Part 28 (1/2)
”Athaclena, what is-”
He stopped then, as he came around and saw her face.
Her features had changed. Most of the humaniform contours she had shaped during the weeks of their exile were still in place; but something they had displaced had returned, if only momentarily. There was an alien glitter in her gold-flecked eyes, and it seemed to dance in counterpoint to the throbbing of the half-seen glyph.
Robert's senses had grown. He looked again at the thread in her hands and felt a thrill of recognition.
”Your father . . . ?”
Athaclena's teeth flashed white. ”W'ith-tanna Uthacalthing bellinarri-t'hoo, haoon'nda! . . .”
She breathed deeply through wide-open nostrils. Her eyes-set as wide apart as possible-seemed to flash.
”Robert, he lives!”
He blinked, his mind overflowing with questions. ”That's great! But . . . but where! Do you know anything about my mother? The government? What does he say?”
She did not reply at once. Athaclena held up the thread. Sunlight seemed to run up and down its taut length. Robert might have sworn that he heard sound, real sound, emitting from the thrumming fiber.
”W'ith-tanna Uthacalthing!” Athaclena seemed to look straight into the sun.
She laughed, no longer quite the sober girl he had known. She chortled, Tymbrimi fas.h.i.+on, and Robert was very glad that he was not the object of that hilarity. Tymbrimi humor quite often meant that someone else, sometime soon, would definitely not be amused.
He followed her gaze out over the Vale of Sind, where a flight of the ubiquitous Gubru transports moaned faintly as they cruised across the sky. Unable to trace more than the outlines of her glyph, Robert's mind searched for and found something akin to it in the human fas.h.i.+on. In his mind he pictured a metaphor.
Suddenly, Athaclena's smile was something feral, almost catlike. And those wars.h.i.+ps, reflected in her eyes, seemed to take on the aspect of complacent, rather unsuspecting mice.
PART THREE.
The Garthlings
The evolution of the human race will not be accomplished in the ten thousand years of tame animals, but in the million years of wild animals, because man is and will always be a wild animal.
CHARLES GALTON DARWIN.
Natural selection won't matter soon, not anywhere near as much as conscious selection. We will civilize and alter ourselves to suit our ideas of what we can be. Within one more human lifespan, we will have changed ourselves unrecognizably.
GREG BEAR.
43 Uthacalthing
Inky stains marred the fen near the place where the yacht had foundered. Dark fluids oozed slowly from cracked, sunken tanks into the waters of the broad, flat estuary. Wherever the slick trails touched, insects, small animals, and the tough salt gra.s.s all died.
The little s.p.a.ces.h.i.+p had bounced and skidded when it crashed, scything a twisted trail of destruction before finally plunging nose first into the marshy river mouth. For days thereafter the wreck lay where it had come to rest, slowly leaking and settling into the mud.
Neither rain nor the tidal swell could wash away the battle scars etched into its scorched flanks. The yacht's skin, once allicient and pretty, was now seared and scored from near-miss after near-miss. Cras.h.i.+ng had only been the final insult.
Incongruously large at the stern of a makes.h.i.+ft boat, the Thennanin looked across the intervening flat islets to survey the wreck. He stopped rowing to ponder the harsh reality of his situation.
Clearly, the ruined s.p.a.ces.h.i.+p would never fly again. Worse, the crash had made a sorrowful mess of this patch of marshlands. His crest puffed up, a rooster's comb ridged with spiky gray fans.
Uthacalthing lifted his own paddle and politely waited for his fellow castaway to finish his stately contemplation. He hoped the Thennanin diplomat was not about to serve up yet another lecture on ecological responsibility and the burdens of patronhood. But, of course, Kault was Kault.
”The spirit of this place is offended,” the large being said, his breathing slits rasping heavily. ”We sapients have no business taking our petty wars down into nurseries such as these, polluting them with s.p.a.ce poisons.”
”Death comes to all things, Kault. And evolution thrives on tragedies.” He was being ironic, but Kault, of course, took him seriously. The Thennanin's throat slits exhaled heavily.
