Saturn rukh, p.24

Saturn Rukh, page 24

 

Saturn Rukh
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  “It does have the ability to spin a thread, like an Earth spider,” said Rod, trying to adjust the position of his head to pick up the glint from the fine line in the visor imager.

  “That’s the answer!” said Sandra, pleased to hear the information. “Once a longleg gets ready to leave the host, it just climbs to the top of a feather and lets out a long line into the breeze coming over the top of the rukh’s wing, and when the line is long enough, the air drag pulls Mr. Longleg Spidermite off its perch and off the back of the rukh, where it slowly falls down through the flock. If it’s lucky, it finds a new feather forest to eat through. They must have started evolution as sinkers, but very slow sinkers because the thread gave them a high surface area-to-mass ratio. Did you remember to take sample bags?” she asked. “I’d like to look at that thing under high magnification.”

  “Sorry, no bags,” replied Rod. “I was just going out for a walk, not a scientific expedition.” He thought for a while. “I’ve got it! I’ll empty my water bottle and bring the wee beastie home in that.”

  “Don’t forget to bring a sample of the thread,” reminded Sandra as the radio link went back on standby.

  With the longleg tucked safely away in his backpack, Rod continued his vermin-clearing operation, now careful to look for vermin on feather edges as well as featherroots. He came to a patch of feathers that were badly infested with quill lice. Soon the meta torch was almost in constant use as he methodically cleared out one louse after another, making sure than none of their spawn survived.

  Suddenly, the canopy opened above him and Rod looked up to see a giant eye peering down at him. This had to be the lower eye, since the third air sac segment was collapsed and the creature wasn’t wearing a hextube string tie. When the giant caterpillar saw the meta torch flaring quietly in Rod’s hand, it rose up, first set of foreclaws drawn up out of the way, while the second set of foreclaws kept the canopy held open. Rod finished off the louse he had been working on. Holding the deflated, but still-squirming, body of the quill louse by his gloved left hand, he fried its brain and cooked its egg sac. He added the body to the stack he had been collecting. Then, turning off his meta torch, he stepped back. The gigantic eye came down to look. It picked up one of the bodies, held it close to its eye, and put it back on the pile. Then, one of its foreclaws extended, it slowly approached Rod. With the meta torch at the ready in his left hand, but hidden behind his back, Rod extended his right hand and grasped the tip of the large, stiffly inflated, balloon-like claw. Once, when Rod had needed help to pull the reactor out over the lip of the mouth, he had led that very claw to the Hoytether and asked for its assistance. Now, he found himself being led by the claw, as the eye contracted its neck, clearing the way for them both through the feather forest. They came to a large quill that had five large quill lice jammed down into the follicle pore. The pore was oozing and the skin around the follicle was swollen and scabby. Rod could see from the thickness of their bladder skins that three of the lice were mature and well dug in. There was no way the pneumatic-powered claws of the eye could extract them. Protected by the bladders of their larger mates, two smaller lice had also forced their way into the pore. Even when the mature lice had jetted off, the pore would still remain infected. For all Rod knew, this particular pore might have been under attack for weeks or months.

  “I bet that’s sore!” said Rod, letting go of the claw and bringing out his meta torch. “You once helped me, so I’ll help you.” He quickly burst the five sacs to make sure the mature lice didn’t jet off, spreading infection through the forest. Then, one by one, he extracted the creatures and torched them thoroughly. As he finished each one, the eye would pick up the corpse, raise it up to the top of the canopy, then use its canards to fly its head high above the back of the still-diving wing and let the burnt body of the vermin fly off on the wind, to fall into the hot depths below.

  The task done, Rod looked up at the giant eye and the eye looked down at him. Rod raised his hand. The giant eye bent down, one of its foreclaws extended in imitation. Rod “shook hands.”

  “Any time you need help in getting rid of some more bandits, partner,” he said, “just give me a call.” Dropping the claw, he headed off into the forest, following the macropolyhextube guide line he had been paying out during his journey. By the time he made his circuitous way back to Sexdent it was getting dark. Sandra, Dan, and Seichi were waiting on the surface outside the airlock, hoping for a nighttime session with the upper eye. Seichi was holding his keyboard, which was connected to a large “woofer” speaker standing beside him. Dan was monitoring the output of his similarly large-sized low-frequency microphone. As they waited they could hear deep rumblings from inside the rukh as the eyes used the giant body to “gossip” with the other members of the flock during the changeover period between the daytime hunting dive and the nighttime altitude climb. Since the human ear had difficulty hearing such low tones, the actual “listening” was done by Jeeves, who analyzed the signals coming from the laser beam motion detector monitoring the vibrational oscillations of the low-frequency microphone, and raised the frequency of the oscillations to the middle of the humans’ hearing and speaking audio range. Similarly, when Seichi would play a note on the keyboard, or any of the humans spoke, Jeeves would down-translate the frequency spectrum to the middle of the rukh’s audio communications band.

  Sure enough, once the nighttime climb of the flock started, the upper eye came visiting again, wearing its “shoestring tie.” It was carrying the loose end of the string tie in one foreclaw. As the eye approached them, it extended the foreclaw proudly to show what it had done.

