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
"We're at least as strange to them as they are to us."
"I'd rather not have them know you can talk," Keff said
thoughtfully.
"But they already know I can speak independently. I
talked to Brannel while you were unconscious. Unless he
thought you were having an out-of-body experience."
"Supposing Brannel had the nerve to approach our
magicians, he wouldn't be able to explain the voice he
heard. He was gutsy with me, but you'll notice on the
screen that he's staying well out of the way of the
chair-riders. They're in charge and he's a mere peon."
"He is scared of them," Carialle agreed. "Remember
how he explained punishment came from the mountains
when one of his people is too curious. It's no problem for
them to dispense punishment. They're endlessly creative
when it comes to going on the offensive."
"Contrariwise, I take leave to doubt that any of the
magicians would give him a hearing if he did come forward
with the information. There's a big crowd of Brannel's folk
out there on the perimeter and the wizards haven't so
much as glanced their way. No one pays the least attention
to the peasants. Your secret is still safe. That's why I want
you to keep quiet unless need arises."
"All right," Carialle said at last. 'Til keep mumchance.
But, if you're in danger... I don't know what I'll do."
"Agreed." And Keff shot her column an approving grin.
"Let's test the system," Carialle said. The small screen to
the right of the main computer lit up with a line diagram of
Keffs body. He rose and stood before it, holding his arms
away from his sides to duplicate the posture.
'Testing," he said. "Mah, may, mee, mo, mu. The quick
brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. Maxwell-Corey is a
fardling, fossicking, meddling moron." He repeated the
phrases in a subvocal whisper. Small green lights in the
image's cheeks lit up.
"Got you," Carialles voice said in his ear. Lights for the
mastoid implants clicked on, followed by the fiber optic
pickups implanted in the skin at the outer comers of his
eyes. "I'm not trusting the contact buttons alone. The
lightning earlier knocked them out for a while." Heart,
respiration, skin tension monitors in his chest cavity and
the muscles of his thighs lighted green. The lights flicked
out and came on again as Carialle did double backup tests.
"You're wired for sound and ready to go. I can see, hear,
and just about feel anything that happens to you."
"Good," Keffsaid, relaxing into parade rest. "Our guest
is waiting."
"Here comes the stranger."
Keffs implant translated Asedow's comment as he
stepped outside. He assumed the same air of dignity that
Chaumel displayed and walked to the bottom of the ramp.
He paused, wondering if he should stay there, which gave
him a psychological advantage over his visitor who had to
look up at him. Or join the fellow on the ground as a mark
of courtesy. With a smile, he sidestepped. Chaumel backed
up slightly to make room for him. Face-to-face with the silver magician, Keff raised his hand, palm out.
"Greetings," he said. "I am Keff."
The eyewitness report had been correct, Chaumel realized with a start. The stranger was one of them. The
oddest thing was that he did not recognize him. There
were only a few hundred of the caste on all of Ozran. A
family of mages could not conceal a son like this one,
grown to mature manhood and in possession of such an
incredible power-focus as the silver cylinder.
"Greetings, high one," Chaumel said politely, with the
merest dip of a nod. "I am Chaumel. You honor us with
your presence."
The man cocked his head, as if listening to something
far away, before he responded. Chaumel sensed the faintest hint of power during the pause, and yet, as Nokias had
informed him, it did not come from die Core of Ozran.
When at last he spoke, the strangers words were arranged
in uneducated sentences, mixed with the odd word of
gibberish.
"Welcome," he said. "It is ... my honor meet you."
Chaumel drew back half a pace. The truth was that the
stranger did not understand the language. What could possibly explain such an anomaly as a mage who used power
that did not come from the core of all and a man of Ozran
who did not know the tongue?
The stranger seemed to guess what he was thinking and
continued although not ten words in twenty made sense.
And the intelligible was unbelievable.
"I come from the stars," Keffsaid, pointing upward. He
gestured behind him at the brainship, flattened his hand
out horizontally, then made it tip up and sink heel first
toward the ground. "I flew here in the, er, silver house. I
come from another world."
"... Not. . . here," Chaumel said. IT missed some of
the vocabulary but not the sense. He beckoned to Keff,
turned his back on the rest of his people.
"You don't want me to talk about it here?" Keffsaid in a
much lower voice.
"No," Chaumel said, with a cautious glance over his
shoulder at the other two Big Mountain Men. "Come . . .
mountain ... me." IT rewound the phrase and restated the
translation using full context. "Come back to my mountain
with me. We'll talk there."
"No, thanks," Keffsaid, with a shake of his head. "Let's
talk here. It's all right. Why don't you ask the others-uh!"
"Keff!" Carialle's voice thudded against his brain. He
knew then why all the Noble Primitives were so submissive and eager to avoid trouble. Chaumel had taken a
gadget like a skinny flashlight from a sling on his belt and
jabbed it into Keffs side. Fire raced from his rib cage up
his neck and through his backbone, burning away any control he had over his own muscles. For the second time in
as many hours, he collapsed bonelessly to the ground. The
difference this time was that he remained conscious of
everything going on around him. Directly in front of his
eyes, he saw that, under the hem of his ankle-length robe,
Chaumel wore black and silver boots. They had very thick
soles. Even though the ground under his cheek was dry,
dust seemed not to adhere to the black material, which
appeared to be some kind of animal hide, maybe skin from
a six-pack. He became aware that Carialle was speaking.
"... Fardle it, Keff! Why didn't you stay clear of him? I
know you're conscious. Can you move at all?"
