
THE  HUMAN   MEMOIRS
by G. Howell
howell_g@actrix.gen.nz

Copyright the author



Part I
I, a stranger and afraid
In a world I never made
	-HOUSMAN


	Running  feet pattered and clicked on worn  flagstones,  the sound   echoing  hollowly   through  the  Library's  cold   stone corridors. Of course running in the Citadel was frowned upon, but at this hour the halls were practically deserted;  the only  ones around  to witness such infractions were the rats and  mice,  and they couldn't care less. 
	The cavernous oval floor of the foyer - packed with students during  daylight  hours  -  was as deserted as the  rest  of  the Library.  Beyond  the  antique leaded glass of the  high  ceiling dome, night-bound clouds scudded across the sky, seemingly just arm's length outside. He blinked up at fat raindrops blatting against the glass and shivered;  the heating was turned down for the night, not that it ever made much of a difference in a room this size anyway.  Somewhere in the library an old water clock chimed the hour, making him glance at his timepiece for confirmation. He grimaced. Rot it! Late enough already.
	In  the  dimness,  terminals - a few with  green  characters flickering up their screen - stared glassily from their cubicles. Beyond  the glass partitions,   row upon row of  ancient  shelves stretched off into the shadowy vaults.  The soundproofed  viewing and  study 
chambers were tucked away in a quiet corner  behind  a row of wood-paneled doors,  one with the 'IN USE' plate glowing. He sighed and took a guess at exactly what she'd say, then opened the door. 
	"You took your time!"
	He grinned. Close enough.
	Mas  swung  her  feet off the edge of  the  desk,  spun  the chair around and glared up at  him as  the door hissed shut behind him.  One finger was  impatiently drumming  a tattoo on the well-worn upholstered armrest. "So, did you bring it?"
	"Love you too," he retorted, flopping into the second chair. She glared at him. "All right! I got it," he waved the plastic case under her nose.  "Why did you have to wait for the last minute anyway?"
	"I had other business," she growled.
	He'd heard that one before. "Sure. More important than your finishing grade?"
	"Yes."
	"Oh? What? Someone die?"
	She stared at him, then began to bristle. "None of your business!"
	"All right." He shrugged. "Sorry. Forget it. Anyway, you could have booked some of the libraries disks earlier in the year."
	"I didn't know they'd all be booked out. That festering video they showed; suddenly everyone wants the disks. Great   timing,"   Mas  scratched   fingers   against   the wooden countertop, "Just in time for a thesis. Why on earth did they set THIS as the topic?!"
	"Come on. You know it's customary for every Academy graduate to do it."
	"Every year?"  she asked with a wrinkle of her nose.  "You'd  think the  'Great  Learned  Ones' would be filled  to  the  back  teeth reading all those recycled essays.  
Most of the students just load a thesis saved a year ago and rewrite  it. If you look through the files you'll see they all seem remarkably similar."
	"Those files're supposed to be locked!"
	"Huh!" she snorted.  "You of all people should know the locks they use are a joke.  There's no way  they can keep a dedicated system wanderer out.  If you  know the  right  people  and right software,  you can  get  access  to anything."
	"You wouldn't!"
	She just grinned at him.
	Perhaps she would. That was her style: all take and no give. He  didn't know why he'd agreed to help her.  A strange  one  she was:  Only recently arrived at the Academy, perhaps not even from the  east coast.  Intelligent enough - in the Academy  that  went without  saying  -  probably  smarter  than  he  was,   but  also incredibly  aloof and arrogant.  Nobody knew anything more  about her other than that she kept herself separate from everyone else, never  entering  into  relationships:   a  frigid  bitch  to  all appearances.  He'd never known anyone who had even claimed  to have spent a night with her.  He had never found her files in the admin system.   She  seemed  to  be  a   nobody, but nevertheless  she held some kind of sway over the  establishment, that was the only way they'd been able to bend the rules and  get into the Library after hours.
	Her arrival at his dorm had come as a complete surprise  and her request. . . no, her demand  for help on this project had left  him flustered and tongue-tied. Perhaps if he'd been thinking straight he wouldn't have agreed to help.  It was his high academic achievements  that'd caught her attention and he knew in his  gut that  when she'd squeezed him for all he was  worth,  she'd  dump him.
	Somehow, he didn't care.
	Frigid she may be,  but she was also undeniably  attractive; any red-blooded male would gladly give a testicle for a chance to be shut in a cubicle with her. A shame she had a tendency to turn it into an experience akin to being shut in  refrigerator. A real waste.
	He  sighed. . . Oh well.   "If you're going to do it that  way, what  do you need me for?  I'll just let you get on with it."  He began to stand but she kicked his feet out so he fell back into the chair.
	"Sit down!  You're a walking encyclopedia when it comes  to this  kind  of thing. And I know you get a rush out of  doing it. Already  got  a career planned out,  haven't you?  What  was  it? Historics and Research?"
	"Uh. . . yes. How'd you know?"
	"Heard you in the canteen."
	"Oh."  When  had that been?  He hadn't been to  the  canteen for. . . 
	"I  can't understand why you enjoy this kind of thing,"  she snorted.  "We  could  be researching  something  practical,  like matrix  memory,   or  the  space  probes  and  parallel  junction projects."
	"And  where'd those come from?" He waved the  disk.  "Aren't you forgetting  who  actually  suggested  those  ideas.   We've  just developed the capabilities to actually build them."
	"History!" she muttered. "Shackles of expectations!"
	"Huh?"
	"Nothing." She shook her head. "Just forget it."
	"Forget it? You like riddles?"
	"No. It's nothing. Just something my father once told me."
	"Your. . . "
	"Don't ask!" she snapped.  "Now we've got work to  do.  That video:  how  accurate was it?"
	"Uh. . . "  her  sudden  change of tact  had  thrown  him.  Her father,  that was a fascinating slip.  There was more there. . . but later.  "I. . . It was fairly well done, but of course you could still tell they were costumes. And they 'cleaned it up' a little:  rearranged parts to make it more  interesting." He  flipped the disk box in the air and caught  it  again.  "This transcription  is copied verbatim from the original  translation. Well, as close as possible anyway. Everything's there."
	"Great," she muttered unenthusiastically.  "Ah,  well.  What about the museum? You recommend it?"
	"Definitely!  You  haven't seen anything until  you've  seen them in the flesh,  so to speak.  Weird!" he chuckled, then added, "And  you  should look up their mating habits.  That's  got  some interesting tidbits."
	Mas snorted,  snatched the case and popped it open, checking the disk's label before dropping it into the drive.  The screen flickered, the manufacturer's logo blinking across the top, then the disk's boot sectors took over and a menu appeared,  icons arranged in neat rows.  Mas selected one, pressed  the  puck's button and the drive light flickered  for  a second, then the high-resolution digitized graphic of an ancient, worn leather volume appeared on the screen along with title and dates.  Beat his old system back home clear out of the running speedwise, and the graphics were so clear they seemed to jump out of the glass. Another few  seconds then the screen cleared and the text of the translation began  to scroll down the VDU.
	"Put  it up on the big screen," he suggested,  then after  a few  seconds  added,   "Who  knows,  you  might  even  find  this interesting."
	She bared teeth back at him and he smiled to himself.
	At the touch of a key,  the featureless black wall above the monitor  flickered,  text  appeared on  it,  the  lights  dimmed. Without  another word the pair settled back in their  chairs  and began to read.


THE HUMAN MEMOIRS

	This ain't no technological breakdown,
this is the road to hell. . . 



	Chris  Rea's  voice  faded in a burst  of  white  noise, then pulsed back to full strength again as the transistor radio  swung like a electronic pendulum from the dash. The   headlamps  of  the  world-weary   Deuce  n'  a Half illuminated  the road ahead for  fifty meters in the clear  night air,  the  catseyes down the center glaring back at the truck  as the  lights  swept  over  and  past  them.   I  squirmed  on  the uncomfortable seat, trying to work some feeling back into my numb tailbone.  I think they cut cost in the earlier  models:  welding the   axle  directly  to  the  chassis  without  bothering   with suspension. 
	"Will you stop squirming like that!"  Tenny  Dalton shifted  gear and glared at me,  his face turned into  a  cragged monstrosity  by  the faint green glow of the dash.  The  stub  of cigar jutting from his mouth glowed like a malevolent  LED.  "You got a rash or something?"
	"Not  yet,"  I  groaned and stretched melodramatically,  "but it's only a matter of time.  Where are we anyway?"
	"How  should I know?  You've got the map."
	"You don't NEED a map!" I protested, then rubbed my eyes and picked up the flashlight from the dash, illuminating my watch. "Shit. We should have caught up with them an hour ago."
	"Hey!  I've been going where you tell me.  You sure it's the right damned road?"
	I  leaned  back  and flashed the battered old angelhead  at  the  map strapped to the dash. "Uh, what's this road?"
	"Ah. . . last sign was US29 to Charlottesville."
	"Uh-huh." I squinted at the map. "Uh. . .Yeah,  that's what I've got here. How long ago was that? Half an hour?"
	"'Bout that."
	"Well,  next stop's. . . " I peered at the confusion of  lines, "Lynchburg. . . I  think.  That's not too far now.  Might  catch  up there."
	"Shit. Better hope we do," Tenny  growled.  "Can't  you imagine  it?  Trundling into camp two hours after the  others.  A truckload  of live ammo rolling around  the  countryside unescorted,  SOP out the window. . . Shit,  Jefferson'd have a field day."  He  slapped the wheel in disgust,  then  reached  over  to fiddle  with the radio as it faded out again.  "What  the  fuck's wrong with this thing?"
	"You put fresh batteries in it?  Try another station.  If the coil hadn't died on us back there there. . . "
	"Oh,  yeah.  Whose  fault was that?  You're  the  mechanical whizkid.  You were supposed to overhaul it in the  pool.  'Sure,' you  said, 'get  right on it' you said." He clamped  down  on  the cigar  again;  the tip glowed furiously as he puffed away on  the reeking thing. "And get your feet down."
	"I did the coil," I snorted, dropped my feet and made a show of  dusting off the scratched metal.  "It'd take me years to  fix everything on this heap."
	"Heap?"  He actually sounded outraged.  "Don't  criticise  a classic piece of machinery.  "He patted the worn  steering  wheel affectionately. "She don't like that kind of abuse, do ya girl?"
	"Talking to a truck. . . "I shook my head  despairingly.  "Have you  ever thought about professional help?  Or at least  a  long, long vacation?"
	He laughed and took his right hand off the wheel to flick me the finger. "You're going to eat them words," he grinned. "It's a good truck. I like the way it handles."
	I stuck my feet up on the dash again, unintimidated. "You're only  saying  that cause you keep drawing  the  short  straw.  It handles like a four ton lump of shit.  I mean,  hell,  even  SLEP didn't want anything to do with it."
	"Really?" he asked lightly and the truck lurched over to the right.
	I  glanced over at him,  "You trying to prove. . . OHSHIT!!"  I yelled  and  grabbed for the dash as a car's lights  glared  from around a corner, the driver hit his horn and Tenny held it to the last second. Tires screamed as the truck lurched back to the left side  of the road and a seconds later the vehicle itself  flashed past us.
	"Jesus Christ!"
	"Might  have been," Tenny said with a glance in the  mirror. "I didn't see."
	I shook my head.Join the Army; See interesting places; Meet interesting people. It's a man's life. . . And then there's the Quartermasters Corps. It's a living. It pays more than regular army, and I was scraping for every cent I could. These days college really costs. 
	One of the rules engraved in the rank and files' unofficial handbook  is 'never volunteer'.  Okay.  That's no problem. You don't have to volunteer: they do it for you. You can wake up one morning and find you've pulled a duty  riding shotgun on a fifty year old truck on a run from Fort Delvoir  out of  DC  down to Fort Jackson with a couple of  tons  of  outdated military hardware on the bed.
	And then to cap it all was the driver. . . 
	Tenny  Dalton:  PFC,  old friend.  Oh,  he could  drive  all right.  In fact the way he handled a truck was downright uncanny, as  were some of the other things he did.  Everything he  did  he accomplished  well  and with a slight  air  of  indifference,  as though  he  really wasn't trying.  This applied  whether  he  was overhauling an engine or coming on to one of the noble Ladies  in a dive in Jacksonville.  Still,  they weren't as annoying as  his insistence on smoking: cigars of all things.
	I  coughed  and  tried to fan a  streamer  of  smoke  aside. Useless  to ask him to chuck it;  he'd sooner amputate his  right hand.  I don't know where the hell he got them from,  but he only smoked Havanahs.
	I just wound the window down a bit further and let cold air whip  around  my  face.   When  the  local  FM  station  vanished completely into the sea of static, Tenny spent only a few seconds fiddling with the dial, then snapped it off.
	The engine growled and the transmission grated, then settled down  again as the truck started up a grade.  The shadows of  the trees  along  the  roadside  blurred past  in  the  darkness  and occasionally the bluish-white smear of the cloud-covered moon was visible through the black crests of trees and mounatins.
	With nothing to see or say,  I yawned,  then settled back to doze.  Well,  I  meant  to  doze.  Not my  fault  I  dropped  off completely.
	A   slap   on   my   shoulder   snapped   me   out   of   my slumber. "Davies. HEY! Davies!"
	I yawned, shook my head and roled my shoulders. Damn kink in my neck .  "Huh?  Wassup?" There was  no  sign  of civilisation  outside.  Just trees,  darkness,  trees,  and  more darkness. "Where are we?"
	"Somewhere near Roanoke." He was leaning forward,  trying to watch the sky.
	"Oh. .	. WHAT?" I grabbed for the map.  "Damnation!  You decide to  take  the  scenic route did you?" How the  hell  did  I  sleep through that? "Why didn't you wake me?"
	That  wasn't  a rhetorical question,  but  he  still  didn't answer.  "Hey!  The power was out when we went through Lynchburg. Lights and everything.  I took the wrong turnoff. . . Look,  there's something  weird going on.  Check the sky and tell me if you  see anything."
	"Huh? The martians coming?"
	"Goddammit! Will you look!"
	What the hell was he on about? I shrugged and wound down the window. "Oh, wow man!"
	"You see it?" he urged,  just about smearing his face across the dusty windshield in his efforts to see upwards.
	"There's  nothing  there," I told  him.  "You  were  perhaps expecting  the  Hindenburg?   You  should  check  those   cigars: anything  besides tobacco in there?" I grinned and looked  up  in time  to  see a bolt of white-blue lighting arc across  the  sky. Less  than a second later the horizon ahead flashed with a  white glare that died just as fast.
	"Holy shit!"
	"You see that?" Tenny yelled, his voice too loud in the cab. "You see it?!"
	"Yeah. Weirdest  lightning  I  ever saw. . . There's another!"
	"And another!"
	The bolts had all originated at different places in the sky, but  they  all seemed to finish at the same spot,  out  of  sight down  the  road.  The sky just over the hill was pulsing  like  a gigantic strobelight. I  stared as more pulses of blue-white light snapped  across the night sky. The clouds had cleared, the stars bright.
	"No clouds," I muttered.
	Tenny  glanced at me,  then fixed his attention on the  road again.  His fingers flexed on the wheel.  "Yeah, I noticed. . . What the fuck is it?"
	"Ball lightning?"
	"Say what?"
	"Fireballs.  A  kind of lightning. . . maybe." I leaned out  of the side window, peering ahead. "I can't see anything, I. . . SHIT!" I cursed and ducked as the air above my head was ionized.
	That  time  the bolt came from behind  us,'bout  ten  meters above the road and going straight ahead,  it disappeared into the darkness  ahead.  A couple of seconds later,  the sharp crack  of its passage hit.
	Tenny hadn't even noticed the near miss,  he was staring  at something else.
	SOMETHING was forming in the air ahead. . . no,  all around us. No real shape to it,  a whirlpool of the deepest blue hanging  in the  air,  like one of those laser light shows.  Jagged bolts  of cyan  and electric blue lighting materialized out of thin air and shot  into  the  vortice,  highlighting it  and  the  surrounding landscape in strobing flashes of surreal color.
	We were heading right for the hub of the thing.
	The hood of the truck blazed with dazzling corona discharges  and  St.  Elmo's fire coruscated around the headlamps  and  other metal fixtures.  The radio blared to life with a scream of static as electrical sparks flared on the antenna.
	"STOP!!"  I screamed.  There was a continuous almost  sub-sonic rumble from the mega-high voltage plasma sculpture building in front of us.
	He snarled something back.  Bitten in half, the glowing stub of the cigar dropped into the foot well.  He had already  floored the brake and clutch.  Nothing.  He jammed the transmission  into reverse:  A  spectacular  shower of sparks gouted from  the  back wheels and tortured metal under the truck screamed,  but we  kept going.
	I grabbed for the dash and yelped as fat blue sparks  kicked me back.
	Whatever it was, we hit it at seventy five. . .
	And kept going, right through it.
	Hit something with an impact that almost broke my neck, the front of the truck leaving the ground,  superstructure  protesting while the engine noise went off into an earsplitting whine. There was a retort that could only be an axle breaking,  then the headlights illuminated flashing glimpses of  grass,  stones,  and trees.
	Pounding  and crashing as the crates in the  back  broke loose.  I was thrown against Tenny,  then against the door as the truck fishtailed,  threatening to roll,  then the door broke open and everything was still for long seconds then a giant backhanded me  and everything spun,  rolling and bouncing against bushes and  rocks. Stunned,  I didn't have time to do anything but lie there gasping for  air as the back of the truck slewed past,  just  missing  my head.
	It flipped,  again and again,  rolling and skidding along on its side,  sparks flying, canvass flapping and cargo crates tumbling end over end,  metal screaming, then something caught and it became a  fireball slamming into rocks where it stuck,  burning  with  a vengeance.
	"Tenny?"
	The  explosion ripped the night apart as cargo  cooked  off, more  fireballs  bursting  to  life.   There  was  a  sound  like machinegun  fire.  Thousands  of tiny trails of smoke  arced  and corkscrewed  high into the air and fell back to earth as  smoking and  glowing  debris  was hurled away from the  mass  of  flames. Tracers whined overhead like mad skyrockets.
	"TENNY!"
	I lurched to my feet, then promptly keeled over again.

*****

	Warmth on my face woke me.
	I  opened  my eyes,  then closed  them  nearly  immediately, groaning  at the morning sun dazzling me.  I rolled over onto  my hands  and knees.  The movement startled a family of deer on  the edge of the forest.  With graceful precision they melted into the trees. I stared after them, then remembered.
	The road. . . the lightning. . . the crash. . . Tenny.
	It hadn't been a nightmare.  Smoke was still curling up from the  wreckage  of the truck.  Blackened and  twisted  debris  was scattered far and wide over across the gentle slope, like driftwood on a beach.
	The  shattered skeleton was still ticking and pinging  as  I picked  my way around warped pieces of metal,  olive crates  with blistered paint and contents data stencilled on the sides,  small craters  gouged in the earth by ordinance cooking  off.  Gobs  of melted  lead  and objects that were just identifiable  as  fragments of shell-casings  littered  the ground.  Actually it was  surprising  that there was this much left of the vehicle.  If so much of the cargo hadn't  been  thrown clear as the bed broke  up,  the  truck  would probably have been reduced to pieces too small to find.
	Now  there was just a framework,  the cab scored black  with carbon,  crumpled like an accordion and tipped to one  side.  The door on the drivers side was still closed,  jammed into place and facing the sky.  Where the windshield had been was a hole  framed by shards of glass:  a mouth with jagged black teeth grinning  at me.
	Behind it. . . Tenny hadn't gotten out.
	I  turned away and  vomited, hard  and  violently;  heaving until I gagged on  bile,  felt  it running from my nose.Help.  Where was help? Surely someone had seen the fire! The road. . . there were cars, trucks. . . I coughed on smoke and puke then ran for the road.
	A  few paces into the forest I stumbled to a  halt,  leaning against  the  slender bole of a pine.  The road!  Where  was  the fuck was the freeway?!
	A  road isn't something that wanders off by  itself.  People don't steal them.  Still,  it wasn't there. For fruitless hours I searched for it;  wandering around in circles, climbing hills and trees.  All around me,  as far as I could see to the east: trees, trees, and trees, finally fading into the horizon. Westwards were The Smokies, seemingly unchanged in the brilliant afternoon sun.
	There was no, repeat no, road.
	Numb, not understanding I returned to the clearing to wait.Something else I noticed.  The scars the truck had torn into the  grass:  They  ran about forty meters from the  wreck  before stopping.
	In  the  middle  of a gently  sloping  grade,  covered  with summer-gold grass, the tracks just. . . stopped.

******

	The  night was chill.  I curled up close to the small  fire, lying there with my eyes open, watching the flames. Strange to be almost killed by fire, to have friend die by flame, then use fire to keep me alive. I shuddered, then closed my eyes and tried not to dream.
	Something that night woke me.
	There  was movement on the periphery of the light cast  from the dying campfire.  Shadows,  like circling sharks orbiting just beyond the terminator.  Many eyes glowed dull red,  feet  brushed against grass and pine needles. A low rumbling hung in the air.
	I rolled to my feet, reaching for a knife that wasn't there. Out of the darkness,  like a ghost from the shadows,  a grey wolf materialized, head low and growling.
	"Uh,  sit boy," I said.
	It snarled. I yelled as it lunged toward me, teeth  bared.  It hit me low,  tumbling me  backwards.  I  caught handfuls of fur and kicked, sent the animal flying over my  head.  Sparks exploded  into the night and a terrified howling cut the  air  as the wolf landed in the fire.  Coat blazing,  it scrambled to  its feet  and fled.  I could see it running across the field  like  a flare, its fur burning brighter and streaming sparks.
	There were still more of them out there.  I took up a  hefty branch, only just smouldering, and fanned it in the air until the glowing end burst into flame.  Another wolf lunged towards me and I jammed the brand into its mouth. It yelped and turned tail and ran as fire lapped from its mouth, catching on its facial fur. Waving  the  burning  branch,   I  yelled  and  charged  the remaining wolves.  They retreated before me,  but stopped when  I stopped.
	I  turned in time to jab another attacking creature  in  the eye.  It  leapt backwards and rolled on the  ground,  yelping  in agony,  then bolted blindly for the trees. Now they'd had enough. The pack melted away into the night, in search of easier prey.
	I stood there panting hard.  Wolves?! In Virginia! Attacking a human! This was beyond bizarre.
	For the rest of the night I didn't sleep. Instead sitting by the fire,  snapping awake with my heart pounding whenever I began nodding off.

*******

	I  used  the  piece of spring steel to  prise  the  lid  off another  case  from  which  the  stencilled  lettering  had  been obliterated  by heat.  The top came off with a screech of  nails, revealing neatly stacked rows of olive green 81mm mortar  shells. Thank god they still had their handling caps on. If they'd cooked off in the crash, I wouldn't be writing this. In  another case I found the fuzes for  the  shells.  Impact fuzes. Another box yielded grenades. Another a trio of M-60 GPMGs, one  with its bipod twisted and carry handle snapped  off.  Three 81mm mortar tubes survived intact, along with five of the Stokes-Brandt bases. Hell, those thing were practically indestructible.
	Case  after  case  I  went  through.  We'd  been  hauling  a miscellaneous   shipment,   surplus   and   outdated   equipment, everything  from ammunition and weapons to socks to the old  cans of  C-rations.   While  some  stuff'd  been  turned  to  charcoal briquettes,  a  surprising amount had survived  intact.  I  sorted through the mess of crates and boxes, gathered together some bits and  pieces to keep me alive and kicking if I had to walk out  of here:  food concentrates,  canteen,  pack, knife, and a few other odds and ends.
	However the object I had really been seeking I finally found lying  under  a bush:  a case with the  legend  M-16A1   GI867503 PROPERTY  OF US ARMY stencilled in black on olive green.  I  tore the  box  open and hefted one of the  black  weapons.  Inspection revealed no firing pins in the rifle.  I had to crack open a case of spares for those. And for the ammunition. . . 
	I knew for a fact that we'd had twenty ammo cases with one thousand  twenty  four rounds each of the  old  5.56  ammunition, about five of the standard IMR NATO 5.56 rounds,  another  twenty of 7.62mm,  and fifteen 12.7mm listed on the inventory.  I  found twelve  metal cases of the smaller caliber rifle  ammunition  and four  catering to the heavier 7.62 GPMG rounds.  Although I  also found five containers of 12.7mm ammo,  they were useless. Even if I  did have a weapon of that caliber,  I wouldn't be carrying  it around with me.  However it might have been useful in case I came up against - say  - a hostile tank.
	Not that likely in Virginia.
	I  overloaded on ammo: three hundred and sixty rounds  of  Armalite  ammo, enough  to  fill twelve thirty round magazines.  I  scrounged six clips and filled those, the excess rounds I loaded into canvas belt pouches.
	Obsolete hardware. Surplus. Scorched and dented, but more than enough had come through to ensure that if those crazy canines came back I didn't have to  worry about being turned into dog food.
	So, from the remains of the truck I came away with  an  M-16  with an Armalon optical sight and three hundred and sixty rounds of 5.56mm ammunition.  A silver-anodized survival  blanket  sealed  in its  packet,  the  small  anglehead flashlight that'd also survived intact,  one canteen, a couple of  C-Rations  packs,  a pizo-electric  cigarette  lighter (almost full),  a  digital Casio watch,  a  small  notebook  and ballpoint  pen.  The  small medical  kit  contained  antiseptics, antibiotics,  a vial and styrettes of morphine,  old fashioned gauze bandages, surgical suture and needles, three syringes(Disposable).
	The  small  tool  kit for the M-16 yielded a  set  of  allen wrenches,  a couple of small screwdrivers, some three-in-one oil, and some spare screws, nuts, and firing pins. My sheath knife had the standard Bowie blade with a hollow pommel concealing a  spool of approximately ten meters of single-strand nylon fishing  line, five hooks,  and five needles and thread.  A gimbaled compass was built into the pommel.
	My  pack was a canvass job;  singed, acceptably waterproof and  very tough.  My helmet was my own,  one of the new kevlar  coalscuttle jobs.  I'd  found it near the ruined cab:  slightly scorched, but otherwise fine.
	For clothing I had what I was wearing on my back as well  as a  lifetimes  supply of oversized shirts and socks.  Didn't bother  me  too much.  It  wouldn't  take  me that long to find a  house  or  gas station;  somewhere  I  could use a phone or stop a  car.  I'd survived basic training so I could live off the land if need  be. This wouldn't be too much different.
	That out of the way I took another two hours to collect  the dangerous hardware together and hide it a short distance away  in the  trees.  The branches I cut to cover the pile would  die  and turn brown eventually,  a dead giveaway,  but it would keep until someone came for it.  Leaving it lying around for some redneck or hillbilly to stumble across wasn't a fantastic idea.
	Then there was time for a parting look  at  the blackened  mass  of  twisted metal  that  was  Tenny's  impromptu coffin. That one look into the cab had been one look too many. It was  hard  to believe that what I had seen had once been  a  good friend. I swallowed hard.
	"I'll  be  back,"  I choked.  "Promise.  Get  you  a  decent burial."
	A  final  informal  salute,  then I slung my  pack  over  my shoulder, plonked the helmet on my head, and set off eastwards. I looked back several times, until the wreck was hidden by trees.
	As  the  day went on I grew more and  more  disquieted. There  was no way that I could have walked that long without seeing SOME sign of man.
	But I had.
	It was creepy.
	I  didn't  sleep  well that night.  Several  times  I  awoke abruptly,  heart beating a tattoo on my breastbone as I  strained to hear something that was no longer there. Something seemed very wrong,  but I couldn't place it. I laid back and tried to pinpoint it until I slept again.
	Next  day  I started east again.  Damnation!  I was  in  the middle of some of the most populated land in the U. S. : there was no  way that I could walk for any distance without coming  across some    sign    of  civilization:    a house, a road, a gas station, even a plane. . . anything.  At  this rate my next stop would be the Atlantic ocean.
	I saw more animals:  raccoons and red squirrels chittered  at me,  deer  that  placidly watched as I passed  by.  I  heard  the deep belling of a moose or elk. This far south?! Nothing was right. Was I in the middle of a wildlife park? How?
	Later that day I did come across a road running north-south. Well. . . not exactly a road,  more of a track. Maybe a trail used by rangers.  It  did  seem well used,  but the  tracks  were  weird: much too narrow to be car or truck. Perhaps bicycle or trailbike tracks.  I shrugged, then decided which way to go. North or south.
	"Eenie, menie, minie, moe. . . ."
	South I went.

******

	The  twin tracks of packed earth in the grass rose  over  an exposed  and  eroded crest then slowly turned and dipped  into  a broad, shallow  valley.  Lush greenery - huge  trees  of  every description -  cloaked the length and breadth of the valley  floor while fields of wind-blown grasses grew along the gentle slopes :  turning golden from the summer sun that also coaxed heat-shimmers from the ground.
	And the track simply dipped down to follow the  valley,  two faint  ruts through the long grass before it vanished from  sight in the treeline below.
	Sweating in the midday heat and humidity,  my shirt stripped away  and used as padding between the straps of the backpack  and my chafed collarbone,  I shaded my eyes with the blade of my hand and looked around. I was starting to feel desperate. . . and scared! It  was impossible,  utterly impossible that I could have  walked for so long and yet have seen absolutely nobody.  Still there was nothing. Not a building or vehicle anywhere. I sighed,  spat phlegm, hitched the pack up and started down into the valley.
	It was like something out of the fucking Twilight Zone: There had to be somebody somewhere!
	The  steady  tramp,  tramp  of my boots  was  a  continuous, monotonous,  mindless rhythm that went on and on.  Each  footstep raised  a small cloud of dusty ochre Virginia clay,  turning  the olive  drab  of  my fatigues a rusty red.  At  least  nearer  the river  it  was cooler,  the more luxurious  flora  offering  some shade.
	Shadows  began to stretch out again as noon passed  and  the afternoon crawled across the countryside.  High overhead a  hawk circled and hovered before diving upon some unsuspecting rodent. I sighed a deep breath, wiped sweat from my forehead then threw the pack and rifle aside and  sprawled out in the grass on the verge.  For a few seconds  I  considered taking my boots off, then thought better of it: I'd never be able to get them on again.  The water in the canteen was warm - almost hot - but it was wet.  I took a mouthful,  swilled it around,then spat out a mixture of water and the grit that I'd accumulated.  I raised the canteen again and this time took a deep draught. And  froze with the bottle against my lips,  water  spilling down my chin. The faint sound of metal grating on metal.
	I lowered the canteen and listened hard.Wind rustled leaves and birdsong was bantered back and forth through the trees.
	Then it came again;  slowly growing louder,  more  distinct, closer.  A  faint creaking and the unmistakable rumble of  wheels being tested to destruction on the pathetic excuse for a road. It was coming from behind me; back the way I had come.
	"Alright!" I whooped, then my grin faded: there was no engine sound.
	No matter. I fumbled the camp back on the canteen and and grabbed my equipment. Tipping my helmet back on my head I stood to wait for them. The day no longer seeming so  stifling,  a  cooling breeze seemed to have  sprung  up  from somewhere. There  were  a few questions I wanted to  ask  whoever  this was.  One that came to mind was:  where the hell was I? a private estate of some kind?
	Abruptly they rounded the corner, shafts of sunlight shining through  the  canopy above illuminating patches of  dust  as  the breeze wafted it away from wagon wheels and the llamas' hooves.
	Llamas?!
	I stumbled to a halt and just stared stupidly as they clattered to an abrupt standstill,  bleating and  tossing their heads. I stared at them, then at the riders.
	Is this a joke?! 
	The llamas skittered impatiently and moved forward and I saw it was for real.
	I bolted.
	Branches and leaves tore at my face and arms and roots tried to steal my feet from under me as I stumbled and careened blindly through the foliage with yowling cries sounding behind  me.  Then there was an embankment rising before me: A near-vertical face of dark, crumbling earth, carpeted with multi-fronded ferns and held together  by  a labyrinth of tree roots.  I hardly  slowed  as  I clawed  my way to the top,  to fall flat on my face and  scramble around to see if they'd followed.
	The road was just visible through the  boughs,  trunks,  and foliage; less than thirty meters away. I wiped sweat from my eyes, liberally smearing myself with dirt at the same time, and saw the riders  staring back,  gesticulating wildly  amongst  themselves, pointing towards me.
	"Oh Christohchristohchrist. . . " I was babbling to myself as I leaned back against a moss-covered boulder,  out of sight for the moment.  When I looked again,  they were still there. One of them had dismounted and come a few paces into the trees. I grabbed for the  rifle and snapped the bolt back,  safety off,  but  held  my fire.
	Eyes the green of molten emerald held my disbelieving  stare and  I  shivered at the chill that ran up and down  my  spine  on spider's feet. For  an  eternity the tableau held;  that thing  staring  at me, our eyes locked. It can't be. . . 
	And  I  jumped backwards when the creature  turned  and barked at the others then it caught its llama's reigns and  swung back  into  the saddle,  waving the others  on  past.  They  left quickly,  the single wagon gathering speed and rumbling off after them.
	For a few moments the single remaining creature on its llama did  nothing but watch me,  then the furred muzzle  wrinkled  and sharp  teeth grinned at me.  My finger tightened on the  trigger, but  the  rider had reigned its llama about and was  hurrying  to catch the others.
	The sounds of their passage faded into the distance.
	Several  minutes later,  my heart pounding,  I climbed  back down  to  the  road.  There wasn't a sound,  not a  sign  of  the creatures. I stepped into one of the dusty ruts with the  rifle at the ready.
	But  there were the hoof marks,  llama droppings,  and  thin hard  lines like bike tracks gouged into the clay  by  iron-bound wheels.
	Perhaps I should have gone the other way.  Perhaps it  would have  been for the better,  but hindsight tells me that my fate would almost certainly have been a grisly  death. . . or  worse.  I have  spent  my time in a cage and do not relish the  thought  of living my life out in one.
	"WHAT'S HAPPENING TO ME?!"
	My scream to the heavens echoed through the trees and hills, scaring birds,  but eliciting no other answer. What WAS going on? I  couldn't  explain it and my brain was threatening to  curl  up and  play  peek-a-boo  from some remote corner  of  my  cranium. I wanted to head for the hills, anywhere.
	But then you'll never know what happened.
	I don't WANT to know!
	Yes, you do. . . 
	Chalk one up for human curiosity. I followed them.

******

	The river - a broad,  shallow stream actually - followed its meandering path through the valley an oversized ice cube had gouged millennia ago as it inched its way down  from  the polar icecaps,  then retreated again.  Along its banks, the trees cast  their branches out over the water to form a leafy  corridor that  didn't  quite meet in  the  middle.  Pines: loblolly  pines, longleaf  pines,  slash  pines,  overcup oaks. . .  My  knowledge  of botany gave out on me.
	A  cormorant  - surprised while drying its wings -  took  to the air as I approached.  It dropped off its perch,  skimmed  the water  and climbed away from the stream that  ontinued  burbling along its way.
	The  road itself twisted and contorted as much as the  river as  it dodged through and around clusters of trees and  boulders: indigenous  and  erratics.  At  times  it  ran  along  the  river bank,  while at others it had climbed halfway back up the side of the valley:  always following the easiest route.  I followed  the track,  always keeping an eye peeled on forest around  me.
	The  afternoon  was beginning  to cool off, the shadows growing  longer and deeper  when I heard the sounds coming from down the road: ringing of  metal on metal through  the  trees.  Animal cries and howls wailed  through  the valley.
	What the hell?!
	My  heart started to pound as I took my rifle into my  hands and cocked it.  Keeping to the side of the track I moved forward, carefully,  like I was walking on glass.  Every damn broken twig sounded like a gunshot,  but with the noise from ahead,  there was no way anything could have heard me.
	Then I rounded a tree and saw them,
	There was a ford here where the track crossed the river. The wagon sat in the middle,  tipped crazily to one side, one of the front  wheels  almost completely sunken  beneath  the  waterline. The driver was a bundle of cloth and limbs lying face down in the water,  the current gently  butting the  corpse against a rock and wafting a trail of red blood  away downstream.
	More corpses lay in the shallow current, some still kicking their life away, turning the water to a pinkish froth.
	There were others still fighting.
	They had to be soldiers of a sort,  those creatures from the caravan.  Wearing  stained and battered leather armour, trimmed with blue and silver designs that  despite  the dirt were still recognisable as a uniform of  a kind.  They  waded  knee-deep in the water fighting wildly against others garbed in a hodge-podge assortment of armour.
	And they were losing.
	Hampered  by  the water and the  treacherous  footing,  they didn't stand a chance against their opposition safely  entrenched along the banks. Swords whirled and gleamed and grew red, another yowling  scream rang out and another of the  soldiers  fell.  Now only four of them left against at least ten assailants.
	A  couple of the soldiers may have made it out  as  together they overcame an opponent on the riverbank,  then they both twisted and went over backwards, falling with stubby feathered shafts embedded  in  their necks and chests.
	I  ducked  as  more bandits stalked into  view  between  the trees  on my side of the river.  Just twenty meters  away,  their backs  to  me as they recocked their  crossbows.  Why  were  they bothering  to  get  their feet wet  assaulting  the  wagon?  They could've just shot them all from a distance.
	I sank a little lower behind the tree.
	The last soldier was crouched low and slowly turning to face its  opponents  as they circled,  slowly closing  in.  Backed up against the wagon there  was nowhere for it to run,  it had no chance,  but it still  clutched its sword.
	I  began  to  move out,  leaving the cover of  the  tree  to retreat back down the track.  The last thing I wanted here was to be involved in a firefight with. . . with whatever they were.  I was out of my league.  I didn't know what kind of shit I was in,  but whatever it was, I was in it over my head.
	Two  loud cries came at the same time:  one a truncated yowl as  that last soldier fell, and the other from the archer who spotted me.
	"Ohshit!"
	I  ducked  automatically and a hastily aimed  quarrel  fired from  the  hip bisected the space I had occupied a  split  second earlier. Shit! I ducked behind a pine trunk and there was a sharp Thwok! as a stubby bolt sprouted from the wood near my head.
	Red  feathers,  I  thought as I stared  idiotically  at  the arrow,  spun  around wideeyed to see bows being aimed again  and started running as another blur hissed past my ear,  then a hollow sound and someone hit  my  pack  with a baseball bat  and  I  stumbled,  then  dove for cover,  headlong into the bracken and undergrowth.  Ferns and bushes  crackled around me as I scrambled on all fours while  more quarrels  rattled into the thicket over and around me.  A  fallen log offered some solid protection and I took it,  diving over  it and hugging the ground.
	There were no more quarrels. Reloading?
	Gasping  air as quietly as possible,  I struggled out of  my pack,  wincing as leaves and branches rustled.  Red feathers were protruding  a  few centimeters from the  canvass.  If  it  hadn't hit something solid, I doubted my backbone would have stopped it.  Bastards. Where were they? What were they doing? I listened, hearing  wind  in  the treetops,  water  burbling,  and  a  faint growling  and the crackling of bracken.
	Again, shit!
	I risked a peek,  then hugged the dirt again,  mud and slimy leaves rubbing against me.
	They were coming after me!
	Not many options. . . 
	I charged the rifle, checking for a flash of bronze in the breach to make sure a round was seated then gripped  the rifle,  flexing my fingers against chill metal and  feeling  the checkered  grips grow slippery with sweat.  Three of  them,  with swords,  taking it slow.  The archers didn't have a good angle on me.  Just three of them,  a few meters apart. I took a breath, clicked the safety  off  and swung the M-16 up  and  over,  not  aiming, squeezing the trigger,  the rifle kicking like a jackhammer in my hands,  plants  jigging wildly in the muzzle blast.  Not three  - four  of them,  one down,  the others staring,  now  starting  to react,  screaming, skidding and spinning to the dirt as the bursts of  slugs buzzsawed  into them.  First rounds were low  and  wild,  kicking their  feet out from under them.  I compensated and  hit  torsos, heads,  splintering  bone and shredding  flesh.  They  fell,  two howling and threshing.
	Over  the  log,  dodging and firing at  the  others.  They'd frozen,  some standing in the middle of the stream, on the wagon, on the far bank, staring wildly. The archers tried to fire, their shots going wide as I hit the deck again and sprayed them with  a wild  burst.  The  first one's head split open like  an  overripe melon  and the corpse crumpled like a deflating  balloon;  Small, red roses sprouted on the others' torsos and they died slower. NOW the others were turning, running.
	I was on my feet again,  staying low as I ran and dodged for the cover of rocks and trees by the stream.  One of the creatures I'd first hit was rolling and thrashing in the bracken. I shot it in the head on the way past and it bucked once then was still.  A bolt from a crossbow struck glittering sparks from a rock near my head.
	"Fuck you!" I screamed, firing back, emptying my weapon into the fleeing figures: mowing several down like scythed wheat. When the bolt clicked on an empty chamber I automatically buttoned out the  magazine,  plucked a fresh one from my belt,  and rammed  it into  the well.  I emptied half the magazine at  shadows  running into  the  trees,  kicking dust and wood chips  from  the  trees, sending rounds ricocheting.  I don't think I actually hit any  of the bastards. They were fast!
	Then they were gone.
	Ten seconds perhaps.
	Heart  still pounding I looked around,  clutching the  rifle like it was the only solid thing in the world.
	In  the  trees,  a couple of birds ventured  hesitant  calls while the stream continued enthusiastically on its way. There was the  slow drip drip as the blood from a corpse on the river  bank ran down a rock,  beaded on the edge as if gathering its  courage  before dropping into the swirling water.  The wagon rocked as the beasts pulling it - bison,  I noticed with dull surprise - tugged at their harnesses. The corpses weren't neat, with chunks of meat the size of baseballs ripped out of them. Blood. . . it was red. Red and glistening like wet paint. A cloying, fecund smell hung heavy in the air: the flatulence of death.
	A coughing, moaning sound from the water.
	One  of  the creatures - one of the ones in  blue  armour  - struggled  weakly on all fours half in,  half out of  the  water, blood  from  a gaping slash in its side swirling  away  with  the current.  It was dragging itself out of the stream by its  hands, kneeling coughing and retching in the mud of the ford.
	When my shadow fell across it, it stiffened, raised its head to see my boots,  then shuddered and collapsed on its side with a grunt: eyes closed, one outstretched hand curled half-shut, chest heaving while blood mingled with the mud.
	I  was  standing above a creature that could  never  be,  my rifle levelled at it and staring in mute shock while my credulity took a beating.
	Putting it bluntly, it was a cat.

******

	Well,  my  transport  problem  - probably the  least  of  my worries - was solved. . . sort of.
	The  hole  the  wagon wheel had been  trapped  in  had  been deliberately  dug, deep enough that the wagon couldn't be pulled out.  The axle was a solid  iron bar that I sincerely hoped was tough enough to take that kind  of treatment.  To  get the damn thing out I had to drench myself  in water that felt like it was runoff from a glacier,  digging  away one side of the hole with my bare hands until the bison were able to pull the wagon out.
	They were huge, stupid, reeking beasts, these bison. Not the plains variety every American should be familiar with, but rather Wood Bison:  a much rarer breed.  So rare in fact,  they were  an endangered species. Not recommended as beasts of burden.
	Endangered or not,  and despite their problems with personal hygiene, they seemed docile and efficient: hauling the wagon from the  water  on  the  southern side  of  the  stream  and  waiting with moronic patience, chewing and farting.
	Hmmm. . . and  people wonder why I hate horses. I shook my head and tried to wring the last of the water from my shirt, then hesitated and looked back across the stream at where a furry body was still sprawled in the mud; one among many.
	Water splashed around my ankles, but there wasn't a sign of life as I cautiously approached. Motionless, eyes closed, twisted crippled-looking hand clenched in the mud. The wound was a sodden mess, the blood as thick as the mud it was sprawled in. Liquid bubbled in a nostril.
	Incredible, it was still breathing. I poked it with my toe.
	The thing didn't budge.
	I  bent down and touched it cautiously.  It didn't  respond. The  fur  was  soggy wet,  the flesh beneath  nearly  hot  to  my fingers. Kill it? Uh-uh. That didn't feel right. It couldn't hurt me. So, do I just leave it lying here?
	"Damned if I do, damned if I don't," I sighed.
	Now, how the hell do I do this?
	Gingerly, awkwardly, I scooped the sodden creature up.
	The  felinoid  was  a limp weight  in  my  arms,  its  limbs completely lax and 
bumping against my own legs as I  lifted.  Its head  lolled and saliva drooled from a corner of the  mouth with its  thin,  black lips.  Water washed around my legs again  as  I crossed the stream; carefully, unsteady with my burden. The thing was surprisingly heavy; I had to struggle to lift it into the back of the cart. This creature was much shorter than my five foot eleven - probably an even foot shorter,  maybe more - but it was  solid; not  fat either.  There was  already a blue-armoured corpse in the wagon that I hauled out and dumped on the ground to make room for the still-living creature.
	The  upper  half  of  the  creature  was  almost  completely encrusted in drying mud while the lower was sopping wet where  it'd  been  lying  in the water.  Covering its upper  legs  was  a sodden kilt made from wide strips of tooled leather, weighted at the lower ends with brass disks.  Blood continued to ooze from a  slash high in its left side,  seeping through the  reinforcing strips of the once-ornate leather cuirass it was wearing.
	First,  get that armour off. That had me scratching my head: there were no zippers,  buckles,  or buttons;  just leather  ties securing it up the left side and on the shoulders.  The wet leather had swollen; resisted all attempts to untie them.  Finally I settled  for cutting  them  and peeling both the cuirass and kilt off  in  one piece.
	Judging by the way the plumbing was arranged,  it was a she. There  were no breasts to speak of,  just twin columns  of  three black teats buried in the fur.
	The sword had broken through the tough-looking skin and  cut into  the  side  at an angle before being  deflected  by  a  rib, ripping away one of those teats as it went.  There was a non-too-modest  flap  of flesh dangling loose while a lot  of  blood  had pumped out,  covering  and matting the fur.  Still more had  been lost to the earth and the river.
	What  was lying in front of me was way beyond anything I'd ever  covered  in  my basic  medical  training.  Perhaps  nothing serious  had  been hit;  then again,  perhaps  it  had.  How was it put together? Was  its metabolism anything like mine?  What medicines could I  use?  How the hell was I suposed to know? Stuff like simple aspirin can kill a cat.
	Was it worth it? I bit my lip, then swore and reached for my pack.
	The quarrel was still stuck into it, stopped by a pack of C-rations. I turned the dented tin over in my hands, not quite believing it.  Saved by a freeze-dried meal. I knew the stuff was tough,  but using it instead of a flak vest..?
	Of course the med kit had wound up at the bottom.  I snapped it open,  and selected a small plastic bottle of antiseptic and a roll of gauze. Nothing to lose.I used my knife,  methodically cutting away the fur and dirt around the wound,  washing away filth:  clotted blood,  mud,  and grass with water from my canteen. That wouldn't be enough.
	The  creature  stirred and its jaw spasmed as I  prised  the wound  open  with  my fingers and squirted  antiseptic  from  the squeeze bottle into it.  I swabbed it out, then tore open a large sterilised gauze pad, bandaging it tightly in place even as blood started welling again.
	Tossing  aside  the ruined armour,  I stripped  one  of  the cleaner cloaks off a corpse and settled that over the cat,  again finding  I  was hesitant to touch it.  Its breathing  was  rapid, almost panting.
	All the others were as dead as luncheon meat.
	I avoided the messy body with half a face grinning uselessly at  the  clouds when I examined the corpses.  One  of  the  other archers  was  sprawled in the middle of  a  bush,  his/her  chest punctured where the rounds had smashed through.  The shock  would have  killed faster than the wound.  S/he was dressed in  rag-tag cloak, but the armour underneath looked well used and functional. Red and black. It looked like a uniform. The crossbow  lying nearby wasn't that large or powerful, but that was simply due to  the  diminutive stature of the user.  It was well made: laminated wood and metal, with recurved tines of wood and bone and some kind of twisted fibre. Six quarrels were clamped to the stock; each about twenty centimeters long with a wicked triangular iron tip.
	I weighed it in my hands.  Oh,  well.  You never know when something like that might come in handy.  Then another  thought struck me and I frowned at the creature in the back of the wagon. Its armour was in pieces. Would it want clothes?
	What was I thinking? Clothes?!
	I  shook my head, but still managed to scrounge some stuff from a soldier.  It'd  been stabbed  through the throat,  covering the front of  the  cuirass with blood.  Nevertheless,  it was in much better condition  than the stuff I'd cut off.
	The  creature's sword:  a beautifully  crafted  scimitar.  I found  it in the middle of the stream where it'd  dropped  it.  I picked  it up,  shaking and wiping the water and mud off  it  and holding  it  up  so the sun threw dazzling  reflections  off  the slightly curving blade.   Nice piece of metal.  I tried a few practice swings  and nearly took my own leg off. Hastily I stuck it back in the sheath then  tucked it up on the drivers bench,  out of reach  of  furry hands.
	I  looked  back  over the scene.  Like something  out  of  a picture:  the  stream,  lush greenery dappled by light  and  tall trees,  patches  of sky and clouds.  Then there were the  figures tumbled like distorted shop mannequins, blue against green, water running  over  glittering  metal  and  leather,  teeth  bared  in hopeless snarls at the sun. Shaking my head,  I tried to figure the reigns out.  How  DO you drive bison? To start with, there's no clutch. . . 

******

	I made camp several klicks further down the river valley.
	The road split at a junction: one branch continuing eastwards along  the river,  the other climbing out of  the  valley,  going south. I rubbed my tired eyes then decided not to make a decisioin, not until I could learn more about my passenger and what was going on. 
	It wouldn't hurt to hang around a few days;  I doubted  that the bandits would be back,  and there was a terrible feeling that there wouldn't be any search parties out looking for me.
	It took a while to find a suitable campsite, but I finally settled on a small,  grassy clearing.  Close enough  to  the  stream  for convenience  and far enough from the road that any fire  couldn't be seen.     Roughly  triangular  in shape it was,  with a pile  of  huge boulders  - broken and whole - in the  northernmost  apex,  small conifers  persistently   hanging  on in small  patches  of  earth between the rocks. I hitched the bison up to a tree, leaving them contentedly cropping away at the grass. Watching them eat set my own stomach to snarling.
	I didn't have to go too far to find a rabbit that was too curious for its own good. It was the matter of a single round from the  M-16  and dinner was laid on. The rest of the daylight was spent skinning and  gutting and laying a fire, then while waiting for a bed of coals I turned my attention back to the wagon and the  cat lying in the back.
	The   bandages   were  working.   The  wound   had   stopped bleeding,  but the fur covering its chest and side was completely matted and plastered with clotted blood and mud.  Mud covered its broad face and one of the pointed ears was stuck down against the head.  I  splashed water onto a rag torn from a cloak and began  to sponge away the worst of the blood.   
	Still unconscious she flinched away from my touch, her jaw twitched and she voiced a high chittering noise.
	Her eyes flicked open, focused on me, then widened until a rim of white circumnavigated the huge  pupils:  Green,  flecked with  specks  of copper.  A small, strangled noise escaped  her  and  she scrambled backwards into the hay until she was backed up  against the  drivers  bench,  unable to retreat  any  further.  The  face contorted,  wrinkles  marching  up  the muzzle  as  she  bared  a glistening array of needle teeth,  canines,  and a  curled,  pink tongue.   Centimeter-long, ivory-colored  claws  slid  from  her fingertips.
	The  bandages  around  her chest  and  shoulder  flexed  and shifted.
	I  jumped out of the back of the wagon and held my hands  in front of me, trying to look harmless.  If she tried to move any more, that wound was gonna reopen. "Hey," I coaxed. "It's okay, I'm not going to hurt you."
	"Fegar  s'sahrorna  nieck  herasti. . . fe, fe!"   
	Well that's what it sounded like.  Not a high yowling as you'd expect a cat to make. They were modulated, sibilant sounds, fairly deep,  probably due to length of the throat. It was a langauge, no doubting that. I'd bet  her vocal chords were just as sophisticated as mine.
	You,  the reader of this journal will probably already  know what I was looking at,  but I'll still take the time to  describe what I saw.
	We stared at each other,  man to cat,  eye to eye. Her head was mounted on her shoulders, she had two ears and eyes, one nose, one mouth, bilaterally symmetrical,   but  there  the resemblance to a human ended.
	Take the classic  feline  features  and anthropomorphise them;  just  the slightest touch.  Shorten the muzzle a little. Raise the brow and bring more expressive musculature  into  the features. The  result would be something like the visage I was looking at.
	That face came out into a classic cat's muzzle, complete with a broad,  leathery,  valentine-shaped nose and hare-lipped  mouth with thin black lips. Sharp, triangular furtufted ears were half buried  in the mane of fur that grew from the crest of  her  head and continued on down her neck.  One ear was pierced by a  single silver  earring.  Her entire face was covered with the same  fawn coloured  fur that enveloped the rest of  her  body,  highlighted with  lighter  gold  stripes pushing over  between  the  ears  to disperse into that mane.
	The arms ended in a hand with four short fingers and a  thumb. No fingernails.  Instead  those  claws  slid into sheaths in the  tops  of  the stubby fingers.  Except for the black pads on palms and fingertips, her hands were completely covered in fur.
	Her  feet  - especially her feet - were so different from  a human's.  More like a cat's pads.  In fact her feet were all toe, her heel the leg joint above them - digitigrade, not plantigrade. Must have balanced on those clawed toes, walking on toe tips only. That sleek, streamlined face was somewhat marred by the mess of  blood  and clay,  but there was no doubting the  purpose  and intelligence in the being I was staring at. Nor the reality. There was no way that this was some kind of costume; a joke or hallucination.
	"Rsacen esc na fe sfecer?"  she sputtered,  then shouted  to the surrounding silence: "FARES WHER'R RSE FE! SAE EI! "
	If  she was expecting someone to answer - one of her kind  - she was disappointed. The branches of the trees hung heavy in the darkness  and the stillness,  but there was no other  sound.  She turned back to me, the iris dilated to turn the eyes to wide pools of black.
	"Fe," she almost breathed the sound.
	"Sorry,  but  I  don't  speak  the lingo,"  I  said with a shrug and a smile.
	She plastered herself against the end of the wagon  and bared   her  own  teeth  in  a  grin  that  was  definitely   NOT friendly. My bared teeth she perceived as a threat.
I  closed  my  mouth and made  placating  gestures  with  my hands. That only served to get her even more agitated. I couldn't speak to her and she was completely vulnerable.
	"Goddamn it! I'm not going to hurt you!"
	She hissed.
	"Look!  Hands empty!  No weapons.  Savvy?  Shit, look! Here, take this." 
	She  looked  as if she would go catatonic when I drew my knife,  her eyes riveted on  the  watery  steel blade.  Carefully,  slowly,  I laid the knife on the wagonbed and pushed  it  towards her - hilt first - and stepped back  to  once more  raise my hands.  Just as slowly she  leaned  forward,  then snatched the knife,  both hands wrapped around the hilt as if  it were a lifeline.
	"Feel safer?" I asked.
	She was still panting hard, but those eyes had changed: not so much terror, calculating.
	I unclipped the canteen from my belt and sloshed it around a couple of times,  then unscrewed the lid and took a sip out of it before slowly holding it out to her.  She shrank back,  shivering and  with teeth bared.  I continued to hold it out  to  her,  and after  a few seconds,  she screwed up enough courage to take  it, claws clicking on the plastic, she raised it to her nose and sniffed warily, her eyes still on me. She took a careful sip, then tilted it back and gulped greedily,  spilling much of it down her front. Her jaw was just the wrong shape.
	"Hey, watch it. You'll be sick if you drink it like that!"
	At  the sound of my voice she dropped the canteen as  though it had suddenly become red-hot. The knife came up again, wavering wildly. Then white membranes slid from the corners of her  eyes and her hand flopped heavily to her side.
	But her chest was moving steadily,  breath whistling through her  nostrils.  I found a pulse in the hollow of her neck and  it was  strong and regular.  She voiced a low growling moan  when  I moved my hand. Just passed out.
	I stood and stared at her for a while.  Just leave her;  let her wake up and find I hadn't touched her. That'd be the best way to tell her I didn't want to hurt her.  Shrugging,  I set off to put another bit of wood on the fire. It'd been one of those days.

******

It  was an amazingly clear night,  one of those nights  when you can literally see forever.  The galaxy was a stream of  white dust spilled across the heavens. . . 
	And all of the constellations were there. 
	I  must  have sat atop the granite crag for an hour  in  the dark,  just staring at those flickering beacons in the sky.  They hadn't changed at all.  That red dot was Mars. . . That was the sky of Earth in the late 20th century.
	I must be on Earth. . . so where did THEY come from ?     
	Aliens?  Huh,  I doubted it.  If they had the technology  to make  it  from another star to Earth,  why did they  wear  flimsy leather armour,  use antique weapons, and ride 
around on animal powered vehicles?
	Why did I feel so out of place?
	There was something I was missing here.
	The  felinoid  was  still lying in the back  of  the  wagon, asleep in the warm night air.  Nearby, the fire I had started had died  down to a glowing bank of coals,  the skinned carcasses  of the rabbits lying nearby: ready to be spitted and cooked.
	Soon  the smell of roasting rabbit was drifting through  the clearing. I turned the meat on the spit and glanced up to see the felid awake and watching me over the side of the wagon,  her eyes flicking  from me to the fire then back to me again.  She  licked her lips and a string of spittle dripped from her jaws.
	Smiling, I  reached out to tear a haunch off  the  browned carcass and then  -  slowly  and  carefully,  every movement deliberate  -  I got up and walked to the side of the  wagon  and offered the meat at arms length.
	Just as cautiously,  she snagged the proffered morsel with a claw and after sniffing it,  took a small nibble,  looked at  me, then started tearing at the meat with dagger-sharp teeth,  taking big mouthfuls, chewing noisily, then swallowing hard.
	So, she had an appetite. Tough little thing.
	And some appetite too.
	Whilst she was absorbed in satisfying her hunger I sat  down on  the tailgate,  swinging my legs over the side while  watching her. She finished the meat and stared 
back, her eyes catching the firelight  and reflecting it,  the rest of her matted  coat  dull and indistinct in the flickering firelight.  Her claws were still at the ready.
	"Uh. . . hi," I said.
	She flinched.
	"I  guess  I should introduce myself.  I'm Kelly,"  I  said. She just stared. "Kelly," I enunciated with exaggerated gestures toward myself and repeated the name twice, three times.
	She blinked at me.      
	I tried again.
	"Freh ash an shirai se fe," she hissed.
	"That's not your name, is it?"
	"Hers  a saf,  s'shesaf."
	I'm no linguist, but that was no language I'd ever heard before. Gutteral, with hisses, growls merging with sibilants. All right, I thought I could manage that: "'Hers a saf. . . uh. . . shesaf' to you too."
	She  jumped  as  though I'd  suddenly  grown another head.
	"Hers  a saf,  s'shesaf"  she repeated slowly,  watching  me intently. I got the idea. "Hers a saf,  s'shesaf," I echoed her,  completely oblivious of what I was actually saying.
	"Sthre ts'ref n'esur s'shesaf,  surio saf fe," she hissed slowly.  I tried to repeat her, stuttering and stumbling over the sibilants. She repeated herself twice. Finally I managed the sentence with a modicum  of accuracy.
	Her jaw dropped, then closed with a hollow clop.
	I leaned forward, touched my chest and said, "Kelly."
	Her eyes went even wider as she twigged. That was my name! I had a language of my own!  By gum,  what a concept! She stared at me,  opened her mouth,  and gave a croak,  cleared her throat and tried  again,  "She'ae." The consonants of the kay and ells  lost completely, my name turned into what sounded like a steam leak.
	"No, no, no. Kelly," I repeated.
	"K'h. . . K'hy."
	With that mouth, she couldn't get the ells at all. I shrugged then pointed at myself,  repeated my name,  and then pointed at her and shrugged. She got my point and said something that sounded like:
	"Tar?"
	She  moved  her  hand  in a  gesture  that  must  mean'no': a horizontal  slash  in  the  air  with  the  hand  open  and  palm down. "Tahr," she corrected.
	We went on like this until I got it right.  She was  willing to let my name slide,  but when it came to her's,  she wanted  it perfect. Afterwards, we tried a few more of her words. With each new one I learned she stared at me; like she couldn't believe it.
	By now the fire had died down to a few feeble embers; warmer than the moonlight albeit not as bright. I squinted at my watch and decided to call it a night: she needed her sleep.
	With my pack as a pillow, the smooth, metallic creases of the survival blanket over me and the cold ground below, I watched the stars reeling through the familiar sky overhead until I dropped off.

******

	The morning was perfection.
	I  squinted  against  the glare  of  sunlight  and  groaned, finally  managing to unwrap myself from the silver folds  of  the sheet I stood and stretched. My joints popped and crackled, stiff muscles  stretched  and  relaxed  again.   The  felid  was still sleeping, half curled up under her cloak. I stared at it for some time, feeling an uneasiness at the very centre of my being.
	This was the way my distant ancestors would have felt when a sabre-tooth appeared on the skyline. 
	Damnation!  I  clenched  my hand to stop  it  trembling  and abruptly turned away from the blanketed figure. A furred, clawed, twisted foot was poking out from under the cloak, hinting at what lay beneath.
	I got out of there.
	For  all our civilization we are still primitive at heart  I reflected as I crouched by the river.  The water was a cold shock against  my  skin as I dunked my head,  then shook  it  dry.  The droplets flew in all directions, glittering in the morning sun.
	We'd come a long way: we have electrically lit homes, kept warm  in  winter  and cool in  summer.  We  travel  thousands  of kilometers in hours,  move  mountains out of the way of our roads  without really thinking about it.
	That's right, we hardly ever think about it.
	How  many  people are there in the world who  can  say  they actually know how an electric light works? How a radio works? Who can even light a fire without matches? For most people,  all they need to know is how to flip a switch, press a button, turn a dial.  Tasks a moronic chimp can carry out.  If their  transistor radio  breaks  down through a loose wire or  burnt-out  resistor, they chuck it out and get a new one: a disposable civilization.
	We  have reached the moon and sent automated  probes  beyond the farthest corners of our solar system.  There are instruments to explore the macroscopic and microscopic    worlds: Electromagnetic telescopes that can detect a nebula's fart light years away,  microscopes that can give a visual image  of  xenon atoms we've 
manipulated to spell IBM.
	And still there are those who hang crosses and prayer  beads in their shiny new cars.  It's as if they need someone,  like  an imaginary friend that children conjure up:  someone or  something to whom you can attribute the inexplicable.
	Damnation!  I don't consider myself an complete ignoramus. I didn't  have  to let my emotions and instincts  overrule  logical thought.
	But that thing gave me the willies.
	I  cupped  my  hands and drank.  Water  ran  through  my fingers and dribbled back into the river.  Several times I dipped my  hands  into the stream,  then opened them to  let  the  water trickle out.  Finally I sat back against a rock that hadn't had time to warm in the sun,  was still cool from  the  night.  The fingers of my left hand trailing in the stream.
	I looked at myself.
	My  fatigues  were covered with dust and  dark  stains  that could only be dried blood.  Not mine.  Not even human, but just as red. I stripped  off  and  staked my clothes down  in  the  current  then scrubbed at them until my hands were raw.

******

	The felid was awake when I returned.
	In  fact she was out of the wagon,  leaning heavily  on  the tailgate with one hand clutched against the bandages.  She stared at  me  when I appeared and her lips parted slightly in  a  smile that showed the whiteness of her teeth.
	Returning the smile I took a step forward,  then froze when  her hand  darted  into  the back of the wagon and came  back  with  a cocked and loaded crossbow wobbling in her unsteady grip. Her eyes wobbled, seeming to lose their focus, then snapping back again. Her grin broadened. I swallowed hard.  Remind me to take the string with me  next time.
	"Tahr?"
	"K'hy," she snarled - literally  - and gestured sharply with the bow and  I slowly raised my hands,  freezing motionless again when her  ears went back flat against her skull and she barked something at  me. Her  ears  slowly  came up again when she  saw  I  wasn't  trying anything. The end of the crossbow jerked and again she snarled something at me: "R'rtsa!"
	What the hell did that mean? I just stood there.
	She snorted and wagged the  crossbow  at  the ground, "R'rtsa!"
	I took a guess and sat  down.
	Her ears flicked and she stood there staring at me.
	I  stared  back, noticing her shifting on  her  feet,  as though she was about to collapse.  And that crossbow was wobbling dangerously.  I  licked my lips.  "Rtsa,"  I  invited,  gesturing slowly at the ground.
	She  blinked at me,  then her ears twitched. Slowly, her face contorting in what could have been a wince, she settled until she was sitting cross-legged, facing me across the  remains of the fire. Meters away, she glanced down at the bow, then at me again as if she were trying to decide to use it or not. I hadn't hurt her; I'd patched her wounds. Perhaps she just felt the need to take some kind of control.
	With  my  hands still in the air,  I carefully  pointed  one finger at the bow and said, "Fe?. . . Tahr."
	Muscles  in  her  face  ticked and  pulled  and  she sputtered something at me.  The crossbow stayed targeted upon  my guts. 
	"Shit!  Look,  you can't point that thing at me all day!"
	She growled.
	Warily, I lowered my hands.
	She flinched and snarled.
	"Okay," I coaxed. "I'm not going to hurt you. Tahr."
	"K'hy."
	When  I  moved again she gasped,  head going back  and  eyes fixed on me.  I saw her muscles trembling as I carefully - inch at a time - reached out and plucked a single blade of grass, holding it up. "Grass," I said.
	Her eyes flicked down to the small green leaf, then she said, "Frwuch," a deep,  guttural sound coming from the throat.  I repeated it as best  I could, then she picked a blade and said a  short  sentence with  her  word  for grass in it,  then pointed at  me  and  said slightly different phrase. I repeated them:
	[have/hold] I grass.
	[have/hold] you grass.  
	For a few different items - sticks,  pebbles,  dirt - we did this. The words were difficult to pronounce.  The  basic  sentence  structure  was   predicate-subject, reversed  from  english.  That threw me several  times,  but  she corrected me.
	Several minutes later she put the crossbow aside in order to use both hands to get a point across. The weapon lay in the  grass, easily within her reach,  and both of us stolidly ignored it  and  concentrated upon the language lesson.

******

Morning  dew was beading on the blanket and grass around  my head;  tiny crystal beads sparkling in the dawn. I closed my eyes and rolled onto my back.
	Something touched my shoulder.
	I  opened my eyes and looked up into a puma's face,  a  bobcat's face,  eyes like cold jade with a slit of night etched into them. A hand, twisted, furred and clawed, was reaching for my face.
	With  a  lurch  of terror I  tried  to  scramble  backwards, slipped  on the wet grass,  fell on my back with dew soaking  me. The  cat  kneeled above me,  reached for my  throat. . . and  gently touched, feeling the pulse racing there.
	"Scre  ne fe ther ri seth m'resh,"  she  hissed,  fast,  too fast,  impossible  for me to follow.  Her head was cocked to  one side like a cat regarding a bird in a cage. The rising sun was behind her, still  barely  a glow over the horizon turning the  streamers  of clouds above it russet and gold.  Seeing that I was as nervous of her as she was of me gave her that touch of confidence.
	Her  hand  moved  down to touch my  chest  in the vee of my shirt,  touched the sparse gold hair there, then travelled up, stroking my skin.  If anything,  she looked puzzled. The question she asked I couldn't understand, so she continued examining me in silence,  her hands moving to touch my face.  I shivered slightly as she pressed a finger against my cheek, rubbing gently. I could feel  the almost-leathery pad on her fingertip grating on stubble.  Growing  bolder, she traced my jaw,  tracing the bones. I flinced when she tried to peel my lips back to examine my teeth: she pulled her hand back, then patted my cheek. So I suffered claws tapping against my teeth, fingers touching my canines. Delicately she bent  my nose from side to side,  then ran a fingertip around  my eyes  and eyebrows and ears.  Finally she stroked my hair  for  a while,  tugging at it curiously,  then sat back, still staring at me as if I were a specimen on a lab table.
	"You [   ]?" she asked.
	"No understand," I replied. The first phrase I'd learnt, and the one I'd be using for a long time to come.
	Her ears flicked - as though routing invisible flies -  then she touched her chest. "I sathe," she said.
	Sathe. That could be her species name, family name, job, or just mean she was hungry. Well,  I took a gamble on it being her species. "Sathe," at least that word came easily to my lips.
	"Yes. Right. Good," she approved, then waited.
	"I human," I hastily provided.
	"H'man," she tried the word, tasting it. "H'man."
	I sat up and reached out my hand, to touch her. With a start she pulled away from me.  She stood just out of reach,  one  hand almost unconsciously clutching the bandages over her  ribs,  that arm  cradled in turn by her other.  "H'man," she  murmured,  then turned and limped back to the wagon.

******* 

	Goddamn it!  She wanted to leave.  With her wound still red, swollen, and threatening to tear itself open, she actually wanted to hit the road!
	"Damnation!  No!  I'm  not going to help you!" I stormed  in frustration,  slouched  back against a tree and crossed my  arms. She hissed something back and threw the bisons' harnesses to  the ground in disgust,  being unable,  in her condition,  to lift the wagon tongue. She glared at me, then caught up a crossbow from the wagon.
	For  a second I thought she was considering using it on  me, but  without  another glance my way she started off on  her  own. 
	"You're cracked!"
	I watched her limp off into the trees and disappear from  my view.
	"Anyway, the road's THATAWAY!" I yelled at the forest.
	Christ on a crutch, she's serious! 
	So  what?  What did I care for her?  If she wanted  to  kill herself, that was her business.  Wasn't it? I mean, it wasn't like I owed her anything.  Anyway, I wrestled with my conscience for a couple of minutes.
	What can I tell you:
	"Shit! GODDAM IT! WAIT!"
	I found her twenty or so meters into the forest,  perched on a sun-warmed rock and obviously waiting for me. 
	"Okay lady," I gritted my teeth and rubbed the bridge of  my nose, forcing the words out, "You win."
	She bared her teeth at me and hissed slowly and clearly, "We go?"
	"Yeah, sure. . . We go."
	She  looked  down  and  dropped  her  hand  away  from   her breast: the  bandages were stained red with the blood seeping  out under them.  "Oh,  Christ," I shook my head.  This was one stubborn and determined bitch.

******

	The beast-lady lay quietly in the back of the wagon, staring up  at branches and clouds moving past.  I glanced back  at  her, assured myself the new bandages were still in place, then  turned  to look out over the mountainous shaggy  backs  of  the bison as they plodded along.
	This Tahr knew where she was going.  At the fork in the road she  had directed that we should continue eastwards,  toward  the remote sea.  I briefly considered debating this,  then  shrugged. Why not? I wondered what destination she had in mind and felt the fear again.
	Were there more of them? How many? Where were we going?Christsake,  I didn't have to go along with this!  All I had to do was dump her somewhere. I didn't need her. . . did I?
	I don't know! 
	So we travelled together, strange companions, each trying to come to know the other. Learning her language - Sathe - was hard.
	English was next to impossible for her.  Her mouth,  all  of her vocal apparatus from her larynx to her tongue to the shape of her jaw weren't as flexible as mine.  With effort I was  able to  imitate  the growls,  snarls,  and sibilant noises that made up the  Sathe language,  but she could barely manage  a  coherent english sentence at all.
	Also  there was the fact that she wasn't human. . . or  that  I wasn't Sathe, whichever way you want to look at it.
	Language  is a means to communicate ideas  and  impressions, its  development  influenced by the environment, by physiological  and  psychological traits.  This creature I was learning from was mammalian, bipedal, and bilaterally symmetrical.  We seemed to have a fair bit in common.
	But  wereas my distant ancestors were  brachiating  primates hastily  adapted for lives on open plains,  her's were  dedicated hunters,  perhaps forest-dwelling quadrupeds who - God knows  how or when - began to use tools. As we'd evolved from such distant and diverse beginnings,  so had our languages.  There were  terms she used to refer to things she could see at night,  to sounds  I couldn't hear and to things I couldn't smell.  Conversely,  I was unable to find words for differentiating between certain tints of a color. . . and there were no words to describe things I had  grown up  with. Different outlook. Different mindsets. How do you describe color to a blind person?
	Given time I'd eventually come to grips with that language, but for the time I had to live with my questions. And she had to live with her's.
	So the language lessons continued every day as we made our leisurely way east. The grammar wasn't that hard to pick up, but my vocabulary was extremely rudimentary. I would point things out or have them shown to me, then Tahr would give me her name for them. It was that way I learned the cat. . . Sathe terms for fascinating things like tree, bush, rock,  road,  bison, wood, bird, and other things that would come in  handy  if  I  intended to live the rest of  my  life  in  the wilderness.  The  only man/Sathe made things we had to work  from were the things we had with us,  the wagon,  Tahr's  possessions, and my things.
	My things:  the contents of the pack, my rifle and clothing. These fascinated and bemused her. She scrutinized everything from the fabric of my clothes to my gun (a puzzle I quickly confiscated,  to her obvious annoyance and indignation).  She tapped the aluminium of my canteen,  tried to bend the laminated steel of my knife blade, stared and poked at the compass mounted it its perspex bubble  in the hilt.  Just what I could be doing with such things was confusing and frustrating her.
	Looking  at it from my point of view there wasn't  all  that much, but I was thankful for what I had, especially the automatic rifle.  All  Tahr  had  to call her own was  her  sword  and  the tattered remains of her armour.
	And the days went by. Sometimes the merciless Virginia sun, sometimes rain that brought the bugs and mud. The lessons continued and increased in  complexity, graduated  to abstracts,  there was more confusion and more  late nights  sitting around a campfire struggling to grasp a concept. How  can  you describe something that you can't  simply  hold  in your hand;  something such as thought, hope, or fear? Miming just didn't work too effectively on a creature who used different body language.
	Things  progressed  slowly,  at  their own speed  and  as  I learned more,  I was able to fill in the blanks.  But is was so maddeningly slow! There's nothing more frustrating than wanting to ask something but not having the words to do so.
	Apparently there were also questions that Tahr wanted to ask me, and she did try as best she could.  What was I? Where did I come from? Things along those veins. Because  of that I was slightly grateful for the barrier  between us.  Despite my equipment she still sometimes seemed to think  of me as little more than a well-trained animal:  sit,  wait,  fetch this,  fetch that.  I played along. It was easier to go with the flow until I  found  out  more  about  my situation.
	Mid-summer.  Hot and dusty after days without rain.  Insects buzzed in irritating  clouds  around the bison.  Grit from  the  road  hung around  in the air before finally settling in  hair,  mouth,  and clothes.  I  was itching and covered in an irritating coating  of dust and sweat.
	Of course when I had the chance to bathe, I took it.

******

	As the sun sank low  - a red eye over the hills to the  west - the moon was already high in the sky.  The  temperature was starting to drop.
	I pulled my head up from underwater and gasped air, shaking water out of my hair in a spray of droplets. Arggh, cold.  Goddamn,  it was good to be clean,  but I  was looking forward to getting back to the campsite where I had  left Tahr  and  a hot fire.  I rubbed my hair as dry as  I  could  and turned to where my clothes were drying.
	Sitting among the shadows on the mossy bank with my clothes beside her, Tahr  was  watching me,  one hand pressing  lightly  against  her bandaged ribs.  She was regarding me with her head cocked to  one side,  expression unfathomable.  Damnation! How long had she been watching  while I was gathering goosebumps in my  birthday  suit?  She  continued  to watch me as I waded over  to  collect  my clothes.  Damnation,  she  was studying me as. . . as I had  studied her.  I felt an embarassed flush burning up under my skin, then even more embarrasement at feeling like this in front of something that wasn't even human.  I guess she had a right to  be  curious  about something she  obviously  had  never  seen before, or perhaps she was feeling hungry. Those greenstone eyes followed my fingers on the closures as I pulled on my damp clothes."So  what are you staring at!" I snapped.  "Never  seen  red hair before?"
	In return she gave me a glistening grin.
	"Damn  peeping  tom alien bitch," I muttered as  I  finished dressing. "Satisfied?" I asked sarcastically.
	She hissed something in obtuse sibilants,  struggled to  her feet  with  a open mouthed gasp,  then pointed at the  water. "Help me?" she mimed washing herself.
	"A  cat  that  likes  water,  eh?  You  sure?  It's  getting cold. . . "
	She  hissed and fumbled with her kilt,  dropping it  at  her feet. I had to help her into the pool, where she settled slowly, yelping as her wound went under. I'd have to clean that again later on.  Soon I found myself  scrubbing her  back.  Actually it wasn't too much different from washing  a dog, but this one cooperated. Caked blood, dust, and mud swirled away downstream. Finally, a soggy arm about my shoulders, I helped her back to the camp and the fire.
	As we huddled close to the fire I couldn't help but stare at the felid on the far side of the flames.  With the wet fur plastered to her  skin she took on an appearance somewhere between ludicrous and pathetic. Her inhuman skeleton was accentuated:  the long legs and  short  torso with broad chest.  The bones in her legs and arms looked. . . wrong; twisted about each other the wrong way, perhaps a few too many.
	That ridiculously bedraggled fur slowly dried as she meticulously groomed herself with her claws, puffing out as it did so. By the time a slab of venison was roasting over the coals it was a glowing, glossy tan. Cleaned   up  she  looked  much  better   than   before;   sleek, warm. . . cuddly?
	Her pelt was a dark tan with lighter streaks around the ribs and on the stomach.  She didn't have whiskers, but there was that mane:  actually long fur that began at the crown of her head  and along her cheeks and grew in thick strands down her neck.  Small was not an accurate description of her size;  compact would be much more suitable. As I had noticed when lifting her,  she was heavy for her size.  There was more  muscle tucked  away there than her stature revealed.  Was  her's  denser than human muscle tissue? 
	She  glanced up from the haunch she was rapidly reducing  to bone  and  saw  me  studying  her:  "Thresss  n'rethi  ai  sa  fe r'rescast. Fe'si?"
	I recognised it as a question, but that was all. As I looked away  in  sudden  embarrassment Tahr  broke  into  a  shuttering, uncontrolled hiss.
	Laughter?

******

	Tahr seemed certain she knew where we were. With much waving of  hands  and drawing with sticks in the dirt,  she  managed  to convey  the fact that were near a small  place-with-[house?]-many called Traders Meet.
	"Town?   Traders. . . Meet?"  I  asked,   struggling  over  the pronunciation.  You  try  and emulate what sounds like  a  hybrid catfight-leaking  boiler.  It  would get  easier  with  practice. Strange name.  Still, I guess it's no weirder than Los Angeles or Buffalo.
	But a town.
	"Where this? Where town  is?"  I asked.
	Tahr pointed ahead  down  the road.
	"No.  Not  understand you not. . . " I scratched my  head  in bewilderment. God, how to ask this? I picked up a stick and began to draw a rough map of the road we had come down,  the stream  we had  just crossed,  the river where I had saved her sodden  hide. "We  here,"  I scratched out an X about where we were.  "Town?"  I  asked  and passed the stick to the felid.She was staring at the map with a strange  expression,  then she  took the stick and put in a triangle for the  town.  Further down the road.

	I  moved my hand to indicate a much larger area.  "Here?"  I asked. "Show?"
	Tahr hesitated, then began drawing, filling in the blanks.
	She drew a recognisable map of the east  coast,  Canada,  of florida,  part of the gulf,  the Appalachians, the heartland, the Great Lakes.This was America. The States! But where was everybody, everything? It didn't fit. I opened my mouth to speak, but she wasn't done yet.
	She was dividing the map up into sections,  lines  splitting it up into four. . . no, five parts.
	I stared,  perplexed.  Tahr pointed to the eastern-most section. "Kerr'sther Hytors," she named it and started adding more details.
	"Hey!  Whoa! Hold it!" Tahr looked up in surprise. "What the fuck's  this!" I demanded in English,  jabbing my finger  at  the map.  "This!  What's  going on. . . Oh,  shit!  What's the point  in asking you!"
	"Kerr'sther Hytors,"  she repeated; looking confused.
	I suppose I must've looked just as puzzled, staring at her map without understanding. Finally I nodded. Very well, cat, we shall see. We shall see.
	"Kerster Hytors," I acknowledged,  pointing at that place on the map.

******

	There  were five Realms - she explained - and the one we were  in was  named  Kerr'sther  Hytors:  the  Eastern  Realm;  so  called because  -  no  prizes  here - of its  location  on  the  eastern seaboard.  The four other Realms she tried to describe, but there the language barrier slammed in our faces.
	No  matter where she thought we were and despite the fact  I had seen no sign of civilization for over a week,  I was not  yet willing  to  believe  that  I  was  anywhere  but  some   obscure backwoods   block of Virginia  with a town around the  next  bend. Everything,  the flora and the fauna,  was absolutely  identical. Even  the  lay  of  the land  was  approximately  the  same:  the Appalachians levelling out to the wide coastal plains covered  in a mixture of coniferous and semi-deciduous forests.  It was  just this damned cat!
	Well,  she said we were making for a town. When we got there I would see what was what.
	As my grasp of the Sathe language progressed, I tried to  ask some of the questions that had been bothering me for some time:
	"Tahr. Who you? Why you attacked?"
	Her wound was healing well. I had taken the stained bandages off and thrown them away,  but that angry red scar would be  with her for some time.  One of her fingers absently traced it out  as she  turned to blink at me from where she sat on my  right.  From what  I could read of her expressions,she seemed startled by  the question.
	"I [   ] not you give. Understand?" she said.
	I frowned,  trying to think that one through.  Finally I had to give up. "No understand I," I said.
	"I  do  not understand," she corrected my grammar  to  Sathe proper and tried to explain.  "I like [     ].  I give you thing; you give me other thing. We [trade]. I do this. I trader, [merchant]."
	"You give what?" I asked.  "You have no. . . give  things.  You have much. . . Sathe with swords. You no merchant, yes?"
	Her eyes flickered away from me for a second. "One my [mate, husband?]."
	Ah.  I had trodden upon hallowed ground here. She was trying to  change  the  subject.   I  got  the  message.  I  dropped  my questioning  about  what  she was and  instead  asked  about  the unknown word.It  turned  out  it  meant  a  prospective  mate,   she  was [courting?] him, a boyfriend. "Tahr. . . " What could I say? "I sorry." It seemed inadequate.
	She looked at me in brief surprise,  then turned away,  ears down  and subject successfully changed.  If she was  telling  the truth about her friend,  I was sorry,  but I was itching to  find out  what she was really doing.  A trader with no trade goods  or even supplies and a number of guards.  I believed her story about as far as I could throw the Washington monument.
	Well,  two  could  play at that game.  If she  wasn't  being entirely  honest with me,  then there were a few snipets  that  I could  withhold from her.  Not exactly lying,  just not  offering all the information.
	The next few days drifted by with monotonous similarity.  By now  Tahr  was able to take her turn driving so  we  took  shifts watching  the bison - not that they needed much,  they seemed  to have  a natural autopilot;just point 'em the right way  and  they keep  going  -  and  continued  language  lessons.  In  the  late afternoon we'd stop and set up camp;  a short ceremony where  one of us'd start a fire and the other would go and kill some food.
	Tahr  would get a fire going with my  cigarette  lighter (she fascinated in flicking it and watching the sparks fly). If we had nothing from the night before,  I'd set off with the crossbow and go hunting small game.  Of course the Sathe weapon wasn't as powerful or accurate as my twentieth century firearm,  but it was adequate and spared ammunition for other contingencies.
	We  drifted  along following this pattern  and  slowly,  one after  the  other,  the days turned to weeks before  we  came  to Traders Meet.

******

	From  the cover of the wooded ridge I looked down  onto  the  walled  town  lying  on the  crossroads  below.  It  sure  wasn't Richmond, Virginia.
	The James river was there; faithful to form as it wound blue and  serene  between  hills.  And the  beautiful  countryside  of Virginia was all around us,  verdant and vibrant green,  even  if the city that should be there. . . wasn't.
	Smoke  curled  from  the chimneys of  the  wooden  buildings below,  nothing larger than two stories high.  Afternoon sunlight glinted off the glass windows of some of the buildings,  the rest all boasted wooden shutters.  The entire town was arranged around a large square and it looked like it was market day.
	Small  figures scuttled through the streets and amongst  the brightly   coloured   stalls  in  the  square.   The   4x   power magnification of my sight was enough to let me pick out the various colours of the inhabitants' fur.
	I  sank back against a tree and shook my head.  I had  hoped that I wouldn't be seeing this,  but there it was, large as life. A whole fucking community of furry sapients,  slap bang where the state capitol of Virginia should be. Somewhere I'd taken one hell of a wrong turn.
	Shit!  I thought this kind of thing only happened to  little girls with small dogs.
	 "What  wrong?" Tahr asked,  turning from where she had  been sharing  the view.  She stared at me with her head cocked to  one side.
	Oh no!  Whatever could be wrong?  I've just been whisked off to the Planet of the Cats. I'll have to spend the rest of my life eating Tender Vittles, and she asks if anything is wrong!?!
	"No,  all fine," I lied. Understanding Sathe was easier than speaking  it,  especially with such bitterness choking  from  the inside.   I took another look at the town below,  "This where you go?" I waved my hand at the town;  offering it to her: "You here. All fine."
	Good luck lady, this is where I get off.
	I  walked  back through the trees to where we had  left  the wagon, the bison placidly cropping away at the grass.
	"K'hy?"
	I snagged my pack and pulled it on. The M-16 I left  dangling by  the  strap as I set off back the way we  had  come,  my  feet dragging up dust.
	"K'hy!" Claws  caught  my  sleeve  and  stopped  me  in  my tracks, pulling me 
around. "Where you go?"
	"I go," I pointed west, the direction I was facing.
	"Where?" Her hand was still on my arm.
	I just shrugged. How should I know?
	"You come with me?"
	I stared at her, then started shaking again. She twisted her hand to disengage her claws and stepped back. "K'hy?"
	"I not," I said.
	"Please! Much please. I [        ] you [         ] come. Please."
	Much of what she said was totally incomprehensible to me, but she seemed desperate about something.
	"I not!"
	"Why?"
	"I afraid. I much afraid!" I blurted out.
	She  stared at me in what could only be  astonishment.  Then her  hand  reached out and gingerly touched my  beginnings  of  a beard.  I flinched from her touch and she hesitated, then withdrew her fingers.  "Saaa," she hissed. "I afraid too. Help, please."
	I looked at her, then at the wilderness surrounding  us. There was  really  nowhere for me to go. It would take me weeks  to  get anywhere on foot,  and now,  now I knew I wouldn't find a  human city. . . I wouldn't find another human.
	"Yes?"
	I sagged. "Yes."

******

	So we entered Traders Meet with me riding in the back of the wagon,  disillusioned and scared and trying to look harmless. All my equipment had been shoved under a pile of hay up front.  All I had  were  my clothes. . . and my knife strapped  around  my  ankle. Tahr's ears had laid back when she'd seen me concealing it there, but she'd said nothing. 
	Tahr  had not wanted me to be too conspicuous,  as  I  would have  been if riding up front.  She was vague about the  reasons, but  she  didn't want to advertise the fact I was  intelligent  - relatively  -  nor that I could talk.  Again I submitted  to  her wishes and rode in the hay.
	First there were the farms: Small clusters of buildings surrounded by their fields. Cattle  - deer, bison, and goats - roamed everywhere. Not surprising when you look at a Sathe's teeth. What was surprising were the number of fields sown with crops. I'd never seen Tahr eat anything besides meat: cooked or raw, but then I'd never offered anything else. I guess becoming omnivorous would be a plus in the evolution of a species.
	On  the outskirts of the town lay the manors:  the homes  of the  affluent,  set among shady,  stately trees  and  grass:  not manicured lawns but long,  wild grasses that stirred languidly in the heavy breeze. They were beautiful, those estates: white walls with exposed beams stained lamp black - Tudor, I think the style's called. Big, rambling affairs with glass in the mullioned windows.
	Just outside the town walls were the rundown piles of lumber that the lowest classes called home.  They had their own streets; dusty  little alleys branching off everywhere.  Inside the walls were  the  rest,  the ones who fell into the  middle,  the  lower merchants,  traders, dealers, hawkers, along with business of all kinds crammed into the walls.
	Small,  narrow streets laid out to no set plan,  just placed according to whim and need. Some were cobbled in rough-cut stones while others were just bare earth packed down rock-solid by  feet and iron bound wheels.  A heavy, pervading stench from garbage and shit hung in the air, but it wasn't as bad as I'd been expecting. Periodic  gratings in the street meant there was a sewage  system working.  It also probably meant there was seepage through to the water table. I'd better be careful about the water I drank.
	Wood,   brick,   plaster,   tiles.  Buildings  with  stained whitewash  splashed on their walls between  old  creosote-stained timbers  and the second stories hanging out over the  streets  to form dark,  reeking tunnels.  Stalls with faded cloth that at one time was probably brightly coloured - a few still were -  fronted shops. Smoke poured from the stacks of smithies and from the open doors  of  alehouses came raucous yowling.  So  like  a  medieval European  fortified  town,  yet the inhabitants set it  apart  as markedly different. 
	Noise: that was everywhere.
	A  modern  city is has its own pulse: the  beat  of  traffic, sirens,  bustling humanity,  shouting,  engines, planes, music. In the  night  halogen  and  neon  lights  beckon  while  spires  of reinforced  concrete  create  their own  skyline  with  uncounted millions  of illuminated windows. The streets throb to the  subway hurtling beneath them and humanity is a neverending flow and ebb, like the tides,  regular as the night and day: Vendors,  salesmen, loners,  delinquents, buskers, businessmen, punks, mavericks, pimps, fat-rich contessas,  hookers,  winos,  teenagers,  actors , children, queens,  losers, writers, dreamers, drifters. . . A true city can be a representational cross-section of humanity. It was an exhilarating, terrifying experience to an out-of-towner,  but  just  everyday life to the cityborn. This  town  was alive  in  its own way. The  shouting  of  pedlars,  hawkers,  and merchants competing with the bass rumble of heavy wheels and  the  clamouring of animals.  As we passed the city gates I studied my Sathe.  She was relaxed,  an alert glint in her eye.  This was no stranger to city life, she had grown up in a place such as this.
	Maybe even this town?
	The  next thing I noticed was how everything seemed to  stop as we passed. Everyone dropped what they were doing and stared at us. Well, at me.
	They  all looked the same,  yet they were all  different. The same features:  long muzzle,  sharp triangular ears,  green slit-pupiled eyes, stripped fur, compact bodies with well proportioned limbs.  And all seemed different:  A different shade of  fur: some light, some  dark. I  saw one female with a  pelt  of  silver-grey. There were scars on the body or nicks in the ears, flecks of gold in the eyes. Sizes varied enormously. Some were about Tahr's size -  fairly large for a Sathe - and the young (would you call  them children  or cubs?),  looking for all the world  like  ambulatory teddy  bears,  would come to about hip height on me.  Males  were slightly  larger than the females,  with heavier  manes,  thinner hips,  and lacking the unobtrusive twin rows of three  teats, but there didn't seem to be any obvious segregation of the sexes. Females  haggled  with males over the cost of bread  while  other males seemed quite content to keep the cubs in line.
	Fashions obviously played a role in Sathe culture,  to judge from  the riot of colour on the felids staring  at  us.  Although many  wore  nothing  but their fur - male  and  female  genitalia hidden  by  the tufted fur at their groins,  hinting  at  a  very relaxed  or  nonexistent  nudity taboo -  a  large  number  wore breeches  or cloaks in various styles and  various  colors:  eye-searingly brilliant colours to mud drab. Nearly every one of them was  armed.  Daggers, blades, scimitars  like Tahr's looked to be  the  weapon  of preference.
	And  some  saw me,  slapped their neighbour's  shoulder  and pointed.  More  and more heads turned.  There was  laughter  from some, silence from others.
	This isn't happening!
	The  weirdest sensation,  like my brain was cringing  in  my skull,  staring out at the world through the eye sockets,  yet not really seeing.  All  I could  do  was huddle in the back of the wagon and  try  to  make myself  invisible.  I wasn't very good at it.  I became  abruptly aware  that my teeth were chattering.  In fact I was shaking  all over.
	Tahr seemed to know where she was going, slipping into the halting flow of creaking, rattling animal-drawn vehicles, yowling at other wagoners and pedestrians. As we moved slowly through the town we picked up a small entourage of cubs who ran after us. I was the attraction and they scurried after us, hissing and pointing at me.
	She pulled off the street and into a gateway leading to a small cobbled court surrounded by doorways with wooden gates blocking off the lower half. A strong animal smell permeated the air and various animal heads poked out of the stalls; I recognised llamas and bison. Must be a stable.
	As she reined in the bison a portly individual, greying about the ears, ran out of an open doorway and chased our young followers off with shouts and snarls. The cubs avoided him with ease, scampered off to a safe distance and returned the calls with obvious glee.
	Dismissing them with a disgusted wave of a paw the Sathe turned back to our wagon.  Tahr jumped to the ground, hissing as the jolt put sudden  pressure on her still tender wound and went to meet  him. Seen from the back,  her walk was a lot like a human woman's. The fact  that  she walked on tiptoes with her heels off  the  ground almost gave the illusion that she was wearing high heels.
	The  Sathe looked past her at the wagon,  and his  eyes  met mine.
	With  the  number  of flies that  were  buzzing  around  the stalls  I'd  have thought it was a rather risky to  stand  around with your mouth hanging open like that.
	Tahr  had  to raise her voice to  catch  his  attention.  He finally  managed to tear his eyes off me and pay her  some  heed. Their conversation seemed to have a lot to do with the  wagon, the bison, and me; They were to far away for me to catch  details,  but Tahr  would  say something,  the male would sign  a  'no',  until finally they seemed to settle on something.  They approached, the stable owned watching me with eyes as green as Tahr's. He relaxed a  bit when I backed away from him as if afraid.  It wasn't all an act. "Is it dangerous?" he asked Tahr
	"Only [  ]," her ears flicked up and down in her version of a smile.
	This was doing a whole lot for my ego.
	He  considered a moment,  then agreed to let her  leave  the wagon and bison in the courtyard.  After the pair slapped paws in a  what I guessed was their version of a handshake,  he  wandered back into the stalls muttering something to himself.
	Tahr scrambled into the wagon bed and grabbed my  pack.  She slapped  my  leg  and  before I could  protest  -  ask  what  was happening - whispered,  "I back.  Not long." Then she was out  of the wagon and off  across the courtyard.
	I  sighed and dropped back into the hay,  squinting up  into the muggy sky.  God,  my head hurt.  Too much,  too strange,  too quickly. I tried not to think about Tahr selling me or handing me over  to  the authorities.  I didn't know what they would  do  to something like me,  but spending the rest of my life in a zoo  or medieval laboratory was not on my retirement plans.
	What's happened to me?
	Another  planet?   Not  likely.  Everything  but  the  local inhabitants were the same.  The flora and fauna identical to that back home.  No two worlds in the same universe could have evolved so perfectly, so exactly.
	Not in the same universe, the same reality.
	But there were theories,  not necessarily restricted to  the bounds of science fiction. Realities are numberless, superimposed on each other like frames in a movie.  And like that film each is different.  In each of those realities,  whenever a certain point is  reached - a  certain decision is made - another  universe  is created,  branching off from the main trunk like a branch from  a tree, a twig from that branch. . . 
	Hah!  That  theory was so full of holes you could curdle  it and call it Swiss cheese,  but it was the best one I had.  It was the only one I had.
	Two hours passed. Fear passed into exhaustion and despite my predicament I dozed.
	The lurch as the wagon began to move jolted me awake  again. Not seeing anyone in the drivers bench I sat up alarmed. A Sathe, perhaps  a stablehand judging by the pitchfork he. . . no,  she  was carrying,  was  leading the bison by the reins,  moving  them  to clear an access way.  The movement as I sat up caught her eye. She turned, squalled, and dropped both the reins and her pitchfork as she backpedalled wildly.
	On all fours she crouched on the cobblestones with her mouth gaping,  teeth bared, chest heaving. She reminded me of Tahr back when  she first laid eyes on me.  Over in a stable  door  another Sathe,  I think it was the one Tahr had been talking to, appeared and yelled at the stable hand.  She stood and yowled back at him, too fast for me to get a grasp on.  He gave a snort and  vanished back into the brick building.
	I  guess the owner of the place hadn't briefed his staff  on their unusual visitor.  I smiled nervously at the stablehand  who was scooping up her pitchfork.  She snarled and went to catch the reins.  
	"Oh, hostility." 
	She sputtered something back at me.
	"Fuck  you  too,"  I said and flopped back into the  hay  to wait.
	The  hay itched,  the afternoon sun was hot,  and the  flies were an incessant irritation.  Once and only once I went to stand at the entrance to the courtyard and stare out at the activity on the street.  Inconspicuous I wasn't and I soon retreated back  to the  wagon as I started attracting attention.  I had the  feeling that  if I stepped out of the bounds of the stables I'd  be  fair game.
	I was starting to feel slightly nauseous.
	Tahr  didn't get back until late.  The sun was low over  the stable  buildings,  the  shadows growing.  For hours I  had  been waiting for her, and I was beginning to despair that she may have ditched  me.  But she came marching back into the  courtyard,  my pack  slung over her shoulder,  engaged in animated  conversation with  a  Sathe  decked  in  heavy  utilitarian  breeks,   several carved,  wooden bracelets around one wrist.  They clattered as he waved his arm at the wagon.
	I had trouble keeping up with the rapid-fire chatter,  but I was  able to pick up that she was trying to make a deal  of  some kind with this guy.
	Currency  was something my language lessons hadn't  covered, however  that seemed to be the main topic of their  conversation. Tahr was trying to sell something.
	ME!? 
	The  Sathe went around to the front of the wagon  where  the one  in  green began to inspect the bison: lifting their  legs  to check  the hooves, inspecting their teeth and eyes.  He  obviously found something he didn't like and barked something at Tahr.  She spread her hands and hissed in reply.
	The other grunted and moved on to inspect the cart.
	They finally came to a mutual agreement and slapped palms.Tahr came around to the back of the wagon.  "K'hy,  we  go," she said slowly, beckoning me. "Come."
	I  hesitated, then  uncovered the pack and slung it  over  my shoulder.  She  caught the crossbow I tossed her and settled  its carry  strap  around her shoulder while I caught up  the  assault rifle and dropped off the end of the wagon.
	I towered over the two Sathe and the one who had just bought our  faithful  transport looked me up  and  down(nervously?).  He asked Tahr a question.
	"No, he will behave," Tahr said.  Slow and deliberate  enough for  me  to understand and with a stern look thrown in  for  good measure.
	I nodded and said, "Okay Kimo Sabe," in English.
	They both looked at me.
	"Very  well," the unnamed Sathe said uncertainly. He  reached into  a  pouch  at his waist and pulled  out  a  small leather  purse.  From this he counted nine roughly-circular gold coloured coins,  each about the size of a dime,  and handed  them over to Tahr, who passed them on to me.
	Heavy as gold.  I examined them closely, then bit them and  looked  at the tooth marks in the  soft  metal. Shit, real gold. Probably  not  pure,  but worth a pretty  penny  nevertheless.  I dropped the weighty gold lumps into one of the cargo pockets down the leg of my fatigue pants.The  buyer  looked astonished;  had he  never  seen  pockets before? "You would give [money] to an animal?" he asked.
	"He  is [reliable? trustworthy?]," Tahr glanced at me  again, "And who would [mug?] [something] like him? K'hy, come. Follow."
	I  followed her out of the sheltered courtyard and into  the street, into pandemonium. On the wagon I'd been above the foot traffic;  now I was  in the middle of it, buffeted by a sea of colourful, furry bodies.
	Heavily laden wagons rumbled and clattered over the  cobbles and  clay  of the streets while pedestrians scurried out  of  the way.  Sathe  shopkeepers  yowled  and hissed  at  the  passerbys, hawking  their  wares.   Brilliantly  textured,  dyed  rugs,  and tapestries hung on display in some shops,  others sold bowls  and implements,  some delicately carved,  others crude hunks of wood, while still other stalls sold goods that I couldn't imagine a use for. The air was heady with the hissing white noise of a thousand cats  fighting,  the scents of  spices,  and  fur,  animals and shit and decaying   meat.   Flies  swarmed  around  a   butcher's   stall, occasionally swatted away by a bored cub wielding a whisk.
	No  matter how thick the crowd was a small island  of  empty space remained about Tahr and I as Sathe melted away from me  like ice  from a blowtorch.  Green eyes stared at  me,  multicoloured, multitextured  muzzles turning aside to confer  with  neighbours. Questions  were howled at Tahr and she growled or  sputtered  her replies. Many times laughter hissed back.   
	It wasn't as if the town was big,  and it was primitive - worse than Jersey -   but  everywhere  I looked  over  the  heads  of  the aborigines there were more.  And more.  The streets were full  of them,  as were the buildings. The smells were thick and heavy and often nauseating , so many  of  them,  almost tangible.  My  senses  were  overwhelmed, overloaded  by  too much strangeness too soon.  I  felt  my  mind cringing and fought back a rising panic. All I could do was follow Tahr automatically,  dodging around a wagon  and onto  the  porch  of a large,  two-story  building  with  a  sign depicting  what looked like a blue stormcloud hanging  above  the front door. A cub cautiously stopped Tahr at the threshold and in neutrally  respectful  tones asked something to fast  for  me  to follow.  Tahr  answered and the cub looked from her to  me,  then scampered back into the building. A minute later a fawn and cream female  with grizzled fur stepped out onto the  landing,  looking Tahr up and down with the air of someone who has just  discovered what  the  dog  has trekked across the  carpet.  I  guess  Tahr's stained and battered armour,  the tooling all but buried  beneath strata of dust, didn't make for much of a first impression. 
	"You want a [room]?" she asked. "You and that [   ]?"
	"I do," Tahr replied, head bowed.
	She glanced at me.  "It is [ugly]! No!" Without another word she turned her back to leave. Tahr looked startled, reached out to touch her arm, then jumped back when the other swung her claws in a vicious  slash that just missed Tahr,  ears  flattened  and  snarled something too impassioned for me to understand. Tahr straightened and snapped back.
	Their   voices  rose  in  volume  as  the  argument   gained momentum;  fur bristling, snarls and spats like tesla coils. Tahr was  obviously  furious and the other female  was  determined  to stand her ground.  Finally Tahr gave a disgusted hiss, turned her back and stalked off,  snagging my sleeve with a claw to drag  me along.
	She  smoothed  her  fur  down with  a  hand  as  we  walked, occasionally glancing at me. I was too stunned by my surroundings to really notice it.
	At  the  next place - inn - we  stopped,  the  innkeeper didn't waste time arguing; he slammed the door in Tahr's face. A few seconds  later it opened again,  a furry arm snaked out,  hung  a sign in a crabbed script from the door, then whisked out of sight again.
	Tahr snarled impotently at the door.
	Back on the main thoroughfare again, the jolting unreality of the situation all around me.  Tahr was still seething to herself, running  her hands repeatedly over fur that refused to lie  flat. She  looked  around,  then  made a beeline for  a  nearby  stall, unadorned flat planks displaying wickerwork baskets.  The  boards bounced  as Tahr leaned a closed fist on them,  half shouting  at the   merchant  behind  the  counter  to  be  heard   above   the streetnoise. He pointed a fur-tufted finger - small knuckles - up the street and gave directions. Tahr thanked him.
	Again I followed. There was nowhere else to go.
	It  was a two storey building with a picture of what  looked like  a rabbit or hare hung above the door.  The sign also had  a line  of that text:  indecipherable,  scratch-like marks done  in black  paint.  There  was no resemblance to  the  greek  alphabet english utilises; more like a coalition of Egyptian hieroglyphics and Chinese ideography.
	I had to stoop to get in through the front door.
	Inside   there   was just enough  headroom  for  me   to   stand upright,  provided  I stayed put.  To walk about I'd have had  to duck under or avoid the oil lamps hanging from the  ceiling.  Not that  there  was much room to walk around.  Sathe  are  small  of stature  and  their  buildings are  built  to  their  scale,  not accommodating to my build.
	Most of the ground floor was a common room, a long split-log table  and  benches in the middle of it.  Over the  fire  hung  a black-iron pot, bubbling, filled with what smelled like some kind of  stew.  A narrow,  flimsy staircase led through a hole in  the ceiling to another floor upstairs.  A couple of doors led to what could have been a kitchen and the landlord's quarters.  The  room was also full of Sathe.
	They  sat  at the communal table,  some  eating,  some  just talking;  six  of them.  As I stooped into the room  they  forgot about  their  food and goggled.  A  Sathe,  male,  fur  grey  and stippled with jet like a dark ocelot pushed his way into the room from  the kitchen,  wiping his hands on the apron wrapped  around his waist.  Abruptly he froze,  eyes locked on me,  then  without shifting his gaze demanded, "What is this?"   
	"I ask for a room for a few nights," she said. "For my [   ] and I."
	The  innkeeper stared at her incredulously.There were a  few hisses from the other guests.  "You are [    ]," he finally said. "I will not have [    ]! What do you take me for, a [    ]?!"
	"Sir,  he is [    ] and quiet.  He will be no [trouble]. I [    ] you I can pay!"
	He huffed and planted his hands on his hips, stalking across and looking up at me.  His breath reeked of fish and meat.  "What is it [   ]?"
	Tahr  answered  him with a string of words  I  couldn't  cut through.  From then on their haggling became indecipherable; fast and  curt,  slang and honourifics,  vocabulary beyond  my  primer stage.  But  Tahr  seemed to be getting somewhere;  at  least  we hadn't been thrown out on our ears this time.
	Finally he feigned spitting:  "I [yield?]." He waved a  hand at  the  stairs.  "Pay  in [    ].  But it  had  better  give  no [difficulties]. It is your [responsibility]!" Tahr  flipped a gold coin that he plucked cleanly  from  the air, and led me toward the stairs. The patrons watched me warily
	Our room was small; little more than a cupboard  with one thin mattress rolled up on the floor,  a stool,  and a small slit in the wall that served for  a window.  The  wooden floor was rough,  dirty and the room  had  a faint  but definite odour of pine and urine and  wet  fur.  Great place. The Holiday Inn would seem palatial in comparison.
	That window and a small tallow candle were all the  lighting we  had.  It  didn't  seem to bother Tahr  in  the  slightest.  I recalled  the  way in which her eyes caught  firelight,  how  she seemed to have little difficulty moving at night. Cats' eyes. She could see one hell of a lot better in the dark than I could.
	Tahr glanced around and huffed slightly: "Huh! Well, it will serve. Wait here." The door swung shut and the piece of wood that served for a latch made a hollow thok  as it dropped into place.
	I was in no hurry to go anywhere.  It had been a long, weird day. I unrolled the pallet, sat down, and leaned back against the wall to wait.She was pretty quick, back within a few minutes carrying a pair of steaming bowls and two cups on a tray.
	Whatever was in those bowls smelled unbelievably good. I was drooling even  before she'd kicked the door closed behind her.  She set the tray down and passed me a bowl:  a stew of some  kind with a weird implement stuck in it,  a sort of cross  between  a fork and a spoon.  Tahr watched  in  unfettered amusement  as  I fumbled with it.  To her the idea  of  me  doing something  as civilised as eating with a tool would  be  unusual. She'd seen me using my knife to cut food,  but watching me trying to imitate her facility was something different. She ate from her own bowl, but still watched me over each noisy mouthful she took.
	The cups were unusual:  they had a small spout on one  side, made for different jaws.  Only water. I didn't try and drink from it.  The  water would have come from the local well and I  didn't want to know what varieties of microscopic entities  called  that well home. The stew was nothing special: The meat was undercooked and might have been slightly  gammy,  but  the  worst was covered  by  the  plentiful addition  of spices.  Vegetables were a surprise:  you just  have to see a Sathe grin once to swear on your mother's grave  they're pure carnivores.
	Still,  my  hunger made that the best meal I'd ever  ate.  I wolfed  down  my share in no time,  revealing a rib bone  at  the bottom.  Tahr also had one,  but she could do something with  it: picking  it up and biting through it with jaws that  treated  the bone as though it were no more than marshmallow.  Meticulously,  and with obvious relish she worked the marrow out with her tongue.
	I'd left my rib lying in my bowl.  She had noticed I'd never bothered  with the bones as she had,  but up to now  she'd  never commented.
	Tahr ran her tongue around her mouth.  "Not eat?" she asked, gesturing at the bone.
	"I cannot," I explained. "My teeth. . . cannot."
	"Saaa!"  she hissed in understanding and twitched her  ears. Picking up the other bone she bit it cleanly in half, then handed half to me. "Here. Try."
	Gingerly I took the morsel.  Tahr watched intently and  with obvious  amusement  as I tried to work the marrow out.  It  didn't  taste  of anything much:  a little salty,  perhaps a bit sweet.  Not to  my taste.  The  felid laughed outright as I passed it back to her.  Within  a minute she'd polished  it off and let the stool lean back against the wall,  the bowl dropping to the floor.  She closed her  eyes, opened her mouth, and belched loudly and contentedly.
	The  light coming in through the thin window slit came  from the late afternoon sun,  still following its inexorable path from east  to west.  After the meal I was feeling  pleasantly  drowsy. Tahr was stretched out on the pallet, looking like the proverbial cat that's swallowed the canary. What the hell do we do now? Watch TV? Go down to the bar? find the swimming pool? Shit,  I sighed, leaned back against a wall  and picked up the M16,  idly running a finger through  the dust and grime coating the receiver.
	When  the  rifles  had first been issued to  the  troops  in Vietnam,  they'd been handed out with the message that the  rifle was  so efficient that it never needed cleaning.  Of  course  the troops  were happy to accept such statements and never did  clean their rifles. How many good men had that snafu killed?
	I was using the old ball ammunition,  M193,  a dirty-burning propellant  that would eventually clog up the barrel with residue.  The  new IMR stuff was cleaner and more effective, but not compatible with the M16A1s.  I buttoned out the magazine and opened the  chamber, holding  the  weapon up to the light as I  squinted  through  the barrel,  frowning  at the grime.  I was tired,  but this gun  had saved  my life and kept me fed.  I started breaking it  down  for cleaning.
	I  put  a couple of drops of oil into the  barrel  and  then pulled  a  cloth  through,  clearing away  crystalline  traces  of propellant.  As I was scrubbing the rotary lug bolt a  floorboard creaked. Tahr squatted down beside me.
	She picked up the forestock assembly, turning it over in her hands,  the  black pads on her fingertips stroking the  synthetic materials  and the blued steel.  "You never tell.  What is  this? What is it for?"
	Perhaps  she  had  guessed it was a  weapon  of  some  kind. Although  I hadn't told her what it was and made sure that I  was well away from the camp when using it for hunting, the facts  were there  if she had cared to look at them: I left the camp  carrying the  otherworldly  device  and  came  back  with  meat  that  had obviously  been  killed  by  some means other  than  a  knife  or crossbow.
	Now  she  was asking me  directly.  Well,  she  hadn't  been completely straight with me. . . 
	"Hunting," I replied vaguely.
	"Hunting?  How?"  she pressed.  "What do you  do?  Club  the animal to death?" She mimed beating some small creature with  the stock.
	"I not understand," I lied, looking confused.She sighed and  turned  back  to  the  assembly  in   her hands: "Where is this from?"
	I thought about what I should say. Should I tell her where I came  from?  No,  not yet.  That was something I wasn't sure she would take too well. Finally I answered with, "My people make. My kind."
	"So small, so fine," she murmured testing the machined steel with a claw. "Your people, where are they? West?"
	I thought hard again before answering.
	"My people are far away.  I not think I can go back to them. I here, no way back. Tahr, what you do with me?" This was her terrain. She was my lifeline, without her I was lost. Besides, I liked her.
	"You  help me,  I help you.  I try to go north.  Town  named Mainport. You come, help me?"
	I  slipped  the barrel back  into  place,  tightened  it.  A magazine  slipped into place with a smooth click,  the bolt  slid back  and forth freely.  I squinted through the  Armalon  optical sight. The lens was smudged and dirty. I cleaned it with the tail of my shirt, not exactly spotless, but passable.
	"What you there do?"
	She uneasily turned away to look out the window.
	"Tahr?"
	She  stood and made for the door.  "I back soon." With  that she was gone. "Damnation!"  I swore and pounded my fist against the  floor in frustration.

