From howell_g@kosmos.wcc.govt.nz Mon Jun 19 12:33:47 PDT 1995 Article: 32585 of alt.fan.furry Xref: netcom.com alt.fan.furry:32585 Path: netcom.com!ix.netcom.com!howland.reston.ans.net!news.starnet.net!wupost!waikato!comp.vuw.ac.nz!newshost.wcc.govt.nz!usenet From: howell_g@kosmos.wcc.govt.nz Newsgroups: alt.fan.furry Subject: Repost: Human Memoirs Part 15 Date: Tue, 20 Jun 95 00:00:14 +1200 Organization: Wellington City Council Lines: 2380 Message-ID: <3s3ouf$esf@golem.wcc.govt.nz> NNTP-Posting-Host: ix.wcc.govt.nz Human Memoirs Part 4 Section C Remae came in with the sun, bearing a tray laden with food: A loaf of meal and meat, some fruit, and water. "How is she?" I glanced at Tahr, the skin showing through the patchy fuzz on her muzzle, her ribs like sticks under fabric. "She slept better last night," I said. "Quieter." Remae handed me the tray and watched as I tore a hunk off the loaf and bit into it. "Did you have to say that to the innkeeper last night?" "What?" "About you being hungry. You scared him half to moult. He called the local guard and I had to answer some questions by the Clan Lord." "Well," I shrugged, "I was hungry. . . I just didn't say what I ate." "K'hy!" Remae warned. "I am sorry," I said, feeling a deep ache when I looked at Tahr's emancipated figure. It'd been a typical male human reaction: When worried, act flippant. Be tough, be macho. I stared at the half- eaten bun in my hand then at Remae. "It worked out did it? That business with the Clan Lord I mean." "Of course. We have their full cooperation," she looked a little surprised. "Who would refuse to help the Shirai?" "Oh yeah, of course," I muttered as I took a bite out of the bun. "We have been offered shelter in the town's Keep," Remae said, "but I am thinking that this inn will serve us well enough. And it is better that we do not move her too much." Sounds from outside drifted into the room:Sathe, draft animals, wagons. The sounds of a town. "K'hy," Remae asked, her head tipped to one side and a thoughtful expression on her face, "I wanted to ask you: are you happy about Tahr and H'rrasch?" I stopped chewing for a second;the question had taken me unaware. I swallowed the mouthful. "Uh. . . What exactly do you mean? I am pleased that she found a mate with whom she is happy. They seemed to get on well enough. . . " "Yes," she agreed, "They do. I just know you were close to her and was wondering if perhaps you might be slightly. . . ah. . . " "Envious?" I chuckled. "You are right. I am. I envy him because I know that anything between Tahr and I would have been impossible. He is something that I could never replace. She is Sathe and I am human. East is east and west is west. It could never have worked." Remae's head tilted to one side as she regarded the Shirai. "True. Still it is strange that one of her status would take a mate who is no more than just a common soldier." I also looked at Tahr. "Does it really matter who it is as long as they are right for each other?" "I suppose it does not. Still, it is uncommon," she sighed, then scratched her muzzle. "I wonder what caused them to meet in the first place. She was with you during her Time, then suddenly he appeared. . . " Remae stopped as two and two fell into place with an almost audible click. She stared at me with emerald eyes: "You. . . you had a hand in this?" I considered lying, just for a second. "Uh. . . sort of. I did not actually think it would go this far." She was staring at me in open amusement. "My Ancestors, you seem to have a claw in the flesh of everyones' lives. I would wonder how else you have affected her life." I laughed with her then. More than you know, Remae. More than you know. ****** I shook Tahr gently to try to wake her up. Her jaw quivered, then her eyes opened, her milky-white third eyelid half extruded. Propping her up gently I tried to persuade her to take a bit of soup. She mumbled incoherent protests, struggled weakly, her eyes closing again. "No! Tahr, don't!" I dampened a cloth and dabbed at her face, wiping the crusting stuff around her eyes and nose, trying to keep her awake. "Tahr you must eat! Please! C'mon, just a sip. A little, please." She tried to turn her head aside, but I held her and put the spout of the mug between her lips. She swallowed a few drops and I gently stroked her threadbare mane whilst waiting for the soup to settle on her empty stomach. After a few minutes, I made her take a bit more, then a bit more, until the mug was half-empty and she raised her hand to clumsily paw it away. "That was good, Tahr, very good," I whispered softly and patted her shoulder as she snored and muttered. It was the first sustenance she'd had in days. ****** It was a slow, anxious time patched with moments of alarm, but over the following days she continued to improve, starting to become more aware of her surroundings. Sometimes I think she recognised me in her lucid moments. I stayed in her room, eating my meals there and sleeping on a pallet on the floor beside her sickbed, only occasionally taking a brief walk outside when Remae insisted I stretch and get some air. The reactions of the townspeople were the usual and still succeeded in making me remember what I was. Tahr slept soundly and heavily, but often she would wake me in the middle of the night when her breathing became laboured and she cried out; sometimes in what sounded like pain, sometimes in something else. Occasionally I heard my name. For hours after she had settled down again I would lie awake and listen to her rasping snores. What was she dreaming? The weather that day had been miserable. Low-lying grey clouds looking like lumps of half-molten lead roiled across the sky. Strong gusts of wind rattled the shutters in their frames, driving the rain against the slate roof with such vigour it sounded like hail. That was the way it stayed all day. At night I leaned back in the darkness, dozing, listening to the sounds of the wind, the creaking of the building, and Tahr's measured breathing. The steady rhythm sped up, became deeper. There was a small, puzzled-sounding mewl, then a silence, not even breathing: "Tahr?" Fear clutched at me. "Tahr!" "Who. . . ? K'hy?" I groped after my jacket and fumbled the lighter out of the pocket, touching the flame to a lamp. The walls danced with red ochre light as the flame sputtered, spat, and caught. Tahr was flat on her back, her head turned to watch me. Her eyes glowed when the light struck them, the pupils contracting slightly. Threadbare patches in her fur and mane shone dull against the her tawny pelt. The swelling of her jaw had gone down but there were still bruises. Slowly, she blinked at me: "How long have you been there?" "A while. You have not been at your best." "Oh." She looked up to where the invisible rain was drumming a steady tattoo on the roof. Distant thunder rolled, long and low. "Where is this place?" "A town called Ice Blue. We had to stop here. The travelling was not doing you any good." She kept staring at the roof. "I remember. . . I have been sick some time." Sick? Oh, Jesus, Tahr. "Over a week. How do you feel?" A sigh, then her head lolled over. "Alive," she replied and raised a stick-thin arm, staring at it as if it wasn't part of her own body. "I look like an old rug." "No. . . " "Yes. Look at me. You could have kept the moths off me, K'hy." Then she smiled and those eyes flickered with a vibrancy I hadn't seen for too long. "We talk?" After those days of lying there playing tag with the old Reaper, she suddenly wanted to chat. "You are sure? Your mouth looks sore. You do not want to rest?" "No," she said calmly, meaning it. "All right," I nodded slowly. "If you think you can manage it, Okay, talk. Talk about what?" "Huh," she looked up at the roof, gathering her thoughts. "What has happened? The armies? What are the Lake Traders doing? Hraasa? Has he been taken? Why did he forfeit like that?" I tried to answer as best I could, telling her what I knew. What I didn't know Remae could fill in later. Tahr listened, staring up at the ceiling while her chest moved slowly. When I told her about Hraasa she stiffened then squinted at me. "Dead?" "Yes." "Suicide?" "No. Remae said he was murdered." I filled her in on those details also, what Remae had told me, keeping it brief. "Rot his honour," Tahr hissed when I was finished. "I wanted the privelege. No ideas who did it?" "No. There was a lot of confusion that night. Please, are you sure you do not want to rest." She raised her hand in a feeble swipe at me. "Ah! Do not mother me. You look too strange for that." There was a hesitation, a faint clicking sound audible over the rain: Tahr tapping her claws together, then she said, "K'hy. What are you going to do now? You and your female." I blinked. "Why that?" Twenty Questions time and the first thing she asks about's my private life. She squirmed, a pink tongue running over sharp teeth. "I. . . I had some strange dreams. You and Mas. . ." she searched for words, then surrendered. "I cannot explain. What are you going to do with her?" "You make her sound like a possession. Not MY female, Tahr. She has a will of her own. I am not even sure what her opinion of me is." Tahr out on the balcony watching Maxine and I arguing. . "You are afraid," Tahr said abruptly. "Our mating. You are afraid of what she thinks." I sat up and crossed my legs, leaning back against the rough wooden planks of the wall while staring at the flickering lamp flame. Dammit, what had she been dreaming about in that delirium? She'd hit the nail on the head. That WAS what I was worried about! How could I ever expect Maxine to accept me after what I had done. "I am sorry, my strange one." I looked up, surprised. "What? Why" "I never realised how it would affect you. I had no idea that anyone could be upset by what we did." She lolled her head back, staring up at the rafters. "I was wrong to lead you on as I did. At first. . . I thought it a game." "Tahr. . . " The floor creaked as I hauled myseelf to my feet and perched myself on the edge of the bed. Her fur was still soft under my hand. "Look, do not go around blaming yourself. I was as much a part of that as you were. I enjoyed it as much as you, and I do not regret it." God, how to explain it to the human woman? I didn't know how Maxine thought of the Sathe. Did she regard them as just exotic animals, or did she see them as people in their own rights? Pray she'd learned to identify with that side of them. After all, what is wrong with love between two people? I patted the fur beneath my hand. "I worry about what she thinks, but I may be worrying over nothing. I do not know. . . After all, who can understand the workings of the female mind?" "You. . . !" Tahr gave a mock-hiss and swiped weakly at my arm; claws pulled. "How can YOU say that?" she sputtered in amusement. "It is true! You are female and many times I cannot understand how your mind. . . " Although still weak, the hand that grabbed my shoulder and pulled me over backwards onto the bed didn't feel like one belonging to someone who had been semi-comatose for over a week. The room seemed to lurch, and suddenly I was lying on my back staring up into brilliant emerald eyes. She was panting after the exertion, her breath warm as blood and harsh enough to blister paint as she lightly nuzzled my bearded cheek and neck. "K'hy, why could you not have been Sathe?" I touched her tufted ears and ran my fingers down into her mane. "Or you Human?" It was soothing to just lie there; her fur warm, moving slightly with every breath she took. I sighed and relaxed, with her weight against me like a warm and heavy blanket, my arms around her, just holding her close, feeling her heart beating. "Anyway, K'hy. What will you and Mas do now?" Tahr murmured after too short a time. I twisted around and looked at her face. "The fighting is over?" "I believe so." "I have given it little thought, actually," I said, glancing at the window as a gust rattled the shutters. "I think that maybe it would be best if we went out on our own. Away from the Citadel, Mainport." "What?" She started slightly in surprise. "K'hy, why?" I swallowed and swirled the fur on her stomach between my thumb and forefinger. "You have a life to lead, and the two of us hanging around you may be a. . . burden." "No! K'hy, you would never be a. . . " "Yes, Tahr! I. . . we would be just that," I interjected. "You know things are never easy with us around. The way Sathe react to us. . . You could not live a normal life with us around and Maxine and I will have to learn to live without your help." She drew back slightly. "Why? I can provide for you as long as. . . " she trailed off as she remembered. "Oh." The difference in our lifespans. Although perhaps we couldn't expect to live as long as we would back home, barring accidents we could live to sixty, maybe seventy, maybe more. And the average Sathe lifespan is what? Forty five? "You cannot always be around; we will have to learn to fend for ourselves. Between us there must be some skills or knowledge we can scrape a living from." "I think that you will manage. I was told that you built a flying device. Is that true?" "We got lucky," I smiled. "K'hy, just building and selling those devices alone would make you wealthy for life." "Maybe, but any idiot can look at one of those and see how to build another." "True, but they would not understand it. You built it. You know how and why it works and how to use it. Perhaps they could be used to go to the moon." I laughed at that, and she growled, then pushed closer against me. Difficult to carry out a constructive conversation with a hot, soft body like that rubbing against your own. She