Bloodhype (18 page)

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Authors: Alan Dean Foster

BOOK: Bloodhype
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“Fine.” Mal downed a straight glass of orange Couperanian brandy. He could trace its tactile path down his throat and into his stomach. It formed a pool of glowing warmth there, a small non-nuclear furnace.

“There now,” said Kingsley expansively, polishing off the remainder of his own drink. “If everyone is suitably fueled, I’ll give evidence of my openness in another manner. To all of you.” A conspiratorial tone had entered the trader’s voice. “I confess the action will not be entirely unselfish. I need some fresh, outside opinions. Surely you can’t do any worse than my own technicians.”

“Is it interesting or just profitable, your proof?” Kitten inquired.

“A deal of both, my dear. Come and decide for yourself.”

Leaving their silverware and glasses and such behind, awkward alien shapes in the smooth furry sea, they followed the merchant, to the central elevator. Kitten noticed he limped, slightly. The conveyance dropped them another ten levels but did not stop there. Instead, a series of lights running horizontally across the control panel blinked on. Apparently they were traveling parallel to the surface, deep into island bedrock.

Kitten estimated that they had traveled roughly two-thirds of the way into the island and slightly downward, when the doors finally slid back. The trader led them out.

Two men stood ready to greet them. They both relaxed at the sight of the merchant.

“Good evening, sir,” offered the one on their left.

“Evening Willus, Rave. Taking some guests to see the salvage.” Both guards hefted heavy, no-nonsense weapons: Paxton Five’s. The thick-bodied guns launched tiny self-propelled missiles with explosive warheads. They were clumsy and awkward at close range, but reflective laser armor would be useless against them.

There were guards at two more checkpoints, located at sharp turns in the tunnel.

“Never been through here before,” Mal said, staring at the smooth, machined walls. “Quite a hidey-hole. What do you keep down here, your trousseau?”

“Abandoned any need for that when my credit account first passed six figures. There are several storage chambers of varying size cut into the rock. We’re headed for the biggest.”

Mal nodded. “I noticed several other passageways branching off when we left the elevator.”

“This one is particularly well fortified. I use it to store the more expensive imports and exports. Also goods which require controlled atmosphere, peace and quiet. Delicate scientific apparatus, for example. Just now it happens to house a very intriguing hunk of cosmic jetsam a pair of shuttle-pilots—semi-regular employees of mine—found drifting in indifferent orbit. They had the good sense to plant a salvage beacon on it and contact me right away . . . The thing they hauled down is interesting more than as a mere representative of alien manufacture. You’ll see why.”

They turned another corner abruptly and stood in the described room. There was a thick door, retracted into the ceiling. Several other men and thranx were already there.

“Engineers and technical consultants from my staff in Repler City,” said Kingsley at an inquiring glance from Kitten. “Brought away from their regular jobs to work on this thing. Expensive.” He pointed. “That’s it.”

He indicated a huge rectangular block of metal standing slightly apart near the back of the chamber. At first glance it was not particularly impressive. It stood near a host of other carefully stacked crates. One of these stood unpackaged. Mal recognized the device as a commercial class Seatoler. This was a thranx-developed instrument which could accurately predict changes in ocean currents, water temperature at various depths, and even track and predict fluctuations in the height of the thermocline. In other words, a very valuable and exclusive hunk of fishing equipment. No doubt consigned to one of the larger fishing concerns on Repler.

One of the engineers noticed their arrival, walked slowly over to greet them. Skinny afterthought arms dangled from a short-sleeved workshirt. The man had a hooked nose and artificial corneas that gave his gaze an unnatural sparkle. Kitten could make out the silvery threads that ran around the edge of the implants.

“Sir, we still cannot locate any kind of button, switch, lever, or even a sign that this thing is meant to be opened. It took us four hours just to find a seam, you know.”

“I know, Martinez. I’m paying for it. Keep at it. I’m not ready to resort to slicing it open. Not yet. Haven’t you been able to learn anything about its insides?”

“Well, the metal—we’re pretty sure now that it is metal, by the way—resists normal xerographic and skeletonay probing. But one of the guys got the idea of trying a moliflow scan at very low power. We got some interior pickup that way, enough to take rough measurements of the body inside . . .” The man wiped sweat from his brow.

