21
Hands
Across & Down The Middle
Jhl had put
a little map of those parts of the interior of the Royal Palace
with which she was acquainted in R’shn’s head. But she didn’t have to use it
immediately: when the two girls arrived at the gates the guardsman on duty
turned a very strange colour and gasped: “Lady! They’ve been looking for you
everywhere!”
“I went for
a little ride,” she croaked. “Um, this is my friend. She’s brought my little
girl.”
The
guardsman didn’t even ask to look at their QAZZEZ, he just waved them through,
gasping something into his comm-blob as he did so.
Rh’aiiy’hn
got up quickly as the sitting-room door opened. “Roz! Thank the old gods! I was
frantic: where have you—” He broke off.
R’shn was
incapable of anything but a gulp.
“Thank you,
Group Leader,” said Rh’aiiy’hn limply to the man escorting them.
The Group
Leader bowed himself out, shutting the door.
Rh’aiiy’hn
swallowed. “It’s quite safe to talk in this room, my dears.”
“Um—sir, she
doesn’t look like—I mean, she looks more like the Captain to other—I mean,”
said L’Thea limply, “everybody else thinks the Captain always looked like that
when she was Roz.”
“I see,” he
murmured. He could also see, though there was a lot of shielding there which he
was in no doubt neither girl was responsible for, that they were both in an
agony of embarrassment. And that though they were both scared, R’shn was far
more scared than L’Thea. He could also see that she admired him very much. And
that she was doing her best to shield this from him. “Allow me to say that you
look very pretty indeed, R’shn.”
R’shn
blushed, gave him an agonised smile, and didn’t know where to look.
“And now I
think I’d better start calling you Roz,” he said, smiling. “Come and sit down
over here, Roz.”
Suddenly
S’zzie, who had been cowering against her mother’s bosom in these unfamiliar
surroundings, gave a crow and held out her arms to him.
“She
recognises me!” said Rh’aiiy’hn with a little laugh. “Hullo, S’zzie, my dear!
So you’ve come to visit me in my house! –Roz, my dear, how are you going to
explain her away?” he said as R’shn sat down and settled S’zzie on her knee.
“The—the
pluh-plan is, sir, that she’s mine from—from before. All the ruh-records have
buh-been fixed. Um, L’Thea brought her to me, you see, suh-sir.”
“Yes. And
who is L’Thea, now?” he asked kindly.
“She’s a
blonde New Rthfrdian, sir. What I mean is, the being that travelled with S’zzie
was a blonde New Rthfrdian that looked like L’Thea does now.”
“I see,” he
said kindly. “You do look very different, L’Thea.”
“Yes. This is my natural appearance. But I
haven’t looked like this for a very long time, sir!” she added hurriedly.
“Er—no.”
Rh’aiiy’hn had a look. Thundering herds of grpplybeasts! “Your appearance was
somewhat different when you were my father’s s-being, I see,” he said grimly.
“Isn’t that
shielded?” gasped R’shn in horror.
“No.”
“They must
have forgotten,” said L’Thea lamely. “Help.”
“It’s all
right: I’ll do it,” said R’shn firmly. “There!”
Rh’aiiy’hn
had another look. He smiled. “Well done, Roz!”
“I’ve been
learning a lot, sir,” she explained shyly. “Since I got better.”
“Got
better?”
“You could
look, sir,” she said shyly.
Rh’aiiy’hn looked. His slanted blue eyes
filled with tears: he swallowed hard, and looked away. The poor little thing!
He took a deep breath. “Now, what do we call you, L’Thea? Still L’Thea?”
“Well, no,
sir. That name is traceable to Lord Vt R’aam, you see. Well, as S-L’Thea, but
it’s easy enough to work it out.” She sighed. “My new name is L’n’ra. That’s a
very common New Rthfrdian name, sir.”
“It’s very
pretty, L’n’ra.”
“Yes, but I
was at First School with a really horrid girl called L’n’ra!”
Rh’aiiy’hn
twinkled at her. “On Old Rthfrdia we might shorten that to L’nnie, as a pet
name. Would you prefer that for less
formal occasions?”
“Yes, I
would,” she agreed.
“L’nnie. I
like it: it’s pretty,” decided R’shn.
“Good: then
you’ll be L’nnie to family and friends!” he said cheerfully. He hesitated a
moment and then said in a low voice to R’shn: “Should we perhaps use a
shortened form of Roz, too?”
She looked
at him with considerable sympathy, which he could see she didn’t dare to voice,
and said shyly: “That would be nice; but isn’t it very short already?”
A little
colour mounted to the high cheekbones. “Mm. I meant a—a pet name. If you
wouldn’t dislike it? What about Roz-ln? It means ‘little rose’ in Ancient
Rthfrdian.”
“Yes, please,” she whispered.
“It suits
you,” decided L’Thea.
R’shn smiled
in a confused way and buried her face in S’zzie’s soft black fuzzy crest.
Rh’aiiy’hn
looked dubiously at them. There was a terrible lot to discuss: for one thing,
he had seen that the Captain had given little Roz-ln only the haziest idea of
Court etiquette. On the assumption that she’d quickly pick it up as she went
along? And also, he was in no doubt, because the whole subject bored the
Captain herself solid. Most of what she’d absorbed about Old Rthfrdia in the
time she’d been at the Mk-L’ster’s lodge she hadn’t bothered to pass on,
either. Well, curse the woman! Pitchforking the child into a situation like this,
almost wholly unprepared? And as for sending L’nnie to the palace with her: it
doubled the risk, for the old gods’ sake! He hesitated. He could see that
Roz-ln would very much like L’nnie to stay with her in the palace, but...
Finally he
said “L’nnie, my dear, I think it might be safer for everybody if you just stay
here tonight, and then tomorrow perhaps go to stay with one of Roz-ln’s
friends.”
“I’d rather
go back to the ship, sir!” she said quickly.
Where the
only person available to keep an eye on her, not to say to keep an eye on what
was going on in her poor little head, would be the Captain.