  “It’s tied a bowline in the loose end!” exclaimed Dan. “It must have figured out how to do it from looking at the knot at the other end. Let me get another segment of line and teach it a square knot.”

  “Dan!” said Sandra. “We’re not at a Boy Scout camp. Let’s concentrate on the language lessons.” She turned to Seichi. “The rukh body is still talking. Can you imitate the sound?”

  A complex rumble was rising up from the air sacs of the beast below them. The sound vibrated the soles of their boots and their bowels quivered in sympathetic response. Seichi listened to Jeeves’s frequency-translated version of the multi-chordal sound through his helmet phones, while at the same time he tried to “feel” what the rukh was saying with the whole of his body. The rumble stopped temporarily and Seichi repeated what he had heard using his keyboard, some of his fingers often having to hit more than one note at a time, then sliding off on another note while sustaining some of the others. Fortunately, the keyboard was designed so he could key in the permanent notes of the chordal phrase as a “drone,” then remove his fingers from those keys and use them elsewhere to bring in other notes. The large ultrabass speaker beside Seichi vibrated visibly as it responded to Seichi’s playing. The deep rumbling sounds coming from the speaker caused the eye to jerk back in surprise, and the surface they were standing on became quiet.

  “I think it heard something familiar,” said Sandra, holding her breath in excitement. “Play it again.”

  Before Seichi could respond, the eye moved closer to Seichi and the speaker, and the surface below them rumbled again. At the same time the eye used a foreclaw to touch the surface they were standing on.

  “It’s the same chordal pattern as before, but just part of it,” said Seichi, repeating the chordal phrase with his keyboard. “Much less complicated and easier to play.”

  “But what does it mean?” asked Dan, bewildered.

  “The eye pointed down with its foreclaw as it said it,” said Sandra. “Perhaps that’s its name. Let’s try and make sure. Are you ready to repeat that chord?”

  “Easy as cake,” said Seichi. “I had the keyboard in record mode.”

  Sandra pointed down, making sure she touched the taut skin of the rukh below their boots, while Seichi had the keyboard play the simpler phrase over again. The eye bobbed rapidly up and down in excitement and confirmed the identification by pointing at the body below them while repeating the chord once again. The eye then pointed a foreclaw at itself and again the body rumbled a chord. The eye looked expectantly to see how the humans responded.

  “We must have got it wrong,” said Sandra, disappointed. “That was the same chord.”

  “Maybe it’s just trying to make clear that the body and the eye are one person,” suggested Dan.

  “I do not think so,” said Seichi after a long pause. “Jeeves? Wasn’t there a different note in that chord?”

  “You are correct,” replied Jeeves. “The lowest note shifted three hertz upward. Would you like me to repeat it through the speaker? I have a perfect copy in my memory.”

  “If I had you do that, then I would not be learning to speak the language,” replied Seichi, fingering the difficult chord once again, with the lowest note now slightly higher. He finished by pointing a finger at the eye.

  The eye bobbed excitedly up and down, then inflated the canards on the sides of its head. The wings caught the air and raised the head high in the sky on a rapidly inflating neck while at the same time an organ chord of rising tones emerged from the beast below them. Then, just as suddenly, the canards brought the head back down again and the chord stopped.

  “I think that was the upper eye’s equivalent of saying ‘It’s got it!’,” said Sandra, smiling at the eye’s antics.

  It was now Sandra’s turn. “Sandra,” she said, pointing at herself. Jeeves repeated the word a few octaves lower through the woofer speaker. The huge body of the leviathan strained below their feet as it emitted a short, multitoned, almost stuttering sound.

  And the language lesson started.

  ~ * ~

  The computer console turned out to be of great help in getting many concepts across, especially once Sandra had shown the eye how it could draw pictures on the touchscreen with the end of its foreclaw. Soon they jointly knew words for many objects, including the Sun and its planets, and many actions, such as “come” and “go.”

  After five hours of lessons, the sky started to get light as morning came. They were joined by the lower eye, which had snaked its way upward from its perch below.

  When the upper eye didn’t introduce the newcomer, Sandra decided to take care of that herself.

  “Are you ready with the keyboard, Seichi?” she asked.

  Going back to the beginning of the language session, she pointed down at the surface below them and Seichi played the chordal phrase that the aliens used for the body of the rukh. She pointed at the upper eye wearing the string tie and Seichi played the same chordal phrase with the single note three hertz higher. Then Sandra pointed at the recently arrived lower eye and waited. The upper eye pointed at the lower eye and the body below them gave out a chordal phrase that was almost identical to the ones Seichi had played.

  “The changed note is lower in this chord instead of higher,” said Seichi. “Am I right, Jeeves?”

  “Correct,” said Jeeves. “Three hertz lower.”

  “It sort of makes sense,” said Sandra. “They are really just different parts of the same animal. They must share the same root chord for their names but have slightly different added notes to indicate which part is which.”

