Acorna's
World
by Anne
McCaffrey and Elizabeth Ann Scarborough
Published circa 1999/2000
One
Roughly
six 'weeks after she had joined the crew of the Condor, flagship of Becker
Interplanetary -SLmRecycling and Salvage Enterprises, Ltd., Acorna sat on
"salvage watch" at the helm of the ship, surrounded by the softly
glowing console lights in the cockpit and the billions of stars beyond. She
felt contented, almost as if she were once more home-back in the first home she
could really remember, the mining ship she had shared with her adopted uncles.
Behind her for the moment were the intricacies of Linyaari society and culture.
Before her instead were the intricacies of the universe as recorded in the
notes, tapes, and files of Captain Jonas Becker and his illustrious parent,
astrophysicist and salvage magnate Theophilus Becker.
To give
herself something to do during the long watch, she was charting those notations
methodically so that the planets, moons, wormholes, black holes,
"pleated" space, "black water" space, and other locations
visited by the Beckers could be easily relocated, and the sites where they had
once been could be revisited if the need arose.
Becker
had grumbled at first when she started this chore. Since the death of his adoptive
father, Theophilus Becker, from whom he had inherited both the ConSor and the
salvage business, Jonas Becker had been lord and master of the Condor, with
only Roadkill (or RK for short) the huge Makahomian Temple Cat he had rescued
from a wreck, for company. Becker didn't like his belongings tampered with or
moved. But Acorna had found plenty of evidence that RK periodically made nests
out of the hard copies of the notes, often shredded them when he felt the urge,
and, in a few sorry instances, had added his own personal ( and remarkably
pungent ) contributions to them when he was displeased with the state of his
shipboard toilet. Though she could easily eradicate the odor and the stains,
nothing could make the shredded notes legible again. It was high time someone
charted the notes before RK had his way with the lot of them. After a few
"reasonable discussions," Jonas had stopped grumbling and let Acorna
get on with her task.
At
first RK had stayed at the helm to assist Acorna with her job, but later had
wandered off in search of food or a sleeping companion, probably Aari, the only
crew member other than Becker currently aboard.
Like
Acorna, Aari was Linyaari, a race of humanoid people -with equine and alicorn
characteristics (including a flowing, curly mane and feathery hair from ankle
to knee, feet with two hard toes each, and three-fingered hands with one
knuckle on each digit instead of two. The most striking characteristic of the
Linyaari, to humans anyway, was the shining spiral horn located in the center
of their foreheads. But in Aari's case, the horn had been forcibly removed
during tortures he'd suffered while he was a prisoner of voracious bug-like
aliens) the Khieevi. While Aari's other wounds had been healed on
narhiiVhiliinyar, the world to which the Linyaari had fled when the Khieevi had
invaded their original homeworld Vhiliinyar, Aari's horn had not regenerated.
This
was an appalling wound for a Linyaari. A Linyaari's horn had amazing (almost
magical, even) properties. The horns had the ability to purify
anything-including air and water and food, to heal the sick, and also acted to
some extent as an antenna for psychic communications among the Linyaari.
Acorna
had learned a great deal more about the powers of her horn and about her people
when she had returned with a Linyaari delegation to narhii-Vhiliinyar.
Unfortunately, once she had arrived, her aunt and two other shipmates had been
dispatched into space again to deal with an emergency, and Acorna had been left
among strangers to try to adjust to her native culture, a culture she'd left
behind while she was still a baby.
Her
only two real friends on narhii-Vhiliinyar had been the eldest elder of the
Linyaari people, Grandam Naadiina, and Maati, a little girl -who was the viizaar's
messenger and the orphaned younger sister of Aari.
When
Becker had made his unauthorized landing on narhiiVhiliinyar to return Aari and
all the bones from the Linyaari graveyard to the new Linyaari home planet,
Acorna, Grandam, and Maati had been in the greeting committee. Aari at that
time had still been terribly deformed from his ordeal with the Khieevi, and the
viizaar Liriili and some of the less sensitive and compassionate Linyaari had
not made his return easy.
Acorna,
perhaps because her own loneliness had helped her identify with his, had been
drawn to Aari. When an emergency signal had called Becker away from
narhii-Vhiliinyar, Acorna and Aari had shipped out with him. They had been able
to help in a crisis that had threatened some of Acorna's human friends as well
as the Linyaari. As a result of their intervention, a branch of a
Federation-wide criminal organization had been destroyed and many off-planet
Linyaari, including Acorna's beloved aunt, had been rescued, along with all the
other captives of the criminals. Acorna, Becker, Aari, and Acorna's Uncle
Hafiz, who had also been on hand for the rescue, were now in great favor among
her people.
Acorna
could have stayed comfortably on narhii-Vhiliinyar once her aunt and the other
ship-bred and ship-chosen Linyaari returned to the planet. But she had decided
instead to leave with Becker and Aari.
She
wasn't sorry. She might have been born on a peaceful planet populated by beings
who had the ability to understand one another telepathically, but her
upbringing had made her different, and that was sometimes a problem, both for
her and for her people. Space was familiar to her, and its diversity of races,
species, and personalities stimulated her. Of course, right now, just being
here, quietly charting coordinates, resting her eyes by watching the stars,
wasn't very stimulating, but the serene surroundings felt wonderful. She was
comforted by the routine watch, at peace with the universe.
Perhaps,
she thought, happily ever after, the permanent version, only happened in fairy
tale, bat happy every once in a while wa^ r&ftful ane) healing.
The
cabin lights flicked on, bringing the harsh light of the day shift to her
starlit world. She blinked a few times until her eyes adjusted.
"Yo,
Princess!" Becker said. "Your watch is over. Whatsa matter with you
sitting there typing in the dark? You'll ruin your eyes that way, didn't
anybody ever tell you?"
He
strode up to stand behind her, peering over her shoulder so intently his brushy
mustache, which closely resembled RK's ruff, brushed her horn. Becker smelled
strongly of the aftershave he had begun to use about the time he began to shave
again, shortly after she arrived. It wasn't that he was trying to impress her
in a courtship. and mating fashion, she knew. It was simply a rather
old-fashioned, by human standards, sign of gender acknowledgment and respect.
"Hey, now, how about that? You've charted the whole journey from the time
we left narhii-Vhiliinyar the first time, to that moon where Ganoosh and
Ikwaskwan held your people captive, and all the way back again! I figured, with
all the excitement we ran into, and all the hopping around we had to do, nobody
would ever be able to figure that one out. How'd you 2o that?"
"You
kept good notes, Captain," she said, smiling.
"Well,
it's terrific! And you did it so fast, too. Where'd a sweet young thing like
you learn that?"
"Elementary,
my dear Becker," Aari said, sauntering up behind the captain and towering
over him. Tall, slender, and graceful now that his injuries had healed, Aari
-was whiteskinned and silver-maned. These were traits he shared with Acorna and
the other Linyaari space travelers.
Aari
had been reading a trashed-out copy of The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes
lately. Becker and Acorna could see the immediate result of his current venture
into fiction in the -way that Aari had layered two baseball caps from Becker's
collection, so that the bill of one hat stuck out in back above his long silver
mane, the other in the front. It was not only a pretty good imitation of a
traditional deerstalker, but the hat covered the indentation in Aari's forehead
where his horn had once been. Aari also clutched a Makahomian ceremonial pipe
between his teeth. It was a bit longer than an antique meerschaum, but with
Aari's height, he could carry it off. The Holmesian effect was only spoiled by
the RECYCLER'S RONDY '84 logo on the front of the cap facing them, along with
an embroidered trash container rampant beneath the lettering.
"Space-bred
and space-chosen Linyaari," Aari said, "develop a heightened sense of
navigational interrelationships between space and masses, even energy
fluctuations. Many of those relationships are imprinted telepathically upon our
brains by our parents when we're young. That is partially how I was able to
guide you to narhii-Vhiliinyar though I had never been there myself."
"Hmm,"
Becker said, surveying his shipmate's latest odd outfit. "You make me
wonder if my old man might not have
been part Linyaari. You're sure finding your way to the planet wasn't
simple deduction?"
Aari
looked puzzled. "No, Joh. We do not use footprints, types of mud, or
tobacco ashes to do this thing. It is a matter of the mind."
"Must
be," Becker said. "Acorna's indicated the wormholes and black space
with a precision that you don't see on regular charts, given the instability of
the features being charted and the dangers of getting close enough to map them
thoroughly. Even got the whole wormhole system we ducked back through to blast
Ganoosh and Ikwaskwan to kingdom come."
Acorna
glanced up from her charting and shrugged. "We were there. The notations
of the holes and folds are roughed out in your notes, and made precise in my
mind." She paused to consider something else Jonah had said. "About
your father-he is probably not part Linyaari. I do not think it is possible for
our two species to interbreed. In the pictures you have shown me of your
father, he certainly doesn't look Linyaari, though I will admit his intuition
about such matters as spatial relationships, as well as yours, seems to me to
be similar to some of the psychic abilities our race possesses. I can certainly
understand that, lacking a crew and managing all phases of your operation
alone, as you do now and as your father did •when you were a child, you did not
take the time to properly collate and chart your observations. But, frankly,
only psychic ability would explain how you were ever able to find anything in
this chaos." Her spread hands took in the mounds of papers, chips, and
recorded tapes scattered around the console.
"I
usually know which pile or computer file to access for what I need,"
Becker protested. "At least, I did once," he muttered. Then he added
graciously, "But I'm sure it'll be helpful to have it all nice and
orderly."
Roadkill
jumped up on one of the piles of hardcopy and sent the papers into an avalanche
that slid clear across the deck.
"RK,
you silly cat, you already had your chance at these," Acorna said, madly
grabbing for the flying papers.
The cat
chased the furthest sheets until they settled to the floor, pounced upon one
and shredded it with his back feet, then abruptly lost interest and began
washing his brindled belly instead.
Acorna
bent down and shuffled the papers, somewhat the worse for wear, back into
order.
"I'm
pleased you approve, Captain. The task needed doing and it keeps me
productively occupied."
"Yeah,
I guess you must have been pretty bored after you reprogrammed that junked
replicator I had in Cargo Hold Two to make all my favorite dishes, so I
wouldn't have to eat cat food when I got busy, and after you and Aari turned
Deck Three into a hydroponics garden for your own noshing needs, while you
meantime inventoried and catalogued all my remaining salvage."
"It
was not so much, Captain. It's not as if I am new to this sort of thing. I used
to replicate food and help grow my own meals when my uncles and I lived aboard
our mining ship. I also catalogued our specimens and assisted with charting. I
like to be helpful."
"No
kidding! Between you and KEN," he said, referring to the all-purpose
KEN-6^0 android unit that they had acquired, more or less by accident, during
the Condor's last voyage, "the way he keeps the ship soooo-"
"Shipshape,
Joh?" Aari offered. "I have been reading the nautical works of Robert
Louis Stevenson, and that term is employed to describe a flawlessly maintained
vessel."
"Yeah,
what you said," Becker agreed. "Between you two and Aari, I could
take up knitting or basket weaving in the spare time I got these days."
"A
very good idea, Joh," Aari said. "You have some excellent references
on crocheting, beadwork, handweaving, pottery making, and origami, as
well."
"You
should know, buddy. I'm glad you've been getting so much out of the pile of old
books I found in that landfill, not to mention the vid collection. But let me
"warn you-steer clear of the do-it-yourself veterinary books." Becker
glanced down at RK who had one leg poised in the air and was looking up at him
with suspicious, wide, golden eyes. In a stage whisper Becker continued,
"I once tried some stuff out of one of those vet guides on the cat there.
Bad idea. Neither of us came out whole."
Aan
looked puzzled. "Why would I read veterinary books, Joh? If 'Riidkyii'
"that was as close as Aari's Standard could come to pronouncing Roadkill's
name"becomes sick, Acorna could heal him. We have no need for the invasive
measures described in those books."
"Damn
good thing, too," Becker huffed. "The problem with using invasive
measures on ol' Riidkyii is he can't get it straight •who's the invader and
-who is the invadee. We were both short a few bits of choice anatomy after that
little adventure. Luckily, Roadkill and I eventually got put back together,
courtesy of the Linyaan." He turned to Acorna and said, "While we're
on the subject, you know you're welcome to the library, too. Princess.
Anytime."
"Yes,
Captain Becker, that is very kind of you, but I already accessed most of the
reading selections you have available during the time I lived with my uncles
and guardians. I was raised by humans unlike Aari, who had no previous exposure
to human culture until he met you. So I won't be using the books. The vids are
another matter. However, I regret very much that we have only vid goggles
available to view the films. It would be such fun if we could all view them
together."
Becker
gave her a sly look from under his brushy eyebrows. Her psychic powers had been
increased while she lived among her own
people, but she didn't need them to know that he understood what she really
meant. Teasing, he said, "Of course, really, only two people oughta watch
at a time because somebody should be on salvage watch."
He knew
that she wished to share the books and vids with Aari so that he wouldn't spend
quite so much time alone, and so that they would have something to enjoy
together. She blushed a little. "I simply thought it would be more
companionable."
"Yes,
Joh," Aari said, "And, as far as salvage watch goes, you once
performed all the ship's duties alone, and your metabolism requires that you
sleep for long periods. You must have let the ship's computers take over
occasionally then. You could certainly do so now. I do not see the difficulty
of sharing these vids."
Becker
chuckled and shook his head. "What is it with you guys? Mutiny? But, okay,
"we'11 keep an eye out for something we can convert to a full screen setup
for vids instead of the goggles."
"Thank
you, Captain," Acorna said. She believed Aari would be much better off if
he didn't spend nearly all of his time on his own. He had spent years alone in
a cave on the deserted planet Vhiliinyar, hiding from the Khieevi who'd
tortured him, before Becker had found and rescued him. Aari hardly knew how to
speak to people anymore. And every time he disappeared while she was not on
'watch and Acorna decided to go to him to try to initiate a conversation,
Captain Becker always seemed to have some task he needed her assistance with or
some errand for her to run. RK, too, tried to deter her. His claws and piercing
cries could be quite eloquent, even to one who possessed no higher
understanding of cat language than vulnerable skin that could be spoken to with
fang and claw. She sensed her friends were possessed by some sort of male
protectiveness toward Aari. She was sure it -was not a reasoned response to her actions, but she was
hard-pressed to understand it. She meant her fellow Linyaari no harm, and
sought only to lead him to a deeper healing than had been necessary with the wounded
she had previously treated.
She was
also as perplexed as she "was amused by Aari's "literary
disguises," as Becker called them. They were funny and sad at the same
time. As he adopted the headdresses and costumes of various characters in the
books and vids he was exposed to, Aan looked less like a maimed Linyaari and
more like an interesting, if rather oddly dressed, human. Of course, she
herself had at times donned disguises that covered her horn and feet so that
she could pass for human, and it had been a useful skill. But in Aari's case,
she sensed a huge chasm of loss underlying his attempts to be someone else. It
was as if he no longer considered himself fully Linyaari. The horn transplant
the doctors had attempted on narhii-Vhiliinyar had not taken. A living horn
transplant from a close relative might be possible with a specimen from Maati
when she was older, but could not be attempted just yet while her horn -was
still growing. They'd have to wait until she'd reached full adulthood before they
could risk harvesting enough tissue for a successful transplant for Aari.
The com
unit button lit and emitted a beep as Aari replaced the fallen papers on the
console, lifted RK to his shoulders, and headed back into the hold to continue
his reading.
"You
get it, Acorna," Becker said. "It's probably for you anyway."
She
flipped the toggle, fully expecting to hear the voice of either her aunt,
viife()haanye ferliii Neeva, checking to make sure she was all right, or that
of the viizaar Liriili, spouting yet another list of instructions and requests
that Acorna was to pass on to her contacts in the Federation in general and to
her Uncle Hafiz in particular.
Since
the rescue of all the off-planet Linyaari spacefarers, ambassadors, teachers, students, scientists,
engineers, healers and their families, and the subsequent return of those
rescued to narhii-Vhiliinyar, just six weeks before, big changes appeared to be
taking place on the Linyaari world. According to Neeva, the governing council
had been in almost continuous session, trying to decide if, when, and to what
degree the Linyaari should end their isolationist policy with regard to most of
the galaxy, and whether they should open trade alliances with Federation
planets and companies.
The
council had already unanimously decided on a most favored trade alliance with
House Harakamian, the empire Uncle Hafiz had recently handed over to his nephew
Rank Nadezda, one of Acorna's adopted uncles. The Linyaari hadn't yet decided
whether or not to allow House Harakamian vessels enter Linyaari space, however.
At this point, the majority of the council favored off-planet trading at some
mutually agreeable location. But that wasn't a unanimous view. Some of the more
progressive Linyaari space travelers even favored entering the Federation. As
they pointed out, isolation had failed to protect their people from the Khieevi
or from capture and mistreatment at the hands of Edacki Ganoosh, the Kezdet
robber baron. The vocal minority of the council felt that knowledge of other
civilizations, both friends and foes, was better protection for a peaceful
people like themselves than ignorance and isolation.
Since
most of the Linyaari diplomatic corps was currently recovering from their
ordeal on narhii-Vhiliinyar, the council was entrusting all of the Linyaari's
initial overtures to the Federation to Acorna, who was a newly appointed
Linyaari ambassador and also, conveniently, Hafiz Harakamian and Rafik
Nadezda's adopted niece. The council completely ignored her protestations that
Becker did not intend to return immediately to federation space, preferring for
the moment to search for salvage in the galaxies occupied by the Linyaari and
their current trade allies, an area neither he nor any other
Federation-licensed salvage company had
previously explored. Acorna had passed on the Linyaari council's messages to
Hafiz before his flagship, the Sharazoi), departed from Linyaari space.
Hafiz's
last message to the ConSor, and to Becker in particular, had been suspiciously expansive
and nonchalant.
"Of
course, dear boy," Hafiz had said, "there is no need for you to
hasten your business on our account. By all means stay in this congenial
universe. Get acquainted. Find useful refuse. As long as Acorna is happy, her
Aunt Karina and her other uncles and I are content. We'll see each other soon
enough."
Perhaps
Hafiz was really serious about retiring after all? In Acorna's experience, it
-was very unlike him to fail to seize a business opportunity by the throat and
milk it for all it was worth. If he wasn't retiring, he was clearly up to
something.
So she
had reason to hear from many people of her acquaintance just at this moment.
But this time the corn unit surprised her. When a face appeared briefly on the
screen, it was not her aunt, or another Linyaari, or even the wily Uncle Hafiz.
Instead, a heavily bovine face was being transmitted, male and jowly with a
curving brownish horn above each ear. It spoke in a language Acorna didn't
understand, so she reached for Aari's LAANYE, a Linyaari device that collected
samples of unknown languages, analyzed them, then served as both a translator
and a sleep-learning device to implant foreign languages into the brain of
anyone who wished to learn them. But the transmission trailed off just as she
got the machine activated.
According
to the LAANYE, the last word the creature had said translated as
"Mayday" or "SOS" in Linyaari. The only other words she'd
caught in the transmission before the screen turned to white, crackling static
were "Niriian" and "Hamgaan)." She did recognize the race
of the creature who'd appeared on her com screen. He "was from the planet
Nirii-the Niriians "were regular trading partners of the Linyaari. Acorna scanned the frequencies, trying to
pick up the signal aeain, but to no avail. Becker put his hand over hers and
pointed. She followed his finger and saw that the screens of the long-range
scanners he used to detect possible salvage showed blips of white light in
several locations. One of them was backed by a mass of green light.
"There," he said. "There's a solid mass under that one.
According to the readout, it's a small planet with an oxygen-based atmosphere.
If the ship was seeking refuge, that would be the most likely place in this sector
of space to retreat to. Let's go see what we can find."
Acorna
nodded. "Yes, I see what you mean. Given the direction of the signal's
probable source, it is likely that the salvage is the distressed vessel whose
broadcast we just received. The LAANYE translated the last word before the
message was interrupted to mean 'Mayday.' Possibly the signal we intercepted
was a general one sent as the ship's systems were failing during some sort of
accident or attack. I feel sure we received it only because we were within range
of their emergency transmitters. If the signal had been meant for us, the
broadcast would have been in Galactic Standard or in Linyaari."
Becker
shrugged. "Yep. That's the way I've got it figured. Don't get your hopes
up, though. We're probably not going to find the cowboy who was transmitting
the mayday alive, or anybody else. None of those blips on the scanners look
like an intact ship. But we may be able to tell what got him from the
fragments. The time stamp on the message is a couple of days ago-if the problem
was indeed an attack instead of an accident, whatever nailed them seems to be
long gone."
So we
will check the situation out and report exactly -what happened to the
Federation?" Acorna asked.
Yeah,
eventually," Becker said. "But mostly -we'll know what to avoid
ourselves."
Intricately
twisted vines and stems joined and twined, braided, knotted, and separated
before bursting into jewel-toned rainbows of richly hued blossoms, reminding
Acorna of pictures she had seen of the illustrated borders in Celtic holy books
from ancient Earth. Except that this vegetation was no mere border, but a lush
tropical jungle so interconnected that it was impossible to tell where one
plant stopped and the next began.
At
first, the tangle of plant life looked impassible. She, Captain Becker, RK, and
Aari had stood on the lowered platform of the robolift, overwhelmed by the
sight of it. Becker was fingering the sharpened blade of his machete while Aari
held the portable scanner, waiting for it to indicate the hiding place of the
large piece of salvage that had shown up on the Condor's screen.
Acorna
was busy cataloging the minerals and elements that made up this planetoid. She
had already notified the others that no breathing apparatus would be required-the
atmosphere was void of any substances lethal to carbon-based life forms and far
richer in oxygen than Kezdet or narhii-Vhiliinyar, and the soil was as rich in
nitrogen. Of course, that was just her scientific opinion. In practice, once
she was actually faced with it, the air was so heavily scented with the aromas
of the flowers it felt too thick to breathe, laden with a heady mixture the
like of which she had never smelled before. She detected elements of the
incenses that had perfumed Uncle Hafiz's palace, like cinnamon, cloves,
vanilla, and the kind of human cooking known as baking, and also smells like
mint, rose, violet, lavender, gardenia, and lily of the valley, but all were
much deeper and mixed together with new scents-things she'd never smelled
before. The end result was so intense that it almost took on substance and
color.
Captain
Becker said the place reeked like a high-priced bawdy house, •which seemed to
please him. Aari had sniffed curiously. "I have no basis for ascertaining
the validity of your comparison, Joh,
but I defer to your knowledge of such matters." For their excursion
dirtside, Aari had removed his Holmesian baseball caps and pipe in favor of a
colorful scarf tied around the top of his head and a plaskin patch, inked black,
over one of his eyes. Acorna deduced, Watson-like, that he had been reading
Treasure Inland and -was assuming a piratical disguise in lieu of his Holmes
persona. Though he was giving the soil a very Holmesian inspection, what he
could see of it from where they stood.
Soil
was clearly foremost in RK's mind, too. The ship's cat leaped off the platform
and hopped through the vines-which parted, almost as if the cat's reputation
had preceded him, to allow him to pass easily through them. The roots and trailers
along the ground seemed to shrink away as RK pawed the soil, turned his back on
his work, and deposited his own ecological contribution to the planet.
Acorna
started after the cat but Becker touched her arm and said, "Wait. Let us
see if he gets out again okay."
The cat
pawed backward to cover his work but the vines and other ground cover were
already creeping back across the pile. Roadkill looked behind him, saw that
this -was happening, gave a little shake that could have been a cat's version of
a shrug, and bounded back through the path that had cleared for him on his way
in. He then hopped up onto the robolift platform and proceeded to wash his
whiskers, as if they had been somehow affected by his previous chore.
"Okay,
then," Becker said.
"That
way, Joh," Aari informed him after consulting the scanner, and pointed in
the direction from which the cat had just come.
"Well,
then, onward." Becker raised the machete in one of the dramatic gestures
he was fond of and pointed. RK leaped to his shoulder and the four of them
dismounted the platform. As they set out, the jungle growth shrank even further
away this time, leaving a wide lane
open before them. It gave Acorna an odd feeling to see the plants moving and
shifting out of their way. Becker walked over to one side and raised the
machete to hack at a thick stalk, but the stalk bent in the middle to retreat
from him.
"Wait,
Captain," Acorna said. "The plants seem to be trying to accommodate
us by getting out of our way. It hardly seems right to cut them."
Becker
gave her a look. "Yeah, well, we don't know how long it will take us to
find the ship. And we don't know what •wrecked it. We might be looking at the
cause of the trouble right now. How do we know these plants "won't close
up around the Coru)or and bury it so deep we -won't be able to get it loose
again? They're several stories high, after all. We -wouldn't even be able to
see the suns if they had decided not to part for us."
"I
think 'decided' is a relevant term in this case," she said. "These
plants seem to have some kind of limited sentience, or at the very least the
ability to react quickly to stimuli. I think it might be wise to sheathe the
machete. Maybe we had better not make them angry. Besides, we could find the
ship with the portable scanner, couldn't we?"
"Yeah,
but I always like to have a backup plan," Becker said, -while putting the
long knife away.
Aan dug
in the pocket of his shipsuit and pulled out a ball of shining thread. "I
have just the thing, Joh." He tied one end to the robohft and held the
rest in his hand. "We can leave a trail behind us, like Theseus seeking
the Minotaur in the labyrinth. This also works very well in eaves when
searching for lost cascades of gold and jewels."
"Caskets,
buddy," Becker said.
"As
you wish," Aan agreed amiably, and began unrolling his ball of string.
"Ow,"
Becker said as his shoulder -was punctured by the claws of the suddenly
hyper-alert ship's cat, -who hunkered
down and switched his brindled gray and black tail, his ears perked and
his eyes intently following the gleaming thread as it unwound behind Aari.
"Belay that, mister," Becker said.
The cat
immediately leaped from Becker's shoulder to Aari's. "Aaargh," Aari
said, rolling his as instead of his rs. "Avast there! It is my faithful
paro, Pol."
RK made
a dive for the thread. Acorna intercepted the cat and received a few scratches
for her trouble.
"I
am sorry, Khornya," Aari said. "I think Riid-Kiiyi does not wish to
be a paro."
"It's
all right," she said, cuddling RK up close to her body and scratching him
gently under the chin. He immediately abandoned his quest to play with the
string in favor of purring and rubbing the side of his face against her skin.
The
small party set out into the jungle. The vegetation now made a path as wide as
the Coru)or, the stalks bending almost flat to avoid contact with the people
passing among them. The heady fragrance turned to an acrid stench.
"Sheesh,"
Becker said, holding his nose. "What are these, skunk vines?"
Acorna
looked around. "No. They are the same sort of plants as the rest, but see
how the flowers are closing up and the scent they are emitting is changing? It
is as if they are afraid of us."
"Hmmm,
well, it does smell like the last guy who tried to gyp me out of some money he
promised me," Becker admitted. He leaned closer to a stalk and the stench
grew stronger. "Joh, don't," Aari said.
"Just
testing," Becker said. "Sony, plants. No harm intended."
Aari
was busy unwinding twine with one hand and holding the scanner with the other.
"It should not be far now, Joh," he said. "The salvage is just
ahead."
An
opening in the canopy was visible before them, and Acorna saw a long cylindrical pod lying among some twisted and
charred stalks right in their path.
Becker
prodded it and turned it over. Beyond it, they could see other bits of the
downed ship visible among the stalks. Although there was nothing overtly useful
in the wreckage they could see, Becker decided he wanted to haul all of the
pieces back to the Condor. "We might be able to figure out why the
Niriians sent the mayday," he said. "Maybe find some clue to •who
exactly they were, what kind of trouble they were in, who attacked them."
He scratched his head. "Don't think that this is a normal part of my
business, Acorna, because it's not. Finding wrecked ships, yes, but not
stumbling on the wreckage before it's cold. And I have a funny feeling about
this one."
"Me,
too," Acorna said.
Aari
looked up, surprised at their words. "I apologize, Joh, Khornya. I did not
realize that you had not understood the Hamgaar()'s, broadcast. I would have
translated it for you if I'd known."
"Hamgaarts?"
Becker asked.
"That
is the name of the Niriian ship that broadcast the message that brought us
here. Niriians have been trading partners of my people for many, many years.
Like us, they are a nonaggressive race. Before I-before my brother was lost-I
traveled on more than one trading mission to Nirii."
He
turned away, stepping over nearer pieces of wreckage to retrieve others farther
from the ship.
Acorna
noticed as she picked up the fragments of ship that they were sticky with some
reddish fluid. At first she thought it was blood, but then she saw that it was
actually more of a deep amber in color and far too transparent to be either
human or Linyaari blood. It was clearly the source of the acrid smell they had
noted earlier, and she wrinkled her nose. "Phew," she told Becker.
"This is what is causing the stink."
Becker
looked more closely at the damaged vines all around them, gleaming with redness that Acorna had not noticed in the
plants nearer the ship. "I think you're right. Look there. They're weeping
this stuff."
Acorna
looked. The redness ran down the stalks, pooled at the base of the stems, and
was slowly encroaching on the wreckage.
"We're
going to have to give this stuff a good scrubbing," Becker said
disgustedly.
Aari
was looking, too, and nodding. Then all of a sudden he turned toward them,
leaped over the wreckage, and ran back to the ship as fast as Acorna had ever
seen him run.
"Hey,
buddy, wait up, -what is it?" Becker asked as they chased after their
friend, but Aari was back on the robolift platform before they could catch him,
curled up in a fetal position on the very center of the platform, his eyes
tightly closed, and his entire body shaking. Sweat and tears ran off his face
and wet the deck beneath him. RK dabbed at him -with an experimental paw and
then looked up at Becker, wide-eyed.
Becker
raised the robolift and he and Acorna shepherded Aari back to his bunk.
"You stay here with him," Becker told her. "I'll get the KEN
unit to help me load the cargo."
Acorna
had leaned against Aari so that he was in contact with her horn all the time
they were loading him and he was quieter now. His trembling had stopped and he
was no longer sweating. Her healing abilities worked to some degree with mental
as well as physical wounds, but she was learning that she had limits. There was
only so much she could do with deeply embedded psychological injuries,
particularly with Aari.
When
he'd been tortured, his survival had depended on being able to escape mentally
to a place where the Khieevi tortures couldn't touch him. Unfortunately, when
he was in deep pain, he still retreated to that place. Acorna couldn't reach
him there, and the healing power of her horn could not touch him either.
She
tried, but she could not read Aari's thoughts, 'which were jumbled and
incoherent. But the feelings that rolled from him were all too clear-deep
dread, loathing that was kaLinyaan in its repulsion. It was as if Aan had been
flung down into some dark and nightmarish place he could not escape from. He no
longer knew where he was or who was with him. She could only hold him, her horn
buried in his mane up tight against his scalp, trying to exude enough soothing
energy to overpower the spiraling horror that gripped him in its vortex. Time
seemed to slip away as she tried to give Aan some relief from the mental demons
that gripped him. And then, as she reached the point of exhaustion, everything
slipped away from her and the world faded to black.
When
Becker returned to the main deck, he and the KEN unit both sticky with the
foul-smelling sap, he looked in to see that Aari and Acorna both slept, she
with her arms wrapped tight around him, he at last relaxed, though his face was
still damp with tears. Becker saw that Acorna's golden horn -was looking a
little transparent, as if the effort of trying to comfort Aan had drained her
healing energy. Past experience had taught him that this was how it -was with
Linyaari who pushed their limits of endurance. He had seen that all too clearly
from the effects of the tortures inflicted on captured Linyaari by Edacki
Ganoosh and Admiral Ikwaskwan. But normally it took a long time and a lot of
injuries to deplete a horn to any degree. The fact that Acorna's horn was
already translucent instead of a healthy gold told him that poor old Aari had
to be in a world of hurt.
RK, who
had spent the time Becker and the KEN unit used to round up the salvage getting
the sap off his fur, plopped himself within the tangle of Linyaari feet and
buried his face in his own paws. The cat had apparently decided that a vigil
was in order.
Becker
looked at Acorna lying there, and thought that if her knuckles weren't already
so pale they'd be white from hanging on to Aari. She was clutching him like a
lifeline. He was hurting, and she "was bound and determined that he -was
going to stop hurting. That was all very well on the surface, but Becker
-wasn't sure Aari was ready to be out of pain, or ready to let Acorna in to
heal him. He wasn't sure that, even with the Linyaari's legendary psychic
abilities, Acorna had enough experience of men to understand how complicated
her caring for Aari could be for both of them.
He
touched Acorna's shoulder gently and -woke her, so that she turned toward him
and relaxed her grip on Aari. He didn't need to do anything else. As soon as
she saw -where she -was and what she -was doing, she rose, not as if she -were
ashamed, but like she knew it -was the prudent thing to do.
"He
was very frightened of something out there," she said. "Khieevi must
have attacked that ship, Becker. Aari's mind was screaming about the Khieevi,
and he was reliving his torture when they captured him again. It was very hard
for him."
"It
was no picnic for you, either, Princess. Better hit your berth and strap in.
I'll strap him in, too. I've got all the salvage stowed. We can look at it at
our leisure once we're back in space. I don't want to sit down here any longer
than necessary and give those plants time to get so relaxed about having the
CorSor among them that they decide to make us part of the scenery. Know -what I
mean?"
It was
an image she could visualize all too well. She nodded sleepily and stumbled off
to her berth.
When at
last the SharazaS returned to Maganos Moonbase bearing a triumphant Hafiz
Harakamian and a host of others, Rafik Nadezda was so relieved to see the old
pirate he could scarcely believe it.
While
the ground crew tended to unloading the ship and servicing it, Rafik walked
beside the Harakamians to the transit lounge, which was the most luxurious of
the quarters at Maganos Moonbase. The soundproofed facility, with its deep
carpets and soft, comfortable divans and chairs in the lounge, fully equipped
business suites and conference rooms, had been designed to make a good
impression on visitors, potential employers, and clients for the skills and
goods that were being offered by the base's residents. Maganos Moonbase was a
mining, manufacturing, and training facility set up to reeducate the former
child slaves of Kezdet. The children ran the base as a business, and were
responsible for its financial and educational successes. The moonbase had been
built -with money rrom both Hafiz Harakamian and Acorna's other benefactor,
Delzaki Li, as well as with reparations seized from Kezdet's kingpin of the
child-slavery operations, Baron Manjari. But it •was the children's job to ensure that the investment was a
profitable one.
Now the
former child slaves rushed up the gangway connecting the ship and gantry to the
transit facility. They greeted the Harakamians and the ship's other passengers
with cheerful familiarity that Rafik was pleased to see Hafiz apparently took
as a compliment. He smiled and waved and spoke a word or two to some of the
children he recognized from previous visits.
Hafiz
looked somewhat trimmer and fitter than he had -when last Rafik had seen him.
It was possible that this new trimness was owing to Hafiz's marital exertions
with his bride, but if so, the old man was a considerate as •well as an
energetic lover. His new bride, her ample form flatteringly draped in an
expensive drift of violet and orchid silk embroidered with gold to accentuate
her not inconsiderable bustline and hips, had not diminished by one curve or
chin, and glowed with contentment.
As
Hafiz embraced him, Rafik thought there was a renewed vigor and purposefulness
to the old man's step as well, a gleam of reinforced steel in his eye and grip.
"You
look well, my uncle," Rafik remarked. "Nearly being killed a thousand
times can do that for a man of action, 0 son of my heart," Hafiz replied
with a dismissive •wave of his hand, to
indicate that real men of action knew this thing and found it beneath them to
make too much of it.
"You
were magnificent, my hero," Karina said, and turned to Rafik, -white gold
carousels glittering with amethysts and blue diamonds swinging from each ear beneath
the light veil she wore over her dark hair. She gestured dramatically with
heavily bennged hands, and the jewels at her neck and bosom heaved with pride
as she lauded her husband. "He was a lion! He saved a shipload of children
as •well as most of Acorna's relatives!" Her hands fluttered down to cling
like plump -white doves to her husband's arm. She batted her eyelashes and looked up at Hafiz adoringly-no small feat
since she -was an inch and a half taller than he.
"So
-we have heard from the Starfarers, Uncle," Rafik said. "They, too,
are here on Maganos, recuperating."
"Are
they? That is good. That is very good indeed. It fits in with my plans
exactly," Hafiz said.
"Plans?"
Rafik said.
"All
in the proper time, most beloved of nephews. I don't suppose you have a few
small viands at hand to comfort weary travelers?"
After
Hafiz and Karina had been comfortably ensconced on a well-padded divan and
refreshments ordered, and Rafik had seated himself in the throne-like carved
chair opposite them, Rafik asked, "Back to the plans you spoke of, my
uncle. Tell me more of them." The old man might have officially retired
from the business, but when he stopped scheming, Rafik would know that Hafiz
had stopped breathing.
Hafiz
clapped his hands together and shook them for emphasis. "They are splendid
plans, most splendid plans indeed, 0 son and heir of my heart! Thanks to your
efforts and those of your partners to rid the universe of our enemies, our
Linyaari friends and the relatives of our dear niece Acorna are opening their
hearts to us, and perhaps their purses as -well. But they are, as you know,
very shy. And our beloved niece, appointed by her people to represent them in
trade, wishes for a time to travel with the estimable Captain Becker and his
intriguingly tragic new first mate."
"Ye-es?"
Rafik said. "Some of the Starfarers have mentioned another Linyaari-a
hornless one. They say he survived the Khieevi, but surely-"
"Survived
he has, indeed! A worthy man in many ways, rrom what I have seen of him. But
that is neither here nor there, he -waved his hand dismissively.
Karma
captured Hafiz's -waving hand with her own ringladen one.
"Actually,
nephew of my husband," she said, "the point is, that it is not here
but there that Acorna wishes to stay for a time at least. Your uncle,
benevolent and kindhearted patriarch that he is, wisely has chosen-with my
help, of course-to view this circumstance not as an obstacle to our future
trade with the Linyaan, but as an opportunity."
Rafik raised
an eyebrow politely.
Hafiz
slipped Karina's hand through the crook in his elbow and patted it. "Can
you guess what I intend, scion of my house?"
"I
believe there is no need for me to hazard such a guess, 0 founder of my
fortune, as it appears you can barely contain your wish to tell me all about
it."
"Even
so, my boy, even so. I will give you a hint. Is it not written that if the
profit cannot go to the mountain, the mountain shall go unto the profit?"
Tea and kaf arrived, along with cool bowls of sherbet that had been flown in
from Hafiz's main compound at Laboue in anticipation of his arrival, and many
assorted pastries and savory morsels. The lounge began to fill up with people
from the ship and those who had come to greet them, among them the Starfarers,
many of whom now were young adults. The Starfarers were permanently planetless
space travelers, their ship serving them as world, country, state, city, and
family home all rolled into one. Rafik waited patiently until everyone had
exchanged greetings, then steered conversation back to the matter at hand.
"The
profit will go to the mountain. ... So it is written in the third of the three
books by the third of the three prophets, Uncle," Rafik said with a
respectful inclination of his dark and handsome head. Then he looked up
sharply, a smile dawning on his face. "Uncle, surely you do not intend to
. . .? No! I can see that you do." He was not really as shocked as he sounded, but he enjoyed watching his uncle's
pleasure in his reaction. "But how? Is not the Linyaari homeworld still
closed to visitors?"
"It
is," Hafiz said.
"Then
how? Surely you would not risk offending them and endangering our business, not
to mention our relations with Acorna's people, by violating their
privacy?"
"Absolutely
not, my son! That would be unthinkable. Inconceivable. We will, of course, wait
for an invitation-which will naturally not be that long in coming. In the
meantime, however, •we will undertake an enterprise so courageous, so
farsighted, so monumental, that the fame of House Harakamian will rise like the
proverbial djinn from the proverbial smoke of the proverbial bottle, and bring
with it all of the riches, the luxury, the beauty, and the bounty that
accompany such great good
fortune."
"You
mean to establish a branch of House Harakamian beyond Federation space, my
uncle?"
Hafiz
spread his hands this time, indicating his innate generosity. "Someone
must, my son. These people are surely lacking all that we have to offer and
possibly are unaware that they are even in need of it! How will they know
unless we show them what they are missing? And the Linyaari are shy. Had it not
been for their need to warn other innocent races about the Khieevi, they might
never have ventured into Federation space, might never have found Laboue or
Maganos Moonbase. While it is true they might one day venture out of their
territory again, an enterprising businessman does not leave such matters to
time and chance any more than a doting parent would the happiness 01 his
adoptive daughter. We are in good odor with the Linyaari at present-"
"Due
to the bravery and innovation Hafiz showed in the rescue of all of their
important space traveling people," Karma put in, looking up at her spouse
with adoration.
"True,
true," Hafiz said. "I covered myself with glory, it is true. But in
my experience, gratitude is an ephemeral commodity, and the memory of those who
are indebted to one is even more so. Therefore, we must move with the swiftness
of a desert storm if we are to take maximum advantage of our past good works.
We must organize our exhibitions, the travel for our exhibitors, sales and
support staff, security, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera."
"Nadhari
Kando might be available for security," Rafik said.
"Excellent!
I am glad you concur. She has been traveling with us. She should be joining us
here soon, as a matter of fact, but she wished first to oversee certain
arrangements aboard the SharazaD before we set off again."
Karina
placed her silver gilt fingertips to her temples and said, "Ahh-you see,
Hafiz? Rafik said exactly what I foretold!"
"Indeed,
my dear. Actually, nephew, Karina sensed that you would wish to employ that
formidable lady, so I have already offered her command of the outpost's guard
and given her full rein to recruit her own staff."
"It
is well, my uncle, Madame Karina," he said with a courtly inclination of
his head to his 'aunt.' Hafiz's bride had a gift for "sensing"
matters that she would have had to be comatose not to know, but she made Hafiz
happy, and for this Rafik was prepared to regard her "powers" with
tolerance, if not with the awe she seemed to think they should invoke in him.
Hafiz
continued. "If we are to be beyond Federation assistance, I will want the
best people, even^ if Nadhari has to lure them away from Federation forces, and
naturally she will require the latest and most effective weaponry as well. And
she is one who may be trusted to acquire what is needed with the utmost
discretion and dispatch."
"True,"
Rafik agreed.
"Your
partner and your senior wife, the ugly one, will be required, as well as your current light of love and her
illustrious km."
Rafik
grinned. Hafiz's mention of Rank's senior, ugly wife was an inside joke. Back
when Rafik had been a space miner, he and his partners-Calum Baird and Declan
"Gill" Giloglie- had found the infant Acorna adrift in space, saved
her from certain death, and raised her. The first time the three miners and
Acorna had approached Hafiz together, in order to keep Hafiz from attempting to
"collect" Acorna as a "rare specimen," Rafik had veiled and
robed both Acorna and Calum and presented them as his wives. He'd told his
uncle he had converted to Neo-Hadithianism, a radical fundamentalist branch of
the True Faith that permitted and even encouraged polygamy. He had counted on
his uncle's respect for his nephew's "wives" to protect Acorna from
acquisition. It hadn't worked, and before their visit was over Acorna had been
revealed for what she was and Calum for what he was. But before Hafiz could
resort to anything too nefarious in his quest to acquire Acorna, he had learned
that Acorna was not a one-of-a-kind creature, but only one among many of a
populous alien race. Consequently Hafiz had lost interest in Acorna as an
acquisition, and learned to value her as an adopted niece. Calum, however, had
never quite lived down posing as the senior, very ugly, wife.
I'm
sure they will be most eager to assist in this endeavor, Uncle. However, there
is the small matter of Maganos Moonbase to manage, the education of the
children ..."
Details!
Such ideas as mine are as the towering pyramids of the ancients, not to be
smothered in the details as numerous as grains of sand. Bring the children! Let
them learn! They can staff the new businesses, apprentice themselves to the
artisans and technicians, provide support. It will be a marvelous experience,
an unparalleled learning experience for them!" He considered. "Also,
many of the elder ones have already learned how to set up artificial
atmospheres and life support systems on life less rocks such as this one was
prior to its transformation. Their previous training -will, no doubt, be
helpful-"
"In
which case, they should be paid," said Calum Baird, joining them with a
mug in his hand, into which he poured a fresh infusion of tea from the tray
between Rank and the Harakamians.
"Like
all who join us, the students will be suitably taken care of," Hafiz said.
"Food, lodging, travel, richly rewarding associations, toys for the young ones
..."
Calum
rubbed the thumb and first two fingers of his right hand together in a
time-honored gesture used for many generations by his canny Celtic ancestors.
"The ready, Hafiz. If the children are to learn business, they must also
learn to manage their own money. To do so, they need to earn some. If they are
to -work, they must have a share of the profits. And even at that, I'm not sure
"we should allow it. To take innocent children beyond the protection of
the Federation!"
"Ah,
yes," Karina said, regarding him with one of those flashes of sudden
shrewdness that lurked like sharks beneath the fathomless sea of mysticism with
•which she drenched most of her utterances. "I heard how well-protected
the children were when they were employed on Kezdet as child slaves, miners,
prostitutes, human fodder for the mills of industry without decent food or
accommodation. The Federation forces protected them so well then I really doubt
the little darlings will be able to bring themselves to part with such security."
"She
has a point," said Khetala, a tall and sturdily built young woman with
dark brown skin and a serious expression. She had entered from the gangway when
the food had been delivered, accompanied by Dr. Ngaen Xong Hoa, the
meteorologist. Dr. Hoa's shyly tentative smile and the blazing intelligence in
his dark eyes had kept him from being completely invisible as he and the girl
silently listened to the exchanges between the Harakamians, Calum Baird, and
Rank.
They
were not the only spectators to this conversation, even though Khetala was the
first to add her own contribution to it. As was often the case on Maganos
Moonbase, a good-sized audience of avid listeners stood around the divan and
the chair, taking in every remark and gesticulation. Which was fine with Rafik
and which seemed to give the theatrical Hafiz and Karina an audience to play
to.
Even if
the children had not been included in Hafiz's plan, they would have been
welcome to listen. They were at Maganos Moonbase to learn not only useful
trades but also all of the other survival skills necessary to living
independently and well, skills which could not be acquired in an atmosphere of
adult secrecy or adult superiority. The kids needed to understand strategy and
self-government, and they learned best by example. They discovered how to be
effective adults by watching the adults in their lives make decisions, from the
beginning of the process to the end.
Khetala,
or Kheti, even more than many others, was already respected as a teacher, an
organizer, and a leader. As one of the older, stronger children in the mines,
Kheti had taken beatings for many of the younger ones and shielded them, lifted
loads too heavy for them, and held them together when things seemed hopeless.
Toward the end, she had been hauled off to the pleasure houses, and although
Acorna had rescued her from that particular pit of despair, Kheti had taken a
special interest in helping girls and women who were formerly used in those
places regain their self-respect and sense of purpose. Among those who cared
about Kezdet she was as much a legend in her own right as Acorna. All of the
adults present knew her story.
Hafiz
opened his hands, palm up. "I rest my case," he said.
Dr.
Ngaen Xong Hoa cleared his throat politely. "I was Just discussing with
Khetala, Hafiz, which of the children have demonstrated an interest in
meteorology. If I am to help you tnaintain a pleasant atmosphere within the
compound at your outpost, energetic
assistance from alert young minds -would be most beneficial." Dr. Hoa's
particular specialty -was planetary weather control.
"And
we Starfarers will go into action helping set up the communications relays
you'll be needing," said Johnny Greene, the computer communications expert
of the Haven, the Starfarers' ship.
"Good,
then I think -we are all agreed," Hafiz said -with a universal beam of
bonhomie at all who were gathered around him. He rubbed his palms back and
forth, "We leave a skeleton staff to keep the moonbase running, and go to
seek adventure. It is time to begin gathering what we shall need and, of
course, a few small, essential luxuries."
"Oh,
goody," said Mercy Kendoro from the edge of the gathering.
"Shopping."
In far
less time than anyone who had not witnessed the power of House Harakamian in
action would have supposed, the initial supplies, provisions, and personnel
were acquired, transport was organized, and a flotilla of space vessels, headed
by the SharazaS, left several respective planets and moons, rendezvoused at a
point just outside Kezdet's orbit, and began a long caravan through unmapped
space toward the site Hafiz had chosen for his new "trading post."
Since
Aari was the only one who really understood
the language spoken in the Niriian transmission, Becker hoped the guy
would be in a better mood when he woke up from his nap. There was no point in
opening the pod until he did. Of course, if there hadn't been anyone aboard who
spoke the language, Becker would have opened it, hoped the LAANYE and the
computer were up to the task, and tried to figure out its secrets on his own,
but right now he could afford to wait. Aari had to wake up eventually.
Becker
had other reasons to delay that task as long as possible. Someone needed to
note the original location on the planet where each piece of salvage from the
wreck had been found, as well as where it was currently stowed aboard the
Com)or, and except for RK and the KEN unit, Becker was the only one awake. Or
so he thought.
It had
only been a few hours since Becker had left Acorna sleeping next to Aari,
totally exhausted. Now she surprised Becker by walking up behind him.
I can
take over again, Captain. Aari is still asleep." Don't scare me like that.
Clomp a little the next time you Wander up behind me, okay? So how's Aari
doing? You're pretty sweet on him, aren't you?" Becker asked.
Acorna
blushed. "Captain, on narhii-Vhiliinyar people wear shields on their
horns, in part to avoid questions just like that. He seems to be resting
peacefully now. I am not sure that 'sweet' is the proper term for my feelings
for him. I am very interested in Aari, it is true, and I want to help him, as
you do."
"Yeah,
but I'm not his type, " Becker said, running a hand through his grizzled
gray and black hair. "I am going silver maned, can't argue with that. But
I'm not a girl." He grinned at Acorna. Then he had a thought he hoped he
was keeping to himself. Aari did like girls, didn't he? Becker figured he did.
But there was no evidence here to go on. The guy had not exactly been in any
shape for courting during the time that Becker had known him, nor had he
mentioned any past loves, which seemed pretty natural considering what he'd
gone through and how alone he'd been for most of his life. On the other hand,
Aari's treatment of Acorna had been brotherly, though every so often Becker did
see him watching Acorna closely, sometimes smiling, sometimes -with a troubled
expression on his face. If he saw Becker watching him, Aari would look quickly
away. And Acorna was probably unaware of Aari's interest, if that's what it
was. He always watched her when Acorna was doing something else.
