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Journal Entry 01028 174 000 Flying Tylia

Flying Tylia

Journal Entry 174 / 01028

Noren, Urim 03, 01028

A hand on my shoulder shook me gently. "Ken?" a voice whispered in my ear.

"Ken, wake up!"

Reluctantly, I paid attention to the voice, knowing that it had to be

someone important-- else how would they have gotten into my sleeping

quarters? As I came further toward consciousness I realized that the

bed I lay on was not familiar to me and that the voice in my ear had

a peculiar tone to it. I had heard a voice speaking llerkindi, for one

thing. For another, this bed used a gelatin mattress whereas my usual

bedding used a more traditional stuffing. I opened one eye and looked

into the face of Queen Anlestin's bodyguard. "Pal?"

She whispered, "You instructed me to awaken you two hours after dawn." She

placed a narrow finger over her thin lips. "Anni's next to you and she's

still asleep."

I nodded, glancing over in that direction momentarily before rolling out

of bed, carefully slipping out from underneath the covers. Quiet as a

Felinzi I slid over to my bags and pulled out fresh clothing. "Thanks,

Pal. Sleep well?"

"Yes, thank you," she whispered. "Very nicely." She smiled as she said it.

Last night had been something of an adventure for both of us. I slid

on a shirt, boots, and a knee-length men's skirt that it had taken

P'nyssa a long time to convince me I should try. I'm not a creature of

fashion. But I had come to enjoy the rough-cloth skirts that had become

a standard part of the cycle of male fashions. She waved her hand to

get my attention. "I will be downstairs making something for breakfast."

I nodded. After she had disappeared, I made use of the bath for all the

usual functions, including brushing my hair back and pinning it with an

elastic. I also wore a wide-brimmed hat and a pair of aviator glasses

to keep my eyes comfortable from the bright day outside. I packed my

bag in the bathroom, which is sound-shielded to prevent those outside

from listening in.

I slipped out of the bathroom and tried to reach the elevator without

waking Anni, but she had apparently heard us sometime during the

operation. "Aren't you going to kiss me goodbye?" she murmured from

her bed.

I put my bag down by the elevator and walked back to the bed. She lay on

one side of the enormous mattress, an arm dangled over the side casually.

I knelt down beside her. "Hi," she said.

"Hi," I said, kissing her cheek softly. "Will you take care of yourself

while I'm gone?"

"I promise. Pal will, too."

"Good," I chuckled. "Hey."

"Hmm?"

"I'm sorry we didn't get a chance to play out some of your fantasies."

She smiled sadly. "I am a Queen and you are... something else. Sometimes

we don't have time for ourselves, or our fantasies."

I sighed. "Yeah." I kissed her lips, and her tongue came out to greet mine

and wish me a good morning... and a fond farewell. "Bye, my princess."

"Goodbye, my love."

I made my way to the kitchen. "'Morning," I said.

"Here," Pal said, shoving a warm sandwich into my hands. "Eat." She

handed me a mug of something cool. "Drink."

I accepted the food from here, wolfing them down as she took my bags.

"Come on."

"Hey!" I said around a mouthful. "A little rushed today, aren't we?"

"You said you wanted a four-after lift-off. If we are going to make that,

you have to be on the tarmac in about twenty minutes."

"Pal," I said, "That's when I wanted to leave. But it's not like I'm on

a schedule or anything. The Ille Pendoro isn't scheduled to make transit

for another four days. That's how much time I have."

She stopped for a second. "I guess I am rushing things."

"I guess you are. Are you that anxious to get rid of me?"

She shook her head. "No, it is nothing like that. I hope it is nothing

like that."

"You're not... a little confused about last night, are you?"

"What is there to be confused about? I expected to live only eighty,

maybe a hundred years if I was lucky. I am now over four hundred. I

generally cannot stand men. Last night the man who gave me that much

lifetime gave me an orgasm, and then slept next to me with my best friend

and Queen of my people between us. Confused? Sometimes around you I feel

lucky if I have a single second of clarity to myself!"

I was surprised by the force of her words. "I... Am I supposed to be

sorry, Pal? Help me understand."

"No, it is not your fault. I accepted all of those things. I just...

sometimes wonder how I ended up here."

I swallowed the remains of my breakfast. "Come on," I said. "Let's

get moving."

We took the same jeep she had driven two days ago. As we sped through

the city, I said, "Thank you for last night."

She smiled. It looked odd on her-- shy, which was something Pal was not.

"Thank you," she said. "Never tell my friends I told you this, Ken,

but I like you."

I laughed. "You've already told me that. Do you still like me even if

I make your life so confusing?"

"Even so," she agreed.

"That's good. I like you too, Pal. And I appreciate how good you are

to Anni."

"I could not be anything else," she said. "Anni needs someone so badly

and you are not available all the time. Not even some of the time. Which

is a shame because she needs someone as strong and as good as you and as

male as you, and I am afraid I fail to fit into any of those categories. I

just pretend to it as I go along."

"I think that's all anyone ever does," I said.

We reached the starport. Pal again demonstrated her mad driving habits

that she had apparently taught Anlestin as we careened through the front

gate and out among the smaller vessels. "That must be yours," she said,

pointing to one. "Mark 454 Starcruiser. Just like the vessel that started

the increasingly poorly-named llerkin/Pendor War."

