Servers had started to carry in platters of steaming food. The mayor motioned them toward him. "Let our guests eat first." The food looked and smelled good. Morgan and Holt showed no reluctance to dish themselves respectable portions of steaks, biscuits and vegetables.

"As we share this food today"-Mayor MacDonald lifted his arms to gesture around the circle of frescoes-"I hope you"ll all reflect for just a moment on our four centuries of hard-fought progress on this world. Our ancestors left their friends, sometimes their families, certainly their worlds and indeed their entire human civilization to seek out this planetary system. Our new worlds were remote from the interference and paternalism of the old order." The mayor looked far above them all, focusing on something invisible. "I think we"ve done well with our self-generated opportunities." He looked back at them then, meeting eyes and smiling. The smile widened to a grin. "Let"s eat."

The applause seemed generated with unabashed sincerity.

"Not the election rhetoric I"d have expected," said Holt in a low voice to Morgan. "He must be waiting to sink in the hook later."

"I"m not hungry!" The voice was loud and angry enough to rise above the dinner hubbub. The speaker was a young woman about Morgan"s age. Her dark hair was piled atop her bead. Her high collar displayed a delicate spray of lace, but her expression belied her appearance.



By now the mayor had sat down to Morgan"s right. Holt sat to her left, "Is something amiss, Meg?" said Mayor MacDonaid. He held a piece of meat only slightly smaller than a skelk haunch in one hand.

"Only the company at this meal," said the woman called Meg. Other conversation around the died away.

"It"s one tiling entirely to dine with Holt Calder. I might not like it, but I recognize the necessity of letting him eat with us. We"re all quite aware where our community"s investment bonuses originate." She glared toward Morgan. "No, it"s her I register an objection to."

Morgan"s, voice was a bit higher than" her usual, controiled tone. She half rose from her chair. "What"s your objection? I"ve done nothing to you."

Meg rose, from her own chair. "It"s who you are," said the woman, "not just who sits before us," She pointed, "Aristocrats... You are a blood-bloated, privileged parasite on the body politic." Meg appeared to savor the words.

Morgan shook her head in astonishment and then sat back down.

The mayor looked unhappy, "I said," he repeated, "let"s eat."

Meg stalked out of the dining room. Those around her developed an abiding interest in the serving platters, in gravy and chops.

Holt touched Morgan"s shoulder. She flinched away.

"My sympathies," Mayor MacDonald said to her. In a confiding tone, he added, "The external universe is not an commodity to sell here. I fear we don"t find Holt as comfortable a dining companion as we might wish." He turned back toward the young man. "Just between you and me, lad, I couldn"t blame you if you found the world not worth saving." Mayor MacDonald put an index finger to his lips. "Just don"t let on to my loyal const.i.tuents I said that." He looked at the great hunk of meat in his other hand. "And now," he said, apparently addressing the food, "and now, let us eat."

The windhover skated across the tundra ground-blizzards with full tanks, barely rocking in the gusts. The pilot and pa.s.senger rode with full bellies and an anxious sense of antic.i.p.ation.

"That"s it, isn"t it?" said Morgan. "That peak off to the east."

Holt nodded.

""Where now?"

Holt gave her a compa.s.s heading.

"How do you know? I thought the bands roamed."

"They do," said Holt. "Back at the field, I stood in the open air. Even with the inversion layer I could tell.

I know the season. I can feel the patterns. The temperature, the wind, it"s all there." He came close to pressing his nose against the port. "The pieces fit."

Morgan glanced sidewise at him. "And is there," she said carefully, "perhaps a little bit of instinct, something unquantifiable in the pattern?"

"No," he said flatly.

"I wonder."

Holt repeated the compa.s.s direction.

"Aye, sir." Morgan swung the windhover to a north-by-northwesterly heading. A range of jagged mountains loomed in the distance.

"You weren"t particularly friendly back in the town," said Morgan.

"I wasn"t feeling cordial. I hope friendship awaits me now." His words were overly formal, a bit stilted, as though a different ident.i.ty were being overlaid on the young man Morgan had met in Wolverton.

"You know," said Morgan, "aside from being presumably competent and obviously a good fighter, you"re quite an attractive young man."

Holt didn"t answer. Morgan thought she saw the beginnings of a flush at the tips of his ears. She started to consider the ramifications. She wondered whether her own ears-or anything else-betrayed her.

They found the encampment-or at least an encampment- just as Holt had predicted. Morgan circled slowly; to give the *Reen plenty of warning, "Skins?" she said. "They live in hide tents?"

