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Journal Entry 00339 186 000 Freya

Freya

Journal Entry 186 / 00339

Noren, Urim 15, 00339

"You're really going to go to this?" P'nyssa asked, the shock in her

voice as apparent and as painful as my decisions.

"Yes," I snarled back at her. "I'm going."

"Ken," she said, softly, walking up behind me, her mitt on my shoulder,

"It's just going to tear you up inside. Please don't."

"Nyss," I said, trying hard to contain my anger, waiting for it to

dissipate like it always does, "I have to. Maybe... maybe I can talk her

out of it. I mean, she called me yesterday to tell me. Why didn't anyone

else tell me? Goddammit, Nyss, it's not fucking fair!" I leaned against

the dresser ledge, supporting myself by my arms; nor for the first time

I felt like I was going to cry.

"They are your rules," she said.

"Just because they're fair doesn't mean I have to fucking like them,

does it? Or is that too much to conceive of? Are all my rules, are all

the rules the universe puts before us fair? Can't win, can't break even,

can't get out of the goddamned game. That's what's not fair, P'nyssa. I

don't like that. I fight it with everything I've got- that's what life

is for." I sighed, wiped a tear from my eye.

"Some people are not that strong."

"But not Freya, you don't understand. Freya is one of the strongest, most

self-determined people I've ever met. I can't believe she's opting out."

"Then don't go. This is going to sound callous, but you haven't seen her

for nearly thirty years... let that time go to tomorrow, then just keep

extending it. It's not... it's not that hard."

"Is that how you handle it?"

"Sometimes," she send gently. Her mitt slid up along my throat, gently

caressing me the way she knows will soothe me. "Sometimes."

"I have to go," I said, turning to face her. Looking at her, at the hurt
visible in her solid, yellow eyes, in her blue-furred face, I wondered

how I would react to her tomorrow. After I watched Freya die.

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I arrived on the SDisk at 15:20 just as scheduled. There were a few

friends there, mingling about; the room was small and decorated in white.

Gentle music played from gravspeakers arranged in the corners. And

there was Freya, standing in the middle of it all, looking composed if

a little tired.

I avoided her, but instead wandered over to the table with the champagne,

drinking down two glasses in quick succession before carrying my third

with me.

I nursed it slowly; my stomach doesn't like alcohol, and in it's opinion

I'd just dumped far too much down there. It wasn't my night. I waited

for my stomach to settle, for the hours to grind slowly by, for the

night to just be over.

And my inebriation helped, a little, to dull the pain, but increase

the sadness, of tonight. There was a little celebration going on, some

people toasting to Freya's past and her hopefully interesting future. As

if she had a future.

I was gritting my teeth. I wanted to be drunk, drunker than possible,

to be so out of my mind I would be useless for a day, a week, a month,

a year.

"Ken," the voice behind me registered just as I had resolved to make

my way back to the table and something stronger than my ninth glass of

champagne. I looked around; the party was winding down already. How much

time had gone by? I'd lost track; there were only a few people here.

"Hello, Freya," I said, making no effort to hide my anger or my sadness.

"I must be going."

"Please stay," she said. "There isn't much left to say between us,

but I want to say it."

"Freya, it was a mistake for me to come here. I'd like to leave."

"And I'd like you to stay." I looked into her human face, the

barely-apparent ruffs of orange fur along her jawbone and trailing down

her throat.

I bit my lip and said, "Okay, I'll stay. For now."

"It's not going to be a long time anyway."

"And I refuse to hate you for it; hating the dead does the living

no good."

"Come on," she said, holding out her hand. I took it; it was warm and

comfortable, just the way it had always been. She led me through the

doors back into a hallway, then into another room. "I reserved this room;

I've already given my house away. Besides, Cutters will know what to do

with me in the morning."

"Freya..."

"You can't talk me out of it."

"Can you blame an old man for trying?" I asked, gently. "Especially

a father?"

"I thought you hated that word."

I tried to force a smile. "Not when using it's to my advantage."

She shook her head quietly, sitting down on the bed.

I sat down next to her, feeling the tightness in my chest, the sadness.

"Dammit, Freya, why are you killing yourself?"

She shrugged. "Because I can't think of anything I'd rather be doing."

"What about your children? What about... Oh, Hell, Freya, there's a

million things you could be doing."

"Instead of dying?"

"Instead of dying. Why are you doing this?"

"Because I want to," she said. "You... you look at life and say 'Well,

I haven't done this, or I haven't done that,' and I can't say that. I look

at all these things and I see 'Somebody else will do that eventually,' or

'I don't think I want to do that.' I don't feel attached to anything. Not

to Pendor, not to you, not to my children."

There was a long silence. An old thought came unbidden, and I said,

"You know, I thought I was going to die once."

"You did? What happened?" she asked, almost perfunctorily; there was no

curiosity in her voice.

"I thought I had a disease, and the test results would take two weeks. All

the symptoms pointed to cancer, engwurth, you know?" She nodded. "You

know what I found? I was very jealous of the living.

