Read The Final Key: Part Two of Triad Online
Authors: Catherine Asaro
Taquinil buried his head in his father's shoulder and wept, his small body shaking with silent sobs. Eldrin walked from the room, gently bouncing his son in his arms, pacing down the hall to the darkened living room. He searched the silent, darkened suite. No Dehya. It was probably why Taquinil's distress had returned; the ameliorating effects of her relaxed mental state were gone.
"Where is your mother?" Eldrin said, more to himself than his son. Alaj had warned him to look out for her. "Laplace,"
he said, addressing the Evolving Intelligence, or EI, that served the royal apartments. "Where is my wife?"
A well-modulated voice answered. "Pharaoh Dyhianna left about four hours ago."
Eldrin continued to walk, his head leaning against his son's head. "Where did she go?"
"I don't know," Laplace said. "However, she received a message. Do you wish to view the log of your mesh-mail?"
He stopped by a console in the living room. "Yes." If the mail had come on Dehya's private account, Laplace wouldn't show it to him. But most of her correspondence came over the account she and Eldrin shared.
Taquinil was shaking in his arms with silent sobs, unable even to cry aloud. Eldrin held him close. He didn't want Laplace to read aloud and disturb the boy, so he had the EI scroll through the mail, pausing each one long enough for Eldrin to struggle through the message. He could read well enough now to decipher most of them. Alaj's medical report had come in with specifics of Dehya's treatment and advice that she rest So why wasn't she resting? Where the hell was she?
Taquinil cried out and his small fists clenched in Eldrin's collar-length hair. "Hoshpa! The man with the bad name!"
Eldrin knew he meant Vitarex, the Aristo in his nightmares, which had spilled into Taquinil's painfully sensitive mind. Eldrin swayed back and forth, murmuring. "I won't let him get you. You're safe, Taqui." On the console, mail continued to scroll by.
"Laplace, stop." He saw the message to Dehya: a major space station had lost many of its primary systems due to a crisis in the Kyle web beyond the ability of their telops to fix. Millions of people lived on that station, and they were losing environmental systems, defenses, even port controls. They couldn't evacuate without launch bays. Dehya had been called in to fix the web before the station died.
Eldrin swore under his breath. He knew she had a duty to help, but when would she ever get to rest? This happened all too often, that she would disappear while he slept, dragged back to her work by her endless responsibilities as pharaoh. He knew she didn't want to disturb his sleep, but it unsettled him even more to awake alone.
"Was she all right when she left?" he asked. "She seemed fine," Laplace said.
Eldrin hoped so. He headed down the hall to Taquinil's room.
MaKe it stop/ Taquinil cried in his mind, please, Hoshpa.
I will, Taqui. I'll make It better. Guilt saturated Eldrin. His nightmare had done this. If only he could take his son's torments into himself and free the boy. Dehya had helped; tonight was the first time in days Taquinil had re-. laxed. But she was gone now, and so was the effect of her medicine. Every time Eldrin fell asleep, he made it worse. He could handle the nightmares; he had mental defenses to mute their effect Taquinil didn't. When he shielded the boy with his mind, his son was all right, but in sleep, Eldrin lost his ability to provide that protection. He didn't know why he was suffering these nightmares, but he feared someone he loved was in trouble, someone in his family, for they were the only ones whose minds linked strongly enough to his to affect him this way. When he slept, his barriers eased and the connection could intensify. As far as he knew, everyone in his family was fine, yet the dreams continued. Taquinil continued to tremble, his tears soaking into Eldrin's hair, and Eldrin couldn't bear his misery.
He knew what he had to do.
Eldrin returned to the living room and brought up Alaj's medical report. He memorized the details he needed, then carried Taquinil through the master bedroom and into a refresher chamber beyond. Holding his son in one arm, Eldrin took Dehya's personal air syringe out of a cabinet. Normally, someone who wasn't a doctor couldn't have a medical-grade pharmaceutical supply in her possession. But as pharaoh, Dehya had a full dispensary, all in a slender syringe that wasn't even the length of her forearm.
Eldrin could have asked Alaj to help Taquinil, but it had never worked in the past, and he had lost faith that the doctors could do anything but disappoint his son. It took a Rhon psion to protect a Rhon psion, and the only Rhon in existence were Eldrin's family. He also knew Alaj would never approve this solution. Too bad. Alaj wasn't the one whose son was in agony.
