Lennart shifted uneasily on his bed. “We’d better keep our eyes open tomorrow. We don’t want to bonker Raerquel’s game, but we sure don’t want to get labelled the sweetest pets in town just to save its professional hide.”
“For a guy who comes from an age when warfare was a dirty word, you have a surprisingly suspicious mind,” Eril said.
“Suspicious, devious, and downright sneaky,” said Lennart with a very unhumorous smile. “That’s me all over. I didn’t get into space by trusting in universal sweetness and good-will. Think on this, captain — there were a thousand applicants for every place, all of them just as qualified as I was. What got me in?”
Eril flinched, as if Lennart has just shoved a plasteel rod up his spine. “What did you call me — captain? What kind of joke is that?”
Lennart buried his nose in the crook of one uplifted elbow and slid down on the bed until he was completely horizontal. “No joke. And nothing wrong with your hearing, either. Who else do you think is holding this circus together?”
Eril stared at him long and hard. “Thanks,” he said in a unexpectedly rusty voice, “but I think you’ve got the wrong candidate.” He headed back to his own cubicle with what poise he could summon.
o0o
Eril paused at the entrance to Kithri’s room. She lay on her side, her back towards him and knees drawn slightly up, her brown curls spilling over one shoulder. The supple fabric of her tunic clung to the curve of her waist, outlining her back and hips.
As if sensing his presence in her sleep, she rolled partway towards him. One small breast formed a rounded silhouette against the pale gray wall. Eril caught his breath, remembering the surprising softness of her body against his. Like melting honey — no, it was he who’d melted. When she’d pushed him away, the separation was only partial.
He held on to the door frame so hard his knuckles cracked. The sound brought him back to the present. The Cerrano Plain receded, worlds away. Maybe millennia away. He shouldn’t be standing here, watching her sleep, even if it weren’t for Lennart next door and Brianna sweating under the lights.
He cursed softly as he walked away.
o0o
Duvach appeared shortly before the morning meal to tell the four humans they wouldn’t be needed in the laboratory. The inspection committee was going to spend most of the next day with Raerquel, going over the results of its research.
If it had been Bhevon, Eril thought, it wouldn’t have even told us that much.
So they waited in their quarters. And waited. They moved restlessly around the room, tension building until even the most casual comment seemed intolerably irritating. Eril decided they’d been cooped up too long. Thinking it would bring them together and give them something to do, he began telling his favorite war stories. He had plenty to tell, even without the battle at Albion and the last escapade on New Paris, the one that lead him to try recruiting Kithri as a duopartner. He wasn’t ashamed of these two incidents, but he somehow wanted to tell a better story than he’d lived.
Kithri and Brianna listened, Kithri relaxing enough to laugh at the right times and Brianna looking as if she’d rather be taking notes. Lennart, his face set, got up and strode over to the other side of the room.
Brianna’s narrative, a string of anecdotes of research expeditions on one meaningless planet after another, also sounded suspiciously edited. If she’d gathered that much professional prestige, Eril wondered, why wasn’t she a hot-shot professor somewhere? What was she doing all by herself on Stayman? Where were the shadows in her past?
As Brianna came to the high point of her story, Lennart walked slowly back to the table. He held his arms crossed tightly over his chest, his hands in fists. When he sat down, Eril saw a new, stormy light in his eyes, a tension around his mouth that hadn’t been there since the pirates.
“I’ve had about all I can stand of this let’s-tell-each-other-how-wonderful-we-are,” he said. “I can’t judge your academic credentials, Bri, but I know hypocrisy when I hear it.”
Brianna recoiled as if he’d struck her in the face.
“I don’t mean it personally,” he continued before she could protest. “I know you think what you’ve done is wonderful and you’re so proud of how civilized your Dominion is. But all this talk of ‘universal cultural understanding’ is just a scab covering over a festering sore. Like they say, violence is contagious. It doesn’t exist in a vacuum. Those space pirates — and everything they stand for — ” he jabbed one forefinger at her “ — that’s how your people really treat each other — that’s the true soul of your Dominion.”
Brianna set her whitened lips together, but she didn’t flinch again. She gathered herself for a reply, but Lennart gave her no opening. By look and gesture, he shifted his focus to Eril.
“And you — to think that all this time I’ve been envying you! I thought I’d woken up in the future of my dreams. It was all I could do not to sound off like a damned propaganda chit — ’O glorious new horizon!’ and all that. I didn’t want to see the truth.”
“And what is the truth?” Kithri asked in a tight, quiet voice. “If Brianna’s people are no better than her pirates, then what are we?”
Eril could hear her thoughts, We who blow up whole planets and turn children into scrub-rats?
“You don’t know what we had to give up for space,” Lennart said. “It’s so damned easy for you. You don’t have to give up a thing! You have it all. You’ve got ships that can take you halfway across the galaxy as if the speed of light was nothing. And what do you do with them?”
“You don’t understand,” Eril jumped into the pause. “Everything’s different now. It isn’t that war is bad and peace is good. Nothing’s that simple, not any more. Settled space is too big, political problems too complex. You can’t judge us by what happened thousands of years ago.”
