Dragons Dawn.txt

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Dragons Dawn
by: Anne McCaffrey
Copyright 1988

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PROFOUND
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This book could not have been written without the advice, assistance, and
aid of Dr. Jack Cohen, D. Sc., lately Senior Lecturer of Reproductive
Biology at Birmingham University, England, whose expertise and enthusiasm
helped me create the dragons of Pern, and attendant botany/biology/ecology.
Jack made fact out of myth, and science out of legend. I am not the only
writer of his acquaintance who owes him a tremendous debt of gratitude.
        I am also indebted to Harry Alm, Naval Engineer of New Orleans,
Louisiana, for his configuration of the Thread Fall Patterns, based on only
casual remarks in various of my books. To his wife, Marilyn, I owe the
patient and correct transmission by Compuserve of this incredible technical
data.

PART ONE
Landing

�Probe reports coming through, sir,� Sallah Telgar announced without taking
her eyes from the flickering lights on her terminal.
        �On the screen, please, Mister Telgar,� Admiral Paul Benden
replied. Beside him, leaning against his command chair, Emily Boll kept her
eyes steadily on the sunlit planet, scarcely aware of the activity around
her.
        The Pern Colonial Expedition had reached the most exciting moment
of its fifteen-year voyage: the three colony ships, the Yokohama, the
Bahrain, and the Buenos Aires were finally approaching their destination.
In offices below the bridge deck, specialists eagerly awaited updates on
the reports of the long-dead Exploration and Evaluation team that, 200
years earlier, had recommended Rukbat�s third planet for colonization.
        The long journey to the Sagittarian Sector had gone without a
hitch, the only excitement being the surprise when the Oort cloud
encircling the Rukbat system had been sighted. That phenomenon had
continued to engross some of the space and scientific personnel, but Paul
Benden had lost interest when Ezra Keroon, captain of the Bahrain and the
expedition�s astronomer, had assured him that the nebulous mass of
deep-frozen meteorites was no more than an astronomical curiosity. They
would keep an eye on it, Ezra had said, but although some comets might form
and spin from its depths, he doubted that they would pose a serious threat
to either the three colony ships or the planet the ships were fast
approaching. After all, the Exploration and Evaluation team had not
mentioned any unusual incidence of meteor strikes on the surface of Pern.
        �Screening probe reports, sir,� Sallah confirmed, �on two and
five.� Out of the corner of her eye, she saw Admiral Benden smile slightly.
        �This is sort of anticlimactic, isn�t it?� Paul murmured to Emily
Boll as the latest reports flashed onto the screens.
        Arms folded across her chest, she hadn�t moved since the probes had
been launched, except for an occasional twiddling of fingers along her
upper arms. She lifted her right eyebrow in a cynical twitch and kept her
eyes on the screen.
        �Oh, I don�t know. It�s one more procedure which gets us nearer the
surface. Of course,� she added dryly, �we�re sort of stuck with whatever�s
reported, but I expect we can cope.�
        �We�ll have to, won�t we?� Paul Benden replied a trifle grimly.
        The Trip was one-way -- it had to be, considering the cost of
getting over six thousand colonists and supplies to such an out-of-the-way
sector of the galaxy. Once they reached Pern the fuel left in the great
transport ships would be enough only to achieve and maintain synchronous
orbit above their destination while people and cargo were shuttled down to
the surface. To be sure, they had homing capsules that would reach the
headquarters of the Federated Sentient Planets in a mere five years, but to
a retired naval tactician like Paul Benden, a fragile homing capsule did
not offer much in the way of an effective backup. The Pern expedition was
composed of committed and resourceful people who had chosen to eschew the
high-tech societies of the Federated Sentient Planets. They expected to
manage on their own. And though their destination in the Rukbat system was
rich enough in ores and minerals to support an agriculturally based
society, it was poor enough and far enough from the center of the galaxy
that it should escape the greed of the technocrats.
        �Only a little while longer, Paul,� Emily murmured, her voice
reaching his ears alone, �and we�ll both be able to lay down the weary
load.�
        He grinned up at her, knowing that it had been as difficult for her
as it had been for him to escape the blandishments of technocrats who had
not wished to lose two such charismatic war heroes: the admiral who had
prevailed in the Cygni Space Battle, and the governor-heroine of First
Centauri. But no one could deny that the two were the ideal leaders for the
Pern expedition.