******

	In  the  narrow street below the inn a couple  of  teamsters were  arguing  over  who had the right  of  way.  Their  shouting sounded  like a  catfight, and the noise grew  louder  when  they started taking swipes at each other and passerbys stopped to shout encouragement.
	There  was a fair-sized crowd out there when I  slammed  the shutters on the window and slumped against the wall, sliding down to  sit on the floor where I buried my head in my hands.  On  the wall  opposite,  pale,  horizontal bars of dusty light  from  the slatted shutters covered the wall and door, filling the room with a muted orange twilight.
	"I back soon," she'd said.
	Again  I was waiting and hoping that she  would  return. What could I do if she didn't?  I had the feeling that I wouldn't make it hundred yards down the street without her, so I  was effectively  trapped  in here until either she  returned  or  the streets cleared enough for me to make my way to the gate.
	Amongst these felids I'd just be an exotic animal; rare and possibly worth a lot. I caught a shuddering breath, leaned my head back against the rough wall and closed my eyes.
	And what if she doesn't come back ?
	She has to. She said she would.
	Yeah, but if. . .       
	I  tried not to think about that.
	How long was this going to go on? How long would I be stuck here? There were things I wanted to do, places I wanted to see. Nothing I'd ever been in any particular hurry to accomplish,  but now they  all seemed that much more important.
	There  had  been the flash of light and a truck scattered across a hillside and Tenny dead and I was here.  That  was all there was to it.
	I covered my face again and moaned.
	When  the  latch on the door rattled I could  scarcely  hear it  above  the cacophony from the fight taking  place  on  street outside.  I  looked  up, but it wasn't Tahr who stepped  into  the room.
	And it wasn't room service.
	Two Sathe males dressed in nondescript tattered breeches stepped inside, casting a glance out into the hall before carefully closing the door.  One  of them - a dark-grey with a dappled pattern of  dark spots  on his fur - hissed something to the brown-furred one  and began sidling towards my pack.  Brown Fur slipped a slender  dirk from  his belt and moved slowly towards me,  beckoning  with  his free hand and making coaxing noises.The assault rifle was with the pack: on the other side of the room. But my knife. . . Brown  Fur was looking worried,  tossing his blade from  one hand  to  the  other.  Grey looked around at him  and  hissed something I COULD understand: "Kill it!"
	Brown Fur almost skewered me.  The blade whispered passed my cheek as I dodged blindly and kicked out with a heavy boot.  I was rewarded with a solid impact,  a grunt of pain and the Sathe staggering backwards.
	I scrambled to my feet and Brown Fur's eyes widened when  he saw  that my head almost brushed the ceiling.  He  lunged  again, fast  and scared.  I dodged again - barely - and caught his  hand and kept him going,  straight into the wall with his wrist taking the brunt of the impact.  There was a crackling snap and yowl  of pain as his wrist broke.
	His  howl  changed as I swung him and launched  him  at  the window.  He hit hard,  shutters splintered and cracked as he went through them. The howl cut off to the accompaniment of something heavy bouncing off the shingles of the porch roof  outside,  then shouts rang out as he dropped in unexpectedly on the Sathe below.
	Breathing hard I turned to face Grey.  He had drawn his  own dagger  and was down in a low crouch,  his claws and fangs  bared and a deep rumbling sounding in his chest.
	I  snarled  back at him and pulled my knife  from  its  boot sheath.  The steel blade slithered out with a hiss.  "I cut  your heart out!" I snarled with my best scowl smeared across my face.
	The  Sathe stared at my trench knife;  its blade  twice  the size of his and wickedly serrated.  He stared at me, at something that spoke Sathe and threw them out second-floor windows.
	His ears went back, then he turned and fled.
	I  dove  for  the rifle and was out  the  door  after  him, slamming  into the wall opposite with my shoulder in time to  see him reach the stairs. I fired from the hip on full auto. My burst shattered the wall above his head as he took the stairs full tilt;  sending  wood chips flying, half-deafening me and filling the tiny hallway with the  acrid  stench  of cordite and hot  lead.  There  were  alien screams  from down below but I dashed back into the room  and  to the  window.  From  there  I  saw  him  help  his  semi-conscious accomplice to his feet and then the both of them disappeared down an alleyway. I tracked them but didn't fire: too many bystanders.
	Whom - I realised - all seemed to be staring at me now their little fight had been unexpectedly upstaged. I  jumped away from the window and stood shaking  as  shouting sounding like hot iron being quenched in water came from outside.

******

	The  innkeeper  was  seething  at the  damage  done  to  his property.
	I  squatted on the thin mattress holding the  rifle  against my chest,  its butt resting on the pallet,  the blue steel of its barrel cool against my cheek.  Vaguely,  downstairs I could  hear the snarls and yowls of Sathe arguing. As yet nobody had ventured upstairs. I  waited,  staring at the door hanging drunkenly  from  its broken hinges.
	When a Sathe stepped into view, I almost shot her.
	Tahr stopped in the doorway,  one hand resting on the  frame as  she  surveyed the wreckage of the  room,  then  me;  crouched scared behind the assault rifle.  When she moved,  it was slowly, cautiously, as one would approach a cornered animal.
	She was afraid of me.
	"Oh  God!"  I breathed in despair and let  the  weapon  fall aside as I buried my face in my hands. "Tahr. . . "
	A hesitant hand touched my hair, stroked it.
	I looked up and she froze with her hand still  extended.  "I not  hurt  you,"  I said in my clumsy Sathe and  she  lowered  it slowly.  I  opened  my mouth,  wanting to tell her,  to  try  and explain what I was feeling, then hung my head.  It was hopeless;  I didn't have  the words.
	"K'hy," she said quietly, firmly, and hooked a claw under my chin to tilt my head up so we were eye to eye, "what happened?"
	It  took time,  but she was patient;  coaxing and helping me when I didn't know how to tell her.  When  she finally  had the whole story she sighed and picked up the  dagger that the intruder had dropped.  Her ears were back tight  against her mane. "This is [   ]?" she asked.
	"I do not understand," I replied.
	She looked surprised,  then those sharp, tufted ears twitched up and down in her version of a smile.  She held up a paw:  "This hand. You do not say this not hand? You say the [truth]?"
	"Yes!" I nodded vehemently.
	She slowly imitated my nod.
	Furious, the innkeeper was, but he was also scared of me. He wanted  to throw us out,  but in order to do that he had to  come upstairs to challenge Tahr face to face.  I watched them growling and  sizzling  at  each  other,  occasionally  punctuating  their argument  with  basso  roars.  It was hard to think  of  them  as actually talking.
	Tahr  was  just  as pissed as  the  other.  She  blamed  the innkeeper for what'd happened,  saying that I was harmless unless provoked  and it was his fault that the intruders had got  in  to provoke me in the first place. I had just been protecting myself. The  innkeeper insisted that she pay for the damage  to  the premises, then quoted a price. Tahr's mouth dropped in outrage.
	"Four golds?!"
	That was half of all we had!
	"Saaa!" he hissed at her.  "You do not pay and I shall  make sure that you find it very [difficult] to leave.  The [garrison?] here  can make a few simple questions a matter of running against  the wind for outsiders."
	Tahr  opened her mouth, about to snap something in return, then she closed it again and looked helplessly at me. "Give, K'hy," she told me.
	I  opened  my  pocket  and counted out  four  of  the  bulky coins.  The innkeeper didn't move to take them,  so I handed them to Tahr who passed them on to the agitated male.  He grabbed  the cash and glanced at it, then turned to leave.
	Halfway  to  the door he did a double-take and  squinted  at me. "It can count?!" he asked.
	Tahr sighed wearily. "Yes. Why? Do you wish to take him from me as well?"
	The innkeeper cocked his head to one side in his scrutiny of me.  "No,  it is ugly; I would not want it. Is it strong? able to work?"
	Tahr glanced at me. I nodded slightly. "Yes," she said.
	"Perhaps  it  will be able to earn you some  of  that  money back," the innkeeper mused. "There are some jobs it might be able to do."
	Tahr glanced at her hands. There was fire in her eyes as she seemed  to  will  her  claws  back  into  their  sheaths  in  her fingertips.  Finally she growled,  "Show him what to do.  He will understand.  But  it is growing late and he does not see well  in the dark."
	"Tomorrow then," he replied.  "You may sleep here, but cause any more trouble and you are out with the llamas. Understood?"
	"Understood," Tahr said to the innkeeper's retreating  back, then  she  muttered  something she hadn't taught  me  -  probably obscene -  and forced the door closed.
	I had picked up the dagger dropped by my assailants and  was turning it over in my hands,  examining it.  It was cheap, poorly crafted,  with a simple wooden hilt bound with some kind of plant fibre.  I  looked  up  at  Tahr;  she met my  gaze  for  a  split second,  then turned away and pretended to be busy fiddling  with the string on her crossbow.
	She was worried. Scared?
	Perhaps.
	Why was she nervous about the law? Those Sathe I'd wasted in the hills; were they bandits or something else?  Why would  common thieves waste their time with someone who was well protected  and obviously  didn't have much in the way of  material  possessions? And why did she lie to me about who and what she was?
	Shit!  There  was  so much about this  strange  female  that didn't click.
	"Tahr, who are you?"
	She flinched when I spoke, then faced me with her ears back. "I do not understand, K'hy."
	"Don't  give  me  that!  " I snarled and  she  took  a  step backwards,  glancing at the naked blade in my hands. "Christ on a crutch!  I  not hurt you!" I dropped the knife and held out  open hands,  "Who are you?  No merchant, I know. How help you I if you not say the. . . truth?"
	Her  ears came up a little and she combed her claws  through her ragged mane as she regarded me.  "Truth," she murmured. "Very well, I tell you.
	"Do you know what 'Born-to-rule' is?"
	I rolled my eyes. "Someone born to rule?"
	Awkwardly, laboriously she told me.
	Their ruler - the one who is born to rule - is an individual whose  entire  upbringing and education has been  geared  -  from birth - to leading and being a figurehead for their people.  They are  trained in politics and diplomacy,  economics  and  trading, weapons and tactics.
	They are raised on private estates - private schools - being tutored  by old masters,  returning to the Capital only when  the former  monarch  became  incapable  of  effectively  leading  the Realm, through either illness or death
	Tahr was one of the candidates.  She had received news  that the  former  ruler - the Shirai - was dying.  She  had  left  her southern  estate  with  sixteen armed  Sathe,  one  of  them  her prospective mate.
	"We  were  attacked three times," she held up  a  hand  with three  claws  out,  retracting them in  sequence,  like  a  human ticking  events off on his fingers.
	"First we drive them off, lost four soldiers. Second time we escape,  lost [six] and also supplies.  Third time,  we have  six Sathe  left,  my  mate one of them,  he killed  by   arrow."  She dropped her eyes. God, if I had just been a few seconds faster. . . 
	That got me. They had been engaged. . . or whatever it was they did. Did that loss hurt her? Could she actually feel that kind of pain?  How  could I tell?  Her face remained as inscrutable as  a statue's. 
	"My [life] I owe you."
	That line. . . Jesus,  I'd never dreamed I'd hear that anywhere in the real world.
	"You help me?" she asked.
	I stared,  meeting eyes that hit like an electric shock. All she'd told me. . . "You say the truth?"
	Goddamn if she didn't look hurt. "K'hy, yes!"
	"Who were they?"
	"I do not know."
	"Yes you do. Are they soldiers?"
	She gaped.  Outrage or astonishment,  I wasn't sure. Finally she just said,  "Perhaps. Not Eastern soldiers. . . others. I am not sure."
	I weighed that up.
	She was on the run,  not from the forces of this realm,  but from others.  If that was the case, then why didn't she go to the garrison posted in this town? Surely they would help her.
	"[      ]," she said.
	"Not understand," I said.
	Her fingers twined together as she tried to  explain.  "Some who not want me. Some who belong to others. They try and stop me. Dangerous. Easier if they do not know where I am."
	Turncoats? Traitors?!
	"Where do you go?" I asked
	"North. Very big town."
	Shit, I had nothing else to do, why not help a cat princess?
	"Yes, I help."
	She  smiled  and held out her hand.  Uncertainly  I  touched palms with her; Shake.

******

	The old iron axe imbedded itself in the wood with a shock  I felt up my arm.  I shifted my grip on the straight,  worn  handle and  hauled the piece of wood up over my head,  then  brought  it down  hard  on the chopping block with a  sharp  BANG.  The  wood split,  the halves flying apart.  I took a moment to lean against the  axe and wipe the sweat from my brow.  My hands  were  sticky with resin and the scent of pine added a fresh touch to air  that smelled predominantly of animal shit.  A couple of cubs  scurried forward.  One  tossed  the stuff I'd just split on  the  woodpile while the other set another piece up on the block.
	"Thanks,  kids," I smiled at them. They chattered and hissed and snarled back at me. I had a small audience gathered around sitting in the  shade of  the  rickety  fence surrounding the  dusty  yard  behind  the inn. The cubs of the town of Traders Meet loved me. Better than a circus.
	Early  that  morning  - shortly after  I'd  started  on  the daunting  pile  of  uncut  wood  -  they'd  been  nervous  little shadows: watching me, but vanishing whenever I so much as glanced in their direction.
	However,  they  learned  that I wasn't about to  come  after them,  bellowing,  screaming,  and brandishing the axe.  Now they crowded around,  following and touching me. They weren't as sleek as  their  elders.   Instead  they  looked  more  like  overgrown teddy bears with oversized heads,  hands, and feet, their gangling limbs lending them an air of awkwardness.  Cute as hell.  When  I went  to the local well to fetch water for the  inn,  I  returned carrying  a bucket in one hand and a squealing,  laughing cub  in the other. I was almost enjoying myself.
	And Tahr was as twitchy as a cat in the rain.
	Later that evening she had perched herself on the windowsill to  stare  moodily at the setting sun,  her chin resting  upon  a clenched fist. Money, that was her concern. She  had  counted  on getting enough for the  wagon  to  buy passage on a caravan bound for the seaport of Bay Town.  While we could  have used the wagon ourselves to get there,  Tahr  decided that  we would get more for it in a small town where vehicles  of any  kind  were  always in demand,  and  we  would  attract  less attention arriving as passengers in among other Sathe. Also, I guessed she was counting on the value of protection in numbers.
	"Although  after today I doubt you could be  [inconspicuous] if  I were to put you in a box," Tahr sighed while examining  her claws. "Why did you [encourage] the cubs?"
	"What do I?" I asked with a shrug.  "Give them scared?  Make them run? Not good 
for my image."
	"Huh!"  she snorted and ran her forefinger down  the  window frame.  A single gouge in the wood appeared, following her digit, wood curling away from her claw. "You did not speak to them?"
	I shook my head and gave a twisted smile. "No."
	Tahr muttered something that I translated as 'thank God  for small favours' and dropped her chin back onto her fist.
	"He not pay?" I asked after a minutes silence.
	Her head snapped about and she glared at me,  then gave  the classical  hissing  spit  of a furious cat.  "He  not  pay,"  she confirmed.
	Bastard! I work my butt off and get shafted. . . 
	I nodded and thought for a second,  then opened my pack  and rooted  around  in the depths.  My fingers closed on what  I  was groping for and I pulled it out.
	"Tahr, here."
	She looked curiously at what I was holding.
	The velcro fastenings on my wallet made their characteristic ripping sound as I pulled it open.  Before I handed it over to Tahr  I took  the  credit cards,  old photos,  and receipt slips  from  a pocket. She took it hesitantly.
	"I  have not seen this before," she said as she stroked  the nylon fabric then opened and closed it several  times,  squinting at the closures.  From inside she pulled a fifty dollar note  and held it up to the light.
	"Strange. . . What is it?"
	"Money," I replied. "Human money."
	"Money?!" she  looked and sounded incredulous and examined  a bill more closely.  "Strange," she repeated, "but what am I to do with it?"
	"Can you sell it?"
	"Sell?"  Her hands froze in their inspection of  the  wallet and she looked up at me,  a spark catching in her eyes. "Yes. Yes! Any leather worker would be interested in the pouch and I can find an artisan or [somesuch] who would be interested in the pictures."
	"Enough?" I asked.
	"Enough?" She smiled. "Yes, I think there is plenty." Then she sobered  and stood up to touch my face.
	I  flinched as that hand brushed my skin: fur on the back  of the hand,  knuckles, fingers. Black pads on fingertips and palms. Strange  joints  and  bones.  Tips of  claws  poking  from  small indentations where the fingernail should be.
	"Do you want to?" she asked.
	I shrugged. "It is. . . nothing. Small thing."
	"Not  much. . . !"  Again she opened the wallet.  "I thank you. . . what is this?" she pulled a couple of small foil packets from inside the wallet, sniffed at them and quickly jerked her head back, looking affronted.
	"Ah,"  I  coughed  and reached over to pluck  them  from  her fingers.   "Not   sell   those."  No,   Condoms  might   not   be appreciated. . . or comprehended.
	"And you are sure you want to sell this?" Tahr asked again.
	"How else get money?"
	She laughed.  "Not hard,  perhaps not [nice]. Always [     ] to sell."
	"I not understand."
	She  frowned, rubbed at the wrinkles  marching  up  the velvet of her nose. "Ah. . . Thing-make-more Sathe. Between male and female: [Sex]. Do you understand?"
	Oh. "Yes."
	She stared,  then her ears dipped sideways and twitched. She was laughing at me, however silently. "Is it the same with h'mans?" she asked.
	"Is the same," I replied.
	"Always male looking for female not in [    ]."
	I  didn't even ask what that meant but I suddenly  realised that  I may never see another human woman again. And that  thought hurt.

******

	Before we left I took time to clean myself up.  It may  have been a bit of a mistake,  but I was still living and thinking  by human  standards.  That  would  change in  time;  so  slowly  and gradually that I wasn't always aware of what was happening to me, but it would change.
	After getting my hands on hot water - you can't just turn on a faucet here - I did my best at shaving my  scraggly  beginnings of a beard away.  Saying that it's not easy shaving with a  knife is a classic understatement.  It's fucking difficult. . . and unless you've got skin like a buffalo's backside, it hurts!
	Tahr  was astonished by the whole performance.  She sat  and watched my selfmutilation for a time before hissing something to herself and leaving. At least afterwards I felt human again.
	For  the two days we had before we left Traders  Meet  time passed  slowly.  Nights  were long,  jolted awake  sweating  from disturbingly vague and shadowy dreams. Days were spent sitting at the  window watching the street outside while Tahr  continued  my education in the Sathe language and culture.  Late into the night she would sit with me and patiently correct me as I practised  my grammar and vocabulary.  More often than not  her exasperated and slightly  pained expression could only hint at the  atrocities  I had committed upon her native tongue.

******

	"Three  Realms I have travelled,  but I have never seen  the likes of this!"
	The  wagon master was a stocky,  grizzled Sathe with brown  fur lanced  with  grey  stripes,   circled  me,   examining  me  with amazement. Across the street naked Sathe labourers were  panting from  exertion in the morning coolness as they loaded sacks  onto the  back  of a wagon.  Early traffic rumbled along  the  cobbled streets and there was already the sound of merchants shouting.
	It had been the same every morning.
	"I  had  heard rumours of a Sathe with a  strange  pet,"  he said. "Tell me, where did you find it?"
	"West. In the mountains," Tahr said. "Yes, rare indeed."
	"You are a [trapper?]" he asked. "Hunting such a creature?"
	"Not exactly," Tahr replied with a twitch of her  ears,  "he found  me.  I  think  he [     ]."  Whatever  she  said,  the wagon masters thought it hilarious.
	"Very  well,"  he  said when he  had  finished  hissing  his laughter.  "If  the  others will allow it,  it may  ride  in  the wagon."  He  waved his hand in the general direction of  a  wagon with  a pair of rough passenger benches in the rear half  of  the cargo bed.
	"Thank you,  sir," Tahr smiled and stooped to pick the  pack up from the dust.  The wagon master turned to shout at some of his employees, then looked at me again.
	"Why is he wearing clothes?"
	"To keep him warm, of course," Tahr said. "He has hardly any fur of his own."
	"Strange that you should find it in the mountains then,"  he mused.  "I would think that he would be more comfortable  further south." He looked me up and down again, then snapped his jaws and returned to his work.
	Tahr  took me aside into the shade of a nearby  porch.  Away from  the  dust and bustle of the street;  also away  from  sharp Sathe ears.
	"Pet?" I almost spat the word out.
	"I am sorry, K'hy. . . "
	"You not. . . do not look sorry," I sulked.
	"It is the easiest way," she tried to explain,  clicking the claws  on  her index fingers together  in  frustration.  "Do  not attract too much attention."
	I snorted. "Do not speak?"
	"Yes."
	"How long?"
	"Perhaps a week."
	"A week?! I do not know if I can. . . "
	She touched my sleeve. "I will try to find time to speak with you. I will try."
	I  closed my eyes for a second, then opened them and  nodded. "Alright. Your pet am I."
	Shades of Lassie.
	"Good.  Thank  you K'hy." She surprised me by flashing me  a grin  that could only be an imitation of one of my  smiles,  then she swatted my arm to get me moving. Her claws weren't completely pulled.

******

	I  trudged along beside the llama as it made its steady  way along  the rough road with the caravan.  There were  three  Bison drawn wagons, two carrying cargo and supplies, the other carrying the passengers. Two guards on llamas brought up the rear.   There  were ten. . . I'll call them people in the caravan:  nine Sathe  and  one human. The wagon master - name of Char -  drove the passenger wagon in the centre of the convoy. The two cargo vehicles led the way with two  Sathe wagoners apiece,  one driving while the  other  either rode  shotgun  or  - more often - stretched  out  asleep  on  the canvass covering the wagon bed.
	Aside  from  Tahr and myself,  there were  only  two  paying passengers  in  the caravan.  I had plenty of time to  watch  and listen to them, learning about them.
	Elmerth  was  a merchant from a small town with  the  morbid name of Lost Lives. He was predominantly brown-furred with only a faint stippling of red ochre.  As his wares were textiles, it was fitting  that  his breeches were made of something that looked expensive,  as was his jewellery: silver filigree bracelets and armlets. Fancy. Damned impractical out there.
	A young female Sathe wearing a black cloak and leather  kilt spent most of her time dozing in the warmth of the  sun. She was called Hymath.  She seemed to be a bodyguard to Elmerth, and even though  she didn't seem like much,  Tahr warned me she  could  be very dangerous. That I found out for myself. Later.
	The two guards,  each decked out in leather armour, kilt and carrying a scimitar,  were called Kharm and Samath. A pair of male youths hired to escort the caravan. They  were there more as protection against  errant animals than against trouble of the twolegged kind. Animals here are  not  as scared of the Sathe as animals in our world  are  of humans,  there  had  been a few incidents  of  trouble with bears and wolvesafter the easy food at campsites.  Not many, but enough to warrant a guard.
	Two days. Two days of the same contryside, the trees, the dust and bugs. Everyone was bored, especially me. Plodding on, hour in, hour out. The Sathe who weren't occupied with driving rode in the back, some wrapped in their own thoughts, other dozing, the only sign they were alive were their ears twitching at persistent insects.

******

	Just  to  the  north of what could have  been  the  Pamunkey River.  The road had started across the hilly,  rolling plains to the east of the Chesapeake Bay.  Everywhere you looked  sweetgum, green ash,  yellow poplar,  hickory, chestnut oak, white oak, red oak,  Loblolly. The deciduous proliferated; the number of conifers slowly waning.  Grouse,  quail, and wild turkey made sure that we didn't go hungry.  In the low twenties,  the weather was warm and muggy,  but not oppressive.  Typical for Virginia. The passengers in the cart dozed in the sun.       
	The first quarrel took the driver of the first wagon through the throat,  he fell sideways in his seat, the bison kept moving. The  second got Kharm through his right arm,  pinning it  to  his armour. He howled and toppled off his llama.
	By that time I was moving.  Scrambling full tilt toward  the passenger  wagon with my head down.  I heard the soft swish of  a steel  blade leaving a leather lined sheath as Samath  dismounted, facing off the twelve red and black armoured Sathe coming at us from both sides of  the  road,  six  to  a  side.  Three archers slung aside their crossbows and drew swords.
	Three?. . . I'd only seen two arrows.
	Elmerth was sprawled on his back,  collapsed over a pile of his  wares  with  the black shaft of a quarrel  poking  from  his mouth. Fur glistened red. A hand twitched.
	I was staring.  Someone howled my name, jerking my attention away as other Sathe left the wagon:  Hymath vaulted over the left side in  a swirl of black cloak,  looking for all the world  like some  giant predatory bird.  Tahr went over the other  side,  her blade  sweeping out of the sheath in a glittering arc  and  mouth gaping in a vicious grimace that was ninety percent teeth. If she made  a  noise  -  snarled something - I  didn't  hear  it  as  I dove onto the wagonbed,  scrabbling for my gear half-buried among the  other cargo,  pulling frantically when the M-16  snagged  on something.The  closest Sathe were only a couple of meters away when  I swung the muzzle up, cocking and firing.
	At that range, I couldn't miss. The slugs smashed into their chests, the muzzle blast punching charred discs across their fur. They stopped as if a wall had hit them.
	For a second the entire skirmish seemed to freeze,  all  the Sathe staring at me with obvious shock on their faces. A shout rang out from the trees and more of  them  burst  from  the foliage.  I  saw a crossbow being raised towards me and put  four rounds into the Sathe wielding it.And they kept coming. Something that killed them before they could get near and they kept fighting.  That spoke volumes about their training:  they  were  good,  or fanatic,  or perhaps  there  was something more terrifying than my weapon awaiting if they fled.
	Tahr was facing three,  her scimitar parrying and  thrusting at  an amazing speed,  a blur of steel.  She was damned good  but she didn't have a prayer of defeating all of them,  the best  she could do was delay them for a few seconds. It was enough.
	One attacker fell,  with her point in his stomach, clutching at his entrails. Then I fired: One attacker's head half-shattered in  a  pink and grey spray.  The other took a round  through  her throat and died slower, thrashing on her comrades' remains as the dusty road turned sticky with blood.       I saw Kharm huddled on the ground,  clutching at the quarrel through his arm.  One of the attackers paused in her rush and was almost  casually raising her sword for a stab at his  unprotected throat.  The crosshairs settled on her neck and she spasmed as  a small red flower seemed to bloom there.  Hot brass rattled to the floor of the wagon.
	"K'hy!"
	I'd  underestimated their speed.  There were two of them  at the tailgate of the wagon. . . 
	"Shit!"
	I  jumped straight up. A sword hissed under my feet and I planted the sole of  my boot in his face on the way down. He fell back out of sight.
	The other one lunged forwards, sword point aimed at my  guts.  I dodged. . . and staggered when the  wagon  unexpectedly jerked forward:.  The bison had decided enough was  enough:  they were leaving, taking my balance with them and my feet skidded out from under me and my  helmet cracked on the tailgate. . . 
	Flat on my back,  choking on bile, a red and black figure looming over me, sword raised then spinning in sunlight as a body toppled,  pinning me.  A sharp, metallic-tinged  warmth  spread across my shoulder.  Tahr stood  over  me, fighting  something that clattered like a manic  typewriter.  Hot brass spattered against my cheek.  Everything just faded out.

******

	Heat on my face.
	Sunlight?  bright  in  my  eyes,  dazzling,  motes  of  dust drifting  above  me,  buzzing dots circling and blurring  in  and out. . . 
	Pain. . . My  head was throbbing in time with a pounding in  my ears.  Where?  Why was I lying here? The sky lurched and circled, floaters bloomed before my eyes.
	There  was fighting,  there was pain.  I didn't want  to  be here. Where was here again? I didn't know. Home. . . 
	Where was home?
	I  was on my feet.  There were  tall  shapes. . . trees,  solid against my shoulder with bright light glaring down in shafts that dazzled to look at.  There,  in the distance,  that hill.  I knew home was just beyond that hill. I'd go to that hill. . . The world reeled,  or was it me?  The ground hard against my feet with every step,  trees rough under my hands.  That hill; it was just over that hill.
	Sharp pain in my arm, pulling me around. . . 
	Animals,  attacking me, claws and teeth and eyes, and teeth, and  catching me,  and I was falling and screaming and they  were over me as I struggled and twisted then coughed bile and  vomited and choked as something stroked at my hair and closed my eyes  so tired. . . 

******

	I awoke to night,  a neon blue moon braving the  cloud-cover and  riding low above the crests of pines atop a  distant  ridge. Crickets  or  some other night insect rasped and clicked  in  the dark.  Distant wind hissed through branches overhead with a sound like  surf  on shale.  I looked up at dark  branches  silhouetted against a leaden sky.
	Night. How long had I been out?
	Then the throbbing ache in my head hit me.
	"Uhhnnn. . . " I groaned.
	"K'hy?"
	The  voice  sounded  from the dark  nearby,  followed  by  a rustling,  as of feet on pine needles and a Sathe's head eclipsed the  moon and clouds.  A hand - fur with the softness of sable  - touched my face then pulled away. "You are awake?"
	"Huhnnn. . . Tahr?"  I couldn't see her and it was all I  could do to croak her name;  my  throat  was like sandpaper,  foul  with  the  lingering aftertaste  of  old  vomit.  I tried to reach up and  found I couldn't move  my arms.  There was something wrapped  around  my wrists.
	"Yes, it is me." She hesitated, "You are sane again?"
	Sane? What was she talking about?
	Oh.
	I closed my eyes at the memory. "Please. . . drink?"
	A  creak of leather armour as she held a bowl to  my  mouth, trickling water between my lips. I drank greedily, but she pulled it away again.
	"Thank you." Speaking was easier.
	"How  are you feeling?" A damp cloth dabbed at my  face  and came away stained with dust and something dark as dried blood.
	How was I feeling? Like shit.
	A  jaw  feeling swollen  and  stiff. The most god awful headache. . . 
		"There are little Sathe with hammers in my head," I  groaned and tried to reach up again.
	"Oh. . . " Hands began fumbling with the bindings that held  my wrists crossed on my stomach.  "We had to.  You were fighting  us and screaming and you would not listen,  you just spoke your  own noises." She pulled away a length of rope padded with  cloth.  "I am sorry."
	I didn't really know what to  feel:  anger,  hurt. . . what?  I wasn't quite firing on all cylinders. Almost absently I rubbed at my  wrists.  Despite the padding there was  some  tenderness,  as there would be if I'd been struggling?
	"All right,"  I sighed.  "I remember. . . I did  a  few. . . strange things."
	She  hissed  and stroked hair back  from  my  face,  fingers brushing lightly at my cheeks and forehead.
	"How long was I out?"
	"Out?" her muzzle wrinkled.  "Sleeping?  For the better part of two days since you fell. You worried me."
	"Two days?" I winced. "I will be more careful next time. We won?. . . "
	Tahr's ears flickered sideways.  "You are talking to me, are you not?"
	True.  But what was the cost?  I'd seen. . . how many  fall?  I couldn't remember. I  gritted  my teeth and turned my head.  I was  wrapped  in a blanket,  propped up against some sacks under a pine.  A  small campfire popped and sputtered nearby,  its light and warmth  lost in the dimness.  A supine figure lay motionless under a stack  of blankets.  I  stared hard before recognising Kharm.  Under blankets; with his fur?  His eyes were closed and his right arm lay on the blanket,  a  crude bandage - stained brown - wrapped around his bicep.  Beside  him, Hymath huddled, lost in her black cloak.
	"He live?" I asked Tahr, mangling my Sathe again..
	"Might. His arm, it will [      ]."
	"What?"
	Tahr scratched her ribs.  "Go bad. Bad smelling, black, then die. Understand?" 
	Damnation!  Infection.  Gritting my teeth I touched the lump on the back of my skull. I nearly screamed. Tender. Clotted blood matted my hair.  So infection was something I had to worry  about also. And it was a safe bet that the Sathe didn't have penicillin or quinine. "Yes,  understand.  In  my  pack  - "  I  grimaced.  It  was difficult  to think,  my mind kept wandering to other  things.  I wanted  to sleep again.  With an effort I dragged my  brain  back online, " - box with red, uh. . . thing on it. . . "
	Tahr  didn't wait for me to finish.  She jumped to her  feet and scurried to the wagon. Char  sat beside the fire while on the other side two  furry lumps were two wagoners curled up and asleep.  The  wagonmaster's eyes met mine,  held for a second,  then dropped. Probably trying to figure out what he had gotten himself into.
	There was no sign of Samath.
	Tahr dropped beside me clutching my medical kit. "This?"
	I opened the small kit and popped a penicillin tablet.  Then directed Tahr as she applied antiseptics to the cuts on my  head. She  hesitated  when I winced and my  fingers  curled,  clutching handfuls of sod, then she clamped her jaws tight together and continued.
	I was panting hard when she finished  up. Lightheaded.  Tahr sat beside me while I caught my breath and my pulse slowed down again. "That is all right?" she asked, concerncd.
	"Yes. Good." I rubbed at my temples, then popped the question, "Who was killed?" 	She grimaced,  her nose bunching up showing her sharp teeth. "Four. Samath, two teamsters, and Elmerth."
	"Samath?"  I  tried to take that in.  It  was  difficult  to grasp.
	"You liked him?" Tahr asked after a short pause.
	"Yes."
	She ducked her head: "He fought well."
	I closed my eyes and was quiet for a few seconds.
	"Do  you  know who they were?" I asked  without  opening  my eyes.
	"They wore the uniform of the soldiers of the Gulf Realm."
	The  land  to  the  southwest  of  the  Eastern   Realm,   I remembered. Along the northern rim of the Gulf of Mexico. "Why they attack us?"
	She  shrugged and bared her teeth.  "Difficult  to  explain. Ahh. . . I  will  try  to keep it simple." She lowered her voice as she spoke. "Their  ruler  wants  this province.  If Hraasa stops the [candidates]  getting to Mainport, the  Eastern  realm will be without a High Lord or  heir  to  the line."
	"Who?. . . Rasa?" I was still a few steps behind her.
	"Hraasa," Tahr corrected me.  "The High Lord,  the  Born-To-Rule of the gulf realm."
	I tried again to pronounce the name,  failing. "I am sorry," I said with a forced smile. "It hurts to think."
	Tahr's  ears twitched and she dabbed the cloth  against the  side of my face.  I reached up and held it there,  the  cool moisture bringing a little relief against the pounding behind  my temples.
	"You were not honest about that weapon," Tahr finally  said, sounding  a little hurt.  Or perhaps I was reading too much  into that statement. Anthropomorphising. It was tough not to.
	"Oh," I hesitated,  then confessed,  "I thought it would  be best."
	"Why?"
	I  looked  at her  beseechingly.  "Tahr,  please.  I  cannot explain. I do not know how."
	"Can  you  not try?" she asked.  "You come into my  life  so suddenly,  yet you tell me so little about yourself.  I know  you have  a weapon beyond anything I have ever seen before.  But  how much more about you is there that I do not know?"
	"I  am asking myself the same question," another voice broke in.  Hymath appeared from the shadows and crouched down beside Tahr.  Her hands were toying with something that looked sharp and glittered  with the watery ripples of steel.  Not a  threat.  Not exactly.  "Both you and your. . . pet are much more than you seem to be."  Then  she  turned to adress me  directly:  "Do  you  have  a name?"  
	I  glanced  at Tahr.  She moved her hand in  an  unobtrusive gesture of assent.  "My name is Kelly," I said;  nervously  aware that  this was the first Sathe besides Tahr with whom I had  ever spoken.
	"K'hy." She tried the name,  again giving the hard  consonant of  the  'K' and the aitch a sibilant sound,  just as  Tahr  did. "That is all? Just K'hy? You have no Clan name?"
	"It would mean nothing to you."
	Hymath  turned to Tahr.  "My oath!  Where did you find  this one?"
	"I  have  told  you the truth about  that,"  Tahr  answered, looking guarded.
	"And you do not know where it. . . he comes from?"
	"I think that perhaps he comes from far to the west,  but he has never been clear on that.  He claims that there are others of his kind - his people, but he cannot return to them," Tahr said.
	Hymath's muzzle wrinkled.  "You have been [       ]?"she asked me.
	"I am sorry, I do not understand," I said.
	Hymath looked at Tahr in surprise and Tahr explained: "He is still learning to speak our way."
	"There is another?"
	"He has. . . sounds of his own."
	"Those noises he was making earlier?"
	"Yes,  those.  I cannot pronounce many of them, but they are words to him," Tahr told the other.  "K'hy,  she asked if you had been  [    ].  Did your people make you leave?  Is that  why  you cannot return?"
	"No. I cannot return because I do not know how."
	"You are lost?" Hymath asked.
	"Umm. . . Yes."
	"And what about that weapon you used?"
	Why was she giving me the third degree like this?  Tahr  was doing  nothing to stop her and indeed seemed to be wary  of  this small  female in her black cloak.  Her arrogant attitude made  me think  cop,  but Tahr had told me she was a mercenary  of  some kind: Dangerous. Still, what business was it of hers?
	"It  is  mine,"  I finally said.  "Among my people  I  am  a soldier. That is the weapon we use.
	"Something  happen. . . happened that I do  not  understand.  I cannot explain. I was lost in the mountains. I walked much. . . many days  before  I meet Tahr.  She help me.  Before  I  see  her,  I not. . . did not even know that Sathe exist. . . existed."
	The fire crackled loudly while the Sathe digested that.
	"How is Kharm?" I asked into the silence.
	"In  great  pain,"  Hymath  replied.   "Do  you   understand infection?"
	"Yes,"  I  nodded.  "If  that is  trouble,  I  can  help.  I have. . . things to stop infection and others to fix wound."
	"Are they safe?" Tahr asked suspiciously.
	"They worked on you," I pointed out.
	Tahr's ears flickered,  a smile. Her finger absently stroked her  chest where the scar still showed,  then she gently  reached out and batted me on the cheek with the palm of her hand, fingers curled. What did that mean?
	Whatever it was, it meant something to Hymath; her ears went down.
	"Yes,  they did." Tahr looked back to Hymath. "His drugs are safe, I assure you." 	My  head  pounded as I tightened the  clean  bandage  around Kharm's side. The wound looked serious; perhaps more than serious than it actually was, but I didn't want to take chances with it.
	The  quarrel  had  gone  through  the  flesh  of  his  upper arm, pinning it to his side like a butterfly to a board. It was a small blessing that they didn't have barbed heads on the  bolts. The simple, pointed tip they used made a clean hole and was fairly easy  to remove.  A triangular head would have lodged  in between  his  ribs and been pure hell to get  out.  Perhaps  even impossible.
	Each  of the wounds were gory holes of  half-clotted  blood, tufts of fur, and the white substance of fat. I had to shave away the surrounding fur then rinse each of them with antiseptics then stitch them shut.  Thank God there was plenty of surgical  suture thread on the spool in the kit.
	The hole in his side was pretty deep. The quarrel had ripped through muscle and just missed a rib.  I still had no idea how  a Sathe's  vital  organs  were arranged,  so I  couldn't  tell  how serious it was. This I cleaned as well as I could and stitched it up, then bandaged it using the last of my clean gauze bandages. A penicillin tablet completed the treatment.
	"Are  you  a  [     ]?"  Hymath  asked,  fingering  the  gauze bandages.
	I  was  sitting sucking air with my head between  my  knees, dizzy after that work.  I looked up:  "What?  I do not know  that word."
	"A [      ], one who heals."
	Oh. A Doctor, Physician, Shaman.
	"No,  but I was,  um. . . taught to help until a  real. . . healer could arrive." Hymath stared at me,  hard and long. Finally in a soft voice she just said, "Where are your people, K'hy? Truth this time."
	I  met her gaze for a couple of seconds,  then looked  away. The crests of the surrounding trees were silhouetted against  the night sky,  the stars.  Uncounted billions of suns up there - all equally insignificant, all equally important.
	"I do not know. . . " I murmured. "I do not know."
	Alone. Stranded in a way that made distance meaningless.  This  WAS earth, but it wasn't MY earth!
	(My people Hymath?  Sure.  Take the first space/time warp to the fifth dimension then it's the third wormhole on the right.)
	The  loneliness  hit me then,  as it would do often  in  the times to come.  I swallowed hard and noisily and looked away from those myriads of worlds, away from the Sathe. Not fast enough.
	"What is happening?" Hymath asked,  head cocked to one side. "Your eyes are watering. Are you ill again?"
	I  scrambled to my feet,  ignoring the nausea and  dizziness, and staggered away from the fire,  away from those things. Behind me I heard them arguing. Tahr sounded pissed with Hymath. I ignored them. I just wanted to be alone to wallow in self-pity.	In the shelter of a wagon I sank down, curled up and buried my aching head in my arms, sobbing myself to sleep. As  I  slipped into the muzzy darkness bordering  on  nothing,  I thought I felt a soft paw on my shoulder.

******

	The  morning came with daylight forcing  its  way under my eyelids.  I groaned and sat up,  rubbing small  granules from my sore eyes.  My head still throbbed, but not as fiercely as the  night before. I ached from sleeping on  the hard ground. Sometime in the night, someone had wrapped me in the anodised survival blanket.
	It was a calm morning.  Dew still lay on the ground, slowly evaporating into a thin mist.  Birds screeched at each other in the treetops. The sun was a white glare on the horizon,  and two five-foot cats fixed breakfast while four more snored away under blankets.
	Char  and  Hymath looked up as I approached.  I  cleared  my throat uncomfortably. "Good morning, Hymath"
	"Is it?" The small female slowly stirred the stew.  "You are feeling  better?  I had not expected something like you to react like that."
	I shrugged. There was a pregnant silence. Kharm  broke  it by moving under his blanket  and  muttering something. "How is he?" I asked,  moving over to kneel beside the young mercenary. 
	"He   woke   for   a  short   time   last   night,"   Hymath instantly responded,  obviously glad of the distraction. "And his wounds do not seem to be getting any worse. It is still too early to tell."
	I lifted the bandage on his arm.  He stirred as I moved  the limb.  Well,  he seemed to be stable:  I couldn't see any dirt or fur  in the scab and the surrounding skin looked a healthy  tone. His breathing looked normal for a sleeping Sathe. He was hot, but I'd noticed their body temperature was a little above my own. I didn't think he was running a fever.
	He  would live,  but for a time he would be in  considerable pain. That was something I couldn't do anything about.
	When time came to leave, he was cautiously and gently  lifted onto  the wagon.  I hated to move him,  but I had to  agree  with the others' decision; waiting around could be unacceptably risky. The  lurching of the wagon caused me almost as much pain  as it  did Kharm.  My head still felt like an eggshell  filled  with nitroglycerine.  I suffered in silence,  trying not to groan when a wheel went one on one with an exceptionally deep rut in the road.
	The  foothills were behind us and now the land  was  broad, rolling  vales  and  plains  swathed  in  dense   semi-continuous forests.   Copses   of  trees  defended  their   own   individual territories,  fields of grass and small shrubs in  between;  like no-mansland.
	Something landed in the hay beside me.  I turned my head  to squint at it: the M-16. "Yours," Tahr said shortly.
	"Thank you," I nodded and picked up the rifle to examine it. None  the  worse for wear,  but the magazine was  empty  and  the selector was locked on full auto. She'd emptied the weapon.
	"Did  you have a reason for not telling me what  that  was?" asked Tahr.
	"I wanted to. . . understand,  to learn about you," I said.  "I did not want you to be afraid of me."
	Her muzzle wrinkled.  "Because your people are more powerful than ours?"
	I shrugged. "Uh. . . Sort of."
	She  scratched  her elbow with a delicate  claw  and  looked around at the passing trees. "K'hy," she began without looking at me, "is there a reason you are here?"
	The  wagon lurched and I grabbed for a support.  "I  do  not know. But if there is I would very much like to know what it is."
	Her pupils abruptly went to pinpricks.  "What I mean is  did you come here to examine us? to watch us?"
	"No!" I shook my head. "You think I am a. . . a. . . "
	"[Spy]?"
	"Jesus H. . . Why the hell do you think that?!  I have told you the truth: I am lost!" Hymath was still facing forward, watching the bison, but her ears  had  rotated backwards,  toward us.  Tahr  seemed   not  to notice.  "You  say that before you met me,  you never  knew  that Sathe even existed.  If you come from the west, you would have to pass  through at least one other Realm: there is no way  that  you would not see another Sathe!"
	I hung my head,  then looked up.  "That is very good, Tahr." Her  ears twitched and I also smiled:  "But you forget.  I  never said I came from the west - that was you."
	"But you. . . you never saw a Sathe before me?"
	"No."
	"Then where did you come from?  Did you simply appear in the middle  of  the Eastern Realm?" She gave a  disgusted  snort  and started  honing  her claws against the  bench.  I  swallowed  and stared at the strands of wood curling away from her claws.  A threat? I wasn't sure. "Will you at least show me how to use your weapon properly?"
	Still watching her claws shredding the wood, I nodded. Tahr  watched me pushing cartridges into the  magazine.
	"When these are gone,  that is it. No more." I had about two hundred  and sixty rounds left.  I showed her how to  insert  the magazine, then pulled it out again and handed her the rifle.
	"Should that not be in it?" she asked, pointing at the clip.
	"I  just  want  to  see  how  you  hold  it,"  I  said.  She uncertainly  raised the rifle to her shoulder.  The M-16's not  a big  weapon,  but it was still awkward for her  diminutive  stature.  I shifted around until I was behind her, my arms lightly around her to  help  her adjust her grip.  I could feel  her  twitching  and tense; her fur bristling, muscles bunched like springs.
	"No," I coaxed.  "Relax.  I will not bite. . . That is  better. Pull  it into you shoulder.  Now press the trigger -  that. . . Yes. Use  your whole hand." I put my hand around hers and  showed  her how to squeeze the whole grip.
	It didn't take long to show her the mechanics of the weapon, but proficiency comes with practice - hands on experience  - and I didn't have enough ammunition for that.
	"And your warriors are all armed with these?"
	I nodded.
	"Such a force would be [invincible]," she said.
	"Until  they  meet  a force armed in the  same  fashion,"  I retorted. Tahr looked surprised, then thoughtful.
	Eventually she said, "True. It is a [    ] device, but only when  the wielder is ready.  If Hymath had not  helped  you,  you would be dead."
	"What?"
	"If Hymath had. . . "
	"I  know  what  you said,  but I  do  not  understand.  What happened?"
	"Do you not remember?"
	"Uh. . . I remember I was on the ground,  then something happened.  I thought it was you." I rubbed at the shoulder of  my shirt, the spot Sathe blood had stained black. I 
glanced to where Hymath  sat  in  her  black  cloak,   the  hood  back,  her  ears occasionally twitching as insects buzzed around them.
	"That  was  Hymath,  she is [scirth],"  Tahr  explained.  "A special fighter.  Like Born Rulers they are trained from the time they  were  cubs  in  the  use  of  a  variety  of  weapons   and [techniques]  known only to them.  They are usually  employed  as mercenaries or bodyguards. . . And they are very, very good at their work."
	I   took  some  time  to  translate  and  mull   over   this information,  then  clambered  up front to sit  next  to  Hymath, grabbing  at  available  handholds  as  the  wagon  lurched  over the potholes the track seemed to be made of.  The driver's  bench was  simply  a plank with a backrest, the whole thing perched at the front of  the  wagon, much like the wagons you see in western films.  Hymath glanced up as I swung up beside her.
	"Hello, bald one."
	I let that lie.  "I want to thank you," I started awkwardly. "I want to thank you for what you did. . . ah. . . maybe I can repay you someday."
	Her ears flickered in a smile.  "Maybe you already have, ah? You repaid me several times over I think.  I couldn't fight them all."
	She was quiet for a time, then spoke again. "Why is the Gulf Realm so interested in you?" she asked.
	"In me? I do not understand."
	"Why  else  would they risk an [international  incident]  by coming  this  far into our Realm unless they were in  pursuit  of something  extremely valuable to them," she said.  "Would  the  [    ] in the [    ] know if they took you?"
	"The  what in the what?" I asked.  "I do not  understand!  I cannot value to. . . be of value to them!"
	"Who  else?" Hymath said,  then her muzzle wrinkled  as  her lips pulled back. She half-glanced back at Tahr, then lowered her voice. "Tahr. . . is her clan name Shirai?"
	"I do not know," I confessed. "She has not told me."
	"You are bound for Mainport?"
	"Yes."
	She   twitched   the  reins  and  gave   a   low,   warbling hiss: "Srrraaa. It is her." I half turned in my seat to look back:  Tahr had her back to us,  idly watching a small bird catching insects on the wing. Her ears were relaxed,  but I wondered just how much of what we  said she could hear. "Hymath," I was concerned. "You will not. . . "
	"I  will talk to whom I choose," she  interrupted  smoothly, correctly anticipating my request.
	I was silent.
	"But  I  am choosy about whom I talk to," she  finally  said with a small twitch of her ears.

******

	The  remaining  two  days passed  slowly,  the  muggy  hours dragging  on under the unchanging slow,  southern sky.  It was  a tedious and tense time.  Tahr was nervous,  and it seemed to  rub off on the rest of us.
	Kharm's recovery was slow, and for a couple of days was only able to hold liquids,  but thankfully his wounds stayed clean. It was  a shock for him to awaken to find me tending  his  bandages, but after Tahr and Hymath persuaded him not to shred my face  and to get off me, he settled down and became quite amicable.
	I  kept up my language lessons and continued to  learn  just how similar and just how really alien they were.
	And they learned more about me. . . 
	"Tahr, how old are you?"
	Sprawled out in the beside Kharm, she cracked an eyelid open against the sun and lolled her head to look at me. "Sixteen years of age, K'hy, soon to be seventeen." 
	WHAT?!
	I stared at her, then echoed, "Seventeen?!"
	"Yes," she looked slightly puzzled.  "Seventeen.  There is a problem?"
	"So young," I blurted. "Just a cub!"
	Hymath laughed.
	"A  cub!" Tahr stared at me,  her fur beginning to  bristle. "K'hy,  I  came  of age three years ago!  How can you call  me  a cub!?"
	Oh,  shit. I grimaced awkwardly. "I am sorry. I did not mean it like that. It is just. . . to me you seem very young."
	She   growled  and  brushed  at  the  upright  fur  on   her shoulder. "Alright, strange one, what about you? How young?"
	"I am twenty one years."
	She blinked. "And you are definitely no cub."
	I stared at her. "By our ways I am. How long do Sathe live?"
	"Some have been known to reach five and forty years."
	My  mind spun wheels for a few seconds before it got a  grip on that. "Forty five?!" I choked.
	"Yes." She blinked. "That surprises you?"
	"Tahr,  humans live to about eighty,  and one hundred is not that rare."
	Silence. Wide eyes.
	"Truth?" Tahr said. "No [joke]?"
	"Truth."
	"H. . . How can you live so long?" Kharm finally asked.
	"Our. . . our knowledge, our medicines help."
	"Then you would know your great grandsires," he murmured  in an awed voice.
	"Yes."
	"What were your's like?"
	"Ah," I looked away. "Most do; not I. I lost many of my clan and family when I was a. . . cub. An accident. We have those too." I shrugged.
	It was an uncomfortable silence this time.              
	"How many h'mans are there?" Kharm finally asked, if only to change the subject.
	Oh God,  I didn't know the numbers to tell them.  I pondered for a few seconds then said, "I think that our largest city would have more humans than there are Sathe in this world."
	I barely had time to realise my mistake before Tahr  pounced on it:
	"What  do  you  mean, 'this  world' ?"  Tahr  demanded, leaning toward me. "Where, K'hy? Where are you really from?"
	Oh shit! The cat was out of the bag, literally.
	"K'hy?" Tahr prompted as I hesitated.
	"Hey, have I told you about the time. . . "
	"K'hy!" This time her claws came out. "No games!"
	"Do really want to talk about this here?" I asked.
	"Yes. Now! Talk!"
	I  looked  around  at  the Sathe faces  staring  at  me  and swallowed  hard.  It would have to come out some time,  and if  I satisfied her curiosity she'd stop pressing me.  
	"Very  well.  It was night. . . "
	I told them everything I knew.
	There  was a long silence when I finished.  The creaking  of the wagon and the scuffing of the llamas' hooves were loud noises in the stillness.
	It  was  Kharm who broke the silence.  "Well,  a  tale  like that. . . It  is so incredible I do not think you could  be  lying." Then  his ears twitched and he added,  "All those bald hides.  I think I would not like to live in a land like that."
	Tahr  said nothing.  She watched me from  under  half-closed eyelids  with  what  may  have  been  pity. . . or  something   else entirely.

******   

	The Chesapeake  Bay was different in the twilight.  
	It  was quiet,  still.  There were no pleasure craft on  the water, no sounds of traffic, none of the multitude of lights that normally cover the water. None of the details that man had added: the houses,  offices,  and other edifices man raised for himself. Instead  the bay  was  clear  and  clean, surrounded by woodland swarming with wildlife.
	Bay Town sprawled on the southern bank of the Potomac,  near the  estuary  where  the slow river entered the  huge  bay  -  an asymmetrical mass of red-tiled roofs,  walls,  and towers  behind the  protective embrace of crenellated battlements  catching  the last light of a setting sun.
	Much larger than Traders Meet, the town was an interface for the  traffic of land and water.  A place where goods were  traded and  travellers  could  buy passage,  be it a  ferry  across  the Potomac or transport on to another Sathe port by sea or land.

	The entire northern quarter of Bay Town was dockside. Wooden wharves embraced by sea walls stretched out into the bay to where ships were moored.  A small forest of masts were gathered  around the  docks;  small wooden scows and fishing vessels tied  to  the larger seagoing ships.
	To  the  south  and west the entire  town  was surrounded by  farmland. A lot of farmland devoted to cattle, others planted with crops, others left fallow. They wouldn't have farming machinery which would explain why the farms were so small and why there were so many of them. Easier for many to manage smaller parcels of land, especially when engaged in continual battle  with the  wilderness that threatened to overrun their farms and  their lives.
	Although not nearly as large as the average American  town, Bay  Town  was  swarming  with  Sathe.  I  estimated  about  four to six thousand.  The  town  was a maze of broad streets  leading  to  a central  marketplace  like  spokes on  a  misshapen  wheel,  with countless small alleys connecting the streets.  On all sides  the rough  buildings  leaned over the streets as if  trying  to  rest their gables against each other,  none more than two stories high and with small windows, some with rough glass in them.
	Stores,  smithies,  stables, coopers, carpenters. . . a hundred and  one  kinds of small businesses slotted in  among  homes  and dwellings.  The  smell  wasn't as bad as  I  had  expected.  Tahr explained  that  they  had  a sewage  system  flowing  under  the streets.  There  were  many public toilets  and  fountains  where residents could dispose of nightsoil and get fresh water.
	Even though I lay low in the back of the wagon and tried not to  attract  attention  we  still  drew  stares  as  the   wagons clattered through the streets of the outer town, headed  toward the docks.
	The  warehouse was a large building with stone walls with  a few small windows and a wooden roof.  There was a shop  connected to it with a sign above the door.  Dim light from lanterns  shone through the small windows.  I didn't know what the sign  said:  I still didn't know how to read the chicken scratchings the Sathe called writing.
	Char  wearily  dropped from his wagon and  pushed  the  door open.  Shortly  later  a  group of  Sathe  emerged,  grumbling and yawning  and scratching,  and started working at unloading the supply  wagons. Another  Sathe - obviously in charge - appeared,  carrying  on  a animated conversation with Char.
	"All right,  K'hy.  This  is where we make our own way,"  Tahr told me and helped gather my gear.  I noticed she took the  rifle and  knife  along  with her sword  and  crossbow, slinging the rifle and bow over her shoulder. Armed like that, she didn't look like someone to be trifled with.  The  pack  was surprisingly  heavy  as I slung it over my  shoulders.  I  didn't remember it weighing that much.
	Anyway,  Hymath took a couple of minutes to say farewell  to us,  clapping Tahr on the shoulder in a gesture that startled  me with its humanness and wishing her luck. Me, she patted on my arm as  she passed,  then the black-cloaked mercenary set off  toward the centre of Bay Town with a confident stride.
	I would be seeing Hymath again.
	Tahr  looked  around,  then  caught  Kharm  before  he  also vanished  into the town.  "Kharm,  do you know a place  where  we could get a room around here?"
	The  guard  looked  at  me  and  rubbed  his  prominent  jaw dubiously. "Any place would take you, but K'hy. . . The only place I can think of that might accept him is the Reptile, they get a lot of trappers with their animals passing through.  They would  have the facilities. . . "
	I gave Tahr a pained look.
	"I am sorry,  K'hy," she sighed. "All right, I think that will have to do. Where is this Reptile?"
	Kharm snorted and twitched his ears.  "Along the docks, that way. It  is  comfortable,  nothing  more,"  he  said  and  gave directions  and  Tahr thanked him then set off with  me  in  tow. Looking back I saw Kharm staring after us. He hesitantly returned my  parting wave and with a final pat at his  scabbard,  followed Hymath into the town.
	The roughly paved streets were very dim and full of shadows. Of course there was no lighting. The inn so delicately called the Reptile was located in the southeast corner of the town;  in  the cheap sector not far from the wharves.
	The wooden sign hanging over the door was illuminated by the orangish  light  that  spilled  out  of  the  open   portal.   An unidentifiable   lizard   lay  basking  under  a   stylised   sun while indecipherable ideographs were dotted beneath.  From inside the  building  the sounds of a stringed instrument drifted outside: methodic scales that never quite sounded right,,  eerie.  The hairs on my neck  crawled. Tahr stopped and petted her fur smooth.
	"I  hope  we get a better reception than we did  in  Traders Meet," I muttered. She  grinned and swiped me on the shoulder,  then ducked  in the door, pulling me after her.
	The interior layout of the Reptile was much the same as that of  the establishment we had stayed in at Traders Meet:  a  large (relatively speaking) common room opened on to what smelled  like a  kitchen while another doorway led to the owners'  quarters.  A narrow staircase against one wall led up to the guest rooms.  The major difference between the two buildings was the quality of the finishing.  While  the  Rabbit - or whatever it had  been  -  in Traders Meet was rough,  unpolished wood, all timber in this room was varnished and polished to a deep shine. Two common tables and their benches,  the stairs,  the chairs near the fire,  the  door frames, were all worn smooth and shiny from years of contact with furry bodies.  Rough tapestries were hung on the wall and  copper implements of various types were neatly displayed on shelves. The overall  effect of the room was that of reassuring  cosiness.  It was a welcome change after the dark streets and the cool  evening breeze.
	The music was coming from a stringed instrument being played by a Sathe sitting in the rosy light cast by the fire and several tinted lanterns.  The instrument looked like  one  of those old lutes:  a large resonating chamber connected to a  long, slender neck.  The  Sathe was playing it like a guitar,  but  the  sounds produced  were  much deeper,  much more mellow.  I  found  myself staring  at his hands as they danced over the strings.  No  pick, just  a claw.  Four other Sathe sat around at the tables  and  in other chairs at the fire, they all looked up as we entered, but the minstrel didn't even falter in his playing.
	One  of  the  figures by the fire - a female -  got  to  her feet,  smoothed down her fur with one hand,  and came over to us. She  didn't seem too perturbed at the sight of  me.  Our  chances for  a room were already looking good.  I unshouldered  the  pack with a grateful sigh and placed it at my feet.
	"It  is  late for travellers," the female  greeted  us.  She looked like she was getting on a bit.  She had a slight limp, her fur was tinged with grey, especially around her ears. "Can I help you?"
	"Greetings," Tahr replied,  looking around with interest. "I would  like a room for a few nights,  with  meals.  Also,  is  it possible to shelter my pet?"
	I rolled my eyes. The goddamned pet routine again.
	"Ahrrr," the innkeeper dubiously looked me up and down.  "It will cost extra to put your creature there in the [Kennels?]  and take  care of it.  I have to comment though:  in all my years  of seeing strange animals,  I have never seen one like  that.  Where did you find it?"
	"In  the swamplands to the south," Tahr smiled.  "However  I have a somewhat unusual request.  He is more of a pet and because he is such a rare creature,  I wish to keep him in my room. He is quite  tricky and I fear he could escape from a cage,  but I  can assure you he is harmless and clean. He will not foul the room."
	Yeah,  and I don't even have fleas!
	The landlady looked me up and down,  sizing me up.  "A truly unusual  request. . . A truly unusual creature.  Why is  it  wearing clothing?"
	"He  is used to a warmer climate,  that of the lands to  the southwest.  He  was suffering in our cooler lands,  so I  altered some clothes  to fit him."
	God she was smooth,  I had trouble keeping a straight  face. Then  I  remembered that these people didn't know  what  a  human smile was, so I broke into one.
	"You are sure it. . . .he is safe and clean?"
	"Of course.  He is very docile.  See,  I do not even have to worry about restraints. He is amiable and quiet."
	The landlady tossed her mane and sized me up.  "Very  well, but  he is your responsibility and I will require  [collateral]." She  looked  at Tahr's somewhat ragged cloak  and  travel-stained breeches. "How will you pay?"
	That had the ring of a euphemism for 'can you pay?'. How did Tahr plan to do that?  We had spent our last  silver on the ride here, how could we pay? Wash the dishes?
	Tahr surprised me again.  She grabbed my pack and opened it, pulling  out a couple of bolts of cloth: blue and green.  SO  that was  why  the  thing  was so  heavy.  Those  she  handed  to  the landlady. "Will this do?"
	She  examined the bundles with a critical eye,  rubbing  the cloth between furry thumb and furry index finger, then she smiled and said, "That will do nicely madam."
	I couldn't help myself. Visualising a five foot furry cat doing a credit card commercial, I cracked up. I leaned against a doorpost and shook with laughter, drawing alarmed looks from the other guests.
	"K'hy!" Tahr warned me.
	Our host looked from Tahr to me. "He is your responsibility, remember."
	"Alright. He will calm down," Tahr growled. "Now."
	I bit my lip and swallowed another laugh.
	The innkeeper blinked, then squinted at me and scratched her chin.  "Saaa. . . yes.  Well,  provided it is clean. . . And I want  no loud noises in the night."
	Tahr looked at me and hissed in her own laughter.  There was something  there that I had missed.  But Tahr left me no time  to puzzle  it out,  she gave me a swat on the butt with  claws  only partially retracted: "Move along, [    ]."
	I jumped and moved,  but I don't think it was that that drew amused hisses from the other patrons.
	Our  room was set at the front of the inn,  overlooking  the Chesapeake Bay.  In the dark there was very little to see but the stars and moon.  There were only a couple of faint lights shining across the water from boats or houses.  I closed the shutters and turned away.
	The room was a simple affair. Hell, a Holiday Inn would have seemed  palatial beside it.  A single wooden  frame  bed,  almost round in shape and depressed in the middle like a huge  bowl.  A table  with  a small candle,  and a chair all made  out  wood   - albeit  quite adequately finished - completed the set.  I  walked over  to where a straw pallet had been set out on the  floor  and flopped down onto it, using my pack as a pillow.  I looked  across at  the shadowy form of Tahr stretched out on the bed.
	"Everywhere we go, I sleep on the floor."
	Tahr looked back at me in mock surprise. "But you are just a dumb animal, you cannot talk."
	"Do want to know what this dumb animal has to say to that?"
	She  laughed,  a hiss of released air between nearly  closed lips.
	I lay there in the dark for another half hour,  I was almost asleep before a thought struck me.
	"Tahr?"
	"Mmmmph?"
	"Where you get the cloth?"
	"Elmerth."
	"Oh."
	Ah well, I guess he wouldn't be needing it any longer.
	I  reflected  on  the morality of this for  a  few  seconds, before turning over and falling asleep.

******

	The next morning I was up before Tahr. At 6:15 I was looking out  the  window at the sun rising over the  bay.  The  town  was already active;  Sathe going about their business,  whatever that may have been.  The sun turned high wisps of scattered clouds  to streaks  of  purple  and rose as it rose over the  hills  on  the eastern side of the bay,  throwing a ray of morning light  across the dim room.
	I looked at Tahr, sprawled out naked on the bowl shaped bed, the  light cotton sheet down around her ankles,  her fur  keeping her   warm  enough.   The  sunbeam  speared  across the   room, illuminating  swirling dust motes in the air and settling  across her back,  setting the fur shining and highlighting the ridges of her  spine,  the jutting of her  shoulder blades,  muscles  gently twitching as she slept.  She really was very beautiful in a soft, sleek, inhuman sort of way.
	I turned back to the window,  thinking about how I could get home again. . . after I had helped Tahr - I had promised.  The  only thing  that came to mind would be to go back to the place  I  had come  through and hope that the portal or whatever it  was  would return  and take me back.  Of course even if it did  return, there was the chance that I would end up somewhere else again,  maybe a world where Earth had an atmosphere of methane, or life had never formed. There were endless, hideous possibilities.
	A noise from behind me interrupted my chain of thought. Tahr was sitting up and stretching, a very human looking movement.
	"Sleep well, fur-face?"
	She  blinked  at me and yawned in a very  unhuman  way  that bared her sharp teeth. "Very,  shave-face." She got up,  scratched thoroughly,  and started getting dressed. "And how was your floor?"
	"Hard." I also scratched at my head and stared at my pallet. "You  know,  I do not think I was alone there  last  night.  This place has a few small, crawling no-paying guests."
	Tahr  smiled and finished tying the breeches up  around  her waist. "I will bring breakfast." She padded out the door.
	Breakfast was a welcome change from the cold gruel and  meat we  had been having over the past few days:  some kind  of  wheat flapjacks  along with citrus fruits - I wondered where they  grew them  -  and what was probably goat's milk.  I  polished  it  off rapidly then asked Tahr what she planned to do.
	She smiled. "First we get you a bath."
	"What?"  I looked down at myself.  I was dusty and my  shirt was covered with dried blood. All those days on the road sweating under a hot sun had not really made me into an aesthetic delight. I was itching all over, my hair was lank and dirty, and I guess I didn't  exactly  smell  like a  rose,  especially  to  a  Sathe's sensitive nose. "Yes. I guess you are right."
	If they had public baths in Bay Town,  I wasn't going to  be invited to use them.  In fact,  we had to leave the town  itself, out  to  the wilderness to find a secluded stream.  The  spot  we found  actually wasn't too bad:  a swimming hole straight out  of Tom Sawyer,  complete with shading trees and sun-warmed rocks off to the side.
	God,  but  that water looked good.  I left my clothes  in  a pile and dove in, coming to the surface gasping and swearing. The sun  had  not yet warmed the neck-deep water and it was  still  a cold  as a witch's tits.  It took a short time a few  more  dives before my body acclimatised and I began to enjoy it.
	Tahr too had stripped off her clothes and had been rummaging around in my pack,  searching for something.  Now she tossed me a small  greyish lump and waded in,  grimacing and yelping  as  the water climbed.  I looked at the slippery mess in my  hands,  then sniffed it.  It bore a vague resemblance to soap,  but I wouldn't want to swear on it. Then something yanked my feet out from under me and I fell backward into the pool and came up sputtering. Tahr darted  back out of reach with wet fur clinging to lithe  curves, ears twitching.
	"Why you little. . . "
	I  cupped  my hands and sent water jetting at the  cat  that wasn't  afraid of getting wet.  She tried to dodge and fell  over backwards,  floating there in a swirl of fur,  laughing at me.  I fished  around the stony bottom of the pool and managed  to  find the soap. "I will do your back if you will do mine."
	She  laughed again,  so I casually reached over  and  dunked her,  then lathered up and proceeded to get clean.  The soap  was coarse, not Lifebuoy. There was sand in it and it was so alkaline I  could have used it in lieu of sandpaper,  but it got the  dirt off.  I idly wondered how long it would take Tahr to give herself a scrubdown. With all that fur it should take hours.
	Perhaps her skin doesn't secrete as much  oil.  Anyway,  all she  did was give herself a quick lather over with the soap  then ducked  her head underwater and came up shaking out a  glittering spray of water. Then she sank down and watched me.
	"Why do you spend so long cleaning your fur,  K'hy? You have so little of it. . . and in unusual places."
	Fucking  nosy. . . I self-consciously  sank a little lower  in the water, my eyes  still screwed up against the fierce soap as I scrubbed   my  hair.  I heard her moving  around,  then  a  sting as claws tweaked me underwater.
	"Hey! Whatthefuck?! "
	I  dunked my head and shook soap out of my eyes.  "What  are you doing?"
	Her  ears went back.  "Your skin is changing color. . . I  have upset you?"
	"Yes,  Dammit!  Can you not keep your hands to yourself?"  I was angry and embarrassed at the same time although I really  had no  reason to be.  It wasn't that long ago when she  hadn't  been able to abide my touch.  I mean, she was a different species, she wouldn't   be  interested  in  me. . . would  she?   I   found   her. . . attractive, but I could control myself, couldn't I?
	"I  am sorry," her ears drooped,  large eyes  with  vertical slit pupils regarded me sadly.  "It was only jest.  I  mean,  you are. . . it looks so different from our males. I apologise."
	I  sat  back in the water.  "Yeah, okay.  I should  not  have reacted  so strongly." I forced a smiled at her and  she  flashed her teeth in imitation.  My anger dispelled and I splashed her in the face, a favour she returned very readily.

******

	The warm breeze brushed across my bare skin and rustled  the tall,  green  grass  that  surrounded and  shrouded  me  where  I sprawled on the ground,  letting the sun dry me.  I'd never  been much  for  sunbathing au naturel . My shorts were still damp, but drying.
	Tahr  had  left  me there whilst she went to  take  care  of business in town. I didn't argue, after all, I'd just be a burden following  her around in a busy town. . . and this was  better  than waiting in a small, stuffy attic room.
	Several gossamer seed pod drifted past overhead just as  the sun  appeared from behind a drifting cloud,  making  the  fragile airborne pods glow with a white  aurora.  I drowsily threw my arm over my eyes against the glare,  then rolled over.  Strange,  not having to worry about burn time, ozone depletion. . . 
	In front of my nose a ladybird was industriously climbing  a stem of crab grass.
	Images:
	Trees, sun, moving grass, insects, polymorphic clouds.
	Seed pods floating.
	The sounds of the wind and lazy water.
	I dozed.
	Something thumped my shoulder,  jolting me fully awake.  The small bundle lay beside me:
	A small,  brightly coloured patchwork ball made from  pieces of multicoloured cloth.
	I  curiously poked it with a finger,  then picked it up  and looked around.  Sathe laughter and voices sounded from the trees, then died as the Sathe in question appeared. 
	The three cubs froze and stared at me crouched there in  the grass. A couple of seconds passed before I glanced at the ball in my hand,  then gently tossed it towards them.  It landed about  a meter in front of them.
	They  glanced at the ball,  then back at me,  then  at  each other.
	Like the cubs back in Traders Meet. None of them were  over four feet tall,  all covered in thick fur - one a light brown and the  others more reddish - making them  resemble  large,  walking teddy-bears.  Like all feline young their hands,  feet,  and head seemed disproportionately large and bulky: they still had to  grow into  them.  They  were wearing nothing but their  fur,  but  the largest  of  them  was wearing a belt with a  leather  thong  for holding  a  small knife.  The aforementioned  instrument  he  was holding tightly in his hand.
	"Uh. . . Hello," I ventured.
	The  small one with the light-chocolate fur bolted  and  hid behind a tree,  peering around it with impossibly wide eyes.  The other  two  looked  frantically at each  other,  but  held  their ground.         
	"I  am sorry if I frightened you." I slowly  stood,  holding out my hand. "It is all right. I am not dangerous."
	"You. . . you can. . . talk?" the one with knife stammered.
	"Well, last time I looked I could," I smiled.
	"Not frightened," the other one declared, drawing himself up to his full three-foot ten and looking anything but unafraid. "We were just surprised."
	"Sure. Of course you were."  I smothered a grin, then glanced at the knife in his hand.  "You don't actually need  that you know."
	It didn't waver. "What are you?"
	"My name is Kelly. I am a human. . . "
	I was interrupted by hissing laughter and looked in slightly hurt surprise for the source: the smallest cub - a  female.  "What is so funny?" I asked.
	She  emerged from her hiding place with a hand clapped over her mouth in a  futile  effort  to stifle   her   giggles:  still her ears fluttered like flags. "Ssss. . . n. . . names. . . funny. And why do you talk wrong?"
	That  was the first time anyone had actually  criticized  my Sathe. "What is wrong 
with the way I talk?" I asked.
	She giggled again.  "It sounds wrong." Then she surprised me by coming right up to me.  "You look funny too. All bald.  Can I touch your fur?"
	I  obliged,  bending  over so she could touch  my  hair.  In fearless fascination she stroked and tugged at my copper-coloured strands.  Sathe pelts had a variety of colours, but copper wasn't among them.
	"Ha!" she gave a squeak and grabbed at my hand.  "Why do you have flat claws?" she demanded as she manipulated my fingers.
	"Why do you have pointed ears?"
	She paused, reached up and touched her left ear.  "I do not know.  I just do."
	"Why, that is also the reason I have flat claws."
	She thought that was funny too.
	With the ice broken the two boys approached, the elder one's grip upon his knife less certain.  He stared at me, then his face twitched and without watching his hand,  he sheathed the knife in a single, smooth movement.
	I suddenly realised that he knew how to use that thing. They knew how to look after themselves, these kids did.
	But they were still children, even if they did look a little strange.  They  asked  all  the  questions  children  would  find important:Are those your clothes?  Why do you wear so many?  What are those things on your feet?  Do you have any food? Do you have cubs? What are they like?
	It was a peculiar tableau that greeted Tahr when she returned a few hours later. A trio of Sathe cubs, a laughing little girl lost in the folds of my jacket perched high on my shoulders while the older boys chased and squabbled over the boomerang I'd carved for them.

******

	Tahr  perched  herself  precariously  on  the  window  ledge watching  the evening activity along the wharves:  fishing  boats being tied,  cargo being unloaded, sails being reefed and mended. I  leaned against the wall beside her and watched and learned  as she pointed out objects and named them.
	As the day gradually wound down,  fewer and fewer  passerbys wandered the quayside below our window. The cool breeze picked up and waves lapped against the worn stone of the dockside.
	"It  has  been a long time since I last through  this  way," Tahr  abruptly said.  "I was little more than a  cub.  My  father brought me here." She laughed in an abstracted way.  "I  remember he  brought  me  a top.  A top. . . it is a  small  toy  that  spins quickly without falling over.  Ahhh, I wonder where that is now." She  leaned back against the window sill and slowly,  lazily  her ears twitched in a smile. She had happy memories to treasure.
	"Your father. . . he is still alive?" I asked.
	"The last news I heard he was," she said.  "He is waiting at Mainport. Saaa! It will be good to see him again."
	"How long have you been away?" I asked.
	"Eight years."
	"Eight years?! And you have not seen him in all this time?"
	"Oh,  a  few  times,"  she was  suddenly  more  subdued.  "I sometimes  wonder  if  it  was  all  worth  it.  Eight  years  of learning. . . "  she  trailed off with a wrinkle of  her  muzzle.  I stepped  aside  as she stood and padded across to  the  bed.  The wooden frame creaked and settled as she sank down into the middle of the bowl.
	I  took a final look out the window.  Nothing was  happening out there, the sun going through its daily death. "I see the sun, and I say, it's all right," I murmured to myself.
	"What was that?"
	"Not  important," I told her and closed the  shutters.  With the  window blocked the twilight inside the room became a  deeper gloom in which Tahr was a shadow against the lighter brown of the sheets.  I stripped down to my Calvin Kleins and sat down  crosslegged on my pallet, rubbing at my stubble.
	"Did   you  know  them?"  Tahr  suddenly  asked   from   the concealment of her bed. "Who?"
	"Your parents. Did you know them?"
	"No," I shook my head. "I was not even two. They had left me with  friends  while they went away for several days  to  another city  with  their parents.  There was a. . . the vehicle  they  were traveling in crashed.  They died along with thirty others. No, I never really knew them, but I do have. . . had some pictures. Do not know why I kept them,  I just hung onto the over the  years.  It is not often. . . " I was babbling. I shut up.
	"I  am  sorry," Tahr said after a few pause.  "I  suppose  I should not have started it. . . "
	"No.  Not your fault.  I am not usually so sensitive.  It is just. . . talking to you. . . " I started trembling,  clenched my hands together. "Tahr. . . "
	"We  will  speak  no more of that tonight,"  she  said  with finality. "Did you enjoy 
yourself this day?"
	I  forced myself away from the bout  of  xenophobia,  forced myself to think about her question. "I. . . Yeah I did." A memory of the  little  girl in a coat eight times to large for her  in  the heat of the afternoon sun. I grinned. "Your cubs are. . . cute."
	Tahr laughed. "They are also impossible. I suspect they were avoiding their chores."
	"Not  a whole lot of difference there," I grinned as  I  lay back.
	She chuckled again and for a time all was quiet.
	Then:
	"K'hy?"
	"Hmmm? What?"
	"Did you have. . . cubs?"
	I sighed and stared at the rafters.  A spider was lurking in the silver ghost of its web in a corner. "No," I replied. "No."
	I wished she hadn't asked me that. I felt a pang and quickly sidetracked her:
	"By the way, what were you doing today?"
	Sheets  rustled as Tahr stretched out on her bed.  "I  found passage  for us to Mainport aboard a ship." She waved an  obscure hand toward the window and the harbor.  "We leave the day  after tomorrow."

******

	Her smooth body was hot, like a fire inside, lips finding mine, pressed hard,  crushing them, biting at my lower lip.  My hands rubbed  the small  of her back then worked down over her  buttocks.  I  could feel  hot skin moving silkily against  my  own.  A delicate nose nuzzled my ear and warm breath whispered:
	"Kelly."
	"Kelly."
	"K'hy!"
	Someone was shaking me. "K'hy, wake. Please wake."
	I  struggled  and woke, heart racing, sweating,  looking into a pair of concerned  goldflecked green eyes,  vertical pupils.  "You  were making noises in your sleep. You are all right?"
	I  looked  down at myself.  The groundsheet  was  around  my ankles.  My erection peeked out of the top of my underwear.  Tahr looked down at the bulge in my jockey shorts. Her nostrils flared.
	"Damn it!  Get away from me!" I snapped,  yanking the blanket up. She drew away from me, looked hurt. "I was just trying to help."
	"You were . . . Shit." I shook my head, shifting my legs. "Sorry."
	"You were calling out." She looked around at the walls, up at the ceiling, at me.  "I hope you  did not waken anyone."
	I closed my eyes and held my hands over my face,  rubbed  my eyes. Then turned to the barely-visible slivers of night sky through the tiny  slits in the shutters:  anything to escape her  questioning gaze. "What was I saying?"
	"I   could   not  understand.   It  was  in  your   way   of speaking. . . but your noises, just the way you were. . . it was obvious enough. K'hy, I worry about you."
	I didn't say anything. She continued:
	"You  are  very  like  our males in  some  ways."  Her  eyes flickered as she gathered her thoughts.  "I know. . . I know that  a Sathe. . . I  do  not  think  a Sathe could  live   properly without. . . another. A male completely alone." Then softly: "I think I would fear for his sanity."
	She  rubbed  her muzzle,  then stared at me.  "Are  you  the same?"
	I  sat up,  wrapping my arms about my knees and  resting  my chin on them.  How to answer that?  Did I know? How did I feel as each day passed and home was no closer? 
	Alone. That I can handle, but knowing it's going to be the same day after day, year on year, for the rest of my life, that thought clutched at my guts with a cold hand.
	"Yeah," I muttered. "I could be."
	"K'hy, what are you going to do?"
	I hesitated. "Try to find a way home."
	"And if you cannot?"
	I looked in her eyes:  Deep,  feline, beautiful. . . and felt a knot of fear clutch at my guts. "I do not know, Tahr. I do not know."
	She  put an arm around my bare shoulders and hugged me  close,  a familiar  gesture I could understand,  one that filled and empty space deep inside me.  Her fur was warm, with a close, musty scent: like sun-dried straw. "I will help you," she said. "I will do all I can."
	There was silence.
	She got to her feet and made her way back to her  bed.  "Try to  sleep,  we  may not get many more nights on land  for  a while. Ships are not the best places to close your eyes."
	I  sat  in silence.  For how long I don't  know.  Finally  I rolled over and managed to get to sleep.
	Thank God, I didn't dream.

******

	The  next day passed slowly.  I spent it in  our room cleaning my equipment,  preparing for a  long sea voyage, and doing my best to shave while outside a light rain fell from leaden skies. Tahr catnapped for most of the day, in the late afternoon she went out into the drizzle. I waited, then fell asleep.   
	I  groggily  lifted  my head as Tahr was  closing  the  door behind her.  The open window showed only night sky  and my watch said 22:32.  So,  I must have been  asleep  for hours.
	"Come on,  get up," she urged me as she pushed my gear under the bed,  so with luck anyone glancing in the door would miss it.  No locks on the doors in these hotels. Pulling on my jacket I asked her, "Where are we going?"
	"To get you some proper clothes."
	Thanks a lot. That explains everything.
	The streets were dark and all but deserted;  we only saw two figures off in the distance in the dim streets.  The drizzle  had tapered off to a damp mist hanging in the air. 
	Tahr's  pads were silent on the damp paving stones,  but  my boots made a muted scuffing sound as I walked.  Dim lights  shone through the shutters on a few of the houses while others were  as dark as abandoned buildings. Without electric lighting most folks rose  and  went  to bed with the sun.  So  much  for  cats  being nocturnal.
	Tahr  led  us to the door of a shop on one  of  the  smaller streets.  She didn't knock,  instead scratched with her claws  on the  rough  wood.  A few seconds passed before it  opened  a crack, spilling a strip of orange-tinted light onto the street.
	"Only me," Tahr said.
	The  elderly  Sathe  behind  the  door  hissed,   then  bade her,  "Come  in," as he released a chain on the other  side.  His facial fur was graying and wiry,  one ear was torn and ragged and his  left foot was twisted, looking crushed.  But that  didn't stop  him from jumping back in alarm the instant he laid eyes  on me.
	"It is all right,  good sir," soothed Tahr. "This is the one I ordered the item for."
	He stared at me. "That?! What in the name of my Ancestors IS it?"
	Tahr  gave  a sigh through her nostrils.  "The tale  is  too long.  It would take all night to tell,  but I can assure you, he is friendly. I would not be walking around these streets at night with him if he were not."
	The old one looked me up and down with an intensely critical eye,  as though I was something he'd found stuck in his fur. "All right," he grudgingly conceded. "Come in."
	Well,  if he wasn't a tailor I was Michael Jordan.  Clothing and scraps of cloth in various stages of construction and  repair hung  from hooks and covered spare surfaces. Knives of all shapes and sizes hung on racks and lay on tables, whetstones handy. Bobbins and spools of thread hung from racks of wooden pegs. A small loom squatted in a corner and there wasn't a sign of any sewing machines.  All work must have been done painstakingly,  by hand. 
	The  elderly tailor walked over to a bench and picked  up  a parcel  of  folded  darkgreen cloth.  "This is  what  you  asked for."  He  looked  at  me critically and muttered, "I can see why you were vague about the sizes."
	I almost said something,  but Tahr's look made me be content with sulking to myself. The  tailor  unfurled  the object.  Holding it  up  at  arms length,  he managed to keep the edges of the cloak from  dragging on the ground.
	Tahr  took the cloak from him and handed it to me.  "Put  it on."
	I settled the cloak and fastened the neck clasp.  The weight of the fabric was heavy on my shoulders;  heavy and  warm.  There was a thin cotton lining and the weave was coarse wool. Weights had been sewn into the hem to stop it blowing around to much.  My first piece  of Sathe  clothing. . . Obi-wan,  eat your heart out.  I felt  like  an idiot. 
	"It is a little short around the hood," the tailor mused, picking up a pincushion lacerated with needles and thread, also choosing a thin knife. I hastily turned to watch him when he tried to get behind me. One thing I'm still not that fond of is an armed Sathe behind me. I've already got a few too many scars.
	"K'hy," Tahr reprimanded me. "Let him work."The tailor bobbed his head at her and I stood still while he scurried behind me and hands started tugging at the fabric around my shoulders, shifting the hood. I could feel him fixing the seam with one of those oversized needles. Finally there was a snap of thread being cut and he said, "That will hold."
	"Good." Tahr nodded approvingly.
	"Ow!" Something stuck in my arm. I pulled out a ridiculously long pin that had been holding a seam together.  I rubbed my  arm and  handed the near nail-sized sliver of metal to  the  tailor who took it dubiously.  
	Tahr looked me up and down,  took a couple of steps backward to squint at me, then turned to the tailor. "I will take it," she said,  fishing in the canvas belt pouch she was using as a  purse and  crossed  his palm with silver:  "Here is the  cost  of  your time." She tossed over another gold piece, "And that should cover the cost of your silence.
	He grabbed at the silver and gold.  "I know it is none of my business, but why 
clothes for an animal?"
	Tahr paused in the doorway.  "You are right,  it is none of your business. Farewell." Out  on the street:  "Why do I need this anyway?"  I  asked, fingering the coarse weave. "I feel ridiculous."
	"It may be wise if you are. . . ah. . . less conspicuous at times. And it looks better than those strange things you wear."
	"Yeah?  Well, at least they do not itch."
	She twitched her ears and we walked.  It'd started drizzling again and a trickle of water wound its way down the center of the street.
	A  disguise?  Well  it might work,  in dim light  and  at  a distance - say two kilometers.  At least it kept the drizzle  off my neck. But why would she want me to wear a disguise? Damnation, I  didn't  want to get involved in any of the  politics  here.  I thought we'd made an agreement,  however long ago that  was;  I'd help her get where she was going, then. . . 
	"K'hy." Tahr caught my arm, pulling me up short. "Wait."
	"Hey. . . "
	"No, wait." She cocked her head to one side and hissed, "Listen!"
	Her hearing was better than mine.  "I cannot hear  anything. I. . . Hey!  wait!" But then she was off, ducking down a side alley, a dark blur. I followed, cursing as my boots slipped on the slime coating  the wet cobblestones,  dodging around piles of  garbage, well into the alleyway before I heard the sounds: Muffled squeals and yelps, Sathe curses, grunts, snarling. . . 
	"Damnation! Is this any of our business?"
	I  rounded a corner and drew up short,  hugging the  shadows while I blinked and tried to see just what the hell was going on.
	Shadows  changed,  sliding over the cul-de-sac as  the  moon tried  to peep through the clouds.  Among a pile of trash in  the dead end five figures were clustered around one on  the  ground, four held it down while another. . . 
	"Hai!"  Tahr snarled,  going down into a crouch.  "Get  away from her!" she literally spat the words out.
	The  five figures jumped to their feet while the one on  the ground gathered the remains of its. . . her cloak around herself and scrambled for the illusion of protection offered by the shadows.
	"Let  her go!" Tahr hissed,  not a trace of humour  in  that sound. "Then get out of here!"
	"Hah!  It  is  only  one more female,"  one  of  the  others observed,   his  words  slurred.  He  growled  something  to  his friends  and  they  began moving to  circle  Tahr,  blocking  her retreat.
	"You are drunk," she snarled, moving to try and watch all of them. "Get out of here. Now. Before you get hurt."
	"Saaa,  don't worry about us," one of them said. "We will be very careful. "There was hissing laughter.
	Damnation Tahr! 
	So we WERE involved now,  and this type, human or non, was a sort  I held little love for.  The nearest of the drunks heard  something and turned just as I reached him and grabbed him by his collar,  swung him around and  half-threw  him across the alley where his head hit  a  rain barrel  with a solid thonk and left him sprawled on  the  ground, moaning and clutching at his face.
	One down. . . 
But  for the mewling of the female in the shadows there  was no sound as the drunken Sathe stared at me. In that dimness, with my  hood  up  against  the  drizzle,  they  probably  had  trouble understanding just what they were seeing
	"Saaa!" The one who seemed to have some sway over the others hissed. "He is only one. Who wants to kill him?"
	"All right," I tossed back my hood to give them a better look, "Who wants to try first? Come on, do not be shy."
	One of the Sathe broke and stumbled away, swearing off drink forever.  The  leader gave a bit of ground,  then held  firm  and grinned back;  large, white fangs and rain-damped fur gleaming in the dim light. He was too pissed or too stupid to be scared. 	"Uhhh,  Creshr,"  one of the others ventured.  "Do  you  not think it is. . . " "I can handle it," he snarled, waving them back.
	"Listen  to your friends and get out of here before  I  kill you," I said, surprised to find I meant it.
	His ears went back and his pupils went to pinpricks, then he yowled and threw himself at me.
	Even drunk he was fast and strong. His claws slashed at my arm, catching and tearing through two layers of thick cloth  to scratch my skin. He danced back a step and looked at my hands. "Saaa! No claws! You have no claws!"
	Then he rushed me again and claws raked for my face.
	This time I caught his right arm and twisted.  He yowled and doubled over as I pulled it straight out and kept twisting,  then he screamed in pain as I kicked his elbow. There was an  audible snap. I kicked him again in the stomach and his scream turned to a choking gurgle.
	I dropped him retching into a puddle and turned back to  the other thugs. The one I had flattened first was only just starting to stir. He vomited loudly.
	"Who is next?" I hissed.
	They scattered into the night.
	I  picked  the moaning Sathe with the broken arm up  by  the scruff of his neck and slammed him face-first up against a  wall, his  feet  a couple of inches off the ground,  his  arm  dangling uselessly by his side and whispered in his pointed ear, "Try this again,  and I will come back. I will rip out your heart. I will show it to you before I eat it. Do you understand?"
	"Yes!  Yes!" His hoarse answer was a bit muffled by the fact his face was being flattened by the wall.
	"Bastard!"  I spat then carried him to the mouth of the alley and threw him on his face. I waited until he'd hauled himself to his feet and staggered off into the dark streets, then dusted off my hands and  went over to join Tahr who was comforting the victim.
	She  was young; probably attractive.  Her  soft facial fur was marred by blood trickling from one nostril and she had  claw marks on her arms,  chest,  and stomach.  More  wetness glistened  on  her thighs and between her legs where Tahr was examining her. Not pretty.
	My foot bumped against a tattered pair of breeches lying on the cobbles. I picked them up, wringing water out, then offering them to Tahr. "Is she all right?"
	The  trembling young Sathe shrank back,  her  claws  sliding out.  Tahr put her hands over the young female's and stroked  her temples, avoiding the scratches across her muzzle.  "It is all right,  he will not hurt you," Tahr assured her. "He did save your life. Here, your breeches."
	The female didn't take her eyes off me, wincing when Tahr pulled the tattered and ripped breeches up, tying the drawstring around her waist. "There. Do you want to tell me your name?" Tahr coaxed.
	The female hesitated, then said, "Heama."
	"All right, Heama, I  will take you home.  K'hy,  I  think  you should. . . Ai! You are hurt!"
	I  glanced at the blood on my arm.  "It is nothing,  just  a scratch," I assured her.
	"If you are sure," she frowned,  the wet fur of her forehead twisting.  "All right.  Why do you not go back to the Reptile.  You are getting her fur on. . . I mean:  she is not comfortable with you around."
	I  nodded.  "Okay. . . I will wait for you there. Are you going to be all right? She can walk?"
	"I can walk," Heama mumbled.
	"I think we can manage.  Thank you," Tahr smiled at me and I watched  as  she  helped the young Sathe  from  the  alley,  then gathered up my cloak against the drizzle and made my way back  to The Reptile.
	The inn was dark, the front door shut and locked. My pounding on the door roused the landlady from her sweet dreams.  Surprised was  a mild word for her reaction when she opened the door and I  pushed past  her  and  bumbled  my way through  a  room  lit  only  by the feeble glow of embers in the grate. She poked her head out to look around. "So  where  is your mistress?" A  rhetorical  question.  She locked  the  door again and went back to her  quarters  muttering something about stray animals.
	I  negotiated the railless stairs and dark corridor without too much injury to my person,  and managed to fumble  the  wooden latch open. I shook the water off my cloak before hanging it on a convenient  peg  in the wall then settled down on my  pallet  and waited. I never noticed when I dozed off, certainly it was before Tahr got back.

****** 

	I woke late.
	The  sun was already well over the hills on the far side  of the bay onto Bay Town and residents were busy going about their business on what promised to be a warm, muggy day.
	Tahr snuffled from where she was curled up in middle of  the round  bed.  Her nose twitched,  then she sneezed and opened  her eyes and lay there, blinking contentedly in the morning light.
	"What happened last night?" I asked
	She  rolled over onto her back and draped her head over  the side  of the bed,  looking at me upside-down.  "Good morning  and waking to you too," she smiled.
	"She was all right?"
	"We met her mate who was just setting out to look for  her. We  took  her to a physician who said she was sore  and  bruised and there was some damage to her [vagina], but nothing  that rest would not cure.  All we could do was take  her home and set her to bed."
	Again  she  rolled over to sprawl on  her  stomach.  It  was rather  disconcerting  as  she  was  naked,   but  it  was   also fascinating:  she  was  supple as a. . . well,  as a  big  cat,  her movements and muscles flowing like quicksilver.  I realised I was staring and tore my attention away from her body and back to  the window,  listening  with half an ear to her narrative of the  way she spent the previous night.
	It seems that Heama's husband had repaid Tahr with both coin and in a way that would not be considered proper back home.  As a result,  Tahr was in an exceptionally good mood this morning.  At least she could get some when she wanted it.
	After breakfast (scones,  meat,  and water),  we put our gear into  my pack which I had the honour of carrying.  Tahr took  her sword and my M-16.  The crossbow was strapped to the pack with my newly acquired cloak, then I followed her downstairs.
	"I  thank you for your [hospitality]," she bade our  hostess goodbye. "Here is the rest of the money we owe you."
	The  landlady  took the coin and put it in a  purse  hanging from her belt.  "Journey well, good madam. You know you shouldn't let your animal wander at night.  It came in last  night,  scared the breath out of me.  You were lucky, you could have lost it for good."
	Tahr showed amusement.  "He knows where his next meal  comes from and he will stay around me to make sure that he gets  it.  I thank you for you hospitality. Farewell." 
	Just  before  I  ducked  out  the  door,   I  couldn't  help whispering,  "Thank  you." I left her with her jaw hanging  open. Gracious, a talking monkey. . . imagine that.
	The  docks stretched the width of the town,  from  wall  to wall,  a  cobbled waterfront avenue with two wharves jutting  out into the bay,  embraced by the arms of the breakwater. Warehouses and shops were dotted around the edge of the open yard.
	Tahr led the way to one of the larger warehouses, on the opposite side  of the square from the place Char had  unloaded.  I  waited just outside the door as Tahr went  inside,  down an  isle lined with floor-to-ceiling stacks  of  barrels,  bales, crates,  and sacks of goods. There was a counter at the end where she  had to yell several times to catch  someone's  attention.  I couldn't  hear the conversation,  but the harassed looking  Sathe behind the counter handed her a scrap of paper then pointed out  to the wharf, to where a certain boat was moored.
	I  found out that the boat had no name.  No Sathe ship  did. When talking about a ship, one would say Tom's ship or Bob's ship or whoever happened to own the thing. Tahr found the fact that we named  our ships very amusing.
	Thinking about it, perhaps she's right; It is a weird thing to do.
	But then one of the qualities that sets the human race apart from  Sathe is the weird,  strange,  stupid,  and outright  crazy things we do just for the hell of it. Things like religion, the amount we spend on sports: we find reasons to justify these things while Sathe don't go for them at all.
	I took in the details of the boat as we approached:  twin masts, the triangular sails rigged fore and aft,  the small shelter  mounted on the aft cabin for the helmsman,  the high prow,  and the small dingy hanging off  the back.  A dangerously narrow-looking gangplank  from  the wharf to the ship rose and fell gently as the boat moved.  A Sathe sailors working on the rigging  noticed  us.  A shout caused other faces to swing toward us. 
	The  Sathe  that  met us at the top  of  the  gangplank  was swarthily built and dressed in stained grey breeches that matched the  greyish fur around his eyes,  giving him the  appearance  of wearing  spectacles.  He stared at us - at me  rather - then exclaimed, "My Ancestors. Not another one."

******

	No  matter how you twisted the word,  our quarters were  not what could be called 'comfortable'.  They were cramped,  hot, and smelled of fish and something indefinable.
	I sat on the lower bunk built into the wall of our tiny  box and  stared  at the article of  clothing I held  in  my  hand. The green flight suit jacket had a name stitched onto the breast pocket.
	"Lieutenant D. Laurence." I murmured out loud.
	Tahr   sat  at  the head of the  bunk  sifting  through  the contents of a wooden chest reinforced with iron bars:  the classic pirate treasure  chest.    But   the   treasure   was   not   of   Sathe manufacture. . . Human articles of clothing and personal effects.
	Boots,  socks,  pants,  underclothing,  the jacket. A set of dogtags  confirmed  that D.  Laurence had indeed  been  a  marine helicopter  pilot  off the USS FORRESTAL.  Also  a  day-glo yellow life jacket,  a plastic  very pistol and flares - both cartridges for the pistol and sticks for the life jacket,  a small packet of food concentrates,  a useless locator beacon and pack of dye, and a harmonica. The last item I picked out and stared at.
	Pewter and pearl.  There  was  an engraving  on  the slightly tarnished metal.  I  rubbed  it  hard against my pants to clean it and read:
	Daniel.  Make music and think of me. Love forever, Clara.
	Corny, but it left me feeling terrible.
	Captain  Hafair leaned against the far wall.  "We found  him drifting  much further south than we are now,  near the  islands, about half a year ago.  He was clinging to a piece of wreckage of some kind and was unconscious.  He would have drowned if not  for his floating device." He pointed at the worn marine life jacket.
	"We  took him and on board and searched the area for  hours, we found nothing but pieces of metal and other strange materials. We did our best to help him,  but he was coughing blood.  He woke only once,  he saw me and made sounds,  then passed out again. He died an hour later. We disposed of the body overboard."
	Of course they would have to.  With no freezer or  anything, the corpse would quickly turn foul.
	He  had  heard my story,  Tahr and I had told it to  him  in turns.  He believed it.  Of course he would have to after what he had seen.
	"K'hy, look at this." Tahr was holding an open water-stained leather wallet in one hand,  in the other was a piece  of laminated white, glossy paper; a photograph. "The purse is like the one that you carried, but what is this?"
	I  looked at the picture.  An attractive young  woman  stood smiling  at the camera.  Around her shoulder rested the arm of  a clean shaven man in jeans, Eagles T-shirt,and baseball cap. Maybe in his late twenties-early thirties, he held a boy of about seven on his shoulders.
	I swallowed a lump in my throat. "His family. They will never know what happened to him. Missing in action. "
	I looked again at the inscription on the harmonica again. His epitaph?
	Hafair took the picture in his hands and rubbed it with a fingertip.  "I have never seen a painting so fine, so lifelike. Was it done by others of your kind?"
	"Yes." I didn't feel like getting into a discussion about cameras and photography and everything else that would entail.
	"You have incredibly skilled artisans," Hafair marveled.  "It is almost as if it is a window looking upon the scene.  If your kind are  ever  willing  to open trading,  I know many Sathe  who  would  pay handsomely for a portrait of that quality."
	I just shrugged and pulled three flare cartridges out of a pocket on the lifevest.He cocked his head to one side and stared at me through deep green eyes.  "I must see to my crew.  We will be sailing with the tide."
	Stopping at the door of the cabin,  he turned and pointed at the harmonica. "I am curious: what is that thing for?"
	"It is a musical instrument." I raised it to my lips and blew a C sharp. The sharp taste of salt and alkaline was tangy on my lips.
	He stared, then blinked and left.
	Shortly we heard him shouting out orders on deck. Tahr vaulted up into the top bunk then poked her head out of the narrow gap between the edges of the concave bunk and the ceiling and cocked her head quizzically. "You are quiet."
	"He had a family," I said in way of explanation, "a female who loved him."
	"The h'man?"
	"We can love,  we can hate," I replied.  "I was thinking  of his family, what they must be feeling."
	"Yes,  I  am sorry." A few seconds later she  said,  "Before that time you. . . spoke of your family,  I had never thought of you having  parents.  I  was  not  even sure  that  others  like  you existed."
	"And now?"
	"Quite sure."
	I  nodded  and  ran my finger over the  inscription  in  the harmonica. For several seconds I just stared at it, then wrapped it in a scrap of leather and slipped it into my pack. 
	Perhaps some day I would be able to return it to his family.

******

	Days  after  Bay  Town  was lost  among  the  hills  of  the coastline  the  novelty  of shipboard life  began  to  pall  very quickly.  As  a  passenger whose knowledge of  sailing  could  be engraved on the head of a pin with room left over for a chorus line of angels, there was very little for me to do but  watch  the shore scroll by like some  patchwork  quilt  gone wild.
	There  were  only  ten crew  members(not  including  captain Hafair  and Tahr):  six male and four  females.  Sathe  seafarers believed  in  recruiting a mixed crew and I doubted  it  was  for religious  reasons.  I had seen no sign of any belief in gods  or deities in the Sathe society,  not even of vague superstitions. I guess that the reason for it was for crew satisfaction and morale on long voyages. Later observations confirmed that hypothesis.
	The ship was on the last leg of its journey, heading back to Mainport  from Bay Town after a long sojourn around  the  Florida peninsula  and the settlements of the Gulf  Realm.  Their  annual trade  route headed south during the early  summer,  then  looped back  north again with their goods as winter  approached.  During those cold months of storms and ice, ships were harbored against the full fury of the Atlantic's elements and overhauled.
	The  crew  worked  on a rotational basis with  a  couple  of them eating,  sleeping,  or playing some obscure dice game  while the  others worked in the rigging or patching sails or any  other of the multitude of mundane shipboard duties they could pull.

	They  were friendly enough.  All of them had seen the  human pilot  they had pulled from the water so I was not a totally  new experience.  However  a couple of them were not convinced that  I was  much more than an animal.  When you're stuck on  a  floating cigar  box  with things with attitudes like that,  it  gets  very annoying very fast.
	During the day we sailed with the prevailing northerly,  the small  vessel  cutting  through  the  water  at  a  steady  clip. Flying clouds of spray from the bow wave made the wooden planking on the deck slippery as it drifted across the boat.  A couple  of times  dolphins flashed alongside, playing beneath  the  bowsprit, their buzzing, chattering, and razzing audible through the hull.
	I laughed as I watched them leaping through the waves.  Even here they still performed their aquabatics: their somersaults  and tailstands.  If  they were surprised to see me,  it  didn't  show through  their perpetual smiles as they lined up to splash  water at me.
	We   sat   at  rest  in  a  small  bay  as  we   did   every night. Traveling  close  to shore in the dark in a  boat  without radar,  sonar,  satellite  navigation systems or other  hit-tech gear  is plain suicide.  Especially in a boat that can  have  the bottom torn open by drifting log.
	The  night was cool to my skin but perfectly  acceptable  to the Sathe with their natural fur coats.  The only light was  from the moon and stars: quite enough to see by on clear nights.
	It  was peaceful: the waves slapping against  the  hull,  the ocean  aglow with cold,  blue phosphorescence - almost a  net  of glittering cyan and light. Surrealistic, beautiful. And  the soft hissing of Sathe voices could be mistaken  for waves on a distant shore.
	The crew would sit on the deck in the still and darkness  of the  late evening and tell stories and jokes:  the  latest  tales they  had heard in the last port,  or something they had made  up themselves.
	". . . then found they were supposed to be there when half the farm washed way in the next rains."
	Sathe  laughter  hissed around the  deck  and  Tahmihr,  the storyteller,  took this as his due and sat down again, taking a deep pull from his mug.
	Everyone  had  been drinking;  some  more  than  others.  As silence settled,  Chmiha - one of the females - got up and pulled an equally tipsy Shatimae   to   his   feet. Together   they   lurched   off belowdecks. I stared after them, aware of what they were probably going to get up to. Nobody else seemed to give a damn.
	A Sathe sitting beside me swallowed a lump of dried meat, belched, then asked me, "What  do things like you do for entertainment?"
	Others heard him and he was quickly backed up by a chorus of voices demanding me to do something,  including a laughing  Tahr. Jokes were out: I didn't know what they found funny. I was unable to think of a story on the spur of the moment.
	"What  about that instrument?" Tahr suggested and  before  I had a chance to protest she dived below-decks to get  it.  Well,  she seemed to be feeling better; the last couple of days had seen  her a little green around the gills, several times making an offering of the contents of her stomach to the gods of the sea.
	Within a minute she was back,  handing me the little leather bundle. Silver glittered when I unrolled it.
	It  was an instrument I could play,  probably the one I  was best  at.  Living in barracks meant that you either got  good  at playing something quickly,  or someone would ram it down your throat.
	Sitting in the dark on a wooden coaster with an audience  of drunk  cats,  I began to play.  A couple of bars of Home  on  the Range to warm up with.  I followed that with Led Zep's The Immigrant Song , then The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald,  Stairway to Heaven, The Devil Went Down to Georgia , Rough Boy and other pieces,  both old and  new, mixing lively tunes with more sedate ones.
	The sounds of the harmonica were alien here,  wailing across the night-cloaked waters. I looked around over my cupped hands at the dim faces of the Sathe, shadows strong and their eyes seeming to glow.  There was no sound from them as they listened,  no sign of  derision.  I took heart from that and smiled to myself  as  I returned my complete attention to the music.
	I played for about an hour, doing the pieces I was best at.  The  moon was high before I finished,  and only two  of  the Sathe  had  left during my solo  performance.  Well. . . I  couldn't expect them all to be music lovers.
	When I finally ran out of breath they showed their  approval by  laughing (hissing all round) and passing me a drink.  That  I could use:  my mouth tasted of dry metal from the harmonica.  The ale was strange,  like beer in a vague way,  but weaker, flat and sweet with the distinct taste of honey.
	A  few mugfulls of the ale was enough to trace a  warm  path through  my insides and as the crew drifted off to their  berths, Tahr  had  to  help  me down  the  pitch-black  companionway  and corridor  to our box of a cabin.  She found it extremely  amusing when I missed a step and skidded down on my posterior.
	I couldn't see her,  but I could feel Tahr's eyes on me as I stripped off in the dark and climbed into bed.  The coarse  sheets were irritating,  but they were all there were and at least it was a bed.  Wood creaked  as Tahr  clambered into the upper bunk,  then came the thunk as  she hit her head against the low ceiling.
	"You all right?" I called up.
	She   snarled  out  a  few  choice  curses.   "Yes,   I   am fine. . . Saaa!"
	That  paid her back for my indignation in  the  corridor.  I laughed and rolled over,  pulling the thin sheet up, wishing that I  had  a pelt like her's:  the nights  were  definitely  getting cooler as we moved north.
	. . . .She  was  warm  under me,  hair fanned  out  on  the pillow in a dark web,  her eyes closed in ecstasy and she was warm as we  moved together.  I  buried my head in her shoulder and rubbed my  cheek against  the  smooth skin.  She shuddered  under  me; tensing  and relaxing,  again  and  again.  I lifted myself with my  arms  and looked at her face. She opened her eyes.
	Impossibly  large  green  eyes; green  with  flecks  of  gold swimming deep inside. . . inhuman eyes.
	I  snapped awake with a gasping cry,  the sheets twisted  around  my legs and clammy with cooling sweat.  There was no sound from  the bunk above.

******

	We  were  at  anchor in a bay somewhere  around  near  where Atlantic  city should be.  The crew were lowering the dingy  from the back of the sloop, the ropes creaking under the weight of the small boat loaded with empty water barrels.
	That was the reason for us stopping.  Tahr told me such a small ship does not have a lot of room for carrying supplies such as food and water.  Since the ship was a coaster and never far from the shore it was more practical to stop - either at a port or somewhere along the coast - than carry provisions needed for several weeks journey.
	Tahr and I stood watching them prepare the dingy. "It will be good to walk on solid ground again," she sighed.
	I had to agree with her.  Going on an Atlantic cruise may be fun to some people,  but not when the  boat rises and falls  with the tiniest swell and the head is a bucket.
	Four  of  the crew clambered down to the boat  and  took  up oars.  With the barrels there was only room for one more. Captain Hafair saw the situation.
	"They will have to make two trips."
	That  was  something the rowers didn't want  to  hear.  They muttered among themselves.
	"No need," I said.  "Tahr,  you go. . . take these." I gave her the M-16, then stripped down to my shorts, bundled all my clothes up in my jacket and handed her the package. The crew stared at my body  with a mixture of amusement and disgust.  I heard  whispers pertaining  to my lack of fur and guesses at other  physiological arrangements.
	Tahr looked at the water with distaste.  "You can swim  that far?"
	"Sure.  It is not that far." It was only about sixty meters, no sweat.  Sathe aren't very good swimmers:  Not only the fact that their fur became waterlogged, but they were just natural sinkers. Too much muscle to float I guess. "Race you."
	She  wiggled  her ears and tossed my clothes  down  into  the boat,  slung  the  rifle over her shoulder and swarmed  down  the horizontal slats on the hull that served as a ladder.  I  stepped over the hemp railings and balanced on the edge of the boat for a second.  The water suddenly seemed a lot further  down.  Oh well. . . With some attention to style I launched myself into a swan dive and broke the water cleanly.
	I came up gasping.  The Atlantic was damned COLD!  I  looked around for the rowboat and saw they had already started, putting their backs into it. I hitched up my shorts and struck out for shore, bodysurfing the mediocre waves.
	The beach was just a small spit of gritty sand,  carried down from inland by a narrow stream. The rest of the shoreline was rock, worn smooth from the constant action of the waves. As yet the trees around the bay hadn't  begun  to loose their leaves,  but it  wouldn't  be  long before they turned russet red-gold.
	Puffing  and blowing like a seal I hauled myself out of  the water,  adjusting  my shorts while I grinned at the  dingy  still several meters out and riding the waves in. I waded out again and gave them a hand by dragging the boat up to the watermark.
	"Show  off,"  Tahr chastised me as she leaped out  onto  dry sand.
	"Hey," I grinned back at her while splashing ashore.  "I  am allowed some fun in life."
	She spat in mock disgust,  then laughed and tossed my bundle of clothes at me. I caught it and began to sort my clothes out.
	"So, did you enjoy your swim?" Tahr asked.
	"Very pleasant," I grinned,  then nearly fell over trying to get  my  legs into my pants.  Solid ground felt strange  after  a heaving deck.
	While  the crew filled the water flasks and drew straws  for the hunting detail,  Tahr and I struck off on our own,  following the stream inland through the utterly deserted forest. Not a sign of Sathe habitation anywhere,  only birdsong.  The sky was  clear with only a trace of clouds,  small animals scuttled through  the undergrowth doing whatever it is that small animals that live  in the undergrowth do.
	"It is beautiful here," I said.
	"What?" she gave me the Sathe version of a blank stare.
	"I forget, you grew up with this."
	As  a  New Yorker myself,  I only  recently  started  seeing anything of the great outdoors,  and even then nothing as outdoor as this. "You should be grateful, there is not a lot of untouched countryside left in my world."
	She  looked around.  "Your world sounds like a very  strange place.  How could anyone destroy land?  It is. . . always.  There is just so much of it."
	"It is not that hard to do, believe me."
	She was silent for a while, looking at me, studying me. "You have changed, strange one."
	"Huh?"
	"Your  skin. . . It is much darker,  and the fur on  your  face is thicker."
	I looked down at myself.  I don't tan easily,  but all those days  outdoors  had weathered me,  and given me  restless  nights suffering  from  sunburn.  Using  a  knife to  shave  is  a  very uncomfortable experience.  The last  time  I'd tried it was  well over a week ago in The Reptile and  by  now  my beard was quite distinctive. Patchy, yes, but distinctive.
	"I think I had better cut it back again."
	Tahr craned around to look.  "No,  do not.  You look  better with it on."
	"You think so?" I scratched at the bristles.
	She  bobbed  her  head in  an  exaggerated  nod.  "It  hides your. . . baldness." Then she added, almost as an afterthought, "And it is a nice color."
	I laughed: "Flattery will get you everywhere."
	"Another saying from your world?"
	"Sort of."
	The  source  of  the  stream was  a  small  lake  about  two kilometers inland.  Not very large, just enough to hold the water that  drained from the local land.  It was picturesque:  a  small valley between four hills covered in a canopy of  greenery:  oak, ash, beech, birch, as well as a spattering of pine.
	We  had  settled  under a tree in a  small  glade  near  the lake, me leaning against the trunk and Tahr lying sprawled out on her  cloak near my feet in that relaxed attitude that  only  cats can adopt, her fur blending in with the golden grasses around us.
	I  took a swing of water out of my canteen then offered  her some.  She accepted it and I watched as she put it to her  almost non-existent black lips and tilted her head back, dribbling water down her chin and chest.  Her mouth really was not built to drink out  of a vessel shaped like that.  Sathe canteens  are  flexible leather bags with long, flattened necks. . . much like botas.
	"Tahr, what happens when we get to Mainport?"
	She  wiped  a trickle of water off her chin and  tossed  the canteen back to me. "Ssaaa. . . You mean what happens to you?"
	"Uh," I ducked my head somewhat sheepishly,  "Yes. . . You  are my only friend here.  I know very little of your customs and I am not skilled in the crafts that your people value.  There are none of my own kind. I am a. . . a stranger in a strange land."

	"Very poetic,  K'hy." She reached out and patted my leg. "Do not worry. You forget; I am not a figure of unimportance there. I will make sure that you are looked after.  Also our scholars will be fascinated in you, your devices, and your knowledge."
	I slowly shook my head.  "That was not really what I  meant. Tahr,  you  are a friend,  but still you are Sathe.  You are  all Sathe. It gets. . . lonely."
	She plucked a blade of grass, twisting it in her hands. "You pine after others like yourself? There was that other. . . h'man. If both you and he came here there may be others.  What do you think the chances are?"
	I shook my head, "I would not have the faintest idea. People - my kind of people - disappear all the time,  but I doubt it  is quite the same thing."
	There  were  all  those legends and stories  of  people  and machines  who vanished without trace.  The tales of  the  ancient civilizations of Atlantis,  Eldorado, and Vilcabamba and the more contemporary Bermuda Triangle, the Marie Celeste.
	Would Tenny and I be included with these?  Nah, I doubted it.  We'd just go down  in a government computer somewhere,  along with that  ever-growing  list of missing persons.  How many of them had  suffered this  same fate. . . or worse.  If this was another Earth  that  had just taken a different turnpike somewhere in time,  then how many others could there be?  an infinite number? every major and minor decision  in history causing another branching with an  alternate Earth? or just periodic breaches along the way.
	Hell,  I could count my blessings.  I could have ended up on an earth that had never developed an atmosphere!
	How many could that have happened to?
	"Tahr,  perhaps a few of my kind have come here before,  but as  you said,  there is a lot of land.  Also,  they may have  not wished to be found by your people."
	"What? Why?"
	"Think about it."
	"Oh. . . " She touched her face. "Our appearance?"
	I nodded and she tried to look indignant. "You remember that when I first saw you I did not wait around for  introductions.  I very nearly left you in that river."
	"But  it  was my personality that won  you  over,  ah?"  She laughed  and ran a clawtip along the strip on her side  where  no fur grew,  then rolled on her back,  spread eagle.  "Am I  really that  hideous?" she smiled at the sun - her earring glittering  as her ear flickered - and stretched.I cleared my throat.  From where I was sitting her  position was rather. . . revealing. 
	She stretched a tawny leg out and ran her bare foot up the inside of my calf, as far as the knee.
	"Ahh. . . no,   I  would  definitely  not  call  you  hideous." 
	She  grinned  and  rolled again to end up  on  her  stomach, resting  her head on her laced fingers;  her  expression  growing serious  once more.  "K'hy,  the last few nights your  sleep  has been. . . restless. You have been having those dreams again?"