I laughed. "You're reading my editorials again."

"Everybody hears about them one way or another. Anni told me that one."

The jeep approached the Starcruiser. "Who's that?" I asked, pointing to

two figures standing next to the ship.

"I do not know," Pal said.

She slowed, and we rolled up to the side of the Starcruiser. The two

figures came into focus-- two Felinzi, both female, one significantly

smaller than the other. As we came closer, I realized that the shorter

one was quite a bit younger. "Good morning," I said as we came closer.

"Good morning," said the taller Felinzi. "I understand this Starcruiser

is going to Pendor today, and I was hoping that the pilot could take my

daughter back to Pendor with him if there's room."

"Well, there's room, and I'm the pilot." I took off the hat and aviator's

glasses and let my hair fall about my shoulders. "Ken Shardik, at your

service."

I could have knocked her over with a hairball at ten meters-- and I still

don't know if I find that reaction flattering or annoying. "I... I'm sure

she'll be safe with you, sir," the Felinzi stammered. "I'm... Kzarren

Meffern. This is my daughter-- "

"Tylia!" the young girl said, standing up. "You're going to be the pilot?"

"That's what it looks like to me," I said, leaping out of the jeep. I

grabbed my bags and tossed them through the open airlock door. "M'Tylia,

if you'd put your stuff on board, we'll be ready to go in just a few

minutes. M'Kzarren, is there anyone I should contact when I get to

Pendor?"

"Her uncle is K'Nash. He knows she's coming home and I'll gradio ahead

after you lift off to tell him which vessel. He'll probably meet you at

Parma. You are going to Parma?"

"Yes, I'm going to Parma." The wind had picked up this morning and my hair

kept trying to flay my eyeballs as I tossed my bags through the hatchway.

"M'Tylia, pick one of the two cabins in the aft port and toss your

bags in there. Then get seated in the copilot's chair." I turned back to

M'Kzarren. "We should be home in about fifty hours or so. Long and boring.

Does she have anything to do for that long?"

The Felinzi gave me an enigmatic smile. "She will now. Thank you for

agreeing to take her, Sh'Ken. The next transport isn't for another ten

days and she is anxious to get home."

"My pleasure," I said, peering back at the child who looked to be about

the same age as my daughter, Sheja. "You'd better stand clear, M'Kzarren.

I want to get moving. Looks like a storm is picking up. Pal, could you

take this lovely fem to the edge of the tarmac?"

"Certainly. If you will get in the car?" The Felinzi nodded and walked

over to the jeep.

"Goodbye, Pal," I said. "Be good to Anni, not for my sake, but because

you want to. And be good to yourself, too. You deserve it. Besides,

aren't you nobility now or something?"

"Something like that," she admitted. "You take care of yourself too."

I stepped back and closed the hatch, listening for the familiar sigh of

sealant inflating the ring. "Reeds?"

"Here, Ken," the AI responded crisply. "And with you until your transit

into hyperspace. How was your visit to the world I now administer?"

"Uneventful," I replied, chuckling. "How's the ship?"

"Fit for duty," he replied. "The young lady has taken the rear cabin

and is currently preening herself."

I sat down in the command chair and looked over the status displays he

had indicated. Pilots approach the 454 Starcruiser with a peculiar blend

of anticipation and superstition. The 454, designed in the early sixth

century, still holds the rank of most popular short-haul shuttle in all of

known space. I like them, as do most of the pilots who fly them. Which is

why we're superstitious about them. Almost every time there's an accident,

it's in a 454, just because there are so many of them.

The engineering unit, which takes up slightly less than half of the

ship's volume, weighs down the aft starboard side of the ship. Wedged up

against it is the environmental module-- including the bathroom. That

makes up about nine meters. Another meter for the hallway, and another

two for the cabin space-- twelve meters wide. And about fourteen long,

with another six meters tacked in front of that for the half-circle

front cabin, which also affords a complete 180 degree view of glass,

port to starboard and 90 degrees from floor to curved ceiling. It gives

the front of the ship about 140 square meters of floor space and each

cabin about twenty or so. Comfortable for short-haul cargo, exploration,

and recreation. One of the most popular modifications involves installing

a large bed and sailing to view romantic stars and nebulae nearby.

Right now the thing looked-- desolate. Huge. Too much room behind me on

off-white metallic floors. Two chairs bolted to the floor in the very

front of the cabin were all that disturbed the empty space. By tradition,

the chairs were upholstered in bright hot orange-- an ugly color that

nobody actually wants to look at, which is why you sit in them and face

away into the blackness of space.

I toggled a switch. "M'Tylia, could you come up here?" She joined me,

still so happy she seemed ready to bounce off the walls. I pointed to

the other chair. "Sit. Please. And strap yourself in. We're about to get

going and I don't want you leaping around the cabin while we're doing

atmospheric maneuvers." I looked at the display. The wind blew by at

twenty four klicks out of the south.

I looked down at the external controls and saw that we were hooked to a

GEV lander. "Fair enough," I said. I warmed up the standby fusion drive

to full power, then kick-started the two main drives. With the standby

I fed power to the landing trolley, which slowly rose off the ground on

four powerful fans until achieving full ground effect. I opened the two

small air-breathing jets at the sides of the trolley and pushed us out

onto the runway. "Okay, Reeds, how's the traffic today?"

"If there were any, I'd tell you. You're it until about seven after."

