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  Still, she hung over the truckle-bed, watching him. She extended a hand to brush the silky white hair back from his forehead, used one careful finger to trace the winging eyebrows—his father’s look there, she thought tenderly, though the rest of Shan’s look seemed taken undiluted from herself, poor laddie. But there, she had never hankered after a pretty child. Only after her own.

  She smiled softly and breathed a whisper-kiss against his hair, unnecessarily fussed over the quilt and finally left the tiny bedroom, pulling the door partly shut behind her.

  In the great room, she settled at her desk, long, clever fingers dancing over the computer keyboard, calling up the student work queue. She stifled a sigh: Thirty final papers to be graded. An exam to be written and also graded. And then a whole semester of freedom.

  More or less.

  Shaking her head, she called up the first paper and took the light-pen firmly in hand.

  She waded through eight with the utter concentration that so amused her friends and enraged her colleagues, coming back to reality only because a cramped muscle in her shoulder finally shouted protest loudly enough to penetrate the work-blur.

  “Umm. Break-time, Annie Davis,” she told herself, pulling her six-foot frame into a high, luxurious stretch. Middling-tall for a Terran, still her outstretched fingers brushed the room’s ceiling. Bureaucratic penny-pinchers, she thought, as she always did. How much would it have cost to raise the ceiling two inches?

  It was a puzzle without an answer and having asked it, she forgot it and padded into the kitchen for a glass of juice.

  Shan was still asleep, she knew. She sipped her juice and leaned a hip against the counter top, closing her eyes to let her mind roam.

  She had met him on Proziski, where she had been studying base-level language shift on a departmental grant. Port Master Brellick Gare himself, a friend of Richard’s, had invited her to the gala open house, sugaring the bait with the intelligence that there would be “real, live Liadens” at the party.

  Brellick knew her passion for Liaden lit—Liadens themselves were fabulously rare at the levels in which Terran professors commonly moved. Anne had taken the bait—and met her Liaden.

  She had seen him first from across the room—a solemn, slender young man made fragile by Brellick Gare’s bulk. The introduction had been typically Gare.

  “Anne, this is Er Thom yos’Galan. Er Thom, be nice to Anne, OK? She’s not used to parties.” Brellick grinned into her frown. “I’d show you around myself, girl-o, but I’m host. You stick close to this one, though, he’s got more manners than a load of orangutans.” And with that he lumbered off, leaving Anne to glare daggers into his back before glancing in acute embarrassment toward her unfortunate partner.

  Violet eyes awash with amusement looked up into hers from beneath winging golden brows. “What do you suppose,” he asked in accented Terran, “an orangutan is?”

  “Knowing Brellick, it’s something horrible,” Anne returned with feeling. “I apologize for my friend, Mr. yos’Galan. There’s not the slightest need for you to—babysit me.”

  “At least allow me to find you a glass of wine,” he said in his soft, sweet voice, slipping a slim golden hand under her elbow and effortlessly steering her into the depths of the crowd. “Your name is Anne? But there must be something more than that, eh? Anne what?”

  So she had told him her surname, and her profession and what she hoped to discover on Proziski. She also let him find her not one but several glasses of wine, and go in with her to dinner and, later, out onto the dance floor. And by the time the party began to thin it had seemed not at all unnatural for Er Thom yos’Galan to see her home.

  He accepted her invitation to come inside for a cup of coffee and an hour later gently accepted an invitation to spend the night in her bed.

  She bent to kiss him then, and found him unexpectedly awkward. So she kissed him again, patiently, then teasingly, until he lost his awkwardness all at once and answered her with a passion that left them both shivering and breathless.

  They hadn’t gotten to the bed, not the first time. The rickety couch had been sturdy enough to bear them and Er Thom surprised again—an experienced and considerate lover, with hands, gods, with hands that knew every touch her body yearned for, and gave it, unstinting.

  Time and again, he came back to her lips, as if to hone his skill. When at last she wrapped her legs around him and pulled him into her, he bent again and put his mouth over hers, using his tongue to echo each thrust until her climax triggered his and their lips were torn apart, freeing cries of wonder.

