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
"Lets chat."
A few hours later, Keffs door opened, and the brawn
emerged, yawning, wearing only uniform pants. Plenna,
wrapped in his bathrobe, followed him, trailing a lazy finger down his neck.
"Good morning, young lovers," Carialle said brightly.
"We have guests."
Red lights chased around die walls and formed an arrow
pointing down at the two globe-frogs huddled together in
the comer nearest the airlock corridor. Keff goggled.
"But how did they get past Plennas barrier? She told
me she warded the area. Any intrusion should have set off
an alarm."
"We're protected against magic only," Plenna said, eye-ing the marsh creatures with distaste. "Not vermin."
'They aren't vermin and they're aware you don't like
them," Carialle said indignantly. "We've been exchanging
compliments."
On her main screen she displayed an expanded image of
the small creatures staring at a strange-looking frog on the
wall.
'That's my computer-generated envoy," Carialle
explained. "Now, watch," The image made a gesture, to
which the native creatures responded with a similar movement. As the complexity and number of signs increased,
the frogs became excited, bumping into one another to
respond to their imaginary host.
Keff watched the data string, glancing once in a while at
the frogs.
"Monkey see monkey do," Keff said, shaking his head.
'They observed the Ozrans making signs and copied them.
This litde performance is without meaning."
"Beasts Blatisant," Carialle countered. Keff grimaced.
"Keff, I didn't make a subjective judgment on the
frequency and meaning of these symbols. Check ITs function log. Read the vocabulary list."
When Keff lifted his eyes from the small readout
screen, they were shining.
"Who'd have thought it?" he said. "Cari, all praise to
your sharp.wits and powers of observation."
Plennafrey had been listening carefully to the IT box's
translation of Carialles and Keffs conversation. She
pointed to the frogs.
"Do you mean they can talk?" she asked.
"More than that," Keff said. 'They may be the founders
of your civilization." Plennas jaw dropped open, and she
stared at the two amphibioids. "Your belt buckle-may I
borrow it?"
The belt flew out of Keffs room and smacked into
Plennas hands. She started to extend it to him, then with-drew it. "What for?" she asked.
'To see if they know what to do with it. Er, take it off the
belt. Its too heavy for them." Obligingly, Plenna detached
the buckle and handed it to him.
Very slowly, Keff walked to where the frogs stood. They
waited passively within their globes, kicking occasionally at
the water to maintain their positions and watching him
with their beady black eyes. Keffhunkered down and held
out the buckle.
Wearing a startled expression on its peaky face, the
larger frog met his eyes. Immediately, the case opened,
splitting into two halves, splashing water on the cabin floor,
and the frog stretched out for the power item. Its skinny
wrist terminated in a long, sensitively fingered hand which
outspread was as large as Plennafrey s. The ends of the digits slid into the five apertures. There was a nearly audible
click.
"It is connected to the Core of Ozran," Plennafrey said
softly.
The water that had been inside the plastic ball gathered
around the frogs body as if still held in place by the shell.
Thus sheltered, the amphibioid rose on surprisingly long,
skinny legs and made a tour of the cabin. Its small face was
alive with wonder. Keff directed it to the astrogation tank
showing the position of Ozran and its sun. The frog looked
intelligently into the three-dimensional star map, and studied the surrounding control panels and keyboards. Then it
returned to Keff.
"Help us," it signaled.
"You win, lady dear. Here're your Ancient Ones," Keff
said, turning to Plennafrey with a flourish. 'They were
among you all the time." The young magiwoman swallowed.
"I . . ." She seemed to have trouble getting the words
out. "I do not think that I can respect frogs."
Chaumel was more philosophical when confronted by
the facts.
"I refuse to be surprised," he said, shaking his head. "All
in the space of a day or so, my whole life is thrown into
confusion. The fur-faces turn out to be our long-lost brothers and we have cousins in plenty among the stars ready to
search us out. Some of them live inside boxes. Why should
we not discover that the Ancient Ones exist under our
noses in the swamps?"
'Try talking to one of them," Keff urged him. Doubt-fully, Chaumel looked at the three globe-frogs Keff and
Plenna had brought to his stronghold. They were rolling
around the great room, signing furiously to one another
over an artifact or a piece of furniture.
"Well..." Chaumel said, uneasily.
"Go on," Keff said. With a few waves of his hands, Keff
got their attention and signed to them to return to him.
Once or twice the "courtiers" turned all the way over,
trying to negotiate over the slick floor, but the biggest
maintained admirable control of his sphere.
After the initial attempts at communication, Keff had let
Carialles two subjects go, asking them to send back one of
their leaders. Within an hour, a larger frog speckled with
yellow to show its great age had come up the ramp, rolling
inside a battered case. A pair of smaller, younger frogs,
guards or attendants, hurtled up behind it. The first
amphibioid rolled directly over to Plenna and demanded
her belt buckle. For his imperious manner as well as his
great size, Keff and Carialle had dubbed him the Frog
Prince. From the two symbols with which he designated
his name, Keff decided he was called something like Tall
Eyebrow.
"I'm sure it loses something in the translation," he
explained.
Chaumel knelt and made a few signs of polite greeting.
He was unsure of himself at first, but grew enthusiastic
when his courtesies were returned and expanded upon.
'These are not trained creatures," he said with delight.
"It really understands me."
'Tall just said the same thing about you," Keff noted,
amused.
"It has feet. What are the globes for?"
