Chapter Four
Danian Panille was
quiet on the ride home. Castor hoped this was simple annoyance at
having been rousted so late for a favor, though his better judgment
knew otherwise. "Three bloody weeks," had been Danian's sole
greeting at the shore.
Castor
sniffed the air, smelled the night's promise of tomorrow's
inevitable torrents. He sat tandem behind Danian within the exposed
passenger compartment of a squat gadi'round:
top third of its thin, spoked wheels whirred past the windows on both
sides as they bumped and crunched
along the gravel streets of Sciriceen's eastern shoreline district.
Bramaria had balled herself onto Castor's lap, asleep; or so he
presumed--there were no outward indicators other than her lack of
sound, movement, or scent--though Castor could insist that, at
times, he perceived the abdominal rumbling of a soft snore.
It
was late, capping the most exhausting, most significant
day of Castor's young life, and he envied the bundle of hair and
legs sat motionless in his lap. The physical high of the day's
events had dulled by the time they'd stepped off the rind, up the
steps to the front streets of Sciriceen; emotions also softening,
blending into the hazy roil of his fatigued brain. Though the ride
was a mere ten minutes from the shore, Castor could not be home soon
enough. Still, he refused his body's insistence to nod off, wishing
to provide no further offense for his agitated friend. Danian forced
a sigh, inviting comment, but Castor simply had no energy to respond,
decided to ignore the invitation. He hoped this too would not further
offend.
Presently,
the gadi'round
pulled alongside the edge of a semi-circular inlet fronting a low
series of ivywood structures, came to rest in a skid of shale gravel.
Danian was at the rear of the vehicle, offloading Castor's gear
before Castor could rouse Bramaria from his lap and drag himself off
the seat to the driveway. Danian dropped the gear bag with disregard
onto the edge of the garden which occupied the outside front area of
the apartments, wounding a patch of scrub succulents growing there.
He
slammed the compartment lid shut.
"My
friend--I apologize," Castor said.
"I'll
be back come morning. And you'd best be ready; there's much to
account for, my
friend,"
Danian said.
Castor
nodded, eyes half-closed, said: "Right. Dani. I--we're--sorry.
And thank you. Come morning then." Bramaria pivoted toward Castor,
turned curious brows up as if to say 'We?!'
Danian
softened a bit, grunted with a hint of a smile. He stooped to give
Bramaria a tap goodbye--a gesture from which she sprung backward.
"Someday," he said then turned back to Castor, flashed a sideways
grin, said: "You'd best not disappoint me, shir
Diep!" mocking him with the formal title. He turned on his heels,
walked back to the vehicle, and hopped into the front seat. The large
wheels spat gravel, bumped and crunched
away
as
Castor waved. He and Bramaria headed up the walk to the apartment:
She free of her harness; he dragging the heavy bag of gear behind
them and carrying Bramaria's stash of carcasses over his shoulder.
Castor's
first stop after dumping the bag to the apartment floor was the
galley. There, he tossed the pack of new carcasses onto the bottom
shelf of the cooler, stared inside the cooler for a bit trying with
great difficulty to decide what to eat. His empty belly gurgled a
complaint, sounding much like one of Bramaria's abdominal cues. If
only he could produce the pheromone odor of dead flesh, he thought,
he could match her scent-for-scent in this moment--the odor implying
she, too, was famished.
He
collected a hodgepodge of vegetable snacks and leftovers, along with
a bilge-fly for Bramaria. He set the fist-sized carcass aside, and
still standing at the galley counter, devoured his own meager banquet
in as few mouthfuls as possible; was surprised to find Bramaria
suddenly at the end of the counter slinking toward him. "Sorry
Bram. I should've been more considerate," he said, sliding the
wrapped carcass down the counter to her. Most meals, Bramaria
insisted on warmed and in the comfort of the neat corner nest she
kept near the divan in the apartment's sitting room. But tonight
she, like Castor, was more than happy to make an exception.
Leaving
her to her meal, Castor made his way back out to the sitting room and
lay down on a plush divan; head rested on the pillow of its sloped,
gently curved arm. His dazed brain tranced on the mural of the room's
entry wall for minutes-seeming-seconds, was jolted back to reality by
Bramaria, once again, balling herself into his lap. Owing to his
earlier exposure to the caustic, quartz-infused vapor of the shallow,
Castor opted for a second dose of the Bun T'Lal-prescribed
antitoxin, popped the last remaining tablet from his vax-dispenser.
