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Diuturnity’s Dawn
1
Bugs.
Hundreds of bugs. Thousands of them, many nearly as tall as she. All chittering
and clicking and waving their feathery antennae at one another as they went
about their daily business. Magnified by the heat and the more than 90 percent
humidity they favored, the atmosphere in the teeming underground avenue was
saturated with the natural perfume emitted by their massed bodies.
Understandably, they stared at her, their gloriously red-and-gold compound eyes
tracking her progress. When she felt it necessary, she would respond to their
inquiring gazes with acrr!lk of acknowledgment. Astonished to hear a human
speaking High Thranx, their multiple mouthparts would invariably twitch in
startled response. Such moments made her smile—though she was careful not to
expose her teeth. Through such small diplomacies were relations between species
improved for the better.
They were not bugs, of course. Though commonly used to describe the highly
intelligent insectoids, that word was typically insensitive human shorthand. The
thranx were arthropods, insectlikebut internally very different from their
primitive Terran look-alikes. Four-armed and four-legged, or two-armed and
six-legged—depending on the needs of the moment—they had helped humankind
finally defeat the invidious Pitar. That notable achievement was now more than
thirty years in the past. Since then, relations between the two victorious
species had improved considerably over the suspicions and uncertainty attendant
upon First Contact.
Stagnated would be a more accurate description, she mused. In certain specific
instances, it could even be argued that they had decayed. As a second-level
consul attached to the human embassy on Hivehom, it was the job of Fanielle
Anjou and her colleagues to see that they did not worsen any further. Those who
entertained higher hopes found themselves frustrated by the sluggish pace of
diplomacy on both sides.
The electrostatic wicking of the shorts and shirt she wore reduced the effect of
the oppressive humidity by more than half, and the electronic cooler integrated
into her neatly cocked cap did much to mitigate the heat, but there was no way
to pretend she was comfortable. It had been worse on the transport capsule that
had brought her into the inner city, even though the commuting thranx had
politely allotted her more space than they would have one of their own. As she
wiped at her face, she reflected on the eternal low-tech usefulness of an
absorbent handkerchief.
Diplomatic offices were on this level, but another half quadrant forward. She
passed a nursery, where larval thranx were cared for and educated while awaiting
metamorphosis; an eating establishment, with its rows of padded benches on which
a tired thranx could stretch out on its abdomen, legs dangling comfortably on
either side; and a large public information screen. The activities it proffered
were utterly alien to her. Despite nearly ninety years of casual contact, and
much closer interaction during the Humanx-Pitar War, humans still knew all too
little about the enigmatic eight-limbed acquaintances with whom they shared the
Orion Arm of the galaxy.
The public announcements that periodically echoed above the constant clacking of
busy mandibles were all in Low Thranx. She had not mastered either language, but
for a human, she was considered fluent—at least by her colleagues. What the
thranx thought of her attempts to speak their complex language she did not know.
No doubt they considered soft lips and a flexible tongue poor substitutes for
hard mandibles.
At least, she thought, I can make myself understood. That was more than many of
her click-challenged coworkers could claim.
An adult female with two adolescents in tow passed close by. Unlike human
postpubescents, the pair of youngsters were perfect downsized versions of the
adult. They were in the premolt stage, preparing to shed their hard exoskeletons
preparatory to growing into another size. Both had their antennae pointed
rigidly and impolitely in the direction of the bizarre biped coming in toward
them. As she strode past, Anjou overheard one chitter excitedly.
“But Birth Mother, it’s so soft and pulpy! How can it stand upright like that?
And on onlytwo legs!”
Anjou did not hear the birth mother’s answer. From what the diplomat knew of
thranx culture, the reply was most likely in the form of some mild chastisement
coupled with an attempt at explanation. What the latter would consist of would
probably be highly imaginative. The average hive dweller knew as much about
human physiology as a hydroengineer whose business it was to work on the
venerable water system of London knew about a thranx’s internal plumbing.
The particular burrow complex she was traversing was home to, among other
segments, the Diplomatic Contact section. Its sub-burrow loomed just ahead. The
main entrance, with its impressive portico of anodized metal and floating holoed
worlds, presented no problem. Entering the lift and hallway that lay beyond,
however, forced her to watch out for low-hanging appliances. Here her short
stature was a positive advantage. Her male colleagues dreaded having to visit
anything smaller than a main burrow corridor. If Jexter Henry, who stood a shade
under two meters tall, wanted to spend some time in a city like Daret, his
travels would be restricted to the main corridors. As a consequence, he was
essentially confined to the human outpost at Azerick.
Thoughts of that establishment, of its comfortable surroundings on the temperate
Mediterranea Plateau on the largest of Hivehom’s four continents, did not
improve her mood. At least, she reflected as she turned into a tertiary access
tunnel, the Contact facilities were located in a brand-new section of the city.
Being the capital not only of Hivehom but of the entire thranx expansion, Daret
had been among the first burrows to transform itself from a traditional hive
into a real city. As a diplomatic representative, she had been allowed to visit
the older, archeologically important sections of the metropolis, with their
early nurseries, food storehouses, and primitive arsenals. She had maintained a
smile—tight lipped, of course, so as not to expose her teeth—throughout, but had
no desire to repeat the tour. Even to a nonclaustrophobe, the ancient quarter of
the city was oppressive.
As she passed through the unobtrusive security scan, the male thranx of midage
who had been following her ever since her arrival in Daret was at last compelled
to abandon his pursuit and continue on past the entrance. He was not
disappointed. Though he possessed within his backpack the means for evading the
security system, now was not the time to employ it. That would come later, when
the fractionated time-part was deemed right by himself and his compeers.
Even fanatics have a sense of timing.
Unaware that she had been followed, Anjou presented her thranx security chit to
a series of scanners. It took her longer to gain entrance to the facility than
thranx who ambled up from behind and passed her, since the automated security
system had to not only verify that the pass she carried was indeed a match to
her particular cerebral emissions, but that she was of the species claimed by
the embedded photons. The eye scan that served to pass most thranx was of no use
in identifying humans, with their oversized, single-lensed oculars.
Eventually she reached the corridor that led to Haflunormet’s office. He greeted
her with a cheerful click and whistle, to which she replied to the best of her
increasing fluency in Low Thranx. He also inclined his head slightly forward,
presenting his feathery antennae. Bowing in turn, she reached up and flicked
them gently with the tips of her index fingers before allowing them to make
contact with her forehead. Formalities concluded, he employed both a truhand and
foothand to direct her to one of the three benches that fronted the freeform arc
of his workstation. Composed of a wondrously light yet strong beryllium-titanium
alloy, it was anodized with a flux that gave it the look of a dark, fine-grained
wood.
There were no windows in the chamber because there was nothing to look out upon.
Dwellers within the ground throughout most of their history, the thranx were
equally comfortable on the surface, but a complex assortment of reasons kept
their communities underground. A human forced to work every day in such
confinement would have found it suffocating, despite the excellent simscene of
luxuriant jungle that filled one wall with color, depth, and a farrago of
fragrance.
“I bid you good digging, Fanielle.” The Terran diplomat and her thranx
counterpart had been on a first-name basis for several months now. As he settled
himself back on his elongated seat, she retired to one of the low visitors’
benches. Instead of lying prone on her chest and stomach while straddling it
head-forward in the thranx manner, she simply sat down on the soft artificial
padding. It made for a perfectly comfortable perch, if one discounted the
absence of any back support. It was certainly preferable to sitting on the
floor.
She did not need to see Haflunormet to recognize him. Every individual thranx
emitted a distinctive personal perfume, each more aromatic and sweet-scented
than the next. A visit to a city the size of Daret could easily overpower the
olfactory sensitive. To her, entering a thranx hive was like plunging into a sea
of freshly plucked tropical flowers. Even those humans who disliked the
appearance of the thranx were hard put to remain hostile in their astonishingly
fragrant presence.
Unfortunately, she reflected, a way had yet to be found that could effectively
transmit true smell via tridee. It was too bad. If every human could meet a
thranx face-to-face, the continuing uncertain and unsettled state of relations
between the two species might be at least partially alleviated.
The improvement in Haflunormet’s Terranglo had kept pace with her growing
fluency in both Low and the more difficult High Thranx. “I trust you had a
pleasant journey from Azerick?”
“The flight was smooth enough, if that’s what you mean.” She shifted her rear on
the near end of the long, narrow cushion, wishing for something to rest her
spine against. “The tube transport from the port into Daret was a little slow.”
“It’s a busy time of year. Fourth cycle of the Dry Season here.”
She chuckled softly. “You have a dry season?” It had rained hard and steady ever
since the atmospheric shuttle had begun its descent into Daret Port East.
“Taste in atmospheric conditions is relative.” Haflunormet gestured expressively
with both truhands. “I don’t see how you humans stand that high, cold desert you
call the Med’ranna Plat’u.”
Anjou tried not to think of the pleasant, temperate hillsides where the human
outpost was situated. Despite the best efforts of her specialized attire, she
was sweating profusely. Though she had grown personally fond of Haflunormet, she
couldn’t wait to get out of the chamber, with its low ceiling and windowless
environment, and back onto the surface.
“I see that you are uncomfortable.”
His observation startled her. “I didn’t know you had become so adept at
interpreting human expressions.”
“It is difficult.” He gestured casually. “It takes continuous effort for us to
realize that those species equipped with flexible epidermi utilize them to
convey the same kinds of meanings that we do with our hands. And your skin is
more elastic than that of the AAnn, the sentient race you most closely resemble
physically. I have had to work hard with my study visuals.”
“You watch my face; I observe your limb movements.” She gestured decorously. “By
such studies do we learn from each other.”
He rose from behind the workstation. “Enough to know that you would be more at
ease outside the city.” Approaching until he was standing next to her on all
four trulegs, he reached up with a foothand and gently urged her in the
direction of the portal.
“Let’s take a riser to the surface,keerkt . It will be just as hot and humid,
but I know that your kind respond with favor to the unrestricted flow of open
air.” He made a short gesture of curious indifference. “A peculiar affectation,
but a harmless one.”
She was more than tempted. “What about security?”
Compound eyes flashing golden beneath the overhead illumination, he indicated
reassurance. “We can talk freely in the Park. There are many secure places.”
She did not need further convincing. Together, they exited his work chamber and
retraced her steps as far as the main corridor. Instead of continuing on past
Security, they turned down another narrow passageway that terminated at a bank
of oval gateways. Her head just did clear the entrance to the one he selected,
but she had to bend slightly at the waist to avoid bumping it on the ceiling of
the internal transport motile. Nearly all her male and most of her female
colleagues would have been forced to sit on the floor.
Haflunormet coded in a destination, and in seconds they were ascending at a
rapid rate of speed. When the riser halted and the portal reopened, she was
greeted by a vista of tangled alien rain forest, wondrous aromas, and ferine
screeching. The ostensible wildness was illusory. The bulk of the terrain that
lay directly above the subterranean capital consisted of carefully tended
parkland. The filtered water sources, holoed directions that appeared at the
wave of a truhand, concealed emergency communications devices, artfully
disguised food-procuring facilities, and other technologically inconspicuous
paraphernalia scattered strategically along the path Haflunormet chose pointed
to the highly domesticated nature of the “jungle track” down which they began
strolling. In appearance, the forest they were entering was little different
from those undomesticated tracts that survived elsewhere on Hivehom. But this
one had been tamed.
Not only did the heat and humidity not assault her as they exited the riser, it
was actually cooler and drier on the surface than in the vast hive conurbation
below. Repressing a smile, she hoped it was not too chilly out for Haflunormet.
Their divergent preferences in climatic conditions provided numerous
opportunities for amusement. In contrast to their weather, the thranx sense of
humor was noticeably drier than that of humans. The intent of traditional human
slapstick, for example, escaped them completely. To a thranx, a pie in the face
was food wasted; nothing more. In contrast, whistling thranx were often clearly
amused by conflations that humans found nothing more than common coincidence.
We still, she reflected as she strolled down the path alongside the thranx
diplomat, have so very much to learn about one another.
A quartet ofqinks bobbled past over their heads, gyrating from one tree to
another. Both mating pairs capered around each other, performing an intricate
mating dance in the air. As she understood it from the Biology Department, qinks
only mated in fours, the twofold coupling bolstering the chances of producing
viable offspring instead of unsettling it. Like little helicopters, the
multiwinged qinks whirled overhead in tiny, tight circles. This meant that at
any one time, one or two of the participants was actually flying backward.
Ordinarily, it would put that individual at risk from lurking predators. But
since qinks only flew the mating dance in tetrads, two of them were always
keeping an eye on the sky ahead at all times.
She lengthened her stride, not wishing to be standing directly beneath the
whirling aerialists when the time came for them to consummate their performance.
Though his legs were markedly shorter than hers, Haflunormet had six of them at
his disposal and had no trouble matching the pace. In a sprint, she knew, she
could easily outrun him and most other thranx. With his three sets of legs and
greater endurance, over a distance he would catch up to and surpass her.
Qinks and sprints, witticisms and woes, she reflected. All grist for the mill of
diplomacy. Haflunormet felt similarly, though he was inherently more pessimistic
than his human counterpart. Or maybe it was patience, she decided. Humans
frequently mistook the immoderate patience of the intelligent arthropods for
pessimism.
“How are you coming with arranging that meeting we spoke about?” she asked him.
In presenting the question, she employed a combination of human words and thranx
words, clicks, and whistles. This useful and informal shorthand manner of
speaking was gaining increasing favor among not only the diplomatic but the
scientific staff at Azerick. Combined with thranx gestures and the resident
humans’ best attempts to imitate these utilizing only two hands instead of four,
it formed a kind of casual symbolic speech. This allowed thranx to practice
their Terranglo and humans the opportunity to train their throats in the
elaborate vocalizations of the thranx.
“Krrik,it is proceeding slowly. Discouragingly so. I think the physicists are
not the only ones who are absorbed in the study of inertia.” He glanced over and
up at her to make sure she understood the last term correctly. As she did not
immediately laugh in the human manner, he could not be certain she had
understood his attempt at humor. Of all the humans he had met—admittedly this
was not a large number—Anjou was the most consistently serious. Perhaps, he
ruminated, this was why she got along so well with the thranx. To Haflunormet it
appeared she sometimes acted in this manner to the detriment of her relationship
with her fellow mammals.
Watching her step easily alongside him, he tried to admire the play of her
muscles, obscenely visible beneath the semitransparent epidermis. Diplomat or
no, he found he could not do it. There was simply too much movement, too much
visible play within the anatomical structure. In this it resembled that of the
AAnn, but the reptiloids’ internal composition was concealed by tough,
reflective, leathery scales. If a person peered closely at a human, individual
blood vessels could be seen not only beneath the skin but forming rills and
ridges above it. Their entire corporeal structure was, inarguably, turned inside
out.
He forced himself not to look away. It would be impolite. This female was his
hive counterpart. Much as the sight unsettled his stomachs, he was determined to
maintain visual contact. As to the sharp, distinctive, and wholly unpleasant
smell that emanated from the biped, he steadfastly refused to dwell on it. No
matter how their future relations evolved, he realized that there were some
things that could not be changed through negotiation.
He worked to pay attention, realizing that the tottering upright stinking blob
was speaking. No, he corrected himself resolutely: It was a graceful, fluid
biped who was addressing him. Formal diplomacy aside, the thranx were
exceedingly polite: a consequence of having evolved in surroundings so confined
that humans could not even conceive of the social forces that had been at work.
To the thranx, of course, they did not seem confined at all, but perfectly
normal and natural. It was wide-open aboveground spaces that tended to
occasionally make them nervous. Consequently, their conquest of space had been a
more impressive feat than that of humans. Psychology was harder to engineer than
spacecraft.
Anjou was deep in thought as they turned a bend in the trail. Eint Carwenduved
was Haflunormet’s superior. Because of the rigid thranx chain of diplomatic
command, only she could properly accept a formal proposal from the Terran
government and pass it on to the Grand Council for discussion and consideration.
It had taken a select group of forward-thinking statespeople from half a dozen
human settled worlds almost two years to finally hammer out a preliminary
proposal for establishing closer ties between their respective species. This had
not even been voted on by the Congress on Terra, yet the signatories felt that
opening negotiations with their thranx counterparts at the same time as the
details were being debated on the human homeworld would, if nothing else, serve
to accelerate mutual consideration of the delicate issues involved.
