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
the Old Ones. Similar, though. Both species were upright
and had rearward-bending, jointed lower limbs-can't tell
how many, but the Old One furniture is built for larger
creatures. Not quite as big as humanoids, though."
"It sounds as if one species succeeded after another,"
Keff said. 'The Old Ones moved in to live with the Ancient
Ones, and many generations later after the Ancients died
off, the New Ones arrived and cohabited with the Old
Ones. They are the third in a series of races to live on this
planet: the aborigines, die Old Ones, and the New Ones,
or magic-using humanoids."
Carialle snorted. "Doesn't say much for Ozran as a host
for life-forms, if two intelligent races in a row died off
within a few millenia."
"And the humanoids are reduced to a nontechnologi-cal existence," Keff said, only half listening to Chaumel,
who was lecturing him with an intent expression on his
broad-cheeked face. "Could it have something to do
with the force-field holding you down? They got stuck
here?"
"Whatever trapped me did it selectively, Keff!" Carialle
said. Td landed and taken off six times on Ozran already.
It was dehberate, and I want to know who and why."
"Another mystery to investigate. But I also want to know
why the Old Ones moved up here, away from their source
of food," Keff said. "Since they seem to be dependant on
what's grown here, that's a sociological anomaly."
"Ah," Carialle said, reading newly translated old data
from IT. 'The Old Ones didn't move up here with the
New Ones' help, Keff. They were up here when the
humanoids came. They found Ancient artifacts in the
valleys."
"So these New Ones had some predilection for talent
when they came here, but their contact with the Old Ones
increased it to what we see in them now. Two space-going
races, Carialle!" Keff said, greatly excited. "I want to know
if we can find out more about the pure alien culture. Later
on, let's see if we can trace them back to their original systems. Pity there's so little left: after several hundred years
ofhumanoid rule, it's all mixed up together."
"Isn't the synthesis as rare?" Carialle asked, pointedly.
"In our culture, yes. Makes it obvious where the sign
language comes from, too," Keff said. "Its a relic from
one of the previous races-useful symbology that helps
make the magic work. The Old Ones may never have
shared the humanoid language, being the host race, but
somehow they made themselves understood to the newcomers. Worth at least a paper to Galactic Geographic.
Clearly, Chaumel here doesn't know what the Ancients
were like."
The magiman, watching Keff talking to himself, heard
his name and Keffs question. He shook his head regret-fully. "I do not. Much before days of me."
"Where do your people come from?" Keff asked. "What
star, where out mere?" He gestured up at the sky.
"I do not know that also. Where from do yours come?"
Chaumel asked, a keen eye holding Keffs.
The brawn tried to think of a way to explain the Central
Worlds with the limited vocabulary at his disposal and
raised his hands helplessly.
'Vain hope." Carialle sighed. "I'm still trying to find any
records of settlements in this sector. Big zero. If I could get
a message out, I could have Central Worlds do a full-scan
search of the old records."
"So where do the Noble Primitives fit in, Chaumel?"
Keff asked, throwing a friendly arm over the man's shoulder before he could start a lecture on the next objet d'art.
He pointed at a male servant wearing a long, white robe,
who hurried away, wide-eyed, when he noticed the bare-skinned ones looking at him. "I notice that the servants
here have lighter pelts than the people in the farm village."
He gestured behind him, hoping that Chaumel would
understand he meant where they had just come from. He
tweaked a lock of his own hair, rubbing his fingers together
to indicate "thin," then ran his fingers down his own face
and held out his hand.
'They're handsomer. And some of them have five
fingers, like mine." Keff waggled his forefinger. "Why do
the ones in the valley have only four?" He bent the finger
under his palm.
"Oh," Chaumel said, laughing. He stated something in a
friendly, off handed way that the IT couldn't translate,
scissors-chopping his own forefinger with his other hand
to demonstrate what he meant. "... when of few
days-babies. Low mind. ... no curiosity . . . worker." He
made the scissors motion again.
"What?" Carialle shrieked in Keffs ear. "Its not a mutation. Its mutilation. There aren't two brands ofhumanoids,
just one, with most of the poor things exploited by a lucky
few."
Keff was shocked into silence. Fortunately, Chaumel
seemed to expect no reply. Carialle continued to speak
in a low voice while Keff nodded and smiled at the
magiman.
"Moreover, he's been referring to the Noble Primitives
as property. When he mentioned his possessions, IT went
back and translated his term for the villagers as 'chattel.' I
do not like these people. Evil wizards, indeed!"
"Er, very nice," Keff said in Ozran, for lack of any good
reply. Chaumel beamed.
"We care for them, we who commune with the Core of
Ozran. We lead our weaker brothers. We guard as they
working hard in the valleys to raise food for us all."
"Enslave them, you mean," Carialle sniffed. "And they
live up here in comfort while Brannel's people freeze. He
looks so warm and friendly-for a slave trader. Look at his
eyes. Dead as microchips."
"Weaker? Do you mean feeble-minded? The people
down in the valleys have strong bodies but, er, they don't
seem very bright," Keff said. 'These, your servants, are
much more intelligent than any of the ones we met." He
didn't mention Brannel.
"Ah," Chaumel said, guardedly casual, "the workers eat
stupid, not question... who know better, overlords."
"You mean you put something in the food to keep them
stupid and docile so they won't question their servitude?
That's monstrous," Keff said, but he kept smiling.
Chaumel didn't understand the last word. He bowed
deeply. 'Thank you. Use talent, over many years gone, we
give them," he pantomimed over his own wrist and arm,
showed it growing thicker, "more skin, hair, grow dense
flesh..."
IT riffled through a list of synonyms. Keff seized upon
one. "Muscles?" he asked. IT repeated Chaumel s last
word, evidently satisfied with Keffs definition.
