little sly grin, "so it doesn't matter that we have landed and changed

the ID.

 

Who will know?"

 

"How fast does your paint dry?" asked Ninety facetiously.

 

They still had the uniforms that had been tailored to fit the first

Barevi raid but Sandy Areson had some new artifices to contribute.

First, she'd an awful-smelling mixture that bleached their hair a dingy

gray.  One of the recovering Victims was a skilled optician (though he

never did explain what he had done on Earth that would have caused him

to be victimized by the Eosi).  When he realized that gray hair and skin

would not entirely present the team as Catteni, he finally managed to

produce yellow contact lenses, cursing the need to improvise, since he

had not considered his first attempt to be successful.  But he managed.

 

"You'll have to take them out and wash them every day," Riz Kamei said,

unhappy with that necessity.  "No plastics here at all."

 

"Yet..  :' one of his helpers said with a grin.

 

"Whatever," and Riz flicked his long fingers irritably, "but the lenses

will do what's necessary." Then he shook his head as if he found even

the requirement of yellow as an eye color an offense.

 

He showed them all how to put them in, how to clean them in a solution

he provided, again muttering about insufficient supplies until everyone

really did wonder what his Earth side job had been.  He did however

allow himself a slight smile of approval when the contacts were in

place.

 

Kris had never considered herself especially vain, but she had had a

brief flush of dismay when her hair had not only been clipped very short

on her head but bleached such a hideous gray.  Now, with the yellow eye

lenses, she looked so much like a Catteni, she was almost nauseated.

 

"You're still much too pretty to be a typical Catten broad," Ninety

Doyle remarked.  He added a smile that, with his yellowed teeth and dyed

skin, made him look all too much like other Drassi they'd seen in the

Barevi markets.

 

She gave a shudder of repulsion.  "You look awful, Ninety.  Lenny would

disown you;'

 

"Lenny's mad enough he couldn't come along," Ninety said, closely

examining his gray complected face.  Their Botany suntans also helped

approximate a Catteni grey skin.  Sandy had said both body paint and

hair dye would last about two or three weeks, depending on how often

they bathed.

 

"Yeah, but Lenny's closer to a Guinness than I am," Ninety said

gloomily.

 

Looking around, Kris remembered that the Catteni who had crewed Baby

hadn't washed at all, remembering the stench in their quarters.

 

"If there is any Guinness left, Ricky Farmer wasn't so sure about that.

 

But I'm sure he'll bring you back a bottle;' Kris said, meaning to

console.

 

"Bottle?" Ninety roared in dismay, as if she had uttered an unforgivable

blasphemy.

 

"Can?"

 

"What'd you bet he frees the last vat in Dublin?" Mack Dargle said.

 

"I never bet on sure things;' Kris said, grinning.

 

"They gotta get your teeth yellower, Kris.  That smile's a giveaway."

 

"And not a tube of Colgate to whiten my teeth anywhere on this planet,"

she said in wistful retort.

 

"They may bring some back, you know," Mack Dargle said, taking the

mirror from Doyle so he could inspect himself and did a good comic

double take.  "My own mother wouldn't recognize me;'

 

"Just so long as a Catten wife doesn't," Ninety said.

 

Mack shuddered.  "I saw some of those crew-women.  No thank you.

 

I'd sooner wrestle with a crocodile:'

 

THE PREPARATIONS FOR THIS FORAY into enemy territory were finally

complete.  The window was a nighttime polar one so Kris hurried into the

day care where Zane was sleeping, for one last look.

 

Zainal came to join her, resting his big hands sympathetically on her

arms.

 

"He's a fine strong lad.  He'll do well here," he said into her ear and

pressed his face against her cheek in his special display of affection.

 

A noise made them both turn to the doorway and there was Pete Easley, a

slightly droll smile on his face.

 

"I drew night duty;' he said, though all three knew he had probably done

so on purpose.  "He'll be fine.  Don't worry about him."

 

"We won't;' Zainal said with a nod of his head and with one arm still on

Kris', led her out of the room.  Both stopped at the threshold for one

more look at the sleeping child.

 

Kris tried not to, but she sniffed all the way to the hangar and had to

blot her eyes twice.  She hadn't thought--in all the fuss and furor of

these preparations--that she would experience the same anguish at

leaving him as she had on their first expedition to Barevi.

 

"Zane will be all right with Easley;' Zainal murmured as he lifted her

down from the flatbed that had brought them to the now-battered and

space-worn KDL awaiting them outside the hangar.

 

The Judge, Ray Scott, Worry, Pete Snyder, Jay and Patti Sue Greene, and

even Aarens were there to wish them a safe journey.  Worry was even bold

enough to clasp Kris in a bear hug.  The judge kissed her hand and then

both cheeks.  If Ray Scott only shook her hand hard and warmly, Patti

Sue was openly weeping as she hugged Kris tightly, murmuring over and

over, 'I'll never forget you, buddy, I'll never forget you."

 

'I'll hold you to that;' Kris said, feeling as she might weep like Patti

and, ignoring whatever protocol to board there might have been, she

scrambled up the steps into the KDL.  Everyone else followed, with Chuck

Micford growling how he hated farewells.

 

ZAINAL INDICATED that Gino should do the honors on the takeoff, while he

punched the final bits and pieces of their "delayed return story" into

the ship's log.  He grinned with unusual good humor when the log

acknowledged the entries.  There were enough computer hackers to have

made it a proper job "as long;' they teased Zainal, "as his Catteni was

okay:'They had even coded into the log appropriate star chart

coordinates.  If, that is, any one would dare question the report of

Emassi Venlik, Zainal's new alias.

 

"He lived once.  Died badly, and only I know where" was all Zainal would

say of the man whose identity he was assuming.

 

"Was he a chosen?" Chuck asked.

 

Zainal gave a quick shake of his head.  His next word startled everyone.

 

"Schkelk!"

 

Chuck was the first one to fall into the stance of an alert Drassi, Wih

Kris a second later before Mack and Ninety suddenly realized what had

been said: "Listen." Even Coo and Pess straightened from their usual

languid positions.

 

Distinctly and slowly enough for them to understand, he gave orders for

the ship to take off and the course it was to assume as soon as it had

lifted from the ground.

 

"Emassi!" was the appropriate reply said in crisp unison and then each

went to the duty station they had been assigned.

 

Coo and Pess buckled into the two drops seats that had been placed on

the bridge for their use in takeoff and landing.

 

Zainal never spoke another word of English during the entire eight-day

voyage.  Neither did they after one of Zainal's thumps, and Kris was no

exception though she didn't think he whacked her as hard as he did Gino,

Chuck, Mack, or Ninety.  But it sure reminded her to keep in her part.

 

The yellow lenses irritated Mack's eyes.  Riz had mentioned that someone

might have trouble and sent along eyewash, with the recommendation to

keep the contacts in for short periods, lengthening the time each day to

allow the eyeball to adjust.  By the time they were orbiting Catten, he

could keep them in most of the day.

 

Seen from outer space, Catten was a lovely planet!  Almost as beautiful

as the pictures of Earth sent back from space by Russian and American

astronauts.

 

There were larger landmasses but inland lakes the size of seas and

several enormous rivers to judge by the width of them.  It was also

remarkably green, which caused a good deal of surprise.

 

Zainal grinned.  And said in Catten: "They have destroyed enough planets

so that they are careful about this one.  All manufacturing work is done

on other worlds."

 

"You should see Earth," Ninety said proudly.

 

"Not all of it is as pleasant as..." Mark paused because there was no

Catteni word for Ireland, "where you live."

 

"More unpleasant since Catteni come," added Gino grimly with an

apologetic glance at Zainal who merely nodded.  "KDM and...  yaya..."

 

which was all Gino could think of as a Catteni description of "Baby,"

"will not like what is there now."

 

Everyone paused in reflection on that unhappy observation.  Then Gino

pointed to a good-sized satellite.  "How many moons?"

 

"Four," Zainal replied, then added as an immense space station spun

leisurely into view in its geo-synchronous orbit above Catten, "we do

not want to dock there."

 

Everyone gawked at the sight of the monstrous edifice, with gantries and

netted supplies far larger than the KDL floating on tethers about it.

 

Ships of all sizes made their way in and out of docking slips.  One

entire quadrant seemed to be a shipyard, taking advantage of the lack of

gravity to push large structural members into position for assembly.

 

Suddenly the com unit blurted out a harsh barking which was either

muffled or distorted so much that only Zainal understood; the others

caught maybe one word clearly.

 

"...  chouma."

 

Zainal rattled off his assumed name, the fact that his ship was damaged

and requested landing at an isolated emergency site on planet.

 

By listening with intense concentration to the Catteni language, the

crew got most of the next exchange, demanding details of the damage.

 

Zainal responded that he could not maneuver into the moon base with

currently faulty equipment.  Immediately he was bluntly told to sheer

off his present course while a landing site could be warned of his

imminent arrival.

 

' Zainal twitched fingers behind his back to indicate to the others how

well their scheme was going.  Considering the size and complexity of the

space station, the Terrans could well appreciate the need for caution,

and why ships had to be in maneuverable condition.  They were probably

as fastidious about unstable cargoes.

 

The interrogation went on.  What was the trouble?  Where had the KCX

been?  Was it contaminated?  What cargo did it have on board?

 

Zainal signaled to Gino to go into his well-rehearsed reply, the pilot

scrambling to get his notes out of his pocket in case he needed to refer

to them.

 

"Engineer Tobako speaking;' he said.  He'd had fun choosing an alias.

 

"Gyro unit, two-three-eight..  :' and he spoke the Catten letters

appended to the part, "realfunctioned in meteor swarm, flash-back

damaging many boards in control panel and causing helm problems.

Maneuvering affected.

 

Suffered hull and interior damages.  Landed on largest meteor to repair

damage.  Gyro part badly made," and Gino infused a lot of contempt in

his voice for that failing.  "Imperfect metal.  Had to reduce cargo to

lift from meteor.  Only one cargo deck remains.  Three crew died."

 

"Only one part cargo?" The contempt and dismay was clearly audible and

nothing at all was said about the loss of lives.  "Go to field at..  :'

and the Catten rattled off the coordinates so quickly that, while Gino

managed to jot down the English equivalents of the first four numbers,

that was as far as he had got by the end of the message.  He gave Zainal

a startled and anxious look.  Zainal nodded to assure those on the

bridge that he had heard all he needed to obey.

 

"What is the cargo?"

 

"Platinum, gold, rhenium, some germanium." Zainal took up the report

now.

 

"Ah..  :' and that drawled exclamation was close to approval.  "Is there

more where that was found?"

 

"Yes.  All can be collected again.  I will return to the meteor with a

repaired ship, and braver crewmen than the Drassi who died.  These were

only a step above Rassi..." Zainal paused to be sure that his complaint

was understood.  "It is a cargo I do not wish others to get."

 

"Ah..." and there was more warmth and approval.  "A vehicle and

mechanical support will meet you on the surface.  Klotnik."

 

"Klotnik," Zainal responded.  "Out:'

 

When the com line had been cut, every one reacted, sighing, or whistling

or mimicking the wipe of a sweaty brow.  In fact, Ninety took out a

square of doth and was about to mop his face when Zainal thumped him.

 

Immediately Ninety used his finger to scrape off the sweat, as a real

Drassi would do.

 

"There is really not that much of a cargo," Kris said dubiously.  Would

they get in trouble with what they had?  It was all that Walter Duxie,

the head miner, could find that might be considered valuable by the

Catteni in the short time he had to do any prospecting.  The germanium

had been pure luck.  And what little of the platinum groups they had so

far discovered.

 

While the gold had seemed a real sacrifice to some people, the metal had

little intrinsic value on Botany.  The two professional and many amateur

jewelers used it as settings for some of the rather magnificent

gemstones which had turned up on the planet during the general

assessment of mineral and metal deposits.

 

"It is enough, since they think we go back for what was left," Zainal

said and grinned, looking more like the man she knew so well than the

very Cat-teni Emassi who had barked answers over the com.  "It has gone

well.  Now proceed slowly until we are in atmosphere and remember to

vent smoke often."

 

That was an effect that Peter Snyder had been particularly pleased to

install.  It would dissipate fast enough in space but would certainly be

visible from the space station, to enhance the story of a "damaged"

ship.

 

"Much traffic," Gino said, glad enough to be steering away from the

space station with so many other vehicles zipping here and there or

ponderously moving out.

 

"There are two dreadnoughts in dock, nine large surface landers," Zainal

said, pointing to the stern ends.

 

They were visible once you knew what to look for, Kris realized.  They

looked bigger to her than the Empire ship from Star Wars.

 

"I count eighteen H-type ships;' and again Zainal indicated where to

look.  What initially looked just like protrusions of the spaceship

were, in fact, spaceships in dock.  The H-types were similar to the one

Kris remembered landing at Denver.  She shuddered.  Zainal went on.

"Look beyond the station to your right, past the freighters and drones."

His big finger now indicated a three o'clock position.  "There's a full

flotilla there."

 

"I can spot another one on the screen, farther out," and Gino tapped the

screen with the proximity display.

 

"Wow!" Mack swallowed as he saw the incredible number of ships' ..

 

being handled by the station.  He stared at the display as they moved

slowly away from a direct view of the massive unit.

 

"How big a navy did you say the Catteni have?" Ninety asked, looking

quite anxious.

 

"More than you see here," Zainal said.

 

"Lots of traffic, too," Chuck said.

 

"That is good.  For us." And Zainal smiled.

 

When they were far enough from the space station for Kris to feel as if

there were no eyes on them, she and the others began to relax.  Now they

could spend the descent watching, as more details of the planet were

visible.

 

"I know the field we've been assigned," Zainal said as their ship slowed

for landing.  "It has some facilities.  Always be Catten there.  I pilot

now."

 

"SMALL?" Kris murmured, remembering to speak Catten as she took in the

landing site.  Nine football fields wide at the very least, and long as

a Denver jet runway: almost larger than the landing field at the

Farmers' hangar on Botany.  Low, large buildings framed one side, and

beyond them, across an access road, were separate structures, small

enough to be dwellings though they reminded her more of the hovels in a

Brazilian barrio.

 

They came down, venting more of Pete's smoke for effect.  Zainal's hah

dling of the ship made them all glad they were well strapped in but the

motions certainly imitated a ship that was barely controllable.  He also

halted at a distance from what looked to be hangar or servicing

facilities.

 

Immediately he and Gino, who seemed to be moving slowly for such a

generally deft man, removed the panels of the control positions and

substituted the scorched boards, handing the good ones carefully to

Ninety and Chuck to wrap and store in a prepared hiding place.  Ninety

and Chuck grunted and seemed to get out of their seats like old men.

