27
Shan
“Hullo,
darling,” he said mildly. The slanted blue eyes sparkled.
Jhl
swallowed, in spite of herself. If this was an illusion it was a plasmo-blasted
convincing one. He seemed to have got back, if that was the expression, all of
his personality and most of his memory—oh, not the technical stuff. Not yet.
Well, given that Trff and The Old Woman were the ones working on him, that was
hardly surprising.
“Pity one
can’t safely access the Encyclopaedia. A good stiff Third School course of
study in astrophysics is indicated, I think. Not to say, Space Fleet Tactical,”
he murmured, smiling.
“Trff has
done Third School engineering,” she pointed out
limply. What in the name of the two galaxies was this conversation about? Given that when last seen he’d
been a drooling infant, and before that she hadn’t seen him for—
Drivelling, wasn’t it?
“Shut UP,
BrTl! And presumably Trff was made to do tactics, though I admit I’ve discerned
no evidence of it.”
It did take tactics, it objected.
The Admiral
sent a short, pithy order and Jhl’s two ship-companions hurriedly retreated
and, in the case of one, physically restrained a pseudopod from saluting.
The
Collector had already tactfully retreated, so that left Jhl and Admiral Vt
R’aam, face-to-face on a plasmo-blasted grassy slope on the Isle of Slrw. With
a funny smell.
“It is
aromatic, isn’t it?” he agreed. “It’s some little herb that’s native
hereabouts; there isn’t an Intergalactic word for it.”
“Say it in Old Rthfrdian, then,” said Jhl
sourly in that language, overriding both her own translator and his without
effort.
“What?” he
said blankly in Intergalactic.
Well,
possibly that proved that he really was Shan, or that Vvlvanian-cursed Collector
Athlor Raj Kadry was a cursed sight better illusionist than Captain Marvel ever
had been, or—or—
“Don’t cry,
darling Jhl,” he said, still with that so-familiar faint laugh in the voice,
coming to put an arm round her. “I really am me. Apart from the technical
stuff.”
Abruptly Jhl
gave way and bawled all over the Admiral’s almost-familiar hard shoulder.
“You’ve lost weight,” she concluded, sniffing.
“Have I? You
mean old S-B’rtha didn’t stuff me with mush until I looked like a Whtyllian sausage?”
“What? Oh,
um, no. She can’t have.”
“Blow your
nose,” he said, smiling, offering her a senso-tissue.
Groggily Jhl
blew her nose. “Sorry,” she growled. “Ugh—what is this?”
“Mm? Oh,
it’s the primmo equivalent of senso-tissue. A piece of cloth.”
“Oh, yes, we
had those on Old Rthfrdia,” she recalled groggily.
“Mm. Sit
down.”
Groggily Jhl
sat down on the short, aromatic turf.
Shank’yar Vt
R’aam sat down beside her and hugged his knees, gazing dreamily at a view of
purple-blue hills and deep blue sea under a cloud-scattered pale blue sky.
“Pretty, isn’t it? Rather like Whtyll.”
“Very. Bits
of Bluellia, too. Up near the snow line where they’ve built the plasmo-blasted
nirvana palaces for the off-world tourists.”
“Uh-huh.”
His hand covered hers where it lay on the aromatic turf. Jhl swallowed, in
spite of herself, and said nothing. They were both silent for a long time.
“Cousin
Raj,” said Shank’yar at last, “is generally held to be a very good sort of
fellow.”
“You would
say that, if you were an illusion he was maintaining.”
“Possibly
not, if he’d thought it through. Hasn’t the it-being told you loud and clear
that none of this is in your mind?”
“It would do, if it was only in my mind! No,
all right,” owned Jhl with a sigh. “BrTl and I have long since agreed to act as
if it was all real. The alternative being a Mullgon’ya nursing-home for life,”
she added politely.
The long
mouth twitched. “Quite. What do you think of Raj?”
“Can’t you see that, Shan?” said Jhl sourly.
“I could,
but to tell you the truth it’s rather tiring, and I’d rather save my strength
for the stiff courses in astrophysics and tactics you’re about to give me.”
“Me?”
“Who else is
there?” he replied placidly. “Go on: what do you think of Raj?”
“Um… Perhaps
BrTl could help with the tactics. …Um, what I can see I can’t help liking. And
admiring, if that’s germane. But as his powers are a lot stronger than mine, I
may only be seeing what he wants me to see,” she ended sourly.
He
hesitated, then said: “You’re likening him to Rh’aiiy’hn? No, I think you’re
wrong: he has a kind of probity, but it’s a much harder, more uncaring sort of
thing than Rh’aiiy’hn is capable of. We-ell… Put it like this: no quarter.” He
looked cautiously at her scowl. “No, more than that: no pity. Principles—no,
perhaps I mean ideals—ideals always come before individuals, with Raj.”
“Makes you
wonder why he went into the IG M.C.,” she said lightly.
“Didn’t he
explain— Yes, he did,” discovered Shank’yar with a little sigh.
Jhl bit her
lip. “I can’t help it if your plasmo-blasted aromatic hillside is reminding me—
And anyway, those grass slopes weren’t aromatic. Um, not like this.”
“No; the
Whtyllian grass slopes have their own grassy smell,” he said mildly.
“Do you like grass-sledding?” asked Jhl
tightly.
“Of course.”
There was
another long silence.
Then
Shank’yar Vt R’aam said very, very mildly: “Don’t trust him, Jhl.”
“What,
because he puts ideals before individuals?” replied Jhl in a hard voice.
“That’s
partly it, yes. I’m not claiming I can read him now, but—Has he spoken to you
of his plans?”
“No!”
shouted Jhl. “No-one’s spoken to me
of anything except Vvlvanian-cursed Old Rthfrdian politics for the last ten IG millennia,
and I’m FED UP! I don’t give a flaming Vvlvanian cptt-rvvr’s fart for them or
anyone involved in them!”
“That’s good
to know,” he said mildly.
“I thought
you wanted me to— Never mind.”
Shank’yar
hugged his knees and gazed dreamily at the Old Rthfrdian view. After a while he
said: “You would always have the option of returning to Space Fleet.”
“What, once
the pwld muck’s put an end to intergalactic freight haulage as we know it?”
returned Jhl nastily. “What a delightful prospect. What would it be, Shan:
demotion to sub-lieutenant and an appointment as aide on a primmo on the Outer
Rim?”
“No, no, a
delightful pleasure-planet at the very least.”
“Very
funny,” she said grimly.
“Seriously,
I could get you a decent commission,” he said mildly.
After a
moment Jhl replied feebly: “Thanks. Uh—this is assuming that they don’t know
anything about any of this, is it? Admiral,”
she ended pointedly.
“Haven’t you
noticed the lovely shield”—the long, mobile mouth twitched
slightly—“surrounding this island?”
“Oh, sure. But
are the combined powers of The Old Woman and the it-being sufficient to deceive
the whole of Space Fleet Command?”
“Supposing
they were interested in you in the first place? Yes.”
“Oh, good,”
she croaked feebly. “And—uh—dare I breathe this—the IG M.C.?”
“Yes.
Possibly the M.C. and the Full College of Full Surgeons in combination might,
if not penetrate it, perceive that there is a shield—I grant you that. But the
likelihood of their acting in combination is—well, I didn’t bother to retain
the precise figure that the Trff suggested. Let’s just say it’s very unlikely.
The Full College,” he said with a little grimace of distaste, “is, as perhaps
you may not have had the opportunity to realise, limited.”
“Limited?” croaked Jhl.
He smiled
slightly. “Yes. And—ah—limited vision.”
Jhl was
about to rubbish this soundly. Then she thought better of it. Her brow creased.
Eventually she said very slowly: “Limited in what way, Shank’yar?”
“I do like
the way you mispronounce my name,” he said dreamily.
Jhl went
very red. “I do not!”
“Yes, you
do, darling, your Whtyllian’s dreadful, thought you knew that? ‘Shank-yah’,” he
quoted dreamily.
“So?”
“Shan-k’-yar,”
he said carefully.
“Stop
laughing at me, you mok lover! Shan— Vvlvanian curses,” she muttered. “All
right, I can’t do those Vvlvanian-cursed Whtyllian hiccups.”
