Chap. 103 Planning
the recovery
Francie's arrival in the dining hall was announced by the tinkling
of a small bell.
Of her three fire lizards, Coora, the bronze, was wearing a
harness, bearing a tiny bell.
Siskin, who was roosting in the rafters, chirped. Sisi and
Keeso, Francie's two green lizards, flew up to join him, but Coora perched on
K'ndar's shoulder. He wheedled.
"Hello, little bronze, what have you here?"
Coora's eyes whirled orange, miffed that K'ndar didn't
recognize him. He hopped to purposefully shake the bell.
"Oh! It's you, Coora! I'm sorry, I didn't recognize
you. Where did you get that bell?"
The bronze chipped and shoved his chest out further. The
bell was attached to a message pouch.
"You have
message…for me?"
Coora peeped, his eyes whirling an affirmative green.
K'ndar removed a small piece of paper from the pouch.
"WELL done, Coora, clever, clever boy. Thank you,"
K'ndar said, knowing the fire lizard wouldn't be interested in a treat from his
plate-he was eating a salad. He unrolled the paper.
The bronze flew up into the rafters to join his weyrmates.
Siskin was immediately envious of the bell.
Hello, K'ndar! What
do you think of this notification system? One of the kids in fire lizard
training suggested we put a bell on a messenger lizard. Good idea, what? Your
friend, Terylin, created the bells. She calls them 'pony express bells', but
why a pony is involved, I don't know. Francie
He had nothing to respond to her message, but it was unnecessary.
A hand on his shoulder announced her arrival. She sat down
across from him.
"Hello, Francie! I think the bell is an incredibly
useful idea!" K'ndar said.
She grinned. "The kids are really eating the training
up. They wanted to teach their lizards, most of them were upset that their
lizards were being a nuisance, but they had no idea how to go about rectifying
the problem. The kids are so excited, not only having a chance to train their
lizards, but also to work with the Weyrlings as mentors. Already half of them
are insisting they want to impress a real dragon," she said.
"Hmm," he said, sipping at his klah. "Have
you had anything to eat?"
"Nay, but that's alright, I had something before I left
Landing this morning. And Hariko keeps the snacks coming to the training hall. I'll get something in a few minutes. I am glad
you're here, I want to discuss something with you."
"Go ahead."
"Raylan told me about your finding that big skeleton on
the southern coast."
"Well, it was one of my exploration teammates who found
it, B'rost."
"No matter. I hear the dolphins told you what it
was?"
"Yes. Who told you, one of the kids?"
"Yes, it's all over the weyr by now. It's a 'deep
diver'?"
"That's what the dolphins call it. What humans will
call it, I don't know. Deep diver seems sort of…clunky."
Lindea came up to them. "Hello, Francie, you're not
eating?"
"Girl, your boss keeps me fed more than I should be
eating," she laughed.
"Lindea was with us, the second time we went to the
coast."
"I see. Here's the situation. The people at Landing
have the skull that you brought in and quite honestly, have no idea what it is.
They would like to collect the rest of the skeleton, not only to do further
study, but also to display it in the new 'museum' that's being established," she said.
"Ahhhhh, Jansen did say they were going to do
that."
"They're trying to collect specimens of every creature on Pern, maybe not ever single insect, but the birds, the various wherries, the whers, etc. Even the creatures the Ancients brought with them…the felines, the pronghorn, and the rest."
Lindea gave him a meaningful glance.
He understood.
"It might not be complete," he warned, not wanting
to bring up the neck bone. That was a part of the deal they'd made with the
dolphins, and he had no desire to break that promise.
"That's alright. They expect some parts of the skeleton
to be missing, buried, or so deteriorated as to be useless. If the skull is any
indication, it's been out there for a while. Only because conditions there are
usually so bitterly cold explains why it still exists. But still, they'd like
to collect it so they can examine it, let the computers sniff it, and maybe
explain WHAT it is, and whether the Ancients even knew it existed."
"And…?"
"Landing's folks would like to have the dragons bring
the skeleton in. I can help, but I need to know the coordinates to give to
Motanith," she said.
He thought about that. "The coordinates are no problem.
We might even take a flight out there this afternoon," he said, "but Francie,
the thing is huge. Did you see the skull? The skeleton alone must be at least
eleven meters long, and that's what we can see on the sand. Who knows if
there's bigger parts underneath?"
"Hmmm," Francie said, "I didn't think it was
that big."
"Not that I'm not willing, and I bet B'rost would be
willing to help, but it's a lot of the smaller pieces that would prove problematic," he
said.
Lindea sat down.
"Why not ship it?"
"You mean, on a boat?"
"Yes. It would be far easier to ship it, and if the
skeleton is easily damaged, the pieces could be put in boxes with packing, like
hay, or seaweed, to keep them from breaking up."
K'ndar looked at Lindea, askance.
"Those waters are pretty rough, Lindea, and I'm
speaking from the point of view of a landsman," he said.
"Aye, you're right. But the shipwreck was caused by
errors-and hubris-on the crew's part. If the ship stands out to sea far enough,
the dragons can take the big pieces by air, and a crew could put in by small
boat, take out the smaller pieces.
Because, if there's a lot of pieces, that's a lot of betweening for a
dragon."
He nodded, thinking.
"Maybe have the
dragons take the big pieces out to the ship?" she asked.