“No,” he
said, the chiselled nostrils flaring. “I’ll speak to The Mk-L’ster. His sister
is acting as one of my mother’s ladies at the moment, but with you for company
she can very well go to her brother’s town house. One of Mother’s older ladies
will accompany you as chaperone.” He saw that neither of them understood that
word. “Old gods,” he muttered, passing a hand over his hair. “I think perhaps
Mother would be the best person to explain some aspects of our culture to you
both.”
He rang the
bell, ignoring their faces of horror, and asked that his mother be requested to
join them.
Mh’aaiivh
came in smiling. “My dearest girl, we were so worried!” she cried, as the
bowing guardsman closed the door behind her. The smile faded: she said sharply
to her son: “What is it? What’s she done?”
Rh’aiiy’hn
had risen as his mother came in: the two girls, looking uncertain, had both
wobbled to their feet. He put his arm round Mh’aaiivh and said to Roz-ln and
L’nnie: “Mother cannot read you. But I will show her what I see.”
There was a
moment’s pause.
Mh’aaiivh
gasped, and took an involuntary step backwards.
“Yes: she’s
prettier than the Captain, isn’t she?” he said, smiling.
“And very
much younger!” said Mh’aaiivh in a shaken voice.
“Mm. We’re
going to call her Roz-ln amongst ourselves, and her friend is L’nnie.”
“I see.
Roz-ln, L’nnie, my dears: you do know this is a very dangerous thing you’re
involved in?”
“Yes, we
both do,” said L’nnie shyly.
“Yes,”
agreed Roz-ln. “I’m sorry, I duh-don’t know what to call a ladyship!” she
gasped, the big, slanted dark eyes suddenly filling.
“Oh, dear,”
said Mh’aaiivh under her breath.
“The
Captain,” said her son in a very dry voice indeed: “has apparently passed on only
the most basic knowledge of our ways to little Roz-ln. I’d like you to take her
under your wing, Mother.”
“I most
certainly shall! –You should call me ‘ma’am’ in front of others, my dear,” she
said gently, “but when we’re in this room, it doesn’t matter what you call me.”
“Yes, ma’am,”
gulped Roz-ln, sniffing.
Smiling,
Mh’aaiivh went over to her and put a finger gently under S’zzie’s chin. “And
who is this?”
“S’zzie,”
she said, sniffing. “She’s mine, if you please, ma’am.”
“Yours and
who else’s, may I ask, my dear?”
“I can’t
remember!” she gasped.
“Well,
really!” said Rh’aiiy’hn angrily. “That’s beyond the pale!”
“He’s not
cross with you, my dear, but with the Captain,” murmured Mh’aaiivh. “Well,
hullo, little S’zzie! –Never mind, it’s immaterial, I’ve always wanted a
granddaughter,” she said briskly. “You may leave it all to me, now, Rh’aiiy’hn,
my dear.”
“May we
chat?” Rh’aiiy’hn said cautiously as they sat down on a little fancy sofa in in
a window alcove of the big palace ballroom.
Jhl turned
carefully so that the back of her head was presented to the ballroom. “Given
that approximately five megazillion of those present can lip-read, sir: no.”
“We’d better
stroll in the grounds,” he said tranquilly. He got up, and opened the long
windows behind them.
Jhl got up
groggily. “Sir, is this etiquette?” she hissed.
“No. But as
the entire Court has already decided that I’ve picked out the equerry with the Belraynian
delegation as my bedfellow for this evening, anything less would disappoint
them.” He bowed and offered her his arm.
Jhl didn’t bother to tell him not to
plasmo-blasted bow to her when she was in uniform. They went out into the
garden.
“It is safe
to talk, but keep it down,” she murmured.
“Of course.
There is a tall bi-sexual Friyrian Prince/ss in particular who appeared most
intrigued to see me send for you.”
Plasmo-blasted H’bl, of course. “Yes,” agreed Jhl sourly.
Rh’aiiy’hn
took a deep breath. “You must sense that I am very seriously annoyed. Is all
this subterfuge really necessary, when you come right down to it? Do those two
girls have to be here? Their lives may be in danger. Are you sure you’re not
playing this game because it’s the sort of game you enjoy playing, Captain?”
Oops: not
the slightest desire to call her “Roz” instead. And he’d let go of her arm,
too. Well—so much the better.
“I think it
is necessary, given that we’re up against the Full College.
But I don’t think I would expose R’shn and L’Thea if Shan was safe.” She could
feel his doubt. “But I am that sort of being, I don’t deny it.”
He strode on
very fast, his long legs easily outdistancing her.
Jhl followed
without hurrying. After a while he stopped and let her catch up with him.
“The gardens
are very scented, sir,” she said loudly.
“What? Oh!
Yes: roses. They’re very popular here. Do you have them on your world?”
“No. But I
am familiar with them. I once collected a cargo of them—not the flowers, the
bushes—from Mklontia.”
He received
a vivid picture of a small black-haired humanoid in a merchant trader’s uniform
shouting through a face-mask at a large Mklontian in the middle of a huge glasshouse.
He smiled reluctantly.
After a
moment he asked: “What do you intend for Roz-ln and L’nnie?”
“I haven’t
any plans for them.”
Rh’aiiy’hn’s
nostrils flared. He walked on, not communicating.
“What do you
suggest?”
He replied
very, very angrily: “Unlike yourself, Captain, I do not propose casting those
two girls aside as if they were pieces on a pwm board!”
Jhl
returned, unmoved—at least, she hoped it came over as unmoved: “I don’t know
that I intend that, exactly. But L’Thea certainly hasn’t anywhere else to go.
And R’shn doesn’t particularly fancy a life tending the egg sheds of Bluellia.”
Rh’aiiy’hn
did not reply for some time. Finally he said: “Whatever happens, I will be
responsible for them both.”
“Good. I
won’t presume to thank you on their behalves, since you value their
being-rights so highly.” –She sensed him clench his fists, but did nothing
about it.
“And if you
get my father away, how will you proceed?” he enquired at last.
“I thought we’d just—uh—lurk somewhere and wait
for him to grow up.”
Her mind was
blocked off from him. In the dimly lighted gardens Rh’aiiy’hn looked
searchingly at her face. She was staring at the ground and didn’t look up.
After quite some time he said: “I’ve been thinking about that. What if you find
that the sorts of powers that the Full Surgeons have are necessary to help
recover his memory?”