“Glottal
stops,” he murmured.
“Shut UP!
And stop trying to change the subject! In what way is the Full College vision’s
limited?”
Slowly he
rubbed his pointed chin. “Limited to the two galaxies, Jhl.”
“Very fun—
You mean that literally,” she discovered weakly.
“Mm.”
“But—” Jhl
stared at him.
“The
position of Head of Space Fleet Exploration Corps is available, if I want it.”
“But it’s a
joke. They’ve never done anything in the last ten megazillion IG years except
point at undefended—relatively undefended—primmos that the M.C. might like to
exploit,” she objected limply.
“True. Don’t
you believe a job is what one makes of it?”
“No. I don’t
believe, and never have believed, anything so plasmo-blasted simplistic!”
“Nor you
have,” he murmured.
She gave him
a baffled glare.
“Well, let
us say that when one is in a position of power, one can make of a job more or
less what one wills.”
“And?”
He rubbed
his chin again. “Pwld will put an end to intergalactic freight haulage—yes. But
more than that: in the end it will probably revolutionise all forms of
transport.”
“What?”
“Mm. No
ships. Well, apart from pleasure vehicles, I suppose,” he said with a slight
shrug.
“Do me the
immense favour of not shrugging, if
you would,” said Jhl through her pearlized teeth.
“Oh, did you
think they hadn’t restored that?”
“Shut up.
How many thousand beings have died so far, while you and your pwld miners
explored this lovely little theory, Shan?”
“Not even a
thousand. No, well, all the beings we tried did die, certainly. According to the
engineers, however, it’s just a matter of time and of culturing up the right
blobs.”
“Engineers
always say that!”
“Nevertheless.”
Jhl licked
her lips uneasily. “Well, let’s say they’re right. No ships. Instantaneous
travel throughout the two galaxies. Where does that leave you and the
Exploration Corps, Shan?”
His lips
twitched. “Oh, well beyond the Outer
Rim, darling.”
She stared
at him, frowning.
“Yes. The
Third Galaxy. Once the engineers have worked out a way to use pwld to transport
living beings complete with their—er—life, how long do you think it will be
before certain entrepreneurial beings decide to hop over to see what
opportunities the Third Galaxy offers?”
“Three IG
microseconds,” admitted Jhl limply.
“Yes, quite.
I,” said Shank’yar Vt R’aam, the slanted blue eyes sparkling, “intend to get
there first!”
Jhl
swallowed. Her brain whirled with speculation, not to say questions, so much so
that she was incapable of uttering even one of them.
“Let me
answer them in semi-logical order,”
he said primly. The blue eyes twinkled and his shoulders shook slightly, but
the long mouth refused to laugh.
“Go on,”
said Jhl feebly, unable to kid herself that she wasn’t very, very glad to see
that again.
“Firstly, I
did grasp the implications for intergalactic travel almost as soon as I knew of
pwld’s capabilities, yes. About three IG microseconds after I’d figured out
that I could make several intergalactic fortunes out of the right perishable commodities,
yes. Which was about a split IG microsecond after I’d figured out that
possession of the rights to mine the stuff would also net an intergalactic
fortune. –I think I’m up to thirdly?” He looked at her blandly.
“Fourthly,
if there’s more,” she said limply.
“Thank you.
Fourthly, I did realise that the M.C. might just be interested in the stuff,
yes—don’t scowl like that, darling, it wrinkles your pretty forehead and
utterly ruins the effect of those lovely pinkish-shlaa cheeks—and that certain
brains in the Commission might just be capable of grasping its full
implications.”
“Yes. –I
never heard anyone call it ‘the Commission,’ before,” said Jhl weakly.
“That’s
because you haven’t been moving in those exalted circles. After that I had to
think very, very carefully about whom it might be advisable to let in on the
thing.”
“Assorted
sons, wasn’t it?” she said nastily. “Uh—no, hang on, that fat old Mklontian.”
“Yes, Wppy
is one of my oldest allies.”
Jhl goggled
at him. “Wppy?”
“Wrong
circles, darling,” he reminded her.
“Thank the
Federation,” she muttered. “So how much did you tell him? –As if I needed to
ask.”
“Only as
much as he needed to—”
“YES! Um,
sorry. All right, he was in on the pwld shit and the cornering-the-commodities-market
shit and the assorted intergalactic fortunes but not the Third Galaxy shit. Is
anyone in on that?”
“In on the
exploration idea: yes,” he said on such an airy note that Jhl looked in spite
of herself.
“You’ve told
Space Fleet about this?” she shouted
terribly.
“It is their
Exploration Corps, sweetheart. Not that I couldn’t have outfitted the ships
myself, I suppose. But this way it’s more… official.”
“And very
much cheaper for the Vt R’aam family!”
“Yes,” he
agreed blandly. “I first broached the idea quite some time back: before we’d
discovered pwld. There are very few substantial opportunities for trade and
development left in the two galaxies, and the Third Galaxy is, after all, the
next logical step. They were open to the idea, especially since I did offer, at
that stage, to put a considerable part of my private fortune into the venture.”
“Right, and
to keep the M.C. well out of it,” she agreed, nodding.
“No!
Darling, who is teaching whom tactics?” he said with a laugh.
“I never
offered,” muttered Jhl sourly. “All right, go on. I can stand it. –I suppose.”
Tranquilly
Shank’yar went on. Jhl more or less listened, more or less sourly. Of course, quote unquote, the Commission, quote unquote, had been in
on the Third Galaxy idea from the start, for reasons not unconnected with a
megazillion tons of diplo mok shit that she closed her ears to—though
apparently not offering to subsidise the whole venture, but only to supply certain personnel. Gee! A whole fleet of
IG M.C. beings with their little probes in their little appendages, fancy that!
Just in case anybody else in this
expedition took it into their heads or whatever they used for heads, not to be
anything-ist, that other beings besides the M.C. might have a right to anything
they might discover in the Third Galaxy. Leaving aside any beings that might be
discovered in the Third Galaxy, poor unfortunate beings. Yes, well, apparently
at this stage it was settled that when he made Admiral (not if, in those
aforesaid circles) all this would come off. Then the pwld muck was discovered
and then, but only after he’d made
sure the rights to the stuff were safely in the appendages of the Vt R’aam
family and its old Mklontian mate forever and a day, fancy that, he allowed it
to penetrate to the great minds of Space Fleet and the M.C. that the matter
might be rather more urgent than they had at first assumed.
Jhl’s mouth
tightened. “The IG M.C. know it all, then.”
“Well, not
all. They know about the pwld, of course—you recall that they issued us a
licence. They didn’t know that Rh’aiiy’hn and Drouwh are my sons, however.”
Jhl drew a
deep breath.
“And if they
had known, it would have given them considerable leverage over me. So you were
quite right to be in fear and trembling, Jhl, darling.”
“I just
about bust myself stopping assorted junior beings from broadcasting the word
‘pwld’, you mok lover!” she shouted.
“Good. The
Commission might have wondered why they were broadcasting it, and investigated.
Down to the sub-cellular level, quite possibly, in which case—” He shrugged.
“Aforesaid leverage. And they certainly didn’t know that I was incapacitated.
If they had done—well, who can say? Plans for the expedition are well advanced,
and it’s more than likely they’d have decided they didn't need my further
services.” He shrugged again. “Or possibly not. But it’s not a risk I’d have
cared to take.”
Jhl breathed
heavily.
“You did
very well, sweetheart,” he said tranquilly.
“Thank you
so much, Great Lord!” she shouted, bounding up. “Is that all? May I have your lordly permission to leave the presence?”
“Don’t be
silly. And it isn’t all, no. Sit down. And do try to stop shouting, you’re
making me lose my thread.”
She breathed
heavily, but did sit down.
Slowly
Shank’yar rubbed his high golden forehead. “I certainly don’t seem to have the
clarity of mind that I seem to recall I used to. Though it is a complicated
story. No, well, Space Fleet Exploration and the M.C. began planning for an
expedition, keeping the whole thing under wraps, of course, more especially in
the wake of the pwld business, and I put in my application for leave.”
“Uh—oh,” she
fumbled. “I see. You wanted to sort out things here before you left.”
