Book Read Free

Star Trek - TOS - The Tears Of The Singers

Page 12

by Melinda Snodgrass


  across the front of her heavy cape. "No, my position as Kor's wife gives me

  certain advantages."

  "I've read that a Klingon woman can only enter the service by marriage."

  Yeoman Chou asked. "Is that true?"

  "Yes, as far as it goes. A woman cannot enter the service 106

  The Tears of the Singers

  unless she has a male sponsor or protector. He may not necessarily be a

  husband." Her lips twisted in a wry little smile. "We do not hold the

  favored position in society that you Earthwomen have."

  "We don't have a favored position, just an equal one."

  "That, to me, would seem very favorable."

  "How do you gain rank then?" Uhura asked.

  "By working hard, doing a good job and by attaching yourself to a man whose

  star is ascending."

  "And what happens if his star ever descends?" Donovan asked as he tossed

  another piece of driftwood onto the fire.

  There was an explosion of sparks, and Kali stared bleakly into the blazing

  inferno. "You fall with him."

  "Sounds like a hell of a way to run a fleet," Brentano snorted, and gave

  her a hostile look.

  "I'm sure there are things in your service that could be improved."

  "But you don't know, do you?" he sneered.

  "Watch your mouth, Brentano," Lindenbaum snapped, starting to rise.

  "You want to go a round, buddy boy? Well come on." Brentano gestured

  menacingly.

  "That will do, Mr. Brentano!" Spock's voice lashed out, separating the two

  men, and sending them grumbling back to their places. "I would advise you

  to remember not only our directive, but the philosophy contained in the

  IDIC."

  "After all, mister," Scotty purred quietly, "it's all that diversity that

  makes the universe an interesting place."

  Kali glanced down the beach toward the fights of the Klingon camp. "I must

  return now. Thank you for your hospitality-"

  "Come any tfine you like," ura said.

  "I wish I could say the ;;me, but some things are not possible."

  "If the Organians were accurate such things will, in due time, become

  possible," Spock replied.

  107

  The Tears of the Singers

  Kafi smiled, and held out her hand to the Vulcan. "Would it be treason if

  I said I hoped so?"

  "I would say rather it would be good sense," Spock replied, lightly

  touching her hand.

  All of the humans, except Brentano, wished her a good night, and

  I.Andenbaum, the blue-eyed, gentle-faced security guard, offered to walk

  her back to the Khngon camp. She smiled up at him, thinking how young he

  seemed by comparison to Kor.

  "That won't be necessary. It is only a short distance, and there is nothing

  to threaten me on this world." She paused, and surveyed the star-sprinkled

  sky and the silver ocean booming onto the sand in a deep counterpoint to

  the Taygetian song. "In fact," she continued, "I have never been in such a

  peaceful place before."

  "I know. There's something about this world that sort of gets to you. Well,

  good night."

  ','Good night, Mr. Lindenbaum." She walked into the darkness, and felt a

  tug of regret as she left the beguiling warmth of not only the fire, but

  the people as well.

  She felt a surge of anger with herself for succumbing to the blandishments

  of the humans, but she could not dismiss it as mere playacting. 'Mere was

  something very honest and sincere about the Earthers and she found it a

  welcome relief after the hostility and hypocrisy that riddled the ship.

  She found herself beginning to worry once more, but she pushed it away. For

  the present there was nothing she could do about the dangers which beset

  Kor. She decided she could best serve them both by relaxing, enjoying the

  peace of this new world and preparing for the next battle.

  Using the darkness as a cloak she crept up the slope of the hill and,

  scooping out some sand, she wiggled in beneath one wall of her tent. In

  this way she avoided the five men who sat talking and drinking about a

  portable heater in front of the circle of tents. She had no desire to

  explain her absence to Quarag, nor did she feel comfortable being the only

  woman

  106

  The Team of the Singem

  in the landing party. She feared that the liquor might arouse both hostile

  and amorous emotions in her companions, and as a precaution she slipped her

  disruptor beneath her pillow.

  Pulling off her boots she slid, shivering, into her sleeping bag, and then

  lay listening to the song which wove mysteriously through the night sky. It

  seemed to speak of peace, and rest and harmony, and for an instant she felt

  a flicker of resentment at the circumstances which forced her to spend her

  life constantly armed, and constantly on guard.

  She wrapped her arms around her body, and at last fell asleep dreaming that

  she lay safe within Kor's arms, and that they both lay in some place far

  removed from the plots and politics of the Imperial fleet.

  109

  Chapter Seven

  "Mr. Spock! Mr. Spock!" Donovan shouted as he and Chou came rumung into

  camp. Spock straightened from where he leaned over Mashn's shoulder at the

  synthesizer, and the other members of the landing party dropped whatever

  they were doing and came hurrying to hear the news.

  "Trouble, Mr. Donovan?"

  "No, sir, I don't think so, sir," the lieutenant panted. "But we just saw

  the most incredible thing."