also knew a few things about me. . like where and how to touch to elicit a response. "Tahr!" I caught her wrist and pushed her hand away. "No! You are supposed to be sick for Christ's sake! Besides, you are mated now." She hissed and pushed back against my hand. "So? How could H'rrasch be jealous of you? It would be ridiculous." She tried a smile with her mouth. I could just about count her back teeth. "Ridiculous, huh?" I grinned back. "Well, I will tell you an interesting tale. Something ridiculous happened to me not so long ago. I almost got my face ripped off by a male who thought I was trying to. . . ah. . . seduce his female." "You?!" Tahr did a poor job of stifling a laugh. "He did have a good reason," I continued. "It would seem there is a rumour going around the citadel. Something about a 'reputation' I have." "A. . . a reputation?" Tahr asked, suddenly cautious. She wasn't laughing anymore. "Uh-huh. Something about the way I am built. Also, that I have 'a way with sex'." I propped myself up on my elbows and raised an eyebrow, "I would wonder where that came from, eh?" "Oh," said Tahr. "Tahr, I am flattered by the praise, but it makes things most difficult for me when Maxine hears of our exploits from Sathe I do not even know, and when angry males feel the urge to rebuild my face with their claws." Her ears went back in a hesitant, almost sheepish smile. "I was wrong. I had no idea that it would go this far." "Just please do not talk about us anymore," I asked. "Please." "Very well, K'hy," she sighed, then hissed in her version of a giggle. "It will cost you," she smiled. I sat up; wary. "How much?" For a reply she stiffly rolled over onto her stomach and wriggled her shoulders, "Please, ease my muscles." "You have a nerve," I half-snorted, half-laughed, amused at her gall, then settled beside her and started kneading the threadbare hide of her back. With a low sigh she went limp under my hands, luxuriating in the massage. Those times I'd been bed-ridden sprang to mind. God, could I have used something like this back then. Maybe it was fifteen minutes later when the scratch at the flimsy door disturbed us. Remae was waiting there. The faint, flickering, reddish-orange from the guttering oil lamp out there did weird things to her black fur and green eyes. Off down the corridor from the common room came the muted background sound of crockery and ironmongery rattling, Sathe talking, laughing. "High One," Remae murmured, ducking her head in surprise and respect when she saw Tahr sprawled on the bed, half-awake and watching her. "How are you feeling?" Tahr smiled back. "Tired, stiff and sore, but much better, thank you." "I am pleased," Remae smiled. "I came to tell K'hy that food is ready and to. . . " She looked from Tahr to me to the rumpled sheets, back to me, and realization dawned in her eyes that she may have committed a boo-boo. "Saaa. . . I did not mean to intrude." For a second both Sathe were watching me. Then Tahr's ears flicked back in amusement, "No, Remae, there was nothing going on. Please, come in. . . and, K'hy, there is no need to look like that." I felt heat rising into my face like mercury in a thermometer. Hastily I backed out of the room, closing the door behind me. I tried not to imagine the two friends laughing. The inn was busy that night. Other travellers sheltering from the unseasonal downpour. They kept pretty much to themselves, but they choked and sputtered on their food when I made my appearance. The fare was simple: a meat and vegetable stew, bread, and a choice of water (a risky choice from a village well), llama milk, or ale, but the Eastern soldiers seemed to enjoy it enough. I wondered if they ever got splinters in their tongues from licking the wooden bowls clean. ****** It was another three days before the storm abated and the mud on the roads had dried out enough to make travel possible. The innkeeper was not unhappy to see us depart, even though he made a handsome profit from our layover. Very quickly the fields and pastures surrounding the small town gave way to wilderness. The road forded small creeks swollen from the rain, wound its way through evergreen woodland, crossed broad stretches of gold and green grassland. We worked our way north; a single covered wagon and seventeen housecarls mounted upon lamas. We took our time; taking it slow and easy. The weather remained fine after the storm, the skies were crystal clear and the nights warm. And Tahr had recovered with a vengeance. During the first few days she ate enough for two, rapidly filling out the gap beneath her ribs that she'd cultivated during her convalescence. When we stopped for the night, her almost hyperactive restlessness would often lead her to disappear into the wilderness, causing consternation amongst her guard. And I had a lot of thinking to do. Light shifted through the intertwining branches of the trees above the small pool, playing across the surface of the water that rippled every so slightly as invisible cat's paws stirred it. A rivulet of water trickled through moss-covered rocks; sparkling and glittering as it dropped the metre or so into the pond. A soft splash. Ripples spread. Settled in a patch of grass, my back against the solid trunk of a sugar maple, I flicked another pebble from the small horde I clutched in my hand. Light twinkled as more ripples spread before the first had entirely stilled. Tahr had been in the right with her questioning at the inn; what WAS I going to do with my life now? I'd been born and raised in a culture where it was always someone else who had the knowledge, the skills. Whatever I needed, I just went out and bought and all the skill needed was the ability to drive a car and write a check. Oh, I was pretty mechanically inclined. More than average. Certainly I was no technical prodigy, but I was comfortable around machinery. My general knowledge was pretty good, I knew how things worked and how they were made. I was capable in metal and woodworking, but that was with tools far more advanced than anything the Sathe used. I could easily plane a length of wood or weld up sheet metal, but would I be as effective if all I had to work with was an adze or forge? And how many gaps were there in my knowledge? Another stone plunked into the water. For my entire life up to the point when I arrived here, I had been deluged with the continual flood of disjointed snippets of information I picked up from television, radio, and casual reading. I could draw a detailed diagram of an internal combustion engine and how it's supposed to work, but what of the materials it's made from? How exactly do you make a magneto? I shifted the M-16 into my lap, running a finger along the scratched and scarred stock. The gun had taken a lot of abuse, the metal itself was nicked in places; gleaming steel exposed on the raised sections of the mat black surfaces. I wasn't sure I knew how to forge a metal like that, let alone how to make the synthetic compounds that made the stock and foregrip. No, I frowned, that was still not the real problem. Would I. . . we - aliens - be able to make a home in this society; not live out our entire, overly long lives as freaks on display for all to see? I mean, we couldn't exactly settle down in the town, could we. . . I say, George. Look what's just moved in next door. Oh, shit. There goes the neighbourhood. No. And what about children. . . My God, children. My thoughts were interrupted by a splash. I looked up to see ripples spreading out across the water. I hadn't thrown that. . . "Why so dour, K'hy?" Tahr got up from where she had been crouched on a boulder across the other side of the small pool, her head cocked to one side in her study of me. "You followed me," I accused her. There wasn't a sound as she dropped from a rock onto deep moss. The worn blue and brown cuirass and kilt she wore didn't quite blend in with the foliage behind her: "No. I was out by myself. I just found you here." My thumb flicked the safety catch back on as I looked up at her. Twigs and small leaves were matted into her mane as though she'd been lying on the ground. "You have been running off by yourself a lot lately. Any reason?" She laughed and flopped down beside me, leaning up against my arm. "Just restless. My legs just want to stretch after all that time doing nothing." I reached out and plucked a twig from her fur. "It is good to have a chance to run, to hunt." She stretched, then craned around to look at me. "Do you never have the urge to do that?" I blinked. "To run. . . sometimes, but not usually to hunt." She gave a half-hearted snort and watched as I flipped another pebble into the water. "I was watching you for a while," she said. "What was troubling you?" "Troubling me?" "Oh, K'hy." She flashed teeth in annoyance. "No games! Your face has more expressions tucked away than a piece of soft clay. I think I can read many of them well enough to see that you were. . . well. . . not happy." "Okay, point taken," I sighed and told her. "Children?" she was puzzled. "I do not think I understand." I got up and paced a couple of times before slumping against a boulder. "Tahr, if Maxine and I reproduce, the result will be human children." "'Reproduce'," Tahr's ears twitched in a smile while the velvet of her nose wrinkled at the same time. "You know, there are words for that which bear more warmth." "I was not trying to be poetic." "Sorry. Please continue." "If we have children, they will be human. Eventually Max and I will both die and they would be alone here. Absolutely alone." I swung around to face Tahr. "Do you understand now? All they would know of where they originally came from would be what Max and I told them. They would be. . . different. All their lives." Tahr got up and slowly ambled past me. Leaves rustled as she pushed aside a branch. "Yes, I can understand that." I fell in beside her as she padded through the forest. My boots made a lot more noise than her bare pads. Aside from the wind and the incidental sounds of nature, that was the only noise there was for a quite a while, then: "K'hy, what do you know about Hraasa's death?" Ohshit! "Well, Remae told me he had died in his sleep." She paused before answering. "He was killed in his sleep; yes," she agreed. "Strangled. . . his throat crushed. Not an accidental death. There is no assassin I know of who would use such tactics." Her green eyes latched upon mine. "No Sathe assassin." I stopped in my tracks and stared at her. She also drew up short, folding her arms, hands hooked over her shoulders. "K'hy, the Marshal has done some asking around, and the thing that strikes both her and myself as peculiar is the fact that nobody can remember seeing you on the night of the Challenge." I felt my jaw twitch. "Remae has also seen Hraasa's corpse. She inspected it perhaps a little more thoroughly than did the guards who found him. He did not die peacefully; he fought. His bedding was soiled with blood that did not come from the scratches I had given him. There were traces of a strange scent on his body. There was more blood on his fingers and claws and chest. She also found shreds of flesh under his claws that did not come from the challenge. They did not come from a Sathe. She saw you the next day. You smelt of blood and medicine. "K'hy, your tunic. Take it off." I swallowed and stepped back a pace, backed up against a tree. "Tahr. . . I. . . ." I shook my head and bit my lip. "I thought as much," she rumbled. "Did you also have something to do with his loss in the Challenge?" My shoulders sagged. I gave her a feeble, glum nod. "Saaaa ! " Birds startled by her cry flapped into the air. "K'hy!" she blazed, turning to howl at the forest. "You could have ruined everything! Why, in the name of my Ancestors! Why did you do it?!" I shook my head helplessly, despairing at her anger. "He was going to kill Maxine." Tahr stopped in mid snarl, half-turning with bared teeth. "No, K'hy, impossible! Hraasa gave his surrender! His troops saw! He could not have!" "He was going to use a Scirth Warrior," I told her. "Are they not outside the agreements that bind you and the other Clans?" "Scirth Warriors?!" she choked on the title. "K'hy, they are lethal! I hold no power over them; no Clan does!" Her jaw twitched violently. "If he has hired one to kill Mas she is. . . " "I took care of it," I said. She gaped at me, her expressions spinning between fury and astonishment at a mile a minute. Finally: "I am lost. Now - from the beginning - tell me what happened that night." We started walking again while I talked. I reluctantly told her about the accidental part I had played in Hraasa losing the Challenge and went on to tell her about the conversation I had later overheard. "I swam the river. Your kind are not the best swimmers, so there were very few guards. Hraasa's tent was around the other side of their camp. . . Anyway, I dodged the sentries and circled around. "He had a physician come to dress his wounds, then someone in a black cloak was brought to see him. I was able to get close enough to hear their conversation. He was talking with a Scirth Warrior, hiring him. . . Did you know that the going rate for the assassination of a human is twenty five gold pieces?" Tahr said nothing. "Well, anyway, I followed the Scirth Warrior when he left. I caught up with him and managed to persuade him to forget about his job." "How did you do that?" Tahr queried. "I cannot see even you defeating a Scirth warrior unarmed and walking away from it." I fished a small metal circlet out of my pocket and tossed it to her. She snatched the ring out of the air, turned it over, and stared in surprise again. "This. . . Where did you