The Dolphins of Pern

by Anne McCaffrey

Synopsis:

When humans first settled Pern, intelligence-enhanced dolphins came with
them--to colonize the planet's ocean.  Now, centuries later, as the
battle to destroy the deadly Thread nears its end, the colonists renew
their bond with the legendary "shipfish.

Acknowledgements

again I wish to acknowledge the help of Dr Jack Cohen in keeping me on
the straight and not so narrow path of Newtonian physics and common
Terran biology, plus inventing whatever Pernese biology has been
required.

I Would also like to thank Rick Hobson of the Whale Conservation
Institute in Lincoln, Mass., for his review of the material dealing With
dolphins and delphinic behaviour.

It Was through Rick Hobson that my daughter and I met and swam with
Aphrodite and her son, AJ, at the Dolphin Research Center at Grassy Key,
Florida.  It was an experience that I shall treasure, as I will the
"visit' we made, to sit on the float and watch Dart, Little Bit, and
other dolphins playing in Sunset waters and "talking' to us.

Those who have had the privilege of Swimming at Dolphin Research Center
will recognize many of the names I have used.

Well, why not?  I met and valued their acknowledgement of me, a human.
They meet many of us, and forget.  But I do not forget them!


Oceanography Information by P.  Burr Loomis Ocean Current Maps by
Marilyn Aim #

DOLL FIN PEOPLE

Adrea, rider of Queen Beljeth at Southern Weyr Aleki, Alemi's son Alemi,
Master Fish man Ademon, Master Farmer Anskono, Readis' baby' brother
Aramina, Readis' mother, the girl who Could hear dragons Aranya, Readis'
sister Armald, Ii holder at Paradise River Asgenar, Lord Holder of Lemos
Bargen, Lord Holder of High Reaches Bendarek, Master Woodsman (paper
maker) Begamon, Lord Holder of Nerat Benelek, Master of Computer Hall, a
son of Groghe Boskoney, Harper at Paradise River Camo, halfwit kitchen
boy at Harper Hall, son of Robin ton and Silvina Corman, Lord Holder of
Keroon Curran, Fort Sea Holder Deckter, Lord Holder of Nerat, succeeding
Lord Meron deceased Denol, former South Boll Holder, renegade usurper of
lerne Island D'ram, former Is tan Weyrleader, retired to Cove Hold,
bronze Tiroth Durras, Weyrwoman at Eastern Weyr Xi # Edwinrus, sculptor
Fandarel, Master Smith at Telgar F'lar, Mnementh's rider, Benden
Weyrleader filessan, Golanth's rider Fabry, Journeyman Healer Fair
Winds, two master schooner G'dened, Weyrleader at Ista (succeeding his
father, D'ram) G'narish, Weyrleader at Igen Groghe, Lord Holder at Fort
Hamian, Master Smith at Southern, Toric's brother, plastics maker H'mar,
bronze Janeruth's rider, Weyrlingmaster, Eastern Weyr Horon, younger son
of Lord Groghe of Fort Hosbon, settler at Southern Weyr Jancis, Master
Smith, Fandarel's granddaughter Jarrol, Jaxom/Sharra's eldest son Jaxom,
Ruatha Lord Holder, rider of white Ruth Jayge, Holder, Paradise River
K'din, brown Buleth's rider (T'lion's nasty older brother) Kami, Alemi's
daughter Kern, a younger son at Crom Hold Kitrin, Alemi's wife K'van,
rider of Heat Ii, Southern Weyrleader Larad, Lord Holder of Telgar
Laudey, Lord Holder of Igen Lemsia, Menolly's daughter Lessa, Ramoth's
rider, Benden Weyrwoman Lesselam, apprentice harper soon to walk the
tables Lur, landsman at Paradise River, fire-lizard holder Lytol,
former4' Lord Holder of Ruatha, retired to Cove Hold M'sur, brown rider,
Eastern Weyr Menolly, Master Harper Mirrim, green Path's rider,
T'gellan's mate Mislue, patient Nazer, uncle Nessel, Lord Holder of Crom
Nicat, Master Miner Nika, Alemi's daughter N'ton, Weyrleader at Fort
Weyr Oldive, Master Healer, based at Fort Harper Hall Olos, Menolly's
second son Oly, older crewman Oterel, Lord Holder of Tillek Pardure,
Parren's son, Readis' classmate Parren, Journeyman weaver at Paradise
River Petiron, deceased, harper at Half Circle Sea Hold, Menolly 's
mentor, Robin ton's father Persehar, Master Artist with Harper Hall
Persellan, Eastern Weyr's healer Piemur, journeyman/Master Harper
Pierjan, Jancis/Piemur's son Ramala, Toric's wife Rampesi, Master
Fishman Readis, our hero and first Dolphineer R'mart, Weyrleader at
Telgar Weyr Robina, Curran "5 wife Robinton, Master Harper of Pern
Robse, Menolly's oldest child Samvel, Master Teacher at Landing Sangel,
Lord Holder of South Boll Sehell, Master Harper of Pern Men oIly "s mate
Sharra, Jaxom "5 wife Shawan, Sharra/Jaxom's second child Swacky,
courtesy uncle, old soldier Tagetarl, Master Printer for Harper Hall
Talmor, Journeyman Harper assigned to aid Ben den Weyrleaders in land
distribution T'hor, Weyrleader at High Reaches Weyr, once Weyrleader at
Southern T'gellan, bronze Monarth "5 rider, Weyrleader, Eastern Weyr
T'lion, bronze Gadareth's rider Tomol, apprentice harper, soon to walk
the tables Temma, aunt Texur, Curran's first mate Thella, self-styled
Lady Holdless, enemy of Jayge and Aramina Xii Xiii # Tikini, T'lion "5
younger brother, favourite sibling Toric, Lord Holder of Southern,
brother to Sharra and Ha in ian Toronas, Lord Holder of Ben den,
successor to Lord Raid V'line, dragonrider Wansor, near-sighted Master
of Smith Craft Hall, specializing in glass products Warbret, Lord Holder
of Ista Worlain, Journeyman healer AT EASTERN WEYR Gar Tom Dik Boojie,
who gets sewn up Natua Tana Ala DOLPHINS    FIRE-LIZARDS AT MONACO Alta
Dar Bitty, Kitrin's Tork, Alemi's Zair, Master Robin ton's AT PARADISE
RIVER HOLD BEAST Kib, healed slash on lower jaw Delky, Readis' runner
Afo, smallest Mel Jim, most acrobatic Mul, blotchy Temp, fattest Biz Rom
Angie, calf daughter of Mell Cori, calf daughter of Fessi Vina, calf of
Afo Teres AT FORT HOLD Inka, pod leader Flip Bit, healer, scarred jaw
Ayjay Dart Nat AT SEA CAVES - KAHRAIN Cal, pod leader Tursi Loki Sandi,
Tini, Rena, Leta, Josi The Tillek (aka Theresa) AT COVE HOLD Ron Alta
(another one) Fessi Xiv Xv #



PROLOGUE

102 Years After Landing ibbe gave the bell rope one last pull.  He and
Corey had been taking turns all morning but now the sun was descending
over the high ground and still no-one answered them. Usually someone
came out of Man's place on the dock: even if only one of the boat
people.  But the boats rocked at anchor under the high wharf and it was
obvious that no-one had gone out in them, even to bring in fish, for
some time.

Corey clicked at him in disgust.  The others of their pod had long gone
fishing on their own, too bored to see if there might just be humans to
feed them when there were plenty small fish to be gleaned at this time
of year from the rich northern waters.

She "blew' her hunger at him, so annoyed with the lack of human
attention that she refused to speak.

"There has been illness.  Ben told us that,' Kibbe reminded her.

He was not well,' Corey replied, reluctantly employing Speech to impart
the concept.  "Humans can die."

"They do.  It is true." For Kibbe was one of the oldest in their pod and
had had two dolphineers as partners.  He still fondly remembered Amy,
his first one.  She had been as much fish as he, even if she had to wear
the long-feet and had no fins.

She had given the best chin scratches and knew exactly where she had to
slough off old skin.  When he had been injured, she had stayed in the
water by his cradle through the days and nights until she knew that he
would recover.  He would never have survived that long gash if she
hadn't sewn it up and given him the human medicines that prevented
infection.

Corey had had only one person and she hadn't seen him in a long time. It
accounted for why she was so sceptical.  She hadn't had the long
association with humans that Kibbe had enjoyed.  And now missed.  They
had worked well together, for there were still many long stretches of
coastline to be mapped, and the locations of fishing schools determined.
The work had seemed more like fun and there had been time for games.
Lately all he had been able to do to keep the Dolphin Contract with men
was to follow the ships, to be sure no-one fell overboard without a
dolphin to assist his rescue.  His warnings about imminent storms might
have been heeded but humans sometimes disregarded advice, especially if
the fish were running well.

Kibbe was one of those who had been chosen to serve time up near the
north-western subsidence where lived The Tillek, chosen of all the pods
for her wisdom.  The name given the Pod Leader was also traditional.  He
had been taught, as had other dolphin instructors, why dolphins had
followed humans to this world, far from the waters of Earth on which
they had evolved: the chance to inhabit the clean waters of an
unpolluted world and live as dolphins had before tech-nol-ogy (he had
learned to pronounce that word very carefully) had spoiled the Old
Oceans of Humankind.  He knew, and taught this despite the astonishment
it caused, that dolphins had once walked on land.  That is why they were
air breathers and were required by Nature to surface to inhale oxygen.
He listened to tales so old not even those who had taught The Tillek
knew their origins: that dolphins had been special messengers of the
gods, escorting those buried at sea to their special underworld' place.
As dolphins considered the seas to be underworld', this caused some
confusion.  The humankind underworld' was where souls' went: whatever
souls' were.

One of Kibbe's favorite tales was the one The Tillek recounted with
great pride: how dolphinkind had once honored those who had died when
one of the spaceships had been wrecked in the sea-sky.  Since then, the
dolphins of Pern had honored those burial rites with their escort.  It
was a ceremony the humans had not asked the dolphins to include in their
traditions but they always seemed grateful for it.

Learning the Names of the Dolphins who had slept the Great Sleep and
accompanied humankind to these clean new seas of Pern was an important
lesson.  From these names came the ones chosen for each new calf, to
celebrate those first Dolphins and those that were born in the Years
Before Thread.  The names had been set to dolphin music and could be
sung on longer journeys in the Great Currents.  It should always be sung
before the young dolphins attempted to cross the great Whirlpool at the
Northwest Subsidence, or even the Smaller One in the Eastern Sea.

There were some matters taught by The Tillek which simply had to be
learned, because they mattered as details to the whole story.  The Great
Sleep, for instance, puzzled even the cleverest calf, male or female,
because dolphins did not require sleep.  To have slept for fifteen years
was an incredible thing to have done.  Although they knew to call the
sparkling light points in the skies stars', there seemed to be a very
great many of them.  The Tillek could not tell them which had been Old
Earth.  Humans had had a device which allowed them to see longer.
Because stars were in the air, dolphins could not sound' them.  There
were three points of light, at dawn, and again at twilight, which were
constant.  The Tillek said those points were the spaceships that had
brought Humankind and Dolphinkind to Pern They must take this on faith,
she said, for she had had to learn these facts from The Tillek who had
taught her.  This was fact as well as faith and must be believed, though
never experienced.  It was History.

And History was another of the Great Gifts Humankind had given
Dolphinkind: History was memory of things past.  To be able to tell
History, Dolphinkind had been given the ability to speak as they did so
that was the Greatest Gift humans had given dolphins.  For with the
Greatest Gift they could repeat the words of History: words that were
sounded as Humankind sounded speech, not as dolphins did.  And they
could speak to Humans and to themselves the things that were made of
words and not sea sounds.

Kibbe had been very good at learning all the words that Humans had used
with dolphins, and all their special underwater signals.  He was good at
singing the words, too, so that the young ones of his pod were familiar
with them should they be chosen to go to the waters of The Tillek and
complete their training.  Kibbe knew the traditions by which humans and
dolphins lived in a special relationship: that dolphins would protect
humans on or in the water to the best of their abilities, in whatever
weather and unsafe conditions, even to the giving up of dolphin life to
save the frailer humans; they would apprise humans of bad weather
conditions, show them where the schools of preferred fish were running
and warn them of sea hazards.  The humans promised, in return for these
services, to remove any bloodfish that might attach themselves to
dolphin bodies, to float any stranded dolphin, to heal the sick and
treat the wounded, to talk to them and to be partners if the dolphin was
willing.

In the early days on Pern, humans and dolphins had taken great pleasure
in the exploring of these new seas and those had been momentous years:
the years of the life of The Human Tillek whom all had revered.  A
Dolphins' Bell had been sited at Monaco Bay and land and sea beings had
promised to answer the Bell whenever it was rung.  In those days the
young dolphins had each had a human partner, to help with the
exploration, to explore the seas and the deep abysses and the Great
Currents, the Two Subsidences, Greater and Smaller, and the Four
Upwellings.  There had been courtesy, each to the other, land and
sea-faring humans.

The Tillek always spoke respectfully of humans, and severely disciplined
any calf who used the term long-foot' or finless' as some dolphins now
were impudently describing them.  When the silly fins complained that
humans no longer kept their end of the ancient agreement, The Tillek
would tell them, at her sternest, that that did not absolve dolphinkind
from practising theirs.  Humankind had had to stop exploring Pern to
guard the lands against the Thread.

This would set the silliest to clicking nonsense noises of amusement.
Why didn't humans eat Thread the way dolphins did?

The Tillek's reply was that humans wore different flesh and had to live
on land where Thread did not drown but attacked human flesh like
bloodfish, sucking life out of it.  And not over a long period of time
but immediately so all life was gone from the body in the course of
several breaths: indeed the flesh of the human body was consumed.

This was another matter that all dolphins must believe as surely as they
believed Thread was good to eat.

Then The Tillek would speak History and tell of the Day Thread Fell on
Pern, and how it fed on the flesh of humans.

How the humans had battled hard with flame - a source of heat and light
that coastal dolphins could recognize but had never felt - to burn
Thread in the skies before it could fall on land and eat it or on humans
and human animals and eat them.  When all the things that humans had
brought with them from Old Earth had been used up, the dolphins had
helped the humans sail the many ships of the Dunkirk to the north where
they could shelter in great caves, forsaking the pleasant warm southern
waters.  Kibbe had always loved hearing how the dolphins had helped the
small ships make the long journey, despite storms and having to cross
the Great Currents.  There had been a Dolphins' Bell at Fort, too, and
there had been many good years of partnership for dolphins and partners.
Until the Sickness.

Kibbe knew that all humans had not died: ships still sailed with human
crews and, on land, people could be seen working - when it was not the
Time of Thread.

Since Kibbe had had a partner, he knew of humans, and their frailties
and their skill at relieving the few illnesses to which dolphins were
prone.  But the young in his pod did not and questioned why dolphins
should bother.

"It is tradition.  We have always done as we do now.  We will always
obey the Traditions."

"Why do humans want to come into water?  They cannot surrender
themselves to the currents as we can."

"Once humans swam as well as dolphins,' Kibbe would reply.

"But then we cannot walk on land,' the calves would say.

"Why would we want to?"

"We are of different flesh, with different needs: dolphins to the water,
humankind to the land."

"True, my son.  Each to his own ways.

"Why do humans want to come into water?  Why do they not stay on land
and leave the water for us?"

"They need the fish in the seas, as we do,' Kibbe would tell them.  One
had to tell the young the same words many times before they understood.
"They need to travel to other land places and the only way is by water."

"They have dragons who fly."

"Not everyone has dragons to fly."

"Do dragons like us?"

"I believe they do though lately we have seen few of them.

Once, I was told, they would swim in the sea with us."

"How can they swim with those great wings?" "They fold them to their
back."

"Odd creatures.

"Many creatures of the land look odd to us, Kibbe would say, undulating
through the water gracefully and effortlessly beside the calves he was
teaching.

Kibbe privately thought that humans were clumsy, awkward creatures, in
the water or out.  They were, however, slightly more graceful in the
water, especially if they swam as dolphins did, by keeping their legs
together.  The way some of them thrashed about with their limbs moving
separately wasted much energy.

Nowadays, humans did not follow the forms laid down by the ancestors of
both species but that did not mean that the dolphins should be any the
less heedful of keeping the traditions.

Very few captains leaned over the side of their ship when dolphins
appeared to accompany it and asked how the pod was faring and how the
schools were running.  Very few would give their escort a token fish for
the assistance.  Of course, it had been many seasons since dolphins had
found and brought any drowned human boxes to their attention.  As it had
been many seasons since dolphineers had swum long distances with their
partners.  Sad the way tradition declined, Kibbe thought.

Like not answering the Bell.

He did one last pass in front of the wharf, eyeing the deserted
structure.  He tolled the bell one last time, thinking it sounded as
mournful as he felt for the silence that had once been filled with human
noises, the fine work they had done together and the games they played.

With a final flip of his tail, he turned and started his long journey to
the Great Subsidence in the Northwest Sea to inform The Tillek that,
once again, no-one had answered the Bell.  The humans who sailed in the
ships would not learn of the latest hazards the dolphins had dutifully
come to report.  Even the waters of Pern changed the land of Pern but
that was the natural way of things.  Or so The Tillek said.  The
dolphins would keep to their patrols of the coastline and, when, if
ever, a human would listen to them, at least they could tell him what
had changed, and save his ship from being broken on unexpected reefs or
rocks: or where the Currents had altered and might provide a hazard to
the ships and the humans who sailed on it.

Chapter One

hen Master Fishman Alemi came by Readis' hold that morning, he found his
fishing crony ready and waiting.

"I thought you'd never come, Uncle Alemi,' Readis said in a tone that
was a thin line away from accusatory.

"He's been on the porch, Aramina told Alemi with a
solemnhiding-a-smile-face, "for the last hour.  He was up in dawn's
dark!" And she rolled her eyes at such eager anticipation.

"Uncle Alemi says the fish bite best at dawn,' Readis informed his
mother in a condescending tone as he jumped down the three steps to take
a firm hold of the callused hand of his courtesy uncle.

"I don't know which excited him more: fishing with you or being allowed
to attend Swacky's gather this evening." Then she waggled a finger at
her small son.  "Remember, you have to take a nap this afternoon.

"I'm all ready to go fishing now,' Readis said, ignoring the threat.  "I
got my snack,' and he brandished the net sack laden with his water
bottle and wrapped sandwich, "and my vest." The last was added in a
contemptuous tone.

"You will note that I'm wearing mine, too,' Alemi said, giving the
trusting little paw a shake.

Aramina chuckled.  "That's the only reason he's wearing his.'

"I swim good!" Readis announced in a strong loud voice.  "I swim as good
as any shipfish!'

That you do,' his mother agreed equably.

"Don't I know that as I taught you?" Alemi replied cheerfully.

And 1 can swim that much better and still use a vest in a small boat."

"An' in stormy weather, Readis added to prove that he knew the whole
lesson on safety vests.  My mother made mine,' he said proudly, puffing
out his vested chest and grinning up at her.  "With love in every
stitch!'

C'mon, lad, time's a-wasting,' Alemi said.

With a farewell wave of his free hand to Aramina, he led his small
charge down to the beach and the slab-sided dinghy that would convey
them out to where Alemi felt they would likely find the big redfins that
were promised for grilling at the evening's festivities.

Swacky had been part of Readis' life since he could remember.

The stocky ex-soldier had joined Jayge and Aramina when Aunt Temma and
Uncle Nazer came from the north.  He lived in one of the smaller holds
and turned his hand to any one of a number of chores necessary in
Paradise River Hold.  Swacky had guard stories of all the Holds he'd
served in to tell a small and fascinated boy.  Readis' father, Jayge,
never talked of the renegade problem which was when he had come to know
Swacky.  And Swacky never mentioned exactly what Jayge had done in those
days, though he was real fierce and unforgiving of the renegades for
"slaughtering innocent folk and animals just to see their blood run' -
except it had to do with the particular renegades who had attacked the
Lilcamp wagon train which was Jayge's family business.

If Readis had been asked which man he loved best - apart from his
father, of course - Swacky or Alemi, Readis would have been hard pressed
to make a choice.

Both men figured largely in his young life but for different reasons.
Today Readis was going to have the best of both: fishing for Swacky in
the morning with Alemi, and feasting to honour Swacky's seventy-five
Turns of living tonight!

Pushing together, they eased the skiff down the sandy shore and into the
gently lapping water.  When they had waded out until the water was
mid-thigh on Readis, Alemi gestured for him to jump in and take up the
paddle.  That was the main difference between Readis' two idols: Swacky
talked a lot; Alemi used gestures where the other man would have used
sentences.

With one mighty last push, Alemi sent the skiff forward over the first
of the little combers and jumped in.  At another familiar gesture,
Readis moved to the stern and skulled his paddle to keep the forward
movement while Alemi unfurled the sail and let the boom run out.  The
inland dawn breeze filled the canvas and Readis stowed the paddle and
reached for the keelboard, sending it home into the stern slot and
shoving the cotter-pin through to lock it firmly in place.

"Hard a-port,' Alemi sang out, accompanying his command with appropriate
gestures.  He ducked agilely as the boom swung over, playing out the
lines until he had moved into the seat beside his shipmate.  He
shortened sail and then put his free arm behind Readis, noting the lad's
instinctive handling of the rudder.

Alemi's good wife had given him three fine girl children and was
carrying a fourth which both devoutly hoped would be a son.  But until
that time, Alemi "practised' with Readis.  Jayge approved since it would
stand a shoreside holder in good stead to appreciate the moods and
bounty of the sea and Readis would profit by knowing more than one
skill.

Alemi sniffed at the off-shore breeze, redolent now of vegetable and
exotic blossoms.  He judged the wind would turn once they got out beyond
the Paradise River channel.  He didn't intend to sail far from land but,
on the landside of the Great Southern Current, they were sure to find
the redfins which frequented this part of the sea in great schools.
Yesterday, Alemi had sent out the two smaller ships of his little fleet
to meet those schools.  As soon as the repairs to his bigger yawl had
been completed, he and his crew would be join them.

Alemi was just as pleased to be on shore for Swacky's gather.

He might miss a day's fishing but until the main's'l had been mended, he
was shore-bound.

As they hit the rip at the channel mouth, the little skiff bucked and
bounced.  Readis' merry laugh burbled out of him, delighted with dipping
and dumping.  Not much phased the lad and he'd never fed the fishes
once.  Which was more than could be said for some grown men.

Then Alemi caught the sparkle and shine on the surface and, touching
Readis' shoulder, pointed.  The boy leaned against him and cast his eye
along the extended arm, nodding excitedly as he, too, saw the school. So
many fish trying to occupy the same space that they seemed to be
flippering on each other's backs.

In a single-minded action, both reached for the rods that had been
stowed under the gunnels.  These were sturdy rods of the finest bamboo,
with reels of the stoutest tight-stranded line, and hooks handfashioned
by the Hold's Smithjourneyman, barbed to hold once sunk in the jaw of
the wiliest redfin.

Twelve redfins, the length of a grown man's arm, were required for the
evening's feasting.  There would be roast wherry and succulent herdbeast
but redfin was Swacky's favorite.  He'd wanted to come along, Swacky had
told Readis the night before, but he had to stay about and organize his
gather or no-one would do it the way he wanted.

Alemi let Readis bait his own hook with the innards of the shellfish
redfins loved best.  The boy's tongue stuck out the side of his mouth as
he manipulated the slimy mess securely on to the hook.  He looked up at
Alemi and saw the nod of approval.  Then, with a deft cast for a boy his
age, he sent the weighted hook, bait still attached, out across the
starboard wake of the skiff.  To give the boy a chance to make the first
catch of the day, Alemi busied himself furling the sail and other
chores.  Then he, too, hunkered down in the cockpit, bracing his rod on
the port side.

They didn't have long to wait for a bite.  And Readis was first.

The rod bent, its tip almost touching the choppy waves as the redfin
fought its ensnarement.  Readis, biting his lip, his eyes bugged out
with determination, set both feet on the seat and hung on to his rod.
Grunts came out of him as he struggled to reel in this monster.  Alemi
had one hand, out of the boy's line of sight, ready to grab the rod
should the fish prove too strong.

Readis was panting with effort by the time the equally exhausted redfin
was flapping feebly in the starboard side.

With one deft swoop, Alemi netted it and hauled it aboard; Readis
whooped with glee as he saw the size of it.

"That's the biggest one yet, isn't it, Uncle Alemi?  That's the biggest
one I've caught.  Isn't it?  A real good big "un!'

"Indeed it is,' Alemi replied stoutly: the fish was not as long as his
forearm.  But a good prize for the boy.

Just then his line tugged.

"You gotta bite, too.  You gotta bite!'

"That I do.  So you'll have to attend to this one yourself."

Alemi was amazed at the pull of his hooked fish.  He had to exert
considerable force to keep the rod from being pulled out of his hand.
For a startled moment, he wondered if he had inadvertently hooked a
shipfish which no fishman in his right mind ever did.  He was immensely
relieved as he saw the red fins of his captive as the fish writhed above
the surface in an attempt to loosen the barb in its mouth.

That's ginormous!" cried Readis and looked up at the Master Fishman with
an awed expression.

"it's a big "un all right,' Alemi said, jamming his feet under the
cockpit seat to get more leverage against the pull.

"And it's dragging the skiff!'

That, too, was obvious to Alemi, dragging them toward the edge of the
Great Southern Current.  He could even discern the difference in colour
between current and sea.

And we're right in the middle of the school!" Readis cried, lurching
from port to starboard to look down at the darting bodies that
surrounded the little ship.

"Best knock your catch on the head before it flips overboard,' Alemi
said, noting the flapping of the landed fish and not wanting its oil to
coat the deck.  He managed to reel in a good length though the tip of
his rod went briefly underwater.  He hauled mightily and got enough play
in the line to reel in again.

"That is the fightingest fish you've ever hooked,' Readis said.

He'd knocked his redfin smartly on the head and tossed it in the
catch-tank, remembering to fasten the lid with a deft turn of the
fastener.

One eye on the drift toward the Great Current, Alemi hurried the process
of reeling the redfin in.  Readis was cheering him along with reports of
the immense size of the fish so Alemi hoped that he would win the
battle.

"Get ready with the net, boy!" he called as he manoeuvered his catch
close to the port side of the skiff.

Readis was ready but the struggling fish was too much for his young arms
and Alemi flung the rod aside to help.  They got the fish aboard, Alemi
clouted it on the head, and then stepped over it to get to the tiller
and alter their course away from the Southern Current.

They were close enough for him to see the rapid stream, making its
inexorable way through waters crowded with fish attempting to reach its
safety.

"Wheee, look at that, Unclemi!" Readis cried, pointing a blood-smeared
finger at the school of redfin.  "Can't we fish here?"

"Not in the Current, boy, not unless you want to take a much longer
voyage and miss tonight's gather."

"1 don't want to do tha Readis' eyes widened and his mouth gaped as he
looked astern.  0-oh!'

Alemi craned his head over his shoulder and caught his breath.  Boiling
up behind them, and far too close for them to reach the safety of river
mouth, was one of the black squalls that this part of the coast was
famous for: squalls which defied even his well-honed seaman's instinct
for storm.  A powerful gust of wind smacked into his face and made his
eyes water.  Even as he moved to secure the boom, gesturing Readis to
perform emergency tasks drilled into him for just such a situation,
Alemi cursed the freak weather which gave none of the warnings he was
used to noting in the Nerat Bay waters in which he had been trained.

His father, Yanus, had often berated the folly of men who insisted on
sailing the Great Currents when there were quieter waters that held just
as many fish but without the hazards.

Alemi, rather liking hazards, had never agreed with his father on that
score - among others.

Now, he gave a brief tug at the ties of Readis' vest, grinned a
reassurance and then payed out the sea anchor.

So what do fishmen do in a blow, Readis?" he shouted above the rising
wind that whipped words from his mouth.

"Sail into it!  Or run with it!" Readis was grinning with all the
impudent confidence of his age.  He leaned into the arm Alemi put round
him as they braced themselves in the cockpit.  Which do we do now?"

"Run!" Alemi said, adjusting his course to the gusty pressure against
the back of his head and keeping the bow in line with the wave pattern.

This dinghy was a frail craft in the high seas that a sudden squall like
this could churn up.  Devoutly Alemi hoped this would be a short blow,
as they so often were in this area.  One large roller athwart the dinghy
and they'd be swamped.

The shoreline had disappeared in the blackness of the encompassing storm
but that didn't worry Alemi as much as getting caught in the Great
Southern Current which could take them dangerously far from land.  Or
ram them, all unseeing, into the headland above Paradise River Cove.
Hauling the tiller over as far as he dared, he hoped the wind would blow
them to starboard, away from the Current and toward land.

But winds were as capricious as these seas.  He had checked the
barometer - one of the new tools which Aivas had supplied as a weather
aid.  Knowing himself more attuned to Nerat Bay's more pacific waters,
Alemi had availed himself of the device despite the scoffing of other
fishmen.  He had also studied the weather charts and such information
about these waters that the Ancients had amassed in Aivas' seemingly
inexhaustible "files'.

Anything that would aid the Crafthold and prevent loss of life and ship
was not too bizarre to be tested by Alemi.

But the barometer had been steady on "fair' when he left to collect
Readis.  Too late to worry about that now, he thought, as a whitecap
bashed the skiff sideways.  It then dropped down a huge trough, sinking
his stomach on the way.  Beside him, Readis laughed, even if he also
tightened his hands on the gunnel beside him.  Alemi managed to grin
encouragingly down at his brave shipmate.

On the upsurge, the wave seized the small boat and heaved it high on the
next crest, then smashed it down again so that water walled them into a
dark green pocket, the sea anchor trailing in the air behind them.  The
skiff lurched, its prow digging into the ascending sea cliff.  They took
on water and, when Readis would have dutifully reached for the bailing
bucket, Alemi tightened his hold on him, shaking his head.  The skiff
could take on a good deal of water - which would make her somewhat
heavier in the seas, all to the good - before she was in danger of
sinking.  He feared capsizing more.  He was glad that he had drilled
Readis on how to cope with an overturn.  Now it was all he could do to
hang on, for a cross rip of surging waves battered the skiff from side
to side, as well as up and down.  He clung - one hand to the ship and
one on Readis and prayed for the end of the squall.

They could stop almost as abruptly as they began.  That would be their
only hope now: a quick end to the blow.

He saw the mast splinter and break, felt Readis' tightened grip, and
then abruptly they were upended as the cross waves slammed into the
starboard side and decanted them into the roiled sea.  His grip on
Readis tightened, pulling the boy close in to his chest.  Over the
scream of the storm he heard the boy's startled, frightened cry.  Then
they were being milled in the waters, Readis clinging to him like a grey
limpet.

Alemi flailed his free arm, trying to reach the surface again.

He managed to grab a breath just as another wave pushed them down.
Readis struggled in his arms and all he could do was tighten his grip.
He mustn't lose the boy.  Then his scooping hand came hard against
something.  The upturned skiff?  He clutched at a roundness that was not
wooden, but firm and fleshed.

Shipfish?  Shipfish!  Through the driving rain and wash of sea water, he
could see shapes all around them.  How often they were said to rescue
fishermen!

The hard edge of a dorsal fin now filled his hand and his body was swung
against its long sleek shape just as another wave crashed over him.  No,
the shipfish was angling its agile body right through the wave and out
the other side.  Readis' small body was on the outside, victim to the
pull of the harsh waves.

Hanging on, Alemi somehow shoved Readis to his side, against the
shipfish.  In between the sheets of water that covered them, he saw
Readis' hands trying to find some purchase on the sleek, slippery body.

"SHIPEISH, READIS!" he shouted above the tumult of the storm winds.
"THEY'LL SAVE US!  HANG ON!'

Then he felt another body nudge into him on the other side, wedging him
and Readis even tighter, though how the creatures managed that feat in
such rough water he didn't know.  But the additional support allowed him
some respite and he reset his hand on the dorsal fin; he even managed to
work one of Readis' small hands on the sturdy edge.

Then it occurred to Alemi as they passed through yet another wall of
water, that Readis was small enough to ride on the shipfish's back.  It
took three more waves before Alemi had hoisted Readis astride the
shipfish.  To his immense surprise, the shipfish seemed to help as much
as it could by maintaining as straight a line through the plunging seas
as it could.

"HOLD ON!  HOLD ON TIGHT!" Alemi said, firmly wrapping Readis' small
arms around the fin.  The boy, his face a scared white but his mouth set
in a determined line, nodded and half-crouched behind the fin, like the
rider of a sea dragon.

A surge of relief caused Alemi to momentarily loosen his grip on the top
of the fin and he floundered about.  Almost immediately, a blunt nose
bumped him authoritatively and the next thing he knew a dorsal fin was
nudging against his right hand.  A wave crashed down on him and he was
tumbled in the water, away from the safety and he had to fight his
panic.

But the shipfish was right beside him, pushing him upward with its
snout.  They both broke the surface together and Alemi thrashed toward
the creature, grabbing the dorsal with both hands, only to be thrown
sideways against the long body by the next whitecap.  This time he
managed to retain a grip with one hand and also, by letting his body
trail beside the shipfish, he could follow its movements more easily. He
fought the panic in him that wanted both hands on this one source of
stability offered in the stormy sea and, relaxing into the movement,
found the courage to surrender to the shipfish.  As they dipped and
plunged through the next wave, he saw Readis, crouching over his mount's
back.  He saw the phalanx of escort on either side and knew that their
protection was solid.

Then it seemed as if the squall was lessening or perhaps they had been
conveyed to its fringes where the water was calmer.

Either way, their passage improved.  Looking in the direction he thought
land should be, he saw the smudge of the shoreline and almost cried with
relief.

"Wheeeeee!'

Startled by that cry, Alemi turned as he saw a shipfish launch itself
above the waves in a graceful arc and re-enter the water.

Others began the same antic, all "wheeing' or "squeeing!'

"Wheee!" cried an unmistakably boy's voice and Alemi looked over his
left shoulder to see Readis, now sitting up straighter on his shipfish,
grinning with delight at the exhibition.  "That's great!" the boy added.
"Aren't they great, Alemi?"

"Grrrreat!" But it was shipfish who repeated the word, in just the same
way the boy had uttered it, spinning the "r' out.

On all sides, shipfish were crying "Great' as they continued their
leisurely vaultings in and out of the sea.  Alemi convulsively tightened
his grip on the dorsal fin.  He couldn't believe what he was hearing.
The stress of the storm, perhaps a blow to his head, or plain fear, had
addled his faculties.  His companion raised its head and, water shooting
up out of the blow-hole in the top of its cranium, clearly said: "Thass
great!'

"They're talking, Unclemi, they're talking.

"How could they, Readis?  They're fish!'

"Not fish!  Mam'l." His rescuer got out the three words in a loud and
contradictory tone.  "Doll fins,' it added clearly and Alemi shook his
head.  "Doll fins speak good." As if to emphasize this, it began to
speed forward, hauling the dazed Master Fishman along at a spanking
pace.

Readis' doll fin and the guardian companions altered their course, too,
and picked up speed, the flankers still performing their acrobatic
above-the-water spins, vaults and turns.

"Talk some more, will you?" Readis encouraged in his highpitched young
voice.  This was going to make some gather tale.

And they'd have to believe what he said because Unclemi was here with
him to vouch that what he said was true.

"Talk'?  You talk.  Long tayme no talk,' a doll fin swimming alongside
Readis said very clearly.  "Men back Landing?  Doll fin ears back?"

"Landing?" Alemi repeated, stunned.  The doll fins knew the ancient
name?  Wonder upon wonder.

"Men are back at Landing,' Readis said quite proudly, as if he had been
instrumental in their return.

"Good!" cried one doll fin as it executed a twist mid-air, knifing back
into the water without splashing.

"Squeeeeee!" another cried as it vaulted upward.

In the water all around him, Alemi heard excited clickings and
clatterings.  The area seemed so full of shipfish bodies that he
wondered how they could move without injuring each other.

"Look, Unclemi, we're nearly back!" Readis said, jabbing his finger at
the fast-approaching land.

They had been conveyed so rapidly and smoothly that Alemi struggled
between relief that they were so close to dry land and regret that this
incredible journey was ending.  The forward motion of the shipfish
slowed as they came to the first of the sandbanks.  Some leaped over it,
others followed Readis' and Alemi's mounts to the channel, while the
majority altered their direction seaward again.

Moments later the smooth transport came to a complete halt and,
tentatively lowering his feet, Alemi felt the firmness of the sea bed,
gradually sloping up to the shore.  He released the dorsal fin and
slapped the side of his mount who turned and rubbed its nose against
him, as if inviting a caress.  Bemused, Alemi scratched as he would his
dog or the small felines who were beginning to invade the Hold.  Readis'
mount continued past him.

"Thanks, my friend.  You saved our lives and we are grateful.

"Wielcame.  Uur duty,' the shipfish said clearly and then with a swirl,
it propelled its body sinuously back out to the break in the sandbar,
its fin travelling at ever increasing speed as it rejoined its fellows.

"Hey!" Readis cried on a note of alarm.  His mount had unceremoniously
dumped him in shallows where he was just able to stand erect, the water
as high as his chin.

"Thank the doll fin,' Alemi called, wading as fast as he could toward
the boy.  "Scratch its chin.

"Oh?  You like that, huh?" Readis, treading water, managed to use both
hands to scratch the face presented him.  "Thank you very much indeed
for saving my life and giving me that great swim ashore."

"Wielcame, bhoy!" Then the doll fin executed an incredible leap over
Readis' head and followed its pod mate out to sea again.

"Come back.  Come back soon,' Readis called after him, raising himself
up out of the water to project his invitation.

A faint "squcee' answered him.  "D'you think he heard me?" Readis
plaintively asked Alemi.

"They seem to have very good hearing, Alemi remarked dryly.  Then he
gave Readis as inconspicuous an assist up out of the water as he could.
The boy had been magnificent throughout.  He must tell Jayge that.  A
father sometimes didn't see his son in the same light as an interested
observer.

Tired as they were from the experience, the exhilaration of their rescue
provided enough energy for them both to reach the dry sand of the beach
before they had to sit and rest.

"They won't believe us, will they, Unclemi?" Readis said with a weary
sigh as he was stretched full length on the warm beach.

"I'm not sure I believe us,' Alemi said, mustering a smile as he
collapsed beside the boy.  But the shipfish unquestionably rescued us.
No mistake about that!'

"And the shipfish what did he call himself.  .  .  maml?  He did talk to
us.  You heard him.  Wielcame!  Uur duty." And Readis made his voice
squeakier in mimicry of the doll fin.  "They even got manners.

"Remember that, Readis,' Alemi said with a weak chuckle.

He knew he should get to his feet and go reassure Aramina that they'd
survived the storm.  Though, as he turned his head to look down the
shoreline, he couldn't see a soul.  Was it possible that no-one on shore
had noticed the sudden squall?

Hadn't even known they were in danger?  Just as well not to
unnecessarily mar what would still be the happy occasion of Swacky's
nameday gather.

"Unclemi?" There was a disturbed wail in Readis' voice.  "We lost our
redfins." Then the boy added hastily to show he was aware of the
priorities.  "And the skiff, too.

"We have our lives, Readis, and we've a story to tell.  Now, just get
your breath a few more minutes.

A few more minutes became an hour before either stirred, for the warm
sand had taken the last of the squall's chill from their bones: the sea
sounds and the light winds had combined with the fatigue of their recent
labours to send them to sleep.

Except for the fact that Alemi was not given to fanciful tales, the rest
of Paradise River Hold might not have believed the astounding tale the
two of them told.  By the next morning tide, however, pieces of the
skiff were deposited on the beach.

By then everyone in Paradise River Hold knew the bare bones of their
near-fatal fishing trip.  No-one on shore had indeed noticed the squall,
busy with their chores and getting ready for the evening gather. Aramina
had been in Temma's cothold, baking.  She nearly fainted when Alemi
informed her, as gently as possible, of the recent ordeal her son had
come through so magnificently.  Then she fussed so over Readis, who was
trying to eat lunch because his had been lost at sea, that she looked
hurt when he shrugged her attentions off so he could get on with filling
his very empty stomach.  She reprimanded him severely when he told her
that shipfish talk.

"How can fish talk?" She glared at Alemi as if he had filled the boy's
head with nonsense.

Before Alemi could support him, Readis gave his mother a very fierce
scowl.  "Dragons talk - he insisted.

"Dragons talk to their riders, not small boys.

"And you heard dragons, mother,' he protested boldly even though he knew
she didn't like to be reminded.  That made het pause so long that he
wished the words back in his throat and chewed more slowly.

"Yes, I heard dragons but I certainly have never heari shipfish !"

"Even when they rescued you and Da?"

"In the middle of a storm?"

"Mine didn't start talking until after the storm."

His mother glanced again at Alemi for confirmation.

"It is true, Aramina.  They spoke

"Their noises may have just sounded like words, Alemi, she tried to
insist.

"Not when they said "wielcame" after I said "thank you", Readis went on
hotly, and Alemi nodded vigorously under Aramina's outraged eyes.  "And
they know that the ancients called the place Landing and they're mamls
not fish!'

"Of course they're fish!" Aramina blurted out.  "They swim in the sea!'

"So do we and we're not fish!" Readis retorted in disgust with her
disbelief and stormed out of the room, refusing to return when she
called him.

"Now see what you've done!" Aramina said to Alemi and then she, too,
left Temma's kitchen.

Alemi regarded the older woman blankly.

"If you say they spoke, "Lemi, they spoke,' the former trader said with
a definitive nod of her head.  Then she grinned at his confused
expression.  "Don't worry about Ara.  She'll calm down but you gotta
admit you frightened the life out of her.  And none of us here even
knowing there'd been a bad squall.  Here!" And she handed him a cup of
the klah she had just made to which she added a dollop of the special
brew she kept for emergencies.

"Ha!" Alemi said, smacking his lips after a long swig, "I needed that!"
He handed back the cup with a quizzical expression.

"You don't need any more or you won't be able to regale the gather
tonight with your adventure,' Temma added with a wink.

The pod swam back into their customary waters full of elation that they
had once again saved landfolk.  This was worth relaying to The Tillek
now, instead of waiting until the year turned and pods gathered at the
Great Subsidence to watch the young males attempt the Whirlpool, and
exchange the news each pod galliered in its waters.  The southern pods
did not have as many occasions as the noflhern ones did to do perform
traditional duties.  So the sounds went out and were broadcast that Afo
and Kib had played wit/i mans lost at sea.  It had been a great moment.
For they had spoken to mans in Words and mans had spoken to them, using
the ancient Words of Courtesy.

So Kib rehearsed the tale, murmuring into the waters as he swam the
Words of his Reporrit.  He sent the sounds out to be repeated from pod
to pod until they came to the hearing of The Tillek.  Maybe this was
time that The Tilleks had promised would come: when mans once more
remembered to speak to sea folk and become partners again.

The sounds travelled to The Tillek who had them repeated from one end of
the seas to the other, to all the pods in all the waters of Pern There
was envy at such good luck and some even wished to join the fortunate
pod.  Afo, Kib, Mel, Temp and Mull swam fast and proud, with great
leaps.  And Mel wondered if mans would still know how to get rid of
bloodfish for he had one sucking him which he could not seem to scrape
off, not matter how he tried.

Chapter Two

Readis fell asleep that night some time after his third repetition of
their adventure.

"He's got it down as pat as any harper, his father said with some
chagrin.

"Just so long as you've made it plain, and Aramina emphasized that word,
"that he isn't to swim out or go sailing  "Skiff's gone, remember?"
Jayge put in reassuringly.

"To try and find those shipfish again,' she finished, glaring at him.

"You heard him promise, "Mina, that he wouldn't go near to the water
without a companion.  He's a child of his word, you know."

"Hmmm, Aramina said ominously.

But, though she kept strict track of her son's whereabouts for the next
two days, he did not disobey though she saw him often shielding his eyes
from the sun, gazing out across the restless waters of the Southern Sea.
Perversely now she worried that he had taken a fear of the sea.  When
she hesitantly mentioned this to her mate, Jayge stoutly denied there
was a fearful bone in Readis' body.

"He's obeying - isn't that what you wanted of him?" Jayge demanded. "You
can't have it both ways.

Aramina sighed and then was summoned out of her preoccupation over
Readis by a loud cry of frustration from Aranya who was having trouble
with a toy cart that kept losing its wheel.

The next afternoon, while holders were taking their midday rest,
avoiding the heat of the sun, Aramina received a polite message from
Ruth that he and Lord Jaxom were visiting Paradise River.  She told her
husband.  She was halfway to the kitchen to prepare the fruit juices
that she knew Jaxom liked when she turned back, puzzled.

"They're already here at Paradise, Aramina said.  Then she went to the
edge of the wide verandah that shaded their house, peering up into skies
unpopulated by the recognizable form of a dragon.  "But where?  Isn't
that just like Jaxom?  Although why he would tell me he was coming when
he's already nearby Oh, maybe I misheard Ruth.  I do that now and then."
She sighed in exasperation, shrugged and went back inside.

Jayge seated himself where he commanded a good view of the approaches to
the house, propping his feet up on the railing.  The days when Aramina
had heard every single dragon conversation were long past - to her
infinite relief.  The dragons had to think specifically at her to convey
a message.  Jayge couldn't imagine what could have delayed Ruth who was
generally very prompt to follow any announcement of his coming.  Lord
Jaxom of Ruatha Hold was welcome for his own self but Jayge smiled at
the surprise Readis would have to see the white dragon when he woke from
his afternoon nap.

"Not that that would rate as high now as swimming with a dolphin,' Jayge
murmured aloud.  As well it was Ruth and Jaxom who were the first dragon
pair to land at Paradise River after Readis' adventure.  The very ones
to answer candid questions.

Just then Ruth glided with deft back-winging to land in front of the
house.  Jayge rose to his feet and went to greet them, a broad grin on
his face.  "Ara started squeezing juice the moment Ruth told her you
were coming.  You've confused her.  She said you were already here but
we couldn't see the white hide anywhere.

And I'm glad you did because something's come up!'

Jaxom grinned and Jayge frowned because he suddenly realized that Jaxom
was carrying his riding jacket and had sweated through his light shirt.
His face also bore sweat marks.  Considering that between was beyond
measure cold, Jayge was confused.  Then Ruth turned and, in a hop-glide
gait, made for the shore while happily chirping fire-lizards converged
above him.

"Off for a scrub, is he?" and Jayge gestured his human guest up to the
coolness of the porch.  "How could you work up such a sweat in between,
Jaxom?"

"Stealing sand." The young Lord Holder grinned with mischief.  "We've
been examining the quality of your local stuff."

"Indeed?  Now what would you need Paradise River sand for?

As I'm sure you're going to tell me anyway." He motioned for Jaxom to
take the hammock, strategically placed at the corner of the house where
it caught any breeze, seaward or landward.  He leaned against the
banister, arms folded across his chest, awaiting an explanation.

"The settlers had a sandpit back in that scrub land of yours.

They thought highly of Paradise River sands - for glass making."

"There's certainly enough.  Did Piemur and Jancis find those
whatchamacallums

"Chips?" With a grin, Jaxom supplied the proper term for all the odd
bits that had been stored in the Hold's barn by the Ancients.  It was
only in recent days that any one had understood their purpose .  .  .
parts for computers, of which the Artificial Intelligence Voice Address
System - Aivas - recently discovered at a Landing building was the most
complex.  And the receptacle in which all the Ancients' vast knowledge
had been stored.  Jayge had had a brief glimpse of the incredible
machine, in its special room at Landing, and heard what miracles of
information it had.

"Chips, then useful, after all?"

"Well, we managed to salvage the usable transistors and capacitors but
they haven't actually been installed yet."

Jayge gave him a long suspicious look for the way the strange words came
so easily from his mouth.  "As you say, he added with a grin.

Just then, young Readis, clad only in a clout, came out on the porch,
rubbing sleep out of his eyes.  He peered at Jaxom, swinging lazily in
the hammock, then swivelled his head around to the front of the house.
"Ruth?"

Jaxom pointed to where the white dragon, surrounded by industrious
fire-lizards, wallowed in the shallow water.

"He's enough of a guardian, isn't he?" Readis asked, tilting his head
back in a stance that mirrored one of his father's postures.

Jayge nodded, glad that Readis was so conscious of his promise not to go
in the water unattended.  "Ruth's bathing right now and besides, I'd
like you to tell Jaxom what happened to you and Alemi the other day?"

"Did you come just to hear?" Readis asked, though he knew that Lord
Jaxom had a lot of other things to do since he was aware of how hard his
own holder father worked.  On the other hand, he was certain that even a
busy man like Lord Jaxom would find his adventure interesting: because
it was a real adventure.

"Well, that was one reason, Jaxom said, smiling.  "So what did happen to
you and Alemi the other day?"

Aramina emerged from the house, carrying her squirming daughter under
one arm and a tray in her free hand.  Jayge quickly sprang to relieve
her of the tray but she gave him Aranya instead, and served Jaxom a tall
cool drink and some freshly baked sweet biscuits.  It took a few more
minutes until Readis was settled on his stool, with two biscuits and a
small glass.  When his mother was seated, Readis looked to his father
for his cue to begin.

He took a deep breath and launched into the well-rehearsed tale.  He
kept his eyes on Lord Jaxom's face to be sure he was listening properly
- and he was - almost from the start.

"Shipfish?" Lord Jaxom exclaimed when Readis got to that part of his
recital.  He glanced at Jayge and Aramina then and Readis saw their
solemn confirmation of his claim.

"A whole pod of "em,' Readis said proudly.  "Unclemi said there must
have been twenty or thirty.  They pulled us far enough in for us to
reach the beach safely on our own.  And,' he added, pausing to give
emphasis to his final words, "the next morning the skiff was found
beached up by the fishhold, like they knew exactly where it belonged."

"That is some tale, young Readis.  You're a harper born.  An amazing
rescue.  Truly amazing."

Readis caught the genuine feeling in the Lord Holder's tone.

"The redfins weren't by any chance returned with the skiff?" he asked.

"Nah,' and Readis dismissed that with a flick of his wrist although he
had been disappointed the lock-box hadn't appeared on the shore as well.
"They drowned.  So we had to eat ol' stringy wherry "stead of good juicy
redfin steaks.  And you know something else?"

"No, what?" Jaxom responded.

"It wasn't just that they rescued us, they talked to us, too!'

"What did they say?"

The expression on Lord Jaxom's face was suddenly alert and his eyes
bored into Readis as if he'd caught him out in a lie.

Readis stiffened his back and threw out his chest.

"They said "wielcame" when we thanked "em.  And they called themselves
"mamls", not fish.  Unclemi will tell you!'

Readis caught Jaxom glancing at his father, as if doubting him.

His father gave a slow nod to Jaxom, then turned to him.

"Readis, why don't you run down and see if the fire-lizards are giving
Ruth a proper scrubbing?"

Having said his piece, Readis was delighted to be released to help bathe
Ruth, who was his favorite dragon of all the ones he'd met so far.

"Can I?  Really?" And he looked up at Lord Jaxom.

"Really, you can,' Jaxom said.

Readis let out a loud yell as he jumped off the porch and pelted down to
the shore where Ruth was afloat.

When the boy was out of earshot, Jaxom turned to his parents.

"I know for a fact that dolphins, what we've been calling shipfish all
these centuries, came with the original settlers.  And they speak?
Amazing." He glanced towards Ruth.

"They'll never be competition for dragons,' Jayge said quickly, flashing
Jaxom a look.

"No,' Jaxom replied with an easy grin, "nothing could be but you seaside
holders might want to encourage a renewal of the old friendship.
Especially with the squalls you have."

"Hmmm,' and Jayge was clearly taken with that idea.

"You are not,' and Aramina paused to emphasize the negative, "to give my
son any more ideas than he already has.

 "Why not?" Jayge said, blinking at her.  "Catch "em while they're young
and train "em up in the way they're to go.

"Readis will follow you as Holder of Paradise River " she began, hotly.

"And, as he is Holder of Paradise River right on the coast, I think it'd
be smart if he is aware of all the possibilities available,' Jayge said,
making a sweeping gesture of his arm which included the sparkling waters
beyond.  "Of course, onl when he's old enough to appreciate the
advantages, he added as her expression turned slightly mutinous.

"Can't start "em too young, you know, Jaxom told Aramina.

"You're as bad as he is.  Don't tell me that Sharra would allow Jarrol
to go careening about the coastline?"

"We don't have much of a one at Ruatha, Jaxom said with immense good
humour.  "And speaking of my wife, I'd best get back to her.  Surprise
her with my early return.  So I have your permission Lord Holder, to use
Paradise River sands .  - - He turned to Jayge.

Jayge raised both hands in broad assent.  "However much you need."

"Thanks.  Jaxom drank the last of the juice, made a satisfied smack of
his lips.  "That hit the spot.  Now, to entice my dragon away from all
his admirers.

Jayge, circling Aramina's shoulders with one arm, waved a farewell. Then
he looked down at his wife, always somewhat amazed that she had chosen
to live her life with him.

"Some people have affinities for the sea, others for horses, or
dragons." He gave her an encouraging squeeze when her face clouded,
hearing that preamble.  "Readis has had a great adventure for a young
lad.  Let's bend with it for the time being.

I would like to hear what Aivas has to say about the shipfish.

After all, love, we, too, owe our lives to them - and all that they
brought us to.  We ought, for the sake of our son, to listen to what is
known about them."

She leaned into him, borrowing his strength once again.  "He is just a
little boy."

"Who will grow, I hope, into a fine sturdy man.  Who will probably be as
stubborn as his mother,' and he grinned down at her.

"Ha!  And not just his mother by any means,' she replied tartly.

"Just don't force the issue, Jayge.

"I hadn't intended to, but I must admit to being curious as to what
Aivas will say about talking fish."

"Yes,' Aramina said, moving away from his side to take a sand-covered
biscuit out of her daughter's hand, "people can imagine such odd things
in moments of stress."

"Didn't we though!" And Jayge's grin was for their own rarely mentioned
rescue.  "We never thought to thank them, either."

Aramina gave him a long and indignant stare.  "Considering we barely
made it to shore, and never really thought the shipfish were speaking to
us, why would we have?"

The dolphins kept patrolling the waters off Pa rdis nv, hoping to ask
mans to remove bloodfish.  Most of them had the annQving things.
Sometimes they could bite it off a podmember, but the parasites could
take a hold that only a man's sharp knife could remove.  It had been one
of the great things about having a partner: he or she would keep their
flesh free of the parasites so dolphins would be healthier and able to
swim faster.  So when they found the broken pieces of the mans' boat,
they pushed it to where the tide would bring it ashore, since the waters
were not deep enough for them to swim all the way in to the sands.

Maybe, seeing that the dolphins were remembering the tasks Tradition had
told them to perform, mans would perform the tasks dolphins could not do
for themselves.  They kept watch until they saw mans finding the
wreckage.  Kib called and called, asking when the bloodfish could be
taken off and where should they go for that healing.  The mans were so
happy to find the ship pieces that they walked away without answering.

If there was only a Bell, Kib thought.  There should be a Bell.

Then they could ring it as their ancestors had, and mans would answer.
The dolphins at Moncobay had a Bell which they could ring but they had
not yet had the barnacles scraped off Had mans forgotten their duty to
dolphins?

The Tillek had said that, one day, when the dolphin bells were rung
again, mans would remember what mans should do to help dolphins.

Chapter Three

f Aramina secretly hoped that Lord Jaxom would forget so trivial a
matter as speaking to Aivas about her son's adventure, she was mistaken.
However, it was Master Fishman Alemi who was asked to come and recount
the event to the Artificial Intelligence Voice Address System.

Jayge was somewhat irritated that Readis would miss an opportunity to
meet this astounding artifact of the original colonists but Aramina
thought it was much the best thing.

He's only just settled down, Jayge.  Seeing this Aivas thing would upset
him.  And how much would a boy of his age understand?  I mean, it's not
as if he were meeting a living person he could relate to, is it?"

I could insist that Readis accompany me,' Alemi said, not wishing to
cause bad feelings between holder and lady.  His initial elation had
been much dampened by realizing that his young friend was being excluded
from the interview.  He had been to the Admin with other Fish Masters,
awed by the vast amount of information the facility had on ocean
currents and deeps that was still relevant as well as extremely useful.
The boy would be so proud of having been granted such a privilege.

"No!" Aramina said with some force.  "It's enough he had the adventure.
He tends to magnify things out of proportion and I don't want him
thinking of swimming with those shipfish again.

You go.  Find out what this Aivas knows.  We can decide then if Readis
is to be told.  Right now, I'd rather the whole affair was forgotten.

"Forget that we owe the doll fins our son's life?"

"We owe them ours, too!" she snapped at him, "but I'm not out looking at
the sea to see fins all day.  Readis has to learn to deal with life on
the land, not the sea." She gave Alemi a quick glance and added in a
gentler tone, "I mean, for a boy his age, he already knows a good deal
about the Fishman's Craft and I'm grateful you wanted to teach him."
Then she let out a gush of held breath and said in a fierce tone.  "He's
only seven Turns old!

He's got a lot more to do with dragons than with doll fins."

The two men exchanged glances and a silent understanding was reached.

"I'll go to Landing then,' Alemi said calmly.  "See what Aivas has to
say about these creatures.  I must admit, I'm somewhat fascinated with
them myself.  And,' he added with a wry grin, "I saved some fish to feed
them with on this latest sail.  You know, I hadn't realized just how
often they have escorted my ship.

And how often they've saved lives.  Each of my older hands had some tale
to tell: in their family or from other crews they've sailed with.  Oly
said that once he was certain doll fins had kept his skiff afloat until
he was close enough to land to swim.  The boat sank the moment he left
it."

"Do me a favor, Alemi?" Aramina asked, her expression severe.

"What?"

"Don't tell Readis any of them."

"Ara-' Jayge began to protest.

She wheeled on him.  "I know all too well, Jayge Lilcamp, what can
happen to a child who gets its head full of notions!'

Jayge pulled back and gave her a sheepish expression.  "All right, Ara,
I take the point.  Alemi?"

"Oh, aye, I'll keep my mouth shut."

There was an awkward pause and then Aramina relented.  "If he asks, tell
him the truth.  I won't have him lied to or put off."

"You want it both ways?" Jayge asked.

She gave him a scowl, then relaxed a bit with a rueful smile on her
lips.  "I guess I do.  But he's only seven and the least said the best
as far as I can see.

They were all of one mind before Alemi left the house that evening.  He
arranged for his first mate to take the sloop out the next day to trawl
for redfins which were still running.  What he couldn't sell fresh,
they'd smoke as the fish preserved well so he didn't want to lose the
day because he was asked to go to Landing.

Kitrin didn't wish him to be away from her at all.

"I'm longer gone on the ship fishing, dear, he gently reminded his wife.
She was well gone in her pregnancy and apt to fret.

He took her hand and pulled her into his embrace, stroking her fine dark
hair.  "And I promise I shan't even look at those forward girls who work
at Landing.

They both felt the baby kicking at her belly and smiled at each other.

"You've only to send Bitty after me,' he assured her, nodding at the
little bronze fire-lizard curled up in a sunny patch on their verandah.
"Returning from Landing is much easier done than from the sea."

"I know, I know,' she said and settled against the curve of him.

If Alemi were truthful - and this was not the time to be with Kitrin so
uneasy in herself - he would have admitted that being asked to visit
Landing, to speak to Aivas itself, was an excitement he didn't wish to
miss, and one he would preferred to have shared with no qualifications.
He could, indeed, understand and appreciate Aramina's anxieties about
Readis.  The boy was adventurous enough and sufficiently selfconfident,
perhaps, to undertake more than he was truly able to.

