The Book of Night With Moon (30 page)

Read The Book of Night With Moon Online

Authors: Diane Duane

Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Fantasy, #Contemporary, #Fantasy Fiction, #Fantastic Fiction, #Cats, #Cats - Fiction, #Pets

BOOK: The Book of Night With Moon
7.86Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

"Please," Rhiow muttered. "I'd rather be attacked by bees. At least they can sting you only once."

Saash was elbow-deep in the catenary now, slowing down a little in her work. "Hmm," she said. "I wonder…" She leaned in again, pulled forward one particular minor bundle of strings, glowing a pale gold, and took it behind her front fangs, closed her mouth; then looked unfocused for a moment, an expression like the "tasting" look she made when breathing breaths with someone. After a few seconds, Saash's eyes flicked sideways toward Rhiow. "Aha," she said.

" 'Aha,' " said Rhiow, slightly edgy. Her mind was on those openings all around them, but more on Arhu. "Care to give us an explanation of what that means in the technical sense?"

"String fatigue," Saash said.

Rhiow blinked. You came across it, occasionally, but more usually in the gate matrices, higher up. Usually a hyperstring had to be most unusually stressed by some repetitive local phenomenon to degrade to the point where it stopped holding matter and energy together correctly.

"There's a bad strand here," Saash said. "It's not conducting correctly. Tastes 'sick.' "

"What would have caused that?" Urruah said.

Saash shrugged her tail. "Sunspots?"

"Oh please."

"No, seriously. You get more neutrinos at a maximum. Add that to the flare weather we've been having recently— get a good dose of high-energy stuff through a weak area in a hyperstring, it's likely enough to unravel. In any case, it's not passing power up the line to the gate."

"I thought the power conduits were all redundant, though," Urruah said.

"They are. That's the cause of the problem here. The 'sick' strand's energy states have contaminated the redundant backup as well because they're identical and right against each other in the bundle." Saash looked rather critically at the catenary. "Someone may have to come down here and rebraid the whole thing to prevent it happening again."

"
Please
don't say that," Rhiow said. "Can you fix it now?"

"Oh, I can cut out the sick part and patch it with material from another string," said Saash. "They're pretty flexible. I'd just like to know a little more about the conditions that produced this effect."

"Well," Rhiow said, "better get patching. Are the other strings all right?"

"I'm going to finish the diagnostic," Saash said. "Two minutes."

They seemed long to Rhiow, although nothing bad was happening. Her forearms were aching a little with the strain of holding the hyperstrings at just the angle Saash had given them to her; and meanwhile her eyes kept dropping to that symbol, almost lost in the fire of the circle but not quite. It was simple: two curves, a slanted straight line bisecting them— in its way, rather like the symbol that even the
ehhif
had known to carve on the Queen's breast.

The Eye—

She looked up suddenly and found Arhu sitting there with his claws clenched full of hyperstrings and gazing down at it, too, while Saash, oblivious, pulled out several bright strings in her claws and began to knit them together. Arhu's expression was peculiar, in its way as meditative as Saash's look had been earlier.

"They have a word for it, don't they?" he said.

"For what?" Rhiow said. "And who?"

"For this," Arhu said, glancing up again at his paws full of dulled fire.
"Ehhif."

"Cat's-cradle," she said. "For them it's just play they do with normal string, a kitten's game."

"They must have seen us."

"So I think, sometimes," Rhiow said.

Arhu's glance fell again to the symbol, to the Eye. "So has someone else," he said.

Rhiow licked her nose and swallowed, nervous.

"All right," Saash said after a minute. "That ought to be the main conduit of the bad gate repaired. I'll just do the second here, and we'll be finished."

"Hurry," Rhiow said.

"Can't hurry quality work, Rhi," Saash said, intent on what she was doing. "How's the circle holding up?"

Urruah examined it critically. "Running a little low on charge at the moment. How much longer is this going to take you?"

"Oh… five minutes. Ten at the outside."

"I'll give it another jolt." Urruah bent down: the circle dimmed slightly, then brightened.

Arhu looked up from the circle then. Not at the catenary, not at Saash: up into the empty air.

"They're coming," he said.

Rhiow looked at him with alarm.
"Who?"

But she was afraid she knew perfectly well.

"He didn't lie," Arhu said, looking at Urruah with rather skewed intensity. "They
are
here."

