Mouse and Dragon (26 page)

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Authors: Sharon Lee,Steve Miller

Tags: #Science Fiction

BOOK: Mouse and Dragon
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There was a general mutter, a moan of "My ankle . . ." and that quickly the bag was in Daav's hand and five of them backing away.

"But what about
him
?" demanded a voice from the rear. "The proctors will have business with
him
, bringing that perversion here!"

"We will take care of the pilot," Aelliana heard her voice assert. She bit her lip.

"I suggest," Daav said, stepping to her side, "that you disperse. One of your number has injured herself and requires medical attention. That is your first order of business and your closest concern. These other matters will be taken care of appropriately."

Perhaps it was the absolute certainty of Daav's voice; perhaps it was the continued whimpering of their downed comrade. Whichever, the crowd faded away, and very shortly they were alone in the alley with the wounded pilot.

"Thank you, Scouts, thank you . . . I am in your debts . . ."

The pilot thrust clumsily to his feet, slamming his uninjured arm against the wall with no regard for bruises. He extended an unsteady hand.

"I'll be off now. I swear, we will be off-planet before dawn, and never come back here. Just be good enough to hand me the case—"

"You're wounded!" Aelliana protested. "Daav, we must find him a medic!"

There was a small pause, then Daav went to one knee on the alley floor. He opened the top of the case, just a little, and peered inside. A furry hand crept over the edge, and gripped his finger.

The wounded pilot whined, high and futile in the back of his throat.

Daav sighed.

"You're quite safe," he told the bag, at his most matter-of-fact. "Recruit yourself now and allow us to do what must be done."

He closed the bag and swept gracefully to his feet. The glance he spared for wounded pilot was . . . not kind.

"My pilot and I will escort you to the Healers," he said, which, Aelliana thought, was sensible. The Healers would have an autodoc, and it was plain that the pilot had sustained other, less visible injuries. He shook where he stood, and his posture was of one who expected a blow to fall at any moment. Aelliana swallowed against a sudden surge of tears. So had she been, and look what wonders the Healers had wrought for her.

"There is sense in what the Scout says," she said gently. "Come, let us go to the top of the street and hail a cab."

 

The Healers kept a small house in the port; barely larger than the bakery at which she and Daav had eaten their lemon squares, hours or days ago. What they lacked in scope, however, they more than made up for in action. Scarcely had the door opened to them than the wounded pilot was whisked away upstairs, while they and the case were left to stand in a chilly parlor considerably less spacious than
The Luck's
piloting chamber.

"Perhaps," Aelliana said, when half a glass had fallen and no one had yet come to speak with them. "We should simply leave the . . . case,
van'chela
, and return to our ship."

The item under discussion was sitting on the floor against his leg. He glanced down thoughtfully. "That might, after all, be—"

"Nay, nay! The case and its contents must go, and also the noisy empath! You, my lady mathematician, are just the woman to take them both in hand!"

A thin man with a well-lined face and fading ginger-colored hair swept into the parlor, pale robes trembling about him.

"I beg your pardon?" Aelliana stammered. "We are here in aid of another pilot, and—"

"Yes, yes! It was well that you brought him to us; we can assist—but
not
until that creature is well away, and you!" He spun to stare up into Daav's face. "
You
are disrupting every Healer in the Hall!"

"My apologies to the Hall," Daav murmured.

He took a breath, closed his eyes, and seemed to—to step away from himself. Aelliana gasped, for truly he burned less vividly inside the dingy little room. He opened his eyes, and her heart cramped; his gaze was remote, as if he looked across a distance too great to bear interest, or humor, or love.

"
Daav
 . . ."

She stepped forward, hand rising—her wrist was caught by the Healer, his bony fingers surprisingly strong.

"Yes, that is well done and I thank you!" he said snappishly, apparently to Daav. "Maintain yourself thus, and give respite to those who shielded themselves in time to avoid a headache! Pilot—"

He turned to Aelliana, releasing her with a small bow. "As improbable as it seems, this man will do as you tell him. Tell him, I implore you, to take up the norbear and go away with you, back to your ship and off of Avontai, immediately!"

"We had thought," Daav said, in a too-calm voice, "to leave the norbear in the care of the House. The Healers on Liad often take charge of such strays."

