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Authors: Jane Lindskold

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BOOK: Artemis Invaded
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Julyan didn't think the Old One was particularly pleased by this casual dismissal of his competence, a feeling that was confirmed when a look of fear flashed across Seamus's face, but he doubted the Dane brothers suspected anything. Although in many ways they seemed more sophisticated than Griffin, they were less sensitive to the responses of others, more unconsciously arrogant.

Perhaps Griffin would have been the same if he hadn't crashed his shuttle and needed help,
Julyan thought.
These men have arrived with their abilities unhampered. We are convenient to them, but not necessary.

At that moment, Alexander, the youngest of the three brothers, pushed a restless hand through his bronze curls and turned to the Old One.

“Would you mind if I borrowed Julyan for a few hours? I'm weary of ship's supplies. Perhaps we could catch some fresh fish or gather some berries or something.”

The Old One bowed, hands pressed against his thighs in the traditional fashion. “I would be happy to have him accompany you, seegnur. Julyan is a trained hunter and I'm sure he feels quite caged in these close quarters.”

“Wonderful!” Alexander tapped a small unit he wore on his left wrist. “Call me if you need me, brothers.”

Once they had left the subterranean complex, Julyan led the way to a cove that faced away from the town of Spirit Bay. Automatically, he scanned the waters outside of the artificial reef that protected the islands from any ships. As he expected, there were none, for the main channel used by vessels going into Spirit Bay was on the opposite side of the Haunted Islands. The cove itself was well sheltered from casual observation, one of the reasons Julyan had favored it.

“Lovely,” Alexander said when they arrived. “A perfect summer picnic spot. I suppose the fishing is good?”

“Usually is,” Julyan said, putting down his pack and removing hooks and lines. Next, he cut and trimmed slender saplings to use as rods. Alexander let him do all the work, but Julyan didn't mind. He liked showing off his competence, something he had been given far too little opportunity to do of late.

Alexander waited until Julyan had put his knife away and was attaching the line to the rod before rising from the grassy knoll upon which he had been lounging. “You are very competent, Julyan Hunter. I hope when we need to recruit other assistants they will be as good.”

Julyan paused in the act of baiting his hook. “Other assistants? Won't your machines and devices serve better than humans?”

“For many things,” Alexander agreed. “However, for some things only living beings will do.”

He accepted the rod Julyan handed to him, then said, his voice so deliberately casual that Julyan felt alarmed, “Before we do our recruiting, I need to test my own research. Siegfried and Falkner have their doubts, but I think…”

The next phrase Alexander spoke meant nothing and yet everything to Julyan. It wasn't very long, perhaps seven clipped syllables, but the effect was instantaneous. Julyan felt as if a new sense had awoken in him, simultaneously making him more alert and yet curiously without volition.

“You await my command,” Alexander said.

“Of course,” Julyan said. He continued preparing his fishing line, but knew without a doubt that if Alexander told him to stop, he would without question or pause. “Does the seegnur still care to fish?”

“You may do so, but listen carefully to me. I have a few instructions. The first is that you may not tell anyone at all in any form or fashion, whether in words or sounds or writing or even through the actions of your body, what has passed and will pass between us this day. We came here. We fished. That is all. Do you understand?”

“Yes. Of course.”

Julyan felt a little hurt. Did the seegnur Alexander think him a fool?

“Now … Jump into the water.”

Julyan pushed off the bank into the water, fishing rod still in his hand. He began to sink, wondered if it was permissible to swim. While he was so wondering, he felt a strong hand grasp his hair—he had worn it in a braid that day—and pull his head above the water.

“Swim!” Alexander commanded. “Let go of the fishing rod and swim. I forbid you to drown.”

Julyan did as he was told, though he felt a trace of regret for his lost fishing gear. He could have successfully kept from drowning without dropping it. Unaware of Julyan's dismay, Alexander was laughing in wild delight.

“Get out of the water,” he said. “Strip off those wet clothes. It would not do for you to catch cold.”