Alemi had planned to tell him all that he had observed on this latest
sail of the doll fins: how he had taken up a position on the prow of the
ship to hail the shipfish, to see if others would talk to him, to feed
them the fish he had saved as a thank you.  He had done this every
morning and evening.  To his own amazement he had begun to notice
differences in the colors, even in the scars on their muzzles, so that
they were distinguishable, one from another.  It occurred to him that
doll fins, like dragons, could be identified once one knew what to look
for: like differences in shade and scar tissue.  Better, he thought, to
distinguish humans by their hair and skin rather than the scars.

Alemi was also delighted for another opportunity to ride a dragon.  He
hadn't had that many chances.  His initial ride between had been at his
sister, Menolly's request.  She'd heard from her Master, Harper
Robinton, of the settlement at Paradise River and thought Alemi might
well consider sailing south and founding his own Hold.  (How well his
sister had read his circumstances, chafing at his father's
conservatism.)  So he'd been conveyed a-dragonback for the initial
meeting with the recently confirmed Holder, Jayge Lilcamp, and they had
liked each other enough to take hold on it.  He'd been conveyed twice
since then to various Fish Craft meetings in the Tillek Master Fishmen
Hall.  Although Menolly had repeatedly told him that, as a Master
Craftman, he had the right to call for a dragon to convey him whenever
that was needful, he did not abuse the privilege.

He had often sailed to what was now called Monaco Bay, with tithes for
the Weyr and supplies for the growing population at Landing. Excavations
were still going on, and he had acquired a thing or two of use from the
Catherine Caves when those were being shared out.

For this appearance at Landing, he dressed in his new formal tunic,
embroidered with his Master's emblem, and in the Paradise River Hold
colors, and newly braided Master's shoulder knots.  Kitrin had a deft
needle and did much of the special handwork for the entire Hold.

He had asked the dragonrider to collect him on the sea side of his
holding, where Readis would not be likely to see him go off.  Alemi was
somewhat surprised by the youth of the bronze rider who appeared exactly
on the time set.

"I'm T'lion, Master Fishman, to collect you, the boy said from his high
perch on the bronze's neck.  "This is Gadareth, my dragon." His voice
was vibrant with deep affection and pride.

"Do you need help mounting, Master Alemi?"

"I think not,' Alemi said, keeping his features composed even as he
wondered if this was the first time the lad had been sent to convey a
passenger.  "If Gadareth will oblige me by a knee up,' he added.  The
bronze had not achieved his full growth yet so mounting was not the
problem it would soon become.

"Oh, yes, sorry about that, Master." The boy's features set as he spoke
to his dragon.

Gadareth had his head turned toward Alemi, his eyes whirling a trifle
faster than the speed Alemi thought of as normal to these huge beasts.
Then he raised his left foreleg slightly.

"If you'd lean your hand down?" Alemi suggested.

"Oh, that's right,' said young T'lion, flushing.

He leaned so far over that he had to clutch at the neck ridge to keep
from tipping himself out of his perch.  So Alemi sprang to the offered
knee, touched the hand only enough to give him an upward surge and swung
himself in the slot between the two neck ridges aft of the rider.

"Nothing to it, really,' Alemi said, settling himself.

"No, Master, there isn't, is there?"

When they had sat there a few moments longer, Alemi cleared his throat.
"I'm all set.  Whenever you're ready?" he asked in a gentle prompt.

"Oh, yes, well, fine.  We're just going.  Gadareth!" Now he spoke with
more conviction and no hesitation.

As Gadareth sprang from the ground, Alemi had a moment's doubt about the
boy's expertise and devoutly hoped they wouldn't end up somewhere
unknown, far from familiar coordinates.  He had heard tales Abruptly
they were in the cold of between, and Alemi caught his breath . .  . one
two.  .  .  three .  .  .  fo .  .  .  They were high above water - at
least that was right and then Gadareth veered, pivoting on his right
wing tip and the magnificent crescent strand of Monaco Bay appeared in
front of them.  The young bronze swooped down, gliding straight for the
ground in a maneuver that made Alemi hold his breath and sit as hard
into the neck ridge as he could, jamming his feet down and his knees
against the neck of the dragon as hard as he could.

The landing was achieved with great ease, however, and Alemi wasn't even
bumped about as the dragon backwinged and settled to the firm surface in
front of the Admin building which housed Aivas.

Alemi knew the story of its discovery - it had been a Harper's tale at
many a gather.  One of the last of the Ancients' buildings to be
excavated, Master Smith Jancis, Journeyman Harper Piemur and Lord Jaxom
had actually undertaken the task.  On a whim, it was said.  And Ruth had
helped.  They had found the curiously reinforced end of the building
which had suggested something special had been carefully protected.  And
discovered the Artificial Intelligence Voice Address System left by the
first settlers on Pern: an intelligence which could tell them much of
the first years humans had lived on this planet, and much about Thread.
Aivas, as the intelligence preferred to be called, had also promised to
help destroy the menace of Thread forever.

Of course, the building had been extended, since Aivas was teaching so
much of the lost knowledge of every craft.  Alemi wasn t sure how this
Aivas could teach so much and to so many.  He was more than pleased that
he would have a special interview with the intelligence.

Dismounting from the young bronze, Alemi remembered to thank them both
for the conveyance.

"We're to wait and take you back, Master Alemi,' T'lion said.

Then, glancing over his shoulder to see other dragons spiraling down to
land, he hastily added, "We'll be up on the ridge where the others are
waiting." He pointed in the right direction.  "Give us a wave.

The bronze was already lifting himself out of the way of those wanting
to land so that the boy's words were carried away.  Alemi waved his hand
to show that he'd heard.  Then he turned to the entrance of the Admin
Building.  Just inside the door was a desk at which sat no lesser a
personage than Robinton, the Master Harper of Pern Alemi gawked a bit
but Robinton smiled a warm welcome, rising from his table to hold out
his hand to the young Master Fishman.

"Ah, Master Alemi, how good to see you.  And on such an errand.  You and
young Readis were so fortunate to be rescued in that extraordinary
fashion."

"You know about it?" Alemi was amazed.  But then, the Master Harper,
even if he was now retired from active duty, had a way of "knowing' a
great deal that went on all around Pern.

Of course, I do,' Robinton said emphatically.  "Lord Jaxom himself told
me.  But, why isn't young Readis with you?"

"Oh, yes, well, his mother decided that she doesn't want him involved
just yet.  He's only a few months over seven Turns.

She feels that's just too young .  Alemi heard his own disagreement with
that decision in his tone and wished he was better able at dissembling.

"I see.  Well, Aramina might have reservations about associating with
just a mere dolphin,' and the Harper smiled sympathetically about
maternal misgivings.  In any event, you're here.  Aivas has much to tell
you, too, about the shipfish.  He was delighted to know that they had
prospered so and have remembered how to speak.  If you'll just come this
way, and the Harper gestured to the left-hand corridor.  Have you been
here before, Alemi?  Yes, well, then you'll see how much we've
expanded,' he continued as they made their way past occupied rooms, of
small groups intent on a screen, to a smaller one at the end.  Here." He
stepped aside to let Alemi enter.

Aivas is in here, too?" the Master Fishman said, rotating on one heel as
he looked about a room that held only chairs of the same Ancients'
design of the two Alemi had acquired for his hold.  Then his eyes
stopped at the blank screen centered in the long outside wall.  A little
red light blinked in its corner.

Good morning, Master Fishman Alemi.  It is good to see you again,' said
a deep bass voice.

He remembered me?  I never even spoke to him the first time."

Master Robinton chuckled.  He remembers everyone and everything, and he
left.

The screen now brightened and an active scene of shipfish plunging and
diving filled the space.

Were there not to be two attending this meeting?  Yourself and your
young companion during the incident?"

"Yes, well,' and Alemi explained Aramina's hesitations.  They sounded
even weaker than ever in the presence of such an august audience.

"Mothers are reputed to know best for their offspring,' Aivas said and
Alemi did not suspect a machine' of irony.  "The young are able to learn
language skills much more quickly, having fewer inhibitions.  It would
have been useful to have a younger student.  To the discussion at hand:
it was good to learn that the dolphins have not forgotten their duties
during the long years Turns - that have passed.  Please be seated,
Master Alemi.  The input of your experience with the dolphins would help
update that apparently overlooked segment of the original colonizing
team."

Struggling to absorb the concept that the dolphins, too, had been
original colonists on this world, Alemi stumbled into the nearest chair
and seated himself, eyes glued to the scene.  There was something not
quite right about the scene he was viewing.  The dolphins were correct
but .  - and then the concept of seeing moving pictures of living
creatures staggered him.

"How do you do that?" he asked.  In the previous meeting the screen had
only shown maps, or what Aivas had called "sonar' readings, not these
glimpses of delphinic activities, doing what he had observed them doing,
disporting in the seas, most of his life.

"This is but one of the many tapes available to this facility,' the
Aivas said.  "Moving pictures were an integral part of the information
services of your ancestors' culture.

"Oh!" Alemi was fascinated by dolphin antics.  "I've seen them do that!
That's that's exactly what the shipfish do " he said excitedly as the
scene shifted to the creatures "escorting' a ship, diving along its
forward wake.

"This tape was taken more than twenty-five hundred of your Turns in the
past,' Aivas said in a gently instructive tone.

"But but they haven't changed

"Evolutionary changes take much longer than twenty-five hundred Turns,
Master Alemi, and zoologists are of the opinion that this species has
gone through several changes in the developmental path to this present
form.

"Including speaking?" Alemi blurted out.

"The dolphins which accompanied the colonists to Pern had been treated
with mentasynth to enhance their empathic abilities and to assist them
in learning human speech.  It was reported that you heard them speak
understandable words?"

"Readis and I both heard them speak." Alemi chuckled.

"Readis was far more credulous than I,' he admitted ruefully.

"The boy was considered too young to attend.

"Yes, Alemi agreed with a sigh.  "I'll tell him you asked."

There was a brief pause.  "As you wish.  It is reassuring to know that
dolphins have not forgotten either speech or their duties."

"Duties?"

"One of their prime functions was to perform sea rescue operations.

Well, they not only saved Readis and me but, since then, every crewman
in my hold has some tale to relate about doll fins rescuing folks."

"Elucidate, please.

"You mean, explain?"

"Yes, if you please.

"For a machine, you're very polite, Alemi said, trying to master his awe
for this amazing creation of the Ancients.

"Courtesy is essential in all dealings with humans.

"Especially between humans,' Alemi added drolly.  He liked this Aivas
entity.

"Would you be kind enough to detail your recent personal experience with
the dolphins?"

"Of course, although really you should have had Readis tell you.  He's
got it all down pat."

"So Lord Jaxom said."

"You've a sense of humor?"

"Not as you know it.  Relate your experience.

"I'm not harper trained

"You were there.  Your first-hand account will be greatly appreciated."

Though there was no hint of censure or impatience in the Aivas' tone,
Alemi obeyed.  To his own amusement, he found himself repeating phrases
that Readis had used in describing the adventure.  The boy did have a
gift for the dramatic.  He must remind Jayge to apply for a harper at
Paradise River Hold.  Fleetingly he regretted Aramina's decision for
Readis.

"They called themselves "mamls",' Alemi added as he concluded the actual
events, "not fish."

"They are,' Aivas said in an uncontradictable tone, "mammals,' and he
emphasized the correct pronunciation.

"What, then, are m-mammals?"

"Mammals - m a m m a 1 5 - are life forms that bear live young and
suckle them."

"In the seas?" Alemi demanded, incredulous.

The picture on the screen altered now to one of swirling waters and
tails and suddenly Ale mi was conscious that he was watching the birth
of a shipfish from the body of its mother.  He gasped as the tiny
creature emerged and then was assisted by two other shipfish to the
surface.

"As you see, oxygen is important and essential to the dolphins as to all
sea-living mammals,' Aivas remarked.

The next scene showed the little creature suckling from its mother's
teat.

"On Earth,' Aivas continued, "there were many mammalian life forms
living in the sea, but only the dolphins, of the family Delphinidae, the
bottle-nosed variation, the tursiops tursio, were transported from Earth
to Pern By the time this facility was put on hold, they had already
multiplied and prospered well in the Pernese waters.  The volume of sea
available on this planet was the reason for including the dolphins in
the colonial roster.

It is good to know that they have survived and seem to be in great
numbers now.  A census is being taken of pod sightings.

Estimates of populations have not been completed since they seem to have
developed a migratory culture."

Through this brief synopsis, the screen showed the wondering seaman more
dolphins with young calves.

"That's nowhere on Pern,' Alemi said, pointing to the screen, suddenly
realizing what was "wrong' with the pictures, "at least that I've ever
seen.

"A keen observation, Master Alemi, for this footage was taken on Earth
in an area called the Florida Keys.  These are the ancestors of your
dolphins in their natural habitat.  I shall now play scenes of how those
dolphins worked with their human partners, called dolphineers."

"Doll fin ears?" exclaimed Alemi, slapping his knee with one hand as he
saw men and women working with the dolphins, undersea and being
propelled across the surface of the water alongside their unlikely
mounts.  "Like dragons and their riders?"

"Not as close a bond as I am told that is.  There is no ceremony similar
to Impression such as dragons and riders undergo.  The association
between humans and dolphins was of mutual convenience and consent, not
lifelong, though congenial and effective.

"Certain groups of dolphins - there were more than twenty varieties of
the species known on earth - agreed to the mentasynth treatment in order
to form a close working partnership with humans.  Those that came on the
space ships with the colonists, twenty-four in number, were experienced
in such matters and undertook to explore the oceans and provide certain
services to the humans.  Up until the eruption of Mounts Picchu and
Garben, a high standard of communication was possible between humans and
dolphins."

"If they like to work with humans, as a sea captain, I'd like to work
with them, if I could, Alemi said.  "I owe them my life and others have.
Readis was highly amused that the d-dol phins,' and now he made an
effort to say those syllables as one word, "had such good manners.

"Courtesy has been observed in the interactions of many species and not
necessarily in vocal expression.  Other abstract concepts, however,
require semantics and suitable attitudes and postures adapted to convey
cultural differences.

"What would I have to learn to talk to dolphins?" Alemi was pleased to
hear how firmly the word, now that he was more accustomed to it, came
out.

"There has been a linguistic shift over the centunes,' Aivas began, "but
both species can adapt to the changes.  Here is an example of humans
interacting with dolphins."

A scene unrolled in which a human and a dolphin were checking fishtraps
of some kind.  The human wore some sort of apparatus on his back and a
short-sleeved, short-legged black garment with brilliant yellow stripes.
The picture was as fresh as if Alemi were at a window on to the lagoon.
He leaned forward, not wishing to miss a single detail.

Alemi watched, fascinated, murmuring to himself phrases exchanged
between the pair.  The dolphin towed the man who gripped the dorsal fin,
among the traps, inspecting the line.

Briefly he wondered what his reactionary father would say to the point
that "shipfish' could talk.

"How do you get them to talk to you, Aivas?"

"It is frequently a matter of record, mentioned by numerous dolphineers,
that getting the mammals to stop talking was considered more of a
problem."

"Really?" Alemi was delighted with that information.

"Dolphins apparently have an unusual ability to delay "work" in favor of
"games".

The screen shifted to a new picture and Alemi recognized Monaco Bay, but
the bay as he had never seen it: populated with sailing craft of many
sizes and types, with vehicles zooming about in the sky like squat,
rigid ungraceful dragons.  A huge wharf dominated the further tip of the
Monaco Bay crescent, and then he was looking at a solid plinth, a large
bell atop it.

"I've seen that,' Alemi exclaimed, pointing to the bell.  "It was hauled
up from the sea floor."

"Yes.  It is being scaled of the encrustations.  This bell was rung by
dolphins to summon humans when they had messages to deliver and by
humans to summon the dolphins."

"The dolphins summoned humans?" Alemi was delighted by the notion.
"D'you think they would respond to a bell?" Alemi asked.

"It is recommended that you use that means of convening them,' said
Aivas "It would be interesting to see if current dolphins would
recognize old imperatives.  The printed sheets are summaries of files on
the subject of dolphins and dolphineers.

They also contain the hand signals which the dolphineers used to
communicate underwater - which you might find useful - as well as a
vocabulary list in the dolphin lexicon."

Suddenly thin sheets of the new writing material which the Master
Woodsman Bendarek had been making began to extrude from a slot at the
base of the screen.

"Instructions on how to conduct yourself in re-establishing a meaningful
contact with the dolphins, Master Alemi.  A report on your progress
would be appreciated."

Alemi gathered the sheets with careful hands, awed by the responsibility
he somehow found himself eager to accept.  He had always half envied
riders their dragons though, unlike many of his boyhood friends, he had
never aspired to be a dragonrider: the sea was already in his blood.  He
found his sister, Menolly's, pair of fire-lizards engaging, as well as
useful creatures, but the thought that he could have contact with an
intelligent sea creature was irresistible: creatures as awesome in the
medium of water as dragons were in the air.

As he left the Admin building, absently responding to the Harper's
farewell, he wondered where he could find a bell that would call
dolphins.

Young T'lion had his eyes open from his vantage point on the hill behind
the Admin Building so he and Gadareth were landing before Alemi could
signal them.

"How did you know I was here?" Alemi asked, surprised and gratified.

The boy flushed.  "Well, sir, saw you leave Admin.  You walk different.
You sort of roll."

Alemi laughed.  "Look, are you required to be back at the Weyr right
away?" "No, sir, I'm on duty for you today."

"Good.  Could we go down to the bay?" Alemi pointed in the general
direction of the distant unseen crescent of Monaco Bay.

He wanted to see how big the dolphin bell was.

"Certainly,' and T'lion reached his hand down as Alemi neatly jumped to
Gadareth's raised forearm and settled himself between the neck ridges.

"Do we have to go between?" Alemi asked.  "Would it be too long to fly
straight?"

"No, not at all,' T'lion replied.

So, when Gadareth reached a cruising height, he began to glide toward
the sea, now visible as a sparkle on the horizon.

Alemi had never had a chance to really see the Landing area, where so
many marvels from the early days of Pern's settlement had been unearthed
over the last Turns.  Now he had a panoramic view of the excavated
buildings, the old "landing field' and its crumpled tower: even the ship
meadow where the three ancient aircraft had been unearthed.  They
continued over thick forestry which no longer could be destroyed by
Thread, protected as it was by the grubs which had spread in the
southern continent to neutralize the organism.

T'lion turned his head occasionally to be sure his passenger was riding
comfortably and Alemi gave him a thumbs-up signal that he was, and a big
grin.  This was the longest he had ever flown on a dragon and he was
enjoying it immensely, not even feeling slightly guilty about
monopolizing the services of a dragon and his rider for personal
reasons.  But there was a purpose to the trip, Alemi reminded himself,
and felt for the sheaf of instructions he had tucked into his jacket
pocket.

Then the superb vista of the almost perfect crescent of Monaco Bay came
into view and what was left of the pier jutting out on its easterly tip.
It must have been built of that almost indestructible material the
Ancients had used.  At that, Alemi had heard from Master Fishman
Idarolan that half of its original length had been sheered off. Pictures
from Aivas' archives had shown a substantial building at the sea end,
floating docks and machinery of some kind.  Alemi sighed.

There were fishermen out on the deeper waters offshore, plying their
ancient trade which Master Idarolan had said had been conducted in the
first days of Pern much as it was now.  Some basic skills did not
change.  Still, so many others had benefited by processes and ideas that
had become lost, or disused, during the darker Turns.

Then, from his lofty perspective, Alemi saw on the beach the long column
and what had to be the bell.  He touched T'lion's shoulder and pointed
down at it.  T'lion nodded understanding for speech was almost
impossible at this speed.  A moment later, Gadareth angled downward,
veering to the right and swinging around so that he landed neatly a few
lengths from the flotsam.

Despite himself, Alemi tightened his grip on the neck ridge, hoping he
wasn't hurting the dragon.

A thick coating of barnacles on the long plinth distorted its actual
shape, Alemi noted as he walked its length.  The bell, which rested on a
stand, was of a generous size - fully four of his hand spans across its
mouth.  A good deal of the encrustations had been chipped off and
someone was polishing the metal.  The clapper was missing.  He pinged
the bell with an irreverent snap of his index finger and thumb and was
mildly surprised to hear a muted tolling, slightly distorted.

Here, use this,' T'lion suggested, handing Alemi a fist-sized rock.

Alemi got a much better sound with that, a mellow rich sound that rolled
resonantly out across the bay.

T'lion grinned.  "Nice sound!'

So, picking up a larger rock, he clouted the bell, getting a more
forceful peal.  Grunting, Alemi bent over and peered up inside the bell,
trying to figure out how large the original clapper must have been.

"Mine was louder,' T'lion said, offering his rock to Alemi.

Alemi hefted both rocks in his hands and then clattered first one, then
the other, against the bell, turning his ear to catch the echoes of the
lovely sound.  Suddenly T'lion exclaimed, looking up at his bronze
dragon whose eyes were beginning to whirl with excitement.  T'lion swung
his torso halfway toward the water and then stood bolt upright, staring
at the bay.

"Shards!  Gadareth's right!  Look!" he cried, urgently pointing.

Alemi, his back to the water, craned his neck and saw a phalanx of
dolphins racing toward the shore, leaping and vaulting out of the water.
The waters beyond seemed to be full of dorsal fins and leaping shipfish.
The Master Fishman rose to his feet, gawping at the noises that drifted
to him.

Bellill!  Squee!  Bellill!  Bellill rings!  Squeee!  Bellill!  Bellill!'
They were making other noises, words which dicy understood, but clearly
they were also shouting Bell!'

Alarmed by their headlong charge straight to the strand, for how could
they stop soon enough not to beach themselves, Alemi raced to the edge
of the water, waving his hands.

No, be careful!  You'll beach yourselves!  Careful!'

He doubted his words could be heard over their babbling of bell' and
squeeing.  So he waded out into the water, hoping to turn them aside.
Instead, he was butted and knocked off his feet by the many bodies that
roiled the waters about him.  Then he was uplifted by one dolphin body,
nose-prodded by half a dozen more and seemed to be flipped from one to
another of the creatures, exultant to have heard their bell.

"Easy!  Take it easy!  You'll drown me,' Alemi yelled, half laughing,
half sputtering at these exuberant antics.

A huge shadow compressed the air above him and he saw bronze Gadareth
hovering, his claws extended as if he intended to pluck Alemi bodily
from the attentions of the dolphins.

I'm all right, T'lion, I'm all right.  Call Gadareth off!'

"They'll drown you,' T'lion shrieked, jumping up and down on the beach
in his concern.

Simultaneously, Alemi tried to reassure the dolphins, fend off Gadareth
who still saw the human endangered and reassure the young rider.

"BELAY THIS!" Alemi yelled, getting sufficient breath to roar the order.

Abruptly the commotion about him ceased and bottlenosed faces were
turned up at him, in a tight circle, an even larger ring just beyond
them and more dorsal fins and leaping bodies homing in on him from
further out in the bay.

"I am Alemi, Fishman.  Who are you?" And he pointed to a dolphin whose
nose brushed his thigh.

"Naym Dar,' and this personage squeed happily.

Two words, then, Alemi realized, hearing the first word as a distorted
"name'.  He was delighted that his question had been understood.  Who
leads this pod'?"

A second dolphin did a wiggle and came closer.  "Naym Flo.

Long and the creature used a word that Alemi didn't recognize.

"I do not speak good dolphin,' Alemi said.  "Say again, please'?"

A ripple of squeeing and clicking greeted that admission.

"We titch.  You lis-ten,' Flo said, turning one eye on him, so that he
could see the happy curve of its mouth.  "Bellill ring'?  Trub-bul?  Do
blufiss?"

"No, no trub-bul,' Alemi said with a laugh.  "I didn't mean to ring the
bell to call you,' he added.  And then shrugged because he didn't
understand their last question.

"Good call.  Long lis-ten.  No call.  We-' - a word Alemi didn't catch -
"bell.  Pul-lease?" She cocked her head Alemi didn't know why, all at
once, he decided she was a female, but something about her seemed to
give that clue to her gender.  He was also peripherally aware of how
much he had actually absorbed from the pictures that Aivas had shown and
the explanations of these mammals.  That was going to shock the
conservative fishmen.  His father especially.  "Fish' had no right to be
intelligent, much less answer humans.

"That bell,' and Alemi pointed back to the shore, "is not working.  I
will get a bell that works.  I will put it at Paradise River Hold.  I
will call you from there.  Can you hear me anywhere?"

There were squeeing and clickings and noisy blowings out of their air
holes as they seemed to be trying to understand him.

Suddenly Flo reared up out of the water, holding herself aloft by what
Alemi could only decide was sheer determination.  She tilted her head,
her left eye regarding him.  "Lemi ring bell.

Flo come.  You oo-ait?  "Miss you oo-ait?  Flo come!" and she emphasized
the last word with a flick of her tail before she sank into the water.

"Mis you wait?" Alemi repeated.

"I tell you I come.  I come,' Flo said with a burble and a whoosh from
her blow hole.  Everyone about her clicked and squeed in tones so
emphatic that Alemi grinned broadly at their insistence.  "Ooo skraaaabb
blufiss?" Flo sounded hopeful.

The last thing he had expected was the eager participation of the
dolphins in re-establishing contact with humans.  He tried repeating her
last query just as he'd heard it.  "Ooo' meant "you' but what
"skraaaabb' or "blufiss' were sounds for, he couldn't even guess. Beside
him, Flo turned over and over in the water.

He had to laugh at her antics: childlike almost.  Then he became aware
of being uncomfortably hot, the sodden heavy jacket weighing him down in
water now up to his chest.

"Let me go ashore, will you?" he asked, indicating he needed to pass by
the dolphin bodies pressing about him.  He put out his arms to swim and
found himself crowded by helpful sleek forms.  "I can swim.  Let me."

"Suwim, mans suwim, mans suwim " and suddenly the ring about him parted,
dolphins flipping up and overhead, out of his way.

Dragon and rider were at the water's edge, dubiously surveying the
incredible scene.

"Member!  "Member!  Oooo ring.  Oo-ee come!" a dolphin shouted as Alemi
waded out of the bay.  "Oooo do blufiss."

He nodded his head enthusiastically as he turned, waving at the
dolphins, criss-crossing each other as they made for deeper water. There
seemed to an incredible number occupying the bay waters.  Then, as the
chorus was picked up by other voices, he cupped his hands.  "I ring. You
come.  I wait."

T'lion looked at him in blank amazement.  "They were talking'?

Speaking to you'?"

Alemi nodded, slipping out of his soaking jacket at the same time as he
worked his sodden boots off his feet.  "That's what I saw Aivas about -
the dolphins.  I never thought we'd get that sort of response, just
tapping a bell."

T'lion shook his head slowly from side to side.  "Me neither!' He let
his breath out with a sigh and took Alemi's coat from him, draping it on
the bell, as Alemi now stripped off his shirt and began wringing it out.
"I better go get you some dry clothes.

Even in the midday sun, it's going to take time to dry "em and you can't
go between in wet clothes."

No, I can't, and i would appreciate dry things.  Is that a problem?"

T'lion sized him up for a moment and shook his head.  No.  It'll only
take a few minutes,' he said as he vaulted to his dragon's back.  I'll
borrow some from a rider your size.  We always have spares.

Sand briefly showered Alemi as the young bronze leaped from the beach.

Shards!" Alemi said, diving for the Aivas papers in his jacket.

With shaking hands he opened the wet sheath but the writing appeared not
to have suffered.  Carefully, using pebbles to hold them down, he spread
the sheets out on the sand to dry in the hot sun.

the old tales that she had learned from The Tillek in her time at the
Great Subsidence, before she had swum cleanly through the Whirlpool and
been considered worthy of beaHng dolphin calves.  When mans had swum
alongside dolphins, above and below the surface and accomplished many
wonderfil things to get her.  And now there wouM be mans to heal the
wounded and keep the stranded from dying on llie sands.  There would be
good Work to be done.  The sea had changed the land in the time since
Humankind and DolphinMnd had come to diese waters.

Humankind should know.  Dolphins could show mans where the shore had
changed and llie Currents and where the biggest schools of fish were.
And there might even be games to PIQY.

No' it was the turn of Flo, pod leader at Monoco bay to sound the news
far and wide that the Bell had been rung.  Not exactly as it should be
rung, but it had been rung mid they had swarmed to answer, to prove to
mans that they would reply when they heard the Bell.  it had been so
long since that sound had been heard upon the waters or under them.  No
member of the pod, even Teres who was the oldest and had to be
accompanied when she fed in the schools of fish, had ever heard the
Bell.  But they had remembered to remember.  Those at Pardisriv were not
the only ones to talk to mans and use the Words.

The mans had been two and they had sent happy feelings to the pod. There
had been scratches and pats that had long been denied the dolphins.  The
entire pod had been glad to answer the Bell.  They had shown their
appreciation with great leaps and tail walks and flips and deep divings.
Mans had said they would scrape off the blood fish which was the best
news of all.

That evening as they rested in the Great Current, Teres repeated

Chapter Four

he n Alemi returned to Paradise Hold, he was bursting with his tidings
and tracked Jayge down to make his report.

Perhaps what Jayge was doing - chopping down the verdant undergrowth
that relentlessly encroached on the clearings about the holds; a sweaty,
difficult job but one best done to inhibit growth during the coming hot
season - made him sour.  In any event, the Holder's enthusiasm for
Alemi's new adventure with dolphins was less than appreciative.

Jayge paused in his labors, wiping the sweat that overflowed the band on
his forehead.

"That's all very well and good, Alemi.  I suppose,' and Jayge hesitated,
"it's good.  We've got fire-lizards and dragons, why n~ intelligent life
in the seas?  The Ancients apparently,' and he stressed the adverb,
"knew what would combine to make a perfect world so these doll fins had
their role to play - - He hesitated.

"But you're worried about Readis?"

Jayge let out an explosive sigh.  "Yes, I am.  He's still talking about
his maml .   "They are,' Alemi said, regaining his perspective on the
matter, mam-mals,' he repeated carefully, not glottalizing the word into
one syllable.  Creatures who give birth to live offspring and suckle
them."

Jayge gave him a long incredulous stare.  "Underwater?"

Alemi grinned, appreciating his amazement.  "Saw moving picture records
of a birth as well as the suckling so I can't doubt it."

"Aivas wastes time on such things?"

"I wouldn't call it wasting time,' Alemi said in a wry tone, "if the
result is dolphins ready to rescue the shipwrecked."

Jayge had the grace to flush and concentrated on honing the edge of his
wide blade.

"Look, I'll keep my findings to myself then.  You didn't mention my
interview with Aivas to Readis, did you?  No.  All right.

I certainly won't but I'd like your permission as my Holder, to
discreetly pursue a closer association with these creatures.

With squalls like the one Readis and I were caught in, those at sea in
these waters need all the help available."

"And these doll fins would always help?"

"According to what I saw and what Aivas said, water rescues are a
dolphin's responsibility and duty."

"Humph.  What does Master Idarolan say to this?"

"I'm only just back, Jayge.  Haven't told him yet but I certainly shall.
Most ships carry bells.  If masters know what sequence summons dolphins
to their assistance, we'd have just that much more of a chance in the
water.  You can't deny that, can you?"

"No,' Jayge said for he had been vividly recalling the storm that had
tossed himself and Aramina overboard, and the shipfish who had rescued
them.  "I can't.  Ah, very well.  Just be sure, Alemi, that Readis
doesn't get wind of all this.  He's much too young.

Alemi nodded, perversely pleased that he could try to establish himself
with the dolphins without having to share the experience.  After all,
they had that jetty now on the sheltered cove just around the headland.
He could rig a bell there, and a float like the one he'd seen in the
pictures, where he could meet the dolphins on the same level.

"I'll take some of this heavier bamboo away for you, Jayge, Alemi
offered, noting the size of the stalks the Holder was cutting.

"Your doll fins eat vegetation?"

"No, but I've uses for this,' Alemi said, gathering up the lengths that
were suitable for his purpose.  With airbladders to increase their
flotation, he'd have a platform similar to the one that used to ride the
water at Monaco Bay; smaller but adequate for one man.  "Have you had
any further word from the Benden Weyrleaders when we can expect the new
settlers?"

"I should hear by the end of this sevenday, and Jayge paused to wipe his
brow.  "So they'll probably be grateful for fish to lay in as supplies."

"No problem there,' Alemi said, grinning, as the delicious white fish
were running.  They could be salted, pickled or smoked and retain their
flavor.

He knew that Jayge was looking forward to having a new hold further down
the river.  He was, too.  Jayge's boundaries were confirmed and he,
Swacky, Temma and Nazer had helped the dragonriders survey the new one,
a hold which would start on the eastern side of the river below the bend
that marked the end of his, down to the origin of the river.  The best
site for the holding would be in the foothills.  They were farmers and
craftsmen; they would round up and protect the wild runner and
herdbeasts, and grow the grain crops in the higher lands that did not
grow along the coast.

He'd met the Keroon leaders, a large family complete with aunties and
uncles, who had applied for the holding.  Good solid men and women.  He
looked forward to having them as neighbors.  There was talk of another
group interested in settling the south-western bank of the Paradise.

Alemi didn't have as much time for his new enthusiasm as he would have
liked.  He'd have to assign sailors to help ship the settlers'
belongings down the Paradise to the Bend so his fishing crews would be
short-handed.  With the whitefish running, he wanted to net as much as
possible.  He and the remainder of his crews were out all the hours of
the lengthening days, trawling and long-lining.  Alemi was mindful of
some of the precautions which Aivas had mentioned in their interview
which Fishmen had - fortunately - always observed: the size of the nets
being critical as well as the old warnings of the "sin' of netting a
shipfish.  Even his father, who hadn't the imagination to be
superstitious, followed that precept - though he probably didn't know
why, Alemi added to himself.  Now he knew but he doubted his father
would ever admit to the reason behind the prohibition.  Much less that
dolphins could talk and were intelligent.  One more of the many gulfs
between then and now.

Armed with Aivas' confirmation of the intelligence of shipfish/
dolphins, Alemi did inform Master Idarolan of his investigations and his
plan to renew the partnership to mutual benefit.  Though he wasn't sure
what benefit the dolphins might derive.  As he respected the Master
Fishman and did not wish to lower himself in his Craftmaster's
estimation, he qualified his interest by virtue of his and Readis'
escape and the turbulence and unpredictability of these tropical waters.
He sent that message off by Tork, his bronze fire-lizard.  The
creature's speedy return pleased him as he'd used Menolly's sensible
suggestions in training the creature and Tork had proven responsible.
Alemi felt that if he had handled fire-lizard's instruction, he could
certainly deal with the more intelligent dolphins.

Aware that water magnified sound, Alemi nonetheless felt he would need a
larger bell than the one on his ship - which he borrowed when she was at
anchor.  He wondered if the alarm triangle that Jayge had put up outside
his hold after Thella's invasion would produce the same effect in
calling dolphins but quickly discarded that notion.  A triangle just
didn't produce the same resonances.

So he needed a bell.  He sent Tork on a second journey that day, to the
Smith Craft Hall in Telgar Hold, asking them to cast a bell for him,
similar to the one at Monaco Bay.

The Master Smith Fandarel sent back a message to Master Fishman Alemi
that he would be happy to cast a bell of that splendid size but that the
commission would have to wait its turn, what with all the other work
that the Halls were currently undertaking to the purpose of eliminating
Thread.  Alemi had to be content with the promise but, in the meantime,
Master Harper Robinton found him a small handbell.  Then later sent him
a message by his fire-lizard Zair that the harper at Fort Hold thought
he'd seen a big bell in the extensive storage area of the Hold's lower
levels.

Alemi studied the notes Aivas had given him every evening until he had
memorized the hand signals and the basic commands that, he devoutly
hoped, had survived in shipfish memories.  As he studied, he was
occasionally given to fits of incredulous head shaking.

"Why does reading those sheets make you shake your head, Alemi?" Kitrin
asked him with a sigh of exasperation.

"Wonder, Alemi answered, leaning back in his chair.  "Wonder that we
missed every single clue the dolphins gave us that they wanted to be
friends.  Shards, they tried to tell us and we humans didn't listen!"
Kitrin made such a grimace that he laughed.  He often knew her thoughts
before she spoke them aloud.  "Yes, indeed, I can just picture my good
father, Yanus, listening to a shipfish!" He snorted.

"Exactly,' Kitrin said with some heat, for a moment abandoning the
little wrapper she was hemming for their expected child.

"I mean no disrespect well, maybe I do,' she added with a rueful
expression, "but he is sometimes

"Always,' Alemi amended firmly with a smile.

"So set in his ways.  You know, neither he nor your mother have ever
mentioned Menolly.  Though your mother often remarks on ingratitude in
my presence." She sighed.  "lt's as if Menolly never existed.

"I think she prefers it that way, Alemi said with a wry and slightly
bitter grin, knowing all too well the treatment given his talented
sister during her adolescence at Half Circle Sea Hold.

"Both of them - mother and daughter."

"Menolly's never been back?  Ever?"

"Not to the Sea Hold.  Why should she?"

Kitrin shrugged.  "It seems so .  so awful .  that they cannot accept
her accomplishments." Then she added shyly, "Sebell always remembers to
send us copies of her latest songs.

Alemi, when are we going to have a harper?"

He grinned for he knew that had been the main reason for this trend of
their conversation.

"Hmmm.  I've asked Jayge and Aramina.  Readis is growing old enough to
learn his ballads and so are enough other youngsters, including our own,
for the Hold to have its own harper.  Enough for a journeyman surely,
and we can offer many benefits here decent weather and property to
develop."

"Ask if they've asked,' Kitrin said with unusual force for her.

"I'm not going to have the girls, or our son' - and she said this
defensively, one hand on her gravid belly - "grow up ignorant of what
they owe Hold, Hall and Weyr."

Alemi laughed.  "Stoutly said." He did bring up the matter of a harper
for the Hold the very next afternoon when he delivered to the Holder's
the best of the day's catch: three grand big redfins.

"I could almost wish,' Jayge said with some acrimony, "that Aivas hadn't
been discovered!  Everything depends on what he needs first!'

"But surely harpers

"Every harper who's done his journeyman's walk wants to have some part
in transcribing Aivas' information which seems to be inexhaustible on
every subject imaginable and all of it seemingly has to be done now!"
The Holder rubbed an agitated hand across the stubble of his
close-cropped black hair.  He scowled.  "I've asked and asked.

"Master Robinton?" Alemi suggested hopefully.

Jayge dismissed that hope.  "He's worse than anyone else, stuck up there
at the Admin." Then the Holder gave a snort of amusement.  "Still has
his finger in most pies!  But 1 no more want Readis ignoring his duty -
even if those too are apt to change with all these new gadgets and
information - than you want your girls growing up untrained.  Push comes
to shove, the Farmcrafters have an elderly harper who might be persuaded
to travel up to us now and again but

"If you don't mind me doing so, I'll drop a word to my sister,' Alemi
offered.  A look of intense relief passed over Jayge's tanned features.

"I didn't want to impose

"Why not?" Alemi said, grinning.  "I haven't fished for many favors from
my well-placed Master of a sister.  She's got a child, too, you know.
And another one on the way.

Jayge gave him a stare and then winked.  "Seems she does more than craft
all the songs anyone sings these days.

"It's one way of being able to do just that, according to her, what with
everything else harpers seem to be required to do right now." While it
was the hot season on the Southern Continent, it was bitter cold in the
North.  Alemi's plea to Menolly for a harper to teach the children of
Paradise River Hold resulted in the message that one was coming as soon
as transport could be arranged.  What no-one at Paradise River expected
was to see Menolly herself, and her young son, Robse, carried by the
sturdy, loyal halfwit Camo, stepping out of Master Idarolan's longboat
on to the beach.

On learning that a harper was being sent, Jayge had organized a work
party to put up a neat three-room hold near the old storage shed.  That
could be used as the schoolroom and the little hold was far enough away
from other dwellings to give a harper privacy.  When he discovered that
the Master Harper Menolly had arrived, he was all set to oust one of the
younger settler couples and give Menolly better accommodation.

"Nonsense.  It's not as if I can make Paradise River a permanent home,'
Menolly said to an embarrassed Jayge.  "I can only stay until the babe
is born.  And that is solely,' she wrinkled her nose in disgruntlement,
"because even Sebell's got tired of my complaining about being too cold
to compose, much less play.  See?" and she held out her long fingers.
"Chilblains!" She brushed past a dithering Jayge and on to the wide
verandah, a hammock slung on its "breeze' corner.  "Besides, down here
you spend more time outside than in.  There's enough space for a small
cot for Robse in my room and a room for Camo; he's so good with Robse
who adores him, since he's not much more than an overgrown baby himself.
You've made a very nice kitchen, and I can always use the store shed,
can't I?  If I need space to work in?"

"No problem.  Or I can settle Camo in the space in the store shed.  That
way, he's near but not underfoot all the time."

"Well, then, we move in here,' she said, turning on the ball of one foot
to circle back to the house, hugging herself before she threw her arms
out in an expansive gesture.  "Oh, it's so grand to be warm.

Jayge gave her a cynical smile.  "Wait till the hot weather really
starts.

"Whenever,' Menolly responded, tossing her thick mop of hair behind her,
"but at least my blood is thawing." She gave a convulsive shudder. "It's
never been so cold."

Camo arrived then, pushing the barrow with the household effects she had
brought with her, Robse perched on the top, hugging a lap harp case.  A
good third of the baggage consisted of musical instruments and an
enormous supply of writing materials.  Later Aramina told Jayge that
Menolly'd only brought two changes of clothing for herself and one long,
elegantly embroidered "harpering' gown.

That was worn by Menolly the first evening when Aramina and Jayge hosted
her at a quickly organized gather.  Everyone living in or near Paradise
River Hold wanted to meet Master Menolly.  The new settlers at South
Bend Holding apologized for not attending as they were so busy raising a
big stone beasthold but two of their aunties came to help with the
cooking.

Jayge could be proud to host such a large crowd that night for the
inhabitants had increased over the past Turns, each new arrival bringing
needed skills or crafts.  Jayge had been able to be selective, though
there was only one couple he had actually dismissed.  So forty-seven
hold residents, adults and children, gathered that night along with the
crew of the Dawn Sisters, anchored in the bay.

With a gather to attend, Master Fishman Idarolan was quite willing to
stop over a day to see these "doll fins' of Alemi's.

"Catch two fish on the one hook,' he said drolly to his Craftsman, his
eyes surveying the neat Fishhold that Alemi and his two journeymen had
constructed.

Alemi had had to sternly keep under control his eagerness to prove
dolphins' intelligence to Master Idarolan because, of course, Menolly's
arrival had to be celebrated.  It had never once occurred to Alemi that
his sister would appear to harper at Paradise River.  It had certainly
thrown everyone into intense and exciting surprise.  Keenly aware of the
prestige of her husband's sister, Kitrin had been for giving up her
beloved house but Alemi had laughed.

"Menolly'd refuse to accept the offer, dear heart, he told his wife,
"especially with you further along in pregnancy than she is.

"But she's the Master Harper

"She's also Menolly, my sister, and hasn't really let her exalted
position go to her head.

So Kitrin launched into a full-scale baking and cooking operation to
prepare for the evening's eating.  "After all, we can't be lacking in
any courtesy to a Master Harper, especially your sister Master Harper."

Alemi laughed and left her organizing the other fishmen's wives to
produce the specialities that abounded in Paradise River Hold at this
time of the year.

It was a very late evening, but tremendously enjoyed by all the Paradise
River holders, hungry for new songs and new faces.

Menolly had sung and sung, request after request, as well as the newest
songs.  Without, Alemi noticed, mentioning which she had herself
composed, though somehow he knew which ones she had written.  Her style
was inimitable.  She'd made him harmonize with her on some of the sea
songs they had both learned from Harper Petiron.  Alemi was genuinely
glad that they'd have a long delayed chance to enjoy each other's
company - in ways they had not when living at Half Circle Sea Hold.

As Alemi listened to his sister's lovely, rich deep voice lilting up and
down octaves, he was more amazed than ever that no-one at Half Circle
Sea Hold - with the exceptions of old Petiron and himself- had
recognized her talents and encouraged her.  He had been furious with his
parents' vindictive attitude when she'd cut her hand on a venomous
packtail fish and the injury was likely to prevent her ever playing
again.  They had been so pleased!

"Why are you grimacing like that, "Lemi?" Kitrin asked in a low voice
during a brief pause in the singing while Menolly had a sip of juice and
chatted with her audience.  After his duets with his sister, Kitrin had
made him her backrest where they sat amid the enthralled audience.

"What you said about my parents, he replied cryptically.

"What?  When'?" Kitrin asked, surprised.

"Oh, their lack of appreciation of our Menolly.

"Oh, that!" Her tone was scoffing.  "What they miss, we can enjoy the
more.  You two sounded well together.  You ought to sing more often at
gathers.  And that was such a lovely ballad about Landing.  Imagine!
People just like us made that incredible journey across skies to begin a
new life here.  Just as we have at Paradise River, in a way.  And we
didn't have to sleep fifteen Turns to get here."

Alemi patted her shoulder and neglected to remind Kitrin of how
difficult she had found settling into their new hold.

Menolly's song was doing its job, he thought, and his grin broadened. He
had always respected his sister's abilities as a singer: now he
respected the song for its subtleties.  Still, that was what harpering
was all about, wasn't it?  Getting people to "think' and "feel' and,
most of all, "learn'.  The Fisher Craft fed bodies but the Harper Craft
fed souls.

Having had Master Menolly for a spell, would Paradise River be able to
cope with whatever journeyman was willing to come to such an isolated
place?  Well, he'd still be singing the good songs she introduced.

Maybe, and here Alemi allowed his mind to spiral upward with aspiration
as Menolly struck a rousing chord on her gitar maybe, the dolphins would
make Paradise River that much more attractive. He must give that notion
more thought.  First, he reminded himself, he had to convince the Master
Fishman that the dolphins could become more than acrobatic mammals that
liked to outswim ships.

Though Alemi hadn't had much time, he had used his ship's bell one
evening - sort of tentatively, almost afraid to ring it loudly for fear
no dolphin would answer the summons.  He waited and, when nothing
happened, he gave the bell one final ring in the "report' sequence
mentioned in the instructions Aivas had printed out for him.  It
probably wasn't loud enough to attract dolphins.

"Bellilll !  Bellilil !"

He had to listen hard to be sure he wasn't imagining the cry, ringing
across the evening waters.  The setting sun was in his eyes and dancing
across the water, obscuring his view.  He heard the unmistakable cry
again and saw the leaping bodies of half a dozen dolphins, speeding
shoreward.  He nearly sank to his knees on the float in relief.  He
genuinely hadn't thought he'd get a response.

"Bellill!  Squeeeeee!" "Bellilll!  Reeeppppporrreett!'

The gladness in the cry repaid Alemi's efforts.

As the instructions had indicated, the dolphineer should reward
respondents and he had provided himself with a pail of small fishes that
weren't worth the effort of salting or smoking.

Since dolphins were quite capable of eating as much as they needed, he
wondered about the custom.  Still, it was a hospitable gesture.  Humans
offered klah to every visitor, or fruit juice, when everyone had the
same commodities in their own homes but it was the principle of the
offer.

"Who's here?" he asked.  "I'm Alemi.

One dolphin, his grey skin colored pinkish by the setting sun, wriggled
up out of the water.  "Know you!  Sayve you "n' caff!'

Alemi tossed him a fish.  "Thank you again."

"Sayve mans me, too!" squeaked a second dolphin, winding itself out of
the water on its tail.

"And a fish for you!  A fish for all you who answered the Bell!'

"Bellill!" "Bellill." The dolphins seemed to put another vowel in the
word and Alemi laughed as he threw fish to them.

"Reporit?" One of them asked and Alemi thought this was the first one to
speak to him but he couldn't tell since they all seemed to look the same
in the dusky light.  Although, by the time he had emptied the pail, he
seemed to have noticed distinguishing scars on several head domes - he
thought some were similar to ones he'd noticed at sea in the dolphin
vanguards - and that they were actually different sizes and somewhat
different shapes.

"I just wondered if you'd come if I rang the Bell."

"Bellill bring pod.  Aw-ways!  Heyard bellill, come."

While Alemi understood the words they were saying to him, he could see
what Aivas had meant about language shifts.

Did they really understand what he said to them?  Should he correct
their pronunciation'?  Aivas hadn't said anything on that account. Well,
he could only try and it was better for him to speak as he normally
would and maybe improve their speech as he went along.  "Good!  Please
come always when you hear the Bell.  I'm getting a bigger one made."

"OO-we ring?  Oo-we ring Bell.  Mans answer?"

Alemi burst out laughing at that cocky query and was bold enough to
reach out and rub the nose of the dolphin who had spoken.

"Gooddee.  Gooddee.  Skraaaabb blufisss now?" There was those odd words
again which apparently were very important to the dolphins.

"Blufisss?" he repeated.  "What are blufisss?"

"Deese .  .  and Kib rolled half over so that his lighter colored belly
was visible.  And stuck to his side was a nasty-looking patch which,
when Alemi peered close to it, he recognized as a bloated sucker fish
that every seaman knew would cling to an open wound.

"Bloodfish .  .  .  Of course, bluflsss,' and Alemi mimicked the
dolphin's higher pitched tone.  "How could I have been so dense!" He
slapped his hand to his forehead.  He grabbed the bloodfish by its head
and tried to dislodge it but it seemed glued to the dolphin's side.
"Well and truly sucking, isn't it?

I don't have a fire out here Sailors usually touched the head with an
ember or a brand.

Kib turned face up, raised his upper body out of the water.

"Nifff."

"Won't knife just make the wound worse?"

"Oooold fisss.  Small hole."

"It'll hurt,' Alemi replied, wincing.  Seamen usually removed the
bloodfish suckers as soon as they could so he didn't know about what
happened to any long-term parasitic habits.

"No eeeeert more good gone.

"If you say so

"Ooo-ee ssay so.  Good good good.  Mans do good good good for dolphins."
And Kib heeled over so that Alemi could attack the parasite.

His knife blade was sharp enough and shaved the bloodfish off.  Then he
had to dig slightly to remove the sucker but that left only a small hole
in the longer healed gash.

Two more ecstatic dolphins had him remove bloodfish, one very close to
the dolphin's genitalia.  When he excised the parasites.  each dolphin
did happy aerial rotations and dove and jumped about.  He also got to
notice them as individuals.

Kib had a healed slash along his lower jaw and was the largest male. Mul
had blotchy coloring and had had the parasite near her tail.  Mel had
the longest nose while Afo was the smallest female.  Jim seemed the most
acrobatic: certainly he displayed by walking a long distance on his tail
when Alemi had rid his belly of the pests and Temp was definitely fatter
than the others.

Aivas' notes had remarked that dolphins had a thick layer of blubber
just under their skin, which kept them warm in cooler waters and
generally provided temperature controls.

When the quick tropical dusk deepened into full dark, with the tree
whistlers beginning to sound off, he bade them good night.

"Good night, he called as he climbed up the short ladder to the pier
head.

"T'anks for bluflsssing cullings.  T'anks good good good.  "Nigh -- "nigh
.  .  .  su-leap tigh He heard, more than saw, the shapes leaping easily
in and out of the water and heading back out to the Currents.

Once again Ajo's pod had good news to sound to all quarters, to tell
diat the mans had taken off trnublesome bloodfish.  Mans had not
forgotten their duty to dolphins.  They heard other good newses on the
sonar echo for now several ships would feed the dolphins who escorted
them out to fish.  Sometimes though the ships did not follow the
dolphins once they were far off-shore so that the places of the best
fishing went untouched.  The Tillek was asked how to teach mans to do
the right.  Dolphins remembered.  Why did not mans?

Afo could say with pride that her mans remembered.  He had had to be
reminded and shown but he had taken out his steel and done the service.
A few more needed to be freed of the parasites but he was one mans and
there were many in the pod which already had had good good good luck.
They' had a Bell at Paradisriv and they had had one removal.  Alta and
Dar sounded that the Bell was not yet up where the Moncobay pod could
ring it.  Soon.  The Tillek sounded back that they must be pafient. When
the Bell was up, she would come to see mans now they were back to their
First Place.  Perhaps there would be a Tillek among the mans who would
remind mans of their part of the Bargain.

Although Master Idarolan had imbibed as deeply as everyone else at the
gather, he rowed himself ashore from the Dawn Sisters as the sun lifted
above the horizon.  A gentle following sea made the journey easy.  Alemi
was there to meet him, a cup of hot steaming klah in his hand.  Turns of
early mornings had made it almost impossible for Alemi to sleep past
daybreak.

"Thanks, lad.  Ah, that's a grand cup,' Idarolan said, smacking his lips
after his first judicious sip of the hot liquid.

Alemi offered him a basket of fruit and some of the leftover gather
breads.

"Didn't think there'd be a morsel after my crew took their haul from the
tables,' he said, helping himself to a pastry.  Unobtrusively he was
peering into the wide windows of the hold.  "Nice place you've made
here.  As neat as the yard!  Ship shape.  I like to see that, not that a
son of your father would be anything else."

"Ah, mention of Master Yanus, ah I trust, Master Idarolan, that .  - -
ah, you would be - --  "Not mention your doll fins to your sire'?"
Idarolan laughed, his eyes crinkling into well-established wrinkles,
carved by wind and sun.  "Not likely, though I like to see a man accept
something new and different - now and then.  Someone who latches on to
just any newfangled

"The association of humans and dolphins is not newfangled .  .  .  "
Alemi said firmly.

"Certainly not if you got your information from Aivas itself And now
Idarolan did chuckle, deep in his chest.  "Master Holder Yanus is a fine
seaman, trains up a good apprentice, has a good feel for Nerat Bay
weather and a solid knowledge of his own coastline Idarolan paused, then
glanced sideways at Alemi, his eyes twinkling, "but, as a man to accept
a new idea oh no.  Doesn't trim sail that way." He leaned closer to
Alemi, at the same time dipping his hand into the bread basket again.
Between you and me, lad, he doesn't believe there could be such a - .  .
creature, a device, like Aivas.  No, there can't be such a thing as this
Aivas."

Alemi rubbed the back of his head, grinning.  "Doesn't surprise me a
bit.   "Surprises me that Yanus and Mavi could produce children like you
and Master Menolly."

"She's the real surprise.

Idarolan shot his craftsman a quick look.  "At least you're proud of
her.

"Very."

"You're why she came, you know.  Told me one night she'd never had a
chance to get to know you but you were the best of the lot."

Alemi stared back at his Master.  "She said that?  About me?" He felt
his throat get tight with pride and love of her.

"Not that ship journeys don't get people saying things they'd never
admit to on solid ground,' Idarolan added slyly.  "Come, lad, pour me
another cup of klah and then show me these doll fins of yours."

"Dolphins." Alemi absently corrected the pronunciation as he refilled
both cups.  He reached for the second pail - with the half eaten breads
and cakes.  He hadn't any fish left over from yesterday's catch to give
and didn't know if the dolphins would accept human food.  Then he led
the way, taking the track that crossed directly from his house to the
jetty.

Idarolan scrambled down the ladder to the float as neatly as Alemi did.
Feeling a trifle self-conscious, Alemi grabbed up the small handbell and
vigorously sent the peals of the "Report sequence out across the gently
lapping tide.

Both he and Idarolan flinched when two dolphins, crossing each other's
paths, leaped out of the water, finger widths from the edge of the
float.

"That's jumping to with a vengeance, boy!" Idarolan said.

"Lemi, ring Bellill!  Reporrrit!  Afo reporit!" The words came
distinctly to both men.

"Kib reporrrit!" came from the second dolphin.

"As I live and breathe!" Idarolan gasped out the words in a low awed
tone.  Kneeling at the very edge of the float, he tried to follow the
motion of the now submerged dolphins.

He lurched back as one surfaced right in front of him, its rostrum
nearly touching his chin.  "My very word!" He stared at Alemi for a long
moment.

"000 rang?"

"Kib?" Alemi said, holding out an offering of bread.  "You eat mans
food?"

"No fish?"

"Not this morning.

"He distinctly said "no fish?" Interrogatory tone!" softly exclaimed
Master Idarolan, rocking back on his heels.

Alemi grinned.

"No fish?" the second dolphin queried, bobbing up in front of Alemi who
put out his hand to scratch under the chin.

"Will scratching do?  Or do you need bloodfish taken off?" He grinned as
he explained to Idarolan about the parasites.

"Well I never and they let you scrape "em off with your knifr?"

"They seemed very pleased to get them off.  I think I've done five in
this pod.  I've since discovered that they like to be scratched.
Sometimes their skin sloughs off but that's normal.

Skritching or does someone have another bloodfish?"

"Skritch.  Blood fish,' and the dolphin enunciated carefully as he
raised his head.  "Gooddee.  Again,' and the dolphin twisted his head so
that the exact spot was under Alemi's fingers.

"What do they feel like?" Master Idarolan asked, his hands twitching.

"Find out yourself.  Give Afo a caress.  Don't touch the blow hole but
just about anywhere on the head - the melon - and the nose will please
them.

"They're rubbery, but firm.  Not at all slimy.  Like a fish.

"Not fish.  Mammal!" was Afo's instant response.

"Stars!" Idarolan lost his balance in surprise and sat down so heavily
on the float that it bounced in the water and they got soaked by the
backwave.  "It knows what it is!'

Alemi chuckled.  Just like we do.  Do you doubt their intelligence now?"

"No, I can't,' Idarolan admitted.  "I'm just gobsmacked, is what I am.
All these Turns I've admired "em and never thought to pass the time of
day with "em.  Never thought the sounds they were making could be words
so I didn't listen!  Oh, I've heard others who got rescued tell me what
they thought and he put a gnarled finger to his temple and twisted it in
the old gesture of mental instability, "but a' course, they'd have been
under stress being nearly drowned and all - and the wind and storm so
bad anyone could easily mistake the matter.  But I've heard "em now and
no mistake.  He gave his head a decisive jerk.  "So, what do we do now,
young Alemi?"

"Reporrrit?" asked Kib, one eye on Alemi and its mouth parted in its
smile.

Both men laughed aloud at that and the two dolphins tailed it, squeeing
and clicking.

"Belllill?  Belllill?" the cry sounded across the sea and Alemi and
Idarolan saw more dolphins heading toward them.  "Bellill rrrring!
Bellill ring!'

Idarolan shook his head from side to side.  "They're making "bell" into
two syllables."

"And oo is you.  Blufissh are the parasites.  Alemi grinned at the
stupidity of not having understood such a common marine hazard.  "A
couple of other oddities but I think if I just use the correct
pronunciations, we'll have them talking the way we do.

What I'd like to do now, Master Idarolan, is consolidate this start.
Aivas gave me instructions on how to proceed.  You could use your ship's
bell at sea use the sequence I rang - and ask them to report.  Aivas
said they know where fish are schooling, where rocks and reefs form,
what the weather's likely to be.  We know they rescue the shipwrecked.
But there were lots of other tasks that humans and dolphins did
together."

"Hmmm - check a ship for barnacles and holings.  Check the current for
speed - - - Aivas gave me the logs kept by a Captain James Tillek .

"Tillek!  Tillek!  T'ere is a Tillek?" cried the dolphins with such
passion and surprise that Alemi and Master Idarolan were startled.

"No, no Tillek here,' Alemi said.  James, and Alemi stressed the first
name, "Tillek is dead.  Long dead.  Gone." The dolphins nosed each other
and a sad sort of sound came up from the group.  "Any rate, the captain
" and Alemi grinned at using that reference to forestall another violent
delphinic reaction, was one of the first settlers to chart our Pernese
waters.  I've been reading about how the dolphins helped people get
safely to the north after the volcanoes erupted.  Amazing journey.  Lots
of small boats and the dolphins saving everyone from drowning in one of
those squalls you whip up down in these latitudes." He gave Idarolan a
dour glance for such squalls.  "Hmmm, smart as they are, maybe they
could take messages now and then.  Maybe not as fast as fire-lizards but
some of those distract easily.  Not smart enough to keep their mind on
one thing at a time."

The other dolphins had reached the float by then and were crowding about
to be recognized, to speak their name and find out what Idarolan's was.

"How do they tell us apart?" Idarolan wondered.

