The
Chronicles Of Pern
First
Fall
by:
Anne McCaffrey
Copyright
1993
VERSION
1.2 (Apr 15 01). If you find and correct errors in the text, please update the
version number by 0.1 and redistribute.
CONTENTS
The
Survey: P.E.R.N.c
The
Dolphins´ Bell
The
Ford of Red Hanrahan
The
Second Weyr
Rescue
Run
Timeline
for
The
Chronicles of Pern: First Fall
Year
1 Landing
6
Torene Ostrovksy b.
8.6 First Fall
10
First Hatching
Michael Connell b.
Fort Hold established
Evacuation of Landing, The Dolphins´
Bell
16
The Fever Year
Emily Boll dies
17
Pierre de Courcis starts Boll Hold
19
Red Hanrahan´s yarn, The Ford of Red
Hanrahan
22
Michael Impresses Brianth at twelve
Ongola moves his people to found hold
25
Jim Tillek dies
Torene Ostrovsky Impresses Alaranth
26
Paul Benden dies
27
Queens´ battle-Porth, Evenath, Siglath
20FF
28 Sean announces three new Weyrs,
The Second Weyr
20FF =
Twenty Years: First Fall
THE
SURVEY: P.E.R.N.c
"It's the third planet we want in
this pernicious system," Castor said in a totally jaundiced tone, his eyes
fixed on the viewscreen. "How's the hairpin calc going, Shavva?"
Looking up from her terminal, Shavva
screwed up her face for a moment before she spoke. "I'm happy to report
that that'll work out fine. Pity we can't have a look at the edge of the
system," she added. "I'd love to have a look at those heavy-weight
planets and the Oort cloud, but that can't be done when we've got to do an
entry normal to the ecliptic. As it is, the slingshot will only give us ten
days on the surface." She cast him an expectant, wry look.
He groaned. "We'll have to double up
again." At her half-stern, half-sardonic glare, he added, "Fardles,
Shavva, after so long together we all know enough of each other's specialties
to do a fair report."
"Fair?" Ben Turnien repeated,
his quirky eyebrows raised in amazement. "Fair to whom?"
"Damn it, Ben, fair enough to know
when a planet's habitable by humanoids. None of us needs a zoologist anymore to
tell us which beasties are apt to be predatory. And each of us has certainly
seen enough strange life-forms and inimical atmospheres and surface conditions
to know when to slap an interdict on a planet."
There was a taut silence as the four
remaining team members each vividly recalled the all-too-recent deaths: Sevvie
Asturias, the paleontologist-medic, and Flora Neveshan, the zoologist-botanist,
both lost on the last planet the Exploration and Evaluation team had visited.
Castor had inscribed, in bold letters on the top of that report, D.E. Dead end.
Terbo, the zoologist-chemist, had been felled in a landslide on the first
planet of their present survey tour, but as that world had clearly supported
some intelligent life, the initials I.L.F. ended that report. They'd lost
Beldona, the second pilot and archeologist, on the third world in the same
accident that had injured Castor: a planet initialed G.O.L.D.I., good only for
large diversified interests. And they'd orbited one that probes had given them
all the information they needed to label it L.A., lethal, avoid!
To a team that had been together for five
missions, the casualties were deeply felt. And this mission had yet to be
completed. The system they had just reached, five planets orbiting the primary
Rukbat, was the fifth of the seven to be investigated on their latest swing
through this sector of space.
"We can handle the geology, the
biology, and the chemistry," Castor went on, frowning at the gelicast on
his leg. The compound fractures had not quite healed. "Well, I can do the
analysis when you've brought appropriate samples back. We might not be able to
do the usual in-depth analysis of all the biota, but we can find the requisite
five possible landing sites, regular or serious meteoric impacts, any gross
geological changes, and if there's a dominant major life-form."
"Hospitable planets are few enough,
but Numero Tres does look very interesting," Mo Tan Liu remarked in his
gentle voice. "I get good readings on atmosphere and gravity. I think
probes are in order."
"Send 'em," Castor said.
"Probes we got to spare."
"We're in a good trajectory to send
off a homer, too, Liu added. "Federated Sentient Planets ought to know
about the D.E. condition of Flora Asturias." Following the bizarre and
perhaps macabre practice of the Exploration and Evaluation Corps, they had
named the last planet after the team personnel lost during that surface survey.
"We are obliged to report those and that L.A. immediately."
"All right, all right," Castor
said irritably.
"Shall I do the report?" Shavva
asked.
"I did it," Castor replied in a
tone that ended discussion. He called up the program, and when the copy was
ready, he rolled it up into a tube to be inserted in the homing capsule. It
would reach their mother ship some weeks before their projected return.
"They will want to know we've discovered another Oort cloud, too. Is it
five or six?"
"Six, with this one. I still don't
buy that space-virus theory," Ben remarked, relieved to switch to a less
depressing topic.
"Number Four System was dead,"
Shavva said unequivocally.
"Can't prove the Oort cloud affected
it in any way. Besides," Ben went on, "the planet was bombarded by
meteors and meteorites, to judge by the craters and the craterites. Shattered
the surface and boiled off a good deal of the major oceans. Just like Shaula
Three. That system had an Oort cloud, too."
"But it had once supported life. We
all saw the fossil remains in the cliff faces," Castor said.
"Like a road sign: Life was here, it
has gone hence." Shavva had been depressed by the landing. Ten days on a
dead world had been nine and a half too many. The atmosphere was barely
adequate; to be on the safe side they'd used support systems. A rough estimate
suggested that the damage had been done close to a millennium earlier. "At
the beginning of Earth's Dark Age, this planet had found the final one."
"Pity, too. It must have once been a
nice world. Great balance of land and water masses," Castor said.
"I don't know what could have
stripped it so completely," Ben said.
"You never did like the
Hoyle-Wickramansingh theory, did you?"
"Has anyone ever found those
space-formed viruses? Even a trace in any Oort cloud?" Ben stuck his chin
out with a touch of belligerence. "I won't buy that space-virus theory,
not when a planet is covered with city-sized craters. To have both would be
overkill, and the universe is conservative. One gets you just as dead as the
other."
"I searched the library for data on
other stripped planets. Asturias matches up on every particular," Liu
said, his eyes on the screen. "What particulars there can be, that is!"
He rose, stretched, and yawned broadly. "What we really need is one in the
process of being stripped."
Shavva gave a bark of laughter. "Fat
chance of that."
Liu shrugged. "Something does it.
Anyway, I feel that the virus theory would be the rarest probability, while
meteors are common, common, common. Look at what happened in our Earth's
Cretaceous and Tertiary periods. We were just lucky! Probes away,
Captain," he said formally to Castor. "Now, I'm for something to eat,
then I'll pack the shuttle for the shot."
"I'll give you a hand," Shavva
said. "I want to be sure we got what we need this time," she added in
a low, angry voice, bitterly aware that it had been Flora's own negligence that
had cost those two lives. Shavva was now the default leader of this
understaffed team, and she was determined not to repeat previous mistakes.
As a young biologist with latent qualities
as a nexialist, she had joined the Exploration and Evaluation Corps for the
diversity of duty and the thrill of being the first human to walk on unexplored
planets and catalog new life-forms, but she hadn't counted on losing friends in
the process. EEC teams developed very close bonds, having to rely on each
other's strengths and weaknesses in dangerous, stimulating, and testing
circumstances no textbook, indeed often no other team reports, could imagine.
This was her fourth tour of duty but the first one punctuated by disasters. Now
all the fieldwork would have to be accomplished by three people, herself, Liu,
and Ben, while Castor, still handicapped by his leg injuries, remained on board
as the exploratory vessel did its hairpin turn about the third planet.
Shavva would have to double as botanist on
this trip. Fortunately she had learned enough from Flora to be able to
determine a fair amount about the ecology of the plant life, if there were
sufficient pollinators, what sort of competition there was for the food crops,
as well as the nutritional possibilities of the native forms, and quite likely
what disease agents and possible vectors existed within the ecology.
Ben, as a geologist with some secondary
background in chemistry, could cope with the planet's basic pulse, its air and
landmasses, magnetic fields, mass-cons, continental plate structure, tidal
patterns, temperatures, the general topography, and, especially, any seismic
activity, and evaluate the history of the planetary surface for at least the
past million years. If the survey proceeded without glitches, he'd have a go at
the longer-term history, attempting to detect signs of magnetic reversals and
to determine if, and when, there had been any large extinctions.
Liu, as nexialist, would investigate
whatever remaining aspects of this planet they had time to consider. That is,
if the probes brought back reports that would make a visit worthwhile. Numero
Tres did look promising, but Shavva had discovered that looks could be very
deceiving in this business.
The probe sent back reports that were
skeptically regarded as being too good to be true.
"Good balance of land and water
masses," Liu said. "Usual ice caps, mountains, good plains areas.
Parallels Earth in many respects. Initial P.E. for starters, Castor."
"Atmosphere is breathable, slightly
above normal in oxygen content: gravity slightly lower at zero-point-nine on
the scale," Ben contributed. "Considerable volcanism in that chain of
islands extending from the southern hemisphere, nothing major at the moment.
Rather a nice little planet, actually."
"Plenty of green stuff down
there," Shavva said. "What the hell?" she added in puzzlement as
the computer began decoding topography. "Have a gawk at these crazy
circles!"
The probe was now on a low-altitude
vector, sending back more-detailed sections of the terrain of the southern
continent. Clearly visible were groups of circular patches, like ripples
overlapping each other but held frozen on the planet's surface.
"Ever see anything like this before,
Ben?" she asked, fervently regretting the missing Flora Neveshan, with her
years of experience as a xenobotanist.
"Can't say as I have. Looks like some
sort of local fungus on a huge scale. Seems to hit all vegetated areas, not
just what appear to be grasslands."
"Fairy rings?" Shavva suggested
very brightly.
"Ha! What esoteric stuff you been
reading recently?" Ben gave her a jaundiced stare.
"Whatever it is, be bloody careful,
will you?" Castor demanded bitterly. "We've got two more systems to
work, and I'm running out of initials."
"Thin red line of 'eroes?" Ben
asked, trying to inject some lightness into Castor's mood. He knew that Castor
would forever fault himself for the deaths of Asturias and Neveshan. He was the
most experienced climber of the group and would very likely have prevented the
disaster if he'd been downside. The fact that no one blamed Castor did not
assuage his feelings of guilt. Shavva
set the shuttle down on the great plain of the eastern part of the southern
hemisphere, several hundred meters from one cluster of the rippling circles
they had observed. She, Ben, and Liu went through the routine landing
procedures, confirming atmosphere, temperature, and wind velocity before
exiting, garbed in their cumbersome protective suits. At least they needn't
resort to face masks and the back-wrenching burden of oxygen canisters. They
all drew in deep lungfuls of the fresh air that a stiff breeze flung at them.
"Good stuff," Shavva said with a
pleased grin. "No L.A., this one." Suddenly, she felt an obsession
for this planet to check out as habitable. From outer space it had had the look
of the old Earth pictured in historical tapes. Such reassurance could be
bloody, and bloodily, deceptive, she reminded herself, but that didn't keep her
from wishing!
The grassy plain was springy underfoot,
and their heavy boots released sweet, pungent odors from the bruised
vegetation. Silently they walked over to the first of the ripples, and Ben and
Liu hunkered down to eyeball it. Shavva took out a sampling probe and inserted
it deftly into the soil, closing the lid as soon as she had retracted it. Liu
poked a plasgloved finger into the hole, fiddled with the dirt that adhered,
and dropped the grains carefully back into the hole.
"Funny. Feels like dirt. Common
everyday dirt. Grainy. Rough, uneven."
"The empirical test!" Ben
chuckled.
"Let's get started, guys,"
Shavva said. "We've only got ten days to do eight people's work and clear
a planet."
"A snap!" Ben replied, grinning
impudently. "I'll start by switching on my geologist's brain." He
moved off to the next arc of the ripple and collected more samples of the
discolored ground. "Hey, we've got ecological succession here," he
added suddenly, pointing to portions now speckled with new growth.
Shavva and Liu came to his side to see the
promising green tufts.
"Great wind systems on this planet.
They'd be strong enough to carry seed as well as dirt," Shavva remarked,
facing into the stiff breeze. "'Nother few decades and this'll all be
grass, or whatever, again. Well, we'll see what the samples say. Take some
right by that new growth, will you, Ben? See what, if anything, is aiding the
regeneration."
That first day they concentrated on dirt
and vegetation samplings from the plain, moving on to other sites throughout
the day, working from east to west to utilize as much daylight as possible.
They took several deep cores in the rich
soils of the southern plains and grasslands and, with more effort, drove
rock-sampling cores. Inland and south they went, to points that had shown
possible ore sites, though the initial metallurgy probe readings did not
suggest that the planet had any easily accessible ore or mineral wealth. They
made their first nightfall on a vast headland, on the sands of a great cove.
Marine life seemed to be diverse, with
enough interesting variations of exoskeletons and sea vegetation alone to give
a marine biologist a lifetime employment. Liu scooped up samples of the red and
green algae and found some interesting fungi on the shoreline, some with
visible movement. Larger marine forms were occasionally visible in the deeper
waters of the cove at dusk, a common feeding time. The explorers spent a
pleasant evening taking samples and specimens along the seashore. Liu had found
enough dead fronds and branches to build a fire on the sands. Shedding their
protective suits, they ate their evening rations around the fire, occasionally
managing to capture various types of insectoids drawn to the bright flames.
"Possibly the pollinators we
need," Liu mused as he peered into the tube of captured insectoids. One
had paused in its frantic flight so that its double wings were visible.
"Little buggers. I'd feel a lot better, though, if there were bigger
things than these to contend with. The probe pictures should have shown us some
sort of ruminants or grazers on these grasslands."
"What about those large flying things
we saw awhile back?" Ben asked, and then snorted. "They looked like
airborne barges, squat and fat, and full."
"Yeah, but what do they eat? And what
eats them?" Liu asked morosely.
"Maybe we're between ice ages?"
Shavva offered hopefully. She really didn't want to find fault with the planet,
though she knew that was a totally unprofessional attitude to take, and
dangerous, as well. But she couldn't suppress the feeling of 'coming home' that
was beginning to color all her perceptions of this world.
Liu snorted, unconvinced. "Ecology is
right for 'em. They should be here."
"If they are, we'll find 'em. If we
don't ..." Shavva shrugged philosophically.
The next day they ventured as far as the
ice cap in the southern hemisphere, taking samples of the frozen crust and as
many layers of soil as the deep corer could manage to reach. Then they turned
to the winter-held north. By then, Liu had become a bit paranoid about the lack
of larger life-forms. So far, all they had seen were some reptiloids, scaled
and basking.
"Quite large enough, thank you,"
Shavva had remarked, narrowly escaping the attentions of a
ten-centimeter-thick, seven-meter-long example.
They also saw a great many more of Liu's
flying barges.
"Wherries, that's what they were
called," he said suddenly that afternoon. "Vessels that were used to
ferry stuff between the English isle and the European continent. Wherries, and
call 'em the biggest life-forms seen in the report. Maybe the term'll
stick." Liu rarely exercised that EEC team prerogative.
There were two identifiable types of the
large avians, with raucous calls and the aggressive manners of predators;
brilliantly plumed smaller fliers, a thousand types of what Shavva called
"creepy-crawlies," both inland and littoral. They had also found
eggshells on southern beaches, shards littering what were apparently
sand-buried nests. Of the egg layers, or the previous occupants, there were no
signs.
They did discover interesting fossil
remains, a good fifty thousand years dead and gone, in an extensive tar pit;
one specimen was intact enough to expose the ground-down dental machinery for
grazing, suggesting that these fossils could have been the ruminants Liu wished
to see. While the short, greenish spiky vegetation looked somewhat like grass,
it wasn't, for it had no silicates, was visibly triangular in form, and was
more blue than green.
"I want to see those grazers now,
too," Liu said firmly. But he was somewhat relieved to find the necessary
variety of life-forms at a different epoch on the planet.
They also located a diamond pipe, just
below the surface in the major rift valley fault. Rough stones, one as large as
Shavva's fist, were pried out of the soil. The team kept several as souvenirs;
they were not particularly valuable otherwise, for the galaxy had produced many
gemstones more exotic than these, though diamonds remained useful in technology
for their durability and strength.
"I find it rather a relief not to
have to be constantly on guard," Ben said on their third night, when Liu
began again on the disappearance theme. "Remember Closto, the L.A. in our
last tour? I kept holding my breath, waiting for something else to latch on to
me."
Liu snorted. "Absence is as ominous
as presence, in my tapes."
"Could have been an axial tilt, you
know, and what's now the ice caps were their homegrounds," Shavva
suggested. "They got caught in the blizzards and froze. We do have ice
cores, which could very well produce tissue and bone fragments."
"Well, this P.E. has only a
fifteen-degree axial tilt; the probes set the magnetic poles very near the
ecliptic north and south, maybe fifteen degrees away from tilt."
"We'll know when we get back to the
ship and have a chance to study things. Are today's samples ready to go back to
Castor?"
"Yeah, but I wish the fardles he'd
sent us back his conclusions. He's had time." Liu scowled as he handed his
latest containers to Ben to pack in the case to be launched back to the
spacecraft.
"Maybe they all moved north,"
Ben said in a spirit of helpfulness.
"To winter?"
"This continent's not in full summer
yet."
"Well, it'd never get hot enough to
fry things, not with the prevailing winds this continent's got." Liu
refused to be mollified.
On their way north they paused on the
largest of a group of islands, basaltic, riddled with caves, bearing the
profusion and lush growth common to tropical climes. They noted several unusual
reptilian forms, more properly large herpetoids of truly revolting appearance.
"I've seen uglier ones," Ben
remarked, examining at a safe distance one horny monster, seven centimeters
broad and five high, which waved tentacles and claws in an aggressive manner.
They could discern neither mouth nor eyes. The olfactor gave a stench reading;
and the creature's back was covered with insectoid forms.
"External digestive system?"
Shavva suggested, peering at the thing. "And, wow!"
The creature had sped forward suddenly,
its nether end now covered with tiny barbs. At the same time, the olfactor
reading went off the scale, and a repellent stench filled the little clearing.
"Look, it backed into that spiny
plant," Ben said, pointing to the little bush. "And got shot in the
ass."
Standing well back and using a long stick,
Shavva nudged one of the remaining spines and was rewarded with a second
launching.
"Well, a clever plant. Didn't just
let loose in all directions. I wonder what would deactivate it?"
"Cold?" Liu suggested.
"There's a small one here,"
Shavva observed. She sprayed it with the cryo and gave it an exploratory prod.
When it did not respond she packed it in a specimen box.
That evening, as they were readying the
day's tube for Castor, Liu let out a whoop, holding up a glowing specimen tube
for the others to see.
"That growth I found in the big cave.
Some sort of luminous variety of mycelium." He covered it with his hand.
"Indeed. Now you see it, " He opened his hand to let the tube glow
again. "Now you don't." He closed his hand again, peering through
thin cracks he permitted between two fingers. "Does oxygen trigger the
luminosity?"
"You are not going back into the cave
tonight, Liu," Shavva said sternly. "We don't have the spelunking
equipment necessary to keep you from breaking your damned fool neck."
He shrugged. "Luminous lichens or
organisms are not my forte." He carefully wrapped the tube in opaque
plasfilm. "Don't want it to wear itself out before Castor sees it."
Later that night they were all enticed
from their camp by the sound of cheeping and chittering. Parting the lush
foliage that surrounded them, they peered out at an astonishing scene. Graceful
creatures, totally different from the awkward avians seen in the southern
hemisphere, were performing aerial acrobatics of astonishing complexity. The
setting sun sparkled off green, blue, brown, bronze, and golden backs, and
translucent wings glistened like airborne jewels.
"The seaside egg layers?" Shavva
asked Liu in a whisper.
"Quite possibly," Liu replied
softly. "Gorgeous. Look, they're playing a discernible game.
Catch-me-if-you-can!"
For a long time, the three explorers
watched the spectacle with delight until the creatures broke off their play as
the swift tropical night darkened the skies.
"Sentient?" Shavva asked,
wanting and yet not wanting those beautiful creatures to be the dominant
sentient life form of this planet.
"Marginally," Liu murmured
approvingly. "If they're leaving eggs on a shoreline where storm waters
could wash them away, they're not possessed of very great intelligence."
"Just beauty," Ben said.
"Perhaps we'll find large and related types of the same evolutionary
ancestors for you, Liu."
Liu shrugged diffidently as he turned back
to their campfire. "If we do, we do."
They made notes of what they had witnessed
and then turned in for the night. The next day had them examining the reef
systems jutting out from the island, and its smaller companions. A trip to the
more tropical eastern peninsula showed them a complicated system, similar to
coral, with fossils of the same thing going right back, Ben estimated, some
five hundred million years. At least this was a viable ecology, not a stalemated
tropical-rain-forest dense ecology, with the various elements, so to speak,
taking in each other's washing. Such transitory ecologies did reinforce Ben's
theory of a recent meteorite storm rather than an ice-age hiatus in evolution.
The bare circles were planetwide, except
at the caps and one small band of the southern hemisphere, and though the
survey team had thoroughly investigated, they could not find the meteorites
that might have been the cause. Nor, Ben fretted, were any of the circles
either deep enough or overlapping in the pattern caused by a multiple meteorite
impact.
The northern hemisphere, though in part
blanketed by thick snows, was duly cored for soil and rock samplings. Mud
flats, emitting the usual dense sulfurous fumes all over the central plain's
vast river delta, produced more regularities than differences, and certainly a
plethora of promising bacteria over which Shavva crowed. Farther inland, up the
broad navigable riverway, they found adequate lodes, of iron, copper, nickel, tin,
vanadium, bauxite, and even some germanium, but none of the generous quantities
of metals and minerals that would interest a mining consortium.
On the next-to-last morning of their
survey, Ben found gold nuggets in a brash mountain stream.
"A real old-fashioned world," he
remarked, tossing and catching the heavy nuggets in his hand. "Old Earth
once had free gold in streams, too. Another parallel."
Shavva leaned over and took one that was
an almost perfect drop, holding it between thumb and forefinger.
"My loot," she said, dropping it
into her belt pouch.
She found one extremely interesting plant
on the upper section of the eastern peninsula: a vigorous tree whose bark when
bruised in the fingers, gave off a pungent smell. That evening, she made an
infusion of the bark, sniffing appreciatively of its aroma. Empiric tests
showed that it was not toxic, and her judicious sip of the infusion made her
sigh with pleasure.
"Try it, Liu, tastes great!"
Liu regarded the thin dark liquid with
suspicion, but he, too, found the odor stimulating to his salivary glands and
wet his lips, smacking to spread the taste. "Hmmm, not bad. Bit watery.
Infuse it a bit longer, or reduce the liquid. You might have something
here."
Ben joined in the sampling, and when
Shavva experimented with grinding the bark and filtering hot water through it,
he approved the result.
"A sort of combination of coffee and
chocolate, I think, with a spicy aftertaste. Not bad."
So Shavva harvested a quantity of the
bark, and they used it as a beverage for the remaining two days. She even saved
enough to bring back to Castor as a treat.
Though none of the three made mention of
the fact, they were all sorry to leave the planet and yet relieved that there
had been no further accidents or untoward circumstances. Barring some
unforeseen factor, discovered in the analyses of soil, vegetation, and
biological samples, they were all three quite willing to let Castor initial it
P.E.R.N., parallel Earth, resources negligible. He added a C in the top corner
of the report, indicating that the planet was suitable for colonization.
That is, if any colonial group wanted to
settle on a pastoral planet, far off the established trade routes, and about as
far from the center of the Federated Sentient headquarters as one could go in
the known galaxy.
THE
DOLPHINS' BELL
When
Jim Tillek activated the red-alert recall sequence on the Big Bell at Monaco
Bay, Teresa's pod, with Kibby and Amadeus leaping and diving right along with
her, was there within minutes, Within the hour, the ones led by Aphro, China,
and Captiva arrived, a total of seventy, counting the three youngest calved
only that year. Young males and solitaries surged in from all directions,
squee-eeing, clicking, chuffing loudly, and performing incredible aquabatics as
they came. Few dolphins had ever heard that particular sequence on the Big
Bell, so they were eager to learn why it had been rung.
"Why ring the red?" Teresa
demanded, bobbing her head up in front of Jim, who stood, legs spread for
balance, on the rocking float anchored at the end of Monaco Wharf. Her nose
bore the many scratches and scars of age, as well as of an aggressive
personality. She tended to assume the role of Speaker for Dolphins.
The float was broad and wide,
nearly the length of the end of the wharf, and was traditionally where the
dolphineers held conferences with pods or individuals. This was also where the
dolphins came to report unusual occurrences to the Bay Watch, or for rare
instances when they required medical attention. The end timbers were smoother
than the others, due to the dolphins' habit of rubbing against them.
Above the float hung the Big Bell, its
belfry sturdily attached to a massive six-by-six molded-plastic pylon well
footed on the seafloor below. The chain the dolphins yanked to summon humans
now idly slapped against the pylon with the action of the light sea.
"We landfolk have trouble and need
dolphin help," Jim said. He pointed inland, where clouds of white and gray
smoke curled ominously into the sky from two of the three previously dormant
volcanoes. "We must leave this place and take from here all that can be
moved. Do the other pods come?"
"Big trouble?" Teresa asked,
leisurely swimming beyond the bulk of the wharf to check the direction in which
Jim had pointed. She raised herself high above the water, turning first one,
then the other, eye to assess the situation. Her sides showed the rakings of
many years' contact with both amorous and angry males. "Big smoke. Worse
than Young Mountain."
"Biggest ever," Jim said, for a
moment wishing that the eternal cheerful expression on dolphin faces did not
seem so out of place right now. Not when the colony's main settlement, with its
labs, homes, vital stores, and the work of nearly nine years, was going to be
covered in ash, at the very least, or blown completely to bits if they were
very unlucky.
"Where you go?" Teresa reversed
her direction and stopped in front of Jim, giving him her complete and
seriously cheerful attention. "Back to sick ocean world?"
"No." Jim shook his head
vigorously. Since the dolphins had passed the fifteen-year journey on the
colony ships in cold sleep, they had had no sense of the passage of time. From
an installation in the Atlantic Ocean, they had entered their water-filled
travel accommodations and had not been awakened until they arrived at the
waters of Monaco Bay. "We go north."
Teresa ducked her bottlenose, flinging a
spray of water at him as if agreeing. Then, dropping her head in the water, she
gave forth to the members of her pod a rapid series of word noises too fast for
Jim to follow, though over the past eight years on Pern, he'd learned a good
deal of dolphin vocabulary.
Kibby glided to one side of Teresa, and
Captiva bobbed up on the other; all three regarded Jim earnestly.
"Sandman, Oregon," Captiva said
distinctly, "are in West Flow. They turn, return as fast as the flux
allows."
Then Aleta and Maximillian abruptly
arrived, adroitly avoiding a collision with the others. Pha pushed neatly in,
too, as he was never one to be left out on the periphery.
"Echo from Cass. They speed back. New
sun see them here," Pha said, and blew from his hole to emphasize the
importance of his report.
"Yes, they do have the
farthest to come," Jim said. That pod was based in the waters around Young
Mountain, helping the seismic team. But dolphins could swim all night, and Cass
was one of the oldest and most reliable of the females.
The waters around the sea end of the
Monaco Wharf facility were now so packed with dolphins that, when some of the
dolphineers arrived, Theo Force remarked dryly that they could probably have
walked on dolphins across the wide mouth of Monaco Bay and never got their feet
wet.
Some of the nine dolphineers and seven
apprentices actually took longer to arrive than their marine friends, since the
humans had to sled in from their stakeholds. Luckily, both Jim Tillek's
forty-foot sloop, Southern Cross, and Per Pagnesjo's Perseus yawl were in port.
Anders Sejby had radioed that the Mayflower was under full sail and would be
there by dusk, while Pete Veranera thought he'd have the Maid in on the
late-night tide. The Pernese Venturer and Captain Kaarvan had not yet reported
in. She was the largest, a two-masted schooner with a deep draft, and slower
than the other four.
Once all the humans reported in, Jim
tersely explained that, with one of the volcanoes about to erupt, Landing had
to be evacuated and everyone must help to get as many supplies as possible to
safety around Kahrain Head. The larger ships would be taking their loads as far
as Paradise River Hold; although that would be too far for the smaller craft,
everything that floated was to be used to shift material as far as Kahrain.
"We've got to transport all
that?" Ben Byrne cried in aggrieved tone as he flung an arm toward the
wharfside, where enormous piles of material were being deposited by sleds of
all sizes. He was a small, compact man with crisp blond hair nearly white from
sun bleach. His wife, Claire, who worked with him at Paradise River, stood at
his side. "There aren't that many ships of any decent size and if you
think the dolphins can, "
"We've only to get it to Kahrain,
Ben," Jim said, laying a steadying hand on the younger man's shoulder.
"Click! Click!" Teresa managed
an ear-piercing shout for attention. "We do that, we do that!"
Amadeus, Pha, and Kibby agreed, nodding vigorously.
"Ye daft finnies, you'd burst
yerselves," Ben cried, incensed, wagging his arms at the dolphins facing
him to be quiet.
"We can, we can, we can," and
half the dolphins crowding the end of the wharf heaved themselves up out of the
water to tailwalk in their enthusiasm. Somehow they managed not to crash into
the seething mass of podmates who ducked out of the way underwater with
split-second timing. Such antics were repeated by many, all across the waters
of the bay.
"Look what you started, Cap'n!"
Ben cried in an extravagant show of despair. "Damned fool fin-faces! You
wanna burst your guts?"
Sometimes, Jim Tillek thought, Ben was as
uninhibited as any of the whimsically impetuous dolphins he was supposed to
'manage.' The difference between their enthusiasm and the reality of their
assistance lay in the fact that all adult dolphins had spent a period training
with human partners, learning to come to the aid of stranded swimmers and
sailors and, occasionally, damaged sailing craft. They were delighted to have a
chance to practice on such a scale.
Harnesses from the training sessions were
available, and more could be cobbled together, to hitch dolphin teams to any of
the smaller sailing craft. A big yoke already existed, contrived for the ore
barge that the dolphins had several times hauled from Drake's Lake. But never
had the settlers had to call on all the dolphins.
"We've known something big was
up," Jan Regan said, her manner much calmer as befit the senior
dolphineer. She gave a snort that was half-laugh. "They've been
squee-eeing like nutters about underwater changes around here," she added,
flicking her hand at the crowded bay. "But you know how some of them
exaggerate!"
"Hah! With Picchu blowing smoke
rings, of course they'd know something's going to happen," Ben said,
having recovered his equilibrium. "Question is, how much time do we have
before Picchu blows?"
"It isn't Picchu that's going to
blow," Jim began as gently as possible. He allowed the startled reaction
to subside before he continued. "It's Garben."
"Knew we shouldn't have named a
mountain for that old fart," Ben muttered.
Jim continued. "More important,
Patrice can't give us a time frame." That stunned even the solid and
unflappable Bernard Shattuck. "All he can do is warn us when the eruption
is imminent."
"Like how imminent?" Bernard
asked soberly.
"An hour or two. The increasing
sulfur-to-chlorine ratio means the magma is rising. We've two, maybe three days
with just sulfur and ash, "
"The ash I don't mind. It's the
sulfur that's so appalling." Helga Duff said, coughing.
"The real problem is, " Jim
paused again. "Monaco is also within range of pyroclastic missile
danger."
"Range of what?" Jan screwed her
face up at the technical term. She knew as much as any human could about
dolphins, but she tended to ignore technical jargon.
"Range of what heavy stuff the
volcano can throw out at us," Jim said, almost apologetically.
"Worse than the ash and smoke already
coming down?" Efram asked. Although they hadn't been standing on the wharf
that long, their wet suits were already gray with volcanic ash.
"The big stuff, boulders, all kinds
of molten debris ..."
"But we have Threadfall at Maori Lake
this afternoon," young Gunnar Schultz said, looking totally confused by
the conflict of imperatives.
"We have to get all the materiel we
can to Kahrain as soon as possible, and that is the immediate priority, folks.
Thread'll have to wait its turn," Jim said with his usual wry humor.
"All available craft are to be used, and the call's gone out to owners to
either get here or appoint a surrogate. So all we have to do is explain to pod
leaders what has to be done and the kind of cooperation we need from
them." He began passing out copies of the evacuation plans that Emily
Boll, the colony's co-leader with Admiral Paul Benden, had given him forty
minutes before. He glanced anxiously overhead, where three heavy sleds seemed
about to collide. "Damn 'em. Look, read the overall plans while I go
organize some air-traffic control."
The dolphineers dutifully read the
evacuation plan, though Jan skimmed ahead to their responsibilities: the stuff
building up on the beach. Loads were all color-coded. Red and orange were
priority, and red was fragile, for immediate transfer to Kahrain. Yellow would
have to go in a hull of some kind; green and blue were waterproofed and could
be towed.
Jim stuck his head out of the control-room
window. "Lilienkamp's sending us drums, wood, lines, and whatever men he
can spare from his Supply Depot to lash rafts together. At least the weather
report's good. Decide which of the dolphins can be trusted to pull, "
"Any one of 'em you ask," Ben
said indignantly.
"And we'll need some sensible dolphs
to swim escort on the smaller sail craft. Keeerist, what's that driver doing?"
Leaning his long frame as far out of the window as he could, Jim began waving
both long arms shoreward to ward a heavy sled away from colliding with two
smaller ones that were trying to slide into the tight landing spaces on the
strand. "Do the best you can!" he shouted at his team, and pulled his
head back in to restore some order to the traffic heading toward the bay.
"Jan, you, Ef, and me explain,"
Ben said. "Bernard, start organizing those red and orange loads for the
Cross and the Perseus already tied up. Let's get some of the larger small craft
in to load. By then the pod leaders'll know what's expected and can make
assignments of escorts. You others, start checking with the sail craft, find
out their load limits. Try to keep track of what went with whom, " He
broke off, realizing the monumental task ahead of them. "We'll need some
hand recorders ... You guys get started. I'll see if I can liberate us a few
'corders. There have to be some ..." His voice trailed off as he climbed
up the ladder to the wharf office.
"Right after we tell the fins what
they're to do, we organize some sea police, huh?" Bernard said.
"Right, man! Right!" Efram said
with heartfelt agreement. "Now then, let's brief the pods."
As they were all suited up, they moved
along the length of the float, spotting their individual pod leaders. Then,
gesturing to the dolphins to give them some space, they jumped in. It was the
easiest way to impress on individual dolphins their particular tasks.
There was a sudden swirling of water
around the dolphineers as the dolphins chose their favorite swimming partners.
Despite the crush, Teresa emerged right by Jan Regan, Kibby by Efram; Ben got
splashed by a well-aimed sweep of Amadeus's right flipper.
"Cut that out, Ammie. This is
serious," Ben said.
"No rough stuff?" Amadeus asked,
and clicked in surprise.
"Not today," Ben said, and gave
Ammie an affectionate scratch between the pectorals to take the sting out of
the reprimand. Then he put his whistle in his mouth and blew three sharp notes.
Heads, human and dolphin, turned in his
direction. Letting his legs dangle beside Amadeus and resting one hand lightly
on the dolphin's nose, Ben outlined the problem and what assistance was
required.
"Kahrain near," Teresa said,
chuffing energetically from her blowhole.
"You have to make many trips,"
Jan said, indicating the growing pile of crates, boxes, and nets of every size
and color.
"So?" Kibby responded. "We
start."
Efram grabbed Kibby by the closest pectoral.
"We need aisles", he demonstrated parallels with his arms,
"incoming, outgoing. We need escorts for the smaller ships. We need teams
for the bigger rafts and barges."
"Two, three teams to change to keep
speed," Dart said, nudging Theo Force. "I know who thinks who is
strongest. I go get them. You get harness." With one of those incredible
flips a dolphin body was capable of performing, Dart lived up to her name,
arcing over several bodies and neatly reentering the water. Her disappearing dorsal
fin showed the speed at which she was traveling.
"I get harness," Theo echoed,
making a foolish grimace at the others. "I get harness," she said
again, as she swam with confident strokes to the nearest of the pier ladders.
"Why is she always one step ahead of me?"
"Cause she swims faster," Toby
Duff yelled.
"We, Kibby me, police lanes,"
Oregon informed Toby. "Use flag bobbers?"
Jan started to giggle. "Why do we
bother telling them anything?" she said.
"Flag buoys coming up," Toby
said, swimming for the ladder nearest the storage sheds where the racing buoys
were kept. "Green for incoming, red for outgoing."
"There should be enough," Efram
said, following him, "from the winter regattas."
"These all the ships?" Teresa
asked, swishing herself high enough on her tail to look up and down the wharf.
"There should be a dozen or more
luggers and sloops coming in from the coastal and downriver stakeholds,"
Jan told her. "The bigger ones can sail right on down to Paradise River,
but whatever we get around Kahrain Head'll be safe enough."
"Busy, busy," Teresa said and
looked happier than usual. "New thing to do. Good fun."
Jan grabbed her left fin. "Not fun,
Tessa. Not fun!" And she shook her finger in front of Teresa's left eye.
"Dangerous. Hard. Long hours."
Teresa's expression was as close to a
diffident shrug as a dolphin could come. "My fun not your fun. This my
fun. You keep afloat. Hear me?" By
the time Jim Tillek had managed to organize air traffic and get some beach wardens
into position, the two lanes had been established with red and green buoys;
three teams of the biggest males had been harnessed to the big barge, which had
been filled with fragile red loads and was already under way. The first
flotilla of smaller sail craft followed, dolphin-towed out of the congested
harbor area to the point where they could safely hoist canvas on their way to
Kahrain. Escort dolphins had been assigned.
"We're never going to keep track of
this stuff," Ben muttered to Claire. She had organized something to eat
for the dolphineers while her dolphin friend, Tory, was busy with his team,
hauling blue and green cargo out to dinghies and other less seaworthy craft.
Even the smaller craft, kayaks, and the
big ceremonial canoe were being pressed into service. These would have to be
very closely watched, as they were manned by relatively inexperienced sailors,
many of them preteens.
Jim Tillek had seen that they all had
emergency jackets and gear, and knew exactly how to call a dolphin to their
aid. The supply of whistles had run out, which worried some of the less
competent kids, but Theo Force had Dart demonstrate how fast she could come to
their aid if they merely slapped the water hard with both hands.
"Those clodheaded landlubbers are
more trouble than anyone else," Jim said, striding landward on the wharf,
raising his bullhorn to chew out some Landing residents who were adding
household goods to the stack of red priority cargo. Some of the colonists who
had remained at the Landing site as administrators felt they should have
certain perks. Well, not in this crisis, they didn't. His patience worn out, he
strode to the nearest sled, hauled the driver out, and ordered him to put back
in what he had just unloaded. When that was done, Jim flew the sled to be
unloaded with the other 'space available' cargo at the far end of the strand.
Then Jim took the sled, despite its owner's voluble complaints, and used it for
the rest of the day to be sure goods carted down from Landing went into the
appropriate areas. The sled also gave him sufficient altitude to keep an eye on
what was happening everywhere on the Bay.
With a leeward breeze keeping most of the
volcanic fumes wafting away from Monaco, Jim was sometimes startled to look
inland and see how steadily the fumaroles on Garben and Picchu emitted clouds
of white and gray, and probably noxious gases. He also felt a pang of near
terror as he saw the mass of things to be removed from pyroclastic activity.
They'd need a ruddy armada ... Why couldn't they send more stuff by air?
Yet he couldn't deny that a steady flow of
sleds of all sizes gave proof that immense quantities were being flown out.
Even the young dragons had panniers of some kind strapped behind their riders.
Wiping his sooted brow with a kerchief
nearly messier than his face, Jim watched the graceful creatures reach a high
thermal and start the long glide down to the Kahrain cove. If they'd only more
dragons, more power packs, more ships, more ...
Someone tugged his arm: Toby Duff directed
his attention to a raft that was foundering.
"Damn fool didn't balance the
load," he began, even as dolphins pushed against sagging barrels and
pallets to keep them from floating off. "I can't be everywhere ..."
He groaned.
"You're giving a good impression of
it," Toby remarked at his driest. "Look, under control."
"But they aren't bringing it back in
to be repacked," Jim began.
"Use the binocs, Jim. Gunnar's there.
Seems like he has it under control. What I need your advice on is can we cocoon
in plastic some of the red and orange and entrust small loads to younger
dolphins who can't help with the heavier stuff?"
Jim thought, glancing at the barely
lowered stack of priority goods. "Better give it a try. Better than having
the stuff fried pyroclastically."
Toby gave him an uncertain grin, then a
genuine laugh, and trotted off to wharfside, jumping into the water to make the
necessary assignments.
All too quickly, the swift tropical dusk
descended and there was a scurry to determine how many of the ill-assorted
carriers had made it safely to Kahrain, how many in transit would need lighting
or other help, and what, if any, casualties or losses there had been.
To Jim's amazement, there were only minor
casualties human and dolphin: scrapes, bruises, cuts, and the occasional
wrenched muscle; even after Ben continually excused his record taking, they
discovered very little loss of common cargo and none of the red or orange
priorities.
Each pod leader reported to Monaco Wharf
that they were off to eat and would return at dawn. Not for the first time did
Jim and the dolphineers envy the creatures who could put half their brains to
sleep and continue to function perfectly.
Some thoughtful person had put a kettle of
stew, loaves of bread, and a pile of biscuits on the long table in the wharf
office and, with little discussion, the hungry served themselves. Then, finding
sufficient floor space, they curled up in blankets, old heavy-weather gear, and
whatever else sufficed to keep tired bodies warm. Some of those sleepers were
among those settlers lucky enough to have bonded with one or more fire-lizards,
the beautiful creatures mentioned in the EEC Survey report. Now, while their
humans slept, those fire-lizards arranged themselves on the pier their
sparkling eyes rivaling the emergency lights up and down the long
installation. The Big Bell roused all
the sleepers and brought Jim and Efram stumbling out of the office to see what
the problem was. Kibby and Dart were fighting over who was to pull the chain
next.
"Morning, morning, morning" was
the chant from several hundred dolphins, as fresh and eager as they had been
the day before for the great new fun their landfriends had discovered to please
them.
Jim and Efram groaned, leaning into each
other in sleepy incoherence. A seaward breeze made the coming day's work
arduous: sulfur and chlorine-tainted air caused eyes to water and irritated
throats and nasal passages. The dolphins seemed less affected, which was a
blessing; halfway through that day, most of the human swimmers were forced to
use masks and oxygen tanks in the water and out. Also, there were more
emergencies, caused by tired people, stiff-muscled from unaccustomed labors,
valiantly trying to exceed the previous day's quota.
Skippering the Southern Cross, laden to
the scuppers with a cargo of precious medical supplies, Jim spent more time on
the comunit, issuing suggestions and orders, and trying to keep his temper over
asinine errors that would never have been so dangerous at any other time. The
sea path between Monaco and Kahrain was a mass, and a mess, of ill-assorted
craft, struggling to transport beyond their capacities. Twice the Cross passed
dinghies afloat only by virtue the pairs of dolphins keeping them up on the
surface of the water.
The third morning, Jim summarily ordered
all small craft under seven meters out of the water at Kahrain. Most, of their
crews he left behind to help unload the larger ships and the dolphins, who he
decided made better, and faster, transporters of small to medium-sized packets.
"Smart of you, Jim," Theo Force
said that evening when they gathered on board the Cross for the eastward leg.
"Kids got a big kick out of how often 'their' dolphins made the trip. They
even started snatching tidbits for 'em as treats. Not that they could catch
much fish with the waters so churned."
"And my heart wasn't in my mouth so
much," Claire Byrne said, "thinking of all that could go wrong with
those cockleshells."
"Weather's disimproving,"
Bernard Shattuck remarked.
"Too heavy for the seven-meter
hulls?" Jim asked, perusing the lists of cargo still piled on the Monaco
strand. The day's hard work had shown a definite lowering of the mass.
"With the more experienced
crews," Shattuck said after a thoughtful pause, "but I'd feel happier
if they had dolphin escorts. How're the dolphs holding up?"
Jim snorted, while Theo managed a weary
chuckle.
"Them?" Efram said with utter
disgust. "They're enjoying this game we thought up for their
amusement!"
Ben was grinning as he leaned forward,
elbows on his knees, hands cradling a hot drink. "Didja hear that the pods
seem to have some sort of competition going between them?"
"Based on what?"
"Weight hauled," Ben said with a
wry grin. "You'll have noticed 'em humping the single packs about?
Weighin' in."
"No damage, I hope," Jim said,
trying to sound severe, although the whole notion of the competition tickled
him. Leave it to the dolphins! Nature's born humorists. He wished there'd been
otters still alive on Earth when the Pern colony was being organized. They,
too, had been creatures who knew how to amuse themselves with the strangest
objects! He sighed. "We can't afford to lose anything we've been entrusted
to get to Kahrain safely."
"Once we get it all to Kahrain, what
happens then, Captain?" Gunnar asked wearily.
"Why then, my hearties, we have time
to decide what has to be brought on the fleetest winds and vessels to the
north." There were sufficient groans to cause him to smile reassuringly.
"But with more leisure available to make choices."
"It's a fair ol' haul to the place
they've chosen in the north," Anders Sejby said in a neutral tone. He was
a big man, phlegmatic in temperament, but astonishingly agile physically. He
had big hands, big feet, broad shoulders, and solid legs that threatened to
burst the seams of his waterproofed trousers. He tended to go bare-chested, and
barefooted, but there wasn't a mariner on the planet that wouldn't sail
anywhere with him, Jim Tillek included. "Any sort of a pier there? Or do
we have to lighter stuff in from the bigger ships?"
Jim gave him a blank stare. "I dunno.
I'll find out."
"You mean," asked Ben, who fired
up easily, "we're busting our nuts doing all this and we've got to, "
Jim held up his hand to stem Ben's
indignant protest.
"All will be prepared for us
there."
"Bet it wasn't until you mentioned
it," Ben said sourly.
"Be not of faint heart, Ben,"
Jim said, laying his hand in a benedictory fashion on the dolphineer's
salt-encrusted curls. "By the time we get there, we'll have wharf
facilities. The good Admiral Benden solemnly promised me."
Ben snorted, unrepentant.
"Now," Jim went on, "let's
sort out what we've got to move tomorrow." Garben moved first. The warning they received gave them a scant
two hours and the advice that everything that could leave Monaco should be gone
well before that time limit. Later, no one had any coherent memories of that period.
The wharf was a frenzy of activity; still, neither of the bigger ships, the
Cross or the Perseus, was fully loaded when the alarm came. They were sailed
far enough out of the projected danger area. If the wharf, and the cargo, was
left when the eruption was over, they would go back in and finish loading.
Everyone did have memories of Garben's
spectacular eruption, seen at a safe enough distance to be clear of the
pyroclastic debris. It was truly awe-inspiring, and immensely heartbreaking, to
see the community that they had achieved in such a short time showered with ash
and burning missiles, then disappearing behind dense gray cloud
"Did everyone get out?" Theo
called from the waters on the starboard side of the Cross.
"So we were told," Jim said.
"D'you want to come aboard?"
Theo raised her eyebrows at the already
overcrowded sloop.
"Lord, no, Jim. I'm safer with
Dart." On cue, the dolphin surfaced and pushed her fin against the hand
Theo idly circled as she trod water. "See what I mean ..." Her voice
dwindled as the sleek little dolphin propelled her farther from the ship and
Monaco Bay.
At last all but a few damaged loads and
other debris had been burned or buried by the beach wardens, and Jim allowed
the Cross, as the last ship, to leave Monaco Bay.
"What about the bell?" Ben asked
just as the gangplank was being pulled up.
Jim paused, squinting up at the bell.
"Leave it. The dolphins get such a kick out of ringing it."
"Even with no one to hear?"
Jim heaved a sigh. "Frankly, Ben, I
don't have the energy right now to dismantle it." He looked around at the
decks crammed with lashed-down pallets. "Hell, where would we put a thing
as big as that?" Then he shook his head. "We can come back for it.
Ezra'll be wanting to check the Aivas interface once the volcanoes have
settled." Then he gave the orders to release the lines forward and aft.
"Yeah, we'll get it next trip."
He did note the sadness on Ben's face as
the bell, and the wharf, receded from sight. Not even the gay escort of two
pods of dolphins seemed to cheer the man. Paradise River had become Ben's real
home, and now it would have to be abandoned. A lot more than a bell had been
left behind at Landing, and yet the bell seemed to symbolize it all. They sailed
on, through the murky, reeking atmosphere that Garben and Picchu had made of
the once-clear air of Monaco Bay.
Kahrain was scarcely better organized than the Bay had been, but there
were hot baths and decent food available, and a chance to let tired bodies
sleep until they were truly rested. The evacuation had gone smoothly enough,
thanks to Emily Boll's foresight. The only casualties had been, unfortunately,
one young dragonrider and his bronze dragon who had collided with a sled, or,
as Emily put it in an expressionless voice, attempted to avoid a collision by
going between, as the fire-lizards did. The young dragon's instinct had not
been sufficient to bring them back from wherever between was, and the other
young dragonriders were suffering from trauma.
"I told them to take the day
off," she said, clearing her throat authoritatively, ignoring the fact
that Sean, de facto leader of the dragonriders, had told her in no uncertain
terms that he and his group would not be available for work until the next day.
"But the dragon actually went
between?" Jim asked amazed.
Emily nodded briskly, blinking against a
sudden moisture in her eyes. "I saw ... Duluth do it. He and Marco were
there, midair, one moment, the sled descending on top of them, and then ...
gone!" She cleared her throat again. "So, if we have to find some
good out of the tragedy, there it is. The dragons can do what the fire-lizards
can. Now, if their riders can now figure out how to do it on a ... safe, return
basis, we may yet have our aerial force."
"Right now, though, it's the naval
forces we must organize," Paul said, standing up and lighting the screen
of his work terminal. "Fortunately, there's a good warehouse at Paradise
River where we can stash nonvital supplies for later runs."
"So we do use the small craft
again?" Per Pagnesjo, captain of the Perseus, asked.
Paul nodded. "For one thing, those
sailers are intrinsically valuable in themselves and not just for what we can
load on them." He turned to the dolphineers. "How are your friends
standing up to this?"
Theo gave a bark just as Ben snorted.
"It's a nice new game we've figured out for them," Theo answered.
"Glad someone's finding some
enjoyment out of all this," Paul said with a grim smile.
"Trust dolphins for that," Theo
said. Her genuine grin turned Paul's into one less strained. "Well, we
don't need to rush so much to get to Paradise, do we? That'll make it easier
and safer."
"We'll have to use personnel who are
not slated for the next Threadfall, though," Paul added, switching his
terminal to another setting. "We had to let Maori Lake take its chances,
but we've got to keep Thread burrows to a minimum."
"Even if we're abandoning the
southern continent?" Theo asked.
"We're not abandoning the continent,
nor entirely removing everyone," Paul said. "Drake wants to continue;
so do the Gallianis, the Logorides; and the Seminole, Key Largo, and Ierne
Island groups. Tarvi's keeping the mines and the smelters going. Since they
work underground or in the cement block sheds, they're reasonably safe from
Thread, though food resources may have to be augmented from our supplies."
"They may have to come north in the
end, if we can't supply them from our stores," Emily said sadly.
"So ..." Paul said, briskly
bringing the meeting back to the matter at hand. "Joel's got some
imperative supplies that ought to be shifted immediately north. Kaarvan, your
ship has the biggest capacity: Can you undertake that voyage while the other
ships redistribute loads and follow when laden? Desi, can you give him a hand
with the manifests?"
"If I get my crew to it now, we can
shift and reload cargo and be ready to sail by the evening tide," Kaarvan
replied with a nod, and left without further comment.
"Desi, I want manifests of every
crate and carton you take, red and orange," Joel Lilienkamp shouted after
his assistant, and received a backhanded wave. "How", Joel turned to
the others, hands upraised in helpless resignation, "are we going to keep track of what is where and ...
everything."
For the first time since Jim Tillek had
known the able commissary chief, he saw the energetic man at a loss,
overwhelmed by the magnitude of the task. Joel had had everything so neatly
cataloged and organized at Landing: he had always known exactly on what shelf
in what building any particular item was stored. But even his legendary eidetic
memory would be unable to cope with the present confusion. Jim felt a deep
sympathy for Joel.
"Joel," Emily said firmly but
somehow soothingly, "no one but you could have pulled off such a
comprehensive evacuation of goods and people."
Perhaps only Jim noticed the order of
importance implied in her compliment, and he rubbed his face to hide an
appreciative grin. In Joel's lexicon, people could take care of themselves, but
goods had to be taken care of, and their location should be known at any time
of day or night.
Joel shrugged. "It's what'll happen
now that deeply concerns me. There're materials we have got to have immediate
access to, and unless I have the records of all the loads that went out of
Landing by sled, as well as those taken by boat from Monaco ..."
At that point, Johnny Greene came in,
looking jaded but also gloating. "Don't anyone ever say 'it can't be done'
in my presence," he announced to all. Joel perked up expectantly as Johnny
went on. "Got generators up and runnin', and ten terminals. Programmed to
take visual, audio, recorder inputs and then correlate. Will that do you for
now, Joel?"
"It most certainly will." Joel
bounced to his feet as if he hadn't just been in the depths of despondency.
"Where've you got them set up? Lead me." He got as far as the shelter
door before he turned back. "I'll need personnel."
