Post by QueenFoxy on Oct 12, 2020 10:46:58 GMT -6
The Smallest Dragonboy
by Anne McCaffrey đ
by Anne McCaffrey đ
Although Keevan lengthened his walking stride as far as his legs would stretch, he couldnât quite keep up with the other candidates. He knew he would be teased again.
Just as he knew many other things that his foster mother told him he ought not to know, Keevan knew that Beterli, the most senior of the boys, set that spanking pace just to embarrass him, the smallest dragonboy. Keevan would arrive, tail fork-end of the group, breathless, chest heaving, and maybe get a stem look from the instructing wing-second.
Dragonriders, even if they were still only hopeful candidates for the glowing eggs which were hardening on the hot sands of the Hatching Ground cavern, were expected to be punctual and prepared. Sloth was not tolerated by the Weyrleader of Benden Weyr. A good record was especially important now. It was very near hatching time, when the baby dragons would crack their mottled shells, and stagger forth to choose their lifetime companions. The very thought of that glorious moment made Keevanâs breath catch in his throat. To be chosenâto be a dragonrider! To sit astride the neck of a winged beast with jeweled eyes: to be his friend, in telepathic communion with him for life; to be his companion in good times and fighting extremes; to fly effortlessly over the lands of Pern! Or, thrillingly, between to any point anywhere on the world! Flying between was done on dragonback or not at all, and it was dangerous.
Keevan glanced upward, past the black mouths of the weyr caves in which grown dragons and their chosen riders lived, toward the Star Stones that crowned the ridge of the old volcano that was Benden Weyr. On the height, the blue watch dragon, his rider mounted on his neck, stretched the great transparent pinions that carried him on the winds of Pern to fight the evil Thread that fell at certain times from the skies. The many-faceted rainbow jewels of his eyes glistened fleet-ingly in the greeny sun. He folded his great wings to his back, and the watch pair resumed their statuelike pose of alertness.
Then the enticing view was obscured as Keevan passed into the Hatching Ground cavern. The sands underfoot were hot, even through heavy wher-hide boots. How the bootmaker had protested having to sew so small! Keeven was forced to wonder why being small was reprehensible. People were always calling him âbabeâ and shooing him away as being âtoo smallâ or âtoo youngâ for this or that. Keevan was constantly working, twice as hard as any other boy his age, to prove himself capable. What if his muscles werenât as big as Beterliâs? They were just as hard. And if he couldnât overpower anyone in a wrestling match, he could outdistance everyone in a footrace.
âMaybe if you run fast enough,â Beterli had jeered on the occasion when Keevan had been goaded to boast of his swiftness, âyou could catch a dragon. Thatâs the only way youâll make a dragonrider!â
âYou just wait and see, Beterli, you just wait,â Keevan had replied. He would have liked to wipe the con-temptuous smile from Beterliâs face, but the guy didnât fight fair even when a wingsecond was watching. âNo one knows what Impresses a dragon!â
âTheyâve got to be able to find you first, babe!â
Yes, being the smallest candidate was not an enviable position. It was therefore imperative that Keevan Impress a dragon in his first hatching. That would wipe the smile off every face in the cavern, and accord him the respect due any dragonrider, even the smallest one.
Besides, no one knew exactly what Impressed the baby dragons as they struggled from their shells in search of their lifetime partners.
âI like to believe that dragons see into a manâs heart,â Keevanâs foster mother, Mende, told him. âIf they find goodness, honesty, a flexible mind, patience, courageâand youâve got that in quantity, dear Keevanâthatâs what dragons look for. Iâve seen many a well-grown lad left standing on the sands., Hatching Day, in favor of someone not so strong or tall or handsome. And if my memory serves meââwhich it usually did: Mende knew every word of every Harperâs tale worth telling, although Keevan did not interrupt her to say soââI donât believe that Fâlar, our Weyrleader, was all that tall when bronze Mnementh chose him. And Mnementh was the only bronze dragon of that hatching.â
Dreams of Impressing a bronze were beyond Keevanâs boldest reflections, although that goal dominated the thoughts of every other hopeful candidate. Green dragons were small and fast and more numerous. There was more prestige to Impressing a blue or brown than a green. Being practical, Keevan seldom dreamed as high as a big fighting brown, like Canth, Fânorâs fine fellow, the biggest brown on all Pern. But to fly a bronze? Bronzes were almost as big as the queen, and only they took the air when a queen flew at mating time. A bronze rider could aspire to become Weyrleader! Well, Keevan would console himself, brown riders could aspire to become wingseconds, and that wasnât bad. Heâd even settle for a green dragon: they were small, but so was he. No matter! He simply had to Impress a dragon his first time in the Hatching Ground. Then no one in the Weyr would taunt him anymore for being so small.
