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
remained. For the shellperson, it meant they could
"inhabit" functional alter-bodies and experience the full
range of human experiences firsthand. That knocked a lot
of notions of limitations or restrictions into an archaic
cocked hat. Since Keff had first heard about
Moto-Prosthetic bodies for brains, he had nagged Carialle
to order one. She evaded a direct "no" because she valued
Keff, respected his notion that she should have the chance
to experience life outside the shell, join him in his projects
with an immediacy that she could not enjoy encapsulated.
The idea was shudderingly repulsive to her. Maybe if
Moto-Prosthetics had been available before her accident,
she might have been more receptive to his idea. But to
leave the safety of her shell-well, not really leave it, but
to seem to leave it-to be vulnerable-though he insisted
she review diagrams and manuals that conclusively
demonstrated how sturdy and flexible the M-P body
was-was anathema. Why Keff felt she should be like
other humans, often clumsy, rather delicate, and definitely
vulnerable, she couldn't quite decide.
She started Simeon's gift tape to end that unproductive,
and somewhat disturbing line of thought. Although Carialle had a library that included tapes of every sort of
creature or avian that had been discovered, she most
enjoyed the grace of cats, the smooth sinuousness of their
musculature. This datahedron started with a huge spotted
feline creeping forward, one fluid movement at a time,
head and back remaining low and out of sight as if it progressed along under a solid plank. It was invisible to the
prong-homed sheep on the other side of the undergrowth.
Carialle watched with admiration as the cat twitched, gathered itself, sprang, and immediately stretched out in a full
gallop after its prey. She froze the frame, then scrolled it
backward slightly to the moment when the beautiful creature leapt forward, appreciating the graceful arc of its
back, the stretch of its forelimbs, the elongated power of
the hindquarters. She began to consider the composition
of the painting she would make: the fleeing sheep was frozen with its silly face wild-eyed and splay-legged ahead of
the gorgeous, silken threat behind it.
As she planned out her picture, she ran gravitational
analyses, probable radiation effects of a yellow-gold sun,
position of blip possibly indicating planet, and a computer
model, and made a few idle bets with herself on whether
they'd find an alien species, and what it'd look like.
a CHAPTER THREE
Keff ignored the sharp twigs digging into the belly of his
environment suit as he wriggled forward for a better look.
Beyond the thin shield of thomy-leafed shrubbery was a
marvel, and he couldn't believe what he was seeing. Closing with his target would not, could not, alter what he was
viewing at a distance, not unless someone was having fun
with optical illusions-but he painfully inched forward
anyway. Not a hundred meters away, hewing the hard
fields and hauling up root crops, was a work force of
bipedal, bilaterally symmetrical beings, heterogeneous
with regard to sex, apparently mammalian in character,
with superior cranial development. In fact, except for the
light pelt of fur covering all but lips, palms, soles, small
rings around the eyes, and perhaps the places Keff couldn't
see underneath their simple garments, they were remarkably like human beings. Fuzzy humans.
"Perfect!" he breathed into his oral pickup, not for the
first time since he'd started relaying information to Carialle. 'They are absolutely perfect in every way."
"Human-chauvinist," Carialle's voice said softly through
the mastoid-bone implant behind his ear. "Just because
they're shaped like Homo sapiens doesn't make them any
more perfect than any other sentient humanoid or human-like race we've ever encountered."
"Yes, but think of it," Keff said, watching a female,
breasts heavy with milk, carrying her small offspring in a^
sling on her back while she worked. "So incredibly similar
to us."
"Speak for yourself," Carialle said, with a sniff.
"Well, they are almost exactly like humans."
"Except for the fur, yes, and the hound-dog faces,
exactly."
'Their faces aren't really that much like dogs'," Keff
protested, but as usual, Carialles artistic eye had pinned
down and identified the similarity. It was the manelike ruff
of hair around the faces of the mature males that had
thrown off his guess. "A suggestion of dog, perhaps, but no
more than that last group looked like pigs. I think we've
found the grail, Cari."
A gust of cold wind blew through the brush, fluttering
the folds of loose cloth at the back of Keffs suit. His
ears, nose, and fingers were chilly and growing stiff, but
he ignored the discomfort in his delight with the objects
of his study On RNJ-599-B-V they had struck gold.
Though it would be a long time before the people he
was watching would ever meet them on their own terms
in space.
Coming in toward the planet, Carialle had unleashed
the usual exploratory devices to give them some idea of
geography and terrain.
The main continent was in the northern hemisphere of
the planet. Except for the polar ice cap, it was divided
roughly into four regions by a high, vast mountain range
not unlike the European Alps of old Earth. Like the four
smaller mountain ranges in each of the quadrants, it had
been volcanic at one time, but none of the cones showed
any signs of activity.
The team had been on planet for several days already,
viewing this and other groups of the natives from different
vantage points. Carialle was parked in a gully in the eastern
quadrant, four kilometers from Keffs current location,
invisible to anyone on foot. It was a reasonable hiding
place, she had said, because they hadn't seen any evidence
during their approach of technology such as radar or track-ing devices. Occasional power fluctuations pinged the
.needles on Carialle s gauges, but since they seemed to
occur at random, they might just be natural surges in the
planets magnetic field. But Carialle was skeptical, since
the surges were more powerful than one should expect
from a magnetic field, and were diffuse and of brief duration, which made it difficult for her to pin the
phenomenon down to a location smaller than five degrees
of planetary arc. Her professional curiosity was determined
to find a logical answer.
