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
Sounds of alarm erupted from underneath the console.
Tall emerged, signaling frantically. Potria, as a parting gesture, threw a handful of scarlet lightning at him. Tall
shielded almost automatically, and went on gesturing,
panic-stricken.
"My people," he repeated over and over. "My people!"
"We have to stop them!" Keffsaid. Plennafrey broke the
bubble around them, and the three headed for her chair.
"I will guard our friends," Chaumel said, making his way
across the platform toward them. Femgal threw forked
lightning, aiming for the silver and golden mages at once.
Chaumel ducked, and it sizzled over his head. A second
later, he had a thin and shining globe of protection raised
around himself and the console, withstanding the attacks
of the dissidents.
Plennafrey lifted off the platform. Asedow and Potria
were already most of the way to the tunnel. Suddenly, half
a dozen chariots loomed over them and dropped into their
path, cutting them off. Jaw set grimly, Keff hung on. Tall
clutched Plennafrey around the knees as she tried to evade
the others, but there were too many of them.
Traitor!" Lacia screamed, peppering them with thunderbolts.
"Upstart!" Femgal shouted at Plennafrey. "You don't
know your place, but you will leam! Together-now\"
The young magiwoman set up a shield, but spells from
six or more senior mages tore it apart like tissue paper. Fire
of rainbow hues consumed the air around them. An explosion racked the chariot beneath them. Keff, blinded and
choking, felt himself falling down and down.
Something springy yet insubstantial caught him just a
few meters above the tops of the generators. When his
eyes adjusted again, Keff looked around. A net of woven
silver and gold bore him and the others upward. Scattered
on the surface of the machinery were the pieces ofPlenna-frey's chariot. It had been blasted to bits. Plenna herself,
clutching Tall, was in a similar net controlled by Chaumel
and Nokias. Femgal and the others were halfway down the
cavern, turning to come in again for another attack.
"Are you all right?" Chaumel asked them, helping them
back onto the platform.
"Yes," Keffsaid, and saw Plennas shaky nod. 'The generators are running out of control. We have to slow them
down."
Tall kicked loose from Plennas arms and hurried over to
the console. Using the amulet, he flicked switches and
rolled dials, but Keff could see that his efforts were having
little effect. Femgal and the others were almost upon
them. A bolt of blue-white lightning crackled between him
and the console, driving him back. Bravely, the litde
amphibioid threw himself forward. Keff interposed himself between Tall and the dissidents, ready to take the
brunt of the next attack.
'That's enough of this!" Carialle declared loudly. Suddenly, the power items stopped working. The dissidents'
chariots all slowed down, even dipped. Everyone gasped.
Lacia clutched the arms other chair.
"Stop this attack at once!" Keff roared, flinging his arms
up. 'The next thing we turn off will be your chairs! If you
don't want to fall into the gear-works, cease and desist!
This isn't helping your cause or your planet!"
Furious but helpless, Femgal and the others drew back
from the platform. With as much dignity as he could muster, Femgal led his ragged band out of the cavern.
"Nice work, Cari," Keffsaid.
T wasn't sure I could select frequencies that narrow, but
it worked," Carialle said triumphantly. 'They won't fall out
of the air, but that's it for their troublemaking. I'm not
turning their power items on again. Tall can do it someday,
if he ever feels he can trust them." Keff glanced at the
globe-frog, who, in spite of the small bums that peppered
his hide, was working feverishly over the console. The turbines slowed down with painful groans and screeches, and
resumed a peaceful thrum.
T doubt it will be soon," Keff said. Plennafrey grabbed
his arm.
"We have to stop Potria," Plenna said urgently. "She's
going to kill the Ancient Ones and she doesn't need power
to do it. She's mad. If she can fly to where they are, that's
enough."
Keff smote himself in me forehead. "I've been distracted. We have to stop them right away."
"She's gone mad," Nokias said. "I will go." The golden
chair lifted off the platform.