"Ezee.  Mans color,' Kib said, gargling.

Alemi was positive the dolphin was laughing at them.

"These are clothes, Kib, clothes,' Alemi said, holding out the fabric of
the light vest he wore with one hand and the sturdy sailcloth short
pants.

"Dolphins not Kib enunciated clearly, "dresssssss.  Then he rolled over
and over in the water as if convulsed with mirth.

"Iddie' was what they could say of the Master Fishman's name but the man
didn't feel at all insulted.

"I'm honored, you know.  I've talked to an animal and it has understood
my name, Idarolan said, puffing out his broad chest a bit in pride. Then
more confidentially, "Never would I tell of this morning to Yanus of
Half Circle Sea Hold!  Never!  But I shall enlist the assistance of
those Masters I know would appreciate the connection." He was nearly
butted off his feet by an impetuous prod of a rostrum.  "Excuse me,
where was I?"

"Ski-ritch Temp,' he was told in a very firm request.  "Ski-ritch Temp.

Idarolan complied.

"This's one thing I never thought I'd find myself doing, - he remarked
in an undertone to Alemi.

"Nor me!'

Chapter Five

lemi was not the only one wanting to have a closer understanding of the
dolphins.

After T'lion and Gadareth returned Alemi to his Sea Hold, and collected
the clothes which T'lion had hastily borrowed from a sleepy brown rider,
the boy and the bronze did not immediately return to the Eastern Weyr.

"They're not as good as you, Gaddie,' T'lion told his dragon as the
bronze leaped skyward.  "But don't you think talking sea animals are
great?"

Would they talk to me, too?

"Ah, Gaddie, don't for a moment think I'd trade you for a dolphin,' and
T'lion laughed at the very notion, scratching the bronze neck as hard as
he could with gloved fingers.  He had yet to grow into all his flying
gear and the glove fingers were a joint too long so scratching was
difficult.  "You and me are different  You are my rider and i am your
dragon and that is a good difference, said Gadareth stoutly.  i chose
you of all who were there the day I hatched -  "And I wasn't even
supposed to be a candidate,' T'lion said, grinning.  vividly remembering
that most exciting of all days in his life.

His brother, Kanadin, had been the official candidate and, even though
he had impressed a brown, Kanadin had never quite forgiven his younger
brother for making such a show of himself and impressing when he hadn't
even been presented as a possible rider.  Impressing a bronze was an
even more unforgivable injury.

"You're too young!" K'din had yelled at his brother when the weyrlings
were led to their quarters.  "You were only brought along because Ma and
Pa didn't dare leave you home.  How could you do this to me?"

It had never done any good for T'lion to tell K'din that he hadn't meant
to impress a dragon, much less a bronze but K'din saw it as a personal
offence.  Not that he would have swapped Gadareth for his Bulith even
ten minutes after the Impression was made.  It was the fact that what
should have been a momentous day for the eldest son of a journeyman
resident at Landing had been trivialized by a much younger brother who
had been barely the acceptable age at the time of his Impression.

T'lion had tried to explain that perhaps if this had been a Weyr like
the northern ones, an interior cavern with tiers of seats set up high
for the witnesses, instead of an open space around the Hatching Ground,
Gadareth wouldn't have found it so easy to reach him.  But the little
bronze had flopped and crawled, keening with anguish, from the Hatching
sands and right up to himself where he had stood with his parents and
sister.  It wasn't as if Tarlion had tried, in any way, to attract the
hatchling's attention.  He hadn't so much as moved a muscle.  Of course,
he had been so flabbergasted to find a little dragon butting him, that
he had had to be urged by T'gellan, the Weyrleader, and the Weyrling
master to accept the lmpression.  Not that he could have resisted much
longer, not with Gadareth so upset that he wasn't immediately accepted
by his choice of partner.

Even three years on, at fifteen, T'lion stayed out of K'din's way as
much as possible.  Which was easier now that K'din was with a fighting
wing and could sneer that T'lion had Turns yet before he, as a bronze
rider, would be useful to the Weyr which housed and nurtured him.

T'lion was very grateful to T'gellan, the Weyrleader, and his weyrmate,
Mirrim, green Path's rider, because they never once made the youngster
feel unacceptable.

"The dragon chooses,' T'gellan had said at the time, and often at other
Impressions, shaking his head ruefully at dragon choice.

Then he'd congratulated the stunned family on having two such worthy
sons.

Since T'lion could not be included in a fighting Weyr until he was
sixteen, T'gellan used the bronze pair as messengers; giving them plenty
of practice in finding coordinates all over what was settled of the
Southern Continent as well as the major and minor Holds and Halls in the
North.  T'lion took pride in being a conscientious messenger and was
infallibly courteous to his passengers, never once mentioning the
behavior of some of them who found going between frightening or
unnerving.

Or those who tried to order him about as if he was a drudge.

No dragon ever chose a drudge personality.  Of course, being so young
made some adults feel as if they had to patronize him him!  A
dragonrider!

There are some of the fins, Gadareth said, adroitly interrupting his
less than amiable thoughts.  And, knowing his wish before T'lion could
even think it, the bronze glided down toward the pod.

Being up high gave T'lion a superb view of the pod, leaping and
plunging, of their sinuous bodies under the water.  It was sort of like
the formation of fighting wings going against Thread, T'lion thought.
Only he'd heard that shipfish - no, dolphins - liked Thread.  They'd
been seen by dragonriders, swarming with other types of marine life,
actually following the leading edge of Thread across the ocean.

"Less for us to flame, boy,' V'line had remarked.

However, being airborne made it a little difficult for T'lion to speak
to dolphins even though Gadareth was agreeable to flying just above the
surface, being careful not to plunge a wing into the water and
off-balance himself.

Then a dolphin heaved itself up out of the water, momentarily on a level
with dragon and rider, eyeing them as it reached the top of its jump
before sliding gracefully back into the water.

The surprise was enough to make Gadareth veer, catching his wing tip in
the water.  He struggled to recover his balance, tipping T'lion
dangerously against his riding straps.

"Squeeeeeeh!  Squeeeh!  Carrrrrrrerfullllll !"

There was no doubting the shout from several dolphins as Gadareth
righted himself and kept a reasonable distance above the waves.  Then
two more dolphins launched themselves up, each eyeing dragon and rider.

Recovering from the fright, T'lion responded to their scrutiny with an
enthusiastic wave, trying to keep his eye on them as they curved up and
down.  Then Gadareth caught the rhythm of the dolphins' maneuver and,
dipping down as he saw a dolphin nose appear, arched up and over with
the acrobat.

This is flin!  the dragon said, his eyes whirling with green and blue.

"Funnnhn!  Funnnhnn!  Gaym!  Pullay gaym!" cried dolphin voices as they
leaped up and over.

Did they hear me?  Gadareth asked his astonished rider.

Getting any dolphin to answer that question was beyond the physical
constraints of their present maneuvering, though T'lion shouted as loud
as he could at each dolphin arching past him.

"I'll have to ask Master Alemi, Gaddie,' T'lion told his dragon.

"Maybe he'll know.  He said Aivas told him a lot about dolphins.

That's what they really are, not shipfish, you know."

i know now.  Dolphins, not shipfishes.  And they' can talk.

"I think we'd better go back to the Weyr,' T'lion said, checking the
slant of the westering sun.  "And, Gaddie, let's keep this adventure to
ourselves, shall we'?"

it's fun to know something other people don't, the bronze replied as he
had had occasion to do several times when he and his rider had spent
some private time investigating on their own.

There was so much to explore!  Of course, if T'lion had not been
conscientious about his duties, Gadareth would not have been so willing
to take free time, but T'lion was very good about doing fun things only
when he had finished his assigned chores.

Sounds were sent that the dragons which mans had made still liked
dolphins.  Dolphins had seen dragons in the skies since mans went to the
New Place North.  Dolphins had sung to dragons but had not been
answered.  Dragons talked to their riders in a fashion that dolphins did
not quite understand.  They felt the speech and saw the resuks - the
dragon doing what the rider asked.  Dragons provided many new games.
They liked having their undersides ski-ritched and mans were always
inspecting them so they did not have any more blufiss.  They did not
mind being jumped and providing sport for dolphins.  They had very big
and colored eyes, not like dolphins.  Dolphins had jumped to see. Dragon
had been pleased to see them play.

So T'lion and Gadareth reported back in Eastern Weyr to the Weyrling
Master, H'mar, bronze Janeruth's rider.  T'lion was sent off to help in
the kitchen which he never minded because it gave him a chance to see
what dinner would be and he always managed to sneak a few bites.  His
brother might twit him about having to do drudge chores because he
wasn't big enough or old enough for anything else.  T'lion invariably
gave K'din the reaction his brother expected and never admitted that he
liked doing the tasks set him.  The best part was that he never knew
from one day to the next what he'd be doing.

Before appearing at the main Weyr Hall, T'lion saw Gadareth comfortable
in his own sandy wallow, a clearing in the thick jungle that T'lion had
himself prepared for his dragon when they were considered old enough to
leave the weyrling barracks.  He lived in a single roomed accommodation
that looked out on to the clearing.  He even had a covered porch so, on
the hottest nights, he slept out on the hammock slung between wall and
porch support.  Having lived, up until his Impression, in a hold too
small for all the brothers and sisters he shared it with, T'lion
treasured his privacy.  He felt very lucky indeed because he could just
remember the cold winters and the harsh winds of his birthhold in Benden
Hold.  Living south was much better.  Living in this Weyr was even
better than living in, say, Benden Weyr, because there riders had to
live in cold caves high up on the Weyrside which was nowhere near as
convenient as living right in the forest, with fruit to be picked from
branches whenever you wanted it.

Over the next few weeks, T'lion and Gadareth spent a good deal of time
conveying Master Menolly about and usually by direct flight since she
was too pregnant to go between: sometimes to Landing but most often to
Cove Hold to see Master Robinton, old Lytol and D'ram.  Neither were
long flights, if the winds were right as they often were at this time of
year.  A dragonrider in Eastern had to be weather wise, too.  While he
was waiting to return Master Menolly, he and Gadareth had plenty of time
to bathe in the lovely waters of the Cove.  Then, when he and Gadareth
went exploring one day, they found a second cove to the west, with deep
waters, where dolphins swam.

That was quite a boon for T'lion and Gadareth for the dolphins seemed as
eager to talk to them as they were to improve their relationship.
Neither rider nor dragon realized that dolphins swam in groups, called
pods, patrolling certain areas as their home waters, just as dragons had
certain areas they patrolled to keep Threadfree.  T'lion didn't have a
bell, couldn't find one at the Weyr Hall, but Gadareth's melodic bugle
seemed to work just as well.  Gadareth got brave enough, too, to settle
on the water, wings spread wide to aid flotation.  This provided the
dolphins with yet another entertainment - leaping across the wings or
coming up between Gadareth's forelegs.  The dolphins also enjoyed
"tickling' the bronze dragon by caressing their bodies on his ticklish
underside: a "game' which had caused T'lion to be submerged on several
occasions before he unfastened his riding straps so that the dolphins
could "attack' Gadareth.

It was Menolly's custom to send her fire-lizard, Beauty, or one of the
bronzes, Rocky, Diver or Poll, to summon him back to Cove Hold.  The
fire-lizards were fascinated by the dolpins, perching on one of
Gadareth's outstretched wings and learning just where dolphins like to
be scratched with the excellent talons that were fire-lizard equipment.

Gadareth would know the gist of what the fire-lizards wished to express,
he'd tell his rider who then informed the dolphins.  It was a
three-cornered conversation but T'lion thought it helped develop more
usable words and terms.  Sometimes he felt like a harper, teaching
dolphins proper pronunciations.  They were using words more properly
now: like "we' instead of "oo-we' and "report' instead of "reporit' and
"bell' instead of "bellill'.

Sometimes he'd come away from these sessions feeling bigger than
T'gellan!

What with all these flights and despite being in and out of Paradise
River often, it was nearly six sevendays before T'lion saw Master Alemi
again.

"T'lion, Gadareth, how are you?" Master Alemi said, arriving with a
creel of fresh fish for Menolly.

"I'm fine, Master Alemi.  How are your dolphins?"

Surprised, Alemi grinned at the boy's proper pronunciation because he
was still having trouble getting others to say the word properly.

"You remembered?"

"Yes, Master, I'm not likely to forget a day like that.  And Then T'lion
hesitated.

Alemi took him by the shoulder, looking down at him kindly - for T'lion
hadn't got his full growth yet and looked younger than his fifteen
Turns.  "And you've been talking to dolphins since, have you, lad?" He
looked up then at Gadareth who turned calmly spinning eyes on the
Fishman.  "And Gadareth?

What does he think of them?"

"He likes them, Master Alemi, he really does.  You know the cove west of
Cove Hold?  Well, the water's real deep there and the dolphins love it
too, and we've sort of had a chance to get to know some of them.

"Good!" And Alemi was delighted.  "Which ones?  I'm trying to make a
list of dolphin names.  They're rather proud of them, you know.

T'lion grinned mischievously.  "Don't they ju5t get stroppy when you
miscall them!  Well, the ones I've met are Rom, Alta - she's pod leader
- and Fessi, Gar, Tom, Dik, and Boogie, that's Alta's latest calf.  And

"Steady on, lad, Alemi said, laughing at the torrent of names he had
unleashed as he fumbled in his belt pouch for pencil and pad.  "Give me
that list more slowly, will you?"

T'lion complied.  "Have you met any of them, Master?"

"No, but i've met Dar and Alta from Monaco, Kib, Afo, Mel, Jim, Mul and
Temp.  You ask yours if they know mine and I'll do the same.  Let's
compare notes later, shall we?  I see you now and again, flying in to
collect Menolly but it's usually when I'm making out to sea and can't
turn back.  How do you call them?  D'you use a bell'?"

"Gadareth bugles and they come.  They like him!'

"I'd be surprised if they didn't."

"Well, we're sort of on the opposite side from the dolphins, though,
aren't we?" T'lion remarked, looking up at the tall Fishman.  "They eat
what we char."

"Point.  Dolphins and dragons are both intelligent creatures.

I'd say they'd respect each other's ways."

"Yes, yes, they do,' T'lion said excitedly.

"What do you talk about?  Does Gadareth understand them, too?"

"That's what I wanted to ask you,' T'lion said, turning solemn.

"Could they hear what he thinks?"

Alemi considered that.  "Well, now, I've never heard a dragon not in my
head as you riders do.  I understand dragons can make themselves heard
to people they want to talk to but, well, I haven't been so
complimented.

i will speak to you, Master Fishman, Gadareth said immediately to
T'lion's surprise because he hadn't asked him to.

The stunned expression that overcame Alemi's tanned face gave evidence
that the Fishman had heard very clearly.

"Ooosh,' and Alemi put a hand to his temple, rolling widened eyes.  "The
words do just come into your head." Then he bowed formally to Gadareth.
"Thank you, Gadareth.  That was very kind of you."

My pleasure, Master.

"Yes, well, to answer your questions, Aivas didn't say anything about
any telepathic ability in dolphins, just that they had had mentasynth
enhancement.

"What's that?"

Alemi chuckled.  "I'm not at all sure I understand but it was a
treatment the Ancients used and it allowed dolphins to use human
speech."

"The reason I wanted to know is, well, sometimes they say something just
after Gaddie and I have been talking and it just seems as if they're
answering us.  Only I'm not talking out loud."

"Really?  That could be merely coincidence, you know.  Great minds
thinking along the same lines."

T'lion absently hauled off his riding helmet, scratching at his sweaty
scalp.  "I suppose it could be.  But you'd know since you talked to
Aivas."

Alemi gave a chuckle.  Aivas only told me what he knew and that he got
from the records.  I doubt he's enjoyed our personal contact with the
dolphins, or yours with your dragon."

T'lion cocked his head at Alemi.  "Are yours speaking more?

I mean like, telling you more things?"

Alemi thought a moment.  "I believe they are.  I don't know about yours,
but I've been trying to teach mine the correct pronunciation Or rather,
how we say words.  Aivas mentioned a language shift."

"Oh, that's why the words are sort of like we say them, sometimes.  I'm
not much on harpering but it's better if they speak more like us, isn't
it?"

"If we want them to be understood by people here and now, it is.

But I do believe they are remembering more words." He grinned drolly.
"Do try not to use words that sound alike and have different meanings.
Like "w h 0 1 e" and "h 0 1 e".  Dolphins know of only one hole,' and
Alemi tapped the top of his head.

"Then it's all right for me to correct them?" T'lion asked, grinning.
"I've got mine to say "bell" and "report" and other words properly.  How
come they got so .  .  .  twisted?"

"Ah,' and Alemi held up one hand, "we don't speak the way our ancestors
did."

"We don't?" T'lion exclaimed, his eyes widening.  "But the harpers are
forever saying that they've helped keep the language pure, just as it's
always been spoken."

Alemi laughed.  "Not according to Aivas.  He had to make adjustments to
allow for " Alemi hesitated briefly, trying to get the next words right,
"lingual shifts.  But let's not rub harper noses in the fact.  I
certainly want to keep on the good side of my sister, the Master Harper.
I've only to mention her name and here she is!  Good day to you, Master
Menolly."

"Good day, Master Alemi brother.  T'lion.  Gadareth.  How good you are
to fly me so patiently,' Menolly said, putting her arms through the
straps of the pack she carried.  "D'you mind if we hurry on, Alemi? It's
so hot in riding gear.  And fish for me?  Thank you, "Lemi.  I'm being
spoiled rotten.  Camo?"

The big man came, carrying a chortling Robse pickaback.

"Here, dear, put these in the cooler, will you?  What are you to do with
the fish, Camo?" she said, tweaking his sleeve arm so that he looked
right in her face.

"Fish?" Camo said, his expression blank as his mind tried hard to recall
what she had just told him.

"Put the fish,' and she placed the creel firmly in his hand, "the fish
in here into the cooler.  Now, what are you to do with the fish?"

"Put in cooler.

"That's right,' and she turned him around and gave him a gentle push
toward the door.  "In the cooler now, Camo.

Then you take Robse to "Mina.

"Fish in cooler.  Robse to "Mina,' Camo said under his breath and he
could be heard repeating his instructions as he obeyed them, Robse's
happy laughter as counterpoint to his litany.

"There, now, thanks again, "Lemi, and have a good day.  Let's go,
T'lion, before I sweat off my breakfast."

As they walked to the waiting bronze dragon, Menolly asked him what he
and Alemi had been talking about so earnestly.

"Oh, this and that,' T'lion said in a noncommittal tone, unwilling to
mention what Alemi had said about the "linguistic' shift and harpers.

"You've conveyed Alemi a time or two?" she asked casually.

"That's what I'm good at,' T'lion said and hopped across the last few
paces to Gadareth.  "You can still get up all right, Master Menolly?"

"Of course I can,' she said with a trilling laugh and proceeded to prove
it.  Though, in fact, it took an effort to hoist her gravid self into
position between Gadareth's firm neck ridges.  "Good thing you've a
bronze.  I'd never fit now on a blue or a brown.

Then, just before T'lion urged his bronze into the sky, she added
ruefully, "And very soon I fear I shan't be able to fit on Gadareth.
Guess I'll have to get that brother of mine to sail me around to Cove
Hold."

"Or I could bring to you the people you need to see, T'lion offered,
shouting over his shoulder at her.

"That, too, if push comes to shove, she yelled back and then the
difficulty of speaking against the wind of flight kept them both silent.

T'lion was just as glad because he wasn't sure if he should mention all
his visits with the dolphins to anyone.  Not even Master Menolly who was
so nice you never thought of her as one of the most important Masters on
Pern.

One of the archivists that thronged Cove Hold these days was on the
porch and hurried down to them when they arrived.

"Master Menolly, Master Robinton would like you to go up to Landing
today.  Aivas has had time to release more music,' and the
journeywoman's eyes shone with eagerness.  "I hear it's simply
splendid."

"Oh, it must be the sonatas we've been after him to copy to us,' Menolly
said, shifting herself a bit from the long ride.  "Well, let's go,
T'lion.  I can see how Sharra's doing, too.  She came south on the Dawn
Sisters with me."

All the way up to Landing, T'lion wondered what he'd do if she started
to have the baby while he was conveying her.  His mother was always
having babies in the night at which times he and his brothers were
shoved out of the hold.  He'd never be forgiven if anything happened to
Master Menolly while she was in his care.  He'd ask Mirrim.

That distracted him from the fact that he would have to forego his day's
idling with the dolphins.  Well, he was lucky to have as much free time
as he did, he told himself sternly.  And the kitchens up at Landing did
produce much better food than he generally got at noontime at Cove Hold
where everyone usually grabbed a meat roll or cold food and continued
working.

Landing was really less fun than Cove Hold.  Gadareth took himself up to
the heights and sunbathed, or exchanged draconic comments with whoever
else had arrived from the various Weyrs.

Gadareth told him that most of the dragonriders were in some sort of
conference.  There were Master Smiths, too, and half the Harper Hall,
trying to construct a "printing press'.

When T'lion hopefully sidled into the kitch"n, he was immediately
pounced on by the headwoman.

"Another pair of hands.  T'lion.  isn't it'?  Yes, here, make yourself
useful.  Take this tray - and be careful not to spill it - to the large
conference room.  I've all that lot to make a nooning for and not enough
hands to do it." She added several more sweet rolls to the tray and
winked at him.  "Something for you, too, lad."

T'lion hurried off before she also thought to order him to come back so
he could help her more in the kitchen.

He managed to deliver the tray, remove his rolls and himself from the
conference room before anyone questioned his presence.

Hearing voices and the tread of booted feet, he ducked into the small
empty room next door so he could eat his rolls in peace.

"Yes?  Identify?" said a deep voice.

Struggling not to choke on the generous bite he had just taken out of a
sweet roll, T'lion looked guiltily about the room.  There was no-one
else in it and the door was still shut.  He swallowed.

"Who's speaking?"

"Aivas.  I did not realize there was a meeting scheduled here."

"Where are you?"

"Please address the screen,' T'lion was told.

"Huh?" But he turned toward the screen and saw the blinking red light in
the lower right hand corner.

"Identify, please?"

"You can see me?"

"Identify!  Please!'

"Oh, excuse me.  I'm T'lion .   "The rider of bronze Gadareth?"

T'lion gawped.  "Yyyyyyess.  How'd you know?"

"A listing of all current riders in the Weyrs, their names and the names
and colors of their dragons has been input.  You are welcome, T'lion.
How may I help you?"

"Oh, I'm not supposed to be here.  I mean, I didn't think anyone was in
here and I needed a place " T'lion trailed off, shaking his head at his
own words and stupidity.  He was embarrassed to be caught where he had
no business being, and amazed to be known by someone (something?)
everyone else in his Weyr respected so highly.  He didn't know what to
do and felt foolish, standing there with sweet rolls in his hand.  "I
certainly shouldn't take up your time, Aivas."

"You have nothing of interest to report?  All input is valuable.

"You mean about the dolphins?" T'lion could think of nothing else he'd
been doing that would be of interest to the Aivas.  He didn't think that
Master Alemi would have mentioned his efforts but he could have.

"You have been in contact with the dolphins?  Your report would be
appreciated."

"It would?"

"Yes, it would.

"Well, I haven't done much more than correct them when they use words
wrong but Master Alemi told me that it's us who're using the wrong
words." T'lion found himself grinning.

It was surely all right to tell Aivas that since Alemi had heard it from
Aivas

"Yes, that is true.  Are the dolphins adapting to the correction?"

"Well, the ones I've been talking have been very quick to correct what
they say,' T'lion said with a tinge of pride in his voice.  " "Gave"
instead of "gayve" and "we" instead of oo-we .  They're using more words
than they did when we first started talking."

"A fuller account is awaited.

"You really want to know?  I haven't told anyone else,' T'lion began,
still reluctant to admit to his pastime.

"All input is useful.  No-one will be informed of your association if
that is your wish but your account will provide further insight into the
renewal of contact."

"In that case,' and T'lion settled himself on a chair and related, as
concisely as he could since H'mar had always insisted on detailed
reports.  Aivas did not interrupt him but, when he had finished
speaking, he was asked to repeat all the dolphin names he had been told.

Interesting that the names have been handed down.

What?"

The present dolphins seem to have shortened names from those given the
original complement of tursiops tursio."

Really?"

Kib is a short form of Kibbe; Afo - possibly derived from Aphrodite,
Alta from Atlanta, Dar from Dart.  It is gratifying to see that they
perpetuated many traditions.  Please continue with your independent
contact and report further discussions of any significance.  Thank you,
T'lion of Eastern Weyr, bronze Gadareth's rider." The light on the
screen darkened and the pulse of the red corner light became much
slower.

"Oh, you're welcome,' T'lion replied somewhat bemused by the
interchange.

His stomach put in a strong rumble and he looked down at the sweet rolls
he hadn't had a chance to eat.  He mulled over the conversation with
Aivas as he consumed them.

Menolly is looking for you, T'lion.

Licking his fingers clean, T'lion hurried down the hall and out the door
to collect his passenger.

Master Idarolan did inform many members of his Craft of dolphin
intelligence and his personal experience of it.  He did not inform all
his Craft since he knew some of the hide-bound ones, like Yanus of Half
Circle Sea Hold, would deny the fact of shipfish intelligence.  The
replies he got indicated that many of his Masters and journeymen had had
experiences, or knew of them from reliable sources.  Some mentioned
relief at vindication of what they thought they had just imagined
shipfish talking to them.  Idarolan had supplied the report peal
sequence, annotated by his Hall Harper, so that even the most
non-musical could ring a proper summons.  He recommended that requests
for assistance be rendered in simple language: he suggested asking about
local fish runs, weather, or depth reports in dangerous waters.

Perusing records kept of ship sin kings, most of them occurred either
during storms or by sailing too close to suspected reefs, shoals and
sandbanks.  On some occasions the captains reported seeing dolphins
veering suddenly to port or starboard.

Now it was obvious to Master Idarolan that the dolphins had been trying
to urge the helmsman to change course.  Invariably the presence of
shipfish was reported when a ship was storm tossed.  Not all gave credit
to the saving of life by the shipfish but it was often implied that help
had been received from an external agency: most seamen being honest in
what they logged.

Two incidents had been faithfully reported of small vessels which had
been caught in one of the Great Currents, being pushed vigorously out of
the current by the efforts of shipfish.

Idarolan asked for, and received, an interview with Aivas to report his
findings and to ask for additional advice on how to promote the
association to the benefit of both parties.

He learned that pods were autonomous, following their chosen leader -
usually an older female.  Young males and old ones were apt to go off on
their own for most of the year.  He was also given a copy of the same
instructions which Aivas had printed out for Alemi: the basic vocabulary
of words that the dolphins had been trained to understand and the hand
signals that were used underwater.

Both men were somewhat disappointed, though, to find that the news of
intelligent shipfish was overshadowed by the growing industry aimed at a
final battle with Thread.  That was the top priority and everything else
subject to that goal.

Even Idarolan, after his initial fierce interest, found little time to
pursue a meaningful relationship with the dolphins.  He did, however,
keep available on deck a pail of the small fish which Aivas said the
creatures preferred.  Whenever the Dawn Sisters had an escort, he
himself offered them the reward.  He also ordered his helmsmen to watch
the directions the dolphins were taking and to follow their lead to the
fishing grounds.  In that way his hauls improved and twice Dawn Sisters
avoided unexpected reefs by following dolphin directions.

It was Kitrin who alerted Menolly to her brother's evening time
occupation.  When the sea winds began to cool the day, Menolly gave
herself such exercise as her condition permitted.

Mostly she swam, delighted to have the weight of her unborn child buoyed
by the sea.  Aramina often joined her, with Aranya in tow.  Readis
needed careful observation for he was utterly at home in the water, or
under it, and had a tendency to swim farther out than his mother liked.
Menolly also used these evening swims as an opportunity to get to know
her brother's wife better.  She couldn't get Kitrin to join Aramina and
herself in doing laps but at least the woman would sit in waist high
water and benefit from the cooling circulation of water about her gravid
body.  Alemi had taught his older daughters how to swim and they were
quite adept, though they obeyed their mother the instant she called them
to stay closer to the beach.  Camo would come, too, wading out to no
more than knee depth and following the fearless toddling Robse about in
the shallows.

Once Menolly had done what she considered sufficient laps, she joined
Kitrin to dote over the antics of their children.  On one evening,
Menolly asked if they could inveigle Alemi to join them.  She hadn't
actually had as much of Alemi's company as she had hoped but certainly
more than in previous Turns.  They were very comfortable with each other
in a way that would never have been possible at Half Circle Sea Hold.

Oh, he's off on some Craft project most evenings, Kitrin said with a
dismissive wave of her hand and a grin for male enthusiasms.  "I never
interfere with Hall matters and whatever it is, he comes back well
pleased from the time spent on it."

Menolly frowned, having explored most of the area in her daily walks,
with and without her pupils.  She couldn't remember seeing any evidences
of a project.  "Building a new skiff, is he?"

Now it was Kitrin's turn to frown in concentration.  "I don't think so
because I believe he sent an order to the crafters at Ista.  About the
one Hall that isn't overinvolved with Aivas commissions." She
straightened abruptly, one hand going to her belly.  "Oh, I do so hope
this one's a boy.  They say that if you've morning sickness, you're
carrying a boy?" She cocked her head at Menolly for confirmation.

Menolly shrugged, grinning in Robse's direction.  He was having an
argument with the little ripples that flowed in as he tried to dig
something out of the sand at his feet.  Imperiously he held up one hand
to the next wave and shrieked with indignation when it, too, splashed
him.  Camo came bounding over to see if the toddler was in any danger.

"I'm not the one to ask.  I didn't have morning sickness with Robse and
certainly none with this one.  What about Aramina?"

Kitrin sighed.  "She never has problems."

"Don't fret, Kitrin,' Menolly said gently, laying a soothing hand on her
forearm.  Kitrin was a dainty person, with fine features, long black
hair now braided and coiled about her well-shaped head.  Her brown eyes
were clouded with anxiety right now.  "Alemi adores you and will
continue to do so whether you ever give him a son or not." Then she
wrinkled her face.  "I remember that most Seahold women wanted daughters
so they wouldn't have to face losing them to storms at sea.

"Oh?" Then Kitrin looked about, although they were alone in the water.
Touching Menolly's arm to indicate a confidence, she leaned closer.
"Have you heard that shipfish - Alemi insists on calling them doll fins
now - are intelligent?  And speak?"

"Yes, I have heard that rumor.  From Readis,' and she smiled, "who told
me in great detail the first day I held class that he had been rescued
by "mammls".  Quite a harper tale it was, too."

Kitrin heaved another of her sighs.  "Well, it was true.  Alemi says so.
He was even sent for by Aivas to come to Landing and give a report on
the incident." She leaned ever closer.  "I think that it's the doll fins
he talks to in the evenings.  If the wind is right I can hear a bell. He
put in an order, I know, to the Smith Craft Hall for a big bell but,
with all they're doing for Aivas and the Benden Weyrleaders, it'll be
ages before they get around to casting it.  So he got a small one from
Master Robinton.  I think he uses it to summon the doll fins.  He's got
it on the pier around on the headland so he won't upset Aramina, or let
Readis know what he's doing."

Readis?" and Menolly's gaze went to the intrepid boy who was diving in
and out of the water, in much the same way she had observed shipfish
disporting themselves.

"Yes, well, she does not want Readis getting keen to talk to shipfish.
Just see hov he's swimming right now.  Readis!' she called, swim back
into shore now.  That's what I mean and what worries her.  Why, he'd
swim right out to sea to meet a dolphin.  No fear on him."

Well, I can help distract him from that,' Menolly said.  At his age,
they don't have a long concentration span." Now she gave a sigh.  "You
have to keep one step ahead of them, with something new to do, a game or
a challenge.  Your girls are a great help with him, by the way.  Such
biddable children."

Kitrin sat a bit straighter, hearing praise of her Kitral, Nika and
Kami, neatly diverted away from the previous topic.

Curious, Menolly took the next opportunity she had to follow the
well-used lane through the trees and shrubs that flourished on the
headland to the pier.  The three fishing ships were at anchor on the
quiet evening in the small bay on the eastern side of the Head, their
skiffs tied to the rings on the pier.  At first she didn't see Alemi,
though she could hear voices some of them pitched at a very odd level
and emitting some very odd sounds.  She saw the splashings first, and
realized that half a dozen shipfish heads were protruding from the
water.  And it was they which were making the odd sounds - squees and
clicks and watery noises.  Only when she had walked to the end of the
pier, did she see her brother, below the pier deck, sitting cross-legged
on a fragile raft that was nearly flooded by the vigorous wavelets
splashed on it by the shipfish.

She nearly fell off the side of the pier when a shipfish suddenly jumped
into the air, one black eye fixed on her before it fell back intQ the
water, squeeing.

"Squeee!  New game coming, Lemi?" it asked plainly.

Alemi's head appeared above the deck of the pier.  "Menolly?"

"None other, brother,' she said at her drollest, peering down at his
surprised face.  "Is this a secret?" she asked, gesturing at the
attentive faces, now turned in her direction.

"This is Menolly, my pod sister,' Alemi said to the dolphins.

Menolly suppressed a burst of laughter as he went on.  "Menolly,
starting on the portside, here are Kib, Afo, Mel, Temp, Biz and Rom. Jim
and Mul are missing this evening."

"I am pleased to make your acquaintance,' Menolly said in slow formal
tones, nodding her head at each smiling shipfish face in the circle.

"G'day, Nolly,' several chorused at her.  She was unable to suppress
laughter any longer.  "Nolly, has babbee inside."

"My word!  I know I'm big with child but how would they know?" she
exclaimed, pausing in her attempt to get her awkward pregnant body
arranged in a sitting position on the edge of the pier.

"They know or, as they put it, "member" rather a lot about humans.
"Nolly!  That's a fair nickname."

"The dolphins may, but you may not,' she said sternly.

"What're you discussing?"

"I'm getting tomorrow's weather and a fish report, he told his sister.

"Really?"

"The dolphins have been very helpful over the past few weeks.

We've never had better hauls.  They know exactly where schools are
feeding and lead us right to them.  My men are delighted since it means
less time at sea as well as sufficient warnings on squalls."

"Oh, yes, that would be helpful, wouldn't it?" Menolly made herself as
comfortable on the hard planking as she could.  "Readis told me all
about your dramatic rescue.

Alemi grinned.  "I don't think he's embroidered it much from the last
time I heard him tell it.  And it really happened, sister.

Only,' and he waved his hand at the raft and dolphins, "Aramina would
rather Readis forgot that adventure."

"So Kitrin told me and now I know, I can divert him.  "Mina should have
told me."

Alemi shrugged.  "She's still recovering from the shock of your
appearance, Master Harper sister dear."

"Oh?  She seems pleased

"Of course she is.  Who wouldn't want a harper of your talent to teach
their children?"

"Teach?  Teach?" asked two shipfish.

"Oh, sorry, fell as,' Alemi said, turning back to the bottlenoses.

"Where were we?  I teach them new words .  .  .  or rather get them to
remember them."

"You?  Teaching'?"

"C'mon, Menolly, I was Petiron's pet student until you came along.

"Oh, and you've sung to your new friends?"

"No,' Alemi refused to rise to her bait, "you're the singer in the
family.  And the teacher!'

Menolly shot her brother a close look.  Alemi had a teasing streak in
him but he was quite sincere.

 "Go on.  You sang to the fire-lizards, why not to dolphins?  I'll do
the tenor line, if you'll sing something I know.

"Very well,' and she launched into one of the sea songs she had composed
not long after she had walked the tables as a journeywoman.  Alemi's
well-placed voice joined immediately in harmony.  After the first
startled squees and clickings, her audience was silent.  Beauty, Rocky
and Diver appeared suddenly in the air, settling on pilings, eyes
whirling fast with curiosity as they saw her audience.

"Zea zong, one of the shipfish said when the last notes died away.
"Nolly zing zea zong." The sibilants were drawn out.

"Zeee, squeee zong,' another added and Menolly laughed.

"Sea song, you silly creatures.  Sea, not ZEE."

Then abruptly the shipfish began an intricate maneuver in and over the
sea's surface, all the time squeeing "ssseee song, scee song' and on
several tones so that it was almost a chord to what she and Alemi had
sung.  Delighted at their antics and the apparent compliment, Menolly
clapped her hands.  Two shipfish splashed water with their flippers as
if imitating her action.

"They are intelligent, "Lemi.  Do they mean to be funny?"

"Just look at their smiling faces.  They're right rascals when they want
to be,' Alemi said, hauling himself up off the float to sit beside her.

"Sing song, Nolly?  Sing two song, Nolly?"

"All right, but settle down.  You can't hear me when you're splashing
around like that."

Beauty now assumed her usual perch on Menolly's shoulder, wrapping her
tail about her neck, but being careful to place her talons on the fabric
of the light top Menolly was wearing.

Menolly put up a caressing hand as she began one of the traditional
ballads.  Menolly was accustomed to respectful listeners but the
attentiveness of these sea creatures was the most intense she had ever
encountered.  They listened with eye, body and whole being.  They didn't
even seem to breathe.  Softly, in her ear, she heard Beauty begin her
usual soft descant.  The shipfish heard it, too, for their eyes turned
slightly to her left and their grins, if anything, seemed to widen.
Menolly had had many rare musical experiences with audiences but this
surely was the most unique.  She would have to tell Sebell all about it.

She would never forget this evening!  From the expression on his face,
she doubted Alemi would either.

Darkness came with the usual tropical immediacy and suddenly they were
enclosed in the dark of full night, the attentive dolphin heads gleaming
silvery in the light of Timor just rising over the sea.

"Thank you one and all,' Menolly said in a voice vibrant with gratitude.
"I shall never forget meeting you."

"Thank you, Nolly.  Love men song.

"In this case it is a woman song,' Alemi said in wry correction.

Nolly song.  Nolly song!" was the rejoinder.

"Diff'rent, better, best,' Afo added, ducking her head and flipping a
spray at them with her nose in farewell.

Menolly and Alemi watched as the six plunged seaward, leaping and diving
gracefully until they could no longer be seen.

"Well, that was much more than I could ever have anticipated,' Menolly
said as they walked slowly back toward the hold, Alemi holding the glow
basket which he had learned to bring for the dark return walk.  "It's
almost a shame, really."

"What?"

"That there's all this fuss and industry over Thread when Aivas has so
much more to offer us.

"What could be more important than getting rid of Thread forever?" Alemi
asked, surprised by her comment.  "Interest in the dolphins is likely to
be limited to my Hall and totally ignored by land dwellers.  No, I'm
glad to keep them as useful allies, like dragons or fire-lizards.
They're far more intelligent than runner beasts, or even the canines,
and are far more use to us than fire-lizards.  Especially since they can
communicate, verbally, rather than mentally the way dragons do or the
limited range of fire-lizards."

"No, let's not belittle fire-lizards, not to she who has ten and uses
all.  Does Master Idarolan know of these - " she laughed, "sea-dragons
of yours?"

"Of course.  He was the first person - besides Aivas - I talked to.  I
send him regular reports on my progress with this pod  "Pod?"

"Yes, that's the name for individual units.  Pods.  Each one has waters
it prefers to fish and play in.  They're great ones for games, dolphins
are.  Alemi laughed indulgently.  As far as they're concerned, I'm just
a new game they're playing."

"But you said that they give you information about fishing and squalls?"

"Oh, they do, but reporting's more like a game to them.   "Oh, I see."

Don't discount the usefulness of such a game, Menolly,' he added
earnestly.

"No, I won't but I do see that their appeal would be, should be limited.
They're certainly not as easy to take home as firelizards."

"True, Alemi said, chuckling.  "But they are endlessly interesting with
their observations.  They're much more their own selves than
fire-lizards or even dragons.  If they're not interested, they go off."
Alemi shrugged.

"Like children .

"Yes, very much like children at times."

"Well, fire-lizards have proved useful,' Menolly said with a tinge of
irritation in her tone.  Some people discounted the many ways in which
fire-lizards were useful.

"Easy, "Nolly,' Alemi said, and his tone made her look up at him, his
white teeth showing in his grinning face.  "And it was your method of
teaching a fire-lizard manners that has helped me make meaningful
contact with the dolphins."

"Sorry, brother,' Menolly said sheepishly.

"We have much to be thankful to the Ancients for,' Alemi said in an
expansive tone.

"Though I wonder,' Menolly replied thoughtfully, "if we will say the
same in a few Turns' time when Aivas unleashes all the wonders stored
up."

"I thought harpers were applauding all the - what is it Aivas calls it -
input?"

"Knowledge is sometimes two-edged, Alemi.  You learn about all the
marvels that used to be and they set the standard for what can be, and
maybe shouldn't be."

"Are you worried?"

"Oh,' she said and shook herself, "put my fancies down to pregnancy.
There's so much we don't know, don't remember, have lost.  Like shipfish
.  .  .  excuse me, doll fins being able to speak intelligently.  Every
time I visit Cove Hold, D'ram or Lytol or Master Robinton have something
newly remarkable to recount.  The mind can only absorb so much.

"Isn't it up to the Harper Hall and the Benden Weyrleaders to see that
we learn only the best of what there is?" He was half teasing, half
serious.

"Indeed it is,' and she was very solemn.  "A great responsibility, I
assure you.

"You must find it dull living here in such a backwater."

"Not at all, "Lemi,' and she paused, catching his arm and giving him a
little shake.  "Frankly, living here and teaching your lovely children
has given me a much needed respite and a chance to gain some perspective
on all that's happening to our way of life."

"It's improved, that's what's happened.

"Ah, but is it really improvement?"

"You're in an odd mood, Menolly."

"I think of more things than the next song to write.

"I never said you didn't."

"No, you never did.  Sorry, "Lemi.  Night-time confessions and doubts
generally are regretted in daylight."

Alemi put his arm about her shoulders in reassurance.  "Don't ever doubt
yourself, Menolly.  You've come such a long way.

She chuckled.  "Yes, I have, haven't I?" She clasped his hand on her
shoulder, suffused with warm feelings for this favorite brother.

"But you can see, as a harper and a sea-bred holder, how helpful the
relationship with dolphins can be."

"Yes, indeed I can, above and beyond my gratitude for their rescue of
you and Readis."

"Mind you,' and his fingers squeezed her shoulders in warning, "don't
mention this evening to Readis or Aramina, will you?"

"No, of course not.  But I'd like to tell Sebell and Master Robin ton.

"Them, of course."

She declined his invitation to join him and Kitrin for an evening cup of
klah or wine.  He saw her safely to her holding despite her protests
that she was able to see her way clear to her own door.  She had every
intention of sitting down and writing of the evening's surprises to
Sebell, but the sight of the hammock swinging lightly in the night
breeze was irresistible and she sank into it only for a moment - she
thought, and fell instantly asleep.

Afo ecstatically reported the Nolly singing to them.  Dolphins had songs
of their own which all The Tilleks had taught so well they were imbedded
in their memofles: which they sang remembering the waters they had come
from.  Sometimes the songs were sad - from the times when many dolphins
died in nets that entangled them.  Sometimes the sadness came from
missing the mans, the great work that had been done and the happy
partnerships.  The happy songs were from the things dolphins had learned
to do with mans, the Dun kirk, the Crossing of the Great Currents, the
Swimming of the Whirlpool, or the finding of mans things that got into
the water and shouldn't stay there; the saving of mans in storms.  There
were many songs dolphins would sound.  Sometimes every pod would join
in, weaving the sounds back and forth across the seas of Pern That
darktime many songs floated on the Great Currents.

That they disturbed the sleep of two women and one small boy at Paradise
River Hold was something that ended on the morning tide.  But the song
remained, a faint and pleasant memory, not a sad one as it had been at
other times.

Chapter Six

allthough Aramina suspected that Alemi spent a great deal of time
talking to the doll fins, he never mentioned it to anyone in her
hearing.  Gradually, Readis' adventure with the shipfish faded as other
experiences - such as learning his traditional ballads under the
guidance of Master Menolly, the birth of her second son, Olos, and
Kitrin's longawaited son, Aleki - superseded that occasion.  She began
to relax again.

Readis was a very strong young swimmer, but she had no wish to see his
strength overtaxed by further direct association with the sea creatures
- mammals or whatever they were - luring him out beyond his depth.
Readis was to succeed his father as Holder of Paradise River, though she
secretly harbored the thought that he might be Searched for a
dragonrider to the Eastern Weyr.  He might be what she hadn't had the
courage to pursue.  He certainly enjoyed the company of the many dragons
that came to Paradise River Hold: he'd scrubbed many a hide in the warm
waters, and most often Lord Jaxom's white Ruth who appeared to have a
special affinity for her son.  It wasn't beyond the realm of
possibility, really, she thought, that Readis couldn't have the same
extraordinary option of being both rider and Holder that Lord Jaxom had
enjoyed.  Although, with all the plans to rid Pern of Thread forever,
there'd be less objection to his dual role.  From time to time, she
wondered - as many did on Pern - if Weyrs would be disbanded after
Thread no longer plagued them.

Of course, if Readis became a dragon rider, he would still be quite
young - in his early thirties - when this Pass ended: more reason for
him to be both rider and holder.  After all, Jayge was a vigorous man
and likely to last well past the end of Thread.

So Readis could ride and hold.

Then, too, dragons would speak to him, a momentous concession even if he
didn't realize it yet in his youthful innocence.

He wouldn't know how much their willingness to do so gladdened her
heart.  Maybe that would weigh in their accepting him as a Candidate on
the Hatching Sands.  She wasn't at all sure how Jayge would view her
ambitions for her son.  But that didn't mean she couldn't have them.
Readis' case was entirely different to hers in every respect.  There was
no reason not to consider that tantalizing future for her son.

The new harper came, appointed by Menolly herself to succeed her: a
journeyman named Boskoney, in his early twenties and bred in a fishing
hold on Ista so he was accustomed to the climate and occupations of
Paradise River.  She'd done the Paradise "River Holders the courtesy of
presenting several candidates.

"I'm not going to let those lovely children be saddled by some
journeyman who only wants to warm his bones in this climate,' she told
them.  "They have to have someone as alert, eager, and -" she smiled,
"as adventurous and understanding of this environment as possible.  We
do have a lovely girl finishing her apprenticeship, if you wouldn't mind
a woman harper Menolly had cocked her head at her friends with a sly
grin and a twinkle in her eye.

"Of course, we wouldn't mind,' Jayge and Alemi said in unison, then
grinned at each other for the force of their response.

"As well, but Hally won't walk the tables for another nine or ten months
and it's not good to start the teaching process and then interrupt it
for such a long time.  The children of this hold are eager to learn and
I don't like to put them off."

She went on to point out the strengths and failings of each of the other
young men.  Perschar, the best artist in the Harper Hall, had sent along
portrait sketches of Boskoney, Tomol and Lesselam, several poses of each
including a full length drawing in color.

"I never expected we'd have a choice, Aramina said, scrutinizing the
drawings.

Menolly grinned at her.  "What?  And deprive my nieces, and nephew, of
the best education there is?  Of course, whoever comes here will have to
spend some time helping the archivists with the music Aivas has been
churning out for us.  Tagetarl's in charge of the actual printing but
the Paradise River Hold Harper is close enough to assist the work.  That
won't be a problem, will it?"

"Not at all,' Jayge said.  "We're quiet here and there are not that many
children

"Yet,' Aramina added with a wink.  When the excitement of that admission
had abated, she asked if any of the men were married.

"Not yet,' and Menolly grinned.  "You've several lovely girls here among
your holders.  We have to give them some choice, too, and not limit it
to smelly seamen." She grinned at her brother.

"I like him,' Aramina said, pointing to Boskoney.  "He has a kind eye."
Boskoney was not the handsomest of the three, nor as tall as Lesselan.
His curly hair was sun-bleached and there were laugh wrinkles at the
corners of his eyes.  She felt comfortable looking at his portrait
whereas the other two faces didn't seem as candid.  "Ista bred, did you
say?  Then he won't mind the heat so much as the other two.  And we
won't have to explain about firehead and the other disadvantages of
living in a tropical climate."

"Very well,' Menolly said briskly, pushing the sketch of Boskoney over
to her.  "Sebell will inform Boskoney of his posting and I'll ask
T'gellan to send a rider to collect him.  I'd like to discuss the
various children with him so he'll know what aspects to concentrate on.
They're such a lovely handful.  I've quite enjoyed my time.  Ooops,
there's the baby awake again." Boskoney arrived, was duly briefed by
Menolly on his students' abilities, and settled in the Harper's Hold as
if he'd always been there.  Menolly promised to visit Paradise River
Hold again, especially when Camo volunteered the information that he
would like to stay warm here.  He didn't like winter but then, as
Menolly explained, he had trouble remembering to put on his jacket as
the year progressed into winter, and to forget to take it off as the
year wound into spring and summer.

Boskoney elected to do his Harper Hall duty at Landing in the evenings,
and T'lion and Gadareth were usually assigned to convey him.  That
suited T'lion, Gadareth and Alemi for they continued to improve their
relations with the dolphins, and now there were many pods who would
respond to the Bells.  In the biggest tree bordering the strand nearest
Eastern Weyr, T'lion had cobbled a sort of belfry arrangement - using a
smaller bell than Alemi used at Paradise Head.

It wasn't that he was trying to be secretive about this activity.

It was more he was relishing the association too much as was Gadareth -
that he didn't want his efforts ridiculed or demeaned.

After all, it wasn't as if Weyrleader T'gellan didn't know that dolphins
rescued the sea-stranded.  It was only that he, T'lion, hadn't exactly
explained the connection he was improving all the time.

A summons to the Weyrleader's quarters that morning in no way alarmed
T'lion since T'gellan often sent for him to assign the day's chores. But
he did not expect to see his brother there and he was not at all
reassured by the smug expression on K'din's face and the stern ones
T'gellan and Mirrim wore.

I don't know why you're upset, Monarth, T'lion heard his dragon say
quite loudly in his head.  They are dolphins that the Ancients brought
here.  They save lives.  They can speak to anyone.

That gave T'lion the clue he needed: K'din had been spying on his
evening sessions with the dolphins.

"I believe you have some explaining to do, T'lion, T'gellan said
sternly, cocking an eyebrow at his young rider.  Mirrim also looked
repressive.

"About the dolphins?" T'lion hoped he sounded more relaxed than he
actually was.

"Dolphins?"

"Yes, dolphins is what Aivas called them,' and he saw the Weyrleaders
exchange glances as he casually dropped in that authority.  "They came
with the Ancients, you know.  They had been given mentasynth enhancement
so they could speak with their human partners, the dolphineers." He got
all the big words out without tripping over them.

T'gellan frowned.  "You've been to Aivas with this?"

"Well, no, he interviewed me.  Master Alemi at Paradise River Hold is
working very closely with the dolphins since they give him weather
reports, news about what fish are running and where.  Saves the fishmen
a lot of trouble.  And better yet, they warn about squalls."

"They do!" T'gellan said, more statement than question, digesting
T'lion's cheerfully rendered explanation.

"And just how did you get involved, T'lion?" Mirrim wanted to know.

"Oh, you know how these things happen, Mirrim.  Like the time you
impressed your fire-lizards."

She frowned, giving him a "don'tyoubecockywith-me stare.  You impressed
these creatures?"

"No, nothing like that, and T'lion dismissed the suggestion with a flick
of his hand.  "Nothing like dragons,' and his tone also relegated the
association to a less significant interface.  "They are useful, though,'
and he decided not to add "like fire-lizards'.

"You summon them with a bell peal.  If they feel like it, they answer.
Mostly they do because we're sort of a new game for them.

"New game?" T'gellan leaned forward.

"That's what Master Alemi said.  The pod that lives in these waters is
different to the one he's in contact with.  Aivas wants us to find out
how many there are and try to improve their language skills.

"Language skills?" Mirrim said, blinking at him.

T'lion gave a shrug.  "That's the term Aivas used.  They speak badly .
they say "mans" for "men" and "gayve" instead of gave .  messing up
words something fearful.  I have to sort of teach them how to speak
correctly."

K'din gave a scornful guffaw.  "You, a teacher?"

"I do know more words than the dolphins do,' T'lion replied serenely.
-Just when do you teach them, T'lion?"

The young bronze rider could see he wasn't out of the fire yet as far as
his Weyrleader was concerned.  "Oh, when I have time.  Like when I'm
bathing Gadareth.  He rather likes the dolphins.  They swim under him
and tickle his belly.  And when I'm scrubbing his wings, they vault over
them."

"Do they so?" The Weyrleader's tone was rhetorical and T'lion remained
silent, trying to act nonchalant.

Had K'din actually suggested that he was depriving or neglecting
Gadareth in favor of dolphins?  Not that he could be drummed out of the
Weyr or anything!  However, he could be disciplined and kept from
associating with the dolphins.  Had he mentioned Aivas enough so that
T'gellan would be satisfied?

Or had he made too much of that association for a Weyrleader's unease?

"I think we'd better meet these Dolphins, Weyrleader.  They'd be pleased
to make your acquaintance, too." T'lion sounded as cheerful as he could
but he hoped the dolphins would display their positive talents instead
of their love of play and games.  "Can my brother come?

So he can get a good square look at the dolphins?"

T'gellan regarded the older brown rider with a speculative look.  "I do
believe that might be salutary."

Yes, very,' Mirrim added with a sour look in K'din's direction.

Monarth and Path are interested.  I told them everything we do.  But we
should have told the Weyrleaders sooner.  That is one thing wrong.  I
don't understand the other.

Not the most reassuring remark Gadareth could have made.

As T'lion turned to follow the Weyrleaders out to their waiting dragons,
he realized that Gadareth was correct about not informing his
Weyrleaders sooner.  But, with conveying Menolly and others about, he
hadn't been much in the Weyr these days.

But much on the seaside talking to dolphins, Gadareth reminded him
conscientiously.

That brother of mine, T'lion thought back to his bronze, he'd love
nothing better than to get me in trouble with the Weyrleaders.

Buleth doesn't like it.

Good on Buleth, then.

Fortunately for T'lion's purpose of demonstration, Tana and Natua
appeared as soon as the bell peal had echoed across waters slightly
roughened by a sea breeze and the incoming tide.  T'lion walked in to
waist depth to meet the two while the others stood on the shore,
dragons, riders and Mirrim's fire-lizards.

"Just you two?" T'lion asked, having hoped to have more of the pod to
show off.  Then he raised his voice so those on the beach could hear
what he said as he made introductions.

"Tana, Natua, that's my pod leader, T'gellan, and his mate, Mirrim.  And
K'din." He was not going to introduce him as his brother.

"G'day, Gellin, Mirm,' Natua said politely while Afo splashed water in
their direction.

"G'day, Natua,' Mirrim said and waded out to stand by T'lion.  She had a
grin on her face.  Her fire-lizards swirled above her head protectively.
She patted the bottlenose that Natua pushed at her.  Tana did a swim-by,
observing Mirrim with first one eye and then the other on the return
trip.  Then she reared up in the water so that she and Mirrim were at
eye level.  "G'day, Tana.  Water good?"

"Fine.  Fish fine, too.  Pod eating.  Good eating.

Tana wanted to know what game they'd be playing so T'lion hastily
intervened.  "Sorry to call you from feeding, Tana."

"Bell ring.  We answer.  We promise.  We here."

He was also pleased that their speech was so clear - he'd finally broken
their habit of saying "oo-ee' for "we'.

"It's very good of you to be so prompt because my pod leaders wanted to
meet you.

Natua did a backward flip, showering water on Mirrim and T'lion Mirrim's
expression went blank as water dripped from her head and shoulders. Well
accustomed to such antics, T'Iion winced that he hadn't thought to warn
her.  Mirrim flicked water off her arms and gave a deep sigh.

"You didn't need to soak Mirrim,' T'lion said, shaking a finger at
Natua.  The dolphin squeed and cut a circle about the two humans.

"Water warm.  Good,' Natua said, his lower jaw dropping in a smile as he
came to a halt by the young rider.

Mirrim began to laugh.  "What's a soaking to sea creatures?

And I did enter his water." She used both hands to shake water out of
her hair.  "You like soaking humans."

"You woman, not oomans,' Natua said.

Mirrim made an o with her mouth, amazed that he recognized the
difference.  "Thank you, Natua!  C'mon in, T'gellan, you're missing half
the fun and the water's warm!'

Then to everyone's shock, Tana delivered a surprise.  "You have baby
inside."

"WHAT?" Mirrim cried, arching her body toward the dolphin.

"Tana sees baby.

"What did you say?  Now, wait a minute, you, you fish!' Mirrim said,
shock briefly draining color out of her face before indignation brought
on a deep flush under her tanned skin.

"What'd that critter just say?" T'gellan demanded, wading into the water
to his weyrmate and putting a protective arm about her.

T'lion was aghast.  He didn't know what to do.  He gulped and stammered,
until he caught his brother's smug expression.

"It said I'm pregnant,' Mirrim replied.  "This is not a joking matter,
doll fin!'

"Not joking,' Tana said.  "I know.  Always we know.  Sonar tells truth
about woman body."

"Sonar?  What's that?" T'gellan demanded of his young rider. -Just what
is going on here?"

"I don't know,' T'lion said in a wail.

"I right.  You ask medic.  Squeee!  Good time is baby time.  I have
baby, too.  Like it."

"Medic?" T'gellan echoed, ignoring the rest of the comment.

"That's what the Ancients called healers,' Mirrim murmured, her head
bent to watch the hand she put on her belly, just below the watery
surface.

"I'm sorry, Mirrim.  I don't know T'lion said, appalled by the incident
and Tana's declaration.  How could she queer this meeting?  He'd thought
they were his friends!  He might just as well plead to be transferred to
another Weyr before his disgrace became planet-wide .  .  .  and he had
no doubt at all that K'din would see that everyone knew!  He'd truly
shamed his family now.  And he'd been so proud to speak to shipfish!

To his growing horror, Tana didn't stop chattering and Natua was nodding
violently as if he, too, concurred!

"I know.  Woman is preg-nant,' Tana repeated, excitedly weaving about in
front of the three humans.  Then, before anyone guessed her intent, she
dropped back into the water, and with the greatest care and lightest
touch, put her nose over Mirrim's hand.  "Have baby.  Not soon.  Small."

T'gellan exchanged glances with his weyrmate and began to smile tenderly
at Mirrim.

"Not that I don't wish you were, Mir, he said so softly that T'lion
wasn't sure he'd heard properly.

"But nothing's happened yet .  I mean, it's much too soon to be sure,'
Mirrim murmured back, looking up at the tall bronze rider, her
expression equally tender.  Then she gave herself a shake and started to
wade to the shore.  "First thing, we find out from Aivas if that silly
sea creature could possibly know what it's talking about." She swivelled
back toward T'lion.  "You come, too, T'lion, and we'll just settle the
matter for once and all.  Can't have a rider your age dealing with
erratic creatures like these."

!  love you, T'lion, Gadareth said in such a vehement tone that T'lion
was a little comforted.  Until he saw the triumphant expression on
K'din's face.  He closed his eyes, trying to close his ears against the
joyous sounds of squeeing and clicking the two dolphins were making as
he waded out of the water.  I like the dolphins.  They have such fun and
made things fun for us, too.

Don't talk to me about doll fins right now, Gaddie.  You don't know what
they've just done.

I know.  Path knows.  Path is glad if her rider is to have a baby.

T'lion groaned as he obeyed T'gellan's hand signal to mount the young
bronze.

"You'll come, too, K'din,' T'gellan said and his expression was suddenly
severe.  "I want you where I can see you.  We're flying straight."

Mirrim had mounted Path, the drip from her wet legs and clothing running
down the green's sides.

"Keep it a low flight,' she said.  "We'll dry out as we go but I don't
want it fast either." She did not so much as look in T'lion's direction
which depressed him even further.

Schools of fish, warnings of shoals and squalls were well within a
dolphin's abilities, but this?  T'lion allowed his body to move with
Gadareth's upward leap but he felt wooden, and scared, and totally
miserable.  How could Natua and Tana treat him so?  Just when he needed
them to show at their very best.