get this?!" "Hymath. Remember her? She gave it to me." Tahr stared at the ring, then slowly gave it back to me. "When? Why did you not tell me?" "You never asked." Tahr made a disgusted noise. "K'hy, take good care of that ring. I think that you do not know just how valuable it is." That ring; the tiny silver Sathe's head baring minute fangs in a snarl. She was absolutely right; it was valuable in ways that went far beyond just the exquisite craftsmanship. I closed my hand over it and slipped it back within my pocket. "Where was I? Oh yeah. He was reluctant about going back on his word, but he agreed not to take the assignment. Before he left, he gave me the gold he had accepted. . . to return to Hraasa. "I went back to the camp and hid until the lamp in Hraasa's tent went out. Their whole camp was. . . it was like they were going mad. There were fires and fights all over the place. The guards were watching a group fighting nearby. I got in under the side of the tent. They never saw me. "There was just enough light for me to see by. I guess I wasn't as quiet as I should have been," I licked my lips and turned away from Tahr, suddenly finding something of interest in the patterns of pine bark. "He must have heard me. . . he woke. I hit him hard. . . here, in the throat. I crushed his throat, but it took time. He was. . . was awake - fighting - the whole time. . . I. . . he. . . " I choked off and slumped against a tree. Tahr said nothing while I pulled myself together again. "I left the money there and just. . . put my hood up and just walked away. . . nobody noticed me. That was the only reason I got away. . . Nobody noticed. Sheer, dumb luck. I swam across the river and circled around to come back in the northern gate." "K'hy," Tahr stared at me. "It was suicide." I didn't respond. I had known. Her ears went back flat against her skull and she moved closer, her eyes about level with my shoulders. Reaching up she fumbled with my shirt buttons. I caught her hand. "K'hy," she almost growled, her ears going down. I let my hand drop. Buttons, one at a time down my chest, then she spread my shirt open. "My Ancestors!" Another tug and my arms were bared. Her wide eyes met mine, like pain-filled greenstone. "K'hy!" The smooth curve of a claw traced a line of red scar and scab up my chest to the point where it ended just below my throat. Just one of a multitude. "My Strange One," she moaned, gently touching my chest again, then stepping away. "It is an ancient tradition you have violated. It is not so much you killing him, as the fact that you biased the outcome of the Challenge. . . you were NOT supposed to be there!" I started walking again, rebuttoning my shirt. Tahr fell into step, slightly behind me. High above us the wind set the treetops swaying and rustling. "What will you do with me now?" I asked. Tahr grimaced and took a swipe at a pine tree she was passing. Four horizontal scrapes appeared across the bark. "I am not sure. In a sense I am the law, but there are limits to my jurisdiction. I am the Shirai, but even I cannot change what has always been, and what will probably always be." "I understand." "Did you understand before?" I bit my lip and studied the ground in front of me. "Yeah." She breathed a steam-kettle hiss, her lips pulling away from her teeth. "And if you were found?! Did you think what your discovery could have meant for the Shirai clan, for the entire Eastern Realm?! You could have destroyed everything that we have fought to achieve! All the loss and sacrifice, all the death, everything would have been for nothing!" I flinched away from the claws that were now hovering near my face, turned and sat on a fallen log smothered in moss. Tahr stood, keeping her distance, a shaft of sunlight cutting the air between us, glittering on the wings of insects. Suddenly I remembered a time a headstrong creature had tried to make her own way back to her people with her side held together with string and a prayer. Memories of chasing after her and finding her waiting for me, calmly waiting with her wound seeping blood. Now her eyes burned with anger. "Tahr," I said, "look at me." She tossed her mane, her teeth flaring white. "I have been looking at you for the best part of two years now. What else. . . " "Damnation! LOOK AT ME!" I exploded. "Look at me as other Sathe see me!" Her eyes narrowed, then she spun and took a few steps away before turning back to study me again. Then she slowly squatted and took a stick in her hands, twisting it in her fingers. "What are you trying to say?" I sighed. "You have grown too familiar with me. What am I? I am not of the Shirai clan. I am not of the Eastern Realm. I am not even Sathe! I am as an animal under your laws! If a. . . a squirrel had made Hraasa forfeit the challenge, could he blame the Eastern Realm?" The Shirai stabbed at the ground with her stick, then slowly twitched her ears: "No, I think not." "I made my decision and I am prepared to stand by it and take the consequences. I think that you would have done the same." The stick moved again as Tahr pondered. "You have thought this out, haven't you," she growled. "I tried to. It happened so fast." "Then you know that while your. . . status may give you immunity from the laws of the Realms and Clans - and even that I am not sure of - it also means that you have no rights at all in our Realm, that you are, in fact, an animal in the care of the Shirai Clan. You could be brought and sold or even killed without the stigma that would be attached to such treatment of a normal. . . person." I nodded. "I had suspected." Tahr's muzzle wrinkled so as much of her teeth and gums as possible were bared. Her ears vanished into her mane and the stick scratched violent patterns into the forest floor, then she snarled and sent the stick bouncing off a tree trunk, splitting into two pieces. When she looked at me it was the look predator gave prey. "Rot it all, K'hy! When I think you understand, you go and do something like this. If anyone learns. . . " I stood, carefully went to lay a hand on her shoulder. "He would have killed you. I . . ." She snarled again and her hand whipped up, catching me across the side of the head. I yelped and staggered back. My face burned. I touched that place and there was blood on my hand. I stared at her in shock. Tahr's snarl evaporated, turning to confusion, then. . something else. She opened her mouth, then turned and bolted into the forest. Undergrowth hissed around her, then the foilage stilled and she was gone. "Shit." I said, touched my bleeding face again, winced. Gone. No way I could catch her. Did I want to? I turned and set off back to camp. Remae caught me as I walked back into camp. "K'hy, they need. . . what happened to your face?" "Branch scratched it," I mumbled. "Angry branch," she observed. She knew. Of course she knew, but she let it lie. I went and sat by myself. The Sathe muttered and gossiped, glancing at me, but they left me alone. I touched the scratches on my face again. Why had she done that? Anger? Fear? Exasperation? Perhaps everything. Perhaps I deserved it. I didn't know. And she's never told me. Goddamn it! A Sathe might be able to stand aside and watch while a friend was torn apart, but I'm not a Sathe. What I did I did of my own volition. If it came down to it I would take the blame, but no-one could drag Tahr or her clan into it. Hell, if someone wanted to they could pick a fight with the Davies clan. Good luck to finding them. Tahr returned that night. A stiff wind whipped sparks into the night sky while we ate. I never noticed until Remae flinched, then laid her platter aside and went to join a figure standing in the gloom of the treeline. They exchanged a few words and eyes flashed metallic light as they glanced my way. I stared down at my meal. When I looked up again they were gone, into the trees: out of sight and earshot. I put my plate aside, not hungry anymore. ****** The Citadel loomed above us as the tiny convoy made its way along the narrow lane between massive inner and outer walls. Covered walkways spanned the gap high above our heads, arching over from one towering vertice to another. It was a lot like being in an alley between two skyscrapers. The inner gate was open, the uphill-sloping tunnel beneath the gatehouse dark and chill. The sounds of llamas' hooves and iron-bound wheels clattering and grinding echoed from the walls of solid granite, then we were through. For a second the sunlight breaking through the clouds above the vast courtyard dazzled me, then the monumental bulk of the Citadel's Keep blotted out the sky; layer upon layer of walls and towers enveloping the granite crown of the hill, dwarfing even the outer walls. Tahr's small fist tapped my shoulder: "Home." Her ears flicked in her smile. I blinked blearily and twitched my own lips at her. The last few days and nights had been spent on the road, travelling nonstop, doing our best to catch forty winks in the wagons. I hadn't got much sleep. None of us had. The walking dead, that was us. I just wanted to lie down and die for a week or two. The stir we'd caused in the town below had reached the Citadel ahead of us. Two ranks of Citadel Guards lined the steps and approach to the Keep. Faces massed at windows and parapets all around the courtyard as the small convoy drew to a halt. As Tahr adjusted her armour and dropped from the back of the wagon, Remae caught my arm. "Walk with me." It wasn't a request. Tahr preceeded us, her head held high and the clean armour she had materialised from God-knows-where flashing as inlaid silver caught the sun. Remae had no clean armour, but the blue and silver cloak she wore hid the scars, nicks, and stains in the purely functional battle dress she was wearing. Against them, I stood out like a cow in church. Head and shoulders above the Sathe, my hair had grown so long the last couple of months that it resembled a Sathe mane escaping from beneath my helmet, even if the copper was so different from the more subdued, earthy tones of Sathe coloration. My cloak flapped around my ankles, not quite hiding my tattered, stained fatigues. I looked around at the continuously growing crowd and nervously hitched up the battle-scarred assault rifle, feeling exposed and vulnerable crossing that huge courtyard. Cheering had started as soon as Tahr had appeared from the wagon, the howling sound of Sathe cheering. With Remae's claw hooked into my sleeve, I stepped out into a confusion of faces and sound. The Marshal noticed my nervousness. "K'hy, this way!" she hissed and tugged me along. "Don't worry so." I'd been shot at, burned and beaten and given a choice I'd have rather been on the battlefield than in that courtyard anyday. Sathe everywhere, more than I'd ever seen in one place before, the entire population of the Citadel it appeared and most of them were looking at me. I scanned the balconies and ramparts and windows and doors, looking for distinctive non-Sathe features. If she was there I didn't see her. More Sathe awaited us within the massive doors of the Keep. The entry hall echoed with hushed Sathe voices, the clatter of claws and metal accessories. Expansive cloaks with clan crests embroidered in glittering thread brushed against the lacquered parquetry in the wooden floor as their wearers bowed their heads before Tahr. "High One," the honorific murmured from the tapestry- hung walls of the chamber, resounding among the galleries and balconies that rose to the vaulted ceiling far above. Tahr respectfully returned the bows to the Clan Lords ranked before her and murmured something that caused ears to twitch in amusement; quickly suppressed. Finally Tahr approached the red-robed figure patiently awaiting her. "Shirai," he bowed when she stopped in front of him. And there was one more Sathe waiting for her. Not a Clan Lord or high-ranking official. It took a second to sink in just who he was. A far cry from the embarrassed trooper who had worried about Tahr in the corridor so long ago. Now wearing the armour of the royal guards, a silver ring in his ear. H'rrasch bowed. "Shirai," he said, and there was an emotion running far deeper than respect there. She touched his shoulder and he looked up. "I am glad you made it back," then he ducked his head again as though he was embarrassed. Tahr gave a stuttering hiss, then they were embracing and nuzzling each other. Been doing some matchmaking, Kelly ? Behind them, Rehr made an Excuse-Me-For-Butting-In kind of sound, interrupting Tahr's personal homecoming. "Excuse me, Shirai, but there are a few thousand people clamouring to see you." Welcome home, Tahr ai Shirai. ****** I was exhausted and hungry and exhausted and tired. The dust of the weeks on the road had ground its way into my very pores; a gritty feeling like sandpaper rubbing against my flesh. That last day had been the toughest, travelling all night so that we would make it to Mainport while there was still light. The sounds of cheering and jubilation were swallowed by the tremendous solidity of the walls of the Keep; the stone absorbing sounds so that none reached the deserted corridor where I walked. Occasionally a servant would scurry past, but otherwise the place had all the air of a mausoleum. All along the corridors the walls between the doors were carved in bas-relief, ancient depictions of tailed Sathe: living and dying, laughing and crying. The joy and sheer exuberance of felinoid life immortalized in stone. I gave a jaw-cracking yawned and concentrated on planting one foot in front of the other. The corridor opened into a T-junction in a groin vault serving as a landing for a broad, dimly-lit staircase. The steps were