T will help, Mage Keff," Brannel volunteered, emerg-ing from his hiding place.
"We've got to follow her, Chaumel," Keff said, turning
to the silver magiman. "Can you take us, too?"
"Not to worry," Carialle said cosily in KefPs ear. "She's
out here. In the snow. Swearing."
"Carialle stopped her," Keff shouted. Nokias turned his
head, and Keff nodded vigorously. The others cheered,
and Plenna threw herself into his arms. He gave her a
huge hug, then dropped to his knees beside Tall. The other
two globe-frogs had come out from beneath the console to
aid their chief. They all acted alarmed.
"Can I help?" Keff asked.
"Big, big power, stored," Tall signed, pointing to the battery indicator. "Made by them," he gestured toward the
departed Femgal and his minions. "Must do something
with it, now!"
"A glut in the storage batteries?" Keffsaid. He could see
the dials straining. The others, who knew from long use
what the moods of the Core felt like, wore taut expressions. "What can you do? Can you discharge it?"
Tall nodded once, sharply, and bent over the controls
with the amulet clutched in his paws.
On the surface, Carialle s fins rested on an exposed outcropping of rock not far from the entrance. She watched
with some satisfaction as Potria shook, then pulled, then
lacked her useless chariot. Asedow lay unconscious on a
snowbank where he'd fallen when his chair stopped. The
pink-gold magess hoisted her skirts and tramped through
the permafrost to his. It wouldn't function, either. She
kicked it, kicked him, and came over to apply the toes of
her dainty peach boots to Carialle's fins.
"Hey!" Carialle protested on loudspeaker. "Knock that
off."
Potria jumped back. She retreated sulkily to her chair
and seated herself in it magnificently, waiting for something to happen.
Something did, but not at all what Potria must have had
in mind. Carialle detected a change in the atmosphere.
Power crept up from beneath the surface of the planet,
almost simmering up through solid matter. Instead of feeling ionized and drained, the air began to feel heavy.
Carialle checked her monitors. With interest, she observed
that the temperature was rising, and consequently, so was
the humidity.
"Keff," she transmitted, "you ought to get everyone out
here, pronto."
"Whats wrong?" the brawn s voice asked, worriedly.
"Nothings wrong. Just... bring everyone topside. You'll
want to see this."
She monitored the puzzled conversation as Keff gathered his small party together for the long flight to the
surface. By the time they appeared at the chimney
entrance, clouds were already forming in the clear blue
sky.
Plennafrey rode pillion on Chaumels chair with the
three globe-frogs clinging to the back while Keff and Brannel shared the gold chair with Nokias. Nokias's remaining
followers straggled behind. The group settled down beside
Carialles ramp. Potria, her nose in the air, ignored them
pointedly.
"Whats so important, Cari?" Keff asked after a glance at
Asedow to make sure the man was alive.
"Watch them," Carialle suggested. The Ozrans were all
staring straight up at the sky. "Its not important to you, but
it is to them. In fact, its vital."
"Whats happening?"
"Just wait! You nonshells are so impatient," Carialle
chided him playfully.
'The air feels strange," Brannel said after a while, rubbing a pinch of his fur together speculatively with two
fingers. "It is not cold now, but it is thick."
The crack of thunder startled all of them. Sheet lightning blasted across the sky, and in a moment, rain was
pummeling down.
As soon as the first droplets struck their outstretched
palms, Chaumel and the others started shrieking and dancing for joy. A few of the mages gathered in handful after
handful of the cold, heavy drops and splashed them on
their faces. Plennafrey grabbed Keff and Brannel and
whirled them around in a circle.
"Rain!" she cried. "Real rain!"
Under his wet, plastered hair, the Noble Primitive s face
was glowing.
"Oh, Mage Keff, this is the best thing that has ever happened to me."
In the center of their Bttie circle, the three globe-frogs
had abandoned their cases and stood with their hands out,
letting the water sluice down their bodies.