"Yes," Chaumel said. "Good for living . . . cold valleys.
Hard work!"
"You mean you can skimp on the central heat if you give
them greater endurance," Carialle said, contemptuously.
"You bloodsucker."
Chaumel frowned, almost as if he had heard Carialle's
tone.
"Hush! Er, I don't know if this is a taboo question,
Chaumel," Keff began, rubbing his chin with thumb and
forefinger, "but you interbreed with the servant class, too,
don't you? Bare-skins with fur-skins, make babies?"
"Not I," the silver magiman explained hastily. "But yes.
Some lower . . . mages and magesses have faces with hair.
Never make their places as mages of... but not everyone
is ... sent for mightiness."
"Destined for greatness," Keff corrected IT. IT repeated
the word. "So why are you not great? I mean," he
rephrased his statement for tact, "not one of the mages
of-IT, put in that phrase he used?"
"Oh, I am good-satisfied to be what I am," Chaumel
said, complacently folding his fingers over his well-padded
rib cage.
"If they're already being drugged, why amputate their
fingers?" Carialle wanted to know.
"What do fingers have to do with the magic?" Keff
asked, making a hey-presto gesture.
"Ah," Chaumel said. Taking Keifs arm firmly under his
own, he escorted him down the hall to a low door set
deeply into the stone walls. Servants passing by showed
Keff the whites of their eyes as Chaumel slipped the silver
wand out of his belt and pointed at the lock. Some of the
fur-skins hurried faster as the red fire lanced laserlike into
the keyhole. One or two, wearing the same keen expression as Brannel, peered in as the door opened. Shooting a
cold glance to speed the nosy ones on their way, Chaumel
urged Keff inside.
The darkness lifted as soon as they stepped over the
threshold, a milky glow coming directly from the substance
of the walls.
"Cari, is that radioactive?" Keff asked. His whisper was
amplified in a ghostly rush of sound by the rough stone.
"No. In fact, I'm getting no readings on the light at all.
Strange."
"Magic!"
"Cut that out," Carialle said sulkily. "I say its a form of
energy with which I am unacquainted."
In contrast to all the other chambers Keff had seen in
Chaumel s eyrie, this room had a low, unadorned ceiling of
rough granite less than an arms length above their heads.
Keff felt as though he needed to stoop to avoid hitting the
roof.
Chaumel moved across me floor like a man in a chapel.
The furnishings of the narrow room carried out that
impression. At the end opposite the door was a molded,
silver table not unlike an altar, upon which rested five
objects arranged in a circle on an embroidered cloth. Keff
tiptoed forward behind Chaumel.
The items themselves were not particularly impressive:
a metal bangle about twelve centimeters across, a silver
tube, a flattened disk pierced with half-moon shapes all
around the edge, a wedge of clear crystal with a piece of
dull metal fused to the blunt end, and a hollow cylinder
like an empty jelly jar.
"What are they?" Keff asked.
"Objects of power," Chaumel replied. One by one he
lifted them and displayed them for Keff. Returning to the
bangle, Chaumel turned it over so Keff could see its inner
arc. Five depressions about two centimeters apart were
molded into its otherwise smooth curve. In turn, he
showed the markings on each one. With the last, he
inserted the tips of his fingers into the depressions and
wielded it away from Keff.
"Ah," Keff said, enlightened. "You need five digits to use
these."
"So the amputation is to keep the servers from organiz-ing a palace revolt," Carialle said. "Any uppity server just
wouldn't have the physical dexterity to use them."
"Mmm," Keff said. "How old are they?" He moved
closer to the altar and bent over the cloth.
"Old, old," Chaumel said, patting the jelly jar.
"Old Ones," Carialle verified, running a scan through
Keffs ocular implants. "So is the bangle. The other three
are Ancient, with some subsequent modifications by the
Old Ones. All of them have five pressure plates incorporated into the design. That's why Brannel tried to take my
palette. It has five depressions, just like these items. He
probably thought it was a power piece, like these."
'There's coincidence for you: both the alien races here
were pentadactyl, like humans. I wonder if that's a recurring trait throughout the galaxy for technologically capable
races," Keff said. "Five-fingered hands."
Chaumel certainly seemed proud of his. Setting down
the jelly jar, he mbbed his hands together, then flicked
invisible dust motes off his nails, taking time to admire
both fronts and backs.
"Well, they are shapely hands," Carialle said. 'They
wouldn't be out of place in Michelangelo's Sistine Chapel
frescoes except for the bizarre proportions."
Kefftook a good look at Chaumels hands. For the first
time he noticed that the thumbs, which he had noted as
being rather long, bore lifelike prostheses, complete with
nails and tiny wisps of hair, that made the tips fan out to.
the same distance as the forefingers. The little fingers were
of equal length to the ring fingers, jarring the eye, making
the fingers look like a thick fringe cut straight across.
Absently conscious of Keffs stare, Chaumel pulled at his
litde fingers.
"Is he trying to make them longer by doing that?"
Carialle asked. "It's physically impossible, but I suppose
telling him that won't make him stop. Superstitions are
superstitions."
'That's er, grotesque, Chaumel," Keffsaid, smiling with
what he hoped was an expression of admiration.
'Thank you, Keff." The silver magiman bowed.
"Show me how the objects of power work," Keff said,
pointing at the table. "I'd welcome a chance to watch without being the target."
Chaumel was all too happy to oblige.
"Now you see how these are," he said graciously. He
chose the ring and the tube, putting his favorite, the wand,
back in its belt holster. 'This way."
On the way out of the narrow room, Chaumel resumed
his monologue. This time it seemed to involve the prove-nance and ownership of the items.
"We are proud of our toys," Carialle said deprecatingly.
"Nothing up my sleeve, alakazam!"