Howling Stones (28 page)

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Authors: Alan Dean Foster

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“Are you so sure there would be consequences?” Pulickel watched the native unswervingly. Jorana looked up sharply but said nothing.

Fawn turned the conversation to more prosaic and less controversial matters, and soon had their host relaxed again. By the time the two humans were ready to leave, he was once more his usual composed, affable self.

They stood outside the entrance to the longhouse, squinting in the bright light of midday.

“We thank you for taking the time to answer our many questions.” Fawn underlined her words with the appropriate gestures. “You have been a great help to us and we appreciate it.”

Jorana’s fingers fluttered complaisantly. “The sharing of knowledge is never a burden, always a pleasure. You are welcome anytime.”

As they turned to depart, Pulickel switched to terranglo. “This isn’t enough. Somehow we have to obtain a stone for examination.”

Fawn’s gaze narrowed as she shouldered her pack. “Didn’t you learn your lesson last time? No stone master is going to willingly relinquish possession of his or her specimen, and because of your little escapade neither one of us is going to be allowed near one unsupervised. Forget it, Pu’il. We’re going to have to study them from a distance and do the best we can.”

He looked up at her as they made their way out of the village, heading for the trail that would take them over the barrier ridge and back to base. “You know that’s inadequate, Fawn.”

“Yeah, I know. But I’m damned if I can think of a way around it.” As they entered the jungle she turned her shirt evaporator up a notch. “Watch that cluster of vines. Shelath stingers sometimes nest in those.” At her urging, he gave the dense knot of yellow-brown foliage a wide berth. “I don’t think even the ever-courteous, ever-understanding Parramati will be as forgiving if we’re caught trying to steal stones a second time.”

“Not stealing,” he reminded her with that familiar fey smile. “Borrowing.”

“I wouldn’t count on that to save me again, either,” she warned him. “The Parramati have fought plenty of wars with their neighbors, some of them in recent times. They’re quite capable of violence.”

He stepped over a narrow gully. Small spotted creatures peeped querulously in the shallow water below. “I don’t see that we have any choice. The alternative is to call in a full-scale research team. If we can’t bring the necessary equipment to a stone, we have to bring a stone to the equipment.”

“I know, I know. Don’t you think I’d love to run Ululiapa’s earth stone through the station’s geoscope?” She jumped over a fallen log that he ducked beneath. “I don’t want a hundred specialists in here, crawling all over the archipelago.”

“We’ve already discussed what would happen to the stones in that case,” he reminded her. “The Parramati would take them to sea in their outriggers and dump them in the nearest oceanic trench. Our choices are limited.”

“What choices?” she muttered. “All we can do is wait for them to use some of the stones, try to wangle an invitation to the relevant ceremony, and make what recordings we can.”

“There has to be another way. Somehow we have to convince, bribe, or frighten a stone master into letting us borrow a stone. Surely there’s one who’s willing to bend kusum just a little. A young one, perhaps, not yet as steeped in tradition as senior big persons like Jorana and Ascela. What if we offered to let them participate in the process of analysis, brought them right into the station? That way their stone would never be out of their sight.”

Fawn looked doubtful. “Won’t work. Remember, stone utilization is a tandem process. No stone master does anything with a stone without consulting at least one colleague. Sure, we might tempt a young stone master. But they won’t do anything without first seeking advice from another.”

He pushed leaves aside. “How can you be so sure, if it’s never been tried?”

She looked back at him. “You never give up on a line of reasoning, do you? When you find one you like, you worry it like a dog. Not only do you still think you can borrow a stone, now you want to borrow a stone master, too.”

“I’m always glad when my aims are perceived so readily.” He grinned up at her.

“You know this trail as well as I do by now. How come you always let me lead?”

“Because you’re bigger, are more familiar with the potentially dangerous flora here than I am, and can push all the vegetation out of the way for me.”

“Ah.” She frowned uncertainly, then set the matter aside. He was being truthful, of course. She just wasn’t sure he was enumerating all the truths.