It was an acknowledged diplomatic ploy, a means of forcing reluctant individuals
on both sides to consider politically highly sensitive issues they might
otherwise prefer to ignore. Easy enough for the executive director of the colony
world of Kansastan to ignore the question of closer human-thranx relations—but
not if he felt that his thranx counterpart on Humus was ready to vote on the
matter. Merely having the proposals presented for contemplation forced those to
whom they were delivered to deliberate their possible ramifications. A good deal
of the work of real diplomacy consisted of engaging such individual
uncertainties.
Just agreeing on what was technically a compilation of informal suggestions was
a triumph for those thranx and humans involved. Others, they knew, were actively
working to discourage the implementation of even one of the proposals. One way
to do this was to persuade those in positions to actually make decisions to
simply ignore anything relevant that crossed their desks. Hence Anjou’s intense
desire to have a face-to-face meeting with Eint Carwenduved. Haflunormet’s
superincumbent could not only present proposals to the Grand Council; she could
go so far as to make recommendations.
Through Haflunormet, Anjou had been trying to arrange such a meeting for more
than six months. Patience or pessimism, whatever one chose to call it, the
seemingly endless procrastination was driving her crazy. She could not give vent
to her true feelings, however—not in front of Haflunormet. The xenologists had
been firm on that from the beginning. She had yet to meet a thranx who would not
recoil in distaste at what was to them an often explosive human outburst of
emotion.
Anyway, she told herself, diplomats do not do that sort of thing. So the fact
that she wanted to stop right there and then in the middle of the domesticated
alien jungle and scream out her frustration to curious qinks and any other
exotics within range of her voice had to remain nothing more than a passing
fancy. But the desire did not wane quickly, she realized.
The delay was not Haflunormet’s fault. She knew that. Thranx diplomacy made the
human equivalent appear to progress at lightning speed. There was nothing to be
done about it but persist, stay polite, and keep her hopes up.
“Why the continuing reluctance?” She gazed over at glittering compound eyes that
were more advanced than that of any terrestrial insect. “It’s just a meeting. It
needn’t even last very long.”
Haflunormet stepped, one set of legs at a time, over an artfully positionedzell
root. “Eint Carwenduved continues to study the proposals.”
“I know that—she’s been ‘studying’ them for the better part of a year.” At once,
Anjou regretted her tone, even though it was unlikely that Haflunormet was aware
of its significance. His knowledge of human gestures, facial expressions, and
linguistic peculiarities was improving rapidly, however, so she was more
concerned than she would have been a few months ago.
He did not react as if he detected any bitterness, however. “You must
understand, Fanielle, that such things take more time to be resolved among my
kind than they seem to among yours. Carwenduved must be certain of herself
before she commits to any course of action because she will inevitably be held
responsible for relevant consequences.”
Which was a fancy and not altogether alien way of saying that the eint was
stalling, Anjou knew.
“The eint marvels at your earnestness,” Haflunormet continued. “She sees no need
for a ‘face-to-face,’ as you call it.” As the thranx diplomat spoke, he absently
employed a truhand to preen his left antenna.
“My people believe strongly that personal contact is an important component of
diplomacy.”
Haflunormet indicated understanding. “You do realize that not all my kind take
pleasure from being in your physical presence.” He hastened to qualify his
comment. “I did not mean you personally, of course! I meant humans in general.”
“I know what you meant.” Anjou was not naÏve. She was fully aware that most
thranx, especially those who had experienced little or no contact with humans,
found the presence of her kind physically unappealing. It was something she had
worked hard to overcome, in everything from her attire to her manner of
speaking. “But as a diplomat, I am entitled to certain accommodations.” This
time her tone was firm. “Eint Carwenduved realizes this as well.”
“I know that she does.” Haflunormet sighed, the air wheezing gently from the
breathing spicules that lined his b-thorax. “Your patience gains you merit in
her eyes as well as in mine, Fanielle.”
What patience? she thought. I’m going crazy here, hanging around up at Azerick
waiting for your mommy bug to deign to see me. She promptly shunted the
undiplomatic and very unthranxlike thought aside.
Instead of thinking antithranx thoughts, what might she make use of that the
thranx themselves would react to? Perhaps she had been stalking the impasse from
the wrong direction. Perhaps she had been thinking too many human thoughts.
How would a thranx diplomat gain speedier access to a counterpart? It would have
to be something informal, she knew. The delicate intricacies and involved
traditions of thranx hive government were still largely a mystery to the human
researchers charged with interpreting them. More was known about thranx culture
and society in general. Mightn’t there be something there she could apply?
She halted so suddenly that Haflunormet was momentarily alarmed. Both antennae
fluttered in her direction. “Is something the matter, Fanielle? If you are
feeling stressed by the local conditions, we can find you a climate-controlled
chamber in which to revitalize—though I personally find the weather outside
today a bit on the cool side.”
“Yes,” she told him. “Yes, I am feeling a little—a little faint.” She put the
back of one hand to her forehead in a melodramatic gesture any human would have
found amusing, but which the anxious thranx could only view as potentially
alarming. “It happens to us—at such times.”
He indicated confusion. “Of what ‘times’ are you speaking?”
“Oh, that’s right. You don’t know. I haven’t told you before now, have I? An
oversight on my part. You see—I’m pregnant, Haflunormet. With, um—” She thought
of the dancing qinks. “—quadruplets.” Unfamiliar with the nature or frequency of
human birthing, the anxious diplomat ought to accept her admission at face
value. He did.
“Srr!lk!You should have told me!” Setting aside his instinctive distaste for
such contact, he took her free hand in both his foothands. “Do you want to lie
down? Can I get you fluid? Do you wish an internal lubrication?”
“Uh, no thanks,” she replied hastily, dropping the hand from her forehead even
as she wondered what an on-the-spot internal lubrication meant to a thranx
female.
In a determined gesture of interspecies concern, Haflunormet continued to hold
her hand, doing his best to ignore the unnatural warmth that radiated from the
pulpy flesh. He realized how much he had come to like this particular human. If
something were to happen to her while she was in his company, not only would it
reflect on his individual and family history, he would regret it personally.
“How are your eggs? Excuse me,” he corrected himself, “your live feti. Fetuses?”
Despite his disquiet, he could not bring himself to contemplate the wriggling,
unshelled larvae that must even now be jostling for room within her womb. He
tried to lighten the moment. “As you possess no ovipositors that I could observe
going into pre-laying spasm, I had no visual clue to your condition.”
“It’s all right. I’ll be fine.” Meeting his gaze, which she assumed reflected
his concern even though his compound eyes could not convey anything like such a
complex emotion, she announced firmly, “Tell Eint Carwenduved that the pregnant
human Fanielle Anjou is making a formalBryn’ja request.”
Haflunormet started, his antennae twitching. Then he simultaneously whistled his
amusement and understanding. “The news will place the eint in a difficult
position.”
That’s the idea, she thought, wincing perceptibly for effect. If she understood
the pertinent aspect of thranx culture correctly, no adult could refuse a first
Bryn’ja request from a female who was about to lay. Such a compunction applied
equally to ordinary citizens, respected poets, noted teachers, and everyone
within the hive irrespective of function. It even applied to diplomats.
Of course, it was a blatant lie. Surely, she told herself, the first time in
history one had been employed in the service of diplomacy. She would have to
make sure her colleagues at Azerick were informed of her “condition” lest the
always thorough thranx decided to check on it with a second source. Once her
rather abrupt pregnancy was verified, it would be interesting to see how the
thranx would react. Time would at last become a factor. To refuse a first
Bryn’ja request from a gravid female until after she laid her eggs would earn
the refuser significant opprobrium. Her only real concern was whether or not the
custom would apply across species lines. And if it did, would it be subject to
the same onerous, lingering deliberation as every other communication she had
asked Haflunormet to pass along to the chamber of the eint? Could any thranx
authority move at more than a sluggard’s pace, no matter the incidental
circumstances?
The official response was as revealing as it was gratifying. So much of
successful diplomacy was not about knowing how to do something, or when, but how
to step just ever so slightly outside the boundaries of traditional, formal
negotiation without falling into the pit of cultural transgression.
Within thirty-two hours, she received acknowledgment of her long-sought-after
appointment.
2
The Bwyl were furious. They had been ever since the revelation of the presence
on Willow-Wane of the covert human outpost there, with its clandestine attempts
to bring humans and thranx closer together, had been divulged to an unknowing
hive public more than eighty years earlier. It was bad enough, from the
standpoint of the Bwyl, that humans and the thranx had cooperated in a war
against the Pitar that was no hive’s business. The disclosure that the
soft-bodied, bipedal mammals had been allowed to establish what amounted to a de
facto colony on a developed thranx world amounted to cultural sacrilege. The
purity of the Great Hive had been defiled.
Worse still, the vast majority of thranx had reacted indecisively at best,
indifferently at worst, to the announcement. Now that the war against the Pitar
lay nearly in the receding past, where humans were concerned the average
burrower seemed to hold little in the way of strong opinion. So long as the
humans posed no overt threat to the Great Hive and did not ally themselves with
the bellicose AAnn, the typical worker was content to ignore them. And if the
respective life tunnels of the two species happened to intersect now and then,
why, it would only be polite to pause and allow those traveling crosswise to
pass without confrontation.
It was all very bewildering to the Bwyl. What about the sanctity of the hive?
Where was traditional deference to poetic purity? Bad enough to allow these
red-blood-pumping creatures access outside the usual restricted diplomatic
missions. To allow ordinary citizens to mix with them at will, without proper
safeguards or preliminary acculturation, was to invite cultural degradation and
worse. What was a newly metamorphosed adolescent to think when confronted with
sophisticated sentients who wore their skeletons on theinside and peered at the
universe out of single-lensed eyes?
It was not to be tolerated. But the Bwyl, though a multihive fellowship, were
few in number. They could not influence the councils proportionately. They did
have many who were sympathetic to their aims, but who were afraid to express
their beliefs openly. The Bwyl base of support was large, but diffuse.
It did not matter. They could wait no longer. Already, there was talk at
significant hive levels of formalizing a much closer alliance with the humans.
True, such talk had been rampant since the end of the Humanx-Pitar War. Lately,
though, it had taken on a certain urgency. Important eints who believed they
could make use of the humans as a bulwark against the adventurism of the AAnn
had been pressing for more than talk. Regrettably, they found sympathetic
hearing organs among traitorous members of the lower councils. Now dialogue
threatened to become action, and action, decision. For the sake of the Great
Hive, this had to be prevented.
Which was why the Bwyl had called the meeting on Willow-Wane. Its members were
not alone in their stand. There were two other interhival societies that had on
more than one occasion expressed similar sentiments. Representatives of the S!k
and the Arba had arrived on Willow-Wane only days before to participate in the
critical discussion.
Now the twineight gathered on the shore of the River Niivuodd, chattering
amiably among themselves. To passersby they looked for all the world like a
group of taskmates out for a day’s relaxation. They carried food and drink and
humming amusements, and talked of inconsequentialities. But their intentions
were far more serious than an afternoon’s casual distraction. They had not
joined together beneath Willow-Wane’s searing sun for purposes of frolic.
When all had assembled by the river’s shore and settled themselves in a half
circle facing the water and one another, and when assurance came from posted
sentries that no patrollers, first class or otherwise, were lingering in the
vicinity, Tunborelarba of the Arba waved all four hands for quiet and proceeded
to open the solemn convocation with a pugnacious, if not downright martial,
paean to the virtues of the Great Hive. His fine words and whistles encompassed
them all, from outworld visitors to their resolute Willow-Wane hosts.
Then Beskodnebwyl of the Bwyl rose on his four trulegs and declaimed what all of
them were thinking. Overhead, a flock of silvertaiax flew past, dipping and
looping to snap in unison at the smaller arthropods that filled the steamy
afternoon air. Their sedateke-uk ,chitt-chitt ,ke-uk-uk did not interrupt the
flow of the charismatic speaker’s words.
“We are gathered here because we agree that anything deeper than the
traditional, polite, formal relations that exist between sentients of different
species is an abomination that is not to be tolerated.” Attentive antennae and
glittering compound eyes were focused in his direction. Near the back, the
ovipositors of a young female S!k as fanatical as she was attractive contracted
in response to the forcefulness of the Bwyl’s words.
“There are those among the hives of several of the burrowed worlds who believe
that a stronger relationship can be forged with these humans. These fools dwell
in the nursery of delusion. The bipeds are too different—not only in appearance,
but in culture, actions, psychohistory, and every other standard that is used to
take the measure of another species. Our alliance with them for the duration of
the latter part of the Pitarian War was superficial and designed to achieve
maximum diplomatic benefit in a limited period of time.”
“Principally to forestall the designs of the AAnn,” an Abra could not refrain
from pointing out.
Beskodnebwyl did not upbraid his impassioned listener for the discourteous
interruption. All were allies in this place: supporters of a similar philosophy.
He had no intention of alienating a collaborator over a point of etiquette.
“That is so. Yet despite what appears to us to be the obvious, there are among
our own kind those who are sufficiently deluded to desire to place the security
and sanctity of the Great Hive itself at risk. They intend to do this by forging
ties with these humans of a nature so intimate I can scarcely bring myself to
contemplate it. You will understand my feelings when you receive the detailed
reports that will be provided to all of you at the close of this gathering. All
I can say without going into further particulars is that there are varieties and
types of corruption not even new larvae can dream of.”
“They must be blind!” someone chirruped above a chorus of lesser clicking.
For a second time, Beskodnebwyl deferred his right to criticize an outburst.
“There are all kinds of blindness, many of which have nothing to do with the
sense of sight. It is these we must correct, even at the risk of carrying out
bitter antisocial behavior. The very ancestral integrity of the Great Hive is at
stake.” Reaching back into a thorax pouch, he withdrew a compact projector and
spurred it to life. Immediately, a semitransparent globe appeared before the
body of thranx assembled by the river. It was a representation of an attractive
world even the most galographically sophisticated among them did not recognize.
“The planet Dawn, as the humans have named it. A fetching place, by all
description. Newly settled and growing rapidly. There is also, in this
subversive spirit of specious cooperation that presently exists between our
respective species, a sizable burrow located beneath the swamps and savannas of
the minor southern continent.”
“What has this to do with us and our avowed purpose?” a female S!k inquired
reasonably.
Manipulating the projector, Beskodnebwyl increased the magnification
substantially, until they found themselves eying one of the distorted, sprawling
aboveground conurbations that had become more and more familiar recently in the
information media. Frivolously tall, slim edifices, not only unaesthetic but
impractical, thrust absurdly all the way up into the weather. Extensive
agricultural facilities bumped up against a surprising amount of undeveloped
green space. Free-standing bodies of water were spotted with fishing craft.
Clearly visible were all the mysterious accouterments of a characteristic
aboveground human hive.
“There is to be a fair held on Dawn, to be situated not far outside the capital
city of Aurora.” Beskodnebwyl continued to manipulate the details of the holo as
he explained. “A cultural fair, exhibiting the best and newest of human music
and arts.”
“Is that not a contradiction in terms?” someone ventured. Amused whistling
spilled from the assembled to drift across the river.
“Obviously, not to humans, it isn’t,” Beskodnebwyl observed when the laughter
had died down. “This gathering will also present contributions from the local
thranx of the southern continent.” He leaned forward, stretching his b-thorax,
his antennae quivering with barely concealed passion. “It is to be a wholly
cross-cultural, cross-species event—the first of its kind on Dawn. In addition
to presentations by the locals, a number of important artists from nearby
settled worlds, both human and thranx, are also to participate. For so young a
colony, it promises to be a most prestigious and important convocation, a
watershed in the settlement’s evolution.” He drew himself back, pausing and
gesturing for emphasis.
“We of the Bwyl also intend that it shall be so, and in a manner that will leave
a deep and lasting impression on perceptive sentients everywhere. We hope that
you of the S!k and the Abra will join us in making our own presentation at this
fair.”
“Which will consist of?” The senior Abra present waved an antenna inquiringly.
