Chorus Skating (36 page)

Read Chorus Skating Online

Authors: Alan Dean Foster

BOOK: Chorus Skating
6.77Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“What is this ‘Mashupro'? I speak of the dolphins and whales, many of whom are also losing the ability to sing. For them it is more than a matter of artfulness, for if they cannot sing, they cannot find one another within the deep ocean or properly position themselves with respect to the land or the sea bottom. A songless cetacean is a half blind cetacean.” She was staring at him.

“How come you to know of such matters, man? Usually land dwellers are woefully ignorant of what transpires beneath the waves.”

“I'm a little different from your average land dweller.” He crossed his legs and sat down in front of her. She responded by sitting up and swinging her tail around so that the tip just touched his boots. In spite of his determination he found his concentration crippled.

“I'm a spellsinger. That's a kind of sorcerer who makes magic with music.”

“‘Singer.' Your songs have not been disappeared?”

“Not so far. In fact, we're traveling with a piece of music, though I don't think it belongs to you or your whales. It leads, and we follow.”

“You speak of things I do not understand. But if you are a magician as well as a singer, is there nothing you can do to help return our songs to us?” Leaning forward sharply, she thrust her face close to his. She was ripe with the aroma of salt and life, kelp and crystal. “I would so do anything to make that happen.”

“That's not necessary.” He drew back a little, though not as much as he might have. “If I can be of any help, I'll help everyone. You, your sisters, the whales, a fresh little band in Mashupro, everyone who's lost music to this singular phenomenon.”

“And what of me?” she whispered, humping forward like a seal. “Do you think of me as a singular phenomenon?” She was very near now.

“Actually—” He sneezed sharply, causing her to draw back in surprise. Her tail smacked the water, a warning reflex not unlike the lobtailing performed by her cetacean cousins.

“Sorry. It's just that I—” He sneezed again, violently, wiping at his nose with the back of his right hand.

“What is it, man? What is wrong?”

Sniffing, he managed to gasp out a reply. “I'm allergic to certain kinds of seafood.”

“Seafood? You would catch and fillet me, man?”

“No, no!” he said hastily. “Not you. Tuna, mackerel, haddock, sardines—that kind of seafood.”

She put her hands on her hips, just above the first iridescent scales. “I should have known. Man, some of my best friends are tuna.” Her expression softened. “But you say you do not eat them.”

“Can't.” He sneezed again, less explosively this time now that she had moved back a little.

Both arms extended as she stretched them over her head. Her lips pursed in a fey pout. “Then it would be uncomfortable for you to make love to me.”

“I don't think you'd enjoy it very much, either.” The degree of disappointment in his voice surprised him.

“I will tell my sisters of your promise to help.” She turned abruptly and rolled back into the water.

“Hey, wait!” He rose to his feet. “I didn't promise anything!”

Her head and shoulders reappeared, her flowing hair clinging to bare skin. “If you could hold your breath long enough, I would give you a kiss of thanks.”

“I don't suppose there'd be any harm in that. Just a kiss, I mean.” He moved to the water's edge and crouched.

As their lips met, a feeling coursed through him the likes of which he'd never encountered. He'd done scuba and felt the sea all around him, warm and embracing and fickle, a salty full-body caress. That was what her kiss was like—a passion that spread throughout his entire being, electric with sweet deep promises and the echoes of preternatural beauty. It was as if she were palpating his soul.

When she drew back, she left the taste of salt and sugar on his mouth. Subsequently he sneezed, causing her to laugh delightedly. Her gill slits rippled like a manta's, the upward-slanting eyes glistening wetly.

“It never works anyway,” she told him. “If I come out on land I flop around like a beached flounder and love slides away. If the man enters my realm he can never hold his breath long enough or float without treading water.” Tail flashing, she rolled and dove.

“That's okay,” he assured her as she reappeared farther out. “I'm not much of a swimmer, and it was a wonderful kiss.”

“I'm joyful you found it so. Find our music, spellsinger. Find our songs and restore them to us and you'll gain the gratitude of myself, my sisters, and all our companions in the sea.” Floating on her back, she batted lazily at the water with her tail. “Practice your breath-holding skills and who knows what might become possible one day? Surely your allergy would not affect you underwater.”

With that she arched her back and dove.

She was right, he realized. If he was underwater and holding his breath or breathing canned air, his allergies wouldn't be affected.