"Whoever isn't doing something else I
hereby authorize you to draft until those records are transferred," Paul
said with a chuckle. But his amusement died as he turned back to his own
screens, pursing his lips with two fingers. "We still have some pretty
hairy problems. Ezra, can you also put back on your captain's hat? We'll have
to take the smaller craft along the shoreline all the way to Key Largo before
we make a final dash across to the northern continent. I can't see any other
way of getting all the people and materiel there. One vast convoy, with dolphin
support, keeping one of the bigger ships as guardian, while the others make
straight journeys from Kahrain or Paradise to the Fort?"
"Let's also count on shifting the
convoy guard ship now and again," Jim said after exchanging a quick glance
with Ezra. "Even with decent weather, and that eruption's going to mess
weather patterns past the predictable point, it's going to be some
safari."
"But can it be done?" Paul
asked.
Jim twisted one shoulder. "We got
here. We'll get there. Sooner or later."
"It's the later that worries
me," Paul responded.
Jim hauled his recorder out of his pocket
and tapped out a query. "Well, let's just see what we can do, Paul."
He peered down at Benden quizzically. "You and Em will go north", he
grinned in lazy irony, "to prepare a place for us ... so d'you want to be
admiral of the Pernese Navy, Ez, or do I get the short straw this time?"
"Let's stick to being captains and
working as a team as we usually do," Ezra replied in his dry fashion, but
he clamped an affectionate hand on Jim's shoulder as he peered over at the
recorder's data.
"Not all the stuff's been lifted out
of Landing yet," Joel said, poking his head in through the door. "I'm
organizing all available sleds to bring up the last. Can I get the dra ...
"
Emily held up her hand. "They'll be
back on line tomorrow, Joel!"
Joel scrunched his eyes shut and grimaced.
"Sorry. Tomorrow'll be good enough." And he was gone again.
"There was a fleet like this once
before," Jim said to Theo Force, who was the dolphineer on duty at the
time the Southern Cross was leading the way out of Kahrain Cove.
"Like that?" Theo jerked her
thumb over her shoulder at the strung-out line of ill-assorted vessels. Dressed
in her body wet suit, breather flung over one shoulder to be ready for use
instantly, she had stretched out her strong tanned legs on her side of the
cockpit. Jim had an eye for a shapely leg, even one generally showing scars
from many brushes with underwater obstacles. He was also becoming accustomed to
Theo's subtly attractive face. Well into her third decade, she was not a
conventionally pretty woman, but her rather plain features nevertheless
indicated her strong character and purposefulness.
"Yup, something like the odd-bods
fleet we have here," Jim said, squinting at the way the mainsail was
filling with a wind that was more capricious than he liked for the beginning of
this bizarre escort duty. "Long time back now, but one of those bright
moments in human history when people rise to an almost impossible
challenge."
"Oh?" Theo never found Jim
Tillek boring, especially when he started yarning. She knew that he had sailed
every sea on old Earth and some on the newer colony planets, as well, in
between his interstellar voyages as the captain of a drone freighter. Over the
past few days she'd had a chance to admire the qualities of a man she'd barely
chatted with before. Now, keeping as watchful an eye on their convoy as he did,
she listened with pleasure as he warmed to his tale.
"Half an army was pinned down on a
beach, strafed by enemy aircraft, and likely all would have been killed there
if the small-craft skippers of that era hadn't saved 'em. Dunkirk, that was the
name of the beach they were trapped on, with safety across a channel a mere
thirty-four kilometers away."
"Thirty-four klicks?" Theo
repeated in surprise, the dark thick arcs of her eyebrows rising. "Anyone
could swim that."
Jim grinned at her. "Some athletes
did, sort of a rite of passage trial or for the helluvit, but not three hundred
thousand troops in full battle gear. And, " He waggled his finger at her.
"no dolphins."
"But dolphins have been around for
yonks!"
"Not as we know them, Theo. Let's
see, where was I?"
Theo scrunched down on the cockpit seat,
grinning at the subtle reprimand. His face had a lot of sun wrinkles, which
made him look older, but his body in the tank top and shorts was lean, fit, and
tanned. As usual on board, his feet were bare, showing long, prehensile toes.
Once or twice she'd seen him hold a line tight with just his toes.
"Ah, yes, the Germanics had three
hundred thousand British troops pinned down on the sands of Dunkirk, which was
on the European continent, and since the Brits had no wish to spend the rest of
their lives in a prisoner-of-war camp, they needed to be evacuated across the
channel to their homeland, England."
"How'd they get across the channel in
the first place?"
Jim shrugged. He had broad, bony
shoulders, and only a sprinkling of hair on his chest, which she preferred to
the full pelt she'd seen on so many other men. "Troopships convoyed 'em
over when the hostilities broke out, but those ports were already in the hands
of the Germanics. One crucial problem with Dunkirk was that the beach was very
shallow for a good distance before it shelved off into deep water. No proper
docking or wharves for the big-draft ships to tie up at. Only a long wooden
pier, which the Germanics strafed with their warplanes. Men were so desperate that
they waded out, swimming the last part to climb up nets put down the sides of
the ships to help 'em board. Then someone had the bright idea of getting all
available craft from the island, especially pleasure craft with low drafts, so
they could sail further in to the beach to pick up troops. Records have it that
even sailing dinghies, no more than three meters long, made the passage
successfully. And not just once but time and again until the crews succumbed to
exhaustion. But the three hundred thousand men were evacuated. Quite a feat of
seamanship and courage."
"It's no thirty-four klicks of a
channel we have to navigate, Jim Tillek, but the coastline of half a
world," Theo said with some acerbity.
"Yes, but we don't have a war going
on around us," Jim said cheerfully.
"We don't?" Theo asked and
gestured over her shoulder to the east, signifying the menace of Thread.
"You've got a point there," Jim
admitted. "Though it's not a people-shooting war. But I believe in
starting every journey with a high heart and in good spirits, and would you
send Dart after that fool sloop with the spotted sail? Where do they think
they're going? They're to tack right back into position."
He finished his remarks to empty air, for
Theo had dived as neatly as her dolphin could over the safety rail and into the
water, to be towed swiftly toward the miscreant vessel by Dart.
It was amazing what heights the human
spirit could rise to, Jim thought as he did a visual check through his
binoculars. Theo and Dart reached their destination, and he could almost hear
the blistering reprimand she was issuing. She had her arms over the rim of the
craft, gesticulating to leave no doubt in the young skipper's mind as to where
he had erred. He watched as she trod water, one hand lightly on the dolphin's
melon, while the little craft tacked back in line. When he saw her begin to
swim back toward the Cross, Dart skipping alongside her, he put the binoculars
down.
Squinting to the fore of the flotilla, he
could see the pennon on the mast of the five-meter yawl that had been put at
Ezra Keroon's disposal as convoy leader. Ezra hadn't much actual sea
experience, but he was a superb navigator through any medium. Jim had himself
done the sea charts on this coastline and knew the waters intimately. There
were no reefs or unexpected dangers to cause problems for the inexperienced. As
long as no ships ventured too far out where the Great Eastern Current could
catch them, sea hazards were minimal. Once they got to Key Largo, every one of
them would be seasoned enough for the open-water run across both the Great
Currents to the safety of Fort.
The coast beyond Sadrid to Boca was not
that well known to him, but he was counting on the fishermen at Malay and
Sadrid, and on Ju Adjai Benden at Boca, to be familiar with local problems. The
sailors at Key Largo Hold had also done a fair bit of charting in their coastal
waters. Barring the weather, they should make it, no matter how slowly.
And the weather, he thought, leaning
forward to tap the barometer, could be an acute problem. Volcanic eruptions
played havoc with weather conditions. There had already been some freak winds,
squalls, and higher-than-normal tides, but Kahrain Cove had sheltered them from
the worst. They would probably arrive in the North just in time for the ash
fallout that was already beginning to filter into the upper air currents to be
pushed around the planet. He wondered if the volcanic activity would have any
effect on Threadfall. If one had to find some good out of bad, that would be
the option he'd pick, if he had one.
Two hours later he had to give the orders
for the small craft to land and the bigger ships to hove to and anchor in a
cove. Winds were picking up, erratic in direction, and therefore especially
dangerous to novice sailors, and so full of ash and grit as to make visibility
poor.
If he and Ezra were disappointed by the
progress they had made that first day out of Kahrain Cove, they sloughed off
queries with any number of logical explanations. No reason to deflate the good
morale of the expedition. The early day did give them a chance to check all the
cargoes and work on the problem of protecting the ships from Thread. Most of
the forty pleasure boats were constructed of fiberglass, with plastic masts and
booms, so decks and hulls were Threadproof. But canvas sails and some varieties
of sheets and line were not. Two of the colony's plastics experts had spent
their first day afloat designing rigid plastic sail covers that were
Threadproof, but they still had to solve the problem of how to protect the
people on the smaller craft, some of which did not have enclosed cabin space in
which to take shelter. There was also not a sufficient number of breathers to
allow passengers to dive under their hulls and remain there during Threadfall.
So that evening, Ezra and Jim had more
conferences on that problem, while all around them, the ill-assorted sailors of
their convoy gathered around campfires to cook the fish they had caught during
the day. But it had been a very busy day, and by nightfall, there were very few
who hadn't rolled up early in their sleeping bags.
An oily, ashy drizzle and light winds made
the next day's sailing longer and certainly dirtier. But they managed to pull
in to Paradise River's wide mouth to anchor before darkness fell.
Jim and Ezra called a meeting to discuss
the possibility of splitting the flotilla into several sections to make better
progress. The larger ships were constantly having to reef canvas, even to drag sea
anchors, to keep from outdistancing the smaller ones. Of course, the cargoes
that were destined to be stored here at Paradise River would be off-loaded and
the remainder more evenly distributed. The more precarious rafts would be
abandoned, having served their purpose. The dolphineers were grateful, their
teams had bravely tried to keep their assigned positions in the convoy and the
strain was showing in galls and swollen flesh.
The decision was made that, as soon as the
unloading was done, Ezra would lead the larger craft forward at whatever speed
they and two pods of escort dolphins could maintain, while Jim followed with
the slower, smaller vessels and the larger number of dolphin escorts. The
smallest of the sailing dinghies would be dismantled or towed.
The bad weather persisted and the seas
became too rough for all but the most experienced sailors, so the Paradise
River Hold continued to host them.
On the plus side, the plastics experts,
Andi Gomez and Ika Kashima, used the layover to complete manufacture of the
sail covers, and doors that could cover open cabin fronts. And Ika came up with
an ethnic solution to the problem of protecting the nearly five hundred
passengers and crew from Threadfall: plastic headgear, in a wide conical shape,
made with wide weals and outward sloping sides, wide enough to cover most
shoulders, with a high crown, to fit on the head, tied under the chin. Once the
people were in the water, buoyed by the compulsory life vests everyone wore,
these conical 'coolie hats' would, deflect Thread into the water, where it
would drown or be consumed by the fish that invariably arrived wherever Thread
fell into the seas. Even the dolphins were known to partake of what they
considered an unusual food.
The Paradise River contingent thought
Ika's cone hat a definite improvement over the sheets of metal they were used
to using for protection if they were caught out in Fall. Overcome by all the
praise, the slender Eurasian insisted that she could not take credit for the
design.
"Well, it's a bloody good adaptation
of a, what did you call it? coolie hat," Andi said stoutly, "and
it'll work. Won't be too hard to turn out once we set the matrix for the
design." And she turned back to that task.
"We're lucky we have people of such
differing backgrounds," Jim told the embarrassed Ika kindly. "You
never can tell when something as simple as straw hats from paddies on Earth can
turn out to be life-saving on Pern. Good thinking, Ika! Cheer up, child. You've
just saved our lives!"
She managed to send him a shy smile before
she retreated once again, but her husband, Ebon Kashima, strutted about the
camp as if he had thought of the gear.
"The next problem will be getting our
brave sailors to overcome fear of being out in Threadfall, and having it bang
down on their heads," Ezra said a little grimly, "no matter how
clever the hat they're wearing."
"Look, Cap'n," said one of the
Sadrid fishermen. "Push comes to shove and Thread starts falling on you
and water's the only safe place, they'll jump in. I sure as hell did that time
we got caught out in one of the first Falls. 'Sides, there're an awful lot of
fire-lizards flitting about. Between them and the wild ones that congregate
whenever there's Fall, I doubt much Thread'll hit any hat."
"A little practical psychology,"
Jim said, "and us as good examples, and they'll take to it. They'll have
little alternative."
"There's that, too," Ezra said
bleakly.
"We'll start some proper chatter
where it seems needed," Ben said, nodding to the other dolphineers. They
wandered off to start their brainwashing.
By the time coolie hats were extruded and
ready to be passed around, most of the flotilla was willing to accept the
measure.
"I'd rather be in a sled with a
flamethrower," one of the barge mates confided to a friend within Jim's
hearing.
"Yeah, but the barge has that slant
fore and aft. All we gotta do is hide under that and we'll be safe
enough."
Jim and Ezra issued an order that anyone
caught without life vest and coolie would be subjected to severe discipline
and, if they held any rank, demotion. They also ordered everyone to work a
two-hour shift helping produce the protective gear.
As it happened, all the stores were housed
and accounted for, and nearly two-thirds of the necessary Thread shields
completed before the weather cleared, so the two sections were able, after all,
to set off again together. But the bigger ships, with more sail, made the most
of the following wind and soon outdistanced the slower craft.
"More like the boat people," Jim
remarked to Theo as he tacked back down the strung-out line of his charges.
"Boat people?"
"Hmmm, yes. War victims in the
twentieth century. They tried to leave their country, Asians, they were, in the
most incredibly unseaworthy craft. Junks and sampans, they were called."
He shook his head. "Totally unsuitable. Many died trying to escape. Many
arrived at their destinations only to be turned back."
"Turned back?" Theo was
outraged.
"I don't remember the
historical-political situation at the time. It was before Earth was really
united by outward bound goals. I don't think a one of their craft was as good
as the worst of these."
Theo let out a sigh, pointed to starboard
where one of the four-meter sloops was flying a distress flag, and dove
overboard. When she surfaced, Dart was right beside her, ready to tow her to
the crippled ship. Jim entered the matter in his recorder. Broken sheet, he
thought, noting the way the boom swung. Lordee, would they have enough line to
see them through the constant breakages? He'd better hold another splicing
lesson tonight.
"Ah, it was the Heyerdahl expeditions
I was trying to remember," he told himself, "only he was doing it
deliberately in primitive craft he'd built himself. Not the same thing as this
at all." He must remember to tell Theo. He grinned. He enjoyed yarning at
her, because she really listened. Occasionally, she responded with stories of
her days as a pilot. He rather thought she preferred being a dolphineer, or
maybe she was just the sort of person who would make the most of what she had.
Too bad this feat will only be known to us
Pernese, he thought. Our Second Crossing: in many ways far more remarkable than
the spatial crossing of fifteen light-years in three elderly but suitable
spaceships to reach this deserted corner of the Sagittarian sector.
They had two more emergencies that day.
The first was a slight brush with the following edge of Threadfall. Ezra
spotted the now-familiar grayness ahead, and they were faced with a choice of
hoving to or giving their emergency gear a trial run. Jim and Ezra conferred
with those ships that were on the comlink, and it was unanimously decided to
continue, and see just how effective the safety gear was. Better now, when they
knew they'd only have to endure a half hour or more of Fall, rather than a
longer period.
So the dolphins and dolphineers spread the
command to all the craft not on comlink. Sails were furled and shields put in
place; fire-lizards were sent off to collect enough wild ones to help, and the
light sea suddenly blossomed with plastic cones.
Jim, his crew of five, and the four
dolphineers, though they could have weathered the Edge in the cabin, decided to
provide a good example to the timorous. Donning their head protectors and
grabbing plastic safety lines, they jumped into the water. That helped a few of
the fearful to follow suit. The four dolphins stayed underwater as long as
possible, then made mad rushes out to blow and squee-ee.
"Much good eating soon," Dart
commented at one point.
"Don't overeat, you glutton,"
Theo told her warningly. "She likes 'em when they're bloated with
water," she explained to the others.
Jim's shudder went unseen, since his
coolie hat touched the water and obscured his face. Once he tipped the hat up
so he could see, but Theo tugged it back down.
"You'd lose your looks with a
Threadscore across that prominent nose of yours," she said, her words
muffled under her own hat.
Jim felt his nose, which he had never
considered as particularly prominent.
"All there is to see are coolie hats
and Thread," Theo told him.
"How d'you know?"
"I've already had a look. Thread
bores me on the ground. It was much more fun flying sleds through it."
Waves rippled out from her as if she had shrugged.
"Which do you prefer? I mean,
profession, pilot or dolphineer?"
"I've done enough flying, though
Threadfall was more exciting than the routine stuff I did," she told him
in a thoughtful voice as her body drifted toward his in the water. Their legs
touched; his were much longer than hers, he noted absently in the clear water
around them. They had drifted slightly away from the others, having let their
safety lines play out to the full length. "Dolphineering's something else
again. Dart's super," she said, and Jim could hear the pride and the depth
of her friendship for her sea partner. "Sure beats the hell out of the
one-sided arrangement you could have with domestic animals. Though I used to be
right fond of an old moggie I had once on ol' Earth. But teaming with Dart's
totally superior to that sort of thing."
"Did you try for a dragon?"
"No. You got asked to stand in that
circle." Theo snorted. "They wanted younger riders. Like I said, I've
done enough flying."
"You're not old ..."
Theo's laugh was genuine amusement.
"Maybe not from where you swim, Granddad," she said, but he took no
offense from her teasing. He was, after all, in his sixth decade, twice her
age, and should have been a grandfather ... if he hadn't chosen a profession
that would have denied him most of the pleasures of marriage and children. A
month's home leave after sixteen or seventeen months in space wasn't enough
time for a wife or kids. He'd never tried for any more than casual
relationships.
He felt Thread plunk on the crown of his
coolie and inadvertently flinched, but the stuff slid off the slick plastic and
hissed into the sea. He swung his legs out of danger as the Thread continued
down into the water deep enough to be swallowed by Dart or one of the other
dolphins, or some of the schools of fish that flitted about to feast on the
manna. Hunger made them fearless, and Jim felt the caress of scales now and
then on his bare skin: startling the first time, and producing a knowing laugh
from Theo, who was completely accustomed to such contact. The result was that
he felt as protected by the sea as by the man-made artifacts. And the
fire-lizards. At Theo's direction, he looked up through the semi-transparency
of the cone's flange to see the first of the fire-lizards flaming around and
above them, deflecting Thread from the deck of the Cross. Since the deck was
made of teakwood he had imported as part of his allowable weight as Buenos
Aires captain, he was particularly happy to see it protected from Threadscore.
Then, almost too soon, the loud chuffings,
squee-eeings, and ecstatic breachings of dolphins told him the danger had
passed.
"We'll do a quick tour," Theo
told him, holding her hand out in the water for Dart to supply a dorsal fin and
the tow. "Peri," she said to the other dolphineer nearby, "you
go to port, I'll go starboard."
"Lemme know if there's been any
scoring, especially any damage to the ships," Jim called after them.
Thinking on how well they had survived
this recurrent menace, Jim hauled himself back on board, stowed his hat within
easy reach, dried off, and ordered sail hoisted again.
"The enemy has been met and ...
consumed," he muttered, grinning to himself at his paraphrase as he
unlashed the helm that had been set on a course diagonally away from the main
Thread rain. But, oddly, he felt the better for that short brush, and for
Theo's company. She was a sort of ... comfortable person. He grinned again.
That was not the sort of compliment a woman would appreciate.
The second emergency was more
life-threatening. A burst plank below the waterline nearly sank a six-meter
ketch, save for the quick action of the dolphins, who all but swam it into
shore on their own backs. As the cargo of the ketch was mainly irreplaceable
orange-coded supplies, its timely rescue was a double blessing.
They anchored early that day so that they
could not only find a replacement plank from those that had been extruded
during the layover at Paradise River but also check sails and lines for
Threadscore. No human had received injury, and even those who had doubted the
efficacy of coolies against Thread had been reassured by the experience.
Though the ketch crew worked all night
with the plastics experts, the flotilla did not make sail until noontime the
next day. A good wind helped make up lost time and certainly relieved Jim's
frustrations. He missed Theo's company in the cockpit, but she had this first
watch off and was sleeping. It was a shame she was missing the best part of
this fine day. Nothing, but nothing, on any world could be a more stimulating
and satisfying occupation than sailing a good ship in a brisk wind down
sparkling clear blue-green coastal waters. He wondered if Theo could appreciate
that, too. The tropical storm, brewing
up suddenly as they neared Boca, drove them back toward Sadrid.
Jim's nautical instinct had been warning
him since early morning as they sailed westward on the gentle swells. One of
the Sadrid fishermen had reminded him only the night before of the suddenness
of squalls on this stretch of coast. So he was watching for those little signs
the experienced sailor knows: a smudge on the horizon that wasn't Thread, the
sudden drop of the barometer, a change in the color of the water, a sultry
feeling of pressure in the air around him. Then he noticed the alteration from
blue-green to grayish green and the rippling change of the wave patterns
He turned to Theo, who was back in the
cockpit with him. "Theo, I think, "
The storm struck with a ferocity and
abruptness he had rarely encountered on any previous sea. He had the impression
of black suit and bare legs going over the side into the suddenly heavy sea as
he tightened his hold on the helm. He didn't even have time to get the bow
turned into the huge comber bearing down on them, but he did manage to avoid
meeting the four-and five-meter waves broadside. His crew struggled to get the
sails down and reefed, fighting the waves that tried to wash them off the deck,
in some cases only the life rails prevented them from going overboard. Young
Steve Duff, struggling to tie down the boom, was barely missed by the lightning
that flashed across the ship, slicing through the mast two-thirds of the way up
its length, snapping the mainstays into lethal lashes until they fell over the
life rail. Jim barely managed to keep the bow turned into the towering seas as
once again the Cross thudded into a trough left by the latest monumental wave.
Worry about the more vulnerable small craft of his fleet drove terror into
Jim's heart, until the more immediate threat to the lives of himself and his
crew banished all thought but that of survival.
Now and then, during the brief but
thoroughly devastating squall, he caught sight of dolphins, hurtling in midair
across a seething watery surface, purpose evident in every line of the sleek
bodies. Sometimes their partners clung to the dorsal fins; other times the
dolphins seemed to be acting independently, but always in accordance with their
training.
Twice the Cross's crew threw lines and
hauled people rescued by the dolphins out of the water to the dubious safety of
the plunging deck. Once they overran the upturned hull of a capsized ship,
feeling the grind as their keel sliced across the plastic hull.
As abruptly as it began, the storm
vanished in the distance, a roiling dark vortex pierced by bolts of lightning.
Exhausted and somewhat amazed to be alive,
Jim was suddenly aware that his right arm was broken and he was bleeding from a
variety of cuts on both arms, chest, and bare legs. None of his crew was
totally unscathed. One rescued girl had a broken leg, and a boy was concussed,
his face badly contused, and a long wound giving his hair a new parting. In the
sea, which was still heavy from the agitation of the squall, survivors clung to
spars, half-sunk hulks, or pallets in an expanse of destruction that nearly
reduced Jim to tears.
Ignoring his own wounds and his crew's
urgings to attend to them, Jim scrabbled for the bullhorn in the cockpit and
released it from its brackets. He gave the order to start up engines that, to
conserve fuel, were rarely used. Ranging up and down wherever flotsam could be
seen, he shouted encouragement and orders, directing dolphineer rescues even as
he wondered if all under his command could still be alive. And what cargo could
be salvaged.
"It came up out of nowhere," Jim
reported in an almost lifeless voice when Fort com, manned by Zi Ongola,
answered his Mayday. By then they had managed to get a lot of the shipwrecked
to the sandy beach. The dolphin teams were still searching the wreckage, but he
needed assistance as soon as possible. He gazed with eyes that dared not focus
too long on the human jetsam and the wreckage flung up on the long narrow
strand that was the nearest landfall. His Southern Cross, five of the larger
yawls and ketches, and two small sloops had ridden out the storm. "I was
warned about the way squalls brew up in this area, so I was on guard. Not that
it did me any good. It hit out of nowhere. A change of the wave color and
pattern and then, bang! We'd no time to do anything except hope we'd survive.
Some never had enough time to lower sail and steer into the wind. If it hadn't
been for the dolphins, we'd've lost people, too."
"Casualties?"
"Yeah, too many," Jim said,
absently smoothing the gelicast that bound the broken arm he had no
recollection of breaking. Only one of his cuts had needed stapling, and Theo
had done that, as well as apply the gelicast. Then he'd applied sealant to the
scratches on Theo's bare legs and arms, earned while she tried to squeeze into
wrecked cabins to aid survivors. They'd separated, first-aid kits in hand, to
attend the needs of others to the best of their abilities.
The medic who had accompanied this section
diagnosed twelve with internal injuries and multiple fractures that the limited
medical supplies she had couldn't handle. She had two coronary patients on the
only life-support units that could be found in the Cross's cargo.
"Can you send a sled for the worst
injuries?"
"Of course. One's already being
loaded with medics and supplies and will fly out to you in the next sixty
seconds. Give me your approximate location again."
"Somewhat east of Boca but west of
Sadrid," Jim said wearily. "You can't miss us. The sea's filled with
flotsam and overturned hulls. Has Kaarvan made port?"
"Yesterday."
"The Venturer would be mighty useful
to carry salvaged cargo back to Fort, as well as the extra folk who no longer
have a ship to sail."
"What's Ezra's condition?"
"I haven't tried reaching him yet.
He's a few days ahead of us and probably missed the storm, or you'd've heard
from him by now. There's really no point in sending him back. Every one of his
ships was loaded to the plimsoll line. His group'll do better finishing their
journey."
Someone stopped beside him and handed him
a mug of hot klah and a twig-pierced fried fish.
"And the Cross, Jim?" Ongola
asked in genuine concern
"Battered but afloat," Jim said.
The mast would have to be replaced, and the mainstays, but he still had all his
canvas. Andi had already vowed that his new mast would be the first she'd make.
She'd be making many, if they were to sail any ships out of here. "Which
reminds me. We got some lightning-burn cases, too. Three of the barges sunk
completely, but the dolphins are busy resurrecting cargo. Right now, the
injured are my first priority."
"As they should be. Ah, yes, "
Ongola broke off for a moment. "Joel urgently needs to know if you can
estimate how much and what cargo is irretrievable?" Jim caught an
indefinable note of regret in Ongola's voice that indicated he felt such a
question was importunate. It was, however totally in character for Lilienkamp,
and Jim was too weary to summon much rancor.
"Hell, Zi, I haven't completed a head
count! Desi Arthied's got broken ribs, had to be resuscitated, and Corrie says
he probably had a coronary. But do reassure Joel that Desi's manifest recorder
was tucked inside his life vest next to his heart. That ought to cheer him
up." Jim couldn't keep the sarcasm out of his voice. "I gotta
go."
"Help is on its way, Jim. My
sympathies. I'll report immediately to Paul. Is there someone you can keep on
the com?"
Bleary-eyed, Jim looked about him. The
able-bodied were tending the injured, but he spotted Eba Dar propped up against
a fallen tree, his splinted leg sticking out in front of him. He was chewing
the last of a fish from its twig.
"Eba? You well enough to keep the
line open to Fort?" Jim asked, peering into the man's lacerated face and
eyes for signs of concussion. Eba's naturally sallow skin did not show pallor,
and the cuts on his shoulders and chest were already sealed.
"Sure. Nothing wrong with my mouth
and my wits," Eba said with a droll grin and, tossing the empty twig,
reached for the unit. "Who's on the other end?"
"At the moment, Zi Ongola. They're
sending a big sled for the serious casualties, and Kaarvan'll sail the Venturer
down to pick up whatever cargo we can save."
Eb looked out at a sea once again calm;
oddments could be seen bobbing to the surface or floating in on the tide. Soon
enough, Jim knew, the shallow beach would be littered, and he would have to
find enough people to haul the jetsam safely above the high-water mark.
Shielding his eyes with his good hand, he peered seaward where dolphin fins cut
from one upturned hull to another, their human partners hanging on to the
dorsals, still searching for survivors.
"Damn her," he said under his
breath as he recognized Dart's smaller, distinctively marked body and Theo
towed alongside. The sealant on those scrapes of hers was probably stinging
like hell. Was she mad, driving herself in that condition?
"Dolphins're doing great, aren't
they?" Eba remarked. "Wonder if we'd've all been safer in the water
with them.
"The dolphins were okay, but not all
their partners," Jim replied. "Besides, you farmer types couldn't
hold your breath long enough, the way dolphins can." He gave Eba's
shoulder a squeeze and limped off to see if, this time, he could come up with a
more accurate body count. Five people were still unaccounted for, three of them
kids. He told himself that everyone had been wearing life vests, there was some
hope to be found in that.
Eba had not been far from wrong about
being safer with the dolphins. Equipped with breathers and able to dive with
their aquatic partners beneath the towering waves to escape the pummeling, the
dolphineers had been lucky, at least during the squall. Now they risked
themselves time and again to rescue unconscious or injured folk. Even before
the storm ended, teams had followed sinking ships down to save those trapped on
board. Many people owed their lives to the quick action of the dolphin swimmers
who had, in some instances, torn off their breathers to give the drowning
life-saving oxygen.
It was during those first few hectic hours
after the storm had passed that the dolphineers had received more serious
injuries. A distraught Pha had gone so far as to beach himself to get Gunnar
Schultz to medical attention for a deep wound in his thigh, sustained when he'd
pushed his way into a cabin to free a trapped child. Efram, Ben, and Bernard
had been called in to haul Pha by the tail back into the sea, the dolphin
squee-eeing and complaining that they'd do him masculine damage.
By the time the big sled from Fort
arrived, Jim knew that, by some incredible miracle, there had been no loss of
life. The five missing folk walked in from farther down the beach where their
ketch had been stranded. One of the teenage girls had a broken arm, the other a
dislocated shoulder, which the newly arrived medics instantly attended. They
made the walking wounded sit and sip at restorative 'cocktails' that had been
mixed and brought along. Some injuries were still life-threatening, two heart
attacks and three strokes from exposure and exhaustion, but none that wouldn't
respond to treatment and therapy.
The dolphins had been able to locate all
of the sunken ships, and buoys now marked their positions. Most could be
raised, but the three small ships thrown up on the beach by the heavy seas were
too badly damaged to be worth repairing. The barges, unwieldy craft at best,
had sunk so quickly that they hadn't been battered by the high waves. Efram
with Kibby, Jan with Teresa, and Ben with Amadeus reported that the cargoes
were still lashed in place; the barges had been full of low-priority freight,
safe enough where it was for now.
As to cargo, no one paid much attention to
what he or she grabbed and hauled into piles well above the high-tide mark: it
was enough to keep the jetsam on the beach. Leaning wearily against a
waterlogged and battered crate, Jim was on the comunit, calling for more people
to help with salvage, when he noticed three of the medics walking toward him.
"Look, Paul, I'm damned sorry to add
this to your problems," Jim said wearily.
"It's not one I expected,
certainly," Paul replied in an odd voice. Jim heard the defeated tone and
responded by couching his report in the most optimistic manner he could muster.
He rubbed at his face, which was stiff from brine. "Actually, Paul, the
way the stuff is floating in on the tide, I wouldn't be at all surprised if
we'll salvage most of it. Some's too waterlogged to estimate any damage, but
generally the packaging held. As to the ships, Andi's already figuring out
repair lists, "
"No jury rigs, damn it, Jim. You've
leagues to go yet to reach Key Largo, and Kaarvan told me it's no picnic crossing
the two Currents."
"I have no intention of setting sail
again until all craft are seaworthy, shipshape, and Bristol fashion, as they
used to say." Jim spoke with all the conviction he could manage, adding
that old seaman's tag to show he was in good spirits.
He was aware of shadows of the approaching
medics lengthening, covering the light from the westering sun. He turned
slightly away from them, not wanting his conversation overheard. "Hell, by
that time, all the cargo will have dried out, too. Only a few of the cocooned
stuff got torn open. Tomorrow we'll have dolphin teams start hauling up what
was too heavy to surface on its own. You wouldn't believe what those critters
can manage. I'll report in again later, Paul. Don't worry about us. Sled brought
us all the help we needed."
As he closed the comunit, someone cleared
a throat. Jim looked up to see Corazon Cervantes, Beth Eagles, and Basil
Tomlinson regarding him with amusement.
"He's still on his feet,"
Corazon remarked to the others.
Seeing how tired she looked made Jim aware
of his own weariness.
"Only because he's leaning on that
crate," Beth said in her pragmatic way. She looked tired, too.
"Old sailors never die, they just
fade away," Basil said in a pontificating voice. "No matter, Theo was
right," he added, pointing. "He's ripped the gelicast around and
split the staples. What's your opinion, Doctors?"
"Repair, then bed rest," Beth
said, and before Jim could protest, she pressed a hypo-spray against his arm.
As his legs folded and his vision darkened, he heard her add, "You know, I
don't think he realizes when it's time to take a break. The smell of roasting food roused him, but
his body was unwilling to respond to the initial commands he gave it to leave
the horizontal position. He was on his back, under a canopy of woven fronds,
which was certainly rustically unusual. Under him, however, was an air
mattress, and a light cover kept the cool of the shade from chilling him. He
made a slight error in judgment by rolling onto his right side, preparatory to
rising. The sudden weight on a heavy and awkwardly covered right arm was
painful enough to force a groan from his lips.
"Ah, you're awake, too, are
you?" a voice said from his left.
He twisted about to see Theo lying beside
him. She gave him a cocky grin.
"You sicced that unholy trio on
me," he accused, not appreciating that justice had similarly immobilized
her.
"Dart informed on me," she said
with a shrug. "So I figured I'd at least see I had decent company in my
ward." In gesturing to their surroundings, she displayed a right arm,
marred by four heavily stapled and sealed spiral gashes.
He reached over and took her hand, gently
lowering her arm to her side. "How'd you get those?"
She glanced in thoughtful surprise at her
arm. "I don't rightly remember. I think we were checking out that
five-meter ketch Bruce Olivine sailed. Dart was trying to poke her nose into
the for'ard hatch when the whole ship shifted and something snagged me by the
arm."
"How're your legs?"
She kicked one free of the light cover.
It, too, glistened with sealant. Dispassionately, she regarded the raw
scratched flesh that ran from the top of her thigh to her ankle. The inside of
her leg was only bruised. "I used to be better able to squeeze through
tight places. Should've been okay if I'd had on a full wet suit. It's only to
regrow the skin I lost. But I gather we will spend some time here at our
pleasant seaside resort."
"Who's taking charge then?"
"The medics," she said with a
rude laugh. "Hey, someone!" she called. "We're hungry in
here."
"Coming!" a cheerful voice
answered.
Jim groaned again as he levered himself
up.
"Hey, they are coming," Theo
said in alarm. She sat up as he headed toward the thick shrubbery behind their
temporary accommodation. "Oh! Always did think you guys had the best of
the deal in circumstances like this."
That short but critically necessary
excursion proved to Jim Tillek that he had less strength than the fronds bowing
to the light wind. It was going to take more time than he had to spare to
recover from yesterday's excursions.
"Yesterday's?" Theo laughed
lustily, making him aware that he had spoken aloud. "Jim, m'lad, you've
been out for the full thirty-six. Today's the day after yesterday."
"My God, then who's ..."
She grabbed his hand and gave one pull,
sufficient to make his weak knees buckle. The air mattress cushioned his sudden
descent, but the jolt reminded him that he had other injuries as well as the
broken arm. "Paul sent another sled, with plenty of people to muscle the
salvage and a team of Joel's apprentices to run bar codes through their
recorders. Where there are bar-code patches left, that is."
Jim groaned just as the obscuring foliage
was pushed aside and Betty Musgrave arrived with a laden tray, which she set in
the space between them.
"Hi, feel better, Jim? Theo?"
she said with none of the forced cheerfulness that Jim would have found
egregious.
"He's had a nice long sleep and a
nice long, " Theo chuckled as Jim's half growl cut off the rest of her
sentence.
"Good, everyone'll be glad to hear
that," Betty said with genuine relief. "And I won't have to ditch
some of the urgent stuff Joel begged me to take to make room for his body. Eat.
You're lucky to get room service today."
She settled back then on her heels, and
Jim got the impression that she wasn't going to move until they finished what
she'd brought, klah, of course, slices of fresh fruit, and rolls that were
still warm from the oven. That was enough to make him attack the meal
ravenously, and he mumbled gratitude.
"Yes, we've civilized your camp since
you're likely to be here long enough to appreciate a few," she paused,
making a funny grimace, "comforts."
"What's happening at Fort?" Jim
asked, pinning Betty with a stern eye.
She raised her eyebrows and lifted her
hands in a gesture that told him she didn't care to go into any great detail.
"There's good, we're safe in Fort. There's bad, we haven't enough power
packs left for sleds to mount any sort of defense against Fall." She
shrugged. "So we'll sit tight. Safe enough in a cliff Thread can't
penetrate."
"Emily?"
Betty pulled mouth and head to one side
and rocked a hand. Though the medics had done all that their not-inconsiderable
skill could do to repair Emily Boll's broken body after the crash landing of
the shuttle ferrying people from Landing to the new settlement at Fort, she was
making a very slow recovery from the trauma. No wonder Paul had sounded so
defeated. He and Emily made a superb team, each supporting the other. Without
her active participation, Paul Benden would have a great deal to cope with even
with Ongola's help.
"She's some better," the pilot
said, "but it'll be a long convalescence. Pierre's taking real good care
of her. Ongola's a rock, as always, and if Joel would only stop yapping about
losing so much cargo ..."
"We haven't lost it ..." Jim and
Theo said in chorus.
Betty chuckled. "If you two won't
give up, I don't see that Paul should. And so I'll tell him." She looked
down at the wide digital on her arm and rose. "I gotta go. Good to see
you've got your appetites back." And with a nod to each, she pushed back
the foliage again.
Jim caught a reassuring glimpse of the
beach and the people moving about. "Leave it open, can you, Betty?"
"I suppose so." She found a
string that had been left for such a purpose and tied back the branch.
"Keep an eye on him, Theo."
"Glad to," the dolphineer said
with a deep chuckle.
"Oh, one last bit of news, Jim,"
Betty said. "Kaarvan sailed the Venturer out of Fort last night on the
tide. He'll come straight down. Be here in a couple of days."
Not long after, they both heard the swish
of a powered sled rising and craned their necks out their impromptu door to see
the rear of the big airborne sled as it flew northwest toward Fort. Jim was
just gathering himself to rise when Beth Eagles appeared.
"You both should have been on that
sled," she said without preamble, staring down at them with an
expressionless face. "Unfortunately, Dart refuses to work with Anna
Schultz", Theo looked almost happy about that non-compliance as Beth
turned to Jim, "and Paul said that you'd probably crucify anyone else who tried
to sail your precious Cross, so we'd better get you well enough to captain her.
Kaarvan's bringing more supplies and enough technicians so you can get this
ridiculous fleet floating again."
"It isn't ridiculous," Jim said,
leaning back and sighing with relief.
"However," Beth
continued, kneeling to run an instrument over his body, "I think the
sooner you're out on that boat, "
"Ship," Jim corrected
automatically.
"Ship, then, the more likely you are
to rest."
"But I have to ..." He waved at
the activity he could plainly see.
"You have to rest, same as Theo here,
or you won't be any good to any of us, and Paul doesn't need anything else to
worry him, like the recuperation of Captain James Tillek!" She turned her
back on him to check Theo. "And you're going out to the Cross with him so
that little mammal of yours can see you. But Teresa, Kibby, Max, and Pha have
been told to make sure she won't let you in the water until you've got skin
again. Hear me, Theo Force?"
"How could I avoid it?" There
was a ripple of laughter in the dolphineer's husky voice. That evening they were carefully escorted,
they refused to be carried, though Theo walked stiff-legged and had turned very
white under her tanned skin, to a dinghy and towed by Dart and Pha out to the
Southern Cross. After being hoisted aboard by Efram and one of the crew, Jim
managed a dignified descent to his own cabin, which he noticed had been set to
rights after the storm had thrown his few possessions around. Theo had to be
carried to her bunk, unable to bend her abraded knees to get down the short
companionway.
"We're sleeping aboard," Efram
said, handing Jim a handunit, "but if you've any problems, just give a
shout.
"Or call that Dart," Anna
Schultz said, poking her head around the door. She made a grimace, but it
wasn't ill-natured. "She's on patrol around the ship. I just hope she
doesn't keep Theo awake, banging her nose into the hull by her bunk."
Both dolphineers had scrapes and bruises
where their bodysuits hadn't adequately protected them, but neither had
sustained the serious injuries Theo had.
"I'm cook," Anna went on,
"but I've orders not to wake you for breakfast, so it'll be laid out in
the wardroom whenever you do get up."
When the Venturer arrived, she dropped
anchor near the Southern Cross and Kaarvan rowed over to pay his respects to
Jim Tillek, who was trying to schedule repairs and set the next day's duty
roster. Kaarvan stood in the doorway for a long look, then grunted when he saw
what Jim was doing.
"As I heard it, you're supposed to be
convalescing. You don't look even that fit."
Jim laughed. "Old sailors never die
..."
"But they fade away, my friend."
Deftly, without offense, Kaarvan removed the notepad from the desk. "This
is my job for now."
Since even the minor decisions he'd had to
make to get halfway through the schedule had tired him, Jim threw up his hands
and grinned cheerfully up at the swarthy skipper. It was only sensible to let
Kaarvan take over. But each evening, the unsmiling Kaarvan came on board the
Cross to report the day's achievements and how much the dolphin teams had
retrieved from the seabed, and to discuss the next day's schedule of repair.
Jim appreciated that. He felt less a supernumerary and somewhat involved in the
restoration of his command.
During the day, he went topside to watch
the antics of the working dolphins and to peer through binoculars at the
temporary shipyard. Since Theo said the sun and fresh sea air promoted healing,
she somehow managed to get herself on deck and stretched out on the cockpit,
trailing a hand over the side for Dart, whom Theo had talked into 'cooperating
temporarily' with Anna, to nudge from time time.
The dolphins were tireless, finding netted
materiel and pallets that had been rolled considerable distances away on the
ocean floor by the tide, and coming back to ask for harnesses to haul their
finds back to the beach.
"They're wearing us out," Efram
told Jim one evening, so tired that raising his fork to his face was an effort.
"You all need some time off,"
Anna said severely. "Give us apprentices a chance to see how the dolphins
do underwater salvage. They know. We should."
Jim raised that point with Kaarvan that
evening, and immediately all the regular dolphineers were given three days'
shore leave. Not being affected by that order, since she was a substitute
swimmer, Anna continued to berth on the Cross when the others went ashore, but
Jim took over the cooking and prided himself on being able to make a decent meal
out of their limited supplies.
"How come you know how to cook so
well?" Theo asked, having complimented him once again on the stuffed fish
roll-ups he had served her. "You were married?"
"Me? No, that's why I know how to
cook." He grinned at her.
He enjoyed those days, fishing for their
dinner to supplement the provisions and the fresh fruit that Dart brought them
in her net. He also enjoyed Theo's undemanding company, especially after she
asked him for the loan of his reader and the historical tape that mentioned the
Dunkirk Evacuation.
"I think we've sort of turned it all
around, the flotilla being rescued by men and dolphins," she said,
"but those troops must have experienced the same sense of amazed wonder
that they survived!"
Jim grinned down at her, knowing exactly
what she meant. In fact, he was beginning to half wish that their convalescence
could last a long time. But he was getting stronger, able to do several laps
around the Cross even though the gelicast arm was awkward. Beth remarked that
he was putting a little flesh on his old bones and the break was knitting
nicely. At Theo's insistence, the medic reinforced the sealants on her wounds
and let her join Jim in their laps, Dart now squee-eeing joyfully to accompany
her partner.
"Dart's better than the Cross,"
Theo remarked one day after she had carefully and slowly climbed the rope
ladder. The rake wounds made her movements stiff on land; in the sea she
regained some of her usual grace.
"How so?" Jim replied, surprised.
"Dart talks back," Theo said
with a grin as she gingerly arranged herself on the cockpit cushion.
"And you think my ship doesn't
communicate with me?"
"Does she?"
"In her own fashion. Like right
now," he said, feeling the alteration of the waves under her. He leaned
across and tapped the barometer. Just then the comunit buzzed.
"Squall's on its way, Jim,"
Kaarvan said when Jim checked in. "Estimate it'll arrive in an hour, give
or take five minutes. Need any help?"
Suddenly Dart breached the water, walking
on her tail and talking so agitatedly that Jim didn't understand her. Theo did.
"She said," Theo grinned,
"sea is changing and will get rough. Storm coming."
"Now we know it's true." Jim
grinned back. "I'll just close the for'ard hatches. We are anchored
properly to ride out a squall, so that doesn't need to be altered."
"Need any help?"
"No, you get below before we get any
choppy water."
Theo grimaced but swung her legs around
and pushed herself up.
As he battened down the hatches and
checked other gear on the deck, Jim saw that the beach dwellers were also
taking precautions. Fins zipped about the area, as the dolphins set about
landing partners. An unaccompanied group, and Jim thought it was Kibby leaping
at the head of the pod, headed toward the storm to bring a report back to
Kaarvan.
"I'd feel safer out there with
Dart," Theo said, scowling at him when he joined her in the wardroom. She
had fixed some klah and laid out some food.
"You know, Eba Dar remarked on
that." Jim slid in to his usual seat at the end of the table.
"We were safer because we could just
go deeper, to calmer water. I'd plenty of oxygen in my breather." Theo
sipped her klah. Her right arm was regaining flexibility, but she still
couldn't raise it all the way to her mouth. "I knew you lot were having a
helluva time topside, but we kept watch below."
Jim covered her right hand, soothing
fingers that twitched impatiently. "I know you did. The reason we'd no
loss of life was you dolphineers!"
"That's our job," she said with
a cocky grin and a jerk of her head. She let her fingers lie still in his
grasp.
Under them, the Cross responded to the
sea's agitation. The comunit buzzed.
"Kaarvan here. Dolphins report it'll
be short and sweet but a bit heavy. You ready for it?"
"As we'll ever be." Jim switched
off and turned to Theo, absently catching his cup of klah as it slid toward the
raised edge of the table. "Would you be more comfortable in a bunk? It
might be rough on that healing skin of yours."
She gave him an odd look and an odder
smile. "It might at that."
She eased her way across the cushions to
the end of the table. He joined her, slipping one hand under her elbow as the
ship gave a convulsive rock. They could hear the wind rising, and the slap of
lines against the mast, and feel waves slamming into the starboard side of the
Cross.
Her good hand balancing her against the
increased pitching, Theo made her way to the forward cabin where the double bunk
in the space under the bow allowed her just that much more space than the
narrower singles. Jim followed, anxious that she not get thrown against the
walls. He had his own right arm tucked against his body, his left held up in
case he needed to balance himself.
Just as she reached the cabin, the Cross
pitched again and Theo fell against him. Instinctively he grabbed and held her
close, a lifetime of experience helping him to balance them both against the
erratic movement. She wrapped her left arm about his waist, hugging herself to
him. He could feel her trembling and the smoothness of her skin against his,
and he tightened his arm, surprised by a number of conflicting and
long-forgotten emotions.
"It won't be as bad a blow as the
other one," he said to reassure her. Though why Theo would need
reassurance.
"I'm not scared, you iggerant old
fool," she said in a taut voice. Switching her left arm to around his
neck, she hauled his head down to hers and kissed him so thoroughly that he
lost his balance and they both tumbled into the cabin as the Cross pitched them
forward. Nor would Theo let go of him even after they had fallen across one of
the smaller bunks.
"Your legs? Your arm," Jim began
without lessening the pressure of his arm around her. "I'll hurt you
..."
"There are ways, damn it, Jim Tillek,
there are ways!"
Despite the rolling and pitching of the
Cross, which sometimes worked to their advantage, he discovered that indeed
there were ways and very little hurting. In fact, Jim decided that the next
hour could be termed therapeutic, among other adjectives that he had had no
occasion to employ for too long a time.
"We're neither of us young,"
Theo said when the Southern Cross lay calmly at anchor again, "but you're
definitely not beyond it, my friend."
"No," Jim said in drawl,
allowing surprise and pride to color his reply, "and glad to prove it.
Especially with you!" And he kissed her tenderly.
The comunit began to buzz, and with a sigh
of resignation, Jim rose to answer it.
"Dart approves of you, you
know," Theo called after him
He let a chuckle answer that sally, but he
felt a little taller all the same. Dolphins were extraordinarily good readers
of human character and defects. Beth
Eagles gave Jim the go-ahead to undertake light employment. "And I mean
'light,' Jim Tillek, though you look rested."
"I am," he said with no
inflection, and sought Kaarvan to see how he could lightly employ himself to
advantage.
He knew enough of ship design and
chandlery so that Kaarvan shared with him the supervision of the repairs. The
squall had done little damage to the makeshift boatyard, and it had released a
few more errant bundles, which the dolphins brought in close enough to be
collected by Joel's apprentices.
Theo also complained that inactivity was
driving her nuts, so Beth allowed her to come ashore every day and help
decipher waterlogged bar codes on the pile of 'mystery' cargo.
If Jim and Theo preferred to row back out
to the Cross for their evenings, no one seemed to regard that as odd,
especially when Dart followed.
"Do they think Dart plays the
duenna?" Jim asked slyly. When Theo looked puzzled, he explained the term
and she laughed.
"Not her. You'll notice she doesn't
swim between us," she said with a sly grin.
Jim laughed because he hadn't.
"That's good, because it'd be awful if she came between us," he said,
masking the apprehension he felt at even such a subtle mention of their
relationship. He wanted the association to continue but wasn't sure how to
broach the subject.
"You got the Southern Cross, I got
Dart."
"We also have each other?" Jim
made the sentence not quite a query, certainly not a statement. He was suddenly
rather more anxious than he felt a man his age should be to hear her reply.
"So we do," she said in the most
equable of tones, calmly gazing at the Southern Cross as they neared her.
Grinning with relief, Jim put his back
into the last few pulls on his oars. A
happy event, the birthing of Carolina's calf, helped raise the morale of the
fleet survivors, tediously repairing storm damage. Malawi and Italia had been
her midwives, and the three of them brought the new female close enough into
shore to be admired. The dolphin nurses and mother were shouting some name
between their chuffs and other excited noises. Theo had to stay on shore, but
Carolina's swimmer got far enough out to be able to identify what the dolphins
were trying to communicate.
"Atlanta! Atlanta!" Bethann
called, between strokes back to the shore. "People don't believe me when I
tell them my dolphin knows as much as they do about old Earth."
Everyone on the beach then began waving at
the dolphins and chanting the name to show their approval.
"Most appropriate. I'm sort of surprised
we haven't had one named that before now," Jim said as a grinning Bethann
joined him and Theo. "Did you help Carolina pick the name?"
The girl grinned, wringing out her long
hair. "Sort of. Carrie wanted to name her calf after something big and wet."
Jim let out a guffaw, and she smiled again. "Well, it's close enough to
'Atlantic.' I tried to tempt her with a-ending states and countries and stuff
because I couldn't think of any big lakes with a endings. Even the colonies
don't have feminine lakes or oceans."
"You made a good compromise,"
Jim said with warm approval. The next
day, a team of dolphins and dolphineers swam the new mast out to the Cross.
With much ceremony and a lot of hard work, it was properly stepped, new
mainstays put in place, the boom rehung, and the patched canvas threaded onto
the sheet and dutifully raised to flap in the light breeze.
In Jim's experience, events had a habit of
occurring in threes. The third one came from Paul Benden and his almost
incoherent account of the reappearance of the seventeen dragons and their
riders. After helping in the evacuation of Landing, Sean, Sorka, and the other
dragonriders had been asked to fly some supplies across the southern continent
to Key Largo, even as Jim's flotilla was sailing offshore. Contact had broken
down somehow, and what had happened to the young riders and their priceless
dragons had caused everyone understandable anxiety. Jim took the call at his
makeshift beach office, where he was figuring out how and what to load on the
ships that would soon be ready to continue their westward journey.
"They just appeared in the skies
above Fort, Jim," Paul said, the astonishment and elation in his voice
such a tonic that Jim changed the setting to wide range so that everyone nearby
could hear the account. "The dragons were spouting flame, charring Thread,
diving into tangles, disappearing, and reappearing. The riders of the queens
were carrying flamethrowers. The males chewed firestone and belched flame until
they ran out of stone, just about the time Thread got up into the Range, where
it can't hurt rock much.
"And then," Paul went on with a
ring in his voice, "those devious young rogues landed and demanded
numb-weed and medical supplies for their dragons before they paid any attention
to my orders to report to me on the double."
Jim grinned, as did many of the other
listeners. The seaman thought of his ship first, his own safety second, the
dolphineer of his mammalian partner, the rider his dragon. He exchanged a
significant glance with Theo.
"That done, damned if young Sean
Connell didn't march 'em smartly right up the entrance to the Hold. Then he had
the impudence to introduce me to what he called 'the dragonriders of
Pern'!"
Jim laughed as he leaned toward the
speaker unit. "Well that's, what they are, aren't they, Paul?"
"Indeed! Now I'm sure we'll make it,
Jim. I'm sure!"
"So are we all." Jim circled his
hand to raise three cheers from the audience. "Give them our compliments,
too. Such news gives us new heart, as well."
He was surprised to see Theo wiping tears
from her eyes and, later, when they lay beside each other in the double bunk,
asked her why.