Beskodnebwyl did not hesitate, nor did his tone change. “We hope to disrupt the
fair, and in doing so push the course of human-thranx relations back onto a
proper level, by killing as many of the participants as possible. Operating
under the guise of the ancient Protectors, we hope to make our case so
irresistibly to all citizens of the Greater Hive that they will have no choice
but to see the correctness of our doctrine.” He indicated first-degree
confidence.
“The humans will respond immediately to our actions, of course. Once word of our
involvement and efforts is disseminated, they will enter the fair and kill us as
quickly as they can. With luck, some of us will escape to carry on the necessary
work. Those of us who do not will be recycled knowing that they gave their
essence to preserve the Great Hive, much as our ancestors did in the course of
thousands of ancient battles. This cause is nobler than any of those, because it
is carried out on behalf of the entire Great Hive itself.” He switched
deliberately to the rougher but more straightforward Low Thranx.
“Males and females of the S!k and the Abra: Will you join with your hive mates
the Bwyl in this great and noble undertaking?”
Animated discussion followed, lively but by no means uniform. Clearly, there
remained among the disputants considerable difference of opinion. Having chosen
directness over diplomacy, Beskodnebwyl had no leeway for hesitation. Nor had he
intended to leave any.
“How would you intend to do this thing?” Velhurmeabra of the Abra was clearly
taken aback by the proposal and not afraid to say so. “Will the humans have in
place no precautions against such an eventuality, no guards?”
“Why should they?” Beskodnebwyl replied expansively. “It is a cultural fair, not
a military caucus. As to the actual methods to be employed in the carrying out
of our intentions, we have already spent much time refining our options.”
“What about introducing into the atmosphere of the gathering a powerful
cyanotoxin?” one of the more enthusiastic S!k proposed.
“For the same reason that we cannot spread a lethal hemolument.” This time the
images generated by Beskodnebwyl’s hand-held projector were more detailed, full
of charts and sketches that floated in midair before the assemblage. “Human
blood binds oxygen through the use of iron, not the usual copper. I am assured
that given enough time and resources, suitable poisons could be engineered for
use against them. We have neither. By the same token, biological agents that
would devastate us are just as likely to pass harmlessly through their systems.
For example, thegin!gas wasting disease for which no cure has yet been
discovered degrades chitin. I am told that malignant as it is, it might at most
cause the hair and fingernails of some humans to fall out. That is hardly the
bold statement we wish to make.”
“Then what do you propose to do?” Uhlenfirs!k of the S!k asked, then waited
quietly.
Beskodnebwyl underlined his response with deliberate movements of antennae and
truhands. Behind him, an aquatichermot splashed in the river, pursuing a school
of hard-shelledcouvine , predator and prey alike oblivious to the convocation on
the nearby bank vigorously contemplating mass murder.
“Explosives have the advantage of not discriminating between species. Volunteers
have already been chosen. They will infiltrate this detestable fair and wreak
such havoc as cannot be imagined. The fact that individuals will be free to do
their work independent of any central control ensures that even if one or more
are detected and forced to abort their mission, the others will be able to
proceed unimpaired. Additionally, every operative will enter adequately armed
for their personal defense.”
The nominal leaders of the S!k and the Abra conferred, supported by their most
able aides. When they were through, Velhurmeabra of the Abra faced his expectant
counterparts across the semicircle.
“While we of the Abra and the S!k feel much as you do with regard to this too
rapid and too intimate mixing of species, we have decided not to participate in
your plans to disrupt the cultural fair on the world of Dawn. While we are not
entirely opposed to the use of violent means of dissuasion, indiscriminate
bombing of so large a gathering will inevitably slay or injure numerous artists
as well as ordinary visitors.”
One of the S!k spoke up. “The killing of an artist is an abomination unto
itself. The stifling of any fount of creativity, however modest, diminishes us
all.”
Beskodnebwyl gestured understanding. He had expected this line of objection.
“Humans feel otherwise. They make no such sharp distinctions between, say,
composers of music and purifiers of water. It is further proof of their degraded
culture.”
“But you cannot guarantee,” Velhurmeabra continued inexorably, “that only human
artists will die.”
“Unfortunately,” Beskodnebwyl responded, “explosives are notoriously
undiscriminating. It is conceded that thranx will also perish in the making of
our statement. It is unavoidable.”
“Then we cannot participate actively,” the Abra concluded.
Beskodnebwyl pounced on an inflection. “ ‘Actively’?”
The leader of the S!k spoke up. “We have no legs to provide you, no antennae to
aid you, no eyes to share. But—” He hesitated only for emphasis. “—we wish you
well in the enterprise, which seems almost certain to accomplish the goals you
have set out for it. While not participating directly, we can perhaps provide
some small encouragement.”
“In any event, we will do nothing to discourage you from burrowing in this
chosen direction,” the Abra concluded.
It was not all that Beskodnebwyl had hoped for. But logistical support would be
useful and would free up the dedicated members of the Bwyl to carry out the more
active components of the scheme. The Abra and the S!k could not overcome the
deep-seated cultural prejudice against the killing of artists. Only the Bwyl had
progressed far enough to do that. But the support of the others would be
welcomed. They wished to share in the credit for the ultimate disruption of
human-thranx integration, but not in the ultimate risk.
It was better than outright dissension, Beskodnebwyl knew. The Abra and the S!k
had access to materials and contacts and useful facilities that were denied the
Bwyl. When the deed was done, the truth would come out. Credit would be
apportioned where due. Beskodnebwyl was not concerned with the refining of such
matters. He carried nothing for credit. He wanted only to put a halt to this
abhorrent, noisome mixing of species.
If the Burrow Master was with them, they would do precisely that—once and for
all time.
Elkannah Skettle stepped off the shuttle and examined the world spread out
before him with great interest. Ahead, he saw Lawlor and Martine passing rapidly
through Customs. Pierrot, Botha, Nevisrighne, and the others were somewhere in
the crowd behind him that was still filing off the transport vehicle. They had
grown used to traveling together yet keeping their distance from one another.
The port facilities were efficient, the port’s equipment spotless, the smiles on
the faces of the local officials almost painfully welcoming. And why shouldn’t
they be? he mused. Dawn was a new world, bursting with opportunity, unclaimed
lands, fortunes yet to be made. The climate was salubrious, the terrain
inviting, the local flora and fauna reasonably pacific. A fine place to live and
an enchanting place to visit.
Provided, he knew as he smiled pleasantly at the young woman who passed him
through the body scanner, it could be kept free of bugs.
Not that there was anything inherently wrong with the bugs, he reflected as he
presented himself to Customs. Or with the Quillp, or the AAnn, or any of the
diverse other intelligent races with whom humankind shared this corner of the
Orion Arm. He had reason of his own to be grateful to the bugs. Without the aid
they had rendered to humankind in the Pitarian War, a favorite grandniece of his
might not have survived the fighting. Military assistance in the midst of
conflict was always welcome.
But the idea that relations should proceed beyondthat was simply intolerable to
one who loved his kind. The thranx might be all twirling antennae and sweet
smells on the surface, but they were as alien as any sentient species humanity
had yet encountered. The revelation that they had an actual colony in the Amazon
Basin had been enough to trigger simmering outrage not only in men like himself,
but in many who previously had given little thought to the problem.
And itwas a problem. How could humankind ever be certain of its safety, of its
very future, if empty-headed authorities allowed aliens to expand beyond the
customary, restricted diplomatic and commercial sites where they were allowed?
The notion that such growth should not only be permitted but encouraged and
codified was sufficient to prod Skettle and those of like mind to move beyond
protest to action. Negotiations, he knew, were presently at a delicate stage and
could go either forward or back. A well-timed statement might be enough to put a
stop to foolishness that bordered on the seditious.
Unlike others who felt similarly, Skettle did not think those humans who blindly
advocated intimate ties with the thranx were traitors. They were simply
ignorant. The bugs had deceived them. They were very clever, the thranx. Polite
to a fault, ever conscious of the feelings of others, they had lulled supposedly
astute people into a false sense of security the likes of which humankind had
never before experienced.
But not all of us, he thought resolutely as he presented his travel case for
inspection.
He waited while it passed beneath the Customs scanner. His corpus had already
been cleared. Now it remained only for his luggage to do the same. Lawlor was
the only potential weak link in the group, he knew. The man tended to exhibit
unease even when no threat was apparent. That was why Skettle had chosen to
carry this particular case. Old men were not usually the first to be suspected
of smuggling.
With a tip of his cap and a practiced smile, the earnest young inspector passed
him through. Picking up his case on the other side of the scanner, Skettle
resumed his trek through the terminal, staying in the middle of the stream of
disembarking passengers. Compared to those on major worlds like Terra or
Amropolus, the terminal was not large. The scanner had detected nothing inside
his case beyond the expected: clothing, vacation gear, personal communicator—the
usual unremarkable assortment of travel goods.
It had not, however, performed a detailed analysis of the luggage itself. Even
had it undergone that thorough an examination, the local authorities would still
have been hard pressed to prove anything. Had they noted the composition of
Lawlor’s case, and Martine’s, and subjected them to observation by a trained
physical chemist, however, they would no doubt have been persuaded to
investigate further.
Each of the three cases was composed of a different set of materials. When
certain specific sections of the trio were cut up and then layered together in
the appropriate proportions, then treated with a commonly available binding
fluid, the result was neat little squares of an extraordinarily dynamic
explosive. Utilizing this product, Elkannah Skettle and his colleagues intended
for the widely advertised Dawn Intercultural Fair to give off even more heat
than its organizers intended.
Everything had been carefully prepared in advance. It was meant for the deadly
consequences to be blamed on unknown provocateurs working together with renegade
thranx elements, but the apportionment of blame was not really crucial. What
mattered was the disruption, and preferably the destruction, of the fair itself.
If nothing else, it would put an end to what was supposed to be an exchange of
“culture” among the races. What nonsense! Skettle chuckled to himself. The idea
that humans and bugs should create art in common, that thranx culture should be
allowed to contaminate human painting, music, song, or sculpture, would have
been laughable if it was not so dangerous. Such aesthetic degradation could not
be allowed. Were no one but Skettle and his associates thinking of the children
as yet unborn? He thought, as he had so very many times, of the brave forebears
of his own organization who had given their lives in the attempt years before to
wipe out the foul thranx colony located in the Reserva Amazonia. Their sacrifice
would not go unavenged.
The Preservers took separate transport to the small hotel they had booked.
Located on the outskirts of Aurora, capital of the semitropical colony, the
establishment overlooked a small natural lake and was within easy commuting
distance of the fair. Following a suitable pause after checking in, they
assembled by ones and twos in a prereserved commons room. There they bantered
trivialities while Botha checked for hidden sensors and erected an
industrial-strength sound envelope. There was no reason to suspect the presence
of the former and no demonstrated need for the latter, but they were taking no
chances—especially when the hand weapons they had contracted for were due to
arrive with their local contact later in the day.
Feeling secure, they activated the tridee and waited the necessary few seconds
for the room unit to warm up. As soon as the menu appeared in the air on the far
side of the room, Pierrot directed it to provide them with as much local
background on the fair as was available for viewing, commencing with material
recorded as recently as ten days prior to their arrival.
The site was expanding impressively. Portable structures had been raised on the
far side of the main lake, facilities for transport vehicles had been prepared
underground, a high-speed transport link with the city continuing on to the
shuttleport had been constructed and tested, and the usual virtually invisible
molegel had been suspended in place above the entire site to shield it from any
adverse weather, since Dawn did not yet possess the advanced climate-moderating
facilities of more technologically mature worlds. Most of the larger exhibits
were already in place and undergoing final checkout.
“Show us the thranx pavilions,” Skettle ordered the tridee. Obediently, it
supplied perfectly formed floating images on one side with a running printed
commentary, in addition to the accompanying audio, on the other. Cerebral
plug-ins were available, as was to be expected in any decent hostelry. Skettle
disdained their use in favor of group observation.
“Look at that grotesquerie.” Pierrot called for magnification, and the tridee
unit complied. “What can that abomination possibly be?” She was shaking her head
disdainfully.
“Some kind of organic sculpture, I would guess.” Botha possessed more
imagination than most of them, Skettle included. “It’s not so bad, if you ignore
the color scheme.”
“Remember,” Skettle announced, “it’s not the content of the fair that we’re here
to terminate. We’re not art critics.” A few laughs rose above the ongoing
commentary from the tridee. “It’s the possibility that such content may lead to
a freedom for thranx on human worlds that will let them infiltrate and
eventually dominate our very lives, from the way we create to the way we live.”
This time his words were greeted not with laughter, but with grim muttering.
They watched for more than an hour, until Nevisrighne could take it no more.
Rising, he walked over to the room’s food service bay and ordered a chilled
alcoholic fruit drink. “I’m sorry, but I can’t watch anymore. Too many bugs for
one morning.”
“Time we finalized more than observations, anyway.” Botha looked expectantly to
Skettle.
The old man nodded, his fine gray beard bobbing prominently. “All right. I know
you’re all anxious to begin the actual work, but we must be careful not to rush
matters. Now that the time for action is so near, it is all the more imperative
that we exercise restraint and caution. The last thing we need is to attract the
attention of local authorities.”
Pierrot made a rude noise. “Security here is primitive compared to even New
Riviera.”
“General security, most likely,” Skettle agreed. “But because of the sensitive
nature of the fair, more than local government is involved. As a consequence,
there will be extra precautions in place. Not only those of Earth, but from
Hivehom as well.”
No one followed Skettle’s observation with any abrupt, disparaging comments.
They had a healthy respect for thranx technology. But technology only added to
the challenge. As to the eventual success of their mission, none among them had
the slightest doubt. They were each of them well and truly dedicated to their
avowed cause.
From his luggage Botha produced a purpose-built three-dimensional diagram of the
fair site. It was exceptionally thorough. As well it ought to be, Skettle
reflected, since he and half a dozen sympathetic associates of the Preservers
had worked at refining and improving it almost constantly ever since the idea of
the fair had been proposed and acted upon. It was safe to say that even the fair
organizations themselves did not possess a schematic any more detailed than the
one that presently floated before the oddly hushed crowd in the commons room.
Everything from food service to sewerage to controlling electronics to items as
simple and straightforward as disposal bins were reflected in the diagram. There
was nothing that could not be expanded and rotated so that the finest detail of
construction and integration could be analyzed. Though not of a technical mien
himself, Skettle could admire the artistry that had gone into the compilation of
the schematic. It was a most beautiful diagram of destruction.
Fanning out to preselected locations throughout the fair, at the height of
general festivities, he and his companions would install and try to
simultaneously detonate the blended explosives. An impartial, emotionless
beholder might have observed that among the myriad devices intended to be
planted throughout the fair, not one was designed to impact upon the integrated
fire-control facilities. With a cutting-edge emergency plant designed to cope
instantly with even a minor blaze, the destruction of such facilities would seem
to an outside observer to be a priority for a group of terrorists planning
wholesale destruction. That such a contingency was nowhere in evidence was a
tribute not to oversight or ignorance, but to the skill of Botha and the team he
had worked with back on Earth.
It was astonishing, Skettle mused as he admired the schematic, how few people
ever gave a thought to the fact that the time-proven, complex, fire-fighting
chemicals used to put out unwanted blazes were composed of a precise chemical
mixture that could also, in combination with certain laboriously engineered
additional elements, stimulate instead of suffocate the very flames they were
designed to extinguish. The anticipated, indeed hoped-for, attempt of the local
emergency command to fight the blazes to be fomented by the Preservers would
result not in a smothering of those conflagrations, but in their enhancement.
Skettle smiled inwardly. The resulting chaos and confusion should contribute
nicely to the blossoming cataclysm.
Botha assured him that upon contact with the materials to be spread by the
multiple explosions, foams and liquids intended for combating out-of-control
blazes would themselves be turned into a substance suitable for supplementing
the very conflagrations they were designed to quench. By the time a sufficiency
of nonreactive chemical retardants and suppressants could be brought from Aurora
City, much of the glorious but debauched fair should be reduced to wind-blown
cinders among which would drift the carbonized components of as many baked bugs
as possible.
The consequent reaction among the human populace of this portion of the galaxy
upon learning that the destruction had been cosponsored by thranx opposed to any
deeper alliance among their respective species ought to put a clamp on any
enthusiastic treaty making for some time to come, Skettle knew. Which thranx?
