X

McCaffrey, Anne & Elizabeth Ann Scarborough – Powers That Be. Chapter 7, 8

“Very,” Sinead said in an unequivocal tone. Then she, too, lightened up, the tension draining out of her body. “Petaybean seals are one of the more unusual beasts: on the surface they may look like the ordinary Earth species, but they’re very much a product of the planet and they must be protected. Not many people ever get to see a Petaybean seal.” Unexpectedly Sinead grinned, her eyes intent on Yana’s face. “You see one, you be respectful,” she repeated pleasantly.

“You can count on that!” Yana said fervently.

Sinead rose and neatly covered their small fire with snow; and then they were on their way again.

Nine traps later, with some carcasses whose pelts had caused Sinead’s eyes to glisten with pleasure, Yana realized that Sinead was swinging to her right. Maybe they were on the homeward leg. Yana hoped so. Her back and calf muscles were beginning to protest: individually the dead animals weighed little, but she had fifteen dangling from the pack now, and her legs were feeling the strain of unaccustomed snowshoeing.

There was no way she would complain, but she was tiring. Still and all, she had surprised herself with the day’s work. Far cry from what she had been like first off Andromeda. A healthy life in the outdoors, with untainted air to breathe and decent food to eat, was certainly providing cures never found in an Intergal medical cabinet.

Yana heard the cracking sound almost as soon as Sinead, who dropped to her knees. Yana did likewise and watched with bated breath as Sinead crept forward. She motioned for Yana to come up, but also signaled her to proceed quietly. Yana had done her share of stalking-of beasts in her expeditionary days, of people in her days as an investigator-and moved appropriately. The cracking continued, a cracking and a thumping. Again Sinead moved forward, stepping with extra care, inserting herself into one of the ubiquitous thickets that grew everywhere. Yana let the branches close around her as she followed Sinead. Instead of peering up over the thicket, Sinead began to part the lower branches, crouching down to look through. She waved Yana to a point beside her, and Yana realized that she could almost see through to what looked like a riverbed. With exquisite caution, she slowly made an obscured peek hole in the branches and barely stifled her gasp of astonishment.

Animals that she first thought were some of Scan’s curly-coated horses were standing about on the frozen river. One was butting at the ice, obviously determined to make a hole from which it and its companions could drink-and it was butting with a short, stumpy curled horn that grew out of the end of its nose bone. The critter was putting its all into the exercise, sometimes dropping to its knees with the force of its blows, then heaving back to all fours and springing from powerful hindquarters to beat again at the ice. The rear view exposed some obvious male appendages; checking the others of the group, Yana came to the conclusion that the horn seemed to be a perquisite of the male of the species. Suddenly it gave a triumphant bellow and began rearing up, coming down hard to stomp at the ice with its sharp hooves. The others in the small herd did likewise and then backpedaled as a black hole appeared in the white surface.

Sinead turned to grin broadly at Yana and then signaled her to withdraw. They jogged quite a ways down the track before Sinead stopped.

“Was that a unicorn I saw?” Yana asked, panting and wheezing just a bit from the exertion.

Sinead grinned with humorous malice. “There ain’t no such animal and neither of us is virgin, though me more than you, 1 guess.”

“I didn’t see any in Sean’s herd. And he showed me the stallion.”

“This is a wild curly. They need the horn to get water in the winter.”

“Does the horn fall off in the summer then?”

“Don’t know. Never saw a horned curly trying to break ice in the summer.” Sinead was off down the track before Yana could press her for more information. Well, she had been promised unusual animals-and she’d got ‘em.

Page: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Categories: McCaffrey, Anne
Oleg: