poor
Dinah. She really missed Lavelle, Bunny thought, but then, when she stopped to
touch her, she got an urgent flash of hot, panting thought: The boy, the boy,
gotta go, gotta go, gotta get the boy, oh let me get him, gotta go, needs me,
friend, friend, needs me, needs me needs me, gotta go, go go nowoooo . . .
"Shh,
Dinah, shhh," Bunny said. It didn't feel strange to be talking to a dog:
she did it all the time. But it did seem odd that the dog seemed to be talking,
too. "Diego's okay, Dinah. I just left him. Look, tell you what, you come
with me and we'll find Clodagh, okay? Don't run off now when I unsnap you.
Maloneys have had enough pain without losing you, too."
The
more of Dinah she untangled, the more the dog calmed, tail wagging
cooperatively; but when the dog was at last free, she snatched herself out of
Bunny's grasp and bounded off toward the river.
Holy
cow, sir, where did that volcano come from?" the pilot asked Torkel as the
copter sped toward the westerly crash-site coordinates provided by SpaceBase.
They were still a good distance away when he pointed to the port side.
Since
his comments had crackled through the headsets everyone was wearing, Yana
looked, too. The fiery glow, the pall of the ash hanging in the air, was
plainly visible. The air was still full of turbulence from the initial
eruptions, and the lightweight copter shook and tossed about like a Ping-Pong
ball.
Beneath
them the ground rolled and fissured while ash and smoke pumped from the newly
blown cone, born on one of the low mountains to the west. Visibility was poor
with airborne smuts that were beginning to build up on the ground. Yana
realized that some of the quaking she had felt back at the clinic must have
come from this eruption.
Sandwiched
as she was between Giancarlo and Ornery, Yana had a clear view between the
pilot and Torkel, riding in copilot position. She wasn't at all reassured by
the panorama. It looked like someone's terraforming gone wrong, and she thought
they would be smarter to make tracks from rather than to.
As the
copter drew nearer to the new volcano, a thin line of people emerged from the
grayness beneath them and started waving frantically.
Torkel
picked up the copilot's microphone. "This is Flying Fish. We have you in sight.
Please identify yourselves. Is Dr. Whittaker Fiske with you? Over."
Rather
to Yana's surprise, a response came back immediately. "Flying Fish, this
is Team Boom Boom. We see you. We have two severely injured people in our
party. That's a big Mayday. Please transport to SpaceBase pronto. Over."
The
pilot clicked the transmission button on his own microphone. "This is
Flying Fish, Boom Boom. Gotcha. We're setting down one-zero-zero meters due
east of you. Over."
But
Torkel clicked on the copilot's mike again before the stranded team could
respond. "Boom Boom, this is Captain Torkel Fiske on the Flying Fish. Is
Dr. Whittaker Fiske or any member of his team with you? Over."
"Negative,
Cap'n Fiske. Petaybee blew its top about the time the shuttlecraft was landing.
The turbulence from the volcano blew the craft off course and we had to
initiate evacuation procedures before we could search for survivors. Sorry,
sir. Over."
"Boom
Boom, Flying Fish here. I'm sorry, too, but you'll have to hang on while we radio
SpaceBase for another craft to retrieve you. We need to look for the survivors
soonest."
"I
can't fly into that, sir," the pilot said, glancing anxiously at Torkel.
"It'd clog the jets. Let me pick up the wounded and get ground
support."
"Finding
my father is number-one priority," Torkel told the pilot in a command
tone. Yana couldn't see his face. She wondered briefly if Torkel wanted to save
his father because of his importance to the mission, or simply because Dr.
Fiske was his father.
"Flying
Fish, you can't leave us here. Our wounded are in bad shape and the rest of us
are having trouble breathing from the ash. It's smothering in there, sir.
Please, at least pick up the wounded. Boom Boom over."
The
pilot, heedless of Torkel's commands to fly into the face of the billowing ash
clouds, began circling to land. Yana saw Torkel reach for his sidearm, but the
pilot had anticipated a problem.
"Sorry,
sir," the pilot said, pointing a pistol at Torkel, "but you and the
others will have to get out while we load the wounded. I'll call for another
aircraft and some ground support for you as soon as we're in the air."
Ornery
started to draw his weapon, but his attention was on the pilot, not on Yana.
With a well-placed chop to his wrist she numbed his hand and relieved him of
his weapon before either he or Giancarlo could react. She stuck the muzzle of
the gun under Giancarlo's ear with one hand and extracted his sidearm from his
holster with the other in a series of rapid movements that would have made her
hand-to-hand combat trainer beam with pride. Ornery leaned menacingly toward
her, but his numbed hand wasn't following orders. She shook her head and jabbed
Giancarlo meaningfully with the gun.
"This
section of the aircraft is secured, pilot," Yana said into her mouthpiece.
The
pilot gave her a thumbs-up and said to Torkel, "I'll take your sidearm,
too, sir. And just in case you gentlemen want to claim this is mutiny or
anything, I'm sure superior-officer types like yourselves are aware that, by
chain of command, I am the pilot of this craft. I am therefore the temporary
CO. Thanks to you, ma'am."
He set
the copter down and the stranded people surged toward it. He lifted a foot and
kicked Torkel's door open. "Out you go, Cap'n. You there, Corporal, open your
own damn door and disembark. You too, Colonel. Under the circumstances, we'll
belay the ladies first shit."
When
the others had jumped out of the copter and the pilot turned to watch her go,
Yana saw that he was a warrant officer, a green-eyed, lean-jawed man with curly
black hair, broad prominent cheekbones, and the slight tilt to his eyes she had
begun to identify with people from Petaybee. His nametag said O'SHAY.
Chapter
14
The
track-cat lumbered down the riverbank and into the trees, surely and
slowly-much too slowly to suit Diego. What if someone caught them and tried to
take them back? What would happen to them then? Would they send Dad off-planet?
Would they split them up? Would he be charged with the theft of the track-cat?
Hours
seemed to pass as the vehicle rolled, slowly but staunchly, up small hillocks
and forded freshets of water and melting snow running toward the river.
The
track-cat was open to the air, too, so it was a good thing the day was
exceptionally warm or they all might have frozen. Diego's dad lay inert against
Steve, who clung tightly to his clothes to keep him from bouncing out of the
vehicle.
The
slushy, icy terrain was tough going even for the track-cat. Diego nursed it up
a hill and down over the other side, only to lodge with one edge of the track
in a ditch.
"Try
rocking it," Steve hollered. "Forward, reverse, forward, reverse! Let
it dig its own way out."
But the
tracks could not bite or budge. Diego put it in neutral and climbed down to see
exactly what the problem was. That was when he heard the noise from the other
side of the trees and realized they weren't the only ones in trouble.
He
pointed to show Steve where he was going and, leaving the vehicle running,
trudged through the slush until he was clear of the trees.
The
snowy road that the snocles had been so blithely using had become separated from
the bank by a foot of open, steaming water. A soldier waved his parka to keep
oncoming traffic from adding to the twenty or thirty vehicles already slewed
crazily over what remained of the iced river. Beneath snocles and the feet of
the drivers, huge steaming cracks yawned and pieces of ice broke off and
floated in the blue-black water.
As
Diego watched, the ice broke and a snocle shifted, unbalancing its ice raft so
that it and one of the men both slid slowly into the river.
Groaning
at this new emergency, Diego raced back to the track-cat just as Steve slid out
from under Francisco and fastened the safety harness around the flaccid body.
"What
the devil's going on over there?" Steve demanded as he sprinted toward
Diego.
"The
ice is breaking, and there's people stranded on it," Diego told him,
panting and pointing urgently toward the river. "They need a lot of help
and fast. We've got to let the village know right now."
But
Steve had to see for himself and swept past Diego to crash through the brush
and look at the river. Diego followed uncertainly, torn between the crisis on
the river and his father's helpless body left alone in the snocle.
On the
fracturing ice, maybe a half-dozen people now lay on their bellies, hands and
feet linked, forming a human chain to fish for the man who had fallen into the
river. He still had a perilous hold on the ice floe, which bobbed about, having
tipped free of the snocle.
Steve
stood poised on the bank for just a moment before he took a grip on Diego's
shoulder. "Get your father to the village on the double, Diego, and send
back help. I'll lend a hand here."
"But,
the track-cat's stuck," Diego reminded him.
"Deal
with it," Steve commanded in the same kind of gruff tone Diego had heard
him use to talk to shipboard staff. Diego glared at him, resentfully. Steve,
seeing his face, added, "That's our expedition team down there. See? The
big fellow with the red bandanna? That's Sandoz Rowdybush. And I think the guy
on the ice is Chas Collar. Your dad and I have worked with them for ten years.
I'm not about to desert them."
"No,
but you'll desert Dad."
Steve
took a deep breath. "He's got you, too. Go back to the cat. If you can't
get it moving, stick with your father till I can come for you. If you make it
to the village, tell them this river is having a serious meltdown problem and
we'll need all the help they can muster."
Not
quite mollified but having no other option, Diego sloshed back to the
track-cat. Sure the guys on the ice needed help, but what if help from SpaceBase
came and found Diego's stuck track-cat? Then Dad would never get the help Diego
was now convinced was his only hope. There were plenty of other guys out on the
ice already-why did Steve think they needed him more than Dad did? Angrily,
Diego kicked at the brush surrounding the track-cat-which gave him an idea on
how to free the vehicle. He tore into the vehicle's locker, strewing a number
of items on the floor until he found a hatchet, which he used to lob off enough
branches to cushion the treads and give them some traction. Then he cleaned the
mud out of the tracks as well as he could, all the while muttering to himself,
as much to keep his own spirits up as to vent his frustration and anger.
Just
about the time he had the cat ready to go, he had reached the conclusion that
Steve had really had no other option but to go rescue his friends. On the other
hand, there was no way Diego was going to wait tamely here. Not when he risked
being found by the company corps, who might resent his appropriation of their
vehicle. More importantly, they would take Dad back to the clinic, where
nothing was being done for him, and Diego knew with a certainty he couldn't
have explained even to himself that he had to get his dad to the village, and
away from the company. The people in Kilcoole understood what had happened to
his dad, and they could cure him. He knew they could. They had to.
He
didn't realize how tense he had been until he broke the track-cat free of the
mud. Hoping his spontaneous shout of relief had been inaudible among the shouts
and cries coming from the river, he immediately changed directions, driving
across the gully and back into the woods. Now he steered away from the
riverbank, keeping to the trees, avoiding anyone who might be struggling ashore
and also avoiding surveillance by airborne rescue parties.
Half an
hour later, with the light beginning to wane, he was far enough from the river
that, when the ice finally completely gave way, all he heard was a dull roar,
like a far-off crowd cheering some sporting event. And he heard that only
because the engine of the track-cat, which had been left running day and night
since the vehicle had been commissioned, had run out of fuel.
He
stopped and listened to the distant roar, tasted smoke and ash on the air
mingling with the released ozone smell of open water, felt the ground trembling
beneath the track-cat as if it, too, would break open at any time. Birds
screeched through the trees as if crying warnings.
His
father's inert body looked uncomfortable in the harness that was keeping it
upright on the seat beside him. Diego tenderly rearranged the passive limbs
into less grotesque positions. He didn't think his father could have been hurt
by the rough journey, but he really hated to see his dad, once so athletic and
fit, collapsed like a disconnected android.
With no
more fuel, the vehicle was useless. Diego let out a deep sigh. Despite his
detours, he couldn't be that far from the village at this point. He glanced
around, sniffing and finally noticing the odd smells in the air: acrid, oily,
definitely nonregulation. Usually by now the air started to chill off, but it
was still as warm as it had been all day. Strapped as he was in the seat, Dad
wouldn't be in any real danger from chilling for at least another half hour,
Diego estimated. He reached for the coat he had removed during his exertions to
get the track-cat moving again and tucked it around his father, patting it in
place, remembering his father doing the same service for him when he was smaller.
Maybe he shouldn't leave his father here. There were wild animals on Petaybee,
wild animals strong enough to break into the track-cat, maybe. Would they be
more afraid of the machine smell than they would be hungry? Suddenly Diego
wasn't sure he could take the risk. Not with his father so helpless.
But he
couldn't just sit here, halfway to nowhere. Fretting more than ever, he turned
to rummage through the track-cat's locker, hoping there might be something
useful in it. There was nothing: nothing to use to build a fire, no emergency
rations, not even a canteen of water, but then the cat had been used around the
SpaceBase, where such supplies had always been at hand. It wasn't as if the
motor pool had anticipated the cat being stolen for a cross-country escape.
Totally demoralized, Diego flopped down on the driver's seat, wondering how he
was going to cope now. If Steve did keep his promise to come after him, he
wouldn't be there anymore. Would Steve be able to come looking for them? What
could he do? He'd only wanted to help his father!
As if
to seal his depression, the first keening howl sounded through the evening.
Bunny
didn't have to alert the village: the dogs' wailing did it for her. People
poured out of their houses to see what was wrong. She didn't have to tell them
the river had broken up. Anyone born on Petaybee and raised with Kilcoole's
long winters could smell breakup in the air, could feel the change in the
pressure, and if that wasn't enough, the ice melting from the roofs and the
slush seeping through the soft soles of their boots made it all too evident.
Bunny
ran up to Lavelle's door first. Liam opened it. "Liam, the river's
breaking early and people in snocles are trapped."
"The
planet take them, then." Liam shrugged angrily and started to shut the
door in her face.
"Seamus
is out there helping, and Dinah's got loose and ran off toward the river.
Please, Liam, if you won't help, at least spread the word!" When he
reached for his parka on the hook by the door, she caught his hand, grinning.
"You don't need it. Come on."
She
didn't wait to see if he followed but ran straight to her Aunt Moira's. Moira
and her three oldest sons, Nanuk, Tutiak, and Tim, were already hitching up
Charlie's dogs while Maureen and 'Naluk, the oldest girls, carried blankets and
other provisions to the sleds. "Auntie Moira, the river's breaking
up-"
"I
know, Bunka. Don't just stand there! Help us! Seamus is out there on that
river."
"He's
okay for now, Auntie. The soldiers pulled him out. But they all need help."
Tutiak
growled at her. "What do you think we're trying to do?"
"No
need to be rude to your cousin, Tutiak," Moira said, slapping at him.
"He's sorry, Bunka. We're taking Charlie's dogs to go help now. Okay with
you?"
"Fine,"
Bunny said. "I have to go tell Clodagh."
"Hmph,"
Tim grunted. "As if anyone ever needed to tell Clodagh anything."
Bunny
paused at Aisling and Sinead's, first noticing that the dogs were missing from
the yard, then that the long daylight was finally waning. The door opened on
her first rap to reveal Aisling wearing her waterproof breakup boots, with her
arms full of blankets.
"Breakup's
come early, Aisling, and-"
"I
know."
"How?"
"Alice
B heard from the other dogs. Sinead and the dogs are on the way."
"It's
getting too slushy for dogs even. We're going to need the curlies."
"Have
you asked Adak to call Scan?"
Bunny
felt something inside her wrench suddenly. "No! I- Aisling, the soldiers
kept Yana. I think Sean's in trouble."
"Warn
Clodagh," Aisling said. "I'll tell anybody else who hasn't figured it
out yet and meet you there."
With a
wave, Bunny ran on through the dusk to Clodagh's house. Clodagh was holding a
lamp when she opened the door. None of the cats were in sight; then one
appeared, taking immediate advantage of the open door to brush past Bunny and
jump up on the table, where it began mewing piteously.
"Marduk
says Yana hasn't been home to feed him," Clodagh translated.
Breathless,
Bunny collapsed in a sprawl on Clodagh's bed. "She was goin' to try to
reason with Captain Fiske for us, but it mustn't have worked. Clodagh, the
river's breaking-"
Clodagh
nodded with some satisfaction. "Of course it is. The river ice has been
Space Base's quickest connecting route to us. The planet's protecting us-and
itself."
"Seamus
almost drowned trying to help one of the soldiers," Bunny said, without
asking how Clodagh knew what the planet knew, or was trying to do. She just
did, that was all. She always did.
"That
Seamus," Clodagh said, shaking her head. "Of course he would try to
help. Is he okay?"