“I don’t
know. I thought I’d see if Trff could help, first, and panic later.”
Rh’aiiy’hn
had to take a deep breath. He grasped her elbow tightly. “Don’t pull away,” he
said in a lowered voice.
Jhl let him
hang on to her elbow. For a moment she thought he wasn’t going to express his
thoughts. Then he said: “I know the Trff would start off with every best
intention. But I can see various scenarios, none of which is very promising for
my father. The it-being may not have sufficient knowledge of humanoid
developmental psychology to help him. Or Trff may lose interest, or ingest too
much fermented laa, or become very involved in some other subject.”
“If you were
going to mention that its priorities are not the same as ours, don’t: I’ve long
since realised that. I’ve also realised that it probably doesn’t even recognise
the concept ‘priorities’.”
“Mm,” he
murmured, squeezing her elbow.
Jhl wrenched
it out of his grasp. SO?
“Don’t,” he said,
wincing. “Well, if you find that my father makes no progress, or poor progress,
I think the only solution may be to bring him to The Old Woman.”
Jhl stared
up at the starry Old Rthfrdian sky for some time.
“Well?” he
said in her ear.
“Oh, sir,
I’m afraid I could never accept such a proposition while I’m on duty!” she
squeaked in a very silly voice. All
right. Yes. Good idea.
Good. “You disappoint me strangely,
Captain,” said Rh’aiiy’hn with only the slightest quiver in his voice. “It
would have been a new experience for me, in uniform—jointly in uniform.”
“What in the
name of Federation is it?” she said weakly.
“This?
Commander-in-Chief of the Combined Forces of the Hereditary Kingdom of Old
Rthfrdia, of course.”
“It’s got
enough sparf on it,” she admitted weakly.
Rh’aiiy’hn’s
shoulders shook silently.
“Shall we go
back, sir?” she fluted.
“In a
moment.” He led her on a little way. I
want you to reconsider using those two girls.
No. Jhl turned on her heel and headed
back for the ballroom. She could sense his astonishment—at her rudeness, as
much as her utter refusal to discuss the matter—but too bad. Let him think she
was unreasonable and hard-hearted and—unwomanly, was it? Right; and the rest of
it. So much the better.
L’nnie had
now been living in The Mk-L’ster’s town house for three days and still hadn’t
laid eyes on her host. The elderly Lady Fhn’Lya whom the Regent’s mother had
appointed as their chaperone had explained that he was very busy. A’ailh’sa had
revealed that it was all stupid politics that L’nnie didn’t want to hear about,
not bothering to ascertain whether she did or she didn’t, and had further
explained, with pouts, but at some length, that Lady Fhn’Lya was a princess,
really—the which meant rather less than nothing to a being from New Rthfrdia,
where a simple form of democracy prevailed and where the only classes were
those created by wealth and power or their absence.
The third
evening of L’nnie’s incarceration in the Mk-L’ster town house was to feature a
Grand Ball at the Royal
Palace—BONAT QATACE,
thought the false L’nnie, with an ache in her heart—which it was A’ailh’sa’s
declared intention to attend. Left to herself L’Thea would not have gone near
the palace: though she wanted to see R’shn again she had now worked out that it
wasn’t particularly safe: the two of them being together would more or less
multiply the risk of discovery—no wonder the Regent had sent her away. The
elderly Lady Fhn’Lya, however, had said in her gentle way that it would be
thought odd for A’ailh’sa’s guest not to accompany her, so she had given in.
Her Royal
Highness the Princess Fhn’Lya had of course asked for a choice of suitable
garments to be sent along from the nicest shops, explaining to the bulging-eyed
L’nnie that normally a dress would be made to her measurements, but there
wasn’t time. That hopeful discussion with the former R’shn about her weaving
and the possible markets they might find for it seemed very, very far away, and
so did the time that BrTl had said that of course she could stay with the ship.
The former L’Thea felt miserably that they’d been a pair of silly little fools
even to imagine that they might be in control of their own destinies to that
extent. Being L’nnie and Roz-ln was no better than being an s-being on vacuum-frozen
Y-K-W; in fact, in that My Lord Y-K-W didn’t figure in the picture at all,
worse.
The ladies
were ready, the ground-car was at the door, and there was no sign of The
Mk-L’ster. Grimly A’ailh’sa decided they’d go anyway. Lady Fhn’Lya was lodging
a distressed protest when the door opened, a bowing servant announced: “Lord
Mk-D’rm’d,” and R’rt Fh’laiin limped in, smiling.
“What are you doing here?” gasped A’ailh’sa,
bounding to her feet, very flushed, L’nnie didn’t need mind-powers to see why.
As he was in
the skirt, with the fine black nyrhide dress jacket, it was obvious what R’rt
Fh’laiin was doing there. He replied, bowing but with a twinkle in his eye:
“I’ve come to escort you ladies to the Grand Ball. Good evening, Lady Fhn’Lya.
May I say you’re in great looks tonight?”
Lady Fhn’Lya
blushed, and disclaimed, and in a great flutter introduced Lord Mk-D’rm’d to L’nnie.
And they would love his escort to the ball; but did he feel quite up to it?
Twinkling, R’rt Fh’laiin admitted he wasn’t up to dancing, though he thought he
might walk through the Grand Step of Old Rthfrdia. But he couldn’t possibly
miss the Grand Ball: it was the highlight of the pre-Fed festivities; and it
might, after all, be the very last Grand Ball to be held in the Royal Palace of
Old Rthfrdia.
There was a
moment’s pause, while the two Old Rthfrdian ladies looked at each other
uncertainly and L’nnie stared at the floor, biting her lip. Then the gentle
Lady Fhn’Lya said firmly, suddenly sounding much more like a Royal personage
and much less like a fluttery maiden aunt: “That is perfectly true, and we
accept your escort very gratefully, Lord Mk-D’rm’d. Come along, my dear girls,
we shall not wait for Lord Mk-L’ster, it seems he is unavoidably detained.” And
they went.
“I perceive
you know the Mklontian shuffle, Lady,” said BrTl, bowing low. “Shall we?”
Not merely
because the only beings who had so far taken the floor for the Mklontian
shuffle were BrTl’s size or larger, L’Thea looked up at him in agony.