"Why
do
you stick with me, Bram?" Castor said, translating for her.
There
was no immediate response, then, "Bram... Family... No..." She
added with a tired chirp/bark,
"You... Me... Worry..." Castor took this last for the rebuke it
was reflecting his earlier actions out on the rind of which she had
so disapproved.
"I
know, Bram. I know."
"You...
Me..." she paused then tapped, "Bore... No..." Not a question;
accented with the soft scent of spice--her best inference of humor.
This conceptual translation of 'bore', Castor noted, was new for
her. He was impressed with its use.
Forgoing
the security of the tight cocoon of her sitting room nest, Bramaria
remained motionless on the divan with Castor. Castor smiled softly as
his eyelids began to fall. Belly full, Bramaria settled, and no more
distractions to hold his consciousness to account, that soon slipped
away as, he too, became as still as she.
His dream sees
Castor holding a flexible sheet-reader atop a bunk within a tent set
within the inner grotto of the tiny no-name islet. It is not yet time
to sleep and he's left the pull-hatch on the far side of the tent
opened. Over the reader, a stirring lump of shadow catches his eye.
The shadow is just larger than his opened hand and slinking forward
near the hatch. There is the faint odor of sweetness scratching at
the edge of his awareness now. He is wary. There are no vebniva nests
about the ivy enclosure of the grove, but he is aware of their
proximity. Castor has left himself unguarded! He discerns the
independent motion of gangly appendages around the shadow's
circumference as the thing eases forward toward the end of the bunk.
He is panicked but does not yet move. The shadow disappears beneath
the obstruction of the bunk. Castor keeps a nakh dagger atop an
upended pack case next to the bunk. He takes the dagger in hand just
as four gangly, sparsely furred black tips reach up and over the
bunk-end. Castor swings upright to the floor, pounds his feet
furiously creating as much vibration in the nanoflex flooring as
possible. The action is no guarantee, and he readies for an attacking
pounce. Instead, the small creature slips from the bunk, awkwardly
falls to the floor. Castor moves to finish the thing, but it scurries
in a shadowy blur back out the open hatch. Castor rushes to the hatch
and pulls the latch closed.
The dream haze
shifts. The day is now new and spent. Outside the tent, Castor
pinches a rounded controller attached to a small, amorphous lump of
nanoflex material and the lump expands, bending and shaping itself
into a simple stool with three rigid legs and a flat, flexible seat.
He situates the stool next to a campfire crackling within a ring of
shale. He sits. A thick slice of meat smolders atop a grate set over
the fire, filling the air with the smoky aroma of salted char. It is
dark outside the circular flicker-glow of the fire. There is familiar
movement just outside the glow's purview. It's the movement of
the small intruder from the night before. Once again, the edge of his
perception is teased by a sudden sweetness in the air. Castor lets
the panic of the morning pass through him and is left only with a
deep curiosity.
The scene repeats
in swirling flashes with only slight variations: a different meal;
stool on the opposite side of the fire; Castor hums; Castor is
silent; a breeze carries smoke from the fire across the campsite;
there is no breeze. But always the diminutive spindler comes to the
same spot, watches just outside the flickering ring of light.
Once again, the
dream shifts. Castor prepares his final evening meal before the next
day's departure. He tosses a bit of meat just in front of his
motionless visitor who is, once again, watching from the periphery of
the firelight. The creature hesitates then creeps forward. It
cautiously tests the morsel with the pointed ends of two front
appendages--fatter, shorter than the rest--finds the offering
unappealing, steps backward with a sharp chirp. Castor repeats the
action with a bit of raw meat he takes from the chest next to his
stool. Again, the spindler prods, then sinks the pointed appendage
ends into the meat with a spasm. After a moment, the creature
extracts the appendages from the morsel and edges forward hiding the
meat beneath its body. Castor watches with curious interest--he's
never observed a digesting spindler before. The creature returns to
its watching spot. Castor sees the devoured morsel, now desiccated,
shriveled.
It is morning.
Castor exits the tent into the cool mist captured within the grove.
It is like any other morning with one exception: There, on the
concave wall of ivy, directly above the nightly watching spot of the
spindler, is a white gossamer-gauze nest the length of Castor's
outstretched arm, winding into the folds of enormous leaves. Castor
sees no sign of the creature itself but is certain it's nestled
into the cocoon at the nest's center. He knows this to be
unusual--for all their ferocity, vebniva are strictly endeared to
the family, even in times of migrations.
