Day of the Dragonstar (26 page)

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Authors: David Bischoff,Thomas F. Monteleone

BOOK: Day of the Dragonstar
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“I think he’s actually happy to see us!” Ian said.

“Do you think he’s King or something?” Becky asked.

“Something special around here, certainly. Clearly he’s the one that’s supposed to figure out who we are. He does seemed pleased.”

The robed saurian cavorted and pirouetted in an ungainly display of awkward moves. Finally, apparently unintentionally, the creature tripped on his robes and fell flat on his face with a squawk of pain. Clicking and hissing in disgust, he raised himself and began to simply stare at Ian and Becky.

“He seems to expect something,” said Becky.

“What?” wondered Ian.

“A dance from us, perhaps.”

“I can’t dance, Becky!”

“Ain’t you got rhythm, boy?” she said. “We don’t have to waltz or anything!” Thereupon she commenced singing her favorite old Motown song, “Dancing in the Streets,” with accompanying jumps, twists, and gyrations.

Ian tried to follow her lead, but he looked more like he was exercising than dancing. Close enough for rock ‘n roll, Becky thought.

Improvising some of the lyrics, Becky finished up. Ian shambled to a halt.

“Well, what did you think?” Becky demanded of the robed saurian, who was, at this point, simply staring blankly at his guests.

The creature jumped about and then began jabbering, making strange gestures.

“No, no, sorry, friend,” said Ian, pointing to his mouth. “We mainly communicate with these

and we don’t know your sign language, I’m afraid, so we’ll just have to get along as well as we can, okay?”

The robed saurian pointed at his mouth and nodded. He then made a gesture that seemed to indicate that he wished for the humans to follow him.

Tail flapping on the floor behind him, he executed a shaky turn and strode from the room.

Ian looked at Becky and shrugged.

They followed.

* * *

“Books,” said Becky. “Piles and stacks of books.”

“Yes,
their
versions of books. They look more like dino skin than paper.”

They were in a large room stocked with manuscripts, all sprawled in a disconcertingly unkempt fashion on odd shelves which were apparently carved from the same material from which the building was fashioned.

With excitement shining in his eyes, the lizard-man grabbed an armful of the scrolls and dumped them on the ground in front of the human couple.

“An obvious invitation to examine, I’d say,” Ian Coopersmith said. “Shall we?”

They knelt and spread the leathery material.

“Hieroglyphs and drawings, Ian. Quite like what we saw out there on those ruins.”

“Words. Too bad we don’t have some kind of translation device. This stuff is fascinating.”

“Copies of their version of a bible, don’t you think?”

“Most likely. Or some kind of record of what they think their origins are. Every culture has to have that, either in their religion or in folklore.”

“l can’t make heads or tails of it, Ian.”

“We should gaze at it reverently, though

and with interest, to show that we appreciate its importance.”

While they did just that, the saurian bustled into a corner, sorting through the clutter. He muttered enthusiastically as he pulled out what he needed and carried it back to his guests with an air of urgency.

Carefully, in front of them, he laid out a blank piece of plant-fiber

bluish in tinge

and produced a thin piece of modified charcoal. Carefully, his tongue flickering with concentration, he marked out a couple of hieroglyphs. He pointed to one of these, then indicated that this symbolized himself.

He then put the writing utensil on the paper and took a step back.

“I think he wants us to write something,” Becky said. “Go ahead, Ian. Do your best.”

Pursing his lips, Ian looked at the robed saurian, then picked up the piece of charcoal. Watching the deftness with which Ian manipulated the writing utensil seemed to excite the saurian immensely. When Ian copied the hieroglyphs, then mimicked the pointing ceremony, the saurian was beside himself. He gave a brief spastic dance, then settled down, motioning for Ian to continue.

Ian then commenced to write the word “humans.” With his finger he tapped this, then the appropriate hieroglyphs, then himself and Becky.