"He's
out on the ice with the others. They're all still stranded. And not only that,
Clodagh, but when 1 stopped by Lavelle's to untangle Dinah from her harness,
Dinah-well, it was like she talked to me. She was all upset about some boy. And
that has to be Diego, but he should be safe at the SpaceBase. What are we going
to do, Clodagh? Everything's coming to pieces." This last came out of
Bunny almost like the howl of one of the dogs. That made her realize that she
was very tired and keyed up to the highest possible pitch. She would give
anything to be able to sleep for a week-if only someplace felt safe enough to
sleep in! Even Clodagh seemed different somehow, her eyes glittering and her
customary expressions underlain with agitation and a hard anger that had
nothing to do with Bunny. Clodagh, Bunny felt, was actually glad about the
river and wouldn't have minded if everyone-well, not Seamus, but everyone
else-had drowned. Bunny suddenly realized that she, too, wouldn't mind if they
all drowned, if all of SpaceBase suddenly sank into the planet and disappeared
and the company moon vanished from the sky. They were bound and determined to
ruin Petaybee. Everything Bunny cared about and counted on was changing, coming
apart the way the ice, usually as much to be depended upon as the ground this
time of year, had broken away beneath her.
Even
Clodagh's house no longer felt like the haven of comfort and reassurance it had
been for Bunny ever since her parents had died and she realized she could no
longer live among her cousins.
"Bunka,"
Clodagh said, touching her shoulder.
"Why
couldn't they leave us alone, Clodagh? Why couldn't they leave Petaybee alone?
Did they have to ruin everything?"
"They've
ruined nothing yet, Bunka. Oh, they set a few charges about here and there, and
sent soldiers out to the mountains. But until they stop and pay attention,
they're not likely to learn anything about Petaybee worth the knowin'. And
meantime, the planet has means to protect itself."
"Clodagh,
have you ever been to SpaceBase?" Bunny asked. It hadn't occurred to her
before that she had never seen Clodagh outside the village except for a time or
two on journeys to Sean's house. Clodagh couldn't possibly understand the power
the company had.
"Of
course not, alanna, now why would I want to go there?"
"They
have thousands of soldiers there right now. Yana says they mean to evacuate us.
By force! Just without a by-your-leave make us all go into space someplace.
Then they'll keep blowing up things on Petaybee until they get all the minerals
and stuff they want. Clodagh, I've seen the shuttles and the ships. I know lots
of the soldiers. They can do it if they want to. They own Petaybee."
"Nonsense,
Bunka. Nobody owns Petaybee but Petaybee."
Bunny
was about to argue the point when something landed with a heavy thud on the
roof.
Marduk,
the cat who had been living with Yana, stood on his hind feet and pedaled his
front paws at the ceiling, chittering and mewing as if looking for a rafter to
jump onto.
From
outside the house came a sound like a well caving in, a roar with a deep echo
to it. Bunny recognized it at once as the voice of one of Sean's big cats.
She,
Clodagh, and Marduk were at the door all at once, but before they could go
outside, a huge shape landed softly in front in the doorway. The black and
white bewhiskered face of the big cat regarded them quizzically.
Marduk,
far from being frightened by the larger feline, stepped forward to rub noses
with it. Each brushed scent glands on the side of his face into the other cat's
fur.
Clodagh
stood away from the door, and the big cat padded inside, leapt to the bed, and
circled about on her handmade quilt to make a nest for himself. Marduk hopped
on top of the larger creature's back and chirruped autocratically. Clodagh
produced a pair of thawed fish and a pan of water for the cats to lap. While
they ate, Clodagh sat beside them on the edge of the bed and stroked their
backs.
She
crooned especially to the big cat, and it looked up from its meal with narrowed
eyes and purred thunderously back at her. Marduk, annoyed at being left out,
butted her hand with his head before he continued to eat.
"Do
you suppose it knows where Sean and Yana are?" Bunny asked. "When I
petted Dinah, I felt as if she was talking to me."
"Come
here, Bunka," Clodagh said, and put Bunny's hand on the cat's head.
"Have you an answer for Bunka, Nanook?"
Why
else would I bother coming? the cat asked her in a velvety, rumbling voice.
The
words weren't spoken; but Bunny heard them nevertheless, inside her head, the
way she had heard Dinah's. Nanook's diction was much better than the dog's.
Clodagh
regarded Bunny speculatively.
"It
talked to me," Bunny told her, blinking rapidly.
"This
cat is a he, not an it," Clodagh told her. "He talked to you because
you can understand him. Marduk, also, is a he. In fact, on our whole planet,
there are no its. Some things have no gender, but they are not without names.
It's only polite to learn those names."
Bunny
shrugged. "Well, I guess I knew that." She had played with the big
cat since he had been a kitten, actually, every time she had gone to visit
Sean. She petted him again. "Sorry, Nanook, I didn't mean to hurt your
feelings."
Having
cleaned his chops of fish residue, Nanook began to tidy up the white fur of his
chest. The house suddenly shook, and-from under the counter came the sound of
crashing glass. Marduk jumped down, and Nanook stretched beneath Bunny's hand.
Bean's
gone swimming, he said. Yana came with soldiers, but their chop-chop bird
squawked and the soldiers took her away again. They do not have good feelings
for her. They have even less good feeling about Sean, They did not like those
of us who live with Sean and tried to find us, to take us away with them. We
were not found. Then the ground shakes and I smell smoke-that-is-not-cooking.
And shedding time is early. What are people doing to our place?
The
last thought was accompanied by a plaintive roar that sent a blast of fishy
breath into Bunny's face.
Diego
found a sturdy branch, though he knew it wouldn't be much good as protection
against wild animals. Hefting it in his hand made him feel somewhat less
vulnerable, however. He could hear the river roaring, along with a crunching
and grinding of the ice that set his teeth on edge. He prayed Steve would be
done with his rescuing of other people and remember he had a duty to rescue his
own family. Darkness was closing in.
The
distant howling picked up again and became separate sounds: keening, howling,
and plain crying, like the ghost of an all-too-familiar memory. Diego glanced
over at his father. For a moment he thought he had seen a flicker in his dad's
eyes, but the older man sagged against the harness as limply as ever.
Another
howl, much closer now, was answered by several others, still distant. Diego
swung his stick like a baseball bat, placing himself between the track-cat and
the hostile woods. As an afterthought, he reached inside and switched on the
lights, grateful that the battery wasn't drained yet. Then the lights picked up
a ring of shining eyes in the woods, closing in on him.
The
howling took on a triumphant note, and suddenly something dashed from the woods
and straight at him.
Cocking
the stick to make his first blow count as much as it could, Diego released it
at the top of his swing as the lights picked up the red fur of the dog. Dinah
crushed him against the grill of the track-cat with the weight of her body. She
licked his face and the hands he tried to protect his face with and whined her
relief.
He couldn't
have said how he knew the dog was Dinah instead of any other, except that Dinah
had done this sort of thing I before. And behind her came answering whines and
howls and a ? man's voice crying "Whoa! Down, dogs."
Diego
freed himself from Dinah's embrace in time to see a sled pulled by four dogs
break through the trees into the lights of the track-cat.
The man
driving the sled wore no coat and frowned when he saw Diego, but Dinah ran
frantically between the cat and the sled until the man relaxed.
"You're
the boy who was with my mother, aren't you?" the man asked.
"Your
mom was Lavelle?" The guess wasn't hard, with Dinah bouncing between them.
"That's
right."
"Then
please help us. I have to get my dad to Clodagh's. He's been dying at SpaceBase
like Lavelle died when they took her off-planet."
The
wind blew and the planet shook, whether in fear or anger or both Bunny couldn't
tell, but inside Clodagh's house a phenomenon was taking place that Bunny would
have only partially understood the day before.
A
taciturn Liam Maloney, whined and howled into submission by Dinah and the other
sled dogs, had delivered Diego Metaxos and his father to Clodagh's just after
dark. Now Diego nursed a cup of tea, while his father sat tied into Clodagh's
rocker.
Liam
had returned home to feed the dogs, although Dinah had whined and made her
peculiar "oooo ooo" sound when pulled away from Diego. Bunny wondered
what she would hear the dog say if she stroked her. She wondered if Diego could
hear Dinah yet, but thought he probably couldn't. After all, she had lived
fourteen years on Petaybee, and she had always known communication existed
between certain aspects of the planet and its people. Come to that, she had
communicated with the planet like everyone else during the hot-springs
interfaces at the end of every latchkay.
Everyone
knew that some people, like Clodagh and Scan, could talk to most of the
animals. Others, like Lavelle, could certainly understand their own lead dogs.
Bunny had always talked to the animals, all of them, having been brought up to
think it was only polite to do so. But today was the first time the animals had
ever struck up what could be called a conversation with her. Maybe it was
because she had bonded with her snocle instead of to dogs or cats or curlies,
or maybe Dinah was just an unusually telepathic dog. Anyway, although Dinah was
evidently tuned in to Diego, the dog had talked to Bunny first, and underlying
all the worry and trouble, Bunny felt a marvelous elation about that.
The big
cat, Nanook, had bounded past her as she held the door open for Liam and Diego
to carry Francisco Metaxos into Clodagh's house. Bunny had caught a flutter of
thought, Wonder what's happening out there now . . ., as the cat passed by.
Darkness
blanked the windows and the wind blew fiercely, carrying the scent of ash and
fresh water, thawing earth and smoke. It howled around the house like a team of
hungry dogs and rattled the roof. Inside, the stove kept the house almost
stiflingly warm as it kept Clodagh's caribou stew simmering in her biggest pot.
Diego
was wolfing down his second bowlful and Bunny making short work of hers while
Clodagh stirred fresh ingredients into the pot.
"Want
to have enough for when people come in off the river," she said.
"Some of them are bound to stop by."
The
cozy domesticity of the scene was reinforced by Clodagh's cats, who had
returned from whatever business they had been about when Bunny had first
arrived.
Diego
had one on his lap, while another, Bearcat, napped on Bunny's knees. And, of
course, one of the more enterprising members of the pride twined around
Clodagh's ankles as she cooked. Marduk and the remaining five seemed fascinated
by Francisco Metaxos.
Marduk
sat on the scientist's lap, kneading and purring and gazing raptly through
narrowed eyes up into his face. Another cat sat on the scientist's shoulders,
its rust-striped cheek and white whiskers snuggled against the man's right ear,
front paws pedaling his shoulders while the ringed tail curled possessively
around Metaxos's neck from the other side. Two more cats flanked Metaxos on
either arm of the chair, licking his fingers and hands and grooming him, while
another pair alternately wove about his feet and settled across them like house
slippers.
You'd
have thought the man was made of catnip the way the silly animals were carrying
on, Bunny reflected. Whether it was coincidence or communication, at the moment
the thought formed she drew an indignant dig from the cat in her lap.
"Can
I have a bowl of stew for Dad, please, Clodagh?" Diego asked. "But
maybe it'd be better-" He broke off and looked at Clodagh's back
imploringly.
She
turned and gave him an impassive half smile. "Yes?"
"If
you'd feed him? Bunny says you're good at taking care of people and things and,
to tell the truth, he never eats very well for me."
Bunny,
who had watched Diego feed his father a couple of times, suspected that half
the problem was that Diego found spoon-feeding his once-brilliant and vigorous
father a disgusting process. She knew it made him sad and angry: that would be
the way she would feel, she knew. Unnerving, too, to have to shove food into
the mouth of a grown man as if he were an infant.
Clodagh
regarded Diego with understanding and sympathy. She looked at the bowl she had
filled and then handed it to him with a kind smile.
"No,
it's better if you do it, son. Someplace inside your da he still knows you and
loves you. If he'll eat for anybody, it'll be you."
"I
guess so," Diego said dispiritedly, and pulled a chair opposite his father.
Bunny noticed he was careful not to disturb any cats, though Marduk raised a
paw as if to snag the spoon carrying food to Metaxos's mouth.
Grimacing,
she looked away as the spoon neared the man's lips: that was the disgusting
part, when stuff fell 'off the spoon and down the chin and had to be wiped off
before it messed up the shirt. At least Diego didn't have to actually pry open
his father's lips to get the food in. But, as she was turning her head, Diego
suddenly said, "Hey, Dad. All right! That was great. Try another
bite."
When
Bunny looked back at them, Diego had a grin of satisfaction on his face: his
father, eyes still dull, face otherwise slack, was chewing the soft diced bits
in the stew. Encouraged, Diego replenished the spoon with more bits; the cat on
his father's shoulders sniffed as the spoon passed his nose, but didn't try to
snag it. Dr. Metaxos's eyes even looked a little more focused when he chewed,
Bunny thought. Food was the best thing he could concentrate on right now; maybe
he was even tasting it. She hoped so: it was a shame to waste a good Clodagh
stew on someone who couldn't appreciate the fine taste of it.
Just
then the door burst open and Aisling swirled in like a one-woman typhoon,
followed closely by Steve Margolies. Through the door behind Steve, Bunny saw
Sinead talking into the ear of one of the curly-coat horses that stood around
about the house.
"Clodagh,"
Aisling called cheerfully, "Sinead and the cur lies did some right fine
towing work at the river, getting snocles out of trouble. Everyone's out now
and on their way back here. We left all the snocles at Adak's, but he's so
busy, I thought I'd see if you had something cooked up for him to eat. He's
going to be there all night. And it's not just the river breaking up early,
either. You know all that smoke we've been after seein' and the ground shaking?
Well, that's from a volcano eruption over by where Odark found Lavelle and
Siggy with your lad here and his da." She grinned at the expressions of
disbelief and amazement. "And the miners and engineers and company men
that went out that way to start work, they got caught right under that
volcano." She grinned so broadly at the effect of that news that she had
to lick her lips.
Of them
all, Clodagh didn't seem surprised.
"And,
there's a shuttle down, almost right on top of the volcano, to hear Adak tell
it, and the survivors yelling like stuck pigs for help. Well, that smooth
redheaded captain who was sniffin' after Yana took her and Giancarlo and some
other soldier to go see if anyone got out of the shuttle. They made it to the
miners and then"-Aisling's expression changed to indignation- "that
captain wanted to leave behind the injured miners and all, right where they
were being bombarded with ash and hot mud, so's he could search for the
shuttle. Can you believe the man's sand that he'd abandon wounded, his own
people, mind you? And crazy enough to want to make a copter fly into all that
heat and ash and smoke? But as luck would have it, and such good luck I can scarcely
believe myself, the pilot was Rick, you remember Orla O'Shay's oldest boy that
went into the service fifteen years ago? He and Yana Maddock made the captain
and the colonel and the other bloke with them get out and load the wounded. He
radioed back for a pickup for them and the other survivors, and Adak was just
talking to him as we came in. Sinead says she has it from her sources that
Scan's gone missin', too, and she's that worried about himself and Yana. The
O'Shay boy says Yana disarmed the colonel and his lad neat as you please and
not a moment too soon. Dr. Steve here wants to rustle up some transport. He
feels he's got to get out there to eyeball that volcano while it's
growing."
She
paused to take a deep breath and then, with a grin, added, "Seems like
Petaybee's not supposed to have volcanoes in that spot."
"Bunka,
take a bowl of stew over to Adak and see if there's any more news, will
you?" Clodagh said in a tone that was not a request.
"Sure,
Clodagh," Bunny said.
"You're
the one I'm to ask about transport?" Steve Margolies asked, looking
perplexedly at the big woman.
"Eat
first," Clodagh said hospitably, and handed him a bowl before filling a
bigger one for Bunny to take to Adak. "You need good food after that stuff
at the river, and for anything else you want to do."
Steve
dragged a tired hand across his face as if he had only just remembered an
essential like eating. He accepted the bowl and found a spot to sit, then took
a good look around the room.
"Frag!"
Steve Margolies exclaimed, his eyes wide with astonishment. "Look at
Frank. He's petting that cat."
"Sure,
it's fine exercise for his fingers," Clodagh was saying matter-of-factly.
"Everyone knows animals are good for distressed folk."
Bunny
was grinning, too, as she carried the stew bowl out the door on her way to
Adak.
Despite
the lid to keep the heat in, she had to walk carefully to keep from spilling
the stew. It would keep hot long enough, however, for her to make a few short
stops on her way to Adak's.
