There were more of the People in the clearing-almost twenty of them. Most were roughly the same size as Speaks First and its two companions, but he spotted four that were considerably smaller. Children, he guessed. This had to be a family group, then, or perhaps a tribe or clan. For a few moments the other People seemed unaware of Teldin's presence. Then one of them stopped stock still, a bright gold eye staring directly at the Cloakmaster. In his mind he 'heard' a mental cry of warning or alarm-the cloak didn't bother to translate the exact meaning, but its significance was clear enough-and then all of the other People were frozen motionless, too, staring at him. They're examining the 'incomplete animal,' he thought with a wry smile; having seen the birds and other examples of three- legged Nex native life, the phrase made a lot more sense now.
The stunned immobility lasted only a few moments. Teldin could 'hear' Speaks First's explanation that the 'not-People not-Other' was a guest. As he'd figured from the outset, Speaks First had to be the equivalent of a clan leader.
Slowly, Teldin advanced into the clearing, hands open to show he was unarmed. 'I mean you no harm,' he said as calmly as he could manage, hoping the cloak would inject a reassuring note into the mental message it was broadcasting. The smaller, immature People dashed into the shelter of full-sized adults as he emerged from the forest. The adults themselves, however, exhibited no obvious signs of fear. More fascination than anything, he told himself. Several of the trilaterals were showing the same behavior as Looks Around, rotating about their axes to examine him with one eye after another.
As Teldin approached, Speaks First indicated one of the trilaterals standing nearby.
Teldin looked at the one named Message Bearer. Its skin was slightly grayer than that of the others-drier- looking, almost dusty. Its eye, too, appeared slightly different, the Cloakmaster thought, with a duller yellow tinge to it instead of the bright gold luster of the others'. It's old, he told himself. The aged storyteller? It had to be. 'Greetings, Message Bearer,' he said with a slight bow.
Message Bearer moved closer, stopping a man's height away. Even at that distance, Teldin could smell the creature's odor-sharper and somehow more sour than that of Speaks First. The creature's oddly shaped pupil expanded and contracted, its size changes slower and less precise than those of the younger creatures.
Teldin took a breath to speak, but Speaks First was already communicating with the older creature.
The aging trilateral pivoted to examine Teldin with another eye that looked even more faded than the first. For a few seconds it remained mentally silent, and the Cloakmaster thought it was going to refuse. But then,
What did I just see? Teldin asked himself. He had the unshakable feeling that something important had just happened, but that he simply wasn't grasping the significance.
Message Bearer paused-reflectively, Teldin thought.
'Where did they go when they left?'
Teldin frowned. 'What were the Others like, then?' he asked. 'Were they like the People?'
Teldin nodded slowly. If he was interpreting Message Bearer correctly, he could well have been right in his guess that the People had risen to intelligence and what level of civilization they had after-perhaps
'Were the Others always here?' he asked. 'Did they evolve here?' He wondered how the cloak would handle the word 'evolve.'
'The Egg. What is the Egg?'
Doubt and emerging distrust were emanating from the trilateral in waves. 'Maybe we call it something different,'
Teldin said hurriedly. 'Tell me about the Egg, and I'll tell you what we call it.'
Message Bearer seemed to think about that for a few moments. Then its mental voice continued,
'The Broken Sphere…' Teldin murmured under his breath.
'Yes,' Teldin answered. 'So the Juna-the Others-came from the Broken Sphere?'
Teldin felt excitement flare in his chest. 'And where
'And where's that?'
'Where is the center?'
Teldin sighed in disappointment. He shouldn't have expected anything else, he told himself. After all, what did he think Message Bearer was going to do, pull out a star-chart and give him precise coordinates? These were racial myths that the creature was reciting to him, using terms and concepts that the People could understand. He shouldn't have expected a meaningful answer, and he shouldn't be disappointed. But he had, and he was.
'Do you know anything about the
To his amazement, he felt a wave of comprehension from the trilateral.
'Did the Others build the