"Look, swimming with Dart is the best
thing, well, almost the best thing," she modified, grinning at him,
"that ever happened to me. But I think flying a fighting dragon would be a
notch, well, maybe several notches above that, given the fact they're our
equivalent of the battle of Dunkirk. So few against so much." All the work seemed to finish up at the same
time, which Kaarvan said was the result of good planning and Jim was equally
certain was due to the boost in morale. So they loaded the Pernese Venturer
with the last of the more important items and distributed the remainder,
unreadable bar codes notwithstanding, among the ships that were to sail west
again. The Venturer could make a swift trip north and be ready to sail back to
escort Jim across both Great Currents.
When he finally reached Key Largo, Jim
conferred with Paul, who was taking no chances and had sent all four of the
large ships, Pernese Venturer, Mayflower, Maid, and Perseus, to await their
arrival at the jump-off point. It had become a matter of honor to the now
well-seasoned skippers of the small craft in his flotilla to bring their ships
into the new port. But few of them were capable of sailing across the two Great
Currents without some assistance, and for that, the four ships with more
powerful auxiliary engines would escort them. Jim had thought long and hard on
how to maneuver the flotilla past this hazard and was pleased when the other
captains agreed with him. The plan was to sail in the quieter coastal water
from Key Largo, beyond the point where the Eastern Current was at its closest
to the Western one. Then they'd turn bravely in to the Eastern Current and let
it carry the vessels a good day's sail away from their final destination, where
they'd slip across the current into the calm dividing waters. Then, using
outboard engines and the big ships towing the ones that didn't have the speed
or bulk to cross the Western Current, they'd maneuver that hazard until they
reached the safe waters at the end of the Boll peninsula. The coastal sail up
to the Fort harbor ought then to be routine.
They sent dolphins ahead to check on incoming weather. Then, assured of
fair weather and decent wind, they set out on the dangerous Crossing. This time
luck was with them. They experienced no heart-stopping moments on the Crossing
and made the quieter northern coastal waters. Some powered ships even had a
little fuel left. Dolphin teams had swum in constant escort in case of engine
failure. Then it was plain sailing. Almost anticlimactic, Jim thought, as the
Southern Cross slid majestically into the darker northern waters bound for her
last port of call.
Not quite her last, he amended. While
stopping at Key Largo, he and the other skippers had had a long talk about
plans for the future and how to protect their ships during Threadfall.
"They built us a sort of boat shed
under the wharf," Kaarvan said, sketching the facility as he spoke.
"Masts have to be unstepped, of course, but that's neither here nor there.
Venturer just fits, with two other big ships or four of the smaller ones."
"Those'd be enough to supply Fort
with fresh fish when there're clear days," Sejby said, scrubbing at the
bristle on his chin and gazing thoughtfully at Jim.
Jim caught the unspoken words. Lifting his
gelicast arm, he managed a grin. "Well, this'll keep me out of action for
a while."
"There's good news, too, Jim,"
Veranera said quickly. "Ozzie mentioned a big sea cavern on the eastern
end of the Big Island. He said it was large enough to sail into. Deep water
even at low tide, and the roof tall enough so the masts needn't be unstepped.
We sort of figured we could take it turn and turn about. Keep at least one or
two of the big ships on duty, and store the others in the cavern."
Jim hauled the chart of that area to him.
The site of the cavern had been marked. "I've no objections. In fact, for me
and the Southern Cross, it makes a lot of sense. Be a nice easy sail."
"After what you just did, it would
indeed," Per Pagnesjo remarked with unusual levity. "I take some
shore time, or the missus get annoyed with me."
They decided then that the Cross, the
Maid, and the Perseus would spend the first year in the cavern. The Venturer
would come, too, to bring the other crews back. Kaarvan wanted to establish
whether or not the cavern was big enough to accommodate his ship, which was the
largest. If it was, he'd rest her the following year.
"Then we can keep more seamen
working, because the wharf will shield the smaller ships," Kaarvan said.
"That keeps more people happy."
"You're putting the Southern Cross in, what did they used to call
it?" Theo asked when he told her the plan.
"Mothballs."
"What're they?"
"Basically cocoons. Moths came from
cocoons. Flying insects that were attracted by flames." Jim wasn't really
paying much attention to what he was saying, distracted by her proximity in the
nighttime quiet of his cabin.
"You'll miss sailing, Jim."
He knew he would, but they both knew that
his decision was sensible. He tired so easily these days, even doing what he
loved most.
"I will, but I'll enjoy it even more
when we get back to it."
"We?"
"Well, Dart has no problem with
becoming official escort to the Cross, does she?"
"Noooo." Theo smoothed his hair
back from his ears. "You need a haircut."
"Possibly." Her totally
irrelevant observations only endeared her more to him. "Two, with Dart,
can handle the Cross on the way to Big Island," he went on, still
resisting in his inner heart the necessity of mothballing his beloved ship.
"A honeymoon?" And Theo giggled.
He gave her a quick hug. "Then next year
..."
"There'll be three of us, Jim
..."
He pushed himself up to look down at her.
"You don't mean ...
She laughed in great delight at his
surprise. "Told you you weren't beyond it, man. Thought I might be, but
seems I got in under the wire."
At that point, he forgot what other plans
he had intended to discuss with her and knew that his decision to harbor the
Cross was for the best possible reason.
It was a cloudy day, mist whisking in and out of the little bays to port
as the Southern Cross made her way toward the wharf Kaarvan had just announced
on the comunit was not far ahead now. The jib sail was barely full of wind, but
a gentle current was helping the forward motion.
Suddenly the pealing of a bell sounded
through the mist. Abruptly every dolphin of the escort broke the surface in
ecstatic leaps of unusual height, a couple walking on their tails in their joy.
Even Jim could distinctly hear them shouting "Bell, bell, bell!"
Theo looked at Jim in perplexed
astonishment. "But you didn't take the Monaco Bell! How ..."
"The Buenos Aires carried more than
one bell in her hold, " Jim said, putting an arm around her shoulders.
"Damn," Theo said, sniffing, and
he saw tears sliding down her cheeks. "That was damned thoughtful of
someone. Look how glad they are that there's a bell for them here, too. Just
listen to the noise they're making."
Jim was beginning to know when the
dolphins were 'singing'. He knew too, that, somehow, they had come across the
seas of Pern to ... home!
THE
FORD OF RED HANRAHAN
"Look,
I know that, Paul," Red Hanrahan said; irritably brushing his shaggy mop
of silver-shot red hair back from his forehead. "We waste less keeping it
all central. And my having supplies doesn't mean I won't share 'em whenever
necessary."
It occurred to Paul Benden that most of
the male residents of the vast Fort Hold were in need of haircuts, except, of
course, the young dragonriders, now over five hundred strong in their Weyr.
They cropped theirs to a stubble, easier to wear under the hide helmets they'd
adopted. But there couldn't be that much of a shortage of scissors, could
there?
Then, annoyed at the increasing tendency
of his mind to go wandering off on tangents, he jerked his attention back to
what Red was saying.
"But the fact remains that most of
the horses are infected with thrush from having to stand on soggy wet bedding
that we don't have the resources to change, and they are acutely in need of
regular exercise, which they can't get here. The cave structure at the place
I've found is sandy-floored, much easier to keep clean, and big enough so I can
have an indoor exercise area for those days when Thread keeps us immured."
"And ..." Paul tried again, for
he hadn't been able to complete a sentence since Red had desperately launched
into his rationale for moving out of the Fort Hold.
"I've checked with Sean. We won't be
a burden on him and the Weyr. Thread has never, yet," Red gave a rueful
smile, which made him look slightly less haggard. "come right over the
place I've found. And," he added, waggling a finger as Paul opened his
mouth, "Cobber and Ozzie have thoroughly explored the tunnel system shown
on the echo survey with Wind Blossom's little photosensitive uglies, so the
dangerous tunnels are blocked off. We've got a small hydroelectric system using
one of the nearby streams, and Boris Pahlevi has plotted out the most efficient
way to use the rock cutters and the borers. Cecilia Rado's given us plans to
enlarge and improve the main chamber and give us a lot of apartments in the
facade. We'll use the cut stone for housing along the base of the cliff, just
as you've done here, so we'll have workshops as well as separate
quarters", and Red emphasized that aspect by enunciating each syllable, "to
accommodate the families coming with us. That's the biggest incentive in moving
out, Paul." He gave a convulsive shudder. "I know we've all had to
cram in together for mutual support and safety. But enough is enough.
Especially in my profession. I'm losing the best breeding years of my mares'
lives. And, now that we've got the dried seaweed to add protein and fiber, we
can get by with just the one feed-maker."
Paul held up both hands. "Let me get
a word in edge-wise, will you, Red?" He grinned. "I have no
objections to you moving out."
"You don't?" Red was genuinely
surprised. "But I thought ..."
Paul Benden indulged in a rare laugh,
which made the big vet realize how much Paul had altered in the past nine
years. Unsurprising, when one thought how many burdens he had assumed since
Emily Boll's death from fever three years earlier. Paul rose and went to the
wall in his office that was covered with survey maps taken by the probes as the
colony ships had moved into their parking orbit. The areas explored by various
teams showed the symbols of metals and minerals discovered; red marked the cave
sites with rough sketches of the tunnel systems made from the probe echo
system. Three enlargements depicted the immense, sprawling Fort Hold; the old
crater, Fort Weyr, which the dragonriders inhabited; and the newest human
habitation at Boll, founded the summer before.
"I won't let anyone make an
ill-advised move, Red, just to get away from here, but decentralization is
essential." Red knew that Benden feared another of the lightning-swift
fevers that had decimated the Hold three years before. "We must begin to
establish autonomous and self-sufficient units. That's part of the Charter I'm
determined we must implement. On the other hand, with Threadfall a constant
menace, I must limit new settlements to those that won't overtax the dragons
during a Fall. We can't even consider expanding unless they can give aerial
protection. I won't risk any more precious lives, not after the most recent
plague."
Paul's expression turned grim. There were
few family groups in the Fort Hold that had not suffered losses in the
debilitating fever that had hit the already distressed colonists. The old, the
very young, and pregnant women had been the most vulnerable, and before the
frantic medical team could develop a vaccine, the disease had run its course,
leaving nearly four thousand dead. Nevertheless, the living had been immunized
against resurgence. Though all possible vectors, food, ventilation, allergies,
inadvertent toxic substances from the hydroponics unit, had been examined, the
trigger for its onset remained a mystery.
The fever had caused another problem: a
large number of orphaned children between eight and twelve years. These had to
be fostered, and although there had been no shortage of volunteers, a certain
amount of reshuffling had had to occur to find psychologically suitable matches
of adult and child.
"Those who leave here must go to
properly surveyed and explored ... premises." Paul gave a mirthless laugh,
and Red grinned wryly back at him: 'premises' seemed an overstatement to
describe the primitive cave dwellings. "Pierre and his crowd were lucky to
find such a network at, " Paul dropped his eyelids briefly, still finding
it hard to make casual mention of his longtime colleague. "Boll."
"We're lucky Tarvi and Sallah
explored so much of the region when they did," Red added ingenuously,
giving Paul time to recover from the tension that had suddenly contracted the
muscles in his face. "You also don't need to lose too many of the valuable
skills from a central facility. Fort should remain the primary teaching
headquarters." Red was referring to the warren of caves adjacent to the
main Fort, where the medics had originally set up isolation wards for the fever
victims. Three years on, the wards had become classrooms, workshops, and
dormitories, somewhat relieving the crowding in the Hold.
"So," Paul said with more vigor,
"who's going with you? Those grandchildren of yours?" He managed a
small smile: Red and Mairi had more of their second generation underfoot than
their first. Sorka seemed to have a baby most every year, despite arduous
riding in the queens' wing. Red and Mairi fostered the five of them, leaving
the dragonriders with less to worry about while coping with the insidious Fall
and training the young dragons. Michael, nine years old and the eldest, spent
every moment he could up at the Weyr, often illegally borrowing a mount from
his grandfather's remuda to make the uphill trip. His red hair matched his
temperament and tenacity.
"No," Red replied, slightly
rueful but more relieved. Mairi had enough on her hands, supervising their own
fosterlings, as well as looking after their son Brian's four, to allow his
wife, Jair, to continue her mechanical-engineer training under Fulmar Stone.
"Not when our going to the new place meant Michael would have too far to
go to visit whenever he can sneak away." Red chuckled. The boy was
dragon-mad, and his father wouldn't let him stand as a candidate until he
reached his twelfth birthday. "There's supervision for them now at the
Weyr if Sorka's busy. And schooling."
The Weyr, now housing five hundred and
twenty dragons after nine years of enthusiastic breeding by the eleven queens
of the first two hatchings and, more lately. Faranth's first daughter, had
asked for additional personnel to help with the domestic tasks the riders had
little time to manage. Some of the older fosterlings had moved up the mountain,
along with enough families and single adults to perform necessary tasks.
Though it was not common knowledge, the
Weyr supplied its needs by judicious hunting in the southern continent. Sorka
often sent Michael back to Fort with a sack of fresh fruit and a haunch or two
of beef tied to the back of his saddle.
"We've singles, fosterlings, and
enough mature couples with full training." Red handed over his list. He'd
carefully screened those picked to accompany him and Mairi for compatibility,
as well as for useful skills. "I'd like your permission to draft more of
the trainees when they've passed their tests. I would, of course, in the future
be willing to take in any who show a knack for animal husbandry or
agriculture."
"You and Mairi have been splendid in
sharing the caring." Indeed, Mairi would have taken in as many fosterlings
as she could, but common sense dictated a limit to the time she could spare for
each grieving preadolescent. "So you are taking the entire regiment?"
Red grinned at the nickname his expanded
family had been given. "Mairi's always had a touch with young folk, and
she'd feel she was abandoning them just when they've got over their
bereavement. I can certainly use them all."
Paul ran one finger down the list, which
had been written on a thin width of gray paper that had already been recycled
several times. The precious remaining plassheets were now used only for special
documents. Some personal computers were still in use, thanks to the production
of generators from the junked shuttles and other spares, but people had lost
the habit of using them as short-term record processors.
Red's list included four veterinary
students, but there were more than enough experienced practitioners and
apprentices in the Hold to leave it amply staffed. Red himself would complete
their training and qualify them. Mar Dook's second son, Kes, had been well
trained in agronomy by his father, and he was bringing his young family. Young
Akis Andriadus had just qualified as a general practitioner, and his wife,
Kolya Logorides, had studied gynecology and midwifery, so that would provide
the new Hold with the medical support it would need, though Mairi could
certainly manage most minor medical emergencies. Ilsa Langsam had just
qualified as a primary teacher. She would have more than enough pupils. Max and
Emily Schultz were two of the oldest fostered, plus two Wangs and two Brennans;
in the fosterings, siblings had been kept together wherever possible, so there
were also three very young Coatls and two Cervanteses. Among the fosterlings,
there seemed to be at least one representative from every ethnic group, and
Paul wondered if Red had done that on purpose. But all the general skills that
would be needed seemed covered in those choices, metalworking and engineering,
as well as teaching, agronomy, and medical.
"Hundred and forty-one all totaled,
huh?" Paul said. "And a good cross section. What are you springing
loose from Joel, since you've the foresight to bring one of his kids?"
"Turn the sheet over," Red said,
amused. The 'foresight' of attaching young Buck was not moving his father an
inch in terms of what he'd allocate a new settlement.
"Stingy, ain't he?" Paul said
with a snort.
"Cautious with community property and
ever aware of the charge of nepotism."
Paul continued reading, then looked up in
surprise. "An airlock door? What're you going to use that for?" he
demanded.
"Well, it isn't being used for
anything else, and it'll make an impressive entrance: also impregnable,"
Red said. "I took the dimensions last time I was down in the storage
cellars. Ivan and Peter Chernoff dissected the frame panel, too, which fits in
the opening as if meant to be there. Seated it in some of that hull-patching
compound Joel couldn't find another use for. Peter even rescued the floor and
ceiling bar holders. A spin of the airlock wheel, and we can drive home the
lock bars top and bottom so that nothing can get past that door once it's
closed. Cos Melvinah called it a neat bit of psychological reinforcement."
Paul nodded in appreciation. "Good
job of recycling materials, too. I will miss you, Red," he said, then
paused.
"But you won't miss having to
arbitrate the disputes in the beast hold," Red finished for him with a
grin.
There were constant quarrels over who had
what space in the low caverns that housed the colonists' animals, and who got
what fodder. Red had been waging a clever and diplomatic war with the Gallianis
and the Logorides, the other major breeders. During the frequent breakdowns of
the overworked grass incubators, the Hanrahan family had fed their animals
their own bread rations and scrounged the shoreline, some distance from the
safety of the Hold, for the seaweed that could be dried and shredded into a
fodder the horses would eat.
"They can't complain when your exodus
leaves them with a lot more space."
"No, but they'll agitate to try and
bring up more of the stock they had to leave behind," Red said with some
acerbity.
Paul shook his head. "No transport.
There's no one will get Jim Tillek to bring his precious Cross out of that
watery cavern he's stored it in. And, with Per and Kaarvan gone fishing most
weeks ..." Paul shrugged. "I see you're requisitioning the use of
five sled-wagons? How long will you need them?"
With almost no power packs left to run the
airsleds, many had been stripped to hulls and fitted with wheels as ground
vehicles. The smaller ones were useful for hauling stone from excavations
within the Hold. The bigger ones were too wide for more than the well-traveled
road down to the sea, but they were capacious and had even survived, better
than the goods they'd been carrying, unexpected long drops down mountainsides.
"Who else is moving out, Paul?"
Red asked. Rumors were rampant, but so far his party was the only one he knew
of that was actually asking for a final clearance.
"Zi Ongola'd like to try that western
peninsula." Paul went to the map and tapped the marker on the tip of the
landmass.
"Good on him. No wonder I couldn't
get any more of the Duffs to come with me. We'll bring the wagons back as soon
as we've finished using them. And I'll loan out the oxen teams I've trained, if
that'll help Zi."
"It certainly would, and I know he'll
thank you when I pass the information on."
"He's got the longer haul."
"He's also got to find a passable way
through the High Ranges," Paul said with a sigh. "The cave system's
satisfactory where he wishes to settle. The way there is not. We might be able
to bore a tunnel, if necessary. Plenty of hydroelectric sites."
Red knew that Paul would miss Zi
Ongola, who had been his second officer and close friend since the two had
served together in the Cygnus Campaign. Red was a little surprised that Zi
would leave, but he'd be a good leader, and pressures in the Fort had to be
reduced. Many dissident voices were quieted only because the admiral was
universally admired and the justice of his regime respected as fair and
equable.
Most of the problems afflicting the Hold
were due to the cramped conditions. The 'good' years when the colony was
starting up had allowed people freedom and scope, which they treasured all the
more now that it had been denied them by the terrible fall of Thread. During
the first few years when Fort Hold had protected them, gratitude for that haven
had overcome the discomforts and inconveniences, but as the birthrate soared
and the stony corridors resounded with the cries of fretful babies, tempers had
begun to rise.
The establishment of South Boll had been
the first major attempt to relieve the congestion, and so far it was
successful, for those who had resettled at the new holding under Pierre de
Courcis's leadership. But exploring appropriate premises was time-consuming,
and with Thread continuing to fall, any outbound journeys had to be carefully
timed and safe layover shelters built along the way. Then some caves were found
to be either waterless or too small to shelter enough people to be worth
development.
"Yes, Zi's got a big job ahead of
him, yet we must make the attempts if this colony is to succeed. Threadfall
won't last forever!" Paul brought one hand down with a hard slap on his
armrest. "By all that's holy, Hanrahan, we'll still make Pern ours, with
everyone owning his or her own place, no matter what rains down on us!"
"Of course we will, Paul. And we
Hanrahans will hold our place! And multiply. You can be sure of that!" Red
said, grinning smugly. Mairi had just weaned their latest and, he hoped, last
child. She'd told Red she wanted to have a dozen offspring, but the repeated
pregnancies were beginning to take their toll on her.
"For Mairi's sake, I hope you have
too much to do for any more of that." There was a twinkle in Paul's eye as
he regarded the veterinarian. "How many have you fathered now?"
Red waved his hand, his grin broader.
"Nine's enough to insure our genes will continue. Ryan's the last I'll
permit her, and I made sure of no more to come."
Benden gave a snort. "Especially when
your sons and daughters are like to pass you out in production figures in a
year or two."
"Well, Mairi's good with children.
She genuinely likes them in all stages of their development. More than I
do," Red added with some acerbity.
"Got a name for this Hold of
yours?"
Red made a disclaiming sound. "Hell,
Paul, I've been so busy with plans, lists, and contingencies, naming's a detail
I haven't given much thought to. We'll think of something appropriate, Mairi
and the rest of us."
Paul Benden rose then, made an effort to
straighten the slump of his shoulders, and held out his hand. "Good luck
Red. We'll miss you here ..."
"Ha! You'll be glad to see the
backsides of us. And so will the Logorides and the Gallianis."
Benden gave a genuine laugh. Despite the
fact that breeding had clearly had to be kept to an absolute minimum, the
Logorides and Gallianis had felt themselves constantly deprived by the
restrictions. Pierre de Courcis had taken nine of the scions of the two large
families, and a substantial number of their cattle, when he went south to
settle Boll, but the two senior men continued to grieve for the 'marvelous fine
bloodlines and stock' they'd had to leave behind at their southern stakeholds.
"They enjoyed freedom far longer than
most of us. It was harder to give it all up," Benden said in oblique apology.
Red cocked his head briefly to one side.
"Who hasn't given up a lot, to stay alive!"
Paul wrapped Red's hand in both of his and
gave it one final hard shake. "When do you plan to go?"
"Sean says we've got three full clear
days come Tuesday. We'll be organized and ready by then."
"So soon?" Benden's tone was
almost wistful.
"On a good horse, Admiral," Red
said, unable to resist teasing the former naval man, "you could ride the
distance in two days. Be good for you to get away now and again."
"I've never even got as far south as
Boll, and that's nearer."
" 'Tisn't, with those hills to
climb," Red protested. "I'll send you a special hand-engraved
invitation, Paul Benden, and you'll come for the good of your sanity! I'll sic Sean
and Sorka on you. A-dragonback's the shortest way to come," he added as he
paused at the door.
Benden laughed. "You talk Sean into
letting someone else ride his precious Carenath and I'll come!"
"Good!" Red gave a brief sharp
nod and grinned. "Then we'll show you what we've done with the new Hold
when we've done it!" Nearly a
third of the Hold's population managed to be on hand when the Hanrahans'
expedition moved off. Every passenger-carrying animal was laden as well with
some bundle or other. The sleds were carefully packed; the largest, with the
Hold door, was drawn by six teams of oxen, beasts Red had carefully picked for
their docility and trained for such work. He'd bred them himself from a genetic
pattern Kitti Ping had produced for him, slightly adjusting weight,
strengthening bone, thickening hide, and enlarging both heart and lungs to
encourage a disease and fatigue-resistant hardy animal, much stronger and more
adaptable than the Terran beasts that had been brought in vitro.
Safely stored in an insulated crate were
the special fertilized eggs with which Red Hanrahan hoped to develop varieties
of equines more suitable to Pern's needs. A heavy-weight animal of Percheron
proportions for the plow; a swift, lean racing type that could carry messengers
long distances on little fodder; and a comfortable riding animal, a pacer like
the ancient Paso Fino, which had been a mountain breed of great agility and
endurance, and, more important, possessing the easiest possible long-distance
riding gait.
He would make his Hold the place where all
others would come to buy their burden beasts and racers. His most private dream
was of founding a racehorse line to rival that which Earth had once possessed.
There was no reason, once Thread had passed, that they couldn't revive the
sport of kings. The practical could coexist with the exotic. Let Caesar
Galliani develop meat animals if that was his passion, but Red would go for
horses.
Now, astride his bay stallion, King, the
best of the fine animals he had bred from the fertilized ova he had brought
with him, Red ranged up and down the line, encouraging his people and
rectifying small errors in the order.
He had positioned one of the heavier sleds
to break trail, with teams of his strongest youths to widen the way whenever
necessary. The way north through the main Fort valley was easy enough, but soon
they would come to the less-traveled ground. Not that he didn't know the track
like the back of his hand, he'd been up and down it so often, but a lot of it
wasn't geared for wide traffic.
There were people waiting for them, too,
at the new premises: the four fostered youngsters who were old enough to help.
Egend Raghir and David Jacobsen, who were supervising the mechanical apparatus
in the Hold, Madeleine Messurier, in charge of the domestic arrangements, and
Maurice de Broglie, who, along with Ozzie and Cobber on loan from the
specialists' work pool, was still checking rock formations and the tunnels.
Soon they would move on to investigate other possible sites for holdings.
As soon as the wagon train was around the
bend and Fort was out of sight, Red sent his fire-lizard, Snapper, to Maddie to
announce that they were on their way. Useful creatures, the fire-lizards,
though there seemed to be fewer of them about these days.
Sorka said it was because they were going
back to their native sands in the South to lay their eggs. The little golden
queens, being more responsible, remained to see them safely hatched before
coming back to their humans. The green females laid their eggs and then forgot
about the matter and, being shatter-witted, probably forgot that they had once
had human friends. Sorka's Duke remained faithful, as did Sean's two browns and
Snapper, another brown. Slowly, though, there were fewer and fewer of the
winsome creatures in and out of Fort Hold.
"They may mind the cold and dreary
winters more than we do," Sorka suggested. "We could go back to
Landing and see if there're any clutches about to hatch."
Red had caught Sean's frown. The lad, and
Red corrected himself with a private grin, because 'lad' no longer applied to
this confident adult, Sean, rider of bronze Carenath, was known as the
Weyrleader. And, if he had certain traits of the martinet, they were needed to
shape up his growing dragonrider contingent. In any case, his orders were
strictly obeyed and, to Red's thinking, were sensibly formulated. There would
be little spare time for the dragon-riders to go looking for fire-lizard nests.
In fact, they had made only one return journey.
When Ezra Keroon had been fretful with the
fever that racked him, Sean had very willingly gone back to Landing on
Carenath. Sean had returned, almost as soon as he'd left, Sorka had remarked,
to reassure the old captain that the Aivas building, which Ezra had so
carefully shielded with shuttle tiles against Garben's eruption, remained
intact and unscathed. Later Sean had reported more fully to Paul that the old
settlement was just so many mounds under a thick carpet of gray volcanic ash.
However, the knowledge that the interface with the Yokohama was still intact
had soothed the querulous Ezra, and he'd gratefully subsided into a sleep from
which he never woke, another victim of the undiagnosed fever.
The new place could quite easily be named
after Ezra Keroon, Red thought. Certainly the man had been one of the heroes of
the Evacuation, in fact, the last man to leave Landing, bar the admiral and
Joel Lilienkamp. And even before the trip to Pern, he'd been a hero of the
Nathi War, too. Yes, it wouldn't be a bad thing to name his Hold
"Keroon." Or "Kerry." That was a good way to keep long-lost
but well-loved places, or people, alive.
A request for his presence at the head of
the caravan interrupted his ruminations. His mind back to the journey at hand,
Red cantered King to see what the problem was.
They made camp the first night where Red had often done so, in a rocky
clearing by one of the streams that fed into the bigger Fort River. All the
stock was hungry enough to munch happily on the dried shredded seaweed that
some of the fussier eaters tended to refuse.
A campfire is a cheerful affair, even when
made of dried animal dung. Someone had contrived a solution that, when used to
immerse the dung, replaced any lingering unpleasant odors with that of apple
wood. The nutritious dinner stew was even seasoned appealingly so that, if you
didn't think about the fact that it had been processed from offal, seaweed, and
wild herbs and grains, you could relish the meal. Red was too hungry to be the
least bit finicky, and let the hard travel bread soften in the leftover juices.
Snapper returned with a note from Maddie
attached his leg. The welkin will ring
when we sight you. River's high with last week's rain. Don't let the sleds bog down.
M.
Mairi had made their bed under one of the
sleds. She had insisted that her bones required a certain amount of padding.
Red wouldn't admit that his own did, too, and was grateful to lie down with
only her and Snapper near him. He was thinking of the absolute wealth of three
good-sized rooms at ... Keroon Hold, naw, that didn't sound right, just for
Mairi and himself. The morning brought
an unexpected delay. Some of the beasts, mainly those hauling sleds, had to be
treated for harness galls. The harness had been new, but Red had thought it had
been softened enough not to rub. Mairi dug about in their household belongings
and brought out some well-cured sheep fleeces and some of the cotton that she
had saved from the last crop at Landing. Red first applied the numbweed salve
that was now in everyone's first-aid kit, then padded the abraded spots to
prevent further friction. They also redistributed the lighter items from the
sleds of the galled teams to ease their burden, and Red himself made certain
that all harnesses were flexible enough and fitted perfectly. One thing sure,
Red announced, He'd personally inspect every strap of harness that evening
after it had been cleaned.
The delay cost them several hours, but
when they finally moved out, it was in good heart, with smiles on faces that
had grown unused to smiling. Almost, Red thought, as if the sheer joy of being
out on their own, away from the burden of so much imprivacy, was that a word?
he wondered, but it sounded exactly right, outweighed any minor snag. He was
relieved and glad for many reasons to see this attitude adjustment.
Considerable hard work would still be needed to complete the new place and make
it livable, not to mention comfortable. For a while, there'd be other
inconveniences and makeshifts. While they carved out their new habitation from
the basic cavern system, everything would be covered with stone dust. He had
brought as many masks as Joel would allow him, but there weren't enough for
more than the people right at the work site. And rock dust had an insidious
habit of permeating and clinging to objects well away from the actual
excavation. Mairi had complained about the state of Red's clothing after his
first long stay at the Hold cave.
He hoped that Max Schultz had managed to
get his gang to finish the stud fencing. Red had paid his next-to-last credits
to have the plastic extruded for enough posts and rails to provide paddocks. He
wanted barn-sour animals to spend as much time as possible out-of-doors, even
if it would be awhile before any grass could get started. There wouldn't be
that much time to exercise horses at first, but they did have stables and byres
inside the immense low cavern that would hold all the beasts. Turn-out paddocks
were essential. He'd get Deccie Foley, who had a knack for teaching animals, to
train the dogs with a certain call or whistle to round up the animals so that
just one person would be needed to help the dogs get them all in under cover
when Thread fell.
Toward afternoon a drizzle began, proper
rain, not Thread, though for a moment the grayness of the sky over the western
range almost caused a few hearts to stop. But Thread always moved from east to
west. Red had prudently built into the eastern face of his precipice, so that
every window would give a view of the direction that danger came from.
To make up lost time, they ate a quick
lunch while they watered the animals at one of the many streams they had to
cross. Maybe he should put something about streams in the name of the place.
His land had almost as many as Fort did, since this eastern side of the High
Ranges drained well into the sea.
A wet nighttime camp meant cold food
again, though Mairi contrived enough of a fire under the high sled to boil
water for hot drinks all around. She also managed to heat enough warm water to
soap and soften the harnesses, which Red personally checked. He also inspected
every one of the burden beasts, just to be sure no new wounds had developed.
Despite the wet chill damp of the
early-spring rain, Red was asleep beside Mairi almost as soon as he got himself
comfortable. Snapper coiled between their warm bodies, as protected from the
cold and wet as he could get, and Red wondered how much longer the little
fire-lizard would remain faithful in this inclement land.
The rain was heavier the next day. Mairi
insisted they have a hot porridge in their bellies to keep out the chill, and
quantities of hot klah were made for the thermoses. The availability of the
warming beverage did make the difference during that very long cold day.
The trace, for it certainly couldn't be
called a trail, was more mud than dirt now and further slowed them down.
Despite that, by the time light was fading from the sky, Red knew they were not
that far from the river he had chosen as the border for his stake, the river
that Maddie had warned him had risen. The ford they were to cross was a wide
basin where the river spread out over a shale rocky bottom.
He ordered lanterns lit. The mycelium
luminescence with which Ju Adjai Benden had been experimenting cast sufficient
light in an enclosed space, but suitable shielding to make it useful outside
hadn't yet been developed.
"We've reached the river, Dad,"
Brian yowled from the darkness ahead. "And it's in spate."
Red groaned. He'd wanted to make the
crossing as much because the land on the other side was his as because the
farther bank was a better site for an overnight camp. He briefly considered
waiting for daylight, but discarded the idea almost immediately. The flatter
land on this side of the river was already under an inch or so of water. If the
river was this high now, then by morning the water would be too high for the
wheels of the smaller sleds. They might float away downstream if they got
loose. And this was the best ford within klicks, if he could find it in the
murky darkness.
Now, so close to his own private place, he
was loath to let high water bar his way.
He borrowed a lantern from one of the
smaller carts and trotted through the mud to the front of the caravan. Reining
King in beside Brian, he looked glumly at the swiftly moving surface of the
swollen river. Rising up in his stirrups and holding the lantern high over his
head, he peered to his left, trying to find the cairn of stones he had placed
to mark the upper edge of the ford.
"Under water, too, damn it," he
muttered.
"Would we have to worry about an
undercurrent here, Dad?" Brian asked, pointing to a large branch floating
serenely, and quickly, past them.
"If it gets too high, that's a
possibility. By tomorrow, it will definitely be high enough to cause us
problems with those lower-loadbed sleds. Damn it, we've got to try tonight or
we might spend days here, just in sight of our destination!"
"Let's give it a go then, Dad,"
Brian said firmly. "I'll try to the right. After all, I have been across
this ford a couple of times. And Cloudy's a good swimmer."
He kneed his gray into the water, but the
animal, head down, snorting at the rushing flow, was not as eager to go forward
as his rider had boasted.
"Don't push him, Bri, " Red
shouted. "Horse's got sense. I'll look to the left. If I could see the
rocks ... Ah!" His high-held lantern showed the bulge of water surging
over an obstacle just below the surface, and he kneed King forward. A brave
horse under any circumstances, the stallion stepped in and moved smartly out,
Red legging him to the left as the ford took a diagonal slant across the river.
The bank on the far side was too dark to make out, and since the water was high
on this side, the incline there might be submerged, as well.
As King waded confidently forward, the
water not up to his knees yet, Red pondered the wisdom of crossing now,
tonight, in the dark. Yet, if they found the ford, they could make a safe
passage, and be on their own land! But floating sleds might haul the burden
beasts off their feet. Rope the sleds, then, and have riders alongside to keep
the sleds within the ford. King walked on, and through his horse's body, Red
knew that the stallion had stepped onto the rocky shale base of the ford.
"Thataboy, King, that's a good
lad!" Red encouraged his mount, trying to peer ahead in the feeble light
of the lantern. Oh, for a power torch! The ones allotted to his operation were
naturally all up at the cliff premises, their clear beams penetrating the
stygian darkness of the tunnel complex.
"Brian! Follow me!" Red called,
swinging his arm in a wide circle so that the light color of his waterproof
gear would be visible in the darkness. In moments, Cloudy's light head and body
came out of the night, splashing as he cantered forward.
"We need the power beams that are up
at the Hold to get us across tonight," Red said. "As soon as we reach
the other side, I want you to go hell fer leather and bring 'em back. Bring
anyone still awake, too. We'll need all the help we can get. And ropes, and
those great horses Kes has been using to break ground."
"Whoa, Dad. I get the drift,"
Brian replied, laughing.
The water was over King's knees suddenly,
and the horse tossed his head in surprise. Red looked over his shoulder, trying
to gauge their angle from the bank, but they were about halfway across and
neither bank was clearly visible now.
"I'll put a lantern where we
entered," Red told himself, "and another where we emerge. The beams
will give a broad enough swath to light the ford itself adequately. At least
we'll see where we should be going." King pulled to the right; Red
corrected him and was instantly in water to his own knees. King gave two
plunges leftward and, snorting mightily, was back on the shale footing. The
horse gave an offended snort as if criticizing his rider's directions.
"All right, boy, you know which way to go, so go! I didn't do so well, did
I?" Affectionately he slapped the stallion's muscled crest, letting the
reins slip through his fingers. God, that river was cold! Ice melt, as well as
the rain.
Behind him, Brian avoided a similar
mishap. One more time, just where the shale bank ended, the water surged up to
caress Red's stirruped feet, but then they were obviously ascending the slope
out of the river, splashing through fetlock-high water.
Standing in his stirrups, Red swung the
lantern, ki-yiing their success. Brian added his own yodels of triumph.
"D'you know the way to the Hold from
here, son?" Red asked, slightly anxious. Brian had not made the trip all
that often, and in the dark, most landmarks would be obscured. "Here,
better take my lantern." He leaned over toward Brian.
"Look, Dad, you'll need that as a
beacon."
"I'd rather you had it and got safely
to the Hold. Off with you, and trust Cloudy."
"Don't I always!" Brian said,
bringing Cloudy up beside King to take the lantern. "Whoops! Got it!"
And with that he trotted off to the left, up the gentle incline.
Red watched him for a long moment before
he set King back into the water, heading directly for the lanterns on the other
side. With those lights to guide him, the going was much easier this time.
Mairi again had foreseen the need for small fires, more cheerful than effective
as light sources but certainly beacons in the dismal night. Red oversaw the
dividing up of the available lanterns, then had a steel pole pounded into the
water's edge by his marker cairn. One lantern was securely fastened at its top,
a second one hooked at man height, and a heavy rope tied at waist height for
those on foot to grab.
That preparation completed, Red fastened
the other end of the rope around the saddle horn and coiled it carefully to
play out across the river. Mounting King once more, he took up three more
lanterns and two more poles, and led other lantern-carrying riders back into
the river. He positioned the riders at intervals; they would hold up the
lanterns to guide the others, and would also be available to give assistance as
required. When he reached the far bank, he hammered in another pole, hooked on
the lantern, and tied the end of the rope in one of those clever hitches
mariner Jim Tillek had once shown him.
Then he walked King to where he thought
the right-hand edge of the ford should be and kneed him into the water, right
up to his own waist. King lurched mightily out of that hole and back onto the
shale, shaking himself as if annoyed at his immersion. Red clamped his teeth
against the cold of that dunking. Fortunately he'd managed to keep the lantern
from being doused. He walked King back up the shale footing to the bank, where
he stabbed the last pole into the ground and settled the final lantern. That
would give them beacons enough, if no one panicked. The ford was just wide
enough to accommodate the largest sled. Even one of the team putting a foot
wrong could result in disaster.
He cantered King back across the ford,
more an act of bravado than common sense, for he knew King was tiring. Mairi
was right there as he emerged from the water.
"Not another step do you go, Red
Peter Hanrahan, until you've something warm in your stomach to take away the
chill of that water! I heard you splashing about." She handed him a cup,
and he was glad enough of it as the klah spread through him and down into his
belly. He managed to suppress a shudder as the cool rain-laden breeze blew
across his sodden breeches.
He handed her the cup with thanks and
then, rising in his stirrups, addressed the group waiting to hear his decision.
"Listen up, folks. We'd best make the
crossing tonight. The river's rising fast with what I bloody well know is ice
melt as well as today's rain. Right now the ford's no higher than King's knees,
if you keep to it and head on the left diagonal to the far shore and the
left-hand lantern. The ford itself is shale, so the minute you feel your mount
moving into something softer, get back on the hard stuff. Now, let's get
moving. Those of you leading packhorses move out first. Tie them on the far
bank and then bring your mounts to form a very careful line on the right-hand
side of the ford. Watch that hole I fell into. It's a cold one!"
He trotted King down the line to the
various carts and gave them their travel orders, leaving the heavy sleds till
last, for they'd need the most help.
Shouts from the river told him there were
minor troubles, but each time he turned King to go investigate, he heard
reassurances that the crisis was over.
Once the lead horses, the other pack
animals, and four of the carts had gotten safely across, and there were
sufficient riders marking the ford's boundaries, he sent the loose animals
across. The dogs nearly caused a commotion, and several had to be roped to
safety when they were in danger of being caught by the current. The goats were
the worst. They seemed to want to go for a long swim. So Red asked everyone
with fire-lizards to keep the goats in line. Snapper dove at the bell nanny,
clipping her on her right ear to turn her to the left. That got her back on
line, and the others followed, urged on by attendant fire-lizards.
Suddenly, without any warning, and before
the goats had started climbing out on the far side, Snapper and the other
fire-lizards let out a racket of dreadful sounds and disappeared.
"What the hell?" Red said,
totally surprised and vastly irritated by the abrupt abandonment. Snapper had
always been reliable ... He pushed King forward to deflect the lead nanny from
yet another wayward plunge and was relieved to get the little herd safely out
of the river.
By then, help had arrived from the Hold
and he was distracted from the fire-lizard desertions by the need to organize
the final stages of the crossing. Madeleine Messurier had sent along hot soup and
some sort of hot bread filled with one of her spicy concoctions. It didn't take
much persuasion from Brian and the Hold reinforcements to convince Red to pause
long enough to eat. Especially as once the powerful beacons were in place they
shone the clear path across the now perceptibly higher water, foaming in its
hurry to reach the sea, many long klicks to the east. Red knew that he'd miss
the sight and sound of the sea near him, but feasible 'premises' had not
presented themselves nearer the coast. He'd always lived in sight of an ocean,
but that was a small price to pay for what he'd have here. But first he'd have
to get everyone across that churning river.
A shiver ran up his spine, despite the
warm food in his guts. He was wet through and through, and he had already begun
to feel the stallion's tiredness in his occasional stumble and slide in the
mire. He counted on the great heart, of the horse and his own determination to
last as long as they still had people and stock to get past this ford.
The first yoke of the three pairs
harnessed to the largest sled balked at being asked to enter dark waters,
though the beams lit their way as clearly as the sun. The drivers energetically
cracked their whips overhead; two men used prods; and a few hauled at the nose
rings of the stubborn oxen. Aggravated by the stupidity and aware that the
river was deepening by the minute, Red ordered the animals blindfolded, but
that old trick wasn't having any effect with the water swirling about their
knees and reinforcing their sense of danger. He was trying to think what else
might motivate them, damning Snapper's disappearance when the fire-lizard might
have repeated his successful motivation of the goats, when there was a
commotion on the far bank horses whinnying and bucking while their startled
rider tried to calm them. The cattle lowed in such panic that there could be
only one cause of such widespread reaction.
Peering above, into the drizzling night
sky while King cavorted wildly, Red just barely made out the shape of a dragon
overhead, the bronze hide faintly illuminated by the dying campfires.
"Sean!" he bellowed at the top
of his lungs, reining King into as small a circle as he could to keep him from
bolting.
"Sorry, Red," Sean's voice
replied from somewhere overhead.
Still circling King, though it took a lot
of strength to hold the frightened stallion with one hand, Red made a megaphone
of the other. "Don't be sorry. Be useful! Get behind this stubborn team
and get them moving across the ford. We haven't got all night and the river's
rising."
"Get out of my way, then,"
Sean's voice drifted down to him. "At the count of ten ..." The
instruction dwindled away into the night.
"Okay, fellows," Red yelled to
the men in front of the team. "Sean's going to dragonize them. Be prepared
for a rough ride. And somehow keep 'em left. At all costs, keep 'em left!"
Keeping a tight hold on the reins, he
eased the pressure on King's bit and kneed him toward the cairn, facing the
horse toward the river, away from the sight of an incoming dragon. He was just
in time, for out of the darkness of the drizzle came a huge shape, low and
headed right for the reluctant team.
The smell of dragon was almost sufficient
in itself, the yoke bawled in fright and plunged forward, away from the
skyborne terror.
Sean must have the eyes of a cat, Red
thought, for he'd sent Carenath over at just the angle that made the oxen head
straight across the ford. Despite the load the beasts hauled, they didn't stop
when they reached the other side, stampeding through those on the far bank
until Red wondered if this had been such a clever maneuver after all.
"We'll land upwind of you, Red, so I
can talk," Sean's voice said faintly out of the murk. King began to buck
and rear, though not as earnestly as before.
Maybe it was the distance, the murkiness
of the night, but Sean's tone sounded odd. Red dismissed the thought as he
concentrated on finishing up the work at hand. Maybe he was a grandfather ...
again.
Now only the smaller of the two big sleds
was left to make the crossing. Fortunately the animals were still keyed up by
the recent appearance of a dragon overhead and were eager to get as far away
from it as possible. But once they got in the water, what Red had feared
occurred. The river level was now above the wheels and the sled, for all the
weight in it, began to float. The yoked beasts were pulled off balance and only
the quickness of the left-hand guide-liners kept the sled from drifting
downriver. As it was, the ropes had to be kept taut all the long way across the
ford until the wheels once more took the weight and the sled was hauled above
the river's current.
At last Red urged a tired and reluctant
King back across the ford to meet with Sean and to help Mairi put out the
fires. Sean was already giving her a hand. Mairi's piebald mare, tied to a
rock, stood as placid as always, unconcerned by the proximity to a dragon.
"Thanks, Sean," Red said,
holding out his hand to his son-in-law. A sandy hand gripped his, and Sean's
face was briefly visible before he scuffed wet sand over the fire. "Had
about run out of options to get those stupid damn-fool oxen across."
"Well, fear's a mighty mover."
Sean's voice definitely sounded odd, choked, but with no more light to
illuminate his face, Red had no inkling as to what might be wrong.
Just then, Mairi joined them. "How
come you arrived so fortuitously?" she asked. "There's nothing wrong
with Sorka, is there?"
Although Sorka, queen Faranth's rider, was
pregnant again, she generally had no more trouble with parturition than her
mother did.
"Oh, no no," Sean said quickly,
raising his hand to dispel her anxiety. "We came to welcome you to the new
Hold, but you hadn't arrived yet. Maddie said you'd sent for help at the ford.
I sort of figured Carenath might be some help."
Red laughed wearily, blotting his wet face
on an already soaking kerchief. "Where'd you stash him? A dragon's hard to
hide even on a rainy night."
"Carenath?" Sean called. There
was a vague hint of amusement in his voice, which only partially reassured Red.
"Show Red and Mairi where you are." Barely fifty meters away a sudden
blue-green light appeared in the darkness, glistening and slightly whirling,
the faceted eyes of a dragon. Red tightened his hand on King's reins, but the
tired horse's head hung down too low for him to see the gleaming eyes.
"Thanks, Car!" And the jewel-clear light disappeared.
"Is he standing there with his eyes
closed?" Mairi asked
"No, he's raised a wing to
shield," Sean said, again using that almost lifeless tone. "You
should be just able to make 'em out behind the wing membrane."
"Oh, yes, so I can," Mairi said,
sounding delighted.
"Look, Red, one of the reasons I came
was to be sure you had gotten there safely. We expect Threadfall over this area
tomorrow morning fairly early, and I didn't want you caught out in it."
Red sighed. With all the problems of
fording the river, he had just been considering staying here the rest of the
night and starting out fresh in the morning.
"You're not that far," Sean said
encouragingly.
"I know, son, I know." Red
paused, to give Sean a chance to speak whatever was clearly on his mind and
bothering him. He had a very good relationship with his son-in-law, and he
wanted nothing to jeopardize it.
"Is your Snapper back yet?" Sean
asked.
"What's happened at the Weyr?"
Mairi said, immediately clasping Sean's arm and peering up into his face.
"Don't lie to me ..."
Sean ducked his head, lifting his free arm
to rub his face. "No reason to lie." Now both could hear the
roughness in his voice.
Mairi embraced the bronze rider.
"Tell us, Sean," she said in her gentlest voice, lifting an edge of
her kerchief to dry his cheeks.
Red altered his stance, moving nearer the
Weyrleader.
"Alianne died in childbirth,"
Sean said, tears now making runnels down his cheeks. "We couldn't stop the
bleeding. I went for Basil."
"Ooooh," Mairi said in the soft
expression of true empathy.
"That's not all of it." Sean
sniffed, rubbing his nose and eyes, giving way to the misery he had bottled up.
"Chereth ... went ... between. Like Duluth and Marco.
"Oh, Sean love ..." Mairi
brought his head down to her shoulder. Red put his arm across the rider's bowed
shoulders.
There had been many injuries, some serious
enough to end the fighting abilities of six dragons, but only four deaths,
actually an astounding record, of which Sean as Weyrleader had every right to
be proud. But the loss of a queen magnified the tragedy. No wonder Snapper and
the others had disappeared. They had gone to the Weyr to mourn.
Red and Mairi were quietly comforting,
allowing Sean to express a grief he had probably suppressed until now.
"I'll come if I can be of any help,"
Mairi said with a quick query at Red, who nodded approval.
Sean raised his head, sniffed, and then
blew his nose on a handkerchief he hauled out of a jacket pocket. "Thanks,
Marri, but we'll come through. It was just such a shock. It's one thing to lose
a fighting dragon, but ..." His voice trailed off.
"We understand, dear."
"So nothing would do Sorka but that I
checked to be sure you were all right, too. I admit to getting a fright when I
didn't see you at the Hold ..." Sean managed a wry smile.
Red put a hand on Sean's shoulder and gave
it an affectionate squeeze, which he hoped expressed both his sympathy and
appreciation. "And you've Thread to fly tomorrow," he said with deep
regret. People needed time to mourn.
"Best thing that could happen,
actually," Sean said, mopping his eyes once more before he put away the
handkerchief.
"Yes, I suspect you're right about
that," Mairi said slowly.
"Off with you now, son," Red
said, giving Sean a gentle shove toward Carenath. "You were more than good
to check up on us and give those oxen the inducement they needed. Soon's Mairi
and I get across, we'll push on. We'll be under cover tomorrow, so don't worry
about us." Then another thought struck Red. "You've enough ground crew
for Fall tomorrow?"
Sean gave his father-in-law a wry smile.
"As I understand it, Red, this river marks the boundary between Fort Hold
and your place. You're not obliged to ground-crew ... if any of you were up to
it. Just push on and get under cover tonight. That's the best way to help Sorka
and me!"
"We'll do just that," Mairi
said, handing over a well-wrapped sleeping Ryan to Sean while she mounted Pie.
"So this is my son's youngest
uncle," he said, pushing back the blanket to peer at the little face.
"Definitely his youngest," Red
said. "Hand him up to me," he added as he swung up on the stallion.
"King's that bit higher above the water, Mair. You'll get a soaking as it
is."
Mairi gave a little laugh. "Not if I
hike my knees up," she said. "Give my dearest love to Sorka, will
you, Sean? And our deepest sympathy to all at the Weyr."
"I will indeed, Mairi. And ... my
thanks!"
The Weyrleader stepped aside then as she
kicked her mare forward. The piebald was one of those rare placid beasts and
stepped from land to cold water with neither hesitation nor so much as a twitch
of her well-shaped ears when water swirled around her fetlocks and then up to
her knees.
"We all grieve with the Weyr,
Sean," Red said, raising his hand in farewell. Looking over his shoulder,
he saw Carenath uncover his brilliant eyes as Sean returned to him, sorrow
displayed by the droop in his broad shoulders. Red sighed.
Then he couldn't help but notice how
closely King was following the mare, needing no urging at all to wade into the
river once more. The stallion stretched his neck out to sniff at her tail,
which she clamped tightly to her rump as she picked up her legs into a
splashing trot. Red grinned as he felt the sprightly lift in the tired
stallion's step, pursuing a mare who was apparently about to come into season.
And this year, Red thought, he could breed every mare he had!
As the swifter current of the still-rising
river tugged avidly at the stallion's legs, Red held his son more tightly in
the crook of his arm. He could see that Mairi had brought her knees up nearly
to her chin as the water rose up the mare's side, but Pie kept her footing and
trotted sturdily forward. Red heaved a sigh of relief in unison with King when
they climbed the far bank for the last time.
"Let's leave Sean's news until
tomorrow, Mairi, " he said before they reached the others.
"Yes, of course. Hearts are weary
enough without being sorrowful, too. And I don't want anything to spoil our
arrival." Then, after a brief pause, she said, "Is that selfish of
me, Peter?" She only used his Christian name when she was uncertain.
"No, kind. We've had sadness in full
measure. We can wait to add this one."
With those from the Hold to share the tasks of the weary travelers, Red
let himself be persuaded to sit on one of the carts and lead King from the back
of it. In the darkness, he even permitted himself to lie back. But the cart
seemed full of crates and parcels of hard edges, pointed corners, and
non-yielding surfaces. He twisted and pushed and finally formed a backrest that
wouldn't dislocate a rib or poke his kidneys too hard. He regretted that he
hadn't paused long enough to find some dry clothes, but he wrapped himself in
the blanket Mairi had thrust at him, and that kept the chill off. Snapper
reappeared and burrowed into his shoulder, wrapping his tail around Red's neck,
and Red stroked the little beast, sensing its sorrow and need to be comforted.
But soon enough, Red hadn't the energy for more caresses and, instead, propped
his head against the lithe warm body, a substitute pillow so soothing that,
despite every good intention, Red Hanrahan was fast asleep when the cart pulled
into the brightly lit circle in front of his Hold. "Mairi was all for
leaving you asleep in the cart," Brian told him when the wail of a tired
child roused him, "but it's only got two wheels and we'd nothing to prop
it with."
Futilely Red roared at everyone for
depriving him of the sight of a triumphal entry, but he resisted every effort
to get him inside and to his bed until he had seen all his livestock safely
ensconced in a 'proper-style barn'.
"Sean said there's Thread across the
river tomorrow morning early," he told those who tried to get him to go to
bed, "and he's usually right about where it'll fall, but I want everything
under cover. Just in case for once he'd be wrong!" And he stormed down to
the animal hold.
Half of the beasts were already down on
the sandy flooring, fast asleep, while others dozed as they stood. Red made straight
for King's stallion box at one end of the equine stabling. The horse, dark eyes
glittering in the soft light, whuffled slightly and then closed his eyes.