  "We were exploring a tidal inlet about four miles south of here," Chou

  said. "Suddenly fish, hundreds of them, started throwing themselves out of

  the water and onto the beach. It was happening for several miles because we

  walked down the beach watching."

  "And then the cubs arrived," Donovan broke in. "They all gathered around

  this carpet of fish, and began this strange song. And ... and then wharal"

  lEs arms circled excitedly in the air above his head. "The next thing we

  knew the fish were gonePt

  110

  The Tears of the Singers

  Spock thoughtfully tapped a forefinger against A lips, and eyed the two

  young humans. "I trust you made a copy of this song. VT

  "Only a part of it," Chou confessed. "We were so startled that we didn't

  get the tricorders on right away."

  "Let me have it," Maslin ordered, holding out his hand. "I'll run it

  through the synthesizer. Maybe it'll help make some sense out of this

  gibberish," he added under his breath.

  "Interesting. Is it possible that this was part of some sort of breeding

  frenzy on the part of the fish?"

  "No way, Mr. Spock," Donovan said firmly. "I'm a biologist, and this

  resembled nothing I've ever seen. It was almost as if those fish were being

  yanked out of the water."

  "Good work, Lieutenant, Yeoman. Dismissed." The members of the landing

  party drifted back to their various duties, and Spock crossed swiftly to

  his tent. Entering, he sealed the door flap behind him, and flipped out his

  communicator.

  "Spock to Enterprise."

  "Enterprise here," came rzeela's raspy voice.

  "Get me Dr. McCoy."

  "Right awa
y ... oh, wait, sir. Lieutenant Mendez needs to speak with you."

  "Mr. Spock, I've either got a problem with the scanners that defies

  analysis, or there's something going on on that planet that defies logic,

  " the woman said without preamble.

  "Explain."

  "I was reviewing the scanner tapes taken during our first pass over the

  planet. I then checked the most recent tapes, and that's were the problems

  began. Whole sections no longer correlate. Where there was desert I now get

  a reading for forest, and so on. I've checked and rechecked the scanners-'

  "Tbe problem may not be in the scanner, Lieutenant," Spock sqid, cutting

  short her aggrieved recitation of the problems she had been enduring. "Two

  of our members observed a phenomenon which closely resembles what you

  The Tears of th e Singers

  am describing. Please locate the captain, and Dr. McCoy. I wish to speak

  with them."

  96yes, sir. 19

  "What is it, Spock?" McCoy's voice came over the communicator. "If it's

  anything less than your discovery of the lost ship of the Agravean Emperor,

  I don't want to know. I'm a busy man."

  "First, why you would believe in that fable, much less that it would be

  present on this world i--2'

  He broke off abruptly as a keening, agonized cry ripped through the air. It

  cut across the Thygetian song, marring the perfect harmony with its

  hideous, pain-filled note. Spock jerked open the tent flap, and rushed into

  the open.

  People stood like statues, stunned and horrified with the sound. All except

  Mashn. He clutched at his head, and toppled from the synthesizer bench.

  "What in God's name was that?" McCoy yelled.

  "Trouble, Doctor. Please get down at once. Mr. Maslin seems to have

  collapsed." Spock shut the communicator and joined the knot of people who

  had gathered around the composer.

  "I'm all right. I'm all right," Maslin said, pushing away the supporting

  hands. But he didn't look it. His skin was stretched tautly across the

  bones of his face, and he was white as a skull.

  "What happened, Mr. Maslin?" Spock asked as he caught the smaller man under

  the arm, and helped him to his feet.

  "I tell you I'm all right!" Maslin insisted agam.

  1 am not interested in the state of your health. I want to know what

  caused your collapse."

  Maslin stood shivering in the center of curious onlookers. "I'm not sure,"

  he said at last. "I was working on the synthesizer, hying to match

  resonances with the song. Then that. . . ." He paused, groping for words.

  "That terrible cry came, and I felt as if a part of me had been ripped

  away."

  112

  The Tears of the Shwrs

  Spock stared at the musician, and considered what he had heard. What Maslin

  was describing sounded like a telepathic experience, but the talent was

  rare among humans.

  "Mr. Mashn," Spock began, only to be interrupted by a melancholy, dirgelike

  descant. The cubs gazed up at the crystal cliffi and sang a song of such

  pain and despair that several humans turned away, fighting back tears.

  "Fit up a reconnaissance team, Mr. Scott. Somehow one or more of the

  Thygetians has died. We will investigate."

  "Aye, sir. It'll be a pleasure to find what ever it was."

  "Probably those stinking Klingons," Brentano muttered.

  "Conjecture will not supply us with facts. We will rendezvous back here in

  ten minutes."

  There was a hum, and a sparkling of molecules, and McCoy appeared. He

  quickly surveyed the camp, ascertaining that everyone was safe, then moved

  to Maslin.

  "What are you doing here?" the composer asked rudely.

  "I was in the neighborhood so I thought I'd make a house r

  -WI

  "Well it's not necessary. I'm fine," Maslin said shortly, then swayed, and

  clutched at Uhura's arm.