She
slipped in at her own place, where she traded her soaked and stiffened hide
boots for her breakup muckers and put on a kettle of food for her dogs. She
looked in at Moira's window. The cousins and the dogs must have come and gone
again, for Seamus was sitting large as life by the stove, shoveling Moira's
soup and bread into his face. Moira was busy cooking. Now that Bunny knew that
Seamus had made it back okay, she could continue with an easy heart.
Passing
Maloney's again, she was greeted by Dinah's unhappy howl. She would pet and
reassure the dog on the way back. Right now, not only was Adak's stew cooling
but also a clever dog like Dinah might try to have first grabs at it. So she
simply clucked reassuringly at the dog and kept going.
Six or
seven snocles sat parked outside Adak's shed, but they had not been cleaned,
serviced, or fueled, and were still covered with melting slush, water, and mud.
Inside, Adak, headphones over his ears and microphone at his lips, was hunched
over the radio. Bunny slid into a chair beside him and shoved the stew in his
direction. He looked a little startled to see it appear in front of him, but
accepted it without question. Lines were etched deeply into his face and his
eyes looked hollow, but his whole body was taut with nervous energy. Early
breakup and a new volcano a-borning might be considered catastrophes, but the
end result was that today had produced the most excitement Kilcoole had seen
since the first expeditionary team had been lost in a tsunami down on the
southern edge of the ice pack.
"Well,
I'm sorry about that, SpaceBase," Adak was saying with a certain amount of
agitation, "but until the next hard freeze, the snocles aren't reliable as
transportation for a trip clear out there. Over." He managed to spoon some
stew into his mouth. "Oh, sure and they'll run on the snow, that's not the
problem. The problem is the rivers, you see, and if you don't believe me, you
can ask yer lads as got fished out of them today. Over.
"Is
that so? Well, I'm sorry to hear that, too. It's a shame about Dr. Fiske's
shuttle crashin' and to be sure we do understand the urgency and all.
Over." He hurriedly ate some more.
"No,
of course flyin' over it is impossible if the ash and smoke are as thick as you
say. My suggestion would be to get yourself some of them crane-copters and have
them hoist the snocles to the edge of the affected area and then see if the
snocles'll drive at all in the ash. You're still going to be havin' the same
problem with slushy going as we have here though. Over.
"The
rivers of course, man! Petaybee has more rivers and lakes than you can shake a
stick at, and who knows which ones are thawin' this early? Normally the high
country would stay frozen longer, but a volcano, now, that's a chancy thing.
I'm not a scientific man like yerself, but it seems to me such a thing would
warm the country considerable. Over.
"Like
I said, air-hoist a snocle to where O'Shay picked up the wounded. I'll wager
Yana Maddock can drive it even if your two officer lads don't know how. Over.
"They
what! When? How'd you find out? Uh-very well, over.
"Yes,
then, I do see the urgency. Look here, I'll try to get some of the local folk
on it in the meantime. The point is, machinery just doesn't do awfully well in
some of the conditions we have hereabouts right now. That's why we use animals.
I'll get back to you. Right. Over."
"What,"
Bunny asked impatiently, "was that about Yana?"
"Well,
seems O'Shay radioed for help as soon as he was airborne and the other copter
passed him at the halfway point. He was almost to SpaceBase when they radioed
back that they were bringing in the rest of the survivors, but that Fiske,
Giancarlo, and Corporal Levindoski overpowered Major Maddock and forced her to
go with them into the flow area to look for Dr. Fiske. The higher-ups are that
frantic to be after them, but the ash would clog any machines they got and it's
not that good for the beasts either."
"I'll
bet the curlies can do it, if anything can," Bunny said staunchly.
"They were bred for sand and snow back on Earth, and they can close off
their nostrils if they need to, and their eyes have a protective lid."
"Maybe
so," Adak said, taking a slurp of stew. "Hard to figure why anybody'd
want to risk a good curly to go after some company bigwig, though."
Chapter
15
Gun in
hand, Yana held off Giancarlo, Torkel, and Ornery until the wounded were
loaded. Torkel had relented enough to help, while Ornery and Giancarlo stood
by, glaring malevolently at Yana. The last thing O'Shay did before he slammed
the door shut was to fling out a red-and-white-striped rectangle. Picking it
up, Yana identified it as an emergency rations pack and blessed the pilot's
thoughtfulness. The four remaining survivors of the expedition were suffering
from shock, and the high-energy rations would do much to revive them.
"If
he thinks that's going to save him from a court-martial, he's got another thing
coming." Giancarlo snorted as the copter lifted off. To Ornery-eyes he
barked, "Don't just stand there, Levindoski. Commandeer that pack. We'll
need those supplies on our search and rescue of Dr. Fiske and his party."
"Uh-uh,"
Yana said. "Not so fast, Colonel. You're not commandeering shit just yet.
These folks need to chow down first." She pointed to the nearest survivor,
a gaunt-faced man whose pocket nametag was half burned off.
"Connelly?" she said, reading what was left. "Why don't you
distribute? You'll want the yellow ones-they'll replace electrolytes and boost
your energy levels."
Keeping
one eye on her and the gun she held, Connelly
retrieved the sack. With a pang of pity Yana saw that he was
sufficiently fatigued so that it took him three yanks to break the labs, and
half the bars and drink packets spewed over the ground. She stepped back and
motioned for the others to help.
"Wait!"
Torkel cried with a tinge of desperation. Yana turned to him. His eyes,
watching the survivors scoop up the supplies, reflected a struggle with his
emotions for the sort of control and charm that had always been a hallmark of
his command personality. "Yana, please be reasonable. You know we're going
to need those . . ."
"Torkel,
if I was you I'd shut the frag up," Yana said, waving the gun at him.
"You didn't exactly cover yourself with glory trying to take the copter
away from the wounded and you're not improving things by trying to prevent the
distribution of emergency rations to these survivors. As for me, I ate a while
back."
Connelly,
who had been handing the packets out to the others, contemptuously threw four
at Torkel's feet. "Sorry, buddy. Didn't know you'd missed your bloody
lunch."
"It's
not that," Torkel said, wisely leaving the packets alone for the moment.
"She's distorting this incident to make us look bad in your eyes, hoping
you'll aid her."
"Which
you are now doing by eating those rations," Giancarlo said sternly.
"If you value your careers, you'll listen to Captain Fiske here and
cooperate with our mission."
"Careers!"
said another man, whose ashy parka bore the name "O'Neill."
"Sure now, Colonel darlin'," he went on, his face angry, his words
soft, and the Irish in his accent dangerously broad, the way the Petaybean
accent became when mocking the stupidity of ; higher-ups. "We're that
worried about our careers havin' just outrun yer volcano there. Seems to me
that if it's our lives we're after valuin', the dama's the one to be listenin'
to." He deliberately and defiantly chewed and swallowed a large hunk of
his ration bar.
"Colonel
Giancarlo, please," Torkel said. "I know you mean well but you're
playing into her hands."
Watching
his face, in which the desperation she had seen before was now suppressed, she
saw him begin to calculate the effect of each word and attitude on the
survivors. He was smart enough to know that he had alienated them initially,
and smart enough to know that if he wanted to regain control of the situation
he was going to have to have them on his side. "Folks, you'll have to
forgive Colonel Giancarlo. He doesn't mean to sound callous but he's absolutely
right. Our mission is one of the utmost priority and this woman has sided with
the Petaybean insurgents creating this catastrophe!"
His arm
swept across the devastation behind the survivors, the pulsing mud in the
valley at their heels, the glow of the volcano visible even through the ashy
miasma cloaking the area.
"Right,"
Connelly said, "one skinny little woman, with or without help, caused a
volcano? I'm a mining engineer, Captain. Pull the other one."
The
third man coughed both to clear his lungs and to get attention. "They
might have set strategic charges that triggered the volcano."
"Th-that's
right," the last survivor, a woman, stammered. Until she had eaten her
ration bar, she had been trembling so violently that she had looked on the
verge of convulsions; now her fearful glance centered on the presence of the
authorities as represented by Torkel, Giancarlo, and Ornery. "Teams have
disappeared here before. It can't all be natural."
"Damned
right it's not," Torkel said, following up his advantage. "We were
interrogating Maddock here, trying to get information from her to head off this
disaster, when it blew up in our faces. Meanwhile, my own father, Dr. Whittaker
Fiske, was coming to join a team in your vicinity to suss out the
situation."
"In
case you don't know who Dr. Fiske is," Giancarlo put in, "he's
assistant chairman of the board, direct descendant of the man who developed the
terraforming process that transformed the rock into a viable planet, and is the
company's top expert on the environmental development and stability of all of
Internal's terraformed holdings."
"He's
the one man who can save this project and everybody involved with it, which is
why you must help me find him," Torkel said, adding with a catch in his
voice that could have even been genuine, "and he's my father. That's why
we tried to supersede your need to move your wounded and effect your own
rescue. Another copter would have been here for you immediately, of course, but
this woman"-he jerked his thumb at Yana-"took advantage of the
pilot's humanitarian instincts to turn the situation against us. But if one of
you will guide me to where the shuttle came down, she won't be able to stop me
from going in after my dad and saving this rock."
"Okay,
who's it going to be?" Giancarlo demanded. "We need to move here and
move fast. You heard Captain Fiske. We need volunteers to take us to the crash
site."
"Say
what?" O'Neill asked, not believing what he heard. "We come out of
that"-he waved to the steaming valley.-"by the skin of our teeth and
you're after us to risk our necks again? You're bloody nuts!"
The
third man just shook his head tiredly. His shoulders were stooped under the weight
of a variety of cameras and other instrument packages, as well as under the
weight of the terror and pain he had just lived through. The straps kept Yana
from seeing all of his name but "Sven" was part of it.
Torkel
shook his head firmly, staring O'Neill down. "No. I'm not nuts. I'd never
ask you to risk yourselves except that this it absolutely vital. It is
imperative to the well-being of this planet and the personnel on it that we
find my father with all possible dispatch."
"Find
him? In that?" Sven demanded in a voice rasped harsh by smoke.
"There's
no alternative, man!" Torkel was getting agitated, as he looked from Sven
to Connelly and then to the other two, the stocky O'Neill and the stammering
woman. "You did see the shuttle go down, right?"
Sven
and Connelly both nodded.
"Well,
where did it go down? Point me out the direction from here. I've coordinates,
but they're only good in a copter."
Sven
gave Connelly a long look and then, angling himself, he faced in a
west-northwest position. "Near as I can remember it. We were scrambling
ourselves by then."
"Why
bother?" O'Neill asked, a trace of exasperation in his voice.
"Captain, the shuttle was trying to land just as the volcano blew. The
shock wave hit it like a ton of fraggin' bricks. I saw the craft knocked out of
the sky with my own eyes. There's nobody could survive that." He obviously
felt his own survival was miracle enough for one day.
"That's
not true!" Torkel said, his voice suddenly wild with denial as he grabbed
O'Neill's coat front and began shaking him. "My father has to have
survived, you bloody idiot!" Then he realized what he was doing and loosed
O'Neill with one more plea. "Don't discourage me, man. Help me, for pity's
sake."
Yana
had been watching this, also making certain that neither Giancarlo nor Ornery
made any sudden moves toward her. She thought maybe Torkel's emotional display
was genuine, but the man was devious-it could as well be a diversionary tactic.
She couldn't take any chances. "Chill out, Torkel," she said. "These
people are exhausted and in shock. They're not going to be fool enough to risk
their lives going back in there."
But if
Torkel was acting, he was doing it with enough conviction that he ignored her
waving the gun. "You didn't actually see the volcanic blast destroy the
shuttle, did you?" he demanded of O'Neill.
"No,"
O'Neill said tiredly. "It was intact when the force of the blast blew it
off course."
"Ah,
but it blew it away from the path of the debris, right?"
"Well,
yes. It was debris, too, as far as the volcano was concerned," O'Neill
told him.
"But
there could have been survivors of the crash?"
Connelly,
who Yana sensed was slowly being convinced by Torkel's insistence, told him in
a weary but not unsympathetic voice, "That was three hours ago, Captain,
and that volcano's been raining down and spitting mud out . . ."
Torkel
heard the sympathy in the man's voice and pounced on it. "Will you guide
me?"
But he
had pushed too hard. Connelly withdrew and favored him with a disbelieving
look, shaking his head. "The only one I'm guiding is me, out of here, when
the copter gets back."
"Listen
up, Connelly, and the rest of you, too," Giancarlo said. "Captain
Fiske is not just any military captain. As son of Board member Fiske, he also
holds the position of ranking executive on this planet at this time. Failure to
cooperate with him and with this mission will have serious repercussions on
your career."
"So,"
Connelly said, "will death. I'm not sticking around here waiting for that
mountain to blow again for the chairman of the board. Besides, in these flying
conditions"-he waved his hand off to the north-"no copter, any
copter, would stay airborne for more than ten, maybe fifteen minutes." He
snorted. "You'd do better using your feet."
When
Giancarlo started toward him angrily, Yana spoke up again.
"I
wouldn't, were I you, Colonel," she said. "They've done enough just
making it here. And you both should know," she added, flicking a glance at
Torkel, "how useless it would be to fly a copter in there!"
"Then,
by all that's holy"- Abandoning his frantic make-'em-see-reason attitude,
Torkel drew himself up into a noble-against-adversity stance. -"I'll make
it on foot. Your packs there," he said, pointing to the pile slowly
accumulating a cover of ash, "can be replaced at company expense when you
get back to base. They won't be of much future use to you considering their
present condition, but I would very much appreciate being able to scrounge what
I need from them."
Connelly
and Sven exchanged looks and shrugged. The woman, with an anxious look at
Yana's gun hand, darted over and extracted a small sack from the pile,
skittering back to the protection of her colleagues.
"Might
as well. There's not that much there," Connelly said, "and if the
company'll make good . . ."
"Of
course, the company will make good," Giancarlo snapped. "Your
equipment was company issue to begin with. Who else do you think would replace
it?"
"I
promise you it won't be debited from your pay," Torkel said quickly.
"And any personal effects you've lost will be replaced, as well. The
company takes care of its own."
O'Neill
flicked him a resentful glance. "The way you were going to take care of
the wounded?"
"Frag
it all, O'Neill, I'm not some kind of a monster," Torkel said, even as he
gestured for Giancarlo and Ornery to help him collect the packs. "I told
O'Shay to radio for another bird for your wounded and for yourselves. A few
minutes would have made no difference to them. You'll all get out safely. My
father, and the crew of that shuttle, are still out there in that
inferno."
Yana
couldn't believe Torkel's gall, trying to guilt-trip the survivors. He sure was
a company man: give with one hand, shuffle the shells, and take with the other!
But she had no objections to him going after his father, as long as he didn't
fore* anyone else to do it, too.
"Knowing
how important it is, won't even one of you guide us?" he implored one more
time as the air began throbbing with the sound of an approaching copter.
"Captain,"
Connelly said, "we really couldn't help you. All landmarks will have been
destroyed by now, and none of us saw where your father's craft actually
crashed. You've got the compass and the coordinates of where it was originally
supposed to land." He scanned the sky anxiously with reddened eyes.
"I hope you find him."
The
unmistakable sound of the approaching copter grew louder: it was a Sparrowhawk,
if Yana read the sound of it right. Those usually had room to seat the crew
members and three more, but there was ample room for others to sit on the
floor. Maybe, with a little luck, she could just manage to squeeze herself on
board, too.
She
relaxed her guard just enough to glance up at the sky, and that was when she
was jumped. She had been so busy watching Torkel, Giancarlo, and Ornery that
she hadn't paid any attention to the survivors, and Sven used the distraction
of the chopper to grab her gun hand and twist. Before she knew it, she was on
the other side of the weapon, nursing a numb wrist.
"Good
man!" Torkel cried, leaping forward to relieve Sven of the gun, only to be
waved to a standstill.
"He
is that," O'Neill said. "Too good to let you get the drop on us again
and try to get this helicopter away from us as well, for all the good it would
do you."
Sven
was evidently in agreement, for he backed over to the rest of his colleagues in
a show of solidarity.
"I
wouldn't have let them do that," Yana told Sven. "I made them
surrender the other copter, didn't I?"
Sven
grunted and shook his head, waving her back to the others.
"We're
sorry, dama," O'Neill said. "You did help before and we're that
grateful, but maybe you were only doin' it to get clear of them? Maybe you'd be
after commandeerin' this bird for yourself to make your getaway. We can't
chance it, and we don't need any more trouble today."
