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Authors: Lisanne Norman

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BOOK: Turning Point
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“When my leg began to heal enough for me to move without too much pain, one of the first things I did was to hunt down one of the forest cats. I soon discovered why you thought I was one of them.”
Carrie nodded thoughtfully, taking a drink from her mug of coffee.
“You looked similar to a forest cat, but your behavior, especially that first day, was more like that of a pet cat I once had on Earth. In fact, almost identical to his.” She stared accusingly at him over the rim of the mug.
Kusac shrugged. “I have to admit that when you found me, I read your thoughts and quite shamelessly behaved according to what you expected of me. It wasn't until much later that I realized I was committed to playing the part of a domesticated pet!” He laughed, the sound a low almost crooning purr.
He reached behind him. “I thought you might like this back,” he said, handing her the leather collar he had worn.
“Don't embarrass me,” she said, flushing as she remembered how unconcerned she had been at his presence in her room. She threw it in the fire.
“Why didn't you tell me sooner who you were?” she demanded.
“For several reasons,” he replied, shifting uncomfortably under her accusing glare. “At first I was too ill, then I had to learn your language.”
“We've been communicating without words for several weeks.”
“If I had told you before now, our relationship would have changed and others would have noticed.”
Carrie shook her head. “Not good enough, Kusac. I know when you're holding out on me. I want the truth this time. And while we're at it, what brought you here in the first place? We weren't aware that Keiss had any neighbors, let alone two such different species.”
Kusac's tail stopped moving as he looked back at her.
“My home planet, Shola, is not a neighbor of yours, but we did have three colonies in this sector, until the Valtegans attacked and destroyed two of them.
“We knew the nature of these Others from the few dead bodies we found. You call them Valtegans.”
Kusac fell silent for a few moments before continuing.
“As soon as reports of the devastation came in from the Captains running the freighter lines, we sent a battleship and escort to investigate. Not one of our people was left alive on either of the two colonies attacked. They had slaughtered every man, woman, and child.”
Carrie, her mind strangely open to every nuance of his, knew he was steeling himself as if to receive some rebuttal.
“We are primarily Traders,” he continued, “and though we trade with several other species we have never come across the Valtegans before. Not only are they unknown to us, but to our allies also. You are lucky indeed that they did not see fit to exterminate your people as they did us. We desperately need to find out what we can about them as they are a threat to us all.”
“You will have to organize some kind of planetary defense fleets for both Shola and your last colony,” Carrie said. “So will the other people you trade with. That will take some doing. Meanwhile, you'll need an excellent intelligence service to know exactly where and when the Valtegans show up.”
Kusac inclined his head toward her. “We have such a service. I was part of it until our craft was shot down.”
“What brought you to Keiss itself?” she asked, setting down her mug.
“Keiss was surveyed some twenty years ago, and when it proved to be capable of supporting our species, a life pod was automatically dropped on the surface. It was to conduct experiments on the biosphere over a period of several years, sending the information to an orbiting satellite which in turn would transmit it to Shola.
“When it suddenly stopped transmitting, nothing was done. We had no reason to suspect anything but a system failure. After the Valtegans struck, a possible relationship was noticed and we were dispatched to find out what had happened.
“Our Mothership, the
Khalossa,
dropped several light scouters in various sectors of space, each on a three-month reconnaissance mission. We had several planets to check in this area, Keiss being our last. Perhaps the boredom of finding nothing made us less observant. Whatever the cause, we failed to notice the presence of the Others until too late.” He fell silent.
Carrie stirred slightly, pulling her knees up to her chin and wrapping her arms around them.
“How many of you are left on Keiss?”
“Five of us survived. I have no way of knowing where the others are, but we located the life pod before we crashed, so I presume they have made their way there.”
He raised his head, looking her squarely in the face.
“I must go to the pod. Even without my colleagues I can send a message to the
Khalossa
about the Valtegans' presence here.”
“I can see that you must,” she replied, aware as she did so of a decrease in the stress she had been sensing emanating from him. They had obviously touched upon something Kusac feared, but since he was barricading the thought, and she was respecting his privacy, she had no idea what it was.
“Have you tried to locate your crew mentally?” she asked.
“Yes, but I can't touch their minds. Not all my people are Talented. It is mainly confined to the members of certain families, of which I am one. The rest of the crew were unTalented.”
“What about that Valtegan? We read his mind. Perhaps together we could locate your friends.”
“It's possible,” Kusac replied slowly. “Though with my people the problem is different. The unTalented seem to have a strong natural barrier which prevents contact unless both parties are willing. With the Valtegan, there was no such barrier.”
“We could try,” she persisted, warming to her theme. “Aren't barriers weakest when one is sleeping? What if we look for the barrier rather than for them? If we tried now, we might succeed.”
“It might be possible. With our combined strength we may be able to pick up some faint echo from them.”
“So what do we do?”
“Sit comfortably and relax,” he said, twisting himself round until he was facing her. He flinched as he moved his left forearm onto his knee.
“What is it?”
“Nothing,” he said. “Just a graze. One of the Valtegan energy weapons clipped my arm.”
“Let me see,” she said, leaning forward to look. The effects of culture shock hit her briefly, scrambling her thoughts for a moment as she saw first an animal's foreleg then an arm almost the same as hers except for the fur.
She gave a short laugh. “We see what we expect, don't we?” she said. “I don't know how I ever thought you were a feline.”
“But I am,” he said gently. “I'm a feline person.”
“You know what I mean,” she said. The wound was reasonably deep, but it had been cauterized by the beam of energy from the weapon. It had already begun to scab over.