bare, undressed rock stairs cut directly into the hill and worn to almost-marble smoothness by the buffing of countless feet. How long ago had this part of the Keep been hewn? A passage to be measured in centuries or millennia? "Kelly!" The shout echoed down the corridor behind me, followed by the pounding of footsteps as a figure in checkered flannel shirt and blue jeans ran towards me. I lowered my pack to the floor and gave her a weary smile as she slowed down to a walk, staring as she approached. "I know," I forestalled her with an upraised hand, "I look like shit." She flinched and gave me rueful grin. "Sorry." Then she stepped close and hugged me. I stiffened, then slowly hugged her back, uncomfortably aware of the feelings her human femininity sparked off inside me. Her hair was clean, soft, and smelling of. . . womanhood. She suddenly stepped back, nervously avoiding my eyes, then smiled shyly. "Welcome home." I blinked. "Last I knew you weren't talking to me." She flashed a tight smile, like the ones I did with Sathe; trying not to show teeth. Was she developing that habit also? Whatever it was she smiled and said, "I'm just glad you made it back in one piece." I managed a smile in return. "Thanks. . . Max." "Here, I'll take that," she said and before I could protest she'd caught up my pack and slung it over her shoulder. "I tried to catch you back there with the others, but you took off alone." "Yeah, well I wasn't expecting anyone to meet me. I thought I'd skip the homecoming. They won't miss me, and I'm beat." It was a familiar route, one I'd walked many times before. The corridors became better lit, the tapestries, murals, and friezes covering the bare stone of the walls became more and more ornate and well-kept; banishing the spartan atmosphere of the less-populated areas of the Keep. Maxine was keeping up a cheerful banter all the way to my rooms, but by then I was too tired to reply in more than monosyllables between the yawns. I fumbled with the latch, then stumbled inside. The room was just as I had left it: papers sitting on the desk, a pair of breeches carelessly draped over the back of a chair. Although the air was stuffy with an atmosphere like a house that hasn't been lived in for a while, there wasn't a speck of dust to be seen anywhere. ". . . realised what you must have felt like when you were here," Maxine was saying. "I wasn't sure if you were coming back or not." I looked at her, then unslung the rifle and propped it against the desk. It overbalanced, clattering to the floor. "Hold on. Sorry, I've just got to sit down for a while. . . I'm stuffed." I nearly collapsed into a chair. Maxine was suddenly kneeling beside me in a near panic. "Hey, c'mon! Don't flake out on me here! I can't carry you!" I mumbled an incoherent protest as she hauled me to my feet again and guided me as I stumbled through to the bedroom. I don't even remember hitting the bed. ****** I was still rubbing my hair dry as I approached my quarters, whistling cheerfully. With the layers of grime I'd collected on the roads sloughed off in a blissfully hot bath, I felt ready to take on the world: any of them, or even all at once. That morning there was someone waiting at my door. I broke into a grin and called out, "Morning, Ms Wayne." "Afternoon you mean. I've never seen anyone go out like that." She didn't blame me for sleeping in. I had - she agreed - looked like shit. While I changed in the bedroom we exchanged smalltalk through the open door. I had countless shirts, all in a stylish shade of olive drab: part of the cargo from the wreck of the truck, but only a single pair of pants. The hardships these'd been through were beginning to show in the worn knees, the stains and holes in the heavy fabric. I glumly poked a finger through a rent in the seat, then chucked the pants aside and fished a pair of Sathe-made breeches from the chest. They were the type that finished around the knees, and I felt absolutely ridiculous in them. "Why don't you try one of those kilts?" Maxine giggled. "Too cold," I replied. "You know what the draughts in this place are like." She laughed and watched as I tied the laces on my boots. "You know, I learned a lot about them while you were away. The Sathe that is." I looked up at her. "You feel better about them now?" "I don't really know. They're easier to get along with, but they're still . . . weird. Sometimes I just feel like it's not real, like it's all just a dream." She sighed deeply and looked at me. "How was it for you?" "Eating, sleeping, drinking and crapping together. You have to get used to them," I replied absently, then looked up at her. "I never said it was easy, Max." "Was the fighting bad?" I felt my jaw tighten. There's no way I'll ever forget those weeks. "How can it ever be good? You know: war is hell and the food sucks." She forced a smile, then said, "If you don't want to talk about it. . . " "Thanks," I pushed my fingers through my overgrown thatch of hair, "Maybe. . . later, I think." The rifle was on the desk, black and vicious against the creamy sheets of parchment lying underneath it. I picked the weapon up and touched the scarred and nicked receiver. There were gouges in the stock and the paint had chipped off the selector switch. "So what do I do with this?" I asked myself. ****** The vault was buried deep underground, as is a vault's wont. The air was chill, the rough-hewn granite walls and vaulted ceiling glittering with moisture, streaked with soot from the sputtering torches in sconces. It was just one of a string of such rooms storing the wealth of a realm. Inside, in the dimness, I could catch the glitter of gold and silver: Bars of precious metal, ornate weapons slung in racks. Locked iron-bound chests labelled with Sathe script were everywhere. Maxine picked up a gold staute the size of her hand, weighing it. It looked like solid gold. Nearer the door olive-green boxes and crates were stacked in neat rows around the walls, black stencilled letters and numbers seeming to twist and writhe in the shifting light. Sathe guards and a single human woman were watching me as I checked the seals on the last case. The Sathe-made laminated box would remain airtight until either the wood rotted away or someone broke the seal around the lid. The rifle and ammunition inside were sealed in a solid block of wax, preserving both indefinitely. I hefted the box and set it on a rack with the other cases. The guards took the torches and swung the heavy door to as I left. The dull boom as it closed echoed down the dim corridor and the guards returned to their station. It was a safe bet that as soon as Max and I were out of sight they would be back to their game of dice. You couldn't really blame them; it was a boring duty to pull. Maxine flicked on the electric lantern she was carrying, filling the corridor with a crisp, bluish light that was strange after the faint orange illumination of the torches. I had that sensation you feel when you've been wearing a watch for years and suddenly it comes off for some reason: You feel as if part of your wrist is missing. That rifle had been near at hand for so long it had almost seemed a part of me. Now it was locked away behind more than a dozen metres of rock, I felt. . . naked. A comforting and familiar weight was gone. My hand kept reaching for a shoulder strap that was no longer there. Maxine noticed my twitching. "Withdrawal symptoms already. You going to be all right without your little toy?" "No problem, I'll just use the one you're carrying." She looked startled. "How'd you know?" "If you want to keep it hidden, you shouldn't bend over like that. Why are you carrying it anyway?" "After what happened down in the town, I didn't want to take any chances." THAT wasn't still an issue, was it? I thought it was history, just 'a day in the life of' to me. I suppose it had been a real shock for her, but it concerned me that she was still nervous about it. How long had it been now? Months, at least. Sathe claws spattered on stone. A servant dashed down a staircase ahead of us and pulled up short, blinking, in the glare of the electric lantern. "High one, the Shirai's advisor requests your presence as soon as is convenient." I saw him glance at Maxine. "Ah. . . alone." Maxine shrugged and held up the light. "You're going to need this. I'll walk you up a few levels." The guard was bobbing tensely. "All right," I told him. "Lead on." ****** There was no reply to my knock. "You are sure that he is here?" I asked. "He must be," the guard outside the door replied, puzzled. "He has not left." The door was unlocked, opening easily when I lifted the latch. The guard was close behind me as I stepped inside the room, expecting the worst. Rehr wasn't getting any younger. . . He was sitting in his chair at the desk, his back to me as he stared out the window. All I could see was the back of his head and his pointed ears. It was all I needed to see. Grinning, I assured the guard everything was alright. He frowned, but he left. I reached for the Sony DAC Walkman on the desk and switched it off. The Advisor was fast for his age. He jumped with a yelp of surprise, turning, his shock turning to a glare. He plucked the earphones out. "K'hy," he said softly; dangerously. "You could have thought about announcing yourself." "I am sorry, sir," I bowed my head. "I did. . . scratch; several times. You did not answer and I was concerned for you." He glared at me, then looked at the Walkman. The thunderclouds behind his eyes cleared and his grey-tufted ears flickered. "Ah. . . No. The fault was not yours. I borrowed this thing from your mate. She said it was music from your world." I took the proffered earphones and held one to my ear; the music he'd been so engrossed in was Nigel Kennedy's rendition of The Four Seasons. I pressed the reverse button. The flipside was halfway through QueensRyche, Silent Lucidity. Hmmm, eclectic tastes. "You like it?" I asked. "It is a change," he answered diplomatically. "So many different kinds of instruments, different music. . " The Sathe gave a steam-kettle hiss as he laid the Walkman on his lap. "Some of it is appealing, some of it is just. . . unusual." He tapped the stereo with a claw and looked up at me. "K'hy, I look at this object and I am afraid. Your people can make objects like this. They can build devices like that vehicle of your mate's. What would happen if your people could find a way to travel between our worlds at will?" I shrugged helplessly and picked up a spare tape from the desk: Robert Plant, Fate of Nations. "I cannot say. I just do not know. In our exploration of our own world, we made many mistakes, but I am not certain that we would not make the same mistakes here." "You speak against your own people?!" "I merely say what is the truth. . . or what I believe to be the truth." The Advisor rested his chin upon steepled fingers and stared at me, thoughtful. Had I said something wrong? Then his ears flicked like a fly had buzzed him and he asked, "What could your people do?" I stared back at him. That was one question I didn't want to answer, for several reasons, the least being the paranoia it might generate toward the humans who were here. "I. . . I do not know exactly," I hedged. "I suppose it would depend on who found whom. Is this why you sent for me?" "Not entirely," he said, looking momentarily disappointed. "I thought that you would want this back." He reached into a drawer and pulled out a yellowish rectangle of parchment with a glaring red wax seal: the letter I given him for safekeeping. "Thank you, Sir," I took the letter and tucked it safely inside my jacket. "I am pleased to be able to return it to you." He hissed again as he sank back into his chair, then smiled. "Hearing of some of your. . . ah, exploits, I am mildly surprised that you are standing before me today." "I got lucky." "Lucky! Saaa! There is the understatement of a lifetime!" He pulled another scroll from a wooden stand beside the desk and held it up in front of me. "Some of your Greens have given a written report on your actions and the Shirai is still trying to decide just what is to be done with you." Oh shit! Seeing me stiffen, he hastily set the scroll aside and coughed, almost apologetically. "Huh. . . I think that can wait. Ah yes, there was one other thing that I am not sure you know about." In five days time there was to be a. . . a party? No, that wasn't the word for it; I think reception, or perhaps formal ball would be more accurate. It was a celebration of the Eastern Realms victory amongst the high fliers of Sathe society: the Clan Lords of surrounding towns and the most prominent merchants. "It is for them to pay their respects and pledge their loyalty to the Shirai," Rehr told me. "There will also be Gulfers present. A formal surender of their Clan lands before an assembly after Tahr proved herself at the challenge." THAT was something I'd screwed up royally. If I hadn't interfered in Sathe business - in that Challenge - Tahr would be dead. However, I had, and she was alive. Did that make her any less capable of ruling the Eastern Realm? I doubted it. Hraasa, now that was one I would definitely NOT like to see in the White House. Having Gengis Khan as your lord would've been only marginally worse. "K'hy?" "Huh?" "Is something bothering you?" "Oh, no. No." I gave him a weak grin. "A party; and here I am without a thing to wear." "Something will be provided," he assured me. ****** Lights, torches and lanterns, were burning throughout the Citadel. Windows small and large all over the faces of the ancient structure were lit; thousands of points of light against the dark vertices of stone