"Thanks. I'll keep that in mind." 454's are about as aerodynamic as

cinder blocks, but we still use waterway runways-- mostly to keep the

damage from the fusion drives from tearing up roads. I pushed us down the

runway towards the water. We hit with a spray of water and began tearing

across the sea, reaching for the magical one-thousand KPH. It hit and I

pushed down on the vertical lift. The rear drive roared to full life,

the vertical lifts whined at high pitch. Finally the ship lifted into

the air. I pushed a button. A loud CLANG rang out as the trolley let

go and splashed back to the ocean. Once it floated back to the surface

it would make its way to shore and get ready for another launch.

The 454 rumbled and roared and took to the blackening sky. I kept the

ship's drives at full throttle, 40 meters per second squared, until the

planet's pull dropped below five percent, then backed down to 25 mps

squared. The engines quieted down to a more comforting rumble where they

would stay for the next four hours until the ship had reached a height far

enough above the planetary plane that we could safely go into hyperspace.

I clicked on autopilot and sat back in my chair with a sigh. "Well,"

I said. "I certainly hope you've got something to do, 'cause this is

going to be a long trip."

"I can't believe you're going to be the pilot!" she said again, and behind

the smile that went with her exclamation I could see wheels turning.

"Somebody's gotta fly the things, M'Tylia," I sighed. "Why not me?"

"Tylia."

"Excuse me?"

"It's just Tylia. It's a pain saying 'M'Tylia' all the time."

I nodded. "Tylia it is."

"Deal." She held out her hand. I laughed at the gesture, but accepted

it for what it was and shook on it. "What are you doing on llerkin? If

that's not a rude question."

"Don't you watch the news?" I asked.

"Nope."

I shook my head. "Visiting Princess Anlestin on my way back to Pendor."

"Visiting the Queen? Neat! You haven't been home to Pendor yet? Wow. When

you left, I was-" She paused to do the calculation. "Five. You've been

away a long time."

"Guess so. What are you doing on llerkin, if I may ask."

"Visiting my folks."

"You don't sound happy about it."

"They're planetologists. The big sort. Visiting them isn't too exciting.

Llerkin is boring."

"I guess that depends on what you're there to do."

She unclipped her safety harness and stepped out, standing. She was very

pretty, so much so that much to my frustration I found myself attracted to

her. Frustrated because she couldn't have been much older than fourteen

and I'd just survived through another similar attraction, that one to

Sheja. She stepped lightly into the rear cargo area, her tail following

her in the air like a big, furry 'S.' She returned a moment later with

two 600ml containers. "Want one?" she offered.

I sniffed. Soda. "Sure."

She stood, looking out the window. Not that there was much to see;

we were moving far too slowly to see anything. Her best view would

have been one through a rear camera, watching llerkin recede from view,

although even now we were already too far away for her to see it change

much. She sat back down in her chair. It made a soft "whumph!" sound as

she did. "Still can't believe I'm the same shuttle with you!"

"Tylia, will you stop saying that!"

"I guess it's the honor of having all this time alone with you." She

didn't turn back to view me. "I've read all your Journal Entries."

"All of them?" I asked dubiously.

"Yeah, all of 'em. My folks went to Rhysh once in a while so they're

level. Too level sometimes."

I chuckled. "Well, you can't have read all of them. There are so many

of them and you're only... what?"

"I'm twelve."

"Twelve? Gods, I would have guessed fourteen."

She laughed. "Yeah, everybody says that."

"You're twelve and you've read the Journal Entries? I mean, even the

really strong ones?"

"The ones between you and Aaden?" she asked, mischievously. "Yeah."

"Wow," I said, not quite sure how to respond to that. "I can't imagine

someone letting their twelve-year-old daughter read my kinky stories."

"Well, your kids can read them, right?"

I thought about that. "You're right. Never did think of it that way. So,"

I said, trying to change the subject before I turned a redder shade,

"What do you want to do when you get back to Pendor?"

"I want to be a genetic engineer."

"Really?" I asked, fascinated. So few people actually wanted to be gene

engineers. The risks were enormous and the competition fierce. So few

paths that gene engineers took actually resulted in something you could

release. "What, in particular, are you interested in? Any particular

field?"

I'm not an empath. According to P'nyssa, telepathically contacting me

takes more energy than with most people because my mind doesn't have the

organization it takes to be receptive to psionics, much less actually

have the talents. Even with that handicap, I could feel the waves of

discomfort coming off of Tylia. Her embarrassment resonated loudly. She

finally found the nerve to speak. "Sentient design."

I didn't laugh-- a good thing. If I had, I probably would have shattered

any real drive she had at that point. There are, maybe, five people

in the known universe who understand sentient design, and I'm one of

them. Anyone undertaking this blackest of all the genetic arts had better

be good. I hoped she was good. "Mmm-hmm."

"What does that mean?" she asked, turning to me.

"I don't know. Do you really want to try and learn something that really

isn't taught anywhere? People study sentient design for years without

ever really getting it."

She nodded. "I know. But I really think I understand it. I mean, I read

Thankso and Gramm's paper last year on the acceptable limitations of

hormonal unbalancing last year, and it made sense to--"

"Whoa, whoa. You read the T&G hormone paper?"