“Mm. I
wanted to, shall we say, settle my family affairs. In the nature of things,” he
said calmly, “I wouldn’t expect to see Whtyll again.”
Jhl
swallowed. “No. Shan, had you thought that, even if you hyperdrive all the way,
it’ll take so long that, um, it is just possible that the engineers will have
got their act together and that you’ll arrive at the Third Galaxy to find the
rest of the Federation there before you?”
The blue
eyes sparkled. “Ah! But we’ll have a certain advantage that you don’t know
about.”
“Oh, ho! Now
we’re coming to it,” she said grimly. “Go on.”
“Pwld, when
handled by the right sort of hyperblob in the care of the right sort of
engineer, can vastly improve the performance of a hyperdrive. More especially
in the very advanced ships that we’ll be taking.”
Jhl was
forced to take a deep breath. “Great splintered shards of quog! I might have
known! How vastly?”
“Oh, it’s
exponential,” he said airily.
“Show me the
maths, Shank’yar!” she shouted.
Smiling just
a little, he showed her the maths.
“That’ll
mean you’ll get there in just over twenty IG years!” she gasped.
“Mm. The
it-being calculates that the chances of instantaneous living-being transportation’s
being developed in so short a period are about five thousand to one against.”
“Then I’d go,” said Jhl limply.
“I am.” He
rubbed his chin slowly. “There are certain problems, though. Mainly, pwld
becomes unstable in hyperdrive, unless very carefully managed.”
“Well,
hyperblobs become unstable in hyperdrive unless very carefully managed, for
that matter. Won’t Space Fleet give you your choice of the best Pilots?”
“Ye-es. The
Pilots aren’t the problem, so much as the engineers. The stuff needs to be
managed at that level. And while the majority of Pilots naturally enjoy
risk-taking—not all, before you mention your tiresome cognate,” he sighed,
“engineers don’t. Not physical risks.”
“No, they
enjoy sitting over their plasmo-blasted drives communing with their
plasmo-blasted blo— Great steaming piles of mok droppings,” she croaked. “You
want me to persuade Trff to go, don’t you? You devious MOK LOVER, Shank’yar!
And I thought—” She choked.
“You thought
I’d have changed,” he stated calmly. “No. The point of the exercise was to
restore me, Jhl, not to make me into something impossibly pure and high-minded
to suit some impossibly pure ideal you’ve got in that stubborn Bluellian head
of yours. Like,” he said with precision, “your idiotic picture of Cousin Raj.
Which I think, if I haven’t lost the
thread entirely, is about where this conversation started, isn’t it?”
“No!” she
choked.
Shank’yar
just waited.
“You changed the subject,” said Jhl
sulkily.
“Did I?
Possibly I did, because I didn’t really want to talk about him, either. But I
think we’d better. I suppose he is more like Rh’aiiy’hn than he is like me, in
spite of having my sense of— Not humour, is it? No: sense of fun.”
“Yes,” said
Jhl tightly.
“I wouldn’t
call it that. He enjoys physical challenges—yes. But only those he knows he’ll
meet well.”—Jhl’s cheeks went very red and she glared at him.—“And he certainly
enjoys other sorts of danger than the physical—with the same caveat. That’s not
the same as a sense of fun.”
“You’re not
convincing me, ” she said tightly. “Your dislike of him’s coming over good,
though.”
“I can see
that. Where was I? Oh—yes. We haven’t mentioned ambition, have we? Raj was
always ambitious, and I’ve had the impression of late years that he’s driven by
it almost to the exclusion of other considerations. As to—uh—moral probity,
he’s always had a version of it, yes. But as I tried to tell you, it’s a much
harder, much less caring—”
“Boring
moral probity, in your terms, isn’t it?” she interrupted in a hard voice.
Shank’yar
shrugged slightly. “If you like. And he’s more like Drouwh than you think. His
superiors at the Commission know about the expedition, but he doesn’t,
because,” he said slowly, “he won’t want to come.”
“Mok shit,
Shan.”
“Jhl, he
won’t want to come because that sort of thing—reaching beyond the known, if you
like—is not what he wants and not something he has ever wanted. Believe me, his
ambition is bounded by his family, his world, and the Commission.” He sent her
a little picture and watched with a very wry look on his handsome face as Jhl
reacted to it.
“Head of the
IG M.C.? The Minerals Commissioner?
What absolute mok shit!” she choked.
“No. His aim
is Minerals Commissioner and head of the Vt R’aam family,” he said, not
expressing his long-felt conviction that Raj wouldn’t care how he achieved the
latter goal. This had most certainly influenced his decision to hide the fact
of his sons’ existence from him. But if he said that, she’d only accuse him of
jealousy—quite justly, he recognised with an inner grimace.
“Look,” said
Jhl heatedly, “I may not be able to read him but I’d bet my cursed shlaa-tinted
cheeks, fore and aft, that he doesn’t
have any ambition to be a plasmo-blasted Lord of Whtyll!”
“Yes, he
does,” said Shank’yar grimly. “Not because of the perks, no—though he doesn’t
despise those as much as you seem to think. Because of the power it would give
him.”
“Compared
with the discovery of a new galaxy?” she scoffed angrily.
“Mm,” said Shank’yar at his wriest.
After that
there was silence on the aromatic hillside of the Isle of Slrw.
Finally Jhl
said, her hands shaking a little: “This is only your version.”
And he was
jealous: right. “Yes,” he said flatly. “Try asking him what he wants. Mention
the expedition, by all means.”
“I couldn’t
blame him for not wanting to serve under your command!”
“Evidently
not, no. Ah… just try not to let your emotions cloud your judgement, and ask
yourself what his motives are for helping us. –Given that he’s always loathed
me,” he added lightly.
“I think you
can see perfectly well that I’ve been asking myself that for some time. There
are only two likely answers, really: One, he wants to see you safe, or Two, he
wants to have you in his clutches rather than those of the Full College.
To do what, given he’s letting Trff and The Old Woman restore your powers,
Blerrinbrig alone knows.”
“Mm. If the
first answer is correct, why does he
want to see me safe?”
“You might just
as well spell it out,” she said grimly.
“Very well.
Having discovered Drouwh and Rh’aiiy’hn are my sons—don’t look like that,
darling Jhl, if he didn’t get it from you he most certainly got it from the
inept BrTl—he deduced that my feelings about their suitability for the position
of my heir would be precisely what they are, and decided to put himself
forward, tacitly, of course, as the best candidate to replace them. –No, well,
you know as well as I do that Drouwh’s not interested in anything outside Old
Rthfrdia, and that Rh’aiiy’hn…” He sighed a little. “That he’d carry out the
duties scrupulously, and loathe every minute of it. –Well?” he said as she just
sat there.
Jhl’s mouth
tightened. She got up. “If you’re serious about hyperdriving off to the Third
Galaxy, you’d better get down to some solid study without delay. Or do you
intend to let these highly qualified Pilots you’ve been going on about set your
course for you?”
“No. But I
haven’t got a notebook,” he said on a plaintive note.
“Uh—oh. No, drooling infants don’t usually
have them. Here you are.” Sighing, she handed over her notebook, not bothering
to say it probably wouldn’t work for him because it was her ship’s notebook.
“The blob’s a bit tired, but it was originally a hy— Uh, never mind.”
“Strictly
IG-illegal,” he murmured. “Astrophysics, Second School Entrance level,” he said
tranquilly to it, ignoring Captain Smt Wong’s audible gulp.
Certainly, Admiral, it replied happily,
so Jhl concluded that the pair of them deserved each other. She stomped off,
scowling. What absolute mok shit! Of course Raj was a risk-taker and not a
stay-at-home, limited FW like Drouwh Mk-L’ster! And of course he’d want to—what
was the fatuous phrase? Reach beyond the known? Of course he would! Any being
with half an IG fluid ounce of adventurousness in its blood, or whatever it
used for blood, not to be anything-ist, would! Flaming Vvlvanian magma pits,
what else was sentient life about?
The two
ship-companions sat on a sort of bump—or hump, or something—quite high up, one
of those bumps—and gloomed at a very
blue view. A view with not nearly enough green in it and far too much pink. Purple, Trff corrected calmly. BrTl just
sighed. After a considerable period had passed in glooming it sent: What are these bumps?