Skettle’s associates back on Earth had spent much time devising a complete bug
terrorist hierarchy, the veracity of whichmight eventually be disproved. But by
that time, the delay in negotiations that would result would give him and the
rest of the Preservers ample time to spread their message to a more alerted
population. Relations between human and thranx would progress no farther than
humankind’s relations with any other intelligent species.
That was as things should be, he mused. But education required time. This they
would gain from the chaos that would be bought by the destruction of the fair.
It would have the added beneficial effect of destroying the viability of any
further such profane convocations. The Humanx Intercultural Fair on Dawn would
be the first and last of its kind.
The fire in his eyes and those of his companions was a precursor to the greater
conflagration that within a few days would engulf thousands of unsuspecting
visitors.
It was not a blaze that was amenable to reason.
3
Cullen Karasi stood on the edge of the spectacular escarpment that overlooked
the Mountain of the Mourners and reflected that he was a very long way from
home. Comagrave lay on the rim of the bubble of human exploration, more parsecs
from Earth than was comfortable to think about. If not for the well-established
colony in the nearby system of Repler and the discovery of valuable mineral
deposits on Burley, it was doubtful humankind would have pushed so far so
quickly into this section of the Arm. By KK drive, the capital of the AAnn
Empire, Blassussar, was closer than Terra.
This latter fact was not lost upon the AAnn, who freely coveted Comagrave. A
semidesert planet whose ecological parameters all fell near the center of their
habitable paradigms, it was ideally suited to their kind. To survive on its
surface, humans had to exercise caution. In this regard, however, it was no
worse than many desertified parts of Earth itself and was more accommodating
than others. Survey after survey revealed a wealth of mineral and biological
potentiality—not to mention additional archeological treasures yet to be
unearthed. With proper preparation and development, humans would do well enough
here.
Humankind’s claim was clear, indisputable, and grudgingly recognized by the
AAnn. In return for permission to establish a limited number of observational
outposts, strictly for purposes of study and education, the reluctant reptiloids
had offered to put their knowledge and expertise at the service of the
colonists. Despite certain reservations within the Terran government, it was an
offer that could not be denied. The AAnn had forgotten more about surviving on
desert-type worlds than humans had ever known, and the government on Earth was
far, far away.
Certainly, Cullen reflected, the assistance his team had so far received from
the AAnn had been a great help. It was they who had provided material aid when
funds from his supporting foundation had been temporarily reduced. It was they
who had saved thousands of credits by knowing the best places to establish safe
camps. AAnn geologists invariably knew where to locate the deep wells that were
necessary to tap Comagrave’s elusive aquifers, which made settlement expansion
as well as long-term scientific work in the field possible. And it was his AAnn
peer, the scientist Riimadu CRRYNN, who had been the first to descry the secret
of the Mourners.
That was why a base camp had been set up near the edge of the great escarpment.
Below him, the sheer sandstone wall fell away more than a thousand meters to the
flat valley floor below. Only the narrow and intermittent River Failings
meandered through this desiccated vale, an echo of the immense watercourse that
had once dominated this part of the continent. Already, field teams had gathered
ample evidence that Comagrave had once enjoyed a much wetter and greener past.
Whether this was the reason, or one of the reasons, for the demise of the
Comagravian civilization and the highly advanced people who had called
themselves the Sauun had yet to be determined.
Already, human exoarcheologists had accomplished much. Ruins of sizable cities
were to be found on every continent. There was evidence of extensive
agriculture, mining, and manufacturing—all the detritus of an advanced culture.
And yet, tens of thousands of years ago, it had all perished. Nor was there any
proof that the Sauun had achieved more than rudimentary space travel.
Preliminary surveys of the planet’s three moons revealed the ruins of only
automatic stations, with no provision for habitation or development.
This did not jibe with the level of scientific achievement visible in their
abandoned cities. There were gaps in technological evolvement where none ought
to exist. It was the presence of such gaps in the Comagravian historical record
and the desire to fill them in that drew researchers like Cullen to a world so
distant.
Behind him, portative digging equipment hummed softly as fellow team members and
advanced students strove to bring to the light the answers that hopefully lay
buried beneath the hard, rocky surface of the escarpment. A vanager cried as it
dipped and soared above the valley floor. With a leathery wingspan equal to that
of a small aircraft, the indigenous scavenger could stay aloft indefinitely,
carrying its two offspring in a pouch beneath its neck. Vanagers lived in the
clouds, mated while aloft, and raised their progeny without ever touching the
ground. To feed, they dove and plucked what they could from the surface or
snatched it out of the air. Long ago they had lost all but rudimentary evidence
of legs and feet. A vanager caught on the ground could only flop about clumsily,
its great wings useless until a gust of wind sent it aloft once more. Or so the
biologists insisted.
Far across the valley, the Mountain of the Mourners stared back at him.
Literally. Hewn from the solid green-black diorite of the mountain from which
they seemed to be emerging, the Twelve Mourners were at eye level with the top
of the escarpment. Counting elaborate headdresses whose significance had yet to
be interpreted, they averaged some fifteen hundred meters in height. How they
had been carved, when and with what tools, was another of the many mysteries
that Comagrave proffered in abundance.
With such gigantic representations of their kind available for study, there was
no wondering what the Sauun had looked like. Tall and slim, with long, humanoid
faces and horizontally slitted eyes, the colossal carvings were clad in flowing
robes embellished with elaborate decorations and intricate designs. Despite
their immense size, the Twelve had been depicted with extraordinary care and
detail. Who they had been, no one yet knew. Knowing that the Sauun had
progressed beyond kingdoms to a modern, planetwide government, all manner of
possibilities had been proposed. The Twelve could be famous artists, or
scientists, or the carvers themselves. Or politicians, or criminals, or
individuals chosen at random, or composites of a theoretical species ideal.
Cullen and his colleagues did not know, and they burned to find out. On one
verity they were pretty much agreed: It seemed unlikely any civilization would
go to the trouble of chiseling fifteen-hundred-meter-high images out of solid
rock, finishing and polishing them with extraordinary care, to perpetuate the
memory of a dozen nonentities. Whoever the Twelve were, they represented
personages of some importance in the history of Comagrave.
It was the AAnn Riimadu who had first noticed that the enormous, solemn eyes of
the graven icons were aligned on a level with the top of the escarpment. It was
he who had theorized that the pupilless orbs were each and every pair subtly
positioned so that they all focused on approximately the same spot—the one where
Cullen’s crew was presently engaged in exploration. Cullen owed the AAnn a debt
that would be hard to repay. At the very least, they would share in the
subsequent fame and profit of any discovery.
Riimadu was the only AAnn attached to the project. When he was not on site,
Cullen missed the alien’s expertise. Like all his kind, the AAnn exoarcheologist
displayed an instinctive feel for the makeup of the ground. Adopting his
suggestions had already saved the team days of hard work. With most of the busy
crew untroubled by the AAnn scientist’s presence from the start, one concern of
Cullen’s had been removed early in the process of excavation.
He did have to be careful to keep Riimadu and Pilwondepat apart. Though
diplomacy was not a province of his expertise, Cullen knew enough of the
traditional enmity that existed between AAnn and thranx to see to it that the
two resident alien researchers encountered one another as infrequently as
possible. Unlike the AAnn, who took an active part in the excavation,
Pilwondepat was present as an observer only, on behalf of several thranx
institutes. They had as much interest in ancient races as did humankind, but
Comagrave was not to their liking. Though humans could survive and even prosper
on a desert world, to the thranx it was an exceedingly uncomfortable place to
be.
While humans had to worry only about sunburn because of Comagrave’s
comparatively thin atmosphere and take an occasional slug from a bottle of
supplemental oxygen, and while Riimadu strolled around in perfect comfort, poor
Pilwondepat lumbered about burdened by all manner of gear designed to supply him
with the extra oxygen thranx required, as well as special equipment to keep his
body properly moist. To a creature who thrived in high heat and even higher
humidity, the climate of Comagrave was withering. Unprotected and unequipped, a
thranx like Pilwondepat would perish within a few days, shriveled like an old
apple. That was assuming it could keep warm at night, when surface temperatures
dropped to a level tolerable to both humans and AAnn but positively deadly to a
thranx.
So Pilwondepat was not comfortable with his assignment. He kept to his specially
equipped portable dome as much as possible and only emerged to take recordings
and make notes. When he spoke, it was with difficulty, through a special unit
that covered his mandibles and moistened the air that flowed down his throat.
Cullen felt sorry for him. The eight-limbed exoarcheologist must have done
something unpopular to have come to a world so disagreeable to his kind.
As he turned to head back to camp, Cullen could feel the immense green-black
bulges of the eyes of the Twelve drilling into the back of his neck. If only
they could speak, he thought. If only they were not made of stone. And if only
the Sauun had left some surviving record of what had happened to their
civilization. It was such riddles that drove curious men and women to willingly
endure harsh conditions on isolated outpost worlds. It was what had driven
Cullen Karasi from a successful family business to the study of ancient alien
civilizations.
The resolution to all the great unanswered questions lay somewhere on Comagrave,
he was certain: buried in an abandoned city, secreted within a protected metal
vesicle, locked in the overlying lines of incredibly complex Sauun code that
Cullen’s colleagues working elsewhere on the planet had not been able to fully
decipher. The first requirement of a good archeologist was curiosity, but the
second was patience. Just as one could not hurry history, so too could the
unveiling of its mysteries not be rushed.
But waiting for the key was hell.
Meanwhile, each individual science team hoped theirs would be the one to bring
to light the Rosetta that would unlock the enigma of the Sauun. While Cullen’s
hopes were as high as those of any of his colleagues, realistically he knew he
was not likely to be the one to make the meaningful breakthrough. As others
labored to interpret the riddles of the abandoned Sauun cities, he was stuck on
a distant plateau whose isolation was notable even for an empty world like
Comagrave. More than he cared to admit, he was relying for direction on the
unofficial counsel and expertise of a visiting alien.
“I would not sstep there.” As he spoke, Riimadu underscored his words with a
second-degree gesture of admonition.
The AAnn’s Terranglo was remarkably proficient. Seeing nothing but a few bumps
in the ground ahead of him, Cullen nonetheless eased to his left before resuming
his advance. He had come to trust the alien’s instincts.
“I don’t see anything,” he commented as soon as he had drawn alongside the other
biped. Unlike the insectoid thranx, the anatomy of the scaled, sharp-eyed AAnn
was fairly similar to that of humans. The AAnn had evolved from a reptilelike
ancestor, and they shared with humans the same upright bisymmetrical build and
the same large single-lensed eyes, though their hands and feet each boasted one
less digit than their human equivalents. They had no external ears, vertical
pupils like cats, and highly flexible, prominent tails that they used to
supplement their serpentine, courtly language of gestures. But for these details
of design, and the bright, iridescent scales that covered their bodies, they
might pass at a distance for wandering bald primates. In build they were slim,
slightly shorter on average than humans, and muscular. Sexual dimorphism was
more subtle than in primates, so that Cullen had to be certain who he was
talking to before addressing individuals of the species as male or female.
Riimadu had established himself as male from the day he had first been allowed
to visit and conduct observations of the human archeological team. Now he
unslung a small, painstakingly embossed leather pouch from around his neck and
right shoulder. Despite the dry heat that radiated from the rocks atop the
plateau, he was not panting, and AAnn did not sweat. While Cullen and his
coworkers perspired profusely, Riimadu was very much at home in the hot, arid
climate.
“Look and learn,” the alien hissed softly as he tossed the pouch.
It landed atop one of the slight bumps in the ground. Soundlessly, it was jolted
half a dozen centimeters into the air, fell to the ground nearby, and lay
motionless. Striding forward, his limber tail flicking from side to side,
Riimadu recovered the pouch. Cullen noted that this time the AAnn handled it
with extra care.
Bringing it back, he held it out for the human to inspect. Three small brown
spines had pierced the bottom of the pouch. One went all the way through the
fine leather to emerge from the other side.
“Defenssive mechanissm for an endemic ssoil-browsser. Not a predator.” Using his
clawed fingers, Riimadu slowly extracted one of the spines from the pouch. Its
tip was so sharp it seemed to narrow down to nothingness.
“Poisonous?” Cullen examined the needlelike implement respectfully.
“Analyssiss will be required. With your permission.” Removing the other pair of
spines one by one, the AAnn carefully placed them within the pouch’s padded
interior.
“I wonder if they would have gone through the sole of my boot.” Turning away
from the no-longer-innocuous, quiescent mounds, Cullen continued back toward the
site.
“While I am a firm believer in dynamic experimentation in the field,” Riimadu
responded, “I did not feel it would be entirely ethical to utilize you for ssuch
a purposse without firsst sseeking your conssent.” He hissed softly, an
exhalation that Cullen had come to recognize as AAnn laughter. While the
reptiloids were by nature more solemn than the thranx, and positively wooden
alongside the Quillp, that they possessed and displayed a sense of humor could
not be denied. It was the subject matter that was occasionally off-putting.
“I appreciate the consideration,” he told the alien dryly. “My feet hurt plenty
as it is.” The AAnn did not react, taking the comment at face value. Well,
Cullen mused, one couldn’t expect every witticism to make the whimsical jump
between species.
The ability to espy hazardous camouflaged fauna was something he had come to
expect from Riimadu. He told the AAnn so as he thanked him more directly.
“You humanss are alwayss looking up, or ahead,” the exoarcheologist commented.
“Anywhere but where you sshould. On a world like Vussussica you need to keep
your attention focussed much more often on the ground in front of you.”
Vussussica was the name the AAnn had given to Comagrave. It was rumored that
certain elements among the Imperial survey services had never fully relinquished
their claim to the distant world humans had begun to explore long before the
first AAnn ships had arrived in orbit around its sun. Subsequent to the
conclusive imprinting by both sides of the formal agreements regarding
Comagrave’s future status, it was presumed that these dissident elements had
been suppressed. Certainly no one had mentioned them to Cullen or to any of his
staff. To Riimadu they were of no consequence. “A hisstorical footnote,” he had
called them when asked to expound his own feelings on the matter.
On an entirely practical level, Cullen did not know what he would have done
without the AAnn’s help. It was Riimadu who had suspected that the eyes of the
Mourners held a secret, and it was he who had triangulated the gazes of the
twelve monoliths and chosen this site for excavation. That they had so far
failed to find evidence of anything more significant than local subsurface
life-forms like the spine shooter did not mean the site was barren of potential
discovery, only that they had more work to do and deeper to dig. Certainly the
preliminary subterranean scan had generated some interesting anomalies highly
suggestive of the presence of unnatural stratification. Digging proceeded by
hand only to protect the topmost layer of whatever they might uncover.
Thereafter, once they knew what they were dealing with, more advanced excavation
tools could be brought into play according to the fragility of the site. They
knew they were ontosomething . They just did not, as yet, know what.
Patience, he reminded himself.
A thickly bundled figure was lurching clumsily along the western edge of the
main excavation. Setting his hopes of discovery aside, Cullen spared a brief
rush of sympathy for the awkwardly garbed Pilwondepat.
Despite making use of all six legs for locomotion, the thranx scientist was
still tottering. The humidifier that was wrapped around his b-thorax covered his
breathing spicules completely. It was not quite silent and made him sound like
he was wheezing even though the source of the sound was entirely mechanical.
Though the device drew moisture from the air, there was not enough in the
atmosphere of Comagrave to satisfy even the hardiest thranx. The humidifier’s
draw had to be supplemented by the contents of a lightweight bottle that rode on
the scientist’s back. Coupled with leg and body wraps that helped to retain body
moisture, Pilwondepat resembled a child’s toy engaged in a clumsy and
ineffectual attempt to break free of its packaging.
Only the scientist’s head was completely unprotected, allowing him to observe
without obstruction. The chafing of his chitin from the dryness of the air was
plain to see, even though Cullen knew the exoarcheologist employed several
specially formulated creams to maintain his exoskeleton’s shine and character.
The site administrator had often wondered what awful blunder the thranx had
committed to get himself assigned to Comagrave. He had been shocked to
eventually learn that Pilwondepat had actually requested the assignment.
“What are you?” he had asked in an unguarded moment. “Some kind of masochist?”