He then wrote down “saurian,” tapped it, and pointed to the robed lizard-man.

He drew a map of the solar system, complete with the cylinder. In the diagram’s representation for Artifact One, he lettered in the hieroglyphs that the robed saurian had first written. Then with an expansive gesture, he pointed all around him.

The saurian’s expression seemed puzzled.

Ian tapped his chest, then tapped the circle he had drawn for the planet Earth, then traced a pathway from Earth to the ship.

Understanding leapt suddenly into the saurian’s eye.

For a few moments, he seemed stunned. Then he seemed to faint, sprawling out onto the ground as though this were too much to take.

“Watch out, Ian! He might revert to his primal reptilian behavior and kill us both!”

But the creature, though clearly unconscious, did nothing of the sort. He just lay there.

“As I thought,” said Ian. “We’re dealing here with a more advanced kind of saurian. Part of the ruling class. Philosopher? Scientist?” He paused. “Is he still alive?”

“I don’t know. There’s something wrong with this guy, I’ve noticed. His skin. He seems very sick

while the other robed priests or whatever they are seem perfectly healthy. The sickness is not a sign of their class. Let me just have a look . . .” Rebecca leaned over the fallen saurian. “God. He does look bad. It doesn’t look like he’s . . .” She touched a tentative hand to the creature’s chest, then passed fingers over the mouth. “No! He’s not breathing! He’s
dead!”
Rebecca Thalberg backed away from the fallen saurian, blood draining from her face. “I hope the others don’t think we killed him!”

“Should we call the others? Maybe they can help.”

“Hello!
Hello!
Help! We’ve got a dead
—”

“Rebecca! I thought you said he was dead?”

“He wasn’t breathing.”

“He seems to be rousing . . . that or advanced rigor mortis!” The saurian twitched and jerked, as though attached to a live wire.

“Some kind of strange catatonia?” Ian suggested.

“Lizard
tonia,
more like.”

The saurian got up, tottered about for a few moments, getting his bearings, then returned his attention to the humans.

He walked up to the astonished Becky and pronounced a gutteral word, tapping her lightly on her head. Something like “Snashish.” Then Ian: “Zashist.”

Becky and Ian pronounced the names as well as they could. Then the saurian tapped his chest, indicating that they were welcome to name him.

Becky smiled and pointed to the saurian. “Thesaurus!”

And that was the creature’s name from that point onward, though Thesaurus never quite managed to pronounce it properly.

* * *

“You know, I think I’m actually used to it by now,” Ian Coopersmith said.

“I don’t think I could
ever
get used to it!” Becky snapped.

They were riding an Iguanodon, Thesaurus at the bio-controls, Becky and Ian in a saddle arrangement farther down the back. There were no other guards. No need for that. Thesaurus and the saurians quite trusted them by now . . . as far as any saurian trusted anyone.

“Do you think we’re almost there?” Becky said, holding Ian around the midsection, trying to compensate for the jouncing, bouncing ride. Clouds and folds of mist hung from the end of the cylinder, which they were approaching.

“I think I make out something in the mist up there, Becky.”

“Thank
God.”

Two “days” and two “nights” had passed since they had met Thesaurus. For several hours after their mutual renamings, they had been immersed in the job of translation. The task had not gone smoothly. Even now, only a few words and a few gestures were truly understood. Nonetheless, there was a bottom-line kind of communication, particularly between Ian and the saurian, perhaps simply because both were straining so very hard at it. The two had developed a strange kind of camaraderie. Becky was almost jealous.

After their first session, they managed to ask for and receive water to bathe with

and the food served to them, fried meats mostly, garnished with fruits and chopped vegetables, was actually edible, if hardly spiced to their tastes. It
was a vast improvement on scavenging and Becky figured she had already put on about two pounds.

Even now, as she bounced three meters above the ground, holding onto Ian for dear life, the images of the preceding twenty-four hours flitted through her head.