"Ozran used to have much higher humidity," Keff said.
'The frogs' skins are delicate. The shells protect them from
the dry air."
"We cannot tell the other mages about them until we
have negotiated the 'cease-fire,'" Chaumel told him seriously. "Already Nokias regrets that he said he will
cooperate. He suspects Femgal of sending those spy-eyes
the other night and I have no reason to doubt him. If we
present them with speaking animals who need bubbles to
live, they will mink we are mad, and the whole accord will
fall apart."
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^Neither Keffnor Carialle, listening through the implant
contacts, argued the point.
"Its too important to get them to stop using power,"
Keff said. "It goes against my better judgment, but it'll
help the frogs' case if we don't try to make the mages
believe too many impossible things before breakfast."
During the successive weeks, the brawn and the two
magifolk traveled to each mage's stronghold to convince
him or her to join with them in the cause of environmental
survival.
Keff spent his free time, such as remained of it, divided
between Plennafrey in the evenings and the frogs in the
early morning. He had to leam another whole new language, but he had never been so happy. His linguistic skills
were getting a good, solid workout. Carialle's memory
banks began to fill with holos of gestures with different
meanings and implications.
Since the mages had always used the signs as sacred or
magical communion, Keff had to begin all over again with
the frogs on basic language principles. The mages had
employed only a small quantity of gestures that had been
gleaned from the Old Ones in their everyday lives, giving
him a very limited working vocabulary. Chaumel knew
only a few hundred signs, Plenna a few dozen. Keff used
those to build toward scientific understanding.
Mathematical principles were easy. These frogs were
the five-hundredth generation since the life-form came to
this world. That verified what Keff had been coming to
believe, that none of the three dominant life-forms who
occupied Ozran were native to it.
Knowledge of their past had been handed down by rote
through the generations. The frogs had manufactured the
life-support bubbles with the aid of the one single item of
power that remained to them. The other devices had all
been borrowed, and then stolen by the Flat Ones, by
whom Keff understood them to mean the Old Ones.
For a change, IT was working as well as he had always
hoped it would. An optical monitor fed the frogs' gestures
into the computer, and the voice of IT repeated the meaning into Keffs implant and on a small speaker for the
benefit of the others. Keff worked out a simple code for
body language that IT used to transcribe the replies he
spoke out loud. Having to act out his sentence after he said
it made the going slow, but in no time he picked up more
and more of the physical language so he could use it to
converse directly.
He was however surprised at how few frogs were willing
to come forward to meet with the Ozrans and help bridge
the language barrier. The Frog Prince assured him it was
nothing personal; a matter of safety. After so many years,
they found it difficult to trust any of the Big Folk. Keff
understood perfectly what he meant. He was careful never
to allude to the frogs when on any of his many visits to the
mages' strongholds.
On his knees at the end of another dusty row of roots,
Brannel observed Keff and Plennafrey returning to the silver ship. Scraping away at tile base of a wilted plant as long
as he dared, he waited for Keff to keep Carialle's promise
and come get him. It seemed funny they couldn't see him,
but perhaps they hadn't looked his way when he was standing up. He knew he could go up to the door and be
admitted, but he was reluctant to do so until asked as they
seemed disinterested in asking him. Weighing the question
of waiting or not waiting, he pushed his gathering basket
into the next row and started digging through the clay-thick soil for more of the woody vegetables.
His thoughts were driven away by a stunning blow to
the side of the head. Brannel fell to the earth in surprise.
Alteis stood over him, waving a clump of roots from his
basket, spraying dirt all over the place. Some of it was on
Brannel s head. A female with light brown far stood beside
the old leader, her eyes flashing angrily.
"You're in the wrong row, Brannel!" Alteis exclaimed.
'This is Gonna's row. You should go that way." He pointed
to the right and waited while Brannel picked up his gear
and moved.
'Tour mind in the mountains?" Fralim chortled from his
position across the field. What traces of long-term memory
the others retained came from rote and repetition, and
they had been witness to Brannels peculiarities and ambi-tions since he was small. Everyone but his mother scorned
the young males hopes. "We saw the Mage Keff and the
Magess Plennafrey fly into the tower. You planning to set
yourself up with the mages?" He cackled.
Another worker joined in with the same joke he had
been using for twenty years. "Gonna shave your face and
call yourself Mage, Brannel?"
Brannel was stung. "If I do, I'll show you what power
the overlords wield, Mogag," he said in a voice like a growl.
Alteis walked up and slapped him in the head again.
"Work!" the leader said. 'The roots won't pull themselves."
The others jeered. Brannel worked by himself until the
sun was just a fingertips width above the mountain rim at
the edge of the valley. Any time, food would arrive, and he
would be able to sneak away. Perhaps, if no one was looking, he might go now.
It was his bad luck that Alteis and his strapping son were
almost behind him. Fralim yanked him back by the collar
and seat of his garment from the edge of the field, and
plunked him sprawling into his half-worked row.
"Stay away from that tower," Alteis ordered him. "You
have duties to your own folk."
Moments crept by like years. Brannel, faming, finished
his day's chores with the least possible grace. As soon as the
magess kept her promise to teach him, he would never
return to this place fuU of stupid people. He would study
all day, and work great works of magic, like the ancestors
and the Old Ones.
At the end of the day, he hung back from the crowd
hurrying toward the newly materialized food. With Alteis
busy doing something else, there was no one watching one
discontented worker. Brannel sneaked away through the