As
Becker worried about his shipmates he heard Acorna let loose a big sigh.
"I
dunno, Princess, you should probably tell me to butt out," Becker said,
troubled by seeing her lovely eyes cloud.
"Oh,
no, Captain, I would value your advice. My aunt intended that I should find a
lifemate pn narhii-Vhiliinyar but- perhaps because most of the space travelers
left early-I did not meet anyone I liked until you came with Aari."
"You
really like him or just feel sorry for him?" Becker asked. Why did he feel
so fatherly to this gorgeous young woman-well, gorgeous young alien woman-who
was taller than he was, probably smarter than he was, and was in full possession of a number of rather spooky
powers that were her birthright and had been Aari's, too, before some of them
at least were partially looted from him. "You don't have to answer that."
Acorna
smiled and patted his hand. "I know you ask only because you care for my
happiness, Captain. You are so much like my uncles-"
"Much
better looking, of course," Becker said, huffing through his mustache.
"Way better looking than Baird."
Acorna
chuckled. "They say that sort of thing about each other all the time. I do
not know what I am supposed to be looking for, to tell you the truth, I have
never done this before. I am here because I like to be here and feel that it is
time for me to move away from both of my homes, at least for a while. I care
for Aari. Perhaps as a healer cares for her patient, but also more than that. I
have never decided before to linger beyond the immediate healing I can do.
Something in him calls to me. Perhaps he will be a friend of my own species,
and closer to my own age than either Grandam or Maati. Perhaps because of
Maati, who is his sister, and is almost like my own little sister, I am here in
her stead. ..."
They
locked eyes and he could see that hers were disturbed in a particular way that
made his heart ache. He had fallen for a few women over the years, but none of
them -were -willing to live for long on a salvage vessel, though a couple of
them had been quite happy to take off with everything on the vessel that wasn't
bolted down and a few things that were. They seemed to consider him a little
eccentric, too. Mostly he just had his tavonte bawdy houses and a favorite girl
or two at each when he was in port. But nobody had ever looked at him the way
Acorna was looking when she was thinking about Aari.
Roadkill
jumped onto his lap and dug all of his claws in, purring madly. Becker sucked
in a sharp breath through his teeth and waited for the pain to subside. Then he
rubbed the cat's thick brindled fur
with his knuckles. "I don't think so, Princess. But you know the guy has a
lot of problems. And he probably thinks a classy gal like you wouldn't like a
Linyaari with no horn."
Acorna
shrugged. "I was raised by men -who had no horns. And he will have a horn
again some day. But-"
That
was as far as they got before they heard Aari's footsteps clanking on the deck
plating. He wore no disguise this time, and he said in -what -was for him a
brusque tone, "Now let us see what else the Niriians had to say."
"Okay,"
Becker said, and reached for a crowbar he kept on the bridge, just in case he
wanted to pry or bash one of the second-hand parts that was no longer working.
While he was wondering which method would work best with the pod, he heard a
series of snaps and clicks.
Turning,
he saw that Aari had opened the pod and pulled out what looked(and smelled)like
the slimiest mess of cheese Becker had ever seen. It was full of holes, covered
in places with green moldy luminescent stuff, and had the fragrancewell, RK had
the right idea when he backed up to it and started making shoveling motions
with his feet.
Aari
grinned up at Becker, showing his rather large teeth in a way that could be
intimidating if the guy -was pissed.
"What
is that?" Becker asked.
"Niriian
organic technology," Aari said. "They have developed ways to use
products of their own bodies, slightly chemically altered, for functions some
peoples achieve with inorganic materials. The biotechnology does not supply all
of their needs, of course, but with the properly stabilized balance of biological
components and nutrients, quite sophisticated functions, including information
storage and retrieval and energy generation, may be performed by ... lifeforms
. . . such as these."
"Yeah,
but how do you plug it in?"
Aari
laughed. "You don't plug it in, Joh! But it is legible- nreanically-based arrays can provide a
remarkably compact form of data storage. Its contents are accessible in an
orderly fashion."
"Oh,
sure. Mold and mildew and slime on Limburger cheese-I had an accountant like that
one time. Real orderly. Acorna, sweetheart, can you do anything about the
stench with-you know?" He was trying to be delicate, pointing at her horn
while Aari's head was bent back over the cheesy thing.
"What
do you use to retrieve the data?" Acorna asked.
"Yeah,
whaddaya use? An ice cream cone?" Becker asked.
Aari
rolled his eyes. "No, Joh. The usual scanner the computer uses to examine
and analyze objects."
"The
Anscan? I don't quite get how that would do the trick, buddy, but whatever you say-hey,
you're not putting that thing on my console, are you?" Becker asked. He
was not normally all that fastidious, but that smell was more alien
invasiveness than he could handle. And the Anscan was expensive.
Acorna
set the pod upright and Aari returned the cheese to it.
Then
they set the -whole gizmo on the console. Aari pulled the Anscan over to where
its probe could read the structure of the cheese.
"That
is not what that delicate piece of equipment was engineered to do!" Becker
said.
"The
Niriians know that, Joh. Though it is true they have not probably encountered
this particular piece of equipment, but they and their trading partners have
similar technology and they have developed this device so it will work by this
means. Ihere have been many fascinating seminars about how Niriian organic
devices can be used with conventional equipment-you should access them
sometime."
Why
couldn't they just get electronics like everybody else then?" Becker
grumbled. He was getting a little lightheaded, trying to hold his nose so he
didn't breathe in those fumes.
"Because
this piiyi is cheaper, more efficient, and entirely homegrown for the
Niriians," Aari answered, now using the keyboard to open the interface
between the Anscan and ship's computer and corn unit.
If
Becker wasn't actually astonished to see a bovine twohorned Niriian appear on
the corn unit screen, he "was at least mildly flabbergasted.
"I'll
be darned. That cheese Dou work, just like you said."
"It
is a piiyl, Joh."
"It
is a pee-yew as far as I'm concerned, but-"
Acorna
put her hand to her mouth and made a hushing noise and they listened again to
the broadcast.
"Can
we stop it and start it so you can translate for us, buddy?" Becker asked.
"Yes.
The piiyl forms a permanent linear archive, but access to information can be
controlled by your . . . Anscan."
"Okay.
Stop it then. What did he just say?"
"The
same thing as before. It was a recorded broadcast, a call for help, what you
call a mayday. Their ship was under attack. They identified themselves and gave
their location, but the coordinates they listed were far from here and even
farther from their home planet."
"Does
it say who attacked them and why?" Becker asked.
"Not
here."
"Okay,
let's see if there's anything else on that monstrosity."
"Undoubtedly,
Joh. The pliyi is a high-density storage device."
"Dense
with stench . . . that I'll agree with," Becker muttered.
Aari
went back to work. Once the static had cleared, a Niriian face appeared and
began speaking. After a few seconds, Becker asked what it was saying.
"It
is the ship's log. I believe we are receiving the last entry first. It is hard
to tell, exactly, Joh. This is a different speaker- probably the captain. His dialect is difficult to follow. Wait!
Yes! By the Niriian calendar they were transmitting-ummm, you would say, five days ago.'
Aari
had made his answer quickly, and quietly, keeping one ear focused on the
Niriian voice as it droned on.
"Ah,
yes." Aari said. "He says that he and his crewmates were on a
scouting expedition. You know, Niriians are always looking for greener
pastures-like us, they are a grazing people, but they are a rather more
numerous race than the Linyaari. He is referring to an earlier entry in the
log, something about a very fertile planet and then, disappointingly, signs of
previous colonization-no, present colonization. Very, very small signs.
One-pod? Does he mean this one? No, he is saying something . . . something
about Linyaari."
He shut
it down and turned to them, his eyes wide. "Joh, he was saying something
about a dwelling place, and a small downed Linyaari vessel, but it was not near
where they detected the mammalian life signs. His accent is too thick,
Joh."
Acorna
said, excitement barely controlled in her voice, "This sounds very
important. Perhaps we should forward all this information back to
narhii-Vhiliinyar, where some of the Starfarers who have spent time on Nirii
can translate it more accurately than we can. In the meantime, we can use Aari
and the LAANYE to try to understand the rest of what is being said. I wonder
who attacked the ship. . . . And I wonder if the Niruans really found stranded
Linyaari outside our normal trade routes and, if so, how our people came to be there?"
If it
was an escape pod, maybe the Linyaari got to the planet in question the same
way you told us you reached the human galaxy-you know, ejecting from a ship in
trouble." Becker offered.
Acorna's
expression became so intense, her mouth so set, ana Ihere was such a determined
look in her eyes that Becker thought she might be hoping somehow that there had
been two life-support pods after all in
the space ship her parents had been on, that perhaps they had escaped. He felt
obligated to point out to her that it wasn't the most likely possibility.
"We
need to get those coordinates and do a little searching ourselves," he
said. "They could be people who escaped Ganoosh's and Ikwaskwan's goons
when the fake Federation troops were 'arresting' all your people."
Acorna's
posture relaxed slightly, dejectedly, at that. "I suppose that's what it
must be."
"But
you're right. Your people can probably sort this out quicker than we can, and
also, maybe somebody who's been to Nirii more recently-wasn't that where your
aunt was, Acorna?" he asked. She nodded. "Well, maybe they will know
who to notify among the Niriian authorities to let them know the Hamgaarf)
ain't coming home no more, no more. And we should probably do a little
searching around to find out who is responsible for taking out the Hamgaan)
before we make that report."
If he'd
had a hat, he'd have taken it off and placed it over his heart right then. He
knew that the cowboy and his crewmates would have families -waiting for them in
vain back on the old home -world. It was one of the hazards of spacefaring that
all spacers tried not to think about.
"Yes,"
Acorna said. "You're right. We'll check all of the fragments of the ship
and see if any provide useful evidence. Mean-while, -we can translate as best
-we can the entire ship's log, and -while -we're at it, take the coordinates of
the place •where they saw the escape
pod."
"You're
sure you don't find anything else about the attack in there, Aari?" Becker
asked.
"I
will attempt to scan throughout the device for such information." Aari
turned back to the Anscan and the pay I. The monologue broke off, there -was a
screech of static, and then, suddenly, there -were images on the screen once
more. Horrifying images.
"Holy
cow!" Becker said. "Who the hell are the big bugs and what are they
doing--oh, no-Cosmos on a crutch! They're torturing that-Aari?"
Acorna's
healing must have worked pretty well because Aari spoke in a very calm,
controlled voice . . . well, actually, Becker thought, his voice was about as
dead as the last fish who tried to swim in a Kezdet river.
"Those
are the Khieevi, Joh. And that is me. The Khieevi transmitted the images of my
torment to this Niriian ship."
Once
the Linyaari space travelers returned, everyC^ "V thing should have been fine again.
Everybody should have been happy. Maati had thought that she, at least, -would
be happy. But first Aari had decided not to stay on narhii-Vhiliinyar. And then
Khornya, who had begun to seem like a big sister to Maati, had left.
Maati
felt left out because none of the space travelers she knew wanted to talk to
her about what had happened to them. If she'd been old enough to be able to
read other peoples' minds, then maybe she wouldn't have been so lonely and
alone, but she doubted it. From the shocked, hurt, and sometimes almost
nauseous way those who had not been in space reacted when meeting those who had
been, Maati could tell that the spacefarcrs experiences had been really bad.
You could see in their eyes that the pain lingered inside them, in spite of all
the healing ivhornya and the Linyaari doctors had attempted to do.
Because
so many of the space travelers were seeking out wandam Naadiina's counsel,
since Grandam was the oldest living Linyaari and by far the wisest, Maati
couldn't even talk Grandam. Grandam was much too busy.
It was
probably better that way. Maati would have hated to have to admit to Grandam that she didn't feel especially happy
to see the others, not when her brother had left and then Khornya had left,
too. It might be selfish of her, but it was the way she felt.
If the
viizaar hadn't been so mean to them, Khornya and Aari might have stayed. Maati
had really started to hate the viizaar. Hate, she knew, was not a thing a good
Linyaari should feel. It was a violent emotion and her people were supposed to
be gentle. But the viizaar was not gentle. She was mean. She just hid it from
everybody, even the people who were good mind readers. Grandam said Liriili was
a good administrator because, since she was less sensitive than average for a
Linyaari, she could make more objective decisions.
Right.
She had made one of those recently, it seemed to Maati. She had decided Maati
was an object to be pushed around and sent here and there. Nobody even noticed
how nastily she spoke to Maati. Everybody was too busy with the returned space
travelers.
When
the spacefarers weren't doing some kind of therapy, they were in council,
discussing trade agreements and that kind of dumb stuff. Grandam was there,
too. At least the council kept ol' Liriili busy so she wasn't always yelling at
or for Maati.
Although
once, in front of the whole council, just because Maati dropped a piece of hard
copy she was bringing from the doctors concerning the wellness of some of the
returnees, Liriili had snapped at her.
"Honestly,
you are the clumsiest messenger I have ever had! And the slowest! You would
have never been given such a responsible position if the council hadn't been
softhearted about you being orphaned. And now look at how you repay their
trust!"
Everybody
was so preoccupied with all the important things they were thinking of that
nobody cared "when hot blood rose to Maati's face or that her ears rang
with viizaar Liriili's hurtful words. She
couldn't read their minds, but they could read hers, and in former times people
had always been kind. But now nobody cared what one little flunky felt. They
were worrying about the grievous hurts their scientists, diplomats, teachers,
and traders had suffered.
A
hundred faces -watched impassively as Maati bent to pick up the paper and hand
it to Liriili, who snatched it from her hand. Maati would have been even more
humiliated if she thought they -were really paying any attention, but clearly
almost every single one of them had used the distraction to get lost in his or
her own thoughts. Thoughts she couldn't read.
In
times past, Liriili would have her stay close by during council sessions, in
case messages needed to be delivered to outlying areas, but these days the
viizaar couldn't wait to get rid of her. She sent Maati out on the silliest
errands, errands that could have been handled easily enough with a beep on the
corn unit, anything to get Maati out of her sight.
Maati
had recently heard VLfec^haanye-feriiii Neeva remark to some of the others,
"I wish Khornya and the young man, Aari, had chosen to stay with us. I
cannot understand what was so urgent that they had to go collect salvage with
Captain Becker."
The
notion had crossed Maati's mind that ^he knew exactly who had made them feel
like outcasts and made their lives miserable enough to drive them away. Just as
that thought crossed her mind the viizaar's voice had cut through her musings
like a laser.
Obviously
our Khornya was attracted to the boy and they wished to be alone together
without the weight of custom that ^as unfamiliar to Khornya and that, frankly,
the boy is too unstable to deal with at this time. Maati, our water has grown
quite stale. Please go fetch some more and see to it that this is ^sposed
of."
Maati
barely stopped herself from saying, "What do you think YOU have a horn on
your head for anyway? Freshen it yourself!"
But
that would really cause trouble. The half-formed thought alone brought a hard
stare from Liriili. But Maati was a messenger, not some kind of a subspecies to
be ordered to do busy work because the viizaar felt like exercising her
authority.
Just
when Maati thought it couldn't get any worse, the Ancestors-the one-horned
four-leggeds who were one of two species from which, back in the time before
the Beginning, the Linyaari had ultimately been formed-sent for Grandam
Naadiina. They insisted that she bring with her the space travelers who
continued to suffer from nightmares and other emotional ills, despite the
healings of their families and physicians. All were to attend the Ancestors in
their hilly home. The personal attendants of the Ancestors called the occasion
a "retreat." Maati thought of it as an abandonment.
No
sooner had Grandam and the others disappeared from sight than the viizaar sent
for Maati and informed her that, during Grandam's audience with the Ancestors,
the viizaar could not allow a young girl to remain alone in the pavilion she
shared with Grandam. Therefore, Maati would be given a guest mat in the
viizaar's tent and would sleep there until Grandam returned.
"That
way you will be handy in case I need you," the Viizaar said with a false
smile. What she really intended -was to keep her own eye on Maati. Every time
Maati wanted to go visit with someone, or -was asked to graze with a group of
other youngsters, Liriili invented some urgent errand for Maati to carry out.
Maati
finally realized that the only way she could have time away from the viizaar
was if she did what the viizaar was already accusing her of, and dragged her
heels on certain errands.
Like
her last one. Late in the evening, in the middle of a downpour, she had been
sent to the spaceport to take Tharimye, -who was on com-shed duty, a basket of
hand-plucked greens prepared for him personally by the viizaar. A little note
was attached to make sure he knew how he was favored.
When
she'd handed him the basket, though, Thariinye had groaned. "Oh, no,"
he'd said.
Maati
shook the water from her mane and peered into the basket. "What's the
matter? Don't you like those sorts? Because I'm not going to take them back to
her. My feet are sore. She keeps me running day am) night now. I'm tired."
She flopped back into the second corn-console chair and sprawled.
"I'm
sorry, little one. You want any of these? They're perfectly good grasses. I'm
just not, you know, wanting to accept any favors from our lady leader."
Maati's
eyes narrowed and she studied him a moment. Thariinye had changed a little
since he and Khornya first returned from the galaxy of her people. He had been
sooo full of himself when they arrived, and had boasted that he and Khornya
were to be handfasted as lifemates. But later, oddly, Maati had heard from many
young females to whom Thariinye had also paid court. They were all complaining
that if only Khornya had no claim on him, Thariinye would gladly ask them to
graze with him forever. But really, as he and Maati both very well knew,
Khornya hardly liked him at all, much less wanted him for a lifemate. Thamnye
was very handsome, if you liked the tall, slim, muscular type, but Khornya was
somehow . . . older, smarter than he was, and she didn't like his
attitude-Thariinye was a bit conceited. But Maati had to admit that any male
who could successfully string along so many females who could read minds
"ad to have something going for him. A lot of nylirl, Grandam said. Which
meant something similar to courage, except that it meant he was courageous
enough to act on things he shouldn't actually be acting on and say things he
shouldn't really be saying.
Maybe
she's just letting you know she doesn't think you're so bad, even though those
ladies complained about you wooing both of them," Maati ventured, with a
little of her own nyliri, watching him to see what he would say.
A crack
of thunder heralded a gust of wind that sent rain splashing in huge puddles
against the viewports of the comshed. In the distance, jagged lightning sliced
through the blackened sky, strobing the night with brief but brilliant flashes.
Thariinye
snorted and gave her a smile as phony as the one he gave his extra girlfriends.
"Such a sweet little youngling you are, Maati. Of course she doesn't think
I'm so bad. After hearing all those other girls tell her what a splendid specimen
of manhood I am, she's courting me herself."
It was
Maati's turn to snort. "You've been away from space too long, Thariinye!
You've got ground-sickness!" It was the sort of joke the spacers made
about ground people and ground people made about spacers to explain their
peculiarities. It was the only thing Maati could think of, other than
Thariinye's high opinion of himself, to explain -why he would imagine that the
vllzaar capable of any softer, more female feelings at all.
"No.
No. It's true. She fancies me. Always says so. Told me she thinks I need a more
experienced woman to guide me, keep me in line, and yet be able to indulge my
little flights of independence. Youngling, that is the last thing I need. No
Khieevi will ever scare me as much as that woman!" He shuddered so hard
his mane shook and his skin twitched.
Maati
was shocked. "But Liriili is really oG>. She's almost as old as
Grandam, I bet as old as Neeva, anyway and you're well, I'm just a kid and even
I remember when you were still a dapple gray!"
Thariinye
made a wry face. "Maybe you see her as being old, but when I'm around her,
Liriili acts' like a frisky filly. I don't think narhii-Vhiliinyar is big
enough for both of us."
"I
know exactly what you mean," Maati replied, remembering her own troubles.
She wouldn't tell Thariinye about them, though. He'd get all adult and bossy on
her if she did, she was sure. It was never a good idea to let him have the
upper hand. She had figured that out because she knew several of those silly girls he'd been involved with. As long as
they didn't seem to notice him, he sought them out and was very polite, even
humble with them. But as soon as they started to like him, he didn't care for
them anymore and went trotting off after somebody else. That was part of why he
kept after Khornya even though the two of them basically didn't get along very
well.
Maati
gave him a sly look, "I guess that's what you get for being irresistible!
So, all right, I'll help you get rid of your gift if you'll pass me one of
those thiiifi). They're my favorites." He handed her one of the tender
yellow-green grasses which smelled spicy and tasted sweet with a little tang to
it.
He
gnawed absently on one himself. "I should have known what she was doing
when she wouldn't let me go with Neeva and Melireenya. Now everybody who was
anybody among the space-chosen has had a traumatic experience that will
probably bond them forever, and because Liriili kept me planet-bound, I alone
was left out."
"I
can see why you would be mad at her for making you miss being mistreated until
you almost died," Maati agreed.
"You're
far too young to understand," he said loftily.
"Receiving
transmission from the alien salvage vessel Condor," a quiet computerized
voice said from the corn set. "Please stand by."
The
lightning flashed again and again, the thunder crashing Just after. Thariinye
turned up the volume on the corn unit.
"We
have just recovered the wreckage of a Niriian vessel," Aan's voice said,
sounding strange and flat. "Among the ship's artifacts is a piiyi
containing the ship's log and several other messages. Please stand by to record
the material you are about to receive." There was no visual transmission,
but Maati was pleased to hear Aari's voice, no matter how fleetingly. This
message -was evidently sent several hours ago, according to the time stamp, so
that real-time exchange of communication now Wouldn't be possible. Maati wished
she could talk to her brother, but that
clearly wasn't going to be possible on this night.
"It
is extremely urgent that the information on this piiyi be fully translated and
interpreted immediately by an expert in the Niriian language. It contains
evidence that the Niriian ship made contact with the Khieevi"-Aari's voice
faltered for a moment-"and prior to that perhaps discovered a Linyaari
escape pod and survivors on an uncharted planet. Once translation is made,
please respond immediately to the Condor." Aari signed off and silence
filled the com-shed.
Maati
jumped to her feet. "I'll go try to find a specialist." Looking out
at the slashing rain, she hated leaving the warmth and dryness of the com-shed.
"Where
do you think you'll do that?" Thariinye said. "The spacefarers are on
retreat, remember?"
"This
is important enough to call them off retreat. I mean, if the Khieevi are
involved, we'd better let Liriili know right away. She can call them
back."
"I
speak excellent Niriian," Thariinye told her. "My first off-planet
mission was to Nirii and I have always been good at languages."
"Well,
that's good," Maati said. "Get started right away on that broadcast.
But Liriili will have my horn if I don't let her know at once."
"I'll
let her know. Just stay put for a naanye, will you?"
He
switched to the domestic corn unit. "Vuzaar Liriili, this is Thariinye at
spaceport communications. We have just received a message from Aari aboard the
Conoor concerning a recovered Niriian piiyi with information about a probable
recent encounter with the Khieevi as well as something or other about a
Linyaari escape pod with survivors left stranded on an uncharted planet. We are
being asked to translate and advise the Conoor of the contents
immediately."
"Then
do so," Liriili said. They could only hear her voice. The uiixaar did not switch on visuals at her
end. She sounded grouchy and sleepy. "You speak Niriian, do you not,
Thariinye?"
"You
wish me to do it, then, ma'am? You don't -wish, for instance, to send for
Melireenya or vifeShaanye-feriiii Neeva?"
Liriili's
voice took on a softer lilt as she woke up enough to realize to whom she -was
speaking. "I have every confidence in you, dear boy. If Aari's impression
that there is urgent information contained in the piiyi is confirmed by your
translation, please alert me at once. If it is indeed as important as Aari
says-though you know his experiences have made him somewhat . . . unstable,
shall we say, mst between us? -then of course you should send the messenger
girl after another expert. But I would prefer not intrude upon the retreat the
Ancestors have declared vital to the recovery of our spacefarers unless I feel
it is absolutely necessary."
"Yes,
ma'am."
"And,
Thariinye?"
Maam?
"I
shall expect a personal and confidential report of your findings in my quarters
as soon as you have finished."
"Yes,
ma'am." He signed off, shaking his head in frustration.
It was
a good thing Liriili couldn't see Thariinye's face, Maati thought. He gave the
most awful grimace and bared his teeth something fierce.
"You
probably should go back and sleep," Thariinye told her pompously.
"I'll be too busy to baby-sit you while I have duties to perform."
You
want me to leave? In this stuff?" she asked, nodding to the weather, which
seemed to grow wilder by the moment. -No way! I am not bailing out just when
something interesting 18 anally happening. Let's have a look."
I don't
think this material is fit for children," he argued.
"If
the Khieevi are in it-I have seen them in action. Trust me. They'll give a
youngling like you nightmares."
"Aari
said 'urgent! Thariinye. Don't you think you should stop arguing with me and
get to -work?" she asked.
"Are
you sure Liriili isn't grooming you to be the next viizaarl" he grumbled.
"You're very bossy for a youngling."
"The/wi//?"
she pointed to the com screen, tension twanging through her body so hard she
thought she'd snap. It worked. Thariinye turned back to the console. She
watched the visuals and listened to the Niriian voice speaking as Thariinye
began the painstaking work of translating and transcribing the Niriian
broadcast from the beginning. Of course, he brought up a computer translation
of the broadcast on screen almost immediately. But verifying the translation
and interpreting the nuances of the broadcast took time and concentration. He
listened to the alien -words •while watching the accompanying visuals and the
streaming machine translation on the corn screen. Sometimes he would amend the
machine translation, and other times he let it proceed unchanged. Because he was
working with a recording, he could halt the broadcast and back it up when he
needed to. He was a lot better than she expected him to be at the work,
actually. He didn't have to stop very often, and it was clear he took it quite
seriously.
When he
got to the shots of the escape pod lying in the greenery by the makeshift
shelter, Maati got a funny feeling in her stomach. As the shot went by, she
felt as if a part of her was still there, with the pod, wherever it had landed.
She was
almost sure she knew? those markings. In fact, the •whole pod looked familiar,
though it was hustling by on the screen too fast to be sure. Even though she
didn't make a sound, Thariinye hit the stop button on the broadcast and turned
to her.
"What
was that?" Thariinye said and then she knew for sure that he was reading
her.
"The
pod," she said. "Whose pod was that?"
"I
don't know. And I'll need that information for my report. Go look it up for me,
will you? There's no one at the other computer." He gestured to the
opposite wall. All Linyaari ships were unique, and it -was a simple matter to
match the markings to the master list of ships. She also wanted a listing of
the people aboard the ship on the date that the Niriian broadcast indicated the
shot had been taken. Lists of crews and passengers, projected and actual
itineraries, manufacturing and maintenance records-in short, anything that
affected the ships throughout their time in the Linyaari fleet could be found
in the government computers.
So
compelling was her feeling of connection with the pod that she didn't even wait
to see what else was on the pdyi, but did as Thariinye asked and opened the
flight records.
She
started scrolling through the files, after telling the computer to check the
most current entries first. Surely, she thought, the pod belonged to one of the
ships whose crew? had been attacked by the criminals Khornya and her friends
had freed the space travelers from. But the computer didn't list the pod as
being registered to any of the ships now in active service and currently in
space. That was odd.
She
expanded the boundaries of her search. And kept digging, listening to the
thunder crash and crack outside while inside the Niriian monologue mumbled
away, and now and then Thanmye would say, "To the-sanctuary? No. Hiding
place? lhats not it either-" as he tried to find the proper Linyaari
translation.
Then
she heard him say something about "Khieevi" and turned to look. She
had never seen a Khieevi. She was curious, in a horrified sort of way. What did
such vicious and voracious beings look like?
She
turned her chair around to view? the screen over Thariinye's shoulder. The bug-like Khieevi were only
visible as feelers and legs and shell-like carapaces around the margins of the
vid. In the center of the screen was the main subject of the transmission. His
face was distorted with blood, sweat, and agony, and his body was even more
broken than it had been when she had first seen him. But she could not mistake
her brother.
"Thariinye,"
she said, her voice tight with emotion, "that's Aari! The Khieevi have
Aari! What can we do? Are we too late? We have to help him. Where are Khornya
and Captain Becker? Have they been killed already?"
Thariinye
turned slightly and looked at her, his face as serious as she had ever seen it,
and perhaps a bit green, too. "This is an old vid, Maati. Probably a
Khieevi broadcast to the Niriian ship. The Khieevi like to do that-send
pictures of old tortures to the people they plan to make their next victims.
Nobody knows why. But that's what this is. Look there-see-Aari still has part
of his horn. Long slices have been carved away, but it's there. This is what
happened to him before you saw him."
She
didn't recognize the emotion that was making Thariinye's voice sound so
strangled. Perhaps he was trying not to throw up. Abruptly, he switched off the
visuals.
Maati
felt as if her heart had been clutched in a tight fist and then suddenly
released to fall thudding to the floor. Her breath came out in a rush.
"That's horrible. Horrible. Are the Khieevi-are they
coming-h-h-here?" She was stuttering now through chattering teeth and felt
cold all over, a reaction that had nothing to do with the temperature in the
room, and everything to do with what she'd nist witnessed.
"No.
I told you. It's an old vid. They sent this to the people aboard the ship that
carried this pliyi. Any luck on that registration design?"
"Not
yet," she said, and turned back to her task with a new sense of urgency,
widening the parameters of her search. The ordinariness of looking for
information steadied her and gradually her hands stopped shaking. And, at last,
there it was-the design, the number,
and the name of the ship that had carried that pod. And the names of the people
aboard when it shipped out on its last flight. A chill engulfed her again.
"Th-Thariinye?"
"I'm
almost done, Maati."
"B-but-Thariinye.
I found it."
"Good.
Just a moment."
"No,
now. It's important. The ship the pod was on? It was registered to my parents.
To mine and Aari's parents. The people on the Niriian ship found them. I
thought they were dead- but if the Niriians are correct, maybe they're not. At
least, not both of them, at least not when this pod -was found."
"That
is 'wonderful," Thariinye said. "We need to let Liriili know at once.
I thought this piiyl was bad news, but it seems we have at least one cause for
celebration among the information it brought us!" He put the final touches
to his translation and uploaded it to the vlizaar.
"We
have to tell Aari and Khornya and Captain Becker," Maati said. "They
can go get our mother and father."
"Yes,
yes, but first Liriili must know. It's procedure," he said, going all
adult again. Thariinye turned back to the com station.
He hailed
Liriili and told her what they had discovered.
I just
thought it prudent," he finished, "to let you know the contents of
the message before transmitting my interpretation to the Condor."
Thank
you, Thariinye. That is very interesting. In light of your information, I think
that tomorrow I shall send an emis^ry to the Ancestors to let them know what
has been discovered. However, there will be no further transmissions from the
Gom station. Not to the Condor or anywhere else."
But,
honored lady! Aari, at least, should know immediately-the pod is apparently
that of Aari and Maati's parents, to have been missing-"
"I
know that very well, Thariinye. I also know now, from hard past experience,
that any transmission we send may endanger this planet. If Khieevi are out
there, we will not let them know our current location. It is simply too
dangerous. The evacuation ships must be prepared, and steps taken for all
Linyaari to escape the planet, if necessary."
"Again?"
Thariinye said. "Where will we go this time? And what about Acorna-she and
Aari are out there near the source of the message. They sent it to us, in fact.
Do they not deserve to know what we've learned?"
"As
soon as possible I will consult the aagroni and make the decision as to where we
must go. Dear boy, I know this is difficult for you to understand,"
Liriili said. "But you simply must trust my judgment. We cannot send
transmissions, and that is that. I will not put this planet in any further
danger, no matter -what. If anything else pertinent comes in, let me
know."
Thariinye
ended the transmission with an exasperated snort. "I can't believe that!
Can you?'
"From
her? Sure," Maati said. "The question is, what are we going to do
about it?"
"We?"
Thariinye asked with maddening superiority. "We will do nothing,
youngling. I, however, am going to borrow one of the ships from the spaceport,
and fly it to wherever I have to go to so Khornya will know how much danger she
and her friends are in, and how much hope there is that Aari's parents are
still alive. And then I'll rescue your parents. If Khornya and her friends want
to come along, well, so much the better."
"I'm
going, too." Maati said.
"No,
you're not."
"I
am, too, and you can't stop me."
"I
can, too. I'm bigger, in case you hadn't noticed."
"As
if you'd let me forget. But if you try to go without me, I'll tell Liriili what
you're doing in time to stop you."
"You wouldn't do that. You -want to save your parents and your
brother and Khornya as much as I do."
"More,"
Maati said firmly, crossing her arms across her small chest. "That's why
I'm going. So you don't mess it up."
"So
I don't-"
"That's
what I said. My family have been spacefarers for generations, just like yours.
I will do fine in space. And you need backup. To get it, all you have to do is
teach me the controls. Two will be better than one. I think we should leave
right now."
"In
this storm?"
"The
ships are built to handle worse. Once we leave the atmosphere, the weather
won't be any problem, will it?"
"It's
easy to see you haven't had the parental discipline you need."
"At
least I don't tell the same lie to six different girls and expect them all to
believe it and like me afterward."
Thariinye
didn't say anything to that, and Maati didn't need to be able to read minds to
know she'd won.
"Come
on, then. We'll take the Nilkaavri. I've been checked out on her already and
she's loaded and fueled and ready to go. We can be out of here before anyone
can stop us."
In her
quarters, Liriili mentally followed Thariinye as he and Maati boarded the
Nukaavri and prepared for take-off. She was not ignoring the threat of the
Khieevi. But if the information from the piiyl was correct, their enemies were
at the far end of the galaxy-weeks away even in the worst possible
extrapolation of risk, and with many likely targets between them and the
Linyaari to slow them down. Tomorrow-today, actu^ty, as it was early morning
now, she -would send another, rnore trustworthy messenger than Maati to the Ancestors-one
could control. She would ask for another translator, one e would hand-pick for
discretion, and when Thariinye's find ings were either verified or modified,
then would be time enough to send runners to the general populace, to alert the
spacefarers, possibly even to prepare the evacuation ships if necessary.
But at
present, she felt sure the Khieevi did not know where the new Linyaari
homeworld was, and she had protected their position by disallowing all outgoing
transmissions from narhiiVhiliinyar. Becker's vessel was hardly a Linyaari
ship, and once the troublesome Maati and Thariinye had joined the ConSor they
could all look after each other.
The
girl had become a hazard, her very existence menacing Liriih's position by
threatening to "expose" her to the spacefarers for alienating Khornya
and Aari. The child didn't understand the delicacy of Liriili's task in leading
the planet, the careful balance that had to be maintained for the good of all.
And, as for Thariinye . . . Who did he think he was, ducking away from her
delicate overtures? He, too, was a hazard, disrupting the peace of so many of
the young females, and not realizing that he obviously needed a mate who could
guide him and help him control his less responsible impulses. He blamed her,
she knew, for she could read him even when his horn was shielded, just as if he
was made of plasglas. He had wanted to go on the Balakiire's last mission, and
he thought she had robbed him of glory. Very well, let him seek it now. Perhaps
when- and if-he returned, he would be much wiser, would understand that her
counsel had been for his own good. But, as for now, her two most difficult
charges were, headed off-planet, possibly never to return. She'd sleep well
tonight.
She
arose the next morning at a leisurely pace, and halfway through cleansing
herself, answered the call from the spaceport com-shed. "Yes?"
"Vuzaar,
I am here to relieve Thariinye, only Thariinye is . here. The equipment is on and there is a strange message 1
opine through the monitor, but Thariinye is absent."
"How
strange," she said. "In this weather, where can he have p-one? It's
hardly fit outside for grazing." Thunder was once more booming outside the
pavilion and the cracks of lightning could be seen indistinctly through the
fabric of the walls. Liriili shivered lightly, and pulled a blanket across her
shoulders.
"Also,
ma'am, one of the spacecraft is not in its berth."
"How
strange. Was it there yesterday? Perhaps it has been taken for repairs?"
"No,
ma'am. I-wait-there u a note here from Thariinye. He says that he and
Maati-surely he cannot mean little Maati the messenger!"
"Surely
not," Liriili agreed.
"-Have
gone to look for the girl's parents. He also wishes to warn others of a Khieevi
presence detected in this galaxy by a Niriian vessel-that's the message on the
com screen."
"How
very extraordinary," Liriili said. "Stay at your post, then-is it
liril this morning?"
Yes,
maam.
"Stay
at your post, liril. Be alert for incoming messages, but under no circumstances
are you to answer them. There will be no outgoing messages of any kind from
this planet until rurther notice from me. Do I make myself clear?"
'With
Khieevi in the vicinity? Yes, ma'am, absolutely."
I will
send to the hills of the Ancestors and ask those spacefarers on retreat to
return for a special meeting of the Council on this matter."
I'll be
right here, ma'am. Even if we're not to respond, ^harnnye may report back to us
with more information about Ae Khieevi."
My
thoughts exactly, liril," she said, and ended the transmission.
"I
don't get it," Becker snapped, glowering at the corn screen. "For six
weeks that damn thing is squawking at all hours with messages from everyone
from your grandma and your aunt, Acorna, to that-woman-who runs the place.
'Pick us up a nice trade alliance when you go home, honey. See if you can get
us good terms on joining the Federation. And don't forget a pint of milk and a
loaf of bread while you're at it.' "
Aari
and Acorna looked at each other and shrugged, then returned their attention
politely to Becker's rant.
"And
now, when we have something really important to tell them, when we need to hear
back from them right away, we get zip for a week and a half. What i) it with
those people, anyway?"
He was
not the only one who wanted to know. Aari and Acorna had spent every waking
hour with the LAANYE and the Niriian logbook, then, while sleeping, learning
the nuances of the Niriian language from the LAANYE's sleep-learning programs.
They listened over and over again to the mayday message and the ship's log
entries. If the captain had given specifics about the transmission from the
Khieevi, the details of the ship's final hours, or any findings pertaining to
the location of the vessel pictured on the verdant planet, they had not found
them. They hcu) deciphered an entry that was a personnel list of the crew
aboard the downed Niriian vessel.
The
Com)or had picked up more of the wreckage of the Niriian ship in the meantime,
but very little of the equipment •was intact.
All of
them had been listening, even in their sleep, for a signal from the corn unit,
but not a single -word out of it did they hear the entire time.
"Well,
RK doesn't seem to have any opinion about this, and normally I'd flip a
coin," Becker said. "But since I have a crew I guess I better
ask-what do you guys think we ought to do?
"Do?"
Aari asked. His voice was a little hoarse from disuse.
He and
Acorna had been concentrating so hard on the translations he would have
neglected to eat if Becker hadn't finally become worried about his crewmates
and tromped down to the hydroponics deck to pluck some greenery for them. He
had no idea what a tasty or nutritious combination was composed of but figured
if they'd planted something, it was supposed to be edible. They both took his
offerings, nibbled abstractly, and kept translating. Even after Acorna was as
certain as she could be that they had made good sense of the messages, Aari
continued to go over and over them.
Acorna
could not help but read the anxiety Aari was broadcasting as surely as the com
system was not. Her head pounded -with the strain he was experiencing, as well
as her own pain. She couldn't usually read him literally, but this sense of
anxiety was more of an emotional maelstrom spinning around him and enveloping
her than a conscious stream of thought. Even Becker and the cat were out of
sorts, all from dealing with the heavily charged atmosphere inside the ConSor.
Becker
was continuing. "Yeah, what do you think we should do-you know, as in
action? Here's our options, the way I see it. Number one," he ticked off
the fingers of his right hand with the forefinger of his left. "We head on
out of here, back to Federation space, and warn people about this. However,
this area ain't Federation and they aren't going to come all this way uninvited
by the locals. Two, -we can turn around and go back to narhii-Vhiliinyar and
ask 'em face-to-face why they aren't speaking to us. Of course, it could be
that the Khieevi's got their tongue-sorry, Aari," he said. "In which
case, we'll hope we see some evidence of the damage before we reacu the planet
and get our own derrieres in a sling or slings, as the case may be. If we do,
we will return to option one and call out the posse. If we can round one up in
time. Option three
appens
if there are no Khieevi and everything is cool on the P anet. I kick some
administrative heinie and make them prom ise never, ever, ever to ignore us
like that again, no matter what. Or option four-we try to figure out what's
going on for ourselves, keeping our eyes open so we don't get ourselves killed,
and see what's needed before we hare off and run for help. End of options,
unless you can think of any others. Aari? Acorna?"
"Joh,
we must go back to my planet," Aari said. "They must know. The
Niriians must be warned, as well."
"Yes,"
Acorna said. "You know, it i) possible we have gone out of range even for
a delayed relay to narhii-Vhiliinyar. There are several wormholes and space
distortions between us and them, and we are. very far off the traveled routes
where communications are routinely boosted at regular intervals. We cannot be
sure they have received our broadcast. The likeliest explanation for their
silence is that they have not heard from us. It's essential that they be aware
of the presence of the Khieevi in this part of the world, and also of the
possibility that Aari and Maati's parents are still alive somewhere. If the
Khieevi are in the neighborhood, our people need to have the evacuation ships
ready, and a plan to board them prepared. After we "warn the Linyaari, we
should return to Federation space and alert the authorities that my people, who
have been considering applying for membership, will possibly soon be under under
attack by the Khieevi. The Federation has already seen the nature of the
Khieevi-after the battle on Rushima they're aware of the sort of creatures we
are dealing with here-and know that they pose a threat that cannot be ignored.
Also, we should consult with Uncle Hafiz and the others and ask them to prepare
a new haven for my people, should it be necessary to evacuate, some temporary
place where they may stay until the situation is resolved."
"That
makes sense," Becker said. "But somehow I cant help but thinking that
they're okay for now and it's that snotty lady-dog of a leader of yours who is
behind this."
"You
could be right," Acorna said, "but we cannot risk it. If our people
are to be safe, they must get those ships ready, and that will take time."
RK, who
had been sleeping with one eye open, idly flipping the end of his tail up and
down, suddenly yawned and stretched. In a casual way his outstretched, kneading
claw hooked Beck er's arm.
"Ow!"
he said. "Okay, the fourth member of the crew has voted. We're changing course."
Thariinye
tracked the Codors erratic course from the data sent with the transmission.
Maati watched him while he made his computations. Maati took to space travel
like a kQaaki to water. Her favorite hiding places back home had been the
techno-artisan village and the spaceport, and with a child's curiosity she had
examined the interiors of all the ships, even the big evacuation vessels. She'd
asked questions constantly, so many that she was afraid the workers would tell
her to leave, or call Liriili and ask her if the government didn't have
something better to do with its messengers than have them bother people.
But
actually she had made friends with most of the people she talked to.
Aarliiyana, a motherly techno-artisan, had explained all about the colorful
designs on the hulls of the ships, how they were based on the banners of the
most distinguished Linyaan clans and individuals. Aarliiyana had also told her
that ne techno-artisans had developed a new and more advanced eloaking
technology for Linyaari spacecraft. The very craft Maati was now riding in,
named after her dear friend Acorna's grndmother, was the first craft to
incorporate the new system.
Hidden
among the brightly pigmented coatings used on the hulls were a field generator
that could create the illusion of invisibility and a radiation absorption
matrix, or RAM. The two •would, between them, defeat sonar, radar, infrared,
and all other traditional detection methods used to trace the location of a
spacecraft. These systems could be turned on and off at will. In addition, the
techno-artisans had developed ways to deal with the engine exhaust, the ship's
communications, and so on so that the ship's location could not be determined
by any means. Even the ship's locator beacon was routinely cloaked to both
friends and foe, unless the ship's captain made the decision to turn it on.
That had to be done occasionally so that the craft could move through crowded
shipping lanes without running the risk of being rammed by vessels that had no
idea she was there.
It made
Maati feel odd, knowing that nobody could find them out here in space, unless
they chose to be found.
Being
on shipboard when the vessel was in space as opposed to being inside it when it
was docked at the technoartisan's village was very different. For one thing,
the air was drier, and it smelled peculiar, almost canned. Perhaps because of
the drier air, she found her sense of smell was diminished, blunted in some
-way. It gave her a curiously light feeling. And also, consequently, the
grasses in the hydroponics gardenmany fewer varieties than grew dirtside-were
not as tasty as they were at home. Well, the tastes were subtler, maybe. She
figured she'd get used to the change soon enough.
With
her sense of smell reduced, her sense of sight seemed to be more important,
somehow. The inner, surfaces of the ship were made of brightly colored
materials softer to the touch than metals, and the crew's quarters were
designed to look like small traveling pavilions. Sort of cozy, really. At first
she missed the horizon, and the sweeping vistas of grass and town and distant
hills she was used to at home, but when she went to the bridge and looked out
the viewport into the stars, her homesickness of dead. How could those grassy
fields compare with the beauty of deep space? She was lost in wonder. The
galaxy gleamed like a jewel box before her. And she'd barely begun to taste the
joys of space travel. How would it look at night on a planet with one moon?
What about a planet with rings-how would that look from the ground? How
thrilling to think she would soon be seeing for herself! Even with the looming
threat of the Khieevi hovering in the back of her mind, she felt freed,
somehow, for the first time in her life.
And if
she was going to have adventures, she'd picked the right ship to have them in.
In addition to being comfortable, the Nakaavrl was equipped with all of the
newest devices her techno-artisan friends had demonstrated. Maati already knew
that because Thariinye had shown off the ship's features when he returned from
his first brief flight, greeting the Condor and the many Linyaari ships when
they returned carrying the spacefarers from captivity.
"Does
this ship have any weapons?" Maati had wanted to know then.
"What
would you know about weapons?" Thariinye had asked in that tone that made
her feel like a total child.
"Grandam
told Khornya that her father had developed a defense weapon that would destroy
our enemies if they attempted to capture one of our ships. Grandam said it was
how Khornya's parents were killed-when their ship self-destructed along with
the Khieevi chasing them. She thought Khornya's folks must have used it on
themselves after Khornya's pod was ejected. The force of the blast was the only
way to explain how far away Khornya was when she was found by her the men ^o
raised her." Maati had been wondering at the time if that ^a-s how her
parents died, using a similar weapon to destroy themselves and their ship
before the Khieevi could capture them.
"Yes,
the Nilkaa vri is equipped with the defensive system," Thariinye said.
"But no offensive -weapons. That would be kaLinyaari, against everything
we believe in. The ship does have all the very latest innovations, of course.
You ask too many questions."
Why, of
all the people she'd ever met, did she have to be on the ship with himi Nobody
else among the spaceport personnel, the techno-artisans, or the spacefarers
treated her like she was inferior just because she was younger and shorter than
they were. In contrast to Liriili and her political friends, the spacefarers
had, with rare exceptions, treated her with respect.
But she
was stuck with Thariinye and supposed she'd have to make the best of it, at
least if she wanted to get to Khornya and Aari, and maybe, just maybe, her
parents. It -was an unfamiliar feeling in her heart, the thought that there was
a possibility they -were still alive.
When
Maati wasn't arguing with Thariinye, she -watched the tutorials that came with
every new ship's complement of programs and she took herself through a
simulation of Captain Becker's course.
The
human employed unusual navigation methods, diving into unplotted wormholes and
through unexplored folds in space rather than following conventional spaceways.
If she and Thariinye were going to manage to rendezvous with the Condor, they
-would have to do the same. Thariinye confirmed her hunch, -when she asked him
point-blank about their course.
Now
Thariinye looked nervous as the entrance to the wormhole loomed before them,
but then he grinned and got a strange gleam in his eye. He shifted to manual
controls. "Strap down, youngling," he said.
"I
am strapped in," she said. "Hurry up, will you?"
"Okay.
Yeeeeeeeheeee!" he cried, a little anticlimactically. She really didn't
notice much. There was nothing to see. One moment the opening -was ahead of
them and the next it was behind them. The stars were in different places. That
was all.
And-something
else.
"Well,
look at you, little girl," Thariinye said, when he turned to glance at her
and the glance became a stare. "You are now a bona fide star-clad
spacefarer."
She
was! She really was. Her skin had been getting a little lighter since they
left, and the pale spots in her mane broadening to overcome the black parts,
but now, her hands below the cuff of her shipsuit -were -white! Completely. As
white as Thariinye's, or Khornya's, or Aari's. She -wanted to run for the
nearest reflective surface but got tangled in her safety restraint straps, her
fingers fumbling as she tried to release the catch. At last she got free and
was able to examine herself in the grooming device. Her face was as pale as the
second moon, her mane pure silver, and her horn golden, though still of a
childishly stubby length. She frowned at her reflection.
"Does
this color make me look plumper?" she asked Thariinye, and immediately
regretted it.
He
laughed. "Of course not. And even if it did, there's nothing to be done
about it. You're star-clad now, youngling."
"How
come it happened so fast?" she asked.
He
shrugged. "I don't know. Usually the change is more gradual. Maybe the
shift of light inside the wormhole accelerated the process."
"There
wasn't any light--was there?"
"Of
course there was light. You're confusing your basic physics. That was a
wormhole, not a black hole."
"I
know that," she said. "I'm just young, not stupid. But I didn't see
any light till -we came out on this side."
"You
probably blacked out," he said. "Fear will do that. Your first time
in space and all that."
"I
Did not," she told him. "I just didn't see any light. Did YOU?
Honestly?"
"Well,
no, but then, probably I couldn't pick it up. We were ravelling so fast and
it~"
"Forgotten
your basic physics?" she asked sweetly.
"What's
next on the course?"
"Cross
this planetary system from here," she put her finger on a purplish planet
that -was farthest from its sun, "to over here," this was past the
seventh planet from the sun, "and then there's a sort of funny part of
space-bumpy, as if it's pleated. ..."
"You
can see that?" he asked, peering at her finger as if it had eyes.
"I
did the simulation, silly. Maybe you should, too. Oh. I forgot. Experienced
Starfarers don't need to do that stuff."
"We'll
have no insubordination out of you, youngling."
"Fine.
You asked. I told you."
