The Crystal Variation (136 page)

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Authors: Sharon Lee,Steve Miller

Tags: #Assassins, #Space Opera, #General, #Science Fiction, #Adventure, #Liaden Universe (Imaginary Place), #Fiction

BOOK: The Crystal Variation
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Jethri crossed his arms over his chest like Uncle Paitor did to show there was no joking going on, and added an out-and-out frown, for good measure.

The ginger-haired Scout drew himself up as tall as he could and delivered a respectable glare.

“The Scouts have jurisdiction in this. You will relinquish the dangerous device to me immediately.”

Jethri kept the frown in place. “Prove it,” he said.

The ginger eyebrows pulled together. “What?”

“Prove that the device is dangerous,” Jethri said.

The Scout stared.

“Well,” Lady Maarilex said, still leaning on her cane across next to the door. “I see that this may be amusing, after all. Miandra, child, help me to the chair, of your goodness. If you please, gentlemen—a moment.”

“Yes, Aunt Stafeli.” Miandra leapt up and moved to the old lady’s side, solicitously guiding her the first of the blue chairs, and seeing her seated.

“Yes—ah. A pillow for my back, child—my thanks.” Lady Maarilex leaned back in the chair and put her cane by. Miandra took a step toward the couch— “Bide,” Lady Maarilex murmured, and Miandra drifted back to stand at the side of the chair, hands folded demurely, her pendant—Jethri blinked. There was something odd about her pendant, like it was—

“Now,” said Lady Maarilex, “the play may continue. The line is yours, Lieutenant. You have been challenged to prove that the device is dangerous. How will you answer?”

For a heartbeat, the Scout said nothing, then he bowed, very slightly, to the old woman in the chair, and glared up into Jethri’s face.

“The device described by Lord Ren Lar Maarilex as being in the possession of the Terran Jethri Gobelyn is unquestionably of the forbidden technology. The form and appearance of such things are well known to the Scouts, and, indeed, to Lord Maarilex, who has attended several seminars offered by the Scouts on the subject of the Old War and its leavings.”

“Adequate,” commented Lady Maarilex, “but will it compel your opponent?”

Jethri shrugged. “I admit that the device is old technology,” he told Lieutenant yo’Shomin. “You, sir, stated that it is
dangerous
, an assertion you have not yet proved.”

The Scout smiled. “It called the wind-twist, did it not? I think we may all agree that wind-twists are dangerous.”

“Undoubtedly, wind-twists are dangerous,” Jethri said. “But you merely put yourself in the position of needing to prove that the device created the wind-twist—and I do not believe you can do that, sir.”

“No?” The Scout’s smiled widened. “The weather charts describe a most unusual wind pattern, spontaneously forming from conditions antithetical to those required to birth a wind-twist—and yet a wind-twist visited the Maarilex vineyard, a very short time after you were seen experimenting with the forbidden technology.”

“I was the one,” Miandra said, quietly, from the side of the chair, “who touched the icon for ‘wind-twist’.”

“And yet,” Jethri countered, keeping his eyes on the Scout’s face, “wind-twists do sometimes arrive out of season. I wonder if the same weather pattern anomaly was present on those past occasions, as well.”

“Well played!” Lady Maarilex applauded from the blue chair. “Bravo!”

The Scout glowered. “Certainly, they would be,” he snapped. “Out of season wind-twists must obey the same rule that forms all wind-twists.”

“Then you agree,” Jethri pursued, “that, unless it was proven in the case of all out-of-season wind-twists that they were every one created by grubby Terrans playing with old technology, it is as least just as likely—if not more likely—that the device which I own, and which was given me by a kinsman, is a
predictor
, rather than an agent to form weather.”

Not bad, he congratulated himself, though, truth told, he didn’t quite buy in to his own argument . . .

“This is a waste of my time,” the Scout snarled. “You may well have possession of a device that cures blindness, restores lost youth, and everything else that is wholly beneficial—and
still
it would be forfeit! Forbidden technology is
forbidden
, in all its manifestations.”

So much for that
, Jethri thought.
You didn’t really think this was gonna work, did you kid?

Truth told, he hadn’t. On the other hand, it was a poor trader who admitted defeat so easily. What was it Uncle Paitor had said? About keeping your opposite in a trade uncertain on his feet, to your best profit?

Jethri inclined his head and changed the ground.

“I am a Terran citizen,” he said.