Pilwondepat had clicked to the contrary. “The love of self-suffering is a human
trait. I simply felt the opportunities here too intriguing to eschew. Like you,
I want to know what happened to these people—to their cities, and to their dream
of space travel that was never fulfilled despite their having apparently
achieved an equivalent level of technology in all other aspects of science.”
“But to volunteer for duty on a world so blatantly inhospitable to your kind . .
. ,” Cullen had continued.
The visiting scientist had responded with a cryptic gesture the human had been
unable to access in his pictionary of thranx gestures. “This is the world where
the Sauun lived. As a field researcher, you must know yourself that recordings
and records are no substitute for working on site.”
Cullen recalled the brief but instructive conversation as he watched the thranx
totter to the edge of the excavation. If the eight-limbed academic’s dedication
did not exceed his own, it certainly matched it. Despite the appalling
conditions, his hard-shelled counterpart rarely complained. As he put it, the
fascination of the Sauun enigma helped to moisten more than his curiosity.
Advancing in front of Cullen, Riimadu approached the thranx from behind and
addressed the scientist in his own language. “Srr!iik,you musst be careful here,
or you will fall in.”
Pilwondepat looked back and up at the AAnn, who loomed over him, though not by
as much as would the average human. “I have six legs. Have a care for your own
footing, and don’t worry about mine.”
“I worry about everyone’ss footing on thiss world.” Leaning forward, Riimadu
peered into the excavation. Neatly partitioned with cubing beams of light, the
hole was now some thirty meters in diameter and seven deep. At the bottom,
humans labored in thin, lightweight clothing, exuding salt-laden body water as
they worked. Their skins, in a variety of colors, rippled unsettlingly in the
light of Vussussica’s midday sun. Unlike AAnn or thranx, their epidermal layers
were incredibly fragile. Why, even a feeble thranx could split them from neck to
ankle with a single sharpened claw!
They were very quick, though. Agility was their compensation for lack of
external toughness. To an AAnn or thranx, the human body seemed composed of
lumps of malleable material, stretching and squashing unpleasantly in response
to the slightest muscular twitch. Their anatomy had no gravity, no deliberation.
The AAnn would have found them amusing, had they not been both gifted and
prolific. And dangerous. The Pitarian War had revealed their true capabilities.
To the AAnn, who had remained neutral throughout the conflict, the war had been
exceedingly instructive.
Lurching forward, he leaned his body weight against the thranx’s right side.
Pilwondepat’s foothands slid over the edge of the excavation, dirt and gravel
sliding away beneath them as he scrambled to retain a foothold. Under such
pressure, a biped would have taken a serious tumble into the open excavation.
The thranx’s four trulegs kept him from falling.
Turning his head sharply, the thranx’s compound eyes glared up at the AAnn.
“That was deliberate!”
“I kiss the ssand beneath your feet if it wass sso.” Gesturing apologetically,
the AAnn exoarcheologist stepped back. Sharp teeth flashed between powerful,
scaly jaws. “Why would I do ssuch a thing? Esspecially to a fellow sstudent of
the unknown.”
“Why do the AAnn strike and retreat, hit and retire?” As he regained his
composure, Pilwondepat held his ground, determined not to give the AAnn the
satisfaction of seeing him flee. “Always testing, your kind. Always probing for
weaknesses—not only of individuals, but of worlds and alliances.” The thranx
gestured with a truhand. “I don’t even blame you, Riimadu. You can’t help
yourself—it’s your nature. But don’t push me again. I may not be as strong, but
I have better leverage than you.”
The AAnn was visibly amused. “Colleague, are you challenging me to a fight?”
“Don’t be absurd. We are both here as guests and on sufferance of the human
establishment,crrllk . They are not fond of either of us, and must regard our
presence here as an imposition and distraction from their work.”
“Not the human Cullen.” With the tip of his highly flexible tail, the AAnn
gestured to where the human in charge was descending the earthen steps that had
been cut into the side of the excavation. “He knowss that it wass I who found
thiss ssite, and I can assure you that he iss properly grateful.”
Pilwondepat turned away. He knew the AAnn was right. The human Cullen Karasi
owed the AAnn his gratitude. Pilwondepat possessed no such leverage with the
human, or with any of his coworkers. Stumbling to and fro among them, weighed
down by the humidifying equipment that kept him alive if not entirely
comfortable, he noted their sideways stares and heard their murmurings of
disapproval. The archeological team represented a cross section of humanity,
though a well-educated one. There were among them some who actively espoused
closer ties with the thranx. They were opposed by those who fervently desired
that the two dissimilar species keep their distance from one another. The
majority listened to the diverse arguments of their fellows and tried to make up
their as-yet-undecided minds. Pilwondepat feared that his personal comportment
under trying circumstances was insufficient to elevate the status of his people
in the humans’ eyes. At every opportunity, he did his best to counteract the
sorry image he was certain he was presenting.
If only he could get rid of the awkward, encumbering survival gear! Within his
private dome he could do so, and actually relax. But those few humans curious
enough to pay him a visit did not linger. Coupled with the temperature on the
plateau, the 96 percent humidity Pilwondepat favored within his living quarters
soon drove them out. There was nothing he could do about it. If he lowered the
humidity in the dome to a level humans would find comfortable, that would leave
him miserable all of the time, instead of just when he was working outside.
So he tried to learn their language, a form of communication as slippery and
fluid as their bodies, and make friends where he could. Meanwhile he was forced
to watch as Riimadu strolled freely about the site, interacting effortlessly
with the humans, sharing the same basic body structure and single-lensed eyes,
and positively luxuriating in what for the AAnn was an ideal climate.
Hadthe reptiloid deliberately nudged him in an attempt to send him tumbling over
the edge into the excavation, or had it been an accident? One could never be
sure of anything except their innate cunning where the AAnn were concerned. They
would gesture first-degree humor while cutting the ground out from beneath you.
Yet he could not complain. The humans, who had far less experience of the AAnn
than did the thranx, continued to remain ambivalent in their attitude toward
them. Humans, Pilwondepat had noted in the course of his studies, had a tendency
to react against assertions they themselves had not proven. Accuse the AAnn,
insult them, insist on their intrinsic perfidy, and well-meaning humans were
likely to leap to their defense.
It was infuriating. The thranx knew the AAnn, knew what they were capable of.
Humans did not want to hear it. So the insectoids had to proceed discreetly in
all matters involving the scaled ones, whether in personal relationships or at
the diplomatic level. Humans would have to learn the truth about the AAnn by
themselves. Like others of his kind, Pilwondepat only hoped this education would
not prove too painful.
For their part, the AAnn were being more patient and proceeding more slowly in
their developing relations with humankind than the thranx had ever known them to
do with any newly contacted species. This knowledge allowed Pilwondepat to smile
internally. Having to proceed with such unaccustomed caution must be causing the
AAnn Imperial hierarchy a great deal of discomfort. He certainly hoped so.
Meanwhile, he was but one representative of his family, clan, and hive, isolated
on a world of great mysteries, dependent on the unpredictable humans for
continued permission to work among them and, indeed, for his very survival. That
many of them viewed his presence among them with suspicion and xenophobia he
could not help. He could only do his work and try, when the opportunity
presented itself, to make friends. For some reason he enjoyed greater sympathy
from human females than from the males. This, he had been told before embarking
on his assignment, was a likely possibility, and he should be prepared to take
advantage of it.
It had to do, he had been informed, with the thranx body odor, which nearly all
primates found exceedingly pleasant. More than once, human workers had commented
upon it, and he had been forced to resort to his translator to ascertain the
meaning of strangely emollient words likejasmine andfrangipani .
With a sigh, he started around the edge of the excavation. It was time to do
some work among the human field staff. That meant making his way to the bottom
of the excavation. In the absence of a familiar ramp, he would have to cope with
human-fashioned “steps.” It was uncivilized and awkward, but he dared not ask
for help. Special treatment was the one thing he was determined not to request.
Many humans did not realize that thranx, built low to the ground, were terrible
climbers despite boasting the use of eight limbs.
A young worker named Kwase saw the scientist struggling at the top of the first
step. Putting down his soil evaporator, the young man turned and vaulted up the
earthen staircase to confront the alien. Smiling encouragingly, he made a cup of
both hands in front of his own legs. Quickly discerning the sturdy biped’s
intent, Pilwondepat gratefully dipped both antennae in the mammal’s direction
before carefully placing one foothand in the proffered fleshy stirrup and
resuming his descent.
Brr!!asc—we make progress! he told himself with satisfaction. The annoyed look
on Riimadu’s glistening face as he observed the human voluntarily assisting the
thranx was even worth a few deep breaths of inadequate, desiccated air.
The bottom of the excavation was no familiar homeworld burrow, he mused when he
finally hopped down off the last step, but it was far more calming than the
wind-blown, lonely surface.
4
Fanielle watched the Hysingrausen Wall slide past beneath the aircar’s wings.
Running east to west across this portion of the central continent, the immense,
forest-fringed limestone rampart was interrupted only by a succession of
enormous waterfalls that spilled over the three-thousand-meter rim. Despite the
heavy flow, most evaporated before they reached the ground. Only a very few, the
offspring of mighty rivers that arose in the northern mountains beyond the
Mediterranea Plateau, thundered against rocks at the base of the wall.
The majestic geologic feature had kept the thranx from making anything more than
cursory explorations of the high tableland. Humans were delighted to be allowed
to establish themselves in a sizable region the thranx had ignored, and many
thranx were pleased to see humans making use of an uplifted portion of their
planet that was to them the perfect picture of a half-frozen hell.
She sealed her field jacket as the aircar, once clear of the strong downdrafts
that raked the wall, commenced a gradual descent. The afternoon temperature at
Azerick Station was sixteen degrees C. Bracing to a human, unbearably frigid and
dry to a thranx. Azerick did not receive many visitors from the heavily
populated lowlands. Most of the thranx who were assigned to help facilitate the
station’s development stayed down in Chitteranx, in the rain forest, where the
humidity and heat were pleasantly overpowering. A few unlucky souls were
assigned permanently to the human outpost. Being thranx, they rarely gave voice
to their displeasure. Only someone like Anjou, who had learned to interpret many
of their gestures, could tell how unhappy they were.
In less than two weeks she would have her meeting with the eint. She intended to
be forceful but congenial. There were years worth of particulars that needed to
be discussed, lists of individual items that needed to be addressed in detail.
She would have to pick and choose carefully so as not to offend, or bore, or
isolate her estimable audience. Haflunormet was a good soul, but during the time
they had worked with each other he had been able to offer little more than
sympathetic encouragement on issues of real import. Working at last with someone
who could actually make decisions promised to be enlightening as well as
effective.
There was so much to prepare. She worried about overwhelming the eint with
minutiae before paradigms could be agreed upon.
The aircar set down gently amid the quasi-coniferous forest that covered the
plateau. While the trees resembled nothing arboreal on Earth, at least they were
green. Jeremy was waiting for her. They embraced decorously. Other moves would
have to wait for greater privacy.
He took her bag as they walked through the terminal. “I hear you finally got
your meeting with a higher-up. Some of us were beginning to wonder if any of the
diplomatic staff here ever would.”
“You know the thranx.” They turned a corner, squeezing past chattering travelers
outbound on the aircar that had just arrived. “Caution in everything.”
He made a rude noise. “It’s more than that. It’s deliberate. They’re trying to
stay friends, close friends, without committing themselves to anything definite.
The Pitarian War was an exception, brought on by exceptional circumstances. Now
they’ve reverted to the hive norm.” Outside, he placed her bag in the transport
capsule. In seconds, they were racing along a grassy trail split by the
glistening metallic strip of a powerguide.
“I don’t think that’s the case at all, Jeremy.” Leaning back in the seat, she
watched the forest whiz past. At this speed, details vanished in a green blur,
and travelers could almost imagine they were speeding through the far more
familiar woods of Canada or Siberia.
He shrugged diffidently. “Well, if anybody should know, it’s you, Fannie. You’ve
spent more time among them than anyone else on staff. Personally, I don’t see
how you stand the climate and the crowding inside their hives.” Reaching out, he
took one of her hands in his and with a fingertip began to trace abstract
designs on the back. “I’d rather have you spend more time here, you know. It’s
not real great for my ego to think that you prefer a bug’s company to mine.”
She smiled and let him toy with her hand and fingers. Little sparks seemed to
materialize with each contact. “Unfortunately, while humankind has conquered
deep space, cured the most serious primitive diseases, and spread itself across
a small portion of one galactic arm, we have yet to solve the unfathomable
complexities of the male ego.”
His fingers jetéed up her arm. “Chaos theory. That’s the ticket.”
The darkened capsule arrived at Azerick with both passengers considerably
relaxed in mind and body. Jeremy bid her a reluctant farewell, leaving her to
compose the report she would present in person to the ambassador. Upgrading the
embassy here to full settlement status was one item on the crowded agenda. The
humans wanted it—for one thing, it would mean promotions all around—but the
thranx were reluctant. Granting such status implied recognition of a condition
existing between the two species that they were not sure they were prepared to
acknowledge.
She showered and redressed, leaving off the field jacket since the station was
heated to an Earth-ideal standard of twenty-two degrees, with humidity to match.
Ambassador Toroni was anxious to hear her preliminary report. Details could come
later.
Smiles and congratulations awaited her in the main conference room. Outside, the
forest of the Mediterranea Plateau, as the resident humans had come to call it,
marched away toward distant high mountains. A smattering of applause greeted her
rising. She did not blush, was not uncomfortable. The acclaim had been earned.
Spreading a brace of viewers out before her, she folded her hands and waited as
the ambassador rose. There were eight other people in the room, most of whom she
knew well. Living in an outpost on an alien world left little room for people to
be strangers.
“First,” he said, “I want to extend my personal congratulations to Fanielle
Anjou for securing what we had come to believe might never come to pass: an
appointment to discuss, and to present, multiple items of diplomatic importance
on which we have all been working for years. While the method of finally
obtaining this long-sought-after meeting may have been unorthodox, I think I can
say safely that no strenuous objections will be raised at higher levels.”
“Especially since ‘higher levels’ have no idea what a Bryn’ja request is,” Gail
Hwang observed tartly.
“Funny, you don’t look pregnant.” From his seat next to the ambassador, Jorge
Sertoa grinned down at her. “Who’s the father?”
“Probably that thranx she’s been seeing so much of,” someone else put in
quickly. Laughter rolled the length of the table.
“I don’t think so.” Aram Mieleski pursed his lips as he rested his chin
thoughtfully on the tips of his fingers. “The delivery mechanism involved is so
different that . . .”
“Oh, shut up, Aram,” Gail chided him. “I swear, if ever anybody needed a humor
transplant . . .”
“Emotional conditions cannot be transferred between individuals,” an unruffled
Mieleski calmly observed, by his words confirming the necessity of her
observation.
“What will you do,” Enrique Thorvald asked seriously, “if the thranx continue to
inquire as to your condition?”
“They’ll be informed that I lost the multiple larvae prior to giving birth.”
Anjou held one of her readers before her. “I’ve worked it all out. If anything,
that should gain me even more sympathy. And it doesn’t hurt that Eint
Carwenduved, with whom I am to meet, is female.”
“Yeah,” Sertoa muttered. “You can compare the glaze on your ovipositors.” While
basically a good guy, Jorge Sertoa was among several outspoken members of the
outpost staff who were less than enthusiastic about cementing deeper relations
with their hosts.
“And I bet you’d like to be there to see that.” Her rejoinder prompted more
laughter and defused what could have been an awkward moment. Putting the jovial
banter to rest, she hefted the reader and commenced delivering her formal
report. They would all receive copies in due course, but this way questions
could be asked as soon as they were formulated. Ambassador Toroni was a firm
believer in encouraging staff interaction.
When she concluded, less than an hour later, there were fewer queries than she
had anticipated. Her accomplishment in securing the official meeting was duly
applauded once again, but most of the questions thrown her way concerned
maintaining the security of the ruse she had invented to gain the appointment
rather than what she was actually going to discuss when it finally came to
fruition.
“It all depends,” she commented by way of summation, “on how much authority I’m
given going into the meeting.”