Castor now sits
in the pilot's seat of a small skiff, sweating with the humidity of
midday, prepares to leave for home. He takes a last glance behind him
at the viridescence of immense leaves concealing the grotto deep
within. His
grotto--intrusion made their
grotto. He spots a tiny, motionless cluster of legs atop the shale
near the path exit from the ivy. Castor pauses a moment then drops
the paddle treads into the thick mud of the shallows. He glances back
one more time and the cluster has gone. He pops the throttles of the
skiff forward, lurches into the thick shallows toward home.
*
* *
"You
do feel it, don't you?" Castor yelled over the roar of whirring
tools. "As if time is moving in the wrong direction?"
"Right
now, what I feel is that may never finish this piece,"
Danian--taller than Castor by ten centimeters, stockier but with the
same raven hair--yelled back, grinder in hand, gesturing with an
elbow toward a half-formed chunk of brilliant crystal bloom which sat
atop the workbench in front of them. "If only time would
run backward just a while." He and Castor labored within the
cluttered studio, which was not quite adequately sized for the work
performed there. Torrents of rain pounded the ceiling above them,
adding to the din.
"Not
backward," Castor said, ignoring the dismissal, "but askew,
following an errant path perhaps." More to himself, added: "Just
wrong."
Danian
stepped back, flipped a switch on the end of the grinder, silencing
the howl of its motor, said: "Has this to do with yesterday, Diep?
Eh?" the edge of scorn in his voice slight but noticeable. "Or
your disappearing act?" He gestured again to the work-in-progress
sitting atop the bench, wide eyes above pursed lips, said: "There
are
deadlines to meet!"
Since
Danian's morning arrival at the apartment, Castor had kept the
conversation casual, waiting for a proper time to disclose the events
of the previous day. He'd found this task difficult. Danian--Dani,
his oldest friend, if not always dearest--had ever been the board to
his sounding, whether prattle or philosophy. But his sensibility
could be delicate at times. The chaotic ramblings he ached to share
today called for a level of finesse the two had, in fact, never
required.
Castor
said: "You're right, my friend. Not a good time. Work now; talk
later." Danian shrugged, turned back to the bench, grinder whirring
back to life.
Nothing
more was said the remainder of the morning, through the afternoon, by
either of them. The tension was awkward. Relentless rain droned on
outside while Castor and Danian ground, chipped, and polished,
transforming multi-hued lifeless bloom to a fine-art bust likeness;
that of an individual unknown to either of them. A fine payday
however--this they knew well.
Eventually,
the revving tools, chipping crystal, squeaks and knocks ceased,
leaving only the drone of the pounding pour above and the silence of
the two; the studio around them coated in fine quartz dust. Elbow to
elbow, the pair regarded the nearly finished piece, smiles under
masked faces. Removing his mask, Danian jabbed Castor with a light
prod, said: "Decent work...Diep. Decent." The concentration
required of the labor had cleared Castor's mind but, as the
distraction now waned, he felt clarity displaced by the onrush of
anxiety.
He
had to share. He had
to!
"Brush
off and let's relax a while, Dani. There's much to discuss."
Relieved now from the weight of deadlines, Danian's curiosity
piqued. He patted and brushed at his clothing in large puffs of
quartz dust.
In
the sitting room, Bramaria was slung into a gauze hammock she'd
fashioned to her nest as her own morning's work. Three gangly legs
were hairy, mutant fingers lazed over the side of the hammock. One
blackened 'fingertip' flicked back and forth as if keeping time
to an unheard rhythm only she'd discovered within the random
assault of patters on the roof. Danian reached out on the sly,
tweaked one of the legs. Bramaria, not losing a beat, cocked the
offended leg up at the knuckle, held it there in annoyance.
Danian
chuckled. "Eventually, Bram... You'll give in eventually." he
said, "Love me as I deserve, you disgusting thing." Bramaria
didn't flinch for the words were spoken with true affection.
Castor
brought coffee on a tray from the galley and he and Danian took seats
opposite each other in the small sitting room; he on the divan,
Danian on the chair situated next to a plate window of quartz-glass
which was blurred by a solid sheet of wet from the storm raging
outside. Castor set the tray atop the low, nanoflex table between
them. Danian pulled his chair forward to meet it.
"So.
You left the skiff." Danian said, taking a steaming cup from the
tray.
"Mm-hmm."
Castor peered up at Danian through his own cloud of steam.
"I
see. At the reef. With a closed port."
"Yep."