  “Oh, dear.” Anne set the juice glass aside, moving sharply away from the counter and wrapping her arms around herself in a tight hug. “Oh, dear.”

  He was gone, of course. She had known he would go when the trade mission had completed its task, even as she would go when her study time had elapsed.

  But it had been glorious while it had lasted—a grand and golden three-month adventure in a life dedicated to a calm round of teaching and study and research.

  Shan was the living reminder of that grand adventure—of her own will and desire. She had never told Er Thom her intention to bear his child, though it seemed she told him everything else about herself. Shan was hers.

  She sighed and turned, half-blind, to put the glass properly in the rack to be washed. Then she went into the great room and shut the computer down, shaking her head over the double work to be done tomorrow.

  Crossing the room, she made certain the door was locked. Then she turned off the light and slipped into the bedroom, to spend the rest of the night staring at the invisible ceiling, listening to her son breathe.

  ER THOM HAD not come to Prime.

  Oh, he had sent word, as a dutiful child should, and begged her pardon most charmingly. But that he should absent himself from Prime meal on the day when he was to have agreed at last to wed could not fail to infuriate.

  And Petrella was furious.

  Furious, she had consigned the meal composed of her son’s favorite dishes to the various devils of fifteen assorted hells, and supped on a spicy bowl of gelth, thin toast and strong red wine, after which she had stumped off to her office on the arm of Mr. pak’Ora, the butler, and composed a sizzling letter to her heir.

  She was in the process of refining this document when the comm-line buzzed.

  “Well?” she snapped, belatedly slapping the toggle that engaged the view-screen.

  “Well, indeed.” Her nephew, Daav yos’Phelium, inclined his head gravely. “How kind of you to ask. I hope I find you the same, Aunt Petrella?”

  She glared at him. “I suppose you’ve finally stirred yourself to call and allow me to know your cha’leket my son has dined with you and that you are now both well into your cups and about to initiate a third round of counterchance?”

  Daav lifted an eyebrow. “How delightful that would be! Alas, that I disturb your peace for an entirely different matter.”

  “So.” She eyed him consideringly. “And what might that matter be?”

  Daav shook his dark hair out of his eyes, the barbaric silver twist swinging in his right ear.

  “I call to allow you to know that my cha’leket your son has gone off-world in the quest of resolving urgent business.”

  “Urgent business!” She nearly spat the words. “There is a contract-marriage dancing on the knife’s edge and he goes off-planet?” She caught a hard breath against the starting of pain in her chest and finished somewhat more calmly. “I suppose you know nothing about the alliance about to be transacted with Clan Nexon?”

  “On the contrary,” Daav said gently, “I am entirely aware of the circumstance. Perhaps I have failed of making myself plain: The delm has allowed Er Thom yos’Galan the remainder of the relumma to resolve a matter he presents as urgent.”

  “What is urgent,” Petrella told him, “is that he wed and provide the clan with his heir. This is a matter of Line, my Delm, and well you know it!”

  “Well I
know it,” he agreed blandly. “Well I also know that any clan wishing to ally itself with Korval may easily accommodate half-a-relumma’s delay. However, I suggest you begin inquiry among our cousins and affiliates, in order to identify others who may be available to wed the lady and cement the alliance with Clan Nexon.”

  “For that matter,” Petrella said spitefully, “it happens that the delm is yet without issue.”

  Daav inclined his head. “I shall be honored to review the lady’s file. But ask among the cousins, do.” He smiled, sudden and charming. “Come, Aunt Petrella, every trader knows the value of a secondary plan!”

  “And why should I have a secondary when the prime plan is all-important? You are meddling in matters of Line, my Delm, as I have already stated. Chapter six, paragraph twenty-seven of the Code clearly outlines—”

  Daav held up a hand. “If you wish to quote chapter and page to me, Aunt, recall that I have the longest memory in the clan.”

  She grinned. “Could that be a threat, nephew?”

  “Now, Aunt Petrella, would I threaten you?”

  “Yes,” she said with a certain grim relish, “you would.”

