Authors: Anne McCaffrey,Jody Lynn Nye
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Adventure, #Space Opera, #Science Fiction, #Interplanetary voyages, #Space ships, #Life on other planets, #Interplanetary voyages - Fiction, #Fantasy fiction, #People with disabilities, #Women, #Space ships - Fiction, #Women - Fiction
He became aware that the other magifolk were glaring
at the young woman. Chaumel was angry, Nokias shocked,
Potria mute with outrage. Plenna lifted her small chin and
stared back unflinchingly at her superiors. Keff wondered
how he had ever thought her to be weak. She was
magnificent.
"Her heartbeats up. Respiration, too. She's in trouble
with them," Carialle said. "She's the junior member here-I'd say the youngest, too, by a decade-and she spoiled her
seniors' fun. Naughty. Oops, more power spikes."
Keff felt insubstantial tendrils of thought trying to
insinuate themselves into his mind. They were rudely
slapped away by a new touch, one that felt/scented lightly
of wildflowers. Plennafrey was defending him. Another
sally by other minds managed to get an image of bloody,
half-eaten corpses burning in a wasteland into his
consciousness before they were washed out by fresh, cool
air.
"Keff, what's wrong?" Carialle asked. "Adrenaline just
kicked up."
"Psychic attacks," he said, through gritted teeth. 'Trying
to control my mind."
He fought to think of anything but the pictures hammering at his consciousness. He pictured a cold beer, until
it dissolved inexorably into a river of green, steaming poison. He switched to the image of dancing in an anti-grav
disco with a dozen girls. They became vulpine-winged harpies picking at his flesh as he swung on a gibbet. Keff
thought deliberately of exercise, mentally pulling the Rotoflex handles to his chest one at a time, concentrating on the
burn of his chest and neck muscles. Such a small focus
seemed to bewilder his tormentors as they sought to corrupt that one thought and regain control.
Sooner or later the magifolk would break through, and
he would never know the difference between his own consciousness and what they planted in his thoughts. He felt a
twinge of despair. Nothing in his long travels had prepared
him to defend himself against this kind of power. How
much more could he withstand? If they continued, he'd
soon be blurting out the story of his life-and his life with
Carialle.
Not that-he wouldn't! Angrily, he steeled his will. If he
couldn't protect himself, he couldn't guard Carialle. Even
at the cost of his own life he must prevent them from finding out about her. Her danger would be worse than his,
and worse than what had happened to her that time before
they became partners.
The Rotoflex handles of his imagination became knives
that he plunged agonizingly again and again into his own
breast. He forced his mental self to drop them. They burst
into flames that rose up to bum his arms. He could feel the
hair crackling on his forearms. Then a soft rain began to
fall. The fire died with hisses of disappointment. Keff
almost smiled. Plennafrey again.
He was grateful for the young magiwomans interces-sion. How long could she hold out against the combined
force other elders? He could almost feel the mental sparks
flying between Plennafrey and the others. She was actually
holding her own, which was causing consternation and
outrage among them. The outwardly calm standoff threatened to turn into worse.
"Small power spikes," Carialle announced. "A jab to the
right. Ooh, a counter to the left. A roundhouse punch-what was that?"
Keff felt himself gripped by an invisible force. Slowly,
like the rope-dancers, he began to revolve in midair, this
time without his chair. He turned faster and faster and
faster. What little remained of his original delight at having
discovered a race of magicians was fast disappearing in the
waves of nausea roiling his long-suffering stomach. He
tried to touch the floor, or one of the other mages, but
nothing was within reach. Faster, faster, faster he turned,
until the room was divided into strata of light and color.
Images began to invade his consciousness, accompanied
by shrieks tinged with fear and anger, shriveling his nerves.
He could feel nothing but pain, and the roaring in his head
overwhelmed his other senses.