"Even the horse has more sense
..." Mairi began in as close to a scolding tone as she had ever used on
him.
"I had to see 'em, Mair," Red
muttered wearily. "I had to see 'em safe where I've seen them in my mind
ever since I knew this place was right for us."
"And righter for them," she
said, steering him out of the cavern and toward the Hold proper.
She half pulled him up the ramp to the as
yet wide-open entrance, but only after he had made sure that the big sled-wagon
carrying the door had been parked nearby, and into their Hold.
"And if you think you're going to
prowl about and see if we've made any progress during your absence,"
Maddie said, fists planted on her belt, "you've another think coming.
Furthermore, Ozzie has offered his rubber mallet to knock you out if you don't
get straight to your quarters and sleep!"
His quarters, for now, were currently the
office to the left of the main entrance, and he reeled slightly in that
direction. Candlelight showed him that the room had been altered, and he
grabbed at the doorframe to steady himself, his tired mind trying to cope with
the difference.
"Well, a bed big enough for both you
and Mairi wouldn't fit in here with all your clutter," Maddie said,
"so we moved that next door. Now, that there is a next door." She
gave him a push and Mairi, still holding his hand, got him into the room.
The door was closed firmly and then Mairi
was opening jacket and shirt, deftly pulling the sleeves off him before she
pushed him backward to the bed. Out of a marriage-long habit, he lifted one leg
so she could remove first one, then the other boot as he managed with fumbling
fingers to undo his belt and trousers.
A long time later, he woke. He roared at first, annoyed that he had been
deceived and cosseted when there was so much to be done, but Brian pretended to
take umbrage that his own father wouldn't trust him to see to the care of his
precious stock. Mairi set before him a steaming mug of klah and fresh bread
with, his eyes gleamed at the sight, a knob of butter he wouldn't have to share
with anyone. So he forgave the conspiracy and demanded to know if people were
settling in. If they weren't, he'd have their complaints that very evening.
A communal kitchen, with everyone taking
turns at food preparation for the main meal, had been established, and the main
hall, bare though it was, was large enough to seat five times the numbers that
sat at the trestle tables that night.
Before the meat was served, Red Hanrahan
rose from his seat at the T junction of the two long tables.
"Many of you may already know from
your fire-lizards that Alianne, gold Chereth's rider, died in childbirth and
her dragon soon after." He paused to let those who hadn't known absorb the
shock of such a loss. "We will all stand and have a moment's silence in
tribute to them."
While the announcement put a damper on the
beginning of what would have been a more convivial evening, by the time the
splendid cakes Madeleine had made for the occasion were brought in, most people
had recovered.
"You don't think of the dragons as
being that attached to their riders," Kes Dook remarked, just down the
table from Red. "I mean, I know the Impression is lifelong ... but the
queen was so young. Surely someone else could have taken over?"
"Not as we understand it," Red
said, toying with his mug of quikal. He did miss a decent drop of wine and
wondered if Rene Mallibeau would ever find his south-facing slopes to grow the
precious vines still tended in the hydroponics shed. "Once Impression is
made, that's it, and the dragon is unable to function without that special
human partner."
"But the Weyr keeps looking for
likely candidates. Surely one of them could have filled in," Kes
continued.
"Perhaps it all happened too
fast," Betty Sopers suggested, her eyes red. She'd known Alianne very
well. "So few women die in childbirth ..." She looked hopefully down
the table to the two medics.
Kolya looked properly sympathetic, while
Akis Andriadus nodded his head encouragingly.
"I haven't heard what went wrong with
Alianne, " Koya said. "She's, she had two children, but I'll
certainly ask for a report."
"And I've had nine," Mairi said
in a no-nonsense tone, "so don't you be fretting, Betty Sopers."
"Especially if you aren't even
preggers," Jess Patrick said, with a slightly hopeful leer, for he was
quite friendly with his fellow student.
"Of course I'm not," she replied
firmly, although a blush colored her face under her tan. Then her expression
clouded. "But she was so young and dragons are so ... strong."
"I'm delighted to hear that opinion
expressed in this hold," Red said firmly. "Without the dragons and
those who ride them, we wouldn't be here today."
"How did Sean get those bullocks to
move?" Kes asked. "It was too bloody dark to see anything by
then."
Red laughed, glad to be able to turn the
evening's conversation to a lighter vein. "The oxen may be stubborn, but
stupid they're not. They made tracks as fast as they could from the dragon
behind them!"
"How did Sean get them to go in the
right direction then?" Peter Chernoff asked. "I could barely keep up
with them, much less keep them left or right."
"As I said, Sean was behind them, but
slightly to their right, so of course they stampeded left," Red replied.
"And we are here, safe and sound. Pat, son, run get my fiddle and your mother's
bodhran. D'you know where your flute is, Akis? I know your dad taught
you."
"I've got a good jug," Ozzie
said, and rose from the table as Pat, getting explicit directions from his
mother on where to find the instruments, ran from the hall, Akis following.
It took no time at all to clear and
dismantle the tables and set the chairs and benches along the walls and provide
a happy ending to the first official day in Red Hanrahan's Hold. The next morning was different. Red was up
at first light, rousing Betty, Jess, Fyodor, and Deccie to feed the animals. By
the time they returned to the kitchen, Licia Dook, Emily Schultz, and Sal Wang
were starting breakfast under the watchful eyes of Madeleine.
With breakfast eaten and a fresh mug of
klah, Red called a meeting of the various supervisors and discussed the day's
priorities. That set the pattern for the spring weeks to come, establishing
pastures, crops, and garden, but still making the most use of the heavy
equipment that would improve and enlarge the cave system. Hanrahan had never
shirked hard work and did as much time on the stonecutters or the borer, the
hardest of the machines to use, as he did in the fields or the breeding yard.
He could and did leave a lot of the general management of his precious stock to
Brian, Jess, and Betty, with whichever fosterlings could be spared from
building. But he was sensible that reasonable rest and relaxation were as vital
as a good day's work.
Even that he used somewhat to his own
advantage, since he made outings to map the holding a special treat, certainly
a change from the unremitting labor of turning a cliff into a human habitation
or the sheer drudgery of plowing, sowing, and weeding. First he had to be
assured by the Weyr that there were a few safe days in hand; then he set
directions and goals for his teams. The extent of his legitimate stake,
combined with the acreage of those who had joined him in the enterprise, added
up to a considerable hunk of real estate, as Brian put it. Now what had been
delineated on probe cartographic surveys had to be thoroughly explored, posted,
and assessed for potential.
In form, the Hold land was slightly
pie-shaped, the most northern point the thinnest part of the wedge, and the
high and very cold mountain tarn lake the blunt point. The holding widened out
from the lake, bordered on both sides by river. On the southern side, the river
they had so perilously crossed; on the northeast, the next large one, two days'
steady ride from the first riverine boundary. Red needed to know how many more
possible cave sites were available for when his present population multiplied
itself out of these facilities.
With material excised from the interior,
stone cottages were to be erected along the foot of the ramp all the way to the
animal accommodations. In his master plan, those ultimately would be workshops
for the various crafts needed in a large and prospering community.
He was fond of Brian, got along well with
him, and hoped to do the same with the younger ones, but his sons would need
land of their own, where the da wasn't sitting over every decision. And the
stake was large enough to support many separate establishments. There should be
room for future generations to expand, too. When this Fall was past, even though
Red might not live to see that glorious time, his kin could spread out, all
over the Hold. In his mind's eye, Red saw that even more clearly now, as
magnificent a dream as he had ever envisioned when he and Mairi had decided to
join the Pern colony.
So, whenever possible, he sent scouts out
to find what other riches, accommodation being the main one, the stake could
provide. Sometimes he went himself to check on possible ore sites, for they'd
need more coal than the one seam they'd found nearby to run the hypocaust
system that Egend had devised for warming the living quarters of caves.
Egend was an ingenious engineer. He'd been
successful at Fort Weyr in drilling into the old, still-hot magma chamber that
provided delightful quantities of heat, especially for the hardening of dragon
eggs on the sandy floor of the Hatching Ground. It had taken the dragons weeks
of hard work hauling in the appropriate sands from the beaches near Boll, but
the Weyr now had an approximation of the conditions Kitti Ping had felt the
dragons would require. Not that there hadn't been clutches successfully hatched
on makeshift warm beds, but the sand flooring appealed to the queens. Like the
babies appearing so continuously at Fort, dragon eggs seemed to be continually in
one stage of maturity or another at the Weyr.
Whenever his duties had permitted him, Red
had attended the happy occasions of Hatchings, but Mairi managed to get to them
all, and was quite an expert on what color dragon would emerge from what shell.
Egend had seen no problem in
heating Red's Hold by hypocaust and such hearths as could safely be extended up
to the heights. He had unearthed some solar paneling among Joel's supplies,
which would do for heating water. There was nothing like a good bath to soothe
a body after a hard day's work. And, after having to put up with other people's
dirt and grime for so long, having a bath, much less clean clothes when one
wanted them, was a real luxury in the new Hold, made possible by the use of the
solar panels.
Of Red's fostered youngsters, young Ali
Arthied had studied enough engineering under his father that he could set up
and monitor that system with Jonti Greene's assistance. They were very clever
in adapting and contriving mechanicals, that pair. He planned to send both back
to sit their exams with Fulmar Stone, who had been monitoring their studies.
Educating the young had become a race
between the jobs that had to be done to survive and the studies that had to be
done to keep skills from dying out.
Well, maybe, Red thought as he rose the
morning they were finally going to hang the airlock door, when that chore was
done, they could stop moving at such a hectic pace. Success in their first year
here was crucial for many reasons, not the least of which was proving it could
be done expeditiously. Grass was up in three of the seeded paddocks; the first
shoots of alfalfa, the last of his seed allowance, were pushing through the
assiduously fertilized earth. The fruit trees, puny as they were, had been
planted in the walled orchard, which could be covered against Threadfall by
translucent plastic sheets. The vegetable garden, also walled, was coming on
with few failures, and the rows could be quickly covered with plastic shields.
It was a bright, sunny spring morning,
too, Red was happy to notice. Auspicious, especially since he had coaxed Paul
Benden and a few other special guests from the Fort to gather for this
momentous occasion, the Dooring of ...
"Scorch it," Red swore under his
breath as he jammed his feet into his steel-capped work boots. He still didn't
have the right-sounding name for the place.
Mairi hadn't been at all in favor of
naming the place Keroon, or even Kerry, which he had thought she'd go for.
"Oh, it should be something of us, or
ours," she'd said, her face screwed up as she tried to express what she
mean.
"Hanrahan Hold?" he'd asked,
almost facetiously.
"Good heavens, no. That smacks of
lord of the manor." Then she'd given him one of her sly sideways grins.
"Though you are, you know. Lord of all this ..." She'd gestured
broadly through the deep-set window of their upstairs bedroom.
The day they had moved their bed from his
old office which immediately became his office again, to the three-room suite
that had been carved out of the cliff face, that had been her day. He was not
likely to forget the joy on her face as she had directed Brian and Simon just
where her heirloom chest, once more glued together since its dismemberment for
the Second Crossing, should be placed. When she'd seen it settled exactly where
she wanted it, she'd given such a happy, contented sigh. Then she shooed
everyone out so she could polish it to a soft gleam.
She was so long at that task that Maureen
ended up feeding her baby brother.
"That's not like Ma," she told
her father as she cuddled Ryan in the crook of her arm.
"It is today, Maureen," Red
replied, swirling the last of the klah around in his cup before he drained it.
"Settling that chest means this place is definitely your mother's home
now."
"First thing Ma asked for when we
landed here was glue to put the chest together," Brian told his much
younger sister, and winked at his father.
"Apart from the stones we stand on,
that's the oldest object in this Hold, " Red remarked in a sentimental
tone. "Cherished for generations in your mother's family ..."
"And doubtless for generations
here," Brian added with an understanding grin. "So, when are we
getting the front door installed, Dad?"
"The invitations have been
accepted," his father said, "so let's get the hoists set up."
Now everything was ready, and at last the
great door was to be hung! Red had new trousers hiding the work boots, and a
fine new shirt over which Mairi insisted he wear one of the leather jerkins
that had been adopted as useful work apparel.
"At least until that thing is in
place. We've ever so much spare hide," she'd said, "but no time to
set up Maddie's big looms yet, so spare the cloth and wear the jerkin."
Today, too, Sean and Sorka, with their
newest son would join the celebrations. A dragon or two might come in useful
bringing in guests, though not in a million years would Red ask that a dragon
be employed in any task but the one it had been bred to do. He knew how bitter
Sean had been when all the dragons could do was carry things from one place to
another. Of course, that was before they had learned to fly between and chew
the firestone that made Thread-charring flame. Sean might be a tad arrogant
over his present high position, but Red would not fault him. He and the other
young dragonriders risked hideous death and many injuries to keep Thread from
ravaging this one area of Pern that humans could survive in. And more power to
the lad, no, the man that Sean had become, he was a true leader of his riders
and a fine manager of the new species. The night that Alianne and Chereth had
died had been the only time Sean had revealed any of the burden of
responsibility he had undertaken. In one sense, Sean's emotion had been a sign
of real maturity in Red's eyes. A man had the right to tears of grief, no blame
attached. Red genuinely admired Sean for that. But then, he had always admired
Sean, even when he'd been an unknown quantity as the wild and young proud
possessor of two brown fire-lizards.
Tantalizing odors of the beef and sheep
roasting over the glowing coals in the barbecue pits wafted across the rough
road that led past the fields to the front of the Hold. Red could hear the fuss
from the open kitchen doors and windows as Mairi, Maureen, and most of the
fosterlings were pressed into service to prepare the feast for those who would
gather here to set the door in the portal.
The mechanicals to perform that setting
were already in place, awaiting the arrival of the guests; the hoist, securely
supported, jutted from the window directly above, and the chains were already
attached to the door to lift it out of the sled-wagon. The durasteel had been
well rubbed with fine steel wool, removing the minor scrapes acquired during
its first occupation. Red wondered briefly which shuttle it had been taken
from. He hadn't asked Joel Lilienkamp, too relieved to get the door released to
him to irritate the old man with a minor detail. He'd say it was from the
Eusijan, the shuttle in which Sallah Telgar and Barr Hamil had piloted the
Hanrahans down to the surface of their new home. Who could argue with him? The
shuttles had all been the same in design.
Suddenly a bronze fire-lizard came
streaking in through the opening, chittering wildly at him. Snapper appeared
and the two conferred. The bronze then approached Red, who held out his arm for
the creature to land. Snapper popped to his shoulder, overseeing any attentions
from a stranger. Chittering again, the bronze held up one foot, and Red could
see that a message capsule was tied to it.
He carefully untied it, thanking the
fire-lizard. Where the hell's this ford
you told us to take? PB
Red laughed, sensing the frustration in
the bold writing of the terse note. He poked his head out the window.
"Someone saddle King for me. Paul can't find my ford."
By the time he got downstairs, King was
saddled and waiting, along with ten other mounts and their riders.
"Should we bring a boat to make him
feel at home?" Brian asked, grinning as he swayed easily with Cloudy's
excited cavortings.
"No, let's just make tracks and get
him here, or the day'll be done with no door in place," Red said, swinging
up into his saddle.
"And no feast tonight either, if my
front door's not in place, Peter Hanrahan," Mairi yelled from the kitchen
door.
"Let's go then, lads, or we go
hungry!" The moment Red eased the reins, King took off, and the others
were showered by the pebbles the eager stallion kicked up behind him. The ford was an hour's distance on a fast
horse, four hours' travel by wagon or cart. As he rode, Red hoped that his
guests' horses were still fresh enough to make the return journey at a decent
speed. Maybe Paul had been practicing riding. Gorghe Logorides had bred a beast
similar to a walking horse, but though the animals were easy to sit, they were
plainsbred. Red's Paso Fino types would be more useful here in the hilly North.
They paused only once to give the horses a
breather, and surprised the party on the other side of the ford by their sudden
appearance.
"Ahoy, there, Admiral Benden, be ye
bogged down by a mere river?" Red shouted through cupped hands. Beneath
him, King blew vigorously through his nostrils, but he was in such good
condition that he was only slightly sweaty from the run and his breath rate
quickly returned to normal.
"Ahoy yourself," Paul bellowed
back, getting to his feet. "How're we expected to get across that?"
He pointed disgustedly at the swirling current of muddy water that separated them.
"I told you to look for the cairn and
line up the poles," Red shouted back, pointing to the right and then
indicating the plainly visible, to him, steel pole on his side of the bank.
"Spare me from spacemen who need a bloody computer to navigate and a
blinking beacon to guide them. Hi, there, Ju, Zi!" he added, noticing
Paul's wife and the big dark man among the nine or ten others who now joined
the admiral where he stood just short of swirling water.
Speaking loudly enough for his voice to carry
across the ford, Paul directed some of his party to find the alleged cairn and
pole of Hanrahan's. The river was high from the rains the previous week, but
not quite as high as it had been the night Red had gotten his party across.
"River's a bit high, isn't it,
Dad?" Brian said, a little anxiously. "Could the cairn have come
down?"
"I hope not. You did cement it,
didn't you, when you returned the sleds?"
"Sure did, and put my initials on it,
but there's growth now along the bank on that side. Maybe it's hidden."
Brian started to urge Cloudy forward.
"Well, we're just wasting time,"
Red said, and kneed King forward, pressuring him just slightly to get him to
yield left to the exact center of where Red knew the ford was. "Guess
we'll just have to lead the blind into the kingdom of the sighted."
As he entered the water, he heard Brian's
chuckle, and a surreptitious glance over his shoulder showed that his escort
had fanned out in a phalanx as wide as the ford. The water was not quite to King's
knees as the big horse pranced across, all too eager to make a show of his
stallion self.
"I found it!" one of Paul's
party cried, planting his foot on the top of the cairn.
"Hiding your precious landmarks, are
you?" Paul roared. "The arrogance of you, walking on the water like
that!" He stood hands on his hips, grinning with sardonic good humor as
the welcoming party splashed up to him.
Leaning down, Red reached for Paul's hand
and gripped it firmly. "Well, the river's running muddier'n usual, or
you'd have seen the shale that makes fording possible right here," he
said. He motioned for Brian to go check the cairn and the pole.
"You could at least have painted
it," Paul suggested as his mount, one of Caesar Galliani's lean-legged,
ribby walking horses, was led forward by one of Caesar's girls. She was giving
King the once-over, too, and grinned up at Red.
"I'll add it to my list of
chores," Red said, grinning, "and maybe build the cairn higher so no
one can miss it."
The Galliani girl, whose name escaped Red,
gave Paul a leg up, checking the girth and deftly slipping the stirrup on the
admiral's foot when she was finished.
"You got here so fast, you can't be
far away?" Paul's remark had a tinge of hope in it.
"Not at the rate I usually
ride," Red said with a slightly malicious grin. "But even at a steady
pace, we're not more than an hour and a bit away. Had a comfortable ride?"
It was clear to Red that Paul was not
really riding into his saddle as one accustomed to the exercise. As the bay
gelding stepped out into the very smooth flowing pace that was his natural
stride, the admiral winced slightly and eased his butt. Riding would never be
more than a necessary evil for Benden. Still, he had come, so Red made no disparaging
remarks. Zi Ongola looked more comfortable on horseback, and so did Ju Adjai
Benden. In fact, she looked downright pleased, glancing about her, taking in
the lay of the land.
Cecilia Rado had come along to see how Red
had translated her architectural drawings. Balding and slightly tubby Arkady
Sturt and the lean and grizzled Francesco Vasseloe were also in the party, and
Red decided he knew who was joining Zi Ongola in settling the western
peninsula. Three of the numerous Duff offspring and two more young Schultzes
made up the rest of the expedition.
Even at a gentler return pace, the
imposing facade of the Hold was soon in sight, its stone blending from an
orange to an orangy red. Indeed, Red had planned the sweep of the road with
just that view in mind and listened with real pride to the complimentary
remarks from all sides about the distinctive orangy red of the cliff face.
Then the Galliani girl drew up beside him,
sitting on a rather fractious little chestnut mare
"Dad sent me along as a spy,"
she said. "I'm Terry, case you need to know."
"You're welcome, Terry, and spy all
you like, " Red said, grinning amiably down at her.
"That stallion's one of Sean's
Cricket's produce, isn't he?" she asked, her eyes feasting on the superb
conformation and easy forward movement that came effortlessly from King's
shoulder.
"He is."
"This weed is all Dad would let me
have," she said with disgust. "He's such a pain sometimes."
"He's your father," Red said a
little severely, though he sympathized with the girl, noting the mare's jarring
trot.
"That is all too true," she
said, unrebuked, "but, if a person's got a few ideas of her own to try,
isn't this planet big enough for differences?" Her tone was plaintive.
"Going with Zi Ongola?"
She nodded. "I'd like to. He'll need
a tougher horse than we breed." Once again she admired King and the others
that had been ridden out from the Hold. "You may well have a customer in
Zi." She gave him another grin and circled around to fall back beside
Cecilia. Baths can wait, Mairi,"
Paul Benden repeated firmly when Mairi again tried to insist that he ease his
sore muscles immediately. "I'd rather do the lot after we've seen that
damned door in place. The klah'll do me till then." So he sipped from his
mug and was even persuaded to eat some of the freshly baked sweets that the
fosterlings were passing around.
Tables had already been set up outside
with klah and a variety of snack and finger foods, chilled and hot. The
roasting meats were a good advertisement for the feasting to come.
"Mairi, now we've all got travel dust
out of our mouths," Cecilia said, "why don't you give me and Ju the
five-credit tour while the muscles do their mite?"
"We'll give a shout before we shut
you in," Red said jovially as he was showing Paul, Zi, and Fran Vasseloe
the preparations that had been made, and how cleverly Peter Chernoff had set
the lock frame into the stone of the portal. Once he glanced toward the
position of the sun and Paul sent him a querying look.
"Sorka and Sean said they'd be here
to watch the Dooring and join us in the feast. And ..." Red paused,
looking from Ongola to Benden. "Once we get producing, I plan to send the
Weyr a tithe of all we grow and make. They've enough to do without having to
forage for food, as well.
"Ah, yes." Paul rubbed the back
of his neck, not meeting anyone's glance. "As it is now, they often bring
us fresh meat and fruit when they've had to go south to feed the dragons. I
don't know how much longer the Ierne Islanders can hold out, but", Paul
grinned wryly, "as you all know, it's meant the difference."
"Tell me, Paul," Red said,
leaning over conspiratorially, his eyes twinkling, "is it Ierne Island
produce they get, or some of the stock the Logorides and Gallianis had to let
loose?"
"Well, now, you know, I've never
asked," Paul replied, regarding Red with a very bland expression.
"Still and all, they shouldn't have
to scrounge for provisions," Red said. "The Hold should supply the
Weyr that protects it."
"I shall tithe from my holding, as
well," Ongola said, his deep voice making his words a solemn vow.
"Alianne's death has certainly made
all in Fort aware that we're asking a great deal from these young men and
women," Paul went on, "and they've met the challenge magnificently. I
had a chance to discuss support personnel with Sean, and he's suggested that we
send him some of the older fosterlings to take over maintenance and domestic
chores. They'd be available, too, as candidates for the new eggs. I got Joel to
spring loose enough supplies so additional personnel won't be a burden on the
Weyr's resources. They've got space, we've got too many warm bodies ..."
He gave a wry smile. "Alianne's mother is staying on, to help rear the
grandchildren. She's widowed and says the place needs a firm hand in its
domestic management. The queen riders really don't have enough time, especially
if they've a broody queen."
"Seems to me one queen or another's
broody all the time," Red said with a chuckle.
"Which also means the dragon
population is growing large enough to protect four Holds," Paul said, with
justifiable pride. "Maybe more, if the 'premises' are feasible. Telgar
says he'd like to be closer to the ore lodes in the eastern mountain range.
He's done as much as he can to improve the warrens of the Fort." He kept
his voice level and added a smile at his use of the word 'warrens'.
Red wondered if his leaving, and Ongola's
projected Hold, was causing more, or less, dissension in Fort.
"I think you and Ongola have given
hope and inspiration. Despite Joel's concern over dwindling supplies, a lot of
his inventory are items that will not be in demand again," Paul said with
a wry grin. "We're stepping down to a lower level of technology, based on
what is available to us here, not what we once had. That was, after all, the
purpose of this colony. You've made it, so did Pierre, on a minimum of basics,
and look what you've achieved." Paul gestured to the imposing facade
behind him. "No, it's definitely time to stop huddling in Fort and move
out. I'd like to see more evidence of courage in our people after the trauma of
Threadfall and the dreadful loss of lives in the Fever Year."
"I think there're more than just Sean
and Sorka coming," Ongola said, shielding his eyes with one big hand as he
looked upward.
Everyone had to crane their necks to see
dragons, gold, bronze, brown, blue, and green, settling themselves on the top
of the Hold cliff, careful, Red hoped, to avoid the solar-panel installation.
"The more the merrier," Red
said, laughing. "They make a brave sight there, don't they?"
"But they've no riders," Zi
remarked.
"Didn't want to scare your beasts
again, Red, " said Sean, emerging from the Hold, Sorka beside him, one arm
crooked about her latest son. Behind them sauntered more riders. "We
wanted to do you honor, and half a Wing seemed an appropriate escort."
Mairi and those she had taken inside the
Hold were the last to emerge.
"They took the stairs down," she
said in a distracted fashion, determined to wrest her grandson from his
mother's arm, "so now I know why you insisted on carving steps all the way
up, Red. It wasn't just to service the solar panels." She turned to
Cecilia. "But we'd just got the stories cleaned up when he cut those steps
and dust sifted all over again. Oh, isn't he a love, Sorka? What have you named
him?"
"Ezremil," Sean said, slightly
accenting the first vowel. It took a moment for people to register the fact
that he had joined the names of two of the colony's heroes.
Tears came to Mairi's eyes. "Oh, what
a splendid notion!"
"Oh, yes, indeed!" Ju Benden
choked on a sob before she managed a laugh. "Much better than encumbering
the poor lad with Ezra or Keroon or even Emile. We ought to use more such truly
Pernese-style names."
Paul put an arm about his wife's
shoulders, smiling fondly down at her. "We could really dispense with
Surnames altogether. Ezremil of Fort Weyr! Ryan of, " Paul turned on Red.
"What are you naming this place?"
Red shrugged. "It'll come to us. The
right name will come to us. Now, can we get this door into position?"
With the dragons safely out of the sight
of any animals, Red sent Brian to get the bullocks whose mighty thews would
haul the airlock door up to the opening. That was the signal for everyone to
gather in front of the Hold Red could see Mairi keeping an eye on the young
toddlers, one of Brian's being the sort that got into everything first and,
when scolded, would reply that no one had said he couldn't.
Authoritative cracks of the bullwhips
started four yokes of oxen moving forward, with men at each wide head, to
steady them up. Slowly, the heavy metal door rose from the sled. When it hung
free, the men whom Peter Chernoff had chosen to help, turned it sideways so
that the hinges could be aligned. A very audible clunk indicated contact
"Hold!" Peter Chernoff said,
raising both hands, and the oxen were halted in their tracks. The open clamps
of the hinges were then shut, each with its own separate metallic clink.
"Ease up!"
The oxen were backed, first one step, then
another, taking the weight slowly off the hoist chains.
A loud hurray burst from the breathless
onlookers.
"Hold that, too," Peter shouted.
"We gotta be sure it", and as he spoke, he leaned against the great
door, "closes." Obediently the former airlock swung in with such ease
that one man had to jump out of its way. Simultaneously Peter grabbed the
beveled edge with a restraining hand and was dragged forward one step. Bracing
himself he stopped the door from closing completely.
A second cheer went up. Peter, wiping
sweat from his forehead, turned with an engaging grin and a sweeping bow to
Red.
"My lord of the Hold, will you
complete the ceremonial closing?"
Grabbing Mairi by the hand, and waiting
only until she had time to pass Ezremil back to his mother, Red strode up the
ramp to the imposing metal door. Then they both inspected Peter's handiwork. He
had done well, adapting the thick airlock door to domestic purposes. Keeping
Thread out was now as important a function as keeping atmosphere in had once
been. Red nodded to Mairi, who put her hand over his on the interior wheel, and
they both pulled the door to. With a powerful spin, Red turned the wheel and
heard the bars thud home in their floor and ceiling sockets. The Hold was now
closed!
"Wouldn't they be surprised if we
didn't open it?" Red asked, embracing Mairi's still slender form against
him.
"Yes, and I'd be furious, because I
wouldn't get any of that succulent meat we've been roasting since
midnight!" Mairi stood on tiptoe and kissed her husband.
"A very good point ..." He gave
an equally powerful reverse swing on the locking wheel and the bars slid free.
Red gave the door a push. "Well, at least that devil of a grandson won't
be able to open this door." He gave a heftier shove, and the door swung
silently open.
He and Mairi strode forward to applause.
He was briefly startled when the dragons on the heights added their deep voices
to human cheers.
"Admiral, Commander, Weyrleaders, one
and all, be welcome to, " He stopped short, a grin suddenly broadening
across his face as inspiration seized him. "Be welcome to the Hold of
Red's Ford. In the old language, Rua Atha."
"Ruatha!" Mairi called out in
her clear voice, her eyes looking up to his for his approval of that elision.
"Oh, that's a splendid name, Rua Hanrahan!"
"To Ruatha Hold!" he shouted.
"To Ruatha Hold!" was the roar
of acceptance. And, for the first time on the heights of Ruatha Hold, the
dragons of Pern lifted their heads and bugled in rejoicing!
THE
SECOND WEYR
"You were over there again, weren't
you?" Sorka said to Torene in an amused undertone as the young queen rider
sauntered past the Weyrwoman on her way to the day hearth. The lower cavern was
deserted at this hour, well past midday and not yet time to prepare the evening
meal.
Torene grinned over her shoulder at Sorka
as she continued to the hearth. She served herself some soup from the big pot,
broke off a wedge of bread, and came back to the table where Sorka was also
having a late lunch. She swung one of her elegantly leather-clad long legs over
the low chair back and sat down, neatly putting her meal in front of her, all
in one graceful movement.
"How'd you guess?"
Sorka had to grin at the girl's
insouciance. Torene hovered on the edge of impudence but never quite offended.
Of course that would have given both Sorka and Sean reasons to reprimand her,
but she seemed instinctively to know the limits. Sorka would have been
particularly loath to bring her up sharp because she, who had been a reserved
child in the restricted society she had been born into on Earth, admired
Torene's candid charismatic manner and her irrepressible gaiety. Sean found
those traits less easy to deal with, but then, he was obsessed with the
responsibilities of the Weyr and the nurture and care of the dragons, and he
had never been very lighthearted to begin with.
Sean generally knew everything that went
on in the Weyr, sooner or later. He certainly knew that there was great
interest in the east coast crater that was touted as the next official base for
dragonriders. But Sorka didn't think he was aware of how often hopeful riders
went to survey these likely premises.
Establishing another Weyr was no longer an
idle notion but an urgent need. Fort's accommodations were terribly
overcrowded, even when they sent wings to live temporarily in the
less-than-comfortable cavern systems at Telgar; and due to the stress and the
greater risk of accidents, they had begun sending mating and clutching queens
to the nearly tropical Big Island. Sorka gave a little shudder, remembering
last year's disaster and how close they had come to losing three queens in an aerial
battle that left all three wounded. The bronzes and browns who had finally
separated them had not come away unscathed either.
The entire Weyr had learned a terrible
lesson. One queen in heat could precipitate the condition in those also near
their season. No queen would share bronze and brown followers with another.
Tarrie Chernoff still woke up with nightmares in which Porth was going between
and she couldn't follow. Evenath, the first queen that Faranth had produced,
had lost an eye as well as the use of one wing and Catherine's Siglath had so
much wing fabric destroyed that neither could fly in the queens' wing again.
There were still queens enough to do the low flying with flamethrowers, joined
as they usually were by any green rider in the first or third trimesters of
pregnancy, when constant dropping into the cold of between might cause
miscarriage. Jays, there were more than enough dragons and riders to form three
Weyrs, and give everyone decent space. They needn't all cram in like holders.
Sean delayed, Sorka felt, because he could
not yet bring himself to delegate final authority to anyone else. His was the
responsibility. His would be any blame. He was intensely proud and immensely
caring of the fighting force he commanded, the force that, indeed, he had
created.
No one denied that. Every rider knew that
dragon welfare came first with Sean, and he constantly strove to maximize their
effectiveness while reducing personal injury. Initially, when the dragons and
riders moved up to Fort Weyr, he had spent endless hours with those who had had
pilot experience during the Nathi Wars and with the admiral and both captains.
He had found what he could of military history and strategy tapes to figure out
the most successful way to combat Threadfall, a combination of cavalry and
dogfighting techniques. Then he had refined formations to apply them to the
different ways Thread would fall.
As the numbers of available fighting
dragons increased he had decided on the appropriate and handiest number for
smaller units. Wings of thirty-three dragons, each with a Wingleader and two
Wingseconds so that, even if the Wingleader and his dragon had to drop out
because of injuries, there would be a secondary rider prepared to take charge.
This was especially necessary, he felt, when the numbers of the smaller
dragons, the blues and greens, increased. The Wingleader should know each
dragon in his wing well enough to see signs of strain and send the pair back to
the Weyr to rest. Some blue and green riders, determined to prove that their
partners were every bit as good as the larger dragons, took risks and rode
their lighter, less sturdy beasts beyond their endurance.
"Even a dragon has limits," Sean
repeated and repeated during weyrling training. "Respect them! And yours!
We don't need heroes in every Fall. We need dragonriders every Fall."
The fortunately rare deaths, either rider
or dragon, or both, had a sobering effect on even the most audacious. Injuries,
so often due to carelessness, always dropped off after a death or a bad
accident. Those that happened during weyrling training were the ones that Sorka
hated the most, because they would haunt Sean through his dreams and turn him
into an implacable martinet during his waking hours. Sorka would, however, take
him to task when he became too autocratic. She made herself always approachable
by any rider and never assumed a judgmental attitude.
"You upset morale throughout the
Weyr," she'd tell him firmly.
"I'm trying to improve discipline
throughout the Weyr," he'd shout back at her. "So we won't have more
deaths. I can't stand the deaths! Especially the dragons! They are so special,
and we need every one of them."
That was true enough, especially now that
more people were moving out of Fort Hold and setting up on their own wherever
they could find appropriate cave systems. Boll and Ruatha Holds were thriving.
Tarvi Telgar had moved his mining and engineering group into an immense system
in the mountains above lodes he was currently working. Naturally he called his
hold Telgar. After five years of searching for the 'right' name, Zi Ongola had
finally called his 'Tillek', in memory of the man who had brought a gaggle of
pleasure yachts along the entire coastline of the southern continent and, despite
storm and other difficulties, led them north to Fort's docks. As the newly
dubbed Tillek was on shores full of fine fishing, the name was all the more
appropriate.
"How'd I guess?" Sorka now
repeated to Torene. "Not a guess. You have that indefinable look of
someone very pleased with herself. And, if you listen a moment, you'll probably
hear all the dragons talking about it. I know Faranth is asking
questions."
Torene did listen a moment, her eyes going
briefly out of focus before she made a grimace of resignation. "There's a
distinct disadvantage about being able to hear all the dragons, especially if
you want to be discreet." Then, eyes widening in concern, she glanced
anxiously about the low-ceilinged rooms.
"Sean's not here," Sorka said with
a chuckle. "He and two wings went south to hunt early this morning."
She sighed. "I really look forward to having that tithe system they keep
talking about in full operation." She went on more briskly. "By the
time they're due back, there will be other things for dragons to talk about. Or
the ones here'll all be asleep. It's a nice sunny day."
"Sorka ..." Torene cocked her
head as she leaned toward Sorka, the expression in her large dark eyes
anxiously earnest. "Can't you persuade Sean that we desperately need a
second permanent Weyr? It's not just for the space it'll give us to spread out.
It's needed to, " And Torene closed her lips on whatever point she'd been
about to make.
Sorka gave a little laugh and finished for
her. "It's needed to give someone else a chance to run a full Weyr."
Seeing Torene's stricken face, she patted her arm. "I know my weyrmate,
dear. His faults, "
"But that's it, Sorka, he doesn't
have any. He's always right." Torene said that without any malice but with
some despair. "He is the best possible Weyrleader we could ever have, but
..."
"There are other very capable riders
who would also make good Weyrleaders."
"Yes, and that isn't all."
Torene leaned ever closer. "I heard that the Ierne Island bunch are going to
come north, too. They want to settle on the east coast. I mean, we've boasted
so often that distance is nothing to a dragon", Torene's grin was pure
amusement, "that they say we can protect them on the east coast just as
easily as here in the west."
Sorka gave a genuine burst of laughter.
"Hoist on our own petards, as my father used to say."
Torene blinked in bewilderment. "What
does that mean?"
It was slightly unfair, Sorka thought, for
a girl to have such long eyelashes as well as a beautiful face, an elegant,
Sean said "sexy", figure, and personality and brains, as well. Even
her short hair, close-cropped to be more comfortable under the skull-fitting
helmets they wore, formed exquisite curls that framed her high-cheeked and distinctive
countenance.
"It means getting caught in one's own
trap, actually, but in this case the 'trap' is the boasts we dragonriders keep
making."
"Oh!" The girl giggled.
"Well, we have, but if we don't move in right smart, those Ierne Islanders
will take the better cave system and we'll be left with second best," she
added indignantly.
"You're a true dragonrider,
girl," Sorka said. "Nothing but the best for us."
"Oh, I don't mean it that way, Sorka,
and you know it. But the old crater is perfect for a second proper Weyr,"
Torene said, leaning forward again in her enthusiasm, ignoring her cooling
soup. "Even better than this one in some ways, because it's a double
crater system, one nearly circular, the other oblong, with a deep lake, and enough
space to keep herdbeasts, instead of having to go south to catch dinner when
our provisions run short. Best of all, there's one immense vaulted cavern that
would be big enough for a half-dozen queens to clutch in ..."
"One at a time is quite enough."
The enthusiasm in Torene's eyes dimmed
slightly at the memory before she rushed on. "And we wouldn't have to do
much to it at all since it's got some sand in it, and an hypocaust system could
be installed in one of the side niches. Furthermore, my mother says that the
stonecutters have about had it. If we don't get to use them soon, we might have
to chisel out individual weyrs with our bare hands." Torene gave a sharp
nod of her head at that unwelcome option.
"Those cutters've done more than they
were designed to do," Sorka said, remembering her father saying much the
same thing when he'd used them nine years earlier at Ruatha Hold.
"Well, I want to design our Weyr with
them ..."
"Our Weyr?" Sorka raised a
quizzical eyebrow at the young rider.
Torene closed her eyes and made a rattling
sound of dismay with her tongue, covering her face with her hands. Then she
uncovered her face and grinned impishly at Sorka. "You can't blame me for
dreaming. Someone's going to be Weyrwoman, and you told me yourself that
Alaranth's the biggest gold yet."
"And have you planned who's to be
Weyrleader?" Sorka asked gently.
Torene blushed furiously. She had the
uncomfortable feeling sometimes that it was wrong of Alaranth to be a full hand
taller in the shoulder than her dam, Faranth, although Sorka had always
appeared delighted by the improvement. The young queen was nearly mature enough
to make her first mating flight. But Torene discounted her own physical
attractiveness whenever someone complimented her, and she played no favorites
among the male riders who were constantly in her company. The only exception
was Michael, the bronze-rider son of Sorka and Sean. He never seemed interested
in her at all, though he seemed interested in every other attractive woman.
Well, maybe she just wasn't attractive to him. She certainly wouldn't have
objected to his company, might even have welcomed it, but she was too
level-headed to feel more than surprise and, perhaps, a little chagrin at his
disinterest.
Mihall, as he was generally called, was as
dedicated a dragonrider as his father. Sometimes more so. Since coming to
maturity three years ago, Mihall's bronze Brianth had sired sufficient clutches
that Sean had grounded the randy bronze during queen mating flights. One of
Sorka's duties was to keep very precise records of which clutch was sired by
which bronze or brown, so that any queens resulting from that pairing would not
be rematched with their own sires. Mihall had shrugged and remarked that that
was fine by him; there were plenty of greens who liked Brianth enough to twine
necks with him anytime.
"Who's to be Weyrleader?" Torene
repeated, dragging her thoughts back to the conversation. "No, I wouldn't
plan that far, Sorka, because Sean would make such an important appointment,
wouldn't he?"
"Probably," Sorka replied
discreetly. Sean, she knew, had a notion on the best way to decide that.
"Surely you've some preference as to which dragon mates with
Alaranth?" she asked gently.
Torene flushed but answered quickly
enough. "That depends on who's fast enough to catch Alaranth, doesn't it?
She grinned, avoiding Sorka's subtle probing. Torene wasn't being arrogant in
suggesting that the bigger males were going to have to fly very well indeed to
mate with her Alaranth. That young queen would lead them a long and very dizzy
chase. Torene added a giggle to her grin. "I only hope I'm strong enough
to last. Don't try to figure out who I really fancy. You might be
surprised." Her mobile face turned solemn. "Seriously, though, Sorka,
dragonriders have got to move quickly to secure that twin-cratered place as our
own."
"I agree with you, Torene, except
that there's no way in except to fly, and that could prove awkward for a number
of reasons."
"Ah ..." Torene held up one
finger in triumph. "I know where to put an access tunnel." From a
thigh pocket, she extracted a limp, well-used plasfilm, an echo survey of the
double crater, with top, side, and ground-level elevations: probably from one
of the original probes. It hadn't occurred to Sorka that there might be other
copies of those survey reports. Now she realized that as mining engineers,
Torene's parents, the Ostrovskys, would likely have had personal copies of all
the preliminary surveys.
Torene spread the sheet out carefully, her
touch almost caressing as she smoothed it down on the table and put salt and
pepper mills to hold down the curling edges. "Now, there's a natural
opening quite far in. See the shadow here? Two-thirds of the way to the lake.
Okay, the ceiling in the central cavity is only about two or three meters high,
but you wouldn't have to dig a very long tunnel to hook to it from either
direction. There's your ground access."
"You do seem to have studied the
entire site well," Sorka admitted.
"Not just me," Torene replied
quickly. "A bunch of us go." She hitched her chair closer and
whispered across the space to Sorka. "Couldn't you act as mediator for
us?"
"Which bunch of you?"
Torene's dark eyes sparkled. "Nyassa
..."
"Really?"
"Well, Milath's due to clutch soon,
and Nya doesn't like the Big Island ground, hates the cold at that place above
Telgar, and doesn't want to clutch here when she has to share the sands again
with Tenneth, Amalath, and Chamuth."
"I take her point."
"D'vid and Wieth, N'klas and Petrath,
"
"Hold it, Torene. D'vid and
N'klas?" Sorka didn't believe her ears.
"Oh, hadn't you heard them?"
Torene seemed surprised, then added quite casually, "No, I guess you
wouldn't have. I hear them all the time during Fall, because it's what the
dragons call other riders when they're warning their dragons to be careful.
They're speaking so fast they sort of, well, compress names. So Day-vid has
become D'vid, Nicholas Gomez is N'klas, and Fulmar is F'mar.
"Are you T'rene?" Sorka asked,
diverted.
The girl thought a moment. "No, but
Sevya'll be Sev and Jenette, Jen. They're sort of fast names anyway. I
mentioned it one day after Fall and, " She gave a helpless shrug. ",
everyone wanted to know their dragonish name."
"Do they shorten their own, or
others?"
"No." Torene shook her head
vigorously and flashed Sorka a dazzling smile. "Dragons always know who's
being spoken to."
"I see." Sorka tried to appear
that she comprehended the distinction.
"We think it's kind of nice to have a
dragon nickname. It means they care about each other's riders, too."
"I guess it would. Tell me, how do
they shorten Sean?"
Torene shook her head, bouncing her curls.
"They don't. He's always 'Leader,' and I'd say they capitalize the L,
too." She shot Sorka a sly grin.
"Oh, g'wan with you, now."
"No, honest, Sorka, they're always
respectful of Sean. And you're always a full 'Sorka'."
"Are you buttering me up, young
woman?"
"Now, why would I do a thing like
that?" Torene made her eyes rounder. "Just because I've asked you to
be softly persuasive. ..."
Sorka laughed again. There was no other
young woman in the Weyr quite like Torene, so refreshingly herself, without
guile and yet exceedingly clever in her directness. "Now, who else is in
your select bunch that's dropping over to the site all the time?"
"Sevya and Butoth, R'bert and Jenoth,
P'ter and Siwith, Uloa and Elliath ..."
"That makes three queens ..."
"The new Weyr could accommodate four
at least," Torene said, "and we've got interest from six more bronze
riders, one a Wingleader and two Wingseconds; fifteen brown riders, three
Wingseconds among them; and ten blue and eight more green riders."
"How long has this been going
on?" A faint unease about the activities of the younger riders replaced
amusement. Torene was far too candid in her dealings to be plotting a subtle
mutiny of sorts. Sorka did a quick figuring, but forty-seven riders? Who were
all eager to start fresh in a new location? That was unsettling. She was
certainly going to speak to Sean if this was the scale.
"Oh, nothing's been going on,
Sorka," Torene said, genuinely alarmed. Making immediate eye contact, she
laid a reassuring hand on Sorka's arm. "We'd just, basically, like to have
more space. Except for Nyassa and Uloa, we're all younger riders, stuck
upstairs or downstairs or wherever we can be fitted in. Sevya says her mother
has a bigger cupboard in Tillek than she and her dragon have here." A
tinge of dissatisfaction did color the girl's voice, and she bit down on her
lip, flushing at having spoken criticizingly.
What she said was fair enough, Sorka knew.
Sevya and Butoth, just graduated from the weyrling barracks, were in
embarrassingly tight quarters. Though Torene had not mentioned herself,
Alaranth did not even have proper head room in the weyr she and her rider
shared. In fact, they did not have two parts to their quarters as most
partnerships did, and unlike most of the dragons, Alaranth had to go to the Rim
to do her daily sunbathing. Soon enough the young queen would be fully mature,
and there was no question that by then she could not continue in such a cramped
accommodation.
"We haven't wanted to rock the boat,
Sorka, but really, we can't afford to lose the chance at this place."
Torene tapped the diagram. "See here? Just above ground level where there
are three natural caverns, one after the other? Made-to-order Weyrwoman's
quarters ... and with a little bit of alteration, these, here, here, and here,
would be spacious enough for the other queens. And over here, opposite what
would be great domestic areas, is a series, of caves just right for weyrlings,
instead of having to cram them side by each. Why, the place would be wasted on
holders." She laid a slightly disparaging stress on that noun.
"It would and it won't be," a
voice said, startling both women.
Torene turned a dull red under her tan as
Sean appeared from behind them and sat down at their table, a cup of klah in
his hand. He had obviously just returned, for only the top of his flight jacket
was undone, and hat and gauntlets were still clutched in his free hand. A quick
glance at the Weyrwoman assured Torene that Sorka was just as surprised to see
him.
Sean placed riding gear on the table
beside his cup as he shrugged out of his heavy fleece-lined jacket. He
finger-combed sweaty silvering red hair back from his forehead and craned his
neck so he could see the plasfilm. At Torene's anxious look, he smiled
slightly.
"Glad there's more than one
copy."
"Mother, " Torene began in
explanation, and then couldn't go on.
Sean's grin broadened. "Mothers have
their uses."
Torene gulped and, seizing this amazing
opportunity, plunged right in. " 'It would and it won't be,' you said.
We'll get the place? Ierne Islanders won't grab it?"
Sean snorted. "They had notions, but
I persuaded them that the other cliff site was far more viable and only
slightly less scenic. There's a valley with good soil for cultivation, a river
for access to the coast, and south-facing slopes that are just what Rene
Mallibeau's been screaming for, complete with the shale he insists he needs.
I've been hoping to get back and go over this place", he tapped the
plasfilm with his forefinger, "with Ozzie, if Telgar could spare
him."
"Mother made me take him with us when
she gave me this," Torene said, casting a quick glance at Sorka, who was,
as usual, all eyes for her husband. Torene was scarcely the only female in the
Weyr who envied them their double bonding.
"Starting your own splinter group
with Alaranth, are you?" Sean asked, his expression carefully bland. But
his cheek muscle didn't twitch the way it usually did when he was about to chew
out an erring weyrling or rider.
Torene chose quickly between the options
that bland question gave her and smiled brightly at Sean, not over-brightly,
because that would annoy him, but brightly enough to make him believe that she
wasn't that much of a fool. Good thing the table concealed the shaking of her
knees.
"Well, you know how big Alaranth's
getting, and honest, Sean, we just don't fit where we are anymore, and it isn't
as if there's anywhere here we could switch to. I've just been daydreaming,
really." She let her voice dwindle down to an apologetic whisper.
As she spoke, Sean sipped klah, looking
neither at her nor at Sorka.
"Yes, she's telling you truly,"
Torene heard Carenath tell his rider. "She is very excited about the place
and has been over every inch several times. So Alaranth says."
Torene did not let her expression change,
but she saw Sorka peer at her with a slight frown.
"Sean, have you forgotten that I can
hear Carenath?" Torene spoke almost plaintively, as she felt she should
remind him since it amounted to inadvertent eavesdropping. "He's got a
strong thought to him, you know."
Sean gave her one of his quietly
thoughtful looks, neither accusing nor accepting. "Yes, even though it
proves to your advantage."
Torene let herself smile now with less anxiety.
"Either way I'd've heard him."
"I think that can prove to be an
asset, young Torene," he said. His words surprised her almost as much as
the total approval she heard from Carenath. Was the bronze dragon merely
echoing his rider's thoughts, or was that his sentiment, too?
"His and Sean's," Alaranth said
in her very quiet way. But he's not thinking of Carenath right now.
Sean was indeed thoughtful as he ran
fingers along the shadowed 'open' areas within the crater walls shown on the
plasfilm, finally laying his hand on the lake site. He nodded once, gulped down
the last of his klah, and rose.
"Have you finished, love?" he
asked Sorka with a brief apologetic nod to Torene.
"Yes, actually, I have."
"Keep the diagram handy, would you
please, Torene?" Sean added. Then one hand under the elbow of his
weyrmate, he walked away with Sorka.
Torene let out a whooshing breath of
relief and, dipping a piece of bread in her soup, began to eat, more out of a
release of taut nerves than from hunger. The appearance of Sean Connell had
taken away her appetite. The sop of bread was cold, but she ate it. One didn't
waste food, and even cold the soup tasted good.
"She's brought matters to a head,
Sean," Sorka said when they arrived at their apartment, a series of five
adjoining caverns that had needed only minor alteration and addition to be a
comfortable, and private, living space. "There's a group of forty-seven
young people who dream of occupying that place."
"Probably more," he said, hanging
his riding gear on the pegs near the entrance.
"You knew?"
He shrugged, once again smoothing back his
now-dry hair. "It's honest speculation, according to Dave Caterel, Paul,
and Otto. It would come sooner or later, a need to split into separate groups
to cover the ground that's going to be cultivated and keep it Thread-free. Red
had a go at me last time Thread fell on Ruatha lands." He shrugged again
and, taking a seat, held up his right leg. Sorka straddled the leg, braced
herself for his push, and hauled the boot off; automatically, she repeated the
process for the left boot while they talked. "Torene would have done
better getting your dad to intercede for them."
"Now, Sean ..." Sorka began,
ready to defend Torene.
"Don't 'now, Sean' me, woman,"
he said. She glanced quickly over her shoulder to test his mood and decided
that she could speak bluntly. "She's right, for all I think she's a tad
young to be so ... so beforehand."
"There
isn't an ounce of malice in Torene Ostrovsky," Sorka said staunchly.
"I haven't suggested there was,
lovey," he said. Scattering his boots, he pulled her by the waist onto his
lap. "But it's obvious we'll have to move quickly on this, now that the
ball's rolling."
He laid his head between her shoulder
blades as he often did, not amorously, but because he was better at using
gestures than words and had many ways of expressing his love for her.
"Have you decided who will lead the
new Weyr?" she asked, covering his hands on her waist with hers and
leaning into the close embrace.
"Weyrs," he said, giving her a
final hug before he gently put her back on her feet.
"Weyrs?"
"Yes. Plural." He rose and,
stripping off his shirt as he walked toward their bathing room, gestured with
his head for her to follow.
"We've more than enough dragons, with
three clutches hardening, to populate three, maybe four Weyrs ..."
"Torene's dream site, Big Island,
that crater in Telgar's holding, and where else?"
He paused on his way through their bedroom
long enough to step out of his pants and heavy socks, and ball them up to throw
into the laundry basket.
"We've got two other choices, one
down on that mid-eastern peninsula and another up in the High Ranges, the
crater with all those spiky peaks. But, to make the necessary improvements even
in the east coast place, we'll need to monopolize the remaining functional
stonecutters ..."
"Is there enough fuel?"
"Fulmar Stone's got all of 'em rigged
to run off generators." Sean grinned at Sorka as he stepped into the
steaming bath. Having a copious supply of thermally heated water was one of the
luxuries he enjoyed. The excess water ran off down the pipes that helped keep
the Weyr warm. Far underground the water went through a filtering system and
returned, cleansed, to the reservoirs, to be pumped up again. Other pipes
brought drinking water from the cisterns that were kept topped up by mountain
streams.
"But the actual cutting surfaces are
wearing out."