“It really should have a dressing over it to protect it,” she said.
“Later.”
Carrie released his arm and moved into a cross-legged posture, letting her hands lie slackly along her thighs.
“Link with me,” he said.
Carrie's view of Kusac started to mist, and gradually her field of vision shrank until all she could see were his eyes. She felt light-headed as she sank deeper and deeper into those amber depths. Almost against her will, she felt herself being pulled into a warm, dark whirlpool.
Fear was beyond her, and for what could have been an aeon, she watched the faint flickers of light that pulsed around her.
Carrie?
The thought surrounded her.
I cannot reach you.
She hesitated, momentarily unwilling to venture farther.
Carrie.
His tone was gentle, urging.
She reached out for him, letting the final barriers snick open. A tide of Kusac's thoughts and memories flowed over her, threatening to sweep her away. Panicking, she reached out for something to hold on to, but all she touched were images of Kusac's past—his pain and terror when his Talent first manifested itself, the gradual growth of understanding as his father started to train him in its use.
Her terror began to grow as she swirled among these scenes, feeling her control of her own identity begin to slip. She tried to retreat, to retain her individuality, but she had already gone too far. Inexorably she was swept toward him, propelled by instincts and emotions she had not known she possessed.
Carrie.
It was as if a hand had clamped onto her arm, preventing her from being swept to destruction. Now they joined, each experiencing the other in a meshing deeper and more intimate than anything either of them had experienced before. She felt him draw her closer, enfolding and protecting her. His smell, mingled with that of slightly damp fur, enveloped her. He felt warm and soft against her skin. Between them there was a total understanding, a total commitment that nothing, save death, could dissolve.
Leska
,
now we must find my companions.
Strangely, his tone
sounded
unsteady.
Kusac gathered their thoughts and channeled them, sending a narrow beam of consciousness throughout the surrounding area, searching for the missing Sholans. At one point there was a faint presence. They stopped, increasing the strength of their probing.
Carrie noticed the barrier first. She led them to the wall, searching for an opening.
There is no way in, Leska
,
but you are right. That is the barrier of my people. They are west of here.
In a cave,
added Carrie.
We can find them.
We can. Let us return.
The beam shrank, bringing them back to the clearing and their own bodies.
Carrie groaned. Her head hurt. There had been too many headaches of late. She lay still, hoping it would go away if she ignored it. Besides, she was comfortable. A hand touched her forehead gently and she opened her eyes, smiling weakly up at Kusac.
“Your head aches? I had these pains when my Talent was developing. Perhaps I can ease it and then you can sleep.”
Carrie, unable to think or speak, lifted her head fractionally. That slight movement sent waves of pain jarring through her head, and even Kusac's soft voice was almost unbearable.
She felt his mind touch the agony inside her skull and gradually all pain ceased, leaving her limp and exhausted.
Kusac leaned back, reaching for the rucksack. Fumbling one-handedly inside it, he pulled out two emergency blankets. Trying not to disturb her, he spread first one then the other around them.
He looked down at where she lay against his chest. So different from his own women. Her face smooth skin, her hair blonde and long, cut shorter above her eyes. The eyes, a brown darker than he had ever seen, the whites almost startlingly blue. Eyes that right now he was drowning in.
A thought drifted up to him from her.
What is a Leska?
It has to do with our merging,
replied Kusac, trying to steady his thoughts. Their joining had been so complete that their rapport needed no strengthening for mind talk.
We are as one—Leskas to each other. Now sleep. I have overtaxed both of us. I had no idea our search would take this course.
He faltered, trying to suppress some of the half-formed thoughts that demanded attention.
Carrie closed her eyes obediently.
“Good night, Leska,” she murmured. “In some matters events happen as they will.”
Kusac sat for some time looking down at the sleeping Terran girl. What in Vartra's name had he done to them? His was the responsibility, the blame, as the girl's tutor. This bonding with her was irreversible for them both. He knew with every atom of his being that she was his true Leska, his life-mate.
No other relationships could ever have the depth of meaning or sharing that this held. Among Talented Sholans this was accepted, but where did that leave the two of them?
It wasn't as if they could hide their relationship; they would betray themselves in many little ways every moment of their lives, whether waking or sleeping. There were bound to be reprisals, from her people if not his own.
The Terrans would claim he had controlled her, used her mind until it belonged to him. This was the greatest sin a Talented person could commit. His people—so like the Terrans after all!—were quite likely to accuse him of the same crime and destroy that area of the brain where Talent was located.
He shivered, chilled by the very thought. To be cut off from this world, the full pleasures of which he had only just begun to taste! It did not bear thinking about, and firmly, he pushed these worries to the back of his mind, unconsciously holding Carrie closer.
Besides, he tried to comfort himself, he had been linked to Carrie before. No one knew what triggered a Leska bond. That this linking should have gone so much farther had not been his doing. He had been swept along on the same tide as she, and for a time control had been taken out of his hands. Vartra alone knew why it had happened, for it was certain he did not. But if it was Vartra's will, then He would protect them. Whatever the future held, at least they would face it together.
Tonight had been inevitable from the moment their minds, both stretched beyond endurance, had met for the first time.
With this thought, he lay back, carefully clasping the sleeping girl. He could feel her presence nestling in his mind like a small, warm cub.
Chapter 5
Kusac dozed for an hour or two, then woke while it was still dark. The fire glowed warmly beside them, giving him enough light to see by. Carrie still lay curled up across his chest, one arm tucked around his waist. He moved his hand, putting it up to stroke her cheek with his fingertips. Her skin was so soft, unlike anything he had ever felt.
BOOK: Turning Point
13.77Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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