raven: [hello my name is] and a silhouette image of a raven (misc - raven writes)
[personal profile] raven
For [livejournal.com profile] lauds and [livejournal.com profile] rhipowered, who both wanted Uhura and languages with unusual grammar.

Ficlet:: Speech
by Raven
PG, gen, Uhura, 1500 words. Five languages she learned to speak, and one she already knew.


making scents 

The people of Sigma Eridani VI were friendly, in that they didn't shoot at anyone, relayed the initial survey team; they were also warp-capable, as they travelled between two worlds in neighbouring systems. It could be worth delaying first contact, the report continued, until any Federation linguist could understand a single word they said. Nyota had rolled her eyes a lot at the mission briefing. 

"Hello," she said, tentatively, on the crisp, icy surface of the new world. Visibility was so low that she couldn't see her feet; although the sensors in her tricorder told her there was open water to her back and living beings in front, she couldn't see a thing. "I know… we know that you're there. We want you to know we're explorers, we haven't come to harm you in any way. Uh." 

Another step forwards. "I understand others among our people have tried to communicate with you, and not had success. I'm here to try again, if that's all right." 

When in doubt, just keep talking. "I'm going to take another step forwards now." Her tricorder was beeping, telling her that she was about to breach the personal space of the nearest of them. "Uh, if you don't want me to, I hope you can indicate it in some way." 

Abruptly, she sneezed, and cursed herself inwardly for it – and then became aware of a distinct smell of lemons. Thinking quickly, she stepped backwards – and suddenly there was rotting meat in her nostrils, all the harsh immediacy of carrion. 

Thinking, she sat down on the ground, cross-legged, and the mist curled around her and smelled somewhere between porridge and azalea flowers. 

"Aha," she said, entirely to herself.
 
Much much later, long after the Eridani petition to join the Federation had been received and granted, Nyota could still read the Federation Charter in scratch 'n' sniff lavender, pepper, citrus and soap. 

*

 
compiling

"And then," Nyota said, "my guide took me to visit his home, and he'd said it was his father's house. I asked if I could meet his father, and he said, my father walks with the spirits now. Okay, I thought, that's a euphemism for death, you hear it or something like it any number of cultures, there's a lot of precedent for that. And then he took me to the local school, and I met lots of Zenasti children, and they'd all been waiting for my visit, they were so excited. I asked one of them what he wanted to be when he grew up, and he said, in the future I see myself as a pilot so I can go out into the stars. And I wished him luck with it, and took a couple of notes and I still didn't get it, because clearly I must be stupid or something." 

"That is exceedingly unlikely," Spock said, and leaned back a little in his chair. The room was quiet except for her voice and his breathing; he had taken to calling her on the comm system as his final act before retiring for the night.   

"Thanks." Nyota smiled at the screen. On the surface of the moon, it was mid-morning; the pinkish light from the system's sun gleamed on her hair. "But I might not believe you. I had to have conversations with at least a dozen other people before I realised." 

"Realised what?" Spock asked. 

Nyota smiled again. "The language has no tenses. No, that's not right – it has present and subjunctive tenses, and some complicated ways to express things that definitely didn't happen, and things the speaker has only heard about. But it doesn't have what we would call past and future tenses; everything is somehow linguistically connected to an eternal present." She laughed. "It's very relaxing, actually." 

Spock nodded. "That is not unknown, but it is nevertheless remarkable." 

"And the Zenasti aren't the only sentient species on the planet, of course. The Kin live underground and even then, mostly on the other continent, so there's been very little linguistic mixing – only in the last generation or so. I took a shuttle over to visit them, and I suppose if your body is made of rock and the sounds you can make are kind of limited to rumblings and grindings, it would make sense for all your utterances to be quite concise." 

Spock raised his eyebrows. 

"I just can't hear the difference between the two-second rumble that means 'it is a pleasure to meet your acquaintance', and the one that means 'I disagree vehemently, you twice-damned offspring of a syphilitic whore', and how a species that doesn't have sexual reproduction has a word for 'whore', I don't even know." 

