Authors: Anne McCaffrey,Jody Lynn Nye
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Adventure, #Space Opera, #Science Fiction, #Interplanetary voyages, #Space ships, #Life on other planets, #Interplanetary voyages - Fiction, #Fantasy fiction, #People with disabilities, #Women, #Space ships - Fiction, #Women - Fiction
Femgal, magical ones. There is a silver cylinder in the crop
fields among the workers. It is huge, High Mage, as large
as a tower. I do not know how it got mere! There is a man
nearby and... I do not know this person."
Iranika cackled to herself. The other spy-eyes spun on
hers, pupils dilated to show the fury of their operators.
"You knew about it all the time, old woman," Potria said,
accusingly.
"I detected it many hours ago," Iranika said, maddeningly coy. "I told you there had been strange movement in
the ley lines, but did you listen? Did you think to check for
yourselves? I have been watching. The great silver cylinder
fell through the sly with fire at its base. A veritable flying
fortress. It is a power object of incredible force. The man
who came from within has been consorting with Klemays
peasants."
"He is not tied to the Core of Ozran," Nokias declared
after a moments concentration, "and so he is not a mage.
That will make him easy to capture. We will find out who
he is and whence he comes. Lend me your eyes, Dyrene.
Open to me."
"I obey, lord," the tinny voice said.
Concentrating on his target, the Mage of the South laid
his left hand across his right wrist to activate the Great
Ring, and raised both hands toward the window. A bolt of
crackling, scarlet fire lanced from his fingertips into the
sly.
"He falls, High Mage," Dyrene reported.
"I must see this stranger for myself," Iranika said. Without asking for leave, her spy-eye rose toward the great
window.
"Wait, high ones!" Dyrene called. "A peasant moves the
strangers body. He carries it toward the silver tower." After
a moment, when all the spy-eyes hovered around Dyrene s
sphere, "It is sealed inside."
Iranika groaned.
"I want this silver cylinder," Asedow said in great excitement. "What forces it would command! High Mage, I
claim it!"
"I challenge you, Asedow," Potria shrilled at once. "I
claim both the tower and the being."
Other voices raised in the argument: some supporting
Potria, some Asedow, while there were even a few clamor-ing for their right to take possession of the new artifacts.
Nokias ignored these. Potria and Asedow would be permitted to make the initial attempt. Subsequent challengers
would take. on the winner, if Nokias himself did not claim
liege right to the prizes.
'The challenge is heard and witnessed," Nokias declared,
shouting over the din. He raised the hand holding the Great
Ring. With a squawk, Plenna sent her spy-eye to take refuge
underneath Nokias s floating chair and warded the windows
of her mountain home. Humming, scarlet power beams
lanced in through Nokias s open window, one from each of
the two mages in their mountain strongholds. They struck
together in a crashing explosion sealed by the Great Ring.
"And the contest begins."
All the eyes flew out of the arching stone casement
behind the challengers to have a look at the objects of contention.
"It is bigger than huge," Plennafrey observed, spiraling
her eye around and around the silver tower. "How beautiful it is!"
'There are runes inscribed here," Iranikas old voice
said. Plennafrey felt the faint pull of the old woman trying
to attract attention, and followed the impulse to the red
spy-eye floating near the broad base. "Come here and see.
I have not seen anything in all my archives which resemble
these."
"I spy, with my little eye, an enigma of huge and significant proportions," Nokias said, his golden sphere hovering
behind them as they tried to puzzle out the runes.
"It is a marvelous illusion," Howet said, streaking back a
distance to take in the whole object. "How do I know this
isn't a great trick by Femgal? Metal and fire-thats no
miracle. High Mage. I can build something like this myself."
"It is most original in design," Noldas said.
"Femgal hasn't the imagination," Potria protested.
"Its lovely," Plenna said, admiring the smooth lines.
Iranika sputtered. "Lovely but useless!"
"How do you know?" Potria snapped.
While her servos were taking care of Keff, Carialle kept
vigil on the mountain range to the south. No rain was falling, so where had that lightning, if it was lightning, come
from? An electrical discharge of that much force had to
have a source. She didn't read anything appropriate in that
direction, not even a concentration of conductive ore in
the mountains that could act as a natural capacitor. The
fact that the bolt had fallen so neatly at Keffs feet suggested deliberate action.
The air around her felt ionized, empty, almost brittle.
After the bolt had struck, the atmosphere slowly began
to return to normal, as if the elements were flowing like
water filling in where a stone had hit the surface of a
pond.
Her sensors picked up faint rumbling, and the air
around her drained again. This time she felt a wind blowing hard toward the mountain range. Suddenly the scarlet
bolts struck again, two jagged spears converging on one
distant peak. Then, like smithereens scattering from under
a blacksmiths hammer, minute particles flew outward
from the point of impact toward her.
She focused quickly on the incoming missiles. They
were too regular in shape to be shards of rock, and also
appeared to be flying under their own power, even increasing in speed. The analysis arrived only seconds before the
artifacts did, showing perfect spheres, smooth and vividly
colored, with one sector sliced off the front of each to show
a lenslike aperture. Strangely, she scanned no mechanisms
inside. They appeared to be hollow.
The spheres spiraled around and over her, as if some
fantastic juggler was keeping all those balls in the air at
once. Carialle became aware of faint, low-frequency transmissions. The spheres were sending data back to some
source. She plugged the IT into her external array.
Her first-assumption-that the data was meant only for
whatever had sent each-changed as she observed the
alternating-pattern of transmission and the faint responses
to the broadcasts from the nontransmitting spheres. They
were talking to each other. By pinning down the frequency, she was able to hear voices.
