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“Some people have affinities for the sea, others for runnerbeasts or dragons.” He gave her an encouraging squeeze when her face clouded, hearing that preamble. “Readis has had a great adventure for a young lad. Let’s bend with it for the time being. I would like to hear what Aivas has to say about the shipfish, After all, love, we, too, owe our lives to them—and all that they brought us to. We ought, for the sake of our son, to listen to what is known about them.”

She leaned into him, borrowing his strength once again. “He is just a little boy.”

“Who will grow, I hope, into a fine sturdy man. Who will probably be as stubborn as his mother.” He grinned down at her.

“Ha! And not just his mother by any means,” she replied tardy. “Just don’t force the issue, Jayge.”

“I hadn’t intended to, but I must admit to being curious as to what Aivas will say about talking fish.”

“Yes,” Aramina said, moving away from his side to take a sand-covered biscuit out of her daughter’s hand. “People can imagine such odd things in moments of stress.”

“Didn’t we though!” Jayge’s grin was for their own rarely mentioned rescue. “We never thought to thank them, either.”

Aramina gave him a long and indignant stare. “Considering we barely made it to shore, and never really thought the shipfish were speaking to us, why would we have?”

The dolphins kept patrolling the waters off Pardisriv, hoping to ask mans to remove bloodfish. Most of them had the annoying things. Sometimes one could bite it off a podmember, but the parasites could take a hold that only a man’s sharp knife could remove. It had been one of the great things about having a partner: he or she would keep the dolphins’ flesh free of the parasites. So when they found the broken pieces of the mans’ boat, they pushed it to where the tide would bring it ashore, since the waters were not deep enough for them to swim all the way in to the sands. Maybe, seeing that the dolphins were remembering the tasks tradition had told them to perform, mans would perform the tasks dolphins could not do for themselves. They kept watch until they saw mans finding the wreckage. Kib called and called, asking when the bloodfish could be taken off, and where should they go for that healing. The mans were so happy to find the ship pieces that they walked away without answering.

If there was only a bell, Kib thought. There should be a bell Then they could ring it as their ancestors had, and mans would answer. The dolphins at Moncobay had a bell that they could ring, but they had not yet had the bloodfish scraped off. Had mans forgotten their duty to dolphins?

The Tillek had said that, one day, when the dolphin bells were rung again, mans would remember what mans should do to help dolphins.

CHAPTER III

IF ARAMINA secretly hoped that Lord Jaxom would forget so trivial a matter as speaking to Aivas about her son’s adventure, she was mistaken. However, it was Masterfishman Alemi who was asked to come and recount the event to the Artificial Intelligence Voice-Address System.

Jayge was somewhat irritated that Readis would miss an opportunity to meet this astounding artifact of the original colonists, but Aramina thought it was much the best thing.

“He’s only just settled down, Jayge. Seeing this Aivas thing would upset him. And how much would a boy of his age understand? I mean, it’s not as if he were meeting a living person he could relate to, is it?”

“I could insist that Readis accompany me,” Alemi said, not wishing to cause bad feelings between holder and lady. His initial elation had been much dampened by realizing that his young friend was being excluded from the interview. He had been to the Admin with other Fishmasters, and had been awed by the vast amount of still-relevant information the facility had on ocean currents and deeps. The boy would be so proud of having been granted such a privilege.

“No!” Aramina said with some force. “It’s enough he had the adventure. He tends to magnify things out of proportion, and I don’t want him thinking of swimming with those shipfish again. You go. Find out what this Aivas knows. We can decide then if Readis is to be told. Right now, I’d rather the whole affair was forgotten.”

“Forget that we owe the doll-fins our son’s life?”

“We owe them ours, too!” she snapped at him. “But I’m not out looking at the sea to see fins all day. Readis has to learn to deal with life on the land, not the sea.” She gave Alemi a quick glance and added in a gentler tone, “I mean, for a boy his age, he already knows a good deal about the fishman’s Craft, and I’m grateful you wanted to teach him.” Then she let out a gush of held breath and said in a fierce tone, “He’s only seven Turns old! He’s got a lot more to do with dragons than with doll-fins.”

The two men exchanged glances and a silent understanding was reached.

“I’ll go to Landing then,” Alemi said calmly. “See what Aivas has to say about these creatures. I must admit, I’m some fascinated with them myself. And,” he added with a wry grin, “I saved some fish to feed them with on this latest sail. You know, I hadn’t realized just how often they have escorted my ship. And how often they’ve saved lives. Each of my older hands had some tale to telclass="underline" in their family or from other crews they’ve sailed with. Oly said that once he was certain doll-fins had kept his skiff afloat until he was close enough to land to swim. The boat sank the moment he left it.”

“Do me a favor, Alemi?” Aramina asked, her expression severe.

“What?”

“Don’t tell Readis any of those tales.”

“Ara …” Jayge began in protest.

She wheeled on him. “I know all too well, Jayge Lilcamp, what can happen to a child who gets its head full of notions!”

Jayge pulled back and gave her a sheepish expression. “All right, Ara, I take the point. Alemi?”

“Oh, aye, I’ll keep my mouth shut.”

There was an awkward pause and then Aramina relented. “If he asks, tell him the truth. I won’t have him lied to or put off.”

“You want it both ways?” Jayge asked.

She gave him a scowl, then relaxed a bit with a rueful smile on her lips. “I guess I do. But he’s only seven and the least said the best as far as I can see.”

They were all of one mind before Alemi left the house that evening. He arranged for his first mate to take the sloop out the next day to trawl for redfins, which were still running. What he couldn’t sell fresh, they’d smoke, so he didn’t want to lose the day because he was asked to go to Landing.

Kitrin didn’t wish him to be away from her at all.

“I’m longer gone on the ship fishing, dear,” he gently reminded his wife. She was well gone in her pregnancy and apt to fret. He took her hand and pulled her into his embrace, stroking her fine dark hair. “And I promise I shan’t even look at those forward girls who work at Landing.”

They both felt the baby kicking at her belly and smiled at each other.

“You’ve only to send Bitty after me,” he assured her, nodding at the little bronze fire-lizard curled up in a sunny patch on their veranda. “Returning from Landing is much easier done than from the sea.”

“I know, I know,” she said, and settled against the curve of him.

If Alemi were truthful—and this was not the time to be with Kitrin so uneasy in herself—he would have admitted that being asked to visit Landing, to speak to Aivas itself, was an excitement he didn’t wish to miss, and one he would have preferred to share with no qualifications. He could, indeed, understand and appreciate Aramina’s anxieties about Readis. The boy was adventurous enough and sufficiently self-confident, perhaps, to undertake more than he was truly able to. Alemi had planned to tell him all that he had observed on this latest sail of the doll-fins: how he had taken up a position on the prow of the ship to hail the shipfish, to see if others would talk to him, to feed them the fish he had saved as thank-you. He had done this every morning and evening. To his own amazement he had begun to notice differences in the colors, even in the scars on their muzzles, so that they were distinguishable one from another. It occurred to him that doll-fins, like dragons, could be identified once one knew what to look for: like differences in shade and scar tissue.