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Authors: Anne McCaffrey

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All the Weyrs of Pern (46 page)

BOOK: All the Weyrs of Pern
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How Aivas learned of the threat no one knew, or admitted, but it gave Fandarel the schematics for a small device that Master Robinton was to wear at all times. “A locator,” Aivas termed it. “Wearing that, you can be traced anywhere on this planet and as far as the spaceships.”

That afforded all his friends far more relief than any would admit. With Aivas as protector, Master Robinton was surely safe.

17

 

 

B
Y THE END
of the summer, there was still no sign of would-be abductors. Nurevin collected Brestolli from the brewer’s cot in Bitra, limping but still adamant about what he had overheard; a visit to Lord Sigomal by Benden Weyrleaders secured the release of the “contagious” harpers, and Master Sebell told the Bitran Lord Holder that, regretfully, he had no replacements suitable for a Hold of such stature. Several other Crafts withdrew their masters, leaving the Bitran Halls staffed by minor journeymen and apprentices of local origin.

A similar withdrawal occurred at Nerat but not at Keroon, for despite his increasingly vocal distrust of all improvements originating from the “Abomination,” Lord Corman did not interfere with any of his Crafthalls or with the performance of their traditional duties to his Hold. He also made plain that he was distancing himself from Sigomal and Begamon.

Every Weyrwoman kept her queen on her mark, and every harper tracked down the faintest whisper of clandestine activities. Major Crafthalls discreetly doubled security measures. And dragonriders continued to drill outside the
Yokohama
, the
Bahrain
, and the
Buenos Aires
. Hamian and his crews worked overtime producing protective covering for riders, as well as a garment that would fit like a glove on dragon hind paws to shield flesh from the burn of ice-cold metal. Oldive, Sharra, Mirrim, Brekke, and the others labored under Aivas’s close guidance to analyze and describe the peculiar organism that was Thread—or, rather, that
became
Thread as it met its fiery frenzied doom in the skies of Pern.

Sharra tried to explain to Jaxom the task Aivas had set his investigators, as much to hear herself explain what she was doing as to make it clear to her mate.

“We had one marvelous day when Mirrim discovered the beads under the microscope. Aivas was excited, too, for he feels certain that the beads are the genetic information of the Thread organism.” She grinned as she remembered that moment of triumph. “The microscope was at sub-high for maximum magnification, so we could all see these tiny, tiny beads strung along one of those long wires I told you Thread has. Not the springs, but the wires, which are coiled ever so tightly in a volume no bigger than the tip of my finger. Aivas says these ring beads use the material of the Thread ovoid to reproduce themselves.” She made a face, indicating her ignorance of how that was done. “What he wants us to find now is a bacteriophage to infect the beads and then discover just the right one that will replicate itself fast before it uses up all the Thread material. We’ve done something of a similar nature, you know, when we located bacteria from wounds and learned how to disimprove their symbiotic bacteriophages so that they would kill their hosts. Our ancestors could certainly do marvelous things biologically to heal people. I hope we can begin to do as well as they did.
This
exercise could heal our planet.”

“Then why didn’t
they
do it?” Jaxom asked. “Why are we left with the job?”

Sharra grinned smugly. “Because we have dragons to replace fuelless shuttles, fire-lizards who can nick Thread ovoids out of space, and Aivas to tell us exactly what to do. Even if I don’t always understand what we’re doing or why we’re doing it.”

“I thought you said it was to disimprove the Thread’s symbionts. Though why that’s necessary with what the dragonriders are to do, I don’t know.”

Sharra was silent a moment, considering that. “Aivas hates Thread, inasmuch as an inanimate machine is capable of hatred. He hates what it did to his captains and Admiral Benden. He hates what it’s done to us. He wants to be sure it can never menace us again. He wants to kill it in the Oort Cloud. He calls the project ‘Overkill.’ ”

Jaxom regarded her in puzzled astonishment. “He’s more vindictive than F’lar!”

Sharra sighed dejectedly. “I’m not sure that we can
do
what he wants. It’s all so very complicated. And we’re so limited in our understanding. He may be the machine, but I feel like one, doing this and that without knowing why.”

She was more buoyant three days later when she told Jaxom that Aivas had found the appropriate parasitic vector.