"At
least take me with you," Yana urged.
But at
that moment Giancarlo hooked her left arm and whipped it around and up under
her shoulder blade, leaving her far more occupied with pain than argument.
"You're
not going anywhere, Maddock," he murmured in her ear. "We haven't
finished with you yet."
O'Neill
and Connelly looked as if they were about to jump in and defend her, but Torkel
spoke up again.
"You
people go on. Take the copter, but leave her with us. She knows more than she's
telling, and maybe when she sees what her rebel friends have unleashed, she'll
have the good sense to help us save this planet."
"If
she knows where other charges are planted, we'll get it out of her,"
Giancarlo said grimly.
"It
is true that there wasn't supposed to be any natural seismic activity where we
were setting up the mine," Connelly replied cautiously, with a glance
first at Sven and then at the approaching copter.
"Right!"
Torkel said, yelling over the copter's noise. "Everything that's happened
is unnatural. You tell them at SpaceBase that there's a massive conspiracy
afoot on Petaybee, and that Mad-dock's changed sides. She's in league now with
the perpetrators. If you hadn't disarmed her, she would have gotten away, and
who knows what trouble she would have caused."
The
copter was slowly settling to the ground a discreet distance from the knot of
humans. The survivors began backing toward it, Sven keeping the weapon trained
on the company tableau of Torkel, Giancarlo holding Yana prisoner, and Ornery,
"They're
nuts," Yana yelled, appealing to O'Neill. "You said yourself, nobody
can jumpstart a volcano!"
O'Neill
shot her a guilty glance, and he and Connelly exchanged looks, but the woman
laid her hand fearfully on Sven's arm and he shook his head.
"No,"
he hollered. "We've risked our butts enough for one day. I'm not risking
my job any further for someone in trouble with the management. You got into
this mess, dama; you get yourself out without our help. You people sort it out
among yourselves."
When
the survivors were aboard the copter, Torkel leaned in the open door to yell at
the pilot.
"You
tell them at SpaceBase that I said this volcanic eruption is part of a plot to
undermine our investigation and to kill a member of the board. And you get them
to send out ground transport as soon as possible. Get it to the volcano site!
We'll meet them there! Tell them that my father, Dr. Whittaker Fiske, is out
there and it's vital we rescue him. Absolutely vital!" The pilot began
lifting off and Torkel jumped down and backed off slightly, but repeated
himself, yelling through cupped hands. "Tell them we've gone ahead to
rescue my father. They're to follow us!"
The
pilot gave him a thumbs-up signal and waved him away from the rising aircraft.
They
all watched as the copter whisked away, disappearing into a maelstrom of wind,
ash, and smoke. Giancarlo released Yana abruptly when it was out of sight, and
she fell to her knees. As she rose, she gingerly worked her shoulder to be sure
Giancarlo's enthusiasm hadn't wrenched muscles. As near as she could tell, she
was still in good functioning order-at least for now.
Without
so much as an eye blink, Torkel tossed her one of the packs he had been
filling.
"Grab
the rest of those ration bars, Maddock," he ordered.
She
didn't mind. It gave her the chance to get something in her own belly. She
couldn't fault the survivors, but she sure hoped they didn't believe the crap
Fiske had been shoveling in their ears: that she was "in league with the
perpetrators," "had caused all these unnatural phenomena."
Trouble was, she thought with a snort, those poor devils were shocked enough to
believe every word. Rather ungrateful of them, though, especially when O'Shay
had made it plain that she was the only reason the copter had been able to land
to pick up their wounded. Whatever! Torkel had turned them against her
sufficiently to banjax her one chance of getting free. Free-and she had a
private grin-to foment riot and rebellion back at the SpaceBase, or even with all
those dangerous allies she had joined forces with.
She
hoped they were all right at Kilcoole. Then Giancarlo brought her back to the
present with a shove in the direction of the valley filled with blistering mud
and smoking ash. Torkel was leading, then Ornery with Giancarlo behind her: not
exactly where she preferred him, but she was in no position to make requests,
was she?
Although
there were still safe places to walk where the mud hadn't yet spread, Yana
wondered how far in toward the volcanic site they could get, where the damage
was fresh and the flow still boiling hot. If the planet decided to set off its
new volcano again, they would be right under it. Actually, she thought, smiling
to herself, the planet was doing such a complete job of dividing and routing
the "enemy," that she wouldn't mind going under to such an admirable
opponent.
"We'll
be okay," Torkel said to no one in particular as he trudged forward.
"But Dad won't if we don't reach him soon."
His
voice was still taut with anxiety, though it projected less heart-wrenching
filial devotion than it had when he had spoken to the survivors. Yana wondered
why he was really risking their necks-but the answer was fairly obvious. Torkel
was a pretty good company spy and a fair administrator, but he was not a
creative scientist like his father, and without the elder Fiske, he was not apt
to carry the same weight in the corporate structure. Of course he wanted to
find old Whittaker. He was once again protecting his interests.
She was
thinking about that as she kept a close eye on where she was putting her feet.
She tried not to cough in the ash-laden, sulfury-smelling smoke. She hadn't had
her lungs healed just to mess them up again inhaling this sort of crud. She
tore off a piece of her shirttail and tied it across her mouth. The others did
likewise, but cloth was a flimsy filter against the thickly laden wind, unlike
the protective masks the company would have issued if such conditions had been
anticipated.
Their
progress was slow. They could not see the sun at all, and when Yana checked her
watch, she had to rub the face clear of clinging ash to read it, but even then
the face remained dark and empty; the ash no doubt had worked its way into the
mechanism and clogged it. Fortunately, the compass was better shielded and more
reliable. For hours, they picked their way forward through the maze of paths
that terminated abruptly in mudflow, forcing them to double back and find a new
path, then following that one forward until it, too, gave out. Occasionally the
volcano would spew forth a gout of fiery red and orange matter, giving them a
terrible beacon to their progress. The air was also getting closer, hotter, and
that slowed them down, too. All were perspiring heavily, and the three men had
torn shirttails into sweat bands around neck or forehead.
Just
about the time Yana was beginning to wonder if the crash site was a myth to
lure them into the certain death of the volcano field, Giancarlo yelled and
pointed. There, ash-dusted and protruding from what looked like an ocean of the
gray muddy guck, was unmistakably a delta wingtip that had to be part of the
downed shuttle. They rushed forward, stopping just on the edge of the bubbling
mud.
Yana
looked up at Torkel and saw his eyes harden and his mouth twist in pain. That
sort of anguish was not generated by a career anxiety alone, she realized.
Whatever personally pragmatic motives he might have for this search, he truly
did care for his father.
They
had to spend a long time circling the crash site, looking for any sign that
someone might have escaped. Torkel circled and paced like a crazy man, trying
to find a way across the mudflow to that protruding wingtip, though what good
that would do, Yana didn't know. They had no rope or cable to secure the tip to
keep it from sliding farther into the mud, and the four of them certainly
couldn't have pulled it, and the rest of the shuttle, free. Then Torkel
obviously realized that this activity was futile and began methodically
inspecting every inch of what solid ground there was for traces that survivors
had exited the shuttle before the mud had drowned it.
The
world was silent, except for the men's harsh breathing, and even that was
muffled. Yana tried not to hold her breath, but she hated every ounce of contaminated
air she had to drag into her lungs. When would Torkel give up this useless
search? If there had been survivors, they ought to have had sense enough to get
out of this vicinity with all possible speed. The likeliest explanation for the
lack of traces leading away from the crash site was that there had been no one
to make them. Surely Torkel had to admit that possibility. And it was equally
unlikely that their tracks would be discernible with mud and ash constantly
falling to cover such traces. Meanwhile, conditions were deteriorating from
minute to minute as the mud and ash built up. If they weren't awfully careful,
someone was going to take the wrong step and end up mud-baked.
She
felt the ground flutter beneath her feet and took a step backward.
And
quite unexpectedly she found herself touched by an amazing sensation. It was
similar to what she had felt in the cave: staunch, reassuring, welcoming. She
swiveled around, not knowing what she might find in such an unlikely place.
There was only the giant boulder she had just stepped around. It was shaped
like an enormous top, the point plunged deep into the ground. Its mass had
separated the flow of the mud, leaving a wide, clear, somewhat sheltered space.
The mud
around her gave a mighty heave and she shot an apprehensive glance at the
boulder for fear it might topple over onto her. But it didn't move an inch. Was
that what the planet had been reassuring her about? That the boulder was safe?
Then Ornery shouted, and whipping around, she was just in time to see the
wingtip slowly sinking out of sight into the mud. Torkel, standing a few paces
beyond her, yelled in anguish and reached out as if to grab the wing. He was
off balance when the surface heaved once more, and he was thrown sideways.
Instinctively, she leapt forward, catching the fluttering edge of his torn
shirt with one hand. With a second desperate lurch, she caught hold of his pack
strap with the other and hauled him into the shelter of the top-shaped boulder.
The
tremors were the prelude to another eruption of the volcano. Particles of ash
rained down faster, ever faster, rapidly developing into a deluge of red-hot
flying stones. Then, with a roar much louder than a ship blasting from a
launchpad, scalding mud, scouring ash, and rock-strewn dust flew past them.
Yana cried out, whipping her left arm under cover as the downpour ignited the
fabric of her sleeve. She beat out the sparks and crouched down as tightly as
she could against what protection the boulder gave. Beside her, Torkel let out a
yowl as his vulnerable right side was also lashed by burning embers. The hot
ash was pervasive, and there seemed to be no way to avoid it. In desperation,
she unslung her pack and covered her head with it. Squeezing tight against the
boulder, she felt the ground tremble again. Fleetingly she wondered about the
advisability of clinging to a boulder, no matter what the planet suggested. At
any moment the huge stone could roll over and crush them. But alternatives were
not available. She let the pack slip farther down to protect her back from the
hot and painful dusting.
Every
muscle taut and every nerve stretched, she endured, as Torkel did beside her.
She really should have made her escape at Scan's, she decided. That was her
first mistake! She could have used one of the curlies or the comm unit or
something to get her back to the village. Her second, she thought grimly, was
not watching the miners and letting one of them take her weapon. Again, if she
had played her cards better she could have been safely back at Kilcoole, where
she knew she had friends and where she would have had a chance of finding Sean.
If half of what people said about him was true, if what she felt about him was
true, he would know what this was all about.
Then,
miraculously, the roaring abated, a gust of side wind blew some of the smoke
and ash away, and a light rain began to fall.
Maybe,
Yana thought with small hope, it would rain harder, clear the air a bit, and
cool the mud off enough so they could walk out of there.
When at
last she dared to peel herself off the boulder, she did a damage report on
herself. Burns stung, rock scrapes ached, she was covered with ash, blood
speckled here and there. Then she looked at Torkel, who looked much the same
way she felt. Only . . . her hand went to her head and she was relieved to find
that she had more hair left than he did. Torkel had lost quite a swath,
including his eyebrows, down his right side. And most of his shirt.
The
back of his fatigue pants, made of a supposedly indestructible material, looked
more like mesh drawers. His right arm was a mass of tiny blisters, and her left
one was in no better shape. Both packs were smoking, riddled with burn holes.
She was putting the remains of the pack out where the rain could douse the
final sparks when she saw Giancarlo lying unconscious, half-buried in the
runnel of mud. He must have been trying to make it to the shelter of the
boulder, too. There was no sign of Ornery-eyes.
The
copters and other aircraft were grounded by falling ash, the snocles could not
run over rivers and muddy slush, the tracked vehicles were too slow, and the
runners of the sleds would not slide over broken ground. Rivers had changed
their courses so that travel by water was unreliable to the point of insanity.
Therefore,
the little string of sturdy curly-coats, each bearing either passenger or pack,
traveled alone across the vast emptiness of the uninhabited northwestern sector
of Petaybee, toward the mountains stretching up from the plains on one side; on
the other, down onto the ice pack to the north and on to the open sea.
The
lead curly, Boru, carried Sinead, while the next, the largest and the sturdiest
of the beasts, carried Clodagh, wrapped in a poncho that covered both her and
her mount so that she looked like a mountain on hooves. Behind her traveled
Bunny, then Diego Metaxos, who was still fretting about leaving his father in
Aisling's care. He had been badly torn between the honor of being asked to join
the rescue party and his responsibility to supervise his father's steady
improvement. He had left his father absently stroking one of the several cats,
who had continued to adhere to the man like leeches. Both Clodagh and Aisling
had assured him that this was a very good sign and told him to let matters
proceed at their own pace. Diego couldn't hurry the healing process but he had
extracted a promise from Aisling that she would take his father down to the hot
springs as soon as possible. Steve Margolies had insisted on coming along as
the "technical" observer to the phenomenon. He carried the only
concession to modem technology, a comm unit, for contacting Adak in Kilcoole
and SpaceBase.
Bunny
thought it was the most ill assorted rescue party imaginable, but, what with
all the injured being tended at Kilcoole, these five had been the only ones
available. Sinead would have gone by herself, if no one else had accompanied
her to rescue Yana, hoping to find her brother, too. No sooner had Bunny told
Clodagh what Adak had said about Yana being in trouble and the shuttle crashing
than Sinead had barged into the cabin, muttering that Yana was in trouble and
she had to go help.
"Sean
send for you?" Clodagh had asked, her gaze unusually piercing.
"Not
just Sean," Sinead had answered, biting her words off. She glanced about,
measuring the occupants for suitability to her need. "This is it,
Clodagh!"
Clodagh
had nodded once and brought her meat cleaver down so hard that it quivered,
stuck, in the board. "I go with you!"
"You?"
Bunny couldn't believe her ears, but Clodagh was already taking off her apron,
striding to the litter of parkas and boots by the door, and searching through
them for her own gear.
Her
statement had galvanized the others. Nothing would have kept Bunny from
following Clodagh, though her insistence astounded Steve. But he repeated his
assertion that he had to make observations of the phenomenon. When Diego
vacillated, obviously distressed, wanting to go, yet unwilling to leave his
father, Aisling had volunteered to look after Francisco.
As they
went outside to select curly-coats from the herd Sinead had rounded up, another
volunteer made it plain that he was coming along: Nanook. A quick smile lit
Sinead's anxious face, and she laid her hand in a brief gesture of gratitude on
the animal's black and white head.
Dinah
joined them, too, using drastic measures to get her way. Seeing them ride out
of the village, she had howled so piteously and continued to yelp at such an
earsplitting volume that Herbie must have given in and ordered Liam to let her
loose. She came charging up to Diego just as they dipped down in the valley
northwest of the town, and she maintained a position beside his mount
throughout the trek.
Nanook
had taken it as his right to lead the expedition and ranged way beyond Sinead,
now and then padding back to them as if hoping he could speed up their
progress. But the slush and mud made the going slow, and even the clever
curly-coats got trapped now and then in melting drifts.
On the
first day, when the ground shook again, Clodagh lifted her hand to signal a
halt. Laboriously she dismounted and slowly lay down, arranging herself flat on
her belly, her right cheek pressed onto the snow-packed ground. After a long
time, she rose, wiping her face clean before she pointed west. "That way."
Clodagh
also had other means of communication and Bunny watched, fascinated, as she
employed them. She sang. Using tone-like sonar, she sang to the birds and the
rocks and the plants:
"Friends,
have you seen our friend, Yanaba? ''
She met
the enemy and was taken into battle with him.
See
that she comes to no harm."
If the
addressee was a raven, it promptly flew away; if it was an animal, it ran
purposefully off; a stream, it kept about ill business, but Bunny swore that
the ripples changed pitch; and if it was the ground beneath the hooves of the
horses, it simply absorbed the songs, listening. Clodagh listened, too, and
then she would alter their direction a compass point or two. They would
continue for a while on the new course until she found something else to sing
to.
In this
way, despite Margolies's demanding explanations of this quixotic form of
directions, they traveled for two days and two nights and half a day again.
They got what sleep they could in their makeshift saddles, stopping only to feed
the horses, and for ten minutes in every two hours to rest their mounts' backs.
The horses kept moving tirelessly, mostly at a walk but occasionally, where the
terrain had been swept free of snow, breaking into their smooth little canter.
