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Authors: Alexander Potter

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BOOK: Women of War
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I remembered Ersh-taste exploding in my mouth, the exhilarating flood of new memories filling my body. Remembered too much. Skalet hadn't merely observed the Kraal's latest war—she'd helped orchestrate it.
That conflict and her cleverness would be my next lesson. There would be lists and details beyond what Ersh had filtered for me during assimilation. Worst of all, there would be Skalet's unconcealed pride in her work.
How could she?
I wouldn't put up with it. I'd hide until she left again. I'd—I'd undoubtably be found, reprimanded, and have my lesson anyway.
To hide the shaking of my gloved paws, I shoved them deep in the suds-filled sink to rescue drowning utensils. “I don't understand her,” I said finally, unable to keep a hint of a growl from the words. “She acts as they do. Why?” With great daring, I clarified: “Why does Ersh permit it?”
“You'll have to ask Ersh.”
The noise I made wasn't polite, but Ansky refrained from comment. “When she's ready, I'm sure you'll find out.” Then she said something strange, something I would come to understand only later. “The forms we take are ourselves, Esen-alit-Quar. We are no more immune to our individual pasts than any civilization is immune to its history. Never fall into the trap of believing yourself other than the flesh you wear, no matter its structure. Skalet—” A tentacle nudged the pot I was holding in the air. “Enough gossip. I need that one next.”
 
Much later, having done Ansky's cooking justice, I was doing my utmost to appear attentive and awake, my posture as impeccably straight as a form evolved from four-on-the-floor could manage. My involuntary yawns, however stifled, likely ruined the effect. “Was there anything else, Ersh?” I asked, before I could yawn again. It had been a longer day than most, given my now-departed Webkin had left disarray and laundry sprawled over their rooms. Being least and latest made any mess my responsibility.
The tall mound of crystal that was Ersh in her preferred form gave an ominous chime. “Should I not ask you, Youngest?”
One of those “examine your soul for spots” questions
. I was suddenly alert, if incapable of figuring out a safe answer.
Before I needed to do so, Ersh continued. “You would know more about Skalet's fascination with war.”
How?
I didn't quite gnash my teeth. I should have realized Ersh would have shared with each before they left her again. I couldn't blame Ansky. All Ersh had to do was take a nibble and she'd know all we'd done and experienced.
On the bright side, while I couldn't deny my question, she might answer it. “Yes, Ersh,” I said hopefully.
Ersh leaned forward and I eased back, careful of my toes should she decide to tumble. A graceful and powerful mode of locomotion, but one I judged safer observed from a distance. “You wonder why I tolerate it?”
This being a far less comfortable question, I did my best to shrink in place without appearing defensive. It was a posture I'd yet to master, but the effort sometimes mollified Ersh. At least it made me feel a smaller target. Then, as usual, my inconvenient curiosity overwhelmed my sense of self-preservation. “You let her do terrible things,” I whispered. “Why?”
“I let her be her form's self, Youngest,” a correction, but mild. “The consequences are as they are.”
“Beings suffer and die.”
“Skalet engages in war, Youngest.” As if this was an answer.
I tilted my head, wary but wanting more. “What of the Prime Laws? She ends sentience before its time.”
“The Kraal are a violent species.”
“Their species is Human,” I corrected automatically.
Ersh's chime grew a shade testy. “A technicality. The Kraal refuse to mingle their genetic material with others of that heritage. It will not be long—as we measure time—before this is a matter of inability, not social preference. You would be wise to pay attention to this process. It is not uncommon among ephemeral cultures.”
The ploy was familiar. Distract the youngest and she'll follow along. “Why—” I said stubbornly, “do you let Skalet participate so fully in this culture?”
Ersh settled herself with a slide of crystal over crystal. Reflected light ran over the floor, walls, and ceiling, making me squint. “You know the beginnings of that answer, Youngest.” There was no doubt in her voice. “You were there, when Ansky and I discussed Skalet's first mission with the Kraal. From that, everything else has followed.”
I'd been there?