“He says that similar life-forms were found in microgravity conditions in the asteroid belts. It’s very like the one found in the ecology of the Pluto/Charon pair in the original Earth Solar system.” Sharra frowned in perplexity. “Well, that’s what he says. He has named the springs ‘zebedees.’ And zebedees are what we will now use to make our tailored parasite, like a virus, jump from one Thread ovoid to the next . . . once the parasite has disimproved itself as a symbiont and became really destructive! We’ve got to culture it now, though.”

Jaxom managed a suitably appreciative grin for her enthusiasm. “Who are we to protest an Aivas pronouncement? What next?”

“Well, he’s got all the fire-lizards searching the ovoid streams for the springs. Sometimes they’re embedded right on the surface of an ovoid. We’ve had to start up nine more cold capsules to contain the things and infect them with the zebedee-makers.”

“Zebedees, the Thread fleas!” Jaxom said, teasingly.

“Well, fleas
are
parasites, and I could wish we were able to disimprove some of them quickly! As it is, the time we have is nowhere near long enough for the work we have to do.”

She had been disgusted to discover canine fleas on Jarrol, who was incurably attached to one of the kitchen-spit animals. “Fleas!” She shook her head. “That will be my priority project, as soon as we’re finished with Aivas’s: to disimprove fleas.”

“Whenever that’ll be,” Jaxom added. There were so many Aivas endeavors, at various stages of completion, that he wondered if any of them would get finished on time now that the deadline drew nearer.

“Would you and Ruth have time to get me back to the
Yokohama
tomorrow before you fly Fall?” Sharra asked.

Jaxom groaned. “I thought you’d be here a few days.”

Sharra looked properly repentant. “I’ve been over everything for the Gather with Brand and the other Stewards, and all’s ready for our guests. But this is an especially critical time, Jaxom . . .” Her eyes pleaded for his understanding.

“You’ll be exhausted. You won’t enjoy the Gather . . .” he heard himself saying, and then he pulled her into his arms, savoring the feel of her body against his, and the spicy fragrance of her hair. Gathers were always special times for them.

“Please, Jaxom?” Her lips brushed his neck.

“I’m just griping, love. I could never keep you where you didn’t wish to be.”

“Won’t it be wonderful, when this is all over, to be just us again?” she asked. “I want a daughter, too, you know.”

That earnest wish elicited a response he was glad to make.

Threadfall was uneventful, though it was not one in which the spaceships’ shields had carved tunnels of Threadfree air. Then Hamian sent a message that he had a new glove for Ruth to test on an EVA. So, after Ruth had tested it and found it comfortable as well as a good shield with an easy buckle attachment to hold it in place, Jaxom reported the success to Aivas to pass on to Hamian. For a change, Jaxom and Ruth were alone on the bridge: Ruth was spread across the big window as usual, devouring his favorite view.

“Aivas, just why are you so obsessed with this zebedee project?” Jaxom asked when he had delivered his message to Hamian. “Sharra says you call it Overkill. Why isn’t blowing the Red Star out of orbit sufficient?”

“You are alone?” Aivas asked.

That was an unusual question, as Aivas usually unerringly sensed additional presences.

“Yes, I’m alone. Are you going to come clean?” Jaxom asked, half joking.

“This is as good a time as any,” Aivas replied, startling the young Holder.

“That doesn’t sound good.”

“On the contrary, it is all to the good to know what has been expected of you since this facility learned of Ruth’s unusual abilities.”

“His knowing when and where he is?” Jaxom asked slyly.

“Precisely. An explanation is needed.”

“They usually are, with you!”

“Flippancy has always covered apprehension. Candor is required. There are three engines that must be exploded to push the Red Star out of an orbit hazardous to Pern. Two of those explosions have already taken place.”

“What?”
Jaxom sat upright in the comfortable chair and stared at the screen in front of him.

“As you are aware, records from every Weyr, Hall, and Hold were presented and analyzed. Two small entries illuminate an anomaly.

“Based on the position of the Red Star when Mankind first landed on Pern, that planet is not now in the orbit it should be tracking at this point in time. Repeated calculations were made during the First Fall by captains Keroon and Tillek. Eccentric it might be, but its current position differs from an extrapolation of those original calculations. Its path shows that it has suffered a perturbation of nine-point-three degrees off its original elliptical orbit. That is not consistent with the extrapolated position. Therefore, something has already altered its path. Substantiation occurs in two minor references found in Istan and Keroonian records in the Fourth and Eighth Passes, which were each prior to a long Interval. During each Pass, bright flashes were observed when the Red Star was at apogee in reference to Pern. Bright enough to be remembered and noted.”

