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
device, passed on to them, not constructed by, the Old
Ones, pictured overleaf." Keff turned the page to the
solido. "Eyuch! Ug-;i/!"
The Old Ones were indeed upright creatures of
bilateral symmetry who could use the chairs reposing in
Chaumels art collection, but that was where their
similarity to humanoids ended. Multi-jointed legs with
backward-pointing knees depended from flat, shallow
bodies a meter wide. They had five small eyes set in a row
across their flat faces, which were dark green. Lank black
tendrils on their cylindrical heads were either hair or
antennae, Keff wasn't sure which from the description
below.
"Erg," Keff said, making a face. "So now we know what
the Old Ones looked like."
"Oh, yes," Brannel said, casually standing up on the
back to look, as if he flew a hundred kilometers above the
ground every day. "My father's father told us about the Old
Ones. They lived in the mountains with the overlords
many years past."
"How long ago?" Keff asked.
Brannel struggled for specifics, then shrugged. 'The
wooze-food makes our memories bad," he explained, his
tone apologetic but his jaw set with frustration.
"Keff, something has to be done about deliberately
retarding half the population," Carialle said seriously.
"With the diet they're being forced to subsist on, Brannel's
people could actually lose their capacity for rational
thought in a few more generations."
"Aha!".Keff crowed triumphantly. 'Tapes!" He plucked
a sealed spool out of the back cover of one of the folders.
"Compressed data, I hope, and maybe footage of our scaly
friends. Can you read one of these, Carialle?"
"I can adapt one of my players to fit it, but I have no
idea what format its in," she said. "It could take time."
Keff wasn't listening. He was engrossed in the second
folders contents.
"Fascinating!" he said. "Look at this, Cari. The whole
system of remote power manipulation comes from a
worldwide weather-control system! So that's what the ley
lines are for. They're electromagnetic sensors, reading the
temperature and humidity all across Ozran. They were
designed to channel energy to help produce rain or mist
where it was needed.... Ah, but the Old Ones didn't build
it. They either found it, or they met the original owners
when they came to this planet. Sounds like they were
cagey about that. The Old Ones adapted the devices to use
the power to make it rain and passed them on to you," he
told Plennafrey. 'They were made by the Ancient Ones."
'The Ancient Ones," Plenna said, reverently, pulling the
folder down so she could see it. "Are there images of them,
too? None know what they looked like."
Keff thumbed through the log. "No. Nothing. Drat."
"Rain?" Brannel asked, reverently. 'They could make it
rain?"
"Weather control," Carialle said. "Now that does smack
of an advanced technological civilization. Pity they're not
still around. This planet is an incipient dust-bowl. Keff, I'm
within fifty klicks of the rendezvous site. Beginning landing
tWIW IVlU^iUfJmy v Juu,y
procedures . . . Uh-oh, power traces increasing in your
general vicinity. Company!"
Keff heard cries of triumph and swiveled his head, looking for their source. A score ofmagimen, led by Potria and
Chaumel, had just jumped in and were homing in on them
along a northwest vector.
'They've found us!" Plenna exclaimed, her dark eyes
wide. Keff stood upright and grasped the back of her chair.
The magiwoman started to weave her arms in complicated patterns. Brannel, realizing that he was in the firing
line of a building spell, dropped flat. Plenna launched her
sally and had the satisfaction of seeing three of the magimen clear the way. The rattling hiss of the spell as it missed
its mark and vanished jarred Keffs bones.
"Can you teleport?" Keff asked, clinging to the chairs
uprights.
"Someone is blocking me," Plenna said, forcing the
words through her teeth. T must fight, instead."
"You'd be a sitting duck in here anyway," Carialle interjected crisply, "because the tractor grabbed me again as
soon as I touched down. Keep moving!"
Plenna didn't need Carialles message relayed to her.
She took evasive maneuvers like a veteran fighter, zigzagging over the pursuers' heads and diving between two so
their red lightning bolts narrowly missed each other. Keff
saw Potria's face as he passed. The golden magiwoman had
abandoned her look of elegant boredom for a grim set. If
her will or her marksmanship had been up to it, she would
have spitted them all.
Contrarily, Chaumel seemed to enjoy toying with them.
He shot his bolts, not so much to wound, but more as if he
were seeing what Plennafrey would do to avoid them. He
seemed to have observed that she wasn't spelling to kill,
obviously a novelty among Ozran mages.
Plennafrey dived low into the valleys, defying the magifolk to chase her through the nooks and crannies of her
own domain. Keff felt the crackle of dry branches brush
his shoulders as she maneuvered her chair through a narrow passage and down into a concealed tunnel. While the
others circled overhead squawking like crows, she flew
through the mountain. Brannel's keening echoed off the
moist stone walls. Just as swiftly, they emerged into day.
Keff thought they might have shaken off their pursuers,
but he had reckoned without Chaumels determination.
The moment they cleared the tunnel mouth, the silver
magiman was there in midair, winding nothingness around
and around his hands. Brannel gasped and threw his hands
over his head to protect it.
Plenna flattened her hands on her belt buckle, and a
translucent bubble offeree appeared around her.
"Oh, child." Chaumel grinned and flicked his fingers.
The chair started to sink toward the ground.
"He made the force shield heavy!" Keff said. "We're
falling!"
Abandoning her defensive tactic at once, Plennafrey
popped the sphere and threw a few of her own bolts at
Chaumel. Almost lazily, the other gestured, and the lightning split around him, rocketing toward the horizon. He
made up another bundle of power, which Plenna averted.
She returned fire, sending a handful of toroid shapes that
grew and grew until they could surround Chaumels limbs
and neck. Two made contact, then fell away as operifarcs,
snaring and taking the other rings with them.