  "Yeah, fine," McCoy repeated and, taking him by the other arm, he and

  Uhura propelled Maslin to his tent.

  Ten minutes later Scotty, Spock, Ragsdale and Lindenbaum headed out of

  the camp, moving quickly along the base of the cliffs. Spock lifted his

  tricorder, took a reading, then frowned.

  "What is it, Spock?" Scotty asked as, phaser drawn, he kept a forward

  watch.

  "There is a group of five humans about two miles to our north."

  "Humans?" Ragsdale echoed.

  "But how did they get here?" Lindenbaum asked.

  "Let's find them, and ask them," Scotty said with a smile, but it was not

  a pleasant expression.

  113

  The Tears of the Singers

  The two groups spotted each other simultaneously. Painstakingly working

  their way down the rugged cliff face were five heavily loaded men.

  Backpacks and bedrolls thrust above their shoulders, and shockwands hung at

  their waists. One of the men on the cliff glanced down, and saw the landing

  party. He gave a Comanche whoop, and waved vigorously. The men quickened

  their descent, and soon joined the Enterprise party at the base of the

  cliffs.

  "Are we glad to see you," a big, heavyset man called as he shouldered

  through his companions. His biceps looked like tree trunks, and his head

  seemed to sprout directly from his beefy shoulders. His small, pig eyes

  flicked evaluatingly over the men from the Enterprise.

  "We've been waiting weeks for a pickup, but we never expected Star Fleet."

  "You can keep waiting," Scotty growled, having taken an immediate dislike

  to the man. "We're not here for you. Whoever you are."

  "Garyson, Max Garyson."

  "Lieutenant Commander Scott of the starship Enterprise. But what are you

  doing here? We had no information of human presence on this world."

  "Isn't that just like that turd Ridly. First he maroons us here, and then

  he doesn't even inform anyone."

  Spock turned to Scotty. There was a slight frown of aggravation on his

  chiseled face. "Forgive me, Mr. Scott. I have been remiss in my duties. The

  captain and I knew of the presence of the hunters. Commander Li mentioned

  them during our meeting at Star Base 24, but when we did not find them in

  evidence I confess that it slipped my mind."

  "It's no real problem, Mr. Spock, but meantime what the hell do we do with

  them?" Scotty asked, jerking a thumb in the direction of the hunters.

  "Hey, what's going on here?" Garyson demanded, apparently becoming

  irritated at being discussed as though he

  114

  The Tears of the Singers

  weren't present. He thrust out his chin belligerently, and stared

  challengingly at the party from the Enterprise.

  Spock turned coolly to face him. "Captain Ridly was returning to pick you

  up when, regretfully, both he and his ship were lost in the space/time warp

  that now exists in this system.,

  "Tough luck about Ridly," Garyson said with a dismissing shrug. "But at

  least you're here, and we can get home. God knows we're ready."

  "Yeah, and it's gonna be party time when we get back," hooted one of

  Garyson's companions.

  "Say, what brought you fellows out this way if you didn't know we were

  here?" a small dirty man with long stringy hair asked.


  "We were investigating a death cry. We believe that one of the Taygetians

  has been killed."

  "That's right, and we did it," Garyson said, jabbing at his barrel chest

  with a forefinger. "Great big male, but the take was worth it. Thirteen

  tears."

  "You killed that creature?" Undenbaum demanded, his normally gentle

  expression replaced by one of loathing.

  "Sure, that's what we come here for."

  "Mr. Garyson, have you been continuing your hunt?" Spock asked.

  "Yeah, but about fifty miles from here. We'd picked over this group pretty

  well, so we went north to another large herd UP there."

  "That would explain why we were unaware of your presence until today."

  Spock paused, and considered how best to approach his next topic. "Mr.

  Garyson, you and your men are naturally welcome to remain at our camp, or

  aboard the Enterprise until our mission is complete, but I must tell you

  that all further hunting must cease."

  There was a confused and hostile babble from the hunters. Garyson cut it

  off with a slash of his spadelike hand. "What the hell are you talking

  about?" IIS

  The Tears of the Singers

  "The Thygetians are not animals as first believed. They are an intelligent

  life form, and this destruction must cease."

  "You got proof of that, Vulcan? 'Cause I got a piece of paper here that

  says these critters are animals, and I've got a license to hunt them.

  Unless you can show me where the law has changed I've got my rights. And my

  rights included harvesting crystal tears." Garyson spat neatly to the right

  of Spock's boot.

  Ragsdale gave a growl of fury, and lunged forward. Spock's arm caught him

  across the chest. It was like running into a steel bar, and the security

  chief quit moving. "I do not have the documentation you request for it is

  our research which has established the sentience of the Thygetians. But I

  can assure you that the law will be changed once we return to the

  Federation."

  "You hear that boys?" Garyson, yelled, turning to face his companions. "He

  says our little gravy train is about to be derailed." He turned slowly back

  to face Spock. "Well, if that's the case I guess we're going to have to

  move fast, and get what we can while we can." His broad face twisted in an

 

‹ Prev