daughter knew damn well that playing a neurophon in
an unsealed room on board any craft was against all
flight rules. It would have been bad enough on board
the liner-transport they had just left. In a shuttle, where
the descent was a matter of delicate, critical adjust-
ments by pilot and machine, it could have placed them
in deep trouble. Rachael was fooling with her damn-
able toy only to irritate her mother, Cora knew. It
would be so much better for her if she would simply
disown the instrument. It occupied far too much of
her study time. Cora had tried to persuade her to
abandon the device. She had tried only once. It had
become an obsession with her daughter, and more than
that, a surrogate larynx. Rachael knew she couldn't
battle her mother with words, so she would sometimes
counter an argument by sulking and speaking only
with the nerve music. Her daughter was turning into a
tonal ventriloquist.
A polite, slightly tense voice came from the cabin
speaker. "Brace for heavy atmosphere, ladies and gen-
tlemen. Thank you."
Cora made certain her harness was properly secured.
She gripped the arms of her lounge and leaned back.
For a few minutes there was nothing of note, then a
sharp bump. A second, a stomach-queasing drop, and
then they were coasting gently through clear blue sky.
She eased her grip on the lounge arms and looked out
the port.
The whirlpool of a small cyclone appeared beneath
them, raced past and behind. Clouds of all shapes and
sizes flew by, and once, only once, she thought she
saw a bright flash that might have hidden an island.
She hunted through her memory for the details of
Cachalot's topography she had force-fed herself, finally
decided the brightness had been a low cumulus cloud
and not land.
Commonwealth headquarters were located on Mou'-
anui, one of several enormous lagoons enclosed by
land sufficiently stable to permit the establishment of
permanent, nonfloating installations. Cora was hunting
the sea for it when a voice sounded from behind them.
"Excuse me."
The harness sign was off. She unbuckled, looked
over the back of her reclined lounge. The speaker sat
across the aisle, one row behind their seats, a stocky,
coffee-colored gentleman about her own age. His hair
and eyes were as black as her own. The hair hung to
his shoulders, was combed straight back, and exhibited
not even an echo of a curl or kink. He had a wide
mouth, almost lost beneath a sharp, hooked nose like