Zainal replaced the damaged panels, as Gino couldn't seem to get his

hands to work properly.

 

"What's the matter with me?" Gino demanded, in English, looking at his

hands.

 

Ninety and Chuck were taking forever to walk down the short passage and

Kris then realized that she felt awfully heavy.  It took a real effort

to bring one hand over to release the safety belt.

 

"Me, too," she said, struggling to stand.

 

"Hmmm," was Zainal's anxious response.  "Cattens gravity is heavier than

Earth's.  You will adjust but slowly.  Just move slowly and pretend that

is how you move."

 

"Wow!" exclaimed Gino when, with considerable effort, he pushed himself

to his feet.  "My knees are not going to like this."

 

"Hurry with the hiding," Zainal called out down the passageway to Ninety

and Chuck.

 

"We try, Emassi.  We do," but even Chuck Mitford's heavy baritone voice

sounded strained by the heavier gravity.

 

"They will think me a great pilot," Zainal said, with a toothy Catteni

smile, "to bring down a ship in this condition:'

 

"Will they believe that we're Catteni?" Gino muttered.

 

Zainal gave one of his inimitable shrugs and grinned.  "Who else but a

Catteni would come here?"

 

"I can sure believe that;' Gino said in English.  Zainal thumped him and

cocked a warning eyebrow at him.  "Kotik," he answered, chagrined at his

lapse.

 

Zainal gave him a gentler pat for the proper response.

 

A pounding on the door and Zainal leaned forward to flick the release

switch on the hatch.

 

There were Catteni growls of "get out of the way" and the thud of nailed

boots on the deck as three men, none of them small, stalked into the

cramped bridge compartment.  Remembering all the drills, Kris somehow

managed to get to her feet and assume the proper attention stance.  She

thought her arms would lengthen from the weight on her shoulders and it

was hard to keep her chin up.  Fortunately, she didn't have to say or do

anything.

 

"Kivel," said the lead man who acted as Emassi as Zainal did.  Since hi

 

neither stated that he was Emassi or saluted, Kris knew he had to be the

same rank.  His brutish features and small bright yellow eyes were also

more typical of the species than Zainal's.

 

"Venlik," replied Zainal and waved to the scorched, warped panels while

Gino, who was supposed to be another Emassi, displayed the carefully

manufactured defective gyro part.

 

"Hmph." Kivel took and examined the gyro and handed it back to the

Drassi behind him.

 

Kris decided she was getting good at differentiating the ranks.

 

Kivel now gestured for the damaged panel to be opened, and turned

slightly so that Kris, being a lowly Drassi, could do it.

 

"Too many in here;' Zainal said irritably, and with an imperious wave at

Kris, "open cargo, bay three.  You hear me?"

 

Kris nodded which was a lot harder to do in the heavier gravity than she

would have believed.  And, by sheer effort of will, passed the other two

big Drassi and, when she was out of sight, put both hands on the sides

of the companionway to give herself some support.  She made it to the

cargo deck and was grateful that she knew how to operate it.  As soon as

the cargo hatch swung open, she saw the vehicle, load bed against the

side of the ship, and stepped aside as seven men swarmed aboard.  One

was Drassi and the other poor wretches were obviously the Rassi, the

primitives from which the Eosi had made the two more intelligent groups.

 

The Drassi shouted his commands, obviously delighting in his ascen-dance

over these dumb creatures.  For that was what they were.  He had to show

them where to place their hands on the crates, shoved them toward the

open hatch, and even walked them onto the vehicle and pointed to where

the crates must be stacked.  He sent them back for another load but

paused long enough to pick up one of the gold lumps, scratch the soft

surface as if to reassure himself it was gold, before he dropped it with

a dull thud back into the crate.  Then he walked back and forth, the

gravity not affecting him one iota, Kris noticed enviously, as he

supervised the unloading.

 

"Is that all?" he asked, glowering at Kris.

 

"All on board"' Kris replied negligently.

 

"Humph," was his unimpressed response.  She then handed him the receipt

that Zainal had prepared.

 

"Everything must be signed and acknowledged," Zainal had told her, in a

discussion of the unloading procedure.  "He has to take it up front for

my signing and whoever is his leader."

 

"Sign," she said firmly and held out the Catteni issue clipboard that

had been in the KDL's supplies.

 

"Humph." He scrawled some runes.

 

She pointed to the companionway for him to take the board to his

commander and with another "humph" he stomped off.  She hung on to the

control panel until she heard him returning before she straightened up

against the awful weight.  He jabbed the clipboard into her midriff.

Fortunately she was leaning against the bulkhead so he didn't quite

knock her down.  She did remember to check that there were two new rune

lines before she nodded and gave him the wave to leave.  She was

appalled to see him jump off the cargo deck to the ground--but then he

was Catteni and had on heavy boots--her ankles ached from even watching

him.  He strode to the front of the vehicle and she was able to close

the hatch and just slide down the bulkhead to sprawl on the deck,

exhausted by this battle with Cat-teni gravity.

 

She was actually close to tears, thinking that she would be no good to

Zainal at all on this mission when she couldn't even stand up for more

than a few minutes without collapsing.

 

When she heard voices and booted steps in the companionway, she started

to struggle to her feet but the noises stopped; she heard Zainal request

transport for him and his crew for shore leave.

 

"Not much here;' Kivel said.  "Try Blizte.  Small but adequate."

 

"I know the place;' was Zainal's reply.

 

"Transport will be dispatched on our return."

 

"Good."

 

She didn't hear the hatch close and wondered what she should do now.

 

Get to her feet or collapse again.  She knew which she preferred but

dic]o want not to disappoint Zainal.

 

Suddenly he was there, hands under her armpits, lifting her, almost

effortlessly, from the deck.  He managed a quick press of his face

against her cheek.

 

"You and Chuck must stay on boaM as guards"' he said swiftly in English.

 

"When the repair men arrive, you are off watch and asleep.  Chuck only

has to stand around and look suspicious:'

 

"He does that well," she murmured back.

 

"You did very well, Kris," Zainal said again, his tone warm and loving.

 

She leaned into him for strength until they heard steps approaching and

separated from their close embrace.  But Zainal kept one hand under her

arm to support her.

 

"They're gone, and a smaller vehicle is on its way here;' Chuck said and

moved forward to take Kris' other arm.

 

If she hadn't needed their support, she would have pushed both away from

her to walk on her own two feet, but she didn't have the strength and

was far too grateful for their assistance.

 

They eased her back into the bridge compartment and into the com seat.

 

"Your Catteni is enough for any messages;' Zainal said, keeping one hand

on her shoulder.  "Anything you don't understand, make them repeat.

 

Tell them com unit is also faulty.  Then act stupid Drassi and you will

tell the Emassi when he comes back.  You don't know where he has gone...

but then they wouldn't ask you since you wouldn't know:'

 

Kris was glad that gravity was not affecting her ears because she

understood every Catteni word Zainal spoke.

 

"Chuck, you will admit only the service men who will have a proper

clipboard you will have to sign as they enter, put in the time I showed

you how--when they leave.  Whenever they come, Kris is to be off guard

and asleep."

 

An obnoxious klaxon announced that the transport was awaiting its

passengers.

 

"I gotcha," Chuck murmured in English.

 

Zainal bent to Kris' ear.  "The first few days are the hardest.  Move as

much as you are able and use hot showers," he said in English.  "Walk

around the ship if you can.  We will not be here long.  If I can help

it."

 

Then, with a final squeeze of her shoulder, he nodded for Gino, Ninety,

Mack, and the two Rugarians to follow him.

 

Kris saw the ground transport as it sped diagonally off the field,

toward the road, away from the command post and the hovels.  It was all

too quickly lost as the road took it into the thick forest of tossing

greenery.  She didn't even have the energy to compare Catteni botany

with Botany's vegetation.

 

While she was sunk in the seat, she heard Chuck moving around.

 

When he reentered the bridge compartment, he carried cups and gave her

one.  Rather, he put it in her right hand where it lay, almost useless

with the gravity, on the armrest.

 

"Try it, gal, you need the energy.  Some of Mayock's special."

 

"Oh, Gawd;' she said.  It took two hands to get the cup to her mouth but

liquid didn't seem to object, and she was able to get a good swig down

her throat.  Did the heavier gravity make it go down faster?  She took

another sip and it did seem to drop into her stomach really fast.

 

"Any better?" Chuck asked in a conciliatory tone.

 

"I don't know.  It all seems like so much work:'

 

"It's never too much work to drink; Kris;' he said and took the other

looking out at the scenery.  "They don't seem to do much in the way of

forestry."

 

"I saw the Rassi," and despite the gravity she managed a little shudder.

 

"You wouldn't want them as work gangs.  They barely managed to carry the

crates into the waiting truck.  I begin to understand why Drassi have

such short tempers...  if they have to work with that level of

unintelligence.  Not even room temperature.  More like just above

freezing;'

 

Even talking was hard because it meant she had to move her jaw.

 

"Just sit, honey;' Chuck said, lightly touching her arm in compassion.

 

"We'll get used to it?" she asked.

 

"If Zainal says we will, we will.  Look, Kris, finish the drink and then

get some sleep.  That'll help.  We've already had a busy day."

 

"Would I feel too heavy to sleep?"

 

"Finish that drink and believe you me, you'll sleep, honey."

 

She did just that, taking the second half of the drink in one gulp and

letting Chuck help her back to the crew quarters.  Even the bed, which

had never been all that soft, felt harder to her.  The blanket hadn't

gained any weight but it felt rough, even through her uniform.  The

pillow was a rock but that didn't prevent her from falling deeply

asleep.

 

ZAINAL COMMUNICATED WITH THEM once the next morning; his blunt phrases

indicated all was well.  To expect repair crews the next day.  He gave a

com contact number.  Drassi Chuck would give their Drassi leader the

prepared list of resupply items.  Zainal was getting the rest.

 

Kris felt somewhat better by midday, with frequent sips of Mayock's

Superior Hooch.  In fact, it did make her feel lighter.  Not

light-headed for her head still felt thick.  She insisted on standing a

watch while Chuck slept.

 

She answered several com unit calls quite adequately.  Four were

obviously a check to see if the ship's guard was actually on duty.

Another, from a very pompous Emassi, inquired if the ship was still in a

dangerous condition.

 

She replied firmly that it was not.  When the Emassi wanted to speak to

Zainal, she gave him the contact number Zainal had left, grateful that

he had since she had absolutely no idea where he was.  There had been a

lot of noise in the background during Zainal's call, which led her to

believe he was in a much larger place than the Blizte place which Kivel

had mentioned.

 

She did make herself leave the ship and managed, with very slow steps,

to do a full circuit.  She sat on the hatch steps and made herself do a

second circuit the other way round.  When she reentered the ship, she

felt as if she had done a marathon at top speed.  More of the Mayock

Superior with very little water in it helped relieve the exhaustion.  In

fact, it helped enough so that she did another walk two hours or so

later, bored with doing nothing.

 

This excursion didn't leave her feeling as wrecked afterward.

 

She managed to make some food for Chuck and herself.  By then Chuck had

slept a good deal longer than his legendary six hours, but he had needed

it.  She woke him and they ate together, with more of Mayock's

supportive aid.

 

They decided they had both better be on duty when the repair crews

arrived, to give a show of exemplary attention to duty.  Chuck made her

sleep until just before dawn.

 

"You've got to see dawn here, Kris.  Never seen anything like it in my

life;' he told her.  "Then I'll kip out until you see the service crew

arriving."

 

That sounded fine to her: Food helped nearly as much as Mayock's brew,

and she slept again until Chuck woke her and, with a friendly hand

supporting her, led her into the bridge compartment so they could watch

the dawn together.

 

There weren't many clouds in a Catteni sky--too heavy an atmosphere,

Kris decided, or they'd just drop down.  But the sky coloration went

from the most delicate aqua into fantastic almost

lightning-like--displays of yellow to orange to red and then back to

orange and fading into yellow that turned greenish before the blue-green

of a normal Catteni sky settled, and the very bright white sun came up.

Instantly the bridge screen darkened.

 

"Too bright for Emassi and Drassi?" she asked facetiously.

 

Chuck yawned widely and stood up.  At least he seemed to be adapting to

the heavier gravity.  Maybe she would...  probably just about the time

they could leave.

 

Chuck went off to sleep, and she fixed herself some breakfast.  Her

stomach must be adjusting because it felt empty, not merely heavy and

unready for any new burdens.

 

She took just a slight dose of Mayock.  She didn't want the repair crew

folk to smell any liquor on her breath because it would be very

difficult to explain where she'd gotten it.  Besides, they'd only

brought enough for their personal needs.  Even if her personal need for

continued potions seemed excessive, considering her generally abstemious

habits.

 

Remembering the state of Baby and the KDL when they had captured them,

she did wonder if perhaps this ship was a little too neat and orderly to

be a proper Catteni used vessel.  She'd ask Chuck if they shouldn't

throw a few things about.  She did leave dishes on the table and the

cooking pan on the heat pad.

 

She never had a chance to discuss this detail with Mitford because she

saw the repair crew vehicles, massive affairs, Catteni-style eighteen

wheelers, come careening across the field.  She had only enough time to

shake him awake before the trucks screeched to a halt by the cargo

hatch.  Someone 'banged on it.  Chuck gave her a shove forward to the

bridge compartment.

 

"You're on com watch," he muttered and then in fine, annoyed Catteni,

yelled that he was coming, he was coming.

 

He undogged the hatch and was almost mowed down by the Emassi who

charged in, scowling and punching Chuck out of his way.  But years of

army discipline intervened, and Chuck assumed a properly military

stance, far more humble than any American soldier would present even if

a four star general or the president of the United States confronted

him.  Kris' com unit blurped for her response.

 

"Crew are there?" was the inimical query.

 

"Yes, Emassi;' she replied meekly.

 

"Get Emassi Yoltin to speak;'

 

"Yes, Emassi." And Kris actually managed to increase her stride to

something approximating "hurry" to the hatch and, with a proper salute,

begged Emassi Yoltin to speak to Emassi on com.

 

Meanwhile, the repair crew, burdened with heavy kits and a variety of

portable affairs that resembled the weaponry of a bad science fiction

movie, went astern to the gyro unit.  Another group waited outside the

hatch, carrying more carefully some packaged units that looked like

control board replacements.

 

Managing to glance outside, she saw others, led by a second Emassi,

examining the "meteor" damage, Pete Snyder's magnificent efforts.