Eldrin entered the prescription Alaj had given Dehya and was relieved to find the syringe had the components needed to prepare the medicine. He wasn't certain about the dose he should use on himself; he was larger than his wife, but she had been in difficulty and he was fine. He settled on the same dose Alaj had given her and injected himself in the neck. He winced as the syringe hissed, not from any pain but because it reminded him of the doctors and their advice against using medicine without supervision. This would be all right. He had watched Alaj treat Dehya, read the doctor's report, and followed it with care.
He put away the syringe and shifted Taquinil to both arms. The small boy shivered in his embrace. Eldrin paced through the royal apartments, walking his son, murmuring comfort.
So far, no effect.
He kept walking, singing now, soft and low, a verse he had written when Taquinil was two years old:
Marvelous bright boy, Wonder of all years, Precarious joy, Miracle from tears.
He sang it over and over. The night took on a trance-like quality and his voice rolled like waves on a shore, the endless ocean of waves, lapping, lapping, rocking, soft and smooth.
Waves murmuring.
Waves rocking.
Rocking.
Eldrin sighed and settled Taquinil more comfortably in his arms. He could carry his son forever, his beloved son. If only he could heal the pain, if only he could make Taquinil's life as serene as his own...
Serene?
Not likely. Many words described his life: confusing, lonely, painfully beautifulbut "serene" wasn't one of them.
It was true, though. He felt remarkably calm.
Taquinil sighed and sagged against Eldrin. Tension drained out of his body. Immensely grateful, Eldrin closed his eyes. He wandered through the suite, less focused, aware of little
more than his relief that Taquinil's attack had passed. It surprised him that the relaxant had acted so fast; usually this soon after taking medicine, he felt only preliminary effects. He rarely needed any, though; he had top-of-the-line nanomeds in his body to maintain his health, and he almost never fell ill. He was only twenty-three and he rarely thought about growing old, but someday, when it became an issue, the meds would even delay his aging.
Taquinil began to breathe with the steady rhythm of sleep. After a few more minutes, Eldrin took him to his room and tucked him into bed. The boy settled under his covers, his face peaceful.
Joy filled Eldrin in seeing his son content. Tranquillity spread through him. He hadn't felt this good sincewell, never. No wonder Alaj had prescribed this medicine for Dehya. His wife deserved peace in her life.
Peace.
Weese.
Geese.
Fly.
Fly away.
The living room swirled in a rainbow of colors. Eldrin didn't remember coming back here. With a satisfied grunt, he dropped onto the couch and stretched out his legs. His body seemed to float A thought came dreamily to him: he could go outside to the balcony, jump off, and fly over the city. Except he didn't want to move. He felt so incredibly good. He hadn't been this happy in ages, maybe never, surely never, nothing compared to this. It was almost too much, too much, too much happiness. His mind swirled, unraveling in ecstasy, lost to the lovely, glorious night...
WaŤe up! Father, waKe up!
The words in his mind went on, such a dear sound ...
"Please." The young voice pleaded. "Father, what's wrong? Wake up! Please!"
Eldrin blearily opened his eyes. Taquinil was standing next to him, dressed in pajamas, his eyes wide as he anxiously shook Eldrin's arm. As soon as Eldrin met his gaze, Taquinil
made a choked sound and climbed up next to him. Confused and groggy, Eldrin put his arm around his son's shoulders and peered around. He was sprawled on the couch, his body slumped against the white cushions. Light from the Sun Lamp streamed through a window at an angle that suggested it was early morning in the thirty-hour cycle of the space habitat's day.
Eldrin sighed. So beautiful a day. He squeezed Taquinil's shoulders. "Don't be scared. I took some medicine last night, that's all. It made me sleepy."
Taquinil curled against his side. "I thought you were sick."
"I'm fine. Really." Eldrin leaned his head back and closed his eyes. The world flowed around him...
"time to eat," Taquinil prodded. "Come on, Hoshpa."
Eldrin lifted his head, blinking and unfocused. Taquinil wasn't snuggled against him anymore. In fact, the boy was standing in front of him, dressed in dark blue trousers and a lighter blue pullover. His shoes peeked out from beneath his trousers.
