Book Read Free

Crystal Singer

Page 34

by Anne McCaffrey


  Pendel winked, laying his finger along his nose. “I did feel some objective information a wise precaution.”

  “So Chasurt decided the storms produced my mental aberrations?”

  “Some such conclusion.”

  “No fool goes out in Passover storms. We leave the planet if at all possible. If not, sleep through it!”

  “I had heard the rumor that Crystal Singers hibernated.”

  “Something of the sort.”

  “Well, well. Have another Yarran beer, Killashandra?”

  Whatever caused Pendel such satisfaction, he preferred to keep to himself, but they enjoyed several glasses until drowsiness overcame her again. Pendel escorted her back to her cabin where Tac stood very much on duty. Small light meals were arranged, and Killashandra lay down to sleep, fervently blessing the forethought that had provided her with the FSP authority. And what had Francu intended to do with her if he had managed to overrule her? Give her to Chasurt to find out why Crystal Singers are different?

  She wasn’t well pleased to have to spend a few more days on the cruiser, but she could sleep and relax, now that the pressures of installation were behind her. And she had completed those well. Trag would be pleased with her. Even if some percentage of the Trundimoux were not. Pity about that!

  Still, they’d given her a big hand. She’d knocked herself out to give them a new tradition. Her performance at the planet installation had turned an angry mob into a jubilant throng. Yes, she’d done well as a Crystal Singer.

  Would she ever again be able to experience that incredible surge of contact as black crystal segments linked? That all-enveloping surge as if she were aligned with every black crystal in the galaxy?

  She shuddered with the aching desire. She turned from that thought. There would be other such times; of that she was now certain. Meanwhile, once the storms of Ballybran were over, she could sing crystal.

  Sing crystal? Sing?

  Killashandra began to laugh, recalling herself as she strode into the planetary communications building, stage center with a near riot occurring around her. She, playing the high priestess, completing the ritual that linked the isolated elements of the Trundimoux! A solo performance if ever there was one. And she had played before an audience of an entire system. What an opening note she had struck with crystal! What an ovation! Echoes from distant satellites. She had done exactly as she had once boasted she’d do, had arrogantly proclaimed to her peers in Fuerte that she would do. She had been the first Singer in this system and possibly the only Crystal Singer ever to appear in Trundimoux.

  Killashandra laughed at the twisted irony of circumstance. She laughed and then cried because there was no one to know except herself that she had achieved an ambition.

  Killashandra Ree was a Singer, right enough. Truly a Crystal Singer!

  Reprise

  “What are you doing back now?” the lock attendant demanded as she entered. “Wough? What sort of transport were you on? You reek.”

  “Selkite,” Killashandra said grimly. She had become used to her own fragrance within the Selkite’s O-breather quarters.

  “There’s some ships no one will travel on. Pity you weren’t warned.” He was pinching his nostrils closed.

  “I’ll remember, I assure you.”

  She started for the Guild’s transient quarters.

  “Hey, there’s vo vacancies. Passover storms aren’t over yet, you know.”

  “I know, but getting here was more important than waiting the storms out.”

  “Not if you had to travel Selkite. But there’s plenty of space in the regular quarters,” and the man, thumbed the archway that she had entered so naively a few months before. “No travelers here yet. Doesn’t make any difference with your credit where you stay, you know.”

  Killashandra thanked him and walked on through the blue-irised entrance toward the hostel, trying to remember the girl she’d been at that point and unable to credit how much had occurred since then. Including the simultaneous realization of two ambitions.

  The aroma she exuded alerted Ford, still at his reception counter.

  “But you’re a Singer. You oughtn’t to be here.” His nose wrinkled, and he shuddered, licking his lips. “Singers have their own quarters.”

  “Full up. Just give me a room and let me fumigate myself.”

  Killashandra advanced to the counter to put her wrist unit to the plate.

  “No, no, that won’t be necessary!” Ford handed her the key, his arm stretching out to keep as much distance from her as possible.

  “I know I’m bad, but am I that bad?”

  Ford tried to stammer an apology, but Killashandra let the key guide her to her quarters.