  “Hah.” His eyes gleamed with appreciation, then he inclined his head. “In that wise, aunt, and all else being in balance—ask among the cousins—feel free to contact Mr. dea’Gauss, should the enterprise put you out of pocket. In the meanwhile, the delm is confident of the return of Er Thom yos’Galan by relumma’s end. As you should be.”

  Petrella said nothing, though she wisely refrained from snorting.

  Daav smiled. “Good-night, Aunt Petrella. Rest well.”

  “Good-night, child,” she returned and cut the connection.

  Chapter Three

  “Of course you are my friend—my most dear, my beloved … ” Shan el’Thrasin leaned close and cupped her face in his two hands, as if they were kin, or lifemates.

  “I will love you always,” he whispered, and saw the fear fade from her beautiful eyes. Achingly tender, he bent and kissed her.

  “I will never forget … ” she sighed, nestling her face into his shoulder.

  “Nor will I,” he promised, holding her close as he slipped the knife clear. No whisper of blade against sheath must warn her, he told himself sternly. No quiver of his own pain must reach her; she was his love, though she had killed his partner. He would rather die than cause her an instant’s distress.

  The knife was very sharp. She stirred a little as it slid between her ribs, and sighed, very softly, when it found her heart.

  —From “The Trickster Across the Galaxy: A Retrospect”

  “JERZY, YOU’RE A doll,” Anne said gratefully.

  Her friend grinned from the depths of the comm-screen and shook his head. “Wrongo. He’s the doll. I love this kid. Name the price; I gotta have him.”

  Anne laughed. “Not for sale. But I’ll let you watch him tonight. Purely as a favor to you, understand.” She sobered. “How about letting me do a favor in return? We’re getting a little top-heavy, here.”

  “What’re you, Liaden? Take some advice and skip that meeting. Go home, eat something sexy, glass of wine, play yourself a lullaby and go to sleep. Tomorrow’s your study day, right? Jerzy will deliver kid latish in the a.m. If I don’t decide to steal him, instead.”

  “Jerzy—”

  “Enough, already! Seeya tomorrow.” The screen went blank.

  Anne sighed, closed the line at her end and sat looking at the screen long after the glow had faded into dead gray.

  There had to be a better way, she thought, not for the first time. Certainly, there were worse ways than the path she was pursuing—the Central University creche leapt forcibly to mind, with its sign-in sheets and its sign-out sheets and its tidy rows of tidy cribs and its tidy, meek babies all dressed in tidy, identical rompers. Horrible, antiseptic, unloving place—just like the other one had been.

  She was doing all right, she assured herself, given the help of friends like Jerzy. But she hated to impose on her friends, good-natured as they were. Even more she hated the hours she was of necessity away from her son, so many hours a day, so many days a week. She was growing to resent her work, the demands of departmental meetings, class preparations. Her research was beginning to slack off—fatal in the publish-or-perish university system. Her allotted study days more and more often became “Shan days” while she tried to cram the work that needed to be done into late nights and early mornings, using her home terminal to the maximum, piling up user fees she could have easily avoided by using her assigned terminal at the Research Center.

  Abruptly, she stood and began to gather her things together. Her own mother had been a pilot, gone six months of every local year, leaving her son and daughter in the care of various relatives and, one year, at the New Dublin Home for Children.

  Anne shuddered, scattering a careful stack of data cards. That had been the worst year. She and Richard had been sequestered in separate dorms, allowed one comm call between them every ten days. They had found ways to sneak away after lights-out, to hold hands and talk family talk. But sneaking away was against the rules, punishable, when they were inevitably caught, by hard labor, by imposed silence, by ostracism. The year had seemed forever, with their mother’s ship long overdue, and Anne certain it was lost …

  She looked down at her clenched fists, puzzled. It had all been so long ago. Her mother had died three years ago, peacefully in her bed. Richard was a pilot in his own right, and his last letter had been full of someone named Rosie, whose parents he was soon to meet. And Anne was a professor of comparative linguistics, with several scholarly publications to her name, teaching a Liaden Lit seminar that was filled to capacity every session.

  Anne shook her head and wearily bent to pick up the scattered cards. Jerzy was right; she was tired. She needed a good meal, a full night’s sleep. She’d been pushing things a little too hard lately. She needed to remember to relax, that was all. Then, everything would be fine.

  WEARILY, ER THOM climbed the curving marble staircase that led to the Administrative Center for University’s Northern Campus. It was slightly warmer in the building than it had been outside, but still cool to one used to Liad’s planetary springtime. He left his leather pilot’s jacket sealed as he approached the round marble counter displaying the Terran graphic for “Information.”

  A Terran woman of indeterminate years came to the counter as he approached. She had a plenitude of dark hair, worn carelessly loose, as if fresh-tousled from bed, and her shirt was cut low across an ample bosom. She leaned her elbows on the pinkish marble and grinned at him.

  “Hi, there. What can I do for you?” she asked, casually, and with emphasis on ‘you’.

  He bowed as between equals—a flattery—and offered a slight smile of his own.

  “I am looking for a friend,” he said, taking extreme care with the mode-less and rough Terran words. “Her name is Anne Davis. Her field is comparative linguistics. I regret that I do not know the name of the department in which she serves.”

  “Well, you’re on the right campus, anyhow,” the woman said cheerfully. “You got her ident number, retinal pattern, anything like that?”

  “I regret,” Er Thom repeated.

  She shook her head so the tousled dark curls danced. “I’ll see if it flies, friend, but it’s not much to go on with the size of the faculty we’ve got … ” She moved away, muttering things much like her counterparts in the East and West offices had muttered. A few meters down-counter she stopped and began to ply the keypad set there, frowning at the screen suspended level with her eyes. “Let’s see … Davis, Davis, Anne … ” She turned her head, calling out to him over her shoulder. “Is that ‘Anne’ with an ‘e’ or not?”

  He stared at her, unable to force his weary mind to analyze and make sense of the question. “I—beg your pardon.”

  “Your friend,” the clerk said, patiently. “Does she spell her name with an ‘e’ or without an ‘e’?”

  An ‘e�
� was the fifth letter of the Terran alphabet. Surely, he thought, half-panicked, surely he had at some time seen Anne’s written name? He closed his eyes, saw the old-fashioned ink pen held firmly in long, graceful fingers, sweeping a signature onto the mauve pages of an ambassadorial guest book.

  “A—” he spelled out of memory for the clerk’s benefit. “n, n, e. D, a, v, i, s.”

  “Hokay.” She turned back to her board as Er Thom opened his eyes, feeling oddly shaken.

  The clerk muttered to herself—he paid her no mind. Terran naming systems, he thought distractedly, Terran alphabet, and, gods help him, a Terran woman, bold and brilliant—alien. But a woman still, with Terran blood in her and genes so far outside the Book of Clans that—

  OK!”

  Er Thom shook himself out of his reverie as the clerk’s cry of jubilation penetrated, and stepped forward.

  “Yes?”

  She looked up at him, lashes fluttering, and he saw that she was not so young as he had thought. Cosmetics had been used to simulate the dewy blush of first youth across her cheek and her eyes were artfully painted, with silver sequins sprinkled across her lashes. Er Thom schooled his face to calm politeness. Local custom, he reminded himself sternly. As a trader he dealt with local custom in many guises on many worlds. So on this world faces were painted. Merely custom, and nothing to distress one.

  “Don’t know if this is your friend or not,” the woman was saying, “but she’s the only Davis in Comparative Ling. Wait a sec, here’s the card.” She frowned at it before handing it over. “Lives in Quad S-two-seven-squared. You know where that is?”

  “No,” he said, clutching the card tightly.

  The woman stood, leaning over the counter to point. Her breasts flattened against the marble, and swelled toward the margin of the low-cut blouse. Er Thom turned to look along the line of her finger.

  “Go back out the way you came,” she told him, “turn right, walk about four hundred yards. You’ll see a sign for the surrey. Go down the stairs and hit the summonplate. When the surrey comes, you sit down and code in this right here, see?” She ran her finger under a string of letters and numbers on the card he held.