Julyan stripped, meticulously removing every item of clothing. Since Alexander did not command him to do otherwise, he carefully placed the wet items on a large rock in the sunlight, where they would have a chance to dry. Then he rose, uncertain if he should return to fishing. Perhaps he should ask permission to retrieve his rod.

“Stand still,” Alexander said, “and await my … pleasure.”

He was still laughing. Julyan thought he should feel happy that the seegnur was so pleased but, in truth, his skin crawled. He'd always liked Alexander best of the three Dane brothers. Siegfried was too much like the Old One. Falkner seemed to care more for his machines than for any person. Alexander had been the one who was easy to talk with, the least likely to condescend.

“I've found it!” Alexander exulted. “Julyan, does your lore contain hints that the seegnur could control the people of Artemis if they wished?”

Julyan considered. “Less the lore than some tales within the lore. It is implied, rather than stated.”

“My family,” Alexander said, “has reason to believe that biologically we are the heirs to your seegnur. My mother has gone out of her way to assure this lineage remains pure and strong, as have others before her. You should be pleased. Your response to the phrase I spoke confirms our belief.”

“I am pleased for you, seegnur.”

Julyan
was
pleased for Alexander. At the same time, he was fully aware of how uncomfortable he was standing wet and naked. Even though the summer air was warm, he did not particularly like how he felt. He wanted to dry off before the brackish bay water stiffened on his skin. He felt oddly vulnerable, something he did not care for one bit. However, he had been specifically told to await Alexander's pleasure, so wait he must.

“Not all the seegnur knew this trick,” Alexander explained. “It would have taken too much fun out of the game, you see. However, with so few seegnur and so many Artemesians, protective measures were necessary. I'm sure you understand.”

He walked a slow circle around Julyan, then extended one hand and gently ran the tips of his nails over the skin of Julyan's right flank, extending up and over his rib cage.

“Do you like that, Julyan Hunter?”

Julyan was honest. “No. Not particularly.”

Alexander smiled a slow, cruel smile. “How you feel doesn't matter one bit to me, just as I suspect the feelings of others haven't mattered much to you. How do you feel about that?”

Honesty forced its way from Julyan's lips, although he fought to say anything else or at least keep silent. “I am frightened.”

“Good.” Alexander faced Julyan, then ran both hands over Julyan's torso, down his flanks, then up again and across the front of his body, caressing in a manner lewd and lingering. “I like that you're afraid. Now, do as I say. Await my pleasure.”

*   *   *

Adara was learning that being a world was a whole lot more complicated than she'd imagined. When she'd first realized what the strange entity invading both her dreams and her communication with Sand Shadow had to be—a gut-level revelation, rather than something coolly understood—Adara had thought of Artemis as the brain, the world her body, the whole basically an oversize variation of life as she knew it.

However, as Adara was learning, for Artemis brain and body were much more intertwined. Artemis had not simply been shut down, she had been both lobotomized and crippled. When Griffin's crash had released into the planetary ecosystem a countermeasure to the destructive nanobots, Artemis had slowly begun to awaken to self-awareness once more. Then, upon awakening, the planet had immediately found herself battling for control of herself.

“You think your attacker was something left behind from the slaughter of the seegnur and death of machines?”
Adara asked.

“Unknown, unknowable. That which was not even yet I had not the eyes to see, ears to hear, self to know. Barely born, immersed in battle, I found this self I am in the process of preservation.”

“Maybe Griffin can explain what happened,” Adara suggested, speaking aloud as had become her habit if no one else was around.

The huntress immediately sensed that Artemis was uneasy. Artemis was still incomplete. Adara could understand why, having been attacked twice in recent memory—for to Artemis, events of five hundred years ago seemed to have happened only a few months before—the planetary intelligence felt unwilling to let anyone know how vulnerable she remained.

“I won't ask directly,” Adara assured her. “Griffin's always eager to talk about his discoveries regarding the seegnur's technology. I'll ask as if I'm wondering about what we could do if something tried to take Leto over.”

