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
your DNA, I couldn't guarantee your safety during pro-longed space travel. And Keff couldn't settle here. His job
is his whole life."
Plenna raised a tear-streaked face to the others.
"Oh, Keff, look!" The young woman pointed to the wall
screen. "My DNA has changed over a thousand years,
Carialle says. And my blood is too thin-I cannot go with
you."
Keff surveyed the DNA charts, trying to make sense of
parallel spirals and the data which scrolled up beside them.
"Can, is it true?" he subvocalized.
"I wouldn't lie to her. No one can guarantee anyone's
complete safety in space."
'Thank you, lady dear, you're the soul of tact-How
terrible," he said out loud, kneeling at Plenna's feet. "I'm so
sorry, Plenna, but you wouldn't have been happy in space.
It's very boring most of die time-when it isn't dangerous.
I couldn't ask you to endure a lifetime of it, and truthfully,
I wouldn't be happy anywhere else."
"I am glad this is the case," Chaumel said, examining the
charts and microscopic analysis on Carialle's main screen.
From the look in the mage's eye, Keff guessed that perhaps he had been eavesdropping on their private channel.
"You cannot take such a treasure as Magess Plennafrey off
Ozran."
Standing before the magiwoman, he took her hand and
bowed over it. Plennafrey looked startled, then starry-eyed. She rose, looking up into his eyes tentatively, like an
animal that might bolt at any moment. Chaumel spoke
softly and put out a gentle hand to smooth the tears from
her cheeks.
"I admire your pluck, my dear. You are brave and
resourceful as well as beautiful." He favored her with a
most ardent look, and she blushed. "I would be greatly
honored if you would agree to be my wife."
"Your . . . your wife?" Plenna asked, her big, dark eyes
going wide. "I'm honored, Chaumel. I... of course I will.
Oh!" Chaumel raised the hand he was holding to his lips
and kissed it. Keff got up off the floor.
"Usten up, sir knight. This fellow could give you some
pointers," Carialle said wickedly. Chaumel aimed a small
smile toward Carialle's pillar and returned his entire attention to Plennafrey.
oz/
"We will share our power, and together we will teach
our fellow Ozrans to adapt to our future. Our society will
be reduced in influence, but it will be greater in number
and scope. The Ancient Ones can teach us much of what
we have forgotten."
"And one day, perhaps, our children can go into space,"
Plenna said, turning to Keff and smiling, "to meet yours."
Leaning over, she gave Keff a sisterly peck on the cheek
and moved into the circle of Chaumel s arm.
Over the top other head, Chaumel winked.
"And now, fair magess," he said, "I will fly you home,
since your own conveyance has come to grief." Beaming,
Plennafrey accompanied her intended down the ramp. He
handed her delicately onto his own chariot, and mounted
the edge of the back behind her.
'That man never misses a trick," Carialle said through
Keffs implant.
'Thank you, Cari," Keff said. "Privately, in a comparison
between Plenna and you as a lifelong companion, I'd
choose you, every time."
"Why, sir knight, I'm flattered."
"You should be flattered," Keff said with a smirk.
"Plenna is intelligent, adaptable, beautiful, desirable, but
she knows nothing about my interests, and in the long
transits between missions we would drive one another
crazy. This is the best possible solution."
Chaumel's well-known gifts for diplomacy and the unexpected treat of the thunderstorm began to bear fruit within
the next few days. Mages and magesses began to approach
Keff and the globe-frogs in the cavern to ask if there was
anything they could do to help speed the miracle to their
parts of Ozran. Spy-eyes were everywhere, as everyone
wanted to see how the repairs progressed.
The greatest difficulty the repair crew faced was the
sheer age of the machinery. Keff and Tall rigged what they
could to keep it running, but in the end the Frog Prince
ordered a halt.
"We must study more," Tall said. "Given time, and the
printout you have made of the schematic drawings, we will
be able to determine what else needs to be done to make
all perfect. The repairs we have made will hold," he added
proudly. 'There is no need to beg the homeworld for aid. I
would sooner approach them as equals."
