Authors: A. C. Crispin,Kathleen O'Malley
Tags: #Fiction, #Science Fiction, #General
Good Eyes eased onto her knees,
coming alarmingly close to the
fledgling
. "
I wouldn
'
t keep you from your mother, Thunder
.
When you
can fly
,
we'll
re
tu
rn
to your fo
re
st, we'll find her
,
and she
'
ll teach you
what you need to know."
Sailor'
s head lifted in surp
ri
se
.
Did she mean that?
"All I ask,"
Good Eyes signed
, "
is that you help us communicate with
your people
.
That
'
s all I've ever wanted. Your mother wants it, too.
She's t
ri
ed to talk to me, but I couldn
'
t understand her. Now
,
you can
tr
anslate for us. If you will."
The chick seemed to consider this for a moment,
then tu
rn
ed her back
and consumed the fish.
"Thunder will take to the air any day now," Sailor signed as the
fledgling stood on the lake
'
s sho
re,
beating her wings.
"I know,"
Tesa replied wea
ri
ly
. "
I know
."
She sat at the mouth of the
cave
,
obse
rv
ing the young avian
'
s powerful wings, wings that would
car
ry
the raptor away either today or tomorrow.
"
What have you decided
?"
Sailor asked.
Mostly, I've decided that this was no summer tipi camp. It's been the toughest
six weeks I can ever remember,
Tesa thought. Her clothes were in
tatters
.
Being in the water now meant bone chilling cold
.
She'd lost so
much weight on their wild, low fat diet that she was never warm
enough
.
Thunder took so
220
much effort to feed, there just wasn't time to take better care of herself, or the
things she needed.
It was getting colder every day and there'd been a light dusting of snow this
morning. They'd have to leave soon, one way or another, or risk getting
caught by blizzards.
"Will you kill her?" Sailor asked bluntly.
Tesa winced. Once Thunder took to the air, they could very well be her first
hot-blooded meal.
Would she do that, now?
Tesa wondered.
And why not?
That was no obedient falconer's bird flexing her muscles, but a massive
killing machine with a mind of her own.
But what kind of mind?
Tesa asked
herself. Sure, the avian could communicate. She could even sign when she
wanted to. More and more, Tesa found herself wondering if things would've
gone differently if only she could hear, if she could communicate with
Thunder in her own speech. She'd begun to doubt herself, and all the
decisions she'd made that had brought her to this moment.
Of course, since Tesa had promised to return Thunder to her avian mother,
the chick had seemed less angry. Yet there was still no love among them,
just a sullen tolerance that had done little to give Tesa hope for their
unorthodox "pair project."
Should she kill Thunder? How could she, believing as she did that Thunder
was a fully intelligent creature? How could she not, knowing Thunder might
kill and devour Sailor and her? She felt hot tears building up in her eyes and
blinked furiously to drive them back. She couldn't risk Sailor. She cared little
about herself, but felt a bitter amusement at the sentiment that could only be
a true mother's.
"Well, will you?" Sailor prodded her again.
At times the young Grus seemed to fear the Aquila, yet at others, he almost
seemed to care for her. Tesa squeezed her eyes shut. This was getting her
nowhere.
"Yes," she signed abruptly, and walked to the cave. Their little home was no
example of good housekeeping. Remnants of past meals were scattered on
the floor, which Tesa found disturbing. Of all things she'd let slide, this was
the most dangerous. Food scraps drew predators, and the last thing they
needed was to call down more trouble on themselves.
Tesa reached for her Clovis-point spear.
She'd made the point in an early tool-making class back
221
home, and had taken it to StarBridge as a link to her ancient heritage on
that
all
-too-modern
campus.
After they'd arrived here, Tesa had taken the tough, rubbery skin of a circle-swimmer and used it to lash the Clovis point to a
well-balanced wooden shaft. She'd taken her eagle and Aquila feathers and
tied them to the shaft. The spear had a good feel in her hands. This was the
kind of work it was designed to do, to kill large
animals
quickly, efficiently.
The Clovis people had been expert hunters.
She swallowed hard. Thunder had seen her handling this and the leister as
well. She had no fear of these things, so Tesa would be able to surprise the
avian with it. Kill her before she knew what was happening. Mercifully.
Quickly. A hot tear coursed down the woman's dirty cheek and she brushed
it away.
She held the spear by her side, and the eagle feathers brushed her fingers.
It
wasn
't fair that it should come to this,
it wasn't
right. Her grandfather had told her she'd been touched by the Great Mystery. She had followed her
dreams, her
heyoka
dreams, and for what? To raise a child that hated her, so
she could kill her or be killed by her? How contrary could her life become on
this
crazy, backward-
spinning
planet?
Another tear betrayed her. She swallowed and watched loose pumice roll in
front of the cave's entrance from the steep outside walls. The gleaners were
always starting mini-rock slides with their constant burrowing.
More pumice rolled and bounced in front of the cave mouth as Tesa started
to leave, straightening her shoulders resolutely. Then a dark shadow filled
the entrance, and startled, she stepped back, raising the spear.
The looming bulk of an adult, male Tree Ripper filled the cave's mouth. He
entered as confidently as a landlord, his nose working to decipher the
strange new odors. His beady green eyes blinked as his great body blocked
the light.
Oh, shit,
thought Tesa, barely daring to breathe as she pressed herself
against the darkest nook of the back wall, her skin erupting in cold sweat.
Maybe he won't see me?