Before I could open my mouth to dispute this, however poor a decision that might have been, memory
rearranged
itself. To be more exact, memory reared up and shook me in sickening fashion from head to paw, recollections of that time before I had words of my own to use abruptly gaining coherance. With the perfect memory of my kind, it seemed I had recorded much I knew Skalet herself would have wished to know—
Or not.
Pressure mattered. Little else. Time. I knew the passage of days, marked them by movement conveyed by waves pressing against me.
Me. Me. Me.
I knew me, that I existed, if then I had had no language in which to express that knowledge.
But the memory of a Web-being is perfect in every detail. So it was that when Ersh challenged me to consider such things as beginnings, I recalled my own—and by so doing, I applied what I'd learned since to the experiences so precisely recalled. The result was—interesting.
The waves of pressure which so entertained my proto-self had been generated by three sources. The inner workings of Ansky's body—the pulse of heart and lungs, the rush of blood through arteries, the gurgling of her digestive tract—all of these transferred through the ammniotic fluid in which I rested as a symphony of pressures against the cells of my exquisitely sensitive skin. I'd hum along.
Then, there was the impact of large muscle movement. Oh, be sure I noticed when Ansky dropped to all fours, or stood on two legs, or bent over, or laughed.
Last, and most intriguing to recall, sound. I'd registered everything I'd heard through the walls and fluid of my living cradle through ears disposed to greater range than most sentient beings possessed.
Especially when those around me were, well, shouting.
I ignored innumerable heated discussions about Ansky's lamentable condition, cuing my memories to one word: Skalet. Sure enough, they'd argued about her as well.
“Skalet? She's incapable! A coward! I tell you I'll be fine. Send me. You know I'm better at learning culture, at blending in with other species. Let our Web-kin skulk somewhere else.”
Skalet?
Even as I tried to wrap my brain around what Ansky was saying, very loudly and with enough passion to shake my surroundings, Ersh replied, “Thanks to your blending, you can't travel until this latest creation of yours is uncorked and given to its father. I intend to monitor this emerging kind of Human closely. Skalet will go and she will learn them for us.” The unspoken “or else” penetrated Ansky's abdomen; either that, or I was influenced by my subsequent wealth of experience with that tone.
My world shifted and jiggled, then a tidal wave hinted that Ansky had moved to another chair and dropped in it without care for me. Parental she wasn't. “It won't be long.” This with certainty. Warmth implied a paw pressed over me. I kicked at it. “She's impatient.”
Really, I wasn't. Especially in hindsight.
“She?” Ersh's chime was nicely ominous. “Don't become attached.”
Perhaps my presence—or her preoccupation with its inconvenience—gave Ansky a little more spine than usual. “Becoming attached is my skill, Ersh. Who else brings back the interpersonal details we need about a sentient species? Who learns what it is to
be
that form? Skalet?” The growl under the word brought an instinctive echo from me, albeit consisting of a pathetic, soundless tensing of a breathing system that had no air in it yet. “Skalet spends her time in other forms—which is as little as possible—hiding in bushes. She uses gadgets to record from a distance, then presumes to tell us she's gathered information firsthand. But she'll have no convenient hiding places at this Kraal outpost. As befits a culture almost constantly in conflict, they're more fanatical than she is about surveillance. Her devices will be useless.”
“Yes.” Ersh somehow made the word smug.
 
I blinked free of memory, for an instant finding it odd to have air against my eyes. “You threw Skalet off a cliff,” I concluded, doing my best to restrain a likely regrettable amount of triumph at the thought. Ersh had tossed me from her mountain to encourage my first cycle into Web-form. Skalet's plunge had been no less perilous for lack of rock at the bottom. For I knew the Kraal.