“There’s a creature in that thing?” asked Kitten.

“A genuine, certified new-to-science, bonafide alien. Yes, my dear.”

“About three meters tall,” the engineer continued. “Pickup was faint, and it’s hard to hold focus at such low power. We couldn’t get much more than that. It seems to be in an excellent state of preservation. I didn’t want to take a chance on harming the tissues by using the scanner at a stronger level. As far as direct visual observation goes, we’ve only found the one transparent section that the pilot marked. The red tinting of the glass, or whatever, is heavy enough to render it opaque in spots. Even so, you can make out more than is pleasant. It’s not pretty, Kingsley.”

“I’ve seen the frozepix, Martinez, I know. As I said, keep ’em at it. This amounts to a paid holiday for some, and I won’t tolerate loafing.”

“Yes sir.”

The group moved to the base of the metal ziggurat. It was mostly gray, shading to a bleached-bone white in places. Tiny pits were visible over most of the surface, scars from micrometeorites and null-flies.

“Another point, Hammurabi.” The trader was examining a particularly large pitting. “Analysis of a scraping from this thing—and you’ve no idea what we had to go through to get it—places it between five and six hundred thousand years of age. Now me, I’m fond of antiques, but this gives me the shivers.”

“And it’s been floating around in your backyard for that long?”

“No one knows for certain. According to what the smart boys tell me, that’s not likely. It would have been noticed before now. Still, Repler hasn’t been inhabited that long and large-scale commerce is pretty recent. More likely, though, it was floating free and happened to be captured by the planet’s gravity. There’s certainly nothing to indicate it was built around here. It doesn’t correspond to anything built by other known space-going races.”

“It might have been built on Repler,” Mal persisted. “Lots of things could disappear in that span of time.”

Kingsley shook his head. “Doesn’t add. If the builders of this and the battleship-size sphere that accompanied it could make things last this long, we’d find similar constructs on the ground. In an advanced state of decay, sure, but at least a foundation here and there. While it’s true much of Repler is still unexplored, enough survey has been carried out to indicate that not even a primitive sapient race once lived here. This is what the brain-boys tell me, anyway. You ought to see that mother object, by the way. Haven’t even scratched that, yet. Looks like one of Mother Nature’s more grandiose invertebrates, blown up to gigasize.”

“Mister Kingsley!” The shout came from behind the massive relic. The merchant looked up.

An engineer peered around the edge and down from his precarious perch atop the makeshift scaffolding.

“There’s some paneling back here, sir.” The man expressed confusion and puzzlement. “I could swear I’ve been over this spot a hundred times already. Anyhow, it just slid back under my hand.”

“How big an opening?” yelled Martinez. Then, lowering his voice, “Anything visible?”

“Damn right there is! There’s a light underneath that’s flickering like it can’t make up its mind whether to stay on or off. It doesn’t appear to be blinking in any kind of recognizable series. Now it’s staying lit. I can’t make out a bulb or filament of any kind.”

“You can come down now, engineer,” said Kingsley quietly. He started to back away. “In fact, I suggest everyone move back.”

“A commendable suggestion,” Kitten added.

“Martinez,” the trader whispered. The room had grown suddenly silent. The engineer tore his eyes away from the relic.

“Go back through the main access and send all six guards in. Then contact stores and get Cady. Tell him I want a small cannon and crew down here. As of two minutes ago.”

“Yes sir.” Martinez departed on the run, glancing back often over his shoulder.

Oblivious to human concern, the front of the ancient relic continued to open.

No one breathed. The slowly opening panel was similarly noiseless. People avoided bumping into things.

The cover of the capsule, or whatever it was, finally stopped. It had swung out and back about 120 degrees, revealing a padded interior. A rainbow of wires, pads, and things with unknown and unimaginable functions enclosed and criss-crossed the inert body of the alien. When nothing else happened, a small cluster of engineers and technicians, men who had been halfway out the tunnel at the first movement, began to edge back for a closer look.

The first two guards arrived, panting heavily. They took one look at what was taking place and immediately ran around the perimeter to the right. That way they would have a clearer line of fire into the capsule.

