Changelings

Changelings by Anne McCaffrey Page B

Book: Changelings by Anne McCaffrey Read Free Book Online
Authors: Anne McCaffrey
Tags: Fiction
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inhospitable.
    But the twins had had entirely too much of that. While they were in town making nice with the refugees, they weren’t swimming and playing and teasing their feline nannies.
    The stretch of river on the other side of town had another big advantage besides being less public. The hot springs fed into it, so areas of water stayed open year round, and much of the water that did freeze had a far thinner crust than that between the old Space Base and Kilcoole.
    The twins found a good, big open place to enter the water, but first took off their clothes and carefully concealed them under some brush on the bank. Then, having located the little straps to their tiny packs, they fixed them over their shoulders so the packs were in the middle of their backs. Then each took a running jump into the water. It was icy at the top but much warmer underneath, and felt warmer still as their transformation took place. By the time they were completely submerged, they were no longer lanky pale children but shorter, fatter, furrier gray seals.
    They played hide-and-seek with each other in the patchy ice, then dove deep, as the hot spring’s current was diluted by colder streams. They swam for the joy of it, loving the feeling of being in a cave made of river ice, with the bumpy riverbed below and the bumpy ice sheets above. This time of the year there was little sun, but their eyes were excellent in the dark and underwater. They raced each other downstream, stopping once in a while to claw open a breathing hole in the ice with the talons at the ends of their flippers. When they grew hungry, they snacked on fish. They caught the smaller ones just by opening their mouths. The larger ones they had to take to the surface to eat.
    When they had swum farther than they’d ever gone before, another hot spring entered the river, making a large area where they could surface and slide up onto the ice and over to the bank. The wind had come up, and it was pretty cold business getting themselves into their new suits. Had they not been native Petaybeans with the special adaptations to supercold temperatures the planet had engendered in its inhabitants, they would have frozen to death long before they got their suits on. However, since they
were
native Petaybeans, they put on their suits very very quickly. Once the shiny thin fabric covered their bodies, including their hands, feet, heads, and all of their faces but their eyes, they found they were quite toasty.
    This stuff is amazing!
Ronan thought-spoke to his sister, both because that was how they usually communicated with each other and because the fabric covering their mouths made it difficult to speak or to hear someone else speaking through it.
I bet it’s what they make ship suits out of.
    Yeah,
Murel said, twirling a little in hers, which was fun because the boots were as slippery as her flippers on the ice.
And we could go skating even in human form while we’re wearing these.
    Ronan yawned.
What I’d rather do is take a nap. I’m pretty sleepy.
    Me too. Then we probably ought to start back before ’Nook and Co’ start stalking us.
    So they found a sheltered place among the spindly trees that grew along the bank and lay down beside them. The snow felt soft through their suits, and not the least bit cold. They had barely closed their eyes when Murel sat up.
Did you hear that?
    What?
    That chirpy noise. It isn’t a bird. I know it’s not a bird.
    “Hah!” something said, very close to them.
    It’s coming from the river,
Murel said.
    “Hah!” it said again, followed by more of the nervous-sounding chirping, like a mother bird missing her chicks.
    Almost sounds like a dog driver coming up the trail,
Ronan said.
    Only not quite. It’s coming from under the water.
    Yeah?
    Listen!
    You’re right, it is.
    They fumbled removing their suits. Ronan left his on the bank and started to slide into the water but Murel stopped him.
No! Strap it on. It’s shiny. A bird might take it.

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