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 No help will avail here,  the knight said, kindly enough, but sternly, too.  This fight must happen only as it has happened, or it will be lost. And if it s lost, everything else will be 

Without warning, darkness fell. Nita, uncertain where she was or what had happened, tried to see, but in that complete blackness, there was no way to see anything at all. Briefly, she heard the sound of laughter, challenging and cheerful, and the ringing scrape of a sword being drawn

And then Nita was sitting up in her bed, open-eyed and startled in the less unnerving darkness of her own bedroom. She wasn t frightened, even though she d caught a taste, in the dream s last moments, of what had been coming toward the knight out of the newly fallen blackness. She knew that Enemy too well to be shocked byIts appearance anymore. But the thought of leaving that glad, tough presence to fight all by itself irked her. And though she d at least been able to make out what it was saying this time, that wasn t the same asunderstanding it.

She glanced over at the hands of her bedside clock glowing in the darkness. They said two-thirty. Nita sighed and lay down again, feeling more determined than ever to figure out what was going on. In fact, she felt more determined than she had about anything for weeks.

 Tell what fights the Enemy thatIt will be held here 

Eventually Nita fell asleep again, and down the corridors of dream, she heard the sword come scraping out of its sheath again, and again, and again

Quandaries

When her alarm went off at about a quarter after six, Nita dragged herself out of bed, showered, and got ready for school with that fierce, small sword-sound still repeating itself in her memory. When she woke her dad up, it was still very much on her mind. She found him a little later in the kitchen, having the coffee she d made for him when she d finished dressing, and saw him looking thoughtfully at her manual, which Nita had carried into the kitchen with her earlier and had left open and facedown on the counter.

 I thought you seemed a little distracted this morning,  he said, pouring milk into his coffee.  You look like you re working hard on something.Harder than usual.

He means, harder than usuallately, Nita thought.  Yeah,  she said. First-contact problem.

 As in first contact with an alien species 

 I thinkso ,  Nita said.  We ve been having some trouble communicating.

Her dad shook his head.  I should get you to talk to my cut-flower distributor,  he said.  If you can get through to something from another planet, maybe you could even get through to him.

Nita had heard enough stories about her dad s troubles with this particular supplier in the past couple of years to make her uncertain.  I might need more power than I ve got at the moment,  she said.

 I wouldn t be too sure about that,  her dad said.   What exactly did you do to your sister yesterday 

Nita raised her eyebrows.  I got her to see sense,  she said.

Nita s dad gave her a loving but skeptical look.  Using what kind of nuclear weapon   he said.  Just so I know when the government calls.

Humor, she thought.When was the last time I heard Daddy make a joke  Since  well.Sincethen.

 I moved her bedroom furniture around,  Nita said. Did a couple of other things  nothing life-threatening.  She looked at her dad over the rim of her mug of tea as she took a drink.  Not that I didn t think about it.

Her dad sighed.  You wouldn t have been the first one,  he said, rinsing out his coffee cup. He got his coat off the hook by the door and shrugged into it.  Keep an eye on her, though, will you 

 Sure, Daddy.

Her dad came over and gave her a hug that lingered for a moment. He put his chin down on the top of her head, something else he hadn t done for a while, and said,  You ve been the one holding everything together.

And that s not fair to you. I feel like I haven t been doing everything I could 

Nita shook her head.  I m not sure I see it that way, Daddy,  she said, and that was all she could get out.

He squeezed her, let her go.  The shop s open late tonight,  he said.  I won t be home till nine. You have anything planned 

Nita shook her head.  I need to do some research,  she said.  If I have to go out, it won t be for long, and nowhere far.

 Okay. Bye 

She leaned against the counter again, leafing through her manual, while the sound of her dad s car faded off down the road. She thought she knew how he felt: as if he was the weak link in the family. But she often felt that way herself, and she knewDairine did, too and they couldn tall be right. This was something that had come up in one of her earliest talks with Mr.Millman , a simple piece of logic that had completely eluded Nita until then probably her first sign thatMillman was not just some  good idea  wished on her by the school, but was someone genuinely worth listening to. Nita knew now that all you could do was try to let the sense of inadequacy pass over you, or the other person, and dissipate. Arguing too hard about it was likely to make the other person think you were trying to hide the truth from them.