"Uh oh," Urruah said. "You don't mean—"

"The dragons—!"

And then the roaring began. It was not very near yet— but it was entirely too near, echoing down through one of those openings… or all of them.

Rhiow rapidly went through the spells she was carrying in her head, looking for the one that would have the most rapid results against the attackers she was expecting. One of them was particularly effective: it ran down the adversary's nerves and rendered them permanently unresponsive to chemical stimulus— the wizardly equivalent of nerve gas, and tailored specifically to the problem at hand. But it wouldn't be able to get out of a protective circle; you would have to drop the circle to use it. And those who were coming were fast. If you miscalculated, if one of them jumped at you and put a big long claw through your brain before you could get the last word out—

"Rhiow?
Rhiow!"

Her head snapped around. Arhu was still sitting there with his claws full of strings, but now they were trembling because he was. "What's that noise?" he said.

"What you said was coming," she said.

"What I said—" He looked confused.

"This is what he did before, Rhi," Urruah said, looking grim. "Saash?"

"Not right now," Saash said, her voice desperately level. "If I don't finish this other patch, the whole job'll have to be done again. Let them come."

"Oh, sure," Urruah said. "Let them 'tree' us inside the circle, five bodies thick! Then what are we supposed to—"

"No," Arhu said, and the word started as a hiss of protest, scaled up to a yowl.
"No—!"

The Children of the Serpent burst in.

Rhiow knew that
ehhif
had somewhat rediscovered dinosaurs in recent years. Or rather, rediscovered them
again,
only more visually than usual this time. She had once heard Iaehh and Hhuha idly discussing this tendency for each new generation of their kind to become fascinated with the long names, the huge sizes and terrible shapes. But in Rhiow's opinion, the fascination had to do with the
ehhif
perception that such creatures were a long time ago and far away. And the most recent resurrection of the fascination, in that movie and its sequel, were rooted in a variant on the same perception: that long ago and far away was where and when such creatures
belonged.

But this too had become one of the places where they belonged. They did not take kindly to intruders. And they certainly would not let any leave alive….

Arhu started to crouch down, trembling, at the sight of them, as if he had forgotten what he was holding. "Saash!" Rhiow hissed, and without missing a beat, Saash let go of the strings she had been working on— they snapped back into place in the catenary— and took hold of the ones Rhiow had held. Rhiow bent down before Arhu could finish collapsing, and snatched the strings out of his paws. He was wide-eyed, crouching right down into a ball of terror: a pitiful and incongruous sight with him in this body, which would have been large and powerful enough to bring down the biggest wildebeest. But the hunt was in the heart, as the saying went: Rhiow couldn't entirely blame him for not having the heart for this one as the Children of the Serpent poured into the cavern and hit the circle, claws out, roaring hunger and rage.

Urruah lifted his head and roared too, but the sound was almost drowned in the wave of shrieks of hate that followed it. Single sickle-claws three feet long scrabbled against the circle, jaws half the size of one of their bodies tried to slash or bite their way in; and everywhere on your body, though nothing touched you physically, you felt the pressure of the little, cold, furious eyes. There was intelligence there, but it was drowned in hatred, and
gladly
drowned. The impression of outraged strength, pebbled and mottled greenish- and bluish-hided bodies throwing themselves again and again at the circle; the impression of raging speed, and the interminable screaming, a storm of sound in this closed-in place: that was what you had to deal with, rather than any single, rational impression of
This is a deinonychus, that is a carnosaur—

"That's what it was," Arhu was moaning, almost helplessly, like a starving kitten. "That's what it was—"

Rhiow swallowed. "The circle's holding?" she said to Urruah.

"Of course it is. Nothing they can do about it. But how are we going to get out?"

It was a fair question. He had said "five deep"; possibly he had been optimistic. The cavern was now packed so full of saurians that there was no seeing the far wall, except for the part near the roof, above the tallest heads. Rhiow had a sudden ridiculous vision of what Grand Central would look like at rush hour if it were full of saurians, not people: a whole lot like this.
We need shopping bags, though,
she thought, pacing around the circle, forcing herself to look into the terrible little eyes, the jaws snapping futilely but with increasing frustration and violence against the immaterial barrier of the circle:
and Reeboks and briefcases. Or no, maybe the briefcases wouldn't be in the best of taste—

"Done," Saash said.

