Cuckoo’s Egg by C.J. Cherryh

Thorn had smiled then, as certainly as he could. “I’d be a fool to disobey him; forgive me, hatani: when he blames you, tell him it was my fault. In my inexperience I couldn’t tell what to do, so I followed his orders.”

Another hatani had come up beside him then and reached out his hand. “Please, visitor: let me at least put these things away for you.”

“No,” Thorn had said, turning the hand with a slow move of his own. “No, hatani. Forgive me.”

That hatani drew back. “No one will trouble you till morning, visitor,” the other said. They closed the door behind them.

(It can’t be that easy. There’s another trick.)

Thorn searched for it. He stripped off the suit, down to his small-kilt. He investigated the food, breaking up the cheese and tearing the meat apart. He drained the tub. He turned out the bed. He searched the closet and pulled out the bureau drawer to look at the space behind it. He racked his brain then. (Even the furniture could hide something.) So he probed the boards of the closet, he investigated the toilet and the bathtub riser, and the sink.

The faucet was dry. That was one thing amiss.

He felt into it and found nothing. (Damn. Something’s wrong there. Maybe it’s to prevent my drinking that and not the pitcher.) He tried to move even the tub and the bed and the big riser near it. He investigated the walls.

And finally, he knelt down in the corner near the door and began to move the deep sand.

He found the small panel in the stone beneath when he had shifted half the sand in the room. He was panting by then. He wiped at his face with a dry and dusty arm. (No.) He remembered Sagot’s fish and the bird. Duun laying his pebble on the table beside the teapot. (Trust nothing.)

He got his dress kilt and pried up the panel with his thumbnail through the cloth. He laid it back. There was a pebble in a small recess. He went to the bureau, got his razor from his kit and a square of tissue. And with that he raked the pebble out and wrapped it in tissue, replaced the lid and contemplated the long wave of sand which wanted redistributing.

(“Be polite.”) Perhaps it extended to leaving the room in order.

And then another thought came creeping into his mind. (“Snap. No bird. See what assumptions do?”)

(Fish and bird. Pebble and pot.)

(Is there any assurance there’s no second stone?)

Half the room remained. (And-gods-how much time? It might be in the sand. I can’t move it except by hand.)

He put the one stone securely in his belt and started scooping the rest of the sand away.

The other secret well was in the far corner. There was no third. He stared at a great mound of sand over by the door and went and cleared the plate of the mangled food, and with the plate scooped and scattered sand as quickly as he could. His back and arms ached; his knees were raw, for all that he had tried to pad them with his spare clothing in his crawling about. His hands were abraded of their calluses, all the protection he acquired on them. He was thirsty and thanked the gods he had had breakfast at least, for he would not touch the food. (There might be a pebble in the source vessel, not even in this room. How could I trust it? And the sink. Something’s wrong. Do I fail if I don’t use the safe things? I’m sweaty. I smell awful. I can’t go to any interview smelling like this. I look like this and now I have to offend their noses too. And I’ve used the only change of clothes I had.)

(Use Duun’s? Gods, no.)

(What time is it?)

Thorn threw sand and spread it, waded into it and kicked it as level as he could with his feet and tried to think. He stood panting, returned to the bath and worked at the sink plumbing until his hands bled. Nothing budged it, and he sat on the cold tiles with his legs going numb. (It’s not going to give. It’s just the pitcher they want me to use, that’s all.) And his mouth was dry, his throat raw with dust and exertion. (I’ve won. There were two pebbles. I’ve got them both. I won’t drink the water, I won’t eat the food; I won’t sleep in the bed.)

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