        �Speaking of loads,� she went on more loudly, �I�d better be there
to referee my team now the reports are coming in. I suppose specialists
have to consider their own disciplines the most important ones, but such
contentiousness!� She stifled a groan, then grinned, her blue eyes
twinkling in her rather homely face. �Just a few more days of talking, and
it�ll be action stations, Admiral.�
        She knew him well. He hated the interminable debate over minor
points that seemed to obsess those in charge of the landing operation. He
preferred to make quick decisions and implement them immediately, instead
of talking them to death.
        �You�re more patient with your teams than I am,� the admiral said
quietly. The last two months, as the three ships had decelerated into the
Rukbat system, had been made tedious with meetings and discussions which
seemed to Paul to be nit-picking over procedures that had been thoroughly
thrashed out seventeen years before in the planning stages of the venture.
        Most of the 2900 colonists on the Yokohama had passed the entire
journey in deep sleep. Personnel essential to the operation and maintenance
of the three great ships had stood five-year watches. Paul Benden had
elected to stand the first and last five-year periods. Emily Boll had been
revived shortly before the rest of the environmental specialists, who had
spent their time railing at the superficiality of the Exploration and
Evaluation Corps report. She saw no point in reminding them of their
enthusiasm for the same words when they had signed up for the Pern
expedition.
        Paul continued to absorb the display information, eyes flicking
from one screen to another, absently rubbing the thumb of his left hand
across three fingers. Though not the sort of man Emily was attracted to,
Paul Benden was undeniably handsome, and Emily much preferred him with his
hair grown out of the spaceman�s crop that had been his trademark. She
thought that the thick blond mass softened the strong features: the blunt
nose, the forceful jaw, and the wide thin-lipped mouth, just then pulled
slightly to the left in a little smile.
        The trip had done him good: he looked fit and well able to face the
rigors of their next few months. Emily remembered how terribly thin he had
been at the official ceremony commemorating his brilliant victory at
Cygnus, where he and the Purple Sector Fleet had turned the tide of war
against the Nathis. Legend said that he had remained awake and on duty for
the entire seventy hours of the crucial battle. Emily believed it. She had
done something of the sort herself during the height of the Nathis attack
on her planet. There were many things a person could do if pushed, she knew
from experience. She expected that one paid for such physical abuses later
on in life, but Benden, well into his sixth decade, looked vigorously
healthy. And she certainly felt no diminution of her own energies. Fourteen
years of deep sleep seemed to have cured the terrible fatigue that had been
the inevitable result of her defense of First Centauri.
        And what a world they were now approaching! Emily sighed, still
unable to look away from the main screen for more than a second. She knew
that all those on duty on the bridge, along with those of the previous
watch who had not left, were totally bemused by the magnificent sight of
their destination.
        Who had named it Pern, she did not recall -- quite probably the
single letters blazoned across the published report had stood for something
else entirely -- but it was Pern officially, and it was theirs. They were
on an equatorial heading; as she watched, the planet�s lazy rotation hid
the northern continent and the spine of mountains up its coast, while the
western desert of the southern landmass was revealed. The dominant
topographical feature was the wide expanse of ocean, slightly greener than
that of old Earth, with a ring of islands splattered across it. The
atmosphere was currently decorated with the swirling cloud curl of a
low-pressure area moving rapidly northeast. What a beautiful, beautiful
world! She sighed again and caught Paul�s quick glance. She smiled back at
him without really taking her eyes from the screen.
        A beautiful world! And theirs! By all the Holies, this time we
won�t botch it! she assured herself fervently. With all that magnificent,
productive land, the old imperatives don�t apply. No, she added in private
cynicism, people are already discovering new ones. She thought of the
friction she had sensed between the charterers, who had raised the
staggering credits needed to finance the Pern expedition, and the
contractors, the specialists hired to round out the basic skills required
for the undertaking. Each could end up with a largeous amount of land or
mineral rights on this new world, but the fact that the charterers would
get first choice was a bone of contention.
        Differences! Why did there always have to be distinctions,
arrog...
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