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
Carialle felt sony for Plenna. She might be one of the
upper class, but she wasn't happy about the status.
On the screen, the spy-eyes were buzzing busily to one
another, circling the area, trying to second-guess the
servo's mission. Serenely, the robot rolled into a swampy
place where pink-flowering weeds grew. Carialle set its
parameters to seek out a marsh weed that had exactly fifteen leaves and twelve petals.
'That should keep it busy for a while," Carialle said.
"What does it want in that terrible wet place?" Asedow's
voice wailed. "I am getting aches in my bones just watching it!"
"Keep your eyes open," Nokiass voice cautioned them.
'There might be a clue in what this box seeks that will lead
us to the stranger."
Carialle joined Plennafrey's delighted chuckle.
Keff ran to the far side of the cave mouth so die hill
would block the view of him from the spy-eyes' position.
The Noble Primitives, still wiping traces of breakfast from
their faces and chest fur, were listening to their crew chiefs
assigning tasks for the day. Brannel, near Alteiss group,
seemed bored with the whole thing. Keff now suspected
that there was something in the Noble Primitives metabolism that rejected the amnesia-inducing drug, or he was
cleverer than his masters knew. He was banking on the latter possibility.
"Ssst, Brannel!" he whispered. A child turned around at
the slight noise and saw him. Sternly, Keff shook his head
and twirled his finger to show the child she should turn
around again. Terrified, the youngster clamped her hands
together and returned to her original posture, spine rigid.
Keff fancied he could see her quivering and regretted the
necessity of scaring her. It was easier to frighten the child
into submission than make friends. He hissed again.
"Ssst, Brannel! Over here!"
This time Brannel heard him. The Noble Primitives
sheeplike face split into a wide grin as he saw Keff beckon-ing to him. He rose to hands and knees and crawled away
from the work party.
Alteis saw him. "Brannel, return!" he commanded.
Wordlessly, Brannel pointed to his belly, indicating the
need to go relieve himself. The leader shook his head, then
lost all interest in his maverick worker. Keff admired Brannel s quick mind; the fellow had to be unique among the
field workers on Ozran.
"I am so glad to see you safe, Magelord," Brannel said,
when they had retreated around the curve of the hill. T
was concerned for your safety."
Keff was touched. 'Thank you, Brannel. I was worried
for a while, too. But as you see, I'm back safe and sound."
Brannel was impressed. Only yesterday Mage Keff
could speak but a little of the Ozran tongue. Overnight, he
had learned the language as well as if he had been born
there.
"How may I serve, Magelord?"
"I wonder if you would be willing to do me a favor. I
need someone with your injenooety," Keff said. Brannel
shook his head, not comprehending. "Er, your smart brain
and wits."
"Ah," Brannel said, docketing "injenooety" as a word of
the linga esoterka he had not previously known. "You are
too kind, Mage Keff. I'd do anything you wish."
Inwardly, Brannel was jubilant. The mage had sought
him out, Brannel, a worker male! He could serve this
mage, and in return, who knew? Keff possessed many
great talents and wide knowledge which, perhaps, he
might share as a reward for good service. One day, Brannel, too, might be able to achieve his dream and take
power as a mage.
Keff looked around. "I don't wish to talk here. We might
be overheard. Come with me to the silver tower." When
Brannel looked askance at him, he asked, "What's wrong?"
'The noise it made. Mage Keff," Brannel said, and put
his fingers in his ears. "It drove me outside."
"Oh," Keff said. 'That won't happen again. I want you to
come in and stay this time. All right?"
Brannel nodded. The magelord rose to a stoop and
began to make his way across the field. None of the workers looked his way. Brannel hurried after him, full of hope.
Instead of entering by the ramp through the open door,
Keff directed Brannel around the rear of the tower and
pointed upward. A slit as wide as his forearm was long had
opened in the smooth silver wall.
"But why... ?" he asked.
'The fronts being watched," Keff said. He joined his
hands together and propped them on one knee. "Put your
foot here-that's good. Now, reach for it. Up you go."
Brannel grabbed the edge of the opening and heaved
himself into it. Once he was up, he helped pull Mage
Keff into a room crowded with boxes. They had to climb
down from a high shelf with great care. When Brannel
and Keff were inside, the opening in the wall closed.
The female voice of the tower spoke in its strange
tongue.
"Aha," it said. "Come on through."
"Come with me," Keff said, in Ozran.
They walked down a short corridor. Two figures sat
together in front of the great pictures of the outside. One
of them rose and stared at him in horror and surprise.
The feeling was mutual.
"Magess Plennafrey!" Brannel, with one fearful glance
at Keff, dropped to his knees and stared at the floor.
"It's okay, Brannel," Keff said, reassuringly, plucking at
the worker males upper arm. "We're all working together
here."
"Hush, everyone," the other magess said in the towers
voice. "Here comes our diversion. I don't want die spies to
pick up any sound from in here."
Carialle turned on a magnetic field in the airlock, strong
enough to disable the spy-eyes, should any be bold enough
to try to pass inside, but not enough to stop the servo. She
slid the door upward. The low-slung robot rumbled imperturbably up the ramp and through the arch. In one slim,
black, metal hand it held very carefully a single marsh
flower.
Immediately, the spy-eyes thought they had their opportunity to storm the tower and zoomed after the servo.
One hit the field before the others and clanked noisily to
the ground,, disabled. The over-the-air chatter became excited, and the other spheres reversed course at once,
speeding away.
'That'll make them crazy," Carialle said. The first spy
sphere rolled halfway down the ramp before its owner, on
the other side of the continent, was able to take charge of it
once again. As soon as it was airborne, it flitted off.