walls and towers. The air that night was warm. A breeze curling in through the open window made the lamps in my quarters flicker and carried the raucous sound of Sathe carrying out preparations for the night to come. Two females, each so different from the other, turned together when I walked through the door. Remae had never seen me in anything other than worn army fatigues or Sathe clothing, altered and cobbled together to fit my frame. Now she blinked in surprise. Both tunic and trousers were black, with aquamarine trim, silver piping on sleeves and legs. The broad leather belt was glossy black with a simple silver buckle matching the buttons. The cut was a sort of cross between dress uniform and a tuxedo, except neither of those styles would have the cloak slung across my shoulder: night black. "Isn't this overdoing it?" I asked Max. "Didn't you have a tux?" "Quit complaining!" she snapped back. "You look great." She fiddled with something on my collar and asked Remae, "That is good?" The Sathe Marshal rubbed at the small tuft of fur on her chin while she cast a critical eye over me. "Good," she finally proclaimed it. "Very good. Muted, yet suits him well, but you will have to something about his fur. Rot you K'hy, stop squirming! You will be amongst some of the most influential individuals in the realms, you must make a good impression upon them. Now sit and be still!" I was pushed down into a chair to endure their fussing over me; adjusting this and that detail, what would look best. Fingers both hairless and furred yanked my head this way and that, claws raked and tugged at my hair and beard: pulling and rearranging while the two women debated between themselves what look I should have. A bit off here? no, it looked better long, like a mane. Tie it back. Did Sathe kids play with dolls? I didn't know. Maxine had indeed come a long way. Her accent was still strong and her vocabulary was not quite as extensive as mine, but now she was able to work hand in hand with a Sathe. It wasn't that long ago that just a Sathe's touch made her shy away. The sound of Sathe shouting drifted in through the window on the breeze and Maxine started to go to work on my patchy beard with a pair of nail scissors she'd produced from somewhere. While her hands tilted my head this way and that I had to wonder what she would be wearing to the reception the next night. ****** I rapped my knuckles against the door. "Ms Wayne? You ready?" Sathe Clan Lords and their retinues had been arriving in Mainport for the past week and the town was buzzing as merchants made the most of the sudden boom in trade. Further down the corridor a group of Sathe soldiers stopped to stare openly at us: probably out-of- town troops just looking around the Citadel. I glared back and they hastily moved off again. The door opened. I turned back and began to say hello and left my jaw hanging open. "You like?" Max asked. I got a blurred impression of chiffon, lace, and flesh. "I take it that drooling means yes?" Maxine smiled innocently, disarmingly. I nodded stupidly, blinked several times. She was wearing. . . something not quite like a jumpsuit, not a blouse or dress, but unlike any evening gown I had ever heard of: white and tantalisingly semi-transparent in places. An intricate and somewhat daring neckline that would be completely lost on Sathe, looping down around her modest cleavage, melding with bloused sleeves. Down the sides of her thighs and hips the light fabric bloused out again, cut into vertical slits that hid just enough. Below the knees and elbows the white fabric was inlaid with silver and gold wire that made it hug the contours of her forearms and calves. More silver filigree wound through the auburn hair that fell about her shoulders. Shoes must have been a problem as the Sathe don't have anything approaching a cobbler: she was wearing white leather moccasins. The evening-blue, floor-length mantle was fastened at her shoulder with a small disk of engraved silver. It made her eyes seem to glow. "Well?" she smiled, "Are you going to stop gaping and escort me?" She didn't wait for me to answer, but hooked her arm through mine; half-dragging me, the cloak swirling behind her, brushing and flirting with mine. There were guards waiting for us. They stared unabashedly as we passed, then hastily fell in behind us. More bodyguards. "Where the hell DID you get that from?!" I finally blurted. Maxine laughed and touched the filmy fabric of a sleeve. "Made it. . . with a bit of help and a few suggestions from friends." "Who? Delmonte de Sathe?" She didn't answer that, just smiled at me in a way that had me wanting to climb the walls. The corridors throughout the uppermost tiers of the Keep were flooded with light; scores of servants replacing and relighting torches and lamps that had burnt themselves out. The smoke hung to the ceiling like inverted mist, escaping out open windows and doors. I could feel Maxine pressing against my side as we drew nearer our destination, then we ascended the final staircase and through the final doorway. If I had harboured any fears that maybe we were dressed a smidgen. . . flamboyantly, those doubts were dispelled upon the first glimpse of the reception area ahead. One entire wall of the massive room opened onto a terraced garden that overlooked the central courtyard of the Keep. Flowing arches and trellises wrapped in greenery blurred the interface between the interior and exterior, almost making it difficult to tell where the marbled floors and walls ended and the long grass of the garden began. The doorway we were standing in was flanked on either side by columns towering up to the vaulted ceiling high above. A totally different type of architecture to that used in the great hall where massive rafters supported the weight of the roof by brute force. Here, the magic of slender arches easily shrugged off the mass of the ceiling. A cascade of broad marble steps paved the way down into a sea of furry bodies. The room was a riot of colour. Clan devices and flags festooned the walls and ceiling while the Sathe themselves were an insane palette of color and styles: breeches, parade armour, sashes, cloaks, furs, decorative splashes of paint on fur. . . all manner of Sathe fashions and all in brilliant colours: Reds, greens, blues, pinks, yellows, purples, blacks. All these colours and more swirled and mixed while the sometimes-discordant, sometimes-smooth sound of Sathe music from a small knot of musicians drifted above the muted hiss of the crowd. A sea of catlike faces swinging our way, green eyes widening, leathery nostrils flaring. Sathe leaned towards their neighbours, whispered questions spreading in a susurrus across the hall. As we two humans moved down into the room Sathe stared at us, some moving away, others standing their ground, but laying their ears back. Claws slipped from fingertips in unconscious reflex as the owners were faced with something they did not understand. Many of them had heard that the Shirai had. . strange. . . guests but didn't realise just HOW strange. Although nobody felt inclined to start chatting with us we did make a nice topic of conversation and a babble of Sathe voices rose in our wake. Being alone in a crowded room isn't a pleasant feeling. Maxine and I moved across the room to an archway bordering upon the garden. The Sathe ideal of an aesthetically pleasing garden differed from that of neatly trimmed lawns favoured by most humans; they preferred the grass wild, burrs and weeds and all. I snagged a couple of ales from a passing tray and handed one to Maxine. "Thanks." "You're welcome." I took a sip and pulled a face. "If this's their best brew, it's going to be a long night." "Do you know anyone?" I looked back into the crowded room. "Can't see any famliar ears." "What about her?" Maxine indicated someone standing behind me. "K'hy, greetings." Surprised, I turned and looked down at the chocolate- brown Sathe who raised her goblet in salute and smiled up at me. Her mane was still the rust-red it had been in Weather Rock, but this time it was set off by golden strands of wire wound through it, individual strands coming together over her brow. Both her breeches and the light leather harness entwined about her torso were coloured brick-red and dark green, sometimes blending into, sometimes in contrast to her fur. The needle-like slashes of brilliant yellow and crimson across her harness were not a touch any human would have chosen. "It is good to see you again. There is so much that I did not get a chance to thank you for," Fres's said. "Please, High One" I protested, "that is not necessary. It was my job. If you must thank someone, thank Tahr. . . " "Ah, no," she waved my words aside. "You remember what Hraasa said? This was not your fight, yet you so nearly gave your life for us. For what you have done the Fres's Clan shall always thank you. You are welcome within our Clan circle and will always be welcome at any of our holdings." "High One. I. . . I thank you." I didn't know what else to say. The Clan Lord showed amusement at my confusion. Her ears flinched and she looked back at the crowd of Sathe in the room. "You would seem to be a little out of place here." "We just do not seem to fit in, High One," I replied. " I cannot understand why." The ears of the Clan Lord of Weather Rock twitched in mirth. "Aye, I would wonder how that can be." Then she turned to Maxine; blinked. "This is your mate? I had no idea that she would look so different from you." Maxine looked sidelong at me. One of those 'give-me-a- break' looks. "Uh, she is not exactly my mate." "No? I would have thought that you would not have much of a choice whom you took." Why did everyone say that? "Tell me, does she have a name?" "I-am-sorry. High One, this is Maxine. Maxine; Fres's, Clan Lord of Weather Rock." Manners impeccable, Maxine bowed her head. "I am honoured, High One, but most Sathe find it easier to call me Mas." Fres's ears perked up. "She speaks as well as you do!" "Thank you," Maxine smiled. By that time we had attracted a small congregation of amused and bemused Sathe dignitaries. A male decked out in gaudily decorated leather armour that would only have been of use on the parade ground stepped forwards: cautiously. "Fres's. . . you KNOW these?!" Wrinkles formed up Fres's's muzzle. "Of course. I make it a point to become acquainted with all potential customers. Honoured folks, these are K'hy and Mas. They are H'mans." She clapped a hand on my shoulder - claws pulled - and grinned, "I should say they are more nervous of us than we are of them." As if that was a signal, the Sathe moved closer, curiosity beating back their caution. Soon I found myself sitting upon a dark granite bench, one of several arranged in a circle in the overgrown garden beneath the dark branches of a Red Maple. Sathe clustered around on other benches, questioning me, commenting, laughing. I put up with curious hands touching my skin and hair, tracing unfamiliar bone structures, examining my hands. As time marched on, Sathe drifted away, but there were always more to take their places. In so many ways these cream of the Sathe aristocracy were identical to the Sathe cubs I'd met: their curiosity, their questioning and touching. Curiosity killed. . . etc. , etc. Nearby, Maxine was engaged in conversation with a young male in greens and golds. I glanced their way in time to see him fondling her breasts. "HEY!" Sathe eyes went wide and ears laid back as I vaulted the back of the bench and advanced upon the youth, my fingers clenching into fists. He turned at my shout then yelped and retreated before my advance. Sathe turned to watch. Several who had been talking to me followed me and I couldn't be sure if they would help or hinder me. "Kelly!" Maxine had my arm. "What the hell're you doing?! God's sake, calm down! He was just looking." "Dammit, he TOUCHED you!" "So? They've all been touching you," she snapped, then her brows shot up and she grinned, "Jealousy?" "What?" "Kelly, are you actually jealous?" She gave an incredulous laugh. I grimaced and scratched at my head as I turned to the Sathe youth. "Sir, the mistake was mine. I misunderstood. I- am-sorry." Maxine smiled at the Sathe. "He only thought he was protecting me. Please understand; forgive." The youth looked from her to me, then back again. Abruptly his ears flicked. "Ah. . . of course. You are mated. Of course I understand." He stalked off to the watching crowd where he explained - loudly - to his friends that I was only thinking to protect my mate. She was, after all, the only one I had. Embarrassed, I brushed through the long grass to lean on the railing of the garden. Far below - beyond the multitude of tiers - the granite of the ancient monoliths of the Clan Circle gleamed in the moonlight. "Kelly?" I didn't answer. "Hey, it's nothing to get like that over. I mean, I'm flattered that you cared enough. You did stand up for what you thought was right." I started as I felt a hand come to rest upon my shoulder. Maxine was looking up at me, amusement crinkling the corners of her eyes. God, but she was beautiful that night. Things, emotions, dreams stirred inside. Slowly, I raised my hand to her cheek, brushing my knuckles over her skin. Wonder. Almost forgotten how soft it was. She smiled, pressed against my chest. I bent to meet her upturned face. "K'hy! Mas!" It broke. That moment between us snapped and dissolved into the ether, fading as if it had never been. Remae stood nearby, waiting with a puzzled tilt of her head. The Marshal knew she'd interrupted something, but didn't understand what. "K'hy?" Maxine stiffened and stepped away from me. I