Huh?
These bumps on this planet. Piece of this
planet.
“You-it’s
getting worse,” he said aloud. “Grass. You-it’s seen it before. It’s a plant.
The pink—pardon me, purple—bits are
some other plant.”
Yes. It meant the very large bumps, BrTl, it sent meekly.
“Huh? Oh,
good grief, Trff! These humps? Hills! If this is what days on end of
concentrating on Y-K-W’s mind does for you-it, you-it can give it up now! –If
not yesterday,” he added incautiously.
There was an
appreciable IG microsecond’s pause. Then: Not
in terms of the commonly perceived—?
“No!” howled
BrTl. “All right! It was a figure of speech!”
“Sorry,” it
hooted sadly.
“No, I am,”
he said glumly. “Poor old you-it, having to concentrate on Y-K-W. Are you doing
it now?”
“No, it’s
having a break,” it hooted sadly.
If it wasn’t
such a fragile being, not to be anything-ist, BrTl would have given it a kind
pat. As it was, he just emanated kindliness and patting.
Thank you-it, BrTl.
“Any time. Um, how’s it going?” he asked
cautiously.
“Oh, very
well!” it replied, cheering up immensely. “Very well indeed! The Old Woman has
excellent powers! Complementary, if one can imagine the concept, to those of
the it-being, in fact! At least, insofar as this particular humanoid problem is
concerned,” it amended quickly.
Right: no
grasp of anything to do with humanoid psychology; he’d known it all along,
acknowledged BrTl silently. “Good,” he said kindly.
“But now
he-it has to learn, it means relearn, Space Fleet Tactical. Oh, and that other
stuff.”
“Ye-es?” he
said warily.
“Pilot
stuff,” it said with an unconvincing attempt at jauntiness.
BrTl winced.
“Do you perchance mean astrophysical navigation?” he asked delicately.
“Does it?”
it asked itself wildly. “Um, it thinks so. But broader than that, BrTl.”
“Two
galaxies,” he muttered. “Astrophysics? That it?”
“That’s it!”
“Well, um,
couldn’t— No, I think I see what you mean. If The Old Woman doesn’t know
anything about the subject, she won’t know if she’s recalling the right stuff
for him, will she? On the other appendage, not to be anything-ist,” he added in
a pointed voice; “what about the great it-being?”
Trff had extended
a tentacle to pick a bit of the purple plant.—Purplish, it had a bit of green
in it, too, but not enough; BrTl gave
the sprig a look of dislike.—“Yes, quite aromatic; at least— Are these
particles this plant’s emitting a scent to your-its noses, BrTl?”
“What? Yes!
What are you on about? Particles?”
“Can’t
you-it see them?” it said sadly.
“No, but I
can smell them, and they don’t strike me as particularly pleasant, and can we
get back to the subject? Why can’t the great it-being, not necessarily the
individual Trff, bring back all Y-K-W’s knowledge of astrophysics,
astrophysical navigation and associated subjects?”
“Not
interested,” it admitted.
BrTl winced.
“That’s putting it in my humble Slaetho-Xathpyrian terms, is it?”
“Yes,” it
said succinctly.
Goddit,
right. He sighed and asked without hope: “Who’ve you put up for the job, then,
Trff?”
“Not
you-it,” it said kindly.
BrTl sagged
all over the hill. Phew! He’d really thought— Phew! “Ooh, sorry!” he said
quickly, hurriedly extending a pseudopod and retrieving it.
Trff dusted
off its fluff. “These hills are slippery,” it said severely.
“Yeah.
Sorry.”
“Jhl can
teach him-it, if he-it really wants to learn. He-it’s got her-its notebook,
that’ll start him-it off.”
“It isn’t
her noteb— YOU MEAN HE’S GOT THE SHIP’S NOTEBOOK?” he bellowed.
“Yes! These
plants aren’t very strong!” it gasped, as the five plants that five of its
tentacles had grabbed at gave way and it lost its balance on the slippery hill.
“Sorry.” BrTl retrieved it before it could
roll off like—well, like a ball of pale green fluff, really.
“There’s
nothing in it that the Fleet Commander, it means the Admiral, wouldn’t know,
BrTl,” it reminded him. “If he-it was him-itself, that is.”
“That’s very
comforting, Trff.”
“No, it
isn’t,” it hooted glumly.
BrTl
entirely concurred, so they gloomed at the view for a while.
“Some
o-breathers have nice green skies,”
he noted evilly.
It knows. It began to list them but
realised BrTl wasn’t listening. “BrTl, you-it knows that bond-partnering stuff
of Jhl’s that at one stage you-it and it thought was dissipating?”
Fleetingly
BrTl thought of pretending he hadn’t heard that, but he knew Trff wouldn’t take
the hint, engineers were impervious to hints. Well, didn’t recognise them, more
like. And anyway, it was reading him. “With him,
you mean?” he said sourly. “Y-K-W, or in your terms, the Fleet Commander,
you-it means the Admiral? Yes, if you-it means the desire to bond-partner with
him, and not just bond-partnering in general, or a certain desire that some of
us thought we might have discerned to bond-partner with certain other
cognates.”
“We did,” it
said, very puzzled.
See?
Anything even approaching a hint was Uncharted Space to it! “Yes. If you’re
trying to say, do I think that this specific desire to bond-partner with
Admiral Vt R’aam,”—he bared his crunchers but as of course Trff had long since
seen this coming, got no reaction—“has come back, the answer’s yes. As I thought
you might long since have seen, actually.”
“It hoped it
was wrong,” it admitted glumly. “Well, mok shit!”
“Mok shit,
indeed.” BrTl eyed it sideways. “What does the great it-being as a whole think
of it?”
After a
split IG microsecond Trff admitted: “There is a certain, not to say a conflict,
but a certain dissimilarity between the view of the individual Slp-Og V. Trff
and the collective mind, it uses the terminology loosely, in this particular
matter.”
BrTl had
sort of thought there might be—yes. No wonder it was so glum, poor old Trff!
Not that the thing was particularly uncommon, with many collective beings.
No, it reassured him.
Huh? Oh, not go raving paranoid and
disconnect from the collective mind and have to be committed to a Mullgon’yan
nursing-h— No. Er, sorry. “Sorry,” he said
aloud.
It put a
kind tentacle on his forearm. “Not at all, BrTl. To you-it it was a natural
analogy. But these things, um, disparities, it uses the term loosely, are not so
very common in the case of the it-being.”
A sort of
sinking feeling came over BrTl, the same sort of sinking feeling that came over
one when one realised that one’s blaster’s blobs were very, very tired and that
yes, that was a full-grown Gervaynian
kryy, a female, what was more, descending from the sky just over there. Yellow,
it being the sky of your actual Gerv— “Eh?”
“There have
been such cases before.”
“That’s
good,” he conceded.
“Ye-es.
Well, not good, BrTl.”
“Huh? Er—no.
Um,” he said, trying to see the thing in its terms, hah, hah, what a hope,
“could anything make it sort of goodish for you-it, Trff?”
“Yes.”
BrTl coughed
slightly, though thoughtfully restraining it with a pseudopod as he did so.
“No—sorry. I put that the wrong way. What could make it sort of goodish for
you-it, Trff?”
“It thinks
that if Jhl truly wanted to bond-partner with him-it, and to cooperate in
his-its enterprise, that might be goodish, BrTl. Because the it-being as a
whole, it uses the terminology very loosely, does approve, it uses the term
loosely, of the enterprise. As an enterprise.”
“Yes—got
that.”
“No, you-it
hasn’t, BrTl. But it isn’t supposed to tell you-it,” Trff admitted sadly.
BrTl came
quiveringly alert. “Says what being?” he demanded tightly.
“Admiral Vt
R’aam,” it admitted.
“Him!” he scoffed.
“Also The
Old Woman, though it perceived she-it was just… Not entirely a humanoid concept;
what is the word? Oh, yes: just humouring him-it.”
“Then let’s
stop humouring him, Trff,” he suggested, baring the crunchers.
“Also the
whole of the IG M.C., though they haven’t communicated individually, it uses
the term loosely, with this it-being.”