'Thank you, friends," Chaumel said, coming over to
throw soaked sleeves over their backs. "Look how far the
clouds spread! This will be over the South and East
regions in an hour. Rain, on my mountaintop! What a
treasure!"
'This is what'll happen if you let the Core ofOzran run
the way it was meant to," Keff said. Plenna gave him a rib-cracking hug and beamed at Brannel.
'This welcome storm will convince more doubters than
any speeches or caves full of machinery," Nokias said, coming to join them. "More of these, especially around
planting season, and we will have record crops. My fruit
trees," he said proudly, "will bear as never before."
"Ozran will prosper," Chaumel said assuredly. "I make
these promises to you now, and especially to you, my furry
friend: no more amputations, no more poison in the food,
no more lofty magi sitting in their mountain fastnesses. We
will act like administrators instead of spoiled patricians,
eating the food and beating the farmers. We will come
down from the heights and assume the mande of our . . .
humanity with honor."
Brannel was wide-eyed. "I never thought I would live to
be talked to as an equal by one of the most important
mages in the world."
"You're important yourself," Keffsaid. "You're the most
intelligent worker in the world, isn't he, Chaumel?"
"Yes!" Chaumel spat water and wiped his face. "My
friend Noldas and I have a proposition for you. Will you
hear it?"
Noldas looked dubious for a moment, then silent communion seemed to reassure him. "Yes, we do."
"I will listen," Brannel said carefully, glancing at Kefffor
permission.
"Ozran will need an adviser on conservation. Also, we
need one who will liaise between the workers and the
administrators. It will be a position almost equal to the
mages. There will be much hard work involved, but you'll
use your very good mind to the benefit of all your world.
Will you take it?"
Brannel looked so pleased he needed two tails to wag.
"Oh, yes. Mage Chaumel. I will do it with all my heart."
"Shall I tell him now?" Plenna whispered in Keffs ear.
"He can have my sash and my other things when I come
away with you. Tall Eyebrow already has my belt."
"Um, don't tell him yet, Plenna. Let it be a surprise.
Uh-oh, Cari," Keff subvocalized. "We still have a problem."
"I'm ready for it, sir knight. Bring her in here."
"Now, friends," Noldas said, wringing out one sleeve at a
time. "I am enjoying this rain very much, but I am getting
very wet. Come back to my stronghold, where we may
watch this fine storm and enjoy it from under a roof." He
beckoned to Brannel. "Come with us, far-face. You have
much to leam. Might as well start now."
Brannel, hardly believing his good fortune, mounted the
golden chairs back and prepared to enjoy the ride. Noldas
gathered his contingent, including the recalcitrant Potria,
and Asedow, who was coming to with all the signs of a
near-fatal headache.
"Go on ahead," Keff said. "We've got some things to
take care of here."
Carialle's Lady Fair image was on the wall as Keff, Plennafrey, Chaumel, and the trio of globe-frogs came into the
cabin. At. once, she ordered out her servos, one with a
heavy-duty sponge-mop, and the other with a shelf-load of
towels.
'There, get warmed up," she said sweetly. "I'm making
hot drinks. Whether or not you've forgotten, you were still
standing on top of a glacier with wet feet."
Keff stepped out of his wet boots and went into his
sleeping compartment. "Come on, Chaumel. I bet you
wear the same size shoes I do. Everybody make themselves at home."
Plennafrey kissed her hand lovingly to Keff. He kissed
his fingers to her and winked.
"Oh, Plenna," Carialle said with deceptive calm. "I've
got some data I wanted to show you." Keffs crash-couch
swung out to her hospitably as the magiwoman
approached. "Sit down. I think you need to see these."
When Keff and Chaumel appeared a few minutes later,
freshly shod, Plennafrey was sitting with her head in her
hands. The Lady Fair "sat" sympathetically beside her,
murmuring in a soothing voice.
"So you see," Carialle was saying, "with the mutation in