swear, Remae, this had better be good! "The Shirai has arrived. The ceremony is to begin." ****** "Honoured Shirai. On the behalf of my Clan, I lay my arms at your feet and bare my throat for your claws. We shall follow your tail and may none stray from the path you lead." The voice of the Clan Lord echoed in the quiet of the room. The musicians had fallen silent while the multitude of Sathe had formed into ranked groups. Individual Clans gathered beneath their standards whilst listening to the litany being recited on the raised dais at one end of the room. Tahr raised her arm to his throat and I saw claws stroking the fur there. "I return your arms to you," she replied. "I stay my hand. I accept your submission and your allegiance. In return, as your protector, I swear to defend you, to aid you, to watch over you and your kin. My food is yours. My drink is yours drink, and my roof is yours. All I ask of you is your allegiance." "High one, our hands are your own. We shall follow," he promised. Tahr leaned closer, to breath into his face. His nostrils widened as he inhaled and she stepped back again. "Shirai," the Clan Lord bowed then stepped down from the dais. Without protraction another Clan Lord was called forth, toward the platform where Tahr ai Shirai awaited. She was wearing orange and red breeches, tied just below the knees and at the waist with tassled cords. Around her shoulders rested a high-collared mantle: a light reddish-ochre with patterns of black spots like a leopards hide. The clasps that fastened it at her throat bore a blood-red stone the size of an egg. Again and again, for Lord after Lord the litany was repeated. Tahr touched claws to throats, breathed into the muzzles and accepted their allegiance, one after another. A Lord in red and black with a jagged ear. My jaw clenched: Gulf Realm. The Gulf Lord wasn't openly hostile, but there were hints: the stiffness in his posture, his clipped replies as he took the oath and resigned himself to the Claws of the Eastern Lord. Perhaps she applied a touch more pressure than she had upon the previous Lords; the muzzle of the Gulf Lord twitched slightly, as if in discomfort. Finally the last Clan Lord returned to his retinue. There was a pause, then the next name was called: "K'herry ai Yaviis." The human name was pronounced with great strain, a lot of practice behind it. And it took a second or so for me to realise that name was mine. Maxine nudged me out of my shock. "Go on, " she grinned. A corridor lined with dumbfounded Sathe had opened ahead of me, guiding the way to the dais. My boots echoed on the marbled floor as I crossed the huge room, climbing the steps slowly until I was level with the green eyes of the Shirai. "For an Outsider to be adopted by a Clan is not unknown," she said, almost as if she were speaking intimately to me, yet loud enough for her voice to heard throughout the room. "However, for a Clan to accept one who is not even Sathe, that is an unprecedented event." Tahr turned to confront the stares of the nobles below. "Not Sathe, but a person of intelligence and sensitivity enough to compare to any. It was nearly two years ago when this being and I first met. He saved my life and agreed to aid me, a time during which we both came to know each other and I say that he became much more than a friend to me. Were that he were Sathe, I would have taken him for a mate," she met my eyes again; ice-cool green depths, nevertheless glowing with warmth. "That, however, was impossible. "He has been through great pain at the hands of Sathe, yet still he bears us no malice, freely sharing gifts of knowledge from a distant and powerful civilization." That drew some subdued muttering. "And it was through his courage and honour that this Realm was able to hold its borders to itself. He has saved Sathe land and lives, putting his own at risk, more than once. "It is with great respect that I ask this one whether he would accept the protection and loyalty of the Shirai Clan. Would he offer himself to the Shirai Clan." I met her level gaze and swallowed. "High One, I would be honoured." Claws touched my throat, gently, almost tickling. Through the pounding in my ears I heard Tahr speaking; asking me questions: "Do you swear to follow the Clan wherever it may lead?. . . You shall defend the common ground, the circle. . . Always uphold the name of the Ancestors. . . " Questions, a lot of them. The ritual went on for longer than the previous ones had. It was a more important ceremony, for taking an Outsider into a Clan was not something to be taken lightly, the Clan Lord had to have complete confidence in the other's character. Tahr knew me, knew me with the intimacy with which I knew myself. I could almost see memories flickering like pictures in her eyes as she gazed at my face. She had to know that some of the things she was asking of me were impossible, meaningless. A Sathe warrior would hold fast to these oaths until the end, but I couldn't place the same value on them. Her breath was warm and tartly sweet. "K'hy ai Shirai, you are now of the Clan." There was a breath of silence, then hissing cheers of approval started. I turned to look out upon the hundreds of Sathe faces, the noise crescendoing until it sounded like a storm-swept sea breaking upon a gravel shore. It took an effort to keep my face in a neutral expression; breaking into a grin could prove disastrous amongst people to whom the baring of teeth was an insult or challenge. There were individuals and small, scattered groups who weren't so happy; looking either puzzled or downright dissatisfied. Notably, several types in red and black turned and stalked from the room. ****** Things turned far less formal afterwards. The music started up again and other stimulants were produced. Some Sathe nobility added powders to their drinks, others took drags from small pipes, producing sickly-sweet clouds of smoke I went out of my way to avoid. The food was brought out on long tables decorated with patterned cloths and elaborate candelabra were laden with delicacies of all descriptions. . . well, the Sathe would call them delicacies. I'd have to be damn hungry before I'd get started on some of that stuff: raw and underdone meat, bowls of pinkish-grey things that looked suspiciously like brains; other small, round things that stared back at you, internal organs, external organs. I tried a small pastie that looked safe, but the meat inside was so tough I had to swallow it nearly whole after chewing for a couple of minutes. Maxine was also exploring the tables. She'd found some other kind of pasties, nibbled at one, then taken a larger bite. I was close enough to hear when she asked a servant what was in it. The Sathe gave a brief, one-word answer and bustled off in to the crowd. Maxine looked puzzle, then saw me, "What was that? Thifki? I don't know that word." I swallowed, fighting a lurch in my guts. "Uh. . . You don't want to know." "Yes, I do." I shrugged and grimaced. "Alright. . . Testicles. Llamas'." Maxine coughed and gagged, dropping the pastie like it was burning and grabbing at her mouth. Sathe who'd witnessed the exchange gave us curious stares mingled with sporadic laughter. "You okay?" I asked. "I think I need some air," Maxine gulped, looking decidedly green. It was fresher outside. We left the noise and drug- stinks and lights behind as we walked the garden tier. Off to the right the time-worn balustrade overlooked the other levels leading down to the inner circle; like a stadium with the ranks of bleachers rising up around the field. Long, nightbound grasses parted like shadows before us as we walked, the music losing to the sound of the wind in the terrace trees and the soft voices of Sathe also out walking. Flickering oil lamps on poles were dotted around the garden, throwing lonely little pools of light. More lights burned around the interior of the Keep, far more lamps than usual, sparkling in the darkness like a grotto of fireflies. "Feeling better?" I asked Max. "Uh. . . Yes. Thanks. Goddamn. I thought there was supposed to be food here tonight." "Same here," I sighed and looked up at the stars. They didn't twinkle in quite the same way as I remembered from back home. "You knew what was going to happen tonight," I said. Not really accusing her. Maxine glanced at me. "Uh-huh. Tahr and Rehr talked to me about it earlier." "Damnation, someone could have told me." A grin creased her face. Pure humour that almost startled me. "We wanted it to be a surprise." "Well better luck next time," I said nonchalantly. "What? Bullshit!" she affected outrage. "You should have seen your face. If that wasn't surprise, I don't know what is." "Okay, you got me. Guilty as charged." "Those pledges you had to take. What where they? I didn't get all the words." "Sort of like 'I pledge allegiance to the flag'. The Sathe version though, with things about following the High Lord, never straying from the trail, share the kill with clan and hearth. Etcetera, etcetera." "They really are hunters," she breathed. "Yeah. I wonder how old that ceremony is? As old as the Circle maybe." She gave me a sidelong look: "How old's that?" I was mildly surprised she didn't know. Still there was a lot for both of us to learn about Sathe. So, as we walked through the wild grass and trees and trimmed bushes and occasional oasis of lamplight, I told her. It was peaceful out there. That garden ran around the interior of the Keep, a small park in itself. The Sathe we did meet - in pairs or small groups - sometimes greeted us, sometimes avoided us. The outer wall of the garden was the upper level of the Keep, hidden behind ivy-covered trellises. Down the far end of the garden we came across a simple railess staircase climbing upwards to the top of the wall. Maxine gazed up to where the wall eclipsed the stars. "Shall we?" "Do you want to ruin that outfit?" I asked. "I'll chance it," she grinned back. I followed close behind her up the narrow steps. The view was worth it. The Keep's ramparts and roofs dropped away below us to the courtyard where bonfires burned. Further out, like contours lines on a map, the staggered walls of the Citadel wrapped the hill in concentric circles. Then there were the lights of Mainport, as bright as I had ever remembered. North, boats at anchor bobbed in the harbour with their lanterns shimmering on the water and beyond that the unbroken heartland of the continent stretched off into the moonlight. Millions upon millions of acres of unbroken wilderness. A new frontier. Maxine wrapped her cloak closer against the cool breeze that wound its way amongst the towers of the Citadel, her hair stirring softly. The light that fell upon the trees was such that it gave the illusion of moving water,as if the woodlands were some vast sea. Dotted around the horizon - indescribably faint - the lights of small farms and settlements, like ships in the night. "Times like this I don't regret leaving the rest behind," I said. Maxine nodded agreement. "Yeah, I know what you mean. It's beautiful." For a while we stood there; just watching, then she asked, "How did it happen? All this I mean," she amended, turning and sweeping her arm in an arc that encompassed the wilderness in front of us and the Sathe civilization behind. "The land, the plants, the animals, they're exactly the same as back home. I mean, if the Sathe evolved from native cats - something like the mountain lion or lynx - then wouldn't that've screwed up the food chain? I mean, they were one of the major predators. If they became agrarian, what happened to the herbivores? " "Well, the Sathe still hunt them, and there would have been a corresponding increase in the number of other predators, you know: wolves and bears and all that." "Yeah," she sighed. "Still, there should have been changes - major changes - right through the ecosystem. It's like tumbling Dominoes, you topple one, and the whole lot goes, one after the other. Something would've changed. Maybe new species popping up or something. There's also the geography; it's pretty much identical." "'Cept the Arthur Kill's gone," I pointed out. "This isn't an island anymore. More like Staten peninsula. There must be more changes. I'd like to get a chance to see Arizona. You know, that meteor crater. Even Niagara would do." "You could ask the Sathe about that. They've got settlements up there haven't they?" I nodded. The sounds of music drifted up from behind us. Sliding strains of an alien melody. Almost oriental. I crossed the battlements to look down on the garden where the party was still in full swing. Light spilled from the arches of the hall where multicolored figures moved between the towering columns. In the shadows and darkness of the garden there were glimpses of half-seen figures amongst the trees and bushes: Sathe, some walking, others - less inhibited than humans - enjoying themselves. I could still smell the food on the air and despite everything, it actually smelled pretty good. "Kelly?" "Hmmm?" Maxine was across the battlements, leaning against a merlon stained by weather and moss. "Can I ask something? About the fighting?" That wasn't something I really wanted to talk about, nevertheless I shrugged, "What?" Her eyes looked really strange in this light. I guess I'd been seeing only Sathe for far too long. "I did some asking around. Some of the things they say about you. . . are those things they say you did true? Running into a burning building to save a cub, defeating ten warriors singlehanded?" I hesitated before answering. "Rumours." "Are they true?" "I never defeated ten warriors in single combat! For the most part I was just trying to stay alive." "But you did