“With the
Slp-Og V. Trff?” replied BrTl cautiously.
“Correct.”
“Got it. Now, Trff,” he said very cautiously
indeed: “you-it has been overdoing it a bit, what with days on end
concentrating on—”
“That’s why
it’s having a break.”
“Yes. Um…
When you say the whole of the IG M.C.—”
“Sorry, it
used the term loosely,” it said quickly. “Governing Board level only. Not
lesser M.C. beings.”
That wasn’t
the reply that BrTl had wanted, at all. Oh, dear: it was a lot sicker than he’d
thought, poor old Trff!
It isn’t. This is all part of what it’s not
supposed to tell you-it.
“Look,” he
said, starting to get heated, “you’d better tell me before my xathpyroid
paranoia takes over entirely!”
“The IG M.C.
is not out to get you-it, personally, BrTl. Not collectively. Though there are
certain individuals within its ranks—”
“YES!” he
shouted.
Trff gave a
startled whistle as the echoes reverberated round the purple-blue peaks of the
Isle of Slrw.
“It’s all
right, Trff,” said BrTl very weakly indeed. “This is one of those planets,
well, one of those parts of them, that do that. Remember O-rb III?”
“That was a
lot colder. Its FW pack had trouble—” It broke off, very evidently remembering,
somewhat too late, that that FW pack had been a sort of temporary or replacement
FW pack that it had had to use until they got back the one that a certain
inhabitant of the nearby O-rb V had stolen from off its very fluff, the body
inhabiting the fluff being at the time in a sort of narcosis induced by the
consumption of far too much fermented laa nicely mixed with yub, a proscribed
substance on most worlds and extremely poisonous to most c-based species, but
irresistible, they had discovered too late, to the average Ju’ukrterian. And
BrTl’s xathpyroid and Jhl’s humanoid bodies having at the time been similar,
for similar reasons. “Um, yes,” it said lamely. “They’re echoes, is that
right?”
“Yeah.”
“A purely
auditory phenomenon.”
“Yeah,” he
agreed, not pointing out the associated emotional phenomenon.
Hah, hah! it sent crossly. Does you-it want to hear this, or not? –All
right, then! The IG M.C. is not out to get you-it—it ignored BrTl’s smothered
sigh—and in fact not out to get Admiral
Vt R’aam, though most of the members of the Governing Board dislike him-it
and—what’s that other one? Oh, yes: envy him-it. Or does it mean jealousy?
Both, he sent glumly, almost giving in.
Thank you-it, BrTl, it thinks you-it’s
right: both. They would be quite glad to get him-it, but this wouldn’t be a
judicious time to do it, because they need him-it. He-it’s going to the Third
Galaxy for them.
It
waited, but received only stunned silence.
That was what it wasn’t supposed to tell you-it, BrTl. The Old Woman did point
out that you-it’d react like this.
BrTl went on
emanating stunned silence for quite some time. Eventually he became aware that
one of Trff’s tentacles had taken a tight grip on his forearm and this was
because, he realised instantaneously, he was about to clear his throat. He did.
When the echoes had ceased reverberating and Trff had let go, he croaked: “He’s
in cahoots with the IG M.C.?”
“Oh, yes!
That’s the word!” it said happily. “Cahoots. It couldn’t remember it. The Old
Woman doesn’t use it, in fact she-it doesn’t really communicate verbally, and
the Admiral doesn’t use it, though now it comes to think of it, he-it does know
it, and Rhan-son does communicate verbally, but has never used it in his-its—
Sorry. It’s burbling.”
“Any small
being, to be merely literalist, might burble when positioned close to a
xathpyroid endeavouring to incorporate a totally monstrous notion, that makes
nonsense of his entire course of action for the last several IG millennia, into
his already paranoid consciousness,” said BrTl very, very carefully indeed.
“Oh, absolutely!”
it whistled anxiously.
“I'm not
going to shout, I’m past that stage,” he said limply.
“So you-it
is,” it recognised in some relief.
BrTl thought
it all over very, very carefully. “It all becomes strangely clear,” he noted.
Trff could
see that. “Yes,” it agreed anxiously. “Jhl didn’t know— You-it can see that.”
A
perceptible period passed in terms of the commonly perceived space-time
etcetera and then BrTl said feebly: “What about all that cognate stuff,
though?”
“What? Oh!
Drouwh-son and Rhan-son and all that stuff? That was just Whtyllian mammalian
stuff, BrTl.”
“Oh, was it?
–So it was. Don’t bother to clarify it any more for me, thanks,” he added
hurriedly, as the picture started to become very murky indeed.
“It isn’t its conception of mammalian humanoid
behaviour and psychology that’s clouding the picture,” it pointed out huffily,
starting to fluff itself up.
“Possibly
not, no,” he groaned. “Don’t go on.”
Silence
reigned on the bump, hump, or hillside of the Isle of Slrw. And as far as BrTl
could tell, no being was emanating much, either. Not in this immediate
vicinity, at any rate.
Finally he
groaned: “Can I ask— No, don’t bother.”
“It was only
the mammalian cognate stuff that the Admiral didn’t want the M.C. to know
about. Or Space Fleet Command,” it added kindly.
BrTl winced,
but acknowledged: “Got it.”
“They could
have used the knowledge against him-it,” it added less certainly.
“Yeah. Let’s
just take that as a given, shall we?”
“Yes. Good,”
it agreed in relief. “It could go on having a break now, BrTl, unless there’s
more you-it wants to know?”
“No, have a
break, Trff,” he groaned.
To all
intents and purposes it was just a ball of pale green fluff perched on the
darker green grass with those unfortunate purplish bits in it, but after a
while BrTl began to get peaceful emanations of having a break, so that was
presumably all right…
“Wha—?” he
gasped.
“You-it was
asleep,” it said, waving an anxious antenna perilously near his left eye.
“Don’t do
that!” BrTl realised his head was on the ground, which was why its antenna
could do that. He raised his neck carefully but that blue sky up there wasn’t
an illusion and his head didn’t connect with anything solid and painful— Oh.
“Old Rthfrdia, right? Where The Old Woman lives, right?”
“Yes.” It
waved the antenna anxiously.
“How long
was I asleep for?” he said suspiciously.
“Not long,
in terms of— Sorry. One IG hour.”
BrTl sagged;
he’d sort of been afraid it might have been one IG year. “Oh. Um—didn’t dream
all that, did I?”
“No.”
No. Right.
“He really is going, is he?”
“Yes. Very
new ships. Maxi-cruisers. Mark XIV.”
“Uh—Mark
XII, old Trff,” he said kindly.
“No, they
scrapped prototypes XII and XIII.”
“Maxi-cruisers. Mark XIV,” said BrTl with a smothered sigh.
I’d like that, First.
BrTl jumped
ten IG fluh.
“That was
the ship,” explained Trff redundantly.
“It wants to
be a maxi-cruiser? But they’re ten times its size!” he croaked.
“It’s
possible... ” it replied vaguely.
“Trff, what
are you doing?” he hissed in horror.
“Only
looking… Well, not very much can be done about its size, but a certain amount
of refitting will bring it up to maxi-cruiser power,” it announced happily.
“Er—good.
Maxi-cruiser weaponry?” he said hopefully.
“Not quite;
that would require too much power from the blobs.”
BrTl had
thought it might. Oh, well. Not that the whole thing wasn’t academic, no being
had invited them to go along on
jaunts to the Third Galaxy.
“They have
invited it,” Trff admitted.
He jumped
those ten IG fluh again. “What?”
It launched
into a long and involved explanation but BrTl pretty soon stopped listening, it
was all engineering stuff, ugh, yuck. At the end of it he asked pointedly why
it, and it must have sunk in, because it explained quite succinctly that it was
because it was a Ju’ukrterian and could communicate very well with blobs and
the other muck.
“Got it.
This’ll mean a promotion to Full Commander, equivalent pay to Full Pilot, will
it, Chief Engineer?” he said snidely.
“No being’s
suggested that,” Trff admitted. “Except this it-being,” it added.
BrTl choked
but conceded. “Good for you-it. Will they wear it?”
“No, but
it’s academic, because Federation credits won’t be of any use in the Third
Galaxy.”
