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
Knowing that Alteis was watching, Brannel was forced to
join them. He consumed a few tiny mouthfuls as slowly as
he dared.
Fortunately, he had plenty of interruptions which concealed his reluctance to eat. Keff questioned him on the
names of the foodstuffs, and what each was made of,
pointing to raw vegetables and making an interrogative
noise.
"Stewed orange root," Brannel said, pointing out the
appropriate field to the mage. "Grain bread." Some of the
grain the plough animals ate served to demonstrate what
kind. "Legume stew. Sliced tuber fried in bean oil." Beans
were unavailable, having been harvested and gathered in
by the mages the month before, so he used small stones
approximately the right size, and pretended to squeeze
them. Keff understood. Brannel knew he did. He was as
excited as the mage when the box began to make some of
the right sounds, as if finding them on its tongue: frot, brot,
brat, bret, bread.
"Bread! That's right," Brannel said, enthusiastically, as
Keff repeated what the box said. "That's right, Magelord:
bread!"
Keff slapped Brannel hard on the back. The worker
jumped and caught his breath, but it was a gesture of
friendliness, not disapproval-as if Keff was just another
worker, a neighbor . . . a-a friend. He tried to smile. The
others fell to their knees and covered their heads with their
arms, fearing the thunderbolt about to descend.
"Bread," Keff repeated happily. "I think I've got it."
"Do you?" Carialle asked in his ear. "And does the rain
in Spain fall mainly in the plain?"
"Ozran, I think," KefFsaid, subvocalizing as the villagers
picked themselves off the ground and came around cautiously to inspect Brannel who was smiling. Keff himself
was wild w|th glee, but restraining himself for fear of scaring the natives further. "I can hardly believe it. I'm making
progress faster than I even dared to hope. There's some
Ancient Terran forms in their speech, Carialle, embedded
in the alien forms, of course. I believe the Ozrans had contact with humankind, maybe millenia ago, significant
contact that altered or added to the functionalism of their
language. Are there any records in the archives for first
contact in this sector?"
"I'll put a trace through," Carialle said, initiating the
search sequence and letting it go through an automatic AI
program. A couple of circuits "clicked," and the library
program began to hum quietly to itself.
By means of Keffs contact button, Carialle focused on
the antics of the natives. A few of the females were picking
up the spilled dishes with a cautious eye on Keff, never
venturing too close to him. The large, black-furred male
and the elderly salt-and-pepper male examined a protest-ing Brannel. The slender male tried without success to
wave them off.
"What is wrong with these people?"
"Mm-mm? I don't know. They're looking Brannel over
for damages or marks or something. What did they expect
to happen when I patted him on the back?"
"I don't know. Bodily contact shouldn't be dangerous. I
wish you could get close enough to them so I could read
their vital signs and do a chemspec analysis of their skin."
Keff stood at a distance from the villagers, nodding
and smiling at any who would meet his eyes, but the
moment he took a step toward one, that one moved a
step back. 'They won't let me, that's obvious. Why are
most of them so downright scared of me, but not surprised to see me?"
"Maybe they have legends about deities that look like
you," Carialle said with wry humor. "You may be fulfilling
some long-awaited prophecy. The barefaced one will
come out of the sky and set us free.'"
"No," Keff said, thoughtfully. "I think the reaction is
more immediate, more present day. Whatever it is, they're
most courteous and absolutely cooperative: an ethnologists
dream. I'm making real progress in communications. I
think I've found the 'to be' verb, but I'm not sure I'm pars-ing it correctly yet. Brannel keeps grinning at me when I
ask what something 'is.'"
"Keep going," Carialle said encouragingly. "Faint heart
never won fair lady. You're all getting along so well there."
With every evidence of annoyance, Brannel fought free
of the hands of his comrades. He smoothed his ruffled fur
and glared at the others, his aspect one of long suffering.
He returned to Keff, his expression saying, "Let's resume
the language lesson, and pay no more attention to those
people."
"I'd love to know what's going on," Keff said out loud in
Standard, with a pohte smile, "but I'm going to have to
leam a lot more before I can ask the right questions about
your social situation here."
One of the other Noble Primitives muttered under his
breath. Brannel turned on him and hissed out a sharp
phrase that needed no translation: even the sound of it was
insulting. Keff moved between them to defuse a potential
argument, and that made the other Primitive back off
sharply. Keff got Brannel's attention and pointed to the
raydome water carrier. Listening to prompts from the IT
program through his implant, he attempted to put
together a whole sentence ofpidgin Ozran.
"What are that?" Keff asked. "Eh? Did I get that
right?"
From Brannel's merry expression, he hadn't. He
grinned, giving the local man his most winsome smile.
"Well, teach me then, can you?"
Emboldened by Keffs friendly manner, the Noble
Primitive laughed, a harsh sound; more of a cackle than a
guffaw.
"So," Keff asked, trying again in Ozran, "what are yes?"
He whispered an aside to Carialle. "I don't know even how
to ask what's right?' yet. I must sound like the most amazing idiot."
"What is that. What are those," Brannel said, with
emphasis, picking up one stone in one hand, a handful of
stones in the other, and displaying first one and then the
other. He had correctly assumed Keff was trying to ask
about singular and plural forms and had demonstrated the
difference. The others were still staring dumbly, unable to
understand what was going on. Keff was elated by his
success.
"Incredible. You may have found the only intelligent
man on the planet," Carialle said, monitoring as the IT
program recorded the correct uses of the verb, and postulated forms and suffixes for other verbs in its file, shuffling
the onomatopoeic transliterations down like cards. "Certainly the only one of this bunch who understands abstract
questions."
