The Dragonriders of Pern - Anne McCaffrey [245]
Disturbed, and suddenly all too willing that someone else be exposed to their ancient enemy at such close range, she stepped back.
Lord Groghe stepped forward importantly. “Sangel, if you please?”
How like the Fort Lord, Lessa thought, to play host when P’zar who was, after all, acting Weyrleader at Fort Weyr, did not act quickly enough to exert his rights. Lessa wished fervently that F’lar had been able to attend this viewing. Well, perhaps P’zar was merely being diplomatic with the Fort Lord Holder. Still, Lord Groghe would need to be kept . . .
She retreated—and knew it for a retreat—to Robinton. The Harper’s presence was always reassuring. He was eager to have his turn but resigned to waiting. Groghe naturally would give the other Lord Holders precedence over a harper, even the Masterharper of Pern.
“I wish he’d go,” Lessa said, glancing sideways at Meron. The Nabolese had made no attempt to re-enter the group from which he had been so precipitously expelled. The offensive stubbornness of the man in remaining where he clearly was not welcome provided a counterirritant to worry and her renewed fear of the Red Star.
Why must it appear so—so innocent? Why did it have to have clouds? It ought to be different. How it ought to differ, Lessa couldn’t guess, but it ought to look—to look sinister. And it didn’t. That made it more fearful than ever.
“I don’t see anything,” Sangel of Boll was complaining.
“A moment, sir.” Wansor came forward and began adjusting a small knob. “Tell me when the view clarifies for you.”
“What am I supposed to be seeing?” Sangel demanded irritably. “Nothing there but a bright—ah! Oh!” Sangel backed away from the eyepiece as if Thread had burned him. But he was again in position before Groghe could call another Lord to his place.
Lessa felt somewhat relieved, and a little smug, at Sangel’s reaction. If the fearless Lords also got a taste of honest dread, perhaps . . .
“Why does it glow? Where does it get light? It’s dark here,” the Lord Holder of Boll babbled.
“It is the light of the sun, my Lord,” Fandarel replied, his deep, matter-of-fact voice reducing that miracle to common knowledge.
“How can that be?” Sangel protested. “The sun’s on the other side of us now. Any child knows that.”
“Of course, but we are not obstructing the Star from that light. We are below it in the skies, if you will, so that the sun’s light reaches it directly.”
Sangel seemed likely to monopolize the viewer, too.
“That’s enough, Sangel,” Groghe said testily. “Let Oterel have a chance.”
“But I’ve barely looked, and there was trouble adjusting the mechanism,” Sangel complained. Between Oterel’s glare and Groghe trying to shoulder him out of the way, Sangel reluctantly stepped aside.
“Let me adjust the focus for you, Lord Oterel,” Wansor murmured politely.
“Yes, do. I’m not half blind like Sangel there,” the Lord of Tillek said.
“Now, see here, Oterel . . .”
“Fascinating, isn’t it, Lord Sangel?” said Lessa, wondering what reaction the man’s blathering had concealed.
He harumphed irritably, but his eyes were restless and he frowned.
“Wouldn’t call it fascinating, but then I had barely a moment’s look.”
“We’ve an entire night, Lord Sangel.”
The man shivered, pulling his cloak around him though the night air was not more than mildly cool for spring.
“It’s nothing more than a child’s miggsy,” exclaimed the Lord of Tillek. “Fuzzy. Or is it supposed to be?” He glanced away from the eyepiece at Lessa.
“No, my Lord,” Wansor said. “It should be bright and clear, so you can see cloud formations.”
“How would you know?” Sangel asked testily.
“Wansor set the instrument up for this evening’s viewing,” Fandarel pointed out.
“Clouds?” Tillek asked. “Yes, I see them. But what’s the land? The dark stuff or the gray?”
“We don’t know yet,” Fandarel told him.
“Land masses don’t look that way as high as dragons can fly a man,” said P’zar the Fort Weyrleader, speaking for the first time.
“And objects seen at a far greater distance change even