He'd never even had a chance to ask them about weather bearing down on
them, or schools in the seas off Eastern Weyr The straight flight,
though it wasn't actually that far, took ages.  His clothes were dry and
his nose burned enough to hurt by the time they reached Landing. K'din's
smugness became slightly tinged now with awe as he followed his leaders
into the Admin and right up to the table where D'ram was currently
serving as visit monitor.

"T'gellan, Mirrim, how very good to see you.  Monarth and Path are well?
And here's T'lion again and this is your older brother, isn't it,
T'lion?  A noticeable family resemblance.

"Good day, D'ram, Tiroth looks fat and fine up there in the sun,'
T'gellan said pleasantly but with an unmistakable urgency in his tone.

"A problem?"

"Yes, and one which only Aivas can solve for us.  Is there any free time
to query him?"

"Yes, certainly.  Try the small conference room.  T'lion knows the way.

T'lion would have given anything right now not to be so well known to
D'ram.  As the ex-Istan Weyrleader gave him a smiling permission to
proceed, T'lion shrank in on himself.

"Lead on, T'lion,' T'gellan ordered, an indefinable expression on his
face as he followed.

T'lion trudged disconsolately toward the conference room and utter
humiliation, a short walk that seemed as long as the flight straight.

Monarth said they would like to have a baby, Gadareth told him in a
cheerful tone.  Path agrees.

But what if Tana can't know?  What if she's wrong?  !"ll die!

No, and Gadareth's tone chided him for rashness, because you would not
like me to die, too, would you?

 No, of course not!  T'lion gave himself a shake.  Whatever happened now
he still had Gadareth.  No-one could part him from his dragon.

He pushed open the door.

"Aivas, it's T'lion here with Weyrleader T'gellan and green Path's
rider, Mirrim,' he announced to the screen.  Only when he had caught a
reproving glance from T'gellan did he mutter K'din's name.

"What is the topic of your, discussion today?  The dolphins?"

"How did he know?" Mirrim asked in an undertone.

"Because T'lion usually reports on the progress of his meetings with the
dolphins, Mirrim,' Aivas said and Mirrim winced, having forgotten the
acuteness of the facility's "hearing'.

"One of the dolphins, Tana, said I was pregnant." Mirrim came straight
to the point.

"If the dolphin noticed an alteration in your womb, she is likely to be
accurate."

A profound silence fell on the small conference room.

"Well, now, how?  I didn't even know myself, Aivas,' Mirrim said, easing
herself on to a chair.  "I mean -  "Dolphin sonar -  "That was the word
she used "Sonar What is that?"

"Dolphin sonar is the means by which they navigate across the oceans of
Pern, sending out signals and reading the sound waves that return to
them.  Sonar also informs the dolphin of minute changes in body mass.
Dolphins accurately diagnose T'gellan exclaimed.

"to not only pregnancy but bodily tumors and growths and often other
illnesses in their early stages.  Medics - healers in your current
parlance - relied on dolphin diagnostics as unique and correct.

"You mean, Mirrim is pregnant?" T'gellan asked.

"If a dolphin has pronounced it, indubitably she is with child.

T'lion looked from the radiant smile that suffused Mirrim's face to
T'gellan's proud posture.  Out of the corner of his eye he caught the
grimace on his brother's face but he was careful not to exhibit his
elation at Aivas' verdict.  He didn't want to prod K'din into further
acts of retaliation.  It was enough that he, T'lion, was right and he
mentally kicked himself for doubting the dolphins.  But he hadn't had
any idea they could "see' into human bodies!

"Perhaps this facet of dolphin abilities has been overlooked?" Aivas
asked after T'gellan and Mirrim had shared a happy embrace.

T'gellan looked at T'lion who shrugged denial.

"I think we should ask the Weyr Healer to look into the matter,'
T'gellan said.  "Would the dolphins see infections that lie under the
skin and then erupt?"

"The records so indicate.  Do you refer to a puncture wound?"

"Yes, I do.  M'sur nearly lost his leg because it wasn't until he saw
the red lines of blood poisoning that he realized he had a severe
injury.  Persellan had a time saving his life and his leg!' Then
T'gellan turned to T'lion.  "I think we'd best inform the Healers Hall
at Fort about this."

"D'you think they'll believe you?" Mirrim said with a laugh.

Her left hand hovered on her belt, fingers spread over her belly as if
she still couldn't credit the diagnosis.

T'gellan shrugged, grinning.  "They can or cannot as they so choose but
I've a duty to inform them."

"There's a healer here at Landing, isn't there?" Mirrim asked.

"Oh, thank you, Aivas, for your time.

"You are welcome, dragonrider Mirrim."

"My gratitude, Aivas, on several counts, and he gave T'lion a reassuring
grin.  "That meeting with your dolphin friends took a most unexpected
turn, lad.  We thank you.  Mirrim's lost two babes because she didn't
know she was pregnant.  We don't want to lose another.  Come,' T'gellan
said, one hand at Mirrim's waist, guiding her out the door.  "We'll
inform D'ram of this.

He'll see that the Healer Hall is informed."

"Yes, best coming from him,' Mirrim agreed, but she beckoned for T'lion
to walk beside her on their way out.

It took a moment or two for D'ram to absorb the astonishing news, then
he rose from his chair and heartily shook T'gellan's hand, beaming at
Mirrim.

"It's always been a problem for Weyrwomen to know when they have
conceived and stay out of between in the first few months.  You'll have
women flocking to the shores to speak to dolphins."

"I'm not sure that's what we want, T'gellan said, somewhat alarmed.

"Oh, well, yes, but I shall inform the Healer Hall and they can make
what arrangements they find useful."

"If they believe the story,' Mirrim said.

"Oh, I know a few who are open minded enough to investigate especially
if Aivas has verified the matter.  First I shall ask Aivas to give me
what information he has on the diagnostic abilities of the dolphin.
Nothing like the printed word to reassure.  Then the old Weyrleader
turned to T'gellan.  "You were wise to confirm this with Aivas instead
of dismissing the matter."

"It was certainly worth the trouble of flying here straight,' T'gellan
agreed, smiling fondly down at his weyrmate.  "Though I won't deny I
found it hard to credit.  Sorry about that, T'lion."

"Oh, that's all right, T'gellan,' T'lion could honestly say now that his
friends were vindicated.  "I didn't believe it myself, you know.

If T'lion found himself appointed as dolphin liaison - a word Kib
suggested to him from his revived vocabulary of Ancient terms - for the
sceptical medics who did come, sometimes with patients, more often not,
he had no objections.  It kept him out of K'din's way and made it less
likely that any tale K'din might concoct would discredit him in the
Weyrleader's eyes.  Persellan, the Weyr's healer, a journeyman from the
southernmost tip of South Boll, was nearly scornful as he announced that
it was impossible to detect a pregnancy so soon after conception.

But Tana neatly demolished his disbelief when she pinpointed yet another
festering puncture wound in the arm of a weyrchild who kept complaining
that his arm hurt.  The headwoman had been sure it was an attempt to
avoid his chores.  Tana not only was correct about the infection but she
touched her nose on exactly the point which the skeptical Persellan was
to poultice.

The next morning the infection had come to a head and in it could
clearly be seen the needle fine thorn which caused the problem.

Thorns from a variety of vegetation on the Southern continent were a
constant problem to the healers.  Most people wore little in the hot
summers so there was more bare flesh which could be invaded by a casual
brush against leaves and plants.  Even tough dragon hide was not
impervious to the problem though the protective layer just under the
skin was rarely penetrated.

More often it was the rider, scrubbing his dragon, who found a thorn
imbedding itself in a water-soaked hand.

Not by any means thoroughly convinced of this method of ascertaining
pregnancy, Persellan did bring women in various stages of a known
pregnancy to test Tana and other members of her pod who seemed eager to
prove their abilities.

It was, however, a broken bone that persuaded Persellan.  A broken bone,
moreover, that had healed badly just below the elbow, inhibiting the
free use of her right arm.  The woman had come to discover if she was
pregnant again, a condition she didn't wish to continue since she
considered that three children were more than enough to saddle the Weyr
with.

"Bone broke.  Healed wrong,' Tana told Persellan.  "Here."

"What about a baby, fish?" the woman demanded even as Persellan seized
her arm, his trained hands finding the thickened joint.  "I've had no
bleeding in two months."

"How long ago did that happen?"

Durras jerked her arm out of his grip, scowling at the Healer.

"I didn't come about the arm.  I was a child when it broke.

Fish, what about the baby?"

"No babbee, but full womb.  Not good.  Needs cleaning out.

"WHAT?" The woman backed out of the water and ran up the sands and away
from the diagnostician.

"What do you mean?  Full womb?  Needs cleaning out?" Persellan asked. He
had been startled by Durras' reaction but, in his long apprenticeship,
there had been not infrequent occasions of interrupted flows where the
patient had later had severe and constant abdominal pains and several
instances where the woman had died: where only heavy doses of numbweed
had eased the resultant pain.

"Growwwwsse,' Tana said, trying to enunciate a difficult word.  "Bad
things.

"Growths?" Persellan asked.  Intrusive surgeries were not a facet of
healing, though he now knew that specially trained healers were actually
cutting into a human body to relieve some conditions.  Aivas had had
much to tell the Healer Hall but very few had actually undertaken
operations.  He'd heard that the Hall had authorized after-death
examinations.  Even thinking about such intrusions made him shudder but
valuable information had resulted.  "Did the Ancients cut into a body to
remove growths?"

"No need.  Opening is there.  Clean out.  Then have babbee.

"How?  What opening?"

"Main one down below.  Way babbee comes.

Persellan shuddered again.  The very idea of entering by that passage
was repugnant.  Still, a healer was often required to perform measures
unpleasant, and even hurtful to the patient, to restore health.

The next surprise Persellan had came later that eventful morning when
T'lion came to summon him to the bay.

"They're bringing in an injured dolphin.  Natua and Tana say you'll need
to sew him up.

"Sew up a dolphin?" Persellan halted in the act of reaching for his
healer's bag.  "Really, T'lion!  That's enough!'

"Why?" T'lion demanded.  "You do dragons when they're cut."

"But fish?"

"They are not fish, Healer, they're mammals, same as humans, and Boojie
won't heal properly unless you stitch the wound."

"Have you seen it?"

"No, but Tana asked.  She's helped you, now you help her.

Persellan could not fault that argument but he muttered under his breath
all the way down to the beach about having to extend his practice to
heal sea creatures.  The moment he saw the long deep gash he was set to
turn right about and return to his weyr.

"There's no way I could close that.  Why, the .  .  .  creature would
bite me or something.  The pain would be intense."

"Numbweed,' T'lion said, stubbornly blocking Persellan's path and
sending Gadareth an urgent plea to come help.

"How do I know numbweed would help?  It might even be a dangerous

"Tana told me.  She said Boojie's too young to die but he will if that
wound is not closed."

"How'd he gouge himself like that?" Persellan continued to argue even as
T'lion pulled him toward the water and the swarm of dolphins clumped
together in the shallower water.  "I don't even know if stitching's the
answer."

"Sew Boojie,' Tana said, then daring water almost too shallow for her to
swim, pushed the healer with her nose toward the injured dolphin which
podmates kept afloat.

"Come on, Persellan,' T'lion said, up to his chest in the water.

"How can I possibly It's so absurd,' the healer cried but a stiff nose
in his crotch pushed him forward.  "Stop that!' And he batted his free
hand at Tana's importunate melon.  "I simply don't know how to go about
Shock from such a wound, not to mention suturing I mean, I've never done
anything like this in my life."

"Didn't they tell you life in a Weyr would never be boring?" T'lion
said, silly with relief that the healer was complying.

He almost gagged when he saw the depth of the wound, the flesh laid bare
to several levels.  The moment of nausea passed because he was
fascinated that any creature so badly injured had survived the journey
here.  Boojie was barely breathing, too exhausted to make so much as a
soft squee.  Only the gleam in the visible left eye, as intelligent as
ever, despite the wound, was evidence that the bottlenose lived.  T'lion
placed a hand close to the lung, far enough away from the ghastly slice
not to cause any additional pain, and felt the rumble of activity within
the dolphin's body.

"If you're going to do something, you better do it now, Persellan,' he
murmured.  "Boojie's just hanging on."

"How on earth am I going to do any suturing in the ocean?"

Seeing the problem, for the dolphin nurses had to prop the patient and
that made it difficult for Persellan to reach a useful position, T'lion
called Gadareth.

"Dragon claws were made useful,' he told Persellan.  "Gaddie will cradle
Boojie, just enough in the water, but with his side turned to you."

A flurry as the bronze dragon, perceiving from his rider's mind what had
to be accomplished, entered the water and approached the group.

"Gaddie'Il help, Tana.  Tell the others to let him take Boojie.  He won
t harm him.  You know dragons wouldn't harm a dolphin."

Tana clicked, squeed and spouted water so urgently that the maneuver was
deftly accomplished, though it took a bit to get Boojie angled just
right for the repair.

"By the first shell, will you look at this?" Persellan exclaimed and
pointed to the thick layer of blubber lying just under the dolphin's
rubbery skin.  "I suppose it's normal?  Would she know?  Come to think
of it a very fat herd beast has a fatty layer.  I suppose it's all
right.  Oh, well, it can only bite me." Keeping up a running monologue -
which T'lion rightly had the sense not to answer - and muttering darkly
about a most unusual healing, Persellan began to smear numbweed on the
lips of the wound.  "Don't know if the stuff will penetrate enough to do
any good but the Master Farmer always uses it on injured animals so I
don't see why I can't use it on a sea creature." His dabbings were
tentative at first, but his motions became more confident when his
patient did not twitch or move during the procedure.

T'lion helped when he saw what to do, and his smaller fingers managed to
ease the paste all along the edges of the wound.

"I've never done anything so bizarre in my life,' Persellan muttered as
he paused, the long thin needle he used for dragon flesh poised for the
first stitch.  "I've never heard of anything so weird as suturing a fish

"Boojie's not a fish,' T'lion corrected but he was grinning.

"He's a mammal."

"Put your hands on either side, would you, and see if you can't push the
lips together?"

It was not an easy job Persellan asked of T'lion and toward the end,
though the healer worked swiftly, the young rider's muscles began to
spasm in protest.  But together the humans finished closing the gash.

"Three hands long "Persellan said, measuring and shaking his head.  "I
doubt he'll live.  Shock alone Although salt water wounds do heal well .
.  - He shook his head again as he scrubbed the remaining blood from his
hands before passing the brush to his equally gory assistant.  He also
washed the needle and replaced it in its leather and what was left of
the fine strong thread he had used back in his wet healer's bag.  He'd
forgotten all about it during the procedure and now clicked his tongue.

"So what do we do with this Boojie now, T'lion?  Nurse him here, in the
shallows?  I'm water-pocked from the waist down.

"Afo, what now?" T'lion asked, seeing her in the circle of observant
dolphins grouped on either side of Gadareth who still held Boojie in his
talons.

"You do good.  Tell dragon to let Boojie go.  We care him."

Ordinarily T'lion would have corrected her phrase but he understood what
she meant.  With a sharp series of whistles, she organized her helpers,
Gar, Jim and Tana among them, T'lion noticed, as Gadareth obediently and
very carefully lowered his forearms into the water until Boojie's body
floated free.  T'lion was relieved to notice a slight motion of fins as
Boojie wearily responded to his freedom.  Then his podmates renewed
their support and pointed him seaward.

"T'ank you!  T'ank you!  T'ank you!" came the unexpected chorus as the
group headed slowly out to sea.

"Will he be all right, Natua?"

She gave a little leap in an answer which he took to be affirmative.
Both he and Persellan watched in silence until the dorsal fins of
patient and nurses were no longer easily visible.

"Never done anything like that before in my life,' Persellan muttered as
he strode out of the water.  He took no more than a few steps up on the
sand before he collapsed, to spread out his length on the warm sand.
"And I don't even know if it will be enough.  But I tried."

"You did indeed, Healer, and I'm very grateful you did,' T'lion said.
Gaddie, you were great!

I know it.  I've never done anything like that either.  But the dolphin
lives.  We all did well.  Tell the healer.

"Gadareth, too, says you did well, Persellan,' T'lion murmured, with a
weary grin.  A snore answered him.  A nap seemed like a good idea but he
had enough common sense remaining to collect two of the wide leaves they
often used to shield the harsh sun rays.  He put one on Persellan's head
and face, and draped the second over himself.

Gadareth, wings carefully tight against his back, rolled this way and
that in the warm sands before he, too, settled his head on his front
legs and relaxed in the sun.

Chapter Seven

early the next morning Persellan joined T'lion and Gadareth on the
strand when the young dragonrider rang the "report' peal.  He had spent
an anxious night, worrying about Boojie, and rather pleased to see that
Persellan was also concerned.

No sooner had the last note of the ring echoed across the waters than
two dolphins leaped above the surface, a distant squeeing audible.

"Hope that's a happy sound,' T'lion murmured.

"Hmmmm,' was Persellan's reply as he shielded his eyes and peered across
the dawn-lightened waters.

"They feed at dawn, you know,' T'lion informed him conversationally.
"Best time to get them."

"Am I likely to be on call to dolphins, too, now?"

T'lion looked up to check the healer's mood.  He didn't know the man
well enough to judge whether or not his gruffness was genuine.  Most
people tended to be grumpy in the early hours of a day.  Healers
certainly had the right, called up at the most inconvenient of times.

"Would that bother you?" T'lion asked apprehensively.

"Hmmmm.  Depends.  I could see that the creature had to have that gash
sutured.  Are they often injured?  How did that happen to it?"

"I don't know about injuries in general.  Most of the dolphins have
scars here and there.  I haven't asked how they get them, though.  We
haven't reached that sort of thing.  Most of our conversations have been
pretty basic.  Maybe Master Alemi knows.  I can ask him."

"Who's Master Alemi?" Persellan asked, his gaze still on the incoming
dolphins' progress.

"Master Fishman at Paradise River Hold.  He got me interested in the
dolphins.  Aivas asked me to continue."

"Did he?" Persellan shot a glance down at his young companion.

"Yes, yesterday wasn't my first visit to report to Aivas,' T'lion said
in a tone he hoped wasn't boastful.

"Indeed!  Hmmmm, well."

The squeeing was louder now and T'Iion thought it sounded happy.  Maybe
because he wanted it to.  He let out a sigh.  Then, as the two dolphins
neared the shore, he couldn't wait any longer and ran out into the water
until he was waist deep.

"Is Boojie OK?" he shouted through cupped hands.

"Squeeee yes.  Squee yes!'

"Yes?"

"Yesssssss, squeee yessssss!" The two dolphins made it a chorus and
seemed to speed up.  Their final leap splashed T'lion thoroughly but he
didn't care.  Natua pushed his face right up into the dragonrider's, and
his ever grinning smile was deeper than ever.  He dropped his jaw and
squeed again.

"Boojie best grateful.  Ate well."

"Swims little, is better."

"Tell them,' Persellan called from where he stood at the water's edge,
"Boojie must have the sutures removed Are dolphins aware of time?  I
mean I don't want to leave those stitches in forever.  They could tear
the flesh."

"When d'you want Boojie back?" T'lion asked.

"In a sevenday.  Would they understand that?"

T'lion nodded vigorously even as he repeated the instructions to the two
dolphins.  "In seven and T'lion held up sufficient fingers, tapping them
in turn on Natua's nose, "dawns, Boojie is to come back to the Healer.
Understand?"

"Squeeee!  Understand.  Seven dawns."

"We tell!" Tana added, clicking affirmatively.

"Thanks for coming,' T'lion added.

"You ring.  We come.  We promise.  Thank medic." And Tana did her
half-stand, nodding her head vigorously before she gave a final tail
swish and leaped sideways, over and under the water and swam off, Natua
squeeing after her.

"Did you hear, Persellan?" T'lion asked as he waded back out.  "Boojie's
very grateful.  He ate and they understood to bring him back in a
sevenday.

"I must say, I'm gratified, since I hadn't a notion if I was doing the
creature any good at all."

"Oh, you did, Persellan, you did!'

Amazing incident, actually.  I must report now who would I report to?
Not the Master Farmer certainly for the sea is not his province.

"Master Alemi says that the Master Fishman, Idarolan, is interested in
the dolphins."

"Well, then, I shall report to him, and to T'gellan, as well as to
Master Oldive.  At least he will find this case interesting.  Many
wouldn't, but Oldive will." That seemed to please Persellan even more as
they made their way back to the Weyr.

T'lion hoped he'd have a chance to tell Master Alemi all about yesterday
and dolphin sonar.  Well, maybe he shouldn't talk about Mirrim's baby
yet, but he could tell about Persellan's sewing up Boojie.

It was several days before T'Iion had a chance to stop off at Paradise
Hold.  He was on his way back from conveying Master Fandarel to Telgar
Smith Craft Hall and saw no harm in stopping off that evening to see
Alemi.  The big yawl, the Fair Winds, was not at anchor, nor the other
sloop or the ketch that fished from Paradise River.  T'lion was about to
tell Gadareth to go on to the Weyr when he saw a ship sailing into the
next cove.  The northern coast of the Southern Continent had many
inlets.  He thought it very odd that the ship didn't put into the
Paradise River anchorage.  Could they have mistaken their port of call?

That cove also had a river, but a small one, feeding into the sea.

Could the captain have mistaken this one for the true Hold?

Puzzled, he asked Gadareth to glide over that way.  What he saw on the
beach did nothing to reassure him.  For people were hurriedly unloading
small boats: quite a mound of crates and stuff already on the beach. Was
Paradise River opening new holdings on its land?  He'd heard remarks at
dinner in the Weyr that more and more people were heading to the
Southern Continent after what had been an extremely cold winter.

Gaddie, let's just check with Holder Jayge, T'lion said and his dragon
obliged, winking into between, hopefully before those on the beach had
seen him.  They'd had the sun at their backs and wouldn't have been all
that visible.  There had been something furtive about the beaching.

"Holder Jayge, were you expecting more new settlers?" T'lion asked,
presenting himself and apologizing for interrupting their supper.

"No,' and Jayge frowned, rising.  "Why?"

"Well, there's a ship anchored next cove over and stuff's all over the
beach.  I thought you should know."

"Indeed I should, T'lion,' and angry sparks lit his eyes.  "Did you
happen to see the Fair Winds on her way in?"

"No, sir, we came out of between above the pier and no sign of any of
your ships."

"I know that dragonriders are not supposed to intervene in Hold matters,
Jayge said, beckoning T'lion to follow him to the front porch, "but if
Alemi knew about this .  .  .  intrusion, he could assist us." He
glanced west where the tip of the setting sun was just visible.  "Could
you estimate how many are on that beach?"

T'lion shook his head.  "They were unloading two small boats, coming and
going."

"Did they see you?"

"No, I was coming in from the west.  Sun behind me."

"Good,' and Jayge emphasized that by gripping T'lion's arm in approval.
"Possibly eight, ten men, if they had two boats.

Well, if we start now, we should reach the cove by moonrise!

But I'd want Alemi's reinforcement." He waited for T'lion's response.

"I'd never find Alemi at sea,' T'lion began, half of him wanting to help
Jayge and the other half most loath to get into further trouble with
T'gellan.  Which he would if he interfered even in a minor way.  Someone
would drop the word that a dragonrider had told Alemi.

Dolphins find Alemi faster, Gadareth said slyly from the shadows in
which he waited.

"Dolphins!  They could find Alemi and tell him to come,' T'lion cried.

"Good lad!" Jayge clapped him on the back now.  "Those critters really
are good for something."

While T'lion knew that this was not the moment to mention the dolphins'
latest skill, he had no reservations about using them.

"I'll just go ring the bell on the pier,' T'lion said, running back to
his dragon.

"My gratitude, dragonrider,' Jayge called after him.

As Gadareth lifted into the night and angled himself toward the head of
the bay, T'lion heard Jayge hammering on the alarm triangle.

The pier was long enough to accommodate the bronze dragon so Gadareth
set T'lion down right by the bell tower.  He clanged it as vigorously as
Jayge had been plying the iron.  Dusk was also a good time to get a
quick response from dolphins who would be looking for a game to play. In
his head, T'lion sorted out the words to use to convey the message to
Alemi.

Kib, Temp and Afo answered the summons.

"You must find Alemi, Kib,' T'lion said, holding the dolphin's head at
an angle so the eye was on him.

"Can do easy.  Not far now.

"Then tell him Jayge needs his help immediately at the next cove.  Over
there,' and T'lion jabbed his hand in the appropriate direction.

"Where ship is?"

"You saw them?"

"Northern ship smelly.  In wrong place?"

"You bet your safety straps they are,' T'lion said.  "They are invading
Paradise River Hold."

"Invade no good?"

"That's right.  Those men do no good to Alemi, Jayge and Readis."

T'lion was amazed by the hostile notes in the clicking and squeeing
which came out in a deeper, almost menacing, tone and tempo.

"Go.  Find Alemi.  Tell him trouble comes here.  Be at next cove by
moonrise to help Jayge and his men.   Kib wriggled himself on his tail,
waving his flippers.  "Find Alemi.  Tell him trouble.  Moon rise.  We
know where!  We go!'

In one of their incredible maneuvers, the three dolphins simultaneously
launched themselves high above the water and, turning their agile
bodies, dove back.  T'lion saw them emerge briefly, travelling at great
speed, out to sea, as if they knew exactly where they were going.

They probably do know exactly where they're going, T'lion told Gadareth.
"Well, we'd better get back home as fast as we can or someone might
wonder how long it took us to get Master Fandarel home."

You were given food when you arrived, Gadareth remarked as T'lion
settled himself again between his neck ridges.

T'lion chortled as he slapped his dragon's neck.  "That's right and a
good meal it was.  I had seconds!  Let's go home!' Several days later at
dinner in the Weyr Hall, T'lion heard that a group of northerners had
been forcefully expelled from Paradise River Hold.  The master of the
ship that had brought them would be severely disciplined by Master
Idarolan and deprived of his command.  Ingenuously T'lion asked for
details.

"You know, I used to go there at lot,' T'lion remarked, "nice folk."

He was told about the clever way in which Holder Jayge and his small
force of men had emerged from the forest, caught the intruders asleep in
their hastily set-up camp and tied them up.  The Paradise River
Fishmaster Alemi and his fishmen had boarded their transport ship and,
with a crew from his own Fishhold, had sailed it and the unwelcome
immigrants into Ista Harbor where the vessel was impounded and its crew
and passengers transported back to their point of departure in Igen.
Lord Holder Laudey was not best pleased by this escapade and the men and
women were sentenced to work in the mines.  The episode was well spread
by harpers with the moral that those who wished to settle on the
southern continent had to obtain permission.

"There'll be more of such occurrences, V'line remarked.

"Paradise River Hold's already had a couple of problems along that line.

"You mean when that self-styled Lady Holdless Thella attacked the Hold a
couple of Turns back?" one of the wingleaders asked.

"That was the worst,' V'line replied, having inadvertently arrived while
the raid was in progress.

"The Weyrs can't involve themselves in Hold matters,' the brown rider,
M'sur, said, frowning.  "It's enough that we have to convey people in
and out of Landing all the time." He nodded at T'lion.  "Not to mention
having to survey every inch of this continent to prepare for the day
Threadfall stops forever.

T'lion shrugged and grinned when several other riders glanced in his
direction.  No-one had even noticed his return after full dark on the
night in question.  And really, he hadn't really been involved.  The
dolphins had!  And who would know that?

Lord Toric heard about the attempted intrusion and smiled.

It amused him that more people were illegally attempting to invade the
south - so long as they kept away from his zealously guarded holding -
and ignoring the Benden Weyrleaders' edict that immigration must be to
sites they had approved.  That only verified to Toric that the
Weyrleaders were indeed keeping the best sites for the dragonriders.  He
was hoping that some of the tries would succeed if only to prove that
people could survive very well, thank you, wherever they were willing to
work hard enough to "hold'.  It didn't matter to Toric that these
would-be settlers could die from sampling exotic-looking and
sweet-smelling tree fruits, that there were hungry and feral beasts
quite able to take down a full-grown adult, that there were the most
insidious dangers from thorn-poisoning and fevers.  Toric's notion was
that the strong survived and if the unfit died, they merited no
mourning.  What irked him most was that the Benden Weyrleaders felt they
had the right to apportion the south where they wished to bestow it.
Just because they'd found some document that told how the Ancients had
dealt with settling.  Land was held by those strong enough to hang on to
it and improve it.

And then there was that infamous meeting of Weyrleaders and Lords Holder
- which he had been unable to attend while he was involved with ousting
the renegade Denol from lerne Island.  That's when all those
old-womanish Lords had actually established that the dragonriders had
the right to control the Southern Continent land grabbings.  "Out of
respect for the services dragonriders have given Hold and Hall over the
centuries of Threadfall." As if tithing to support the indolent riders
hadn't been reward enough for dragons doing what they had been bred to
do.  Much less the gratuities which had always been lavished on
dragonriders.

When Toric had heard of that decision, he had been infuriated,
especially as it had been voted on behind his back.  He'd have stopped
the whole notion right then if he'd been able to come.

The first insult to him had been that the Northern Lords hadn't waited
until he could come to a meeting that, when all was said and deplorably
done, affected him more than any of them, since he was the only
confirmed Lord Holder in the south.

And Lord of Hold so much larger than anything in the north, including
Telgar, that it had been ludicrous to hold such a meeting without him.
Of course, the Weyrleaders had planned it that way, knowing he would
protest.  Knowing he would have been able to sway some of the indecisive
idiots who had their titles by default and certainly wouldn't have been
able to survive a season in the south.  He'd've seen that the Southern
Continent would be wide open for those with the guts to work to hold any
land.  And apply for confirmation to a full Council of Lords Holder and
no Weyrleaders present for it wasn't up to dragonriders who held and
where!  Not in Toric's lexicon.

On his bedroom and office walls were outsized copies of the Southern
Continent: several aspects, including one which had cost him a sack of
marks, a spatial view of the south, its terrain stretching out and out
to the curve of the horizon.  That view caused him the most irritation
since it was proof positive that he had been cheated.  The Weyrwoman had
shown him only a small section of the continent when she and F'lar had
tricked him into settling for only the land between the two rivers.  He
had been deceived into settling for a tiny portion when he could have
had more, much more.  And those two Weyrleaders had known it.  Although
his wife had tried to convince him that they couldn't have known the
extent of Southern, not until Master Idarolan and Master Rampesi had
sailed, one west and one east, until they had met, was the size of the
southern continent truly discovered.  Toric could not be convinced
otherwise.  He had wanted more and, since the Weyrleaders had thwarted
him in that devious meeting, he would have more.  Especially when the
dragonriders had not helped him regain the big island from Denol's
clutches.  He was especially bitter about that.

Right now, of course, with everyone scurrying about following the orders
of that machine, Aivas, he had to bide his time.  It was as essential to
his future plans as everyone else's that Thread be stopped from ever
falling on Pern again.  He had even allowed Hamian to spend full time
experimenting and contriving the new machines and equipment needed to
end the airborne menace.  He had informants in place so that anything of
any significance occurring at Landing was reported to him.

He appeared when vital decisions were being discussed.  He also tagged
those who would be of use to him later on.  If, and Toric entertained
some doubts, Aivas managed to do as it had promised: rid the planet of
Thread.

He had already started to make his plans: spurred by his animosity for
the Benden Weyrleaders.  He still had the notes which young Piemur had
made of his explorations along the coast.  He himself had taken short
trips - no absences long enough to arouse suspicion, and never where
dragonriders might inconveniently overfly him.  He would personally
select those he placed where he wanted them, and enough on large enough
holdings so that, after Threadfall, there would be enough Lords Holder
grateful to him, Toric, to vote a majority over the northern idiots.
When the time was ripe .  .  .  And he smiled again.  The domination of
the Weyrs over the Southern Continent would suffer a major curtailment.
He had no doubt he would find support among the Lords Holder, especially
since he could use that Ancient document to justify the actions.  Ah,
yes, when the time was ripe The next morning was the seventh day when
Boojie was supposed to report to Persellan.  Healer and dragonrider
arrived at first light on the beach and saw dolphins cavorting in the
water on a shoreward course.

"I do hope Boojie isn't one of those leapers, Persellan said in a
grouchy tone.  "He'll pull his stitches and I won't sew him up again.

T'lion gave the bell a few pulls to be sure their presence was noticed.
Then he and Persellan, who was dressed in shortlegged pants and had put
what he needed out of his healer's bag in a small pouch slung over one
shoulder, waded out to meet the incoming sea creatures.

The one who glided in across their path stopped right in front of them
and eased over on to his back.  The long gash was visible, just under
the water.

"Gaddie, we may need you again .  T'lion began.

"No, I don't think we need trouble Gadareth,' Persellan said because the
dolphin was holding steady, presenting the injury well enough for the
purpose of removing the sutures.  "Here, hold this for me,' the healer
said, having removed a blunt-ended pair of scissors from his pack before
he pushed it at T'lion.

Running skilled fingers along the injury, Persellan gave one of his
meditative hums, his expression registering approval and satisfaction.

"It's well closed, not a single suture torn or pulled.  Really, if I'd
known they heal so quickly, I could have removed the stitches earlier.
Remarkable recovery."

"The salt water?"

"Could be, and the excellent state of health these wild creatures enjoy.
Now tell him not to move.  I don't want to inadvertently puncture him at
this stage of his recovery."

T'Iion bent close to Boojie's head, noticed the brightness of the eye
regarding him and patted the melon.

"Hold as still as you can, Boojie.  Won't hurt."

Boojie dropped his jaw in token of understanding.  T'lion nearly fell
backwards, though, as the tip of another dolphin snout protruded from
the water just beyond Boojie's head.

He hadn't been aware that a dolphin lurked that close, Tana probably.

"Hold your hand out, please, T'lion.  I need to be sure I've removed all
the stitches."

T'lion obeyed and the procedure was very quickly accomplished. Persellan
bent his head to peer at the closed wound.

"Hmmmm.  Yes, remarkable.  I really should encourage patients to swim Or
at least to immerse themselves in the water here for its curative
powers.  Good fellow, Boojie.  You've been a grand patient.  Where do I
scratch?"

"Not there,' T'lion said hastily and grabbed Persellan's hand away from
what was indecently close to dolphin privates.  "Here, under the chin.
They love it."

Persellan caressed Boojie.  "You've been a very good patient.

I could wish humans were as well behaved.  But then I didn't have to
oversee you in your watery ward, did I?" Persellan's hum turned into a
chuckle.  "Dragonriders do not take kindly to having to remain in bed.
Shards!" Persellan backed away in surprise as Boojie suddenly loomed up
out of the water until he was on eye level with the healer.  Then, with
great care, the dolphin touched his nose to Persellan's mouth before
dropping back into the water.

"Thank you, Peerrssss-lan,' Boojie said with an enthusiastic squee to
emphasize his statement.

"You are very welcome, Boojie.  Very welcome indeed, Persellan said,
executing a few short bows at the dolphin.

"Hmmm.  I don't always get thanked by my human patients either.  You
know, T'lion, I don't think I'd mind being healer to the dolphins after
all.  D'you think I should see what other information Aivas has on sea
mammal ailments and cures?"

T'lion grinned as he handed the healer back his pouch and they both
waded out of the sea.

"I don't see why not.  The more we learn from Aivas the better.  Have
you heard anything from Master Oldive?" T'lion asked.

"Yes, I have.  Most gratifying.  Oddly enough, it was the Harper Hall -
Master Menolly, in particular - which supported my suggestion,' and
Persellan glanced quizzically at T'lion.

"She was at Paradise River Hold and Alemi is her brother.

He might have told her what he was doing with the dolphins."

"Which is?"

"Much what I'm doing, getting to know them and teach them our words."

"But they know them  "No, they know the words people used to use,'
T'lion said, mastering an urge to grin at the healer's confusion.  "Our
language has shifted slightly from what the dolphins learned long ago
from us.

"Language shifted?" Persellan was indignant.

"Aivas told me."

"For a rider who hasn't even flown Thread yet, you seem to be remarkably
well connected."

"Me?  Shards, no, Persellan, I just have to convey a lot of people here
and there,' T'Iion said in an earnestly selfdeprecating tone.  He didn't
wish to give Persellan the impression that he was boasting or anything.
"I was conveying Master Alemi when he rang that old bell they dredged up
from Monaco Bay and summoned the dolphins.  That's how I got involved."

"But you've put up a bell here."

"Aivas asked me to.  I'm supposed to help count how many dolphins there
are these days.

"Doing well, I see.  Hmmm.  What does Gadareth think about all this?"

"You saw for yourself, healer.  He was quite ready to help with Boojie."

"So he was.  Well,' and they had entered the clearing around the Weyr
Hall, "let me know if they need any more stitching or something.  Like
dragons, they are appreciative!" He sniffed once disparagingly and made
for his quarters.

At Fort Hold, Menolly.  Sebell, Master Oldive and two of his journeymen
had made their way to the Fort harbor.

"I find it most fascinating that no-one .  .  .  " Master Oldive paused
to emphasize the negative, "ever bothered to ask why that bell was known
as the "doll fins bell"."

Menolly laughed, enjoying this outing from the Healer Hall now that the
weather was more clement with an early spring warming.  It was good to
be on runner-back and especially to have something which could pry
Sebell loose from his increasingly heavy duties as Master Harper.  They
scarcely seemed to have any time together these days with all the
activity and industry connected with Aivas' plan to rid Pern of
Threadfall.  "Surely you've had come across enigmas in your Healer Hall
records."

"Oh, indeed,' Master Oldive said with a laugh.  "Even the most legible
entries contain references to procedures the authors were familiar with
but which we lost over the centuries.

Thankfully, Aivas is explaining more and more." Then he sighed, his
expression thoughtful.  He shook off whatever reflection troubled him
and spoke more briskly.  "And you'll be able to communicate with the
dolphins?  If any come in response.

"My brother assures me that they assured him that all dolphins have
maintained their traditions.  And we know that there are dolphins in
these waters.  So we shall ring the peal and see what happens.

"I do so hope they come,' Oldive said, sighing heavily.  "If they can,
as Weyr Healer Persellan said, pinpoint irregularities in a human body
with this sonar ability of theirs, I might just be able to treat three
puzzling cases that have worried me excessively."

Menolly lowered her voice so it would not carry to the journeymen riding
behind them.  "You're having trouble convincing your Craft of the
"surgical" treatments the old records recommend."

"Indeed!" Oldive's comment was heartfelt.  "The caesarean to release a
womb-held baby is permitted, and the one to remove the pendicks, but
neither are the lengthy repairs and deep delving that Aivas reports were
last measures even then.  But we don't have the medicines that the
Ancients did that would dissolve or shrink other conditions to which
occasionally people are subject."

They had reached the pier and were welcomed by the Master Fishman who
delegated men to take the runnerbeasts from their riders.  Menolly
noticed that all five vessels of the Fort fishing fleet were in port.
She grimaced.  She hadn't anticipated an audience but they had had to
inform Samvel of their intentions for the day's excursion.

Master ldarolan had, of course, informed him of dolphin intelligence.
Sebell, also spreading such news, had met with considerable skepticism,
especially from those inland who had never seen dolphins escorting
ships. -A long cold ride, you will need at least a cup of klah before
you ring any bells,' Curran said jovially, gesturing them to enter his
hold, situated on the height above the sea.  There was another smaller
cot built on the T-bar of the pier itself for the harbormaster.

Menolly, always conscious of being away from her children, would have
preferred not to dally but courtesy required the grateful acceptance of
hospitality.  And hot klah would be welcome.  She was somewhat stiff
after the long ride, having had little occasion to exercise of late. She
almost resented the ease with which Sebell, who was constantly riding
both runners and dragons, dismounted.

More than klah was offered which was very nice of Curran and his wife,
Robina, and actually very welcome: small fish rolls that were delectably
spiced, the cold roe of fish spread on tiny bread rounds, the hot spiced
klah and a cup of a chowder that was also highly seasoned.  But then
Robina was from a southern Fishhold and liked such blood-warming
preparations.  The journeymen, as hungry as any ever born, tucked into
the food with a good will.  Even Master Oldive made a good meal.

Finally, they were able to go to the long pier, with a throng of
interested fishers and cotholders.  Menolly should have known that this
would become an occasion, especially after a long and sequestering
winter.  Everyone took what excuses for diversion they could find.  This
would certainly be a more interesting one.  No sooner had she stepped
out of the hold than Beauty, Diver and Rocky launched themselves from
the roof, Beauty settling to her shoulder while Diver and Rocky swanned
about in the air above.  Other fire-lizards joined them, uttering glad
cries, though Menolly knew they could hardly appreciate the reason for
the day's activities.

The dolphins' bell had been given a new housing, the wood preservative
still rank enough to catch you in the back of the throat despite the
light breeze.  The bell itself had been shined to a high polish.

"We added a new clapper,' Curran said proudly.  "Made Master Fandarel
hold up some other work to get it done in time."

"I could wish to know how you did that, Master Curran, Oldive said with
a wry smile.

"How long has the bell been without a clapper then?" Sebell asked in his
quiet way of extracting information.

"Oh,' and Curran threw up arms thick from years of hauling nets and
sails, "it had none when I became Master here."

"Did your master not notice?" Sebell asked, his eyes twinkling.

"I suppose he did but he must have taken it on in that condition."
Curran looked a trifle embarrassed.

"The Monaco Bell had no clapper either,' Sebell said to pacify the man
but Menolly noticed her mate did not mention that the Monaco Bell had
been at the bottom of the sea for centuries.

"But it has one now and can be put to its original use again.  Will you
do the honors, Menolly?"

"Delighted,' she said and seized the rope by the end.  "I think, Curran,
the purpose of the Dolphins' Bell is for them to be able to ring it,
too, to summon men to hear their reports.   "I didn't know that,' Curran
said, surprised.  "But what would I do if they should ring it?"

Menolly smiled reassuringly at him.  "Ask why they rang it, of course.
This is to let them know the Bell's back in service." She gave the pull
a hefty yank, and then settled into the "report' sequence that Alemi had
taught her.  She sincerely hoped it would be effective or Curran would
think he had wasted time, effort and badgered the Master Smith for no
purpose.

So, pretending that the sequence was longer than it actually was, she
pealed off the "report' a second time.  "Alemi's had very good fishing
since he's listened to the dolphin reports.

He's also been able to avoid some of those appalling squalls the
southern waters spawn.

"Look!" cried one of the fishmen who had followed them to the pier.  On
her shoulder, Beauty let out a piercing cry.  Rocky and Diver swooped
off to investigate.

Distance viewers appeared from pockets to aid the naked eyes.

"Fins!" cried Curran's first mate.  "Half a dozen .  .  .  no, more than
that.  Coming from all directions.  Heading here!'

Curran reached for the distance view from his mate and peered out to
sea.  Beauty spread her wings, tangling them in Menolly's winter cap so
that Menolly had to grab it before it fell into the sea.

"Easy there, now, Beauty.  You've seen dolphins before.

Beauty chittered something but obediently folded her wings and blinked
bright blue eyes.

"Quite a display they're making,' Curran remarked and politely passed
the viewer to Menolly.  She grinned and gestured for him to give it to
Sebell who had not yet had a chance to see a dolphin pod arriving in
answer to the age-old summons.

How had the creatures remembered for such a long time!

Maybe there were dolphin equivalents to harpers?  The pod leaders?

Sebell sucked in his breath as he watched.  "They are moving at an
incredible rate and doing all those leaps and ah one just somersaulted
midair."

"I'd say they were delighted to hear the bell rung again, Menolly said
with a nostalgic little smile and a catch in her chest.  To be ignored,
to have one's abilities neglected must have been hard and yet the
dolphins had continued to do what they could to aid humans all these
long centuries.  She must write a special song for them.  A very special
song of loyalty and joy.

The squeeing was soon audible to the watchers on the dock.

"How can they speak?" Curran asked.

"They do,' Menolly said, "if you listen." She glanced up at Sebell,
standing straight and tall beside her and grinned impishly.  "Despite
all we harpers did, the language shifted but the dolphins are adapting
to the new words."

Sebell gave her a jaundiced stare for that familiar tease and she
chuckled at harper discomfiture over the "purity of speech' which the
Craft had tried so hard to preserve.

"But I thought "Curran began and then stopped, clearing his throat.

The vanguard were now closing the gap and the watchers were unable to
count the number of dolphin bodies in their leaping and plunging.

"Where's the boat, do we need to be close to them?" Menolly asked and
Curran pointed to a ladder at the side and, peering over the edge,
Menolly saw the long boat bobbing at its painter.

Curran led the way and carefully guided her feet to the rungs and safely
into the tossing boat.  It was one of the off-shore fishers and
accommodated a fair number of folk: an orderly descent was made by those
whom Curran had apparently ticked off as audience to this momentous
occasion.

They were barely settled when the first dolphin raised its head above
the waters.

"Bellill ring.  Oo-ee come!  Bellill not ring long long." The creature
squeeed, and was joined by other importunate heads, all of them jostling
for a view of those in the boat.

"Your name?  I'm Nolly,' she said, leaning over the side of the boat and
extending a hand to scratch a bottlenose chin.

Almost ecstatically the dolphin allowed the caress, the jaw dropped into
the water in its excess of delight.

"Inka!  Inka!  Pod-leader.  Inka!'

"By the first Egg,' Curran cried and there was excited muttering from
the other fishmen.

"Here is Curran,' Menolly said.  "Fish Master.

"Oo-ee know,' Inka said.

"Flip me,' another dolphin said, raising itself well above the water to
reach an eyelevel that startled the Fish Master.

Hipme?" Curran asked.

"Flip!  Flip!  "On-ra-bul naym.

"On-ra-bul?" Curran repeated amazed.

"Maybe he means honorable?" Sebell suggested and held out a hand, hoping
to entice a dolphin to him.  One immediately raised up and offered fins
in his direction.  "Your name?" he asked.

"Ajay, Ajay.  Mans name?" The interrogatory lift to the word was
unmistakable.

"Sebell.  Sebell, Ajay!'

"Sebell." "Sebell, Nolly, Cur-ran,- chorused dolphins in their high
funny voices.

"Oldive,' Menolly said, putting her arms about the Master Healer.  She
had long since ignored the hump on the man's back and her arm curved
over it as she made the introduction.

"Healer.  Medic,' she added.

"Me-dick!  Meddick!" Dolphins passed this information back and forth
among those that now thronged the waters about the boat and great pier
bollards that rose above the surface and supported the T-shaped
facility.  "Oll-deeve, medick!" Excited squees and clicks followed this
introduction and the immediate waters seethed with dolphins changing
position and many attempting to inspect the Healer simultaneously.
"Ooooo heal?

Ooooo skraabbb blufisss?"

"How remarkable!" Oldive said, surprised to be the focus of such
attention from so many cheerful faces.  "Oooo heal?" he asked, turning
to Menolly for a translation.  "Skraaabbb blufiss?"

"Bloodfish.  It's a parasite and has to be cut off,' Menolly said.

"Alemi did it for his pod.  Something they are unable to do for
themselves."

"I shouldn't wonder with just flippers and no fingers.  How would I "Who
has blufiss?" Menolly asked and four dolphins squeed and pushed in
toward her.  She had had a chance to study Aivas' tapes on the dolphins
and now gave the signal for them to lay on their sides.

"Oh I say,' Oldive remarked with great sympathy.  "I've never seen a
fully bloated bloodfish before.  They must be very painful.

One would have to use a sharp knife."

"Niggghhhfff, nigghhhfff,' was repeated back to him from those nearest
with exposed bellies.  They waggled themselves from side to side.
"Skraaabbb blufisss."

"Well, I suppose they'd know .  .  .  Oldive said and, taking out his
belt knife, tested its edge.  "Sharp enough, I'll hope."

He leaned over the side of the boat.  Before any of the seamen could
warn them, the harpers and healers leaned over to watch the operation.
The boat, of course, rocked and spilled Master Oldive and Menolly into
the water.

"No, no, leave me, I'm fine.  I swim quite competently,' Oldive said,
batting at the hands stretched out to retrieve him.

"Ooooo, it's cold,' Menolly said but she also declined offers to drag
her back into the boat.  She did however slip off her boots and passed
them up to Sebell.  Then she took out her belt knife.

"Ah, is that how you do it?" she said as Oldive first sliced the head
off the fish, with a deft cutting movement, removed the clinging body,
and then pried out the head's sucker, leaving only a tiny hole.  The
sucker was of remarkable length since it had had to penetrate through
the layers of blubber to tap a vein.

Just as Oldive dealt with his first patient, another dolphin nosed
through its fellows, clicking in such an authoritative tone, the others
parted for it.

"You really should wait your turn,' Oldive said in a gently chiding
tone.

The dolphin smiled and turned its head this way and that as the bright
black eyes fixed themselves on the healer.

"Bad back!" the creature said quite plainly.

"My goodness!" The remark caused a brief silence, almost an appalled one
that a sea creature would make such a statement.

Oldive held out his hand to the creature's nose as if absolving it from
mentioning what few did.  "How could you know?" Oldive asked.  Despite
his wetting, the hump was not that apparent under his carefully
contrived shirt and the creature had only observed him from the front.

"Seeee.  Seee.  I Bit, Oll-deeeve medick."

"I don't really believe what I'm hearing,' Curran murmured to Menolly.
"And it knew about " He closed his lips.  "How could it see?"

"Perhaps what Persellan said about the creatures' .  Oldive looked at
Menolly for the word.

"Sonar .  .  .  " she supplied.

"Is very true.  Proof positive,' and because Oldive appeared cheerful
about the matter, everyone began to relax.  "What is it?

This sonar?"

Menolly recollected the exact phrasing she'd had from Alemi.

"Sonar.  Dolphins can emit high frequency sounds and register the
vibrations coming back to their ears.  That's how they navigate in the
sea and send messages long distance to other dolphins.  Somehow they can
use it on human bodies as well."

"If this Bit could see my hump through all my clothes, I'm willing to
believe.  Bit, do you wish me to skraabbb your blufisss?"

"Now, see here, Master Oldive,' began one of the medics who had been
upset to see his master in the water, "there are more and more coming.
You had better come out of the water.  There are too many for you to do
them."

"I've counted forty so far,' Sebell said, relieved and gratified.

"Pleeesss, Ol-deeve.  Many many blufiss."

"Skraabbb blufisss,' the cry went up from the many crowding in.

"I can really only do one more today,' Oldive said.  "The water is very
cold." His teeth were beginning to chatter and the others kept begging
him to come back into the boat and be dried off.

Menolly's teeth began to chatter too.  "Look, we are humans, not
dolphins.  But there are enough in this boat to remove any more
parasites those dolphins have.  Those we don't do today, we can do
tomorrow.  All right?"

"Rigggh.  Rigggh,' was the enthusiastic delphinic response.

The humans were not quite as pleased by her offer.  When she insisted
that Oldive re-enter the boat with her, and blankets were brought for
them, she found willing enough hands to assist.

Over the next few hours of this auspicious meeting, most of the humans
in the boat ignored their wet clothing although they were unable to
attend to all the dolphins who applied for that service.  When Sebell
remarked that Bit and Inka who had a dark splotch like a cap on her
head, seemed to have some authority over the pods, he, Menolly and
Sebell managed to explain to the newcomers that they should return the
next day.

"When the sun comes up, Menolly said, using the hand signals for "next
day'.  "More blufiss cull.  Understand?"

Squeeings and clickings, as well as some happy acrobatics answered her,
and the press of dolphin bodies about the boat eased.  They were later
to learn that Bit was one of the oldest dolphins in the nearby seas.
Certainly she seemed to understand more and certainly appeared to be the
most respected member of the pod.  Bit taught the young calves and sent
the smartest ones to the Great Whirlpool to The Tillek.  At first the
use of that name confused the two harpers.  Gradually they realized that
The Tillek meant the oldest and wisest dolphin who was evidently the
repository of all marine knowledge the way harpers were for humans.

When Sebell and Menolly asked if they would ever meet The Tillek, Bit
said she would ask.  The Tillek was known to be very pleased with the
mans.

"The Tillek is wo-mans, Bit said, giving them a long stare with her very
bright and intelligent eyes.  "Best, biggest, wisest.

"I'm sure she is,' Menolly said and proceeded to ask Bit detailed
questions of what dolphins learned from The Tillek.

"T'e Tillek sing too,' Bit remarked, her lower jaw dropped in what was
the most expansive dolphin grin they had yet seen.

"I guess that settles me,' Menolly told Sebell, grinning.  About then
she noticed that most of the people on the boat were holding what looked
like two-way conversations with separate dolphins.

The cold of twilight, augmented by a sharp southern wind, forced the
humans out of the boat but with many promises to continue the contact
the next day, and every day.

"Oooo ring bell.  Oo-ee come.  Oo-ee promise.  "Member!  Oooo member!
Next sun more blufisss skraaabss." Though, by the fall of night, the
dolphin numbers had shrunk from the nearly hundred that had swum into
the pier in response to the Report peal, to twenty, they were as loath
to leave as the humans.

Curran urged all back into the warmth of his hold which was then crowded
with wet, oily and damp fleece smells, but the hot mulled wine that was
passed around was very welcome indeed.  The first mate, Texur, and three
of the other skippers then took folks back to their cotholds where they
could dry their clothing.  Robina clucked about, handing out fur rugs,
and fussing over Master Oldive.

"You'll be treating yourself if you don't have more of a care for your
own health, Master,' she said, scowling fiercely.  "And then where will
the rest of us be?" "Ringing the Dolphin Bell,' Oldive murmured in a
whisper that only Menolly and Sebell heard.  "There is so much, so much
more than we could have ever anticipated,' he went on in a slightly
louder but reflective tone of voice, "and we must learn all we can.  All
we can." His voice fell again and his hand nearly let go the cup of
mulled wine.  Menolly rescued it with a smile which he returned.
"Goodness, I don't think I've had this much outdoor activity in
decades."

"We should have had you conveyed a-dragonback, Menolly said anxiously.

"No, no, my dear, Oldive said, sitting up straighter.  "I'm always after
my patients to exercise and get fresh air and I never listen to my own
advice.  This has been a truly remarkable day."

"As soon as you're dried out enough, I'll send Beauty to Fort Weyr and
we'll get you home safe, sound and unwet,' Menolly said firmly and gave
him a stern look.

"Oh, no, not today.  I must wait over and speak with Bit again.

But let us send back Worlain and Fabry.  I have a particular patient in
the Hall at the moment.  Bit might just be able to see what ails her for
without some help, I fear she will die.  There is so much we don't
know,' he added, shaking his head.

"Now, Master,' Fabry said for he evidently had an ear cocked in his
Master's direction, "Mizlue's the last person to expose to a dolphin. In
the first places she'll be terrified

"She's also terrified of dying,' Oldive said crisply.

"But how will you transport her here?  The jolting of a gather wagon
would be too painful

"A dragon will oblige."

Fabry snorted.  "She'd be even more afraid of riding a dragon - if we
could get her astride one, than even the doll fin."

"Dolphin,' Sebell said in absent correction.

"Whatever,' Fabry said, glancing at the Master Harper with all the
arrogance some of the healers often displayed for other Crafts.

"If that Holder woman intends to live to see the grandchild she hopes
her daughter-in-law carries, then she'll obey my orders,' Oldive said
with a tinge of impatience in his usually serene voice.  He laid a
sensitive, thin-fingered hand on Fabry's arm and the stocky Journeyman
assumed an attentive stance.  "You will make the arrangements on your
return to the Hall, Fabry.  I know I can count on you but you are not to
forewarn her  "She'll want details.  She always wants details,' Fabry
said with a much put upon sigh.

"The sea, Fabry.  It is possible that a sea cure will help her, Oldive
said, one of his irresistible smiles lighting his gentle face and kind
eyes.

"A sea cure?" Fabry barked a laugh.

"A sea cure,' Oldive repeated, smiling back.

So Menolly despatched Beauty to Fort Weyr with a request for N'ton to
provide dragons for those returning that evening.

Though Menolly received a warm invitation from Robina to remain
overnight, too, she declined, anxious to return to her children.  Sebell
elected to remain with Oldive for a further meeting the next day with
the dolphins.  That left the question of the runner beasts they had
ridden down to the Hold but Curran said he'd have one of his holders
lead them back, laden with fish, in a few days.

Sebell gave Menolly a quick embrace when the dragons arrived.

"Now, don't spend all night composing, will you?"

"Much as I'd like to,' she said, hugging him fiercely, "the fresh air's
got me yawning, too.  I'm so glad that it all worked."

"Were you worried?" Sebell asked, looking down into her face with
searching eyes.

"Well, not exactly worried, but I certainly didn't expect the turn out!
I'll have to tell Alemi.  He'll be thrilled.  lt is too bad, though,'
Menolly added, uxoriously smoothing the wrinkles of a jacket only just
dried from the afternoon's soaking.

"What?"

"That so much else is happening to detract from the dolphins.

"Hmmm.  Yes, but we'll have the dolphins with us for the rest of our
lives on Pern Right now it is imperative that we follow Aivas' timetable
and rid us of Thread."

"You're right of course, Sebell.  The dolphins will be with us as they
have been with us all along.  I do hope Lessa doesn't mind."

"Why should she mind?" Sebell asked, holding his mate from him to peer
into her face.  She could come out with the most astonishing
observations.

"Well, you know how she was about fire-lizards!'

"Not yours, my love.  Just the undisciplined mob.  I'll brief Master
Robinton and he'll break it to her."

Chapter Eight

oll fins?" Lessa demanded, her eyebrows raising in black arcs of
astonishment.  She stared at Alemi, glared fiercely until Master Harper
Robinton laughed at her.

"Dolphins, Lessa." Adroitly he corrected her pronunciation.

"They have been mentioned.  They came with the original settlers and
have been happily plying the seas, saving lives when they could, and
waiting until humans remembered them.  Aivas is very interested in
reestablishing the association."

She blinked at the Harper.  "Well, I suppose I do remember some mention
of the sea creatures, but there's been so much else going on "And her
tone chided him for bringing up a subject which she plainly considered
irrelevant and immaterial.

"They've been around longer than dragons,' he said teasingly.

"And they're proving far more useful than, say, the fire-lizards." He
shot her a wicked glance for her well-known disgruntlement with
fire-lizards pestering her gold dragon, Ramoth.

Lessa awarded him a very sour look until she caught sight of Ramoth,
splashing in the waters of Cove Hold, her bathing assisted by wild and
tame fire-lizards.

"The dragons that have met them seem to like them, Lessa,' Alemi said,
taking his cue from the Harper nd not letting himself be intimidated by
the diminutive but forceful Weyrwoman of Benden.

"Which ones?"

"First, Gadareth, the bronze of young T'lion from Eastern Weyr.  He was
conveying me the day I inadvertently summoned the Monaco Bay pod." She
accepted that with a flick of her fingers so Alemi went on.  "Master
Oldive had a very puzzling patient which the dolphins at Fort Sea Hold
diagnosed as having an internal growth in the belly.

"And that caused enough problems with his Hall,' she said dryly.  "I
really don't like the idea of cutting into human bodies." She gave a
little shudder.

"No more than when a child is hard to birth, Alemi said, knowing that
Lessa had had to have that surgery.  Probably why she disliked intrusive
operations.  "The woman's recovering and most grateful.  However,' and
he went on briskly, having noticed her resistance, "the dolphins are
certainly proving invaluable assets to my Craft."

"I did hear Master Idarolan on the subject but now is not the time to go
off half-cocked,' she said.  "We must not let anything interfere with
Aivas' program.

"No more will the dolphins,' Robinton said soothingly.  "I've met one or
two and they are charming.  It's so nice to see creatures smiling all
the time."

Lessa's glare intensified and then, abruptly, she burst out laughing. "I
have been a grouch, haven't I?"

"Indeed you have,' Robinton said as cheerfully as any dolphin.

"You should meet a few.  They all have names.

"Sea creatures with names?" Lessa exclaimed and her frown returned. That
the dragons knew their own names at birth was an indisputable mark of
their self-awareness and intelligence.