She
left him alone on the bridge and stomped down to the hydroponics area to do
some serious grazing. And pouting, if the truth be known. The Condor had been
gone for six weeks before the Nlikaavri launched. They had only been in space
for ten sleep periods. Maati tried to think about what she would say to her
parents if she saw them again, how she -would convince Khornya and Aari to let
her stay with them instead of returning to narhii-Vhiliinyar. But even her
vivid imagination began to run out of ideas after a while. She thought about
it, analyzed the jittery feeling that made it hard for her to sit still. That
wasn't all. Her attention wandered at any excuse, and everything Thariinye said
was sounding even stupider than usual. She had a thousand questions about how
everything on the ship worked, but lacked the patience to listen to Thariinye's
lectures on the subject. She wanted to climb behind the panels and see how
things worked instead of just sitting and waiting. And waiting. And waiting.
She was
bored. Here she was on the greatest adventure or her whole life and she was
sooooo bored. She was used to having the run of Kubiilikhan, keeping so busy
she was exhausted at the end of the day. To having conversations with people from all walks of life all over the
city and surrounding countryside. Here on this ship she mostly sat. And talked
to Thariinye. Who treated her like a baby. By the Ancestors, something had
better happen soon!
Her
wish was granted in seven more sleep periods. She had been using the LAANYE
Thariinye brought along to brush up on Khornya's language-Standard. She wanted
to be as fluent as possible when she saw Khornya, Aan, and Captain Becker
again. If she could speak the language, maybe they wouldn't fuss too much when
she announced she intended to stay with them, wanted to go back with them to
that moon Khornya had mentioned where all the children lived and learned new
skills.
It was
her watch and she was tired of studying. If only the Condor weren't still so
far awayl Linyaari ships were faster than those of the humans, so they should
be overtaking the salvage vessel before long, but she wished fervently that
they were there already. She ran the course simulation again, wondering if
maybe she could plot a more direct route Instead of simply following
Thariinye's extrapolation of the Condor's course.
As she
calculated and plotted her various trajectories, she noticed some
familiar-looking coordinates among her calculations.
Thariinye?"
she said, speaking into the onboard hailing system.
He
huffed and snorted, from which she gathered that she'd awakened him.
It we
just deviate two degrees from Captain Becker's course for a few hours, we'll be
at the point where the Niriians 8aw the planet with my parents' escape pod on
it." "Hmm? Oh. Good."
I think
we should alter our planned route and find my parents before we go see Captain
Becker and the others. Shall we change course?"
"Oh,
yeah, okay. Fine, kid. Don't bother me," he said and then before she could
draw another breath said, "What? No no, Maati, wait. Don't you <)are
touch anything! I -was asleep. I'll be right there!"
She
shook her head when she saw him, rubbing his eyes his mane all flattened on the
left side. He stumbled a little when he walked.
"You-didn't
touch anything, did you?" he asked.
"No.
That's technically your job. That's why I called. But I do think we should try
to get my folks since they're sorta on the way." She tugged at his sleeve,
and pointed to the screen where the course she had been plotting intersected
with the familiar coordinates.
"Absolutely
not." He looked again, tapped a button, compared her course -with the
original tracing of the Condor's. "What's this all about?"
"I
was trying to make our trip shorter and faster. The Condor is just looking for
junk. They are not in any hurry, and they are rambling all over the place while
they are looking. They are not trying to take the most direct route through
space. But we do not have to follow their path. We could reach them faster by
plotting a more direct course."
"Oh,
-we could, could we? I suppose now that you're starclad, you think you know as
much about navigation as seasoned spacefarers, do you?"
"It's
not that. It's just that if those horrible things that hurt my brother are out
here too, I don't want them to find my parents all stranded on some deserted
planet. I wanted to come with you so that I could help you save them. And if we
keep on our present course, it will take forever to reach where the ConSor
•was. Then we'd have to try to find it from there and, meanwhile, my parents
could die."
"Ummm,"
Thariinye said again, tracing each route simultaneously with both hands.
"If we take this shorter route, we could rescue your parents on our way
and still rendezvous with the ConDor in half the time I figured." Maati
looked up at him with wide, approving eyes but inwardly she was laughing about
how he was making this whole thing sound like his own idea. "Very well
then. I'll change course now."
He did,
putting on quite a show for her benefit-embellishing his movements with
graceful little flourishes, humming to himself the "Hero's Gallop"
song. He evidently thought that, instead of being grounded for life when he
returned to narhiiVhiliinyar, he would receive a hero's "welcome for the
rescue of her parents, his account of which would no doubt be as embroidered as
his current implementation of the course change, or maybe even more so. Let him
be the biggest fraaki in the pond if he wanted to. Maati didn't care. She would
finally get to see her parents again.
Maati
was at the helm once more when the ship prepared to enter the orbit of the
planet whose coordinates matched those described by the Niriians. The planet
was a pretty one from this distance. Overall it was the color of the small
lavender flowers that grew in the best grazing grounds. Large pools of deep
indigo appeared through the powdery blue clouds that swathed the world. It even
had several blue moons. She wondered what they would look like from the
surface. She'd find out soon enough. . . .
Maati
was about to summon Thariinye when the corn unit Game alive. She heard, not
words, but sounds like rocks being ^nged together, "Hick Klack,
klick-klick-klickety-klack-klackklack."
Thariinye
must have been on his way to the bridge already ecause suddenly he was beside
Maati. The color completely famed from his horn and he looked like he was
watching something terrible.
"What's the matter, Thariinye? We're here!" she said.
"Yes,"
he whispered, nodding at the corn unit. "And so are the Khieevi."
Captain
Becker, look," Acorna said, when he arrived on the bridge for his watch.
She pointed out to him their present course back to narhii-Vhiliinyar, and a
slightly altered one. "If we deviated here slightly, -we would intersect
with the coordinates the Niriians mentioned in their vid. The ones where the
escape pod was seen. Do you wish to make that detour? From the looks of the vid,
at least one person survived. Even if that's no longer the case, perhaps you
would find the pod valuable salvage?"
Becker
beamed and patted her on the shoulder. "You're gonna make a junker yet,
Princess. That's a great idea. While we re at it, we'll see if there's anybody
there who can tell us more about the wrecked Niriian ship, and if so, we'll see
if they d like a ride. If not, "we have salvage that looks like something
your people would like to have back. Even if they don't, bet your uncle Hafiz
knows somebody who would •want to view it as a curiosity."
Slight
as the course change was, it had a profound effect on Aari, who stared at the
pliyi broadcast continually while he was on the bridge, and particularly
focused on the picture of the pod.
He had
gone over the broadcast so many times that Acorna •was surprised he could still
stand to look at it. He didn't even flinch away from the scene of his own
torture anymore. True he went into an apparent trance while watching, but since
he could be distracted from it if necessary, Acorna decided he was simply
thinking deeply about his experience, trying to face up to it and process it,
which surely meant he was growing stronger and healthier and better able to
deal with it? She hoped so.
Becker
rolled his eyes now whenever he looked at Aari. He had tried some
conversational gambits with no success. Aari •would answer a polite "Yes,
Joh" or "No, Joh" and return to staring at the screen. Acorna
usually met with the same response.
Had it
not been for the cat and the KEN unit, the situation might have never been
resolved.
Once
his initial curiosity about the pliyi had been exhausted, RK paid no attention
to it for several days. As the same images playing over and over on the screen
meant that Aari, who was one of the cat's favorite people, would be on the
bridge, RK started spending more time there. But enough, in RK's opinion, was
enough. When Aari refused to focus exclusively on the cat, RK, tail lashing,
began watching the screen, too. Acrorna noticed that every time the Khieevi
appeared on screen again with Aari at their mercy, the cat -would enlarge
himself to twice his already considerable size, flatten his ears, and hiss. The
first time Becker had witnessed RK's reaction, he'd laughed until he fell out
of his chair. The cat then hissed at Becker, too.
Even
Aari couldn't help laughing.
But RK,
as his apparent understanding of what he was watching grew, became even more
agitated when the scene appeared on the screen. One day, when they -were all on
deck and the scene appeared, the cat flung himself at the screen, claws and
teeth bared. The force of his collision with the hard, smooth, and totally
uninjured surface of the screen knocked RK onto the deck, where he lay for a
moment. Then he sat up and licked the fur on his left side as if that had been
his intention all along.
Aari
picked the cat up, stroked his fur, and laughed. "You got yourself a
defender there, Aari," Becker said. Acorna reached over and scratched RK
under his chin. The cat graciously permitted her ministrations, though he did
not go so far as to actually purr.
During
the long hours when she was not on watch and the others were busy or sleeping,
Acorna undertook to "educate KEN," as Becker put it.
The
android was being underutilized, she told Becker. Though he was programmed
essentially as a servant or at least an employee, he had a vast amount of
unused memory.
"It
would greatly expand your ability to collect salvage, Captain," she told
Becker. "If you landed on a world rich in salvage but with an unbreathable
atmosphere, for instance, the android could collect your salvage for you long
after the limited oxygen supply in your pressure suit forced you to return to
the ship."
Becker
nodded. "Sounds good to me." I'll need access to the Condor's memory
banks." ML ccua e<) ^u. ccua," Becker said. "Is that
Standard?"
Only to
the Pallomellese," Becker said. "It means 'my house is your house, my
ship is your ship.' Go for it."
During
most of this programming, the KEN unit was turned ' "ut during the rest,
he remained conscious and participated ln e '^rk. Acorna was surprised at how
natural he seemed. He was not, after all, a particularly new model.
Were
you originally programmed to feel or display emotlon?" she asked the
robot.
"No,"
he said. And then, half a beat later, he asked with seeming anxiety, "Was
that the wrong answer?"
She
smiled to reassure him. It seemed silly to think that someone who was basically
a machine needed reassurance- but, on the other hand, she had heard her uncles
talk to their ship, she'd seen Becker talk to the ConSor in the same way he
spoke to RK, so there was really no reason to think that machines didn't
respond in some way to emotional input. Particularly machines -which appeared
to be human. "I do not think that there is a wrong answer to that
question," she said. "But I'm interpreting your responses as being
emotionally motivated. This makes me more comfortable with you."
"I
hope you are comfortable with me, miss," the KEN unit said. "You have
taught me a great deal these last few days. I know many more things. I
understand a great deal more about the people here, this ship, this universe.
Kisia Manjari did not wish me to think for myself."
Acorna
frowned. "Kisia Manjari -was a very troubled person. And she had the
unfortunate habit of passing her trouble around to everyone she met."
"She
was a very difficult user, miss. I believe I perceive •what you mean. Captain
Becker, on the other hand, keeps me shut off most of the time. This recharges
the batteries but does not add greatly to my knowledge."
"I
don't think the captain realized your potential, KEN640," Acorna said.
"I'll ask his permission to leave you on continually while you are
assimilating the data I have added to your banks."
"Miss,
I note that the captain, and you, and the other being like you, and even the
fur-bearing creature call each other by casual appellations. KEN-640 is my
model number. But it is not the same sort of appellation."
"I'm
sorry, KEN-640. You may call all of us by our given names. Although Aari calls
me Khornya, as do others of my race, my
original name is Acorna and I prefer it. Do you wish to be known by a different
appellation than KEN-640 yourself?"
"Yes,
Acorna. I have scanned the selection of names for humanoids of Terran origin,
which I resemble, and have decided it would be appropriate for me to be called
MacKenZ. Mac means son of, which sounds more human than modeled by, does it
not?"
"It
does."
"And
although my model number indicates that I was not the latest or most
sophisticated unit made to date, I feel that your programming has put me on a
par -with the most recent and updated of my series. And if an "A"
indicates the first or earliest model in the Standard alphabet, then Z surely
means the most recent upgrade. Hence MacKenZ."
"Fine,
MacKenZ. If you'll accompany me to the bridge, I will reintroduce you to our
crewmates."
She did
so. After that, Becker readily agreed to leave the MacKenZ operational most of
the time and began some programming of his own, teaching MacKenZ some of the
important points to remember in collecting salvage. "I think Mac is
selfprogramming to some extent anyway," Becker said, scratching his head.
"Otherwise, I don't see how he could come up with some of the stuff he
does."
Becker
was nonetheless reluctant to trust MacKenZ at the helm alone, although he
didn't mind tutoring him in Becker Enterprises navigational methods when he
stood his own watch.
MacKenZ
spent much of his time on the bridge, when Becker didn't have any other
specific assignment for him. Acorna -was glad of the company. She used the time
to input more data, using the books that Aari had now abandoned in iavor of
studying the piiyi.
She
discovered, as she came on watch to relieve Aari, that KEN, too, had taken an
interest in the broadcast.
Aari
was involved in the liveliest exchange he had engaged in since they recovered the pod. He and MacKenZ were conversing
in Linyaari. Acorna had programmed the android for Standard. The Linyaari was
either the android's own idea, or perhaps Aan had taught him.
"From
observation," MacKenZ was saying, nodding at a frozen frame of the Khieevi
torture scene, "I have deciphered the meaning of some few of the
utterances Khieevi make by rubbing their legs together, Aari," MacKenZ was
saying in a puzzled tone. "But these sounds, while they have a definite
pattern and twenty-one thousand four hundred fifty-two distinct combinations
which can predictably be determined to have specific meanings, are not
translatable -with the use of your LAANYE device, which I find odd. Can you
enlighten me as to the meanings of these clickings? Are they the only form of
communication employed by these beings?"
Aan sat
back in the command chair and closed his eyes, rubbing the area around the
cavity where his horn once grew. He looked very, very weary. "They use
thought-speak," he told MacKenZ, sighing deeply. "I didn't realize it
at first, but they touch their antennae together and thought transference takes
place. The audible communication they perform with their leg rubbings is
apparently a code for more complex thoughts they are able to transmit in full
by antennae contact. This is what has made it so difficult for the LAANYE to
make sense of their verbal communication in the past. I suppose I am the only
living being who has spent enough time with them to comprehend their mode of
data transference." He paused, then added dryly, "I suppose that
dubious distinction also means I may be the only Linyaari qualified to try and
program the LAANYE to decipher the Khieevi utterances."
"So
the Khieevi have to be physically present to employ such a mental means of
communication," the android said. "So they use the clickings of their
legs rubbing together as an audible means of communication for longer
distances, such as ship to-ship transmissions. Fascinating. What else did you
learn while you were with the Khieevi?"
"How
loudly I could scream. How long before my voice crave out," Aari said.
"How I could be reduced to a mass of searing pain, with no thought, no
higher purpose than to make it
cease."
"And
yet, clearly, from what you say, you were able to
withhold
the location of narhii-Vhiliinyar, as well as your brother's hiding place. Was
that not an act of will?"
"Willful
memory loss perhaps," Aari said with a very faint smile.
"What
meanings did you attribute to these various click ings "
"Perhaps
on my next watch we will attempt to interpret them, Maakinze. Here is Khornya,
come to relieve me."
He
smiled at her, but she was looking beyond him, to the screens that were, as
Becker would say, lit up like pinball machines. "Look, Aari! Signals from
everywhere! And we are nearing the coordinates of the lost pod. Perhaps we
should alert Captain Becker."
"I'm
right here, Mac!" Becker called out from down the corridor, his bare feet
clanking as he jogged across the grated deck plating. "What's up?"
"A
diffuse sonar signal is emanating from the area around the planet where the Linyaari
escape pod is located, Captain," Mac replied.
A
strange feeling came over Acorna as she looked at the thousands of tiny
blinking lights spread across the sonar screen. She had seen this pattern
before. "I know what that is, Captain!" she said. "It's the
sonar-blocking signal given out by cloaked Linyaari vessels. One of the
techno-artisans showed me how it worked recently."
"So,"
Becker said. "If it's a cloaked Linyaari vessel, what's that?" He pointed to a substantial and
solid blip rapidly entering the sonar array.
As if
in answer, the corn unit began a "Klick-klack-klickklack-klick-klack"
noise.
"Khieevi,"
Acorna and Aari whispered, while Mac said the same word in a matter-of-fact,
almost cheerful tone.
"Those
guys?" Becker asked, peering at the dot as if he could make out the shape
of the ship from it.
"Scope,"
Acorna said, and the viewscreen suddenly zoomed so that the mantis-shaped
Khieevi vessel was indeed readily identifiable, though still quite distant.
"So
that's what one of the little buggers looks like." Becker said, quietly,
as if afraid they would hear. Meanwhile the klickings and klackings continued.
"We seem to have intercepted one of their transmissions. Anybody have any
idea "what it's all about?"
"Klickety-klack,"
the Khieevi vessel's message seemed to be tapping directly onto Maati's spinal
cord. She sat for a moment with her eyes squeezed shut.
"You
don't have to close your eyes and pretend they can't see you," Thariinye
said, but not as scornfully as he might have. "We're cloaked."
"What
does the noise mean?" she asked.
"I
don't know. I didn't hear a lot of their language when we were up against them
on Rushima. And I wasn't alone. So far, nobody has gotten enough of a sample
into the LAANYE for reliable translations. All our contacts with them have
pretty much been at the wrong end of a 'weapon. Maybe it's Khieevi for 'come
out, come out, wherever you are.' But don't worry, youngling. We may not be
coming out, but we're moving out right now. I'm putting us into the nearest
wormhole and-"
Maati's
eyes blinked open and she reached to intercept his hand on the controls.
"But . . . my parents! They're still on
that planet! The Khieevi will get them." A brief struggle ensued,
which Thariinye won.
He gave
her a pitying look and reached again for the navigation controls. "I'm
sorry, Maati, but we don't know for sure they're still alive. If so ... well,
they've escaped the notice of the Khieevi so far. Perhaps they can continue to
do it until we can find help. We-"
He
never finished his sentence.
A heavy
blow thudded against the Niikaavri, knocking both of them forward, straining
the straps that held them into their chairs. At the same time, the lights on
the control panel flared and two blinked out.
"Oh,
no!" he cried, and punched frantically at the board again.
"Oh,
no, what?" Maati asked.
"Somehow,
in that little maneuver of yours, -we turned our camouflage off. They know our
position now."
"Put
the cloaking device back on and move, then!"
"I'm
trying to, but the ship is not responding!"
A bolt
of light shot in front of the viewport and they were once more rocked by the
force of some sort of energy weapon striking their starboard bow.
Suddenly
the egg-like ship was spinning dizzily, and the blue planet grew larger and
larger in their viewscreen.
Thariinye
grabbed the corn unit and yelled, as if it could carry across space,
"Mayday, Mayday, we are the Linyaari vessel Niikaavri and we are under
attack from a Khieevi vessel."
Maati
thought he had lost his mind. Surely no one would hear them, but then she
cried, "Tell them -who we are, Thariimye. In case my parents can hear us.
Tell them it's me, so they'll know what happened. Tell them to hide!"
I am
Ensign Thariinye of clan Renyilaaghe. My second in command is Maati of clan
Nyaarya. We are under attack by a Kleevi vessel. Our coordinates are . .
."
Maati
thought she was hearing things for a moment when the klickings and klackings
and sound of failing systems were replaced suddenly by a familiar comforting
voice.
"Thariinye,
Maati, it's Khornya. You've been badly hit. Use the escape pod. We'll pick you
up and get us all out of here."
Another,
harder thud and the ship was spinning dizzily, the blue planet looming larger
with every revolution.
Maati
floated up from her seat. "G force has been cut."
"Khornya,
the Khieevi! Save yourselves!" Thariinye bellowed into the corn unit. To
Maati he said, "No time to deal with it, youngling. Unstrap. Climb into
the pod!"
The pod
was located behind the command chairs. Maati snapped her restraint open and did
a handstand on the back of the chair, flipping herself down to the top of the
pod and popping its catch.
"No
sweat, sport," Captain Becker's voice was saying. "We got 'em
covered."
"Thariinye,
the escape pod," Khornya said again.
Maati
climbed inside the pod. She suppressed a nervous giggle. The zero G popped her
up to the top.
"Oh,"
Thariinye said, and she saw the top of his head as it swrveled to take in the
wildly flickering console lights, the sparks flying from the board at many
points.
Maati
waited. It felt like forever. She felt sick from the spinning and thought that
the stars swirling past the viewport looked like what she'd thought she would
see in the wormhole.
She
heard the snap of Thariinye's restraint, and saw his feet, then his legs as he
bounced over the top of the chair and off the deck.
Maati
held on to the pod lid with one hand and grabbed his foot with the other,
pulling him in. He was barely inside the pod when all of a sudden the canopy
slapped closed and locked, and they felt a bump as gravity returned, but
increased fivefold, pressing the pod against the deck.
Thariinye
pressed the release button to eject the pod and activate the recirculating
oxygen supply. Oxygen flooded the ood with a hissing sound, but they were still
stuck inside the ship. The ejection mechanism -was malfunctioning, just like
everything else on the ship! And the gravitational force was so strong they couldn't
pop the hatch again to see why the pod had failed to eject.
Thariinye's
heart boomed against her ear.
"It's
okay, Thariinye. The pod will help protect us during a crash. They're amazingly
resilient, you know."
His
breath rasped in and out a few times.
"Unless,
of course, the ship burns up on entering the atmosphere or we're smashed in the
wreckage when it slams into the planet," Maati said, and realized that
what she was voicing was Thariinye's thought. He hadn't said a -word. What a
time for her psychic powers to kick in!
The pod
insulated them a bit from the noises around them, but she knew they -were still
inside the ship because she hadn't felt the explosive acceleration that would
indicate the pod had separated from the mother ship. They were still stuck.
(I
could open the hatch and . . .) she thought she said aloud.
Tharnnye
hugged her close to his chest. "Not if it's stuck, you can't. I'll keep
hitting the firing mechanism. We'll just have to hope that the relay decides to
engage before the crash-or maybe even during."
(Oh,
no, we're trapped!) Panic welled up inside her and tears began to flow from her
eyes. She couldn't spend the pitiful traction left of her life cooped up in
this tiny shell. She couldn't. She just couldn't.
Then
suddenly it was as if they had hit a bump. They felt themselves sliding and
then their pod was launched so that at rst they were flying, then dropping.
(It
will level out, won't it?) she asked. Or did she? They were wrapped so closely
in each other's arms that it was no
-wonder she could suddenly hear his thoughts and he could hear hers.
(Yes,)
he said. (But I am doomed anyway. Even if -we survive the crash and the
Khieevi, Liriili will kill me for stealing and losing her newest ship.)
Becker
jerked his thumb backward, gesturing for Aari to surrender the command chair.
The Condor's hiding place behind one of the moons kept it out of range of the
Khieevi ship's sensors, giving the crew a little breathing space to make plans.
Aari
got up, but gave the captain a level look. "I am fine, Joh. The Khieevi no
longer freeze my ability to think."
"I
know that, buddy, but you don't know my bird like I do." He clasped his
hands, intertwining his fingers, straightened his wrists and flexed his knuckles,
then shook both hands out and applied them to the buttons. "Let's deploy
those Winding laser cannons we picked up last year."
"Sorry,
Captain," the computer said, "but you have not yet found the right
mountings to affix them to the gun ports."
"Oh,
yeah. Then fire the Apatchipon micron splitters."
"You
have not been able to fashion suitable ports, Captain, to accommodate both the
micron splitters and your latest hull modifications.''
"Well,
I've had all these people around and-okay, so we'll just go for the plain old
atom blasters Dad installed years ago.
"You
removed those and stored them, Captain, when you traded for the Windigi laser
cannons."
"Fraggit!
So what have we got? Spit? We fired the last big load of cargo into Ganoosh's
bird and we haven't acquired enough new stuff yet to do any good." He
shook his head and said, "I guess we could board 'em and go mano a mano
with the side arms and laser rifles. It worked on Rushima."
Acorna
leaned forward, "You used the tractor beam before, Captain. How much will
it hold?"
"A
bunch more than we've got to throw at these buggers," Becker replied.
"This was supposed to be a nice, simple cargo run. . • •" He and Aari
exchanged long looks. Acorna did not care for the grim set of Aari's jaw or the
glazed, doomed look in his eyes. Nor could she bear to think of Thariinye, much
less Maati, at the nonexistent mercy of the Khieevi. She had sensed some
difficulty with the pod before their ship crashed, but she had no true reading
of what it was.
"Joh,
listen to me and do exactly as I say," Aari commanded, interrupting
Acorna's train of thought. His voice was clipped and hard and she was amazed to
see he had appropriated Becker's side arm, and was raising it in Becker's
direction. "You have an operational shuttle in Bay Two. You will take
Khornya and Riidkiiyi and board the shuttle now. I will give you five seconds
to clear and then I will ram the Condor into the Khieevi ship."
"Over
my dead body," Becker growled, whipping around in the chair to face Aari.
"That's mutiny."
"Over
your stunned body if necessary, Joh. Khornya, you understand this is the only
way to save Thariinye and my sister, don't you? The Khieevi killed me long ago.
I live only to prevent them from doing to others what they did to me. So unless
you wish to lose your horn to them as I did, and worse, you and Mac will take
Joh and Riidkiiyi now and evacuate."
You're
not gonna crash my ship!" Becker said belligerently, his jaw stuck out.
Ir you
will all just listen to me for a moment," Acorna interjected. "Aari,
give the captain back his weapon. We will need the ConSor to rescue Thariinye
and Maati and your par61118. I have a better idea. Remember in that old vid,
when the evil western agricultural workers dragged the good quick-draw waITlor
the indigenous inhabitants had hired to save them?
Tksy
dragged him through cactus, and over hardened trails, a he was much the worse for wear as a result.
I remember thinking that actually it was highly unlikely he would have survived,
especially maintaining his headgear as he did, had the event been an actual
occurrence rather than a fictional one. Well, it seems to me that we could do
much the same thing here. The atmospheric rim on this planet is quite dense and
the gravitational pull strong. If the tractor beam will hold the Khieevi ship
..."
"Gotcha,
Princess! You're brilliant!" Becker spoke to the computer. "Okay,
Buck, engage the tractor beam. Hook onto that big, nasty piece of salvage off
our starboard bow." He chuckled and said to his crew members.
"Heh-heh. This is a great idea! They can't shoot us or anybody else while
they're locked onto the tractor beam's gravity -well."
The
beam locked onto the Khieevi ship and hauled it toward the Condor until it
vanished from view beneath them.
"At
least, I don't think they can, unless they got some new technology that lets
them." Becker continued in a slightly more worried tone as he maneuvered
the beam so that the Khieevi was in tow behind and at an angle from the Condor,
riding between the salvage ship's belly and the planet's rim.
The
klick-klack noise on the com unit was now loud, angry, and very obviously
intended for the crew of the Condor.
"They
are telling you to surrender, Joh. They have us in their pincers," Aari
said. He was baring his teeth, and it was not a friendly grin. Acorna reached
up without thinking to wipe the sweat where it was suddenly dripping off his
chin. He touched her hand lightly, his fingers stroking hers once, regretfully.
She knew from the touch that he still could not imagine they -would come away
from this encounter alive, much less unscathed.
"Strap
down, crew," Becker said.
Acorna
grabbed RK and strapped him in with her. Aari and Mac did likewise in the seats
Becker had scavenged so that the entire
crew could be together on occasion-though none of them had thought that such an
occasion as this would ever arise.
"Buck,
give us a visual of the cargo in the tractor beam, Becker told the ship's
computer." Once he could see the Khieevi ship, Becker accelerated and the
Condor shot toward the blue planet, past where the enemy vessel had originally
hovered while watching the crash of the Linyaari craft. The screen showed the
mantis-like ship dangling beneath the Condor's belly, while the klicking and
klacking from the corn unit rose in volume and variation. Threats, no doubt.
Becker
dove and the blue planet grew larger and larger, until its vaporous cover
seemed ready to swallow the Condor. "Manual," Becker said, and pulled
back on an actual lever among the buttons of his control panel, with the effect
that the Condor's nose swooped up, slinging the Khieevi ship behind it.
Acorna
felt a bump as they changed course, and on the screen the Khieevi ship jumped
and shook as it dipped into the atmosphere and was pulled out again. Becker did
this three times. Diving and swooping, and-at the end of each swoop- a bump. As
they pulled up, the pressure of acceleration pressed all of them to their
seats. RK's lips pulled back from his teeth in a fierce grimace, as did Aari's.
Acorna -would have laughed but her teeth were bared, too. Only Mac's face
remained just the same, robotic flesh impervious to the force. Acorna's stomach
could not decide whether to go into her throat or her legs, and the variations
in gravity made her lightheaded and giddy.
Just as
the Khieevi ship bumped the third time, Becker commanded, "Disengage
tractor beam, Bucko. We're gonna play a little game of crack the ship."
The
Khieevi ship -was flung wide from the Condor and skipped three more times
against the resistance of the outer atmosphere, almost as if the ship was a
flat rock and the atmospheric rim was a pond. But the ship wasn't solid, and
the Mantis's legs and antennae broke off with the first skip, while large cracks appeared with the next before
it plunged spinning toward the surface. It disappeared into nothingness as the
Condor flew deeper into space.
"Whoa,
Buck," Becker said.
When
the Condor had slowed, Becker returned to the atmosphere and reversed
thrusters. The Condor's screens were picking up signals from the Lmyaan escape
pod as well as several from the Khieevi ship.
The
planet appeared even bluer than it had from the air as the ship approached the
surface.
Acorna
didn't know she was humming until Aari asked, "You are singing-is it your
death song?"
"Gill
used to sing it sometimes," Acorna said. "It is an old Terran
folksong of military origin."
Becker
laughed and sang in a gravelly and tuneless voice, "Off we go, off into
the wild blue yonder."
Seven
Thariinye?"
Maati said. "Tharnnye, we've landed. JVly arms are pinned. Can you open
the canopy?"
His
heart still beat in her ear slow and steady. He was alive, anyway.
"Thariinye, are you okay?"
He
blasted her other ear with a loud snore. She elbowed him in the ribs. "You
fell asleep! We could have been killed and you fell asleep!"
He
stirred and groaned. "Not asleep. More like unconscious, I think."
"Unconscious
people don't snore. You were snoring." Where are we, anyway?" he
asked, changing the subject. "I don't know. But it feels like we landed.
That was too much of a thump for us to be still in space. Can you open the
canopy?"
What if
we have landed on some hostile planet where there is only nitrogen to breathe?"
he asked. "If I open the canopy, we die."
Look at
the sensors, you dope. The air's fine. Remember, "y parents lived here for
long enough for the Niriians to find roem. They must have breathed the air and
still survived. And if you don't get us out of here, I wet my pants now and we
both die of hunger or worse later anyway," she said. "Do you just
want to sit here and wait for the Khieevi to snatch us?"
"Okay,
you've got a point." He opened the hatch. While he was at it, he turned
off the locator beacon. "Don't know who'll be looking for us, do we?"
he asked. Through the open hatch, they saw periwinkle blue sky, lacy fronds of
vegetation, one sun and half a dozen moons simultaneously, and some large and
very beautiful birds with blue and green iridescent plumage soaring above them.
"How
could you fall asleep -when the Khieevi were after us and maybe even got
Khornya and Aari, too?"
"I
couldn't do anything about it, could I? When you are older and more
experienced, youngling, you will learn to utilize whatever quiet moments you
can grab from the constant excitement of a spacefarer's life to conserve your
energy and mend any damage done by life's travails."
"Right,"
she said, and tried to sit up. The pod moved under her, bouncing up and down.
"Whoa, stop!" she said, and looked over the edge to see what was
causing the motion. Lacy, fernlike growth held them in the air.
"Thariinye, look. These are the tallest bushes I have ever seen!" All
around them and high above them, blocking off the view in most directions,
other lacy fronds fanned briskly back and forth.
He sat
up, too, and the pod rocked even more perilously.
"They're
not bushes, youngling. These are treetops. Can you climb down? If the branches
support your weight, then maybe they'll support mine. I don't think we're up
very high. All of the other trees appear to be higher."
She
leaned over the edge and touched something solid, big enough it let her spread
her whole hand. Thariinye leaned against the opposite side of the pod to balance
it as she felt her way along. When she was sure the support was wide enough for
her to step out on, she did, slithering her belly, pelvis, and legs over the
side to follow her outstretched hands and arms.
She
crawled along the limb on hands and knees, peering through the fronds to try to
find more sturdy branches. When she reached the trunk, she had to lift more
fronds to find the way down. "No wonder it wasn't very tall," she
crawled back to Thariinye.
"Be
careful, you'll . . ." "Oooops!" she cried, windmilling her arms
as she let her legs shoot out from under her.
"Maati!"
Thariinye cried, and toppled the pod reaching for her. It fell from the nest of
fronds and landed below-about three feet below. Thariinye had covered his head
with both hands anticipating the crash.
Maati
laughed and laughed, and stood up. The fronds and the part of the trunk still
in the ground rose only as high as her waist. "Gotcha!" she cried,
clapping her hands. "We broke the tree when we landed and its branches cushioned
our fall!" "Brat," Thariinye grumbled, extricating himself from
the pod.
"Now
what, 0 experienced spacefarer?" Maati asked cheekily.
"Standard
protocol is to stay near your pod," Thariinye told her. "Which would
be a good idea if Khornya and her crewmates are looking for us."
'But a
bad idea if they lost out to the Khieevi, and it's the monsters who are looking
for us," Maati said.
"Yes,"
he admitted. "I know what we can do," Maati said. "Oh, you do?
Who put you in charge of the mission?" "The same power that put you
in charge," she replied, We're in this together. If I get saved, you get
saved. If I get caught, you'll-"
If I
get caught I'll try to make sure they don't know you're alive,' Thariinye told
her with unexpected gravity.
Right.
Well, all I need to do is climb up one of the taller "ees, if it's
climbable, and look around. I can maybe see where the wreckage of our ship is
and if anybody is checking it out. That is the first place anyone will look for
us, and it isn't like we can't tell our friends from our enemies in this
situation. One look, and we'll know what to expect."
"Why,
that's a very good idea. You learn quickly, youngling."
Climbing
these trees was easier said than done, however unless you were one of the small
blue-furred scampering things constantly running up and down trunks and through
the underbrush. The trunks were smooth and thick-it was the broken off end of
the trunk that Maati had crawled along when she first left the pod. But the
frond branches were not very strong and snapped under the pressure of even
Maati's small feet.
She
made it halfway up one of the trees, and that was as far as she got. She felt
around for handholds or footholds but found none.
Thariinye
called up to her from below, "Keep going."
"Can't,"
she said.
"Well,
what do you see from there?"
"More
trees. But I think the ones over that way," she pointed to the west,
"are on a hill, maybe. And there is some kind of clearing at the top. If
we could go climb that hill, we could see more." When she'd pointed, she'd
let go of the tree with one hand, and transferred all her weight to her other
hand. That put more pressure on her grasping hand and the frond she was holding
broke. While she was searching for another, her feet bore too heavily on the
fronds she stood on, and those broke as well. She slid precipitously down the
trunk, catching her shipsuit several times on protruding fronds on the way
down. It was a sturdy synblend and didn't tear, but Maati wasn't so sure the
skin beneath the suit was as undamaged.
"It'll
take us farther from the pod," Thariinye said with a sigh. "But that
might be a good thing."
"I
don't think we ought to talk so loudly anymore either," Maati said.
"In case the monsters hear us."
(We
wouldn't need to talk at all if you weren't such a baby,) Thariinye grumbled.
She
punched him lightly in the side with her balled-up fist. (I heard that.) Then
after a beat, (Hey, do you think we could contact Khornya and my brother
mentally from here? Or maybe even my parents? I can do that, can't I, now that
I'm able to send and receive?) The last was thought quite proudly, and
Thariinye received an image of a grownup Maati.
(Not if
they're still too far out in space or too busy to listen-engaged in battle with
the Khieevi, maybe,) Thariinye sent a withering thought. Maati realized that
this was a frequent behavior with him. The idea had not been his and therefore
he was trying to make it sound "worthless.
(It
doesn't hurt to try, though,) Maati pointed out.
(Unless,
of course, the Khieevi can read our thoughts and find us from them,) Thariinye
said. (In case they folio-wed us down here.)
(Oh,)
Maati said. (Yeah. Okay. I'll shut up. Back to the hill, then.)
They
were nearly there when they heard the -whistling, roaring sounds. They
scrambled quickly to the top of the hill and found the clearing in time to see
the wreckage of the Khieevi ship falling from the sky, splashing into a sea
some distance from them. They could make out the -wreck of their own ship on
the shore.
"At
least if we lost our ship, they did, too," Maati said.
"I
suppose that's some consolation," Thariinye agreed. "The Khieevi ship
was -wrecked-maybe Liriili can blame the Khieevi ror the whole mess, instead of
me, if we live long enough to have to confess it." And then he pointed.
For once, even he was speechless. Maati could see why.
Also
tumbling down from the sky, but in much better shape than the larger ship had
been, was a small Khieevi shuttle. As it fell, two figures could be seen
emerging from it, trailing some sort of membrane behind them that caught the
air and sailed them gently to the ground.
Maati,
seeing the bug-like creatures alive for the first time, even at a distance, was
filled with horror and loathing. Tears began trickling down her cheeks as she
looked up at Thariinye.
"They
landed somewhere over there," he said, pointing toward the beach. "So
I think we should run in the opposite direction as far and as fast as "we
can."
"Yes,"
she said, "But-but-Thariinye?"
"What?"
"If
their ship is crashed and in pieces and only two of those creatures are getting
out, does that mean the ConSor won?"
"We
can't take that chance, youngling, though by the Ancestors I hope it is so. We
are no match for even two of those creatures. Quickly now."
He
didn't have to tell her twice.
The
Linyaari ship lay broken in two like a giant egg that had hatched its chick. It
was nestled deep in a beach of aqua blue sand, beyond which cerulean blue
waters stretched to the horizon. Wreckage from the Khieevi ship was scattered
like bits of large and particularly ugly seaweed on the surface of the water
and along the beach, carried in by the waves. Behind the beach was a range of
blue dunes and, beyond them, the fronds of a forest of graceful fern-like trees
beckoned the Condor to land.
Once
the ship had done so, Acorna released her restraint and RK's.
"Conditions
are hospitable, Captain," the Buck Rogers voice of the ship's computer
told him. "That blue stuff that looks like sand, is. The other blue stuff
that looks like the water is. Salt water, though, so take your desalination and
purification unit.
The
temperature is sixty degrees Fahrenheit with moderate winds at three point two
knots. The air is breathable, even fragrant, by human standards."
"Are
there-life forms?" Aari asked.
"Other
than here? How should I know? I'm a ship's computer, for heaven's sake, not an
anthropologist. My heat and motion sensors are picking up something, but it
could just be all that wreckage out in the water."
The
scanners showed what Buck was referring to more precisely. Becker salivated at
the sight of all that salvage.
Aari
was more sober. "Does it show if there are any live beings there?"
Becker
shook his head. "Don't know. My scanners are for salvage, mostly."
"I
hope Thariinye and Maati were able to make it to the escape pod," Acorna
said with a little shiver that made her skin twitch. "I don't think
anything else would have survived that crash."
Becker said,
"Look at the ship. I don't see any obvious signs of them or the pod in the
wreckage. They're here somewhere. And if that's the case, Princess, we'll find
them. What I'm hoping is that none of those stupid bug things made it to a
pod."
"Their
ships don't have pods, Joh," Aari said. "Their carapace protects them
against many things that would kill others."
"What
about that large shuttle-shaped piece of debris over there, captain?" Mac
asked.
Rrrrrowwsst!"
RK responded. Cat says it's Khieevi," Becker told them.
"We
heard him, Joh," Aari said soberly. 'Well, from here I'd say it's not as
badly wrecked as the Khieevi ship." He indicated the fragments of the ship
floating ^ the water. "We can at least hope that any occupants are in ^e
same fragmentary state as their transportation," Becker said.
RK
bolted for his personal exit and they heard his claws scrabbling as he slid
down the cat chute to the ramp that led to the robolift.
"We
better get moving," Becker said. "Cat seems to have to go real bad.
Must be that pretty blue sandbox out there just itching to have a Makahomian
cat scratch in it. Aari, you get that Khieevi earthmoving weapon you brought
along as your dowry. I've got the locator and laser rifle," he said,
hefting a sleek and deadly looking weapon the length of his forearm.
"And
I have my own array of attachments, Captain," Mac said, opening his
forearm to display the corkscrew, can opener, knife blades, scissors,
magnifying glass and other small equipment that were standard with his
particular model.
Acorna
made a side trip of her own. Taking a slight detour to an otherwise empty
storeroom, she gathered up a lightweight titanium cargo net she had spotted
earlier in the journey.
"Good
idea, Princess," Becker said when he saw it. "We'll be able to net us
some salvage from that Khieevi ship for sure."
Thus
armed, they boarded the robolift and headed down. Acorna felt something sticky
on her shoes. She took a closer look at her shoes, then at the source of the
problem. "Mac, when we get back here, I want you to scrub the lift down.
It's a mess from the plant sap on that planet where we picked up the
piiyl."
MacKenZ
looked surprised-probably because she was talking about minor housekeeping
matters now, when so many more important things were at stake-but didn't say
anything. Clearly the robot had never learned the trick of keeping fear at bay
by concentrating on the trivia of life. Maybe robots didn't ever feel that kind
of fear.
Once
the robolift set down, however, Becker regarded the outside of his ship with
disgust, too. "Those damn plants slimed my hull! Look at that! What a
mess."
"Joh,"
Aari said softly, nodding to redirect the captain's attention to the halves of the Linyaari ship. "What if Maati
and Thariinye are in the wreckage?"
"If
they're there, they'll be easy to find. We'll know soon enough what the
situation is. No sense borrowing trouble. Princess, anything to add here?"
"I
was-receiving some impressions toward the last, before we picked up the Khieevi,
that the pod might have become stuck in the ship. If so, they could still be
alive but trapped in the wreckage in the pod."
"We
must reach them before the Khieevi do," Aari said.
"If
there are any Khieevi left," Becker said. "Come to think of it, maybe
we'd better try to head the bad guys off at the pass even before we check the
wreckage."
"There
are Khieevi here," Aari said. "I can feel them."
RK,
back up and tail brushed, apparently agreed with him.
They
made their way cautiously down the beach, weapons at the ready. Acorna felt a
little foolish trailing behind, preoccupied by the feeling that she knew Maati
and Thariinye were here somewhere-alive-but she couldn't tell where. She only
had a vague sense of them. Why couldn't she at least reach Thariinye? She
couldn't shake the feeling that her friends were alive, but in trouble.
They
saw wrecked Khieevi shuttlecraft lying in the dunes, broken up but considerably
more intact than the Khieevi ship, lying in the dunes further up the beach.
Something brown lay crunched around the edges, and a green fluid tinted the
blue sand turquoise.
"Any
Khieevi who survived were most likely in that shuttle," Becker pronounced.
"Look at their ship. I doubt they could live through a wreck like that. The
ship is toast, but the shuttle-well, that looks like it was spaceworthy till
the last minute. No convenient vacuum or decompression to kill all the
occupants for us."
As they
drew nearer they saw movement and heard a sound that made Acorna's skin twitch-the klick-klack she had heard so
often on Aari's video. The light wind carried a terrible stench-rot combined
with vomit. RK stopped, dug his claws into the ground, and hissed like a tea
kettle. Aari's steps slowed. Becker surged ahead like a missile, Mac outpacing
him with nonchalance in the face of danger that only an android-particularly
one who had once been the face of danger himself- could achieve.
"It
appears we've got a live one," Becker growled as he rounded the dune where
the shuttle lay. "Though it's half buried under that shuttle. It's not
going anywhere fast. I'll just put this cockroach out of its misery,"
"Please,
wait," Acorna said. "We must question it. Aari knows their language,
at least enough to get something useful out of it. Perhaps we can get more from
the LAANYE. We have to find out if this ship was alone or if others will be
coming, where the main swarm of Khieevi is now, and where they are heading
next. If my people are threatened again, they must know at once."
Aari found
his voice and his feet, and in six more strides stood beside Becker. Acorna
approached cautiously, curiously. The creature snapped its mandibles and
reached for Becker with its pincers but the captain sidestepped smartly and
beckoned for Acorna to give him the cargo net.
She
wondered suddenly why it had occurred to her to bring it. Then she glanced at
Aari and saw him smiling at her with both approval and triumph. That was it, of
course. Aari had sent her the suggestion. He thought he. couldn't intentionally
send any longer, but he was clearly mistaken. He had certainly just done it.
Why hadn't he asked her aloud, she wondered? It would have been a reasonable
request. How odd.
Aari
was carrying the very large and heavy weapon which he'd retrieved when his
torturers fled the death throes of Vhiliinyar. He trained it on the monster.
Maybe that was it. Acorna had been the
logical one to bring the net-but, still, he usually communicated with spoken
words. She looked up at him again, frowning this time, but he was concentrating
on the Khieevi.
"Okay,"
Becker said. "Aari, Acorna, and I are going to capture this thing. When we
have the net over it and solidly anchored, Mac, you maneuver the shuttle off
its leg and thorax, okay?"
"Yes,
Captain."
Acorna
was the only one who could use two hands, but fortunately the creature was
trapped and rather badly injured by the crash. Much of its back end was crushed
beneath the shuttle, from what she could see. It still gave her cold chills to
be this close to a live Khieevi, no matter how much was wrong with it. When the
android lifted the broken piece of the shuttle from the back of the Khieevi and
tipped it aside, the Khieevi struggled mightily against their titanium net, but
in vain. Mac then aided his crewmates in finishing netting the monster's hind
parts. The monster klicked and klacked and gnashed its mandibles at them as
best it could through the impediment of the net, but they paid it no attention.
Finally it -was well wrapped enough that they could risk transporting it.
"Now,
then," Becker said. "We'll put him in the brig and Mac can stay and
guard him while the LAANYE collects language samples. As mad and as noisy as
this beast is, we ought to get enough stuff to be useful. As long as he doesn't
have any friends to scream for, we should be fine. I'm told they kill their
wounded, so the fact that he's alive means he's probably alone. men, Aari,
buddy, while that's going on, you and me are going to excavate that egg ship
and make sure your little sister and that idiot punk she's with aren't trapped
inside."
'I'll
start searching through the debris while you're gone, and I'll broadcast that
we're here, Captain," Acorna said. "If our friends are nearby, and
conscious, Thariinye will hear me and he'll let me know where they
are." "Good idea, Princess.
We'll be right back with the plasma cutters."
Acorna
climbed inside the half of the egg that should have contained the bridge. She
could see the lower edge of the crushed viewport sunken deep into the damp
sand. The sea was licking at the wreckage now, wide wet fingers teasing loose
bits of smashed equipment and carrying them out and back with each wash of the
waves. She wondered about tides-was the wreck in danger of being flooded?
Perhaps, with so many moons arrayed about the planet, that wouldn't be an
issue. Maybe they would all cancel each other out, gravitationally, instead of
amplifying the movement of the seas. She could hope so, anyway.
The
shadows were growing long now. Becker and Aari would not have much more
daylight. She began throwing everything she could over the side of the ship
facing away from the water. Becker -would certainly want his salvage. Nothing
faintly resembling the bridge was visible yet. Fragments of burnt and ripped pavilion
fabric passed through her hands, as did a mane comb, and the shards of a
mirror. Acorna saw her own slender face reflected back in the device. She
hadn't realized she was •weeping until then.
(Thariinye?
Thariinye, answer me if you can!) she thought as hard as she could. But
everything within the ship was still. The only movement was the settling of the
rubbish as it shifted beneath her feet, and the lapping of the waves against
the ruined hull of the ship.
She
heard the Condor's robolift descend again. Becker and Aari soon arrived
carrying the plasma cutters with them. At Becker's signal Acorna climbed back
out of the shell. Becker gave her an inquiring -waggle of his eyebrows, but she
shook her head sadly. She had been unable to make contact.
The men
worked until -well after dark, seeing by the light from their cutters. At one
point, Acorna went up on the robolift
and turned on an exterior floodlamp Becker had rigged above ,t for
nighttime salvage expeditions. The shadows it cast made t look as if the two
men were mining the pits of darkness, their grunts and the raucous scorch and
sizzle of the saws adding to the general impression of demonic digging. The
tide had risen and the wreck was beginning to flood. The men were waistdeep in
water, so that they had to dive as well as cut. Meanwhile, Acorna carried
salvage to the robolift.
She
made mental calls to her friends from time to time, pleading for Thariinye to
answer, but she felt nothing, heard
nothing.
Not then.
When
the men were up to their necks in water, Becker finally threw his plasma cutter
onto the beach over the broken hull of the shell ship and hoisted himself out.
"C'mon, Aari. We're going to have to wait for the tide to go out. If
there's anything there to see, it's too far under water now. Maybe the tide
will shift some of the junk still there so we can see more."
"My
little sister might be in there, Joh. A child."
"Maybe,
but I doubt it," he said. "I'm betting that she and Thariinye were
smart enough to get out." He looked toward Acorna but all she could see
-were the whites of his eyes and his teeth. "You sense anything from in
there yet, Princess?"
She
shook her head. "Nothing," she said. "It is possible the pod
broke free -while we were discussing how to destroy the Khieevi ship. Thariinye
and Maati could have escaped then."
The
three of them climbed onto the robolift. RK had stayed aboard the ship during
the salvage operation. "Our new guest better hope they escaped, or be
prepared to tell us where they are. Aari, I've got a few questions I want you
to translate into their kilck-klacL"
"Certainly,
Joh. I can ask questions, but I do not think the Khieevi will answer. They have
never answered questions. The Linyaari sent ambassadors to them and the only
answers we ever received to our questions were vids of the ambassadors being tortured as I was. But those
ambassadors never escaped. Our people met their deaths in those vids."
"Nasty
stuff. Well, maybe your people asked the Khieevi right questions, but didn't
ask in the right way. You Linyaari have got a few scruples that don't
particularly apply to me. Aari, I want you to give Mac a little language
lesson. He learned how to ask questions when he worked for Kisia Manjari. I'm
betting our guest will be real happy to tell us anything we want to know before
Mac is done with him. But we're still going to need you to translate. You folks
are pacifists, I know. Is this going to bother you?"
Aari
bared his teeth until they -were -whiter than his skin in the light of the two
moons. "No, Joh. It will not bother me."
