Chapter Seven

Because the earliest Psi sensations came upon mankind from the unknown, primitive emotional associations with Psi were those of fear and the maya projection of false realities, of incubi and witches and warlocks and sabbats. These associations are bred into us and our kind has a strong tendency to recapitulate the old mistakes.

—HALMYRACH, ABBOD OF AMEL, Psi and Religion

In the wardroom of Stetson’s scout cruiser, the lights were low, the chairs comfortable and close to a green-beige table set with crystalate glasses and a decanter of dark Hochar brandy.

Orne lifted his glass, sipped the liquor. He said: “For a while there I thought I’d never again be tasting anything as lovely as this.”

Stetson poured a glass of the brandy for himself, said: “ComGo heard the whole thing over the monitor net. D’you know you’ve been breveted to senior fieldman?”

“They’ve recognized my sterling worth at last,” Orne said. As he spoke, he found the bantering lightness of his own words disturbing. He tried to recapture an elusive memory—something about primitive gardening, about tools…

A wolfish grin spread over Stetson’s big features. “Senior fieldmen last about half as long as the juniors,” he said. “Very high mortality.”

“I might’ve known,” Orne said. He took another sip of the brandy, his thoughts going to the fate of the Gienahns, of the Hamalites: military occupation. Call it I-A necessity, call it preventative surveillance—it still spelled control-by-force.

Stetson flicked the switch of his cruiser’s master recorder system, said: “Let’s get it on record.”

“Where do you want me to start?”

“Who authorized you to offer the Gienahns limited membership in the Galactic Federation?”

“It seemed like a good idea at the time.”

“But junior fieldmen do not originate such offers.”

“ComGo objects?”

“ComGo was telling me to authorize it when you jumped the gun. They weren’t on your net, were they?”

“No… no, they weren’t.”

“Tell me, Orne, how’d you tumble to where the hidden the Delphinus? We’d already made a quick scan of the moon and it didn’t seem possible the try to hide it up there.”

“It had to be there. Tanub’s word for his people was Grazzi. Most sentients call themselves something meaning ‘The People.’ But in his tongue, that’s Ocheero. There was no such word as Grazzi on our translation list. I started working on it. There had to be a conceptual superstructure here with direct relationship to the animal shape, to the animal characteristics—just as there is with us. I felt that if I could get at the conceptual models for their communication, I had them. I was working under life-and-death pressure and, strangely, it was their lives and their deaths that concerned me.”

“Yes, yes, get on with it,” Stetson said.

“One step at a time,” Orne chided. “But on solid ground. By that time, I knew quite a bit about the Gienahns. They had wild enemies in the jungle, creatures much like themselves who lived in what might be enviable freedom. Grazzi. Grazzi. I wondered if it might not be a word adopted from another language. What if it meant ‘enemy?’”

“I don’t see where this is leading,” Stetson said.

“It is leading us to the Delphinus.”

“That… that word told you where the Delphinus was?”

“No, but it fitted the creature pattern of the Gienahns. I’d felt from our first contact that the Gienahns might have a culture similar to that of the Indians on ancient Terra.”

“You mean with castes and devil worship, that sort of thing?”

“Not those Indians. The Amerinds, the aborigines of wilderness America.”

“What made you suspect this?”

“They came at me like a primitive raiding party. The leader dropped right onto the rotor hood of my sled. It was an act of bravery, nothing less than counting coup.”

“Counting what?”

“Challenging me in a way that put the challenger in immediate peril. Making me look silly.”

“I’m not tracking on this, Orne.”

“Be patient; we’ll get there.”

“To how you learned where they secreted the Delphinus?”

“Of course. You see, this leader, this Tanub, identified himself immediately as High Path Chief. That wasn’t on our translation list either. But it was easy: Raider Chief. There’s a word in almost every language in our history to mean ‘raider’ and deriving from a word for road or path or highway.”

“Highwayman,” Stetson said.

“‘Raid’ itself,” Orne said. “It’s a corruption of an ancient human word for road.”

“Yeah, yeah, but where’d all this…”

“We’re almost home, Stet. Now, what’d we know about them at this point? Glassblowing culture. Everything pointed to the assumption that they were recently emerged from the primitive. They played into our hands then by telling us how vulnerable their species survival was—dependent upon the high city in the sunlight.”

“Yeah, we got that up here. It meant we could control them.”

“Control’s a bad word, Stet. But we’ll skip it for now. You want to know about the clues in their animal shape, their language and all the rest of it. Very well,” Tanub said their moon was Chiranachuruso. Translation: ‘The Limb of Victory.’ When I had that, it all fell into place.”

“I don’t see how.”

“The vertical slit pupils of their eyes.”

“What’s that mean?”

“It means night-hunting predator accustomed to dropping upon its prey from above. No other type of creature has ever had the vertical slit in its light sensors. And Tanub said the Delphinus was hidden in the best place in all of their history. For that to track, the hiding place had to be somewhere high, very high. Likewise, dark. Put it together: a high place on the dark side of Chiranachuruso, on ‘The Limb of Victory.’”

“I’m a pie-eyed greepus,” Stetson whispered.

Orne grinned at him. “I won’t agree with you… sir. The way I feel right now, if I said it, you might turn into a greepus. I’ve had enough nonhuman associates for a while.”

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