Keff felt a touch on the arm, and suddenly he was staggering weak-kneed across the slick floor behind
Plennafrey. She had abandoned the battle in favor of saving him. Holding his hand firmly, she made for the open
doors.
Chaumels transparent wall proved no barrier. Plennafrey
plunged her hand under her sash to her belt, and a hole
opened in the wall just before they reached it, letting a cloud
of dust whip past them into the room. Coughing, she and
Keff dashed out onto the landing pad. Keff remembered
what Carialle had said about color coordination and ran after
the girl toward the blue-green chair at the extreme edge of
the balcony. His feet were unsteady on the humming floor,
but he forced himself to cover the distance almost on the
young woman's heels.
She threw herself into her chariot, hoisted him in, too.
Without ceremony, the chair swept off into the night.
Behind him, Keff saw other magifolk running for their
chairs. He saw Chaumel shake a fist up at them, and suddenly, the image blanked out.
They emerged into a vast, torchlit, stony cavern that
extended off into the distance to both left and right.
Plenna paused a split second and turned the chair to the
right. Her big, dark eyes were wide open, her head turning
to see first one side, then the other as they passed. Keff
hung on as the chair skipped up to miss a stalagmite and
ducked a low cave mouth. He gasped. The air tasted moist
and mineral heavy.
'"Where are you?" Carialles voice exploded in his ear.
"Damnation, I hate that!"
'"Watch the volume, Cari!"
Sound level much abated, Carialle continued. "You are
approximately nine hundred meters directly below your
previous location, heading south along a huge system of
connected underground caverns. Hmm!"
"What?" he demanded, then bit his tongue as Plennafreys chair dodged through a narrow pipe and out into a
cavern the bottom of which dropped away like the illusion-aiy abyss.
'Tm reading some of those electromagnetic lines down
there, not far from you, but not intersecting the tunnel you
are currently traveling."
"Where are we going?" he asked the girl.
"Where we will be safe," she said curdy. Her forehead
was wrinkled and she was hunched forward as if straining
to push something with her shoulders.
"Is there something wrong?"
"Its the lee lines," she said. "Where we are is weak. I'm
drawing on ones very far away. We must reach the strong
ones to escape, but Chaumel stops me."
"Lee lines?" Keff said, asking for further explanation.
Then a memory struck him and he sent IT running
through similar-sounding names in Standard language. It
came up with "ley," which it defined as "adjective, archaic,
related to mystical power." Very similar, Keff noted, and
turned his head to mention it.
The chair bounced, hitting a small outcropping of rock,
and Keff felt his rump leave the platform. He gripped the
edges until his knuckles whitened. The air whistled in his
ears.
"What if you can't reach the strong ley lines?" he
shouted.
"We can get most of the way to my stronghold
through down here," the girl said, not looking down at
him. "It will take longer, but the mountains are hollow
below. Oh!"
Ahead of them, the air thickened, and a dozen chariots
took shape. These swooped in at Keff and the girl, who
took a hairpin curve in midair and looped back toward the
narrow passage. Keff caught a glimpse of Chaumel in the
lead, glittering like a star. The silver mage grinned
ferociously at them.
Asedow spurred his green chariot faster to beat
Chaumel to Plennas vehicle. He succeeded only in
creating a minor traffic jam blocking the neck of stone as
Plennafrey disappeared into it. By the time they
straightened themselves out, their prey had a head start.
Plennafrey retraced their path through the forest of
onyx pillars. Keff leaned back against her knees as she cut a
particularly sharp turn to avoid the same outcropping as on
the way out. Keff glanced up at her face and found it calm,
intense, alert, pale and lovely as a lily. He shook his head,
wondering how he had possibly missed noticing her
before. He risked a quick glance back.
Far behind them, the magimen in pursuit were coming
to grief amidst the stalactite clusters. Keff heard shouts of
anger, then warning, and not long after, a crash. Their pursuers were down to eleven.
