Nor Crystal Tears

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by Foster, Alan Dean;




  Foster, Alan Dean - Commonwealth 01 - Humanx 01 - Nor Crystal Tears (v1.6)

  A Del Rey Book Published by Ballantine Books

  Copyright © 1982 by Alan Dean Foster

  All rights reserved under International and Pan American Copyright Conventions.

  Published in the United States by Ballantine Books, a division of Random House, Inc., New York, and simultaneously in Canada by Random House of Canada, Limited, Toronto, Canada.

  Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 82 8836

  ISBN 0 345 32447 1

  Manufactured in the United States of America

  First Edition: September 1982

  Sixth Printing: January 1985

  Cover art by Michael Whelan

  ***

  For the tiger with the little girl voice and the velvet claws, My agent, Virginia Kidd, with thanks for Ten years of encouraging purrs and constructive scratches.

  ***

  Alan Dean Foster - Commonwealth 01 - Nor Crystal Tears

  Table of Contents

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter One

  It's hard to be a larva. At first there's nothing. Very gradually a dim, uncertain consciousness coalesces from nothingness. Awareness of the world arrives not as a shock, but as a gray inevitability. The larva cannot move, cannot speak. But it can think.

  His first memories, naturally, were of the Nursery: a cool, dimly lit tubular chamber of controlled commotion and considerable noise. Beneath the gently arched ceiling, adults conversed with his fellow larvae. With awareness of his surroundings came recognition of self and of body: a lumpish, meter and a half long cylindrical mass of mottled white flesh.

  Through simple, incomplete larval eyes he hungrily ab­sorbed the limited world. Adults, equipment, walls and ceiling and floor, his companions, the cradle he lay in, all were white and black and in between shades of gray. They were all he could perceive. Color was a mysterious, unimag­inable realm to which only adults had access. Of all the unknowns of existence, he most pondered what was blue, what was yellow the taste of the withheld spectrum.

  The adults who managed the Nursery and attended the young were experienced in that service. They'd heard generations of youngsters ask the same questions in the same order over and over, yet they were ever patient and polite. So they tried their best to explain color to him. The words had no meaning because there were no possible reference points, no mental landmarks to which a larva could relate. It was like trying to describe the sun that warmed the sur­face high, high above the subterranean Nursery. He came to think of the sun as a brightly blazing something that produced an intense absence of dark.

  As he grew the attendants let him move about in his crude humping, wormlike fashion. Nurses bustled through the Nursery, busy adults gifted with real mobility. Teach­ing machines murmured their endless litany to the stu­dious. Other adults occasionally came to visit, including a pair who identified themselves as his own parents.

  He compared them with his companions, like himself squirming white masses ending in dull black eyes and thin mouth slits. How he envied the adults their clean lines and mature bodies, the four strong legs, the footarms above serving either as hands or as a third pair of legs, the deli­cate truhands above them.

  They had real eyes, adults did. Great multifaceted com­pound orbs that shone like a cluster of bright jewels (light gray to him, though he knew they were orange and red and gold, whatever those were). These were set to the sides of the shining valentine shaped heads, from which a pair of feathery antennae sprouted, honestly white. He was fasci­nated by the antennae, as all his companions were. The adults would explain that two senses were held there, the sense of smell and the sense of faz.

  He understood fazzing, the ability to detect the presence of moving objects by sensing the disruption of air. But the concept of smell utterly eluded him, much as color did. Along with arms and legs, then, he desperately wished for antennae. He desperately wished to be complete.

  The Nurses were patient, fully understanding such yearn­ings. Antennae and limbs would come with time. Mean­while there was much to learn.

  They taught speech, though larvae were capable of no more than a crude wheezing and gasping through their flex­ible mouth parts. It took hard mandibles and adult lungs and throats to produce the elegant clicks and whistles of mature communication.

  So he could see after a fashion, and hear, and speak a little. But sight was incomplete without color and he could not faz or smell at all. By way of compensation the teachers explained that no adult could faz or smell nearly as well as the primitive ancestors of the Thranx, back when the race dwelt in unintelligence even deeper in the bowels of the earth than they did now, when artificial light did not exist, and the senses of faz and smell necessarily exceeded that of sight in importance.

  He listened and understood, but that did not lessen the frustration. He would worm his way around the exercise course because they insisted he needed exercise, but he was ever conscious of what a pale shadow of true mobility it was. Oh, so frustrating!

  Larval years were the Learning Time. Hardly able to move, unable to smell or faz, barely able to converse, but with decent sight and hearing a larva was adequately equipped for learning.

  He was a particularly voracious student, absorbing everything and asking greedily for more. His teachers and Nurses were pleased, as was the teaching machine attached to his cradle. He mastered High and Low Thranx, although he could properly speak neither. He learned physics and chemistry and basic biology, including the danger posed by any body of water deeper than the thorax, where the adult's breathing spicules were located. An adult Thranx could float, but not forever, and when the water entered the body, it sank. Swimming was a talent reserved for prim­itive creatures with internal skeletons.