 

Several of the outboard sensors on the port side had also been broken

off to add verisimilitude to the supposed crash.  Suitable gashes had

taken a lot of time to make but the Emassi was nodding, touching the

marks and then rattling off orders to his crew.  A third group were

setting up what looked amazingly like a field kitchen.  Kris breathed a

little sigh of relief that she wouldn't be expected to feed this lot.

 

Considering what she saw being prepared and smelled cooking, she hoped

that she and Chuck wouldn't have to eat any of it.

 

"You/' Emassi Yoltin said, returning from the bridge, but he pointed to

the group waiting outside, "repair controls." He passed by her as if she

didn't exist but Chuck now followed Yoltin astern.

 

"Emassi Venlik orders me to check replacement unit," he said.

 

Emassi Yoltin gave Chuck such a look that a snake would have died of the

venom in it but Chuck held his ground until Yoltin gave an abrupt nod of

his head and allowed Chuck to follow him.

 

Totally superfluous, Kris decided she needed more Mayock to get through

this experience.

 

When the control panel repairs were finished, she did resume her station

at the com unit.  And saw the arrival of another vehicle.  This time she

remembered how to initiate communications with an on-surface vehicle and

made contact.

 

"Cargo, supplies.  Open hatch/' she was told and dutifully followed such

orders, wondering what Zainal had acquired.

 

It was considerable.  Foods, crates with runes she couldn't quite

understand, but thought they were spare parts.  Certainly a good deal of

fuel canisters was onloaded, taking up a full cargo deck and then half

of another.

 

Some open slatted crates proved to be fresh foods.

 

"Good," she said, when the Drassi supervising the loading looked at her

for some reaction.  She smacked her lips.  "Not much fresh to eat for a

long time," she added.  She recognized some of the fruits she had seen,

and bought, in the Barevi markets.  She'd thought they were indigenous.

Then remembered that Zainal had said the Rassi worked the land and

produced great quantities of food for both Eosi and Catteni ships.  "We

eat well."

 

"We will.  And soon," the Drassi said but he jerked his head to the

exterior and the rather unusual smells coming from the outdoor kitchen.

 

The Drassi had been marking off items on the clipboard as the Rassi came

on board with their burdens.  These seemed slightly more intelligent

than the ones there the other day.  Possibly because they had resupplied

ships so often.  '.

 

Then the truck was empty and the Rassi sat on the floor, waiting for

whatever would happen to them next.

 

The Drassi handed her the clipboard, and she wrote down her rune and

then took it from him to get Chuck's signature.  He was standing in the

passenger hatch, watching the repair crews eating.  He signed and winked

at her.

 

"We weren't invited;' he said, mouthing the words with little sound.

 

She rolled her eyes in relief, aware out of the corner of her eye the

ravenous way in which the meal was being consumed, with much smacking of

lips and slurping.  Even eating in such company would have been nearly

as nauseating as the food they consumed so greedily.

 

She returned the double-signed records to the Drassi, and he also jumped

to the ground and barked an order at the apathetic Rassi.  They slowly

rose and followed him around the ship to the eating place.

 

She closed and locked the cargo hatch, three of its decks now full of

supplies.  Zainal had gone whole-hog here.  Would they get away with

such bald-faced piracy?

 

"We can eat," Chuck muttered to her as he pushed her past the open cargo

hatch.  "Water's pretty good."

 

They used that to dilute the Mayock with which they washed down the

fresh fruit and what passed for bread in the Catteni cuisine.  It was so

fresh that it was easy to chew and didn't taste half-bad.

 

"D'you know what they're eating out there?" she asked Chuck.

 

"You don't want to know," Chuck said and took a long swig from his mug.

 

That was enough to inform Kris that the Catteni were probably eating

Kassi.  She ate nothing more despite Chuck pantomiming that she should.

 

The exterior crew had filled in the gouges, and the main hole, using

some sort of mastic.  When the interior specialists had finished their

job, they drove off but left EmassiYoltin behind to supervise the rest

of the repairs.

 

A Catteni day was longer than one on Earth but shorter than one on

Botany.  There was actually more exterior damage, between the "meteoric"

gashes and the hole, because the stumps of the broken external units had

to be removed and replaced.  This required technicians going in and out

of the ship, and coming awfully close to where the undamaged control

panels had been secreted.  Kris thought she might have indulged in the

first faint of her life but managed to pinch herself hard enough to

retain consciousness.

 

They'd come so far and done so well, she simply could not jeopardize

everything with such a reaction.

 

So they had another day to endure the proximity of sweaty men whose

clothing was smeared with the repair compound, which intensified the

stench of them.

 

Chuck did offer the Emassi the captain's quarters but that was curtly

refused, and Chuck and Kris were left to themselves.  They did, however,

close the passenger hatch as night descended on the field.  That meant

they didn't smell whatever it was the Catteni were eating.  Kris was

ravenous by now and made a huge meal for them both.

 

'I'll take first watch," Chuck told Kris, and she could not demur.  The

day's excesses as well as the gravity had reduced her to total

exhaustion.

 

He woke her six hours later.  "We've had a few calls, and one from

Yoltin to be sure we're keeping watch.  So you've got to stand one:'

 

"I'm fine, Chuck, fine;' she assured him.  Indeed, she realized that it

wasn't quite as difficult to sit up and get out of the bed though she

still felt as if all her muscles and flesh were being pulled inexorably

groundward.

 

She got a call from Yoltin shortly after she took the com.  Yoltin was a

real Catteni bastard.  Checking up.  She had a sudden notion and put it

into action by removing the undamaged control panels from where they had

been stashed and putting them quietly behind a huge crate in the cargo

deck that was currently available.  If they should be discovered, though

she doubted that, they were no concern of hers.  The Drassi had checked

off all the items that were brought on board, and being Drassi herself

she could pretend she didn't read well.  Not many true Drassi did unless

they "needed to know" as Zainal would have put it.

 

By the time all the repairs had been done, EmassiYoltin did an onboard

inspection of every panel and locker of the main ship.  Chuck turned an

awful deeper shade of gray until she managed to give him a wink.  He

leaned briefly against the bulkhead in relief.

 

Yoltin could find nothing to reprimand them for--apart from unwashed

dishes in the kitchen, and he ticked them off soundly and loudly for

that, while they looked humble, meek, and repentant.

 

As Yoltin left, Chuck said very angrily to Kris "that the galley must be

spotless when Emassi Venlik returned.  You are responsible, you will do

it."

 

"Yes, Drassi Chuck;' Kris responded with earnest subservience.  Both

were close to laughing at their little charade and did, when the

passenger hatch was closed.

 

They heard the vehicles revving up and immediately strode to the bridge

compartment to see the last of the crew leaving, dust rising at the

speed of their passage.  They also saw a smaller transport coming out

from the field buildings.

 

"Oh, God, what now?" Chuck demanded.  "Go do the galley thing, in case

that's what's to be inspected:'

 

They really had not been that untidy but she sloshed water and what went

for cleaning liquid about the sink.  Her hands were raw, and she checked

to make sure that the liquid had not taken off her skin dye.  It looked

paler but she didn't dare do a touch up-the dye had a very no-riceable

odor to it--until their latest visitor was gone.

 

It was Kivel after all, with two Drassi, who inspected the ship as well,

spending more time on the exterior to approve a smooth hull.

 

"You go soon?"

 

"Emassi Venlik is not back," Chuck replied.

 

"He must come soon.  This field will be needed," Kivel said at his most

pompous.

 

"We have been in space months," Chuck said with a very good imitation of

a Zainalian shrug.

 

"Months?  Where?"

 

The query was innocent enough but there was a gleam in Kivel's eyes that

suggested rumors of an abandoned cargo of considerable worth had

circulated.

 

Chuck shrugged again.

 

"We will talk of this at the evening meal," Kivel said, far too affable

to have confused even a Rassi.

 

Chuck looked slightly eager and then relaxed.  "I am on guard.  Emassi

Venlik is a hard commander."

 

Kivel inclined his head at Kris.  "The little one can stay on guard.  We

will enjoy ourselves this evening;' he went on, his tone an insidious

promise.

 

Chuck allowed himself to consider this and, looking hard at Kris, he

finally nodded.  "You will say nothing of this to the Emassi."

 

"No, Drassi Chuck."

 

"Come, then," and Kivel gestured affably for Chuck to take precedence

out of the hatch.

 

Chuck, bowing politely, insisted that the higher-ranking officer leave

first.  With Kivel's back turned, Chuck had a chance to throw an

inquiring look at Kris, and she winked in encouragement.  She'd close

the hatch and not open it until Chuck got back.  Mitford really didn't

have much choice, not since a Drassi more or less ordered his company.

 

Kris ate by herself at the com, watching the dark creep across the

beautiful forest and then the first moon rise, a large orange crescent.

Two, one very far away and small, also started their ascent with the

first one mid She almost wished the com unit would blurt at her so she'd

have something to do.  She poured herself a respectable tot of Mayock's

supe-and then wondered how Chuck would be handling the Catteni

equivilent Mitford had often boasted that he could drink anything

alcoholic and keep his wits about him.  She certainly hoped he could

tonight.

 

The fourth moon was rising, and the level in the bottle of Mayock was

only a finger high, when she heard a transport, and loud, off-key

singing.

 

Then there was a spirited banging--by more than one fist--on the hatch

and she hastened to open it.

 

Kivel almost threw Chuck inside, waving back to the transport and waving

the driver to go on.

 

"You made it," she said, hearing herself slurring her words.

 

"On...  ly just," Mitford replied, having far more of a problem than :

in enunciating.

 

"I'Ll get you to bed/' she said, pleased that she was so much soberer.

 

he wan'?"

 

"Cooooo...  orrrr...  dinates;' Chuck managed, lurching from side to

side even with her trying to keep him upright.

 

"Thought so."

 

"Doan...  know...  'era.  On .  .  .  ly Drasssssssi;' Chuck said and

hic"Stuff...  was...  worst...  thing...  ever...  drank.  Drunk.

Drink."

 

They had reached the captain's quarters, which was nearest, and Chuck

went in at that door.  Kris didn't object.  It was nearer than the crew

quarters and in his condition she doubted he could get into the lowest

of the three-bunks without cracking his skull.

 

The captain's bed was also wider and she steered him toward it.  He

laied down but was sitting up so fast that they cracked skulls.

 

"Ohhhh;' he groaned.  "Can't...  get...  boots ...  off;'

 

She did that service for him with fingers that had trouble opening the

The next thing she knew, he had locked his arms about her and pulled her

into the bed along with him.  By the time his head was down, he was

snoringly asleep.  She waited a few moments, wanting to get horizontal

herself because suddenly the Mayock that she'd been sipping for hours

was catching up with her.  But he had some sort of a death grip on her

and she couldn't disengage herself.

 

Well, she was as nearly horizontal as he was, though she still had her

boots on.  She inched her way into a more comfortable position, put her

head on his chest and went to sleep.

 

SHE WOKE FIRST the next morning.  Chuck was no longer snoring but he had

his head resting on her bare shoulder.  She'd had the most remarkably

vivid, almost pornographic dreams, and gasped in dismay.

 

"And I'm bare?" Chuck also was--clothing strewn about the cabin.

 

"Oh, my god, that Mayock did it again."

 

She swallowed.  "That's unfair.  I don't remember anything about it.  At

least I hope that dream wasn't what we did!" She stared at the relaxed,

sleeping face of Chuck Mirford and slowly shook her head.  She could

not, would not believe he, and she, had done that!  Such behavior, even

in their super-drunken conditions, was as uncharacteristic as it was

unlikely.  Even impossible.  She shook her head, infuriated and

irritated.

 

Then she tried to remember when she'd last had a period and couldn't.

 

Between Botany days and the elapse of time on the Catteni trip, she

couldn't figure out if she was in a fertile period or not.  She glanced

over at Chuck.

 

Well, if she was pregnant by him, at least she'd spared both of them any

embarrassment over actually going to bed for that purpose.  But she did

wish she'd remember something both logical and in character.  That was

unfair.

 

A buzzing penetrated her ruminations.  The com unit on the bridge was

announcing a message coming in.

 

Mitford was so relaxed--well, she'd done that for him at least--that she

was able to withdraw from his side.  She covered him with a blanket,

hoping that he was so far gone in sleep he wouldn't rouse as she went to

answer the buzz.  She did grab up her clothing as she left the room. Let

him think he slept alone.

 

She didn't waste time dressing--she'd just leave the visual off but she

wanted to stop the buzz.  She managed the correct response in her

guttural tone.

 

"Venlik here.  All repairs finished?"

 

"Yes, Emassi:'

 

"All cargo aboard?"

 

"Yes, Emassi."

 

"Prepare the ship for immediate takeoff."

 

"Yes, Emassi:'

 

He didn't even ask why she didn't turn on the visuals.

 

Did she have time for a quick shower?  Well, she was going to have

anyway.  She'd have to take care of that detail, or some of the other

Humans might notice a certain other reek about her.  And her eyes hurt.

Oh, Lord, the contacts.  She slipped hers out, and they were the first

things she cleansed.  Then she remembered that Chuck's would surely

still be in so she knelt beside his bed, and delicately stroking the

eyelids, managed to slip the contacts out.  His eyes might be sore, too,

but maybe seeing the lenses in a cup of water might make him think he'd

had the sense to do it for himself.

 

She washed quickly, dried herself off, and remembered to check her color

before she dressed.  She was still gray enough.  Oh, Lord, how glad

she'd be to be Human again.  She used some eyewash to soothe the

irritation, hoping it would ease before she had to use her eyes for

something important.

 

The way Chuck was sleeping, her eyes would be normal by the time he

woke.  Should she wake him before Zainal returned?  No, she'd say she'd

!i ' just relieved him on watch.

 

"You caught me in the shower, Zainal," she rehearsed aloud as she

dressed if he asked about the delay in response.

 

Damn, he hadn't indicated how long before he'd be there.  No, he'd said

he wanted the ship ready for immediate takeoff.  Had he run into

trouble?

 

She started the pre-flight check, having watched Zainal, G/no, and

Raisha do it often enough to know the drill.  She then checked each

cargo deck to be sure everything was locked down there for takeoff and

left the empty deck ready.  When she returned to the bridge, she noticed

a dust cloud appearing at the edge of the forestry.  The truck, and it

was a good-sized one, did not, as she half-expected, come directly to

the ship but paused in front of the command post.  Whatever transpired

there was very brief for the vehicle did not stop long.  And, as it

turned toward the ship, she noticed it headed toward the cargo hatch so

she made her way as fast as she could down the companionway, rather

pleased with being able to move with some speed in the heavy gravity.

