Part 25 (1/2)
”And we still have at least a century to go, if everything goes as Komak thought it would.”
”A century or more.” He rubbed his cheek against hers.
She sighed and smiled at her mate and then at her child. ”I had Edris make a vid of Rognan and Kanthor, for Komak, when he's old enough to understand how difficult it was for them to get along at all while he was on the way.” She laughed at his expression. ”I did explain why ancient humans boiled water and hit the baby on the bottom.”
He chuckled. ”They will make fine playmates for him, when he begins to walk.” He glanced at her and smiled. ”That will happen sooner than you imagine. Our children mature quickly.”
”I've read about it. About a lot of things. I like your culture very much.”
”I hoped you might,” he said. ”It will be a great change from military life, for you.”
”Yes. But a good one.”
He got to his feet and moved to the wide stone rail. ”Revolution is afoot on Enmehkmehk,” he said. ”I think Ho Chan Ho has very little time left to command the Rojok empire.”
”I think the same.”
He turned and looked at her. ”The war must end soon, so that one of Komak's G.o.dfathers can step on Memcache without risking arrest and execution. My sister will rejoice on that day.”
She smiled. She and Lyceria had grown close. ”I'll rejoice for her, as well. Old Mardol looked as if he'd won a lottery,” she added gleefully. ”We owe him our lives. I'm glad he's happy here.”
”He has a good heart. His stories will amuse Komak when he is old enough to hear them.”
”He made vids of us, he said. Komak, I mean.”
”I am certain that he picked the most embarra.s.sing situations to record,” he murmured with a grimace.
”It would be like him,” she agreed.
”Are you coming inside now?” Sfilla called from the doorway. ”The emperor and empress and Princess Lyceria are coming to eat with us.”
”I forgot. Sorry.” Madeline got up with Komak tight in her arms and walked beside Dtimun back into the house.
He let her go in first.
”I do outrank you now, don't I?” she teased. ”You're standing aside for me.”
He leaned down. ”I outrank you,” he argued. ”But I give you precedence because you are carrying the heir to the throne in your arms.”
”You wait,” she challenged. ”I'll have the best crack troop of women in the three galaxies, and they'll sing songs about me.”
He chuckled. ”The kehmatemer already do,” he reminded her. ”The Warwoman. Invincible.”
She thought of the Latin for that word and smiled absently. Invictus. One word to describe an att.i.tude, a credo, a pattern for living. One word to envelop all that her life had been and would be.
She pursed her lips in thought. ”Invictus,” she mused.
He didn't need a translation. He saw it all in her mind, like a music painting in cybers.p.a.ce, such as the Cehn-Tahr designed at Kolmankash.
He studied her with quiet pride. ”It is quite suitable, for such a mutinous human female,” he added softly ”At least I've stopped saluting you and calling you 'sir,'” she reminded him. And he chuckled when she gave him a wicked grin.
Within the year, there were great changes in the three galaxies. Terravega had a new president, one Harmon Chakra, who swept to victory on a program of reform. The military's mental neutering policy went out the window, along with its regulations on fraternization. The government baby factories became a thing of the past. Couples of all three genders were permitted to marry and breed as they pleased.
Clones were admitted to the republic as citizens and their exploitation for organ replacement was to cease.
The totalitarian regimentation also ceased. All charges against the Terravegans of the Morcai Battalion were dropped and the humans were offered citizens.h.i.+p again.
To a man, or woman if Lieutenant Commander Edris Mallory were to be counted, they refused. Their Cehn-Tahr citizens.h.i.+p had become a thing of great pride, and none of the crew wished to return to Terravega. At least, as Holt Stern whispered amusedly, not until they were certain that the new rules of law were going to last longer than a few standard weeks. Stern and Hahnson, who were both clones of their originals, had a great deal more to lose than the rest of the crew if they returned to Trimerius and the clone restrictions were reinst.i.tuted. It was a new start for humanity. But most new things had growing pains. The Morcai Battalion's human faction decided to play a waiting game.
Meanwhile, Captain Rhemun was making a slow start as commander of the Morcai Battalion. He and the crew were on shaky ground. He had little to do with humans until Madeline Ruszel came along, and his prejudices against them were deep and of long duration. Lieutenant Commander Edris Mallory was having more problems with him than the rest of the crew put together. Her clumsiness and slow reactions were getting her reprimands. Even with the changes in military governance, one law was still on the books-that of three strikes and reboot. Only intimate members of the medical corps knew what that meant. It was one of the best kept military secrets, to which even the new president of Terravega was not privy. Even with their Cehn-Tahr citizens.h.i.+p, Edris could fall victim to Terravegan military law if the Holconcom renewed their a.s.sociation with the Tri-Galaxy Fleet, which was rumored to be in the offing as territorial disputes escalated in the New Territory. Dr. Strick Hahnson knew Mallory's situation, but he was reluctant to share details of it with Rhemun, who was becoming her worst enemy.
The war was beginning to wind down. A revolution had taken place on Enhmehkmehk, which left Ho Chan Ho in exile and Chacon as new party chairman and leader of the Rojok empire. It was now called the Rojok Republic, however, and rumors were flying of a liaison of some sort with the Cehn-Tahr Empire which would result in peace.
Madeline Ruszel took all this news in her customary calm manner, smiling with each new tidbit of change and nodding complacently. She knew, as many of her confidants did not, that peace was not only a possibility, it was a certainty.
She sat down in a chair with Komak in her arms and looked down into his wide, intelligent little face.
”One day in the not too distant future, I'll tell you all about how you and Mommy wrecked bars and defended the honor of the Holconcom,” she whispered wickedly.
”Shame, telling the boy such stories,” Dtimun scoffed as he joined her. But his eyes were green, and laughing.
”I'm preparing him so he won't be shocked when the time comes,” she chuckled. She looked up at him with wide, soft eyes. ”What a long way we've come from Terramer.”
He nodded. He reached down and smoothed the already thick black hair on his son's head. ”It has been a journey with many surprises.”
”Is Chacon making the announcement soon?” she asked.
He smiled. ”Tomorrow.”
”There will be shock and awe in the governments of the Tri-Galaxy Council,” she predicted.
”Especially when he announces the candidacy of the Rojok Republic to become a member.”
”I hope they have medical personnel standing by to administer stimulants,” she said.
He dropped down elegantly into a chair across from her. ”The emperor has a gift.”
”For me?”
He nodded. ”They are recruiting for the first corps of female military candidates. You yourself will choose those who gain members.h.i.+p to the elite group.”
She caught her breath. ”How kind of him!”
”He is quite fond of you.”
She smiled, happy in her new relations. And her mate. She looked down at the baby. ”Did you hear that?
Mommy is a brigadier general. She's going to lead armies one day.”