To hear that the dolphins also had names smacked of heresy to the
Weyrwoman.

"Each calf is named as it's born, I'm told, Alemi hastily explained.
Aivas said those names are variations on the names of the original
dolphins.  They have traditions, too, you see.

"I suppose the next thing will be the formation of yet another Craft
Hall to take care of dolphins."

"They seem to take very good care of themselves, my dear, Robinton said,
"if they've survived on their own in our seas all this while."

"Hmmm, yes, well.  I don't want anything to detract from the priorities
Aivas has set us."

"This won't,' Alemi said with such conviction that he won a smile from
her.

She rose then.  "If that's all today?" she asked Master Robinton.

He rose, too, moving stiffly and that gave Lessa a pang of concern for
her valued friend.  He'd never been quite as vigorous - though he
protested constantly that he was well since the heart attack he'd
suffered at Ista Weyr.  All this fuss with Aivas and the discoveries at
Landing were not at all the sort of stimulation he needed.  And yet .
"There're several very engaging fellows out in the Cove,' Robinton said,
gesturing toward the beautifully colored waters of his bay.

She made a disgruntled noise, dismissing the notion.  "I've more than
enough to do as it is.  And far more "visitors" to meet and sort out
than I can comfortably deal with." She saw the disappointment on the
Master Harper's face and laid a kind hand on his arm.  "Once we've
finished Aivas' grand scheme, I promise you I'll make time to meet these
doll dolphins of yours.

"Grand!  You'll love the games they play.."

"Games?" Once more Lessa's frown returned.

"Games can be as necessary as work, Lessa,' Robinton said gently.  "You
don't take enough time for yourself."

"I don't have enough time for what I have to do, much less myself,' she
said, but she gave him an encouraging smile and left the cool, shady
comfort of Cove Hold for the midday heat.

Ramoth waded out of the water to meet her.  The sea creatures know where
to scratch my belly just where it itches, she told her rider.

"They do?" Lessa looked out at the Cove waters where these dolphins were
leaping and diving about her dragon as easily as tumblers did at a
gather.  They did have smiles on their faces.

"They were born that way,' she told herself.  "C'mon, Ramoth, we've to
see if another holding is feasible below the others on the Jordan
River,' she said as she stepped up to Ramoth's neck.  The dragon had not
completely immersed herself, since she knew they'd have to go between
and Lessa would not like sitting on damp hide.

She'd been trying to find time to make this inspection for some weeks
but something more urgent always came up.  Not that allocating lands to
properly trained northerners from overcrowded holds wasn't also urgent.
It was a matter of priorities.  Since the Jordan River was so close to
Landing, they had been able to explore it sufficiently - the ruins of
the Ancients' Stakeholds were fascinating - to release holdings: none as
large as the original but respectable properties.  Sometimes one had to
wait until there were sufficient representatives of each of the Craft
Halls to provide self-sufficiency within each new holding.

And at least one journeyman or woman healer who could tend the needs of
several holds.  People had also to be trained to recognize the dangers
in this wilderness.

Back in Cove Hold, Alemi was berating himself for not mentioning the
newest job which Jayge had suggested for the dolphins.

The Paradise River Holder had been furious over the recent invasion of
his Holding.  He was not the least bit mollified to know that he wasn't
the only one of the dozen confirmed holds along the coast to suffer such
depredations.  He didn't want any more!  So he asked Alemi to find out
if the dolphins could patrol the waters off his Holding and warn of any
more unauthorized landings.

"For a pail of fish, they'd be delighted to, Alemi had reported to the
Holder after he had explained this new work to the pod.

"Good ships and bad ships,' Afo had told him.

"The bad ships never have fish for dolphins?" Alemi asked grinning.

"You right!  Bad ships smell, leak "n' leave badness in our water.  Not
nice." She squirted from her blow hole to emphasize her distaste.

Alemi decided that was a fair enough measure of identification since
invariably those masters willing to transport unauthorized passengers
were men who would do anything for a few marks.

Well, a good heavy sack of marks, Alemi amended.  The men who had tried
to land on Paradise Holding had paid a substantial amount to the captain
to sail them south.  The ship had not been in very seaworthy condition,
its holds wet and dank, sails and hull patched, its bilges spewing
wastes into the sea.

"As bad as the Igen caves,' one man had said in disgust.

"With all this land down here, why can't we have some?" he had demanded
bitterly.

"You can if you do it in the proper fashion,' Jayge had told him.

"Ha!  Dragonriders're keeping the best parts for themselves,' but there
was a wistful envy in his eyes as he looked over the fine situation of
Paradise River.

"I'm no dragonrider and I hold this proper, with neighbors further down
the river who've proved up their lands.

"And paid a great sack of marks to get it, like as not."

"No, they did not,' Jayge snapped back.  "They applied and with the
required number of Craft Halls among "em.  That's what's required and,
if you lived here, you'd know that this Southern Continent's not easy
just because it's warm."

Jayge had walked off then, scowling deeply, Alemi following him.
Although Alemi knew that Jayge and Aramina had been shipwrecked, they
had proved the Hold long before they had been found by Piemur.  He also
knew that he'd been very lucky to be asked to start a Fishman's Hold at
Paradise River and he certainly knew the dreadful conditions of the
Holdless, crammed into the caves at Igen and other even less salubrious
places in the north.  He was also now aware that settlements were being
established where ruins indicated that the Ancients had had holdings.

Lord Toric had accepted quite a large number of those wishing to
immigrate south - even before the Council of Lords Holder and the Benden
Weyrleaders had formalized the ways such settlements could be allowed.
Toric had been choosy, preferring men and women who were proven hard
workers and preferably at least of journeyman status in their Craft. The
iron-handed Lord of Southern did not suffer fools and had one incident
with renegades trying to settle the big island that happened to be part
of his Holding.  He had tried to get dragonriders to help him flush the
squatters out but had had no luck there.  That was when the policy of
non-interference from the Weyrs had been reinforced a few Turns back by
the Benden Weyrleaders.

Alemi had approved.  The dragonriders must be above partisan leanings,
no matter what hold or hall they had been born in.

But, even as he helped Jayge flush the intruders out, he had thought how
much easier it would have been with dragons a-loft to "encourage' the
men to surrender without bloodshed.

Among the few people to know it, Alemi was aware that the dragonriders
intended that they would have first choice of the lands in the Southern
Continent.  A stray remark by Master Idarolan had set his thinking in
that direction and nothing had happened to disabuse him of the notion.
It stood to reason that, once Thread no longer fell on Pern the
dragonriders ought to have some reward for their long service to Hall
and Hold and what better one than their own holds where they wanted to
live.

As a Craft Master, Alemi undoubtedly entertained a slightly different
opinion to that held by the Lords Holder who could well feel that they
should have the disposition of land, no matter where it was.  Master
Idarolan had remarked that there was far too much open land to bring
folks to blows over who had what and how much.  As he'd circumnavigated
the Southern Continent, the Master Fishman certainly had a good idea of
what vast expanses of land were available.

On the other hand, fishmen needed only enough land to tie up their ships
in a safe harbor and sell their catches.  More would be greedy.  Alemi
did not approve of being greedy.

"Well,' murmured the Master Harper, bringing Alemi back to the present,
"that went off better than I expected.  I adore Lessa of Benden Weyr but
she tends to be say, a bit too obsessed with draconic prestige.

"Shouldn't she be?" Alemi asked, startled.

"Yes, of course, she should,' Master Robinton said quickly.

"And she behaves as she should as Weyrwoman.  But occasionally, she does
not consider other matters in quite the light you and I would.  Now,
tell me about this dolphin sea watch you wanted to set up to guard
against more intruders?"

"I should have told the Weyrwoman about that

"Oh, no, I don't think that was necessary or even a sound idea,'
Robinton said, smiling slyly.  "Let her get accustomed to the idea of
dolphin intelligence first.  Then spring this further evidence of their
ingenuity on her.  Don't you think?"

"If you say so,' Alemi replied, not totally convinced.

"The Paradise River pod is organized now to repel intruders?"

"Yes, and I believe that T'gellan at Eastern Weyr has had young T'lion
initiate a similar watch along that coastline.

Although, and now Alemi grinned, "I think the Weyr Healer is doing as
much work with the dolphins as T'lion."

"Yes, tell me about that,' Robinton said, pouring wine for both of them
and gesturing Alemi to sit beside him in the cool shade of the wide
porch that surrounded Cove Hold.  "They actually come to be treated by a
human?"

Inside other residents were preparing a light midday meal.

Cove Hold had a changing population among the archivists and harpers who
were organizing the vast amount of information which Aivas was
constantly producing.  It was unusual for there to be so few people
demanding Master Robinton's attention.

D'ram and Lytol who were his companions in the lovely Hold were busy at
Landing.

"Yes, they do,' Alemi said.  "A bell can summon humans as well as
dolphins." He had put a good long sturdy chain on the bell at Paradise
Head so that it hung well down into the water by the float for the
dolphins to pull to summon him.

Though it was usually one of the children who ran to answer the
dolphins' peal.  He was as often approached while he was at sea by "his'
pod members.

"And they ring the bell in this report sequence you mentioned?" Robinton
was clearly fascinated.

"And keep ringing until someone comes, Alemi said, with a twisty grin
since he'd been roused out of his bed a time or two.  Still, the
occasions have been emergencies.  Once, wouldbe settlers from the North
being overturned in their totally inadequate skiff, and the other time a
dolphin displayed a nasty gash.  Temma had sewn it up as neatly as a
healer could have.  The dolphins had been very grateful.  Aivas very
kindly printed out medical information for any healers who encounter
dolphins.

He paused.  "I remember once finding six dolphins dead in a cove up
Nerat way.  We never did know what had affected them because there
weren't any visible marks.  Dolphins can get just as sick as humans and
with the same sorts of problems, with digestion and lungs and hearts and
kidneys and livers.

"Really?" The Harper regarded Alemi with surprise.  "One never thinks of
fish excuse me, and he corrected himself before Alemi dared to, "mammals
.  as being subject to the frailties that beset human flesh.  What on
earth would cause a heart attack in a dolphin?"

Alemi shrugged.  "Stress, physical exertion, even birth defect,
according to the report." Then Alemi remembered that stress and physical
exertion had retired Master Robinton well before the man had been ready
to step down.  He stole a nervous look at the Harper who was apparently
considering the information he'd been given.

"Six heart attacks at the same time?" he asked, surprised.

"No, that incident had to be caused by something else.  Aivas' report
mentioned "beachings" were not uncommon on old Earth and were thought to
have been caused by polluted waters that poisoned the dolphins.  But our
waters are clean and clear."

"And they will stay that way!" Master Robinton said with unexpected
vigor.  "With Aivas to guide us we shall not repeat the mistakes our
forebears made on their world." He paused a beat and then went on with a
wry grin.  "At least not the same ones and for the same reason.  We can
- perhaps - be grateful that what the Ancients had, Pern's resources
will not provide.  That will be our saving."

"Oh?" Alemi wasn't above a little prompting.

Master Robinton's mobile face lit with a knowing smile.

"Despite all we have endured since the Dawn Sisters took their orbit
above us, this world has stayed remarkably well in the parameters set
out by the colony founders.  Of course, we couldn't know that we were
abiding by those precepts,' and he grinned roguishly at Alemi, "but the
fact of the matter is that we did keep to just the technology needed to
survive.  Once the threat of Thread is abolished, we can improve the
quality of our lives and still remain within those precepts: a world
that does not require as much of the sophisticated doodads and
technology that so obsessed our ancestors.  We'll be the better for it.,
"And the Weyrs?" Alemi was burning to ask that.

Robinton's smile abated but his expression was more pensive than
anxious.  "They will, of course, find a new level for themselves but I
sincerely doubt that dragons will disappear because Thread does."

His smile returned, slightly mysterious as if he had information he
would not impart to Alemi, which was fair enough, the Master Fishman
thought.  It was comforting enough to be reassured by the Master Harper,
however circumspectly.

Alemi was loath to leave the porch and the easy companionship which
emanated from Master Robinton but he was also aware that he couldn't
justify monopolizing the man's attention for much longer that morning.
There were so many other demands on the Harper's time and his reserves
of energy.  Alemi felt much pride at being awarded as much of an
interview as he had.

T'lion was, perhaps, a little indignant about being constantly warned by
H'mar as Weyrling Master not to neglect his dragon for his new
enthusiasm, the dolphins.  But he kept his tongue in his mouth,
especially when Gadareth protested vehemently to him, and more
importantly to bronze Janereth, that he was not for a moment being
neglected and the dolphins were even helping keep him clean.  Most
evenings, he was the rider assigned to collect the Paradise River
Harper, Boskoney, and bring him to his work at Admin.

He liked Boskoney so the task was no sinecure.  It also meant he could
arrive a little early and spend a few moments getting to know the
Paradise River pod, Kib, Afo, and exchange greetings from Natua, Tana
and Boojie.  Sometimes he encountered Alemi, thanking the pod for good
fishing or warnings on weather.

"The pod's also sweep-swimming,' Alemi said, grinning for altering the
Weyr term, "along the Paradise Holding to prevent any more intrusions.
That way we won't compromise you, T'lion, though I assure you we were
very grateful to you for your help two months back."

T'lion shrugged and grinned.  "Just so long as my Weyrleaders don't hear
about it."

"Of course not."

Then T'lion frowned a bit.  "But that only protects you,' and he waved
to the east.  "There's an awful lot of unpatrolled coast from here to
Southern Hold."

Now it was Alemi's turn to shrug.  "Well, that's not my problem.  Not
that I won't mention - where it will matter - if in my sailing I happen
to see other incursions.

"There's such a lot of land here,' T'lion said, shaking his head slowly
at the immensity.

Lad, you can't worry about everything, though it's a credit to you that
you take additional responsibility.  Now, help me feed these fish
faces."

"Sssh,' and T'lion made an exaggerated gesture of dismay at the word.
"They don't like being called and he mouthed the terrible word.

Alemi laughed.  "I have dispensation.  I'm a Fishman." And he formally
introduced T'lion.

"No need,' Kib told him, raising his head up out of the water.

"Tana "n' Natua tell.  Good man, dragonrider."

"Thanks,' T'lion said, rather pleased to be acknowledged so warmly.

"Stitch Boojie,' and Kib ducked his nose in the water and flicked it at
T'lion.

"I'll get my death of a cold talking to dolphins,' T'lion said, wringing
the front of his sopping shirt.  "Oh, well, I've learned to carry a
spare and he didn't get my jacket."

"I've learned to not wear a thing,' Alemi remarked with an understanding
grin, his tanned body bare to the folded clout so many wore in the hot
season.  "So where's tomorrow's fish, Afo?"

Afo gave the information, which included sonar "readings'.

"They know where the school is but the only way they can express that to
me is to give me the return time of their sonar responses,' Alemi said,
"I'm getting good at figuring distances that way."

"That's that's amazing,' T'lion said, awed.

"Not as much as you getting Boojie stitched.  Oh,' and Alemi grinned at
T'lion's surprise, "we heard all about it.

They can pass quite a bit of information around - if they feel like it."

"Dragons are still the most responsible." T'lion said, proudly glancing
up at his splendid bronze.

"Don't deny that for a moment, lad.  Each to his own purpose on Pern."

"Which reminds me, I'll be late collecting Harper Boskoney, and T'lion
clambered back up the ladder to the pier, tugging free his wet shirt as
he made his way to his dragon.  He finished changing to the dry one from
his pack as Gadareth flew the short distance.

When he and Gadareth glided in to land in front of Boskoney's cothold,
the harper peered around the door at them.

"Be a moment,' he called.

T'lion knew these harper "moments' and laid his shirt out on the nearby
bush to dry, hunkering down to lean back against Gadareth's haunch to
wait.

A darkly tanned youngster came out and, grinning to see a dragon there,
came confidently up to him.

"You must be T'lion and this is Gadareth." The boy reached a hand up to
the dragon's muzzle.  Gadareth touched it in polite greeting.  "Boskoney
said you'd come to collect him so I could run along now."

"And you are?" T'lion asked, amused at the boy's poise.  He couldn't be
more than seven Turns.

"I'm Readis, son of Holders Jayge and Aramina.  I wash Ruth, Lord
Jaxom's dragon whenever he comes to visit.  Can I wash Gadareth sometime
too?" Then he eyed the bulk of the bronze who had not yet reached his
full stature.  "There's a lot more of him than Ruth but I could help.

T'lion laughed.  "You can, if we ever have a chance to stay long enough.
Generally, though, the dolphins help me wash Gadareth."

The boy's ogle-eyed reaction made T'lion laugh.

"You're speaking to dolphins'?"

It was T'lion's turn to be surprised: the boy not only knew that the
dolphins spoke but he pronounced their name correctly.

Have you spoken to dolphins'?" T'lion asked.  Maybe the boy answered the
Dolphin Bell for Alemi.  It would be a good task for a young lad and a
holder 5 son.

"Only the day they saved my life.  But Unclemi said they ask him how I'm
doing."

"They saved your life'?  Tell me how." Sometimes T'lion missed the
youngest of his brothers, Tikini, who had much the same ingenuousness
about him as this holder's son.  He and Tikini had been very close.

Just then Boskony came out of his cothold, sweat breaking out on his
forehead from the heavy flying jacket he was wearing.

You scoot on home now, Readis,' he said to the boy, "and let's get above
this heat, can we, T'lion?"

"I'll see you around, Readis,' T'lion called as he speedily mounted
Gadareth and then helped Boskony aboard.  Circling upwards away from the
sultry air of the steaming hold, T'lion saw the boy waving as long as he
could be seen.

Over the next several weeks, in the course of collecting the harper,
T'lion and Readis met again.  Readis invariably asked what was new with
his pod, and who was sick, and who had been cured, and T'lion was only
tOO glad to talk to someone who avidly soaked up his tales.  He hadn't
realized how he had bottled up his interest in the dolphins until he
began to talk to Readis who responded so enthusiastically, his eyes
sparkling, his whole body almost vibrating he was so intense.

"Look, you can speak to the dolphins again, if you want to,' T'lion told
Readis one day.

"I'm not "sposed to be near water alone,' Readis said.  "I promised."

"Well, if you're with me and Gadareth, you're scarcely alone.

Readis considered this, thoughtfully and wistfully, digging at the sand
with his bare toe.  "Yes, a dragonrider and a dragon would keep me my
promise." He gave T'lion a radiant grin.

"But where?" and his arm swept to the wide expanse of the river mouth.

"Oh, that's the easy part and very safe,' T'lion said.  "D'you know
where Master Alemi anchors?  Are you allowed to go that far?"

Readis nodded vigorously, bouncing the dark curls on his head, his eyes
solemn and his expression so eager it was hungry.

"You meet me there tomorrow afternoon, say, at the fourth hour, so we'd
have a whole one before I'm due to collect Master Boskoney.

"Oh, I will, I will, I will.  Thank you!' Begun innocently enough, the
afternoon sessions with the dolphins became a happy routine for them
both.  If his mother asked Readis "where have you been?" "who was with
you?", he could honestly reply that he was with T'lion and Gadareth. The
fact that he was also swimming with the dolphins off Alemi's float
simply was not mentioned.

T'lion was delighted not only with the boy's fearlessness in the water
and with the dolphins, but in how quickly Readis seemed to understand
their odd speech.  They, in turn, liked his high pitched young voice
and, having been warned by T'lion that the "calf' was young and must be
carefully handled, never swamped or roughed him up, even when Readis
dove under the water to swim with them.

 "You've got lungs like a dragon to stay under so long, T'lion said, one
afternoon when he had almost feared the boy had gone too deep, only to
have him and Afo's latest calf, Vina, burst out a good two dragon
lengths from the float.  "Don't do that to me again, Ready,' he shouted.
"Now come on in.  Take a breather!'

Laughing, Readis allowed Vina to tow him into the float.  He climbed up,
grinning and thoroughly pleased with himself.  "We got way far down but
not to the bottom.  Vina clicked it too far for us.  So we surfaced.
She's great to swim with."

"I can see why your folks want someone with you when you do swim."
T'lion said, still recovering from that long moment of fright.  "You can
promise me that you won't stay under so long again."

"Sure.  I promise.  But it was great fun.  You try it.  You can get ever
so much deeper with a dolphin!'

"I'm sure.  but next time, we'll do it together!  Promise?" Then Readis
looked irritably down at Afo who was pushing her nose at his foot.

"T'orn.  Bad t'orn,' she said and squeed urgently up at T'lion.

"Your foot hurting you'?"

Readis looked blankly at his friend, then down at the fi)ot.

Oh, now and then.  I stepped on somethin' but it doesn't hurt when I
swim.

"Lemme see.

Readis swirled on the float so he could obey and, while T'lion prodded
the strong, callused foot, he didn't strike a sore spot.

"Bad t'orn,' Afo insisted.

"Nothin's there, Afo,' Readis insisted and twisted so his face was on a
level with hers.  He reached out one hand and scratched her chin just
where she liked it.  "Nothin' hurts."

Afo ducked her head vigorously, scooping water at them with her nose.

"Maybe, Readis, you better show your fi)ot to your mother, or your Aunt
Temma.  She's Hold Healer, isn't she'?"

"Ah, it's nothin'.  Let's swim again

"No,' T'lion said so firmly that Readis knew better than to coax him.
"I've got to collect Boskoney."

"He's always late,' Readis said with good-humored scorn.

"That doesn't mean I shouldn't be on time.  C'mon now."

It so happened that that day either they were later than they should
have been or Boskoney was actually on time.  T'lion deposited Readis on
the ground and helped Boskoney up so he had no time to remind the boy to
get the foot seen to.  Dolphins had always proved right in such matters.

The next day he had to attend the Fall, delivering firestone sacks to
the fighting wings far out over the huge inland lake.

Then he was sent to collect Master Smiths attending one of the endless
discussions now held daily at Admin, so it was three days before he
resumed conveying Boskoney.  He arrived at Alemi's float, eager to see
Readis but the boy didn't come.

When T'lion and Gadareth landed to collect Boskoney, he asked the harper
if he'd seen the boy.

"No, he's ill.  Quite ill, I understand.

T'lion experienced a pang of fear.  Shard it!  Readis had promised to
see his Aunt Temma.

"Got one of those swift high fevers that kids his age so often have,'
Boskoney added, settling himself between the bronze's neck ridges.
"He'll be fine in a day or two.  Bright child."

"Yes, he is,' T'lion replied, his anxiety only partially abated.

A sister had died of one of those swift high fevers but she'd been
younger than Readis and not nearly as sturdy as the holder boy.

"Maybe a dolphin should look at him.  They're good at diagnosing."

Boskoney laughed, giving the young rider's shoulder a comforting pat.
"Oh, I don't think it's anywhere near critical enough for your friends,
T'lion, but it's nice of you to be concerned.

"I am.  He's like a brother to me."

"I'll tell him you were asking for him.

"Do.  Please."

The next day, T'lion went to the float and rang the bell, asking for Afo
when the first dolphin reported in.

"What kind of thorn was it in Ready's foot, Afo?" he asked urgently.

"Swim w'us,' Afo squeed, clicking in excitement.  "You not ring bell
three suns now.

"No, Readis is sick."

"Bad t'orn.  Told him.

"A thorn could cause him to have a fever?"

"Bad t'orn.  Sea t'orn, not land.  Badder.

"I'd better tell his mother, then,' T'lion said and promptly had
Gadareth fly him to the Holder's cottage.

There, he found not only the boy's parents, Aunt Temma, but the Master
Healer from Landing as well.  All looked anxious and the mother drawn
and haggard from sleeplessness.  Even Jayge showed the strain of
anxiety.

"I heard Readis was ill,' T'lion began.  nervously clutching his flying
cap.  "Anything I can do'?  The dolphins are good at telling what's
wrong with people, you know."

"Dolphins!" Aramina spat the word out.  "He's delirious about dolphins."
She turned her face up to Jayge.  "He can't possibly be reliving that
rescue, can he?"

She) afraid of dolphins, T'hon, Gadareth said.

Why shoulil she be?

She's just afraid of them for Readis.

That was when T'lion had his first inkling that he had perhaps done
wrong in taking the boy to Alemi's float.  But he'd been very careful
with him and the boy hadn't broken the promise he must obviously have
made his fearful mother.

The Master Healer gave T'lion a keen glance.  "You're the bronze rider
who's helped Persellan at Eastern Weyr?"

"Yes, master, T'lion, Gadareth's rider.

"You're kind to offer, dragonrider, but this is a child's fever.

More tenacious than they usually are, it's true, but nothing within the
problems which the dolphins can solve."

T'lion hesitated.  "Isn't he always running about the place,
bare-footed'?  I don't mean that as a criticism, Holder Aramina,' he
added hastily when he saw that she was bridling at his comment.  "I wish
I could,' and he gestured to his heavy boots in which his feet were
perspiring, "but I know how nasty thorns are and it would be so easy
"His limbs are swollen,' the Healer said slowly.

"Both legs, Aramina said with such an irritated glance in T'lion's
direction that he shrugged as if he regretted making the suggestion.

"But the right foot is unusually swollen " The Healer spoke on his way
down the wide corridor that led to the sleeping rooms and Aramina and
Temma hurried after him.

"I'd better go,' T'lion said to Jayge now that he'd done what he could.
"I'll come in again.  I collect Boskoney every day,' and he gestured
over his shoulder toward the cothold, looking anxiously at Temma and
Jayge.

"You're good to be concerned, dragonrider, Jayge said kindly though it
was obvious to T'lion that his ears were pricked toward the sickroom.

"Not at all.  Not at all, he's such a friendly lad, like my brother .  "
T'lion made a hasty retreat, more concerned than ever.  We didn't do
anything bad, did we, Gadareth?  He wanted to speak to the dolphins.  He
already had spoken to the dolphins.

But his mother was sure upset.

She hears dragons too much.  We are careful not to speak too loud.  it
upsets her.  Maybe dolphins upset her, too.

T'lion walked quickly across to Boskoney's cothold.  If he asked just
the right questions, maybe he'd find out what he needed to know.  But if
he had done wrong, then he'd have to admit it.  Or he'd be in real
trouble with T'gellan.  Being a dragonrider didn't save him from making
stupid mistakes some times.  But how could he have known?

"Yes, there was no way you would have known,' Boskoney said with a heavy
sigh when T'lion stumbled through his recital of events.  "And I don't
think you've done wrong exactly.  It's just unfortunate it's turned out
so badly.  You say, one of the dolphins "saw" a sea thorn in his foot
four days ago?" He sighed for they were both aware, being raised in the
tropics, how treacherous thorns could be in human flesh.  The harper
laid a reassuring hand on the young rider's shoulder.  "I'll do what I
can, lad.  And I've cancelled tonight's meeting.  They need me here
right now.  You go on.  Speak to your Weyrleader.  That's the best thing
to do now.  I'll find Alemi and tell him what you've told me."

The upshot of the matter was that T'lion and Gadareth were assigned
other duties and a blue weyrling and his rider conveyed Harper Boskoney
to and from Paradise River Hold.

A sevenday later Boskoney appeared at Eastern Weyr on his way to Landing
to tell the guilt-tormented bronze rider that Readis' fever had broken
and he would recover.  Out of respect for T'lion's feelings, the harper
did not mention that the poison had affected the boy's right leg,
knotting the tendons and he might never have full use of the limb.

"Alemi managed to insist that they take the boy to the dolphins and Afo
accurately identified the site of the thorn and the poison which had
travelled up to the knee by then.  it could have travelled all the way
to his heart, I'm told, and killed him."

T'lion sank to the hammock on his porch, head in hands.  "I should have
told them then!'

"Now, lad, don't take it so to heart.  You told me and I told them.

"Could .  .  .  I go see him?"

Kindly the harper shook his head.  "He's too weak to see anyone though
he asked Alemi to tell you why he hadn't been arnund.

T'lion groaned again.  "I I .  .  .  should have taken him right then to
the Hold Healer, right when Afo told us there was a bad thorn but I was
late to collect you

"And I was annoyed and rushed you off that day.  It's by no means all
your fault, T'lion, and you mustn't take it so hard.

And,' now the harper's tone lightened and T'lion saw he was smiling
wryly, "all the healers insist that Readis must swim every day to regain
tone in the leg muscles."

"They did?" Some of the heavy pressure in T'lion's chest lightened.

"it's the best chance he has to recover.

"What does his mother say to that?"

Boskoney's grin was even more ironic.  "She has had to agree to the
treatment.  It is the only way he'll walk again."

"Ohhhh!" T'lion buried his head in his hands again, shaking it from side
to side.  "He was like my brother

"Now, T'lion, enough of this guilt.  It was an unfortunate concatenation
of circumstances.  However, I may say unreservedly that Readis is
delighted.  He finds it no chore to have to associate with dolphins
daily.  I heard him tell his mother that he walks in water better than
he can on land!'

T'lion gave a rueful laugh.  "He would, wouldn't he?  He's such a brave
lad."

"He'll be fine.  You will be, too."

Chapter Nine

ver the next four Turns, while Readis earnestly exer cised his legs in
the warm waters of Paradise Head, entous events unfolded at Landing,
Benden Weyr, Cove Hold and Fort Hold. With advice and counsel from
Aivas, Weyrs, Halls and Holds combined their efforts with the technology
available from Aivas and altered the orbit of the Red Star so that it
would never again come close enough to Pern to threaten the planet with
Threadfall.  On the day that the explosion of the anti-matter engines of
the three colony ships was viewed through distance lenses, everyone on
Pern celebrated the end of Thread tyranny.  Only Thread did not stop
falling, a demonstrable fact which confused many, including Readis.

"Then why did you celebrate?" he asked his father, four days later when
Thread fell across Paradise River Hold.

"Because Thread will end - this is the last Pass.

"It is?  Harper says that we've had it for centuries and every time we
think it's going to stop - in a long Interval - it comes back anyhow."

Jayge grinned at his son, tall for his eleven Turns, and tried not to
glance down at the wasted right leg which cocked on tiptoe beside the
uninjured left foot.  He ruffled Readis' curly hair and thought instead
that it was unfair for the boys in the family to have the curls while
the two girls had straight hair.

"The dragonriders have gone to the Red Star and steered it away from
getting close enough to bring Thread to Pern ever again."

"How could they move a star?" Readis demanded.  "It's too big, even for
dragons.

"They used the engines from the Dawn Sisters.  They pulled the Star out
of an orbit that brings it too close to Pern Do you understand what I
mean?"

"Sure.  Harper's told us all about our star system.  He put a coconut
down for the sun and then walked all the way to the edge of the river to
put down a tiny pebble for Pern." Readis giggled.  "He said that's the
re-la-tive distances involved." Patently Readis could only repeat what
he had been told and did not quite comprehend the subtleties of the
explanation.  "Pern isn't as small as that pebble.  I know that!'

"You'll understand better as you grow up.

"Everyone's always saying that,' Readis replied disgustedly.

"You'll find it's true,' Jayge said, hearing an echo of his own boyish
voice.  "However, Boskoney has advised us to enrol you in the Landing
school."

"Huh?  And leave Paradise?" Readis was appalled at the very thought.

"Daytimes, six of a sevenday, with a break during the hot season.

"Daaad!'

"You, Kami, and Pardure are enrolled.  At that, Paradise River is
exceedingly lucky to gain three places out the twenty-five available to
special students

"You mean, because of my leg I have to go away?"

"There's not a thing wrong with Kami and Pardure, my young lad!" his
father said sternly.

Readis was not completely mollified.  He hated anyone making concessions
for him.  He only rode the small runner Lord Jaxom had trained and sent
especially for his use in getting about on land because Ruth had said
that he, the white dragon, had selected the beast for Readis who had
been so good about scrubbing his hide all these Turns.  The little
creature had made it possible for Readis to go wherever the other
youngsters of the Hold roamed: the boy was as good a rider as he was a
swimmer.

Aramina preferred him to use Delky, the runner: anything to keep him out
of the water and away from the dolphins.  She could not be convinced
that the dolphins were not responsible for his illness and subsequent
crippling.  It was Aramina who heard about the proposed special classes
to be held in the Admin building.  using the information machines which
were the legacy of Aivas.  Menolly had told Alemi who had not only
requested the concession for his eldest daughter but for Readis as well.

"How'll I get there?" Readis demanded of his father, sticking his chin
out almost impertinently.

"A-dragonback.  I trust you won't mind that.  Jayge knew that the
transport might be the final persuader.

"Every day?" Readis brightened considerably.  "We'd have to ride a
dragon every morning and every evening?" He hoped that T'lion and
Gadareth would do the conveying.  He'd never been able to convince his
mother that T'lion wasn't in some way responsible for his illness.  He'd
told her time and again that T'Iion had told him, twice, to go see Temma
for the thorn and he'd forgotten.  So his illness, and his bad leg, were
not T'lion's fault, but his.  He heard what his father was saying then.

"This is a special dispensation for the three of you, until a dormitory
can be set up for the pupils."

"A-dragonback twice a day?" Readis did not hear that qualifier, his eyes
shining with the prospect of riding dragons on a regular basis.

"Only as long as you study hard enough to deserve the honour,' his
father said sternly.

Boskoney's report listed Readis as his top student over Kami and the
studious Pardure, Journeyman Weaver Parren's eldest.

While Pardure studied hard for his knowledge, everything seemed to come
easily to Readis who would benefit from the challenge of a more
structured learning climate.  Competition for the few places available
had been intense but Master Robinton, whose scheme this was, had
insisted that the students be harper-recommended and they had to be
proportionately drawn from Weyr, Hall and Hold.

Master Robinton wanted to be sure this current generation of young
people grew up, trained from an early age to absorb and utilize the vast
amount of knowledge available through Aivas.

He had started special classes with just a few suitable pupils from the
Landing residents and each Turn had increased the size of the classes.
Aivas had agreed, remarking that it would be easier to train youngsters
up - since they would have no mis-information to be corrected - than to
retrain men and women who would have to alter life-long habits of
thinking and learning.  Now that the main push of everyone's efforts -
the Red Star project - was accomplished, the Halls could concentrate on
spreading new devices that would raise living standards all across Pern.
Once power could be generated in Holds, Halls and Weyrs, the special
equipment Aivas had taught people how to use could be extended
throughout the planet, instead of centralized at Landing.

Wind and tide generators were being studied by Jayge and his Craft Hall
residents to see which would suit their needs best.

Journeyman Parren could produce quantities on a powered loom of the
coveted fabrics he made from the local fibre plants.  Better lights
would be a tremendous help in every household, and the fans which would
stir air during the hot season would make life more bearable.  Other
applications of power generation were being studied, especially the
manufacture of ice so the fish catches would remain fresher longer.
Alemi was very keen for that amenity.

Jayge found some of the concepts difficult to understand so he was
delighted that Readis would have the opportunity to start off, absorbing
the new wonders at a better "learning' age.

Such training would also make the boy more acceptable to the Council of
Holders when it came time for him to be confirmed in his Holding.  In
the meantime, Jayge was determined to improve the Hold and its
resources.  The basics of figuring, reading and scripting taught by
harpers along with traditional ballads and songs was well enough for
those who would be apprenticed to a craft but a holder needed a broader,
overall view.  Jayge had learned how to hold through trial and error, to
survive when he and Aramina had been shipwrecked on this coast, but he
wanted more for his sons and daughters.

Readis was all set for his session at school the following morning, his
knapsack packed and he had a flying jacket and cap to protect him
between when a fire-lizard came screaming in to land on the porch.  He
heard its distressed cry at the same time as his family and reached the
porch just as his father was unfastening the message tube the
fire-lizard wore.

As soon as he released it, the little creature, still desperately
keening, flitted out and was gone, followed by the resident fair who
picked up its tormented cry.

"No, no, nonono, Jayge said, shaking his head in denial as he scanned
the message.  "No.  He can't be!'

"What's the matter, Dad?" Readis asked.  He'd never seen such a look of
anguish on his father's face.

Jayge bowed his head to his chest and slumped against the railing,
covering his eyes with one hand while the other held the message; a
narrow strip of paper.

"Dad?" Readis felt the first twinge of panic.  Something terrible had
happened.  "Dad?" Readis needed to be reassured.

"Readis, go tell Boskoney to come.  Take Delky,' and he gestured toward
the little runner, standing hipshotten in the shade at the corner of the
house.

As Readis vaulted to her back, he looked over his shoulder and saw his
father, sagging and motionless.  He dug his heels into the willing
little beast's ribs and she was away in a flash.

Readis really liked having Delky to ride on land but it wasn't a patch
on swimming with Kib or Afo.  For all she was patient and willing, Delky
couldn't talk to him, not as the dolphins and the dragons did so he
found her distinctly lacking.  Even fire-lizards gave you some sort of
reaction.  Delky only did what she was asked to do.  Still, she was
useful.  He sat back on her rump and, as she'd been trained, she came to
a complete halt, showering sand into the harper's open doorway.

"What's the rush now, m'lad?" Boskoney asked, coming to the door.

"Dad wants you.  Urgent.  Fire-lizard brought a message and it's upset
him."

"It has?"

Readis gestured for Boskoney to mount behind him, though the harper's
legs would catch any bushes on the way back.

Obedient and uncomplaining, Delky swivelled neatly on her hindquarters
and cantered back as easily with her double burden as she had with only
Readis' light body.

"What sort of message?" Boskoney demanded, reaching through Readis' arms
to clutch Delky's mane.

"He didn't say.  Just told me to get you.

"He hasn't moved a muscle since I left,' Readis muttered to Boskoney as
the harper dismounted at the porch steps.  Readis was really worried
now.  Bad news didn't often trouble Paradise River.  When something did
go wrong, his father was more apt to curse and pace and wave his arms
about, but he was never silent and all drawn in on himself like now.

Hearing the harper's step, Jayge reached the message strip in his
direction.  In the act of stepping up, the harper halted, foot held
midair a long moment before he sort of turned and sank to the top step,
head in his hands and his shoulders shaking.  That was too much for
Readis.  He kneed Delky around the house to the kitchen door where his
mother was preparing their supper.

"Mother,' Readis said, edging into the house and touching her arm, "I
think you better go see what's wrong with Father."

"What could be wrong with your father, dear?" she asked in a voice that
suddenly seemed too loud to Readis.

"He got some bad news and sent me for Boskoney.  Now he's sitting on the
porch and .  .  .  What would make a harper cry, mother?"

Aramina shot her son a startled look before she took the heavy pan off
the fire and half ran to the front of the house.  Readis moved after her
in the touch-toe/step gait he had adopted to get him places almost as
quickly as anyone else on two good feet.

Before he could reach the porch, he heard his mother crying.

not loudly as she had when she learned of Granddad's death but softly as
if the pain inside her was unbearable.  She had her arms about Jayge and
was comforting him even as she wept.

The scene was too much for Readis and he retraced his steps, vaulted up
on Delky's back again and raced her toward the cluster of cotholds down
the river bank.

"I think you better get up to the hold, Aunt Temma, Uncle Nazer.  You,
too, Uncle Swacky,' he added when the burly figure of the grizzled old
soldier appeared in the doorway.  "I don't know what's happened but it's
made Dad, Mother and Boskoney cry." He didn't wait to see if they
followed but turned Delky around again and had her galloping past the
tableau on his porch and on to Alemi's hold.  He brought Alemi back with
him on Delky, leaving Kitrin and the other fishmen to follow on foot.

When Alemi arrived, Temma, Nazer, Swacky, Parren and his wife and oldest
daughter were standing about, weeping, too.  The strip of paper was
passed to Alemi who began to breathe deeply and swallow while tears
crept down his cheeks.

Seeing his chance, Readis turned Unclemi's hand toward him so he could
read this awful message.

"Master Robinton and Zair have died.  Aivas, too." The stark words did
not immediately make sense to him.  Master Robinton couldn't die.
Everyone needed him.  Readis knew that.  And how could a machine die? He
knew that Aivas was a machine, a very intelligent machine, who knew a
great deal but still a machine.

Machines didn't die, they just .  .  .  just ran down?  Wore out?

Suddenly the air was full of fire-lizards, all of them uttering the most
incredible keening noise, sort of edgy and hurting the ears: sounds he'd
never heard them make ever before in his life.  They went diving about
the air, swooping down to the roof of the hold, and then up again,
unable to settle, all the time making that dreadful noise.

"What's the matter?  My fire-lizard is terribly upset, cried Lur, one of
the landsmen, who came running up to the main hold.

Behind him on the path, Readis could see other holders and crafters
making their way here, attracted by the fire-lizards' unusual behavior.
Alemi had slipped off Delky and joined those mourning on the porch so
Readis kneed his runner to meet Lur, showing him the message.  Lur's
face went very pale under his tan and he collapsed against the nearest
tree, bawling in great sobs.  So Readis pointed Delky on down the path,
showing everyone the message as he reached them.  Soon everyone had
congregated around the porch, weeping and immersed in this grief.  Their
children, not quite understanding the terrible loss, assembled a little
away from the adults, confused by the atmosphere and the sight of their
grieving parents.

It was the strangest evening Readis ever lived through.  He watched as
his father took a long time to coax Tork, his firelizard, to come to him
so he could send off a message.  Some of the women followed his mother
into the house and they came back with wine.  Another group went back to
their houses and brought food, not that anyone other than the hungriest
of the little kids ate much.

When the sun set, no-one seemed inclined to go home.  The harper was
still on the steps, turning a half-empty wine glass in his hands .  .  .
Aramina or Jayge kept filling it.  Readis noticed that tears kept
dropping off his jaw and Boskoney made no move to dry them.  Well, he
was a harper and he would have been taught by Master Robinton so you
could understand his grieving for the death of his Master.  Readis
thought it even sadder that the Master Harper's fire-lizard had died at
the same time.  That sort of loyalty brought a lump to his throat - even
thinking that Delky, Kib or Afo might die along with him, should he die
soon.

He nearly had the time he'd been so sick with the thorn poison in his
foot.  He knew that dragons died when their riders did but no-one who
had a fire-lizard had died in Paradise River so he wasn't sure about
their reaction.  Then he realized that the grown-ups on the lawn were
talking softly among themselves.

Kami thought they should get some glowbaskets.  So Readis led her and
Pardure who offered to help to where they kept them and set enough out
so that this remarkable scene was lit.

Many Turns later, Readis remembered that night and the shadows cast on
familiar faces all saddened by their loss.  He remembered that, although
there had been many skins of wine opened, and everyone was drinking,
no-one got merry from the wine.  There was no singing which was most
unusual for any group with a harper in the center of it.  Readis
wondered as the night got later and later why no-one was chasing him and
the other youngsters off to their beds.  The littlest ones fell asleep
where they were, on a parent's lap or on the ground beside them.
Eventually he got up and collected covers for Aranya, Kami and her
sisters and himself and Pardure and Anskono: his baby brother was
sleeping in the hammock on the porch with their mother.

He tried to stay awake, to see what staying up all night was like, but
the soft murmur of sad voices lulled him to sleep.

When he woke the next morning, he was in his own bed.

Checking outside, he saw that a fair number of people had slept the
night on the grass.  Boskoney occupied the hammock, Aramina's prized rug
covering him.  This was the day Readis was supposed to start school but
he knew it wouldn't start today.  The school had been Master Robinton's
idea.  Maybe it wouldn't happen now he was dead.  Somehow Readis didn't
like being deprived of that opportunity, especially when it mean he'd be
going journeying to school a-dragonback.

His stomach was rumbling, since he hadn't eaten much last night out of
deference to the occasion, so Readis went to the larder to see what he
could find to eat.  Evidently alerted by the small noises he was making,
Aranya entered the kitchen, Almie tagging beside her.

"Hungry,' Almie said clearly, pouting.  Although Aranya was in a clean
coverall, Almie was still in the rumpled things she'd worn yesterday.
"I'm empty in my middle."

"I'll feed you so be quiet,' Readis said in a low voice.  He sort of
figured his parents wouldn't want to be awakened.  His baby brother
would always sleep until someone, or some loud noise, woke him.  Readis
didn't want the loud noise to be Almie.

He set out bowls, filled them with the fruit which was always sliced and
ready in the cooler and toasted bread for his sisters so they'd keep
quiet.  He spread Almie's bread with the sweetener she loved because he
knew if he didn't, she'd demand it and loudly, too.  Aranya was much
easier to deal with than Almie.

Then he got the grain for the poultry and took care of them, and Delky
who patiently waited out the back door for her morning handful of corn.
The canines were just getting restless when he deposited their bowls in
the run.  They could howl loud enough to wake the dead, as his mother
often said.  Back in the kitchen, he heated water and ground more klah
bark because the jar was empty.  One thing for sure he knew would be
needed was plenty of klah.

He got Aranya to take Almie into their room and wash her and dress her.
Aranya loved playing "mother' to their sister.

He was just sitting down to his own toast when Kami slipped in the back
door, her blue eyes wide with the tidings and her expression solemn.

"It's awful, isn't it?" she whispered at him.

"They're still asleep,' Readis said, speaking low but not in a whisper.
He gestured with the toasting fork and she shook her head.  She did
however look wistfully at the pitcher of fruit juice on the table so he
filled her a glass of it.

"Father got messages this morning.  We're all to sail to Monaco to
escort the Harper to sea.

 Readis felt his throat close over.  Boskoney had sung a very moving
song about an honorable sea burial, for another old harper, Aunt
Menolly's master.  It would be like that.

"All of us?" Readis asked after swallowing the lump.  All of us in
Paradise?" He meant children as well as grown-ups.

Kami nodded.  "Father says we'll use all three ships so just about
everyone can be there to honour our Master Harper.

Father said we should never forget what we owe Master Robinton."

"Then we will be able to go to school?" Readis asked.

"Oh, how can you think of something like school when the whole world
mourns?" Kami's voice rose in her disgust of his innocent query.

"It's a fair question,'said Jayge from the doorway.  "Ah, klah!

That was thoughtful of someone,' he added and cocked his head toward
Readis.  "Good lad.  Your sisters are fed and occupied?

Thank you." He poured three cups, adding sweetener in two and placed
them on a tray.  "I'll be back.  Toast me some bread, would you, Readis.
I don't think any of us ate anything last night.

"A moment, please, Holder Readis,' Kami began formally and she took a
deep breath.  "My father says that a message has come requesting the
Hold to come to Monaco Bay tomorrow morning.

My father says the ships will have to be loaded and casting off at the
top of the night to reach Monaco by the appointed time.

"All three ships?  Hmm, that'll be room enough for everyone?"

Kami nodded, the picture of solemnity, "Yes, sir.  Everyone who can
come, should, he said.  The message said so."

"Very well.  Can you take the message round the Hold?  Good, thank you,
Kami.

Kami slipped out the back door and, through the window, Readis could see
her running down the path toward the cotholds.

"The bread, please, Readis, and enough for your mother and Boskoney,
too."

It was an odd day.  People did what they usually did but everyone was
solemn-faced.  Some people were red-eyed and sniffed a lot.

Especially when Readis played messenger and gave out the ship
assignments which Unclemi sent for him to deliver.  He wondered if
Unclemi had told the dolphins.  He must have, for when they boarded the
Fair Winds in the middle of the night, he could see the dorsals crowding
the water and the sleek silvery bodies in the starlight, and hear the
dolphin song.

He couldn't stay awake as long as he wanted to: last night had been
tiring and the day had been, too, in the oddest possible way.  The
dolphins were singing a sad song, too.  He curled up in his cover in the
prow of the Fair Winds and fell asleep to the hiss of water and the
gentle motion of the ship on a calm sea.

When they arrived in Monaco Bay, there was a great array of ships and
small craft and hundreds and hundreds of dolphins in the water.  In the
air, in great fairs, thicker even than those that had swept across the
Hold yesterday, the fire-lizards raced back and forth, blotting the sun
at times.  He was so busy with that display he didn't at first notice
the ship, all wreathed in black, that was anchored at the pier.  The
Fair Winds was standing far enough out in the bay so that his father had
to call his attention to the procession, a small column heading to the
dock.  Readis was given a chance to use Unclemi's far-viewer.

"I want you to remember this, Readis,' his father said, passing him the
cylinder.  "A great man has died!'

So they watched as the ship unfurled its sails, black, and slowly they
bellied with the light wind.

it moved from the pier.  Unclemi made sail, too, them by, and followed
in its wake, Readis all the that maybe a dolphin would be hurt, there
were them, as they leaped in escort.

trimmed in Majestically as it passed time fearful so many of What Readis
remembered most that day, besides the awful solemnity of that ship and
the covered body on its prow, was the dragons in the sky, wing after
wing of them in close formation, hanging motionless as the ceremony was
conducted.

He remembered the terrible keening of the dragons as the Master Harper's
body slipped into the water.  The hairs on his neck stood up and he
could feel the sound down to the heels of both feet.

It was far worse than the noise the fire-lizards had made: the dolphins
squeeing and clicking only added to the uncanny noise.

Had the dolphins known the Master Harper, too?  Then all the pods gave
one final leap and seemed to disappear.  Readis could hold his breath
pretty well now and he had unconsciously held it just as they submerged.
But they just didn't come back up and then he had to take a breath as
spots were forming in his eyes.  Shielding his eyes, he looked far out
to sea and couldn't see a single dorsal fin.

Then he realized that there was only one dragon left in the sky: Ruth!
His white hide unmistakable against the blue of sky!

He was motionless for so long Readis began to wonder what had happened
to him.  He remained, in that vigil, when Unclemi, himself at the wheel
of his ship, turned to port and they began their journey homeward.  The
figure of Ruth dwindled finally or maybe the white dragon had ended his
sky-borne post.  Readis thought that was the most sad of all he had
witnessed today.

The dolphins didn't return until the Fair Winds had reached her home
waters.

Three days after that funeral, T'lion arrived to take the students to
Landing.  They weren't taken to the Admin building as Readis had half
expected.  He was sort of disappointed to find that the students had
their own building, three over from Admin, where a large crowd of young
people had gathered.  At the appointed hour, a Master appeared at the
main door and, in a clear, carrying voice, announced which rooms were
assigned to which class.  When the older students had entered the
building, he motioned for those remaining outside to approach him.

"Well, now, so you're the ones starting with us this term,' he said,
letting his gaze range over them.  "I am Master Samvel, head of this
school and you will be known as Class 21, since this is the twenty-first
year of the Present Pass.  Not very original, I fear, but that
designation will identify you to us and you will listen for any messages
addressed to the class in general.  I shall learn to identify you each
by name over the next few days.

Meanwhile, I bid you welcome and if you'll all file into room D, we can
begin orientation.

Thus began what Readis later found was called the Transition Phase.  He
was an integral part of it.

Chapter Ten

hree Turns later, four hundred students were living in dormitories at
Landing and pursuing their courses, of h a variety were now offered.
When generators were established in other major Holds, additional
schools were set up, ranging from primary lessons to retraining.  At
Harper Hall, Master Harper Sebell inaugurated a totally new course for
training apprentices, and musicianship was no longer the dominant
concern of the Hall.  He was only able to implement the new form because
Master Robinton had proposed it to the Masters of the Hall before his
death.  It had not been acceptable at its initial airing but,
afterwards, Sebell and Menolly watched, bemused, while the obdurate
older Masters insisted on adopting the program.  If Menolly's reception
of that reversal was bitter, Sebell held on to the advantage and pressed
forward, working all the hours of the day to get every phase of Master
Robinton's educational plan into operation.

With Fandarel and Oldive insisting, the Smith and Healer Crafts made it
compulsory for Masters to attend courses which improved their skills and
explained new craft applications of Aivas' knowledge.  After the success
of the Red Star mission, Master Fandarel had less trouble getting his
Masters to embrace the technology.  He was also attempting to produce
the radio instrument which Aivas had suggested as a reliable means of
communication between distant places.  Materials to construct the
transistors required were obtainable in quantity on Pern Master Oldive
was not as fortunate, facing such rebellion from older healers that he
concentrated on imparting the Aivas' techniques and methods to new and
unprejudiced apprentice minds.  Although he could prove the healers
could now save many from desperate suffering and improve the quality of
life for other patients by the discreet use of surgical remedies,
Masters in his craft balked at using such methods, to the detriment of
patient health and longevity.  To Oldive, that was a craft failure that
could not be allowed to continue.  Where he could, and, oddly enough,
his intrusion worked best with those who had the least training and were
desperate to relieve the suffering of their patients, he introduced new
procedures.

The transition in the Healer Hall was sporadic.

After the initial experiment with the dolphins and a reciprocal service
in removing any bloodfish, Oldive had asked for volunteers to work more
closely with the discerning mammals.

Curran had been only too happy to permit the building of a small Healer
cothold at Fort Sea Hold.  A float was rigged at the end of the pier so
that patients could be lowered into the water for the dolphins to use
their sonar capability on them.  There were similar facilities at three
other seaside locations: Ista, Igen Nerat and Monaco Bay, or rather, the
Eastern Weyr.

Aivas had spent much time with Master Oldive and his more receptive
masters and journeymen.  Though he had made it clear that Pern did not
have certain requisites to bring medicine up to the level the Ancients
had practised, many innovations would improve the Hall.  The dolphins
were an effective alternative for the Ancients' X-ray machine and other
scanning devices, an invaluable exploratory device for healers.

There was one major drawback to the dolphins' ability to perceive
abnormalities in the humans they examined: they could not tell the
healers exactly what the growth or lump was, nor how to treat it: only
that it was inside a body and shouldn't be there.

Nevertheless, their sonar readings gave healers more knowledge of the
irregularities that could not be seen or palpated.

Master Oldive often had the notion that there had been a great many such
devices which Aivas did not even mention to him and he sighed over those
omissions and then went on, as healers had for centuries, making do with
what was to hand and had proved helpful.

Aivas had been most complimentary in general about the Healer Craft
which had pleased even the hide-bound members.

Aivas made special mention of the medicines that were in common use as
efficacious, especially the numbweed derivatives which apparently had no
side-effects as artificial compounds were apt to produce.

Once the wind machines had been installed on Fort Hold fire-heights, a
terminal unit was installed in Oldive's rooms at the Harper Hall and two
more dominated classrooms.  Lord Holder Groghe had tried his not
insignificant best to get one for Fort Hold but until the Smith Craft,
or the new Computer Craft could duplicate the components, distribution
was restricted to those disseminating information.

The Landing students did not study all the day long as Master Samvel was
well aware that youngsters required physical exercise as well as mental.
Many old games were annotated in the Aivas files and some of those
Samvel revived: baseball, soccer, and polo, a sport in which Readis was
to become quite proficient: as he was in the water sports when they
started using the pond below the landing field.  Readis suspected that
Master Samvel emphasized the water sports in deference to his infirmity
but he thought it made sense that people should learn how to swim when
so many long journeys were made on the seas.

Master Samvel also gained permission from Benden Weyr, and a half wing
of weyrling dragons, to take Class 21 to Honshu, to see the incredible
artefacts left by the Ancients in the mountain eyrie, not the least of
which were the incredible murals that decorated the walls.  They could
see and touch the machines that the Ancients had left behind them.  Kami
was awestruck by the paintings while Pardure found the old sled they had
all seen the devices in action from tapes of that period of Pernese
history - the big looms, the finely crafted tools to be of more
interest.  Readis found the view from the Hall to be fascinating - the
vista of endless mountains and valleys, a sense of the breadth of the
land mass of this Southern Continent which was scarcely explored.

F'lessan, rider of bronze Golanth and only son of F'lar and Lessa, made
this place what he called his "Weyrhold'.  As he explained to the
students, this unique historical spot should be available to any who
wished to visit it - to see the magnificent murals that decorated the
main hall walls.  He had appointed himself the caretaker and spent more
of his free time here than at Benden Weyr.  The Weyrhold had a
complement of holders, herding and experimenting with grain crops and
vegetables in areas which had once, clearly, been fields, walled by
stones set in place centuries before.

"You're Readis, aren't you?" F'lessan said, joining Readis on the bench
placed on the upper terrace where the best view of valley could be had.
The other students were clambering about the terraces below which Readis
didn't care to do.  "I asked Master Samvel to point you out.  I knew
your mother." He leaned back against the cliff wall.  "She was at Benden
Weyr for a while, you know, before hearing dragons got too much for her.
K'van, who's now Weryleader at Southern, was one of the weyrlings in my
wing and they were very close before Lessa sent her down to Benden
Hold." He gazed out over the view for a few moments.  "So, have you
decided what to study at Landing?"

"Oh, we're just getting general stuff right now,' Readis said, "what
Master Samvel calls "preparatory" courses.  There's so much to learn."
Sometimes the sheer volume and complexity of the knowledge available at
Landing overwhelmed Readis.

it was daunting to know how much he didn't know.  "Master Samvel says
he's learning more all the time himself.

F'lessan grinned down at him.  "Samvel's the type of person who'll never
stop learning."

"My head aches sometimes,' Readis admitted shyly.

"Mine would, too,' F'lessan agreed.  "I was never a good student.  Even
Master Robinton gave up on me."

Readis gave him a quick glance of surprise.

"You had Master Robinton as a teacher?"

F'lessan's snort was self-deprecating.  "I was in the room all right but
I didn't pay much attention." He grinned.  "I was too enamored with
being Golanth's rider at the time, I think.

Jaxom, Menolly, and Benelek were the real students."

"Master Benelek of the Smith Craft?  The one who's keeping the Aivas
machinery running?"

"The very one." Then F'lessan cast a look at the awed expression of the
boy.  "Who knows where some of your study mates may end up?  Where you
yourself will."

"Oh, I know where I'll end up,' Readis said.  "I'm to be Paradise River
Holder." He flicked a finger at his right leg.

"I'm to learn so much that even this won't keep me from being confirmed.
"Your father's a strong, healthy man.  You might have to wait a long
time to accede.  What're you going to do with all that time in between?"

Readis had thought about that.  During his initial Turns at Landing, he
realized that he had absorbed a great deal of Hold management from
following his father about and hearing him give orders.  Managing the
Hold would be easy.

"I'd like to be a dolphineer."

"A what?  Oh, yes, you've been talking to the creatures, haven't you?"

"There aren't any dolphineers, not like the Ancients had and the
dolphins are very helpful, you know.  To the Fish Craft Hall and the
healers.  But we just sort of call them when we want them.  We don't do
much for them apart from pry off a bloodfish now and then .  .  Readis
paused, not wanting to appear to belittle the delphinic accomplishment
but he had to be truthful to the dragonrider, "but nothing at all like
the great work they did exploring the oceans and coastlines."

As I understand it, the coastline's always changing.  Charts will need
to be updated, won't they?  Are you studying cartography?"

"Not as much as I'd like.  I'm good at the maths but you also need
special instruments to do a proper job."

"I understand that Master Fandarel is making those instruments since
everyone seems to want a chunk of the Southern Continent." F'lessan
chuckled.

"Don't you dragonriders get the first choice?"

"Where'd you hear that'?" F'lessan shot the lad an appraising look.

"Oh, and Readis shrugged, "you hear lots of things at Landing."

"I'll just bet you do,' and F'lessan snorted.  "Have you accessed the
tapes on dolphins in the Library?"

"I did that the first term I was here,' Readis said, grinning.

Then he went through some of the hand signals that dolphineers had used
and F'lessan's eyes widened respectfully.  "That's how dolphineers gave
directions to the dolphins underwater.  They still know them.  The
dolphins, I mean.

"And with you living right on Paradise River and the sea, you must make
good use of them." Readis mumbled a noncommittal answer.  This was not
the time, nor the person, to confide home problems too.  Oblivious to
the boy's hesitation, F'lessan went on, "You might even start up your
own Craft Hall.  That's what Benelek did, you know, by learning all he
could about Aivas' terminals."

"He did?"

"He did!" Then F'lessan gave Readis a mischievous grin.

"Right now, you and all the other students at Landing have a brilliant
chance to make sure that Pern becomes what the Ancients wanted it to be
before Thread interrupted their progress." F'lessan gestured behind him,
to the murals.  "The sum total of their knowledge and their overview of
this planet is available to us.  It's up to us, and you, as the next
generation, to be sure we pick up the plan where they left off and see
that Pern becomes the planet they envisioned.  That's what must be done
if Pern is to be what it could be.  D'you see that?  That's what Master
Robinton wanted.  It's what my parents want.  But not all the Holders or
Master Craftsmen.  They're still hanging back with what's comfortable
and familiar." He narrowed his eyes slightly to assess the impact of his
words on his audience.