One really did get used to it.

 

She unfastened the hatch so all was ready for a speedy loading as the

truck backed up, almost but not quite banging against the fleshly

repainted hull.

 

Coo and Pess emerged first, lifting the accordion backdoor of the truck.

They hurried on board with a large and heavy-looking carton.  It made a

heavy thud as they let it down.  Behind them Ninety, Mack, and Gino each

struggled to bring in more crates and containers.  Zainal appeared with

satchels that he deposited with more care on the bow end of the cargo

space.  He grinned at her, his eyes sparkling with success but he

immediately turned to bring yet more crates on board.

 

"Where's Chuck?" Zainal asked on his next trip back, and he was speaking

English again.

 

"He had a busy night as the Emassi's guest," she said and stepped

forward to help unload in Chuck's absence but Zainal shook his head and

tapped the control panel for her to be ready to close the hatch at his

command.

 

It didn't take all that long to unload with Pess, Coo, and Zainal all

more used to Catteni gravity than the Humans who handled the lighter

objects.

 

This deck was almost as full as the others and Kris was obsessed with

curiosity.

 

"Pess," Zainal said, pointing to the truck and indicating that the

Ru-garian was to take it back to the command post.  They had to wait

until Pess came back, covering the distance quickly with his oddly

jointed long legs.

 

"That's all?" Kris asked, her hands on the cargo controls.

 

"Yes.  You didn't happen to do a pre-flight check, did you?" Zainal

asked as she closed the cargo hatch.  She nodded an affirmative.  He and

Coo were netting the cargo down, fastening the ropes tight to the deck

cleats.

 

Gino had already gone forward.  Mack and Ninety looked about done in as

they leaned against the bulkhead.

 

"Had a good time, lads?" she asked blandly.

 

"It'll take the entire trip back to fill you in," Ninety said with a

ghost of his usual impudent grin.  "Lenny will never believe what I've

seen and done."

 

"Yes, he will.  I'll vouch for it:'

 

"C'mon, let's get strapped in for takeoff," Zainal said, urgently

pointing forward.

 

"Is anyone after us?" Kris asked anxiously.

 

"Not exactly;' Zainal said with a grin, "but they're not above following

us back to where we left all that high-grade ore;'

 

"How can they find an asteroid that doesn't exist?" Kris asked,

answering his grin.

 

"Ah," and he put his hand under her elbow to speed her along the

companionway, "but that is exactly what we must find before we can go

home to Botany:'

 

They were almost to the bridge compartment when Kris remembered that

Chuck wasn't strapped in.  "I'll have to net Chuck down."

 

"Don't waste any time;' Zainal said, turning sideways to squeeze past

her.  He smelled of something acrid which she couldn't identify.

 

"Zay's also got to be gone for at least a full Catteni day;' Mack

muttered to her as she strapped in beside him.

 

Kris rolled her eyes.  "You can't leave that man out of your sight but

he gets into trouble:'

 

Fortunately Zainal was far too busy laying in the course with Gino,

making the necessary com calls to hear their soft remarks.

 

"Tell you one thing, Kris, he's not a man I'd tangle with anywhere or

anytime, and even in my own gravity," Ninety said, impressed.

 

Mack chuckled.  Having received clearance from Emassi Kivel himself,

they proceeded to take off at a sedate vertical ascent.

 

"Kivel tried to get Chuck drunk enough last night to interrogate him,"

Kris said.  "I don't know what they use for such purposes here on

Catten, but it was a miracle Chuck made it back this morning."

 

Kris severely berated herself for her adjustments to the exact truth but

no one would be hurt by her version, and she might not even have any

reason to explain anything to anyone.

 

After enduring the Catten homeworld gravity, the takeoff pressure was

minimal.  As they rounded Catten on the outward-bound orbit, Kris once

again found the beauty of the planet almost breath-stopping.

 

The space station hove in sight and this time, one of the dreadnoughts

was maneuvering out of its dock.  By noticing some of the H-class ships

nearby, Kris got a better idea of just how ginormous the dreadnoughts

actually were.  It was comparable to being in a Tomahawk with a 747

looming behind you.  And these ships had not been able to penetrate the

Bubble?

 

The com unit blurped, and Gino answered in a totally expressionless

Catteni voice.

 

"Your destination?"

 

"This is Emassi Venlik.  Eosi Ba is responsible for our destination,"

Zainal said.

 

"Understood."

 

Maybe Kris only imagined it, but there was even a note of awe in that

response.  Zainal grinned at Gino who chuckled softly when the com line

was off.

 

The KDL executed a course alteration and then showed its stern to the

space station.  Zainal poured on the speed as the ship headed out to

where thousands of stars gleamed in the black of space.

 

"Did he beat someone up?" Kris asked when she felt they were safely

away.

 

"To a faretheewell;' grinned Gino, and then he rolled his eyes.  "Some

nerd sycophant of an Eosi.  I don't think the ones we met were that

anxious for trouble.  At least not the ones that Worry and Leon saw. Now

the guys I met...  One was humongously wide and I made myself as small

as possible against the nearest wall.  But the ones in an ugly mood were

worse than anything Hollywood ever dreamed up, including the aliens in

Aliens."

 

Zainal now leaned back in the command chair and stretched until every

joint and tendon seemed to crack.

 

"Let's hope Duxie can get us some more of that high-grade ore and we'll

be the toast of the cap,to, Gino added, and out as often as we choose;'

 

"Gino, are you okay?" Zainal asked, rising.

 

"I'm great, Zay, you need the rest;'

 

"Chuck's in your bed," Kris said.

 

"Where is immaterial so long as pointing to Mack and Ninety, "and you're

off duty, too.  It should be all clear ahead, Gino, but wake me if

something you don't understand comes up.

 

"Get some rest, Zay;' Gino said and made shooing motions with his right

hand.  "You, too;'

 

Kris looked around for Press and Coo.  Surely they'd need some rest as

much as the others, but neither Rugarian was there.

 

"They zonked out as soon as we made orbit;' Gino said.  "Move up i here,

Kris, and I'll give you a rundown of all we did and what Zainal managed,

smooth as a baby's butt."

 

A DRASSI CLERK NOTICED THE EXCESSIVE CHARGES and ill; assorted cargo

registered against this particular vessel.  When he checked through to

administration, holding the com line open for nearly an hour, he was

told that the ship had sufficient credit to cover the expenses.  There

was no problem.  He was to return to his duties.  Being a Drassi, he did

so, felt more abused by his superiors than ever.  There were no rewards

for being diligent on behalf of his Emassi.  But what choice had he?

 

"I HAVE TO TELL YOU, KRIS," GINO began, "I wasn't all that keen on

seeing a Catteni there on Botany, but..  :' and Gino whistled expertly

and shrilly through his teeth, "when you see how that guy operates, I'd

walk through fire for him now."

 

"He does have a way about him," Kris admitted with a grin, "so how did

he operate?"

 

"Blizte was a boondock of a berg, all Rassi in godawful hovels, just

staring at us.  Or to be more precise, staring at nothing really.  Two

Cat-teni vets--one had both legs missing and the other was minus an

arm--managed the one--get it the one eatery in Blizte.  They were

sitting on a bench as we went past.  Zainal got a wave.  A few klicks on

and we came to a surfaced road.

 

Don't know with what but there were few ruts in it and that old banger

could move when you put your pedal to the metal." Gino executed a joint

cracking stretch, and Kris wondered if she couldn't possibly manage the

bridge and let him sleep, too.  "No, I'm fine," he told her, hands back

on the armrests.  "I can sleep anywhere and be fresh with half an hour's

catnap.  I slept on the way back from the city.

 

"And that was an eye-opener." Again that distinctive whistle of

respectful awe.  "Like something from future worlds 'n' stuff. Beautiful

layout and even the important buildings weren't squared-off in plate

glass but..." he mimicked a commercial voice-over, "'ecologically

situated so as not to mar the natural beauty and making good use of

flora and fauna." Nothing higher than one story.  Mostly because the

buildings are built down rather than up.  Zainal says some of them go

down a good hundred plegs."

 

"What do the Eosi live in?" Her curiosity got the better of her dislike

of the overlords.

 

Gino raised his eyebrows.  "Only for Zainal pointing them out, I

wouldn't have guessed.  Though they do enclose their properties with

high walls and force screens.  Saw a bird-like thing get fried trying to

land on one.

 

So we didn't get to see anything inside the compounds.  They're also

scattered all over Cattena--which is what they have so imaginatively

named the city.  Still, if it weren't for the neighbors, it'd be better

than Beverly Hills.

 

Or even Carmel.

 

"Zainal showed us where his family home was, and it's spread out over

quite a hunk of real estate.  Zay says it's because so many Eosi hosts

have come from his lineage, or pedigree or whatever you want call it."

 

"Did you see an Eosi?"

 

Gino's shudder was not faked.  "Four of them.  Big bastards, even when

you know the poor damned Catteni that got stuck with being subsumed was

big to start with.  Crazy eyes!  Scare the shit out of me...  begging

your pardon."

 

Again his whistle.  "Sure was glad Zay got out of that living death.

 

Worse than a zombie in my opinion.

 

"However, he stops at a place where there're public com units and made a

half dozen calls, while we ambled over to the eatery."This time Gino

grimaced.  "They don't know a damned thing about good eating.  Cram into

their mouths, but Zay had told us what to order and we did and that was

pretty good.  Almost as good as what we regularly eat on ' Botany." He

said that with an air of condescension.

 

"He couldn't reach all the guys he wanted to see, but he said that these

four were the best and he was just lucky to find any one of them at

Cat.We did the secret hand signs and passwords and stuff and met at what

for a service station here.  Sort of Catteni-style garage sales." He

grinned impishly at her for his witticism.  "We made as if we were

trying to sell the transport so much of the conversation between Zainal

and the others appeared to be discussing the condition of the truck and

the engine it uses.  That engine is stuck above one of the ground level

panels. Zay hiS.

 

'!  parked obliquely to the station so no one could see any one coming

or going.  One of us was there to keep the mechanics or whatever they

were from closing in when inconvenient.  There were two or three other

vehicles being inspected so it was a good cover to use."

 

He paused, rubbed the side of his nose.

 

"And?" Kris prompted him.

 

He chuckled a smug "he he he he" of satisfaction.  "There seem to be a

lot of Catteni Emassi fed up to here," and he levelled his hand with his

nose, "with Eosi domination.  Especially..." and he paused again for

emphasis, "since Mentat Ix--that's the one Zay's brother's lugging

around and Co and Se have been agitating every one of the other Eosi

about demolishing Botany, diverting all naval forces to that end."

 

Gino looked worried.  "No one has ever seen the Mentats--they're the

leaders among the Eosi--going so ballistic.  They've got to penetrate or

burst or explode or implode the Bubble--because it's there, I think, and

has them stumped.  And stumped, they don't like to be;'

 

"Anything said about Earth?"

 

"Yeah, and it's not good.  They haven't stopped mind-wiping specialists

so those who were lucky enough to escape being caught have had to go

into hiding.  And hiding places are getting filled up and harder to

find... especially as we have no air transport at all.  And very few

working trucks or cars.

 

The Eosi have found another use for petroleum products--all theirs. It's

not as if they can burn the Bubble away--no oxygen in space, thank God.

 

"And the Emassi Zay talked to are not the only ones beginning to get

ideas from the rebellion on Earth." Gino nodded in satisfaction.

"Evidently we've really got 'em going, Catteni and Eosi.  Never had so

much opposition before.  We might not be as technically advanced as

Eosi, but I'll tell you, there're not enough Emassi to deal with what

we're giving 'em back on Earth."

 

"So we could actually rebel enough to get Earth back?" Kris felt a surge

of triumph flow through her.

 

"I didn't say that," Gino replied cautiously, tilting his head to show

his skepticism.  "In the first place," he held up one finger, "Emassi

and Drassi like Earth and want to keep it--just get rid of the

troublesome population.

 

Meanwhile they're looting everything that isn't cemented into the ground

and sometimes they jackhammer loose what they fancy.  In the second

place, they have stopped ruining manufacturing complexes and keep some

of the specialized companies working nonstop...  which means until the

workers drop from exhaustion.  I mean, shift work was never like that.

Nor those sweatshops in India and Asia we were hearing so much about. We

do have some items high on the list of acquisition and they're being

turned out in bulk.  While there might not be enough good Emassi to help

a worldwide coup, I'll tell you one thing: the Eosi invasion sure

stopped all the petty squabbles and got all Earth working toward one

real good goal--getting rid of the invaders."

 

"I always did think a really bad extraterrestrial menace would unite the

world," Kris said.

 

"It sure has.  Palestinians join Israelis; the Northern Irish have

allied with the Brits in covert actions against any Catteni on the

British Isles.  Even North and South Korea are cooperating against the

mutual enemy.  The African nations got some real rough

treatment--because they're black fer Gods' sake and the Catten/tried to

make Rassi out of them;' Gino snorted.

 

"That didn't work.  In fact, I think the African nations have wracked up

more fatalities among the Drassi and Emassi than any other race.

Turnabout's fair play.  Now, if that will hold when we've thrown out the

invaders, it'll be the first wonder of the twentieth century."

 

Kris sighed in a hopeful breath.  "I suppose it could happen."

 

"Might not until the twenty-first but we'll see.  We've a few years to

spare."

 

"So, where does that leave us?"

 

"Well, I'm not quite sure, since this is going to take a lot of planning

and under difficult circumstances.  We've got to wait until Baby and the

KDM make it back.  Then we'll have to somehow get some of the Emassi

sympathizers to Botany so we can correlate plans and stuff."

 

"Lord, how'll we do that?"

 

Gino laughed.  "Zay's started the process and, as long as we can keep

bringing in the high-grade ore, no one's going to wonder where he's

getting it.  So he can check in as much as he needs to to mobilize

dissidents:'

 

"What did he mean about being followed?  By the friends of the Cat-teni

he beat up?"

 

"Oh, him.  He didn't have friends smart enough to follow us.  But there

are others, Eosi, in particular who might try," Gino said with a laugh.

 

"Probably will.  But one of his Emassi friends gave him a chart of an

asteroid belt so dense you could hide the entire Catteni fleet in it and

they wouldn't be able to spot each other unless they knew exactly where

the other ship is.  There're so much heavy elements in the belt,

supposedly, that it jams all signals.  We can slip in and out of there

neat as a whistle.  In fact, that's where we're headed right now;'

 

Reacting subconsciously to being followed, Kris turned about in her seat

but Gino laughed.

 

"Don't worry, Kris;' and Gino patted her knee.  "Zay and I spotted them.

