F'lar was on his feet and halfway down the passageway.
"Come on, man, we've got to get to Ruatha."
Lytol lit every glow in the Hold for F'lar and Robinton to examine the tapestry clearly.
"She spent the afternoon just looking at it," the Warder said, shaking his head. "You're sure she has tried this incredible jump?"
"She must have. Mnementh can't hear either her or Ramoth anywhere. Yet he says he can get an echo from Canth many Turns away and in the Southern Continent." F'lar stalked past the tapestry. "What is it about the door, Lytol? Think, man!"
"It is much as it is now, save that there are no carved lintels, there is no outer Court or Tower . . ."
"That's it. Oh, by the first Egg, it is so simple. Zurg said this tapestry is old. Lessa must have decided it was four hundred Turns, and she has used it as the reference point to go back between times."
"Why, then, she's there and safe," Robinton cried, sinking with relief in a chair.
"Oh, no, harper. It is not as easy as that," F'lar murmured, and Robinton caught his stricken look and the despair echoed in Lytol's face.
"What's the matter?"
"There is nothing between," F'lar said in a dead voice. "To go between places takes only as much time as for a man to cough three times. Between four hundred Turns...." His voice trailed off.
Who wills, Can.
Who tries, Does.
Who loves, Lives.
THERE WERE voices that first were roars in her aching ears and then hushed beyond the threshold of sound. She gasped as the whirling, nauseating sensation apparently spun her, and the bed which she felt beneath her, around and around. She clung to the sides of the bed as pain jabbed through her head, from somewhere directly in the middle of her skull. She screamed, as much in protest at the pain as from the terrifying, rolling, whirling, dropping lack of a solid ground.
Yet some frightening necessity kept her trying to gabble out the message she had come to give. Sometimes she felt Ramoth trying to reach her in that vast swooping darkness that enveloped her. She would try to cling to Ramoth's mind, hoping the golden queen could lead her out of this torturing nowhere. Exhausted, she would sink down, down, only to be torn from oblivion by the desperate need to communicate.
She was finally aware of a soft, smooth hand upon her arm, of a liquid, warm and savory, in her mouth. She rolled it around her tongue, and it trickled down her sore throat. A fit of coughing left her gasping and weak. Then she experimentally opened her eyes, and the images before her did not lurch and spin. "Who ... are... you?" she managed to croak. "Oh, my dear Lessa . . ."
"Is that who I am?" she asked, confused.
"So your Ramoth tells us," she was assured. "I am Mardra of Fort Weyr."
"Oh, F'lar will be so angry with me," Lessa moaned as her memory came rushing back. "He will shake me and shake me. He always shakes me when I disobey him. But I was right. I was right. Mardra? . . . Oh, that . . . awful . . . nothingness," and she felt herself drifting off into sleep, unable to resist that overwhelming urge. Comfortingly, her bed no longer rocked beneath her.
The room, dimly lit by wallglows, was both like her own at Benden Weyr and subtly different. Lessa lay still, trying to isolate that difference. Ah, the weyrwalls were very smooth here. The room was larger, too, the ceiling higher and curving. The furnishings, now that her eyes were used to the dim light and she could distinguish details, were more finely crafted. She stirred restlessly.
"Ah, you're awake again, mystery lady," a man said. Light beyond the parted curtain flooded in from the outer weyr. Lessa sensed rather than saw the presence of others in the room beyond.
A woman passed under the man's arm, moving swiftly to the bedside.
"I remember you. You're Mardra," Lessa said with surprise.
"Indeed I am, and here is T'ron, Weyrleader at Fort."
T'ron was tossing more glows into the wallbasket, peering over his shoulder at Lessa to see if the light bothered her.
"Ramoth!" Lessa exclaimed, sitting upright, aware for the first time that it was not Ramoth's mind she touched in the outer weyr.
"Oh, that one," Mardra laughed with amused dismay. "She'll eat us out of the weyr, and even my Loranth has had to call the other queens to restrain her."
"She perches on the Star Stones as if she owned them and keens constantly," T'ron added, less charitably. He cocked an ear. "Ha. She's stopped."
"You can come, can't you?" Lessa blurted out.
"Come? Come where, my dear?" Mardra asked, confused. "You've been going on and on about our 'coming,' and Threads approaching, and the Red Star bracketed in the Eye Rock, and . . . my dear, don't you realize the Red Star has been past Pern these two months?"
"No, no, they've started. That's why I came back between times . . ."
"Back? Between times?" T'ron exclaimed, striding over to the bed, eyeing Lessa intently.
"Could I have some klah. I know I'm not making much sense, and I'm not really awake yet. But I'm not mad or still sick, and this is rather complicated."
"Yes, it is," T'ron remarked with deceptive mildness. But he did call down the service shaft for klah. And he did drag a chair over to her bedside, settling himself to listen to her.
"Of course you're not mad," Mardra soothed her, glaring at her weyrmate. "Or she wouldn't ride a queen."
T'ron had to agree to that. Lessa waited for the klah to come; when it did, she sipped gratefully at its stimulating warmth.
Then she took a deep breath and began, telling them of the Long Interval between the dangerous passes of the Red Star: how the sole Weyr had fallen into disfavor and contempt, how Jora had deteriorated and lost control over her queen, Nemorth, so that, as the Red Star neared, there was no sudden increase in the size of clutches. How she had Impressed Ramoth to become Benden's Weyrwoman. How F'lar had outwitted the dissenting Hold Lords the day after Ramoth's first mating flight and taken firm command of Weyr and Pern, preparing for the Threads he knew were coming. She told her by now rapt audience of her own first attempts to fly Ramoth and how she had inadvertently gone back between time to the day Fax had invaded Ruatha Hold.
"Invade . . . my family's Hold?" Mardra cried, aghast.
"Ruatha has given the Weyrs many famous Weyrwomen," Lessa said with a sly smile at which T'ron burst out laughing.
"She's Ruathan, no question," he assured Mardra. She told them of the situation in which Dragonmen now found themselves, with an insufficient force to meet the Thread attacks. Of the Question Song and the great tapestry.
"A tapestry?" Mardra cried, her hand going to her cheek in alarm. "Describe it to me!"
And when Lessa did, she saw-at last-belief in both their faces.
"My father has just commissioned a tapestry with such a scene. He told me of it the other day because the last battle with the Threads was held over Ruatha." Incredulous, Mardra turned to T'ron, who no longer looked amused. "She must have done what she has said she'd done. How could she possibly know about the tapestry?"
"You might also ask your queen dragon, and mine," Lessa suggested.
"My dear, we do not doubt you now," Mardra said sincerely, "but it is a most incredible feat."
"I don't think," Lessa said, "that I would ever try it again, knowing what I do know."
"Yes, this shock makes a forward jump between times quite a problem if your F'lar must have an effective fighting force," T'ron remarked.
"You will come? You will?"
"There is a distinct possibility we will," T'ron said gravely, and his face broke into a lopsided grin. "You said we left the Weyrs . . . abandoned them, in fact, and left no explanation. We went somewhere . . . somewhen, that is, for we are still here now...."
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