16

Essasu RRGVB looked around the meeting room. Piarai was present, along with the two ranking survivors of the ill-fated expedition to Torrelau. The memory of that failure still burned in his mind, as he knew it must in theirs.

Since returning, he’d immersed himself in everything the staff xenologists had been able to find about the sacred stones of the Parramati. Taken together, this constituted a singularly uninformative and inadequate body of work.

“You’ve all seen the latest report from our native contacts on Torrelau. What do you make of this talk of the male human using stones to take a journey to far-off places?”

The assembled underlings exchanged glances and gestures. It was Yaarinda who spoke. “We now know that certain so-called sacred stones, when manipulated by those Parramati trained in their use, can displace individuals in space. What the extent of this displacement may be we still do not know, but it is real.” Her hands gestured second-degree importance colored with danger. “Several of us saw this happen.”

Piarai continued. “It appears that at some unknown time in the past, historic Parramati acquired the use of advanced technology whose origins remain for us to discover. I admit that these stones do not look like much,
but in this instance it clearly is dangerous to confuse appearance with function. Through the use of these ‘stones,’ two companions were significantly displaced. If this new information is true, then it appears that the human was similarly transported but was able to return.”

“There is a greatness to be learned here,” Essasu proclaimed. “We must find the truth of it. All our other work now becomes secondary. Energies must be redirected.” He turned his gaze on each of them in turn. “Our first priority must be to acquire as many of these stones as possible for detailed study.”

“According to our information from Torrelau, there are dangers involved in such acquisition.” Requesting permission with a gesture, Vuikak settled into a resting lounge.

Essasu glanced at him. “According to the same information, only if certain stones are allowed to come in contact with one another. Apparently the human was careless. We are not careless. We will not repeat his mistake.”

“The natives who have charge of the stones, these so-called stone masters, will not surrender their possessions freely,” Piarai pointed out.

Essasu executed a curt gesture of indifference. “Then we will shoot a few. That should persuade the others. If we keep our distance from the stones that cause spatial displacement, they cannot harm us.”

“What kind of stones do you wish us to obtain first?” Yaarinda leaned back in her lounge, her long tail tracing abstract patterns on the sand-carpeted floor.

“Anything that hints of real power. After these transportation stones, weather stones would be an excellent next choice. Now that we are aware of the stones’ true nature, I would be interested to discover if there is any connection between the native weather stones and these fascinating and damnable mastorms.”

Piarai blinked both eyelids. “You think the aboriginals may use the stones to control the weather?”

Essasu showed many teeth. “If certain stones can displace individuals in space, it is not so great a reach to imagine that others may displace clouds and rain. After what we witnessed on Torrelau, I believe nothing can be ruled out.”

Yaarinda looked thoughtful. “I wonder where the human was displaced to. The report does not specify. It says only that he was unconscious when he was found.”

“Even if it was from one side of a room to another, that is enough,” Essasu observed impatiently. “It is the fact of the displacement that is important. The technology to accomplish such a feat has been a dream of imperial scientists since the dawn of modern physics.”

Piarai rose. “With your consent then, Commander, I will organize a group to obtain several stones. With the natives’ consent if possible, by other means if they prove recalcitrant. How many do you wish us to acquire?”

“As many as possible, obviously. Half a dozen would make a nice beginning. We don’t wish to leave the Mallatyahans stone-poor. Employ everyone who can be spared. This supersedes all other research, and a show of strength may make it easier to deal peacefully with the locals.”

“We could request reinforcements from Chraara,” Vuikak suggested.

“No. The humanx monitor all comings and goings from headquarters, just as we record their activities around Ophhlia. We do not want to give the impression that any unusual or extraordinary activity is taking place here. We will do this as quietly and quickly as possible.”

Yaarinda contemplated the ceiling. “Perhaps the natives can be persuaded to cooperate and the need to employ less flexible means of persuasion will be obviated.”

“It is to be hoped.” Essasu added a gesture indicative of third-degree amusement. “We have one advantage already. We have not tried to ‘borrow’ any of the sacred stones, so the Mallatyahans do not regard us as potential thieves. For this moral preeminence, however temporary, we have the male human to thank.”