The
sole Khieevi still alive and free on this planet cut a swath through the
fern-like trees. At first it was a low swath. The creature was a bit stunned
from his emergency departure from the shuttle, but it managed to properly
decimate the undergrowth in the approved style. The Khieevi scoutship crew had
expected that the strange craft that destroyed theirs would come for them on
this planet, trying to protect the fragile little onehorns in the decorated
space-borne food container. But the strange ship hadn't been fast enough. The
Khieevi had made short work of the one-horn ship, and would have done the same
to the strange ship had it not taken them by surprise and used unfair and
totally uncalled for tactics to wreck them and cause the deaths of all of the
other swarm members but the navigator and the self of the Khieevi who now ate
Jits way through the forest floor.
That
self-the inquisitor-had heard the klickmgs of the navigator for miles and miles,
but the inquisitor -was not about to go back. The navigator had been half
squashed -when the shuttle fell on him. The navigator would be recycled into
food soon. The inquisitor -would see to it.
10S
The
inquisitor had a communications device. It would be difficult to activate
without the ship's power to fuel it, but organic activation could be
implemented in an emergency such as the current one. It had only to reach a
high point on the planet, arrange indigenous ingredients in a certain proportion,
and chew, and the resulting chemical reaction would provide carrying power for
the message the Khieevi wished to transmit.
The
mission would not fail. The Khieevi swarm would come to this planet and find
plenty and prosperity for another short time, and then all of the neighboring
worlds and all their viable foodstuffs would also fall to his race's relentless
mandibles.
Meanwhile,
the other scout ships would search out other areas. But the inquisitor's sole
purpose now was to notify its swarm of its own location, the location of the
food, and the loss of the ship.
That,
at least, was its sole intended purpose until, after eating its way through the
undergrowth, it found at its very jaws a one-horn device, small and compact and
shaped like a food container. To the inquisitor's regret it was empty, but the
one-horns who had occupied it had left a trail of broken plant matter, scent,
and vibrations. The inquisitor chomped its way after them up a steep hill and
down it.
At the
top of the steep hill, it looked at the seashore below it and saw the navigator
being lugged down the beach by two hornless two-leggeds into the strange ship.
The navigator was still alive and klicking. Not for long, the inquisitor was
certain. mat information would be noted when the inquisitor broadcast the next
report to the swarm. It continued eating, tracking the missing one-horns.
As
nighttime fell, the inquisitor was very full, but unsatished. It had a need to
smell alien one-horn blood. To see it flow. /vs it ate its way downhill into a
little valley, it saw how to lulhll that need, too. Leaning against a tree,
apparently sleeping, was a one-horn. The inquisitor closed on its prey.
The
healing retreat in the hills of the Ancestors, under their gentle, probing
care, was meant to erase all pollution, all contamination, all taint, all pain,
all shame left behind from the dreadful ordeal the Linyaari spacefarers had
faced. The process could go on for days, weeks, months, years, by Standard
reckoning; a ghaanye or many, by Linyaari reckoning.
However,
the deep healing had barely begun when personal attendants began handing the
supplicant pilgrims their wraps and saying, "Go home. You are needed in
Kubiihkhan."
Grandam
had never known of such a thing to happen in all her life.
Have
-we done something wrong?" one of the younger crew members from the
liliura asked. "Are we being cast out because our taint is too
great?"
'Don't
talk nonsense, child," the personal attendant said. Didn't you hear Us?
You are needed. And as for being cast °ut, how can We possibly be casting you
out when We are coming with you?"
Back in
town, Liriili had been fidgeting, forgetting to graze, pacing until her feet
were quite rough and sore, walking up
and down the road to and from the spaceport. The viizaar had no
messenger since Maati had vanished, though she had little to do for the moment
except wait. Wait for the Khieevi to find them again. She did not know what to
do. Now recovered from her anger, she told herself she had done a service to
Thariinve and Maati. When the Khieevi came here, those younglings at least
would be spared. If they hcu)n't alreaSy been coruumeS, a small voice inside
her head pointed out. She ignored it.
Walking
down the road from the spaceport, where she had once more been checking with
the com-shed officer of the day, refusing to believe that the remote reports to
her office were frequent or rapid enough to alert her in time for an attack,
she saw the stream of her people, two footed and four footed, flowing down from
the hills on the opposite side of the bowl-shaped valley containing
Kubiilikhan.
Alarmed,
disturbed, frightened, and yet, somehow, relieved as well, she returned to her
office to await the return of the pilgrims-and of the Ancestors.
The
thought of questioning of the Khieevi prisoner bothered Acorna. Despite her
fear and loathing, she knew she would not be able to watch without wishing to
heal any hurts inflicted upon the Khieevi in the line of questioning. She also
knew that trying to heal the destructive monster was not reasonable.
She
could, however, feel its pain from two decks away. Despite Becker's threats to
the contrary, no one had touched it since it had been brought aboard and .its
net locked into place where cargo nets were normally strung up. It hadn't been
necessary to lay a hand on the creature. It was answering their questions
sporadically, in between spasms of pain. But it was dying. She could feel it
dying.
The
feeling was so intense, it was as if she could feel herseli dying, too. She
couldn't stand it any longer. She had to leave
she'd be forced to interfere with what Becker was doing. A^J they needed
the information he -was extracting. She abandoned the bridge for the robolift,
stopping on the way to tell the others what she was doing-that she was going to
see if the tide was out yet, and if it was, she'd load some more cargo. She'd
also continue calling for Thariinye and Maati while she was at it.
She got
a "Yeah, ummm hmmm, okay," from Becker. Aari and Mac were totally
absorbed by the Khieevi's rapid-fire klick-klacking'.
The
door edged open for a moment and the impression of the pain within staggered
her. RK pushed himself through the door, flipping his tail up along his back as
the hatch automatically snapped shut behind him. With a light leap, he was on
her shoulder.
She
scratched his chin. "Thank you, my friend. It will be good to have
company."
Ghostly
blue vapors billowed across an indigo sky and the turquoise light of two of the
planet's moons strobed across the sea, the beach, and the forest beyond. Sand
skidded against Acorna's ankles and calves. Out here she could still feel the
captive Khieevi's pain, but distance helped attenuate it. It also helped
knowing that none of her crewmates was inflicting the terrible torture; they
were only taking advantage of the monster's agony to obtain answers that might
save her people, and any other creatures whose path the Khieevi crossed.
She
breathed deeply of the night air. The fragrance of the sweet and spicy grasses
and the fernlike trees, exotic and cit^sy, filled her nostrils. She realized
she hadn't grazed yet that ^y, and was hungry. She didn't worry about venturing
beyond "e dunes. Her Linyaari navigational instincts gave her an excelent
sense of direction, and the light of the two moons above her was sufficient to see her -way to the
grasses between beach and forest.
She was
relieved to put some distance between her and the Condor now. When she had
eaten, she would return, see what progress her friends had made, and, if they
-were finished, ask them to let her examine the prisoner and tend to its
wounds. She had not offered to tend to it so far out of fear that once she
healed the thing, one of her friends would then have to reinjure it, in all
likelihood, to obtain the vital information they needed. This could well be one
of the very same Khieevi who had caused the death of her parents, but it was
against her nature to cause or endure the suffering of another living creature.
It -was against Aari's nature, too. Despite what the Khieevi had done to him,
she could not help but feel that participating in actual torment of another
creature, even one of the species who had all but destroyed him, would impede
his inner healing, perhaps even prevent it altogether. He, more than she, was
born and bred to the Linyaari •way, which was nonviolent.
Back on
the beach, Aari had brandished his Khieevi weapon with authority and deadly
intent, however. She didn't blame him or judge him for that, but it worried her
that he had undergone such a tremendous change, one that -was completely
contrary to his upbringing.
She
tested the grass with her horn-it was suitable for her to eat. So she took a
mouthful of grass. It was peppery, not quite what she had in mind. She searched
for another plant and found, growing sparsely among the peppery sort, a little
reed with nodes on the stem. The nodes had a pleasant sour tang that offset the
sweetness of the reed. They, too, were edible, and much tastier. She searched
selectively for these, while RK slithered through the grassland as though he
were a large jungle cat stalking prey.
She
visualized Maati, who had been practically her only friend from narhii-Vhiliinyar. The child was just approaching
puberty-funny, enthusiastic, lively, hard-working, inquisitive. She pictured
Maati's soft pale brown skin and white and black spotted mane and feathers, her
brilliant smile, short nose, and wide golden eyes below her little spiraled
horn. She thought of Maati's immediate acceptance of Aari and her unquestioning
love of her long-lost brother. The child's sadness and disbelief at being left
behind by the ConSor when it had taken both her newly found brother and her
friend away. They could have brought her along, even though Liriili had
objected violently when the subject came up. If they had done so, Maati
wouldn't now be lost, maybe dead, along with poor Thariinye, who, although he
-was about the same age as Acorna, had not had as much experience or adventure
in his life as she had, and so was still rather callow. Irritating, conceited,
and arrogant, but not a bad fellow, really.
Her
thoughts were anguished and regretful. She especially worried about her little
friend, so sensible and knowledgeable about Linyaari ways but more willing than
any to help a stranger. (Oh, Maati, Maati, I am so sorry, youngling. I thought
you should stay with Grandam. I should have listened to your own thoughts more
and not tried to decide for you. . . .)
(Khornya?
Khornya! You're here! Oh, Khornya, come quickly. I can't find Thariinye and
there is something awful out here in the bushes. Please, Khornya. I'm scared.)
(Maati!
It's all right. I'm here. Where are you?)
(Looost!)
The thought was a long 'wail.
(I'll
come and get you. Just keep sending and I'll find you and bring you back. Can
you see the beach from where you are? Can you see the Condor7)
(No,
I'm in the woods and it's dark and Thariinye was right ^re standing guard while
I slept. Now he's gone and the noises ^e terrible, Khornya.)
(Can he
read you? Have you tried?)
(No. I
think he must be unconscious. Knocked out, maybe )
Acorna
was galloping through the grass now and into the trees, following Maati's
thoughts as if they were spoken words tracking them to their origin.
The
footing was treacherous in the dark but she leaped over bushes and roots. She
had to pause frequently, however, to listen again for Maati's thought.
(Keep
sending, Maati. I can't follow you unless I can read you.)
(I'm
sooo tired, Khornya. And I'm almost afraid to think too loud for fear whatever
it is that's thrashing around out there will hear me like you do.)
(I
understand, dear, but if I'm to find you, you have to keep sending. If whatever
it is hasn't bothered you yet, it probably can't read us.)
Acorna
was halfway up a steep hill when she slipped and fell in a trail of slime. As
she picked herself up again, she saw that she had fallen on the broken branches
of what must have been brush. The raw ends of the branches were sharply severed
at just above ground level for a long swath as wide as Acorna was tall. Where
the foliage had been, a trail of foul-smelling slime covered the ground.
From
the smell, she knew this -was a Khieevi trail, the creature eating, digesting,
and excreting as it went. No wonder they could trash entire planets in such a
short time!
Had the
wind not been from the sea, and blowing the smell of the slime away from her,
she easily would have picked it up earlier. Now she had a spoor to follow and
she lost no time scrambling after it.
(Maati,
I think it is a Khieevi who has Thariinye. Stay right where you are and do not
make a sound unless you know it is me. Have you moved since he disappeared?)
(No, I
was too scared of the things out in the bushes.)
(Okay,
then, that is good. Just stay put. Somewhere right near you there is a trail of broken brush and smelly Khieevi slime.)
(Eeewww,
is that what it is? I thought maybe this planet just smelled really bad in some places.)
(No,
that's Khieevi spoor. They excrete as fast as they eat, apparently. You sound
stronger. I'll be with you in a bit.)
Acorna
scrambled further up the hill and down it, following the trail until, though
she hadn't heard from Maati in some time, she suddenly caught a very loud
thought. (Ouch! You stepped on me!)
Looking
down, at first she saw nothing but more pale blue brush but then she saw, white
and lustrous among the leaves, a face. She stared.
(Maati?)
she asked uncertainly.
"Yes,
it's me, Khornya," Maati whispered, and rose to her feet and threw her
white arms around Acorna's neck so that Acorna's nose was buried in the girl's
silvery mane. (But you look-) "Oh, yeah!"
(Think
it, youngling. We don't know how near danger is.) (I m star-clad now. Like the
new me?)
(Why
should I not? I liked the old you. You are beautiful! So let's keep you alive,
shall we? I need you to follow the slime trail back down the hill and through
the woods-your nose will help you if you get off track. When you get to the
beach, you'll see the Condor. You need to get Aari and Captain Becker's
attention and have them come to help Thariinye and me--)
(And
leave you alone? Thariinye won't be any help. I can't read him at all.
Something's happened to him. If that's a Khieevi, you need me.)
IvK
bounded up to them and sat down, seemingly to wash, though he kept his ears
cocked slightly back, as if he was lisening to the their nonverbal
conversation. At some point in "elr Journey, he had departed from Acorna's
shoulder and taken off on his own
explorations. Probably -when she began galloping.
(It L)
a Khieevi. And it will be no trick to find it and Thariinye. The trail is
extremely clear. Just go back and tell the others that we'll need their help.
Meanwhile, I will try to keep the Khieevi from harming Thariinye anymore.)
(What
if there are other Khieevi?)
(Captain
Becker will know if there are. He has been questioning an injured Khieevi that
-we captured. He'll be able to tell us how many of these things we're facing. I
need that information very much before I tackle freeing Thariinye. And I'd like
you somewhere safe from this one,) Acorna said simply. And turned toward the
slimy trail. But Maati wasn't done yet.
(You
said you'd come for me,) Maati reminded her. (You were thinking all those nice
things about me, and how you and Aan should have let me come with you. I'm not
just a kid, you know. I'm smart. I could help you. What if I get caught on the
•way to get the others? What if I get lost?)
(Just
follow the trail.)
(You're
only one person. You need help, too. -You know Thariinye won't be much help. We
could hear him if he was in a position to help us. You know, you didn't treat
me like such a child back home.)
Acorna
hesitated. She didn't want to put her young friend in harm's way but, then
again, maybe that thought was a little ridiculous. Maati had already survived
the •wreck of her space vessel and eluded capture by the Khieevi once today. It
was entirely possible, if the Khieevi were on this planet in force, that the
ship was no safer place than trooping with Acorna through the forest.
(Very
well. You can come with me. But thought-speak only. And stay behind me.)
(Okay.)
Acorna felt Maati searching for RK, but the cat had vanished. Maati was a little worried, so Acorna sent her the
calming thought that if anyone on the face of the blue planet could look out
for themselves, it was that cat. Then they pushed forward, along the broken
trail the Khieevi had left behind them, hoping against all hope that Thariinye
was still all right.
The
Council meeting -was brief. Liriili had been questioned. The accusations
against her by comshed personnel and by Thariinye's many mourning
soon-to-be-lifemates were verified, and a proposal was made for her dismissal.
The evidence was examined, including a copy of the broadcast from the CorQor
that Liriili denied had ever been received. One of the com-shed officers, who
was also one of Thariinye's lady friends, had concealed copies of the pliyi
transmission and Thariinye's translation of it, which she had taken from the
com-shed before Liriili had given orders to have them destroyed. That was right
after the vuzaar had told the com-shed officers to stop transmitting anything
at all from the planet for dny reason. Not only did the young officer realize
that Liriili had tor some reason allowed Thariinye and a child to go into space
alone, but she recognized that the piiyi had great implications for the
Linyaari, and that the people must know about it. The combed officer had been
about to set off for the hills herself to fetch tne spacefarers when the
pilgrims came streaming home.
The
Council had not been kindly disposed to having the brining of a possible
Khieevi threat withheld from them for no reason, no matter what Liriili
thought. (??ed note. not quite correct)
After
the matter of Liriili had been discussed, the Council was expanded to include
Neeva, Khaari, Melireenya, and several of the ambassadors and high teachers and
merchants and officers from the returned fleet.
In lieu
of Liriili, Grandam now presided over the Council. Liriili faced them from the
opposite side of the table where she'd sat for so many years, wearing her
"Everything is in order, business as usual" face.
Grandam
could not help but smile. "Liriili of Clan Riivye, ^iizaar of Kubiilikhan,
you stand accused of treasonous acts against your people and your -world. We
will not ask you how you plead. You of all of us are most skilled at concealing
your thoughts, one reason we felt you -would make a good administrator. But you
have betrayed not only the trust of your people, but my personal trust to you
of the life of a young and parentless child, as well as the life of a brave
officer of our fleet."
"It
-was not my fault!" Liriili said. "I told them not to go. I told
them-and this is perfectly true; any of you can read me-that we must not
transmit further communications to the salvage ship that sent the piiyi message
to us, for fear of the Khieevi tracing the signal back to us. It is perfectly standard
procedure. I have saved us all by my actions and this is the thanks I get? That
you hold me responsible because two feckless and rebellious young people stole
our newest and finest vessel and took off on a pointless and dangerous joyride
against my express orders?"
"Enough!"
Grandam bellowed. "You knew very -well that the Condor had sent the piiyi
here for translation-a translation Thariinye completed before the children
departed. There is a record of the conversation in which he informed you of his
translation. You knew at that time that there was a good chance of
communicating with the Condor so that Captain Becker, as well as securing the
safety of his ship and crew, could warn
our allies of the impending threat without. Yo did nothing."
"Allies!"
Liriili snorted. "Look at the Starfarers if you thin we have allies! Did
our so-called 'allies' not turn over our fines ambassadors and officers,
teachers and traders, to enemies wh imprisoned and abused them?"
"They
-were deceived," Grandam said. "But you, Liriil were not deceived.
You knew that the Condor and our allie could have been notified of the threat
long before the Khlee\ were likely to be close enough to trace them. You knew
tha Thariinye also knew this, and that neither he nor Maati wouli allow harm to
come to Khornya, Aari, or to Captain Becker i it was in their power to prevent
this. You even knew, Liriil that the piiyi contained evidence of the
probability of the sui vival of Kaarlye and Miin of the Nyaarya clan, Maati's
an' Aari's parents. All of this information was problematic for yoi And so you
deliberately ordered the children to do nothing knowing that they -would be
forced to disobey you, and tha they-and all those -who depended on their
information-woul be lost."
Liriili
felt a sharp pain in the middle of her back and sh was Jabbed forward so
quickly she fell to her knees. "I didn know that. How could I know for
certain? All of you spacefaren as usual, were off someplace else -when
decisions had to b made immediately. I did what I thought was best for the
peopl( Licluding you. And is this the thanks I get for my dedicatio to duty?
Some thanks ..."
She was
weeping now with rage, -with fear, -with indigne lion, for she half-believed
-what she was saying herself, as Grar dam well knew, or she could never have
said it.
Oh,
Liriili, my poor granddaughter," Grandam Naadiin ^id, pushing past the
Council table behind which she had bee sitting and kneeling to put her hands on
either side of Liriili •wet face.
Liriili stared rebelliously back at her. "We have been aware of the flaw
in your makeup since you were very young you know. You, of all of us, are best
able to conceal your thoughts. You alone are capable of, if not lying, at least
twisting the meaning of your thoughts to a degree that makes them difficult to
read. We decided when the old Viizaar passed on to the land of the Ancestors
that this-difference-in your makeup need not be a flaw, but could be used for
the greater good of all. And you are correct. In general you have been an
excellent and conscientious administrator.
"Much
of the fault lies with us for not realizing that your- specialness-separated
and isolated you, not only from the rest of your people but from the truth
within yourself. Now we do not punish you, child, but seek to recompense you
for the harm we have allowed you to do to yourself as well as to others. You
must face the truth of your actions, if not within yourself, for you seem to be
incapable of doing so, but by seeing for yourself the consequences."
Liriili
was very easy to read now. Caution was trying to displace fear and disbelief in
her mind as Grandam retreated to her official position, sat, then rose again,
in unison with the other Council members.
"Liriili
of clan Riivye, you are relieved of your duties as Viizaar of Kubiilikhan and
administrator of narhii-Vhiliinyar by the High Council after consultation with
and in accordance with the advice of the Ancestors. You are reassigned to duty
as a junior shipman on the Balakiire, under the command of vifeShaanye-feriui
Neeva and Melireenya. Your mission will be to pursue the information obtained
from the pliyi, to attempt to warn the Condor of the peril contained in it, to
ascertain the whereabouts and ensure the safety of Thariinye and Maati and the
Niikactvn, to determine the whereabouts of Kaarlye and Miiri and rescue them or
at least retrieve the data in their landing pod, and to warn our allies of the Khieevi danger, even
if by issuing such a warning you allow the Khieevi to trace a signal back to
the Balakiire. Vi^e()haanye-feriiU Neeva and her crew have volunteered for this
mission, and have agreed to take responsibility for you. They are prepared to
make the ultimate sacrifice, if necessary, to accomplish this mission. You are
hereby dismissed into the custody of the Neeva, her crew, and the Balakiire,
and may the wit of the Ancestors and the Grace of the Friends preserve you all
from harm."
The
prisoner -was in unbearable pain. Aari had decidedly mixed feelings about the
fact. His need for revenge was at odds with his hatred of seeing anything, even
a Khieevi, suffer so. But there was one comfort to be found in the hold of this
ship, as terrifying a place as it was right now. The prisoner was klacking out
all the information Aari demanded, but neither Aari nor Becker nor even Mac,
who had been quite prepared to "slowly disassemble" the Khieevi, had
laid a finger on the creature. Whatever was causing the Khieevi so much agony,
they weren't responsible.
Instead
of disassembling it, Mac was rapidly processing the information he was given
about Khieevi klackings by Aari and the LAANYE to help interpret Aari's and
Decker's questions into simulated klacks and to interpret the answers.
The
thing lay within the cargo net on the deck, and the net s couplings were
securely fastened to the bulkhead. The monster was going nowhere. Aari was
grateful the despicable creature's form was somewhat obscured by the grid of
the net. •Is titanium strands pulled tightly across the creature's protrudlng Gyes,
restrained its pincers, and bent one antenna flat against ^e side of its
bulbous head. The putrid smell Aari had first ^ticed out by the Khieevi ship
now filled the hold and seemed 0 grow worse and worse as time went on. Becker
remarked on tne green icor draining from beneath the netted Khieevi.
"It's
messing itself, it's so scared," he said. "Scared?" Aari asked.
"A Khieevi? Scared? Of us?" "Sure. You were scared, when we
found you for the first time, weren't you?"
"Naturally,
but I am not a Khieevi." "Let me tell you a little something about
people, buddy, any kind of people," Becker said. "These creeps,"
he gestured to the Khieevi, "they like to hurt anything they come across
just to watch it squirm. It's how the buggers think. So when one of them gets
caught and put in the same position as its victims, of course it's going to
figure we'll do the same to it. Only difference is, we're after information.
According to you, when you were a Khieevi captive, they didn't seem to care all
that much if you said anything or not. They just liked to hear you scream,
right?"
"Yes,
Joh. I never understood any of that." "Well, understand this. As
afraid as you were, this critter is even more afraid. Because to do to someone
what the Khieevi did to you requires being a real lily-livered son of a gun at
heart. Yessir, these Khieevi may look like bugs, but they're all piles of pure
cowardice with legs, if you ask me. Cowards and bullies, every one."
Becker threw his arms around and let his voice ring to make it heard above the
piteous but irritating high-pitched sound the Khieevi was making. Aari had
never heard the bug-like beings make that sound -while he was among them.
Though perhaps he might have heard the sound, or a variant of it, coming from
himself.
"Now,
Aari, if you have any more "questions, ask away. Mac, you follow and see
if you can fill in any blanks for him"What will you do. Captain?" Mac
asked mildly. "I'll be thinking up threats and-uh-persuasions, Becker
said.
"Very
well, Captain. Aari?" "Mac, ask it what it was doing here, how many
others like it there are close by,
where the main fleet is, and the location of the homeworld."
Mac
manufactured the klacking sound of the Khieevi, using his mouth alone. Aari was
impressed.
The
Khieevi let forth the high-pitched whining sound once more.
"Tell
it we'll stop the pain if it gives us the data," Becker instructed Mac,
his jaw clenched tightly, his teeth bared in what was an indisputable display
of hostility-a hostility Becker seemed to be reveling in.
Aari,
on the other hand, was not enjoying his position. He had certainly thought he
-would enjoy giving back to a Khieevi what the Khieevi had done to him, but
instead he felt filled with loathing-for himself. He was now doing a Khieevi thing.
He might as -well be one. But the information was important. He put the thought
on hold when he realized Mac -was speaking, and not in klacks this time.
"Theirs
was a scout ship. The Khieevi have many such ships. Their mission was to locate
a likely world with the proper atmosphere and nutrients for consumption by the
horde. The horde's main fleet has already been notified that this being's ship
had located a large number of suitable worlds, including this one, due to a
lucky conquest of a scout ship of a twohorned race."
Mac
turned to Becker and said, "That -would be the Niriians, surely? You
understand, please, that many of the concepts this creature expresses can be
interpreted only loosely. Fortunately, because of the remaining programming from
my former i^er, I am quite conversant with the basic content of this create s
thought and language patterns and can assure you that "y interpretations
are fairly accurate. The Khieevi have a lot l" common with Kisia
Manjari."
And so
it -went. To minimize the misunderstanding or trance of lying on the part of
the Khieevi, ("Well, for pity's
sake, Aari," Decker said, "any critter who would do to you
what these guys did is certainly not going to stop at a little lt£\")
Becker insisted on asking the same questions over and over in many different
ways.
Mac
said, "You are very good at information extraction Captain Becker. Have
you been in the business before yourself?"
"No,
but my dad was great at giving pop oral exams on the subjects I was supposed to
be learning when I was a kid " Becker said. "I never could put
anything over on him. Who knew it would come in so handy? So let's go over it
all one more time ..."
Aari
found himself sweating during the questioning, remembering himself in the
Khieevi's place and hearing the squeal ooze out of the creature along with the
stench.
At some
point during the questioning, Khornya stopped by. When she left, Aari noticed
that RK was no longer in the room with them. By then, among them, they were
trying to explain to the Khieevi that they wanted the coordinates of the horde
fleet and of the Khieevi home planet, as well as the codes that would allow
them to crack Khieevi communication devices.
The
thing had just given them a useless string of babble that none of them could
decipher when the stench suddenly became much worse, the klacking much more
muffled, and the squeal thinner, higher, shriller. Then, suddenly, all was
still.
Mac
kicked at the creature. "I think it is unconscious, Captain."
"Sissy,"
Becker said. "We never touched it. Some people will do anything to get out
of having to answer a few simple questions."
"Joh,
you told it we would stop its pain if it told us what we wished to know,"
Aari said.
"Looks
to me like the pain has almost stopped," Becker said.
"No,
it is worse. The thing is dying. We must have Khornya heal it. I would but-1
cannot."
"Ain't
it just too bad for old klacker here that they took out your horn, then?"
Becker said, and Aari felt a flash of anger
toward him.
"We
must call Khornya back in to save it, Joh. It may ^ye _ more information."
"Hmm,
true. You look like you can use a break anyway, buddy. Go ahead then. Get
her."
Aari
left quickly. He was surprised to see that he had to call the robolift to return
to the deck for him to descend. Its deck was stickier than ever, despite the
heavy traffic, and when he tried to move his feet made a sucking sound. The
patches of sap were -yes, they actually were larger than they had been when he
and Becker ascended to the ship with the prisoner. He bent down, curious, to
touch the stuff. It seemed innocent enough, but when he tried to right himself,
he found that the hand he had been using to steady himself on the deck stuck to
it. He lost his footing and fell, getting sap all over the front of his
shipsuit. He unstuck himself and regained his balance with some difficulty. He
also resolved to clean the deck as soon as they had disposed of the prisoner.
As the
lift continued to descend, he saw that the bright blue day had become indigo
night, lit only by the pale blue moons. The wind soughed through the tall
sapphire grasses. Khornya was nowhere to be seen, but as he looked, he suddenly
heard a raucous "Mrowl" and saw RK bounding across the field between
the beach and the woods.
As soon
as the cat saw him, RK turned and leaped back in the direction from which he
had come. Sprinting a few steps, •\J^ turned and stared meaningfully, his
gleaming eyes twin molten gold coins. He mrowled again and Aari followed,
reluctantly. rle had planned to take a slight detour and try to clean off the
^icky, irritating sap with sea water, but the cat was trying to lead him to Khornya, of that Aari was
certain. "Where is she Riid-Kiiyi?" he asked.
RK ran
another few feet and glanced back again, mrowling for Aari to follow him. The
cat was conveying a sense of urgency that worried Aari. Through the long grass
and to the ferny trees, Aari followed the cat's lead. Khornya. The cat was
leading him to Khornya. She was in some sort of trouble, perhaps wounded, or
maybe she had found Maati and Thariinye and they were 'wounded and she had sent
the cat back for help and-
Aari
smelled the Khieevi spoor before he was actually upon it. Old and cold, it had
hardened to a nasty shiny trail. The Khieevi. The Khieevi had Khornya.
He
vomited what little food he had eaten that day into the underbrush. Returning
for Becker now was out of the question. Every moment counted-he remembered
-what the creatures had done to him and his blood ran cold at the thought of
Khornya in their clutches. Precious time would be lost if he went back to the
ship-moments Khornya would pay for in unimaginable pain if the Khieevi did
indeed have her. Somehow, somehow he had to find her, to free her, to protect
her. No one must go through what he had. Especially not Khornya-beautiful,
graceful, gentle Khornya. So kind. So caring. Practical and intelligent too and
very strong, but no one could hold out against the Khieevi. That they should
have a chance to break her into pieces as they had him was unthinkable.
Perhaps
he couldn't yet feel what he, sensed she -would have liked him to feel for
her-he still felt hollow inside, numb and cold, when he wasn't filled with pain
and fury. He had nothing to give to someone like Khornya. But he owed it to her
to make sure she lived to receive it from someone else someday.
He
followed the spoor uphill and down again and then into another section of forest, up another hill.
He did not notice when the cat disappeared once more.
But
when he heard the screams, the steady jog with which he was following the sign
lengthened to a full gallop.
As far
as Acorna could see, the problem was not
finding the Khieevi. The thing was not stealthy.
Its
excremental trail led straight to it. The only problem was how to get the
better of it before it could harm Thariinye.
They
found Thariinye first. He was at the end of the trail, wrapped up in the end of
the trail in fact, pinned by a hardened twist of it to a tree. In the chill of
the night air, his breath made a vapor, so they knew he was not dead. But
neither of them could pick up any thoughts from him, not even a snatch of
dream.
The
Khieevi stood slightly uphill from him, its moondrenched shadow falling over
them, mingling with the shadows 01 the trees. Its bug eyes were lifted to the
moons, its head bobbing. Two of its legs tended what seemed to be some sort or
electrical contraption. Sparks flew periodically between its legs and the
machine, while two more of its legs burned a bit °i the excrement, with
predictably nauseating results. After each bit of legs had gone through the
ritual, the pincers made a series of klacks, much like the Morse code Acorna
had learned on the mining ship.
Maati
and Acorna thought at the same time, (It's callingthe mother ship. We have to
stop it.)
(Free
Thariinye first,) was their next simultaneous thought. Maati saw Acorna's teeth
shining in the dark-humor and hostility mixed.
(Work
your way behind the tree, Maati. See if you can get him loose from that stuff.
Here, take my laserknife. I'll see if I can create a diversion.)
(Okay.
Be careful, Khornya.)
The two
split up, and Acorna circled wide in the forest and up the crest of the hill to
one side of the Khieevi, who was actually within a slight clearing. Peering at
the creature through the trees, she could see that it was busy with its work.
Still, she had the feeling it was only trying to make contact, not that it had
achieved its goal. Its pauses were to adjust the machine, not to listen. The
Khieevi creature must be stopped before it brought an entire invasion force
down upon them.
She
needed to draw him off, away from whatever it was he was using to communicate
and away from Thariinye and Maati. And she needed to have a plan to get away
herself, if possible, once they were a safe distance from her friends. She
thought for a second, took a deep breath, and started moving.
She
picked up a stick, flung it at the creature, and raced off down the hill at a
diagonal from Thariinye's position.
"Neener
neener neener!" she yelled at the Khieevi, using an expression she'd
picked up from the kids on Maganos Moonbase as she galloped down the hill. She
glanced back to see if it was paying attention.
It gave
two hops and was almost upon her.
She
took off at a dead run, thundering down the hill, screaming at the top of her
lungs, with the Khieevi hopping behind her, covering two or three yards with
each hop.
(Khornya,
run!) Maati cried inside her head. (I can't get through this stuff without Thariinye's help. And I can't wake
Thariinye.)
(Try
harder. Use your horn if you have to.)
(What
if I hurt Thariinye?)
(Better
that than what the Khieevi will do to him.)
Thinking
and running at the same time was not easy. Acorna stumbled across a broken tree
and fell sprawling among the branches. In two short hops the Khieevi was
practically upon her. She dove under the fronds and wriggled her way to the
trunk, then hopped up and tried to run again, only to find her leg wouldn't
-work. Sharp pains -were running up it.
The
heat and stench and klack of the Khieevi were all around her as she tried to
squirm and touch her horn to her leg.
The
huge bug appeared nightmarishly dim through the fronds as it jumped-and landed
on her hurt leg.
Acorna
had not cried out for help, mentally or aloud, because she did not wish for
Maati to run to the rescue and try to fight the Khieevi. But the sudden pain
was so intense she let out a piercing scream.
"Hey
you! Big old bug!" Maati sang out, followed by Thariinye yelling,
"I'm over here, you slimy hulk of a feces machine!"
The
Khieevi stepped back for a moment, uncertain. Then Acorna could swear it bared
what passed for teeth in that gaping maw, and deliberately brought its foot
down again on, well, on the area where her leg had been, because she had pulled
the broken limb out of the way.
"Maati,
you silly child, run!" Acorna cried.
"Don't
you hurt her again, you dung-eating pile of-of dung!" Maati yelled.
Footsteps ran in closer.
"Maati,
no," Acorna screamed. And so did Maati. Acorna Gouldn't see what happened,
but she heard a crunch and a yelp, wen a sound as if the air was being let out
of something.
'You
pick on little girls, you bag of excrement!" Thariinye hollered. "Why
not tie me to a tree with your slimy trail again!" He profited by Maati's example because his
voice grew a bit fainter and Acorna heard the sound of his feet crushing brush
as he retreated. The Khieevi gave a hop-and she was free. At least for a
moment.
Bending
from the waist she rubbed her horn against her leg once she had the bone
properly aligned. The pain eased at once, but she was forced to concentrate on
the healing of the limb rather than on anything around her. She had no idea,
for a precious few moments, whether or not Maati was living -whether Thariinye
had escaped capture while leading the Khieevi from her, or even if the Khieevi
was about to step on her head this time.
As soon
as the pain stopped and the bone had knitted, Acorna raised herself up to see
the Khieevi grab for the dancing Thariinye with its front pincers. Thariinye
screamed, and Acorna grabbed the nearest object-a rock from the ground beneath
her-and threw it at the Khieevi.
The big
insectoid was not so quickly fooled this time. It grabbed Thariinye and began
slashing at him with its razorsharp pincers, leaving gruesome wounds on
Thariinye's upraised hands and arms. Acorna leaped across the fallen trunk of
the tree and pounded on the carapace of the creature with her fists -while her
old shipmate's heart-rending cries rang in her ears.
"Let
go, let go, let go!" she bawled.
The
Khieevi did let go, and Thariinye, bleeding from many wounds, fell like a limp
doll very close to Maati's still form. Acorna turned and ran.
The Khieevi
rounded on Acorna, its pincers snapping. Only a single tree hung between them.
Then, with a chomp and a noisome burst of gas, the tree -was gone. Acorna
turned and ran, leaping over the fallen tree this time, putting it between
herself and the Khieevi. She dashed past frond after frond, only to have them vanish down the Khieevi's maw
to reappear behind the creature as another smelly bit of trail.
The
Khieevi seemed to smile as it took its last bite from the tree trunk, taunting
her with its deliberate progress as it ate away her only barrier. She kept
moving, mentally calling to Maati and Thariinye, hoping to hear a response but
urging them to lie still.
The
Khieevi finished the tree trunk. Acorna backed up against another tree. It
followed her slowly, taking first one chomp and then another from fronds she
thrust between them. It was clearly enjoying the game.
She
shrieked as a pincer came within a centimeter of her face. The Khieevi snapped
at her, then brought its pincers up again, close to her horn. She dodged and
tried to dive between its lower legs.
All at
once, from the corner of her eye, she saw a white blur. The Khieevi fell over
backward, a Linyaari form bearing it to the ground, surrounded by its flailing
legs and pincers.
(Khornya,
run!) Aari's voice was mental, but far from a whisper. (Get Joh. Get weapon. I
will keep it here as long as I can, but you must save yourself and my sister.)
(You can't fight it alone, Aari.) (No, but I can Delay it. Go!) (It will kill
you!) (I am carrion already.)
She ran
through the woods screaming for Becker, screaming Ae names of her fallen
friends.
Much to
her surprise, Becker and Mac, brandishing weapons, bounded toward her through
the woods, Becker yelling, "Where is he? Point and duck!"
She
turned and ran back toward Aari, who, much to her ^rprise, was raising himself
unharmed from among curled ^leevi legs and pincers. The creature made no
attempt to stop him or damage him. Instead it stayed on the ground, emitting the same high-pitched
"eee-eee-eee" sound their prisoner had made back on the ship. Decker
paid none of that any attention at all. As soon as Aari -was clear, Becker
pressed his rifle against his hip and fired. A huge crackling hole opened up in
the creature and it was still.
The
echo of the shot had not yet faded when a pair of Linyaari figures carrying
what looked like strips of metal came running over the hill. (Maati? Aari? By
the ancestors, are they ()ea()1)
Acorna
grabbed Aari's arm and heard the mental call when she touched him. (Mother?
Father?) he said, stunned.
Maati
sat up, groggy. "Did somebody call me?"
Acorna
released Aari and moved to kneel beside Thariinye. Her old shipmate did not
look up, but she could see he was breathing. His shipsuit was a bloody mess.
One of his hands dangled from a scrap of skin protruding from his sleeve. A
chunk was missing from his right cheek and one of his eyes •was swelled shut,
the lid and brow lacerated. His horn was an inch or so shorter than it had
been.
"Thariinye!"
Maati cried, and rose to her hands and knees to do a very fast crawl to
Thariinye's other side. "Oh, no, look at his hand."
"Maati?
Baby, is that you, all grown up?" the male Linyaari who had appeared
during the fight asked.
Maati's
face rose to look at the two tall Linyaari strangers. Once she got a good look
at their faces she ran to them, crying. "Mother? Father? Help us!
Thariinye's hurt bad. He made the Khieevi fight him so it wouldn't kill
me." She dragged her parents back to Thariinye's side.
"My
goodness," her mother said. "The young man certainly is in a bad way,
but this young lady is doing a fine job or healing him. Maati?"
The
male Linyaari gently shoved Acorna aside and bent his own horn to Thariinye's hand. "Allow me, my dear. This boy
was little more than a toddler when we left narhii-Vhiliinyar. And now he's
been wounded protecting our little girl."
Acorna
willingly surrendered Thariinye's care to the man. She was weary beyond belief
from her own ordeal, but she needed to see to Aari. He hadn't appeared to be
greatly harmed by his own encounter with the Khieevi, although he had been
locked in its multilegged embrace. But there had been something odd about their
"parting."
Becker
and Aari were both bent over the corpse of the Khieevi, studying it.
"The
Khieevi -was dying when you shot it, Joh. It could not hold on to me. See how
its legs are curled?"
"Lead
poisoning -will do that to you," Becker growled.
"Lead
poisoning? Where was the lead?" Aari asked. "You used the laser
canon."
"Figure
of speech," Becker replied.
"Aari,
are you hurt?" Acorna asked, looking him over careful. "The front of
your shirt-it's a mess."
Aari
looked down and said with satisfaction, "Khieevi blood, mostly. You or
Thariinye must have wounded the creature before I reached it. I had no
-weapons."
"Neither
did we," Acorna said. "We weren't expecting trouble here." She
knelt to examine the dead Khieevi. Gingerly, she touched its chest along the
edge of the wound made by Becker's laser cannon. "What is this? It's not
the same color as the Khieevi blood."
"Oh-that's
from me," Aari said, "I fell in the sap on the robohft when I left
the ship. It was all over the front of my ^ipsuit."
Acorna
tried to remove the sap with her finger but it had ^tually sunk into the
Khieevi's carapace. In fact, she saw as ^e pulled some of the sap aside, it had
eaten away a portion or the creature's shell-like protection. She looked up at the two men who were
frowning down watching her. "What became of the other Khieevi?"
"It
was dying when -we left the ship," Aari said. "I came to get you to
heal it."
"Did
you harm it?"
"No-no,
we did not have to harm it. It seemed to ... believe we were harming it,
though, and we let it think so," Aari said.
"We
really were going to let you heal it up, honest," Becker said. "As
soon as -we got all the information we needed. Figured maybe the scientists
could study the thing-" He tried to sound innocent. Acorna knew? that
Becker had just thought of the scientists studying the Khieevi. He had been
very much against healing its wounds. "Maybe it was hurt worse in the
crash than we figured. It told us what we wanted to know and then- really,
pretty conveniently-it keeled over. Aari was coming to get you to see if you
could maybe heal it or something."
Both
men looked very uncomfortable. Acorna looked from one to the other. "I
don't think it was the injuries in the crash that killed that prisoner-and I
suspect this one was mortally wounded from the moment Aari jumped on him."
"You
jumped that thing, buddy?" Becker asked Aari, clapping him on the back.
"Way to go. I didn't think you had it in you. Not bad for a
pacifist."
"You
miss the point, Joh. Khornya just said I killed the Khieevi. How did I do that,
Khornya?"
"The
sap on your shipsuit," Acorna told him.
"Ye-es,"
Aari said. "Yes. That makes sense. I remember the first time we saw the
sap. It killed small insects preying upon the vines in the home-world."
"Yeah,
the plants thought -we were a bug, too," Becker said. "They slimed
the Condor, trying to get through its shell. Lucky us, it didn't work."
"The
sap probably only destroys selected organic sub stances. Judging by the
results, I would guess that the polysaccharides in the Khieevi's chitin
carapaces are susceptible to it, Joh," Aari said.
"Good.
Anything that eats up Khieevi shells is fine by me," Becker rejoined.
Acorna
glanced over and saw Maati and her parents were helping Thariinye stand. His
clothing was still bloody, but he was moving the fingers of his formerly
injured hand, and all of the gashes and gouges were cleaned up. His horn,
however, remained shorter than it had been.
Aari
deliberately turned his back on the Linyaari quartet as he, Becker, and Mac
began pulling another of the titanium cargo nets around the dead Khieevi.
Acorna, panting and catching her breath, stared at his back, and shook her
head. He was clearly not going to fall on the necks of his long-lost parents
and rejoice at their presence. In fact, it looked like he was going to avoid
dealing with them at all, if he could.
Miiri-Maati
and Aari's mother-was the first to discover the rash on Aari's hands. While
Aari's palms -were now mostly cleaned of sap, they were red and itching,
swelling in places. He kept pausing in the journey to rub his palms on the legs
of his shipsuit. His mother, who had been trying to run along beside him to
talk to him, noticed.
Aari
tried to ignore his mother but Acorna stopped him, turning to rest a hand on
his arm, raised his palm and examined it. I had an itchy red place like this on
my finger just now, from where I examined the sap on the edge of the Khieevi's
wound, but I put it up to my horn and it healed. Let me see if I can help
you," she said, lowering her horn to Aari's palms and touching them
lightly, first one hand and then the other.
The
pain he was in was all too evident in his rigid posture and the look in his
eyes. Finally he let out a sigh of relief and gave her a look half of
irritation, half of gratitude.
"That
sap, which eats into the Khieevi shells and kills them in short order,
apparently merely causes an allergic reaction in our species," Acorna
said. "It's irritating, but the sap doesn't appear to be lethal to
us."
"Mac,"
Becker said, "-when we get back to the ship, priority one is for you to
scrape all that sap off the robolift and collect it, then stow it in one of the
unpressurized cargo bays. I want samples of it analyzed as soon as possible.
This stuff could be useful."
The
next few hours were a blur of activity. Maati and Aari's parents thought-spoke
with the other Linyaari while everyone worked, telling a little bit of their
adventures while stranded on this planet. Their survival here was a testament
to both their courage and cleverness. But Maati had so much to say to her
mother and father that she chattered away like a magpie, using her newfound
telepathic abilities. So, consequently, most of the conversation centered on
Maati's recent escapades, rather than on her parents doings since they left
their home-world in search of their children. And, despite the need to
reconnect with the -wanderers, there was too much to accomplish to truly do
justice to the occasion. All the Linyaari, as well as the remaining crew of the
Comfor, bent their backs to the tasks at hand. They wanted to load both the
crashed Khieevi shuttle and the remains of the Nilkaavri aboard the Condor, as
well as any other cargo they could reach or Mac could -wade out to retrieve.
The main Khieevi ship was simply shattered, most of the resulting fragments of
debris too small to be of interest even to Becker, though they salvaged what
they could.
(Why
are we bothering with this trash right now?) Kaarlye, Maati and Aari's father,
asked Maati. (Don't we need to get in contact with our people? The Khieevi were
here.) The parents, without time to sleep-learn standard Galatic from the
LAANYE, could make no sense of Becker's or Mac's thought patterns, though RK-as always-managed to make
himself understood.
(I will
see what I can find out,) Maati told him.
"Captain,"
Maati said in Linyaari, following Becker down the beach until -when he turned
back to pick up another piece of salvage he nearly stepped on her. "If the
Khieevi are scouting this area and the swarm is near, shouldn't we leave this
stuff until later and return to narhii-Vhiliinyar to warn the people ~ "
Becker
tried to answer, first in Standard, then in the broken Linyaari he had picked
up from Aari. Before Kaarlye's confusion became total, Acorna hurriedly
translated Becker's answers as physically transmitted by Maati.
"Well,"
Becker said, "except for finding you and Thariinye here, we haven't had
any communication from your planet since we sent the pilyi data, honey. We told
'em to get back to us with a translation, remember? I don't think they're
listening to us, and I'm sure they're not talking to us. I don't imagine that's
going to change now, even though -we've got things to tell them. I hate to say
it, but for all we know, the Khieevi could be there already, maybe even been
there and left.
"That
monster we -were able to question only knew the position of the fleet as of the
last transmission he'd received, which was days ago. If it helps, as far as the
prisoner knew, the Khieevi -weren't on your -world yet at that time. But -we
dont know what's going on at your home, nor can we give them any solid
information other than the warning about the iMueevi maybe being in the
neighborhood that we already sent-you know, the one that made you and Thariinye
go hur"ing into space? We gave your people that warning when we fansnutted
the piiyi contents-though from what you've told us about that horse-faced
vilsmar of yours, it might not have °Re any good. All we can really add to our
first broadcast is at we've found your parents here. Whatever's happening back
your planet, our help's too far away and will arrive too late to change anything. That's why I'm not in
any hurry to talk to your planet.
"Right
now, I'm more worried about us. That bug we talked to told the rest of the bugs
exactly where this planet is, and how rich it is in Khieevi food. The swarm
could be on their way here, for all we know. We could have a lot of time, or
-we could have very little, before they arrive. My scanners don't show anything,
but that's not conclusive. So that's why I -want all the salvage we can manage
to get aboard the Condor before we take off. If the com system in the Khieevi
shuttle is undamaged-it looks pretty good to me-and if we can turn it on and
get it working, there's a chance it could still be getting signals from the
fleet, which would tell us where they are, and maybe even where they're
going."
So
everyone pitched in and worked for hours gathering the cargo and transporting
it to the ship. After they got it all stacked ready to stow, they watched Mac
open his forearm and extract a paint-scraping tool. Then the android punched a
button just under the skin of his wrist that switched him to what looked like a
holovid on fast forward. With rapid sweeps, he cleaned the robolift of sap and
stored the sticky stuff carefully in one of Captain Decker's ceramic yogurt
containers-after first evicting the yogurt and cleaning the dish, of course.
"What am I to do with this, Captain?" Mac asked. "Stow it in one
of the outer holds, not a temperaturecontrolled one. The sap was doing just
fine out there in the cold vaccuum while we traveled here. I don't want to mess
with a working system. Great stars and asteroids, -will you look at my
hull?" The ConSor was normally a silvery metallic color but now was
covered with broad trails of the yellowish sap as vines would cover a quaint
cottage. "I guess this stuff "was frozen in space and is having a
field day here thawing out."
Acorna
stopped relaying his words to the non-Standardspeaking newcomers, and
suggested, "Captain, -we should make
certain none of the sap is left behind since it is alien to this
ecology, and may greatly damage it."
"I
was gonna say that next," Becker told her. Once the lift was cleared and
they were sure no sap remained on the ground, everyone helped load the cargo.
Mac returned from stowing the sap and carried the heavier items such as the
nearly intact Khieevi shuttle. Becker cast a regretful glance at the hull of
the Linyaari vessel. "I really want to take that with us, but I can't
justify the time it would take to grab it, disassemble it, and stow it. Well, I
guess since you guys came with it, it's not really salvage anyway."
Acorna
thought he was going to cry in his mustache at leaving such a valuable item
behind, so she patted his arm and said, "When the crisis is over. Captain,
we can always return for it."
"That's
right," he said, and brightened up immediately. She translated for the
newcomers again and Kaarlye said, "Yes. Perhaps when he returns the
captain could retrieve our escape pod as well. We're very fond of it. It saved
our lives, you know."
I think
-we'd all like to know how you came to be
here and what has happened to you since you left
narhii-Vhiliinyar," Acorna said much later to Kaarlye and Miiri. Becker,
RK, and Mac were manning and catting the helm. Aari and Acorna led their new
guests to the hydroponics gardens to graze.
"There's
not much to tell really," Miiri told her. "We left as soon as Maati
could be cared for by someone else." She ran her hand over Maati's mane.