“Of course:
off you go, my dear!” said Lady Fhn’Lya brightly.
The agonised
L’Thea allowed BrTl to take her appendage and lead her onto the floor…
“Hey, the
Mklontian shuffle! I can do this, Aunty Jhl, BrJk taught me, do you wanna?”
The small
grqwary dropping sufficiently related to herself, having refused point-blank to
wear the archaic long male robe of Bluellia, for which one could hardly blame
him, was in a sort of watered-down, re-hashed, very non-Regulation version of
Space Fleet dress uniform. “In my dress uniform with you in something horribly
reminiscent of it?” said Jhl through her pearlized teeth.
“He’s doing it,” said G’gg sadly,
looking at a small pink-crested figure in dress uniform shuffling in the giant
shadow of a Thwurbullerian.
“And I
thought these Grand Balls were exclusive affairs!” she said, rolling her eyes
madly
“Huh?”
She was
about to blast him when a tall, slim, turquoise-skinned figure in Friyrian
male-tended dress clothes sauntered up to them and drawled: “Oh, but they are: would we be here, otherwise?
Perhaps the cognate would care to shuffle it with me, instead?”
“Y—Um—what
about Old Rthfrdian gender customs?” she croaked.
Frr’gg
shrugged. “Does gender pertain in the Mklontian shuffle?”
“Go on,
then,” she groaned. “Uh—hang on: this is—”
“G’gg, I can
see that. I’m Frr’gg. Come on,” he said, grinning.
Jhl watched
limply as her nephew shuffled onto the floor under the kindly supervision of
Lord Frr’gghurrhynvycia of Friyria. Resplendent in his silver scintillion long
trousers, silvered dhrss silk dress jacket, its full skirt gathered back in the
obligatory bunch over the mammalian bum, exiguous silver zpandria-cloth male
blouse, and mandatory gill-collar, very much emphasising the gill area of the
neck. An ear-clip covering much of the left side of the head was also required
wear on these diplo occasions: Frr’gg’s was not silver-chased xrillion to match
the gill-collar, but silvered old quog, intricately carved, and undoubtedly
worth a world’s ransom. The two of them were most certainly a sight for sore
visual organs but Jhl, frankly, was past caring. G’gg had grown, she noted
morosely: all legs.
Frr’gg was
of course using the opportunity to probe G’gg as to what in Federation the lot
of them were up to—he’d recognised BrTl instantly, curse his plasmo-blasted
shades—but after the Ju’ukrterian appendage had been in that particular nymbo
cheese pie there was fortunately not even a remote possibility that the grqwary
dropping would be able to reveal a thing. In fact, emanations of bafflement
were coming from Frr’gg at this moment, as he absorbed drivel relating to
Pye-Class Bhylloblasters, maxi-shakes, jolly-lolly jelly, Njneeainwearian
chewing-taffy, Circule Pundervarps, QAZZEZ, Kernarvian balloon flights, and the
rest. Hah, hah.
… The New
Rthfrdian glide struck up. The tall, yellow-haired Friyrian bowed before the
confounded R’shn. The silver scintillion dress trousers shimmered, as did the
silvered dhrss silk dress jacket, with its full skirt gathered back and tied
with a gauzy zpandria-cloth bow. The exiguous silver zpandria-cloth male
blouse, together with the fact that the mammalian breasts had almost
disappeared, signalled to the initiate that Prince/ss H’blwlldreffna was now
almost fully male-tended. S/he was still wearing the long yellow moustache. And
of course the gill-collar. This one was mixed gold and silver inlay on wkli
shell. The intricately carved ear-clip shielding the left side of the head was
also wkli shell; from it dangled a multitude of small, sparkling pale turquoise
stones which picked up the pretty shade of the skin. H’bl’s thin, wiry wrists
and fingers were adorned with more turquoise gems, more wkli shell, and rare
wkli pearls.
“Do you know
the glide, my dear?” murmured Rh’aiiy’hn. “It’s a New Rthfrdian dance.”
“Generally
popular in humanoid societies,” said H’bl, bowing again. “May I have the
honour, Lady?”
“I’m afraid
I don’t know it!” gasped R’shn.
“Then do,
pray, allow me to teach you,” said the Friyrian, bowing again.
Rh’aiiy’hn
gave in. “The Lady Roz would be delighted.”
Shaking in
her shoes, R’shn let herself be led out by a Friyrian lordship. Rh’aiiy’hn
watched and listened grimly: the Prince/ss’s mind-powers were more than the
equal of his own.
It’s all right! said a cross voice in his head. Relax!
Jumping
slightly, Rh’aiiy’hn conceded: Thank you,
Captain.
… The yorble
struck up. Recognising without difficulty the quality of the anguished look
that M’ri was giving her as Lord Frr’gghurrhynvycia of Friyria approached them,
Mh’aii’rhi Roz rose gracefully and before his Lordship could so much as utter,
cooed: “Lord Frr’gghurrhynvycia! How lovely! I’d be delighted: the yorble is one of my most-favourite dances!” And
glided off with him.
… The
dancers revolved in the minuet. “You’re late,” said R’rt Fh’laiin mildly.
Drouwh
scowled. “Old Rthfrdia hasn’t entirely come to a standstill just because a lot
of useless Court fools are having a cursed Grand Ball.”
“Court fools
and diplo fools, isn’t it?” he drawled.
“Yes,” said Drouwh coldly.
R’rt
Fh’laiin laughed.
“Where’s
A’ailh’sa? I suppose it was too much to hope that she’d be sitting out with
you,” his old friend noted grimly. He glanced over to where Dh’aaych’llyai’n,
Lady U-Fl’aiir’th and Kt-Ln were all sitting quietly on a small sofa.
Dh’aaych’s eye was covered by a patch and he was rather pale but Drouwh could
sense that he was feeling much better. Not to say thoroughly enjoying the
reaction of horrified friends and acquaintances who had not yet seen the
eye-patch.
R’rt Fh’laiin
replied calmly: “A’ailh’sa’s on the floor: just over there. She has been
sitting out with me, but the girl’s entitled to some fun, at a dance.”