"Good riddance," Carialle said, and returned her attention to the situation inside the cabin.
Keff stood between Plennafrey and Brannel with his
hands out. Brannel was on his feet, with his mutilated
hands balled into fists by his sides. Plenna had both her
long-fingered hands planted protectively on her belt
buckle. The Ozrans were glaring at each other.
"Now, now," Keff said. "I need you both. Please, lets
make peace here."
"You intend to explain to a worker what we are doing?"
Plenna asked, appealing to Keff. 'This one only has four
fingers! You can give them directions, but they cannot
understand detailed instructions or complicated situations."
Brannel, following the secondary dialect with evident
difficulty, replied haltingly in that language, which surprised the magiwoman as much as his daring to speak out
in her presence. "I can understand. Mage Keff has agreed
to give me a chance to help. I will do whatever Mage Keff
wants," he said staunchly.
Carialle made her image step forward. "Lady Plennafrey, you are suffering from a preconceived notion that all
the people who have had the finger amputation are stupid.
Brannel is the exception to almost any rule you can think
of. He has superior intelligence for someone brought up
with the hardships he suffered. I think he's far smarter
than the favored few who live in the mountains with you
mages. You're not that different. You belong to the same
species," she said, reaching for an example, "like . . . like
Keffandldo."
"You?" Plennafrey asked.
Almost amazed that such a thought had come from her
own speakers, Carialle had to pause to consider die change
of attitude she had undergone. Much of it was due to seeing the division of a single people on this world into
masters and slaves. She now realized that it was counter-productive to separate herself from her parent community.
Yes, she was different, but compared with everything else
she and Keff encountered, the similarities were more
important. Acknowledging her humanity at last felt right
and proper. In spite of the way she always pictured herself,
she knew inside the metal shell and the carefully protected
nerve center was a human being. She felt warmed by the
perception.
"Yes," she said, simply. "Me."
Keff beamed at her pillar. Her Lady Fair image beamed
happily back at him. Plennafrey fumed visibly at the inter-play. If Carialle was human, then the Ozran had a genuine
rival. This, combined with her lovers liberal attitude
toward the lower class, obviously dismayed the young
woman. As she had proved before, she was resilient and
adaptable. Plenna seemed to be considering Keffs point of
view, but she thoroughly disapproved of Keff having
another woman in his life. To disarm the magiwoman,
Carialle made her image step back onto the wall. Plennafrey relaxed visibly.
"So I think you should understand that Brannel
deserves an explanation if he is to help us."
"Well..." Plennafrey said.
"I heard that some of the mages are descended from
Brannel's kind of people," Keff said persuasively. "Isn't
Asedow's mother one like that? I heard Potria call her a
dray-face."
'That's true," Plenna said, nodding. "And he is intelligent. Not good at dunking things dirough, but intelligent."
She smiled ruefully at Keff. "I don't wish to make things
harder for my people or for myself. I will cooperate."
"For what am I risking myself?" Brannel asked hoarsely,
looking from one mage to another.
"For a sheaf of papers," Keff said. "I need to see them.
Magess Plenna will describe them, and Carialle will create
an image for you to see."
Brannel seemed unsatisfied. "And for me? For what am
I risking myself?" he repeated.
"Ah," Keff said, enlightened. "Well, what's your price?
What do you want?"
Plennafrey, losing her newfound liberalism, drew herself up in outrage. "You dare ask for a reward? Do the
mages not give you food and shelter? This is just anodier
task we have given you."
"We have those things, Magess, but we want knowledge, too!" Brannel said. Having begun, he was
determined to put his case, even in the face of disapproval
from an angry overlord, though somehow he was begging
now. "Mage Keff, I... I want to be a mage, too. For a tiny,
small item of power I will help you. It does not need to be
big, or very powerful, but I know I could be a good mage. I
will earn my way along. That is all I have ever desired: to
leam. Give me diat, and I will give you my life." Keff saw
die passion in the Noble Primitives eye and was prepared
to agree.
'To give a four-finger power? No!" Plenna protested,
cutting him off.
"Not good for you, Brannel," Carialle said, emphatically,
siding unexpectedly with Plennafrey. "Look what a mess
your mages have made of this place using unlimited power.
How about a better home, or an opportunity for a real
education, instead?"
"What about redressing the balance of power. Can?"
Keff asked under his breath.
"It doesn't need redressing, it needs de-escalating,"
Carialle replied through her brawns mastoid implant.
"Could this planet really cope with one more resentful
mage wielding a wand? We still don't know what the
power was for originally."
Brannels long face wore a mulish expression. Carialle
could picture him with donkeys ears laid back along his
skull. He was not happy to be dictated to by the flat
magess, nor was he comfortable being enlisted by a genuine magess.
"No one speaks of what went before this," he said. 'The
promises of mages to other than themselves always prove
false. I served Klemay, and now he is dead. Who killed
him? I know whoever kills is not always the newest overlord in a place."
Plenna's mouth dropped open. "How do you know that?
You're uneducated. You've never been anywhere but
here."
"You talk over our heads as if we aren't there," Brannel
said flatly. "But I, I understand. Who? I wish to know, for if
it was you, I cannot help."
Plennafrey looked stricken at the idea that she could
willingly commit murder. Keff patted her hand.
"He doesn't know, Plenna," Keff said soothingly. "How
could he? It was Femgal," he told Brannel. "Chaumel said
so last night."
"Yes, then," Brannel said eagerly, "I will do what you
want. For my price."
"Impossible," Plenna said. "He is ignorant."
"Ignorance is curable," Keff said emphatically. "It wasn't