	So,  so,  so.  She  had noticed.  For a couple of seconds  I stared at her,  then sighed and said,  "I was hoping you had  not noticed. Why now?"
	"A  boat  is  not  the  most  private  of  places,  and  you are. . . touchy about this. Is it the same dream?"
	I shrugged. "Sort of."
	"Ah. . . what was this dream?"
	"Look,  Doctor  Ruth!" I was starting to feel flustered  and threatened  by her line of questioning.  "Why do you keep  prying into my affairs?!"
	"I do not understand," she said;  genuinely puzzled. "I just want  to  help.  It  can help to discuss  your  problems  with  a friend."  She  gave  me her  most  endearing  human-style  smile, exposing pointed white teeth.
	It  still  startled  me.  Tahr saw me flinch  and  her  face straightened,  almost looked hurt.  Damnation,  she was for real, caring about my problem.  I swallowed and relaxed a  little.  So, now she's a psychiatrist,  okay.  Haltingly,  embarrassed, I told her about the dream. Nightmare. Whatever.
	Afterwards she was silent, looking at me with those eyes the liquid green of ocean depths.
	I  stared back,  all too aware of that gulf between  us.  So different,  she  with her fur and claws and teeth and  predator's manners. Her kind used to prey upon mine.
	"Tahr," I choked.  "What am I? I mean,  when you look at me, what do you see?"
	She  pondered  over that.  "A friend,  I  think,"  she  said thoughtfully.  "Perhaps a tall, clumsy, bald, half-blind and deaf friend,  but you are a friend nevertheless. Beside, 
you have cute fur."
	Cute. . . I  flushed.  "What I said before. . . I hope I  did  not offend."
	She smiled. "It offends me far less than it embarrasses you, K'hy.  Dreams  can  say  a lot about  a  person:  what  they  are thinking,  what they want. . . Saaa,  K'hy." She cocked her head and asked, "And what am I to you?"
	Oh Jeeze!  "I. . . Ah. . . I have known many females,  but you are unique."
	She gave a small snort.
	I continued,  trying to explain.  "You are stronger  inside. You  are. . . .There is an animal my people often used to  represent grace,  power,  cunning,  and beauty:  you strongly resemble this creature."
	"Are you calling me an animal!" she bristled.
	"No,  no. . . I. . . er. . . that was a. . . a. . . " Damn,  I didn't  know the words. It wasn't necessary.
	Her  anger  evaporated into laughter.  She  moved  over  and squatted down beside me.  A claw lightly traced long my  jawbone. "I  know  what you meant." Then she shifted and  there  was  warm breath  on my neck and a second later I almost screamed when  she bit  me lightly on the shoulder,  teeth closing,  then  releasing again.
	"Jesus,"  I gasped when my heart settled down  again.  "What was THAT for?!" 
	She  scratched  her  own neck  and  looked  bewildered.  "It shows. . . affection. Do you not have such a gesture?"
	"Uh. . . yes. It is. . . uh. . . " I didn't know how to say it. Impulsively I leaned over, placing my lips against her cheek.  Just a touch.  Her fur was warm from the sun, with that now-familiar musty scent. I hesitated, then impulsively shifted and bit her lightly on her  right  shoulder;  she trembled slightly, then relaxed.
	"That touch," she felt her cheek. "Is that it?"
	"A kiss," I said,  embarrassed.  "There is more to it, but you. . . you are not. . . I do not think it would work."
	Ha!  The metal picture of getting into a serious mouth match with a Sathe was both ludicrous and faintly repellent.
	"A chiss. . . We both have a lot to learn," she murmured; then, more loudly. "Come on. I think it is time we went back."
	I  lagged a few steps behind her,  discreetly trying to  get fur out of my mouth.

******

	But for the rowboat, the beach was deserted.
	Waves  lapped  around the dingy where it lay  in  the  surf. Water casks lay upended on the beach with their contents  spilled back to the sea.  There were also dark stains on the white  sand: small  droplets and larger patches of a  sticky,  reddish  liquid already  drying.  Fifty meters out on the ship we could  see  the crew  waving their arms and shouting something swallowed  by  the distance.
	Tahr grabbed me,  pushing me back toward the trees, hissing, "Out of here! Move!" 	Sathe were waiting with loaded crossbows leveled.
	I  grabbed for my rifle but Tahr caught my arm  and  stopped me, "No! K'hy!"
	"Submit!  Now!" A Sathe snarled.  "Do it!"
	I hesitated, looked at Tahr in confusion.  It almost got me shot: a crossbow bolt whirred past my head. I froze rigid.
	"You!"  the  Sathe growled at Tahr.  "Get that  thing  under control!"
	"Like  this," Tahr hissed at me.  She hung her arms  loosely away from her side and looked up at the sky, exposing her throat. I imitated her example.
	Hands  grabbed my hair,  yanking my head back  even  further while  claws rested at my throat;  I broke out in a  cold  sweat. Others took my gun and tied my hands behind my back: tightly. Tahr  was  tied  likewise,  then we were  led at  crossbow-point into the forest. The crewmembers were there: stripped bodies dumped behind bushes. Well enough hidden so we'd missed them on the way in. Guards pushed me past the corpses, stumbling at a grueling pace through  the  trees,   then  uphill.   On  a  windswept  hilltop overlooking the bay, I looked back to see the ship still lying at anchor. It looked like a toy. That was how the Sathe had known we were there: they had probably watched the ship sailing in and the rest was easy. How many crew were left? Could they get help? I doubted it.
	Wagons and llamas waited on the other side of the  hill.  In short  order Tahr and I were stripped of our  clothing,  had  our ropes replaced by manacles,  and were left lying like a couple of sacks of meal in the back of a cart. Right in front of my nose a canvass blanket covered a lumpy pile. A corner had shifted and  I caught  a glimpse of armour hidden underneath: blood red and coal black.
	Tahr  glared  at the back of wagoner,  then  went  back  to staring at her bonds:  two small stocks,  one for the wrists  and another for the ankles, chained together and secured with a crude but  efficient  lock: like  wooden  handcuffs.   She  had  limited movement, but me they were taking no chances with.
	They'd crammed my hands into the same kind of manacles - too small for my wrists - also they'd hog-tied me: linking my wrist and ankle restraints behind my back with rope,  then running  another loop of cord up to my neck. If I so much as twitched my hands the noose began to bite into my windpipe.
	Perhaps  I could've coped with that,  but the  sheer  terror when  one  of  the bastards - a  female - had jabbed  me  with  a dagger,  then  held  it between my legs and debated  amongst  her comrades whether or not she should take a trophy was like nothing I've ever felt before.
	They thought it was hilarious.
	Tahr  was  snarling  and spitting in helpless  fury  as  the laughing  Sathe poked and prodded and jabbed at me until an officer dispersed them, snarling they didn't want me damaged too badly.
	Now  several hours later - cuts and scratches stinging and oozing, my muscles aching from  lying  on hard wood in the back of the cart, shaking uncontrollably -  I wondered  what they had in mind for us and why it was every  time we moved,  someone jumped on us. Tahr must be really important to someone.
	The  Sathe on the llama behind the wagon had grown tired  of  jeering  at us;  laughing  at me and making proposals to Tahr,  who  stolidly ignored them. However, they still kept a close eye on us.
	Toward  evening  we left the road and  started  through  the trees. The jolting while the cart was on the road was bad enough; offroad  it  was  unbelievable.  Black and  blue,  I  was  almost relieved when we rolled into a campsite. Several small fires were crackling away and shelters were slung between trees.  Some  were tent  shaped,  others just a heavy sheet with one end tied  to  a rope and the other pegged to the ground.
	Two  Sathe climbed into the back of the  cart,  two  more stood  at guard on the ground.  One of them cautiously untied  my ropes,  then gestured to Tahr with sword drawn.  "Out." He looked at me: "That too."
	I got to my feet, my joints popping from being locked in the same  position  for hours on end,  and waited while  our  captors removed  our  hobbles.  They led us at swordpoint to one  of  the larger pavilions where our leg shackles were replaced and chained to a stake driven deep into the ground. Guards waited outside.
	I  looked  around.  Shabby, water-stained canvass draped over a rope. There were a couple of blankets  on  the trampled grass, but besides that; nothing.
	"They are Gulf Realm?" I asked Tahr.
	Unable  to  sign the affirmative with her hands  she  nodded human  style  instead.   "Yes,  Gulf  Realm,"  she  almost  spat. "Warriors of Hraasa, that impotent, fatherless, son-of-a. . . "
	"Talking about others when they are not present.  Where  ARE your manners?"
	The mild voice broke Tahr off in mid-curse.  We both  looked to  where a male Sathe was watching us through the pavilion's  flaps. The  newcomer  laid  his ears back in a smile  that  held  little warmth. "A pleasant catch. Tahr ai Shirai herself. Almost too much to hope for. I've heard many promising things about  you, and  I  am  pleased to see they are  true."  He  settled  himself opposite her, his nostrils flaring.
	"Who are you!" Tahr snarled. "And what is this outrage! Gulf troops  violating  all  the conventions and  interfering  with  a Candidate and her entourage. The assembly shall demand a tribunal of inquiry."
	"Entourage?" the other smirked. "THIS?" he stared at me, "is your entourage? You 
are in a bad way, Tahr."
	"Who are you!"
	"Ah,  my manners!  I suppose I should introduce myself: I  am Tarsha."
	This Tarsha was hefty for a Sathe: about five foot three. His fur was dark gold in the fading sunlight, lighter stripes running down  his muzzle.  He wore a kilt of black leather outlined  with red trim, his black cloak was decorated likewise.
	He moved closer to her; his clean features and her ragged fur were  silhouetted against the light filtering through the tent fabric.  When he combed  a  claw through her mane she snapped at it,  but his hand was already out of reach.
	"Huh. . . Yes,  you are the one all right.  I think I shall  find you very enjoyable tonight."
	"Fuck  off. . . Get your paws off her you mother-copulator!"  I lunged  forward,  straining at the wooden stocks.  They  creaked, but unfortunately held.
	Tarsha  turned his attention to me.  "It DOES talk!  You  do find some strange friends Tahr. Strange and ugly."
	"The best part of you ran down your father's leg!" I snarled at him.
	Tahr hissed.
	Tarsha looked surprised,  then his eyes narrowed. He stepped towards  me and crouched down.  With a single quick  movement  he grabbed my hair and forced my head back.  A black claw traced  up and  down  the curve of my throat,  pausing to  circle  the  soft hollow below my adams apple. I swallowed. "Tahr,  does it not know that it is not nice to say things like that.  What is it,  Tahr? Some friend of yours perhaps?"
	The claw meandered down to my chest,  then started to  apply pressure. I winced, then ground my teeth. Sweat and blood started to flow.  I was all too aware of how easy it would be for him  to gut me with a single slash.
	"Stop, Tarsha," Tahr sounded weary. "Don't hurt him."
	"Huh." He drew back, suddenly thoughtful. "Compassion for something like this?  Interesting.  I wonder why?"  He withdrew his claw from the small furrow it had made  in my chest and brushed his fingers across my forehead,  frowning at the  moisture on his fingertips.  "You hear  her,  Creature?  She cares for you." He released his hold on my hair and signaled for a guard.  "Get it out of here."
	"Where do you want it, High One?"
	He sighed, like he didn't really care. "I do not know. Take it and chain it to a tree or something. Make sure it is well guarded."
	They  did.  Chain me to a tree.  Without  clothing,  neither beneath  shelter nor near a fire.  A guard sat like a furry  idol under  a  nearby bivouac,  a sword and cocked crossbow  close  at hand.  A half-hearted tug at the chain that bound me to the  tree only earned me a kick in the side of the head.
	Day fled and nighttime stole across the camp,  broken only by the oasis of light around the campfires. None of the Sathe around them  reacted much when the snarls of protest  came  from that one tent; turning to sounds of pain and struggle.
	"BASTARD!" I started screaming also, struggling against my chains while Tahr cried out. Several guards finally used the butts of their crossbows to  shut me up.

******

	The  morning  arrived  to  find  me  soaking  wet,  shaking, miserable,  and sick as a dog. It'd been a long, cold night with the moon  lost  behind clouds and a persistent  drizzle  soaking  me. Water dripped from the tree.  After shivering all night I was exhausted,  hungry, bruised, possibly concussed and  - almost unbelievably - thirsty. What  water  had pooled in nearby leaves  wasn't  enough  to ease the burning in my swollen throat. My breath rasped in my throat and deeper, right in my lungs.
	My  guard had been changed,  and the Sathe watching  me  was still vigilant,  if bored.  The camp quickly roused  itself,  the sodden remains of fires were turned and dry wood set alight. They must  have  been  very confident in themselves  to  risk  someone spotting the smoke,  little as there was.  Altogether there  must have been about fifteen of them,  of mixed sexes.  Breakfast  was set  to  cooking,  sending  a smell of roasting  meat  and  grain wafting that started my mouth watering and stomach churning. When was  the  last time I had eaten?  I huddled up and  watched  them eat. They ignored me. Not feeding time.
	"I heard it speak, I tell you. It insulted the commander."
	Three  of  the red and black clad  Sathe,  all  males,  were standing over me. I curled up, put my knees up against my chest and tried to stop shivering.
	"How could THAT speak." Another batted at the first speakers head,  playfully.  Their way of speaking,  the inflections on the words  were  different from the other Sathe I had  heard  in  the towns I noted dully; a different accent?
	The  first  one  bent down beside me and  grabbed  my  bound hands.  "Look, no claws," he observed, then extended the talon on his index finger and ran it down the side of my face, from ear to jaw,  scratching bruised skin.  "But it can talk.  SAY something!" He emphasized  that with a jab at my cheek.  A small noise escaped me and I felt  something  warm start to flow down the side of my face.
	"Get bent," I mumbled in Sathe, then broke down in a hacking cough.
	"You were right,  it can talk, sort of. . . but what is it? and what is wrong with it," puzzled Number Two.
	I managed to stop coughing and was taking rasping breaths.
	Number Three spoke for the first time.  "It is ill. Look, it has  no fur and you can see how thin its skin is.  It  must  have frozen last night."
	I  closed my eyes and tried to ignore them;  that got  me  a kick in the ribs.
	"No,  don't go to sleep now,  tell us about yourself."  That was Number One again. He yanked my head back by the hair and that triggered another spasm of coughing and gasping.
	"I do not think it is feeling very talkative," another observed.
	"A." The first agreed and tugged on my hair a few more times. "Give me a knife."
	Number Two handed one across. "What are you doing?"
	"Look at this stuff." Another yank on my hair. "I would not mind a belt this color."
	"Are you sure . . . "
	He was. The knife slashed and cut, painfully as he hacked away handfuls of hair, bunching them in his fist and sawing the knife across. When he was finished he let me drop and stuffed his trophies into a pouch on his belt. "Might be worth something.
	Number three bent down to peer into my  face.  "You know,  I  think it is really sick.  Perhaps the [captain]  should know. He does not want it dead."
	"Ah,  you worry too much," one of the others  laughed.  They poked  me  a few more times before losing interest and stalking off.
	For half the day I lay there.  The sky remained overcast and the air chill.  I curled into a small ball wracked with shivering and coughing.  If I'm lucky, it's only a bad cold. God, don't let it be pneumonia.
	Sometime  in  the late morning,  a pair of  arms  raised  my head:  "Drink  this." A wooden bowl was pressed against  my  lips and  water dribbled over my face.  I choked,  managed  to  drink, then I was dropped and left again.
	About midday I was given water again,  then unchained and half-dragged by a bevy of guards to Tarsha's tent. I wasn't expecting a friendly chat, and I didn't have one. 
	"Tahr, what is the matter with your. . . friend?"
	She looked at me huddled and shivering  violently,  hovering on the edge of hypothermia. "Has it not seeped into your tiny mind, he is ill!" she snarled. "What have you DONE to him?!"
	She was still chained. Bruises were visible through her fur, one eye was half closed, and there were small scratches along her side.  My stomach turned when I saw the spatters of blood on  her thighs.
	But  she  had at least gotten in a few of  her  own.  Tarsha sported a beautiful slash along the side of his face,  from below his left eye to the top of his nose,  and there was a crescent of small  punctures on his arm; about the right shape for a jaw  full of sharp teeth. 
	He  bared his own at her,  V-shaped wrinkles forming up  the bridge of his muzzle.  "Be careful how you choose your words. You could  easily find yourself regretting them.  We might be able  to help your companion."
	Tahr's eyes flickered from him to me. "Why can you not leave him alone!"
	"But  I thought that you would want us to  help. . . him. You see? He does seem to be suffering, does he not? I can ensure that he  is  treated well."
	God, Tahr! No! 
	"Across the other side,"  Tarsha  continued,  "I  can also  make  things  very unpleasant for him if you do not co-operate.  Now are you willing to talk with me?  or do you want a demonstration?" He waited  for her to respond.
	Tahr  gave me an agonized look,  started to speak, then hung her head and  was silent.
	The Gulf Sathe waved a curt signal to the warriors.
	Tahr  still didn't speak,  but that look on her  face  spoke volumes as four guards laid hands on me,  dragging me outside.  I struggled, for all the good it did; there were enough of them to hold me still.
	A  rope  was tied to my manacles, the other end thrown  though  a  high fork  in  a tree.  I gasped in pain as they  hauled  me  up, my back to the tree,  the cramped  muscles in my arms and back screaming their protest  and my skin being scraped raw against the bark. My feet - a foot off the ground - were tied so I couldn't kick out and I hung there, fighting to breath.
	Tahr  tried  to  reach me,  snapping at  her  guard,  but  a vicious cuff about the ears staggered and silenced her.
	"Now. . . " Tarsha strolled around to stand in front of me, contemplating me like someone might study a picture on the wall. He reached up,  a finger tracing the scab of  the  wound he had given me the previous  day,  "I  have  some questions to ask of you, Tahr."
	Tahr glared at him sullenly.
	The  Sathe's  claw came out and  slashed  downward,  cutting through  skin  and  muscle.  The shock of the  pain  was  like  a kick in the stomach and I gagged on the agony that ripped through my  stretched pectorals.  Again Tarsha's claws cut into my  skin, slicing methodically,  tracing a red rectangle on my chest.  Then he caught one end and started peeling the strip of skin off.
	You  wouldn't  believe  the pain. I couldn't  help it;  I screamed, bucking and thrashing enough to almost dislocate my shoulder and knock myself silly against the tree. 
	"Stop."
	Tarsha calmly raised his hand and sniffed at the blood  that stained  the fur of his fingers,  gazing coolly up at me while I tried to focus through watering eyes. "Tahr, you do surprise me," he turned to face her. "I had thought you would be stronger than this."
	Tahr snarled helplessly,  looking haggard,  tired.  "If  you kill him, you are the greater fool," she hissed. "You do not know what he is! what he means for all Sathe!" 
	"Really?" Tarsha purred. "I must confess I had been curious. Maybe  there will be time for that later.  Now,  the  other  Born Rulers: what routes will they be following to Mainport?"
	"What? I do not know that!"
	Again I twisted as Tarsha's claws slipped under my skin  and began skinning another strip.  The strange noises I was hearing I only later realised came from my own mouth.
	"STOP!" Tahr screamed.  "I DO NOT KNOW!  I do not know.  You know I cannot!"
	Tarsha grinned up at me.  "Yes,  you are right.  I know." He wiped  a finger through the blood streaming down my  front,  then methodically licked it clean.  "Have you ever wondered what  your pet would taste like? Maybe filleted?"
	Tahr yowled incoherently at him.
	Tarsha  laughed,   then  continued  while  Tahr  was   still seething;  half-furious,  half-terrified. "My superiors have long been  curious about the strength of the garrison at River  Plain. What is its strength? Are there any plans to reinforce it?" His  claw  flexed again,  I felt its hard  curve  tracing  a pattern in my blood.
	Tahr  hesitated,  then answered.  A Gulf  trooper  scribbled notes.
	"Good, Tahr," Tarsha smiled. "I may tame you yet."
	She gaped her mouth and hissed.
	Tarsha asked more and more questions, scattering his demands for information with things he already knew. Every time he caught Tahr lying, he made me scream. Even when she was simply unsure of an answer, a claw slowly ripped through my skin.
	It seemed like an eternity I was up there. The world blurred out of focus,  my ears rang.  Time became meaningless;  all  that existed  was the pain,  then even that started to blur into the distance.  I never really noticed when Tarsha had  finished  and Tahr was being dragged off, yowling.
	They  left  me  up  there until  I  started choking.
	Through the haze I saw soldiers approaching,  a sword  being drawn.  They  moved around behind the tree,  then the  rope  went slack and the ground smashed up.

******

	The cool,  damp cloth on my forehead felt good,  a sensation beside the constant pain across my chest and through my joints.  I just lay there  with my eyes shut, shivering. 
	"K'hy, are you awake? Can you hear me?"
	Fuck off! Leave me alone!
	The voice was familiar, and persistent.
	I forced my eyes open and blinked to focus. Tahr was leaning over me.  Several guards lurked just outside the shelter: a sheet of canvass draped over a rope. I tried to speak, but nothing came out,  my  throat felt as if it were swollen to twice  its  normal size and lined with sandpaper.
	"Try  to drink," Tahr coaxed.  Her wrist manacles  had  been removed but her ankle restraints still rattled.  With one arm around my shoulders she helped me sit up.  I nearly passed out again  as muscles and skin moved on my lacerated chest.  Tahr held a  small cup to my lips so I could drink. The water was wonderful, but she pulled it away after only a few sips.
	She looked at me mournfully,  at the raw wounds on my  chest still oozing blood and clear lymphatic fluid.  So, I hadn't been out for very long: I was absolutely covered in clotting blood, dust and dirt.  
	Then I went into paroxysms of uncontrollable shuddering  and coughing.
	Tahr grabbed my head and a rough hand touched my nose, my cheeks, then my forehead.  For a couple of seconds she studied me. "What have they done to you," she murmured, then called the guard: "For pity's sake, get him some clothes, a covering! Please!"
	The guard turned and bent to stare in at us,  then waggled a hand in a shrug. "Not my responsibility."
	"Then get Tarsha!"
	The soldier grinned at her,  "I would have thought you would have enough of talking with him."
	Tahr snarled incoherently, then spat, "If he dies, your hide will be nailed to a tree for the crows!"
	This time the guard's grin lack conviction.  She backed out, leaving another warrior staring in at us.
	Tahr ignored them.
	"I am sorry,  K'hy," she lamented, touching the sticky blood that coated my arm.
	Don't  be.  Not  your fault.  I couldn't speak  it,  I  just started  coughing  again  and the pain from  that  movement brought tears to my eyes;  I ground my teeth. Tahr gave me more water and that eased the raging fires in my throat a little and for a while I lay quietly, looking up at her. She stroked my forehead, glancing up at the guards outside the tent occasionally, tension drawing muscles in her neck into sharp relief, fatigue and fear matting her coat.
	"He. . . hurt  you?" I grated in what could pass for  a  voice. 
	"Hurt ME?!" She looked surprised, then leaned back and met my eye, abruptly cold and pragmatic. "Yes, he raped me."
	Oh.
	I  was feeling very weary.  Ill and injured in a  primitive world  with beings who looked and thought alien: another world, time, and morality.  After what  had happened  to her she was steady on the outside,  but one look  at her face, at the burning in her eyes, chilled me.
	Someone was going to be paying.
	Tarsha  pushed  into  the opening at the end  of  the  bivvy followed  by the guard who handed a bulky sack to  her  commander and  left.  The  large red and black clad Sathe loomed  over  me, stooping a bit under the low cloth roof of the shelter.
	Tahr turned and the anger burned brighter.
	"What  do  you want,  Tahr ai mine?" He  half  smiled,  half grinned;  a predator's grin.  Then he glanced at me.  "I see your pet is awake. How are you feeling? A? Still full of words?"
	Her  nostril flared.  "He is seriously ill. I think he  is dying. He needs warmth and his wounds need tending."
	"Perhaps you would like me to send for a physician,"  Tarsha snarled  sarcastically.  He  sneered at me lying chained  on  the floor:  "For  all  his size he has a very delicate  hide.  I  had considered  skinning him to make breeches out it,  but the  stuff might be too fragile for that."
	Tahr flinched and put a hand on my shoulder. "You. . . you said you would help him if I cooperated!"
	"That  is true," he shrugged.  "Ah well,  I suppose that  we really  do not want him dying upon us.  I suspect that you  might most uncooperative if he was not here to help. . . persuade you."
	Tahr's  ears plastered down flat against her skull  and  she trembled  as Tarsha's hand caressed her mane.  Her eyes  slitted, but she bore it with restraint.
	The Gulf officer smiled at her,  at her subservience: "Good, my Tahr.  Very good." 
	Then abruptly he pushed her away:  hard, so Tahr   sprawled  backwards  on  the  ground. "Here," he said laconically and drew a blanket from the bag and threw  it  in her face, "For your friend."
	Tahr yanked the blanket off with extruded claws and a snarl, then turned her back on the officer and tried to be as gentle  as possible as she wrapped me in the blanket.  I shivered beneath the rough cloth while Tarsha sorted out the other contents of the sack. 
	Merry Christmas I though inanely.
	My clothes.  My watch, my ball-point pen, notebook, cigarette lighter,  my  boots  and my M-16 lay in the  jumbled  pile.  Mute testimony of a society I might never see again.  Tarsha picked up my watch and waved it under Tahr's nose.
	"What  are  these things? Your friend was wearing this and carrying all that other stuff.  What  is  it?  What makes these marks behind the glass move?"
	Tahr hesitated; looked at me.
	"Tahr,  do  you  really want me to have to persuade  you  to answer  again?" Tarsha warned,  his claws resting on  my  leg.  I couldn't help wincing as they dug in.  "Your friend's fingers  DO look fragile. I am sure that they break easily."
	Tahr  growled;  her lips parting in a snarl that showed her teeth. "Very well."
	"Excellent,"   Tarsha   smiled.   "I   just knew you would cooperate."  
	"It is a time-piece," Tahr choked the words out. "To be worn on the wrist."
	"A clock? Do not lie to me, Tahr."
	"I am not lying," she muttered tersely.  "It is a clock. You can believe me or not, but it is the truth."
	Tarsha studied her, then snorted and turned his attentions to the watch, pressing the button on the side,  ears flinching as it beeped.  He stared at the  watch for a while,  pressing the mode button over and over and watching the crystal characters flicker from one display to another. "What makes the patterns change? What is that noise it makes," he asked.  "How do you make something like this?"
	"I do not know.  I DO NOT KNOW!" she shouted it as  Tarsha's claw  pressed harder.  He looked at  her,  then  grunted  and retracted his claw. Blood welled.
	He dropped the watch and selected another item; the lighter. The small rectangle of silver metal clicked against his claws  as he flipped the lid open, the electric spark igniting the gas in a blue flame that wavered in a draught.
	"A fire starter.  But again: how does it work?" He removed his thumb  and  the flame died.  He turned the lighter  over  in  his hands,  tracing out my initials with his finger.  "Your people of the east could not have made these,  nor - I admit -  could mine. There  are materials I have never seen or heard of in these,"  he held  up the notebook and pen.  "The paper is so smooth and  this writing instrument; I can see how it works, but the craftsmanship is impossibly fine."
	He dropped the pen and notebook. "Where did you get these?"
	"They are his," Tahr spat, jerking her head at me.
	Of course he didn't believe her.
	"Huh. . . " Tarsha grinned at her.  "Well, that does not matter right now, I will find out. . . later."
	He picked up the M-16. "And this thing? What is this for?"
	Without looking at me Tahr sullenly said,  "Hunting."   
	"How does it work?"
	"May  I  show you?" Tahr was being very  casual,  maybe  too casual - Tarsha looked thoughtful.
	"I think not,  Tahr," he said. "Something has already killed too many of my people." He looked at me,  "Although I cannot  believe THAT pitiful creature did it.
	"No,  Shirai, you will tell me how to use it." He experimentally hefted three  and  a  half kilograms  of  armalite then wrapped his hand around the grip, flexing his dark fingers. 
	Tahr licked her thin, black lips and said nothing.
	"Tahr," Tarsha reminded her mildly, "your friend. . . "
	Tahr looked at me.
	No, Tahr, don't do it!
	"There  is a small knob on the side there.  Pull  it  backwards until it clicks and let it go again," she said.  "All right, now push that little thing there forward."
	Holding  the  rifle casually in one hand Tarsha did  as  she said. "Now what?" he asked.
	Tahr   sighed,   looking   about   as   threatening   as   a dandelion. "Just pull that lever underneath."
	Confident in our helplessness, Tarsha pulled the trigger.
	The  gun  rattled out a short,  wild burst,  the  noise  and recoil taking the Sathe completely by surprise.  He instinctively spun  around  and  threw up his arm to protect his  face  as  the recoil  kicked  the weapon from his grasp  and  bullets  stitched blackened holes through the fabric of the shelter.
	Tahr had the gun before it hit the ground       
	The Sathe didn't have time to react before Tahr had assault rifle aimed  at the two guards behind Tarsha.  The gun burped  and  the small  shelter was filled with the acrid smell of propellant  and burned leather,  fur, and flesh. The guards were kicked backwards by an invisible mule, the first one's chest imploded and the next one's  head whipped around in a spray of pink;  she had not accounted for the muzzle  kick and hit the second one higher than she had intended.
	Tarsha  had  only just begun to move,  turning  in  time  to receive  the butt of the gun in his face as Tahr turned  to  face the other two guards.  Tarsha swayed indecisively then toppled at my feet.
	The  other two guards had hesitated a second before  drawing their swords.  That cost them their lives.  One fell spasming  on the ground with a sucking hole through her chest,  the other  had three  holes  up  the torso as Tahr 'walked'  the  shots  up  his body. She missed with two rounds.
	She started searching Tarsha;  for the key to the manacles I guessed,  then kicked him aside and aimed the rifle at the wooden stocks.  Two  shots  in  quick  succession  tore  the  wood  into flinders that she kicked away and fumbled  through Tarsha's sack,  coming up with another  magazine then darted from the shelter,  out of my sight.  Shouts and cries came from outside,  many cut off abruptly with the sharp crack of rifle fire.  A crossbow quarrel tore through the canvass near the top  of  the shelter,  in one side and out the  other.  The  M-16 clattered, short bursts mixed with screaming. A long rattle of gunfire, then single shots, then there was silence.
	"Tahr!"  I  croaked  past the burning  in  my  throat.  Long seconds  passed  before  Tahr  pushed her  way  into  the  bivvy, stepping over the bodies lying outside. She was over the edge of a berserker rage:  every hair  upon her  body  seemed  to be standing upright  while  her  ears  were plastered   down  tight,   almost  lost  in   her   mane. Those greenstone  eyes  were black pools,  the iris dilated  until  the green  of her pupils was all but obliterated.  The sound  of  her breathing was a hoarse rasping as she gulped air.
	"Tahr. . . ?"   She  dropped  to  her knees and the gun fell  aside  with  a clatter,  then  my face was buried in her mane as she hugged  me, her cheek pressed close against mine.

******

	I couldn't believe the whimper came from my own  throat.  It hurt  like hell as Tahr wiped the steaming-hot cloth  across  the mess  of blood on my chest,  clearing it away so my skin and  the scratches themselves were visible.  A couple of them began slowly weeping  blood  again  as soon as they were  bared  to  the  air. Kneeling over me she inspected the cuts,  then sat back until she was resting on her ankles.  Judging by her expression it was  not good.
	Tahr confirmed my fears:  "They are deep,  and there are  so many of them. K'hy. . . It is not good."
	There was a groan from the still-unconscious form of  Tarsha lying  there  in the restraints that until recently  I'd  been wearing. Tahr looked at him and gaped her mouth in a hiss of pure malice.
	I sagged back and stared at the mottled, off-white fabric of the  tent roof.  Trees outside cast a hypnotic pattern of  moving leaves  and  branches it:  a shifting pattern  swaying  back  and forth.
	Tahr spoke again, giving me something to focus on, "Is there nothing that you can do?"
	I  slowly shook my head.  My medical kit was in my pack  and that was on the boat and God only knew where that was  now.  What would Rambo do?  I thought numbly to myself:  Sew himself up with fish  gut and a six-inch nail and not give a damn about infection.  I had to  give  a damn about it. I was already running a fever and there was no way that my body could cope with both.
	Was  there  anything  I  could do?  I  knew  that  you  made penicillin from molds,  but I wasn't about to wait around for  a few weeks for an orange to turn green. Besides, once you've got a moldy orange, what the hell do you DO with it?
	I remembered the clean,  antiseptic smell of hospitals,  the hint of alcohol in the atmosphere. . . 
	Bingo. Alcohol.
	"Tahr, how do you make ale?"
	"What?" her muzzle wrinkled up in confusion.
	"Please, how?"
	She  scratched her muzzle and thought for  a  second.  "Uhnn. . . grain or corn is left until it starts to grow,  then it is cooked and  mixed  with  water.  I think it is then left  until  a  foam appears on the surface. It is flavored with honey or spices."
	I pawed at her and she trailed off.  It  was  all I needed to know  and  everything  I wanted to hear. "Is there any ale here?"
	"Thirsty? I can bring you water. . . "
	"No, no. Please, just see if they have any."
	With  a  bob of her head she was gone from  the  shelter  to return in a few minutes with the news that there were two kegs of the liquor in the supplies of the Gulf troops.
	"This had better work," I muttered to myself. "Help me up. I have work to do," I held out my arm to her.
	"No.  Hold.  You are not moving," Tahr pushed me back  down. "Tell me what to do." I protested,  but she remained firm. No amount of arguing on my  part was going to sway her.  Finally I had to  acquiesce  and tell her what to do.
	"Boil ale and catch the vapors?" she wrinkled her muzzle in puzzlement. "I do not understand."
	"Please." I was so tired.  I just wanted to sleep.  "Just do it."
	"Very well."
	She batted my face gently and then was gone again. Outside I could hear the 
clattering of ironmongery.
	Tarsha stirred, turning over.
	My chest ached, sharps pangs lancing through it as I reached for the M-16's strap,  took it up. I really have no idea if there were any rounds left in it.
	I rested the trembling weapon across my lap,  muzzle  toward the unconscious Gulf officer.
	His  muzzle was covered with blood,  as was the  surrounding fur.  A bluish lump was starting to show through the  fur.  Red-tinged spittle drooled from the corner of his mouth:  I  wouldn't have been surprised if he had lost a tooth or two as a result  of Tahr's work with the gun butt.
	As I watched him,  he groaned and tied to raise his hands to his  face; the chain from his wrist to his ankle manacles  stopped him.  Then  he  opened  his eyes and  looked up  at  me  with  an expression of undisguised horror.
	Really,  he had no reason to be scared of me.  Not of me. Of Tahr, now that was something else altogether.

******

	Tahr  squeezed the cloth and a single drop of liquid  seemed to  burn a hole through my tongue,  the smell tearing  a  passage through  my sinuses.  I gasped and  coughed. "Goddamn!" To  Tahr's bewildered face I said, "Good."
	"What do I do?" she asked.
	"My  belt." She passed it to me.  With trembling  fingers  I doubled it over.  "Just pour it on," I said and jammed the  tough webbing of the belt between my teeth.
	She hesitated. "This will hurt you?"
	I nodded and growled, "G'on wi't!"
	Even  the diluted liquid was icy-cold against my skin for  a second,  then it seemed as if tongues of fire were raging through my  nerves,  burning slashes on my chest reaching inside  me  and searing  to  the  core.  I squeezed my eyes  shut  and  my  teeth clenched hard on the rough nylon in my mouth.
	Slowly it faded as Tahr paused,  then she moved again and  a strangled  whimper escaped my throat,  sweat breaking out as  she wiped the cloth across my wounds. I think I passed out for a few seconds.
	Cool  finger-pads were patting my cheek,  then  slapping.  I groaned and felt the belt slip from between my teeth. "K'hy?"
	"Uhhh.
	"I have finished. If you can sit up, I will put the bandages on." There was the sound of claws clicking  together,  then:  "It will hurt."
	It did,  but it was nothing compared to the cold searing  of the alcohol.  I sucked in air through my teeth as she put pads of hot cloth on my chest then wrapped hot bandages around my  torso, covering  the  still bleeding cuts.  When  she  finished,  I  was covered in mismatched cloth from nipples to navel.
	Tahr surveyed her work and was apparently satisfied. She let me  rest for a brief while before waking me.  "K'hy,  we have  to leave this place. Can you walk?"
	"Don't  know," I croaked,  but tried:  lurching to my  feet, trying  unsuccessfully  to  ignore the sheet of  pain  across  my chest.  Then my knees buckled and Tahr only just managed to catch me.
	"Obviously not.  Here," she slipped a shoulder under my  arm and together we staggered outside. "My Ancestors, do you have to weigh so much?"
	It  was like the aftermath on a battlefield.  All around the  campsite  Sathe bodies  lay  in  various poses,  some  still  clutching  weapons, several  had  holes in the forehead;  mercy  shots.  Amongst  the treeline  lay more shapes,  the marks on their backs showed  they had  not been trying to fight.  Already black carrion birds  were squabbling in branches overhead and they would not wait long.
	There  was  a  small,  four-wheeled wagon  with  two  llamas already  hitched  to  the tongue.  Tahr boosted me  up  into  the wagonbed,  laid  me  back and pulled a pile of  blankets  across, swaddling me in cloth that quickly warmed to my body heat.  I was tired,  my  skin burning.  I wanted to throw the blankets off  to cool down.
	Tahr squatted at the tailgate and sniffed her shoulder where I  had  leaned on her.  "It is time you had  another  bath,"  she smiled.
	As  a  joke it fell a bit flat.  "You killed  them  all,"  I grated.
	She  looked around,  "Not all of them,  some got  away.  You worry about them? My ancestors, K'hy, they would have killed us." She looked back at the tent. "And it is not over yet."
	She walked back to the tent,  stooping to pry a sword from a dead  soldier's fingers before disappearing inside.  I closed  my eyes when the screaming started, but I couldn't close my ears.

******

	The fever grew worse:  a debilitating,  strength-sapping heat and  shivering  that dragged me under,  burning at  my  skin  and keeping  me floating in and out of sleep,  babbling at Tahr in  a patchwork  of English and Sathe as she nursed me.
	My memory of what happened after we left the Gulf encampment behind us is pretty hazy.  I slept for hours on end,  drifting in and out of dimly remembered dreams. At times, when Tahr roused me and  did  her  best to feed and water me I  would wake  confused  and disoriented,  the Sathe terrifying me as I mixed her with  the nightmares in my deliriums.  I fought her.  I can remember  that, struggling against her, then just a picture of her holding me,  stroking my face and hair, murmuring, crooning something soft and incomprehensible and reassuring.
	I've never spoken to her about that.  How did she feel knowing she was a thing of nightmares and horror for me?  Were there times she felt the same way about me?
	We  traveled west:  inland, towards the setting  sun. Sometimes  it  rained and I would wake  in  humid darkness,  the sound of water drumming against cloth. Tahr's fur was warm as she lay beside me under the canvass covering us.
	Days later the fever broke, shortly after Tahr got us onto a road  that took us northwards,  towards Mainport.  There  was  no doubting her relief.  I rose from the fever to find her tired and haggard - actually shedding - after driving day and night as well as  trying to tend to me.  Another two days passed before  I  was strong  enough to sit up and take my turn on the  bench.  When  I insisted on doing my shift,  she handed over the reins with  only token resistance.
	Hours later I turned  around  to see how my passenger was  faring, the scars across my chest pulling uncomfortably.  She  was sprawled on her back in the sun,  one leg propped up on the  side of the wagon, head back, mouth open, and snoring like a chainsaw.
	There are many times I've missed having a camera.
	It  was only later that I had a chance to talk to  her.  She had sacrificed a lot because of me.  Looking back, I realise how blind I had been in reading her true feelings for me. Perhaps  I  should have realised that there was more than friendship there when she almost betrayed her  people  for  my sake.
	"You play dangerous games, Tahr."
	"How so?" she inquired blandly with a twitch on the reins.
	The  knife  in  my  hands  slipped  when  the  wagon  hit  a rut,  nicking a rogue gouge from the piece of wood I was absently whittling down to a toothpick.  I frowned at the mar, then tossed the wood away into the grass verge.  "I think you know.  Why  did you try so hard to protect me?  If you had not been so sure  that you could get your hands upon the gun would you have played  such games with them?"
	Tahr's ears flickered up and down; as though someone had just blown into them.  "I was protecting my own interests just as much as yours. As I told Tarsha, he did not realise just what you mean to  our people.  Your knowledge is more valuable than anything  I could have offered him." She gestured at my chest. "The trick you performed with the ale, it seems to have worked wonders."
	"There was a lot of luck there," I said, wiping the blade of my knife on my shirt.  There was sap stuck to the gleaming  steel and  something made me want to polish the blade until  there  was not  a trace of imperfection upon it.  The sap was  reluctant  to come off, but I was in no hurry.
	"Perhaps, but you can save many lives with that stuff."
	"Yeah,  it  also  makes  a rather  nice  drink  among  other things," I said, then realised what she was doing.
	"But you are pulling me off the subject again!" I fumed  and she  threw back her head and hissed at the sky and  at  me.  "You risked you home and your people for me! I do not understand you!"
	She  stopped laughing and looked at her hands,  then at  me: "Would you have not done the same for me?"
	I  opened  my mouth to say something,  and  then  closed  it again. Would I have done the same. . . ?
	Tahr saw my indecision and simply smiled into the  sun.  "It did work out though. Did it not?"
	"Well, yes," I admitted.
	"Then why worry?"
	I shook my head in hopeless disgust.  A few minutes later  I asked. "What did you do to him?"
	Tahr's  head  whipped  around and her  unmoving  green  eyes locked  on  me. 
	Slowly, her ears went down,  "Ahhh,  that is why you bring this  up. . . Do  you really want to know?"
	I  remembered  the noises from the tent and  gave  a  mental shudder. "No," I said: subdued, "I do not think I do."
	"Why  are  you so upset about his death?  Did  you  want  to bring him with us after what he did to you?"
	Shit,  she was right, I shouldn't be concerned about him. He had raped her and 
tortured me. The bastard'd had it coming.
	But what had she done with that sword?. . . I shuddered again.
	"Why does it worry you so much?  You have killed before:Many times."
"Tahr. . . " I didn't quite know how to say it.  "Before I came here I had never even seen a death.  I certainly had never really expected  I  would  have  to kill.  It. . . " I  broke  off  with  a dismissive wave of my hand.
	She was amazed.  "But a warrior. . . how could you not consider the possibility that someday you may have to fight? to kill?!"
	"I  had considered it,  but I never really expected  that  I would have to." I ran my hand through my hair and rubbed my  neck as I wondered how best to explain.  "Our ideas of armies are most probably different.  You use yours as a. . . deterrent? To make other Realms respect your borders and lands?"
	"Yes," Tahr said.
	"My  people  do  not  rely so  much  upon  their  individual warriors  for  that," I  said.  "There  are. . . agreements  between Realms to make sure that no small Realm is abused."
	"This does not make much sense," Tahr mused.
	"I do not know how to explain it fully," I confessed.  "I am not entirely sure that anyone does."
	"Politics are the same for your kind, huh?" she smiled. "But what  does that have to do with a soldier not being  prepared  to kill?"
	Damnation!  There were some things that I really didn't want to talk about. The Damocles Sword of nuclear weapons one of them. Finally  I  sighed  and  said,  "Our  warriors  are  not. . . always warriors.  Most  of them are civilians who serve a short time  in the  military  and  there are many other skill  that  are  taught besides simply fighting.  I was one of those trained among to. . . look after vehicles and distribute supplies. Things like that."
	"A [quartermaster]?!" Tahr looked astonished.  "I had always thought of you as. . . as being of a higher ranking."
	"Sorry,"  I  said, feeling slightly hurt.  "We have  a  large army. Someone has to do the dirty work."
	"True,"  she  agreed,  still  sounding  disillusioned.  "How large?"
	"Around about. . . I think your number is, million?"
	Tahr's jaw hit ground floor.  "A million? A thousand thousand?!"  she squeaked.  "K'hy,  there  are not that many warriors in  all  the armies in all the Realms!"
	"Then you can imagine the difficulty in supplying it."
	There  were  questions flitting across her face  like  flies over a sheep's carcass.  She opened and closed her mouth a couple of  times  then  turned her head to  stare  out  straight  ahead. Finally she glanced sidelong at me, "Were you good at your job?"
	"It was a living," I said.
	Still the questions lurked just beneath the surface, but she choked them back. Instead she said: "Then when you killed,  it was the first time in your life - for me. Was it worth it?" I  stared  back  at her then  chuckled.  It  turned  into  a cough. "I believe so."
	Or was it?
	Maybe  if  I had stayed by the truck the Portal  would  have come back.  Maybe I could have stayed up in the hills,  away from alien politics and fighting. Maybe. . . There were too many maybe's. I was in it now, in it way over my head. Riding with an exotic, high-ranking alien female, hunted, future uncertain but not looking very good. Tahr said this was the main road from the Bay Town district to  Mainport.  Well, she called it a road;  all I saw was a strip where the grass had  two parallel  ruts in it,  a typical  Sathe  highway.  E.  T.  A.  at Mainport: one week, maybe a little longer.
	When asked why we weren't going back to the ship, Tahr asked me what I would do if I was a captain on a ship that was  running a  tight  schedule  to  make port before the  
Autumn  storms  set in,  and  had just lost a quarter or more of its  crew.  Would you waste  time searching for two careless passengers who had  gotten themselves  captured  by bandits after paying half the  fare  and leaving  behind  a  pack full of unique trinkets  worth  a  small fortune?
	Neither would I.

******

	The  storm blew up on our fifth day on the  road.
	These  past couple of days Tahr had been restless,  with  an agitation  I  couldn't explain and she denied when  I  asked  her about  it.  Now with the thunderheads brewing on the horizon  she was even more distracted.
	"I  think we should make camp soon," I  suggested,  watching the darkening sky. "Huh?.."  She  looked at me with a glazed  stare,  then  she blinked and  her eyes focused.  She looked at the sky.  "What did you say?"
	"I said we should make camp, it is going to urinate down."
	"What. . . Oh. . . yes, you are right." Her muzzle wrinkled as she judged  the massive thunderheads looming on the horizon like  the prows of titanic ships.  "If I remember. . . I think there should be a  good site a few kilometers ahead.  We might make it in  time." She squirmed on the seat, scooting her butt across the plank.
	"You are twitchy. Are you all right?" I asked.
	She looked at me in a funny way. "Yes, I. . . I am fine."
	She  turned  back  to the llamas.  I  thought  I  heard  her muttering   something  to  herself, something  about   'it   being already',  but the wind garbled and tore the words. I shrugged it off.
	The  wind picked up to the accompaniment of distant  thunder and several fat drops of rainwater spattered onto the wooden  bed of  the cart.  I grabbed a sheet of canvass from the back (one  of the  shelters that the gulf soldiers would no longer be  needing. We   also   had  a  small  armory   of   'liberated' swords   and crossbows) and went to sit by Tahr,  lunging for hand-holds as the cart lurched over the rough track. I felt a twinge in my chest as the scarred skin there moved.
	"Move  over  a  bit." I sat beside her and  held  the  heavy material in place over us. It kept the rain off as we kept moving.
	Thousands of years ago, two huge slabs of granite had fallen against each other forming an upside down V shape, blocked at one end.  Plants had grown atop them,  sealing the gap where the  two monoliths met. The floor of the resulting cave was covered with a variety  of  stones,  but these had been cleared  away  by  Sathe travelers who made good use of this convenient shelter,  leaving clean sand.  Fires had been lit at the mouth,  always in one ring of fire blackened stones. The walls had been decorated with Sathe graffiti drawn in charcoal: strange Ideographs and hieroglyphics.
	It  was  pissing down when we finally  arrived,  the  canvass soaked and rivulets of mud streaming down into the road. Tahr made for the cave while I  unhitched  and tethered the llamas,  dodging a  spray  of saliva as one of the bastards spat at me.  Let me tell you, until you've  smelt wet llama fleece,  you haven't  smelt  anything.  I wished I had a wet dog along to freshen the air.
	There was a small stack of dry wood and kindling in the cave. Not enough to last the night. The pair of us braved the downpour and dashed out to retrieve more to stack and dry off. We were both soaked to the skin, Tahr dripping and trying to shake herself dry, looking so miserably bedraggled I had to laugh. She favoured me with a sharp white smile, then a playful cuff with a muddy paw. Chuckling, she went to stack the kindling. With  some  aid from my lighter a bright blaze was soon crackling in the hearth.
	"Home sweet home," I said cheerfully,  glad to be out of the driving  rain.  Thunder rolled across the hills outside  and  the light faded quickly.
	Tahr had found herself a warm spot and was just sitting, staring into the sheets of  rain. I sat down on the sand beside her.  She smelled strange. . . not the usual kind of musky;  a distinct,  almost-spicy smell just on the edge of detection.  Wet fur I guessed. 
	"Tahr, do you think. . . Tahr? Hey, Earth to Tahr, come in space cadet."
	Her  head  whipped around and those big eyes  fixed  on  me. "Huh?. . What is it?" "I've been thinking. . . About using a sword.  I mean, I am going to have to learn sometime. Can you teach me?"
	"You do not know how to use blade?" She sounded incredulous. "No, of course you don't." She rubbed at her face, smearing her hands across her cheeks.
	"I never thought that I would need to know how to use one. They are not very popular in my world."
	"You  have told me before," she sighed.  "Yes,  I  shall  be happy to teach you." 
	"Great! Shall we get started?" There were swords in the back of the cart, I started to get up.
	"No,  K'hy,  no." She gave me a sidelong glance then flicked her gaze back to the rain. "I. . . not now. You choose your moments! Can you not be patient?!" She almost snapped out the last  words. Then looked surprised, then chagrined. "I am sorry," she mumbled. "I think I need to sleep."
	Was she trembling?  or was it just the flickering light?  I didn't say anything as she stiffly climbed to her feet and moved further back into the cave to where  we had  laid  bedrolls on the soft sand,  out of the  reach  of  any streams of water that might find their way inside.
	A fork of lightning seared the clouds outside.  I stared at  it long  after  it  had vanished, the  after-image  imprinted  on  my retina.  It  reminded me of the Portal that had  brought  me. . . us here.  I  thought about Tenny Dalton for the first time in a  long while. 
	A  night  out  on  the  town  during  leave,   visiting  the nightclubs. Sometimes there were girls, and they. . . 
	Nooo! No more girls. No more women! Nothing!
	I shuddered.
	And Tahr was pissed at me for some reason.
	Thunder cracked and rolled.
	If the weather cleared up during the night,  we could get an early  start  in the morning.  Perhaps things would  look  better then.  I kicked a log into the fire;  it lay  sputtering,  flames licking around it as I stripped off my boots,  fatigue pants, and jacket,  left them lying in a pile and wrapped myself in sheets of canvass: uncomfortable, but warm.
	Tahr  was lump under her cloak.  I could tell she was  still awake, and tense.
	"Tahr?"
	She didn't answer.
	"What is wrong? Is it something I said? What?"
	When  she  rolled over,  her  eyes  reflected  firelight: two shimmering green points of liquid emerald.  For a few seconds she stared  at  me,  then  sat  up,  gathered  her  cloak  about  her shoulders and came over to me, kneeling less than a meter away, watching me.  The musky smell  about her was strong. Now I realised it wasn't wet fur. "K'hy, I. . . I did not expect my Time to come so soon."
	What the hell was she talking about?  Time? The way she said that. . . was she ill? 	"Tahr, what. . . I do not understand."
	She squirmed uncomfortably and explained.  "It is the season for my Time. I am ready for mating."
	My wheels spun for a full second before that  clicked.  "You are. . . Holy shit ! You are in. . .estrus?"
	She saw the confusion on my face and moved  back slightly,  surprised herself.  "You do not. . . Oh. Your females. . . Do not tell me: they do not have Times, do they?"
	I  shook my head.
	"Oh," is a  good  transliteration  of her next noise. Then: "No wonder you are so. . . It is all new to you. I am sorry if I hurt or offend you. . . you do not know what it is like." 
	"There is nothing I can do?"
	She glanced sharply at me,  then tipped her hands in a shrugged.  "I do not  think so.  It. . . It is a hard thing to describe. Sometimes hot, craving, siskrtch; An emptiness, a. . . a. . . " She hunted for words, her hands writhing about each other.
	"An itch you cannot scratch," I suggested.  I had a  feeling that I did understand. 	"Yes,  that is. . . it." Her eyes started to lose their  focus again  and she shook her head wildly,  sending her mane  whipping about her face.  "Uhnnn. . . If I am impatient with you,  please try and understand."
	"I will remember. Good night, Tahr." I rolled over, away from her. After a few seconds her voice murmured:
	"Good sleeping, K'hy."

******

	Tahr twitched violently in her sleep,  like a dog chasing something in its dreams, the small mews and snarls she voiced reminiscent of a wild animal.
	I leant over her,  touched her shoulder and gently shook her then tried to duck as she swung wildly,  backhanded, catching me across the ear and I went  over backward with my head swimming. When  my vision cleared, Tahr was kneeling over me, her hands fluttering with indecision.
	"Ow, Goddamn,  you've got a good left." I sat up  rubbing my temple. Lucky she hadn't had her claws out.
	"Saaa! Scthe n'sert ctsre a'n kreths . . . " she started off in a babble I couldn't follow at all,  then abruptly buried her face in her hands and looked up again.  "I am sorry, K'hy, I could not stop myself!" she raked claws through facial fur and mane.  "This is  the first Time I have been through with no-one around.  I cannot. . . "
	"All right," I tried to soothe her. "Do not worry about it."
	She flowed to her feet and paced,  tossing her head back and forth.  A  bolt of lighting flashed outside, illuminating  her  in relief  and she froze to stare at the flash like a possum  caught in a car's headlights.  I could hear her murmur, "You do not know what it is like,  alone. . . " she broke off and turned to stare  at me. My jaws twitched in a tight little smile and I saw her ears wilt as she realized that she was talking to a being who was one of a kind in her world.
	Yeah, Tahr. I know. I understand. I had known it these past months. I had lived with it; More alone than she would ever be, could ever imagine.
	"Oh,  K'hy. . . strange one. If this is what it is like for you every day. . . " She let it hang and was silent. In the darkness her eyes were shadows trying to read my brown ones.
	There  was  nothing  I could say. I just looked down at my hands, feeling so awkward. Rain hissed outside, drowning the sound of her footsteps on sand, but I heard fur rustle  as  she sat down beside me on  the  soft  sand,  leaning against me,  and I instinctively put an arm around  her,  feeling her  warmth and solidity in the dim firelight.  Her musky scent hung heavy  on the damp air;  it brought back memories of hot nights back  home, women.
	Tahr was motionless against me, breathing softly, her head leaning on my shoulder. I tensed when I felt her move, kneeling beside me.  Fur brushed against my  arm, hands moving, looping around in a warm embrace,  a warm breath against my ear, then sharp teeth bit  gently  into the juncture of shoulder and  neck,  just  hard enough to be felt, a rough tongue rasped after. 
	"Tahr," my voice cracked. This was. . . It was leading. . .  I knew where it was leading and it set emotions into conflict: fear and something else.. "Please. . . think."
	"I have," she rumbled in my ear,  her voice deep;  almost  a purr. "I have thought most carefully."
	"But we are not. . . I mean. . . You are a Sathe. . . "
	"And you are not.  I had noticed." Hands stroked my  hair.  Thunder rolled  outside.  The rain picked up and the fire flickered as  a cool wind blew through.  She moved,  looking up into my  face.  A single rough finger pad stroked down my cheek.  "H'man. I know what  you are."
	The wind blew again.  I shivered violently and hung my head. "I. . . I do not want to hurt you. . . "
	I think she smiled then: "I know," she whispered, soft tones like the moving of air. "You could never hurt me."
	Again I shivered.  It was the cold, I told myself, not that knot of agony inside. . . how could I lie to myself? "I am afraid."
	And  now  she  cupped my face in her  hands, holding me when I flinched, bent my face toward her muzzle. Delicately she licked  my  eyes  with the tip of her  rough  tongue.  That  felt strange: tickling, oddly comforting.
	"Tahr. . . " I suddenly needed more air.
	A furred finger crossed my lips to hush me.
	Her hands lowered, sliding down my neck and across my chest, then hooking my shirt and sliding it off.  Confused, I didn't resist.  That familiar tension inside kept me trembling, uncertain, not knowing whether to run or reciprocate, a shiver when she nuzzled  gently at  the  hollow  of  my  neck. Seemingly  of their own accord my arms went around her, holding her close, feeling her heartbeat, her breathing, my face  to the dusty sunlight of her mane.  She made a low noise: not a purr, not quite a growl and  I released a shuddering breath into the encompassing warmth of  her fur.
	Then her hands were in my waistband and  -  somehow - my shorts were lying on the sand  and  we were kneeling before the fire;  touching, exploring each other in ways  infinitely more intimate than we had ever done  before,  in ways I'd never dreamed of.  Her fur was so slightly coarse  and exquisitely pleasurable as she moved closer and wriggled against me, warm, muscular, embracing me as I hugged her close, claws digging into  my back.  My fingers combed through her fur,  across her  back,  her breath hot past my ear.  As sensitive as a woman. . . No,  she was a woman. . . No. . . I. . . 
	We  tried.  And  it  was confusing. I didn't know what  I wanted,  I didn't know what she wanted. For what seemed like breathless years we were writhing on the sand,  gasping  and yelping  and  fumbling,  fur twining between my fingers  and  her claws  nicking  my  back.  Like the first time I'd ever been with a  woman  all  over again:   that  same clumsiness and uncontrollable excitement that sets your heart pounding with  an intensity  even  running for your life  can't  match.  But  there hadn't  been the fur then,  nor the claws or teeth nipping at  my chest and arms.
	Hugging her, her back arched, spine hard against my chest, arms around her rubbing across her chest and the bumps of her leathery nipples, her hands caught at mine, head twisting to nuzzle my neck and then she knelt beneath me,  down-covered rump raised and wriggling. I hesitated, unsure, then she was there to guide me, into alien  heat.  I heaved a shuddering breath and she gave a yelp of what could have been  surprise.  Warmth and silken,  strong,  and strange muscle enveloped me.  She shifted to and fro beneath me and I was moving also,  through a  chaos of darkness,  flickering  firelight  and flashbulbs  of lightning and familiar sensations that were still like nothing I'd felt before.  Eyes closed and hands clenched  in fur.  The scent in my nose  was heavy and musky: the smell of sex and there were moments of heat, of slipping, clenching hands in fur, warm moving encompassing everything.
	When everything became a blur of pleasure that turned to  an explosion of heat - the culmination - Tahr's cry of release rose, echoing in competition with the storm outside.
	We lay spooned together for a time, my sweat forming a sheen on  my bare skin,  fur adhering in sticky clumps.  Tahr stirred against  me, twisting to nuzzle my chin and lick my neck. "Hai? K'hy?"
	"Hmmm?"
	"Again?" she murmured, reaching back to rake her claws lightly up my hip.
	"Hnnn? Already?"
	"A,"  She  rolled  over,  hooking arms behind  my  neck  and drawing  me closer.  I could feel her breath on my  cheek,  rough tongue lathing my chin: "Please?"
	I hesitated, responding already, then wrapped my arms around her, drawing her still closer.
	Slower, this time. Slower, more feeling, teaching her a thing or two.

******

	By morning the storm had eased.  I awoke to fragmented beams of sunlight streaming into the cave, the sounds of birdsong. Tahr was nestled against me, her head in the crook of my arm.
	I just lay there for a while, watching the sunbeams crawling along the floor of the cave,  up our legs.  Tahr's fur scattering the light into smaller beams,  like prisms.  I could see how  her fur  changed from place to place across her body:  light  on  the inside of her thighs, on her stomach and face. Growing heavier on the  outside of her legs,  her crotch,  up her spine,  her  mane. Highlights,  a corona of white and gold where that sun stroked across the landscape of her torso. Her  ribs moving as she breathed,  teeth glinting 
through  partly opened black lips. . . 
	Beautiful. . . 
	And  by the light of day she was  unutterably,  indisputably alien.
	My God! What've I done ?!

******

	We  walked  the  cart down to the road  where  the  mud  was steaming; fighting a slow,  losing battle with the morning sun.  In  places the ruts were ankle-deep in an ooze that clung to the spokes on the wheels  and spattered us.  Breakfast was eaten on the  move,  the cold remains of a deer shot with a crossbow the other day.  I ate little, my mind wandering back to the previous night. 
	Of all the things I'd ever done,  I'd never felt such a. . . a lust, a loss of  control.  It scared me.  I couldn't justify it,  but  I  also couldn't forget it.
	Despite the minor  scratches  and  bite marks she'd left me with, she'd been gentle; in her own, feline way. She'd told me she was experienced, but the one description that came to mind when recalling her lovemaking was naive. Energetic; yes, very, but naive. 
	She only knew a single position: submissive, with the male mounting from behind, and nothing at all about playing,  spinning the pleasure  out. . . I'd learned I didn't have the recuperative power of their males, but in that one night I'd shown her more tricks than she had  learned  in  a lifetime!  Sathe  just  didn't experiment when it came  to  their primal urges. It probably had something to do with their males: when they get a whiff of a female in season they get that glassy-eyed look, then the only way to hold them back is to nail them down.
	I'd shown her new moves, opened new horizons for her, and she, in turn, had given me both a new experience and shown me there was somebody there for me.
	But she wasn't even human !
	Not on the outside, but what about inside ?
	Not there, either.
	I didn't understand this. Last night riding on the crest of lust it had all seemed so natural, so right. Now this guilt trip. She wasn't human, but she wasn't an animal. . . or  was  I  just looking for an excuse to justify myself.
	"You are very quiet this morning. Share your thoughts?"
	I'd been staring off at nothing. I blinked and focused on Tahr.
	"Last night?" she asked.
	That hit. I nodded.
	"Do you regret what happened?
	"I  don't  know," I said then hesitated before I added, "My people would consider what we did as wrong."
	"Why?"
	"You are not even human!" I blurted it out then looked at my feet.
	"Well," she said dryly, "it was me or the llamas."      
	"Not funny."
	"K'hy,   what  could  be  shameful  about  giving comfort and pleasure?  We are different, I will grant  you that, but not so far apart. I know you are very like a Sathe in many of your ways. Also, you are not in your world any longer. This is mine. I think my people are not as. . . ah. . . fussy as your own when it comes to mating." Her sharp eyes caught the slight flush around my ears and her ears flickered in amusement. "You are still uncomfortable talking about matters of sex."
	I swallowed,  but plunged on,  "Are all your. . . uh. . . Times so short?"
	She kept a straight face when she answered,  but those green and  gold  eyes  laughed  at  me,   sensing  my  discomfort.  "It varies. Sometimes for days, sometimes for only a few hours." She was silent for a few seconds. Then:
	"I  remember  my  first  time,   it  was  one  of  the  most frightening  moments of my life.  I was still in the  Citadel  at Mainport,  still  a  student.  It  was spring  and  I  woke  with sensations I'd never had before.  In an academic way I knew  what was happening to me,  but was still afraid of the feelings I  had no control over,  the yearnings." Her ears flickered in the ghost of a smile.
	"Ah,  the fluster of my male friends when they first scented me. I think they were even more confused than I.  Even so,  they helped me.  They chose one.  He stayed with me for those  nights. Did you have a female back on your world?"
	There  she  goes  again,  changing tack more  often  than  a sailing ship into a blustering headwind.  Well,  yes, I had known women,  but I wasn't what you could call a casanova.  There  had been  affairs - a few - but they had faded:  I hadn't been  ready for the commitment.
	"Do you still fear it?" she asked.
	"It was not fear," I said,  trying to recall why I had  been so  reluctant.  "I supposed I thought of females as a. . . almost  a burden,"  I  realised how that must have sounded and  laughed  at myself.
	"And now?"
	I rubbed the bridge of my nose.  "And now it is something  I regret most deeply." Tahr didn't press the subject.
	The days passed slowly, the temperature and weather  changing all the time;  sometimes warmer,  sometimes colder.  The air grew crisper as we traveled: less muggy and sedentary.
	As we progressed north we came across other traffic:  carts, wagons,  and individual riders on their llamas.  Most of the time they were going the other way,  but once we overtook a  lumbering procession  of  wagons laden with barrels and boxes and casks  of  various types also northbound.
	Gawping Sathe stared at us for a long time as we  passed  them, until they passed from sight.
	There  were  several small settlements along  the  way: towns the size of Traders Meet built at river crossings and crossroads, small villages along the road, tiny hamlets and farms half-hidden among  the trees.  The largest of these settlements - First  Step South - was a proper town, similar in size to Baytown.  Tahr told me that  it was  the  first  settlement built outside  the  traditional  clan grounds, the last town before the ancient walls of Mainport.

******



THE   HUMAN   MEMOIRS
PART II


 It's no fun   
  Being an illegal alien
			 GENESIS




	I'm a New Yorker, born and bred.
	Well,  maybe not born. Jersey's where I spent the first few  years of my life.  I was too young to remember anything but vague  impressions of that time,  and just a few years later when I  was  four, there was that accident.
	The friends who adopted me were a young couple living across  the waters in New York,  in Brooklyn Heights,  in an  established  neighbourhood  near the old Plymouth Church.  That's a time I  do  remember, quite fondly: the house was a big old place, built from  old  wood,  crowned with a steep shingled  roof,  crestings,  and  defunct chimneys. Birds roosted in the gables and in the huge old  trees  around  the property.  Over the near-century it  had  been  standing,  additions and extensions had sprung up,  some of  them  seemingly  spontaneous  or  whimsical.  You  could  walk  from  a  nineteenth-century  study into a living room added in the  nineteen  twenties and furnished in rococo.  In some places there were  two  floors,  in  others three.  I had one friend compare it with  the  Adams' place.  Still,  the place took money to keep and maintain,  so  with more rooms than we could ever use it only made sense  to  take in lodgers.
	 Until I could legally change it back to my given  name,  my  surname  was Jerald.  Not that I had anything against  my  foster  parents,  they were as good a parents any kid could wish for, but  I  just wanted the name I was born with.  They  both  worked,  my  father  owning  a bookshop and my mother in a  boutique  over  in  Manhattan.  Still,  even though they were away a lot of the time,  the house wasn't a dull place by a long shot.  There were  always  the lodgers. We were careful who we took in, generally preferring  students,  artists,  trampers,  young couples,  people who looked  like they could be trusted.   My parents were pretty good  judges  of character,  and we only had a few incidents.  It was a sort of  word-of-mouth institution,  and believe me,  we got some classics  through there.  It seems strange to say it,  but I became closer to  some of those people than I did to my own parents. They taught me  odds and ends:  playing the guitar,  harmonica, keyboard, also to  draw and paint. From an ex-bikie I learned to strip down a Harlie  blindfolded  and  I  could  rewire a house  by  the  time  I  was  fourteen.  And they talked; I heard stories of all kinds from all  over  the country,  so eventually I decided to see some of  these  places for myself.  Well,  the army gave me a chance to do  that.  Sort of.
	As  something I grew up with,  the Manhattan Island  skyline  was  mundane,  simply  a  spectacle I could see every  day  if  I  wished.  When I did sign up for my time,  some of the more  rural  postings  came as a bit of culture shock.  Still,  I'd  had  more  contact with 'the great outdoors' than a lot of New Yorkers. Town  or  country;  either  way,  it was a lifestyle far  removed  from  anything any Sathe could imagine.
	As far removed as the life I was living now was from anything I could have imagined: On the road with an over-evolved cat, riding a rickety wooden wagon as it crested a final hill and I was looking at Mainport, lying  peacefully under leaden afternoon skies.
	There  were  no towering skyscraper or glass-faced condos  -  I  hadn't  expected  any - but  still  the  city  was  impressive. I guess it's comparable with the feeling you get when  exploring an ancient human city or medieval castle: compared  with  modern constructs they're not much,  but you can't help  but be impressed with the strength and solidity of these edifices that have endured for generations.
	By Sathe reckoning Mainport was a large city.  Built on  the  north-western  tip of what I knew as Staten Island with the  kill  to the north,  The Narrows to the east. Covering an area of maybe  sixteen square kays,  it was a huge, bustling metropolis to them.  However  to me,  faced with what continued to be  my  prospective  home, it was far less glamorous.  But I had to admit the  Citadel  itself was something else again.
	Towering  over the city proper,  the Citadel was a  gigantic  mass of battlements,  walls,  towers, and buttresses lying on the  crest of the hill like some massive reptile sunning itself upon a  rock.
	Once,  long  ago - it was only later I would learn just  how  long  ago - I supposed the central keep had stood alone  on  that  hilltop, just a small settlement.  As  time passed the Citadel had grown,  spreading  like  granite ivy on a gargantuan scale down upon the town below  where  buildings been razed  to  make  way for the encroaching  walls. Against  the  backdrop  of  grey skies, the  sight was  impressive and - strangely - depressing.
	I had lived here in this place that had once been my  home and now  threatened  to  be  my home  again. I  thought  I  recognized  various  marks  in  the  landscape:   Hills,  ridges,  gullies.  Probably  my  imagination.  The geography  wasn't  that  exact: the Arthur Kill that  normally  separates  Staten Island from the mainland didn't exist here. Also, New York  was  built upon a foundation engineered by  humans;  if  nature's  design  didn't fit in with what was on their drawing  boards  and  computer terminals,  it was removed,  so the landscape I knew was  probably not even natural.
	God, the polluted  grandeur  of New York, the sky-climbing dreams and schemes of human beings,  the sound of traffic,  television,  music,  hot  showers,  toilet  paper,  Oreos.  All  those  little things that  make  life  worth  living, all those things I had take to be inalienable, gone.
	Tahr  tapped my shoulder and clambered over the back of  the  seat  to sat beside me.  The wooden plank that had  weathered  so  much protested under the extra load.  "Why have you stopped?" she  asked, then saw my face. "Your eyes. . . What is wrong?"
	I  blinked back tears and muttered,  "Nothing.  I  was  just  thinking."
	"That wetness is a sign of grief. . . is it  not?"  she  inquired with head cocked to one side.  "Why?  We  are  safe  here. We are home."
	I stared at her. Home?
	"Oh. . . " Understanding flashed behind her eyes,  subdued her,  "I forgot. My home, not yours."
	I didn't say anything.
	From there I could see wisps of smoke rising from chimneys,  could hear the faint cries of gulls.  At last Tahr's voice was  a  slow, measured rumble: lower than any human woman's could be. She  was trying to be gentle but still businesslike: "I think it would  be for the best if I drove the rest of the way."
	"Are we doing the animal act?"
	"No," she said.  "Not here.  Just do not do or say  anything  until I tell you, yes?"
	"Yes." Resignedly, I nodded.
	She  flicked the reins and the llamas started plodding  down  the hill, toward the city.
	The  fields  surrounding  the  town  were  many  and  varied,  containing crops and livestock:  goats,  llama,  bison, some even  held  deer behind high split log fences.  From the air  the  land  would  have  looked  like a jigsaw of  angular  green  and  brown  shapes. 
	The fields and the houses held Sathe, living out their lives  as they must have done for generations.  Some of them saw us  and  paused at their chores,  resting behind their ploughs or  looking  up from butter churns and gardens.  It was a well-travelled  road  so they would be accustomed to strangers,  but I was a stranger a few notches of strange above the rest.
	I  was  so busy rubbernecking back at them that  the  sudden  change  in  the sound of the wagon's  wheels  startled  me.  Tahr  hissed  at my surprise and proudly pointed out that the road  was  paved and drained. It was also much wider, in places becoming two  laned!
	Necessary. The nearer we got to the city, the more traffic. It was like every Sathe from miles around decided to tag along with us. Gawking at me.
	"Market day," Tahr explained.
	The wall surrounding the city was imposing, reaching up five  stories  and constructed of huge blocks of stone - each  about  a  metre  high  and two metres in length - set with a  precision  to  turn  an Inca green with envy.  As we drew up to the  barbican  a  disparity  in the age of the blocks became obvious.  Some  stones  looked  old;  ancient.  Edges and  corners  rounded  and  weathered  from  countless years exposure to the  elements  while other  blocks of granite still bore the chisel  marks  from  the  stonemasons who shaped them.
	The  gatehouse  and barbican were built from the  newer  stonework. The massive supports around the gate were elaborately decorated with  Sathe  script  and  carvings.   Strange  to  see  aliens  as  the  main  theme  of  a  carving; where you expect to see humans there are bipedal cats  in  their stead.
	Sathe  guards were everywhere: on the walls, below the walls, around the gates,  watching  the  steady  stream of carts and wagons that went past them and looking bored.  Occasionally they would stop one that caught their attention  and  examine the cargo.
	And of course we caught their attention.
	Three Sathe troopers in leather armour trimmed with blue and silver moved out to catch the llamas' reigns  and lead us off to one side of the gate; watching us warily. They were young, probably younger than Tahr, but even so, they all carried scars and nicks from past fights. And they all had one hand draped - almost casually - over  the pommel of their scimitars.
	"What is your business in Mainport?"
	The one who spoke wore three small  gold crescents on his cuirass.  If they were badges of  rank,  he  was superior to the others: they had only one apiece.
	"I  have  business at the Citadel,"  replied  Tahr,  looking  perplexed. "What is this? Why all the security?"
	The  guard  waved  his hand in a shrug and  continued  in  a  conversational manner.  "I am not sure. There have been growlings  about  trouble with the Gulf Realm.  More guard duties have  been  assigned and we have orders to search all strangers entering  the  city." He scratched under his armour,  then peered at Tahr again.  "The  Citadel  you  say.  Is  there any  reason  they  should  be  expecting you? What is your name? Business?"
	Tahr considered for a second before saying, "My name is Tahr  ai Shirai. My business is my own."
	"Tahr ai Shirai? THE Tahr ai Shirai?"
	"Is there another?"
 	His muzzle wrinkled.  "Ahh. . . Of course, and I am  a Clan Lord in my off-shift. Is that intended to be a joke?"
	"No."
	Uncertain, he hesitated, then his fur began to bristle; standing up as if electrified. "You think that is amusing?! Start laughing, shave you! I could drag you in for a claim like that!"
	Tahr also began to seethe.  "And I could have you demoted so  fast your head will spin! I am serious!"
	"Then where is your entourage!  Where are your  guards!  You  look like a goatherd and you smell like. . . I wonder the llamas can  stand it!" He waved at his subordinates: "All right, check that wagon out from ears to toes! And as for you. . . " he levelled a finger at  Tahr.
	His  troops were moving around to start searching the  wagon  and  found themselves staring up at me.  "Uh-uh,  guys," I  said,  then slowly grinned.
	"Ah. . . Sir?"
	"What?!" he snarled irritably and stepped around to see what  their trouble was.  He stopped and gaped at me, his ears drooping  like wet facecloths.
	"Is. . . " he swallowed: hard, "Is it dangerous?" he squeaked.
	"Very," she hissed.
	"Get it out of the wagon. Now!" he yelled at her reluctance. "You too! Down!"
	Snarling furiously she waved for me to get down and dismounted herself.  I  took up my rifle as I dropped to the ground.  She saw me cock  the  weapon  and  shook her head in a gesture I  could  understand.  I  frowned, but left the safety on.
	The Sathe looked all the more apprehensive when they saw  my  size and kept a respectful distance as they inspected the cart.
	Three Star watched me, keeping himself at a safe distance  holding  the  llamas'  reigns.  Tahr cast a glance over her shoulder at the guard searching the wagonbed, then turned back to their  commander. "You! I want your name and that of your superior."
	At  that moment,  one of the guards chose to point  out  the  fact that we had weapons in the back.
	Holding   the  sword  by  pommel  and  blade, Three  Star scrutinized the blade just below the cross guard where Sathe pictoglyphs were engraved. He looked up at Tahr, his ears slowly  flattening back on his skull. "Weapons. . . Gulf weapons. And what were you going to be doing  with these?"
	Tahr  had  just  started  to open her  mouth  when  a  voice  bellowed from the ramparts atop the gatehouse:
	"TAHR!"
	Everyone in earshot looked up at a soldier leaning over  the  wall,  in serious danger of teetering over.  "You!" he pointed in  our direction.  "Wait there!  Don't move!" He pulled back out  of  our sight.
	The guards had their swords drawn. If we had wanted to move it would have become bloody. I think I could have taken them, but  the archers on the walls would probably get me.  We all waited in  a nervous tableau,  the Sathe shifting and sniffing at me.  There  was a racket in the tunnel, a sprinting Sathe - in all likelihood  the  guy who was on the wall - dodged around the noses of a  team  of  bison,  prompting  curses from the driver.  He slowed  as  he  crossed  that  sharp  line  dividing  sunlight  and  shadow,  his  flapping  cloak turning from black to grey  and  settling  around his ankles. He was staring at Tahr.
	"By my Ancestors, Tahr! It is you!"
	"S'sahr?" Tahr squinted in the sunlight and dust, shifting uncertainly, her ears going back. Twitching. She was expecting something. I shifted the  rifle uneasily, unsure of what to do.
	The  one  named S'sahr laughed,  that hissing  Sathe  laugh:  "Himself. You can relax, young one. Those days are past."
	Tahr  relaxed  only a little,  and the  cloaked  Sathe  came  nearer.
	I stared. The scar ran from where S'sahr's right ear used to  be,  down between his eyes, and ending up on the left side of his  mouth.  A three centimeter wide strip of puckered,  furless skin.  None of the others seemed startled by it.
	However  the officer was thunder-struck,  more by his  words  than appearance.
	"You. . . You  ARE Tahr ai Shirai?. . . I did not know. . . "  If  he  could  have blanched he would have gone whiter  than  bleach.  He  looked  back  and forth from S'sahr to Tahr,  the  captured  Gulf  sword  forgotten in his hands,  visualizing his  career  slipping  down the tubes.
	S'shar  strode  forward  until he was eye to  eye  with  the  hapless guard.  "Yes,  saf!   Tahr ai Shirai." He whispered this,  then bellowed, "YOU DID NOT KNOW?!"
	"Sir,"  the  guard squeaked,  cringing  before  the  scarred  veteran's fury.
	"S'shar," Tahr held out a hand to forestall his anger. "Leave him. I am too tired for that now."
	The grizzled Sathe dismissed the guard with a disgusted hiss  and a swat across the ears that tore the fragile membrane.  Blood  welled and the guard yelped and scurried back a few steps. One of  his subordinates was tactless enough to hiss amusement and he  in  turn had his ears slashed.
	"Young  one,"  S'shar  reached  out  to  clap  Tahr  on  the  shoulder. "Or would High One be more appropriate?"
	As  if she was about to embrace him,  Tahr stepped  forward,  but stopped and hugged her arms about herself.  "No, no. You have  known  me too long for that." She looked around at  the  watching  Sathe. We were beginning to attract attention. "Perhaps we should  continue this later," Tahr suggested,  then glared at the  guard:  "May I pass now?"
	The guard hastily backed away, bleeding ears twitching nervously. "Saaa. . . yes, of course."
	"May  I  have the honour of escorting  you?"  S'shar  asked.  Coming  from the torn old Sathe,  the courtesy was a little out of place.
	Tahr smiled: "I think that I will be able to tolerate that."
	She climbed up onto the drivers bench. S'shar leapt up and settled beside her. He turned and stared at me in surprise when I vaulted up onto the  bed of the cart. "What is that. . . " he started to say.
	"Hai!" Tahr barked and cracked the reins, getting the llamas  moving.
	Through the main gate was a broad plaza, paved, surrounded by buildings and shops. A road main avenue followed  a winding path up to where  a switchback road  climbed the steep hillside up  to the Citadel.  I was surprised to see ancient trees overhanging the road, their roots buckling the cobbles in some places.  I hadn't expected a  fortress  city to waste space on extraneous objects like trees. Still, they  looked good.
	If Baytown had been busy, this place exceeded it by a factor  of ten. Shops and stalls lined both side of the main street while  vendors roamed, hawking their wares, selling everything from adze  and abaci to zinc ore and zaxs.  The buildings the shops were  in  were  usually two stories high; a ground floor store and  the  first  floor a living  area. A few buildings were only one floor  and  I  didn't see anything above three.  Lines criss-crossed the  street  from the first floors.  Not power lines:  washing.  Alien laundry  drying in the cool sea breeze above the streets.
	Despite  the small size of the buildings,  Mainport  was  an  unbelievable  busy  place.  Close on one hundred  thousand  Sathe  lived there and they all seemed to be on the streets at the  same  time,  all  of them as varied as those I'd seen elsewhere in  the  Realm.  As I ogled at them,  many stared back at me and  excited  chatter started up behind us.
	"If  you wanted to be unobtrusive then bringing your pet  along  was not such a wise move. What is it anyway?" S'sahr was staring at me  in bemusement. " I thought I was quite knowledgeable when it came to wildlife, but  this thing. . . Some kind of freak bear?"
	Tahr  looked back at me - a warning glance - then  told S'shar, "Ah. . . There  are  a few things I will have to explain, at the Citadel. My. . . pet is one of them."
	Yeah,  didn't want him falling out of the cart in  shock.  Being a freak to every new Sathe I met was getting pretty tiresome.  It was something I was going to have to get used to, no matter how it irked me.
	As the Citadel drew closer, Tahr hung a right, taking us down a side street that wasn't half as spacious as the main avenue, but was still every bit as busy.
	"You have business at the docks?" S'sahr asked.
	"Yes. There is a ship I have to find. I have some cargo  due me."
	On the docks she stopped to study a large board with  dozens  of  smaller painted tags hanging from it.  Some kind  of  directory.  She quickly scanned it.
	"Captain Hafair. . . building five."
	Of  course the docks were bigger and busier than Baytown's  wooden  wharves.  These were solid stone,  with an  artificial breakwater  surrounding the harbour.  The dock had slipways cut into it, for hauling boats into and out  of the water. Above it all, the walls of the Citadel had vantages commanding the whole bay.
	During  the  storms of winter ships in  the  harbour  were  drydocked  for  repairs and refitting.  Already  there  were  six  vessels  sitting  high and dry on the quayside.  Many  more  were  still  waiting  at anchor out in the harbour,  sheltered  by  the  embrace  of the harbour walls.  I thought I  recognized  Hafair's  command out in the forest of masts. No, perhaps not.
	Tahr  was  reading what had to be numbers painted in  faded  black  paint on  boards on the fronts  of  waterside  buildings.  Finally she reined in the llamas outside  one particular  structure. "This is it."
	"Here?"  S'sahr wrinkled his nose.  "What kind of cargo?"
	"Just something I have to collect for a friend," Tahr said. "This  should not take long. Wait here."
	"Hold," S'sahr stalled her. "Tahr, this thing," he jabbed a finger in my direction, "Is it dangerous?"
	Tahr flashed a scintillating grin and smile at the same time  and  replied,  "Only  when  provoked." Then she  pushed  her  way  through  a knot of Sathe outside the front door of the  warehouse  and was gone.
	"Only  when  provoked," S'shar muttered staring  after  her,  then rubbed absently at the remains of his right  ear.  "Ah,  she  has changed. . . dragging pets around." He sighed and turned to face  me.  "You  have  got to be the weirdest thing I have  ever  seen!  Where did she dig up something like you from?"
	I took it to be a rhetorical question.
	He noticed the bulky tarpaulin behind the drivers bench  and  picked  up a corner,  then threw it aside revealing the  pile  of  Gulf weaponry: scimitars, daggers, crossbows, and bolts.
	"One sword I could understand, but all this. . . " His eyes lit  upon  the M-16 and he reached out a furry paw to pick  it  up.  I  also grabbed at it and a brief tug-of-war ensued,  ending when  I  deliberately bared my teeth and gave him a low growl.  He hastily  released  the rifle and went for his sword.  I sat still  and  he  hesitated  with the sword half-drawn,  then looked around at  the  pedestrians  who'd  stopped and were in  turn  watching  him.  He  blinked, then sheathed the weapon and sat studying me.
	It's  amazing. Even when faced with something that walks like a Sathe, wears cloths and has hands, he didn't even consider the possibility that it might be more than a dumb animal. Most Sathe wouldn't consider it intelligent unless  it could actually persuade them it is.  They had never explored the possibility of other intelligences in the universe.
	Well. . . give  them some more time and someone would've  hit  upon the concept.  Until after the industrial revolution and  men  had  more leisure time, humans never considered it.  All they  had  was  themselves  and  the  Gods.  The Sathe  did  not  even  have  those, they  only really lived for the present, and each  clan  was  fiercely proud of being self sufficient.
	We both waited for Tahr to return. She took her time.

******

	The gates of the Citadel were even more impressive close up.  Three  sets of huge wooden doors -  each reinforced with iron  and  covered  with  bronze sheets beaten onto  astonishingly  detailed  mosaics -  hung beneath the barbican that had been hewn from large  blocks of solid granite.  It is hard to describe just how MASSIVE  the whole place was. Built to last for a thousand generations.
	The Citadel guards moved toward us,  but took one look at S'shar  and  waved  us on.  There were two more  gatehouses  inside.  The  Citadel  was built like an onion,  layer within layer,  all  with  their own guardposts.
	Tahr had collected my pack. While the wagon rolled through the streets I'd sorted through it,  making sure  that  nothing  was  missing.  Everything seemed to be in order and even my customised  cloak  was  still  there.  I wish I could  have  seen  Hafair's  expression when she walked in on him.
	We couldn't take the wagon all the way into the Citadel. I  guess  they  also had their  security,  or  perhaps  just  problems with traffic. The only traffic going through were goods wagons. S'shar pointed out to Tahr that she had the right  to  take the wagon all the way to the Keep,  but she declined, saying  she was just as capable of walking as any other. After the third barbican we had to  leave  the cart in a dark stable that reeked of animals and rotting hay. A stablehand  -  still  a cub - had the monotony of his day  broken.  Tahr,  still  chatting away with S'shar,  tossed the reigns to the cub who  was  staring  at  me.  They slapped across his  chest;  his  reflexive  grab missed.  I stooped, picked them up and handed them to him  with a smile. He stared at me, then at the straps in my hand, but  didn't move to take them.  I sighed,  pressed them into his  hand  and patted his shoulder, then took off after the others.
	I  was  rubbernecking like a country rube fresh to  the  big  city as I crossed the yard to where S'shar led the way up  a  narrow  staircase into a postern gate.  We walked through  narrow  passages  and  dark  corridors,  occasionally  being  stopped  by  guards.  S'shar  got us past these.  An old  veteran  supervising  three  younger guards at a gateway recognized Tahr and  bowed  to  her. After a moments hesitation, the others followed suit.
	"Excuse me highness, but should you be taking that," he eyed  me, "into the Keep?"
	"It is all right," she reassured him. "He goes where I go."
	The  old  'sergeant' bowed his  head  again,  then  muttered  something  to one of the soldiers who took off ahead of us with a spattering of claws on worn stone.
	"You  may  pass,  High  Ones."  That  was  a  change,  being  addressed with respect instead of scorn. From rags to riches. Ah,  the whims of fortune.
	Tahr and S'shar led,  chatting amicably between  themselves,  swapping  tidbits of news.  I trailed  after  them,  occasionally  lagging  behind to crane my head around an open doorway  or  peer  into a cavernous gallery. This place was humongous!
	But  as  we went deeper into the Citadel I  began  to  stick  closer  to the Sathes' heels.  Hunters' vision had an  affect  on  Sathe  architecture.  This  far inside the walls of  the  citadel  windows  were  impossible,  but the Sathe  didn't  compensate  by  adding more artificial lighting.  They didn't need to. What lamps  existed were dim,  widely spaced oil lamps that left most of  the  corridors  in  near-blackness.  Tahr and S'shar had  no  trouble:  their  night  vision was superb.  However in the worst  of  these  places I could hardly see my hand in front of my face, and I sure  as hell couldn't see those steps going down.
	While Tahr collected the M-16, I leaned against the wall and  tested  my  right  wrist  that had take the  brunt  of  my  fall.  Thankfully it didn't seem broken, just damn sore.
	I jumped as something patted my shoulder.  "K'hy, it is me,"  Tahr's voice spoke into my ears. "Are you all right?"
	I  nodded.  All I could really see of them were vague  solid  shapes  in  the dark,  their eyes catching  and  reflecting  what  little light there was.
	"What?" That was S'shar.  "Who are you. . . You are not talking  to that. . . ?"
	Tahr ignored him. "What happened?" she asked me.
	"My  fault," I said.  "I cannot see my hand in front  of  my  face."
	There was a hissing sound as S'shar sucked air.
	"Oh,  I keep forgetting." There was a rustling sound,  then a  small  metal  cylinder  was pushed into  my  hand.  I  gratefully  flicked the anglehead on.
	Tahr squinted and threw up her hand to shield her eyes  when  the  white light lit upon her.  I moved the beam and  spotlighted  S'shar  standing plastered against the far wall of the  corridor,  his  single ear down hard against his skull and  eyes  wide.  "It  can. . . talk?" he sputtered.
	"Amazing," I muttered with a shake of my head, " what  powers  of observation."
	"K'hy, hush!" Tahr warned me.
	"Tahr," S'shar almost growled.  "Enough is enough.  What  IS  that thing!?"
	"His  name is K'hy,  something-unpronounceable,  and he is  a  male H'man.  That is the nearest I can pronounce his  titles.  Do  not worry, he will not hurt you."
	"That  would be difficult,  he has the teeth and  claws."  I  held up my fingers and wiggled them: longer than a Sathe's, but of  course without the claws.  It did little to reassure the veteran.  When we made it to a better lit section I saw that he did  indeed  have his own claws out.
	The passage traveled up and down more flights of stairs and  along  corridors  flanked on either side by  open  doorways.  The  rooms  beyond  were obviously living  quarters; equally obviously deserted for a long time. Judging by what I'd seen so far they looked plush, with  tapestries,  carved  wood and stone panels, and furniture, all crumbling, mildewed, and  generally dilapidated.
	"Why is this place so empty?" I finally asked. "All these empty rooms. You redecorating?"
	Both  S'shar and Tahr looked around as though  noticing  the  abandoned chambers for the first time.
	"These were once servants quarters," Tahr explained. "As the  Citadel is expanded they move to the new areas, where  they are needed. These are abandoned. They might be used again as  the population grows."
	"How long will that take?"
	She didn't answer immediately. "A long time."
	"Then why build all this if you have no real use for it?"
	S'shar  answered that.  "There is always work being done  on  the  Citadel.  There  are  plans for a  sixth  wall  outside  the  town. . . "  he wound down as though suddenly realizing what he  was  talking to.
	 "K'hy,  h'mans also build all the time,  do they  not?  You  have told me about your cities. Is that not the same?"
	"Ah. . . well,  I do not think it is exactly the same thing." I  replied.
	"Cities?"  S'shar  stopped in his tracks,  then  hurried  to  catch  up.  "Do  you  mean there are more  of  these?  They  have  cities?!"
	"Yes, it is difficult to explain, but there is a whole world of them."
	S'shar went quiet, his ear wilting.
	We passed another guard post,  the sentries there  expecting  us.  They stiffened to attention as we passed, but I felt eyes on  my back. A small postern beyond the guard room opened into bright  sunlight and a vast expanse of cobbled court.  I stepped out into  the  glare,   blinking.   The  Sathes'  slit  pupils  snapped  to  pinpricks. Despite the pervading odor of animal shit the air was  nowhere near as oppressive as the dark,  heavy atmosphere of  the  corridors beneath the walls.
	My first glimpse of the Citadel's Keep: I was rubbernecking like a tourist.
	It was big, really big: the equivalent of three or four football fields at least, encircled by three-story high walls on the outside, the mountain of the Keep offset at the northern end. A large gate stood open in the easternmost wall,  admitting the heavy traffic.  To get into  this  courtyard the llama drawn vehicles would have had  to  have  entered the main gates,  then gone right,  following the curve of  the wall around,  then through another set of gates, followed the  wall  further - uphill all the way - then that  final  gate.  Any  hostile  forces  trying  the  same  maneuver  would  have  found  themselves under fire from the battlements all the way.
	As  we  started across the cobbled space I saw that  it  was  already dotted with Sathe: in groups and alone,  carrying barrels or boxes, cutting wood. There were buildings up against the outer wall: small wooden structures with tile roofs. Smoke trickled from the chimney of what looked like a blacksmith's shop, other places must have stables and sheds for wagons. Anything you wouldn't want to keep inside. Off to my right I saw clusters of Sathe in armour standing watching a pair sparring.  Swords flashed and the noises rang off the walls.  A row  of  archers fired a volley at straw buttes strung up against a  wall;  I didn't see any miss.
	The  doors  to the central Keep - The Circle the  guard  had  called it - were hanging open.  I got a sudden insight as to  the  scale  of  the  place  when a  small  group  emerged,  a  central  individual  surrounded  by  others.  They  were  dwarfed  by  the  portals. What were the hinges made of?!
	"Rehr is waiting," S'shar informed Tahr. All I could see was  an indistinct individual in rust red robes. "You remember him?"
	"Of course.  How could I forget? Has he changed much?"
	"About as much as the Circle."
	Tahr smiled at that, then spoke to  me.  "K'hy,  stay behind us and whatever you do,  make no  sudden  moves. I think you will make them nervous." I slowed down so that  she and S'shar were a few paces ahead of me as we approached  the  entrance.
	The  huge metal-bound doors hung open at the top of a  short  flight of steps.  All around the portal were carvings of Sathe in  various  poses  and activities.  Above these towered  the  walls,  leaning slightly away from us.  That must be Rehr waiting at the top of the steps.
	He was an old Sathe.  His fawn pelt was peppered with  white  and grey,  especially around his nose and ears and he was wearing  red robes,  things something like a monk's cassock. Escorting him  were over a dozen armed Sathe in blue and silver leather  armour,  their crossbow not quite aimed at us,  but too many of them  were  eyeing me and flexing their grips on their weapons.
	The elder said, "Thank you, S'shar."
	S'shar  ducked his head and stepped back into the small ring of curious  Sathe  who  had gathered to watch.
	"Tahr, your arrival was. . . unexpected."
	She bowed before answering,  "I wished to keep it that  way.  There were. . . complications."
	Rehr looked her up and down for a second, taking in her worn  and soiled kilt, her matted and tangled mane.
	"Please, this way." He turned and swept through the gates
	"Follow," she hissed to me, following him.
	Totally  lost,  I did as she bade me. . . Only to freeze in  my  tracks when about twenty crossbows suddenly came to bear on me.
	"Let him pass!" Tahr snapped.
	The  soldiers hesitated then lowered their bows and we  were  inside.
	The interior of the Keep was dimly lit,  but enough  light  came in through the open doors and from oil lamps to let me see.
	A lacquered wooden floor - the polish marred by scratches from careless  claws - gleamed  in the light.  Columns supporting the roof  were inlaid with elaborate, seemingly aimless  designs;  tantalizingly intricate, almost gaudy. Balconies with carved railings looked out over the floor. Tapestries the size of swimming pools covered bare stone walls. There were stained-glass panels concealed above the door, throwing a rose of tinted light across the hall. I followed the Sathe on automatic, staring at everything as  Rehr led us up a staircase and  along  passages  that  twisted  and turned,  through chambers and galleries where  fires  and  torches  blazed,  illuminating  mind-twisting  frescoes  and  carvings  of  Sathe:   playing  instruments,  dancing,  fighting,  mating. . . 
	I did a double take. Mating: those were quite explicit. That was how they did it! Like a cat. Figures.
	There was no doubting this section of the Citadel was occupied. Sathe bustled everywhere: guards, others carrying bundles of cloth or wood, others dressed in expensive finery. They all stood  aside  as  we  approached. I could feel their eyes on my back, but there was too much else to look at. The corridors were well lit and clean with sculptures  every few meters.  One that caught my eye seemed to be a mass  of  bubbles in blown glass.  I wasn't quite sure whether it was meant  to be abstract or representational. Other artifacts were made out  of boned wood, polished stone, and dark metal.
	Down  a cul de sac a guard opened an inconspicuous door  and  stepped aside as Rehr entered.  Tahr and I followed.  The  guards  behind us started to follow, but he waved them back.
	"No, wait outside."
	"But, Sir," one protested. "What of that?" she nodded at me.
	Rehr glanced at Tahr who made an obscure little gesture with  her  hands.  The red-robed elder studied me,  then dismissed  the  guards.  They  bowed and stepped back,  closing the  door  behind  them.
	He  led the way down a short hall that terminated in a room  full  of what had to be a lifetime of assorted knick-knacks.  A massive  desk of dark wood sat in front of a pair of large mullioned windows. The tinted glass let the light in, but the view through them was rather distorted.  Shelves  and  racks along the walls held dozens of scrolls,  leather  bound books,  polished rocks,  small carvings, combs and brushes, small widgets made of sticks and string and other things I  couldn't  name.  Beside  the desk stood a  crude  spyglass   made  out  of  brass  and  decorated  with   elaborate  scrollwork. A polished copper oil lamp with three wicks hung from the ceiling above the desk  and,  astonishingly,  a globe on carved wooden stand stood nearby  although only a fraction of the surface had been  charted, the rest decorated with fanciful.  Dark- red  carpets  were soft underfoot and several  small  tables  and  chairs were scattered around.
	A faint but distinct cloying scent hung in the air. I rubbed my nose. Staleness? No, not quite. Over by the windows a pair  of globe-shaped ceramic bowls with perforated lids smoked  gently: some  kind  of  incense.  Whatever it was it smelled sickly sweet, something like pot. A whiff gave me a lightheaded feeling: I snorted softly to try and clear the smell. Neither of the Sathe seemed to notice.
	Settling  into the chair behind the desk,  Rehr  linked  his  fingers  together on the desk in front of him and stared at  Tahr  out of impassive green eyes while I waited quietly in the background.
	"Tahr, you look terrible."
	Indeed,  in  contrast  to Rehr - clean and  well  groomed  -  sitting in his study,  Tahr did look terrible.  Her once gleaming  coat was matted,  torn,  and smeared with the dirt of days on the  road.  The  scar  across her ribs was very  visible.  I  probably  wasn't any better off.
	"Yes, High One," Tahr ducked her head.
	Rehr snorted.  "Enough of that, young one. I have known you since  you were a cub and you may soon be my superior.  There is no need  for the formalities." He leaned back in the chair." Did you  know  that you are only the third heir to arrive."
	Tahr was startled.  "But I left the manor months ago!  I was  sure I would be among the last to arrive."
	"Saaa,  we will continue to wait, but there is not much time  left," he said,  then gestured at me.  "I take it you had a  good  reason  for  bringing this along.  Tell me,  why  is  it  wearing  clothing. Is it cold?"
	"Rehr, he is intelligent."
	He blinked. "Intelligent? You did say 'intelligent'?"
	"Yes, Rehr. It is quite a story. We have been traveling together for some time and been through a lot. He has kept my hide intact several times."
	"She has been able to return the favour," I added.
	Rehr stared.
	"Rehr,  this is K'hy, a h'man. K'hy, this is Rehr, Adviser to  the Born-To-Rule, to the Shirai."
	I  bowed:  "I am honoured to meet you." Straightening, pink floaters flashed in my eyes. I was feeling strange. The  atmosphere seemed stifling,  the sweet,  sickly smell in the  air  was unbearable. I blinked and took a deep breath. It didn't  help
	"Tahr, where did you find such a. . . person."
	I  listened  as well as I could while Tahr once  again  went  over the story of how we had met. As she went on it got harder to concentrate. Her voice, a low, steady susuruss that began to merge with the pulse of  blood  in my ears. Listening, but not hearing, not feeling anything. As though through a heavy sheet  I heard my voice.
	"Tahr?. . . I think I am. . . "
	And the room reeled.  I felt myself hit the floor. Not pain,  just  the  pressure,  a dull thud through my bones.  Then  I  was  sprawled  on cold wood,  Sathe feet - all toes - in front  of  my  face.  I was rolled over and Sathe,  ten kilometers high,  loomed  over me. I was choking in that smell, smothered in pollen.
	If someone was trying to speak to me,  I didn't hear  it.  I  wasn't even aware when it went dark.

******

	It was dark.
	I opened my eyes.
 	It was still dark and there was a heavy metal concert going into a drum solo behind my eyes.  For a while I just  lay  quietly, breathing lightly to stop my head exploding and it was a few minutes before I felt like taking stock. I was  lying in my shorts in the dark on a bed, a real one: bowl-shaped, but with a real mattress and soft sheets. Sitting up made my head pound.  I  groaned  and  clutched my throbbing skull. Something had died on my tongue.
	There was moonlight enough to let me see as I lurched to  my  feet and half-walk,  half-stagger across the wooden floor to the open window, almost tripping on the edge of a rug in the process.
	I  clung to the windowsill and breathed deeply of the  cool,  clear night air. That helped to clear my spinning head a bit.  I could see that I was in one of the highest points of the Citadel,  looking down on all of Mainport.
	The  clouds  that  had blocked the sun during  the  day  had  dissipated,  scattered by the winds to reveal the stars  sprawled  in all their glory across the sky. Beneath me, bathed in a bluish  moonlight,  lay  the dark streets of Mainport.  The  harbour  was  still,  the  waters  reflecting the moon in the heavens  and  the  occasional lantern on the dockside.
	 I didn't hear the latch lift,  nor the door swing open.  It  was  the pool of light spilling through from the  other  room  that  startled me.  Turning too quickly and the room wallowed like a ship's deck. I just managed to catch myself on the window sill  before I hit the floor again.
	"K'hy!" Tahr hissed.  She moved to help me off my knees  and  back to the bed where I sagged down.  She sat down beside me  and  stroked my brow. "I am glad to see you are up. You are feeling better?"
	"Uhnn," I croaked.  My throat hurt.  I worked my jaw to  get  some saliva flowing. "W. . . What the fuck happened?"
	She pressed a damp cloth to my forehead,  wiped my face with  it. "I am not sure. We think it was the thamil."
	"Huh? Hamil?"
	"Thamil," she enunciated. "Rehr was burning it in his study.  It  is just a scent. . . usually." I could see her eyes glowing  in  the starlight. "It seemed to have a more adverse effect on you."
	I groaned and rubbed my face.  My head felt as though it was  full of guncotton.  "You can say that again.  Please,  is there  any water?"
	Tahr  lifted  the cloth away and padded across  to  a  chest  beside the door.  There was the gurgling of liquid being  poured.  She  returned and pressed the mug into my hands:  "Here." It  was  water: cool and wet.
	A minute later I felt ready to make another effort to  stand  upright.  "No, I am all right," I protested, shrugging off Tahr's  hands. I made it back to the window on my own, "Where am I?"
	"Safe  now." Tahr stood beside me at the  window,  ready  to  catch me if I collapsed again.  "These are your chambers now. You  are officially my guest here."
	I  didn't  know what to say.  I hedged  around  it:  "It  is  beautiful out there."
	Her head moved to look,  a slight breeze ruffling the fur of  her mane.
	"Thank you for everything, Tahr, but I do not know how long I  will be able to stay."
	There was a second's silence.
	"You want to find other H'mans."
	I nodded, aware of how hopeless that sounded; "If possible." I turned back to the window.
	"They  must be out there, they've got to be."
	There  was more silence,  then needle sharp claws caught  my  shoulder, squeezed gently. When they released me I slipped my arm  around the warm figure beside me.
	We stayed like that for about a minute,  then she disengaged  from my arm and silently padded over to the door.
	"Will you be all right?"
	I nodded.
	"Then you should sleep now. Good night, K'hy."
	As  the door closed behind her,  I  smiled  slightly.  'Good  night'. She'd picked that off me.  I stared at the mug in my hand, then tossed back the final mouthful of water and clambered back  onto the bed.

******

	I  ignored the hand that was gently shaking me  until  claws  started to dig into my shoulder. "Ouch! Christ!" I rolled and squinted into the sunlight streaming in through the window.
	"Good  morning," Tahr smiled down at me.  "Are  you  feeling  better?"
	I began to answer, then squinted at the Sathe, not quite so sure. "Tahr?"
	It was her. The bedraggled young Sathe  from Rehr's study had washed and brushed her fur until it shone with a glossy sheen I'd never seen before, turned to a silver nimbus by a sunbeam that touched her. Her breeches were immaculate: green with intricate gold trim. In the months I had known her I'd never seen her looking like this.  She  looked  like. . . royalty.
	She preened, pretending to examine  a claw. "You like?" she asked.
	"I like," I confirmed.
	She batted a hand against my cheek,  then stood and went  to  stare out the window, her back to me. From the slant of the sun I  guessed  it was about nine o'clock.  I glanced at  my  wrist;  my  watch was gone. "You were talking in your sleep last night," Tahr  said. "Your noises."
	"Oh," I said. I didn't remember anything.
	She  turned to lean against the window sill.  "Do  you  feel  like walking?" she asked. "There is someone who wants to see us."
	Again: "Oh? Who?"
	She smiled then, blinking peacefully in happy reminiscence, "Someone special. Someone I have not seen in a long time."
	"Ah,  for you I think I can manage that." I unfolded  myself  from  the bowl-shaped bed,  muscles unused to sleeping on such  a  shape and softness protesting.
	The  room  was not as small as it had  seemed  the  previous  night. The bed was the largest piece of furniture in the room and  stood against the south wall,  opposite the door.  The window  in  the east wall admitted both light and cold air.  Woolen rugs in subdued earthy shades lay across the wooden floor. A large metal-bound chest stood near the door.
	"Where are my clothes?"
	Tahr  opened the chest and drew out a pair of  blue  Sathe  breeches and my customised cloak. "Wear these."
	That didn't really answer my question. The breeches were too short in the legs and the crotch and the cloak hung open,  exposing my scarred chest.  I had  to hold it shut with one hand.
	"I feel ridiculous," I muttered.
	Tahr looked me up and down. "You will need some more clothes  made for you. Those do not exactly flatter you."
	"Understatement of the year."
	She smiled. "Hurry, or we will be late."
	Through the door was another room;  a study. A desk stood in  front  of a window in the east wall and there were empty  shelves  along the far wall. A fireplace with a stone slab hearth stood in  the northeast corner,  a small pile of wood beside it.  A door in  the  west wall led to the corridor.  I walked beside Tahr as  she  stalked  along  the passage with feline grace.  She  pointed  out  another door down the hall. "My chambers," she told me.
	We  moved deeper into the maze of the Keep's corridors,  meeting Sathe everywhere. Most greeted Tahr and gave me dubious looks.  Carved slabs of stone,  reaching from floor to ceiling, decorated  the halls. Like the passages in the outer walls, some stones looked new  while others  were obviously ancient.  In one particularly  ancient  carving, something  seemed strange about the worn Sathe figures  etched  into it,  but we passed before I could make out exactly what.
	There were	more stairs, then a guardroom. A Sathe was there waiting for us; a servant decked out in simple brown breeches. "High One," he greeted Tahr. "Please, follow me."
	Weird. He hardly spared me a second glance.
	Beyond that the halls changed. The walls were paneled in wood, the floor covered in carpets decorated with curlicues to rival any Persian rug. Heavy, metal-reinforced doors stood every few meters, with guards posted alternately, like statues in blue and silver armour, sheathed swords in hand, their heads turning to follow us as we passed by. Halfway down our guide stopped us, directing us through a doorway.
	"Here?" Tahr sounded surprised. "What about the royal chambers?"
	The servant ducked his head. "They have not been used for some time."
	"Why?"
	"The Lord has not had need of them."
	I saw the wrinkles across Tahr's brow. Something was puzzling her.
   	These might not have been the royal chambers, but they were plush enough,  and big. Paintings hung from the  walls and blown glass sculptures decorated shelves.  A large  map  of  the  eastern States - the Eastern Realm I should say  -  hung  from a wall behind a desk. The entire floor was covered by a huge  rug woven in complex geometric patterns and curtains  partitioned  off other areas of the chambers. Something made from moving metal  parts, wood, and water dripped away in a corner. A clock? I  whistled softly.  Whoever lived here would have to  be  a  real bigwig. The Lord, the servant had called him.
	"Please, wait," the servant bowed, then disappeared through the curtains.
	"The Lord?" I whispered to Tahr.
	"The Born Ruler," She smiled. "My Ancestors, it has been a long time."
	The curtains rustled and Rehr stood there, still wearing the red robes. Tahr bowed to  him, and I imitated her.
	"High one." He bowed to Tahr, then studied me, up and down. "I hope you are feeling better. I never thought thamil would have such  an  effect  on  anyone." He turned and parted the drapes.  "Please, he is waiting  for both of you."
	I followed Tahr through the curtains.  It took a second  for  my eyes to adjust to the gloom.  Some light filtered through  the  drapes that had been pulled across the window and I saw the  room  was dominated by the typical bowl-bed favoured by Sathe.
	"That would be Tahr."
	I  heard her hiss of breath,  then she was kneeling  by  the  bed,  clasping  the hand of the shriveled and grey-furred  Sathe  lying there, her ears canted sideways and a mournful expression  on her face. With his free hand, the old Sathe on the bed reached  out and gently felt her face;  the sides of her muzzle,  her ears  and  the silver ring there.  I realized with a start that he  was  blind.
	"Father!. . . I did not. . . When did this happen to you?"
	Father!?
	The torn ears twitched in a smile.
	"Months ago. An attempt on my life."
	She hung her head. "I never heard."
	"I  did not want you to know." He sank back on the  cushions  with a sigh that seemed to come from his bones.  "I was afraid it  might affect your studies."
	She lifted one hand and oh so softly batted the side of  his  face. He smiled up at her. "You are well?"
	"I am fine."
	"How is Saerae?"
	Pushing the subject away from himself,  trying to spare  her  thinking about it. But of all the things on the face of the planet, why did he have to ask about Saerae?
	Tahr flinched back; in shock, perhaps in memory. "You knew?"
	"Saaa,  daughter.  You think I would not know when you chose the one to sire your young?"
	I slowly shook my head. Oh, Tahr.
	"But you did not know that he is dead."
	The Shirai was silent,  his milk-white eyes closed.  "No. . . I did  not know. I am so, so sorry. How. . . "
	"On our way here,  Gulf mercenaries. . . They knew Father! They  knew. It was only through coincidence that I escaped."
	"Yes, I have heard about your 'Coincidence'," he murmured
	Tahr  laid her head on his shoulder and was silent.  I  felt  like an interloper.  As quietly as I could, I pushed back through the heavy draperies.
	Rehr was at his desk,  scratching away with a quill pen.  He  looked up as I left the room, but said nothing.
	God,  she  was daughter to the old king or whatever he  was.  She  had  never  told me.  That word they used  to  describe  her  position 'candidates'.  I thought she was just a nominee  running  for the position of Shirai.
	Shirai:  not  just a title but a name.  I hadn't known  that  either.  I had a recollection of the dark-furred Hymath,  and the  questions she asked me about Tahr,  about her clan name. I hadn't  realised.
	And for a homecoming,  to find her father dying. Christ! How  many of those closest to her had she already lost? How many more?  Why?  There were  circumstances beyond  my  control,  and  they'd  already drawn me in out of my depth. How much further could I go? 
	We'd had an agreement,  Tahr and I. There was that afternoon  on the hill above Traders Meet when I'd agreed to help her get to  Mainport.  Now  my part of that agreement had been fulfilled  and  things were still changing.  There was something happening here I  didn't understand.  Someone was trying to kill her,  had tried to  kill her father, had perhaps killed the other Candidates.
	Would she still need me?
	In  my mind I recalled what we'd been through,  how we  met,  some of those early summer days when it had almost seemed a  game  to  learn about one another.  It had changed.  We had grown  from  that simple childhood state.  My life back home - if I could call  it  home - now seemed like something far removed.  It had been real, I had lived it,  but somehow it was starting to feel like nothing more than  an elaborate memory. And this. . . this craziness, this was reality. 
	Shit. You could drive yourself mad thinking like that.
	I  wandered  across  to the room to  stand  and  study  that  tapestry covering a wall:  an ornate, pictorial representation of  the Eastern Realm.  The brilliant colours,  idiographic text, and  seemingly  abstract designs that meandered their way  across  the  fabric never obscured the actual land that was being portrayed.
	And  I  knew  that  land.  I'd  been  staring  at  pictorial  renditions  of  that  land throughout high  school  and  college.  Perhaps I'd had some doubts when Tahr scratched her crude map  in  the dirt, but now. . . I couldn't doubt any longer.
	There was the east coastline,  Florida,  and the area around  the Gulf of Mexico.  There were graphics representing cities  and  towns,  mostly scattered up and down the east coast,  around  the  northern area of the Gulf,  and around the Gulf of Saint Lawrence  where  Canada  should be;  There were hardly any  settlements  in  Florida.
	That was all there was - the east seaboard of the states and  Canada,  the Florida peninsula, and the Gulf of Mexico - the rest  of the map was a blank. Terra Incognito.
	Exactly  what had happened to me was a mystery I was sure  I  was never going to unravel.  This WAS earth,  but yet it  wasn't.  This WAS America,  yet again it wasn't.  An alternate earth where  the  big  cats  of  the Americas had  ascended  well  beyond  the  threshold of simple animal awareness.
	They were well the equal of any evolved ape.
	On  that  subject,  what had happened to the  apes  over  in  Africa?  What  had  they  been doing while the  Sathe  were  busy  evolving?
	I  didn't have the answer to that either.  Well,  the  Sathe  would  definitely be interested in sending ships east across  the  Atlantic.  A  whole  new world over there to  explore,  with  new  produces, animals, and deposits of precious metals. That would be  bait enough to tempt the most skeptical soul.
	An alternate earth,  as if every time a choice,  a decision,  was made,  a new reality was created.  If I were to flip a  coin,  would  that  create universes in which it  landed  heads,  tails,  perhaps even a universe where it landed on edge?
	Could an action as frivolous, as inconsequential, as tossing  a coin create worlds?
	Or perhaps it took an event that could change a world,  such  as  a pseudo-cat overcoming its fear of a lightning-struck  fire,  using it for warmth on a cold night,  learning to feed the flames  to keep it alive.
	"You are not going to collapse again?"
	I wheeled at the voice.  Rehr was hovering beside his  desk,  dithering between perhaps helping me or making for the  door.  He  gestured towards me: "You do not need help?"
	"No," I shook my head. "Thank you, but I will be all right."
	"You  have  been  standing there  for  some  time. . . You  are  familiar with maps?"
	"Yes,"  I nodded and gestured at the  illuminated  tapestry.  "My people use them. Same things. Ah. . . How old is this one?"
	"That  particular  one,"  Rehr  nodded  at  the  illuminated  tapestry, "was woven by Methres ai Ch'athr, not four years ago."
	"I can see you have still got a lot to explore."
	"What do you mean?"
	I shrugged. "I have seen maps that are more. . . complete."
	"Of our lands?  Tahr told me you said you came from  another  world. 'One that is ours but not ours'. I cannot quite comprehend  that. You mean your world's geography is identical to ours?"
	"Very  similar," I said.  "I can look out the window  in  my  room and see the area where I was raised,  but it is not the same  place at all."
	"A strange idea."
	"Yes."
	Rehr was quiet for a second, ears twitching in thought.
	"Is there anything out there?" he finally asked me.
	I looked at where his claw had jabbed the map,  about  where  England would be.
	"Well,  if  it is consistent,  there should be lands to  the  south of this one,  below the Gulf Realm, a continent bigger than  this one over to the east,  and another one down here  somewhere.  Also on the top and bottom of the word." I pointed them out as  I  spoke. "The world is a big place."
	Some time later Rehr was still staring at the map when  Tahr  laid a hand on my shoulder. I hadn't heard her come out.
	"He wishes to. . . see you," she said.
	"Why did you not tell me he was your father."
	She gave me a small,  sad smile.  "You never asked.  Go now,  quickly."
	I  pushed  the drapes aside as I stepped back into  the  dim  room and stood for a second, blinking.
	"You must be Ka. . . K'hy," said the gruff voice.
	"Yes, High One."
	There was a slight pause.
	"She said you are not Sathe. You sound different."
	He was sitting propped up against his cushions. His rheumy eyes were wandering sightlessly,  but his ears were locked on  me  and twitching.
	"I am. . . different. Quite different."
	"Please, come here." A hand patted the left side of the bed.  I went and knelt down beside him.
	He  reached  to  touch  me  and  I  pulled  back  a  little,  forestalling him. "Sir, you are sure that you want to do that?" I  asked,  for some reason worried he might have a heart  condition.  "I am not Sathe. You may be. . . startled."
	"Tahr told me what to expect," he assured me.
	He touched my hand and in that instant his pads touched  me,  I saw him flinch, then relax again. For a while he just touched my skin, then he began mapping the shape of my hand, examining the  fingertips and nails, which way my fingers bent. He ran his fingers up my arm, feeling  the light hair that grew there, the pads on the undersides of his  fingers cool and dry and slightly rough against my skin.
	I managed not to flinch when he reached my face and explored  that;  feeling the bone structure,  my nose and lips. He followed  the  contours of my ears and felt the bristles of  my  beard.  He  finally  ran his fingers through my hair, feeling the shape of my  skull.
	"I  would  never  have believed it,"  he  murmured  and  sank  back against the cushions.
	"I suppose I do take some getting used to," I said.
	"Huh!  Hearing  about  you is  one  thing.  Actually  seeing  you. . . "  he  smiled then,  "So to speak,  it  is  something  else  altogether. You are truly from another world?"
	"In a way; yes I am."
	"Yes,  Tahr  did try to explain," the old Shirai sighed  and  turned those blank eyes my way. "I wish I could see you. She told  me  so  much. . . For what you have done for my daughter I will be forever grateful."
	"High One. . . " I started but he cut me off with a wave of his  hand.  "I  know  the  sacrifices  that you  have  made  for  her;  willingly and otherwise.  I do not care what you look  like:  you  have the heart of a Sathe."
	"I. . . "  Shit!  I didn't know how to put it  into  words.  "I  thank you, High One."
	"You  have  known Tahr for several  months;  have  traveled with her,  fought with her. You would know, better than  I. . . "
	"Know what?"
	He gave a small smile.  "I am not going to deny I am  dying,  but  it would make it easier if I knew. . . Would Tahr make  a  good  successor?"
	Dumbstruck,  I floundered for a response. "I. . . ah. . . I do not  think that I can be the judge of that.  I am not sure that I know  what abilities a Sathe ruler must have, High one."
	He snorted faintly. "Just tell me what you know of her, what  you have seen in her."
	"Sir. . . I  can honestly say that I have never  known  anybody  like her. Being able to call her a friend is something I can take  pride in.  She is warm, caring, loyal, intelligent, and brave. If  those are qualities you value, I think that she would be a worthy  heir."
	"Thank you," he murmured and was still for a time. Then: "Do  you feel the same way about her as she does about you?"	
	"I  do  not understand," I said,  although I already  had  a  glimmering of what he was getting at.
	"She has told me about her Time and I am curious to know how  you found it."
	"Uh. . . You. . . " I stammered to halt and swallowed hard.
	The  Shirai's blind eyes closed and he hissed in  amusement.  "My Ancestors! She was right: you are shy!"
	I felt the flush crawling up my neck.	
	"No," he calmed down again.  "Do not worry about that.  Tell  me: what do you think her feelings for you are?"
	I floundered for words:  embarrassed.  "I. . . I know that  she  does  not  hate  or  fear  the  way  I  look,  but  as  for  what  happened. . . she could not help herself then. . . could she?  There is  no way that she can think of me as a Sathe."
	"She  cares  for you a great deal,  Strange  One,"  the  old  Shirai  was  staring  sightlessly at the low  ceilings  with  its  massive  rafters.  "She  knows that she can never have you  as  a  mate,  but still she cares for you.  You have her friendship, and  her love."
	I shook my head.  I had believed that night in the  cave  was more. . . hormones than anything else.  I tossed things over  in  my head;  The times I had woken up from dreams and she was there,  the times she cared for me when I was ill and no-one else  would,  the time in the sun-warmed grass when she had bitten me.
	"Well?" he asked. "Am I wrong?"
	"No." I bit my lip; unable to deny it. "I think not."
	He smiled: "Good."
	"Good?"
	"Yes."  Those blind eyes turned in my direction.  "Sometimes a bitter looking fruit hides a sweet center. She cares for you, a great deal, no matter what you look like on the outside. I know my daughter and she is no fool. I do not know you as well, but from what I have heard she judged correctly.  If she can continue to do so well, I think she will make a worthy successor. No?"
	