Very
early on the rescuers had to cover their mouths with pieces of cotton cloth
that rapidly became clogged with dust and ash and had to be shaken often. Even
the food they ate during their brief halts tasted like more of the same. Soon
everyone's eyes went from stinging to being red and swollen. When they could
dig down to clean snow during the rest halts, they bathed their faces, trying
to relieve the irritation.
Everything
was mud gray-the sky, the ground, the air- and the people and animals moved
like big ashy lumps in front and behind. Bunny was so tired and so full of ash
and smoke that only her sore tailbone let her know that she was not traveling
in a dream. Then Nanook began racing forward and back to them until they
quickened their progress in anticipation of what he might have found. He led
them to a place where the snow and ash still bore faint indentations of human
feet, the long flat marks of copter skids, and a pile of discarded effects, all
but the metal reduced to scraps of melted or fused material. Fingers of
cooling, hardening mud crept up the side of a canyon wall.
Nanook
leapt the few feet from the edge of the canyon to the mud, and Bunny caught her
breath, fearful that Nanook might be risking injury. But the cat was far from
stupid, and he landed and solemnly stretched out on a surface that was
apparently comfortably warm. He began licking his filthy paws as if he were
back in Sean's laboratory.
"Trust
him to find the perfect spot to relax," Clodagh said, amused.
Dinah
also settled down to lick her paws clean. She had trotted dutifully by Diego's
mount, her red coat barely visible under its ashen cover.
They
slipped the saddle blankets and hackamores from the horses and fed them. They
munched trail rations as they unstrapped the snowshoes that they hoped would
give them better footing over the ash-covered mud and snow. While they made a
final check of their packs, Steve Margolies called their position in to Adak.
Bunny only hoped the transmission was better than the reception. All they could
hear was a hiss and crackle a little louder than the wind, which was blowing
steadily east.
"I
hope they got all that," Steve told the others. "I didn't hear
exactly what they said but, having done a personal on-the-spot review of
conditions, I think they said this is a no-go area. There was also some
gibberish about there being no one in command to give orders."
Clodagh
gave a contemptuous sniff and, with a groan, once more began to spread herself
flat on the ground. The others stood about for what seemed a very long time-at
least the curly-coats had moved a good distance away in search of any grass the
mud and ash hadn't buried-before she moved again.
She
hauled herself up, mopped the ash from her face and neck, brushed it off the
front of her clothes, and then pointed. 'That way."
"The
volcano's that way," Steve protested, pointing elsewhere.
Clodagh
moved her arm slightly toward the north. 'The volcano is that way." Then
she dropped her snowshoes to the ground and stepped into them. Scooping up her
pack and twitching her shoulders so that it settled on her back, she started
off in the direction she had indicated.
Bunny
looked at Diego and shrugged. Sinead jerked her head at the perplexed Steve,
and very shortly, all were following her down into the valley, Dinah sticking
right at Diego's heels. In several leaps, Nanook caught up and passed the
humans. Clodagh took particular notice of where he put his paws. For all her
bulk, she moved with unexpected agility as she followed the cat's tracks.
Chapter
16
Yana
and Torkel dragged Giancarlo back to the uncertain safety of the boulder, the
three of them hostage to the hot mud surrounding them. Yana bound up
Giancarlo's pulped arm and leg, but the heat of the mud and flying rock had
pretty well cauterized the wounds inflicted by the blast-or so she would have
to hope, she thought ruefully. The colonel would be lucky to live long enough
to get infections.
Torkel
had taken a worse beating than she, for although her back was pretty well
skinned, her hair hadn't been as badly singed and her scalp hadn't been
peppered with ash because she'd had sense enough to protect her head. Torkel's
face was scored and swollen where rock had hit it before she had pulled him
down, and he was ravaged with grief besides.
She had
had to prod him painfully to get him to move enough to help her with Giancarlo.
"Look,
Torkel," she said in her best bracing tone. "If your dad survived the
crash and the first blast, it's likely he survived I he second one, as well. At
any rate, we can't do anything about it one way or the other unless we survive.
Here, eat this so we do!" She thrust a battered ration pack at him,
somewhat amazed that the wrapping was still intact. It seemed years ago that
she had stuffed them in the front of her shirt.
She
wasn't sure when she slept, but she knew that sometime within that interminable
period, the searing heat from the mud dissipated and the sunless air grew cold
again. She and Torkel Fiske put the unconscious Giancarlo between them and
hunched over him, sharing their warmth with him. In her sleep she dreamed that
she was holding Scan rather than Torkel, and he was bathing her wounds with
water from the hot springs, telling her, "I'm here, Yana. Trust me.
Nothing of this world means you harm. Listen to its voice. Remember now . .
."
The
dream and others like it repeated as she slept or half dozed, shivering,
clinging to the warmth and life in the two other bodies for more time than she
could count or was conscious of.
Then,
without knowing how or when it happened, she woke from the dream of Scan,
feeling warm again. She smelled a freshening in the air and realized that her
hand was touching something cool, hard, and smooth; and, rousing, she found
that she was touching the once scalding mud.
Torkel
was still sleeping, and Giancarlo moaned in a fever. Yana sat up and placed
both palms against the mud. The sensation wasn't unpleasant. It still retained
some warmth, but was otherwise hard and seemed stable. Standing, she tested
other areas, pressing her fingers into the layer of ash overlying the
previously steaming rivulet. It gave with a slight hiss and a hint of
smokiness, but once the crust was broken, solid hard mud was only an inch or
two down. She carefully hauled herself up on top of the flow and found that it
held her weight.
The air
was clearer. She could definitely smell and see the difference at this height.
A strong wind whipped at her, blowing the ash back away from them and over to
the north and east. Torkel sat up and blinked lashless eyes at the sudden
change. Yana rubbed cautiously at her arms, avoiding the burn blisters but
needing to increase blood circulation and reduce hypothermia. She was glad of
the visibility, glad of the ability to travel again, if only they knew where
they were going. Then she opened the remaining ration pack, twisted it into two
more or less equal halves, and let him choose.
"We'll
have to drag Giancarlo," she told Torkel when they had finished their
scanty meal.
"He'll
slow us down," Torkel said.
"You
want to leave him?" she asked. She didn't like being directly responsible
for anyone's death. On the other hand, if she was to be responsible for someone
dying here, she wouldn't much mind if it was Giancarlo.
Torkel
looked down at the colonel, then shrugged
and bent to hoist him by the arms up the wall of mud, where Yana helped
support the unconscious man.
"We'd
better get him back to where a copter can land, I hen." Yana said.
But he
shook his head stubbornly, unreasonably. "Dad may still be out here."
"You
can come back afterward," she insisted.
But
just then a fresh gust of wind from the west carried a raven toward them. The
bird swooped, diving so low that its wing brushed Yana's hair.
Its cry
was no doubt only the usual raucous caw, but to her, wounded, shocked, and
probably a little delirious, it seemed to be saying " 'ana, 'ana," or
maybe it was "Sean, Sean." Then it made an abrupt turn and flew back
the way it came. Abruptly she recalled Sean's dream message.
"Okay,
you win," she told Torkel. "But we spell each other dragging the son
of a bitch and you get first shift."
She was
pleased when the crow's west eventually turned out to be the right direction.
Even so, both she and Torkel were at the end of their strength from dragging
Giancarlo's heavy and unresponsive body when she caught the first gleam of open
water. She hadn't realized how parched she was until that moment. Then her
throat took over, reminding her that she was so dehydrated it didn't know if it
would ever come unstuck. Up closer, Yana saw that the water was a little
stream, running from one edge of the mud and on into the side of a hill. Yana
fully expected the water to be milky with ash and mud and clogged with debris,
but in fact it was so clear she could see the stones at the bottom. Somehow
this stretch had escaped all of the ravages of the volcano. Where the stream
emerged from the hill, she could make out a deep, cavelike opening, into which
her crow guide disappeared as she watched.
Judging
by the way the ash had drifted, Bunny thought that the wind had been westerly
for some time, possibly the entire two and a half days it had taken them to
make it this far. Nanook even began to touch down on the mud from time to time,
and when the humans walked on it, they felt only a tolerable warmth through the
soles of their boots. It certainly wasn't hot enough to damage the snowshoes, which
were proving their worth through the heavier ash deposits.
They
were moving steadily to one side of the smoldering cone. Smoke or steam was
windborne away from them to the east, so that the air was not so clogged with
ash and sulfur stench.
Seen
from this safe distance, the volcano didn't, to Bunny's way of thinking, look
all that dangerous. It was actually not very big.
"It
doesn't have to be big to be dangerous," Steve said when she voiced her
observation. "I'm no expert on vulcanism-Petaybee is not supposed to be
labile," he added in a sourly amused tone, "but, on a world which
does have considerable activity, a volcano can rise up one day and disappear
the next. After raining ash, lava, rock, or whatever all across a landscape.
We're just lucky this is only an ash-and-mud type. Some rise for the one
blowoff and then remain dormant."
"Is
this one dormant now?" Bunny asked, eyeing it nervously.
"We
hope," Steve said with a grin.
"Clodagh?"
Bunny persisted.
Clodagh
shrugged and plowed on tirelessly. Nanook skirted a vast lake of hardening mud
that steamed more than did most of the rivulets and puddles of the stuff.
The
volcano was almost out of sight behind them, obscured by the foothills, when
Nanook suddenly picked up the pace, from an amble to a working lope. Then,
abruptly, he halted at a fast-running stream to lap up the clear water. The
others were glad to follow his example.
Clodagh
did more than drink: she immersed her face in the stream. She was so long about
it that Bunny got worried, but when she finally lifted her dripping head, she
wore a broad smile.
"That
way," she said, pointing uphill in a more northerly direction as she wiped
her face, leaving dark gray smudges on her forehead and down her cheeks.
Ash
clung to all their clothing and rendered their complexions ghostly gray.
"Let
me see if I can get a message through, Clodagh," Steve said, starting to
unsling his radio equipment.
"Not
now," she said, shaking her head, and began to follow the stream. Steve
shrugged and resettled the radio equipment.
The
stream disappeared into a narrow opening at the bottom of the first terrace of
the cliff. When Clodagh indicated that they would have to climb, they discarded
the snowshoes. Bunny marveled that Clodagh calmly prepared herself to climb,
hitching her skirts high enough so that her sturdy legs, clad in woolen pants
knitted in a variety of quite lively colors, were visible. She was slow, true
enough, but she made certain progress upward. Nanook reached the top of the
terrace in three graceful leaps, Dinah scrabbling close behind him. Fortunately
they didn't have all that far to go. On the second terrace, Nanook turned to
his right and led them around an escarpment, ducked into a hole in the stone,
and disappeared from sight. Only then did Clodagh groan, for she would have to
go down on hands and knees to follow the big cat. She did.
Once
inside, they could all stand up again. Clodagh paused, leaning against the wall
to catch her breath. Bunny thought the pace was telling on the large woman. It
was certainly beginning to wear Bunny down a bit, and she was much more used to
running about than Clodagh.
"Hey,
this is like the other place," Diego said, looking about him. A curious
luminescence gave enough light for them to see.
"Quite
a few subterranean networks did appear on the last scan that was made of this
planet," Steve was saying as he examined the rock walls, wiping off a
light film, which he rubbed between his fingers. "They weren't on previous
ones, but they do account for the subsidences. Or do they? Most unusual. I wish
Frank had been well enough to travel with us. He's more familiar with such
geological anomalies than I am." He walked on a few more strides before he
stopped completely, forcing Diego, walking behind him, to hurriedly step aside.
"Or perhaps there was a flaw in the original terraforming that has
produced unforeseen long-range crustal defects. A shame that Dr. Fiske was
killed on the shuttle crash."
"We
don't know that for certain," Bunny said. "Only that Captain Fiske
was going to try to find his father, so he could still be alive."
"Is
Fiske's father the company big shot who's supposed to know more about Petaybee
than anyone else?" Clodagh asked, pausing to lean against the stone.
"Yes,"
Steve said. "He's Dr. Whittaker Fiske, grandson of the Dr. Sven
Whittaker-Fiske who developed the Whittaker Effect, the process that perfected
the accelerated terraforming technique used to make Petaybee habitable."
When Clodagh gave Steve a long and thoughtful look, he corrected himself.
"Or at least he thought he had perfected it."
"Why
didn't he name it the Fiske Effect then?" Bunny asked.
"He
named it for his mother, Dr. Elsie Whittaker. I guess he thought it was
appropriate, considering the generative nature of the project."
Clodagh
gave a satisfied grunt and, pushing herself off the wall, was about to move
forward again when she stopped, holding her hand up for silence.
"Listen!"
The
sounds were muted but obviously human. Bunny and Sinead dashed forward, Diego,
with Dinah at his heels, just behind them. The voices had suddenly risen in
excitement, and as Bunny turned the next bend, she stopped in surprise. Nanook
had found Yana and was attempting to lick any part of her he could!
"Yana!
You're alive!" Bunny cried, but she had taken no more than one step before
she realized that Yana was not the only inhabitant of the large, low cave. And
judging by the way the camp had been set up, Yana and her companions had been
here a few days. "Who're all of you?" she demanded.
A
sturdy man in a torn uniform and a bandage covering almost all his black hair
stood up by the fire, where he had been stirring a pot. "Captain John
Greene of the shuttle Sockeye," he said with a wry smile. "Who're
you?"
"Buneka
Rourke of Kilcoole," Bunny said in stunned courtesy.
"From
Kilcoole? Of all the bloody luck," groaned a disgruntled voice, and a
battered, blistered, half-naked, filthy man barely recognizable as the dapper
Torkel Fiske rose painfully from his seat on the ground. He placed himself
protectively between the rescue party and an older man, who had one arm bound
across his chest.
Before
either Bunny or Sinead could respond to Torkel's hostile reaction, Steve
Margolies, and Diego, and an excitedly barking Dinah rushed into the cavern,
followed more slowly by Clodagh.
To the
man behind him, Torkel said, "Just keep calm, Dad. I'll handle this. These
are the rebels I was telling you about. The ones who brainwashed Maddock into
helping them."
"Nonsense,
son," the older man said, stepping gently but firmly past his tottering
son. "That's Steve Margolies there, and Frank Metaxos's boy, Diego.
They're no more rebels than I am."
"Dr.
Fiske," Steve exclaimed, rushing toward the older man and pumping his good
hand excitedly. "I can't believe you survived."
"Neither
can I," the older Fiske replied in a droll voice.
"Dr.
Fiske, in the past few days, Diego and these people have showed me the most
amazing developments. You simply won't believe what I have to tell you . .
."
"I'll
be the judge of that," Dr. Fiske said. "Stop posturing for a moment,
son, and sit down before you fall down." He gently pushed Torkel back to
the floor. "And for the love of Mike let these people clean you up and
dress your wounds. You're no damned good to me dead. You, young Diego, lend me
a hand here to clean up my son's wounds before they fester. I've only got the
one that's useful now, myself. I'll debrief Dr. Margolies."
"Yes,
sir," Diego said, taking over the bowl of water and the cloth. Having
learned a few things from caring for his father, Diego went about the duty both
gently and conscientiously, cleansing the portions of Torkel's body that Torkel
couldn't have reached. The captain wearily protested every dab, as if Diego
were deliberately trying to inflict more pain than was absolutely necessary.
Diego's private opinion was visible on his face: the captain was acting like a
big baby.
Dr.
Fiske settled down to one side of Torkel, and Steve hunkered down and began
talking in a rapid-fire explanation full of words Bunny didn't understand even
when she could make them out.
Yana
caught Clodagh's eye and urgently beckoned the healer over, indicating
Giancarlo's bundled figure on the ground by her feet.
Clodagh
examined the colonel's terrible burn wounds briefly, pursing her lips at the
irremedial damage.
"I
can do something to make him comfortable, no more," she said, shaking her
head. "Intergal may know something." She started to work, pulling
various unguents and potions, bandages and splints from her knapsack.
Yana
would never have expected to be sorry for a man like Giancarlo, but she was.
Hurting as badly as he was, he had not uttered a sound.
For
herself, Yana was so glad to see Clodagh and the others from Kilcoole that she
could have cried. She and Torkel had made it to the cave several hours before,
and she had been unutterably relieved to see the shuttle crash survivors.