She nodded, blushing. On a Felinzi, that means her nose and her ears

grew a little darker and her ears drooped downwards. "That's why I was

so amazed when I saw you were going to be the pilot. I read theirs,

and I read the Shardik and Shardik documentation on designing towards a

non-humanoid frame with telepathic implementation. I've been studying a

lot in the past year, mostly xeno-stuff. I... I was going to write the

University at Sinaloa when I got back to Pendor, but something must be

guiding me, 'cause I have a chance to ask you."

"Ask me what?"

"Can I... Can I study at Pindam?"

I almost laughed again. As I record this, I'm grateful I didn't. "Well...

" I said. "What are you asking for?"

"I want to be an apprentice. Kinda like a sorcerer's apprentice. I want

to be your apprentice. I want to work for you. Study for you. Get to know

you. Figure out what you do that makes you so different from everyone

else, makes you know how to do this stuff."

The earnest desire in her voice to be a part of something came through

very clearly, but likewise something else did too. Maybe it was just

my typical perceptions coloring everything in that way that it does,

but I had to admit that I found this far-too-young lady in the chair

opposite mine to be very attractive in that youthful and energetic way

that's all too rare among adults. Aaden achieves it on rare occasions,

but he's special. I sighed; I think she took that the wrong way, because

her face drooped a little when she heard it.

"I don't know, Tylia. Let me think about it. Can you allow me to read

your school records?"

She nodded. "I think so. I might have to call my mother."

"Then do it." I gestured towards the console. "Now. We're going into

hyperspace in three hours, and she might not be available."

She began the process of contacting her mother. Fortunately, we had the

help of the third member of our crew, Reeds, who I had forgotten about

in all the rush to get off-world. Lots of AIs are like that-- they want

you to forget that they're even there, just allow them to do their jobs

with a minimal amount of interference. Reeds was like that. Fortunately,

David isn't like that.

Within twenty minutes we had contacted her mother and received

authorization to review her records. They were downloaded to the ship in

a matter of another couple of minutes. I secured the station-- nothing to

do for the next couple of hours anyway-- and sat down to read them. "This

is going to take a while, Tylia."

She nodded. "You mean, I should find something to do."

"Exactly." She picked up a PADD from the small schoolbag she had brought

into the cabin and began looking for something. I sat back with my own

PADD and began reviewing the data she had sent me.

Tylia Meffern, age twelve, thirteen next month. Her parents are botanical

planetologists-- hmm, they should get along with Aaden real well, then--

and she's, well, precocious. Cloned her first rat when she was nine,

apparently, and in the four years since then has spent a lot of time doing

a self-directed study of sentient design. After more than two hours of

reading through the report, I looked up. "It says here that last year

you won a recognition award from Sinaloa for designing a better rat."

"Two awards. One for my work on the brain-- better pattern recognition,

faster maze-learning systems. I figured out what made the best

maze-learners work and made the genes that did it propagate into the

next generation."

"What was the other award for?"

She smiled wider. "Security control. Build a better rat, and you don't

want it to get loose."

"What do you know about the non-brain influence of t2-aphedrine?" I said,

trying something out of thin air.

Her response was almost immediate. "T2-aphedrine is a compensation

mechanism found in the Han for the emotional stress related to having

cycling rates of testosterone and t2-estrogen in their bloodstream. You

can't say there's a non-brain 'influence.' All of it comes back to the

way the brain perceives the body's response limitations. That's from

your old essay, 'The Shape Of The Body.'"

I chuckled, caught. "Okay, I'm impressed. On the other hand, my first

son knew the names of every dinosaur that had ever walked across the

face of the Earth when he was ten years old." I realized as I said it

that comparing Richard's memorization of names that clearly impressed

young minds to her ability to synthesize even simple answers from the

material she made were worlds apart.

I sighed. "Look, Tylia, I don't know what I'm going to do with you. I

can't... I don't know if I have a place for you. I don't even know what

you really want?"

"I want to work for you!" she protested. "I want to learn... everything.

See?" She held up the PADD she'd been looking at for the last hour. "I've

been studying Ritan design, endocrinology, stuff like that. I want to

be part of the project. I want... I want you to be my... mentor." It

felt to me that she had torn that last word from somewhere else. The

word had meaning to her. Meaning that I hadn't heard from her yet--

and almost instantly recognized.

"Tylia... " I said. "You better not be asking for what I think you're

asking for."

"Why not?" she demanded, suddenly shifting into pouty defiance.

"Do you really want to sleep with me?"

"If that's the price for getting into Alpha and learning from you, yes! I

read that story about you and Aaden and what was his name... Khai. Yeah.

Aaden said he didn't know many girls who went through the kind of thing

Khai did but he was sure there were some. Maybe I'm one of 'em!"

"Maybe you are," I said. She had me backed into a corner, but I saw

an easy way out. "Maybe you are not. I could say no, just so that you

wouldn't look like a whore trying to get something out of me. On the

other hand, if I accepted, it might be because I want to look like a man
of principles who you don't have to sleep with to get what you want." I

grinned. "Bad move."

"I just want to talk first. Please?" Her eyes were wet and pleading. "I

just want to talk. I just want to know if there's a chance you'll be my

mentor? I'm not a child."

"Yes, you are."

"You know what I mean!"

"No," I admitted. "I don't know what you mean. I don't read minds."