"True, but Telgar's trying to make replacement
abrasives that'll slice rock. There're enough industrial diamonds near Big
Island to give us a fair approximation of the cutting surface. 'Tany rate, I
dealt with the Ierne group. They get the second east coast cave system and give
us a workforce to make our own adaptations." He grinned both with pleasure
as he sank to his chin in the warm water and with an understandable pride in
the success of his machinations. "With them there, and in a fertile area,
they'll have enough to tithe to the new Weyr."
"You thought all this up?"
He opened his eyes and grinned at her,
suddenly boyish. "Hell no, your old man gave me the wink and the nod, and
stood by me while I fought it all out with Lilienkamp." After Paul
Benden's death the previous winter, Joel Lilienkamp had been voted into the
management of Fort Hold. He was, in some ways, much harder to listen to in the
further disbursement of people, whom he regarded as renewable resources, and of
irreplaceable material, which the colony had to conserve.
"You mean, you weren't hunting south
with the others?"
He nodded once and then shook his head and
began vigorously soaping himself. "Nope. Carenath made do nicely with an
injured bullock that had fallen into a crevasse that your father said we could
have. I didn't want any more rumors to circulate than necessary." He
grimaced. "There seem to be enough."
She had to wait until he had ducked his
head to clear the soap suds from his hair before she asked the next question.
"Who're to be Weyrleaders?"
He gave her an enigmatic smile and she
knew why he was going for three new Weyrs. That way he'd avoid any complaint of
nepotism. The young people who had been born on Pern, especially those orphaned
by the Fever eight years ago, were quick to make that charge when the children
of still living fathers and mothers were promoted more often than any from
their numbers. Mihall expected to become a Weyrleader. Sorka knew that, and she
knew that Sean was aware of those aspirations even though their eldest son
never made any allusions to his hope. Indeed, he pointedly did not,
scrupulously serving as Wingleader, helping to train weyrlings as part of the
duties of his rank, and, except when Brianth lifted in a mating flight, never
stepping out of line on any matter, despite his relationship to Sean and Sorka.
"Because of it," Sean had once said to Sorka.
So Mihall, if Brianth flew a senior queen
designate, would reach the objective he had set himself from the moment he had
stood on the Hatching Ground at twelve, the youngest ever to Impress a bronze.
There had been mutterings about that among older candidates, but Sean's answer
had been firm. "The dragon chooses. Mihall could have been left
standing."
There'd been a few private words between
the new bronze rider and his father, the Weyrleader, but Mihall had never once
taken advantage of the relationship. In his group of weyrlings, he had almost
been shunned for trying too hard, for always doing more than was necessary and
showing up the others.
If Sean had been self-contained and
private as a boy, Mihall was doubly so. Her own firstborn and she didn't really
know or understand him, Sorka thought ... and yet, she did.
The boy had been mad about dragons as soon
as he was old enough to understand what his parents did, and despite being
mainly raised by his grandparents and with his own siblings, he spent as many
waking hours as he could up at the Weyr, making the long hike by himself if
there was no one to escort him.
"We've got twenty mating queens,
discounting you, because no one flies Faranth but Carenath," He cocked a
stern finger at her, provoking her to grin smugly. "And the three injured
..."
"Porth can fly," Sorka objected
on Tarrie's behalf.
"But she doesn't fly long enough to have
a good clutch."
"Tarrie's got experience managing
Weyr problems," Sorka said staunchly, knowing how often she'd relied on
her friend during her pregnancies or when the children were too ill for her to
cope with all that went to running a Weyr.
"All perfectly true, but I mean to
start the new Weyrs with young leaders who'll see their group through the rest
of the Fall, who can pass on what we had to learn the hard way."
"So how will you determine these
young leaders?"
"Figure it out, love," he said,
and slipped once more under the surface of the hot bath water.
"You would!" she said to the
ripples that floated soap down the outtake pipe.
Three Weyrs? My word, she thought with
relief and a certain amount of awe. Jays, when Sean let go, he let to with a
vengeance. Young leaders! That made excellent sense, and there were enough. Any
one of those who were currently Wingleaders could manage a Weyr. They'd been thoroughly indoctrinated by
Sean, with emphasis on safety and tactics. Even the Wingseconds would make good
leaders. Too bad the blues simply hadn't the stamina to keep up with a queen.
At that, there were only two Wingseconds. And she didn't see either Frank
Bonneau or Ashok Kung as Weyrleaders. Nice enough young men, but better as
subordinates than leaders.
But that meant, and she found herself
clutching the bath sheet under her breasts in relief, that Mihall would most
certainly be one of the new Weyrleaders, one of three, so no one would be able
to accuse anyone of nepotism. Besides, as everybody had been told repeatedly,
the preference of the queen and her rider had to be reckoned with. Sorka
allowed herself a small smug smile. There wasn't a girl in the Weyr who
wouldn't be proud to have her queen flown by Brianth and to be able to stay in
Mihall's company as his Weyrwoman. Ah, but would her handsome red-headed son,
who had shown himself as willing to bed a holder as a rider, be willing to
settle to one? The Weyrleadership had to be stable, or the Weyr would be
disrupted. What behavior Sean would condone in his son in his current capacity
would alter once Mihall became a Weyrleader. It was time for the boy to settle
anyway, she thought firmly, and on the end of that, decided she would not
interfere with a word to the wise to him. Mihall was man enough now to
recognize a need for fidelity.
"Well, don't stand there,
woman!" Sean's voice brought her back, and with an apologetic murmur, she
handed her dripping husband his towel.
"You're also a very clever man,"
she said, then added to keep him from being too smug, "Did you know that
dragons elide riders' names?"
"Sometimes, during Fall if it's
especially heavy, I've heard Carenath slur a name or two," Sean said,
vigorously rubbing himself with the towel. "Why?"
"It seems to have caught on, at least
with some of the younger riders."
"No harm in that!"
"I do have it on very good authority
that neither your name or mine, however, are ever slurred."
"I should hope not!" By the time the southern hunting party made
it back that evening, replete dragons did not go between, Torene had had a
chance to calm down from the excitement of knowing the double-cratered place
was going to be her Weyr. She decided not to mention her conversation with the
Weyr-leaders. The other members of her group were high enough as it was from
their eastern hop. The boys planning which weyr they'd make their own; Sevya
and Nya figuring out just how much sand would be needed to give a good deep
bedding for hardening eggs. Siglath was hopeful in a wistful way, or so Nyassa
told the youngsters. Torene thought the rest of the Weyr should hear the news
from Sean, once it was official. Fortunately, her bunch tended not to mouth
their enthusiasms near the more conservative older riders, and Alaranth would
keep her counsel. Torene grinned. Her queen took her cue from her rider. And
sometimes that worked the other way round, too.
So Torene applied herself to checking her
riding gear. Sean just might call a snap inspection, they had Fall the day
after tomorrow. Out of several years' habit now, Torene rechecked the
flamethrower tanks she used, as well as the nozzles and the carrying straps.
Then she checked her safety harness and inspected the heavy plastic-coated
gloves for any sign that the fingers might have spillage of the HNO3 on them.
Eventually the plastic would wear through and have to be recoated. Her hands
tended to sweat inside the nonporous material, but that damp discomfort was
better than acid burns. She made sure her goggles were clear, too. Sometimes a
fine spray was blown back before the HNO3 ignited, and she needed clear, not
clouded, plasglas.
She was just about finished when F'mar,
Fulmar Stone Junior, bronze Tallith's rider, swung into the queen's ready room,
helmet and gloves in hand, riding jacket open.
"Hey, gal, we're back!" F'mar
was grinning from ear to ear. "And boy, did we bring home the bacon!"
"Real bacon? Is Longwood curing pig
so early?"
"You can be so literal sometimes,
Rene."
She hadn't told Sorka that was how her
name had been compressed, since it was humans and not dragons who had given her
that nickname.
Slapping his gloves on his leg with some
irritation, F'mar went on. "No, actually, we brought back steaks and a lot
of stew meat. They're culling herds for the winter down there. Or don't you
remember how seasons switch?"
"I remember that much," she
replied evenly. Eight years older than Torene, Fulmar Stone had been five when
he and his family had Landed; he had Impressed a bronze of a Weyrleaders'
clutch at nineteen. Half-trained to follow in his father's mechanical
engineering specialty, F'mar had salved Fulmar Senior's shock at the idea of
his son's pursuing an entirely different life's work by taking charge of all
the Weyr's mechanicals. These were, however, so well designed or redesigned
that they rarely needed more than a drop of oil, or so F'mar insisted.
"You should've come." Then
F'mar, as tall as she was but rangier in frame and bony shoulders, leaned
toward her with a friendly leer. "It was more fun than climbing about rock
faces and peering in holes."
Torene grinned placidly at him. "But
I like cliff climbing, and Alaranth hunted yesterday with the other queens. I'd
better go help with dinner if there're steaks."
"I have to, too," F'mar said,
grimacing. He didn't enjoy that segment of the additional duties that the
riders assumed inside the Weyr. "In fact, Tarrie sent me to find
you."
"For steak, I'm findable," she
said. "Just let me wash my hands first."
"Can I help?" he asked with a
second amicable leer.
Torene laughed at him, evading his
half-serious interference with a direct path to the sinks.
F'mar was nothing if not persistent in his
efforts to attach her. He pressed his luck whenever he had the chance, like
now, trying to persuade her that he was her best possible weyrmate, just as his
Tallith would be the perfect bronze to twine necks with her queen. F'mar was
looking for any opportunity to prove his worth, in advance. He was also a
Wingleader, which he thought gave him an advantage over others of their group.
For her part, she treated them all alike,
and no one knew if she'd any experience at all. She didn't because she was
romantic enough, though she knew that would surprise many, to want her first
time to be very special. She wanted to really like the man. She was being too
picky perhaps; then, too, she knew all the most likely men too well now to see
any of them in a sexual way. Except possibly Mihall, but only because she
didn't know him at all and knew far too much about his reputation. She'd become
skillful in evading answers and importunities. Sometimes, to tease, she'd
mention one or another of the apprentices at Telgar Hold whenever she'd been to
visit her parents and sibs.
Actually, she liked F'mar best of them
all, with his good humor and pleasant good looks, though she'd never give him
any encouragement. He might just try joining her in her tight squeeze of a
weyr. It was just as well that she was in such an uncomfortable weyr, she
reflected. Everyone knew she slept right beside her queen, warmer that way,
anyhow. Two human bodies wouldn't fit, and she wasn't about to be seen leaving
a male rider's weyr, or caught hiding if she chose to be in one.
When they reached the kitchen cavern,
Tarrie and Yashma Zulieta were supervising the carving up of the carcasses. It
was much too late in the day to have spit-roasted the whole sides, which was
the usual way of preparing meat in quantity. Torene knew they'd have several
meals from all this mess. Good big meaty animals. Well, the grass at Longwood
had produced many a fine meal for the Weyr when Fort's supplies ran short. It was indeed a fine meal. While comestibles
like flour, dried beans and legumes, and dairy produce were provided by Fort
now, the dragonriders could add to the bare necessities by going between to the
southern continent and returning with fruits, fresh vegetables, and herd
animals. Slowly but surely, the task of provisioning the Weyr was being handled
by the Holds so, one way or another, the dragonriders often ate far better than
holders. That, and the glamour of being a dragonrider, were reasons why so many
young people were ready to take their chances on the Hatching Ground even
though their parents might have had other careers in mind for their children.
In the early days, Sean and Sorka had been forced to act rather autocratically
in demanding enough boys and girls to stand on the Hatching Ground, especially
older boys, who would be mature enough to fly in Fall as soon as their dragons
were old enough. Gradually, however, to have a son or daughter become a
dragonrider became a mark of prestige for a family. Although birthrates had
been high the first six years at Fort Hold, there were only so many available
to stand as candidates now. Lately they'd had to include preadolescents, to be
able to present enough of a choice to the hatchlings.
With eggs hardening on the Ground and
Hatching quite near, the Weyr was presently hosting candidates. They were,
Torene noted, the ones that came back for seconds and thirds of the juicy
steaks. Not that she blamed them. She remembered her stomach rumbling far too
often in the days when she had lived at home. There were not that many days
when food was scarce, for a dragonrider.
And, if one happened to find a
fire-lizard's clutch in the southern sands, a rider could barter eggs for
anything he or she desired. That was one unhappy aspect of living north. There
were fewer and fewer of the lovely creatures·looking to humans. They didn't
seem to like the colder climate. Early on, hundreds had augmented dragon fire
during Threadfall. Now that number had dwindled to a couple of pairs.
That was how Ierne Island had managed to
hold out so long against coming north. The shores of Longwood, Lockahatchee,
Uppsala, and Orkney were fire-lizard havens, and every man, woman, and child
had dozens to help protect them during Fall. At least the proposed site for
Longwood and Orkney personnel would be warmer than the double crater. They'd
keep their fire-lizard friends that much longer.
When Torene's kitchen duties finally
allowed her to rejoin her friends, they talked more about the fine eating than
about their afternoon activities. Torene didn't mention her encounter with
Sean, but she did notice the Weyrleader glancing over in her direction from
time to time. The second time she observed his casual glance, she spoke to
Alaranth; she concentrated that little bit harder, but Carenath was fast
asleep.
"He didn't ask him anything all night,"
volunteered Alaranth also sleepily.
"Probably because he remembers that I
can hear."
"No, Sean asked Carenath his opinion
of some of the candidates. It would be good for Dagmath's rider to have some of
his own persuasion."
Torene considered that. The blue rider
preferred boys to girls. And Sean would prefer to have fewer of the speedy
little green dragons out of action because their riders were taking maternity
leave.
"Are there any prospects in that
line?" Torene asked.
"Three."
Torene grinned. Now that was certain to
please the Weyrleader.
"Who's the grin for?" F'mar
asked. He was sitting beside her and now leaned heavily against her shoulder.
"For me to know and you to
guess," she replied in a singsong voice.
"You're not giving anything away, are
you?" He sounded irked. "You did go to the craters today, didn't
you?"
"Sure, but that conversation had been
gnawed to the bone by the time I got here," she replied. "It would
really make such a splendid Weyr ..." She gave a wistful sigh.
"I think," F'mar whispered in
her ear, his breath tickling, "that Sean's about to do something about
establishing a new one."
"You do?" She pulled back to
look at him with an eager surprise which was genuine enough.
F'mar bent close again. "Sean wasn't
hunting all the time he was gone."
"He wasn't?" Torene used that as
an excuse to widen the distance between them, to foil yet another of F'mar's
heavy-handed ploys.
"I think," F'mar said, putting
one hand to the side of his face and lowering his voice so that only she could
hear, "that he's busy making some deal with the Langsams and the Mercers
at Ierne."
"Oh, so they'd be happy with the
lower site and leave the higher one for us?"
He nodded.
"You could be right," she
replied, imbuing her tone with hope. "Oh, good, music! The perfect end for
such a meal!"
She used that opportunity to slip away
from F'mar completely, hauling the penny whistle from a thigh pocket as she
joined the other players. Torene always
woke early on a Fall day, even if Fall wasn't until afternoon, as it was today
over Fort and parts of Boll.
Rumors had been flying yesterday. The
dragons were as bad as the people, repeating their riders' stories, adding
supporting details based on the occasional odd statement by Sean or Sorka, or
even what one of the bronzes who had gone south had to say about suspected
meetings with the Longwood and Orkney stakeholders. Torene listened and
wondered if she ought to report some of the more implausible theories to the
Weyrleaders. Then she decided against it. There was no need to tell tales out
of turn. And the prospect of a new Weyr raised spirits often full of jitters
before any Fall, especially one over occupied lands.
As was his custom, Sean sent riders ahead
to watch for the leading Edge and check the composition of today's Fall. It
would begin halfway across Big Bay, coming in over the port area, where the
dolphins would swarm for the good eating and to provide what help they could.
Then the Fall would sweep southwesterly across Fort and Boll lands and down the
other side of the mountain range. Over the last year the Weyr had, at Pierre's
request, extended its protection to that area, too, for Boll folk were
spreading out, making small holds under the jurisdiction of the larger.
Torene always managed to eat breakfast,
but like many other riders, she skipped the noontime meal, settling instead for
a cup of klah before she changed into riding gear and asked Alaranth to come
down to be tacked up. The other queens began to assemble, joined by the seven
green riders whose pregnancy required them to fight with flame-throwers. There
were nine more green riders unavailable, either too recently delivered or
recovering from injury, so the greens would have to ride longer shifts to keep
the wings at proper strength. Sean did not like drafting in spare riders from
the wings temporarily stationed at Big Island and Telgar. Wingleaders found
that a gap in the rank was better than a diffident replacement who wasn't sure
of his wing-mates. Torene listened carefully as Sorka gave the greens their
positions in the low-flying wing of queens. Most of them were seasoned riders,
though there was one newcomer. Amy Mott, who was pregnant by Paul Logorides as
a result of her green's first mating flight.
It was almost a relief to hear Carenath's
bellow and look up to see the massed wings ranged along the Weyr Rim, awaiting
the signal to chew firestone. Torene mounted the kneeling Alaranth, then
reached down to those who were lifting the heavy tanks to their positions on
either side of the queen's withers. The tanks tethered, Torene attached the
wand to the right-hand one and gave a good turn of her wrench to be sure the
connection was firm. Thanking her helpers, she then peered up to the Rim to
wait for Sean's signal to Sorka and Faranth, the leaders of the queens' wing.
"Follow me," Carenath said to
Faranth. His voice was loud and clear in Torene's head, but she didn't make a
move. She always took extra care to wait for Sorka's signal, ever since her
first flight with the queens' wing, when she had moved off ahead of Faranth.
That was the day she had admitted, shamefacedly and feeling she was guilty of a
terrible sin against the Weyrleaders and the Weyr, that she could hear the
speech of other dragons. After she had made a stammered confession, in private,
to the Weyrleaders, she had agreed to keep her ability to herself and be
discreet at all times in exercising this unique talent.
Faranth made the all-important first leap
off the ground, springing with tremendous power from her hind legs, and Torene,
riding right point to Faranth, gave Alaranth the go-ahead.
As often as she had fought Thread, Torene
felt the excitement knot in her belly, felt the surge of adrenaline in her
blood as her queen's wings described mighty strokes. With three, they were
above the Weyr walls, gliding into their in-flight position under the massed
wings of Fort dragons.
She took their destination from both
Carenath and Faranth, felt that awful sinking into the cold blackness that was
the medium through which the dragons passed on their telekinetic way from one
place to another, and came out over the sea, just beginning to darken as Thread
slanted down across it. She was close enough at a roughly thousand-foot
altitude to notice the churning of the water where schools of every fish that
thrived in Pern's seas had gathered to feast on drowning Thread.
High above, at some eight thousand feet,
Torene estimated, the aerial defenders of Pern waited for the leading Edge to
get closer to the port facility. No sense wasting dragon flame on what would
drown.
Then the nearer wings went into action.
Flame sprouted red-orange, then caught, and Thread burned into blackness. It
was clumping today, Torene noticed, and she turned the regulator on her wand to
a wide setting.
She also turned her hearing to listen to
the dragons already engaged and wondered if Sorka was asking Faranth about the
nicknames.
"She is," Alaranth promptly
replied, as an overlay of messages from both dragons and riders briefly
confused Torene. "Watch your left, F'mar! That's coming in at two o'clock,
B'ref! Big mother clump descending right over you, D'vid. Firth, watch
right!" That last came directly from the Weyrleader dragon to Shih Lao's.
Torene giggled. There was nothing dragons
could do with that name!
"S'lao," was Alaranth's prompt
reply. "Stuff getting through. Veer right!"
Sorka and Faranth had already begun to
swing, and Torene and Alaranth followed. Habit kept Torene listening in with
half an ear, as the queens' wing began to mop up, mostly single Threads, which
the upper level of fighters ignored in order to concentrate on the clumps and
tangles. Faranth directed some of the quicker green riders to spread out to
catch the outer edges of these and then, in an aside, ordered Alaranth to
supervise.
Sometimes Torene's neck ached with craning
her head upward. Occasionally Alaranth eased her forequarters upward so that
the strain was reduced, but such an awkward maneuver was hard for the queen to
sustain
A dragon screamed, and instantly Alaranth
identified the beast, Siwith, P'ter's blue.
"Wing damage," Alaranth said.
"We go."
"We're assisting," Elliath,
Uloa's queen, said. The pair went between the brief distance to the falling
blue. Siwith's right wing had been shredded. Unable to sustain flight, he was
managing no more than a downward spiral.
Spouting flame, two greens appeared,
clearing Thread from the path of the two queens as they arrived to arrest the
blue's descent.
Alaranth and Elliath had done this
maneuver so often in the past two years that it was nearly routine now. As
Torene laid herself flat against her queen's neck, Alaranth being the larger
beast, slipped up under the falling blue matching his downward speed and then
coming up under his smaller body, holding it along her spine. Torene could feel
Siwith's hot and pungent breath on her back and hoped she wasn't going to lose
another suit of riding gear from scorching. Elliath hovered above them both,
her forelegs poised to grab Siwith by the wing shoulders if he slipped.
"Nice catch," Carenath told
Alaranth.
Siwith's whistles of pain were muted as
the little fellow valiantly tried to stifle the agony of a wing injury.
"We have him," Alaranth told her
rider, who could feel the strain through her queen's body.
"Siwith," Torene said,
"relax now while we take you between. We've got you safe. Elliath, we go
... now!"
The transfer to Fort Weyr was accomplished.
Sometimes the wounded panicked when they weren't in control of a movement
between, another reason for the second queen ready to grab wing-shoulder
joints. But Siwith managed to stay calm, and Alaranth arrived at the Weyr with
her casualty still in place. The extra weight had her skimming the surface,
though she landed smoothly just where medics waited.
"Are you okay, P'ter?" Torene
shouted over her shoulder. A whiff of scorched leather reached her nose.
"Yeah. Thanks, Rene! Just missed me. Ah,
Siwith, you'll be all right. You'll be all right!" P'ter's voice was
ragged with concern and shared pain.
"Hang on while we transfer you."
Alaranth tucked her left wing as well as
she could under the wounded blue's limp pinion, Elliath caught Siwith by his
uninjured joints, and as Alaranth eased out from under Siwith, the other queen
gently eased his body to the ground. Hoses had already sprayed numbweed on the
underside of the mangled wing membrane; now the medics could reach the upper
surface. The blue's rider unbuckled his fighting straps and started slathering
his dragon's upper back. Siwith's whistles of pain were reduced to murmurs of
relief.
"D'you need new tanks, Uloa?"
Torene asked.
"No, I'm fine for another hour."
"Me, too."
Torene looked skyward, giving Alaranth the
signal to be ready. Both queens sprang from the ground at the same instant and,
sufficient altitude gained, winked between and back to the Fall. The evening meal was served at a late hour.
While ground crews said that little had gotten through the wings, there had
been sufficient injuries that all the riders knew Sean would have words with
the Weyr in general before they were dismissed.
"He's sure to claim today's flying
injuries are due to careless riding, bad concentration, and stupidity,"
N'klas muttered as he followed Torene into the lower cavern.
"And he'd be right," Torene
said, grinning back over her shoulder at the morose N'klas. "But clumps
are the hardest to fly, and he's sure to admit that before he starts lambasting
us."
"Nice catch on Siwith, by the way.
P'ter says he'll be out months growing back wing membrane."
"Thought so, from what I could see
when we brought him in."
"At least he got the best ambulance
team."
When she and Uloa had returned to the
queens' wing, Faranth and Greteth had been in the process of catching another
wing injury.
"Sorka says your timing is excellent.
You have command of the wing," Faranth had said directly to Torene.
"We have him, Greteth. Easy now, Shelmith. We have you. Relax, will
you?"
"I still fall," Torene heard
Shelmith say, frightened.
"Of course you do, but I fall right
under you. You are caught. Feel my back under your belly."
"I do! I do!"
"What about Shelmith?" she asked
N'klas now. She hadn't had time to check on the injured yet. The queens' wing
always made contact with ground-crew leaders before returning to the Weyr.
"He's only got holes in one wing, but
body scores and some bad tracks down the right hindquarter," N'klas said,
wrinkling his nose at the extent of the injuries. "We need rearview
mirrors."
Torene laughed. "Where on earth would
we attach them?"
"Oh, shoulder, peripheral vision
reflex mirror, maybe."
Torene stopped at the sight of the crowded
dining tables. "Lord, we'll have to take front seats tonight," she
said, noting the only vacant spots at the tables perpendicular to the slightly
raised Weyrleader and Wingleaders' table.
"You did great," N'klas said.
"You've got no cause to feel guilty. Too bad you aren't bigger," he
added with a grin, for he was heavy through the shoulders and chest. "I
could hide behind you."
"You've nothing to worry about. You
brought Petrath in with no scores, didn't you?"
N'klas paused before he answered, his
remorseful expression verging on the comical. "Not exactly. Though,"
he hastened to add, "he won't be out of action more than a week, I'd
say."
"I'm sorry, I didn't know." She
glanced up at him with a rueful smile.
N'klas shrugged his wide shoulders.
"Nothing a bucket of numbweed didn't soothe. Dragon hide grows back
quickly, thanks be!"
The kitchen crew were quick to serve the
riders as soon as they seated themselves. The top table was not occupied as
yet. Torene knew that Sean would be having a few words with Wingleaders over
poor performance. But Sean knew that clump Falls were always the trickiest, and
while a lot of dragons had not finished this Fall due to minor wounds, there
had been very few put out of commission by major ones. Every wing had missing
members, and some wings were off on R & R, so the Weyr was flying a bit
short. Only queens never got official vacation. Queens got time off only for
clutching. As Alaranth had yet to experience her first mating flight, Torene had
been on duty for over two years without a break.
"We fly well as a team. We do
excellent rescues," Alaranth said.
"Oh, beloved heart," Torene
said, immediately chagrined that she'd been thinking so negatively, "we
do, we do. But I am tired. Like most of the riders. Everyone needs some time
off, not just a visit home or to the east coast." Well, she added to
herself, maybe Sean would announce that some of those recuperating at Big
Island would be reporting back for duty, and that would take the burden off the
short-manned wings.
The meal was good. One of Yashma's special
casseroles, more of the beef, plus legumes and tubers, served with fresh hot
bread and slabs of butter. Torene grinned as she slathered her bread with it
before passing it on to the impatient rider next to her. Butter in this
quantity obviously had come in from Ierne Island. Would they be able to have
dairy products when Longwood settled on the east coast? She'd miss them. In the
Hold, milk products had been reserved for babies and growing kids. What was
being tithed to the many advantages of being a rider ... not the least of which
was having Alaranth?
"You like me better than
butter?"
"Of course I do, but there's
absolutely no doubt that you couldn't be spread on hot bread!"
"Bread is all right." Alaranth
was unenthusiastic. From time to time, because Alaranth was curious, Torene had
given her queen samples of what she ate.
"But not for a carnivore like you,
darling. You aren't hungry again, are you?"
"No, but you were!"
Alaranth also found it hard to understand
why her rider had to eat several times a day, when once or twice a week
sufficed the much bigger dragon.
Before the casseroles were passed around
the tables for the second time, the Weyrleaders and Wingleaders took their
places. Torene thought they all looked relaxed as they conversed pleasantly
with each other. That did not jibe with her notions of the Weyr getting a
lecture on recklessness and inefficiency.
A spicy nut-filled bar provided a sweet,
and then ale was served, along with refills for anyone wanting just klah.
"He must really be going to take
slices from our hides," N'klas muttered in her ear.
"Then why is F'mar grinning from ear
to ear?" Torene asked. The young Wingleader was looking excessively smug.
Of course, she realized, mentally reviewing the day's injuries, his wing had
come through unscathed, so he could afford to be at his ease. But she wondered
why F'mar kept trying to catch her eye.
Torene listened for Tallith, but the
bronze was asleep. "Alaranth, did I miss something?"
"What?"
"I don't know, and F'mar's grinning
like a fool at me."
"He does that all the time."
Torene caught an almost impatient and
irritable note to her queen's remark.
"Don't you like F'mar?" she
asked. "Or is it Tallith you don't fancy?"
Torene often asked her queen which bronze
she preferred. As she had no particular favorite among the riders, maybe her
queen had one among the bronzes. Torene did have to think in terms of her
queen's mating flight, an event that could happen soon now. Sorka had no
difficulty in telling her queen riders exactly what to expect, and Torene hoped
it would be as thrilling for her as reputed. Sorka never exaggerated.
"Bronze dragons are much the same in
a mating flight. But I will be hard to catch!"
Torene burst out laughing.
"What's so funny?" N'klas asked
her.
"Alaranth," Torene said and
shrugged, indicating a private joke.
She nodded at him to pour some ale into
her glass after he'd filled his own. She was getting to like the stuff;
certainly she preferred it to the jarring taste of quikal. And tonight, she had
the feeling that she'd need the loosening beer provided.
Suddenly noise in the dining area subsided
and Torene saw that Sean had risen.
"Uh-oh," N'klas said, scrunching
himself small beside her.
"Oh, don't be an idiot," she
said rather sharply. She was well acquainted with N'klas's tendency to
dramatize.
This time he was right. Unexpectedly, Sean
was holding his glass in one hand.
"You all know that the wings did not
perform very well today, but I take the nature of today's Fall into
consideration. We all know that clumps and tangles are the worst types to
combat, and that the very nature of such a Fall can cause injuries to even the
most alert rider and clever dragon. I don't excuse you, and I shall have words
with some of you who were caught unawares, and those of you who managed to
escape when you bloody well deserved to be scored." Sean's expression was
harsh as he looked over the crowded tables. "Injuries could have been
worse."
When he paused again and let his gaze
sweep the riders, Torene had the feeling that something momentous was going to
happen. She was positive she knew what that had to be and inhaled, sitting
straighter. She felt N'klas shift beside her as if he, too, felt impending
news.
"The holders all agree that new
Weyrs, " He stopped as dramatically as N'klas might, to let the plurality
be absorbed. "must be formed."
He would have gone on, but wild cheering
and stamping ensued and made him smile as he held up his arms for silence.
"Some of you", and Torene caught
him looking at her, "may think that the double-cratered site on the east
coast is an ideal site for one. And you'd be right." More cheering
punctuated that statement. Torene felt N'klas's elbow in her ribs, and she saw
that F'mar was also watching her, a broad, happy, and very smug grin on his
face.
Well, she thought, he had the makings of a
good Weyr-leader, and his Wingseconds swore by his competence.
"We'll start that one first,"
Sean went on, "and there will be two more adapted as soon as possible. I
project that we'll need two more at the rate our queens are laying, so we
should prepare now for our needs while holder enthusiasm for our profession
continues strong." He gave a wry smile, which brought a ripple of
appreciative laughter. "Big Island is also a firm choice, to give us a
warmer climate not only where our injured can convalesce but also where our
disabled can still be of assistance. Telgar needs one to protect the
miners." There was a ripple of mild dissent, because Telgar was
mountain-cold. "There is a crater in the sandy peninsula to the east and
another in the far north-west. But we already have contingents at Big Island
and Telgar, so those will be completed first."
He waited until the wave of whistles and
cheering died and then, with a slight grin on his face, continued. "Ierne
Islanders are coming north, and Longwood wants the secondary site on the east
coast. They will also help us prepare that Weyr in appreciation of our
willingness to protect them." Sean grinned more broadly now.
"So that's how he's done it,"
N'klas said, his eyes shining with respectful awe.
"Done what?" Torene asked in a
low voice.
"Made them think we're doing them the
favor when it's the other way round," N'klas replied. "Oh, he's
clever, is Carenath's rider."
"Lockahatchee and Uppsala fancy Big
Island, and they will help us enlarge the existing facility there," Sean
went on. "Telgar's promised as many miners as he can spare for some of the
excavation work on all sites, so I think we will be able to provide protection
in four locations even as the Weyrs are being adapted to the needs of our
dragons."
Four Weyrs, including the one she had
yearned for! Torene couldn't believe it! One would have occasioned great joy.
But four Weyrs? Well ... She did a quick count: Sean could put twenty wings in
the air for any given Fall even if all were not accommodated at Fort. Three new
weyrs also meant three new Weyrleaders and Weyrwomen. Who had Sean and Sorka
chosen to promote? Probably some of the senior riders, and she couldn't but be
happy for Uloa's and Arna's sakes, or David Caterel and Peter Semling. They were
logical choices ... but who else?
"We have twenty mature queens,"
Sean was saying, "and well over a hundred bronzes and ten or twelve browns
who would make admirable leaders. This being the case, I feel that we'll let
chance play a part in what is too difficult a choice for us," he indicated
himself and Sorka, "to make. So you're going to draw which Weyr you'll go
to. We're splitting up the queen dragons, with the exception of Faranth, who
stays here, with me." Sean scowled fiercely, waiting for the widespread
laugh that was expected at the notion of any other dragon but Carenath flying
Faranth. When the laughter died down, he went on. "Nora will pass the bag
among the gold riders. Tarrie has a bag for Wingleaders, as I think it's best
if the wings go forward as a unit to whichever Weyr the Wingleader draws. Does
that seem a fair way to distribute riders?"
Despite an almost universal surprise,
approval followed almost immediately. Looking around at the faces she could see
from her position, Torene saw many expectantly hopeful expressions; she put her
hands to her ears in an automatic but pointless attempt to shut out the
tumultuous responses of dragons to their riders' anxious reactions. She shook
her head and then felt Alaranth's mind helping her shut off the mental noise.
Usually she could filter unwanted messages, but not tonight-not that she could
blame either party.
"Of course, we've three clutches of
eggs ready for hatching, and we'd divvy them up as soon's we know what they
are," Sean added with a grin.
Torene looked around for Tarrie and Nora
and saw them rising from a table on the far end of the cavern. She'd be one of
the last to choose, sitting as she was at the front of the room, and the agony
of the wait was exquisitely painful. Dare she dream of drawing the east coast
Weyr? would she stay on here at Fort, since she was the youngest queen rider
and had so much to learn? She ought to wish she'd be stationed at Telgar for
then she'd be nearer her parents, which they'd appreciate all the more now that
her brothers and sisters were away on their apprenticeships. But she had
developed a special feeling for the double crater and had so brashly planned
how to use its many natural caverns, just as if she had the right to!
Brown and bronze riders began to shout out
their new assignments, leaping from their seats or just waving their arms about
in delight. Surprised, Torene heard as much pleasure expressed at being
assigned to Telgar as east coast or Big island. Everything was happening so
quickly on the far side that she really didn't see who had got the east coast
assignment. She was surprised when she saw Tarrie go to the head table and pass
the bag to the Wingleaders sitting there. Why had F'mar been grinning so much
then? She saw him reach his hand in and was so eager to know where he was going
that she was startled when she felt someone touch her arm and turned to see
Nora standing beside her.
"You're the last queen rider present
to pick," Nora said. "Hope it's the one you want. Then Sorka will
draw for the absentees."
Holding her breath, Torene dutifully
slipped her hand into the bag and felt several slivers. Squeezing her eyes
tight, she let her fingers close on one, drawing it out.
"Do exhale, Rene," Nora said
with amusement.
Torene let out her breath, grinning
nervously at the other queen rider before she had the nerve to look at what she
held. She read it, then read it again.
"You keep saying 'east coast',"
Alaranth remarked patiently. "Are we to go to the place we want?"
"Yes, oh, yes, yes," Torene
breathed, clutching the all-important message to her breasts.
" 'Yes, oh, yes, yes,' where'd you
get?" N'klas asked, showing her his slip. He'd pulled "east
coast" as well.
She hugged him in a most uncharacteristic
gush of joy. He was too surprised to take full advantage of it before she, as
abruptly, released him.
"East coast!" Oh, she was so
happy, and she squeezed the message in hands suddenly moist. Radiantly she
smiled up the head table and caught Sorka's smile and Sean's nod of approval.
As her eyes slid away, she saw F'mar's face. He wasn't smiling quite so broadly
now. She raised her eyebrows queryingly, and he mouthed "Telgar" at
her.
She made a moue of disappointment, but
actually she wasn't disappointed at all.
Tarrie and Nora had brought the bags up to
the main table and Sorka drew for the absent queen riders, Sean for the six
absent Wingleaders.
"So you now all know which Weyr
you'll be stationed at, for now, since we'll have to make other divisions if we
decide to expand to six full Weyrs. All of you Wingleaders are experienced and
know as much about managing a fighting Weyr as I do. I've seen to that!"
He ignored the barrage of whistles and jocular remarks that met his slightly smug
smile. "There's really only one fair way to decide who becomes
Weyrleader." He used another of his pregnant pauses to increase suspense.
Torene had never seen her Weyrleader in such teasing good spirits. He was
really enjoying stringing all this out.
"We leave it up to the queens."
He surprised them all by making a gracious bow to Sorka. "And we'll leave
which queen up to chance, as well. Chance plays a greater part in our affairs
than you may be aware, but I feel the Weyr has profited by random choice, and
we will continue this. Therefore, the first queen in each new Weyr to rise to
mate will decide which rider will be Weyrleader!"
That announcement met with a stunned
silence, which was broken by quiet murmuring. Torene was even more surprised than
most. She didn't know which other queens had been assigned along with her, but
she was suddenly very sure that somehow the draw had been arranged so that she,
and Alaranth, would go east. For Alaranth, of all the twenty fertile queens,
would undoubtedly be the next one to rise to mate. Was that what Sean had meant
when he had said Torene's ability to hear all dragons was an asset? How long
had he been planning to form new Weyrs?
She shot a quick glance at the
Weyrleaders, but they were not looking in her direction.
"Am I right, Faranth?" Torene
asked, breaking her self imposed rule never to initiate a conversation with
another's dragon.
"You can hear all of us,"
Faranth said. "It would be wise to have you over there. You will be a very
good Weyrwoman. Sorka thinks so, and so do Carenath and Sean. Be easy!"
As if she possibly could at a moment like
this! Chance, indeed! Torene stared fiercely at Sorka, wanting to catch the
Weyrwoman's eye, but Sorka was leaning across the table to talk to Tarrie and
Nora.
"So, those of you who have to remain
here with Sorka and myself can be excused. I think the new Weyrfolk ought to
have a bit of a gather and find out who goes where. Big Islanders, assemble at
the far right tables; Telgar, these in the middle; and east coast on my
left."
As Sean pointed, his eyes at last met
Torene's. His expression did not change, except for the slight tilt of one
eyebrow. So she could read more into this public exhibition of 'random choice'?
But how could he have arranged it? The odds against were four to one.
She was startled out of her reverie when
F'mar leaned down, lips to her ear.
"I would have liked to have you as my
Weyrwoman, Rene," he murmured. Before she could remark on his arrogance,
being so sure that he would end up Telgar's Weyrleader, he had moved to the
center tables.
"Sour grapes?" N'klas asked,
jerking his thumb at F'mar's retreating back.
"No, no sour grapes," she said,
with a not too saccharine smile. "He's got as good a chance as anyone to
make Weyrleader at Telgar. See, " She pointed at Arna, Nya, and Sigurd
already seated at the head of one of the Telgar tables.
She welcomed Uloa with a happy cry, and
then Jean, Greteth's rider, only to be overcome with chagrin. Uloa and Jean
would know that Alaranth would be the first queen assigned there to rise to
mate. So did Julie, for her queen had just clutched and wouldn't rise for
months. Torene's thoughts must have been transparent, for Uloa leaned close to
her.
"And why not Alaranth?" Uloa
murmured. "Better you than me. You're young enough to cope."
"My sentiments entirely," Jean
added quietly, then raised her voice. "N'klas, pass the beer pitcher, will
you? Who else have we got for Wingleaders?" She looked about as riders shifted
to the appropriate tables. "Besides you, N'klas. Hello, there, Jess.
You're one of us? Great."
Torene glanced shyly at the older bronze
Wingleader. She hadn't had the chance to get to know him, but she'd never heard
unfavorable reports. She saw David Caterel making his way to them. He and
Polenth were of the original seventeen dragonriders. He had always been
pleasant to her, but the look he gave her now made her blush. He knew. Young
Boris Pahlevi, who had risen quickly to the rank of Wingleader on Gesilith, was
also on his way over. And behind him ... Torene blinked, but the lithe
redheaded figure was still that of Mihall, Brianth's rider, and the
Weyrleaders' oldest son.
Well, she thought, an odd numbing
sensation running over her, he was one of the best Wingleaders. Why should she
resent him being in her Weyr? Silly! It's not your Weyr, yet, m'girl. He gave
her a sharp nod as he stopped a little behind N'klas, reversed a chair, and
sat, leaning his arms on the back of it. He took the mug of beer passed to him
but only sipped politely.
Wingseconds and some of the other
wingriders ranged casually near their leaders, chatting among themselves.
"Well, well, and well," Uloa
said, grinning, her black eyes snapping with wry amusement. "David, your
Polenth is the oldest dragon, do you wish to take charge of this first meeting
of us new Weyrmates?"
"Why should I, when you're doing so
well, Uloa?" he replied good-humoredly and endured a bit of teasing from
his wingmates. "Anyway, you've seen more of our new Weyr than I
have."
"Shouldn't all of us go there now, to
see what needs doing?" asked Jess Kaiden, whose bronze, Hallath, came from
the same hatching as Uloa's queen.
"Not now," Uloa said, amused,
"as it's past midnight there and we wouldn't see much."
"We go when it's daylight then,"
Jess said with a shrug.
"All of us?" asked one of the
blue riders seated near David. Torene didn't know his name. That was one detail
she'd have to remedy.
"Martin, who rides Dagmath,"
Alaranth said.
"Yes, all of us," David replied,
"since all of us will share the making of this Weyr."
"Does it have to stay known as the
east coast Weyr?" Boris asked in some disgust. "What a
mouthful!"
"See it first, name it later,"
Jean said. "I've only been there once myself."
"Just how much help will we get from
the settlers?" N'klas asked, shooting Torene a quick look. Both were aware
of how much work would be required to make the place livable.
"I think we'll have to ask Sean
that," David replied.
"Rene, you got that film on
you?" N'klas asked, turning to her.
Torene felt herself flush. She ducked her
head on the pretext of opening the thigh pocket where she kept the plasfilm and
recovered her composure somewhat by the time she could spread it out on the
table in front of her. Everyone began to press in to have a look. David, who
was tallest of those nearby, took it and held it up high enough for more to
see.
"Shaded areas show the echo spaces
inside," N'klas said. "Some only need to be broken out. And Torene
spotted where we can put a ground-level access tunnel." Craning his head
and stretching out one arm, he pointed out the various features. "Hatching
ground, bigger'n Fort's, plenty of ground-level caverns for support staff,
kitchens, weyrling barracks, queens' quarters, and there're tunnels
underground. One to a cavern big enough for us to put hydroponics. ..."
"If we do our job properly, we'll get
supplied by the holders we protect," David Caterel said. N'klas was not the
only one whose mouth dropped open in surprise. "That's the plan which has
just now been accepted by all holders." David grinned. "That's what
allows us to decentralize the fighting force. The Holds we protect will tithe
to support the local Weyr. That way Fort won't be overburdened. We won't always
be able to sneak south for food, especially after Ierne is abandoned. Their
fire-lizards have done a great job to help the wings we've sent there. But
they'll be leaving, too. We've got to let the grubs dig in and spread. A good
start's been made at Key Largo, Seminole, and Ierne, but it's a long-term
process."
There were a few wry smiles at the
understatement. Everyone knew that it would take several hundred years for
grubs, the anti-Thread organism that Ted Tubberman had bioengineered, to spread
across the Southern Continent in sufficient density to make ordinary vegetation
less vulnerable to destruction by those deadly spores. And only once the new
life-form was well-enough established in the south could colonies of it be
transferred north.
"So that's what all this coming and
going's been about," Uloa said, propping her fists on her hips and glaring
at David. "And you never gave us so much as a hint."
David recoiled slightly. "I never had
so much as a hint myself until this evening. You know how closemouthed Sean can
be."
"That's true enough," Jean said
with a wry laugh.
"What he dislikes is that the
dragons'll have to do a lot of hauling."
Jean made a real grimace this time and
sighed deeply. "Then it's only fair that the holders help us dig!"
"That was Sean's point."
Jean couldn't see the diagram, so she
pulled it down. "So this is how we'll be spending our free time?"
"What free time?" half a dozen
voices chorused around her.
"The free time tomorrow when we'll
all go over and formally take possession of our Weyr," David said firmly.
He glanced around, looking for acknowledgment. "Go easy on the beer. We'll
make a daylight start."
"Our daylight, of course!" said
an anonymous voice from the back.
"He's got more sense than to
interfere with your beering by making us start at daylight on the east
coast," Jean said tartly.
From the middle of the room a roar went
up, "Telgar! Telgar Weyr!"
"As if they had any choice,"
Jean said at her drollest, "though I'd like to suggest a name now for ours
and let you think about it."
"What name?"
"Benden!" she said in a proud
quiet tone, lifting her chin. There was a long moment of respectful silence.
"What's to think about?" asked a
firm baritone voice from the rear.
"Could there be any other name that
would be more fitting?" David Caterel asked, and Torene could see that his
eyes had filled.
The murmur grew quickly as the name was
repeated throughout their small gathering. Jean touched her glass to David's,
and suddenly the others all got to their feet, glasses raised.
"To Benden Weyr!" David Caterel
said, though 'Weyr' came out raggedly.
"To Benden Weyr!" And mugs,
cups, and glasses were raised high and then drained.
Torene had to sniff and dash the tears
from her eyes, but she felt uplifted by that little ceremony. Hers had been the
last Hatching that the ailing admiral had attended. She remembered that he had
sought her out and wished her and her new queen the very best. Though he still
walked with an erect back, his step was short and jerky. One of his sons and
Mihall had escorted him.
Many riders began to circulate then, some
to get more beer, some to drift off, but Torene was more or less hemmed in by
the other queen riders and Wingleaders.
"You got this copy from your
mother?" David asked, spreading it carefully out on the table. When she
nodded, he asked, "Any chance we can get more? And at least one set of
enlargements for each elevation?" Torene nodded again. Her parents would
be extremely proud of her assignment and willing to cooperate in any way they
could. "And you've been there recently?" His manner was kindly, as if
she were much younger than she actually was and needed to be led. She was
twenty-two, but she didn't resent that from David as much as she would have
from one of her peers.
"A whole bunch of us went the day you
and Sean went down to Ierne to eat," Uloa said, with a
put-you-in-your-place tone.
Grinning back at her, David said, "If
I'd known Sean was going to pull it off, I'd've come with you. What I need to
establish is how recent your visit was."
"Very."
"And where is this access tunnel you
found, Torene?"
N'klas was closer and jammed his index finger
down on the spot. "Here."
David kept looking at Torene for his
answer.
She nodded. "This echo reads as two
meters high, ground to ceiling." She indicated with a fingertip.
"Here and here Ozzie says there're tunnels that can be enlarged, with an
entrance into the, into Benden Weyr, " She was interrupted by a chorus of
approval. "Sounds good." "Paul'd be pleased." "Perfect
name!" "Has a ring to it, doesn't it?" She went on, "and an
exit on high ground above the river, here."
Comments and suggestions flew too thick
and fast for her to identify the speakers.
"That would be the priority project,
so we can get materials and people in and out easily."
"We still have to shift by
dragonback. Couldn't send a land expedition when we don't know the overnighting
places."
"Kaarvan wouldn't mind a good long
sail. He's bored with fishing the Bay."
"Iernans can bring in a lot of their
own gear on their ships."
Other riders, eager to contribute, began
to crowd in, and Torene, courteously letting people past her, suddenly found
herself excluded.
"It's my map," she said under
her breath, trying to suppress a surge of bitterness as she took a further step
back, nearly stepping on the feet of someone seated behind her.
"It'll be your Weyr, Rene," said
a soft, amused tenor voice. She looked down into Mihall Connell's slightly
mocking gray-blue eyes. She'd never been close enough to see their color
before. "Come the time Alaranth flies," he went on. "She'll fly
soon, but you know that, don't you?"
There was no mockery in his tone, and he'd
made more of a statement than a question.
"Well, if you intend to be
Weyrleader, why aren't you in there, mapping your space?" The moment the
words were out of her mouth, she regretted them and bit her lip. "I'm
sorry, Mihall."
"Why?" His very regular eyebrows
quirked briefly, and his gray-blue eyes, not a trace of mockery in them, met
hers once more, his head tilted up at her. "I should like to be
Weyrleader. I intend to be Weyrleader. Everyone knows that." The mockery
was back. "The question is, how does Alaranth feel about Brianth?"
"Isn't it more how I feel about
you?" The words tumbled out before she could stop them, and she shook her
head and stamped her foot in annoyance: That wasn't at all what she had
intended to say.
Mihall rose slowly until he was looking
down at her, an intense expression on his face. "No, it's ultimately the
dragons who decide. The one who decides how to fly this queen, and the one who
decides who she'll let catch her."
Torene knew now why she hadn't been in his
company much. He wasn't at all like the other bronze and brown riders in her
'bunch'. And knowing the reputation he and Brianth had in 'catching' queens,
she had deliberately, if unconsciously, avoided being in his company. She also
knew the opinions the other queen riders had of him, and those only confused
her more. "Polite"? "Quick"? "Deft and
considerate"? "Too controlled"? None of those comments fit what
she sensed of him.
"He knows he is the son of his
parents," Alaranth said.
"Yes, he would know that," she
said almost sadly, for that couldn't be easy on him. When Mihall politely
raised his eyebrows in query, she realized she had spoken aloud.
"Brianth," she added, and gave Mihall what she hoped was an
understanding smile. From his stunned expression, she found she had only
compounded her blunder and he had jumped to the logical conclusion. "Oh,
lord, both feet are in my mouth tonight. Do you want a copy of your own when I
ask Mother for them tomorrow?" She tried to keep her voice even and
pleasant, but to her own ears she sounded irritated.
Mihall inclined toward her. "I'd
appreciate it," he said, but all the warmth she had seen, so briefly, in
his eyes was gone and they were coldly gray. He stood clear of the chair, and
before she could walk away from her embarrassment, he left her.
"I could just scream," she told
Alaranth. "It all came out so wrong, Allie. How could I possibly have said
the things I did to him? And the way I said them! Oh, how could I!"
There was a long pause when she thought
that her dragon was too sleepy to answer.
"Don't worry." The voice was not
Alaranth's.
"Brianth?"
"He's right." Too late now was
Alaranth's not too reassuring reply.
"Where did Torene go?" David's
voice rose above the other conversations.
"I'm here," she said, and
allowed the alacrity with which the riders parted to let her back in soothe her
frustration and self-accusation. The
next morning, having asked the watchdragon to wake her at daybreak, Telgar
time, Torene arrived at her parents' cavern just as Sonja was pouring klah. To
her daughter's astonishment, she was pouring it into three cups, and there was
a third bowl of steaming porridge set at the table.
"How did you know I was coming?"
"How could we not know?" Sonja
said, clasping her daughter to her ample bust and joyfully, proudly, embracing
her with arms well muscled from a lifetime of mining. "Telgar announces to
us there will be four Weyrs, and one of them here."
"Up there," Volodya corrected
his wife, pointing north-east, but he rose from his seat and kissed his
daughter, hugging her nearly as enthusiastically as his wife had but with some
consideration for Torene's ribs. "And you are named to be at the east
coast one."
"At Benden Weyr," she said,
hoping that at least the name would be a surprise.
"Ah!" Her mother's face lit up
and she embraced her daughter again before she mopped a tear from each eye
"As it should be. As it should
be," Volodya said, sitting down at the table and beginning to spoon his
porridge into his mouth. "Sit! Eat! You will need it."
"So, how many copies do you come for
me to make for you?" Sonja asked slyly, giving Torene a little push toward
the spare place.
"Oh, Mother!"
"And why shouldn't you, dushka?"
Sonja was unperturbed. "Always you are putting yourself behind. And where
else is there a replicating machine that works? You will want enlargements,
too, of each elevation? How many in all?"
"Mother ..." Torene began in
protest, and then burst out laughing.
"Sit! Eat!" her father repeated
and gestured firmly for her to take her seat. "Copies we can talk of
later. Now you will have breakfast with us and tell us news we don't get to
hear at Telgar."
When she finally left, stuffed with two
bowls of porridge and more klah than she liked to have swirling in her belly
going between, she was carrying a plastic tube full of copies and enlargements,
more than she would have had the nerve to request. Sonja had blithely
replicated four copies of each and every possible angle of the original and
secondary surveys of Benden Weyr. Torene reckoned that one reason they were so
willing to go over the top was because they were so pleased with that naming.
"No, is for you, dushka," Sonja
said, giving her daughter a hard kiss on her cheek in farewell. "We are
proud to have queen rider daughter. Keep her safe, Alaranth!"
With her many-faceted eyes gleaming in the
shadows cast by Telgar's high mountain peaks, Alaranth turned her head and
lowered her forequarters to the ground, as much to aid her rider to mount as to
acknowledge the parting.
"Who else is to keep you safe?"
Alaranth said as she turned and dropped off the ledge into the valley below.
Torene laughed at her phrasing, the speed
of their descent snatching the sounds away. "You sound just like my
mother!"
"We go now to Benden Weyr?"
Torene squeezed her eyes, which had filled
slightly with tears of pride at the grand sound of the name, and the
concentrated on the image of the double-cratered bowl, the bowl of Benden Weyr.
"Yes!"
She was certain that all that klah and
porridge would turn to ice in her belly, but then they were out in the warm
spring sunlight, gliding down the Weyr toward the lake.
"Good morning to you!" Torene
recognized Brianth's voice though she didn't see him below, nor any sign of
Mihall.