"You do understand, my dear, that we didn't think we would be gone long,
and we didn't wish to endanger you, should the Khieevi still be in the area of
our old home. We hoped somehow our boys-you, Aari, and-"
"Laarye
died. Mother, -while I -was a prisoner of the Khieevi," Aari said.
"I'm sorry. I couldn't save him."
"Yes,"
she said simply. "I felt it."
(Did
you feel me, too, Mother? Did you feel my suffering?) At his mother's shocked
look, the stolid, mildly bored look Aari wore as a mask left his face and he,
too, looked shocked. "I didn't say anything," he said a little
pleadingly to Acorna. She let out the breath she had sucked in when he spoke to
his mother.
(You
used thought-speak, as you did with me earlier -when the Khieevi attacked me.)
(I-did
not think anyone could hear me. I did not realize-)
(I
heard you,) Acorna said. (I heard you this afternoon •when the thing -was
attacking me. It gave me courage, knowing you were coming.)
"I
heard you, too, my son," his mother said. The light in the hydroponics
gardens was dim now, simulating nighttime to give the plants a rest. The air
smelled sweet and fresh down here. The rest of the ship'd had a very pungent
odor when the six Linyaari boarded. Even though Mac had dragged the Khieevi
corpses into another outer hold, and cleaned the sap and the Khieevi blood from
the decks, the Condor reeked. Of course, the Linyaari horns cleansed the air.
But it still seemed like the dead Khieevi could stink up the place a little
faster than the Linyaari horns could clean it.
This
area of the ship was something of a showplace, one Acorna and Aari had worked
hard to bring into being. They had draped drop cloths from the bulkhead above
the space so that they resembled clouds and sky. The ship's artificial lighting
now shone down on them, filtered gently by the "sky." All six
Linyaari were squatted in grazing posture, in a circle, staring at each other
through eyes shining with the reflection of the simulated moon. A little
enclosed pond Acorna had created to make the area nicer as -well as to maintain
the humidity needed for optimum plant growth sent rippling shadows across the
billowing drop-cloth clouds.
"I
heard you across the galaxies, Son. I heard your brother die and I heard your
screams," his mother said. "Why do you think we left Maati with
Grandam and returned?"
"To
join me in the Khieevi torture chamber?" he asked. Aari's bitterness -was
all too visible then. He could not choke it down, and Acorna knew that this was
some of the buried pain she'd been unable to touch in him. "What a waste
that would have been. You would have
done better to have parented Maati, even if you hadn't given up on Laarye and
me."
"Hear
me," his mother said. "I heard you. We came when we could."
"She
heard you," his father said, his face solemn and his eyes deeply sad.
"She screamed at night along with you. She lost all sleep and appetite as
she endured with you what you endured. Did you. not hear her as our enemies killed
not only your brother Laarye, but the twins she lost before she carried
Maati?"
Acorna
gazed at Miiri more closely. She was very thin, but then, Linyaari -were
inclined toward slenderness as a rule. Her eyes were a beautiful copper color,
but set deeply in her head. The color and texture of her skin -were not good.
Not sickly- her lifemate would have healed her if it had been merely an illness
that troubled her-but unhealthy nonetheless. Strain had etched deep lines from
her nose to her mouth, and other lines formed a diamond with points at the base
of her horn and the bridge of her nose.
"And
you, Father?" Aari asked. "You felt nothing."
"You
know I have very little of the empathy that is your both your mother's gift and
her curse. I concentrated on sending. Sending you the directions to our new
world, suggesting ways to escape, and praying to our ancient friends that
somehow you would be saved, that Vhiliinyar itself might cast out the invaders
and preserve my sons."
Aari
looked aghast. "But-I did know how to get to narhiiVhiliinyar. Were we not
all programmed that way?"
Kaarlye
shook his head, his mane flying and settling again, briefly silver in the
lamplight, a slight whuffling snort emitting from his nostrils and lips.
"Of course not. I am a strong sender."
Aari
looked abashed for a moment, then defiant. He inclined his head briefly in
acknowledgment.
"But-you
had me," Maati said, almost wailing.
"Yes,
youngling my own," her mother said, stroking her cheek with the back of
her fingers. "We had you. It was your birth that delayed us. Grandam would
not permit me to move, she kept me sedated with good herbs and sang me soothing
songs through the night and a circle of women laid horns on me for hours a day
until you were safely into the world. But then, oh Maati, my love, we haS to
go. With you there to carry on the clan name, safe with Grandam, we had to go
find your brother. I heard him no longer, you see, once you were born. And yet
I had not felt his death. As terrible as his torment had been, I knew what it
meant "while it continued. It told me Aari lived and he felt and that I
was in contact with him. But then he was lost and I did not know what to think.
I could not feel him, I could not-"
"My
horn," Aari said, touching the slightly indented scar on his forehead.
"They had taken my horn. It nearly killed me. No doubt the loss also . . .
lessened . . . my ability to transmit to you, Mother."
"Yes,"
his father said. His mother could not speak for the tears choking her. Acorna
was rapidly wiping away her own. Maati sniffled and snuffled. Thariinye,
strangely quiet, put his arm around her. Maati's mother also held her daughter
close. Acorna laid a hand on Maati's knee and one on Aari's. He lifted her hand
and held it against his face for a moment, bending his head to press it between
his jaw and his shoulder. His face was damp, but she thought it was
perspiration rather than tears. This confrontation was very painful for him,
but a good pain, she hoped, a healing pain. Aari's nerve endings burned with
life again.
"To
lose a child to untimely death is almost the worst thing there is for a parent.
To know a child is being deliberately and terribly injured is even •worse. But
when I lost you, when I didn't know where you were or what was happening to
you, to know you were there but not to feel you-that was unbearable.
Had it
not been for the twins, and then Maati, we -would have left to find you long
before we finally departed."
Miiri
reached out to Aari, but he flinched away from her touch. She withdrew her hand
and rested it on her knee. Raising her chin, she continued her tale. "When
-we could, -we flew back to Vhiliinyar. We maintained radio silence lest the
Khieevi trace the signal. But our old home planet had been violently altered,
and it seemed it was now fighting back. From our vantage point in low orbit -we
could see that the beautiful greens, blues, and purples of our world were gray
and black now, with angry red sores and craters all over. The seas had dried
up, leaving behind cracked and broken soil, and where once streams had flowed
through mountain meadows the barren riverbeds flowed instead with magma from
the ravished peaks. Indeed, many of our mountains had hurled themselves into
the heavens, erupting violently. One of these eruptions destroyed our
spacecraft before we could raise our shields. It came from nowhere. We took
heavy damage. Knowing that the ship was likely to break up at any time, -we
headed toward the nearest habitable planet. As we approached the atmosphere of
this world, we barely had time to slip into the pod and eject before the ship
was destroyed. We landed here, much as Maati and Thariinye did, the pod's
sensors guiding us to a safe landing. Here there was food and water, and
breathable air. We survived and waited for rescue, so that we could continue
our search for our son." Mini's voice grew small and stilled, her hands
clasping and unclasping on her knees, her eyes dropping from Aari's.
Acorna,
her hand still in Aari's, with her other hand took one of Miiri's and joined it
with her son's. They did not clasp hands, but they touched. Miiri raised her
eyes again and searched Aari's.
Kaarlye
took up the tale. "There was little we could do but survive, and wait, and
hope that you would somehow free yourself from the Khieevi. And here you
are."
He
ruffled Maati's hair. "And here you are, too, our beautiful daughter,
starclad and a young lady now."
Aari's
hand clutched his mother's now, and Acorna slipped away as the family reunited.
Thariinye sat there watching, so quiet it was hard to believe he was Thariinye.
Acorna
joined Becker on watch. Mac had shut himself down to conserve his batteries. RK
sat cleaning himself, warming his underside on the lights from the console. The
piiyi that had played constantly on the corn screen was blessedly shut off for
the moment.
Becker
looked around as Acorna slid into the chair beside his.
"Family
reunion stuff, huh?" he asked.
Acorna
nodded, feeling happy but subdued. The emptiness that was in Aari was filling
in like a dry spring after a dam had broken, and to a lesser extent, the same
thing was occurring with Maati. It made Acorna feel wistful, wishing that
perhaps her own parents had escaped somewhere, could rejoin her. But no, she did
not feel that would happen. She had not known them, had missed them as a baby
only long enough for dear Gil, Calum, and Rafik to learn her Linyaari baby
names for mother and father, and then she had been wrapped in the loving care
of her three "uncles" who -were actually her fathers, and all of her
other new friends, who were her family. Now she had an aunt and a planet and so
much more-and she did not begrudge Aari finding his parents and learning of
their continued love for him and Maati. And yet-
Becker
leaned over and patted her shoulder. "Makes you wonder, doesn't it,
Princess?"
"What?"
she asked. Becker was better at reading thoughts than she'd realized.
"What
your own folks were like, what it would have been like to be with them, you
know. I knew my mother a little- she was a scientist someplace, I'm not really
sure where. I was about three
"when there were a lot of explosions and gunshots and she fell down with
blood all over her and then I was taken to the slave farm on Kezdet. Maybe it's
because I -was only three then, but what I remember most about it was, it was
boring being with my mom. And one thing about Dad-Dad Becker, I mean-there was
nothing boring about him. I don't reckon I've missed anything, come to think
about it." But she saw, in his heart, where that creek in him "was
still dry, 'waiting for the dam to break and water it. ,
And she
knew that in spite of all of her friends and her adopted parents and her real
Linyaari kinfolk, she had a similar dry creek inside herself. But dwelling on
such things was pointless. Besides, she had work to do. She looked out at the
stars and asked, "Where to now, Captain?"
For the
Balakiire, tracing the signal to the blue planet -was not difficult. The
coordinates had been on the piiyi, and the NiikcLavri's ion tracings led
straight to the planet. But none of the crew was prepared, as the Kalakiire
began to home in on the beach where once the Condor had landed, for the site of
the Niikaavrl's broken shell, lying open to the elements as if some massive
chick had hatched from it and abandoned it there.
They
saw wreckage bobbing in the sea as well, and washing up onto the beach. After a
closer look at it, Neeva recognized some of the fragments as coming from a
Khieevi vessel. A quick trip back to the ship to consult the scanners gave no
indication of a continuing Khieevi presence on the planet. From there it was
just a matter of figuring out exactly what had happened. Beginning at a
debris-littered indentation in a sand dune, they followed a trail of Khieevi
excrement. Liriili was given the honor of walking in front, •which she did with
the poor grace Neeva expected of her. The broken trees, the large, coagulated
pool of blood surrounded by many other blood-stained fronds and ruined trees
and crushed leaves, drew a low, painful groan from all them. They followed the
trail further up a hill, until they
came to a place where a tree was surrounded by broken heaps of the solidified
dung. They searched farther still, and found that beyond this last hill, the
woods thinned once more into a low marshland of reeds, and beyond that
stretched the "wide blue sea. Only a few pieces of debris bobbed on the
-waves on this side of the landspit. But tucked up next to the trees, in a
small clearing that showed signs of occupation, lay an eggshaped vessel covered
with a symbolic design. Liriili gasped as if this came as a surprise to her,
which of course it should not have done.
The
Linyaari made their way to the shuttle and examined it.
"This
is the design registered to the . . . the ship Kaarlye and Miiri took when they
went in search of their sons?" Neeva asked.
Liriili
nodded reluctantly.
"You
are sure?"
Liriili's
eyes were reddened and slightly bulging, as they had been since the return of
the pilgrims and the ancestors. She had not been a pleasant shipboard
companion. No number of Linyaari horns could cleanse the atmosphere of her
energy field, which was so discordant as to upset the harmony of even such a
close-knit crew as the Balaklire's.
"I
should know," she said hollowly. "I watched that transmission and
checked over the information Thariinye had gathered from the files over and
over again. It's not as if I made my decision lightly, you know. I was doing as
I always have done, acting with the good of our people in mind, and this is the
. . ."
"Yes,
yes," Khaari, who was not a diplomat, said shortly. "Thariinye and
Maati's ship lies in pieces, and we have found traces that indicate the
Coru)or, containing Khornya and Aari, was in the vicinity of the armed Khieevi
ship that wrecked the Niikaavrl. Khieevi spoor is all about, and here is the
pod belong ing to Kaarlye and Miiri, but this -whole situation is still all
about how badly misunderstood you. are."
Liriili
gave her a sullen look and sniffed. "Whatever . . . but since everyone
you've mentioned except the Khieevi -who made these trails are no doubt dead,
perhaps -we could end this futile mission and return home?"
"I'm
surprised you want to," Neeva said. "In your place I would be
considering a long mission that sent me to the farthest galaxy imaginable,
preferably one where no one ever heard of me."
"That
is your nature," Liriili said. "It is not mine. I am not a
spacefarer."
"You
are now," Melireenya said. "I can't believe you can look at all of
this without some feeling of compassion, some sadness perhaps, even remorse in
the case of Maati and Thariinye."
"If
you think the arbitrary decision of a council influenced by an influx of my
enemies is going to make me feel guilty, you are very much mistaken. I did what
I thought best for the good of the planet. If harm befell anyone because of my
decision, then it is the Khieevi who are at fault, not me."
Khaari
rummaged in the pod and pulled out the tiny capsule that kept a record of its
flight.
In the
ship's shuttle, they did a low flyby circling the planet. Though they looked
carefully, they never found another biped lifeform on the planet's surface,
dead or alive.
Back in
space once more, they discussed what should next be done.
"We
must -warn our allies of the impending Khieevi threat," Neeva said.
"The
same -way they warned us of the fake Federation troops?" Khaari asked
-with a trace of bitterness lingering from that betrayal.
"Those
enemies -were only human beings," Neeva said. "Bad ones, admittedly, but still merely human.
And they tricked our allies. It "wasn't right, what happened to our people
as a result, but letting the Khieevi overtake any civilization without -warning
would not be right either."
"I
suppose not. Should I begin a broadcast?" "No!" Liriili said,
"You will lead them straight to us, and from us to
narhii-Vhiliinyar."
Neeva
sighed. "I'm afraid I have to agree -with you, Liriili. No, silence is
still necessary this close to recent Khieevi depredations. I'm afraid we must
deliver at least the Erst of our warnings personally."
They
returned to their ship, docked the shuttle, and plotted a course that would
take them toward the inhabited planets closest to their homeworld.
The
ConDor transmitted broadcasts on all channels to all worlds and spacecraft
within range about the Khieevi threat. The Linyaari response to their message
proved to be typical- not a single reply came from any of the planets they'd
targeted. But three days and a two wormholes away from the blue world, Acorna
was startled and delighted to see Calum Baird's face on the corn screen and to
hear him say, "This is the Acadecki, Con<)or. Read you loud and clear.
Acorna, what in the cosmos are you and that ;unk ship up to now? Didn't we
teach you better than to play with the Khieevi? They're not nice."
"Roger,
Calum," Acorna said, baring her teeth at her beloved foster father, who
was likewise baring"his teeth at her. Before they could say more, however,
other faces and signals replaced Calum's in quick succession.
Becker,
hearing the unfamiliar voices, came running to the bridge, followed quickly by
Aan and their Linyaari guests and Mac.
"Damn,
are we back in the Federation already?" Becker bellowed. "We musta taken a wrong turn at the last wormhole.
I told you that was a left, Aari."
Aari,
who was used to Decker's odd expressions said, had picked up a couple of them
himself. "I am sorry, Joh," he said. "I must have done the wrong
thing while attempting to determine which turn signal to activate."
Maati
stared wide-eyed at the faces on the screen, while Kaarlye and Miiri looked
alarmed and Thariinye began translating with only a trace of his former pomp.
The
younger male had changed his attitude quite a bit since being captured by the
Khieevi. At first, right after he'd been rescued, he had retreated into
himself, uncharacteristically tremulous and reticent. All Maati's goading,
Becker's scolding, and Acorna's kindness couldn't reach him. But Aari had been
wonderful with him, encompassing him in an exclusive wordless empathy extended
from the first and heretofore only Linyaari to survive capture by the Khieevi
to the second. Thariinye had responded to Aari's help with relief and something
like hero worship. He'd had a taste of -what the Khieevi were capable of, and
couldn't begin to imagine what Aari's ordeal had been like. The bond was
clearly healing for them both.
Aari
had begun to speak with his parents and Maati of his time alone and with the Khieevi
on Vhilnnyar. Some of what he described was new to Acorna and even to Becker.
Now that all of them had had such a close shave-Becker's description, but an
apt one-with the Khieevi, everyone understood Aari's experiences much more
fully. They were horrified for him, of course, but their reaction was one of
grim comprehension, not shock or squeamishness.
With
his new air of self-assurance, Aan faced the parade of faces on the com screen
with a degree of comfort he'd never exhibited in the past.
Once
everyone had been hailed, Acorna switched back to Calum. "Delighted as I am to see you, what are all these
ships doing here?" Acorna said.
"We
re en route to join Ha£z and his caravan at the House Harakamian Moon of
Opportoooonity," Calum said, deepening his voice into a parody of a
Scottish brogue. "It's on that moon you used as a base of operations to
rescue the folks Ganoosh and Ikwaskwan captured."
Becker
chuckled. The wily Hafiz's lust for trade reminded him of his own for salvage.
"His timing coulda been a little better," Becker told Calum.
"According to-uh-our informant, this whole sector will be crawling with
Khieevi before long. On the other hand, if the old pirate had waited till
later, there wouldn't have been anybody to trade with, so we'll just have to
deal with it, I guess. I presume you're up for a bit of haggling over rescuing
the galaxy once again?"
Caravan
Harakamian had come to rest at its destination after sailing through vast
distances of space. Along the way it stopped at various watering holes and
oases to refuel and pick up a few forgotten but essential supplies, experts in
various fields, security personnel, and general shopping. Its space-going
"camels" were fat with the finest cargo by the time they arrived at
the desolate moon.
In less
time than it took the genie to build the castle of Aladdin, Hafiz and his
colleagues in commerce had erected a gigantic trade center. Hafiz used his own
hologrammatic magic to disguise the envirobubbles as giant Linyaari pavilions,
such as those described to him by Acorna and Aari. From the inside the bubbles
were all blue sky and flying birds, -waterfalls and forests and mountains in
the distance. In the foreground was the flowering vine of goods and services,
the commercial center that House Harakamian erected solely to attract the
Linyaari and their allies to what Hafiz fondly hoped would be an exclusive
trade agreement.
Calum
Baird had taken charge of leading a second expedition of technicians who set up
relays between the new sector and the old one, specifically Laboue and Maganos
Moonbase.
Rafik,
Gill, Mercy, Judit, Pal, Johnny, and Ziana ensured that the kids who came from
Maganos Moonbase and the crew of the Haven were given all possible learning
opportunities. Some of the older children were now of age for university
training. Those whose brains had been damaged by deprivation or who had been
kidnapped into slavery so young that they were still catching up on their
educations remained on Maganos Moonbase in the care of trusted teachers and
some of the more gifted older children. They would help coordinate future
supply caravans, and the transmission of orders from the new Moon of
Opportunity, as Hafiz had dubbed his trading colony.
Dr.
Hoa's weather wizardry created a climate both varied and pleasant, cycling
through a temperate change of weather every thirty days. With the resident
botanists, he came up with species well adapted for several days of warm rain
with intermittent hard rain, interspersed with brilliant warm sunshine,
followed by crisp autumnal days that caused the special trees to turn bright
red and gold and drop their leaves before the snow that fell only on the lawns
and in the mountains on the recreational portion of the moon, where residents
and guests were provided with skiing, snowboarding, ice skating, sledding, and
ski lodge activities.
In
another part of the resort area, specially tailored palms swayed above a
"white sand beach onto which surfable waves glistened and slid under
sailable winds. Provisions were made for the alien recreational activities
Hafiz had knowledge of as well, vine swinging (for the Limurian jungle
dwellers), mudrolling (for the Porcinian beings of the Greater Ursine
constellation), and of course, high and low gravity events-long distance
jumping sports and soil diving among them. Hafiz's brochure promised that more
exotic entertainments would be offered later.
His
hologram wizardry also made the hotels playgrounds for both the children and
the sophisticates, offering a variety of
fantasy-oriented suites and facilities, even holographic houris. He was
a bit surprised that Khetala, who had been reeducating former pleasure house
employees, took it upon herself to visit the holographic harems of the houris.
While there she attempted to convince the denizens they were being exploited
and should perhaps take up courses in accounting or business management to
empower themselves.
That
was his first inkling that perhaps his colony was beginning to seem a bit too
frivolous for some of his associates. But of course, the guest facilities had
to be in place before the university and healing centers could be completed.
Karina
ordered up the initial hologramatic ambience for the healing center. She also
spent a fortune on crystals, candles, gauzy draperies, drums, incense,
amorphous music, and real greenery and fountains. Hafiz was allowed to
embellish her setting with his holograms, but she insisted on the genuine
article as far as plant life and water features went, "for the ozone and
the extra oxygen, beloved. One doesn't get that from a simulation."
A large
portion of that pavilion was kept barren however, awaiting the arrival of the
first Linyaari trade partners, who would of course have their own
specifications.
Thus was
all in readiness for the first trading partners. Hafiz and his staff waited.
And waited. And waited.
Signals
had been sent on all frequencies to all planets in the sector. Calum Baird and
his technicians finished their work installing the appropriate links and relays
to allow swift communication with Maganos Moonbase, Laboue, and all other
previously known Federation worlds, moons, and space stations. But until Calum
and his fleet intercepted the Condor's signal, not a single response did the
newly created facility receive.
Finally
these last ships docked and by the time their crews were welcomed and rested,
the Condor, its sides virtually bulging
with cargo and expanded crew, waddled into port to squat beside the
other, sleeker vessels.
Becker
gave a low whistle as the crew, including RK, descended on the spanking clean
robolift.
"Will
you look at this spread?" Becker asked. "Your old uncle has done
himself proud, Princess."
Acorna
wasn't listening. She didn't even wait until the robolift touched the ground
before jumping off and flying into the collective arms of her uncles and old
friends from Maganos Moonbase.
Hugs,
kisses, tears, and exclamations flowed freely and to Maati, seemed to sadly
contrast to her own reunion with her brother, mother, and father.
Finally,
Hafiz Harakamian, mindful of the presence of four horned Linyaari and Aari,
whom he had met before, detached himself from the storm of sentiment and
greeted his new guests.
He was
flanked by Karina on one side and Nadhari Kando on the other. As chief of
security, Nadhari considered it her job to be with Hafiz in any crowd and put
herself between him and harm.
"Welcome
to my pavilion, and to this Moon of Opportunity, honored guests, Captain
Becker, and er-crewman?" Hafiz said with a glance at Mac.
RK
leaped onto Nadhari Kando's shoulder.
"It's
that Makahomian warrior lady again. Hello, there," Becker said, perhaps a
bit eagerly.
Nadhari
gave him a slow smile and streked RK's plumed tail. "I see the sacred cat
has brought you safely through another journey, Becker."
"Yes,
he was a lot of help," Becker said, reaching over to stroke RK too, and
incidentally brush his fingers against Nadhari's sculpted cheekbone resting
against the cat's side. RK growled and batted at him. "The hero of the
whole thing actually," Becker continued. The growl lowered. "In fact,
if he hadn't alerted Aari to the fact that the Khieevi was after Acorna, and
then come back to lead me and Mac to where the Khieevi and Aari were duking it
out, we probably would not be the hale and healthy party standing before you
now."
RK was
purring now.
Hafiz,
who had been trying to ignore Becker to court the Linyaari, suddenly turned to
him, very pale despite the artificial sunlight in his offices. "Khieevi?
You encountered Khleevi!"
"Yeah,
got a couple of dead ones up top," Becker said, jerking his thumb toward
the Cow)or.
Acorna
rejoined the crew, her friends and relations surrounding them all now as they
strolled off the robolift and toward the sumptuously appointed reception area.
"Uncle Hafiz, we will need to establish some sort of laboratory to study
the dead Khieevi and to analyze a substance we discovered on another
world."
"You
need establish nothing, 0 flower of my family tree," Hafiz said. "We
have the best of all laboratories here at your command complete with all the
most advanced devices and equipment."
"And
we have some top Linyaari organic chemists in our crew, Uncle," Acorna
said with a nod to two of the newcomers, "Allow me to present Kaarlye and
Miiri, father and mother of Aari and Maati."
"We
are honored," Hafiz said. "And our laboratories of course are at your
disposal. Just across the garden of a thousand succulent sweetgrasses and
flowering fountains you will find luxurious pavilions designed with Linyaari
tasks and requirements in mind." He clapped his hands and porters
appeared. "When you have rested from your journeys, we will dine."
"No
time to rest," Kaarlye said brusquely. "We must analyze this
substance at once. When it is warm, it spreads rapidly."
Becker
stopped the porters at the robolift. "Wait a minute, folks. We didn't come
with a lot of baggage and I think my crew and I had better unload the sap and
the -uh- prisoners. You might want to stand back. They stink. A lot. As for RK,
Mac, and me, -we're staying aboard the Coru)or."
Nadhari
lifted an eyebrow and made a very unconvincing pout with her mouth. RK laid his
ears back and wrapped his tail possessively around Nadhari's neck. "Unless
of course the cat has other ideas," Becker finished lamely.
That
night a sumptuous meal was laid before them.
Under
an open canopy, silvery platters of meats and sweets nestled among opulent
arrangements of flowers and plumed grasses upon a long low table nestled within
a bank of tufted divans covered with poufs of paisley silks and velvets. These
topped thick soft rugs of various harmonious patterns and jewel-like hues.
Becker
and his new crew sank into the divans and following Hafiz's lead, Becker,
Karina, Dr. Hoa, Acorna's non-Linyaari family, and Nadhari Kando plucked
succulent items from the trays on the table. Meanwhile Acorna, Aari, Maati, and
the parental units grazed on the flower arrangements. Becker was a little
startled until he realized that this was the intended purpose of what he had
thought of as an overabundance of centerpieces. The old man had simply seen to
it that the Linyaari "dishes" were arranged as appealingly as the
savory morsels offered to the other guests.
"Uncle
Hafiz, you are amazing," Acorna said. Becker was pleased to see that after
the strain and danger and hard work the girl had recently endured, she looked
as fresh as some of the flowers she was eating, glowing with happiness at being
among her old friends again. "How long did it take you to build this
installment, anyway? " Her eyes took in the gently lit garden with its
fountains and mountainous background, the spired and domed palaces that formed
Hafiz's chief residence and several of
the hotels and office buildings besides. Overhead stars twinged-not any stars
Acorna had ever been among but artful stars, placed with an artistic
interpretation of constellations and formations Karina had deemed auspicious.
"Little
more than the twinkling of an eye, dearest child, that and many, many, many
trillions of credits, of course."
Becker
was seated on the end of one divan, Nadhari Kando on the adjoining end of
another, the Condor's first mate still wrapped complacently around her neck
like a living fur collar. Every once in a while a forkful of fish eggs or meat
didn't make it all the way to Nadhari's mouth, however, as a paw or a set of
feline teeth intercepted it.
"But
enough of my little pastimes," Hafiz was saying while Becker was admiring
the line of Nadhari's jaw and the curve of her neck, "I am consumed with
curiosity to know how it is that you actually have two dead Khieevi with
you?"
"Oh.
Them," Becker said. "Well, they're survivors. I mean, they were
survivors. From the crash of their ship. The one we caused since, you know,
they had just finished shooting the kids' ship out of the sky."
"And
by kids you mean . . . ?"
"Maati
and Thariinye," Acorna put in. "They apparently decided at almost the
same time we did to search for Maati's and Aari's parents on the blue world.
But the Khieevi had the same idea, and had already launched an attack when we
arrived."
"Tell
me, Captain, I am intrigued," Nadhari said. "What powerful weapons do
you carry on that salvage ship of yours that vanquished a Khieevi vessel?"
"Yes,"
Hafiz said. "Please, tell us. If they are that effective, I will order
many for the protection of our moon."
Becker
gave Nadhari a smile that urged her to wait a moment and answered Hafiz,
"Well, sir, it is true that I have a bunch of very lethal weapons on the
Condor. Some of them even work. Or
would, if I had them assembled and installed. Which I didn't. So then Acorna
here says, what about using the tractor beam?"
A smile
played at the edges of Nadhari's mouth, which was the only thing about her with
any extra flesh-her lips were sculpted but pleasingly plump, at least they were
when relaxed. He seemed to recall seeing that same mouth set in a hard grim
line above the jut of that firm and shapely jaw. It would have had him quaking
in his gravity boots, if he thought she had any quarrel with him. But she
didn't, and RK's tail tip flitted playfully from her shoulder bone to jawline
to eartip, as flirtatious as a courtesan's fan.
"Captain,
surely you have not acquired enough cargo by now to act as another slingshot
bomb with which to fell your enemies?"
"Oh,
no, ma'am. Not slingshot this time. We-uh-skipped 'em like a rock and then
played crack the ship with their sorry carcass. Worked good, too, didn't it,
crew?"
"Yes,
Joh. Good," Aari said.
"Except
for the survivors. We didn't know there were two at first," Becker said.
He
regaled the table with the story of the questioning of the injured Khieevi
while interweaving the story of Maati and Thariinye as if he had understood
every word they spoke of their ordeal or had been with them while it was
occurring. He gave it a few flourishes here and there and ended by saying
modestly, "So I blew a hole through the bugger, but Aari here had already
pretty much finished him off."
"How?"
Karina Harakamian asked.
"Why,
by giving him a great big old hug. See, that Khieevi was so purely mortified by
all that Linyaari sweetness and light Aari was extending to it just because
he's of such a highly evolved nature, that I figure the Khieevi came down with
a monstrous case of sugar diabetes on
the spot and it was such a shock to its system it curled up its toes and
died."
Karina
clasped her plump, beringed hands over her heaving amethyst-veiled and
amethyst-encrusted bosom and sighed, "How thrilling! And what a triumph
for the light!" Then she glanced around at the stolid Linyaari faces, and
at Becker's determinedly innocent one. He was trying to keep his mouth from
twitching. "Wait a moment. Is that true?" she asked.
"Not
a word of it!" Becker exploded with laughter. Karina was exactly the kind
of audience he loved. Gullible. "Well, the thing did curl up and die and
it was because of something sticky as sugar, but not sweet. It was this sap
stuff we picked up on some planet full of vines. But I had you going there,
didn't I?"
Nadhari
shook an admonitory finger at him, "Naughty, naughty, Captain. But I must
say, I'm very impressed. You and your crew of pacifist •warriors vanquishing
such formidable foes without so much as a real weapon among you-"
"You're
forgetting that I blew a hole the size of the cat through that thing,"
Becker said, slightly offended at being lumped with the pacifists.
She
shrugged like a panther rippling its muscles in preparation for a longer
stretch. "Oh that. A mere coup de grace. But your ingenuity and wit amaze
me. Anyone can win by force of muscle or superior firepower. But winning
because of strategy and the ability to turn whatever you have at hand into a
weapon, I find that-very, very impressive."
"You
W Becker was surprised at first, then amazed, followed by stupefied. Him?
Impress heri She was absolutely the most impressive woman he had ever seen in
his entire life and fascinated him at the same time she scared the bejesus out
of him. He hadn't done anything she couldn't do with both hands tied behind her
back, but it was nice to hear it anyway.
"Absolutely."
He couldn't tell if it was her or RK purring. Both of them were regarding him
through slitted eyes.
"I
certainly do. You and I should discuss-strategy."
He -was
flummoxed. The truth was, he never stuck around for courtship or seduction much
past the brief encounters in the pleasure houses-hadn't since he was younger
and encountered all the ladies who wanted a good time but thought spending any
part of it on a salvage ship beneath them. Nadhari Kando knew where he lived.
She'd been there. "I-uh-I'd really like that. I need to check in with Mac
though-that's the KEN-640 unit-he's repairing the corn unit on the Khieevi
shuttle so we can maybe monitor their movements-"
"By
the sacred whiskers, you think of everything, don't you?" She moved closer
and offered him an olive. He held out his hand but she held it with two fingers
and her thumb and waved it teasingly till he opened his mouth, then she popped
it in. He could definitely get used to this. Her scent was a mixture of musk
and citrus, and something like a forest after a rain. He liked it. He held out
an olive for her.
"And
I-uh-I guess I should get RK back, too. He hasn't had his usual eighty hours of
sleep today."
"Oh?"
she said. "That's funny. He's been communing with me. He -wants to stay
with me tonight."
"Well,
if that's not just like a cat!" Becker exclaimed, dropping the olive back
onto his plate in his consternation at his first mate's defection.
Nadhari
smiled. Her smile reminded him of RK-he just hadn't realized that was what a
cat smile looked like. "What's that?" she asked as the cat rubbed
against her cheek. "Oh, yes. He wants to stay with you tonight, too."
"Divided
loyalties?" Becker asked.
Nadhari
swung her sturdy but very shapely legs down from the divan with a sinuous
slither and stood looking down at him. "Hardly. RK is a sacred temple cat.
His wish is my command. If he wishes to be with me, and with you ..." her
hand reached down to cup Becker's chin
and with slight pressure on it, raised him to his feet. "I am not the one
to gainsay him. Are you?"
"Disappoint
my old buddy?" Becker asked, slipping her hand through his crooked elbow.
"Perish the thought. Mind telling me where he wants to spend this time
with us tonight?"
"Aboard
your vessel," she replied, and he was surprised to see that she actually
had to look up at him. How did she do that? He could have sworn she was taller.
"In the hold -where you questioned the first Khieevi."
"Really?"
"Yes.
The sacred cat thinks I would find that environment rather - stimulating."
"Kitty
knows best," Becker said.
fourteen
Hafiz
-would not hear of the Linyaari remaining aboard the Condor. Acorna was glad,
particularly -when she saw Becker, RK, and Nadhari strolling arm in arm in the
direction of the ship.
A
self-contained trio of pavilions triangulated around a garden/grazing area.
Kaarlye and Miiri were billeted in one, and although Maati could have stayed
with her parents, she asked if she might share a pavilion with Khornya instead.
This left Aari and Thariinye to share the third.
Acorna
spent most of the rest of the evening with her adoptive fathers/uncles,
describing what had befallen her since they had last seen each other.
"This
Aari guy," Gill said. "You and he . . . ?"
"We're
friends," Acorna said, off-handedly.
"Evidently,
if he's willing to wrestle bug-eyed monsters on your behalf," Calum said.
"We
-were all in danger," Acorna said, reasonably enough. "And Aari was
trying to save us all."
"He
didn't know that stuff smeared on his shirt would kill the thing though?"
Gill asked. "He just dove right in and tackled it?"
"Well-yes."
"Sounds
kinda suicidal to me," Calum said.
"I
don't really think he is-at least, not now," Acorna said.
"But
he was before?" Gill asked.
Acorna
suddenly felt more uncomfortable than she had ever before felt in the company
of these beloved men. "Why are you questioning me this way?" she
asked.
"Why
do you think?" Calum asked, exasperated. "Because we care about you,
of course, and we've talked it over and it looks to us like you care about
him."
"But
we wish to make sure," Rank said, "That-well, you're not just feeling
sony for someone who cannot be a good mate for you, to put it bluntly."
"You
must admit, pet, that we know a few more things about men than you do,"
Gill said, smiling.
"Human
men, yes, but Aari is Linyaari," she said. "And we are friends.
Nothing more."
"Not-yet?"
Gill asked.
"No,
nor will we be until he's-"
"Until
he'^f ready, darlin'?" Gill pressed. "What about you? Are you going
to crew on a salvage ship until the guy makes up his mind whether or not he
could stand being mates with a beautiful, intelligent, funny, talented, warm,
and loving girl? You must excuse us, but it's a no-brainer. Which makes us
wonder about how intelligent or warm he is."
"Frankly,
we thought you'd get snatched up by some young stud the minute you landed on
your home-world," Calum said. "We're a bit surprised at this turn of
events."
Acorna
dimpled at them suddenly. "Is this one of those situations where you are
going to ask me when I'm going to settle down and give you grandchildren?"
"Yes,"
Rafik said, "Usually mothers do it, well, used to, but you have no mother
and we weren't sure your aunt would think of it, besides which she's not
around, is she? So we thought- that is,
Calum and Gill thought-maybe between us, we should discuss this."
"Ha£z
started it, really," Calum said. "Hey, we did pretty well, I think.
Gill "was all for calling the guy outside and asking him what his
intentions were when we saw how he-how you- how things were. But then we
figured a guy -who tackled a Khieevi bare-handed might be the sensitive type,
so we decided asking you-"
"Was
safer," Rafik finished with an impish grin.
Acorna
laughed. "You've asked. We've discussed it," she said, giving them
each a hug. "And I have nothing more to say-honestly, there if nothing
more to say right now. Meanwhile, when am I going to get to give my fathers
away in marriage is what I'd like to know? Judit and Mercy will not wait
forever while you busy yourselves speculating about my love life."
"Actually,"
Calum said. "We um, have an announcement to make. But I will wait until
she can-"
The
other two started thumping him on the back. Talk turned to how the nuptials
were to be handled and then all of them began to feel the need to talk to their
mates and Acorna slipped away, back to her assigned pavilion.
Maati
was not there. Acorna thought perhaps the girl was spending more time with her
parents. That was fine. It would be nice to be alone for a while. As light as
she had made of her dear friends' questions, they echoed questions in her own
mind, and she didn't want a youngling new to thought-speech to read her, even
accidentally.
Du) she
care for Aari simply because she had pitied him, or was there more to it than
that? How would she know? She had never chosen a mate before. She knew her
uncles had only her best interests at heart and it was quite true that she
hadn't noticed all that much difference between human and Linyaari males. And
she felt, being raised by men, that she understood them as well as a female could. At this point in her life anyway.
But she couldn't say she understood Aari at all. She could read his mind when
he let her and she knew he cared for her. She could empathize with his pain.
But she hadn't a clue why he behaved as he did. She wished Grandam Naadiina or
Aunt Neeva "were here to consult with. She would have asked Gill, Calum,
or Rafik about the matter but they seemed to be predisposed against Aari.
With a
sigh, she settled down to an uneasy and dream-filled sleep in which she -was
being courted by a Khieevi.
Aari,
on the other hand, was getting no sleep, nor was he able to progress very far
in the book he had chosen from the Condor's ancient hardcopy library, a
collection of ancient European literature by various authors. Aari was
currently reading an excerpt from a play called Romeo am) Juliet by William
Shakespeare. The language was not easy but Aari had read another book that
referred to Shakespeare as inventing the language of love, so he thought it
might be interesting to see what the Bard of Avon had to say. Although he could
not imagine why a cosmetics firm from the twentieth century (the ship's library
also contained a number of small brightly colored pamphlets from this company)
would choose to sponsor an ancient poet unless it -was because he "was also
an actor and they, as Aari was learning, also used makeup.
But
•while he was struggling with the language, Thariinye was chattily giving him
the benefit of Thariinye's spectacularly successful career (according to the
young male) as a wooer of females. Aari had not had the heart to ask him to be
quiet, as he knew that the loss of the tip of Thariinye's horn had made him
feel disfigured and the younger fellow was relating his past exploits simply to
bolster his own confidence.
But in
that estimation, Aari was using the projection of his own feelings about the
loss of his horn and empathy for Tharii nye's distress, not thought-reading,
which he found impossible to do -while he was trying to unravel Shakespeare's
thees and thous. So he was taken aback when Thariinye suddenly rolled over on
his own pallet and poked Aari playfully in the ribs.
"That
Khornya is quite a reed, isn't she?" Thariinye said with a wink.
"A--reed?"
Aari asked, looking up from his book at the mention of Khornya's name.
"A-slender
and succulent desirable mate, to old-timers like you," Thariinye
translated with a tolerant wave of his hand.
"I-yes.
Maati mentioned that you had considered yourself pledged to her. Is that-still
true?" His voice was steady and controlled.
"Me?
No! No, no, no. By the ancestors, no! Oh, I was smitten, of course. She is
beautiful-quite a reed, as I said. But, well, it really was just that I was the
first Linyaari male she met and she -was so dewy eyed and innocent I felt
protective, so I -wanted to warn off other males lest they not . . . appreciate
her finer qualities . . . properly. No, now that I know her better, she is not
for me."
"No?
And -why not?" Aari asked, suddenly feeling protective himself, and rather
angry at Thariinye dismissing Khornya. Who wouldn't want Khornya?
"Frankly?"
Thariinye said. "She's too smart for me. And well, a bit too idealistic.
And a little too strange, being raised by humans and all. She has peculiar
ideas about things so I can't begin to guess what she's going to do next. That
makes me nervous around her."
"I
admit I am nervous around her, too," Aari said thoughtfully.
"I
noticed. But you're crazy about her, aren't you?" Thariinye's voice was
insinuating and his eyes sly. "You want her, don't you?"
"I
... have no right," Aari said. "She deserves a mate who is whole in mind and body. And horn,"
he said, a bit cruelly, since Thariinye was being cruel and discourteously
invasive, to his way of thinking.
"Ouch,"
Thariinye said. "I guess I deserved that. But I'm told mine will grow
back, in time."
Aari
was quiet. Thariinye had responded to cruelty with cruelty of his own. That was
one reason why the Linyaari usually eschewed cruelty. It was not only unkind,
it was unwise to start the spiraling descent that would lead with all parties
having fallen to a lower level.
"Sony,"
Thariinye said again. "I'm trying to tell you something here and I keep on
upsetting you. You're pretty touchy, you know that, don't you?"
"Perhaps
it is because for so long, when anyone touched me, it was to cause pain,"
Aari said through gritted and bared teeth. Then he relaxed, "I am sony
too. I have begun to think of you as a friend. Grandam says friends come
together to teach each other. I sense you are trying to teach me something.
Proceed."
"What
I'm saying," Thariinye said, "Is no matter what YOU think she
deserves, the females I know seem to feel that what they deserve is whatever
their little female hearts decide they •want. I think it's pretty clear she
wants you."
"No,"
he said. "She is a kind and loving person. She feels sympathy for my
injury, for what happened with the Khieevi. When she is sure I am as healed as
possible, for she is a healer above all, she will return to her human people
for good as our ambassador-stopping by narhii-Vhiliinyar to communicate with
the government perhaps. By then Joh and I will be far away so I -" <)o
I will not have to watch her leave again, he thought to himself.
"You're
just making that assumption!" Thariinye said "Why don't you ask her?
Talk to her? Take her some of these beautiful, delicious flowers! Recite
Linyaari love poetry to her!
She's
never heard it, you know. I was going to try it out on her but I could tell she
wouldn't believe me."
"What
would it tell her that I bring her flowers from a garden that is also hers to
graze?" Aari asked, shaking his mane.
"That
you brought her breakfast in bed?" Thariinye suggested. "No, no, go
back to your book. Forget I said anything."
But the
next morning, Thariinye slept in while Aari went to see if he could assist his
parents in the laboratory where they were analyzing the sap that had killed the
Khieevi. Upon awakening, Thariinye saw the book Aari had left behind. His
journey with Neeva, Khaari, and Melireenya to collect Khornya from her human
foster parents had given him a superior knowledge of Standard, he felt. With
the help of the LAANYE he had carried -with him from the Niikaavri, he was able
to translate one of the stories, although the words fell in odd places. This
particular tale, by a human named Rostand, told of a fellow with a
disfiguringly long nose-which sounded perfectly attractive to Thariinye, since
long noses were considered elegant by Linyaari tastes. The long-nosed chap was
in love with a female also desired by a more attractive male, a friend of the
longnosed chap. Finally, because he -was a kind person and wished to see both
his friend and the female he loved happy, and also because it allowed him to
speak his own -words of love to the female, the long-nosed male hid and spoke
his love words while the handsomer male pretended to speak them to the female.
Thariinye
knew that it obviously would never work out. There were a few similarities in
the personalities involved of course, but considerable mutation would have to
occur before such a solution would in any way serve the present situation.
Maati
was a youngling, but in her capacity as a messenger, she had been receiving a
great deal of vicarious experience since she was very small. The only other
females available to discuss this with, unfortunately, were Khornya and Aari's
mother, who was quite busy and besides,
Thariinye didn't know her. Maati would have to do.
Maati
was thrilled to find herself among human younglings approximately her age. They
had been alive much longer, as Linyaari children developed very rapidly and,
once adult, maintained a healthy maturity of great longevity. The youngest of
these children had been alive at least eight years, which was much longer than
Maati's single ghaanyi. A ghaanyi was about one and a half years, by Standard
time, which was how these humans measured their days.
But the
younglings were barely sentient for a very long period in their early lives, so
their experience, while different, was not much greater than Maati's own.
Certainly none of them had been messengers for their governments, although
Laxme, one of the boys, had developed unusual skill with the com units. Nor had
they been shot down by a Khieevi ship, fought a Khieevi hand-to-hand, and
lived. But the Maganos Moonbase children, she was sorry to hear, had all
endured horrible lives as child slaves. The Starfarer children of the Haven had
watched their parents die at the hands of hijackers, had defeated and dealt
decisively "with the same hijackers, and now were in command of their home
ship, with only a little help from a few adults. The thing all of the children
had most in common was that they loved and admired Khornya, though the human
children called her "Acorna," "Lady Epona," or "The
Lady of the Light" and regarded her with •worshipful adoration Maati found
strange.
"She's
just a really nice girl, like us, only a little older," Maati told them.
"Like
you, you mean," Jana corrected her. Jana was really nice and had been asking
Maati lots of questions about healing. At first Maati had been unwilling to
answer. Linyaari did not usually let
outsiders know they healed directly through their horns. Doing so could lead to
incidents like the one where bad humans took many Linyaari ambassadors prisoner
and tried to force them to heal and cleanse water and air under horrible
circumstances. Linyaari raised on the homeworld knew this, but Khornya had not.
"Don't
be so cagey," Jana had said when Maati tried to play innocent. "We
know all about how you can heal people. Acorna healed all of us when we were in
the mines and other bad places. If it hadn't been for her, most of us would be
crippled. I don't know why you wouldn't want people to know what you can do.
It's wonderful! I wish I could do that. I -want to be a doctor."
"I'm
going to create holograms, just like Mr. Harakamian," Annella, a redheaded
girl from the Haven, said. "He's shown me a lot of what goes into it. It's
not as hard as you'd think but then, he says I have a natural talent for
it." Then she realized they weren't talking about careers, they were
talking about Acorna's ability to heal and she added, "But it must be
wonderful to be able to heal the way your people can."
Maati
made a wry face. "It comes in pretty handy, like when the Khieevi attacked
us. Thariinye got hurt real bad trying to save me and Khornya. He probably
would have died if he wasn't Linyaari and we hadn't been there. Or at least
lost a hand."
"That
was really brave," Jana said. "Kheti is brave like that. And Acorna
is, too."
"My
brother was the bravest though."
"Which
one is your brother? Thariinye?" Annella asked.
"Oh
no-Thariinye is a friend, sort of, when he isn't being a hdnye."
"I
don't know what that means," Jana said, "But I bet it's not
good."
"No,
it's not, but he's not that way as much anymore. My brother is the one -who
doesn't have a horn. The Khieevi, um," Maati found she had trouble saying
it, even now, "When they captured him they tortured him and, you
know-"
"We
get the picture," Jana assured her hastily, hearing the choke in the voice
of the Linyaari girl. "Your brother must be very brave. We heard he
tackled that monster bare-handed."
"He
did. But the monster was about to get Khornya. That was a fatal mistake,"
Maati said with satisfaction unbecoming a member of a nonviolent race.
"I've
seen how Lady Epona looks at him," Jana said with a sigh.
"Everybody
sees but him!" Maati said. "He is so smart and so brave but he just
thinks because he doesn't have a horn, Khornya would be getting a bad deal-that
she might not accept him, even though everybody can see she really likes
him."
"Why
doesn't she tell him?" Annella asked.
"Cause
she's afraid that even though he likes her, he would still maybe reject her and
I think, well, actually, I sort of peeked. She is afraid that rejecting her
would cause him more pain and she doesn't want to do that. Grownups are sooooo
complicated."
"You'd
think they'd realize that life is pretty short to be so backward about good
stuff," Jana said wistfully. "Everybody is being so careful of
everybody else's feelings they're never gonna get together."
"That's
what Thariinye said," Maati agreed, heaving a deep and dramatic sigh.
"He was talking about 'some male with a large nose who did the talking for
some other male to a female they both cared for. Do males with long noses play
the role of go-betweens in your society? Are there any of them here we could
get to talk to Khornya for Aari-or the other way around?"
"Nooo,"
said Jana. The other kids shook their heads too.
Their
educations on Maganos Moonbase had tended to the practical and technical and
neglected the arts. Their former masters hadn't exactly provided them with
cultural opportunities either.
However,
Annella's mother, before she had been spaced by the invaders, had been very
fond of theater. "He's talking about a character named Cyrano, Maati. It's
from an old earth tale."
"I
see," Maati said wisely. But she didn't.
"I
think he's hit on something," Annella said. "Maybe they need a
go-between."
"A
matchmaker," put in Markel, another of the kids from the Haven who had
been listening carefully to what -went on. He considered himself a very special
friend of Acorna's, since it was with his help she was able to save herself,
Calum Baird, and Dr. Hoa and help the youngsters of the Haven overthrow the
hijackers. "Only, it sounds like a lot of people have tried to be one from
what you say, Maati."
"Yes,"
Maati said. "Khornya's foster fathers talked to her about it and she
didn't want to talk, Karina Harakamian can't read her mind, Thariinye said he
knows she -won't talk to him, and she thinks I'm just a kid and can't
understand. But I 9o. I understand they are both being dumb not to talk to each
other. They don't really need to talk to some third person because neither of
them will believe anybody else. They need to talk to each other. Aari needs to
talk to Khornya and Khornya needs to talk to Aari or they won't believe
it." She shrugged. "Not even a long-nosed male could help."
"Maybe
there's a way for that to happen, kind of," Annella said slowly.
"Are
you thinking what I'm thinking?" Markel asked.
"I
think so. Do you think we could pull it off?"
"Maybe.