Flustered, I wasn't sure where to go with this conversation. I just

stared at her, churning thoughts in my head and feeling manipulated. I

didn't know where to go with this conversation and I was afraid of where

I could end up. This went on for quite a few minutes, long enough for

the alarm to go off. "Look, I have to pay attention to the ship. We're

about to make the jump to lightspeed."

She nodded, then looked down. "Forget it."

"What?" I asked, surprised.

"Just forget it. It was a dumb idea. Forget I asked." She hopped out of

her chair and ran for the rear of the ship and her cabin.

I examined the controls. I had about four minutes left. "Reeds, I don't

know what to do with her."

"Neither do I," Reeds intoned casually. "But then, she is no longer

my problem. Should I forward the gist of your conversation with her to

her mother?"

I thought about it. It disturbed me to think that someone else might know

of our conversation. Someone other than an AI, I mean. "No, not just yet."

Jump in two minutes. "I still haven't decided I'm going to accept."

"Very well. I shall keep it in mind if we need it."

"Thanks." I dropped the fusion drive down to zero and coasted into

position for the jump past lightspeed. Forty seconds passed. A gentle

lurch occurred, more in my mind than in reality, and the stars through

the front window began to fly past at high speed. These 'stars' were

more projection than reality, created by a common computer program to

simulate the feeling of movement.

I retreated to my own cabin to read, and to think.

----------------------------------------------------------------------

Nine hours later an alarm buzzed above my head. "Wha?" With no AI on board

to tell me what the call was about, I fumbled to get to the controls on

the head board. The image resolved quickly. "Hullo?"

"Did I wake you?" asked the lovely, if too-thin, Mephit on the other

side of the screen.

"Yeah, 's okay. How's life, Aanji?"

"Hectic. That shouldn't surprise you. You're the cause of all this

insanity. Nice haircut, by the way." She sighed deeply. "The people on

the Ille Pendoro have just sprayed the ring with a Huffman transmission

in the clear-- they obviously wanted everyone to hear it." She saw my

eyebrows rise a cent at that. "The message requests permission on the

part of two of the crew, their Chief Engineer and their Chief Medical

Officer, to accompany the survivors quote through every step of the

recovery process unquote."

"Okay..." I said. Then I realized what they were trying to accomplish.

"They're right."

"I beg your pardon?"

I laughed. "Aanji, they're trying to keep us from murdering those males."

"Why would we do that?" she asked, now more confused.

"Because if we let the tanks fail, as they would without drastic

intervention, then this whole thing becomes an archaeological expedition

which I could direct at my whim. If they survive, the matter becomes much

stickier, since it will then become a rescue, subject to the Genocide

Provision of Article Five of the llerkin-Pendor-Terra Pact."

Aanji stroked the tip of her muzzle with her hand. "You would do that? Let

them die?"

"Honestly? It wasn't an option that had occurred to me until the Pendoro

crew suggested it as a possibility, but yeah, if I were Machiavellian

enough I might have done it." I looked down at my PADD. "Does the Pendoro

crew know they might have to turn right around?"

"The Pendoro crew isn't going to be up to that. The Handele, however,

will be. A whole new crew is readying it to space in four weeks."

"Captain?"

She smiled. "Etta."

"Good for her!" I said. "It's crazy, Aanji. Crazy, crazy, crazy. Hey,

speaking of madness, I've got a request for you."

"I'm listening."

"I'd like to take on an apprentice."

"A what?" she asked, surprised.

"An apprentice. You know, a sorcerer's apprentice. Something like that."

"What does he know?"

I forwarded the report I had to her. She worked her muzzle thoughtfully.

"Doesn't seem like a very good student. Maybe first year of postgraduate

although a little light on theory. Why her?"

"Would you be surprised if she was twelve years old?"

"Twelve?" Aanji asked. "Twelve? You want me to invite a twelve year old
girl into Alpha?"

"No, I'm asking you to allow me to invite her."

"And the rest of Alpha has to put up with this?"

I glared at her. "Alpha is my team, Aanji, don't forget that. You're here

because it's in my best interest to have someone with your skills here.

Look, this argument is stupid. If you can't handle working with a

reasonably mature twelve-year-old girl walking around my lab asking

questions and learning, tell me now." Even as I said it I realized

that she knew exactly what she could say to convince me otherwise. I

had hired her to do her job. She knew better than I did what the team

could and could not sustain.

She sighed and glanced offscreen at someone or something. "It's just

one more huge complication."

"I can see your point, Aanji. If she's a problem, I promise she'll be on

an Sdisk back to her uncle first thing in the morning. We've got three

huge lab assignments coming up, none of which are in our traditional

line of work. The Ritans aren't from our evolutionary line, the Han are

hermaphrodites engineered by someone else, and in Unity we're going to

be targeting sentience to avoid it, not create it. This does make your

life more complicated.

"On the other hand," I continued, "There's a tradition of having student

apprentices and she looks like she could be a good one. I mean, she's

only twelve and she's already demonstrated that she can re-engineer rat

brains and clone then in-vitro."

"Cloning rats is a childish experiment."

"Aanji, how old are you?" I asked, exasperated with her. "How old were

you before you cloned your first rat?"

"I've never cloned rats, Ken. I'm here because I'm a program manager,

remember?" She smiled tiredly. "It's entirely your decision, Ken. I

appreciate your telling me first, but she's to be your responsibility.

