The Mystery of Ireta_ Dinosaur Planet & Dinosaur Planet Survivors - Anne McCaffrey [20]
“With all due respect, co-leader, the inclusion of your team doesn’t puzzle me as much as no mention of a previous coring.”
“I quite appreciate that. How old d’you think the cores are?”
“Too scorching old for my liking, Varian. The lines end with the stable shield area!”
Varian drew breath in a whistle. “Kai, that would mean millions of years. Could even a Thek-manufactured device last that long?”
“Who knows? C’mon, you can have a look at the device yourself. Then I’ve some tapes to play for you that I think you’ll like.”
“Those flying things Gaber was raving about?”
“Among others.”
“Sure you won’t have one more piece of fresh fruit?” She couldn’t resist teasing him.
Kai gave her a fleetingly irritated look, then grinned. He had an engaging smile, she thought, and not for the first time. They’d seen a good deal of each other in the planning stages but far too little now that they had to deal with their separate responsibilities.
“I’ve had a sufficiency to eat, thank you, Varian.”
“And I’m a glutton, huh?” But she snatched up one more slice from the platter. “What are these avians like? I don’t trust Gaber’s observations.”
“They’re golden-furred and I’d hazard that they’re intelligent. Curiosity occurs only with intelligence, doesn’t it?”
“Generally, yes. Intelligent fliers? Raking ramjets, this’ll throw the Ryxi into loops.” Varian crowed with delight. “Where’d you encounter them?”
“I went to see those colored lakes of Berru’s and startled them out of the cliffs. By the way, the lakes harbor monsters every bit as big and dangerous as those swamp dwellers we saw this morning.”
“This planet goes in for big things . . .”
“Big puzzles, too.” They had entered the cartography dome now and Kai picked up the old core and handed it to her. “Here’s my latest.”
Varian hefted it in the palm of one hand. She saw another core on the table. “Is this one of yours?”
Kai looked up from the tape canisters he was sorting through and nodded.
Side by side, she could see the slight differences in circumference, length and weight.
“Does this previous coring explain why you’ve had so little luck in finding any ores?”
“Yes. The shield land has been stripped. My gang was relieved to know there was a good reason—this planet ought to be full of pay dirt. Now, however, we’ll have to set up secondary camps in the new fold mountains . . .”
“Secondary camps? Kai, that isn’t safe. Even if the worst you’d have to content with is fang-face . . .”
“Fang-face?”
“Well, that’s what I call whatever chewed a piece off Mabel’s flank.”
“Mabel?”
“Must you keep repeating me? I find it a lot easier to name ’em than to keep calling ’em ‘herbivore number one’ or ‘predator with teeth A.’ ”
“I didn’t know you’d seen the predator?”
“I haven’t. I can postulate from his tooth marks . . .”
“Would this be fang-face?” asked Kai as the tapes he and Gaber had made that afternoon began to appear on the viewing screen. He punched a hold on the one shot they’d had of the predator’s head.
Varian let out a squeak as she got a good look at the toothy, snarling head, the angry little eyes upturned to the sled as the creature had flashed across the small clearing.
“Yes, that could be the villain. Six meters in the shoulder, too. You couldn’t set up secondary camps that would keep him out. He could flatten you even with a couple of force-screen belts on you. No, I wouldn’t advise secondary camps until we find out how far these sweethearts range.”
“We could move the shuttle . . .”
“Not until Trizein has completed his current run of experiments. And why move? Are we low on power for travel?”
“No, but I was considering the commutation time. Cuts down effective time in the field.”
“True. Frankly, Kai, I’d prefer to scout an area before you set up a secondary