Authors: A. C. Crispin,Kathleen O'Malley
Tags: #Fiction, #Science Fiction, #General
seemed loathe to injure barely an hour ago.
Timidly,
Flies-Too
-
Fast stepped forw
ar
d
,
head lowe
re
d, offe
ri
ng a
silver
-
blue fingerling fish to the chick
.
Taller indicated his approval
,
and Sailor grabbed the fish. The ye
ar
ling glanced nervously at the two
Grus adults, maintaining his deferential posture
.
Shimme
ri
ng also
seemed unsure whether to stay, but the chick was too much for her to
resist
.
She peered cu
ri
ously around Flies
-
Too-Fast
,
and then they
suddenly shared eye contact
.
Embarrassed
,
the two slowly backed
away to leave, but Weaver indicated they could feed the chick
.
After all
their years together
,
Taller and Weaver rarely had to speak to sh
ar
e
the same plan
.
The two young avians began se
ar
ching the
ar
ea, st
ri
ding the water side by side.
Taller looked at his son, exposed to war and death and aliens at the tender
age of five days.
Well, it was what the shimme
ri
ngs had promised
,
wasn't it?
"Taller,"
First
-
One asked solicitously, "are your wounds se
ri
ous?"
The bloodied avian eyed her for a moment. "
My people will suppo
rt
me
now in what I wish to do
.
Are the wounds se
ri
ous? Dissension among
the people is always se
ri
ous." He tu
rn
ed to his human pa
rt
ner with a
piercing st
ar
e
. "
But it will all make for a glorious dance
,
won't it
,
Good Eyes?"
"But, Taller,"
First-One signed
, "
you'
re
bleeding so much."
Suddenly she looked old to Taller,
really old
.
She had changed since
Puff had died
,
and he realized that she was too old to make a new pa
rt
nership, that she would fo
re
ver be alone. He felt an incredible sadness
for his human friend. "Weaver will help me
,"
he signed
,
to comfo
rt
her
.
"
The wounds are minor."
"Taller,"
Relaxed interjected
, "
we've got to take Good Eyes with us to
our sky shelter."
Good Eyes let out a sound, which start
led Taller and Weaver so much
,
Taller had no chance to react to Relaxed
'
s outrageous statement
.
The
human male was igno
ri
ng Good Eyes' ang
ry
exp
re
ssion and p
ro
testing signs
.
First
-
One was chewing her lip,
142
seeming torn
between agreeing with Relaxed and fearing the intrusion
into the avian family.
Taller wondered, not for the first time, what made humans think they could
speak for someone they weren't partnered with?
"I know you have your own special medicines there," Taller signed slowly,
"however.
..
"
"I'm all right," Good Eyes protested. "I just need a few days rest. It's really just a..."
"You're
not
all right!" First-One-There argued. "You need
treatment!"
"Can't you bring your medicines here?" Taller asked.
"She needs to be
examined with special equipment that can't
be moved," Relaxed
explained.
Taller held Relaxed's gaze with his own. For the second time today, the
human didn't flinch or look downward. He was
telling the truth
,
at least
about the medical care
,
but there was something else behind his eyes,
something Taller didn't understand
. "
Take her then
,
if you must
,"
the
leader signed.
Good Eyes seemed stunned,
and the other humans gave each
other a
look that Taller didn't find the least comforting. "Return her to us by nightfall,"
Taller added. "No later." Their expressions did not change. Once they had
her aboard their shelter they could find excuses to keep her there.
"They have no intention of le
tt
ing me
re
turn
,"
Good Eyes
signed to Taller, angrily. "They're afraid, because of Puff."
"What kind of people would we be if we weren't afraid for you?" First-One
signed, her temper flaring. "You don't have the sense to be afraid for
yourself. I swear, you're just like him. Rushing in where
fools
fear to tread..."
She wound
down suddenly and hung her arms limply.
Relaxed turned to Taller. "We can't promise she'll be back by nightfall. We
don't know how badly she's been hurt."
Weaver stepped between the
arguing sides
. "
F
ri
ends!
There's been enough combat for one day. If Good Eyes can't
go to the sky
shelter and
re
tu
rn
the same day, she must stay here
. This
infant has
seen enough to scar the soul of an adult, and now you
'
ll take away his
pa
re
nt
?
He'll think she
died."
Taller turn
ed to First
-
One-There
. "
You'
re ri
ght
,
she is like Puff
,
and
like Water Dancer
,
too. They were like two eggs from the same pa
re
nts
.
They we
re
fearless and rash
,
and far
143
seeing
.
They had great hea
rt.
And they were willing to sacrifice
themselves for the good of others."
He addressed them all. "
Don't you think the White Wind people will tell
the sto
ry
of this day so that all the people of the World will know it
?
Dances will spread from one marsh to the other
,
telling about Good
Eyes
,
a land
-
bound being not-of-the
-
World who became bound to us
with her blood and pain. Isn't that why she came here
,
to become one
of us, so your people and ours could be allies? This is an impo
rt
ant
memo
ry
for Sailor
,
for all of us. Good Eyes is a pa
rt
of this family,
forever
."