Remember that when it's comes to key coding, it's your mission priority.

If you want a twelve-year-old girl on your library team, that's up to you.

I question if it's your brain or your hormones making this decision,

but ultimately you make or break the sentient design team."

"Well, thanks for that vote of confidence."

"Next item--" I waited for the bad news. "Terraforming is proceeding

as planned. The processors are now on their way to Ritacha. It's going

to take them four years to get there, since the engines don't push

them nearly as fast as we'd like. The archaeologists want more time,

as always."

"Aanji?" I asked. "I should probably warn you. Something huge is going

to be leaving Pindam in a couple of days."

She looked up at me with alarm. "Huge? How huge?"

"Oh, about eleven kilometers across, shaped a little like an emergency

landing capsule. You don't know where it is right now, and Hal will give

you six hours warning before lift off. I just want you to be aware of

it before it moves."

"What is it?"

I smiled. "Nazkrimpatul."

Aanji's eyes went wide. I love seeing that in her-- it makes her look

so much like her brother. "Ringmaker?"

I nodded. "You said in your letter three days ago you had a star picked

out."

"Well, yes, but... " She shook. "I thought Nazkrimpatul was a legend."

"You're not an evolutionist, are you?"

"Well... Um... No. But, I mean, a thousand years seems plausible. There

are a couple of hundred people still alive who were here a thousand

years ago and remember the beginning."

"In another eighty years, you'll be one of them."

"Don't remind me. But, the Ring-- I mean, it's millions of years old.

Sometimes, it doesn't seem real that... that you made it." She sighed. "I

forget who I'm talking to."

"No, you remember right. Ringmaker is just a tool, Aanji. An impressive

one, but a tool nonetheless, and no more impressive than statis fields." I

grinned. "Come on, you've slept with me. You know how awkward and gangly

I can get."

She smiled. "You're right. So Ringmaker is on its way. At eleven

kilometers, it's can't be any faster than the terraforming processors."

"You're right. In fact, it's on a Corrane-one drive. So it might not

be actually leaving for a few days after it awakens. It might have to

retrofit for the new technologies in space flight. Ringmaker isn't AI,

but it's smart. And fast." I neglected to add that it cheats, too.

Aanji jotted something down on her PADD. "My life is too complicated."

"It's not going to get any better," I pointed out cheerfully.

"I'll remember you said that. We seem to be caught up." She pointed at

me through the screen. "Do me a favor, and don't come to Alpha until

the day before the Pendoro transits. You need a vacation. Take it. Use

it. Stay home. Fuck my brother's brains out. That is an order."

I smiled. "Yes, Ma'am!"

"Later, Ken."

"Until then, Aanji."

As the screen blinked out, I realized that I couldn't afford to get too

much sleep on this trip. I looked at the clock and decided to get up. I

was now three hours early out of synch with daylight at the Castle. I

could probably get back to my normal schedule if I went to bed an hour

early-- but then I realized that there was damned little to do on this

ship to wear myself out enough to want to go to bed that early.

I sniffed myself and looked at my hair in the mirror. I stank all right.

The hair was greasier than day-old fried chicken. I sighed and decided

to head for the shower.

I opened the door to the hallway. Tylia was nowhere to be seen, so I

sneaked across the hall with only a towel around my midriff and closed

the bathroom door behind me. It suddenly occurred to me as I opened the

door that she could be in the bathroom. Fortunately, she wasn't.

As the warm water hit me, I started to relax. I hadn't realized how

tense this whole incident was making me. As the spray of water hit my

shoulders and cascaded over my back and front, I could feel the heat

penetrating me, loosening muscles and easing away a deep ache in my

bones. I wondered if that came just from the past day. I hoped so.

I poured soap into my hands and proceeded to wash my hair, then the rest

of me. When I got down to my crotch, I grabbed something solid. "What are

you doing?" I asked my dick, which was hard for no apparent reason. I

never get an answer back, which some of the fems in my life tell me is

unusual. I slid my hands over my erection to wash it like everything else,

and as is usually the case I found the pleasure of doing so inviting.

"Oh, what the Hell," I said to nothing in particular. I began stroking

my cock slowly, enjoying the sensations that made me shiver every time I

felt the crown of my cock head slide through my closed hand. With my other

hand, I reached down and stroked my balls, tugging on the scrotum and

enjoying the difference in sensation between the two. I couldn't remember

the last time I masturbated, although memory served me well enough that

it had been on the Handele and I had been in the shower then, too.

The water was running down my back as I leaned against the wall of the

shower for support, letting myself get lost in the warm water and the hot,

delicious sensation of my hand stroking my hard penis. The piercing I had

gotten two years ago was still there, and I could feel the hard knobs

at the ends of the barbell running under the pads of my fingers. After

two years I still notice it, what a change it is.

As I started to breathe a little faster, my mind wandered, looking for

something to fantasize about. I always do that, always have something

to dream about when I'm masturbating.

My mind just wouldn't let her go, though. I couldn't close my eyes without

wondering what Tylia looked like under those clothes. In my imagination,

she looked less like a Felinzi and more like a Mephit-- I think I was

confusing her with Sheja. But her name was Tylia in my fantasy. I wanted

to kiss her, to grab her, to pick her lithe, little body up into my

arms and hold her to me. I wondered how much she'd weigh, and how much

I would feel if she were on top, taking my cock inside herself.