******

	 I sank back in the hot water with a grateful sigh and closed  my  eyes  as  the tendrils of steam wound their  way  across  the  surface of the pool. The water I disturbed slapped lazily against  the sides before settling back to quiescence.
	Whether  by luck or design the citadel had been  built  over  natural hot springs and the Sathe were not reluctant to make  use  of them.  Several rooms in the lower levels of the Keep had  been  built as baths, with receptacles the size of small swimming pools  cut into the stone floors and filled with deliciously hot  water.  Benches  hewn  into the sides of the pools were worn  smooth  and  clean by water and Sathe behinds.  In the center of each of these  pools stood a large,  dark stone like Sathe's fang with the edges  chiseled sharp, a half-meter poking above the water. Decoration?  It reminded me of a shark's fin.
	The water was clean,  with no algae or deuterus.  Light came  from oil fires burning in niches in the walls.  I had one of  the  rooms  for  myself and that probably wasn't normal.  Had  it  been  cleared for my befit or the Sathes'?
	Whatever. I wasn't going to pass up the chance for the first  hot bath in half a year.  I dunked my head and held my breath  as  long as I could while giving my head a good scrubbing,  hoping to  kill or dislodge any passengers I might have picked up  over the last couple of weeks.  When I surfaced, Tahr was sitting  on the edge of the pool,  her feet trailing in the water.  Beside  her sat my boots.
	"They were not happy to give them up," she said.
	"Who and what?" I asked.
	"Scholars."  She stood up and began shucking  her  breeches,  still  talking.  "Engineers,  smiths.  They  are  examining  your  possessions. . . They have not made much progress."
	Her clothes lying in a pile behind her, she slowly descended  the steps into the pool.  I watched the water slowly climbing her  body  - her fur billowed out in a ruff at the waterline  -  until  it stopped at her neck.  She hissed in pleasure and sank onto one  of the benches.
	"But  do  they have to examine my  clothes?  They  are  just  cloth."
	She snorted. "Just cloth! Some of the cloth is recognizable,  but  most of it is an enigma.  The tightness of  the  weave,  the  strength. . . They have never seen anything like it."
	I  slouched  lower  into the  water,  staring  at  the  worn  stonework on the far side of the pool.  In the center of the bath  there was that large piece of jagged rock sticking up out of  the  water,  roughly triangular in shape.  Sathe have strange artwork,  but still it didn't resemble that.
	"What is that?" I asked, staring at it.
	For an answer,  she stood and waded out to the stone.  There  was  an underwater dais around it,  bringing the water up to  her  shoulders.  She leant her back against one of the chiseled edges  of  the monolith and started rubbing against it like a  housecat,  her eyes closed and her ears back in a smile.  
	A backscratcher.
	"Come, join me." She grinned at me.
	I grinned back and waded across the pool and leaned  against  the rock.  The surface was rough behind my back, like sharp-edged  pumice. Not unpleasant. I laughed at the sensation.
	"Nice. But is this all they're for? Backscratchers?"
 	"Nice?" Tahr moved around in front of me,  mane plastered across her  shoulders, bemusement wrinkling her brow. "Is that all it is to you?"
	"Huh? What do you mean?" I asked, not understanding
	She kicked my feet out from under me and when I got my  head  above water again and sneezed the water out of my nose,  she  was  sitting against the side of the pool.
	"What was THAT for?" I implored.
	"You  are impossible.  You are just so different.  I try  to  treat  you as though you are normal male," she raised  her  hands  and  rubbed the side of her muzzle,  wetting the fine fur  there,  "but you do not ACT like a normal male." She dropped her hand and  it splashed into the water.
	I pushed my way through the pool to sit beside her, silent.
	"What did you and my father talk about?" she asked.
	"Uh. . . You."
	"I thought as much. What about me?"
	"He  wanted  to  know if I thought you  would  make  a  good  successor."
	"Do you?"
	"Definitely."
	She smiled and cocked her head delicately to one side: "I am  pleased someone has faith in me. What else did you talk about?"
	I  felt the corners of my mouth twitch.  "I think  that  you  already have an idea."
	"Ah," she nodded slowly. "And what did you say about us?"
	I  leaned  my  head back against the edge of  the  pool  and  stared  up  at  the ceiling.  There were things  her  father  had  said. . . I  wanted  to know if they were true.  Were  her  feelings  towards me something I could understand,  or were they a drive so  alien  that  they  could mean the world to  her  but  nothing  to  me?	
	"You know," I finally said,  "your father cares a great deal  for you."
	"I know," she said. "And I for him."
	"After what you told him about us, he wanted to know how I felt about you: did I feel the same for you as you do for me."
	"And do you?"
	I  lowered  my  head  and  spoke  to  the  water's  surface:  "I. . . cannot say. I do not know. . . what you feel."
	Tahr's eyes widened,  then her ears danced.  "Did that night  in the cave not tell you?"
	I shrugged,  sending ripples right across the  pool.  "Tahr,  you do not understand me and often I cannot understand you.  That  night. . . I  do  not know if you made love to me  through  want  or  NEED. You did not seem to be. . . yourself."
	She was quiet for a while then she said softly,  "Times  are  difficult for us,  but I knew what I wanted. I like that term you  used, 'making love'. For me that is what it was."
	Oh Jesus!
	It went that deep.  Damnation,  couldn't she see it wouldn't  work!  How  could  she have feelings like that for  me?  We  were  different species! How could she love me?!
	And why was I so hurt by the realization it was impossible?
	"K'hy,"  she  touched my arm.  "I know that  you  cannot  be  everything  a  Sathe  male is:  I know that  you  cannot  replace  Saerae.  But  there  are other paths of friendship:  you  are  my  companion,  you have saved my life and you have lived with me and  loved with me. K'hy, I love you as a friend."	  
	She leaned against me and I could feel her fur moving in the  gentle currents in the water.  I felt her breath against the side  of  my  face a split second before she touched her  mouth  to  my  cheek in her version of a human kiss.
	When she pulled her lithe and dripping form out of the bath,  the temperature of the liquid seemed to drop slightly.  She dried  herself  by shaking and rubbing down with a piece of cloth off  a  pile by the door. I got out soon after she left the room. It's not so much fun by yourself.
	That  evening  I waited for my food to arrive as it  had  at  lunch,  delivered by a wide eyed cub who practically dropped  the  food and ran.
	I  was  sitting on the desk staring out the  window  at  the  lights  of Mainport and humming disjointed snatches of dimly remembered songs. What Tahr had told me earlier echoed in my head, but  the  warm  feeling  that  conjured shared  rent  with  a  nagging  foreboding: could friendship be stretched too far?
	When  the  scratch at the door pulled me from my  reverie  I  went to answer it,  getting ready in case he dropped the tray  as  he had earlier. It wasn't room service.
	"Tahr. . . " I broke off and stared.
	She  was  dressed in bright red breeches tied  with  a  cord  inlaid with silver thread.  Her tan fur had been brushed until it  glowed  and  her mane was strung around her shoulders  in  artful  disarrangement.  Around  her neck,  she wore a necklace  of  fine  silver  wire twisted and woven into fine designs.  On  her  right  wrist she wore a light bracelet of a similar design, but this had  a large blue stone imbedded in it: a single bluebottle trapped in a silver filigree web.  Hanging from her left hip was  a scabbard made of laminated walnut and inlaid with  silver.  The  protruding scimitar handle was bound with some kind of dark twine  with a dark stone mounted on the pommel, set in silver.
	I swallowed. "You have outdone yourself."
	"Thank you," she smiled and pushed passed me into the  room.  Tucked  under her arm was bundle of green cloth with what  looked  like  a scabbard rolled up in it,  she spread the lot out on  the  desk.
	"I  am  sorry that I have not had time to find a  tailor  to  make you some proper clothes,  so these will have to do in  their  stead." She waved a hand at the undersized breeches I was wearing  and said, "Get rid of those and put these on, we have a dinner to  attend."
	My fatigue pants were there,  as well as my shirt, belt, and  sheath knife. I was right about the scabbard: it was wood, coated  with black lacquer, and definitely contained a sword.
	I  stripped off the five-sizes-too-small pair of breeches  I  was  wearing and pulled on the trousers.  They'd been washed  and  ironed  or pressed,  but not starched,  so the seams were not as  crisp as they could have been; likewise with the shirt. Also, the  cleaning couldn't do anything about the faded and worn cloth, nor  the repaired tear,  but it was a great relief to get into  clean,  comfortable clothes again.
	I  buckled  on the belt and clipped the knife  to  it,  then  hefted the sword gingerly.
	"Do I wear this?"
	"Yes. Here, on your belt. That is right."
	After  that came my boots - cleaning them up with a  bit  of  spit  and polish.  Not exactly parade ground standard, but  better  than nothing.
	Tahr eyed me critically.
	"Not too bad. . . sit down." I did so.
	She  stood  behind  the chair and began to  rake  her  claws  through  my hair,  straightening it,  pulling  it  back.  Another  advantage of claws: built in combs.
	Sitting  with another person combing your hair is  strangely  relaxing;  built-in social grooming habits I guess.  I could have  easily  dozed off,  but she finished quickly,  and with  a  final  flick of hair, she stood back to examine her work.
	"Much better. You look presentable. Come on."
	"Where are we going?"
	"Dinner."
	"And for that I need a sword?"
	"Oh, bring your knife also."
	I grabbed the knife and slipped it into a pocket, snuffed out the oil  lamp, and  followed her out the door, slamming it behind me.
	As  we  marched down the corridor,  I  patted  the  scabbard  banging against my leg. "What am I supposed to do with this? I do  not  even  know  how to use the thing.  Would  not  my  rifle  be  better?"
	Tahr waved a 'no'.  "There should be no need to use it.  The  sword in any case is purely ceremonial. Offer it at the door, but  keep  your  knife.  Stand against the wall,  directly  behind  my  chair.  Do  not speak unless spoken to directly,  and  always  be  courteous."
	"Tahr, why am I doing this?"
	"I need an escort. You are the only one that I trust enough.  The others will have escorts from their personal staff.  You  are  all I have."
	"Sorry to disappoint you."
	"I did not mean it like that."
	"Who are these 'others'?"
	She  smoothed  down a bit of fur on  her  chest.  "Why,  the  returned heirs of course."
	We stopped in a small antechamber,  opposite a set of  heavy  wood doors with guards posted. They opened the doors for us.
	The  room wasn't the grand hall with huge banquet  table  I'd been half-expecting.  A low ceiling was supported by  massive  wooden  beams.  Through twin archways in the far wall  a  balcony  commanded a view over the outer Citadel walls towards the  forest  and  farmland  to the west.  There was a table and  at  least  it  wasn't too different from what I'd imagined.
	Massively  built.  Dark  wood,  polished  to  a  high  sheen  anchored  upon  a strangely carved central  pedestal.  Out  of  a  possible fourteen places five had been set;  two on each side and  one at the far end.  A conical brass candelabra with three  tiers  of   candles  sat  in  the  center  of   the   table,   providing  illumination. Two seat at the table were occupied.
	The two Sathe - one male, one female - sitting opposite each  other  at the table turned to face us as we came  in.  The  looks  they gave Tahr were definitely not friendly and the one she  gave  in  return  told me there was no love lost  between  them.   When  their  eyes turned to me it was obvious that they forgot  about  Tahr there and then.  Nostrils  and  eyes  flared  wide  as  neurological  hardwiring tensed them against possible threat.
	Following  Tahr's  example I left my sword on a  side  table  covered with a red velvet cloth beside the door.  Tahr  leisurely  selected  a place on the right side of the  table,  opposite  the  other female. I pulled her chair out and held it while she seated  herself,  then  stepped back into a shadowed niche in  the  wall,  settling into an at-ease stance.  Behind each of the other heirs,  in similar niches,  were two more Sathe: escorts. All I could see  of them in the shadows and dimness was that they were large.
	"I am surprised to see you here,  Tahr," one of the heirs  -  the male - said.
	"Really?  Is  there any reason you thought I might not  make  it?" Tahr asked. "Perhaps you thought I may have an accident."
	"Perhaps," the other agreed with the merest twitch of a lip.  "There have been a lot of them going around."
	Tahr hissed. The male smiled and said, "Control yourself."
	"I think you speak too lightly of others' misfortune,"  Tahr  retorted acidly.
	"I  am afraid she is right,  Schai," the female  said.  "But  Tahr,  I  am curious about your. . . companion.  Have you  taken  to  traveling with animals now? It will not foul the floor?"
	"He  is not. . . " Tahr began,  but her retort was  interrupted  when  the door opened and the final heir entered.  That  was  one  Sathe  I  figured I wouldn't have any trouble  recognizing  in  a  crowd: his fur was a shocking, almost-metallic silver. His escort  was  also  different  from  the  others. . . Well,  perhaps  not  as  different as Tahr's escort, but for a bodyguard she was extremely  small. Her eyes would perhaps be level with my chest.
	Behind  them Rehr flowed in like a red bishop and turned  to close the heavy doors.
	The Advisor wasn't surprised to see me.  He hardly spared me  a  glance as he swept past on his way to the seat at the head  of  the table.  The other two seemed more startled: they stared for a  second  before Silver Fur removed his sword and laid it  on  the  table, closely followed by his diminutive consort.
	As  he took his seat opposite Tahr,  he gave her  a  cordial  nod, "Tahr, it has been to long."
	"R'rrhaesh."  She returned the nod.  "You have  not  changed  much."
	The  other  female chose that moment to add  her  two  cents  worth. "True. He still refuses to dye his fur!"
	Tahr turned and hissed at her with ears down,  but R'rrhaesh  stopped her.
	"Do not trouble yourself, I am quite used to it."
	I felt a twinge of sympathy for him,  of course I know  what  it's like being a misfit, but surely the colour of his fur didn't  matter that much?  Huh!  A human should talk! Across the room the  glow  of  candlelight  reflected from a pair of  eyes  caught  my  attention. The small female who'd had come in with R'rrhaesh was looking  at me.  No. . . not looking, staring. She was eyeing me from head to  foot as though weighing me up.  For R'rrhaesh to have chosen  her  for  an escort,  he must have had a good reason.  Looking at  the  heavies the other two had brought, she was a striking contrast.
	She  must have been only about four foot  eight.  A  pleated  leather skirt with suspender-like straps criss-crossing her chest was her only clothing, her fur like chocolate with swirls of milk through it.  She carried  herself  with  poise  -  inherent  in  Sathe  -  but  I  got  an  impression  of  exceptional grace about her.  When our eyes met and locked she huffed, fur  bristling, and gave me a stare I could almost feel, daring me to look away first.
	I  wasn't  about to try outstare a Sathe. I flashed her a wink and turned my attention  back to the table.
	Rehr  waited until everyone was settled before standing again.  There was no need to call for  attention;  all  eyes went to him.
	"Four. Only four." Rehr looked at each of the heirs in turn.  "This should be a time for rejoicing. The youth, the offspring of  the  realm's  Lords,  the  best  of  their  Clans,  returning  to  demonstrate  their prowess and ability in the  final  Challenge,  choosing  from among the best the one who is to rule  our  lands.  Instead, there are too many Clans who have been mourning the loss  of prized youth."
	He sighed and sank back into the chair, looking old.
	"To those who are here tonight.  Old friends, young friends,  I greet you. The Shirai clan greets you. Their food is yours, their drink is yours, their roof is yours."
	As if this was a signal, servants seemed to materialize from the shadows.  Platters of veal,  spare  ribs,  corn,  bread,  and  goblets of ale were set on the table and the Sathe set in with  a  will.
	Watching  a Sathe dinner party isn't a sight you forget in a hurry.  I'd become somewhat immunized to the spectacle of Sathe eating  over  the past months,  but mealtimes made sure that I would  not  overlook the differences in physiology.
	The  meat was usually done rare,  at the best.  Large  bones  were never wasted,  powerful jaws and sharp teeth splintered them  then  the marrow was fastidiously picked out.  Sathe do not  have  the  molars that humans use for masticating their food and it  is  impossible for them to keep their mouths shut while chewing.  Any  Sathe  meal  is  accompanied  by  the  sounds  of  loud  chewing,  swallowing,  and  bone crunching.  They were eating things they  probably  considered  delicacies,  but  to  me  looked  suspiciously  like  internal   organs  of  various  animals.   One taste treat I found particularly distressing were the rabbits brought in, pinned down on boards, still alive. They actually screamed when the  Sathe  slit them open for the steaming organs.  I saw Tahr use her  jaws  to crack open a skull and scoop out the brains.
	Shit, you think you know someone. . . 
	Fighting a roiling stomach, I stood there and suffered the twofold punishment of watching them eat, and smelling the aroma  of cooked food that filled the room.  When Tahr had said that  we  were  going  to dinner,  I,  for some  strange  reason,  got  the  impression that I might be eating as well.  Still,  watching them eat pretty much did for my appetite.
	As  the meal progressed I could see their  attitudes  toward  one another.  They all seemed to be mutually distrustful of  each  other, although Tahr and R'rrhaesh did not seem to be as cautious  towards each other as they towards the others. The other two, the  male and the female were called, respectively, Schai and Eaher.
	Throughout Rehr stayed neutral. In conversation he took care  not  to  become  involved with either side,  and  of  course  the  obvious subject came up; Me.
	"Tahr," said R'rrhaesh,  "I am curious,  where did you  find  your escort."
	"Actually it was he who found me," she replied. "He saved my  life after I lost my staff."
	I think she said more than she had meant to then.
	"So,"  Eaher  put  in thoughtfully,  "THAT  is  your  entire  staff?"
	Tahr's ears twitched in annoyance.
	"He is quite adequate."
	"Exactly what is it?" asked Schai.
	"He calls himself a 'h'man'," Tahr replied.
	"Really?"  Eaher asked in what had to be a  sarcastic  tone.  "Of course,  how foolish of me, I should have realized it TALKS."  She snorted the word.
	Tahr's  jaw muscles twitched in a barely restrained  hostile  grin. "Oh yes, he talks."
	Eaher looked at me. "You talk do you? Say something."
	I remembered Tahr's warning to be polite,  so I bowed my head  before saying. "Is there something you would like to hear me say,  High One?"
	Tahr's  ears  twitched  in  a smile  as  everyone  but  Rehr  expressed various degrees of surprise then rapidly tried to  hide  it.
	"I did tell you he spoke Sathe," she said.
	"Why  is it. . . he wearing such strange  clothing?"  R'rrhaesh  asked. "Looks like a walking bush."
	"That is his own clothing," Tahr replied.
	R'rrhaesh,  sitting opposite Tahr, lifted his spouted goblet  to his mouth and took a swallow, staring at me over the rim.
	"Do you know where he is from?"
	"No,"  Tahr plucked something out of the rabbit  carcass  in  front of her and popped it into her mouth, "not really."
	"'Not really'," Schai echoed, "Has he not told you?"
	"He has told me,  but it is difficult to comprehend. Imagine  a world that is ours, but not ours."
	"You  talk in riddles Tahr," said R'rrhaesh.  "How can  that  possibly be?"
	Tahr attempted to explain my theory of what had happened.  A  theory  that  was only a patchy framework built from what  I  had  seen  and experienced.  Her audience listened  skeptically, taking  occasional  draughts from their cups. When she finished, there  was  silence for a few seconds.
	"Huh. . . you  expect us to believe that," Schai  snorted  into  his ale.
	"Believe what you will." Tahr picked a bone off her  plate."  He is here,  and that is the best way I have heard of  explaining  his presence." She bit into it with a loud crunch.
	"Have you not thought of the fact that he may have come from  across the sea?" Eaher asked.
	"Yes. . . and I prefer the other explanation. You have not seen  some of the devices he has with him,  they are far in advance  of  anything we can produce. He says his people are warlike and I for  one would far rather have them on another world than on the other  side of a stretch of water," Tahr replied smoothly.  She used her  tongue to lick the marrow out of the bone.
	After the last bone had been split,  Rehr leaned back in his  chair surrounded by his red robes.  He must have been hot in them  even though for me it was a cold night.
	"You have all been summoned here as the guests of Shirai. He  knows  that he does not have long to live and so he  has  ordered  that the Ceremony be held whilst he lives.  Now, as in ages past,  on  the  eve of the winter [solstice],  you shall meet  for  your  final trial, the Challenge to determine who shall rule."
	On the delivery of this cheerful note, Rehr rose and brushed  out of the room.

******

	Walking   alone  down  the  dim  corridors  was  a   strange  experience.  The only light came from the occasional torch in its  sconce  or  the dim glow from under closed  doors.  My  footfalls  echoed loudly.  Occasionally I would see a Sathe who would  hurry  past me.  I started whistling softly, then hastily stopped as the  sound was amplified eerily in the stone halls.
	  I  found what I hoped was the right spiral  staircase  and  came out on what I recognised as my floor.  When I arrived at  my  door I put my hand on the latch, then hesitated.
	"Ah. . . what the hell. . . "  I sighed.
	I  knocked on the door just a few steps down  the  corridor
	"Come in K'hy," Tahr said, her voice muffled by the wood.
	Her room must have been one of the first class guest  rooms. Wooden furnishings that fairly glowed with age and polish,  ample  lighting, colourful rugs on the floor.
	She sat at her desk,  a quill pen in one hand and sheaves of parchment on the desktop in front of her. The jewellery had been  removed and her fur was ruffled, as though she had  been  running  her hand through it.  She cocked her head to one side as I stuck  my head in.
	"I  will  leave if you are busy,  it was not  important,"  I  said.
	She leaned back in her chair.  "No. Please, come in. I could  use a distraction."
	I closed the door behind me and went over and perched on the  side  of  her  desk.   The  parchments  were  covered  with   the  streamlined scratches of Sathe script.
	"Sometime I will have to learn to read," I said.
	She looked surprised for a second. "I had forgotten that you  cannot. Do you have a written language?"
	"Of course."
	"Could  you  show me some of your script?"  she  asked,  and  handed me the quill and pushed an inkwell across the desk.
	I  took  up the quill awkwardly.  Tahr had to  show  me  the  proper  way  to hold it and dip it in the ink.  As  neatly  as  I  could, I wrote on a scrap of parchment
	'KILROY WAS HERE'    
	Tahr eyed the text curiously, but didn't ask what it meant.
	"Can you spell my name in your language?"
	I spelled her name as well as I could: phonetically. Alongside it, she scratched something in Sathe.
	"That is my name."
	It looked vaguely like a Pi symbol preceding a trident.
	"Tahr, Rehr said that only four heirs have made it. How many  were there supposed to be?"
	Tahr  glanced  at me,  then gave a  body  wracking  shudder.  "K'hy. . . there should have been twelve heirs tonight."
	"What do you think happened to them?"
	"What nearly happened to us."
	"Dead? Eight of them?"
	She  waved  an  affirmative  miserably.  "Eight  plus  their  staffs."
	I was silent for a while.
	"But they were your rivals.  I saw how you did not get along  with the others tonight."
	"True.  They  are  my rivals,  but I grew up  with  them.  I  get. . . got  along with some of them better than I did  with  those  fools Schai and Eaher. . . K'hy, some were my friends."
	I didn't understand it.  "But why kill them?" I asked.  "Why  try to kill you?  The Gulf Realm again?  What does the Gulf Realm  have to gain from that?"
	"Confusion," Tahr began to explain.  "Perhaps more land. All  the  heirs  hail from the most affluent Clans,  the  Clan  Lords'  offspring. On the night of the Choosing only the best will be the  High  Lord  of the Eastern Realm,  and their Clan name  shall  be  their title - as Shirai is my Father's." Tahr dipped her quill in  the  inkwell  and  wrote a few  characters  then  began  absently  tapping the nib on the paper.
	"Should  the  Gulf  realm succeed in  killing  us  all,  the  hierarchy that the Eastern Realm is built upon will be undermined  for a time.  Other Clans, less-reputable clans - undoubtedly some  of  the  southern  families sympathetic to  Gulf  causes  -  will  squabble  for  the opportunity to send  Candidates  to  Mainport.  There  would be clashes between clans and the possibility of  the  Realm itself being fractured, the centre of power being dislodged  from Mainport."
	Tahr  dipped the pen again.  "If the Gulf wanted to  invade,  they  could  not pick a better time.  For a long time  the  Realm  would be staggering around like a headless bird. . . " she left that  scenario for me to finish off.
	"But  they have not killed you all," I said.  "What  happens  now? You know the Gulf Realm is behind what has happened."
	"At  the best?" her ears drooped.  "I do not  know. . . At  the  best I see the Gulf Realm being sanctioned by other Realms  until  there  is a reduction in military forces and then as  a  goodwill  gesture handing us the disputed territories along the  Borderline  River. Temporary.
	"At  worst  they  deny the  accusations.  They  continue  to  stockpile  troops  and weapons along the Borderline  River  while  playing  for time.  When they are ready they will fabricate  some  excuse  and invade anyway, 'to reclaim lands snatched  from  their  ancestors'!" Tahr snorted in disgust and jabbed viciously at  the  paper. A wonder the quill didn't break.
	"What about your army?" I asked. "Allies?"
	"Our army cannot compare with theirs!" she spat.  "We  could  perhaps  match  the numbers with conscripts,  but the  number  of  well trained and equipped personnel would be on their side.
	"As for allies. . . Perhaps the Lake Trader coalition. They are  an unknown,  but as things stand now the Eastern Realm is a  warm  coat  of fur between them and the chill of the Gulf  Realm.  They  would be reluctant to lose us, but how reluctant I do not know."  She  slammed her hand down on the paper.  Now the quill  snapped,  the feather fluttering to the floor.  Tahr's nose wrinkled at the  mess  of ink-blots she'd made on the paper.  "Now  look:  I  have  ruined  a  perfectly good piece of parchment," she  said  with  a  strained smile that rapidly vanished.  Her head dropped into  her  hands.  "My Ancestors,  K'hy!  All I see is war!  Do I want to be  High Lord?"
	I  didn't  know  what to say.  I got  up  and  stood  behind  her,putting my hand on her shoulder.  Her muscles were bunched up  like steel knots under her fur.
	"Hey, whatever happens I believe in you."
	She  leaned forward and moaned softly.  I could  sympathize.  She had come home to find her father blind and dying and most  of  her childhood friends dead. I couldn't advise her. I  felt useless.
	"Tahr," I stroked her shoulder, the fur, "there is something  my  people  do to relax.  Relieve some tension. And it feels good. I am not sure  if  it  would work on you, but do you want to try?"
	She reached up and softly batted my face. "Why not."
	"Can we use your bed?"
	Her eyes widened. "K'hy. . . "
	"No, no," I hastened. "It is not that."
	"I should have guessed," she smiled. Sadly?
	We moved through to the bedchamber,  Tahr starting to  light  the lamp.
	I caught her hand.  "I do not think we need that.  Just  lie  down, on your front."
	She  did so,  leaning on her elbows,  and I knelt over  her,  making myself comfortable.  I didn't have any oil,  besides,  her  fur would make that messily impractical.
	She twitched and yipped in surprise when I took hold of  her  shoulders and started kneading the muscles.
	"Hai! What are you doing?" she yelped at the first pinching.
	"Just  relax," I reassured her.  "It is supposed to  hurt  a  little."
	She was tense. Hah! Understatement. Under her fur her muscles were like knots in steel cable. She didn't work out and still had musculature like an athlete. I really had to work at it, but as I continued I could  feel the tightness slipping out. She sighed like a  deflating balloon, put her arms to her side, and fell lax.
	Rubing steadily, kneading, slowly squeezing muscles between  my knuckles,  running my fingers along the vertebrae and shoulder  blades, pushing folds of skin with the heel of my hand.
	Her  furry  back felt really strange  under  my  hands,  the  muscles  not where I expected them to be. As she relaxed, her skin softened, rolling under my hands in loose folds. I was no  professional  masseur,  but a girl I had once known back home had shown me  the  basics.  No, I was no pro, but I learned as I worked. Her muscles  were strange and it took me time, reading the ridges and hollows,  making a map in my mind.
	Tahr lay there,  eyes closed,  breathing softly and steadily  with a deep burring sounding faintly in her chest. After about twenty minutes or so she stirred hersefl to say, "I thought you  said  that this was not to be sexual."
	I hesitated.  "It is not," I said, confused. Only then did I  remember  how  she had acted in the pool.  Rubbing her  back  got  her. . . 
	"No, don't stop," she murmured in a dozy, slurred voice as I  faltered in indecision. A rumbling purr escaped her. "Don' worry,  not in the mood. . . " her voice drifted off.
	"I think I am glad to hear it," I whispered.
	I kept up the massage for another half hour,  at the end  of  which her closed eyes, steady breathing, and gentle purrs told me  she was asleep. She stirred slightly as I eased off her expensive  breeches,  folded  them carefully,  and covered her with  a  thin  sheet. Calm again, she didn't stir.
	I  tiptoed out of her room,  pausing in the doorway to  look  back and wonder what her dreams were like.

******

	A light but steady snow was drifting down outside,  covering  Mainport and the Citadel in a chill white blanket.
	Inside the keep,  for the past week or so, it had not seemed  any warmer than the air outside.  I had taken to wearing my cloak  inside and was not pleased when Tahr assured me that it would  be  getting colder.
	We  walked down a passage,  our breath visible in the  chill  air as we talked.  Central heating was something this place could  really use.
	Tahr  was trying to describe the layout of the Keep and  not  having a great deal of success. It seemed like the place had been  designed  by a hundred different architects,  all of them  having  something  different in mind and quite possibly more than  a  few  not knowing what they were doing at all.  A lot of the place  was  actually  built into the hill itself,  like they took  a  granite  crag  and  chipped away at it to turn the whole  thing  into  the  citadel. Actually, that wasn't too far from the truth; and if you  think that would've taken a while, you'd be right.
	I  myself couldn't quite grasp how old the  place  was.  Now  Tahr  was  taking  me to a section where  some  of  the  original  construction  remained.  It was a place I'd been through  before,  but now she took me down a side corridor. "Look."
	"At what?"
	"The carvings. Take a good look."
	I did. There was something funny about the Sathe in them. . . 
	Goddamn!
	"They've got tails!"
	Well,  stubby, short ones,  but they were unmistakably tails.  There  were  other differences as well.  The posture,  the shape of  the  head,  there were probably more,  but the granite was too worn to  tell.
	"You see now?" she spread her hands. "This was an early part  of the Citadel,  walled up and only recently uncovered. We do not  really know exactly how old it is."
	"But. . . but  how  can the. . . "  I was so  flustered,  I  found  myself speaking in English.  I tried again.  "But this is  CARVED  into the wall!  Sathe must have had tails thousands of years ago.  Uh-uh. No way. I do not believe the Citadel is that old."
	She hissed in exasperation, then caught my arm. "Come on."
	I  followed her through the dim corridors deeper in  to  the  Citadel. Deeper than I had ever been before. Tracks had been worn  in solid stone by the passage of millions of pairs of  feet.  The  walls were covered with script,  some looking fresh,  others just  faint impressions in the rock.  The rooms were smaller and not as  well  constructed as the ones in the outer areas of the  Citadel,  more primitive.
	We emerged from a doorway into a cloister surrounding a huge  open field.  The snow had formed a hard crust over the grass that  lay  underneath.  As we walked across it,  we left two  different  sorts  of tracks:  my bootprints,  and Tahr's  strange  four-toed  prints.
	The snow drifted down, losing the Citadel walls on the far side of the circle in swirling whiteness. At first the objects in the centre of the circle were similarly masked, slowly becoming clearer as we approached. I felt my jaw begin to sag.
	A circle of huge stones stood out in the middle of the white  carpet,  snow-iced granite slabs about fifteen feet tall and  six  thick standing on end and joined together,  edge to edge,  at the  very core of the Citadel.  Time had worn down edges, leaving the  stones ragged, uneven. It would have been like Stonehenge or one of  those places,  but for the stones being joined together, making a  nearly  solid  ring, or perhaps a wall.  With snow, the silence, there was an air of dreamlike silence - timelessness - about the place.
	Tahr touched my hand, beckoning me to follow. Through a gap between the monoliths: a gate. Inside, snow was backed around the inside of the wall, hiding a rampart. There were lumps in the snow: squares and rectangles. Ancient stubs of walls buried, the remains of buildings.  A small village, houses gathered around a central gathering place.
	I  followed Tahr to the centre of the  circle.  She  brushed  snow from a buried stone and sat down, flakes settling on her fur.  She wore no cloak yet seemed unaffected by the still, cold air.
	No  sound made it through the curtain of snow,  and I  stood  there  in  the silence,  turning around on  the  spot,  my  cloak  wrapped around me against the cold. The stones were huge, ghostly  shapes in the whiteness.  It was a cold, timeless place. A circle  of memories and ghosts, none of them human.
	"What is this place?" I finally whispered.
	"This  is  the Circle," she replied quietly.  "This  is  the  heart of the Citadel, of Mainport, of the Eastern realm."
	I  cleared the rock beside her.  Lichen grew  there,  hidden  under the snow.  Beneath that there were indentations in the rock  that at one time may have been carvings.  I sat, turning to watch  her. She continued.
	"No  one knows just how long ago it was. . . certainly  it  was  before any records were kept,  before written language even, when  Sathe still had tails.  The stones you see here are old,  but not  as old as the Clan ground we stand on. We were born here, birthed  from  the  womb  of time,  here we grew  and  learned. From the forgetfulness of the past to today.  Sathe pass,  but  the  land  endures.
	"Across  the Realms,  in ages past,  Sathe came together  to  grow.  Where  they succeeded there are the ancient Clan  grounds.  Where they failed: nothing but dust and a few fallen stones."
	She waved her arm in a gesture encompassing what lay  beyond  the white wall surrounding us.
	"As you can see,  the eastern Realm succeeded.  We have kept  building the Citadel,  our heritage, each Born Ruler adding to it  so their descendants will always know their Clan was standing over the Realm.  It  has pushed the town out as the walls moved  outwards.  Only recently have we started building new settlements."
	"How recent is 'recently'?" I asked.
	"About three or four hundred years ago." Tahr replied.
	I looked around at the time worn rocks.
	"Sometimes  we  find caves," she continued in  quiet  tones,  almost  as  if she were speaking to  herself.  "Sometimes  tools,  sometimes skeletons of. . . we think Sathe, but they have no hands.
	"Now do you believe?"
	I nodded slowly. "I do not have much choice. You can be very  convincing."
	She hissed and swatted me on the arm.
	"Hang  on. . . If you have been building this place  for  those  thousands of years,  then why are there not enough Sathe to  fill  all those empty rooms in the citadel?"
	She  looked away from,  then back at me as though trying  to  make a decision about something.
	"Many families have left for the frontier towns.  There  are  not  nearly as many Sathe in Mainport as there were  fifty  years  ago.  I am starting to get cold, so you must be  frozen. . . yes,  you  are  shivering. I think we should go back now."
	It was true I was starting to shiver, but for some reason I  her story about families emigrating grated.  Why would  whole  families  up  and  move  out?  I  was  sure  that  there  weren't  television adds and glossy sales brochures advertising a life  of  easy riches in the small towns.  This is not the kind of  culture  where  people just move on a whim:  where they live is  all  they  know. Adventure is a risk.
	She had something she didn't want to tell me. Well, that was  her perogative, I wouldn't push her. . . but I was curious as hell.
	Behind  us,  the  stone circle disappeared in  the  drifting  snow.
	Back in my room,  I banked up the fire until I had a roaring  blaze  going.  Then I pulled the drapes on the evening  snowscape  outside,  stripped, wrapped myself up in a sheet and flopped down  before the warm hearth. Standing around in the snow had gotten me soaked.  The cloak was not - of course - water resistant, and the  melting snow had seeped right through the fabric.
	I  huddled in front of the fire and prayed that  the  stuffy  feeling  in  my sinuses wasn't another cold coming  on.  I  could  foresee that they would be a irritation all too common here.

******

	I could pay my way in this world I discovered. I didn't have  any  particular  skill,  but  a little knowledge can  go  a  long  way:far better than American Express.  Accepted in more places as  well.
	Those long months ago Tahr had tolerated me because I seemed  to  be an intelligent animal of some kind - a  novelty.  As  time  passed  she realised there was more to me than met the  eye,  had  come to understand what I could mean for her people.  She had  so  nearly betrayed the Eastern Realm to protect not only me, but the  learning I carried.
	Now her gambling could bear some fruit.
	Textiles,  both  linen and llama-wool based  cloth,  were  a  major trade item in the Sathe culture,  especially in the Eastern  Realm where the climate was ideal for cotton plants.
	Collected  by hand,  the wool would be  laboriously  cleaned  then wound by hand onto spindles:  a slow,  tedious process  that  produced  yarn  with  patches  that  were  sometimes  too   thin,  sometimes to coarse.
	It was only a matter of a week to build spinning wheels  and  improve on the looms.
	With these the weavers and draperers could not only  greatly  increase  their productivity,  the yarn and cloth would be  of  a  much  higher  quality and able to fetch a higher price  from  the  merchants of other Realms.
	The success of those projects boosted my confidence and  the  faith  of the Sathe.  I asked for - and received - some tools  to  help  me: A  draughting  board,   T-squares,  quills  and  ink,  a  plentiful supply of paper. Some of the stuff like protractors and  compasses  I had to design from scratch and I worried  about  how  inaccurate they were.
	It's a paradox:how did you build precision machinery without  precise  measuring  equipment?   and  how  do  you  make  precise  measuring equipment without precision machinery?
	I  had  trouble with that one when I had to come up  with  a  solution to the problem of putting a regular thread on a lathe to  be used for making the threads on screws, bolts, drill-bits, etc.  The answer I came up with had to do with heavy weights turning  a  mechanism that etched a spiral line up a rotating steel rod. . . 
	But I'm getting ahead of myself again.
	There are any number of inventions that can claim to have had a significant effect on my own history: the wheel,  gunpowder,  the  aircraft, television, the microchip -  to name a few. And they all did.
	They weren't quite what I was after. A couple the Sathe were  already familiar with,  others were impossible with the materials  I  had  to work with,  or I didn't want  them.  Aircraft:  now  I  thought  about  balloons  for a  while,  but  decided  there  was  something that was perhaps not as impressive, but was simpler, safer, and could have just as much of an impact in the long run.  .
	Invented  in my world by Johannes Gutenberg, the letterpress printing  press  made  mass  communication possible,  suddenly  presenting a way to print thousands of pamphlets,  documents,  or  books  in a fraction of the time it took scribes to write it  out  by hand. It meant that classical works and teachings - previously  only available to the clergy or wealthy - could become  available  to the man on the street.
	It took longer than the spinning wheel, but eventually I had  a  working  printing press based on one of those  old  mimeograph  machines. It was bulky, and the letterheads gave me a headache. I  started  with  a batch made from copper,  but they  were  not  an  outstanding success:  ink just doesn't adhere well to copper  and  the  metal  fluctuates too severely  under  temperature  changes.  Another  batch  made from  a  softer,  coarser  tin-lead-antimony  mixture finally worked.
	Some  of  the  other  things  I  came  up  with were even simpler, but they had their place.
	My hair had grown ridiculously long over the past weeks, and  I was not entertained by the idea of hacking it off with a knife:  it gives a lousy cut and hurts into the bargain.  I had taken  to  wearing it tied back with a headband,  but now I was starting  to  look like a damn hippy.
	Well, necessity IS the mother of invention.
	I  did  a trade with one of the blacksmiths  in  the  Keep's  smithy:  I gave him several tips on producing higher-grade  steel  and  sword  blades  and in return he helped me  make  a  pair  of  scissors out of a couple of daggers.  He profited all the way  in  that one, being so impressed by the simplicity of the idea that I  had no doubts he would probably start to sell a few on the side.
	There was no way that I could cut my hair myself,  even if I  did have a good mirror, which I didn't. Sathe don't cut their fur  - they shed.
	So where the hell am I going to find a barber?
	Tahr was astonished when I knocked on her door and told  her  what I needed.
	"You would like me to WHAT?!"
	I repeated myself: "I need some help cutting my hair, if you  could."
	She stared at me as though I was crazy.
	"But why would you want to cut it?"
	I sighed.  "My hair does not stop growing while it is short,  like your fur.  It grows. It becomes uncomfortable." I untied the  headband to demonstrate.
	"Ah. . .   I  see what you mean," she said,  obviously  amused,  then  gave an overly-dramatic  sigh.  "I,  the  Shirai,  grooming  animals. . . "
	"Well, if you don't want to, I could always go down to the stables and ask a groom. . . " I gave her an expectant look.
	"Oh, very well," she hissed. "I will cut your fur."
	I bowed deeply.  "Thank you,  High One. I will be forever in  your. . . "
	"Ah, stop the noise," she playfully cuffed me over the ears,  grinning. "Now, sit down. How do you use these things?"
	She  worked slowly and carefully at first,  then  picked  up  speed,  using  her  claws to rake the hair  into  position,  then  trimming  it  with rapid snips of the  scissors.  I  watched  red  clumps falling onto my lap.
	"Do all h'mans have to do this?" Tahr asked.
	"Most  of them," I said.  "There are humans  who  specialize  in. . . ah. . . cutting hair. That is their job."
	She came around front and looked at my face to see if I  was  joking.  "You are serious.  They actually make money just shaving each other?"
	"Someone has to do it."
	She  snorted.  "I  have  said it before and I  will  say  it  again: your world sounds strange."
	"Yours  is  rather weird," I retorted,  then yelped  as  she  yanked out a few strands of hair with one pull.
	"Oh, I am so sorry," she said smugly.
	"Sure you are."
	She  didn't  answer,  but I could imagine  her  smirking  to  herself as she returned to the business of cropping back my hair.
	There  was  quite a pile of copper coloured hair in  a  ring  around  the chair when she finished.  I checked the result  in  a  small mirror she had.
	Interesting style. It resembled a Sathe mane: shorter on top, longer at the back and sides.
	"Hey, not bad. . . "
	"And not good?" she grinned.
	"No,  it  is  good." Well, it was. . . different. "Have you done this  before?"
	"Well," she looked coy. "I have groomed llamas before; there  is not a great deal of difference."
	"Thanks a lot."
	While  I cleared up the strands of hair lying  around,  Tahr  was examining the scissors. "Can these cut other things?" she asked.
	"What?" I looked up from my work with the small brush.  "Oh,  yes. They can cut parchment, cloth. . . better ones can cut metal."
	She  picked  up a sheaf of parchment lying on  her  desk. The  scissors cut through the yellowish material cleanly and easily. "What other devices are you dreaming up?" she asked.
	"Well,  I left your scholars in the library drooling over  a  device that can print a document over and over,  as many times as  is necessary. Humans call it a printing press. There are hundreds  of other things that I should be able to think of."
	I  dropped the hair into the fire,  where it  sputtered  and  curled  before  being consumed by the  flames.  The  chimney  was  drawing  well and the smoke was quickly sucked out of  the  room. 
	"Since I groomed your fur, there is something you can do for  me," Tahr smiled.
	With some trepidation: "What?"
	"That  thing you did to my back the other night.  Could  you  show me how?"
	"Um. . . fair enough."
	Despite the chill in her bedroom she stripped off and sprawled on the bed while I settled beside her. She  sighed and rumbled softly while I showed her how to rub and pinch  flesh between the fingers,  how to read the muscles. I'm not even sure she was listening, just lying there, half-dozing while I worked.  Her fur was  so  different  from human skin:  coarse,  dark on the  outside, softer, lighter in near her skin.  I couldn't use oil, but the fur helped  some. Her rump wriggled as I ran my fingers down the side of her spine.
	"I  must try this on a Sathe male," she murmured after a while,  "It  will  drive him crazy."
	I didn't say anything.
	"What about you,  K'hy?" she suddenly rolled over and arched  her back,  her fur-tufted crotch thrusting up. "This would not do  anything for you, would it?"
	I yanked my hands back like she'd turned red hot,  unable to  tell if she was joking or not.  "Umm. . . Look,  Tahr,  we have been  through  this before.  You are. . . beautiful,  but I just  cannot. . . " I trailed off.
	"You did not seem to find it so difficult back in the cave,"  she  retorted.  "I  KNOW  you enjoyed it as  much  as  I. . . By  my  Ancestors,  why  are  you  not more like us  in  the  mind?"  she  lounged back and tapped her temple with a claw.
	I was flustered,  embarrassed, and a bit angry. "You want me  to act like a Sathe?  Before the unsuspecting Tahr could move,  I  grabbed her and pinned her arms to the bed.  She just stared back  at me in surprise.  "Is that what you want me to do?" I demanded.  "To take you like Tarsha did?"
	Her  eyes sudden turned big and black and I realized what  I  had just said.
	"Oh God!  Tahr, I am. . . I am sorry." I rolled and lay  beside  her  on the bed,  covering my face  with  my  arm.  "That  was. . . I did not mean it like that."
	She  didn't say anything,  but I felt her hand on my  chest,  her other one drawing my arm away from my face. "K'hy, your eyes are watering." She reached out and caught a  tear on a clawtip as it meandered down my cheek.
	"Aw, shit ," I muttered and wiped my sleeve across my face.
	"You do want to join,  do you not?" she smiled at  me:  that  lackadaisical drooping of her ears.  With one hand she toyed with  a strand of my hair. Her other hand. . .
	"I. . . Tahr, but. . . Jesus! " I was out of the bed, backing away from her. "Tahr,  don't. . . " I stumbled out the  door,  my  head  swimming in confusion.
	She  was  sitting there staring at me as I fled back  to  my  quarters. How could she be so. . . so blase about it?
	She's alien, that's how!
	My desk was covered in paper; plans and sketches and ideas. I stood and stared  gloomily at them for a while,  then one sweep of my arm sent them  fluttering  to the floor.  The inkwell made a satisfying crash as the heavy  glass  shattered and  the  contents stained   the  floorboards.
	" WHY ME?!"
	I screamed it at the top of my voice. Of course there was no  reply.
	Mainport shone in the moonlight,  the light being  reflected  from the snow that softened the contours of the  landscape.  Five  floors  below me,  the snow-covered courtyard surrounding the Keep was almost glowing: black shadows and silver-blue snow dotted with the tracks of the  Sathe  who  had  crossed  it  in  the day.  A few were  still  moving  around, dark  shadows on the pale backdrop.
	Five floors down. . . would it be quick?
	God!  What was I thinking?!
	I shook my head and slowly made my way to bed,  tugging  off  my boots and bouncing them off the walls. The bed was cold and empty. I huddled there, knowing it always would be.
	
 ******

	Tahr  on the wagon fending off shadowy assailants.  On  both  side her comrades and friends were dying on steel blades. The  water flowed red, a solid red. The whole river ran blood.
	She turned to me, eyes wide with fear, pleading. Blood; her's  and her companions' made her fur soggy. She held out a hand.
	I slow motion I saw the crossbow bolt hit her in the  chest,  sinking  in.  Her  head flew back,  mouth open in  a  red  tinted  scream, before she crumpled out of sight. . . 
	The  M-16 in my hands vanished as I moved forward, toward  the  figure lying in the mud amidst the corpses.  I nudged it over with a boot.
	Tahr lay with her ribs laid open, spilling her lifeblood  into  the earth.  Her eyes flickered open,  her mouth working  in  agony and we were on a gravel beach, her blood streaming over the  stones to a red sea.
	"K'hy? Help me. . . "
	"Tahr. . . No! Oh, God,no!"
	I  turned away. Turned away and started off down a road that stretched over the horizon.
	"K'hy. . . "
	"No!"
	I  was walking back down the road.  Behind me a  dark  shape  sprawled   in  the  mud,   joining  the  earth  and   stones   in unmovingness.
	Death   isn't  a  state  of  mind  -  it's  a   condition. . .  
	"TAHR!. . . no"
	Tahr stood before me in the water,  wet fur clinging  to  her curves, a playful grin on her face.
	I continued, walked past her.
	Tahr sprawled out on her cloak near my feet in that  relaxed  attitude that only cats can adopt,  her fur blending in well with  the golden grasses.
	"Dreams  can  say a lot about one.  What  are  your  dreams,  K'hy?"
	I left her again.
	She  crouched on the soft sand in a cave,  the light of  a  dying  fire flickering across her tan fur.  She was naked.  Glowing eyes  watched me, then she stabbed a sword into the sand between us.
	"You can't even accept what you want.  Hah!  Find  yourself,  K'hy."
	I turned my back and walked on.
	"Tahr! No. . . Wait!"
	The  whole  scene grew smaller,  dwindling in  the  distance  behind me.
	There were flames, heat. Through the roiling inferno I could see a figure writhing: dying. Sometimes human, sometimes not. Then there was a flare of whiteness and everything faded. . . 
	Like a film looping. Back at the ford, I saw her die again.
	"TAHR!"
	There  was  a lurch like falling and I woke up  grabbing  at  sheets, my heart hammering.
	The  darkness  of my room surrounded my  like  a  comforting  blanket.  My own were in disarray,  half on the bed,  half on the  floor. The whole bed was drenched and chill with sweat.
	For  a long time I lay there, watching moonlight waxing and waning across the far wall,  listening  to  my  heartbeat settling down. The floorboards were rough and cold under my feet when I swung out of bed, crossing the pool of blue light from the window to the water jug by the door.  I took a long drink straight  out  of  the pitcher,  then dashed a handful across my  face  and  leaned  against  the  chill stones of  the  wall,  clenching  and  unclenching my white-knuckled hands, shivering.
	What was that old poem I'd learned way back?  There'd  been  an old drifter who'd stopped by for lodgings with his ragged hat  and scarf, everything he owned in a beat-up pack.  He'd been a history professor or some such  once  and  was an encyclopedia of personal observations of the  world.  There was something he'd told me,  original or from some old sonnet,  I  never  knew:

Here we all are, by day; by night we're hurled
By dreams, each one, into sev'ral worlds

	I was living a dream.  When was dawn due?  I sighed down at the jug in my hands. I wanted to wake up.
	"K'hy?"
	I  whirled, banged my shin against the chest.  There  was  the  shadowy  man/ not man shape of a Sathe standing just  inside  the  door:
	"It is me."
	Tahr. I opened my mouth,  then closed it again,  looking away  from  her.
	"The guards summoned me. You were crying out. They were not sure what to do." She  paused,  then asked, "The dreams again?"
	"No. . . not those," I ran my hand through my  hair,  surprised  at the trembling. "Different," I said. "It is nothing."
	Her shadow moved: "You were screaming. Nothing?"
	"Tahr. . . please."
	She came closer. "You are shaking all over. Get back to bed,  you will freeze!"
	It  was then I realized that I was still naked,  and so  was  she,  but she grasped my arm firmly and with and almost  clinical  detachment led me back to the bed where I collapsed on the fine cotton sheets. She drew the heavy fur covers up over me then perched herself  on  the  edge of the bed and studied my face for a  while  before  speaking.
	"Not  the  same?" she asked with wrinkles marching  up  her  muzzle. "Worse?"
	I closed my aching eyes and swallowed. "Different."
	"Ah."
	There  was  an  awkward  hesitation,  a  tension,  then  she  shifted. "You will be all right?" she asked.
	I nodded and she patted my shoulder then stood to leave.
	"Tahr." The name caught in my throat.
	She stopped and turned, eyes flashing with a titanium shimmer.
	I  held  my  hand out to  her:  "Please,  I  need  a  friend  tonight."
	She stared at my hand, then took it. I pulled her and she fell on me and pinned my arms to the bed: gently, hissing soft laughter.

******

	Something was tickling my nose.
	I  pulled my head away from Tahr's furry side; snorted.  She didn't stir.  I reached over to touch her, gently, then lay back and idly ran my fingers  through the soft fur on her mane, thinking.
	Last night had been. . . good. Bewilderingly strange, but good.  I was coming to realise just how much this strange woman meant to  me. There'd been none of the fumbling from the first time, more laughing and teasing, biting and careless claws, and this morning  there  was  none  of that guilt that had plagued  me  last  time;  instead I had a craving for a cigarette.
	Outside it was snowing again; fat flakes adhering to the fogged windowpanes like intricate lacework,  the clouds  looking  like  lumps of lead against a steel grey background.  The air  in  the room was chill but the bed was as warm as blood.
	Tahr  stirred  against  me,  rolling over  and  nestling  up  against me,  still curled up in a small ball.  I ran a finger  up  the  top of her broad nose,  tracing out the light  stripes  that  pushed over her forehead.  She was warm and soft, so was the bed.  I dozed for a while.
	I opened my eyes when I felt her stir and shift as if to get  up.
	Tahr blinked down at me. "Oh, I thought you were asleep."
	"No."  I stretched out and rubbed my eyes then put my arms behind my head and  blinked  sleepily,  "Not really."
	She  placed splayed fingers on my chest and leaned over to stare down into my face. "Feeling better now?" she asked.
	"Much," I smiled back.
	"Huh, I too," she grinned at me. "You know some interesting tricks. Last night, it was fun."
	"That is the idea."
	She shook her head in slow imitation of me.  "Fun?  So often  they  climb  on and pump away until THEY are  satisfied.  I  have  never had a male work to please ME before. I have never been able  to look down on the male before, I have never been able to set my  own pace. Different. Fun."
	"Gee," I scratched my head.  "I have been called many things by women, but not usually 'fun'."	
	Tahr  laughed  and raked claws lightly down  my  ribs,  then  squirmed  so she was lying on top of me like a warm,  heavy  rug. I could feel her breathing, her heartbeat.  "You are so strange,  my strange one," she murmured,  stroking my  face.  "In  your body and your mind and your moods.  Your  moods,  perhaps they are the strangest thing about you.  You turn me down  so  vehemently,  then you join with me with such  intensity. . . Why  did you change your mind?"
	I  casually laid my arms around her.  Her fur was strange  against  my  naked  skin,  the  tough  guard hairs and  the  softer  down-like  insulating layers beneath. Warm. Erotic in a way.
	"I do not really know," I half-lied.
	And  Tahr watched me with an amused expression.  "Huh,"  she  breathed gently. "That nightmare must have been a bad one."
	Lying  there  with her pinning me I couldn't  turn  away  to  avoid her eyes.  Instead I stared up past her at the ceiling, the wood and the rafters. "Just say it  made me realise what you mean to me.  I needed a friend; you were  there."
	"Just  a  friend?" she dipped her head and rasped  a  tongue  like wet sandpaper around my nipple, nipping with sharp teeth.
	I yelped. "Alright! More than just a friend!"
	"Hmmm," she purred.
	"You  vicious  female." I stroked the fur along  her  spine,  lightly  tracing the ridges of vertebrae.  She gave a  stuttering  hiss. Ticklish?
	"Vicious?"  she  grinned,  carnivore  teeth  near  my  face.  "Reminds me. You are still interested in using a sword?"
	"I. . . Yes."	 
	"This afternoon," she said,  "I want to do some sparring.  I  need the practice. You may want to come along to watch. See how it is done."
	"Sure, friend."
	She laughed down at me and licked my neck and chin.  "Do you  feel in the mood again? A? Good! This time I am on top!"
	It   was  in  the  early  afternoon,   after  a   remarkably  stimulating morning, that I followed Tahr to the exercise hall.
	The hall was in the innermost ring  of the citadel, the ring just  before the central keep.  To get to it we had to cross  the  central  courtyard,  ankle  deep in drifts, the  falling  snow  cutting visibility way down.  The ice on the cobbles made footing  treacherous. . . well,  treacherous  for  me  anyway;  Tahr's  claws  stopped her feet from going where she didn't want them to. At least my boots kept the cold out.  Even  the thick pads on Tahr's feet wouldn't be enough  to  keep out the biting chill; she must have been rather uncomfortable  by the time we got across.
	In the shelter of a doorway I batted snow off my cloak while  Tahr did the same with her fur.
	"Jesus. Are winters here usually like this?"
	She  looked  up at the leaden skies.  "Not  usually.  It  is  rather mild for this time of year."
	I  followed  her up the  narrow  circular  staircase.  Sathe  coming down stepped aside as we made our way up.
	"Mild?!. . . It must be twenty below out there!"
	"Twenty below what?"
	"Forget it."
	Mild!  God,  we  never had it this bad back home,  not  even  during New York winters.
	At the top of the stairs a cold stone hallway was flanked by  rooms  filled  with  racks and displays of  battered  armour  and  weapons.  Sathe  in the corridor bore arms and armour of  various  types.  I  could feel their eyes on my back as  we  passed.  Tahr  ignored them.
	The size and temperature of the room at the end of the  hall  took my breath away.
	Like the Citadel, it was built on a grand scale. Rectangular  in shape,  it must have been about the size of a large cathedral,  a  football  field.  High around the rim - just below  the  heavy  wooden  ceiling - narrow windows let in scattered beams of  light.  It  was  rather  dim for me,  but the Sathe there seemed to be  having  no  trouble.  It was also cold,  with my breath frosting in the chill  air.
	Sathe were everywhere: drilling,  standing  around  watching  others fighting.  The room was echoing to  the clashing of metal as soldiers sparred.  Others were  using  wooden swords,  much like the ones used in Kendo. Circular mats  of woven straw covered the floor and on these hand to hand combat  was  underway.  Unlike human gyms,  there was no smell  of  stale  sweat in the air.
	"I have to get some equipment,"  Tahr told me. "You can look around for a while. Just watch at first, see if you learn anything."
	"Go ahead," I said to her retreating back.
	I wandered around,  staying near the wall out of the way  of  the trainers and trainees. There was a large noisy crowd standing  around  watching  something that I couldn't  quite  see.  Anyway,  curiosity got the better of me.
	The  sathe in the back of the crowd didn't notice me when  I  came  up behind them;  they were so absorbed in trying  to  watch  what was going on in front of them.  I was able to see over their  heads without to much trouble.
	A Sathe soldier was warily circling one of the biggest Sathe  I  have  ever  seen.  He came very close  to  matching  my  five- foot eleven,  maybe a couple of inches shorter. His build matched  his height;  muscles along his arms and across his chest  rippled  under the dark-cream fur.
	Their breath was fast,  hanging in glittering clouds in  the  cold air as they circled each other.  Fur was standing on end and  their ears were flattened back.  Each of them had their hands and  feet wrapped in strips of cloth, preventing them from using their  claws
	The  crowd was obviously divided:  Some were supporting  the  rather worried looking soldier,  and the rest the giant.  The two  circled  each  other on the straw mats. . . well,  the  soldier  was  doing  all the circling;  the giant just stood there  grinning at  his opponent.
	This  continued for about a half a minute before the  soldier  made  his move. He darted in and swung a punch at the giant's head. The  giant  hardly seemed to move,  he swayed back just far enough  to  avoid  the  blow and swung his own hand in a blow that  sent  his  opponent staggering back.
	The  blows had seemed more like slaps:  arms  swinging  wide  before  striking.  I  wondered at this before I realised  that  a  Sathe couldn't punch!	 Think  about  it.  A  Sathe has claws in  the  ends  of  his  fingers,  as  well  as the tendons for retracting  and  extending  them.  If a Sathe made a fist and punched something,  he would be  crushing  the tendons and muscles around those claws between  the  claw and the bones in his hand.  Despite the padding, there would  be  serious chance of the claw punching through the  palm  of  the hand itself. Kind of like clenching your fist with overgrown nails then punching something.
	When  not fighting in earnest,  Sathe usually slapped  their  opponents.  It may not sound like a very dangerous way to  fight - pretty pathetic in fact - but I know from experience that a  good  hit  could still rattle your brains; and if the claws were  drawn,  it could easily be lethal.
	The  soldier had gathered his wits about him again  and  was  once  again  trying  to  commit grievous  bodily  damage  to  his  opponent.
	"Hah!  come on, little one.  You are having some trouble?"  the giant goaded.
	The crowed cheered and jeered him on.
	The  soldier mustered his courage and moved  in  again.  The  giant blocked his blow and the returning one sent him spinning to  the mat where he stayed for the count.
	The  crowd burst into excited chatter.  Cash  changed  hands  amidst cries of triumph and curses of disappointment.
	"Anyone  else  feel  like  trying  their  luck?"  the  giant  grinned.
	I wondered if some idiot was going to volunteer.
	"Huh,  Thraest!"  called some smartass in  the  crowd,  "Why  don't  you  try  THAT  one?" I felt eyes  start  to  turn  in  my  direction and others took up the cry. Uh-uh, I began to back away  but  the  crowd  closed  in behind me  and  a corridor  opened  up,  clearing the way between the overgrown rug and myself.
	Thraest swaggered across to me, weighing me up with his eyes  all the way.  He stopped and deliberately grinned again.  I  tell  you,  a  Sathe who can actually look you straight in the eyes and give you  a smile like he'd like to have you for dinner don't  inspire  confidence.
	"Can you understand me?" he asked.
	"Yes," I nodded cautiously.
	There  was a slight murmuring around us but he did not  seem  very perturbed. He slowly looked me up and down. "So, do you have  a name?"
	"Kelly."
	"K'hy."  He wrinkled his muzzle like he didn't like the taste.  "All right, K'hy, I am Thraest."
	"Get on with it!" someone yelled.
	Thraest  turned and snarled at the crowd.  The  front  ranks  shrank back a pace or so.  The giant rumbled in his throat,  then  spoke to me again, "Are you a good fighter?"
	I shrugged: "I can usually hold my own."
	"Ah, modest," his scarred ears twitched slightly. "Would you  be  interested in placing a wager on a match between the  two  of  us? Just a friendly match."
	I  looked pointedly over at his previous opponent, who was being carried off. A few spectators in the back rows egged  me on. "And what would the wager be?" I asked. "I have no coin."
	Again  his  ears flicked.  "Well,  I suppose a  bet  is  not  necessary. I have not had a decent sparring partner for some time. And it could be an interesting match, that is if you are not afraid. . . and I will not use my  claws," he added with a glance at my hands.
	Goading me.  He was the king of the heap and I was a new kid  on the block who needed to be put in his place.  It didn't matter  that  I  really had no interest in their  pecking  order;  I  was  bigger than he was and therefore a potential threat.
	One  of  his fingers was stroking the tooled  leather  of  a  padded glove.
	"Very well," I nodded slowly.	
	The crowd cheered its approval.
	And that little voice inside said You're gonna be sorreee. . . 
	We  moved  onto  the  mat and there was  a  brief  burst  of  chatter as bets were placed.  The crowd was  growing  quite  rapidly, more Sathe converging on the crowd.
	"What are the rules?" I asked.
	"No claws."
	"That is it?"
	"That is it," he grinned and the gloves creaked as he flexed  his hands.
	My heart hammered as we each moved to opposite sides of  the  mat, dropped into defensive crouches. The mat crackled and rustled  under our feet as we circled.
	Thraest darted forward,  fast,  and swung:  a wide, sweeping  blow that I dodged without too much effort, but only just managed  to avoid his other shot:  faster and closer. Then he danced back,  out of reach.
	Appraising me.
	He's  faster,  maybe stronger,  used to this.  I've got  the  reach, the stamina, and this is MY kind of fighting.
	I ducked forward and feinted with my left hand, a wide swing  mimicking  the Sathe technique, while my right jabbed  up,  nailed Thraest in the gut.
	It was like punching a tree.  I nearly broke my goddamned knuckles. Still, his breath deserted him  with a 'whuff' and he staggered back a few steps.
	He  recovered quickly and managed to block the hook I  threw  at his head,  stepping inside the blow. Before I knew it, we were  grappling.  Thraest had the edge on me in arm strength,  but  his  grip  was surprisingly weak.  We swayed back and forth for a  few  seconds  before  he hooked his foot behind my leg and  shoved  me  over backwards.
	Reflex made me keep my grip on his arm - pulling it over  my  head as I fell - and plant a foot in his stomach. He flew over me  and hit the mat with a loud thud and exhalation of air.  Some  of  the crowd cheered.
	He was up again,  shaking his head to clear it,  and came at  me. No style this time, just brute force and a flurry of blows. I  went  into  the classic boxing stance and managed  to  block  and  dodge most of them,  but the ones that got through left me with a  split lip and spinning head.  I staggered back a couple of  steps  with blood running down my chin.  Then, as he followed, I punched  him hard, a straight right jab to the nose.
	Thraest  yowled,  hands flying up to his face as  he  reeled  back.  When  he lowered them blood was pouring in a  steady  flow  from  his nostrils.  I followed that blow by pivoting on my  left  heel  and  bringing my right boot around  into  his  ribs:  hard,  staggering him again.
	And the crowd  was going wild! Blood drawn  on  both  sides.
	He  was  mad  now,  his muzzle wrinkled  back  in  a  blood- bespattered  snarl.  A thread of glistening saliva  snapped  into  droplets  as  he shook his head.  Then he  crouched,  yowled  and  rushed me.
	I  brought my boot up;  hard under his chin and  practically  flipped him over onto his back.
	Sweat trickled down my face.  Breathing hard,  I backed  off  and wiped my face. He was down for the. . . 
	He rolled onto all fours, worked his jaw, then clambered to  his feet.
	He wants MORE ?!
	Again  he came at me and again I took a couple to the  head.  By  that time neither of us were steady on our feet and the  room  seemed to be waltzing up and down. I shook my head and managed to  dodge a foot aimed at my groin. He caught me off balance; charging in again and grappling, bearing me over backwards. I tried to throw him again but he twisted and I hit the mat hard and he landed on top of me, a blood-smeared puma face baring teeth at me. A glove smashed into the side of my head and redness swam acoss my vision. Desperately I tried to push him off. Christ! he weighed a ton! His foot came up and raked down my leg and there weren't any gloves on his toe claws. I cried out, my hand fumbled through coarse fur and locked around his throat. I squeezed.

	He was raising his arm for another strike when I got his neck. He jerked away. Perhaps that might have broken a Sathe's grip on his throat, but my grip's a lot stronger than a Sathe's. I held on while his eyes widened, then he gagged and tried to pull away again. I squeezed harder, my own face aching from the savage grin plastered across it.
	He was making choking noises. His gloves pawed at my face and arms, trying to claw, his mouth hung open, his tongue curling as he made faint hacking noises. I held on, held on even when pale membranes began to cover his eyes. Then he went limp and heavy.

	I was panting hard enough for both of us. I pushed him aside and he fell to the mat, suddenly sucking air in huge, gulping lungfuls. I wobbled to my feet and stood over him, fist raised, waiting.
	It wasn't necessary: this time he wasn't getting up again.
	I don't know who was more surprised; me or the spectators. I  released  him and just stood there while a ragged cheer  went  up  and  my  supporters started collecting their bets.  Quite  a  few  seemed to have put their money on me. Suddenly my legs refused to  hold  me  up any more and I found myself sitting  on  the  coarse  matting   while  my  brains  tried  to   unscramble   themselves.  Damnation;  I can't see how anyone could get any enjoyment out of  boxing. The scratches on my leg were oozing thick blood, matting into the hairs. Shit.
	At least Thraest was still alive.  He'd rolled over and  was  lying on his back gasping for breath.  The blood leaking from his  nostril bubbled in time with his breathing.  I touched my own lip  and  looked at the smear of red on my hand then back over to  the  fallen Sathe giant.  His head lolled around and he squinted at me  through the swelling around his eyes. For  a time he just stared at me, then - ignoring  the  Sathe  gathered  around - hauled  himself across the  couple  of  metres  separating us to sit beside me. "So," he began, then coughed and rubbed his throat, "you  do bleed."
	"What did you think I would do?" I retorted, rubbing my jaw.  "Leak sawdust?"
	He  blinked, then - slowly - his  ears  dipped  in  a  smile.  "Saaa!  But  it  was  a good fight. How can you hold on like that?"
	I held up my hand, rotating it. "Put together differently."
	He stared at my hand also, his muzzle twitching, then asked, "Where did  you  learn  those  tricks?"
	"Part of my job."
	"What was that?"
	"Same as you: a warrior."
	He lifted his hand, then dropped it to the mat again. "I did  not know there are more like you. Where are they?"
	"Long  way  from here," was all I said as I  climbed  to  my  feet.
	"Ah,"  He reached up to wipe the blood from his  nose.  "You know, we should try again some time. I might have better luck."
	Now he knew how I fought? Shit, he'd probably wipe the floor  with me. I shrugged and said, "I shall see."
	When I found Tahr,  she was already busy; sparring with a young Sathe male  decked  out  in purple lacquered  leather  leg,  arm,  and  chest  armour. They were both damn good.
	The  blades  of the wooden swords they  were  wielding  were  hardly visible.  Held in a two-handed grip,  the laminated blades  slashed and parried at an incredible speed,  meeting with  abrupt  smacks of wood on wood, but always under control.
	I slumped down on a convenient bench, and dabbed at my split  lip,  watching them for half an hour as they danced  around  each other. They would face off, eyes locked in concentration, raise the blade in a salute, then blur forward to meet in the centre of the mat. Maybe thirty seconds at most and a blade would make contact. I'd always thought they aimed at the heart or something; you know, those movies where the hero would swing in on a chandelier and dispach the villian with a thrust through the heart. The Sathe weren't playing that game: they were aiming for the arms, the wrists, legs, a stomach if there was an opening. Just a tap and they would fall back, salute, start over. For an hour they kept this ritual going until they started slowing and making obvious mistakes. They both seemed to come to a tacit agreement  to call it a day. Tahr looked around and came over to me, working at the ties on her cuirass. She stopped cold when she got a good look at my face.
	"K'hy. . . By my mother's tits! what happened to you?!"
	"I got into a bit of a. . . competition," I slurred,  thanks to  my battered mouth.
	She looked exasperated. "Can I not leave you alone for a few  minutes without you getting into trouble?"
	"Sorry," I mumbled: chagrined.
	Tahr stared down at me, her wooden scimitar swinging idly in  her hands. "Well. . . who won?"
	"I did."
	"Really?" she affected surprise.  "If you won,  I would hate  to see what the loser looks like. Who was it anyway?"
	"Some  arrogant asshole called Thraest.  Not such a bad  guy  after you beat the stuffing out of him."
	Tahr  turned  to  the  Sathe she  had  been  sparring  with,  standing a discreet distance behind her: "Who is this Thraest?"
	"Thraest?  Ma'am, he is captain of the guard in the  northern  quarters,  also the biggest Sathe and ego in the Eastern  Realm."  His muzzle wrinkled in a grin, "Huh, I would have paid to see him  finally have his ears clipped. . . High One,  this is the individual  I have been hearing about?"
	"I do not know what you have been hearing,  but his name  is  K'hy. . . K'hy, this is H'rrasch."
	I stood and bowed slightly to him.  He looked surprised  and  hesitantly returned the gesture.
	"K'hy,  bowing  is not necessary.  He is simply a  warrior,"  Tahr sighed, raking claws through her mane. "Why did you choose a  fight?"
	"I did not have much of a choice."
	Her ears began to lay back: "Explain."
	"Well,  he  challenged  me and I could not  back  down  from  that."
	She  put  her hands on her hips and cocked her head  to  one  side.  "Too  proud to back away from a fight?  Let me  guess:  he  suggested you were afraid."
	"Well  what  would you have done?" I retorted. "I  can  not  imagine you walking away from a fight.  And as for pride, I have been dragged all around the countryside while you passed me off for a pet. I have been attacked, tortured, and generally walked  over.  I think I have the right to try and salvage a  little  self respect."
	She  blinked,  her ears drooping slightly,  then  batted  me  softly on the side of the face.  "Yes, I suppose you do. Come on,  it is time we started back."
	I  waited  with that trooper - H'rrasch -  near  the  stairs  while Tahr returned her weapon and padding to the nearby armoury.  The  young male was wrapped in an awkward silence,  unsure of  my  status.
	"Was that a good work out?" I asked him, trying to break the  ice.
	It didn't translate.  He looked up at me:  surprised, almost  scared: "Work out?"
	"I mean the practice; did it go well?"
	"Oh, ah. . . yes. Yes, very well. A good challenge."
	"Tahr is good with a sword?"
	"I. . . I have seen much worse," he said,  flicking ears  back.  Then he asked, "How long have you known her?"
	"Tahr?"  God,  how long has it been.  "I think  about  three  quarters of a year, I am not entirely sure. . . Why do you ask?"
	He made an absent gesture with one hand.  "Huh, never before  have  I  heard  anyone speak to a Candidate  in  such  a. . . casual  manner."
	"I guess I have never really thought of her as a candidate,"  I  replied.  "In fact I only recently found out that she was  the  Shirai's daughter."
	"Why did she not tell you before?"
	I gave a small laugh. "I never asked."
	He didn't have time to answer,  Tahr appeared through a door  beside us. She noticed our abrupt silence.
	"Anything I might have missed?" she asked.
	"Uh, no ma'am," H'rrasch hastily replied.

******		

	 I  was sore and aching when I got back to my dark and  cold  room. It was still early - about 8:00 pm - and I didn't feel like  turning  in  yet. The  day's activities had left  me  drenched  in  sweat. It didn't bother me too much, but a Sathe would really  have  something to turn his nose up at.
	Without television, radio, or books, the bath was one way to  pass the cold winter days. The warmth of the water warmed the air  and my bones,  loosening the muscles.  The tiny windows kept  the  room dark, so I could stretch out on one of the submerged benches  and just doze; listening to the gurgling of the water.
	I  barely opened my eyes when the door opened,  admitting  a  dim  patch  of light from the corridor and a  trio  of  Sathe.  I  didn't expect them to stay at the sight of me, but to my surprise  they  stripped  off and slipped into the steaming  water  on  the  other side of the pool.
	They  chatted amongst themselves and I listened to the  low,  sibilant sounds of their voices without really listening to  what  they were saying. I felt a strange, warm glow that had nothing to  do  with  the temperature of the water:  they were  beginning  to  accept me.

******

	The  fire in the hearth in the Great Hall  blazed  fiercely,  logs  that were not completely dry sputtering and popping as  the  flames  licked  up around them.  The fireplace itself  was  about  three metres long, and the heat it gave off warmed a large arc of  the big room.
	Overhead,  coloured banners hung from wooden rafters. Swords  and  crossbows  of  various  types hung  from  the  stone  walls,  interspaced with oil lamps every several metres.
	I lounged in a chair in front of the fire.  Despite the heat  coming from the fireplace,  it was still cool in the room,  and I  was  wrapped  in my cloak,  not paying to much attention  to  the  goings on around me.
	This Great Hall was the social centre for the inhabitants of  the inner keep.  Sathe of all walks of life, male and female, sat  or stood; drinking, talking, laughing. Games were also popular; I  saw  what looked like a variation of checkers being played  by  a  pair  off in a corner.  Elsewhere a group of pre-adolescent  cubs  were  kicking a small leather sack around,  and bets  were  being  placed on a pair of females who were arm wrestling.
	Things near the fire were a bit quieter.  A troubadour had a  small audience gathered around her, the flickering orange light on  their  fur  turning  the  scene  into  something   surreal.   The  instrument that she was playing was a lot like the one I had seen  being played in The Reptile all those weeks ago.
	The bulky instrument had a very deep,  mellow sound that the  troubadour  used  to  a good effect in her  songs. The  music  was  strange  to me, even though I'd had time to grow  accustomed  to  it, I was used to the fast paced music of home. Sathe music is slow  and flowing, the sounds blend into one another. Once you get used to the weird pitch, it's beautiful in its own way.
	The   songs   she  sung  were  heavy   with   dialect,   but  comprehensible;  songs  of ancient leaders and heroes  and  wars.  Nothing like modern human music.  I wish that this journal  could  bring across some measure of this music,  but translated. . . I feel  it would mean very little. In Sathe they have ryhme and metre; in English, they'd be awkward, nonsensical.
	Yet in reality,  it was something I enjoyed listening to.  I  still do.
	The  deep notes put forth by the pseudo-lute were  something  you could lose yourself in. I dozed, lulled by the flowing notes;  somehow they reminded me of water,  drippping in a forest after heavy rain, waves on a lake shore. . . 
	I guess I was almost asleep when a tug on my sleeve jolted me awake. "Huh?" I looked around, then down into a pair of green eyes.
	"Why do you look so funny?" the tiny Sathe cub asked, his  claws  still snagged in my sleeve.  He  twisted  his  hands to untangle them,  then he discovered my watch and  started  poking at the liquid crystal display behind the glass. I stared, not quite sure what to do.
	"Hfay!  Stop  that!"  A young female cub had  appeared  from  between a couple of tables and was making a beeline for the small  ball  of  fluff  who  immediately abandoned my watch and ducked behind my chair,  squealing.  The  girl  stopped a few metres away from me, obviously worried.
	"I am most sorry,  High One. He did not mean to disturb you.  I swear it will not happen again," she said, her hands fidgiting nervously.
	"It is all right. He is not causing any problems." At the  moment,  the object of our discussion had found how different  my  fingers were and was trying to find out what ways they bent.  "Is  he your brother?"
	"N. . . No High One, I just look after him."
	"Hey,  do  not  be afraid of me," I said.  "I do  not  bite.  Promise."
	Hfay clambered into my lap. "Tell me a story," he demanded.
	Fifteen  minutes later I had a small group of Sathe  sitting  in a circle around me.  Almost all of them were cubs,  but  there  were  a  couple  of adults  including  the  troubadour  listening  attentively  as  well.  I was not sure how well ghost  or  horror  stories would go down. Sathe don't have religion or believe in a  afterlife,  and  I  didn't really want to risk  scaring  the  cubs.  I  shouldn't really have worried about that.
	". . . and  so the crow opened her beak and let out a  terrible  screech.The cheese that she had held in her beak dropped down  to  the waiting fox who grabbed and swallowed it."
	"That  is  boring," piped up a tan cub with  black  stripes.  Various sounds of agreement rose from the small group.
	Well,  not everyone would like Aesop's fables.  I sighed and  looked across at the troubadour where she sat, ears flickering in  amusement. "Any suggestions?" I asked.
	"Interesting,"  she smiled.  "Stories about talking  animals, bearing a lesson.  I must remember those. . . but I think they would  like  something  a little more lively, with some action and excitement in it. A tale of  a  great  hero  perhaps? Do you know anything like that?"
	Something more lively. . . a great hero,  Okay.  I spent a  few  seconds gathering my thoughts.
	"In  a  land unimaginably far from here,  a  mighty  warrior  returned  from a war in another distant land.  A war in which  he  had given up his sanity for his homeland. The horrors he had seen  in this war,  the misery he had endured, the comrades he had seen  fight  so  valiantly  then be betrayed by  his  masters.  It  was  because of this,  it was because this was all he knew,  that  his  mind  had  been twisted.  He walked on the thin,  razor  edge  of  madness, unable to return to a peaceful life.
	"The name of this warrior was Rambo. . . "
	Hell, they loved it.

******

	The  heavy black oak door swung to behind me with a  muffled  moan of protesting hinges.
	My  quarters were cold and dark,  the flames in  the  hearth  having died to a small pile of glowing embers.  I sighed,  wished  for an electric heater,  then set down to the task of  rekindling  the fire.
	So few places back home still have fireplaces and those  who  do  seem  to think they're a  charming  anachronism,  quaint  and  pleasant, a  luxury.  I can tell you that when they're  your  only  source  of heat they aren't so pleasant.  You can't just  say,  I  don't feel like lighting the blasted thing tonight' and turn on a  radiator. You light the thing or freeze.
	I stuck another twig into the growing fire and wondered  how  many fireplaces there were in the Citadel. Pity the miserable sod  who had the task of cleaning the chimneys.
	When the small pile was blazing,  I tossed on a back log and  got  myself  a goblet of bittersweet wine.  I  had  been  telling  rehashed  human stories for the past two hours and my  mouth  was  raw.  Astonished how well mindless crap like Rambo  went  down.  There's  definitely a market for action adventure  amongst  the young, no matter what their race, creed, colour, or species. And the astonished look on the troubadour's face when I got going. . . that's something I'm going to remember for a long time. I'll have to try Star Wars on her some time.
	Sitting on the desk,  sipping from the pewter receptacle,  I  stared absently out the window.  The myriad diamond-shaped  glass  panes  that made up the window were acting like hundreds of  tiny  mirrors;  in  each  of them I could see myself  outlined  in  the  dancing  firelight,   the  stars  showing  faintly  through   the  dopplegangers.
	A scratching at the door disturbed my thoughts like a  stone  tossed  into a still pond and I started,  spilling dark  droplets of  wine.
	"K'hy?" called a voice; muffled through the door.
	Tahr.
	"It's open," I called. "Come in."
	The young Shirai did so,  letting the door close behind her.  A large Sathe armchair made of interwoven leather straps had  been  moved  into  my  chambers  and  she  flopped  down  in  it:  heavily.
	"Hiya, Tahr. What is up?"
	"Up what?"
	"Figure of speech. I meant: what is happening?"
	"Oh," she waved a hand vaguely.  "There are matters of state  to attend to. . . and my father."
	"Ah."  I  looked  at  the  slender  goblet.  It  offered  no  revelations so I drained it. "Would you like some?" I offered.
	She waved a No.
	"So, how is he? Any change?"
	Again she waved her hand vaguely then let it drop back  onto  the  carved  arm of the chair.  "Yes,  but not for the  better  I  fear."
	I was quiet for a second, shifting nervously. "I am sorry."
	She was quiet as well,  there was something on her mind.  "I. . . I do have something to tell you K'hy.  You know  that  the  Challenge will be tomorrow?"
	I  looked at the date on my watch; the 20th  of  December, the  winter solstice would be on the evening of the 21st. Tomorrow.
	"Uh, yeah! I had lost track of the time. So?"
	She waved her hand,  palm down. "I do not think you know what  is going to happen. I have not told you everything."
	An alarm went off inside me.
	"K'hy, we fight for the position of Born Ruler."
	"What  do  you  mean  'fight'?" It  sounded  like  a   stupid  question. . . Hell, it was, but she took it in her stride.
	"Tomorrow  night,  at  midnight,  the candidates go  to  the  Circle and there they fight. They fight two at a time, the victor  of  one  battle,   fighting  the  victor  of  another.   Do  you understand?"
	I nodded, the message still seeping in.  Elimination rounds.  God,  it sounded like  the  ancient  Roman  Circus Maximus.  "To the death?"
	Now she hesitated,  scratched at that strange little  furred  web between her fingers with a clawtip.  "That. . . It depends  upon  the  Sathe  fighting," she finally  replied.  "Sometimes  in  the  madness  of  battle they can kill. . . Or after.  It is  up  to  the  victor to decide."
	"Oh, jesus."
	One corner of her mouth twitched in a blatant imitation of my  grin: a flash of white teeth. "Saaa! There have been no deaths for  a long time now. However. . . "
	"However what?!"
	The artificial smile stayed, like an actor's mask, hiding what was really beneath.  "We live in interesting times. Things  can happen, change."
	"You think they would go as far as to kill you?"
	"Huh!" She delicately scratched her muzzle with a claw tip. "I  cannot say for certain what may happen.  There is a great deal at stake: Power, an entire Realm, and you."
	"ME?!"
	"Yes."  She  hugged herself, as if suddenly cold,  one  hand rubbing at the opposite arm.  "K'hy, understand this: whoever controls the Eastern Realm also controls you and your knowledge."
	"You as well?"
	"Saaa! K'hy, I would do anything for you! But I also love my  people.  I want to work WITH you, to help you as you help us, but  there are others who will use you as a means to an end. No offence intended, K'hy, but to many Sathe you are an. . . "
	". . . ugly misfit," I finished glumly. "None taken."
	I  sighed heavily and got up from the desk to  lean  against  the window sill.  I leaned my forehead against the cool glass  of  the window for a second. Goddamn, where had I lost control? There  were  things going on that I had no control - no knowledge -  of.  Here I was being bandied about like a prize at a county fair  and  my  closest friend and lover was telling me she may die the  next  day!
	"Shit!  Damnation!" On my feet,  I went over to lean spread- eagle against the window frame,  swearing impotently at  nothing.  "Why the hell  do you have to do this?"
	From behind me she said, "Because I was born to do this. All  of  my  life  I have trained and been taught to do  this  one  thing. For eighteen years. Now the time is here, and I must go.
	"I  have talked to Rehr.  He has promised that  if  anything  should happen to me, he will try to ensure sure that you are well  treated. That is all he can do."
	I  turned  to face her again.  "Tahr,  if you died  I. . . "  I  began, then trailed off.
	"What?" she asked.
	"Nothing," I shook my head. Oh, Jeeze! If she died. . . 
	"K'hy.  If I should. . . " now she stopped and studied me for a  few second. "I really cannot ask you to promise anything, can I."
	Again I shook my head.  "You are the only real friend I have  here." In response to her look of surprise I explained: "I do not  get out much - for some reason people seem to avoid me."
	The feeble joke did little to ease the  tension.
	  "Your  weapons. . . " I started to say.
	Now  she shook her head in a mimic of my gesture.  "We  must  use the weapons of tradition:  Swords,  our claws,  our teeth; no  more. To use your weapon is out of the question."
	"Oh,"  I  said,  my  hopes  deflated,  then  almost  angrily  demanded, "Why did you not tell me earlier?"
	She  hunched  forward.  "I did not want you to  worry,"  she  said.
	"You did not want me to. . . Oh God ," I knelt down beside  the  chair and leaned my head against her furry shoulder.  "You should  have told me, Tahr. You should have told me."

******

	Midnight. The moon had reached its apex.
	In the Circle - the very heart of the Citadel - a procession  of  nearly fifty Sathe and one human made its way  across  frozen  snow toward the ring of ancient monoliths. The sky was clear, the  moon  casting  a cold light on the snow  covered  ground,  giving  everything  a distinct shadow against the white  background.  The  warm circles of light cast by torches the Sathe bore were lost in  the vastness of the court.
	I followed close behind Tahr as she padded through the whiteness.  A  path had been cleared through the deeper drifts,  but still  a  crust of ice covered the ground.  I pulled my cloak a bit tighter  as  a  gust of wind whipped powder snow from a nearby  drift  and  swirled it around us in a chill flurry.
	Not that it bothered Sathe. Pelts fluffed out like fur coats while flakes speckled them with white. Cloaks were dark colors  - blood red,  night-sky blue, earth brown, kelly green - that the  strange  mixture  of moon and torchlight turned  into  shades  of  black.  The four Candidates wore only a pleated leather  kilt,  a  cloak,  and carried their swords. Tahr was bearing the  sword that she had worn when meeting the other Candidates for the  first time; the one with the dark stone inlaid in silver set  into  the pommel.  A heirloom of the Shirai Clan I had learned.  Handed  down from generation to generation.  Tahr didn't know how old  it  was.
	They were all there,  stalking across the windlown drifts: Tahr,  R'rrhaesh,  Schai,  and  Eaher.  Ready  -  although  perhaps not willing - to kill each other.
	The  circle  was  eerie  in  the  moonlight. Towering above the procession, the  great, black  monoliths cast short, black shadows as dark and chill as the ocean depths.  In the very centre of the Circle an oval area had been cleared of  snow.  The  generations-old remains of collapsed dwellings  lying  silent  and shrouded in cold whiteness made a labyrinth of  blue- white windswept mounds and icy gullies.
	The  column  had split up and Sathe were moving  around  the  edges  of the cleared area,  pushing the bases of  their  torches  into  the  frost-tempered  ground around  the  perimeter  of  the  arena, then left to take their places on the earth ramparts inside  the  standing  stones, brushing  the  snow  away  before   sitting  down: like  spectators  taking their places at  a  football  game. And like those spectators there were polarized groups, followers and hangers-on to the Candidates.
	"Tahr?"
	She didn't look at me. Her voice strange, undertones of something not human. "Go. Sit down."
	"But. . . "
	"Go."
	Nothing more to say. I opened and closed my mouth, then left her. Alone, I found my own seat.
	The figures in the centre were quite visible in the moon and  torchlight  against the white ground.  I could now see  that  the  unknown  individual in the centre was wearing red armour  beneath  his dark robes:  Rehr. He lectured the four Candidates at length,  then departed the arena.
	The  Candidates paired off: Tahr with Eaher, Schai  with  R'rrhaesh.  I  guess it was just luck of the draw,  who got  who.  There  were  no speeches or announcements,  they  just  moved  to  opposite ends of the oval arena and drew their swords.
	For a few seconds each pair just faced each other. I  could  see  their breath condensing and drifting away in small  clouds.  The torchlight sent rippling highlights of orange running up  and  down the naked steel of the swords.
	R'rrhaesh was the first to move,  blurring his sword  around  in a  two-handed arc that ending in a ringing clang  on  Schai's  blade as he parried, then thrust in return.
	As soon as R'rrhaesh's sword met Schai's,  Tahr  moved.  She  swung her scimitar in a slash to Eaher's side.  Eaher blocked - with a blindingly swift move - twisting Tahr's blade vertical and sending it flicking harmlessly away.
	There in that cold, snowswept arena, four intelligent beings  fought  each  other  for control of their  land. I felt so out of place there; isolated,  sitting  there at on that white-shrouded embankment  watching  them  fight  while all around  me  Sathe  sat  silently  huddling  in  their dark cloaks,  watching the  spectacle  taking  place before them.
	The  two  battles being fought down in the arena  among  the  remains of the first Sathe settlement seemed to drag on  forever;  thrust, parry, riposte. However it was only about fifteen seconds  before first blood was drawn.
	Schai was pressing his attack on R'rrhaesh who was defending  well,  but not quite well enough.  A sword thrust darted  through  R'rrhaesh's defence and was in and out of his arm before he could  respond.  He backed off a short distance and glanced at the blood  welling  from  the  gash  and soaking  into  his  fur,  then  was  instantly on the defensive again.
	However,  he  was  not  reacting with  the  same  speed  and  strength  he had been,  and  continually  retreated  before  Schai's onslaught. The contest became a foregone conclusion.
	R'rrhaesh did his best,  but as he moved backward,  he  lost  his  footing  on something buried beneath the snow;  a  stone  or  something.  It  didn't really matter what it  was,  for  as  he  stumbled, Schai took advantage of the moment and caught R'rrhaesh with  a solid slash across the thigh that his leather kilt couldn't turn. R'rrhaesh collapsed backwards into the snow as his leg gave  way beneath him, his sword spinning out of reach.
	R'rrhaesh  lay there spread-eagle,  totally  helpless,  with  blood  oozing  from his arm and through the hole  that  had  been  slashed in his kilt. I could see him lay his head back and close his eyes, knowing he'd lost.
	I don't know what I was expecting. Tahr had said it could be  a  fight  to the death,  but since Schai  had  obviously  won,  I  thought  he would let R'rrhaesh surrender.  I don't think anybody expected what came next.
	R'rrhaesh  opened his eyes in time to see the  final  stroke  coming,  in  time  to start a scream,  not in time to  avoid  it.  Schai's scimitar took him through the exposed throat, pinning him  to  the  ground like a butterfly on a board.  Even from fifty metres away I could hear R'rrhaesh's cry  cut  off  abruptly  and see the snow start to turn pink beneath him  as  he  briefly thrashed about.
	"Jesus Christ."  My face twisted in shock.
	Down  in the arena Tahr and Eaher still battled. Schai  pulled his sword from the now-still form of R'rrhaesh lying  like  a discarded marionette on the frozen ground. Calmly, methodically, he proceeded to wipe  the blade clean on the corpse's fur. There was a disturbed stirring among the spectators, but besides that: nothing.
	Tahr  and Eaher seemed to be evenly matched and after  their  initial flurry of blows,  were concentrating on strategy: a war of  attrition.  They  circled  each other warily,  probing  for  weak  spots, defending themselves.
	Eaher abruptly turned to the offensive,  stepping in with  a  lunge  at Tahr's shoulder,  sword at arm's length.  That was  the  opening that Tahr needed. She avoided the swing, stepped inside a  return cut,  and grabbed Eaher's arm and pushed it. A foot behind  Eaher's leg was all that was needed to make her sit down heavily.
	Before Eaher could move to get up, she found herself staring  at the blade of a scimitar poised just centimetres from her neck.  She  dropped her sword and tilted her head back in a  gesture  of  submission.
	That  tableau held for a few seconds:  Eaher sitting on  the  ground staring up at Tahr.  Tahr standing with her ears laid back  against her skull and her sword at Eaher's throat. Then Tahr said  something,  lowered  her sword,  and arrogantly stalked from  the  arena with scarcely a drop of blood being shed..
	Eaher  shakily got to her feet and  looked  around.  Besides  her,  the only other occupant of the arena was the cold corpse of  R'rrhaesh  staring at the sky.  She picked her sword up from  the  snow, shook it  and wiped it clean. Then she slipped it back into  the sheath and without looking about walked from  the  oval  of  light cast by the torches.
	R'rrhaesh's  body  lay there until four Sathe  came  out  to  carry it away. There was no coffin or stretcher, they just lifted  it  between them and carted it off into the  darkness.  A  single  small figure trailed after them. His bodyguard.
	I was cold all the way through,  both from the snow that had  melted  from my body heat and from what I had seen.  I hugged  my  knees to my chest and buried my head in my arms.  I thought I had  become immunized to death to a certain extent,  but what I had  seen  here. . . killing  an opponent who had  surrendered,  in  cold  blood. . . in front of an AUDIENCE for Christ's sake!
	I almost missed the beginning of the final round.  I  lifted  my  head when the muttering from the crowd died down in  time  to  see  the two finalists walk into the arena;  Tahr from the right and Schai from the left.  Again  they   started   without  preliminaries.
	They both fought ferociously: twisting and turning, thrusting  and  parrying,  using all the tricks that they could think of  or  had  been  taught:  Kicking ice at the  other's  face,  tripping,  slashing with claws,  yowling abruptly to distract the  opponent.  Not a model display of sportsmanship.
	Despite  my  reactions  at  seeing  what  had  happened   to  R'rrhaesh, I found myself mesmerised by the two Sathe combatants, by their blurring swords.  Reflected  firelight  flashed as they fought  and  an  occasional  spark jumped as the scimitars clashed.
	However  they  were both tiring rapidly,  starting  to  make  mistakes, slowing down. Tahr had blocked Schai's blade so that it  glanced  off  her scimitar,  but she misjudged what he  would  do  next.
	A quick reversal by Schai sent his sword blade slamming into  Tahr's. Not her blade, her fingers.
	I  could  hear her scream and see the trampled  snow  become  stippled with dark spots.  Tahr lurched back until she was almost  at the edge of the arena,  her left hand clenched into a fist and  tucked under her right arm.  She still held her sword, but limply  clutched in her right hand.
	Schai came on remorselessly, and from the way he renewed his  attack on her I could see that he wouldn't be satisfied  until  Tahr ended up like R'rrhaesh,  and there was fuck all I could do about it.
	Tahr continued retreating before Schai, leaving a  trail of blood in the snow behind her and starting to stagger.  She  almost lost her sword as  she  desperately  tried to block another blow,  but instead of stepping  back,  she  surprised Schai by jumping straight at him.
	Schai  was  still in his follow through and wide  open  when  Tahr came at him, abandoning her sword and attacking him with her  bare  hands.  With her wound forgotten,  she cannoned  into  him,  knocking  him  over backwards with her  on  top.  They  struggled  frantically in the snow as they fought for their lives.  I  could  hear their snarls and yowls; it sounded like a catfight.  Suddenly  Schai exerted himself and rolled over on top of Tahr, pinning her  arms  with his body and struggling to reach for her  throat  with  claws extruded.
	He  would have killed her but for the fact that he  had  his  face too close to her's.
	". . . ,  our teeth and our claws,"
	I watched, wide-eyed, as Schai thrashed about in the snow,  reflexes from limbs that did not yet know they were  dead.  Blood  pumped from the gaping wound in his neck where Tahr had torn  his  throat out with her teeth.
	She dragged herself out from under his still-twitching  body  and  stood.  For a few seconds she wavered back and  forth,  then  collapsed face first over the not-quite-dead Sathe beneath her.
	The snow slowed me down,  made me stumble and fall face-first, filling my shirt with ice before I  reached  the two bodies in the arena split seconds ahead  of  the  Sathe.
	I rolled Tahr over.
	"OH, Christ!"
	The  blood that drenched her was a gory conglomerate of  her  own and Schai's.  She was still breathing,  but faintly, her body wracked  by tremors. The last two fingers on her left hand were hanging from the palm by flaps of skin while blood pulsed  from the stumps, staining the snow with crimson blotches. My belt made a satisfactory tourniquet around her arm,  but I felt queasy as I  tightened it. I needed a pressure bandage. . .
	"Dammit  Tahr.  Come  on,  don't you dare die on  me. . . "   I  wasn't  aware I was muttering in English until Rehr put his  hand  on  my  shoulder  and pulled me aside to let  a  Sathe  physician  crouch beside her.
	"You,"  the  physician pointed out two  of  the  surrounding  Sathe, "take her to her quarters."
	The  two he had told to carry her moved to pick her up; one  grabbing her feet and the other her shoulders.
	"Fuck  it!"  I screamed.  "Get away from her!" They were  so  startled,  they almost dropped her.  I scooped her up in my  arms  and pushed my way through they crowd toward the gateway.  I could  feel the blood seeping through my shirt: cold and sticky.

****** 

	The  morning  sun was just starting to shine over  the  wild  hills  on the far side of The Narrows and in through the  windows  of Tahr's room.
	She lay on the bed,  her bandaged hand resting on the  sheet  that  covered her.  The worst of the blood had been  washed  off,  leaving  enough  to make her look out of place  among  the  clean  sheets.  From  the time we'd brought her in she'd laid in  shock,  slipping in and out of consciousness.
	The physician they called had had to remove the two fingers,  there was absolutely nothing we could do to save them.  All I was  able  to  do was to put antiseptic on the  remaining  stumps  and  stand  by with the morphine in case it was needed.  Afterwards  I  sat and kept an eye on her as the night passed.
	Morning found her with a fever and delirious.  She  muttered  and moaned in her sleep, her skin, her nose, had grown hot to the  touch. Through the night she was panting and thrashing in her sleep, sometimes screaming out. The several times I heard Tarsha's name I tried to calm her with cool cloths and water.
	Rehr returned the following morning, fifty hours after the duel. Fifty hours without sleep. It was the advisior who  ordered me to go and get  some  rest.  "You  will be told if she wakes. Now get out of here. Go on, before you collapse!"
	I  wearily acquiesced and stumbled back to my  room,  almost  knocking  over  one  of the guards who had  been  posted  outside  Tahr's  room.  In my quarters I fumbled with the buttons of  my  shirt,  but in the end I couldn't be bothered.  I just fell  onto  the bed, pulled a sheet up, and was asleep.
	I awoke to sickly light outside. Dawn? My watch  told  me  that  it was 19:32.  Shit! I'd slept most of  the  day  away!  Pausing only to grab an apple and a mouthful of water,  I double- timed  it  back to Tahr's room,  pushing past the guards  at  the  door.
	The doctor was carefully packing a bundle of herbs away into  a  small  bag   as I barged in.  He  looked  up and jumped. "Rot! What is that?!"
	I ignored that. "How is she?"
	He swallowed and said in a small voice ,"What?"
	"What word did you not understand," I growled. "How is she?"
	"Ah. . . well,  the fever has passed, but she is  still very weak. What ARE you?"
	"Is there anything else you can do?"
	He stared, then waved a 'no'. "I have done all I can, and I have other patients to attend to. I. . .ah. . .I will be back later." He picked up the bag and sidled past  me  out of the room, keeping an eye on me until he was out of the room.
	I  went over to the side of the low bed and looked  down  at  Tahr as she slept.  Someone had cleaned her up; the clotted blood  had gone and her mane and fur had been combed out.  The  bandages  on her left hand had been changed for clean ones. They were doing their best,  but I would have traded my soul for  a  real  hospital with proper equipment. I knelt down and touched her mane  where  it pushed over the crown of her head between  her  pointed  ears, then moved my hand down to the damp leather of her nose; she did feel cooler.
	"You'll be fine."
	  I gave her fur a final stroke while wishing I could feel as certain as I sounded,  then got  up  and  walked around to the window,  where I leaned against the sill and  watched her; she didn't even twitch.
	Outside  the  window,  an icicle had stretched down  from  a  stone  that  stuck out from the wall above it.  It acted  like  a  prism on the setting sunlight striking it,  refracting the  light  in  much  the same way as a crystal would.  Moving  pinpoints  of  light  were formed by water running down the side of the  icicle,  dangling from the end,  and either freezing solid or being  blown  away by a gust of wind.
	Hours  passed,  the  icicle  growing as  the  sun  vanished.  Attendants scurried about the room lighting lamps and candles.  I  watched the darkness spreading.  A soft flurry of snow damped any  lights in Mainport.
	"K'hy?
	I almost tripped over my feet turning.  Tahr was watching me through half- closed eyes.
	"God, you had us worried. How are you feeling?" I sat  down on the side of the bed.
	She closed her eyes before answering.  "Alright I  think. . . "  Her eyes snapped open and she tried to sit up. "My hand!"
	"Steady. . . lie  back." I gently forced her back down  on  the  bed.  "I  will get you a drink." I patted  her  shoulder  then ducked out to the other room and poured a mug of water  from  the jug there, at the same time telling one of the guards outside  her  door to inform Rehr that Tahr was awake.  When I  got  back,  Tahr  was  resting her bandaged hand on the sheets  covering  her  chest, her other hand was gently caressing it.
	"I  have  lost  them,  have  I not." It  was  not  really  a  question.
	I  sat  down  on  the bed  again.  "Yes,  I  am  afraid  you  have. . . but it could have been worse. Here, try this. . . slowly." I propped her up  as  she  sipped at the water and set the mug aside when she said  she'd had enough.
	When  she spoke again,  her question was strange:  "Why  did  Schai spare me?"
	"What?"
	"Why did Schai not kill me? I was. . . it would have been to easy," she seemed to sag as she said this; difficult when you're lying down. Before I could answer, the bedroom door opened  and  Rehr walked in,  slowly and cautiously,  carrying a small satchel and closely followed by the physician.  I got up and went to lean  against the window sill.
	"Shirai," Rehr bowed respectfully.
	"Rehr,  what  is going on?  Is this some kind  of  joke?"  Tahr demanded, struggling up on her elbows looking distressed and  confused.
	Rehr was startled at this. "Excuse me, High One?"
	"Tahr,"  I interrupted gently,  "You won.  You now rule  the  Eastern Realm. . . You won."
	She sank back and looked from Rehr to me,  the doctor lurked  in  the  background  and  kept  his  mouth  shut.  "I  won?"  she  whispered. I nodded. She closed her eyes and took a deep breath, then opened them to stare at the ceiling. "I do  not remember. . . How?"
	Rehr told her.
	Having seen it once already, I didn't need reminding. I stared out the window while Rehr spoke and tried not to listen.
	When  he  finished,  there was a silence,  broken  when  the  doctor asked to examine her.
	"There is no need; I feel fine," she protested, not very  wholeheartedly.  I wondered just how much use it would be  having  this sawbones examining her,  then realised that while he may not  know much about the finer points of medicine,  he could at  least  recognise  what were good and bad signs in a Sathe.  More than  I  could do.
	He  took her pulse then her temperature,  touching her  nose  and   holding  his  hand  there  for  a   second.   She   shifted  uncomfortably.   Unwrapping  the  bandages  on  Tahr's  hand,  he  examined  the  stumps where she had lost the  fingers.  Tahr stared in horified fascination, then looked away. Living meat, clotted blood and bone. I felt queezy myself. Tahr  grimaced when the surgeon rubbed a oily looking salve on them.
	"She  will be alright," he diagnosed.  "Give her rest and  a  lot of liquid to make up for the blood she lost.  She should  not  do anything too active for the next week or so." So saying he dropped his little jar of ointment into a bag. "I will check  on you from time to time," he said as he left.
	"Is there something you wanted,  Rehr?" Tahr asked after the  physician had gone.
	"There  were a couple of matters of state that I  wished  to  discuss,"  he  replied.  "There are the matter of  the  Succession  Honours."
	"Rehr,  I am tired.  I do not think that I would be able  to  make  the best decisions at the moment.  Is it so urgent that  it  cannot wait until the morning?"
	"I suppose they can wait High One.  I will let you rest." He  backed out the door and pulled it closed behind him.
	"I had best leave as well then," I said and started to  move  toward the door. Tahr stopped me.
	"No K'hy.  That was just to get rid of him." She patted  the  bed beside her.  "Here.  sit." I did so.  She coughed and touched  her  bandaged hand.  "I am sorry that you had to see  that,"  she  said. "But it was your choice."
	"I know," I nodded. "You did not have much of a choice."
	"But you still cannot get used to it, can you?" she said.
	"No, I suppose I cannot."
	"It is strange," she mused.  "You have killed almost a dozen  times, yet you say that death disturbs you."
	"It is a lot easier to kill someone when they are trying  to  kill  you  than  to  sit and watch  someone  tear  out  another's  throat," I said.
	"Yes,  and  this  time I was the one who had to kill  or  be  killed," Tahr replied. "As you said: I had little choice in the matter."
	I ran a hand through my hair. "I know. I cannot help it."
	"Enough  about that," she raised and dropped  her  uninjured  hand on the sheet,  as though chopping the previous  conversation  off  short.  "Do you think there is any chance of  these  growing  back again?" She lifted her bandaged hand.
	I shook my head. "No. I am sorry."
	"Huh,"  she  snorted  and glared at the hand as  if  it  had  offended her.
	"But  your wound is clean and should heal well," I tried  to  console  her.  "Just  keep it clean;  make sure that  anyone  who  touches  it while it heals has clean hands and boil any  bandages  before using them. It will be fine."
	"Yes,  our doctors know to keep wounds and sores clean. . . but  why boil bandages? You had me do that, for your chest."
	I  tried to explain about microbes,  viruses,  but my  heart  wasn't  really in it.  There were other  concerns.  Still,  it  seemed  to help Tahr take her mind of the pain in  her  arm.  She  listened attentively, grimacing occasionally.
	When I finished she grinned at me; pained. "What I wouldn't give for one of your physicians. Saaa. . . Your home sounds like  a  dream: a world free of disease."
	I shifted and shrugged.  "In some places,  yes. . . others, no.  There are Realms that are more advanced and wealthy than  others.  The wealthier ones have destroyed many disease,  in other  places  the poor suffer from the most common of them. Some people in more  isolated  areas  were given the knowledge to let them  and  their  children live longer,  but before they could use it properly. Now  there  is  starvation and drought in many areas where  there  are  more people than the land can support.
	"And we are not free of diseases. There is one that recently  appeared. It lingers in the body, then kills.  We have no cure for it and more forms of it are appearing all the  time. Last I heard about sixty million humans were infected, most  of them from the poorer Realms."
	For  a while the only sound was the wind howling around  the  walls of the Citadel.  "I have been here long enough,  you should  rest." I patted her shoulder as I got up to leave.
	Just  as I put my hand on the door latch,  she  stopped  me:  "You are not too disgusted by me are you?"
	I shook my head, then grinned.  "I guess I will have to learn  to put up with you, disgusting as you are."
	"Get out of here!"
	As I pulled the door shut behind me, I heard a brief hiss of  laughter.

 ******

	I ate my dinner in the great hall,  sitting at the end of  one of the long tables with my legs stuck out to the side. The furniture hadn't been built with my frame in mind.
	The Sathe at the table watched me curiously as I ate.  I was  used to their bolting chunks of food,  but to them,  taking small  bites  and  chewing  them thoroughly would  be  most  unusual.  I  finished off the meal loaf I was eating and washed the dry, half- stale  bread down with a swig of water from the wrong side  of  a  mug, much to the amusement of my table companions.
	One  of them seemed a little too amused,  was  laughing  too  loudly  and his voice was slurred as he called  out,  "Hai,  Ugly  One!"
	I kept drinking.
	"Ugly One! Shave-face! Yes, you!"
	I lowered my mug and weighed him up. Not very big, just an oversized mouth. Too drunk. Yeah, the last time I'd seen drunk Sathe it'd been a rape. Did they always lose it  that  bad? I hoped not. "My name is Kelly."
	He hissed and sputtered into his mug. A silence began to travel around the table like a row of tumbling dominoes as Sathe stopped their conversations. "As ridiculous as the rest of you. Look, Bald One, you do not even know the right way to hold a drink!"