"He's on the rim behind us,
sunning," Alaranth told her, well pleased that she and Torene had started
their own errand earlier than this pair.
Torene's mouth felt dry as Alaranth swung
back to the upper crater and lost altitude. She had a view of Brianth, sunning
himself on the heights. Backwinging, Alaranth landed neatly on the surface, the
breeze from her pinions making the gravel rattle. A man's head peered out from
the nearby opening to what Torene thought would be the Hatching Ground. Mihall
still wore his flying gear, so he couldn't have been here long, Torene thought.
He didn't rush, but his stride covered the
distance between them so that he was at her side when she reached the ground.
"You've been busy this morning, I
see." He nodded at the tube.
Keeping a stern grip on her tongue, she
smiled pleasantly. "Their daybreak, not ours," she said, opening the
tube.
He looked into the tube's contents and
whistled, grinning down at her with approval. That was the first time she had
seen him smile so openly, and she wondered why he didn't more often. It would
have improved his reputation.
Then she could see his fingers twitching,
eager to see every sheet she had brought. Was that why he had gotten here so
early? How could he have been certain she'd do her errand so promptly?
"Brianth told him we'd left."
This time she was careful to keep her
immediate response to herself. "Had Brianth slept with one eye open?"
"The watchdragon will speak to anyone
who asks politely." This came from Brianth, and although she knew dragons
couldn't laugh, there was amusement of that quality in the bronze's tone.
"Here," Torene said, perversely
irritated now by both rider and dragon. Why did Mihall have the ability to
disturb her with so many conflicting emotions? She tapped the tube so the roll
would fall out.
Mihall was that much quicker and had the films
in his hands before she could catch them.
"It's less windy inside here,"
he said, impatient to unroll the sheets but not willing to risk their damage.
When she got inside the vaulted chamber,
she saw that he had been there long enough to make a small fire, set far enough
in the shelter of the front wall to be protected from the wind, and secure in a
neat circle of stones. A klah pot balanced close enough to keep its contents
hot. A bulging sack was propped up against the wall, along with an opaque sheet
of plastic wrapped around a number of finished plastic shafts.
"The klah's ready if you'd like a
cup," he said, noting her surprise. "If not, help me put the table
together. It's easier with two."
Torene shook her head at the first offer
and started to untie the bundle. When assembled, the table was exactly the same
size as the largest of the replicated elevations. Mihall produced pushpins and
a narrow strip of plastic. He worked deftly, and before she knew it, one full
set of the drawings was secured to the table with the plastic strip holding
down the top edges so that the diagrams could be flipped over without being
torn.
"You are handy," she said,
pleased and somewhat amused by his preparations.
"I know the largest size that replicator
can print," he said, shrugging off her implied compliment. "Ah, this
is the one I wanted to see." He turned to the side elevations of the upper
crater.
"There are more coming now!"
Brianth and Alaranth said almost in unison.
"About time," Torene and Mihall
said, also in chorus. Catching each other's eyes, they both laughed, blue
dominated the gray in the bronze rider's eyes.
For Torene, that marked the beginning of
the most intense period of activity she had ever experienced, even when she was
first learning how to care for Alaranth. David Caterel had borrowed Ozzie from
Telgar, although the old prospector insisted that everything he and Cobber had
discovered in these craters was already written up or symbolized on the
plasfilm they had in their possession.
"We used some of those first uglies
Wind Blossom bred to check out the tunnels," he said, tapping a
joint-disfigured finger on the drawings. "X marks spots you don't go.
'S'all here. Took her", he pointed at Torene, "and her, him, him,"
he added, indicating Uloa, N'kla and D'vid, "through every one of 'em, up
and down, and the ones in between. The 'between' you get to when you
walk," he commented, favoring David Caterel with a droll eye.
"Had you anything better to do
today?" David asked, grinning. "You can sit here, drink all the klah
..."
"You didn't think to bring any beer,
didja? Prefer beer."
"In fact, I did, knowing your
preference," David said, and began to haul large bottles from each of his
thigh and jacket pockets.
"Good man." Ozzie took one,
broke the seal, took a long pull, then wiped his mouth with the back of his
sun-riddled hand and sighed with deep appreciation. At last he looked up at
David again. "I'll tell ya if ya do anythin' wrong," he assured them.
"That one", and he pointed to Torene again, "knows most of 'em
anyway, so she can lead you. I'll just stay here in case ya go wrong. Then I'll
findja."
Smiles were carefully concealed from the
wiry old man as David turned purposefully to Torene.
"So, what do you want to see
first?" she asked, holding her hands out in compliance.
"Everything," David said.
"Starting with here and where can we put the hypocaust to keep the sands
warm.
"This way, lords and ladies,"
Torene said impishly, remembering the phrases from the stories her father had
told her as a child. There were always lords and ladies in Volodya Ostrovsky's
bedtime tales. By noontime, they had
climbed about, or been flown by obliging dragons to, every cave, niche, nook,
and cranny in the eastern side of the upper crater. They paused to eat, and
review their notes and the diagrams, and then, with only slightly diminished
zeal, explored the western side, including the sites where Torene had thought
ground access was possible. The plasfilm that had been pristine that morning
showed all kinds of marks and new legends in the margins. Lists of materials
urgently needed were stuck in under the top rail.
By the time darkness fell, not only was
everyone tired, scratched, and bruised from clambering over, under, and past
unforgiving stone, but also full of intimate knowledge of their proposed home.
The next day, queen riders, Wingleaders,
and seconds held conferences with Ierne's representatives to see what materials
would be needed to start work on the access tunnel.
Though they were not asked, the dragons
insisted on helping dig once the stonecutters had excised the cliff face of the
proposed access tunnel. David Caterel tried to stop them.
"You're fighting dragons, not digging
dragons," he said, scowling at his own Polenth. "Torene, Uloa, Jean,
speak to your queens."
"Sternly?" Jean asked, grinning
back and smearing the mud on her face as she mopped sweat. A shovel handle
leaned against her.
"This will be our home, too,"
Alaranth and Greteth said, and the bronzes bugled agreement.
"Think you got outvoted," Uloa
said. "It's only because you're one of the first and Sean fussed so about
doing carrier duty."
"This is different," Jean said,
replacing gloves preparatory to attacking the rubble again. "This is for
us!"
The dragons gave another bugle, and David,
shaking his head, surrendered. There was no question that dragon assistance
lightened the task. Ozzie was on hand, too, "to make sure the echoes were
accurate," he said. But he carried out his supervision from a sunny spot
on a convenient boulder, pulling away at his beer.
Torene was not the only rider who had
brought sleeping furs, spare clothes, and what food she could wangle from
Tarrie's kitchen. She had dumped her things in one of the smaller caves that
she could climb to if Alaranth was asleep. It was three times the size of her
accommodation at Fort, palatial in comparison. Alaranth thoroughly approved of
the ledge in front, which got the morning sun.
By pooling their food, those who stayed on
overnight managed quite a satisfactory meal. Despite being tired, some of the
bronze and brown riders excused themselves afterward.
"Wonder where they're going?"
Uloa asked.
"Not where, not even why," Jean
said, groaning, "but how do they have the energy to go at all! Fresh fruit
would go nice for breakfast."
"Did any of them check for Threadfall
in the south?" Torene asked.
"Mihall did," R'bert said,
offering round the klah pot.
Jean rolled her eyes and Uloa sighed,
stretching warily.
"D'you think he'll bring back a hot
bath?" she asked.
"That would be heaven," Jean
said. "What did Ozzie say about the possibility of tapping into some
thermals here?"
"He said that it was possible if
there was enough pipeline left from doing Tillek," Torene said, thinking
longingly of a hot bath herself.
"We could go back to Fort?"
Alaranth suggested.
"I don't think I have muscles enough
to climb up to your back," Torene replied.
She was half-asleep when the riders
returned. Not only had they brought fresh fruit and several braces of chickens,
but each dragon had a fat bullock or cow struggling in his claws. These were
deposited down by the lake, where they bawled out their terror for hours before
finally settling.
"Where'd you find the chickens?"
Jean asked, eyes wide with delighted surprise.
"They take shelter in the old caves,
the Catherine caves, I think they were called," Mihall said.
"Yes, they were," Jean said as
she watched him untie the chickens' legs. Squawking, each released fowl ran off
into the bowl. "We've nothing to feed them with."
"I think I threw some crusts and
heels onto the compost heap," Torene said, and got up.
Mihall caught her by the shoulder. "If
it's there, they'll find it on their own. What's the matter?" he added as
he saw her wince.
"My shoulder's stiff."
"Whose isn't?" Uloa said,
groaning and rubbing her own shoulder.
"Didn't one of you think to bring
some numbweed?" Mihall asked with a grin.
A widespread groan answered the question:
the remedy was so obvious! Jean stiffly began to get to her feet. "My
pack's nearest."
Mihall reached out to prevent her.
"Where? Let me get it."
"Oh, would you? I'm in the third cave
on the left on the first level. It's an easy climb."
When Mihall returned with the numbweed,
they took turns rubbing the salve into abused muscles. Somehow, and she
couldn't reject the courtesy without sounding uncivil, Mihall managed to be
available to work on Torene's shoulders. Then she was much too grateful for the
sure, firm touch of his massaging fingers as he worked the salve in.
"Thanks, Mihall," she said,
rotating shoulder blades that no longer ached.
"Just take it easy tomorrow or you'll
be back to me again," he said, and turned to Genteelly, who was waiting
for similar ministrations.
Because of the massage she slept easier
that night, once she tuned out the bawling of the cattle. The next day, at an
appropriate hour, she asked Polenth to have David bring along a big jar of the
numbweed when they returned from Fort to Benden.
In effect, they now worked two shifts,
those staying at Benden did the first one, then took a rest break when the
Fort-based contingent arrived, fresh. The four Benden wings, excused from
Threadfall at Fort, began to catch the eastern Falls, to see how they could
protect the newly named Benden Hold property. A nearby source of
phosphine-bearing rock was indicated on the survey maps, and David sent a work
group of blue and brown riders to begin to stockpile the all-important
firestone.
A team arrived from Tarvi Telgar to set up
the hypocaust system in the Hatching Ground, so the campers moved their
belongings across the Bowl to what would be the living quarters. The first
hearth and its chimney were built against an outside wall. Ozzie and Svenda
Bonneau plumbed for and found a thermal vent, and Fulmar Stone supplied the
pump and instructed his apprentices in setting the pipes that would supply the
individual weyrs as well as the main living accommodations.
More cattle and other types of herd beasts
that had managed to survive Threadfall in the South were added to the herd that
occupied the lake end of the craters. The chickens laid, and it became a
regular early-morning exercise to find where, in the sands, the eggs had been
secreted. Some were left to the broody hens, but others supplied the cooks.
Julie, the fourth queen rider for Benden Weyr, arrived from Big Island on her
Rementh, who had finally recovered from wing scoring. Julie, who was still in a
gelicast for the broken leg she'd incurred trying to dismount in a hurry to
tend to her queen, announced that she'd act as domestic manager.
Then Captain Kaarvan and the Pernese
Venturer dropped anchor at the mouth of Benden River, and the promised
assistance from Ierne broke trail to be the first to make use of the access
tunnel. The workers they supplied included masons and carpenters, and soon
individual caves became proper weyrs, with partitions between dragon and rider
accommodations, and even private bathrooms.
Work was also done on what would be the
quarters of the two Weyrleaders, the large room that would be used for private
conferences, and one below that which could be an office for the Weyrleaders.
No one minded the hard work and the long
hours, because they were building for their own comfort as well as that of
generations to come. So they built well and carefully.
When the Benden Weyrfolk decided that
sufficient provision for them had been made, they and their dragons flew down
to the Hold, which was progressing more slowly, and, used the skills they had
learned to help the holders settle into their new accommodation.
The only break the Benden riders took was
to attend the Hatching at Fort. That was always a glad occasion for
dragonriders and could not be missed, especially when most of the sixteen
hatchlings had been assigned to Benden Weyr. That provoked a complaint from
F'mar, in the name of Telgar Weyr, although work on that facility had not even
started.
"The next clutch will go to you,
F'mar, especially as you've no place to put them yet but here at Fort,"
Sean said dismissively.
"Young Fulmar better stop hassling
Sean," Jean murmured to the other Benden queen riders. "Especially if
he keeps on acting like he's already Weyrleader. That's a long way from being
decided."
"But someone has to be in charge,
sort of, don't they?" Torene asked. "I mean, David ..."
"David Caterel has the right,"
Jean said firmly. "You've no complaints, have you?" She eyed Torene
speculatively.
"Me? No. He listens to any
objections, anyway," she said, once again made conscious of the fact that
although no one said anything to the point of her being Benden's Weyrwoman,
everyone knew, and tended to turn to her for decisions and opinions.
Working shoulder to shoulder, day after
day, with the bronze and brown riders had given Torene a good chance to get to
know them all. She liked most of them, so she supposed Alaranth would have the final
say. Of the younger riders, N'klas, L'ren, T'mas, and D'vid kept as much in her
company as possible. David Caterel was always courteous to her, but he treated
all the women riders the same way, even Julie, whom his Polenth had last flown.
Mihall had a knack of appearing when she was in trouble, like when the cutter
jammed, or when she was trying to roll a heavy boulder out of the way. It got
so she almost expected him to be there when she needed a hand. Somewhat to her
chagrin, he never lingered, but returned to whatever task he had interrupted to
help her. Meanwhile, the Weyrleaders' quarters remained unoccupied.
It was Mihall who cried, "Get the
queens away!" while people were finishing their midday meal. He came
pounding into the lower cavern, straight up to Torene. He caught her hand and,
pulling her to her feet, urged her to action. "Get your queens out of
here, Jean, Llloa. Where's Julie gone?"
Licking the fingers of her right hand,
which were sticky from peeling red fruit, Torene did not resist Mihall's urgent
tugging.
"How could she go into heat without
me noticing?" she cried. She had been keeping such a close watch on
Alaranth, or so she had thought.
"Today, because she's been lounging
in the sun," Mihall said, and turned her by the hand he held so that she
was facing the right way. He pointed. "She's more than just gold right
now."
Torene inhaled sharply. Alaranth,
stretching legs and wings in a manner that Torene instantly identified as
sensual, was gleaming a bright gold that had nothing to do with clean skin and
sunlight. Mihall jerked round as Jean, Uloa, and Julie came pelting out of the
lower cavern in flying jackets too large for them and helmets that were just as
obviously borrowed. No time to get their own riding gear. Throwing anxious
glances over their shoulders at the luminous Alaranth, the three riders
scrambled aboard their own dragons.
"Look!" Mihall swiveled Torene
about again so that she could see the male dragons beginning to gather on the
Rim, their eyes taking on the avid orange of arousal. Their riders were
converging on Mihall and Torene, and suddenly she was the focus of their
awakened sensuality. Despite herself, she recoiled, tearing her hand free of
Mihall's grip. His eyes had turned an intense blue. "Remember,"
Mihall said then, "don't let her, "
"I know, I know, I know!" she
cried, resenting each and every one of them for the way they were looking at
her. No one had told her about this part of a queen's mating, especially this
flight, when the reward of Weyrleadership went to the winner. She backed up
until she was leaning against the stone of the Weyr, her mouth gone dry, even
as sweat began to ooze from her pores and a strange sensation enveloped her
guts.
At her final shout, Alaranth woke
completely and Torene made the mental linkage. The rock wall supported her. Not
even the calm explicit recital Sorka had given her covered the depth or
intensity of the emotions the dragon was feeling, much less Torene's reluctant
but inexorable response to the lust. A blood lust, first, with Alaranth aware
of an insatiable hunger.
Glittering in the summer sunshine,
Alaranth extended her wings and bellowed a challenge. Aware that the male
dragons were watching, she turned to display her proud strong body, throwing
her head back and stretching out her long neck. She retracted in the blink of
an eye, arching herself, and with a graceful, powerful motion, leaped into the
air. Three long sweeps of her gleaming wings, and then she was gliding down to
the lake, scattering the beasts, her prey, with her hungry cries.
"Blood it, Alaranth. Blood it! Don't
eat!" The instructions Torene had been drilled in jumped to mind as
Alaranth landed on the bullock. "Blood it only!" Torene kept her
voice firm, stern, putting every ounce of authority into her tone.
Alaranth snarled back at the distant tense
circle of humans before she tore the throat and sucked greedily at the blood.
"Blood it! Hear me now!
Alaranth!" Torene could not give her any leeway in this. Blooding gave the
mating queen the quick energy she needed. Flesh would only weigh her down and
she would not achieve the height required in a truly successful mating flight.
Height meant safety, for dragons locked in conjugation could plummet to the
ground before finishing if insufficient altitude had not been attained.
"Blood only, Alaranth!" Torene
repeated as her queen leaped on a second large bullock. "You must fly the
highest you can. You must not eat to do that! Blood it only!"
Though they were the length of the Weyr
apart, Torene felt as if she were right there beside her ravenous queen; the
hot blood was running down her throat, and she wondered why it wasn't choking
her. With another part of her consciousness, she felt hands touching her and
realized that she was surrounded by many sweaty male bodies, but her immediate
concern was not for herself, but for Alaranth. The queen seemed to pulse
goldenly even from this distance.
The terrified herd beasts were stampeding
about, but they had nowhere to go, and as their circling took them too close to
the blooding queen again, she casually made a little hop and landed on one of
the smaller creatures.
"Blood it! Don't you dare take the
flesh, Alaranth. Don't you dare!"
Torene was in her queen's mind with an
immediacy she had never experienced since Impression. Still, she gasped at the
suddenness with which Alaranth flung aside the last kill and, with a gigantic
push from her hind legs, surged aloft. The male dragons on the Rim were equally
surprised. They all sprang up; two or three dropped off the Rim and were
somehow airborne and rising faster than their rivals. To Torene, they were just
a blur of wings behind her, for she was Alaranth more than she was Torene,
increasing the distance between herself and the males with every beat of her
broader, longer wings.
The peaks were falling fast below, and the
air cooled a body heated by blooding and by sexual drive at its most potent
point. Alaranth reveled in her speed, in the height she was gaining so
effortlessly. She caught a thermal and soared on it, attaining more altitude.
This was higher than she had ever ventured, and she felt strong, felt the
powerful lift of air under her wings, caressing her body, stoking the fires
already consuming her.
Far below her sparkled the sea, blues
shading to green and aqua. She felt, rather than saw, the shadow, sensed the
proximity of another. Craning her head around, she saw the cluster of males
below and some distance behind her. They would not catch her so easily. They
hadn't her wings, her strength, her ...
Strong talons gripped her shoulder joints,
a powerful neck twined with hers, and wrenching herself about to meet her
attacker, only too late did Alaranth realize she had done exactly as the bronze
had hoped and she was well and truly caught. As he made sure of his conquest of
her, wing to wing, necks twined, talons locked, Alaranth realized that only one
had ever been in contention for her, and she abandoned all restraint. "Now! Torene, now!"
Torene was no longer aloft with Alaranth
in the throes of the dragons' mating passion; she was naked in the arms of the
bronze's rider, naked, and her body demanding the same glorious orgasm that her
dragon had just experienced.
"Damn it, Torene," that rider
was saying as he attempted to penetrate her body, "did you have to wait
until now?"
She gripped him to her, her nails digging
into the muscular flesh of his back. The hurt was a mere moment's discomfort,
immediately forgotten in the powerful surging of lust that rose from some
unexpected, limitless depth within her.
"Toreeeeeeeene!"
The cry of her name produced mild
astonishment in her. The tone held more than triumph, more than surprise, more
than intense pleasure. So she opened her eyes to see whose dragon had flown
hers so skillfully, which rider had take her.
His face was still buried in her neck; his
body, limp with repletion, leaned heavily against hers. He smelled of sweat, as
she did. Even his hair was damp. They were both dripping, but as she wrapped
slippery arms about his slippery back, she knew him, and knew him more
intimately now than she had known any other man.
"Polite"?
"Considerate"? Her errant mind went through the comments of the other
queen riders about this man. "Deft"? Well, he had certainly been
that, both with his bronze's tactics and with herself. "Controlled"?
Oh, no, not a bit controlled. Not polite, and more angry with her virginity
than considerate. But then, had she been all that wise, leaving her first
experience until her queen's first flight? Well, it had been her option, and
she was glad she had. That way she had been sure that it was her dragon who
would choose, not some silly preference of hers.
"Mihall?" She spoke his name
softly. His breathing had slowed, and she didn't know if he had fallen asleep
where he lay on her. He wasn't that heavy, and she'd better get accustomed to
it anyway, since he was now indisputably the Weyrleader, and her weyrmate.
He gathered himself to move away, and she
held him fast. She liked his body. Indeed, she liked it very much for the way
it had made her feel, the way it had completed her.
"You made for the thermal current
right off?" she asked, having figured out just how he had managed to
achieve his goal.
"Hmmm." He moved his head to
emphasize the agreement.
Vividly blue eyes regarded her with solemn
appraisal. His short hair was dark red with sweat, but it curled as much as
hers did. She expected that they'd have curly, red-headed children and smiled
to be thinking that far ahead right now.
"Only way," he murmured. Then,
almost as if he expected her to resist, he ran a wondering finger down her
cheek.
"Alaranth hadn't a chance against
that technique," she said.
"I didn't intend that she should,
Rene," he said with a slow smile, and stroked her cheek again. It was the
warm smile she liked so much. "I couldn't let any other rider have
you."
She looked up at him quizzically: not
'dragon,' but 'rider' and 'you'. He meant her, not just what she brought to
this union, her dragon and the Weyrleadership.
"Rider?"
He raised himself on his elbows, looking
down at her face as if he had to memorize every detail. "You are
exceptionally beautiful, you know, and those eyelashes are totally
unfair!" That marvelous smile of his again curved his firm mouth.
"But you said you were going to be
Weyrleader."
"Oh, I'd've been that one way or
another, sooner or later," he said in a blithe tone. He gave her very
tender kisses on the edges of her lips.
"Polite"?
"Restrained"? She couldn't help smiling up at him, thinking of how
very wrong the other women had been and how very glad she was that they were.
"It was always you I ached to
have," he said, still memorizing the planes of her face, kissing her
cheekbones. "From the moment I saw you Impress Alaranth. But my father had
warned me off the queen riders. I had to shadow Admiral Benden in order to get
anywhere near you then without having my backside flayed."
"That long ago?" Who had been
avoiding whom since? She raised her eyelashes then and swept them teasingly
across his forehead. His arms tightened, and there was nothing polite or
considerate about his response, a response that had nothing to do with his
dragon.
"We both have what we wanted,"
said a dragon in a sleepy satisfied tone.
Try though she would in all the years she
and M'hall were the Weyrleaders of Benden, Torene was never sure which dragon
had spoken. Or to whom.
RESCUE
RUN
"Ma'am?"
Ross Vaclav Benden said in a surprised tone. "There's an orange flag on
the Rukbat system." He swiveled around toward the Amherst's command chair
and the battle cruiser's captain, Anise Fargoe.
The Amherst had been assigned to conduct a
determined search of the Sagittarian Sector for any evidence of new incursions
by the Nasties. The punitive war of six decades earlier had proved insufficient
to dissuade those intruders from continuing to annex remote elements of the
Federation. A massive seek-and- destroy operation was now five years in
progress; mercifully, only minor infiltration's had been discovered, a few
outposts and two space stations, which had been obliterated. But not until all
adjoining space and every peripheral system had been investigated and warning
devices strategically strewn would the Federation enjoy any sense of security.
A second prolonged Nasties Campaign would ruin the already depleted Federation.
Quick sharp thrusts now, the Combined Joint Staffs had wisely decided, should
suffice.
As the Amherst had so far had a very
boring swing through their sector, Lieutenant Benden's unexpected comment
roused everyone on the bridge.
"Orange? This far out?" Captain
Fargoe asked, her eyes widening in a flare of excitement. "Didn't know we
had colonies in this sector."
"Orange" signified that an
investigation should be initiated by any vessel close enough to the flagged
system to do so.
"I'm accessing files, ma'am."
And Benden, suddenly remembering family history, breathlessly awaited the
entry. He tapped his thumbs restlessly on the edge of the keyboard and got a
quick repressive glance from old Rezmar Dooley Zane, the duty navigator.
"Oh," he added, his eagerness deflated as the file header informed
him that a distress message had been received from the colony on Pern, Rukbat's
only inhabitable planet.
"Well, let's see the message,"
Captain Fargoe said. Anything to relieve the tedium of the fruitless search
through this deserted, almost deserted, sphere of space. "Screen it."
Benden transferred the message to the main
screen.
MAYDAY! PERN COLONY IN DESPERATE CONDITION
FOLLOWING REPEATED ATTACKS OF AN UNCONTACTED ENEMY INVASION FORCE EMPLOYING
UNKNOWN ORGANISM ...
"Nasties don't need germ
warfare," muttered brash Ensign Cahill Bralin Nev. Someone else snickered.
... WHICH CONSUMES ALL ORGANIC MATTER. MUST HAVE TECHNICAL AND
NAVAL SUPPORT OR COLONY FACES TOTAL ANNIHILATION. THERE IS WEALTH HERE. SAVE
OUR SOULS. THEODORE TUBBERMAN, COLONY BOTANIST.
There was an almost embarrassed silence.
"Hardly the Nasties then," the
captain said dryly. "Probably some old weapon system has been triggered.
Perhaps one of the Fifty units we ran into in the Red Sector. I thought only
survivor types were chosen to be colonists. Mister Benden, what does Library
say about this Pern expedition?"
Ross didn't need to search for the
official documentation on the Expedition, he knew most of the tale by heart.
But he keyed up the file anyway.
"Captain, a low-tech, agrarian colony
was chartered for the third planet of the Rukbat system, under the joint
leadership of Admiral Paul Benden and, "
"Your uncle, I believe."
"Yes, Captain," Ross replied,
keeping his tone level. Proud though his entire family was of Paul Benden's
most honorable service record, Ross had taken a lot of gibing during his first
cadet year, when his uncle's victory at Cygnus was telecast as a documentary,
and in his third year, when Admiral Benden's strategy was discussed in Tactics.
"A most able strategist and a fine
commander." Fargoe's voice registered approval, but her sideways glance
warned Benden not to presume on his uncle's sterling record. "Continue,
mister."
"Governor Emily Boll of Altair was
the other leader. Six thousand-plus colonists, chartered and contracted, were
transported in three ships, Yokohama, Buenos Aires, and Bahrain. The only other
communication was the regulation report of a successful landing. No further
contact was expected."
"Humph. Idealists, were they?
Isolating themselves and then screaming for help at the slightest sign of
trouble."
Ross Benden gritted his teeth, searching
for some polite way to assert that Admiral Benden would not have 'screamed for
help' and bloody well hadn't sent that craven message.
Fortunately, after a moment's thought, the
captain went on. "Not Admiral Benden's style to send a distress message of
any kind. So, who's this Theodore Tubberman, Botanist, who affixed his name to
the plea? A Mayday should have been authorized by the colony leaders."
"It wasn't a standard capsule,"
Benden replied, having noted that emendation. "But expertly contrapted. It
was also sent to Federation headquarters."
"Federation headquarters?"
Fargoe sat forward, frowning. "Why HQ? Why not the Colonial Authority? Or
the Fleet? No, if it wasn't signed by Admiral Benden, the Fleet would have
shifted it to the CA." Then she sat, chin on one hand, studying the
report, scrolling it forward from her armrest keypad. "A nonstandard
homing device sent to Federation HQ indicating that the colony was under attack
... hmm. And nine years after a successful landing, forty-nine years ago.
"How far are we from the Rukbat
system, Mister Benden?"
"Point-oh-four-five from the
heliopause, ma'am. Science Officer Ni Morgana wanted a closer look at that Oort
cloud. She's interested in cometary reservoirs. That's when I noticed the
orange flag on the system."
"They wanted squadrons then?"
The captain gave a short bark of laughter. "Nearly fifty years ago? Hmmm.
No Nastie activity was noticed that soon after the War. This Tubberman fellow
doesn't specify. Maybe that's what he intended. Big unknown alien life-form
attack might have stirred Federation." She gave a dubious sniff.
"What sort of resources does this Pern have, Mister Benden?"
Benden had anticipated that request and
inserted a smaller window on the main screen with the initial survey report.
"Pern evidently only had minimal resources, enough to supply the needs of
a low-tech colony."
"No, that sort of ore and mineral
potential wouldn't have interested any of the syndicates," the captain
mused. "Too costly to use an orbiting refinery or to transport the ores to
the nearest facility. Nine years after touchdown? Long enough for those
agrarian types to settle in and accumulate reserves. And the EEC doesn't list
any predators." She paused in her review of the data and made a slight
grimace. "Have Lieutenant Ni Morgana report to the bridge," she
ordered the communications officer.
The captain tapped her fingers on her
armrest. "Doesn't compute that Paul Benden would send any distress
message," she went on. "So where was he when this Tubberman sent off
his contraption? Had the menace from outer space done for everyone in
authority?"
"Internal conflict?" Benden suggested,
not able to believe his resourceful uncle would have been destroyed by a mere
organism after surviving all that the Nastie fleet had thrown at him. That
would be ironic. The EEC report listed no hostile organism on the planet. Of
course, no one could completely rule out the admittedly bizarre possibility of
an attack by a remnant weapon system. Sections of the galaxy were strewn with
the unexploded minefields from ancient wars, and not necessarily of Nastie
origin.
The grav shaft whooshed open and
Lieutenant Ni Morgana entered, stood to attention, and snapped off a salute.
"Captain?" She tilted her head, awaiting her orders.
"Ah, Lieutenant, there is not only an
Oort cloud surrounding the Rukbat system, but it appears to be an orange
tagged, distress message," the captain said, gesturing for Ni Morgana to
read the data covering several windows on the big screen.
"Coming on a bit thick, weren't they?
Alien invasion!" Ni Morgana gave a snort of disgust after a quick perusal.
"Although ..." She paused, pursing her mouth. "It's just
possible that the 'unknown organism' has been seeded into the cometary cloud to
camouflage it."
"What are the chances of it
containing some engineered organism that attacked the planet fifty years
ago?" Captain Fargoe was clearly skeptical.
"I am hoping that we can obtain
samples of the cloud as we pass it, ma'am," Ni Morgana replied. "It
is unusually close in to the system for an Oort cloud."
"Have Oort clouds ever been found to
harbor natural viruses or an organism that could threaten a planet?"
"I know of several cases where it's
always been assumed that inimical mechanisms have been launched from one
stellar system to another, 'berserkers,' they were called."
"Could the organism this Tubberman mentions
be a Nastie softening agent? Destroying all organic matter seems like a weapon
of some kind, doesn't it?"
"We've learned not to underestimate
the Nasties, Captain. Though their methods, so far, have been much more
direct." Ni Morgana's smile was tight, understandable when one knew that
the science officer was the only survivor of her family, solely because she had
been at the Academy when the enemy had attacked her home world. "However,
since the Nasties have been trying to establish bases far from well-traveled
space, it becomes a possibility out here."
"Yes, it does, doesn't it?" the
captain said thoughtfully and then grimaced. It was the ambition of every
member, of Fleet and EEC, from the lowliest long-distance single scout to the
commander of the heaviest battle cruiser, to discover the Nasties' home world,
and Captain Fargoe was scarcely an exception.
"Whatever the attack on Pern was,
they would not have sent for help unless their situation was desperate,"
Ni Morgana added. "You are aware that the Colonial Authority exacts
punitive payments for such assistance?"
A complex series of expressions rippled
across the captain's face. "Far too high for the service they give, and
the time it takes them to respond. The colonists would be mortgaged, body,
blood, and breath, unto the fourth generation to repay such a debt. Also the
message was not sent by Admiral Paul Benden. That's one man I'd like to pipe
aboard the Amherst."
"He'd scarcely be alive now,"
Ross Benden heard himself saying. "He was in his seventh decade when he
started."
"A good colonial life can add decades
to a man's span, Benden," the captain said. "So, I think we can
entertain a rescue run to Pern. Lieutenant Zane, plot a course that will take
us through the system close enough to this Pern to launch the shuttle. We can
give the other planets and satellites a good probe on the swing past. Mister
Benden, you'll command the landing party, a junior officer and, say, four
marines. I'll want your crew recommendations, and calculations on projected
journey to rendezvous with the Amherst on her turn back through the system.
Allowing, say ... how long did the EEC survey team take? Ah, yes, five days and
a bit. Allowing five days on the surface to make contact with the colonists and
establish their current situation."
"Aye, aye, Captain," Benden
replied, trying hard to keep elation out of his voice. Lieutenant Zane on the
navigation board shot him a malevolent glance, which he ignored, as he did
Ensign Nev to his right, who was all but tugging his sleeve to remind Ross that
he'd had xeno training.
"I suggest you talk with Lieutenant
Ni Morgana, Mister Benden, when she has completed her survey of the Oort cloud
matter. There might just be some connection, and these ancient weapons can
produce some awkward surprises." She awarded Ross Benden a quick nod.
"You have the conn, Lieutenant Zane." With that, the captain slid
from the command seat and left the bridge.
As Saraidh ni Morgana took her seat at the
science terminal, she winked at Ross Benden, which he interpreted as her
support in his assignment. On the 3-D
globe on the Amherst's bridge, the ship seemed only centimeters from the edge
of the nebulosity that was the Oort cloud. As she approached at an angle to
sample a core through the thickest part of the cloud, a great net was fired
from a forward missile tube on the port side. The net would both collect debris
and clear the ship's path. No ship would barrel through such a cloud, where
particles were as close as tens of meters. The biggest particles were about a
kilometer apart. The problem was to avoid collision of the net with anything
above a ton, which would tear it and bring the ship's meteorite defense into
play.
During the next two weeks, while the
Amherst passed beyond the cloud, heading into the Rukbat system, the science
officer carefully examined the material. First she asked permission to rig an
empty cargo pod with remote waldo controls and monitors. A work party towed the
pod out to a point far enough that there was no risk to the Amherst and yet
close enough to make frequent trips to the net feasible.
Then, with a work party, she jetted out to
the net and selected fragments that might be worth examining. The cargo pod was
already divided into sections. At first these were all kept in vacuum status at
-270 Celsius or 3º absolute. Once back in the Amherst, Ni Morgana activated the
monitors and began one of her legendary forty-hour days.
"I've got a lot of dirty ice"
was her initial comment four days later, after she'd had some sleep and a
second review of her data. "Most of the stuff has identifiable intrusions,
particles of rock and metal, but there are also, " There was a long pause.
"some very unusual particles that I have never encountered before."
As the science officer held five degrees in different disciplines and had
landed on three or four dozen alien surfaces, that was an intriguing admission.
"Before anyone gets an idea I don't want to give, there is no evidence of
any artifact."
The next morning she suited up again and
jetted around the netted debris, continuing her investigation. Meanwhile,
Captain Fargoe approved Lieutenant Benden's preliminary flight data, and Ross
continued his study of the EEC survey reports and the two cryptic messages that
were the only communications from the colony world. "If there is a life-form," Ni Morgana said tentatively
in the week's officer's meeting, "its response time is far too slow for us
to discern. There have been some anomalies, both in superconductivity and in
cryochemistry, that I want to follow up. I shall begin a series of tests,
slowly warming some representative samples, and see what occurs."
The next week she reported. "At minus
two hundred degrees Celsius, some of the larger particles are showing relative
movement, but whether this is driven by anomalous internal structure, or
reacting to the warmer temperature, I cannot as yet ascertain."
"Keep in mind at all times,
Lieutenant," the captain said at her sternest, "what happened to the
Roma!"
"Ma'am, I always do!" The
legendary 'melting' of the Roma when the science officer brought aboard a
metal-hungry organism was the cautionary example drummed into every science
officer.
The following week Ni Morgana was almost
jubilant. "Captain, there is a real life-form in some of the larger chunks
from the cloud. Ovoid shapes, with an exceedingly hard crust of material, they
have some liquid, perhaps helium, inside. They're very strange, but I'm sure
they're not artifacts. I'm bringing one sample up above zero degrees Celsius
this week."
The captain held up an admonishing finger
at her science officer. "Remember the Roma," she said again.
"Ma'am, even the situation on the
Roma didn't happen in a day."
In the process of leaving the conference
room, the captain stopped and stared quizzically at Ni Morgana. "Are you
deliberately misquoting something, Lieutenant?"
"Mister
Benden!" The peremptory summons of the science officer over the comunit by
his ear jolted Ross Vaclav Benden out of his bunk and to his feet.
"Ma'am?"
"Get down to the lab on the double,
mister!"
Benden struggled into his shipsuit as he
ran down the companionway, stabbing feet into soft shipshoes. It was
zero-dark-hundred of the dogwatch, and no one was even in Five Deck's lounge
area as he raced across it and to the appropriate grav shaft down to the lab.
He skidded to a halt at the door, skinning his forearms on the frame as he
braked and fell into the facility. He almost knocked over Lieutenant Ni
Morgana. She pointed to the observation chamber.
"Funkit, what in the name of the
holies is that?" he breathed as his eyes fell on the writhing grayish pink
and puke-yellow mass that oozed and roiled on the monitor screen. The mass was,
in reality, ten kilometers from the Amherst, but he could understand why
everyone was standing well back.
"If that is what fell on Pern,"
Ni Morgana said, "I don't blame 'em for shrieking for help!"
"Let me through!" The captain,
clad in a terry-cloth caftan, had to exert some strength to push past the
mesmerized group watching the phenomenon. "Gods above! What have you
unleashed, mister?"
"We're taping the show, ma'am,"
Ni Morgana said. In reassurance, she prominently waved the hand she held over
the Destruct button that would activate laser fire. Benden could see her eyes
glittering with clinical fascination. "According to the readings I'm
getting, this complex organism exhibits some similarity to Terran mycorrhizoids
in its linear structure. But it's enormous! Damn!"
The organism suddenly collapsed in on
itself and became a viscous, inanimate puddle. The science officer tapped out
some commands on the waldo keyboard and a unit extruded toward the mass,
scooped up a sample in a self-sealing beaker, and retreated. Lights glittered
on the remote testing apparatus as the sample was analyzed.
"What happened to it?" Captain
Fargoe demanded, and Benden admired how firm her voice was. He, himself, had
the shakes.
"I should be able to tell you when the
analysis is finished on that sample of the residue, but I'd hazard the guess
that; with such rapid expansion, if it found no sustenance in the chamber, and
there was none apart from a very thin atmosphere, it died of starvation. That's
only a guess."
"But," Benden heard himself
saying, "if this is the Pernese organism ..."
"That's only a possibility at this
point," Ni Morgana said quickly. "We must first discover how it might
have managed to get from the cloud to Pern's surface."
"Good point," the captain
murmured. Her faintly amused tone angered Benden: there was nothing remotely
funny about what they had just witnessed.
"But if it did, and it's what
attacked Pern, I can't blame 'em for wanting help," said Ensign Nev, whose
complexion was still slightly green.
The captain gave him a long look that
caused him to flush from neck to a scalp that was visible under his latest
space trim.
"Captain, " Ni Morgana said as
she pressed the Destruct button and destroyed the remains of the sample,
"I request permission to join the Pern landing party to pursue my
investigation of this phenomenon."
"Granted!" Stepping over the
lintel of the lab, the captain paused with a wicked grin. "I always prefer
volunteers for landing parties."
Whoever might have envied Lieutenant Benden the assignment had different
feelings once the details of the 'organism' became scuttlebutt. A concise
report from Lieutenant Ni Morgana was published to quell the more rampant
speculations, and her lab team became welcome as experts at any mess.
Ross Vaclav Benden had nightmares about
his uncle. The admiral, unexpectedly garbed in dress whites, great purple sash
of the Hero of the Cygnus Campaign, and a full assortment of other prestigious
and rare decorations on his chest, struggled against engulfment by the
monstrosity of the lab chamber. Determined to do his best by his uncle, Ross
studied, to the point of perfect recall, the EEC evaluation of Pern. The terse
all-safe message by Admiral Benden and Governor Boll and Tubberman's Mayday
were easy to memorize, the latter tantalizingly ambiguous. Why had the colony
botanist sent the message? Why not Paul Benden or Emily Boll, or one of the
senior section heads?
Although this was not Benden's first
landing party command, he believed in checking and double-checking every aspect
of the assignment. He wanted to be as prepared as possible for any and all
hostile conditions, including omnivorous organisms and other enigmas to be
solved or avoided, they might encounter on Pern's surface; also, he judiciously
plotted an alternative holding orbit, in case they had to evacuate early,
before the escape window opened up for their rendezvous with the Amherst. The
landing party had five days, three hours, and fourteen minutes on the surface
to conduct its investigations. To his chagrin, Ni Morgana asked for Ensign Nev
as the junior officer.
"He needs some experience,
Ross," Ni Morgana said, blandly ignoring Benden's disgruntlement,
"and he's had some xeno training. He's strong, and he obeys orders even as
he's turning green. He's got to learn sometime. Captain Fargoe thinks this
could give him valuable experience."
Benden had no option but to accept the
inevitable, but he asked for Sergeant Greene to command his marines. That tough,
burly man knew more about the hazards that could embroil a landing party than
Benden ever would. Having seen the organism Ni Morgana had unleashed, Ross
wanted solid experience to offset Nev's ingenuousness, if that was the proper
word for the boy.
"Just what were you like as an
ensign, Lieutenant?" Ni Morgana asked, giving him a sly sideways glance.
"I was never that gauche," he
replied tartly. True enough, since he'd been reared in a Service family and had
absorbed proper behavior along with all the normal nutrients. Then he relented,
grinning wryly back at her as he remembered a few incidents ... "This
sounds like a fairly routine mission, find and evaluate."
"Let's hope so," Saraidh ni
Morgana replied earnestly.
Ross Benden was delighted to be teamed up
with the elegant science officer. She was his senior in years but not in Fleet,
for she had done her scientific training before applying to the Service. She
was also the only woman on board who kept her hair long, though it was generally
dressed in intricate arrangements of braids. The effect was somehow regal and
very feminine, an effect at variance with her expertise in the various forms of
contact sport that were enjoyed in the Amherst's gym complex. If she had made
any liaisons on board, they were not general knowledge; he'd overheard
speculation about her tastes, but no boasting or claims of personal experience.
He had always found her agreeable company and a competent officer, though they
hadn't shared more than a watch or two until now.
"Did you see the tape of that
thing?" Ross heard the nasal voice of Lieutenant Zane saying later as he
passed the wardroom. "There'll be no one left alive down there. Ni Morgana
has proved the Oort cloud generated that life-form, so it wasn't Nastie
manufacture. There's no rationale for taking a chance and landing on that
planet if any of those things are alive down there! And they could be, with an
entire planet to eat up."
Benden paused to listen, knowing perfectly
well that, despite the dangers involved, Zane would have given a kidney to be
in the landing party. Nev was, at least, an improvement on the sour and
supercilious Zane. And when the navigation officer added some invidious remarks
that Benden had been chosen only because of his relationship to one of the
leaders of the colony, Ross passed quickly down the corridor before his temper
got the better of his discretion. As
the Amherst's majestic passage through the system approached the point where
the shuttle could be launched, Benden called for a final briefing session.
"We'll spiral down to the planetary
surface in a cork-screw orbit which will allow us to examine the northern
hemisphere on our way to the site of record on the southern continent at
longitude thirty degrees," he said, calling up the flight path on the big
screen in the conference room. "We've landmarks from the original survey
of three volcanic cones that ought to be visible from some distance as we make
our final approach. Survey report said the soil there would be viable for hardy
Earth and Altairian hybrids, so it is reasonable to assume that the colonists
started their agrarian venture there. The Tubberman Mayday came in some nine
years after landing, so they should have been well entrenched."
"Not enough to avoid that
organism," Nev said flatly.
"Your theory would hold water,
Ensign," Saraidh ni Morgana said mildly, "if I could figure out how
the organism transported itself from the Oort cloud to Pern's surface."
"Nasties sowed it in Pern's
atmosphere," Nev responded with no hesitation.
"Nasties are more direct in their
tactics," the science officer replied with a diffident shrug.
"We taught 'em to be cautious,
Lieutenant," Nev went on. "And devious. And, "
"Nev!" Benden called the ensign
to order.
Benden kept his expression neutral, but he
wondered if Ni Morgana was regretting her choice of the irrepressible Nev and
his wild theories. If the science officer hadn't found a transport vector for
the organism, the Nasties were unlikely to have discovered it. Their forte was
metallurgy, not biology. Nev subsided and the briefing continued.
"Once we have made landfall, we may
also have answers to that question and others. It is obvious our search must
begin at the site of record. We will also have made a good sweep of the entire
planetary surface and can deviate if we find traces of human settlements
elsewhere. We board the Erica at 0230 tomorrow morning. Any questions?"
"What do we do if the place is
swarming with those things?" Nev asked, swallowing hard.
"What would you do, Nev?" Benden
asked.
"Leave!"
"Tut tut, mister," Ni Morgana
said. "How will you ever increase your understanding of xenobiological
forms unless you examine closely whatever samples come your way?"
Ensign Nev's eyes bugged out.
"Begging your pardon, Lieutenant, but you're the science officer."
"Indeed I am." And Ni Morgana
rose, the scrape of her chair covering a mutter of gratitude from the end of
the table occupied by the four marines assigned to the landing party. Launched from the Amherst, the gig proceeded
at a smart inner-system speed toward the blue pebble in the sky that was
Rukbat's third planet. It began to dominate the forward screen, serene and clear,
beautiful and innocuous. Benden had plotted the gig's course to intercept the
geosynchronous orbit of the three colony ships, to see if the colonists had
left a message to be retrieved. But when he opened communications, all he got
was the standard identification response, stating the name and designation of
the Yokohama.
"That might not mean anything, "
Saraidh remarked, seeing Benden's disappointment. "If the colony's up and
running, they won't have much use for these hulks. Though I find that sight
rather sad," she added as Rukbat suddenly illuminated the deserted
vessels.
"Why?" Nev asked, surprised.
Saraidh gave a shrug of her slender,
elegant shoulders. "Look up their battle records and you might appreciate
their present desuetude more."
"Their what?" Nev looked blank.
"Look up that word, too," she
said and, in an almost cloying tone, spelled it for him.
"Old sailors never die, they just
fade away," Benden murmured, gazing at the three hulks, feeling a
constriction in his throat and a slight wetness in his eyes as the gig drifted
away from them, leaving them to continue on their ordained path.
"Soldiers, not sailors," Saraidh
said, "but the quotation is apt." Then she frowned at a reading on
her board. "We've got two beacons registering. One at the site of record
and another much farther south. Enlarge the southern hemisphere for me, will
you, Ross? Along seventy degrees longitude and nearly twelve hundred klicks
from the stronger one." Ross and Saraidh exchanged looks. "Maybe
there are survivors! Pretty far south though, over mountain ranges of
respectable height. I read altitudes of from twenty-four hundred rising to more
than nine thousand meters above sea level. We'll land at the site of record
first."
As the gig slanted in over the northern
pole, it was obvious that this hemisphere was enduring a stormy and bitterly
cold winter. Most of the landmass was covered by snow and ice. Instruments
detected no source of power or light, and very little heat radiation in areas
where humans usually settled: the river valleys, the plains, the shoreline.
There was one hiccup of a blip over the large island, just off the coast of the
northern continent. The reading was too faint to suggest any significant
congregation of settlers. If they had followed the usual multiplication so
characteristic of colonies, the population should now be close to the
five-hundred-thousand mark, even allowing for natural disasters and those
mortality patterns normal for a primitive economy.
"We'll do another low-level pass if
we've time later. The settlers were determined to be agrarian but they might be
using fossil fuels," Saraidh said as they plunged toward the equator,
leaving the snow-clad continent behind them and slanting down across the
tropical sea. "Lots of marine life. Some big ones," she added.
"Bigger than the survey team reported."
"They took Terran dolphins with them,
" Nev said. "Mentasynth-enhanced dolphins," he elaborated.
"I don't think rescuing dolphins is
what Captain Fargoe has in mind, even if we had the facility to do so,"
Saraidh said. "Have either of you any training in other-species'
communications? I don't. So, let's table that notion for now."
"There's another consideration. How
long do dolphins live?" Ross asked. "Remember, this trouble started
when the colony was down eight to nine years. In your report, Lieutenant, you
did mention that further tests with the organism proved that water drowned it
and organic fire consumed it. Mentasynth-enhanced creatures have good memories,
sure. But how many generations of dolphins have there been? Would they even be
aware of what happened on land? Much less remember?"
"Would they want to, is more the
case," Saraidh said. "They're independent and very intelligent. I
imagine they'd cut their losses and survive on their own. I would, if I were a
dolphin."
Then Saraidh started the recorders on the
gig's delta wing, to take a record of the plunging antics of the large marine
life as the Erica swooped over the ocean on its final descent toward the site
of record.
"Records state that the Bahrain
brought fifteen female dolphins and nine males," Nev said suddenly.
"Dolphins produce, what? Once a year. There could be nearly eight hundred
of 'em in the seas right now. That's a lot of terrestrial life-forms we'd be abandoning."
"Abandoning? Hell, Cahill, they're in
their element. Look at them, they're doing their damnedest to keep pace with
us."
"Maybe they have a message for
us," Nev went on earnestly.
"We look for humans first,
Ensign," the science officer said firmly. "Then we'll check the
dolphins! Ross, I'm not getting anything from the ship-to-ground interface
that's recorded for the site. It's inoperative, too."
"Now hear this! Buckle up for
landing," Ross said, opening a channel to the marines' quarters.
"Muhlah!" was Saraidh's awed
comment as they saw the two ruined volcanic craters and the smoking cone of the
third.
Ross could say nothing, appalled by the
extent of the eruption. He had never expected anything as catastrophic as this.
Or had this devastation occurred after the organism had begun to fall? While he
had more or less resigned himself to the idea that he was unlikely to encounter
his uncle, he had hoped to chat with the admiral's descendants. He certainly
hadn't anticipated this level of devastation. They flew over the landing-field
tower, its beacon now blinking, activated by the proximity of the gig.
"See those mounds, just coming up on
portside?" Saraidh pointed. "They've got the outlines of shuttles.
How many did the colonists have?"
"Records say six, " Nev replied.
"Bahrain had one, Buenos Aires two, and the Yoko three. Plus a captain's
gig."
"Only three parked there now. Wonder
where the others went," Saraidh mused.
"Maybe they were used to get out of
this place when the volcano blew?" Nev suggested.
"But where to? There were no signs of
human habitation on the northern continent," Benden said, sternly
repressing his dismay.
Saraidh let out a thin, high whistle.
"And those other regular mounds are, were, the settlement. Neatly, if not
esthetically, laid out. Must have built well, for nothing seems to have
collapsed from the weight of ash and dirt. Lava's cooled. Ross, got a reading
of how deep that ash is over the ground?"
"We do indeed, Saraidh," Ross
replied. "A metallic grid is present a half meter below the surface. No
problem landing, it'll be nice and soft."
Which it was. While waiting for the
disturbed ash to settle, both officers and marines suited up, checking masks
and breathing tanks, and strapping on the lift belts that would convey them
safely above the ash to the settlement.
"What're those?" one of the
ratings asked as the landing party assembled to hover a meter above the
ash-coated ground outside the Erica. He pointed to a series of long
semicircular mounds, bulging up out of the ash. "Tunnels?"
"Unlikely. Not big enough and don't
seem to go anywhere," Ni Morgana said, deftly manipulating her attitude
and forward jets. She hovered to one side of the nearest mound and pushed with
her foot. It collapsed with a dusty implosion and a stench that the filters of
their masks had to work hard to neutralize. "Faugh! Dead organism. Now,
why didn't that puddle?" She took out a specimen tube and carefully
gathered some of the residue, sealing it and putting the tube away in a second
padded container.
"It fed on ash or grass or
something?" Ensign Nev asked.
"We'll check that out later. Let's
look at the buildings. Scag, stay by the gig," Benden ordered one of the
marines. He gestured for the others to follow him up to the empty settlement.
"Not empty," Ross said an hour
later, increasingly pessimistic about finding any survivors. Contact with a
cousin or two would have been something to write home about! So he clutched at
a vain hope. "Emptied. They didn't leave a thing they could use. Nasties
would have obliterated any trace of humans."
"That's true enough," Saraidh
said. "And there's no evidence of Nasties at all. Merely an evacuated
settlement. There is that second beacon to the southwest. There's certainly
nothing here to give us any explanations. Your point about everything being
emptied is well taken, Benden. They closed shop here, but that doesn't mean
they didn't open it up elsewhere."
"Using the three missing shuttles,"
Nev added brightly.
Airborne again in the Erica, heading
directly toward the beacon, they overpassed the rest of the settlement, taping
the one smoking volcano crater and the melted structures below it. No sooner
were they over the river than the landscape showed another form of devastation.
The prevailing winds had minimized the dispersal of volcanic dust, but oddly
enough, there were only occasional stands of vegetation and large circles of
parched soil.
"Like something had sprinkled the land
with whopping great acid drops," Cahill Nev said, awed at the extent of
the markings.
"Not acid. No way," Benden
replied. He keyed the relevant section of the report he knew so well. "The
EEC survey team found similar circular patches, and they also reported that
botanical succession had started."
"It has to be the Oort
organism," Nev said enthusiastically. "On the cruiser it died of
starvation. It had plenty to eat here."
"The organism had to get here first,
mister," Ni Morgana said bitingly. "And we haven't established how it
could cross some six hundred thousand miles of space to drop on Pern."