  He was taught astronomy and geology although he'd never seen the sky or the earth, for all that he lived be­neath the surface. The Nursery was exquisitely tiled and paneled. Other sections of Paszex, his home town, were lined with plastics, ceramics, metals, or stonework. In the ancient burrows on the planet Hivehom, where the Thranx had evolved, were tunnels and chambers lined with regurgi­tated cellulose and body plaster.

  Industry and agriculture were studied. History told how the social arthropods known as the Thranx first mastered Hivehom, adapting to existence above as well as below the surface, and then spread to other worlds. Eventually theology was discussed and the larvae made their choices.

  Then on to more complex subjects as the mind matured, to biochemistry, nucleonics, sociology and psychology and the arts, including jurisprudence. He particularly enjoyed the history of space travel, the stories of the first hesitant flights to the three moons of Hivehom in clumsy rockets, the development of the posigravity drive that pushed ships through the gulf between the stars, and the establishment of colonies on worlds like Dixx and Everon and Calm Nursery. He learned of the burgeoning commerce between Willo wane, his own colony world, and Hivehom and the other colonies.

  How he wanted to go to Hivehom when he learned of it! The mother world of the people, Hivehom. Magical, enchanting name. His Nurses smiled at his excitement. It was only natural he should want to travel there. Everyone did.

  Yet something more showed on his profile charts, an un­defined yearning that puzzl
ed the larval psychologists. Possibly it was related to his unusual hatching. The normal four eggs had bequeathed not male and female pairs but three females and this one male.

  He was aware of the psychologists' concerns but didn't worry about them. He concentrated on learning as much as possible, stuffing his mind full to bursting with the won­ders of existence. While these strange adults mumbled about "indecisiveness" and "unwillingness to tend toward a course of action," he plowed through the learning pro­grams, mitigating their worries with his extraordinary ap­petite for knowledge.

  Couldn't they understand that he wasn't interested in any one particular subject? He was interested in every­thing. But the psychologists didn't understand, and they fretted. So did his family, because a Thranx on the Verge always knows what he or she intends to do ... after. Gen­eralizations do not a life make.

  For a while they thought he might want to be a philoso­pher, but his general interests were of specifics and not of abstruse speculations. Only his unusually high scores pre­vented their moving him from the general Nursery to one reserved for the mentally deficient.

  On and on he studied, learning that Willow wane was a wonderful world of comfortable swamps and lowlands, of heat and humidity much like that of the Nursery. A true garden world whose poles were free of ice and whose large continents were heavily jungled. Willow wane was even more accommodating than Hivehom itself. He was fortunate to have been born there.

  His name he knew from early on. He was Ryo, of the Family Zen, of the Clan Zu, of the Hive Zex. The last was a holdover from primitive times, for only towns and cities existed now, no more true hives.

  More history, the information that the development of real intelligence was concurrent with the development of egg laying ability in all Thranx females. Gone was the need for a specialized Queen. Their newly evolved biological flexibility gave the Thranx a natural advantage over other arthropods. But Thranx still paid respects to an honorary clanmother and hivemother, echoes of the biological ma­triarchy that once dominated the race. That was tradition. The people had a great love of tradition.

  He remembered his shock when he'd first learned of the AAnn, a space going race of intelligence, calculation, cunning, and aggressiveness. The shock arose not from their abilities but from the fact that the creatures possessed internal skeletons, leathery skins, and flexible bodies. They moved like the primitive animals of the jungles but their intelligence was undeniable. The discovery had caused con­sternation in the Thranx scientific community, which had postulated that no creature lacking a protective exoskeleton could survive long enough to evolve true intelligence. The hard scales of the AAnn gave protection, and some felt that their closed circulatory systems compensated for the lack of an exoskeleton.

  All these things he studied and mastered, yet he was un­settled in mind because he also knew that of all the inhabi­tants of the Nursery who were on the Verge, he alone was unable to settle on a career, to choose a life work.

  Around him, his childhood companions made their choices and were content as the time grew near. This one to be a chemist, that one a janitorial engineer, the one on the cradle across from Ryo to become a public Servitor, another opting for food processing management.

  Only he could not decide, would not decide, did not want to decide. He wanted only to learn more, to study more.

  Then there was no more time for study. There was only time for a sudden upwelling of fear. His body had been changing for months, subtle tremors and quivers jostling him internally. He'd felt his insides shift, felt skin and self tingling with a peculiar tension. An urge was upon him, a powerful desire to turn inward and explode outward.

  The Nurses tried to prepare him for it as best they could, soothing, explaining, showing him again the chips he'd studied over and over. Yet the sight of it recorded on screen was clinical and distant, hard to relate to what was occurring inside his own body. All the chips, all the infor­mation in the world could not prepare one for the reality.

  Worse were the rumors that passed from Nurserymate to Nurserymate in the dark, during sleeping time, when the adults were not listening. Horrible stories of gross deformi­ties, of monstrosities put out of their misery before they had a chance to see themselves in a mirror, which others said were allowed to survive for a life of miserable study as scientific subjects, never to be permitted out in society.

  The rumors grew and multiplied as fast as the changes in his own body. The Nurses and special doctors came and went and monitored him intensively. Around it all, encap­sulating all the mystery and terror and wonder and hope, was a single word.