It can't hurt to try anyway. Hafiz isn't going to care. He probably 'will even
find a use for them later."
"What?" Maati asked. The other kids looked at the two
Starfarers as well.
"Come
with us to the holo lab. We'll try to show you. It'll take a while,
though."
In the
days that followed, Becker staggered around the ship humming marching songs.
While Nadhari was on duty, RK stayed on the ship. She was on duty a lot, but
still found time almost every day for a little visit. Becker was chronically
surprised that she really seemed to like him, and the Corufor.
And of
course, Mac was conducting, under Becker's guidance, an extremely critical
security operation. He could now receive signals from the main fleet, although
he could not yet send them. While Mac was working, Becker regaled him with cute
stories about Nadhari. The captain figured if he was going to be crazed about
the woman, the android -was the perfect party to hear his jabbering. That way
he wouldn't make a fool of himself to anyone who -was likely to gossip.
He was
just getting to the part where Nadhari, in a fit of passion, had inadvertently
reintroduced him to somersaults and handsprings, when Acorna arrived, looking
bemused and distracted, but as usual, determined to be useful.
"Any
luck with the corn unit, MacKenZ?" she asked.
"I
have had some contact with the main fleet. They are wondering where this
scouting shuttle is. They apparently re ceived some communication before the
crash onto the blue planet. However, these beings are on the whole unperturbed
by peril to individual members or even vessels, from what I have learned from
our captive, from what Aari has been able to tell me of his experience, and
from what I have gleaned from their communications."
"Where
are they? What are they doing?" Acorna asked urgently, hunkering down
beside the thoroughly exhausted Becker and Mac.
Acorna
looked down at the corn unit, still mounted on the control panel, and at a mess
of other hardware from the shuttle. "What did you do with the rest of the
shuttle?" she asked.
"Smells
like Khieevi," Becker said. "Without you and the others on board, the
smell was enough to gag a maggot. Maybe the smell w<u a maggot, for all -we
know. Khieevi are bugs. They could have maggots."
"Ye-es,"
Acorna said. "We really should investigate their life cycle. We would have
a better idea of their vulnerabilities if we knew more."
"True,"
Becker said. "Wonder if Hafiz has got any entomologists in this bunch of
settlers he's imported."
"From
what I can tell, Khornya," Mac said, "The fleet may be en route to
the Niriian home-world-where the piiyi came from."
Acorna
nodded. "The Niriians have been warned already that their ship was
intercepted and that the Khieevi are in this general area and still at large.
Surely they will have taken defensive measures."
"In
case they haven't," Becker said, "Nadhari was going to get Hafiz to
dispatch a light drone with a prerecorded message to broadcast from space-well
away from here. We still haven't heard from narhii-Vhiliinyar, Princess, but it
looks like the bugs haven't got there yet."
"What's
needed is technology that prevents transmissions from being traced back to their origins, at least by Khieevi
devices," Acorna said. "Do you think we could do a diagnostic that
might help some of the engineers develop something within the near
future?"
"Yeah,
if we survive that long," Becker said. "Anyhow, it won't hurt to ask
Hafiz about it."
"If
the Khieevi find the drone and destroy it, that would give my beloved uncle an
economic motive anyway," Acorna said. "He just hates to lose
something he'd hoped to make a profit on."
"You
know, me too," Becker said. "Your uncle and I have got quite a bit in
common."
Acorna
smiled mischievously at him. "I know."
Becker
gave her a sideways glance from under his bushy eyebrows. "Seen much of
Aari lately?" he asked innocently.
"Not
too much," she said, feigning lightness. "He has been assisting his
parents in the laboratory, from what I can tell. They've determined that the
sap contains a spore which, -when it comes in contact with an insect's
carapace, metamorphoses into a fungal infection of great virulence."
"I
knew it had to be something like that," Becker said. He didn't mention
that she'd changed the subject away from Aari. "So all we gotta do
basically is lure them to the place where we got the sap and tell them to eat
their fill." He chuckled. "I'm getting good at this decoy business.
We faked Ganoosh into thinking the Federation Outpost was the Linyaari
homeworld and now all we have to do is convince the Khieevi fleet that
whaddayacallit-vine worlds is full of yummy bug food and let them and the
plants fight it out to see who eats who. Piece of-you should pardon the
expression-cake."
"First,
however," Mac said, "I must fix the transmitter on this unit. While I
have no problem with concentration or distractions, Captain, you do happen to
be sitting against the access panel. Perhaps you would consider moving?"
"Mutiny!"
Becker grumbled. "C'mon Acorna, I'll treat you to a bouquet or something
dirtside."
They
ate together in one of the little bistros Hafiz had set, one to a building,
circus, or block, for times "when people did not want to meet in one of
the several great dining halls. All of the ones in the main compound, which
contained the Linyaari compound, opened onto gardens for al fresco mixed human
and Linyaari grazing.
"Have
you tried any of the activities around here?" Becker asked Acorna
casually. "Nadhari and I are going to take a room in one of the fantasy suites
at the hotel. Complete holo landscapes in every suite." He sighed.
"She's an amazing woman, Nadhari."
"You
really like her, then?"
"That's
a little mild. I mean, there's not many women I'd let take RK with them while
they're working, but she said he wanted to see what she did. She's the first
Makahomian he's been around since the crash. He likes being worshipped. I guess
everybody ought to try it once. Being worshipped, I mean."
Becker
did not need RK. He himself looked like the proverbial cat who had swallowed
the unfortunate proverbial canary.
"I
am pleased for you, Captain. Have the two of you made any long-range
plans?" Acorna asked.
"It's
a little early yet," Becker said complacently, "But I figure after we
save the universe as we know it, -what with her brawn and my brains ..."
Acorna
didn't warn him, but Nadhari herself, clad in her green security forces
uniform, crept through the garden until she was directly behind Becker, where
she caught his head in a hammerlock, "And then what, oh brains of the
outfit?" she asked. RK, slipping through the weeds behind her, stopped at
her feet and wound around her ankles.
"Whatever
you want, babe," Becker said, removing her arm without difficulty and distributing kisses up the crease in her uniform sleeve.
Nadhari
actually wrinkled her elegant, if oft-broken nose at Acorna. "Isn't that
cute? He called me babe. Nobody ever calls me babe. If most men did it I'd have
to break at least a finger. But from Jonas, it's not lack of respect, it's
protective." She put both arms around his neck and gave him a half-comic
noisy smooch before melting back into the garden as if she were one of the
plants, the cat's plumed tail the last vestige of their presence.
Becker
sat there with a silly grin on his face. Acorna remembered the word used for
someone whose internal dam had broken so that the banks of their dry stream
-were filled to overflowing. Besotted. Becker and Nadhari were besotted and
Acorna was glad for them.
But she
had to excuse herself before she choked on the lump in her throat.
Maati
made Thariinye close his eyes as she led him by the hand into the holo-lab.
Opening them, he saw a number of the youngsters from the station grouped around
Aari and Acorna.
He
looked confused. "Is this some kind of an instructional meeting or what?
Where's Becker and the cat and your
parents?"
"Look
closer," Maati told him, now letting go of his hand and herding him in
among the children. "Aren't they awesome?"
He saw
now that Aari and Acorna were standing in little pools of light. Neither of
them greeted him and once in a -while, though very seldom, one of them would
flicker slightly.
"Holograms?"
he asked.
Annella
Carter beamed at him. "Yes! What do you think?"
Thariinye
scratched his chin and circled the two familiar figures. "Well, they do
flicker sometimes. What are they? Tourist attractions?" "Noooo," Maati punched him
lightly on the forearm. '"Course not. They're to, •well, be go-betweens
for the real people."
"Go-betweens
to what?" Thariinye asked.
"What's
the matter with you?" Maati demanded. "Have you gone soft in the head
from too much easy living? Go-betweens to each other, of course!"
Thariinye
groaned. "I was afraid of that. You don't think it will actually work, do
you? These things wouldn't fool either of them for more than a moment or two if
they have their wits about them."
"That's
why we wanted your help," Maati said. "You're the one who made me
think of it. How do we make it work?"
"Work?"
he asked. "Why ask me? I don't know anything about holograms."
"No,"
Maati said, "But according to you, you know all about loooove," she
drew the word out mockingly and he gave her a look that would have sent older
and more susceptible girls running away in tears. She just laughed back up at
him and the other children giggled.
"Of
course I know more than a lot of infant younglings," he said. "What
is it that you need to know about it? And how does it concern your little holo
dollies?" He flipped his fingers at the life-size holograms as if they
were no bigger than his foot.
"We
need to know what Khornya should say to Aari and what Aari should say to
Khornya to get them together, of course!" Maati said. She did not seem to
be getting the idea that she was a mere child being put in her place. She acted
as if he was the one who was being stupid. He didn't much care for it, but as
her words sank in, he did see -what the children -were trying to do.
"Oh,"
he said. "Well, she should tell him that she loves him and why and
he-er-should do the same."
"But
how would they say it •without sounding corny?" Jana asked. Maati and Thariinye had both been
speaking in Standard for the benefit of the others. Maati's Standard was quite
good by now, he noticed, no doubt the result of her prolonged association with
the other younglings.
A young
male the others called Laxme tapped some keys on his control pad and the Aari
figure swung toward the Acorna holo and said, in a comic mockery of Aari's own
voice, "Oh, kiss me, my sweetie pie," and made sounds like hooves
pulling out of a mud puddle.
Thariinye
was indignant. "Stop that at once!" he said.
Laxme
shrank back into himself as if he expected to be hit.
"He
was just playing, showing you how it worked," Jana said softly.
"I
know, but Aari is a brave man, the bravest man my people have ever produced
probably, and I'll not have him and Khornya ridiculed, not even by
friends."
"That's
-why we wanted your help," Maati said. "To make them do and say the
right things."
"What
right things?" Thariinye asked.
"You
know-to get them together. You say you're this big expert on luu-uuve. So you
should know, right?"
He
glared at his former shipmate. "I know how to attract a girl to me,"
he said. "But, uh-" he lowered his voice and spoke out of the side of
his mouth so just Maati could hear, "as you'll remember, it didn't work
with Khornya."
"Maybe
not, but she's already attracted to Aari. We just have to have his hologram to
encourage her, and vice versa. So what things should they say?"
"First
of all," Thariinye told her, "You'll have to have the holograms
appear to them after they've been sleeping for a while so that they're groggy
and won't notice the shimmering."
"That's
what we were going to do," Annella said. "But they don't shimmer that
much."
Thariinye
ignored her. He was thinking hard. "I know," he said. "I think I
can find just the thing. Wait a bit."
He
returned about a half hour later carrying the book of ancient European
literature Aan had been reading.
For the
next several hours, Jana read aloud and the others argued the use of this
passage or that, 'while -Maati and Thariinye, with the use of the LAANYE,
attempted to translate the agreed-upon phrases into Linyaari. Once they decided
on the phrases, they had to program the holos to move properly.
"They
should look seductive, but mustn't touch a real person, of course,"
Thariinye said. "They should lead Aari and Khornya to a real place
together to continue in person ..."
"Or
a holo place!" Annella said, "None of the holo suites in the hotels
are filled yet, since we haven't had a single new guest, just the people who
came with the caravan and they all have their own quarters."
Mac's
performance and function had been greatly increased by his recent upgrades and
education, and he knew the captain was pleased. Becker had puzzled him somewhat
when Mac had shut himself down in the captain's absence with Nadhari Kando.
"I thought you'd keep working on the shuttle, Mac," the Captain had said.
"Not exactly a self-starter, are you?"
"No,
sir, though I do shut myself down to conserve energy."
"I
want you working on that shuttle day and night, whether I'm here or not. So
program that and don't 'worry about conserving energy. There's energy to burn
in this place and I don't think Harakamian will begrudge you some if it saves
our butts in the long run."
"Yes,
sir," Mac had responded. And he had of course been following instructions
ever since. If he could have felt regret, it was that now most of his social
interaction was in the Khieevi fashion. He had repaired the transmitter some
time ago, though he had not used it yet, as he had not been instructed to do
so.
But he
practiced, nevertheless, imitating, interpreting, assimilating, and integrating
the klicking and klackings until he used them-if only to himself-quite as
easily as he conversed in Standard and Linyaari.
He 'was
left alone a great deal these days. The captain and the cat spent increasing
amounts of their time with the denizens of the Moon of Opportunity,
particularly with Ms. Kando. Sometimes they had their get-togethers aboard the
ConPor, but since Ms. Kando needed to be available to her staff, many times the
three of them shared her off-duty time -with her in her quarters or in one of
the hotel rooms available in the compound. Aari and Acorna were busy elsewhere
as well, and the few times -when any of the Linyaari had come aboard, the
initial smell, the noise emitted by the shuttle, its corn unit's volume on high
so Mac could hear it as he moved about the ship, seemed to distress them and
they left again quickly, particularly •when Mac accidentally greeted Aari with
Khieevi klackings.
So it
was that he was alone when he heard the ships sounding off, a roll call of attack,
heard the staccato klickety-klackklack of orders passed from one unit to
another. The essence was that the planet of Nirii, around which the fleet had
been gathering, was now being attacked, the fleet swarming down upon it much as
hungry insects were said to do on some particularly appropriate foodstuff.
Mac
listened with interest. Had he been capable of it, he might have been excited.
He was still listening when Becker returned.
"Hi,
Mac, can you turn that damned thing down? It sounds like an army of tap dancers
landing on a flat wooden planet."
"Oh,
no, Captain, nothing like that. The sound is simply that of the Khieevi
invading the planet of the two-horned bovine beings. They are passing
communications among their various ships, attempting to first conquer major
cities and defense outposts, and to an extent prevent any possible escape by
inhabit ants. Their efforts are concentrated primarily on the attack
however."
"Great
galloping gravity, Mac, why didn't you say so?"
"You
did not instruct me to do so. Captain."
"Do
I have to tell you everything?"
Mac was
pleased to now be able to employ one of the captain's own idiomatic phrases,
"Yes, sir. Pretty much."
"Right.
Okay. You keep monitoring that thing-remember everything you hear. I gotta go
see a man about a drone."
Hafiz
was explaining why the drone -was not yet in space as he had assured Becker it
-would be with all possible dispatch. "I was preparing my message, dear
Becker."
"Your
message? How long can it take to say, 'The Khieevi are coming, the Khieevi are
coming, lock and load or get the hell out now7.' "
"You
don't understand, my boy. Even such public service messages carry delicate
nuances. And of course, we did not know exactly -when or where they were
coming, did we?"
"Now
we have a pretty good idea, though. They're chowing down on the cowboy planet
right now."
"Cowboy
planet?"
Becker
stuck a forefinger from each hand up beside his temple and wiggled them.
"Two horns like cows, get it?"
"Ahh,
the Niriians. Yes, I have heard they have excellent organic technology."
"It
stinks, if you ask me, but nobody deserves to have the bugs on top of them and
that's what's happening right now. So, is the drone going up or do I have to
take the ConSor up and make like Paul Revere?"
"Paul
who, dear boy? And what was he revered for, exactly? "
"Getting
his drone up before the enemy had a chance to
eat every planet in the galaxy, that's -what. Now then, do you think you
can finish your message?"
"Certainly."
"Good.
I'll just wait then and carry it out to the drone for you."
Hafiz
turned on his recorder and rewound. "Let me see, where was I, oh yes,
'This urgent humanitarian -warning is brought to you through the kindness and
beneficence of the Federation's foremost philanthropic economic ambassadorial
firm, House Harakamian.' "
"A
commercial'}" Becker demanded. "You held off putting the drone into
space while you made a commercial?"
Hafiz
spread his hands -with an elegant shrug. "I am in commerce after all, dear
boy."
"Not
for long if the bugs attack us," Becker said grimly.
"Ah,
an excellent point. Very well, I shall continue."
The
message concluded, "The dastardly insect creatures of torture, doom, and
enormous appetite, the Khieevi, are known to be attacking the Niriian
homeworld. Any who dare assist the Niriians, feel free to do so, please, -with
our commendations and blessings. All others in the same quadrant might think
seriously about evacuation or defense, as your culture dictates."
Becker
gave him a disgusted look, but said only, "Good. Now then, that should be
translated to all of the languages of the nearby races. I don't expect, since
-we're making first contact here, more or less, their Standard is going to be
really up to par."
"Ah!
A good point." He clapped his hands. A servant appeared. "Please
fetch our Linyaari guests-all of them. Ask them to bring their clever
translation devices and tell them it is a matter of some urgency."
Hours
later, -which seemed like months to Becker, each Linyaari had contributed a
translation of the message in all of the languages each of them knew. Since all
but Maati and Acorna had spent
considerable time visiting nearby planets at some point in their lives, they
felt they had pretty much covered it.
Meanwhile,
Nadhari and her staff went on red alert, and to the whine of the sirens, the
first evacuation drill began, just as the drone was shot into space.
The
Balakiire had not yet landed on the first planet on the list of those to be
warned when they heard a broadcast that at once made their mission and their
caution futile and provided them with a new mission.
Oddly,
this new mission began in a similar fashion to their present one.
"Mayday,
Mayday! This is the Niriian vessel Fo^en broadcasting a Mayday to all worlds
and ships in the area. Our homeworld is under attack. The Khieevi have landed.
Our ship escaped before the invasion. Mayday! Come in, please." With a
glare at Liriili, Neeva picked up the communication device.
"Please
give us your coordinates, Fo^en. The Linyaari ship Balakiire, is reading you
loud and clear."
The
Niriian gave the Fo^en's coordinates. "Hurry, Balakiire. We are nearly out
of fuel and air. We were on our way in for both when the Khieevi attack commenced.
The Khieevi have covered our cities like sweet-bugs converging on their
hive."
"We
are coming, Fo^en. Please do not send additional communication unless we
request it or you are in further distress. To do so may alert the Khieevi to
your-and our-position. Signal that you have understood and then please, silence
unless we contact you."
"Understood,
Balakiire. Be swift, be swift, please."
Liriili
snorted. "I suppose we will join them just in time for a Khieevi attack."
"Perhaps,"
Neeva said. "But I, for one, hope not. At least their signal should be
heard by nearby worlds and other craft, so our personal warnings to those
worlds will not be necessary."
"I
wonder what they will make of it on narhii-Vhiliinyar," Liriili said with
a bitter smile. "I warned them."
"Yes,
you did, and fortunately, with you no longer in charge, they will probably
ready the evacuation ships, refuel the fleet, gather the lifeforms, and prepare
to leave narhii-Vhiliinyar in the direction farthest from the Niriian world. I
suspect they may fly into Federation space. That will be the recommendation of
those of us who have been in contact with the peoples of that alliance."
"Yes,
and they "will come with their weapons, disrespecting the principles the
Ancestors taught us."
Melireenya
turned in her seat and stared at the former viizaar, "What is it with you?
You are not satisfied one way or the other. Would the destruction of our people
please you now that you have been deemed unfit to lead them?"
Liriili
gave her a superior smile but didn't answer. Neeva was becoming alarmed by the
woman's attitude. Instead of helping her heal, this entire experience was
driving her more and more into herself. She -was so aloof there was no question
of touching her with a horn to try to heal her and besides, she seemed to be
resistant to the usual bonding that cohered the Linyaari.
The
next hours were spent in preparation to take the Niriians aboard. The Balakiire
had no fuel to give them, and their ships were fueled somewhat differently.
Extra berths were prepared, the gardens hyper-planted with varieties of plants
the Ninians "were known to favor.
The
Niriians were pathetically glad to see their Linyaari allies, and also somewhat
shame-faced. "VLfe^haanye-Ferlili Neeva," the captain of the Niriian
ship began. "We heard you and your crew had been taken into custody by
false authorities. Please know that our lives are yours from this day forward
and we will defend you always to any-"
She choked,
sputtered, swallowed, and continued. "I was about to say, to any who seek you on our planet. But it is
unlikely we will have a home to return to."
"Which
brings up a good question," Khaari interjected. "Where should we go
now? Return to narhii-Vhiliinyar?"
"Yes,
but we should emulate Captain Becker and take evasive action, don't you think,
rather than returning directly? In case the Khieevi have spared any ships to
follow the Fo^en."
"A
lot of good it did the junk man," Liriili sneered.
"How
do you know what good it did him?" Khaari demanded. "We don't know
what became of anyone yet."
But
they were to learn very shortly. On the other side of the wormhole, they picked
up a broadcast.
The
first portion was in Standard, and while the Balakiire's crew were putting
their heads together trying to remember enough of that language to decipher the
message, it was rebroadcast in other languages.
The
Niriians became agitated, "They know! They know about the attack! Perhaps
they will send help. They are speaking our tongue!"
Neeva
looked up. Khaari said, "I know that voice! That's Thariinye
speaking!"
"He's
alive!" Melireenya said.
"Of
course he is," Liriili said. "I told all of you that he would be
perfectly all right, and no doubt the brat is as well."
The
language switched again, this time to Linyaari, and Neeva smiled widely.
"That's Khornya."
They
recognized other voices as the broadcasts were repeated in other
languages-Aari's and those of Miiri and Kaarlye, which made Khaari, who was
related to Kaarlye on her mother's side, sigh with relief.
When
the Standard broadcast was repeated, Neeva said, "I know that voice, too.
Doesn't that sound like Khornya's kind and generous uncle Hafiz? He spoke
before we parted of start ing a trade colony on that moon where we went to
recuperate after-"
The
other two nodded, indicating she needed to be no more specific. "That must
surely be where they all are now."
"I
have the coordinates right here, Neeva," Melireenya's voice practically
sang. "Perhaps he can contact the Federation and they will drive the
Khieevi away." She smiled up at the Niriians. "Your world may be
saved yet."
They
clasped each other so tightly their horns locked. "Only let it be
so," the captain said fervently.
Acorna
'was awakened by a brilliant light shining in her eyes. She opened them wide.
She was very tired, having spent the day formulating evacuation plans for the
children. The first shipload carrying the youngest ones was to leave in two
days' time with Calum on the AcaSecki. The crew of the Haven would send their
youngest along too, but the older ones insisted they would stay and fight.
Acorna had also done translations of follow-up messages to broadcast in the
languages she knew-Linyaari of course, but also Federation-based languages. The
Khieevi had invaded Federation space once in search of Linyaari, who was to say
they would not do it again?
The
tension and her efforts both had •wearied her until she had fallen onto her cot
too tired to say goodnight to Maati.
Now the
light awakened her and her first thought was that she was being wakened because
the compound was under attack.
Aari
knelt beside her, a few feet from her sleeping pad. He looked rather odd, but
not especially alarmed. Maati, on the other side of Acorna from her brother,
was rolled onto her side and covered completely by her blanket. She did not
seem to notice the light. Acorna rubbed her eyes. "What is it, Aari? Is
something the matter?" she whispered.
"Hark!"
he said.
"What?"
she asked, thinking for one ridiculous moment that he might break into a
holiday carol, though she had no idea why he would unless he had been inspired
by something he had been reading. But the archaic term was the only word he
uttered in Standard. The rest was in Linyaari.
"What
light is breaking through the pavilion flap over there? It is the suns and
Khornya is the moons!" he asked in a very soft version of their rather
nasal native language. Evidently this was not, then, an alarm, unless it was
perhaps in some sort of code.
Otherwise,
oh dear, she had to wonder if perhaps he might have a fever? An infection
perhaps? Or a poisoning? She had no idea really which dangers he might be more
susceptible to, without his horn, than the average Linyaari.
"Aari,
are you all right?" she asked. "You look ratherwell, no pale, but
see-throughish. I don't like the texture of your skin. And what you are saying
does not entirely make sense. Here, let me feel your pulse. . . ."
But he
backed away a bit, babbling, "A reed is a reed by any other name and would
still not smell very much but be as graceful and delicious as Khornya." He
beckoned her to follow. Which she did because whether his strange utterances
were a code for danger or because he was ill, she could hardly ignore them.
Aari
thought at first he must be dreaming. Khornya knelt a short distance from his
sleeping mat. She was surrounded by a very bright light, as if perhaps she'd
taken .radiation, and was looking at him with a yearning that echoed that he
felt whenever he looked at her.
"Khornya!"
he said, when she did not speak. "Khornya, is something wrong? Are the
Khieevi attacking?" He looked for Thariinye, to waken and warn him, but
the other man was not on his mat. This was not unusual for Thariinye. He had
been gone a great deal lately, working
on translations and evacuation procedures and also apparently chatting up
females, even if they were the wrong species, just to keep in practice, as he
said.
Khornya
did not answer him directly but instead said something very strange. He thought
it might be code, but if so, no one had given him the key.
"How
do I love you?" she asked in Linyaari. "Let me count the trails! I
love the very ions scattered behind your vessel. I love the fragrance of the
grains on which you sup. I love the-"
"You
do?" Aari asked, comprehending that what she said was complimentary if not
particularly coherent, evidently not code, but her own pent-up feelings. Her
tone of voice was rather declaiming and he could not read her at all. But then,
there were times when that happened to him. "But-I have no horn."
"I
love the horn you do not have and the horn you used to have and the horn you
will have again," she continued, rather than answering him. "Come, my
love, let us wander into a secluded bower and there take our ease, if you know
what I mean?" Very un-Khornya-like, she waggled a silver-white eyebrow and
winked at him. He wondered if perhaps Hafiz's gardens had inadvertently been
planted with a stand of what was called "loco weed" in the ancient
Zane Grey novels of the wild western America.
Either
that or it was some peculiar female mating ritual his mother had neglected to
tell him about. Well, there was no time to consult her now. Khornya was wafting
away and he could not let her wander around this huge alien compound in such a
state. Someone might take unfair advantage of her. He rose to follow her.
She
flitted ahead of him like one of the ectoplasmic entities of the wraith-haunted
ruined -world of Waali Waali his parents had taken him to as a child. Back in
the early days of terraforming technology, a powerful company had rapidly
terraformed planets, raised great
cities upon them, and settled •whole transplanted civilizations upon their
surfaces, where they thrived and bred, loved and warred for several eons. And
then the terraforming destabilized, the ice caps melted, the seas froze, the
mountains erupted, and the ground opened and buckled. The cities were ruined
and the people were killed, but the heavy gravity kept them bound to the
surface, which had an indelible memory of the former grandeur of its cities
imprinted upon its ruins. A similar, more tangible memory of its inhabitants,
now bodiless spirits seeking some solid vessel in -which to be reborn,
flickered about the ruins in the same "way Khornya's white form was now
kindled, now quenched, as she wound her way through the ornamental back alleys
of Hafiz's compound.
He
could only follow, the winds and rain of Dr. Hoa's climactically generated monsoon
soaking through his mane, his steps clicking quickly up cobbled steps leading
through narrow passages and by doorways shrouded -with night-velveted rugs and
blankets, their patterns picked out golden with the light of the holo-torches
from the main thoroughfares. Suddenly he saw Khornya's -white form disappear
through a doorway and he found it, concealed by a waterfall of luminous beads,
then he too quickly entered.
He
threaded through -what seemed a maze, except that instead of blank walls, there
were more often curtains, blankets, rugs, beads, and once, the side of a large
gray beast with flapping ears, long curving fangs, a nose like a snake, legs
like pillars, and small, disinterested eyes that regarded him mildly, then
returned to contemplating the infinite. Aari passed the beast, but when he
looked back, all he saw was blackness.
He
began to -wonder and to fear. Perhaps he was still in the Khieevi torture
machine, and his mind -was playing cruel tricks on him, all of this a mere
illusion to build his hope, to give him a dream they could cruelly dash?
But--well, no. He didn't hurt. That was a sure sign there were no Khieevi. When
he had been with the Khieevi the pain -was always -with him and now there -was
nothing but his body, feeling whole and quite astonishingly alive, and the
night, and Khornya flickering ahead of him, a beckoning candle.
Abruptly,
her white form twinkled out ahead of him and then, much farther than he thought
she could have gone in such a brief instant, he heard her call,
"Aari?" in a rather plaintive and childish voice. He rushed forward.
"Khornya?
"
"Aari,
where are you?" she sounded not frightened but anxious.
"Right
behind you. I'll be there in a moment," he called, and he -was. Suddenly
he found himself facing her across not a room, but a moonlit field, much like
the ones he remembered from Vhiliinyar when he -was a boy. The moons shone down
through mist rising from a free-flowing stream, and night birds crooned softly
from the boughs of scattered trees. Khornya stood near one of the trees beside
the stream, and noted his arrival with relief.
"There
you are!"
"Of
course I am." He went to her. He -was relieved to see she seemed healthier
and more substantial than she had at first appeared in his pavilion. Her skin
radiated warmth and the sweet clean floral smell she carried with her. But
there -was another more enticing scent emanating from her as -well. She looked
up at him -with her eyes wide and shining as the moons and her mouth moist.
"I
feared you wouldn't come back," she said softly.
"Against
love's fire fear's frost hath dissolution," he said.
"Excuse
me?"
"It's
something I read recently," he told her, his hand running through her
mane, the backs of his fingers stopping to feel the curve of her cheek.
"It seemed appropriate."
She
sighed. "It sounds better in Standard."
"I
will ask my parents to tell me Linyaari love poetry and fill your ears with it,
if that's what you -want," he said, realizing that the language of love
must have been what she'd been trying to speak when she -was in his tent. She
was right, even with the meaning rather unclear, the poetry from the books he'd
been reading did sound much better in Standard.
"That
is not all I want," she said, her voice husky and her breath sweet.
He felt
parts of himself he'd thought dead rushing to fill his veins with life as hot
and strong, as urgent as magma seeking to escape a volcanic fissure. She lifted
her arms, almost as if in a trance, and he took her into his own and held her.
Her sweet musky scent swept over him as they slid together into the wildflower
sprinkled grass, which was not damp and dewy as he expected, but as warm and
comforting as a blanket.
Annella
and Maati let out a sigh at the same time. Jana pulled them away from the
control booth for the holo suite. She had Laxme by the ear. Thariinye lingered
a little until Maati reached back and snagged his arm.
"They
deserve a little privacy," she said.
"I
maybe should have given him a few more pointers before we started this,"
Thariinye said.
"There
was no time," Laxme said. "They're going to make us leave pretty soon
and we had to finish it-get them together before whatever is going to-happen,
happens."
"Looked
to me like he was doing-they both were doing- just fine, without your
advice," Maati told Thariinye. "And we should leave them to do
it."
Jana
grinned at her. "I think you're wise beyond your years, Maati."
"Someone
has to be," Maati said, with a meaningful look at Thariinye.
Feeling
quite pleased with themselves and considering their good deed a job -well done, the group of young people emerged
from the Spanish-Moorish castle that housed the grandest of the holo hotels.
The curtain swags and bead-draped maze of back streets through which Aari and
Acorna had followed each other's doppelganger was the hotel lobby. The suite
Aari and Acorna occupied now was on the second floor. The field of fragrant
flowers and grass was actually a rather nice Turkomoon carpet, the stream an en
suite lap pool, in case they wanted to bathe after their . . . activities.
No
sooner had they emerged however, than Maati realized the air smelled subtly
different-she recognized the smell too. It was the smell of ships landing.
Linyaari ships. She recognized it even before she heard the boots pounding in
concerted double time down the street from the spaceport.
With
each stroke of the hand, each gentle nip of teeth or lap of tongue, Acorna felt
more and more bonded to Aari, as if they -were exchanging their very molecules,
which of course, they -were, romantic as the thought might sound. It didn't
feel unromantic however. The urges that had been mysteriously rising in her,
troubling her dreams, thrilling her at inappropriate moments, were all about
thi). This exquisite agonizing ache that made her feel as if she would burst
from her skin if something didn't happen. She knew Aari felt the same -way and
yet, he hesitated.
"If
we-continue," he said. "There will be no going back."
"Why
would I want to go back?" she asked. "You are my lifemate. I think
I've always known that."
"Really?
I didn't think-I couldn't hope-"
She
shushed him with a kiss and they moved so that she was poised above him, his
hands on her waist.
"Now,
beloved?" he asked.
She bit
her lower lip and nodded emphatically, "Yes. Now."
The
double-quick pounding boots rounded the corner and the security forces halted
with two quick and perfectly synchronized stomps. Nadhari Kando paced
effortlessly at the head of the cadre and Captain Becker pantingly trailed
behind the buff and ready cream of planetary militia from Federation -worlds.
Nadhari
glared at the children. "It is long after curfew."
"What
curfew?" Jana asked, innocently.
"Were
you not at the briefing at twenty hundred hours this evening?" Nadhari
asked. "We have a red alert situation and a curfew is in effect until
further notice."
"So
what're you gonna do, shoot us?" Laxme demanded. He liked being free after
his childhood in the mines. He did not take kindly to orders, even from the
good guys. Or gals.
Nadhari
pursed her lips and regarded him seriously. "No, but you could ask
Becker's friend Aari how much fun it is to not be where you're supposed to when
the evacuation starts and be left behind when the Khieevi attack."
None of
the kids said anything and Nadhari continued. "Now then, Maati, Thariinye,
you are to report to the reception area. The Balaklire has just landed and they
are very anxious to see that all of you are alive and well. I need to find Aari
and Acorna, too."
Becker
grimaced and told Maati, "That witch of an administrator came on the
Balakiire, too. I bet the Linyaari couldn't take her on the planet anymore. But
Neeva really wants to see everybody and make sure you're all okay."
"I'll
go tell her Khornya is okay," Maati said. With a wicked grin she added,
"Thariinye can fill Liriili .in."
"No,
that's okay," Becker said. "Just tell us where Acorna is and I'll get
her."
Thariinye's
glance strayed toward the hotel entrance and Becker asked, "Are they still
in there? Why didn't you say so?'
"Good.
I'll fetch them," Nadhari said, and before anyone could stop her she
pushed past them and entered the hotel.
Moments later she emerged, looking most uncharacteristically embarrassed
and shame-faced. "Why didn't you tell me they were-uh-occupied? " she
demanded. "I thought you had all been playing a game or having a meeting
or something! What were you doing, using their rendezvous as a training
class?"
Maati's
face fell. "Noooo, we were trying to get them together. And we did, too.
And now it's all ruined!"
"Uh-not
entirely," Nadhari said. "Not from what I saw. But I certainly
spoiled the mood."
Annella
groaned. "It took us weeks to set that up."
"Set
what up?" Becker asked suspiciously, but Annella, Markel, and Jana were
shaking their heads slightly that Maati should say no more.
In a
few minutes, Aari and Acorna walked purposefully from the hotel, as if they
hcu) been interrupted in nothing more personal than a meeting, except that
every once in a while one of them would steal a look at the other one. And
smile. Or sigh. Or get lost in looking and stumble.
Nadhari
said nothing as she led the way back to the spaceport. Becker talked rather a
lot.
The
Niriian refugees endured the Linyaari reunion and the subsequent confusing
introductions as well as they could, until at last they met someone whose name
they recognized. "And this," Vi^ec>haanye-ferUU Neeva said,
"Is Mr. Ha£z Harakamian."
"The
Hafiz Harakamian of the message?" they cried, and faced him with broad
smiles. "Ah, it is you, exalted sir, who will save our world and our
people. But it must be done quickly. Many die even as we stand here -wasting
time with these formalities."
Neeva
translated and Hafiz smiled broadly back at his guests. "I am very sorry
for the plight of your planet, dear alien beings, but you see, I am a merchant.
While it was within my power to provide you and the neighboring worlds with a
warning about the Khieevi menace, I am not a -warrior or a warlord, merely a
humble tradesman."
This
was the point when Khornya was sorely missed. Neeva understood Niriian very
well indeed, but she missed many of the nuances of Hafiz's speech.
"He
says he can't save them," Neeva said. "He is no -warrior, merely a
rich merchant." Hafiz caught her
look and saw that he had fallen somewhat in her estimation. The Niriians
weren't buying it, however. They set themselves even more squarely in front of
him and stuck their round jaws out a bit and smiled even more broadly and
determinedly.
"Sister-child's
father's sister-brother Hafiz," Neeva said, for had he himself not said he
felt as if he were related to the Linyaari as he was to Khornya
herself-therefore he would naturally also be related to Neeva. "I must
tell you that these Niriians are very stubborn people. Once they put their
minds to a thing, they do not budge until they have achieved their goals."
"Most
admirable," Hafiz said nodding and smiling still. "But their tenacity
cannot change the facts."
At this
impasse, Nadhari Kando and Captain Becker and the little cadre of security
troops Nadhari commanded marched into the reception area. With them were a
gaggle of children including Maati, as well as Thariinye, Aari, and Khornya.
"My
husband is a merchant, as he has explained to you elevated alien beings,"
Karlna Harakamian now addressed the Niruans with an apologetic flutter of
lilac-and-violet draperies and a sparkle of amethyst-jeweled hands.
"Surely you would not wish him to subject himself and those he protects to
the same fate your planet has met? Hafiz is a genius at accumulating and
distributing useful things and services. The idea of the sort of mass
destruction the Khieevi wreak is abhorrent to him, but also totally
incomprehensible. I don't know how you could possibly imagine he could be of
assistance."
Liruli
had a fine curl to her lip and to " Neeva, said in Linyaari, "It is
as I suspected. Your great hero-our adopted 'uncle'-is perfectly willing to
trade with us but as far as being a true friend of anyone but
himself-hah!"
Neeva
tried valiantly not to let the disappointment show in her eyes as she murmured
to the unflinching Niriians.
Acorna
was roused from her bemusement by this exchange, and separated herself from Aari and the others to go stand
next to Hafiz.
To
Liriili she said, "That is not fair. Uncle Hafiz is responsible for the
lives of all of the people here and their welfare has to be his first
consideration. And he and Captain Becker have been making some strides in
perhaps finding a way to combat the Khieevi without risking more lives."
"Is
that so?" Liriili demanded. And before anyone could stop her, she
translated a version of what Acorna had said to the Niriians. The result of
this was that one of them, following Acorna's glance to where Becker stood
beside Nadhari, reached out a muscular arm and hauled Becker into a great
crushing hug.
Liriili
smirked. "Our allies say the junk man is their hero and surely if he knows
a way to fight the Khieevi, he will use it quickly to save what is left of
their world."
Acorna
translated to Becker, "They want you to use the methods we have discovered
to fight the Khieevi now, Captain, to save the rest of their -world."
"Okay,
okay!" Becker hollered. "Just tell them to let me go! We'll
talk."
This
time Thariinye stepped in to translate, adding his usual flourishes.
The
Niriian did not loosen its grip on Becker.
"What
did you say?" Aari asked Thariinye. "It's not working."
"I
told them the captain was a great hero and had already slain many Khieevi and
would save their homeworld with the help of the philanthropist Uncle
Hafiz."
"Tell
them they have to let Captain Becker go before he can help them," Acorna
suggested.
Thariinye
spoke to the Niriians again and the one who held Becker released him with such
an enthusiastic clap on the back that
the captain staggered into the arms of Nadhari Kando, and stepped on the cat's
tail as he stumbled.
RK
rewarded him by opening his leg from kneecap to ankle.
Nadhari
patted Becker absently and shoved him gently aside to pick up the cat and croon
to it. "Your servant meant no disrespect, sacred feline. Is your
magnificent tail broken?" She looked at the nearest Linyaari, -who
happened to be Liriili. "Please heal the tail of the sacred temple
cat."
Liriili,
much to the surprise of anyone who was paying attention to her, abandoned her
goading behavior of the rest of the humans to add one of her hands to Nadhari's
in RK's thick fur, cradle his tail in the other hand, and gently lowered her
horn to touch it. The cat immediately began purring and rubbed his cheek
against Liriili's.
"If
that isn't adding insult to injury!" Becker yowled, clutching his bloody
pant leg.
Aan
scowled at Thariinye, who quickly stopped jabbering to the Niriians and knelt
beside Becker. "Sorry, Captain, allow me." He placed Becker's foot
upon his own bent knee and ran his horn the length of the cat scratch.
Becker
let out a long sigh of relief.
Liriili
was crooning to RK. "I had a little pahaantiyir once and you are very like
him, sacred temple cat, yes, you are, you lovely creature!" Tears were
actually coming to her eyes now. "Oh, how I wish he were with me now, my
little friend, when I am surrounded by ill-wishers."
RK
purred as if he had found a new best friend.
"Traitor,"
Becker growled.
Come,
my friends, let us refresh ourselves in the gardens and discuss this brilliant
plan of ours." Hafiz waggled an eyebrow at Becker, but the eye under the
brow was extremely skeptical.
Of
course, Becker didn't really have a plan. Acorna knew that. But between the
experiences the current crew of the Condor had and the skills and resources of
Hafiz Harakamian, Acorna saw the components of a rather good plan taking form.
All it took to formulate -was for everyone involved to pool their resources.
As the
others trailed off behind Hafiz, Acorna fetched Mac. "The captain told me
I should remain here, Acorna, and monitor the Khieevi broadcasts."
"You
are recording them, aren't you?" Acorna asked.
Yes.
"Then
you can listen to the recordings when you return. We need you now, MacKenZ.
Captain Becker is going to explain to Uncle Hafiz how we can defeat the
Khieevi."
"Oh,
that would be most instructive. I am grateful you thought to bring me,
Acorna."
She
smiled and eased him away from the Khieevi shuttle. He had spent so long with
it the smell had permeated him and she had to stop and give him a once-over
-with her horn to erase the unpleasant odor.
"Of
course you must come, Mac. Without you and your skills, we would not have a
hope of defeating the Khieevi."
"Now
then, Captain, we are all eager to hear your plan," Neeva said.
"Ye-es,
dear fellow," Hafiz said. "Please enlighten us."
"Oh,
you're part of it, too. Uncle Hafiz," Acorna assured him. "In fact,
we can't do it without Uncle Hafiz's holographic magic can -we, Captain
Becker?"
"Uh-no,
of course not," Becker agreed.
They
sat on low cushioned chairs positioned near the fountain. Servers brought delicacies
for the humans, while the Niriians and the Linyaari -were invited to pluck
-whatever appealed to them from the bounty of the lush gardens surrounding the
pool into -which the -waters splashed from the horn of a unicorn, rampant. The
Linyaari who had not yet seen this fountain re garded it with wonder, even
Liriili. This was not the usual way in which homage was paid to the Ancestors,
but no doubt the Ancestors would approve.
"And
as I was telling Mac, we can't do without his skills. Of course, if Aari had
not made an effort to recall all he knew of the Khieevi, had not concentrated
so hard on the piiyl that was, I am sorry to say, Toroona and Byorn, the legacy
of one of your brave crews, we would never have learned their language or
anything about how they function." The Niriians were actually a mated
couple, female and male, rather than two males as those unacquainted with the
species had assumed. Becker was surprised to find that his ribs had almost been
broken by Toroona, the female.
"Yeah,"
Becker said, "Aari found out about another important part of the plan too.
Namely that a substance we discovered while on a salvage mission is toxic to
the Khieevi. And what Kaarlye and Miiri have been doing is analyzing the damage
to the corpses as well as the effects of the substance on other things. What
have you folks come up with anyway?"
"We
are still exploring possible ways to synthesize the substance, Captain, and to
utilize it in a controlled fashion outside its native environment."
"That's
okay," Becker said. " 'Cause the truth is, there's nothing wrong with
using it in its native environment. See, it's this vine world, full of these
big plants that secrete the sap that eats through the Khieevi shells. The way I
figure it, if Hafiz here can make use of his holos to make the vine world
appear to be like a Linyaari outpost or something,'and Mac can persuade the
Khieevi that he's one of their guys who survived in the shuttle we've
been-well, Mac's been-studying, and we can set up drones and such to make it
seem inhabited, then the Khieevi will maybe leave the Niriians to come to the
vine world, and the vines will attack 'em, sap 'em, and no more Khieevi."
Everyone
agreed that it was a brilliant plan. Almost all of it could be carried out by remote control, once the vine world
had been prepared to look inhabited. The only danger was that the vine world
was closer to both the Moon of Opportunity and to narhii-Vhiliinyar than the
Niriian homeworld, but they could not, of course, let that weigh too heavily
against the lives of any Niriians still surviving the initial Khieevi attack.
The
Niriians listened anxiously to the translations, their faces stoic, but when
they spoke at last their words sounded urgent.
"Time
is of the essence," Neeva interpreted. "They implore us to begin
implementing the plan immediately."
The
Moon of Opportunity shut down its recreational functions and trade centers.
Personnel were reassigned to emergency functions. If the plan worked as
everyone hoped it would, security, medical, and reconstruction teams would be
sent to Nirii following the destruction of the Khieevi.
Aboard
the ConSor, Mac reassembled the Khieevi shuttle.
Kaarlye
and Miiri continued their experimentation with the sap and their studies of
Khieevi anatomy and physiology in the laboratory.
The
children were assigned to either the AcaBecki or the Haven for evacuation.
However, Annella Carter, Markel, and Jana were remaining as long as possible in
order to help Hafiz prepare the necessary holograms.
"We
must simulate a civilization sufficiently luscious to induce salivation among
the Khieevi," Hafiz instructed his pupils. "We shall transfer the
holos of Linyaari pavilions to nestle them among the vines. We will also need
to use the Baiakiire as a model for simulating other Linyaari vessels of
different designs."
"Oh,
goody," Annella said. "It will be like decorating giant Easter
eggs!"
"Also,
we must have holos of individuals-Linyaari and the Nirnans. We can do several sims of each of the Linyaari guests
and hope the Khieevi will not be aware of the duplication."
"We
already have done ones of Aari and Acorna," Annella told Hafiz.
"Have
you?" Hafiz asked. "That is excellent. Excellent indeed."
"Yes,
and we can do me and Thariinye next," Maati said. "Except I want my
holo to be really large and fierce."
"Why
bother?" Thariinye said. "All they have to do is make an ^altered
holo of Liriili and she'll probably frighten the Khieevi into leaving a slime
trail all the way back to their homeworld."
Seventeen
The
first invasion of the vine world was both human and Linyaari. Acorna, moving
gently among the fragrant vines, felt remorseful for what her people -were
about to bring upon this self-contained ecology.
The
plants felt far less alien this time, and far more friendly, now that she knew
what their sap could do to Khieevi. She had scarcely noticed before how
exquisitely beautiful the flowers were, with their petals shaded from cream to
ivory to milky white and translucent, with the barest hints of pink near the
stamen.
The
scent did not seem so overpowering as it had before. Instead it was rather
hypnotic, permeating her other senses so strongly that it seemed to be a color,
a taste, a voice, as •well as a smell. As technicians and scientists barged
through the vines so quickly the plants whipped back and forth as if in a
strong wind, Acorna merely held her hand aloft and the ropes of leaf and flower
parted for her like a curtain. Perhaps she was thinking of these vines as
saviors, champions, defenders of her kind against Khieevi kind, but they were
altogether more attractive to her than on her last visit.
Kaarlye
and Miiri led teams of volunteers in the harvesting of the sap. They brought containers, of course, but all the
really needed was their own footwear and gloves, which collected plenty of the
sticky substance as the people plowed through the vines.
Technicians
carefully placed the drones that would transmit signals to lure the Khieevi
away from the Niruans. These would be overlaid with holograms of Linyaari ships
and pavilions being projected by other technicians while the programmed
Linyaari holos began milling around among the holo-structures like so many
ghosts.
Acorna
found it quite startling -when she parted the vines •with a small gesture to
face herself on the other side of them, a self apparently kneeling to collect
sap and murmuring oddsounding words. Acorna retreated two careful steps and the
vines closed back over the projection.
"Hmmm,"
she said to herself, and returned to where the ships that had brought the
technicians, scientists, and equipment were almost totally wrapped in vines.
"Captain,
I think I may have learned something about these plants," she began.
"Yeah,
well, save it, Princess. We got us a situation here. Most of the holos are
being hidden by the vines. Except for the projections we can make from above,
of the tents and the ships, and only the tops of them are showing, this is
still looking pretty much like -what it is, a vine world. It's going to take
either some earth-moving machines or some heavy machete work to clear spaces
for the holos and then these things have a way of growing back. The only good
thing about it is that mowing a few of them down will produce more sap. But how
it's going to work for a decoy, I dunno." He scratched his mustache in a
thoughtful way.
"Wait,
Captain. Perhaps that won't be necessary. Perhaps we can communicate with
them."
The
Captain looked at her as if she were insane. "Acorna. Darling. Sweetie. Princess. Honey. Excuse
me. You're a real bright kid, but they are plants. You eat them. You <)on't
discuss strategy with them."
"Perhaps
not. But if you use heavy equipment or even machetes to clear the area around
the holos, then won't that defeat the purpose? Especially if the vines do not
regenerate quickly enough in this area? Then the Khieevi will simply land in an
area filled with holos, and once they discover that the bait is indeed, merely
a collection of holograms, they will go back to the Niriians, or what will be
worse for all of us, follow the projections back to the source and prey on the
Moon of Opportunity instead."
The
mustache bristled and Becker scratched it again. "OK. Guess we better have
a council of war here."
Acorna
made the same speech to Rafik, Gill, and via transmitter to Hafiz, orbiting the
planetoid in the Ail Baba, one of his more modest vessels. Karina Harakamian,
who had come along as the mission's "spiritual adviser," answered for
Hafiz. "Of course, Acorna, dear, you are quite right to try gentle
persuasion first. I will have the first officer transport me to the surface at
once so that I may assist."
"How
kind," Acorna said, quite insincerely, but there was no point in hurting
Kanna's feelings. Fortunately, her new "auntie" was a mind reader
only on very sporadic occasions, and those were never the ones Karina predicted
or anticipated.
At
Acorna's signal, the Balakiire landed beside the holos of the other Linyaari
ships, some of them decorated with bunnies and flowers as well as the more
usual rococo designs that symbolized the great families and heroes of the
Linyaari people.
Thariinye
and Maati, who had been setting up the smaller holos and who had also noted the
problem of the vines obscuring them, responded to Acorna's mental summons, and
Aari, who had been keeping her within sight as much as was possible, joined
them.
"I
don't suppose the LAANYE will be of any help here," Acorna said. "But
I think we must try thought transference with the beings on this planet."
"The
vines?" Aari asked.
