Authors: A. C. Crispin,Kathleen O'Malley
Tags: #Fiction, #Science Fiction, #General
of the deadly battle that had been fought hours ago.
But then she saw strange hatching cloaks attached to the
nest
shelter. They
must belong to Kills-the-Ripper, and the male that Weaver had beaten. Not
trophies, they were hung to mark the days of grief that Taller's family would
have to mourn for the members of their flock that they'd been forced to kill.
Taller set down in the water without a splash, as Tesa cautiously hovered
the sled beside the platform and stepped onto the slick reeds. She intended
to carry the lightweight sled up to the platform, but then a small, cinnamon-
colored head popped out from the slitted doorway. Tesa dropped the sled in
the mud, stretching out her arms.
Wings outstretched, Sailor hurled himself down the ramp with such abandon
that he tumbled right
into
Tesa's shins. He picked himself up to flutter
against her legs, imploring her to feed him, brood him, and never leave
again.
Tesa plopped down, cross-legged, letting the happy tears flow, as Sailor
clambered into her lap. When she looked up, Weaver and Taller were
standing near, their angular faces close to her and Sailor. It was wonderful to
be home.
When she finally stood to follow them into the nest shelter, she remembered
to pull the sled out of the mud. As she propped it against the shelter's tule
mat walls, she glanced back at the cliff. There,
sitting at
its edge, watching
the last shreds of the sunset, were Meg and Thorn, yet even at this distance
Tesa could tell that Thorn wasn't looking toward the
166
horizon.
He was watching her. Hesitantly
,
she held out her hand
,
as
she
'
d once done as a child
,
and made the ASL I-love-you sign
.
Then
she stepped into the nest shelter, leaving the humans behind.
167
Why do children grow so fast?
Tesa wondered, watching Sailor preen the
long, black primaries of his fully grown wings.
He's almost
as
tall as his
father,
she marveled, recalling the tiny cinnamon chick that cuddled in her
lap only six months ago.
His color was more golden now, with white feathers peeking through. His
eyes were a stunning aquamarine, as they changed from blue to golden
yellow and the long, dark rapierlike bill seemed outsized for his face.
Every day his movements were becoming more graceful, his flying more
powerful. Tesa watched him with both admiration and dread, knowing that
soon it would be time for him to leave on his "flyaway," his rite of passage
into adulthood.
When he comes back-will I even be here?
she wondered. The human crew
expected to receive confirmation of the _Grus' status any day now. By the
time Sailor took his flyaway, the first of his people to have a close
relationship with a human, Earth would have a successful First Contact and
would have been voted full membership in the Cooperative League of
Systems.
Tesa wanted to be happy, but she couldn't.
168
She felt guilty,
but her departure from T
ri
nity was looming too close for
her to celebrate any victo
ri
es
.
She found herself understanding Bruce
'
s feelings.
She noticed Sailor laying his head along his back,
looking at her like the
child he still was despite his incongruously adult
body
, and her conce
rn
s slid off like so many dream shadows.
"Let's
go flying
,"
he signed,
plaintively.
"Without
Taller and Weaver
?"
she asked
. "We
should wait."
"We'll
go by ourselves."
A month ago he wouldn't step into the reeds unless he could see one of
them,
but now he only wanted to be with Tesa. Soon
,
he'd go without
her, as well. He treated her sometimes as a pa
re
nt
,
sometimes as a
coho
rt,
because of her smaller size. Some nights, as they slept side by
side
,
and he
re
sted his long neck across her, she
'
d remember Szu-yi
'
s wa
rn
ing. She couldn
'
t imagine him leaving her behind, and not
loving her when he
re
tu
rn
ed
.
Or her not being there at all.
Sailor was distracted by something swimming around his legs. There was a
flash of blue and silver,
and the sudden jab of his sleek head
,
and then a
moment of wrestling with a fish that seemed much too big for him to
swallow
.
In a moment it was gobbled down
,
headfirst
. "I'll
go alone,"
he threatened, while the bulge in his throat slid downward.
"You'd better
not," she wa
rn
ed.
He gave her a one-eyed look,
then sta
rt
ed running
,
stretching his
wings
,
finally his legs lifted up
,
trailing water.
He's bluffing,
thought Tesa. No, this time he was really going, just
because he could
.
She tu
rn
ed her sled on so fast it almost left without
her, and flopping onto her stomach across the flat flyer
,
she quickly
pulled up beside him.
"Your
father will kill us," she signed
,
but he
couldn't answer in the air. All she could do was follow him-and enjoy
herself.
Tesa activated the shields that protected her from the wind, set up the
passive re
straint field
,
and called up her mapping g
ri
d, set flush on
the sled
.
She knew where they were headed.
Just as Thorn had predicted,
Sailor
'
s flights usually ended up in Black
Feather
'
s ter
ri
to
ry,
to see if his brother's group had retu
rn
ed from
their annual southe
rn
migration. Today was no different as they
banked over Black Feather
's river.
"They're
not back yet
,"
Sailor signed as soon
as
they'd alighted on the
bank of the wide
ri
ver
.
