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
cabin where her painting gear was stowed.
Mine Wic^dJJreij u juuy i-it/ini ivyv
To any planetbound home-owner the cabin looked spot-less, but to another spacer, it was a magpies nest. Keffs
exercise equipment occupied much of one end of the
cabin. At the other, Carialles specially adapted rack of
painting equipment took up a largish section of floor space,
not to mention wall space where her finished work hung-the ones she didn't give away or throw away. Those few
permitted to see Cans paintings were apt to call them
"masterpieces," but she disclaimed that.
Not having a softshell body with hands to manage the
mechanics of the art, she had had customized gear built to
achieve the desired effect. The canvases she used were very
thin, porous blocks of cells that she could flood individually
with paint, like pixels on a computer screen, until it oozed
together. The results almost resembled brush strokes. With
the advance of technological subtleties, partly thanks to
Moto-Prosthetics, Carialle had designed arms that could
hold actual fiber brushes and airbrushes, to apply paints to
the surface of the canvases over the base work.
What had started as therapy after her narrow escape
from death had become a successful and rewarding hobby.
An occasional sale of a picture helped to fill the larder or
the fuel tank when bonuses were scarce, and the odd gift
of an unlooked-for screen-canvas did much to placate
occasionally fratchety bureaucrats. The sophisticated servo
arms pulled one microfiber canvas after another out of the
enameled, cabinet-mounted rack to show Simeon, who
appreciated all and made sensible comments about
several.
'That ones available," Carialle said, mechanical hands
turning over a night-black spacescape, a full-color sketch of
a small nocturnal animal, and a study of a crystalline mineral deposit embedded in a meteor. 'This one I gave Keff.
This one I'm keeping. This ones not finished. Hmm.
These two are available. Sos this one."
iiir, Stilf \VtiU WUTM
Much of what Carialle rendered wouldn't be visible to
the unenhanced eyes of a softshell artist, but the sensory
apparatus available to a shellperson gave color and light to
scenes that would otherwise seem to the naked eye to be
only black with white pinpoints of stars.
'That's good." Simeon directed her camera to a spacescape of a battered scout ship traveling against the distant
cloudlike mist of an ion storm that partially overlaid the
corona of a star like a veil. The canvas itself wasn't rectan-gular in shape, but had a gentle irregular outline that
complimented die subject.
"Um," Carialle said. Her eye, on tight microscopic
adjustment, picked up flaws in some individual cells of
paint. They were red instead of carmine, and the shading
wasn't subtle enough. "It's not finished yet."
"You mean you're not through fiddling with it. Give
over, girl. I like it."
"Its yours, then," Carialle said with an audible sigh of
resignation. The servo picked it out of the rack and headed
for the airiock on its small track-treads. Carialle activated a
camera on the outside other hull to spot a technician in the
landing bay. "Barldey, would you mind taking something for
the stationmaster?" she said, putting her voice on speaker.
"Sure wouldn't, Carialle," the mech-tech said, with a
brilliant smile at the visible camera. The servo met her
edge of the dock, and handed the painting to her.
"You've got talent, gal," Simeon said, still sharing her
video system as she watched the tech leave the bay. 'Thank
you. I'll treasure it."
"It's nothing," Carialle said modestly. "Just a hobby."
"Fardles. Say, I've got a good idea. Why don't you do a
gallery showing next time you're in port? We have plenty
of traders and bigwigs coming through who would pay
good credit for original art. Not to mention the added
cachet that it's painted by a brainship."
^1 Iff I/I/ A"-
"We-ell..." Carialle said, considering.
"I'll give you free space near the concessions for the first
week, so you're not losing anything on the cost of location.
If you feel shy about showing off, you can do it by invitation only, but I warn you, word will spread."
"You've persuaded me," Carialle said.
"My intentions are purely honorable," Simeon replied
gallantly. "Frag it!" he exclaimed. The speed of transmission on his frequency increased to a microsquirt. "You're as
loaded and ready as you're going to get, Carialle. Put it
together and scram off this station. The Inspector General
wants a meeting with you in fifteen minutes. He just told
me to route a message through to you. I'm delaying it as
long as I dare."
"Oh, no!" Carialle said at the same speed. "I have no
intention of letting Dr. Sennet T am a psychologist' Maxwell-Corey pick through my brains every single fardling
time I make stationfall. I'm cured, damn it! I don't need
constant monitoring."
"You'd better scoot now, Cari. My walls-with-ears have
heard rumors that he thinks your 'obsession' with things
like Myths and Legends makes your sanity highly suspect.
When he hears the latest report-your Beasts Blatisant-you're going to be in for another long psychological profile
session, and Keff along with you. Even Maxwell-Corey has
to justify his job to someone."
"Damn him! We haven't finished loading my supplies! I
only have half a vat of nutrients, and most of the stuff Keff
ordered is still in your stores."
"Sorry, honey. It'll still be here when you come back. I
can send you a squirt after he's gone."
Carialle considered swiftly whether it was worth calling
in a complaint to SPRIM over the Inspector General and
his obsessive desire to prove her unfit for service. He was
witch-hunting, of that she was sure, and she wasn't going to
be the witch involved. Wasn't it bad enough that he
insisted on making her relive a sixteen-year-old tragedy
every time they met? One day there was going to be a big
battle, but she didn't feel like taking him on yet.
Simeon was right. The CK-963 was through with
decontamination and repairs. Only half a second had
passed during their conversation. Simeon could hold up
the IGs missive only a few minutes before the delay would
cause the obstreperous Maxwell-Corey to demand an
inquiry.
"Open up for me, Simeon. I've got to find Keff."
"No problem," the stationmaster said. "I know where
he went."
"Keff," said the wall over his head. "Emergency transmission from Carialle."