"Yes,"
she said. "It came to me while I was out among them that they may
communicate by their scent. Remember, the first time we came here, it was
almost overpowering."
"It
still is right around the ships, and where Captain Becker and the scientists
are working," Maati said. "But I noticed as we got a little farther
away, planting some of the holos, that the smell was actually kind of
pretty."
"Sexy,"
Thariinye said.
-Maati
put an elbow in his ribs. "Trust you to think so, even about vines!"
Aari
shrugged. "I don't see what help I can be. I'm not very psychic without
my-"
Acorna
had to turn to face him as he was behind her, one hand resting lightly,
reassuringly on one of her shoulders. "Aari," she said, staring, not
into his eyes, but slightly above them.
The
other Linyaari, including his parents, who had just arrived, panting, hefting
their collection bags, followed her gaze. "Aari, what is that on your
scar?" she asked, a little breathless with hope as she reached up to
touch, thinking realistically that she would probably encounter a piece of a
petal from one of the vine flowers. Her finger and his touched the little white
protuberance at the same time.
"It's
horn!" he said. "My horn is regenerating. The graft is finally
taking."
(And
I'll bet I know why,) Thariinye whispered, laughing.
Both
Acorna and Aari blushed and Maati, who also picked up the whisper, stomped hard
on Thariinye's foot.
Acorna
embraced Aari and his parents and Maati touched him briefly.
Karina
arrived. "I suppose we should start by everyone forming a circle!"
she said brightly.
"Why?"
everyone else asked, almost in unison.
"The
better to commune, of course!" Karina said.
"With
our species or yours maybe," Acorna told her gently. "But I think
perhaps with these beings we might need to use different methods. One thing I
do feel we must do, however, is to distance ourselves from the main part of the
camp. The odor given off by the vines is the most overpowering and noxious near
the ships."
Acorna
led them into the vines, which parted almost politely before her and the
others. They walked perhaps a half of a kilometer from the ships before Acorna
stopped and inhaled.
"What
do you smell?" she asked.
"It's
nice here," Maati said. "Does that mean the plants here aren't as
upset as the ones near the ships?"
"I
don't know really," Acorna said. "It's just something I thought -we
might try."
"It
sounds pretty silly to me," Liriili said, though she had been unusually
quiet until then. "How ever can you imagine that something can communicate
with smells?"
Miin
laughed. "What do you think -we do when -we're ready to mate, Liriili? Or
other species for that matter? With pheromones!"
"It's
not unheard of for species to communicate with something other than sound,
after all," Neeva said. "Many do by sight, or touch, or, as we do
ourselves, by thought alone. Had you spent more time investigating the universe
around you, Liriili, you would know that."
Acorna
said, "Now I remember! Ants! Little ants communicate by pheromones too-a
fairly complex set of smells to give ", each other signals, indicate
path-ways, that sort of thing."
"Ye-es,"
Liriili said, sounding almost pleasant, "Of course.
Paha,ntiydr<f
also leave scent marks on their territory, or for mating. I just never thought
of it as communication before."
"Yes,
well, live and learn," Neeva said as diplomatically as possible, clearly
not wishing to discourage Liriili's willingness to consider for once that
something someone else said might actually contain merit. "The problem is
how we should interpret the scents given here."
"That
probably won't be as hard," Acorna said, "As somehow managing to
communicate with the plants themselves. But I wondered-if the scents symbolize
their thought forms, perhaps we can find some common ground to teach them
something about ours."
"Why?"
Thariinye asked.
"There
are many good reasons why one would wish to communicate with a new species,
Thariinye," Neeva said. "But the specific one Khornya has in mind, I
suspect, is so that we might
ask the
vines to part and allow the holograms to be seen by the Khieevi."
"But
first "we must find a common vocabulary," Khaan said. "What do we
know about the vines? How could we show similarity?"
"We-ell,"
-Maati said, "If-we want them to part, maybe she should start with that.
They come together and they spread apart. Maybe we can show that with each
other."
"But
they don't communicate by what they see," Liriili said, and for once she
-was using a reasonable, if impatient, tone that only slightly hid the fact
that she was as puzzled as any of the rest of them. "They communicate by
smell."
"But
they convey a thought, sort of," -Maati argued. Acorna thought the girl
had matured a great deal since she had stopped being Liriili's messenger. She
was much more confident now.
(Showing
off for her parents,) Thariinye, catching Acorna's thought, -whispered to her
uncharitably. But Aan scowled at him,
as if he read the thought too, and Thariinye looked away as if the thought had
been sent by someone else.
"Yes,"
Acorna agreed with Maati. "It is a thought form, however they express it
and who knows? Maybe to the vines, we exude a scent too when we are thinking
certain things. Only we'd be a lot more complicated for them to read, maybe,
than they are for us. Let's try to simplify it for them. Everyone spread apart
and concentrate, as we do so, that we are spreading apart."
"Our
essential apartness," intoned Karina.
(Move
gently, spread wide,) Acorna whispered. "Karina, think, 'Move gently,
spread wide.' "
"A
mantra! I love it!" Karina squealed. "Move gently, spread wide. Move
gently, spread wide,"
"Softly,"
Acorna said. "In fact, don't say it, think it."
Karina
nodded gravely and only moved her lips to the words.
The
whisper was taken up by the others, in unison, (Move gently, spread wide).
Their line spread until they could not touch outspread hands. As they moved at
first the plants only parted to let each individual pass but gradually, as the
people kept whispering, the vines softly lay themselves down upon each other
until there was a large rectangular area open around the Linyaari and Karina.
When
this concept seemed to be understood, Acorna said softly to Karina, who was on
her right, while whispering to the others, (Close up, gather together, twining,
tangling, plaiting).
The
others took it up and gently came together, then pressed themselves in closer,
Joining hands, lacing fingers, wrapping knees and feet around legs, hips, and
waists as tightly as possible-and then more tightly as the vines locked in
around them, squeezing until Acorna gasped, "Move gently, spread
wide" again and the others picked up the thought. It took the vines a
breathtaking moment to realize that this time, they must spread first, but their scent lightened from
the suffocatingly close aroma it had become while holding the Linyaari, and the
vines spread once more.
"These
plants are definitely sapient beings," Neeva said approvingly-and
apparently somewhat fragrantly. The vines swayed gently back and forth, as if
pleased, and emitted a light, sweet aroma.
"Good,"
Acorna said, "Because now we have to tell them about the Khieevi."
"Why?"
Thariinye asked.
"And
how," added JVlaati.
"Because,"
Aari said. "We are bringing the Khieevi among them to be killed, but the
Khieevi may also kill many of the vine people. When we thought they -were not
possessed of intelligence, then it seemed good to let the Khieevi graze here
and be killed by the sap. But now that we bring this evil upon these beings,
the least we can do is -warn them."
"Where
are they going to go if they object?" Liriili asked archly.
"That
is not the point," Neeva said. "Now that we know they are beings who
would suffer from the Khieevi as we would, we naturally will continue Captain
Becker's plan only with their cooperation."
"Which
we will obtain how?" Liriili demanded with the same archness.
"My
collection bag!" Miiri said suddenly. "Where is it?"
"There-among
the vines," Kaarlye said. "Mine too. They're open. Do you suppose the
plants mind that we are taking the sap?"
"Perhaps
they don't mind so much as-wonder -what we are doing with it," Acorna
ventured. "After all, they know what function it serves for them, but it
must be hard for them to understand why we would wish to take some away."
"Mother,
Father," Aari said, "I know of one smell that is very evocative-that might demonstrate to
them exactly what •we are trying to convey. Do you have anything with you that
smells like the Khieevi?"
"Oh
no," Miiri said. "We bathe very carefully after our laboratory
work."
"I'll
bet MacKenZ does," Acorna said. "The ship still reeks horribly of
Khieevi when you first board it, no matter how many times horns purify the air.
That shuttle has the stench hardwired into its structure, I believe."
"I'll
go ask him," Maati said.
She
returned a short time later holding a peculiar looking object at arms length in
one gloved hand, while she held her nose with the other.
"I
guess I'm not old enough yet to purify it," she said.
"Good.
Don't anyone else try to erase the smell till we can show the vine beings what
it means," Acorna said. "Now then, set the thing down, Maati, and let
us all allow ourselves to react as we would to a Khieevi with it-fear, disgust,
horror, anger, feel them as hard as you can and send. Work yourself up into a
sweat if possible."
They
all did as she suggested. Aari grew particularly rank with sweat and the stench
of fear so that even she could smell him, though usually the Linyaari had only
a pleasant odor, if any.
The
vines shook and trembled at first and then all at once they swept past the
people and converged on the Khieevi object, pouring sap over it, almost
shooting the viscous fluid from their stems and blossoms until the thing was
entirely covered.
"They
get it!" Thariinye cried. "They understand."
"Either
that or they're simply acting from self-protection," Liriili said.
"Maybe
we should make a holo of the Khieevi to show them?" Maati suggested.
"If
they communicate by scent, they'll know the Khieevi -when they smell them, and apparently they know what to do with
them too," Melireenya said.
"We
need our collection bags back," Kaarlye said.
Acorna
frowned. "Perhaps they'll understand now. Try to take it back. They know
we are afraid of the Khieevi and they have probably noticed that -we can't
exude sap as they can. That might be clear enough to them-we fear something
they have a defense for that -we don't."
Kaarlye
reached for the sack and met with no resistance as he reclaimed it and then
Miiri's from the vines that had been curled protectively over it.
"Back
to the original problem of the holos. I suggest that we simply go to the
various holos and ask the plants to spread apart where they are. We will have
to work on suggesting that they remain that way until the Khieevi are among
them."
Neeva
shook her head. "The initial problem isn't the main question now. With
beings as intelligent as these, we have no right to sacrifice them to spare the
Niriians, or ourselves for that matter."
"So,
let's show them the piiyi," Thariinye said.
"If
they can't see it, how can they judge?"
"Can
they smell it?" Aari asked. "Becker -was complaining of the smell of
the piiyi. We still have the capsule in which we found it. Perhaps the smell of
that will convey information to the plants that it does not to us."
"I
suppose it's worth a try," Acorna said. "Though I hope we're not
giving them the wrong smells."
Thariinye
and Aari duly boarded the Condor and emerged with the piiyi. They were trailed
by RK, who ignored the smelly organic communications device to sniff the
plants, after which the cat turned his hoisted tail to the nearest vine and,
with a mighty shudder of his magnificently furred appendage, let fly a bolus of
eau ^e chat that momentarily overpowered the scent of the flowers. The vines bent down and for a moment Acorna
feared they would perhaps attack RK, but they seemed instead to be bowing to
him.
"Look!"
-Maati cried. "They recognize his scent! They know he's a sacred temple
cat! It's like he's blessed them!"
Neeva
wrinkled her nose. "If that is the blessing of the sacred temple cat, I
should hate to smell the curse!"
The
piiyi was attached to a portable scanner and played for the plants. The vines
reacted to nothing until the Khieevi appeared on the piiyi. Then, to everyone's
surprise, the plants sprayed the piiyi with sap.
"Well,"
Acorna said, "they clearly recognize the Khieevi. Even when Captain Becker
behaved aggressively toward the plants, they didn't spray sap at him or us, but
just the image and the klacking of the Khieevi cause the plants to
attack."
Aari
nodded. "Yes, I think it is because the Khieevi seem to the vines to be
larger versions of the insects their sap is created to destroy. That first time
-we were here-when I- when I had to return to the ship? I saw the resident
insects in the sap and they reminded me of the Khieevi. Very much."
Neeva
frowned. "If the plants regard the Khieevi as natural enemies, and respond
aggressively automatically, then I think perhaps this plan will work and still
be within the bounds of diplomatic integrity. Now then, all -we have to do is
get them to spread themselves away from the holos."
With
the communication they had already established, this did not prove difficult.
Even Becker was impressed by the cooperation of the vines. When the last drones
-were planted, the crew of the Cow)or looked down to see a little frontier
outpost of the Linyaari, nestled among flowering vines. Tall unicorn people
scurried to and fro among the buildings and vines.
"That
ought to be enough to fool the Khieevi," Becker said, and turned to Mac,
"Are you ready to transmit from your shuttle?" "Aye, Captain." -Mac said.
"Then
stand by. As soon as the area is cleared, you can invite your friends to our
garden party," Becker said, his mustache bristling as he bared his teeth
in what Acorna decided was not a show of friendship.
"Uncle,
I thought we agreed that the children were to be evacuated here to the Moon of
Opportunity immediately," Rank Nadezda reminded Hafiz.
"Ah,
but that was before the excellent Becker devised his excellent plan,"
Hafiz said. "And Ambassador Neeva and the eminent Lmyaari scientists
Kaarlye and Miiri assure me it will succeed, as does our own beloved Acorna. So
why send the kiddies home? And if they go, why not all of us? And if "we
go, so goes a large portion of the assets of House Harakamian, which I have
invested in the establishment of the Moon of Opportunity." Seeing his
nephew's eyes snap and his mouth open, Hafiz added hastily, "I know, dear
boy, I know, of course, that human-and Linyaari-life is not to be measured against
mere profit. Naturally. But is it not true as well that these people, Acorna's
people, have come to rely upon us for a certain measure of protection-•well,
perhaps, support is a better word? And if we begin sending away our own
children, indicating that we believe danger still exists, does this not imply
that ours are more important than their loved ones? Such an implication hardly
sets the right tone, you see?"
"Tone
be damned!" Rafik said. "These kids have already been through a
thousand kinds of hell and^we have definitely promised them our protection. The
Linyaari are home, as are their children. Our kids should return to Maganos
Moonbase and stay there until the Khieevi are no longer a problem. And the
Haven has no business here either."
"The
Haven is free to go whenever it wishes. Thus far the Starfarers have decided to
remain with us." "You can't
allow it. Uncle Hafiz. It's much too risky."
"Nephew,
dear boy, listen to me. Life is risky. Business- successful business-is even
more so. We are pioneers, son of my heart. If we are to tread the surface of
planets -which have never known a human footprint, if we are to trade in
currency as yet untouched by human hand, risks are necessary."
Rafik's
eyes narrowed and his tone -was filled with disgust he didn't bother to
conceal. "You say this to me, you who cowered in the underground shelter
of your compound at Laboue when you first saw what the Khieevi did to their
prisoners?"
Sweat
broke out on Hafiz's forehead despite the sweet and mild day Dr; Hoa's weather
iriagic had provided. "The shock of first contact, dear boy." Hafiz
blotted the moisture with a monogrammed scarlet synsilk tissue. "But, very
-well, if you insist, your aunt and I will personally escort the children back
to Federation space, while you as my heir and representative will naturally
conduct business as usual until the crisis has passed and it is safe for us to
return. At which time you will see the wisdom of your old uncle's counsel and
realize how hasty you have been."
Rafik
smiled ruefully, to let his uncle know he had been outmaneuvered. Hafiz could
now take Karina and the children and retire from the field, leaving others to
face danger for the sake of his profit. On the other hand, with the old man and
the kids safely out of the way, Rafik could command the dismantling of the Moon
immediately if it looked like Becker's plan to eradicate the danger from the
Khieevi might fail.
Hafiz
knew this, of course. And furthermore, he knew that Rafik knew that he knew.
But it was much easier to handle matters this -way, allowing Rafik to make the
decisions that would preserve or risk life, determine profit or loss. After
all, Rafik was now head of House Harakamian, -while Hafiz was technically
retired. But these things -were very difficult and must be handled delicately. If the Moon of
Opportunity failed, it would be on Rank's head, and not Hafiz's.
Thus as
soon as the holo team returned from the vine "world, the Acadeckt and the
Haven were loaded with the children of Maganos Moonbase. As a mark of his faith
that he would be returning shortly, Hafiz left the Sharazad on the Moon of
Opportunity and submitted himself and Karina to the far less commodious
accommodations of the AcaSeckl. Rafik had suggested the gesture, both because
the plans were already in place to use the AcaSecki for evacuation and also
because, should general evacuation become necessary, the Sharaza<) was
larger and •would hold more personnel.
With
Aari translating, Kaarlye and Miiri approached Hafiz just before he boarded.
Miiri spoke first and Aari said, "My mother implores you to take my sister
with you and the children. My parents vow to remain here and continue searching
for a way to exploit this biological 'weapon the vine world has provided,
although you understand of course that no Lmyaari can actually deploy it as an
implement of aggression, even against the Khieevi. However, they say they can
work better if they know that Maati is safe. They wished for me to join her,
but Khornya and I wish to remain with Captain Becker. My sister is young and
longs for new experiences, and would very much like to see the Federation
worlds. So take her with you. Take Thariinye as well so that one of her own
kind bears her company." He looked back to his mother for further words
but she was swallowing hard and looking away.
As
Maati and Thariinye transferred ships, Thariinye complained that he wanted to
stay -with the Condor but he drew only a stern look from Neeva, who silently
indicated he should obey.
What no
one said, or even whispered, was that if the Khieevi prevailed, despite the
plan, and once more attacked narhii-Vhiliinyar, at least there would be one
young male and one young female of the Linyaari safe in Federation space, as hope for the Linyaari. Meanwhile, the
Balakiire's remaining crew worked on coordinating with other teams of volunteer
rescuers, in the event it became possible to take a relief mission to Nirii
once the Khieevi had been lured away. Distressing transmissions from the
Khieevi showed them torturing stoic two-horned beings who were obviously in
great pain, but refusing to utter a sound or show any fear at all. Even
stranger, Toroona and Byorn, "who had been so emotional on their planet's
behalf when asking for help, watched the transmissions -with the same stoicism.
Their emotions showed only when they turned away as the frustrated Khieevi
increased their efforts until their prisoners, still silent, died.
Becker
and RK enjoyed a brief reunion with Nadhari. She, as security chief, was now
second in authority on the Moon of Opportunity only to Rafik Nadezda. Since she
was supervising the security arrangements for the evacuation, she had time only
for a quick half hug with Becker, and to 'welcome RK as the cat draped himself
around her shoulders while she worked.
As the
passengers finished loading onto the Acaoecki, Miiri and Kaarlye supervised the
loading of canisters full of sap into the cargo hold. Hafiz wished to take it
to his corporate laboratories for further analyses and study. Should the
Khieevi ever attack •within Federation space, the Federation would pay well in
terms of influence and power, as well as great sums of money, to the holder of
a secret weapon against this terrible enemy.
Aari
surprised Hafiz by clasping the older man's round synsatin clad form in his own
large embrace. "Farewell, Uncle Hafiz. Look after my sister and Thariinye
and our friends and be well. Joh, Khornya, Riid-Kiiyi, and I too will let you
know when it is safe to return."
"Er,
farewell, my nephew."
Karina
gave him a somewhat more effusive hug. "Farewell, Aari, and oh, my, is
that a horn you're growing there?" She
reached up to touch it and with difficulty he endured what she probably
didn't realize was an inappropriate intimacy. "Oooh, I just had a flash.
The plan will succeed but there will be difficulty-and danger! Be careful, dear
friend-friends!"
Ready,
Captain," -Mac said. The android was in the cockpit of the Khieevi shuttle. It was still in the hold of the
Condor, which was now orbiting the vine world. The holograms moved below in
their randomly programmed patterns. Some of them were speaking, some were not.
It didn't matter. The Khieevi wouldn't understand anyway.
Becker
rubbed his hands together as gleefully as a landlord about to foreclose on the
heroine's mortgage in a vid melodrama. "The trap is set, the bait's in
place, now all we need is to wiggle the string a little to make the bait look
lively to the rats."
Acorna
looked up from the console, smiled and stroked RK's head. "Captain, it
occurs to me you've been hanging out too much with RK lately."
"Yes,"
Aari said. "You are beginning to think like a cat."
Becker
shrugged. "I could do worse. Cats are good at strategy. " He flipped
the toggle on the ship's intercom. "Okay, Mac, do your thing," he
said, then, recalling how literal minded the android -was, added, "I mean,
make the speech -we discussed to the Khieevi and try to lure them over
here."
Acorna
frowned. "I wish we were able to wait until the evac ships have time to reach Federation space." She let the
words hang in the air. It -was a vain wish. All of them had seen the broadcasts
of pain-wracked Niriian prisoners being tortured. All of them knew what the
planet would look like when the Khieevi were finished. All of them knew that
every moment they delayed cost more Niriian lives. They had to act quickly. And
really, the evacuation ships would be heading toward Federation space, not near
the vine "world. There should be no problem at all. Acorna wondered why
she remained anxious, nevertheless. When her question popped out, it surprised
even her. "I wonder why they do it, really."
"Who,
hon?" Becker asked.
"The
Khieevi. Why do they torture people? Did you ask the prisoner that?"
"No.
I figure it's just cause they're mean mothahs and they enjoy it. Isn't that
about right, Aari?"
Aari
frowned. "I did not think of them as enjoying anything, Joh. In fact, now
that you mention it, I don't believe they 9u) enjoy torturing me, as relentless
and thorough as they were. It seemed more as if they were very anxious to be
wringing from me every bit of pain and fear they could. The few questions they
asked me did not seem to be important to them and they did not bother to try to
understand enough Linyaari to be able to express themselves. And I am afraid
that one thing our observers and diplomats have learned of the Khieevi is that
they are very scientific about their torture. The first few of our
representatives they captured and tortured died almost at once, so the Khieevi
refined their techniques so that they would only cause maximum pain for the
longest possible time without fatal results."
He
shuddered suddenly and Acorna reached for his hand and held it. She knew from
his thoughts that he had been shamed by his fear of the Khieevi, and by the
pleading he had no doubt done with them to stop hurting him, natural as
such responses were. He did not feel
any of the merit Thariinye attributed to him for enduring what he could not
escape. Acorna agreed with his assessment. It was pitiable what he had been
through, horrible, but did not, in itself, make him a better person. No, he
himself did that by his strength of character in facing what he feared most,
and with reasons stronger than anyone around him could possibly understand. He
faced the Khieevi, and their torture, and examined it to try to find answers
and solutions that would help others.
Becker
grunted. "Whoever said 'know your enemy' was right, even if he couldn't
have known the enemy was going to be big, nasty, alien bugs. If he had known,
maybe he would have told us how we were supposed to know them."
"Receiving
reply from the Khieevi now, Captain," Mac said. "On our -way,
Mac," Becker said. The crew clattered across the grated deck plate and down
to the hold containing the shuttle. Klackings and klickings emanated from the
freshly repaired corn unit.
"What
do they say, Mac?" Becker asked. "They are coming here now,
^Captain!" Mac said. "Wow, that was fast. Already?" Becker
asked. "The Niriians do not make satisfactory victims, apparently,"
Mac said. "The Khieevi expressed preference for Linyaari prey. They scream
better, apparently. This is a desirable trait in a host race for the Khieevi.
They have been quite unhappy with the lack of response from the Niriians,
despite their best efforts. The Niriian response has been judged
inadequate." "Inadequate for what?" Becker asked.
Mac
said, "I do not know, Captain. I repeat only the- scuttlebutt-I am picking
up from their intership transmissions. Shall I ask?"
"No,"
Aari said. "If you were a real Khieevi, you wouldn't have to."
"True,"
Becker said. "So, they're on their -way. Let's fall back smartly, gang." It had been
necessary for them to transmit from the proper physical location to lend
verisimilitude to their transmission, but the remote cameras located on the
vine world and its moon would provide visuals of the Khieevi invasion. The
Condor could detect the approach of the Khieevi from considerable distance,
thanks to the bank of long-range scanners Becker normally employed for
detecting ships in peril, recent disasters, and other juicy salvage situations.
Once the Khieevi swarm was all focused on the vine world, the Condor could
creep back into position for a ringside seat to the "the squishing,"
as Becker colorfully referred to it.
Once
the swarm approached, radio silence would have to be maintained. However, the
Condor's shuttle had been repaired and readied to act as a relay between the
Moon of Opportunity and the Condor, to carry news of the mission's progress.
Once the Condor was in position on the far side of the vine world's nearest
planetary neighbor, their position was transmitted to headquarters on the moon.
The
Condor lurked, waiting for the Khieevi to become carrion.
When
the swarm's vanguard arrived, Becker, who was on watch, let out a whoop.
"-Mercy gracious, boys 'n' girls, the scanners look like Kezdet's pleasure
district on a Saturday night when the fleet's just docked! My oh my oh
my!"
Acorna
and Aari joined him on the bridge. Mac was still monitoring Khieevi
communications from the wrecked shuttle.
The vid
screen came to life as the remote cameras switched themselves on to record the
landing of the Khieevi fleet. A shark-like school of the mantis-shaped vessels
circumnavigated the smallish vine world as if they were the rings of Saturn.
From the innermost ring of ships, shuttles shot to the surface, after -which
those ships spiraled away from the planet to be replaced by others with a fresh
supply of shuttles and troops.
"We're
going to need something to destroy the ships too," Becker whispered
fiercely. Acorna knew why he was whispering. The attack was ferocious. She
feared anew for the sapient vines. "If they don't land, the sap can't make
contact."
"Perhaps
they will land to investigate and infect each other," Acorna suggested.
But
they did not.
The
vines parted to permit the landing of the shuttles, each of -which disgorged an
amazing number of ground troops.
At
first the vines allowed the Khieevi to pass until it seemed there were as many
Khieevi on the ground as there -were vines, all marching relentlessly upon the
holo compounds.
Acorna
trembled at the sight of multiples of herself, Aari, Neeva and the Balakiire's
crew, Aari's family, Thariinye and Liriili, going blithely and peacefully about
their business while endless lines of Khieevi, ever reinforced by more shuttles
dropping through vine-world space in lines of their own, deposited
reinforcements.
The
staccato klacking of pincers and mandibles was louder than any -weapon's fire.
"Why
aren't the plants closing on them?" Becker demanded.
"I
don't know, Captain," Aari answered. "In the communications we had
-with them, the mere scent of the Khieevi caused the vine-beings to shoot sap
upon the offending objects."
"They're
waiting," Acorna said, excitement and awe in her voice. "We knew the
plants were intelligent and they're proving it! I think our -warnings about the
Khieevi -were understood much better than -we had reason to hope. The plants
actually have formed a plan. They -want to trap the largest possible number of
Khieevi before they counterattack."
"You're
kidding!" Becker said, and whistled.
RK
leaped onto the console. His fur stuck straight out on his body so he appeared
to be twice his normal size. His tail bristled and switched so fast it slammed
Becker's kaf cup to the floor -with one swipe, Aari's with the next. A low
growl from RK's throat grew to a
high-pitched caterwaul that made Becker cover his ears and Acorna lift the
spiky creature into her arms to try to comfort him. He didn't attack her, but
neither did he calm down. There was nothing to heal in his response. It was
natural and healthy for a Makahomian Temple Cat to go into battle mode under
the circumstances. Acorna understood this and when the cat remained stiff and
distinctly uncomforted, she set him down again where he stood with his tail
lashing the air like a saber.
The
first phalanx of Khieevi reached the holo-compounds and opened fire on the
holos, which responded by breaking up and reforming, continuing the postures,
journeys, movements, and apparent tasks in -which they had been engaged before
the attack.
Khieevi
klacking escalated to an even higher volume. Shuttles no longer streamed from
the skies. The ground troops, heedless of the klacks of the vanguard, charged
forward, trampling some of those in front of them.
Mac
looked up at the rest of the crew. "The Khieevi are very frustrated and
dissatisfied," he said. The android could have saved the speech. The tone
of the klacks accompanied by the activity of the klackers was more than
eloquent.
Then
suddenly, and seemingly simultaneously, the Khieevi exploded into action, all
of them at once diving into the vines with open mandibles. The attack had been
so typically single minded that it had drawn their attention-and the attention
of Acorna and her friends-completely away from the plants, -which had been
docilely shrinking away .from the Khieevi, allowing roots and stalks to be trampled.
Even before the Khieevi attack changed course, however, the plants slowly began
thrusting upward again, unbending from being trod underfoot, as if reaching for
sunlight, all very innocent and plant-like.
But as
the first mandibles closed on the first stalk, the vines whipped into action, shooting sap from each
fresh wound and from sap sacs hidden in the stalks and under the leaves as
well. The Khieevi were surrounded, as they had previously surrounded the holo-compounds.
The
cameras became ineffective as sap squirted everywhere. Becker switched to the
moon-linked camera. A close-up of the planet's surface showed it glistening
with turbulent swells and peaks of slimy sap. The Khieevi shuttle's corn unit
squealed -with high-pitched eeee sounds. Acorna reached over and flipped the
toggle, and the sound mercifully ceased.
The
remote camera showed a handful of shuttles with rapidly dying Khieevi piloting
them erratically towards the mother ships. Once the stragglers had been
reabsorbed by the swarm, the ships veered off.
"Are
they going back to the Niriians?" Becker asked Mac.
Mac
flipped the toggle back on again and monitored the noises emitted by the ships.
"No, Captain. They are in disarray. This has never happened to them
before, I think."
"Predators
who prey on pacifists probably don't run the risk of getting beaten all that
often," Becker allowed. "So what are they up to?"
"I
do not think they know at this time, Captain. There is talk of returning to the
homeworld. They are-unlikely as it may sound-I believe they are very
frightened, Captain."
"Of
the vine world?" Becker grinned. "They should be. Serves them
right."
"Yes,
but they are already discussing -what might be used to neutralize it. Actually,
from what I can detect, I believe they are afraid of returning to their
homeworld. That seems odd, don't you think?"
"Maybe
the King bug is going to chop off their heads," Becker said with a shrug.
"I hope he does and that teaches them not to mess -with us again. So,
gang, I guess that's it. It's over. We win. Or the plant critters do. End of
story."
Acorna
could not think of a logical objection to this conclusion, though she felt it
was somehow all-anticlimactic. So much horror so easily conquered. Who would
have believed it. But she could tell from Becker's tone and his expression that
he felt the same. Aari too appeared perplexed and unsatisfied. "What's the
matter?" she asked him.
He
shook his head, "Perhaps, after living with fear of the Khieevi for so
long, it is hard to believe we have put an effective end to them. Perhaps I am
merely having trouble adjusting to the idea that they are gone, that our
people, and I in particular, no longer have the terror of them looming over
us."
"Maybe
that's it," Acorna agreed. But she remained uneasy.
No
brass band greeted the ConSor, but everybody looked happy to see it return
safely. Rafik Nadezda, Declan Giloglie, and Nadhari Kando were waiting at the
landing bay, as were Aan's parents.
Before
the robo-lift had touched the ground, Aari's parents were saying, "We made
a significant breakthrough with the sap! Wait till you see. It's quite simple
but very effective."
"That's
good," Becker told them. "But I'm afraid we won't be needing
it."
He
deliberately pulled a long face and Acorna and Aari, picking up their cues from
him, tried to keep their thoughts to themselves.
"Why?
Didn't it work? What happened?"
"The
plants pretty well annihilated the Khieevi army, that's what!" Becker
said, grinning. "We-or rather the plantswhipped their buggy butts."
Cheers
went up among the reception committee and as the word passed all through the
compound. Outlying recreational areas had been closed for the red alert and the
main city was bloated with anxious people, some of them bored because their
functions had been related solely to the closed areas, some of them pumped with adrenaline, ready to take
action against any threat.
The
Linyaari delegation pressed forward, the Niriian couple preceding them by a
step or two.
Acorna
smiled at them and told her aunt, "According to the Khieevi broadcasts,
they won't be going back to Nirii either. Mac says from what he can figure out,
the Niriians did not make very good victims."
Neeva
translated and Toroona smiled beatifically. "She says that's something
they can be proud of," Neeva said.
Rafik
was smiling too. "Whew. This is a wonderful turn of events! We had better
call Uncle Hafiz at once, Acorna, so he can come back and broadcast a new
message taking all the credit!" Acorna and Rafik exchanged knowing grins.
Aari's
mother had taken his arm on one side and Acorna's on the other. "And we
thought we had so much to show you.."
"We
are most interested in your discoveries, Mother," Aari assured her.
"While most of the Khieevi army was destroyed, there were still many ships
aloft and we are unsure how many troops may have remained onboard."
"Yeah,"
Becker said. "Besides, they're bugs." Acorna translated.
Kaarlye
looked puzzled. "Of course they are insects. Does the captain think we are
unaware of this?"
"I
believe what he means," Acorna said. "Is that insects reproduce
rapidly and in large numbers. The danger from the Khieevi is not yet
over."
Rafik,
dear boy, and my good Captain Becker, this news!" Hafiz Harakamian said.
The crew and passengers of the
AcaSecki were cheering, holding hands, and hopping up and down, even as Calum
reversed course in preparation for the AcaSecki's, return to MOO, as the
children now referred to it. "You have vanquished the enemy, saved the
Niriian homeworld, made the universe a safer place to do business, brought
honor to House Harakamian, created the opportunity for much favorable publicity
for the Moon of Opportunity, and all at a relatively low price point!
Commendable, gentlemen, most commendable indeed."
The
next hail was from the Haven. "I presume you've heard the news!"
Johnny Greene said.
"We
have indeed and splendid news it is!" Hafiz replied. "We are
returning to the Moon of Opportunity even as we speak."
"We're
within Federation space right now, and I haven't heard what the general vote
was, but the Counsel is pretty sure the kids will want to come back to the
Moon, too. Once the vote is in, if that's the case, "we'll caravan with
you again."
"Very
well, Johnny, but tell the children not to dawdle.
Uncle
Hafiz has a great deal to do now that his staff has made space safe for our new
friends and neighbors to travel freely once more."
"Uh-yeah,
we knew that," Johnny said. "Catch you in a few."
"So
that means we need to wait for them?" Calum Baird asked.
"Yes,
indeed," Hafiz said. Laxme and some of the other children made impatient
noises.
"Are
they going to be long?" Laxme asked.
There
was not actually a lot to do on the Accu)ecki and the rations weren't that
great either. It wasn't as big as the ships they had come on, and there hadn't
been time to prepare properly for a long journey. Nutritious ration bars took
up little space, did not require heating or freezing, and provided all of the
basic requirements. Laxme knew he shouldn't quibble. Working in the mines, he
and many of the others had far less to eat, nothing really, just enough to keep
them upright and working. But now that he had tasted enough food, tasty food,
lovely desserts and butter for the vegetables and even the succulent meats-he
wasn't happy to give that up.
Maati
had been indignant at being herded onto the evacuation ship as if she wasn't
the former copilot of her own ship, the survivor of two battles, one in space,
one on the ground, with the Khieevi. She knew that her parents had insisted she
go because they wanted her to be safe, but part of her felt that they really
just wanted to be rid of her again, when she had only just found them. And
Thariinye was even more impossible than usual. Recently their mutual teasing
had been playful and friendly but he was so angry at being kept out of the
action again and treated like a child that he took it out on her with
deliberately nasty and hurtful remarks. She snapped back just as angrily, and
their mood made the other children angry and nasty or depressed too so there
was already a lot of fighting on the
ship. This didn't improve Calum Baird's temper any either, and Karina
Harakamian fluttered about calling for peace and light. When she wasn't hiding
in the berth she had to share only with Uncle Hafiz.
As for
Hafiz, he could not but wonder how he had come to taking leave of his senses so
far as to allow himself to undertake a long journey in the company of so many
children. He was not a fatherly man, nor, if the truth be known, even an
avuncular one unless it proved profitable to appear to be. He could not stand
whining children actually.
Of
course, the unsettling thing about this lot is that they didn't whine. For the
most part they were disturbingly adult. The larger ones seemed to be used to
looking after the smaller ones, and even the youngest didn't cry, just looked
at him with wide eyes that managed to be hopeful and suspicious at the same
time.
Returning
to the Moon of Opportunity seemed to please them, and he felt more gratitude
than was strictly reasonable that they had perked up so much. Even the two
Linyaari young ones stopped scowling at each other to cheer. But as the wait
for the Haven grew longer, the children became impatient again.
Hafiz
did not like the hostile silence. Karina disliked it even more, apparently.
Complaining of a headache, she took to their berth.
"What
troubles you, my little ones?" Hafiz asked finally, bravely, his own mood
at least much improved by relief at not losing his corporate shirt.
"Well,"
Jana said. "There's not a lot to do here. I think they're bored." She
herself, her tone implied, was above boredom.
"Bored?"
The concept was not one with which he had much familiarity. Being fabulously
rich and imaginative as well, he could usually avoid such unattractive moods.
Calum
turned in his command chair and said, "In order to get maximum passenger space, we had to
dispense with some of the amenities-there's only one set of phones and goggles
for vids, the hardcopy books were offloaded to make room, and I'm getting sick
of nutrient bars myself. Of course they're bored. Aren't you?"
"I've
been enjoying the rest, frankly," Hafiz said. "And then, my beauteous
Karina and I have not been married long."
"Uh-huh,"
Calum said, rolling his eyes.
"She
has her trances and meditations and continuous search for what she refers to as
enlightenment to entertain her," Hafiz said. "Perhaps you could tell
the children a story, Baird?" he suggested in a helpful tone.
"Or
maybe you could, Hafiz. I'm busy skippering this bird," Calum said,
turning his back on him again.
"Me?
Ah." Hafiz looked around him. "Very well, then. I shall need to
employ the remote link to the ship's computer, dear boy."
"To
tell a Story?' Calum asked incredulously.
"Audio-visual
aids, homely former senior wife of my illustrious nephew, audio-visual
aids," Hafiz said, and clapped his hands. "All young persons wishing
to become unbored will now assemble in the hydroponics garden where your
beneficent Uncle Hafiz shall entertain you so thrillingly you will completely
forget to sulk and fret and otherwise contort your faces and voices into
infelicitous conformations."
"That
should charm 'em all right," Calum said.
"I
shall also require the next meal's supply of luncheon bars and liquid
refreshment," Hafiz said.
"Gee,
I'd have the chef give them to the mattre'd to deliver personally, but they're
both busy with this evening's banquet," Calum replied sarcastically. Hafiz
knew, very well that if he wanted the damned bars he'd need to take them from
the food locker himself. The replicator worked, but even it required sup plies
from which to manufacture foodstuff and those supplies took up more room than
the nutrient bars and caps.
"Very
well," Hafiz said, and beckoned imperiously to Jana and Chiura, who were
following in the wake of the other young ones headed toward the hydroponics
garden, which they would soon, Hafiz knew, come to regard as a garden of
delights. "Young ladies, you will accompany me to the food locker and
assist in conveying supplies to our destination."
The
girls looked at each other and shrugged.
The
driver of Khieevi ship designated by Fourteen Klaclu am) Two KUdu was greatly
agitated.
Partly
this -was from the pain in his sixth foot, which had come into contact with the
damaged shuttle pilot who managed to dock aboard Fourteen Klaclu am) Two Klicfu
before the crew of the large ship realized that both shuttle and the operator
of same were infected with an alien substance that ate them. Once they had made
this discovery, members of the crew attempted to neutralize the infected
personnel in the customary way, by stomping them to death. Unfortunately, this
brought feet, pincers, and in some cases other delicate body parts into contact
with the alien substance.
The
driver really didn't feel well at all and neither did the affected crew
members, who could now truly be called a skeleton crew, if not an exoskeleton
crew, since the exoskeletons were the first parts eaten away by the substance.
The
high-pitched pain sounds they were producing made the driver's brain ache as
well as his foot, •which he realized would have to be sacrificed before long or
it would involve his entire leg. Unlike the crewmembers, he had not done any
actual stomping of the infected shuttle soldier. He had merely nudged the
soldier with his foot to tag the tainted one for elimination.
He
feared that he would be the next to be eliminated. If the disease didn't claim
him, he would surely be stomped by the
other, healthier ship drivers, or worse, his damaged part -would be severed and
he -would be fed to the Young.
The
Young would be even angrier and more ferocious than usual, as they had not
received a good feeding in many, many lengthy time units. The Niriians -were a
stingy, selfish race who kept their pain to themselves and did not beg or plead
or weep, no matter how meticulously and slowly they were disassembled. They
were so retentive of their feelings that they refused to writhe even under the
worst provocation. They also were rather frail things and tended to die.
Quickly. Quietly. No nutrition for the Young there.
When
the shuttle from scout ship Fifty-three Kliclu am) Sewn Kiack.<) reported a
juicy colony of the One-Horns, the swarm had been hungry for conquest, and more
to the point, the Young had been even hungrier. The lair of the One-Horns had
proved elusive and was much sought after, since the members of the race thus
far encountered possessed a particularly satisfying capacity for emotional
projection. Shock, fear, outrage, loathing, and an unplumbed depth of capacity
to suffer and emote anguish -when correctly manipulated made even one of these
beings a sweet feast for the Young.
But
this time the Khieevi had been -worse than thwarted. According to the shuttle
soldiers -who survived, the -world -was filled -with nothing but shadows of
One-Horns and their buildings, shadows that could not be touched or hurt or
killed and had no redeeming nutritional value to either soldiers or the Young.
Worse, there were the growing things with the prominent white sexual organs,
similar in appearance to stationary growing things on other -worlds. These
emitted pheromones of fear which had seemed promising, but when the shuttle
soldiers attacked them, the growing things had the temerity to attack back! The
entire ground fleet had been lost and many of the swarm ships infected by
contaminated shuttles, which nonetheless returned to their ships. The Young knew. The fear and pain of their
own elders had been fed to them as a substitute for the alien food, but it was
not enough. So much time had elapsed since a proper feeding, nothing -would
satisfy the Young now but the actual physical bodies of their elders, whom the eldest
of the Young would replace.
This
-was The Path, the driver knew. In time, the elders, such as him, grew weak and
unable to serve, and had to be eliminated and replaced with fresh, fierce
Young, who in turn served the even more vicious, malicious, and avaricious
Younger. So now the swarm would return with nothing to offer but themselves,
their own bodies, their own pain and anguish and fear, to be devoured by the
slavering hordes of their offspring.
The
driver regretted this with a deep bitter regret that the Young -would find
added a nice tang. He himself had replaced a used up, -worn out elder -whom he
personally devoured only a few brief time units ago. His turn at the Gathering
should have lasted many, many more time units. It was not right. It was not
fair. It did not suit him. But it was The Path.
Between
his agitation and his pain and the lack of attentiveness on the part of the
other crew members due to similar distractions, he veered somewhat off course,
folio-wing several other members of the swarm -who were also affected and also
deviated from course.
His was
the first ship to spot the alien vessel. It did not appear to be accelerating,
nor orbiting, nor moving in any way. Nor did it appear to be damaged. The
equipment detected life signs. The other ships of the swarm also spotted it. It
-was still a great distance away and if it -was fast, it might yet evade them.
But if it was not, here was food to offer the Young, -who might be so busy
feeding, they -would forget to consume a few stringy old elders.
The
hydroponics garden of the AcaSecki now blossomed with exotic flowers of crimson
and orchid, lilacs so real they seemed fragrant, jasmine and roses of all
descriptions vying with frangipani, plumena, and lush lotus blossoms floating
in a pool of crystal water, fed by a sparkling fountain.
As each
child looked at the others, he or she saw not another child but either a
beautiful (if rather plump; Hafiz always made his holograms in the images of
his own desire) houri or a dashing thief. The ladies were scantily clad in
clothing that included many layers of silken veils and skirts, balloon-legged
pants with slits down the sides to show shapely limbs, and lots and lots of
clanking silver and gold coin jewelry. The thieves "were clad in Berber
blues, their skins dyed by the indigo in their clothing, or in striped robes
colored in the soft golds, saffrons, russets, and browns of a desert most of
the children had never imagined. Now it stretched out before them, just beyond
the boundaries of the gardens. Each child was alone among fascinating
strangers, all of them listening respectfully, attentively to the voice of
Hafiz Harakamian. Ouds and doumbeks, tambourines and zills, a whining flute
spiraled and curled around Hafiz's words, illuminating each as colored inks
adorned the alphabets of ancient holy books.
And
that was only the backdrop!
Hafiz's
tales came to life between him and the children.
The
story began, "There was once in days of yore and in ages and times long
gone before, on Kezdet, before the Federation, a poor but enterprising lad, by
name Habib, son of a lowly designer of inexpensive gaming software. Sadly for
Habib, before he had reached his fifteenth year, his father passed into the
land foretold by the Three Books and the Three Prophets, and Habib, whose
mother had long ago run off with a smoothtalking merchant of space travel
insurance, was left alone."
He went
on to demonstrate how the young Habib found his fortune in a magic lamp - a
lamp that, -when used in the sleep pods
of space travelers in cryosleep, prevented deaths that had been occurring due
to lack of vitamin D. But Hafiz made the lamp look like an ancient magic lamp
and coming from it was a genie-in cryosleep.
He was
just coming to the next plot turn in this tale when Calum Baird called down,
"Hafiz, will you cool it with the special effects? You're draining the
power of the ship's computer."
"Nonsense,
my boy," Hafiz said. "My holograms take up very little power."
Normally, he might have taken Baird's warning under advisement but he had yet
to perform his best trick.
Finishing
the story, he laid out the nutrient bars on an ordinary table, then had dancing
girls in tinkling costumes cover the unappetizing fare with roast swan and
hummingbird tongues. Discerning from the puzzled silence that met him, even
through the holo-disguises he had cast upon the children, he tapped the
computer pad and replaced the swans and hummingbird tongues with burgers,
fries, onion rings, milkshakes, soft drinks, and ice cream treats.
The
children lunged for the table.
The
lights went out.
The
burgers, fries, rings, and banana splits and sundaes turned back into nutrient
bars and the sloe-eyed houns and slyfaced thieves turned into disappointed
children suddenly shivering in the dark.
Soon
another light appeared on the circular metal stairway no one used because the
lift was more convenient. "Come on back upstairs, everybody," Calum
said, "while I get the computer back up. Don't worry. Even if it proves to
be difficult, the Haven will be here soon and we'll have help.
Unfortunately,
the Haven was not the next ship to reach the stranded AcaSecki.
"What
do you mean, you lost them?" Rafik demanded of an uncharacteristically
flushed and flustered Johnny Greene.
"Just
what I said," Greene replied. "After we got the allclear to return to
MOO, we agreed to rendezvous at the AcaSecki's coordinates. But by the time we
arrived, there was nothing there but empty space. We hailed them over and over
but didn't get a blip. They just disappeared."
Rafik
held his breath for a long moment before he replied. "Johnny, you folks
turn the Haven around and get back to Federation space on the double. We know
the Khieevi left the vine world, but we don't know where they went from
there."
"You
think they got the Accufeckil" Johnny asked. "But- we talked to them
just a few hours ago."
"I
don't know what happened. But one vessel full of kids has disappeared with
Calum and my uncle. We can't risk the rest of you. Go back. Get the posse if
you can-after all, Hafiz's baksheesh provides a lot of private schools and
widow's and orphan's pensions for Federation forces, and even though this isn't
their turf, we are under their protection. I hope."
"Gotcha,"
Johnny said. "But get word to us the minute you know something,
okay?"
"We'll
try," Rafik said grimly.
"Saltwater?"
Acorna asked. "Is that all?"
Miiri
nodded. "Simple saline solution. It breaks down the sap enough for it to
liquefy but it doesn't seem to harm the sap's ability to alter to its fungoid
form and destroy insectoid tissue. We replicated some of the remaining carapace
tissue and the liquefied sap was if anything more virulent than in its original
form, just as an acid's potency may be increased by mixing it with water."
"That
makes sense," Acorna said. "Though it wouldn't be as tenacious as the
sap."
"No,"
Becker said, scratching his mustache, "but you know if we could have had some in aerosol
torpedoes to shoot into the orbiting Khieevi ships, we could have taken out
more of them."
Miiri
shuddered. "How horrible," and looked at her work as if she had given
no thought as to how it would be used.
But
Aari said gently, "Mother, these are Khieevi we're talking about,
remember. You've seen them. You say you felt what they did to me."
"Your
mother knows, Son," his father said. "It's just not the Linyaari
way."
"Which
is why you need people like Hafiz and Nadhari and me," Becker said.
"There are still Khieevi out there. I think it's a good idea, in our
copious leisure time, to whomp up a batch of sap and sea water. I can scrounge
around here and see if I can find the makings of some aerosol torpedoes. You
Just never know when that kind of thing will come in handy."
Acorna
frowned. "Maybe it would also be wise to return to the vine world and
collect more sap there. The plants not only buried the Khieevi in their sap,
but also submerged themselves. I'd like to make sure the plants are
regenerating properly too. If they need any special climactic conditions to
help them grow, perhaps Dr. Hoa could be of assistance."
"Good
idea, Princess," Becker said. "But you know RK. He wants to spend a
little time with Nadhari before we ship out again."
"I
see," Acorna said, smiling. "It doesn't have to be done right
now."
But at
that moment, Nadhari Kando burst into the lab. "Becker!" she said
urgently, then nodded slightly to the Linyaari who were also present. "I
have to ship out right away. Sorry."
"I'll
go with you," Becker said immediately.
"No.
You can't. This is my responsibility. Hafiz hired me to protect him and his
people and now the AcaSeckl has disappeared." Acorna grabbed Nadhan's muscular forearm to get her attention,
"What do you mean, disappeared? Calum was on that ship as well as
Hafiz-"
"And
Maati," Kaarlye, Miiri, and Aari said at once. "I know, I know. I
should have gone with the Harakamians
but he
wanted me here to protect his investment," Nadhari said.
"But
time is wasting. I've commandeered the Ifrit. It's the fastest
ship in
Hafiz's security fleet and well-armed."
She
took the time to explain about the Haven's transmission. Becker frowned.
"If they're not -where they're supposed to
be, I'm
not sure fast is going to do you any good, Nadhari. I've
got those
banks of long-range scanners on the Condor. And the
Khieevi
communications device. And Mac."
"It's
too slow, Becker. And you already told me, it's not
packing
firepower." She hesitated and then said, "Although ..."
"What?"
"You've
had good success defeating the Khieevi without weapons and you do have that
unconventional navigation style. Your tactics might come in handy. If you still
-want to join me."
"No
ifs ands or buts about it, lady," he said.
"Good,"
she said and turned on her heel, as if expecting him to follow.