Drouwh
looked at his sister circling in the Friyrian minuet in the grasp of the very
Friyrian who’d told that filthy story about the Captain at dinner a few nights
back. His mouth tightened.
R’rt
Fh’laiin watched him uncertainly. After a few moments he said: “That’s a pretty
little girl that you’ve got staying with you.”
“What?” he
said blankly.
“The girl
that Rh’aiiy’hn asked A’ailh’sa to look after. For the old gods’ sake, Drouwh,
where have you been these last three days?”
“Largely,
down in the South Cwmb. There’s unrest in the
processing plant. Cursed Bh’ay’llaaiyh up to his tricks again.”
“What about
your—uh—Trust, or whatever it is?”
He shrugged.
“First get the people to understand it. Well, I thought I had. Never mind: it’s
settled now.”
“Only two
days to go,” murmured The Mk-D’rm’d.
“Until
F-Day: yes. Then a week of drunkenness and general mayhem. That’ll leave them
in good form to vote in the Referendum.”
“Mm.”
Drouwh
stared at the dance floor, no longer focusing. After a while he said: “Did you
say Rh’aiiy’hn asked A’ailh’sa to
have this girl to stay?”
“Yes.”
He looked at
him, frowning.
R’rt
Fh’laiin shrugged slightly. “Don’t ask me where he found her. She claims to be
a friend of the Lady Roz.” He eyed him drily.
“Oh,” said
Drouwh limply.
R’rt
Fh’laiin’s eyes rested thoughtfully on a small Space Fleet Lieutenant-Pilot
leaning against a wall with her arms crossed, looking bored, but he said
nothing.
“Just
don’t,” warned Drouwh.
“Many may be
listening but are any picking up?” he said lightly.
Drouwh’s
fists clenched: he was silent.
“Mm?”
“I’m
certainly not picking you up, R’rt
Fh’laiin,” he admitted, nostrils flaring.
R’rt
Fh’laiin shook silently.
“Very
amusing,” said Drouwh coldly, walking away from him.
… A
pink-cheeked young cavalryman in dress uniform returned L’nnie to her
chaperone’s side. “There you are,” said Lady Fhn’Lya placidly. “Now, you must
meet your host! Lord Mk-L’ster, may I present—”
L’Thea
didn’t really hear the introduction. She looked up weakly at the handsomest
male humanoid she’d ever seen. He was very tall, and he had beautiful hair:
short red-gold curls gleaming under the ballroom lights. He had wide shoulders
and long legs, an even better figure than—someone else’s—but the very same
slanted blue eyes and that winged jaw; and even though his colouring was
different and he was taller, he looked just so incredibly like Lord Y-K-W! Two
galaxies!
Drouwh could
see with no difficulty whatsoever that the pretty little blonde girl admired
him. He was rather touched: she was an unsophisticated, naïve little thing. He
was aware of a certain amount of shielding in her mind, but he didn’t think for
a moment she was responsible for it. There was also a certain intelligence, a
good deal of common sense, and some very creditable reservations about the lordship
class of Old Rthfrdia and its Grand Balls, and diplo junk in general. –Diplo
junk? Hm. He couldn’t imagine who she was or why the Captain had wished her on
them, but as it was pretty clear she had, and as the poor little thing was
clearly very ill at ease and unhappy in the company in which she found herself,
he smiled very kindly indeed into her unusual amber eyes and said: “I’m very
glad to meet you at last, L’nnie. And you must excuse my not being at home
these last few days: I’ve been very busy.” He held out his hand. “Would you
like to dance? This one’s a glide, I think.”
“Thuh-thank
you,” she whispered, putting a tiny paw in his long, strong hand.
Drouwh led
her gently onto the floor and glided gently away with her.
I see! That was part of the plan that you
didn’t have, was it? said Rh’aiiy’hn’s voice sardonically in Jhl’s head.
Grimly Jhl
ignored the Regent of Old Rthfrdia. She was getting quite good at it.
… The Grand
Step of Old Rthfrdia was announced, and every being present who had the
physiology for it and had absorbed the correct Etiquette Bulletin obediently
took the floor. In couples where that was appropriate to the physiology.
Couples of mixed gender, where that was appropriate to the physiology. Though
the Grand Step did not entail staying with one’s partner, but going down the
long line of the dancers in one’s set dancing with every other partner but
one’s own until one finally ended up back with one’s own partner, at which
point the dance ended. Oh, well, it was no sillier than the Porbernarian shloow
or the Njneeainwearian wiggle-slip-wiggle, to name but two of megazillions .
”I suppose
it’s no sillier than the Porbernarian shloow,” admitted the Thwurbullerian with
whom BrTl was dancing it.
“Granted,”
he granted.
“I think you
go that way now,” said the Thwurbullerian helpfully.
“Thank you.
Will there be supper after this?” he said hopefully.
“No. Those
nibbles earlier were supper,” the Thwurbullerian replied glumly.
Glumly BrTl
went on down the dance. Hullo.
Jhl circled
gravely with him, hand in pseudopod. Hullo.
Are we doing this right?
No idea.
That’s what I thought, he acknowledged glumly.
Trff was in
another set. Hullo, G’gg.
“Hey, Slgg!
How are ya?” he cried. “This is fun, eh?”
Trff had to
run that one by its translator a second time. “Oh, yes, G’gg. Fun.”
“You-it goes
that way, now!” he pointed out, giggling madly.
“Thank you-it,”
it acknowledged glumly.
Having reluctantly
abandoned little L’nnie to the tender mercies of a set full of Court fools and
diplo even worse fools Drouwh inevitably found himself face-to-face in the
dance with his soon-to-be-ex-wife. Nh’raii’llyh was draped in a violently puce
mn-mn silk creation clipped up with quog brooches which by rights were part of
the Mk-L’ster patrimony. Huge puce Phang-Phangian senso-orchids waved on her
shoulder and head.
To Drouwh’s certain knowledge there were
only three glasshouses in the whole of Old Rthfrdia that grew Phang-Phangian
senso-orchids of that particular shade: his own, where there was no chance at
all that she’d got them, Sh’n M’Klui’shke’aigh’s, about as much chance, and old
Lord Mk-D’nl’d’s. As the old Lord was gaga and confined to his ancestral keep,
that meant that she had indeed, as rumour had it, been sleeping with his eldest
son, Lord U’iiain Mk-D’nl’d, a middle-aged man who ought to know better and who
until the Lady Nh’raii’llyh had got her puce-painted claws into him, had been
generally considered so to do. Nh’raii’llyh gave him a glance of bitter
dislike. Drouwh ignored it. They danced in silence.
