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
long shadows on the field and hurried up to the ship.
As he reached the tall door, it slid upward to disgorge
Magess Plennafrey and Keff on her floating chair.
"Oh, Brannel!" Mage Keff said, surprised. "I'm glad you
came up. I am sorry, but we've got to run now. Carialle will
look after you, all right?" Before Brannel could tell him
that nothing was "all right," the chair was already wafting
them away. "See you later!" Keff called.
Brannel watched them ascend into the sky, then made
his way toward the heart of the tower.
Inside, Magess Carialle was doing something with a trio
of marsh creatures.
"Oh, Brannel," she said, in an unconscious echo of Keff.
"Welcome. Have you eaten yet?" A meal was bubbling in
the small doorway even before he had stopped shaking his
head. "I promised you a peep at the tapes. Will you sit
down in the big chair? I've got to keep doing another job at
me same time, but I can handle many tasks at once."
Keffs big chair turned toward him and, at that direct
invitation, Brannel came forward, only a little uneasy to be
alone in the great silver cylinder without any other living
beings. Marsh creatures didn't count, he thought, as he ate
his dinner, and he wasn't sure what Carialle was.
Though she didn't seem to eat, in deference to his appe-tite, Magess Carialle had prepared for him a meal twice
the size of the one he had eaten last time. Each dish was
satisfying and most delicious. With every bite he liked the
thought less and less of returning to raw roots and grains.
He was nearly finished eating when the big picture before
him lit up and he found himself looking into the weird
green face of an Old One. He stopped with a half-chewed
mouthful.
"Here's the first of the tapes, starting at the point we left
off last time," Carialles voice said.
"Ah," Brannel said, recovering his wits.
He couldn't not watch for he was fascinated and her
voice kept supplying translations in his tongue. Brannel
asked her the occasional question. She answered, but without offering as much of her attention as she gave one of
Keffs inquiries. He glanced back over his shoulder, wondering why she had made a picture of the marsh creatures,
and what they found so interesting in it.
"... And that's the last of the tapes," Carialle said,
sometime later. "What a fine resource to have turn up."
' "What am I to do now?" Brannel asked, looking around
him. Carialles picture appeared on the wall beside him.
The lady smiled.
"You've done so much for us-and for Ozran, by telling
us about farming," she said. "All we can do now is wait to
see what the mages think of our evidence."
"I would tell the mages all I know," Brannel said hope-fully. "It would help convince them to farm better." The
flat magess shook her head.
'Thank you, Brannel. Not yet. It would be better if you
didn't get involved-less dangerous for you," she said.
"Now, I don't have any tasks that need doing. Why don't
you go home and sleep? I'm sure Keffwill find you tomorrow, or the next day. As soon as he has any definite news to
teU you."
Brannel went away, but Keff didn't come.
The worker spent the next day, and the next, waiting for
Keff to stop off to see him between his hurried journeys to
the far reaches of Ozran on the magess's chair. He never
glanced at Brannel. In spite of his promise, he had forgotten the ,worker existed. He had forgotten their growing
friendship.
Worse yet, Brannel now had a head full of information
about the ancestors and the Old Ones, and what good did
it do him? Nothing to do with teaching him to become a
mage, or getting him better food to eat. In time his disappointment grew into a towering rage. How dare the
strangers build up his hopes and leave him to rot like one
of the despised roots of the field! How dare they make him
a promise, knowing he never forgot anything, and then
pretend it had never been spoken? Brannel swore to himself that he would never trust a mage again.
Femgals stronghold stood alone on a high, dentate
mountain peak, set apart by diverging river branches from
the rest of the eastern range. The obsidian-dark stone of its
walls offered little of the open hospitality of Chaumel's
home. In the dark, relatively low-ceilinged great hall, Keff
had the uncomfortable feeling the walls were closing in on
him. Brown-robed Lacia and a yellow-coated mage sat
with Femgal as Chaumel gave his by now familiar talk on
preserving and restoring the natural balances of Ozran.
Chaumel, in his bright robes, seemed like a living gas-flame as he hovered behind Carialles illusions. He
appealed to each of his listeners in turn, clearly disliking
talking to more than one mage at a time. He had voiced a
caution to Keff and Plenna before they had arrived.
"In a group, there is more chance of dissension. Careful
manipulation will be required and I do not know if I am
equal to it."
Keffhad felt a chill. "If you can't do it, we're in trouble,"
he had said. "But we need to speed up the process. The
power blackouts are becoming more frequent. I don't
know how long you have until there's a complete failure."
"If that happens," Chaumel told his audience, "then
mages will be trapped in the mountains with no means of
rescue at hand. Food distribution will end, causing starvation in many areas. We have made the fur-faces dependent
upon our system. We cannot fail them, or ourselves."
Early in the discussion, Lacia had announced that she
viewed the whole concept of the Core of Ozran as science
to be sacrilege. She frowned at Chaumel whenever the silver magiman made eye contact with her. The mage in
yellow robes, an older man named Whilashen, said little
and sat through Chaumel's speech pinching his lower lip
between thumb and forefinger.
"I do not like this idea of relying more upon the servant
class," Femgal said. 'They are mentally limited."
"With respect. High Mage," Keffsaid, "how would you
know? Chaumel tells me that even your house servants are
given a low dose of the docility drug in their food. I have
done tests on the workers in the late Mage Klemays
province and can show you the results. They are of the
same racial stock as you, and their capabilities are the
same. All they need is more nurturing and education, and
of course for you to stop the ritual mutilation and cranial
mutations. In the next generation all the children will
return to normal human appearance, with the possible
exception of retaining the hirsutism. That may need to be
bred out."
