Brianna pointed out that the light panels were still operative, ripples of brightness covering them with each sentence. The gastropoids could easily watch the conversation.
“If they’re going to spy on us, there’s not a lot we can do about it,” Lennart said, making swirling patterns with his fingers on the smooth table surface. “What are we going to do, stop talking to each other — or invent a common sign language? We still don’t know if we’re guests or prisoners or what.”
“I don’t think they’ve decided that yet, themselves,” Eril said. “The next move’s theirs.”
“Running us through their tests to see if we’re worthy of, how did you put it? personness?” said Lennart.
“And if they decide we’re not?” Kithri said, half-bitter, half-anxious. “What happens then? Do we get stuck in a cage for the rest of our lives?”
Eril remembered the therine incident with Bhevon. Being able to exchange abstract ideas, use recorded language to bind time, manipulate tools — all the measures of intelligence he was familiar with — none of these might count if the aliens’ standards for “personness” were truly that different. But he couldn’t bring himself to say it aloud, to feed Kithri’s mood. She had good cause to be uneasy. They all did. They’d been separated, questioned and kept in suspense about each other. After their ordeal with the pirates, that was more than enough to erode even the most optimistic spirits.
“You can sit around feeling incompetent if you want to,” Brianna told Kithri, “but I’m not going to join you. It takes time to understand any new culture, and time is what we’ve got. Besides, Raerquel, the chief investigating scientist, is already our advocate.
“Which reminds me,” she paused, gesturing with her hands, “I need of some sort of recording medium. There’s only so many details I can memorize before they all start to run together — ”
Lennart laughed and told her she was incorrigible.
“What’s the point of keeping notes, when we might be trapped here for the rest of our lives?” Kithri said. “We could die here, alone, prisoners. Don’t you even care?”
“What would you do if you could break out?” Brianna said waspishly. “Go running off to the hills like you did before?”
Kithri drew in a quick breath and clamped her lips together. Her hands curled into fists, the muscles of her shoulders bunching.
“It’s too early to be making plans,” Eril said. “Not until we know what our situation is. The slugs could turn out hostile, or they could just as well become our allies. Maybe we’ll find a way back to Brianna’s world, or Lennart’s, or our own. Or a way of traveling between all three. Who knows?”
Kithri swiveled on the bench to look him full in the face, her eyes like pools of still water. The dent in her nose stood out sharply. For a moment, Eril saw her as a wild young thing, bewildered and alone. Brianna was in her element here, and Eril couldn’t deny his own hopes for dealing with the aliens. Lennart seemed as relaxed and good-natured as usual, but where was there a role for Kithri? Here there was no jaydium to run, no scrubjets to pilot...
Was that what she was thinking?
“We’re all in this together.” It was a stupid platitude, but the best he could come up with at the moment. The expression on her face had left him awkward and unsure.
She looked away and said in a voice that tore at his heart, “If you say so.”
Chapter 19
The living quarters were the most boring Eril had ever laid eyes on. If this was a hotel, I’d turn around and check out now. How can these creatures make buildings that are so beautiful on the outside and so dull inside?
The four windowless rooms opened to a spacious central area furnished with a table, benches and a large shallow pool of water, constantly circulating through pipes at either end. The table was more birdbath than eating surface, its water replenished like that of the pool. The sleeping cubicles were empty except for an unadorned couch and a shallow ceramic fixture set in the floor, with perforated openings at one end and a large drainage hole at the other, like an awkward cross between a urinal and a bidet. Everything from the walls to the benches was the same neutral, indirectly-lit gray.
Kithri threw herself down on one of the beds, her back to the others. Brianna darted about, examining everything from the pool to the table to the cubicles with great enthusiasm. Lennart slouched on a bench, encouraging her until Eril wanted to scream at both of them to shut up. When Bhevon returned and indicated that Eril was to return to the laboratory, he went cheerfully.
What followed was the strangest examination Eril had ever undergone, and he’d passed some sadistically inventive Qualifiers at the Academy. The chair, again sculpted to his own dimensions, was superlatively comfortable, yet now he felt penned-in, cornered. Another of Raerquel’s many assistants, Possiv, had drawn six-foot high panels out of the bare walls and surrounded him with them. The panels were close enough for Eril to touch. They completely cut off his view of the laboratory.
Apparently all he was expected to do in this test was watch the patterns of light that flashed across the screens. Ripples of the subtlest shades of gray, barely distinguishable from one another, alternated with loops and squiggles of brilliant white and black. Occasionally they broke into stark geometrical patterns like aerial views of a psychopathically conceived labyrinth.
Eril couldn’t decide if it was the brightness that made his eyes water and ache, or it was the rapidly changing patterns. His leg muscles twitched and his hands curled unconsciously into fists. Something grated on his nerves, as if he were about to fly smack into an ambush. He couldn’t put his finger on what made him feel so jumpy. Whatever it was, it was getting worse by the moment. His vision blurred and the blood vessels behind his eyeballs began to throb.
He briefly considered jumping up from his chair and cutting the whole thing short, but he managed to restrain himself. There was too much at stake here. He’d find some way to put up with it.