She sighed and turned another page. The size of her manual s linguistics section had nearly tripled since she got up with the day s research in mind, and she was left now with the realization that her own knowledge of the Speech was even more basic than she d thought it was.I can t believe how dumb I ve been about this , she thought. The quick vocabulary test she d taken before her dad came down for his coffee had suggested that Nita was readily familiar with about 650 terms in the Speech  out of a possible 750,000. And more words were being rediscovered or coined every day by wizards of every species. There were even regional dialects and variants, alternaterecensions used by species whose physiologies or brain structure, or sometimes even the structure of their home universe, meant that the most basic forms of the Speech had to be altered to make sense.I ve been treating this like it was a dead language , Nita thought.But it s alive.It s the language of Life Itself: How could it notbe 

And then, no matter how many of the words you might know, there was always the question of context  the way a species used the Speech. Some species understood it clearly, but meant very different things by their usage of it than other species did. Some members of other species, too, whether wizards or not, might have only a beginner s acquaintance with the Speech, a most basic understanding of how to use it.Like it looks like I have , Nita thought, turning the manual s pages ruefully.

So the question is: Was I the one being incompetent the other day, or was the robot Or the clown Because of the way she felt lately, Nita thought the incompetence was a lot more likely to have been on her side.And how come I got so little from the knight   Nita rememberedDairine s line about the robot, about howthe species contacting Nita seemed to have no plurals, possibly even no personal pronouns. What she d heard last night seemed to confirm the idea.He never said  we ,  she thought.But then, he never said  I,  either. There was something so I don t know ...solimitedabout the way he was expressing himself. Was that just because I was having trouble dealing with the way he used the Speech  Or was he hiding something 

And why

She leaned there on her folded arms for a while, looking rather glumly at the manual, and didn t even bother looking up whenDairinecame padding in wearing one of their dad s T-shirts, hunting her breakfast. Morning.

 Yeah,  Nita said, turning over another page covered with necessary vocabulary that she didn t know.

Dairinestuck her head in the refrigerator.  My bedcreaks now,  she said.

 It s always creaked,  Nita said asDairine came out with the milk.  That s because you jump on it.

 I think it s because it just spent the better part of a day down a crevasse full of liquid nitrogen, Dairine said, getting a bowl for her cereal.

 If it spent any time in liquid nitrogen, it wouldn t just creak,  Nita said.  It d shatter.

 Yeah, well, I m thinking your wizardry wasn t temperature-tight, Dairine said, pouring first cereal and then milk.  I think you dropped a variable.

 No, I didn t.

 I bet you did.

 Didn t.

Dairinegave Nita a look that said,Yes, you did, you idiot , and went out into the dining room with her cereal.

Nita smiled slightly as she turned another page. At leastDairine seemed to be back to normal for the moment.Of course, it might be a ploy to lull me into a false sense of security . But Nita thought her sister knew better than to bother trying to mislead her just now, when Nita s fuse was shorter than usual. Next time, it might not be justDairine s bed that wound up down a crevasse  andDairine s present power levels weren t what they had been a while ago. Nita s couple of years  more experience as a wizard might be enough temporarily to keepDairine in line.

She raised her eyebrows and went back to the vocabulary list. Ireally wish there were ways to just magically make all this informationgo into my head , Nita thought.Oh well 

Dairinefinished her cereal and went to get dressed, and Nita kept reading, turning page after page in the manual, looking for a hint as to what she might have been missing. It was at least an hour later whenDairine came by again, dressed, with the backpack she used as a book bag over her shoulder; Nita glanced up just long enough to seeDairine putting her coat on, and to notice the small, glowing, rose-colored eye looking at her from inside the bag.

 Have you been upgrading Spot again   Nita said.

 He s been upgrading himself, Dairine said. Wireless, optical  some other stuff.  She looked affectionately at the bag as she shouldered it, and the little eyeon its silvery stalk disappeared back down between the backpack and its flap.

 I wouldn t let anybody see him, if I were you,  Nita said.

 They can t. But he can see them.Gottago,Neets .