"Look beyond," Holt answered. "There are openings for the dug-out chambers. Even though they"re nomadic for most of the year, the "Reen open earthen tunnels for the heart of the winter. It"s a retreat to an earlier, life. They dig the pa.s.sages with their claws. You"ll see."

And so she did. Morgan set the windhover down and cut the fans. The mechanical whine ran down the scale, fading to silence. Holt cracked the hatch and they heard the wind shriek. Heat rushed from the craft, to be replaced with darting, stinging snow and a marrow-deep chill.

Morgan glanced out and recoiled slightly. While she had" been engaged in shutting down the windhover, a silent perimeter of "Reen had come to encircle the craft. Not, she reflected, that she could have heard them in this gale anyway.

She had never before seen the "Reen in the flesh. Films had not done them justice. Morgan squinted against the sudden flurry of snowflakes slapping her face. The "Reen appeared bulky, not as though they could move quickly at all. The woman knew that perception was utterly wrong. She also knew the "Reen were equally adept on all fours as upright. These adults were standing erect, as high as her shoulder.

Their fur color was rich brown, ranging from deep chocolate to a golden auburn.

The sun abruptly burned through the gray sky and Morgan saw the light glitter from the "Reen claws.

Those claws were long and curved like scimitars. They looked as honed as machined steel. The silence, other than the wind"s keening, stretched on.

"It"s up to you now, isn"t it?" she finally said to Holt.

He made a sound that might have been a sigh, then moved forward through the hatch, dropping down to the intermediate step and then to the snow. She followed as he approached the "Reen squarely facing the hatch. Wind ruffled the auburn pelt. Obsidian eyes tracked the newcomers.

"Quaag hreet"h, PereSnik"t tcho?" Holt"s voice, ordinarily a baritone, seemed to drop at least one gruff, uncomfortable octave.

At first the "Reen seemed to ignore his words, staring back silent and unmoving. It responded as Holt stepped forward and raised both empty palms facing the "Reen. The man said something brief Morgan couldn"t catch. The "Reen spoke something in return. Then man and "Reen embraced roughly.

Morgan thought instantly of how she used to hug her huge stuffed creatures when she was a girl, damped the incongruous response, but said under her breath, "I think this is a good sign."

The "Reen turned its attention to her, c.o.c.king its head back slightly. Morgan stared past the blunt muzzle into unblinking, shiny, black eyes. The "Reen articulated sounds. Holt replied in kind, then turned toward Morgan.

"His short-form name translates as MussGray. He is an artificer, ah, an artist, apprenticed to PereSnik"t, the tribal shaman. He says to tell you he"s honored to meet one who is vouched for by He-orphaned-and-heipless-whom-we-obliged-are-to-take-in-but-why-us?"

"That"s you?" Morgan couldn"t help but smile. "I"d like to hear all that in "Reen."

"You did." Holt didn"t smile. "The "Reen tongue is quite economical."

"Tcho, PereSnik"t tcho." The "Reen called MussGray turned and started to walk toward the nearest hide shelter. Morgan noted that the "Reen"s rounded shoulders hunched forward as he moved. Holt followed.

"Follow me," he said back to Morgan, who had hesitated. "It"s what we came to do."

"I know, I know," she muttered. "And it was my idea."

The other "Reen had made what to her ears seemed whuffling noises and dispersed among the hide shelters of the encampment.

MussGray led them through a doorway protected by a heavy flap of cured leather. Inside, the shelter was dimly illuminated by the flicker of a few candles. Morgan saw a thin column of apparent smoke drifting up from the room"s center, then realized it was rising from a circular hole in the earthen floor.

"That"s where we"re going," Holt said to her. "Don"t worry."

MussGray vanished into the smoke, into the hole. Holt followed. So did Morgan, discovering the top of a st.u.r.dy wooden ladder. She clambered down the rungs, attempting to hold her breath, trying not to cough and choke on the smoke. Beside the foot of the ladder, a tow fire was separated from the opening of a fresh-air shaft by an upright stone slab.

This chamber also was lit with candles, only slightly abetted by the dusky fire. The interior seemed rounded and close. The place smelled of fresh earth and woodsmoke and a muskiness Morgan did not find unpleasant. Five "Reen waited there. Morgan took them to be older adults, pelts silvered to an argent that seemed to glow in the candlelight.

"They honor us," Holt said to her. "The "Reen are nocturnal. Our greeting party up there tumbled out of warm burrows to meet us."

The "Reen reclined in the shadows on the luxuriant furs blanketing the chamber"s floor. Then the largest and most silvered of the adults stood and embraced Holt for a long time. Morgan heard the man say simply, "PereSnik"t."

