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
THE SHIP WHO WON 15
I
and given it shape and texture, becoming more than a game,
meaning more. He'd never tell this space-dry plodder about
the time five years back that he actually stood vigil
throughout a long, lonely night lit by a single candle to earn
his knighthood. I guess you just had to be there, he thought
"If that's all?" he asked, standing up quickly.
Darvi waved a stylus at him, already engrossed in the
files. Keff escaped before the man thought of something
else to ask and hurried down the curving hall to the nearest
lift.
Keff had learned about Myths and Legends in primary
school. A gang of his friends used to get together once a
week (more often when they dared and homework permitted) to play after class. Keff liked being able to live out
some of his heroic fantasies and, briefly, be a knight battling evil and bringing good to all the world. As he grew up
and learned that the galaxy was a billion times larger than
his one small colony planet, the compulsion to do good
grew, as did his private determination that he could make a
difference, no matter how minute. He managed not to
divulge this compulsion during his psychiatric interviews
on his admission to Brawn Training and kept his altruism
private. Nonetheless, as a knight of old, Keff performed his
assigned tasks with energy and devotion, vowing that no ill
or evil would ever be done by him. In a quiet way, he
applied the rules of the game to his own life.
As it happened, Carialle also loved M&L, but more for
the strategy and research that went into formulating the
quests than the adventuring. After they were paired, they
had simply fallen into playing the game to while away the
long days and months between stars: He could put no
finger on a particular moment when they began to make it
a lifestyle: Keff the eternal knight errant and Carialle his
lady fair. To Keff this was the natural extension of an
adolescent interest that had matured along with him.
As soon as he'd heard that the CX-963 was in need of a
brawn, his romantic nature required him to apply for the
position as Carialles brawn. He'd heard-who hadn't?-
about the devastating space storm and collision that had
cost Fanine Takajima-Morrows life and almost took Carialle's sanity.
She'd had to undergo a long recovery period when the
Mutant Minorities (MM) and Society for the Preservation
of the Rights of Intelligent Minorities (SPRIM) boffins
wondered if she'd ever be willing to go into space again.
They rejoiced when she announced that not only was she
ready to fly, but ready to interview brawns as well. Keffhad
wanted that assignment badly. Reading her file had given
him an intense need to protect Carialle. A ridiculous
notion, when he ruefully considered that she had the
resources of a brainship at her synapse ends, but her vul-nerability had been demonstrated during that storm. The
' protective aspect of his nature vibrated at the challenge to
keep her from any further harm.
Though she seldom talked about it, he suspected she
still had nightmares about her ordeal-in those random
hours when a brain might drop into dreamtime. She also
proved to be the best of partners and companions. He
liked her, her interests, her hobbies, didn't mind her faults
or her tendency to be right more often than he was. She
taught him patience. He taught her to swear in ninety languages as a creative means of dispelling tension. They
bolstered one another. The trust between them was as
deep as space and felt as ancient and as new at the same
time. The fourteen years of their partnership had flown by,
literally and figuratively. Within Keffs system of values, to
be paired with a brainship was the greatest honor a mere
human could be accorded, and he knew it.
The lift slowed to a creaky halt and the doors opened.
Keffhad been on SSS-900 often enough to turn to port as
THE SHIP WHO WON 17
he hit the corridor, in the direction of the spacer bar he
liked to patronize while on station.
Word had gotten around that he was back, probably the
helpful Simeons doing. A dark brown stout already separating from its creamy crown was waiting for him on the
polished steel bar. It was the first thing on which he
focused.
"Ah!" he cried, moving toward the beer with both hands
out. "Come to Keff."
A hand reached into his field of vision and smartly
slapped his wrist before he could touch the mug handle.
Keff tilted a reproachful eye upward.
"Hows your credit?" the bartender asked, then tipped
him a wicked wink. She was a woman of his own age with
nut-brown hair cut close to her head and the milk-fair skin
of the lifelong spacer of European descent. "Just kidding.
Drink up, Keff. This ones on the house. It's good to see
you."
"Blessings on you and on this establishment, Mariad,
and on your brewers, wherever they are," Keff said, and
put his nose into the foam and slowly tipped his head back
and the glass up. The mug was empty when he set it down.
"Ahhhh. Same again, please."
Cheers and applause erupted from the tables and Keff
waved in acknowledgment that his feat had been witnessed. A couple of people gave him thumbs up before
returning to their conversations and dart games.
"You can always tell a light-year spacer by the way he
refuels in port," said one man, coming forward to clasp
Keffs hand. His thin, melancholy face was contorted into
an odd smile.
Keff stood up and slapped him on the back. "Baran Larrimer! I didn't know you and Shelby were within a million
light years of here."
An old friend, Larrimer was half of a brain/brawn team
assigned to the Central Worlds defense fleet. Keff suddenly remembered Simeon s briefing about naval support.
Larrimer must have known exactly what Keff had been
told. The older brawn gave him a tired grimace and nodded at the questioning expression on his face.
"Got to keep our eyes open," he said simply.
"And you are not keeping yours open," said a voice. A
tiny arm slipped around Keffs waist and squeezed. He
glanced down into a small, heart-shaped face. "Good to see
you, Keff."
"Susa Gren!" Keff lifted the young woman clean off the
ground in a sweeping hug and set her down for a huge kiss,
which she returned with interest. "So you and Marliban
are here, too?"