  Since the humans couldn’t easily produce chords, they chose the nicknames “Uppereye” and “Lowereye” to distinguish between the two eyes. The string tie of Uppereye and the nonfunctional third air sac on Lowereye made it easy for the humans to tell the two apart.

  Sandra tried to talk to Lowereye, but it was soon obvious that what Uppereye had learned during the night had not been passed on to Lowereye. She sighed and started in over again.

  “Sandra,” she said, pointing to herself.

  came the reply. But instead of the rolling chord vibrating up from below in an ultrabass rumble, it came as a bass chord directly from Lowereye’s head.

  “The eyes talk!” yelled Sandra in surprise.

  “That is only logical,” replied Seichi. “We have already observed that the rukh’s body is controlled by only one eye at a time, so only one eye can use the body to speak with. It must often be necessary for the intelligence behind the other eye to be able to communicate. They have air sacs in their neck, so they certainly could have developed the necessary vibratory control over their bladder orifices needed to produce speech. The speech tones of the eyes are necessarily pitched up a few octaves from the speech tones of the body because of the smaller bladder size.”

  “That’s going to make it a lot easier to talk with them,” said Sandra. “If we can get them to use eye-talk rather than body-talk, then we won’t have to always have Jeeves in the loop to hear those sounds we can’t hear with our own ears.”

  “Sun come,” said Uppereye, pointing to the direction of the rising sun. “Uppereye go.”

  “Wait!” said Sandra. When Uppereye didn’t halt, Sandra realized she would have to teach that word to Uppereye in the next lesson. She searched around in her memory for a phrase that contained words that Uppereye did know. She finally found them.

  “Not go!” she blurted out, and Uppereye came back.

  “There is one more thing I need to show them,” she said to Seichi. “I’m going to climb up onto the airlock platform. You two stay down here and don’t look up. “

  “What are you going to do?” asked Seichi.

  “They think that humans have hard heads with one big eyeball, like they have, and tough elastic neon yellow bodies. All they’ve seen of us is the outside of our saturnsuits. I’m going to show them what a human being really looks like.”

  “Sandra!” interjected Dan. “Don’t do it! It could be dangerous!”

  “I’ll be able to hold my breath long enough for the airlock door to cycle,” said Sandra, as she climbed the rungs to the platform door.

  “But someone needs to keep an eye on you in case you get into trouble in the airlock,” replied Dan in a concerned tone.

  “I volunteer!” interjected Pete over the link.

  “Don’t worry, Sandra,” said Chastity. “I’ll make sure that I’m the only one watching you through the airlock window.”

  Once in the airlock portal, Sandra unfastened her backpack with her oxygen supply and hung it from a safety hook inside, where the umbilical could reach her helmet intake. Leaving her helmet on, she proceeded to strip in the cold and gusty Saturn morn, dropping her clothing on the door of the airlock in her haste. She had originally been thinking of pointing out the various parts of her body as she unclothed them, but the “wind chill” factor from the frequent gusts billowing through the clearing around Sexdent made her drop that idea. Tomorrow she would name the various body parts to Uppereye using drawings on the portable console. Now completely naked in front of the two giant staring eyes, she took a deep breath, and deliberately blinking her eyes often to help protect them from the ammonia fumes in the atmosphere, she lifted the helmet from her head, shook out her hair, and pulled on it with one hand to show its structure.

  Holding the helmet aloft she quickly turned around so the eyes could see her from all sides. As she turned, she could hear and feel sonar pings from the two eyes as they looked inside her. Her pirouette finished, she dropped the helmet back on her head, turning the air supply to high as she did so, to flush the ammonia-laden Saturnian air out of the helmet. Once she could safely do so, she used her held breath to say: “Close that airlock door, Chass! It’s cold out here!”

  Before the door could rise shut, however, an errant gust of wind whistled through the airlock and Sandra’s pink silk panties flew off the door and sailed across the clearing to land in front of Lowereye. The massive foreclaws of the giant caterpillar picked up the limp piece of underclothing. Solemnly the giant eye inspected the item, marveling at the three openings and their elastic bands. After toying with the object awhile, Lowereye realized that its whole foreclaw would fit into the larger opening, while the individual pincers would fit through the other two smaller openings. Using its other foreclaws to help, it drew the underpants snugly onto its upper left foreclaw like a rock singer pulling on a fingerless glove.

  With the show over and the airlock door closed, Uppereye waved good-bye to Seichi and Dan and left. Imitating the wave with its “gloved” hand, Lowereye followed.

  “Looks like a one-eyed, two-fingered Michael Jackson,” said Pete from an upper holoviewport, making sure the viewport imager got a good picture of the dressed-up alien. “I bet I can sell this to the InterRock magpage.”

  “Say,” said Chastity loudly through the echoing confines of Sexdent as she watched Sandra get dressed through the inner airlock window. “The eyes have seen only one half of the human race. How about one of you guys imitating Sandra for the education and amusement of Peregrine’s eyes tomorrow night?”

  “No way!” “Not me!” came the rapid responses from Rod and Pete.

  “Just as well,” concluded Chastity with a wry smile. “It’s so chilly out there, the important bits would be all shriveled up anyway.”

 

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