"With
harvesters bound in the area." (Harvesters--fishers of
shadow-hunters and other creatures of the deep mud--were notorious
for rising, at times, to just above privateer.)
"My
skiff." He added.
"No
longer your skiff, Dani," Castor said. "Besides, I dropped a
buoy. I'll know if it moves."
"You're
right about that. I have no cause to worry then, have I?" Castor
and Danian sat quietly after this, sipping the hot coffee, avoiding
eye contact. The moment was more awkward than any other that day.
Presently,
Castor spoke.
"Dani,
I--"
"What
in the bloody moon happened to you the past weeks?!" Danian
blurted.
Castor
took Danian's outburst as an opening and, dismissing all apology
for his weeks of absence, he began a rambling recount of the profound
events of the previous evening. The words rushed from him with the
gale force of winds tearing within the storm outside. Danian, who had
been expecting the apology--not the chaotic rant of a
friend-turned-lunatic--sat in stunned silence while Castor replayed
the events, detail for detail. He described, along with the many
visual wonders of the cockpit, the less tangible sense of welcome, of
belonging experienced treading the floors of the submerged craft; of
the sensation he'd felt that the craft had belonged there as well,
in its time and theirs. Not by the grace of Bagad'i, but by the
happenstance of fate--a gift
of Scion! A gift to be known and understood not hidden through time;
not secreted away by the wills of greater men.
Castor
concluded the surreal tale. Danian continued to regard his friend a
lunatic, though far less so for the earnestness in which the tale was
told.
"Good
Lords Baga!" Danian cried, slapping his thighs, producing a white
puff from the remains of the workday still embedded within his pants
leg. "I would call you a liar, but I know better of it, Diep. But
such blasphemy! That... this
is not like you. To question the Tenets--sure, at times. To question
the Bun T'Lal--I'd expect nothing less. But...but to trample
your feet upon the very Arm of Bagad'i?" His head shook in
disbelief. "What is this? Are you smazy? vapor-fogged? Are you off
your vax?
Castor
shook off the questions.
"As
I said, Dani, I don't believe it to be the Arm of Bagad'i. Not
now. Rather--perhaps--an extension of Scion? Proximity must
assuredly be at hand. And if this is the case then, where is
adherence to The Nikata'Kal? Why am I the only witness? Should
there not be dancing in the streets of Sciriceen--storms be damned?
Where is the proclamation of the Baga?! If the Bun T'Lal are
unaware, then--why are they?!"
"If
all is as you claim, the Bun T'Lal are most certainly aware and
have reasons for their silence." Danian said, shrugged.
"Silence
in opposition to The Nikata'Kal?" Castor said.
"Silence
in accord with the Basic Principles of Protection, I'd assume,"
Danian said.
And
there it is! Castor
could not let this go unanswered.
"What
need to assume?" Castor said with a disapproving shake of his head.
"Do you not see the contradiction?"
"Faith
is belief in
defiance
of contradiction," Danian said.
"How
naive! Where is that lesson taught?"
"Um...well--"
"If
something makes sense, it makes sense. No one should ever ransom
reason for belief!" Castor said, then "Certainly, no one should
ever be required
to."
Perhaps
we don't know each other as well as assumed.
He
had not quite expected such a response from his friend. Castor
decided then to share only one of the artifacts with Danian, and that
with hesitation. He reached into a bag sitting next to the divan,
produced the black orb which he'd kicked across the derelict
vessel's floor.
"This,"
Castor held the orb up, presented it to Danian. "This. Such a
simple thing! Look!" He rotated the orb with a twist of his wrist,
brought the side of it containing a small circular portal to bear.
Within the portal floated an object with writings of the Old
Forms
on its many faces. The object inside spun independent of the orb;
behind the clear portal, swam within its blue liquid bath.
"A
true relic of Origin?
Wondrous, yes! But is this not the most mundane of divinities?"
Castor added.
Danian
surrendered to his curiosity, reached out and cautiously took the orb
from Castor, regarded it twisting now in his own hand. "I believe
you, Diep. But..." his hand shook under the moral weight of the
orb. Castor watched his friend wrestle with the same
curiosity-over-blasphemy with which he'd been previously
confronted. But he knew his friend--less curious, more dogmatic than
he.
Castor
said: "Time moves in the wrong direction, my friend. And not of its
own accord. We're stifled, Dani, as a people--we are stifled.