However, once Torkel had reassured himself that his father was safe, he began
ranting about Yana's treachery and warning the shuttle crew to ignore anything
she might say and to watch her. Considering the fact that Yana had obviously
taken on most of the physical burden of dragging Giancarlo, as well as
supporting Torkel, as they staggered into the cave, the shuttle crew didn't pay
much attention to his ravings. Still, the atmosphere had been extremely tense.
Even the cave itself seemed to be holding its breath, waiting for something.
The calm before the storm? Yana wondered. A lull before the mountain blew
again? It didn't feel exactly like that, and she was too tired to analyze the
feeling, but it definitely added to the tension.
Once
Clodagh finished ministering to the unconscious Giancarlo, she rounded on Yana,
clucking over the scabby sores crusting Yana's left arm and over her appearance
in general.
"When
did you eat last, girl?" Clodagh demanded.
"I
had a piece of ration bar just before we got here," Yana said.
"You
look like you could eat a whole moose by yourself and sleep for a month. You
were skinny as a skeleton when you got to Kilcoole, but we fattened you up
good. Now you look like a lame doe after a hard winter again."
Yana
jerked her arm away from Clodagh. "Don't fuss over me. I'm all right.
There are others who could really use your help, Clodagh." She nodded
beyond her to others wearing makeshift bandages. "The shuttle survivors
have been here for three days, and they've had zip to look after themselves
with. All they could do for Dr. Fiske was immobilize his arm and wash off his
wounds."
"Is
that him over there Steve's talkin' to?" Clodagh asked. When Yana nodded
Clodagh said wryly, "He looks better off than Torkel to me."
Sinead
joined the two women then, her face anxious. "Have you seen him?" she
asked Yana. "I thought he'd be with you."
"No,
if you mean Scan," Yana said with an odd smile. "But I'll tell you
both something. We didn't find them"-and she gestured to the crash
victims-"we were led to them."
Hope
bounced back into Sinead's eyes. "Led to this place?"
Yana
nodded. "What's more, they swear they were led here, too. I can only think
of one person not here at the moment who might have engineered this rescue, and
I've been wondering, Sinead, how the hell he did it." Her eyes were keen
on the other woman's face. "Dr. Fiske told Torkel he believes that there's
an underground network of rivers. That's why there were so many subsidences
when the mining charges weakened subterranean supports. If there's a network,
one river flowing into another, then someone who knew his way around could go
from one end of the system to the other without ever being seen-couldn't
he?"
Sinead
gave Yana a long look. "If there was such a network, that's possible, I
suppose. I don't go underground much. 1 like horizons." Then she reached
to heave her pack off her back and began rummaging in it. "I've got spare
clothes you can use. And some stuff Clodagh will want."
"No
one looked beyond this cavern?" Clodagh asked with quiet urgency.
Yana
shook her head. "We'd enough to do without going exploring!"
"That's
as well," Clodagh said with a satisfied snort, and asked Yana who was the
worst of the injured. She cleansed, stitched, anointed, and listened as
gradually the two separate incidents were reported in detail.
The
shuttle had been on the point of landing when the volcano blast had caught it,
throwing the vehicle heavily to its side. Nine passengers had not survived the
impact, but the others, hastily mobilized by the resourceful young pilot,
Captain Greene, had got the living out of the shuttle before the air locks were
submerged. They had managed to leave the area, the hot mud only centimeters
from their heels as they plunged out of the western end of the valley. They had
paused only to distribute supplies and attend to burns, scalds, and broken
bones, before force-marching themselves as far from the erupting volcano as
their strength would take them. The wind was easterly: they had picked the only
safe direction to flee. And that had been only by chance, since the pilot had
thought he was directing them toward the mining site that had been their destination,
but a knock on the head, from the crash landing, had skewed his sense of
direction.
"Remarkable
that we were all led to this particular spot," Steve Margolies said.
"This appears to be the opening of a vast system of caves. The two parties
could have ended up in widely separated spots. Are there other entrances to
this particular cavern?" he asked, glancing toward the back of the cavern.
Greene
shrugged. "Could be. We didn't need to explore with that fresh stream
right outside."
"We'll
return later, properly equipped, and do a thorough investigation," Dr.
Fiske said in a firm command tone. "Right now, we'd better report these
coordinates and get our wounded back to SpaceBase. I believe this may be one of
the places for which our teams have been searching all these years. Dr.
Margolies, I trust you brought some means of communication with the base,
didn't you?"
"Of
course, of course," Steve said. He jumped to his feet. "We'll have to
go outside and get some height for the best possible signal-" Then he
stopped, as Torkel latched on to the comm set at his belt and hauled himself
wearily to his feet, using Steve to balance himself.
"I
initiate any communications," Torkel said curtly. Then he caught his
father's frown and managed a ghost of his old diplomatic smile for Margolies.
"That is, I'll report in while you and my father continue the
debriefing."
Captain
Greene nodded to the least injured of his crewmen, a short black man, who
helped Steve and the rumbling Torkel untangle the comm set from Steve's belt.
"And
while you're exercising your jaw, Dr. Fiske, I'll just see to your arm,"
Clodagh told the scientist. She crouched down in front of him and began untying
the sling.
"Dama,
I've waited this long," Fiske said with great dignity, resisting her
ministrations. "I can certainly- Ouch! How did you do that?" He
stared at his newly set arm and then at Clodagh, eyes wide with respect.
"It's
a knack I've developed," she said. Then she dipped a length of bandage in
a pot of her boneset potion and quickly and deftly wrapped the area about the
break. By the time she had done that and rinsed her hands off, the bandage had
hardened. "This will be more comfortable for you until you get back."
"But
this hardened ... I don't believe this," Fiske said, tapping the shell
experimentally.
Gently
but firmly taking his arm again, she replaced it in the sling and tied it
across his chest. Then she began to undo the blood-soaked bandage on his thigh.
"This
wants stitching," she said, examining the gaping wound.
"It's
been cleaned and dressed," Fiske said testily, inhaling quickly at the
sight of his parted flesh.
"That
was well done," Clodagh agreed, and let a handful of a moist salve slip
onto the wound.
Fiske
started to hiss and then stopped in surprise. "That didn't hurt."
"Medicine
need not hurt, or taste bad, to be effective. Never did know who started that
stupid old superstition," she said with all the scorn of an experienced
practitioner. From another packet she took a needle already threaded and began
to make neat sutures.
Despite
an initial distaste, Fiske gradually became fascinated by her swift movements.
"Where did you get your training?" he asked respectfully.
"Living
on Petaybee teaches you many useful things," she said serenely, and tied
off the last stitch. "Not perhaps what your medical folk might use, but it
works. That's all we ask of any medicine, isn't it?" she added.
"Anywhere else?"
He had
a less serious laceration farther down the leg, and she put in two neat sutures
to close that. Then she applied a wet aromatic compress to the swollen, bruised
flesh of his ankle.
While
Torkel and the crewman called for a copter and Clodagh fussed over Dr. Fiske,
Yana helped Bunny warm up some of the provisions the rescue party had brought
with them. By the time a rich meaty stew had been reconstituted with water and
was simmering in a flight helmet stripped of its lining, Clodagh had finished
administering to Whittaker Fiske. Yana offered the old man some of the stew,
and he thanked her without a hint of his son's surliness.
Yana
had tood for Clodagh, as well, and put it into the healer's hands with a
firmness and a look in her eye that told Clodagh that she had better eat or
else!
"Is
it just that I am very hungry and tired of energy bars, or is this really as
good as it tastes?" Whittaker Fiske asked amiably.
"Hunger
is a good sauce," Clodagh said. "Here's a spot of seasoning that'll
add an extra zap to it." From her capacious medicine bag, she took an herb
bottle and sprinkled some powder into his bowl and hers, then offered it to
Yana.
Settling
down beside her, Yana grinned around her spoon. "Clodagh's far too modest,
Dr. Fiske. Food generally tastes better on Petaybee because most of it's fresh!
Even the frozen stuff."
"I
thought the growing season was a little short for that," Whittaker Fiske
said, chewing thoughtfully.
"Yes,"
Clodagh said. "But we get more daylight than usual during our growing
season, so things get big fast. And the fishes and animals we eat grow all year
round."
"And
maybe you have a lot of access to hydroponic gardens on the space stations, Dr.
Fiske," Yana said, "but to me anything that hasn't been freeze-dried
and stored in a food locker for several ship-years tastes downright
ambrosial."
They
had just finished eating when Torkel and the crewman returned to the cavern,
Torkel's step somewhat more confident than it had been.
"All
right, everyone, gather what you want to take with you," he began.
"Not
much of that," one of the crash survivors muttered.
"There's
a jumbo copter on the way with medical staff," he continued, frowning as
he tried to identify the wit. Then he saw that Yana was sitting next to his
father. "Maddock, you're to consider yourself under arrest."
Yana
looked up at him quizzically.
"Oh,
come now, Torkel," his father said with some asperity. "Surely you
can't hold any of these people, least of all Major Maddock, responsible for
Petaybee's geological vagaries! I tell you quite frankly your allegations have
no scientific foundation."
"Sir,
you manage the planet and I'll manage the investigation. Maddock's turned
against the company and is actively aiding the-"
"Who,
you say, make their headquarters in Kilcoole?" Fiske asked in a mild tone,
looking up at his son who towered over him. "The same town that organized
this very efficient, if unorthodox"-and he smiled at Clodagh-"rescue
party? I find that hard to believe."
Clodagh
chuckled, and Torkel gave a deep, disgusted sigh and sank down beside his
father.
"You
wanted me to get to the bottom of the team disappearances . . . sir,"
Torkel said with exaggerated patience in a hoarse weary voice, "and the
biological anomalies on this planet. You saw that big cat that came with these
people, the one that's even now sunning itself on the ledge outside this cave?
And keeping watch, I wouldn't doubt. That cat's one of those same anomalies.
It's one of Shongili's little pets, and there'll be no mention of such a breed
in your files. Major Yanaba Maddock's been thick with Shongili since shortly
after she arrived here, and I believe she's fallen under his influence and
become his accomplice. I don't have Shongili, but I do have Maddock, and with
her in custody I'll get my hands on Shongili, too."
Fiske
raised his hand to silence Torkel, but he looked directly into Yana's eyes.
"Are
you guilty as charged, Yanaba Maddock?"
"Me,
sir? No, sir," Yana replied with a wry smile. "Trouble is your son
didn't like hearing what I had to report."
"Sir,
this is neither the time nor the place to discuss the situation," Torkel
continued in a low, strained tone, his eyes boring into Yana as if his stare
could force her to silence. "It's not what it seems!"
"I'll
go along with that," Yana said fervently.
"Sometimes
when you create life, it does not fit the form you chose for it," Clodagh
said with an enigmatic smile at Whittaker Fiske.
"What's
that supposed to mean?" Dr. Fiske asked, frowning.
"You'll
be given to understand that soon." She rose, putting an end to that
subject. "Come, Yana, we must speak to Sinead. She, and perhaps Bunny,
better drive those curly-coats back. They won't find much to eat around here
now that volcano's finished."
"The
volcano's finished erupting? How can you know that?" Fiske tried to get
up, but he was stiff from sitting so long and couldn't stop her.
"She's
bad as the rest of them, Dad," Torkel said, looking rather pleased that
Clodagh had damned herself out of her own mouth.
"Bad?"
Whittaker Fiske exclaimed. "Bad doesn't come into this, son! Margolies, a
word with you!" He limped over to Steve, who, with Diego, was helping get
some of the injured ready for transfer.
Yana
remained near Clodagh. Captain Greene snagged Torkel to organize an orderly
transfer of the survivors from their cave refuge to the nearest possible copter
landing site, and that kept the captain occupied. There was a flurry of
activity when the copters arrived, stretcher bearers whipping back and forth,
people getting loaded. Yana noticed Clodagh in deep conversation with Sinead,
Greene, and Bunny, but she thought nothing of it. She just made damned sure she
stayed out of Torkel's way, a task made easier
when
Greene strong-armed the exhausted man aboard the copter while insisting on
giving him a preliminary report.
"I
left my medicine bag in the cave," Clodagh said just as the last folk were
waiting to load up.
"Sure
thing," Yana said, turning back to the cavern entrance. But inside, she
found Sinead, apparently gathering up the last of the debris. Sinead smiled at
her, an odd sort of smile, and then Yana heard voices in the passageway.
"It
is something that you must see right now, Dr. Fiske," Clodagh was saying
as she entered the cavern, the scientist limping impatiently beside her,
"to begin to understand what Petaybee is beneath the surface you folk gave
it."
"Beneath
the-what are you talking about, woman?" Fiske, anxious to return to
SpaceBase, was getting grumpy. "Are we going to miss the copter?"
"It
will wait," Clodagh said easily, and Yana realized that the big woman had
come on a mission that had an urgent purpose extending beyond the initial
search and rescue.
Chapter
17
Trailing behind Clodagh and Fiske, Yana
heard the copter lift off. She paused, listening until the sound was barely
audible, then turned back to follow Clodagh. As she started walking, she became
aware that the atmosphere inside the cave had subtly altered and lightened: the
whole cavern was flooding with a sense of release-the exhalation of the breath
she had felt it holding since she had first arrived.
At the
same time something splashed and she swiveled, but she could see nothing, and
decided that the sound must have come from outside the cave. Backtracking, she
peered out along the little stream that flowed into the cavern, through the
low, dark opening. Something was rising from the stream out there. Sparkling
droplets of water splashed around a long, silver-brown body energetically
shaking itself dry as it rose from the water. Yana watched in fascination as
the droplets flew, clearing a finely sculpted head with ears flat against the
skull and bright eyes that seemed to search the entrance of the cave. Then the
moisture was gone and the head seemed to, well, fluff out, she supposed, and
the body lengthened into that of a man-a man who seemed to be wearing a fine
silky pelt of hair. Or, perhaps, a gray wet suit. But as he walked closer to
her, she saw with joyful surprise that the man was Scan, clad in nothing at all
save volcanic ash, which he must have been trying to wash off in the spring
before coming inside.
"You
always travel that way?" she called out, not quite trusting what she
thought she had seen and hoping that either he would explain sometime soon or
she could somehow find a subtle way to ask.
He
grinned down at her. "Not always, but it's very convenient if you know
how." He looked down at himself. "Can get a little drafty once I'm
out of my element, though."
The
cave was littered with bits of uniform that had been discarded by survivors as
not worth transporting. Scan rifled through them until he found a flight suit
riddled with holes. He pulled it on, and it served as a social covering.
"Ashes
as disguise and swimming as transport? Clever of you," she said, making a
wild guess.
"More
or less," he said, coming to stand very close to her and putting his hands
on her shoulders.
She
wasn't quite ready yet to be distracted by his touch, still bewildered and
intrigued by the way he had appeared and by what she felt surely had to be her
perfectly ridiculous perceptions of it. "You know - I was wondering about
that raven that guided us here - I sort of had a sense of you then. You don't
by any chance own a black wet suit and hang glider, do you?" she asked,
lifting her brows in a query that practically demanded that he confide in her.
He
remained amused and enigmatic. "And make myself small, as well? Gracious
no, I couldn't do that. I don't go in for wings. I've a definite water
affinity. But I do have friends in high places."
Yana
decided to pursue that mystery later and concentrate on more urgent matters for
the time being. She laid a hand on his arm and said, "Sean, I'd better
brief you as to what's happening here. Torkel Fiske is ready to court-martial
me for trying to defend
Petaybee
and Clodagh's taken Torkel's father into the cavern-"
"I
know, Yana, I know. And I'll explain as soon as there's time. Right now we'll
do better to help Dr. Fiske and Clodagh."
His
hand made a reassuring warm spot on the middle of her back as he guided her
toward the passageway.
Yana
became suddenly aware that the sound of the helicopter, which had grown faint
by the time she had found Scan, was suddenly louder again. Instinctively she
lengthened her stride. Sean heard it, too, and increased his pace to match hers
until both were well within the passage.
The
luminescence was brightening, and ahead of them she could hear Clodagh saying
soothingly, ". . . someone who wants to meet you, Dr. Fiske."
The
copter thud grew louder and louder, then suddenly began fading again, but from
behind, Yana heard quick footsteps entering the cave.