"It's going to be difficult, the next twenty-odd Turns, to set in place
what Pern will be now that Thread has stopped."

"But it hasn't, has it?"

F'lessan gave him a quick look and grinned.  "But it will."

"Were you .  .  .  " Readis began tentatively, "one of the dragonriders
who took the engines to the Red Star?"

F'lessan nodded.  "Golanth and I."

Readis' jaw dropped in awe.

"All in a day's work for a dragonrider,' F'lessan said, dismissing the
feat in his usual light manner.

On the top of the weyrhold, Golanth lifted his head and uttered a
welcoming bugle.

"Ah, your conveyancers arrive,' F'lessan said, standing up, though
Readis could see nothing but empty sky in front of them.  "Think about
what I said, Readis, about the dolphins and about what Pern could be."

Readis nodded, eyes front.  Of course, Golanth, being a bronze, would
know when dragons were arriving, so Readis kept staring and was rewarded
by the thrilling sight that always made his heart pound faster: the
abrupt emergence of a half wing of dragons.  They were so beautiful. But
not for everyone.  Dolphins now, they weren't so restricted.  Anyone
could get to know a dolphin.  He could be a dolphineer and a Holder.
Form a new Craft Hall?  That did appeal to Readis and he turned over
that possibility.  Of course, his mother would have an attack if he even
whispered of his interest in the dolphins around her.  She persisted in
believing that it was the dolphins who had put his life at risk when it
was the other way round.  His father might understand, especially now
that the dolphins had been shown to be useful in so many ways, guarding
the coastline and warning them of bad squalls and good fishing.
Certainly mastering another Craft would only show the Lord Holders that
Readis, son of Jayge and Aramina, was that much more capable of managing
an important Southern Hold like Paradise.

"Thank you, F'lessan,' he said.

"For what?" the bronze rider asked, smiling down at the boy.

Suddenly Readis went shy and covered it by waving his arm about to
indicate the weyrhold.  "For what you just said."

F'lessan grinned and placed his finger beside his nose, indicating
secrecy.  "Think about it, lad.  We dragonriders are, I assure you.

Before Readis could ask him what that cryptic comment meant, F'lessan
had walked off to find Master Samvel.

Back at school, when he had some free time to use one of the keyboards,
Readis tried to find out exactly what the Ancients had meant Pern to be,
before Thread ruined their plans.  Eventually, he found the Charter in
LAWS and that gave him a good deal to mull over.  He wished he could
talk to F'lessan again.  By deft questioning, he learned that the son of
F'lar and Lessa was considered a competent and much trusted wing leader
but, until he had discovered Honshu Weyrhold, had not been given to much
serious thinking or behavior.  That made Readis give more weight to what
the bronze rider had said that day.

Of course, the dragons were not mentioned in the Charter since they
hadn't been created.  Nor in any other file on LAWS or GOVERNMENT or
VETERINARY or FARMING.  They were listed in BIOGENETICS, though Readis
couldn't understand half the words and gave up trying to figure out what
the cryptic words in the lab notes meant.

Nevertheless, in twenty Turns or so, Thread would stop falling on Pern
and would never come back to rain on the planet.  What would
dragonriders do then?  Surely there had to be something special.  Readis
gave a shudder.  Pern without its dragons would be unthinkable.  He was
awed by the ingenuity which had resulted in dragons.  He'd had enough
biology to understand the concept of biogenesis even if no-one on Pern
now could possibly perform it.  So what would dragons do when Thread was
gone?  He fretted over that question for quite a few weeks of that
school term.  Dragons did so many things that didn't have to do with
fighting Thread.  They conveyed people, and often these days, materials
that would take days to be transferred by cart or ship.  Well, the blues
and greens did, and occasionally the browns and the younger bronzes
before they started flying Thread.  For adult dragons to do so was
somewhat demeaning.  He couldn't imagine a queen lugging things from one
Hold or Hall to another.

Dolphins could do quite a few things only they could do, being water
creatures.  Dragons were of the air.  There had to be something that
only dragons could do.

Readis' distraction had not gone unnoticed.  Master Samvel found him
staring at a screen displaying the earliest flight of dragons: dragons
as small as large runner beans.

"I've been meaning to have a word with you, Readis,' Samvel said,
sitting down on the next chair.  "You've not been paying as close
attention in class as you usually do.  Are you troubled about
something?"

Readis took a deep breath.  "Master Samvel, what's going to happen to
the dragons?"

Samvel blinked in surprise and then he smiled and, in a rare gesture,
patted Readis on the head.  "You are not the only one pondering that
question, young Readis."

"Yes, but what can they do when Thread is all gone?"

"This is a huge planet, Readis, and there is much work to be done to
settle all the land available to us.  Right now the dragonriders are
carefully overflying this vast Southern Continent, making as detailed a
map as possible.  We know only a small part of it and much of it would
be impassable to people on foot or uninhabitable until the Pass ends.
Don't you worry about the dragons.  Their riders will take care of them,
as they've always done.  But your concern does you credit.  We must
never, on Pern, forget what the dragons have done for us for twenty-five
hundred Turns."

"How could we forget?" Readis asked, appalled at the very notion of such
ingratitude.

Samvel's smile was sad.  "We've done it often enough in long Intervals.
You concentrate on your studies now, lad, and let the Weyrs worry about
themselves.  You have your future to worry about."

That put Readis in mind of F'lessan's advice to him: to learn more about
the dolphins.  So once again he accessed that information: most of which
he knew by heart already, as well as being fluent in using the
underwater hand signals.

"Underwater' was the relevant word.  Though Readis had learned how to
hold his breath so he could follow the dolphins on some of their
shallower dives, the Ancients had had special breathing equipment which
had allowed them to stay underwater for long periods of time.  Tanks,
smaller but similar in design to those used with flame-throwers, had
been strapped to swimmers' backs.  They'd had face masks to cover nose
and mouth and had breathed proper air from a tube to the tank.  The
device seemed simple enough to Readis, although how he would acquire one
was beyond him.  He had a small hoard of marks since his father had paid
him the last two seasons for helping with the harvesting but he doubted
that would be sufficient since it would be new work.  However, since the
tremendous effort from all Craft Halls to implement Aivas' plan was a
glorious page of history now, craftsmen might take such a commission.

They might even know how to construct one since they, too, had access to
many, more specialized Aivas' files.

So Readis sought Uncle Alemi the next time he was back at Paradise
River.  He'd brought a diagram of the apparatus with him.  In the
evening, he turned Delky to the shortcut to the Head and, as he'd
suspected, he found Alemi and his son, Kitral, on their way to the pier
for their daily talk with the pod.

Readis got through the courtesies as fast as possible and then shoved
the drawing at Alemi.

"If we had something like this, which the dolphineers used, we'd be able
to function better in the dolphins' own environment.

Alemi gave him a startled look and then laughed outright.

"You have learned a lot in that school, haven't you, Readis.

Kami's nearly as bad with all the terms she throws out to confuse her
poor parents.  Now, let's see what you have here to perplex an old
sailor."

"You're not old, Unclemi, and I don't think you'll be the least bit
perplexed about an aqua lung."

"Hmmm.  Is that what this contraption is called?"

"That's how I read it."

Alemi wasn't as condescending as many Masters were but he still liked to
tease and Readis was not in a receptive mood.  He was in deadly earnest
about this project.

"I looked back over all the tapes showing dolphins and dolphineers. When
the partners had to do underwater work, or long distance swimming, the
humans always wore this sort of equipment.  And special clothing called
wet suits."

"One would need special gear to keep skin from softening too much during
long immersions." Alemi examined the drawing closely.  "The Ancients had
special gear for just about everything, didn't they?"

"More than we'll ever have,' Readis replied.  "More than we'd ever need.
The Charter Preamble states that they formed the Pern Colony to avoid
the intense specialization that had stratified Earth culture.  They
intended to achieve a good standard of living using the lowest possible
form of technology needed to supply essential services and a good,
rounded life-style."

Alemi grinned at Readis.  "You're much worse than Kami.

Does the Charter really say that?"

Readis nodded, grinning back.  At least Alemi wasn't peremptorily
dismissing the notion.

"And since this equipment is not beyond our current capabilities - oh,
yes, I see the similarities and I know we have this much technology,'
Alemi added, tapping the mask and the tank with one finger.  "It's only
a matter of recreating the elements displayed here.  And, since such an
order would come better from a Master Fishman, you've come to me to make
the request.

Readis nodded enthusiastically now, immensely relieved that Alemi
grasped what Readis hesitated to voice.  Alemi handed the sheet back and
sighed deeply.

"You know your mother's opinion about dolphins and you, Readis.  It
wouldn't be right for me to deliberately assist you to further your
association with them."

"Oh!" Readis sank into Delky's back and, as she'd been trained to do,
she halted.

"But you know she's wrong

"She's your mother, Readis, and my Hold Lady.  I'm well aware of the
loyalty I owe her.  I've not been all that easy in my mind about
allowing you to swim with the pod here.  Oh, I know you've been doing it
and, as long as I didn't actually see you in the water with them, I
could pretend I didn't know." Alemi gave a wry grin.  "The dolphins
don't at all understand your mother's attitude since Afo warned you
about the thorn."

Readis groaned.  "But it was my fault, not Afo's, or any of the
dolphins."

"True.  Look, lad, 1'm on your side in this even if I can't sail on a
dangerous tack.  You could,' and here Alemi paused, "see what your
father says."

"He won't upset Mother.

Alemi lifted his hands in a gesture of impotence.  "Try him, Readis.
He's really easy to approach on matters that improve the Hold, you know.
And he never accused the dolphins." Alemi shot the boy a glance.  "He
knew where the fault lay,' he added in a kindly voice.  "Afo and Kib are
always asking for you.  Will you join us?"

Though he didn't really want to in his disappointment, Readis knew that
certain courtesies were required of him as the Holder's heir.  So he
asked Aleki if he'd like to ride in front of him on Delky.  The little
boy was delighted and Alemi obviously approved of Readis' demeanor.

Seeing the pod improved Readis' spirits, especially after Kib and Afo
did an enthusiastic tail walk when he gave them some of the hand signals
he'd learned from the old tapes.

"Member!  "Member!" Kib cried, squeeing and blowing with pleasure.  "You
do good.  Very good.  Better best.  You come under soon?"

"Not today, Kib.  But I will, someday, Readis assured the happy dolphin.

"Old times come back, Afo said, her jaw dropping low as she squeed and
chirped.

Readis could not resist giving Alemi an accusing look for failing to
fall in with his plan to obtain an underwater breathing device.

It was full dark before the three of them made their way back to the
hold proper.  When his mother asked him where he'd been so long, he
could quite honestly reply that he'd gone to visit Alemi and stayed to
play with young Aleki.

Sometime during the night another solution presented itself to Readis.
He had experienced a keen sense of betrayal when Alemi refused to help
him get an aqua lung.  The device would only make his swimming with the
dolphins that much safer.

He'd've thought that Alemi would see that, too.  However, he had
another, stauncher ally in T'lion.  When he got back to Landing after
this break, he'd leave word that he'd like to speak to T'lion.  As well
as his duties as a member of a fighting wing, the bronze rider was often
in Landing.  They hadn't seen that much of each other lately but theirs
was a friendship that could be resumed at any point with no sense of
time lapse.

T'lion sought him out one afternoon a sevenday later.

"Sorry to be so long getting to you, Readis, but what with Fall and all
" and the bronze rider let his sentence dangle.

"That's all right,' Readis said, pawing through the sheets that littered
the desk in his quarters to find the diagram.  "I found this,' and he
shoved it at his friend.

"OOOOh.  This is great,' T'lion said, his eyes widening as he scanned
the sheet.  "An aqua lung?  Hey, we could get one of these.  No trouble
at all.  Are you?"

"I'm only a student, T'lion." Then in a rush, he added, "I tried to get
Alemi to help but he wouldn't on account of my mother not liking me
associating with dolphins and all."

T'lion made a sound in his throat and smiled wryly.  "They just won't
let you live that down, will they?"

"Evidently not!" Readis couldn't suppress the bitterness.  "It'd cost a
lot of marks, wouldn't it?"

"Hmmmm.  Could.  But we're not the only ones who're swimming with
dolphins whenever we get the chance.  Can I have this?" When Readis
eagerly agreed, he folded it carefully and put it in his inside pocket.
"D'you have time to come see my pod?"

"Your pod?" Readis said, raising his eyebrows in surprise at the
possessive pronoun.

"Well, the pod that answers my Bell,' T'lion said with a grin.

"Coming?"

Readis' answer was to grab up the lined jacket and a swimming clout.  He
paused only long enough to scrawl a note on the message board at the
entrance to his dormitory that he had gone with T'lion.  He was old
enough now that he didn't have to ask special permission for short
absences.

Once on the strand near Eastern Weyr, Readis helped T'lion divest
Gadareth of his riding harness.  T'lion rang the Bell in a "come-in'
sequence which was less urgent than the "report' and gave the dolphins
the opportunity to ignore the summons if they chose.  They rarely did
but sometimes only one or two answered.  By the time the boys had
changed into the swimming clouts, the waters of the cove showed half a
dozen dolphins leaping and speeding towards shore.  Raising himself up
on his hind legs, Gadareth opened his wings and threw back his head for
a welcoming bugle.  The air was immediately full of wild fire-lizards
for they loved nothing better than to play with their large cousins in
the water.  Flattening his wings right to his back, he walked into the
water and began to swim out to meet the dolphins with the fair display
above him.

As one of the games dolphins liked best was scrubbing a dragon, they
proceeded to "help' the humans wash Gadareth.

The boys nearly drowned half a dozen times trying to emulate dolphin
acrobatics.  The fire-lizards left halfway through the bath to go about
their own business.

"We really do need that .  .  .  breathing device, T'lion gasped out to
Readis when they took a rest, hanging on to the wing Gadareth had
extended for washing.  "But you can sure hold your breath a long time
when you want to."

"Can't .  do it too often.  Head starts to spin,' Readis said.  "Other
thing we need - - is a decent ball for them .  .  .  to play with!'

"So they can steal it?" T'lion demanded.  "That's what they've done with
all the ones I get made for "em.   "New game?  New game?" Boojie asked,
head high in the water so all of his smiling face was visible.

"Not today, Booj,' T'lion said.  "You've worn us out.  C'mon, Gadareth,
let's go ashore."

Booj swam backwards, clapping his flippers and squeeing with delight.
"Worn out!  Worn out!  We play more better."

T'lion and Readis let Gadareth tow them ashore by grasping his tail
until they felt the slope of the beach under their feet.

Gadareth found himself a spot on the sand and fire-lizards returned to
find resting places on him while they murmured sleepily to their living
perch.  T'lion carefully extracted the diagram from his inner pocket and
looked at it.

"We've got glass,' he sad, tapping the face mask, "and we've got
material for the straps, and the tanks shouldn't be a problem, nor the
hose.  Valves look the same as the ones Smith Craft put on flame-thrower
tanks.  It's the rest of the face mask that might be difficult.  You got
any free marks?"

Readis rolled over on his stomach, elbows propping his body up.  He
grimaced.  "If I'd known, I wouldn't have spent so much at the last
Landing Gather.  But I've maybe three whole Smith Craft marks and some
quarters.  Now I'm over fifteen, Dad pays me for harvesting." He said
that with a bit of pride: he'd sweated for those marks.

"Hmmm, well, yes.  I've some, too, from a bit of trading I've done.

"Trading?" Readis perked up.  He'd heard enough from Temma, Nazer and
his father about trading over the Turns to be familiar with the Lilcamp
family traditions.  "What with?"

"Ohh,' and T'lion shrugged his reluctance to continue.  Then, making a
quick decision, he went on.  "Well, it's like this.  Most dragonriders
are kind of looking about this continent to see where they'd like to
live when the Pass is over.  I mean, during Threadfall and all, the
Holds and Craft Halls tithe to the Weyrs so we don't have to worry about
that.  Honestly, we'd rather not be beholden to anyone -  "But Holds and
Halls have always tithed to Weyrs Readis protested, being well versed in
tradition.

T'lion grinned.  "Not when there isn't going to be more Thread."

"Oh."

"Yes, so we're looking for our own places.

"What F'lessan calls a Weyrhold?"

T'lion nodded.

"And you've found one?" Readis asked, excited to learn that the
dragonriders were looking so far ahead.

"Oh, I've found several sites I'd like but we have to put in a bid and
then, when it's time, the Weyrleaders will decided who gets what.  Right
now, we're charting the land to make divisions easier.  That's why I've
been up at Landing so much, registering what Gaddie and I have
overflown."

"Did you find any more ruins?  Like F'lessan did?"

T'lion gave a snort.  "Ruins, I found.  But nothing half so well
preserved as Honshu.  That is really spectacular.  In fact, that's the
only place that was properly built.  The others are all smack dab in
wide open spaces.

Readis mirrored his consternation at such stupidity.  The Ancients had
known so much: why had they been so silly to build out in the open?

"Of course,' T'lion went on in a slightly patronizing tone, "the first
few years they didn't have Thread so they didn't build proper.   "Oh,
yes, that's right,' Readis agreed.  "So, where have you seen places?"

"Gaddie wants a lake and there are quite a few and also some wide rivers
which are nearly better than lakes.  That big inland sea, the one that
Ancients called the Caspian has some lovely islands.  They'd be
perfect,' and he sighed.  "But I'd be low on the list for a prime site
like that.  Another place I like a lot is not far from the old mines
that Master Hamian is working now.  Place the Ancients called Karachi.
Pretty name, isn't it?  They had lots of unusual names.  And there's a
cliff in the Southern Range which has a fairly decent-sized cave.  View
is fabulous and the ledge is wide enough for Gad to snooze on." T'lion
shot a fond look at his sleeping dragon.  "Trouble would be having a
weyrmate and family.  They'd have to wait on Gaddie to get up or down.

"That would be a disadvantage but couldn't you make stairs, the way they
did at Honshu?"

"I suppose so .  .  .  T'lion paused, deep in thought.  "Rather high up
so it'd take a lot of stone carving.  Then, too, I'd have to find work
somewhere else.  At the mines, we could always convey At Readis' gasp of
surprise, "Well, conveyancing isn't a bad way to make a living for a
dragon and his rider.

Particularly a big strong bronze like Gaddie.  It's a lot less dangerous
to hide and health than Threadfighting.

"Yes, I suppose it is.  But if you went that far inland, you'd be too
far from the sea and the dolphins.  They can't swim in fresh water, you
know.  They don't float well and they get sores."

"Hmmm,' and T'lion once again retreated into thought.

"Haven't you found any nice place along the shore?"

"Oh, there's coves left, right and center,' T'lion dismissed them.  "But
you're right.  I'd miss Boojie and Natua and Tana.

It's a case of wanting what y6u get, I suppose.  Then, too, other teams
are searching east of here.  I suppose I could ask but the land I've
been overflying is magnificent.  You wouldn't believe how much space
there is!'

"Tell me,' Readis urged though T'lion didn't need much.

By the time darkness was falling, Readis was relieved to realize that
Paradise River Hold had a great many advantages.

His parents had been very lucky to be granted hold of it.  And it was
rather nice to have neighbours further down the river.

There might even be some new ones along the coast, if they could find a
decent supply of stone to build their cotholds.

"Why do the Weyrleaders decide who gets what land?" he asked as he
changed into his clothes for the trip back to Landing.

"Not just the Weyrleaders, Readis,' T'lion said with a grin.

"The Lord Holders and the Craft Masters'll have a say, too.

But this time, the Weyrs get first choice."

"They do deserve it.  If they can hold what they want.  The pod warned
us just last week of another group trying to land, west of the river."

"Really?"

"Dad sailed out with Alemi and they left.  We outnumbered them,' Readis
said with hold pride.  "One day, we might not,' he added ruefully.

"There're a lot of decisions to be made, aren't there?" T'lion said with
a sigh.

Gadareth and T'lion brought Readis back to Landing.  Seeing the area
from a height, buildings lit, and people walking up and down the paths,
Readis felt a surge of pride to be part of this place which had had a
glorious past and was now preparing for a future: the future that, in
fact, had been planned a long time ago for this planet.

T'lion said he'd find time in the next sevenday to get to the Master
Smith Hall in Telgar and he'd let Readis know the outcome.

"You may not have any marks to spend at a gather for some time to come,'
he said.  "But then, neither will I!' T'lion was back three days later,
looking highly amused as he sauntered into Readis' quarters.

"We're not the only ones,' he announced.

"Only ones who what?" Readis asked, half of his mind still on the
mathematics he was figuring.

"Who found the aqua lung and want the Master Smith to make "em.  And I
was right."

"About what?"

"The face mask.  There isn't any sort of elastic material that will keep
a mask comfortably tight and seal it against a face."

"Oh.

T'lion did not appear to be concerned about that lack.  "Seems as if
that sort of flexible material is needed for a lot of things the
Ancients used.  So Master Hamian and one or two of that Hall over in
Southern Hold are experimenting."

"Who else wants the aqua lung?"

"Idarolan, for one.  He's really quite an advocate of dolphins.

Master Fandarel told me

"You saw Master Fandarel himself?"

T'lion grinned.  "I think I shall miss the courtesies accorded
dragonriders." He sighed wistfully.  "However, I did see him but only
after I'd talked to half a dozen journeymen and Masters.

Evidently Idarolan is mad because he's too old to do too much with
dolphins .  .  .  too old and too busy as Master Fishman."

Readis was beset with conflicting emotions: that someone as prestigious
as a Craft Master wanted to be with dolphins and would have more
authority than he, Readis, ever could; that someone else might usurp
his, albeit tenuous, connection with a pod; and fury with his mother's
prejudice which kept him from openly associating with these marvellous
creatures.

"Don't look so bereft, Readis,' T'lion said.  "It's not the end of the
wrld.  Look how many pods we've already contacted.  And how many more
there are out there?  Yours'll be yours.  And you already share it with
Alemi, don't you?  Besides you're going to be Holder at Paradise River."

"Which is a Sea Hold, too, so the dolphins are important to us.  And who
knows when, or if,' and Readis slapped the knee of his withered leg, "I
get to be Holder.  My father's a healthy man .  .  .  F'lessan's words
at Honshu came back to him.  "What are you going to do in the time
between?" Then there was his younger brother, Anskono, with both legs in
good working order and growing stronger and taller every year.  Readis
could be passed over in favour of his unimpaired younger brother.

"Paradise River's a big place, Readis,' T'lion went on.  "Big enough for
you to hold on your own, separate from your parents.

He's barely touched the heart of it even with all the folks he's taken
in over the last Turns.  With a lot of sea coast."

That prospect hadn't occurred to Readis; though it had been standard
practice for most northern Lord Holders to establish smaller ones for
their sons whenever possible.  Which was another reason so many
northerners looked enviously at all space available on the Southern
Continent: every accessible and workable site in major northern holds
was already long established.  Readis knew from conversations at gathers
that Lord Toric had let some younger sons run holds in Southern but not
every candidate met the high standards that Lord Toric expected or
wanted to work under that taskmaster's total authority.

"You could establish a dolphin base of your own and be a dolphineer.
Wouldn't hurt."

"No, it wouldn't,' Readis agreed absently, thinking about his mother and
cringing a bit at having deceived her, and his father.

They'd no idea that he'd spent so much time with the Paradise River pod
- unless Alemi had told them.

"And Lord Toric's another one who wants aqua lungs, T'lion said.  "That
man!" And he shook his head.  "He's not going to let a chance pass him
by.  He's ordered ten breathers."

"He's going to start a Dolphineer Hall?"

"No,' T'lion said with a wry grin.  "That would require him to allow
others to join." His grin faded.  "Not that he'd have the chance with
Master Idarolan on the dolphins' side."

Readis gave a sigh of relief.

"Don't worry, Readis,' T'lion went on.  "I've already put in a good word
for you."

"You did?" Readis was torn between relief and the fear that now his
mother would learn how he had disobeyed her.

"Never fear.  Master Idarolan only asked me how many people were truly
interested in dolphins.  I said you were because you'd been rescued that
time and had learned all the bell peals and hand signals out of
gratitude."

Readis wasn't sure that was subtle enough.

"Don't worry now, Readis.  It'll all come right.  You'll see."

Readis' response was a noncommittal sound deep in his throat.

"Thanks anyway, T'lion.  Did Master Fandarel have any idea when we might
get an aqua lung?"

"Soon, he hoped, but he couldn't give a time.  He's got a whole Hall
doing nothing but assembling radios.  Do your folks have one yet?  No?
Well, they should.  Fandarel says they have to find the sealer material.
If you don't have that, you get water inside the mask and that defeats
the purpose.  At that, we're lucky because the sea here is so clear.
Gets pretty murky in the northern waters.  I'll keep you informed,
Readis."

"I'd appreciate that, T'lion, and thanks."

"Any time." With a cheerful wave, T'lion left.

Chapter Eleven

Master Fandarel comes with Master Nicat, Mnementh informed both Lessa
and F'lar.

"I wonder what the Master Smith wants,' Lessa said, sharing the report
of new arrivals with R'mart of Telgar Weyr, G'dened of Ista and
Journeyman Harper Talmor who was the Benden Weyrleaders' main assistant
with relocations.

Talmor indicated the council table, spread with maps and reports which
the meeting was discussing.  F'lar shrugged.

"Leave it.  Not efficient to bundle it all up, after all,' the
Weyrleader said and won smiles for the Master Smith's oftvoiced
criterion.  He and Aivas had had much in common on the score of
"efficiency'.  Perhaps, of them all, Master Fandarel missed the voice
address intelligence the most, though his absence was still felt three
Turns after the end of his presence.

"Maybe he has this "radio" he's been so eager to produce,' Lessa said,
her smile partly for the many attempts the huge Smith had made to
initiate some sort of instant communications system for those who had
neither dragon nor fire-lizard.  He'd been at it ever since that
half-successful attempt at the beginning of the Pass.

"That would account for Master Nicat's appearance,' F'lar said.  The
Master Miner had collaborated with the Master Smith to find the raw
elements, like metals, crystal and some of the plastics that Aivas had
listed as necessary to the production of "electronic' devices.

As large as Benden's Council Room was, Master Fandarel seemed to dwarf
its dimensions, as he did the other tall and well-built men in the room.
Even the Harper was tall and while R'mart had put on some flesh over the
past few Turns, he was certainly not as massively built as the Smith.

Fandarel stood in the doorway, noticed the table strewn with paper, the
complement of the meeting and frowned.

"I dislike saying this but you are simply going to have to go more
slowly settling people in the south,' he said.

"What?" Lessa exclaimed, staring at the Master Smith for it was the last
thing she had expected him to say, and certainly he was not against the
relocations.  Her reaction was mirrored by everyone else in the room.
Talmor left his hand suspended over the latest Smith Craft Hall reports
which had recently been delivered.

"This is the first time we've been asked to slow down,' F'lar exclaimed.
"And good day to you, Master Fandarel.  D'you know how many people
complain that we're dragging our heels over settlings?"

"I hear that, too,' Fandarel said, nodding his big head and looking as
solemn as ever.  He had visibly aged since he had helped remove the
engines from the three colony ships and Lessa had noticed that the slow
way in which he now moved was due more to the debilities of age than
deliberated movements.

"But I know it is not the truth and say so.  I also hear, and know, that
journeymen and women as well as Masters are being offered heavy purses
of marks to leave their positions and go south."

"I thought Master Nicat was with you,' Lessa said, looking around the
big man's figure in the doorway to see if it hid the smaller, rotund
figure of the Master Miner.

"Ah, and Master Fandarel's brows drew together as he held up an object,
almost lost in his huge hand.  "Master Nicat, can you hear me?"

"Of course I can.  I'm only at the foot of the stairs." The unmistakable
tones of the Miner sounded clearly, if reduced, from the instrument
which Fandarel had turned to face the assembled.

"Ah!  You've produced the radio!" Lessa cried.

I have produced an electronic device,' Fandarel corrected her.  "An
improvement on the ancient radios but, with relays, they can operate
across much longer distances than those units.

"Oh, may I try?" Lessa said, slipping to Fandarel's side and holding out
her hand for the device.  "Oh, it's lightweight.

She hefted it, and turned to show the oblong balancing in her hand.

"Press the red button and hold it down to speak.  Later you will need to
key in the code number you wish to reach but as the only other unit is
with Master Nicat, that step is not necessary.

Press and speak into this end."

"Master Nicat?" Lessa pressed so hard that her knuckle turned white and
she spoke into the appropriate end in a loud voice.

"There is no need to shout,' Nicat said, with some asperity in the small
clear manifestation of his voice.

"A whisper will be heard,' Fandarel said with an understandable degree
of pride.

"Where are you now, Master Nicat?" Lessa asked in a conversational tone.

"Right where I was two minutes ago."

"Remarkable,' F'lar said, coming to the side of his weyrmate and taking
the device from her.  "May I?"

"Of course,' Lessa and Fandarel said in chorus.

"I can hear that, too,' Nicat said.

F'lar pressed the red button.  "Then join us!'

"Only too happy to since it's raining, you know."

F'lar and Lessa exchanged amused glances.  They had been at this meeting
for well over an hour now and had had no idea the weather had altered
from morning mists to precipitation.

"Master Fandarel, some klah?" Lessa said, getting a fresh mug from the
tray and holding up the thermal jug.  That had been one of the best
homely additions to kitchen equipment.

"Please,' he said, striding forward and accepting the seat which F'lar
suggested.

Nicat arrived, puffing slightly from the climb to the Weyr, holding out
the damp coat he'd been wearing which Talmor took from him and hung on a
spare chair to dry.

While he was being served a welcome cup and seated, the two devices were
passed around the table for everyone to examine.

"Now what's all this about your people being bribed, Fandarel?" F'lar
asked, setting aside the delights of the device for the more important
consideration.  "That's serious."

"It distresses me, my Journeyfolk and Masters because it undermines the
discipline of my Craft Hall and the honor and loyalty which has always
governed us.

Nicat muttered a "here-here' to that sentiment.

"Who's doing the bribing?" R'mart wanted to know.  "Toric?" The Telgar
Weyrleader made no bones about his distrust of the southern Holder.

"Not always."

"Oh, then who?" R'mart demanded, surprised.

Fandarel shrugged.  "Let them remain nameless, Weyrleader.

Our Craftsmen and women did not accept the offered bribes and informed
me of each occurrence.  But I worry about the apprentices who might not
have such scruples."

G'dened snorted.  "I've heard of bribery in Ista Hold.  Lord Warbret's
furious.  He's also lost some young men and women who're knowledgeable
enough about the sea but haven't formally been apprenticed yet.  And
there, it is Toric, or his agents, who're promising high marks because
Istans would "understand" the hazards of the Southern Continent since
they're already used to tropical conditions." G'dened snorted.

"Not the same at all,' F'lar said.  "Ista's been settled a long, long
time and has fewer of the hazards that the Southern Continent has in
plenty."

"Exactly, and furthermore .  .  .  G'dened began.

"We don't actually have many more sites available right now, Talmor
said, looking through his papers.  "And it's not just a matter of having
trained craftspeople to staff them.

Master Fandarel.  It's sites that are accessible.  So far, we've
concentrated on river and oceanside positions so there is at least one
means of transportation and contact.  Especially when the northern born
have not had a chance to acquire fire-lizards.  Of course that device of
yours would be of enormous assistance in that respect,' and he nodded to
the hand-held.

"That is the bad news I have for you,' Fandarel said with a heavy sigh.
"We will need a workforce to make the transistors required and to
assemble the components.  They will have to be trained and we will need
at least one knowledgeable person of Journey rank to oversee the work.
Master Benelek needs all the young folk he can train for the terminals
and cannot give the Hall more time.  I have a long list of those who
have requested this efficient and effective little device."

Lessa covered her smiling mouth at his use of his favorite words.
"Effective' was now always paired with "efficient' in his lexicon.  It
was ironic that when he finally had achieved a device that satisfied his
high standards, he hadn't the people to produce the units.

"As well as the demand for any one of the many projects people have
applied for our Craft to fabricate,' he added, "I've had to assign
Master Terry three assistants to deal with requests alone and we have
given up trying to make efficient and effective deliveries." Fandarel's
sigh was more regret than satisfaction at so much business on his books.

"I, too, am overwhelmed, Weyrleaders, put in Master Nicat.

"Every mine known to the Craft, and certainly all the new ones from the
Ancients' records, are being worked and I've had to ask those older
miners I asked to return to the Hall to answer the priorities required
to do Aivas' work to remain on in supervisory capacities.  I can't
afford to lose one able-bodied man or those women we have in the Hall.

"Then,' and he threw up his hands, "people started applying to me for
stoneworkers.  There's not much call for stoneworkers as most holders
enlarge their quarters over the winter months.

And masonry's not strictly a Miners Craft skill.  But no-one else trains
men to work stone.  And all the dressed stone will have to be shipped
south!  I ask you, how will that be accomplished'?" If he saw R'mart's
knowing look or the glances that F'lar and Lessa exchanged, he gave no
notice.  "One thing Aivas didn't seem to have in those exhaustive files
of his was much about improvements in quarrying and masonry."
Unexpectedly, a grin spread across Nicat's round face with its fringe of
white hair.

"Really'?  Well, it's almost a relief to find out he wasn't infallible,'
F'lar remarked at his driest.  "Do you have men trained for stonework?"

"Actually, we're training some right now, Nicat said, screwing his face
up and sighing.  "That sculptor fellow, Edwinrus, has a couple of young
sons and has taken on a few more likely lads.  He's put aside some
artistic commissions to give me a hand.  I could use half again as many
apprentices in that trade and the same number in mining, what with
Hamian wanting more and more trained miners down at Karachi.  He'll have
to take apprentices and train them up as he wants them.  I even walked
those Caves of Laudey's to see if there were any men able-bodied enough
for that sort of work."

"Laudey still has people in the Caves?" Lessa asked in surprise.  "I
thought they all got put to work during the special projects.

"Some of those projects have ended, you know, - Nicat remarked.  "So he
got some of the holdless back but mainly it's the old and infirm who're
in those Caves.  However, Larad says he could free up some of those
prisoners,' Nicat continued, "the ones who he feels have served
sufficient time and could be more profitably used elsewhere.  At least
they're accustomed to stonework."

"In point of fact, it's the dearth of suitable stone that curtails
settling in some of the open plains areas, Talmor said, shuffling around
his various maps and reports.

"Those areas will just have to wait until after the Pass is over,' F'lar
said, dismissing that consideration.  "Sometimes I wonder why we let
ourselves get talked into being responsible for the development of the
Southern Continent

"Because Weyrleaders are the only ones who could be entrusted with such
a responsibility .  .  .  " Fandarel bellowed at the same moment that
Master Nicat rose half out of his chair to say much the same thing. They
regarded each other with their uncharacteristic vehemence.

G'dened and R'mart grinned.

"With the Harper Hall as your consciences,' Talmor added in a mild tone,
"and the fervent agreement of all the Lords Holder and Master Craftsmen
-  "With the notable exception of Toric,' Lessa said, sardonically
cocking one eyebrow.

"Be that as it may,' F'lar went on, with a nod of gratitude to the two
Master Craftsmen, "dragonriders are stretched, too, between Threadfalls
all over the world, mapping and conveying.  Shortly, we'll have to open
a Weyr in the Honshu area

"Surely not at Honshu Weyrhold,' Fandarel said, shocked out of his usual
phlegmatisim to pounce on F'lar's words.

"Not likely,' Flar said with a laugh, glancing at Lessa to forestall a
terse comment from her as well.  "But we will need stone for a decent
Weyrhall for that as we haven't been able to locate any suitable craters
down south."

"You do remember, don't you.  your promise to T'bor,' said R'mart,
leaning toward F'lar and smiling lopsidedly.

"That he could turn over the Weyrleadership of High Reaches and go back
south?" F'lar nodded his head.  "When this Pass is over, he can do what
he pleases."

"When this Pass is over Nicat said wistfully on a long sigh.

A respectful silence followed that as each member of the meeting let
thought dwell on the time when.

"By the by, Master Fandarel,' R'mart said, snagging one of the maps out
of the array on the table and sliding it to the Smith, we located that
ridge for you, the one which is indicated as a source of iron on the
Ancients' spatial map."

"Where?" Fandarel was instantly alert and reached his long arm across
the table to retrieve the paper.

"There, in those foothills.  We've staked and flagged it to be
recognized.  Good site, actually, a fine river nearby.  You might
consider setting up another Hall down there." R'mart was half-teasing,
knowing how devoted Master Fandarel was to the main Craft Hall site in
Telgar.

"We may indeed have to consider that in due course,' Fandarel said, his
eyes scanning the map while one huge index finger followed the course of
the river.  "It wouldn't be fair to have all the Main Craft Halls in the
north.  Give some of my good Masters a chance to show their abilities."

"Make it easier to mine and process the ore at the same site, Master
Nicat said, rising to peer over Fandarel's shoulder at the map.  "See
any blackstone?"

"Didn't look for it, Master Nicat, but we can,' R'mart replied.

"Nice stretch of trees nearby.  And a sweet little valley where folks
could farm."

"Ah, the possibilities are endless now, are they not?" Nicat said with
great satisfaction.

"Did we but have the trained men and women,' Fandarel added wistfully.

"Well,' F'lar began, "it is obvious that we can proceed no faster than
we are doing in the matter of southern settlements, no matter what
accusations are made."

"We shall do our best to counter those,' Fandarel said, looking at
Nicat, who nodded vigorous accord.  "We shall also do our best to
indicate that it is a lack of trained personnel that holds the whole
process up.  I shall so inform my Craft Masters, Journeyfolk and
apprentices." He looked at Master Nicat who hastily added that he would
do likewise.

"When will more of these be available?" F'lar asked, holding up one of
the intercom devices.

"I was thinking of the most efficient way of doing that;' and now
Fandarel turned to Master Nicat, "those elderly and infirm at Igen, do
they have their wits about them and the use of their fingers?"

Nicat frowned down at his fingertips, splayed out on the stone table.
"Aye, I believe they do."

"Good then.  That is all that is really needed, sight and ten fingers.
We've already put some of our elderlies to work and they are glad of the
marks in their hands, I can tell you."

"Besides which, it's an efficient use of available personnel, isn't it,'
Lessa said, managing to keep a straight face though Talmor took a fit of
coughing and R'mart and G'dened looked everywhere except at her or the
Smith.

"I shall leave this one with you, F'lar, Lessa,' Fandarel said, formally
bowing to make the presentation.  "It will reach me at the Smith Craft
Hall should you need to speak with me."

"Quite useful, I assure you,' Nicat answered.  "I don't know how I've
managed without it..

F'lar escorted the two Master Craftsmen out of the Council Room.  Then
Lessa allowed herself the luxury of a chuckle while the others smiled
broadly.  When F'lar returned, he was grinning as well but he rubbed his
hands together.

"We'll just wind this meeting up, shall we?"

"Not much more to say, is there?" Talmor said.  "And we thought we were
busy doing Aivas' bidding!'

"I wonder if he knew just how much he was altering our whole lives .  .
.  " Lessa said, making a sweeping movement with one arm.

"Quite likely he did,' R'mart said sardonically, "which is why he quit
on us before we could disconnect him, or whatever it is one does with a
machine."

"He could at least have stayed around until we were well into the
Transition,' Lessa said, slightly mutinous.

"And bear your reproaches, my dear?" asked F'lar, a mischievous glint in
his eyes as he looked at his weyrmate.

Lessa gave a sniff.

"He knew at least one person would make efficient and effective use of
the Library,' Talmor said, grinning.

"Enough out of you, Harper,' Lessa said with mock astringency.  "Did you
find anywhere, R'mart, remotely resembling a weyr possibility?"

"Not a cave nor a crater we could use among any of those hills,' R'mart
said with disgust.

"Plenty of stone for Master Nicat, though,' G'dened said.

Talmor continued making his notations on the borders of the charts and
sighing occasionally.

"Now here 1 have no special comments,' he said, turning the edge of the
map toward R'mart.

"That's because there is nothing special to comment on.  More hills,
valleys, rivers, rocks."

"Ah, but rocks can be useful,' Talmor said and made the appropriate
notation.

"When the Pass is over It was an hour or more before the Weyrleaders had
finished their discussions of the newly charted lands and the visitors
left.

"I'll be so glad when we've got the entire continent mapped out,' Lessa
said, sighing.

"I doubt we'll have discovered all we need to know about for the time
being .  .  .  until we have enough folks to distribute,' F'lar said,
gathering her slight body to his with one arm as they made their way
into Ramoth's weyr.  She was asleep, her nostrils twitching a bit and
her foreleg claws scrabbling against her stone bed as her dream caused
her to open and close them.  "Is she hungry?"

"Shouldn't be,' Lessa said.  "She hunted well earlier this sevenday
below Landing.  The southern beasts really are better tasting."

"All the fuss is worth the trouble, Lessa,' F'lar reminded her.  "We
shan't disabuse the trust that's been placed in us to dispense the land
impartially.  And dragonriders will have their own stakes in the
Southern Continent.  We'll never be beholden to Halls or Holds again."

Lessa knew that he had never forgotten Benden's situation at the end of
the Last Interval, when only three holds had tithed to the lone Weyr and
dragonriders had been reduced to conditions no small holder would have
endured.  It was ironic that, in finding the solution to the recurring
problem of Thread, they had also ended the reason for their privileges.

Aivas had reassured them on one point: the dragons would not just cease
to mate because the orbit of the Red Star had been disrupted.  They were
as established a species on Pern as the dolphins and would continue to
prosper, though perhaps not in the same large numbers.  A shallow mating
flight would keep the clutches small.  It required more control of both
queen and bronze but it was a feasible deterrent.  Commonly in
Intervals, the queens did not rise as often anyway.

"No,' Lessa said with a devious smile, her eyes sparkling, "they will be
beholden to us for the peace and tranquillity after this Pass is over!"
She liked that.

"We must still wait carefully for the appropriate moment, my heart,' he
said but he, too, smiled in anticipation.

"I wager you that it's Toric who provides the excuse,' she said, a
slight tinge of malice in her tone.  "He's greedy and he's never
forgiven us for deceiving him about the true size of the Southern
Continent." Her grin was sweetly malicious as she recalled that victory.

"You say that every time the subject comes up, so you're probably right
about him,' F'lar said equably.  "Still he's done more to properly site
new settlers than anyone else."

"Especially that group that tried to take over his island,' and Lessa
gave a very girlish giggle of amusement.  "He'll never let us forget
that one.  Still, we were right not to interfere.

"Then,' F'lar said in a significantly weighted tone.  They'd reached the
table where they'd been eating a light meal which Laudey's appearance
had interrupted.  He lifted the klah jug and felt it.  "Cold.  Let's see
what's going in the lower cavern.  That way we'll be harder to find."

They grinned conspiratorially and, hand in hand, made their way back to
the stairs of the Weyr and down across the Bowl to the kitchens.

The dolphins gave warning, ringing the Bells that were now situated in
ten locations on the coasts.  They rang the Big Bell at Tillek Sea Hold
early that morning, though Tillek was further north than the storm's
course.  But the pod that swam in the great bays also knew that the
Master Fishman Idarolan was pod leader for all fish boats and should
know what affected his Craft.  In appreciation of dolphin help to all
seafarers, Master Idarolan had had built a really fine dolphin marina
where they could bring the injured and sick animals of the Western Sea.

Idarolan himself answered the Bell, well wrapped up against the chill of
pre-dawn.

"Bad blow, bad bad bad blow,' the pod leader told him, wagging her head
while her pod mates nodded emphatically.

"Ships can sink in bad bad bad blow.  Blow against rocks." Of which
there were many on the less hospitable western coastline.

"Exactly where do you think it will hit?" Idarolan asked.  He'd had a
harper drawer make up a huge map of Pern, the seas in the bright primary
color the dolphins could recognize as "sea' as opposed to the "dark'
landmasses.

He lowered this now, close enough for Iggy to nose out the storm 5
course.

She indicated the vast expanse of water just below the Eastern Current
and skidded her nose under Southern Boll, aiming it directly at Southern
Weyr and Hold.  "Blow big there.  First land.

Blow all day, all night, all day, all night.  Looooong blow.  Warm
water, much cold air,' Iggy shook her head at the unfavorable mixture.
"Blow blow blow bad bad bad."

Her pod mates squeeed high and loud to stress the dangers.

"We've some ships out Idarolan ran through the list of those he knew
from this port.  "Fishing

"We swim, we see, we tell,' Iggy promised.  "We warn Iddie pod leader."
Iggy loved to say the Master Fishman's name as it was so much like her
own.

"I appreciate that very much, Iggy." He held out the first fish from the
pail always kept full by the Bell and she rose neatly to accept his
offering.  Then he flicked out thank yous into the waiting mouths.  He
had a good aim and none of those who had accompanied the messenger were
slighted.

Master Idarolan trundled back to his warm hold and started writing
messages for fire-lizards to carry.  He sighed as he did so for it was
likely that the fleet finny friends of the deep would relay the warning
far faster than even fire-lizards could be despatched.

His first message went to Lord Toric for that man would batter his Craft
Hall with complaints if such news was not sent first to him.  The
dolphins couldn't measure wind speeds in any gauge comprehensible to
humans.  They did not have to cope with winds, anyway, merely high seas
and they'd either swim to calmer waters or through combers.  They often
delighted in the rougher seas as ways of testing their skills.

There had been rather a lot of storms in the past two Turns and Master
Idarolan had heard whispers that this was due to changing the Red Star's
orbit.  Master Wansor of the Smith Craft Hall who had made a study of
the stars and was one of his own leading Sea Masters had learned the
Craft of meteorology from Aivas and had ridiculed the possibility but
that hadn't kept it from being repeated, and credited by those without
the specialized knowledge to recognize its fallacies.  Idarolan had sat
in on as many of Aivas lectures on weather formation, winds and currents
as he could make time for.  There were valid reasons for the formation
of both calm, clear weather and storms.  The weather satellites
established by the Ancients still gave back their information but not
always were they read right.  The dolphins were more reliable than
instrumentation set at Landing, so far away from the point of the
depression.

Lord Toric was roused from a deep sleep by the chattering of a
fire-lizard and the noise his own were making at the arrival of a
newcomer.  He wasn't best pleased.  He had worked late the previous
night, going over the recent maps made by his scouts, checking and
rechecking the organization of his next move.  He had made contact with
all those he had felt would be eager to assist in his dramatic move.
He'd also sounded out which of the Lord Holders also felt that Benden
Weyr should not have the gift of Southern lands.  Even Lord Groghe had
wavered slightly from his loyalty to the Weyrleaders.  After all, he had
ten sons to place to some advantage.  At every Fort Gather over the past
three Turns, Toric had been planting suggestions in the boys' ears,
intimating that they ought to have the same opportunity as Benelek or
Horon.  He'd put a flea in the ear of young Kern of Crom, Lord Nessel's
third son and Nabol's second.

He'd selected older journeymen, competent and resenting the promotion of
others to Mastery above them.

He cursed as he read Idarolan's message about the storm, it meant he'd
have to delay the start.  It could also mean more chance of someone -
and his "someone' translated into "dragonrider' - discovering the
carefully concealed sites.  Or questioning the prnvision of every one of
the hold's small fishing fleet.  So far, the young Weyrleader K'van had
accepted the off-handed explanation that Toric was resupplying his
southernmost mine sites before the hot season.  Those across the river
had not been detected.  nor the sites, hidden in dense foliage.

The dragonriders had long since surveyed the coast.  All that land and
his Hold bursting with eager new, hand-chosen settlers, determined to
secure and improve their own holds.  looking favorably on him because he
had granted their most earnest desires.

He had had to swallow a great many slights and insults from the Benden
Weyrleaders who thought they were going to carve up all these lands to
their own specifications.  Well, they would find opinion against them
now.  Too many people were aware of the extent of the Southern Continent
and were discontent over the dragonriders' claim that they had first
choice.  For Turns they had had the best that Pern had to offer.  When
the Pass was ended and their services no longer needed, a far different
tune would be struck for them to dance.  And he would make sure of that!

He heard the bell that his Fish Craftmen had insisted be installed in
the deep harbor.  The shipfish had proved unexpectedly useful in telling
fishmen where the schools were running but he was not at all their
advocate.  He resented talking animals: speech was a human attribute and
he hadn't cared being told that dolphins were mammals, not fish, and
humans were mammals too.  The creatures were not equal to humans and
there was no way he would change his mind on that score.  Humans planned
ahead: dolphins only cooperated with humans because humans amused them,
created "games' for them to play.  Life was not a game!  The very notion
of providing amusement to an animal irritated Toric to the core.

But he was a pragmatist and the dolphins could be used to human
advantage.  He didn't like the notion that the creatures were known to
patrol the coast line.  He had his own plans for the coastline.  He
fingered his lips thoughtfully.

They'd seek safety in the Currents during this storm, then, and that
might be the best time for him to make his move: before the storm was
quite over and the dolphins had returned to their customary waters.

He rose then, pulling on his clothes, ignoring his wife's sleepy
murmurs.  If he was to push this scheme through on the end of the gale,
he had work to do and to be done.

When the storm swept down on the southern peninsulas protruding
northward in the Southern Sea, its battering winds were the fiercest
experienced.  Even long-time fishmen were amazed.

Though its eye was well south of Southern Boll and Ista, coastal holds
were battered and the seas flooded low-lying lands, crashing up beaches
to inundate seaside cotholds and fields that had always been high above
ground.  Coming as it did during the equinox, its fury was double that
of normal storms, battering the lands right up to the hills.

Along the southern coast it uprooted the shallower rooted, flexible
trees that generally bowed with wind.  The stOrm rolled gigantic combers
as high up the Weyr cliff as the Weyrhall, shredding part of the roof
and demolishing many of the little buildings that housed riders. Nothing
stood in its way.  Especially Toric's plans.  The deep harbour, usually
a safe enough anchorage, was as storm tossed as the outer sea and men
struggled to save the ships, many half-laden for their "down river'
journey.  Some crew, riding out the storm on their craft, took serious
injuries and had to remain, tended for three long days and nights as
best their mates could manage, until the storm blew itself away from
Southern.

It made good speed, and gathered more, as it headed obliquely south
southeast, blasting toward Paradise River and Cove Hold.

Although the warning served by the dolphin pods was immediately heeded,
for the water mammals had never been wrong, the exact definition of "bad
bad bad' became all too apparent as the weather worsened and the
whistling twisting winds pounded the coast.  No-one had anticipated such
a lengthy and ferocious storm.

Paradise River ran high, flooding the line of cotholds and forcing Jayge
and his family to the nearest high ground, which was also threatened.
The riverside farmlands were inundated, too.  With the season's crops
all gathered in, at first everyone felt safe enough.  But the
storehouses were merely roofs on posts to keep the sun off material and
most of those buildings lost their roofs and had contents blown away. It
was even too dangerous to try to lash down bales and crates for the wind
tossed these indiscriminately as lethal flying objects.  Herd and runner
beasts who were pasturing in the more open fields were later found
lodged in now leafless tree boIls, a strange fruit.  It took days to
round up those that had fled from the savagery of the storm.

Some animals had to be destroyed when they were found with broken legs
or wounds that had become infected during the three days in which they
had been untended.

At Landing, the storm flag was flown from the mast that had once floated
ancient colours of a forgotten homeworld to the breeze.  Somewhat
protected by the three slumbering volcanoes and the fact that the storm
was blowing itself inland, Landing suffered relatively little damage.
Monaco Bay took heavy surf and lost the dolphin float but not the Bell
that had clanged for hours in the gale.  Eastern Weyr got lashing rain
and high winds but not the punishing blow that had devastated the
coastline.

As soon as he could, Readis made a wet journey down to the bay, to ask
Alta and Dar to find out if his folks at Paradise River were all right.
Kami insisted on coming with him because a frantic message from Cove
Hold told them that Master Robinton's house had been flooded and many of
the things that the Harper had valued had been destroyed.  She was
terribly afraid that Paradise River might also have been devastated.  It
took a long time for the dolphins to answer the report' sequence: Readis
and Kami ended up taking turns at the Bell rope.

When Alta finally answered, she told them that, while some of the pod
had remained on duty in case a ship had been out in the gales, the
others had swum to the northern and quieter seas.

She said she would sound a message to pass to the Paradise River pod. So
Readis and Kami waited until nearly full dark before they received an
answer.  The blow had been bad bad bad but humans were well, wet and
tired.

"Dolphins hurt.  You go help?"

"Badly?"

Alta ducked her head under the water and came up.  Don't know.  You go."

Further distressed by such unexpected news, Readis thanked Alta and
apologized for having no fish to give her.

"Ah, the fish run well and deep,' she told him and then backflipped
away.

"Who got hurt?  How badly?" Readis demanded of Kami who remained silent
as they started on the long walk back.  "I wish they could be more
explicit.  Shards!  It'll be ages before we find out.

"I'm sure Master Alemi is already helping, Readis,' Kami said
soothingly.

They were both startled, and Readis cried out with relief, when they
heard a dragon's trumpeting above them, the sound almost lost in the
still brisk after-storm wind.  It was Gadareth and T'lion.

"Could you take us to Paradise River, T'lion?" Readis begged when rider
and dragon landed.  "There's been dolphin injuries, only Alta couldn't
say who or how badly."

T'lion didn't bother to dismount, leaning over to give them a hand up to
Gadareth's back.

"That's bad news,' T'lion looked concerned and Gadareth turned his head
back to show the orange of concern in his eyes.  "I was just at Landing
and heard you'd walked down here.  Look, I'm supposed to report in at
Cove Hold.  It was badly flooded but I can certainly get you home first.
At that.

the wind's only just died down enough for dragons to risk flying. Gaddie
couldn't lift far enough off the ground to go between.  That storm was
incredible!'

As soon as Gadareth lifted from the roadway, the three were buffeted by
the winds: Readis clinging to T'lion who had his safety straps buckled
on and Kami clutching Readis so hard she hurt his ribs.  Dragon flight
was usually smooth but this morning even Gadareth was subjected to
unexpected drops in the few moments it took him to reach transfer
height.

The winds were not much calmer at Paradise River and as Gadareth
re-entered, all three could see how badly the Hold had fared.  Whole
swathes of trees were down, the broad-leafed vegetation in shreds, river
banks deep in mud and roofs lying everywhere but where they had been
built.  Readis groaned.

Everywhere people were working to clear the storm debris.

Grabbing T'lion's shoulder, Readis shouted in his ear.

"Take us to the harbour.  The dolphins'll need my help more."

"Oh, Readis, I must get home.  Just look!" Kami was in tears as she
pointed to their once neat hold.  The porch roof was awry, mud and storm
wrack covered the place and the chimney had fallen down.  The net racks
were splinters on the ground and they could see several nets festooned
in high limbs of trees.

"The dolphins first.  You won't be far from your home there.

Readis also fretted about the fishing ships.  Maybe, and surely Alemi
would have gone to inspect them as soon as he could, the dolphin
injuries had been attended to.  That way he could go home to help.  His
mother might not even realize that he'd gone to the dolphins first.

Gadareth had trouble finding enough clear space to land in, for the pier
had been demolished to a few lengths, the dolphin float and the Bell
gone.  With a sinking heart, Readis saw that the two smaller ships had
been beached and lay on their sides, masts and rigging gone, hulls
broached.  The Fair Winds was not in much better case, but he could see
figures working on her deck.  cutting away the sheets and the splintered
main mast: the second one was still upright even if the rigging had been
torn away.  The schooner also looked low in the water.  Had she sprung a
leak or merely taken on a lot of water?

There were no dorsals visible and that worried Readis even more.  He'd
been thinking "one' injury.  How many had there been?  And with no bell
to summon the dolphins, how was he to call them?

As Gadareth gingerly settled on the beach, pushing dislodged, splintered
tree trunks out of his way to do so, T'lion turned to Readis.

"No Bell.  Gaddie can call them underwater.  He's done it before.
Haven't you, my fine fellow?" And T'lion affectionately slapped
Gadareth's neck.

I call.  They come.  My bugTh is as good as their bell.

When his passengers had dismounted, Readis looked around him, shaking
his head at the devastation.  So much to do.

Kami was sniffling, knowing that Readis disliked her showing indecision
or emotions but she wanted to cry on seeing the destruction of the
smaller boats.  Father would be so upset!

Gadareth walked into the water, holding his wings up high at first until
he was buoyant.  Then he lowered his head in the water.  Those watching
heard nothing but they could see the bubbles of his call boiling to the
surface.  He raised his head, looking out to sea to wait for results.
Then T'lion and Readis saw someone on the Fair Winds waving vigorously.
The ship was too far out for voices to be heard.  Gadareth was about to
repeat his summons when a single dorsal appeared in the water, speeding
towards them.  Gadareth extended his head toward the incoming dolphin
but it continued in toward the shore as far as it could before it raised
its head.  It was Kib, bearing fresh marks on his melon.

"Bad bad bad bad blow.  Worse!  Two calves hurt.  Can you fix?"

"We'll try,' Readis replied.  "How's the ship?"

"Hole full of water.  We help "Lemi."

"That's good of you with injured calves."

Kib blew water out of his hole.  "We help.  Our duty."

"Then we'll help.  Our duty,' T'lion added.  "Bring in the injured.
Gaddie's very good at holding."

When the two battered calves were brought it, Readis and T'lion
exchanged despairing glances.  Both needed stitching to close the gaping
wounds.  A healer was needed.

"Would your Aunt Temma be willing?" T'lion asked Readis.  "I think
T'gellan will understand me coming here instead of Cove Hold.  They'll
have lots of help."

From his tone of voice, Readis gathered that T'lion wasn't all that
certain of Weyrleader approval of his delay.

But they'd need Gadareth to hold the dolphin calves while the surgery
was in progress.  The dams were alternately squeeing to the humans to
help and trying to soothe their offspring.  Both dams bore superficial
cuts but nothing as bad as the lighter and less experienced younglings.

"I'll understand if you don't feel you can stay.

"Don't worry about me and T'gellan,' T'lion added, coming to a sudden
decision.  "There're plenty of humans to help other humans but very few
to help dolphins."

"I thought the dolphins just rode out storms, Kami said timorously, her
pretty face twisted with conflicting worries.

"They usually can,' Readis said.

T'lion shook his head.  "That was not any usual sort of storm!

Shall I take you to the Hold?"

"You go to the Hold, T'lion, and ask Temma to come.  She's good at
suturing.  Had enough practice, Uncle Nazer says.  And you go with him,
Kami,' Readis said, deciding that the girl would fret too much over the
conditions of her home to be useful here.  "I'll stay with the
patients."

"Can you manage?" Kami asked, vacillating again between showing Readis
how helpful she could be and worried about not being with her mother in
this emergency.

"Sure,' Readis said blithely, standing waist deep in water, a wounded
dolphin floating on either side of him and he surrounded by the dams and
the nurse dolphins.

Temma was too busy with human injuries to leave off her duties for
dolphins.  She said she'd come when she could.

T'lion thanked her and asked Gadareth to take him back to Eastern Weyr.
They had weathered the three days of storm much better than anywhere
else.  He'd get Persellan to come.

Persellan had been collected and taken to Cove Hold.

"Does he need more supplies?  How bad was it there?" Mirrim asked, her
brows knotted with concern.

"It's bad all along the coast, Mirrim,' T'lion said.  "I'll just bring
what's needed with me,' he added and, since Mirrim didn't challenge him
further, he entered the healer's hold and helped himself to the items he
knew he and Readis would need.

There was more than enough and he'd tell Persellan later.  He also took
the book which was Persellan's treasured compilation from Aivas' medical
files.  T'lion had watched Persellan work on dolphins often enough to
have a good idea of how to proceed but it would be reassuring to have
printed words to refer to.