	I drummed my fingers, beginning to get annoyed.
	He grinned. "Were your parents as deformed as you?"
	THAT did it. I froze, then turned to him and smiled. It wasn't a nice smile. "All right, what do you have on your mind? If you will pardon the exaggeration."
	He opened his mouth, then frowned and cocked his head to one  side? "What?"
	"Deaf as well as an idiot," I shook my head. "Well, what you lack in intelligence, you more than make up for in stupidity."
	There was a hissing of laughter from others,  and the  Sathe  who had spoken took a while to get it. When he did, he bristled -  literally  -  and  started  to  reach  for  something  at his belt.  One  of  his  comrades grabbed  his  hand  and  whispered  something;  the fire went out of his eyes.  He was helped out  of  the room, none to steady on his feet.
	Well, that could have gone worse. Didn't even have to fight. I  looked around at the Sathe staring at me.  "Everyone's  a  critic," I growled and finished my meal in peace.
	That kind of thing is one of the reasons I don't eat out that  often. It's also the kind of thing that can play on your mind. The walk back to my quarters gave my mind plenty of time for playing, so I was pretty wrapped up in my own thoughts when a Sathe stepped out before  me. "Shit!"
	 "Sir?"
	I  knew I'd seen him somewher before. "You are. . . Hrach?" I asked.
	"H'rrasch,  High One," he corrected. Oh yeah, the young male  who'd sparred with Tahr in the exercise rooms.  He was fidgeting,  his  eyes locked on me with iris black and wide.  "You have  seen  T. . . uh, the Shirai have you not, sir?"
	"No 'sir' please," I smiled, "I do not think I deserve that.  Yes, I have seen her."
	He   looked  uncomfortable,   clearing  his  throat   before  speaking. "Huh. . . uh, how is she? She was hurt badly. I heard. . . "
	"She will be fine," I forestalled him.  "She is just resting at the  moment."
	He looked as if a weight had been lifted from his shoulders.  That  look  was  more than just a loyal  soldier  would  have.  I  studied him thoughtfully and he squirmed. "Do you need to see her  about something?" I asked.
	"I   thought. . . she  might  remember. . . "  he   trailed   off,  clenching his hands.
	I smiled, "She is beautiful, is she not?"
	He looked up at me and I swear his eyes seemed to glow,  "Yes, she is. . . "  Then he appeared to realize what  he  was  saying and who he was saying it to.  "Uh. . . yes sir. Thank you sir. I am sorry I disturbed you."
	"Anytime." I replied automatically.  Watching his back as he  disappeared down the corridor,  I broke into a grin.  Seems  like  Tahr has got herself a not-so-secret admirer.	
	I  was  in my room later that  evening,  practising  on  the  harmonica I had acquired aboard Hafair's ship.  Why was it I only  felt  able  to  work  melancholic  airs  that  night?   My   solo  performance came to an end when guard appeared at my door, saying  Tahr wanted to see me.  I reluctantly left the relative warmth of  my room and followed her.
	Tahr  was still bedriddden,  propped up by a  small  mound  of  pillows. A glowing oil lamp  threw dull-redish light on pieces of paper scattered on the sheets in front of her: some covered with the bird scratchings of Sathe  writing  and others with what looked like maps. She wasn't alone: In a chair beside the bed a piece of night turned around and stared at me with wide green eyes. I stared back. It was a Sathe, a female, but her fur was black. . .or a brown so near black it didn't make much difference. I'd seen her around before, but she'd always kept her distance.
	A snort from Tahr interrupted our mutual scrutiny. She waved a hand as she made the introductions:  "Remae,  this is K'hy,  my escort and friend.  K'hy, this is  Remae, [Marshal] of the Eastern Realm's forces."
	I  bowed my head to her,  and she uncertainly  returned  the  gesture,  then she turned to Tahr. "Do you really think that. . . he  may be able to help?" she asked.
	"I  hope so," Tahr replied.  "K'hy,  look at these.  Do  you  recognize them? The area?"
	She handed me several rough maps of the eastern seaboard  of  America  and Canada,  and the area around the Mississippi  and  the  Gulf of Mexico. So, this was going to be a geography lesson?
	"I recognise them."
	"Do you know where Mainport is?"
	Where Mainport was was there; a triangle drawn in green ink.  I pointed it out.
	"Very good.  This area,  from the tip of the Swamp Lands, up  along the far side of the Sky Scratcher mountains and ending in a line from the Great Lakes to the Eastern Sea.  "Many of  these  names  were  new to me,  but I translated them as best  I  could,  surprised that the Sathe also called those lakes bordering Canada  the Great Lakes.
	Tahr continued:  "The Gulf Realm lies here, on the southern coastline, from the Borderline River extending down the peninsula  here,  and  up the Slow River here.  Their capitol - Riverport  -  lies  here,"  she pointed out the spot where New  Orleans  should  have been.
	"Here,  northeast  of the Eastern Realm are three more  Clan  lands. This area around the Great lakes is the domain of the Lake  Traders." She traced the area out with the crescent of a claw.
	"They  are actually two seperate Realms with an ancient  bond  of  allegiance between them.  Alone, they are small, but together they  are as large as the Gulf Realm, and much larger than us.
	"On the far side of the Sky Scratchers is the Open Realm. It  is  probably  the largest realm in sheer size,  but in  terms  of  cultivated and inhabited lands,  cities and the like,  it is  the  smallest and weakest realm."
	"Open Realm. Why that name?" I asked.
	"Because  of the vast plains that make up most of it,"  Tahr  explained.
	"Oh."
	Tahr  put  the  maps back on the bed,  and  picked  out  one  particular one. "Remae, explain to him  what has been happening,"  she  handed the map to the Marshal,  then sank back  against  the  cushions,  curled  her legs up under the sheets,  and closed  her  eyes.
	"Shirai,   you  are  prepared  to  continue?"  Remae  leaned  forward, concerned.
	Tahr opened her eyes again. "I am fine, just tired."
	Remae's  ears  flickered with worry.  "Should  I  have  some  Thamil brought in? It would help relax you."
	"Uh. . . " I started to speak, but Tahr beat me.
	"No," she gave me a smile,  a small flicker of her ears. "We  want to talk to K'hy, not listen to his snoring."
	Remae looked confused. "I do not understand."
	"Do not concern yourself. . . No,  no Thamil now. . . maybe later.  Now tell him."
	Remae blinked.  In the dim light,  it was as if her eyes had  flashed  off and on again,  she held the map while I peered  over  her shoulder. I could see she was nervous having me so close, her  ears  were at full alert and opalescent claws poked  indentations  in the paper.
	"Over  the  past  few months,"  she  began,  "small Eastern  villages, outposts,  and caravans around  this area have been attacked, most destroyed completely." She  pointed out an area covering the lower Appalachian  mountains  -  the  Sky Scratchers - down the Appalachicola river in Georgia  to  the Gulf of Mexico.
	"The smaller towns on our side of the  Borderline  River  have been raided, with crops burned, outlying farmsteads looted, Sathe killed. The Gulf Realm claims that settlements  on  their side have been attacked."
	Uh-huh. I had an inkling where this was leading. I scratched  my chin and asked, "Who has been doing the raiding? Bandits?"
	The black Sathe looked surpirsed. "Ahh, the survivors  say bandits.  But bandits do not usually  attack  armed  convoys,  nor  garrison towns.  And these bandits did  not  fight  like  bandits: they were too well trained and equipped."
	I remembered being bound and helpless in the back of a wagon  by  Sathe  soldiers wearing tattered cloaks  concealing  red  and  black armour. I said so.
	"Yes,  the Shirai has told us as much," Remae  replied.  "We know they are smuggling troops into our borders, we just cannot prove anything."
	"Why?" I asked.
	"We have never been able to catch them."
	"No. I mean why are they doing this?"
	"War seems most likely," she grimaced. "Internal  upset.  Disrupt supplies to outpost  settlements.  Destroy food supplies. Spy on our resources. Propaganda.  They will probably complain to the other realms that  we are not able to conduct our own affairs. They will insist upon sending a 'peacekeeping' force across the Borderline, posting troops in key areas such as river crossings, major towns, seaports.  That would  put them in an excellent position for an invasion.  With the river  crossings  already controlled, they would be able to move more troops into our Realm virtuable unopposed."
	She bared her teeth in a snarl at the implications of  that.  "The  Gulf  forces  would bite off a major chunk of us before any  of  the  other  Realms could send aid, even if they deign to assist us.
	"But at the moment, the bandits are our greatest worry. They  strike and are gone before we can get soldiers there." A frown creased her face, "It is  not  an  honourable  way to fight a war. Aside from disrupting traffic across the Realm they  are  causing  much  death, destruction, and fear amongst innocent people."
	Guerilla Warfare  I thought.
	Aloud I said. "You said that I may be able to help. . . how?"
	Tahr looked both awkward and hopeful at once, "Do you know of anything that might help us?"
	I sighed.  I had been kind of expecting this.  "Weapons and such? Yes."
	"What about finding those supurating bandits? You have had experience with that kind before?"
	"I know of them," I admitted. "We have the same kind of fighting back home. Same kind of problems. All you can do is be smarter or stronger. Difficult. Send oldiers with the present caravans,  even make  entire  fake caravans to lure them out and trap them."
	Remae tapped her leg with a clawtip. "Yes, we HAD thought of  that."
	"Well,  I might think of something more original. Tahr," I looked to her and held out my hands helplessly, "I am not a genius. I cannot do the impossible. I can give you some ideas and new tools, but working wonders is not my field. . .my expertise. All I can do is the best I can."
	Tahr's ears flickered and she gave me a pleased grin.  "I know. That is all we ask. Thank  you, K'hy. You will have all the aid we can give you."
	I smiled back. "Thank you. Oh, and a merry christmas to you."

******
 
	I  started  to learn the tactics the Sathe used  in  battle.  They were simple to the point of ridicule: not really so different from the way we did it a few hundred years back.
	The opposing sides would meet each other on an open  field and combat would take place in much the same way it'd done in  the human middle ages.  Archers would soften up  the  enemy with long-range fire. As the forces closed upon each other,  the archers stopped firing because of the chances of hitting  one  of  their own.  After that things started to break down: communications were lost, units seperated and the battle was left  up  to  the  individual soldier with his or her sword.
	Disorganised  and  chaotic with much loss of blood  on  both  sides.
	I watched the Citadel guard drilling in the exercise hall. I examined their swords.
	I saw something that threatened to really screw my plans up.
	The Sathe used their light swords two-handed.  Okay, I had noticed that, but I hadn't realized why.
	Humans  are descended from apes;  brachiating creatures  who  are  at home hanging from branches.  Apes' hands are  crude,  but  they  are built for grasping.  Even a chimp has a powerful  grip,  much more powerful than a human's but without the finese.
	Sathe  are descended from (no prizes  for  guessing),  cats. Probably some kind of large hunting cat, maybe the  bobcat or puma, it doesn't really matter. I don't know how it happened, but  somewhere  in  the  convolutions  of  evolution,   Sathe  started  manipulating things.
	Starting  from  paws they had a lot further to go  than  the  apes of my world,  and even now they lack the grip that my simian  ancestry has given me. With their claws and speed, they never had  to rely upon being able to grip a tree branch or weapon to escape  from or fight predators,  and it is only with the development  of  their tools that they had need of a strong grip.
	But their grip was not as strong as is needed to swing a sword  one  handed and hold against the shock as it meets an  opponent's  blade,  armour,  or  flesh.  With  two  hands  they  were  wicked  swordsmen,  but  they were incapable of holding a shield  at  the  same time as their scimitars.
	I trashed my plans of skirmish lines based upon the  ancient  Roman and Greek ranks  and started anew.
	
 ******

	The target mounted on the straw bales at the far end of  the  hall settled between the V of the modified sights. I squeezed the  trigger,  and without waiting to see if the quarrel would hit the  target,  braced the cross bow against my hip and pulled the lever  that  re-cocked it.  As the bow-string caught on the  catch  that  held  it  back,  another  quarrel dropped  into  place  from  the  magazine.  I  raised the bow and fired,  repeating the  operation  several times.
	Remae  and  several others whom I had been told  were  other  high  ranking  Sathe officials and Clan Lords stood  off  to  the  side,  their breath turning into small clouds on the chill air in  the hall. They  eyed the target and looked fairly impressed.
	One  of the Sathe,  a scholar by the name of Sthrae  stepped  forward  to  speak.  He could say and express ideas  that  I  had  trouble saying in Sathe.  "Imagine archers armed with these bows.  They can fire several times as fast as a normal crossbow. Imagine  what a toll they would take upon infantry."
	There was a brief conversation between the officials on  the  side, before Remae called out. "Continue."
	"Of  course." Sthrae bent over and picked up a  sack, pulling  out  the next item.  The chain metal links rattled and  glittered  dully  in the light coming through the windows along the  top  of  the hall.  He gave it to me and I carried it over to the watching  Sathe, they tensed as I came near.
	"This is a type of armour that you do not have,  Sthrae  has  called it link-armour." I handed the chain-mail hauberk to Remae.  She turned it over in her hands, flexing the steel links.
	"Is this worn as it is?" one of the other Sathe,  a grizzled  looking veteran, asked.
	"It can be worn like that, but is more effective over leather  armour," I said.  "Padding helps: It stops the links pinching the  flesh, although I think that will not be so much of a problem for  Sathe."
	There were a few smiles.
	I had been thinking about a suit of plate-mail armour.  With  a few modifications in the design and materials,  I'd be able  to both cut down on the weight and make it tougher. I'd decided against it. The  Sathe favoured their speed over a lot of armour.  After  all,  if  you can't be hit, then there's no need for hot, clumsy armour.
	Devices such as the five metre long pikes and halberds they'd never seen before.  The long pole arms  had  simple leather straps a Sathe soldier could sling  over  his  shoulder to help him hold the unwieldy wooden poles.  They  found  these interesting, especially the news that a formation of these were practically invulnerable to attack by swordsmen, but the real pice de rsistance had no blades.
	I  unwrapped  the  bulky cloth bundle  and  sorted  out  its  contents.  The airtight ceramic and steel-bound cylinders I slung  over  my shoulders on their straps.  There was a  metal  tube  that  stuck out the bottom of the right cylinder and then made  a  ninety degree turn and continued on for another sixty centimetres  before  ending  in  a tapering nozzle with  a  simple  mechanical  mechanism attached to it. I tucked this nozzle under my right arm  so that it stuck out in front of me.
	"High  Ones,  if you would kindly move back. . . " a couple  of  guards ushered the watching Sathe officials back to what I  hoped  was a safe distance.
	My  hands were steady enough as I lit the small  taper  that  stuck out in front of the nozzle and opened a valve on the  pipe;  we had tested this before, but something could still go wrong. Too wrong and they'd be scraping me off the walls with a spatula.
	I  advanced on the target,  the bale of straw,  until I  was  about  six  metres away,  then I took a breath and  squeezed  the  trigger.
	The  stream of compressed methane,  oil,  and coal tar  shot  from  the muzzle in a pressurized stream,  igniting as it  passed  over  the taper,  and flying in a blazing orange-blue arc to  the  target.
	Three  more two second shots,  each blast of flame  throwing  dancing light on the walls, floor, and spectators. When I lowered  the sputtering muzzle of the flame thrower, the bale of straw was  a pillar of flame dancing up towards the roof, sparks floating up  and extinguishing themselves before reaching the huge timbers  of  the rafters.
	I  turned  back  toward  the  Sathe  spectators,  my  shadow  flickering and wavering in front of me.  Snuffing out the taper,  I shrugged out of  the  harness  and let the riveted cylinders fall to the floor  with  a  metallic clang.
	The  Sathe were staring at the pyre behind  me,  their  eyes  wide and filled with the sparks that danced behind me. I couldn't  tell if they were delighted, overawed, or shocked.
	"You asked for a weapon. . . you got it."
	Not  waiting around for an answer,  I tucked my hands in  my  pockets and walked out,  still feeling the heat from the fire  on  my back.

******

	 There was a tower in the citadel,  not one of the  highest,  but  it  still  commanded  a complete  view  of  Mainport  below.  Occasionally,  a guard on punishment detail huddled in the lee of  a merlon,  but more often than not the tower was deserted.  As it  was now.
	It  was  a place I could go whenever I wanted to  be  alone.  Maybe that sounds strange coming from someone who is about  alone  as one is ever going to get,  but it was another kind of solitude  I sought.
	I  leaned on the embrasure between the teeth of the  merlons  and  watched the activity on the streets below slowly die as  the  shadows drew longer. The temperature hovered around three degrees  celsius,  it  would have been colder if it weren't for  the  wind  that  whirled  and twisted through the walls and turrets  of  the  Citadel.
	Wrapping  my  cloak a bit tighter around  my  shoulders  and  settling the hood, I watched as the setting sun tried to beat its  way  through  the  layers of granite  cloud  that  blockaded  the  western horizon, backlighting them with a corona of orange.
	I've  always loved sunsets.  Usually  they're  restful,  but  tonight. . . 
	"Do you often come up here?"
	I  jumped,  turning,  then relaxed when I saw who'd  spoken.  "So they let you out."
	"It took a bit of persuasion,"  Tahr smiled. "I had begun to wonder if I was Clan Lord or prisoner."
	"How did you find me?"
	She adjusted her own cloak and propped a shoulder against the grey stone of the ramparts.  "You are  not exactly inconspicuous,  K'hy.  I just had to ask." Green eyes  looked out at the clouds - now faded to a dull magenta - and  her  mane  whipped in the wind.  She brushed it back out of  her  eyes  with her right hand,  the left one still swathed in bandages.  "I  want to thank you for what you have given us."
	I didn't reply.
	She reached up and took my chin between two fingers, turning  my head, studying my expression. "You are upset. . . why?"
	I  jerked my head out of her hands and stared fiercely  back  at the alien world disappearing into the night. "I thought it was  obvious." I turned away from  the  view  and  leaned  against the solid,  wind-worn  granite of  the  merlo, watching Tahr.   She looked as if  she  fitted  there;  standing on top of a tower amid small  drifts  of  blown  snow,  the  wind sending her mane into  periodic  flurries  about her head. I continued:
	"Those weapons will be used, will they not?. . . of course they  will," I sighed. "So in a way I will be responsible for the death  or injury of everyone that those things are used against."
	Tahr gave a quiet sigh,  betrayed by the mist that condensed  in front of her nostrils.  "Yes, that is not a thought that gives  me  great  joy,  but they are for the protection  of  the  Realm.  Surely that counts for something?"
	I nodded curtly.  "That was why I gave them to you.  I owe  you  Tahr,  but  I do not know whether that justifies making new ways to kill people. I think I have started something  terrible."
	"It cannot be that bad, can it?" she tried to soothe me.
	"Dammit  Tahr,  have you ever thought about what it would be  like to be burned to death? To be maimed for life by flame? I had  a  friend who died by fire,  I saw his body." I shuddered at  the  memory.
	"From these will probably come bigger weapons,  able to kill  at  greater distances.  You will make a fire that cannot  be  put  out, even under water it will burn to the bone."
	Tahr opened her mouth to say something,  but I got my say in  before her,  "In my world, entire towns were burned to the ground  by this flame:  Buildings,  animals,  trees,  males, females, and  children.  The stuff was dropped by flying machines in a  blanket  that covered and destroyed everything below.
	"If you think that you will be able to keep it a secret, it will not work. The idea is too simple. My Realm developed  the  most  powerful type of weapon that my world has. They thought that  they  could keep it to themselves.  Within a few years, the rest of the  world also had these weapons."
	I let her think about that.
	K'hy," she finally said, "It was your choice. If you really  felt so strongly about it, why did you give it to us?"
	I slapped my palm against rock; once lightly, again harder.  "I said I  owed  you.  You needed a weapon to help you, I give you that. I thought that they would be too limited to be of too much use.  I could not give  you  the secret of my gun. . . " I broke off. I'd begun something  that I didn't really want brought up.
	She  came up to me and leaned against my  side.  "You  could  not. . . or would not? "
	I didn't answer. She prodded. "K'hy? Please tell me."
	Goddamn,  could I trust her for something that could be  the  pivotal  point to the future of her Realm;  life or death of  her  people? I wasn't sure.
	Maybe she read my mind.  "Please, K'hy, you can trust me. It  will go no further than these ears."
	"My  weapon,  can  be far more. . . deadly than  any  fire. . . " I  choked off.
	She  looked down at the town,  now lying dormant  beneath  a  growing  cloak  of darkness.  The suns rays were just  a  glimmer  behind  the  clouds,  "You would not want to be  responsible  for  that. . . I do not think I would either."
	"Someone will discover it, you can be sure of that. Then you  will be able to kill each other all you like."
	Her  eyes  opened wide in shock and I realized  what  I  had  said.
	"Tahr. . . I  did not mean that." I stuttered. I wanted to say something, to take it back, but the words failed me. I just hugged her close and hard.  I could feel her claws tense and then relax against  my  back as the fur on her muzzle tickled against my neck.
	Still pressed against my chest,  she touched my cheek.  "You  are as cold as a stone!  Come, let us get you into the warmth." A  claw snagged my sleeve, and she led me toward the stairs.

******

	Selected  Sathe trained with the new  weapons,  getting  the  feel  of  them and learning techniques and  strategies  that  may  someday save their lives.  I shared my time between the  exercise  hall  where  most  of  the training  was  carried  out,  and  the  workshops where work was being carried out on the flame throwers.
	I  wasn't  satisfied with the strength of the  cylinders  in  which the pressurised, volatile mixture was carried, and I wanted  more  tests carried out on the safety valve intended  to  prevent  blowbacks.  If one of those throwers exploded,  there wouldn't be  enough  left  of  the operator to pick up with  tweezers  and  an  electron microscope.
	The  dashing  to  and fro between the  two  places  left  me  totally  exhausted  at the end of each day,  but the  effort  was  paying off.
	After a couple of weeks,  the pike-Sathe were becoming quite  adept  at  using the long unwieldy weapons.  They  could  form  a  skirmish line and hold it steady. While retreating or wheeling to  face  an  imaginary  charge on an exposed  flank,  they  kept  in  perfect formation, the swordsmen and archers spaced in among them  moving to stay in their positions.
	Buckles  and  other  pieces of  loose  metal  clattered  and  clinked as they manoeuvred, pike and swordsmen crouching to allow  the archers to fire volleys over their shoulders,  then  standing  and awaiting orders.
	Their commanding officer drove them hard,  but finally  told  the  weary troops to fall out.  He noticed me watching  from  the  shadows  of  the  cloister that ran around  the  outside  of  the  training  hall  and started in my  direction.  I  recognized  his  scarred face from a distance.
	"They  are much improved," I told S'sahr as he fiddled  with  the straps of his battered practice armour.
	He gave me a weary smile.  "They have had a lot of practice, but  with all these new weapons and tactics,  it is hard for them  and  us." The 'us' must have meant the officers. He snorted then: "We have only a little more idea of what we are doing than they do."
	He  opened a door and stepped through,  holding it open  for  me;  I had to duck my head to get through the Sathe sized portal.  The room long, narrow room was filled with the stuff they used in  combat practice: wooden swords by the barrel-load, blunt and bent  arrows, basic leather armour hung from pegs on the walls.
	"Why did you not go with Tahr on her parade the other  day?"  S'sahr asked as he pulled off his brass-studded leather skirt and  scarred cuirass.
	A couple of days ago, Tahr had gone down to the town, amidst  great  pomp  and  pomposity.  She told me that it  was  a  P.  R.  exercise,  showing the people that she was alive and well.  I had  watched  from  the Citadel as the procession made it's way  on  a  roundabout route through the streets of Mainport, Sathe thronging  to see it.
	"I  am not really sure," I shrugged.  "I think that she  did  not want me seen by the townspeople."
	S'sahr's one ear gave a flicker of amusement as he grabbed a  pair  of  breeches from where they hung amongst  several  others.  "K'hy,  there  are rumours all over Mainport that the Shirai  has  her own,  personal monster.  I do not see why she would not  want  you to be seen. . . you are not very fearsome."
	I  leaned back against a handy post,  "I seem to remember  a  certain Sathe who was scared shitless when he was, uh, introduced  to me."
	He  tightened  his waistband and gathered up  his  dark  blue  cloak. "I was taken by surprise," he sniffed.
	I  laughed  out loud and he looked  at  me  curiously,  then  snorted in an aloof manner;  S'sahr, captain of the guard was not  used to being laughed at.
	As  we walked down to the wide central courtyard I  listened  while  S'sahr told me how the training of the  various  companies  was going.  They were making slow but steady  progress,  adapting  the tactics that I remembered from my history class,  as well  as  adding their own.  I listened,  but there was very little I could  actually contribute.
	We  parted company in the courtyard.  He headed off  towards  the  outer  walls and his stations,  and as I made  my  way  back  towards my room,  I realized that I had a little free time on  my  hands,  so  I  ignored  the stairs that led to  my  quarters  and  instead headed for the baths.
	As the weather had grown colder, so the baths had grown more  crowded.  Heads - and maybe a few stomachs - still turned when  I  entered one of the bathrooms, but by now most of the patrons only  gave me a cursory glance when I entered.
	There was,  however,  still muted talk between others.  That  and  the  fact  that the baths were  unisex,  made  it  the  more  embarrassing.  However,  the  warmth that seeped through my  cold  body from the water made it worth the trouble.
	With  my hair still damp,  I stoked up the fire in my  room,  and  headed  for the bedroom,  rubbing at my hair with  a  coarse  towel.  I'd eaten and bathed and was feeling comfortably warm and  tired. The circular bed creaked slightly as I collapsed on it and  pulled the heavy sheets up to my chest.
	Outside was still,  the moon just a ghostly glow behind  the  clouds. There was scarcely  enough light coming through the windows to  cast a shadow from the window's lattice  across the floor and the  'foot'  of the bed.  I found myself wondering if I had  done  the  right  thing with the weapons,  for the hundredth time,  before  I  dropped off.

******

	The  first sensation I was aware of was my  head  throbbing,  feeling  as though it had swollen to twice its normal  size.  The  next was the pain as I tried to lift my hands to my head.
	Muscles  that  had been tied in one position  for  too  long  screamed and protested as I tried to move. I couldn't budge.
	My  knees were up against my chest,  my arms wrapped  around  them,  wrists tied to ankles. I was naked and freezing and gagged  with a saliva-sodden rag shoved in my mouth and tied in place.
	I was lying on my side, crammed into a tiny,  wooden,  straw-lined space barely large enough for me.  Shafts of light danced in through gaps  between the planks. Creakings and the rumbling of wheels could be  heard  and  occasional bumps jolted me.  I could hear  the  muted  sound  of  Sathe  voices,  but  the  words  were  muffled  beyond  comprehension.
	Trying to struggle free of the ropes proved useless, my arms  were stiff and sore from the unnatural position and hard  boards.  The ropes were tightly tied and a lot thicker than they needed to  be.
	Unable to move at all,  I lay there and  suffered,  confused  and scared shitless. It was hours before the rattling and bumping  slowed, then stopped.
	There was a pause,  then the sound of bolts being  drawn.  A  hatch above me was flung open and I clenched my eyes shut against  the light that poured in on me.  Furry hands grabbed me,  holding  my  head and yanking the gag out. I gasped air and something was shoved into my mouth, water went down my windpipe. I choked and coughed, spraying water.
	"Drink, rot you!"
	I managed several mouthfuls, then the water was withdrawn and something  that smoked was passed  under  my  nose.  I  recognized the sweet, pungent odour and tried to pull back; tried  to hold my breath.
	The  hands  held me fast,  claws  puncturing  my  skin,  and  eventually I had to breath.
	After  several  choking  breaths  the  world  floated   into  pinkness,  spun  a  few  times,  then spiralled  down  and  away.  Blackness swam over me.

******

	Groaning out loud,  I woke.  A migraine that had to be  the  granddaddy of all headaches pounded in my skull. I was frozen, the uncontrollable shivering doing nothing to help the pulsing in  my  temples.  Trying  to move,  coarse hemp rasped against  my  skin,  straw or grass rustled and poked at me.
	"Look. It moved."
	"It is waking. Go tell the commander. Go!"
	My  hands  were  tied behind me and  my  ankles  were  bound  together. The gag was still firmly in place. I felt hands tugging  at  the  ropes,  testing them.  My eyelids stuck and ached  as  I  forced them open and squinted at my surroundings
	A Sathe snarled and hissed in my face.
	I gave a muffled yelp through the gag.
	She moved to crouch down at my feet,  her hands on the  hilt  of  a  sword resting tip-down on the dirt floor,  and gave  me  a  glistening grin. "You behave. No trouble."
	I tried to say, fuck you!
	"Mmmphhh mmmphh!"
	When she growled again and stood up,  I caught a glimpse  of  the  red  and black armour she wore underneath her green cloak.
	I shuddered violently, not entirely from the cold, twisted my hands against the ropes. No go.
	Where was I?  It looked like a. . . stable?  A  stable. There was that permeating smell of  animals  and  damp  straw,  the  bleat of a  llama  came  from  a  neighbouring  stall.  Heavy wooden rafters supported  the  gabled  roof, all  held together with wooden pegs.  What little light  there  was had to fight its way through chinks in the  walls.  Opposite the stall I lay in,  several  stools  sat around a rickety table covered with scraps  of  food.  Blankets  were  spread out on the dirt  floor.  The  Sathe  guard  settled  herself  on a stool,  leaned back against the  wall  and  watched me intently as I shivered. It was literally freezing.
	Minutes  dragged themselves by on  broken  legs.  Eventually  there was the sound of voices: ". . . paid when we see it."
	"I assure you it is fine."
	"And nobody saw you?"
	"Nobody, High One."
	Shadows  fell  across me as several Sathe appeared at  my  stall.  Four  of them:  three dressed in the red and black armour of  the  Gulf Realm, the other wearing an ordinary dun cloak.
	One  of  the armoured ones sported the gold chevrons  of  an  officer  on his cuirass.  He eyed me,  then turned to the  guard.  "Kas, has it done anything?"
	"Kicked around a bit, sir. Tried the ropes."
	Shit! She'd noticed. Not too slack.
	"Huh!" The officer turned back to me,  looking at me like  I  was a particularly suspicious lump in his stew. He kicked my foot  and I growled back.
	"Well,  it seems to be in good condition. Here," he pulled a  pouch from his belt and tossed it to the civilian in the cloak, "you  earned it."
	The  cloaked  Sathe snatched it out of the  air  and  poured  pieces  of gold into his palm,  counting them.  Him.  He was  the  bastard  who'd  snatched me!  If I ever caught up with  him  he'd  begin a new career as a fur hat!
	Oblivious  to my glare he tipped the gold back into the  bag  and  bowed,  "Thank you High One.  It has been a  pleasure  doing  business with you."
	"Likewise," the officer snorted. "Get out of here!"
	The  cloaked sathe scampered off,  leaving the  other  three  staring  down  at me.  The female guard sat at the table  in  the  background, watching with interest.
	The Gulf officer then casually squatted by my head, studying  me  with  interest before he yanked the gag out.  I sucked air, watching him while he watched me. "Tell  me  your  name," he said.
	Shivering violently, I clamped  my mouth shut. It stopped my teeth rattling.
	Smoothly,  before  I could react,  his hand darted  out  and  grabbed my hair.  I yelped as my head was forced back then  froze  when  his claws began tickling my throat.  "Now," he continued,  unruffled. "You CAN talk. You know it and I know it. Tell me your  name."
	He  wouldn't kill me.  He'd gone to too much trouble to  get  his paws on me. He wasn't going to kill me. . .  
	A  minute  later I was writhing and choking in pain on  the  stable  floor,  something  moist trickling down the side of my  throbbing  face. He raised his hand again, the claws peeking out. I tried to cower away and the hand came down and took another fistful of hair, forcing me to look up at him.
	"Your name!" he hissed.
	I licked my lips,  tasting blood. My nose ached, bubbled when I breathed. Scratches down the side of my face stung. There was a limit to  how  far I could push him and he was teetering on that line.  "Kelly,"  I croaked, deflated.
	"Was that your name?"
	"Yes."
	"That  is better.  Ka. . . K'hy," he did an acceptable  job  of  wrapping  his  long jaws around the name.  "Do not be such a fool. You  will  find  things a lot more comfortable if you co-operate with us.  Do  you  understand?"
	"Yes."
	"Very good." He said,  then checked my bonds. He huffed with  satisfaction, and before I could say anything, he grabbed my jaws  and  rammed  the gag back in,  "Since you do not  seem  to  enjoy  talking, you can stay quiet."
	"Sir," the female guard ventured from across the room as  he  turned  to leave,  "is that safe?  He has no fur - he looks cold."
	I  made  muffled  noises and frantically  tried  to  nod  my  agreement.
	He  stopped  and looked at me again.  "I think it will survive. . . You  can  stay as you are.  No games next  time,  a?"  He  grinned, then with a final word to the guards, he was gone.	
	I  turned my incoherent appeal on the guard,  who looked  at  me,  then settled her cloak closer about her shoulders and leaned  back in her chair. Desperate now, I began to struggle.	
	The ropes didn't give at all. My efforts warmed me for a while, but in no time they left me exhausted and with wrists burning and slippery. I moaned into my gag and collapsed into a shivering heap.
	Time passing.
	A cold aching throughout my body,  my limbs leaden and numb.  The  shivering had died to spasmodic twitches and then even  they  stopped.  Totally  spent I just closed my eyes as a vague  warmth  began seeping through me.

******

	". . . a blanket. Hurry!"
	Hands grabbed me.  If there were claws I couldn't feel them, but they lifted me and a biting wind wound  its way around and through me.  When I tried to open my eyes, all  I could see was swirling whiteness.  It wasn't worth it: I closed them again and a door slammed then there Sathe voices  all around, questioning.
	"What happened?"
	". . . know! It is frozen!"
	". . . it alive?"
	"Over here. . . by the fire."
	They dropped me.  Soft surface, hands grabbing me warm around  me. There was a tingling in my limbs like pins and needles that  grew  more and more intense,  like aching like real needles,  then like  fire  under  my skin,  then something beyond  burning.  I  screamed.  I  screamed until my throat was raw, struggling and thrashing like a  beached  fish  with the ropes biting into me and  adding  to  the  pain. Shouts, growls in my ear, fur and armour against me as they  pinned me. And the pain grew.
	The  pain  changed,   going  beyond  pain,   becoming  other  sensations.  I moaned,  unable to move,  suffering until the flow  ebbed. They released me. I just lay there, sobbing for breath.
	Furry arms propped me up,  something soft was thrown  around  my  shoulders and warmth was forced between my  chapped  lips.  I  could smell food; some kind of hot broth against my lips. I swallowed eagerly and choked as it went down the wrong way. When I recovered, I was allowed another sip, then another. I  could  feel  the heat tracing a  warm  trail  through  my  gullet, warming from the inside.
	More pain lanced through my head as I opened an eye.  Sparks  jumped and swirled in the open fireplace before me. All around, glimpses of polished wood,  heavy rafters,  the glitter of  brass  and Sathe eyes.
	 And there was someone touching me,  helping me sit up.  The  bowl  was raised to my lips and again I drank.  My gaze  followed  the  furry hand holding the steaming bowl,  travelled up the  arm  until I was nose to muzzle with the female guard from out in  the  barn.  Her eyes - the same emerald green -  locked with mine  for  all of two seconds, then she pushed me away.
	Unable  to support myself I fell back into the soft  embrace  of the furs. The room swam and I moaned, clutching at the furs to  stop myself falling onto the ceiling.
	A Sathe leaning over me,  staring into my face: ". . . you hear  me?"
	There were other voices in the  background:  inconsequential  static.
	I rolled my head away and the noises faded as I  sank into  simple, untainted sleep;  the  only drug used this  time being exhaustion.

******

	I  hunkered  down in the cold corner beside  the  fireplace,  huddled  against  the fire-warmed stones of the  chimney for the megre warmth they provided.  I  was  still  cold:  they  hadn't given me clothing or even  a  blanket.  Covered in goosebumps,  my privates retracted up around my lungs.  I  was hungry.  Miserably I made myself as small as possible  and  stared at my chains.
	While  I'd  slept  they'd replaced  the  hemp  ropes  with  manacles.  The fetters upon my feet were linked with heavy  chain  with just enough give for me to hobble. On my wrists the manacles  were joined by a solid iron bar just long enough that I  couldn't  touch my fingertips together.
	The chain rattled as I picked it up, weighing the links. A guard looked up at the sound. "Drop it," he hissed,  hand  going  for his sword. Others looked around.
	I dropped it.
	Placated,  but still wary,  the guard settled back into  his  chair. I heaved a shuddering sigh and stared at my irons.
	It's  a  demoralising thing to have  your  every  movement  restricted by cold metal.  If I wanted to move one hand, I had to  move the other, yet I couldn't bring them together. If I couldn't  so much as touch two fingertips together, then how the hell was I  supposed  to do something like picking the locks?  crude as  they  were.
	Damnation!  It  was  going to be hard enough to  eat!
	I glumly turned to survey my prison again. Perhaps there was  something I'd missed.
	A single room combining kitchen and living area.  The  walls  were  rough  wooden logs,   cracks  caulked  with  clay.  Black  rafters  supporting  a thatch roof;  solid,  utilitarian wooden  furniture  with  that  interior glow of well-used wood were  scattered  about  the room,  the most elaborate a pair of chairs before  the  fire.  Crockery,  a few metal pots,  and strings of food: ears of  corn, and  various  spices sat on shelves or hung from  the  heavy  rafters, slung lower than they would be in a human house.
	Two doorways in opposite walls,  one sealed  by a door of half-logs,  the other by a heavy tattered curtain. Wind howled  around the wooden door, rattling it in its frame.
	Yeah. The room wasn't much of a cell, but there were bars.
	Gulf Warriors.
	In the dim light of a lantern and the fireplace they lounged around, looking as bored as waiting soldiers everywhere. Some slept, using their armour as pillows. Some played  games  of  chance. Every so often a trooper would don armour and  cloak to go and relieve a guard on duty outside.
	Sathe returned with their fur coated in ice and  snow.  The  hearth  was  littered with drying cloth,  armour,  and  a  single  soldier  who'd  assured  himself that I wasn't  a threat before stripping and falling asleep.
	The air  was heavy with the smells of cloth  and  wet  fur. 
	Where were they taking me?	
	The Gulf Realm was a pretty safe bet.
	And what would happen when they got me there?
	That one I had no answer for.  But someone had gone to a lot  of trouble to see that I dropped by and someone obviously  didn't  give  a flying fuck about my comfort.  Whoever it was  definitely  wanted  to  ask  a few questions as  well,  and  I  guessed  they  wouldn't want to talk about the weather.
	Again I shivered.
	Time passed slowly in the gloom. With the windows shuttered,  not  a whisker of light penetrating the storm outside,  I  didn't  know what the hour was.  Hell, I didn't even know if it was night  or day!
	Later,  a  drab-brown  female with nervous eyes and ears prepared  a  meal.  Civilian,  had to be.  I watched her working at a pot over  the fire,  adding herbs and meat and it was obvious that she  was  no part of the Gulf retinue. Who then? One of the original residents of the building I guessed. A farmer?
	After  a time the tangy aroma of stew prevailed  above  even  the  Sathes' miasma,  setting leathery nostrils to  twitching.  A  pre-adolescent male cub (the farmers' son?) scampered around  the  room ladling food into the soldiers' bowls,  dodging half-hearted  cuffs  from  claws.  Saliva  flooded my mouth as  I  watched  the  troopers  begin  to  eat and the cramps in  my  stomach  made  me  realise  how hungry I was.  How long had it been since I'd had  a  decent meal?
	Damnation! I was starving!
 	"Hey!  "  I called. A guard looked up from his meal, his head  bobbing  and  throat  pulsing  as  he  swallowed  his   mouthful.  "Please," I glanced hungrily at his bowl. "I need food."
	There was silence. Heads turning to stare at me.
	"Talking  now," said another voice.  The Sathe officer  rose  from his seat in the shadows across the room and approached me. I  pressed  further  back  into  the corner as  he  stood  over  me.  "Hungry?"
	"No, I am just making conversation," I growled, mustering all the courage left in me. "Goddamn, You  are killing me. I am starving and freezing."
	His  ears  set back and his muzzle rumpled up  like  a  rug. "Suddenly you seem to have become very verbose.  Perhaps I should  leave you as you are and see what else you may say."
	"Dead people say very little."
	"People!" He hissed in amusement. "You do presume a lot upon  yourself!" Nevertheless he snapped an order at a trooper and  the  Sathe  filled  a bowl from the communal pot.  Eagerly I took  the  carved  wooden  bowl  in  both  hands,  almost  drooling, then asked, "Think  you  could take these things off so I  can  eat?" 
	The Sathe officer bared his teeth.
	"Thought not," I sighed. I was forced to put the bowl on the  ground  and kneel before it,  carrying  the  greasy,  undercooked  lumps of meat to my mouth with both hands chained together.
	They had a good laugh.

******

	He sat there in his chair before the fire,  just staring  at  me.  For half an hour,  just staring at me, until I couldn't meet  his eyes and curled up, hiding my head.
	"K'hy."
	I slowly looked up at him.
	The Sathe commander gestured at the impressive bearskin  rug  lying in front of  the hearth. "Come here."
	I hesitated in my niche by the fire,  then,  as guards began  to move towards me,  awkwardly shuffled out with chains rattling to kneel on the rug. He flickered his ears  at my sullen glare.
	"Sit," he invited cordially.
	I sat.
	"Huh!"  he huffed and cocked his head,  chin propped with  a  fist,  elbow resting on the arm of the chair.  "You really are  a  delicate creature, aren't you? Not as dangerous as you look. Such  a thin hide. . . "
	"What  do  you want?" I demanded wearily.  I was  tired  and cold.
	"I want to talk. Scent the wind and understand, K'hy. We are  your friends."  
	"Friends!" God,  that was so pathetic I found the energy  to  laugh.  "Friends!  You have drugged me.  Kidnapped,  frozen,  and  starved me! I would be safer with my enemies!"
	He  sat  there and regarded me for a time.  Then gave  me  a  wide, glistening grin: "You really are not as stupid as you look."
	Damnation! Keep your mouth shut, Davies!
	"Now, K'hy, I would like to know a little about you."
	"I need clothing. Please."
	"Perhaps,"  he  said pleasantly.  "That will depend  on  how  cooperative you are."
	"No answers, no clothes."
	"Exactly." The chair creaked as he settled back. "What  are you?"
	What would it hurt? "Human."
	"What?"
	"Human," I repeated. "That is what I am: Human."
	"H'man," he mused. "Where are you from?"
	"New York."
	His ears laid back slowly and his eyes slitted.  "Are  you,"  he hissed, "playing games again? These words mean nothing!"
	"What  did you expect?" I snapped.  "Sathe do not  have  the  words  for what I am or where I am from.  I can only tell you  in  the words of my kind."
	"How can you have any other kind of words?" he sneered.  "If  a hand is not a hand,  then what is it?" He emphasized by leaning  forward to wave his hand in front of my face,  making sure I  saw  the claws.
	I  flinched back:  "A hand is a hand whether you call it  by  that name or something else.  My people use different sounds, but  they mean the same things. I still do not know all your words."
	He leaned back,  mulling that over.  "You have had to  learn  our speech, like a newborn cub."
	"Yes."
	He  used  a clawtip to scratch at  his  muzzle,  a  rumbling  sounding in his throat. Finally he said, "Very well. This Hew-ork,  where is it?"
	"I do not know."
	"Then  how  did  you  come to the  Eastern  Realm?"  He  was  sounding impatient again.
	"I had no choice in the matter.  I am a. . . a. . . " Nervously  I  fumbled  for  a  phrase  I  didn't  have.  "I  do  not  know  the  words. . . survivor of an accident."
	"A  [castaway],"  he  prodded.  "You are  perhaps  from  the  continent to the south?"
	"Perhaps,"  I nodded vaguely,  trying to blur that  distinct  line. Don't press it! "I just do not know!"
	"Then  why did you go to the Eastern Realm for  assistance!"  he demanded.
	"I  did not choose!  I did not know where I was,  I did  not  understand  Sathe.  I was looking for my own kind,  but  I  found  yours."
	"You  found the Shirai female!" he  corrected  sharply.  His  mane began to bristle and he reached up to pat it  smooth.  "Why did you interfere? It was not your concern!"
	"I was defending myself," I said. "It was not planned."
	"If it was not planned,  then why do you stay with her?  Why  do you aid them? give them weapons?
	"Why do you feel you have to help them so much?"
	I didn't answer.
	The  blow that caught me around the ears knocked me  to  the  floor.  Dazed,  I looked up at the officer who calmly knelt above  me:  "Come now,  if you expect me to answer your  questions,  you  must answer mine. That is only fair, is it not?"
	I  clenched  my  fists helplessly and struggled back  to a  sitting position, thinking unprintable thoughts.  "You forced me  to choose sides!" I snarled.  "You dragged me into your war,  and  while they have helped me,  your people have invaded their  land,  killing their people, and trying to kill me.  You have seen  the scars on my chest?  Did you think they were natural?  They are a gift from one of your own. Perhaps you knew him;  a shit called Tarsha."
	The  Sathe commander looked at my clenched  fists.  "Yes,  I  knew him,  and I can profess no love for his techniques.  I  also  saw  his remains after the carrion birds had finished  with  him;  his corpse and the remains of his patrol.  I do not know how  you  killed them all, but I am not taking chances with you.
	"Whatever  you are,  you have made some people  nervous  and  they  do not like that.  My orders are to return with you  alive.  Alive, they made that quite clear; as long as you are alive, they  do not care if you are missing fingers, testicles, or toes.
	"Now,  I have heard tell of interesting new devices that are  appearing in Mainport:  New tools. . . and new weapons also. Did you  perchance have anything to do with these? Yes?"
	"Perhaps," I said.
	He cuffed me around the ears again.
	I looked up at him through watering eyes.
	"Yes?" he asked mildly.
	"Yes," I growled.
	"Good. Now, do you give them this knowledge from the goodness of you being, or is there payment involved?"
	"I try to pay my way," I said.
	"Saaaa!" His ears twitched.  "Is that all?  Perhaps it is in  return for the favours she shows you?  What is coupling with  her  like,  ah?" The Sathe grinned and his ears flickered when he  saw  that hit home.  "Tell me this: Why do you think she is willing to  do that with you?  Why would any female couple with you?  Do  you  really believe she is ATTRACTED to you? To YOU?! Huh!"
	I didn't want to hear this.
	He  turned to the troopers behind him,  addressed a  female:  "Mer'ap! Would you ever consider coupling with. . . with this?"
	"Perhaps in nightmares," came the cheerful reply.
	There was the water-on-shale sound of amusement hissed  from  a dozen throats.  The commander turned his attentions back to me.  "The Shirai could never feel for you," he grinned.  "Anymore than  I could feel for my llama."
	"I would not put it past you," I growled.
	He  flashed  teeth.  "Insults now?  That is not  really  the  subject. You realise how you have been manipulated?"	
	"Shut your face!" I snarled.
	"Why? Are you afraid to hear the truth?"
	"What would you know of truth!"
	"Use your mind, if you are capable of it. You are ugly. What  could she possibly see in you but a means to an end? You are just  a  stone  she is stepping on to cross a stream and  when  she  is  finished with you she will leave you behind."
	I shook my head,  trying not to listen.  Inside a  seditious  voice was murmuring, It could be true!
	"She is simply using you," the Sathe's voice went  on.  "And  you are such a fool as to believe she has affections for  you!  A  fool!"
	"I must be, to be snatched by assholes like you."
	His eyes flickered.  I grinned and he struck me again.  Even  after  the  dizziness  settled there  was  a  stinging  pain  in my ear and wetness on my shoulder.  Blood dripped to  the rug. The bastard had had his claws out that time. I swallowed  and glared at him.
	"Take care," he growled. "You might hurt yourself."
	He wasn't funny. I didn't reply.
	Then he leaned forward and held his hand up for me to see; flecks of blood  stippled  his fingertips.  "Some advice:  mind your  mouth.  Some  people  are not as patient as I am. . . and your Shirai is not  here  to watch over you and lick you clean."
	I reached up to touch my ear. It stung. "She will find you."
	Somehow, as a threat, it fell kind of flat.
	"I doubt it," he grinned.  "We have put some thought into this.  You will disappear like you had never been. The Shirai. . . well, we  have you,  her sire is dying and as for her:  poison, a crossbow,  some  kind  of accident. . . once you are  safely  tucked  away,  of  course."
	That. . . My  hands  stopped trembling as I  met  his  eyes.  I  simply said, "I am going to kill you."
	He spat and raised his hand to hit me again.
	There were guards around us, and I think he may have been half expecting it, but they still weren't fast enough. I hit him hard. He swung wildly, claws extending, striking my shoulder when I cannoned into him, taking him over backward, me landing on top of him.
	He managed to roll over,  to clamber to his knees.  I  swung  and clubbed him on the side of the jaw with the manacles, sending  him tumbling.  Then I was looping my arms around his neck, trying  to  use the bar between the manacles as a garrotte.  He  squalled  and  ducked his chin.  Instead of crossing his  neck the metal slipped into his mouth, like a horse's bit.  His claws scrabbled at my arms with  growing desperation as I hauled back,  cutting the skin,  drawing blood,  scraping  against the fetters that dug into my wrists.
	Perhaps  - given time -  I could've broken his neck.  But  I  didn't have time.  It was less than seconds before the guards got  there and piled on.
	I hit the floorboards hard, ending up in a tumbled heap back  in a corner by the fireplace. Claw cuts burned across my body. My right shoulder howled pain, cutting through the confusion when I  tried to move.  I couldn't.  My hands and legs were pinned. Sharp points dug at my throat, hot breath and spittle against my skin. I froze, gasping, just moving my eyes. The Sathe with my throat in his jaws growled and twisted his head to glare up at me. Teeth and  tongue rasped against my skin. I almost shit myself.
	"Alive!" another voice screamed. "We need it alive!"
	 Reluctantly,  the jaws loosened and the Sathe snarled into my face. There were other  troopers holding - sitting on -  my arms and legs. Over there was  the  Sathe  officer:  hanging half-supported between two  of  his  captains,  displaying  curved tongue and an impressive  array  of  dentures as he hacked and coughed,  blood-tinted spittle  running  from  the corners of his mouth.  The troopers carried him  bodily  from the room, through the curtain.
	More guards approached, heavy chains draped over their arms.
	Ah, shit!

******

	Now  a  short  chain led from my ankle fetters  to  an  iron  staple  hammered into the floor.  Also my wrists and ankles  were  connected by a heavy chain.  I was completely hobbled,  any hopes  of escaping retreating further across the horizon.
	My fault!
	Damnation,  I should have just sat and let it wash past.  He  was just trying to goad me,  to see how far he could push  me.  I  should  have sat there and taken it,  let them think me  helpless  and  subdued,  bide my time until an opportunity came to  make  a  break for it. Now my stupidity had landed me with more chains and bruises.  Their punishment had been none too gentle;  working me over good,  but taking care not to cause any damage that would be  permanent.  Then I was dumped back into my corner where I could use the night  to nurse my aches.
	Now the morning meal was being prepared,  the cub once again  passed  among the waking soldiery passing out bowls of food  with  deferential  ducks of his head.  His mother worked by  the  fire,  stirring a pot,  occasionally adding water. She warily watched me  as  I  struggled to sit up,  propping my back against  the  rough  wall.  My  shoulder  was swelling up and moved only  with  aching  protest.
	"You want food?" a soft,  hesitant voice ventured:  childish  tones.  The cub sidled a little closer,  bowl and spoon in  hand.  Over his shoulder his mother was watching with concern foremost  in her expression.
	"Thank  you,"  I grated hoarsely,  taking the bowl  that  he  proffered at arms length.  My own arms were chained down at waist  height;  I had to double over to get my mouth down to the bowl. I  fumbled  awkwardly  with the spoon before it twisted  out  of  my  fingers. I stared at the bowl in growing frustration.
	"Here," the cub offered, leaning forward and taking the bowl  from my hands,  holding it while I used the spoon.  It was  long,  narrow, and deep - shaped for Sathe mouths' - but it worked. I shoveled mouthfuls as fast as I could. . .
	"Saaaaa!  Boy!"  from behind the cub there came a cry and  a  clatter of wooden utensils being hastily cast aside.  The  cub  yelped,  dropped  the bowl with what little stew was left in  it,   and  instinctively dashed to his mother's side as several  guards  bore down upon us. They shoved the female aside as she tried to  protect her child and lunged for the kid.  He dodged their grasp  and  tried to duck around them,  but they had him cornered. As a guard  moved  in I flicked the chain securing my ankle to  the  staple,  hooking it about the Sathe's feet and pulling. The guard squalled  and  hit  the floor in a clatter of toughened leather  and  metal  buckles.  Taking advantage of the opening,  the cub was over  the  body, gone.
	The trooper snarled, shook the chain away from his leg, then  kicked out at me,  his toe claws catching me just above the knee,  ripping up my leg.  The tingling burning of the pain came almost as quickly as the blood,  rivulets merging and pooling.  I gasped and looked up to see the Sathe raising his hand for another blow.
	"HOLD!" Another Sathe snarled and a hand grabbed the trooper  and  shoved  him out of the way.  The Gulf officer  was  standing  above me with his muzzle drawn back in a white snarl. Beneath his  fur his face was the worse for wear:  one side swollen while  the  corners  of  his mouth were raw and red with patches  of  clotted  blood.  Breath  hissed through flared nostrils and his eyes  were  furious  black  pools,  ears laid back flat  against  his  skull.  "You,"  his  words were scarcely  understandable,  they  were  so  distorted by his fury, "are going to learn!"
	I shrank back,  but there were enough of them to drag me out  and  pin me down by kneeling on my arms and  legs.  Casually  the  officer  strolled  across  to the  fire  and  squatted  there.  I  couldn't see what he was doing,  but when he turned back to me he  was holding a smoking poker, the tip glowing red.
	"Hey. . . "  I  tried to shrink away,  but they  just  held  me  tighter. "No. No, please, do not. . . "
	He didn't speak, just waved it slowly in front of my eyes. I  could  smell  hot metal and burnt pine.  I could feel  the  heat,  going light headed with sudden fear and he just stood there  with  his eyes locked on mine, pointing the poker down at me, waving it  around my face. Slowly he moved it down and I could feel the heat  on my chin, my neck, my chest.
	Then he jammed it up against my left nipple.
	A  hissing,  feeling like ice at first,  then. . . I  screamed,  uncontrollably,  thrashing and bucking and twisting madly.  Sathe  shouted, more held me. The poker twisted and I think I passed out  then.
	Seconds. . . He  was  crouched over me,  looking down  into  my  face, still holding the poker. I could smell burnt meat. The pain  in both my chest and leg was dull now and I was shivering, dimly realised I  was  in shock.  His voice growled, then he grabbed my jaw and shook me  until he was certain he had my attention.  "You understand  now?"  he hissed. "You try something like that again, and we will simply  hamstring you."
	"Ness. . . "  I  croaked.  My jaw didn't want  to  work.  "Next  time. . . better job."
	His eyes widened and he glanced down at my chest.  I had  no  urge to see what was there.  Already the pain was  returning.  My  leg  spasmed and I could feel the blood drying there.  It'd  been  sliced down to the muscle.
	"You want to die?" He stared at me, as though not quite believing it, then snorted. "Ah, such loyalty and stupidity." Turning to his troops he gestured at me, "Alright, get that cleaned  and patched." Then he gathered up his cloak  and  pushed  out into the cold whiteness outside. The others dragged me back to the fireplace and dumped me there. Christ, but it hurt: almost like I was going to pass out, but it never quite happened.
	A  trooper  approached me,  a small bag  in  her  hand.  She  crouched down near me and produced herbs, small sealed pots, a grey-brown stuff that looked like moss,  and strips of cloth.  I recognised her as  the  guard  I'd  had in the barn,  the one who'd fed me.  "I  want  to  help you," she said slowly;  enunciating.  "I have your word  you  will behave?"
	I nodded vaguely, "Yes."
	Catching  a  breath  she  inched  forward  and  chirred   to  herself.  I  didn't  move as she worked on the wound on  my  leg,  washed it clean,  pressed the moss against it, then began binding  it,  wrapping coarse cloth around my leg.  Considering where  the  gash  was located - my upper-outer thigh -  it was  an  extremely  personal operation.
	"Stay  still," she hissed through her teeth when I  flinched  at an errant brush of fur against sensitive flesh.  Oh God! Don't  let me get an erection!
	But of course, even with the pain, just thinking about it. . . 
	The Gulf Troops saw it, laughter hissed:
	"Kas! I think it likes you!"
	"Careful. You could hurt yourself there!"
	"Ha, pity Mer'ap's not here! That could change her mind!"
	The one working on my wound looked up at my face and  hissed  in amusement.  "Not so different then.  I am surprised you are in  the mood."
	I felt the heat rising in my ears.  Her's fluttered madly as she settled the bandages, then moved on to my chest.
	My nipple was gone,  turned to a red and black ruin.  Not as bad as it looked.  He hadn't gone  deep,  being  careful  not to damage me too seriously.  Still,  it hurt  enough  when the female began to treat it and put the salve on, almost as  much as when it happened.
	The  room  had gone silent,  the Gulf Sathe standing and  watching  as  I  moaned and ground my teeth, fighting to keep from striking out at the female ministering to me. I don't remember when she finished, just that one moment she  was pressing ointment against the charred skin,  the next she was  packing up her equipment. "Finished,"  she told me.  "You will be all right." Then she  leaned  closer to my head. "Take my advice," she whispered soto voce. "Do  not  provoke  the commander.  He can be  most  unpleasant."  Then  louder she said, "Try not to do anything stupid that might reopen  that. I will change it later."
	 "What? That mean jogging's out?"  I panted in english. She scratched her neck,  head cocked to one side in puzzlement, then she snorted and gathered up  her kit.

******

    The storm was still blowing the next day.  It stopped us from  going anywhere, but it also stopped any pursuit there might be. A  stalemate.  I  wasn't going  anywhere  either.  Outside,  without  clothing  and in my condition,  I would freeze to death before  I  could get a mile.
	Still,  they watched me.  When I had to relieve myself, they  sent a guard along.  There was a shuttered window in the freezing  little  room that I would probably have been able to squeeze  out  of,  but  with the temperature outside hovering  around  zero,  I  wasn't about to try.
	Now  I  had  an idea of just how many of  them  there  were:  approximately twenty,  a large number to be moving around deep in  enemy  territory.   Capturing  lill'  ol'  me  was  their   only  directive? I found that hard to swallow.
	I guess I should've been flattered.
	As the wind howled around outside and wormed its way through  gaps  that you could have sworn weren't there a minute  ago,  the  seven  Sathe sitting at the table played a game of chance that  I  guess must be universal; dice. Others were outside: barracked  in  the stables, on picket duty. My wrists and ankles were beginning to chafe from the constant  rubbing  of the iron manacles. Both my leg and chest wounds were continuous sources  of  nagging  pain.  I  couldn't do much moving  without  gritting  my  teeth.  The  Sathe  who was guarding me sat in  a  chair  nearby,  cleaning his already-gleaming sword,  always keeping a green  eye  on me.
	Bone  dice  rattled on the rough wooden table top  amid  the  muted  sibilants of Sathe voices and occasional bout of  laughing  and curses when someone won.
	The  day dragged by slowly.  The evening meal was a kind of sausage. Like a dog I was fed the table scraps.
	The manacles stayed on.
	Afterwards, the  cub was crouched by the fire cleaning the dirty pots in a tub of melt water,  the  iron and copper utensils clattering and rattling. As he worked he  stared at me where I sat near him on the rug before the fire,  at  the  extreme extension of my tether and trying to get as near  to  the heat as I could.  Several times it looked as if he might  say  something,  only to change his mind at the last second.  So I sat  in silence, watching him work.
	As the evening dragged on into night the temperature plummeted again. I huddled up into a small ball in front of the open fire, for all the good that did. An icy draught needled across the room, wending its way up the chimney and leaving me shivering violently in its wake. My wounds ached as my muscles knotted up.
	"Huh," a Sathe coughed. It was that female, the one who'd patched me up. She knelt beside me, looking me over. "What is the matter with you? Huh? Your leg?" She touched a hand to my leg and swore, "Mother's milk! You are still cold?" She stared then waved a shrug and left me again, going through the curtain to the back of the house. A few minutes later the commander himself appeared with a bundle tucked under one arm. Guards shifted and stirred themselves when he snapped orders, several baring their teeth and approaching me, their clawed feet clicking against  wooden floorboards. Instinctively I tried to move back, away from them. They leapt forward and I yelped in pain when claws sank in. One of them grabbed me by the  hair; dragging  me  to  my knees,  forcing my head back and  laying  bared  claws  alongside my throat.  My chest roared pain.  I began to raise  my  hands; the claws pressed harder. I froze motionless.
	The Gulf commander stepped around in front of me, showing me the bundle.  "You," he said slowly and clearly, "are going to get  your  clothing.  Your  chains  will be removed and  you  will  do  exactly as I say. Anything else and you will be hamstrung. Cause trouble and we kill you. Your choice."
	As simply as that.  From the corners of my eyes I could  see  swords glinting.
	"Understand?" the Sathe asked.
	"Yes," I croaked.
	I was hauled to my feet, the claws still at my throat whilst  keys rattled in locks. The weights upon my wrists and ankles were  lifted away with a clashing of heavy iron links.
	The claws at my neck tightened still more,  breathing became  difficult, my leg and chest ached.
	"Now, you will take the clothes and put them on. . . slowly and carefully. Understand?"
	"Y. . . yes." I could hardly speak.
	The  claws released me and I gasped air,  starting to  reach  for  my  throat.  A sword tip tickled the skin of my back  and  I  stopped moving, stopped breathing.
	"Good," the Commander grinned, making sure I could see all his teeth. "Now these."
	I carefully took the clothes from him. Rough-spun brown breeches and ragged cloak; tight for me, my leg hurt, my nipple burned as fabric brushed it, but they were warm and that was all I cared about. I wrapped the cloak around my shoulders and looked at the officer. Standing, I was almost a full head taller than he. Something flickered in his eyes, ears went back and nostrils flared. I knew fear when I saw it.
	And that  look  vanished under anger and he snapped an order and the chains were brought forward again. I retreated a single small step and suddenly the claws were at my neck again, a low growling in my ear. I went rigid, forced to submit to the chill iron of the restraints again.
	The Gulf Commander personally examined the  manacles.  "Keep  your  hands in sight all the time," he warned me.  "Tomorrow the storm should have abated enough for us to leave. You are going to need the clothing.  If the guards have cause to be suspicious  of  you, if you cause trouble,  you will be punished. We do not want to kill you, but you will stay quiet even if we have to fill your skull with drugs."
	He  signalled for the soldier to release me and I sagged  to  the floor.  They didn't try and stop me when I raised my hands to  rub  my sore neck;  red smears on my fingertips when I looked  at  them.
	"Fragile," the commander hissed.
	"Fuck you!" I hissed right back.
	He spread his hands in a Sathe shrug and then turned his back  on me.
	End of conversation.
	The soldiers who had clustered around drifted back to  their  games  of  chance and story telling,  leaving me  huddled there, pulling the cloak tight around myself.  There was little talking among them, the  scrape of chair legs, the clatter of a keyring. . . 
	That got my attention. There on the table, the keyring, just  eight, ten metres. . . 
	Damnation!  I slumped again.  They might as well be back  in  Mainport.  Here am I,  unarmed,  chained to the floor,  in a room  full of hostiles. I was just going to get up, waltz over and say,  "'scuse me, just borrowing these. Alright?"
	Right.
	Face it, Kelly. Your future don't look too bright.
	More  footsteps;  a half-hearted kick at my ribs to  get  my  attention  as  the female guard who'd patched me up crouched  beside me:  "Turn around." I complied.  "Hold out your arms," she  ordered.
	"Do  you  enjoy this as much as I do?" I  muttered  as  that  female double-checked my bonds with a critical eye.
	She  gave  the  chains a tug,  making sure  the  links  were  secure.  As if I had a chance of breaking them.  "I am only doing  my job. . . can you move your fingers?"
	"Yeah, right, sure. . . "  I  muttered in English as  I  wriggled  my  digits. Just doing her job. I'd heard that one before.
	Her claws caught my shoulder.  "Those noises, are they words?"
	"What do you think?"
	She growled. "I thnk you do not know when to keep your mouth shut. What did  you  say?"
	"It was not important," I muttered. She squeezed my shoulder  once - hard.
	Behave yourself. . . 
	But the hands stayed on my shoulder even when the claws  had  retracted.  Her  eyes narrowed and she cocked her head, scrutinising my face.  She had a curious ring  of  white  fur  that  poked out from under the fringe  of  her  mane,  encircling her left ear and eye. When she moved her hand upwards,  toward my face, I flinched away. She waited, then gently - almost  tenderly  -  touched her fingers to my overgrown hair.  She  stroked once, twice, then dropped her hand again.
	"What. . . "  I began and automatically tried to lift my  hands  to  my  head only to be stopped when they reached  the  limit  of  their chain. "Why did you do that?"
	She  shrugged  "I wanted to see what it  felt  like.  Softer  than it looks."
	I wasn't sure when I'd started trembling, but then I was aware my chains were rattling.  Suddenly I had  to  know. . . "What is going to happen to me?" I blurted.
	That startled her.  She stared at me,  her nostrils flaring,  then  she  shook her head.  "You are to be  taken  to  Riverport.  Beyond that, I cannot be sure. I have heard rumours. . . " She broke  off  and looked around quickly.  "There are whisperings that  you  can sway the balance of the war, ensuring victory for whoever owns  you."
	"Dammit,  all  I  want is to return to my  home!  How  am  I  supposed  to sway the balance of the war if I cannot even  remove  these?!" the manacles clattered as I shook them.	
	She looked at the irons,  then met my eyes for the  briefest  moment.  "Listen,"  she lowered her voice to a whisper.  "I  will  have nothing to do with helping you escape, but if you so choose,  I  can  arrange  a death that is a lot quicker."  Her  hand  touched the silver inlaid wood of her scabbard as she spoke.  "It  could  be far preferable to what will probably happen to  you  in  Riverport."
	I  didn't  say anything.  She suddenly looked around  as  if  embarrassed   and flowed to her feet in one smooth  move.  "Sleep  now, all right?"
	I nodded mutely,  not caring if she understood or  not,  and  curled  up,  my  cheek  against the rug.  Was she  trying  to  be  friendly? That offer she had made. . . Was it going to be that bad?
	I shuddered at the cold chill that ran down my spine.
	The  shadows  on the rough wood walls danced  and  flickered  into  unearthly shapes.  Nooks and corners had their  own  little  pools of darkness. Sathe moved around the room without trouble in  the dimness, cat's eyes acting like little green mirrors when the  firelight caught them.
	There was a rattle of metal on metal from the corner by the fireplace. I looked up. The cub gave me a startled look, then gathered up his pots and pans from where he had been taking entirely too long cleaning up.

******

	I slept badly that night:  long,  indeterminable periods  of  uneasy wakefulness interspaced with dreams.
	I dreamt badly that night.
	Dashboard lights. Outside, signposts flashed through the headlights, too fast to read. Tenny was at the wheel, cigar clamped in a corner of his mouth. In the hellish green glow of the dash lights I could see he was grinning, laughing about something. I couldn't hear over the growl and crackle of the engine.
	I looked at the sky out my window: glowing red, The air was thick and cloying: like smog, like the choking reek of thamil. Trees were dark shapes like jagged teeth, fangs and claws with a sullen slit of a moon hanging over them.
	The sky blinked.
	Now there were flames, a searing heat, only this time it was  me  inside  the  inferno.  Through the flames  licking  over  the  windshield  I  saw  a shape blurred by the  heat:a  human  figure  standing with head bowed and shoulders slumped, a helmet dangling  forgotten from a hand. The heat and noise became unbearable. . .
	I thrashed and cried out and opened my eyes to flames not a foot from my face.
	"Jesus!" I swallowed a lungfull of smoke. Choking and coughing I backpedalled to  the  end  of my chain, retreating into the corner between  stone fireplace and the wall.
	The  centre of the room was ablaze,  a pool  of  blue-orange  fire  spreading  from  the  shattered remains  of  an  oil  lamp,  crawling  across the floor between me and the rest of  the  room.  Already it was climbing wooden posts, crackling into the rafters.  Ah shit! The roof was thatch!
	The chain still refused to give. I grabbed at the tether and  hauled back frantically."Goddamn!  You bastards!  HELP!  Goddamn!  HELP ME!"
	Beyond  the  flames  and smoke the  Sathe  were  frantically  fighting a losing battle against the fire;  already being  pushed  back.  Several of them manhandled a bulky object over to the fire  and tipped it. Water poured across the floor, washing burning oil  aside,  but  not extinguishing it.  The oil just floated  on  the  water,  but it created a causeway through fire.  A single trooper  in leather armour,  arm across face,  pushed through. That female  again.
	Already her fur was curling and smoking with the  heat.  She  pulled  at the shackles then yelled back through the  fire, "KEYS!  WHERE ARE THE KEYS!"
	There was blurred activity.  "I do not know!" came the reply  from the other side of the flames.
	"FIND THEM!"
	"They are not here!"
	Then the thatch caught.
	There was a soundless explosion of light,  a pressure as air  was torn from the room.  The female looked up in panic, then turned and fled. The flames roared up behind her.
	"Nooo! GODDAMN YOU!" I screamed uselessly into the fire, grabbing onto the chain and yanking until my skin burned and tore and bled, screaming and the staple pulled out of the floor sending me recoiling into the wall.
	Now the chains tangled my legs.
	Flames spun about me, burning, as I coughed and hacked and tried to scramble for a footing. Smoke rushed into my lungs and I doubled up; coughing. The cold stones of the fireplace were hard up against my back, the flames drawing closer. A rafter collapsed  in a shower of sparks and a hand grabbed my shoulder, sharp points digging  in. A white-shrouded figure was leaning over me and for a split  second  I wondered if perhaps I should have adopted a religion.
	It shouted somethin inaudible over the roar of flames and  fumbled  with the locks on my ankles.  I felt the fetters  on  my  feet fall away.
	Part of the ceiling fell in, steam hissing and sputtering  as  snow plunged into the flames and was evaporated.
	"Hurry!" it screamed into my ear.
	I was on my knees,  gagging on pain, smoke-blinded,  trying to stay low as  I  stumbled  after  my  guide  through the  smoke  until  the  Sathe  vanished. Where. . . ?
	I  all  but fell into the hole.  A hand grabbed my  arm  and  tugged. "Come on!"
	A tunnel, dark as pitch and tiny, meant for Sathe stature. I struggled through on belly and elbows, cobwebs dragging at my hair. Every time my chest or leg scraped the ground I wanted to scream, feeling myself go lightheaded, but I couldn't pass out, not there. It was impossible to see, but I could feel, feel the moist earth, wooden supports, bugs that crunched under my hands. Fear when my shoulders wedged and dirt pattered on my neck.
	God! Not a cave-in.
	Yet,  amazingly,  it  held  as I frantically pushed  my  way  through.  There  was  smoke in the tunnel now and  breathing  was  becoming harder by the second. Head down, I crawled. . . 
	Right  into  the  feet of the Sathe  ahead  of  me.  He  did  something  and a cold,  dim light filtered past him,  along  with  freezing, fresh air.
	"Come on!" he hissed.
	I  followed him,  spilling out of the hole like a worm  from  its tunnel,  rolling into the shock of snow in a low culvert. Red  glare  shone  from  the farm fifty metres  or  so  behind  us.  I  snatched  a peek:  just a pyre of flame with the skeleton of  the  house  in  the  heart.  Silhouettes of Sathe  dashing  around  in  confusion. What did all the light do to their night vision? Could  they see me?
	A  hand  grabbed my arm,  pulling me  along.  Then  we  were  running,  stumbling across a night-cloaked white landscape, roaring of fire hiding  the  noise  of  chains,  perfect  white  crystals,  glittering with red and orange light, crunching under my feet. So  soon after that scorching heat it was bitterly cold.  My  damaged  leg buckled,  sending me sprawling, ice crystals scratching at my  skin. I spat snow and scrambled after my rescuer.
	"Down!"
	Again  I dove headlong,  rolling,  landing in a drift  in  a  ditch,  almost  screaming as my nipple ripped along the  snow.  I  shook ice from my face,  feeling the aching chill lancing into my  skin again.  For a time we lay there before a swat on my back got  me up and running again. Across a wide space; blue-dark under the  inconstant moonlight.  My heart hammered;  surely they would  see  us. . . a shout. . . a crossbow bolt. . . pursuit.  They would catch me! I  couldn't outrun Sathe!
	There  was  no  outcry.   Snow-covered  fields  merged  with  woodland. Night and shadow mixed under trees. Branches I couldn't  see tore at me as I stumbled over invisible roots.  Thank god  my  feet were so numb, I didn't feel the pain as I stubbed my toe yet  again.  My  wounded leg collapsed twice more and the second  time  only the other's aid got me back on my feet.
	He was short,  so small. . . The cub! By God! the cub. The mask  against  the smoke had fallen from his muzzle and his  eyes  were  wide as he glanced back past me, then at me.
	"Th. . . thank you," I managed to get past my rattling teeth.
	He waved that aside, hissing, "Come on! Run!"
	"I cannot see! It is too dark."
	A small hand caught mine and pulled. "Follow!"
	We ran. I followed  him through the  trees,  not  seeing anything else, just holding his hand and trusting him absolutely. Branches lashed me and I held my other arm over my face, protecting my eyes.
	Now the cub stopped me, made me kneel, guided my head into  absolute darkness. With my hands I felt another earthen tunnel - this one not more than a metre long - then a tiny  round  chamber,  soft  leaves  and  scraps of cloth lining the  floor,  the heavy smell of loam and. . . and something else.  Here I collapsed,  gasping air,  the  acrid  aftertaste of smoke lining my mouth and throat.
	"Wait here," I was told.
	"W. . . what? Where are you. . . " There was a scrabbling sound.
	"Hello?" I ventured.
	Silence.
	After a time I reached out,  trying to determine the  limits  of my burrow.  My shivering hands touched cold earth, then cloth. A few blankets of coarse-woven cloth; something like canvass. I grabbed handfuls and wrapped myself, trying to get away from the freezing earth and air, huddling in the dark, slowly thawing.
	The cub was a while returning. I heard the panting in the entrance to the den and remembered wolves before a  quiet  voice  reassured me.  There was a metallic tinkling,  then hands  pushed  aside  the  blankets to work at my irons.  It  was only seconds before tumblers clicked and the shackles came off.
	"Y. . . y. . . you have the k. . . k. . . " my teeth were chattering  so  hard I couldn't work my mouth around the Sathe words.
	"Quiet down," he growled. "Your hands." The manacles  were  quickly  removed.  
	"T. . . thank you. "
	Fur and leathery pads on small fingers touched my skin. "You  are still cold?  There are more coverings. Here. . . " It was almost  a bed he helped me find in the darkness:  soft furs under me  and  blankets  - albeit thin and feeling worn to my fingertips   -  on  top. He settled me there, then said, "I have to go now."
	"Hey! Please wait. . . "
	"They will miss me. There  is some food over there. I will come back, " he told me,  then there were scuffling sounds and his presence  was  gone.
	"Wait!"  I called after him.  "Don't. . . " I trailed off  into  the silence.
	There was no reply.

******

	I crouched at the border of field and forest,  hidden behind  the  snow-dusted skeleton of a bush and a drift banked against  a  fallen trunk.
	Now  the storm had passed,  the sky was a pure  cobalt  blue  with  a white sun and the world was a clean as a blank  sheet  of paper.  Over there,  a stark contrast to the crystalline  snow  and  achingly  clear  sunlight,  the farm was a  cluster  of  low  outbuildings around a blackened mound of timbers.  A stiff breeze  whisked tails of powder across the fields, piled it millimetre by  millimetre against the buildings, making it even colder.  And over there a hare  worried  at the a few remaining leaves on the lower branches of a bush.
	There was no other sign of life.
	That  morning I'd woken alone to light at the  entrance  to  the  burrow.  It was a strange little chamber and I spent a  time  trying to puzzle out what animal had dug it:  a badger  set?  Too  big. Wolf? Perhaps, but I didn't think so.
	There was food,  as the cub had told me the previous  night,  but precious little.  I ate, rationing myself. The dried meat was  tough, like old leather, but it filled a hole.
	For  some time I waited there,  hiding.  Would my  abductors  think I'd died in the blaze,  or would they be looking for  me?  Should I stay put or make tracks out of there? Where the hell was I? I spent hours waiting, hoping the cub would return, but there was no sign of him.
	Finally I crawled out of my sanctuary.
	Strange  how people who have never before  encountered  snow  have the impression that is soft,  dry, and fluffy. It is none of  these things.  It is inimical to humans. New-fallen powder may be  soft, but after a time it can compress, melt, form a layer of ice  on  its surface that is quite capable of breaking  the  skin.  My  impromptu  marathon the last night had left me  with  lacerations  that only that morning were beginning to make themselves noticed.  Could've been worse. I'd  torn the blankets into strips, divided them between makeshift moccasins and mittens. They'd provide some protection against that, but they weren't waterproof. Frostbite: I'd have to take my chances
	Outside, I squinted in the sunlight, the first I'd seen in God-knows-how-long. I was somewhere in the forest, snow knee-deep all  around  me. The kid had done a good job  of  covering  our  tracks,  but I was able to trace tell-tale signs - a half-covered  footprint, trampled bracken - back the way we'd come.
	The tunnel opening was gone;  closed and buried under  snow.  Just  as  well.  There were the prints of adult Sathe along the culvert: most likely Gulf Sathe. Just making sure.
	I limped over to the homestead and spent a while poking through the wreckage. The farmhouse was a gutted ruin.  The chimney had  collapsed  into  a pile of rubble.  Some of the stones had been moved in  an  aborted  attempt  by someone to search the debris,  a  few  beams  shifted, but otherwise the ruins were undisturbed.
	I  pulled the cloak tighter about my shoulders and nudged  a  blackened beam;  it shifted with a grating and a slight cloud  of  soot.  Not very thorough on their part.  If they HAD searched the  remains they'd have discovered the lack of a body, or even of the  chains.
	Outside  the  stable there were the wheel marks  of  wagons,  hoofprints of llamas and bison, already half filled with wind-blown snow. Inside, there were half a dozen crude pallets  arranged  about  the  remains of a small fire. Nothing  there.  The  other  rickety outbuilding was a storage shed of some kind. Any food had  been cleaned out,  but there was still some heavy  canvass sacking,  a few farm  implements.
	I  took  up  a  rusty knife with a  handle bound in varnished string and set to work.
	A  few hours later I was leaving the farm again,  this  time  for  the  last time.  Even through the crude  padded  jacket  and  leggings I'd made from the sacking I felt the bite of the wind.
	New England winters are harsh.

******

	Most  of  the day was behind me by the time  I  reached  the  road.  Like all Sathe roads this far from habitation it was little  more  than  wheel  ruts following the path of least  resistance  around  boulders, steep hills, lakes, and gorges. I had almost passed it;  missing it completely.  Buried beneath the snow it was all  but  invisible.
	I tightened my hold on the cloak around my shoulders and set  off  at  jog. . . well,  a fast walk actually,  following  the  road  north.  At a guess,  my captors would have been taking me  south,  toward  the  Gulf  realm. . . But then again they  might  have  been  headed west,  into the neutral territory of the Open  Realm.  No,  not at this time of year. The Appalachians. . . Skyscratchers  would  be impassable.  And this road was the only way to anywhere I had,  so I stuck with it.
	Kilometre  after  kilometre crawled by.  The  cloth  wrapped  around my feet became torn and soaked. Through the damp, chilling  cloth my feet grew cold,  numb. They felt as if they weren't even  really  there;  just  abstract lumps on the ends of my  legs  I'd  dreamed up to walk on.  Muscles that hadn't been used in the long  months in the Citadel started complaining,  occasionally balking,  causing me to stumble.  The gash on my thigh throbbed,  adding to  the pain.  I'm not sure when it reopened, but blood began seeping  through  the  rags and running down my leg to chill in  a  sticky  mess.
	My jog turned to a walk, to a stagger.
	Finally,  my legs gave out completely,  leaving me  sprawled  and exhausted in a rut.
	An  ancient  conifer,  a pine, with branches  that  formed  a  curtain to the ground.  Inside this circle,  near the trunk,  the  snow  had  not encroached and the ground was  dry,  covered  with  needles.
	I  pushed the branches out of the way and wearily sank down on the  needles,  leaning against the trunk.  Huddled  in  the  cloak,  I  tore at a strip of the dried meat with my  teeth,  too  exhausted to make much of an impression on it. I dropped the meat  and closed my eyes.
	"Just five minutes," I told myself.
	I don't know exactly how long I slept.

******

	A llama's whining bleat sounded through the veils of  sleep,  jolting me to bleary awareness.
	Dim  light  - morning light - was filtering in  through  the  branches of the tree,  throwing moving, stippled light across the  ground and me.  Beyond the branches,  I caught a glimpse of rapid  movement  before they were pushed aside amidst a deluge  of  pine  needles and snow crystals.
	Two  cloaked Sathe were silhouetted against the morning  sun  shining over their shoulder,  dazzling me. I gave a yell; fear and  desperation turning it into an animal's howl,  and hurled  myself  at them.
	They seemed as surprised as I was, falling backwards as they  fumbled  for  their weapons.  I pushed past  them,  knocking  them  aside, and found myself in a circle of Sathe.
	My  leg screamed pain as I spun on the spot, but  found  that  the two I'd knocked down had recovered,  their swords in  their  hands.  I  kept turning,  looking only for a way out of there;  all I saw was the glittering steel of swords and knives,  the swirl  of cloaks, shaggy faces with flattened ears snarling.
	Something landed on me from behind,  clinging and tangling: a  net.  I tried to throw it off again, but someone tackled me and I  hit the ground hard.  Thrashing and kicking,  I tried to  wriggle  free,  but  my  legs were pinned.  I jabbed with my  fingers  and  elbows and was rewarded with a grunt of pain.  A hand grabbed  my  arm,  trying  to hold that down as well,  hit my  chest,  sending  skyrockets  of agony bursting in my skull.  I twisted  my  wrist,  caught hold of the hand and wrenched the arm, aiming to crack the  elbow. A Sathe howled in pain.
	Then  they all piled on and hammered away until  the  lights went out.

******

	Something  sent a white-hot burst of stars through the  back  of my skull and made me whimper with pain.
	I  was  curled up on a hard surface covered with a thin smattering of  reeking straw.  Everything was shaking and jolting. There was the  distant clattering of wheels and squeaking of axles.  A bump, and again the lump on the back of my head met the floor with agonising results.
	Dim. A low, wooden roof, metal bars and beyond those  a rough,  canvass fabric with pale, yellow light filtering through.  Animal stink was overwhelmingly strong. My clothes, the rags I'd cobbled together, they were all gone, but  the  temperature was bearable.  Barely;  I  was  still  shivering with the cold.
	I rolled over onto my hands and knees,  my head hanging  and  my  vision blurring in time to the throbbing in my skull.  A  low  growling  made  me  look up into a set of amber  eyes  and  bared  fangs.  I flung myself backwards  against the bars of my cage  as  the wolf in the next cage snapped and snarled viciously at me.
	Cages.
	Cages of all sizes stacked in the back of the wagon, animals of all kinds locked within them: Minks, squirrels, rabbits, raccoons, gophers, birds of various kinds, a badger, and the beady, bespectacled eyes of a ferret watched me. There were furs of all kinds hanging stacked in piles, other fresher ones hanging from the roof. My prison was a cube about a metre on all  sides; not nearly enough room to let me stand or stretch out.  The  bars  were grids  of solid iron, a couple of centimetres thick. A clay container  with a few dregs of water left in it was  strapped  to  one  of the bars.  The door was just a hinged side of  the  cage,  held shut by an iron bolt; no lock.
	The wolf and I were the largest creatures in the  menagerie.  It stopped lunging at the bars  but retreated to a far corner of its cage  and  kept  growling while it watched me strain my fingers through  the  bars to reach for the bolt. No go. The thing was rusted stuck, my  trembling fingers couldn't budge it.
	My  throat was parched and swollen.  The water in  the  dish  looked fresh,  probably melted snow. I drank it all; then shaking  wildly,  I  curled up into a small ball in a corner of the  cage,  futilely  trying to burrow into the straw for as much warmth as I could.
	They'd  got me again,  but why wasn't I guarded?  Why was  I  shut  in  here?  It didn't look as if I were  going  anywhere, but  wouldn't they at least have someone watching me?
	What would they do with me?
	The  wagon  creaked  and  groaned on  through  the  day  and  occasionally,  I  could  catch  snatches  of  Sathe  voices  from  outside.  When we finally stopped there was a long heart-pounding wait before the  flap at the back was flung open.
	The  wolf shrank back,  snarling and I cowered back with  an  arm  flung  up against the half-blinding  light.  The  Sathe  who  rocked the wagon as he clambered into the back of the wagon was a  complete  stranger,  not  wearing armour,  just a pair  of  dirty  breeches  and a thick leather guard around his left  wrist.  From  the  wooden  bucket he was carrying he pulled something  that  he  tossed into the wolf's cage,  then dipped his hand back into  the  bucket and threw a lump into mine.
	Raw meat.
	For a time I stared at it. I was starving.
	But  raw  meat?!
	I  snatched  it up, ripped a chunk off and forced it down.  Cold  and  raw,  juices trickling over my hands, like rubber in my mouth.
	The  wolf  had already devoured his  meal and was snuffling around in case he'd missed anything when my stomach clenched violently. I doubled over and puked, bringing back up what'd just gone down, heaving until my stomach was empty  and  I  was  curled  up  in a retching, trembling ball.

******

	  "It looks ill,  Ma'am," a rough voice grated.  "It  hasn't  even tried to eat anything since it vomited everywhere."
	I  lay  quietly,  staring dully at the  Sathe  who  appeared  beyond  the bars of my cage.  A female,  decked in blue and  dark  green;  a cloak and breeches.  She stared at me,  then turned  to  address someone behind her, "What have you been feeding it?"
	"Meat.  It ate some,  then was sick and has touched  nothing  since."	
	Something sharp jabbed me and I tried to press further  back  into the unyielding iron.  "Try something else," she  said.  "Try  and keep it alive.  Incredibly ugly thing. Have you ever heard of  anything like it before?"
	"No. Never."
	"Saaaa," there was a long drawn-out hiss.  "Neither have  I.  That rare.  It is bound to be worth something then.  Perhaps  it prefers plants:berries and leaves."
	"But then it would not have touched the meat."
	"Huh! Depends how hungry it was. Bears eat both. Try it." She turned to leave.    
	"Who  are  you?"  I tried to say,  my voice  seizing  in  my  swollen throat.
	The female's head snapped around to her companion.  "What? Did you  say. . . "
	I licked my lips and forced my mouth around the Sathe words. "Who are you?"
	"My Ancestors. . . " Sathe gaped at me. "It TALKS!"
	I struggled to sit up,  finally propping my back against the  bars and panting with the effort. "Who. . . who are you?"
	The female squatted before the cage, staring at me. "Can you  understand us?"
	She didn't KNOW! My heart leapt. "You are not Gulf?"
	There were more faces appearing behind her,  all staring  at  me.
	Again she looked me over,  as if unable to believe what  she  was  seeing.  Slowly  her ears went back  and  she  hissed,  "No, Eastern. What are you?"
	But I was just staring at her. "Eastern?"
	"Yes, Eastern!"
	 "Ohjesus!" I buried my head in my hands and sobbed in  sheer  relief.
	"Answer me!" the female hissed. "What ARE you!"
	I looked at her, at her face, the anger and pure distaste in  her eyes.  I suddenly felt fear.  "My n. . . name is Kelly.  Please,  let me out."
	"Let you out?!" she snorted incredulously.  "Something  like  you must be worth a fortune!"
	"Wha . . ." My heart lurched into doubletime. "No! You cannot. . . "
	"But I can," she smiled. "Who did you escape from. Who  was  your previous owner?  Ah, I can make a lot of profit from you and  I do not intend to lose you!"
	I made a small noise, not really believing what I was hearing. "But. . . No owner. . . I am. . . I am not an. . . animal."
	"You smell like one! You stay in there."
	"No!" I lunged forward, grabbing at her through the bars.
	She  was faster than anything has a right to be. Her sword  jabbed my shoulder, drawing a stream of blood. I scrambled back with a yelp and clutched at the wound, panting.
	"Please.  Do  not  do this.  I am not. . . dangerous. . . I  am  a  friend to the Shirai. Please! You have my word I. . . I will stay!"
	Her muzzle wrinkled, baring white, pointed teeth and she ran  her gaze over me,  taking in the tattered and torn clothing,  bandages across my chest and leg, the  red marks on my wrists. . . 
	"A  friend  to  the  Shirai  you  say,"  she  sneered.  "Not  dangerous. . . Animal,  you just tried to attack me. You have broken  S'kasavienr's  arm  and  the Shirai would never  consort  with  a  reeking  pile  of filth such as you." With that  she  turned  and  jumped from the wagon.  I saw Sathe had gathered behind the wagon  where  they  were staring at me.  "What are you gaping  at!"  the  female snarled at them.  "Move your tails!  Go!  Get out of here!  There is work to do!"
	She  turned to the Sathe with the leather  wristguards.  The  gamekeeper,  I realised with a hollow feeling. "I want that thing  chained," she ordered.  "Keep it alive,  but do not let it out on  any account."
	The gamekeeper looked at me. "But if it knows the Shirai. . . "
	"You do not believe that?!  Look at it! Look at the marks on  its wrists! It has been chained recently and I am willing to  lay  bets that it escaped from someone's collection.  Perhaps even the Shirai's."
	"No," I croaked in disbelief. "No! I did. . ."
	"You  shut it!" she snarled at me.  "Keep it  shut!  We  can  always take your tongue!" Then she turned back to the gamekeeper:  "You heard how anxious it was to learn if we were  Eastern.  It  may be worth a fortune." The Sathe looked at me and I stared back in shock. "I know several  collectors  who would pay a great deal for a rare specimen like  this."
	"No. . . "
	Later on, several of the Sathe opened the cage and forced me  to  lie face-down at sword point.  I couldn't do  anything  while  they  fastened an iron collar around my neck and riveted it  shut  with hammers. When they withdrew I just stared at the heavy links  of the chain running from my collar to the bars of the cage.
	"It is an animal," the female had said.  "Keep it alive, but  whatever you do,  don't let it escape.  If it even gets out of that cage I will have your hides for blankets!"
	
******

	The shivering and fever got worse.
	They fed me pieces of raw meat or stale bread,  ignoring my  protests.  At first I tried to force the meals down, but I just couldn't stomach it, there wasn't enough water and gradually I couldn't be bothered to  make  the effort to eat at all. I had to live with rotting food and the  stink  of  my  own  wastes until they  were  cleaned  away  by  a  perfunctionary bucket of freezing water sloshed into my cage when someone got around to it.
	The days were hot and cold blurs of darkness and  nauseating  jolting and Sathe faces thrusting  inedible  food upon me.  My leg throbbed in pain,  the wound turning  black  and  foul-smelling. My body kept trying to vomit,  but  there  was  nothing  left.  All  I could do was lie there, staring dully at the bars, the wounds the collar had chafed in my neck stinging painfully.  Noises of the animals chittering  and  squeaking  merged  with  the dull  pounding  in  my  skull.  Time  stretched,  melting with the misery until even that died into  a  drifting detachment.
	I was almost  dead by the time the  caravan  reached  Sand Circle.
	
******
	
	Winter sunlight streamed in as the canvass flap across the back of the wagon was thrown aside.
	The Sathe soldier in blue and silver livery looked bored as he carried out his inspection of the  wagon.  His  eyes travelled over me, to the wolf curled up and staring sullenly  back  at him,  to the other cages,  then back to  me.  He  leaned  closer,  blinked in mild bemusement,  his muzzle wrinkling at the  stench  from  my cage,  then took a scroll from its case  at  his  belt and unrolled it.  With  widening  eyes,  he  looked from the  scroll  to  me then back  to  the  scroll.
	I stared back without really seeing him.
	Then he was gone and I faded out again.
 	The  voices woke me up.  The cage door hung open  and  Sathe  leaned over me,  their voices loud as they called to others,  but  their hands were gentle as they touched me.  Anger set their ears  back  when  they examined the black collar biting into  my  neck,  then tools were working at the metal.
	"Careful! He's been burned."
	"Tortured you mean. . . By my mother's tits! Look at his leg!"
	"Ai. Bad."
	"I wouldn't keep my llama like this!"
	"Rot you, move! Out of the way!" Another  face - familiar black fur -  pushing others  aside and freezing in shock.  "Oh, my Ancestors. K'hy? K'hy Do not move! My Ancestors.  Do not try to speak. You are safe now. Hear  me? Safe. Rot it! Get him out of there!"
	I  croaked something unintelligible and tried to  touch  her  face.  She  caught my hands and clasped them in her own,  then a blanket covered me; warmth after so long. When they lifted  me onto a makeshift stretcher she stayed by me, stroking my face. I remember glimpses of blue sky and a sun that dazzled me, also a  furious female Sathe being held by guards,  her hide slashed  and  bleeding from marks left by raking claws. There  was shouting,  then a pause while several  unfamiliar  Sathe  leaned  over  to  stare down  at  me.  One  of  them  said  something, then I was moved again.
	Indoors,  carried through doors, up stairs, along corridors. In a bright room Sathe fussed over my leg and chest  while  the  dark-furred female stroked my brow and calmed me during the pain.  After that came the warmth and vague pleasure of a bath,  hands  with  fur  slicked down by water washing me then carefully  rubbing  me  down  with  rough towels.  There were the cool sheets  of  a  bed  against  my bare skin,  then the salty flavour of  something  hot  forced between my lips. Hands held my mouth closed while I choked and gagged and finally swallowed  and then the fever hit me again.

******

	I  awoke  with a gasp in almost  complete  darkness. Sweat  beaded on my face and body, the clammy cotton sheets adhering to my skin.  For several minutes I just lay  there,  gasping  and listening to my heart settling down to a regular  pulse.  The  dream was already fading back into the recesses of my  mind, but it still left me shaking. Flashes - barely remembered glimpses of pain, bars and blades, hate and claws. . . 
	I let out a shuddering sigh,  finally  taking a breath and looking around.  Blackness, the faint glow of a dying fire. The  only  door  was delineated by the thin spread  of  light  shining  through from the other side.
	The  sanded floorboards were cool and smooth under  my  bare  feet  as  I  swung my legs over the side of the  bed  and  stood,  grabbing for the side of the bed as my legs buckled beneath me. I  rested,  examining my wounds. My upper thigh was heavily bandaged  and was throbbing angrily.  My ruined nipple was scabbed over and  looked  absolutely terrible,  but seemed clean.  I  grimaced  and  rested a few seconds, then tried again.  This time I made it to the  door, but even that exhausted me. I had to lean against the frame as I fumbled with the latch. The door  swung  open with a squeal of misaligned hinges and I squinted into glow of the  lantern  on the wall opposite.
	A long corridor panelled in a dark wood, rugs  on  the  floor  and  paintings on the walls.  Closed  doorways  flanked  either side of the passage while at one end it  finished  in  a latticed window - dark outside - and at the other in the blank wall of a  T- junction.  I  made it three-quarters of the way  to  the  junction before I had to rest, slumped against a panel beside a  portrait  of  a  Sathe noble with a condescending gaze.
	A Sathe carrying a tray and decked out in the simple kilt of a servant turned into the corridor, saw me and jerked back with a startled bark.  The tray hit the floor with a crash and a rattle as several bowls rolled to a  standstill, their contents staining a rug brown.
	For  a  second  he  just gaped at me  while  I  watched  him  nervously.  He  was  a stranger, and recently I had had  some  bad  experiences with strange Sathe. When he closed his mouth and came  towards me, I flinched away.
	"Hai, no." He stopped, setting his face in what he must have hoped was a reassuring expression. "You should not be out here," he said in the same kind of tone one might use on a  child. A couple of paces away from me  he stopped,  held out his hand, then drew it back again. "Can you  understand?" he asked,  unsure of himself.  "You must go back  to  your room."
	"No," I shook my head. "Where is Tahr?"
	"Your room, please!"
	"Fuck  off,  runt !" I pushed past him and lurched off  down  the corridor,  reeling against walls.  The domicile  scurried  after,  futilely pleading that I return to my quarters,  that  he  would send Remae to me. Sathe appeared in doorways, stepping back  as  I  passed.  Finally  several soldiers in the  livery  of  the  Eastern Realm burst into the corridor in front of me.  I  snarled  at them,  sweat running down my face, and they started to crouch,  their hands going for their swords.
	"No, do not hurt him!" the servant yelled.
	"Hurt HIM?!" one of the guards snarled. "He was not the one I was worried about!" However they left their swords  and  claws  sheathed  and began to move in on me.  I only struggled  briefly,  futilely.  I could scarcely stand.  What hope did I have  against  armed troopers?  I gave in, letting them half-walk, half-carry me  back to my room.
	I  lay  limply on the bed and simply stared at  the  ceiling  while  a fire was laid and lit and guards stared at me.  I  could  feel the traces of fever burning in my body;  just dying  embers,  an echo of the heat that had raged and stormed through my dreams.
	When  the  door opened again,  I turned my head to  see  the  moving blackness that was Remae enter. Her eyes flared briefly in  my direction before she turned to the guards.  There was a  brief  exchange  with  several  references  to  yours  truly,  then  the  troopers  bowed and left.  Remae snagged a chair and  brought  it  over  to my bedside,  sitting down and leaning forward  with hands clasped on her knees.
	There was a pause.
	"How are you feeling?" she finally asked.
	I lolled my head over to see her better. "Where is Tahr?"
	Her ears matted,  "Still in  Mainport.  A  messenger has been dispatched."
	"Uhhh?" I looked around. "I thought this was Mainport."
	Her hand waved as she waved a negative.  "No,  Sand  Circle.  Mainport  is  six days away.  The trappers who  found  you  brought you here."
	I closed my eyes and grimaced. It was a haze. "Trappers?"
	"You do not remember?"
	I  tried.   "There  were Sathe and. . . and a  cage. Only  pieces. . . I am sorry."
	Remae leaned back into the chair and steepled her hands, her  chin  resting  on two fingers.  It almost looked as if  she  were  praying and that might have been funny at another place,  another  time.
	"There's no need to be,  K'hy.  Their intention was to  take  you  to Mainport,  to sell you,  but I doubt that you would  have  survived  the  journey." She reached out and  took  my  arm.  Her  stubby  thumb  and  forefinger  were  able  to  close  around  my  forearm. "It is nothing I would wish to remember. You were nothing  but  bones  with a little flesh attached.  You  still  are.  That  little walk you took will not help. You must rest. . . "
	There  was  an interruption then as the door  opened  and  a  servant entered with a tray.  Remae waited until he had placed it  upon  a table and left,  then the Marshal rose and  poured  water  from a jug into a strangely wrought cup: all lopsided with swirls  and bulges in the glass.  She picked up a small sachet and looked  at me. "This is to help you sleep. It is tasteless and quite safe  for you;  we have been using it to quell the dreams you have been  having."
	I drew back slightly into the cushions.  More drugs. "Do you really think I need it?"
	"Yes."
	I sighed: "Very well."
	With  a  delicate  claw she tore sachet open  and  poured  a  powdery substance into the water, stirred it slowly with a swizzle stick. I cautiously  sniffed the concoction, then while Remae propped my shoulders up,  I  drank.  She was right,  there was absolutely no taste and  the  water was the best thing I'd felt in ages.  "It will take a short  time to work," she said as she laid the glass aside.
	I lay back and waited for my awareness to start to fade.
	After a while: "K'hy?"
	"Hmmph?" I mumbled, already floating away on warm waves.
	"Can you forgive us?  For everything Sathe have done to you,  can you forgive us?"
	"I will work on it," I said,  then smiled and fumbled  after  her hand. She hesitated, then clasped it: just lightly at first.
	The Marshal of the Eastern Realm held my hand and watched me  until I slept again.

******

	Thri ai Hast, lord of the Hast clan sat at the head of the table. A young, slightly-built male Sathe. Red breeches went well with his reddish-brown fur and  a  distinctive white fur blaize marked his chest fur over his sternum, if that's what you call it on a Sathe.
	Beside  him,  his mate was a female who looked  young. . . well,  no  older  than Tahr,  with fawn-coloured  fur, dark  stripes  on her forearms, blue breeches.  In each ear she  bore  a  single, silver ring. Opposite, Remae was a black, muscular figure  innocuously sipping delicately at her spouted wine goblet.
	The room wasn't the large hall where banquets and meals were held  to  impress visiting nobility, it was a more informal place. Dark wooden panels and a few tapestries lined the walls while a pine table dominated  the centre of the room. A fireplace set in one wall blazed fiercely, keeping the room and the food set on an iron grid before it, warm.
	Neither of the nobles seemed to know what to make of me.
	There  was  no  doubt  that they'd had plently of time to study me while I slept.  I  had  a  hazy  recollection of the Clan Lord's female standing over me,  hastily  pulling  her hand away from the scars on my chest as I opened  my  eyes.   What  had  she  been  thinking?  Disgust?  fear?  perhaps  sympathy?
	And now they watched me again.  The small amount of meat  on  the  platter  before me had been  specially  overcooked,  tasting  fantastic  to me,  but the looks upon the faces of the  Sathe  as  they  ate  their own almost-raw fare made it  obvious  that  they  wondered how I could eat the charred stuff.
	Of  course they asked me what I was, where I was from, how I came here. So - once again - I told my story.  It was  starting to become a litany,  but what the hell; it was great for  breaking the ice. Eventually the conversation worked its way on through the smalltalk to the  point  where Remae explained what had happened after my abduction:
	"We  did  not know what had happened  when  you  disappeared, K'hy."  Remae paused to rip a gobbet of meat from the haunch she held in both hands,  then  continued with juices matting the fur around her mouth. "Tahr went ordered immediate searches of  the  town, the Citadel, and  the countryside. Messengers were sent to all the nearby towns to alert the garrisons.
	"At first we did not know what had happened to you. They said you'd gone and we didn't know if you had decided to leave us  of  your  own  will or had been taken by force,  but  when  we  found  traces of thamil in your quarters the Shirai went berserk. She ordered a  massive  search  of all towns and roads between Mainport and  the  western  borders."
	"Excuse me,  Marshal," Thri looked slightly puzzled.  "Thamil? What relevance does that have?"
	Remae looked at me before answering.  "From what I have been  told,  it does not affect him as it does us.  To him it is  a  powerful  soporific.   That  is  why  we  have  been  using  a derivative of it to help him sleep."
	"Thamil?" Thri repeated, looking at me. "Why?"
	I shrugged.  "I am not entirely sure.  I. . . work  differently  from you.  Things like thamil have different effects on  me.  Not so pleasant."
	The  Sathe  still looked  bewildered.  Their  nobility  used  thamil  as  humans used designer drugs or used to  use  expensive  tobacco;  how could it be dangerous to anyone? That was the point  when  the  conversation  turned to  human  vices  and  pleasures.  Awkward and somewhat embarrassing to me, filled with entertaining  titbits for the Sathe. It was some time later before it wound its  way back to the present situation.
	"Remae, how long have I been gone?"
	"Two and a half weeks now."
	What? God, how long had they kept me drugged? Everything had been so chaotic, I'd lost all track. How long had it been since the trappers had found me? Since the fire? 
	"Do you think they will be all right?" I asked quietly.
	Thri  looked away while Remae stared into her goblet, swirled the wine inside.  "We  will not know until the patrol returns. . . It will depend upon the Gulf troops," Thri answered.
	I  swallowed  hard  to choke back the  lump  forming  in  my  throat.
	"K'hy," Remae said,  I looked at her and saw her  expression  was gentle and a little sad, "We will not be able to wait for the  patrol."
	"Yeah , I know." I sighed. "Please, if you will excuse me."
	"Of course," Thri said.
	"Do you need help?" Remae asked.
	I shook my head. The marshall cocked her head, watching me shuffle out on my walking stick.
	The room was simple, wooden panelling, a shuttered window, a few pieces of  furniture  and of course the circular  bed  in  the  centre  of  the room. The only light came from the fire  that  had  been laid so the room would be a comfortable temperature for me. Even so, I  sat  with my legs crossed in the middle  of  the  bed, the  blankets pulled up around my shoulders like a shawl. In my mind I  ran over what I had done. . . what I could have done.
	I should've realised what would happen to the family. With  me gone, the bastards would have had no further use for them when they moved out. . . They were alien,  I was alien, but that family had set light to their own home to help me. At what cost to themselves. . . ?
	The  door squeaked slightly as it swung open.  I looked  up,  startled. Remae stepped into the room,  one hand holding the door. She  was almost invisible in the dim light,  her dark fur blurring  in  with the shadows, but her eyes burned like green coals. "Are  you  all right?"
	"Yes,   I  am  fine,"  I  forced  a  smile.  "Did  you  want  something?"
	"I  was  just checking on you.  Tahr would have my  pelt  if  anything. . . " She trailed off then with a gentle hiss. She closed  the  door  and came to stand by the edge of the bed. "K'hy, I noticed it downstairs. What is wrong?"  The glowing embers of the fire shone through her  fur,  outlining  her in flickering orange. "Do you want to talk?"
	"What makes you think there is something the matter?"
	She  snorted.  "I have stood here and watched you scream  as  you lived the emotions of your dreams: fear,  pain,  hatred, love,  pleasure. . . I  think  I have known you long enough to be  able  to  read your moods. I can tell when something is bothering you. Do you want to talk?"
	"No,"  I shuddered.  "Please, just leave me alone." It just washed over me: I  couldn't  face the. . . the ALIEN in front of me.  I was scared  and  alone  in  a  world  where I was a pawn in a  game  I  only  half  understood. All I wanted to do was curl up and wait till it went away.
	She ducked her head.  "All right, then.  As you wish."  She  walked back to the door and placed one hand on the  latch.  "They  would have killed them anyway.  Do not blame it  on  yourself. . . Good  sleep, K'hy."
	The door's hinges screamed like a comment behind her.

******

	The cellars of the Keep were cold,  dark. They reeked of  urine  and something less tangible.  Fear?  Beneath my  feet  the  steps  were damp and slimy,  as were all things  down  here.  The  stones of the walls leaked moisture and lichen abounded in  these  dank  corridors and stairs.  It was a screaming contrast  to  the  culture of the panelled and ornate hallways upstairs.  A textbook  dungeon.
	The torch of the Sathe guard in front of me began to  gutter  and  he  paused to pull another pair from a  rust-encrusted  iron  sconce in the wall.  The wood sputtered and smoked into life  and  the  guard  continued down the passage that was an inch  deep  in  opaque water.
	"Here," he finally said,  stopping at a heavy door barred by  a wooden beam. He started to open it, then hesitated, tipping his  head and asking, "Are you sure?"
	"Just open it," I snapped, nerves making me touchy.
	He  shrugged then removed the beam and stood it aside  while  he  pulled  the door open.  Warped from the  moisture,  it  stuck  halfway.  The  fetid  stench  that wafted out of  that  hole  was  indescribable, had me dry-retching.
	The cell was tiny:  two metres by two,  and not tall  enough  for  me to stand upright.  I held the torch  up,  squinting  past the flame to make sense of the cell's shadows. It was the only light, without it the cell would've been a black, wet, reeking hole. Opposite, in  a  niche carved into the damp stone wall,  the lone occupant  was  shielding her eyes from the sudden light, blinking, dazzled. Then  she made a small, strangled noise.
	"N. . . No. . . No," she choked. "Guard. . . GUARDS!"
	The rough stone walls seemed to swallow her cry. Even so, the guard outside must have heard her,  but he didn't respond.  Oh Jeeze, she  was  a pathetic sight: There were dark scratches down her  muzzle, one of her ears was ripped and torn,  her fur was filthy  and  plastered  to her skin by water and dirt,  and she had  obviously  not  been eating.  Rust-stained manacles around her  wrists  were  chained to an iron loop in the wall. They rattled as she held her  hands out as if trying to push me away
	"GUARD!" she screamed again,  then her eyes seemed to glaze,  refusing   to   focus   on   me.    "Go. . . Go. . . Get  out, get outgetoutgetoutgetout. . . " she was panting wildly.
	I held the torch  out to  the  side as I approached her,  sidestepping a puddle in the centre of the cell. She shrank away,  as  if  she  were trying to ooze into the  cracks  in  the  wall,  covering her head with her arms.
	I crouched down in front of her. "I am not going to hurt you," I said,  then waited for  some  kind of response.  Nothing:  she just huddled  there,  trembling.  "Look," I continued.  "I just want to ask you something. . . Hey!"
	She gave no indication that she'd even heard me.
	"Please,  listen to me!  Either after or before  you. . . found  me,  did you see anyone else?  Another convoy?  Just some  Sathe?  Anyone?"
	In  the silence afterwards I heard the guard outside  cough,  water drip from the ceiling.  She didn't answer. After everything  she'd done to me,  almost killed me. . . Damnation!  I was going  to  get something!  That anger lent me strength to seize her mane and  twist her around to face me.  She mewed and tried to  hiss,  then  started  panting  again,  staring at me with  fascinated  terror.  "Fuck it! Listen to me!" I yelled into her face, shaking her.
	She started chittering uncontrollably.
	With  that  my strength deserted me.  My head reeled  and  I  lurched  back away from her,  breathing hard from  the  exertion.  No. . . I wasn't going to collapse, not here. The whites of her eyes  were showing as she stared,  teeth glinting.  This was  something  I'd never seen in a Sathe before.
	"Get away from me," she moaned.
	"Tell me," I replied. "Did you see anyone?"
	"No!"  she  tried to bury her head again,  then  raised  it,  looking anywhere but at me and her words turned to a babble, "No!  I. . . There was a caravan.  Going the other way.  In a hurry. I did  not see. . . "
	"They had a cub with them?"
	"I did not see! I DID NOT SEE!""
	"How do I know?"
	She moaned.
	The  torch  flickered in a draft,  the  smoke  staining  the  ceiling black and stinging my eyes.  I blinked,  weighing up the  female  huddled  there.  She buried  her  head  again,  trembling  violently. Scared. Too scared to lie? How was I supposed to tell?  She'd  never shown the slightest compassion or mercy  toward  me;  what was to say she was being honest with me now?
	"You are sure."
	"I  do  not  know." The voice was  so  small,  tiny  in  the  stillness of the dungeon.
	I stood there for some time,  watching her. She stared back,  breathing  fast and shallow with the white of that  third  eyelid  partially  eclipsing her eyes,  glittering technicolour  with  the  torchlight.  Moisture dripped and glittered in the  dimness.  The  guard coughed again.
	Finally,  I  nodded,  slowly and told her,  "I am  going  to  believe you,  but let me tell you: if I find I have been lied to,  I will be back. You understand that?"
	She just stared at me, huddling in on herself. Closer, and I caught the sharp smell hanging over the general miasma: the stink  of  fresh urine.  It stopped me in my tracks and I was  sure  she  wasn't lying and that her terror was genuine.  That  feeling,  to  have someone so petrified of you they lost control of themselves;  it's not pleasant to learn you're a deepest and darkest nightmare  come to life.  It hurt with the pain I feel when cubs run from me  in fright.
	My tongue failed me. I did the first thing I could think of,  unbuttoning my cloak and draping it over her.  I waited awkwardly  for  a  few seconds while she just. . . just stared  at  me,  at  my  chest,  as  though  looking right  through  me.  With  goosebumps  breaking out on my skin I left that reeking little hole.
	The guard stared at me and I ignored him. He didn't say anything and there was a hollow thud as he dropped the bar  back  into place across the door.  I could imagine her curling up in a small ball on the icy stone as the darkness closed in around her.
	It was a long, cold walk back up from those depths.
	Remae intercepted me on the ground floor as I came past  the  guards. She took one look and whipped her own cloak off, throwing  it about my shoulders. "Rot you, you fool! By the Plagues! Why did you go down there? And you gave her your cloak, didn't you?"
	I didn't bother answering,  just pushed past her and started  off  down  the hall.  She caught me before I'd gone  five  steps,  hooking  claws into my sleeves and pulling me  up  short, pushing me against a wall to snarl up at me.  "Shave  you, K'hy! What were you doing down there?!"
	I shrugged. "Looking for answers."
	Her head drew back. "Did you find them?"
	I looked at the floor: "No."
	She hissed softly and disengaged her claws from the folds of  the  sleeve,  then turned to chase after the guard who'd  let  me  down there.
	"Remae."
	She turned.
	"Let her go."
	"Who?" She blinked. "The one down below?"
	"Yeah," I nodded. "Let her go."
	She  cocked  her head and  frowned,  furrows wrinkling the velvet of her muzzle. "What? Why?"
	"What laws has she broken?"
	Remae  stopped with her mouth hanging open,  surprise at  my  question turning to a level stare,  as if she were trying to  see  what was going on in my head.  "K'hy,  you must understand.  Laws  are dictated from ages past; they can be difficult. When a person  is taken against their will there is no. . . "
	"Would I be considered a person by your laws?"
	Her mouth snapped shut. A tic twitched at her jaw.
	I nodded slowly,  my legs feeling rubbery. I'd thought as much; When it came down to the crunch, I wasn't a person. I swallowed bile and began  to turn to head back to my rooms and the  promise  of  warmth there, pausing to say again to the Marshal,  "Remae,  let  her go."
	
