benefit could I gain?' He took a deep breath. 'Look through my eyes, if you can,' he demanded. 'Use my senses. See if I'm not telling you the truth.'
Slowly he turned around, scanning the length and breadth of the ship with his gaze. All the while, he concentrated on every detail he saw or otherwise perceived, trying mightily to channel it down the telepathic link into the mind of the metal creature. 'Those 'tiny, scurrying things' you see,' he whispered harshly, 'they're like me. And they're like you, too. They have minds, emotions. They have wishes, and hopes, and dreams. They love. They feel fear.
He pounded the ship's rail with a fist. 'This-the ship-
'One is speaking to you now,' the Cloakmaster asserted. 'Except I'm not a parasite. I am an independent being like you, with my own mind. We all are.
'I know it's difficult,' he went on more quietly. 'We seem so different, don't we, you and us? In size, in shape, in where and how we live. But we share one thing: we're aware of ourselves, and of the universe around us. Despite all the other differences-minor differences-that makes us the same.'
The mental link remained 'silent' for so long that Teldin was starting to think that Zat had broken the connection. But then the telepathic communication resumed-slowly, almost tentatively.
'I think so,' Teldin confirmed.
There was another long pause.
Teldin shut his eyes, his throat constricting so tightly that he could hardly breathe. He thought he knew what the 'terribly unwise' thing that Zat and its race had done was. What do you do when you find something you consider to be alive parasitized, suffering from some kind of infestation? You remove the infestation, don't you… ?
In response to Zat's mental words, half a dozen more of the mirrored triangles emerged from the fire ring, soaring up into the cold darkness of wildspace to take up station behind and to either side of the first creature.
'No service,' Teldin said quickly. It wasn't that he particularly distrusted Zat, but there was something about the creature's suddenly effusive friendship so soon after its doubt and denial that bothered him. How many ships have you 'sanitized?' he found himself wondering. 'We just want some information. We know that you were recently visited by a large ship, a very large ship.' He visualized the
Apparently he'd succeeded. His mind was filled with a torrent of emotions, powerful enough to sear his thoughts with pain, as if his brain were being scoured with wire brushes. Recognition mixed with surprise, with excitement, and with tinges of ecstacy, but the dominant feeling was one of awe, almost religious in its intensity.
At first Teldin was surprised by the tone of Zat's telepathic contact, but then he understood. You think the
Could they think the
'Yes, we know of the Wandering One,' he answered. 'In fact, we've been following it across the universe.'
'Wonder,' Teldin answered quickly. It wouldn't do to tell Zat that I might be a deity's next captain, would it? 'Wonder and awe. We've never seen anything like it before, and we want to learn what we can about it. To revere it-from a respectful distance, of course.' He held his breath, waiting for the metal creature's answer.
More than two hundred hours, more than a week. Teldin felt his shoulders sag. The
'Do you know where it was going?' Teldin asked pessimistically. 'Did it tell you?'
You tried to follow your god home, Teldin translated with a wry grin, and it left you in the dust. 'Where is this home?' he asked. 'Do you know?'
'No. We don't. Where is it?'
Teldin felt that his heart would burst. The Broken Sphere. What else could the creature be referring to? 'And where's that? Do you know?'
Teldin ground his teeth in frustration. So close… 'And how do I find that? Can you give me directions?'
The breath hissed from Teldin's lungs. 'Tell me,' he whispered.
Teldin stared at Zat, hanging in space like some demented artificer's trick mirror. I think I understood one word in five, he told himself. What in Paladine's name is a 'paramagnetic gradient,' and what do 'secondary eddies' look like?
He turned to Djan. 'What's a paramagnetic gradient?' he asked.
The half-elf looked startled-Teldin remembered he'd only been hearing half of the strange conversation-but then he shrugged. 'I couldn't tell you to save my life,' he admitted.
The Cloakmaster focused his attention back on Zat. 'Can you describe it in another way?' he asked.