First sight suggested a mating between a crab and a Kodiak bear. The being was clearly constructed along lines with power commensurate to size. The trunk was broad and deep. Lines of muscle showed clearly under the skin at the bare spots. Most of it was covered by a bristly silver-white fur centimeters in length, fading here and there to a light brown. Plastrons of some shell-like substance, mottled white, covered the chest area. The fur there was sparse and stunted around the edges.

Four thick, jointed legs, bare of fur and armored like a battleraft, trailed from the limp torso. A thick tentacle at each shoulder point divided almost immediately, splitting four-fifths of the way down into four smaller, finger-like branchings. There were sixteen manipulative members, then. The branching limbs descended to a point just above where the legs began.

There were four eyes, two on either side of the curved white beak. Two large ones close to the center, with a smaller to the far left and right. Furred lids shut tight over all four. The beak was closed, but four short, pointed canines projected outside the mouth, two up and two down. There was no external evidence of ears or nostrils.

Six guards now focused their weapons on the thing. Mal, Kitten, Philip, Kingsley, and a batch of fascinated technicians and engineers stared open-mouthed in its direction.

“Ugly thing, isn’t it?” said Porsupah into the silence. The engineers immediately started to buzz among themselves, a dozen conversations suddenly going at once.

“I’m not in love with its features either, Pors,” Kitten replied. “Anyone recognize the species?”

“I don’t want to interrupt any fascinating dialogue on alien cosmetology,” said Philip quietly, “but I believe I just saw an eyelid flicker. Yes, there it is again.”

Kitten backed away, moaning. “Oh god, I think I may suffer a lapse of training. I’m going to scream.”

She didn’t, although funny sounds came from her throat. One of the technicians wasn’t so bashful and did scream. Another fainted. All four eyes did open, slowly, all at once. The pupils, Mal noted as he took four large steps backwards, were slitted like a cat’s in the two big ones but were round in the small peripheral ones. He drew his own pistol. If the thing decided to charge he had more confidence in running than in the gun’s stopping power. The alien looked frighteningly efficient, was clearly carnivorous (that hooked beak, never mind the teeth) and powerful enough to shred armor-plate.

“Hey, I can’t scream. I’m too scared.”

“Scared, Lieutenant?” said Mal, immediately regretting the unkind dig.

“Fang you, ape. This isn’t in the manual.”

They all heard the voice at the same time.

It was similar to the voices one hears in dreams. Precise, sharp, but very far away.

“Do not be scared, female-image-of-small-furred-animal-with-long-claws. After such Time, it is sad to be awakened to thoughts dissonant and unfriendly.”

“Interesting,” she said, recovering rapidly. Whatever else could be said about the voice, it was completely devoid of any hint of malice. She was instantly, perhaps unreasonably, reassured. “Telepathy.”

“A serviceable label, given lack of proper referents,” the creature murmured. The eyes shifted slowly, slightly. “Also for want of a better term, you may address me as ‘Peot.’ I am quite immobile. I can, however, detect a number of your species pointing what I ascertain to be lethal devices in my direction. While I do not believe they could do me harm, I would prefer to avoid the possibility that one may stumble accidentally, thus forcing me to find out. I assure you I mean you no evil.”

One of the guards, an older man with some gray in his sideburns, turned his head to face Kingsley. His weapon did not move.

“Sir?”

Kingsley had not become wealthy by hesitating. “Take the rest of the boys and resume your normal stations. Stay there unless you’re sent for.”

“As you wish, sir. I protest, though.” He gestured to the other five and, without taking their weapons off the alien, they began to edge out of the chamber.

“Oh, and Haddad?”

“Sir?”

“Call Martinez at stores and tell him it seems we won’t be needing that cannon after all. Tell him just to get back here himself.”

“Aye, sir.”

The engineers had edged back and were slowly resuming their multiple conversations—quietly, this time.

“I’ve a million questions and no place marked ‘begin the game here,’ ” began Chatham, “so . . .”

“A moment,” said Peot solemnly. The eyes closed and the alien went incommunicado for several minutes while the humans shifted about restlessly. They reopened.

“There were a number of things I had to determine. It is difficult also for me to adjust to the span of time that has passed.”

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