“Wait!” He waded out through the warm, clear water until it lapped at his knees. “Come back!”

No tail of shining peridot broke the surface, no eyes limpid with promise peered back at him. She had gone, leaving only the memory of that kiss lingering on his lips, rich as chocolate, pungent as dew. A kiss, and a plea.

What was happening to the world's music?

Reluctantly, he turned back toward the woods. She would have done better to encounter a human with fewer allergies and greater lung capacity.

They'd finished more than half the necessary repairs when a muting of the light announced the arrival of evening. The sun was stealing away to the west when Mudge casually accosted his friend.

“Ain't seen you all day, mate. Where'd you take yourself off to?” Though Jon-Tom didn't reply, the smile on his face was response enough to pique the otter's curiosity. Mudge didn't press the inquiry, preferring to wait until his friend looked less dazed. Or perhaps
dazzled
would have been a more accurate description.

Besides, Pivver was waiting on him. Only to talk, but otters were naturally physical creatures. A little touch here and there, he told himself. For now more here than there, but with time, who knew what marvels might transpire?

Did he want marvels to transpire? Wrestling with his damnable new conscience, he trotted off muttering to himself, leaving Jon-Tom to stare curiously at the otter's retreating back.

The following day the princesses pitched in to help with the work. Not because they were feeling particularly egalitarian but because they were already bored to tears. Though accommodating enough, the island was singularly lacking in excitement. With her natural strength, Umagi of Tuuro proved especially helpful, though everyone did their share. Watching Ansibette work, Jon-Tom reflected, was even more dangerous than watching her doing nothing. He concentrated on his own contribution, which consisted of keeping resolutely out of the way.

By the following morning they'd done all they could within the range of their limited resources. Anxious moments followed as they waited for the tide to lift them free. The boat's keel was firmly wedged in the sand, and Naike floated the possibility (as it were) of launching their single lifeboat, affixing a line to it from the ship's stern, and trying to pull the bigger vessel free. Alternatively they could haul the anchor out on the lifeboat, drop it, winch the ship backward, and in this fashion kedge their way off the beach.

Neither arduous option had to be exercised. The tide crept in just enough to float them clear. The stalwart little vessel straightened as they backed sail and drifted out into the lagoon. Under Naike's increasingly assured direction she was brought about and they made confidently for the passage through the reef.

Only when they were once more safely out on the open sea did everyone relax. Heke and Karaukul hurried belowdecks to check on the state of the repairs they'd made. There was still some seepage near the bow, but the rest of the patches were holding firm. To compensate for their lack of skill and technical knowledge, they had overcaulked and overfilled even the tiniest gap. Profligacy with time and material on land translated into safety at sea.

“She's tight below, sir,” Heke reported proudly.

On the other side of the wheel Jon-Tom studied the hazy sky. “We should be okay unless we run into another storm. I don't know if she can take another pounding like that.”

A small, powerful paw came to rest on his arm. “Be of good cheer, spellsinger. Do not seek storms, lest they seek you.” Naike swatted absently at the string of chords swirling near his head. The music made his ears itch.

They weren't an hour out from the island, Jon-Tom regaling his companions with song, when Heke's voice reached them from the platform affixed to the top of the mast.

“Something five points to starboard, sir!”

The Lieutenant squinted at the lookout. “What is it?”

“I can't tell. But it's big, whatever it is.”

Leaving the mongoose to hold the wheel, Jon-Tom rushed to the railing. So did the excited princesses.

They drew back as a titanic shape rose from the water. It was far larger than their vessel, slick of side and pale of hue. It reeked of abyssal depths. The boat rocked slightly in the waves induced by its emergence. A wary Jon-Tom readied his duar.

Weighing more than a hundred tons and stretching well over a hundred feet in length, the stupendous sulfurbottom carefully nuzzled the side of the boat. From within the forepart of that curving rampart of pale blue flesh a plate-sized eye focused firmly on Jon-Tom. The air vibrated with a voice sufficiently sonorous to set his teeth to aching.

“DON'T I KNOW YOU?”

More than a little bemused, Jon-Tom examined his reflection in the whale's eye. “Um, I don't think so. If we'd met before, I have a feeling I'd remember it.”