  “I’ve given you the biggest we have.” Ford’s voice followed her through the hallway.

  The room was down a level, and assuming that the lock attendant had been correct—that there were no visitors at that time—Killashandra began ripping off her stinking clothes. The key warmed at the appropriate room, and she shoved through the panel, shutting it and leaning against the door to shuck off her pants and footwear. She looked at the carisak and decided there was no point in fumigating those things. She stuffed everything into the disposal unit with a tremendous sense of relief.

  The Shankill accommodation had only shower facilities but a decent array of herb and fragrance washes. She stood under the jets, as hot as the spray would come, then laved herself until her skin was raw. She stepped out of the shower enclosure, smelling her hands and her shoulders, bending to sniff her knees, and decided that she was possibly close to decontaminated.

  It was only drying her hair that she realized she didn’t have any fresh clothes to put on. She dialed the commissary and ordered the first coverall that appeared on the fax, then keyed for perfumes and ordered a large bottle of something spicy. She needed some spice in her life after the Selkite vessel. Well, Pendel had tried to warn her. Come to consider, even the Selkites were better than remaining in the vicinity of Francu or that bonehead Chasurt.

  Then she remembered to take out her lenses and sighed with relief as color, decent soothing color, sprang up around the room.

  She ordered a Yarran beer and wondered how Lanzecki had weathered Passover. Immured by herself in the Selkite ship, she had come to terms with lingering feelings of resentment for the Guild Master and wanted very much to continue in friendship with the man. Solitude was a great leveler: stinking solitude made one grateful for remembered favors and kindness. She owed Lanzecki more of those than accusations.

  The beer was so good! She lifted her beaker in a toast to Pendel. She hoped that for every Francu she met, there would be at least one Pendel to be grateful for.

  The door chime sounded. She wrapped a dry towel around her, wondering why her order was being delivered instead of sent by tube. She released the door lock and was about to slide the panel back when it was moved from without.

  “What are you doing back here?” Lanzecki stepped into the room, looming angrily above her in the narrow confines. He closed the panel behind him and lobbed a parcel in the direction of the bed.

  “What are you doing on Shankill?” She tried to tighten the towel above her breasts.

  He brought both bands to his belt and stared at her, his eyes glittering, his face set in the most uncompromising lines, his mouth still.

  “Shankill affords the most strategic point from which to assess the storm flows.”

  “Then you do escape from the storms,” she said with intense relief.

  “As I wanted you to escape them, but you’re back here days early!” He swept an angry gesture with one arm as if he wanted to strike her.

  “Why not?” Killashandra had to stand her ground before him. “I’d finished the wretched installations. Were the storms as bad as predicted? I’ve heard nothing.”

  “You were scheduled to return on a comfortable passenger frigate seven days from now.” He scrutinized her closely. “The damage could have been worse,” he a
dded grudgingly. She wasn’t sure whether he referred to her or the storms.

  “I took the Selkite freighter.”

  “I’m aware of that.” His nostrils flared with distaste.

  “I’ve tried to decontaminate. It was awful. Why wasn’t I told about Selkites? No, I was, but I wouldn’t listen because I couldn’t stay one more moment on that fardling Trundie cruiser.” The towel was coming loose as she remembered Francu. “Why didn’t you at least warn me about the Trundies?”

  Lanzecki shrugged. “We didn’t have much on them, but you at least had no preconceptions or the residue of partial memories of other isolated systems to prejudice your actions.”

  “They may never deal with another Crystal Singer.”

  “They’ll deal with the Guild.” Lanzecki was smiling, his body relaxing, his eyes warming.

  “More important, Lanzecki”—and she tried to step back, away from him until she’d aired her grievances—“why didn’t you tell me about link-shock? I sang the king crystal, link and all, and they brought me to my knees.”

  “Link-shock’s about the only thing that would.” He put his warm hands on her shoulders and held her firmly, his eyes examining her face. “No one can describe link-shock. It’s experienced on different levels by different personalities. To warn is to inhibit.”

  “I can certainly appreciate that!”