My gods, I was fantasizing about a twelve year old girl. But it was just

fantasy, and I let it go. I dreamed of what she'd be like, lying in bed,

facing me, her legs parted just slightly. What would it be like for me

to crawl on top of her, to look down into her eyes and have her say "take

me?" I could just barely imagine the feel of her fur under my hands, the

excitement in my heart, the feel of her tight cunt as I penetrated her...

I barely noticed what I was doing with my hands. In my ears, over the

sound of the falling water I could hear myself whispering her name,

moaning her name as I came closer to orgasm. In my mind she was crying

with pain and joy, feeling the way I do when I'm being flogged, or fucked,

or fisted by someone who I know loves me.

I started to wonder what it was like to be her. I could feel her anxiety,

her concern over what was happening, what would happen. I could imagine

her voice, so full of life and so close to that indecisive edge between

lust and fear. And as I made love to her, I imagined her holding onto

me for dear life, for an experience we all go through once. As I came,

I could hear my fantasy self thanking my fantasy of her for letting it

be me.

"Whew," I said, again to nobody in particular. I pulled the shower handle

off of its bracket and sprayed the wall where my semen had landed, washing

it down the drain to the recycling plant. I blinked a couple of times--

spray from the shower had collected on my eyelashes-- and stretched.

Standing like that for so long had made me cramp up again. Damn, I was

out of shape.

I cleaned the rest of myself off and got out. I felt refreshed. I also

didn't feel at all guilty. It was just fantasy, and I knew on which side

of that line I stood. I also knew where I stood with Tylia.

----------------------------------------------------------------------

"You bored?" I asked as I watched her touch her PADD for the fifth time

in under a minute. I know very few people who read that fast. She was

either channel surfing, or just flipping static material at random.

"A little," she said, petulantly. She didn't even bother to look at me.

"Wanna do something?"

"Like what?" Again, voice low and disinterested. If it was an act,

it was a good one. For someone who had been so thrilled to have Ken

Shardik as her sole audience for over thirty hours, she sure wasn't

taking advantage of it.

"A round or two of Raider?"

"What's Raider?"

I picked up my own PADD and looked to see if the game in question was

in the database. Sure enough, it was. "Come on." I stood and led her

back to the cargo area, a huge space, relatively speaking. In the middle

stood twelve metallic canisters, all barely knee-high. "Raider is a silly

game I used to play a long time ago. Got nostalgic for it suddenly. These

canisters--" I ran my hand through one to show it was just a hologram--

"are ours. Now, out of the walls are going to come ships, first in waves

of one, then two, then three, then four, then five, and they're going

to try to grab these cans and run with them. They will get faster. We

have to keep our cargo as long as possible. Hands are the only valid

tag. And if you tag a ship that has a canister, the can stays where it

is. Sound easy?" She nodded. "Want to play?" Nod again.

I hit the 'go' button on my PADD and tossed it across the room. It sailed

through the air and landed on my chair perfectly. "Yes!" I said. The

attack started. "Whoops!"

Tylia got the first one, and I got to see how fast she was. Fast enough.

At this point in the game, the attack ships are pretty slow. They're just

holograms, about the size of a medium-sized dog, squarish and glowing

and hard to miss.

The second wave came. One ship, then another, staggered. I took care of

the first, Tylia got the second. The battle continued.

The game got faster. I found myself diving for ships that ran off with

canisters. By the fifteenth round we were facing waves of three moderately

fast ships and already had lost two cans.

Tylia started breathing fast around round twenty-one-- and four ships came

out. These were slower than round twenty's, but still more of them. I

managed to tag one, fell forwards, looked up to see a ship getting away

with a can, and rolled in the way. It's a little creepy to watch one of

those things roll over you and not feel it, but a swipe of my hand and

it disappeared, leaving me with a canister in my lap. I stood quickly

for wave twenty-two.

Wave thirty, and five ships were coming at a time. They came from all

sides-- from the walls, from around the corner to the cabins, even

leaping out of my chair. They skittered across the ground and grabbed

the canisters, and I was running to keep them from getting to the walls

and disappearing with our cargo.

Tylia and I both dove for the fifth ship-- and knocked heads together.

"Ouch!" I remember saying. She shouted something more appropriately

incoherent. "Time!" I shouted at the ceiling. The game froze. Not that

it mattered-- we were between waves. "You okay?"

She nodded. "Uh-huh." She rubbed her head appropriately. "You have a

hard head, Shardik."

"So I've been told," I agreed. That got me the first grin I'd seen since

"turning her down." I decided to work with it. "By the way, call me

'Ken.'"

"Okay, sir. 'Ken.' I figured you were gonna ask me that eventually."

"They why didn't you just start off calling me 'Ken?'"

"Well, I don't know. I mean, I don't know what you want to be called,

really. I figured I should play it safe."

I nodded. "Do you really want to stay around me? I mean, do you really

know what you're asking for?"

"I've read your journals; I know what you've taught other people, all

the way back from the beginning!" She smiled. "And that includes the,

uh, the sex."

"That interests you?" I asked.

"Rings, yes, it interests me!"

Her enthusiasm caught me off guard. Sitting on the floor as close as

we were I could feel it coming off her in waves. I'm starting to wonder

about that "psychically dead" part. "Woah, wait, I wasn't offering. I'm

just talking, like you said."