"Perhaps the translator is becoming excessively idiomatic," Spock said, and couldn't prevent the corners of his mouth twitching upwards. 

"Perhaps. And the third species, whose name goes, in Standard, tongue-click, sneeze, glottal stop, hi! Well, we don't even know if they have a language, or whether they actually communicate by direct mind-to-mind transfer, and whether their minds will even interface with mine. I've been advised to take the shuttle five hundred metres up, open the cargo doors and wait for them to appear. I'm told they look like small, starfish-shaped clouds. That's tomorrow's plan, so I'd better get some sleep." A pause. "Actually, I can't remember the last time I slept." 

"I am sorry your work is so fatiguing," Spock said, carefully. "It is logical to wish for rest." 

"Are you kidding?" Nyota grinned at him. "I want to retire here. Goodnight!" 

The screen went blank. Spock stood up and walked towards his bed; not for the first time, he was finding himself filled with joy for no logical reason at all.


*


memory

The people of the Light worked with their hands. Their world was made of chromium and glass, wood and stone, smoothed with saltwater, and time. Nyota had told Spock about their intricate art, their solidity of tradition, and the elegiac sparseness of their poetry. She had talked with her hands over breakfast, about cultural continuity and fluidity, and how a world never recorded was never objective, described and experienced in flux.

She hadn't been afraid until now.

"The people of the Light," said the Elder, "toil so that we may live. It is not how I would have our world be." It nodded its great head, and Nyota understood that the fine crystalline structures of its mind would shatter, instantly, in the blue-white light of the sun. Down here in the dark, they were safe. "For their toil, we live."

"You remember," Nyota said. "You remember... everything."

"Almost." There was humour in its voice. "I remember everything that I am told, that I have been told, since I came to be."

"When was that?" she asked, reaching for her tricorder.

"When I was first here, we did not know what stars were." She suspected that if it could smile, it would. "We have learned a great deal since that time."

The tricorder bleeped and then chirruped in complaint; something about the density of the rock was preventing its signals from transmitting into orbit. Sighing to herself, she got a padd out of the pack and started to scribble.

Feeling rather than seeing the Elder's gaze on her, she said, "It's a piece of technology my people use, to record things."

"I have been told." A pause. "It is what you have, instead of us."

She smiled. "Something like that. Tell me, do you have a name?"

"I am the Elder. I had a name, once, in the Light. Do you have a name?"

For some reason the question was surprising. She looked up at it, properly. "My name is Nyota Uhura."

"I will remember you, Nyota Uhura."

When I am dust, she thought, later; and it made her shiver in the blue light of the world.

*


static

The first language Nyota ever learned was Federation Standard, and the one after that was Vulcan.  

She beamed down to the colony world on a quiet desert's evening – as an able-bodied Starfleet officer, capable of managing a little above Earth gravity, she was past time to do a stint in recovery work – and she gave them her name and they gave her work to do. 

She planted seeds in long bays, amidst rows of workers; she archived ancient texts, scraps that remained of vast citadel libraries; she learned how to solder circuits together and how to prepare the ground for terraforming. She learned the feel of the soil, the different caresses of fertile earth and desert sand. She sent messages to Spock at the end of the long days, pictured them crossing the distances between stars, dropping out of subspace like notes onto his pillow.  

The Vulcans fed her, housed her, were kind to her. She was shown to her room by Admiral T'Lara; Sarek paid her the solemn courtesies due a daughter of his house. But she grew used to the silence of the desert, the silence of nothing left to say. She was old enough, now, to understand the curious grammar of loss. 

*


hello world

Lieutenant Andrew Zhang had said, to no one in particular on the thirty-second straight day of their survey mission, "At least we're getting off this fucking rock in the morning", and then the ground had swallowed him up. 