Lennart’s eyes shone like polished cinnabar. “Can’t I?”
“Your people weren’t so great with your vaunted age of peace,” Eril shot back. “It didn’t last, did it? It ended so long ago, we’ve even forgotten it existed. But we haven’t given up! In fact, we’re still fighting for the same thing.”
Watching Lennart’s face, Eril remembered his expression as Red-hair had reached for Brianna that last time. He also remembered thinking a man who looked like that was capable of anything. Eril could have throttled him then, before he infected Kithri with the same deadly recklessness. She too would have thrown away all their lives for a moment of hopeless compassion, if he hadn’t stepped in. He saw that same desperation in Lennart’s eyes now, but then the light shifted and it was gone.
“Fighting?” Lennart repeated, his voice laced with sarcasm. “For peace?” Something like a bark shot from his mouth. “Maybe I’m too dense to see it. Maybe things have changed so much I can’t see it. But I do know this — we didn’t have to be afraid of each other. And you do.”
I’m only one man, Eril thought desperately. The civil war was no more my doing than the pirates were Brianna’s. I’m on the other side, building something better, or trying to, for god’s sake.
It wasn’t fair to blame him for something he had no control over. Even less fair to blame Kithri, who hadn’t had the chance to fight back. But every answer that came to his mind sounded defensive, an adolescent whine.
“We don’t know why it ended. It was a special, isolated time,” Kithri’s voice broke in on his thoughts. She was talking to Lennart in slow, careful tones, whatever hurt she’d taken from him well hidden. “Maybe it lasted until the First Fed. We can only guess. But once we discovered jaydium, we exploded through space. Everywhere. Distance didn’t mean anything any more. People could just take their problems somewhere else. We didn’t have to live together on one planet.”
And if we hadn’t discovered jaydium... The stuff’s like a cancer, devouring all our lives, not just Kithri’s. Without it, there wouldn’t have been a Fifth Fed or Brianna’s Dominion. Or the pirates, either. We’d still be back in Le
nnart’s time, cooped up on a handful of planets, taking decades to travel between them.
“You’re saying war’s inevitable, given human nature,” Lennart said bleakly. “In our genes, like some hereditary disease. I can’t accept that. It wasn’t true then and it’s not true now.”
“Things change!” Eril insisted. “People change.”
“No. Some things don’t change, captain. War isn’t bad one time and good the next. We built you a world of peace and you threw it away.”
Of all the narrow-minded, comet-brained, opinionated —
“Hold on, you two,” Brianna cut in. She’d been listening to their debate, her face grave with concentration. “All civilizations go through natural cycles of conflict and resolution, if they last long enough. Mine did, but with each round of tensions, we got further away from wide-scale fighting. It’s only in the early trigger-happy stages — by accident — that interplanetary destruction is a possibility.”
Albion was an accident?
The conversation came to an abrupt halt as the door became visible and whispered open. Two gastropoids stood outside in the hallway. Eril identified them by the pattern of their neck slits. Duvach and Possiv.
Duvach extruded its head section into the room. “It is time for personal inspections by the Council committee. Kithri-human, please to be accompanying us.”
Kithri straightened her shoulders. A few stray curls had fallen forward on her brow, and she brushed them back.
“Why her?” Eril said. “She missed the tests the rest of us took.”
“Obviously, the Council committee members are wishing to witness firsthand the duplication of previously reported results, using a naive subject,” Duvach answered in the same expressionless voice all the gastropoids used.
Eril shut up, wishing he didn’t feel so damned protective. Kithri gave him a small smile on her way out.
“I’ll be all right,” she said. “After all, you made it through the other day.”
Chapter 21
What are they doing to her? She’s been in there longer than all the rest of us put together. It can’t be more than a bunch of stupid light tests... Raerquel might be willing to stop with a headache, but what about this Council committee?
Eril found himself pacing again. It had been several hours — three or four at least, it was hard to tell — since Kithri had been taken away. One moment he was sitting at the table with Lennart and Brianna, sipping table water from the cups they’d convinced Possiv to sculpt for them. Pretending to listen to their few attempts at conversation, going over the same speculations and words of encouragement. Trying not to feel how slowly time passed, as unbroken as the blank gray walls. The next thing Eril knew, he was on his feet, his body moving of its own accord through the common room.
He skirted the shallow pond, resisting the urge to jump in and kick up some waves, the way he had as a boy at the summer lake on Terillium, waves that left only a temporary mark on the surface of the water. It would do no good and space only knew how the gastropoids would react. The water was important, he could feel it even if he didn’t understand why.
Damn! What was taking them so long?
Was that any reason for him to fall apart? Whatever happened next, he’d need all his wits where they belonged, not scattered halfway to Hyades, which was where they were heading at the moment.
He stopped right where he was and took a deep breath. Where was that cool, level head that had gotten him through so many squeaks? How could he expect to handle the gastropoids — or anything else — if he couldn’t even sit still?
Slowly the room came back into focus. Lennart was watching him, eyes shadowed and brows in a single straight knot, and Brianna was tracing patterns in water on the table top. Eril walked back to the table, every step smooth and controlled.