… “We meet again, Lone Delegate,” said
Rh’aiiy’hn graciously, not pointing out that Trff was going down the female
line, because what did it matter, after all?
It isn’t male, either.
“Uh—no, of
course,” he said weakly, smiling at it.
Help! Where does it go now?
“The
sequence of steps one dances with each successive partner is exactly the same,
Lone Delegate,” said Rh’aiiy’hn, very limply indeed.
“Not really?
Silly it!” it replied brightly, bobbing off towards the next unfortunate in the
line of notionally male dancers.
Limply
Rh’aiiy’hn continued on down the dance.
… “Well, well!” smiled H’bl.
Well, well to you, too, returned Jhl
grimly. “Good evening, Prince/ss.”
H’bl gave
her a meaning smile and squeezed her hand. To her annoyance Jhl felt her colour
rise. “This is rather pleasant, for a change,” s/he said suggestively.
Blast it out your ear, H’bl.
… Dh’aaych
had insisted on dancing the Grand Step. Limply he let the little green fuzzy
thing put a tentacle, at least he thought it was a tentacle, in his fist. Was it female?
No.
Jumping, he
gasped: “Have we met before?”
“No, of
course not,” it said in Old Rthfrdian, at least he was almost sure it was
actually speaking it and not being translated. Though the tentacle did bear an
up-market translator. Though curiously, not a chrono-blob.
It knows what the time is, local-time.
Uh-huh: he
just betted it did.
It is Trff.
Thought you must be, thought Dh’aaych feebly.
He got an
impression of nodding, though nothing on it moved. He swallowed hard.
It goes this way, now. This it-being is
honoured to have met you-it, Dh’aaych.
Dh’aaych
smiled weakly as it bobbed off.
… G’gg had
now encountered Mh’aii’rhi Roz in the dance. Jhl tried not to look. Or listen.
… M’ri
looked up nervously into a familiar turquoise face. Frr’gg gave up all pretence
at controlling anything, clasped her to him, and whirled her in an
all-too-brief delirium. Ooh, delicious! Would it were his entirely! He allowed
himself to tinkle very faintly as he sent her on her shaken way.
… L’Thea’s eyes had filled with tears.
Don’t
be like that, you were all right before, sent BrTl anxiously. That’s a bad
sign, isn’t it, when that water oozes out of your eyes?
Yes, she agreed, nodding and sniffling.
I miss you, too.
She sniffed
and nodded.
Will he let you keep on with the
Slaetho-Xathpyrian?
“Who?” she
said, looking up at him in astonishment.
“Uh—forget
it,” he mumbled hastily. Ugh, far from forgetting it, she was mulling it over
and coming to the inescapable conclusion that— Hastily he expunged the entire
conversation. Better safe than sorry. Tentatively he bared his crunchers. In
the past that had sometimes worked.
She smiled
faintly. “That’s really horrible.”
“Good,” he
said, hugging her to his foreleg and doing a sort of hop.
“Is this how
the dance goes?” she gasped.
“Dunno,” he
admitted.
She went
into a fit of the giggles. It wasn’t the old L’Thea, by any means, but it was
better than nothing.
… Sh’n had
rotated as far as the Captain. He looked at her mockingly. “I don’t think we’ve
met, er, Lieutenant-Pilot, is it?”
“‘Captain.’
Merchant captain’s star up,” responded Jhl limply.
“Of course;
I beg your pardon,” he said solemnly. The green-blue Islander eyes sparkled: he
took her in his arms for their part of the dance.
“Oh!” gasped Jhl as she was whirled in the
figure.
Sh’n looked
down at her mockingly. “That’s what this humanoid dance is supposed to be,
Captain.”
“Yes. You’re
a wonderful dancer, sir,” she said limply.
“‘Representative’,” corrected Sh’n, straight-faced. “Thank you.”
Jhl allowed
herself to be whirled round again and sent on her way, her little heart all
a-flutter. There was a cursed sight more to Representative Sh’n
M’Klui’shke’aigh than met the first probe through the mind-shield, that was for
sure! Possibly Shn’aillaigh of U’Rhy’iior’thn was not entirely to be pitied,
after all.
… Drouwh had encountered a very beautiful
woman further down his set. Tall—nearly as tall as he, in fact—with an oval,
high cheek-boned, golden-skinned face, a pointed chin, slender winged eyebrows
and slanted lapis lazuli eyes. Her hair was a shiny black and waved up from her
smooth forehead in an intricate mass of curls sprinkled with blue and pink
glittering stones and tiny pink, gold and blue butterflies with moving wings,
the which Drouwh told himself firmly could not be alive. The elaborately wound
gown was a shimmering gauze which constantly changed shades from gold to blue
to pink as one looked at it. She smiled into his eyes as they revolved in the figure.
Well met, cousin!
His jaw sagged.
I had no notion that we had any Whtyllian
connections on Old Rthfrdia.
“You
mistake, ma’am,” he said through his pearly teeth.
She raised
the slanted eyebrows very high, gave a light laugh, and said aloud: “I do beg
your pardon!”
Drouwh went
down the dance to his next partner on legs that shook. Bears’ claws, she must have
recognised his father’s genetic encoding in him!
… Shn’aillaigh
looked somewhat limply up at the huge brown furry creature that was emanating
friendliness and good will at her. It was a rotten dancer.
He, he said in her head. I’m the Captain’s First Officer.
She nodded,
her eyes on stalks. GOTCHA.
You don’t need to yell, responded BrTl
happily. If you gave up this
bond-partnering stuff, there might be a possibility of a position on a certain
ship. With a bit of coaching in blob-control. A good shot’s always an asset to
a ship.
Shn’aillaigh
looked up at him limply. “I can’t,” she said aloud.
Ssh. I see that now. Pity.
She looked
after him limply as he shambled down the dance.
… G’gg had
now rotated as far as his cousin in the dance but Jhl was pretty well past even
wanting to look.