”I know that, my Tymbrimi colleague. It is why most registered nursery worlds are allowed to go through their natural cycles unimpeded. Ice ages and planetoidal impacts are all part of the natural order. Species are tempered and rise to meet such challenges.
”However, this is a special case. A world damaged as badly as Garth can only take so many disasters before it goes into shock and becomes completely barren. It is only a short time since the Bururalli worked out their madness here, from which this planet has barely begun to recover. Now our battles add more stress . . . such as that filth.”
Kault gestured, pointing at the fluids leaking from the broken yacht. His distaste was obvious.
Uthacalthing chose, this time, to keep his silence. Of course every patron-level Galactic race was officially environmentalist. That was the oldest and greatest law. Those s.p.a.cefaring species who did not at least declare fealty to the Ecological Management Codes were wiped out by the majority, for the protection of future generations of sophonts.
But there were degrees. The Gubru, for instance, were less interested in nursery worlds than in their products, ripe pre-sentient species to be brought into the Gubru Clan's peculiar color of conservative fanaticism. Among the other lines, the Soro took great joy in the manipulation of newly fledged client races. And the Tandu were simply horrible.
Kault's race was sometimes irritating in their sanctimonious pursuit of ecological purity, but at least theirs was a fixation Uthacalthing could understand. It was one thing to burn a forest, or to build a city on a registered world. Those types of damage would heal in a short time. It was quite another thing to release long-lasting poisons into a biosphere, poisons which would be absorbed and acc.u.mulate. Uthacal-thing's own distaste at the oily slicks was only a little less intense than Kault's. But nothing could be done about it now.
”The Earthlings had a good emergency cleanup team on this planet, Kault. Obviously the invasion has left it inoperative. Perhaps the Gubru will get around to taking care of this mess themselves.”
Kault's entire upper body twisted as the Thennanin performed a sneezelike expectoration. A gobbet struck one of the nearby leafy fronds. Uthacalthing had come to know that this was an expression of extreme incredulity.
”The Gubru are slackers and heretics! Uthacalthing, how can you be so naively optimistic?” Kault's crest trembled and his leathery lids blinked. Uthacalthing merely looked back at his fellow castaway, his lips a compressed line.
”Ah. Aha,” Kault rasped. ”I see! You test my sense of humor with a statement of irony.” The Thennanin made his ridge crest inflate briefly. ”Amusing. I get it. Indeed. Let us proceed.”
Uthacalthing turned and lifted his oar again. He sighed and crafted tu'fluk, the glyph of mourning for a joke not properly appreciated.
Probably, this dour creature was selected as amba.s.sador to an Earthling world because he has what pa.s.ses for a great sense of humor among Thennanin. The choice might have been a mirror image of the reason Uthacalthing himself had been chosen by the Tymbrimi ... for his comparatively serious nature, for his restraint and tact.
No, Uthacalthing thought as they rowed, worming by patches of struggling salt gra.s.s. Kault, my friend, you did not get the joke at all. But you will.
It had been a long trek back to the river mouth. Garth had rotated more than twenty times since he and Kault had to abandon the crippled s.h.i.+p in midair, parachuting into the wilderness. The Thennanin's unfortunate Ynnin clients had panicked and gotten their parasails intertangled, causing them to fall to their deaths. Since then, the two diplomats had been solitary companions.
At least with spring weather they would not freeze. That was some comfort.
It was slow going in their makes.h.i.+ft boat, made from stripped tree branches and parasail cloth. The yacht was only a few hundred meters from where they had sighted it, but it took the better part of four hours to wend through the frequently tortuous channels. Although the terrain was very flat, high gra.s.s blocked their view most of the way.
Then, suddenly, there it was, the broken ruin of a once-sleek little s.h.i.+p of s.p.a.ce.
”I still do not see why we had to come back to the wreck,” Kault rasped. ”We got away with sufficient dietary supplements to let us live off the land. When things calm down we can intern ourselves-”
”Wait here,” Uthacalthing said, not caring that he interrupted the other. Thennanin weren't fanatical about that sort of punctilio, thank Ifni. He slipped over the side of the boat and into the water. ”There is no need that both of us risk approaching any closer. I will continue alone.”