“You never
know, and better safe than sorry, and couldn’t the it-being as a whole use a
raft of credits in igs all nice and safe in its New Rthfrdian bank account?”
“Mklontian.
Not really,” it said vaguely.
“The we-it
banks with Mklontia? Pooh, ugh, argh—”
“The igs
don’t smell unless the bank sends them physically from Mklontia.”
“Or transfers
them while in hyper-hop,” replied BrTl courteously.
“Yes,” it
agreed tranquilly.
He gulped,
and desisted. After a while he said weakly: “If you-it does go, I suppose
you-it realises that all the other beings you-it sets off with, except possibly
a load of Mklontians in a giant maxi-Bhylloblaster all by themselves half a
light-year from the rest of the fleet, will long since have died by the time
you get there, in terms of the commonly perceived Y-K-W? Light-years since,” he added grimly.
“Using the
pwld makes it much faster, it just explained all that, BrTl!”
Uh—did it?
Oh, must’ve been mixed in with the engineering muck. “Oh, yes? How much?” he
asked in a bored tone.
Promptly
Trff showed him the maths.
“Er, think
you might have got a decimal point— No?” he said groggily.
No! Twenty point zero three IG years, at a
consistently maintained speed of F to the power of bracket z minus P1, close
bracket, where P1 represents the influence of the pwld on the blobs! It’s a
very simple formula!
“To an
engineer, maybe. I should ask what P1 in fact represents, mathematically, but I
won’t, because I don’t want to be here until Vvlvania freezes over. Look, can
you-it state it in simple Intergalactic, pardon my crudeness: twenty point zero
three IG years or twenty point zero three light-years?”
“Twenty point
zero three IG years.”
BrTl just
gaped at it.
“Yes, BrTl.
It’s exponential, once the blobs are—um, fired up, it thinks is the way
you-it’s conceptualising it.”
“Exponential? It must be,” he croaked. “And fired up is right. Fired up
as in flaming Vvlvanian magma-pits! Can ordinary blobs stand that?”
“Not
ordinary blobs, no,” replied the engineering mind happily. “But of course
they’ll be hyperblobs, specially cultured to—”
BrTl let it
rattle on. Good old Trff; after all, it hardly ever got a chance to talk about
its subject, being as how it was the most boring topic in the Known Universe.
…Twenty IG years? Great steaming
piles of mok droppings!
“Point zero three,”
it reminded him.
“Never mind
the plasmo-blasted point zero three. You-it could go and come back!” he said
numbly.
“It could do
that in any case, BrTl. Oh—while you-it’s still alive. So it could.”
BrTl began
to do sums but it said helpfully: “If Jhl went, she-it’d be about the age the
Admiral is now by the time she-it got there. And about his-its mother’s age by
the time she-it got back. That is quite old in mammalian terms.”
He took a
deep breath. “Will she?”
“It doesn’t
know,” it hooted sadly.
“No,” said
BrTl glumly. “No… ”
“Lunch?” it
suggested kindly.
Something in
the tone… BrTl took a look. It tried to shield it from him, but too late. “I
see,” he said grimly, getting up and extending a pseudopod to it. “Come up;
I’ll lope back. And tell certain beings,” he added as Trff allowed itself to be
swung onto his back, “that they’ve been feeding you the wrong muck for the last
megazillion IG years!”
“Just days,”
it said sadly.
Baring his
crunchers at the Old Rthfrdian view, BrTl agreed feelingly: “Days. Right.” And
began to lope.
All the Old
Rthfrdians were terribly overcome at the news that they’d been feeding Trff the
wrong muck, though on later and cooler reflection BrTl was to admit this could
have had something to do with the shouting. That water started to come out of
the eyes of several of them but he ignored that, it was one of those things
that humanoids did, he remembered that perfectly well, S’zzie did it a lot.
“It won’t
eat MEAT!” he shouted terribly as a small one brought in a platter of it.
“Um—no!” it
squeaked, about to retreat.
BrTl
retrieved the platter with a casual pseudopod and engulfed the contents. “Not a
bad snack,” he said graciously to the being.
“Mum, he’s
eaten a whole leg of hggl!” it squeaked.
It wasn’t
Mum at all, though it was a larger one. Oh, yes, female: gender-dressing,
right, right. She came forward and put an arm round the small one and told it
to never mind, dear. BrTl implanted a suggestion in the mush between her round
mammalian ears and she immediately told the smaller one to bring several more
of whatever the meat was. Good. After that some more, or possibly the same
ones, rushed in and out with ever more unlikely suggestions but he finally
forced Trff to give up the diplo manners and admit that an evil-smelling vegetable
drink would appeal.
“If it goes
into its nest more or less straight after we’ll know it’s only being polite,”
he warned them.
“We thought
it just liked a nap after its meals,” said one of them weakly.
BrTl was
just about to blast it but The Old Woman came in—no, she didn’t,
physically—oops, yes, she did, some time behind the personality—and blasted it
and all of them for him. Telling them that she had been almost sure Trff was
only being polite and why hadn’t they listened to her?
“Khyai’llh
tea and nothing else,” she said severely to them. BrTl could see she meant the
evil vegetable soup or drink muck, so he nodded. And after they’d scampered out
of the way of the bits of falling rock coming off their ceiling, they all came
back very meekly and watched Trff siphon the muck up.
“Very nice,
very suited to its metabolism,” it said kindly.
“It’d say
that anyway,” warned BrTl, monitoring it narrowly.
Ooh, it feels much better!
BrTl sagged.
“I think that was genuine.” Then he realised that only The Old Woman and the
small one who’d brought him the meat snack had caught it. Oh, well, primmos
were all the same. Laboriously he translated: “It’s feeling much better. It was hungry,” he explained pointedly. Making
squeaking noises, the small one shot out, it was to be hoped, hoped BrTl
sincerely, in the direction of the culture-pans.
He sat down
with a sigh. “How does it imagine,” he said to Trff, “that it’s going to cope
as the only Ju’ukrterian in a great huge fleet of giant maxi-cruiser Mark XIVs
lumbering off to the Third Galaxy, if it can’t even manage to get some
nourishment into itself on a pathetic FW primmo? Oops, did I say that aloud?”
he said, as the emanations from the humanoids mind-deafened him.
“It would
make sure the ship could provide the correct nourishment,” it assured him. “If
it went.”
“The
engineering mind. Literal,” BrTl explained heavily to their audience.
“Of course.
Trff’s been a great help in assisting Admiral Vt R’aam to relearn mathematics
and logic,” said The Old Woman briskly. “Now, please give our guests some
space.”
The
humanoids all vanished.
“Thank you,
Old Woman,” said BrTl, sagging.
There is no need to communicate aloud. Nor
to thank me. And I apologise for the ineptitude of my people.
“Uh—not at
all.” Not at all, he sent hurriedly. And don’t worry, if the it-being was being
diplo, no being in the two galaxies could have seen that it didn’t like the
muck you were feeding it on.
Thank you, she replied drily. What about the Third?
BrTl gave a
short bark of laughter, in spite of himself. There was quite a lot of good in
that Old Woman. Bit of a pity she couldn’t go with—
And shall you go, Lieutenant BrTl?
BrTl could
feel Trff emanating gratitude at her. It hadn’t dared to ask him? Poor old
Trff! The pwld muck will mean the end of
intergalactic freightage, Old Woman, don’t know if you— You do; good. So
there’ll be nothing much left for me, it won’t take long for the stuff to get
as far as the Outer Rim. So if Trff goes, I’ll go, so long as they’ll have me.
Uh—Space Fleet things, technical things, you won’t— Oh, you do. Well, they
might overlook them. Depends how many volunteers they get.
It won’t go unless you-it goes, BrTl! sent
Trff happily.
BrTl felt
the Old Woman’s start of surprise. Yes,
it has cheered up a lot, hasn’t it? –Silly old Trff, he sent it
affectionately. It could fancy another
shot of the vegetable muck, he told her, but the small one had already come
rushing in with another bowl of it.
But of course neither of you will go if Jhl
doesn’t go, stated The Old Woman.
No, I won’t, agreed BrTl.
No, of course it won’t, agreed Trff.