save a cub from a fire?" she asked. When I just shrugged vaguely, she smiled and said, "That does sound like the kind of stuff legends are made of. Kelly, why'd you think they cheered you in there? They've heard what you've done for them, they respect you. Tahr gave you what she feels is the greatest honour that can be given. What you've done won't be forgotten in a hurry." How right she was about that? Was that reason Tahr had adopted me into the Clan? Or was it something else, something political. The hierarchy of Sathe nobility was a snarl of intrigues, alliances, misdirections, and misconceptions, all buried so deeply beneath facades of goodwill that only someone born and raised into the system could truly have a hope of understanding it; let alone manipulating it. My interference in the Challenge had really pissed Tahr off. I still had the scratches. But there hadn't been just anger in her reations, there was also fear. I hadn't beent Eastern, not even Sathe; an enigma in the metaphorical eyes of the law. How could a person be recognised as such if they didn't even have clan and family? The Sathe word 'animal' translates as 'not Sathe'. That was us. By Sathe law I couldn't be called before a tribunal to be judged as a proper 'person' could but there was action could be taken against me. . . of an unofficial sort, a terminal sort, in a back room or side- street. Eliminate the only random factor: Politics isn't a personal affair - it's cold and remote. Like an iceberg, most of it's hidden beneath the surface, and it's that part you can't see that's dangerous. Thinking about that clenched a cold hand around my guts. If I was found out, if Sathe learned what had actually learned what had happened at Weather Rock, the best I could've hoped for was that caution to anger the Shirai Clan and reluctance to do away with something that could prove an asset to the entire Sathe race would at least preserve my life. That ceremony wasn't just an honor; it was an insurance policy, a shield. It wrapped me in the protection of the Shirai Clan. But what would be done with Maxine? "Max, has anyone said anything about getting you into the clan?" She looked puzzled. "Uh. . . yeah. Tahr spoke about it earlier. She said that it'd 'take care of itself and in time you will join with the clan.' What'd she mean?" "I'm not sure," I frowned. That certainly didn't sound like Tahr; too corny. What was she talking about. . . Then I put a couple of those words into the Sathe context. That could be what it meant. . . Could it? No. . couldn't be. Still, thank God Maxine's Sathe wasn't quite up to nuances, riddles and puns. "You sure that's what she said?" "Uh-huh. Word for word." I shook my head. "I can't really say. I think I need a little talk with her." Again the smell of food drifted up to us and my stomach tried to remind me of all the hours since I'd last had a good meal. "Say, you hungry?" She also sniffed the air. "Yeah, but not for Llama nuts." I grinned. "Then how about we go somewhere we can get some decent food." She brightened. "Sure. Where?" "Uh, I think the Red Sails is about the only place in town that'd serve us." At that her expression changed again. "Oh. What about what happened last time." "That won't happen. They were in the Gulf payroll and we don't have to worry about that anymore. If you want we could get some Citadel guards to tag along." "No trouble?" I put one hand to my chest. "I swear. Scouts honour." She pursed her lips, then shrugged lightly. "Alright. You're on. I'd like to get out of here for a while." "You don't want the guards?" "Nah, but do you mind if I get changed out of this lot?" she indicated the white eveningwear. "It's not the best stuff for walking around town in." "Sure." To tell the truth, I wanted to get into something a little less conspicuous. I gave an exaggerated bow and held out my arm. "May I escort you to your quarters, madam?" She giggled and took my arm, affecting a southern accent, "Why, sah. I'd be downraht honoured." ****** Ten minutes later I met Maxine at her door where she was still brushing her hair. She'd changed into levis, sweater, her leather bomber jacket, and solid hiking boots, all human made. I painted quite a different picture in a mixture of human OD shirt, boots, and my Sathe cloak and black breeches. Max looked me up and down. "Sorry," I shrugged apologetically. "My other suit's at the cleaners." She laughed. "Don't worry. You look. . . uh, great." "Right. 'Uh, great' she says. Hell, who knows - maybe the look'll catch on. So, shall we go?" I fell into step beside her. "You know," she said as we walked, "I don't really know much about you. I mean, where're you from? What did you do? What about your family? Huh?" "Alright." I sighed and gathered my thoughts. "I'm from New Jersey originally. My parents, were killed in train crash when I was about two. I was adopted by friends of the family and grew up acros the water in New York." "Oh. I'm sorry," she said. I'd heard that too often. It seemed to be an automatic response from anyone who heard I'd lost someone. "What? That I grew up in New York?" She looked surprised. "No, that your parents were killed." "There's no need to be. My foster parents were a great couple. I had a childhood a lot of kids would gladly trade their own parents to have. Anyway, it was a long time ago. Another world." "Oh," she said again. "Why'd you join up?" "Pay my way through the final years of college mostly," I said. "And I thought it'd be a change." "No shit? Was it?" "Well, yeah. I tell you though, I'd never realised how much I hated other people telling me what to do. I wonder what they've got me down as now: missing, AWOL, deserter. . . " "I wouldn't worry about it," Maxine grinned. "What are they going to do anyway. Arrest you?" "I don't know. If we ever get back there it could make it difficult. 'Gee, well you see Sarge, there was this planet inhabited by cats and they had a war and I was invited. Did I miss anything?'" Max laughed. Guards in ornamental armour stationed at corridor intersections stared as we passed, those who knew me standing to attention. "Anyway," I said. "What about you? Your family? You told me your father's big in computer circles." "Yeah. Well, he's got his Integrated Solutions and mom has her teaching job. We don't really need the money, but she enjoys it. The last of the philanthropists, I guess." "Brothers or sisters?" "Nope. Only child. I was on break from college and just wanted to get away from it all for a few days. I've got. . . had a thesis due and thought I might get some inspirations out in the mountains. Huh! Got a bit more than that, didn't I." "What're you studying?" "Ahhh. . . Textile designs, some of the soft sciences: biology, psychology, English, struggling through calculus." "Textile design," I noted. "That explains the dress." She laughed, "Yeah. I showed Tahr sketches from my portfolio and she picked it out. I don't know what she thought of the other stuff in there." The main entry hall of the Keep was around us now, our voices taking on the hollow tone they may acquire in a great cathedral. "I wish I could have seen that," I smiled, picturing it. "I think we confuse her enough as it is." And we were down the steps and in the courtyard, walking through the pools of heat surrounding the bonfires that burned there, still chatting and learning. Servants bustled around, stacking wagonload upon wagonload of wood and keeping the fires stoked. "You want to take the ute down?" Maxine asked me. "Uhh. . . I don't think that'd work very well; we'd probably start a riot. Anyway, the parking's hopeless; probably get clamped. How about public transport instead?" "Huh? What public transport?" "I'll show you." A few minutes later and we were riding. It hadn't taken much fast talking to get one of the Sathe carting wood up to give us a lift down; I think he was too terrified to argue. Anyway, he just sat there and drove, holding the reigns and trembling violently while Maxine and I sat back on the bed chatting away. We got off at the bottom of the switchback road down from the Citadel and thanked him. He didn't speak, just continued to sit and stare at us with a stupified expression. Despite the hour, the town was busy and festive. There were stalls in the streets lit with strings of colorful paper lanterns. Merchants shouted, cheerfully praising their wares while decrying their competitors' produce. There were troubadours and acrobats performing. Maxine and I paused to join a small crowd watching a troupe tumbling and leaping with a little less facility than human acrobats could achieve and when we turned away we found there was a larger crowd watching us. Oh, well. Only to be expected I suppose. The Red Sails was a welcome haven. I greeted the bouncers at the door and they admitted us without a fifth glance. From the top of the stairs the crowd inside seemed about normal; the usual mix of wharfies, traders, craftsmen, and a few guards on their off-shift. The smoke of cooking and the oil lamps used still gave the place its own cloud ceiling. The odours of Sathe and food mixed and mingled with the clatter of mugs and cutlery, the snarls and spats of voices. Some Sathe stared, which was usual, and some actually greeted me, which wasn't. I suppose hearsay of the Red Sail's unusual patrons had spread. "Hi, K'hy!" The cheerful greeting in a familiar mangled English came from behind the bar. Dun colored fur and a flash of white teeth came from behind a pile of dished balanced precariously on a tray. "Be right with you," she called, navigating with the ease of long practice through the clutter behind the bar to the door leading to the kitchens. She returned half a minute later wiping her hands on a grimy rag and once again I wondered about the health regulations in this place. "K'hy. Mas. It has been a long time. Good to see you." "Same here," I smiled back. "How is life treating you?" "A?" she blinked, then grinned and leaned against the stained countertop. "Ah! Not too badly. Not too badly at all. Now, what have you been doing with yourselves?" "Not a lot. Max has been working on her speaking." She looked at Maxine. "Any improvement?" "I like to think so," Maxine replied. "Hah!" the Sathe female flinched back in surprise. "She speaks as well as you!" "Well," I waggled my hand in an 'iffy' sort of way, "almost as well. . . uhnn!" I drew back as Max cocked her elbow again."Alright! Uncle ! As well as I do!" "You are lucky she does not have claws, K'hy," the Sathe chuckled. "Now, are you drinking?" "Oh, sure. Max?" "You have any Steinlager? Thought not. . . Ah, ale for me." "Same here, two ales please," I asked. "Also a meal if you could." "Ah," she grimaced. "Your burnt meat? I thought there would be ample food at the Citadel this night." I glanced at Maxine who made a face "It is not to our taste. Too. . . fancy for us. We prefer something simpler; like last time, no internal organs. Oh, and you'll also want this." I handed my knife across. She took it, flipped it over, then slipped it under the bar. "Remind me to return it, all right? Very well. There is something cooking back there; I'll make sure it is dead and burnt. Find a table." "Thanks. . . " I started to say, but she was already skittering off to the kitchen. We found our table, scratched black wood in a dim alcove. A single beeswax candle flickered, the wax running down the side to puddle on the tabletop. Jeeze, against this just the formica and cheap plastic of a truck stop would look like a five-star restaurant. Maxine squeezed in opposite me, settling herself on the rough planks that served for seats. The candle threw deep shadows across her face, but her eyes glittered. "Kelly, what's her name?" I shrugged. "I don't know." "I thought so. How long have you known her?" I scratched my head. "Ahhh. . . Not sure. I met her a while back, before you arrived. She almost put a quarrel through me. I guess things went uphill from there." "Friendly, though." "Yeah." God, that she was alright. No prejudices neither, as that night way back when had proven. "It helps, you know." "How do you mean?" I drummed a short tattoo on the claw-torn tabletop: "A Sathe being so openly friendly. I mean, you know the looks you get just walking around the Citadel. When they're friendly it makes me feel like a person." She nodded. "Oh. Gives you hope they'll maybe be able to treat us a human beings and not some kind of freaks?" The two are kind of synonymous here, but I knew what she meant. "I hope so. Kind of weird though: humans of different races still haven't learned to live together and here we are trying to do that with a different species." "You really think we'll have better luck?" she asked, brushing a strand of dark hair back. "I hope so," I replied. "Damn, I hope so." We were quiet a while, watching the Sathe watching us. I wondered what they were thinking when they saw the two of us sitting here. So many of them covertly glanced our way, met my eye, then hastily turned away again. "Max." "Hmmm?" she turned back to me. "Something I picked up." I reached into a pocket and pulled out the heavy little circlet. It glittered dully in the candlelight, the filigree head of the eagle shining silver. "I thought you might like it." She blinked at me, then picked up the amulet by the thin chain, holding it dangling and twisting in the light before breaking into a smile. "Kelly, it's. . . thank you." I smiled back. "Try it on." She did so, tossing her hair forward to slip the chain over her head - it didn't have a clasp - then she touched the dime-sized circlet where it nestled against her throat. "It's beautiful." "Yeah, it is," I agreed, meeting her