Things that were known are unknown; things that were seen,
obscured--and we're lesser for it. I know you know this." Castor
risked the accusation, hoped his friend would loosen his dogmatic
grip, if but a little. "We both were brought up under the tutelage
of the Pedagoguery which we both also questioned. Can you close your
mind now after what I've told you? Unless you truly do believe me a
liar."
"Wheel
of Baga, forgive me," Danian whispered, setting the orb down next
to the coffee tray with reverence.
Castor
considered carefully, said: "I could take you...when the rind
clears."
Danian's
eyes went wide. "I do not believe you a liar, Diep! But not a
chance! You should not speak such things. This..." Danian pointed
to the orb, "...this should be presented to the Bun T'Lal. If for
no better reason, than to keep you from castigation!" Danian
referred to often severe enforcement of the social order, overseen by
the Jokata Ha'i--an intolerant man in a position not known for
tolerance; blasphemy among the highest of offenses against one's
peers.
Castor
huffed a weary sigh, said: "I swear, Dani, Sometimes I think
Bramaria better understands me than you."
"Will
you?" Danian prodded.
"Will
I what?"
"Present
yourself to the Bun T'Lal. Get from them your explanations."
"Indeed,
No," Castor said. "That is not my intent. Perhaps Harrot--"
Danian
laughed aloud, said: "I love the old man. But let's face it,
Diep. There's bound to be little sway in that argument. Spindlers
in a nest, the two of you!"
Castor
shrugged.
"Well,
you know where my thoughts lie." Danian turned away to the window.
"No shir, I don't possess your stones--" He thought a moment,
turned back with a devious smile, continued, "--or your stupidity!
I'm just not certain which drives you to the far edge of sense!"
"The
far edge of sense," Castor repeated. "Curious, that. When people
are misled, understanding and belief resides there; truth could not
be further from it, Dani."
Weary,
Danian said: "Alright...alright. I know when to step down, my
friend." He knew Castor differently that day; Danian, in fact,
recognized a different Castor altogether. But he was a friend, and as
a friend he would let differences be as they may between them. He
stood from the chair, setting the empty cup on the tray. "Storm's
beginning to let up, it seems. I'd best be off." Something in
Danian's look told Castor the subject was far from dropped.
Castor
also stood, stepped close to Danian, put a hand on his shoulder,
said: "So it does seem, Dani. Thank you for listening. For my part,
I understand your reluctance with all this...rambling
of mine. Perhaps I am a touch vapor-fogged after all. Go. Get some
sleep. We've a bust to finish tomorrow."
"And
a wealthy benefactor to impress; rups to collect!" Danian gathered
his work bag and made for the door, covering his head with the bag as
he stepped out into the rain, shutting the door behind him.
Castor
took the coffee tray to the galley. Bramaria, sensing the
tall one
had gone, unfolded from her hammock, creeped down the web face to the
floor, skittered up behind him as he walked. Castor left the tray
messed with sugar grains, stained with dark drips, on the galley
counter then prepared himself a light dinner as his gangly friend
'watched', crouching near the galley door. After her meal of
bilge-fly the night before, she wouldn't eat again for several days
but, with the other nuisance now gone from the apartment, she
preferred to share in Castor's activities wherever they might lead.
The
scent of sweet vanilla flicked at Castor's senses--a contrast to
the steamed rootlet and warm meat resting on his plate. He could hear
a consistent, light barking from Bramaria's abdomen. "I'm OK,
Bram," he said. "Yes...Dani can be difficult. I understand how
you feel about him." He'd picked up on the sentiment of concern,
surmised the rest from personal history. Plate in hand, he stooped
over, tapped the gist of his reply for her.
How
could Dani be so obstinate? Castor knew him to be an intelligent man,
not generally prone to judgment. Perhaps the shedding of this
light cast shadows from too many doubts to accept. Castor had seen
the shadows as well. But, for him, the light had scattered, engulfing
doubt, filling the whole of his awareness until no shadows remained.
He was there in the moment; the witness of it.
When
faced with an undeniable truth, one must accept that truth--or
fashion oneself a hypocrite. Castor
reasoned.
Dani should at least see for himself.
Disappointed
in his inability to let go of this irritation, he forced himself to
concentrate on other things while shoveling heavy forkfuls of food
into his mouth. Dani had shown to the apartment that morning before
Castor had awoken, so he'd had yet no opportunity to examine the
artifacts. The black orb sat where Danian left it, portal side down,
on the nanoflex table. Castor once again, picked the odd thing up in
one hand, twisted it around. It produced no sound--seemed to perform
no function other than to display the words of the inner object
through the portal screen. He turned it several times over until one
of the Old
Form
phrases looked familiar: 'Most Likely'
I
must pay Harrot a visit,
Castor thought.