He turned the full force of his gaze on the humans who
wanted to take his pa
rt
ner away, who might be reluctant to b
ri
ng her
back.
"Return
her to us by nightfall, healed," he told them, "or I will fly to the
sky shelter to get her myself."
144
"If you weren
'
t so beat up
,
I'd be really pissed at you," Thorn signed
as he checked the
re
adings on the null
-
grav couch that would protect
Tesa from the worst of the shu
tt
le's thrust.
"You
are
pissed at me," she signed. The numbing cold from the ice wraps coveri
ng her wounds only compounded her discomfo
rt
.
"Do you have any idea what I was
going
through 'watching
you get the shit
kicked out of you down the
re
?" the biologist asked
,
then gently
molded an ice wrap around her face.
"Not half what I was going through gett
ing it done!" She yanked it away
,
smacking his hand. "Am I going to have to console you because I got
hu
rt?
And I am
not
your helpless lover,
so just stop acting like a
nursemaid
."
She slapped the ice wrap back on her face too hard
,
and
saw spangles.
He lifted the wrap,
to be sure she could see his signs. "You're not
my
lover,"
he reminded her, bitterly. "You're the
partner
of a feathered
alien."
Her hands moved tire
dly
, "
You can
'
t build a relationship on jealousy
, Thorn
."
"Relationship!"
he signed
.
"
What
re
lationship
?
I've let you
144
145
know how I feel
,
but you tell me nothing
.
I'm not even su
re if we'
re
friends!"
He sat on the couch, turning away from her.
With an effort, she sat up and touched his shoulder. He gazed at her
solemnly. "Of course we're friends," she signed. "If I've been cool to you, Thorn ... it's not that I don't care
about you
...
but I
'
m not su
re
how much
I wan
t to ca
re
."
She stopped then, hesitant to say more. What was the point in worrying
about her feelings toward someone when she'd be re
tu
rn
ing to Earth in a
year? How soon befo
re
she'd
re
sent
him, resent that he'd be able to stay and work on Trinity? She thought of Mahree Burroughs and Rob Gable--
thought of how much longer their separations were than their times together.
Could any relationship be worth that?
Without answering, he touched her face gently and kissed her mouth-one of
her few unswollen places. Her eyes closed as she accepted the kiss. There
was no pressure in it, no demands-just
a ple
asan
t
, c
aring touch
,
with a
hint of passion
behind it. When Thorn pulled back, Tesa surprised herself
by
following him, sliding
an
arm around his neck
an
d kissing him
back.
They separated and Tesa sank back down, exhausted-and more confused
than before. She couldn't help but smile. "Will you try to deal with my
situation with the Grus any better?"
He smiled weakly, looking chagrined. "I'll work on it. But Meg was worried,
too, you know."
"Meg has an excuse. She's already had one friend die."
"And now I know we are, at least, friends." He laughed good-naturedly.
"Okay.
But I
won't be your biggest problem aboard the
Crane.
Just wait till
Bruce
sees you." He strode toward the front of the ship to his copilot'
s seat.
Tesa groaned inwardly, anticipating
that
reception.
When they'd docked with the
Singing Crane,
Meg watched Thorn pull off his
sound
nullifiers
. "How're you doing?" she asked.
He shrugged. "Trying to decide if I want to kiss her or kill her. Incredibly
relieved that she's here, out of danger."
Not good,
Meg thought. Thorn could see his own place at Trinity, but he still
didn't understand how critical Tesa's role was. Having gotten over the shock
of the battle, Meg knew Tesa had done what she'd had to.
"Bring that couch through here," Dr. Li's crisp, business
146
like voice came through the open airlock.
The small woman marched into
the ship and leaned over Tesa's prostrate form. "We got your
transmissions
,
Meg. Looks like you
'
ve done eve
ry
thing for her that's
in the protocol. Let's get her to the infirma
ry
."
Meg sighed.
Would Szu-yi ever address Tesa personally? Thorn had
moved over to the couch and was translating what the doctor had said
,
since Tesa
'
s Mizari voder was covered with mud.
Bru
ce g
ri
nned at Tesa while unlocking the floor bolts so the couch
could float. "Forget Sacajawea, hello Chief Joseph!" Tesa nodded
,
lip-reading the name of the Nez Perce chief
who'd known when to fight and when to retreat. "
I hope," she signed as
Meg translated, "that I
,
too, `will fight no more, forever'!"
Bru
ce made a clumsy sign to her, a G
ru
s compliment that meant
"
you
are one with the World."
Thorn'
s surp
ri
sed expression was almost comic
.
He clearly had not
expected this reaction from the meteorologist.
Peter came around the other side,
his dark face drawn with concern
.
He
and B
ru
ce floated the couch onto the station and down the long cor
ri
dor to the infirma
ry
.
"I saw you counting coup on that big female,"
B
ru
ce said to Tesa
. "
That
was quick thinking
,
girl."
"I can't believe this," Thorn
complained. "I thought you'd be
furious."
"
Who, me
?"
said B
ru
ce.
"Yeah,
you. You we
re
the one who was dead set against having
'
a
human woman living with a bunch of p
ri
mitive..."