Way back.  We took off before they expected us to so they were late

leaving the space station.  They'll try to track us by the ion trail and

let's hope another ship crosses ours and confuses them.  Any way, we'll

be in the asteroid belt long before they make it.  You wait, Kris,

you'll see."

 

"See if this so-called friend of Zainal's is setting us up?"

 

Gino shook his head.  "Not Kamiton.  You know how reserved Catteni are?

Well, this guy all but kissed Zay he was so glad to see him.  Not that

he knew who he was at first...  and in fact, damned suspicious because

he had known Venlik, the Emassi Zay's pretending to be, and hated the

man.

 

So there was a bit of an impasse at first.  Until Zay removed the cheek

pieces and reminded Karoitoh of a few details only the real Zainal could

have known.  You should have seen Kamiton's face when he realized who

Zainal really was.  And I like Karoitoh.  He can smile, and he's got

that same wacky sense of humor Zay has."When Gino noticed how dubious

she was, he laughed.  "Look, hon, I've been a good judge of people all

my life and there's not that damned much difference between us and

Catteni when you get down to basics."

 

Then unaccountably Gino blushed.

 

"Well, if you say so, G/no," Kris said, ignoring the blush since she had

a good idea what caused Gino Marrucci's sudden embarrassment.  There was

indeed one very notable difference between Human and Catteni that she

happened to enjoy exceedingly.  And Gino had suddenly remembered that.

 

"I'll reserve my opinion until I meet him.  If I ever do."

 

"I think you will;' the pilot said, recovering his composure quickly.

 

"He's the first one Zay wants to bring through the Bubble."

 

"Really?"

 

"YUP, because if they had a Missouri on Catten, Kamiton'd be from there.

We gotta show him the Farmers' part of Botany and what we've managed to

do on our continent before he'll really believe what we told him.

 

Humans speaking Catteni are not that uncommon these days, but Humans

living beyond Eosi control need to be seen to be believed:'

 

Kris nodded.  "Sometimes I don't believe it myself."

 

"Hell, kid, you were making it happen before I got transported."

 

"That doesn't change the fantastical aspects of it, Gino."

 

They were silent for a long while, watching the stars, then Gino pointed

out some of the anomalous primary colors, and even one double star. They

were so far away as to resemble opaque marbles rather than suns. Gino

crossed his arms on this chest, a slight grin on his face, and shook his

head ever so slightly.

 

"Never thought you'd be this far from our solar system, huh?"

 

"You got it."

 

"Hungry?"

 

"Something hot would go down well, food and drink, if you don't mind,

Kris."

 

"Drassi hear, Drassi obey;' she said with mock humility and made her way

back to the companionway.  She had become so accustomed to the heavy

gravity that a normal one had her bouncing along.

 

Snores from the various sleeping accommodations indicated that the

others were well and truly asleep.  She had the galley to herself and

prepared enough food for them both.  Then she remembered she didn't need

to wear the lenses anymore so she took hers out, cleansed them once more

before putting them back in the little container.  She got an extra cup

of water for Gino to get rid of his.

 

As she handed him his tray of food, he gave her a puzzled glance and

then chuckled.  "Excuse me, while I get my own eyes back." He put his

lenses in the cup and put that to one side.  'I'll clean 'em later. I'm

hungry enough I might eat 'em as hots d'oeuvres."

 

"Naw, they don't taste at all like oysters;' she retorted facetiously

and started in on the stew she'd reheated for them.

 

SEVERAL HOURS LATER she decided that there was nothing to do and she

would certainly know which lights indicated trouble in any section of

the ship.

 

"Go get some rest, Gino.  I can sit here and look at the telltales just

as sensibly as you can."

 

"Not quite yet," and he pointed ahead, without taking his eyes from the

sensitive scope he was using.  "The pulsar I've been looking for.  We

make a course correction when we line up with that.  Then I'Ll go get

some sleep.

 

And wake Zainal up.  He said to."

 

WHEN ZAINAL TOOK OVER THE BRIDGE, he first pressed his cheek against

hers and kept one arm about her shoulders even after he had seated

himself.

 

"Did Gino bring you...  how does he put it?  Up to speed?"

 

"Including your brush with another Catteni."

 

"He asked for it.  But he's a mere nothing," and Zainal gave a

contemptuous flick of his hand.  "Getting Karoiron on our side was more

than I expected.  Tubelin, Kasturi, and Nitin can be valuable to us, but

they don't have the connections that Karoitoh has.  Or the family

prestige."

 

"And?" she prompted.

 

He ruffled her short hair, tipped her face toward him so he saw she had

removed the lenses.  "You look much better with your own eyes.  You did

make a convincing Drassi."

 

"Noble Emassi, you are too kind."

 

Zainal chuckled in that bass rumble that made her grin.  "Don't let that

get around just yet.  However, all four are due to go back to Earth for

various tasks.  If we could somehow get them in touch with our Humans

there, we could begin to make the Catteni regret what they've been doing

to your planet."

 

Kris thought that over.  "But you're Catteni.  And you said 'our'

Humans."

 

"I like the way Humans think better than I like the way Catteni don't

ever think."

 

"Some of them must.  You do:'

 

"Luck."

 

"What are our chances of doing what you want?  Getting rid of the Eosi,

with or without the help of the Farmers?"

 

"I heard something I have never heard about an Eosi Mentat before," he

said, his tone very somber and thoughtful.  "The one who subsumed my

brother went totally out of control and his juniors had a very difficult

time reducing his...  wildness.  He's the one that wants to burst our

Bubble no matter how long it takes:'

 

"Eosi can have nervous breakdowns?" She was astonished.

 

"I don't know about nervous, but Ix was dangerously out of control."

 

"What does it take to kill an Eosi?"

 

He gave her a quick look and a humph.  "I've never heard that one has

ever been killed.  Though .  .  ." and he paused reflectively, "killing

one has never been tried.  They are well protected, both by the fear of

them that is instilled from the time we understand anything outside

childish needs.  We don't even know how long an individual Eosi lives.

Except that it needs to change hosts." '..

 

"Poison it?"

 

Zainal shook his head, drawing the corners of his mouth down.  He gave

her a sideways look.  "You Humans say you do not like to take Human

lives.  It is against your laws."

 

"The Eosi are not Human," she said tartly.

 

"The Farmers would not like it."

 

"You haven't given up then, on gaining their assistance?"

 

"No," he replied.

 

"What if Humans managed to kill an Eosi..  :'

 

Zainal waved both hands in a cutting negative gesture.  "The numbers

they would kill in retaliation would decimate your population:'

 

"The Eosi are already doing that, aren't they?"

 

"They are, on a small scale, but if an Eosi was known to have been

killed by some Human agency, they are just as likely to destroy the

entire planet."

 

"Well, there goes another good idea.  We have to kill them all then."

 

"What is it Ninety says?  Bloodtirsty?"

 

"Bloodthirsty," she corrected him.  "I just want my planet free of

them."

 

"As I want my planet free of them.  We've had them longer.  We get the

first chance."

 

"Not without us right there beside you, Zainal.  You Catteni can't have

all the fun." Then a yawn overtook her.

 

"Get some sleep, Kris.  You've served a double watch already."

 

She tried to argue but with one hand, he lifted her out of the chair.

 

"Get some sleep.  I can hear the sergeant moving around:' He reached

into one of his thigh pockets.  "Tell him to take this powder in water.

It'll help."

 

She took the packet he handed her.

 

"Didn't know Catteni ever needed hangover remedies," she said, amused.

 

"Headaches are caused by other things than too much Mayock:'

 

Kris left before he could see the guilty expression on her face.  She

found Chuck, looking more green than gray, just coming out of the head,

one hand clutching the door frame.  He was definitely in need of

whatever remedy Zainal had given her for him if it had taken him this

long to sleep off the hangover.  She cleared her throat, and her mind,

of other details.

 

"Zainal said this will help:'

 

His eyes weren't really focusing, but she'd got the lenses out before

they could have irritated the eyelids.  Mind you, his eyes were pretty

bloodshot in spite of having no lens aggravation.  She took his other

hand and--sternly forgetting what her erotic dreams reminded her his

hands had been doing--slapped the packet into the palm.

 

"All in the line of duty, sarge," she said brightly.  "Take it

immediately in water.  I'll even get the water..."

 

'I'll get my own water, Bjornsen," he said with great dignity and

straightened himself out and walked, however slowly and carefully, back

to the galley.

 

Chapter Five.

 

IT TOOK NEARLY TWO WEEKS TO REACH the coordinates Kamiton had given

Zainal.  Kris said nothing about it, but she hadn't realized she'd be so

long away from Zane.  She thought a lot about him and there was plenty

of time to think as they hurtled at top speed toward their destination.

"Top speed" was somewhat dampened by a device which Zainal had attached

to the propulsion unit just before they shifted to a new heading, and

before they left what would have been a well-traveled area of

Catteni-controlled space.

 

"It alters the ion emissions slightly;' he explained.

 

"We may not be as easy to follow.  Certainly it will delay pursuit.

Kamiton knows where to meet us."

 

"He's meeting us?" Chuck exclaimed.

 

"Didn't Gino tell you?" Zainal asked.

 

"He told me that Kamiton would have to see before he'd join

wholeheartedly;' Kris said.

 

"Oh," for once Mitford was taken aback.  He rubbed his forehead.  "I

seem to be missing a lot."

 

"There are alcoholic drinks even I wouldn't take," Zainal said

reassuringly.

 

"I think Kivel probably did his best to get information from you."

 

"Fraggit, I thought I could hold anything and not spill any beans,"

Chuck said.  "I did hear you mention Kamiton but I didn't know you

intended to take him back to Botany:'

 

"Him and how many others?" was Ninety's query.

 

"Only Karoiron;' Zainal said.  "He is a scout explorer, which is why he

knows about this asteroid belt where we will meet him, and then return

to Botany.  Spatially we are traveling in a triangle so we won't be long

getting home once we contact him."

 

"Do we have to be Catteni with him?" Gino asked, rubbing at the stubble

over his gray skin.

 

"No, because it will give us the...  the upper hand," and Zainal

grinned, "to show him how well we can fool Catteni, even on their own

world."

 

Kris was not the only one who took in the significance of his last

phrase.  Ninety nodded slowly, and Gino grinned more broadly than ever.

 

Coo and Pess nodded.  Mack Dargle made a comical grimace.

 

"What did I say?" asked Zainal who was becoming more and more sensitive

to Human nuances.

 

"Their own world," Kris said, enunciating the three words slowly.

 

"I would give my eyeteeth to hear other Emassi speak that way of

Cat-teni;' Mack said.

 

The asteroid field was a spectacular vision as they passed the heavy

Uranus-type planet well away from the slowly orbiting mass of space

detritus.

 

Chunks large enough to be small moons were interspersed with smaller,

uneven hunks following eccentric orbits about each other as well as the

big planet, which, like some interstellar miser, seemed unwilling to

release any of its satellites.  The cosmic do-si-do dance was almost

mesmerizing.

 

Gino wondered just how many of the original inner worlds and moons had

been involved in a collision of such magnitude.  And how it had

occurred.  Two charred and dead planets, pockmarked by impacts centuries

old, wobbled on erratic Mercury- and Venus-type orbits, each with more

small moons of spatial debris attracted by the gravity of the planets

they now orbited but not large enough to head for final dissolution in

the primary.

 

The star was dying, according to the spectroscope analysis Gino had

done: the readings suggested that the star was doing its damnedest to

continue to live.  Yes, all this space junk wasn't really an asteroid

belt...  a field of planetary and lunar fragments hugging the one thing

that gave it some stability--the heavy Uranus planet.  The area would

take days to circumnavigate.

 

To wend a way through it would require not only a very, very experienced

pilot but a ship with heavy shielding and good gunners to explode those

bits and pieces that were too small for them to avoid and too big to

ibounce harmlessly off the shielding.

 

"Only someone like Karoitoh would find a...  a curiosity like this:'

Zainal shrugged and seeded himself more firmly in the pilot's chair,

hands poised over the control panel.

 

"How'll we ever find the one we want with that mess churning around like

that?" Gino asked, his hands tense as he readied himself to use the

thrusters on Zainal's command.  "It's damned near a light year across;'

 

"No," Zainal replied prosaically, "but certainly it covers an enormous

area:'

 

They'd rehearsed the maneuvering tactics all the previous day, using the

diagram that Kamiton had given Zainal.  They were to approach from

co-oral'mates at the ecliptic and weave a course that, in itself, would

have thrown any pursuer off.  Not that the ship's detectors had spotted

anything following them.  Kris wondered how anyone could rely on the

diagram since : every rock, boulder, mountain, and small moon seemed to

be on a totally · rratic orbit.

 

SEE WHAT YOU MEANT about being able to hide..  :' Chuck murmured

respectfully.

 

"Right thruster two seconds..  :' Zainal interrupted Chuck's remark.

 

Gino responded, and they seemed to be heading directly at a cluster

spinning end on end when Zainal asked for three seconds right thruster

and they broke into the clear...  briefly.

 

No one dared say another word to risk breaking the concentration of the

two pilots.  They sat, occasionally with an inadvertent gasp at the

terrifying proximity to a space obstacle large enough to crush them,

clinging to the armrests of their seats, and grateful for the safety

belts that held them in place.  Zainal had insisted they don protective

helmets and emergency oxygen tanks, and these precautions, pitiful

though they seemed as the ship wove a torturous way through the maze,

irrationally gave them a sense of security.

 

It seemed like hours, and possibly it was, before they finally saw empty

space again.  Then Zainal ordered a left thruster for five seconds,

which swung the ship right back at the belt.  The second course change,

just before they would have reentered the asteroid belt, brought them

parallel to it.

 

A sparkle caught Kris' eye and she pointed.  "Look!  Three-fifteen!"

 

Zainal gave a nod of his head and slowed the KDL almost to a complete

halt.  The ship drifted toward a ginormous asteroid, which turned ever

so slightly to display an obvious cavern, which had been punched into it

at some point.  Zainal now slowly moved the KDL toward the dark hole,

and they caught sight again of a glint where no light should be.  He

activated an exterior light, and they all reacted to the sight of an

EVA-suited figure making for their hatch.

 

"Light the air lock," Zainal said, "and prepare to accept boarder."

 

Karoiron was as much a surprise to Kris as he was to the rest of the

Botany group.  He acted, Kris thought, much as Zainal had on their first

meeting: dismissive, even contemptuous, until he realized that each and

every one of them understood what he said to Zainal.

 

"I did not expect you to arrive so promptly, Zainal.  I have only just

arrived myself."