eyes. "But it can't compete." I think she blushed then. Damn candlelight: you can't see a thing. Two pewter mugs banged down in front of us, spilling liquid. Furry muscular arms leaned on the table and a muzzled face grinned down. After that brief normality of Maxine it came as a slight shock. "Alright," she said, "Two ales. Warm and honeyed." Then she spied the pendant. "Ah. . . Very nice. A gift?" "From Kelly," replied Maxine. "Sathe made? I thought so, but I don't recognise the style. Not local?" Max shrugged: "I do not know. Kelly? did you find this down south?" "Uh-huh." The Sathe started. "South? What were you doing down there? The war. . . " Then it clicked: "Weather Rock?" "Yes." "Then it WAS you! My Ancestors! I heard stories coming back about the fighting there. There was talking about a handful of Eastern warriors stopping the Gulf advance in its tracks and leaving the fields covered with their bodies. They said there was a monst. . . uh, something not-Sathe helping us and I thought it might be you, but every description I heard was different. Hai, were some of those things they said you did true? Killing hundreds of them? Tearing a Gulf officer's heart out?" I flinched in shock. "Where did you hear THAT?" "I do not know. Just some troopers. Rumours." Rumours. More stories. Lies. I felt a surge of anger. "Shit, rumours like that I do not need." I think she noticed my irritation; Her nostrils flared. "I get your food." I watched her melt back into the crowd, one cat among so many, then I sighed. "Hey." Maxine swatted at my hand. "Don't let it get you. Not all of those rumours are bullshit. I mean, you did save lives. You had to take sides somewhere." A flash of waves of Sathe going down under machinegun fire. . . I shook my head: "Did I? We could've run." "Where? They'd just come after us, wouldn't they? We couldn't hide forever. . . What's so funny?" I shook my head. "It's just an argument I had with myself a while back. Do I run? Where do I go?" "Oh." She glanced out of the booth at the room. "You talked yourself out of it." "Yeah. Like you said, I couldn't spend the rest of my life running." "No." She took a sip from her mug, grimaced. "If you hadn't got involved in the first place. . . " "Hmmm? How do you mean?" "Tahr. When you first saw her. . . I mean, why did you help her?" I tasted my own drink: warm and malt and slightly sweet. I'd had a conversation along these lines before. "I didn't have much of a choice at the time. They were trying to kill me. Afterwards. . . well, she was almost dead and I wanted to find out just what the hell was going on. I just couldn't leave her." I watched another bead of wax run down the side of the candle. "You weren't scared of her? I think I would've run." "Scared? Of her?" I chuckled. "Bleeding, half-dead. . Hell, yeah, she scared me shitless at first. I mean, I didn't know her language, I expected to wake up with my throat ripped out. It took time before. . . well. . . before we. . . before we knew each other." There was an awkward silence. Maxine took a hasty drag from her drink and I stared uncomfortably down at my own mug and mentally kicked myself in the head. Why did THAT have to rear its head? however unintentionally? Then she cleared her throat. I saw something awkward coming. "Ah, Kelly. . . I never really apologised." "Huh? What for?" "What I said about you and Tahr," she replied, not able to meet my gaze. "You were right: I didn't understand. I thought. . . I didn't know what you'd been through together. I'm sorry." Those words. Amazing how just that little bit of forgiveness lifted a weight. "Thank you." She touched the amulet. "While you were gone, she was worried about you. I've never seen her. . . She was scared, Kelly, scared for you!" "So was I." And our food arrived , stacked high on a tray adroitly waltzed through the crowed by the female bartender. Back to her buoyant self she handed out the steaming dishes. "As you wanted: just flesh and burnt." Burnt. . . Now that was a relative turn. Medium-rare was more like it. Still, it looked one hell of a lot more appetizing than that stuff lurking in the bowls back up at the citadel. The meat was actually cooked, and there were more plants than any Sathe would want: potatoes and a leaf that looked a bit like lettuce. A thick gravy smelling like peanuts spread across the meat and chunks of rough bread perched on the side of the dishes. "Hrilya likes a challenge, but he cannot understand why you would want to ruin a perfectly good meal. 'Why not just throw it into the fire', he said." I poked at a steak. "It looks fine to me." She hissed. "I would imagine they would have delicacies you could only dream at up there tonight. A rare occasion indeed." "Has this kind of occasion happened before?" She scratched her chin. "Ahhh, I cannot say for sure. There was something. It was way before my life though. There was also the Lake Traders, but they settled their differences. Now they are gaining more land in the South. You would have seen their representatives at the Citadel this night." "Yes, they took oaths from several Gulf Clan Lords." "Only fair. They helped us, so we repay them." She picked up the tray and seemed about to leave, then stopped and cocked her head at me, then at Maxine. "What about you two. How did the Shirai thank you?" "A new name." She nearly dropped the tray: "You are serious?!" "Yes." She stared, the tip of her tongue lolling from a corner of her mouth. "I would never have believed it. So, now what is your name?" "Kelly ai Shirai." "The Shirai herself. K'hy, you have some powerful friends. I would never have thought anyone would bring. . . people," a hesitation there, "like you and Mas into their clan. I mean, you are. . . " she trailed off, looking embarrassed. "Yeah ," I nodded. "But she only named me into the Clan. What about Mas?" "Huh?" she blinked, then her ears flickered. "No, K'hy. You do not understand; You have been named into the Clan so your mate also carries the name." "But we are not mated." "What?" She looked taken aback at that. "Not mated?" "No." "I would have thought. . . " "HAI! FERHIA!" She looked up at the shout from across the room. That male who'd stopped me the first time I'd come here was glaring our way. "Shave you, Ferhia! You are not paid to move your mouth all night!" "I'm not paid enough to do anything else!" she muttered. "Alright!" she called back, then gave us an apologetic smile as I paid her. "Sorry. If you need anything else. . . "Ferhia!" "ALRIGHT!" she bellowed back. "Clear the way! Coming through!" and she was weaving her ways through the tables and Sathe back toward the bar. We were quiet for a while. "Uh, yeah, well." I picked up a rib and was about to take a mouthful. Max was just watching me, ignoring her meal. "That's what Tahr was talking about, isn't it. That shit about 'in time'. I'm supposed to be your. . . mate, as she so delicately put it. Shit! Why'd she DO that?!" I shook my head. "I don't know. Perhaps she thought she was helping us. . . " "Helping?!" she looked insulted. "Look. She was pretty torn up when she found out you were upset about. . . us sleeping together. She thought she'd been helping me, then she saw you were so shocked by what had happened. It confused her. She would never deliberately do anything that'd hurt us." "No." Maxine quietened. "She wouldn't." Then she startled me: "She really loves you, you know." I shrugged vaguely, trying to damp down the emotions her words stirred. What had they talked about while I was away? A lot, by the sounds of things, and Maxine had come to learn a little more about Sathe. . . and me. "It. . . it wouldn't have worked out." "No." A corner of her mouth twitched. "I don't think so." The next few minutes there wasn't much said. Three meals a day and not a lot of hope of anything in between, cold buildings, it all added up; You got hungry, and when food was available, you ate. We ate. In silence. Every so often I'd look up to meet Maxine's blue eyes, watching me. The amulet at her neck burned warm red-gold in the candlelight, a circlet of reflected fire against the paleness of her skin. Not fur; skin. It wouldn't have worked. She glanced up, her eyes meeting mine, then ducking away again. Blue eyes, with their whites startling in the dimness. It wasn't fear; it was normal. Normal? What was normal? Two females, one not even human, the other. . . Well, when we first met she'd tried to give me three adam's apples. Normal? But she was beautiful. Not in the same way Tahr was; it wasn't that lean, predatory sleekness. It was something different: the delicacy of the face, the cheekbones and nose, the eyes, the waves of dark hair of a texture and sheen no Sathe mane could ever match. "Kelly?" "Huh?" I'd been staring. I blinked and smiled. "Yeah?" She ran a piece of bread around the remnants of her meal, sponging up gravy. "What're we going to do now? I mean. . . can we go home?" Home. . . I shook my head. "I don't know. . . Tahr. . . you know a while back she offered some land. I laughed then, but now. . . well I might just take her up on that." "Land? What for?" "Make our own home," I said. "Get used to living here and find some way to make it on our own. I can't keep freeloading off her forever." "Oh," she tore a piece of dark bread off and nibbled at it. "Somehow I can't see myself spending the rest of my life here, with them. It just doesn't. . . I mean, forever: it's a long time. . . " "Hey," I reached over to touch her hand as she trailed off, getting that anxious look about her. She flinched, but didn't pull away. "Look; you're one hell of a gutsy and beautiful woman. You're not the kind to let this get to you." I held her hand. She clenched mine back, then mumbled, "I can't," and slid out of the alcove, turning and stopping like she'd forgotten something; just standing staring across a smoky room of Sathe. A few turned to stare as she stood there, green eyes blinking curiously, voices muttering. More looked and she continued to just stand there, frozen on the spot, like a kid out on stage for the first time staring dumbly back at the audience. I saw her hand trembling. "Hey." Table legs squeaked on the floor as I pushed it aside, touched her shoulder. "Hey. Max?" She just grabbed me and held on, her face buried against my neck as if trying to block the world out and I was holding her tightly, feeling her heart racing and her hands digging into my back. The noise around us died. Damn! I'd never thought! What had she been through? I'd had Tahr. I'd had a close friend, someone I could talk to, someone who'd been a warm presence on those dark nights. Soft words and gentle hands to comfort me when I'd had enough of the world, when I didn't understand. Max. . . she'd had no-one. I'd gone away and she hadn't known if I'd ever be coming back. For her Tahr was a stranger, even stranger than me, who'd had the best intentions, but who probably still frightened her. How often had she woken up from nightmares? as I'd done. So, in that crowded tavern, reeking of food and staring, overheated Sathe, I just held her, murmuring reassurances while she clutched me and shook. I don't know how long it was until a hand touched my shoulder. Greenstone eyes, ears tipped, concern: "You are all right?" the barkeeper - Ferhia - asked. "Max?" I whispered. She pulled back a little with eyes running water, nodded. "You want to go back now?" She flinched. "Kelly, it's cold. . . empty. . . " Cold. Yeah, it was. Perhaps I'd grown used to it. . . She'd never spoken and the Sathe had never known; how could they? "Ferhia? Could we. . . ?" I glanced toward the ceiling. She understood. "Ah. . . certainly. Here, this way." We followed and I felt eyes on us as we left and I really couldn't give a damn. It was a different room. She had the decorum for that at least. There was a window and a bed and a tiny fireplace. Ferhia lit a few candles and pointed at the logs in the hearth. "If you are cold. . . " she trailed off, then gave me a subdued smile and closed the door behind her. Maxine slumped on the bed, her English out of place in that dark little room. "Oh, God. I made a dork of myself down there." "I've done worse," I smiled as I checked the window. Quiet outside; Gibbous blue moon over the harbour. "Just get some rest, okay? It'll help." In the dim candlelight she nodded. That bowl-shaped bed creaked as she leaned back into the furs and sheets. I moved to snuff a candle. "I'll sleep on the floor, okay? Just get some blankets and that. Used to do it all the time when I was with Tahr. I'm used to it." "Kelly?" "Yeah?" I hesitated with my arm outstretched, ready to snuff another candle. "Would you stay? I mean, with me?. . . Please?" I clenched my fist to hide the sudden trembling in my hand. Unexpected? Of course the idea we'd get horizontal had reared its head. How could it not? That 'if I was the last guy on Earth. . . ' line taken to extremes. But that's all they'd been: ideas. Dreams. Now, by the light of one candle she was mostly shadows, eyes watching me. Carefully, like I was walking on ice, I settled beside her, just sitting and putting an arm around her, holding her close. Strange muscles shifted and smooth fingertips stroked my arm, my hand. "Max." I choked. I didn't know how to tell her. "We can't. . . If you get. . " Her hand took mine and guided it, touching her forearm and the tiny tube just under the skin. "Norplant." Her voice husked. "No kids, guaranteed." Now, by the light of one candle the shadows shifted, a corner of her mouth quirked in a smile, the rest of her face hidden behind a fan of hair. Like mist on my hand when I brushed it aside. . . End Human Memoirs Part 4 Section c