He never made it. A door formed in the wall, first a hair-wide outline, then a narrow opening. Kithri stumbled through, gasping and ashen-faced.
Eril was beside her before she’d taken two steps into the room. He caught her in his arms. For a moment, she sagged against him as if her legs could no longer hold her. She trembled and her skin felt clammy against his.
Then she pushed him away and sprinted for the back of her cubicle, one hand over her mouth. She threw herself on the floor beside the sanitary facility, retching. It took Eril a moment to realize that she was neither badly injured nor in shock, and by that time Lennart was kneeling at her side, one arm across her shoulders.
“Go away,” she snapped at him. “I don’t need any help to puke.”
Lennart returned to the table where Brianna still sat. He glanced at Eril with a wry expression. “She insists on doing everything herself, heyh?”
Kithri emerged a few minutes later, still pale but steadier on her feet. She’d used one of her socks for a washcloth, and her face and hair were sopping wet. She sat down on one of the two empty benches and Eril took the other. Lennart solemnly dipped some water into a cup and handed it to her.
“Well,” she said after she’d downed the water, “that’s over with.”
She glanced at their expectant faces and cleared her throat. “I guess you want to hear about it, huh? Mmmm... There were four or five tests with different kinds of lights, just like you told me, a couple of drills with small objects, and then a thousand questions, most of which Raerquel had already asked.”
As she talked, her color returned and her voice began to sound normal again. “I don’t know how much good any of it did. They must have asked me twenty times how we got here, and even then they didn’t believe me.”
“You did the best you could,” said Lennart.
Kithri didn’t respond, not even a flicker of her gaze in his direction. Eril understood. Maybe things were different where Lennart came from, but here you didn’t get any credit for trying. What you got was dead.
“Any idea how long before they make up their minds about us?” he said.
Kithri shook her head.
“If the gastropoids work anything like Dominion funding committees, it could be months,” Brianna sighed. “They delight in keeping grant applicants as anxiety-ridden as possible.”
Kithri managed a brief smile. “My father always said it was a foregone conclusion. The grant people only took their time when the answer was no and they were obliged to go through the formalities anyway. But he said you already knew it. Of course, none of this may apply to the sl — gastropoids. Who knows what they’re looking for? I sure didn’t.”
The door slid open with the faintest of whispers and Raerquel undulated into the room.
Eril got to his feet. News, this must be some kind of news. He held his breath, wishing that the gastropoid’s metallic-tinted head discs were either more like eyes or less. He kept expecting to be able to read some expression in them and feeling frustrated when he couldn’t.
Raeerquel paused beside the shallow pool. It lowered its head section and uncurled several feathery upper tentacles until they touched the rippling water. For several moments, it held them extended and dripping.
“Your ways are not ours, your...water is not ours,” it said. “Yet I honor the light within your water. I invite you, if you are so...moved, to be reciprocating.”
Without thinking clearly what that meant, Eril dipped his fingers into the pond and held them out, watching the drops fall into the water. One body, he thought, and then separate, and then one again. A profound gesture, he realized in retrospect. His impulse to act for all of them had been sound.
Raerquel slithered up to the table and halted, unfurling more appendages. “My mammalian friends, without yet knowing how much we have achieved together, still I thank you for your cooperativeness. Especially you, Kithri-human. I am aware of the pain you suffered for the advancement of scientific truth. To my thinking, your ability to transcend the discomforts of the body for a higher goal is itself proof of your personness.”
Kithri reddened and ducked her head.
“Any of us would have
done the same,” Eril said. “It’s important to establish a relationship between our species and yours. If we’ve got to satisfy your superiors as to our intelligence, or whatever they’re looking for in us, then we’ll do whatever we can.”
“We would have much to learn from your kind,” Raerquel began. “We — ”
Whatever the gastropoid scientist was going to say was cut off as a rumble like faint thunder filled the air. It started low, barely more than a vibration. It felt to Eril like a starship taking off from a nearby field. Kithri and the others scrambled to their feet. The shaking escalated sharply. The room shivered, slid sideways with a stomach-twisting jerk, and shivered again.
Earthquake!
“Let’s get out of here!” Eril shouted. “Fast!” He yelled at Raerquel to open the door.
But the gastropoid scientist sat as if glued to the floor. Its thick head section wavered back and forth as it spoke. “Be calming yourselves until this activity has subsided and further information is forthcoming.”
Eril did not feel in the least calm as the room rocked again, rolling and swaying. Legs braced and apart, he rode the next wave. His skin felt cold and prickly. He tasted a familiar tang like the thrill before a battle broke loose.
“Our dwelling constructions are possessing considerable elastic properties.” Raerquel continued in its expressionless voice. “Only detachable external ornamentations present any immediate danger. Whatever the cause of this disturbance, the greatest protection lies within these walls.
“Elastic properties” — that was so much comet dust! Eril knew glass when it saw it and he’d been through the Academy’s survival drills. Even the doorways — if they could find them — wouldn’t provide decent protection in an earthquake. Any moment now, the walls would crack and shatter under the strain. They’d be buried under tons of splintered crystal. And, despite its infuriating calm, Raerquel would be buried along with them. The slug wasn’t going to do a damned thing to save them!
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