"Come
out with your hands up, Shongili, Maddock! I saw you rendezvous!" Torkel
yelled. "And my father had better be unharmed or-"
"Are
you with me?" Sean asked Yana quickly. She nodded, and they stood, one on
either side of the passage, flush against the wall, while Torkel, forgetting
all training in his agitation, barreled into their ambush. Yana disarmed him
easily and caught him in a wristlock, while Sean, on the other side, did
something that made Torkel sag against them. Other footsteps could be heard in
the outer cave then, but Sean ignored them as he dragged Torkel onward. Yana
stepped forward to help, and together they steered him through the passage and
into the inner cave, where Clodagh, Bunny, Sinead, Nanook, and Dinah surrounded
Dr. Fiske.
A warm
mist was already rising from the rivulets running down the cavern walls and
along the sides of the floor. It was scented with earth, ozone, plant life,
both green and decaying, and the faintest hint of the perfume of exotic
flowers. The mist trickled along the floor and twined up the knees of the
people in the cavern, gently tugging them down.
The
luminescence on the cavern walls danced with shadow play as if lit by
firelight; the walls themselves seemed to pulse. The mist thickened and rolled
up around them, veiling their faces: heavy, warm, scented mist; the distilled
essence of the caves, the ground, the water, the air, moving in and out of their
bodies with each breath they took.
Feet
shuffled briefly behind Yana, and the disturbance in the air pressure told her
that yet others had entered the room. They said nothing, and when she could
bring herself to glance over her shoulder, she saw that the late arrivals were
cloaked by the mist as well, their nostrils and mouths and lungs and hearts
adding to the rhythm with which the cave pulsed.
Every
sound was magnified, the trickle of the water rattling like rain on a roof or
rustling leaves, a whispered accent to the measured throb in the cave.
Suddenly
Torkel writhed in Yana's hands, and she felt him wake, heard his ragged
breathing tear against the fabric of the thing that was happening here.
"No!"
he cried. "No, stop! This is how they brainwash you. Dad, don't
listen!"
Dr.
Fiske's voice sounded muffled and distracted as he answered, " 'M fine.
Don't be such a horse's ass."
And
Clodagh murmured encouragingly, "You're both just fine, just fine."
From
behind Yana, other hands joined hers on Torkel and other arms wrapped around
him-in reassurance, not restraint.
"Don't
fight, Captain," Diego's voice whispered. "Please don't fight.
Listen. It doesn't mean to hurt you, it just wants you to listen."
"I'm
here, Captain Fiske," Steve Margolies whispered in a less solicitous tone.
"I'm a scientist, and so is your father. If this is all bull, we'll know.
You're safe with us. Greene and the other pilot just joined us. You're
safe."
"You're
safe and well and here because Petaybee has much to tell the sons of those who
first woke the planet to life," Clodagh said.
Torkel
started to struggle again, and the whole cave suddenly vibrated with a thumping
tremor that repeated over and over to the beat it had established from their
breathing. The walls swirled with images, and Yana once more felt the jolt of
contact running up her spine, exploding in her nervous system with blossoms of
pure joy as she experienced a greater unity than she had ever known. A part of
her heard Torkel gasp as he was infused with it, too, and then others became
included. Contact was made with them now, each touching another; warm skin or
warm cave, warm mist or warm breath, all were mingled in the heavy beat of the
planet's great heart.
In the
cold cave floor she felt the ice-and-rock shell that had once imprisoned that
heart. Then a shock rocked through her, over and over again, the world's
greatest orgasm, this world's great orgasm. She was so full of life and joy
that her body could not contain it all and lovely things began growing from her
skin, her hair, her eyes and mouth and ears and nose, her womb and anus and
fingers and toes and hair, giving birth to thousands of new beauties every
second, flowering things and furred things, winged things and hoofed things,
soft dense creeping mosses and towering trees with undulating sweet-scented
fronds. And through each thing, with no more than a whim of a try, she could
speak and sing, act and dance, love and laugh and live. Even dying was a kind
of life, and she felt that, too, with regret but no grief.
Lovely
things sent shivers over her skin, caressed her surfaces, brought warm pleasure
to her orifices, dove and swam through her blood, nourished her. And all was
well and all was one and she was glad of life.
Then a
little pain started-just a small one, near her heart. At first it only troubled
her once in a while. It grew worse when some of the things that grew from her
were removed, though she could bear even that at first. But it grew worse and
worse as time passed and other, sharper, deeper pains shot through her, as if
someone had suddenly plunged a knife into her. She seized up and screamed and
tried to cry out through the things growing on her, and some heard and cried
for her and some were scorched by the force of her cries. Panting, she waited
for the pain to pass and it did, until the next time.
Then
the first pain, the main pain, the central pain, a pain much like the start of
the ecstatic release that had freed her from her ice and rock, intensified,
deepened, drove through her until she could stand it no more. At last she
lanced her own boil by applying more and more pressure, sending blood and the
strength of her muscle and bone, igniting nerves until the area blew, and she
lay bleeding, but relieved. The things that nourished her surface rushed over
her and centered on the spot to console her, and she felt the consolation, the
oneness, the comfort of releasing her pain through those who had first released
her.
Gradually
the images of a volcano erupting on her left breast dissolved into the image of
the pain flowing through the pores of her skin and out. That image dissolved
into one of herself accepting Petaybee's pain from within it and releasing it
through herself, until she lay spent on the floor, Torkel Fiske sobbing on one side
of her with Diego between them, Scan and Steve Margolies on the other side.
The
mist had vanished now, and Dr. Fiske sat looking up at the luminous walls,
tears coursing down his cheeks, his bad arm draped awkwardly across Clodagh's
back and the other one around Bunny.
Slowly
they rose and left the cavern. O'Shay and Greene, as last in, were first out to
reboard the waiting helicopter. Yana hauled herself aboard and crowded in next
to Giancarlo's stretcher, where Nanook lay stretched lengthwise next to the
colonel, purring and doing the job usually reserved for his marmalade brethren.
Then Sean squeezed in on her other side, and they made the journey in silence.
What
was terraformed, Dr. Fiske, was a sentient entity which just happened to be a
planet," Sean said when they were comfortably reassembled in Clodagh's
house.
"Scientifically,
I find that very hard to believe," Dr. Fiske said, sitting as erect as
possible on Clodagh's bed.
Clodagh,
meanwhile, was stirring up another batch of medicine for the abrasions and
burns suffered by Torkel and Yana. Giancarlo had been delivered to the hospital
at SpaceBase. O'Shay had taken off again, neglecting to mention to the
receiving officer that he had several other passengers, passengers who were
attempting to digest a great quantity of new information. He landed the copter
at Kilcoole, and those who had been present for Petaybee's revelations
disembarked.
Torkel
was slowest to revive from the experience, remaining extremely quiet and
contemplative when he did. But he also quietly and contemplatively used Steve
Margolies's comm unit to order from the contingent of soldiers stationed in
Kilcoole an armed guard around Clodagh's house.
He was
confused, Yana thought, and she didn't much blame him. She was a little confused
herself, and at the same time much more enlightened as to the nature of the
bond between this planet and its people. She had, after all, directly
experienced in microcosm everything the planet had experienced.
"Scientifically,
there probably is no explanation," Sean said, calmly agreeing with
Whittaker Fiske. "And I've spent most of my boyhood and all my adult years
examining the pertinent sciences with little success and no ... scientifically
acceptable . . . answers. I just know that Petaybee works for us, and for
itself, in a unique symbiosis."
"Yes,
it could be a form of symbiosis, at that," Whittaker Fiske said, nodding
as he absently stroked a marmalade cat. "A most remarkable one. Definitely
unique. However, I would still very much like to have more details: Was your
grandfather aware of the planet's sentience and reactions? Did he establish
whether or not its sentience occurred during, or after the terraforming
process? How did you become aware of its sentience, and most of all, what protocol
is now involved? I don't believe that Intergal has ever encountered such a
phenomenon in any system it has explored to date. I do, at least I think I do,
understand now why our totally unprepared and scientifically oriented teams
could not psychologically cope with their-shall I call it ... psychic
initiation to Petaybee's sentience? Poor Francisco Metaxos is a good scientist,
but he has always been extremely didactic."
"He's
better, by the way, Whit," Clodagh told the man. "Better all the time
and now, I think, he's more accepting."
A
curious, affectionate sympathy had grown up between Clodagh and Whittaker since
the event in the cave. Dr. Fiske had held Clodagh's hand all the way back to
the copter. The pair had sat together, staring out the copter window, now and
then exchanging long searching looks. Yana would have liked to exchange similar
searching looks with Scan-but not with a crowd of people around.
"Aisling
will bring Frank over," Clodagh went on, "soon's they've finished
feeding and grooming the curly-coats. Any chance of bringing Colonel Giancarlo
to Kilcoole, too, when he's stable? Being contrary the way he is, he'd never
have survived the cave in his weak condition, but strengthen him up a bit and
introduce him to Petaybee gradual like, he might even come to understand a
bit."
Whittaker
nodded, though Yana thought Clodagh was being uncharacteristically and
unrealistically charitable toward Giancarlo and far too hopeful about his
adaptability. The man was as rigid as the company rulebook.
"I'll
tell you what I can, Dr. Fiske," Scan said, leaning forward to plant his
elbows on his knees. "And what I've learned about Petaybee. First, we've
never tried to keep anyone deliberately in the dark about this, but as you can
imagine, it's a little hard to explain and make anyone believe us. All we know
is this: when your great-grandfather's terraforming process had been completed
and the planet ready for occupation, a proper ecological mix was determined by
the Intergal specialists."
Sean
had washed off the last of the ash and was wearing pants and a gray cable-knit
sweater borrowed from Sinead. With his silver eyes and silvery hair, he
reminded Yana of the way she had seen him on the shores of the little stream
when she had mistaken him for a seal. She ran her hand softly down his arm from
elbow to wrist, and he captured the hand in his own and squeezed, as he
continued speaking. "My grandfather, as the Intergal biogeneticist, was
asked to make what biological changes were necessary to adapt animals who could
function in this planet's harsh climate and be useful to inhabitants where
machinery and technology would prove inadequate. He did so, supplying us with
an ecological chain that includes plants, trees, grain, food beasts, and those
that could be used in a variety of tasks, such as the sled dogs, curly-coats,
moose, deer, the other small food and fur animals, birds, insects: all viable
on this cold, snowbound planet. All of us here, the vegetation and we more
movable creatures, were influenced by his work."
"But
he went much further than he should have," Torkel said, less
belligerently; more in dismay.
"Not
deliberately. He was, like yourselves, a scientist, and he didn't reckon on the
planet being a part of his equation. Once awakened, it had its own agenda and
entered into the spirit of the changes-taking the ones Grandda made and
improving on them now and then, when it felt these alterations were necessary.
Those of us who have lived out our lives on Petaybee, like Lavelle, are more
affected by those changes than the young people who volunteer for service
off-planet. I have never left Petaybee. I know I never can." He smiled
with great charm. "I don't wish to leave Petaybee. It has made me part of
it, the way it is part of me."
Torkel
shook his head, half denying, half agreeing. "That's not enough for me,
Shongili. What happened to us in there? It wasn't brainwashing-not as I know
it," he added, puzzled.
"The
planet was telling you how it felt about what you've been doing to it,"
Scan said.
Torkel
twitched, grimacing, seemingly unable yet to accept that explanation.
"Well, I still don't understand how you got the planet to do what it's
been doing over the past few days. Starting volcanoes, earthquakes, breaking up
the rivers six weeks too soon ..."
Scan
shrugged. "I didn't get it to do anything, Fiske. It planned its own
defense. I've done nothing but see that its messages are delivered."
"Which
only you can interpret?"
Scan
shook his head. "You and I had the same experience there in the cavern,
Fiske. You can interpret it as well as I can, if you just stop trying to deny
what you felt. You can't deny what you personally experienced, can you? If you
had rejected it as completely as you're trying to, you'd be in the same shape
as Frank Metaxos. All I did-all any of us did-was to try to protect you from
your own stubborn idiocy and put the right people in the right place at the
right time for Petaybee to deliver its own message. It did that in the
cave."
"And
what, exactly, was the message that we both received, as you understand
it?" Whittaker Fiske asked, his face full of lively curiosity rather than
challenge.
"The
message is that Petaybee is a living and sentient entity, Dr. Fiske," Scan
answered imperturbably. "It does not wish to have its skin blown open, its
flesh dug and taken away, its substance reduced, its children hunted, harried,
or removed against their will. It is pleased to have been awakened, and it is
more than willing to share itself: including, I might add, some valuable processes,
which can benefit you and your superiors, that you're not even aware exist on
this planet."
"Like
Clodagh's medicines," Yana chimed in. "I'd think the company would
have a lot of use for a cough medicine that can actually heal lungs as badly
damaged as mine were."
Torkel
regarded her with surprise, then turned thoughtful while his father nodded
sagely.
"Not
to mention that boneset stuff," Dr. Fiske added, running his fingers
across the hardened cast. "Simple things that have multiple applications
and no side effects. Go on, Shongili."
"Petaybee
has been particularly distressed," Sean said, "by the increase of
traffic at the SpaceBase. The planet was able to buffer the area under
SpaceBase to allow a certain amount of necessary comings and goings, but that
amount has now exceeded the safety margin and must cease. Petaybee does not
wish to have to feed and supply the numbers now massing in the SpaceBase, as
these numbers would be a burden on its resources, especially this time of year,
before the growing season."
"It
was glad to see that some of us who left here as kids have come home, at least
to visit, though," John Greene said. He and O'Shay had been wolfing down a
casserole Aisling brought over earlier. "I was given a real welcome in the
cave. Didn't know it remembered me."
"You
and O'Shay have a lot to answer for, Captain," Torkel said. "Like why
you didn't place everyone under arrest when you saw that we were being detained
in the cavern."
O'Shay
shrugged. "Like the man says, Cap'n, we're native-born. We got more sense
than to interfere when a latchkay's starting."
"You're
natives?" Torkel stared at them. "No wonder I didn't get the support
I required." He rounded on Sean then with a resurgence of his old
belligerence. "Did you arrange that, too, Shongili?"
Sean
shrugged. "You give me more credit than I deserve. The presence of
Captains Greene and O'Shay is pure serendipity, Fiske. No harm's come to you,
so I don't see that the personnel involved matters."
"I
don't put anything past you, Shongili," Torkel said, and striding to the
door, he opened it and beckoned a guard inside. "I want one of those
portable comm links from headquarters. Bring it here on the double. We'll just
check out a thing or two about the disposition of Petaybeans on this project."
The
guard snapped a salute, and Yana thought she saw a little smile playing at the
edges of his mouth. Yana wondered about that, and began to suspect what Torkel
would find about the disposition and composition of Intergal troops currently
on duty in Petaybee. She noticed that Steve Margolies was looking exceedingly
thoughtful: he kept glancing from Torkel to Sean to Dr. Fiske, but whatever was
worrying him he kept to himself.
"You
keep speaking of these adaptations, son," Dr. Fiske said to Sean, with an
air of getting back to important matters. "Just what do they consist
of?"
"The
most important," Sean said, his voice filled with the sort of excitement
that the other two scientists, more than anyone else in the room, were best
equipped to understand and share, "is how Petaybee-not I or my
grandfather-improved, beyond their previous capabilities, the perceptions of
some of the more intelligent species."
"Like
the pussycats here with Frank?" Steve Margolies asked.
"Yes,
and like this," Scan said, and lifted his hand and closed his eyes. In a
moment there was a scratching at the window and a whining at the door. One of
the guards opened the door to admit Dinah, who was leading a weakly smiling
Francisco Metaxos, followed by Aisling. Clodagh opened the window to admit
Nanook, who jumped down across the sill in one fluid motion, walked calmly over
to Whittaker Fiske, put one saucer-sized paw on the man's uninjured arm, and
said "Meh," quite clearly.
"My
word!" Dr. Fiske leaned away, staring at the cat. "You asked it to
come and do this?"
Scan
nodded while Nanook gave a burst of purr, marched to Torkel, and repeated the
performance.
Torkel
started to shove Nanook away but stopped, giving Sean a puzzled look.
"It's telling me that Giancarlo is resting well, thanks to it."
"Him,"
Sean said. "Nanook is male. And he likes his ears scratched. Most of the
felines here have the ability to soothe troubled, or sick, minds. They'll carry
messages, lead people across dangerous terrain, and hunt when that's necessary."