******

	Morninglight; the white landscape bathed in that crisp light  and shadow that is the early morning.  The blue vault of the  sky  was  of a hue that made it appear almost solid,  the airy  clouds  across the horizon cloaking mountain peaks in mist.
	Cocooned  in  furs I was bundled into the back  of  a  wagon  hitched  to a pair of bison encrusted in sparkling ice-crystals,  steam  snorting from their nostrils. The iron-bound wheels of  the  wagons and hooves of the llamas clattered and skidded on the ice- coated cobbles as the small caravan wound its way out of the town  and across the whitewashed landscape.
	It didn't take me long to realise I was getting the bird  in the gilded cage treatment.  The wagon was comfortable;  luxurious by Sathe standards with padded benches, cushions, warm furs and sheets; all obviously put there with me in mind. But there were  also  the  guards,  two of them, one male the other female. I know they were  there  for  my own protection,  but I was sick of  being  watched  over.
	The  pair  were stony-silent as we put the town  behind  us,  both  of them avoiding my eyes.  At midday the caravan paused  to  rest the animals and let the riders stretch their legs, however I  was  lucky  to be able to talk Remae into letting me out  of  the  wagon.  Well,  'talk' isn't exactly the right word; rant would be  better.  She  gave  way to my anger looking more  than  a  little  surprised.

******

	I lay dozing,  half-in half-out of sleep, suffused with that  warm  glow  that  comes after  eating.  There  was  the  rocking,  lurching movement of the wagon that I'd almost learned to ignore,  the  rumbling  and  fingernail-on-blackboard  screech  of   badly  greased  axles  that I hadn't,  and the soft sibilants  of  Sathe  talking. About me.
	"If you have something to say about me," I said, "why do you  not  simply  ask me.  Instead of whispering behind  my  back."  I  stretched and rolled over to see them staring at me. " Well?  you  were talking about me?"
	The pair looked embarassed. "Saaa!  Yes. . . Sir,"  the female began,  then looked  to  the  male.
	"Sir," he took over, "are you the one all the madness has  been  about?"
	"Madness?"
	"Sir. . . most   of  the  Citadel  troops  are  searching   for  you. . . also the militia of a dozen towns. You must be important to  someone."
	"Oh. That."
	"There  were  rumours around Mainport that  the  Shirai  had  herself a fearsome creature. . . you do not look so fearsome."
	"That would depend upon the mood I am in," I grinned back at  him  and they both stiffened at the sight of  my  teeth.  "Sorry,  that is how I smile," I apologised. They still looked pensive.
	Of course they asked what I was. I gave my usual answer.
	"Your name is H'ey?"
	"Kelly," I corrected. "It has a 'K'."
	"K'hy."  They tried,  but their pronunciations still  missed  the palatal ells,  transforming my name into a cough with a  hiss  in its train.
	"Strange name," the female said.
	"Yes," I sighed. No point in disputing that. Here - to alien  ears - it is a weird name.
	The male was called Chirthi, and the female. . . 
	"R'Raschhhh. . . " I broke off,  almost choking on the  tongue- twister.
	"No. . . R'R'Rhasct,  it  is easy," she said and  repeated  her  name, enunciating. It sounded like a cat being deep fried.
	My efforts to get the pronunciation of her name correct  had  them in hysterics;  a pair of armed cats hissing their heads  off  with laughter.  But eventually they took mercy on me,  letting me  call  her  Rhasct.  Even  though - to Sathe - it  was  a  totally  different name, I could at least pronounce it.
	I wondered how they would cope with a name like 'Elizabeth'.
	They   confessed  they  had  been  'volunteered'  by   their  superiors to be my guard,  but it seems they had the last  laugh.  It was a cushy job, I wasn't too unpleasant, and they got to ride  in comfort and warmth.  They couldn't understand why I wrapped so  many blankets around myself.
	They  taught  me  to play Thsaa,  a game  in  which  small,  flattened  sticks with various dotted patterns on them were  used  in place of cards. The object of the game was to get several sets  of various different patterns.  The sets you had to collect  were  determined by the first hand you were dealt. You could dispose of  sticks and pick up new ones.  The first to get the necessary hand  was the winner. It was a simple game and helped pass the time.
	When we stopped for the night, I once again had a guard with  me when I had to relieve myself. Sleeping arrangements stuck me in the wagon with my guards, both the Sathe taking it in shifts to keep watch. I huddled under my piles of sheets and furs, unable to sleep, watching Rhasct's silhouette perched at the front of the wagon. In  the dark I felt a furry arm bump against my back as  its  owner rolled over in his sleep. What a crazy universe.

******

THE  HUMAN  MEMOIRS 
PART III



When so many are lonely
as seem to be lonely,
it would be inexcusably
selfish to be lonely
	 alone.
	    -TENNESSEE WILLIAMS	
 



	The day started as it had way back when Tahr and I were on the road. How long ago was that now? God, almost a year now. Ah, things were simpler then, when we'd first met, back in the good ol' days: Living day to day, up with the sun, break camp, and eat a cold breakfast on the move. Usually what was left of last night's dinner.
	A clear, crisp morning; one of those days that winter lives for. A translucent, half-hearted mist clung to the snowy countryside, sinking like an insubstantial tide as the sun slowly warmed it. The sky was a cobalt blue so sharp it cut.
	Off in the distance a flock of geese - flying in V-formation - skimmed low over the mirror-perfect surface of a lake that for some reason had remained unfrozen, the still water reflecting the birds and the bare trees along its shore . . . until the birds touched down, their wakes spreading ripples of distortion out across the crystal surface.
	New England would have looked like this, before the Europeans arrived. Indeed it was a paradise, but when everyone turns up expecting a share of paradise, it very rapidly becomes something else. Was that going to happen back home? Had it already happened?
	I reached out to push the flap back further. The outside air was cold, but fresh. I'd been cooped up for too long already.
	"Sir?"
	It was Chirthi. He reached past me to close the flap again. "I am sorry sir, but I cannot let you do that."
	"Huh? Do what?"
	"Sit like that, where someone might see you."
	I didn't quite believe this. "Say what? Why?"
	"Orders, sir." He ducked his head.
	I drew a deep breath. "Chirthi, you cannot read my expressions very well, can you. Do you know how I'm feeling?"
	He looked wary - rightly so. "Ah, no sir."
	"Annoyed!" I snarled. "Who told you to keep me inside?!"
	He cringed back, ears flattening. "The Marshal, sir. She ordered us to keep you in the wagon, out of sight, even if we have to chain you. If anything happened to you, or if you even got out to relieve yourself unaccompanied, she would drown us in the nearest river."
	I wanted to punch something. "All right then," I grated, "I will not try to make your job any harder."
	"We would appreciate that," R'R'Rhasct smiled. I rolled my eyes and wished the sarcasm wouldn't go past them so easily; took the fun out of it. Oh, shit, I sighed and settled back into the cushions. Tired. I still wore out easily. If my guards wanted to physically restrain me, they'd have little trouble.
	It was later that evening, when Remae brought me my food, I had the chance to ask her why I was being treated like I was under house arrest.
	"Your safety, K'hy," she said. "Look, if they were Gulf Realm who abducted you, then there could be a war brewing. They outnumber us, badly."
	"But, those maps you showed me. The Realms are about the same size. Anyway, what has that to do with me not being able to go and relieve myself without a cub watcher?" I demanded.
	"Huh . . . Those maps show the land we hold, not the number of Sathe on the land. The Swamp Lands to the south are almost worthless; too hot and wet. Insects, diseases, and hurricanes . . . There are not many Sathe who would wish to make their homes there."
	Yeah, it'd been a long time before the Florida peninsula back home was settled.
	"Also," she continued, "the Gulf realm has grown a lot over the past fifty years, they have built three new towns in the west."
	Three towns in fifty years was a LOT?! I was about to ask about that but she kept talking.
	"We knew they were increasing the sizes of their armed forces, but we did not realise the magnitude of these increases. They did it subtly, never marshalling large numbers of troops in one place. We just never knew just how many they had. When they recalled garrisons from outlying settlements they had a trained army that hopelessly outnumbers our own. Putting it simply, they are equipped for a war, we are not. So we need something to even the odds. You and you knowledge may be it, and they know it. They have tried to steal you from us once and failed. They may try again, or . . . or they might to decide to eliminate the thing that could possibly help to balance our forces."
	Why didn't she just say it? "Kill me."
	"Yes." She twitched a shoulder; an imitation shrug? I wasn't sure. "You see why I have ordered you kept under guard and out of sight. If they think you have been lost in the wilderness, all the better."
	"You think they will try again?"
	"I am not sure, but if their spies report you alive and causing trouble, I think there is a very good chance they will. This time they may not bother with trying to take you alive either. A well-aimed crossbow bolt would put an end to their problems. It all depends on how large a risk they consider you."
	"Thanks," I grimaced. "That makes me feel a whole lot better." I doubted they would have gone to all the trouble of kidnapping me if they thought I would be a minor irritation. Up to that point they had contented themselves with hit and run operations, making sure that their operatives struck at targets they could be sure of destroying while remaining anonymous. Now, with my abduction that had changed. They were willing to risk the disapproval of the other major powers just to snatch at a relatively unimportant target.
	How unimportant was I?
	Damnation! Given long enough a dedicated interrogator could get enough information out of me to give them a serious edge, technology-wise. I knew how to make gunpowder, I knew how to make a steam engine, or a glider or an electrical generator. I knew more efficient methods of refining iron ore, of smelting steel and of casting it.
	Perhaps the Eastern Realm had not deemed it an extravagance to put most of their forces on the watch for me. Now I knew that both sides wanted me . . . Bad.
	But perhaps there was a difference in their motives.	   
 
******

	"Six-eyes again!" R'R'Rhasct laughed. "Full set. That's two hundred and five golds you owe me, K'hy."
	"Shit!" I muttered. "All right, another hand. I cannot keep losing."
	"Perhaps," Chirthi grinned, "but you are pretty consistent."
	"Ah! Fuck you!"
	 "What?"
	"I was just congratulating you on your luck," I replied airily. They both laughed at that and R'R'Rhasct swirled her hand, spreading the sticks in a starburst - marked faces down - and plucked one at random, then another, and another, finally setting one back: "Your draw."
	I picked my chits, and selected the trio:three dots in an equilateral triangle. As Chirthi took his turn, I asked, "What can you do for entertainment in Mainport?"
	"Well," R'R'Rhasct began with a glint in her eyes, "You can buy anything and anyone: males, females. I am sure you can find someone who would . . . "
	"Not that kind of entertainment," I broke in. They both hissed their amusement. "Seriously."
	"Seriously," Chirthi said. "There are inns and taverns everywhere. Also a couple of theatres and libraries." That sounded interesting. I wondered what a Sathe play would be like. "Or - if it is more to your liking - you may be able to find a fight-pit."
	"Ah . . . Fight-pit?"
	"You do not know of them? Well, I suppose they are not spoken of a great deal. Well, two or more Sathe are placed in an arena where they . . . "
	"Fight," I finished.
	"Sort of predictable, ah?" R'R'Rhasct grinned. "Sometimes Sathe against Sathe; sometimes Sathe against animals."
	I shook my head. "Uh-Uh. It does not sound like my kind of place."
	They looked at each other in surprise. "Fighting is not to your liking?"
	"Just say I have grown very tired of it," I said picking up another stick. "Alright . . . What are the taverns like?"
	"Huh!" R'R'Rhasct coughed. "Best in the Realm. But the water holes up in the Citadel are too to heavily policed. They are tame, boring. Only the clawless retainers patronise them. You should try the ones down by the docks. I would recommend the Red Sails."
	"Best food by far," Chirthi agreed. "They have actually got someone who knows how to cook. Also good ale and musicians, and at that place I think they would not even notice one such as yourself!" he laughed again and rejected another stick. R'R'Rhasct also laughed and picked one up.
	"Hahh!" she grinned and laid her hand out: TWO full sets this time - four quads and the five pentagons.
	"Shit!"

******

	The wagon clattered and squealed through the cobblestone streets of Mainport as the small procession wound its way up toward the massive shape of the Citadel looming on the skyline. Sathe melted away to the sides as we passed.
	Chirthi and R'R'Rhasct made sure I was hidden in the wagon while they settled themselves on guard before the opening at the back. I couldn't see what was going on outside, but I could hear the sounds of the city: the rattling of metal bound wheels, the bleating of llamas, and the multitude of Sathe voices forming a sibilant background noise, like surf on a shingle beach.
	The tailgate was lowered into the shadows of a postern gate where my guards of four days helped me out into the arms of Royal Citadel guards in their spit-and-polish armour. Walking still took a bit out of me.
	Armour clattered as my guards dropped down beside me. Green eyes blinked up at me, then a hand flashed up to pat my cheek. "Perhaps I see you again some time, ah? Good luck, K'hy, " R'R'Rhasct bade me.
	"Thank you, Rhasct."
	"R'R'Rhasct," she corrected and she laughed and gave a final wave as the soldiers hustled me off into the cover of the Keep. Through the labyrinth of passages inside the Citadel they guided me, going higher all the time. All those twisting corridors and stairs completely screwed up my sense of direction, I didn't know where we were. And I wasn't in the greatest shape; those stairs exhausted me. The guards caught my elbows when I stumbled and helped me up the few final flights to a place I recognised from a long time ago.
	The corridor was wide and brightly lit with several guards posted in niches along its length. They were guarding the Royal chambers; the rooms where the old Shirai lay. My escorts stopped at a heavy door, only a couple of rooms down from the heavy doors of the Royal chambers.	After unlocking the room with a bulky iron key from a large keyring already jangling with other keys, two of the score of Sathe guards checked the room, then they left me to wait.
	I didn't have much choice. When the door closed I heard the key turn in the lock.
	I poked around the room. It was similar to my old quarters, but plusher: Rugs covered the finely polished wooden floor and several pieces of wooden furniture were arranged around the room. A wide, if low, desk was set before a narrow window filled with latticed glass, a highbacked, carved wooden chair behind it. A couch and single-place chair made from leather cushions supported in wooden frames sat before a fireplace with logs and kindling already laid. Empty, expansive shelves and a large mirror hung from the wall; large for a world where mirrors had to be backed with silver, say, about as big as my head. Through another door: the bedroom.
	The whole room had the air of one that has'nt been used for a while, but there was not a speck of dust to be found anywhere.
	Looking out the window, I saw that the room was somewhere on the southern side of the keep. It didn't have the view of the bay that my last room did, but the main gates of the town below were visible, standing above the rooftops. Directly above the window were the eaves of a tiled roof; a bit surprising to find that on a fortress. About six or seven metres below was a wide, flagstone  parapet overlooking the courtyard.	 
	My clothes were waiting in the bedroom, my twentieth century garments lying clean and folded on the concave bed. I didn't put them on. In my unwashed condition, I would only make them filthy again.
	There was another door in the bedroom. Upon examination, I was surprised to find that it led to an ensuite toilet. Nothing  fancy, just a long drop, probably leading to a cistern that served several other jakes, but it was a luxury here. Even though it was a bit draughty. My previous quarters were served by a communal crapper on the same floor. Unisex bathrooms. They didn't reek nearly as much as some gas station restrooms I've used.
	I collapsed into the couch to wait. Same problem as will all Sathe furniture: built to the wrong proportions, either me or the chair.
	Finally, keys rattled in the lock. I was on my feet, starting to demand to see . . . 
	Tahr hadn't changed. Had I really expected her to? I'd only been away for about a fortnight, but it seemed longer.
	For what seemed like ages we just stood and stared at each other. I remember what she looked like perfectly: every piece of fur standing out in sharp relief, brushed to a glossy sheen, her breeches green and gold. That silver ring hung from her ear, bracelets from her wrists. Against that I was woefully bedraggled.
	When the rush of relief hit me, it couldn't be described. All the trials and tribulations of the past weeks seemed remote: nightmares banished by the dawn. She was an anchor, a stable pillar of support in a land of unpredictable landscapes.
	"Tahr," I choked and she was holding me, and I was hugging her, resting my head against hers. Her musty scent, like a cat after it's been lying in the sun. With one hand, she stroked the back of my neck; there were not as many fingers as there should have been.

******

	Water lapped softly. A monotonous sound, like a metronome, changing slightly whenever I moved.
	I floated there in the warm dimness, eyes closed and listening to the water and the sound of my pulse. It was hot and peaceful and I could stay there forever, letting the heat melt away the aches from old bruises and ease the stiffness in my leg. Returning to the womb? I smiled lazily to myself. Not such a bad idea.
	There were voices at the door, then a wedge of light as it opened and closed again. Almost inaudible footsteps sounded on the flagstones and I turned my head to follow the Sathe as she moved to crouch by the pool and dip a finger into the water. Ripples spread as she moved her hand in slow circles.
	"Hello, K'hy," Tahr's face twisted into her parody of a human smile. "Are you feeling better?"
	"Yes," I stood and moved to sit on one of the underwater benches carved from the stone. "Much." I cleared my throat. "Ahh, about earlier, grabbing you like that . . . Sorry."
	She stood, shucked her breeches then slipped into the steaming water, her fur floating out in a ruff at the waterline. Sinking a little lower, she hissed softly, not meeting my eyes. "I cannot blame you," she said. "You have been through a lot." Her eyes drifted and I knew she was looking at the pale scars on my chest, legacy of a previous meeting with soldiers of the Gulf Realm. "I heard . . . How is your leg?"
	"Healing."
	"Oh," she ducked her eyes. "They did hurt you . . . Your chest . . . "
	"This, you mean," I glanced down and almost touched the red tissue where my left nipple had been. "They were trying to . . . to make me behave. I was not exactly cooperating."
	Tahr frowned. "You are too delicate to play games like that. Just a wrong touch can scratch you and they would not have known that. Without clothing you could have frozen . . . " She gave me a sharp look: "They did give you clothing?"
	"Not a first, no. They did not know how . . . harmful cold is to me." Not a pleasant memory. I didn't go into details about that and tossed her the greyish lump that passed for soap.
	Tahr caught it and held it for a second. What was she thinking? Damn that furry face; so inscrutable, like a mask with the expression only in the eyes. Windows to the soul? More so in Sathe. She didn't press the conversation, lathering the soap, rubbing the slimy result into her mane and face fur, then ducking her head to rinse it off.
	"Tahr, how did they get me out of the Citadel? All the guards and gates . . . "
	"I do not know that part." The bar of soap twisted in her hands. "All we do know is that they used their agents to drug and take you; a great gamble on their part. The agents they used were highly placed within the servants ranks. We caught one, but she killed herself."
	"There was a Sathe who was not a soldier," I remembered. "The officer in charge paid him . . . For delivering me. I think he was the one who took me."
	Tahr's ears flicked to attention. "He was their contact? Would you recognise him if you saw him again?"
	"Uhm, well, I am not sure," I confessed. "Many Sathe look alike to me."
	"What?" That surprised her. "You cannot tell us apart?"
	"Oh, Sathe I am familiar with I can, but I cannot see someone in passing and remember his face." I grinned sheepishly. "Many of you look alike."
	She shook her head; quickly, as if trying to shake water from her ears. "You continue to puzzle me, K'hy."
	"Sorry."
	"Huh, stop SAYING that!" She punctuated that with a splash at my face, then settled back so only her head was above water, wisps of mist drifting around her. "Well, we will find him. Meantime, anyone trying that agin will not find it so easy."
	"Tahr, I have been wanting to ask you about that."
	Her ears pricked up. I cleared my throat and continued.
	"When I asked to take a bath, the captain in charge of the guards wanted to bring a tub into my room. God's sake , Tahr, I know that you are trying to protect me, but how long must this go on? I cannot live my life surrounded by soldiers and walls. I think I would rather . . . " I cut that off and bit nervously at my lower lip, waiting for her answer.
	For a few seconds, the only sound was that of the water.
	She finally shrugged, sending wavelets racing each other across the pool. "I do not know how long, but it is important that you do remain safe."
	"Because of the weapons I can give you?"
	 She hissed, "Because of your knowledge, and because I want you to be safe."
	I hung my head. "I am sorry."
	"It does not matter," she said gently, then she flared in mock anger. "Will you stop apologising!"
	"Sorry," I smirked, then ducked underwater to dodge the torrent of water she splashed at me.
	When I came up thirty seconds later, it wasn't where I'd submerged. Tahr's back was to me as she cast about in the dark  water: "K'hy?"
	"Yes?"
	She whirled with a yelp, just in time to get a faceful of water. Sputtering, she jumped forward and pushed me over backwards onto one of the benches carved out of the side of the bath. Waves splashed over the side.
	I found myself face to face with her, my small nose almost touching her broad, valentine shaped one. She had me pinned against the side of the bath. Below, her fur rubbed against me, feeling like the weird caress of some marine plant. "Now you have got me, what are you going to do with me?" I grinned.
	She glared at me, and her ears flicked, flinging droplets of water. "For a beginning,  how about this?" Her head darted like a snake and sharp little teeth nipped my nose. I yelped in mock pain and she pulled back, laughing. Abruptly serious again she studied my face, then darted forward to place her lips against my cheek and withdrew again. "I missed you. You and your strange ways."
	"Same here. Sometimes you almost seem human."
	"Is that intended as a compliment?" she smiled,  then intercepted my hand as I tried to bat the side of her face, staring at it. "Do you know your hands are wrinkled?"
	"It is just the water."
	She didn't let go of my hand, inspecting it like an entomologist with a new butterfly. "Does water make you wrinkle?"
	"Only if I have been in for too long," I said and she laughed at that. "At least," I added with a lopsided grin, "our fur does not block the drains."
	She stopped laughing.
	I hauled myself out of the water and scraped excess moisture off with the blades of my hands. Tahr lounged in the pool, arms up on the side and chin rested on laced fingers.
	"I have to say I am relieved," she said.
	"About what?"
	"That." She pointed. "Male llamas and bison can be made easier to handle by removal of . . . "
	"Not funny!" I cut her off - wincing - threw a towel around my waist and grabbed for my clothes.	

 ******

	"My help?" I asked Remae.
	A flare of lightning burst beyond the rain-lashed windows, outlining the dark Sathe Marshal in a flickering nimbus of electrical light. Her ears pulled back tight to her head and she turned away from me to snarl back at the storm that seethed outside. I waited.
	I had been doing a lot of that for the past couple of weeks; waiting in my chambers, seeing little of either Tahr or Remae. Very early on I had discovered that the guards outside my door had their orders to - however politely - restrain me in my quarters.
	That time I used for working, for sketching out some ideas I had about my future. A way I could give the Sathe advanced tech, but also make sure that they understood it. A way to produce not just a few limited handmade articles that would rapidly reach ridiculous prices the further they went from the source, but a way in which an entire economy could be kicked - if  into not the twentieth - then into the nineteenth century. From there, hopefully it would be self perpetuating. More concentrated progress has been made in the past hundred-fifty years than in the entire history of mankind.
	However, that time quickly palled. Days passed, each like the one before, each promising to be like the one to come. I had begun to slip into a blue funk, unnoticed by the menials who fed and watered me. Tahr, when she had time for me, was often preoccupied and tired. Her arguments that this was all for my own good fell flat with me.
	Now Remae was here asking for my help. You can understand why I was a little dubious.
	"My help?" I repeated. "How?"
	She shuddered and reached out a black hand to yank the heavy drapes across the window as thunder from the strike rolled over the Citadel, rattling the thin panes in their lattice. The dim orange-tinted lamps were inadequate, shadows casting the subtle illusion of the room being much larger than it really was. The marshal propped herself up on the corner of the desk. "Storms make my fur stand on end," she muttered then twisted to look to where I slouched in the leather-web armchair, a mug of warm wine in my hand. "K'hy, we have been unable to find the Gulf forces who abducted you."
	I nodded. "Big surprise."
	"Do not be facetious," she reproached. "We simply do not have the wherewithal to cover every square span of the Realm. So it has been decided that if we cannot go to them, then they must come to us."
	It didn't take much to fill in the blanks. "And you want me to be bait."
	She coughed and scratched at her muzzle. "If you wish to put it that bluntly: Yes."
	"Uh-huh," I mused. "Sounds like barrels of laughs. What is the game plan?"
	"Game plan? Oh, I see. Well, first it hinges upon you being able to identify the one who abducted you. Do you think you can?"
	"I am not sure. I sometimes have trouble telling Sathe apart, but I think I should be able to recognise him."
	"Excellent. Then we lead him to believe that you are being moved from the Citadel with all possible haste. For speed your escort shall only be small.
	"However, that escort shall be armed with the flame throwers and elite guards. Also, many small patrols shall have been sent out over the previous weeks. Some of those shall not return, but shall instead shadow the convoy, ready to reinforce you."
	"Sounds good . . . on the surface," I said. "But a few rough points . . . One: How can you be sure that the bastard who kidnapped me would fall for that? If he has heard I am back, he would be doubly wary about being identified. In fact, there is a good chance he has decided to see what the living standards in some of the other Realms are like.
	"Two: If the Gulf Realm gets wind of it being a trap, or their outriders spot the tails . . . the reinforcements, they simply vanish and we traipse along our merry way to nowhere." I sipped from my wine before speaking my third point.
	"Three: What if there are many more Gulf forces in the Eastern Realm than you know of. Flame throwers make exceedingly good terror weapons, and they are useful for defence, but they are only good for a few shots, after which they are only so much junk. They would be of limited use against hundreds of opponents."
	"True," Remae agreed. "But we have done our best to make sure that none but a few selected guards know of your return. We intend to make it appear as if you are simply stopping here for a while to recuperate, then moving on. The traitor will receive the information in the most discreet way possible.
	"As for the Gulf Realm suspecting a trap, well, there is little we can do about that except be a cautious as possible."
	"And what about three?" I asked.
	She gave a fluttering sigh, her nostrils flaring open and shut again. "Their attacks on convoys . . . They choose only small targets and strike from ambush."
	"That proves little," I said. "They have limited resources, so they are careful to so completely overwhelm the opposition that they suffer few or no casualties. There could also be quite a few small groups out there, and if they got together they could become quite a formidable force."
	"Still not as many as we intend to use," she shot back. "Most people have little love for fire . . . our fur. With your weapons you should be able to send them running straight into our arms."
	" 'Should' being the operative word," I muttered.
	Still she heard me. "K'hy, we need your help. You must be on that caravan, be seen leaving the town," she entreated. "They are killing us. Every week caravans are reported missing. Trade is being stifled as merchants are reluctant to enter or leave small towns that cannot protect them or gather enough vehicles to make a convoy large enough to deter attackers. Small merchants are being stripped trying to provide guards for their wares."
	I drained the rest of my wine in a lump that burned all the way down. "Whatever happens is better than sitting around here gathering dust. Alright, you have got your bait."

******

	The great hall was filled with the sounds of Sathe enjoying themselves. Gambling, arm wrestling, and drinking bouts went on at various locales scattered about the room. Down there, in her traditional place by the hearth, a minstrel wove her tales to an attentive audience of cubs and mature Sathe.
	And I was watching it from high up in one of the walls.
	I should have expected secret passages in a construction as massive and as ancient as the Citadel; in fact I had thought about it, but never asked anyone. The passage ran the length of the hall. Peepholes at strategic points along its length admitted pencils of light.
	"How many of these passages are there?" I asked Remae.
	"Nobody really knows," she said, brushing aside a cobweb. "Every dynasty has built them since the Citadel began and many have been forgotten. I think that mapping them would be near impossible. But the ones that are known come in useful . . . keep watching."
	I turned back to the narrow peephole between the stones. The light wasn't the greatest, the field of vision was narrow, and it was a long way down. "I am not sure I will be able to recognise him."
	"Just try."
	I bumbled my way down the narrow passage, awkwardly. The only light came from the dim spots seeping through the spy-holes and the white beam from my flashlight. The floor of the corridor was not level: beams and other obstructions poked through the walls at interesting heights. Several times I wacked my shins and Remae hushed my curses.
	She didn't seem to have any such problems.
	The next hole was the second to last one, looking out over a place near the fire. I skipped over the children and the females, trying to get a glimpse of the males . . . 
	"There, Remae!" her fur brushed against my face as she pushed her head in close to peer out the narrow gap. "Down there, in the corner beside the fire. Dark brown fur, talking to that female. You see him?"
	"Yes . . . You are sure that is him?"
	I frowned, hesitating until the figure below us turned around to give me a good look at him.
	"Yeah . . . That is him."
	"All right, now we set the bait and make sure the wolf catches the scent."
    
******
  
	The covered wagon rumbled through the day, as it had the past four days and nights.
	Inside it was dim, stuffy, and crowded. The smell of nervous cat overpowering any smell of nervous human. There were nine in the back of that wagon, one human and eight Sathe, and after four days, tempers were a bit short. The bulky packages by the soldiers' feet did nothing to ease tensions.
	Outside the wagon, I knew there were two more of the slow moving vehicles as well as half a dozen llama mounted cavalry. For a moment I wondered if the Sathe had such a thing as a coordinated charge with mounted troops, then dismissed the idea. One would be better off using donkeys than llamas.
	Time, and the caravan plodded on.
	I was fiddling with the straps on my helmet, for the thousandth time, when the cry came from someone outside. "Ambush! Ambu . . . " The yell cut off abruptly.
	I slammed my helmet on my head and followed Sathe out the back of the back of the wagon, hitting the ground in a crouch with the M-16 at the ready.
	Already there were two riderless llamas stamping around in panic. Sathe in red and black armour were racing from the trees on both sides of the road, too many to count. I didn't try, just raised the rifle and pulled the trigger as fast as I could, blazing away on full automatic.
	Some Sathe stumbled as though they'd been tripped. Holes appeared in armour as if by magic. The M-16A1 is a fairly lightweight  weapon, lacking the punch of a Kalashnikov or an M16A2, but even so the shock factor of the muzzle flash, the noise, and impact of bullets was hideously  effective against people who'd never even heard of firearms. The 5.56mm slugs tumbled in flight, buzzsawing as they hit the target, spreading out like dum-dums, the concussion smashing bone and pulverising flesh.
	The rifle ran dry. I popped the clip, snatched another from my belt and rammed it into the well.
	An Eastern realm soldier was falling back under the onslaught of three red and black armoured figures. She ducked wildly as slugs hissed past her head and the Gulf warriors had their strings cut, jerking and falling.
	I clamped the Armalite under my arm, firing with one hand as I reached for the handle of the flare pistol tucked into my belt. Muttering a silent prayer to whoever may be listening, I pointed it at the sky and pulled the trigger.
	Heads on both sides turned as a trail of smoke shot into the sky and a glowing red sun swung slowly to earth. Come on, Remae! Be there!
	The Eastern soldiers were fighting to clear areas about the wagons, and only just succeeding. The gulf forces were pressing us hard, especially around my wagon. Dropping the flare pistol, I spun to fire on attackers behind me when something hit my helmet with an impact that nearly broke my neck; a crossbow bolt fell to the ground.
	Their archers had reloaded and fired a second volley; Eastern soldiers fell, dead and wounded.
	"Assholes!!"  I screamed and emptied the magazine at the archers as they tried to reload, they scattered for cover, many of them falling. The Gulf forces were closing in.
	"MOVE IT!" Our backup was taking too long.
	"Furless bastard!" A Gulf warrior howled and hurled himself at me, claws glittering red and shedding tufts of flesh and fur swinging for my throat. I ducked away and felt him hit my helmet.
	He also fell back, crouching to snarl, "You should be dead!"
	I recognised him then: the officer from the farm. He took advantage of my moment of shock to rush in again, to meet the muzzle of my M-16 in his stomach and I found out the rifle wasn't dry. The shock of impact jarred my trigger finger and his back exploded in a pink and grey spray.
	Everything seemed to stop.
	I was staring into his eyes when he dropped. His hands fell to fumble at the barrel of my rifle, his fur curling from the heat, then his mouth opened and he a made small sound. Not loud, but pained. Then his legs folded and another Gulf soldier appeared in front of me, and I was busy dodging his blade. I stepped inside his swing and grappled with him, trying to keep his claws from my face, forcing him back, but it was taking too long; at any second I could have been skewered by another Gulf soldier. His leg came up and I instinctively twisted my hips to protect my crotch. He wasn't using his knee however. Toe claws dug into my calf and raked downward. Through the adrenalin the pain was nothing. I screamed my rage at him and drove my helmet into his face, used the room that gave me to finish the job with my rifle butt. He no longer looked like a Sathe.
	More Eastern Sathe started spilling from the wagons. Instead of swords or crossbows, they carried bulky cylinders on their backs, tubes poking out from under their right arms. They formed a circle at the back of each wagon, and at a shouted signal, Eastern realm soldiers disengaged from their opponents and scampered into that circle.
	I ducked past one of the Sathe at the perimeter of the circle, changing the stick on my M-16 at the same time. I stood amidst a small knot of panting Sathe, staring past bulky packs at the Gulf Soldiers.
	They didn't charge, sensing something strange was going on, staring at the flickering flame burning on the taper in front of the nozzles pointing at them. At last one of their officers started the charge across the few metres that separated us.
	From where I stood, I couldn't see what happened behind the curtain of greasy orange flame that sprayed out. That was probably a blessing, listening to the screams.
	The flames died for a second then flared out again, the Sathe carrying the flame throwers started to advance, moving outward for as long as their fuel lasted.
	That wasn't napalm in those flame throwers; it didn't cling and keep burning with the sadistic vigour of jellied petroleum, but it did burn, almost as well as Sathe fur. Gulf Soldiers fled into the woods, those who could flee. Others staggered about screaming, their fur crackling and burning brightly with a hideous smell. Sickened, I shot several flaming, screaming figures, no longer identifiable as their faces burned; mercy killing. It was no longer a battle, it was a massacre.
	The fuel in the flame throwers was exhausted quickly, but puddles of oil still burned on the ground and charred corpses sizzled and smouldered, lying twisted with blackened lips pulled back baring teeth in rictus of agony. Many had been killed not by the flame itself, but by merciful sword thrusts up under the ribs or through the throat.
	Out in the woods the remnants of the Gulf forces were fleeing; shapes disappearing into the depths of the woods. We waited.
	Distant shouts came soon, the faint clash of steel upon steel as an unseen battle was waged. We defenders of the wagon train clutched our weapons and waited.
	Figures appeared in the trees on both sides, not many this time, and they weren't attacking. Gulf soldiers - many of them wounded - staggered back onto the road and dropped their weapons, standing their with their arms at their side and their necks bared. In the woods behind came shouts as Remae's troops rounded up stragglers and wounded.
	For a few seconds I contemplated the crumpled corpse with its spine blown out, then limped over to help collect our prisoners.

******

	The funeral pyre threw sparks into the air as wood settled. The dark shapes standing around the fire had their heads dipped, in mourning for their friends and comrades who died. We had our quarry, but Eastern Sathe had died for it.
	I leaned back against the wagon wheel and inspected the bandages around my calf. Ten metres away, the prisoners clustered around a campfire.
	They were a sorry looking lot. Their armour had been taken from them, and now they huddled together around the fire for warmth. Several Eastern Realm guards stood watch over the fifteen or so prisoners.
	There was little speaking among the prisoners, the loudest sound was that of moaning. At the back of the group, farthest from the fire, a Sathe with its back to me sat beside a limp bundle of blood-smeared fur on the ground, every now and then reaching out to touch and caress  with a manacled hand.
	The guard was worrying at a slab of meat. He turned when he heard me approach. "What is wrong with that one?" I asked, pointing at the two figures.
	He swallowed and licked his jowls, looking at them. "Oh, him. Just a burn," he snorted. "Not worth worrying about." He took another huge bite.
	I blinked at him. It couldn't be . . . Nah, Sathe don't eat each other.  Shaking my head I limped over to the figures, the one sitting down turned its . . . her head away. Kneeling down, I examined the one lying down.
	'Just a burn' the guard had said.
	Mercifully, the Sathe was unconscious. The arm and part of his neck and chest was red and oozing blood and a clear, watery fluid. Skin had burned, crisped, blackened, and peeled away, red muscle showed where the skin had split. The hand was curled up into a mangled claw, and there was a manacle on the roasted wrist.
	"Oh, Jesus . . . " I winced, sickened, then yelled, "Guard!"
	Still worrying at his steak he sauntered over, only moving faster when I started to rise, intending to drag him. "You," I snapped and pointed at the manacle. "Take that off. Now!"
	"Ah . . . I cannot do that," he said about to take another bite of his meal.
	I stood and knocked it out of his hand, glaring down at him. "I said 'take it off'. NOW!"
	He glanced at the meat lying in the dust, then looked up at me, worried. "Uh, sir . . . I cannot, without the commander's word . . . "
	"Fuck  that!" I roared, drawing stares from all over the camp. "Unlock this, or I will shove your arm into that fire myself!" If he had been wearing a shirt I'd have hoisted him up by the lapels.
	"But if the commander finds . . . "
	"I will take responsibility," I growled.
	He quickly grabbed a keyring from his belt and unlocked the chain on the burned wrist. The crippled Sathe moaned and hissed as his arm was moved.
	"Thank you," his companion whispered. I frowned. There was something . . . 
	I caught her mane, lifting her head so I could see her face properly. The crusted blood and soot didn't hide the circlet of white fur around her left eye.
	"You!"
	Oh Beejeezus, a small world.
	My guard from the farm shrank back, her heavy chains rattling as she threw up an arm to shield her face. She was terrified.
	I stared back at her, surprised to find I was unable to feel anything. As drained of emotion as some of the derelicts I'd seen in new York. I was exhausted and my leg was throbbing. "Okay," I sighed, unclenching my fist. "I was not expecting to see you again."
	She didn't reply. Just stared at me.
	I met her gaze. ""Who is he?" I gestured at the wounded male.
	She started shaking then. I thought for a second she wouldn't answer, before she sucked air and stuttered: "M . . . My mate."
	Damnation! But she was a mess as well. Blood matted her fur from a wound in her neck, and she kept one arm tight against her chest. "Do not hurt him," she bolstered her courage and bared her teeth at me.
	Behind me there was a susurrus of metal on leather. "Hold it!" I stopped the guard as he was drawing his scimitar. Then I swung my pack around, opened it, and pulled out what I needed.
	She stared at the gleaming steel needle as I pulled a styrette from its sterile packaging. "What are you doing?"
	"This will help ease the pain for a while," I told her. She whimpered as the needle slid into the flesh of the burned Sathe. "That is all I can do for him. Do not worry, it is only to stop the pain. I swear it."
	Seconds after the shot, the Sathe began to relax, sleeping deeper. I packed away the medkit, grabbed my pack by its strap and limped back to the wagon where I would be sleeping. Tossing the pack over the tailgate, I clambered in after it.
	The moon sent shafts of blue light through rents in the canvas top and the open flaps at the back of the wagon. Outside I could see the sky was clear, with the milky way spilled across it, a lot like a stream of crystallised milk. The sounds of the night and Sathe were all around.
	After the events of the day, I was exhausted, but I couldn't sleep. My leg throbbed and itched as I lay there and stared at the sky, a cloak and sheets wrapped tightly around my shoulders. I don't know how long I watched the heavens revolve before I started to drop off.
	"K'hy, are you awake?" someone hissed.
	Oh, shit! "Huh? What?" Blinking, I sat up, pulling the cloak around me.
	The wagon rocked slightly as a black figure vaulted up onto the bed. All I could see were the eyes. "Who are you?"
	"Sorry, I forgot. It is Remae." She moved until she was sitting in the pool of moonlight just inside the flaps. "Is that any better?"
	"Yeah, I can see enough." I could just see the shifting patterns of her face and ears as she spoke, enough that she was more than just a voice in the blackness. "What did you want?"
	"Do you know that female?" She moved her hand in a vague pointing gesture. The guard must have reported what I had done.
	"The prisoner out there? Yes, we have met before."
	"How? When?"
	I explained how I knew her, how she had been my guard, and a bit of company; even if she hadn't exactly been a sparkling conversationalist. Out loud, I recalled how she had touched my hair. When I had finished, Remae hesitated before speaking.	 
	"Why did you aid her mate?" the Marshall finally asked.
	"I was going to help him before I saw who she was. I did not know she was a prisoner until then."
	"But you still helped when you did know."
	I sighed. "He was in pain. His arm is badly burned and I am not sure he will live, but there was no point in his pain. Besides she did not treat me too badly; she did help me when I needed it."
	"But after what they did to you . . . and they are the enemy," her tone was the one I had seen Sathe using on their children.
	"That does not mean they need to suffer," I protested. Hell, I was the root cause of a lot of the woundeds' suffering; me and my weapons.
	Remae was quiet for a second. "You are strange, K'hy."
	"I am human."
	"H'man . . . you are so different from us. You seem to think differently," She moved further into the shadows, all I could see was a blot of moving blackness, slightly more solid than its surroundings. Something touched my head, my hair, and I started. A hand stopped mine as I reached up.
	I didn't know what to do. I just froze while she ran her hand through my hair, around my ear, and down the side of my face. When she finished, she retreated back to the moonlit patch.
	"Why did you . . . ?" My voice died out before I finished the sentence.
	"I wondered what it felt like."
	I found I was trembling. My pulse pounded in my ears, there was a tension in my abdomen and my breath caught in my throat: Fear blossomed inside. "Please, Remae . . . please do not do that."
	Her eyes opened wide. "Did I hurt you?"
	"No . . . no. It . . . I . . . Please, do you never sleep?"
	She took the hint: "I am sorry."
	The wagon shook almost imperceptibly as she left. I curled up under the cloak and blankets as I tried to get my breathing back under control.

******

	I rubbed a fingernail along the slight scratch in my helmet while watching the detachment of soldiers from the Citadel as they formed a cordon around the prisoners. This was as much for their own protection as to prevent them from trying to escape as they were taken through the streets of Mainport.
	It had been a slow trip back. The prisoners who could walk did so, surrounded by Sathe soldiers on llama-back; the badly wounded - there were several of them - rode dispersed among the wagons. The one in our wagon was a male Gulf Sathe whose leg had been shattered by a bullet.
	A bullet. In wars back home, anyone could have been hit by a bullet and never know who had shot him, but here it was like a signature. I knew I had done it, and he knew I had done it. Many times I turned to find him glaring at me. He would have cheerfully slit my throat given half a chance.
	Now inside the city gates the prisoners cowered  on the back of a wagon as they were carted up to the Citadel. As the word spread, more and more Sathe appeared on the sides of the streets to jeer, snarl, and hiss at them. I watched it all from inside another wagon with the hood of my cloak pulled well down so my face was - I hoped - hidden by shadow.
	Wheels clattered and slipped as the procession made its way up the switchback road to the Citadel. Soldiers and staff watched from windows, doors, and battlements as we passed from bailey to bailey until we reached the courtyard around the huge central keep.
	The prisoners were chained together at the wrists and neck and led away, the wounded carried by Eastern guards. The burned Sathe had survived, even though I had not expected him to. I watched as he was supported by his mate, his arm was badly twisted and I doubted it would ever totally heal.
	"K'hy, are you coming?" Remae called.
	"No, I always walk this way." I slung my pack over my shoulder and jogged over to where she was waiting on the steps outside the massive wooden doors to the Keep. "Where are they being taken?" I jerked a thumb in the direction of the Gulf captives.
	"Downstairs . . . the dungeons of course."
	"Oh . . . of course." I had never wondered if this place had dungeons; not too surprising to find it did. "What will happen to them?"
	She greeted a pair of Sathe we passed in a corridor before answering. "Well, they will have the choice of pledging their sword, their allegiance, and their lives to the Eastern Realm, or they keep their honour and lose their lives."
	"They become slaves, or die?! Is that not a bit . . . harsh?"
	"What else could we do with . . . why are you looking at me like that?"
	I ran my hand through my hair. "I am sorry, it is a . . . um . . . different way from the way I am used to. We used to do it your way, but that was hundreds of years ago. The custom now among my people is to hold the prisoners until after the war is over, then they are released. Usually."
	"But that is ridiculous," Remae said in disbelief. "How much effort is needed to keep them fed and guarded? And what happens when they return home, surely they would just take up arms again?"
	"A lot of effort is needed to keep them, but after some of the things that went on in our last world war . . . things occurred that no sane human would ever want to see happen again, so the effort is made."
	Her claws clicked as she tapped her fingertips together. "If they really wish to live, they will join us, and some of the strongest may be lose their claws and be sold, but they will almost certainly all choose to die."
	I blinked stupidly at her while what she said sunk in. "Why?"
	"They are elite soldiers, even if they are Gulf Realm. They could not disgrace their clan by turning traitor to their Realm. Their Families are bound to their lords by oath; to break that oath would be to destroy the honour of their clans."
	I stopped and leaned against the wall. I hadn't know this . . . I'd had no idea. I'd been in Gulf hands, would they have given me that choice? IF I'd refused to help them, they probably wouldn't have sold me as a slave.
	In a alcove in the wall in front of me was a small, blown-glass sculpture. Slightly greenish glass in an abstract pattern of teardrops connected together by gracefully arching tubes . . . A thing of beauty, a delicate thing; fashioned by those same hands.

******
   
	Oh, they rewarded me for what I had done. Like all the other soldiers who had been in that expedition, I came out of it a bit richer. Actually, in my case it was a lot richer. My previous net wealth had been exactly zilch.
	I stood in front of the window in my room and weighed the ten gold pieces in my hand, a lot to be paid by Sathe standards. Now, whereas before I had nothing, I at least had some money to my name, but what could I do with it? The guards outside my door were adverse to me even touching the latch.
	Bright, warm sparks of lamps and fireplaces showed that there was life down in Mainport. The lights were alluring, and I stared at them, wondering what kind of night-life the place had. Below, a Sathe guard strolled along the parapet, paused to stretch and yawn, then moved on.
	I looked down at the battlement, it was about six metres down, and a grin spread over my face. "Why not? I need the exercise . . . "
	The wind whipped around me as I hung from the windowsill, tugging at my jacket. Don't try this at home kids . . . I took a breath, and let go. The flagstones of the parapet hit my feet hard and I lost my balance, rolled onto my shoulder, coming up in a crouch. The bundle that was my rolled up cloak containing my knife lay in front of my nose, the flashlight was tucked into the waistband at the back of my pants.
	My boots thudded dully against the worn stones as I walked along parapet, staying close to the wall. When I found a small iron door, I fumbled with the latch until it swung open. On the other side was a long hallway, several torches along its length casting pools of twisting light. Two Sathe engrossed in conversation were passing one of those lamps, the features clear and familiar: Remae and Tahr. Coming this way.
	Of all the fucking places to run into them. . . 
	As carefully as I could, I shut the door and ducked behind a buttress,  gathering my cloak close and shrinking back into the shadows.
	The door squealed as it opened and a pair of shadows were cast against the battlements opposite. Their voices were blown to me by the wind.
	" . . . here in a few weeks. It takes so long to get reports."
	I think it was Tahr who said that. I peeped around the buttress, they were leaning against the ramparts, looking outwards, their backs to me.
	"Does K'hy know any way to send messages long distances quickly?" asked Remae.
	"He has never mentioned it," Tahr said. "Still, there is quite a lot about himself he has not told me."
	Remae snorted. There was a silence over which I could hear distant shouts, laughs . . . other everyday night noises. Then Remae's voice asked, "What is it about him?"
	"K'hy?" Tahr asked.
	"Your strange one, yes. There is something about him that . . . I just find it attractive. I see it does the same to you . . . and there is a Gulf prisoner, a female, she has been asking after him."
	Tahr wrapped her arms around herself. "A Gulf Warrior. How does she know of him?"
	"She was among those who kidnapped him. K'hy helped her Mate who was injured in the fighting."
	I saw Tahr stiffen and there was a long pause.
	"He used a concoction of his own that stopped the pain for a time," Remae continued.
	"On a GULF warrior?!" Tahr asked, incredulous.
	"Yes."
	Tahr raised her head and sighed into the wind, then slapped her hands against the stone of the battlements. "It is times like this that I feel I will never understand him."
	"Then why are you so close to him?"
	"Saaaaa ," Tahr breathed again. "I am not sure. He is rather clumsy and slow, and there are definitely better looking males around." Remae hissed her laughter at that. "Maybe it is his sentimentality; for someone so large and grotesque, he is kind, caring. Maybe it is his eyes, they always appear to be so afraid."
	"I noticed. Yes, sometimes he does look like a lost cub," Remae agreed thoughtfully, "but he is definitely no coward, he fights like a bear."
	"Why did you ask about him?" Tahr asked. Remae turned around and I ducked back behind the buttress.
	"I visited him after the fighting, at night. I . . . ah . . . touched his fur and . . . "
	" . . . And you probably scared him to moult." Tahr laughed. "If he does moult, that is."
	"I must have. He asked me to leave," Remae replied.
	"Huh . . . He is one of the shyest males I have ever seen. He embarrasses easily. It seems his people - or at least he -  think mating is a completely private thing." The voices were growing fainter. I stuck my head around the side of the buttress and saw only their backs as they ambled away from me along the parapet.
	"You have coupled with him, have you not?" Remae asked. My eyebrows shot up. Come on, surely Tahr wouldn't tell her . . . 
	"Ah . . . that. Yes."
	"What was it like?"
	"Huh, you agree never to let him know I told you? I can just see his face changing color if he found out. Hah!"
	Remae also chortled. "Agreed."
	"Well, he is different . . . " Then the wind and night swallowed their voices.
	I leaned against the damp stone of the buttress, tilting my head to follow the line of the sheer wall up to where the ghosts of clouds raced before the moon.
	"You bitch, " I told it.
 
******

	The guards at the main gate were busy inspecting a wagon by torchlight, so, thankfully, they hardly spared me a glance as I strolled out. My hood masked my face in shadows, but my height and gait still marked me as different from Sathe.
	The road down to the town was almost deserted. Apart from a band of drunk Sathe soldiers headed up towards the Citadel, the only other life I saw was a raccoon that dashed across the road, pausing to stare at me, then disappearing into a snow-covered bush on the roadside.
	Dirty snow lying on the cobblestone  squeaked beneath my boots I walked between the dark buildings. The moon was almost full, with wisps of cloud scudding across its face, so there was enough light for me to see where I was going. A cool breeze wound through the narrow streets, and the tang of the sea was stronger.
	The waterfront was also dead, an empty stretch of dock littered with bits of rope, fish, and other such trash. A forest of masts from the boats that were still in the breakwater stood out against the night sky, and underlying everything was the steady murmuring of the sea and the groaning of the boats' timbers. I threw back my hood and ran my hands through my hair, relishing the fresh air, feeling more alive than I had for some weeks.
	With my hands jammed into my pockets, I wandered along the waterfront staring out at the sea. Somewhere out of my sight in the darkness, waves crashed against the breakwater.
	The only thing to mar the evening was the thought of Tahr's conversation with Remae. Damnation! Why did Remae seem to be developing an interest in me as well? I couldn't handle two of them!
	When I reached the southernmost end of the dock, almost at the town walls, another kind of crash made me jump. Close behind me, a group of Sathe spilled out of a door that had been thrown open. From the opening came Sathe voices and yellow light, dimmed by the amount of smoke that also spilled out; the smell of cooking food was strong on the air. The door slammed shut again, obviously an exclusive club ejecting some of its more . . . rowdy customers.
	I hastily pulled my hood back up again as the Sathe that could walk gathered up their pissed friends and helped them stagger off. One of them careened off my shoulder and clutched at my arm, peering into the shadows of my hood and blinking, then recoiling. I ducked out of sight into an alley before he could bring me to the attention of his friends.
	The city at night was like a termite mound: On the outside it was quiet, just superficial signs of life: a guard dozing beside a brazier, lights in a bakery as Sathe bakers prepared the next day's dough. Underneath, I guessed, the silent town had its own nightlife, the pubs and the brothels. I think the Sathe had them, I personally had no reason to seek one out.
	As one neared the centre of the city the back streets narrowed, divided, became a warren of alleys, cul de sacs and tunnels beneath houses arching over the streets. The cleaning of the streets seemed up to the tenants of the buildings around them as some sections of paving were fairly clean, whilst others abounded in filth of various indescribable types.
	The disjointed rooftops and chimneys threw shadows on the grounds that grew sharp, then faded away into darkness again as clouds swept across in front of the moon. Windows were holes of darkness, the few that had glass in them glinting in the moonlight. I walked the deserted streets as quietly as I could, my cloak flapping around my heels like dark, enshrouding wings.
	There . . . 
	I halted in mid stride.	
	Lit from below by light escaping a small window in a closed door, the sign depicted a sloop with oversized flame-red sails billowing. Red Sails. Could only be that place R'R'Rhasct and Chirthi had described. A trio of Sathe approached and simply walked in. As the door opened and closed I could smell warmth and food and smoke on the tangy sea air.
	For a time I lurked in the shadows a couple of buildings away, nervous and indecisive, then shrugged. Why not?
	That front door opened easily onto a small, Spartan chamber, another door in the far wall. Music, the clatter of metal and glass, Sathe voices sounded through. I pushed that door open and stood on the landing at the top of a wooden stair. Down below, the smoke-filled basement room was filled with a snug gloom. Oil lamps hanging from massive rafters added to the hazy atmosphere. Brass fittings and copper utensils rippled and glowed with reflected firelight. Wooden furniture: tables and benches in secluded alcoves, wooden floor, the bar counter along the far wall, all boned and burnished until they shone with that soft glow of natural wood. The strong, slightly unpleasant smell of mingled Sathe and food.
	Many Sathe.
	The room was full of them. At tables and at the bar, in the heat of the room most of them wearing only their pelts, almost giving the illusion that the room was carpeted in patched furs. As I stepped down the stairs more and more of them began to stare at me, surprised silence spreading like ripples in a pond. At the foot of the stairs a pair of burly Sathe glanced at each other, then hesitantly moved to block me off, their ears back.	
	"Alright! Joke's over! What get of a diseased goat let THAT in here?!"
	A Sathe was pushing his way out from behind the bar, mad as hell, fur bristling as he glared at the crowd. He stopped at the foot of the stairs, behind the bouncers: "WELL?!"
	There was hesitant laughter hissing from the crowd.
	I cleared my throat. "Good sir," I ventured. He whipped around to stare at me. "I let myself in," I smiled. "You are the owner of this place?"
	He goggled. "You . . . you . . . you . . . " He sounded like a stuck record.
	I leant against the railing. "Yes, I can talk. I had noticed. I am not looking for any trouble, all I want is a drink and some food . . . however if your employee who is trying to sneak up on me tries anything, he will be wearing his asshole as a necklace." I turned and levelled a finger at the startled Sathe bouncer frozen with one foot raised on the stair behind me: "Got that?"
	That was bluff, pure and simple. I don't know if I could have handled the muscle, especially if the other two piled in, but there was more laughter from the crowd and the Sathe bouncer hastily backpedalled up the stairs.
	The barkeep was still staring. I stepped down - the bouncers retreating before me. "Nice place you have here," I said, glancing casually around.
	"You cannot . . . " the tavern master began to protest, then noticed the three gold coins in my hand. He goggled again.
	"Change of mind?" I asked.
	There was the briefest hesitation before he snatched the golds from my palm, claws barely nicking my skin. Oversized canines dented the soft metal and meticulous eyes examined it. "Very well," he finally said. "If you can pay, you can drink, eat."
	"Thank you," I said. Hell, capitalism is universal. Whatever you are, if you can pay they don't have any objections.	
	"Uh . . . wait," he stopped me as I began to head for the fireplace at the far end of the room. "Do you have any weapons?"
	I stopped and stared at him for a time, watching him squirm. "Perhaps."
	"You must check them at the bar."
	I kept staring.
	"Please."
	None of the other patrons appeared to be carrying any hardware. I couldn't see any knives or swords. Difficult to hide weapons; many of them wore only small pouches for valuables.
	The bartender - a small female with dark fur spattered by droplets of liquid and patched in a couple of places, scars showing - froze like a rabbit, panting hard, as I unstrapped the knife and set it on the bar. She took the combat knife, turning it over in her hands and stroking curious finger pads along the rubberised waterproof sheathing.
	"I am going to be wanting that back," I warned her. "It had better still be here when I get back."
	"Yes . . . sir," she said, uncertain as to my gender, then hastily tucked the weapon under the bar.
	Covert eyes and a wake of silence followed me through the tavern.

******

	The minstrel hunched over his instrument, completely absorbed in his playing. His tongue poked forgotten from his lips as claws in lieu of picks danced across strings. He was acceptably good and the worn leather satchel on the floor at his feet had a sprinkling of copper coins dusted across its battered surface.
	I idly toyed with the mug. The single candle on the table in the small alcove was guttering, barely a centimetre of stem with the wick flickering. I stared moodily into the flame reflecting on the twists and turns my life had taken, trying to find a path for the future. I'd seriously debated leaving Mainport, just slipping away one night and trying to make my own way. Harder to hit a moving target.
	But then I'd have the hunters of two Realms after me, perhaps five if the others got wind of the hunt. This land is big, but I couldn't hide forever. All it would take would be a careless glimpse, a farmer or villager reporting to the authorities and I'd be running again. Even Tahr, even with what we had between us, she would be duty-bound to find me.
	And behind the other door . . . staying here in Mainport, with a roof over my head, food, and a sitting duck for assassins. Tahr had told me on the night of the Choosing that I was a prize. I was the one who had precipitated the killing in the Circle. I was the one who had so nearly - however indirectly -  caused the death of my friend and lover.
	My reverie was interrupted at that point by the arrival of one of the tavern staff bringing my meal. I tipped her and she stared incredulously at the gold coin, then made it vanish into the empty-looking pouch that swung lightly from her belt.
	The meat was rare; cut into chunks that took me forever to chew and swallow, but the rich gravy and the vegetables were excellent. The minstrel paused to scratch vigorously at his mane, then began on another solo. Most Sathe just ignored him. Just muzak.

	From my little recessed alcove all I could see of the room was the fire, the musician, and a couple of other tables discreetly tucked away in nooks and corners  of the room, so when Sathe voices began to raise down the other end, I poked my head around the corner of the booth for a look-see, then hastily pulled back again.
	Five, six guards in their blue and silver livery were having a heated debate with a group of the locals. Looking for me? I glanced around again. Those two guards . . . Shit! I knew them! Chirthi and wasshername . . . R'R'Rhasct? Yeah, that's it. What the hell were they doing here? Looking for me already? They'd checked their weapons. Perhaps they were just in for a meal or a drink.
    	A yowl of pain rose above the general hubub. I looked around in time to see a small-scale riot breaking out - the Citadel troops were tussling with disreputable-looking Sathe who were either naked or wearing tough leather breeks: labourers or fishers I guessed, but they outnumbered the troopers three to one. Two of the combatants rolled onto a table that promptly collapsed under their weight, scattering wooden bowls and patrons left and right. A trio of locals were working a trooper over; two holding him while the other went to work on his ears: tearing with claws. Chirthi decked the one he was grappling with, then turned to help. The fallen dockhand clambered into a crouch, then reached into the back of his waistband.
	I had his arm bent behind his back before he could draw the concealed knife from its sheath. "Naughty, naughty," I growled in his ear as I confiscated it. A wicked thing, like an icepick, with a slender blade designed for slipping in through chinks in armour. Nice balance too. A flick of my wrist and the dirk was imbedded in a wall.
	Now the Sathe I was holding twisted around and yelped at what he saw. Two of his friends - perhaps drunk beyond caring - tried to jump me. I shifted my weight and kicked out at one of them with my right boot, catching him on the hip and sending him sprawling. The Sathe in my hands was a burden; I shoved him into a chair, spun and crouched in time to avoid a slashing sweep from the other Sathe. He didn't manage to dodge a straight line-drive to his stomach and doubled over as the air was knocked out of him.
	Another male faced me, crouched low in a fighters stance, arms curled with all claws extruded. Too cautious. I twisted my face into a mask of rage, roared, then while he was still startled, introduced his groin to my combat boot; right on the penile sheath.
	He just grunted, lunged forward and tried to open the side of my face.
	Someone landed on my back and hooked a muscular, furry arm around my windpipe, legs around my waist. I stumbled backwards under the unexpected weight, then lunged forwards, trying to send the Sathe flying. Claws scrabbled for my throat. I punched a fist back over my shoulder. Damp, leathery tissue gave way, the Sathe yowled and collapsed.
	I tripped on something and went over backwards, landed on a furry body that yelped and gasped. In the resulting tussle a fur-covered elbow filled my vision and pain exploded down the side of my face. I swore and kicked out again, feeling my boot strike solid flesh, another yelp amongst the cacophony of snarls, growls, and howls filling the room. Toe claws raked at my side as one bastard tried to slice me open while I was down, then he was tackled by a blur in blue armour. They landed with an almighty crash on a table in a booth, fur flying in clouds as they battered at each other's head and neck.
	Then another civilian tried for me, claws snagging in the heavy material of my shirt as he clawed at my neck. I caught that hand, blocked the other, spun him, then snatched him up by the belt of his breeches and strung him up from a lamp sconce on a nearby post. He thrashed and squealed as the breeches bit deeply.
	His friends had had enough.
  	Pads and claws thudded against the wooden stairs as the gang of dockhands high-tailed it. The door slammed and suddenly the room was very quiet, my laboured breathing and pounding blood inordinately loud in my ears.
	Other patrons had retreated to the walls of the room, watching the fight from a distance. Not a one of them had abandoned their drinks. Several Sathe - blue armour, naked fur, and civi breeches - were sprawled about, some semi-conscious and nursing wounds, others dead to the world. The Citadel troops in their blue armour stood looking around uncertainly as they came down off their adrenal high.
	Another sound: a creaking and metallic click.
	I turned to see the barkeeper raising a crossbow above the bar, levelling it at me. The quarrel nestling in the groove was fitted with a triangular hunting tip. I stared at the pinpoints of light gleaming from the head of the quarrel, frozen as my guts turned to ice.
	Her finger was tightening on the trigger . . . 
	"Stop!" a Sathe cried. "Hold!" Chirthi pushed in front of me, a bleeding ear, holding out a hand to the bartender. She lowered the weapon with pure, undiluted surprise scrawled across her face. "Wha . . . "
	"He did not start this!" Chirthi began to explain.
	"That one over there had a blade," one of the other patrons called. "The animal stopped him using it."
	Now the innkeeper pushed through the door behind the bar. He froze at the sight of the damage and his hands went to his head in a melodramatic display of horror. "Saaaa . . . My life! I am ruined! Aiiii, I am but a lowly merchant! How am I to pay for such destruction?!"
	There was some laughter from the room, flattening ears and hisses from the troopers - the equivalent of rolling their eyes. 
	"You find this humorous?!" The tavern master raged at the patrons. "I should throw you out, the lot of you!"
	"Get real, Chaereth," Chirthi chuckled. "They can pay the usual amount for damages," he gestured at the prostrate civies on the floor.
	"And I suppose you didn't have a claw in this?"
	"There are forty witnesses here who can vouch for us."
	The innkeeper - Chaereth - snorted. "Very well, but if they do not have enough, you shall make up the difference. Your commander turns from brawling amongst his troops."
	"Agreed," Chirthi signed consent with a twitch of his ears. "And good sir, would your employee mind pointing that thing somewhere else. I think she is making my friend here slightly nervous."
	"Friend?" Chaereth inquired with a wrinkle of his muzzle, then, "Very well." He waved a hand and the bartender reluctantly lowered the crossbow, taking out the quarrel then pulling the trigger. The bow released with a sharp snap sounding like a small-calibre pistol shot.
	"Thanks," I told Chirthi, then asked, "Get real?"
	"I heard you use it before," he said with a slight flash of teeth. "Sounded good. I have been waiting for a chance to use it."
	A hand touched my shoulder, claws tickled my skin through the shirt; friendly. "We had wondered if you would show," the small female said.
	"Rhasct . . . " I began.
	"R'R'Rhasct," she interrupted; laughing. "You will never learn to say it, will you."
	By now their friends had gathered around. Sathe in blue armour, silver trim. None taller than five and a half foot, all of them scuffed, several bleeding from scratches, cut ears and muzzles. "I have seen this around the Citadel," one of them said. "You know it?"
	"Him," R'R'Rhasct corrected. "His name is K'hy. He is . . . what are you again?"
	"Human," I provided.
	"H'man, that noise," she grinned at me. "I have not seen any sign of you since that Sand Circle affair. What are you doing down here tonight?"
	"I was looking for a drink, and a bit of peace and quiet."
	There was Sathe laughter. "You are not such a good hunter," Chirthi said as he dabbed at his torn ear. "This is not the best place to look for peace and quiet."
	"Drinks, however," R'R'Rhasct said, "perhaps those could be found here. Do you need help looking?"
	I grinned back, making those Sathe who weren't familiar with my expression of amusement shift back uneasily. "I would welcome the company."
	"Lonely, a?" R'R'Rhasct gave me a thoughtful look, then patted my shoulder. "Not too surprising. Come on, we will get you that drink."

******

	The bed was warm, the sheets coarse, the furry body beside me soft, pulsing gently with breath. I closed my bleary eyes again and cuddled up close, feeling fur rubbing softly against my naked skin.
	There was shouting from outside, the rattle of iron-bound wheels on cobbles. The noise went right through my head.
	I groaned, rolled over onto my back, and threw an arm across my eyes, wincing at the pounding behind my temples, the gummy taste on the roof of my mouth. Eventually I took my arm away and squinted at the ceiling.
	Somehow it seemed different that morning . . . 
	Perhaps because it wasn't my ceiling.
	Low, peaked ceiling of huge slate shingles with rafters of old, black wood; warped and twisted. Walls of rough wood, small window with slats missing from the shutter, a faint, blurry light outside. Black floor polished smooth to a gleaming finish.
	This wasn't my room! I didn't recognise it at all!
	Beside me the Sathe muttered and chirred in her sleep, in waking. I stared. Her fur was brown, a dark van dyke brown with faint stripes of white and black on her ribs.
	Not Tahr.
	I'd never really understood that term, 'your heart skipping a beat'. Not until then, that is. If I hadn't been lying down I'd have collapsed. This isn't happening. I just froze, staring. She abruptly rolled over and opened her eyes, meeting mine.
	With a yell I was out of the bed and against the wall by the window, wide-eyed and gasping and stark naked as I stared at her.
	"K'hy?" she asked.
	"Oh my god!" I squeaked.
	"What was that?" she smiled and stretched out. "You know I do not understand those noises."
	"W . . . who are you?" I croaked. "Oh Jesus! What happened?! Where am I?!"
	She stared at me, speechless, then sat up; one arm looped over a knee. "Saaa! You do not remember? Last night?"
	I shook my head miserably, trying to remember what happened. "I . . . I had some drinks . . . Rhasct and Chirthi. After that . . . "
	After that . . . nothing. Some confusing emotions maybe, otherwise zilch.
	A scratch at the door. I jumped as another female poked her head around. "I heard . . . " R'R'Rhasct began and trailed off as she saw the tableau: Me naked, in a defensive crouch, facing off the strange female I'd woken up with.
	At that moment my exposure was the last thing on my mind. I rounded on the female guard: "Rhasct! What the fuck is going on here?! What happened?! We were drinking,  then I wake up here . . . " I looked at the female on the bed again, saw the scars on her pelt. "Shit! You were at the bar. Took my knife, then nearly speared me with a crossbow."
	"I did apologise," she retorted, almost insulted.
	"Uhnnn!" I grated between clenched teeth, turned away and leaned spread-eagle against the window frame. Dawn was trying to creep between the slats of the shutter. I took a deep breath: "Did anything . . . happen last night? Between us?"
	There was hesitation before she answered. "Yes. Yes, we coupled. I do not . . . "
	"Oh God!" I hissed with my stomach tying itself in knots. "She's going to kill me!"
	"K'hy?" R'R'Rhasct ventured. "What is the matter with you?"
	"WITH ME?!" I spun on them in a flaring rage that made both Sathe start, then gasped air as I fought to calm down, my head pounding. "Oh Jeez, Rhasct, what happened?" I pleaded, then looked to the female in the bed with abrupt horror: "I did . . . I did not PAY you, did I?"
	"No," the wide-eyed female replied.
	"You had quite a few ales," R'R'Rhasct volunteered.
	"How many?"
	"Oh, I am not sure. About three tankards I should imagine."
	"Three . . . " I rubbed my forehead. The stuff they brew here is far from potent. Hell, compared with that ale, even Coors - the piss of the lager industry -  packs a punch. Three tankards; not including the few I'd downed earlier. Damnation! I'd drunk more than that before and still been able to thread a needle.
	I didn't get it.
	R'R'Rhasct's ears trembled and again she glanced between me and the recumbent female on the sheets. "Does it . . . does simple sex really upset you so much?"
	"Rhasct," I said, then sighed, fighting to think clearly. "I do not have anything against simple sex. Could you enjoy it if you wake remembering nothing of it? Also, she and I . . . I am too different to make it simple sex. Our differences are not just physical. Sex to me is . . . emotional." God, I'd had a hard enough time coping with Tahr's advances. Now I was fooling around? My head was throbbing again and I heavily sat down on the edge of the bed, rubbing my temples. "Thank you, Rhasct. Please, leave us?"
	She quietly closed the door behind her.
	I jumped at a touch on my shoulder. Leathery finger pads and furry knuckles pressed against my neck and down alongside my spine and across my shoulders, rubbing, pressing, kneading. Slowly, my tension drained under the backrub. The pain in my head subsided.
	"I taught you this?" I asked.
	"Yesss," she spoke that monosyllable in English, drawing it out into a hiss. "The last night you were not so touchy. "
	I groaned. "The last night I was not exactly myself."
	Again she laughed.
	"You are not afraid of me," I said, aware the instant I spoke of the foolishness of the question.
	"How can I be," she softly rebuked.
	"Huhnn . . . I did not . . . hurt you?"
	"No," she said. Warm, insubstantial breath hovered against my shoulder as if sharp teeth hesitated, then moved away again. "No, never." Her hands described small circles over the region of my kidneys, traced the ridge of my vertebrae upwards. "It was a lot of fun actually; for both of us I thought. There is another female, is there not? Another Sathe?"
	"How did you know?" I asked; surprised. "Did I talk about her last night?"
	"No," she said and I felt the bed move as she resettled herself. Her hands pressed at my shoulders, each squeeze bringing the claws partly out to kiss my skin. "You knew me too well for this to have been your first time with a Sathe."
	"Ahhh," I nodded. The fur of her stomach rustled against my back as she pressed up closer. It was then I realised what was happening.
	"Hey!"  I yelped and yanked away. "What are you doing?!"
    	Startled, she knelt on the bed with her feet tucked back beneath her. "You ARE different this morning."
	"I am SOBER this morning!"
	"Saaa! I think I prefer you drunk. You were not afraid to have fun then." She cocked her head to one side. "I know you enjoyed yourself as much as I did."
	"That was then, this is now," I growled.
	Her ears and muzzle dipped in annoyance: "Do you have the same trouble with your female?"
	My female . . . Holy Shit!
	I dashed to the shutters and wrenched them open. There - to the east - the velvet sky was lightening, high streaks of cloud glowing with the coming of the dawn.
	"Shit! I have to get out of here! Now!"
	"What? What is wrong!"
	My clothes were scattered around the room. I began to hunt around for the various bits and pieces. "Look," I tried to explain as I caught my underwear up from the 'foot' of the circular bed. "I am not supposed to be here."
	"Where?"
	"Here!" I waved my arm as I hopped on one leg trying to get into the shorts. "In the town. In Mainport. If I am not back at the Citadel before they know I am gone, I am going to be in a lot of trouble." I found my boots and shirt.
	"Trouble? With whom?"
	"Damnation! The Shirai!"
	"The Shirai! You know her?"
	"Know her! Huh!" I half-laughed. "Listen; that other female . . . that's her."
	"Oh!" Her eyes went impossibly wide. "What would happen . . . "
	I shook my head. "No idea. She does not seem to be the type to get jealous, but I do not want to risk it."
	She hissed and wrinkled her muzzle at me. "It was not jea . . . "
	I couldn't find my pants. "My breeches! Damnation!  Where are my breeches?!" I demanded. She stared at me, then flicked an ear and pointed up.
	There, draped over a rafter, were my pants. I cursed and snagged them down. Now my socks . . . 
	"You are looking for these?" she asked, sticking a foot out.

******

	The trio of bored guards lounging around outside my door had kittens when I appeared. Hands shot to sword hilts, fur bristled.
	"Hey guys!" I smiled and waved at them.
	"You . . . How . . . " they stuttered with jaws dropping. "Where have you been? What have you done?!" the senior howled.
	"I got tired of the view and took a walk," I said. "Now if you will excuse me . . . "
	"A walk!" The guard started to hyperventilate. "The Shirai will have our hides for this!"
	"What she does not know cannot hurt her," I pointed out. "I am here, I am safe. Just keep your mouths shut and nobody will know."
	He gaped and was about to argue when his associates caught his shoulder and drew him aside to put their heads together. Eventually they came to a solution that was of mutual satisfaction to them all. The trio returned to their posts, staring past me. "If anyone asks, we never saw you leave your room."
	I grinned and opened the door.

******

	From the rampart below my window a bird was singing its respects to the morning sun.
	"Oh, Jesus . . .  Why haven't they invented coffee?"  I moaned to myself, clasping my head between my hands. Water had to do instead. I took a mouthful, swilled, spat, then drank.
	Nah, it's just not the same.
	Christ on a crutch! How much had I drunk last night? R'R'Rhasct had said it was only three mugs. Bullshit! I'd never feel like this after only three beers. It reminded me more of the after-effects of Thamil. Still, whatever it had been, it had been more than enough to persuade me to go all the way with yet another Sathe female, one I didn't even know! "This is a habit I've got to break,"  I muttered, then dropped back down on the couch, nursing my water. My head was still aching, even when I put my head down and closed my eyes for a second . . . 
	Five localised points of pain lanced through my shoulder. I yelped, rolled over, and fell off the couch. From my position on the wooden floor, I looked up at Remae leaning over the back of the chair, her claws still poking from her fingertips. "Oh, sorry," the Marshal apologised, "I forgot how thin your skin . . . what has happened to your face?"
	"Huh?" I touched my cheek and winced. "Oh, I just had a small accident last night. Fell over. Nothing serious." Outside, the sun was high in the sky. How long had I been asleep?
	"Good to hear. Have you looked at yourself?"
	There was a mirror in my room, a tiny square of smoky glass. Unfamiliar features stared back at me. Every time I caught a glimpse of myself in the damned thing, I looked. . . wrong, and this time I looked even worse than usual. My left eye was almost swollen shut and surrounded by black and blue skin, a real shiner. I touched the tenderised meat and winced. "Ouch. That's going to be a beauty. "
	Reflected in the mirror, I saw Remae standing behind the couch, staring at me. The contrast between the brilliance of her eyes and the darkness of her fur was incredible; like the catseyes down the middle of a road, shining in a car's headlights. It made me nervous.
	"Fell over," she mused. "Did you trip over someone's claws?"
	"Huh?"
	"Those scratches down your side."
	I glanced down at the tears in my shirt with the red scratches showing through. Shit! I'd forgotten . . .  "Was there something you wanted?" I snapped and turned to face her.
	"The guard said that you were asleep when he brought in your food, that you had been all day. I just stopped off to see if you were all right."
	I bent over to picked up the mug I'd knocked over when I fell off the couch and set it back beside the pitcher of water on the desk. "Oh, thanks . . . I would be better if I could get out more often, but that is not possible is it," I said with a meaningful glance in her direction.
	She rubbed behind one triangular ear; amused. As if she knew something . . . "No, I am afraid not."
	I rolled my eyes, sighed, and she turned to leave. "Hold on a sec," I stalled her. "Can I see that Gulf prisoner? The female, the one whose mate was injured."
	She stopped in her tracks. "What in the Name of the Clan do you want to see her for?"
	I shrugged. "There are a few questions I want to ask her."
	"Are there?" she stared at me, her ears tilting back. "Why? She is the enemy."
	"Remae, to me she is a Sathe . . . as are you, Tahr, and Rehr. I find it very difficult to hate any of you because of your backgrounds and histories; they do not mean as much to me as they do to you . . . Please, can I see her?"
	Remae's hand was resting on the door latch but she made no move to open it. She stood there for a few seconds, her muzzle wrinkled in puzzlement and those unblinking eyes fixed on me.
	I swallowed.
	"We shall see," she said, then she swept out and the door was swinging shut behind her.
	I watched the door after it had shut, thinking about what I had heard Remae and Tahr talking about the night before. What had Tahr told her about us? Judging from the way she had been staring at me, I guessed it was a lot.
	"What is it with them? We're different goddamn SPECIES!" I wondered if talking to yourself really was a sign of cracking up.

******

	Papers on the drawing board fluttered in a draught coming straight through the closed windows. Sparks danced up around the stew simmering over the fire, the smell wafting around the room.
	As the papers rustled again, I jotted down a note in the margins: DOUBLE GLAZING.
	They hadn't let me see that Gulf prisoner, but I'd got my drawing board moved in. Those long winter evenings dragged on, working was one way to pass the time. I spent hundreds of hours at that desk with quill and ink, scratching away, putting ideas to paper. Technical works for the most part, tools and machinery I tried to recreate from memory, but tucked away in a drawer were a few sketches of a more personal nature. 
	One slow day I'd found myself doodling, sketching a line drawing of Tahr's face. It just went from there, drawing the faces of the Sathe I'd met, trying to catch the individuality of the alien bone structures and furry faces; emotions expressed in ways a human couldn't; ways a human found difficult to relate to. I never actually showed the pictures to anyone - embarrassed they might just laugh at my interpretation of Sathe. They were something to do when I was bored or when I needed something else to think about. I kept them tucked away in a drawer and slowly  - over the months - their numbers grew.
	On the board in front of me at the moment were rough notes for part of a wind-powered sawmill, the mechanism that would move eight saw blades while pulling a log through them; not to difficult to put down on paper, but I wondered what the gears and ratchets could be made from . . . it looked like it would have to be wood. Steel would have to wait until I got a Bessemer converter -  or a satisfactory analogue - worked out.
	There was a scratch on the door. "Come in," I called out absently in English, my mind really on the paper in front of me. No matter. Remae came in and shut the door behind herself. 
	Without preamble she said. "I have the person that you wanted to see. She is outside . . . Do you still wish to see her?"
	I tossed the quill I was writing with on the drawing board and leaned back in the chair. The sharpened feather made a small blot of ink as the tip touched the yellowish paper. "She is here? Sure."
	She stared at me then started to open the door.
	"Remae," I got her attention again. "Why do you keep . . . ah . . . looking at me like that. Is there something strange about me? More than normal I mean."
	She favoured me with a smile. "Apologies. I did not mean to stare. It is nothing." She disappeared into the corridor.
	I cleared the papers off the desk. "Nothing . . . right. Sure." 
	What HAD Tahr said about me?
	When I looked up again that female Gulf soldier was standing in the doorway, a pair of armed and armoured guards flanking her. Remae hovered behind them.
	"Can we be alone?" I asked her.
	She gave the Gulf trooper a dubious look, then asked me, "Will you be all right?"
	Of all the stupid . . .  "Does she look as though she can hurt me?" I snapped.
	That was true. It looked as if she was having trouble standing; her wrists were chained and her fur was matted and bedraggled, tufts missing with patches of cut skin showing through. With dull eyes she watched me, but her nose was twitching. I saw her glance at the fire and the pot of stew simmering on the hearth.
	Remae and the guards left.
	"You do not look so good," I said.
	She just stared at me.
	"Have a seat." I sat down in one of the armchairs and gestured at the other one. She just stood there.
	"Come on. You can sit down now, or I can carry you to a chair when you collapse . . . Look at yourself, you can hardly stand."
	She seemed to wilt even more, if that was possible, and settled in the chair nearest the fire, tucking her feet up and lowering her head, her eyes still watching me.
	"I do not even know your name," I realised. "Do you want to tell me?"
	She didn't say anything.
	"Listen, please. I am sorry about what happened to you and your mate. I wish we could be meeting under different circumstances, but I am afraid I really have no say in the matter."
	"Kass," she said.
	"What?"
	"My name is Kass . . . Kass ai Shila." Her head lifted slightly.
	"Kass," I pronounced the name correctly and looked at her sitting there, small, defenceless, scared, but with a spark of defiance  burning within her. I saw the dirty muzzle, fur stretched taut over her ribs, and I saw her furtive glances at the pot of stew steaming softly beside the fire. A thread of saliva hung from her mouth and she licked her chops.
	"Hungry?"
	Startled, she looked back at me and pointedly clamped her mouth shut.
	I shrugged, picked up a clean bowl and ladled a generous helping of stew into it. Beside the fireplace a spoon I had carved for myself hung alongside Sathe spoons; I took one of the long Sathe ones. "Here, take it." I offered the bowl to her.
	She hesitated, but was soon shoving spoonfuls of stew into her mouth as fast as she could, holding the bowl awkwardly because of her chains.
	"Careful." She flinched when I touched her hand. "Go slowly." She kept eating, but at a more sedate pace. When she finished, I gave her a mug of water. "When was the last time you ate?"
	She belched and looked surprised. "I told you to take it easy," I said.
	She snorted then looked at me suspiciously. "What do you want?"
	"Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness."
	"Huh?"
	"I just want to ask you a few questions."
	Her eyes narrowed as a guarded look crossed her face: Obviously she had been asked some questions before.
	"No, no," I hastily assured her. "You will have nothing to lose by answering . . . at least I do not think you will. I just want to know what happened to the family at the farm."
	She still looked wary and scared.
	"For Christ's sake . . . Look, I just want to know what happened to them. I will not hold your answer against you." I hoped.
	"Can I ask you a question first?" she countered.
	"You will answer my question if I answer yours?"
	"Yes, I swear it."
	"I will take you on your word. What is it?"
	"What ARE you? Those months ago I was told we go to capture a strange creature aiding the Eastern Realm. We do this task," her chains rattled as she clenched a fist. "The creature talks, it seems to burn to death, then it returns to capture US!" She sagged and stared at the black chains around her wrists, then almost pleaded: "What are you?"
	I couldn't blame her for wanting to know that, but should I tell her? What could it hurt? "It is a long story."
	"I am not going anywhere."
	Well then. I poured myself a mug of water, settled and began to tell her my tale. She listened attentively.
	"That is true?" she asked once I had finished.
	"Yes, every word. Now I have answered your question, it is your turn."
	She took a deep breath that hissed like steam escaping from a kettle and tucked her feet in closer. "They were executed."
	"Oh, God . . . You fucking . . . "
	 She cowered back, wide-eyed in terror as I stood and took a step toard her, jaw and fists clenched in fury. All she could do was cringe back, like she was trying to push through the back of the chair. She raised her hands to ward me off, the chains rattled, and the rage abruptly faded. I sat down again. She couldn't read my expression, shrinking away as I raised my head from my hands, moisture streaming from my eyes.
	"We had to do it," she gabbled. "We had to! If we didn't, he would have had us impaled and skinned for disobeying his orders if he had found out!"
	I half-listened to her. Why hadn't he come with me!?
	He had his family.
	"Why are they any concern of yours though? You never knew them."
	That snapped my attention back to the present. "Oh, I knew them! I knew them. They gambled everything to save my life, and they lost.
	"I owe them everything, Kass!"
	Bewildered by my outburst she gaped, then stuttered, "You . . . cared for them?" it was an unbelieving question.
	"Yes, I cared. I can care you know. I can love and hate, laugh and cry . . . everything a Sathe can feel, so can I. When you had me chained, did you think I enjoyed it?! Did you think I LIKED being tortured?! What did you think I AM?!"
	"I still do not know," she mumbled.
	My anger abruptly died. As tired as if I had been running for my life, I sagged and ran my fingers over my scalp. "You were asking the guards about me; why?"
	"I wanted to know more about you. What . . . who you are."
	"Have I answered your questions?"
	Her chains rattled as she waved a sign of acknowledgment. There was a silence, then: "You are alone? There are no more of your kind?"
	"I do not know," I replied. "You have not heard any stories or rumours about anything like myself?"
	"If you listen to enough tale-weavers you will eventually hear anything you like," she said," but I have never heard tell of anything like you."
	I sighed to myself and stared out the window. Droplets of water impacted against the wavery glass as the sky outside began to open. "Alright, Kass. Tell me about the Gulf Realm."
	Instantly her ears went back and she clammed up.
  	"Hey! No. My mistake. All I wish to know about is what your life in the Gulf Realm was like. Where you were born, what your Clan and family is like. I know nothing of what life outside the Eastern Realm is like."
	Kass stared at me in surprise, but the hostility was still there.
	"Okay ," I shrugged then got up, took her bowl, refilled it, and handed it back to her. "You do not have to tell me anything you do not wish to."
	She looked at the steaming bowl she held and I could see her nostrils flare. Saliva glistened on her thin, black lips. A time of thought, then she started speaking.
	Her Clan was not prominent. They hailed from a fairly insignificant settlement in the western borderland of the Gulf Realm. Farming and herding was a major part of their lifestyle. She described in wistful detail the small outpost and the countryside about it: the golden prairies that 'vanished beyond a glowing purple horizon', the rivers and glades.
	She was a long way from home.
	Six years ago, at the age of thirteen, she had been drafted into the Gulf military forces to do her time as all able-bodied Sathe were required to do. She had seen action on their north-western frontier against the nomadic tribesathe of the Open Realm when the Gulf Realm carved itself several thousand square klicks of new land. She returned to their capital a vet and was initiated into the Guard where she had earned the trust and recognition of her superiors.
	Although she had fond memories of it, she really harboured  no wish to return to her little backwater town. She'd found a job that offered to let her see more of the world than she could ever see swabbing out llama stalls.
	"However I did not realise that the world would include the inside of an Eastern dungeon," she finished wryly.
	While her story was doubtless biased, what she had told me gave me a picture of how her Realm functioned. To begin with, while the Eastern Realms form of blanket government was what could be coined a benevolent monarchy, the Gulf Realm was reigned over by a militant dictatorship.
	For generations now, the Clan leading the Realm had been the Mharah Dynasty, of whom Hraasa ai Mharah was the current Born Ruler. They had the Gulf Realm in a stranglehold, stifling opposition by ensuring that the other Clans in the Realm were all firmly under their control.
	There were the compulsory draft regulations. Clans must send a certain number of their young to serve in the Gulf military for a time. That left the Mharah Clan with a standing army of immense size under its almost exclusive control, funded by taxes from the other clans of the Realm.	
	I also saw how the Gulf Realm had been nibbling at its neighbours, taking tiny bites from here and there. And now there were Gulf troops infiltrating the Eastern Realm; pushing far beyond the borders nearly undetected. The Eastern Realm knew they were there, but couldn't find them. Like fleas on a dog.
	Their push was going to turn to shove real soon.	
	I turned from my ruminating back to Kass: "Thank you. You have been most helpful."
	Her catlike ears went back flat and the green eyes she shared with the rest of her kind, regardless of their Realm, widened in alarm. I could almost hear her thoughts: what did I say?!
	The guards came when I called them and yanked Kass to her feet. I growled at them to be gentle and they took their hands off her, but they still kept a hand on their sword hilts.
	"Hold it," I said before they carted her away. The guards stopped and she looked around at me. "Kass, one more thing. You know the choices available to you. Make your one count. I do believe that no ideal is worth dying for."
	"I will in no way dishonour my Clan or my mate," she said. "I will make my own choice."
	I shrugged. "Spoken like a true fanatic."
	She bristled. The guards hissed.
	"I hope I see you again," I said sincerely, then waved for the guards to take her away.
	Remae drifted in, turning in the doorway to watch the Eastern Warrior being taken away, and sat down in the chair that Kass had just vacated. "Did you enjoy yourself?"
	I glared at her. "Cut that out. I found out what I wanted to know."
	Remae idly scratched at the arm of the chair with a claw, "What was that?"
	"A little about the Gulf Realm."
	"We could have told you anything you wanted to know."
	"I know," I shrugged, "But I wanted to hear the other side." From the horse's mouth, so to speak.
	"Then you see what we fear. Do you think we are right or wrong to desire your weapons to protect ourselves?"
	"Christ, Remae, I do not think I am the right one to make moral decisions of this kind. I can only hope I am doing the right thing."
	"Believe me," she said. "You are!"
	"Thanks a lot," I said dryly, then dropped down in the chair behind my desk: "What she said as she was leaving . . . I think she really would rather die than surrender to you. Are all Sathe like that?"
	Remae's eyes hardened:" Gulf they may be, but they are also Guard. They are the most trusted of the Clan Lord's followers for good reasons: They are good, and they are loyal. It is a code: Loyalty, courage, and honour above all else. Why did you not believe me when I told you that they would live and die by this code?"
	"I guess I was thinking like a human."
	"Would you not die for your Clan and Realm?"
	"Ah . . . we do not have Clans like you do."
	"Would you?"
	"I do not know." I couldn't explain all the differences between our two cultures. "I do not think so."
	Remae's head rocked back as if my words had been a slap in the face. "But you are a warrior. It is your duty to defend your Realm!"
	"A duty I can perform much better if I am alive," I countered. "I will follow my superior if he leads me to Hell and back. I would fight for my . . . Realm, I would not betray it, but I would not give my life. Shit, I do not want to die; nobody in their right mind does. No honour is worth that."
	"Saaa! K'hy, honour is everything!"
	To you, Remae, perhaps.
	To me it just seemed like another name for pride. A means of inflaming youthful imagination to do the bidding of those who would use them.
	But when in Rome . . . 
	I sighed and nodded vaguely.
	She stared at me, then shook her head as though dispelling a cloud of midges. I didn't hear Remae step up beside me, but I felt it when she brushed against my sleeve.
	"I am sorry, maybe you are right," I apologised, then changed the subject: "I have not seen much of Tahr lately. Is she too busy to see me?"
	"You have not heard? . . .  No, of course you would not have. The old Born Ruler is much worse. She has been seeing as much of him as possible." The black velvet of her muzzle wrinkled slightly. "I do not like to believe it, but I do not think he has long to live."
	"Oh," I said.
	She laid a black-furred hand on my shoulder. "Do not worry, she has not forgotten you."
	"I understand. She has a life to lead as well." I astonished Remae by putting an arm around her shoulders and giving her a hug, "Thank you, Remae. For everything."

******

	Something disturbed me that night: The creak of a floorboard, scraping of furniture, I don't know what it was, but I rolled and opened my eyes to stare up at a raised thread of steel, glittering like the startled Sathe eyes behind the mask.
	The face reared back even as I yelled and kicked out, sending sheets flying up at the figure standing over me, sending it reeling back, flailing at the cloth and I rammed into its midriff, feeling something like an icicle push into my back, then we both slammed into the wall and slid to the floor. Her head was in my arms and I was about to break her neck when pain ripped into my shoulders and tore down my arms. Reflexively I lurched backwards with a cry of pain and tripped over something in the dark. My arms gave out when I tried to cushion my fall and I hit the floor hard. Agony shot through my back, the cold feeling turning to paralyzing pain.
	She pulled the blankets off, her claws glistening oily with steel and blood, snatched something small from her belt and cocked her arm ready to throw. In the turmoil the black mask had been torn off and I saw her face.
	"Hymath?" I gasped, eyes wide, trying to focus while arching away from the pain.
	She hesitated, and at that moment I heard the door in the other room burst open. A blur in the darkness, she turned and disappeared.
	There was shouting, a cry of pain, the sound of furniture being overturned, then guards were milling around me and I was lifted and laid facedown on the bed and my back was throbbing and everything whirling, then a claw moved in my back, below my shoulder blade, a grating of bone on . . . something. I began to scream, hands held me and jammed something that tasted of leather into my mouth. I bit down hard as a cold length was pulled out of my back.
	A Sathe doctor fussed over me. Salves and paste on my shoulders, on my back. I shuddered weakly as it burned and stung, then burned again, like a poker in my trapezius. I was able to mumble a warning and someone grabbed a chamber pot, holding it while I puked my guts out. Hot water was brought in, they cleaned me. The surgeon mixed powders from various small vials on a single piece of parchment, then tipped them into a mug.
	I was almost eager to drink the sedative, my bolt-hole from the pain.
	They kept me drugged for three days, half-waking me only to give me food and water and the chamber pot. The last of the antiseptic from my medical kit was used to keep the sutures clean.
	I dreamed, or so they said. I would cry out in my sleep and toss around, threatening to tear the stitches open. Whatever those dreams were, all I can remember are flashes of fire and teeth and bloodied steel.
	I awoke with that hangover usually characteristic of Thamil. My head was throbbing and I couldn't move either arm without feeling pain in my shoulders. The sun was streaming in through the window, water was dripping off the eaves outside, and Tahr was there; back turned to me as she stared out the window.
	"I will break the legs of the next person who gives me that stuff." I growled, then sputtered to get fur out of my mouth as Tahr hugged me.

******

	"You are sure it was her?" Tahr asked.
	Perched on the edged of my bed, she was turning a dagger over in her hands. It was a wicked-looking piece of steel, with a long, polished blade and an ornate wooded handle, finely carved in minute detail to resemble a Sathe's head. It was the dagger they'd pulled out of my back.
	"It was Hymath. She was as close to me as you are, and she recognised me as well. She could have killed me then, instead she ran away."
	Tahr flicked the knife and it became a silver blur in the air before thudding to rest in the doorframe. She went to retrieve it. "It could have been her. She was a Scirth Warrior, the weapons are those favoured by them," she said as she pulled the dagger from the wood. "This is a ceremonial dagger, used for assassinations, and the wounds on your shoulders were probably caused by Iron Claws."
	"Iron Claws?"
	Tahr extruded her claws; sharp, black crescents. "They are pieces of sharpened steel that fit over one's claws . . . like so. Only Scirth Warriors use them."
	"I am sure that it was her," I stated adamantly. "But if she was going to kill me, why did she not go through with it?"   
	"She is a mercenary," Tahr reminded me. "She may have been hired to kill someone, but was not told who. She did not seem to be the type who would kill a friend."
	"You have got to admire her, it was a brave attempt."
	Hymath had broken into the apartments directly below mine and cut a hole in the roof, the floor to my room. When the guards burst in, she dropped back down through the hole and lost them in the corridors of the Citadel. The scratches she'd left me in my shoulder were deep and painful, but not life-threatening. Her knife, that had gone in at a sharp angle, scraping against my shoulder blade and sinking deep into the muscle.
	"Someone tries to kill you, and you admire her," Tahr's muzzle wrinkled. "I simply do not understand you, K'hy . . . Well, she has given you enough scars to remember her by."
	"I am starting to look like a map," I looked down at the tracks of old scars beneath the sparse hairs on my torso. "If I get any more punctures, I will start to leak." I saw her worried face and hastened to clarify: "That is a joke Tahr."
	"Huh, you have a strange sense of humour."
	"You should talk," I retorted, then yelped as her claws pinched my arm. "Alright! I take it back! No fair," I grumbled, "picking on a helpless invalid."
	She gently stroked my arm with the pads on the tips of her fingers. "I am sorry," she grinned, looking anything but. Then, while I couldn't retaliate, those hands ran up my arm and caressed my face. "What happened to your eye? That was not from Hymath."
	"An accident."
	"You are very accident prone," she smiled and patted my cheek, which she knew annoyed me, but there was nothing I could do about it. I threw a few light hearted insults after her as she left.

******

	It was a clear night, but the moon had chosen to hide behind the only cloud in the sky. The air was cold and a stiff wind had blown up, howling down corridors like a banshee. There was no snow on the ground, the rain of the past few days had washed it away.
	The Keep walls surrounding the central courtyard where the Circle lay rose away from the courtyard like giant steps, each tier made up of walkways, buttresses, balconies, and archways. It was plain for all to see that this face of the Citadel was not intended to be a fortress: the masonry was artistic and intricately carved, letting the walls soar.
	Five floors above the courtyard I huddled into my cloak. My wounds still ached, the stitches itching, but I couldn't miss this. My two Sathe bodyguards stood like statues, not noticing the chill. On either side of us along the length of the cloistered corridor Sathe were standing silently, watching what went on below.
	Beneath the gaze of thousands of Sathe around the walls and the watchful squinting eye of the quarter moon appearing from behind its cloud, the old King lay dead on a litter carried by a small entourage of Sathe as they headed across the frozen ground toward the stone circle.
	In the centre of the circle, in the centre of the arena where the Candidates had fought, the litter was placed upon a rectangular stack of logs. The Sathe moved out until they formed a circle with the deathbed in the middle, then several Sathe stepped forward with torches.
	The pyre burned slowly at first, a flickering glow around the base, but it quickly grew until a tower of flames leapt up into the night, sparks ascending until they faded from sight. Light danced and wove among the Sathe, playing with their long shadows and finally losing itself in the darkness. A single figure stepped toward the pyre and a mournful cry of loss and sorrow tore up into the night.
	The cry was echoed.
	From a thousand Sathe throats, the same sound reverberated, sending electric shivers up and down my spine. Every Sathe head I could see was thrown back, howling like coyotes baying at the moon. Their eyes were shut tight and their ears plastered back against their skulls. The fire settled, the collapsing timbers setting a shower of sparks to dancing above the Circle.
	Slowly the sound faded as Sathe started to drift away. After a time, only one Sathe was left standing by the pyre that blazed in the circle. Even from that distance, I could see the grief in the way she stood. I stood there and watched her until a guard touched my arm, telling me it was time to leave.
	Back in my room, I sat and stared into the fire. Tahr had lost her father now, the last person whom she had been very close to. I didn't know how I would take it if I found out that everyone I used to know was dead . . . Hell, I didn't know if they were still alive, I just kept myself sane by telling myself they had to be, but how could I be sure . . . 
	I tore my thoughts away from that track and tried to think about something else, but my mind kept drifting back to the funeral and that eerie howling. All the Sathe I could see had cried out at the same time with no apparent prompting. I wondered if it was a custom that went on at all their funerals, then decided it couldn't have been. There had been no howling on that night after we had captured the Gulf forces. The Eastern Realm soldiers had mourned the loss of their comrades with silence. No, it was another ritual, something reserved for their nobility.
	There were voices in the corridor outside, then a scratch on the door. "The Born Ruler sent for you," a guard told me. "We are here to escort you."
	I nodded and went with them.
	Tahr's quarters were dark and cold. I hesitated inside the door, waiting for my eyes to adjust. "Tahr?"
	There was a movement near the window, a flash of emerald eyes. "Hello, K'hy," the voice was flat, emotionless.
	I picked my way across the dark room, feeling ridiculously clumsy as I bumped against furniture. "I am sorry," I said. "I am as blind as a bat."
	Perhaps she smiled. "But bats do not walk into things."
	I shrugged. She reached out and took my hand, her much smaller one almost engulfed in my paw. "K'hy, I just wanted someone to talk to."
	"Me?"
	"I know you."
	My eyes had adjusted to the faint moonlight coming in through the window. I put my arm around her shoulders and pulled her against my side. "I am sorry about your father," I whispered.
	She tensed under my arm. "I can remember what he was like when I was a cub," she finally said. "Before I was sent to the estate, I remember we would go to the market. I always loved that. The strange Sathe, their wares. I could eat sweetmeats, enjoy myself. Sometimes we would go to nearby towns by ourselves for a few days, get away from the court. He was much stronger in those days, able to take care of himself," she was staring out the window, trembling violently. "I remember . . . I . . . " she broke off, shivering, chittering.
	I'd never seen a Sathe cry before.
	I held her close, resting my head against the fur of her mane while she shook against me. By involuntary reflex her claws dug deep into my back; I gritted my teeth and did nothing. I just held her until she cried herself out.
	"Why?" she gasped. "Why is it like this? We mourn their death, but it is we, the ones who live, who suffer. We mourn for them, but they no longer care." She leaned her head against my chest again and I gently rocked her back and forth.
	"I know . . . I know," I murmured softly and gently scratched her behind the ears. "Among my people, there is a belief that a person lives even after death. The body might wither and die, but the thing that is the person, the essence, the soul  lives on."
	Tahr stirred against me. "Is this so?"
	"I do not know. Many people like to believe it is so . . . and nobody has every proved it not true," I stroked her muzzle with the tip of one finger and smiled at her. Inside I felt a tinge of regret, I might have just made a big mistake. At best Religion is a touchy subject
	"It is a nice thought," she murmured and snuggled in close, looking out the window. I ran my hand through that long fur that made up her mane. Slightly coarser than human hair, it was still warm and soft. "Will you stay with me?" she asked.
	"I am not going anywhere," I reassured her.
	I stayed there, holding her, stroking her mane until her eyes closed and she relaxed against me. Then I set her to bed and watched her until I also dozed off.

******

	The sword swung at me again and I managed to block it with the edge of my thin blade. Deflected, it somehow snaked around and came at me again. I blocked the one as well, then swung a stroke of my own. The Sathe snarled and lifted his blade, sagging under the force of my blow. Then my sword skittered off his blade and his leapt forward. Frantically I moved to parry.
	It'd only been a feint. While I was off balance the Sathe slipped under my guard and slammed his blade into my unprotected left side.
	"Ow!" I yelped.
	"Alright! Stop!" S'shar snapped. "You are dead!" He flipped the weighted blade of his wooden sword over his shoulder and wearily rubbed at his facial fur, then rounded on me. "What by all the Plagues were you doing?! Using the edge of your blade to parry!" He gave a disgusted snort. "Are you seriously trying?"
	Doubled over, gasping air and with sweat running down my neck, I nodded. My introduction to swordplay was not going well. During my regular lessons we attracted a small crowd of Sathe who lounged around on the grass growing on the balcony garden, having a great laugh at my expense.
	I put my hands on my hips and leaned back, taking a deep breath and squinting at the chittering Sathe watching us. "We should charge admission. Could clean up."
	S'shar was not amused. He ignored that and slung the mock-sword over his shoulder. "I do not know!" he spat air in disgust and frustration: "Teach you to use a sword! Huh! It is hopeless! You are slow. You favour your right hand too much. You cannot guard your left side correctly.  You have enough strength behind your blows . . . but first you have to hit me . . . and even then I think there is a chance you would break your blade or get it stuck!"
	I looked at the battered imitation scimitar in my hand. Sathe held theirs' in a two-handed grip, but I could manage one-handed without difficulty, something S'shar often chewed me out about. He couldn't seem to understand that I was built differently. The mock-ups weren't as dangerous as the real things, but they could still bruise. With his fur S'shar didn't bother with protection, but the body armour the Sathe had issued me with was leather, and on that day in May it was hot enough in that sweat-suit to fry eggs. I sank down in the shade of a tree making the windbreak that sheltered the garden from the wind off the Atlantic. The Citadel landscapers did good work.
	The swordsmaster loomed over me: "K'hy, most cubs are better than you are."
	"Gee . . . thanks for the constructive criticism," I snapped. "I cannot move as fast as you can. If you would just stand still, it would make everything a lot easier."
	"I doubt that many opponents will stand still for you to take pieces out of him," he gave a rumbling laugh, then glanced past my shoulder. "Company. Saaa . . . she will not be pleased."
	I looked to see who 'she' was. Oh, Remae. She was brushing through the wild grasses that Sathe preferred to close-cropped lawns.
	"Oh shit!" I closed my eyes and groaned. "Report card time!" 
	"S'shar," Remae said in way of greeting, stopping beside me and reaching down to ruffle my hair. I patted it flat again. "How is your pupil doing?"
	S'shar gave me a single, despairing look, then said, "Not well. I fear that I can never see him being any good at all with a blade."
	Remae looked astonished.
	"Hey! I am not superman," I said grudgingly.
	"He is just a beginner. He is really that bad?"
	The swordsmaster took a deep breath, then launched into a litany of my faults. While she listened the Marshal stared at me: I leaned back against the tree, propped my head up with a hand and tapped at my cheek with a finger, trying to hide my embarrassment.
	"K'hy," Remae finally said when the vet had finished, "pick up your sword." She in turn took up S'shar's wooden scimitar and swung it experimentally. I groaned and struggled to my feet. I was still tired from my previous rounds with my tutor, my muscles aching from days of non-too-gentle whacks and jabs that signalled I had lost the match.
	The creature duelling with the Marshal . . . Sathe out enjoying the sun sat up to take notice.
	Remae touched her blade to mine, took a few steps back.
	 . . . and the rounded tip of her blade was spearing for my guts. I danced backwards and knocked it aside with a  Clack of wood on wood. Again and again.
	Step by step she was forcing me backwards. As sweat dripped down my face I realised with shock that she was playing with me, pushing me just so far that she could see what I could do. Goddamn, she was even better than S'shar.
	And I fought back to the best of my ability, for all the good that did. S'shar had taught me to fight the way he had been taught: grip the hilt with both hands and rely upon nimbleness to be your shield. It worked for Sathe. It didn't work for me.
	Air whistled as my sword passed through the space Remae had occupied a split-second earlier.
	"You are slow," she hissed from a compact crouch, then she blurred forward. You really have to see it to realise just how fast Sathe are; just snap your fingers and they're . . . there. Frantically I twisted to cover my left side, but there was a stinging slap against my arm, then I was facing Remae down a lacquered wooden blade at my throat.
	From his comfortable seat in the shade of the tree S'shar waved his hand philosophically at Remae: "You see?"
	"I see." Remae's ears went flat in disgust. She practically threw the sword at the veteran who deftly caught it in one hand and ran a finger over the notched blade. "You really have never even SEEN a plague-touched sword before, have you? Did your army teach you nothing about swordplay?"
	"No," I shook my head, "Never needed to. In one of our wars they would only be good for chopping firewood."
	Remae's muzzle rumpled in disgust. "There is no honour in your kind of fighting."
	"There is no honour in any kind of fighting. If you want to pussyfoot around, you should not be fighting!"
	"You are farting though your mouth!" she bristled. "Fighting should involving meeting your enemy face to face and defeating him, watching his eyes when he dies."
	I cast an exasperated look heavenwards. "Oh, of course. How foolish of me! That is what honour is: Seeing a fellow Sathe holding his entrails in with his hands, watching him coughing blood on the end of your sword? Better . . . "
	"EXCUSE ME!" S'shar bellowed. Both Remae and I halted our tirade in mid-broadside to glare at him. "I apologise," he said in milder tones, "but I think that the point of this was not the discussion of personal philosophies.
	"K'hy, are you trying your utmost? You do not think you can improve?"
	"I am trying, but these are your rules we are playing by. I cannot match you there."
	"Then do you have any of your tricks that might help?" Remae inquired.
	Almost I said no, then paused with my mouth open and thought for a second or two. "Perhaps," I finally admitted. "Perhaps I may have an idea or two . . . "

******

	Shrouded from head to foot in heavy leather apron and mask, the Sathe blacksmith resembled some extra from an Italian B-grade sci-fi movie. White-hot glare exploded around him as he pulled the door of the furnace open. Shielding his face with a leather-clad arm he poked a hook into the scorching heat and slowly swung the miniature Bessemer converter out on its arm. The converter was shaped like an inverted bell, scored and coated with carbon, spitting sparks of molten metal as apprentices continued pumping high-velocity compressed air through the viscous ore.
	The smith wrapped a paw protected by an oversized leather glove around a handle on the converter and tipped it, directing a cascade of orange-white metal and sparks into the mould, letting it envelope the thin core of brittle, low-carbon steel. An assistant swung the converter back into the crucible, leaving the smith free to turn his attention to the liquid steel in the mould.
	Before it had cooled the smith was passing the glowing rod through the trip hammer, more sparks flying and rebounding from his apron as the length of metal was pounded and folded around the slat of the central core. A hand-held hammer  knocked off extraneous pieces of metal, crudely shaped it.
	The metal hissed furiously as the smith quenched it in a trough of oil.
	Now the Sathe smith turned to where I was standing out of his way and held the blade up to the light spilling from the furnace. With a claw he pulled the mask from his face.
	You can always recognise a Sathe blacksmith: the fur around the eyes, crown, ears, and mane - unprotected by their masks and aprons - has been curled, withered by heat, blackened by soot.
	From that mask of soot, green eyes gleamed as the blacksmith ran a critical finger over the black bar, still glistening with oil: slivers of carbon peeled off, metal gleamed and wavered.
	It was the final draft, the finished copy. The other lumps of ore, the small daggers and blades that had been forged in the weeks before were dry runs, practice. I was giving the Sathe a quick way to produce large amounts of high-quality steel much faster than they could produce with their conventional smelting and manual metal-folding techniques. I think it was fair enough that this be the first finished article to be produced.

******

	The practice hall was almost deserted, the occasional couple of Sathe sparring with hands or weapons, their feet raising dust from the straw mats. Cold midwinter sunlight from those small windows high in the walls threw puddles of light against the opposite walls.
	S'shar held the new practice sword I'd built in both hands, turning the long wooden blade over and over as he scrutinised it: the crosspiece, the hilt moulded for the contours of a completely different palm. The captain tried to wield the sword with one hand, swore as his grasp slipped and weapon's blunt tip dropped to the mat, missing his foot by mere inches. Unlike the curved Sathe scimitars the sword was based upon the two handed broadsword: longer, heavier, and definitely meaner looking. "You actually intend to use something like this? And . . . that?" he jabbed a finger at the buckler I was strapping to my arm.
	"I am going to try."
	"I will believe it when I see it," he hissed, then tossed the sword to me. I caught it in one hand, slipped the strap over my wrist, then spun it in a blurring figure eight before settling it comfortably and stepping onto the mat.
	"Alright," his sword leapt from sheath to his hand, he padded into a ready stance. "Surprise me."

******

	Remae touched her blade to mine in salute, then lunged. I barely had time to parry her first blow with the shield before she was coming around again, sword raised and teeth bared in a white grimace. This time her practice sword hit mine and she was staggered, knocked back as my heavier weapon waved hers aside. She scuttled back a couple of steps and began circling.
	"That is better," she said.
	I didn't waste breath answering.
	Now she dashed forward again and barely dodged the tip of my longer blade as I jabbed at her, again forcing the Marshal to retreat. Now she began to look interested.
	Her toe claws were out, digging into the grass as she sidled through the long grass. Dry stems crunched under my boots as I pivoted, watching her, then defending as she feinted left, moved right, then to my left again. I couldn't bring my sword around to block that, but my shield dropped and deflected the blow Remae had aimed at my legs. At the same time my sword was driving at her right side. She wheeled to stop that, again staggering back a step, then coming in again fast and low.
	I hit her with the shield: hard.
	There was a commotion from the watching Sathe as the Marshal was knocked over onto her back, then I was over her with sword raised.
	Before I had a chance to bring the weighted practice blade down, she kicked up and planted a foot in my stomach. I felt needles dig through my shirt and into my skin and froze, afraid of how deep they'd gone and what might happen if I tried to pull away. On her back on the ground Remae grinned up at me, then hissed. "Much better, but there are weapons besides swords."
	I looked down and swallowed.
	"Alright," Remae said with a smile, ears fluttering against the grass that framed her. "K'hy, could you untangle my claws please. They are caught in your clothing."
	I winced as she moved. "Ahhh, shit!  . . . That is not my clothes."
	It took a while to untangle her claws. A crescent of five bloody pinpoints began to seep through the shirt where it touched my skin.
	"Oh," Remae said with a sheepish look. "Sorry. I forgot."	
	"No problem," I grimaced. "Shit."

******


	Remae had been convinced that all that paraphernalia wouldn't help me improve and in a way she was right. At first it didn't. It took time and practice to learn to use the shield and heavy blade to their full advantage. Slowly, but surely, I improved.
	Holding my own against S'shar took work, many hours of his time, but he was a good teacher. At first he invariably beat me black and blue. When the end of the day dragged around I would collapse on my bed, my joints so stiff I imagined them squeaking.
	I exercised. To help build up my arm muscles I began to wear several kilograms of lead in leather bracelets on my wrists. The added weight made my arms and shoulders ache even more, but after a week I stopped noticing the hindrance, and when the handicaps came off, my sword felt as light as air.
	And often, during her spare time,  Remae would come to practice with me.
    	As time passed I stopped making a complete asshole of myself and graduated to mere incompetence. Sometimes we even had a small audience watching the Marshal and her unusual partner sparring. It was obvious that compared to a Sathe I would never be much better than mediocre at swordplay, certainly never as good as Remae. But then she was one of the best.
	Spring dragged on.

******

	"HAHHIIIRRR!"
	Remae's sword danced around the side of my shield as she yowled in my face. I batted it aside with the edge of the shield and lunged with my wooden blade, straight at her padded chest.
	Surprised, she danced back a step, then retaliated with an attack again absorbed by my shield. I made a feint with my sword, and lashed out with the shield, never expecting to hit her.
	She gasped as I caught her a solid hit on the shoulder and went over backwards, taking me with her. Cursing seconds untangling ourselves, then she called time. I sat down on the grass beside her while she propped herself up on her elbows.
	"What happened?" I asked. "That was too easy . . . or am I too good for you now?" I grinned at her.
	"Ah . . . you were lucky," she panted, licked her chops and stared at me - suddenly disturbingly intensely - then blinked and shook her head. "I think we had best stop now."
	"But we have only just started," I protested.
	"That will be all!" she snapped and began to bustle with her equipment, intent on what she was doing. As if she didn't want to look at me.
	"What is the matter with you?" I asked.
	"Not your business," she snarled with bared teeth.
	"Alright," I said, taken aback. "Sorry I asked." I got up to leave.
	"K'hy!"
	I stopped and looked at the Eastern Marshal. She blinked, then furiously scrubbed at her face with her hands as though trying to wash off something I couldn't see. Was she cracking up?
	Remae stopped her rubbing and stared at her hands. "I had hoped this would not happen yet," she muttered angrily. "It is my Time, K'hy."
	I rocked back on my heels, "Uh-oh."
	Well, it had to happen. Spring was well and truly there, and things were hotting up . . . in more ways than just the weather. Spring was the time when Sathe females had their first Time of the year, and the number of females I had seen walking around the Citadel with a horny male entourage in tow was growing. In some places even I could smell the scent of heat in the air, a spicy musk that did nothing for me. I hadn't really thought about Remae having her Time, and now it was here, I was a bit nonplussed.