At Ian’s request, Thesaurus had taken them on a tour of the city, shown them the things that were important. By that point, Ian’s conjecture that Thesaurus was a member of an elite group was borne out-in fact, he was apparently rather like a philosopher-king.

He showed them this, rather than told them this, in context with his tour.

An alien society indeed

and yet, Becky had once read that if the dinosaurs had not died out, they would have been the ancestors of human beings

and what
were
human beings, anyway? What gave them their unique difference from lower animals? Certainly not social habits or ties, or anything like that. Intelligence. The saurians had that. Self-awareness? Yes, they had that as well.

All this was too much for Becky. She just welcomed the rest and the comforts provided after weeks of harrowing nightmares. She absorbed what Thesaurus showed them docilely, not focusing on the implications of the details as did Ian Coopersmith, but rather trying to understand the race holistically, ecologically.

Apparently, they had already witnessed a telling part of the society’s structure. Although there were no families as such

after all, nuclear families were a mammalian invention

young and old were supported in a rough, communal sense.

The first thing that Thesaurus had taken them to see was a public mating, which seemed to be some kind of spectator sport. Each of the participants

a male and a female

had been selected for various reasons, and were both on the brink of sleep, thus allowing their feral, reptilian natures to take them over fully. The ritual was conducted in a pit, over which ranks of seats were mounted for many saurians who hooted, hollered, and hissed in what Ian at first interpreted as bawdy encouragements. But then, as the male and female tore their shirts off, the sound blended into chants of an unmistakable religious and ritualistic nature.

The actual mating was something to watch indeed.

“Ian! It’s . . . it’s got
two
—”

“Yes. A hemipenis. Certainly significantly larger proportionally than other reptiles. I say! They do seem to be rather enjoying themselves, don’t they?”

“It doesn’t turn
me
on, I can tell you that.”

“Thesaurus indicates that the participants “go away.” Transcendental transport, I suppose he means

‘ outside this universe, with the Gods.’ Pantheists.”

“Well, we know where they lay the results, don’t we?”

This, also, Thesaurus showed them, along with an explanation for the rite of passage they had witnessed. And he showed them the bio-breeding centers.

Those had been almost beyond Becky’s ability to comprehend. Although these creatures’ technological abilities were of necessity limited, they were geniuses with genetics. Flesh and nerves and blood in breeding looms . . . fascinating.

Now Thesaurus was about to show them something which he considered quite important.

The mists parted before them. There, stretching up and up, was the end of the cylinder

the thing they had been shooting for, hoping to find their way out of the cylinder’s dangerous parts.

At the base of this was a temple,

Thesaurus stopped the Iguanodon in front of the portal and made a bleating yell. Immediately, five priests in flowing robes streamed from the portal, calling welcoming songs.

“Old Thesaurus seems well-known here, I’d say.” Ian commented.

The Iguanodon knelt and the riders dismounted. They went into the temple. The walls were crammed with saurian hieroglyphics, complex tapestries, and altars.

But Thesaurus did not stop here. Rather he led them down the passageways to a room absolutely bare of ornament. Several other priests followed them.

“My God! This wall is
—”

“Metal!” Becky finished for Ian.

There were heavy drapes hanging over one section of the wall.

”Ian! It’s an entranceway into the next section of the cylinder!”

“What are we waiting for?” Ian said, stepping forward.

Thesaurus barked an order to the other priests, who gently restrained both Ian and Becky.

“No!” hissed Thesaurus. “No . . . my . . . my Snashish, my Zashist.” He pointed to the entrance. “My Snashish, my Zashist. . . . Thesaurus know you there.
Good!”
He pointed to himself.
“Thesaurus. Bad!”

Slowly he lifted his robe up to his chest.

“Oh, Ian. No wonder he doesn’t look so good,” Becky said.

Ian whistled softly.

On the saurian’s body were a number of faint radiation burns.

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