Part 12 (2/2)
Humanity remained in terrible peril from her acts, the information she brought offering perhaps insight but no help. Incredibly, she felt . . . happy. Something had changed for the better. What?Keep telling yourself it's only a movie, she had told Kyle. She had known humans had movies, but seen very few. Her quote now to Gustafson from one of his country's greatest films was unintentional but apt.
”This could be the beginning of a beautiful friends.h.i.+p.”
CHAPTER 19.
From deep within a beanbag chair-Kyle had now brought one for most rooms of the building, Swelk watched two more curious and dissatisfied visitors leave. Humans under stress, she knew from both intercepted movies and her short time on Earth, paced to and fro. Krulirim in like circ.u.mstances also moved, in their case-naturally-always in circles.
Swelk's present immobility was willed. Her lame leg always ruined the perfection of her loops; she'd endured enough ridicule about her deviancies to have learned long ago how not to evoke more. Seething though she was in unexpressed frustration, a fragment of her mind laughed at the foolishness of maintaining self-discipline in front of the bilateral humans.
”May I join you?” asked Darlene Lyons from the doorway. She was at the house much more often than Kyle. Why bother, thought Swelk. So far today she had failed dismally to answer questions about the engines of the Consensus, the numbers and capabilities of its antimeteor lasers, and the range of its lifeboats. Of the lifeboats she had known only that the reach was less than interstellar. She had abruptly ended the last session, about ”military capabilities,” when she realized what motivated the two men's inquiries: a possible a.s.sault on the Consensus. Despite Swelk's abuse by its pa.s.sengers and crew, thoughts of revenge had not motivated her hasty departure.
”Of course,” Swelk waggled two digits in feigned welcome. The gray tabby, now named Stripes, leapt clumsily onto the beanbag chair. It toppled against her, and almost immediately fell asleep. The fuzzy little thing, all legs and ears and impossibly soft fur, could not have been more different from a Girillian swampbeast-and the kitten reminded Swelk achingly of her abandoned charges. She would not cause them more suffering. ”But I won't help Earth attack my former s.h.i.+pmates.”
Darlene's cheeks reddened, a reaction whose meaning Swelk could not penetrate. ”I have no desire to become a radioactive extra in a Krulchukor movie. What would you propose we do?” Swelk's sensor stalks drooped in sadness and shame. The pa.s.sengers and officers of the Consensus were eager to sacrifice the most advanced race her people had ever discovered. Would the plotters accept disappointment, meekly heading home if their plans were widely disclosed . . . or would they find new means to produce the same result? Rualf's special-effects wizards had already produced the robotic F'thk and the illusion of a gigantic moon-orbiting mother s.h.i.+p. Did she dare gamble they could not find a way to goad any Earth country into attacking its national rival? From newscasts Swelk had surrept.i.tiously watched in her lifeboat hideaway before her escape, it seemed that counterstrike after countercounterstrike would inevitably follow the first hostile launch.
And what if the filmmakers' attempts to fool Earth into a photogenic self-destruction did fail? Would Rualf and Captain Grelben, their dreams of vast wealth dashed, lash out at Earth in anger and disappointment? Swelk felt certain that an unsuccessful attack on the Consensus would draw an enraged response. Either way, as the morning's earlier visitors had made her realize, she simply did not know what danger the Krulchukor s.h.i.+p represented. There was no doubting from the humans' questions that they were concerned.
And she had led Rualf and Captain Grelben here. The exile's sensor stalks collapsed in withdrawal. The suddenly limp tendrils lay draped across her torso, obscuring her vision and m.u.f.fling her hearing.
”Swelk!” called Darlene. ”Are you all right?”
Swelk roused herself with a shake, her sensor stalks snapping painfully erect. ”I am far from all right,
but I have only myself to blame for that.
”And as for your previous question, I have no idea what we should do.”
* * * Kyle watched Swelk watching the kittens from the comfort of the beanbag chair she had towed into the dining room. Blackie and Stripes-there were two unimaginative names . . . were all Krulirim so literal?-were tussling for no obvious reason, their tiny mouths opening repeatedly in meows either silent or too high-pitched for him to hear. From time to time a cat forgot what she was doing and pounced on the disheveled fringe of the oriental rug on which they played.
The little alien had two sensor stalks pointed at her pets; the third was time-shared between Kyle and
routine scanning of the room. One needed little time with Swelk, he thought, to deduce where the ET's attention was focused. He glanced at his wrist.w.a.tch and sighed inwardly. His impatience was unfair, and he knew it. One debriefer after another grilled her most of the day, every day. He had to allow her an occasional mental break.
Those feelings of tolerance did nothing to expand the hours in Kyle's day. Well, he hadn't grown up with pets for nothing. After a while, he took the laser pointer from his pocket, waving it to make a jiggly red dot beside the kittens. They immediately stopped wrestling to chase the spot around the room. The hunt became a stakeout at the hall-closet door beneath which the laser dot had vanished. They were likely to stay there, staring at the gap under the door, for some time.
With the kittens quieted down, he tried to get Swelk back to business. ”I'd like to talk some more about
the bioconverter.”
Success: she favored him now with two sensor stalks. ”What else is there to say? I put organic material in. I take different stuff out.”
”How does it work?”
”Here is the On-Off b.u.t.ton. I can pick what I want made from the list in this display, or insert a sample here. I speak how much I want. Raw material, when needed, goes into this chute. Anything it can't use is
emptied here. Food is deposited in the final compartment.” She flicked, three times, all the digits of one limb. He took it as a sign of annoyance. ”I have told you, and others, all of this before.”
The day was overcast; the illumination from the window was gloomy. He pointed at the chandelier over
the dining-room table. ”Would you mind if I turn on the lamp?” Standing without waiting for an answer, he was surprised at the response he got.
”I do not like your lights. They make me jumpy.”
”All right.” He sat back down. Kyle knew people who got depressed in the winter from too little sun.
There was even a medical name for the condition: seasonal affective disorder. In Swelk's case, of course, the ambient light wouldn't improve with the months-distant lengthening of the days. Renewed sympathy for the solitary alien washed over him. He tamped down the feeling-what Earth needed now was information. ”I understand the controls for the bioconverter. My question is different. What happens inside to make it work?”
The alien hesitated. ”Chemicals are broken apart. The pieces are recombined into new chemicals. Maybe
there's a computer inside to control it.”
Foiled again. Kyle's certified-evidence-free theory was that the bioconverter employed nanotechnology: self-replicating molecular-sized machines to manipulate atoms and molecules. Nanotech was conceptual at best in some of Earth's cutting-edge labs; any clues to its practical implementation could be priceless.
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