	"Do I make you so nervous?" she asked, wiping her sword down.
	Yes, she did.
	As we headed back through the corridors of the Citadel, I was aware of how closely she was walking beside me. Once, a male going in the opposite direction stopped and stared at her, his nostrils flaring as they worked overtime. Remae turned and rumpled her nose in a grin that bared teeth. He hurried on his way and Remae huddled a little closer to my side.
	I'm with HIM! was the message she was broadcasting to all and sundry.
	"Remae?" When she didn't answer I nudged her. "Remae!"
	"Huh?" She blinked in surprise, and moved a hasty step away. "I am sorry . . . I did not realise," she paused, and I caught a whiff of something . . . familiar: a faint, musty scent which was quickly wafted away. We moved on down the corridor and she was silent, lost in the turmoil that oestrus brings them.
	Until she suddenly grabbed my arm. "K'hy, stay with me tonight."
	Oh, shit. I'd been hoping she wouldn't ask. "Oh, Christ on a . . . Remae, WHY?"
	She let go of me. We stopped outside the door to her quarters and she met my gaze with her huge eyes. "I like you," she said. "And I want to. I wanted to ask you that night in the wagon, but you seemed afraid of me."
	Was it that? Or was it curiosity, something new, something the Shirai had told her. I reached out and stroked the dark fur on the side of her neck. It was soft, but not like a human woman's hair; slightly coarser. She twitched slightly as my fingers touched, ran down her mane and along her jaw. "Shit . . . Please Remae. I like you - a lot - but I cannot. I mean . . . You are Sathe, I am Human . . . Look at me: We are as different as it is possible to get. I saw how that male back there looked at you. He could respond in the right ways. And there are plenty more Sathe males: plenty of fish in the sea. Please, understand." I leaned forward and kissed her gently on her muzzle.
	She regarded me with ears drooping slightly. Maybe she was the Marshal of the Eastern Realm; maybe she did have fur and fangs, but she also had feelings. "What of you and Tahr?" she asked.
	"We have been through a lot together," I tried to explain. "She has helped me, she has been my guide, my friend, my teacher . . . and my lover. It just . . . happened. I do not really know how. Circumstances I suppose. She told you what it was like."
	Remae flinched. "How did you . . . ?" she blurted, then bit the question off and looked embarrassed. "So Tahr was the lucky one."
	"Hey!  No! Remae, she and I are too different. I cannot give her cubs, and she is not . . . right for me. In a way, I love her, but it can never be love as I would love another human, or she another Sathe.
	"Remae, it is nothing personal, it is just . . . I . . . I suppose it is the relationship. I mean, you might be able to have sex and maintain a casual friendship, but I do not think I can do that. I like having you as a friend, but if I stayed with you that would change. Do you understand?"
	She hesitated before answering. "Yes . . . I think so," Her ears flickered in a smile. "Well, as you say, there are many more fish in the sea."
	I watched the door of her apartments close and sighed. With my armour feeling like it weighed a ton I trudged back to my rooms.

******

	"Do you think you did the right thing?"
	"I just do not know. That was why I was asking you. Did I hurt her feelings?"
	The fire crackled. Tahr was warm against my side as we sat together on the couch. She had her feet drawn up behind her and was leaning against my shoulder, wearing only her fur. There was a faint musky scent hanging around her. Familiar. "You did what you thought was best . . . Did you mean what you said about relationships?"
	Hesitation:
	"Yes."
	"Oh."
	"Tahr, it is true. Someday you will find a male you are attracted to . . . "
	"I am attracted to you."
	"You know what I mean! You will find a Sathe male who is right for you and you will settle down together."
	"Settle down?" Tahr cocked her head, puzzled.
	I chuckled. "Start a home . . . a family. You know, the patter of tiny feet and all that."
	"Cubs." She flinched, then stared fixedly at the fire and said, "You are right. The years are running by and I am not getting any younger. Soon, a cub."
	"Why only one? Have a few."
	Again she twitched.
	"I mean one would get lonely all alone . . . "
	She looked right at me, her face clouded over, her pupils turning to black pools and wrinkles marching up her nose. I trailed off.
	"Hey, what did I say?"
	She shook her head and rubbed her eyes. Her ears went back up, but still they trembled slightly. "No . . . I am sorry. I over-reacted." She raked her hand through my hair and I was aware her claws were not completely pulled. "It is difficult to talk about . . . some things during a Time."
	I was still confused. "I am sorry, I do not know what I said."
	"Cubs. Birthing. It is not something that is to be taken lightly." She heaved several deep breaths. "You said several cubs . . . Why?"
	"Why, because that is . . . " I swallowed. "Do not tell me: that is not normal for you, is it."
	She clenched her fists. "No! It is wonderful, it is what any female dreams of, but never normal."
	I blinked. I'd always taken it for granted they had litters, like cats would. "But your breasts . . . " I blurted.
	"What about them?" she inquired softly.
	And for my next trick, I'll put my other foot in my mouth. "Ah . . . you have six. I thought that would mean that . . . you would have many babies."
	Her ears started to lower again, but she pulled them up with an effort. "You are right. We have . . . five, sometimes six cubs." Her claws flexed in and out of their sheaths as she spoke, like a sharp heartbeat.
	I touched her shoulder, "If you do not want to talk about this . . . " I said, but she cut me off.
	"No . . .  It is better I do, before you get torn to pieces by a female who does not understand you." She took another breath. "K'hy, is it easy for a human female to become pregnant?"
	"Yes. Sometimes all too . . . "
	She kept on, as if I wasn't talking. "It can take many Times, many matings, sometimes several years. When it happens, we have four or five cubs . . .  But only one . . .  rarely two, only they are normal; the others, they are . . .  they are animals in the shape of Sathe. They cannot talk, eat, or think." I gritted my teeth as her claws sank through my pants and into my leg. "The mother she has to . . . to . . . she has to kill them. She . . . " shaking violently she broke off, then suddenly rounded on me, ears down tight against her skull, her eyes all dark pupil, and her teeth bared in an open-mouthed snarl.
	I jerked away, throwing up an arm to protect my face.
	And Tahr changed again, the fury evaporating and horror replacing it. "Saaaaa! K'hy! I did not . . . " Her hands shook as she held them up before her, the claws retracting. "It is hard to talk . . . "
	There was nothing I could say. I reached out and put my hand to her bowed shoulder; she flinched under my touch. Her fur was standing on end, like filaments of wire. I stroked, smoothing her ruffled pelt. Beneath that she was tense: coiled springs of her muscle to the wire of her fur, like she was ready to fight for her life.
	She shifted slightly as my hands moved, the stroking turning to rubbbing. Like ice melting under my fingers she relaxed, luxuriating in the massage. There was a remote buzzing in her throat when she craned  around to gently nuzzle my neck. I moved my hands down, down her back, tracing the ridge of her spine, until I was stroking the spot just above her buttocks, that spot that sent shudders through her body. She gave a moan of pleasure, her breath warm against my neck.
	I slowly stood, gathering her into my arms. She rubbed against my face and neck, running her hands through my hair as I carried her into the bedroom, then her hands were clenching against my back, claws scratching lightly . . . 
	When we were finished, she curled up against my side and immediately fell asleep, twitching occasionally in her dreams. I lay back in the warm bedclothes, aware of her musky scent covering the linen and myself. With the tip of one finger I drew small sworls in her ruffled fur and stared at a patch of moonlight on the stone wall beside the door.
	I wasn't sleeping. I couldn't stop thinking about what she had said.
	They kill their children! They kill their goddamn children . . . 
	The morbid litany plagued my thoughts. Little more than animals, she had said. Their mothers had to kill them, 'She cannot help it'.
	My mind went back to that day I had played with those cubs in that stream outside of Bay town. I remembered their teddy bear-like cuteness, their friendliness, and tried not to think about what had happened to their brothers and sisters. Tahr stirred in her sleep, and I wondered if she ever thought about what her siblings may have been like.
	Over the years, piece by piece, I would find out that for their females childbirth was a fever much like their Times. Uncontrollable; instincts trying to run rampant over their thoughts. They would want to be alone, and most times they would leave their homes to find solitude for the birthing: a hollow beneath a tree, a basement, a  barn or hayloft . . . anywhere they felt alone. There the female would litter, and always, just after they were born, she would kill most of them.
	I don't know how they choose. Maybe scent, maybe maternal instinct, but somehow, they choose them. I have since read old Sathe texts where attempts have been made to save cubs - usually if the mother dies in labour. If they are taken while she is alive, she goes berserk. None of those attempts have met with any success. As Tahr had told me, most of the cubs are severely retarded, little more than animated lumps of flesh and bone.
	 I had no idea of that while I lay there beside my impossible lover. I touched her soft fur and a heavy lump settled inside me. This could not go on. I'd already told Remae that, I had told Tahr that, then I went right ahead and did it anyway.
	"Fucking hypocrite,"  I cursed myself: soto voce.
	Beside me, Tahr rolled over and nestled closer into my side.

******
	
	I stood beside the window and finished my breakfast, looking through the open door at Tahr lying sprawled out on the rumpled sheets in the bedroom. It was already the third day of her Time, and it showed no sign of ending. I sighed and remembered her last one, it had only lasted about a day, but this one . . . 
	God, I was exhausted.
	There was something going on in the Citadel. Banners were flying above the gates and Sathe in polished armour paraded the walls. Some kind of holiday?
	I was just about to take Tahr's breakfast through to her, when there was a scratch at the door. "It is open, come in." I called.
	A young Sathe guard hesitantly stepped into the room. I thought I recognised him. "Sir, a message."
	The penny dropped. "I know you. H'rrasch? is it?"
	He bowed his head. "Yes sir."
	"I thought I told you not to call me that," I told him. Last time I'd seen him he seemed to be pretty much head over heels for Tahr. I fought back a grin. "Alright, you said you had a message."
	"Ah . . . The High Lord's adviser requests your presence. He asks that you wear . . . the things you had when you first came here." H'rrasch's tufted ears flicked in apology. "I am afraid I do not know what that means."
	"S'okay, I do. Any idea what he wants to see me about?" I asked while opening the chest that held my camouflage fatigues. I hadn't worn them recently, saving wear and tear by wearing Sathe clothing that had been altered to fit me. They were folded and stacked neatly, the Kevlar helmet perched on top. Would I need that too? To be on the safe side I tucked it under my arm.
	When I turned around, H'rrasch was staring avidly at Tahr through the open doorway. She was still asleep, sprawled naked on the bed. He saw me watching, and quickly ducked his head.
	I pursed my lips in amusement, then had a thought. Would it . . . ? Nah . . . But still, he didn't seem a bad sort and surely she could make up her own mind . . . 
	"You like her?" I asked.
	He didn't say anything, but his left ear drooped before he caught it. "Do not worry," I laughed, "I do not blame you." I pulled the pants on and wrapped the web belt around my waist.
	"Sir, may I ask you a question?"
	"Go ahead . . . and stop calling me 'sir'!"
	"Why does she sleep with you?"
	Such a straightforward, direct question; just what you have to expect from a Sathe. I sighed again, "I'm afraid that you would have to ask her that."
	The camouflage jacket was a little tight across the shoulders, but I shrugged into it. After pulling on my socks and boots, I inspected myself in the mirror; I could have done with another haircut.
	In the bedroom, Tahr turned over and gave a small sneeze before settling back again. I saw H'rrasch glance her way, his  ears drooping.
	Should I do it?
	"Ah, H'rrasch," I cleared my throat. "Would you like to meet her?"
	"Sir?"
	"Just take her breakfast in." I gestured at the tray. "You can also tell her where I have gone."
	His eyes widened. "I . . . I cannot. It is her Time . . . she will want too . . . "
	"Exactly," I grinned.	
	"But . . . but she is yours."
	"She belongs to nobody but herself," I said. "Please. I think she needs you more than she needs me."
	He hesitated, and I could see the indecision on his face. He licked his lips, glanced at the doorway again, and asked, "Is that an order?"
	"Yes," I grinned and he flinched. "Now, where is Rehr?"
	"There are warriors outside who will take you to him . . . and sir?" He stopped me as I was about to leave.
	"What?"
	"You would have time to bathe before you see him." He taped the claws on his index fingers together nervously. "Sir, you smell like the Shirai."
	I blinked in surprise, I had forgotten about their noses . . . I smelled like . . . I laughed at that. H'rrasch's muzzled was wrinkled in puzzlement as I closed the door, still laughing.

******

	When a guard told me to go in, I pushed the door open and stepped through. The room suddenly went very quiet.
	Intricately woven tapestries full of vibrant colours covered the stone walls, portraits of Sathe made from woven thread. An exquisite deep, dark-blue carpet covered the floor, wall to wall, it must have been incredibly expensive. In the centre of the room there was a table with a top that looked like it was carved from of a single chunk of obsidian, scraps of paper scattered around on it. The attention of the Sathe who sat around the table was riveted on me as I stood in the doorway, at a loss as to what was expected of me.
	"Here," Rehr ordered without looking around, and I ducked my head to the staring Sathe and went over to take position beside his chair at the head of the table. He'd never even glanced at me, watching the four others as they stared at me towering over his chair, his ears canted in vague amusement.
	I stared back at them, memorising the patterns and texture of the fur that helped me tell Sathe apart. They were all fairly elderly males. All of them looking wealthy and important in their fine robes and jewellery. All of them staring back at me with various odd expressions.
	"My lords," Rehr addressed them. "This is K'hy, a h'man. I know he looks . . . unusual, but despite his appearance, he is probably as intelligent as any Sathe." He waited for that to settle in. "Twice now, he has been abducted by outland warriors, once from within Mainport itself, and there has been a direct attempt on his life. Of course, these attempts failed." He was scratching a claw back and forth on the shiny table top. "However, he has had some excellent opportunities to get good looks at these outlanders. K'hy, would you please describe the warriors you saw."
	I wasn't sure what was going on. Was this some kind of court of inquiry?
	"Yes, sir." I saw it the instant I spoke; all around the table there were those involuntary twitches, the flaring of nostrils and irises. I saw it in all of them, with the exception of one - as if he already knew what I was. Reddish-brown fur streaked with grey, especially around the tufted fur in his ears. Not especially unique, but his gorget was made out of what looked like alligator hide.
	He began to bristle under my scrutiny. The others were beginning to wonder what I was staring at. Turning away I cleared my throat and began to describe what had happened, the armour and weapons of the troops I'd had run-ins with before. I told them about the ambush on the wagon train from Traders Meet, the attack on Tahr and I on our journey from Bay Town, and the Sathe who kidnapped me from the Citadel. I also told them about the bandits I'd killed when I first met Tahr, although I couldn't say whether or not they were more than they had seemed.
	They were staring at Rehr when I finished.
	"You expect us to believe this?!" It was that Sathe with the grey tufted ears. He was glaring at me. "This . . . You would believe something like . . . like THAT?!"
	"So you do not deny having warriors in our Realm," Rehr replied.
	"I do deny it!" the other spat. "I would say that if the Eastern Realm cannot handle bandits within its borders, then that is none of our concern. However, the fact that our lands and trade routes are threatened by your inability to deal with your own internal affairs compels us to act."
	His ears rose with his spirits as he felt that he was taking control of the situation. "The Gulf Realm is willing to send warriors to aid the Eastern Realm in ridding themselves of this . . . bandit problem."
	Four . . . No, five of them. Ambassadors from the other Realms. Judging from what he had said, Tufted Ears would be from the Gulf Realm. The others would be from the three other Realms: Open Realm, and the alliance of the Lake Traders.
	Rehr bared his teeth slightly. "My lords," he addressed the other three Sathe at the table. "Do you really believe that the Gulf Realm would send troops to HELP us? I doubt that very much. I am sure that you all remember that Daycross River incident in the Open Realm."
	That didn't mean anything to me, but it obviously did to the other Sathe. The one with a very light fawn pelt sitting opposite Tufted Ears fleered his lips back in a grin. I took a stab in the dark: that was the emissary from the Open Realm.
	"Lord Samth," Rehr said to the Gulf emissary, "you deny having warriors in the Eastern Realm?"
	"Most vehemently."
	"Then would you please explain this."
	On some signal that I didn't catch, the door opened and with a rattling of manacles, several prisoners were led in, still in their red and black armour; officers who had been captured. They were all battered, bloodied, and tired. They saw me, then the Sathe gathered around the table and they sagged, as if something inside them had died.
	Rehr grinned at the emissaries. "You recognise them? Good. Honoured ones, you may ask them questions. They will answer. K'hy, thank you."

 ******
   
	Rehr was alone in the conference room when I returned. It was dark outside, the only light coming from a dim lantern on the paper-littered obsidian table top. He had his head buried in his hands.
	"Sir?" I ventured uneasily. I felt like I was intruding on something. "They said you wanted to see me about something else."
	He looked up at me waiting for him and sighed. "Ah, K'hy . . . I am getting old and tired . . . Please, sit down." He gave me a wan smile; the barest twitch of his ears. "Yes, I have some news that may interest you." He handed me a crumpled and stained piece of vellum marked with Sathe ideograms in black ink.
	"Uh . . . I cannot read," I confessed.
	"No?" he looked vaguely surprised. "Well, I guess one cannot expect everything . . . You know that while the Born Ruler is . . . indisposed, I take over her duties?" He waved his hand over the piece of paper, cream in the flickering orange light.
	"That would figure."
	"Well, this was brought in from the village of Singing Rock, a small village. It is not too far, but well away from the main  routes. It would seem they are having trouble with a strange creature."
	My heart leapt into my throat. Rehr continued.
	"Apparently it is two legged, leaves very strange tracks, steals food, and kills wolves with 'a loud noise'. Sound familiar?"
	I nodded dumbly.
	"They want some help in tracking it down." He folded the paper carefully and handed it to me. "Would you be interested in going there and finding out what is going on?"
	My mouth worked silently for a couple of times before I asked, "How soon would I be able to leave?"
	He twitched his ears in amusement. "I can have an escort ready for you by morning. Be ready then."
	I turned to the door, still staring at the paper in my hand, and hardly daring to hope. Could it be possible . . . ?
	I had my hand on the latch when I remembered. "Sir?"
	"Yes?"
	"May I ask how the conference went?"
	"You may." He drummed his claws on the obsidian. "It looks as if we may be at war."

******

	The door to my quarters creaked as I closed it behind me, but there was no sound from within. In the dimness, I half-felt my way across the room and peered through into the bedroom.
	There were pieces of armour and clothing strewn everywhere. Two figures were curled against each other, lying in an errant patch of moonlight in the centre of the bed with rumpled sheets surrounding them. I mouthed a silent 'oops' and started to close the bedroom door.
	"K'hy?"
	Tahr had lifted her head and was blinking first at the figure lying beside her, then at me. Smoothly, she extricated herself from beneath his arm and slid out of bed. He made a noise, smacked his jaws and settled down again, never quite waking.
	Once the bedroom door was closed behind us I smothered a smile and asked, "How are you feeling?"
	Tahr settled cross-legged into a chair, still naked. "Confused . . . WHO is he?" She jerked her thumb at the closed door.
	"You do not remember?" I shook my head. "Well, you needed someone to look after you; his name is H'rrasch." I squatted down beside her.
	"I have coupled with him?" she cast a bemused glance down at her groin. It was quite obvious what she'd been up to.
	"It would look like it," I said. "You do not remember?"
	Her muzzle wrinkled. "You were there, then suddenly he was there . . . "
	Her Time. Jesus, what went on in her head while it was going on? It was like she became something else; like there was a deeper, more animalistic side to her that ran closer to the surface than in humans. Despite the intimacy, she scared me sometimes; holding her, looking into her eyes to see the pure hunger staring back and for a second SHE wasn't there. Perhaps some thing were never meant to be.
	"You seemed to be getting along well enough," I observed with nod towards the bedroom door.
	"Yes, but . . . I mean this should not happen. He is just a soldier."
	"So am I."
	"K'hy, how can you ever be just a soldier?" she chuckled and reached up to stroke my face.
	I smiled and touched that little tuft of fur on her chin, then remembered the note in my pocket. "Tahr, I am going to have to go away for a while. Out of Mainport. Tomorrow."
	"What? Where are you going? What has happened?"
	"Hold it, slow down," I touched her lips and she was quiet. "Rehr has let me go at my own request. Here . . . " I produced the message and handed it over. Tahr scanned it, then read it over again.
	"Well, what do you think?" I asked eagerly.
	She shook her head quickly, then stared down at the paper. "It could be anything you know . . . a trickster, bandits, maybe an animal of some kind or . . . " She trailed off when she saw my face.
	I took a shuddering breath. "Oh God, I hope not . . . "

******	

	When Rehr had said that the village of Singing Rock was off the beaten track, he hadn't been kidding. One day west by wagon, then another two and a half days on foot.
	The main road had been a joke, but this one . . . 
	The parallel ruts someone had felt like calling a road were overgrown with bushes and weeds, near nonexistent. There were felled trees across the track, and in places young trees were actually growing in the road. Getting a wagon through that lot just wasn't worth it. The equipment we needed we carted in on llama-back.
	Wary of 'bandit' activity in the area, Rehr had provided us with an escort: fifteen Sathe troopers altogether, all armed and all male. It was that time of year, and a female coming into season could cause a few problems amongst the troops. The commander was a Sathe I already knew: the scarred veteran S'sahr.
	Singing Rock itself was a small village, self-sufficient. With that road it wasn't surprising. The buildings were mostly wood, just a few built from what looked like fired clay bricks or adobe, arranged around a larger central home. Streets were just dirt and dust, riddled with rain-worn gulleys and ditches. Fields surrounded the entire village, surrounded in turn by forest, thinned by woodcutting and clearance for pastures. Away on the edge of the fields a shallow river glittered invitingly.
	It was late afternoon when we trooped into the village, escorted by a few gawking cubs who had intercepted us almost a kilometre out, alerted by their own information network. Most of them had never even seen a Sathe soldier before, let alone anything like me. Older Sathe  working in the fields and around the village paused in their work. A pair working at loading a kiln stopped their work, exchanged some comments and began following us. There were females, just a few who must have been in their last days of estrus skittering nervously. I saw soldiers' heads turn and nostrils twitch distractedly. Thankfully nothing more.
	The Clan lord met us at the door to his home in the middle of the village; A big Sathe, just starting to turn grey about the ears. He gaped at the procession in front of his house.
	"My lord Scrai," S'sahr bowed his head. "We are here at your call."
	"By my ancestors!" the Sathe lord scratched at his heavy mane. "I did not expect they would send so many!"
	The three-quarter moon was creeping above the trees on a ridge, huge and shining. Somewhere a wolf howled and was answered with a more distant cry that wavered and echoed between the hills.
	I shivered and tossed another branch on the fire that burned outside the tent flaps. Beside me, a Sathe soldier lying on his blanket muttered in his sleep and scratched vigorously at a hitchhiker. Other tents were scattered around in a rough circle, many of them with tired Sathe sprawled asleep outside, taking advantage of the mild weather.
	From where I was sitting, I could see other warriors with more stamina enjoying themselves with the villagers. Music and shouting drifted on the air. The incredible silhouettes of Sathe weaved and bobbed in front of a bonfire.
	There was a noise behind me; the sound of feet rustling in grass. Five cubs - most of the small village's complement of kids -  were standing half-hidden beside the tent, staring at me.
	"Hi, Hello," I greeted them.
	They stared at me.
	"It is all right; I do not bite. See, I do not even need a leash."
	They muttered and shifted, pushing each other forward until one of them took a hesitant step. "S . . . sir, Lord S'sahr wants to see you."
	"Oh? About what?"
	"I . . . I . . . I . . . I . . . " One of the others hit him in the back and he blurted out, "I do n . . . n . . . not know."
	Did the kid have a stutter? or was it just fear?
	"Alright, I will be right with you." I started pulling on my boots. Their ears pricked up in surprise and they watched in fascination as I tied the laces. "Lead on."
	S'sahr turned in his chair when I literally ducked in through the door. "We have been waiting," he said simply.
	"I am sorry," I apologized.
	Lord Scrai, sitting opposite under a flickering lantern, tapped the goblet he held with his claws and invited me to make myself comfortable. He studied me for some time before saying, "So you are K'hy . . . Honoured S'sahr has told me why you are here . . . You can understand me?"
	"Well enough, Sir."
	He stiffened and his tongue flicked at his lips like a nervous little snake, "You speak very well."
	"Thank you."
	He cast a glance at S'Sahr, then leaned back and asked me, "Do you really think that this animal could be another . . . uh . . . another one of you?"
	"I had hoped . . . " I stopped, glancing down at my clenched fists. I made a conscious effort to relax and started over. "High one, I had hoped. I do not know for sure, that is why I came; hoping to find out. Please, could you tell me more about what has been going on?"
	"Most certainly. Ah . . .  we first saw it about four weeks ago. A farmer heard something disturbing his stock, he went to investigate and caught a glimpse of something running across the fields. He thought perhaps it was a Sathe, but the tracks he found were like nothing he had ever seen before."
	"They would not still be there?" I asked hopefully.
	"Unfortunately not. We have had some heavy rain. They were washed away," he said, lowering his ears in apology. Of course they never thought to cover a couple.
	"Things also started to disappear. A farmer found that some of his grain and meat stocks had gone, and also a crossbow was taken, along with quarrels." The lord cocked his head at me: "We are not wealthy and those things mean a lot to the farmer that lost them. Does your kind steal a lot?"
	I shrugged. "Sir, it would depend upon the circumstances. If that is one of my people out there; he is probably hungry, cold, scared," I remembered how I had felt when I saw Traders Meet; that hollow feeling when the world dropped out from under my feet, "and lonely."
	"There was something else as well," S'sahr scratched his muzzle.
	"Yes . . . It was two nights before you arrived. A wolf had killed a goat. The farmer who owned the animal was in time to see the wolf dragging it into the forest. A short time later there was a noise - like a small thunderclap.
	"Several Sathe went to investigate the next morning. They found the body of the wolf, the head had been split open by something that had gone straight through it. The goat had been dragged off and was nowhere to be seen. After seeing what had happened to the wolf, they were reluctant to follow the trail."
	Probably just as well.
	"They did find this." He reached into a pouch hanging from his waist and pulled out a small object that flashed dully in the light. He handed it to me. "Do you know what it is?"
	I turned the small brass cylinder over in my hands. On the baseplate, for all the world to see, there was a tiny dimple and the legend 'FC 60 MATCH'.
	Someone was using a 9mm pistol round manufactured in Wisconsin.

  ******

	All the Sathe were panting hard by the time we got to the top of the ridge. S'sahr barked an order and there were groans, but the troopers spread out keeping eyes open for any traces or tracks. Way below us the village nestled in the elbow of the river bend, looking like a model.	 
	"Good view, a?" S'sahr panted, his tongue lolling out the side of his mouth. "You do not even look tired."
	They were fast, unbelievably so, but they little stamina.
	I glanced at the swords and crossbows. "Perhaps if you didn't have to carry those . . . "
	"There are things out here that do not like Sathe," he grunted and turned to watch the Sathe troopers searching the ridgeline, shading his eyes with his hands. "You heard the wolves last night."
	"I would bet they like chasing Sathe." I grinned. In joke: he wouldn't understand.
	"At a scent. Vicious creatures."
	"You have never tried to tame them?"
	He looked disgusted at the mere idea. "Tame them? What for? They cannot pull wagons or ploughs. You cannot even eat them! Stringy meat."
	Difference in priorities. Why would natural predators need help? 
	We kept moving, following the ridgeline looking for tracks, leftovers, anything. It took a while, but finally a warrior hit paydirt: "There is spoor here!"
	I scrambled across to where he was using a stick to trace out a shoe-shaped impression in the dirt. He looked up at me, "Sir, could you just put your foot here."
	I planted my foot where he indicated, right beside the marks. He compared the prints. Whoever had left the tracks was wearing sneakers. Reeboks.
	"Smaller than you are," the soldier said. "And quite recent. Perhaps this morning. Obviously went off that way." He pointed along the top of the ridge, in a southerly direction.
	"Alright," S'sahr said. "Lead the way."
	The soldier glared at him, but complied. I wondered if they had been hearing tales about the dead wolf. That would make them a bit leery about charging around hunting for a creature that could do that.
	The spoor crested the ridge, then started down the far side of the hill, into a gully carved by a stream running down to the river, almost hidden in the dappled shadows beneath the overhanging trees. The Sathe tracker stopped to examine the tracks where they appeared to cross the stream. "These are more recent than I thought . . . a few hours at most."
	He poked a stick at the tracks, measuring their depth, then started poking around on the same side of the stream. "Hah!" he grinned, showing an impressive array of dentures. "Tried to fool us . . . look, you can see where he stood on the rocks to hide the tracks." There were flakes of mud on the rocks, and some looked like they had been moved, but I wouldn't have spotted it if it hadn't been pointed out to me. The tracks began again, heading upstream.
	S'sahr snorted and flicked his ears as a sandfly tried to settle. "Looks like whoever it is does not want company." He turned to the archers, "Load up."
	"Hey!"  They were cocking the bows. "No! What are you doing! We are not here to kill him!"
	"And we are not here to sacrifice our lives," he replied as he shifted his sword around. "K'hy, I put the lives of my troops first. We will not do anything unless our lives are threatened. All right?"
	I forced myself to think, to try and see it his way. It wasn't easy; another human, so close!	
	"All right," I reluctantly nodded.
	We pushed on. In some places we had to force our way through heavy undergrowth, while in others we could walk unimpeded on a carpet of pine needle between the huge trunks of ancient conifers. The tracks turned into a distinct path through the grass alongside the river.
	"Whoever it is comes this way a lot," S'sahr said and pointed to a prominent footprint. "And he is not very careful."
	"He is probably watching the village a lot of the time," I replied. "From that ridge. It is the best place around here."
	"See here!" A warrior called, pointing at something on the ground a little way off the track.
	A rabbit was hanging dead in a nylon snare.
	"We may be getting close." S'sahr said. "I would not put a trap too far from my camp. Cut that down and bring it with us."
	One of the soldiers grabbed the cord and tugged, trying to snap the deceptively thin string. Of course nothing happened. He tugged harder.
	"Cut it," I suggested.
	He glared at the thin cord, but pulled out a small utility knife and sawed through it, hanging the dead rabbit from his belt.
	We walked for another fifty metres before the soldier on point yelped and fell on his face. Cursing, he rolled over and squinted at something like a thick spiderweb stretched across the path at ankle height.
	"Plagues! What is it?" the soldier asked, squinting at the fine stuff.
	I knelt down and squinted at it. "Fishing line. Well, whoever it is, now he knows we are here." I flicked the line with a finger, it was stretched taut, looped around a tree-trunk and headed off in the direction we were going. Probably tied to a bell of some kind
	Fifty metres down the track we found the camp. The clearing at the edge of the river was broad and warmed in the midday sun. A lazy breeze stirred the grass around the wheels of the red Toyota SR5 pickup and stole the smoke from the fire smouldering in front of the blue Alpine tent. The wailing of a slide guitar sounded faintly from the cab of the truck, but otherwise there wasn't a sign of life.
	"He knows that we are here alright," I muttered. "Nobody around."
	"What about the noise from that thing," S'sahr whispered, pointing at the truck with his sword pommel.
	I sighed. I wasn't about to try and explain stereos to him at that time. "Don't worry about it. It is just a machine making the noise . . . and will you put that goat-sticker away!" I hissed at him. He stared at me, and reluctantly sheathed his sword.
	"Thank you. Hold this," I handed him the M-16 then pushed aside the bushes, stepping into the clearing.
	"Hi!" I shouted in English. "HEY! Anyone here?"
	I slowly walked across to the Toyota. From a sophisticated stereo system in the dash came the voice of Freddie Mercury, the almost operatic strains of the Bohemian Rhapsody wailing above the sound of the river. I reached in and punched STOP. The silence was deafening. There was a Sathe crossbow in the footwell, a few books on the dash: Ben Elton, Roget's Thesaurus, a college text on Revolution and Triumph, a Shell road atlas. I popped the glovebox: a flashlight, a box of 9mm shells: half empty. Hmmm. A glance in the backseat and I saw the underwear.
	Scanty, lace.
	I swallowed:hard.
	"HEY! HELLO!" I stood in front of the truck and scanned the edges of the clearing, seeing nothing but leaves moving in the wind.
	"Hey! I know you're out there!" I called again. "It's all right; I'm here to help."
	Nothing.
	"Listen. I can help you, but if you don't want it, I'm out of here. Okay? Your choice."
	This time the shadows under an old oak moved.
	She stepped into the clearing.
	I'd swear my heart stopped. She. It was beyond anything I could have dreamed of, the most beautiful thing in this world. Short, almost on average with a Sathe, with angular, elfin features, bright blue eyes contrasting sharply with aburn hair.
	Those baby blues were staring at me over the barrel of a pistol; incredible those small hands could hold a cannon like that.
	"Hey! Hold it lady," I backed into the grill of the truck, holding my hands in front of me. "I'm not armed."
	She slowly straightened, lowering the gun. I caught a glimpse of the grip of another weapon tucked into the waistband of her blue jeans and concealed by the bomber jacket she wore. "God! At last. Where the hell have you been?"
	"Huh? What?" That was not what I had expected.
	"I've been waiting for weeks for somebody to show up!" she stormed over and jabbed a finger at my chest. "Do you realize there's a town full of fucking ALIENS over there!" She jabbed the gun in the direction of Singing Rock.
	I couldn't believe this.
	"What? Lady, I hate to break this to you . . . Do you think we're . . . HEY!" I threw out my arms as the gun pointed at me again.
	"SHIT! They're here!"
	Not me. Sathe were emerging from the bushes behind me, S'sahr and the others. "NO!" I lunged, hitting her wrists just as the pistol went off, the slug whining away into the treetops. "No! Don't, dammit! They're . . . "
	That was when her knee came up, fast and well aimed and I dropped like a rock.
	Doubled up on the ground, clutching myself and choking on bile. Ohshitohshit . . . Phosphors exploded behind my eyes, muscles went to jelly. Worse than torture. Blood pounding in my ears, cries and screams that I scarcely heard, closing my eyes and grasping my aching balls.
	"You are all right?" S'sahr knelt beside me, his sword in hand.
	"Gnnnnnaggh . . . " I moaned.
	"What is the matter? You are hurt? Where?"
	Through gritted teeth I moaned, "Shit! Where do you think! Oh, shitohshitohshit!"
	There were more of them around me while I lay there, biting back the vomit. They didn't know what was wrong with me, searching for a stab wound and finding nothing. When they finally twigged to my problem I didn't get a whole lot of sympathy. The minutes that passed before I could move without threatening to toss my cookies they spent laughing. As if my pride also needed bruising. Troopers grinned and snickered as I limped across to where the soliders surrounded the human girl lying crumpled face-down in the grass with blood seeping into her hair. "She dead?" I asked.
	"She? That is a female?" He looked at her again, "She looks even stranger than you do . . . No, she is not dead."
	I sighed in relief.

******

	Lying in the shade of a sycamore tree, the girl twitched in her sleep.
	Another one.
	The third human to drop in here since I'd arrived. The third in a year. Why'd this link between the worlds choose to start up now? How much longer was it going to continue? Had this happened before in Sathe history? Maybe Humans had come through before, long ago. If so, what had happened to them? Were there any records or stories of strange animals? Maybe some of the other Realms would know something. And there were other continents. That thing, that portal, whatever it was, seemed to like metal: First the truck, then that helicopter crewman, now a pickup, one out at sea the others scattered around on land.  Would there be more?
	If I said I wished there would be, would that be too selfish? It's not a fate I'd want someone to wish on me. At least now there was someone else, someone I could actually talk to in my own language.
	I watched her, just trying to figure my emotions out; On one hand I found her beautiful, but on the other, she seemed wrong . . . alien. I'd been seeing only Sathe for so long, they appeared to be the norm. This human girl didn't have enough fur . . . hair, except for the thick crop of wavy hair on  her head. The face was the wrong shape, and those breasts . . . 
	I sighed.
	She was beautiful, but strange . . . Much as Tahr had seemed the first time I saw her.
	I turned my attention to the pair of firearms in my lap. The one she'd had tucked into her waistband was a Walther PPK automatic. The other one was a pistol I'd never seen before.
	Heckler & Koch VP70Z, Made in West Germany, 9 9400 ts, or so the stamp on the side read. Streamlined. The thing had no right angles on it, just rounded metal and a flowing, synthetic grip. No safety either. I buttoned the magazine out and checked the rounds. 9mm. Eighteen of them. When I hefted it, the gun felt solid in my hand and took definite pressure on the trigger before the hammer clicked.
	I dropped the guns and stared at them. Why was she packing artillery like this?
	She stirred and muttered something.
	I uncapped my canteen and cradled her head in my lap. "Hey you alright?"
	She blinked up at me, still not focusing.
	"You took a nasty knock," I told her. "Here, try this. It's just water." She groggily gulped the water, then her eyes widened and she knocked the canteen out of my hand.
	"You bastard!" Nails slashed at my face. I ducked back and caught her flailing wrists.
	"Cut that out! God's sake, I'm trying to help you."
	She struggled against my grip for a second, then slumped back against the tree. I let her go and retreated a couple of steps. She looked at me, then reached around to touch the back of her neck, wincing. Then her face froze when she saw the two Sathe guards watching us.
	"They won't hurt you," I assured her. She stared at them, and they stared back. "Look, you can have these back." I handed her the pistols, with their magazines out. Grabbing them, she rammed the clips back into the wells and actually cocked the weapons, then hesitated, glancing from me to the motionless guards. Slowly she lowered the guns and I could see the suspicion written all over her face.
	"Who the hell are you anyway?" she demanded.
	"My name is Kelly . . . Kelly Davies. From New York. Pleased to meet you."
	"Maxine Wayne," she replied automatically. "What the fuck is going on here?!"
	I shook my head. She really didn't know. "I don't know exactly. Didn't you notice things were a bit . . . different? What happened to you?"
	She shrugged. "I was camping out, just getting away from home for a while. I don't know, I was driving at night, on a back road looking for a campsite. There was one hell of a weird lightning strike and I just about drove into the river. The road was gone and everything was different." She gestured at the wilderness around us. "I waited around for days, but no-one came. I couldn't get anything on the radio. I tried to walk out down the river, until I found that . . . village. I was just about to walk into it when I saw them. What the hell are they?"
	"They're called Sathe."
	"They bite?"
	"I told you they won't hurt you. You don't have to be scared of them."
	She looked at the guards and at the other Sathe who were resting in the sun, talking, looking in the Toyota's windows. "Why? For Christsake, how could you not be scared of things that look like casting rejects from The Howling?! AND they shot me."
	"What?"
	"They shot me! I went down there to see if I could scrounge up some food . . . Hey, I was starving, okay? I turned a corner and just about  walked slap bam into one of them. It tried to shoot me with a crossbow. It missed. I ran before it could reload."
	I frowned. They hadn't told me about that. "You scared the farmer as much as he scared you. They're really just like humans . . . Well, some of the time."
	"How do you know? How long have you been here?"
	"I've been here about a year," I told her.
	Her nostril dilated as she sucked breath and there was a hesitation. "A year?" I could see the panic building and wished I'd kept my trap shut.
	"Yeah . . . Well, anyway it looks like we'll be spending the night here. I think the commander would be interested in meeting who he came all this way to find. His name is S'sahr. Don't worry: he acts tough but underneath he's really a pussycat."
	She wasn't amused.

******

	Several of the Sathe soldiers jumped backward with fur bottling when the pickup's engine started up. S'sahr himself nearly bolted, taking a couple of steps back with teeth bared before composing himself.
	Through the windscreen I could see Maxine grinning at their shock. The engine revved as she gunned it, then inched it forward and down over the bank onto the solid gravel beside the water. There she stopped and waited, engine idling.
	"It is impossible!" S'sahr tried to assure himself.
	"No, it is a Toyota," I grinned.
	The ute moved down the river in midstream, its wheels flinging water left right and centre as it powered its way downstream. Over their initial shock the Sathe taking their turn on the bed laughed and shouted ribaldry at the others slogging their way through the water. They got used to the truck quickly enough, and like most cats, Sathe aren't overly fond of cold, running water.
	The sound of the engine carried. By the time we arrived at back at the village, an armed reception committee was waiting for us. Farmers armed with farm implements and a few crossbows retreated as the truck hauled itself out of the river, its wheels churning the loam. Maxine parked on the edge of the village and turned the engine off, then just sat there staring out the windows. The truck rocked as Sathe leapt off the bed. Outside, villagers were starting to gather around. "What now?" she asked.
	"Stay close. They aren't going to hurt you."
	Sodden troopers gathered around us to escort us to the village Lord's central house. Villagers gathered around to stare at the pair of us while Maxine stared back, jumping in alarm when a group of cubs scampered across in front of us. Several farmers pushed through and started shouting at S'sahr, demanding recompense for the damages done to their stocks.
	I stood beside Maxine and S'sahr in the Lord's home. Maxine was nervous, flinching as Scrai made a sudden movement. Unconsciously, she pressed up against my arm. "What's going on. Are they talking? What are they saying?" she whispered, referring to the discussion going on between Scrai and S'sahr.
	"S'sahr is telling the chief there that you didn't mean any harm and that the Shir . . . Uh, the government will reimburse for any damages done," I translated quietly. "I'm afraid you caused a bit of a stir around here."
	She hung her head and shuddered. I could feel it.
	That night I lay awake in my tent, listening to the snores of the Sathe around me.  After the day's activities I was exhausted, but still had a buzz singing through me. I couldn't sleep.
	The night air was cool on my bare skin as I pulled aside the flaps of the tent. A Sathe inside stirred, rolled over, and went to sleep again. A piece of wood dropped on the dying embers in the fire soon burst into flame.
	Across the way was a dome-shaped tent; un-Sathe. An electric lamp blazed steadily inside, a silhouette cast upon the side of the tent: Maxine was sitting in the middle of her tent, head in her hands. I think she was crying.
	The light went out after a few more minutes.
	"K'hy, " S'sahr quietly acknowledged me as he sat down and looked across at the dark tent, then back at me. "What are you doing?"
	"Nothing," I sighed.
	"You have been doing nothing for quite a while now," he said, his one ear tilted back. "Something the matter?"
	I picked up a stick and idly poked at the fire, then in the direction of the dark tent. "She is . . . she is. I do not know how to say it." I rubbed my face. "I have been waiting for a year, and now . . . I do
not know. I feel as if I am whole again."
	"That sounds serious," he gave me an amused smile.
	"It is," I grinned back. "I never dreamed this would happen . . . A female human."
	His claws gleamed black as they slid out. He clicked them together softly. "She looks so different from you. That fur and breasts," he cupped a hand over his chest to emphasize and I also chuckled, " . . . and those eyes . . . Do all female h'mans have blue eyes?"
	"No, there are other colours: greens, browns, greys . . . "
	"It looks so . . . strange." He suddenly stared intently at me. "Is she with child?"
	"What? . . . I doubt it. Why do you say that?"
	"Females' breasts grow when they are pregnant . . . Sathe females to be more specific," he said. "H'man females?"
	I shook my head, "I guess so, a little, but I did not know about Sathe."    
	He looked into that fire. "That is right," he murmured, seemingly to himself. "Tahr has taught you, has she not? . . . Yes, well she would not have spoken much about that."
	I remembered the look in her eyes, the wildness, when I asked her about Sathe childbirth. I shuddered. "She told me never to ask a female Sathe about that. I found out why."
	There was a moment's silence. "They change," he said eventually. "I knew a man. He accidentally came across his mate in the hayloft while she was giving birth . . . he still has the scars."
	The scars across his own face stood out in the firelight. I decided not to say anything, to change the subject, "Tahr told me that you were her teacher once."
	"Huh . . . a long time ago. For her swordcraft. She was still a cub."
	"What was she like?"
	He blinked,then smiled. "Mischief in fur. She was everywhere she was not wanted and never where she was." Emerald eyes turned to the stars, "I taught her how to hold a sword, and she was a natural at it . . . which was just as well. Every chance she had, she was down in the town playing with other cubs.
	"I remember a particularly unsociable farmer who caught them playing on his land. He punished several of Tahr's friends," S'sahr grinned; half-humour, half-something else. "He returned home from market one day to find his house and barn had been painted the most hideous shade of pink imaginable."
	"Tahr did that?!"
	"Nobody could ever prove it."
	"Oh, God!" I laughed. "That I cannot believe."
	"You have never played jokes? done something like that?"
	I smiled at a memory, "Once, a long time ago."
	Senior high-school days, the end of term.
	There were always pranks played at that time of year. It had come to be a sort of ritual; loved by the students and feared by the teachers. Sticking the Head's furniture to the ceiling, a car in the corridors, Cherry Kool-aid in shower heads, crank phone calls. . . all those had become mundane, we wanted to go a step better, bigger. . .
	The staff are probably still trying to figure out how we got that bus onto the stage in the auditorium. After I explained what a bus was, S'sahr laughed:
	"YOU playing jokes? Just the idea of you going to a school is strange."
	"Sometimes we are not so different."
	There was a silence which S'sahr used to toss another branch upon the fire. Sparks jumped.
	"Who was her mother?" I asked.
	"Ah . . . her mother." S'sahr gave a sad smile. "Looking at Tahr, it is like seeing Saja in her youth all over again: same eyes, fur . . . " He broke off and trailed a finger in the sand, the clawtip drawing patterns I couldn't see through the fire." She died when Tahr was at the Manor . . . An illness that the physicians could not cure."
	God, she would've only been in her mid twenties. Their lives were so short, less than half a human life span. Not even just a modern human life span: there was that guy back in the eighteenth century who lived to one hundred and thirteen. I would probably live to see the Sathe I knew grow old and die, their children, and maybe even their grandchildren.
	There were a few Sathe moving around the tents. Dark shadows, their sibilant voices carrying even though they spoke quietly.
	"I will have to do some teaching of my own," I said absently.
	"Teaching whom?" S'sahr asked.
	"Maxine," I replied. "She will have to learn to speak Sathe, to learn your ways. That will be difficult, I am not sure of them myself. Just as I think I understand you, something comes up to confuse me." I pursed my lips, "It is not going to be easy."
	There was no sign of movement from her darkened tent.

******

	"A year!" Maxine Wayne didn't sound enthused. "You've been stuck in this hell for a year?! Haven't you TRIED to get out?"
	"Tried? Sure, how?" I rolled the smooth stone in my hand, then snorted and hurled it. The rock skipped eight times across the water  before vanishing into the bushes on the other side of the river. I turned to Maxine. "What, exactly, could I do? I don't have any more idea of how I got here than you do!"
	Maxine dropped onto a rock and hugged her knee up against her chest, biting on her knuckles.
	I swore to myself and felt like tearing my hair out. Crouching down beside her I said, "Miss Wayne, I know what it's like. Believe me. When I came here I had absolutely no idea what was going on. It was pure fluke I was able to make friends with a local. I had to learn everything firsthand, including the language, the customs."
	"Tough shit!" she shouted. "That's supposed to help me?!"
	"Look. It isn't that bad . . . "
	"Not that bad. . . Not that bad?! They don't even have electricity for Christ's sake! You think I don't know my history? I KNOW what medieval societies were like, and I DON'T want to live the rest of my life in one!" Now she clutched at her leg again, rocking back and forth. "And they aren't even human, they aren't even fucking HUMAN!"
	After her outburst the countryside seemed quiet. Distant birds still sang, the river flowed, lapping at its banks. Smoke rose from chimneys in the distant village, the traceries of smoke vertical in the crisp morning air. A few farmers in their fields glanced over our way.
	And I could understand the girl's anger. She'd been scared, disorientated, confused, now angry. I sympathised. How had Tahr seen me those first weeks? The day we spied Traders Meet? I'd been in much the same way.
	"I know," I said. "I know. I've been through it."
	"Why the hell should I go with you anyway?!" she demanded. "Why shouldn't I just take off and find my own way home?!"
	"If you really want to . . . "I waved a hand in a sweeping gesture taking in the wilderness around us. "All I can offer is a warm roof over your head and regular meals."
	But for how long?
	I didn't tell her about the dark clouds brewing over the Gulf Realm.

******

	S'shar was a veteran warrior. He'd been in skirmishes ranging in size and viciousness from simple brawls up to full-blown battles. He had killed and had many an opportunity to see his own blood.
	However the ride back to Mainport had him scared to death.
	Along with another guard who'd been hyperventilating in near-panic, he sat silent in the back seat, staring wide-eyed out the window and digging his claws into the seat's upholstery.
	The sight of the pair of them in their blue and silver leather cuirasses and segmented kilts, strapped into human-sized seats with seatbelts and surrounded by plastic, glass, and rubber was incongruous to say the least. Hell, it was downright bizarre.
	Already we had left the rest of the troops far behind. They'd take two days to reach their wagons, but that rutted track didn't pose too much of a problem for the pickup and even though we had to take it carefully, we could still travel much faster than foot infantry. Holding the truck back to their speed would be tough on both the engine and fuel consumption. There were two jerry cans of gas in the back: both full. We didn't have to worry about running out before making Mainport.
	Maxine was driving. She'd insisted and, well . . . it was her truck. I glanced sidelong at her. Her window was down a little, the breeze blowing through ruffling her hair, her eyes hidden behind wraparound Boll cycling glasses tinted like oily water . She kept the vehicle on the narrow, winding track with the languid ease born of long experience. I wondered how old she was. I wondered where she had come from.
	"You done ogling me yet?" Maxine asked dryly.
	"Huh? What?"
	"You've been staring at me for the past five minutes." She frowned behind the glasses savagely worked the shift, changing down.
	"Sorry," I said. "I was thinking."
	"I bet," she said. "You've been here a year. No women. I bet you were thinking."
	"Hey! No!" I protested. "Not about that! I swear!"
	Ummm . . . well, not entirely about that.
	An eyebrow arched. "What then?"
	"Ah . . . who was first man on the moon?"
	"Armstrong, of course."
	Uh-huh. That fit.
	"Okay . . . What was Martin Luther King's famous speech?"
	"'I have a dream'," she said instantly. "What is . . . "
	"How many died in the Challenger disaster?"	
	"Seven. Hold it soldier! What's with the Mastermind routine?"
	"I was wondering whether your USA is the same one I'm from."
	"Huh?"
	"You familiar with the parallel universe theorems?"
	"Other earths in the same place but not the same universe, like in that TV series, what was it called? Otherworld? Something like that." Her knuckles whitened on the wheel. "I'd usually call it sci-fi crap . . . " she dropped the sentence with a shrug.
	"This is earth," I said, waiting for a second for that to sink in. "I've seen Sathe maps and the eastern United States - that's all they've really charted - from Lake Ontario down to the Florida Keys is pretty much identical. Only difference is that here the big cats evolved."
	She was looking a bit white. Perhaps she should pull over . . . 
	"You sure it's the same?" she asked.
	"Miss Wayne. From where we're going you can look out your window and see Long Island as it was before the settlers."
	"Oh joy," she laughed bitterly. "And you think that we could actually be from different worlds. Did my answers satisfy you?"
	"No," I shook my head. "Not really. Your world could be identical to mine in every respect but one. One tiny, insignificant detail. Hell, you could be from a world where I never got into this mess in the first place!"
	"Or perhaps I'm just dreaming all this," she said.
	"Want me to pinch you and see?" I asked.
	The glasses turned my way, like a tank turret traversing. I couldn't see her eyes but I could imagine a glare fit to freeze methane.
	"Sorry," I flashed her a smile in return.
	She didn't answer. Instead she reached over to the stereo, turned a dial, and pressed PLAY. I found myself busy trying to stop our Sathe passengers from bailing out as Joe Satriani began blasting the cab with quadrophonic sound. Surfing with the Alien: appropriate.

******

	We passed though two more settlements on the way back to Mainport. Neither was large, little more than villages. Too small to warrant walls.
	Of course we drew stares as we passed. Villagers - farmers and merchants and tradesmen - gaped as the ute slowed to a crawl to pass through their hamlets. Even cubs were reluctant to trail behind us.
	Each time we left the boundaries of the towns Maxine would put her foot down in a surge of acceleration. I noticed her face: chalk-white, jaw set so rigid the tendons in her neck stood out.
	Damnation! this would be even harder for her than it had been for me! I'd travelled with Tahr for weeks before I stumbled across that first Sathe town. I'd had time to acclimatize. Here she was, barely twenty four hours since learning what had happened, travelling through three alien townsteads, soon to come to a capital where Sathe numbered in their thousands.
	How would she handle that?
	Finally we topped one last rise, the one where so long ago I'd caught my first glimpse of Mainport.
	Mainport sat beside the bay on the point that had been Staten island, the towers of the Citadel looming over it. Massive guardians of granite. Several errant beams of sunlight flickered through the heavy cloud, spearing down upon the town and spotlighting it in patches of shifting light.
	"That's it?" Maxine finally asked after a stark silence
	"That's it," I confirmed.
	"Jesus," she finally said, staring at the sprawling edifice and the dark skies behind it. "Is Dracula in?"
	
 ******

	I knocked on the door and waited. There was no reply. I tried again, "Ms Wayne?" I called in English. The two Sathe guards looked curiously at me.
	There was another pause, then the latch clicked. I pushed the door open. Maxine was backing away from the door. Before she turned away I saw her eyes.
	"You've been crying."
	She sank down on the sofa in front of the cold fire. I crouched down on the floor beside her, "Hey, you've only been here a day. I felt the same way when I first arrived. You get used it."
	"How?!"  She grabbed my shoulder. "How the hell can you get used to them?!"
	"That's what really bothers you? The Sathe?"
	She nodded.
	I gently took her hand. She made no move to pull it away; glad for the human contact. The bare skin felt . . . strange. "Listen, Ms Wayne. They're not bad, not at all. In some ways they're a lot like us . . . only hairier."
	She only shook her head.
	"You know, you're going to have to make a start on the language. You'll at least have me here to help, I had to learn on my own."
	"Why are there guards outside the door?" she muttered.
	"I've got them too. They're there for our protection. Look, there are some things I'll have to tell you about the situation here . . . "
	But I didn't have a chance to, there was a scratch at the door. "Who is it?" I called in Sathe.
	"Tahr . . . may I enter?"
	I looked at Maxine. "It's a Sathe called Tahr. She's the . . . umm . . . I guess you'd have to call her the queen." I grinned weakly. "Pun not intended . . . Can she come in?"
	Maxine looked scared, then swallowed. "I guess I have to get used to them sometime . . . It's not a bad dream is it."
	"'Fraid not."
	Tahr moved slowly, keeping her hands in sight, as if she were dealing with a skittish animal. If she was trying to make a good first impression, she probably succeeded: Finely woven green and blue cotton breeks came down to the top of her calves, an intricate golden armlet wound around her upper-right arm; two lengths of gold, winding and entwining around each other, embracing a dark blue opal. The silver earring she habitually wore glinted as her ear flicked.
	"She's always been a snappy dresser," I confided to Maxine.	
	Maxine blinked at me, then stared at Tahr. "Do I have to bow or something?" she asked as Tahr slowly sat down in a chair opposite her, drawing her legs up so they were curled under her.
	"No, she's a friend," I replied.
	"F'nd," Tahr echoed, trying an english word she knew.
	The two females stared at each other across a gulf that was far larger than the couple of metres physically separating them. Finally Maxine broke the silence: "Can I touch her?"
	That surprised me a little. I asked Tahr and she mutely nodded; a human gesture Maxine could understand.
	Kneeling, Maxine reached out and gently touched Tahr's wrist, running her fingers through the fur on her arm. "Soft," she murmured. "But not like my cat back home."
	Tahr lifted her other arm. Maxine just bit her lip as a clawed fingertip moved toward her face and traced her jawbone. "She has no face fur like you do," Tahr said; puzzled.
	"That is quite normal," I smiled.
	Tahr's hand moved down. Gently she touched one of Maxine's breasts. Maxine stiffened, pulling back slightly. "Hey!"
	"Tahr," I touched her shoulder. "Don't. Not there."
	"Oh," The Sathe dropped her arm. "Sorry."
	Maxine looked down at herself. "What'd she do that for?"
	"Curiosity. They don't have the extra padding . . . She said she's sorry."
	"Oh."
	There was another uncomfortable silence while the two females stared at each other.
	"Is she comfortable?" Tahr asked. I translated.
	"Well, she wonders where her possessions are. She would like to have a change of clothes."
	Tahr looked at the dirty and worn denims and shirt Maxine was wearing, "We can give her breeches. Satin. And a cloak."
	"I think she will want her own clothes. She will want to keep her breasts covered. Custom."
	"Oh," Tahr said. Then: "I will have them sent up here."
	I passed that on to Maxine. She looked a bit relieved, "At least they don't lose the luggage . . . Can I get cleaned up as well?"
	I grinned. "Well, that's one luxury you won't have to go without. They've got baths here. Hot springs actually. Sort of a cross between a swimming pool and a jacuzzi. Better than some motels."
	
******

	Maxine had gone off for her bath, guided by her guards who had orders that nobody was to go into the baths while she was in there. They had accepted their orders deadpan. They would have time later on to wonder at our weird idiosyncrasies.
	"Do you think she will be able to adapt?" I asked Tahr.
	Tahr clicked her claws together. "You managed."
	"I am not her. She seems so . . . uncomfortable with Sathe around."
	"Give her some time." Tahr stretched. We were in the corridor near my rooms, and she leaned up against one of the walls, heedless of the ancient and expensive tapestry draped there. "A year ago, you were very hesitant to touch me."
	"A year ago you were ready to claw my eyes out if I came too close!"
	Tahr's ears drooped sadly, but her eyes were laughing. She reached out and cuffed me lightly on the cheek. "But you have managed to change . . . H'rrasch is a very surprised and pleased male indeed. Some of those things you showed me can be used on a Sathe."
	Laughing, she nudged me as I blushed.
	"I must thank you for introducing us. He is a most charming person, although, like you, he is a bit shy." Still grinning in good humour, she disappeared off down the corridor with a spattering of claws.
	Oh God. I stood in the middle of the corridor and watched her leave, running my fingers through my hair. If Maxine found out about us, then it would really hit the fan.
	Absorbed in the ramifications of this, I automatically lit a taper from a lamp in the hall and carried it through to light the oil lantern that hung in my room. Sitting down at the desk, I absently leafed through the papers I had left there over a week ago, then paused at one particular sheaf.
	On the flip side of the sketch I had done of Tahr, there was another picture, one I hadn't done. Despite the odd bone structure, the oversized eyes with slightly oval pupils, the hair that looked more like fur, the picture was unmistakably of me.

******

	I shook my head, sending beads of sweat flying from my face, then crouched back behind my shield and squared off with Remae.
	Panting, she held her scimitar upright in front of her, both hands clasped around the hilt. Luck was the only reason I'd been able to hold off her last onslaught. I'd improved a lot, enough that we were using real blades that would really hurt, but not nearly enough to make it an even match. "Had enough?" she managed between pants.
	"Not likely," I gasped back.
	"Your face is leaking water."
	"Careful you do not trip over your tongue," I retorted.
	She grinned, then her gaze went over my shoulder and she stood up, lowering her blade. "Is that your female?"
	Sure enough, Maxine was sitting on the grass, watching me and trying out her limited Sathe on the guard beside her.
	In turning my head to watch her, I almost lost it. Remae's sword hit my shield and stuck in the wood for an instant, giving me the time I needed to recover.
	"Dirty trick," I swallowed as we faced off again.
	"Old trick. Foolish to lower your guard." She fleered her lips back in a full grin and came at me again.    
	For a few seconds we bandied back and forth, my shield turning her tricky blows and her superb blade work redirecting mine. Moving to dodge the shield as I shoved it at her, she made a stupid mistake, brushing against my arm. She yelped as I grabbed and swung her around, holding her in a firm half-nelson with my sword at her throat.
	"Now," I grinned. "Had enough?"
	There was a sudden stinging pain in my stomach. She craned her head around and grinned at me, needle-sharp teeth gleaming. "Look down," she suggested.
	I did: "Shit!  Where did that come from?"
	In Remae's left hand was a slim dagger, its tip digging through the cloth just below the edge of my armour. "A draw?" she suggested.
	While tucking the dirk back into its sheath under her skirt she reamed me out for what I had done. "Any good warrior carries more than one weapon, and is not afraid to use it . . . My ancestors, with your thin skin, I would have been able to shred you with my bare claws. K'hy, never, NEVER try to hold a Sathe like that! She could gut you before you knew what was happening."
	I wiped my brow and unlaced my cuirass, hauling it off over my head. My tunic was drenched, dark sweat-stains under the arms and across the back. I bundled my weapons and armour together while Remae finished her tirade.
	Maxine was looking confused when I dropped down beside her. That was the first time she had seen me practising . . . probably the first time she'd ever seen a sword fight.
	"Hey, it's only practice," I reassured her as I flopped back on the grass. A pair of seagulls were promenading along the balustrade that ran around the perimeter of the balcony garden, watching us with beady eyes.
	"Only practice?" Maxine brushed her hair back and looked across at the Sathe Marshal. "It looked like you were trying to kill each other. How often do you do that?"
	"First time for a while, Ms Wayne. I need the practice."
	"Max," she said.
	"What?" I squinted at her, the sun in my eyes.
	"My name. Call me Max." She was watching the seagulls watching us.
	"Oh . . . Okay then; Max it is," I nodded.
	"Who's that cat you're fighting with anyway? It came to my rooms the other day, just to stare at me."
	" 'It's' a she. Remae. She a sort of military liason to the Shirai."
	"You've got friends in high places."
	"Yeah, one's a window cleaner on the Empire State."
	She grinned, then asked, "Why's she doing it? I'd have thought she'd have better things to do than give fencing lessons."
	I shrugged. "Dunno. I guess you could say she's got a vested interest in me. Someone said I'd never be any good with a sword. She's trying to prove him wrong."
	"Was he?"
	"Well, she can still kick my ass most of the time," I confessed and looked around to see just where Remae was. She had her kit rolled up and was just leaving. I returned her parting wave just as a servant in messenger livery sprinted up to her, throwing a salute as he passed a scroll over.
	Remae popped the seal. The messenger was dismissed with a casual wave of her hand.
	"Davies? What is it?" Max was asking me.
	"Just a sec," I shushed her.
	Remae read the note, then read it again, then she seemed to cave in.
	"Remae?" I called.
	She didn't even notice. With the scroll dangling forgotten from her hand, she walked over to the carved stone railing and collapsed against it, shoulders bowed.
	"Oh Jesus!" I muttered to Maxine as I scrambled to my feet. "Something's happened."
	Remae didn't answer when I spoke her name, but she flinched when I touched her shoulder. "Remae?"
	Her claws actually left scratches on the granite balustrade, one of them snapping. She held her hand up and dully watched the blood start to flow from the stub. "Gone," she whispered, then turned wounded eyes on me: "It is gone . . . all gone."
	"What is?"
	She just handed me the scroll. I held it helplessly, the complex symbols meaningless. "Remae, I. . . I cannot read this."
	Her muzzle twisted in a snarl, then she began telling me.	Hunter's Moon . . . A small town in the southern Eastern Realm, near the upper reaches of the Borderline River. It wasn't that much, just rural community, not even on the main trade routes. All it had to warrant the presence of the small garrison was its value as a border post. It was also Remae's hometown. Her Clan home.
	Was her Clan home. The attack had razed it. The garrison barracks had burned, along with most of the town. Most had died, only a few escaped to the surround hills . . . just a few. The rest, the males, females, cubs were slaughtered.
	Remae's home, her clan and family.
	Under Maxine's uncomprehending and shocked gaze, I held the Eastern Marshal close while she shook.

******

	Tahr was sitting at her desk, head buried in her hands. She looked up when I came in.
	Without saying anything I walked over and unslung my rifle, dropping it with a clatter on the desk in front of her. "There are more weapons. I can get them. I can train Sathe in their use."
	She didn't seem at all surprised. "What made you change? Something to do with Remae's misfortune?"
	I didn't say anything.
	"Or maybe now you have something else to protect . . . Hmm?" If she'd had eyebrows, they'd have shot up.
	"Tahr, I do not like what I am doing, but under the circumstances I believe it is the right thing. What happened to Hunter's Moon will happen again. I know that I can help prevent it."
	"Why did you not tell me this earlier?"
	"I had hoped that you would be able to settle matters at the conference table."
	Tahr tucked her legs up. "So far, I am sorry to say, that has come to very little. The Gulf Realm is prepared and we are not and they know it. Of course they are not passing up such a chance." She sighed and turned back to the assault rifle on the desk: "Where are these weapons?"
	"About two days walk from where we met. I would have to go along to find them. Nobody else would have a hope."
	"That is quite a journey," Tahr said. "Long - and with all the trouble brewing - dangerous. Are you sure that you have to go?"
	I shrugged. "As I said, nobody else could find that place, it would be like looking for a needle in a haystack."
	"Cute metaphor. A h'man proverb?"
	"Yeah ," I sighed. "Also I have a promise to keep."
	"A promise?"
	"Just something I said I would do for a friend," I said. "A long time ago."
	"What? You are referring to the other h'man? Your friend?"
	"Yes."
	She looked puzzled. "He is dead, is he not?"
	I nodded slightly. Even after this time, thinking of Tenny touched a sore spot. "Tahr, it is my business. Our way of showing respect for the dead. I really do not want . . . I think it would be best not to discuss it."
	"Huh." Tahr was confused, one ear canted back. She was silent a moment, then shook her head and huffed again. "Very well. You said something about training Sathe?"
	I told her what I needed: A dozen intelligent Sathe who were capable with crossbows and willing to take orders from me. No xenophobes. I also wanted to take them on the journey to collect the hardware; it would give them time both to become accustomed to me and to get used to using the weapons."
	"A tall order," Tahr studied me, a claw tapping on the desk, then she smiled. "Very well. You shall have them."
	An hour later, I was wandering the corridors on my way back to my room. Even though I had become a familiar sight around the Keep, Sathe still spotted me from a distance and either found another route to their destination, or decide that it wasn't really worth going to in the first place.
	Damnation! The guns again . . . Was there any other option? I had weighed the choices  - few enough of them - and made my decision.
	Giving Sathe gunpowder was out.
	The modern weapons they could use, but they couldn't copy them. The machining was beyond them and the ammunition was a far cry from primitive blackpowder. I doubted that even the Sathe - despite their surprisingly advanced chemists - could duplicate it. Perhaps they could find a substitute: compressed air, springs, maybe develop their own powder, but I'd be damned if they'd get any help from me.
	Distracted, I recoiled in shock as a strange figure abruptly rounded a corner before me.
	"Kelly!" Maxine spotted me and her face lit up.
	"Christ, Ms . . . Max," I caught a breath to settle my heart, then smiled. "Lost, eh?"
	"Hey!" She looked dour. "It's not funny."
	"No, sorry. You're right. It's easy to do," I sympathised. "Here, I'll walk you back."
	After a time, she spoke. "What was going on today? Between you and that . . . Sathe? She's important isn't she?"
	"She's a friend who's hit hard times," I said. "She needed someone."
	"I'll bet," Maxine muttered.
	I stopped and glared at her. "Ms Wayne. She is one of the only friends I have got here, one of the ones who actually LIKES me." My voice was rising. "Today she just found out that her home town was burned to the ground. Her family, all of them, dead! Alright?!"
	"Hey!" she protested. "I'm sorry. I didn't know."
	"You . . . " I began, then broke off. "No . . . You couldn't."
	We continued in silence.
	And I had something else to worry about.
	Despite her denial, I'd heard the disapproval in her voice. She was a borderline xenophobe. If she reacted like that over a simple hug, then what would happen when she found out about Tahr and I?
	I glanced sidelong at her. Aburn hair and smooth, hairless face and breasts. Petite nose, wearing human clothing: worn and faded blue jeans, printed sweatshirt, leather bomber jacket with the Eagles' logo stencilled across the back.
	Could she change? Could she accept their ways? Could she learn to see Sathe as people beyond their fur and claws? Damnation! She had to!
	My footsteps flagged as we approached a staircase. I stopped. "You'll know the way from here," I told her. "Straight ahead, second on the left, first on the right, then up the stairs."
	"Hey!" She called after me as I started down the stairs. "Wait up! Where're you going?"
	I stopped and turned. "I, Ms Wayne, am going to go down to Mainport to find a certain establishment I know of where I intend to get myself totally and absolutely pissed."
	"It's been one of those days,huh?"
	"You said it."
	"Mind if I tag along?"
	That got me. I blinked at her, "You sure you want to? I mean, the place will be full of cats."
	She grinned. "And you think I'm prejudiced."
	"Do I?"
	She stuck her hands on hips and cocked her head: "C'mon!"
	"I had wondered," I confessed, then grinned back at her. "Alright. You're on."
	"You'll have to buy," she said. "They don't take Visa, do they."

******

	The massive rafters of the Red Sails were low, with wisps of cooking smoke winding their way around the hanging oil lamps. The warmth in there was a pleasant change from the chilling night wind blasting its way through the streets outside. The smell of mingled food and Sathe was something you had to get used to.
	It was a busy night. With nothing else to do many Sathe chose to while away the evenings down at the local watering hole and the basement room hissed to the sound of conversation and the chanting of a Sathe bard weaving a story about the hopeless affair between two lovers from different Realms. Over behind the bar the female bartender had caught my eye as I came in and flashed me an unmistakable wink that I prayed Maxine didn't notice.
	 Many were the times Sathe patrons turned in their chairs to stare at Maxine and I sitting at a table in a secluded alcove with a single lantern hanging above it. Some of those patrons knew me from the last time I had been in there; they didn't pay us much attention, but the newcomers really had something to gawk at.
	"Don't stare," I told Max after a mouthful of ale. "It's not polite."
	"Don't stare?" She reached for a knife and fork that weren't there, scowled, then resorted to her fingers. "I can't believe you can be so blase about this. God, it's unreal. Salvador Dali would have had a ball here." She sniffed the food: "And this meat is almost raw."
	I pointed the way to the kitchen. "You can complain to the chef if you like, but don't be surprised if he decides to make you into a side dish. You're lucky you don't have to hold your meal down on the plate. That's the way they like their meat."
	Again she glared at the platter, then resignedly picked up a rib and began working at it with juice running down her chin.
	"Hi, K'hy."
	I jumped at the english greeting. The dun-furred bartender, the one with whom I'd had my one night stand, stood by our table wiping a tray with a towel that looked like it could do with a little burning. She flicked me a smile. "You come by without stopping to spare some greetings? You wound me, K'hy."
	I grinned at that. "Sorry, but there was a mug of ale with my name on it. Anyway, you looked busy."
	The female smiled and grinned back, like a piranha trying to be friendly. She had learned a lot from me in that one night. "Hah! Excuses! I will always have time for you, K'hy. Now, who is your friend? Not very talkative." She peered curiously at Maxine. "She, is it? Your mate?"
	"Ah . . . no," I hastily corrected. "I mean, she is a female, but she is not my mate."
	She looked surprised. "Then there is another female like that around here?"
	"No," I admitted. "But . . . "
	"Ah!" she swatted me on the arm. "Then with the way you react to sex with Sathe, I think you do not have much choice!"
	"Very funny!" I fumed. Thank God Max couldn't understand.
	She laughed. "I trust the Shirai was not too harsh on you after last time."
	I shook my head. "I think I managed to get away with it," I said, then glared at her. "You have not been spreading stories?"
	"I? No. I gave my word, did I not?"
	Yeah, she did. I only hoped I could hold her to it.
    	"Kelly ," Maxine interrupted me in english. "What's going on? Who is this? "
	"Just a second, " I told her. "She's a friend."
	Maxine looked up at the Sathe who stared back at her, then twitched her ears.
	"I have never seen anything with blue eyes before," said the Sathe. "Is that the way you talk? How can you make those sounds?"
	"Believe me, it is much easier than speaking your way," I said. "I sometimes wonder how I make THESE sounds. That can really dry you out."
	"Ah, a not-so-subtle way of saying you need another drink. Very well," she flashed an overdone genuflection and a grin and vanished back into the crowd.
	Maxine had a peculiar look on her face. "Who the hell was that?"
	"She works here," I explained vaguely. "I met her last time I down in town."
	"She seemed to like you."
	"Ummm," I nodded and toyed with my near-empty mug. How clean did they keep things here? I'd bet my eye-teeth there wasn't a health inspector. Things probably went on in those kitchens that'd have one tossing his cookies in the back alley.
	Maxine frowned and pushed the dish away. She propped her chin up with her fist, elbow resting on the table-top that had been scarred by hundreds of sets of claws. "What happened, Kelly? What's going on here?"
	I looked at the food on her plate. "Finish that. They don't chuck stuff out here. It's not the Waldorf you know, but the food cost about the same. Now what are you talking about?"
	"That cat . . . "
	"Sathe."
	"Whatever . . . up at the castle, when you hugged her. Also all the soldiers around the place, the crossbows and swords being forged. What's going on?"
	"Oh, shit. Complicated." I sighed and watched the dregs of ale in my mug as they turned lazy circles. Then I started to try and explain the situation she had fallen into; about the fine balance of power between the five Realms and the weight that was trying to tip that balance; the Gulf Realm.
	She listened attentively, but I could see that she was confused about some points . . . as was I. Rubbing my eyes, I was just about to launch into an explanation of the Sathes' low population growth when activity at the steps that led down to the basement tavern caught my eye.
	Someone had just come in, and was receiving a welcome much like the one Max and I had got. A wake of silence marked the black-cloaked figure's progress between the tables, then she was standing in front of us.
	"Hymath." I swallowed, my finger tightening on the trigger of the M-16 under the table. "You are the last person I expected to see around here."
	She held her hands in front of her, in clear view. "May I sit down?" she asked.
	Maxine made a choked noise when I set the M-16 on top of the table, so Hymath was staring down the muzzle. "I should repay your favour and drill you full of holes . . . "
	She didn't even blink. "I want to explain."
	I stared at her. That female could easily have killed me that night . . . I clicked the safety on and set the gun down. "Sit."
	Hymath glared at the watching Sathe around us. They hastily averted their gaze and business in the tavern went back to normal. She snagged a chair and sat down. "I am glad to see you are still alive . . . I did not know how badly I had hurt you. There was a lot of blood."
	I nodded. "I have a few new scars to remember you by. So, why did you do it?"
	"K'hy, you have made yourself some powerful enemies." She tossed her head, throwing the black hood back. "I was only doing my job."
	There was a pause during which the bartender stepped forward to place a mug of ale before me, grab my empty one, then hastily retreat without so much as a word. Now THAT wasn't like her. She was as wary of Hymath as the rest of the surrounding Sathe, as if the Scirth warrior was someone none of them wanted any truck with. I took a sip of honeyed ale before asking, "Your job. Meet interesting people, then kill them, ah?"
	She looked pained at that. "I do what I am paid to do. No Scirth Warrior makes many friends, but the ones we do, we would never deliberately harm them. I did not know it was you"
	While I was digesting this, she turned to Maxine who probably had been able to follow only a word in fifty, maybe less. "Who is this?"
	I hesitated, then introduced them to each other. "A female?" Hymath asked.
	I nodded: she was a Sathe who could understand that.
	"Strange . . . blue eyes," the mercenary mused.
	I tried to find out who had set her on to me, but she confessed that she herself did not know. A masked intermediary had given her half her fee in advance, the rest forthcoming when she had completed her assignment. She had never tried to find out the identity of her client. I wondered that they would not try to cheat her.
	"Nobody would cheat a Scirth Warrior," was her response, as if that explained everything. "K'hy, I know apologies cannot really make a difference, so perhaps this will help."
	I tensed as she reached inside her cape, but all she produced was a small, silver circlet that she tossed onto the table where it rolled to a stop before me. "A gift. Take it."
	I took the trinket: a small earring made of silver; intricately woven silver threads that wound around themselves, all coming together in a tiny silver Sathe's head. "What is it?" I asked.
	The answer she gave me didn't translate. She had to elaborate: "If you ever have trouble that you cannot handle yourself, show this to any Scirth Warrior. They will do what they can to help you." She reached over the table and cuffed me lightly on the cheek, then she was gone into the crowd.
	"What was that about?" Maxine was asking.
	"Huh?" I rolled the ring in my fingers, then tucked it into a pocket. "Oh, just an old friend."
	"Another?" her eyebrows arched. "Female also . . . You must be popular."
	"Let's just say I stand out in a crowd," I said. "I think we've attracted a bit too much attention around here."
	If Hymath could learn of our whereabouts in Mainport, probably just from local scuttlebutt and word of mouth, then anyone else could also find us. Maybe they wouldn't be as friendly. "Finish your meal." I told Max. "I think we'd better make tracks."
	"Why? Something wrong?"
	"I hope not," I said.
	I held the door open for her as we ducked out onto the street. The moon had hidden itself behind a cloud, and the Sathe who passed spared us only a glance as they hurried to wherever it was they were hurrying to. Nobody followed us outside and there didn't seem to be any untoward interest in us, so I relaxed a bit. Perhaps that should've alerted me in the first place.
	"This place is incredible," Maxine said, rubbernecking at the buildings. "It's just like the small places in France and England, without the street lighting of course."
	"You've been there?"
	"Sure."
	"Oh. That's something I'd been wanting to do. Never had the cash though."
	"My parent's paid for most of it."
	"Well off?"
	"Pretty much. Daddy's the managing director of Integrated Solutions."
	"Oh, yeah. . . Integrated Solutions. Never heard of it."
	"What?" She blinked at me. "You don't know anything about software? Computers?"
	I shrugged. "Not really."
	"Oh," she looked somewhat surprised. "Well, anyway, it's a big company, so we've got the money to travel."
	I shouldered the rifle. "Lucky. I wanted to see Europe, but the money always seemed to go to more important things . . . You know: college books, food, gas . . . Hey, but not many people can say they've had the chance to see another world."
	"Who're you going to tell?"
	"Good point. So what's Europe like?"
	We turned off into a side street, the Citadel visible above the rooftops at the end of it. "The big places like Paris and London are nothing really special," she said. "They got some attractions, but after a while they all look the same: big and dirty. You know, not much different from Chicago, except the buildings are older. But the  small European towns, they're really something you shouldn't miss. There's a place in Normandie, that's in France, Mont St. Michelle. It kind of looks like the  . . . do you have any other friends that you might bump into tonight?"
	"What? No, I don't think so. Why?"
	She stopped suddenly and turned around, peering at the shadows. "I think we're being followed."
	I stopped to look and saw nothing. Nevertheless I tightened my grip on the rifle strap. "You're sure?"
	"Uh . . . I thought I heard something." She looked doubtful.
	The darkness of the narrow uphill street with its low steps, dim light gleaming from wet cobblestones, the occasional black slit of an alleyway. If there was anything there, I couldn't see it.
	"Don't worry about it," I told her, trying to reassure her. "It's probably some drunk trying to sneak in the back . . . Unghhh!"
	I didn't get to finish my sentence when something struck me across the back hard enough to send me sprawling face down in the muck on the street with lights exploding behind my eyes. Hands were trying to pull the rife away. I grabbed at the strap in desperation, the Sathe at the other end drawing his sword and swinging. I rolled. The blade struck sparks from the cobblestones beside me, but he wouldn't miss a second time.
	I hauled back on the webbing, toppling him off-balance. On his way down his head met my boot going up. There was a wet crack and he dropped like a stone.
	A Sathe was levelling a crossbow at me.
	Gunshots slammed through the narrow street. The archer squalled and went over backwards. The Walther in Maxine's hands looked huge. It cracked and bucked again; a howling Sathe with raised sword doubled over clutching his guts, the sword clattering to the street.
	More Sathe, bolting from alleyways, some snarling and sprinting toward us. Maxine was pulling the trigger again and again and again, shifting from one Sathe to another, the retorts blending into a single roar in the narrow alley. Running Sathe twitched and fell under the impact of the 9mm rounds.
	I grabbed the M-16, locked and loaded in one move. Kneeling, I fired from the hip, hosing at Sathe figures milling in confusion. Muzzleflash strobed in the darkness, the hammering of the rifle and cracking of the pistol merging and rolling of the alley walls in a roar that could probably be heard on the other side of the city.
	Finally there were no more targets.
	Maxine and I were back to back in the darkness. I could feel her gasping air. My own nostrils burned with the stink of hot brass, lead, and propellant. Faint groans and mewlings sounded in the darkness.
	There was a scratching of claws on cobbles at the far end of the street and a single Sathe darted from the doorway he'd been hiding him. He made it to the end of the street before the pistol cracked twice more, sending him sprawling, clutching at his upper leg. Max stood with the gun aimed, then lowered it again and just stood there staring at the Sathe writhing in agony.
	"Jesus . . . Max," that was all I could say.
	She waved the gun a bit to cool it, then tucked it back inside her jacket while I hauled myself to my feet. The Sathe who had been about to skewer me was lying on his back near me, jaw slack and eyes glazed over in death. Broken neck. I'd kicked harder than I thought.
	Maxine was nudging a corpse with her foot. I touched her shoulder. "Come on. We'd better get out of here."
	She didn't speak all the way back to the Citadel. I could sympathize with the way she felt; I'd been through it before.

******

	"You are mad!" Tahr was aghast. "You must be! Going into the town like that. With no escort and without telling anyone! Were you LOOKING for trouble?"
	"No, it just found us. I-am-sorry Tahr, I did not mean for anything to happen, it just did."
	Tahr sighed and drifted over to the window. Her profile stood out against the light flooding in through the panes. "Seven Sathe dead and four wounded, and it was not even you who did it. Do all h'mans draw trouble upon themselves like iron flakes to a lodestone?"
	I shrugged. "Most humans do not find themselves up to their eyeballs in situations like this. Who were they, anyway?"
	"Debris," she snorted. "Dockers, criminals. Someone filled them with ale, then paid them to get you. They did not know what they were getting into."
	"Not Gulf?"
	"No, but do not worry about that."
	"I wasn't, particularly."
	"Ah," She shrugged. "What about Mas?"
	"Max." I corrected automatically, before realising the uselessness of it. She had gone straight to her quarters and I hadn't seen hide nor hair of her for the past several hours. "She is upset over what happened . . . I think." I said.
	Tahr came over and batted me gently on a cheek. "I do not think that your relationship is off to a very good start."
	"You can say that again." I muttered. She had become used to that little anecdote and only laughed.
	"Why do you not go and see her?" She said. "I have got a . . . what did you call it? . . . A date with H'rrasch and I am sure that Mas would be grateful of some company."
	There was no answer when I knocked at Max's door. I persevered and eventually she answered. Her room was taking on personality, in fact it was starting to look like a second hand shop with the stuff she had Brought Through with her cluttering it up.
	There were a few paperbacks on the shelves. The desk was cluttered with scraps of notebook paper and pens, also several college textbooks. A Coleman lantern stood on a table alongside a useless radio while a blue Rockgas cylinder squatted in a corner. An almost new Kathmandu rucksack sat on a worn, tooled leather chair and modern cotton clothes hung from hooks on ancient panelled walls. Throughout the room, human trinkets and technology stood out against Sathe craftmanship.
	Counterpoint.
	"You alright?" I asked. She said nothing, just stared at out the window. "I know it's tough," I said, "but you'll get over it."
	"Get over it!" she spat the words out, then turned on me. "Fuck it, Davies! They tried to KILL me last night! Fucking furballs! How do you 'Get Over' something like that! Huh?"
	"It's hard," I agreed. "I'm sorry, but I don't have any easy answers."
	She blinked at me, choking back her rage.
	"Ms. Wayne, this is a tough culture. The Sathe are like we were a few hundred years back. They have a low rate of childbirth, plus high mortality, plus primitive agriculture, with no room for those who can't contribute. It's not quite survival of the fittest, but it's close, and it is a violent culture. There's something you haven't seen . . . Here, look."
	I unbuttoned my shirt. Her face went slack at the sight. The scars on my torso stood out: white worm-tracks making twisting tangles across my chest. The marks that a vindictive Sathe named Tarsha had gouged into my chest were still very visible; almost making patterns. My ruined left nipple was a twisted piece of scar tissue while the much more recent marks on my shoulders and upper arms were red and swollen. "Before I came here I didn't have a scratch on me. That wasn't much over a year ago."
	"Let's see now . . . These ones on my arms and this one on my back were done by that Sathe in the tavern, and that was a mistake. If she had finished her job, you would probably still be out there, with the village hunting you. The others . . . I picked them up here and there. I repeat; this is a tough place."
	She tried not to stare at the scars, but I saw her eyes flickering to them as I rebuttoned my shirt.
	"Have you killed many of them. . . I mean, besides last night?"
	"Yeah."
	She turned away and was quiet for a while, then her shoulders started shaking. Feeling helpless I touched her arm. "Hey, it's okay."
	"I just wanted to get away from it all for a few days," she blurted, then raised her fists to the ceiling. "Goddamit, I want to go HOME!"
	The hoarse scream rattled the windows.
	I couldn't say anything, promise anything.
	Eventually, she quietened down. "Please, get out. Leave me alone for a while."
	I didn't move. "I've felt like that a few times. Feeling lost and alone and scared. You won't do anything stupid will you?"
	She didn't answer.
	"You know," I said, "guns are the best method for a suicide. They're more stylish than a razor blade and drugs are too chancy; you might get the dosage wrong and just have a good time."
	Max looked at me strangely. "You're mad."
	I shrugged and grinned. "Probably, it's the only thing that keeps me sane. Come on, cheer up. There is a cure for depression."
	"What."
	"A long, hot bath."
	"Get serious."
	"Hey, it's always worked for me."
	She laughed and it was like the sun coming out. With the tears still damp on her cheeks, she cocked her head at me. "You're something else, you know that?"
	A woman's moods; they change with the wind, with the seasons. She stared at me, then cleared her throat.
	"How did you survive?"
	I shrugged. "Luck mostly. I guess I've always been a bit of a loner. It wasn't too hard once I found out what was what. . . and Tahr helped me a lot."
	"You like her?"
	"She's. . . special to me." I wasn't sure if she caught the hesitation, but there was an awkward silence. I broke it. "I'm going to have to go away for a while. Maybe a month, maybe longer, I'm not exactly sure."
	"Where?"
	"Down south." I gestured vaguely. "Some stuff the Sathe want, and I gotta show them where it's at."
	"Do you have to go?"
	"'Fraid so."

******

	It took four and a half weeks, round trip.
	At first we travelled by sea, on a three-masted ship; a fat-hulled cross between a trader and a warship that looked like something out of an old pirate film. I almost expected to see the Jolly Roger flying from the masthead.
	A larger vessel than Hafair's, with more crew, it was both faster and could sail twenty four hours a day. The prevailing winds bore us southwards against the gulf stream while the coastline was a cloud-covered blur on the horizon.
	A few seagulls found us and floated lazily alongside the ship, resting their weary wings in the rigging for a while before moving on again. They didn't hang around with a beady eye out for food, nothing edible was wasted.
	It took us a week by sea to get from Mainport down to another port called Sea Watch, a slowly growing city further south than Bay Town, near the Pamlico Sound. From there it was inland, westward to a small settlement called Ch'ie's climb. That town was actually closer to the point I'd arrived than Traders Meet had been.
	I said us.
	Besides S'sahr and the ten Royal Guards who went with us, my request for a dozen good Sathe soldiers had been granted.
	Chirthi, R'R'Rhasct, two friends of previous acquaintance who had volunteered, along with ten others: Hosf, Eor'sf, Hraisc, Fasir, H'Ses, Finder, Haiscraf, Fen, Chir, and Ihhm.
	I was told they were all capable warriors, all of them had seen combat of various kinds, and all of them were crack shots with crossbows. The majority were males, with three females including R'R'Rhasct. At first I thought that might be a problem. I knew they could handle themselves all right, I just wasn't sure if there might be some trouble with relationships or jealousies. I guess I was thinking like a human again. It was something I'd get over.
	Chirthi and R'R'Rhasct proved invaluable, both as friends I could talk to and also as buffers between me and the others who weren't so familair with me. There were times when I wasn't around and I knew there was talk behind my back: jokes, insults, complaining. I know they stuck up for me on more than one occasion. It was with their help that I was able to get the others to accept me as more than an oversized, furless animal.
	Whilst on board the boat, there was precious little us landlubbers could do but try and stay out of the way of the crew. Once on the road however, I took every opportunity I could to work with them, to teach them tactics and concepts that would help them learn a way of fighting radically different from anything in any Sathe army.
	We marched in shifts: ten klicks on foot, ten in wagons, another ten on foot. Sathe may be faster than a greyhound with a rocket up its ass when running, but they don't have a lot of stamina. I wanted to see just how far I could push them, then try for a bit further.
	Late at night, they would limp back to their tents. In the wee small hours I could hear them bitching through the tent canvass. Since I marched with them, I suffered also, although I did my best to hide it.
	It took a long time just to find a place I found familiar; several days. We followed the narrow trail north until it linked up with the road to Traders Meet. Disturbing. That branching in the trail was familar territory, from way back when Tahr took me off down the other road, the other choice, the other life. If I'd gone the other way, what would have happened? Had it happened, somewhere Else?
	The clearing was still there. I stood alone in the middle of it, hands in pockets, staring moodily at the place we'd camped. That place where we'd actually met, where she'd almost shot me, where we'd first spoken, however limited those first exchanges might have been.
	"You've come a long way, huh, Kelly?"
	Full circle.
	"What was that?"
	Startled, I jumped. S'sahr was right behind me. "Oh, I did not notice you. It was nothing."
	"What are you doing?"
	"Just looking."
	"Ah." He turned full circle on the spot, trying to see just what I  found so fascinating. "You have been here before."
	"Yes. A while ago now."
	"Is there anything here?"
	Memories. Regrets. Wonder. . . 
	I shook my head. "No. Not really. Come on, we should keep moving."
	The river wasn't difficult to find at all. It was smaller than I remembered it. Just a stream and a road under the shady branches of huge old trees. There was no sign there'd ever been a fight.
	"You are sure it was here?" S'sahr asked.
	Then a Sathe found the skeletons. A jumbled mix of mouldy bones and skulls that stared out from the bushes that had grown around them. What clothing and weapons there'd been had either rotted away or been taken by other travellers. A Sathe skull. I'd never seen one before. The teeth were gone.
	Finding the place where I'd first stumbled across the road was much harder. From there it was over a day's walk through the wilderness to find that clearing.
	It was still there, but a year's worth of undergrowth had claimed the site as home and already the wreck was overgrown with ivy and other flora. Metal covered with rust and glass was being buried by dust and dirt. The camouflage over the crates had died away long ago, leaving the pile covered with dead leaves and the remains of a squirrel nest. Nature always reclaims its own.
	While Sathe labourers hired from the last town packed olive-green crates with stencilled markings on them onto the backs of draft llamas, my small force watched silently from a diatance as I kept a promise.
	There wasn't much left to bury.

******

	Workers swarmed over the docks, shouting and snarling at each other as they milled round in well-ordered chaos, grabbing for the ropes thrown from ship. Sailors leaned over the railing, yelling suggestions and cautions as the ship was brought in to bump against the wharf.
	Home again. Huh, I smiled to find myself thinking of Mainport as home. Still, it would be good to be back on dry land, in a room that doesn't move, and be able to relieve myself without hanging over the side of a ship.
	The twelve Sathe I'd been training were watching their home as well, laughing and whiling away the time with idle chatter. Watching them, I grinned. Twelve Sathe perched around and on the ship's central cabin, stripped to the waist and wearing old US army issue camouflage trousers, some with their decorated scabbards strung from equipment belts.
	It was almost amusing.
	Four and a half weeks and they had changed. Experienced soldiers, they knew how to follow orders. As archers they understood missile weapons and the principles involved, but the guns left them in awe, and not a little fearful. As it was something they'd had no experience with they were leery at first, flinching at a gunshot. Only to be expected; I'd known enough people in basic training with the same reaction, but for Sathe it was something a little more physical: I think the noise hurt their ears. The flinch they could overcome, the noise . . . There wasn't much I could do about that. Whenever they used the rifles, they did so with ears flattened back into their manes.
	Uniforms. Uniforms were something else I hadn't considered. Sathe leather armour is bulky, not exactly inconspicuous, and also has a tendency to creak, but there wasn't much we could do about that. That was until a trooper asked a passing question about my fatigues. Could he get a shirt like that?
	Why not?
	Three of those cases held shirts - green t-shirts and tank-tops, another two of trousers and jackets as well as others with a scattering of belts, old Claymore carrybags and universal pouches, M-16 clip bandoliers and miscellaneous other junk. There'd been socks and boots in the inventory, articles that must have gone up with the truck. No great loss there. It was the pants and jackets I had plans for.
	 Back aboard the ship, the sailmaker-come-seamstress grumbled and swore when she heard what I needed, but still she managed to work wonders. The results . . . they wouldn't win any fashion awards back home, but they worked and the Sathe liked them. The trousers were taken in, turning them into something like the breeches so popular among Sathe. The jackets were cut into things almost resembling safari jackets, with ventilation slits along the sleeves and across the back. Useless in a sword fight they were, but the Sathe testified they were more comfortable than the armour, and the pockets were great novelties. They laughed outright at the pants' zippers.
	They had changed.
	I leaned on the railing and watched teams of dockhands transferring crates to the waiting wagons. They worked methodically and naked in the heat of the midday sun. It seemed that no two were the same, their fur marking had all the disparity of snowflakes. They weren't the only dock crews working; further up and down the docks other labourers were loading bigger vessels. One of the ships was taking on a contingent of Eastern soldiers.
	A hand clapped me on the shoulder. "Are you coming, or waiting for the tide?" S'sahr asked.
	"Yeah, coming." There were wagons waiting for us, along with more Royal guards. On cobbled streets the unsprung cart was more of a pain in the ass than a bike without a saddle, and on some of the steeper thoroughfares you held on or kissed the pavement. I held on, watching Mainport pass by. The narrow, winding streets with their rounded paving stones, the precarious buildings that'd never known an architect's touch. At the northeastern tip of the peninsula I'd once known as Staten Island, the tiers of the Citadel's walls stood over the town like a sculpted mountain.
	It all looked normal, just everyday life going on as normal. Shops and stalls were open, Sathe dickering over the price of some trinket. Farmers came and went, selling their wares. A side street was blocked by a dozen or so carts and wagons, their drivers shouting and snarling over just who had the right of way. A Sathe on a llama threaded his way through the snarl of vehicles and animals, hardly slowing. From an alley in this city made of alleys erupted a pack of squealing cubs, gleefully engrossed in a ball game with no rules that were immediately apparent. They chased after us for a time before barrelling off down another street.
	The carefree days of childhood.
	Sigh.
	They probably didn't know what was happening. Even if they did, how could they care? It was a world beyond their ken. Like the cubs in Traders Meet, in Bay Town . . . like the cubs in Hunter's Moon. They'd deserved more; they'd a least deserved a life. How many more towns had to go like that?
	At least now I had some say in the matter.
	I watched the other Sathe as they bantered and jawed among themselves. The world's first rifle platoon . . . this world's first. Okay, so they weren't Marines or SEALs: their training was haphazard and brief, their equipment was still new to them and they'd never fired a shot in battle. Neophytes. Unblooded. Nevertheless, they packed more firepower than a world war one infantry company - an overwhelming advantage against Sathe  weapons.
	It was a start.
	Looking back on that day now: those guards probably got labelled with the moniker the instant they stepped ashore. Green was the color of their clothes and equipment and, hell, the name stuck. They became known as Greens; among friend and foe alike.

 ******

	The walls of the passage were solid and rough, hewn from the granite outcropping upon which the Citadel stood. The air was damp and slightly stale, with only the tiniest breeze to move the atmosphere through the warren of passages and corridors under the Keep.
	Tahr watched as guards locked and bolted the heavy door to the strongroom where the cargo from the wreck had been stacked. Some crates were filled with items useless to Sathe: boots, helmets, gloves. Others held more valuable things: ammunition, guns, grenades, mortar rounds and fuzes, things that could kill, could maim . . . 
	"M-16s." I muttered. Mostly to myself.
	"What?" Tahr turned her shoulders to look at me as we climbed the steps back to more habitable areas of the Keep. Three guards followed us at a discrete distance.
	"I wish I had something a bit more powerful than those." I jerked my thumb back down the stairs. A couple of gunships or tanks, even a few heavy machine guns.
	"You have those bigger guns," she said, referring to the M-60s.
	"There are larger ones available. I wish we had a few."
	Her ears flattened and she gestured at the storeroom. "Then you think that those will not help?"
	If my ears were as expressive as her's they'd have also laid back. "Sure, they will help, but they will not win the war. That is up to your soldiers. I will do the best that I can."
	She reached up and put her hand on my shoulder. Squeezed, claws just denting my skin. "And I am grateful. You will be well paid when this is over."
	If I survive, I thought to myself. Aloud, I said, "Thank you, but I am not sure what I would do with money."
	She laughed. "It does not have to be money. Anything within my power. You could lord over a town if you wished."
	I chuckled at that, then had second thoughts. "I'll have to think on that one. There are possibilities there . . . "
	Surprise made her ears dance, maybe a bit of amusement. "Well, we can sort that out when the time is right. Why do you not go and get cleaned up." She snuffled. "You are rather . . . aromatic."
	I guess I was. I couldn't remember when my last bath had been.
	Tahr cuffed my arm. "Then you go and groom yourself. I will meet you afterwards, there is much to talk about. Go to the room of your mate, alright?"
	My mate? Maxine?
	"She is not my . . . " The sound of Tahr's claws spattering on the granite were fading as she disappeared off down a side passage. " . . . mate," I finished. I looked at the guard who had remained with me, dogging my heels; he stared back at me. "Oh well. Come on then, shadow of mine."
 
******

	After scratching Sathe-style on the door,  I leaned  against the jamb,  waiting.  A pause,  voices,  the latch rattled and the door opened and Maxine stared.
	"Good  afternoon," I smiled.  "Have you ever considered  the advantages of owning a really good set of encyclopedias?"
	"Kelly!" Her surprise transformed into a grin then it was my turn to be surprised when she jumped forward to hug me, then just as quickly let go and stepped back, looking suddenly embarrassed. "Hey, it's good to see you."
	"Same here. You're looking good, Ms Wayne."
	"Max," she corrected immediately and her smile flickered for a second as she stared at me, then it flashed back again. "Come in. We've been waiting for you."
	The  room was still cluttered with poignant reminders  of  a place  I'd left behind.  The lantern was on the desk alongside with  pens, several textbooks and papers,  as if she'd been working at  night and  needed more light than candles could  provide.  Her  leather bomber jacket hung from the back of a chair.  A Sony DCC walkman, earplugs and tapes perched on a shelf beside a small stack of dogeared paperbacks.
	Unlike mine, her quarters were on the inner walls of the Keep, with a small balcony built onto one of the tiers overlooking the central Circle. Sunlight streamed in through the open doors,  and Tahr was leaning against the  carved stone balustrade,  watching our greeting with her ears perked  up in  interest.  I  don't know if she  could  understand:  we  were speaking in English.
	"I hope I didn't keep you waiting." I said to Maxine.
	"Don't  worry  about it." Max waved my  apology  aside  then changed to the modulated coughing,  hisses and growling of Sathe, "Tahr . . . explained to me. You have been on the road a long time."
	"Could've  knocked a skunk cold at fifty  paces . . . Hey,  your Sathe's improving."
	She smiled proudly.  "I have something for you,  a home-come gift."
	"Accent needs work though," I mused and grinned as she  shot me a sharp look. "Hey! Just kidding! Peace!"
	"Bastard!"  She  produced  a chilly bin  and  rooted  around inside  then tossed me an object I plucked out of  the  air.  "My God! Heiniken! I never thought I'd see that again."
	"Been  saving it," she smiled and ushered me  outside  onto the balcony where Tahr was waiting.
	"Feeling better?" the Sathe asked.
	I ran my hand through my still-damp hair. "Yes, much."
	"Smelling better as well," she smiled,  then motioned toward the can I was still holding. "What is that stuff?"
	"Ale," I said and popped the tab.  Tahr blinked,  flared her nostrils at the can as it spat and hissed. I proffered the can to her. "Try some."
	She took the can,  sniffed it,  then spent a while trying to find the best way to wrap her almost-nonexistant lips around the opening. She finally managed a swig and  almost choked on it. Her ears twisted until they stuck out sideways, she took  several rasping breaths.  "My Ancestors . . . you  actually  DRINK this?!"
	I took the can from her and took a swing myself. Maxine stared: I hadn't bothered to even wipe the rim.  "Bit warm," I judged, "otherwise nothing wrong with it."
	Tahr  hissed and shook her head.  "You must have gullets  of iron.  I will stay with something a bit milder.  Come, K'hy, tell us what happened.  How are the midland towns taking the news  of the war?"
	"You would be better off asking that of S'Sahr. Sathe in the towns  never  got  very . . . friendly with me for  some  reason."  I grinned.  "What  I  saw  seemed  obvious  enough.  Storing  food, preparing   defences.   There  were  already  garrison   troopers recruiting."
	So Tahr sipped Sathe wine while Maxine and I drank beer  and filled each other in on what had been happening over the past few weeks.
	Another village had been hit,  farther along the border than the  others.  It  seemed that the Invaders weren't  going  for  a direct  lunge  at  the heart of  the  Eastern  Realm.  They  were advancing  slowly in three points across the  Realm,  wiping  out anything that stood against them.
	"At that rate they will not have anything left to  conquer," I said.
	"This  tactic  is only temporary." Tahr  flexed  her  claws. "They terrorise the settlements.  Soon they will not even try to resist; they will surrender straight away."
	"You cannot really blame them, can you," Maxine said softly.
	The  death  of  your  family and yourself  as  well  as  the destruction of your town . . . or surrender.  No,  you couldn't blame them.  And there was no way the Eastern Realm could quickly field and army to help.  Even if they had one ready,  it would have  to reach  the enemy.  Shit,  it took two weeks for just a couple  of dozen  of us to travel less than half the length of  the  Eastern Realm.
	And the Realm was in Tahr's hands.
	Nursing  my drink,  I leaned against the granite  balustrade beside Tahr. "There are going to be hard times."
	Tahr  took  a pull of her drink,  then stared at  it  as  if wishing  it were something stronger.  "A,"  she  muttered.  "Hard times indeed."
	I reached across and took her furry hand and gently squeezed it,  drawing forth a flicker of  her ears before she returned the pressure.
	"Kelly?"
	"What?"
	"You . . . " Maxine was staring at us, looking from our hands to me to Tahr to me. "You two . . . What is between you two?"
	For a second I all I could think about was that that was how I  must have sounded;  heavily accented Sathe from a throat  that was  never meant to make those sounds.  Then the actual  question registered.
	"What?" Tahr beat me to it.
	Maxine looked at the can she was holding.  "You two.  I talk to a guard,  he say . . . he . . . " She swallowed  and  made vague  motions  with her hands,  a bit  of  beer  spilled.  "Have you . . . ah . . . " She couldn't find the words in Sathe and switched to English. "Kelly, have you two . . . slept together?"
	For a second the beating of my heart seemed to  be the  only sound in the world.
	Even though she couldn't understand exactly what was  being said,  Tahr  must  have guessed the  question.  Her  ears  slowly flattened back and she looked to me.
	 It had to happen . . .   "You would find out about it sooner  or later," I sighed.  "Look,  Tahr,  please, this would be easier in our own language."
	Tahr ducked her head, "All right. I understand."
	I  could feel her eyes on us as Maxine and I retreated  back into  her  room.   Sex.   Most  Sathe  wouldn't . . . they   couldn't understand.  Already I'd bedded - or perhaps been bedded by -  two and propositioned by a third.  They had no problems with  it,  to them it was just sex, just enjoyment and pleasure. For me . . . Only Tahr really  had  an  inkling  how different it was  for  me  and  she watched, partially understanding just what was happening.
	How much did she really comprehend?
	Maxine was staring at me.
	"So," I began,  moving behind the high-backed wooden  chair, using it as a podium to hide behind, "now you know."
	Maxine  Wayne  sat down on the edge  of  the  desk,  looking stunned. This was not going well. "Shit. I never believed it. I thought he was joking. You really . . . did it."
	I nodded,  glancing at Tahr.  Out on the balcony she  ducked her head, turning away to stare out across the Circle.
	"Jesus  Christ," the human woman was shaking  her  head.  "I didn't believe it.  You really did it, you actually screwed her?! That's sick! God's sake, how the hell could you DO it?!"
	She was almost shouting,  gesturing with clenched hands.  My own were gripping the back of the chair.  Shit,  the way she  was putting it . . . 
	"Look, I was cold, confused, scared and lonely. I didn't really know what was happening, it just . . . "
	"You saying she raped you?" Maxine snorted.
	Stung, I softly answered, "That's not funny."
	"Oh? Why!"
	"She'd been raped."
	Maxine's mouth opened, then closed again. "Oh. Sorry." Then: "They catch him?"
	"She killed him."
	There  was  a short silence,  then  Maxine  almost  pleaded: "Jesus,  Kelly, she's not even Human!" She looked out the balcony doors  at  where Tahr was leaning on  the  balustrade,  her  back toward us.
	That  coarse  mane flowed down  her  back,  sharply  defined muscles  rolling  under fur turned golden  by  the  sun.  Red breeches were tied with white cord at her waist and calves. That silver ring glinted as her ears twitched toward us.
	"She's not ugly,  is she?" I asked. "Just different. Inside, she's the most beautiful person I've ever met.  I mean, you don't just fall in love with someone's looks."
	"You love her!?" Maxine's eyes went wide.
	I turned away,  raked my hair back in frustration,  then spun back to  face the human girl.  "Dammit!  I don't know how else to say it!  It's  not that kind of love!  We've been through shit together;  she's been there when I've needed her, and I've helped her now and again."
	"I can imagine," she said drily, then her hands waved as she exploded again, "Shit, man! What about diseases. I mean she could be carrying something that makes AIDS look like a cold!"
	"I don't think so."
	"How'd you know?!"
	"How'd you know I didn't give HER something?!"
	That stopped her for a second,  giving me time to  continue: "We  just  did  what seemed right at the  time . . . can't  you  stop acting so catty."
	"Me!?  Acting catty!? What about her! THAT'S catty," she jab a  thumb  at Tahr who'd turned and was  watching  us  with  a troubled expression. She couldn't understand what we were saying, but she could follow the tone well enough.
	"That was not what I meant," I was feeling weary. "You don't understand."
	"What's to understand."
	"Everything!  I've been here to nursemaid you.  You  haven't got  a clue what it's like to be absolutely alone and never  sure if  you'd ever see another human again!  Not able  to  understand anything of what's going on around you! If Tahr hadn't been there I'd be dead several times over;  either from Sathe, wild animals, or my own stupidity! I owe her a lot!"
	"And that's how you repay it?"
	"It's  not  a  question  of  payment! It  just happened! Spontaneous. I think it took her as much by surprise as it  did me." I  shook  my head and watched her, looking for some sign of softening, my heart sinking as she stared back. Chagrined, I continued in gentler tones, "I do love  her . . . but  you  just  can't understand, can you."
	"No.  I can't," She shrugged. "I guess I shouldn't  be  prying.  It's  really  your  own  affair . . . No  pun intended." Again she looked at Tahr, then said, "It was her Time was it?"
	"You know about that?"
	"That guard came on to me . . . "
	"What?!"
	"I don't see what you're looking so shocked about, with what you've been doing. This guard came on to me. He asked me when my Time was and I asked him what the hell a Time was. They have seasons, don't they. Like cats."
	"They're not cats, dammit!"
	"That was the only reason you got together? She was too randy to keep her paws off you?"
	Oh, God. That hit hard. "Ms Wayne," My voice choked on me. I started again. "It wasn't like that. We didn't. . . I don't know; perhaps it started like that, but it changed. That first time, I was as shocked as you. I didn't know what the hell I'd done. I didn't know why I'd done it and the later times. . . I did it because I wanted to. I did it because it was the way to show how I really felt about her, everything she'd done for me."
	I didn't know how else to say it.
	She stared back at me, then looked at Tahr. "You were right: I don't understand."

******

	Of course things changed. I knew they would.
	Over the next few days Maxine did her best to avoid me. When I did see  her  she had few words for me and always  pressing  business elsewhere.  I  could understand her reactions and didn't  try  to push it. Give her time.
	Meanwhile there were other things to keep me busy.
	The  war was spreading.  Fighting continued in the  southern provinces  of  the Eastern Realm and all the time  shiploads  and wagon  trains  of  troops left the  city.  Recruits  drilled  and trained  continuously in the Citadel's courts.  Much of the  time Sathe  I knew were occupied:  S'sahr southbound for  the  central Eastern  Realm,  Remae  and Tahr engaged for hours at a  time  in conference  with  Eastern  commanders,   sifting  over  the  news filtering in from around the Realm.
	I  couldn't  sit in on any of these  meetings:  I  would  be too . . . distracting.  The disjointed snippets of news I did pick  up around  the place through rumours and gossipmongering  were  more confusing  than anything else.  I spent most of my  time  working with  the  Greens,  drilling with them.  Even  with  the  limited ammunition  available some of them were becoming  quite  adequate marksmen,  even  though I found their eyes couldn't discern  fine stationary detail nearly as well as I could.
	It  was almost two weeks before Tahr sent for me to fill  me in about just what the hell was going on.

******

	"Here,  here,  here,  and  here," Remae's claws  stabbed  at points  on the map.  "We do not have enough troops down south  to cover all this area. These villages will be defenceless."
	"We may have to evacuate some of them,  move the inhabitants to towns that we can defend," Tahr said.
	The  room was one I was familiar with,  the conference  room with  the huge obsidian table and pile carpet.  A wood and  brass chandelier hung over the table,  oil lamps hanging from it. Three Sathe  and a human sat around the table on which maps and  pieces of vellum and parchment were spread.
	Remae  was looking terrible. Her ribs were showing  through fur which itself lacked lustre, was actually coming out in  places. The corners of her eyes were crusty with goop.  I knew she'd been under stress, but she was going to kill herself.
	"The  villagers  would be vulnerable while  they  are  being moved,"  Rehr  observed.  "Again they would need  armed  escorts. Could we spare that many?"
	"I  do not think so," Remae said and ran her  claws  through her mane, staring dully at the handful of fur that came away. "We have lost several scouting parties without trace,  and they  were not small."
	"We have lost too many troops," Tahr sighed.
	Indeed,  the map was dotted with small red triangles; places where battles and Sathe had been lost.
	"We  just  do not know exactly what they are  doing,"  Remae said.  "Their  main host is reported to be about here . . . and  they have  others scattered along here." She drew a line from east  to west  at  the top of the Florida peninsula.  "We  are  trying  to muster forces to meet them."
	"And how many victories have been ours to date?" Rehr  asked softly.
	"Precious few I am afraid.  Commander Rsef managed to defeat a  flanking  force much larger than his own by luring  them  into swampland where their own numbers were a liability. They lost over a thousand troops, but they will not  make  the mistake of baring their necks  like  that  again." Remae rubbed her eyes. "K'hy, are your troops ready?"
	I frowned. "I would have liked to have given them a bit more time, but they are soldiers, they are ready."
	"Commander  S'Sahr wishes to move a Company to  this  town." She  pointed at a circle set on a squiggly line that led  to  the sea  south  of us.  "Weather Rock.  It lies on the  river  Broken Tooth, ten days south by sea.
	"It is not a large town,  but wealthy, able to afford its own small garrison. And it controls the only bridge over that part of the  river.  The last news placed the Gulf forces  about . . . here," she pointed at the line on the map,  "but we simply cannot afford to  spend  a company holding a place the Gulf  forces  may  never approach. The Greens are few, but you said they can stand against much greater numbers. Could they secure the bridge against a Gulf strike?"
	"What is the opposition likely to be?"
	"Ah . . . that we cannot be sure about,  but if they do  assault the  town,   it  will  most  likely  be  with  their  easternmost force . . . this  one.  Reports are too sketchy to give  an  accurate size,  but it will not be as large as their central one.  I would go out on a ledge and guess perhaps two, three thousand."
	I nodded.  "And the town?  What kind of a position is it in? Defensible?"
	There were some troubled looks. "That . . . we are also not sure about."
	"Oh, great!"
	"We spoke with some traders who'd been through about seven months ago.  According to them there were siege engines being built and the walls were in terrible condition.  They cannot  say if repairs have been made since then."
	"Wonderful,"  I scowled.  "This is sounding better  all  the time."
	"The town . . . here," she pulled out another map. "It straddles the river,  with quarters on the north and south banks. The river at this point is wide,  but shallower and slower than  elsewhere; suitable for a bridge and ferries."
	"Could it be forded?"
	"Ah . . . that  is doubtful.  In mid-summer during  a  heatwave, perhaps. Otherwise, I think not. The surrounding land is flat and open farmland surrounded by forest. There are three roads leading in through the forest: two from the north, one from the south."
	"How much open ground between the walls and the forest."
	"I have no idea. Can it be defended?"
	I considered,  then nodded.  "I think so.  We will have some good fields of fire."
	"And, K'hy," Tahr leaned forward. "You will not be going."
	"What?"
	"You heard well enough.  We do not want to lose  you,  K'hy. You will remain behind, and that is an order."
	"High One,  they are my unit, I have to go with them. I will not sit around on my fundament while they go out there, maybe get hurt or killed!"
	"K'hy, you are staying even if I have to have you chained in the dungeons," growled Tahr.
	"No! We are a unit!" I protested. "I trained them to work as a team, like a machine! Listen, if you take a working part out of a  machine  you end up with junk!  Also,  I am the only  one  who understand how the weapons work,  I know what their strengths and weaknesses  are.   If  you  send  those  Greens  out  without  an experienced commander, it would be like having a huge army with a cub in charge;  a shrewd enemy could beat them." She didn't  look convinced.  I turned to appeal to a professional soldier: "Remae, you must know what I am talking about."
	Remae  rubbed the side of her muzzle.  Tufts of fur  drifted down and she quickly stopped.  "Well,  yes.  I think he is right, High One."
	"Rehr?"
	"It  does  sound  reasonable to  me,"  the  elderly  advisor confessed.  "Can you name any commander who would know how to use a gun?" He hiccuped a bit on the foreign name.
	"You too?" Tahr was outnumbered.  "I shall have to think  on this,"  Tahr tapped her claws together and looked at  the  black-furred Remae; her worn expression, the shedding fur. "Remae, when did you last rest?"
	Remae  blinked at Tahr through crusty eyes.  "Why  just . . . It was . . . "
	"Go and get some sleep," Tahr snapped.  "Before you fall  on your face."
	"But . . . "
	"Go!"
	Remae  hauled herself to her feet and went to  the  door,  a very  different kind of movement to her normal graceful  stalking walk;  heavy  and tired.  She hesitated at the door like she  was going to say something, then she left.
	Tahr stared at the closing door.  "She will kill herself  if she keeps on like this. I should have said something before."
	"There is much to be done," Rehr said. "These are hard times for  us  all . . . You  yourself look as if you could  do  with  some rest."
	"I am fine," Tahr muttered.
	"If you say so High One," Rehr stood up with a rustle of red robes.  "You  will find decisions easier if you  are  rested . . . By your leave?"
	Tahr  watched the door close behind the advisor then got  up and went to the window,  throwing it open.  The breeze that  blew into  the room put the lamps out but was also welcome  breath  of fresh  air.  She  stood in front of the window  cutting  a  black swathe  out of the stars,  her mane moving in  the  breeze.  "You actually want to go and fight."
	I shook my head.  "No,  I want to finish what I started. You cannot send them off by themselves. I KNOW they are not ready for that."
	She  sighed,  her shoulders rising and  falling.  "You  make tried and proven soldiers sound like cubs."
	"They are like cubs," I said.  "If they were soldiers in  my world,  one enemy could kill them while they all sat around their fire  telling  tales," I remembered what I  had  shown  them,  how chagrined they had been when I jumped them.  They had had a guard posted,  but in full camouflage and enough bush, a man can become almost invisible.
	That  was how they learned that heavy armour is not  the only kind of protection: What you can't see, you can't hurt.
	"By my Ancestors,  Tahr. They were sitting guard duty around a goddamned CAMPFIRE!"
	"But this is not your world,  K'hy,  and they know it better than you do. What can you still teach them?"
	"They are too smart for their own goods."
	Her ears flicked: "Explain."
	"Those  weapons do not make them . . . all  powerful.  They  are simply tools,  just like an axe or adze,  and only as good as the person  using  them.  It  is good that  they  feel  confident  in themselves,  but not foolishly so. A crossbow bolt or sword would have just the same effect on them as on any other.  They are just raw recruits . . . Green is a good name for them:  they are as  green as a new sapling."
	"Then do you really think they are ready to go?"
	"As  you  said,  they  are  soldiers.  They  have  to  learn somewhere . . . why  not there?  Also,  how many conventional  troops would you have to send in their stead,  ah?  Troops you are going to need."
	The shadow moved away from the window and there was a  muted footfall  on  the  carpet behind  my  chair.  Then  smooth,  hard crescents were running gently over the bare skin on my cheek  and neck.  "My  furless  strange  one . . . Down inside you  are  not  so different from the rest of us. Why do you decide that you want to fight now?"
	"I have been trying to adapt,  to fit in," I said. "There is so much to un-learn."
	She  sat  down on the empty chair to my  right  and  hunched forward,  toward me,  her hands hanging between her  knees.  "You want to fit in by fighting? My Ancestors . . . K'hy, we fight, that I cannot and do not deny,  but it is not a way of life for us.  You do not have to try and prove yourself by doing that."
	I blinked in surprise.  "I never said anything about proving myself."
	"I  think  that you do not always say what you want  to  say K'hy,"  she looked dour.  "Is there nobody else who could  go  in your stead?"
	I shook my head.
	"Do  not  do  that," the pads on the  tips  of  her  fingers touched my chin,  rubbing against the stubble.  "Very  well,  you impossible  fool,  go  if you must." Then her breath was  a  warm breeze against my neck as she leaned close.
	"But I shall be very angry if you get yourself killed."