"Courier duty for a trading contingent," Susa said in a
low voice, her dark eyes crinkling wryly at the corners. She
tilted her head toward a group of hooded aliens sitting isolated around a table in the comer. "Hoping to sell Simeon
a load of protector/detectors. They plain forgot that Marls
a brain and could hear every word. The things they said in
front of him! Which he quite rightly passed straight on to
Simeon, so, dear me, didn't they have a hard time bargain—
ing their wares. I'd half a mind to tell CenCom that those
idiots can find their own way home if they won't show a
brainship more respect. But," she sighed, "it's paying
work."
Marl had only been in service for two-no, it was three
years now-and was still too far down in debt to Central
Worlds for his shell and education to refuse assignments,
especially ones that paid as well as first-class courier work.
Susa owed megacredits, too. She had made herself responsible for the debts of her parents, who had borrowed
heavily to make an independent go of it on a mining world,
and had failed. Fortunately not fatally, but the disaster had
left them with only a subsistence allowance. Keff liked the
spunky young woman, admired her drive and wit, her
springy step and dainty, attractive figure. The two of them
had always had an affinity which Carialle had duly noted,
commenting a trifle bluntly that the ideal playmate for a
brawn was another brawn. Few others could understand
the dedication a brawn had for his brainship nor match the
lifelong relationship.
"Susa," he said suddenly. "Do you have some time? Can
you sit and talk for a while?"
Her eyes twinkled as if she had read his mind. "I've
nothing to do and nowhere to go. Marl and I have liberty
until those drones want to go home. Buy me a drink?"
Larrimer stood up, tactfully ignoring the increasing aura
of intimacy between the other two brawns. He slapped his
credit chit down on the bar and beckoned to Mariad.
"Come by if you have a moment, Keff," he said. "Shelby
would be glad to see you."
"I will," Keff said, absently swatting a palm toward
Larrimers hand, which caught his in a firm clasp. "Safe
going."
He and Susa sat down together in a booth. Mariad
delivered a pair of Guinnesses and, with a motherly cluck,
sashayed away.
"You're looking well," Susa said, scanning his face with a
more than friendly concern. "You have a tan!"
"I got it on our last planetfall," Keff said. "Hasn't had
time to fade yet."
"Well, I think you look good with a litde color in your
face," she declared. Her mouth crooked into a one-sided
grin. "How far down does it go?"
Keff waggled his eyebrows at her. "Maybe in awhile I'll
let you see."
"Any of those deep scratches dangerous?" Carialle
asked, swiveling an optical pickup out on a stalk to oversee
the techs checking her outsides. The ship lay horizontally
to the "dry dock" pier, giving the technicians the maximum
expanse of hull to examine.
"Most of 'em are no problem. I'm putting setpatch in
the one nearest your fuel lines," the coveralled man said,
spreading a gray goo over the place. It hardened slowly,
acquiring a silver sheen that blended with the rest of the
hull plates. "Don't think it'll split in temperature extremes,
ma'am, but its thinner there, of course. This'U protect you
more.
"Many thanks," Carialle said. When the patching compound dried, she tested her new skin for resonance and
found its density matched well. In no time she'd forget she
had a wrinkle under the dressing. Her audit program also
found that the fee for materials was comfortingly low, compared to having the plate removed and hammered, or
replaced entirely.
Overhead, a spider-armed crane swung its burden over
her bow, dropping snakelike hoses toward her open cargo
huU. The crates of xeno material had already been taken
away in a specially sealed container. A suited and hooded
worker had already cleaned the nooks and niches, making
sure no stray native spores had hooked a ride to the
Central Worlds. The cranes operator directed the various
flexible tubes to the appropriate valves. Fuel was first, and
Carialle flipped open her fuel toggle as the stout hose
reached it. The narrow tube which fed her protein vats
had a numbered filter at its spigot end. Carialle recorded
that number in her files in case there were any impurities
in the final product. Thankfully, the conduit that fed the
carbo-protein sludge to Keffs food synthesizer was
opaque. The peristaltic pulse of the thick stuff always
made Cari think of quicksand, of sand-colored octopi
creeping along an ocean floor, of week-old oatmeal. Her
attention diverted momentarily to the dock, where a
# AAV^ T " \^# 1
front-end loader was rolling toward her with a couple of
containers, one large and one small, with bar-code tags
addressed to Keff. She signaled her okay to the driver to
load them in her cargo bay.
Another tech, a short, stout woman wearing thick-soled
magnetic boots, approached her airlock and held up a
small item. 'This is for you from the stationmaster, Carialle. Permission to come aboard?"
Carialle focused on the datahedron in her fingers and
felt a twitch of curiosity.
"Permission granted," she said. The tech clanked her
way into the airlock and turned sideways to match the
up/down orientation of Carialle's decks, then marched
carefully toward the main cabin. "Did he say what it was?"
"No, ma'am. It's a surprise."
"Oh, Simeon!" Carialle exclaimed over the stationmaster's private channel. "Cats! Thank you!" She scanned the
contents of the hedron back and forth. "Almost a realtime
week of video footage. Wherever did you get it?"
"From a biologist who breeds domestic felines. He was
out here two months ago. The hedron contains compressed videos of his cats and kittens, and he threw in
some videos of wild felines he took on a couple of the colony worlds. Thought you'd like it."
"Simeon, it's wonderful. What can I swap you for it?"
The stationmasters voice was sheepish. "You don't need
to swap, Cari, but if you happened to have a spare painting? And I'm quite willing to sweeten the swap."
"Oh, no. I'd be cheating you. It isn't as if they're music.
They're nothing."
'That isn't true, and you know it. You're a brain's artist."
With little reluctance, Carialle let Simeon tap into her
video systems and directed him to the comer of the main