"Good job!" Keff said. "We'll take our report home to
the Central Worlds. As soon as we can, we'lPcome back to
help you to finish the job. I expect that by the time we do,
between you and the Noble Primitives, you'll teach the
mages all there is to know about weather management and
high-yield farming."
'The fur-faces will show them how to till the land and
take care of it. We do not retain that knowledge," Tall said
with creditable humility. "Brannel is our friend. We do
need each other. Together, we can fulfill the hopes of all
our ancestors. Others will take us up and back to the Core
after this," the Frog Prince assured them. "Many are protecting us at all times. You've done much in helping us to
achieve the respect of the human beings."
"No," Keff said, "you did it. I couldn't convince them.
You had to show them your expertise, and you did."
Tall signaled polite disbelief. "Come back soon."
Carialle and Keff delivered Tall and his companions
back to Brannels plain for the last time. The globe-frogs
signed them a quick good-bye before disappearing into the
brush. Five spy-eyes trailed behind them at a respectful
distance.
Chaumel and Plennafrey arrived at the plain in time to
see Keff and Carialle off.
"You've certainly stirred things up, strangers," Chaumel
said, shaking hands with Keff. "I agree there's nothing else
you could have done. My small friends tell me that shortly
Ozran would have suffered a catastrophic explosion, and
we would all have died without knowing the cause. For
that, we thank you."
"We're happy to help," Keff said. Tn return, we take
home data on a generation ship that was lost hundreds of
years ago, and plenty of information on what's going to be
one of the most fascinating blended civilizations in the galaxy. I'm looking forward to seeing how you prosper."
"It will be interesting," Chaumel acknowledged. T am
finding that the certain amount of power the Ancient Ones
have agreed to leave in our hands will be used as much to
protect us from disgruntled workers as it will be to help
lead them into self-determination. Not all will be peaceful
in this new world. Many of the farmers are afraid that their
new memories are hallucinations. But," he sighed, "we
brought this on ourselves. We must solve our own problems. Your Brannel is proving to be a great help."
Plennafrey came forward to give Keff a chaste kiss.
"Farewell, Keff," she said. "I'm sorry my dream to come
with you couldn't come true, but I am happier it turned
out this way." She bent her head slightly to whisper in his
ear. T will always treasure the memory of what we had."
"So will I," Keff said softly. Plenna stepped back to stand
beside Chaumel, and he smiled at her.
"Farewell, friends," Chaumel said, assisting the tall girl
down the ramp and onto his chariot. "We look forward to
your return."
"So do we," Keff said, waving. The chair flew to a safe
distance and settled down to observe the ships takeoff.
'They do make rather a handsome couple," Carialle
said. "I'd like to paint them a big double portrait as a wed-ding present. Confound their combination of primrose and
silver-that's going to be tricky to balance. Hmm, an
amber background, perhaps cognac amber would do it."
Keff turned and walked inside the main cabin. The airlock slid shut behind him, and he heard the groaning of the
motor bringing the outer ramp up flush against the bulkhead. The brawn clapped his hands together in glee.
"Wait until we tell Simeon and die Xeno boffins about
the Frog Prince and his tadpole courtiers on the Planet of
Wizards," Keff gloated, settling into his crash-couch and
putting his feet up on the console. He intertwined his
hands behind his head. "Ah! We will be the talk of SSS-900, and every other space station for a hundred trillion
klicks!"
"I can't wait to spread the word myself," Carialle said
with satisfaction as she engaged engines and they lifted off
into atmosphere. "We did it! We may be considered the
screwball crew, but we're die ones mat get the results in
the end.... Oh damn!"
"What's wrong?" Keff asked, sitting up, alarmed.
Carialle s Lady Fair image appeared on the screen, her
face drawn into woeful lines.
"I forgot about the Inspector General!"