He didn't think he'd been very long but it was Readis who had had to
wait and the waiting must have seemed like Turns to the hold boy who
called out frantically as Gadareth landed.

"What took you so long?  I've had all sorts of trouble keeping the
bloodsuckers from attaching themselves to the calves.

Temma isn't with you?" Readis' face turned whiter and his expression
bordered panic.

"I took what we need from Persellan's hold, and his book,' T'lion
explained as he stripped off his riding gear and clothes down to his
clout.  Shivering a bit for the wind still had traces of storm chill, he
waded out, book and sack of supplies held above the rippling surface of
the water.  "C'mon, Gaddie, we'll need you, too." Gadareth followed him,
moving very carefully with one eye on the dorsal fins and heads
protruding above the surface.

"What about Temma?  I've never sewn up anything.  Have you?  And I had
to stuff Angie's guts back in."

Angie was the older of the two injured calves - Cori's daughter, born
that spring.

"Ooooo.  Wonder if you should've

"1 had to, T'lion,' Readis said, his tone a bit strident with anxiety.
"Couldn't let any blo?dsuckers get attached to her guts.  They'd eat her
inside out.

"Wait a minute.  I'm looking .  - T'lion said, riffling through pages of
the book which he kept well above the water and any splashes.  "Oooo!
Ugh!" He paused, lowering the book slightly to peer at something.  "Ah,
here.  Human intestines." He bent to peer down at the injured Angie.
"Gaddie, hold her for me, will you?  C'mon now, Angie, Gaddie won't hurt
you.

The calf's squeeing was agonized but, with her mother and Afo pushing
her with their noses, she had no option.  Gaddie's talons cradled her.

"Tip her slightly, huh, Gaddie?" And the bronze dragon, head cocked to
see for himself, tilted the little body sideways.

"Oooo." T'lion shuddered at the raw sight of the cords of visible
intestines poking out of the wound.

T'lion tucked the sack on the dragon's upper arm where the angle was
just enough to keep it secure but to hand, then tentatively fingered the
extruding loops.  Referred to the book again, read with his lips moving
as he did the more technical words by the syllables.  Then he shrugged
at the anxious Readis.

"Well, the book doesn't give any directions other than "reinsert the
colon in the reverse order of removal." Hmmm.  That's a lot of help."

"1 did sort of loop them back in,' Readis said.  "I've seen runners with
their bellies opened.  Dad would just put them back in, sew "em up and
hope.  Mostly they lived."

"Then we'll hope dolphins being mammals like us and runners will
survive, too,' T'lion replied, rolling up his sleeves.  "All right,
start spreading this,' and he handed Readis a big pot of numbweed,
"around the wound.  It seemed to help Boojie and he didn't squirm when
Persellan sewed him up.

Readis liberally slathered on the numbweed.

"I've watched Persellan sewing up dragons often enough, and I helped him
with Boojie,' T'lion began, taking out a needle and threading it with
the fine strong suture that Aivas had suggested to the Healer Hall.
"I've even got the hang of how he ties his knots.

"So do it,' Readis said, impatiently, "before she loses any more blood.
That's definitely not good for her."

With a decisive exhalation, T'lion reached for the needle and thread.
Numbweed worked really quickly, deadening any flesh, human, dragon and,
he hoped, dolphin.

Watching, he found, was by no means the same as doing for even getting
the sharp needle to penetrate the tough and slippery flesh of the
dolphin was different than sewing up clothes or even repairing his
flying straps.  The muscles along Angie's side rippled.  Since he had to
jam the needle in her pretty hard, that was okay.  She wasn't squirming
which would have worried him.  And the other dolphins were making some
sort of soothing noises that, in some mysterious way, seemed to vibrate
in the water around his legs.  Gaddie, careful to keep the rest of her
under the rippling water, held steady enough so that his jabbing needle
didn't go into the wrong places.

"She knows you're helping her,' Readis said as he kept up a reassuring
rhythm of caresses.  That helped his nerves and she seemed to lean into
the motions.  He also kept checking the reassuring beat of the big heart
in her chest.  It struck him as significant that dolphins had hearts on
the left sides of their bodies, just as humans did.

Cori, the other injured baby, wasn't more than a few months old but the
wound was serious for so young a calf.  When T'lion was finishing the
last of Angie's stitches, he asked Gaddie to take Cori in hand so that
Readis could smear her with numbweed.  The baby made odd noises and
swished her tail around but Afo told them that Cori was only relieved to
be painless.

"Goodee man goo, she said quite clearly.  "Nummmmm weeeed?" she asked.

Readis laughed, as much from relief of the strain as because he was
pleased to know the pods were using more words.

"Yes, numbweed,' Readis said.  "They've learned a lot from you, T'lion,
and he tried to keep envy out of his voice.

"They didn't learn it from me - I don't think,' T'lion said, frowning as
he concentrated on tying the last few stitches in the complex knot.
"Maybe Persellan used the word when he was doing Boojie.  But Afo wasn't
at Eastern when we did that.

There!  That's closed now.  Wheeee." T'lion wiped his forehead on his
arm, cleaned the needle and returned it to the little case that held
Persellan's needles.

"Good mans men,' Afo said and rubbed against their legs, prodding them
gently in their genitals as a mark of extra affection.

"Hey, don't do that, Afo,' Readis said.

T'lion laughed at his reaction.  "Don't forget to thank Gaddie, too,
Afo,' he said and Afo responded by blowing a spout of water up against
the bronze dragon's chest before submerging.

Gadareth rose out of the water, the wave he made swamping the two young
men.

"Watch that!  I'm soaked, and this water's not so warm today,' Readis
complained.  "I'm also water riddled." He looked at the shrivelled skin
on his fingers.  "Anyone else need help, Afo?"

"No, t'ank you.  We go now, work holes in ships.  Lemi grateful.  Afo
grateful, Cori, Angie, Mel grateful and happy.

"Bring the calves back in three days, three sunrises, Afo.  So we can
take those stitches out.

"Hear you,' Afo said as she swam away, ahead of the little group of
four, moving off westward and more slowly.

The two friends made their way to the beach, moving wearily after the
unaccustomed mental and physical strain.

"I sure hope we did it right,' T'lion said, shaking his head.

"What we need is a manual on animal treatment.  1 heard tell that Master
Farmer Andemon finally asked for .  .  .  Shards!" T'lion stopped,
pawing through the sack.  "Where did the book go?" His hands came up
empty and he looked about frantically, hoping to see the book on the
water.  He couldn't even remember when he had last seen it, save that he
had propped it up on Gaddie's forearm.  "Gaddie, where did the book go?
Readis, call Afo back.

Did we come straight out?  How far were we from shore?"

"Don't panic, T'lion,' Readis said as he began retracing his steps.  "I
was in up to my belt - which is probably so saltlogged it'll never
soften up

"You're worried about a belt,' T'lion roared, "when I may have lost
Persellan's book?"

"We were about here, I think,' Readis said and then dove beneath the
surface.

"Gaddie, put your head under, too.  See if you can see it.

The waters were still dark from the storm where the sea bottom had been
churned up.

I see little, Gadareth responded though it was obvious from the movement
of his neck that he was looking all around.  What do !lookfor?

"The book!  The book I used.  I put it on your arm.  You know what the
book looked like." Really upset, T'lion framed the size of the book in
his hands although his dragon still had his head underwater and could
not have seen what he did.

Readis surfaced.

"It's all stirred up, sand everywhere.  Can't see a thing.  And Gaddie's
been walking about.  He might have buried it."

"Buried it'?" T'lion's voice broke octaves in his anxiety.

"Easy, T'lion, easy,' Readis said, took three deep breaths and then
dove.

T'lion could barely see the holder lad swimming so murky was the water.
Why now, of all days, was the water not as clear as usual.  He began
walking about the area where he thought they had been standing, hoping
he might kick it up.  But Gaddie couldn't've kicked it.  He had been
holding up the dolphins, and his hind feet would have been further out.

"Gaddie, call Afo.  Tell her we need her."

Gadareth obligingly bellowed.  That his bugle was heard was obvious when
two of the seamen working on the Fair Winds waved back at them.  But not
a single dorsal fin came streaking toward them.

"Try underwater, Gaddie.  Afo must hear you.  We need her help."

Afo did not come, though Gadareth called her in air and underwater every
time T'lion asked him.

And Readis, who kept diving, going in ever increasing circles out from
the spot where they thought the precious book might be, was becoming so
hyperventilated and pale under his tan that even T'lion knew he should
stop.

"One more dive is all I'll let you take,' the dragonrider told his
younger friend.  "You look awful."

"If only we'd had the mask accusatory.

"I'm trying, I'm trying, - T'lion explained, his voice tense, his mind
in a whirl as he thought of how Persellan was going to react to the loss
of his invaluable book.

Then Readis took his usual deep inhalation and dove, appearing for that
instant more like a dolphin than a boy.

"Lucky last!" Readis shouted as he exploded out of the water.

In the hands held high above his head he had the book.

"Don't get it any wetter than it is!" T'lion cried, reaching out in a
thankful gesture at the sight of the lost object.

But when Readis put the soggy book in his hands, dark runnels of water
over their hands told them that considerable damage had been done the
contents.  T'lion groaned as his trembling fingers flipped open the
cover.  He flipped it closed immediately, rolling his eyes and groaning
again.

"It's ruined.  Ruined!  Persellan will flay me!'

"It came from Aivas' files, didn't it'?  Well, then it only needs And
Readis' look was to be reprinted,' Readis said in an effort to relieve
his friend's dismay.

"Only?" T'lion replied.  "Do you have any idea of how long someone has
to wait to get something only reprinted?"

Readis shook his head, determined to supply a remedy.

"I'm up there all the time, T'lion.  I can recopy what needs to be done
directly from the discs." Then he added by way of reparation, "And maybe
include some animal treatment stuff at the same time."

"Oh, I dunno,' T'lion said, appalled at the damage a moment's
inattention had caused.

"Good thing you had it so we'd know how to put her guts back in.

"We won't know until she gets better - and works right - if we did,'
T'lion replied, shaking his head and staring down at the book which was
still shedding inky drops of water.

"Let's get out of the water, and see if we can't dry some of the pages
in the sun,' Readis urged and they both headed back to the shore.  "I
mean, we have a duty to dolphins, too, you know.

"Do we?"

Readis gave his friend a startled look.  "I think we do.  They came with
us, didn't they?  They didn't have to but they came to help us with the
marine explorations.  They've done them but our responsibility doesn't
end there.  Does it'?  Huh?  No more than our responsibility to
dragonkind will end when Thread stops.

He looked a little embarrassed when T'lion turned to him an odd stare,
his jaw dropped in surprise at Readis' vehemence.

"That is, when it does,' Readis amended.  "I mean, we - humans - created
the dragons.  We owe them, too, you know."

T'lion's slow grin spread across his face.  "I wish more of us humans
thought the way you did."

Readis ducked his face in embarrassment.  "I've known dragons all my
life, better than most holder children do.  I've scrubbed more." Then he
squinted up at the angle of the sun.  "Here.

Let's prop the book up here so it gets the sun.  I'd better dry off,
too,' he added, noticing the water marks on his hands.  "Or Dad will
sure know where I've spent time when I should have been back helping him
and Mother."

"D'you think the book'll dry out enough'?" T'lion said anxiously as he
settled the book on a broad leaf so that sand wouldn't damage it
further.

The volume was heavy enough so that it had fallen to the bottom, lying
there until Readis had finally found it.  The inner pages had been
sufficiently pressed down so that only the edges of every leaf showed
their immersion.  Ink had blurred somewhat, even on the illustrations.

T'lion groaned as they surveyed the ravages.  "Persellan's not going to
like this."

"I said I'd make it good."

"You oughtn't to have to.  I borrowed the book without permission.  You
didn't."

"You wouldn't have borrowed it if I hadn't insisted we heal the calves."
Readis' chin was at an aggressive angle.  "We're in this together."

"You most certainly are, said a new voice and the two young men swung
around to see Jayge and Temma come striding out of the jungle that
bordered the cove.  "What's all this about dolphins needing medical
assistance?  Where have you been?  Kami's been back hours and she said
she came with you.

Readis sprang to his feet, trying to conceal the water-logged book from
his father's sight.

"Ah, well, oh!" he floundered.

"1 told T'lion I'd come when I could,' Temma said, cocking her head and
looking from one to the other.  Then out to sea.

"No dolphins to mend?"

"We did it,' Readis said.  "I mean, T'lion's watched Persellan and there
were bloodsuekers trying to and it was the calves, and they were hurt
with awful gashes guts hanging Out

"So you decided that those mammals of yours needed attention sooner than
injured humans?" Jayge had crossed his arms over his chest at his most
forbidding.

Readis swallowed.  He had not often had occasion to suffer his father's
disapproval or chastisement but he knew the pose from those times Jayge
had dealt with recalcitrant hold workers or those whose behaviour had
not met his standards.  Now he raised his chin.

"Yes, sir.  They bleed and hurt the same as we do, and there was no-one
else bothering about them and plenty of people, including Aunt Temma, to
tend to human hurts.  No-one was badly hurt, were they?" Readis asked
Temma.

"No, but you should have found that out first, before you even thought
of coming here,' Jayge answered, frowning at his son.  "You're my son
and will be Holder.  What sort of an example are you setting?" and he
waved toward the sea and its denizens, "Coming here first before you
knew what help was needed in your Hold!'

"When we overflew the Hold, it looked like you had matters in hand.  But
no-one was looking after our dolphins

"Our dolphins?" Jayge's expression became even more forbidding.  "Since
when do "we" own dolphins?"

"The pod .  .  .  the ones that use these waters they're ours, in a
manner of speaking.

"Sir, the fault was mine,' T'lion interrupted and was waved silent by
Jayge.

"Why are you involved in this, T'lion?"

"He's been .  .  .  " Readis began.

"Dragonriders are able to answer for themselves, Readis."

"But he

"I'm liaison for the dolphins in the Eastern Weyr waters, Holder Jayge,'
T'lion said, stiffening to an erect position.  "We heard at Landing that
there were injuries in this pod and help was requested.  So I Jayge
frowned.  "How would they know at Landing Before Readis could capitalize
on his father's misunderstanding and absolve himself of his apparent
defection by intimating that someone at Landing had given him the
orders, T'lion continued.

"Actually, sir, we found out at Monaco Bay, not Landing.

Readis and Kami were there, hoping to hear word from Paradise River that
all was well here."

"So you got a message at Monaco Bay that dolphins at Paradise River were
injured?"

"Yes, sir,' T'lion replied.

Jayge's frown got darker.  "So Master Samvel didn't give you permission
to leave, Readis?"

"Master Samvel told me that Readis was down at Monaco.

T'lion said, temporizing as he suddenly realized what Readis had been
trying to imply.

Jayge shook his head.  "Will you boys stop answering for each other? So,
you are absent from school as well as derelict in your duty to your
Hold, Readis.  And you, T'lion, where were you supposed to be when you
were busy healing the dolphins?"

"I went down to Monaco Bay when I heard that's where Readis and Kami had
gone,' he replied.

"I repeat, where were you ordered to go?"

"Cove Hold,' T'lion said, "but plenty of folks were helping out there
and no-one was .  " He hesitated.

"Helping these dolphins,' Jayge finished.  "Both of you need to get your
priorities in order.  I shall expect you to report your afternoon's
activities to T'gellan, T'lion.  You'd better report to where you should
be before the day ends." A holder could not presume to give a
dragonrider, even a young one, direct orders that did not deal with
Threadfall.

"Ah, yes, sir,' T'lion hesitated.  He needed to take the book with him,
damp as it was, but he also didn't quite like the idea of displaying the
damaged thing to anyone.

"Well T'lion grimaced.  He had to leave, and leave Readis facing an
angry father.  So, giving a despairing sigh, he reached for the book.

And what's that sorry-looking mess?" Jayge asked, holding out his hand.
When T'lion reluctantly gave it to him, Jayge whistled as he felt the
dampness.  Turning the first few pages, he then shot angry glances at
both son and dragonrider as he realized how valuable it was.

"We know it's been damaged.  It fell off Gaddie's arm,' T'lion
explained.  "I needed to know how to restore intestines .

"By using your healer's most valued possession?" Temma asked, incensed
when she saw what Jayge was looking through.

"He'll not thank you for that.

"I can copy the damaged pages,' Readis said quickly.  "I've access to
the files.  I can even add more from the veterinary sections

"Did you at least have permission to use the manual?" Jayge asked.  "Ah,
I see not,' he added, noting the guilty flush on the dragonrider's face.

"Persellan was nowhere about to ask,' T'lion said.  "Mirrim saw me and
said it was all right."

"To take supplies possibly,' Temma put in, "but not such a valuable
healer's book."

"I can set it right,' Readis insisted.

"That's enough out of you,' Jayge said, turning on his son.

"You'd better leave, T'lion."

Temma took the dragonrider's arm before he swung past her.

"And the dolphins?"

"We sewed them up and they went off with their dams,' T'lion said in a
muted voice.

"Sewed them up, did you?" Temma looked dubious.

"I've helped Persellan and I can tie the right sort of healer knots to
suture securely.  That was the critical need, so the bloodfish couldn't
enter the wounds."

"The critical need?"

T'lion stiffened, regarded the woman with an expressionless face.  "I
did what I could to help and we'll see in three days if what I did was
enough."

Temma's expression softened a little.  "Happen you did all that was
needed.  I'd be interested to see."

Without a backward look then, the young dragonrider went to his pile of
clothes, dressed, stuffed Persellan's volume in his flying jacket and
clambered aboard Gadareth.  The bronze took off westward, away from
those silently watching.

Readis couldn't look at his father but he felt Jayge's suppressed anger
in the grip he took on Readis' arm as he pushed him toward his own
clothing.

"Get your shoes on!" Jayge said.  "Let's not have another thorn in your
foot."

Readis felt a hard cold feeling in his chest at that harsh remark.

His father never referred to his limp, had never before reminded him of
the injury nor where he had taken it.  But then, his father wouldn't
know that Readis felt far more comfortable in the sea, where his
shrivelled leg posed no disadvantage or handicap.

The way home was too short for Readis to prepare himself for his
mother's condemnation.  She'd make sure he never went to the cove again.
She would certainly extract a promise from him to have nothing to do
with dolphins ever again.  It was a promise that Readis could not in
conscience give.  There was no way now that he would give up the
contact.  Today's event had proved to him that the dolphins needed to
have at least one staunch defendant in every coastline settlement: one
committed dolphineer.  The word had been hovering in his mind for a long
time now and, in that moment, he recognized what he should do and be: a
dolphineer.

As badly as Readis thought his mother would react, the actual storm that
followed his father's account of his son's various offences against his
Hold, against parental teaching and tolerance, his consorting with
dolphins, his absence from the Landing school, brought such a tirade
down on his head that he was unable to speak out in self-defence.  Until
she ranted that he was without conscience, loyalty or honour in his
devious and unworthy association with shipfish.

"Dolphins, Mother, dolphins,' he said.  "And I've always kept my promise
to you.

She halted in her ranting, her face pale, her eyes huge and, if the tear
streaks on her cheeks tormented him, her injustice made him speak out.

"You have not!'

"I have, too.  I have never been alone with the dolphins or in the sea.
There has always been someone else with me.

"That isn't at issue

"But it is.  I promised you the day after the dolphins rescued me and
Unclemi that I wouldn't go by myself to swim and I never have.  Not in
ten Turns!'

"But you were a child!  How could you remember that'?"

"Mother, I remembered.  I have obeyed.  I have never come to harm from
the dolphins

"But you have neglected your own family and the Hold's needs at a time
when we needed everyone's help, everyone's loyalty - -  "The dolphins
are part of Paradise River Hold,' Readis began and she slapped his face
as hard as she could and he staggered back, rocked from the insecure
balance of standing on the toe of one foot.

For a moment there was complete silence in the room.

Aramina rarely used physical punishment and the slaps she had given her
children for naughtiness had been admonitory not punitive.  She hadn't
even so much as tapped his hand in rebuke since he had started at the
Landing school.

"Dolphins .  .  .  are .  .  .  not .  .  .  part of this Hold!" she
said fiercely, stringing out the words to emphasize her anger and
denial.  "I'm sure there is work to which your father can put you now.
You will do it and you will never mention those wretched creatures in my
presence again.  Do you understand'?"

"Yes,' Readis managed to say, "I understand." He could not at that
moment call her "Mother'.  He turned his head to his father, awaiting
orders.

Jayge, whose expressionless face told Readis nothing, beckoned for
Readis to follow him.

Fortunately, the Ancients had built all the river-bank holds on stone
pillars that elevated the floors four to five steps above ground level.
This had provided breezeways under the dwellings for cooling in hot
weather, but it also provided protection against occasional flooding.
The holders blessed that precaution when the gale-driven tides had
lapped at the top steps, and even flowed on to the porch flooring, right
up to the doors, but not over the thresholds.  The storehouses had lost
their light roofs but their walls and floors had withstood the gales, as
they had done for centuries.  But there was debris to be removed, and
help required to rig some sort of covering for supplies; stored crates
and canisters to be inspected for damp, clothing to be hung out to dry,
dead animals to be butchered.  The injured, human and animal, had by
then been attended.  Readis was set to help with the skinning and
dressing down.  That had to be completed by nightfall and the meat
refrigerated.

Nazer had the generator running again so there was power for lights and
cooling.  Readis worked alongside other holders, grateful for the fact
that no-one else knew of his dereliction.

Kami had evidently only told his parents that he had returned with her.
Readis didn't think he could stand any more reproaches.  While he had
learned how to compensate for the antrophied muscles in the bad leg and
he sat or leaned against some sturdy support whenever possible, he had
to work at top speed to dress the carcasses down and, by midnight, the
muscles in both legs were jumping with strain and he was exhausted.  But
nothing would make him take a break until everyone else quit.

He had had klah and a fish roll when food was passed round which had
eased hunger pangs.  He'd had nothing since eating at school early that
morning.

When the last haunch was prepared for the cooler, Nazer sent everyone to
their beds.  Readis started off toward his home, and stopped half-way
there.  He could see that a light had been left burning on the porch but
he couldn't - he just couldn't - go back under that roof right now.  He
veered toward the animal shed.  He'd be warm enough under the temporary
roof despite the slight chill of the sea breeze.  He'd sleep anywhere he
laid himself down.  And he did.

He was unprepared fir being roughly shaken out of a deep sleep.

"So here's where you are!" his sister Aranya said, her expression
accusatory.  "Father's been searching everywhere for you but Uncle Alemi
swore he hadn't seen you.  You've got Mother in a terrible state over
your shameful

"I'll take that from .  .  .  my mother,' Readis said, putting his fist
in her face and having the satisfaction of seeing his sister stumble
backwards, frightened, "but I don't have to take it from you, Rannie."
Then he decided to take a small revenge on his usually tender-hearted
sister.  "My leg ached so I couldn't walk another step." And he rubbed
both hands down the withered muscles.

"Oh, Readis, Father said Nazer told him you'd stayed on till the bitter
end last night.  They looked ftr you there, first.  Then Mother was
certain you'd gone to those wretched creatures who caused all your
problems."

"The dolphins,' he said with distinct emphasis on their proper
designation, "have caused me no problems at all.  A wretched thorn did!'

"Well, Mother says you wouldn't have got the thorn in your foot if you "
She broke off when he raised his fist in her direction again.  "You'd
better come home.  I'll tell them where I found you and that will be
that."

It wasn't.  His mother was close to hysterical again and his father,
reckoning the cost of the storm to the Hold's prosperity, was in a sour
mood.

Later Readis would realize how strained everyone had been then, tempers
and patience too stretched to allow for any tolerance but, when his
mother insisted that he give her his word that he would never again have
anything to do with shipfish - and her use of that term as well as the
tone of voice she used further inflamed him - then he, too, lost his
temper.

"That is a promise I cannot make!'

"You will make it and abide by it,' his mother told him, her eyes
inflamed and sparkling with anger, "or you cannot live in the Hold!'

"As you will, he said, cold despite the trembling in his guts.

He stalked down the hall to his room where he filled a travel sack with
everything he could lay his hands on.

"You promise me, Readis,' his mother screamed down the hall at him. "You
promise .  .  .  "she began again at his doorway.

"What do you think you're doing?"

"I'm going for I cannot promise that, Mother.

"Going to those awful creatures?"

"Now that's a ridiculous idea,' he said, scornful and, though he didn't
know it, sounding so much like his father at that moment that Aramina
was so stunned by the similarity that he was able to push past her
before she could recover to prevent him.

Limping as fast as he could, he made for the kitchen, sending out a
piercing whistle for Delky.  He'd seen her grazing, as usual, near the
house when he and Aranya had left the shed.  He saw his wide-eyed
sisters and younger brother sitting at the table, an uneaten breakfast
proving that they had been listening to the row.  As he got the kitchen
door, Delky whinnied a greeting.

Although his bad leg nearly collapsed, Readis managed to vault to her
back, balancing his duffel before him.  He heard his mother, demanding
at the top of her voice that he come back inside the house right now as
he kicked Delky into a canter, putting as much distance between himself
and his unyielding parent as possible.

Delky had to dodge fallen trees and piled debris, nearing unseating him
several times but he kept her heading toward the river.  The bridge had
already been partially restored so that both sides of the river bank
were accessible.  There were just enough planks down for Delky,
surprised and cautious but obedient to his insistence, to cross without
losing a foot in a gap.  When he got to the other side, he sent her
flying down the sands and on into the scrub vegetation.  He slowed her
down only when the rough going might injure her.  He couldn't afford to
lame her right then.  He stopped only when they had reached jungle again
and would be invisible to anyone searching for him from the air.  Then
he slipped from Delky's back, his sack under him and wept in
frustration, anger and heartbreak.

Chapter Twelve

"van strode into the Weyrwoman's quarters with the briefest nod to
Ramoth asleep on her couch.

"It's Lord Toric again, Lessa, F'lar,' the Southern Weyrleader said,
with an angry slap of his riding gloves on his thigh as he came to a
halt by the table where they were having an evening glass of wine as
they studied storm damage reports from the Southern Continent.

K'van might be the youngest Weyrleader but he was now as old as F'lar
had been when Mnementh had flown Ramoth and become Weyrleader.  He had
attained more height than his adolescence had suggested, for his
shoulders had broadened, his legs had lengthened and his eyes were at a
level with F'lar's when they were standing.  F'lar gestured for K'van to
be seated and poured a glass of wine for him.

"You look as if you need it."

"I do,' K'van said with a sigh as he dropped into the chair opposite
Lessa.  "And you will, too."

"So what has Toric done this time?" Lessa asked, amused.

"He hasn't done it yet but he's about to.  Go across the river and
settle it with his chosen, having prepared a place for them.  He's never
been the least bit altruistic so I know he's up to something and I've a
hunch what it is." It gave K'van little satisfaction to see how angrily
the Weyrleaders reacted to Toric's latest show of arrogance.  "We found
incontrovertible evidence of substantial shelters in eight different
locations, coastal, riverside and in-land.  His harbor master is saying
that the ships are being loaded for a down-river supply run but I
doubted that even when he gave me the smooth lie."

Lessa pursed her lips angrily, her eyes sparkling.

"Toric's never been satisfied, has he?" she asked rhetorically and then
pounded her fist on the table.  "Greedy, that's what he is.  And he's
got a larger Hold than any of the Ancients ever staked out." She leaned
toward F'lar.  "We can't let him away with this, F'lar.  We can't!'

"Lessa, we also can't stop him.

"Why not?" she demanded.

"We can't interfere with a Lord Holder." The Weyrleader scowled deeply,
for once annoyed to be constrained by that tradition.

"But Toric isn't within his Hold if he's across the river, now is he?"
K'van asked, his tenor voice at its mildest.  The slight smile on his
face was sly.  "Oh, I know, he asked us to help him with Denol and that
group who tried to take over lerne Island, but that is part of the
holding you granted him.  This land is all beyond his Hold borders.

"You're sure of that, K'van?" F'lar asked.

"That he's out of his own Hold?  Yes, even the eastern bank of the river
is not his.  Not according to the map I have that outlines Southern
Hold, from river to sea, and inclusive of lerne Island

"Which he insisted on having at the time,' Lessa said, angry red spots
appearing on her tanned cheeks.  She had clenched her fists.  "And we
only gave in to that demand because I wanted Jaxom to have Sharra."

F'lar brushed back the lock which always escaped to cover his eyes at
moments like these.  "You're right he's up to something.

I have a sudden, totally unworthy thought F'lar then shook his head and
dismissed the thought unspoken with a wave of his hand.  "I believe I'd
better wait to justify such base suspicions." He grinned at K'van and
Lessa.  The look in the young Weyrleader's eye suggested he might be
entertaining the same notion.

"What suspicions?  Of course they'd be base, coming from Toric.  But
just what?" Lessa wanted to know.

"Later, love.  Tell me, K'van, does he have settlers all lined up and
ready to settle?"

K'van nodded.  "I had nothing specific to report to you until now, but
we keep our eyes open to Toric's doings.  Discreetly, of course.  Over
the past few months there have been more than a normal number of
well-laden ships making port at Southern.

Each carrying ten to twenty passengers, sometimes family, sometimes
singles.  You know he's built four coastal cruisers?

Yes, well.  They're lumberly craft but have shallow draft and good cargo
space.  At any rate, he's got a lot of people in and about the Hold who
haven't gone inland as I'd've thought they would - if they were his new
settlers.  He's never hidden the fact that he's been recruiting
crafters.  All perfectly legal since he hasn't settled all the land he
rightfully holds.  No reason for a Weyrleader to poke his nose where
he's no right to sniff." K'van grinned, his eyes glinting cynically.
K'van kept strictly to the Traditions that governed Weyr and Hold,
knowing that Toric would rave about any infringement by Weyr on Hold
iprerogatives.  "But when no-one moved out, by land or by sea, all I
could do was wait until I had something definite to bring to your
attention.  At the last gather, there were marks circulating from every
northern Hall and Hold and some rumors Fthat Toric's been selling sites.
In his own Hold, he has that right but K'van lifted his hand, "not
across the river!'

"He wouldn't dare!" Indignation and outrage fueled Lessa's anger.  "He's
got the gall to charge for what settlers should have by right of their
own hard work?"

"A neat scheme,' F'lar said, sardonically amused by such connivance.
"And I wouldn't doubt if the payment in marks isn't followed by a
different sort of payment later on." K'van nodded.  "When the Council of
Holders might need to vote on other business."

Lessa opened her mouth, her dark eyes widening as she began to
understand the scale of Toric's plan.  "Base isn't a vile enough
description of what he plans to do!  I knew we were wrong to call a
complete halt to new settlings,' she said, in spite of what Fandarel and
Nicat said, and in spite of the lack of suitable places.  They wouldn't
have been half so eager to take up Toric's offer if they could have come
to us.

"So, do you have proof of Toric's encroachment on unapportioned lands?"
F'lar asked.

"Indeed we have.  The storm flattened whole swathes of forestry as wide
as a Threadfall and what do you know?  There were five settlements all
too visible to my sweep riders.  So we went looking to see if there
might be a few more, and located another three.  All built and ready to
be occupied.  And then there's Lord Toric's harbor full of laden ships .
.  .  " K'van shrugged, not needing to say more.

"He didn't lose any ships to the storm?" F'lar asked, a tinge of
annoyance in his voice as he nodded at the reports spread out on the
table, itemizing storm losses.

K'van grinned.  "I know that Master Idarolan passed a dolphin warning on
to him as well as to the Weyr so Toric had time, and the good sense, to
batten his shipping down.  toric doesn't leave much to chance."

"Does he know you've overflown these totally illegal sites of his?"
Lessa said, her voice harsh with the anger seething inside her.

"I doubt it,' K'van said.  "Once they realized what they were seeing, my
sweep riders avoided Southern Hold on their way back."

"We can tackle this encroachment several ways,' F'lar said, leaning back
in his chair, a malicious smile on his lips as he idly twirled the stem
of his glass.

"There's only one way - Lessa began and he held up his hand

"Hear me out.  We could dismantle those settlements so there'd be no . .
.  ah accommodations left for these settlers of his when they finally
sail forth.  They'd be forced to go back to Southern.  This is not the
season to be without shelter, if that storm is any preview of a rough
winter down south.  But 1 would like to show other Lord Holders, who
have been courteous enough to bide their time, what sort of trickery
toric has been up to.  Making people pay for land they have the right
to!'

"He's so certain that we're holding out the best lots for ourselves -
Lessa began, giving vent to her outrage.  "Just because he wasn't at the
Council when the Lords asked the Weyrleaders to officiate, he refuses to
believe that we did not want anything to do with land settlements, that
we protested about taking on such responsibilities F'lar regarded his
diminutive weyrmate with more amusement than choler. "We didn't protest
that strongly, love, now did we?"

"Only because it was all too plain what would happen if someone with
some claim to impartiality didn't take charge.

And it was we who insisted that all Weyrleaders took part, not just
Benden which was the intention of Larad of Asgenar who proposed the
notion.  And we also insisted that the Harper Hall keep records of all
transactions."

"I know Toric's certain that dragonriders will get preference, K'van
began.

"And shouldn't we?" Lessa demanded of the young Weyrleader.

"I certainly feel we should,' K'van answered firmly, all too aware of
the Weyrwoman's temper and determined not to fall foul of it, "since
it's the last concession we'll expect of Pern.

Adrea and I found a place that we feel we'd be very happy in.

Found it on my very first mapping sweep."

"Adrea likes it?" Lessa asked, momentarily diverted from her castigation
of Toric.

"Oh, yes, we've been down half a dozen times to make sure, and,' K'van
grinned, "it looks better every time we see it.

It's what we want but I don't think many people would find it so
perfect."

"That's what I mean,' Lessa went out, gesturing emphatically with one
hand as if sweeping Toric's exceptions aside.  "Our needs and tastes are
very individual and there's so much land out there She made another
expansive gesture.  "And he has the unmitigated gall to take marks " She
was speechless for such presumption.  "The man has tried my patience for
the last time."

"I do believe you're right, my love,' F'lar said, still grinning with
malicious anticipation.  "And since he isn't even on his own Hold
grounds, I think we have him just where we need him.  And do us a favor
of becoming a lesson for anyone with similar inclinations.  A lesson
that will last until the end of this Pass."

"I'm with you there, F'lar, and K'van lifted his glass in respect of
that claim.

"Exactly how did you mean to set the lesson?" K'van asked.

"Mind you, you have Southern Weyr's total cooperation.  There have been
times when it was all I could do to keep a civil tongue in my head with
a great and greedy Lord Toric.  And I'm not the only one in the Weyr to
find him a bit too high-handed and arrogant."

F'lar's amber eyes were sparkling with such orange lights that for a
moment K'van wondered if some of Mnementh's fighting characteristics had
transferred to his rider.  His slowly widening smile was both sinister
and amused.

"I think I'll borrow a moment from Benden Weyr's past.  How long do you
think it will be before the storm damage to Toric's fleet is repaired
and he's ready to move out?"

"Oooh, I couldn't say, F'lar, but I can sure find out.  How much leeway
time do you need - to prepare this lesson of yours?"

F'lar laughed, rising from the table.  "No more than I did the first
time." He took a roll of maps from those stored in a container and,
motioning Lessa and K'van to clear the table, spread it out with a
practised hand.  "Now, can you show me the exact locations of each
site?"

"Yes I can,' and K'van took some notes from his inner pocket.  "I
checked them out myself against our chart of the area." Referring to his
notes from time to time, he used F'lar's stylus to make small x's, all
on land east of the river that the Ancient maps called Island River. One
was where a river branched off to the old Stakehold of Thessaly and a
second well east of Drakeslake.  There were three in coves along the
coast, and three well inland.

"That toric!" Lessa said in exasperation.  "He's he's grasping,
avaricious, covetous and unrepentantly rapacious!

He's like .  .  like Fax!'

"Is there anyone in any of these sites now?"

"Half a dozen at the most, builders."

"Have they prepared any fields?"

K'van shook his head.  "We'd've noticed that a lot sooner, I can assure
you.

"Yes, I suppose you would.  Is he doing anything at all on his own
Hold?"

K'van shook his head again, grinning.  "He's had all his crews where
they've no right to be,' and he tapped the encroachments on the map.

Although he refused K'van's adroit attempts to find out what he
intended, Lessa was refilling their glasses when she suddenly looked at
F'lar and burst out laughing.

"Figured it out, have you?" he said.

As she also spilled the wine, he took the wine skin from hands shaking
with laughter as well as malicious anticipation.

"Now, now, Lessa love, that's good Benden red you're pouring.  In the
memory of our good Robinton, have a care of it."

"Robinton would be howling with laughter over this, F'lar, and you know
it,' she said, interrupting her chuckles to make that observation.

"Honestly, F'lar, I wouldn't tell anyone what you plan to do.  You know
how discreet 1 can be,' K'van said, not quite pleading.

F'lar gave him an affectionate slap on the arm.  "You'll know.

Just be sure we know when Toric's about to move, will you?"

"I can do that.  He sets some of his fire-lizards to watch the Weyr Hall
and doesn't even realize that two can play the game of See and Say."
Reluctantly K'van rose, realizing he wasn't going to get any more out of
the two Benden Weyrleaders.

Ramoth was still asleep on her stone couch and Mnementh had only opened
an eye when Heth had landed K'van on the ledge the big bronze dragon
guarded.  It was unlikely, as well as improper, for K'van to get his
dragon to find out by querying the Weyrleaders' dragons later.
Considering how annoyed they had been about Toric's territorial
aggressiveness, they were in remarkably good spirits now.  "Do let me
know when, and how, Southern Weyr may assist you.

"Oh, you'll know,' F'lar said, laying a companionable hand on K'van's
shoulder as he escorted the young Weyrleader to the Weyr's entrance. "In
fact, you'll be the first,' he added, chuckling at whatever scheme he
had in mind.

On the third day, Jayge with Temma and Alemi who had been told of
Readis' escapade while he'd been desperately trying to repair the Fair
Winds with dolphin help, arrived at the anchorage.  Alemi had a dinghy
in the water, since there had been no time to replace the float
previously used for human and dolphin conferences.  Jayge was certain
that his son would reappear, if only to make certain that the two calves
were healing pn)perly.  These last three days had weighed heavily on
Jayge.  He could have wished that Aramina had not been so didactic about
issuing that ultimatum to Readis.  Although he understood the panic
which had consumed her, and certainly agreed with her that Readis had
acted disgracefully, he also understood his son well enough to know that
forcing the boy to promise against his conscience would make him rebel.
The boy was of the right age to resent a mother's restrictions.  Jayge
earnestly hoped that the three anxious days would be enough for Readis
to have made his point and make an honorable return.  By this morning,
Aramina had been beside herself with remorse at driving her oldest child
away.  Jayge doubted that she'd renew her demand that Readis stop seeing
the dolphins but he was equally certain she would never cease blaming
the creatures for the trouble they'd caused her and hers.

T'gellan had sent an adroit message to Jayge by fire-lizard, asking for
confirmation that T'lion had treated injured dolphins at Paradise River.
Jayge had succinctly replied that that was true.

Jayge was not surprised to see one dragon in the sky, but he was when a
second bronze appeared.  One was Gadareth, carrying T'lion, and the
other was T'gellan on Monarth with a passenger.  He was introduced as
Persellan, Eastern's Healer.

From the moment he dismounted Monarth, the healer did not look at T'lion
and addressed whatever questions dealing with the dolphins' welfare to
the air in front of him - though they were patently meant for T'lion who
answered in humble and subdued tones.  Not that Jayge blamed Persellan
for his coldness to the young rider.  T'lion was lucky to get off with
just that when he had borrowed the precious manual without permission
and ruined it into the bargain.  Well, replacing the damaged portions
would be part of Readis' reparation.

"It was made plain, was it not,' Persellan was saying in that
purse-mouthed pose he adopted when "not addressing' T'lion, "that they
should return in three suns?" He was staring straight ahead at the sea.

"It was.  Afo understood."

Persellan shielded his eyes, peering out to where the Fair Winds rode at
anchor: some of her rigging was restored and the waterline hole had been
repaired with delphinic help.  Some dolphins were still to be seen,
working with crewmen in the water.

"And they knew to come to the beach?"

"Yes.

Alemi suddenly pointed to the west.  "There're dorsal fins just clearing
the head now.  I'd say they were smack on time.

Wouldn't you, T'lion?  Wasn't this about the time when you and Readis
got here?  I remember seeing you on the shore."

The Master Fishman was sensitive to more than the rhythms of the sea or
his beloved schooner and was doing his best to ease the tension in the
air.  Now he looked in the opposite direction, down the shoreline, to
the spit of land at the eastern end of the cove, and then back over his
shoulder at the jungle.

"I would have thought that Readis would be here already,' T'gellan said,
looking at Jayge for some explanation.

"I expect him to be here,' was Jayge's terse reply.  He realized then
how desperately he counted on Readis' appearance.  Three days was more
than long enough to prove his point.  It was certainly long enough to
throw Aramina into a complete panic of anxieties that Readis had injured
himself, had been thrown from Delky, had suffered any number of
misfortunes.  Worry conflicted with a rising and righteous anger that
Readis, who had always been treated with respect, would repay their
kindness in this fashion!

The dolphins had escorted the two calves into the shore by then and
T'lion, who had stripped down to his clout when Alemi spied them
approaching, now waded out to meet them, Gadareth following him.

Muttering under his breath, Persellan also discarded his clothing while
T'gellan only removed his boots and rolled up his pants.  As Jayge,
Temma and Alemi were already down to the minimum of apparel, they kicked
off sandals and strode in.

"We come three suns,' Afo said, clicking and blowing water.

She bumped into Persellan.  "You healer.  I hear all about you.

Good man.  T'ank you.

"You're welcome, I'm sure,' Persellan said.  "Now which ah, for Angie
had swum into the talons which Gadareth had splayed just under the
surface.

Jayge was briefly surprised at Gadareth's initiative then realized that
T'lion had probably mentally asked for his cooperation.  Dragons could
surprise their riders now and then but there was no expression at all on
T'lion's face as he stood to one side so he wouldn't impede Persellan's
examination.

Angie had tilted her sleek little body to expose the stitching.

Persellan's hands gently moved across the flesh on either side of the
sutured wound.

Now that Jayge saw the wound, he had to admit that Readis had acted
properly.  No-one at the Hold had been so severely wounded: a few broken
bones, quite a few gashes from flying debris, muscles strains which
numbweed immediately eased.  Of course, Temma had also had to decide
which herd beasts would have to be destroyed but that had been done with
a minimum of fuss and no prolonged suffering.  Jayge gave an involuntary
shudder over the terrific wound the calf had endured.

"A little tight here,' Persellan said with asperity, prodding the point.
"I think I will release it.  There is good healing and this might soon
tear the skin." He reached into his sack and pulled out scissors, making
the cut and pulling the suture carefully through the skin.  He wasn't
the only one to hold his breath as the flesh relaxed but did not split.
"Hmmm.  There is much to be said about salt water healing." Then he
turned to Afo who was watching him carefully with one bright black eye.
"Does she hurt when 1 touch here?"

"Ask her,' Afo said with a soft squee.  "Her name is Angie."

"Angie, can you tell me if my fingers hurt you?" Persellan raised his
voice and Angie, as if in response, let water out of her blow hold for
she held her head out of the water and craned so she could keep one eye
on Persellan.

"Just like a kid not so sure he believes his healer,' Temma murmured to
Jayge and Alemi, standing beside her.

Persellan poked, gently enough, testing the length of the wound.  "How
do I ask this?  Angie, are you regular?"

Temma cleared her throat, suppressing a chuckle.  Angie squeed in a tone
that was so clearly "repeat that, I don't understand', that Temma did
give an amused snort.

"Are you eating all right?" Persellan asked.

"I hungry.  I eat.

Persellan turned now, in his perplexity even willing to address T'lion.
"How do I get across to her that she also has to evacuate what she
eats?"

"Her guts work,' Afo said in a tone that bordered on disgust with his
periphrasis.  "Come back sooner if not."

"Well, that's good to know, Persellan murmured.  "I think I'll remove a
few more sutures to ease her flesh.  But she is healing well." That
begrudged compliment seemed to release the tension in the taut young
bronze rider.  "There now, Angie, you come back in three more days and
the other stitches can be removed." He turned to Temma who nodded that
she would attend to that.

Angie wriggled free of Gadareth's claws and obediently the smaller Cori
replaced her.

"I think all of these can come out,' Persellan said, his voice not half
so accusatory now.  "It's a jagged enough seam but I perceive that it
was also a jagged wound.  Who's this?"

"Cori,' T'lion said, almost white with relief.

"Cori.  Well, you're a lucky .  .  .  young dolphin,' Persellan said,
just catching himself before saying "young girl'.

He had relaxed enough now that he even smiled as he neatly severed and
pulled through each suture.  He stroked Cori's side before giving her a
farewell scratch under her chin.  She squeed and clicked as she swam
free but turned back to him and, looking up in his face, said quite
clearly:

"PersIan good man.  T'ank you, t'ank you, t'ank you."

Just then, her dam, Mel, pushed herself against T'lion.  "TIon, hand,'
she said.

"Hand?" T'lion held both up, looking puzzled.

"Hold your hand open under water,' Alemi said, having a notion what was
to happen.

"My hand?" But the dragonrider had done so and in an instant, Mel
dropped something from her mouth into his hand.

He held up a smooth oval vari-colored shell that glistened in the light.
"Oh!  It's lovely,' and he forgot his disgraced state long enough to
hold the gift up for the others to see.

"That's one of those bivalve shells,' Temma said, impressed.

"You don't see many unbroken ones."

"Thank you, Mel, I will treasure it,' T'lion said and Mel's bright eye
watched him as he carefully tucked it under his clout waistband.

Then Angie presented herself before Persellan and surprised everyone by
lifting herself out of the water high enough to touch her nose to
Persellan's lips.  "I kiss t'ank you.  I clever "member old t'ank you."
At which point she dove down and away as if embarrassed by her actions.

"My word, my word,' Persellan said through the fingers of his hand that
he had raised in surprise to his lips.

"You're more popular with the dolphins than the weyr children,
Persellan,' T'gellan said with a laugh."Maybe you ought to let T'lion
copy those animal treatment files as well as the ones that got soaked."

"Well, I'm not sure about that, Weyrleader,' Persellan replied but from
the expressions fleeting across his face, it could be assumed that he
might be reconsidering.  He glanced in T'lion's direction though he
didn't quite look at him.  "I was far more upset that the boy had
borrowed without permission what he knew was invaluable .  .  .  "
T'lion looked down at the ripples breaking against his legs, making
futile hand motions as Persellan continued: "But, in all honesty, now
that I see how well he used the information in the book - despite its
damage - I cannot hold the grudge."

Relief and disbelief shining in his eyes, T'lion looked up.

"I am sorry, Persellan, but I didn't know what else to do and there was
no-one to ask .  " The bronze dragon rider held his hands out to the
healer in entreaty.

"Ask the next time,' Persellan said, once more stern.  "But I think next
time we should both be more knowledgeable about the necessary
procedures.  You did say there was considerable documentation on the
treatment of dolphin ailments and injuries?"

"Yes, there is.  And D'ram said that I could copy anything you felt you
needed

"Readis was to do the copying, Jayge said.

T'lion, still flushed with absolution, looked anxiously at the Holder.
"I thought he'd be here.  It's not like him to be absent.

Or

"I was hoping that he would be here, too,' Jayge said quietly.

In the sudden silence, T'gellan cleared his throat and started wading
out of the water.  Alemi, Persellan and Temma followed him.

"But he went back to the Hold with you,' T'lion said, anxiety clouding
his eyes.  He looked up and down the strand as if he momentarily
expected Readis to burst through the thick vegetation.

"He left the Hold the day after and has not been seen since."

"Oh!" T'lion looked anywhere but at Jayge's face.

"You haven't seen him?" Jayge asked though he knew now that the answer
would be negative.

T'lion shook his head.  "I've spent every free moment up at Landing.
Persellan insisted that since I borrowed the book, I should copy it, not
Readis.  I thought you'd just made him stay here,' and T'lion gestured
toward the Hold, "to help clean up.

Jayge shook his head.

"Oh, that's not like Readis, sir,' T'lion said earnestly.  He opened his
mouth to ask another question and closed it without speaking.  "If you
asked T'gellan, maybe he'd let me and Gaddie sweep ride?"

Jayge made eye contact and saw the concern in T'lion's eyes.

He gave a nod.  "I will ask.  I would appreciate the help.  The last I
saw of him he was crossing the bridge and heading west on Delky."

"Oh, if he's on Delky, I'm sure Gadareth and I can find him."

Then they waded out of the water to where the others were drying off and
dressing.  Jayge asked T'gellan if T'lion could be spared to do an
errand.

T'gellan gave Jayge a long look before he flicked his fingers to grant
permission.  "T'lion has an appointment at Landing for his evening's
stint of copying but he may do your errand until then." T'lion was so
certain that he and Gadareth would find the truant in a short sweep down
the coastline that he went off in very good spirits indeed.  Readis
would be so glad to know that all had ended well: that Persellan had
grudgingly approved the suturing and would now learn more about dolphin
medicine.

The next step would be to get Persellan to let him assist and maybe even
work as an apprentice - at least in the dolphin healing.  There wasn't a
Hall for sea creature medicine and Master Farmer Andemon had made it
very plain that he didn't consider them part of his Craft's mandate. But
if dolphins could get hurt, they had the right to be healed.  He and
Readis might be the only two on Pern to consider that imperative but two
were better than none.

How far could he have got, Gaddie?  Even on Delky's back?

T'lion asked his dragon as they skimmed the tree tops.  Where tree tops
still existed, that is.  This part of the coast had taken a ferocious
beating.  T'lion thought that should make it easier to find Readis.

When an hour's flight along the coastline failed to turn up any sign of
his friend, T'lion had Gadareth turn slightly inland and fly a second
search pattern.  They coursed back and forth, occasionally landing in a
likely clearing to see if there'd been a fire or anything that suggested
human presence.  They startled a very large furry creature at one point
and only the size of the bronze dragon deterred the beast from charging
at T'lion.

Instead, it went crashing away from them as fast as it could run.

Darkness came and a weary and discouraged T'lion stopped briefly at
Paradise River Hold to inform Jayge that he had had no success in his
search.

"I'll ask T'gellan to let me try again tomorrow.  He can't have gone too
far from here in just three days, sir.  He might not have realized it
was me and Gaddie, and hidden.  I'll try again and we'll call for him.
And .  - T'lion had the good sense to break off there when Aramina
appeared on the porch, hoping for good news.  "I couldn't go as far as I
should have, perhaps,' T'lion added in a self-deprecating tone of voice.
Readis' mother had been crying and she looked awful, T'lion thought.
"I'll try again tomorrow.  I know I'll find him.  Don't you worry now.
Got to get back to my Weyr before T'gellan flays me." T'lion backed off
the porch with that sentence and raced for Gadareth before he could be
questioned.  He certainly had no answers.

Beljeth, Adrea's queen, forwarded the alert to Ramoth whose immediate
reaction - a stentorian bugle - reverberated around the Bowl of Benden
Weyr, startling everyone and bringing the riders out of the Lower
Caverns where they had been eating.

Lessa, K'van says now is the time, said the queen.

"Toric would, wouldn't he?" Lessa said for they had been just about to
sit down to a fine late lunch.  "Sailing on the dawn tide, is he?  I'll
enjoy giving Toric his just desserts."

F'lar wistfully eyed the meat pie that was steaming on the table, and
the assortment of early vegetables that would accompany it, the hot
fresh bread and the sweet berries that would have made an excellent
meal.  With long strides, he collected their riding gear and deposited
Lessa's in her arms.

"I knew we should have eaten when the others did,' he muttered, breaking
off some of the bread and stuffing a hunk in his mouth.  Then he grabbed
a handful of the berries and crammed them in his mouth, the juices
dribbling down his chin as he went to get Mnementh's harness down from
its peg.

Lessa followed his example, and stuck the rest of the bread into a
half-closed jacket before she took down Ramoth's harness.

The queen was swinging from side to side, her head low, waiting for her
rider to slip the harness on.

Does every rider know where he or she is to go?  Lessa asked Ramoth as
the golden queen shivered the harness down her neck into place.  Lessa
buckled the straps, then pulled on her gloves.

Yes, and Ramoth dragged out the sibilant vocally as well as
telepathically.  Her eyes were bright, shot with orange eagerness.

This will be fun.  Not like fighnng Thread.

"Just don't get to like it too much, my fine queen, Lessa said.

She closed her jacket, wrapped the single braid in which she wore her
hair around her head and jammed on her riding cap, fastening the chin
strap.  Then she jumped to Ramoth's forearm, deftly snagged the one
dangling strap and pulled herself into place between the last two neck
ridges.  "I devoutly trust we won't have to do this exercise more than
once!" Then she grinned.  "Well, this is the second time.  Let's go,
dear heart."

Ramoth walked the last few lengths to the ledge of her Weyr.

Mnementh was above her to the right, F'lar already mounted.

The half dozen bronze dragons and the other Benden queens who were to
take part in this "lesson' were making their way to the rim of the Bowl.
Mnementh asked Lessa if everyone involved had been alerted and Ramoth
said that Beljeth had conveyed the message to every other Weyr.  Lessa
grinned.

F'lar says we should move out now, Mnementh informed the Weyrwoman
Ramoth gave one more bugle and sprang into the air, spiralling upward,
above the rim of Bowl, outlined against the further hills by the late
afternoon sun.

Mnementh flew proudly beside his queen, looking over at her.

Admiring your queen, Mnementh?  Lessa asked.

We fly well together was the response and she grinned as she heard the
smugness in the bronze dragon's tone.  No other had even come close to
catching Ramoth in her mating flights and every bronze, and two very
audacious browns, had tried.

As soon as F'lar judged them far enough above the Weyr, Mnementh gave
Ramoth the order to go between.

This day's maneuver took a little longer than F'lar's capture of Hold
ladies the day that the Hold Lords had attempted to storm Benden Weyr.
This time, it was the Lord Holders who were being peremptorily required
to accompany the Leaders of every Weyr while bronze riders awaited their
arrival at each of the fraudulently sited settlements.  The golden
queens would see that the ships which had set sail so blithely from
Toric's harbor tacked right back the way they had come.

F'lar and Lessa checked at all eight illegal sites to be sure that each
had been inspected by a Lord Holder and Weyrleader, and that the men and
women found there were loaded on dragons for transportation back to
Southern Hold.  The queens who were on ship duty told Ramoth that they'd
never had so much fun.

The ships had not gone so far from their home port that they would delay
the confrontations the Weyr1eaders had planned for Toric.

The Lord Holder of Southern heard the shouts, the cries of alarm where
he sat in his hall, eating a belated morning meal.  He had seen the
ships leave port and been well satisfied with the sight of their sails
billowing with the brisk eastward wind.  Without knowing why Toric had
asked to know when the weather would be fine for a long sail, Master
Idarolan had sent a fire-lizard message that the winds would be
propitious today and the weather fair for several days.  Toric had even
noticed the dolphins who escorted the ships out of the harbor, leaping
and plunging in their witless fashion.  Then he had come back inside and
spent a pleasurable hour figuring out the profit on this enterprise and
that it would, as he had hoped, off-set the expenses of establishing new
holds on the Seminole peninsula.

He disliked resorting to the Ancients' names - they'd had their chance
and lost it to Thread - but since Aivas had identified places by what it
had in its memory, the "old' names for the Southern Continent had been
seized upon with great enthusiasm as "a link with their heritage'. Toric
was not of that mind.  He had the future to plan for and that was what
he'd been doing while everyone else on the planet seemed to be wallowing
in ancestral accomplishments and striving to reconstruct all sorts of
devices.  He was probably one of the few who did not regret the silence
of Aivas nor the demise of the old Harper.  Who had been a meddler of
the first order.

As Toric had weeded out the "right' sort of settler from the ones who
had come, purse in hand, he was reasonably sure he wouldn't have a
repetition of the Denol treachery.  Those whom he had chosen to stay on
Southern would listen and obey him.

And he had sufficient knowledge of the ones he had shipped off to know
they would have to obey him when the time came.  That was all he
required of them!  Obedience to his orders.  Or else.

He smiled to himself.  Once this Pass was over His smile died as he
became aware that the noise outside his hold had changed in pitch,
rising more often to an angry babble and punctuated with shouts or
cries.  Not at all the sort of sounds that should go with the event
which had been inaugurated this morning.  While he was well aware that
the residents of the Hold had been complaining for months about the
overcrowding by the settlers he'd planted in their quarters, the extra
bodies were now gone.  His holders should be happy to have regained the
privacy they so prized now that the ships and their passengers had
sailed off.

He was on his feet, annoyed that his contemplation as well as his meal
were being interrupted by some stupidity when the Benden Weyrleaders
appeared in his doorway.

"What are you two doing here?" he demanded, not at all pleased and
hoping that the ships had been well out of sight by the time they had
approached his hold.

"I suggest you come outside and see, Lord Toric of Southern,' F'lar said
but his smile was far from amiable and the Weyrwoman's smile was wider
and full of malice.

"Now, see here, Benden-'

"No, you see Lessa interrupted him and pointed outside, there!" She
stepped aside so that he had a view of Groghe of Fort, Larad of Telgar
and Asgenar of Lemos waiting in the hall.

"We require your presence outside, Toric,' Larad said, his face
expressionless.

"The sooner the better,' Groghe added.  "Being hauled down here when
I've more than enough to attend to at Fort, with two generators down
Toric was nearly apoplectic with fury and barged past his peers, down
the hall and out of his hold.  He came to a sudden halt at the top of
the stairs leading down to the huge yard which was crowded with his
holders and their erstwhile guests.  Startled, he looked beyond their
heads to the harbor and growled to see that the ships he had seen off
were back, sails furled and anchors cast overboard.  The fact that each
had a gold dragon hovering above it suggested the cause of the return.

Glancing now down at the crowded court, Toric became aware that the
first few rows of faces turned on him were the men and women he had
planted at his cross-river sites, who should be there, awaiting the
arrival of the settlers; not here, with scared or indignant or nervous
expressions on their faces.

And certainly not in close proximity to dragon riders and other Lords
Holder.  He was both surprised and outraged by the fact that all the
Lords Holder seemed to be present.

"Just what is going on here?" he demanded in a loud and carrying tone
though he was in a fair way toward figuring it out himself.

"I think that should be obvious enough, Toric,' F'lar said, taking a
position a discreet distance from the enraged Lord Holder.  "I wished
the Lords Holder to see for themselves that you had illegally initiated
settlements outside your own holding."

"What's wrong with that?" Toric demanded, deciding to plow through any
objections that could be raised.  "The land's lying empty.  I've spent
months training these men and women,' and he gestured broadly, "to deal
with any of the hazards found in southern lands .   "The Southern
Continent is not yours to parcel out, Toric,' Groghe said.

"It's not theirs either,' toric roared, jerking his hand over his
shoulder in Benden Weyrleaders' direction.  "It belongs to anyone strong
enough to hold-'

"But not someone who already has far more than a just share,' Groghe
said, his eyes blazing as he took a menacing step toward the much larger
toric.  Larad and Asgenar closed in behind him to indicate to Toric that
Groghe spoke for them.

Toric sneered down at Groghe.  "You could never stomach that, could you,
Groghe?  That your little Fort Hold would be lost in a corner of mine?"

"That is not the issue, man, Larad said.  "It was agreed among us

"I never agreed,' Toric said with a disparaging snort, determined to
embroil them all in an argument and thus turn attention from him.

"You didn't choose to attend the meeting but its result is binding on
all

"Not on me "Shut your mouth, Toric,' F'lar said and gestured toward the
dragons lining the cliff.

"Since when do dragonriders interfere with Hold business?" Toric said in
a snarl, turning on the dragonrider.

"When the business is not in a Hold, toric,' and N'ton of Fort Weyr
answered, stepping forward from where he stood in front of the crowd.