“THAT MUSIC
…” The leviathan effortlessly kept pace with the ship.
“I COULD SWEAR I'VE HEARD ITS LIKE BEFORE. AND SEEN ITS MAKER.”
The eye swiveled slightly.
“SURELY I KNOW YOU AS WELL.”

“Me?” squeaked Mudge as the orb centered on him. “I 'ardly think so, Your Immoderateness. Not that I ain't never forgot folks I've met, but 'tis a tetch difficult to imagine forgettin' someone your size.”

“I SUPPOSE SO.”
The eye returned to transfix Jon-Tom.
“BUT I COULD SWEAR … NEVERTHELESS, YOU ARE THE SPELLSINGER OF WHOM THE MERMAID SPEAKS?”

“I guess so, unless she's swam into another one in the past couple of days.”

As if this admission was somehow the answer to everything, the whale arched its back and sounded, leaving the boat to bob wildly for a moment in its wake.

“Well now, mate.” Mudge sidled close to his friend. “Wot do you make o' that? An' wot's this about a mermaid?”

“Not much. I had a chat with one day before yesterday. She spoke of her kind losing their music, and the cetaceans likewise. I guess news travels faster underwater.”

Faster than he knew, as Heke confirmed by calling out a second time from the masthead.

“There's another. And another, and another!”

The air was filled with expansive whooshing sounds as whale after whale surfaced and spouted. Soon the boat was surrounded, not by dozens of individuals but by dozens of pods. Not just blues, but all manner of tribes were represented. There were humpbacks and fins, sperms and seis, rights and orcas. Scattered among them like so many PT boats escorting a fleet of aircraft carriers and battleships were hundreds of agile, uncatchable dolphins and porpoises, leaping and darting among their more massive cousins.

“Isn't that a grand sight!” declared an awestruck Aleaukauna.

“Truly wondrous.” Along with the other princesses, Pivver gazed raptly upon the cetacean flotilla.

Taking turns, the goliaths swam alongside to have a closer look at the boat and its occupants, who were delighted to return the favor. Eventually the parade made way for a patriarchal humpback whose head was as gnarly as the root ball of a sequoia.

“YOU BE THE SPELLSINGER?”

“I be,” replied Jon-Tom evenly.

“YOU WERE MADE KNOWN TO US BY FRIENDS.”

“The mermaids; I know.” He felt a tug at his side.

“'Tis best not to volunteer too much until we know wot they're about, mate.”

“What are we going to do, Mudge? Refuse to answer their questions? In case you haven't noticed, we're a little over-matched here.” He peered back over the side. “Can we do something for you? Surely this impressive gathering isn't all for my benefit.”

“IT IS HOPED THAT YOUR PRESENCE WILL BE TO OUR BENEFIT.”
The old humpback had rolled slightly onto his right side, the better to see aboard. Thick with barnacles and whale lice, a massive pectoral fin rested on the side of the boat.

“I don't understand.” Actually Jon-Tom was afraid that he did.

“WE HAVE LOST OUR MUSIC, JUST AS HAVE THE MERMAIDS. THE ONE YOU TALKED WITH SAID SHE IMPRESSED ON YOU THE DANGER THIS POSES TO US. WITHOUT SONG WE CANNOT FIND OUR WAY.”

“I don't know what I can do for you. At least not right now.” Jon-Tom gestured forward. “First I have to escort these six ladies homeward. After that I follow a solitary piece of music wherever it may lead.” The demands on his time, he mused, were beginning to verge on the absurd. His sinuses gave a twitch, but he didn't sneeze.

“SINCE LEAVING YOUR LAST LAND WE HAVE PLOTTED YOUR DIRECTION.”

“For now we go where the music leads us, but soon we'll turn east toward our passengers' kingdoms,” Jon-Tom explained.

“FOR NOW.”
The humpback brooded.
“CAN IT BE YOU DO NOT KNOW WHERE YOU ARE HEADING?”

Man and otter exchanged a look. Then they turned as one to stare at the lightly luminescent cloud of music that danced and pirouetted just forward of the bowsprit.

Other books

Gypsy Heiress by Laura London
Murder With Reservations by Elaine Viets
Las Christmas by Esmeralda Santiago
Submission by Michel Houellebecq
Another Pan by Daniel Nayeri
Strawberry Fields by Katie Flynn
A Bear of a Reputation by Ivy Sinclair
Con ánimo de ofender by Arturo Pérez-Reverte