“Assuming we are successful in obtaining several of the stones,” Vuikak commented, “what do we do when the Mallatyahans come seeking their return?”

Essasu displayed indifference. “They cannot penetrate compound security. We will tell them that the stones are not being harmed and will be returned to them when we have concluded our tests. If they are unhappy with those conditions, that is unfortunate. What can they do? If they come bearing the stones that cause displacement, we will keep them at a distance with weapons. If they send bad weather against us, assuming they are capable of such a feat, this installation has survived the worst of many mastorms. Along with imperial power, we will teach them that futility leads to patience.

“When we have finished with the stones, they will be returned undamaged.”

“Can we guarantee that?” Yaarinda wanted to know.

The station commander eyed her evenly. “I am Essasu RRGVB. I do not give guarantees to aboriginals.” His attention returned to his second-in-command.

“Now then. What do we know of stone types, of their locations, and of the potential malleability of their masters?”

Piarai looked to Yaarinda, who responded. “We have some information, though evidently not as much as the humans. This can be increased.”

“We do not need to know the location of every sacred stone on Mallatyah,” Essasu declared. “Only sufficient for our purposes.”

“We could make a few stone masters our ‘guests,’ ” Vuikak suggested, “until they have told us all that they know about the workings of their stones.”

“Only if necessary. I have more confidence in our own specialists.” Essasu turned to gaze out a narrow ground-level window. “Besides, I grow tired of sly natives and their devious mannerisms. They delight in utilizing their kusum for obfuscation. I prefer the language and response of advanced instrumentation.” He turned back to his subordinates.

“We will proceed with or without their cooperation, and expend no special efforts to secure the latter. I will brook no delay in revelation.” His eyes flashed. “My fellow nye, I feel that we are on the brink of discoveries that could alter the balance of power between the Empire and the Commonwealth.” Seeing the looks in their eyes, he realized that his explication was teetering on the grandiose, and moderated his ensuing rhetoric accordingly.

“Stones first, then speculation.”

“Yes,” Yaarinda agreed. “Let us embark with modest expectations.”

The AAnn force was prepared to kill to acquire the requisite stones, but this proved unnecessary. Advanced search-and-detection technology allowed them to bypass occupied buildings and concentrate on those whose inhabitants were elsewhere.

From a nondescript house in a temporarily deserted village situated high up on the north flank of Mallatyah’s tallest peak, they plucked a fine big weather stone. No one leaped out of the forest to challenge the camouflaged tech-soldiers. A storage hut on the edge of terraced fields lying fallow yielded a nice growing stone. Again they were not confronted.

By the time Essasu was satisfied, the sun had long
since set. In addition to the weather and growing stone, they had accumulated a pair of healing stones, a fishing stone, and three transportation or traveling stones. Or so their information insisted. All were carefully packed in thickly padded individual containers and distributed among the members of the group. Essasu was taking no chances on having two stones come together accidentally.

“It was almost too easy.” Vuikak shouldered his own pack effortlessly. “I think we could have seized half the stones on the island.”

Essasu’s mood was decidedly upbeat, all the more so because everything had gone so well compared to the earlier disaster at Torrelau. “Yes. I suspect that word of the human male’s transgression has yet to reach here. Consequently, the locals cannot conceive of someone ignorant of the relevant roads helping themselves to a sacred stone. So they remain unguarded.”

Yaarinda had three stones in her pack, a carefully chosen mix. In a further effort to avoid incidents of the kind that supposedly had befallen the human, no member of the group carried two stones of any one type. Her camouflage suit kept the pack from chafing against her scales. The stones were sizable and heavy, but she strode along uncomplainingly under the burden. Working in the field, she and her colleagues frequently returned to the station carrying prodigious loads of specimens.

“We must take care not to repeat the human’s mistake,” Piarai was reminding everyone for the tenth time.

“If what was told to us is true, he was clumsy—as is the nature of humans.” Essasu was unconcerned. “Proper care will be used. If these primitives can make them work, surely their operation cannot be so difficult to divine.”

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