  He chuckled at her sarcastic comment and began to draw her to him, his embrace as much of an apology as he was ever likely to give her.

  “Some people feel nothing at all.”

  “I’m sorry for them.” She was not sarcastic now.

  “For you, Killashandra, to link a set of crystals you yourself cut binds you closer to black crystal.” He spoke slowly, again with the hidden pain that she had once before heard in his voice. She let herself be drawn against his strong body, realizing how keenly she had missed him even as she had damned him, grateful now to give and receive comfort. “The Guild needs black-crystal Singers.”

  “Is that why you’ve personally guided my career, Lanzecki?” She reached her hand to his lips, feeling them curve in amusement.

  “My professional life is dedicated to the Guild, Killashandra. Never forget that. My personal life is another matter, entirely private.” His lips moved sensuously across her fingers as he spoke.

  “I like you, Lanzecki—damn your mouth.” She bubbled with laughter and the joy of being with him again.

  He took her hand and kissed the palm, the contact sending chills through her body.

  “In the decades ahead of us, Killashandra, try to keep that in mind?”

  Books by Anne McCaffrey

  Decision at Doona

  Dinosaur Planet

  Dinosaur Planet Survivors

  Get Off the Unicorn

  The Lady

  Pegasus in Flight

  Restorree

  The Ship Who Sang

  To Ride Pegasus

  Nimisha’s Ship

  Pegasus in Space

  THE CRYSTAL SINGER BOOKS

  Crystal Singer

  Killashandra

  Crystal Line

  THE DRAGONRIDERS OF PERN® BOOKS

  Dragonflight

  Dragonquest

  The White Dragon

  Moreta: Dragonlady of Pern

  Nerilka’s Story

  Dragonsdawn

  The Renegades of Pern

  All the Weyrs of Pern

  The Chronicles of Pern: First Fall

  The Dolphins of Pern

  Dragonseye

  The Masterharper of Pern

  The Skies of Pern

  By Anne McCaffrey and Elizabeth Ann Scarborough:

  Powers that Be

  Power Lines

  Power Play

  With Jody Lynn Nye:

  The Dragonlover’s Guide to Pern

  Edited by Anne McCaffrey:

  Alchemy and Academe

  A FRIENDSHIP BEGINS

  Killashandra watched as the stranger pressed a code, then stepped back before the screen. She politely moved back.

  “Control? The shuttle that just landed can’t be permitted to take off. Half the crystals in the drive must be overheating. Can’t you tell from the ejection velocity monitor? . . . Well, now that’s more reasonable,” he continued after a moment. “I’m Carrik of the Heptite Guild, Ballybran—Yes, that’s what I said. I could hear the secondary sonics right through the walls, so I damn well know there’s overheating.” Another pause. “Thanks, but I’ve paid my bill already. . . . Oh, as you will.” He glanced at Killashandra. “Make that for two,” he added, grinning at her as he turned from the console. He cupped his hand under Killashandra’s elbow and steered her toward a secluded booth.

  “But, I’ve a bottle of wine at my table—” she said, half protesting, half laughing at his peremptory escort.

  “You’ll have better shortly. I’m Carrik and you’re . . . ?”

  “Killashandra Ree.”

  He smiled, gray eyes lighting briefly with surprise. “That’s a lovely name.”

  It looked as if her luck was about to change.

  To learn more about other great ebook titles from Ballantine, please visit

  www.randomhouse.com/BB/ebooks.htm.

  To enjoy other great science fiction and fantasy titles visit

  www.delreydigital.com.

  THE DRAGONRIDERS OF PERN is a trademark of Ann McCaffrey. Reg. U.S. Pat. & Tm. Off.

  A Del Rey® Book

  Published by The Ballantine Publishing Group

  Copyright © 1982 by Anne McCaffrey

  All rights reserved under international and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Published in the United States by The Ballantine Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc., New York, and simultaneously in Canada by Random House of Canada Limited Toronto.

  Del Rey and colophon are registered trademarks of Random House Inc.

  www.randomhouse.com/delrey/

  Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 82–4009

  eISBN: 978-0-345-45745-5

  v3.0

 

 

 


‹ Prev