Tosh!" Femgal's ruddy face suffused further. .
"I can't wait to see what happens when we tell him
about the Frog Prince," Carialle said through the implants.
"He'll have apoplexy."
Keff leaned forward, his hands outstretched, making an
appeal. "I can explain the scientific process and show you
proof you'll understand."
"Proof you manufacture proves nothing," Femgal said.
"Illusions, that's all, like these pictures."
"But Nokias said..." Plennafrey began. Chaumel made
one attempt to silence her, but it was too late. "Nokias-"
Femgal cut her off at once. "You've talked to Noldas?
You spoke to him before you came to me?" The black
magiman s nostrils flared. "Have you no respect for protocol?"
"He is my liege," Plenna said with quiet dignity. "I was
required. You would demand the same from any of the
mages of the East."
"Well... that is true."
"Will you not consider what we have said?" she pleaded.
"No, I won't give up power and you can stuff your arguments about making the peasants smarter in a place where
a magic item won't fit. You're out of your mind asking
something like that. And if Nokias has softened enough to
say yes, he will regret it." Femgal showed his teeth in a
vicious grin. "I'll soon add the South to my domain.
Chaumel, you ought to know better."
"High Mage, sometimes truth must overcome even
common sense."
Abruptly, Femgal lost interest in them.
"Go," he said, tossing a deceptively casual gesture
toward the door behind him. "Go now before I lose my
temper."
"Heretics!" screamed Lacia.
With what dignity he could muster, Chaumel led the
small procession around Femgal toward the doors. Keff
gathered up the holo-table and opened his stride to catch
up without running.
He heard a voice whisper very close to his ear. Not Carialle's: a man's.
"Some of us have honor," the voice said. 'Tell your master to contact me later." Startled, Keff turned' around.
Whilashen nodded to him, his eyes intent.
In spite of Chaumels pleas for confidentiality, word
began to spread to the other mages before he had a chance
to speak with them in person. Rumors began to spread
that Chaumel and an unknown army of mages wanted to
take over the rest by destroying their connection to the
Core ofOzran. Chaumel spent a good deal of time on what
Keff called "damage control," scotching the gossip, and
reassuring the panic-stricken magifolk that he was not
planning an Ozran-wide coup.
"No one will be compelled to give up all power,"
Chaumel said, trying to calm an angry Zolaika. He sat in
her study in a hovering chair with his head at the level of
her knees to show respect. Keff and Plennafrey stood on
the floor meters below them, silent and watching. "Each
mage needs to be allowed free will in such an important
matter. But I think you see, Zolaika, and everyone will see
in the end, that inevitably we must be more judicious in
our use of power. You, in your great wisdom, will have seen
that the Core of Ozran is not infinite in its gifts,"
Zolaika was guarded. "Oh, I see the truth of what you
say, Chaumel, but so far, you have offered us no proof!
Pictures, what are they? I make pretty illusions like those
for my grandchildren."
"We are working on gathering solid proof," Chaumel
said, "proof that will convince everyone that what we say
about the Core of Ozran is the truth. But, in the meantime, it is necessary to soften the coming blow, don't you
think?"
"I'm an old woman," Zolaika snapped. "I don't want
words to 'soften the coming blow.' I want facts. I'm not
blind or senile. I will be convinced by evidence." Her eyes
lost their hard edge for a moment, and Keff fancied he saw
a twinkle there for a moment. "You have never bed to me,
Chaumel. You say a thousand words where one will do, but
you are not a liar, nor an imaginative man. If you're convinced, so will I be. But bring proof!"
As they flew off Zolaikas balcony, Chaumel sat bolt
upright in his chariot, a smug expression on his face. 'That
was most satisfactory."
"It was? She didn't say she'd support us," Keff said.
"But she believes us. Everyone respects her, even the
ones who are spelling for her position." Chaumel made a
cursory pass with one hand in the air to show what he
meant. "Her belief in us will carry weight. Whether or not
she actually says she supports us, she does by not saying
she doesn't."
'There speaks a diplomat," Carialle said. "He makes
pure black and white print into one of those awful moire
paintings. Progress report: out of some two hundred and
seventeen mages with multiple power items, I now have
one hundred fifty-two frequency signatures. It is now theo-retically possible for me to selectively intercept and
deaden power emissions in each of those items."
"Good going. We might need it," Keff said, "but I hope
i ??
not.
With Zolaika four of the high mages had given tentative
agreement to stand down power at the risk of losing it, but
meetings with some of the lesser magifolk had not gone
well. Potria had heard the first few sentences of Chaumels
discourse and driven them out of her home with a miniature dust storm. Harvel, the next most junior mage above
Plenna, had accused her of trying to climb the social ladder
over his head. When Chaumel explained that their tradi-tional structure for promotion was a perversion of the
ancestors' system, the insulted Harvel had done his best to
kill all of them with a bombardment of lightning. Carialle
turned off his two magic items, a rod and a ring, and left
him to stew as the others effected a hurried withdrawal.
"I think that among the remaining mages we can concentrate on the potential troublemakers," Chaumel said as
they materialized above his balcony. "Most of the others
will not become involved. A hundred of them barely use
their spells except to fetch and carry household items, or to
power their flying chairs."
"They'll miss it the most," Keff said, "but at least they
aren't the conspicuous consumers."
"Oh, well put!" Chaumel said, chortling, as he docketed
the phrase. 'The 'conspicuous consumers' have been making us do most of the work for them. I laughed when
Howet said he'd agree if we talked to his farm workers for