Shells, Keevan thought now, but the sands are hot!
âImpression time is imminent, candidates,â the wingsecond was saying as everyone crowded respectfully close to him. âSee the extent of the striations on this promising egg.â The stretch marks were larger than yesterday.
Everyone leaned forward and nodded thoughtfully. That particular egg was the one Beterli had marked as his own, and no other candidate dared, on pain of being beaten by Beterli at his first opportunity, to approach it. The egg was marked by a large yellowish splotch in the shape of a dragon backwinging to land, talons outstretched to grasp rock. Everyone knew that bronze eggs bore distinctive markings. And naturally, Beterli, whoâd been presented at eight Impressions already and was the biggest of the candidates, had chosen it.
âIâd say that the great opening day is almost upon us,â the wingsecond went on, and then his face assumed a grave expression. âAs we well know, there are only forty eggs and seventy-two candidates. Some of you may be disappointed on the great day. That doesnât necessarily mean you arenât dragonrider material, just that the dragon for you hasnât been shelled. Youâll have other hatchings, and itâs no disgrace to be left behind an Impression or two. Or more.â
Keevan was positive that the wingsecondâs eyes rested on Beterli, whoâd been stood off at so many Impressions already. Keevan tried to squinch down so the wingsecond wouldnât notice him. Keevan had been reminded too often that he was eligible to be a candidate by one day only. He, of all the hopefuls, was most likely to be left standing on the great day. One more reason why he simply had to Impress at his first hatching.
âNow move about among the eggs,â the wingsecond said. âTouch them. We donât know that it does any good, but it certainly doesnât do any harm.â
Some of the boys laughed nervously, but everyone immediately began to circulate among the eggs. Berterli stepped up officiously to âhisâ egg, daring anyone to come near it. Keevan smiled, because he had already touched itâevery inspection day, when the others were leaving the Hatching Ground and no one could see him crouch to stroke it.
Keevan had an egg he concentrated on, too, one drawn slightly to the far side of the others. The shell had a soft greenish-blue tinge with a faint creamy swirl design. The consensus was that this egg contained a mere green, so Keevan was rarely bothered by rivals. He was somewhat perturbed then to see Beterli wandering over to him.
âI donât know why youâre allowed in this Impression, Keevan. There are enough of us without a babe,â Beterli said, shaking his head.
âIâm of age.â Keevan kept his voice level, telling himself not to be bothered by mere words.
âYah!â Beterli made a show of standing in his toetips. âYou canât even see over an egg; Hatching Day, you better get in front or the dragons wonât see you at all. âCourse, you could get run down that way in the mad scramble. Oh, I forget, you can run fast, canât you?â
âYouâd better make sure a dragon sees you, this time, Beterli,â Keevan replied. âYouâre almost overage, arenât you?â
Beterli flushed and took a step forward, hand half-raised. Keevan stood his ground, but if Beterli advanced one more step, he would call the wingsecond. No one fought on the Hatching Ground. Surely Beterli knew that much.
Fortunately, at that moment, the wingsecond called the boys together and led them from the Hatching Ground to start on evening chores. There were âglowsâ to be replenished in the main kitchen caverns and sleeping cubicles, the major hallways, and the queenâs apartment. Firestone sacks had to be filled against Thread attack, and black rock brought to the kitchen hearths. The boys fell to their chores, tantalized by the odors of roasting meat. The population of the Weyr began to assemble for the evening meal, and the drag-onriders came in from the Feeding Ground on their sweep checks.
It was the time of day Keevan liked best: once the chores were done but before dinner was served, a fellow could often get close enough to the dragonriders to hear their talk. Tonight, Keevanâs father, Kâlast, was at the main dragonrider table. It puzzled Keevan how his father, a brown rider and a tall man, could be his fatherâbecause he, Keevan, was so small. It obviously puzzled Kâlast, too, when he deigned to notice his small son: âIn a few more Turns, youâll be as tall as I amâor taller!â Stay tuned....đ