  Metamorphosis.

  The process was something you could not avoid, like death. The genes insisted and the body obeyed. The larva could not delay it.

  He had studied it repeatedly with a fervor he had never applied to anything else. He watched the recordings, mar­veled at the transformation. What if the cocoon was wrongly spun? What if he matured too soon and burst from the cocoon only half formed or, worse yet, waited too long and smothered?

  The Nurses were reassuring. Yes, all those terrible things had happened once upon a time, but now trained doctors and metamorphic engineers stood by at all times. Modern medicine would compensate for any mistake the body might make.

  The day came and he hadn't slept for four days before it. His body felt nervous and ready to burst. Incomprehen­sible feelings possessed him. He and the others who were ready were taken from the Nursery. Befuddled younger larvae watched them go, some filling their wake with cries of farewell.

  "Good bye, Ryo ... Don't come out with eight legs!" "See you as an adult," shouted another. "Come back and show us your hands," cried a third. "Tell us what color is!"

  Ryo knew he wouldn't be returning to the Nursery. Once gone, there was no reason to return. It would belong to another life, unless he opted for Nursery work as an adult. He watched the Nursery recede as his palette traveled in train with the others down the long central aisle. The Nurs­ery, its friendly familiar whites and grays, its cradles and compassion the only companions he'd ever had, all van­ished behind a tripartite door.

  He heard someone cry out, then realized he was the noise­maker. The medical personnel hushed him, calmed him.

  Then he was in a great, high ceilinged chamber, a dome of glowing darkness, of perfectly balanced humidity and temperature. He could see the other palettes being placed nearby, forming a circle. His friends wiggled and twisted under the gentle glow of special lamps.

  On the next palette rested a female named Urilavsezex. She made the sound indicative of good wishes and friend­ship. "It's finally here," she said. "After so long, after all these years. I'm I'm not sure I know what to do or how to do it."

  "Me either," Ryo replied. "I know the recordings, but how do you tell when the precise moment is, how do you know when the time is right? I don't want to make any mistakes."

  "I feel ... I feel so strange. Like I like I have to ... . " She was no longer talking, for silk had begun to emerge magically from her mouth. Fascinated, he stared as she began single mindedly to work, her body contorting with a flexibility soon to be lost forever. Bending sharply, she had begun at the base of her body and was working rapidly toward the head.

  Layer upon layer the damp silk rose around her. body, hardening on contact with the air. Now he could see only her head. The eyes began to disappear. Around him others had begun to work.

  Something heaved inside him and he thought he was going to vomit. He did not. It was not his stomach that was suddenly, eruptively working, but other glands and organs. There was a taste in his mouth, not bad at all, fresh and clean. He twisted, doubled over, working the silk that ex­truded in a steady, effortless flow as if he'd spun a hundred times before.

  He felt no claustrophobia, a fear unknown to a people who mature underground. Up, high, higher, around his mouth and eyes now, the cocoon rose. The upper cap nar­rowed over his head. It was almost closed when a pair of truhands reached in and down throug
h the remaining gap. Moving quickly, in time to his mouth movements so as not to become entangled in the hardening silk, they held a tube that was pressed against his forehead.

  The hands withdrew. Nothing else remained to concen­trate on except finishing, finishing, finishing the work. Then the cocoon was complete and the sedative that had been injected into him combined with his physical exhaus­tion to speed him into the Sleep. A dim, fading part of him knew he would sleep for three whole seasons ...

  But it wasn't long at all. Only a few seconds, and sud­denly he was kicking with a desperate intensity. Out, he thought hysterically, I have to get out. He was imprisoned, confined in something hard and unyielding. He shoved and kicked with all his strength. So weak, he was so terribly weak. Yet a small crack, there.

  The sight renewed his determination and he kicked hard­er, punched with his hands and began to pull at the pieces that cracked in front of him. The prison was disintegrating around him. He whistled in triumph, kicked with all four legs then sprawled free and exhausted onto a soft floor.

  On his thorax the eight spicules pulsed weakly, sucking air. He turned his head and looked up, using his truhands to brush at the dampness still clinging to his eyes.

  Then other hands were on him, turning him, helping him untangle. Antiseptic cloths brushed at his eyes and there was a sharp smell of peppermint. A voice spoke sooth­ingly. "It's all over. Relax, just relax. Let your body gather its strength."

  Instinctively he turned toward the sound of the voice as the last film masking his eyes was sponged away. A male Thranx looked down at him. His chiton was deep purple, so he would be quite elderly.

  Realization came in a rush. Purple. The adult's chiton was purple, and purple was a color that had been described to him and now he knew what it was and the ceramic inlay in the doctor's forehead was a single bar of silver crossed by two bars of gold and his ommatidia were red with gold and yellow central bands and they gleamed in the light of the room and ... and ... It was wonderful.

  He looked down at himself, saw the slim body, the seg­mented abdomen, the four glistening wing cases, vestigial wings beneath, the four strong, jointed legs spraddled to his left. He raised a truhand, touched it with a foothand, then repeated the motion with the other pair, then touched all four sets of four fingers together.

 

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