A moment later, Potria and Asedow appeared.
"You found them!" Potria called. The pink-gold magess
was jubilant. Plenna turned in her seat and fired a double-barrel of white spark lightning at her. Potria shrieked when
her fine clothes and skin were burned by some of the hot
sparks. At once she retaliated, weaving a web with missiles
of force around the edge that propelled it toward the
younger magess.
Asedow chose that moment to drive in at them from the
other side. His methods were not as smooth as his rivals.
He produced a steady stream of smoky puffs that hung in
the air like mines until Plennafrey, trying to avoid Potrias
web, was forced back into them.
Keff was nearly shaken off when the first exploded
against his back. Plennafrey turned her chair in midair,
seeking to steer her way clear of the obstacles. No matter
how she turned, she collided with another, and another. By
then, Potrias web had struck.
All around him Keff felt rolls of silk fabric, invisible and
magnetic, drawing him in, surrounding him, then
smothering his nose and mouth. As the spell established
itself, it threatened to draw every erg of energy out of his
body through his skin. He gasped, clawing with difficulty at
his throat. He was suffocating in the middle of thin air.
Plennafrey, her slender form slumped partway over one
chair arm, her skin turning blue, still fought to free them, her
hands drawing primrose fire out other belt buckle. Her will
proved mightier than the other female s magic. The sunlight
flames consumed the air around her, then caught on the veils
of web clinging to Keff and Brannel, turning them into
insubstantial black ash. She was about to set them all free
when they were overcome by dozens and dozens of bolts of
scarlet lightning, striking at them from every direction.
As Keff lost consciousness, he heard Potria and Asedow
shrilling at each other again over who would take possession of him and his ship. He vowed he would die before he
would let anyone take Carialle.
A sharp scent introduced itself under his nose. Unwit-tingly, he took a deep breath and recoiled, choking. He
batted at the bad smell, but nothing solid was there.
"You're awake," a voice said. 'Very good."
With difficulty, Keff opened his eyes. Things around
mm began to take focus. He lay on his back in the main
cabin of his ship. Beside him was Plennafrey, also in the
throes of regaining consciousness. Brannel lay in a motionless heap under Plennas feet. And leaning over Keff with a
distorted expression ofsolicitousness was Chaumel.
a CHAPTER ELEVEN
Carialle fought against the blackness that abruptly surrounded her, refusing to believe in it. Between one
nanopulse and the next, Chaumel had appeared in the
main cabin, past the protective magnetic wall she had set
up, and stood gloating over the contents of a captive starship. Outraged at the invasion, Carialle set up the same
multi-tone shriek she used on Brannel to try and drive him
out. Chaumel threw up protective hands, but not over his
ears.
Suddenly she could move nothing and all her visual
receptors were down. She could still hear, though. The
taunting voice boomed hollowly in her aural inputs, continuing his inventory and interjecting an occasional
comment of self-congratulation.
She spoke then, pleading with him not to leave her in
the dark. The voice paused, surprised, then Carialle felt
hands running over her: impossible, insubstantial hands
penetrating through her armor, brushing aside her neural
connectors and yet not detaching them.
"My, my, what are you?" Chaumel s voice asked.
"Restore my controls!" Carialle insisted. "You don't
know what you're doing!"
"How very interesting all of this is," he was saying to
someone. "In my wildest dreams I could never have imagined a man who was also a machine. Incredible! But it isn't
a man, is. it?" The hands drew closer, passed over and
through her. "Why, no! It is a woman. And what interesting
things she has at her command. I must see that."
Invisible fingers took her multi-camera controls away
from her nerve endings, leaving them teasingly just out of
reach. She sensed her life-support system starting and
stopping as Chaumel played with it, using his TK. She felt
a rush of adrenaline as he upset the balance other chemical input, and was unable to access the endorphins to
counteract them. Then the waste tube began to back up
toward the nutrient vat. She felt her delicate nervous system react against pollution by becoming drowsy and logy.
"Stop!" she begged. "You'll kill me!"
"I won't kill you, strange woman in a box," Chaumel
said, his voice light and airy, "but I will not risk having you
break away from my control again as you did when the
magic dropped. What a chase you led us! Right around
Ozran and back again. You made a worthy quarry, but one
grows tired of games."
"Keff!"
"I'm here, Carialle," the brawns voice came, weak but
furious. Carialle could have sung her relief. She heard the
shuffling of feet, and a crash. Keff spoke again through
soughing pain. "Chaumel, we'll cooperate, but you have to
let her alone. You don't understand what you're doing to
her."
"Why? She breathes, she eats-she even hears and
speaks. I just control what she sees and does."
For a brief flash, Carialle had a glimpse of the control
room. Keff and the silver magiman faced one another, the
Ozran very much in command. Keffwas clutching his side
as if cradling bruised ribs. Plenna stood behind Keff, erect
and very pale. Brannel, disoriented, huddled in a comer
beside Keffs weight bench. Then the image was gone, and
she was left with the enveloping darkness. She couldn't
restrain a wail of despair.
It was as if she were reliving the memory other accident
again for Inspector MaxweU-Corey. All over again! The
helplessness she hoped never again to experience: sensory
deprivation, her chemicals systems awry, her controls out
of reach or disabled. This time, the results would be worse,
because this time when she went mad, her brawn would be
within arms reach, listening.
Swallowing against the pain in his ribs, Keff threw himself at Chaumel again. With a casual flick of his hand,
Chaumel once more sent him flying against the bulkhead.
Plennafrey ran to his side and hooked her arm in his to
help him stand.
"You might as well stop that, stranger," Chaumel advised