"I wouldn't want a dragon going too close to a ship,
I'd worry it would get tangled in the ropes," he said, wincing at the
thought.
"Rigging," Lindea, a sailor to her bones, corrected.
"Rigging. It's too risky, in my mind."
Francie said, "I'd like to go see it, before we do
anything. But…would it be possible to put all the pieces on a pallet or in
boxes on the shore? And have the dragons transport the pallets over several
days?"
Lindea and K'ndar both thought that through.
"I think that could be done. There's enough big
dragons, browns and bronzes, who could do the lift. For that matter, the golds
would insist on helping, and they're the biggest of all. Remember the tree lift-the
golds could have handled a tree by themselves, if we'd let them."
"You'll still need a ship," Lindea said, thinking
of her brother. He was a newly made captain of his own ship, Arrow, and had always been the sort to
take on a new adventure.
"Why is that?" Francie asked.
"Like K'ndar said, the coast is rough-and empty. There
is NOTHING there, nothing to keep a team in the field; no water to drink, no
food, no shelter from the weather. The people who will be digging up the
skeleton, packing it on the pallets or boxes, rigging them for transport, they'll
need a place to sleep, to eat, because I'm betting it will take, a week? Maybe
longer? to dig that thing up without breaking it," Lindea said.
Francie grinned. "This is what I love about life after
thread, now…people brainstorming, working together to do things like this.
That's an excellent suggestion."
"You'll need experienced sailors to get into the shore
through that surf. Like K'ndar said, it's not a friendly beach, not like ours,
here," Lindea said, her mind already turning with the logistics of the task.
"That, and the weather turns like that,"
she said, snapping her fingers.
"Where do we get the ship?" Francie asked.
"My brother, Braig, is captain of the Arrow. Fishing season is done, for now.
I'd bet my boots he'd like to be involved with this. They'd be new waters for
him, I'd get a chance to see him, and get back to sea for awhile. It's been a
long time since I've been aboard a ship, and sometimes, I just miss it."
"Can Hariko do without you for a few weeks?"
K'ndar said, only half teasing.
"I'll have to ask her. It may be I can only be gone for
a few days, but, I'm not second in command, at least, not yet. And, for that
matter, I'd bet my boots there's a dragon rider who'd be willing to fly me out
there on a daily basis, should it come to that," she said, grinning at
K'ndar.
"I can do that, my friend."
Then he turned serious.
"Francie, there is one big caveat to all this."
?
"The dolphins. They told us about how that big 'deep
diver' was killed by humans. They were VERY upset when it happened, and have
kept the existence of the divers secret from us. They were very hesitant about
telling us anything about the divers. They are protective of them. They
wouldn't tell us anything about the ship wreck or anything until we swore that
we would never hurt a diver."
Lindea nodded.
"I've been a fisherman all my life, 'cept for now since
living here. So I've been around dolphins for years. I've never seen the
dolphins so ..so serious, Francie. They mean it, they don't want humans
hunting, hurting or bothering the divers AT ALL. We promised them to never hurt
a diver-but we can't make a promise for EVERYONE on Pern. I wouldn't be
surprised if, the dolphins learn we know about them, now, that they may stop
helping us humans. As it is, I was, well, ashamed that it was a fisherman who
did the killing."
Francie nodded her head.
"I see. I will have to get with Jansen, Raylan and the
field recovery folks…somehow we have to get the message out that these animals
are not to be harmed or interfered with in any way. If it means not displaying
the skeleton..well, I don't know. I just don't know, but I agree, I think the
divers should be off limits to any sort of contact."
She tapped the table, thinking.
"Tell me, Lindea, in all your years fishing, did you
ever have any dealings with sea raiders? Exchange information? Sell, trade, buy
things from them?"
Lindea looked about ready to vomit.
"Are..are you joking? Never. Not once. Nor have any of
the fisherfolk I know. We don't talk to them. We don't have a thing to do with
them. They're…they're vermin. I'd sooner run my own ship aground before I'd warn a raider about an unmapped reef," she said, vehemently.
Francie nodded.
"Lindea, I have to tell you, it wasn't a fishing boat,
they weren't fishermen, the ones who killed the diver."
"They…they weren't? How do you know?" Lindea said,
relieved-but puzzled.
"One of you dropped off a spear head? That was in the
skeleton's hip?"
"Pelvis," said K'ndar.
"Pelvis?"
"Yes, we did. It's a called a harpoon."
"Well, Raylan turned it over to Jansen. She's a sharp
one, she is, she can winkle out the most arcane bits of history. In this case,
the harpoon had a number in it," she reminded them.
"Two thirteen!" the two said in unison.
"Aye. Two
thirteen. That was the number of an iron forger in the North. He had a small
cothold on the coast, near Tillek Hold, so he was involved in the seafaring
trade. About seventy years ago, his cothold was
attacked by sea raiders. They stole everything he had, to include his daughter,
and beat him almost to death. Among the many things they stole was the harpoon.
How it ended up stuck in the pelvis
of a deep diver, thousands of kilometers from Tillek, we have no idea. Nor,
until we get a better sense of the skeleton, do we know WHEN it happened. But I
doubt, very much, that it was a fisherman who killed the diver," she said.
Lindea felt a sense of relief.
"Thank you, Francie, for telling me that. It makes me
feel a little better."
K'ndar added, "And, justice WAS served. By the
sea."
1 comment:
Interesting developments. The recovery should make a great set of stories.
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