All eyes shifted to Toroni. Running a hand through his shock of white hair, he
leaned back in his chair and considered. For an ambassador appointed to what was
arguably the most important nonhuman populated world known, he was casual in
manner and laid-back in his work habits. It was an attitude much appreciated by
those who labored under him. Azerick was a lonely enough place to be stationed
without being forced to toil for some inflexible martinet.
“If it were up to me, Fanielle, I’d give you permission to vet and sign
treaties. But you know I can’t do that. I don’t have that capability myself. As
soon as we adjourn here, I’ll get on the deep-space communicator and find out
just how far the authorities on Earth are prepared to let you go. One thing you
can be sure of: You won’t be allowed to negotiate anything controversial.”
“I already know that,” she responded.
“But we might be able to procure more authority for you than you think, by
trumpeting the importance of this meeting, how it’s likely not to be repeated
for some time, the sensitive nature of relations between you and this Eint
Carwenduved—I intend to call in every favor and promise I’ve been stockpiling.”
He leaned forward. “I want you to have as much autonomy going in as we can
manage. This is the first real breakthrough we’ve had in months, and I don’t
want to squander it.”
“Even so, sir,” Sertoa began, “we don’t want Fanielle to agree to anything
hasty.” He smiled deferentially at her. “Careful perusal and dissection of any
potential covenant is demanded before the authority to sign can be conferred.”
“Loosen up, Jorge,” she told him. “No matter what I manage to get the eint to
agree to, I don’t think you have to worry about some thranx sharing your
bathroom anytime soon.”
It was an exceedingly mild put-down, but whether for that reason or one unknown,
Sertoa said nothing more for the duration of the meeting.
“I’ve been working on proceeding to the next step in securing a stronger
alliance among our respective species.” Holding up her reader, she touched a
contact and waited the couple of seconds necessary to transfer the relevant
documentation to everyone else’s handheld. “If the eint doesn’t dismiss it out
of hand, I intend to at least broach a number of possibilities for future
discussion.”
“Such as what?” Hwang asked with obvious interest.
“A lasting, permanent alliance. Nothing held back. Military presence on one
another’s worlds, mutual command of tactics and weaponry, joint colonization of
which this plateau and the Amazon Basin are only the most preliminary sorties.”
Someone whistled.
“You don’t want much, do you, Fanielle?” Genna Erlich observed.
“You’re talking about the kind of treaty that would require not only a vote of
the full Terran Congress, but approval by majorities on all the settled worlds.”
Mieleski’s tone was somber. “It’s a very adventurous program.”
“What are we here for, if not to press for closer relations?” Toroni smiled
paternally. “Though you’ve certainly chosen an ambitious agenda for yourself,
Fanielle.”
“Everything depends on the eint’s reaction to my prefatory suggestions,” she
replied a bit defensively. “Depending on how things go, I might not even have
the chance to make known my more elaborate proposals.”
“Quite right.” Rising, Toroni indicated that the conference was at an end. “I
look forward to reading all the details of your report, Fanielle. With luck, we
should within a couple of days have some guidelines from Earth detailing how you
will be allowed to proceed. I myself am optimistic, and intend to frame the
request for those guidelines in the most anxious manner possible.
“In the meantime, we all of us have much to study, and to digest. I take it you
are amenable to criticisms and suggestions, Ms. Anjou?”
“Always,” she replied, at the same time hoping there would not be too many.
Putting what had previously been an informal succession of guidelines into
presentation format was going to take most of the time she had remaining until
her meeting with the eint. The last thing she needed was a flood of well meaning
but essentially superfluous advice.
Only when word came back from Earth that she was to have essentially a free hand
in making proposals—though she could not commit to anything more significant
than, for example, the Intercultural Fair about to get under way on the colony
world of Dawn—did she realize how truly important the encounter would be. Though
usually an island of calm amid her often frazzled colleagues, she finally had to
take some minor medication to still her nerves.
I am going to go in there, she told herself, as the chosen representative of my
entire species, knowing that I have gained that access on the back of a lie. But
while the burden was making her increasingly uneasy, she would not have turned
the meeting over to one of her colleagues for all the suor melt on Barabbas.
As the time for her to return to Daret drew near, she found herself relying more
than ever on Jeremy’s strong, self-assured presence. A microbiologist, he had no
diplomatic ax to grind, nothing of a professional nature to gain from her
success or failure. He was interested only in her and their future together; not
in her mission. It was a gratifying change from the characteristic infighting
and arguing that took place within the highly competitive diplomatic hierarchy.
When the day scheduled for departure finally did arrive and she had little to
take with her but her hopes and anxieties, he took time off from his lab work to
join her for the brief journey in the transport capsule that would convey her to
the settlement airport.
Once more, the great green forest of the Mediterranea Plateau was rushing past
outside the transport’s port. To the thranx, it was their deepest jungle, the
most biologically mysterious region left on their homeworld. Visiting human
researchers, strolling about comfortably in pants and shirts, were making
valuable reports and passing on the results of their research to their thranx
counterparts, who would have required special gear and attire simply to survive
in the temperate-cool lower oxygen environment humans found perfectly amenable.
Similar revelations were being made by thranx researchers stationed in the deep
Amazon and Congo Basins on Earth. Of such serendipitous exchanges of data and
knowledge were scientific alliances, if not diplomatic ones, strengthened.
During the high-speed commute they held hands and talked. Jeremy’s research was
going exceptionally well, and everyone at the outpost was talking about
Fanielle’s breakthrough in securing a meeting with a thranx who ranked high
enough to actually make decisions as well as recommendations.
“I’m not going to be able to get near you when you get back,” he told her
teasingly. “You’ll be blanketed by representatives of the media.”
“If this visit is a success,” she reminded him.
“There are noifs where you’re concerned, lady-mine.”
“Maybe not where I’m concerned, but diplomacy is something else again.” Why, she
wondered, did someone who was perfectly comfortable trolling the corridors of
interstellar power suddenly and so frequently in this man’s presence devolve to
the maturity level of a sixteen-year-old? She had long ago become convinced it
was due to a recessive gene on the Y chromosome.
“Just like you’re something else again.” Leaning forward, he kissed her as
passionately as the time remaining to the airport conveniently allowed, then
rose. “I could use something to drink. Do you want anything before—?”
She became aware of the pain as vision returned. It seemed to increase in
proportion to the intensity of the light that splashed across her retinas.
Memory loaded in increasingly large chunks: who she was, where she ought to be,
what she was supposed to be doing. Too much of it failed to jibe with what she
was feeling and seeing. Though the first words she heard were in themselves
entirely innocent, their import was uncompromisingly ominous.
“She’s awake.”
She recognized the voice. Ambassador Toroni had a distinctive, measured way of
speaking, slightly nasal but memorable. It matched his face, which moments later
was smiling down into her own. There was relief in his countenance, but no
humor.
A voice she did not recognize said, “I’ll leave you alone with her for a while.
Her vitals are fine, but she’s liable to be less than completely coherent until
the comprehensive neural block has fully worn off. The aerogels will keep her
comfortable. If anything untoward occurs, or something doesn’t look right, just
hit the alert.”
“Thank you, nurse.”
Nurse.Anjou liked the sound of that even less than the absence of humor in her
superior’s expression. She struggled to sit up. Reading the relevant cerebral
commands from the patch fastened to the back of her skull and ascertaining that
rising did not contradict her medical profile, the bed complied.
Sitting up, she found that the light did not hurt as much. In addition to
Toroni, Sertoa was also present. He did not even try to fake a smile. “Hello,
Fanielle. How—how are you feeling?”
“Sleepy. Confused. Something hurts. No,” she corrected herself, “everything
hurts, but something is muting it.” Looking past them, searching the hospital
room, she did not see a third face. Especially not the one she sought. “I’ve
been in an accident.”
Toroni nodded, very slowly. “What’s the last thing you remember, my dear?”
“Packing to go to Daret. No,” she corrected herself quickly, inspired perhaps by
their stricken looks. “I was already on my way there. On the transport to the
airport. With—” She looked past them again. “—Jeremy Hyguens.”
“He was a good friend of yours,” Sertoa commented softly.
“Yes. We are—” She broke off as Toroni threw the other man a look of quiet
exasperation.
He was. That was what Sertoa had said.He was. She sank back into the cushioning
aerogel, wishing it was solid enough to smother her. When she had finished
crying, when the tears had subsided enough for her to form words again, she
believed that she heard herself whispering, “What . . . happened?”
Bernard Toroni sat down on the edge of the bed, the transparent aerogel dimpling
under his extra weight. He wanted to take this exceptional young woman’s hand,
to hold it tightly, to make things better. But that was not a procedure allowed
for in the diplomatic syllabus, and circumstances dictated that he keep a
certain distance. He did not want to keep his distance, though. He wanted to
hold her the way he had once held his own children back on Earth, before he had
begun to receive assignments to other worlds.
“You were on a transport capsule in line for the airport. There was an empty
cargo carrier on the strip ahead of you. No one knows exactly how it happened,
but there was a program failure. The cargo unit’s drive field reversed. The two
capsules hit very hard.”
“The kinetic energy released—” Sertoa started to say before a look from Toroni
silenced him.
“Once engaged, transport capsule fields don’t ‘reverse.’ The programs are
designed to be fail-safe. At worst, onboard in-line safeties should have cut its
drive. Had that happened, your capsule’s onboard sensors would have had time to
detect the failure ahead and bring it to a stop prior to impact.” He paused for
reflection. “There were a total of twelve people on board the capsule you were
traveling in. You and a fellow named Muu Nulofa from Engineering were the only
survivors.”
“Jeremy—” She did not swallow particularly hard, but her throat was on fire.
Toroni shifted his position on the edge of the bed. No one else had been willing
to pay this first visit. “The lifesavers who extricated you from what was left
of the capsule found his body sprawled across yours. They theorize that the
extra . . . padding . . . is what saved your chest from being crushed when the
front wall of your cubicle caved in. There was nothing they could do for him.
Cerebral and internal hemorrhaging.” He hesitated. “I did not know the man, but
I have since spoken to some of his colleagues. They all describe him as a fine
human being who was dedicated to his work. And to . . . other things.”
Her eyes rose to meet his. He did not enjoy the experience, but he respected the
woman in the bed far too much to look away. “Did they also tell you we had been
discussing marriage?”
“No.” The ambassador’s lips tightened. “No, nobody mentioned that to me.”
She relieved him by turning her head to one side, letting the warm aerogel
supply the support her muscles no longer cared to provide. “We didn’t talk about
it much except among ourselves. There were too many other distractions.
Professional—” She choked softly on the word.
It was quiet in the room. No one spoke for many minutes: the two men remaining
silent out of respect, the woman because she no longer had anything to say.
Behind her eyes, something had gone away.
“It’s very interesting,” Toroni finally murmured. When she failed to react, he
added, “Unprecedented, certainly.”
Moving with a slowness that had as its source something deeper and more profound
than medication, she rolled her head back in his direction. “What is?”
“The expression of concern. On a personal level. From our hosts.”
She frowned ever so slightly. “I don’t understand.”
“Some of the recently communicated terminology is unique to our translator’s
experience. I am told there are nuances involved they have never before seen
expressed.” He mustered a fatherly smile. “There are several from your contact
Haflunormet, as well as from other contacts you have made among the locals. Of
particular note is the one from Eint Carwenduved. Not only are deepest regrets
expressed, but she wishes to assure us that as soon as you are able to resume
work, she looks forward now more than ever to making your acquaintance.”
“Your meeting is still on.” Sertoa looked pleased. “You’ll carry into it with
you the extra benefit of added sympathy.”
Her mind stirred, roiled, thoughts and emotions crashing into one another before
slipping away in opposing directions. “No I won’t,” she responded tersely.
Toroni blinked. “I’m sorry, my dear?”
The look in her eyes was very different from the one that had commanded her
countenance only moments earlier. “I won’t be carrying sympathy or anything else
into that meeting because I’m not going to be in attendance. I’m not going,
Bernard. I’m finished here. Finished with Hivehom, finished with the bu—with the
thranx, finished with everything.” She turned away, until all she could see was
the aerogel support. The portion in front of her face opaqued when she closed
her eyes. “I want—I need to go home.”
The ambassador considered. In the course of his distinguished career he had been
faced with similar situations before. Some had even been inflected with highly
emotional overtones. But never before anything like this. Never. That did not
keep him from pressing forward as he knew he must.
“Fanielle,” he told her as tenderly as he could, “youhave to do this. No one
else here at the mission has managed to achieve as intimate a rapport with our
hosts. No one else is as facilely comfortable with their ways, with their habits
or mannerisms.You are the best qualified to take this meeting. That’s why you
were given the assignment of trying to secure it in the first place. It’s your
moment of triumph. You have to take it.”
From the vicinity of the aerogel came the agonizingly stillborn response. “I
don’t want it anymore.”
Hating himself, Toroni refused to let it, or her, go. Both were too important.
“It’s not a question of you wanting or not wanting it. You have to do it because
no one else can do it as well. This is a highly sensitive moment in the
development of relations between our species and the thranx. Perhaps even a
milestone. We won’t know until we see the fruits of our labors begin to blossom.
The fruits of your labors, Fanielle. Do you really want to cast aside everything
you’ve worked for here?”
“I’ve already cast it, Bernard. Find somebody else to go. Find somebody else to
take my place.”
Swallowing determinedly, he leaned toward her, careful not to initiate a
significant disturbance within the highly responsive aerogel. “Don’t you think,
Fanielle, that if I felt someone, anyone else, was sufficiently qualified I
would have assigned them to the task already? Before coming here to see you?”
Deep within, a certain component of her shattered self was pleased by the
sincere words of a man she greatly respected. But like so much else that was
Fanielle Anjou, that part of her was hiding now, isolated and shunted aside by
the nightmare that had overwhelmed her life.
“I told you, Bernard. I don’t care. It’s not important anymore.”
He nodded slowly, even though she was not looking at him. Or at anything else.
The ensuing silence lasted longer than its predecessor. Once again, it was the
ambassador who broke it.
“Program failure. Transport capsule drive fields just don’t go into reverse. The
system is replete with fail-safes—every one of which failed. The engineers are
working on it, working hard. They’re good people, but they’re baffled. They
cannot afford to be, because we must know what caused the accident. If we don’t
know, then we cannot with any certainty prevent a repetition. Of the accident.
If,” he concluded concisely, “it was an accident.”
It was enough to turn her head. “Bernard?”
Sertoa took his turn. “Fanielle, you know as well as any of us that there are
elements, some of them with substantial backing, both among the thranx and our
own kind who will do anything to prevent the kind of union between our species
that the enlightened among us seek. I’m not talking about the great mass of
undecideds on both sides. I’m talking about the kind of blatant, old-fashioned
fanaticism we thought we had evolved beyond.”
Slowly, she digested what her colleague was saying. Contemplated it from an
assortment of viewpoints. In the end, every one of them was equally ugly.
“You think someone deliberately reprogrammed that cargo capsule to reverse and
smash into the one that was taking me to the airport?”
“We don’t know that.” Toroni was relieved to see some small flicker of alertness
return to his junior colleague’s expression, even if it was thus far focused
entirely on concern for something unconnected to professional interests. “At
this point it is only speculation. But I am not the only one to have considered
it. Azerick Authority is pondering the possibility with utmost seriousness. If,
and I caution if, the hypothesis should turn out to have any basis in fact, it
would mean that our entire modus here will have to undergo the most strict
review. We will continue to press forward with our work, of course. More
fiercely than ever. But we will have to do many things differently.”
She heard everything he said, but in manner muted. Her own thoughts were
churning. “Somebody would kill a dozen innocent people just to get to me, to
keep me from a stupid meeting?”
“Not stupid.” The strength of her response allowed the ambassador to employ a
stronger tone of his own. “Highly important. Possible milestone.”
“And maybe it wasn’t someone,” Sertoa added. “Maybe it was some thing.” He eyed
her sternly. “The thranx have their own fanatics, remember.”
“But to resort to killing a diplomat . . .” Her voice trailed away into
disbelief.
“Why not?” Turning, Sertoa began pacing slowly, waving his hands to emphasize
his words. “If successful, they set back our efforts until we can find someone
else capable of achieving your kind of personal rapport with their kind. If
discovered, word reaches Earth that thranx have carried out a mass killing of
humans here on Hivehom. Either way, they achieve at least one of their ends.”
“Which is why,” Toroni went on, “no word of our suspicions is being allowed to
go beyond Azerick. Officially, there was a programming failure. A transport
accident. Nothing more. Unofficially, desperate unease is being bounced between
worlds at high speed and without regard to the cost.”
She was silent for a moment, wrapped in a cocoon of conflicting concerns. “What
will you do if the investigating authorities determine that the crash was no
accident, and that thranx were responsible?”
Bernard Toroni had been in the service all his professional life, had ridden the
currents of diplomatic ebb and flow until all the rough edges had been knocked
off him long ago, leaving him polished and smooth. Nothing surprised him;
nothing could crack his learned demeanor; nothing could get a grip on his
emotions. For the first time since he could remember, maybe for the first time
ever, he was shaken.
“I don’t know, Fanielle. I don’t think anybody does. The reaction on Earth,
among the colonies . . .” He swallowed hard. “It would result in . . . a
setback.”
She nodded, the movement a barely perceptible stirring against the aerogel. “If
it’s true, then someone—” She glared disapprovingly at Sertoa. “—someone, will
go to any length to keep me from meeting with Eint Carwenduved.”
Toroni’s face betrayed nothing. “To keep you from doing so, yes. You
specifically, Fanielle.”
She gazed back at him evenly, more awake now than at any time since the two men
had first entered the room. “You’re a very cunning man, Bernard Toroni.”
He shrugged, his face a perfect blank. “I’m a professional in the diplomatic
service, Fanielle. Nothing more.”
She turned her gaze to the ceiling. It displayed a soundless, peaceful holo of
drifting clouds. In the distance was a small rainbow. She did not see it, just
as she no longer saw peace. That had been taken from her. Forever? She chose not
to think about it. Forever was a very long time.
“How soon will they let me out of here?”
The ambassador’s tone was glib, controlled. “In a day or two, if you like. Then
there will need to be a period of rest. You are one bipedal contusion from head
to toe. But nothing significant was damaged. Nothing was broken.”
“I wouldn’t say that,” she whispered wearily. “So . . . I will follow through
with the lie, and make the meeting. You must be pleased, Bernard.” Seeing the
look on his face finally gave her the means to again consider the feelings of
others. “I’m sorry. That wasn’t fair.”
“It doesn’t matter.” He rose from the side of the bed. “I’m used to it. It’s
part of my job.” He hesitated briefly before continuing. Noting his superior’s
expression, Sertoa nodded solemnly and left the room. “There is one other thing.
At least you will no longer have to worry about lying when you refer to the
Bryn’ja request.”
She did not reply: just stared up at him.
“The staff here knows nothing is broken or damaged because when you were brought
in from the wreck you underwent the most thorough medical scan the facilities
here are capable of rendering. I am more sorry than I can ever say, Fanielle,
but there is no point in keeping it from you. Truth always seems to emerge
before it is convenient for us to have it do so. When you meet with Eint
Carwenduved you will be able to do so as someone who has not obtained an
encounter on the basis of a prevarication.”
She examined the implications of his words from a distance. It only made her
that much more determined to confound those who might have done this to her. To
her, and to one other, and to a future that now would never have the chance to
be.
Her voice as taut as duralloy stressed to the point of destruction, she gazed up
from the bed out of damp eyes and asked him softly, “Do they know how long I’ve
been pregnant?”
5
It certainly was a lovely world, Elkannah Skettle reflected as he and Botha took
their ease along the shore of City Lake. New pathways had been laid to
accommodate the anticipated tide of guests. Transparent lobes thrust out over
the lake’s surface so that visiting children could experience the illusion of
walking on water while delighting in the play of native and introduced aquatics
swimming just beneath their feet. A multitude of chromatic-winged flyers swooped
and darted above the shimmering splay of water, making fearless dives to pluck
small, wriggling creatures from the depths. They filled the air with an
unexpectedly sonorous honking, surprisingly tolerant of the increasing numbers
of visitors who had begun to throng the lakeshore prior to the official opening
of the fair.
Too bad it all had to be marred by the presence of thranx.
For all that he had devoted much of the previous decades to decrying humankind’s
intensifying relationship with the insectoids and then taking his philosophy and
intentions underground, Skettle had seen very few thranx in person. Observing
them on the tridee was no longer a problem. The disgusting creatures were all
over the media. You could hardly find one delivery source out of the thousands
available where they were not eventually to be encountered; all bulging compound
eyes, wriggly antennae, and obscene multiple mouthparts. If anything, meeting
them in person was even worse.
He could sense the same robust revulsion in the shorter, darker man who matched
him stride for stride. Botha was not especially talkative, ill at ease in
get-togethers even of his own kind. But there was nothing subdued about his
dislike of the bugs. Equipped with poor social skills, he had to be watched over
constantly lest his deeply felt feelings manifest themselves in ways that could
be dangerous to his friends as well as to himself. Skettle had taken it upon
himself to do this, which was why he had insisted that the engineer be paired
off with him today. Hatred is healthy, he had assured Botha on more than one
occasion. But it must be moderated by wisdom. To be effective, ruthlessness must
be appropriately timed.
So when they passed a mated pair of the creatures, all suffocating scents and
pearly aquamarine exoskeletons, he shifted his weight just enough to nudge Botha
off stride. Wearing a hurt look, the stumpy engineer blinked up at him in
confusion.
“What was that about, Elkannah?”
“Keep walking. Keep looking at the wildlife on the lake. That’s better.” When he
was certain they were well out of earshot of any other visitor, and after
checking to make sure that his individual privacy field was at full strength,
Skettle absently placed an open palm in front of his face to confound any
possible distant lip-readers and proceeded to explain.
“How often must I remind you, friend Botha, to conceal your true feelings toward
the bugs?”
The smaller man’s expression changed to one of honest surprise. “I wasn’t! . . .
Was I?”
“Your face is pure plastic, Piet.” The older man stroked his beard. “I at least
can rely on these long gray whiskers to hide emotions that might otherwise
escape. If you will persist in using a biannual depilatory, you must be prepared
to monitor every wrinkle of your lips, every arch of your brow, every twitch of
your cheek muscles.”
Botha replied while considering something on the ground—which also allowed him
to conceal his lip movements from potential far-seeing viewers. “I’m sorry.
You’re right—I need to be more aware. Especially now, when we are so close to
accomplishing something really important. But is it really necessary to be so
careful, every minute? We’ve both seen non-Preservers who obviously feel as we
do yet aren’t afraid to express themselves visually.”
“That’s because it doesn’t matter if somebody confronts them, or questions
them.” Raising a hand, Skettle waved at a passing couple. Charming little girls
they had with them, too. “Without appearing effusive, we must seem to be among
those in favor of closer, not more distant, ties to these bug beings. We must
not merely deflect suspicion; we must embrace it, engulf it. Then it can be
safely disposed of, the way targeted eukocytes kill cancer cells.”
Botha nodded understandingly. Except for the thranx presence, which would not
begin to become truly onerous for another day or two until the full panoply of
the fair was thrown open to the public, he was quite pleased with how things had
been going. The weather, the freshness of the unspoiled atmosphere, the subtle
tingling tastes and aromas of a new world: all were meant to be enjoyed.
Several times that day they tarried to eat something, or sit and have a drink.
These many pauses allowed time for reflection. They also allowed Botha, through
the sophisticated instrumentation woven into his attire, to coordinate the
actual final layout of the fairgrounds with the multiple schematics he had spent
nearly a year preparing. The inconspicuous display that occasionally flashed
onto the organic readout that floated atop his left pupil would have gone
utterly unnoticed by anyone but a very attentive lover.
By late afternoon they had covered a good deal of ground. Having studied stolen
diagrams of the grounds for months prior to actually arriving on Dawn, they were
able to avoid dead ends and cover only those areas it was absolutely necessary
for them to visit and confirm in person.
“We could do another quadrant.” Botha had perfected the art of reading the
optical display without squinting. “They won’t close for another hour yet.” When
the fair opened officially, they both knew, the grounds would remain accessible
to visitors around the clock. This was very convenient for their own purposes,
which did not include nocturnal sight-seeing.
“No need to rush things.” Skettle was sitting in a chair floating above a small
pond. Trained leeshkats, local amphibians, popped up in cleverly choreographed
rhyme-time to spit sparkling fountains into the air. Despite the seeming
randomness of their alien exertions, not a drop of water fell on giggling,
appreciative patrons of the small snack bar. Flowers flush with streaks of pink
and vermilion swayed atop flexible aqueous roots. “We’ll come back and finish up
tomorrow.”
“Fine with me. Everything matches up with the charts we’ve been using. I haven’t
seen anything yet that will complicate our planting of charges.” Frowning
abruptly, Botha spun in his seat. His chair rocked playfully with the sharp
movement. “What is that awful screeching?”
“Poetry reading.” As he pointed with one hand, Skettle took a sip from the
self-chilling glass of his tall, teal fruit drink. “Watch your expression,
Piet.”
From atop a rotating mobile platform drawn by picture-perfect simulacra of
eight-leggedcovuk!k from Willow-Wane, an ornately attired thranx was declaiming
melodiously. Enchanted by his exotic appearance, quaint mode of transportation,
silvery clicks and whistles, and a wafting fragrance redolent of crushed
orchids, a sizable crowd trailed behind. They hung on the poet’s every gesture
and sound. Though the majority of the entranced entourage was human and could
understand little of the actual meaning of what was being said, they were
fascinated nonetheless. The few thranx tourists in the procession endeavored to
translate as best they could, and to convey some sense of the trenchant artistry
that underlay the courtly performance.
“Look at those people, slavishly hanging on that filthy bug’s wretched
croakings!” Botha had to turn away from the noisome spectacle, so repellent did
he find it. “What’s wrong with them?”
“They have not been educated.” Far more in control of himself than his companion
was, Skettle took a longer swallow of his drink, then eyed the nearly empty
glass appreciatively. “This is very good. We will have to try and take some
concentrate back with us. It is the task of such as ourselves, Piet, to educate
them. That is why we are here.” He listened for another moment as the procession
wandered out of earshot. “Desvendapur.”
“What?” Botha blinked at him.
“That was the thranx poet who escaped from their treacherous outpost in the
western Amazon. Before your time, really—but I remember it quite well. I spent
more time than it was worth trying to see what even a few disoriented, misguided
humans found in his so-called poetic random barks and gargles. None of it ever
made the least sense to me. Absolutely worthless drivel.”
“Apparently not to a bug,” Botha commented.
Skettle emancipated his empty glass, watched as it carefully negotiated a path
between diners and drinkers on its way back to the kitchen. “Who knows what a
bug thinks? Who cares? Let’s get back to the hotel and find out how the others
did.”
Botha slipped out of his chair. It rocked briefly in his absence, then steadied
to await the next set of perambulating buttocks. “Hopefully, Pierrot hasn’t
blown up anything prematurely.”
“If she has, she better have included herself.” Skettle did not look in Botha’s
direction, for which the smaller man was grateful. He admired, even revered,
Elkannah Skettle as much as any member of the cause. But the old man could scare
you sometimes, without even intending to. Something in his manner, in his mental
makeup, was skewed: a powerful ego skimming swiftly across the ice of the mind
on skates fashioned of parallel psychoses.
That did not make him any less of a leader in Botha’s eyes. You just had to be
wary of his occasional . . . moods.
Like his companions, Beskodnebwyl found Dawn unappealing. Had the authorities in
charge not decided to hold this misconceived melange of a fair in the middle of
the hottest month on the northern continent of the colony, he did not think he
could have stood being outside for very long without proper survival gear. The
idea of spending a winter on such a world . . .
As it was, it was near noon and he was still chilly. Afternoon would be better.
The local temperature tended to reach its most intense just before sunset.
Nothing could be done about the dryness of the atmosphere, however. Like the
temperature, the local humidity fell just within the limits of what was
tolerable. He felt some sympathy for the thranx who were actually participating
in the fair. They did not have his flexibility, could not always come and go
when the weather suited them best.
It was not enough sympathy to keep him from watching them die, however.
Flanked by Sijnilarget, Meuvonpehif, and Tioparquevekk, he wandered in
apparently incessant spirals that in fact were designed to carry him and his
square of four to a specific destination. Not one of the many clever amusements
that had been constructed by the resident humans, nor any of the engagingly
familiar displays that had been erected by the invited thranx, distracted the
Bwyl from their chosen course. The four resisted all such blandishments,
ignoring lights and music, recitations and performances, disdaining to sample
even the finest examples of thranx foodstuffs imported by invitees from Hivehom,
Willow-Wane, Eurmet, and elsewhere. They had no time to partake of such
diversions. The truly dedicated are not easily swayed from their intendment.
The closer they got to their destination, the more edgy they became. It was not
necessary to conceal the emotions running through them, however, because certain
movements of limbs and antennae that would have been highly suggestive to
another thranx meant nothing to the humans among whom they passed, and all other
thranx were busy operating exhibits. The fair infrastructure had been designed,
laid out, and was being run solely by the hosting humans of Dawn.
Even if they were confronted at the wrong time or in the wrong place,
Beskodnebwyl knew, they could easily plead ignorance.
No one challenged them as they reached the building that had been constructed on
the shore. A large portion of it extended out over the lake. This bulky
apparatus was to be expected, since the building’s task was to integrate
communications within the fairgrounds, both private and public. Concessions,
restaurants, exhibits, and most of all, Security—all depended on the gleaming
new transmission and relay system to supply their needs. This it did admirably,
in manner mostly automated.
Working with data extracted from restricted reports, a mated pair of renegade
scientists sympathetic to the Bwyl cause had developed a wonderful set of
miniaturized explosives easily deliverable by hand. At their chamber in the
temporary hivelike structure the humans and their thranx advisors had built to
provide comfortable climate-controlled lodgings for thranx visitors to and
workers at the fair, the Bwyl had left a small packing case containing an
assortment of favorite drinks. One drink container held enough of the explosives
to kill a significant number of people.
Utilized throughout the fair, they would quickly cause widespread havoc. When
the source of the havoc was identified as thranx, it should not be enough to
start a war, but should prove more than sufficient to place a freeze on the
upgrading of diplomatic relations that would last for years at a minimum.
They located and memorized several entrances to the structure, which was to be
one of their principal targets. All were secured, as Beskodnebwyl and his
companions knew they would be. Beskodnebwyl and Tioparquevekk kept watch while
Sijnilarget and Meuvonpehif inspected the security arrangements.
“Difficulties?” Beskodnebwyl asked as soon as they returned. Few humans had
passed their way. Those that glanced in the direction of the four thranx had
assumed they were part of the fair maintenance staff. A reasonable, if totally
incorrect, assumption.
“Not many.” Sijnilarget was peering through a device that no human would have
recognized. “Though important to the smooth functioning of the fair, this is not
a military installation. I would estimate less than ten time-parts to gain entry
without setting off any alarms. Admittedly, I have not had as much time as I
would like to study human designs of this nature, but I see nothing
insurmountable. Regardless of the sentient species that designs them, security
systems for oxygen breathers adhere to certain fundamental patterns.”
Beskodnebwyl gestured his understanding. “Gaining entrance is the difficult
part. Once inside, it becomes a simple matter of setting and timing a couple of
containers. In the absence of communications, the chaos we will create will only
be magnified.”
“There may be human guards inside,” Tioparquevekk cautioned. “Or at least
maintenance workers we may have to deal with.”
Meuvonpehif flicked her truhands sharply forward, producing a small cracking
sound as chitin snapped against chitin. “You concern yourself with getting us
in. The rest of us will handle matters should any unfortunate humans decide to
try and intercede.”
“Anyone observing our activities must be silenced.” Sijnilarget deliberately
spoke in Low Thranx to emphasize the crudity of his response. “They must not be
allowed to raise the alarm.”
“We don’t even know if there will be any humans to be encountered in what must
surely be a largely automatic operation.” Beskodnebwyl continued to shield
Tioparquevekk’s instrumentation with his body. “No one enters a strange burrow
looking for trouble. How are you coming?”
“Almost finished.” Tioparquevekk hovered over his equipment. “I have analyzed
and ascertained the requisite patterns. All that remains is to record them and
then run a phantom, to ensure that everything will work on the day we choose to
act.” He went silent, busy with all four hands and sixteen digits.