"This is not the homeworld!" the Healer snapped, and sighed. "Forgive me—you are not informed. We dare not keep the creature here, Pilots. Avontai has a horror of such things as mind control—
we
are barely tolerated—and only if we are careful not to interfere too much! To hold a norbear would be to destroy the Hall. We cannot allow even such limited aid as we may offer to falter on one life—
any
life. You have interfered in an alleyway brawl, which you surely know better than—and now you must pay the price. Remove yourselves to a place of safety greater than Avontai. We have summoned a cab—go now!"

Aelliana met Daav's remote black gaze and shivered.

"What is your name?" she asked the Healer.

"I am Hall Master Ver Sev. Feel free to use my name with the Portmaster. Now, will you
go
? Every moment those two linger here is a moment that those in pain are without surcease."

She could, Aelliana thought, scarcely be so coldhearted as to remain in the face of such distress. She cleared her throat.

"Daav?"

"Aelliana, it is well," he told her in that too-calm voice.

She doubted it, but there again, if departing this place won him wholly back to her, then she wished to tarry not one heartbeat longer.

"If you please," she said, her voice hoarse. "Bring the . . . norbear and let us go."

Calmly, he bent and picked up the case.

The Master Healer sighed, noisily. "Just through there, Pilot. The cab awaits."

Carrying the case, Daav left the parlor first. As Aelliana followed him out into the foyer, she heard Master Ver Sev say, softly, "Thank you, Pilot."

 

The Luck
's hatch sealed securely behind them, and Aelliana spun, fright and confusion flaring into anger.

"Daav yos'Phelium, stand forth and tell me what has happened!"

He tipped an eyebrow; she thought his gaze was sharper now, but he maintained a reserve that was both unfamiliar and unwelcome.

"What would you know, Pilot?"

"What is that—that norbear? Why must we take it off-world? Is it dangerous? Where are we to take it?
What happened to you?
"

"A comprehensive beginning list," he murmured, and his eyes
were
sharper; his expression sardonic, his whole self coming back into focus.

"As for the norbear . . ." He dropped to one knee and opened the bag wide.

"Come out now, rogue, and show yourself to the pilot. Understand, I can do nothing if she decides to space you, or to bake you and serve you up for tea. She is the final authority here, and it is she whose patronage you must win."

As before, a small, furry hand rose to grip the side of the case. The hand rested for a moment, was joined by a second, and then a pair of round ears, a round head and large, liquid eyes. It paused with its nose level with the case, as if giving her a moment to accommodate herself.

"It understands?" she asked Daav.

"To a certain point. The questions being—which point, and whether he also
mis
understands or only ignores one."

She frowned at the creature, knelt, and tapped the deck before her with a forefinger.

"Come here, norbear."

It blinked, as if considering the request, then all at once it was scrambling out of the case, sliding and hitting the deck firmly on its rounded rump. Undeterred, it performed a graceless somersault, got all four feet oriented and bumbled toward her. It tried to stop on the spot she had indicated, but its claws got no purchase on the decking and it slid the last distance, bumped into her hand, skittered a little, and sat, one paw braced on the deck and the other on her knee.

She stared down at it. A less offensive creature would be difficult to imagine, yet neither the crowd's horror nor the Healer's fear had been feigned. It bore her scrutiny with the good humor that seemed its chiefest characteristic; not so large as a cat, nor yet so small as a mouse, its brown fur was shot with ripples of orange. Aelliana bit her lip, fighting a desire to laugh—and another, to gather it up and rub her cheek against its plush fur.

Instead, she raised her head and looked to her copilot, who was watching the proceedings with interest.

"
This
is a creature so dangerous that it must be put to death on sight, and all of its kind are banned from Avontai Port?"

"From Avontai entire, if I understood the Master Healer correctly. As for dangerous—there are some humans who are susceptible, and some of norbear kind, I expect, who are rather
loud
—"

The norbear turned its round head to regard him, as if wounded.

Daav grinned and inclined his head. "As one who is also
loud
may say without prejudice. The pilot we found was, I expect, extremely susceptible, and our rogue there has already admitted to loud."

"But—mind control?"