"I thought I was already dead; that even if I had one, two, maybe three

years to go, that it didn't matter. I was already dead. Nobody ever

survives throat cancer, ever... It's just a long, drowning painful

descent into death.

"I was jealous of the living. I hated them, their long lives, their

families, their friends. I had almost nothing and nobody, and I was

waiting to be told I was going to die. I was sure I had it; I was sure

I was on my way.

"I wanted to live. More than anything, I wanted the problem to be

something else, I didn't want to be told 'you have cancer,' yet I knew

I had cancer. It was a hellish two weeks, the problem got worse every

day. I hated it, every last minute of it.

"And the scariest thing was that when they told me I was going to live,

I took the information very calmly. I almost didn't want to believe

it. All the energy I had invested in being angry, in being jealous,

was wasted, and I resented wasting it. It took a few days for me to get

around to celebrating.

"It turned out it was something minor, a pulled muscle combining with

stress to give me a very psychosomatic pain."

She leaned over to hug me, and I returned the hug fiercely. "I don't

ever want to let you go, daughter. Please don't go."

She sighed gently and said, "I don't want to stay, father. I don't want to

stay attached to a life I don't believe in anymore. You said it yourself,

that death is a viable option for people who've grown tired. Don't you

ever get tired?"

"Never," I replied, quickly. "Not since Brieanna, not since Donna. I don't

want you to change that. There's always more, more to have. I never get

tired of the new touch; there's too much in life to ever get a hold on,

how can you ever want to let it all go?"

"But I do." She smiled and said, "I do have one last request, though. I

want an old touch."

"You want... what?"

"Make love to me, one last time, before I go."

"That's sick."

She turned away as if I had slapped her. "Is it, to ask one more request,

one last familiar friendship before I go? To have a hug, a kiss with my

father before I go?"

"Freya, dammit, I love you. You were Tleil Satryl number one, you

aren't supposed to be the one to opt out, you were supposed to be the

strong one."

She nodded, her human face and her bright red hair bobbing. "I know." She

reached over and kissed me. If I felt revulsion, it didn't show on my

face, knowing that in the morning she would be gone. "Think of it as an

adventure," she said. "The undiscovered country." Her hands reached and

undid my shirt.

"'From whose bourn no traveler returns.'" I replied. "Is it okay if I

tell you I want you to come home?"

"It is," she said, gently removing my shirt and tossing it aside,

working on my pants. "Undo me."

I reached over and slowly undid her blouse, throwing it aside as well. She

helped me out of my clothes, I helped her out of hers. Her body was as

taut and sexy as the day I had decanted her; her human torso with her

high, Scottish-descent face, were magnificent. Her pseudo- Feline legs

were equally beautiful, the light peppering of orange over an almost-black

grey caressing her fur, ethereal in the dim light of her bedroom.

"I can't," I turned away. "I can't believe tomorrow such beauty will

be gone."

"There's always beauty in the world, father." She smiled gently and said,

"Make love to me, one last time."

I summoned all the resolve I had to lie next to her; her fingers caressed

my cock insistently. Part of me wanted to be out of there, and part of

me wanted to give her her last request. My sex had a mind of its own;

it hardened, and without a word I slid on top of her and into her.

She sighed, a gentle, warm sigh, her face easing into a warm smile as I

began to make love to her, to stroke against her. I could feel her belly

meet mine with every stroke, her furry legs wrapped around mine and held

me in place as we made love, slowly. "I love you," I said, feeling my

tears grow in my eyes, hot and painful. My whole body was wrapped up in

two emotions tearing me apart; and I was crying uncontrollably as I came

inside her, moaning softly, easing down next to her.

I cried for a long time; I bathed her naked breasts in my tears. Finally

I lifted my head and said, "Are you happy now?"

She smiled, trying to reassure me. "I'm going to go now."

"What?" I cried.

"The programs have been in place all day. I just have to think the right

thing and it all shuts down."

"Freya!"

"Good-bye, Father. Give my love to everybody when I'm gone. Hold me

while I go."

"Freya, please don't go. Oh, Gods, please don't. Please."

"Good-bye, Daddy." She closed her eyes.

I held her close to me, feeling her body. "Oh please," I whispered,

"please." But it didn't happen that way; her breathing stopped a few

seconds later. I felt her heartbeat get softer, softer, then it faded

and I couldn't hear it anymore. I held on to her body for a long time

thereafter, knowing she was gone forever.

Finally, I rose from the bed, wiping my eyes with the bedsheets. I pulled

my clothes back on and said, "Jean, please call... whoever it is you

would call for this. Can you SDisk me somewhere?"

"Where?" the AI asked. She should have denied my request; SDisking

requires runious amounts of energy anywhere but from a SDisk. But she

didn't even suggest it.

"The Rowan." I was there; it was night. I walked down the hill to Donna's

tomb, got down on my knees in front of the nameplate, and cried.

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The Journal Entries of Kennet R'yal Shardik, et. al., and Related Tales

are Copyright (c) 1989-2000 Elf Mathieu Sternberg. Distribution limited

to electronic media not-for-profit use only. All other rights are reserved

to the author.