 

"With no pursuit?"

 

Kamiton shrugged shoulders as broad as Zainal's and began to strip off

rest of his space suit, looking around with a frown as no one seemed

immediately assist him.

 

"You're closest, Chuck," Zainal said in Catten, "give him a hand.  These

are awkward even with plenty of space." He took the helmet from Kami-ton

and the harness of the one-man thruster pack.

 

"Your cabin has the most room," Chuck said as Zainal opened a

compartment where the helmet and thruster could be stored.  "This way,

Kami-ton, in case you are unfamiliar with this class of ship." By tone,

gesture, and courtesy, Sergeant Chuck Mitford was establishing his

equality with the new arrival.

 

"They all speak Catten?" Kamiton asked, surprised as Gino and Mack

pressed tight against the bulkhead to give him room to move aft.

 

"All of them," Zainal said.

 

Kris, too, had made as much space in the companionway as she could to

allow Kamiton to pass her, but he stopped and stared hard at her.  She /

raised an eyebrow in askance.  He was a touch taller than she.

 

"Is it a female?" he asked Zainal, not taking his eyes off her.

 

Kris was glad that her gray skin did not show the flush of blood to her

face at being referred to as an "it:'

 

"Female and of command rank," she said in a cold hard voice, almost

spitting out the Catteni syllables.  "A fact you will remember:'

 

"One of the Terrans, though, is she not?" He looked forward at Zainal.

 

"Do not speak over me, Kamiton," she said, thoroughly incensed and

determined to be certain he answered her directly, "speak to me as you

would to any other of equal rank;'

 

"I would, were I you," Zainal remarked in a mild tone to Kamiton.

 

"She's dangerous in a fight.  Gino," and he paused at his cabin, "set

course for Botany, top speed." Then, as soon as Kamiton and Chuck had

entered the cabin, he winked at Kris and closed the door.

 

WHATEVER MIGHT HAVE BEEN SAID during the short interval in which Kamiton

was assisted out of his EVA apparel, he did not again refer to her as an

"it" or but addressed her directly, as he did the rest of the crew.

Since he asked a great many questions, glancing about the cramped table

in the crew mess, he did seem to accept her answers if she gave them.

 

Once or twice, he rephrased the question later on, looking at Gino for

an answer.

 

"Kris would know that, and I think she's already given you the answer,"

Gino said blandly.

 

Kamiton was quick enough never to use that ploy again.

 

"Which of you were first on Botany?" Kamiton asked.

 

Chuck held up his hand first followed by all, including the two Deski

and Zainal, except Gino.  Karoiron had the same habit of raising one

eyebrow as Zainal would, in the manner of requesting explanation.

 

"I am space pilot, too," Gino said with a shrug.  "Third Drop."

 

"The rest of us," Chuck said, "were what the Eosi picked up in the

initial Invasion.

 

"So you have learned Barevi as well?" Kamiton asked.

 

"Well enough to barter in the markets," Kris said.

 

"And other places;' Chuck added in a droll tone.

 

Kamiton started to cross his arms, but there were too many wide bodies

to permit that so he put his elbows on the table.  Gino got up and

started to clear the remnants of the meal, which provoked a startled

reaction from Kamiton.  Gino grinned.

 

"We all take turns;' he said.  "You do know, Kamiton, that there are

many minerals in the asteroid belt.  Read traces as we wandered

through:' Kamiton gave a curt nod of his head.  "I picked it so."

 

Coo and Pess, evidendy having had enough of the social scene, rose and

left the room.

 

"Now;' Kamiton asked in a patient tone of voice, "I wish to see the

spatial photographs of this refuge of yours.  And especially of this

Bubble that has our leaders..." his tone was contemptuous, "so

aggravated."

 

At least that was what Kris thought the word meant.  Most of the

language Kamiton had used could be understood in context if he used

words that she wasn't familiar with.  At least he did them the courtesy

of not speaking in pidgin Catteni.

 

Mack Dargle came in then: he'd been standing the watch.  "Nothing around

here but us, Zay;' he said, nodding to Karoitoh.  "Pess has taken over

the watch;'

 

Zainal nodded, then asked Mack to collect the hand viewer and the file

that had been compiled as what they facetiously called the "travel

guide."

 

Karoitoh went through the file several times, first very quickly,

grunting now and then.  The second round was more selective as he

magnified certain scenes, like the enclosed valleys, which caught his

attention.  Zainal had had Baxter take shots of the new Farmer equipment

in the garage and then in action.  There were also shots of the units,

which the settlers had made of the original equipment.

 

Kris noticed it about the time that Chuck must have because the

sergeant's eyes made contact with her.  In no shot did Zainal actually

show the geographical location of either the original installations or

the current ones.  Nor any details that might have given their positions

away.  Kris wondered if this was intentional.  Zainal had said that he

trusted Kamiton.

 

' How far?That was when Kris began to fret over the possibility that

Kami-was actually a spy for the Eosians.

 

Then Chuck tapped her on the arm.  "Your shift, Kris;' He also gave her

a nod to reassure her that he would remain.  And that he was still

assessing this new recruit.

 

Kris glanced at the timepiece on the wall.  "The time has just flown,

"she said inanely.  Then pushed herself around the table, which also

momentarily displacing Kamiton from his position.

 

"I think the Cat's okay," Gino said when he came forward an hour later.

He'd brought her a cup of herbal tea.  He had one as well as he slipped

in the pilot's seat and absendy ran his eyes over the panel lights.  "So

do Coo and Pess, and they'd have more to go by than any of us.  'Sides

which, I can't imagine Zainal risking any chance of aborting phase

three.  then wriggled his fingers in a characteristic stretch of his

hands over the control panel.  "Got a course correction to make soon."

He leaned slightly to the left to peer at the rearview screen.  "Nary a

sign of pursuit either.  Hope the others are okay." And doubt crept into

the pilot's voice.

 

"So far Zainal's been right..." Kris said loyally.

 

"You only need to be wrong once," Gino said.

 

"For Pete's sweet sake, you sound like Balenquah."

 

Gino sat up straighter in the chair.  "Kindly keep your insults to

yourself, young woman," he said.  "To begin with I'm a much better pilot

than that idiot ever was."

 

"Sorry," Kris said, feigning meekness.

 

Gino had his eyes on the timepiece now and, toggling up the course

correction made it with swift movements of his agile fingers.  "There

now.

 

We should be home in next to no time."

 

"Really?"

 

"As the man said, that asteroid jumble wasn't all that far from where

Botany is after all."

 

GINO'S WORDS WERE TRUE enough for they made it home just as the watch

changed.  Before that, however, Zainal and Gino had done the computation

to find which window was the best one to take, avoiding the thirty-hour

satellite.  They had three and Zainal decided to use the one that would

bring them in just "beyond" the range of the geo-synchronous, older one

while the thirty-hour sat was on the other side of the Bubble.

 

By mutual consent, Kamiton was allowed to take the second seat so he

could have the best view of the Bubble and the insertion.  He sat, arms

folded across his chest in best Catteni mode, and watched, his keen

yellow eyes missing nothing.  Zainal had indicated that Kris and Gino

should remain in the cabin.  The others were detailed to rig the ship

for landing and check the cargo restraints.  There was always some

buffeting as they entered the atmospheric envelope of Botany.

 

Zainal altered one view screen to show Kamiton the Eosian arrays still

stuck in the Bubble at that point of exit.  Karoitoh snorted, then

apparently gestured for Zainal to turn the screens on the Bubble.  He

seemed surprised when Zainal slowed to penetration speed.  They almost

popped through like a pea coming out of a pod, Kris thought.  She gave a

nostalgic Peas were so good, fresh out of the pod.  Maybe someone would

have thought to bring back some Earth-type seeds to experiment on

Botanic soil.

 

She hoped so, and that peas were among them.

 

They slipped easily through the Bubble's skin, and Kamiton rumbled a

request for a rear screen view.  Of course, there was absolutely no

indication that a large ship, with arrays of all the same sorts that had

been ripped off the Eosian vessel, had passed through it.

 

Then Kamiton saw Botany, the largest of the continents in full view,

though clouds were obscuring the seas and the other landmasses.  His

eyes opened wide.  He said nothing but the crisp nod of his head was

approval enough for Gino and Kris who grinned at each other.

 

Zainal did the necessary orbits, pointing out the original continent

they had inhabited, also the half-desert one they had partially

explored, barely visible under cloud cover.  Then at a much lower

altitude, he did a flyby of the command post, magnifying the screen

sufficiently so that Kamiton could identify that this was an alien

structure.

 

They flew on, low enough over the neatly cultivated fields to show

Kamiton a few Farmer mechs at work, spraying in one case, harvesting in

mother.  Again that sharp Catteni nod to indicate Kamiton had noticed.

 

Almost at a glideonserving fuel had become second nature to all the

pilots--Zainal took the KDL across the narrow sea and up to the landing

field.

 

"God in heaven, what's happened?" Gino cried.

 

Zainal snapped on the intercom.  "Scott?  Beverly?  Someone.  Landing

mstructons.

 

"Five, I count five," Kris said, her voice rising in a squeak.  "We've

been invaded?"

 

"Welcome back, Zainal," and Scott's voice was far too vibrantly

triumphant for the extra three ships to be menaces.

 

Suddenly Zainal began to swear in Catteni, only a litfie of which Kris

understood but it had to do with boiling and eating and other usually

fatal applications.  Karoitoh was roaring his head off, laughing and

whooping in such uncharacteristically Catteni behavior that Kris and

Gino were both grinning, too.  Kris couldn't quite understand his angry

reaction: after all, he was the one who proposed the acquisition of

Catteni spaceships.

 

Zainal was definitely not amused and continued to growl out his fury all

through the landing procedures.  As soon as he put the KDL down, to one

side of the now crowded field, he jerked his head at Gino to power the

ship down.  He brushed past Kris who was considering what options she

had of cooling him off before he did something that would really put the

cat among the pigeons.  She slipped in ahead of Kamiton who was nearly

staggering with laughter down the companionway to the hatch.  Zainal

didn't wait for the landing ramp.  He jumped to the ground and started

looking about for someone to holler at.

 

The other ships could not have been there very long, because two were

still unloading groggy passengers or cargo or both.  The passengers were

enough of a surprise all on their own because Kris recognized the

unmistakable lanky figures of black Maasai, with their long hair and

distinctive garb.  She missed the customary spears and shields that

she'd seen them carry in the documentaries and news reports during the

African famine.

 

Cargo was being unloaded, boxes and crates and larger items that

required the use of a quickly constructed hoist told her that the

mission, however increased, had been very successful.

 

"AH!  SCOTT!" And Zainal had seen his victim and turned in that

direction.

 

Halfway up the field, Ray Scott acknowledged that shout with a wave and

the most cheerful expression Kris had ever seen on the ex-admiral's

face.

 

She groaned at the thought of that dissipating when Zainal confronted

him.  Standing in the now fully open cargo hatch of the KDL, she began

to semaphore her arms, trying to catch Ray's attention.  Just warning

him might help.

 

There was nothing wrong with the ex-admiral's eyesight, and he caught

her frenzied signal.  His smile began to fade as Zainal closed the

distance between them.  Even Zanal s back looked angry, Kris thought. He

was in a towering rage and even Kris could understand why other species

were afraid of Catteni.  What she couldn't understand was why he'd be so

angry at what seemed to be a very successful undertaking.

 

He was confronting Scott, waving arms and fists about, pointing from one

of the newly captured ships to the other.  Two were as big as the

H-class, which had kidnapped her from Denver ages ago.  The other was

another new K-class.  One way or another, Botany was assembling a

substantial space fleet.  So why was Zainal so put out?

 

Karoiron had disembarked the KDL, Chuck Mitford and Gino Mar-rucci

acting as guides as well as sponsors.  Mack was following at a more

leisurely pace, taking in all the activity and the new arrivals, Human

as well as material.  The busy stevedores didn't even give Kamiton a

second look.

 

Kris ran to catch up with Zainal and caught the last of Zainal's

diatribe, so well interspersed with more Catteni curses and allegations,

that Ray looked so stunned Kris could almost feel sorry for him.

 

Abruptly Ray Scott began to chuckle.  "You taught us how, Zainal.

 

Dont btch at m when we had a chance to improve on your tactics and save

a lot of people the Eosi want badly."

 

"One ship at a time would not be missed," Zainal began again, his voice

harsh, his manner so belligerent he looked more Drassi than Emassi.

 

"These all went unnoticed, too, Zainal," Ray said, calmly, suavely

defusing the unexpected anger Zainal displayed.  "And who is this you

have brought?"

 

If there was an edge that approximated disapproval in Ray's voice, Kris

could hardly blame him as he now caught the approach of Kamiton and his

guides.

 

But evidently Zainal had spent most of his anger.  With a definite

effort, he contained himself, taking a deep breath.  Looking over his

shoulder, he saw how close Kamiton and the others were.  He also turned

his head just far enough to take in the anxious expression on Kris'

face.  Suddenly, the gray of his skin lightened and, with a massive

shake to his whole body, he relaxed, gesturing for Kamiton to approach.

 

"Admiral Ray Scott, this is Emassi Kamiton, a friend for many years and

one as committed to removing the Eosi domination as I am." Zainal let

the two men shake hands--he'd mentioned that custom to Kamiton since

Catten/rarely touched in cordiality--and Ray did not wince at the grip

Kamiton produced.

 

"You are welcome, Emassi," Scott said in Catten/, with a slight grin

when he noticed Kamiton's surprise.  "Most of us can speak a little

Cat-ten...

 

these days.  Come, join us, you, too, Kris, Chuck, Gino.  We can debrief

in turns." He added the last in English.  "Report, I meant to say," he

put in, remembering the Catten/words.

 

Kamiton was looking around with great interest, especially at some of

the unusual people who were being helped out of one big H-class.

 

"We've almost doubled our population again," Ray said, gesturing for

them all to go up to the hangar and his office.  "Later, Emassi Kamiton,

it will be my pleasure to introduce you to the leaders of our colony."

 

As they entered the hanger, Kris saw Baby already ensconced, her hatch

wide open.  How had they managed to get pilots enough for three more

ships?  The KDM had had Laughrey as a second pilot and Boris with Raisha

on Baby, and Ricky Farmer, maybe that's how they did it.  She shook her

head.  But none of them, except Laughrey who'd captained Concordes,

would have any experience with such big vessels, which would also

require a minimum crew.

 

"Kris..." and obviously Ray Scott was calling for her attention a second

time, "there's coffee over there," he said with a broad grin.  "And even

some reasonably fresh milk."