“Hey!”
Beskodnebwyl, whose knowledge of human speech forms verged on fluency,
recognized the word as an exclamation of accusation. What mattered, he knew from
his painstaking studies, was the intensity with which it was delivered, and
whether querulousness was implied. It struck him that in this instance all the
relevant ingredients were involved.
“What are you doing there?” The human who had spoken now adopted a tone more
belligerent than curious. Beskodnebwyl did not panic. There were only two of the
bipeds, and they were not clad in the attire of the several maintenance teams
that serviced the fair. That meant they were only casual fair-goers, not unlike
himself and his three companions. Behind him, he could sense Tioparquevekk
concluding his work and hastily downpacking his equipment. Despite a rising
sense of anxiety, the other three thranx worked smoothly and efficiently. With
four hands, they were not prone to fumbling.
If this human did not occupy an official position, what right did it have to
bark accusingly at Beskodnebwyl and his companions? Assuming a defensive stance,
he moved forward to confront the human. It was rangy, even for its kind.
Standing tall on his four trulegs, Beskodnebwyl could not have raised his head
to the level of the biped’s chest. Nonetheless, he was not intimidated.
Proximity to the lumbering, lurching mammal brought on feelings of disgust and
mild nausea, not fear.
“I will tell you as soon as you have shown me your license.”
Looking bemused, the two men halted. The taller one continued to do all the
talking. “What license?”
“The one that gives you the authority to challenge peaceful visitors to this
fair.” Behind him, Beskodnebwyl sensed his companions shifting their stances to
form the rest of a traditional defensive four-headed square. Whatever happened
now must be resolved quietly, he knew, lest the confrontation draw unwanted
attention.
The smaller of the pair spoke up, speaking to his friend. “Not only talkative
bugs, but sarcastic ones.” His hand, Beskodnebwyl noted, was hovering over a
slight bulge in the garment that covered his lower body. The Bwyl was not
worried. If the human flourished a weapon, Sijnilarget, Meuvonpehif, and
Tioparquevekk would be ready to respond with firepower of their own. Though
differing greatly from thranx in their physical makeup, human bodies reacted
similarly to an encounter with high-velocity explosive pellets.
The taller one’s tone became slightly less combative. “I asked you what you were
doing here.” His head bobbed in a gesture Beskodnebwyl knew was meant to
indicate the building behind them. “This isn’t part of the fair exhibit. There’s
nothing here for the public to see.”
“We know,” Meuvonpehif commented readily in her heavily accented Terranglo.
“It’s the central communications facility.”
Beskodnebwyl was furious enough to reach back and snap one of the female’s
antennae. By her physical reaction, he could see that she recognized her error
almost as soon as she made it. Perhaps, he hoped agitatedly, the humans would
find the comment innocuous.
They did not.
The tall man chose to continue to direct his words to Beskodnebwyl. “Is it
really? That’s interesting. How do you know that? It isn’t marked as such on the
outside.”
“It’s function is quite obvious,” Beskodnebwyl replied a bit too quickly. “The
necessary apparatus for the transmission of information dominates the roofline.”
The human nodded again. Beskodnebwyl thought his expression now indicated
thoughtfulness, but it was difficult to tell. Mastering the range of human
facial expressions took time and patience. “So you’ve been studying the
communications center from other vantage points besides this one. That’s even
more interesting. I wonder what the Dawn police would make of your interest?”
The biped was preternaturally perceptive, Beskodnebwyl thought tightly. This was
threatening to get out of hand. He could feel his companions shifting their
stances behind him, preparatory to . . .
He was contemplating how best to dispose of the humans’ bodies when the short
human appeared to lose control of himself. Drawing the bulge from his shirt, he
aimed a device that was as lethal-looking as it was compact directly at
Beskodnebwyl’s head.
“Goddamn dirty bugs want to get their filthy claws on everything!”
Reacting almost instantaneously, the trio of thranx behind Beskodnebwyl
extracted from their thorax pouches weapons of their own. Confronted
unexpectedly by thrice his number, the stocky biped hesitated, unsure now how to
proceed, his initial bravado much reduced by the revelation that his intended
victims were armed. He stared at them, glanced up at his companion, then back at
the thranx. Like the rest of him, the muzzle of his weapon wavered.
Admirably calm, the tall human stepped between his friend and the armed
defensive square. “Now, this I would not have expected. Piet is quite right: It
is unthinkable to have disgusting, germ-ridden quasi-insects such as yourselves
stumbling about this close to a vital human installation. It inevitably raises
the question of why you would want to do so. The presence of concealed weapons
at a peaceable venue like this fair greatly enhances those questions. As does
the undeniable skill and readiness with which they have just now been deployed.
Yet you are not members of an officially recognized organization.”
“I dispute nothing you say, but what does it prove save that thranx are always
ready to defend themselves from reasonless attack?” Beskodnebwyl was watching
the tall human carefully. The man’s stocky companion he had already dismissed as
unimportant, despite the fact that he was the one holding the weapon.
“It may prove a very odd thing indeed.” The human smiled, fully exposing his
teeth. Beskodnebwyl had to force himself not to turn away from the distasteful
sight. “It suggests that you and I may be here for the same purpose.”
Beskodnebwyl had nothing to frown with, and the human could not understand the
thranx’s gestures. It was left to inadequate words to convey subtleties of
meaning. “And what purpose could that possibly be?”
“Elkannah?” the shorter man murmured uneasily. “Are you sure about this?”
“I always trust my instincts, Piet. If there’s another explanation, we’ll divine
it in short order.” Turning his attention back to Beskodnebwyl, he continued as
calmly as if requesting a change of shuttle seat assignment. “You and your
dirt-dwelling friends are here to disrupt this fair, aren’t you? You’re planning
to do something to, or with, local communications. You are here to cause
trouble.”
This was it, Beskodnebwyl reflected. They would have to kill both bipeds, and
kill them quickly. All it would take would be a gesture from him. The humans
would not recognize it, and so the one holding the gun would not have time to
react. But . . . he was curious.
“That’s the kind of observation that could get an individual killed. Why
shouldn’t it?”
“Because my friends and I are here for the same reason. From civility, we plan
to bring forth chaos. We don’t like your kind, you see. Among us are many, too
many I fear, misguided people who think we should cuddle up to you bugs, make
you part of our cultural and political lives, let you set up your teeming,
odious colonies on our own worlds. That sort of thing is reprehensible,
unnatural, and must be prevented at all costs.” He stopped, waiting while the
bugs digested his words.
“How very astonishing.” At a gesture, the trio behind him lowered, but did not
put up, their weapons. Somewhat reluctantly, the shorter human did likewise.
“Your speech is admirable, except that for sake of veracity the word phrase
forstinking soft flesh should be substituted for the derogatory termbugs .”
The biped smiled again. Beskodnebwyl found he was better able to tolerate it
this time. “I think we may be able to come to an understanding. If we do not
cooperate, our natural antipathies will surely undo our respective plans. Ours
do not especially involve the communications facility. Your plan is just to
destroy it?”
“Yes,” Meuvonpehif replied before Beskodnebwyl could silence her.
The biped looked in her direction. “You are lying. Such as you would not come
all this way, smuggling in weapons as well as intentions, just to render the
visitors to and promoters of this abomination of a fair unable to communicate
with one another. You must have something more extensive planned.” He returned
his gaze to Beskodnebwyl. “I will reiterate: If we do not cooperate, we will end
up at cross-purposes, when what we both want is the same result.”
Beskodnebwyl nodded, an absurdly easy human gesture to imitate. “We intend to
set off explosives not only here but throughout the length and breadth of the
depravity.” Behind him, he heard Tioparquevekk and Sijnilarget inhale sharply in
disbelief. “The more fair-goers—human and thranx alike—that we can kill or
incapacitate, the stronger will be the reaction among your kind.”
Again the human nodded—approvingly, Beskodnebwyl thought. “We plan to make use
of some custom-built explosive devices. As I understand it, the more creative
types we execute, the angrier will be the response from your infernal hives.”
“Quite correct.” Beskodnebwyl found himself staring up at the human. Used to
dwelling underground, the human’s greater physical stature did not intimidate
him. That sort of psychological positioning was for open-air dwellers only. “You
confirm what we already believe: that your kind are inherently violent and
murderous, and must be kept as far away as possible from a truly civilized
society such as our own.”
“We want nothing less. Back on Earth, you know, we step on bugs all the time.
Have been doing so since the beginning of our recorded history.”
“What more can be expected,” Beskodnebwyl responded, “from a species that flops
about like ambulatory sacks of iron-based blood and loose meat?”
Skettle’s smile faded slightly. “We understand each other, then. We will not
interfere with whatever it is you intend to do, and you will not interfere with
us. Working separately but with the same goal in mind, we will with our
endeavors here succeed in putting relations between our species where they
belong: at a distance sufficient to ensure that we have to do no more than
tolerate your presence in the same galactic arm as ourselves.”
“I could have put it better,” Beskodnebwyl replied, “but your words will do. It
may even be that we will, over the next several days, find reason to cooperate
more closely in carrying out our respective efforts, and might even try to
synchronize our operations in hopes of achieving maximum outcome.”
“That’s a fine idea.” Skettle started to retrace his steps. At no time did he
turn his back on the bugs. “We should arrange for some of us to meet daily to
continue this exchange of information. How about at the Syxbex Restaurant, on
the lakeshore?”
“That location will be eminently satisfactory.” Beskodnebwyl maintained the
defensive square, watching as the pair of bipeds retreated. “We want to be sure
to avoid any misunderstandings.”
When we have done what we came for, he mused, we will also find a way to kill
you. Loose antennae could not be allowed to flutter about. Besides, it would
give him pleasure to preside over the demise of so forthrightly antagonistic a
human. He raised a foothand in the human gesture of farewell.
Skettle waved back, thinking as he and Botha turned the first available
sheltering corner that he was going to delight in seeing this particular bug’s
skull cracked and its brains oozing out over the colorful pavement that had been
laid down for the fair.
There is nothing in art, in philosophy, or in politics to match the fervor of
mutual cooperation among discordant bands of fanatics.
6
The supply station had a spectacular setting. Located on a low rise overlooking
a vast salt pan smoking with geysers, mud pools, and hot lakes, it doubled as a
geothermal research station for the score of scientists and their support teams
studying the wonderfully bewildering variety of silicate and sulfuric minerals
that gushed forth from the bowels of the planet. These often differed markedly
from their terrestrial analogs. Every week of exploration, sometimes every day,
elicited new cries of discovery from delighted geologists.
In addition to being crammed full of mineralogical revelations, the thermal
wilderness was awash in beauty. While yellow and its variations were the
predominant colors, there were also rich varieties of blue, green, and red
thanks to the presence of the tough, active, endemic bacteria that thrived in
the thermal pools. Occasionally, a brisk south wind would sweep through the
valley, brushing away the clouds of steam to expose kilometer after kilometer of
roaring geysers, gurgling hot springs, plopping mud holes, and steaming rivers.
A certain species of thermotropic eel-like creature nearly two meters long had
biologists almost coming to blows over its taxonomy. Was it a highly advanced
worm or an exceedingly primitive fish? Or something entirely new to science?
On the rare occasions when it rained, the combination of steam, fog, and drizzle
made it impossible to see more than a meter in front of one’s face even at high
noon. At such times fieldwork was restricted. Unseen, the tentative network of
hastily laid prefab pathways could not be negotiated in safety, and even aircar
work was halted. The resident scientists would cluster in frustrated,
argumentative knots inside the air-conditioned labs and living quarters, anxious
to be released from regulations even though they knew these had been drawn up
with their own safety in mind. But when was there ever a scientist who paid
proper attention to personal safety when a host of new discoveries lay close at
hand?
Brockton was working on a robot probe designed to take samples from the hottest
vents when he felt the first vibration. It was accompanied by a muted rumble, as
if one of the back doors had been opened. A glance showed that both of the big
service bay barriers were still shut. With a shrug, he returned to his work. He
was alone in the shop except for the automatics, Norquist and Oppervann having
decided to take a long lunch. They did not have many opportunities to interact
with the scientific staff and took every chance to do so. To improve their
education, both men insisted. To try to put the make on one of several
attractive unattached ladies among the staff, Brockton knew.
Nothing more than casual flirting for him. He had a wife and two kids on Tharce
IV. He was here because he didn’t mind the desert, and because in a year on
Comagrave he could make the equivalent of three years’ salary back home. His
family understood. When his contract was up, he would be able to take a whole
year off doing nothing but watching his kids grow.
Though considered a party-killer, he got along well with his workmates. His
skills, honed through fifteen years of experience, were greatly appreciated by
both his colleagues and his employers, and he did not try to play the
disapproving father figure to his predominantly younger coworkers. Removing his
hands from the interior of the probe, he shut the access panel, picked up the
nearby magnetic welder, and began to reverse the polarity on the interior
latches. Once flopped, they would hold the panel shut as securely as if it had
been melted into place.
There it was again. A second tremor, stronger than the first. He had picked up
enough geology from hanging around the station’s scientists to know that where
geysers and thermal pools are present, stronger seismic activity was to be
expected. But this didn’t feel like one of the numerous minor temblors he had
experienced many times during the preceding months. It had a different feel to
it—more of a bump than a rumble.
The station was constructed on a flexor foundation that was designed to
distribute any shock evenly across its base. Anything short of a tectonic
convulsion would be dissipated by the integrated flexors before it could cause
any damage. The contractors had known what they were doing. Though he had not
worked in construction, Brockton had seen enough to know good work from bad.
Upon arriving, he had taken an off day to make his own inspection of the station
and its outlying structures. Everything had looked reassuringly solid.
That was when the ground fell away and the roof started to come down on top of
him.
The roar that accompanied the collapse was frightful, a caustic clamor in the
ears that masked the screams of those crowded into the central dining area for
lunch. Feeling the floor fall away beneath him, he grabbed wildly for the probe.
It was plunging downward as well, until he managed to hit the open programming
panel. Bluish light emerging from its flat underside, the probe rose and
steadied on its tiny repulsion field. Brockton’s terrifyingly rapid descent
slowed. Kicking the field up to full power, he found that the probe could muster
just enough lift to keep them both aloft. For how long he did not know.
Then the rest of the roof came down.
Guiding the probe, he made a mad dash for the nearest crumpled doorway. He just
did manage to slip through a rip in the crumpling, warping fabric. Outside in
the glare and steam of the day, he turned his head to look back in the direction
of the station. Keeping both arms and legs wrapped tightly around the laboring
device, he tried to make some sense of what he was seeing.
The entire station—central hub, communications tower, living quarters, lab
modules, service departments, hygienics plant—was collapsing in upon itself. No,
not upon itself, he saw through the rising, swirling mists. Into a gaping
cauldron. A roaring river of boiling water had suddenly manifested itself
directly beneath the station. With nothing to support it, the advanced flexor
foundation was no more useful than a row of wooden pilings.
Despite the damp heat, he was having chills. Rising above the groans and
grindings of imploding buildings were the screams of those trapped inside. A few
who had been near the front exits had tried to escape that way, only to find
there was no place to escape to. Like those they had left behind, they died
before they could reach solid ground, crushed beneath the subsiding structures
or boiled alive in the torrent that had burst forth beneath their feet.
In less than an hour there was nothing left of the supply station. It had been
swept away, down the steaming cataract that now gushed from the side of the rise
and into the nearest expanse of hot lake. A couple who had been out all morning
studying cyanotic bacteria returned in their aircar and pried his cramped arms
and legs off the probe that had saved his life. Another researcher returned
later that evening. He was accompanied by the resident AAnn advisor. Decamping
on a mound of solid, well-vegetated ground half a kilometer away, the numbed
survivors tried to make sense of what had happened.
Brockton knew what had happened. He had survived to feel his wife next to him
once more, and to hold his children. As soon as rescue teams arrived, he was
putting in for a pysch dismissal. He doubted he would have any trouble getting
one. Not after what he had seen.
Norquist, Oppervann, all those other fine men and women—all gone. If the rescue
teams were really lucky, they might be able to recover some bones. Sitting on
the ground beneath an orgthic bush, he hardly heard what the others were saying.
It was starting to get dark, and he was cold. Surrounded by hell, he was cold.
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