The emotions coming from Artemis became more complex. Uncertainty remained, mingled with other elements. Artemis didn't like Leto, yet, at the same time, she felt highly protective of her, even possessive.

“I'll be careful,” Adara promised. “But if you've been attacked once, next time you might not be so lucky. It's possible that whatever attacked you was as weak as you were yourself. As you grow stronger, so might it.”

The equivalent of a sigh.

Adara wished the planetary intelligence would go back to talking, but often these days, Artemis resisted words as a very imprecise form of communication. Even though frustrated, Adara understood. How often had she struggled to find the words to communicate a complicated emotional state—such as her own feelings about Terrell or about Griffin? Nonetheless, Adara often found Artemis's idea/emotion combinations difficult to sort out.

The problem was a variation of what Adara had dealt with when learning to communicate with Sand Shadow. Especially when a kitten, the puma had seen every object as unique. Each tree was its own thing. There was no general class of objects called “tree.” Each animal, again, a unique entity. Only with experience had the puma learned group classifications.

Artemis had her own ideas as to how they could solve the communication problem. Her own neural network was anchored in a wide variety of mycelia—not only in the more visible mushrooms and fungi, but in tiny spores and invisible living threads. She wanted Adara and Sand Shadow to accept some of her spores into themselves. Both human and puma, accustomed as they were to thinking of fungi as agents of decay and deterioration, had balked.

In time,
Adara thought uneasily,
Artemis will surely come around. She's still reacting to her realization of how very incomplete her perceptions are. Even when she's “with” me and Sand Shadow, she's in hundreds, even thousands, of places, strengthening and expanding her net.

Over the last several days, Adara had learned just how incomplete that net was. When Artemis had discovered the gigantic hole that was Leto, Adara had believed that Artemis's linked strands of perception were much more extensive than they actually were. She had imagined a tightly woven net, girdling the globe. That was how Artemis had been designed to be. That awareness of her essential design had colored Artemis's earlier explanations.

In reality, the net's mesh was wide and loose. When Artemis communicated within herself, it was—as best Adara could comprehend—as if she stood upon various strands and called to herself. Those calls provided temporary connections but, when Artemis let them drop, the gap returned. What made Leto so disturbing was that her area was a gap too wide for Artemis to call across.

I wonder,
Adara thought,
if in the days of the seegnur, Artemis had more strands, perhaps reaching up into the skies. Then she would have called across Leto without even realizing Leto was not there. I wonder if Artemis is even more uneasy because she wonders what other gaps there might be and if she'll learn about them before they become a danger to her?

Yes. Being a world was far more difficult than Adara had ever imagined. Nonetheless, she was drawn into the experience, knotted tightly to Artemis—she and Sand Shadow both. The question was, would they expand as the net grew or would they tangle in the meshes and drown?

*   *   *

Some days after Adara and Sand Shadow departed for who knew where, Griffin arrived in Leto's complex to find the resident intelligence very agitated and Ring behaving oddly indeed.

The big man had opened one of the enormous bunkers in which various spaveks hung inert in their “squires”—complex racks that not only contained a variety of diagnostic machinery, but also would have helped a wearer to put on the complex machines.

“He arrived here shortly after dawn,” Leto said, her voice that of a petulant little girl. “I warned him off, but he opened the bunker and has been going up and down, examining the spaveks and muttering nonsense to himself. Had he actually touched a suit, I would have taken prohibitive action, but since you have let him come into the complex, I felt I must forebear.”

“I'll handle it,” Griffin promised, stepping authoritatively forward.

In truth, Griffin had no desire to bother Ring, for he had no doubt of the man's good intentions. Ring had proven repeatedly that his motivations were too complex to be easily grasped. Therefore, if Ring wanted to stare at the prototypes, then Griffin was inclined to let him do so.

To Griffin's relief, Ring slowly turned to face him, eliminating the need for open confrontation. This time, he did not cover his eyes as he so often did, but forced his slightly unfocused gaze to meet Griffin's own.

BOOK: Artemis Invaded
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