Not personally, being too young in Ersh's estimation to leave her Moon, but the assimilated memories of my Webkin were clear enough. Kraal society had evolved an elaborate structure in which every individual had an allegiance to one or more of the ruling Houses through birth or action. Moreover, those allegiances, called affiliations, were permanently tattooed on each adult Kraal's face. While they allowed no images of themselves until death, to ensure only final affiliations were recorded for posterity, their gates were guarded by those who remembered faces exceedingly well. Only those who had been introduced by a known and trusted individual would be admitted, given that advancement through Kraal nobility typically involved assassination of rivals by as clever a means as possible.
Not a group to overlook a stranger.
“Why?” My favorite question. I stared at Ersh, a mountain of crystal shaped in hardness and edge.
Her voice could be as warm and soft as any flesh. “Why did I put her at risk? Because Skalet resisted being other than herself. The idea of a different form influencing who she was terrified her. She would be crippled by that fear, useless to our Web, unless forced to live it.”
“Why the Kraal?” I whispered.
“A act of charity, Youngest.” I must have looked confused, because Ersh clicked her digits together with an impatient ring. “Like Skalet, Kraal do not welcome physical contact, unless in practice drills. Like Skalet, they do not welcome personal questions. They share an obsession with intellect and games. And respect authority.”
I ignored the last, most likely aimed at me. “What happened?”
As Ersh winked into the blue teardrop of her Web-form, I realized my curiosity was once more taking me where I'd doubtless regret going.
Not that fear could stop instinct. I released my hold on this form, cycling into my true self, and formed a mouth for Ersh's offering of the past.
Gloves froze and stiffened; coat fabric froze and crinkled. The slight
whoof
of air that escaped the face mask with each breath added its moisture to the rim of ice searing both cheeks and chin, that flesh rapidly losing all feeling anyway. Another being might have feared the cold, the darkness, and the howl of a wind that ripped unchallenged across this plain of floating ice from an empty ocean six hundred kilometers away.
Then again, another being wouldn't have preferred chipping frost from the antenna array, a duty that entailed far more than finding and climbing a ladder in the dark, over company and warmth. But Skalet craved these moments of solitude, no matter how punishing to her Humanself.
For the Kraal outpost was as close to a hell as any Human legend remembered by the Web. At the southern pole of an uninhabited world known only by a number, those assigned to it faced two seasons: a summer of sharp blinding ice crystals, in air that struggled up to minus twenty degrees Celsius under an unsetting sun; or a winter of utter darkness, where ceaselessly drifting snow erased the tracks of any who dared move outside at temperatures that solidified oil, let alone flesh.
Not that either season made hiding easier. In the summer, movement could only be concealed within tunnels through the snow, joining each of the domes. In the winter, radiation leaked by suit or building would betray them. For this was an outpost of that deadly kind: a spy set in place for a war that might come their way, at best an expendable asset, at worst, a prized target.
Skalet, to her surprise and growing dismay, fit in too well.
The eighteen stationed at the outpost were, to put it plainly, disposable. The arrival of another such was occasion for no more than a shifting of bunk assignments. Skalet's calm acceptance of a lowermost bed had nothing to do with stoicism, although it impressed the Kraal. Dumping heat was essential for a Web-being forced to hold another form and the temperature at floor level in all the buried domes was close to freezing. A cold bed was thus, as Skalet would say,
convenient.
But her behavior set a pattern. Ersh's orders and her situation notwithstanding, our reluctant Web-kin wanted as little to do with Kraal as possible. She took the worst shifts. She'd seek out the most dangerous, dirty tasks and do them alone. She'd eat first or last and clean up every trace of her existence. Unfortunately for Skalet, everything she did to avoid the other eighteen at the outpost only served to enhance her reputation. The others admired her fortitude, nicknamed her Icicle, and whispered of rapid promotion. Several went so far as to broach offers of support, gambling, with the single-mindedness of true Kraal, her inevitable rise in rank would similarly increase that of her allies.
Skalet had no idea how to stop any of it, short of disobeying Ersh and fleeing this world.
Case in point, this afternoon's trip out to the antenna array. Skalet would have let someone else take the dangerous duty—and praise—but such excursions were her only escape from the populated tunnels and tiny rooms of the outpost.
BOOK: Women of War
10.97Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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