Stunned, Jaxom blinked, as if closing and opening his eyes would help him focus his thoughts on what Aivas was saying. “Those two craters?”

“Your perception is acute.”

“My fear is also, Aivas!”

“Man is wise to fear: it sharpens the sense of self-preservation.”

“But what I felt when I saw the first crater was not fear. It was—it had to be—it was as if I knew it had to be there! I discounted such a ridiculous notion at the time. And you, Aivas, would not have me believe that I have been there before?”

“The time paradox has bewildered many. Your presentiment of involvement with the crater is unusual, but similar incidents are reported in the annals of psychic phenomena.”

“Are they?” Jaxom asked facetiously. “I’m not at all sure I appreciate the position you’ve put me in—that is, if I understand you correctly.”

“How do you understand what has been said?”

“That somehow I, on Ruth, with enough dragonriders to perform the task, took an engine back in time and deposited it in that Rift? Where it blew up to form the crater I find on my initial trip to the Red Star some eighteen hundred Turns in the later?”

“You have done it twice. The second time was six hundred Turns ago. It is the only explanation. Furthermore,
you
know that you’ve done it.”

“I don’t want to do it,” Jaxom protested, thinking how far back he would have to ask Ruth to take him and the others. Yet Aivas had been accurate in so many other unlikely things. “What if something went wrong?”

“True to the time paradox, if something had, you wouldn’t be here, and there would be some thirty or forty dragons missing from this time.”

“No, that’s wrong,” Jaxom said, struggling to understand. “We wouldn’t have gone yet. So we’d still be here. We won’t be here if we fail when we try it. No, no!” He waved one hand irritably at his confusion.

“You have gone. You have been successful, and each of those previous explosions has caused Long Intervals—which are inexplicable by any other rationale—thus setting up the planet for the final orbital dislocation.”

“Now wait a minute,” Jaxom said, waggling his finger at the screen in an aggravated fashion. “We’ve done a lot of queer things to propitiate you, Aivas, and we’ve done them because you’ve proved to be right . . .”

“This facility is correct in its findings and conclusions in this matter, as well, Lord Jaxom.”

“Don’t try that tact on me, friend. It doesn’t work! The dragonriders are not going to go along with this. Timing it has always been extremely tricky. You know that Lessa nearly died going back four hundred Turns. You want us to go back eighteen hundred?”

“You will be carrying your own oxygen supplies, so you will not suffer from asphyxia as she did. You are aware of the sensory-deprivation syndrome and will not be disturbed by the disorientation . . .”

Jaxom kept shaking his head. “You can’t ask bronzes to do that, even if they are able to. I don’t think F’lar times it. In fact, the only one I do know who has is Lessa.”

“And your Ruth. Furthermore, you have been proud of the fact that the white dragon always knows where and when he is going.”

“You have said that Ruth always knows where and when he is going.”

“I have, but—”

“If Ruth knows where and when he is going—and specific guides are available—he can supply the necessary visual coordinates.”

“But I know that the other riders won’t stand for this . . .”

“They will not know!”

Jaxom stared straight at the screen for another long moment. “How,” he asked at last in a very patient, saccharine tone, “will they
not
know?”

“Because you will not tell them. And since you now have been to the Red Star on several occasions, and since the distance in terms of travel
between
will not be appreciably longer than what they would expect, they will not know that they have been transported back in time and to the Red Star in the position required by the equations that cover the two disparate explosions.”

Jaxom mulled that over and, inhaling deeply, realized that in his state of shock he had not been breathing regularly.

I think we can do it
, Ruth remarked with more confidence than Jaxom was feeling at that moment.

Jaxom turned toward his beloved friend. “You may think we can, but I’m going to be bloody sure we can. Now, Aivas, let’s go through this again . . . The other riders are not to know the time of our destination. But there are to be three teams of us, taking the three engines . . .”

“Hamian will not have sufficient space suits for the three hundred beasts required to shift all three engines at the same time. You will lead two of the three groups. F’lar will, as planned, head the third. He will be the only one depositing an engine in this time. As you know,” Aivas went on, overriding Jaxom’s protest, “the locations chosen are not in sight of each other. Since F’lar will think that you are at one end of the Rift, N’ton at the other, he will not know what you are doing.”

BOOK: All the Weyrs of Pern
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