Dinah,
tongue lolling from her open mouth, waited until Metaxos was safely deposited
in a chair between Diego and Steve, then pranced up to Fiske. She gave a bit of
a whine before she pushed her nose at his arm and held it there a moment.
"Talking
cats and dogs?" Dr. Fiske asked, eyes round with amazement.
"Telepathic,
actually," Sean said. "When they choose to be. Dinah, as a lead dog,
had no trouble communicating about trail conditions and finding her way across
frozen wastes. She had bonded most effectively with Lavelle, the woman who died
when
Captain
Fiske and Colonel Giancarlo had her removed from Petaybee. Nanook has a close
bond with me, but is actually a pretty |j| social creature."
"And
Clodagh's cats-" Yana began, but Clodagh shot her a look and she subsided.
No need to tell the offworlders everything. Not more than they needed to
convince them. Not just yet. So Yana made no mention about unicorned curly
stallions, intelligent seals, and trained ravens. Scan's hand dropped to the
back of her neck and kneaded it gently as he watched the reaction of the Fiskes
and Margolies.
"Telepathic
sled dogs and felines .. ." Dr. Fiske said, shaking his head.
'Tour
granddad was one busy guy." Torkel snorted. Nanook dug his claws into
Torkel's leg, ever so slightly. "Ouch!"
"Grandfather
developed several types of large felines and canines suitable to this icy
climate, but, as I said, Petaybee improved on his work many times over the
years. Give Petaybee a chance, and it will improve on anything you ask it to.
Isn't that much better than blasting the planet apart for mere minerals and
ores which the company can surely find on lifeless asteroids and planets?"
Dr.
Fiske sighed. "Ah, now I suppose we come to the crux of all this. If I
understood it correctly, Petaybee is extremely grateful for its life, but not
grateful enough to endure our resource development plans? That's why the teams
have disappeared or been killed?"
Frank
Metaxos cleared his throat and said in a rusty voice, "It wasn't
intentional, Whit. I-freaked out, as Diego would say, what with the blizzard
followed by that intense psychical input. I understand now that what I sensed
in the cave was only this same explanation. And-incredible as it
seems-something of an apology. Perhaps Petaybee could adjust its climate a bit
for those of us who aren't used to such extreme conditions."
"Actually,
Petaybee's extremely hospitable, if you're willing to take the hospitality on
its own terms," Clodagh told him. To Dr. Fiske she added, "Petaybee
offers you more than you could ever take from it by force. This doesn't have to
be a fight."
"That's
right," Yana said, leaning forward and talking with all the persuasion at
her command. "The company's just been trying to develop the wrong things
so far. This planet offers absolutely unique opportunities to study its inner
life-providing you can find some extremely dedicated people able for the
challenge. And that's the resource the company most needs to develop-the
people."
"I
suppose we could send scientists down to instruct them in the proper
procedure," Dr. Fiske said slowly.
"You
send them," Clodagh said, nodding. "We'll teach proper procedure. But
you'll see, it will work."
"We'll
send equipment-comm units, computer linkups."
"Some
maybe," Clodagh said. "But not too many. Too noisy. Petaybee wouldn't
like it. Just send a couple of teachers who don't mind the cold and can teach
us reading and writing. That's quieter."
Just
then the guard returned with the comm link Torkel had sent for. Torkel accepted
the equipment and set it on his knees.
"Now
then, we'll see what's going on here," he said. "Computer, I want
files on O'Shay . . ."
"Richard
Arnaluk, sir," O'Shay helpfully provided.
"And
Greene . . ."
"John
Kevin Intiak Greene the Third, sir," Greene told him. "My crew
members were Corporal Winona Sorenson, deceased, Specialist Fourth Class
Ingunuk J. Keelaghan, deceased, Lieutenant Michael Huyukchuk, wounded in
action-"
"Wait
a minute," Torkel said. "These names sound Petay-bean."
O'Shay
shrugged. "They are-native-born or
Petaybean stock. Same's true, I think, for most of the replacement troops
shipped down with me. And the survivors we picked up near the volcano."
"Computer,
access personnel list for troops transferred to planet Petaybee, code name
Operation Mop-Up. Cross-reference by planet of origin or descent and provide
statistical data of composition of total numbers."
After a
moment of frantically scanning the screen, Torkel looked up suspiciously at
Scan. "This can't be right. Unless your planet can manipulate troop
movements by remote control." "Why? What does it say?"
"Eighty-eight
percent of the troops deployed here for Mop-Up are of Petaybean origin."
Scan
gave a low whistle. "Imagine that. I didn't know we'd sent so many people
away. Did you, Clodagh?" "I sure didn't."
"Computer,
audio, please. Explain how such a large percentage of personnel assigned to
Operation Mop-Up are of local origin."
"This
system cross-indexed physical and psychological requirements necessary for
ground duty on an arctic-type planet. The personnel selected were the best
qualified to function at appropriate levels on such a planet."
"Torkel,"
Yana said, leaning forward and slightly to the side to watch the screen.
"While we're on the subject of the quantity of Petaybean troops involved,
why don't you check statistical data concerning the service records of those
with Petaybee as planet of origin as compared to those of the corps as a
whole?"
"Computer?"
Torkel asked, and gave it the data request.
"Petaybean
personnel on the average receive seventy-five percent more commendations, sixty
percent more bonuses, and eighty-nine percent more decorations than troops of
other places of origin. However, they are promoted through the ranks ten point
five times slower than other personnel, and only twenty-one point
eight-nine-five percent of Petaybeans become senior officers.
Yana
lifted her eyebrows at Torkel and permitted herself a small, smug smile.
"See? These people are definitely worthwhile to the company, and definitely
worth developing."
Torkel
raised an eyebrow back at her. "As long as they're never removed from the
planet to do what they're worth developing for?"
Sean
broke in. "Many of our people are perfectly happy to serve the company and
see the universe. You just have to recruit them early."
"And
I think if the company worked with Petaybeans on the research, compensatory
devices could be used to offset the incompatibility between Petaybean adaptive
characteristics and space travel," Yana said. "That is what I was
trying to tell you before."
Torkel
shut down the comm link with a snap, and Sean grinned broadly.
"It's
okay, son," Dr. Fiske told Torkel.
But
Torkel shook his head uneasily. "It's not okay, Dad. We're in an
intolerable situation, disadvantaged. There're not only more of them, they're
the company's best troops but, being here, their loyalty is compromised. We're
at their mercy."
"Fortunately
for you, Captain," Clodagh said, handing him a cup of hot drink and a hunk
of bread, "we're extremely merciful around here. Sprinkle a little of this
on your bread. You'll see how tasty it is." She passed over an herb jar
and, unusually compliant, Torkel shook it over his bread.
Dr.
Fiske smiled at his son as one of the marmalade cats jumped into Torkel's lap
and began purring. For a moment, Torkel stiffened, wavering briefly between
rejection and acceptance. He took a sip of the drink and a bite of the bread.
After several more sips and bites, he gave a deep resigned sigh and finally
relaxed, leaning back in his chair, the cat firmly in charge.
"Look
here," O'Shay began tentatively, appealing to Clodagh, "if there're
that many Petaybeans come home to roost, d'you think we could have a latchkay
to celebrate?"
"The
very thing," Aisling agreed happily.
"Now
that," Scan said, "is one of the best ideas I've heard in days. It
would undoubtedly settle a lot of qualms and answer some of the questions you
haven't thought of yet, Dr. Fiske, Steve."
"Well,"
Yana said, rising, "since confusion has died down to mere chaos, I'd
really appreciate a decent bath and change of clothes." She looked askance
at the riddled remainder of her shirt.
"I'm
not exactly as clean as I'd like to be either," Scan said. Also rising, he
took Yana by the arm and began leading her to the door. Then he stopped.
"You wouldn't mind dismissing that guard now, would you, Captain
Fiske?"
"I
will," said Whittaker Fiske, rising and doing exactly that.
Yana
could not believe the relief that washed over her as she and Sean stepped out
into the fresh air. The whilom guard had dispersed like snowmelt on a hot day.
She inhaled, half expecting the previous days' exertions to result in a
paroxysm of coughing.
"You
won't have that trouble ever again," Sean said as he guided her toward the
path to the hot springs.
"Wait,
I'll need clothes," she said, half towing him in the direction of her
house.
"There's
always something left about at the springs," he said, and pulled her back
to his side, grinning with a boyishness that surprised her.
Laughing,
she let herself be held. "Is it wrong of me to want to wash some of
Petaybee off?" She asked, buoyant with relief and with his presence.
"You
can never wash Petaybee off completely, Yanaba Mad-dock. Not now! You're stuck
with us, love." And then he threw back his head and gave an odd call.
Two
curly-coats broke out of a nearby copse and trotted up to them.
"Local
transport," Scan said. When the curlies stopped beside them, he lifted
Yana to the back of one before he vaulted astride the other.
"You
just called and they came?" Yana asked, bubbling with laughter, as she
laced her fingers tightly into the mane. She knew little about riding, but she
felt no fear.
"Sure
thing," Scan said, grinning like a fool. "Let's go!"
To her
surprise and delight, Yana found the curly-coat's rocking gait to be extremely
comfortable, its fur soft on bare skin. She tried not to see how fast the
terrain sped by as they went hell-for-leather down the forest track to the hot
springs.
They
reached their destination in moments, sliding off the mounts, who then wandered
away as amiably as they had come. Sean was discarding his clothing and stood
before her, sleek, faintly silvery-tan, waiting for her to shuck off the
tatters she wore. Then she held out her arms toward him.
Smiling
with luminosity to his silver eyes that made her breathless, he enfolded her in
his arms, pressing her head into his chest so that she could hear the beating
of his heart.
"You've
heard what Petaybee had to say. Now hear what I have to say to you, Yanaba Maddock."
He tipped her head back to look at him. "You are courage, you are beauty,
you are honor, you are strong and kind. You are also loved. By more than
I." He bent to kiss first one eye and then the other, then her forehead.
"Petaybee healed you because it had need of you. I have my own need of
you, and of the child you carry for both of us." He touched her breast
then, gently but as if in benediction.
"Child?"
She tried to struggle free, appalled and aching with hurt and disappointment.
If he wanted a mother for his children, he would have to find someone else and
she couldn't bear that thought. "Sean, I'm past all that. It may have
escaped your notice, but a person doesn't become a senior company officer until
middle age. My body is just not-"
"Well,
love, as long as we're talking about what bodies are and are not, I think you
should be aware of a thing or two about mine. So much has happened, I didn't
want to spring it on you all at once, but back in the cavern, when we were all
joined with Petaybee, I knew . . ."
"Knew
what? Sean? Scan!"
But he
dove into the water, and as it sluiced over his skin, instead of the gray-brown
ashy color subsiding, it deepened, blurring his skin so that she felt she was
looking at him through mist. Sean rolled himself into a ball, dove under the
water, and when he surfaced again, his silver-brown hair covered not just his
scalp but his face-and his form had changed!
Before
she could say anything, the seal who was Sean climbed back out, playfully
flipped her with the water on his sleek hide, and unfolded once more into her
lover.
She
took one involuntary step backward, then stepped toward him.
"What-exactly-happened there?"
"My
grandfather did, as Torkel suggested, go a little far. Actually, a lot far.
There are some special notes in his personal diaries, which I have hidden in a
safe place. He was fascinated by old Native American and Celtic tales of men
who could change their shapes to protect themselves and suit their
environment-of course, these were magical tales, but he always maintained they
were just an extreme form of adaptation. Of course, he wasn't supposed to
experiment on people at all-he didn't realize at the time that the planet was
already producing substantial adaptive alterations in us-but he did do a bit of
manipulation on himself that has carried down in my chromosomes, so that I, at
least, adapt-er, quite a lot more drastically-than others on the planet. I
'adapt' or actually, in most ways, transform, at times into the marine animal
most suited for this climate. I'm what they call in the old Celtic folklore a
selkie; a man on land, a seal in the sea, or in my case, in the water."
"And
your sister?" Yana asked. "Does she transform, too? I wondered why
she bit my head off when I mentioned seal hunting."
He
shook his head. "Not that I know of, and I think she would have told me.
She's the only one who's actually seen me change, except for you, though
Clodagh knows. As you saw, the seal shape can be very useful when it's
necessary to navigate the underground riverine network." He gave her a
half-uncertain, half-rakish smile. "Clodagh and Sinead even seem to feel
it makes me one of the more versatile individuals on the planet. But the woman
whose opinion on the subject matters the most to me is you and-I wasn't sure
how you'd feel about it, which is why I hesitated to make love to you the first
time we came here, although I wanted to very badly. I meant to tell you all of
this before we made love after the latchkay but ..."
She
laid her hand on his cheek, and he caught it and held it as if she were
throwing him a lifeline. He took another deep, ragged breath. Obviously
confiding this secret to her scared him as none of the dangers they had braved
together had done.
"I-hope-that
after what you've seen, you can see that it's this dual nature of mine that
gives me my particular special bond with Petaybee. And that because of it, when
we were all joined with the planet, I sensed that within our common union there
was an extra person present, the child you carry. Our child."
"But
I can't have a child," she said, still trying to absorb his astonishing
revelation. A little dizzy with all the changes taking place, she leaned
against his water-slick body, her cheek damp against his shoulder. "I
can't."
"You
can and are having our child," Sean said in such a fiercely tender voice
that she melted against him. "Petaybee healed that part of you, too,
because our children will be even closer to it than most. The planet wants your
children-and mine." He turned her in his arms, and again she saw the
anxiety-no, fear- cloud his silver eyes. "Or do you not want mine?"
Yana
gulped. "I think . . ." she began unsteadily; then she cleared her
throat so what she could manage to say was audible. "I think that first 1
need a bath. After that, anything you want, I want, too!"
"Then
you don't mind?"
"Being
pregnant? No, I thought I'd never get the chance."
Relief
mingled with the anxiety in his face now. "Then you do want the baby? You
don't mind that I sometimes . . . change into a seal?"
She
searched his face, so strong and full of integrity, intelligence, and humor.
She thought of their lovemaking and his strength and kindness through
everything they had endured together. She shook her head slowly, rather amazed
to find that in the face of all of that-in the face of her love-she had damn
few fears, and even fewer doubts. She put her arms on his shoulders, looked
into his face with a quizzical little smile, and gave a small shrug of
nonchalance.
"A
seal? A man? Whatever," she said. "Nobody's perfect."
ABOUT
THE COLLABORATION
The
inspiration for the arctic background of Powers That Be came several years ago
when Hugo and Nebula award-winning bestselling author Anne McCaffrey visited
Fairbanks, Alaska, at that time the home of (future) Nebula-winner Elizabeth
Ann Scarborough. When the two weren't working on a writers-in-the-school
project for the Fairbanks Arts Association, Scarborough saw to it that
McCaffrey tasted the adventures Fairbanks in the winter had to offer: a dogsled
ride, the northern lights, a movie about dogsled racing, and (thanks to her
friend Hilda's hospitality) moose spaghetti.
In the
beginning of 1992, McCaffrey invited Scarborough to Ireland to conduct some
folk music research. Inevitably, the two writers talked about writing, and folk
music and the Irish, and the idea for Powers Thai Be "just growed"
despite McCaffrey's busy schedule and Scarborough's exploration of Irish music.
The manuscript bounced back and forth down the hall at McCaffrey's new home in
County Wicklow, with story conferences occurring over the breakfast table
before the milkman arrived. The two took turns writing and rewriting the
manuscript to make the transitions smooth, each section being written in turn
by whoever was most excited about that particular passage. The book was
completed before the end of Scarborough's '92 visit, and McCaffrey's editor,
Shelly Shapiro, who was visiting at the time, promptly put dibs on the joint
project for Del Rey. The story will continue in two more volumes, which are to
be written in the next two years on subsequent visits.
ABOUT
THE AUTHORS
Anne
McCaffrey shuttles between her home in Ireland and the United States, where she
picks up awards and honors and greets her myriad fans. She is one of the
field's most popular authors.
Elizabeth
Ann Scarborough is the 1989 winner of the Nebula Award for her novel The
Healer's War. She has also written twelve (and a half) other novels.
Scarborough, whose other great passion is folk music, lives in a log cabin in
the Puget Sound area of Washington State with her three cats.