Chaumel s feet clumped backward and to one side, out
from Keffs limited field of vision. Suddenly, the ground
shot away. Unable to order his muscles to move, Keff felt
his head sag limply to one side. He saw, almost disinterest-edly, that he was floating on air. It felt as if he were being
carried on a short mattress.
Unceremoniously, Keff was dumped off the invisible
mattress onto the footrest of Chaumel s chariot, his head
tilted at an uncomfortable upward angle. The magician
stepped inside the U formed by Keifs body and sat down
on the ornamented throne. The whole contraption rose
suddenly into the air.
Telekinesis," Keff muttered into the dental implant.
He found he was slowly regaining control of his body. A
finger twitched. A muscle in his right calf contracted. It
tingled. Then he was aware that the chair was rising above
the fields, saw the upper curve of the underground cavern
in which Brannel's people lived, the mountains beyond,
very high, higher than he thought.
"Good!" Carialles relief was audible. "You're still connected. I thought I might lose the links again when he hit
you with that device."
"Wand," Keff said. He could move his eyes now, and he
fixed them on the silver magicians belt. "Wand."
"It looked like a wand. Acted more like a cattle prod."
There was a momentary pause. "No electrical damage. It
seems to have affected synaptic response. That is one
sophisticated psi device."
"Magic," Keff hissed quietly.
"We'U argue about that later. Can you get free?"
"No," Keff said. "Motor responses slowed."
"Blast and damn it, Galahad! I can't come and get you.
You're a hundred meters in the air already. All right, I can
track you wherever you're going."
Carialle was upset. Keff didn't want her to be upset, but
he was all but motionless. He managed to move his head
to a slightly more comfortable position, panting with the
strain of such a minor accommodation. Empathic and
psionic beings in the galaxy had been encountered before,
but these people s talents were so much stronger than any
other. Keff was awed by a telekmetic power strong enough
to carry the chair, Chaumel, and him with no apparent
effort. Such strength was beyond known scientific reality.
"Magic," he murmured.
"I do not believe in magic," Carialle said firmly. "Not
with all this stray electromagnetic current about."
"Even magic must have physics," Keff argued.
"Bah." Carialle began to run through possibilities, some
of which bordered a trifle on die magic she denied, but
something which would bring Keff back where he
belonged-inside her hull-and both of them off this
planet as soon as her paralysis, like Keffs, showed any signs
of wearing off.
Brannel hid alone in the bushes at the far end of the
field, waiting to see if Mage Keff came out again. After
offering respect to the magelords, the rest of his folk had
taken advantage of the great ones' disinterest in them and
rushed home to where it was warm.
The worker male was curious. Perhaps now that the
battle was over, the magelords would go away so he could
approach Keff on his own. To his dismay, the high ones
showed no signs of departing. They awaited the same
event he did: the emergence of Magelord Keff. He was
awestruck as he watched Chaumel the Silver approach the
great tower on foot. The mage waited, eyes on the
tight-fitting door, face full of the same anticipation Brannel
felt.
Keff did not come. Perhaps Keff was making them all
play into his hands. Perhaps he was wiser than the
magelords. That would be most satisfyingly ironic.
Instead, when Keff emerged and exchanged words with
the mage, he suddenly collapsed. Then he was bundled
onto the chariot of Chaumel the Silver and carried away.
All Brannels dreams of freedom and glory died in that
instant. All the treasures in the silver tower were now out
of his reach and would be forever.
He muttered to himself all the way back to the cave.
Fralim caught him, asked him what he was on about.
"We ought to follow and save Magelord Keff."
"Save a mage? You must be mad," Fralim said. "It is
night. Come inside and go to sleep. There will be more
work in the morning."
Depressed, Brannel turned and followed the chiefs son
into the warmth.
Q CHAPTER SEVEN
"Why . . . make things more . . . harderest . . . than
need?" Chaumel muttered as he steered the chair away
from the plain. IT found the root for the missing words
and relayed the question to Keff through his ear-link.
"Why must you make things more difficult than they need
to be? I want to talk... in early..."
"My apologies, honored one," Keff said haltingly.
He had sufficiently recovered from the bolt to sit up on
the end of Chaumel s chair. The magician leaned forward
to clasp KefFs shoulder and pulled him back a few inches.
Once he looked down, the brawn was grateful for the reassuring contact. From the hundred meters Carialle had last
reported, they had ascended to at least two hundred and
were still rising. He still had no idea how it was done, but
he was beginning to enjoy this unusual ride.
The view was marvelous. The seven-meter square
where Brannel and his people laid their gathered crops
and the mound under which the home cavern lay had each
shrunk to an area smaller than Keffs fingernail. On the
flattened hilltop, the brainship was a shining figure like a
literary statuette. Nearby, the miniature chairs, each containing a colorfully dressed doll, were rising to disperse.
Keff noticed suddenly that their progress was not unat-tended. Gold and black eye spheres flanked the silver chair
as it rose higher still and began to fly in the direction of the
darkening sky. More spheres, in different colors, hung
behind like wary sparrows trailing a crow, never getting too
close. This had to be the hierarchy again, Keff thought. He
doubted this constituted an honor guard since he had gathered that Nokias and Femgal outranked Chaumel. More
on the order of keeping watch on both the Silver Mage and
the stranger. Keff grinned and waved at them.
"Hi, Mum," he said.
"It'll take you hours at that rate to reach one of those
mountain ranges," Carialle said through the implant. "I'd
like to know how long he can fly that thing before he has to
refuel or rest, or whatever."
Keff turned to Chaumel.
"Where are we ..."
Even before the question was completely out of his