They made some progress in the days that followed. They found him eventually, bemused, remembering nothing, in a creek a mile downstream. Then they tapped on trees, they watched the rhythms of the waves lapping on the shore, and when the Enterprise arrived, the clouds formed whorls and flowers beneath its geostationary orbit and Nyota understood it in a single, dizzy rush. 

"A language?" Spock murmured. 

"An understanding," Nyota corrected, looking out at the bridge viewscreen. 

After days and weeks of watching atmospheric patterns, chasing the tides and press-ganging dendrochronologists, they learned very little; Nyota beamed down to the planet and ran headlong across the cracked earth, shouting, "Hello! Hello, we can hear you! Hello!" until she sprawled down flat from exhaustion and thought about being an ant, crawling unnoticed across her own skin. 

But it took time. One night, out of the tectonic movements beneath the earth: I am. The seismological rumbles passed through the rock, epicentre below the Enterprise. I am here.  

It was only one verb, and the start of a lifetime's project for many Federation linguists – but afterwards, Nyota heard language in everything: songs in the batter of rain against glass, harsh rhythms in pounding surf, a queer and distant music in everything that grew, moved, and lived. 

end.

on 2010-08-07 11:49 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] lauds.livejournal.com
On my way to bed so can't give detailed squee now but just wanted to say that I LOVE this so very much. Thank you!!! I love the very different moods of each segment and the last two lines of memory gave me SHIVERS.

<3

on 2010-08-08 12:23 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] anotherusedpage.livejournal.com
Oh oh oh this has left me teary eyed with joy. I love her so much. I love you so much. All the different ways to communicate; and the joy of listening

on 2010-08-08 12:48 am (UTC)
ext_1310: (the sound of how awesome i am)
Posted by [identity profile] musesfool.livejournal.com
This is beautiful.

on 2010-08-08 01:35 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] leonie-alastair.livejournal.com
A lovely piece, a lovely portrait of Uhura. Thank you.

on 2010-08-08 02:58 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] mardia.livejournal.com
Oh, this is wonderful.

on 2010-08-08 03:39 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] rubynye.livejournal.com
Wow. And here I am, out of words to properly praise this amazing, kaleidoscopic picture of the possibilities of the universe before her!

on 2010-08-08 06:19 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] aplenacalle.livejournal.com
oh oh oh I love this so much I could just hug it forever.

on 2010-08-08 12:40 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] amchau.livejournal.com
Amazing.

on 2010-08-08 12:56 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] illariy.livejournal.com
Very poetic. I love how you packed so much about Uhura and communication and the world into this story. Thank you for sharing. :-)

on 2010-08-08 01:27 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] minttown1.livejournal.com
This is so beautiful.

on 2010-08-08 03:19 pm (UTC)

on 2010-08-08 04:26 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] classroomnotes.livejournal.com
I loved how Nyota's strength comes through in so many different ways....

on 2010-08-08 08:55 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] eponymous-rose.livejournal.com
This is beautiful! Very well done.

on 2010-08-08 09:11 pm (UTC)
ext_12246: (smiley)
Posted by [identity profile] thnidu.livejournal.com
Remarkable! I'm impressed. (And very pleased, enjoying the story.)

on 2010-08-08 10:02 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] skywaterblue.livejournal.com
This sort of blew my mind with the wonder of the universe at the end. Which is really an astonishing power.

on 2010-08-09 07:57 pm (UTC)
genarti: Woman looking up into gold bubbles. ([misc] magic in every moment)
Posted by [personal profile] genarti
Oh, oh, this is beautiful.

on 2010-08-09 11:31 pm (UTC)
ext_7899: the tenth doctor stands alone (these are the voyages: AOS)
Posted by [identity profile] rhipowered.livejournal.com
Oh, lovely and brilliant and really what I'd wanted. Thank you so much.

on 2010-08-10 12:23 pm (UTC)
tau_sigma: (Default)
Posted by [personal profile] tau_sigma
Oh, I love you. Your fic is so beautiful, always. *g*

on 2010-08-10 09:05 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] cmdr-zoom.livejournal.com
The first was charming. The second, fascinating. The third, stunning. The fourth, mournful. And the fifth, full of wonder.