“Ah,” Lady Maarilex murmured.

“As anyone can see,” the Scout replied, nastily. “However, the point is unimportant. You are currently in Liaden space and are subject to Liaden law and regulations.”

“Hah!” said Lady Maarilex.

Jethri raised a hand. “I am a Terran citizen and the device you wish to confiscate is a gift from a kinsman. Thus far, I have only your assertion that the confiscation of old technology falls into the duty of the Scouts. I will see the regulation in question before I relinquish what is mine.” He lowered his hand. “Nor will I relinquish it to you, sir.”

“You. . .” the lieutenant breathed and Jethri could see him tally up the insult and store it away for later Balancing. Much luck to him.

“I will relinquish the device—if it is proved that I must relinquish it at all—to Scout Captain Jan Rek ter’Astin.”

There was a long moment of silence, strongly tinged with disbelief.

“Scout Captain ter’Astin is a field Scout,” the lieutenant said, with a slight edge of distaste on the word
field
. “It will take some time to locate him, during which time the device will remain a danger to us all.”

“Scout Captain ter’Astin was seen as soon as Day sixty-six at Kailipso Station, and I am persuaded that you will find him there still, for he had just recently been transferred,” Jethri countered.

“Send for him,” Miandra said, sharp and unexpected. “Jethri will swear not to use the device until the captain comes to claim it. And it will be better to give it over into the hands of a field Scout than a man who prefers the comforts of the regulations and his own bed—and who cares not to associate with
beastly Terrans
.”

The Scout gaped at her.

“Do I have that correctly?” she asked, and there was a wild note to her voice that lifted the hairs up straight on Jethri’s nape.

The Scout bowed, with precision, and straightened, his ginger-colored eyes like stone. “You have that most precisely,” he said. “Dramliza.”

Jethri shivered. Miandra had just made an enemy. A powerful enemy, with her stuck to the same ball of mud and not able to lift ship out of trouble . . .

“There are no dramliz in this house,” Lady Maarilex snapped. “Merely two young Healers who are fond of parlor tricks.”

“Of course,” the Scout said cordially, and bowed once more.

“I will have the oath the
Healer
has promised for you,” he said to Jethri. “And then I will go.”

Jethri hesitated, wondering what this fellow might accept as a valid oath—and nearly laughed, despite the worry and upset in the air.

“I swear on my name—Jethri Gobelyn—that I will not use the old technological device and that I will hold it safe and harmless until such time as it is claimed by Scout Captain ter’Astin, bearing the regulation giving him the right.”

“Witnessed,” murmured Lady Maarilex.

Scout Lieutenant Fel Dyn yo’Shomin bowed. “On behalf of the Scouts, I accept your oath. Captain ter’Astin shall be summoned.”

“Good,” said Jethri. “I look forward to seeing him.”

THE SCOUT WAS GONE,
intercepted by a pale-faced Meicha at the hall door. Jethri let out a long, quiet sigh, and very carefully didn’t think about what he had just done.

“Miandra,” Lady Maarilex said, very quietly.

“Yes, aunt?”

“May I ask at what date and time you lost your wits?”

Silence.

Slowly, Jethri turned. Miandra was standing, rigid, eyes straight ahead, hands fisted at her sides. The ruby pendant swung in an arc at the end of its long silver chain.

“Your ruby,” he said, seeing it now. “It’s melted.”

Miandra shot him a look from eloquent sapphire eyes, though what they were eloquent of he couldn’t exactly have said. A bid for allies—it might be that, though what she thought he might do to divert one of Lady Maarilex’s high octane scolds, he didn’t know.

“Melted?” the old lady repeated, frowning up at Miandra. “Nonsense. Do you have idea how much heat is required to melt a—” Her voice died. Miandra closed her eyes, her mouth a white line of pinched-together lips.

“Give it to me,” Lady Maarilex said, absolutely neutral.

Eyes closed, fists at her sides, Miandra stood like a life-size doll.

“Now,” said Lady Maarilex.

Miandra wet her lips with her tongue. “If not this error, another,” she said, speaking rapidly, raggedly, her eyes screwed tight. “I cannot—Aunt Stafeli. It is—too big. I drown in it. Let it be known, and done.”

“Done it surely will be, witless child!” Lady Maarilex held out an imperious hand. “Give me the pendant!”

The last was said with enough force that Jethri felt his own muscles jerk in response, but still Miandra stood there, rigid, willfully disobedient, with tears starting to leak from beneath her long dark lashes.

