Acorna's Search (Book Excerpt) by Anne McCaffrey Buy from Amazon.comPage 1 of 2
Chapter One
Home! The word sang in Acorna's mind, a song of chiming silver streams and
drumming waterfalls, of wind fluting across the tops of bending blue-green
grasses and through the spade-shaped leaves of gigantic trees in vast forests.
The song echoed in the minds of every Linyaari present as they beheld
Vhiliinyar-that-was.
The first homecoming place was on a high plateau, overshadowed by a conical
mountain. Among deep purple and azure wildflowers lay a sprinkling of snow,
while a pinkish cap of glacier frosted the distant peak, silhouetted against a
delicate violet sky. A cascade flowed majestically from a plateau, the water
forming a roaring curtain that plunged down to the mountain's base, ending in a
froth of rainbow mists and white water that smoothed out into a broad
plumcolored lake.
Acorna felt instinctively that this lake had tremendous significance for her
but she didn't understand what that significance could possibly be. She wanted
to stop and stay there, gazing into it, looking for something she was sure she
could find if she just had time to look for it, but the world around her
swooped onward, as if she and her traveling companions were flying through it
in an open-topped flitter.
The violet skies of Vhiliinyar arched overhead, edged by the scalloped
beauty of snow-covered mountains, as the spectacle swiftly segued from one
glory to another.
Acorna almost forgot to breathe. This was the world she had dreamed of for
so very long. She didn't hear the thoughts of the others, not even Aari or
Neeva, nor did she seek them out. Surely they were as overwhelmed as she was by
the sheer beauty of Vhiliinyar.
Abruptly the sky darkened, the moons rose, and sunsetcolored words blazed
overhead:
Brought to You Courtesy of Harakamian Homeworld Holograms and Terrestoration
-- Making Any World a Better One
A collective sigh went round the room as the images faded. Everyone began
talking, aloud and with thought-talk, all at once, so that the resulting words
were little more than confused babble.
Despite all the verbal confusion, Aari's communication was very clear. He
was trembling and looked rather greenish. His jaw was firmly clenched and his
brimming eyes stared straight ahead.
"What is it, yaazi?" Acorna asked, using the Linyaari term for "beloved."
Taking Aari's arm, she led him quickly to the main exit from the holo-bubble.
She felt, rather than saw, Aari's parents, his sister Maati, and Thariinye, who
had become Aari's friend, following them.
Aari's answer to her question came into her mind in a wave of pain and
shock, the sort of emotional trauma he had seemed to be free of for some time
now. Acorna placed her gleaming horn against his cheek to reassure him.
Normally, among Linyaari, this caress would have been horn-to-horn, but Aari
had been mutilated during his capture by the evil Khleevi. His horn had been
destroyed. Thanks to hard work by some of the best Linyaari healers and a
tussue donation from his younger sister Maati. Aari's horn had regrown to a
short, twisted knot protruding an inch or so from his forhead and in time would
be fully restored, but horn-to-horn gestures weren't possible for him yet.
His friends and family, emerging from the holo-bubble that had been
temporarily transformed into their lost home, sensed Aari's anguish and joined
their horns with Acorna to try and soothe him.
Hafiz Harakamian bustled out, the silk panels of his robes flying behind him
like the wings of varicolored butterflies. His round face retained its
geniality, but Acorna, raising her head to watch her adopted uncle's approach,
felt a subtle blend of pique and embarrassment beneath his surface cheer, and
saw the right half of Hafiz's mustache twitch irritably. Copyright© 2002, HarperCollins Publishers. All rights reserved. No part of this may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher. This excerpt has been provided by HarperCollins and printed with their permission.
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