Keffwas more involved with what he could see with his
own eyes-his wonderful aliens. He studied the tool with
which the nearest male was chipping at the ground. The
heavy metal head, made of a slagged iron/copper alloy, was
laboriously holed through in two places, where dowels or
nails secured it to the flat meter-and-a-half long handle.
Sinew or twine wound around and around making doubly
sure that the worker wouldn't lose die hoe face on the back
swing. By squeezing his eyelids, Keff activated the telephoto function in his contact lenses and took a closer look.
The tools were crude in manufacture but shrewdly
designed for most effective use. And yet no technology
must exist for repair: the perimeter of the field was littered
with pieces of discarded, broken implements. These people might have discovered smelting, but welding was still
beyond them. Still, they'd moved from hunter/gatherer to
farming and animal husbandry. Small but weU-tended
small flower and herb gardens bordered the field and the
front of a man-high cave mouth.
'They seem to be at the late Bronze or early Iron Age
stage of development," Keff murmured. "Speaking anthro-pologically, -this would be the perfect species for a
long-term surveillance to see if this society will parallel human development." He parted the undergrowth, keeping
well back from the opening in the leaves. "Except for having only three fingers and a thumb on each hand, they've
got the right kind of manipulative limbs to attain a high
technological level."
"Close enough for government work," Carialle said,
reasonably. "I can't see that the lack of one digit would
interfere with their ability to make more complex tools,
since clearly they're using some already."
"No," Keff said. "I'd be more disappointed if they didn't
have thumbs. A new species of humanoid! I can write a
paper about mem." Keffs breath quickened with his
enthusiasm. "Parallel development to Homo sapiens
terraneum? Evolution accomplished separately from
Earth-born humanity?"
"It's far more likely that they were seeded here thousands of years ago," Carialle suggested, knowing that she'd
better dampen his enthusiasm before it got out of hand.
"Maybe a forgotten colony?"
"But the physical differences would take eons to evolve,"
Keff said. The odds against parallel development were
staggering, but the notion that they might have found an
unknown cousin of their own race strongly appealed to him.
"Of course, scientifically speaking, we'd have to consider that
possibility, especially in the light of the number of colonial
ventures that never sent back a 'safe down' message."
"Yes, we should seriously consider that aspect," Carialle
said, but without sarcasm.
"JJ-
y
By thrusting out the angle of his jawbone, Keff
increased the gain on his long-distance microphone to listen in on the natives as they called out to one another. All
the inhabitants of this locale were harvesting root produce.
If any kind of formal schooling existed for the young, it
must be suspended until the crops were brought in. Typical of farm cultures, all life revolved around the cycle of
the crops. Humanoids of every age and size were in or
around the broad fields, digging up the roots. They
seemed to be divided into groups of eight to ten, under the
supervision of a crew boss, either male or female, who
worked alongside them. No overseer was visible, so everyone apparently knew his or her job and got on with it.
Slackers were persuaded by glares and peer pressure to
persevere, Keff wondered if workers were chosen for their
jobs by skill, or if one inherited certain tasks or crop rows
by familial clan.
Well out of the way of the crews, small children minding
babies huddled as near as they could to a low cavern
entrance from which Carialle had picked up heat source
traces, suggesting that entrance led to their habitation. It
made sense for the aborigines to live underground, where
the constant temperature was approximately 14# C, making
it warmer than it was on the surface. Such an accommodation would be simple to heat, with the earth itself as
insulation. Only hunger could have driven Keff out to farm
or hunt in this cold, day after day.
Keff could not have designed a world more likely to be
dependent upon subsistence culture. The days were long,
but the temperature did not vary between sunup and sun-down. Only the hardiest of people would survive to breed:
and the hardiest of plants. It couldn't be easy to raise crops
in this stony ground, either. Keff rubbed a pinch of it
between his finger and thumb.
"High concentration of silicate clay in that soil," Carialle
said, noticing his action. "Makes it tough going, both for
the farmer and the crop."
"Needs more sand and more fertilizer," Keff said. "And
more water. When we get to know one another, we can
advise them of irrigation and soil enrichment methods. See
that flat panlike depression at the head of the field? That's
where they pour water brought uphill by hand." A line of
crude barrels nestled against the hillside bore out his
theory.
Dirt-encrusted roots of various lengths, shapes, and colors piled up in respectable quantity beside the diggers,
whose fur quickly assumed the dull dun of the soil.
"Its incredible that they're getting as much of a yield as
they are," Keff remarked. 'They must have the science of
fanning knocked into them."
"Survival," Carialle said. 'Think what they could do with
fertilized soil and steady rainfall. The atmosphere here has
less than eight percent humidity. Strange, when you consider they're in the way of prevailing continental winds,
between the ocean and that mountain range. There should
be plenty of rain, and no need for such toil as that."
Under the direction of a middle-aged male with a light-brown pelt, youngsters working with me digging crews
threw piles of the roots onto groundsheets, which were
pulled behind shaggy six-legged pack beasts up and down
the rows. When each sheet was full, the beast was led away
and another took its place.
"So what's the next step in this production line?" Keff
asked, shifting slightly to see.
The female led the beast to a square marked out by
hand-sized rocks, making sure nothing fell off as she
guided the animal over the rock boundary. Once inside,
she detached the groundsheet. Turning the beast, she led