Eldrin tried to focus. "How are you feeling?" "Fine, Hoshpa." Taquinil looked much calmer. "Good." Eldrin rubbed his eyes. "Have you had breakfast?"
"An hour ago." Taquinil's forehead furrowed. "You should eat. That medicine makes you too sleepy."
Eldrin sat up and rested his elbows on his knees. He grinned at his son. "You're a delightful sight for your hoshpa's eyes."
Taquinil blushed and smiled. "Come on." He took Eldrin's hand. "I'll make you breakfast."
Eldrin wondered if other people's six-year-olds spoke this way. He had no formal education in childhood development, but he was the oldest of ten children, and none of his siblings had been like this. Taquinil had a boy's voice, but sometimes he sounded more like an adult than some adults. From the effusive comments of the boy's tutors, Eldrin gathered that most children didn't learn to read before they were two. Lyshrioli natives didn't read at all. He didn't know many Skolian children, and Taquinil's handful of friends were older than him, which made it hard to judge. Besides, royal
tutors always praised royal children. That had certainly been true for Eldrin, even when he didn't deserve it He did know that Taquinil could read and write much better than he, and that the boy understood more math than Eldrin would probably ever know. He didn't have a good sense of how far above the norm Taquinil was, but it made him proud to have a smart son.
"My thanks, young man," Eldrin said. As he stood up, the room swirled around him. It had settled down from last night though, and from his dreams, which had floated in a blissful fog. He let out a satisfied breath. "I feel good."
Holding his son's hand, he went to the kitchen. He walked by the wine cabinet with barely a thought for a drink. And if his head was beginning to ache and his pulse to stutter in odd ways as the medicine wore off, well, that would go away soon, he felt certain.
Surely he had nothing to worry about.
1
Reunion
Starship engines. Soz considered them the sexiest subject at DMA, the Dieshan Military Academy. Full-color holos of an inversion engine rotated above the media table. She highlighted the fuel selector in purple, the cooling coils in green, and the engine column in white. Her course in Jag engineering was sheer pleasure. It almost let her forget the threat of war that loomed over her people. Almost.
"Look at you," Soz crooned. "Beautiful engine."
A laugh rumbled nearby. "Maybe if you treated your dates that way, you'd have more success with men."
She looked up with a jerk. Jazar Orand was leaning against a console with his muscular arms crossed and his dark hair sleek against his head. At nineteen, he was a year older than Soz. Last year they had entered the Dieshan Military Academy together, but since then she had skipped more than a year ahead. With him giving her such a cocky look, she was tempted to tell him that he had to salute her now that she was an upper-class cadet. But, of course, they were in the library. The DMA powers-that-be had ruled the library exempt from that regulation because it interfered with the ability of the younger students to study.
"My dates aren't as sexy as this engine," Soz said. Or as sexy as Jazar, but she was trying not to think about that. At the academy, fraternization was grounds for expulsion.
Jazar laughed amiably. "You know, I've always wondered why someone as good-looking and well-connected as you has so much trouble with men. It's no wonder, if you go around telling your dates they aren't as desirable as a bunch of machinery."
She crossed her arms. "Did you come here to analyze my love life?"
His grin flashed. "No, but it wouldn't take long." "Jaz, I swear"
He held out his hands in surrender. "Don't attack." Soz glared at him.
"You have a visitor," he added. "A girl." She couldn't think of any girls who would visit her. "Where?"
"In one of the common rooms. I asked around. People said she came to see you. I offered to let you know."
She considered him warily. "Jazar Orand, I am sensing ulterior motives here."
"Well" He scratched his ear. "I was hoping you would introduce me."
"Whatever for?"
"Oh for flaming sakes, Soz, you really are dense sometimes."
"Yes, well, I'm densely not going to introduce you to my visitor." Apparently this "girl" was older than she had thought. She told herself she wasn't bothered by his interest. At least arguing with Jazar was better than dwelling on the bigger reason for her loneliness, the unwanted isolation she had endured since her father had disowned her. In such a close-knit family, it was like having a part of herself cut away. She feared she would never again see her home or the members of her family that lived there.
"Come on," he coaxed. 'Tell her I'm your great friend."