The meande
ri
ng water
169
way, edged on its opposite bank by a dense forest
,
played host to
many avians
,
but, at the moment
,
no Grus. Sailor
'
s whole body spoke
of his disappointment.
"
Well, it was a nice flight
,"
Tesa signed consolingly.
"Look!"
Sailor
pointed to a group of squat
-
legged birds, who carried comical
,
flapping pouches on their long lower bills.
They
were "Travellers
,"
ungainly avians who were adventurous explorers
--
the Johnny
Appleseeds of Trinity
.
They carried genetic material in their pouches to
seed barren waters.
"Black Feather,"
Sailor signed admiringly
, "
follows the Travellers
.
They
know the best routes to
eve
ry
where
.
If they're here, it won
'
t be long
before he will be, too."
As Sailor grew,
Tesa had lea
rn
ed that the Grus could converse with
many of the World
'
s beings. Signs were involved, some body
movements or gestures, and occasionally vocalizations. She recorded
it all on her voder
,
but this cluttered up her files and slowed its ability to
translate the Aquila vocalizations she'd collected from her
"
study
nests."
Weaver felt that Sailor'
s aptitude for the World
'
s languages was greater
than her other children
'
s had been
,
because of Tesa
'
s influence
.
The
young woman taught Sailor some American Sign Language and Plains
Indian Sign
-
a language more adaptable for him since it required no
facial exp
re
ssions
.
Sailor eagerly lea
rn
ed those "un-Worldly signs."
"Well," Sailor signed cheerfully,
determined to make the best of their t
ri
p,
"we may as well get something to eat." Tesa g
ri
nned
. "
Anything
special in mind?"
"How about black nuts?"
he signed
. "
They grow at the edge of that
forest
."
He pointed farther west with his bill. Tesa was familiar with that
forest
.
The trees there dwarfed
Eart
h
'
s Sequoias and we
re
so wide that it took minutes to walk
around them
.
One of her Aquila study nests was located the
re
. Over
the months she
'
d watched the Aquila pair finish their
nest and lay a
single egg. As Sailor'
s adult feathers began to come in, that egg had
finally hatched
.
Unlike the Grus, this chick was helpless, its legs too
soft to even suppo
rt
its own weight
,
and its black-tipped predator's bill
was constantly open in endless screams whenever it was awake
.
Its
only activities seemed to be eating and sleeping in a bo
ri
ng, repetitive
cycle.
Even her translation program seemed redundant.
Eve
ry
thing the voder
repeated was either untranslatable or involved hunting or flying
.
It was
all becoming a sad letdown.
170
The only interesting thing that had happened re
garding Aquila while
Sailor was growing
-
or actually,
hadn't
happened-
was that ever since
the esco
rt
flock had been attacked, the Aquila had not been seen
again.
"This is the best season for black nuts."
Sailor
'
s signs snapped Tesa out
of her musings. "We could take some home."
Even though the big raptors nested in that forest, Tesa an
d Sailor would be
in less danger there
.
The Aquila preferred to attack in open areas near
water
,
since it was hard to maneuver those tremendous wings around
huge trees.
Tesa hopped up onto her sled. "
Let's go. I'm starved!" Miles from Black
Feather
'
s roost site, Sailor and Tesa found the heavily laden trees
.
Greedily Sailor wolfed down small, dark nuts, as Tesa easily cracked
the pape
ry
shells and enjoyed the rich
,
sweet ke
rn
els
.
They collected
four mesh bags of nuts while stuffing themselves on the delicious
nutmeats.
While they
were eating
,
several large animal shapes slipped in
an
d out
of the shadows
,
sharing the trees' bounty with them. There were blue-antlered
Leaf-
Eaters, some small c
an
is-form predators
, an
d the ever
-
present avians
.
Once, a flock of small, gold avi
an
s erupted from the
ground
,
sta
rt
ling the two f
ri
ends,
an
d they looked up quickly
.
Deep
within the copse of trees, ambling along the nut
-
strewn ground
,
was
the ominous red
an
d white ro
an
Tree Ripper.
"Rippers are
n't much for conversation," Tesa remembered Taller
saying as the two stood silently still while the ferocious, temperamental
killer lumbered by, sampling the nuts as she went
.
The great bearlike
omnivore would
'
ve dw
ar
fed the g
re
at Kodiak be
ar, an
d Tesa had
sta
re
d at it in awe and
terror,
wonde
ri
ng if even the monstrous cave
bears of Earth's past had ever been that big
,
with claws that long, or
teeth that sharp. The huge p
re
dator ate her fill
,
then shambled on.
"Are
n't you full yet?" Tesa finally complained, reclining on a mossy
spot free of nuts. She was watching the suns' rays slant through the
tops of the impossibly high t
re
es
,
wondering which one held her
study nest
.
She had a sudden, sharp memo
ry
of Dr
.
Rob saying
"
maybe you could tame one, like the old falconers did." She laughed
.
Wouldn't Taller love
that?
Sailor daintily wiped his face on his back. "
I'm full now. Maybe we c
an