 

"WHAT?"

 

That shook her out of her introspection.

 

"COFFEE?"

 

G/no and Chuck reached the serving table almost as soon as she did.

 

Chuck inhaled the aroma, eyes closed in ecstasy.

 

"I'll take a fresh cup, Kris," Scott said as he gestured the two Catten/

to the chairs around the long table.

 

"Maybe a cup of coffee'll help settle Zainal, too," Chuck murmured to

her as she poured for them all.  His eyes were twinkling but his

expression was sober.  "I don't ever want him to get that mad at me, and

I've been chewed out by experts."

 

"You?" Gino said, trying to ease the tension he felt in the atmosphere.

 

"Sugar as well, Ray?" Kris called out, noticing the large package of it

open on the table.

 

"Two," Scott answered and she wondered just how much sugar had been

acquired.

 

Without even an apologetic look on his face, Chuck used three spoonfuls

but no milk.  Kris was still deliberating what to add to the two cups

destined for the Catteni when Chuck splashed in both sugar and milk,

stirring vigorously.

 

"They can always try it pure later," he said.  "This is real army

coffee."

 

He took three cups as deftly as Kris did while Gino, eyes glinting with

amusement, carried his and Scott's over to the table.

 

"See if you like it, Zainal," Chuck said at his most affable in trying

to placate Zainal's still visible anger.  He spoke in Catteni but when

he went on, he had to use the English words where there were no

equivalents even in Barevi.  "Army can't move without coffee, nor the

navy."

 

"It is a pleasure for us all," Scott said, also in Catteni.  Then he

blew on the surface of his coffee before sipping judiciously.  As the

other Humans were following that example, so did Zainal and Kamiton.

Then Scott dropped into English.  "First thing Sandy Areson off-loaded

was a huge pot of brew and doled it out.  I got that pitcher and two

refills.  I think she'll be brewing for the rest of the day, we're all

so eager for the taste of it.  Boxes of tea as well, so Ainger's happy."

 

"How much coffee did she bring in?" Chuck asked hopefully.

 

"Sacks full, though not all may be as fresh as this," Ray said before he

switched to Catten.  "I don't think the Catteni;' and he nodded

graciously at Kamiton, "realized..." and he made gestures of grinding

with his two hands, "that the beans have to be ground to be useful."

 

"Sort of like potatoes when Sir Walter gave them to Queen Elizabeth,"

Kris said, slipping in the remark to allow Zainal more time to regain

his usual dignity.

 

"Now, let me explain to you, Zainal, Kamiton, about the three ships,"

Ray said, sitting forward but keeping both hands on his coffee cup.

 

"I listen," Zainal said in a firm voice and sipped again at his coffee.

 

Kamiton did, too, rolling the liquid in his mouth and savoring it.

 

"Neither of the two ships we sent on this reconnaissance of Earth had

any trouble with their ID's or traveling.  As you said, Zainal,

Catten/ships are moving about without any restrictions at all.  All

right, all right, that might change because of what happened next," Ray

intercepted Zainal's objections.

 

"But considering how easy it all was to take over three more, I doubt

they will be missed."

 

"They will not be missed," Karoiron said, having followed Ray's somewhat

basic Catteni even with the ex-admiral's atrocious accent.  He grinned

broadly.  "Everyone is too busy taking valuables and loading cargo

drones.

 

Those who are assigned to the Eosi do not have the same freedom, but

those, as you know, Zainal, are the chosen few!" Kamiton's smile was a

mixture of contempt and condescension.

 

"Matt Su and Vic Yowell managed to find an unused channel on the

communications band and kept in contact with our scout ship."Then Ray

rubbed his forehead and, with an apologetic nod at Kamiton, asked Zainal

to translate to Kamiton while he resorted to English.  "That proved

extremely useful because once Raisha and Boris saw what had been done to

St.  Petersburg, they were so shattered it took hours for Bull Fetterman

and Lenny to talk them back into action." Ray paused briefly.  'I'll say

this for them, once they got over their initial shock, they really

showed the stuff they're made of.  By then, the KDM had realized how

easy it was to get in and out of any major Catteni landing field and

were reconnoitering." He sighed heavily.  "Not much is left of the major

world capitol cities, except the ones that don't look big enough to be

important.  After the KDM dropped off Basil Whitby and Leila in England,

they let Sandy off in what had been the Boston-Cambridge area, and Joe

Latore in upper New Jersey.

 

the KDM proceeded, as planned, to Houston and the big Cat-1osi

installation there.

 

"That's when they had the chance to take over the two H-class ships.

 

The H's had just been loaded with more folks and were headed to one of

the mining planets.  Matt Su pretended to be in command and reassigned

'Bert Put and John Beverly as the new Drassi officers in charge of the

newly acquired HTS.  It was loaded but had only two crewmen on board so

they · were easily fooled into believing a change in command..."

 

Zainal actually grinned.  "Perhaps it wasn't a bad idea, after all."

 

"No, because John Beverly knew where some air force personnel might into

hiding.  And they were.  So that didn't leave just two fake Cat-teni to

manage that big mother.  They aren't that difficult to operate but some

crew had to be used.  Beverly got to the hideout--but he had a bit of a

problem, dressed as a Catteni until he wiped off part of the makeup and

recognized one or two officers he knew.  After that, they had enough to

crew half a dozen more ships;' Ray chuckled at the startied look on

Zainal's face.

 

Kamiton grinned, shaking his head at the audacity.

 

"We also now have NASA ground crew personnel who'll know how to service

the ships;' and Ray was obviously relieved about that aspect.

"BevLaughrey and two more experienced Hercules pilots back with him to

the Houston facility in the H's shuttle and enough men to crew a second

H-ship;' Ray paused, noticed that his cup was empty.  Chuck rose, took

it, and went to fill both.  "That's when we got the African contingent.

 

Even the Hutus and Tutsies resented Catteni interference with their

little joined forces against the Gray Men.  We've Maasai, Luo, and

Kikuyo :and evidently a smattering of Tuareg and Zulu.  The Catteni took

savage all across Africa."

 

"So I also heard;' Kamiton put in.

 

Over at the coffee table, Chuck murmured to Kris: "He's laughed once.

Relax." As he poured coffee from the large botde, he inhaled the aroma

with a look of pure pleasure on his face that Kris had recently seen, in

much different circumstances.  Fortunately he didn't see her blushing.

 

"And the K-class?  Three spaceships disappearing from the same area

would arouse suspicion," Zainal said bluntly.

 

"No, the K was Joe Latore's contribution to our growing navy," Ray said.

"He found a lot of people hiding out in the forests in New Jersey, and

they told him about all the ships they'd seen coming and going from

what's left of New York City.  He organized a bunch to go have a look.

Had enough volunteers to make an army but kept it to a sensible force.

Lots of people have rifles and small arms, you see.  Have to hunt to

live.  They got to the city via the Lincoln Tunnel."

 

"The tunnel?" Chuck asked, exchanging surprised looks with Kris and

Gino.

 

"Well, all the bridges were gone, and the Holland, but debris from the

old Port Authority hid the entrance to the Lincoln and evidently the

Cat-teni hadn't noticed the New Jersey entry.  Can't get vehicles

through the ones already stuck there.  Some folks are using them to camp

out in: those who got stuck there when the Catteni hit the city.  Joe

said they nearly caused a landslide getting through the debris on

Fortieth Street and that didn't make them popular with the refugees.

But..." and Scott shrugged off that complaint.

 

"According to the tunnel people, Central Park was a prime landing and

loading area.  So Joe and his group started up Eleventh Avenue toward

the park.  When Joe saw the K-class parked on top of the Cunard building

at Fifty-fourth Street, he decided to take a closer look.  It was fully

loaded and the crew drunk out of its tiny minds on champagne;' Ray

grinned.  "By the way, Catteni do not know how to swim."

 

When Zainal translated that, Kamiton gave another of his bursts of

laughter.  Even Zainal had a grin on his face.

 

"So no one's going to miss that K right away.  It was only a matter of

getting in touch with the KDL.  General Beverly sent his shuttle with a

couple of air force Hercules pilots and enough crew to handle her.  Joe

brought as many folks back as possible and promised to lift more when he

could." Scott sighed.

 

Not, Kris thought, that he didn't blame Joe for promising, but because

it might be difficult to honor it.

 

"Were proper precautions taken to avoid the thirty-hour satellite?"

 

Zainal asked in English.

 

"Hid behind the moons until they got the olley-olley-in-free," Ray Scott

said with a boyish grin in keeping with the hide-and-seek password.

 

"The what?" Zainal glanced at Kris for explanation.  She was relieved to

see that his eyes were back to a normal shade of yellow and that the

tension in his face muscles had dispersed.

 

"A children's game word.  Quite appropriate."

 

"But how did the new vessels pass the Bubble?" Zainal asked, frown ing.

 

Ray gave a flick of one hand to indicate the ease of that operation.

 

"Baby brought one H-class in, using the same trick you did, Zainal, with

a magnetic linkage.  Then the KDL piggybacked the other two the same way

when the coast looked clear of surveillance:'

 

Zainal blinked.  "Piggybacked?  More children's games?" he asked, with a

weary but tolerant sigh.

 

"As far as we know, before they got through the Bubble;' Ray went on,

filled cup raised in both hands, "no alarms were heard on any of the

Cat-teni channels.  If they haven't missed the ships in nearly three

weeks, will they ever?" Then he took a long drink of coffee.

 

Zainal repeated that in Catteni to Kamiton, then stood up with his empty

cup in his hand, and silently held out the other for Kamiton's.

 

"It is refreshing to drink;' Karoiron said, handing the cup over but he

followed Zainal's progress to the service table to refill their cups

while answering Ray in Catteni.

 

"I doubt even the Eosi know how many ships they have in the fleet.  The

shipyards keep building them," and Karoitoh shrugged his heavy shoulders

diffidently.  "The ships not to touch are those used only by the Eosi.

They are distinctively marked and no one enters who does not have to:'

 

"I can easily understand that;' Ray said with a grin.  Then, as Zainal

returned with the refilled cups, he leaned across the table toward them.

"But would not they be the very ships we'd need to hijack if you," and

he pointed at both Zainal and Kamiton, "want to be rid of Eosian

domination?"

 

Chuck grinned though, Gino, for a moment, looked apprehensive.

 

"There are at least one hundred Eosi," Kamiton said.  "That is one

hundred ships to destroy and you have...  how many now?  Six?"

 

"It's "

 

a start, Ray said, grinning slightly.  "Are you also with us in our

fight against Eosian domination?" When Kamiton nodded slowly, he added.

 

"Are there any more at home like you?"

 

"There are," Kamiton said firmly and soberly.  Now he leaned forward

across the table.  "We must plan.  It will not be easy."

 

"What is worth having never is," Ray Scott said.  "Now, it's your turn,

Zainal," and he continued in Catteni, "tikso."

 

ZAINAL "REPORTED" IN THE SAME LANGUAGE, although occasionally Ray had to

ask for a translation.  He chuckled over the asteroid belt deception.

 

"Well done, well done," Ray said, rubbing his hands together.

 

"We cannot make mistakes, Ray," Zainal said as if he could see Scott

planning all kinds of hijacking missions that would eventually be

noticed: perhaps even traced to Botany.

 

"There is one Mentat, the Ix?  Kamiton said, glancing at Zainal with a

significant nod, "who is certain you all," and his large finger circled

the table, "are responsible for every disaster that has occurred

recently.  You realize that a moon base is being constructed to keep

watch over you."

 

Ray nodded.  "We know, which is one reason why we are using the south

polar windows."

 

"Good." Kamiton hitched his chair forward, the wood creaking under his

weight.  He glanced down at it, shifted experimentally, and then ignored

the occasional noises.

 

Kris really did hope that the chair, though made of lodge-pole wood, was

sturdy enough for the heavily built Catten.

 

"The Mentat Ix has had one seizure..."

 

"Seizure?" Zainal came alert.

 

Karoitoh nodded, grinning.  "Interesting, isn't it?  The Immortals have

a weakness.

 

.  We must discover how we can use them to our benefit."

 

"Tactically," Ray said, showing appreciation for that information, "its

always smart to get your enemy to destroy himself...  if you possibly

can.

 

"No species' injury;' Chuck said with great satisfaction.  "Only how do

we do it?  One of them losing his cool doesn't mean we'd be able to get

to the minds of the others." He cocked his forefinger and clicked his

toung making his hand into an imaginary weapon.

 

"A seizure in a Mentat has never happened before," KaroitOh said.

 

sitting back and folding his arms across his chest.

 

"No, it has not;' Zainal said, then switched to English, addressing the

"The significance of such an occurrence wouldn't mean as much to as it

does to us;' and he turned back to Kamiton.  "I would like to know why I

heard nothing of that on Catten," he added in Catteni.

 

"Nor would you," Kamiton said in a droll tone.  "But I know of it as

well.  The Bubble frustrates Mentat Ix.  Total annihilation of this

planet is required as retaliation for the humiliation suffered by Ix."

 

"But this Ix fellow can't get past the Bubble and we know he, it,

what-has tried;' Ray Scott said smugly.

 

"Necessity is the mother of invention," Gino reminded them pointedly.

 

Zainal translated to Kamiton.

 

"Have you heard if their brain-wiping of Human specialists has given

help?" Ray asked.

 

"We know that it was done," Kamiton said.  "We are trying to find out if

any worthwhile information was discovered.  More importantly, if any

projects have been started.  Not so far as I know:' And Kamiton's

attitude was that if anyone would know, he would.

 

"I think that the Eosi," Ray said slowly but with a glint of

satisfaction in his eyes, "have underestimated Humans."

 

Kamiton smiled.  "They have and it gives us," and his thick thumb chest,

signifying his group of dissidents, "immense satisfaction.

 

And hope.  How best may I serve you, Emassi?" Kamiton bent his head

toward Ray in an unexpected gesture of compliance.

 

"My rank was admiral, Emassi Kamiton," Ray said, with a grin.  "And it

looks likely that I may resume it.  We'll have to consider how best to

use your services.  Welcome aboard." Then he stood up and turned to

Zainal.

 

"I think that perhaps it would be wise if you all," and he gestured to

include Gino and Chuck, "escort KaroitOh up to the hall and make sure

everyone knows he's on our side.  I'll see how soon we can schedule a

tactical conference, but right now, unloading and the disposition of our

latest arrivals takes precedence."

 

Kris was on her feet.  "And I have a son to see:' Clearly it was safe

for her to leave now that Zainal was himself again.  And she was

suddenly overcome with the urge to see Zane.