"He's a find," Keff agreed. "A natural linguist. It could
have taken me days to elicit what he's offering freely and, I
might add, intelligently. It's going to take me more time to
figure out that sign language, but if anyone can put me on
the right track, it's Brannel."
Having penetrated the mystery of verbal declension,
Keff and Brannel sat down together beside the fire and
began a basic conversation.
"Do you see how he's trying to use my words, too?" Keff
subvocalized to Carialle.
Using informal signs and the growing lexicon in the IT
program, Keff asked Brannel about the below ground
habitation,
"... Heat from . . . earth," Brannel said, patting the
ground by his thigh. IT left audio gaps where it lacked sufficient glossary and grammar, but for Keff it was enough to
tell him what he wanted to know.
"A geothermal heating system. Its so cold out; why can't
you enter now?" Keff said, making a cave by arching his
finger and thumb on the ground and walking his other
hand on two fingers toward it.
"Not," Brannel said firmly, with a deliberate sign of his
left hand. The IT struggled to translate. "Not cave day. We
are ... work... day."
"Oh," Carialle said. "A cultural ban to keep the slackers
out on the field during working hours. Ask him if he knows
what causes the power surges I'm picking up."
Keff relayed the question. The others who were paying
attention shot sulky glances toward Brannel. The
dun-colored male started to speak, then stopped when an
older female let out a whimper of fear. "Not," he said
shortly.
"I guess he doesn't know," Keff said to Carialle. "You,
sir," he said, going over to address the eldest male, Alteis,
who immediately cowered. "Where comes strong heat
from sky?" He pantomimed arcs overhead. "What makes
strong heat?"
With a yell, one of the small boys-Keff thought it
might be the same one who had defied his mothers
orders-traced a jagged line in the sky. The he dove into
his mothers lap for safety. An adolescent female, Nona,
Keff thought her name was, glanced up at him in terror,
and quickly averted her eyes to the ground. The others
murmured among themselves, but no one looked or
spoke.
"Lightning?" Keff asked Alteis softly. "What causes the
lightning, sir?"
The oldster with white-shot black fur studied his lips
carefully as he spoke, then turned for help to Brannel, who
remained stoically silent. Keff repeated his question. The
old male nodded solemnly, as if considering an answer, but
then his gaze wandered off over Keffs head. When it
returned to Keff, there was a blankness in his eyes that
showed he hadn't understood a thing, or had already forgotten the question.
"He doesn't know," Keff said with a sigh. "Well, we're back
to basics. Where does the food go for storage?" he asked. He
gestured at the stone square and held up one of the roots
Brannel had used as an example. "Where roots go?"
Brannel shrugged and muttered something. "Not
know," IT amplified and relayed. "Roots go, food comes."
"A culture in which food preparation is a sacred mystery?" Carialle said, with increasing interest. "Now, that's
bizarre. If we take that back to Xeno, we'll deserve a
bonus."
"Aren't you curious? Didn't you ever try to find out?"
Keff asked Brannel.
"Not!" Brannel exclaimed. The bold villager seemed
nervous for almost the first time since Keff had arrived.
"One curious, all-" He brought his hands together in a
thunderclap. "All... all," he said, getting up and drawing a
circle in the air around an adult male, an adult female, and
three children. He pantomimed beating the male, and
shoved the food bowls away from the female and children
with his foot. Most of the fur-faced humanoids shuddered
and one of the children burst into tears.
"All punished for one person s curiosity? But why?" Keff
demanded. "By whom?"
For answer Brannel aimed his three-fingered hand at
the mountains, with a scornful expression that plainly said
that Keff should already know that. Keff peered up at the
distant heights.
"Huh?" Carialle said. "Did I miss something?"
"Punishment from the mountains? Is it a sacred tradition associated with the mountains?" Keff asked. "By his
body language Brannel holds whatever comes from there
in healthy respect, but he doesn't like it."
'Typical of religions," Carialle sniffed. She focused her
cameras on the mountain peak in the direction Keff faced
and zoomed in for a closer look. "Say, there are structures
up there, Keff. They're blended in so well I didn't detect
them on initial sweep. What are they? Temples? Shrines?
Who built them?"
Keff pointed, and turned to Brannel.
"What are . . . ?" he began. His question was abruptly
interrupted when a beam of hot light shot from the peak of
the tallest mountain in the range to strike directly at Keffs
feet. Hot light engulfed him. "Wha--?" he mouthed. His
hand dropped to his side, slamming into his leg with the
force of a wrecking ball. The air turned fiery in his throat,
drying his mouth and turning his tongue to leather. Humming filled his ears. The image of Brannel's face, agape,
swam before his eyes, faded to a black shadow on his reti-nas, then flew upward into a cloudless sly blacker than
space.
The bright bolt of light overpowered the aperture of the
tiny contact-button camera, but Carialle's external cameras
recorded the whole thing. Keff stood rigid for a moment
after the beam struck, then slowly, slowly keeled over and
slumped to the ground in a heap. His vital-sign monitor
shrieked as all activity flatlined. To all appearances he was
dead.
"Keff!" Carialle screamed. Her system demanded
adrenaline. She fought it, forcing serotonin and endorphins into her bloodstream for calm. It took only
milliseconds until she was in control of herself again. She
had to be, for Keffs sake.
In the next few milliseconds, her circuits raced through
a diagnostic, checking the implants to be sure there was no
system failure. All showed green.
"Keff," she said, raising the volume in his implant. "Can
you hear me?" He gave no answer.
Carialle sent her circuits through a diagnostic, checking
the implants to be sure there was no system failure. All
showed green except the video of the contact camera,