Using what vocabulary and grammar Keff had recorded
from Brannel and the others, she tried to get a sense of the
conversation.
The IT left long, untranslatable gaps in the transcript.
The Ozran language was as complex as Standard. Keffhad
only barely begun to analyze its syntax and amass vocabulary. Carialle recorded everything, whether she understood
it or not.
"Dam you, Keff, wake up," she said. This was his spe-cialty. He knew how to tweak the IT, to adjust the
arcane device to the variables and parameters of language. The snatches of words she did understand
tantalized her.
"Come here," one of the colored balls said to the others
in a high-pitched voice. "... (something) not . . . like
(untranslatable)."
"... (untranslatable) . . . how do ... know . . ." Carialle
heard a deep masculine voice say, followed by a word
Brannel had been using to refer to Keff, then another
unintelligible sentence.
"... (untranslatable)."
"How do you know?"
An entire sentence came through in clear translation.
Carialle perked up her audio sensors, straining to hear
more. She ordered the servo beside the weight bench to
nudge Keffs shoulder.
"Keff. Keff, wake up! I need you. You have to hear this.
Aargh!" She growled in frustration, the bass notes of her
voice vibrating die tannoy diaphragms. "We get a group of
uninhibited, fluent native speakers, situated who knows
where, and you're taking a nap!"
The strange power arcs that she had sensed when they
first landed were stronger now. Did that power support the
hollow spheres and make them function? Whoever was
running the system was using up massive power like air:
free, limitless, and easy. She found it hard to believe it
could be the indigenous Noble Primitives. They didn't
have anything more technologically advanced than beast
harness. Carialle should now look for a separate sect, the
"overlords" of this culture.
She scanned her planetary maps for a power source and
was thwarted once again by the lack of focus. The lines of
force seemed to be everywhere and anywhere, defying
analysis. If there had been less electromagnetic activity in
the atmosphere, it would have been easier. Its very abundance prevented her from tracing it. Carialle was
fascinated but nervous. With Keff hurt, she'd rather study
the situation from a safer distance until she could figure
out who was controlling things, and what with.
No time to make a pretty takeoff. On command, Carialle's servo robots threw their padded arms across Keffs
forehead, neck, chest, hips, and legs, securing him to the
weight bench. Carialle started launch procedures. None of
the Noble Primitives were outside, so she wouldn't scare
them or fry them when she took off. The flying eye-balls
would have to shift for themselves. She kicked the engines
to launch.
Everything was go and on green. Only she wasn't
moving.
Increasing power almost to the red line, she felt the
heat of her thrusters as they started to slag the mineral-heavy clay under her landing gear, but she hadn't risen a
centimeter.
"What kind of fardling place is this?" Carialle
demanded. "What's holding me?" She shut down thrust,
then gunned it again, hoping to break free of the invisible
bonds. Shut down, thrust! Shut down, thrust! No go. She
was trapped. She felt a rising panic and sharply put it down.
Reality check: this could not be happening to a ship other
capabilities.
Carialle ran through a complete diagnostic and found
every system normal. She found it hard to believe what her
systems told her. She could detect no power plant on this
planet, certainly not one strong enough to hold her with
thrusters on full blast. She should at least have felt a twitch
as such power cut in. Some incredible alien force of
unknown potency was holding her surface-bound.
"No," she whispered. "Not again."
Objectively, the concept of such huge, wild power controlled with such ease fascinated the unemotional,
calculating part of Carialle's mind. Subjectively, she was
frightened. She cut her engines and let them cool.
Rescue from this situation seemed unlikely. Not even
Simeon had known their exact destination. Sector R was
large and unexplored. Nevertheless, she told herself
staunchly, Central Worlds had to be warned about the
power anomaly so no one else would make the mistake of
setting down on this planet. She readied an emergency
drone and prepared it to launch, filling its small memory
with all the data she and Keff had already gathered about
Ozran. She opened the small drone hatch and launched it.
Its jets did not ignite. The invisible force held it as firmly as
it did her.
Frequency analysis showed that an uncapsuled mayday
was unlikely to penetrate the ambient electromagnetic
noise. Even if she could have gotten one in orbit, who was
likely to hear it in the next hundred years? She and Keff
were on their own.
"Ooooh." A heartfelt groan from the exercise equipment announced Keffs return to consciousness.
"How do you feel?" she asked, switching voice location
to the speaker nearest him.
"Horrible." Keff started to sit up but immediately
regretted any upward movement. A sharp, seemingly
pointed pain like a saw was attempting to remove the rear
of his skull. He put a hand to the back of his head, clamped
his eyes shut, then opened them as wide as he could, hoping to dispel his fuzzy vision. His eyelids felt thick and
gritty. He took a few deep breaths and began to shiver.
"Why is it cold in here, Can? I'm chilled to the bone."
"Ambient temperature of this planet is uncomfortably
low for humans," Carialle said, brisk with relief at his
recovery.
"Brrr! You're telling me!" Keff slid his legs around and
put his feet on the ground. His sight cleared and he realized that he was sitting on his weight bench. Carialles
servos waited respectfully a few paces away. "How did I get
in here? The last thing I remember was talking to Brannel
out in the field. What's happened?"
"Brannel brought you in, my poor wounded knight. Are
you sure you're well enough to comprehend all?" Carialle s
voice sounded light and casual, but Keff wasn't fooled. She
was very upset.
The first thing to do was to dissolve the headache and
restore his energy. Pulling an exercise towel over his shoulders like a cape and moving slowly so as not to jar his head
more than necessary, Keff got to the food synthesizer.
"Hangover cure number five, and a high-carb warm-up," he ordered. The synthesizer whirred obediently. He
drank what appeared in the hatch and shuddered as it