 

"Take my runabout, Kris," Ray said expansively.  "I've got reports to

write while all this is fresh in my mind."

 

Chapter Six.

 

ZANE WAS SO INVOLVED, PLAYING WITH others his age, giggling outrageously

over something they found funny that she stood and watched, drinking in

the sight of him.

 

Suddenly they went dead quiet, eyes wide open and staring.  One of the

little girls whimpered in fright but was instantly comforted by Sarah

McDouall, one of the carets on duty at the crlche.

 

"Great heavens, where did they come from?"

 

she said, her voice part surprise and part reassurance.

 

Kris turned and saw a line of the tall thin Maasai men and women

striding up the hill.

 

They had not been outfitted with the customary Catteni coverails,

possibly because the Catteni hadn't made any that size before, so they

wore the tatters of their traditional garb.  And were as proud and

dignified as she remembered seeing them in occasional news broadcasts

when there had been that awful drought in Africa and Bob Geldof had

started Band Aid.

 

The size of Maasai would intimidate more than two- and three-year-olds.

 

"How come you're leading the Maasai, Bart?" Kris asked, noticing him in

the front, almost lost among the tall folk.

 

"They seem to trust me.  Now a few smiles wouldn't go amiss right now/'

Bart Tom/said firmly and immediately everyone complied, waving as well.

"Hassan says 'Jambo' is a greeting.  Can we have a chorus from you all?"

 

Everyone obediently repeated the greeting.  The Maasai beside Bart

looked surprised, eyebrows ascending up his wrinkled forehead but he

stopped.  So did the others behind him.

 

Abruptly Sarah brought the child she was holding closer, waving its arm

as she did so.  The transformation of the Maasai from surprise to

delight was amazing.  They all smiled now, at the children, rather than

the adults.

 

The leader came right up to the playground, the picket fencing not as

high as his knees, grinning broadly and saying something that Kris heard

as "kasserianingera?"

 

Sarah held out the little girl's hand to the man.  Smiling with very

white teeth and bending his tall frame down to her level, he very gently

touched her fingers, so gently that the child, wide-eyed though she was,

did not withdraw.

 

The Maasai nodded and stepped back, then smiled at all the children.

 

Behind him, the rest of his tribe, if that's who they were, nodded and

smiled and murmured their response of "jambo."

 

"Good, good," Bart said.  "That's the first any of them have reacted at

all."

 

"I'd heard/' Sarah said, "that they love children.  And cattle.  Our

loo-cows are going to give them quite a shock."

 

The little girl had a grin hovering on her lips, but she burrowed her

head into Sarah's shoulder, peeking coyly at the tall man.  But the

break occurred and a ripple of soft words went down the line.  The sai

all had smiles now and strode forward more cheerfully.

 

Bart pointed toward the hall.  Then, looking down at a strip of paper [n

his hand added in Swahili.  "Hapa chakula kizuri!  Get me?"

 

"Ndio, ndio," the leader said, nodding and looking around to gesture for

the progress to continue.  "Hapa chakula kizuri!" He repeated the same

words Bart had used but with the proper inflections, and the Maasai

behind grinned and nodded.

 

"So much for Hassan's instant Swahili lessons," Bart said, grinning as

he stuffed his paper back into a thigh pocket.

 

At that moment, Zane came running towards Kris, arms outstretched to be

picked up.  "Mommy, mommy, mommy."

 

She was only too glad to collect him and hug him tightly and kiss him

over.  Then she took his arm, turned, and had him waving at the Maasai

flowed by in their long striding gait.

 

"Mommy?" Zane whispered in her ear, his eyes wide.

 

"These are good people, Zane."

 

"Not Deski, not Rugars..."

 

"No, Maasai."

 

"Massssi."

 

"Maas--ai," she corrected him and he got it right.

 

"Has a quick ear, this one," Sarah said.  "Have a good trip?"

 

Kris chuckled, thinking of some of the elements she was not going to

mention.  "Mind you, all we brought back was a dissident Catteni which

isnt much against the increase in Botany's fleet...

 

"Dissident Catteni?" Sarah made round eyes at that.  "Do tell!"

 

"Didn't you see him go up to the hall with Zainal a few minutes back?"

 

"Can't say as I did.  But then, I can't say as I knew of any Catteni

disSidents either:' Sarah grinned.  "Nice to know we might have inside

help, we?"

 

"Tell you later:'

 

"Over lunch perhaps?" Sarah said, her eyes sparkling with curiosity.

 

"If you share what you've heard that I haven't had time to find out."

 

"Good.  It's nearly lunchtime and sandwiches are all made.  LUNCHTIME/'

Sarah called.

 

Out the window of the crche dining room, they saw the procession of what

Sarah called the "repossessed," mainly Africans, but some whites, and

their nationality not so obvious as they had been given Catteni

cover-alls.

 

"Not so many injured either," Kris remarked.

 

"We did the unloading," Sarah said, "and wait 'til you see what else we

got."

 

"Zainal came back with equipment as well," Kris said.  "But it got

loaded in such a hurry I don't know what all he acquired."

 

"Did you see much of the planet?" Sarah asked, as others joined their

table, eager to hear of Kris' adventures.

 

Kris shook her head, breaking a piece off her own sandwich, which Zane

evidently preferred to what was on his plate.  "The gravity damned near

wore me out.  I stayed on board and answered the com unit.  My

Cat-teni's good enough for that but I don't look the part.  And I sure

couldn't operate in that gravity!  Chuck did all the fronting for us.

I'll tell you one thing for sure, I was awful glad to lift off safely."

Then she laughed.  "We ended up in an asteroid belt and whatever created

it must have been one hel-luvan explosion."

 

She told them the ruse they'd used so that the space station hadn't

wanted them to land there, which would have meant handling more

formalities than was wise.  So they'd got to land on the surface of the

planet, far enough away from any settlement so that their "faulty"

systems would cause no damage.  "And we sure were sent to the boondocks.

!  did see the Rassi and they are..." she gave a shudder, "really little

more than animals.

 

You can't call them morons or retarded because they don't have much

intelligence at all.  They copy what they are shown to do and even that

has to be repeated over and over.  But Zainal and the others got into

the main city and made contact with Kamiton."

 

She could relate the deception about having to off-load an extremely ore

cargo, which is why they came back via the asteroid belt, and could get

back to Catten if they wished.

 

"So what's this Kamiton doing here?" Sarah wanted to know.

 

"Seeing's believing, isn't it?" Kris replied.

 

"And if he likes what he sees, he brings in more dissidents?" asked

another woman.  Belatedly Kris recognised her as Jane O'Hanlan, the TV

reporter been one of those rescued from Barevi in a mindless state.

 

"You've recovered!" Kris exclaimed.

 

Jane gave a rueful smile.  "I'm improving.  Many are.  Dorothy Dwardie's

-been marvelous;'

 

"Indeed she has," Sally Stoffer said, as she wiped cereal off a baby's

face.

 

"I'm practically out of my job there."

 

!

 

"Really?"

 

"Seventy-five percent have recovered enough to function on their own

now, to talk and help out.  We've been busy while you were gone."

 

"I don't doubt that for a moment," Kris said.  "But boy-oh-boy, am I

glad to be home.

 

"Daddy, daddy," Zane cried excitedly just then, and Kris looked up to

"see Zainal and Kamiton in the doorway.  "'Scuse;' Zane said in Sarah's

direction and ran up to his father, squealing in excitement when Zainal

swung him up.

 

"Watch out, Zainal, he's just had lunch," Kris cried.

 

Obediently, Zainal positioned Zane on his back while Kamiton looked on

in amused condescension at the sight of a paternally occupied Zainal.

 

LATER Kris heard all about the resetdement of the Maasai from Sarah at

dinner in the hall.  Zainal had taken Zane off for an evening walk and

talk.

 

Zainal was also teaching Zane Catteni, and if Kris was there, he

preferred to jabber away in English, which defeated the purpose.

 

"Well, I did do some work in the outback with Aborigines, so they

guessed I, and Joe, might be able to help;' Sarah said in her

matter-of-fact way.  "Problem is that the Maasai're used to a totally

different lifestyle, which was getting ruined in Africa even before the

Cat .  . . Eosi hit Earth."

 

"I remember the famine there in the eighties," Kris said.

 

"So they won't be happy up here but Chuck thinks that the southern end

of this continent might do, where we found semi-desert."

 

"Why not the desert continent?"

 

"Maybe, in time, but right now, that'll keep them in a more or less

familiar terrain.  Oh, and you should have seen their faces when we

showed them the loo-cows!" Sarah laughed.  "They couldn't believe 'era

and they wouldn't believe that the critters don't give milk until one

was captured for inspection."

 

"What about night crawlers?  As !  recall it, the Maasai are nomadic,

looking for grazing for their...  cattle.  Will loo-cows do for them?

And they have huts or kraals...  or something like 'em to live in."

 

"Well, tonight's the big demo on night crawlers and all the newbies are

going to have to attend," Sarah said with a certain amount of grimness.

"We gotta get that lesson across."

 

"What about using some of the closed valleys?" Kris asked.

 

"That's another solution but nothing to hunt and they don't like fish.

 

But you should have seen them looking at all the plants, grass, and

stuff we wouldn't think twice about.  Hassan was damned near tongue-tied

translating for my Joe and the other herbalists..."

 

"It'd be helpful if there just happened to be a book on Swahili in that

latest shipment..." Kris thought, remembering the crates of books she'd

seen being transported to Retreat's library.

 

Sarah gave a snort.  "They're rummaging through 'em right now. Has-san's

running out of useful vocabulary."

 

"That'll be a first," Kris said with a grin.  The former Israeli spy was

the chatty sort at any time.

 

"Let's see what they got in.  I'd love a good juicy murder mystery to

read;' Sarah said.

 

"With this new lot in, how'll you find time?"

 

'I'll make it;' was Sarah's firm reply.  Then she sighed again.  "I have

missed reading, I really have."

 

"That's because you weren't rescued from two college survey courses with

required reading lists this long/' and held her hand out at about four

feet above the flagstones of the hall.

 

"So this," and Sarah gestured ironically around, "is a much better way

to spend your time." Before Kris could open her mouth to answer, Sarah

added, "Actually, college would be pretty dull in comparison."

 

"Prof, do I get an A in this survival course?"

 

"Too right," Sarah said and they both rose, taking their dishes back to

the window that led to the KP section of the dining hall.

 

WHEN THEY REACHED THE STRUCTURE, they found only Dorothy Dwardie

unpacking and shelving books.

 

"Oh, good, some help.  I've found the most astonishingly eclectic...

 

texts here.  !  can't imagine how all these books got in the same case

together;' and she showed them the ones in her hand.

 

"Post-Renaissance Painters?" Sarah said, reading one title.

 

"How the Grinch Stole Christmas?" Kris read the second title and took it

from Dorothy, leating through the colorful illustrated pages.  "We may

not have Christmas here, but I'm sure glad to see some good children's

books.

 

Can we help?"

 

"Yes, please/' Dorothy said and pointed over behind her.

 

Cases had been stacked three and four high all the way back to the

tarpaulin that covered the end of the present library and the addition

under construction.  Aisles allowed access to the cases.

 

"Marian, the librarian," Sarah began in a sing-song voice, "where's the

mystery section?"

 

"Now that's a mystery to me," Dorothy replied, rising to her feet with

an effort.  "Have at it.  I can't promise there will be any.  I'm

cataloging as I go along and thank God for more computers.  Otherwise

we'll never know how much we've got."

 

"You're not doing it all yourself, are you?"

 

"Well, I'm supposed to get some help shelving/' she said.  "We had some

Victims in here this morning and I think it's helping them remember some

of the basic skills they once had."

 

"What're you looking for?"

 

"Anything, everything.  Dr.  Seuss for the children ranks in my eyes as

a far greater treasure than anything Post-Renaissance.  Though I've

nothing against painters at all."

 

"Actually, light classics that we can read to the Victims: even Westerns

or a good mystery story."

 

"Gotcha," Sarah said and closing her eyes, she turned herself around and

pointed.  When she opened them, her finger directed her to one of the

side aisles.  "C'mon, Kris."

 

Kris was still chuckling at Sarah's whimsical manner of choosing when

they heaved a crate to the ground and opened it.

 

"Lord love us, how're we going to sort this mess out?" she said looking

at the tumbled collection: books with spines bent and pages crumbled,

all heaped together.  A few loose pages only added to the tribulations

of transfer.

 

"By starting at the top and working down.  I'll get a few of those

shelves over here/' Kris suggested, going over to one side where she'd

seen the empty shelving, "and separate as we go."

 

"Good thinking/' and Sarah sat herself down and started pulling out

books.

 

However, they had "unerringly," as Sarah remarked, migrated to a whole

case full of mysteries and romances.  Their conscientious efforts to

perform their assigned task were interrupted by seeing books they either

recognized or titles that looked interesting.

 

"A new Hillerman," Sarah crowed and settled against the back of the

crate, shamelessly reading her find.  "I'll just read a few pages..."

 

Kris worked more diligently but not much longer because she found an

Elizabeth Peters' Amelia yarn and she, too, couldn't resist reading

"just a few pages..."

 

"Ah, Doctor Hessian, have you come to help shelve books?"They both heard

Dorothy say.

 

When Kris would have moved guiltily back to unpacking, Sarah grabbed her

arm and whispered at her.

 

"No, let's just listen," Sarah said in a very low voice.  "Dorothy's

been trying to pin him down since he got his mind back.  He wants all

the Victims to undergo proper Freudian sessions.  He feels that he

should be in charge of the treatment team, not Dorothy."

 

"Are you Miss Dwardie ..."

 

"Doctor Dwardie, Doctor Hessian;' Dorothy replied calmly but there was a

slight edge to her voice that alerted both Kris and Sarah.  Kris wouk

have risen but Sarah grabbed her by the arm, pressing her back against

the crate.

 

"You've made a remarkable recovery;' said Dorothy with apparent plea

sure.

 

Sounds like "grumph grumph" and an audible "be that as it may" seemed to

indicate that this Dr.  Hessian was not in complete accord.  His raspy

baritone gave Kris a mental image of a portly man of advanced years,

probably balding, overweight, and overbearing.

 

"I was told that there had been new additions to the library and wished

to avail myself of some suitable reading material."

 

"Oh.> Were you not also told that your help in cataloging our new

shipment would be sincerely appreciated?"

 

"Shelving?  Books?" was the pompous and astonished reply.  Kris thought

he sounded remarkably like Lady Bracknell in The Importance of Being

Earnest, declaiming: "Handbag?  Station?"