BrTl sagged,
but it didn’t matter, because The Old Woman had expected it, and Trff was sagging,
too. Um, won’t you-it really? he sent
cautiously.
No,
it just told you that, it replied calmly.
Literal-minded engineering asteroid-brain! “Oops, sorry! That was a
Slaetho-Xathpyrian hum; I won’t do it again,” he said quickly as bits of the ceiling
began falling off again.
The Old
Woman got up, emanating dryness. No,
don’t. It isn’t a ceiling, it’s a cave roof, and there’s a substantial amount
of rock above us. She sent him a picture of the rock. BrTl cringed. Well, now all you have to do is persuade her
to go, isn’t it? She went out.
BrTl eyed
Trff cautiously. “Look, couldn’t you implant a teeny-weeny— Yes, of course
you-it could. But you won't.”
“Free will,”
it said glumly. “She-it’d never forgive it. –Us, then. Though it would have
been its responsibility.”
“I do
outrank you, Chief Engineer.”
Don’t be silly!
BrTl stopped
being silly. Several rafts of the meat were then brought in by several panting
humanoid beings and after quite some time he admitted: “That’s better. Almost
like lunch. Shall we just put it to her straight?”
“If you-it
likes. But it thinks that may not be enough: she-it wants something from
him-it—the Admiral. And possibly from the Collector, too.”
BrTl waited
but it didn’t elaborate. After a bit he realised it couldn’t. “Um, shall I ask
The Old Woman what she thinks Jhl wants, Trff?”
“It’ll all
be humanoid stuff. But why not? Um, she-it isn’t sort of here,” it said
uncertainly.
“Uh—Jhl?
Where is she, then?”
“Sort of
floating?” it offered dubiously. It sent him a picture.
That’s floating, all right. What’s all that
wet stuff? A laa bath? No.
“Water.
Floating,” it said in Slaetho-Xathpyrian.
“Yes, I can
see it, Trff. That’s not Y-K-W with her on that raft thing, is it?”
The picture
clarified.
BrTl gulped.
Collector Kadry. He didn’t dare to say which of them did she really want,
because he could feel that that was exactly what Trff was wondering, too.
The rowboat
bobbed gently on the sheltered surface of a deserted little bay. The Collector
had had to explain to his companion that the tide was just off the turn: she
had ridden in many types of boat but knew almost nothing about the sea and its
habits, her expectations of sailing, in fact, having been formed by a bit of
mild canoeing on a very placid lake in the middle of the Bluellian plains. As
he rowed he had ascertained that she was impressed by his skill but not about
to admit it, and also that she was, once again, comparing his thighs to those
of his half-brother and his half-brother’s sons.
“Raj,” said
Jhl at last: “what are your plans?’
“My plans?
Immediately, or for the future?” he said nicely. Adding, for good measure, a
nice smile. He had yet to encounter a heterosexual woman who was immune to it.
“Well—all of
them. Including your ultimate ambitions,” she said, frowning—though at the same
time, not immune to the smile.
“Immediately, I intend to see Shank’yar safely back home on Whtyll
without the knowledge of my superiors,” he said lightly.
“That would
probably be sensible—yeah.”
“Ye-es.” He
gave her the smile again. “I can see you know something that I don’t, though I
can’t see what it is.”—Not because her shield was strong enough to keep him
out; but cursed Shank’yar and the cursed it-being were both reinforcing
it.—“Shank’yar’s revealed his plans to you, is that it? His—what did you call
them? Ultimate ambitions?” he said with the suggestion of a shrug that he knew
was very like Shank’yar’s shrug.
“Don’t shrug!”
She bit her lip. “Sorry. No, well, I doubt he’d reveal his ultimate ambitions to any sentient being in the Known Universe, but
he has told me his plans for, um, the foreseeable future. But I’d like to know
what yours are.”
And also,
she’d like to see if he was willing to reveal them to her. “Well, I have told
you a good deal about my career, haven’t I? In spite of its entrenched
hierarchy and the corruption it’s riddled with, I do believe the M.C. could be
a force for good.”
“Bring justice in the matter of land ownership
and mining rights throughout the two galaxies?” she croaked, since he was
broadcasting it loud and clear. “Mok shit!”
“There would
have to be a radical switch in the organisational mind-set, yes,” he murmured.
“The organisational mind-set and a half!” said
Jhl with feeling. “And to achieve this,
you personally will have to have what sort of power?”
“Minerals
Commissioner, of course,” he said lightly. Shank’yar had told her that: she was
broadcasting it loud and clear.
Jhl took a
deep breath: Shan was right about that, then. “Yeah. How many beings will have
to be zapped in order for you to get that many step-ups, Collector?”
She thought
she caught the suggestion of another shrug, and then he said levelly: “No
innocent beings will be zapped. Certain beings who abuse their positions of
power will, however, be exposed.” The chiselled nostrils flickered with
distaste, just a very little, and Jhl involuntarily thought of what Shan had
said about his version of probity: no quarter and no pity was right.
“I see. No
wonder you didn’t want the M.C. to have an inkling of what you were up to, down
here.”
“Ye-es.
You’re broadcasting ‘Whtyll family mok shit’ very loudly,” he said on an
apologetic note.
“Oh, am I?”
said Jhl lamely. “Okay, look, just let’s get one thing clear. Shan suggested
that you’d like to replace him as head of the Vt R’aam family. Is that true?”
“Yes. I
think I’d do a much better job of it than he ever has,” he said lightly. “He
has as much pride in his name as any Whtyllian—it’s all right, I know it’s a
concept you can’t affectively relate to—but he takes almost no interest in the
day-to-day administration of the very large enterprises he has on Whtyll, or of
the Federation-wide enterprises in which he employs his—er—clanspeople?” he
said in Old Rthfrdian.
“Clanspeople!” replied Jhl, very startled.
“They’re not
quite that, as we don’t have the same concept of blood clans that the Old
Rthfrdians do. Free Whtyllians born on his estates or who work for his family
interests.”
Jhl received
a rapid mind-sketch of the way in which a proper Lord of Whtyll, i.e. him in
the rôle, would act. Er—yeah. All right, yeah, he probably would do a much more
conscientious job than Shan ever had.
Trying very
hard not to broadcast anything with even the suggestion of a suspicion or a
doubt about it, she said as lightly as she could: “You probably would do a much
better job, yes. But it’s academic, isn't it? You’re not in line for it. On
Whtyll it’s male primogeniture, isn’t it? Shan has got sons, and since they
live off-world all he has to do—unless I’m totally muddled—all he has to do is
acknowledge one of them as his son and leave the lot, the um, lordship stuff as
well as the megazillion rafts of super-igs, to him.”
It was now
very clear that she didn’t have the slightest idea how he really felt about
cursed Shank’yar and his cursed full sons. Athlor Raj Kadry smiled nicely and
corrected her terminology nicely to: “Name one of them as his heir—yes. When I
found out why he’d sent you on this mad venture I was quite sure that he was
going to; and that, as you correctly assume, would have put paid to one of my
ambitions. But has he indicated that he will?”
Jhl stared at him, frowning. So this was why he’d decided to help rescue
Shan! Finally she said: “I know he very much approves of Drouwh becoming
Protector of Old Rthfrdia: he feels it’s worthy of his son, I think—something
about living up to the family name. Well, that was the phrase floating about,
but it’s genetic, if you analyse it. He won’t name him as his heir, though,
because he’s not interested in anything outside Old Rthfrdia.”
Athlor Raj
Kadry had deduced as much—though he hadn’t been absolutely sure he was reading
Shank’yar aright. He nodded, shielding his immense relief. “And Rh’aiiy’hn?” he
said very, very lightly.
Jhl stared
across the bay, trying to look as if she wasn’t putting all her strength into
maintaining her shield. “Shan hasn’t said so, but he’s disappointed in him.
Well, they never have seen eye to eye, have they? Um, not so much disappointed
by anything he’s done, though in his place he would have ignored all the
tradition mok shit and taken advantage of his position as Regent to force
through what he wanted. He doesn’t much care which system of government they’re
for: he’s not interested in political theory, only in the practicalities of
power, though he is predisposed for… absolute monarchy? Yeah, with him at the
top of the heap. Or for anything with him at the top of the heap. That’s why he
can’t help approving so much of Drouwh. But with Rh’aiiy’hn… The fundamental
objection for Shan is that he lacks ruthlessness,” she said, grimacing. “He can
see that in him as clearly as you or I, Collector.”