Later he introduced Morgan. The woman, half-remembering one bit of biological trivia about showing one"s teeth, inclined her head a moment, but didn"t smile.

Then they all made themselves comfortable on the heaps of autumnal black-and-white skelk hides.

"We"ll need patience," Holt told Morgan. "Both of us. This will take a while. I have too little vocabulary, too few cognates, so I"m going to have to approximate some language as I go."

"Can I help?"

"Maybe," said Holt. "I don"t know. I"m going to be improvising this as I go."

PereSnik"t rumbled something.

"He says," Holt translated, "that you smell just fine to him."

Morgan covered her smile.

With MussGray, PereSnik"t, and the other four "Reen listening attentively, Holt told his story. He also used body language and a bit of theater. Morgan could decipher the gestures sufficiently to understand at which points in the narrative the boojum arrived in orbit around Kirsi, destroyed that world, and then advanced on the Almiran fighters. She found herself forcing back tears as Holt"s long fingers described the rupture of ship after ship, his expressive features miming the final moments of her friends and comrades. Morgan clamped down on the feelings rigidly. Time enough later to mourn, and there would doubtless be many more to keen dirges for. She wondered whether, indeed, there would be anyone left alive to do the mourning.

At last Holt"s monolog ceased and what seemed to be serious discussion began. Morgan hugged her knees, feeling a sense of disconnection. There was nothing now she could do to affect what was happening with the "Reen. She had acted, if all catalyzed as she hoped, she would act again. But for now she was reduced to sitting on plush furs and listening.

The interplay between Holt and the "Reen became much more of a staccato exchange. Morgan thought of a ball hit back and forth across a net. She couldn"t tell the content of what she heard, but was sure of the context: questions and answers.

As best Morgan could tell, internecine bickering was igniting among the silvered "Reen. Growls, timbre sliding low, verging on subsonics, filled the underground chamber. Claws as long as her hand clicked and glittered while the candles began to burn down.

MussGray appeared to be taking a moderating role. He deferred to the older adults, but began to interject his own comments when the others roared at Holt.

These are carnivores, thought Morgan, staring at increasingly exposed teeth. They are predators, and they surely must hate us for all we have done to them. Except for Holt.

The discussion had reached a crescendo, a near-pandemonium.

Holt stood and slipped off his windbreaker as the "Reen fell silent. He tugged his insulated shirt up over his head. His chest hair was not nearly so impressive as the "Reen fur. Holt slowly raised his empty hands up and apart, forming the bar of a cross.

Morgan realized the man was exposing the vulnerability of his belly. The "Reen voices began again to grumble and roar. Morgan wondered again if they were about to kill Holt; and after him, her. She had no weapons. Holt had insisted on that. She knew she could neither save him, nor beat a homicidal "Reen up the central ladder.

Holt had better know what he was doing.

MussGray said something. PereSnik"t said something else in turn. Holt hesitated, but then nodded his head slowly. Affirmatively, he drew his arms in, then proffered both hands in front of him.

It happened almost too quickly for Morgan to see. PereSnik"t extended one paw, flicked out a razored claw, and blood traced a thin line down the inside of Holt"s right index finger. The blood, black in candlelight, beaded and dripped for a moment before Holt closed his fist to stop the bleeding.

The "Reen were silent again. MussGray looked from Holt to Morgan, and then back to the man.

Shivering, Holt put his shirt and windbreaker back on. He shook his hand as though it stung.

"Are you all right?" Morgan said.

He answered a different question, one unspoken. "It"s done."

"They"ll help us?"

"The verdict"s not in yet. There have to be... consultations. We"re to wait here."

The "Reen began to climb up the ladder. PereSnik"t ascended without saying anything more to Holt.

MussGray was the last to go. He turned back from the ladder and spoke briefly.

"He says" that we should enjoy the shelter," said Holt. "There"s a storm front pa.s.sing above us. It shouldn"t last long, but he says it will keep us from traveling for a few hours."

The "Reen disappeared through the ceiling hole.

"Now what?"

"We wait," said Holt.

"Are you optimistic?"

The man shrugged.

"Are you simply tired of talking?"

Holt looked down at the furs around them. "Just... tired." Then he again raised his eyes to her face. One of the guttering candles flickered a final time and burned out. A second spattered. "This is probably entirely too forward," he said, hesitating, and then saying nothing more.

"Yes?" she finally said, prompting him.

He met her gaze levelly. "I feel colder than even the storm warrants. Would you give me some rea.s.surance?"

"Yes," she said, "and a good deal more, if you"d like."

Morgan reached to take him gently, as the last of the candles went out and the only light was the lambent flames racing over the coals in the fire.

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