on 2010-08-11 02:40 am (UTC)
ext_51201: (st: spock uhura close)
Posted by [identity profile] anodyna.livejournal.com
Oh, this is so beautiful! I'm in awe of the worlds you created in such a small space. It's a wonderful character study of Nyota, and I love the little interactions between her and Spock, and just the whole mood of it--inquiring and thoughful, rich with fascinating little details. I'm so glad I read it, thank you so much for sharing it!

on 2010-08-12 01:30 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] ladymercury-10.livejournal.com
Oh, it's lovely! The part about the language of smells and the scratch-and-sniff charter is really great. Very original.

on 2010-08-12 06:32 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] rosehiptea.livejournal.com
This is gorgeous. Really lovely descriptions, and her respect for all of it is so IC.

on 2010-08-18 02:27 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] builtofsorrow.livejournal.com
This is utterly gorgeous.

on 2010-08-18 06:24 pm (UTC)
ext_41564: (st - uhura: fierce)
Posted by [identity profile] shighola.livejournal.com
Gorgeous. This is absolutely amazing!

on 2010-08-19 04:44 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] danahid.livejournal.com
Stunningly beautiful. I particularly liked this:

But she grew used to the silence of the desert, the silence of nothing left to say. She was old enough, now, to understand the curious grammar of loss.

The grammar of loss, the geography of grief, the topography of hope...

I had saved the link to this story to go back and read, and I never had a chance until today. I'm glad I did. I will stay with me all day.

Thank you for this.


on 2010-08-26 10:21 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] jouissant.livejournal.com
This just beautiful. Each of these vignettes is so perfectly wrought. I love your language and your worldbuilding and your Uhura!
Edited on 2010-08-26 10:21 pm (UTC)

on 2010-08-27 12:24 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] cadenzamuse.livejournal.com
I am filled with wonder, both at Uhura and at the universe. (And at you.)

on 2010-08-27 03:09 pm (UTC)
siria: (sga - teyla classy)
Posted by [personal profile] siria
This is so very lovely!

on 2010-08-29 03:12 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] rinsbane.livejournal.com
This is absolutely beautiful. It's so delicate and full of joy.

on 2010-11-14 05:10 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] moth2fic.livejournal.com
Very, very beautiful!! Each section could make a whole novel and I love the way you've condensed the important parts. Uhuru's reactions are as delightful and fascinating as the communication styles. I heard about this from a friend of a friend of a friend and I'm so glad I did! Thank you!

on 2011-01-30 05:00 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] pezzyaltoid.livejournal.com
This was recc'ed over on the Spock_Uhura. It's beautiful.

Thank you.
--isobel

on 2011-01-30 09:18 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] clar1208.livejournal.com
This is a beautiful love song to Uhura, the linguist.

on 2011-02-05 04:11 am (UTC)

on 2011-02-22 10:01 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] linstock.livejournal.com
A truly amazing story. This is a wonderful glimpse into Nyota’s deeper self and the meaning that language has to her. Outstanding.

on 2011-02-23 07:33 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] fanfiction-rec.livejournal.com
Oh, I could read this six or seven times over, and still get something more out of it.

on 2011-04-10 02:28 pm (UTC)
gingicat: deep purple lilacs, some buds, some open (Default)
Posted by [personal profile] gingicat
OMG.

I am finally getting around to this out of all the beautiful links that [livejournal.com profile] rubynye sends me.

This, this is POETRY. Which is, of course, the only way one can understand languages so separate from our own, not being Nyota Uhura.

*hugs the story*

So very beautiful. I need to share it everywhere.

on 2011-04-10 08:34 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] sodyera.livejournal.com
This is very nice. I think you'll understand this like I found:
BBC News - Structure of stars revealed by 'music' they emit

on 2011-05-24 01:49 am (UTC)
idella: (Default)
Posted by [personal profile] idella
Very nice.

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