"The whole repair?"

"Yes. I'm going to bring up the rest of the Grand Central complex again," Saash said. "Tell our connection to get ready."

Heard that,
Kit said.
We're set. Rhiow, if you need help, there's backup waiting.

Might need it,
Rhiow said,
but it's hard to say. Hang on—

Saash leaned into the catenary again, put out one single claw, inserted it into an insignificant-looking little loop in one string— it looked like a snag in a sweater— and pulled.

The loop straightened, vanished. The catenary came alive again, the full fire of its power bursting up through the strings that had been offline. Saash stood watching it, her head tilted to one side, listening.

"Feels right," she said. "Khi-t?"

We've got the gates back,
said another voice: Nita's.
Want us to test the bad one?

"Please."

The screaming and scrabbling and clawing went on all around them, undiminished.
Okay, it hyperextended all right—

"I saw that," Saash said. "The catenary's feeding the patched string properly. Shut it again?"

—Closed.

Saash sat down and started to scratch again, looking surprisingly satisfied with herself, under the circumstances. "I deserve some milk."

"So do we," Urruah roared at her, "and we also deserve to get out of here with our pelts intact, which seems increasingly unlikely at the moment! What in Iau's name are we supposed to do
now?"

Saash looked at the catenary, then back at Rhiow, and slowly her whiskers started to go forward.

"Oh, no, Saash," Rhiow said. "
Oh
no."

"Why not? Have you got anything better?" Saash said. "You want to try the odds of dropping the circle and having time to hit them with the neural inhibitor? I don't
think
so, Rhi! There are so many of them leaning against that spell right now, they'd just squash us to death the second we dropped it, never mind what else they'd do to us. Which they
will
, as you remember from last time."

Rhiow swallowed. Arhu stared at Saash in dumb terror. Urruah said, "Just what are you thinking of?"

Saash started to smile again, a smile entirely in character with a giant prehistoric predator-cat. "I'm going to push the catenary back out there without its 'insulating" spell in place," Saash said.

"Your brain has turned to hairballs!" Rhiow shouted. "What if it degrades the circle on the way through?"

"It won't."

"How sure are you?"

"Very sure. I'll leave the 'insulation' in place until after I've shoved it outside."

"Oh, wonderful, just great! And what about when you take the insulation off, have you thought that it might just degrade the circle
then,
and blast us all to ashes?"

"It shouldn't."

"Shouldn't—!"

"You want to sit here and wait them out?"

Rhiow looked out at the room full of roaring, shrieking saurians. Those at the far side of the room were already settling down to wait.

"It won't work. No matter
how
long we sit here, they'll wait," Saash said. "And sooner or later we're going to need food and sleep, and as soon as the last one of us goes to sleep, and the circle weakens enough to let them in—"

Urruah looked from Rhiow to Saash, then back to Rhiow again. "She's got a point," he said.

Rhiow's tail was lashing. "You think you have a life or so to spare?"

"You want to find out if it matters," Urruah said, more gently than necessary, "down
here?"

Rhiow licked her nose again, then looked at Saash. "All right," she said. "I concur."

"Right," Saash said.

She looked at the catenary. It drifted toward the edge of the circle; its own protective circles drifted with it.

Some of the saurians nearest the place where it was about to make contact looked at the catenary with the first indications of concern. Its rainbow fire fell into their big dark eyes, turning them into a parody of People's eyes— bright slits, dark irises; they blinked, backed away slightly.

"They're not wild about the light," Urruah said.

Saash nodded. The small circle surrounding the catenary made contact with the larger one: they "budded" together again. As if becoming somewhat uneasy at this, more of the saurians began to back away, and the screaming and roaring started to take on an uncomfortable edge. Some of the saurians nearer the walls stood up again, began to mill around, catching their companions' unease. Saash closed her eyes then and held quite still.

Other books

Champagne Life by Nicole Bradshaw
Treasure Hunt by John Lescroart
The Wild One by Danelle Harmon
Echoes in the Bayou by Dukes, Ursula
Soul Eater by Michelle Paver
Sons of Liberty by Christopher G. Nuttall
The Virtuous Woman by Gilbert Morris
Three Thousand Miles by Longford, Deila
Undead for a Day by Chris Marie Green, Nancy Holder, Linda Thomas-Sundstrom