“How much more is there of this tri-vid show?,” he said. “The visuals are great — I think — but the plot’s a little thin and the characters could use some juicing up.”
The panel in front of him shifted from a grid of hair-fine lines to a display of eccentrically spiralling bulls-eyes. A moment later, it slid to one side and Raerquel’s head emerged through the gap, coppery-steel discs reflecting the lurching zig-zags.
“Eril-human, please repeat your communication. Are you in distress?”
Eril tried to stand up, but his muscles wouldn’t obey him. His stomach rolled over three times. He sat back down and buried his face in his palms, his mouth filling with acrid saliva. The spasm of nausea eased, but the pain in his head hammered on like a molten pulse.
He tried to breathe. “Uhhh...”
“Assistant Possiv! Immediate cessation of experiment!”
“I’m all right,” Eril protested, sitting straight again and swallowing rapidly. He winced as light blasted once more on his eyes, but kept his hands away from them. “It’s just a headache, that’s all. We can — ”
“You are in pain, Eril-human. I cannot permit this to continue,” Raerquel said as it flicked its stout lower appendages over the screens. One by one they went blank, melting to the gray tones of the divider panels. Possiv slid the subdivider panels back into the walls.
“I didn’t do too well on that one, did I?” Eril muttered.
“Do not berate yourself.” Raerquel placed itself alongside Eril’s chair. “It is a deception that because we possess efficient translating devices, we are therefore capable of instantaneously understanding one another. Your absence of reaction merely indicates the depth of our differences.”
Absence of reaction? It calls this headache an absence of reaction?
Eril shook his head, hoping to loosen the pain that had caught his skull in a bone-crushing vice. His vision steadied, but the agony continued unabated. He rubbed his temples, feeling the underlying muscles as tight as strings of steel.
“
I did react,” he said, trying to sound more coherent than he felt. “Like I said, it’s just a headache. I’m not the type that uses them as an excuse. Let’s go on.”
“Be covering your eyes,” Raerquel commanded. “NOW!”
Eril complied. Whatever came next couldn’t be worse than the light displays. He was unprepared, and therefore startled, when he felt a moist band encircle his head. He reached up and touched something smooth, almost snake-like, and under it a sticky wetness —
His eyes flew open as Raerquel withdrew its tentacle and re-coiled it neatly on its neck.
“You — you tricked me.”
“Would you have permitted me be touching you otherwise, Eril-human?”
Eril rubbed his fingers together, feeling the liquid harden quickly to a gel. He blinked. The throbbing headache had vanished. “I didn’t have my eyes closed more than a second before you smeared me with that stuff. There was no time to dig out a container. Where did you get it?”
Raerquel swung its head away, as if preparing to join Possiv in dismantling the screen panels. Eril lurched forward in his chair, reaching out with one hand. If Raerquel had been human, or even some type of animal, something with fur or feathers or even bones, he would have pulled it around to face him. But, he thought as he hesitated, fingers still outstretched, he had already touched the thing, and it hadn’t been horrible. Smooth and cool, more like marblestone than worm slime...
“Did you secrete that stuff from your own body? Was — was it therine?”
“No.”
“No, what? You didn’t squirt it out on me, or it isn’t therine?”
Raerquel’s head tilted back towards him. “It is not good for you to know the answers to these questions. Clan-inferior Bhevon has already explained to you the dangers of any suspicion of cultural contamination. The day following this, the preliminary scientific inspection team will be reviewing my researches. If I am able to convince them of your potential for personness, then we can begin meeting each other as civilized equals. If not — ”
“Then we go back to being pet cockroaches?”
“Then we must gather more proof until we cannot be controverted. And for this we will need the establishment of ignorance, are you understanding? For some on the committee will not be believing even if your only interaction with us was through automatic computing devices.”
Eril sat down, shutting up with a considerable effort of will. Finally, when he could trust himself not to come out with something totally idiotic, he said, “Whatever it was, your stuff cured my headache. I’m ready to go on now.”
“I am appreciating your cooperativeness, Eril-human. Come here.”
One of the coiled appendages high on Raerquel’s neck uncurled into life. Smooth and slender, it ended in a blunt, featureless tip. It gestured towards one of the instrument banks that lined the laboratory walls. “Please to be observing.”
Eril got up and followed the creature to the side. The various devices were difficult to distinguish because they were all made of the same highly reflective glasslike substance. A large rectangular screen had been set in the wall at the height of the gastropoid head discs.
Raerquel uncoiled several of its lower, thicker tentacles and stroked a row of small knob-like projections. Under its touch, they lengthened into thick levers. Something white and brilliant fluttered in the center of the screen, spreading quickly into a discernible image. Eril recognized the characteristic silhouette of a gastropoid. Shades of gray, from almost-white to dark charcoal, created scintillating patterns along the bottom and two sides of the screen. Raerquel waited, apparently watching Eril, and Eril waited for something else to happen.
“It isn’t going to do any good for me to look at this if I can’t understand what it’s saying,” he said after a few minutes.