"Dragonriders have not interfered with Hold affairs,' cried R'mart of
Telgar Weyr.  T'gellan of Eastern, G'dened of Ista and his father,
D'ram, formerly that Weyrleader, G'narish of Igen, T'bor of High
Reaches, K'van of Southern and F'lessan of Honshu Weyrhold were ranged
beside him.  "We have prevented an unfair appropriation of lands not
available at this time for colonization by a Lord Holder who hasn't
settled a fifth of his own lands."

"You're saving all the best places for yourselves,' toric cried,
jeering.

"By no means,' N'ton said and then grinned, turning slightly back to the
crowd so the smile could be seen, "but we do want our choice once
Threadfall is over."

"But it's not over,' cried someone deep in the crowd, a cry of
frustration, indignation and anger.

"Twenty-two more Turns,' F'lar said, "and you will never again have to
tithe to the Weyrs.  And we " he paused for his tone had become resolute
and hard, "we will finally hold lands we can work and Halls of our own!"
His words rang with the promise he repeated to them, and to himself. "Of
all those who live on Pern, the dragonriders are the only ones who are
able to survey the extent of the territory available.  At the insistence
of the Lords Holder, we undertook that task between Falls, and the Lords
Holder can vouch,' and F'lar nodded to the Lords Holder, standing to one
side of the court, "that a significant number of settlements have been
started by groups who have the skills and the training to cope with the
feral animals, the fevers, and the dangers you all know.  You're also
very much aware of what happens to people who think it's only a question
of picking the next meal off a tree." There was a ripple of bitter
agreement for that.  "Holdings are being constantly released for
settlements for those prepared to prove them.  Just as the Ancients
did."

"And what gives you dragonriders the right to decide what privileged few
go and where?" toric said, again jeering at F'lar.

"The Ancients' Charter gave every settler on Pern the right to choose
land, to make his own stakehold.  I was only ensuring that others were
allowed their rights."

"And you were not extending your Holding, Lord Toric?" Asgenar asked
with deceptive mildness.

"Now why should I do that?" -And you were not exacting payment for
providing the sites?"

"Payment?" Toric managed a very good expression of total astonishment
and dismay.

"Payment!" F'lar said and gestured to several of the men in the front.

"There were certainly nominal costs involved in building adequate
facilities Toric began until he saw that one of the men coming forward
was one of the troublemakers he had wanted out of Southern as fast and
as far away as possible.

Hosbon was the fourth son of a High Reaches Hold, strongly built and
strongly minded that he was going to show his father and others that he
ought to have had control of the family Hold.

If Toric had been perceptive, he would have seen that what he disliked
in that young man were the qualities he prided himself on.

"We could have built our own Holds, Hosbon said.  "We've paid and paid
ever since we were accepted,' and he loaded that word with indignation
and repressed anger, "by you as settlers.

Paid for everything we've eaten and every tool we've had in our hands.
We'd've been better off if we had been illegal!" And he east an angry
look at T'bor, the High Reaches Weyrleader A cheer went up from the
crowd and the menacing atmosphere and the Benden Weyrleaders as if they
were responsible for the indignities he had suffered.

"You couldn't have built adequate shelters,' toric roared back at him.
"You have to have stone to protect you from Thread

"But you said,' and Hosbon waved a fist at Toric, "that Thread doesn't
scour the land down here.  We've seen it ourselves

"And once you cut the leaves and reeds from living bushes, Thread'd go
through them as fast as it would your flesh,' T'bor said.  "I lived down
here so I know.

"Oh!" Hosbon subsided briefly.

"The lack of easily accessible quarries is one reason,' F'lar said, "why
you just can't go where you choose down here - and survive.  Lord Toric
did you one favor by building in stone.

"My thanks,' Toric replied sarcastically.

"Well, we've paid top prices for those stones,' Hosbon continued.  "Like
we've paid for everything else and then more for supplies to take us
through the bad season.  Shards!  We've been here for months.  We could
have built our own places in that time, and set aside food for the bad
season which is when our good Lord Toric finally lets us go so he can
extract the last mark out of us." He snorted at such avarice.

"Southern's better than High Reaches at any time of the year,' T'bor
said, "but your point is made."

Grinning, Hosbon turned in T'bor's direction.  "I'm not so sure of that
if the storm we had a sevenday ago is a taste of what we'll have to live
through.  Only, now, do we?" and he took an aggressive stance, glaring
at F'lar.

"We have a point to make, Hosbon, and you're part of it," F'lar said but
his conciliatory tone and sympathetic expression relaxed the man's pose.
"We know where you are and if you prove your Holdings, they will be
officially granted you

"Free and clear?" Hosbon asked, switching his gaze from F'lar to
challenge toric.

"Free and clear,' F'lar said, nodding.

cleared.

"Then why'd you drag us all back here'?" someone shouted.

"Why did a queen turn my ship back?" one of the captains demanded,
pushing his way through.  "Is this going to be what happens when the
Pass is over?  Dragons menacing honest folk?"

"We came to set matters right,' F'lar said.

"We have harmed no-one,' R'mart added, looking at the huddle of workers
who had been transported from the distant sites.  "Though I imagine we
surprised a few."

"The queens are large enough to turn a ship, but you hadn't gone very
far from this port to make a return difficult,' Lessa said.  "And we,'
she included the Lords Holder and the Weyrleaders, "have the
responsibility of seeing that such a blatant abuse is corrected."

"Dragonriders aren't supposed to interfere with Hold matters,' Hosbon
said.

"Ah, but that's the crux of the matter,' F'lar said, grinning broadly as
he pointed at Hosbon.  "And let me repeat so that everyone understands
the difference.  The land you were being settled on is not anyone's
established Hold Not yet.  And certainly not Lord Toric's to dispose."

"That's enough out of you, Weyrleader,' and Toric, his patience gone,
charged at F'lar.

Immediately Mnementh, sitting above the courtyard on the hold cliff,
spread his wings and bugled.  Ramoth also spread her wings but barked
something at the other bronzes and golds who had also reacted.  The
crowd gasped and constricted into a tight knot, as far from the dragons
as possible.  F'lar had neatly ducked away from Toric's swing and danced
out of range though his hands came up in defensive positions.  Larad,
Asgenar, and Jaxom, being more than agile than the older Lords, closed
in on Toric, grabbing his arms and preventing a second charge.

"What we have to say to you now, should be discussed in privacy, Toric,'
Jaxom said, giving his wife's brother a warning squeeze of the hand he
had on Toric's upper arm.

"I have nothing to say to you,' Toric said, snarling and struggling to
free himself.  "Any of you!'

"That makes no difference,' Larad said, speaking in a low and cheerful
voice.  "We intend to talk to you or at you but you would be wise to pay
attention." Then he turned his head to catch R'mart's attention.  "Let
the settlers go now, R'mart.

They'll still reach their destinations in good time."

Then they marched toric back into his hold.  Ramala stepped inside, her
face expressionless as Larad and Asgenar followed Jaxom's lead into the
hold's main hall.  Weyrleaders and the other Lords followed.  As they
crossed the threshold, Toric tore himself loose and spun around to
confront his adversaries.

Groghe, puffing a bit from his exertions, together with Deckter, Lord of
Nabol, Toronas of Benden and the dour Oterel of Tillek ranged themselves
to the fore, while the dragonriders, male and female, made a loose
circle behind the Lords Holder.

"You cannot use your absence from a decisive meeting to ignore its
decision, Toric,' Groghe said.  "You had a chance then

"Ha!" was Toric's sarcastic reply.

"Well, you did.  In open Council,' Oterel said.  "Nothing had been
decided

"Don't give me that,' and toric dismissed it.

"Well, I hadn't made up my mind,' Laudey of Igen said.

"Nor had Bargen here and Begamon, no matter what you think.

But it was also plain that none of us,' and he gestured to the other
Lords, "could be considered impartial in the matter of distributing
lands.  And none of us, certainly, had any way of surveying the
property."

"The Ancients left all those maps

"Old ones and they hadn't the information we needed."

"So you let the dragonriders do it

"Reporting to the Council in detail That also rankled

"Like the reports you had from Piemur,' Corman of Keroon said in a droll
tone.

"Which he gave to the Master Harper in Toric's mind.

"Reports of lands past your Holding, certainly,' Groghe said.

"We arranged procedures, organized lists of prospective settlers, each
with at least Craft Journeymen to supply skills.  You had the same
chance as any of us to establish any safeguard against abuse or fore
knowledge of special sites."

"The records have been copied and sets are available,' Larad said, "to
prove that there have been no especial favors accorded dragonriders.
They have tended to ask for locations that would not appeal to the rest
of us."

"Faugh!  You'd say that no matter what."

"Nor have we,' Groghe went on, "had special considerations for unlanded
sons.  And daughters.  Of course, that wouldn't worry you since you have
unused land to provide for your offspring."

Toric merely glowered.

"That's as maybe,' Toronas of Benden said.  "The important consideration
is that no-one, and I repeat that, no-one of us or of the dragonriders
can apportion land without the consent of the rest of us.  You included.
Surely you can accept that as a guideline."

"I think you will have to accept that as a guideline, Toric,' R'mart
said, "because we, and he gestured to the other Weyrleaders, "intend to
see that no-one oversteps those requisites as you did today."

"Is that what you'll become when you're no longer needed to char Thread?
The guardians of order on Pern?" Toric glared at F'lar.

"That's what some of us will certainly be doing, F'lar said, equably,
"when, as and if,' he paused significantly, "such overseeing is needed."

"And who decides the when, as and if might I ask?"

"You may, and

"There will be guidelines for that, too, Larad interrupted F'lar to say.

"Which we,' Groghe said, "in the Council will decide and refer to the
special Gathers that will let everyone, Hold, Hall and dragonrider, have
a vote in the matter.  Or will you absent yourself from that meeting as
well?"

"The Pass is not over.  Are you not interfering before time?" Toric
acidly asked F'lar.

"We have not, I repeat, Lord Toric, interfered with Hold matters,' F'lar
said with a slight bow.  "We have explained the difference.

"A united show of the difference, I might add, said Groghe while the
other Lords Holder murmured agreement.  "You have more than a generous
share of the southern lands, Toric.  Stick to them and there shall be no
further need for disagreements or misunderstandings.

"Don't be so easy on him,' Oterel of Tillek said in a harsh voice.  "He
knew exactly what he was doing.  And he now knows exactly what can be
done to curtail these incursions of his

"One Fax in a lifetime is quite enough,' Groghe said bluntly.

"You're absolutely correct,' said Sangel of Boll with a shudder of
dismay.  "You won't find us permitting that sort of thing to happen
again!  Not in my lifetime."

Toric gave the elderly and not too effective Lord of Boll a measuring
look which suggested that he would have found Boll an easy target.

"And you've three, four times as much land as Fax overran, Sangel
continued.  "Take my advice and be grateful."

Toric snorted contemptuously.  "If you have finished handing out today's
do's and don'ts?"

"Since you have been gracious enough,' Larad said with studied courtesy,
"to hear what we had to say, we can leave.

"But you have been warned,' Laudey of Igen said sternly.

"You will voice any complaints in the next Council of Lords and you will
abide by the decisions."

"Or?"

"I don't think you want to know, R'mart of Telgar said, with a malicious
smile on his face.  "I really don't think you want to know.  And he
turned on his heel and strode out, followed by his Weyrwoman and the
other queen and bronze riders.

"K'VAN,' Toric bellowed and when the young Weyrleader turned in the
doorway to face him, Toric raised his fist, "if I see a single one of
your riders anywhere near this Hold .

"Ah, but you see, you won't, Lord Toric,' K'van said with a soft smile.
"But then you have been too busy to notice that the Weyr is empty and we
have settled in a much more congenial location, heretofore unoccupied."

"With the full consent of the Council of Lords Holder, Larad added.
"Good day, Lord Toric of Southern Hold."

Chapter Thirteen

nce Readis found the seaside caves that he had once  seen from the
decks of the Fair Winds, he chose the one most suitable to his purposes,
making it as comfortable as he could. Some of the water and wind worn
openings would be half flooded with higher tides but these would also be
extremely handy for a dolphin hall. This series of caves and hollows
were at the base of the rocky slope that led up to the deep gorge and
the river shown on the Ancients' charts as the Rubicon.  Most of the
caves were shallow or accessible only by a treacherous climb over
tumbled boulders.  There was really only one which could be made into a
human living accommodation, with a sea-eroded maw through which he could
lead Delky to the space on a wide ledge where he could stable her
adequately.  Past that point, the ledge led to two interior,
water-hollowed chambers, one of them large enough to make a respectably
sized hold, and both now high above the full tide marks.

They'd had to spend their first Threadfall, on their way to these caves,
crammed under a barely adequate overhang, with Delky shivering with fear
as Thread hissed just a finger's thickness from her hide.

There was plenty of time, too, for Readis to regret the precipitousness
of his departure and bemoan the items that he should have packed that
would have been very useful and made his new life considerably easier.
But then his exodus had not been planned.  He steeled himself against
other regrets, like foregoing the studies he had begun to enjoy for the
challenge and mental stimulation they had provided.  And the tantalizing
prospect of things that could be when the Pass was over.  He regretted
not having access to the wealth of information on the Aivas files - nor
the chance to copy Persellan's damaged pages, as much for his own
information as to make amends to the healer.  He worried how T'lion got
on with the healer and how he'd been disciplined by his Weyrleader.  He
worried most about Cori and Angie: had T'lion's stitches held?  Were
they healing?  Who was tending them?  How was he going to get in touch
with the pod in these waters?  And would the dolphins feel the need to
tell other humans where he was?  He was doing this for them, finding sea
caves accessible by water: the quieter pools that were flushed out with
the tides would be perfect for tending the injured, and the great ledge
outside couldn't be better for talking to a whole pod with no crowding.
There was deep water beneath the ledge - or as deep as he could dive.

The Great Current was far out, too far to be visible and that's where
the dolphins would swim, riding the westward flow.

They wouldn't know a human was in this area.  And Readis had no bell and
no way of obtaining one.  If only T'lion were here, Gadareth could
attract them with his bugle.  No doubt the bronze rider had been
restricted to official duties and the Weyr.  Readis hoped that T'lion
wouldn't be denied access to the dolphins.  Surely T'gellan would have
understood how important it was .  .  .  His parents hadn't, Readis
interrupted himself, why would he think a Weyrleader would care?  Except
that the dolphins had warned Path's rider about a pregnancy and Mirrim
had had a fine son.  Was that enough?

Probably not.  His parents didn't care to remember that dolphins had
rescued him and Alemi from the squall.  That had been a long time ago
now.

Readis had little time for much reflection: he had to find food which in
this season meant long and sometimes futile searchings: the main growing
season being now over.  What he could find he had to save so he hunted
until he discovered a supply of clay along a creek.  He made utensils
which he fire-hardened.  It took him several tries to get a mug and a
bowl that didn't leak.  He knew more theory than he had had a chance to
put into practice.

He could and did make himself a frond mattress which gave him comfort at
night and he wove fine grasses into a covering.  The tougher ones
supplied him with stout rope to secure Delky when he didn't want her
straying from the cave.  He'd twisted threads from her tail for a
fishing line and braided more for a longer line, splicing it to a good
length thanks to those lessons he'd learned from Unclemi.  He kept his
belt knife honed sharp and hoped the steel blade would last until he
could replace it as the daily honings were visibly narrowing the good
blade.  He sought the biggest tree nuts, chiseled a hole in the tops so
that once he had drunk off the juices, he could store fresh drinking
water in them.  While the nut juice was considered by many to be very
tasty and he knew that Swacky fermented it for his sevenday night's
drinking, he didn't like the almost sickly sweetness of it.  Besides
fresh fish and shoreline shellfish, he'd find the occasional fowl nest
so he had sufficient protein in his diet.  No fire-lizard clutches yet,
though he'd searched every sandy cove on his way here.  It was really
the wrong season for fire-lizards to clutch.  He'd never particularly
wanted one but one would be very helpful right now.  Delky wasn't that
companionable.  And, until he made contact with dolphins, he had to talk
to himself if he wanted to hear another voice.

He was generally too busy to be lonely and too tired not to sleep at
night when doubts tend to assail one.  If he wanted to communicate with
dolphins, he'd have to swim out far enough and he wasn't so foolish as
to venture out that far without the safeguard a vest would provide. Once
he had finally located a stand of the fibrous plant from which life
vests were made, he spent several days designing and making one.

From small fish bones he fashioned needles and with clumsy but firm
stitches, constructed a passable garment.  He gave it a long test the
morning he finished it, floating about until the local fishes were
comfortable enough with his presence to come nibble his toes.  That was
brave of them since he'd already caught so many.  But he was as buoyant
in the water at the end of the morning as at the beginning so he felt
confident enough in its efficiency.  He made sure that Delky had enough
fodder and fresh water in her clay pot (though he hadn't been able to
make it completely watertight and moisture oozed out slowly), before he
donned the vest again.

Today the sea was calm, only wind ripples marring its surface.

He might not get another such day in this stormy season.  So he tested
the ties on his vest one last time and then waded out until he reached
the deeper water.  Straight out from the shore he swam with good firm
strokes.  If his luck was in, he'd get a ride back.

By the time the shoreline was well behind him, he began to have second
thoughts.  His arms were beginning to tire and his breath was getting
ragged.  So he stopped swimming and assumed a floating position, letting
his head go back until the top of his vest cushioned his neck.  He
closed his eyes against the glare of the sun though he could not escape
the whiteness of its rays behind his eyelids.  His breathing slowly
dropped to normal.  He had never been afraid of the water and wasn't
now.  The light waves occasionally splashed over his face but he only
snorted the water out of his nostrils without changing his position.
This was very restful, rocking only lightly from time to time.  He could
almost fall asleep, mesmerized by the watery rhythms.  Arms extended, he
stopped even a cursory movement of his hands.  He'd give himself a good
rest before he started off again.

He felt motion in the water beneath him.  As he flipped himself
perpendicular, his legs encountered something slithery and he caught
sight of the large body aiming at the surface.  Then he became aware of
the dolphin fins nearby.  Abruptly a smiling dolphin face emerged in
front of him.

"Save man?  No storm.  No good far from land?"

"I was looking for you.

"Looking for Cal?" The dolphin squeed loudly in surprise and swam past
Readis with one bright black eye never leaving his face.  "Who you?"

"I'm Readis, Cal."

Abruptly the dolphin came back, stopping in front of him.

"Pods looking for Readisssss.

"Are they?"

"All pods looking for Readis,' Cal repeated and then flipped into a
dive.

Startled, because Readis didn't want to be found, he ducked under the
water and hauled hard on Cal's near flipper to bring him up and prevent
him sounding a message through the water.

"Don't tell the other pods you've found me,' he said urgently, his face
inches from Cal's bottlenose.

"Don't tell?" The dolphin turned his head so his bright eye was fixed on
Readis and his whole expression conveyed an air of total surprise.  "You
lost.  You found."

"I'm not lost.  I don't want to be found.  By humans.

"You are human.  Humans stay together.  Live in pods on the land.  Only
visit dolphins in sea.  Not live in sea.  Dolphins live in sea.

Cal's response was long for a dolphin and, if the squeaky, pinched tones
dolphins used for human speech also conveyed emotions, this time Cal
spoke in shocked amazement.

"I want to live with dolphins, heal dolphins when they're hurt, be a
dolphineer!'

Cal's loud squee broke off when he spouted an unusually high fountain of
water from his blow-hole.

"You be dolphineer?" The pinched tone rose to a shrill note.

"You be Cal's dolphineer?"

"Well, we've just met.  You don't know much about me .

"Dolphineer!  Dolphineer!" Cal's response was ecstatic!  "Will more mans
be dolphineers again?  Swim with pods, hunt with pods, go see where
coast has changed?  New reefs, new channels, new stuff?  Visit
subsidence and meet The Tillek?"

Cal's brief, earlier submergence must have been sufficient to send for
the rest of the pod.  Dolphins were homing in on him from all
directions, leaping in and out of the water, squeeing and clicking so
enthusiastically that Readis came very close to being drowned by their
attentions.  But he caught a dorsal fin as he was tumbled underwater and
hung on until he and - it was Cal he'd got hold of - the dolphin
surfaced again.  Readis had got a nose full of sea water and had to
cling to Cal while he snorted his nasal passages clear and got breathing
properly again.  Somehow Readis would have to get an aqua lung that he
and T'lion had discussed.  Without it, he was likely to be a liability
to any pod, not the helping partner he hoped to be.

"Cal, listen to me,' he said, catching hold of both flippers and pulling
at first one, then the other to get Cal's attention.  "I want to stay
here.  Don't tell humans.

"Why?" Cal was plainly puzzled and others poked their heads up to listen
to the conversation.

"I want to be alone with the pod.  Learn to be a dolphineer."

"No long feets,' another dolphin said.  "Dolphineers had long feets."

"Your name please?" Readis asked, catching one of the speaker's
flippers.

"I Delfi.

Then others started squeeing out their names: Tursi, Loki, Sandi, Rena,
Leta, Josi.  They poked their faces at him, or walked toward him with
flippers extended.  He was splashed with the waters of their enthusiasm.

"Hey, hey!" He held up his arms and waved his hands to get them to calm
down.  "Take it easy.  You'll drown me."

"No drown in middle of dolphins!" Delfi cried and squeed as she dropped
back into the water.

"Yes, you will.  I've no blow-hole!'

There was a good deal of clicking and squeeing over that.  The dolphins
evidently thought it was very funny.  Readis began to feel as if his
great idea of being a dolphineer might not be such a childish one.  At
least the dolphins approved.  What did he care if every other human on
the planet didn't!

"I have found caves that lead to the sea and the pools which would be
perfect places for dolphins to come to talk to me, where dolphins who
were sick could come to be healed.  I can take off bloodfish, too.  And
stitch wounds.  D'you want to see?"

"See, see, squeed the dolphins.

"Give me a ride in?" Readis asked, lifting his right hand in the
position to grasp a fin.

"Me!" cried Cal and squirmed her way through to take up his hand.

There was a bit of splashing and bodies tried to push him away from Cal.

"Hey, wait a bit!  You can take turns, swimming me in,' Readis shouted
and got a mouthful of water.  He couldn't clear his air passage and, but
for the vest, would have been helpless to remain above the surface.

Almost instantly the scramble ended.  Two dolphin bodies supported him
until he got his lungs clear, though the sea water he had swallowed made
him nauseous.

"All right, now, pod, let's take it easy on this poor human.

You take turns so I don't tire you out.  Huh?"

"Tire?  What tire?"

"Ummmm, get weary, lose strength, exhaust." Readis made motions of
difficulty in swimming.  "Like men you rescue, all tired from ship going
down.

Scornful fountains rose from blow-holes and two rolled in contempt for
the notion.

"Dolphins swim all around Pern and not weary, Cal said, her smile deeper
than ever.  "Swim you to shore is easy.  Easy, easy, easy,' Cal said,
gently brushing the side of his face with her nose.

"We go now.  We change.  You keep hand up."

And so he was towed to shore.  Actually at a much reduced speed than he
remembered them taking him and Unclemi into shore after the storm.  He
changed steeds, and there was always a new one, waiting for him to
switch.  He realized that Cal had come back for a second turn by the
time the shore loomed above them.

"To starboard .  .  .  and Readis gestured right with his left hand. "To
the right.

"Know starboard.  Know port.  Cal is smart."

"Cal certainly is.  Have you been in these caves?"

"Yessss, been in pools here.  Good place.  Readisss smart to find good
place." Her voice echoed in the stone cave and Delky whinnied in fear.

"It's OK, Delky, Readis called, worried lest she break his vine rope in
her panic.

"You have horsss?" Cal asked, carefully raising herself far enough above
the water to put an eye on the startled beast.

"Horss?" Readis laughed.  "Delky's a runner beast.  And a weed at that.
Easy there, girl.  It's all right."

"Looks horsssish,' Cal insisted.  "Name Delky?  Delky, 1 Cal.

"Neither horses nor runner beasts can talk, Cal."

"Pity.  We can talk better now we got you to talk to."

"I think you speak pretty well already, Cal,' Readis said, hauling
himself out of the water.  The vest had held him up all right, but it
had rubbed badly under his arm and on his shoulders and neck.  He'd have
to find something to pad it there.  Right now the abrasions stung.  He
also needed a drink.  "Stay put, will you, Cal?"

He rose and had to grab at the wall to keep upright.  He hadn't realized
how tired he was and his bad leg was not in good working order at all.
That was the first time he realized that the dolphins never commented on
his wizened leg.  At least they didn't seem to care.

Grabbing the nearest of his home-made water bottles, he returned to the
pool and found it stuffed full of dolphins.

"Is the entire pod inside?"

"Yes, want to see man's land place,' Delfi said, raising her body out of
the water to peer about her.  "Nice place.  And she dropped back.

"Anybody need a bloodfish scraped off?" Readis asked, wanting to
reinforce his usefulness.  He was tired enough to be grateful that his
offer was not taken up.

"We strong pod,' Cal said with an understandable pride.

"Maybe later.  When we swim closer in, where reefs and things make cuts.

"Well, I'm willing to help whenever I can, Readis said.

"Can't be dolphineer to whole pod,' Cal said.  "Not right.  One to one
is tradition."

"Until I can find more folks who want to be dolphineers, I guess I'll
have to be one for the whole pod."

Readis was surprised to discover that dolphins had a covetous streak in
them.  But then, dragons and fire-lizards were possessive, one way or
another, of the humans they looked to.

Runner beasts didn't much care who got on their backs, except Readis had
always considered Delky to be especially his, since she'd been a gift.
The canines responded better to some folks than to others so maybe it
was one of those universal attributes he'd learned of from reading in
the Aivas files.

"How people know to be dolphineers if no-one knows who you are?" Delfi
asked.

If Readis had needed any confirmation of how intelligent dolphins were,
that remark certainly clarified it.

"Well now, you have a point, Delfi,' he said, settling more comfortably
on the ledge, his feet dangling.  "Just tell folks that there is now a
dolphineer and a dolphin Craft Hall." Readis wasn t exactly certain how
one established a Craft Hall, but Master Benelek had and so had Master
Hamian when he decided to specialize in the plastic materials that the
Ancients had made so much use of.  Someone had to start someplace,
sometime and for a good reason.  He believed that he had one: the care
of the dolphins who had been neglected by humans for so long in their
struggle to survive Threadfall.  "Was there a dolphin Craft Hall at
Landing?"

"Where the Bell rings is where we go.  Is not Craft Hall?" asked Tursi.
And Readis recognized him by the network of old scrapes on his rostrum.
He was very pleased that he was beginning to identify the individuals of
the pod so early in their association.

"I wouldn't qualify then, I've got no bell,' Readis said.

"No Bell?" "No Bell!" "No Bell!" The phrase went from dolphin to
dolphin.

"That's why I had to swim out to you, I had no bell to ring.  Clicks and
hisses, and much blowing out of their holes as they turned from one to
another.

"Tomorrow Bell,' Cal said at the end of this cryptic discussion.

"Sure thing,' Readis said amiably, grinning, and reaching down to
scratch Cal under her chin.

"Give good scritches,' she said, dropping her jaw and leaning just hard
enough into his hand to get him to increase the pressure.

"We get Bell." Then she flipped up and over the rest of the pod and
started out of the cavern.

Tursi had lifted his head for similar attentions but as abruptly, he
pulled away and followed her out, the rest of the pod streaming behind,
only starting their characteristic leapings when they were clear of the
rock formations.

Readis watched them go, relieved that he had made such a good start and
wondering what they were up to.  Bells didn't grow on trees, after all.
And dolphins had shown no real interest in human artefacts.  He was also
relieved to see them leave because fatigue was settling in on him, and
hunger.  He checked Delky's water and refilled it, gathered enough dry
grass to keep her through the night, and finished the last of the
previous day's fish stew before he gratefully laid himself down.

Odd sounds roused him at dawn.  By now he was accustomed to the various
water noises made as the sea flowed in and out of the main cavern so
this unusual thunk, plus Delky's distressed snort, got him out of bed.

His arms were stiff and sore where the vest had rubbed him.

He wondered what he could use from his small store of clothing to pad it
adequately.  He slipped his knife from his belt and peered out into the
outer cave.  Nothing, and no more sounds.

Delky snorted again but no longer frightened.  He peered around the
irregular opening to the outer ledge.

There on the stone was a lump, dripping.  There were wet patches, too,
that suggested the lump had been deposited by wet bodies.  Readis didn't
see a dorsal fin in the cavern nor could he see one outside.
Straightening up and replacing his knife in the sheath, he went to
examine the lump.  Halfway to it, he realized it was rounded on the top
and he semi-jumped in his excitement to examine it.  The heavy lump was
indisputably bell-shaped, misshapen by centuries of encrustations.  And
it had no clapper, only the stout bar across the inside of the dome
where a clapper could be hung.  First he'd have to clean it up.

"A bell, my own bell,' he murmured to himself and he went to collect the
hammer he had made and other rocks to use in place of proper chisels.  A
Dolphin Bell makes a proper Dolphin Hall.

While he chipped away the accumulated layers, he kept one eye on the
waters leading into the cavern.  Dolphins were endlessly curious. Surely
they'd come back to see how their offering had been received: to check
that he was awake, to see what he did with the bell.  He was almost
sorry that no single fin cut the water.

He had to take a break to feed and water Delky.  By his calculations,
there'd be Threadfall sometime today and they'd better stay inside.  He
went as far as the patch of root vegetables to pull some to eat later:
they were as tasty raw as cooked.

He cut enough of the stout grasses he could weave into rope, broke a
branch of a hardwood to make into the clapper arm and picked up several
sea-washed, smooth rocks that fit in his palm for the actual clapper. He
paused long enough by the fish trap to remove two good-sized
yellowtails.  The trap had been one of his real successes and he blessed
Unclemi for having taught him how to weave them properly.

He stirred up his fire, put his pot on the firestone to heat water and
then returned to the laborious chipping, pausing now and then to rest or
work on the clapper.  He had that long before he had chipped down to the
metal.  The lip, once he got all the junk off it, was smooth but dull
after its long immersion.  He wondered if it would polish up.  Was it
bronze?

Or steel?  The Ancients had had good steel.  Maybe one of the other
alloys that they had favored.

It took him most of the day to clear the exterior and then he had a time
getting his tools in to scour the inside.  He stopped only briefly when
he heard Delky's fearful squeal and saw her swinging as far inside the
cavern as possible.  He saw the grey rain of Threadfall hissing against
the surface of the water.  Even saw fish heads protruding to be the
first to eat of the sky-borne bounty but not a single dolphin.  He
checked Delky's tether but it was firm and she wasn't likely to bolt out
of safety no matter how scared she was.  Then he returned to his work.
He was constantly scraping his knuckles and they got bloody and sore
from the knocking.  He couldn't quite get the stuff at the very top of
the bell but managed to clear the hanging bar so he could attach the
grass thong to hold the clapper.  So, by the light of his fire, he wove
grasses about the roundest of the stones he'd picked up and attached it
to the hanger.  He had trouble getting the grasses over the bar, partly
because the light from the fire had died down so much, he couldn't
really see.  He put it aside, determined to finish that night and have a
proper Dolphin Bell to ring the next morning, when he realized he hadn't
eaten.  By the time he had grilled a yellowtail, chewing on a root
vegetable while it cooked, and eaten it, he could barely keep his eyes
open.  His scraped and bruised knuckles hurt, his shoulder muscles were
knotted from the laborious chip-chipping and he never even made it to
his bed, curling up by the remains of his fire and falling instantly
asleep.

He woke with a start, but that was more from the discomfort of his
chilly position on cold stone than from an exterior sound.

His bad leg was very stiff and spasmed, knocking against the bell.  It
gave a soft "bong' that delighted him.  He picked up the clapper arm and
very softly tapped the rock against the rim of the bell.  Not quite a
perfect sound but indisputably a bell ring!  Would the dolphins have
heard that muted sound?  And he needed a belfry, too, and a long rope
that would dangle in the water for them to pull.

Quickly, he stoked up the fire, gutted and filleted the second
yellowtail and put it on the cooking rock.  Then he picked up the bell
and the clapper.  His fingers were slightly swollen from yesterday's
exertions and it took him quite a time - he nearly lost his temper twice
- to get the grass around the hanging bar and secure the clapper arm.
And then the bell pull.

He made himself eat the fish - it was tastier hot than cold before he
rose, hand on the clapper and carried the bell to the water's edge.
There was a protrusion near the entrance to the cavern.  He put the bell
down and returned to his supplies for more of the rope he had twisted in
readiness.  And hung the bell, wincing every time it issued a small
complaint in the process.

Delky kept one wide, white eye on him, not quite sure what he was doing.
He hoped she wouldn't panic when he rang the bell.

The sun was only just up in the east, he noted, so the pod would have
finished its morning feed.  He couldn't have timed it better if he'd
tried.

Taking a deep breath, he grabbed the pull rope and listened critically
to the sound that reverberated through the cave.

"Not bad,' he said as the still slightly sour "bong' echoed in his ears.
Then he rang the "come in' sequence.  Not that a "report' to celebrate
the hanging of the bell wouldn't be appropriate but report' was urgent:
"come in' gave them an option.

As if they'd been waiting just outside the cave for the slightest bell
sound, sleek grey bodies glistened under the pool water and heads lifted
right under him.

"Bell ring!  Ring Bell!" "We come!" "We come!" "Reporrit!' "Reporrit !"

"No report, you silly fish faces,' Readis said, laughing with relief and
delight, "I only rang "come in"."

"We come in!" "We come in!'

Then the bell rope was yanked out of his grasp and enthusiastically
pulled as a dolphin discovered it hanging down in the water.

"Hey, hey,' Readis cried, grabbing for the clapper.  The ringing was
like thunder all around him in the confines of the cavern.  He should
probably place it outside or he'd be deafened.  Delky was rearing and
kicking, screaming with panic.  "Easy, there, now.

Easy!" He meant the advice for both runner and dolphin.  He was also
none too sure that the grasses would hold under such ardent
manipulations.

Then he knelt down at the side and delivered scratches on all the chins
that were presented.  "Where did you find that bell?  I couldn't believe
it when I saw it yesterday morning.

it took all day to clean it up."

"Bell long lost,' Cal said.  "Long, long, long."

Readis grinned at the delphinic repetitions.  He really must teach them
"good, better, best' though Cal's pod spoke very well: much better than
even the Paradise River ones.

"Did you find it on the sea bottom?"

"We find.  We bring.  You fix.  You ring,' Loki said, she with splotch
on the side of her melon.

Loki!  You're a poet!  Did you know that?  Readis exclaimed.

"Yes.  I poet, I know it.  See?"

Readis howled so with laughter he lost his balance and sprawled on the
ledge, repeating her words while dolphin faces regarded him in their
constant amusement and clicked and squeed.

"You have Bell now.  Need long feet, mask, tank so you can swim far with
pod!'

That sobered Readis almost instantly.  "That would cost more marks than
I have .  .  .  " And Readis suddenly realized that such marks as he did
have were back in his dormitory room.  Or, if Master Samvel had taken
his long absence as a withdrawal from the school, maybe his belongings
had been returned home.

Either way, the marks were out of his reach as was the aqua lung.  "And
I don't have any to buy an aqua lung, even if one could be made."

"No thing left over?" Cal asked.

"If you mean diving stuff from the Ancients' time, no they didn't last
the way the Bell did.  Where did you find it?"

"Where storm sink Dunkirk ships,' Cal said as if the event had taken
place recently and not nearly twenty-five hundred Turns before.

"And you know where that was?"

"Still find man things when bad storm turn over,' Cal said and Readis
was astonished.  How had dolphins remembered such historical things.

"How could you remember something that happened so long, long, long
ago?" he asked, absently scratching her chin again.

"The Tillek.  She holds history in her head."

"Now don't tell me there's a dolphin who's twenty-five hundred Turns
old."

"No, not tell what isn't true.  But she knows from her Tillek.

"Oh, you've a sort of Harper Hall?"

"We have The Tillek,' Cal repeated firmly.  "You must have lung to go
see The Tillek.  You must go see The Tillek."

"I'd love to.  When I'm able, and Readis sighed.  "If I ever am.

"If you be dolphineer, you meet The Tillek." Once again Cal spoke so
definitively that Readis gave a wistful chuckle.

"I be a dolphineer, already.  I have Bell, I have cave, I have you!  Did
you eat well yesterday on Thread?"

"Eat good, good, good,' squeed some of the other pod members.  "Too bad,
bad, bad, men don't eat."

"Well, that's the way it is, fellas,' Readis said.  "And I'd better eat,
he added as his stomach rumbled.

A large rainbow fish was flipped to the ledge and instinctively he
grabbed it by the gills before it could wriggle off.  A second one
followed the first, and then a large leaf, two beautiful shell fragments
and a barnacle-encrusted object.

"You eat, then we swim.  Much to show you.

"I've no long feet, no lung.  And my .  .  .  "he started to mention the
abrasions the vest had made and how loathe he was to put it back on and
open those barely healed scrapes.

"You dolphineer.  Your pod swim you safe,' Tursi said with such
authority that Readis could only laugh.

He did what he had to do, to keep Delky fed and watered, while the
rainbow cooked.  After his breakfast, he had to collect more wood for
his fire, bank it with wet seaweed, until it was safe enough to swim. He
also lavished scratches and pattings on the waiting pod.  Occasionally
one of them would pull the Bell, just to hear it ring.  The good part of
that was Delky got so accustomed to the sound that finally she didn't so
much as twitch an ear when it rang.

The "much' the dolphins had to show him had to do with the coastline up
to the mouth of the deep gorge of what the Ancients had called the
"Rubicon River'.  It required him to swim with the pod long but
thrilling hours.  When he needed to drink they seemed to know where
little brooks and freshets drained into the sea.  They would provide him
with fish whenever he needed them, as well as their constant little
presents of items that attracted them.  Almost every morning there were
offerings.

He'd only removed four bloodfish so he felt he hadn't earned any special
gifts but he remained grateful for anything.  Once they brought him a
"man thing', a plastic crate with one side knocked in but the color as
bright, when he cleaned off the clinging mud, as the day it had been
made.  They told him there were more where that came from.  Over the
next few weeks, he acquired seven, three of which were filled now with
"treasures'.

Winter storms had set in so he also had days when it was inadvisable for
him to swim with the pod.  The sea would lash waves into floods over the
ledge and he'd have to bring Delky inside with him.  The wind found all
kinds of crevices to howl into so that he often had to stuff his ears
with plugs from the fibrous plants to diminish the awesome shrieks.
Invariably, if he went to the ledge at low tide, there'd be a fish left
high and relatively dry for him to eat.  Occasionally branches with the
tougher stemmed fruits clinging to them would be added as special
"treats'.  It amazed him that the dolphins knew what humans could eat.

During the first of those storms, he padded the rough spots of the vest.
He wore it as a "man thing' - his excuse to them - but there were many
occasions when the vest kept him from being half-drowned by the
enthusiastic aquabatics of his companions.

They began to learn how to swim with him, not over or under or impeding
his movements.  They could not quite understand why he had to spend some
time out of the water because his skin began to shrivel and slough off.
He learned to qualify such matters as "man things' and opposed to
"dolphin' or "sea and marine' things.  He also tried experimenting with
wood he carved into the best approximation of "long feet' he could
arrive at, tied to his feet with a mixed grass and tail hair rope.  But
the devices were too cumbrous and either twisted off - as he couldn't
carve a pocket' for his feet without breaking off a piece of wood or
banged into dolphin bodies.  They never complained but he could see the
darker marks on their skin which he knew he had caused with his wooden
water shoes.

His days were so full now of sea work that he almost considered turning
Delky loose.  It wasn't fair to keep her standing in the cave. Declining
to go with the pod one day, he used all the rope he had made to cordon
off a pen for her, not far from the cave but with enough grass and
shelter from the sun for her old hide and by one of the many brooks so
she'd have water.  As he kept a calendar on his cave wall to mark off
Thread days, he could always keep her in when she might be in danger
from Fall.  That way, he didn't feel as bad about confining her.  With
no other runners to lure her away, Delky was content with these
arrangements.

He was therefore horrified to return late one evening to find evidence
of a bloody struggle, bushes knocked over and trees scarred with kick
marks and no sign whatever of Delky.

Searching the little paddock to discover what had attacked her, he
finally found clear paw prints and knew his old friend had fallen victim
to one of the huge cats.  He blamed himself and was disconsolate for
days after Delky's removal.  The size of the paw prints dissuaded him
from going after the beast with only a belt knife to defend himself. His
father had always rounded up all the men in the Hold to go after the big
marauders.  He missed her for more practical reasons later on when
mourning turned to regret: he had no more of her long strong tail hairs
to braid into rope.

He also had very few clothes left.  It was also apparent that the
dolphins had not informed people of his whereabouts.  There were
moments, despite his full and exciting life with the pod, when he could
almost wish they had disobeyed him.  But then, Cal or Tursi or Loki the
Poet would do or say something and make him so glad that he was part of
their lives, that his mood would swing up again.

The worst of the storm season passed and he could gather some of the
green shoots that supplied nutrients he didn't get from fish or what
root vegetables remained in his immediate environs.  He really ought to
start a garden in the glade where he'd kept Delky.  Her manure would be
good fertilizer.  He knew what to plant and where to get the starts and
took some time off from the pod to organize his garden.  That's when he
came across Delky's tail.  He almost didn't bring it back with him.

The urge to bury it as a tribute to its former owner was great but
common sense overcame sentiment and he made a bundle of the long hairs
and stuffed them in the pack he had with him.

On his way back he heard the Bell, heard the report sequence and broke
into as fast a run as he dared with the precious starts and sprouting
plants he had gathered.  Constant swimming had improved the muscles in
his bad leg so that he could achieve a respectable speed, but he was
breathless by the time he reached his cavern.

There was only one dolphin, pulling the Bell, and that surprised him. It
was also the largest dolphin he had ever seen.  That should have warned
him.

"I'm here, I'm here,' he blurted out breathless, propping his pack
against the inner wall before approaching the pool.  "Is someone hurt?
Where's Cal?  Tursi?"

"They come when I call,' the dolphin said, rearing her splendid head up,
her flippers out of water.

"Are you hurt?  Do you have a bloodfish?"

"Yes, I come to you to remove bloodfish,' she said.  "It cannot be
scraped off." She turned on her side and eased slowly by him until he
saw the bloodfish, precariously near her sex organs.

"Good thing I honed my knife, then,' he said and slipped into the water.
"Over here.  And what's your name, please?" he asked as he took three
good strokes to where an underwater protuberance gave him a place to
stand while he ministered to dolphin needs.  "I like to know the name of
my patients,' he added jovially in what he had decided was his
"healering' mode.

"I was called Theresa," she said, gargling her words slightly as she
remained heeled over as she placed herself close to him.

"That's a very fine name.  One of the originals, isn't it?" he asked for
he always talked to his patients to make them feel easier.  "I'm
Readis."

"Your name is well known.  You call yourself the dolphineer.

"You speak really well, Theresa,' Readis went on, his fingers, now deft
at this task, assessing the depth of the bloodfish's sucker.  Often now
he could get the whole thing out without severing the head first.  If he
punctured the thin skull at just the right point, the sucker released.
He found the spot on the bloated body, inserted the thin knife point
and, with a now deft flip of the point, the bloodfish came off with it.
With a flip of the wrist, Readis sent the parasite flying to the wall.
It slipped down on a trail of blood until it lay, with two final
convulsions before it expired, gape-mouthed.  "I'm always glad to get
rid of those vicious things for you." He looked down at the minute hole
and shoved water hard against her flank to rinse the puncture.

"There, that should close shortly.

 "Thank you, that was well done, dolphin healer."

"Oh, 1'm not a healer by any means, though I can do small repairs now,
Readis said, washing his knife blade before returned it to its sheath.
And he'd need a new one soon as the salt water was rotting the leather.
Whatever had the Ancient dolphineers used?  More of their versatile
plastics?

"I had heard of major healings?" She eased herself back so that she
could focus her eye on him.

He smiled down at her, accustomed to such dolphins manoeuvrings.  She
was one big mother.  And old, judging by the scars on her melon, though
all looked long healed.  Could she be full of calf?  Near to birthing?
None of his pod were carrying young.  He had very much wanted to be
present during a birth.

It was such a magical moment, especially in the sea.

"Don't I wish I was able for major stuff,' Readis said, leaning back
against the side of the pool, still supported underwater by the wide
protuberance.  "Maybe I could get more training.  .  .  but I'd need to
have more people working with me as dolphineers before I could take time
off."

"You are not the only dolphineer,' she startled him by saying.

"I'm not?" He jerked bolt upright, the sudden movement whooshing water
over her eye.  She blinked.

"There are dolphineers at Eastern Weyr, at Monaco Bay, and she was the
only dolphin he had heard pronounce it correctly, "Paradise River,
Southern, Ista, Tillek, Fort, Nerat Bay

"There are?" His heart sank within him.  He would not be the first new
dolphineer.  The new Hall he had so proudly thought he might found was a
dream dying in a single, casual sentence.

Others had pre-empted his grand idea.  He might as well go home now and
take whatever punishment his father decreed for him.  He probably
wouldn't be able to go back to school so he'd lost that opportunity,
too.  He might even have lost the best chance to secure Paradise River.
But he would have to make it very plain to his mother that he must swim
with dolphins.  He couldn't give that up now.  He was eighteen now, he
realized suddenly, if he'd counted days correctly.  He was old enough to
go off on his own in any case.  Maybe, maybe, he could just come back
here.  He already had the makings of a small hold.  And if he could
prove enough land around him, under the terms of the Ancients' Charter,
he could own that.  And he'd have Cal and Tursi to swim with, he could
listen to Loki's poems, and

"Come, swim with me, Readis,' Theresa said in the very gentlest tone he
had heard a dolphin use.

"I'm sorry, Theresa, I don't feel much like swimming right now." For all
he was eighteen now and judged a man, a sob caught in his throat and he
turned his face from the dolphin's knowing eye.

He was knocked off his perch by a deft swipe of her rostrum.

He was coughing as he bobbed up and she was facing the cavern entrance.

"Come, Readis, swim with me."

"I need my vest,' and he extended one arm towards the ledge, meaning to
climb back up.

"No vest is needed if you swim with Theresa,' he was told and he was
nudged away from the side of the pool.

"I didn't mean to offend you

"None taken,' she replied.

He caught her dorsal fin with his right hand.  Her tow was deceptively
smooth but the speed with which he passed out of the cavern told him she
was fast.  That surprised him in such a large mammal.  Just outside the
cave, they were joined by the others, and Cal poked her head up on the
other side of him, grinning.

"You help her?" Cal asked.

"She had a wicked bloodfish, yes, and I removed it."

He was being pulled with such speed he had more water in his mouth than
words and gestured that he couldn't speak.  Then he saw that the entire
pod was here, ranging on either side of Theresa.  Some were in advance,
leaping and diving as if they escorted a ship.  Behind him more were
dipping in and out but not displaying the more athletic maneuvers.  He
spotted Loki and she rolled her head at him before dipping her nose
under again.

Theresa just kept swimming, heading directly toward the Great Western
Current.  He'd been out to it several times with the pod, and had been
caught up in the incredible current, fearless only because he had been
in the company of dolphins.

They were nearly upon the ships before he realized that her bulk had
kept him from seeing them bearing down on them.

Two ships, one of them Master Idarolan's Dawn Sisters, and second was
Alemi's Fair Winds.

"Oh, no, Theresa." He dropped his hand and was immediately upheld by Cal
on his left.

"Take hold, Readis,' Theresa said, screwing her head around so that he
could not deny hearing her words.  "You will come with me.

"She speak, you obey!" Cal said, squeeing emphatically.

That was when Readis had the first suspicion.  Later he realized how
stupid he had been.  Just then more pods could be seen, leaping and
diving, plunging and cavorting, all heading towards the ships which had
furled their sails and seemed to be standing still.  Sea anchors out, he
thought in his bemusement.

As they neared, and Theresa was closing the distance with incredible
speed, he could see that each ship had a longboat in the water beside
it, and that there were dolphins clustered all around.  He'd never heard
that dolphins had gathers, but that's Afo had suggested, the only time
dolphin pod met was in the Northwest at the Great Subsidence for

"You're The Tillek, Theresa!" he shouted, lost his grip and swallowed a
mouthful of water that had him gasping for breath and grasping for the
nearest solid form.  Which happened to be The Tillek Theresa and that
had made him reach for any other form, for to grab at her seemed
tantamount to sacrilege.

"Hold me, Dolphineer, he was commanded and his hand was flung up and
landed against the dorsal fin which he obediently clutched.

"I shouldn't Tillek." he gasped.  "It's not right.  You're The Loud
squees and clickings of approval answered him and then they were so
close to the longboats he could hear the welcoming shouts.  The Tillek
swam him up to Master Idarolan's ship, and slowed to come to a complete
stop, her flippers holding her steady with deft subtle movements, by the
Dawn Sisters' longboat.  Looking up he saw his father, smiling, his
mother, unsmiling but somehow looking proud, Alemi, and Kami, of all
people, looking as if she was about to weep.  Beyond her were T'gellan,
the Benden Weyrleader, D'ram, T'lion looking excessively pleased, a
dour-looking man he didn't know, Master Samvel, Master Menolly and
Master Sebell.  His father and Alemi held out their hands to him.

"Grab hold, Readis,' Jayge called.  Too surprised to disobey, he held up
his arm and was hauled aboard.  His mother herself handed him a big
towel, even as she ran critical eyes up and down his tanned body as if
she hadn't expected to find him in such good and healthy condition.

"Thanks, Mother,' he mumbled and didn't know what else to do because
there was The Tillek herself raised up from the water to be part of
whatever was about to transpire in the boat.  For this had the feeling
of more than the recapture of a recalcitrant truant.

"Well, Readis, lad, Master Idarolan said, planting his hand on his hips
and grinning at him.  "Led us a fine and merry chase you have, lad."

"I just wanted to help the dolphins,' Readis said, speaking to his
father despite the press of other important people around him.  "No-one
else was.

Jayge took Readis' arm and pressed it affectionately, the expression in
his eyes wistful.  "We know that now, son.  And I honour you for what
you did that day, despite what I said, and felt, at the time.

"I should never have said what I did,' Aramina murmured right beside
him, and there were tears in her eyes when he looked around at her.

"Ah hem, we can't keep The Tillek waiting, friends," Master Idarolan
said.  "We have come at her request, Readis,' he added.

"At her .  Readis looked from the Fish Master to the looming shape of
The Tillek.

"She wishes you to be The Dolphineer,' Master Idarolan said.  "We've
never had a Dolphin Hall on Pern .  .  .  never realized we should have
had one all these years.  But, well, she's been very understanding."

"The Thread caused many problems for humans,' The Tillek said in a tone
that suggested she really couldn't understand quite why.  Beyond her,
Readis could see the masses and masses of dolphin bodies.  Why, every
pod on Pern must be here!  "We are grateful to men for many things.  For
history, for knowing what we are, and for giving us the tongue to speak.
For speech is what raises the mammal above the animals and fish of land
and sea."

"And you, Theresa The Tillek,' said the Master Harper Sebell, "are
obviously my counterpart among dolphins."

"I do not play music makers.  But I sing the songs of old so that the
young do not forget the past and the old Earth and how men and women
swim with us in these new seas.

"Close your mouth, Readis,' his father murmured softly.

"But he said she said .  A Dolphin Hall?"

"A Dolphin Hall,' repeated Master Idarolan.

"A Dolphin Craft Hall,' said F'lar of Benden, "and I speak for all the
Weyrleaders

"And I, Oterel of Tillek Hold, speak for the Lords Holder said the gaunt
man Readis didn't know and then he smiled and didn't look half as
forbidding.

"And I for the Harper Hall,' said Sebell, "that the new Hall is needed
and is herewith situated at the Sea Caverns of .  .  .  what will you
call your place, Readis?"

"Huh?  I don't know.  I don't know anything

"Kahrain is the name we dolphins know of that place from the Ancients,'
The Tillek said.

"Kabrain Hold it will be then,' Readis said, wondering if a man's heart
could burst from his chest.  "But I really don't have much of a Hold
there right now, only the caves and the pools where I can do the
healing.  And I'd need to learn much more healing to be a good
dolphineer

"That has been promised you,' The Tillek said and ducked down into the
water, rising again to blow out of her hole.

"Why?  Why me?  You said there were other dolphineers Readis said,
almost accusing her of gentle treachery.

"There are,' T'lion said, bursting with the news, "because Gaddie wants
to help, too, and T'gellan says I can spend my free time with you and
I've copied a whole "nother set of medical stuff for you, Readis, and
Readis began to shiver suddenly, though the sun was warm and the breeze
mild.

"He is cold and needs hot food,' The Tillek said.  "We will retire and
return when he has been cared for." She either did not hear or did not
care to acknowledge the outraged "well, I never' from Aramina for she
went on.  "You swim strong and well, Dolphineer Readis.  You will be
Tillek and Thea to all in your Hold." Then she disappeared below the
side of the long boat.  Stunned by all that had just happened, Readis
stared at the space she had been occupying until he saw her long body
gracefully arch out of and then back in the water, many dolphins
following her away from the ships.

Readis was then bundled up the rope ladder and into Master Idarolan's
cabin, and given hot soup and hot klah and made much of by his mother,
attentions which he endured out of gratitude for the day and her
forgiveness.  His father handed him a new shirt and muttered something
about other things that had been brought along that he would possibly
need.  Then, with Aramina still anxiously hovering over him, he was
ushered back out to the deck.  There everyone else on this extraordinary
voyage had wine glasses which were being topped up by Master Idarolan's
seamen.

"Now, lad, I've some cargo destined for your new Hold,' Master Idarolan
said, handing Readis a full glass.  "I know The Tillek wants to talk to
you further .   "I think I'd like to talk to you first,' he said and
included his father and mother with a glance in their direction.  "I
didn't know anyone knew where I was.

"We have for the past three sevendays, Jayge said, laying an arm across
his son's shoulders.  When he saw Readis glance suspiciously toward the
sea, he added, "No, the dolphins didn't tell on you."

"I've been on daily sweeps trying to find you and then I saw the seaside
caves and I figured that they were so perfect for you and dolphins, you
had to be there,' T'lion said, looking very pleased with himself. "Only,
what with one thing and another, Gaddie and I didn't get a chance to
check the place out.  Made yourself right comfortable, didn't you?"

"I got by fine,' Readis said, a remark calculated to take the anxious
expression off his mother's face and, at the same time, prove to his
father that he'd coped well.

"Then,' Master Idarolan said, beaming about impartially, "I was
approached by no less than The Tillek herself.  The dolphins at Paradise
River were upset when you didn't return."

"I got questioned by the Eastern Pod,' T'lion put in, "and so did Master
Persellan who forgave me, by the way!'

"That's a relief,' Readis said.

"And The Tillek asked me when would dolphineers come back to the sea to
work with her pods,' Idarolan went on.  "So naturally I informed Lord
Oterel - and he gestured to the Lord Holder.

"And I asked T'bor of High Reaches and he - - Oterel said and then
turned to the Master Harper.

"Didn't know anything about dolphin pods and, while I knew a little from
Menolly here,' Sebell said, "I conferred with Alemi, who told me of your
disappearance, Readis, and why.  I also spoke to

"Us,' Lessa said, picking up the tale in her turn, "and I remembered
something that Master Robinton had told me about these creatures." She
turned to D'ram.

"And I remembered all the tapes which Aivas had shown of the early days
when there were dolphineers,' the old Weyrleader said and then shrugged.
"So The Tillek went to Paradise River and spoke to your parents."

"She asked us, Jayge said, looking slightly embarrassed while Aramina
ducked her head and nervously twitched the hem of her tunic - one of her
gather tunics, Readis now noticed, "if we objected to your becoming a
dolphineer.

Readis waited.

"It is an honour to be asked,' his mother said softly, hesitantly,
before raising her head to look him straight in the eye.  "I was once
asked to accept and honour,' and she shot Lessa a quick glance, "and
could not.  I cannot stand in your way, Readis."

"Thank you, Mother,' he murmured, his throat blocked with the surge of
relief and happiness.

"You're in for a lot more training before you can become a Craft Master,
young Readis,' Master Idarolan said, "but you've made a fine start.
Ahemm,' and he cleared his throat, "however, The Tillek plans to
instruct you herself which is why she has come all the way down from her
natural habitat."

"She will?" Readis closed his mouth as soon as he realized that it had
dropped open in surprise.

"She has insisted,' Sebell said with a wry grin.  "She is the living
repository of all delphinic history, tradition and knowledge."

"She speaks the best of any dolphin I've ever heard,' Readis said.

"She claims it's because she has to repeat the Words and History every
spring to all the new dolphins wishing to take the Test.  I gather
that's swimming across the great subsidence whirlpool."

Readis nodded and then asked softly, "I wouldn't have to do that, would
I?  I mean, I'm a good enough swimmer but Sebell wasn't the only one to
chuckle.  "She'll set her own test and you should know that you've
already passed the critical entrance examination."

"I did?"

"You did, that's why she brought you to us.

"You'd have all just gone home?" Readis was astonished.

"No, we'd've gone in and brought you back home, lad,' Alemi said, "and
no blame.

"Oh!'

"Listen!" Menolly said, holding up one hand.  "Listen!'

"To what?" Idarolan asked but now Sebell held his hand up and they fell
silent.  Even the sailors in the rigging and on deck stopped what they
were doing, as the odd but melodious sound reached their ears.

"Music, but where is it coming from?" Sebell said, glancing around the
ship.

"I've heard that before,' Aramina murmured to Jayge and leaned close to
him.  "Only it's not quite the same.

"It's not so lonely a sound,' Menolly said as she swung slowly to face
the sea.  That's when those on deck saw the wedge of leaping dolphins
coming alongside.  Suddenly Menolly jumped back in surprise as a loud
squee was clearly heard.

"The big one's back, Master,' one of the seamen in the rigging said,
pointing.  He, too, involuntarily flinched away as The Tillek reared
high from the sea.

"Readis,' she said plainly before she fell back into the water.

"Coming,' he said and started toward the rail.  Then he paused, startled
by his own compliance, and not sure he could just leave the eminent
company on the Dawn Sisters' deck.  "Do I just go?"

"When your Master calls, lad, you go,' Idarolan said, grinning, and
giving him an encouraging push on his way.

"We'll drop the supplies at your caves,' Alemi shouted after him.

"Listen well, learn hard,' Sebell added.

"We're proud of you, son,' his father said just as Readis arched himself
in a dive over the railing and into the sea, carefully aiming himself at
the space left free for him by the dolphins waiting there.

Epilogue he dragonriders stayed a while longer, talking about this
unusual meeting between humans and dolphins and eating the small repast
which Master Idarolan had had prepared.

"Sometimes, I feel that we are rushing forward at unbelievable speeds,'
Menolly remarked, "with hardly time to catch our breaths.  So much has
happened!'

Sebell nodded.  "And not enough time to make songs out of most of it."
He gave his wife a droll smile and ducked as she playfully swatted at
him.

"The song .  Aramina said, leaning toward Menolly, "the song we heard.
Where did you hear it?"

"At night, near the sea, I must admit.  And Menolly paused, frowning,
"at Paradise River when I was there harpering the children.  You've
heard it?"

"Yes,' Aramina said in a sad, wistful tone.  "I always thought it was a
dream but I wasn't always asleep when I heard it."

"When you think how long the dolphins have waited for us to acknowledge
them again, it would make any creature sad,' Sebell said, slipping a
reassuring arm about his wife.

"Dragons don't sing, so I knew it wasn't them, but Ramoth has complained
about "lonely" sounds impinging on her sleep,' Lessa said.  Then, with a
brisk twist of her shoulders, she smiled at Aramina.  "Now we all know,
don't we, that the Dolphins of Pern are part of our future.  I like to
think, one of the better parts of our future when this Pass is over."

"When this Pass is over!" said Master Idarolan loudly, raising his
glass.

And the others drained their glasses to that toast!