He-it
believes she-it’s the Lady Roz, her Chief Engineer reminded her helpfully.
Thank you for that intel, Trff.
Trff shut
up, emanating huffiness.
… “Vlohffert,”
approved BrTl. “A charming shade.”
His Old
Rthfrdian partner just looked up at him numbly, her mouth open.
Swallowing a
resigned sigh, BrTl clasped her in a pseudopod and whirled her in the figure.
He was getting quite good at this. Oops! He dusted down her vlohffert garment
with a careful pseudopod and sent her on her trembling way.
… “Surely
we’ve met before, my dear?” said Lord Chr’kndry K’mr of Whtyll, smiling kindly
upon the devastatingly pretty little blonde humanoid girl. Mm, he’d almost
forgotten how delightful blonde-haired, pink-skinned simplicity could be!
Er—was it entirely simplicity? There was something—Oh. A Mullgon’ya nursing-home:
poor child. But never mind, simplicity was her main characteristic now:
delicious!
L’Thea had a
mad instant in which she almost said: “Yes, I danced the aarNaarNian mating
dance for you in Lord Vt R’aam’s palace on Whtyll.” She swallowed. “No, Lord.”
“Tell me,”
he said in her ear: “are you permanently committed to the red-haired Lord who
is half Whtyllian?”
“Wha— No!”
she gasped in horror.
“Ah,” he
said, smiling meaningfully into her eyes as the dance parted them. “Then we
shall meet again!”
… “Good
evening: Captain, isn’t it? I think we have met,” said Drouwh through his
pearly teeth, taking the grpplybeast by the horns.
“How are
you, sir?” responded Jhl grimly.
“Very well,
thank you. The ball’s going well, don’t you think?”
Jhl took a
deep breath. She did not descend to sending him any sort of mind-message, let
alone one that suggested he blast it out his ear. She just trod viciously on
his nyr-leather-clad foot with her Space Issue Number One-type boot, FW planets
for the use on.
Drouwh
gasped. His face turned a sort of pale green and then went very red.
“I’m so
sorry, sir!” she fluted. “Was that your appendage?”
His mouth
tightened. He said nothing.
Jhl waited
but he didn’t attempt to do the same to her. How unenterprising.
… “Thank the
old gods,” sighed Rh’aiiy’hn as at long last he found himself facing Roz-ln
again at the head of their set. She looked at him plaintively as the musicians
brought the tune more or less to an end: given that they were trying to
compensate for the facts that the sets were out of synch and that some beings
had become hopelessly confused as to the direction in which they were supposed
to be proceeding, and were still proceeding. “That was the last dance, Roz-ln.”
R’shn sagged
with relief and had to be prompted to curtsey.
Jhl and her partner
were back in the place in the set they’d started from, so possibly this was the
end of this particular pile of mok shit.
“Curtsey!”
hissed paxeR.
“Eh? Oh. So this is the end, then?”
“Yes!”
hissed the crested one, turning a strange orange shade. –Possibly
embarrassment: couldn’t be sex-change, he was still too short to be anything
but male.
“Thank the
Federation,” she groaned, bowing.
He began
unwisely: “That’s not a curts—” but she gave him a Look and he shut up like the
proverbial dendrion nut.
“That’s it,
you can stop now,” said the Thwurbullerian kindly.
BrTl stopped
instantly.
In the
adjacent set G’gg bowed to his partner, a pretty little Old Rthfrdian girl who
had no cognitive grasp of the concepts “Bhylloblaster,” “hyperdrive” and
“hyperblob” at all, and very little of “left” or “right”. “’Scuse me!” he
gasped. He shot down the set, dodged across the confused lines of muddled Grand
Steppers, and pulled Trff bodily to a halt. Not hard: in terms of the commonly
perceived Y-K-W he was something like five times its weight. “You can stop now,
Slgg!” he gasped.
Trff stopped
immediately. So did at least a dozen of the surrounding muddled Grand Steppers,
all emanating tremendous relief, so it hadn’t been at all an un-diplo move,
really.
Shn’aillaigh and Sh’n had got as far as the
front lobby, in the midst of a milling mass of guests waiting for their
vehicles to be announced, when a panting Guardsman caught up with them. “My
Lady! Sir! The Regent requests your presence—”
“A little
supper?” groaned Shn’aillaigh. “At this hour?”
Sh’n gave
her a warning look. “We’ll be there directly.”
Dh’aaych and
K’t-Ln had made it all the way to the vehicle park, ignoring the earnest
representations of its guardian that their vehicle could be brought round.
“What?” he
groaned. “Supper? It’s practically dawn!”
K’t-Ln gave
a warning cough.
“Oh!” he
said. “Yes, we’ll be there, with bells on! His private apartments, is it?
Right!”
“What’s wrong?” demanded Drouwh grimly as the
servant closed the door to the Regent’s private sitting-room softly behind him.
“I hope,
nothing,” replied Rh’aiiy’hn calmly. “Please sit down. We’ll discuss it when
everyone’s here.”
“But we are
all here,” said BrTl in confusion.
“Not quite.
–I’m sorry, Lieutenant, of course you don’t know everyone.”
“Yes, I do,”
he said in surprise.
A’ailh’sa
collapsed in helpless giggles.
“Sorry. Hullo, female cognate,” he said,
baring the crunchers carefully.
“Call me
A’ailh’sa!” she squeaked, going off into more gales of giggles.
“See?” cried
L’Thea. “I’m not the only one! Just don’t try to smile, BrTl!”
“Er—when we
met earlier, Lieutenant,” noted R’rt Fh’laiin delicately, “I’m almost sure you
were introduced as Lieutenant BrJk.”
“I would
have been. –This one isn’t a cognate,” he reported. “Though the hair is red, I
think?” he added delicately.
Smiling,
Rh’aiiy’hn agreed: “Certainly. The shade we call very dark auburn, Lieutenant.”
“I knew
there had to be a word for it!” he cried. He shook his wrist and gave it an
evil look. “Piece of space junk.” He looked at Drouwh. “Ah: the other male
cognate, of course.”
Drouwh held
out a hand, looking dry. “Yes. Drouwh Mk-L’ster. Do we call you BrTl?”