Keff tilted his head up lazily. "I'm busy, Simeon. Privacy." Susa's hand reached up, tangled in his hair, and
pulled it down again. He breathed in the young woman's
scent, moved his hands in delightful counterpoint under
her body, one down from the curve other shoulder, pushing the thin cloth of her ship-suit down; one upward,
caressing her buttocks and delicate waist. She locked her
legs with his, started her free hand toward his waistband,
feeling for the fastening.
"Emergency priority transmission from Carialle,"
Simeon repeated.
Reluctantly, Keff unlocked his lips from Susa's. Her eyes
filled with concern, she nodded. Without moving his head,
he said, "All right, Simeon. Put it through."
"Keff," Carialles voice rang with agitation. "Get down
here immediately. We've got to lift ship ASAP."
"Why?" Keff asked irritably. "You couldn't have finished
loading already."
"Haven't. Can't wait. Got to go. Get here, stat!"
Sighing, Keff rolled off Susa and petulantly addressed
the ceiling. "What about my shore leave? Ladylove, while I
like nothing better in the galaxy than being with you
ninety-nine percent of the time, there is that one percent
when we poor shell-less ones need-"
Carialle cut him off. "Keff, the Inspector Generals on
station."
"What?" Keff sat up.
"He's demanding another meeting, and you know what
that means. We've got to get as far away from here as we
can, right away."
Keffwas already struggling back into his ship-suit. "Are
we refueled? How much supplies are on board?"
Simeons voice issued from the concealed speaker.
"About a third full," he said. "But its all I can give you right
now. I told you supplies were short. Your foods about the
same.
"We can't go far on that. About one long run, or two
short ones." Keff stood, jamming feet into boots. Susa sat
up and began pulling the top other coverall over her bare
shoulders. She shot Keff a look of regret mingled with
understanding.
"We'll get missing supplies elsewhere," Carialle promised. "What's the safest vector out of here, Simeon?"
TU leave," Susa said, rising from the edge of the bed.
She put a delicate hand on his arm. Keff stooped down and
kissed her. 'The less I hear, the less I have to confess if
someone asks me under oath. Safe going, you two." She
gave Keff a longing glance under her dark lashes. "Next
time."
Just like that, she was gone, no complaints, no recrimi-nations. Keff admired her for that. As usual, Carialle was
correct: a brawn's ideal playmate was another brawn. It
didn't stop him feeling frustrated over his thwarted sexual
encounter, but it was better to spend that energy in a useful manner. Hopping into his right boot, he hurried out
into the corridor. Ahead of him, Susa headed for a lift. Keff
deliberately turned around, seeking a different route to his
ship.
"Keep me out of Maxwell-Corey's way, Simeon." He ran
around the curve of the station until he came to another
lift. He punched the button, pacing anxiously until the
doors opened.
"You're okay on that path," the stationmaster said, his
voice foUowing Keff. The brawn stepped into the empty
car, and the doors slid shut behind him. "All right, this just
became an express. Brace yourself."
"What about G sector?" Carialle was asking as Keff
came aboard the CK-963. All the screens in the main cabin
were full of star charts. Keff nodded Carialle's position in
the main column and threw himself into his crash couch as
he started going down the pre-launch list.
"Okay if you don't head toward Saffron. That's where
the Fleet ships last traced Belazirs people. You don't want
to meet them."
"Fragging well right we don't."
"What about M sector?" Keff said, peering at the chart
directly in front of him. "We had good luck there last
time."
"Last time you had your clock cleaned by the Losels,"
Carialle reminded him, not in too much of a hurry to tease.
"You call that good luck?"
"There're still a few systems in that area we wanted to
check. They fitted the profile for supporting complex life-forms," Keff said, unperturbed. "We would have tried
MBA-487-J, except you ran short of fuel hotdogging it and
we had to limp back here. Remember, Cari?"
"It could happen any time we run into bad luck," Carialle replied, not eager to discuss her own mistakes. "We're
running out of time."
"What about vectoring up over the Central Worlds cluster? Toward galactic 'up'?"
"Maxwell-Corey's going toward DND-922-Z when he
leaves here," Simeon said.
Carialle tsk-tsked. "We can't risk having him following
our scent."
Keff stared at the overview on the tank. "How about we
head out in a completely new direction? See what's out
there thataway?"
"What's your advice, Simeon?" Carialle asked, locking
down any loose items and sliding her airlock shut with a
sharp hiss. Her gauges zoomed as she engaged her own
power. Nutrients, fuel, power cells all showed less than
half full. She hated lifting off under these circumstances,
but she had no choice. The alternative was weeks of interrogation, and possibly being grounded-unfairly!-at the
end of it.
"I've got an interesting anomaly you might investigate,"
Simeon said, downloading a tile to CariaUes memory.
"Here's a report I received from a freighter captain who
made a jump through R sector to get here. His spectro-scopes picked up unusual power emanations in the vicinity
of RNJ-599-B. We've no records of habitation anywhere
around there. Could be interesting."
"G-type stars," Keff noted approvingly. "Yes, I see what
he meant. Spectroanalysis, Cari?"
"All the signs are there that RNJ could have generated
planets," the brain replied. "What does Exploration say?"
"No ones done any investigation in that part of R sector
yet," Simeon said blandly, carefully emotionless.
"No one?" Carialle asked, scrolling through the files.
"Hmmm! Oh, yes!"
"So we'll be the first?" Keff said, catching the
excitement in CariaUes voice. The burning desire to go
somewhere and see something first, before any other
Central Worlder, overrode the fears of being caught by the
Inspector General.
"I can't locate any reference to so much as a robot
drone," Carialle said, displaying star maps empty of neon-colored benchmarks or route vectors. Keff beamed.