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
to wait for the full analysis-"
'That would have taken hours," Keff interjected. "Our
social interaction was happening in realtime."
"Well, you certainly made an impression."
"Did you understand the Beasts Blatisant? How'd the
IT program go?" asked Simeon, changing;the subject.
IT stood for Intentional Translator, the universal
simultaneous language translation program that Keff had
started before he graduated from school. IT was in a
constant state of being perfected, adding referents and
standards from each new alien language recorded by
Central Worlds exploration teams. The brawn had more
faith in his invention than his brain partner, who never
relied on IT more than necessary. Carialle teased Keff
mightily over the mistakes the IT made, but all the
chaffing was affectionately meant. Brain and brawn had
been together fourteen years out of a twenty-five-year
mission, and were close and caring friends. For all the
badinage she tossed his way, Carialle never let anyone else
take the mickey out other partner within her hearing.
Now she sniffed. "Still flawed, since IT uses only the
symbology of alien life-forms already discpvered. Even
with the addition of the Blaize Modification for sign language, I think that it still fails to anticipate. I mean, who
the hell knows what referents and standards new alien
races will use?"
"Sustained use of a symbol in context suggests that it has
meaning," Keff argued. 'That's the basis of the program."
"How do you tell the difference between a repeated
movement with meaning and one without?" Carialle
asked, reviving the old argument. "Supposing a jellyfish's
wiggle is sometimes for propulsion and sometimes for dis-semination of information? Listen, Simeon, you be the
judge."
"All right," the station manager said, amused.
"What if members of a new race have mouths and talk,
but impart any information of real importance in some
other way? Say, with a couple of sharp poots out the
sphincter?"
"It was the berries," Keff said. 'Their diet caused the
repeating, er, repeats."
"Maybe that. . . habit. . . had some relevance in the
beginning of their civilization," Carialle said with acer-bity. "However, Simeon, once Keff got the translator
working on their verbal language, we found that at first
they just parroted back to him anything he said, like a
primitive AI pattern, gradually forming sentences, using
words of their own and anything they heard him say. It
seemed useful at first. We thought they'd leam Standard
at light-speed, long before Keff could pick up on the
intricacies of their language, but that wasn't what
happened."
'They parroted the language right, but they didn't really
understand what I was saying," Keff said, alternating his
narrative automatically with Carialle's. "No true comprehension."
"In the meantime, the flatulence was bothering him, not
only because it seemed to be ubiquitous, but because it
seemed to be controllable."
"I didn't know if it was supposed to annoy me, or if it
meant something. Then we started studying them more
closely."
The video cut from one scene to another of the skinny,
hairy aliens diving for ichthyoids and eels, which they captured with their middle pair of limbs. More footage
showed them eating voraciously; teaching their young to
hunt; questing for smaller food animals and tiiding from
larger and more dangerous beasties. Not much of the land
was dry, and what vegetation grew there was sought after
by all the hungry species.
Early tapes showed that, at first, the Beasts seemed to
be afraid of Keff, behaving as if they thought he was going
to attack them. Over the course of a few days, as he
seemed to be neither aggressive nor helpless, they
investigated him further. When they dined, he ate a meal
from his own supplies beside them.
'Then, keeping my distance, I started asking them
questions, putting a clear rising interrogative into my
tone of voice that I had heard their young use when asking for instruction. That seemed to please them, even
though they were puzzled why an obviously mature
being needed what seemed to be survival information.
Interspecies communication and cooperation was
unknown to them." Keff watched as Carialle skipped
through the data to another event. 'This was the pot-latch. Before it really got started, the Beasts ate kilos of
those bean-berries."
"Keff had decided then that they couldn't be too intelligent, doing something like that to themselves. Eating
foods that caused them obvious distress for pure ceremony's sake seemed downright dumb."
"I was disappointed. Then the IT started kicking back
patterns to me on the Beasts' noises. Then I felt downright
dumb." Keff had the good grace to grin at himself.
"And what happened, ah, in the end?" Simeon asked.
Keff grinned sheepishly. "Oh, Carialle was right, of
course. The red berries were the key to their formal communication. I had to give points for repetition of, er, body
language. So, I programmed the IT to pick up what the
Blatisants meant, not just what they said, taking in all
movement or sounds to analyze for meaning. It didn't
always work right..."
"Hah!" Carialle interrupted, in triumph. "He admits it!"
"... but soon, I was getting the sense of what they were
really communicating. The verbal was little more than protective coloration. The Blatisants do have a natural gift for
mimicry. The IT worked fine-well, mostly. The systems
just going to require more testing, that's all."
"It always requires more testing," CariaUe remarked in a
THE SHIP WHO WON 11
long-suffering voice. "One day we're going to miss something we really need."
Keff was unperturbed. "Maybe IT needs an AI element
to test each set of physical movements or gestures for
meaning on the spot and relay it to the running glossary.
I'm going to use IT on humans next, see if I can refine the
quirks that way when I already know what a being is communicating."
"If it works," Simeon said, with rising interest, "and you
can read body language, it'll put you far beyond any means
of translation that's ever been done. They'll call you a
mind-reader. Softshells so seldom say what they mean-but they do express it through their attitudes and gestures.
I can think of a thousand practical uses for IT right here in
Central Worlds."
"As for the Blatisants, there's no reason not to recommend further investigation to award them ISS status, since
it's clear they are sentient and have an ongoing civilization,
however primitive," Keff said. "And that's what I'm going
to tell the Central Committee in my report. Iricon Ill's got
to go on the list."