"Norbears are natural empaths. If you are melancholy, a norbear may help you feel . . . better. If you are frightened, a norbear may leach your fear. Someone who is in . . . a great deal of pain—as I suspect our rescued pilot was—might quickly become addicted. After all," he added softly, "there are few delights more poignant than the absence of pain."

Aelliana looked at him sharply, felt the discrete prick of claws through the fabric of her trousers and looked down.

The norbear met her eyes, and stood up on its hind legs, reaching one hand high.

Barely considering, Aelliana picked the creature up and brought it up to her shoulder, where it settled itself as if it were the most natural thing in all the worlds. It caught a disordered lock of hair in its hand and leaned companionably against her ear. There came a contented buzzing, growing slightly louder.

Aelliana looked to Daav.

"It's purring."

"Apparently he does not wish to be served up for tea."

"That's all very well, but where are we to take it? Liad?"

Daav frowned slightly.

"I think not," he said eventually. "But I may know better, later."

"Oh? And how will that be?"

"I propose to retire with our guest to the acceleration couch, to make sure of his comfort while you lift us to an outer orbit. It may be that two loud empaths will share dreams during such a time. At the very least, we may all rest once we are safely off-world, and be able to make better plans on the morrow."

Aelliana closed her eyes, feeling a certain creeping weariness.

"It has been a full evening," she said, and rose, the norbear riding her shoulder easily.

Daav rose as well, and moved toward her, face watchful.

"
What happened to me
," he said softly, "is a . . . method, somewhat like the Rainbow. It's true that my presence sometimes dismays Healers, especially those already under stress. I was not absent from you, Aelliana, only . . . at rest."

She sighed, not understanding, but lacking the energy to pursue the topic further at this moment.

"Very well, sir. If you will take our passenger and render—him?—safe and comfortable, I will call the Tower and postulate an urgent packet from Master Ver Sev at Healer Hall."

Daav smiled. "Excellent, Pilot."

 

Chapter Twenty-One

Happy is one who finds a friend on every port.

Liaden proverb
 

The norbear's name was, reportedly, Hevelin, and he had once "been employed," as Daav had it, at a Traveler's Rest or a Guild Hall, or some similar establishment, possibly in the Far Out.

Daav had the grace to admit without much prodding from her that this information, while interesting, was . . . rather vague. He had also some hours later been prompted to say that he knew of a person whom he thought "might answer." Hevelin, on the occasion of this individual being . . . 
described
to him, or
felt at
him—Aelliana sighed, for the dozenth time retreating before the problem of how one communicated with a creature that had no language, excepting an extremely nuanced vocabulary of emotion.

However it was done, Daav's description of this personified solution had excited Hevelin's interest.

Which was why they were here, on Staederport, walking, guns on belts, in the warm, slightly sticky rain, down a thin street crowded with tall Terrans. Aelliana clung to Daav's side, he being taller than she, though in comparison to the company they moved through, even he seemed . . . undergrown. Still, he had the trick of claiming space upon the walkway—a particular way of holding the shoulders, and a certain swagger in his usually smooth gait—and neither she nor the bag he carried over his shoulder were unduly jostled.

"Here we are," he murmured, turning them in toward a grey storefront like all of the others they had passed.

No, Aelliana corrected herself—not like all the others. The autoscroll over the door of this establishment read, in alternating Terran and Liaden: Guild Temp Office. Accepting Applications and Upgrades.

A buzzer sounded as they entered a small room bisected by a counter holding several screens and a large green plant.

"Be out in a sec!" a voice called from beyond the screen on the far side of the plant.

Daav put the case on the counter and propped an elbow on it. Aelliana climbed onto the tall stool at his side, resisting the temptation to lean against him. She was not, she told herself, afraid.

Perhaps, she was a little uneasy, but surely that was reasonable? Although she spoke the language—enough, at least, to be understood—she could not feel but that her grasp of culture, especially in regard to what might be held as an insult, was firm. Of course, she thought, shifting carefully on the stool, it was that way among Liadens, also. One could not hope to know the necessities of a stranger's
melant'i
, and error was always possible. It was absurd to have felt as if she was at home on Avontai, only because it was a Liaden world. She had no more call upon grace from a Liaden than a Terran.

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