'The passage widens out beyond the junction where you
first appeared," Carialle said, narrating from her soundings
of the underground system. "Life-forms ahead."
They swooped under a low overhang that marked the
boundary of the next limestone bubble cavern. Keff
smelled food and squinted ahead in the torchlight. The
smell of hot food blended with the cold, wet, limestone
scent of the caves. Before them lay the subterranean kitchens whose existence Carialle had postulated. Compared to
the frosty ambient temperature above, this place was posi-tively tropical. Keff felt his cheeks reddening from the heat
that washed them. Plennafrey turned slightly pink. Scores
of fur-faced cooks and assistants hurried around like ants,
carrying pots and pans to the huge, multi-burner stoves
lined up against the walls or hauling full platters of cooked
food to vast tables mat ran down the center of the chamber.
"Natural gas, geothermal heat," Carialle said. 'The
catering service for me nine circles of Hell."
In one corner, discarded like toy dishes in a dolls tea set,
were hundreds of bowls, plates, and platters, sent back
untouched from upstairs by fussy diners.
"What a waste," Keff said as they passed over the trash
heap. The reeking fumes of deteriorating food made his
eyes water. He gasped.
Avoiding a low point in the ceiling, the chariot bore
down on the cooks, who dropped their pans and dishes
and dove for cover. The bottom of the runner struck something soft, but kept going. Keff glanced behind them and
saw the ruins of a tall cake and the pastry chefs stricken
face.
"Sony!" Keff called.
Behind them, the magimen on their chariots swooped
into the cavern, shouting for Plennafrey to surrender her
prize. Bolts of red fire struck past them, impacting the
stone walls with explosive reports. Chunks of stone rained
down on the screaming cooks. Plennafrey jerked the
chariot downward, and a lightning stroke passed over
them, shattering a stalactite into bits just before they
reached it. Keff threw his hands up before his face just a
split second too late, and ended up spitting out limestone
sand.
"Don't damage anything!" Chaumel yelled. "My
kitchen!" Keff saw him frantically making warding symbols
with his hands, sending spells to protect his property.
Plennafrey stole a look over her shoulder and poured on
the speed. She pulled Keffs body back against her legs. He
looked up at her for explanation.
She said, T need my hands," and immediately began
weaving her own enchantments in a series of complex
passes. Keff braced himself between the end of the chariot
back and the chair legs to keep Plennafrey from bouncing
out of her seat.
The cavern narrowed sharply at its far end, forcing them
farther and farther toward the floor. Fur-faced Noble
Primitives who had been throwing themselves down to get
out of their way went entirely flat or slammed into the wall
Anne McCaffrey o-joay L,y 11,11 ^yc-as Plennafrey's chariot flashed by. Females shrieked and
males let out hoarse-voiced cries of alarm.
Scarlet fire ricocheted from wall to wall, missing the
blue-green chariot by hand-spans. The young magiwoman
launched off fist-sized globes of smoky nothingness, flinging them behind her back. Keff, intent on the wall above
the cave mouth zooming toward them, heard cries and
protests, followed by a series of explosive puffs.
Plennafrey resumed control of her chair just in time to
direct them sharply down and into the stone tunnel. This
must have been the central corridor of Chaumels underground complex. Hundreds of Noble Primitives dropped
their burdens and dove for cover as he and Plennafrey
zoomed through. Skillfully zigzagging, dipping, and rising,
she avoided each living being and stone pillar in the long
tube.
"She's good on this thing," Keff confided to Carialle.
"What a rocket-cycle jockey she'd make."
To right and left, several smaller tunnels offered themselves. Plennafrey glanced at each one as they passed. With
the inadequate light of torches, Keff could see no details
more than a dozen feet up each one. The magiwoman bit
her lip, then banked a turn into the ninth right.
"Keff, not that one!" Carialle said urgently.
"Aha!"
Keff heard Chaumels crow of victory, and view-halloo
cries from the other pursuers. He wondered why they