T wish I could be a mouse in the wall," Simeon said,
chuckling with mischievous glee, "when an evaluation
team has to talk with your Beasts. The whole party's going
to sound like a raft of untuned engines. I know CenCom's
going to be happy to hear about another race ofsentients."
"I know," Keff said, a little sadly, "but it's not the race,
you know." To Keff and Carialle, the designation meant
that most elusive of holy grails, an alien race culturally and
technologically advanced enough to meet humanity on its
own terms, having independently achieved computer science and space travel.
"If anyone's going to find the race, it's likely to be you
two," Simeon said with open sincerity.
Carialle closed the last kilometers to the docking bay and
shut off her engines as the magnetic grapples pulled her
close, and the vacuum seal snugged around the atrlock.
"Home again," she sighed.
The lights on the board started flashing as Simeon
sent a burst requesting decontamination for the CK-963.
Keff pushed back from the monitor panels and went
back to his cabin to make certain everything personal
was locked down before the decontam crew came on
board.
"We're empty on everything, Simeon," Carialle said.
"Protein vats are at the low ebb, my nutrients are redlining,
fuel cells down. Fill 'er up."
"We're a bit short on some supplies at the moment,"
Simeon said, "but I'll give you what I can." There was a
brief pause, and his voice returned. "I've checked for mail.
Keff has two parcels. The manifests are for circuits, and for
a 'Rotoflex.'What's that?"
"Hah!" said Keff, pleased. "Exercise equipment. A
Rotoflex helps build chest and back muscles without strain
on the intercostals." He flattened his hands over his ribs
and breathed deeply to demonstrate.
"All we need is more clang-and-bump deadware on my
deck," Carialle said with the noise that served her for a
sigh.
"Where's your shipment, Carialle?" Keff asked innocently. "I thought you were sending for a body from
Moto-Prosthetics."
"Well, you thought wrong," Carialle said, exasperated
that he was bringing up their old argument. "I'm happy in
my skin, thank you."
"You'd love being mobile, lady fair," Keff said. "All the
things you miss staying in one place! You can't imagine.
Tell her, Simeon."
"She travels more than I do. Sir Galahad. Forget it."
"Anyone else have messages for us?" Carialle asked.
THE SHIP WHO WON 13
"Not that I have on record, but I'll put out a query to
show you're in dock."
Keff picked his sodden tunic off the console and stood
up. ,
"I'd better go and let the medicals have their poke at
me," he said. "Will you take care of the rest of the computer debriefing, my lady Cari, or do you want me to stay
and make sure they don't poke in anywhere you don't want
them?"
"Nay, good sir knight," Carialle responded, still playing
the game. "You have coursed long and far, and deserve
reward."
'The only rewards I want," Keff said wistfully, "are a
beer that hasn't been frozen for a year, and a little compan-ionship-not that you aren't the perfect companion, lady
fair"-he kissed his hand to the titanium column-"but as
the prophet said, let there be spaces in your togethemess.
If you'll excuse me?"
"Well, don't space yourself too far," Carialle said. Keff
grinned. Carialle followed him on her internal cameras to
his cabin, where, in deference to those spaces he mentioned, she stopped. She heard the sonic-shower turn on
and off, and the hiss of his closet door. He came out of the
cabin pulling on a new, dry tunic, his curly hair tousled.
Ta-ta," Keff said. "I go to confess all and slay a beer or
two."
Before the airlock sealed, Carialle had opened up her
public memory banks to Simeon, transferring full copies of
their datafiles on the Iricon mission. Xeno were on line in
seconds, asking her for in-depth, eyewitness commentary
on their exploration. Keff, in Medical, was probably
answering some of the same questions. Xeno liked subjective accounts as well as mechanical recordings.
At the same time Carialle carried on her conversation
with Simeon, she oversaw the decontam crew and loading
14 Anne McCaffrey
staff, and relaxed a little herself after what had been an
arduous journey. A few days here, and she'd feel ready to
go out and knit the galactic spiral into a sweater.
Keffs medical examination, under the capable stetho-scope of Dr. Chaundra, took less than fifteen minutes, but
the interview with Xeno went on for hours. By the time he
had recited from memory everything he thought or
observed about the Beasts Blatisant he was wrung out and
dry.
"You know, Keff," Darvi, the xenologist, said, shutting
down his clipboard terminal on the Beast Blatisant file, "if
I didn't know you personally, I'd have to think you were a
little nuts, giving alien races silly names like that. Beasts
Blatisant. Sea Nymphs. Losels-that was the last one I
remember."
"Don't you ever play Myths and Legends, Darvi?" Keff
asked, eyes innocent.
"Not in years. It's a kid game, isn't it?"
"No! Nothing wrong with my mind, nyuk-nyuk," Keff
said, rubbing knuckles on his own pate and pulling a face.
The xenologist looked worried for a moment, then relaxed
as he realized Keff was teasing him. "Seriously, its
self-defense against boredom. After fourteen years of this
job, one gets fardling tired of referring to a species as 'the
indigenous race' or 'the inhabitants of Zoocon I.' I'm not
an AI drone, and neither is Carialle."
"Well, the names are still silly."
"Humankind is a silly race," Keff said lightly. "I'm just
indulging in innocent fun."
He didn't want to get into what he and Carialle considered
the serious aspects of the game, the points of honor, the
satisfaction of laying successes at the feet of his lady fair. It
wasn't as if he and Carialle couldn't tell the difference
between play and reality. The game had permeated their life