“Mm,” he
agreed, the nostrils flickering a little as she again addressed him by his rank
instead of his name.
She took a
deep breath. It felt plasmo-blasted unfair to both Shan and Rh’aiiy’hn, but if
the Collector was as bad as Shan carefully hadn’t said, then it might be very
much safer for Rh’aiiy’hn to tell him this. “He hasn’t said so in so many
words, but I don’t think he’ll name Rh’aiiy’hn as his heir: he knows he’d do a
conscientious job, but he’d hate it.”
The Collector
stared at her.
“Can’t you
see that in him? Hate the formality and the diplo mok shit that goes with being
a Lord of Whtyll. Rh’aiiy’hn’s had more than enough of that in his lifetime. I
doubt if Shan will inflict another dose of it on him.”
Inflict? By
the Federation! Didn’t the woman realise how patronising that sounded? Well,
no: she didn’t, and one of these days he hoped very much to be able to teach her
better. “That,” said Raj Kadry very lightly indeed, “doesn’t sound like the
Shank’yar I’ve known all my life!”
“I—No,
perhaps it doesn’t,” said Jhl slowly, frowning over it. “Well, maybe all this
mind-blowing stuff he’s been through has changed him more than he thinks it
has. Never thought I’d see the day!” she admitted.
“I think that
must be the inescapable conclusion—though I can’t read it in him.”—He was
monitoring her closely, but she didn’t react.—“And yes, he must see that Rh’aiiy’hn
hasn’t got the sort of drive and ruthlessness that’s needed to keep a Lord of
Whtyll in power and to maintain and enlarge the commercial enterprises.”
“He’s not
entirely without drive,” said Jhl on a weak note.
“Oh, I
agree. But what you or I think is not the point, is it?”
“No.” She
eyed him doubtfully.
Raj made a
sour grimace and sent her a carefully calculated picture of some of the things
that his own drive and ruthlessness had led him to do in the past.
“Don’t go
on,” she said grimly. “What about those beings that weren’t going to get
zapped?”
“Innocent
beings,” he corrected calmly.
Yeah. Well,
he had more in common with Shank’yar Vt R’aam, and less in common with
Rh’aiiy’hn, than she had thought. Funnily enough it didn’t make much
difference.
The
Collector was reading this quite clearly. “Well, if you have it quite straight
that I would like to step into Shank’yar’s shoes, and that it has always been
one of my ambitions to do so, if it could be accomplished honestly, perhaps we
can move on to another point?”
“What? Um,
yes,” said Jhl lamely. He certainly wasn’t giving her time to think about it,
was he? Was that deliberate, or not?
“Why is
hiding Shank’yar from the M.C. no longer a matter of urgency to you?” he asked
coolly.
Jhl’s fists
clenched. “If you were offered the chance to go on the first exploratory
expedition to the Third Galaxy, would you give up the aforesaid Whtyll family
mok shit and the Commissioner stuff?”
“What? Don’t change the subject!” he
said with a cross laugh.
“I'm not,
you intergalactic fool. That’s the whole point. He’s going, the IG M.C.’s in on
it, and the reason he didn’t want them to find out about Drouwh and Rh’aiiy’hn
was that it would have given them too much leverage over him. Likewise if they
found out he was incapacitated.”
He stared at
her, his mouth slightly open. Scowling, Jhl let him see the whole load of pwld
mok shit. There was quite a long silence, during which the powerful mind was
completely veiled from her.
Eventually he said slowly: “Twenty-odd years
to get there, twenty-odd to get back, supposing one could… It would be a matter
of giving up all one’s other plans, for the average humanoid.”
“Yeah.”
“Do I have the chance of— Yes,” he said
on a limp note. “I see. …You realise, if the engineers do develop instantaneous
personal transport, it may all be for nothing?”
“Part of the
fun,” said Jhl with a shrug.
“Uh-huh…” He
rubbed his pointed chin. “You’re asking me to give up a very real chance of
becoming Minerals Commissioner and making a real difference in the Federated
Worlds of the Two Galaxies, for a risky expedition that may not even reach its
goal? –Especially if your Ju’ukrterian engineer loses interest in making pwld
and blobs work together, or if the said engineer loses touch with the rest of
the collective being—yes, I thought you hadn’t thought that one through. Or
simply if the stuff is more unstable than they think. And if the expedition
does reach its goal, then what? Settle down to farming on a pioneer world?
Attempt to trade with unknown beings with whom you have no hope of
communicating? Be zapped by the unknown beings’ superior technology before you
even know they’re there? Or, worse: find a galaxy of empty rocks and blazing or
freezing masses of gas, with no life in it at all?”
“Puts it well.”
“Look,” he
said with a little protesting laugh, “I can see the attraction, but it’s a mad dream! I might be tempted if I were a
younger man, but— And Shank’yar seriously intends giving up everything he’s
got, for this?”
“I’d call it
a mad gamble rather than a mad dream, but yes, he does. Possibly he is mad.
Possibly all explorers are mad. Possibly Athlor Kadry was mad.”
“He was
certainly irresponsible,” said his descendant grimly.
Jhl
shrugged. “The expedition will be as well fitted out as— Never mind. No, well,
in your terms, I dare say Shan is irresponsible: gallivanting off to parts
unknown and leaving his old mum to get on with looking after the estates. So
what’s new? –Can we take this primmo vehicle back to the land, please?”
“To shore,”
he corrected with a sigh. “Very well.” He bent to the oars.
“Don’t go
with him,” he said as they neared the beach.
“Huh!”
“Look, there
are other sorts of gamble, Jhl!” He sent her an urgent picture.
“Mineral
Commissioner’s bond-partner? You’ve got to be joking!”
The
Collector was very flushed, in spite of himself. “No, I’m not! Look, you’re a
Bluellian: you grew up with the concepts of equality and social justice! This
would give you a chance to do good!”
Jhl’s
nostrils flared. “Yes. But I’m not cut out for that.”
“Listen,
you’re throwing away everything, and for what? For him?”
The keel
grated on the sand, and Jhl stood up. “No. For the greatest adventure that a
humanoid will ever be offered in my lifetime. I’d go with or without him.”
He
swallowed, and took another look. So she would. All right, he’d miscalculated
badly. The stormy grey eyes darkened for an instant, and then cleared. Her
loss. And after all, one woman was much like another, when all was said and
done.
“Good luck
with it. You’ll make a good Minerals Commissioner, if any being can,” said Jhl tightly.
“And I think Shan will see the sense of naming you as his heir. He doesn’t
expect to be back.” She stepped out of the boat into the chilly shallows of the
waters round the Isle of Slrw. Her Space Issue boots objected, and then
readjusted to the chill, and Jhl splashed grimly to shore. Well, Shan had been
right all along about Vvlvanian-cursed Raj Kadry and his limited little
humanoid vision!
You’re humanoid, too! said the
so-familiar voice with that faint laugh in it.
GET OUT OF MY MIND, SHANK’YAR!
Will you join the expedition? he replied
blandly.
You’ll wangle the Wavey-Spacey call-up for
me, will you, Admiral? she sent nastily.
No,
he replied serenely. Reinstatement of
your commission. Command of your own ship. Coming?
Jhl gave in.
Yes. –But Trff and BrTl ship aboard with
me, not on your plasmo-blasted flagship!
Of course, he replied serenely.
She waited
for him to ask what she really felt about Raj, or how the man had reacted to
the news that neither Drouwh nor Rh’aiiy’hn seemed to be in line for Lord of
Whtyll and head of the Vt R’aam family— Nothing. Typical! Him all over! Never
mind the softness with regard to his eldest son: that was clearly a very, very
minor aberration, and Shank’yar Vt R’aam, curse his vacuum-frozen Whtyllian
eyes, was to all intents and purposes himself again!
Would you love me so much if I wasn’t?
he asked dulcetly.
WILL YOU GET OUT OF MY MIND? screamed
Jhl again.
This time
the only reply was that mocking little laugh of his.
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