BrTl did him
the honour of taking the hand in one of his, rather than a pseudopod. Not that
hand-shaking was a xathpyroid gesture, at all. He didn’t squeeze, though: he had
learned not to. “Only within this shield,” he admitted.
“Otherwise,
BrJk for the purpose of the exercise!” said a voice from the doorway with a
cheerful laugh. Shn’aillaigh came in with Sh’n, grinning. “If this is meant to
be a light supper, Rh’aiiy’hn,” she noted genially, “could we have some,
please?”
“See?” cried
BrTl. “I told you she’d be ideal! The being thinks of everything!”
The food had
been brought, and Dh’aaych and K’t-Ln had arrived and been introduced—Dh’aaych
declaring breezily there was no need to, he didn’t think he could mistake BrTl
or Trff for anyone else—and, certain beings having stayed the pangs
sufficiently, Rh’aiiy’hn admitted: “This isn’t entirely a social gathering. We
thought we’d best—er—clear the air.”
Silence fell.
“Don’t all speak
at once,” noted Jhl drily.
“Friyrians
and Whtyllians,” offered BrTl glumly, embarking on his second roast, um, it
wasn’t grqwary but tasted almost as good. “Spotting us.”
“Quite,” said
Drouwh grimly. “The Whtyllian I have
specifically in mind is a tall, handsome woman who claims to be my cousin.”
“Ah… wearing
Vorsernarian butterflies tonight?” ventured Jhl.
“Butterflies, yes,” he said drily.
“The Lady
Kmlh’aa gh R’ju Mhk-Rhajjii.”
“A widow,”
said BrTl thickly.
The
assembled company goggled at him.
“‘Gh’ in the
name,” agreed Shn’aillaigh limply. “Yes. I’d have said that sort of thing was
entirely beneath your notice, BrTl.”
“He had it
explained to him in concepts of less than one syllable by a blue Flppu,” said
Jhl through her pearlized teeth, “and could we avoid irrelevancies, please? –L’Thea?”
L’Thea
gulped. “There’s another one that knows Lord Mk-L’ster is part Whtyllian. He
said it just—just casually!” she said on a desperate note.
“He would. Trff? –Trff!”
Jumping
visibly, it withdrew a tube from a bowl of laa. “Yes, sir!”
Jhl opened
her mouth angrily but Rh’aiiy’hn murmured: “Let me. –Trff, if I understand the
position rightly, these upper-class Whtyllians may well gossip about the blood
connection between Lord Vt R’aam, Lord Mk-L’ster and his sister, and myself,
but they will not perceive anything we know about Lord Vt R’aam’s condition and
associated matters, will they?”
“Not while
the it-being continues to shield such matters, no, sir,” it said gratefully.
“Good.”
“What about
the plasmo-blasted Friyrians?” said BrTl grimly. ‘There’s two here that know us
and have spotted we’re up to something.”
“Yes,”
agreed Jhl. “Added to which—” She hesitated.
“It could
tell them, Jhl,” offered Trff kindly.
“Tell them
what a cousin is?” she returned nastily.
“Yes. But it
doesn’t need to.”
“Er—no, we
all know what cousins are, Trff, old thing,” said Dh’aaych kindly, seeing that
everyone else was bereft of speech. “Tell us about these Friyrians, then.”
“The
particular reference is to the being called H’blwlldreffna. That being has many
cognates, some of whom are cousins. One cognate is a member of the Full College
of Full Surgeons.”
Several
beings gasped, and/or cringed.
“It does
that,” apologised BrTl glumly.
“S/he’s only
a distant cousin,” admitted Jhl. “But blood relationships are very important to
most Friyrians. If H’bl spotted anything that might interest the Full College,
s/he might well tell the cousin.”
Sh’n stood
up, looking grim. “l have a feeling this is starting to get far more dangerous
than just a little internecine political struggle on an obscure little primmo.
If I’ve got it right, Trff, you can remove all memory of this complication from
our minds. Will you do it, please?”
“Everything
to do with my father, the Full
College and associated
matters. Including the pwld mining venture, please,” added Rh’aiiy’hn.
Trff pointed
an antenna dubiously at Drouwh.
“Not him,”
said Rh’aiiy’hn with a sigh. “But definitely the other Old Rthfrdians.”
“We’ll say
goodbye, then!” said Shn’aillaigh cheerfully, getting up and taking Sh’n’s arm.
They went out with farewells all round, Dh’aaych and K’t-Ln, and R’rt Fh’laiin
with A’ailh’sa and L’Thea following in their wake.
Drouwh had
risen politely. He sank down onto the sofa again. “How much did you remove, for
the old gods’ sake?” he said to Trff.
“All of it,”
it replied calmly.
Jhl got up.
“That appears to be that. We’d better go. You, too, Trff.”
“This
it-being is quartered in the palace.”
“I meant get
to bed, Trff! You’re not staying in here to get pissed out of your
asteroid-brain on fermented laa! We need you to maintain all those shields! Now
MOVE!” She strode over to the door and opened it.
BrTl bowed
deeply to the Regent. “Many thanks for your hospitality, sir.”
Trff bobbed
politely. “Indeed, a delightful supper, sir.”
“Not at
all,” said Rh’aiiy’hn with a wary eye on the Palace Guards outside the door.
Jhl bowed
stiffly. “Thank you for your gracious invitation, sir.”
“Not at all,
Captain.” Rh’aiiy’hn refrained from saying they must do it again some time. The
Guards carefully closed the door after her. The brothers looked limply at each
other.
After quite
some time Rh’aiiy’hn said lightly: “That leaves the two of us, doesn’t it? One
wonders how much of all this was in our father’s original plan.”
Drouwh
looked at him uncertainly.
“I gather
that his mind is both flexible and devious—to an extreme degree. How much would
he have anticipated, do you suppose?”
Drouwh
hesitated. “I’d say it depends how well he knows all three of them.”
Rh’aiiy’hn’s
lips twitched. “Yes.” He opened the door and looked at his brother mockingly.
“Good-night, Drouwh. Feel free to speak to me at any time.”
Drouwh took
a deep breath. “Thanks for the supper. Good-night, Rh’aiiy’hn.”
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