Ross, glancing at her set expression, thought she was rapidly considering
improbable transport media. "Terrain's flat enough here, Mister Benden. Try
a low-level pass, and give us a closer look at that, that diseased
ground."
Benden obliged, noting once again how
responsive the Erica was to the helm as it smoothly skimmed the often uneven
terrain. Not that he expected something to pop up out of those polka dots, but
one never knew on alien worlds, even ones thoroughly surveyed by Exploration
and Evaluation teams. They might not have found any predators, but something
dangerous had put in an appearance nine years after the settlers took hold. And
the Tubberman appeal hadn't mentioned a volcanic eruption.
Klick after klick, they passed over
circles and overlapping circles and triple circles. Ni Morgana remarked that
some succession was visible on their peripheries. She asked Benden to land so
she could take more samples, including clods of the regenerating vegetation.
Across a broad river there were swaths of totally unharmed trees and acres of
broadleafed and unscathed vegetation. Over one wide pasture they caught sight
of a cloud of dust, but whatever had stirred it up disappeared under the broad
leaves of a thick forest. They spotted no trace of human habitation. Not even a
dirt-covered mound that might be the remains of a building or a wall.
The second beacon signal became stronger
as they neared the foothills of a great barrier of mountains, snow-clad even in
what must be high summer in this hemisphere. Gradually the pips altered from
rhythmic bleeps to a sustained note as they homed in on the beacon.
"There's nothing here but a sheer cliff,"
Ross said, disgusted as he let the gig hover over the destination, the single
note grating on his nerves.
"That may well be, Ross,"
Saraidh said, "but I'm getting body-heat readings."
Nev pointed excitedly. "That plateau
below us is too level to be natural. And there are terraces below it. See? And
what about that path down into the valley? And, hey, this cliff has
windows!"
"And is definitely inhabited!"
Saraidh exclaimed, pointing to starboard, where a doorway appeared in the cliff
face. "Put her down, Ross!"
By the time the Erica had settled to the smoothed surface, a file of
people were running down the plateau toward it; their cries, piped in via the
exterior sensors, were of hysterical welcome. They ranged in age from early
twenties to late forties, except for one white-haired man, his mane trimmed to
shoulder length, whose lined face and slow movements suggested a person well
into his eighth or ninth decade. His emergence halted the demonstrations, and
the others stood aside to allow him a clear passage to the gig's portal, where
he halted.
"The patriarch," Saraidh
murmured, straightening her tunic and settling her beaked cap straight on top
of her braids.
"Patriarch?" Nev asked.
"Look it up later, if the term is not
self-explanatory, Benden shot at him over his shoulder, operating the airlock
release. He glanced warningly at the marines, who replaced their drawn hand
weapons.
As soon as the airlock swung open and the
ramp extruded, the small crowd was silent. All eyes turned to the old man, who
pulled himself even more erect, a patronizing smile on his weathered face.
"You finally got here!"
"A message was received at Federated
headquarters," Ross Benden began, "signed by a Theodore Tubberman.
Are you he?"
The man gave a snort of disgust. "I'm
Stev Kimmer. "He flicked one hand to his brow in a jaunty parody of a
proper Fleet salute. "Tubberman's long dead. I designed that capsule, by
the way."
"You did well," Benden replied.
Inexplicably, he suddenly did not care to identify himself. So he introduced
Saraidh ni Morgana and Ensign Nev. "But why did you send that capsule to
Federation headquarters, Kimmer?"
"That wasn't my idea. Ted Tubberman
insisted." Kimmer shrugged. "He paid me for my work, not my advice.
As it is, you've taken nearly too damned long to get here." He scowled
with irritation.
"The Amherst is the first vessel to
enter the Sagittarian Sector since the message was received," Saraidh ni
Morgana said, unruffled by his criticism. She had noted that Ross had not given
his name and assumed he had his reasons. She hoped that Ensign Nev had also
noted the omission. "We've just come from the site on record."
"No one came back to Landing,
then?" Kimmer demanded. Bender thought his habit of interrupting Fleet
officers could become irritating. "With Thread gone, that'd be the place
they'd return to. The ground-to-ship interface's there."
"The interface is inoperative,"
Benden said, careful not to betray his annoyance at the old man's arrogance.
"Then the others are dead,"
Kimmer stated flatly. "Thread got 'em all!"
"Thread?"
"Yes, Thread." Kimmer's palpable
anger was tinged with deep primal emotions, not the least of which was a
healthy fear. "That's what they named the organism that attacked the
planet. Because it fell from the skies like a rain of deadly thread, consuming
all it touched, animal, man, and vegetable. We burned it out of the skies, on
the ground, day after fucking day. And still it came. We're all that's left. Eleven
of us, and we only survived because we have a mountain above us and we hoarded
our supplies, waiting for help to come."
"Are you positive that you're the
sole survivors?" Ni Morgana asked. "Surely the colony grew in the
eight or nine years you had before this menace attacked you."
"Before Thread fell, the population
was close to twenty thousand, but we're all that's left," Kimmer said.
"And you cut it mighty fine getting here. I couldn't risk another
generation with such a small gene pool." Then one of the women, who bore a
strong resemblance to Kimmer, tugged at his arm. He made a grimace that could
be taken for a smile. "My daughter reminds me that this is a poor welcome
for our long-awaited rescuers. Come this way. I've something laid by in the
hope of this day."
Lieutenant Benden gestured for Sergeant
Greene and one other marine to accompany the landing party, then followed Ni
Morgana down the ramp, Nev treading on his heels in his eagerness.
The silence that had held Kimmer's small group
while he had addressed the spacemen relaxed into gestures and smiles of
welcome. But Benden took note of the tension evident in the oldest three men.
They stood just that much apart from the women and youngsters to suggest they
had distanced themselves deliberately. Their faces had a distinctly Asian cast;
jet-black hair was trimmed neatly to their earlobes; they were lean and looked
physically fit. The oldest woman, who bore a strong resemblance to the three
men, walked just a step behind Kimmer in a manner that suggested subservience,
an attitude Benden found distasteful as he and his party followed them to the
entrance.
The three younger women had mixed-ethnic
features, one had brown hair. All were slender and graceful as they tried to
contain their excitement. They whispered to each other, casting glances back at
Greene and the other marine. At a brusque order from Kimmer, they ran on ahead,
into the cliff. The three youngest, two boys and a girl, showed the mixing of
ethnic groups the most. Benden wondered just how close the blood bonding was.
Kimmer would not have been fool enough to sire children on his own daughters
... would he?
Exclamations of surprise were forced from
each of the officers as they entered a spacious room with a high, vaulted
ceiling, a room nearly as big as the gig's on-ship hangar. Nev gawked like any
off-world stupe, while Ni Morgana's expression was of delighted appreciation.
Clearly the main living space of the cliff dwelling, the room had been broken
up into distinct areas for work, study, dining, and handcrafts. The furnishings
were made of a variety of materials, including extruded plastic in bright hard
colors. The walls were well hung with curious animal furs and hand-loomed rugs
of unusual design. Above those and all along the upper wall space, a vivid
panorama had been drawn: the first scene was of stylized figures standing or
sitting before what were clearly monitors and keyboards; other panels showed
figures plowing and planting fields, or tending animals of all sorts; the
illustrations led around to the innermost wall, which was decorated by scenes
Benden knew all too well, the cities of Earth and Altair, and three spaceships
with unfamiliar constellations behind them. At the apex of the ceiling vault
was the Rukbat system, and one planet that was shown to have a highly
elliptical, and possibly an erratic, orbit from slightly beyond the Oort cloud
to an aphelion below Pern's.
Ni Morgana nudged Benden in the ribs and
spoke in a barely audible whisper. "Unlikely as it seems, I've just
figured out one way the Oort organisms might have reached Pern. But I'll be
damned sure of my theory before I mention it."
"The murals," Kimmer was saying
in a loud and proprietary voice, "were to remind us of our origins."
"Did you have stonecutters?" Nev
asked abruptly, running his hand over the glassy, smooth walls.
One of the older black-haired men stepped
forward. "My parents, Kenjo and Ito Fusaiyuki, designed and carved all the
principal rooms. I am Shensu. These are my brothers, Jiro and Kimo; our sister,
Chio." He gestured to the woman who was reverently withdrawing a bottle
from a shelf in a long dresser.
With a searing glance at Shensu, Kimmer
hastily took the initiative again. "These are my daughters, Faith and
Hope, Charity is setting out the glasses." Then, with a flick of his
fingers, he indicated Shensu. "You may introduce my grandchildren."
"Pompous old goat," Ni Morgana
muttered to Benden, but she smiled as the grandchildren were introduced as Meishun,
Alun, and Pat, the two boys being in their mid teens.
"This stake could have supported many
more families if only those who had said they'd join us had kept their
promises," Kimmer went on bitterly. Then, with an imperious gesture, he
waved the guests to the table and offered each a glass of rich, fruity red
wine.
"Welcome, men and woman of the
Amherst!" Kimmer toasted, and he touched glasses with each of them.
Bendan noticed, as Ni Morgana did, that
the others were served a paler red by Meishun. Watered, Benden thought. They
could at least be equal to us, today of all days! Shensu hid his resentment
better than his two brothers did. The women seemed not to notice as they passed
dishes of cheese bits and tasty small crackers to everyone. Then Kimmer
gestured for the guests to be seated. Benden gave a discreet hand signal to the
two marines, who took the end seats at the long table and remained watchful,
taking only small sips of the celebratory wine.
"Where to start?" Kimmer began,
setting his wineglass down deliberately.
"The beginning," Ross Benden
said wryly, hoping that he might learn what had happened to his uncle before
disclosing his identity. Something about Kimmer, not his anger or his
autocratic manner, but something less obvious, made Benden instinctively
distrust him. But perhaps a man who had managed to survive so long in a hostile
environment had the right to a few peculiarities.
"Of the end?" And Kimmer's
spiteful expression served to increase Benden's dislike.
"If that is when you and the botanist
Tubberman sent that homing device," Benden replied encouragingly.
"It was and our position was then
hopeless, though few were realists enough to admit it, especially Benden and
Boll."
"Could you have gotten back up to the
colony ships then?" Ni Morgana asked, nudging Ross Benden when she felt
him stir angrily.
"No way." Kimmer snorted with
disgust. "They used what fuel the gig had left to send Fusaiyuki up to
reconnoiter. They thought they might be able to divert whatever it was that
brought the Thread. That was before they realized that the wanderer planet had
dragged in a tail that would shower this wretched planet with Thread for fifty
frigging years. And if that wasn't bad enough, they let Avril steal the gig,
and that was the end of any chance we had of sending someone competent for
help." The recital of that forty-year-old memory agitated Kimmer, and his
face became suffused with red.
"It was definitely established that
the organism had been carried from the Oort cloud?" Ni Morgana asked, her
usually calm voice edged with excitement.
Kimmer gave her a quelling glance.
"In the end that was all they discovered despite their waste of fuel and
manpower."
"There were only three shuttles left
at the landing site. D'you suppose some people managed to escape in them?"
Ni Morgana asked in a deliberately soothing tone. Benden could see the glitter
of her eyes as she sipped calmly at her wine.
Kimmer glared at her with contempt.
"Where could they escape to? There was no fuel left! And power packs for
sleds and skimmers were in short supply."
"Barring the lack of fuel, were the
shuttles still operational?"
"I said, there was no fuel. No
fuel!" He banged his fist on the table.
Benden, looking away from the man's deep
bitterness, noted the faint look of amusement on Shensu's face.
"There was no fuel," Kimmer
repeated with less vehemence. "The shuttles were so much scrap without
fuel. So I haven't any idea why there'd be only three shuttles at Landing. I
left the settlement shortly after the bitch blew the gig up." He glared
impartially at the Amherst officers. "I had every right to leave then, to
establish a stake and do what I could to preserve my own skin. Anyone with any
sense, charterer or contractor, should have done the same. Maybe they did.
Holed up to wait out the fifty years. Or maybe they sailed away into the rising
sun. They had ships, you know. Yes, that's it. Old Jim Tillek sailed them out
of Monaco Bay into the rising sun." He gave a bark of harsh laughter.
"They went west?" Benden asked.
Kimmer favored him with a contemptuous
glance and made a wild gesture with one arm. "How the hell would I know? I
wasn't anywhere near the place."
"And you settled here," Ni
Morgana asked blandly, "in the dwelling built by Kenjo and Ito
Fusaiyuki."
Her phrasing was, Benden thought, a little
unfortunate, for the question angered Kimmer even more. The veins in his
temples stood out, and his face contorted.
"Yes, I settled here when Ito begged
me to stay. Kenjo was dead. Avril killed him to get the gig. Ito'd had a
difficult birth with Chio, and his kids were too young to be useful then. So
Ito asked me to take over." Someone's breath hissed on intake, and Kimmer
glared at the three sons, unable to spot the culprit. "You'd all have died
without me!" he said in a flat but somehow cautionary tone.
"Most assuredly," Shensu said,
his surface courtesy not quite masking a deep resentment.
"You have survived, haven't you? And
my beacon brought us help, didn't it?" Kimmer banged on the table with
both fists and sprang to his feet. "Admit it! My homer and my beacon have
brought us rescue."
"They did indeed lead us to you, Mr.
Kimmer," Benden said in a tone he barefacedly borrowed from Captain Fargoe
when she was dressing down an insubordinate rating. "However, my orders
are to search and discover any and all survivors on this planet. You may not be
the only ones."
"Oh yes, we are. By all the gods,
we're the only ones," Kimmer said, an edge of panic in his voice.
"And you can't leave us here!"
"What the lieutenant means, Mr.
Kimmer," Ni Morgana put in soothingly, "is that our orders are to
search for any other survivors."
"No one else survives," Kimmer
said flatly. "I can assure you that." He splashed wine into his glass
and drank half of it, wiping his mouth with a trembling hand.
Because Ross Benden was not looking at the
old man just then but at the three brothers seated across the table, he caught
the glitter in the eyes of Shensu and Jiro. He waited for them to speak up, but
they remained silent and inscrutable. Clearly they had knowledge that they
would not communicate to their rescuers in front of Stev Kimmer. Well, Benden
would see them privately later. Meanwhile, Kimmer was coming across as a
somewhat unreliable opportunist. He might assert that he had the right to set
off and establish a stake when the colony was obviously in terrible straits,
but to Benden, it sounded more as if Kimmer had fled cravenly. Was it just luck
that he had known where to find Ito, and this Kenjo's stake?
"My sled had a powerful
comunit," Kimmer went on, revived by the wine, "and once I'd erected
the beacon on the plateau here, I listened in to what was broadcast. Not that
there was anything important beyond where the next Fall was. How many power
packs had been recharged. If they had enough sleds able to cover the next Fall.
A 1ot of the stakeholders had come back to Landing by then, centralizing
resources. Then, after the volcanoes blew, I heard their messages as they
scurried away from Landing. There was a lot of static interference, and
transmissions got so fragmented that I couldn't hear most of what was said.
They were frantic, I can tell you, by the time they abandoned Landing. Then the
signals got too weak for me to pick up. I never did find out where they planned
to go. It might have been west. It might have been east.
"Oh," he said, waving one hand
helplessly, "I tried when the last signal died. I only had one full power
pack left by then. I couldn't waste that in futile searches, now could I? I'd
Ito and four small kids. Then when Ito got so ill, I went back to Landing to
see if they'd left any medicines behind. But Landing was covered in ash and
lava, great rivers of it, hot and glowing. Damned near singed the plastic off
the hull.
"I checked all the stations on the
lower Jordan. Paradise River, Malay, even Boca, where Benden lived. No one.
Fierce waste of materiel, though, piled as storm-wrack along the coast at one
point. Looked to me as if they'd lost the cargo ships in a storm. We got bad
ones blowing in from the sea, or maybe the aftermath of a tsunami. We had one
of those after some sea volcano blew up to the east somewhere. Missed us,
though, on Bitkim Island.
"Last message I ever heard, and only
parts of it at that, was Benden telling everyone to conserve power, stay
inside, and just let that frigging Thread fall. I guess it got him, too."
Ni Morgana's thigh deliberately pressed
against Benden's, and he took it as sympathy. Though the old man's rambling had
been confused and sometimes he contradicted himself, his statement had the ring
of truth.
For a few moments, Kimmer sat silently
contemplating his wineglass. At last he roused, raising a finger to bring Chio
to his side. She refilled his glass. Then, with an apologetic smile, she
offered wine to the other guests, whose glasses were barely touched.
"We had eight good years on Pern
before disaster struck," Kimmer said, casting farther back in his memory.
"I heard that Benden and Boll swore blind that they could lick Thread.
Except for Ted Tubberman and a few others, they had half the colony behind
them, too entranced by the great reputations of the admiral and the
governor", the titles were pronounced disparagingly, "to believe they
could fail. Tubberman wanted to send for help then. The colony voted the motion
down."
"Where we were on Bitkim Island, we
didn't get much Thread, but I heard what it did, wiped out whole stakes down to
the metal they'd been wearing. Ate anything, Thread did; gorged until it blew
up too fast to live, but it could burrow down and the next generation would
begin. Fire stopped it, and metal. It drowned in water. The fish, even the
dolphins, thrived on it, or so the dolphineers said. Humph. Damned stuff only
let up a couple a years back. Otherwise, we've had this frigging menace raining
down on us every ten days or so for fifty fucking years."
"You did well to survive for fifty
long years, Mr. Kimmer," Saraidh said in a flattering purr as she leaned
forward to elicit more confidences. "But how? It must have taken
tremendous effort."
"Kenjo'd started 'ponics. Had some
sense, that man, even with this fanatic thing he had about flying and being in
the air. Space crazy he was. But I was better at contrapting the things you
need to live. I taught this whole bunch everything I knew, not that they're
grateful to me." His spiteful gaze rested on the three Fusaiyukis.
"We saved horses, sheep, cattle, chickens before Thread could ooze all
over 'em. I'd salvaged one of the old grass-makers they used the first year,
before they'd planted Earth grass and that Altair hybrid got started." He
paused, narrowing his eyes. "Tubberman had another type of grass growing
before they shunned him. I'd none of that seed, but enough to keep us going
until we could plant out again. As long as I had power packs, I foraged and
saved every scrap I could find. So we survived, and survived real good."
"Then others could have, too?"
Saraidh asked mildly.
"No!" Kimmer thundered, banging
the table to emphasize that denial. "No one survived but us. You don't
believe me? Tell her, Shensu."
As if making up his mind to obey, Shensu
regarded first Kimmer and then the three officers. Then he shrugged.
"After Thread had stopped for three
months, Kimmer sent us out to see if anyone lived. We went from the Jordan
River west to the Great Desert. We did see long-overgrown ruins where stakes
had been started. We saw many domestic animals. I was surprised to see how many
animals had managed to survive, for we saw much devastation of fertile land. We
traveled for eight months. We saw no one human, nor any evidence of human
endeavor. We returned to our Hold." He shot a single challenging look at Kimmer
before his expression settled into its mask.
Benden had a stray thought. Kimmer had
sent them out, not to search for survivors, but hoping they wouldn't return.
"We're miners, too," Shensu
continued unexpectedly. Kimmer sat up, too enraged at the bland disclosure to
form words. Shensu smiled at that reaction. "We have mined, ores and
gemstones, as soon as we were strong enough to wield pick and shovel. All of
us, my half sisters, and our children, too. Kimmer taught us how to cut gems.
He insisted that we be rich enough to pay our way back to civilized
worlds."
"You fools! You utter fools! You
shouldn't have told them. They'll kill us and take it all. All of it."
"They are Fleet officers,
Kimmer," Shensu said, bowing politely to Benden, Ni Morgana, and the
astonished Nev. "Like Admiral Benden." His eyes slid and held Ross
Benden's briefly. "They would not be so basely motivated as to steal our
fortunes and abandon us. Their orders are to rescue any survivors."
"You will rescue us, won't you?"
Kimmer cried, suddenly a terrified old man. "You must take us with you.
You must!" And now he embarrassed Benden by beginning to blubber.
"You must, you must," he kept on insisting, pulling himself toward
Benden to grab his tunic.
"Stev, you will make yourself ill
again," Chio said, coming to disentangle the grasping hands from Benden's
clothing. She gazed at Benden, mutely expressing her abject apologies for an
old man's weakness and pleading for reassurance. The other women fastened
apprehensive eyes on the Fleet party.
"Our orders are to establish contact
with the survivors, " Benden began, taking refuge in that protocol.
"Lieutenant," Nev intervened,
his face contorted with anxiety, "we'd have a weight problem, taking
eleven more aboard the Erica."
Kimmer moaned.
"We'll discuss this later,
Ensign," Benden said sharply. Trust Nev to be loosejawed. "It is time
to change the watch." He gave Nev a quelling look and gestured for Greene
to accompany him. Greene looked disgusted as he fell in behind the chastened
ensign, who flushed as he realized how badly he had erred.
As Kimmer kept on sobbing, "You must
take me, you must take me," Benden turned to Shensu and his brothers.
"We do have orders to follow, but I
assure you that if we find no other survivors to make your continued residence
viable, you will either come with us on the Erica, or another means will be
found to rescue you."
"I appreciate your constraints and
your devotion to duty," Shensu said, his composure in marked contrast to
Kimmer's collapse. He made a slight bow from the hips. "However," he
went on, with the slightest of smiles, "my brothers and I have already
searched all the old stakes without success. Will you not accept our
investigations as conclusive?" His dignified entreaty was far harder to
ignore than Kimmer's blubbering.
Benden tried to assume a noncommittal
pose. "I will certainly take that into consideration, Shensu." He was
also trying to calculate just how to accommodate eleven extra bodies on the
Erica. He had three-quarters of a tank. If they stripped unessential equipment,
would that still give him enough fuel to lift and a reserve if last-minute
adjustments were needed in the slingshot maneuver? Damn Nev. His orders were
for search only, not rescue. One thing was certain. He trusted Shensu far more
than he did Kimmer.
"This mission has another goal, Mr.
Fusaiyuki," Ni Morgana said, "if, under these trying circumstances,
you could find your way clear to assist us?"
"Certainly. If I can." Shensu
executed a second dignified bow to her.
"Would you have any documentation
that Thread comes from the stray planet as Mr. Kimmer intimated?" she
asked, pointing to the ceiling and the system diagram. "Or was that only a
theory?"
"A theory which my father proved to
his satisfaction, at least, for he flew up into the stratosphere and observed
the debris which the stray planet had dislodged from the Oort cloud and drawn
into this part of the system. He had noticed the cloud on their way through the
system. I remember him telling me that he would have paid far closer attention
had he any idea of the threat it would pose." Shensu's well-formed lips
curled in a wry smile. "The EEC report evidently gave the erratic planet
only a mention. I have my father's notes."
"I'd like to see them," Saraidh
said, her voice edged with excitement. "Bizarre as it is," she said
to Benden, "it is plausible, and unique. Of course, this erratic planet
could be a large asteroid, even a comet. Its orbit is certainly cometary."
"No," Benden replied, shaking
his head. "The EEC report definitely identifies it as a planet, though
probably a wanderer drawn into Rukbat's family only recently. It orbits across
the ecliptic."
"Our father was too experienced an
airman to make a mistake." Jiro spoke for the first time, his voice as
impassioned as Shensu's was cold. "He was a trained pilot and observed
critically and objectively on those missions. We have notes of thanks from
Admiral Benden, Governor Boll, and Captain Keroon, all expressing gratitude for
his investigation and his selfless dedication to duty." Jiro shot a
contemptuous look at Kimmer, who was still sobbing, his face pillowed in his
arms, while Chio tried to comfort and reassure him. "Our father died to
discover such truths."
Saraidh murmured something appropriate.
"If you would cooperate, further information about this phenomenon would
be invaluable."
"Why?" Shensu asked bluntly.
"There can't be other worlds that are infested with this menace, can there?"
"Not that we know of, Mr. Fusaiyuki,
but all information is valuable to someone. My orders were to find out more
about this organism."
Shensu shrugged. "You're too late by
several years to do the most valuable observations," he said wryly.
"We saw some ..." Saraidh
fumbled for an exact description of the "tunnels" they had seen at
Landing. "Remnants, dead shells of these Thread. Would there be any near
you that I could examine?"
Shensu shrugged again. "Some on the
plains below us.
"How far in terms of time?" she
asked.
"A day's journey."
"Will you guide me?"
"You?" Shensu was surprised.
"Lieutenant Ni Morgana is the science
officer of the Amherst," Benden put in firmly. "You will want to
assist her in this investigation, Mr. Fusaiyuki."
Shensu made a small gesture of obedience
with his hands.
"Jiro, Kimo." Chio spoke up.
Kimmer seemed to have subsided into sleep. "Help me carry him to his
room."
The two men rose, their faces blank, and
picked him up, much as they would a sack, and carried him toward a curtained
arch through which they disappeared, Chio following anxiously.
"I'll check on Nev," Benden
said, rising, "while you arrange tomorrow's expedition with Shensu,
Lieutenant."
"A good idea, Lieutenant."
Benden motioned for the remaining marine
to stay behind as he made his way out of the superb room, his eyes on the
gorgeous murals and their story of mankind's triumph over tremendous odds.
"I could wish, Ensign Nev, that you
would learn to think before you speak," Benden said sternly to the
chagrined junior when he returned to the Erica.
"I'm real sorry, Lieutenant."
Nev's face was twisted with anxiety. "But we can't just leave them, can
we? Not if we can actually rescue them?"
"You've made such calculations?"
"Aye, sir, I did, as soon as I got
back on board." Eagerly Nev brought his figures up on the monitor "Of
course, I could only estimate their weight, but they can't weight that much,
and the inward journey only took a quarter of our fuel."
"We've a planet to search,
mister," Benden said sharply as he bent to study the figures. This was
going to be a command decision on his part, to abandon the search on the basis
of the opinion of a few local witnesses, or to carry out his original orders
scrupulously.
"We weren't expected to find
survivors, were we?" Nev asked tentatively.
Benden frowned at him. "What exactly
do you mean by that, mister?"
"Well, Lieutenant, if Captain Fargoe
had expected there'd be survivors, wouldn't she have ordered a troop shuttle?
They'd carry a couple of hundred people."
Benden regarded Nev with exasperation.
"You know our orders as well as I do, to discover the survivors and their
present circumstances. Nothing was intimated that we wouldn't find survivors.
Or that we wouldn't find them able to continue their colonial effort."
"But this lot couldn't, could they?
There aren't enough of them. I don't trust the old man, but that Shensu's
okay."
"When I need your opinion, mister,
I'll ask for it," Benden said curtly. Nev subsided into glum silence while
Benden continued to peer at the numbers on the screen, half wishing they would
cabalistically rearrange themselves into a solution for his dilemma.
"Establish how much we'd need to
jettison, mister, without seriously affecting safety during slingshot.
Ascertain just where we can put eleven passengers, and take into your weight
consideration the extra padding and harness we'd need to secure them during
lift-off."
"Aye, aye, sir." Nev's
enthusiasm and the admiring look he gave Benden was almost harder to endure
than his chastened funk.
Benden strode to the airlock and out of
the ship, taking the crisp air into his lungs as if that would aid his
thinking. In a sense Nev was right. The captain hadn't expected that they would
find survivors in need of rescue. She had assumed that either the settlers had
overcome the disaster or all had succumbed to it. However, these eleven could
not, in the name of humanity, be left behind on the planet.
The Erica's remaining fuel would barely
accomplish that rescue. It certainly wouldn't allow the Pernese to bring
anything back with them to start again elsewhere, like metal ores. Possibly
some of those gemstones Shensu had mentioned could be permitted. With no more
than the usual shipwreck allowance, these people would be seriously handicapped
in the high-tech societies on most of the Federation planets and financially
unable to establish themselves in an agrarian economy. They had to have something.
If Kimmer could be believed, and possibly,
with the estranged brothers corroborating his statement, it was true that these
eleven constituted all that remained of the original colonial complement, then
further search would be fruitless, as well as wasting fuel that could, really,
be put to better use. Did the brothers have any reason to lie? Not, Benden
thought, when they hated Kimmer so much. Ah, but they'd want to leave this
place, wouldn't they, even if it meant perjuring themselves!
Unusual noises attracted his attention,
and he walked to the edge of the plateau to check. Some twenty meters below him
he saw four people, Jiro and the three youngest mounted on Earth-type horses,
herding a variety of four-legged domestic beasts through a huge aperture in the
cliff. He heard an odd call and saw a brown, winged shape hurtling after them.
As he watched, a heavy metal door swung on well-oiled hinges to close off the
opening. The evening breeze wafted some curious smells up to him. He sneezed as
he made his way across the plateau to the door to this unusual residence.
They'd have to turn those animals loose. Bloody sure, there was no room on
board the Erica for that mob.
When Benden reentered the big room, he
spotted Ni Morgana and Shensu poring over maps on a smaller table to the left
of the main entrance. There were cases of tapes and other paraphernalia along
that section of the smooth-carved wall.
"Lieutenant, we've got both the
original survey maps here and those that the colonists filled in with detailed
explorations," Saraidh called to him. "A crying shame this endeavor
was so brutally short-lived. They'd a lovely situation here. See, " Her
scripto touched first one, then another of the shaded areas on the map of the
southern continent. "Fertile farms producing everything they needed before
disaster struck, a viable fishing industry, mines with on-site smelting and
manufactory. And then, " She gave an eloquent shrug.
"Admiral Benden rose to the challenge
magnificently," Shensu said, the glow in his eyes altering his whole
appearance, making him a far more likable person. "He called for
centralization of all materials and skills. My father commanded the aerial
defense. He had flame throwers mounted on sleds, two forward and one aft, and
developed flight patterns that would cover the largest area and destroy
quantities of airborne Thread. Ground crews were organized with portable
flamers to incinerate what did get through to the ground, before it could
burrow and reproduce itself. It was a most valiant effort!"
There was an excitement and a ring in
Shensu's voice that made Benden's pulse quicken; he could see that Saraidh was
also affected. Shensu's whole attitude was suffused with reverence and awe.
"We were just young boys, but our
father came as often as he could and told us what was happening. He was always
in touch with our mother. He even spoke to her just before, before that final
mission." All the animation left Shensu, and his expression assumed its
habitual taciturnity. "He was brutally murdered just when he might have
made the discovery which would have ended Threadfall and preserved the whole
colony."
"By this Avril person?" Saraidh
asked gently.
Shensu nodded once, his features set.
"Then he came!"
"And now we have come," Saraidh
said, pausing a moment before continuing on a brisker note. "And we must
somehow gather as much evidence after the fact as possible. There have been
many theories about Oort clouds and what they contain. This is the first
opportunity to examine such a space-evolved creature, and the disaster it
causes on an uninhabited planet. You said the organism burrowed into the ground
and reproduced itself? I'd like to see the later stage of the organism's life
cycle. Can you show me where?" she asked. She looked exceedingly
attractive in her eagerness, Benden thought.
Shensu looked disgusted. "You
wouldn't want to see any stage of its life cycle. My mother said that there was
only the hunger of it. Which no one should encounter."
"Any sort of residue would aid the
research, Shensu," she said, reaching out to touch his arm. "We need
your help."
"We needed yours a long time
ago," he said in a voice so bitter that Saraidh withdrew her hand,
flushing.
"This expedition was mounted as soon
as your message came up on the records, Shensu. The delay is not ours,"
Benden replied crisply. "But we are here now, and we'd like your
cooperation."
Shensu gave a cynical snort. "Does my
cooperation guarantee escaping from this place?"
Benden looked him squarely in the eye.
"I could not, in conscience, leave you here," he said, having in that
moment made his decision. "Especially in view of the fact that I also
cannot assure you that you would be relieved by another vessel in the near
future. I shall, however, need to have the exact body weights of everyone, and
frankly we'll have to strip the Erica to accommodate you."
Benden was aware of Ni Morgana's discreet
approval. Shensu kept eye contact, his own reaction to Benden's decision
unreadable.
"Your ship is low on fuel?"
"If we are to successfully lift
additional passengers, yes."
"If you did not have to strip the
Erica to compensate for our weight?" Shensu seemed amused as he watched
Benden's reaction. "If you had, say, a full tank, could you allow us to
bring enough valuables to assist us to resettle somewhere? Rescue to a pauper's
existence would be no rescue at all."
Benden nodded in acknowledgment of that
fact even as he spoke. "Kimmer said there was no more fuel. He was emphatic
about it."
Shensu leaned his body across the table
and spoke in a scarcely audible whisper, his black eyes glittering with what
Benden read as quiet satisfaction. "Kimmer doesn't know everything,
Lieutenant," Shensu said with a chuckle, "he thinks he does."
"What do you know that Kimmer
doesn't?" Bend asked, lowering his own voice.
"Spaceship fuel has not changed in
the past six decades, has it?" Shensu asked in his whisper.
"Not for ships of the Amherst's and
the Yoko's class, Saraidh replied, quietly eager.
"Since you're so interested,"
Shensu said in a louder, conversational tone as he rose from the table,
"I'd be happy to show you the rest of the Hold. We have a place for
everything. I think my esteemed father had visions of founding a dynasty. My
mother said that had not Thread come, there were others of our ethnic type who
would have joined them here in Honshu." Shensu led them toward a hanging,
which he pushed aside, gesturing them to proceed through the archway. "They
accomplished much before Thread fell."
He let the hanging fall and joined Saraidh
and Benden on the small square landing where stone-cut steps spiraled in both
directions. Shensu indicated that they were to ascend.
Saraidh started up. "Wow! This is some
staircase," she said as she made the first turn.
"I must warn you that the living room
has peculiarities, one of which is an echo effect," Shensu said.
"Conversations can be overheard in the passages outside. I don't believe
he has yet recovered from his, disability, but Chio, or one of his daughters,
is always eavesdropping for him. So, I take no chances. No, continue up. I know
the steps become uneven. Balance yourself against the wall."
The steps were uneven, unfinished, and
several had no more than toe space.
"This was deliberate?" Saraidh
asked, beginning to show the effort of the climbing. "Oh, for a grav
shaft!"
Benden was in agreement as he felt the
muscles in his calves and thighs tightening. And he had thought that he'd spent
adequate time in PT to keep himself fit for any exertion.
"Now where?" Saraidh asked as
she came to a very narrow landing. The thin slit of a tiny aperture did nothing
to illuminate the blank walls all around them.
Shensu apologized as he squeezed past the
two officers, the half smile still on his face; to their chagrin, he was
showing no signs of effort. He put his hand, palm down, on a rough, apparently
natural declivity in the wall, and suddenly a whole section of the wall pivoted
inward. Light came on to illuminate a low, deep cave. Benden whistled in
surprise. The space was full of sacks, each tagged with some sort of coded
label. Sacks of fuel, row upon row of them.
"There's more here than we
need," Saraidh said, having made some rough calculations. "More than
enough. But, " She turned to Shensu, her expression stern. "I could
understand your keeping this from Kimmer, but surely this was fuel those
shuttles could have used? Or did they?" she added, noticing that some of
the closer ranks were thinner where sacks had obviously been removed.
Shensu held up his hand. "My father
was an honorable man. And when the need arose, he took what was needed from
this cavern and gave it, willingly, to Admiral Benden doing all within his
power to help overcome the menace that dropped from the skies. If he had not
been murdered, " Shensu broke off, his jaw muscles tensing, his expression
bleak. "I do not know where the three shuttles went, but they could only
have lifted from Landing on the fuel my father gave Admiral Benden. Now I give
the rest of the fuel to a man also named Benden." Shensu looked pointedly,
at the lieutenant.
"Paul Benden was my uncle, " he
admitted, finding himself chagrined at this unexpected inheritance. "The
Erica is also economical with fuel. With a full tank, we can lift you and even
make some allowance for personal effects. But why is the fuel here?"
"My father did not steal it,"
Shensu said, indignant.
"And I didn't imply that he had,
Shensu," Benden replied soothingly.
"My father accumulated this
fuel during the transfer from the colony ships to the surface of the planet. He
was the most accomplished shuttle pilot of them all. And he was the most
economical. He took only what his careful flying saved on each flight, and no
one took harm from his economy. He told me how much was wasted by the other
pilots, carelessly wasted. He was a charterer and had the right to take what
was available. He merely insured that fuel was available."
"But, " Benden began, wishing to
reassure Shensu.
"He saved it to fly. He had to
fly." Shensu's eyes became slightly unfocused as his impassioned
explanation continued. "It was his life. With space denied him, he
designed a little atmosphere plane. I can show it to you. He flew it here, in
Honshu, where no one but us could see him. But he took each of us up in that
plane." Shensu's face softened with those memories. "That was the
prize we all worked for. And I could understand his fascination with
flight." He took a deep breath and regarded the two Fleet officers in his
usual inscrutable fashion.
"I'm not sure I could live happily
stuck landside forever," Benden said earnestly. "And we're grateful
to be taken into your confidence, Shensu."
"My father would be pleased that his
saving ways permit a Benden to save his kinsmen," Shensu said with a sly
glance at the lieutenant. "But we will wait until late tonight, when there
are few to notice our activity. Those marines of yours look strong. But do not
bring that ensign. He talks too much. I do not want Kimmer to know of our
transaction. It is enough that he will be rescued from Pern."
"Have you checked these sacks
recently, Shensu?" Saraidh asked. When he shook his head, she crouched to
enter the low cave and inspect the nearest. "Your father did well,
Shensu," she said over her shoulder, peering at the sack she had tilted
upside down. "I was afraid there might be some contamination from the
plastic after fifty-odd years, but the fuel all seems to be clear, no sediment,
well saved."
"What gemstones would be worth
bringing with us?" Shensu asked casually.
"Industrial technology requires
quantities of sapphire, pure quartz, diamonds," Saraidh told him as she
left the cave, arching her back to relieve the strain of crouching. "But
the major use of natural gemstones is once again decorative, for pets,
high-status women, courtly men."
"Black diamonds?" Shensu asked,
his lips parting in anticipation.
"Black diamonds!" Saraidh was
astonished.
"Come, I will show you," Shensu
said with a pleased smile. "First we will close the cave and then descend
to our workshops. Then I will show you the rest of the Hold as I said I
would." He grinned back at them.
Benden was not sure whether going down was
worse than climbing. Not only did he feel dizzy from the short arc of the
stairs, but he had the sensation that at any moment he would fall forward down
this interminable spiral. He considered himself competent in free-fall or in
space walking, but this was a subtly different activity. He was only marginally
relieved that Shensu was in front of him, but if Saraidh fell into him, was
Shensu sturdy enough to keep all three from pitching down?
They passed several landings, which Shensu
ignored, and seemed to descend a very long way before they emerged into another
large room that must be under the main living chamber. It was not as
high-ceilinged or as well finished, but it was clearly furnished for a variety
of activities. Ross identified a large kiln, a forge hearth, and three looms.
Worktables were placed near racks of carefully stored tools. Hand tools, not a
power tool among them.
Shensu led them to a plastic cabinet a
meter high and as wide, with many small drawers. He pulled out two, evidently
at random, and scattered their contents on the nearby table. The facets of cut
stones sparkled in the over-head light. Saraidh exclaimed in surprise, scooping
up a handful of carelessly thrown stones of all sizes. Benden picked a large
one out of her hand, holding it up to the light. He'd never seen anything like
it, dark but glittering with light.
"Black diamond. There's a whole beach
full of them below a dead volcano," Shensu said, leaning back against the
table, arms folded across his chest. His smile was amused.
"We have drawers of them, and
emeralds, sapphires, rubies. We're all good lapidaries, though Faith is
cleverest in cutting. We don't bother much with what Kimmer terms semiprecious,
though he has some fine turquoise he says extremely valuable."
"Probably," Saraidh murmured,
still absorbed in running a shower of the diamonds through her hands. She was
absorbed but not, Benden noted, covetous.
"The blacks are why I know you won't
find any survivors in the north," Shensu went on, his eyes on Benden.
"Oh? Why?"
"Before the sled power packs died,
Kimmer made two trips to Bitkim Island where he and Avril Bitra had mined both
the black diamonds and emeralds. He brought me and Jiro with him both times to
help gather the rough diamonds. I saw him leave our camp late one night and I
followed him. He went into a big water cavern before he disappeared from sight.
He had the light. I didn't dare go farther. But, in the cavern lagoon three
ships were moored, masts lashed to the decks. They were plastic-hulled, and their
decks were badly scored by Thread. It couldn't pierce plastic, but it could
melt grooves on it. I went down into one of the ships and everything was neatly
stowed aboard, even in the galley, where there were supplies in tight
containers, everything left in readiness for the ships to be sailed out of the
cavern again." Shensu paused dramatically. Shensu had a feeling for the
dramatic, Benden realized. But that was not necessarily a fault. "Three
years later, we came back for a last load. And no one had been near the ships.
There was a thick coat of dust on everything. Nothing had been touched. Except
there was a lot more algae on the hulls and windblown debris on the decks.
Three years! I say there was no one left to sail them."
Saraidh had let the diamonds drip through
her fingers to the table, and now she sighed. "You said there was a
volcanic island? Was it active when you were there? That could account for that
heat source we noticed," she added to Benden.
"Kimmer would stretch the truth every
which way," Shensu said, "to make himself look good. But he
desperately wanted to have a larger gene pool, for his own pleasure if not
ours." The last was said with understandable malice. "If only a few
more had survived, there'd be that much more future for all of us."
That gave both Ross Benden and Saraidh ni
Morganz a lot to mull over as Shensu showed them around the additional
facilities, the animal barns, the well-supplied storage areas. He paused at a
locked door to a lower level.
"Kimmer keeps the key to the hangar,
so I can't show you my father's plane," Shensu said. Then he gestured for
them to ascend the stairs to the upper floors. Benden was relieved that these
steps were wide and straight.
When they returned to the main level of
Honshu Hold, they found the women busily preparing a feast. Certainly a feast
for those who had been five years on a mission. Not that the Amherst did not
cater well, but ship food was nothing to compare with spit-roasted lamb and the
variety of Pernese hybrid vegetables and tubers. The two marines assigned to
stand watch on the Erica, despite the slightly sarcastic assurance from Kimmer
that no enemies could be lurking on Honshu Cliff, were brought heaping platters
and nonfermented beverages by Faith and Charity. Within the Hold, the evening
was merry, and Kimmer, after a glass or two of wine, became expansive as a
host. He had recovered his composure after a long rest, and tactfully, no
mention was made of his collapse.
As prearranged, Benden, Sergeant Greene,
and Vartry, the fourth marine, met Shensu, his two brothers, and the boys, Alun
and Pat. Even with nine to tote sacks, it took four trips to top off the
Erica's tanks. The boys, who were short enough to walk upright in the low cave,
brought the sacks out to those who waited to haul them down. The marines, using
slings, carried eight sacks at a time. Ross Benden decided that he had no
reason to challenge the marines, four was quite enough. The Fusaiyuki brothers
carried six effortlessly. When the tanks were full, there were still sacks in
the cavern. The next morning, hearing
Nev's cheerful morning ablutions, Ross Benden stirred, then abruptly stopped.
He was uncomfortably stiff and sore from the night's exertions.
"Something wrong, sir?"
"Not a thing," Benden said.
"Just finish up and let me have a chance, will you?"
Nev took that in good part and shortly was
out of the tiny cabin. Moving with extreme caution and hissing at the pain of
abused muscles, Ross Benden managed to get to his feet. Bent-kneed, he hobbled
to the handbasin and opened the small cabinet above that contained the medical
kit. A thorough search revealed nothing for muscular aches. He fumbled for a
pain tablet, knocked it to the back of his mouth, and discovered that his neck
was sore, too. He took a drink of water. He made a mental note to drain the
cistern and fill it with the excellent water of Pern.
A scratch at the door made Benden
straighten up, despite the anguish the movement caused the long tendons in his
legs, but he was damned if he'd show weakness.
"It's I," Ni Morgana announced
as she entered. She took in at a glance his semicrippled state. "I thought
this likely. Just one trip up and down those racks of a stair and my legs are
sore. Faith gave me this salve, wanted me to test it to see if it was something
of medical value. It's indigenous. No, lie back down, Ross, I'll slather it on.
Supposed to have numbing properties. Hmm, it does," she added, eyeing her
fingers and the generous dollop she had scooped out of the jar.
Ross was crippled enough to be willing to
try anything, noxious or bizarre. He could hardly appear before Kimmer in his
present shape.
"Oh, it is numbing. Whee ... ooh ...
ahh ... more on the right calf, please," Benden said, ridiculously
relieved by the numbing effect of the salve. The pain seemed to drain out of
calves and thighs, leaving them oddly cool but not cold, and certainly free of
that damnable soreness.
"I've got plenty for later, and Faith
says they have buckets of the stuff. Make it fresh every year. Doesn't smell
half-bad either. Pungent and ... piney."
When she finished doctoring Benden, she
washed her hands thoroughly. "I'd say don't shower today or you'll lose
the relief." Then she turned back to him with a puzzled expression.
"Ross," she began, settling against the little handbasin and crossing
her arms. "How much would you say Kimmer weighed?"
"Hmm ..." Benden thought of the
man's build and height. "About seventy-two, seventy-four kilos. Why?"
"I weighed him in at ninety-five
kilos. Of course, he was clothed, and the tunic and trousers are rather full
and made of sturdy fabric, but I wouldn't have thought he carried that much
flesh."
"Nor would I."
"I didn't judge the women correctly,
either. They all weighed in a little under and a little over seventy kilos, and
none of them are either tall or heavyset."
Nev mumbled figures under his breath.
"All of 'em, even the kids?"
"No, the three brothers are
seventy-three, seventy-two and seventy-five kilos, which is about what I
thought they'd be. But the girl and the boys are also two or three kilos more
than I'd have thought them."
"With a full tank, we can afford a
few extra kilos," Benden said.
"I was also asked how much they could
bring with them," Saraidh went on, "and I said we had to calibrate
body weights and other factors before we could give them an exact allowance. I
trust that wasn't out of line."
"I'll get Nev to calculate in those
weights and let me know how much fuel we'll have in reserve then," Benden
said. "And what we use as padding and safety harness so no one bounces all
over the gig during takeoff."
Folding out the cabin's keyboard, Benden
ran some rough figures against the lifting power of the full tank. "D'you
have a total on their weights?" Ni Morgana gave him the figure. He added
them in, plus kilos for padding and harness, and contemplated the result.
"I'd hate to be considered mean, but twenty-three point-five kilos each is
about all we can allow."
"That's as much as we're allowed for
personal effects on the Amherst," Ni Morgana said. "Is there room for
another twenty-three point-five kilos in medicinals? I gather this stuff is
effective."
"It certainly is," Benden said,
flexing his knees and feeling no discomfort.
"I'll just get some of this on the
marines as well, then," Ni Morgana said.
"Ha!" was Benden's scoffing
reply.
"I don't know about that," Ni
Morgana said with a sly grin. "But then, you didn't catch sight of
Sergeant Greene making for the galley. I think, " She paused reflectively.
"that I'm doing some empirical tests of this junk and they just got lucky
to be chosen as test subjects. Yes, that should save face admirably. We can't
give Kimmer any reason to be suspicious, now, can we?" Then she left,
chuckling.
At 0835, when Benden left the galley and
proceeded to the Hold, he found Kimmer and the women in the main room, none of
them looking too happy.
"We've done the calculations, Kimmer,
and we can allow each of you, the children included, twenty-three-point-five
kilos of personal effects. That's what Fleet personnel are generally allowed to
bring on voyages, and I can't see Captain Fargoe objecting to it."
"Twenty-three-point-five kilos is
quite generous, Lieutenant," Kimmer surprised Benden by saying. He turned
to the women chidingly. "That's more than we had coming out on the
Yoko."
"And," Benden said, turning to
Faith, "that wouldn't include medicinal products and respective seeds to a
similar limit. Lieutenant Ni Morgana is of the opinion that they could well be
valuable commodities."
"For which we'd be reimbursed?"
Kimmer asked sharply.
"Of course," Benden said,
keeping his voice even. "We have to allow for the weight of padding and
harness to keep you secure during our drop into the primary's gravity
well."
Charity and Hope emitted nervous squeaks.
"Nothing to worry yourself over,
ladies," Benden went on with a reassuring smile. "We use gravity
wells all the time as a quick way to break out of a system."
"Be damned grateful we're getting off
this frigging forsaken mudball," Kimmer said angrily, rising to his feet.
"Go on, now, sort out what you've got to bring but keep it to the weight
limit. Hear me?"
The women removed themselves, with Faith
casting one last despairing glance over her shoulder at her father. Benden
wondered why he had thought any of them graceful. They waddled in a most
ungainly fashion
"You've been extremely generous,
Lieutenant," Kimmer said affably as he settled himself again in the
high-backed carved chair that he usually occupied at the table. "I thought
we'd be lucky enough to get off with what we have on our backs."
"Are you absolutely positive that
there are no other survivors on Pern?" Benden asked, favoring a direct
attack. "Others could have carved holds out of cliffs and remained secure
from that airborne menace of yours."
"Yes, they could have, but for one
thing, there aren't any cave systems here on the southern continent. And I'll
tell you why I think the rest perished after I lost the last radio contact with
those at Drake's Lake and Dorado. In those days I was more confident of rescue
and I'd enough power left in my sled to make one more trip back to Bitkim
Island, where I'd mined some good emeralds." He paused, leaning forward,
elbows on the table and shaking one finger at Benden. "And black
diamonds."
"Black diamonds?" Benden
exclaimed, doing what he considered an admirable job of faking amazement.
"Black diamonds, a whole beachful of
them. That's what I intend to bring back."
"Twenty-three-point-five kilos of
them?"
"And a few pieces of turquoise that I
found."
"Really?"
"When I'd enough of a load of stones,
I went into a natural cavern on Bitkim's southeast side. Big enough to anchor
ships in, if you stepped the mast. And it was there."
"Pardon?"
"Jim Tillek's ship was there, mast
and all, holes and grooves where Thread had scored it time and again."
"Jim Tillek?"
"The admiral's right hand. And a man
who loved that ship. Loved it like other men love women, or Fussy Fusi loved
flying." Kimmer allowed his malice to show briefly. "But I'm telling
you, Jim Tillek wouldn't have left that ship, not to gather dust and algae on
her hull, if he was alive somewhere on Pern. And that ship had been anchored
there three or four years. That's one very good reason why I know no one was
left alive.
"Did you find any sign of human
occupation," Kimmer went on, his voice less intense, his eyes glittering
almost mockingly, "when you spiraled down across the northern
hemisphere?"
"No, neither on infra or power-use
detection," Benden had to admit.
Kimmer spread both arms wide then.
"You know there's no one there, then. No need to waste your reserves of
fuel to find 'em. We're the last alive on Pern and, I'll tell you this, it's no
planet for mankind."
"I'm sure the Colonial Authority will
want a full report from you when we return to base, Kimmer. I shall certainly
log in my findings."
"Then do mankind a favor, Lieutenant,
and tag this disaster of a world as uninhabitable!"
"That's not for me to say."
Kimmer snorted and sat back in his chair.
"Now, if you'll excuse me, I must
join Lieutenant Ni Morgana on her scientific survey. There are sufficient lift
belts, if you'd like to come along."
"No, thank you, Lieutenant."
Kimmer flicked his hand in dismissal of such activity. "I've seen about as
much of this planet as I have any wish to." Benden was just strapping on his liftbelt when Kimmer erupted
from the Hold, the whites of his eyes showing in his agitation.
"Lieutenant!" he cried, running
toward the small party.
Benden held up a warning hand as one of
the marines beside him moved to intercept the man.
"Lieutenant, what power do you use
for the belts? What power?" Kimmer cried excitedly as he approached.
"Pack power, of course," Benden
replied.
"Regulation packs?" And, without
apology, Kimmer grabbed the lieutenant by the shoulder and swung him round,
just as the marine took hold of the old man's arm.
"As you were!" Ross Benden
barked at the marine, but with a nod to reassure him, because he understood
what Kimmer, in his excitement, did not explain. "Yes, the standard power
packs, and we have enough to reactivate that sled of yours, if it's in any
reasonable working order."
"It is, Lieutenant, it is!"
Kimmer reassured him, his agitation replaced by immense satisfaction. "So
you'll be able to eyeball the remains of the colony and report honestly to your
captain that you followed your orders, Mister Benden, assiduously as your noble
relative would have done." Ross grimaced, but his relation to the admiral
would have become public sooner or later. "I thought you looked
familiar," Kimmer added smugly.
Benden took Ni Morgana aside for a quick
conference, and she concurred that it was Benden's first obligation to search
as far as he was able for survivors. She was quite willing to conduct her own
scientific research with Shensu as her guide and two marines as assistants. So
she wished the lieutenant good luck and lifted gracefully off the plateau,
floating down in the direction of the nearest evidence of Thread, some ten
klicks down the valley on the other side of the river.
That matter settled, Kimmer began to pluck
at Benden's sleeve in his urgency and hurried him, Nev following, back into the
Hold. Maps were still spread out on the table from the previous evening.
"I searched east as far as Landing
and Cardiff," Kimmer said, prodding one map with an arthritic index finger.
He dragged the finger back and down along to the Jordan River. "Those
stakes were all empty, and Thread-ridden, though Calusa, Ted Tubberman's old
place, wasn't." Kimmer frowned a moment, then shrugged off that enigma,
moving his finger up to the coastline and west. "Paradise River must have
been used as some kind of staging area, because there were netted containers in
the overgrowth along the shore but the buildings were all boarded up. Malay,
too, and Boca." He stabbed at those points on the map. "I went north
from Boca to Bitkim, but I confess that I didn't stop at Thessaly or Roma,
where they had well-built stone houses and barns. And I didn't get any farther
west. The gauge on the power pack was jiggling too much for me to risk getting
stranded."