It came to Jethri in that moment, that, for all she sat there stern and awful, Lady Maarilex was frightened.

“Miandra,” she said, very softly. “Child.”

Miandra turned her face away.

He had no business interfering in what he didn’t understand—and no possible right to short circuit whatever decision Miandra had made for herself. But Lady Maarilex was afraid—and he thought that whatever could scare her was something no lesser mortals ever needed to meet.

Jethri took three steps forward, caught the chain in one hand and the misshapen ruby in the other and lifted them over the girl’s head.

Miandra made a soft sound, and brought her hands up to hide her face, shoulders shaking. Jethri stepped back, feeling awkward and more than a little scared himself, and dropped the pendant into the old woman’s waiting palm.

“My thanks, young Jethri,” she said. He looked down into her eyes, but all he saw was bland politeness.

“What’s amiss, ma’am?” He asked, knowing she wouldn’t answer him, nor did she surprise him.

“Nothing more than an unseemly display by a willful child,” she said, and the pendant was gone, vanished into pocket or sleeve. “I ask that you not regard it.”

Right
. He looked at Miandra, her face still hidden in her hands. No question, Stafeli Maarilex was fearless—Miandra was no hide-me-quick, neither. Despite which, both her and her sister managed to mostly keep within the law laid down by their seniors, and answer up clear and sharp when they were asked a question. In his experience, willful disobedience wasn’t their style—though he didn’t put covert operations out of their range—no more than just standing by, crying.

“Hey,” he said, and reached out to touch her sleeve. “Miandra, are you well?”

She sniffed, shoulders tensing, then very slowly lowered her hands, her chin coming up as they went down.

“Thank you,” she said, with the dignity of a ship’s captain. “Your concern warms me.”

“Yes,” he replied. “But are you well?”

Her lips moved—he thought it might have been a smile. “As well as may be,” she answered, and seemed about to say something more, but the door came open just then and there was Meicha making her bow and announcing—

“Healer Tilba sig’Harat.”

Jethri turned and dropped back a couple steps as the Healer strode into the room: Long in the leg—relatively speaking—and gaunt, her hair done in a single pale braid, falling over her shoulder to her belt. She was dressed in regulation calling clothes, and looked a little rumpled, like she had started her shift early and was looking to end it late.

“Healer,” Lady Maarilex said, and inclined her head in welcome. “You honor us.”

Tilba sig’Harat paused just before the chair, her head to one side. “The message did say that the matter was urgent.”

“One’s son certainly believed it to be so,” Lady Maarilex replied, evenly.

So, Jethri thought, Ren Lar had called the Healers off his own board and his mother thought he’d overreacted. That could explain the particular sharpness of her tongue so far.

But it didn’t explain the fear.

“Just so,” the Healer was saying, and looked beyond Lady Maarilex to Miandra, who was standing tall now, chin up and face defiantly bland. “Miandra, your cousin has said that you told him you had held the wind-twist back from the vineyard for a period of time before its strength overcame you. Is this correct?”

Miandra inclined her head. “It is.”

“Ah. Would you care to explain this process of holding the wind back?”

Silence. Jethri, ignored, cast a quick glance aside and saw the girl lick her lips, her defiant chin losing a little altitude.

“Well?” asked the Healer, somewhat sharply. “Or is it that you cannot explain this process?”

Miandra’s chin came back up.

“It is very simple,” she said coolly. “I merely placed my will against the wind and—pushed.”

“I—see.” The Healer held up a hand. “Open for me, please.”

The chin wavered; kept its position. Miandra closed her eyes and the Healer did the same. For the space of a dozen heartbeats, there was complete silence in the parlor, then Miandra sighed and the Healer opened her eyes and bowed to Lady Maarilex.

“I see that she believes what she has said, and that she has undergone a profound disturbance of the nerves. This is entirely commonplace; wind-twists unsettle many people. The hallucination—that she held back the winds until her friends reached her side—that is less common, but not unknown. In the immediacy of peril, knowing oneself helpless to aid those whom one holds dear, the mind creates a fantasy of power in which the wind is held back, the sea is parted, the avalanche turned aside. Sometimes, the mind remains convinced even after the peril has been survived. In its way, it is a kindly affliction, which is easily dispelled by a display of the facts—in this case, a recording of the path and pattern of the wind-twist.”

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