 See you 

Dairineleft. Nita spent some moments more reading the manual in the quiet, until suddenly she realized that if she didn t get out of there,she was the one who was going to be in trouble for being late. She ran off to get her own backpack, and her manual went floating after her.

The rest of the day went by fairly quickly, partly because Nita s concerns about the communications between her and  her aliens  kept bringing Nita back to the manual in every free moment that wasn t taken up with class work. She hardly thought seriously about anything else until just before her lunch period, when Nita suddenly remembered that today was when the time and day for her next session with Mr.Millman would be posted.

When the bell rang, she made her way down into the corridor in the south wing of the school, where the administrative offices were, and from there into the main office, where the bulletin board for the special services messages was located. Nita found the pinned-up folded message that saidN. CALLAHAN , pulled it off the board, and headed out into the corridor, opening it.

The message said,  Dear Nita: 7:30 A.M., Monday. Hope the magic s going okay. Don t forget to bring some cards. I want to find out how to keep them from falling out of my sleeve. R.Millman.

Nita looked at this and was tempted to shred the note right down to its component atoms.What in the worldsmade me say that to him , she thought, shoving the note into the pocket of her jeans and stalking off down the hall.

By the time she got to the cafeteria, though, she d shrugged off the annoyance and was once again worrying at the clown-robot-knight problem. Nita got herself a sandwich and a fruit juice, sat down by herself off to one side, and spent another half hour studying how species that didn t understand plurals handled the Speech. It was complex. Mostly they wound up repeating singular forms with aredactive or  virtual  plural, which

It s sounding a little dry in there,Neets 

Nita smiled.You have no idea , she said, and shut the manual. Nita disposed of her lunch tray and went out of the cafeteria, into the small side parking lot. Kit was leaning against the chain-link fence on the far side, hugging himself a little against the cold, watching a boys  gym class out in the athletic field running easy laps to cool down after soccer practice.

Nita went to lean against the fence beside him.  You know any card tricks   she said under her breath.

He looked at her oddly.  No. Why 

 I did something incredibly stupid. I mentioned magic toMillman at our last meeting. He thought I meant magician stuff, though, the sawing-people-in-half kind of magic. Now he wants me to show him some.

Kit stared at Nita,then burst out laughing.  You should do some wizardry, and let him thinkit s magic. I bet you can do all kinds of fancy card tricks when you canreally make them vanish.

 I hadn t thought of it that way.  Nita frowned.  I m not sure I like the idea, though. Making the real thing look like somethingfake  It s too much like lying.

Kit nodded.  What made you mention magic to him at all, though 

 I wish I could remember. It was an impulse, and I felt like such a dork afterward.  She sighed. Never mind. Now I have to learn card tricks in my endless free time.

Kit raised his eyebrows.  You make any headway with your aliens 

 Yeah.Or rather, I m not sure.

 Not sure they re aliens 

 Not sure they re aliens, plural. Then again, let s not get into the plural thing. I m having enough trouble with it.  Nita rubbed her face.  I seem to have been talking to the same one at least twice. I m not sure if I was talking to him, or it, the first time, the time with the clown on the bike.

 But you understood him this time, anyway.

 I m not sure of that, either. I think I did  but I keep thinking he was holding something back, or having trouble saying something. And it could have been important.  She sighed.  I m just going to have to keep trying. What about you  Did you have time to go after your Ordeal kid again 

 Not yet.Ponch is still worn-out from the last time. I m going to try to get in touch with Darryl again tonight, maybe tomorrow. You sure you don t want to come along 

He sounded almost wistful. Nita gave it a moment s thought, but then shook her head: She mightfeel more like working today, but she still wasn t sure of her ability to be of use in a crisis situation.  Give me a little more time,  she said.  I want to work on this Speech problem for the moment. I think if I bear down on it hard enough, I may make a breakthrough.

 I wouldn t want to derail you,  Kit said.  But keep me posted.

 You okay   Nita said.

Kit looked at her a little strangely.  Why 

 You lookkinda worn-out yourself.

He looked surprised at that,then shrugged.  WhatPonch does,  he said,  it takes a lot out of me, too, maybe more than I realize. I do feel a little run-down.It s okay: I ll get a good night s sleep tonight and be fine tomorrow.

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