"So there could be survivors to the
west ..." Benden pored over the map, feeling a surge of excitement and
hope. Then he wondered why Kimmer was willing to take such a risk, that enough
survivors might be found for the colony to be left to work out its parochial
problems. Maybe the prospect of leaving so much behind, including being the
default owner of a planet, was giving Kimmer second thoughts. If fifty years of
his life's endeavors were going to be crammed into a 23.5-kilo sack, living out
the remainder of his life in the comforts he had achieved might indeed hold
more charm for the old man than an uncertain, and possibly pauper's, existence
in a linear warren.
"There could indeed be stakeholders
there, but why haven't they attempted any contact?" Kimmer asked
defiantly, and his eyes quickly concealed a flicker of something else. "I
got the last communication from the west, but that could have been for any
number of reasons. Now, if you've got a portable unit that we could bring with
us, maybe closer to one of the western stakes, we might rouse someone."
"Let's see this sled of yours."
Benden didn't mention that they had opened the broadest range of communications
on their inbound spiral with not so much as a flicker on any frequency.
Kimmer led them to the locked door, opened
it, and proceeded down to the next level, which proved to be a hangar with wide
double doors at one end opening out on the wide terrace below the Hold entrance
plateau. The sled occupied the center of the considerable floor space; Kenjo's
little atmosphere underwing craft was not quite hidden in the back. But
Benden's attention was all for the sled, which was cocooned in the usual
durable thin plastic film. Kimmer energetically punctured the covering, and all
four men helped peel the sled free as Kimmer enumerated his exact shut-down
precautions. Although the plascanopy was some-what darkened with age and the
tracks of Thread hits, when Benden touched the release button, the door slid
back as easily as if it had been opened the day before.
This was a much older model than those
Benden was used to, so he did a thorough inspection; but the fabric of the
sturdy vessel was undamaged. The control panel was one he recognized from text
tapes. When he depressed the power toggle, the gauge above it fluttered and
then dropped back to zero. He walked aft to the power locker, flipped up the
latches on the power trunk, and lifted the big unit out to examine the leads.
Liftbelts used much smaller packs but he could see no difficulty in making a
multiple connection of smaller units to supply power. Moving forward again,
Kimmer stepped out of his way, exuding a palpable excitement, Benden tested the
steering yoke. It moved easily in his grip.
"We'll just make a linkup and see how
she answers to power. Ensign Nev, take Kimo and Jiro and break out twelve belt
packs, and the portable comunit. We're going to take a little ride."
An hour later, the old sled drifted under
its own power to the narrow lower terrace.
When Benden returned to the Erica for
rations and a bed-roll, an earnest and anxious Nev accosted him, wanting to
join the expedition.
"You don't know what that old man
might try, Lieutenant. And I don't trust him."
"Listen up," Benden said in a
low and forceful tone that stopped Nev's babbling. "I'm not half as
worried about my safety as I am about the Erica's. Kimmer goes with me. I don't
trust him either. I'll take Jiro along, as well. And Sergeant Greene. Neither
of them could get through Greene to me. You'll only have Kimo to worry about,
and he strikes me as too placid to do anything on his own. Shensu is a proven
ally. Present my compliments to Lieutenant Ni Morgana when she returns and
relay this order. Either you or the lieutenant are to be on the Erica at all
times. Also, the marines are to stand proper watches until I return. Have I
made that clear?"
"Aye, aye, sir, Lieutenant Benden.
Loud and clear, sir." Nev's teeth were almost chattering with his
assurances, and his eyes were wide.
"I'll report in at intervals, so
break out handunits for yourself and Vartry."
"Aye, aye, sir."
"We'll be back in two days."
Ross ordered Greene to collect supplies and carry them to the sled.
"If you will pardon me,
Lieutenant," Kimmer said unctuously as he and Jiro entered the craft,
"I think we can easily reach Karachi Camp today, stopping at Suweto and
Yukon on the way. Karachi is a real possibility because, now that Thread is
gone, they'd want to activate the mines."
Surprising himself, Benden gestured with
an open hand to the pilot's seat. "You have the conn, Mr. Kimmer." It
was as good a way as any to see just how competent the old man had been, if he
had actually done what he'd said he'd done. "After all, you're more
familiar with this model sled than I am, and you know where we're going."
It would also be easier to keep the old man occupied.
So Benden seated himself behind Kimmer
while the sergeant, giving his officer only a mildly reproachful look, took the
seat next to Jiro on the starboard side.
The old sled purred along as if delighted
by its release from long imprisonment. It answered the yoke with the smoothness
of a well-maintained vehicle as Kimmer swung it to port. Kimmer wasn't all bad,
Benden thought to himself, and wondered again why the old man had insisted on
this search. Was it really to prove to Benden that his folk were the only ones
left? Or had Kimmer some ulterior motive? And would Kimmer be surprised if they
did find anyone? After overflying the snowy waste of the northern continent and
the devastation of the southern lands, Benden could only be surprised that
anyone had survived. It was certainly most unlikely that his uncle, who'd be
well into his twelfth decade, would still be alive.
They came down from the foothills across
the river obliquely to port of Ni Morgana and her group, and then across a
lifeless plain of circles in the dust. There were spots here and there of
struggling plant life, and Benden wondered if the wind would scatter the
topsoil before vegetation could reestablish itself and prevent further erosion.
And that was the pattern for the next few hours: broad uneven-edged ribbons,
about fifty klicks across of ravaged land, then broader belts of grassland or
forest, even thick vegetation that was neither shrub nor jungle, with the glint
of hidden water in rivers and ponds.
The old sled purred along at about 220
klicks per hour. Benden broke out rations and passed them around. Kimmer
altered the course and, over the sloping nose of the sled, a large and brilliantly
blue lake could be seen. As they neared it and Kimmer obligingly skimmed low,
they saw the vegetation-crowned mounds that indicated the ruins of a
considerable settlement.
"Drake's Lake." Kimmer gave a
sour laugh. "Damned arrogant fool," he muttered to himself. "No
signs of anyone, but there may be at Andiyar's mines."
They overflew more deserted housing and
startled a herd of grazing animals, which plunged wildly away from the muted
sound of the sled.
"Livestock seems to have survived,"
Benden remarked. "Will you turn yours loose?"
"What else?" Kimmer barked a
laugh. "Though Chio's moaning about her pet fire-dragon having to be left
behind."
"Fire-dragon?" Benden asked in
surprise.
"Well, that's what some people
thought they looked like," Kimmer explained diffidently. "They look
like reptiles, lizards to me. It's an indigenous life-form, hatches from eggs,
and if you get one then, it attaches itself to you. Useless thing as far as I
can see, but Chio's fond of it." He glanced over his shoulder at Benden.
"It wouldn't take up much room,"
Juro said, speaking for the first time. "It's a bronze male."
Benden shook his head. "Humans, yes;
creatures, no," he said firmly. The captain was still likely to question
his foisting eleven human survivors on her, but she'd blow her tubes if he
tried to impose an alien pet.
They reached the mine site and landed near
the adits. Within was cocooned equipment,ore carts, picks, shovels, all kinds
of hand tools, as well as an array of tough plas props for tunnel supports.
"You really had gone back to the
lowest level of useful technology, hadn't you?" Benden said, hefting one
of the picks. "But if you had stonecutters, didn't you, "
"When that damned Thread started
falling, your uncle called in all power packs for use in the sleds. That was
Benden's priority, and we couldn't fight it."
The living quarters, unlike those at the
lake, had been cocooned. Peering in through the thinner patches over windows,
Benden could see that furnishings had been left in place.
"See what I mean, Lieutenant? This
place is all ready to be started up again. It's nearly two years since Thread
stopped falling. If they could, they'd be back here."
They spent the night there at Karachi,
setting up a rough camp. While Kimmer started a fire, " to keep the tunnel
snakes away," he told Benden-the lieutenant made contact with Honshu and
spoke to Nev, who said that Ni Morgana was writing up her notes and that
nothing of any significance had happened.
Just as Benden was signing off, Juro came
to the sled for a coil of rope and walked off into the forest. He returned not
too much later with a fat, squat avian, which he had roped off a branch and
strangled. He identified it as a wherry, as he neatly skinned it, then spitted
it over the fire. During its roasting, the aroma of the meat was tantalizing,
arousing a good appetite. It proved to be very tasty.
"Forest wherries are better than
coastal ones," Kimmer said, slicing himself another portion. "Those
have an oily, fishy taste."
Greene nodded appreciatively as he licked
his fingers clean of the juices. Then he excused himself and disappeared into
the woods. Just about the time Benden was becoming apprehensive about his long
absence, he reappeared.
"Nothing moving anywhere, except
things that slither," he reported in a low voice. "I don't think we
need to set a watch, Lieutenant, but I always sleep light."
As Benden saw Kimmer already asleep and
Jiro settling down on their side of the fire, he decided a watch would be
superfluous tonight. The enemies of this deserted world had retreated into
space.
"I sleep light, too, Greene."
And he did, rousing often during the night at slight unaccustomed sounds,
Kimmer's intermittent snores, or when Jiro added more wood to the fire.
In the morning, Benden contacted Honshu
and spoke with Ni Morgana, who said that her expedition had been entirely
successful from a scientific point of view. She would spend the day with the
women, cataloging the medicinal plants and their properties. Benden gave her
the day's flight plan and signed off.
They doubled back east and slightly north
of the mining site and Drake's Lake, then followed a fairly wide river as it
flowed down to the distant sea. At last they came upon the stout stone houses
and barns that had housed the inhabitants of Thessaly and Roma. They observed
herds of beasts, cattle, and sheep in nearby fields, but the houses and barns
had been cleared of all effects. Dead leaves and other debris littered the
spacious rooms where the shutters had fallen from rusted hinges.
"Lieutenant," Greene said,
motioning for him to step a little away from the other two men. "We
haven't seen any of the sleds Kimmer said they used. Nor those three missing shuttles.
So, if we find them, wouldn't we find the people?" "We would, if we
could, Sergeant," Benden said tiredly. "Kimmer, how long did your
sled have power?"
Kimmer's eyes gleamed as he appreciated
what Benden did not ask. "Once I reached Honshu, I didn't use the sled at
all, except as a power source for the comunit, for maybe five-six years. Ito
got very sick and I went to Landing to see if I could get a medic out here.
They'd all left and taken everything with them. I tried some other stakes, as I
told you, but they were deserted, too. Ito died, and I was too busy with the
kids and then Chio's to go off. Then I made one trip to Bitkim, and four years
later, as I'd no way to recharge the pack, I made that last trip. But," he
added, holding up a gnarled finger, "like I told you, just before I lost
all contact, I heard part of Benden's message to conserve all power. So they
couldn't have had many operational sleds. I think ..." Kimmer paused to
search his memory. His eyes met the lieutenant's. "I think they didn't
have enough power left to go after Thread anymore, and they were going to have
to wait." He sighed. "That'd be forty years they'd've had to wait for
the end of Thread, Lieutenant, and I don't think they made it."
"Yes, but where were they?"
Kimmer shrugged. "Hell, Lieutenant,
if I knew that I'd've hiked across the continent to find them once Thread
stopped. If I'd had one whisper, I'd've tracked it down." He swiveled
about then, facing west. "They were someplace in the west, from the direction
of their signals. Say!" His face lit up suddenly. "Maybe they went to
Ierne Island. That would have been easier to protect than one of these open
stakes."
So Benden called in the new destination.
"We'll be back by tomorrow evening ..."
"You'd better be," Ni Morgana
said dryly. "That window won't wait for anyone."
There was no question in Benden's mind
that she would delay taking that window either, but he wasn't worried about
that. He had to be sure-and it looked as if Kimmer's conscience required him
also to be confident that there were no other survivors from Paul Benden's
group.
The run to Ierne Island took most of the
rest of that day and was as fruitless as the other. Kimmer suggested one
further detour, to the tip of Dorado province, to Seminole and Key Largo
Stakes. Amid the wreckage of a storm-damaged building, they found a com-mast,
or sections of it, and evidence of a hurried departure of the inhabitants. In
another shed, still partly roofed, the remains of two sleds were discovered,
obviously broken up to provide spare parts. The canopies and hulls were well
scored and blistered by Thread. Benden appreciated that Kimmer was
extraordinarily lucky to have survived at all.
They made their evening camp there, with
Jiro providing fresh-caught fish. He did his fishing from the remains of a
sturdy jetty, the last ten meters of which had been snapped off by some
tremendous storm, or maybe many. It would have taken a lot of force to break
off heavy-duty plastic pilings like that.
When Ross Benden checked in with the
Erica, he roused a sleepy Nev, forgetting that there was a time difference
across the southern continent.
"Everything' s okay, " Nev said
around a yawn. "Though the lieutenant is sure something's up. She says the
women are acting funny."
"They're about to leave all they've
known, as well as a very comfortable life," Benden replied.
"Isn't that. Lieutenant'll tell you
when you get back." Nev didn't seem much concerned, but Benden trusted Ni
Morgana's instincts and wondered what might be up with the women.
He was wakeful that night, trying to
figure out what could have gone wrong. He worried about it all the way back to
Honshu, which was a useless activity. But he'd noticed that those who
anticipated problems always seemed able to solve them faster.
When they finally reached Honshu, despite
the gathering dusk, Kimmer insisted on maneuvering the sled into its garage,
proving his piloting skills.
"This sled's done more than its
designers ever expected, Benden," Kimmer said sardonically as he reversed
it in, "so humor an old man in rewarding its service the only way he
can."
Benden and Greene left Kimmer and Jiro to
a ritualistic deservicing. Benden ran up the stairs to the main room. Ni
Morgana was there, storing small packages in a case. Benden noticed first that
some of the wall hangings were missing, and then that the big room appeared to
be stripped. Damn it! They could take only 23.5 kilos each.
"Glad to have you back, Ross,"
Ni Morgana said, smiling a welcome. "We're just about packed up and ready
to go." There was nothing in her manner to suggest anxiety. "There
you are, Charity. If you'll stow that in the galley locker, that's the
last." She consulted her notepad then, reading the last entry as Charity
left with the container. "From your less than jubilant manner, Lieutenant,
I gather that your time was wasted."
"You could gather that,
Saraidh," Benden said, trying not to sound truculent. "In some places
matériel was neatly stored as if the owners intended to return; in others,
everything had been left open to the weather, or showed signs of hurried
departure. They turned their animals loose, and those have multiplied, so I'd
say that the meek have inherited this planet. You said you've had more
success?"
She reviewed her notepad a moment longer,
then flipped it shut and placed it in a hip pocket. At a nod of her head, both
officers moved toward the door. Benden was relieved to see one of the marines
on duty at the ramp of the Erica, having a word with Charity before she
entered.
"When I've written up my
investigations," Ni Morgan said with considerable satisfaction,
"there're going to be some red faces. Irrefutably, the Oort cloud supports
a life-form which I have observed in its normal immensely sluggish metabolic,
activated, and defunct states. Fascinating actually, even if it also has
managed to devastate a world and ruin it for further human habitation."
She walked Benden to the far side of the Erica, raising her arm as if to point
something out to him. "I don't know what's going on, but something is,
Ross. I don't believe it's just sorrow for leaving their home that's making the
women nervous, jumpy, and accounts for a mass insomnia. The children seem fine,
and Shensu and Kimo have been most helpful."
"I thought taking Kimmer and Jiro
with me was a sensible precaution."
"Sensible, but Kimmer's quite likely
to have given those women orders before he left. I think he did. I just don't
know what. We haven't left the Erica unattended, but each of us who's stood a
watch on her has been plagued with headaches. I'll admit to you, Ross, that I
fell asleep on watch. I can't have dozed for more than ten or twenty minutes,
but I was asleep. I can't get Cahill, Nev or the other marines to admit that
they had similar lapses, but Nev had that hangdog expression I've come to know
well in erring ensigns. Anyway, after my little snooze, Nev and I searched the
ship from prow to the propulsion units and couldn't find anything illegally stowed.
Which is what I think's been happening. Oh, we've put aboard everyone's
twenty-three point-five kilos, which were thoroughly searched and weighed
before I'd permit them to stow it. Nothing hidden in anyone's bundle.
"And the women ..." M Morgana
paused deep in thought, then shook her head slowly. "They're exhausted,
although they swear blind that they're fine, just that this has all happened so
fast. Chio released that little dragony pet of hers, and she bursts into tears
if you glance sideways at her." Then she gave a chuckle. "Nev and I
thought to cheer them up, and he's a mainframe of humorous anecdotes about life
in high tech. He's from a colonial family, so he's been marvelous at reassuring
them. You should have heard the spiel he gave on how they'll be living back on
a 'civilized' planet and all the advantages of same. They cheer up a bit and
then fall into the weeps again."
Then she turned briskly professional.
"We've got additional safety harness for all, by the way, and pallets with
a local vegetable sponge that is lightweight but cushioning. I figure that all
the women should be strapped into the marines' bunks; the kids and the brothers
can use the pallets and temporary harness in the wardroom, and the marines will
take the extra seats in the cabin with us. Tight squeeze, but there's only so
many places you can put bodies on this gig. Where is Kimmer?" she asked.
"I think one of us ought to keep a close eye on his movements this
evening." Then she looked out to the last of the brilliantly red and
orange sunset. "Too bad. This is such a beautiful planet."
That night a lavish feast was spread for
everyone, except the man on duty on the Erica. Kimmer urged the officers and
the three marines to drink as much of his fine wines as possible, claiming that
there was no sense leaving good wine behind for the tunnel-snakes. When he
found the Fleet reluctant to overindulge, he nagged the girls and the three men
to "eat, drink, and be merry." Taking his own advice he passed out
before the meal was finished.
"He'll have to be sober by, "
Benden consulted his digital. ", 0900 tomorrow or he'll be nauseous in
takeoff, and I don't want to have to clean that up when we reach free-fall.
Good evening and thank you, Chio, for such a magnificent meal," he added,
and after Saraidh had also complimented the women, the Erica's complement left.
Kimmer looked none the worse for the drink
the next morning as he and the others reported on time to board the Erica. Nev
strapped them in, but Benden made a final check himself. The women were all
red-eyed and Chio patently so nervous that Benden wondered if he should get Ni
Morgana to give her a mild sedative.
At the exact second calculated by
Lieutenant Zane, the Erica lifted from the plateau, blasting her way skyward,
tail rockets blazing. A fisherman,
standing the dogwatch on his trawler off the coast of Fort Hold, saw the fiery
trail, vivid against the gray eastern sky, and wondered at it. He followed the
blazing lance of light until it was no longer visible. He wondered what it was,
but his more immediate concern was keeping warm and wondering if the cook had
made klah by now and could he get a cup.
"The roll rate's too low!" Benden cried over the roar of the
engines, exerting all his strength to keep the right attitude. "She's a
slug!" Suddenly Benden realized that the Erica's reluctance could be
caused by only one thing. "We've got too much weight on board. She's too
bloody heavy through the yoke," he said through gritted teeth. He forced
his head to look to his right at Nev, strapped in the copilot's seat. Ni
Morgana was in the next row with Greene beside her, while the other marines
stoically endured acceleration g-forces in makeshift couches. "I've got to
increase thrust. And that's going to take one helluva lot of fuel."
Benden made the adjustments, swearing
bitterly to himself over the expenditure of so much fuel. His calculations
could not have been wrong. The gig was too far gone in its path to abort, and
if they did, there was no way to contact the Amherst and arrange a new
rendezvous. How in hell could she be so heavy?
"Nev, give me some figures on what
this is costing us in fuel and the estimated weight we're lugging up."
"Aye, aye, sir," Nev said,
slowly moving his hand in the g-force to activate the armrest pad.
Benden forced his head to the side so he
could see the bright green numbers leap to the small screen.
"Twenty-one minutes five seconds of
blast, sir, was what we should have needed," Nev replied, his voice
genuinely strained. "We're bloody twenty-nine point twenty into flight and
still not free! We're, uh, four-nine-five-point-five-six kilograms overweight!
Free-fall in ten seconds!"
Ten seconds seemed half a year until they
were suddenly weightless. Benden swore as he read the ominous position of the
fuel gauge. Still cursing, he adjusted her yaw with burst of the port jets,
swinging her nose toward the sun. He already knew that they hadn't enough fuel
to make their scheduled rendezvous with the Amherst. And the cruiser would
currently be in a communications shadow as it made its parabolic turn about
Rukbat.
He called up Rukbat's system on the
console monitor. There was no way they could use the second planet as a
slingshot. But ... He pulled at his lower lip. There was a chance they could
make it to the first little burnt-out cinder of a planet. They would come
awfully close to Rukbat, and even closer to the surface of Number One, in order
to use its gravity well. That would save fuel. But they'd need a different rendezvous
point, if they could get to the same point at the same time, at the same speed
and heading in the same direction as the cruiser at some point earlier in her
outbound hyperbolic orbit of Rukbat.
"Nev, figure me a slingshot course
around the first planet." There was only the one option left to Benden.
"Aye, aye, sir." The ensign's
voice was full of relief.
Then, in a taut hard voice, Ross shot out
a second order. "Greene, bring me Kimmer. Tell the others to stay
put."
He flipped open the harness release and
let himself drift up out of the pilot's seat, trying to figure out just how
Kimmer had managed to sneak 495.56 kilograms of whatever it was on board his
ship. And when? Especially as the man had been under Bender's own watchful eye
for over three days.
"Lieutenant," Nev said in an
apologetic voice, "we can't make a slingshot around the first planet, not
with the weight on board."
"Oh, we'll be lighter very soon,
Nev," Benden replied with a malicious grin. "Four hundred ninety-five
point fifty-six kilograms lighter. Figure a course with that weight loss."
"What I can't understand," Ni
Morgana said in a flat voice, "is what they could have smuggled aboard. Or
how?"
"What about your headaches,
Saraidh?" Benden asked, seething with anger at Kimmer's duplicity.
"And those catnaps no one else's had the guts to report to me."
"What could they possibly have done
in ten or twenty minutes, Ross?" Ni Morgana demanded. "Nev and I
searched for any possibly smuggled goods or tampering.
Benden pointedly said nothing and then
scrubbed at his face in frustration. "Oh, it's no blame to you, Saraidh.
Kimmer just outsmarted me, that's all. I thought removing him from Honshu would
solve the problem." He raised his voice. "Vartry, you, Scag, and
Hemlet will conduct a search of the most unlikely places on this ship, the
missile bins, the head, the inner hull, the airlock. Somehow they've overloaded
us, and we have got to know with what and dump it!" He turned to Nev.
"Try reaching the Amherst. I think it's too soon to make contact, but get
on the blower anyhow."
Kimmer overhanded himself into the cabin
then, a smile on his face for the fierce expressions on the three marines as
they passed by.
"Kimmer, what did you get on board
this ship and where is it, because we've got less than an hour to make a course
correction, and thanks to you, we've lost too much fuel lifting the bird off
Pern."
"I don't know what you mean,
Lieutenant." Kimmer looked him squarely in the eye. "I was with you
for three days. How could I have put something on board this vessel?"
"Stop stalling, man. It's your life
you'll lose, as well."
"I'm flattered that you've asked my
opinion, Lieutenant, but I'm sure you know better than I what equipment can be
jettisoned to lighten her."
Benden stared him down, wondering at the
malevolence in the gaze Kimmer returned. "You know what weight I'm
referring to, and it was all put on at Honshu. If I don't know what that was,
Kimmer, you'll be the first thing that lightens this gig's load."
Suddenly they all heard hysterical weeping
from the stern, and Vartry propelled himself back into the cabin.
"Lieutenant, they started the minute
I said we were going to search because the ship was overweight. They know
something!"
As Benden hand-pushed himself deftly down
the short companionway to the marines' quarters, the wailing rose to an eerie
ululation that made the hairs on the back of his neck rise.
"Stow it!" Benden roared, but
Chio's volume only increased. The others were not as loud, but they seemed just
as distraught, plainly terrified and far too hysterical to reply to his demands
for an explanation.
Ni Morgana arrived with the medical kit
and injected Chio with a sedative that reduced the hysterics but had no effect
when Benden questioned her, trying to keep his voice level and reasonable.
"They will not tell you what they
have done," Shensu said, careering into the marines' quarters. Absently
rubbing the arm he had bruised, he looked down at Chio. "She has always
been dominated by him, and so have the others. If Kimmer can be made",
Shensu's voice was hard-edged with hatred, "to give them the necessary
orders."
"I think Kimmer will explain, or take
a long step out of a short airlock," Benden said, pushing past Shensu.
There was no time for finesse or bluff with the Erica currently on an abortive
course for the second planet. They had to make a correction soon, and do it
without the excess weight, or they'd be beyond rescue. He'd have the truth if
he had to space Kimmer and enough of the women to get one of them to tell him
what he had to know.
"Lieutenant!" Greene's booming
voice was urgent, and Benden propelled himself as fast as he could back to the
cabin where Greene was searching Kimmer roughly. "Sir, he's wearing metal.
I felt it when I frisked him." And as the sergeant peeled back the
shipsuit, a vest was exposed, a vest made up of panels of gold.
"Shit!"
"Hardly!" Kimmer remarked,
smiling smugly.
"Strip him!" Benden ordered.
Shortly it became clear that Kimmer was wearing not only a gold vest but a
thick belt of gold cast in lozenge shapes. Even his underpants had pockets
filled with thin gold sheets. Greene was nothing if not thorough. The boots on
Kimmer's feet produced smaller gold plates worked into the soles and ankle
leather.
"Saraidh!" Benden roared.
"Search those women. Greene, you search the kids, but gently, get me?
Shensu, Jiro, Kimo, in here on the double." Benden took some comfort when
the three men proved to be wearing no more than their shipsuits. Ni Morgana's
yell confirmed Benden's guess about the women. It took both her and Vartry to
carry into the cabin the concealed sheets and gold plates the women had
secreted. All the while, Kimmer's slight, amused smile did not waver.
"I'd estimate that's about ten to
fifteen kilos per woman and five per kid," Saraidh said as they looked
down at the pile of gold.
Benden shook his head. "Forty-five
kilos is a drop! Nowhere near four hundred ninety-five point fifty-six
Ks." He turned on the naked Kimmer, who smiled back, all innocence.
"Kimmer, we're running out of time. Now, where is the rest of it? Or had
you intended becoming an integral part of Rukbat?"
"You don't panic me, Lieutenant
Benden." Kimmer's eyes glittered with a vengeance that shocked Ross.
"This ship's in no danger. Your cruiser'll rescue you."
Benden stared at the man in utter
amazement. "The cruiser is behind Rukbat, in com shadow. We can't arrange
a different rendezvous. Unless we can lighten this ship, we can't even make a
course change for the one chance we have of staying alive!" Benden hauled
Kimmer by the arm to the console and showed him the diagram on the screen, and
the little blip that was the Erica, serenely heading for her original, now
nonviable, destination. "We certainly don't have enough fuel to make the
arranged rendezvous." He tapped out the sequence to show the original
flight plan. Then, with his finger, Benden indicated the inexorable path the
Erica was taking. "Tell us what and where the excess weight is hidden,
Kimmer!"
Kimmer contented himself with a wry
chuckle, and Benden wanted to smash the smile off the man's face. "If
that's the way you want to play it, Kimmer. Sergeant, get the stuff and bring
it with you." Benden hustled the naked, barefooted colonist down the
companionway to the airlock and, palming the control for the inner hatch,
shoved him inside, motioned for Greene to throw in the gold, and closed the
hatch again.
"I mean it, Kimmer, either tell me
what else is on board and where, or you go out the airlock."
Kimmer turned, a contemptuous expression
on his face, and he folded his arms across his chest, a gaunt old man with only
defiance to clothe him.
"You've more than enough fuel, Benden.
Chio checked the gauge. The Erica's tanks were full. Since you had to have used
at least a third of a tank to get here, I'm of the opinion that Shensu
knew", his eyes traveled to Benden's left, where Shensu was standing by
the window, "as I always suspected, where Kenjo had stored his
pilferings." Kimmer drew himself up. "No, Lieutenant, I will call
your bluff."
"It's no bluff, Kimmer, and if you
had any training as a space jockey, you'd've felt how sluggish the gig was.
She's heavy, too heavy. We burned too much in the lift-off. The gold on you and
the women isn't enough to cause that. Damn it, Kimmer, it's your life,
too."
"I'll have taken a Benden down with
me," the man snarled, his face contorted with hatred and sheer
malevolence.
"But Chio, and your daughters, your
grandchildren, " Benden began.
"They were none of them worth the
effort I put into them," Kimmer replied arrogantly. "I have to share
my wealth with them, but I'm certainly not sharing it with you."
"Sharing?" Benden stared at him,
not quite comprehending the man's words. "You think I'm blackmailing you?
For a share of your wealth?" The disgust in his voice momentarily rattled
the old man, but Benden hardly noticed. "There are many people in my
world, Kimmer, who are not motivated by greed." He gestured with
contemptuous anger at the sheets and lozenges at Kimmer's feet. "None of
that is worth the risk you want us to take. What have you hidden on the Erica,
and where?"
Just then, Ni Morgana beckoned urgently to
Benden. Gratefully, he moved away from the window. His hand novered briefly
over the evac button. Kimmer could stay where he was, just a thin sheet away
from space, and contemplate his situation.
"When I was looking for tranks,"
Saraidh said quietly, for Benden's ears only, "I came across a vial of
scopalamine in the medical chest. It may be an anesthetic, but the right dosage
provides the truth, so Chio spilled it out. It's platinum and germanium, sheets
of it, stuffed wherever they could when they came aboard on legitimate errands,
and when they drugged whoever was on the dogwatch. That's why we all had
headaches."
Benden was astounded. "Platinum?
Germanium?" he exclaimed loudly enough for the others to hear.
"Kimmer was a mining engineer. He
found ores, and we've all had to work in them," Shensu said, pushing over
to them. "I wondered why the workroom smelled of hot metal. He must have
had the girls melt the ingots down at night, extruding sheets. No wonder
they've looked so worn out. I never thought to check on the metals, because
they'd be too heavy to bring."
"Where is it?" Benden demanded,
looking up and down the aisle, momentarily bewildered when he thought of all
the places sheets of thin metal could be unobtrusively attached within the Erica.
"We've got to search the ship! Everywhere! Sergeant, take your marines to
the stern. Shensu, you and your brothers start on the lockers."
"He knew one helluva lot about the
interior of gigs," Nev remarked almost admiringly when the marines found
that the missile tubes had been stuffed with metal plaques. These were
immediately flushed into space.
"And I watched her, Lieutenant,"
Vartry said, aggrieved, when they found that the locker where the medicines had
been stowed was also lined with thin slabs of silvery metal. "I stood here
and watched her, heard her tell me she wanted to be sure the medicines were
safe, as she slapped sheets top, bottom, and side."
The lockers in which the 23.5-kilo
personal allowances had been stowed also proved to be lined with platinum.
"You know," Ni Morgana remarked,
bending one of the thin sheets she had found under Benden's bunk,
"individually these don't weight much, but they damned near coated the gig
with 'em. Ingenious."
There were sheets everywhere, and still
more were found and piled at the airlock hatch.
Nev, remembering how he'd entertained Hope
and Charity by showing them the cabin, found metal glued to the bottom of the
blast couches, lining the inside of the control panel, and thin rolls of metal
tacked to the baseboards, looking for all the worlds like innocuous
decorations. Inspection of viewports revealed platinum-decorated seals, which
sent Nev and Scag searching all the ports.
When the pile at the inner airlock door
reached the window slow, abruptly Benden realized the airlock was empty.
"Kimmer? Where's Kimmer?" he
cried. "Who let him out? Where is he?"
But Kimmer was nowhere in the ship. A
gesture from Benden had the marines on his heels as they propelled themselves
to the galley, where the brothers were still searching.
"Which of you depressed the evac
button?" Benden demanded, seething with impotent anger.
"Depressed, " Shensu's look of
astonishment was, Benden felt, genuine. There was no regret, however, on his face
or his brothers'.
"I'm not sure I blame you, Shensu,
but it constitutes murder. You had opportunities enough while we were searching
the ship."
"We were searching the ship,
too," Shensu said with dignity. "We were as busy as you, trying to
save our lives."
"Perhaps," Jiro said softly,
"he committed suicide rather than face the failure of that brainstorm of
his."
"That is a possibility," Ni
Morgana said composedly, but Benden knew she believed that no more than he did.
"This will be investigated more fully
when we have time," Ross Benden promised them fervently, pinning each of
the three brothers with his angry glare. "I won't condone murder!"
Though at just that moment, Benden had several he would have liked to commit himself.
Returning to the airlock, he found Nev
busy with a chisel. The ensign let out a hoot of triumph as he peeled off a
paper-thin sheet of platinum.
"I'm sure Captain Fargoe wouldn't
mind having a platinum-plated gig ..." His voice trailed off when he
caught sight of Benden's expression. He gulped. "There'd be another twenty
kilos right in here." And he applied himself to the task of removing it.
Benden signaled for two of the marines to
assist Nev while he and the others piled the accumulated sheets, pipings,
strips, and lozenges into the lock.
"Amazing!" Ni Morgana said,
shaking her head wearily. "That ought to make up the rest of the
four-hundred-ninety-five-point-five-six kilos."
She stepped out of the lock and gestured
to Benden, who was at the controls. With a feeling of intense relief, he
pressed the evac button and saw the metal slide slowly out into space, a
glittering cascade left behind the Erica. It was still visible as the outer
door cycled shut.
"I've half a mind to add their
personal allowances," Benden began, feeling more vicious and vengeful than
he would have thought possible, "which would give us another hundred
kilos' leeway."
"More than that," said the
literal-minded Nev, and then gawped at the lieutenant. "Oh, you mean just
the women's stuff."
"No," Ni Morgana said on a gusty
sigh. "They've suffered enough from Kimmer. I don't see the point in
further retribution."
"If it hadn't been for the extra
fuel, we wouldn't have lifted off the planet," Nev suddenly remarked.
"If it hadn't been for the extra
fuel, I don't think we'd've had this trouble with Kimmer," Ni Morgana said
sardonically.
"He'd've tried something else,"
Benden said. "He'd planned the contingency of rescue a long, long time.
Those vests and pants weren't whipped up overnight. Not with everything else
those women were doing."
"That's possible," Ni Morgana
said thoughtfully. "He was a crafty old bugger. All along he counted on
our rescuing him. And he'd know we'd have to check body weight."
"D'you suppose he also fooled
us," Nev asked anxiously, "about there being more survivors
somewhere?"
That thought had been like a pain in
Benden's guts since Kimmer's duplicity had come to light. And yet ... There had
been no sign of other survivors on the southern continent. Nor had their
instruments given them any positive readings as they spiraled across the snowy
northern land-mass. Then there was Shensu's story, and that man had no reason
to lie. Benden shook his head wearily and once again regarded the ship's
digital. The search had taken a lot longer than he'd realized.
"Look alive," he said, rising to
his feet with as good an appearance of energy as he could muster. "Nev,
try to raise the Amherst again." He knew beforehand that the Amherst was
unlikely to be receiving. He also knew that he had to alter the course now,
before they went too far along the aborted trajectory. He didn't have any
option. He made his calculations for the appropriate roll to get the Erica on
the new flight path. He'd worry about contacting the Amherst later. A
three-second burn at one g would do it. That wouldn't take up much fuel. And he
breathed a silent prayer of thanksgiving. "Nev, Greene, Vartry, check our
passengers. We've got to burn to our new heading in two minutes forty-five
seconds."
He felt better after the burn. The gig was
handling easily again. Like the thoroughbred she was, she had eased onto her
new heading. And he had done something positive about their perilous situation.
"Now, let's be sure we get every last
strip Kimmer added to the Erica," he said, unbuckling his seat restraints.
He'd also go through the gig with an eye to what else could be jettisoned, he
decided. But they had a long trip ahead of them and precious few comforts for those
on board.
"I'll check the women first," Ni
Morgana said, pushing herself off deftly from the back of her couch and
grabbing the handhold to propel herself down the companionway. "And see
about some grub. Breakfast was a long time ago."
Benden realized how right she was, but
under stress, he never noticed hunger pangs. He did now.
"Chow's the best idea yet," he
said, and managed a reasonably cheerful grin for her.
When she checked the women, she found them
still shaken by the emotional prelude, and though they helped her in the
galley, they were apathetic. Chio wept silently, ignoring the food Faith tried
to get her to eat. She seemed wrapped in so deep a depression that Saraidh
reported her condition to Benden.
"She won't last the journey in this
condition, Ross," Saraidh said. "She's deeply disturbed, and I don't
think it's losing Kimmer."
"Isn't it just that she was so
dependent on him? You heard what Shensu said."
"Well, if it is, we ought to sort it
out. We can't avoid discussing Kimmer's demise."
"I know, and I don't intend to. His
demise", he drawled out the euphemism, "was accidental. I would have
preferred to have him alive and standing trial for his attempt to disable the
Erica," he replied grimly. "What I want to know is how he got those
women to sabotage us. They must have known from our conversations that their
extra mass would seriously burden the ship."
Shensu had floated down the corridor
during the last sentence, and he gave them a terse nod.
"You must explain to my sisters that
the gemstones alone will provide suitably for them," he said. "That
the stones will not be confiscated by the Fleet to pay for this rescue."
"What?" Ni Morgana exclaimed.
"Where did they get that notion?" She held up her hand. "Never
mind. I know. Kimmer. What maggots had he got in his brain?"
"The maggot of greed," Shensu
said. "Come, reassure my sisters. They are so fearful. They only
cooperated with him on the metal because he said that would be the only wealth
left to them."
"And how did Kimmer plan to remove
all that platinum from the Erica?" Benden demanded, knowing that his voice
was rising in frustration but unable to stifle it. "The man was
deranged."
"Quite likely," Shensu said with
a shrug. "For decades he has clung to the hope that his message would be
answered. Or else all he had accumulated, the gems, the metals, meant
nothing."
They had reached the marines' quarters and
heard Chio's soft weeping.
"Get the kids out of here, Nev,"
Benden told the ensign in a low voice, "and amuse them. Shensu, ask your
sisters to join us here and, by whatever you hold sacred, tell them we mean
them no harm."
It took hours to reassure the four women.
Benden stuck to his matter-of-fact, common sense approach.
"Please believe me," he said
with genuine concern at Chio's almost total collapse, "that the Fleet has
special regulations about castaways or stranded persons. Stranded you were. It
would be totally different if the Colonial Authority or Federated Headquarters
had organized an official search, then there would have been staggering
retrieval costs. But the Amherst only happened to be in the area and the system
was orange-flagged ..."
"And because," Ni Morgana took
up the explanation, "I was doing research on the Oort cloud, Captain
Fargoe ordered the gig to investigate. As she will tell you herself when you
meet her, it saves you, the surviving colonists, any cost."
Chio mumbled something.
"Say again?" Ni Morgana asked
very gently, smiling reassurance.
"Kimmer said we would be
paupers."
"With black diamonds? The rarest kind
of all?" Ni Morgana managed to convey a depth of astonishment that
surprised Benden. "And you've kilos of them among you. And those
medicines, Faith," she went on, turning to the one sister who appeared to
be really listening to what was being said. "Especially that numbweed
salve of yours. Why, the patents on that alone will buy you a penthouse in any
Federation city. If that's where you want to live."
"The salve?" Sheer surprise
animated Faith. "But it's common, "
"On Pern, perhaps, but I've a degree
in alien pharmacology and I've never come across anything as mild and effective
as that," Ni Morgana assured her. "You did bring seed, as well as
salve, because I don't think that's the sort of medication that can be
artificially reproduced and provide the same effect."
"We had to gather the leaves and boil
them for hours," Hope said wonderingly. "The stink made it a
miserable job, but he made us do it each year."
"And numbweed can make us rich?"
Charity asked doubtfully.
"I have no reason to lie to you,
" Ni Morgana said with such dignity that the girl flushed.
"But Kimmer is dead," Chio said,
a sob catching in her throat, and she turned her head away, her shoulders
shaking.
"He is dead of greed," Kimo said
in an implacable voice. "And we are alive, Chio. We can make new lives for
ourselves and do what we want to do now."
"That would be very nice," Faith
said in a low, wistful voice.
"We won't be Kimmer's slaves
anymore," Kimo added.
"We would all have died without
Kimmer after Mother died," Chio turned back, mastering her tears, unable
to stop defending the man who had dominated her for so long.
"Died because she had too many
stillborn babies," Kimo said. "You forget that, Chio. You forget that
you were pregnant two months after you became a woman. You forget how you
cried. I do not."
Chio stared at her brother, her face a
mask of sorrow. Then she turned to Benden and Ni Morgana, her eyes narrow.
"And will you tell this captain of yours about Kimmer's death?"
"Yes, we will naturally have to
mention that unfortunate incident in our report," Benden said.
"And who killed him?" She shot
the question at them both.
"We don't know who killed him, or if
he cycled the lock open himself."
Chio was startled, as if that possibility
had not occurred to her until then. She pulled at Kimo's sleeve. "Is that
possible?"
Kimo shrugged. "He believed his own
lies, Chio. Once the metal was found, he would consider himself to be poor. He
was at least honorable enough to commit suicide."
"Yes, honorable," Chio murmured
so softly her words were barely audible. "I am tired. I wish to
sleep." She turned herself toward the wall.
Kimo gave the two officers a nod of
triumph. Faith covered her sister and gestured for them to leave.
Over the next several days, passengers and
crew settled into an easier relationship. The youngsters sat for hours in front
of the tri-d screen, going through the gig's library of tapes. Saraidh cajoled
Chio and the girls into watching some of them as well, as a gentle introduction
to the marvels of modern high-tech civilization.
"I can't tell whether they're
reassured or scared witless," she reported to Benden, who was standing his
watch at the gig's console. They still had not made contact with the Amherst,
though he had no real cause for worry on that score, yet. "How many times
have you worked those equations, Ross?" she asked, noticing what he had on
his pad.
"Often enough to know there's no
mathematical errors," he said with a wry grin. "We'll only have the
one chance."
"I'm not worried," she said with
a shrug and a smile. "Off you get. It's my watch." And she shooed him
out of the cabin.
"Leutenant?"
Nev's voice reverberated excitedly down the companionway the next afternoon.
"I've raised the Amherst!"
There was a cheer as Ross propelled
himself to the cabin.
"Neither loud nor clear, sir, but
definitely voice contact," Nev said with a grin,
Ross grinned back at him in relief and
depressed the talk toggle on his seat arm. "Ross Benden reporting, sir. We
need to make a new rendezvous."
Fargoe acknowledged him, and though her
voice broke up in transmission, he really didn't need to hear every syllable to
know what she was saying.
"Ma'am, we've had to abort our
original course. We are currently aiming for a slingshot around the first
planet."
"You want a sunburn, Benden?"
"No, ma'am, but we have only
two-point-three KPs of Delta V remaining."
"How did you cut it that fine?"
"Humanitarian reasons required us to
rescue the ten remaining survivors of the expedition."
"Ten?" There was a pause that
had nothing to do with interference on the line. "I shall be very
interested in your report, Benden. That is, if your humanitarianism allows you
to make it. What is the total of the excess weight you're carrying?"
Nev handed over his pad, and Benden read
off the figures.
"Hmm. Offhand I don't think we can
match orbits. Can you make it five KPs?"
"No, ma'am."
"Roger. Hold on while we refigure
your course and rendezvous point."
Benden tried not to look toward Nev, or at
Saraidh, who had joined them at the command console. He tried not to look
nervous, but he felt various parts of himself twitching, unusual enough in
gravity and damned annoying in free-fall. He clutched the edge of the console
as unobtrusively and as hard as possible to keep from twitching out of the
chair.
"Erica? Captain Fargoe here. What can
you jettison?"
"How much is required?" Benden
thought of the wealth they had just consigned to space.
"You've got to jettison
forty-nine-point-zero-five kilos. You will need to make a ten-g burn for
one-point-three seconds around the first planet, commencing at ninety-one
degrees right ascension. That will put you on course, speed, and direction, and
we devoutly hope, in time to make a new rendezvous. Good luck,
Lieutenant." Her voice indicated that he'd need it.
He didn't like a 10g burn, even for 1.3
seconds. They'd all black out. It would be rough on the kids. But it would be a
lot rougher to turn into cinders.
"You heard the captain," he
said, turning first to Saraidh and then Nev. "Let's snap to it."
"What'll we toss, Lieutenant?"
Nev asked.
"Just about everything that isn't
bolted down," Saraidh said, "and probably some of that. I'll start in
the galley."
In the end they made up the required kilos
out of material Saraidh knew could be most easily replaced by Stores on the
Amherst, extra power packs; oxygen tanks, which accounted for a good deal of
the necessary weight; the messroom table; and all but one of the beacon
missiles the gig carried.
"If Captain Fargoe decides you
weren't negligent," Saraidh told Ross, her face expressionless, as they
both watched the articles sliding out of the airlock into space, "you
won't have to pay for 'em."
"What?" Then he saw she was
teasing and grinned back at her. "I've enough I've got to account for,
thank you muchly, ma'am, on this expedition without paying for it, too."
He kept trying to explain Kimmer's demise to himself and wondering how he could
have prevented it, if he could have.
"Now, now, Ross." Saraidh
waggled a finger at him. They were alone in the corridor. "Don't hang
Kimmer about your neck. I subscribe completely to the suicide theory.
Temporarily of unsound mind due to the failure of his plan. He might just have
done it to be awkward, too."
"I'm not sure Captain Fargoe would
buy that one."
"Ah, but she'd never met Kimmer, and
I have." Saraidh gave him an encouraging thumbs-up. The moment of truth came two long, weary
weeks later. The temperature inside the Erica began to rise with its proximity
to Rukbat, reaching an uncomfortable level. Benden was sweating heavily as he
watched the ominous approach of the tiny black cinder of the system's first
planet. That poor wight hadn't had a chance to survive. Bender intended to.
"Burn minus sixty seconds," he
announced over the intercom. He hadn't informed his passengers of the rigors of
a slingshot maneuver. They'd all black out. If something went wrong, they'd
never know it. Meanwhile, he hadn't had to endure Chio's suspicions or the
sorrowful reproaches of the other three women. He'd done slingshot passages
before, both actual and in simulation. It was mostly a matter of timing the
burn properly just as the ninety-one-degree right ascension came up on the nav
screen. But he hated blacking out for any reason, not being in control for
those seconds or minutes.
"Nine, eight, seven," Nev
chanted, his eyes glittering with anticipation. This was his first slingshot.
"Five, four, three, two ... one!"
Benden pressed the Burn button, and the
Erica lunged forward. As he was slammed deep into the pads of the contour seat,
he knew the maneuver would be successful and surrendered to the mighty g-forces
he had just initiated. Benden returned
to consciousness, the blessed silence of space, and the relief of weightlessness.
His first glance was for the expended fuel. Point-ninety-eight KPs left. It
should be enough, provided the course corrections were accurate. He had one
last burn to make as they bisected the Amherst's wake and then turned back to
her at a sharp vector.
"My compliments, Lieutenant," Ni
Morgana said briskly, unsnapping her harness. "We seem to be well on our
way now. I think the cook has something special for lunch today."
Benden blinked at her.
She grinned. "The very same thing we
had yesterday for lunch."
Benden wasn't the only one who groaned.
They'd added supplies at Honshu, but the fresh foods were long gone and they
were down to the emergency rations: nourishing but uninspired. And that's all
they had for the next two weeks.
When he was back on board the Amherst,
Ross Benden was going to order up the most lavish celebratory meal in the
mess's well-stocked larder. When, and he grinned to himself. That's positive
thinking.
When the Erica's sensors picked up the
cruiser's unmistakable ion radiation trail, Benden was in the command cabin,
teaching Alun and Pat the elements of spatial navigation. The boys were bright
and so eager to prepare themselves for their new life that they were a pleasure
to instruct.
"Back to your pods, boys. We've got
another burn."
"Like the last one?" Alun asked
plaintively.
"No, matey. Not like the last one.
Just a touch on the button."
Reassured, they propelled themselves out
of the cabin and down the companionway, dexterously passing Saraidh and Nev at
the door.
"A touch being all the fuel we've got
left," Saraidh murmured, taking her seat. She leaned forward, peering out
into the blackness of space around them.
"You won't see anything yet,"
Nev remarked.
"I know it," she replied,
shrugging. "Just looking."
"It's there, though."
"And not long gone," Benden
added, "judging by the strength of the ion count." He toggled on the
intercom. "Now, listen up. A short burn, not like the last, just enough to
change our course to match up our final approach to the Amherst." In an
aside to Saraidh he added, "I feel like a damned leisure-liner
captain."
"You'd make a grand one," she
replied blandly, "especially if you have to change your branch of
service."
"My what?" Benden never knew
when Lieutenant Ni Morgana's wayward humor would erupt.
"Lighten up, Ross. We're nearly home
and dry."
"Fifteen minutes to course
correction." He nodded to Nev to watch the digital while he contacted the
Amherst. "Erica to Amherst. Do you read me?"
"Loud and clear," came Captain
Fargoe's voice. "About ready to join us, Lieutenant?"
"That's my aim, Captain."
"We'll trust it's as accurate as
ever. Fire when ready Gridley."
"Captain?"
"Roger, over and out."
Beside him, Saraidh was chuckling.
"Where does she get them?"
"Get what?" Nev asked.
"Are you counting down, Ensign?"
"Yes, sir. Coming down to ten minutes
forty seconds."
Why was it time could be so elastic?
Benden wondered as the ten minutes seemed to go on forever, clicking second by
second. At the minute, he flexed both hands and shook his shoulders to release
the tension in his neck. At zero, he depressed the burn on the last
ninety-eight KPs in the tank yawing to starboard. He felt the surge of the good
gig Erica as she responded. Then all of a sudden the engines cut out with the
exhausted whoosh that meant no more fuel in the tank.
Had the Erica completed the course
correction? Or had the engines stopped untimely? The margin was so damned
slight! And the proof would be the appearance of the comforting bulk of the
Amherst any time now. If the maneuver had been completed before the fuel was
exhausted.
Like the two officers beside him, Benden
instinctively leaned forward, peering out into the endless space in front of
them.
"I've got a radar reading,
Lieutenant," Nev said, and there was no denying the relief in his voice.
"It can't be anything but the Amherst. I think we're going to make it
"All we need is to get close enough
for them to shoot us a magnetic line," Benden muttered.
Nev uttered a whoop. "Thar she
be!" He pointed. Benden had to blink to be sure he actually was seeing the
running lights of the Amherst. He was close to adding his own ki-yi of relief
and victory.
Just then the comunit opened to a sardonic
voice. "That's cutting it fine indeed, Lieutenant." The blank screen
cleared to a view of the captain, her head cocked and her right eyebrow
quizzically aslant. "Trying to match your uncle's finesse?"
"Not consciously, ma'am, I assure
you, but I'd be pleased to hear the confirmation that our present course and
speed are A-OK for docking?"
"Not a puff of fuel left, huh?"
"No, ma'am."
She looked to her left, then faced the
screen squarely again, a little smile playing on her lips. "You'll make it.
And I'll expect to have reports from both you and Lieutenant Ni Morgana as soon
as you've docked. You've had time enough on the trip in to write a hundred
reports."
"Captain, I've got the passengers to
settle."
"They'll be settled by medics, Ross.
You've done your part getting them here. I want to see those reports."
And the screen darkened.
"Got yours all ready, Ross?" Ni
Morgana asked with a sly grin as she swiveled her chair around.
"And yours?"
"Oh, it's ready, too. I said that I
believed Kimmer suicided."
Benden nodded, glad of her support.
"It would have had to have been self-destruction, Saraidh. He would have
been far more familiar with airlock controls than Shensu or his brothers,"
he said slowly, considering his words. "It's really far more likely that
he did suicide, given the fact that he had failed to bring along all that
metal. Damn fool! He must have known that he was dangerously overloading the
ship. He could have murdered us." That angered Benden.
"Yes, and nearly succeeded. I think
he was hoping that his death would have brought suspicion on the brothers, as
the most likely to wish his demise," Ni Morgana went on. "He would
have liked jeopardizing their futures. And discrediting another Benden if he
could." When she heard Benden's sharp inhalation, she touched his hand,
causing him to look at her. "You can still be proud of your uncle, Ross.
You heard what Shensu said, and how proud he was of the way the admiral
marshaled all available defenses."
Benden cocked his head, his expression
rueful. "A fighter to the last ... and it took a wretched planet to defeat
him.
"Poor planet Pern," Saraidh said
sadly. "Not its fault, but I'm recommending that this system be
interdicted. I did some calculations, which I'll verify on the Amherst
computers, and rechecked the original EFC report. That wasn't the first time
the Oort organism fell on the planet. Nor will it be the last. It'll happen
every two hundred and fifty years, give or take a decade. Furthermore, we don't
want any ship blundering into that Oort cloud and transporting that organism to
other systems."
She gave a shudder at the thought.
"There she is," Benden said with
a sense of relief as the viewport filled with the perceptibly nearing haven of the
Amherst. "And, all things considered, a successful rescue run."
ABOUT
THE AUTHOR
Between
her frequent appearances in the United States and England as a lecturer and
guest-of-honor at science-fiction conventions, Anne McCaffrey lives at Dragonhold,
in the hills of County Wicklow, Ireland, with assorted horses, cats, and a dog.
Of herself, Ms. McCaffrey says: "I have green eyes, silver hair, and
freckles, the rest changes without notice."