He
set the thing back atop the table, took the last bite of rootlet as
Bramaria crawled across the divan, laid her mandibles on his
pants-leg.
Tap...tap...
She
pointed a leg across the table, toward the black orb while she spoke.
Castor shrugged, tapped back: "Not sure."
From
the bottom of the bag beside him, his hand emerged holding the thin,
silver-tipped mechanical instrument he'd found nestled in the
ash-dust pile of the craft cockpit. Holding the slender ovoid in one
hand, he lightly nudged the silver tip with the opened palm of the
other; a tiny extrusion appeared then disappeared at the opposite end
of the thing as he did. It was remarkably similar to the
micro-grinder in the studio, itself a rather ancient piece of kit.
Castor wondered if it could have a similar function.
Next,
he retrieved the flat device from the bag, its narrow edge of light
winking to life. The thing was pristine, as if just handed him new
across eons. At the same moment, the bag cast a sudden glow from its
open top; the edge-light of the banded wrist-device had awakened in
tandem with the flat device--as it had the prior evening. These
clearly worked as a pair. This, he also removed then he placed it on
the table next to the orb, turned his attention back to the thin hard
plastic and glass-not-crystal of the flat device.
His
fingertip glided across its smooth face prompting the edge to turn
from white to bright yellow and several icons to appear on its
screen. In its center, one icon seemed to suggest an entryway of some
kind; another was a simple circle with a large 'X'. Though both
were accompanied by small lettering--in the Old
Forms--Castor
assumed no need of these, promptly tapped the entry-like image.
So
far, so similar to a sheet-reader, he
thought.
The
screen erupted with colors and light and movement, a replay in
miniature of the previous evening. A flat wheel of connected,
iridescent segments, each containing three-dimensional icons and flat
words, floated just above the surface in a quarter spin, then came to
rest. Some icons were baffling; others had that aspect of the
familiar-yet-unfamiliar he'd experienced so vividly within much of
the craft itself: a printed book--ancient, but not unknown; a human
face; a flower; the orb of a nondescript planet; a power cell--though
cylindrical rather than cuboid; a near perfect likeness of the banded
wrist-device now glowing on the table. Displayed flat at the top of
of the screen were the words 'Lindsay Heller' in large font.
Though more elaborately presented, the context of function on display
here was not entirely foreign to Castor. It appeared to have similar
facility to that of any number of devices to which he was accustomed.
This
is no sheet-reader! But
nor was it, Castor reasoned, of any greater mystery than that of the
erosion of time diluted further by the wills of greater men. A very
human mystery, after all.
Bramaria,
having not moved, began lifting a curious leg out to touch the
dazzling display; thought better of it, tucked the leg back with a
flinch of apprehension.
Presently, Castor
poked a finger at the face icon and the wheel transformed to an
offset stack of identical, roughly square, metallic-silver icons,
each overlaid with text. He found that a flick scrolled the stack up
and over in an arc in either direction; a tap would halt the scroll.
He selected one of the icons at random, causing the display to
transform to yet another, similar stack--but of icons each of a
different photo image.
Without
thinking, Castor poked his finger again at the new stack. The
randomly selected image swooped
into an enlargement set vertical above the face of the device,
resting at a tilt. The portrait before him was that of a feminine
figure, middle-aged, in a loose-fitting body suit--inlaid patch
unreadable over the right breast--with sandy light hair and blue
eyes. Red lips turned up in a wide smile as she stood, arms folded,
atop a kukura float. In the foreground, a male figure in similar
attire sat atop a surface glider, harness in hand, riding the beast
in the same fashion Castor had many times. This figure was covered
from waist to toe with translucent mud, suggesting to Castor no
charge weave in the fabric of the garments, but in many respects was
of similar attribute to his own UV attire. The better part of
astonishment, however, lent to the exposed skin of each figure:
leathery shades of light bronze with pink undertones--and entirely
opaque!
Castor's
universe became suddenly more vast and at once condensed; he forgot
to breath, nearly dropped the device to the floor as he took in the
scene. "If these...people...truly
are of Bagad'i," he hissed aloud, "then lies and misdeeds of
the Bun T'Lal be damned!" The
progenitors of Origin--those
children of Scion--were not human after all!
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