Her grip on the spear shaft tightened until her
knuckles were white.
Then the huge predator's nose wrinkled, and his tiny eyes focused on the
human. His thick red and white coat glistened with
its lush winter
's growth
as he slowly pulled himself up
222
on his hind limbs.
Tesa felt her legs go weak as the predator opened his
mouth in what had to be a tremendous roar, then faced her with an
incongruous grin.
It was the gri
n of a laughing bear
,
full of long, white teeth
an
d saliva.
The Ripper moved toward Tesa
,
his arms out as though he w
an
ted
nothing mo
re
th
an
a friendly embrace.
223
Tesa's voice welled up and rushed from her throat in a fullblown scream.
She was trapped-pinned against the back of the cave, with only Thunder's
perch and her Clovis-point spear between her and the Ripper. She'd only
get one chance with her weapon; she didn't dare risk a careless jab.
Wounded, he'd
be more dangerous. The thought made her giddy.
More
dangerous?
Suddenly something landed on the Ripper's back, knocking
him forward. Almost grazing Tesa with his claws, he fell across the log
perch. She blinked as the sunlight hit her eyes-and realized Thunder had
buried her talons in the predator's thick shoulders. The Ripper shook and
spun around in the cave, crashing into Tesa and sending her sprawling, but
he could not free himself of the raptor clinging to his back like a crazed
bronco rider. Dazedly Tesa saw Sailor also attacking the pain-stricken
animal, kicking and jabbing at the huge creature's rear as Thunder worried
the front. The Ripper wheeled and swiped at Sailor, but Thunder bit into his
short, rounded ear.
The beast re
ared up, crashing back against a white
-coated
224
wal , smashing the Aquila against it.
Tesa c
ri
ed out, scrambling to her
feet
.
The Ripper spun on the raptor
,
who now lay dazed and helpless
on the cave floor. Then Sailor was between Thunder
an
d the Ripper
,
his rapid
-
fire kicks
an
d slapping wings sta
rt
ling the predator so
much that he stepped back.
Dazed,
Tesa felt for a wild moment that she had done this before
,
back
on Ea
rt
h
,
thousands of years ago. G
ri
pping her spear
,
she lunged
between her child and the massive predator and slid the point
smoothly between the flat
ri
bs
,
deep into the beast's chest.
His great,
shaggy head lifted in a ro
ar
that Tesa could feel along the
wood
,
then he swung his paw, shatte
ri
ng the shaft. But the Clovis
point stayed whe
re
she'd planted it, and the creatu
re'
s red blood
mingled with the roan patches on his coat. He sagged
,
then re
ar
ed
back
an
d ch
ar
ged
.
Tesa gasped, helpless.
But, somehow,
Sailor w
as
there
.
The young avian leaped, d
ri
ving his
long bill deep into the Ripper
'
s
ri
ght eye
,
impaling his brain
.
The
monster shuddered, then collapsed so quickly that his body ne
ar
ly
pinned Tesa to the ground.
Tesa'
s legs suddenly shook, then all her muscles went limp and she
fell
.
Stunned
an
d f
ri
ghtened, she looked for Sailor. The young Grus
was bending solicitously over Thunder. Tesa crawled over to them on
her hands and knees
. "
Is she okay
?"
she asked Sailor.
"I don'
t know
,"
he answered, obviously worried. "Are you?"
"I think so," Tesa signed. "
You saved my
life.
.. Sailor ... you killed a Tree
Ripper."
"
Only because you weakened him," he insisted.
"Well, neither of us could'
ve done a damned thing if Thunder hadn
'
t
pulled him off me
.
Do Aquila often attack Rippers?"
"
No, never
,"
he told her
. "
Rippers
ar
e not the hunted. In fact
,
they
ar
e
the only person on the World that Death fears."
Thunder,
dazed and shaken
,
began cautiously stretching her wings.
Then she gazed, first with one eye, then the other, at the huge
,
dead
an
imal filling the cave. She tottered
ar
ound the corpse
.
Finally
,
she
signed haltingly
, "
We-killed him?"
"Yes," Tesa signed.
The Aquila peere
d at the ragged eye socket
,
then at Sailor's
225
SILENT DANCES 225 bloody bill. "You kept him away from me, though he
could've easily maimed you."
"Not so easily," Sailor signed testily.
"He could have just as easily maimed you," Tesa told Thunder. "Why did
you attack him?"
The Aquila hunched her head into her shoulders. "When I heard your
scream ... I couldn't let you come to harm. Not
after what you said about
my mother."
The Aquila stared at Tesa full-faced. "I knew you'd fight for each other, but I
was surprised when you kept the Ripper from killing me. You could've taken
that time to escape. That's
something I'd like to tell my mother."
Then Thunder climbed onto the Ripper's shoulders and threw her head back
in what was, no doubt, the high-pitched call of her people.
So,
Tesa thought
with a spark of grim satisfaction,
we're no longer merely "the hunted." Well,
that's fine.
Thunder looked at her from her furry perch and signed, "Do you think we can
eat him, Good Eyes?"
Thorn hovered over the terminal screen, using one of Peter's computer pens
to manipulate the data. This was like playing one of those old computer
games--only in this game there were no points, and you could actually win.
Or lose,
he thought grimly. He'd already lost, hadn't he? A good researcher
in Scott, a good friend in Peter, and ...
Don't get mad,
he reminded himself,
get even.
Peter's program had been damned hard to install-especially since Thorn kept hearing his friend's voice