"Captain,"
Acorna said. "We can follow in the CorSor and keep the scanners working
and Mac monitoring the Khieevi transmissions. That way if we learn anything,
-we can transmit to Nadhari's vessel and you'll have the advantages of both
ships."
Becker
leaned back and gave her a kiss on the cheek before Nadhari snagged his hand
and yanked. "Thanks, Princess. But you can do that from here and we can
read you. No sense you taking unnecessary chances. Besides, I need you to make
sure the sap shells get made and Condor, at least, is outfitted with them.
Don't want to get caught with nothing but a tractor beam to fight those
klackers again." Nadhari released his arm and threw the door open. He followed her calling, "Hey, wait up,
Punkin. Just a sec."
"What?"
she asked sharply.
"What
about the cat, is he going or staying?"
"He
is already aboard the Ifrit but wouldn't allow the checkout procedure to
proceed. I divined his purpose was that you should be told of the mission."
"I
should hope so!" Becker huffed into his mustache. "That's the only
reason you came for me?"
"Of
course not," she said. "But -we -will discuss that later. "Yes, ma'am. I know. It's of the
essence," Becker said, and -waved to the others as he allowed himself to
be hauled away.
Acorna
and Aari conferred -with Gill and Rafik.
"Do
you think you can locate the materials for making the aerosol torpedoes Becker
described?" she asked.
"Are
you kidding?" Gill asked. "We have the best engineering help
available in all areas."
"And
Uncle Hafiz has never been one to turn his nose up at the lucrative business of
arms manufacturing," Rafik added. "I can think of at least six of our
friendly neighborhood merchants -who could supply what's needed
immediately."
"Good,"
Acorna said. "Miiri and Kaarlye cannot be a party to turning the sap into
-weapons, you understand, but since it's a simple matter of mixing sap and
saltwater, there should be no problem with others mixing the formula. We need to
return to the vine world. We Linyaari must communicate -with the vines, heal
them if the Khieevi attack truly injured them."
"Good
thinking," Gill said. "Some of the non-House Harakamian merchants may
resist having their ships fitted with the torpedoes, but I think from -what
we've seen, as long as they're in this sector it's really the only smart thing
to do. Maybe if we show the vids the moon camera took of the sap's effect
on the Khieevi, it will be easier to
persude the skeptical owners to accept the modifications."
"I'll
talk to any of them who have reservations and make sure they've seen the
vids," Acorna said. "After all, having the modifications made would
be useful for their own protection from Khieevi attacks." She paused for a
moment. "Of course, it would probably help persuade them if House
Harakamian offered to pay for the modifications."
Rafik
laughed. "You're beginning to think like a merchant, but not one who's the
adopted daughter of Hafiz! However, I'll authorize it if only to aggravate the
old boy into showing up again just to tell me off. Meanwhile I'll appreciate
any help you can give me persuading the merchants to think like a team, at
least during crises. I'm doing my best but I haven't Hafiz's gift for
imperiousness."
"I'll
see what I can do," Acorna promised. "And Aari and I have a somewhat
different perspective on pacifism where the Khieevi are concerned. Both of us
will be glad to help supervise the preparation-and maybe the deployment-of the
torpedoes and the ships to carry them in case they're necessary to rescue the
AcaSecki," she said, and her voice had a catch in it.
"Of
course," Gil said reasonably. "We've no evidence yet to suggest that
the Khieevi were responsible for the disappearance of Calum and Hafiz and the
kids."
"No,"
Rafik agreed. "But it's a pretty big coincidence that they should
disappear so soon after a Khieevi attack. I think that whether we have evidence
or not, we have to be prepared for the worst."
"Of
course," Acorna said thoughtfully, "The sap isn't the only thing that
will kill Khieevi. For the merchants who can't be persuaded to modification, as
long as they are otherwise armed, they have some protection."
"Yes,"
Aari said. "The Khieevi are used to preying upon people like mine and the Niriians, who do not fight back with any
sort of weapon."
Gill
grinned. "We all saw that they blow up as easy as anybody if somebody lobs
some ordnance at them."
Rafik
grumbled into the little goatee he was affecting these days, to make himself look
more lordly in the performance of his administrative duties as head of House
Harakamian. "True, but the sap works better than anything we've
seen."
Acorna
and Aari rose. Rafik felt a bit sad. Their little girl was all grown up into a
beautiful young lady, and from the look of it, had chosen her mate already. He
hoped they'd all live and prosper long enough for him and Gill-and Calum and
Hafiz-to have Linyaari grandbabies.
Acorna's
voice caught, "I hope they're okay. I can't bear to think the Khieevi have
them."
The
crash of the computers was a temporary matter, of course, and Hafiz was rather
put out with Calum for making such an issue of it. The man's panic had spoiled
Hafiz's story for the children, who had been blessedly quiet while Hafiz had
held the attention of all, which was practically his favorite way to interact
with anyone, especially children.
For two
such wizards of the keyboard as him and Baird, not to mention a certain amount
of help from some of the children, who were quite talented in that area,
restoring the ship's computer to operation was scarcely a challenge. Without
the additional load of the hologram programs, the power soon returned along
with all of the other amenities.
Including
the com screen and the telescopic viewport. Hafiz was making final
readjustments to certain navigational calculations when Baird tapped him on the
shoulder and pointed at the viewport.
"Yes,
yes," Hafiz said, glancing up. "It is good that it is operational
..." and then he stopped and stared, as a sinister looking vessel began
filling the viewport. "Hut-hut, my boy!" Hafiz said. "Get us out
of here this instant!"
"I'm
way ahead of you," Calum said. "But we're going nowhere. They have us
in a tractor beam."
The
children were exclaiming, and some crying. The two Linyaari, the girl Maati who
was so talented herself with holograms, and the youth Thariinye, crowded close
to the console.
Suddenly
the corn screen lit up and one of the ugly bug faces leered at them, before
being replaced by a scene of the Khieevi torturing a Linyaari prisoner.
"Oh,
no, you don't. Not again," Maati said.
The
driver of the Khieevi ship designated Fourteen Klack^i am) Two Kiiclu was the
first to put his tractor beam on the vessel containing the life forms.
As soon
as he had them, he could not resist looking into their vessel to see what his
courage and intelligence had netted. He could hardly believe his luck. The ship
was filled with humans-most of them immature! How the Young -would love that!
And even better, there were two tender One-Horns aboard.
With
considerable glee, hampered only a little by the arrival of his fellow
stragglers, he began running the demonstration of Khieevi diplomatic methods
when dealing with aliens. The Niriians had proved so unsatisfactory that the
driver decided to give the One-Horns a little preflight fright by showing what
had been done to dismantle the body of the last One-Horn captive.
That
should tenderize their youthful emotions, get them ready to scream all the way
back to the homeworld, providing a substantial emotional appetizer before what
was left of them could be physically delivered to the Young.
The
driver could not resist, before boarding the ship and scooping out the sweet
One-Horns and humans from the hull, taking a look to see their fear and horror
at the film he had just transmitted.
The smaller of the One-Horns stared back at him, baring her teeth, Then she
raised a metal canister of some sort, dipped a gloved hand into it, and pulled
out a glob of the horrible, carapace-eating sap, which she smeared across the
corn screen.
Perhaps
the Young would rather extract the One-Horns and humans themselves.
The
AcaBecki had simply disappeared.
Nadhari
shook her head in disbelief. "How could it have just vanished?"
"There's
a lot of space out there," Becker pointed out, sounding a lot more
nonchalant than he felt.
"Of
course there is," she said, her voice overly sweet, as if talking to
someone with a bad case of stupid. "But the Ifnt and the other security
ships have the ion trail ID for the AcaSecki and all of the other ships on MOO.
And the trail ends here. Poof!"
"I
wish I had my maps to check," Becker said. "Maybe they have a Bermuda
Triangle in this quadrant."
"A
what?"
"Well,
long ago back on Mother Earth, there was this area in the ocean where airplanes
and ships disappeared without a trace. It was called the Bermuda Triangle and
people thought-"
"Yes?"
"That
maybe aliens from outer space were responsible." His voice faded off at
the end.
"That
certainly stands to reason in this case," Nadhari said dryly.
"Can
your ion trail ID thing check for other kinds of ion trails-those not left by
Hafiz's or his allies' ships?"
"Like
Khieevi ships for instance?" she asked. "I don't know, to tell you
the truth. We only had one encounter with the
Khieevi in Federation space and that was rather brief. I'll check for
any strange trails however."
She
worked at the control panel for a bit, the colored lights bouncing off the
planes of her face, and then said, "Got it."
"What?"
"There've
been a number of other ships here. Similar trails all. I'm reprogramming so -we
can follow them but the trails are confused."
"Think
it's Khieevi?"
"Who
else? It's not us, that's for sure."
"Follow
that ion," Becker said.
"What?"
"You
have just got to watch more of my antique vid collection, honey," he said.
Acorna
and Aari had the Condor fitted for the sap shells first. They could use their
installation as a prototype to show the others. After a few glitches, which the
Com)or accepted with its usual savoir-faire, the modifications were made and
the Condor -was pronounced Khieevi-ready.
The
most effective way to persuade all of the other merchants to go along with the
plan, Acorna decided, was to have a meeting and show the vids to all of them at
the same time.
Once
the vids had finished playing, the boardroom was absolutely still as the lights
came up.
Then
Holland Barber, the lawyer for Cascade shipping company, which had won the bid
to transport merchandise to and from MOO, spoke up. "Ms.
Harakamian-Li," the thin-faced blonde in the abbreviated silver synsilk
power suit said, "Your allegation that we need to modify our ships in such
a drastic way to deal with an alien race that clearly, from your own film, has
been almost annihilated by those sticky things, appears to us to be unfounded.
You are overreacting to a ridiculous degree. With Mr. Harakamian missing, there
is actually no reason even to suppose
that MOO will continue to be operational. Why, therefore, should we risk
unnecessary modifications to our ships when we could simply claim because of
your lack of foresight in providing a satisfactory business climate, we are no
longer bound by our contract? We shall simply withdraw and return to Federation
space."
"That
is certainly your choice, Ms. Barber," Acorna said sweetly. "But I'd
like to remind you that the AcaSecki has disappeared while attempting to do
that very thing-return to Federation space, that is."
The
bony blonde gave Acorna a supercilious look and said, "That was one small
ship, Ms. Harakamian-Li. We control a fleet. I hardly think these cockroaches
would consider us as easy a target."
"It's
entirely up to your client, Ms. Barber," Acorna said.
At that
moment Aari and Mac broke into the meeting. "Excuse us, Khornya. But Mac
has just intercepted a transmission we thought would have bearing on this
meeting."
"Yes?"
Holland Barber, who had yet to sit down, acted as if she were in control of the
meeting.
Mac
earnestly repeated all of the klackings and klickings he had heard and Aari
translated.
"The
Khieevi are massing an attack on narhii-Vhiliinyar," Aari said.
"And
that is?" Holland Barber asked.
"The
Linyaari homeworld," Aari said. "Our homeworld."
"I
can't see that your homeworld, however dear it may be to you, has anything to
do with my client," the lawyer said.
"It
doesn't actually," Acoma said. "Except that narhuVhiliinyar was the
primary planet Uncle Hafiz hoped to entice as a trading partner when he
established MOO."
"In
short, Holland," said Michaela Glen of Hudson Interplanetary Realty, Inc.
"Customers. If you want to sit around quibbling about a few modifications
House Harakamian has agreed to pay for
in order to save your client's penurious corporate butt while these cockroaches
eat some of the most potentially profitable trade partners in the history of
the Federation, feel free. But Hudson is willing to follow in the footsteps of
our glorious voyageur founders and not only modify our ships to fight, but
fight to protect our trade."
The
rest of the merchants in the room applauded.
Becker
and Nadhari were having a difficult time following the ion trail when they
received a hail and Acorna's face appeared on the screen. "Captain, Mac
has picked up a signal from the Khieevi fleet. They've located
narhii-Vhiliinyar."
"On
our way, Princess," Becker said. "Your uncles getting those sap
torpedoes filled?"
"Yes,
Captain. All available personnel have been collecting and diluting the sap and
Gill says the engineers have made some very business-like torpedoes and are
fitting the ships with them now. The Condor is ready to go. Have you found any
trace of the Acadeckil"
Becker
looked at Nadhari. He didn't want to break the news to Acorna.
"We
haven't found a trail, Acorna," Nadhari said crisply, "But there are
other trails that correspond with those of Khieevi ships. We were about to
follow, but it seems we now have a good idea -where to find the Khieevi."
"Yes,"
Acorna said. "Though it's odd that you're finding traces there when the
coordinates are so far from those of narhii-Vhiliinyar." ,
"Those
bugs get around," Becker said.
The
spaceport on narhii-Vhiliinyar took the first hit from the Khieevi missile
attack. The third wave took out most of the techno-artisan's compound,
including the huge evacuation ships the Linyaari had used to escape their
former homeworld.
Due to
the Linyaari ability to heal infirmities as well as injuries and disease, even
the old were not feeble and the staggered lines of refugees heading for the
caves in the hills -where the Ancestors lived moved along smartly.
The
com-shed officer of the day barely escaped with her life and the portable remote
link as her duty station exploded behind her.
Trees
were few on narhii-Vhiliinyar but the grasses beyond the primary grazing areas
-were taller than the heads of the people, and provided visual cover. Council
members directed people to the proper path and shepherded them through. The
attendants of the Ancestors met the refugees at predesignated places to guide
them to the caves.
At
first, once the cities and chief settlements were behind them, the refugees
faced little danger from the bombardment,
They
made their way quietly toward the caves. Only the occasional whimpering of a child or the cough of an elder
interrupted the muffled pounding of hard feet and the shush of the grasses as
bodies wound quickly through them. The thought that guided everyone was,
"Calm. Peace. Go swiftly but silently. Help your neighbors if they
fall." The voice in -which everyone heard these thoughts was that of the
one they loved best and trusted most. The best loved and most trusted heard the
thought in the voice of Grandam Naadiina.
Then
suddenly the bombing fanned out from the city and ignited the tall grasses,
where hundreds of people still travelled. People ran, and screamed, and fell,
and some were trampled.
Circling
the planet, the Khieevi -were pleased at last to feel the terror rising in
nourishing -waves from the surface. The transmission of it -would appease the
Young for a -while longer, until the ships could land and begin loading the
prisoners.
The
House Harakamian ships rallied under Nadhari's leadership. Most of the security
ships needed only to load the torpedoes in their own bomb bays to be ready to
fly into battle. Cascade shipping company's lawyer -was overruled by her
bosses, although one ship was allotted to take her and some of the other less
committed executives and employees back to the company's headquarters. What Ms.
Barber had failed to realize, Rafik told Acorna, -was that her company -was
actually a subsidiary of one owned by Hafiz's second cousin, "whose
holdings were dependant on the backing of House Harakamian.
Acorna
and the other Linyaari meanwhile spent time with the plants of the vine world.
The vines actually seemed to flourish in the sea of sap they had created,
growing from it at an amazing rate and sending forth a pleasant floral smell as
if the •whole planet was merely a large innocuous bouquet. "Apparently the
sap that kills the bugs has regenerative properties for the plants," Miiri
said. "Fortunately it doesn't
work that way for the Khieevi," Aari said with a small, tight smile.
Some of
the less battle-worthy ships brought up the rear of the makeshift fighter
squadron. They formed a supply line back to the vine world to reequip ships
that, it was optimistically hoped, would expend all of their sap shells destroying
Khieevi and their vessels.
Becker
meanwhile was giving the skippers and navigators a crash course in gonzo
astrophysics.
"If
we use the folds in space as cover, we can pop in and out around the bugs and
sap them before they have any idea
•where -we come from. But with this many of us, we have to do it in
strict rotation or we'll be ramming each other and lose the battle to friendly
fire."
Becker
was originally going to return to the Condor, flying it into battle and leaving
Acorna and Aari with the other Linyaari back on the vine world, which was the
only place certain to be safe from Khieevi attack.
But the
Khieevi massed quickly around narhii-Vhiliinyar and, instead of sending in
ground troops and shuttles as they had before, began a massive bombardment of
the helpless planet. Becker stayed with Nadhari as she flew reconnaissance,
spying out the Khieevi position, which was basically encircling the planet with
ships, as it had done with the vine world.
"You're
on your own, kids," Becker told Acorna and Aari in his last transmission
to the ConSor before the battle was joined. "I'll miss my old bucket of
bolts, but the I frit is lighter and more maneuverable and Nadhari needs me
with her to
•weave
her troops in and out if we're going to have a prayer against the klackers.
Aari, make sure Mac reports to you what he's getting from the Khieevi
communications and if there's any break. ..." "Lately they've been almost impossible to read. Captain,"
Aan said sadly. "So many are klacking at once that Mac cannot decipher
individual messages. And the sound of the missiles is also disrupting our
sensors."
"We're
going to start making a lot of noise ourselves pretty quick," Becker said.
"Be safe, people."
"Be
safe, Joh," Aari said, and touched the corn screen.
"Be
safe, Becker, and keep the others safe as well," Acorna said.
But she
felt so powerless. In the other battle, there had been something she could do
to help, but this one, well, it almost went without saying that this was a lost
cause. The sap was effective against the Khieevi. Perhaps they could be driven
off in time to save the Linyaari people, if not narhii-Vhiliinyar, but it was
hard to believe the combination of corporate security and civilian ships stood
a chance against the Khieevi hordes.
More
immediately saddening was that in the course of their reconnaissance, Becker
and Nadhari had seen no sign of the AcaSeckl, and Mac could discern no mention
of them from the Khieevi transmissions filling the Condor with their staccato.
The
driver of the Khieevi ship designated Fourteen Klaclu am) Two KLiclu was not,
as his non-Khleevi enemies sometimes presumed, incapable of independent thought
and action. Quite the contrary. The driver, now trying to control the ship with
only five feet, having sacrificed his sixth, knew that once he rejoined the
other Khieevi, he -would not last long.
When
the main swarm discovered the true home of the One-Horns and began bombarding
it, the driver was so dismayed he sent an extra jolt of energy to the Young.
His wonderful capture, so fortunately come by and so willingly carried to the
Young, was about to be rendered insignificant by the might of the swarm.
Unless, of course, he and his fellow strag glers delivered their contribution
to the diet of the Young before the swarm was able to return with captives.
Some of
the other stragglers were little more than dead weight. There had been six of
them in his limb originally and he knew for certain that three of the ships no
longer contained living personnel. No one was at the com units, and the ships
were guided only by the tractor beams attached to the captive vessel from
Fourteen Klaclu an() Two Klickd and the other two vessels whose crews still
contained some living members.
The
only comfort that the driver had was that he knew many of the ships in the
swarm were as badly off as his own - as the others of his limb. The
communications he received, and ignored, were quite often disordered and
nonsensical and he suspected that only the structure of the swarm kept many of
the ships in place.
Fourteen
Klacfu ano Two Klic/u would not remain in place. It sped, with as much momentum
as possible pulling one alien and three Khieevi vessels plus two others whose
drivers, he suspected, were suffering more of the effects of contaminated
shuttle soldiers than him, toward the homeworld and the Young.
As the
bombardment of narhii-Vhiliinyar continued, so did Acorna's healing duties.
The
first to show the long-range effects of the damage done to the Linyaari was
Aari's mother. Miiri, gathering sap on the vine world, grew more and more
distracted and incoherent. Kaarlye said she was receiving telepathic signals
from the homeworld, reading the suffering of her people. The time came when she
cried out and fainted, falling face forward into a lake of sap. By the time
they pulled her out, she had nearly suffocated.
Acorna,
Neeva, Melireenya, and Khaari, as well as Kaarlye, all laid horns on Miiri to
revive her. But the physical effect of
her fall was not what caused her to thrash and cry out in her
unconsciousness.
"This
is how she was while Aari was a prisoner," Kaarlye said.
"I
don't see why," Liriili said. "She's no good to anyone that
way."
But as
time wore on, and reports were relayed back along the supply channels of the
fires in the fields, the decimation of the cities, the saturation bombing of
the planet's surface, the bad news took its toll. First Melireenya, then
Khaari, then Neeva and finally Kaarlye himself began to succumb to the disorientation
and panic that had marked Miiri's decline in health.
Even
Aari attempted to use his newly grown horn to soothe his parents and the
Balakiire crew. He had no more luck than the others.
Acorna
had not lived on narhii-Vhiliinyar long enough to develop a bond strong enough
to affect her the way it did the others, but she missed Calum, and Maati,
Grandam, Hafiz, and even Karina. Not to mention all of the children she had
helped to rise from slavery only for them to fall victim to a more deadly peril.
Jana would be taking care of the others now, she knew, and Maati would help. So
would Thariinye, -who was not a bad sort, just a bit callow sometimes.
Calum
had helped raise her and at times had been her closest friend. If she -were to
bond with anyone out there, she thought, it would be with him. But she felt
nothing from him. Nothing. Unfortunately, the hardheaded Caledonian, while as
pragmatic and ingenious as the best of his race, had not fallen heir to their
more magical qualities.
Grandam
had lived through much in her long life, but even the Khieevi attack on
Vhiliinyar had not been this horrible. The people had escaped then. Now they
were ambushed on their own world, their
escape routes cut off, the ground quickly being bombed from beneath their feet.
The
noise outside her head was no worse than the clamor inside. Her people were
dying. Dying. Dead already, many in the tall grasses, and she could do nothing.
The keening of death songs in the caves was as loud in its way as the bombing.
Not
just bombing either, but ships falling from the sky, huge chunks of them
plummeting everywhere, blazing comets of death.
She
healed burns and fractures, crushing injuries and shock, all the time trying to
exude calm and control, as all the other elders -were also doing. But never had
she felt so keenly every year of her age. The Ancestors attempted to help, but
their energy was older than her own and they were not immune to the chaos and
tragedy thundering down upon them.
She
felt a sudden jolt of alarm and looked up from the badly burned body of young
Hiiri, who had been caught in the first grass fire. One of the Ancestors bolted
from an adjoining cave and galloped across the charred stubble that remained of
the tall grasses, easily, gracefully leaped the small river fed by an
underground spring in the hills, and charged into a remaining stand of tall
grasses on the other side. Grandam watched as the grasses parted, and a line of
figures, much burdened with cases and cages, humbled through the grass to meet
the Ancestor. (Aagroni lirtyef) Grandam called in thought-speak. (Your
laboratory should have been among the first to be evacuated!)
(We
could hardly leave all of the new younglings we've been growing from the
remains of the animals from Vhiliinyar, could we?) the aagroni demanded
indignantly. (It took a little time to pack them out but everything has gone
very well indeed.)
The
Ancestor had gone to offer her services as a pack animal. (Of course, you
couldn't,) Grandam replied. (I commend
your dedication to your charges.) She turned back to the smoky den
behind her to recruit some of the able bodied to assist with the bundles.
The
ball of flame flashed across her eyes as she turned and •when she whirled back
to look, it had landed in the tall grass. She could no longer see the Ancestor
or the aagroni but she heard the screams and the frantic whinnying of the
Ancestor. An attendant ran from one of the caves but he had Grandam's heels
before him.
She
tried to outrun the flame, circling around it to reach some of the scientists
behind it, or the Ancestor. All of these precious beings must not die. So much
had been lost in such a short time. This must not go too.
But she
could see nothing but fire. She heard the roar of the flames and the screams
and she saw the Ancestor leap from the fire with specimens upon her back, her
mane and tail on fire before she leaped into the river. Grandam leaped into the
river herself and soaked herself thoroughly and then gave a great leap of body
and mind and plunged into the flames.
After
countless hours of healing work, trying to soothe and sedate Neeva, Khaari,
Melireenya, Miiri, and Kaarlye, Acorna was resting. Aari helped by holding the
hands of his parents, speaking in a low voice to them of his boyhood, and also
remembering some bits of Linyaari spiritual teachings, of how beloved souls
returned with the new spirits of the young.
She had
finally fallen asleep listening to him herself. His horn was not mature enough
to use for healing, but what he was doing truly helped. More than Liriili, who
wrung her hands and demanded that somebody <)o something. She seemed most
distressed that all of these outsiders now knew the location of
narhii-Vhilnnyar. Irrationally, she was somehow not understanding that the
Khieevi had already found the planet. And
something wo,) being done. The Khieevi bombardment of the Linyaari world
was now meeting with resistance from the outside, from the darting
mosquito-like attacks of MOO's combined forces. Reports traveled back down the
supply channels that the attacks were effective. Once a Khieevi vessel was
sapped, it did not remain aloft for long.
On the
other hand, another odd rumor was reaching the vine world. Many of the Khieevi
ships that had not been hit, in fact, even before the MOO ships began their
attack, were falling out of orbit and crashing onto the surface of
narhiiVhiliinyar. Direct communication with the front wings was infrequent and
terse, so Acorna had not been able to speak to any of the actual combatants
about this, but she suspected that some of the Khieevi swarm had been infected
with the sap from the swarm's previous attack on the vine -world.
The MOO
forces had actually been firing a relatively short time-less than forty-eight
hours-but the psychic damage from the telepathic bonds between the Linyaari on
narhii-Vhilimyar and Aari's parents and the Balakiire's crew had been occurring
since the first Khieevi bomb struck the planet's surface.
Acorna's
dreams were fitful and troubled, she was running, hiding, ducking, while the
world fell apart all around her. Some part of her mind knew that this was not
only a dream. Nevertheless, the bonds of empathy that tied her to her own
friends and kin were beginning to drag her into the morass of emotion
experienced by the Linyaari under attack.
Suddenly,
screams shattered her fragile rest and her eyes flew open. All of the Linyaari,
including Liriili and Aari, cried out.
"What
is it?" she asked, struggling to her feet.
"Grandam,"
Neeva cried.
"Grandam,"
Kaarlye and Miiri echoed.
Aari
added, with wonder in his voice. "And Maati."
At the
moment Grandam leaped into the flames, Maati was also sleeping. She and
Thariinye had their hands full calming children, trying to heal them of fears
they shared. It didn't help that Hafiz and Karina were so obviously frightened.
"Look,"
Maati had told the others. "I think the Khieevi really like it when they
scare us. They get some sort of special kick out of it. So the scareder we are,
the more they like it. Can we try not to give them the satisfaction?"
Jana
nodded her understanding, "Some of the overseers at the mines were like
that. And-Kheti said that some of the clients in the pleasure houses -were like
that, too. They enjoyed scaring and hurting the girls because that was what
they wanted really, not the sex."
"I
can't help it," Chiura said, cuddling close to Jana. "I'm
scared."
Karina
Harakamian stopped trembling and tried to rally them. "I know what. We
could group sing. Does anyone know the song 'Kum-bye-ya?' It's from an ancient
Earth culture and very hypnotic."
Nobody
did. Karina sang it with them. It -was slow and everybody swayed to it like she
showed them to, but it was repetitious. It didn't change their mood or lighten
their fears.
Calum
Baird, who now had nothing to do, finally said, "That's a nice wee song,
Karina, but we've sung it twenty times. Shall we try something else? I know a
few. I learned this one from Giloglie one time when -we were drunk as skunks.
His people were great ones for songs. We used to sing this one and some of the
others to Acorna when she'-was little."
While
he taught them, "The Rocky Road to Dublin" and they were all
shouting, "One, two, three, four, five! Hunt the hare and turn her on the
rocky road all the way to Dub-uh-lin one, two, three, four, five!" Maati
and Thariinye were finally able to fall into an exhausted sleep.
And
then she felt the flames and heard, for the first time ever, Grandam shriek, and she woke up
shrieking too. Thariinye was screeching right back at her. Then Grandam was
gone, somehow, but someone else was there, in her mind with her.
"Maati?
Maati, where are you? It's Aari. Keep sending. I'm coming to get you."
Maati's
thought was loud and clear and If Aari and Acorna both heard it, though
Miiri and Kaarlye almost immediately
lapsed back into their telepathic nightmares. (There's Khieevi ships all around
us. They're taking us somewhere.)
(Can
you read them, Maati?) Aari asked her.
(A-a
little. I know they want to hurt us, but I scared one of them by rubbing sap on
the screen.)
(That's
good,) Aari told her. (You kept them from taking you off the ship.)
(Maati,
ask Calum what your coordinates are,) Acorna said.
(Can't,)
Maati replied.
(Is he
hurt?) Acorna asked anxiously.
(No,
nothing like that. He's doing a lot of clapping his hands and stomping his feet
and bellowing. Everybody else is doing it too so I wouldn't be able to make him
hear me. But I can read them.) She was silent for a moment, then recited the
coordinates.
(Keep
sending,) Aari told her. (We're on our way.)
The
coordinates were nowhere near those of narhiiVhiliinyar.
The
Khieevi swarm spiraled in rings twenty deep around narhii-Vhiliinyar. Blossoms
of red fire bloomed from the innermost ships as missiles silently connected
with the surface of the planet. Then the ships that had fired spiraled back out
to the outermost layer to be replaced by fresh ships.
Up
until recently, no one who had witnessed this battle formation had lived to
tell about it. One hundred percent saturation, domination, and decimation were
guaranteed. Usually the innermost ships dispatched shuttles with ground troops
instead of bombs, but sometimes the bombs came first, to soften up the enemy
before the troops landed. This time the ships themselves intended to land and
gather up the prisoners.
The
strategy was time tested and utterly perfect against planets without missiles
or other defenses of their own. Planets such as narhii-Vhiliinyar.
The attention
of every ship was focused inwardly, on the target, though in many cases in this
particular formation, individual ships were distracted by a substance brought
onboard by disabled shuttles and wounded crew from the battle with the vine
world. The substance was as intractable as the Khieevi themselves, creeping,
infiltrating, oozing over any and all surfaces, and where it met with
susceptible carapace or Khieevi exoskeleton, burning and eating all that it
touched, growing ever more rapidly as it fed. Much like the Khieevi. Very much
like the Khieevi.
The
ships that had been infected and remained within the swarm did not request
assistance from the other ships. They did not know exactly -what was weakening
them and causing them to suffer, but they knew that weakness -would be met with
elimination, so they gave their suffering to the Young and carried on as usual.
Nine
Klackt am) Seventy-two Klick<) had just returned to the outermost spiral
ring when its hull imploded and the bridge
was filled with burning, clinging yellow sap and the high pitched eeee's
of the crew.
Nine
Klack<f an3 Seventy-two Klictu was not one of the ships that had been
infected on the vine -world. But it had seen that many other ships haS taken
back shuttles and crewmembers damaged in that battle. No doubt one of them had
become defective. The driver of Nine Klack.) ant) Seventy-two Kliclu thought in
the split second before the liquid sap covered him that this -was just the sort
of thing that made it necessary to strictly enforce the policy of eliminating
the -weak.
Seventy-two
Klackd and Nine Kiick^, on the other hand, had six crewmembers in various
stages of being devoured by sap. When it<f hull imploded with ordinary
explosive missile material, the driver thought to wonder, just before he
crashed his ship into sixteen other vessels, which crashed their ships into a
like number on the -way to the target's surface, how the swarm had known his
ship was infected. And why they had not waited to eliminate him until after the
battle. But, of course, by then the question was strictly rhetorical.
"This
is like shooting ducks in a barrel," Nadhan complained, but not unhappily.
"More
like shooting pool," Becker said. "Lookit that ricochet!"
"Somebody
call for Ryk O'Shay?" the corn unit asked. "I'm right here with Cap'n
Glen in the Hudson IT sapship Bananas. And we read you, wing command! One of
the bugs just slipped on one of our peels and crashed through the Khieevi inner
formation taking out, oh, maybe ten or twelve of its little bug buddies, and
each of them bumped off at least ten more apiece.
"It
hardly seems sporting," Captain Glen opined. "And I -wonder if we
aren't wasting the sap. Whatever they're hit with, it looks to me as if it's
their own tactics that are defeating them.
They
seem to be totally unprepared for an attack from outside their formation."
"That's
a roger, Cap'n Glen," Becker said. The scan scope on the Ifrit showed a
long view of the Khieevi formation.
"Au
contraire, ma capitaine," broke in Andina Dimitri of Domestic Goddess
Intergalactic Cleansing Corporation, manufacturers of a multitude of cleaning
products and providers of the most comprehensive housekeeping and interior
design services in the Federation. "We've been compiling statistics here
and according to our figures, the ships hit with sap shells hit three times as
many of their companion vessels as the ships hit with conventional ammo. The
sap shells are demonstrably superior."
"This
is the Condor calling the Ifrit. Come in, Ifrit," the remote link
crackled.
"Aan!
Acorna, we're kicking butt here. Wish you were here."
"Joh,"
Aari's face on the corn screen -was both serious and hopeful. "Khornya and
I are taking the Condor to find the AcaDeckt. My sister just sent us the
coordinates."
"Oh,
good, I'm glad they're okay," Becker said.
"They're
not okay, Captain," Acorna said. "They're held in a Khieevi tractor
beam. Maati is afraid they're being taken to the Khieevi homeworld. But the
Khieevi haven't touched them yet."
"Mr.
and Mrs. Harakamian?" Nadhari asked. "How are they?"
"Fine,
except Maati says Karina has a lousy singing voice. Calum was teaching the kids
Gill's drinking songs, Maati said."
"I'll
pass it on," Nadhari said. "Keep us posted on the coordinates of the
Khieevi vessels."
Acorna's
voice was unsteady when she asked, "Do we- know how the people on the
surface are doing? Any idea what happened to Grandam?"
"Something
happened to Grandam?" Becker asked.
"I
forgot you wouldn't know," Acorna said. "All of us felt it. I think
maybe she-she's gone."
"We'll
check it out as soon as possible, honey," Becker said. "Nadhari wants
to shoot something so we gotta go now. Give me those coordinates again,"
he said. She did and they signed off just in time to hear a very staticky call
from Hudson IT Bananas.
"What
the devil!" Captain Glen called. "Wing command, •we've been
hit!"
"Fall
back!" Nadhari cried, as a missile exploded to the port bow of the Ifrit.
"They
finally shooting at us instead of the Linyaari?" Gil asked.
"Cloak
and shield, people" Becker said. "Do it now."
The
mosquito fleet obeyed the command, leaving the space surrounding
narhii-Vhiliinyar to the Khieevi, but still the firing continued. The spiral of
ships, formerly as tidy and symmetrical as a water ballet, already had gaping
holes torn in its pristine formation from the crashes. All pretense of order
vanished as the ships on the lower layer fired upward, the ships on the upper
layer fired downward, and both hit the ships in the intermediate layers, which
crashed. Fire blossomed and ships disintegrated into thousands of pieces,
buffeting the shielded ships of the makeshift MOO fleet like a meteor shower.
"Holy
smokes," Ryk O'Shay said. "Would you lookit the fireworks."
"Fireworks
hell," Becker said, his voice thick with longing. "RK, wouldja look
at that salvage, and us without the ConSorV
Nadhari
snorted, "The Khieevi apparently decided what we threw at them was
friendly fire-no longer so friendly. I don't know how they could have figured
the crashes were deliberate as well but it looks as if they did, and good
riddance. They're saving us the trouble of killing them by turning on
themselves."
"I
like that," Adina said. "It's economical."
"Banaruu,
how bad are you hit?"
"I
think we've contained it for now, Ifrit, but we'll need a tow back to
base."
"Hang
on. This •will be over soon from the look of it."
It was.
In a matter of less than an hour, hundreds of Khieevi ships destroyed each
other. A few managed to flee the scene.
With
the ships gone, however. Decker could see what was left of narhii-Vhiliinyar.
The planet's surface, once a study in blue-green landscape and charmingly
colored cities, was now a smoking black, cratered wasteland.
The
Condor's computers found every shortcut between itself and the Acaoecki. Mac,
no longer troubled by the cacophony from the fleet, easily picked up the
signals from Fourteen Klacfu an<) Two Kticfu and its cohorts.
"They
have injured aboard, Acorna," Mac said. "And they are returning to
the homeworld-the captain of the limb, as the six ships are referred to, is
attempting to precede the remainder of the fleet to the homeworld to appease
those he calls "the Young" with the sacrifice of the AcaSecki's
personnel."
The long-range
scanners had enabled to Conclor to stay a safe distance from the limb of
Khieevi ships without detection, and now Aari asked, "Shall we close on
them, Khornya?"
"Hmm,
not yet, I think," she said. "Mac, let us know if you can get the
coordinates of the homeworld from the Khieevi vessel-or at least some idea when
we're close enough that we have an idea where to locate their homeworld before
we free the Acaoecki."
"Yes,
Acorna." Mac said, and returned to his post at the Khieevi shuttle's corn
unit.
Maati
continued to send the coordinates every hour.
(Lots
of the kids are sleeping now,) she said. (I told Calum and Hafiz that you were
behind us and Calum says please don't get caught. I told him you had sap shells
and he's worried you won't use them because of us Linyaan being pacifist and
all.)
(A
minor technicality in this case,) Acorna said as cheerfully as possible. (Mac
can use the launch controls and he is no pacifist. But I suppose this is one
case where even Liriili might be glad Aari and I are somewhat alienated from
mainstream Linyaari culture.)
(Hmph!)
Maati sent a picture of herself snorting and giggling (Are you kidding? If
Liriili thought it would save her, she would pull the toggle herself.)
(I
think you're right about that.)
(Khornya?
Do you know any more about Grandam yet? I didn't even say goodbye. Do you think
she might think I ran away from heri I'm glad I found my-Aari's and my-folks,
but Grandam is-Grandam was my real family, you know?)
(I felt
-what you felt too Maati but I don't know any more about it. We'll just have to
go to narhn-Vhiliinyar when you're free and find out. Captain Becker says the
Khieevi mistook MOO's attacks for some kind of internal warfare and turned on
each other and blew each other all across the quadrant. I could tell Captain
Becker was slavering over all that salvage.)
(He if
coming now, Maati. RiiS-Kiiyi if coming, too,) Aari said.
(You
thought-talk to RK?) Maati asked.
(Yes,
but you, know him. He doesn't Lit ten to me or anyone else. But we have hao a
special relationship since I helpeo heal him on Vhiliinyar. Don't tell Job. He
gets jealous. But 'RiQ-Kiiyijust scratched at the ()oor of my mino. He wants
you, to know he is coming an9 he will claw the eyes out of the Khieevi ani)
spray their sockets.)
Maati
giggled.
And
after a while she said, (I think we're getting nearer. The Khieevi just came
back on the corn screen even though I scared him off once with the sap. He's
showing that-you know, Aari, that vid
of you from the piiyi, to frighten us again. But we turned the sound off.
Nobody speaks Khieevi anyway and many are sleeping now. Calum's songs are very
energetic and involve much stomping, clapping, and hollering. He wore himself
and everyone else out.)
(I
missed those versions,) Acorna said. (Or at least the stomping and hollering
arrangements. Gill did sing me an Irish lullaby or two.)
As they
spoke, they narrowed the gap between themselves and the Khieevi limb until they
were within firing distance.
(Calum
says you should know that he thinks each of the ships have a tractor beam on
us. But I think at least three of the ships are dead already.)
(That's
what I call good news and bad news!) Acorna said. (But I have an idea. Tell
Calum to be ready to accelerate and fire upon the Khieevi as soon as the
connections are broken. Then to put up the shields and cloak and take you all
away as fast as possible.)
(I
don't think he will leave you.)
(He
must to save the children.)
(They
will all feel safer with you, Khornya.)
(That's
touching but not helpful. Just tell him, Maati, and wish us all luck.)
She
went to Mac's station and asked him, "Can you use the Khieevi shuttle's
controls to remotely operate controls on their ships?"
Mac
examined the controls and said, "No, Acorna. I cannot find such a
mechanism on the shuttle."
"Oh,"
she said. "Hmm. There are six ships with tractor beams locked onto the
AcaSecki."
"I
could try to send them a command to release the ship," he said.
"Three
of the ships are dead," she told him. "But if we fire on them to break the beam, I'm afraid
'we might damage the Acaffeclu."
"Perhaps
the other Khieevi ships in the limb •will have a remote mechanism to control
the tractor beams of the dead ships," he said.
"I
suppose there's no harm in trying."
He
transmitted command-style Hacking and klicking using the identification code
from the mother ship of the shuttle.
Four
ships fell away from the Acaaecki at once and when he repeated the command, so
did the fifth.
But the
sixth ship sent back a message saying, "This is the driver of the ship
designated Fourteen Klaclu aru) Two Klicki). How is it that you escaped the
Planet of Doom, Fifty-three Klaclu am) Seven Kliclu, when most of our shuttles
were lost?"
Mac
shrugged. "What do I say?" he whispered.
Aari
had joined them and suggested, "Respond with this message," and he
gave Mac a series of klacks and khcks to transmit.
The
last ship immediately released the Acaoecki, which shot away from it and fired
a round at each of its captors. Three of the ships were hit at once and flew to
bits but the other three maneuvered out of range and returned fire. By then,
however, the Acaoecki had cloaked and shielded, as ordered.
"That
worked," Acorna said. "What does it mean?"
"I
have no idea," Aari said. "Except that it is not very polite and
those in charge seemed to say it when they were particularly annoyed-although
with a Khieevi if was difficult to tell, of course."
The
other three ships accelerated away from both the Aca<)ecki and the Condor
along the same route they had been folio-wing, and were out of range before
Aari and Acorna could return to the bridge.
"I
am picking up strange signals, Aari," Mac said. "They do not sound like any of the Khieevi
transmissions I have heard before."
Acorna
and Mac heard a higher pitched sound, containing klicking but also something
that sounded more like "snip snip" than a klack.
"However,"
Mac said, as klick-klacks began transmitting and new blips appeared on the
scanner, "ThoM do. And they are homing in on us. Fourteen Klack) ana Two
Kllclu is transmitting data regarding our position."
"I
think it's time to sap Fourteen Klaclu ana Two KUclu," Acorna said firmly.
"They have caused enough trouble for one journey."
The
driver of Fourteen Klachf and Two Kllckd -was in agony once more. Behind him
the debris of four ships of his limb blew apart. He alone had realized that
Fifty-three KlacLf and Seven KUdu was behaving in an irregular manner. But when
the driver called him an eater of his own eggs, he thought the driver must be
of very high rank, as such an insult to any but the lowliest inferior was an
invitation to be devoured. Thus had he been tricked into releasing his prey.
His only hope now was that he would leave the nestworld alive once more.
And
then that last vain hope also was eaten.
Another
of his crewmembers had become infected while tearing off the legs of one of the
previously infected members. Now this crewman crawled up to the driver while
the driver was arguing -with the false driver of the shuttle from Fifty-three
Klack<f and Seven Kilclu. Laying half-eaten pincers upon the driver's
carapace, the crewman begged to be slain. The driver obliged at once, but not
before the sap began eating through to his internal organs.
Meanwhile,
signals arrived from several returning members of the swarm.
"Deserter!" their klicks and klacks said, more or less. "The swarm has perished and now
you will perish as well." That was the message from behind him.
And
just ahead, on the nestworld, the Young were clamoring for their prey,
demanding it be brought to them.
On the
-whole, it seemed easier to oblige them after all. The driver of Fourteen
Klaclu anc) Two Kliclu raised his acceleration and shot for the surface of the
nestworld without bothering to initiate a landing procedure.
"He
crashed it!" Mac said. "Fourteen Klackf and Two KUcLf crashed his
vessel onto the surface of the nestworld. He killed some of the Young. The
others seem to be-from -what I can tell, swarming over the dead to feast upon
them."
"At
least it seems we won't have to worry about destroying innocent children when
we sap the nest," Acorna said.
"No,"
Mac said. "But you had better sap them fast and leave. The Khieevi ships
behind are gaining on us."
"Khieevi
ships to your starboard stern," Calum said. "We'll cover you,
Condor."
"No!"
Acorna said. "Take the children out of here, Calum. Now. You can't risk
them."
"This
is Wing Command Ifrit," Nadhari's crisp and authoritative voice came
through. "You heard the lady, Acaoecki. Move smartly from the field at
once."
"Do
it," Becker's voice seconded the motion. "We got 'em in our
crosshairs, Calum. Vamoose and don't let any salvage hit you in the stern on
your way out."
The
rest "was a bit anticlimactic for Acorna and Aari. The squad from the MOO
fleet closed rapidly on the few survivors from the horde's self-destruction and
demolished them with a combination of conventional fire and sap shells.
The
majority of the sap shells were saved for the nestworld, where the Young had
already begun to die from the sap oozing out of Fourteen Klaclu and Two Klick.
"Dimitri,
Glen, and Giloglie each keep your wing here until you're sure it's over,"
Nadhari commanded.
"Don't
worry, Nadhari," Andina Dimitri said, "I've just the cleanser to take
care of this mess."
"Acorna?
Aari?" Becker asked plaintively. "I don't suppose you could pick up
any of this salvage on your way back to MOO, could you?"
For the
first time since the Linyaari inhabited narhiiVhiliinyar, hordes of people of
other species joined with the Linyaari and the Ancestors.
It had
taken much imagination and very precise navigational memory to find the site of
Grandfather Niicari's grave. It had once been marked by being located a few
steps from the back flap of Grandam Naadiina's pavilion but now all pavilions
were little more than pools of molten ash in the lake of such ash that had once
been Kubiilikhan.
Neeva
swallowed hard and spoke, "Friends and clankin, we are gathered to lay our
beloved Grandam, mother, protectress, and wise counselor to our many
generations of Linyaari, friend to the outsiders, to rest beside her lifemate,
our Grandfather."
Maati
was weeping quietly, supported on one side by Aari and Acorna and on the other
by a dry-eyed but solemn-faced Thariinye. Miiri and Kaarlye stood behind their
youngest, Miiri's hands resting lightly on her shoulders.
Grandam
looked so beautiful lying there. The char had been cleaned from her silvery
mane, the lines were smoothed on her face, her hands resting peacefully,
naturally at her waist. And her mouth was curved in a firm and exultant smile.
She had not died in the fire, as it
seemed when Maati and the other Linyaari felt first the fire and then the
extinguishment of Grandam's life force.
Grandam's
leap at the fire had been a complete act involving not only her body, but also
her extraordinary strength of heart, mind, and will, as she dragged the river
waters from their bed to flood the fires threatening the scientists and the
precious new species they had risked their own lives to save.
Never
had anyone done such a thing in Linyaari history or fable, as long as any of
them could remember. But Grandam Naadiina had lived longer than any two-footed
Linyaari and had grown in -wisdom and skill with every ghaanyi of her life.
Unfortunately, her heart, which had grown in the strength of its love and
kindness, had not improved structurally, and the strain of her final telepathic
struggle to save others had been too much for it.
"Those
who -were with Grandam at the end said she wore the same smile you see here.
Aagroni lirtye, do you wish to add something?"
"I
do," he said. His mane was very short and irregular where the char had
been chopped off, and he had no brows or lashes. His skin was reddened and
peeling, as was that of several people around him. "Grandam died as you
were just told, saving me, my staff, and most important, the young we have been
growing from cells of species lost with our own beloved Vhiliinyar. I
understand that her passing was felt by her foster daughter Maati and
Spacefarer Thariinye across several galaxies. I was privileged to be nearest to
her at her death and received her last thoughts. They were of you, Maati, full
of pride for your bravery in risking your life to save your family and friends,
and for all of us, her other children, and most of all, for Vhiliinyar. Just as
Grandam knew, somehow, that we would be saved, she also knew that the
destruction of narhii Vhiliinyar was not the end of a Linyaari homeworld.
Viife<)haanye-feriilt Neeva?"
"I
think Grandam would be pleased and proud now to hear the message brought by my
sister-daughter, VueShaanye Khornya, called Ah-khorn-ah by those humans who
saved her as an infant, and saved us from the Khieevi. Khornya?"
Acorna
gracefully extracted herself from Aari, with a last caress to his fingers and a
lingering touch on Maati's shoulder, and knelt beside Grandam to kiss her
forehead before standing, quite close to Grandam, and saying, "As some of
you know, the Khieevi -were defeated by people my Uncle Hafiz brought into this
quadrant in hopes that you -would trade with them. I -want you to know that
when these people, merchants, tradespeople, learned that you were in danger,
they hastened to help you however they could. Not all could destroy Khieevi.
Like the Linyaari, many are good only at building, not at destroying. Dr. Ngaen
Xong Hoa, in particular, has long sought to escape from those who would use the
-weather-control science he developed for martial purposes. He feels a great
kinship -with the Linyaari.
"He,
along -with the most expert terraforming specialists available in the
Federation, have been brought to House Harakamian's Moon of Opportunity by Hafiz
and Rafik Harakamian for the express purpose of helping us restore Vhiliinyar
to its former life and beauty.
Her
voice lowered for a moment and her silver eyes were covered by their long
pewter lashes before she resumed, "I do not recall having seen Vhiliinyar
with my own eyes. But in my dreams, since I -was a baby, I have seen a
beautiful world of rolling hills, snow-capped mountains, tumbling waterfalls
and forests, and great tracts of delicious grasses. I am told that is what
Vhiliinyar was like.
"Grandam's
final sacrifice, -which kept Aagroni lirtye and his staff's heroic efforts to
preserve native species that would have
otherwise been extinguished, was her last contribution to the
restoration of this home I have never known, but many of you remember. Her
first contribution, of course," and she smiled impishly, "Was to have
her many children and grandchildren, all of us.
"My
adoptive fathers have requested me to ask you if the Linyaari would please
direct Dr. Hoa and the other specialists in a joint effort to restore our
ancestral home to us. For those of us who require the solitude and seclusion of
a peaceful world, Vhiliinyar's location •will remain a highly classified
secret. My uncles further propose that narhii-Vhiliinyar and Kubiilikhan also
be restored as a trade base for Linyaari skills and goods, •where our people
may interact freely with people of all planets and species so that we may each
learn the good the other has to offer.
She
knelt once more beside Grandam and, laying her hand upon Grandam's folded
hands, said, "Grandam, when the restoration is complete, you and
Grandfather will be brought home to join your children on your world."
It was
perhaps the first funeral in the history of the Linyaari in •which the beloved
deceased was interred to sobs of rejoicing and cries of hope for a better world
to come.
End
Acorna's World edited by MerryLady minus the book! please excuse any errors.
Scanned by none