“Is translator device being inoperative? You are unable to understand me now?”
“Yes, I can understand you. But I can’t read that.” Eril pointed to the rippling lights.
“You cannot read?”
Eril forced himself to take a slow, deep breath. It helped keep his temper under control. “I can read my own language. But I’ve never learned to read yours.”
“Your species has to be taught interpretation of vision?”
Interpretation — of vision? Eril thought of the educational programs developed for the born-blind, fitted as children with computer implants. It was certainly true that they had to learn to interpret the electronically enhanced signals. But what did that have to do with reading, an acquired skill?
“Look,” he said, “I don’t think we’re talking about the same thing. That stuff — ” indicating the bands of patterned light, “looks like a visual record to me. Your people may learn it awfully young, but you weren’t born knowing it. It’s not inherently obvious, at least not to this space-bum.”
“You are in error, Eril-human,” Raerquel said after a brief pause, during which Eril wondered what new diplomatic outrage he’d unwittingly committed. “Comprehension of what you call a secondary recording is indeed inherent in my species. What we now spew into the air, these patterns of sound vibrations, these are the learned analogs, useful for redundancy in storage, but fraught with potential for error. Light, in its infinite meanings and shadows, light is the true language. Everything else is compromise.”
Chapter 20
Having determined for the hundredth time the door to the living quarters was undetectable when sealed and being unable to think of anything more constructive to do, Eril wandered restlessly through the common room. He knelt by the pool of running water and dipped his fingers into it, noticing for the first time the four shallow depressions on the bottom. They were long and narrow, as if designed to cradle four prone bodies. Was the pool meant as a bath? The water, while not exactly cold, was far from a comfortable temperature. And, he discovered as he put his fingers to his lips, it was slightly salty.
Damned if I know what the thing is for. He got to his feet and tried the table water. It was fresh and cool.
There was no one to discuss the water and its significance with, and for some reason that bothered Eril. The entire suite of rooms felt echoingly empty. Kithri was still sleeping, or whatever she was doing in her cubicle. First Lennart and then Brianna had been taken away for testing.
Eril tried to ignore how much their absence affected him. What did he think existed between the four of them? Some kind of solidarity, because they were all human? He didn’t even know these people. There was no reason one brief adventure should make a difference. For the past five years, neither constant danger nor Weiram’s powers of persuasion had ever made him feel like part of a team.
A door appeared in one wall, whispered open, disgorged Lennart and just as quickly sealed itself behind him. Lennart went to his empty bed and sat down. A trace of healing gel gleamed on his forehead and his eyes held a tight, strained look.
Eril leaned against the doorway, watching him. Memories stirred uncomfortably. “You don’t look too well.”
“Yeah?” Lennart stretched out his legs on the bed, one by one, and leaned back against the wall. He closed his eyes and rubbed his temples. “You were no prize, either, when you came back.”
“How did it go?”
“Slugs two, humans zero, the best I can tell. I don’t know what they were after with that light show, but they sure didn’t get it from me.”
“It makes you wonder, doesn’t it, what they’re really up to,” Eril said, thinking aloud. His eyes wandered back to the empty common room and pool of salt water. “Raerquel admits we’re intelligent, but it talks about proving our ‘personness’ — the local passport to first class treatment — as if that were something quite different.” He shook his head. “We didn’t make such a distinction in the Fifth Fed.”
“That’s hard to believe. Every government on my Earth defined citizenship in a way that kept somebody out, whether it was women or foreigners or AIs.” Lennart’s voice was rough with fatigue. He sounded
more pessimistic than Eril had ever heard him.
Eril sat down on the edge of the bed, next to Lennart’s feet. “But we both agree that intelligence isn’t limited to the human race, don’t we? These gastropoids don’t seem to think anyone else even qualifies for consideration.”
“Except for Raerquel, who’s our local version of a free-thinker. And it’s only dancing the dance for the sake of its grant committee. It doesn’t give a shit about this ‘cultural contamination’ stuff, or it would never have let us peek at that lab, let alone turn us loose there. It would have just stuffed us into a Korzinowski box.”
“A what?”
“They wouldn’t have shown themselves to us.”
“Unless they’ve never dealt with an intelligent alien species and it hasn’t occurred to them that this half-assed isolation isn’t very effective,” Eril said. “We may not have a free spin of the place, but Brianna’s studying them as hard as they’re studying us. She’s not being particularly secretive about it. They’re pretty sloppy if they’re really worried about ‘cultural contamination.’”
“‘Cultural contamination’, my ass,” Lennart said. His mouth twisted downward. “There’s more than a few tourist traps they’re hiding from us.”
“Such as?”
“Such as there’s a goddamned power struggle going on and we’re smack in the middle of it. Everything Raerquel and its friends have told us reeks of it. If it were just up to Raerquel, we’d probably be guests of honor, right? Instead of being put through one idiot-minded test after another. So what does that suggest to you?”
“The Admiral’s inspection tour,” Eril couldn’t resist saying. “Seriously, it suggests Raerquel has an agenda of its own, and that agenda is not popular with the higher-ups.”
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