"It does!" she continued in the same strong voice. "I mean, I I even

play with myself."

Hearing words like those from a twelve-year-old girl surprised me. A lot.

It was one of the few times I'd ever heard someone that young give

such strong praise for their own sexuality, and her voice was full of

appreciation. "Tylia," I asked, "Have you ever had sex with someone yet?"

"No " she begun.

"Then you don't know what you're asking for."

"I'm not asking for a repeat experience. Don't you understand? I know

what it feels like. I know what I've read and what I've heard. I want

to know what it's like with someone else. The fact that I don't right

now is no reason for me not to ask I mean, just ask. Somebody's got to

take my virginity sometime." She laughed. "Well, I'm clasisted, like

everyone these days. I just figured... you know "

"And you want me to be the one?"

"I don't know yet. Wait," she said as I opened my mouth to interrupt. "I

know that that's the answer you'd want to hear. So I know you're gonna be

suspicious when I say it 'cause you know I've read all your stories. But

it's also the answer I want to give."

I stood up. "I have to check the controls."

She interrupted my examination by taking the copilot's chair again,

saying, "I think... I think one of the problems you're having is that

if you accept an offer from me, who else will ask you in the future?"

"That's a very mature thought," I said, smiling at her reservedly.

"Well, somebody had to say it. Look, how many kids... " She laughed. "Oh,

rings. Yeah, you're right. How many kids my age have access to your

journals and have read and understood enough of them to even ask what

I'm asking you for?"

"You don't!"

"I have a good enough idea!" She was going to pout.

"Yeah, I bet you do. You're one of the smartest twelve-year-olds I've

ever met."

She grinned wide. "Thanks. You know, I think that by itself is going to

make my day.

I smiled and checked the readouts again. In my mind I thought about who

I would need for advice on this. Aaden, certainly-- despite her features

Tylia came across as a tomboy. I wondered at the power dynamic involved

in her being a fem, though unlike Aaden and those rare "students" of his,

Tylia literally could not give as good as she got. P'nyssa probably. A

few others came to mind.

I thought about the funk she had gone through all morning and I realized

that her sulkiness was the other side of her youth. I guess if I was

prepared to enjoy one I would have to learn to help her through the other.

The mere suggestion that I wanted to 'enjoy' her bothered me, but isn't

that exactly what Aaden had asked me many years ago. I enjoy young people

already, for their athleticism, their energy, their boundless curiosity.

Was Tylia really offering me something different in asking me to enjoy

her sexuality as well? I didn't have an answer for that yet. But I wanted

to give her that chance.

"Tylia," I said, still checking over the last of the readouts, "I've

already spoken to Aanji on Alpha. I'll have to get advice from some other

people and I'll have to talk to your parents, too. But I'm willing to

give you a fair chance. Fuck this 'I don't have time' crap. I better

make time. I'm going to live for a lot longer, and that's time enough

for me, but you're not going to be young forever and I don't really have

the right to take away from you such a wonderful possibility. I'll see

if I can get you into Alpha."

There was complete silence from her chair. Then, in a careful voice she

asked, "Do you really mean that?"

"I mean that with all honesty."

She bounded out of her chair and dropped into my lap, throwing her arms

around me. "Thank you, Ken! Thank you so much! I won't let you down."

"I hope not. I think we're sticking you with either Kamron or Baler.

Probably Baler."

"Baler?" She stuttered the word. "B...Baler? The one who solved the

evolutionary problem of Egan's Sheets?"

I nodded. She lunged for me, gripping me so tightly she cut off the

circulation to my brain. "You won't regret this!"

I rubbed my head. Her sudden action had made the pain return. "I regret

it already. Ouch."

"Oops. Sorry."

"It's okay. You'll be working as his understudy on Ritan sensory

mechanisms, if I remember my assignments clearly. I'll be working on

DNA translations into Pendorian schemas-- so you'll end up reporting to

Baler, who reports to me." I paused. "That is, after I get both Baler's

and your parents' permissions."

"You'll get my folks, fast!" she said.

"I plan on telling them everything we've talked about."

That stopped her. "Oh." She looked at me.

I nodded. "I'm extreme, but I'm honest. At least, that's how people tell

me they see me. Which will your parents focus on?"

"I don't know. I guess they'll let me work with you. Would you work with

me if they don't want us to... ?"

"It's not like I can't find excitement elsewhere, Tylia. I'm not even

sure I want to find it with you. I do know that you have a tremendous

opportunity to make a lifetime of respect out of the Ritans right here

and now."

"Good." She eased herself out of the chair, noticed the game still

running behind us. "Score?"

"Twenty Nine to Twenty Six, Meffrn." The voice sounded stilted,

mechanical, unfriendly. I wished for an AI.

"I won!" she said.

"I'm thirsty," I said. For some reason, that lump on my head wasn't

clearing very quickly. I hoped it wasn't anything serious. She put a glass

in front of my nose. "Here. More soda. Your favorite." She made a face.

"You do read closely," I observed.

"Nah. I saw you drinking some earlier and could smell it."

"Thanks."

"How soon until we get home?"

"About six hours," I said. "I'm going to go lie down. I feel dizzy."

"You want me to bring you anything?"

I shook my head. "No, but if I'm not awake when we get to transit,

could you make sure I do wake up?"

She nodded.

----------------------------------------------------------------------

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.