******
	
	"Rehr? Sir?"
	The Born Ruler's Advisor looked up from his  desk,  starting to put paper away in a drawer before he saw who had spoken. "I am busy, K'hy. Can this not wait?"
	"Please sir, it will not take very long."
	"Very  well." He stood his quill pen in a rack on the  desk, beside an inkwell. "I think I can make time. What do you want?"
	I  pulled  the sealed envelope out of my breast  pocket  and stroked  the creamy paper with a finger before dropping in  front of Rehr.  He picked it up and glanced at the handwritten  English message on the outside: To Maxine Wayne.
	"What is this?" Rehr asked.
	"A  letter,"  I  replied,  then  took  a  deep  breath.  "If something  should happen to me,  could you see that  Maxine  gets this?"
	Rehr stared at me,  then at the parchment in his hand,  then back at me." Why did you not ask Tahr to do this? You are close."
	"I  am  not  sure," I admitted.  "We are maybe too close. Please. I am asking you because I think I can trust you."
	He slowly ducked his head,  his greying mane  bobbing.  "You honour me.  Very well.  It shall be as you ask,  but I hope I will not have to pass it on."

******

	I  worried about that letter.  There were things written  on that indifferent paper I'd lost sleep over.
	Amongst  other  things,  I had left Maxine with  a  decision which I had had to make once.  She knew a bit about firearms; she could certainly fire a gun well enough . . . 
	I had left the complete formula for  black gunpowder  and  detailed  instructions  for  forging  cannon  and muskets.

******

	When we finally rode into Weather Rock I was hot, tired and covered with yellowish dust blown up from the road.  We all were.  The Broken Claw  river flowing  through  the town beckoned invitingly,  but  there  were formalities to go through first; time for bathing later.
	First impressions of the township  of Weather Rock were of a set from a movie, a western. A single unpaved avenue split the town down the middle, from north to south, the river quartering it east to west. The buildings were slightly more auspicious.  Large - some of them actually had two floors  - and made of wood, brick and something like adobe.
	The  Sathe  inhabitants quickly dispelled  any  illusion  of similarity that Weather Rock had to Dodge City.
	By then I was used to the kind of  welcome  we  received; locals  stopping  and  staring at us from the street and their dwellings, bolder cubs falling in behind the soldiers in an impromptu procession.  I just smiled wearily at them and  blinked dust out of my eyes.
	The curtain wall around the town was not very  imposing,  in fact it was rather pathetic.  Parts lay in disrepair with ivy and lichen growing over fallen stones. In a couple of places - mainly around  the gates - the walls had been repaired,  I  suppose  for appearances's  sake,  but still there were a few merlons  missing and one tower bore the blackening of a fire.  Weather Rock was not  a prime example of a fortified stronghold.
	We definitely didn't look any better; worse if anything. The Greens  were  only wearing their trousers,  rolled  up  to  their knees,  and  these  were all a uniform shade of  mud  brown  from airborne dust. Sathe fur was caked with grime and the llamas were exhausted.
	An awe-inspiring sight we were not.
	The  ruling  clan  in  Weather Rock  was  the  Fres's  Clan. R'R'Rhasct had told me that it was a powerful Clan,  and one friendly to the Shirai Clan so their loyalty was assured.  They  had control over two towns in the Eastern  Realm  and were purely traders;  their Clan Elders had never had any  desire for any power other than that brought from trading.
	So the Fres's clan had always remained totally loyal to  the Eastern  Realm,  and despite the attempts of rival clans  to  use them as political leverage, they had prospered.
	The dilapidated state of the city walls belied the wealth of the  town behind them.  The buildings were  well-maintained, painted, glass in the windows.  The streets were clean with the populace looking well-fed. The air of affluence  exuded  by  the  Keep  more  than  made  up  for   any unfavourable impressions the walls may have given.
	Pennants and flags waved at us in the breeze while  sunlight glittered  off a multitude of windows;  far more than a  building designed to keep people out would have. Servants stopped in their tracks  and gaped at us,  at me.  We clattered into  a  courtyard while  guards still stumbled out of their barracks  to  intercept us.  Their  armour was spotless and highly embossed  while  their weapons had that air of something straight off the rack. Probably still had the price tags on them.
	If they were the police around here, who upheld the law?
	Amongst us,  we had already agreed that the Green called Fen would  meet  with the Clan Lord as  our  representative.  He  was educated, intelligent and being raised in a wealthy family, knew something about court protocol. It would make things easier if the Clan Lord only  had talk to him,  and not try and get used to someone  like me.
	Fen  dropped  stiffly from his saddle and waited  while  the guards approached him,  surrounding us.  Up on towers around  the courtyard,  archers  were taking up  positions,  their  crossbows cocked  but  not levelled.  An officer stepped forward  and  there followed  a  spirited  conversation that  I  couldn't  hear.  Fen eventually  produced the sealed document from Tahr and brandished it in front of the other's nose.
	The officer's muzzle wrinkled when he saw the red seal on  the document and he looked us over again,   then  he  gestured  and  led  Fen  off  through   the surrounding  ring  of  guards. A small  entourage  of  soldiers followed the pair.
	They disappeared through a wrought iron gateway and I looked around at the remaining Fres's guards. They were watching us, but all of the crystal-green eyes surrounding us seemed to be  fixed on one object; Me.
	I raised my face to the sky, squinting into the glare of the sun. Anything but look at them.
	The Sathe up on the walls stared back at me.

******

	Chirthi  and  R'R'Rhasct walked with me along  the  southern fortifications of Weather Rock.
	"This is pitiful," R'R'Rhasct gestured angrily at the  wall. "If  any modest number of cubs ever attacked these  walls,  they could take it within the day!"
	She  was  absolutely  right.  The gatehouses  on  the  roads leading into the town was solid and sound, as were the gates over the river, but the walls on either side of the town, each curving around to meet the river, were low and falling apart..
	Barely three metres tall, the walls' catwalks were crumbling and eroded.  Lichen and ivy were growing over the ramparts and we disturbed birds in their nests as we passed. The only things that were  in  decent  repair were the few  arbalest   and  catapults, mainly maintained, I suspected, for show.
	"The  only chance this town would have would be to  stop  an attacker from getting near the walls," said Chirthi.
	The ground out there was flat, just fields and grazing land away to the forest. Even with crossbows a determined charge could swarm the walls.
	As  we  walked  back  to the  keep  where  the  Greens  were barracked,  the  two  Sathe carried on a  spirited  conversation, recalling old battles where defenders were in similar conditions, and  what they had done.  I found the references they were  using totally meaningless,  instead I watched the stalls and shops, the Sathe who went to and fro, until a stall caught my eye.
	"Chirthi, Rhasct. Hold  on," I tapped their shoulders to stall then ducked across the dusty throughfare to take  a  closer look. 
	It was one of those shops with front shutters that rotated on a central pivot. At night they'd be swung up to close up the shop while during business hours they hinged down to produce instant display tables. The tables were  covered  with  small metal  trinkets  and jewellery of all kinds,  from  tiny  locks  to spring-loaded  flint  and steel fire strikers to  gold  and  jade earrings.  I bent low to admired the craftsmanship. Without  machinery or advanced tools someone had made these  from scratch  and they were as much pieces of art as pieces of  metal. Delicate shapes hand-crafted from gold and silver wire,  a  small quarter-sized medallion that was unmistakeably a bald eagle. That one caught my eye: I'd been wondering what I could use for a sort of cease-fire offering to a certain non-Sathe I knew and that might to the job. If I ever had the chance.
	The proprietor of the shop, an oldster with long fingers and much grey in his fur,  watched me with his ears flattened back as I picked up the medallion.  He looked like he wasn't sure whether he wanted to watch and laugh or run for help.
	Strands  of gold filigree made up the body and  outstretched wings while silver wire outlined the head,  feathers.  The  chain was also solid silver. I'd have never believed Sathe fingers were nimble enough to make something like that. Whoever'd made it must have used a microscope. I whistled softly  and turned to the proprietor,  "Sir, how much does this cost?"
	"You . . . speak?" He gaped.
	I sighed, "Yes, I speak. Now, is this for sale or not?"
	A businessman through and through.  Almost instantly he  had pulled himself together and quoted a ridiculous price.  I got the idea and countered with an offer of my own.  We bantered back and forth and when  a  price was finally settled on and I  dropped  three pieces of gold into his palm, he seemed inordinately cheerful. No guesses who'd ended up with the better end of the deal. Chirthi and R'R'Rhasct were waiting,  sitting on the  stoop, leaning  against  each other and  chuckling  at  something.  They squinted  up  at  me as I came out.  "We are at war  and  you  go shopping?" R'R'Rhasct smiled.
	I shrugged and scratched at my jaw.  My beard needed a trim. "What can I say? It is a dirty job, but someone has to do it."
	"Ahh . . . true," Chirthi chuckled. "What have you got there?"
	I showed them. They both laughed when I told them how much I had  paid  for it,  saying I had been done out of a  gold  piece. R'R'Rhasct  was ready to go and get it back,  but I stopped  her, "He probably needs it more than I do."
	"You would throw away a gold piece?!" They were astonished.
	I shrugged and grinned, "I have to learn the right way to do it. If I make a mistake, I should pay."
	"The place you come from,  do you buy things there?" Chirthi asked.
	"Yes,  pretty  much  the same." I was thinking  about  check books  and credit cards.  "But there is usually no haggling  over prices."
	"But   that  takes  all  the  fun  out  of  it!"   exclaimed R'R'Rhasct, sounding genuinely horrified.

 ******

	The  tiny bird of prey gleamed dully in my fingers as I lay under the rough grey blanket, holding the medallion in a pale moonbeam. The chain rattled almost inaudibly as I slipped it back into the pocket of my jacket lying beside the bed.
	Down the other end of the long,  second floor room,  I heard the  surf-like  sound of Sathe  whispering;  Chirthi  had  joined R'R'Rhasct in her bed where they murmured softly to each other. I couldn't  hear what they were saying,  and I didn't try  to.  The deep,  steady  breathing of the other sleeping Sathe  filled  the room.
	I  stretched my legs off the end of the Sathe-sized  pallet, then curled up and slept.
	The shouting woke me.
	"ATTACK! Rot it! THEY'RE ATTACKING!"
	Someone  was shaking me and I scrambled out  of  bed,  still wondering  what  time  it was.  It was  still  dark  out,  but  a flickering red glow shone through the dusty windows.  Coming from across the river.
	"What's  going  on?!"  I snapped as I pulled  my  shirt  on, grabbing my rifle and stuffing extra clips into my pockets.
	"Attack, sir," Eor'sf shouted. "The town is under attack!"
	Fasir  clattered  up the stairs with wild  eyes.  "From  the south!" he yelled as he grabbed for his weapons. "They're burning the town! Trying for the bridge!"
	Outside was chaos.
	Sathe were starting to appear in other buildings while  from across  the  river came the source of the  glow.  Buildings  over there  were burning,  the bridge swarmed with the dark shapes  of fleeing Sathe. Behind them I could hear screams and cries and see steel  glinting in the firelight as weapons were swung. Figures escaping burning and collapsing buildings milled in  confusion before being cut down. Wolves in a flock.
	Armoured figures started to head for the bridge,  swords and firebrands ready.
	"Two  teams!" I yelled at the Greens.  "Six on each side  of the   road.   Crossfire   on   that   bridge,   then   fire   and manoeuvre. Let them come to us, try to get as many as possible on the bridge. . . Watch out for the civilians! Go!"
	Toe  claws scrabbled on wooden stairs as they got,  with  me right behind them.
	By  night  and firelight Weather Rock  had  become  downtown Pandemonium.  Flickering orange-red light and the alien shapes of terrified Sathe. Someone bumped into me, and I got a glimpse of a terrified  face and managed to duck a frenzied swipe at  my  face before I was past. Up ahead Greens, naked but for their belts and ammunition,  were  spreading  out  on each side  of  the  bridge. Kneeling behind walls,  barrels, and any other available cover to steady the M-16s.
	The Enemy were already on the bridge,  dozens of  them,  red and  black armour turned into something more sinister in the  mad light. As they ran toward us they howled, and I saw bared fangs, eyes wide with battle-lust.
	Then the guns started chattering, the racket of concentrated gunfire mingling into a metallic-sounding snarl.
	I took cover beside a Green and added my  own  fire, her spent brass flying across in front of me in erratic bursts. On the bridge  invading armoured Sathe caught in the gunfire went down like skittles, spun and fell,  doubled over  and fell, fell and died.
	Their  assault  melted  away into piles  of  bodies  on  the bridge.  A few survivors turned to dash back the way they'd come, howling  ambush.  Some  of them made it back to the  end  of  the bridge.  None of the ones who'd chosen to run the other way  made it.  The  Greens howled in triumph,  but didn't rush  to  follow. Every  second  soldier ran forward under covering fire  from  the rest  of  us,  then it was our turn to leapfrog  them.  Fire  and manoeuvre until we had the bridge.
	That was a blessing.  Their first fight and they didn't  get carried away, go wild and charge off on their own.
	Wounded and dying Gulf Sathe shied away from me as I crossed the  bridge,  some rolling under the parapets and into  the  dark water  below;  the light,  spinning rounds from the M-16 are  not always  mercifully  quick.  The  Greens  remedied  much  of  that suffering; their claws and knives were messy, but fast.
	Across the bridge,  the street was littered with  bodies.  A few  Gulf  corpses lay scattered around,  but most of  them  were Eastern Sathe; Men, women, and children.
	Any  sympathy  I felt for the Gulf soldiers  on  the  bridge vanished.
	The next half hour was a time of killing.  All I can  really remember  is  the light;  that bloody,  red  light  from  burning buildings. Armed Sathe came at me and were cut down by my weapon, or the fire of other Greens.  With only swords out they came from the buildings,  being cut down before they came near.  Blasts  of gunfire cut through the night.  Muzzle flashes strobed along  the street as teams of Sathe moved and hunted down the Gulf forces.
	I  remember a Gulf soldier standing over the bodies of a unarmed male and his cub, claws still dripping.  I remember the look of surprised horror on his face as my gun butt stove in his skull.
	A group of Sathe with crossbows firing at us from the cover of a window. Greens firing a burst that stitched across the wall, letting me get close enough to throw a grenade in. The concussion kicked the door off its hinges and knocked wooden slats from the walls, then the top floor caved in.
	A Gulf warrior with a firebrand coming out of a building while flames licked up in the windows, he saw me, his eyes widening then the muzzle flash of my rifle strobed across him. I  remember firing until my gun jammed,  or  ran  dry,  then using it as a club.  I remember pain from minor wounds.  I joined the chase as the remaining troops fled for the walls and the  gun just clicked as I tried to fire on fleeing troops . . . 
	"K'hy?"
	I stood on the crumbling town wall. The body of a guard lay at my feet,  his throat slit by a Gulf blade. I stared down at the corpse, feeling utterly drained, like I'd run a marathon. There were still bursts of gunfire - on the wall and in the fields beyond - as Greens and local guards rooted out enemy troops, firing on the few who were  retreating across the fields to the woods beyond.
	"K'hy?"
	Chirthi repeated my name. I looked at him, winded, unable to reply. His ears were back, blood matted his fur. I looked down at myself. Gore covered me; blood, my own and others', glistening black in the light of burning buildings. Gently he reached out and took the  gun from my unresisting hands, then led me back down to mainstreet.
	That  central street was still in chaos.  Buildings  burned, filling the air with sparks and smoke.  Sathe were forming bucket chains to the river: soldiers and civilians. What good could that do?  The  buildings still burned,  and would continue to  do  so: right to the ground.
	I  stared,  strangely  detached as flames begin  licking  at another  building.  There  was a movement at a window  above  the covered  porch;  a small head that barely reached above the  sill and hands fighting at thick glass.
	Cries rose from behind me: "K'hy! NO! Stop! Stop him!"
	I  was  inside  the building before I realised  what  I  was doing,  still going on automatic.  The stairwell was filling with smoke.  Red light and flames danced through cracks in the  wooden stairs.  I  could feel the heat through the wood against my  bare feet, but the stairs held.
	Smoke  filled the corridor in the top floor . . . What the  hell am I doing here!?  The door was locked,  barred from the  inside, but  gave way under a kick.  Flames climbed one wall of the  room and   I   choked  and  hacked  as  heat  and  smoke   seared   my lungs; blistering my skin.
	A small form hunched under a window, a stink of burning fur. I  grabbed the cub and turned just as the lintel above  the  door collapsed in a shower of sparks, blocking the portal with flaming debris.  I  crouched  over the cub,  sheltering it  as  the  heat tightened the skin on my face and hands.
	Below,  on the street outside,  Sathe milled about, pointing towards me,  the heat rising from the flames making their  images blur,   twist,  writhe . . . The  window  exploded  into  a  thousand glittering  shards of glass and wood as I heaved a chair  through it,  then as the flames exploded around me, fuelled by the influx of fresh oxygen.  I hit the eaves outside the  window,  stumbled, and fell.
	The  burning world spun and came up and missed me as  I  hit something soft that collapsed beneath me.  Hands were pulling  me away  from  the  small  body I had  wrapped  mine  around  in  an unthinking effort to protect it: an instinct I never knew I had.
	Voices were rising around me,  calling and shouting. A Green -  Finder  -  was propping me up,  trying to  get  my  attention, shouting something about the fingers he was holding up.  I pushed his  hand  away  and looked to where more  Sathe  were  clustered around a small shape.
	"He  is not breathing." A Sathe looked down  at  me.  "I  am sorry."
	"Bullshit!"  I  gasped and tore  from  their  grasps,  claws inadvertently  tearing  my skin as I half scrambled  through  the crowd.  The cub lay sprawled on his side,  his baby-fur scorched, shrivelled, and curled from heat.
	I  didn't  bother checking for a pulse.  The ring  of  Sathe around us stirred and shifted in indecision as I tilted the  limp head  back and clamped my lips over the small  mouth.  His  chest rose and fell as I breathed in and out; I could taste soot on his breath.
	Desperately  I  blew,  watching the  chest  move  feebly.  I couldn't make a proper seal around the alien mouth!
	Damn you! BREATH, damn it !
	A shudder in the body. I pulled back as the chest started to move on its own. Then the kid started convulsing, and I pawed him over onto his side.  A thin trickle of vomit ran from the  corner his mouth,  pooling on the sand.  His breathing settled down to a steady  rhythm.  I  sat there with his head cradled  in  my  lap, gently stroking the singed fur over and over and it was another cub I was holding, one I'd never had the chance to thank.
	"I'm sorry. Oh, god, I'm sorry I wasn't there. . ."
	Sathe hands gently took him away, then took me away.

******

	The guard who'd been bending over me jumped back in alarm as I opened my eyes, then he dashed out. I listened to claws clattering in stone,  a door slam,  and looked around in bewilderment. Where the hell was I?
	The room was large,  spacious,  and spartan.  Big  shuttered windows  along one wall were hanging open,  a warm summer  breeze blowing  through.  The  off-white walls were  covered  with  what looked like polished granite slabs,  as was the floor.  The round bed  I  was  lying  on was in the middle  of  the  wall  directly opposite  the door,  and I was lying stark naked on white  satin-soft sheets.
	I had enough small cuts and bruises to add to my  collection of scars. I ached, pain outside and in. Both my feet were bandaged,  and there was another bandage  around  my right forearm, another around my stomach.
	My clothes were nowhere in sight.
	I sat up and gingerly put my feet on the floor,  wincing  at the  pain.  Running  around on stones and broken  glass  with  no boots. Not a good idea. Slowly I put more weight on them. Ouch.
	"K'hy!"
	Sathe burst through the door, R'R'Rhasct and Chirthi, with Weather Rock guards close behind.
	"Hi," I greeted the pair.
	"Out,"  R'R'Rhasct ordered the other guards,  then strode over to stand over me, arms folded and wrinkles on her nose: "What do you think you are doing?!"
	"What does it look like? Where are my clothes?"
	"Oh, no. You are staying right there," Chirthi told me.
	R'R'Rhasct pushed me back onto the mattress and perched herself beside me. Belatedly, I realised what I wasn't wearing and made a grab for the sheets. Pointless really: she'd seen me in the buff before, and in a far more compromising situation: straight after my little soiree with the bartender at the Red Sail.
	"The  physician  said that you must stay offf your feet until they heal," she scolded me. "You are not to walk for at least a few days."
	 "There is nothing wrong with them," I  protested.  "They are a little sore, but that . . . "
	"Sir,"  Chirthi  said  from where he  was  standing  by  the windows,  "You looked half-dead when we carried you in here."  He rubbed his mane. "The physician did good work on your feet. You'd been dancing on glass; they looked like burnt mincemeat."
	"Same  as the rest of you. You are  not fireproof," R'R'Rhasct added.  "And you were not acting quite. . . normally."
	"Well,  I feel fine now," I lied. Then blinked around at the opulent room. "Where am I anyway?"
	"A guest of the Clan Lord," Chirthi said.  "In the Keep.  We could  not leave you with the other wounded.  It was too  crowded, and there would be some who would not accept you."
	The other wounded . . . 
	"How many did we lose?" I asked fearfully.
	Chirthi  looked at  R'R'Rhasct.   "Twenty-four  wounded  and thirty-seven dead. Thirteen of them soldiers."
	"Oh, shit!" I moaned to the ceiling.
	"Are you alright?" A hand touched my shoulder.
	I looked up at her. I wanted to cry. "Thirty-seven?"
	"There  would have been many more if we had not been  here." Chirthi stared at me, "Do all h'mans fight like that?"
	"Huh? Like what?" I asked, confused.
	"Never mind." They looked at each other.
	I ignored that,  didn't really attach too much importance to it. Thirty-seven . . . 
	I  sat up and swung my legs over the side of the  bed.  "Fuck doctor's orders. There are things to be done. I have work to do . . . where are my damn clothes?"
	"Please sir," Chirthi pleaded, "We are already doing everything. Do not do this!"
	"I  am fine," I insisted as R'R'Rhasct passed me a mug  half filled with water.  Water . . . I was parched. Unthinkingly I drained it and tossed it aside. She retrieved it from the bedspread to set it back on a tray on the floor by the bed,  smiling a bit.  "I do not want to lie here like a fucking invalid!" I  snapped.  "Bring me my clothes, and that is an Goddamned ORDER!"
	"We cannot."
	'Rhasct!" I snarled, furious. "Now!"
	The  Sathe looked at each other,  then Chirthi  said,  "Sir, before  we  left,  the  Shirai gave  us  other  orders,  to  make sure . . . Sir,  she outranks you.  We cannot let you.
	"Tahr!"  Goddamit,  she had no business . . . giving me  fucking BABYSITTERS!  "I  don't  care  what she told  you!  Bring  me  my clothes!" I managed to get to my feet,  then my muscles turned to jello.  The Sathe caught me as I collapsed and lowered me back to the bed.  I tried to grab them, then lost the use of even my arm. I twitched helplessly.
	"The water," I croaked. "Rhasct, you bitch!"
	R'R'Rhasct  straightened  the sheets, brushed hair from my eyes, then stood up beside Chirthi who gently  nuzzled  her neck,  his eyes still on me.  "I  am  sorry, K'hy," R'R'Rhasct told me,  even sounding sincere.  "The Marshal told us it is  quite safe  for you.  It will just help you relax and sleep.  You  will heal better."
	I  tried to swear at them as they left,  but my  tongue  had turned  to  a  slab  of dead meat.  All  that  came  out  was  an incoherent mumble and then the drug rolled over me like a  velvet bulldozer.

******

	Hands gently shook me awake.  Faces, hovering over me. Blood pounded dully in my ears.  There were noises,  voices talking and words washing over me without registering. I mumbled some meaningless protest and let my  eyes close.  Again hands were slapping at my face.  I tried  to push them away and don't know if I even lifted my hands. 
	Another face,  a small face,  pelted with long cinnamon  fur shrivelled  and curled,  green eyes blinked down at me.  A  hand, fingers, white bandages, feather-touch my face. I moved my arm to catch fur, hold a small hand. Teeth bared, fear blossoming in the eyes before voices rang. Green blinked, curiosity and wonder . . . 

 ******

	To  the south of the Broken Claw river the town  of  Weather Rock was in ruins.
	Great  black  swathes were burned in  jumble  of  buildings, patches  where  the fires had  burned  unchecked,  levelling  the wooden  structures as effectively as if they had been  dynamited. Sathe were swarming through the streets. If there had been a time for mourning, I'd missed it. I'd been flat on my back for the better half of a week, dead to the world while the town pulled itself together again. Admittedly the Greens had done good work: the walls were being repaired and reinforced. Food and equipment being stored.
	Still, not all the Sathe were choosing to stay and fight. Over  on the river,  flat-bottomed barges being loaded  with cargo and refugees headed off down the river. Occasional clusters of refugees were leaving by the main gates;  going north in their search for protection.
	Those were the outsiders;  the ones from outside the  Fres's clan.  The majority of the towns population had found shelter  on the  untouched  northern bank.  It was  crowded,  but  they  were coping.
	I leaned against the parapet to take some of the weight  off my feet.  They were almost healed,  but I still treated them with respect. I turned around in time to see a Sathe messenger pop out of the stairwell . . . The clan lord wished to see me.
	The messenger was a talkative Sathe,  as well as curious. He asked me all the usual questions: What am I? Where do I come from? Am I male or female?
	He  shut  up as we got near the centre  of  the  keep.  Four guards outside a set of reinforced oak doors sprang to  attention as  we  approached.  The messenger disappeared off down  a  side-passage, and the guards opened the doors as I approached.  
	And closed them behind me again.
	"Sir,"  R'R'Rhasct  greeted me in a small  voice,  her  ears plastered back.
	"You . . . !"  I pulled up short when she stepped  back,  baring her neck to me.
	"No! It was not her fault, sir."
	I turned around to face Chirthi and a bemused  Fen.  Chirthi continued:
	"We were only obeying orders," he saw me glance at Fen. "The others knew nothing about it . . . We did it for your own good."
	I  looked  down at my fists and forced my  hands  to  relax. "NEVER do that again! Ever!" I snapped through my teeth.
	They said they wouldn't . . . I wish I could have believed them.
	"IF  you  have quite finished," a cold voice interrupted. Another pair of double doors were open, a female standing between them.
	She was wearing only dark green breeches,  belted around her waist  and fastened just above the knees by gold clasps.  On  her right arm there was another gold ornament, an armlet of fine gold wire  that showed up well against her  chocolate-brown  fur.  Her eyes glowed green from under a rust-red mane, and a silver earring glinted in the fold of her ear. Hanging at her waist, the hilt of a dagger protruded from its lacquered wooden scabbard.
	Fres's. The Clan Lord.
	The   Sathe   around  me  instantly  adopted   postures   of submission;  lowering their heads as her gaze swept over us.  Her eyes  locked with mine as I stared back at  her,  still  silently fuming  at  R'R'Rhasct.   The  Clan  Lord's  ears  flickered   in amusement.  "You are not a very docile one,  are you.  Now get in here!"
	The  room  that Fres's led us into was a  private  study.  A large  desk  sat  before a fireplace and  the  wooden  floor  was covered with fur rugs. There were seats arranged around the desk.
	"Sit  down," Fres's told us as she settled down  behind  the desk,  picking up a quill and absently stroking the feather. "You should have told me that. . . he," she indicated me with the tip  of her quill, "is your commander."
	"We felt that it would be easier for you to talk to  someone normal,"  Fen  said,  then  his ears  flattened  and  he  hastily apologised to me, "No offence intended, sir."
	"None taken," I said. "I am really only an. . . uh. . . advisor. I command  them  in battle. . . but that seems to be the only  time  I hold  any authority," I glared at R'R'Rhasct.  She  wrinkled  her muzzle in hurt.
	"Your wounds are healed?"
	"Well enough."
	She  ran  her gaze over me again,  staring  at  my  clawless fingers  and  flat face.  "That was a brave thing that  you  did, saving the child. You have the clan's thanks."
	"Heroes do not usually live very long," R'R'Rhasct muttered.
	The  Clan  Lord glared at her,  "Do you have  a  reason  for disliking what he did?"
	The  Green clicked her claws together nervously.  "He has  a knack for getting himself into trouble."
	"So?"
	"So,"  I said,  "They were ordered - by the Shirai - not  to let  anything  happen to me.  I suspect there  was  a  punishment involved?" Neither Chirthi nor R'R'Rhasct could meet my eyes.
	"Well,"  Fres's  said  grimly,  "if she does  not  want  you damaged, I would suggest you leave as soon as possible. If you will look at this:"
	I leaned forward as she pulled a map out of a drawer in  the desk  and smoothed it out.  "You see Weather Rock is here, on the Broken Claw river. Up here it turns into lakes while downstream it becomes even wider and the land becomes like mud. If you want to cross it is either here or three hundred kilometres upstream. I can tell you that first attack was their outriders. They must have nearly killed their llamas to make such good time because they are almost two weeks ahead of their main body . . . and as best we can tell that is about here," she stabbed a claw into  the  map.  "About five thousand Sathe, I would say they are now about four days out and coming this way."
	"Shit!"
	She spread her hands in a gesture of helplessness,  "I  know very little of warfare. The Fres's Clan have always been traders, not fighters.  We are simply not prepared for an attack,  as  you have doubtless noticed.
	"The other night your warriors had stopped those  motherless bastards  almost before our guards were out of  their  beds.  Your troops have done a lot of work helping us ready our fortifications. You seem  to  know  what  you are doing." The  next  thing  she  said obviously hurt her pride,  "I think it best for all of us that  I leave the defence of Weather Rock to you."
	"Thank you, High One," I nodded.
	"Can your weapons stop them?" Fres's asked,  and the  Greens looked at me.
	I  walked  across to the south-facing  window.  Even with what had been done to them, the  pitiful excuses  for  town  walls wouldn't hold that  number  for  long. Beyond  the  walls,  fields  surrounded  the  town.  Open  fields stretching  off  for about one and a half kilometres  until  they ended  in  a solid line of trees.  A single road led out  of  the forest.
	"The guns will help," I said.  "But they are not going to be enough just by themselves. Your town will be difficult to defend. Being on flat, open ground and with the walls . . . " I shrugged.
	Fres's slumped behind her desk, "You do not have to stay."
	 "Hey,  that is what we are here for,  to help you" I  said. R'R'Rhasct  started  to say something but changed her mind  at  a sharp look from me.
	The  Clan Lord flicked her ears wanly,  "I  thank  you,  but against five thousand, there is not much that you can do."
	"Do  not be too sure of that," I replied.  "There is more we can do to make life difficult for them. Smaller  numbers than ours have held off vastly larger armies for some time."
	Fres's  snorted.  "But  doubtless  it was  not  in  such  an indefensible  spot,  and  that is just part of the largest  armies  the world has ever seen."
	"Not that big," I shrugged.
	She  stared  at me then flashed an unsure  smile;  was  that supposed to be a joke? The Clan Lord obviously wasn't sure. As if annoyed by that indecision,  she dismissed Fen,  R'R'Rhasct,  and Chirthi.
	"We  will be outside," Fen told me.  The last to  leave,  he closed the ornate double doors behind them.
	Fres's  bade  me sit down again.  "I am very  curious  about you," she said,  coming around the desk and moving around  behind me;a blur in my peripheral vision.  "I had heard that the new  Shirai had an . . . unusual favourite, but you . . . " The sentence trailed off.
	I  just  stared  at  an  ornament  on  her  desk,   a  glass paperweight  riddled with air bubbles.  She was reflected in  it, standing behind me, one hand resting on her belt near the dagger.
	"The  things  that I have heard about you are  difficult  to believe," she said. "Are you truly from another world?"
	"Have  you  ever  seen  anything like me  on  this  one?"  I replied.
	A soft hiss of laughter. "No. Never in all my days."
	I  also grinned,  then said,  "You seem to know quite a  bit about me."
	"I have my sources," Fres's said. "There has been a lot said about you and your exploits. As your minder said, you have a gift for finding trouble."
	The reflection in the paperweight shifted.
	"As  Clan Lord,  I  have a responsibility to my  town,"  she  said.  "I have to know if there is any chance of holding the Gulf forces.  I will not order my people to stand and be butchered for a hopeless task."
	I rubbed my temples with my fingers.  "So you put the burden upon  my  shoulders . . . I  cannot make promises that  they  can  be stopped,  but there is a good chance we can delay them.  At least until reinforcements arrive,  but we are going to have to work on the walls.  We have brought some materials with us, but we are going to need help from you: mainly labour, also some materials . . . Chirthi has a list."
	There was absolute silence for a while, then a feather-light touch on my hair.  "You will have whatever you need.  We are  not fighters, but we can learn."
	Fight: How I was coming to loath that word.
				 
******



THE   HUMAN   MEMOIRS 
 PART IV




Alone we are born
	And die alone;
Yet see the red-gold cirrus
	Over snow-mountain shine.  

Upon the upland road
	Ride easy, stranger;
Surrender to the sky
	Your heart of anger.

		   High Country Weather
		   1945 James K. Baxter
				



 

	It was going to be close.  The deadline was finally catching up with us.
	Huh,  deadline:  perhaps  not the greatest choice of  words. Death was something I for one was trying not to think about.  Now  refugees trudged  along mainstreet,   whole  villages  and   bedraggled individuals carrying what they could. They would beg food, but we how  could we feed them all?  We could only stand and  watch  the exhausted  stream passing through the town.  Some  stayed; those  incapable of going any further and those sick of  running. The others just kept their eyes on the road and continued onwards.  Some  had  fled from as far as the  Savannah  district; That's  over  four  hundred  klicks.   It  was  like  watching  a procession of the damned.
	That strike by the Gulf outriders was a mixed  blessing.  It gave  us warning that they were close, and that Weather Rock was a target,  but we'd lost buildings,  resources, and all too many people. 
	Yet the Gulf Forces had come off even worse. The town had been littered with their corpses. Seventy three bodies, the majority of them scattered along the length of the bridge. We had a few prisoners, but they weren't very helpful and the Fres's interrogators hadn't had a lot of practice. All we could get out of them was their equivalent of name, rank and serial number.
	Oh yeah. And most of them boasted about the Gulf army marching on Weather Rock. Tens of thousands of troops. Break us like a bone. Stand over our corpse. Etc. Fres's had lost her temper after the fifth. The next one who tried that died with his throat ripped out by her claws.
	The  midday sun was raising shimmering heat waves  from  the packed  dust.   The  ramparts  still  swarmed  with  activity  as carpenters and stonemasons laboured at reinforcing Weather Rock's flimsy  fortifications.  I  stepped aside to let  a  couple  of guards struggling with barrels of quarrels to pass,  followed  in turn by more Sathe carrying awkward bundles of crossbows.
	I  ducked into the south gate's barbican.  Inside the  tower the  sounds of pounding hammers and Sathe shouting echoed up  and down  the  circular stairwell.  A female dashed down  the  narrow steps at a suicidal pace, sidestepping me in a grey swirl of fur, patches of green fabric, a spattering of claws upon raw stone.
	The  rooms  in the gatehouse towers and the  single  gallery that ran above the gates - housing the winch for the portcullis - were filled almost to overflowing with casks and crates of water, food,  quarrels,  pitch,  rocks, arbalest bolts, and oil. Several Sathe were arguing over a barrel, one of them brandishing a scrap of  foolscap beneath the others' noses.  Leaving them to sort  it out  for  themselves  I clambered up the  wooden  ladder  to  the fortified roof.
	Already three arbalests had been put together and were squatting on the ramparts, looking like crossbows titans might use, their sweeping horns embracing the arc of landscape visible through the crenelle.  Another was being built; a  trio  of  carpenters cursing as they  battled  to  string  the massive fibre and gut bow. Overhead, heavy frameworks roofed with sandbags and half-rounds of timber shielded the ramparts from the heat of the sun and  any heavy objects that might decide to  drop in.
	Beyond  the  town walls the road ran  in  a  near-straight line to the point where it entered the forest,  a couple of  kilometres off.  On either side of the road the  fields  were deceptively  peaceful.  Stalks  of grain were  sprouting  in  the fields and a few small farm buildings stood a good distance from the town's curtain wall. Those were the fields over which the Gulf forces  would have to march to reach the town,  and we  had  made sure that it would not be easy for them.
	A  few  Claymores would've been useful.  So would a  few  M1 tanks or Appaches. We had to make do with what was available.
	The  fields  to the south of the town were sown  with  booby traps  and obstacles of all types.  Caltrops,  sharpened  spikes, punji  stakes  and  pits,   'venus  flytraps',   abatis  ditches, everything we could think of that would slow an attack.  Close to the  town the obstacles were even denser and anyone  trying  to clear  them would come under rifle and MG fire.  The road  itself wasn't booby trapped, but the punji-filled trenches running along either  side  gradually  closed  in.  It  was  a  neat  trick  of perspective that concealed the constriction:  where a row of  ten Sathe  abreast may enter the gauntlet,  there would only be  room for seven at the end.  Guaranteed to screw up a concerted  charge any day.
	I  pulled my dogeared notebook from a cargo pocket,  flipped it open and ran a finger down the  list. There were still a few items to be checked off.
	"Sir?" A lieutenant of the Weather Rock guard stepped up and raised his muzzle in a salute. "The western wall reports that all is  ready,  but  the eastern side is having trouble  with  the catapults. One of them tipped over: they are still trying to right it."
	"Shift some of the engineers from the western side  to give  them a hand.  And what about the river gates and clearing that wreckage away from the walls?"
	"The  chains and nets are in place," he  reported.  "Nothing is going to be coming down the river. The rubble around the south bank, that is going to take a while to clear away."
	"Okay. How long until the rest of the supplies are stored?"
	"I would guess at the end of this day,  sir.  But the  crops were  not  ready.  There will not be enough to withstand  a  long siege. Perhaps two months at the most."
	Should  be ample.  "What about the positions on  the  corner towers?"
	"Ah, those bags of sand are in place,  as are the  overhead  shields. Extra strong as you ordered."
	I nodded then dismissed him.
	Things were moving smoothly.  I guess I'm a  pessimist,  but I always felt it was going too well; any moment Murphy'd rear his head  and  it'd  hit  the fan.  Of course we  had  our  share  of drawbacks, but thankfully nothing terminally major.
	The Gulf army had to be close by now.  The refugees and  the few  scouts we had risked sending out had come back with news  of razed  homesteads  and  villages in the wake  of  the  army  that advanced  on us.  Reports on their muster fluctuated between  four thousand and eight thousand warriors.  However all agreed that they were headed in this direction.
	Already there had been encounters between Gulf outriders and the skirmishers we'd posted in the wilderness to the south of  Weather Rock  to ensure that Gulf spies didn't get close enough  to  take notes on the town's defences. There were only two small groups of town guards - no more than ten -  but the two Greens per platoon made sure they could hold their  own  in  a  fight against a force four times their size.
	Bipedal  cats  in fur,  leather,  and metal and  armed  with scimitars,  accompanied  by  other felids in  camouflaged  battle dress  slung  with webbing,  ammo pouches  and  carrying  assault rifles is a sight that has to be seen to be believed.
	But I've seen it, and even then it's difficult to swallow.
	"How are things going here?" Lady  Fres's  stepped  up beside me and looked out over her lands;  standing straight, her hands linked behind her back.
	"So far everything is on time,  High One," I replied, pushing my hands into my pockets and following her gaze. There were still labourers out there, struggling to manoeuver an abatis into position. "Your people are hard workers."
	"It is their home they are working to save," Fres's  pointed out,  wandering over to an arbalest and laying a hand on a curved tines.  "You are placing great stock on missile weapons.  Why did you have so many more crossbows built? Nearly a hundred more."
	I  nodded.  "I want to keep the Gulf Realm at arm's  length. They  will  outnumber us in trained troops.  You know  a  lot  of farmers  and peasants cannot use a sword,  but most of  them  are familiar with crossbows.  A few hundred more archers in the right place at the right time will make a vast difference."
	"I see you have made some changes."
	"Uh-huh." I called a sentry over and took his weapon to show Fres's. "It is twice as powerful as the old design."
	The Clan Lord hefted the weapon.  "Heavier also." She  tried to cock it and was barely able to pull the string halfway back.
	"Here, it is easier with this," I grinned, tapping the lever built into the forestock of the bow. She fiddled with it briefly, then easily cocked the weapon, slotted a dart into place and took aim at a stanchion.  There was a sound like a sharp handclap  and red fletchings were sprouting from the post. That was all you could see of the bolt, it was buried over halfway into the wood.
	"Saaa!" The Clan Lord hissed and bared her teeth in a toothy grin as she tossed the weapon back to the guard. "Alright. So we have better claws. How long do you think these will hold them back?"
	I  shrugged.  "Until  the  sun went out  if  we  had  enough ammunition.  But we do not,  so I cannot really say.  We do  know they  have about five or six thousand well armed and  trained  warriors, along   with  archers  and  engineers  with  siege  engines   and equipment.  We  do  NOT know how well  supplied  they  are,  what reinforcements and equipment they may have."
	"Agreed. What would be your best guess?"
	"Perhaps two weeks. . . perhaps. Do not quote me on that."	
	She snickered;  a throaty hiss.  "Well,  we shall make them pay for every handspan."
	I nodded.
	There  was a shout of triumph as the  carpenters  struggling with the recalcitrant arbalest finally managed to string the bow.
	Suddenly it all seemed remote,  as though I were seeing  the whole thing through someone else's eyes.  The mottled gridwork of shadows cast by the frame above my head, the gape-toothed grin of the battlements,  the faint heat shimmer of earth baking  beneath the sun, the thunderheads on the horizon.
	I could die here.
	Away in the distance birds burst into the air from the  sanctuary of the shady treetops. It was almost a full second before I heard what had startled them.
	A gunshot.
	Then  a  long volley of gunfire.  A  brief  lull,  then  the distant  pops of automatic weapons on full auto.  It slowly  died out  to  the sporadic shot interspaced with  rolling  rattles  of snapping.
	Then Sathe were on the edge of the woods;  tiny dots bolting towards the safety of the town walls.  I watched as they  covered the  distance at top speed,  long legs blurring,  mouths  gaping; over a kilometre in about a minute and a half.

******

	Chirthi  popped  out of the trapdoor to the parapet  of  the gatehouse like a piece of toast from a toaster.  Tongue  lolling, he  hitched the webbing of the rifle's carry-strap with a  clawed thumb and pattered over.
	The M-16 reeked of hot propellant.
	"They are here," he announced; unnecessarily.	
	"Lose anyone?"
	"WE  didn't."  He grinned and slapped the  receiver  of  his weapon; claws clattered against metal.
	Sathe citizens and warriors of Weather Rock were  converging on  the town walls as the news spread.  The white noise of  their massed  voices  rose in volume then abruptly there  was  silence, like the flipping of a switch on a radio.
	The scouts came first.  Cautious,  nervous, they darted like wasps on the fringes of the treeline as they scoured the area for further ambushes.
	Then came the rest.
	Streams of Sathe soldiery - on foot,  riding llamas, wagons, and  carts  - were leaving the confines of the road  through  the forest, spreading out across the fields, their numbers growing steadily until they stretched along the front of the forest. And still they came.
	The afternoon stretched on and the sun traipsed lazily along on  its arc across the slate-blue sky.  As the shadows  grew, long red  and  violet streaks dashed the clouds.  The tiny  sparks  of campfires started to spring up in the Gulf encampment.
	I hugged my jacket around me and shuddered in a breeze  that came   entirely   from   my   mind.    Shadows   stretched    and merged,  gradually climbing up the trunks of the trees until only the crowns were illuminated in the twilight,  then even that  was gone  as  the sun finally sank below the horizon and  there  were only the fires of the Gulf Realm.

******

	It was the kind of morning when even the sun seemed to  have trouble rising.
	A  light  mist covered the ground in grey tendrils  of  damp moisture.  The  air was perfectly still and  chill.  Droplets  of crystal  condensed on grey stone,  making the walls greasy  to  the touch. I  pulled  my  cowl a bit closer  and  watched  through  the approaching rider through the small cloud my breath made.
	Leaving his llama huffing to itself he approached the  town on  foot.  His red and black armour was clean and polished, without a buckle out of place.  Three  small chevrons  embossed  on a pauldron gleamed silver  in  the crisp morning light, denoting his rank. No scabbard hung from his belt; he appeared to be unarmed.
	He did not look worried as he stopped, easily within earshot of  the gatehouse.
	"I want to speak to your commander!" he yelled.
	Fres's  had  already been summoned.  She looked at  the small  group of Greens standing around with weapons at the  ready and  stepped forward to the crenellation,  drawing herself up  to address the Gulf Messenger:  "I am the Clan Lord of Weather Rock. You and your forces are in breach of all treaties between our Realms and I warn you, the consequences will be dire."
	"For  whom?" The other's ears dipped  in  amusement.  "Hystf Fres's. . . Yes,  we know you. My lords also know that your town has no chance against us.  You are not fighters," he spread his  arms in  a gesture of supplication.  "In their magnanimous  generosity they  offer you sanctuary if you surrender to us.  This is  sworn upon the honour of the S'erst Clan."
	"I would speak with your commander," Fres's called.  "If  he is so sincere in his offer, why does he not come himself?"
	"The  Mharah has no wish for words with  you,  Fres's,"  the messenger bared his teeth in a savage grin.  "You may have  until noon to decide what your choice will be. Please choose carefully, there   are  five  thousand  warriors  who  eagerly  await   your decision."	He snorted,  turned his back,  then raked his feet to  scuff dirt  in our direction before going back to his mount and  riding off  toward  the  dark ranks of enemy  troops  massed  along  the treeline.
	Fres's  sagged  against the  rampart,  looking  haggard  and worried.  Unfortunately the Furball on the llama was  right;  She was no fighter. The daughter of a merchant mariner - now deceased - she had made a successful career of trading and returned to her home to succeed the previous Clan Lord.
	But this was never in the job description.
	With  the fate of the whole town resting upon her  decision, she was scared and confused. Fres's turned to us with the muscles on the side of her muzzle twitching in a nervous tic.  "He swears upon  his Clan name," she said.  "If we surrender they must  keep their word."
	"It stinks," I said.  Surrendering to The Gulf Realm was not an attractive option, especially for me. Besides, I wouldn't trust him any further than a Bosnian Cease fire. "It is not Hraasa's style to offer terms."
	"Huh!  You are right," Fres's agreed.  "But I think that  he does  not  know about those weapons that  you  have.  After  that skirmish  in  the woods their commander knows we  have  some  new weapon,  but he is probably still certain that he can take Weather Rock. Probably expects  us to be cowering in fear of sharing the same fate  that the  border towns faced,  willing to surrender to  him.  Also  he wishes to save himself the slight inconvenience that attacking us will bring.  Also, there is little point in gaining a Realm if it is peopled with corpses and its buildings are gutted ruins."
	I nodded. "I think he would be more worried that if  we  did  stand  against him, we would have time enough to fire the bridge and make sure it burns completely."
	"But  our forces need that bridge as much as they,"  Chirthi mused.
	We had no idea of how far behind us reinforcements were, but any Eastern army that was following us would need that bridge  to cross the river and mount their own offensive. If this arm of the Gulf  forces took the town,  they could delay the Eastern  forces long enough for the other prongs of their army, moving northwards further inland, to swing in from behind.
	All they had to do was take the town.
	"I  think  that they will find Weather Rock a tough  nut  to crack," I grinned. "High One, we have decent defences and we have these," I  slapped  my  palm against the receiver of my assault rifle.  "Twelve of these firing can fire three hundred and  sixty bullets  at eight hundred a minute, every one of those is deadly. The  larger  weapons. . . they can turn any attack into vulture-food. That should make them think twice."	
	Chirthi backed me up:  "It is true.  At a distance one Sathe armed  with one of these is more than a match for a hundred  with swords.  We  wiped  out an entire advance force  of  their  elite scouts before they knew what was happening."
	Fres's  looked across at the bustle of the enemy  encampment and grinned a Sathe grin,  nervously running her tongue over  her teeth. "You believe that we have a chance?"
	"Twenty to one?" I returned her grin. "Yeah!"
	True to his word,  the Gulf officer returned - punctually  - at  noon.  The  sun  was beating down  on  the  battlements,  the contingent of Eastern Sathe waiting shaded by the shields  placed to protect archers from ballistic weapons.
	The intermediary was squinting into the dazzling sunlight as he reined his mount up on the road below the gatehouse, not even bothering to dismount.
	"You  have  had  time enough to  make  your  decision,"  the officer called up to us. "What will it be?"
	Fres's  scratched  her  jaw,  then set  her  ears  back  and snarled, "You can tell your superior we reject your offer!"
	The  Gulf warrior leaned forward in his saddle and  squinted up at us, twitching his ears. "Prize fools, ah? Your last chance. No? Ah, well, not to worry. It should not take us more than a day to walk over this hovel and urinate on your clan ground."
	"You talk too much!" Fres's growled.
	"You  think that you. . . " the Sathe started  to  say and Fres's  gave  me  a  pointed  glance and tipped  her  head  toward  the messenger.
	I grinned, raised the M-16 and squeezed off three shots.  Three spurts of dust kicked up in front of the llama  and the  animal reared as the rounds impacted,  one ricocheting  away with a ululating whine.  The officer was thrown,  landing heavily on his back.  The llama bolted back down the road,  away from the town.
	Fres's  spat  at the groaning figure  sprawled  below.  "You little piece of offal!  Nothing here would abase itself enough  to bow to festering cesspits like you. You can crawl back your superior and tell him that we will meet you in combat. . . if you are capable of it!"
	With that done she opened her mouth in a hostile hiss,  then spun and stalked off.
	Soldiers  lined the walls, laughing as they watched the  Gulf warrior  stagger to his feet.  His armour was covered with  ochre dust.  Blood stained his muzzle: he'd probably bitten his tongue. He stared up at me.
	I tipped my helmet back and grinned.
	It certainly had an affect on the Sathe.  He stood, staring, his ears down and mouth moving vaguely with  words I couldn't hear,  then he started retreating, stumbling backwards before turning and limping wildly back toward the Gulf camp, casting panicked looks over his shoulder as though he thought I was going to go after him.
	The  laughter of the Eastern troops on the walls of  Weather Rock hissed after him like a mocking ocean.
	Your move.	 

 ******

	The warning gongs sounded from the gatehouse,  booming across the town. The Sathe cubs  and elderly looked up at the sound, but stayed put, diligently spreading layers of linseed oil on  the  seams of the mass of cloth spread before  them  while  I grabbed  my equipment and double timed it to the  southern  gate. 
	Sathe   at   the  base  of  the  walls   were   already   in action:   loading  catapults  with  the  medieval  equivalent  of a beehive round,  carting  bushels of crossbow quarrels to  the  troops upon the battlements, boiling water.
	Other Sathe,  Sathe who only a couple of weeks ago had  been merchants,  shopkeepers, farmers, craftsmen, they also hurried to their positions on the walls, all of them grasping their bows.
	They had the numbers,  but not the training.  How would they hold up?
	God help us !
	The Gulf host was readying itself. Lines of their troops shifted  and writhed as they formed into groups of  fifty  Sathe, six of them altogether.  I frowned: three hundred, that was about a  hundred more attackers than there were experienced  defenders. That  certainly wasn't large enough a number to ensure they  took the walls. Why didn't they swarm in en masse?
	What was Hraasa playing at?
	"Testing  us." R'R'Rhasct came up  beside  me  to answer  that question.  "You have been a thorn in their feet  for some time,  and now they find you, they are not sure what you can do."
	"If  they  keep coming as they are,  I will  put  more  than thorns in them," I muttered. I was still sore at the Sathe bitch, tense every time she was around.  She must've known that,  but  she still talked to me,  trying to be friendly.  For some reason that in itself annoyed me.
	I  sighed and slapped a magazine into the well of  the  M16. "Everyone ready?  Alright!  We let the crossbows handle this lot. Have  the  archers fire in volleys.  The Greens hold  their  fire unless they get within a hundred spans."
	R'R'Rhasct grabbed her rifle and sprinted over to the  group of  Sathe  who functioned as our  communications  centre,  taking courier reports from the east and west ends of the walls. She had words with one of them and came back. "Everything and everyone is ready."
	"All right. Now the next move is up to them."
	I  propped the M16 on a sandbag  in  the embrasure in front of me and squinted through the scope.
	Officers  were  strutting around before their  troops, waving swords and yowling, psyching them up.
	R'R'Rhasct snorted something.
	"What was that?" I asked.
	"Conscripts," she repeated. "In the front ranks. There are a few elite there in the back, but the rest are rabble."
	Cannon fodder. Almost made me feel sorry for them. Almost.
	Now  the  Gulf scouting forces were  advancing,  slowly, then the lines began to break up as they began to rush the western end of the wall.
	That charged faltered badly as they crossed the fields. That'll teach them not to scout the terrain properly: What looked like sprouting crops at a distance were in fact slivers of wood  stuck  in  the ground.  Those  and  the  six-spined  metal caltrops  buried  in the soft sod played hell upon  unshod  Sathe feet.  Those pads might have been as tough as leather,  but  they couldn't stand up to sharpened iron spikes.
	The charge faltered amongst curses and cries of pain.  Their screaming officers got them going again, much more slowly.
	I  ducked as a crossbow quarrel clattered against stone near my head. Okay, that's far enough !    
	A shout sounded out along the parapet.  Peaked ears appeared along the wall,  weapons raised to crenelles. The snap of close on two hundred crossbows firing in a ragged volley was a sound  like sharp  applause.  A  cloud of quarrels  rose,  then  fell  again, following shallow arcs into the thick of the Gulf forces.
	The  Gulf archers had been firing at  extreme  range,  their shots  striking our positions with little accuracy.  Our archers were a rag-tag bunch of farmers and traders fighting for their homes. They might not have had training, but most of them were quite at home with a crossbow. When hunting was a way of providing food, straight shooting often decided whether they ate or not. Along with that they had superior weapons,  a height advantage, and a fortified position to ready their aim.
	Screams sounded as near fifty Gulf soldiers were hit.  The  next volley  - scant seconds later - claimed even more victims as  the archers got their range.
	This  one  got the Sathe  officer.  He  jerked  rigid,  then doubled over clutching frantically at a spot just  above  his hip.  Another bolt hit  his  leg, knocking it from under him, leaving him writhing in an incredibly energetic manner for a dying man. . . Sathe. . . whatever.
	The  Gulf  assault wavered visibly.  Despite the elite  troops  at their backs the forward ranks began to falter.  Their archers had been cut down in those volleys.
	Another  swarm  of arrows hissed out  from  the  walls.  And another.
	Now,  with little more than a quarter their original numbers left the attack crumbled,  the ranks shattering and falling apart like  a  house of cards collapsing.  Forward ranks  pushed  back, darting  past  the elite guards at their backs as they  fled  for their own lines.
	The elite guards broke also, snarling. Toward us. All twenty seven  of  them,  trying  to push their way through  a  hedge  of sharpened stakes.
	To  be  cut down by a fusillade of quarrels  that  left  them scattered  where  they fell,  looking like so  many  multicolored pincushions. A few of them lived for over half an hour.
	It  was hardly a decisive victory,  but it did  wonders  for morale. Any rumours that may have been circulating about the Gulf Realm  being an unstoppable juggernaut had just been  stabbed  in the back.  There were well over a hundred-fifty dead and  wounded scattered out there like so many cast-off dolls.
	"What the hell was that?!"  I muttered in  English,  shaking my head.
	"What?" R'R'Rhasct was standing right behind me.
	"That fiasco," I jerked my thumb over my shoulder.  "Whoever their  commander  is,  he just threw away over a hundred  of  his troops,  for no real purpose.  He knew that there were not enough to successfully charge the walls. A fucking rout!"
	"As I said, just testing our defences. Besides, now they are a hundred less."
	"Yeah. . . Fantastic," I scowled.

 ******

	It was late that day,  the sun burning into a hazy, red, orb on  the  horizon.  That first Gulf attack - little  more  than  a cautionary probe - had been beaten off.  Our casualties?  A minor scratch.
	Now they were preparing again. Would they fight all night? With their night-vision it was a possiblity. Shit! Our twelve Sathe qulified to use firearms couldn't stay on duty twenty-four hours a day.
	Their  troops  were forming up again.  Along a  much  larger front this time.  Those units of fifty they'd used last time were being formed again,  only many more this time.  I counted  twenty units.  Several  of  them  composed  of  archers.  More  of  Gulf Regulars.
	A thousand warriors.  Perhaps one-fifth their  number.  They weren't screwing around.
	Our crossbows had superior range but they obviously believed they'd be able to storm our positions.  If crossbows were all  we had  there was no doubt they'd break through.  As it  was  things would be tough.
	I was nervous,  sick to my stomach as I checked the M60  for the third time in an hour.  I removed the barrel and switched  it for one I'd taken off the last time I cleaned it.
	"Sir?"
	A Green.  Fasir.  A lanky, barely post-pubescent cub. But he was  a soldier,  had been since he was twelve,  and he  was  also turning  out  to  be a damn fine shot.  He ducked  in  under  the heavy overhead of sandbags.  "The other positions are  ready.  No problems."  He was referring to the other M60 in  its  sandbagged embrasure on the western tower.
	"Good,"  I nodded as I snapped the breech down on  a  round. "Make yourself comfortable. Now we wait."
	Fasir settled himself down to my left, in a position to link and feed the fifty round belts into the GPMG. As my second, it was his  job  to  make sure the links went in  without  a  hitch.  He crouched beside the gun, staring out along the barrel at the Gulf forces.
	Drums boomed in the distance,  the distorted echoes  rolling across the fields towards us. Already carrion birds had found the dead:  the dusk swarmed with black feathered bodies squabbling and fighting as they pecked and tore at fur and flesh.
	"Sir?"  Fasir  asked without taking his eyes  off  the  Gulf forces. "You ever afraid?"
	I  flashed a tight grin.  "Hell yes.  Be a damn fool not  to be."

 ******

	The tide of the Gulf swept forward, the troops breaking into a  long-legged lopping stride that rapidly devoured the  distance separating us. Swords were out of their sheaths, hundreds of them glittering in the setting sun as soldiers sprinted toward us.  The  traps took  their  toll,  leaving screaming soldiers impaled  on  punji stakes in pits and ditches,  but nobody had ever expected them to stop everything.
	I  drew a bead on a company of archers, took a breath, and fired and the muzzle retort was like a palpable force in the shelter. Sathe tumbled like ninepins as their legs were shattered, ripped apart. So sudden they just lay there, unable to understand what'd happened.
	I raised my sights a couple of notches.
	The stopping power of a 7.62mm round is awesomely lethal.  The Sathe  archers  might just as well have not bothered  with  their armour. Machine gun fire from the other M-60 in the west tower ripped into their flank,  decimating them. A higher-pitched clattering started as the Greens opened up with the M-16s and entire ranks of Sathe went down.
	Beside me Fasir  was coughing on the propellant fumes as he worked at linking the belts together and feeding them  hand over  hand  into the pig.  I slapped the stock of the  weapon  to bring it to bear on another target:  elite guards.  This lot were closer. I could see the effect the impacting rounds had.
	An  officer turned from seeing his troops being cut down  by something they couldn't fight,  turned and looked straight at  my position as I fired. Through the haze and shock waves around the muzzle I saw flowers bloom  on his chest and red spatter the dust behind him.  Small, harmless looking red patches.  He was kicked back several feet and bounced in the dust before lying still.
	The gun ran dry.  Fasir set up another case while I changed the barrel, already shimmering from the heat. Spent brass casings rolled around underfoot as I swung the weapon to find another target.
	The Gulf forces were in complete disarray.  Some were trying to push their way back through their lines while others were still trying to advance. I aimed at the largest congregation of troops. Finder on the other gun had the same idea.
	Two M60s caught the same area in a crossfire. The effect was devastating.  Rows of Sathe toppled like grass in a strong  wind, but  these  ranks  of flesh and blood  stayed  down.  Sathe screamed and howled, trying to tun, some hugging the ground which was turning into a reddish,  viscous mud.  Had this been what the legendary charge of the light brigade had been like?
	Pity the poor sods.
	Through half a case of ammo I kept firing.
	When - finally - the firing sputtered to a halt the  silence was deafening.  An acrid cloud of propellant hung about the  gun, the stench of hot steel and brass stinging at my eyes.  The  Gulf attack was in full retreat, the field littered with their dead.
	We'd  hammered them badly,  but how much ammunition  had  it cost  us?  A more than considerable amount of the limited  7.62mm stuff and a fair bit of the 5.56mm ammo for the M-16s.
	At least it'd gone down the way I'd wanted it:  to draw them into a serious assault, then hit them back hard.  That'd  slow them down a lot,  buy us some time until  our reinforcements arrived.
	Fasir was also watching the fleeing gulf soldiery.  His eyes were  red-rimmed  and watery,  his nose running.  The  gun  fumes in the confined space really didn't agree with him. He sneezed.
	Along the battlements a mass howl rose after the  retreating red  and black uniforms.  Weather Rock Sathe were dancing on  the ramparts,  yowling  obscenities at the Gulfs'  backs.  They  were alive while the ones who'd tried to kill them were dead.  Can you blame their exuberance?
	"You alright, kid?" I asked Fasir.
	He rubbed his eyes,  spat in distaste and flicked his  ears. "I will live. Will it all be this easy?"
	"We can only hope."
	"They cannot take losses like that for long."
	"Yeah.  Unfortunately  we cannot hold off attacks like  that for too long. How much ammo did we use?"
	He did a quick check. "Almost two cases."
	I whistled. "A lot of lead."	
	"They will have trouble swimming."
	I laughed at that. It broke the tension.
	"Good work," I grinned, then slapped him on the shoulder and clambered out of that goddamned little nest of sandbags and half-rounds.  The  other  Sathe  on the  tower  were  distinctly  more disposed to approach Fasir with their congratulations rather than me.
	Didn't bother me too much. You get used to it. I was content to  lean  against  the  wall and stare  at  the  Gulf  positions, wondering what they'd get up to.
	"K'hy. . . Sir?"
	"Hey, Chirthi. How did it go along there?"
	"Incredible.  Oh. . . we had one casualty. She took an arrow through the eye. Had her head in the wrong place at the wrong time."
	"One. . . " I shook my head. "Could have been a lot worse. What about ammunition?"
	"The   small  guns  used  maybe  seven  percent.   The   big one. . . about thirty at a rough guess."
	"Ahhh. . . shit!  Maybe  they will not be stupid enough to  try another couple of attacks like that one."
	"If   they  do  they  will  be  climbing  over   their   own bodies."	
	"But how many can they afford to loose?" I asked myself  and went  back to the wall,  leaning against a merlon and staring  at the enemy encampment.  There was a small bunch of Sathe on llama-back  out in front of their lines,  I caught flash of  light  off glass;  a telescope? Sathe had them - in fact Rehr had one in his study  -  but  the  clarity  of the  lenses  left  a  lot  to  be desired. Whoever it was, they were watching us.
	I lifted my M-16 to the  parapet  and squinted through the scope. So you're the opposition.
	The  central  Sathe  was holding something  with  a  golden, metallic sheen to it. An expansive red cloak surrounded the body, but I got a glimpse of white fur on the head.  The others in  the group  were military types;  red and black armour  with  matching cloaks.
	Lowering the rifle I squinted across at the enemy lines. At that distance they were indistinct, like dolls, but their uniforms stood out like sore thumbs. A real snappily dressed bunch. Officers.
	How far? Two hundred yards? A little over probably. I raised the rifle again, propping it on a sandbag and fiddling with the sights. About right. I snugged the rifle into my shoulder, relaxing. . .
	Squeeze.
	I hardly noticed the retort. Through the scope a second passed, then one of the llamas went down, taking its rider with it. Hastily the others reined around and put some more distance between us. 
	"Shit!"
	The fallen officer struggled out from under his beast and raced after the others, leaving his mount on the road. I fired two more rounds without much effect. They were still over there,  carrying on a  very animated conversation. The central  figure  raised  the spyglass, staring straight at me.
	I gave a tight, humourless grin and waved back.

******

	There was no moon that night. Heavy banks of clouds covered the sky, only a pale glow seeping through. In the gloom I could barely see two yards.
	Lights  glowed in the town behind us, friendly warm-orange windows and doors. Promises of warmth. On the walls there was nothing, not even a torch. Screwed up a Sathe's night vision and made them sitting duck to any enemy snipers who might try to sneak in. Still, on a night like that, even they couldn't see much.
	"There you are." A shadowy figure approached me.
	"Chirthi?" I squinted into the gloom.
	"Yes. So, what do you see out there tonight?"  He laughed.
	"Very funny, I do not think."
	He hissed. "I thought you had good eyes. Hitting a llama from this distance, that was impressive shooting. Tell me: was there a reason for that particular one? Ah, advisor to their commander, a?"
	I smiled. "Well, it will make them keep their heads down." But it wouldn't stop them. Even now they were probably trying to sneak troops across the river upstream, downstream, anywhere they could. Cut us off eventually.
	"Sir?"  Chirthi  broke into my thoughts, sounding uncomfortable.  "Do you mind if I ask. . . Is it true  that you were a. . . a quartermaster?"
	I nodded: "Yes, among other things."
	He  used a single finger to scratch beneath his cuirass  and grinned  in the moonlight.  "Somehow you do not seem like just  a box pusher. I mean, that thing you are putting together in town, how did you learn to build something like that? You did other work?"
	"I  repaired  machinery.  I  think you would  call  that  an engineer." That didn't translate perfectly into Sathe.
	"You built seige engines?"
	"No,  not  those.  There were other machines. . . We  use  them instead of wagons. Also things like. . . " I trailed off helplessly. "I think your speech does not have the words for them."
	"Well, then where did you learn your strategy?"
	"History  is a good teacher," I replied,  touching the  cold stone  of a merlon.  Off in the distance a wolf howled and another even more distant answered.  "I  have been  trained. . . and  my kind has had a long time to  learn  about things like this."
	His green eyes blinked at me. "You have not actually been in a situation like this before?"
	"No."
	"You have been in any kind of battle?"
	"Only war games."
	"Games?"  He  sounded incredulous.  "You have  not  actually fought?"
	I shrugged. "Our last war. . . well I never saw action. My unit was  not  assigned.  The games were just larger versions  of  the exercises I had you do,  more soldiers,  weapons. . . all that.  Our way  of life is. . . different from yours,  so we had to  be  taught things you would take for granted."
	"Oh? Such as?"
	"Hunting. Killing and preparing food."
	He  looked like I'd offered to shave  him.  "But  that. . . who does not know how to do that?!"
	Well, here perhaps. There were enough people back home who'd never  had to kill anything in their lives.  With all their  food provided  by  others,  their  idea of roughing it is  to  park  a Winnebago in a campsite and worry that they won't be able to  use their  satellite dish when the extension cord doesn't  reach  the outlet.
	I shrugged. "Like I said, life is. . . was different."
	"You miss it?"
	"What, with all this to keep me busy?" I waved a hand at the town and battlefield somewhere out there in the dark. "Yes."
	Chirthi's  ears  flickered  then  settled   down,   slanting backward slightly: Caution.  "You often go off to be alone,  sir." His  tongue  flicked around his thin lips and  he  scratched  his muzzle with a clawtip.  "You are uncomfortable around us?"
	"It is not that simply put." I turned and leaned my forehead against the cool stones of the wall. "It is not you personally, it is just that sometimes. . . I do not know how to say it;  I need time to sort things out with myself." I paused, then added. "Sathe are strange."
	He hissed. "You find US strange?"
	I shrugged. "You have lived with it all your life. I am always finding out new things about you. Some of the things I learn are. . . disturbing, such as childbirth."
	"Ahh," his head rocked back a touch, a stiffening of his posture, then: "It is not proper to talk about that." I saw him glance toward me, "Your kind do not. . .that does not happen to you, does it."
	"No."
	Again: "Ahh."
	There was another silence. There was a thin mist forming in the darkness, moisture falling from the clouds. Droplets were beading on his pelt, glittering in the tufted fur of his ears like minute pearls, scattering when his ears twitched. "Did  you   hear that?"
	Nothing but a few voices back in the town, rattle of a wagon as supplies were moved from damaged warehouses.
	"Rot it! I heard something. Voices, out there."
	"You see anything?"
	"Uh. . . No. Plagues! I heard it!"
	I hadn't heard anything,  but I wasn't one to question a Sathe's hearing;  as  good as their night vision.  I couldn't compete, but I could compensate. I snapped open a cargo pouch and produced the flare pistol. "Do not leave home without it". The orange plastic gun  kicked in my hands and a trail of smoke snaked up into the darkness above the fields.
	Even through the mists the flash of light was dazzling. A red sun hung in the sky,  spitting sparks and smoke while casting  blood-red light on the ground below.  The four Gulf troopers out in the fields  were  thrown into sharp relief,  freezing  motionless  in surprise and fear. The three wounded soldiers they were trying to drag back to their own lines must have been lying there all  day. They were covered in muck: dried mud and blood. Those of the conscious ones stared back at me along the barrel of the  rifle, another closed his eyes and kicked feebly  with  his legs, whimpering something.
	I  took  my finger off the trigger.  They were  unarmed  and unarmored and in no condition to fight anyway. 
	The  flare drew attention from both camps,  guards  shouting and  running  to see what the  commotion  was.  Eastern  sentries leaned  over  the battlements,  waiting for me to blow  the  Gulf Sathe to hell and back.  I didn't,  I lowered my gun and shouted out,  "YOU! GET YOUR WOUNDED AND GET OUT OF HERE! GO ON, MOVE!"
	The flare sputtered and died and the  darkness rolled back in.
	"Are they going?"
	Chirthi squinted into the darkness. "I  think  so. . . yes.  Why  did  you  do  that?"  he  hissed. 
	I slipped the safety on again. "They were unarmed. It could not hurt to let them reclaim  their wounded."
	"But that is crazy!  We are trying to kill them and you help them?!"
	I sighed and leaned against the wall,  damp stone soaked  my jacket.  "Also, if we let them take their wounded back, they have to look after them, do they not?"
	He turned and flicked his ears in an amused smile.  "So they have still more useless mouths to feed. More of a strain on their resources and supplies."
	I looked at him and twisted my mouth. I had a sudden craving for a cigarette. "Yeah, that too."

******

	My  eyes  snapped  open as soon as I felt the  touch  on  my shoulder, my heart jumped into my throat, my fist stopping before I decked the Green.  I'd grown touchy;  three days with about six hours sleep all told was beginning to take its toll.
	"What  the fuck  do you want?!" I rasped.  My  mouth  tasted like a stable floor.
	"Apologies, High One!" he blurted. "Sir, R'R'Rhasct sent for you. It is important."
	"Uhnn," I muttered, sat up, swearing as I struggled into my boots. "Okay, where to?"
	The  guards  at  north  gate had spotted  the  wagon  as  it approached the town not ten minutes ago. There was nobody driving it,  the  llamas pulling it just ambled up to the gates at  their own lazy pace and began rooting up grass.
	Now it rested just inside the gate,  a few guards in a  wide circle around it.
	I gave it a second look.  Just a wagon:  wooden, with spoked metal-bound  wheels,  two  llamas. . . Whatever was in the  bed  was lumpy, immoving, and covered by a stained burlap tarpaulin. There was no sign of any driver or passengers.
	R'R'Rhasct  intercepted me as I approached.  Her  ears  were drooping and there was an expression on her face that I can  only describe as glazed.  "We are cut off," she said.  "There are Gulf forces to the north.  Probably not many at this time,  but enough to stop caravans going through."
	"You are sure?"
	She  hooked my elbow and drew me to the back of  the  wagon. There was a fetid, heavy stench that stuck in the back of my throat. When a couple of guards pulled the tarp back a cloud of flies rose  into the  air. I gagged, the smell was overwhelming.  It took a while before  I understood what I was looking at.
	Eventually  the  garish lumps lying in there - mounds streaked  and ribbed with red,  yellow-white,  and  purplish-blue - focused:  There an arm, a head resting on a leg. Five Sathe, four adults and a cub.
	They'd been skinned. All of them had been skinned.
	My last meal tried to climb back up.
	"Their teeth," R'R'Rhasct said in a flat voice. "Their teeth and their claws. Gone. Trophies, decorations."
	I gagged and turned away as my stomach leapt,  clutching the side  of the wagon and breathing hard to keep my last meal  down. R'R'Rhasct caught my arm, led me away from the grisly scene. "You alright?" she asked.
	"Y. . . yes," I choked.  "Give me a minute." I sat down heavily on a porch fronting one of the buildings lining main street. "Oh, shit."
	"You were right," she said.  "They are around behind us.  We are cut off. We do not know how many of them there are. We cannot afford  to escort caravans out of the town. . . " she  trailed  off. Her  pink  tongue  whipped around her thin  black  lips  and  her leathery nostrils flared
	I  nodded.  Unless we got reinforcements,  we weren't  going anywhere.
	"Sir," she said.  "I am sorry you had to see that. I did not know you would be so badly. . . affected."
	I shook my head. "No. You did right. It gives me a reason to fight  them." I looked at the sky,  then dropped my head into  my clenched fists. "Damnation! They were Sathe. They were people!" I hissed.
	The  Sathe's eyes went wide.  "Rhasct," I  grated.  "If  any Sathe  under  my command treats a prisoner  like. . . like  that,  I swear I will have his ears for a necklace! Spread it!"

******

	The  M60  hammered  and Sathe howled and tumbled to the dirt.  I shifted my aim to a clump  of enemy  infantry  and clamped the trigger back,  the  spent  brass ringing off the stones beside me.
	They  were trying again.  This time at least trying to  plan their attack:  a massed,  two-pronged attack at the east and west corners  of  the town walls where the least amount  of  firepower could  be brought to bear.  The problem with that  manoeuvre  was that they tended to bunch up,  presenting choice pickings for the Greens and their automatic rifles and GPMGs.
	A  crossbow quarrel thunked into a nearby sandbag. A nearby green took aim and felled an archer who was busy  recocking  his bow.  They had advanced beyond the punji spikes even though  many of  them had been left clutching their feet and  limping  wildly, but there were more surprises.
	Give  them full marks for guts  though!  Or  stupidity.  The regulars charged forward,  into the teeth of automatic fire, then they hit the covered trenches. The front lines just vanished as the ground collased under their feet and the close packed ranks behind them tried to stop or jump the sudden hazzard. Some stopped, some teetered, then went over. The trenches were too wide to jump.
	And they were lined with three-foot long spikes. You could hear the screams from the walls. Like dropping a bag of cats into a food processor.
	"Jesus."
	It was enough to make the Gulf Charge falter. Soldiers stood on the sides of the trenches, just staring, trying to find a way across. Some were reaching down, trying to help comrades out even as quarrels and bullets rained down on them. They had guts, but whatever nerve they had deserted them when the balloon went up.
	As  big as a house,  it rose over the buildings  of  Weather Rock.  A patchwork canopy climbing into  the still  evening  air,  swaying slightly in an  errant  breeze.  It steadily  lifted,  higher  and higher,  until it  was  hanging  a hundred metres above the town.
	For the Gulf forces it was the final straw.  Many threw down their arms as they turned and fled.  One by one, the defenders on the  walls  realised  that the Gulf soldiers  were  running  from something  behind  them.  They turned and stared at  the  balloon floating  above their town,  not a few of them looked  like  they were about to go over the walls after their enemies.
	I  tipped my helmet back to stare up at the balloon. "Well, I'll be damned, it works!"

******

	Getting  it put together in time had been a real  bitch.  To start with,  the Sathe don't have silk,  not real silk.  How  can they?  The caterpillars that produce the silk don't exist in  the States,  not in this world nor mine. The closest they can come is a tight-woven, lightweight cotton that doesn't hold air that well by itself.  But lacquer it with a coat of the varnish Sathe  make from  pine gum and it'll hold air well enough to get you off  the ground.  What with the weight of the bag, the thing couldn't take much in the way of a payload, but it could manage an observer and enough  fuel  to keep it up for a  while.  Provided  the  weather decided to cooperate.  For intelligence it was invaluable, giving us a birds eye view of the entire battlefield.  We knew what  the Gulf  forces  were up too almost as soon as they  did.  We  could pinpoint  troop concentrations and foresee just where  they  would strike  next.  That  gave  us  the time  to  move  arbalests  and mangonels into position along the walls.
	It  also  gave  us  the first  warning  of  the  worst  news possible.
	From the gondola of the balloon I watched in dismay as more ranks of Sathe marched from the forest  road.  Reinforcements;  swelling the diminished ranks of the Gulf army beseiging Weather Rock.  Tendrils of soldiers  were making their way eastwards,  forming another  camp downstream  from us.  In the town below Sathe were crowded along the ramparts, watching the enemy reinforcements in silence.
	There  were a hell of a lot more than five thousand;  eight, maybe  nine thousand at a guesstimation.  Where had  they  come from? I guessed that the Gulf armies were sweeping  up  through Eastern territory in three prongs, maybe more. We had stopped one of those prongs, and now another had joined it; whether through a request  for reinforcements or a prearranged  meeting,  I  didn't know.
	I  sighed.  At  least the air up there was  clean.  Down  at ground  level the miasma from the dead of war was noticeable  all the time,  at its worst around midday.  Up there the stink the coke fire burning above my head.  I looked across at the Gulf encampment, a hollow feeling settling inside me. Maybe we could hold them for a bit longer, but not forever. Never forever. It was only going to be a matter of time. A gust of wind set the basket rocking gently, creaking. For a few seconds I eyed the guy rope: it'd be so easy to cut it, float away over another world.
	Yeah, it'd be easy. Shaking my head I waved to the ground crew way below. The balloon bobbed once,  then  started  to descend.

******
	
	Someone  over  there,  maybe  the commander  of  the  recent reinforcements, had started to use his grey matter.
	Damnation!
	Trenches  and  low walls of earth braced with  wooden  beams zig-zagged  their  way  across the fields to  where  Gulf  troops laboured at raising bulwarks against rifle fire.  They'd  learned to keep their heads down when they discovered that three  hundred metres is not an M-16's maximum effective range.  Nobody bothered -  or dared - to recover the bodies,  they still sprawled on  the earthen breastworks that grew hourly.
	Now  they  stretched in a gentle crescent the width  of  the town, east to west.
	Again,  thank  god for our eye-in-the-sky.  From the  walls - even the three-story ramparts of the Keep -  it was impossible  to see what was going on behind those bulwarks.  From over a hundred metres  above the town it was obvious,  but there wasn't much  we could do about it.

******

	With  a crack and spray of granite chips, a rock the size  of my  head  struck  the top of the wall and  pulverised  a  merlon. Another arced over and kicked up a dusty cloud as it impacted the packed  earth of the courtyard.  A soldier was being carried  off, screaming and thrashing with a smashed leg.
	The battery of Gulf catapults were hidden from line of sight behind  hastily  constructed  breastworks.   I  could  see  their spotters giving directions.  There was a volley of muffled thumps and dark shapes curved towards us.
	I  ducked back behind a merlon as stones  clattered  against the wall.  There were muted impacts as more hit the sandbags over our heads.
	Chirthi looked across at me from behind his piece of  cover. "So, what do we do now?"
	"I am working on it. Can our catapults hit those things?"
	He peered around the stone.  "Only with small  stones.  They may  crack a few skulls,  but nothing we could throw  would  have much effect on their machines."
	"Even  if  we  could,  they would simply  build  new  ones," R'R'Rhasct pointed out.
	"How many have they got?"
	"Last count: fourteen. They fire them in volleys."
	Another  projectile flew in with a whirling hiss to  shatter against  the wall,  knocking another merlon loose.  The piece  of fortification tumbled out of sight.
	Shit! You ever have one of those days. . . ?
	I  tipped my helmet off and scratched my head.  I  needed  a bath. "Okay,  the  Sathe  using those  things,  they  are  their engineers? The ones who build their equipment?"
	"Yes."
	"Then we will have to take the catapults and their operators out at the same time."
	"Wonderful, "Chirthi said. "Just one question: How? You have an idea?"
	"Uh-huh." I surveyed the town for a few seconds.  "Okay, get the balloon up with a spotter crew and get the catapults ready and crewed." Messengers scampered off into the town.
	"Alright,  Chirthi," I said, slapped my hand on his shoulder to pull him along. "I will explain on the way."

******

	The smoke-stained wall - all that remained of what had  once been a house - shattered under the impact of a boulder.  I  heard the crack and turned in time to see Sathe scurrying clear as  the two  story shell of a building slowly folded down on itself in  a rumble of falling masonry and a rising cloud of dust.
	Weather Rock mangonels thumped in response,  sending  stones sailing  back at the Gulf lines on lazy,  graceful arcs  to  land with  inaudible  thuds  and  puffs of  dust  against  the  Gulf breastworks.
	Gulf soldiers waved back at us,  their jeers carrying on the wind along with the stench of rotting carrion.
	I leaned back against merlon and squinted up at the balloon, the  chaos  of colors,  like a patchwork  beachball  against  the bottomless  blue  of  the  sky.   I  patted  the  M-60's  forearm assembly  then  swung the weapon up to settle it  on  a  sandbag. About forty metres out.  Dial the sights.  Ease breath out,  hold it, relax, first pressure, adjust aim, squeeze. . . 
	Muzzle  flash  burst  and  the  Gulf  trooper  flipped  over backwards.  Instantly the others were down in the mud, scrambling back for their lines. The one I'd just hit was still kicking, the round had been a little low.
	I  ducked  back  behind the merlon and yelled  down  to  the Greens  in  the courtyard behind the  south  gate,  "Down,  three marks."
	Finder waved back to me. "Ready!"
	I gave the signal: "Fire one."
	The  hollow phthonk of a 81mm mortar firing echoed  off  the town walls like a firework in a trash can.  Seconds later a  blur plunged  down  into the Gulf fortifications.  The blast  of  high explosive sent a cloud of dust fountaining into the air.  I could see a log flip upwards,  tumbling end over end to hit the  ground and cartwheel to a standstill like a caber.  Perhaps the throwing arm from a catapult.
	In  the  balloon  above us a spotter  sent  the  signal  'on target'.  A lucky first shot.  The spotters changed their  flags, waving out corrections to the mortars.
	There  were  more  distant  thumps and a  volley of heavy boulders slammed into the walls, knocking masonry loose. I saw one knock a chunk out of the corner of the gatehouse  where  it rose  above  the walls,  spraying chips of pulverised rock  and clouds of mortar on the parapets below.
	The three mortars fired more volleys,  one after the  other, in  a dozen raggedly spaced coughs.  Sathe cavorted on the walls, howls and yelps  of  triumph rising as the rounds burst along the length  of the  Sathe trenches.  Columns of dust and smoke rose  and  spread above their fortifications, drifting down like a black fog as the concussion of the blasts died beyond even the rolling thunder  of echoes.  Sathe  emerged  from the haze;  just a  few,  dazed  and wounded, hauling themselves over the breastworks to lie twitching in the mud and trampled grain.
	From the balloon I heard a cry,  "In their heart!" The flags waved directions for the next volley:  down fifteen  marks,  left two.
	A  single  mortar thumped.  The round struck  further  back, amidst  the  tents  and pavilions of the  Gulf  camp.  Again  the spotters waved corrections and again the mortar fired;  five more times.  The  Weather Rock catapults joined in,  lobbing  grenades over  into the Gulf positions,  the sharp explosions mixing  with the  blasts  from HE mortar shells.  Even when the  mortars  fell silent  - with only a few rounds left - the  catapults  continued firing. Sathe , male and female, stripped in the heat of the day, laboured to haul down the ponderous oak arms.  The whole assembly kicked  like a mule when those arms slammed up,   one  after  the other,  three more volleys of six grenades.  Then more towers  of smoke  were climbing toward the sky;  screams wailed  across  the fields.
	In their heart !

******
		
	Two hours  later and trails of oily smoke were  still  rising from  the  Gulf  siegeworks,  the  sounds  of  panicked  shouting shrilling  on  the  air.  Chirthi turned his furry  back  on  the panorama  and regarded me with bright eyes.  "What  other  tricks have you got hidden away?"
	"Not enough," I ran my fingers through greasy hair.  "I  saw the Gulf messenger. What was that about?"  
	"They wish to parley and Fres's accepted the offer."
	"Uh," I nodded.  "Good. At least we can buy time." A thought struck me and I bit my lip. "That WAS her reason?" I asked. "Just buying time? She does not plan to. . . "
	He turned and led the way toward the southern gatehouse.  "I think so sir, but. . . " he broke off.
	"But what?" I prompted.
	"She has  to consider her people.  There is  the  chance  - however remote - that perhaps she does wish to surrender, despite her oaths to the Realm."
	"I think that she is not the type for that," I replied.  She had already defied the Gulf Realm, and seriously pissed them off. If she surrendered, they might just pound the  Fres's clan into the dust from sheer spite.
	"I hope you are a good judge of character,  because there is now  no doubt that the Gulf realm would do anything to  get  your knowledge."
	"It is one thing to have the mind, but it is another to find out what is inside it," I grinned at Chirthi with a lot more confidence than I felt.
	He didn't look convinced. "Failing that, I think Hraasa would be satisfied to have you impaled and roasted over a spit."
	I grimaced. "Thanks. Hey, if something does happen to me, make sure that Rehr knows about it. It is very important. All right?"
	He bowed his head: "As you wish."
	Fres's  was waiting at the southern gate along with  several of her lieutenants.  I caught the scroll she carelessly tossed me and stared at it helplessly.  The Clan Lord looked surprised when I ruefully told her I could not read.
	"Their lord says that he wishes to meet on the road  halfway between  our  camps.  There are to be no more than  five  in  our party," she looked at me, "and it must include you and myself."
	Going  out  there.  Finally face to face  with  the  bastard who'd  put  me through hell and back. I felt my heart lurch and glanced toward the heavy wooden gates. "You are agreeing, High One?"
	"Yes."
	"Do you wish to surrender?"
	She  hesitated before answering:  "I do not know.  You  have seen their new forces arriving,  they have siege engines and many thousands  of fresh troops." Her claws punched through the  paper she  was  holding,  "Unless  you  know of  a  way  to  stop  them cold. . . No?  I  did not think so;  and your weapons will not  stop them  forever.  If nothing else,  I may be able to give  us  some time."
	"Do you really think they will offer reasonable terms?"
	"No,  but I have to search every branch for a solution," she rubbed her muzzle. "Are you willing to accompany me?"
	I nodded. "Yes."
	"Sir!" Chirthi protested. "You cannot. . . "
	"Yes I can!" I snapped, wiping my hand across my face, bringing it away covered in grime.
	"You don't trust that turd?"
	"No, I don't. There is something I need from the barracks. . ."

******

	R'R'Rhasct's  yowling shriek echoed off the walls behind  us as our small group rode out of the gatehouse.
	"I told you she would not be happy," Chirthi muttered.
	I glanced back over my shoulder. "That was a good reason for not letting her know." Felt good to get back at that furball for what she'd done to me. Behind us,  I could hear Sathe voices howling in argument as  R'R'Rhasct tried  to persuade the wardens to open the gate.  They had  their orders and they stayed shut.
	The  smell around us became incredible as we passed  through the centre of the battlefield,  the Sathe riding and me  walking: nothing  would  persuade me to try and ride  a  llama. I'd  look ridiculous. Besides, it was extremely doubtful they could carry my weight any distance. Flies buzzed around bloated corpses, what remained  of  the  casualties  from  earlier  battles  after  the scavengers had eaten their fill.  Flesh had putrefied,  turned to black  slime.  Faces  from which the fur had fallen  swollen  and black,  bone and eye  sockets  and rib cages squirming  with  maggots  and decaying flesh.  More recent cadavers were still recognisable  as individuals,  unseeing  eyes - their third eyelid half  drawn  in death - staring at us.
	I shuddered and turned my head away, to see the same view on the other side.  The Sathe were gasping through their mouths  and for once I pitied their superior sense of smell.
	As we drew further away from the town, the stench grew less. It  was by pure misfortune that the town lay on the down side  of the prevailing winds.  In the distance ahead we could see  riders setting out from the Gulf camp to our south.
	"There are more than five of them," Chirthi observed glumly.
	"They're holding the cards," I said.  The  Sathe  all looked at me. "Forget it."
	The  two  parties stopped a goodly distance away  from  each other.  Nine  warriors in their black and red armour cloaks,  all carrying swords and bows at the ready,  spread out across the road while their leader rode forward to meet Fres's halfway.
	 Hraasa.  Hraasa,  the enemy I had plenty of reasons to fear and hate but had never seen.  Now I was looking at him.  I wasn't that impressed.
	True,  as a High Lord,  an autocrat in the Sathe aristocracy,  he was larger than most,  but beyond that he wasn't staggeringly exotic.  A patch of silver-white fur on his muzzle made an  arrow targeted  on  his  broad  nose,  but otherwise  his  fur  was  an unobtrusive fawn. His armour was a matt black that seemed to soak up the sun. Hot.
	The  wind  whirled small clouds of dust over my boots  as  I stood and waited for something to happen.
	Finally  Hraasa laid his ears back slightly and looked  down his nose at Fres's.  "I am glad that you decided to listen to our terms, Fres's."
	"I had nothing better to do," she replied just as easily, as if talking to an old acquaintance. How many noticed one corner of her thin lips curled to show a flash of white?  "What is it  that you want?"
	"I want to know why you continue to resist us," he  snapped, all pretence of amicability vanishing under the sodium  harshness of his glare. "You know that you cannot win. We have thirteen thousand warriors and engines of war. More than enough to level your pathetic town to rubble.
	"I  am not ungenerous.  I am offering you the chance to survive. Any of your warriors who  accept  my amnesty will be gladly welcomed and well treated.  Surely you  do not want to be responsible for the complete demise of the  Fres's Clan."
	"The  Fres's Clan has chosen,  unanimously,  to fight you," Fres's  replied;  level  and cool.  "You have played games with honour, you have murdered, stolen, lied, raped, and destroyed. There is no way that I would surrender our cubs to your soiled claws."
	He  bowed his head slightly. "Only an idiot would claim that war is a clean exercise," he said.  "Those traps that litter  the ground outside your walls,  are they honourable?  I think not. We are taking back the land that is rightfully ours. I know when you stole it from us, you showed us no mercy."
	  Fres's looked incredulous. "That was so long ago there are not even any records. Our Realms did not even know of each other's existence! And there was  no mercy needed; there was no fighting. That land was empty! You cannot claim what no-one owned!" Fres's spat.
	"Temper;  outbursts like that do not become you," the  other growled.  Then  looked over Fres's' shoulder, seeing me as if  for the  first time.  "I have heard much about  this  creature,  Clan Lord,  but it is even stranger and uglier in the flesh. You: come here!"
	I looked at Fres's.  At her beckon,  I reluctantly handed my M-16 to Chirthi,  then stepped up alongside Fres's'.  All the Gulf warriors stared at me and I tried to ignore them.
	"You have caused me much pain," the Gulf commander told me.
	"You should talk," I replied coldly.	
	His  eyes widened slightly,  then he flickered his  ears  in amusement. "Ah, you speak better than I had expected. Do you know that when I was told that a monster had saved the life of Tahr ai Shirai, I had those responsible for the failure executed? Huh. . . " He shook his head.
	"I can believe that," Fres's muttered.
	He ignored her.  "Your name is K'hy?  Yes?  Good. You see, I endeavoured  to  find out as much about you as I  possible  could when  I  learned that indeed you did exist.  You  would  be  most interested  to find out how that came about." He cocked his  head to one side; inviting me to ask.
	"How did you learn?" I asked through clenched teeth.
	"There was a commotion on the docks one day.  A fishing boat had  come in with a strange catch;  a yellow boat literally  made from air,  and an incredible creature," he said,  then grinned at me.  "Unfortunately we did not realise how ill the creature  was. We took his reluctance to cooperate as belligerence;  He died  in our. . . care."
	I felt numb,  hollow. I gritted my teeth and said nothing. A man. Another human, and he had killed him. That HURT!
	"Tell me," he continued.  "Why do you fight for the  Eastern Realm? I can offer you great power, wealth, whatever you wish."
	It was my turn to laugh;  grimly.  "What I want,  you cannot possibly offer."
	"You wish to return home?"
	"You have done your homework." First Fres's and now him.  Was there a book out about me or something?
	He tipped his head quizically but didn't ask, instead said,  "Why do you oppose me? This war  is  really  none of you business you know. It is a Sathe affair, Outsider."
	"No," I shook my head.  "You made it my business.  It has been my business since I came here and witnessed murder.  It has  been my  business since you had me drugged and kidnapped,  beaten and tortured. You would not leave me be. I had to take sides."
	He wrinkled his muzzle, the silver fur rippling and the  thin black  lips  drawing  back in a grin,  "But  if  you  are  killed here, then what will become of your female?"
	That jolted me again. "If something happens to either of us, you will be the one to regret it."
	He  looked  amused.  "I  doubt that you have  that  kind  of power."
	"You  have  no real idea of what powers I have,"  I  grinned deliberately.  "I  have made sure that should we fail  here,  the Eastern Realm will be even more powerful."
	He smiled lazily. "If indeed you do have such powers, why do you not use them against us?"
	"Perhaps  it  is because I  have  a. . . conscience.  Should  I become responsible for the death of not just these thousands, but untold  millions in the future,  I would be no better than  you." 
	"Ah, very noble," he grinned. "Yet you would happily decimate our brave troops with your weapons."
	"Not happily," I replied. "Never happily. But I would rather kill those I consider my enemies than have my friends killed."
	"You would consider THESE your friends?"
	I  looked  at the Eastern Sathe lined  up  behind  me,  then turned back. "Yes."
	"What do you see in them that is lacking in us?"
	"Do you really want a list?"
	That got him. His jaw tightened and ears trembled;  Looked  like he wasn't used to people  talking  back. "Fres's," he hissed to the Clan Lord. "There is another path that you may take,  one that should be more appealing to you.  I offer you the chance to end this war here and now.
	"Look around you,  look at the death.  You can also see that your town really has no chance.  You are their Clan Lord.  It  is your duty and your honour to protect them,  to let them live. You can still do this."
	I could see the truck coming.
	Fres's bit: "How?"
	"Simply give this. . . this abomination into my hands."
	It wasn't such a surprise but my heart lurched then began  a staccato dance against my breastbone.
	The Gulf Lord continued without so much as a blink: "I swear -  as  I am willing to before an assembly of Clan  Lords  of  all realms - that all our forces will return to the Borderland  River and  the southern provinces will be acknowledged as belonging  to the Eastern Realm.
	"Think  of it Hystf ai Fres's.  You could end this  fighting simply by handing the outsider into our care."
	It was bait well chosen and Fres's nibbled like a trout after a dry-fly.  It was me or her Clan.  I looked at her sitting as  though  frozen  on her tooled  leather saddle. It was her decision.
	I knew,  as I had never been certain about anything, what it would be like if Hraasa got me.  I don't claim to have much of  a threshold  for pain and Hraasa had had a human.  There  had  been time  for  him  to have his little games.  He would  know  how  I worked, what made me tick. . . what made me scream.
	And there were their drugs.
	Perhaps deep down that scared me more.
	Perhaps I could beat torture, but chemicals. . . I didn't know.
	Damnation,  they're chemists before their time. Their thamil would knock me cold with just a whiff. They had other concoctions to paralyse,  neuromuscular paralytics that would disconnect  the brain from the muscles,  opiates that would leave me babbling  at clouds  for hours afterwards.  They had other substances  -  more refined and effective - that they used on each other. If they had anything like thiopentone sodium. . . 
	I  couldn't fight something that ate away from  the  inside, leaving  me  malleable like a piece of wet clay  on  the  potter's wheel.
	Eventually  Hraasa would have what he wanted from  me,  then the  Gulf Realm would be back,  swarming over the  Eastern  Realm like ugly on a bulldog.
	And Hystf ai Fres's knew this.
	And she hesitated.
	"Think,"  Hraasa goaded,  his voice  becoming  silky-smooth. "The chance to finish this dying lies in your claws; simply reach out and grasp the opportunity!"
	The Clan Lord of Weather Rock clenched her right hand,  then flexed  it  and gazed with slitted eyes at  the  tiny  opalescent  scythes that curved from her fingertips as Hraasa's words  washed over her.
	"Why  do you hesitate,  Fres's?  Do you place this  creature above  the  safety  Clan,  above the lives  of  your  cubs?  What Outsider can mean so much? You heard it say it has the ability to destroy us,  yet it chooses not to.  Instead it plays games  with your people,  watching them die to save its own miserable  hide." Hraasa  smiled  slowly,  smugly.  "I leave the decision  in  your hands. Decide, Fres's."
	She made her decision.
	"Hraasa, you can shove it."
	Hraasa's  ears shot up.  He must've been as surprised  as  I was. Where the hell had she learned that? She must have overheard something I said.
	"That means no?" Hraasa asked.
	"Exactly."
	"Then I think this meeting is at an end," the Gulf Commander said,  nodding  slightly in a token gesture  of  respect.  Fres's returned the hollow honour and reined her llama about.  I turned to follow but was stalled by the Gulf Lord's soft voice,  for  my ears only:
	"Pause, K'hy!"
	I stopped and turned to him.
	"A gift from your fellow creature." He pulled a small bundle out of a pouch at his belt and threw it.  The bundle unrolled in the  air, dumping the contents on the ground.
	A severed hand lay there in the bleached dust; a human hand.
	I just stared at it, not quite believing what I was seeing.
	"I  thought  that you would like to know his hide  is  still intact. . . excepting  that piece of course," Hraasa  continued.  "A shame the skin is so delicate though; it makes stuffing that much harder. At this time his hide is the centrepiece of attraction in the  great hall,  the rest of him. . . really,  he  was  delicious." 
	The words took a second to sink in,  then I slowly raised my head to stare at him, the shock turning to anger.
	"You. . . did not."
	He grinned, then ran his tongue around his lips.
	"You. . . you Motherfucker!" The one step I  took toward him was all the provocation he needed.
	One smooth move and the Gulf commander was holding a stubby .38 revolver. For a split second I was staring down a muzzle that to me  seemed the size of a cannon's bore, the savage grin of Hraasa behind it.
	Even as I tried to dodge thunder exploded in my face, burning pain and another hammer and dirt and dust was choking me while I gasped for a breath that wouldn't come. Another hammer. . . 

******

	"Get him inside! No, gently! Gently! . . . over there! Where is that festering physician! Hurry!"
	Hands  caught at me and every muscle in my chest tried to tear itself apart. I was aware of being carried, then the heat of the sun was cut off, as was the noise.
	"How is he? I had no idea that. . . "
	"You! Because of you this happened! Look at him! His death is something you are going to have to explain to the Shirai!"
	The voice sounded familiar, and it was annoying me.
	My  face burned, my mouth  was swollen,  sore,  and filled with  a  metallic taste. Every shallow breath hurt.
	"Fool!  You had your orders not to let him risk himself, but what do you do? You go and. . . "
	There were other sounds in the distance: The muted sibilants of Sathe shouting, the bleat of llamas, the distant bustle of the town. That voice was familiar:
	"Rhasct," I croaked. "Shut up."
	She did - abruptly - then hands touching my cheeks. "K'hy?"
	I opened my eyes, staring straight into her astonished face. Chirthi looked just as surprised.
	"K'hy?"  R'R'Rhasct wiped fingers down my chin: they came  away red.  "Bring  water!" she snapped at a guard who disappeared  out the door.  I was lying on a stretcher in a small room with  solid stone walls, cool air. The gatehouse?
	I moved my arm and moaned out loud.  Damnation! This is what a punching bag must feel like. My entire front felt like a single bruise,  my head throbbed in time with the lights in front of  my eyes and there was an overwhelming taste of copper in my mouth.
	Alive.
	I felt fantastic.	
	"Stay  still," R'R'Rhasct urged,  pushing me back.  "Do  not move."
	"Bullshit!" I mumbled again.  My nose. . . shit,  it felt  like it was broken.  That explained the blood.  With a groan I sat  up and started fumbling with my cloak.  "Oh,  shit! Chirthi, help me with this."
	He  started  to, but R'R'Rhasct slapped  a  hand into his chest, stopping him, "You have done quite enough. . . "
	"Rhasct!"  I said softly and she shut up.  She watched  as Chirthi helped me remove the cloak and shirt;  he had to cut them away as I couldn't lift my arms without pain.  Two Sathe - one  a guard and the other a physician - hovered in the doorway.
	"He knew what he was doing," Chirthi said.
	The Kevlar and glass-fibre  flak vest had stopped  the  .38  softnosed rounds,  spreading the shock of their impact out across my entire torso. The bullets hadn't penetrated, but my entire chest was burned and bruised. Better than dead any day. Chirthi fumbled with the straps and fastenings and I grimaced in pain when he lifted it off over my head. Two deformed bullets fell from the tattered glass fibres to rattle on the floor.
	R'R'Rhasct's ears went flat when she saw my torso: old scar tissue, black and blue, but unpunctured
	Chirthi snarled at her, then threw the flak vest aside and stalked out, pushing past the physician on his way through the door. The doctor glanced after the retreating soldier, then said, "I was told there was an emergency."
	R'R'Rhasct spat, then snapped, "Yes. Him."
	"That?!"
	"Him," she snarled. "Check him. See if there is much damage. And K'hy," she levelled a finger at me, "one word of complaint, we have ten guards in here to hold you down. Understand?"
	I opened my mouth, then shut it again.
	"Good." She slapped the physician on the shoulder. "He is all yours."
	I don't think the doc even really knew what he was looking at. He grimaced at the scars covering me and gingerly began his examination, hissing, exclaiming to himself, looking up at Rhasct in surprise. "Is he supposed to have twelve ribs here?"
	"Yes," I muttered. " Shit! Ouch! Careful."
	"Sorry," he said, then reared back in shock.
	"Yes," Rhasct sighed, "he talks. Keep working."
	He did so. I forced myself to lie back and capitulate to his poking and prodding. Ribs flexed and nerves screamed their protests under his pads. A rib sprained or cracked. Nothing broken, so the physician said.
	I'd never dreamed that Hraasa may actually have a gun!
	The skin on my abdomen was starred by contusions, rapidly turning black and blue, the muscles knotting and cramping painfully. "See, Rhasct? Nothing wrong with me." I tried to stand, gasped and went light-headed with pain, and sat back down on the edge of the bed, hugging myself. My nose started bleeding again.
	"I  hear you are going to live." Fres's was standing in  the doorway. 
	"High one. . . " Rhasct started to speak.
	"Out," Fres's jerked her hand, indicating  R'R'Rhasct and the doctor. They left. She closed the door behind them.
	"High one," I tried to stand again, to bow. . . 
	"Do  not even try it," she pushed me down again.  "You  look terrible. . . Saaa! Your nose."
	"Nothing serious." I dabbed at the blood on my upper lip.
	She hissed again. "Shave you! Perhaps  I should have gifted you to  the  Gulf Realm, K'hy. That was an incredibly stupid thing to do. If Hraasa  had known that you lived we would not have been  able  to stop him taking you. You would not have woken in Weather Rock."
	"Yeah,"  I said dryly.  "That would have come as a bit of  a surprise."
	She  fleered lips away from needle teeth.  "It is no  joking matter.  I  saw  you when Hraasa offered those  terms;  you  were terrified! You know as well as I what would happen if they hooked their claws in you."
	I winced slightly.  Did she have to use that metaphor? "Then why did you take so long to turn him down?" I asked.
	She looked guilty, then confessed, "It  was a. . . tempting offer. Tell me, would it be so bad for the Gulf realm to have you?"
	I started to say something, stopped, tried to put it another way and couldn't, remembering the pain of claws,  the hissing of Sathe voices, the hand falling in the dirt and a mental picture of a human figure,  motionless, gazing out across a smoke-filled room,  aswarm with shadowy cat-like  figures,  the fireflies of torches reflected from cold glass eyes. . . 
	"K'hy?"
 	A lionesses face was staring into mine, her breath hot and rank. My  muscles were still trembling but my voice unnaturally calm, "High One, should they take me, kill me. Please."

******

	From  high  on the walls of the keep I watched yet another assault on Weather Rock being beaten back. Someone  in  the Gulf camp had been using his  grey  matter. They had advanced behind shields this time.
	There had been a lull in the fighting,  then the Gulf forces advanced from two sides, sheltering behind two metre high shields made  from  heavy half-rounds that needed several Sathe  to  move them. They managed to absorb the crossbow fire. The catapults could bowl them over like ninepins,  but they were  too slow,  too unwieldy. It was the guns that stopped them. Even a round from an M-16 went straight through, and the M-60s chopped the  shields  to  toothpicks and tore into  the  masses  ranks behind.  I guess they were screaming,  but with the distance  and roaring of gunfire,  I couldn't hear anything.  Even so,  a small group of them actually managed to make it on to the walls,  where they  quickly disappeared under the blades and  flamethrowers  of the defenders.
	Black shafts of smoke drifted up from the battlefield.  Seen from my angle the fires that caused them were hidden behind the city walls. Surviving Gulf warriors - those who were left - fled back to their respective hosts. There were not many of them.
	My chest ached as I limped down the narrow stairs,  stepping aside to let the  occasional surprised  warrior  past.  The halls of the keep were  large  and airy,  with  polished  stone  floors and  huge  lattice  windows. Tapestries,   paintings,   and  glass  sculptures  decorated  the hallways and chambers.
	I  jumped as I almost collided with a guard coming around  a corner,  his  arm and sky-blue armour sodden and  dripping  blood onto  the marble flooring.  He gazed at me with tired eyes and  limped  off down the corridor. I stared after him and felt guilty.
	The  barracks  were empty when I got back;  the  beds  lying empty  and  shafts  of sunlight streaming in  through  the  dusty windows.  A panicked mouse scuttled across the floor and vanished into a hole between two ill-fitting planks in the floor. I rubbed a  clear spot in the grime coating the small  window  overlooking the  street and watched as a precious few Sathe went about  their business.
	Subdued  groups  of cubs wandered about,  many of  them  had probably had their homes burnt on that night a year. . .  No, only a couple of weeks ago.  Wagons clattered by,  taking  weapons  and supplies  to the walls;  bringing the wounded and the  dead  back across  the river.  Work had been started on a barricade  on  the bridge,  but nobody held many illusions about being able to  hold the Gulf Realm with that.
	Despite the drawbacks it could cause to the Eastern  forces, it had already been decided to destroy the bridge rather than let it fall into enemy hands.  That would only delay them for the few days it would take them to build another bridge or ford,  but  it was better than nothing.
	The  wooden  stairs  creaked as six of  the  Greens  wearily stalked  into the room.  They chattered quietly as they took  off their  jackets  and  bulkier pieces of equipment  and  left  them strewn   about  on  their  pallets.   Going  off  for  food, they said. Perhaps sex as well. Alright, food I could believe, but if they had the energy to get it up after their extended shifts they had more stamina than I gave them credit for.  I wished them luck and  declined an invitation to tag along,  warning them  to  have their pants on if the alarm gongs sounded.  They  laughed,  slung their weapons over their shoulders and left,  jokingly  remarking that  that  may  be  the last chance they  would  have  to  enjoy themselves.
	Maybe they're right.
	But God only knew where they got the energy.
	I  stood at the dusty window,  watching the traffic down  on the street.  God,  sleep was something I needed, but there was so much to think over, so many things to do. How long would the ammo last?  What  if the weather didn't hold and we couldn't  fly  the balloon,  where would they attack? Could we hold out? Would I die here?
	Outside,  I saw R'R'Rhasct cross the street,  walking slowly toward the barracks.  She paused and looked back the way she  had come  -  toward  the walls - then entered  the  building.  A  few moments later she trudged up the stairs and went straight to  her pallet where she dropped her rifle and rubbed her fawn mane  with her hands, raking her claws through the tangles. Tired, worn, and upset.
	"Something wrong?"
	R'R'Rhasct whipped around, then relaxed. "Oh, sir. I did not notice you."
	"That is a first," I smiled.
	Still watching me,  she sat down on her mattress. "Sir. . .K'hy, may I talk with you?"
	"Sure," I went over to sit on the pallet opposite her. "What is up?
	"What is. . . ?" she began.
	"I meant what is happening."
	"Oh,"  she  rubbed at her muzzle,  then it twitched  into  a half-hearted  snarl.  "We fight against impossible odds  and. . . My Ancestors!  Why are males like that?  I was wrong!  I admit  that freely.  Why does he hold that against me?!" She suddenly  turned away from me and curled up, trembling violently.
	"Hey!"  I reached  out  and  cautiously  touched  her  bowed shoulder; surprised and puzzled. "This is Chirthi you are talking about?"
	"Of  course.  Who  did you think. . ." she broke off  into  an agitated chittering, her jaw jerking.
	"Hey, Calm down," I touched her mane, stroked it. "Please, Rhasct, what are you talking about?"
	Still curled in on herself she muttered,  "I asked him. . . and he refused."
	"What did you ask him?"
	The trembling resumed. "To be my mate of course, what else?"
	That  threw me. I flinched back, then carefully asked, "Rhasct,  I am not so sure I can  help  you with this. Would it not be better to talk about this with another Sathe?"
	She  hugged  tighter in upon herself and  hissed,  long  and slowly,   like  a  tyre  being  deflated.  "Sir. . . K'hy. . . you  are different. Male, yet not male. And you know so many things. I can trust you," she forced a smile then and I touched her furry ears.
	"Thank you, I  think." I smiled uncertainly,  pleased but also bewildered. Why did she  come  to  me like this?  I  was  no  ancient,  white-bearded philosopher;  able to hand out profound advice on call, but maybe I could help. . . 
	"K'hy,  why  did he say no?" she mewed piteously.  "What  is wrong with him?"
	"You hurt him, Rhasct."
	"What? I never harmed him! I never would!"
	"I am afraid you did," I glumly observed. "You did call him a fool. . . "
	"I was afraid for you!" R'R'Rhasct protested.
	"And  angry at him," I pointed out.  She began to  tuck  her head under again.  "Rhasct,  come on!" I implored. "Please do not do  that!  It  is  not all that bad.  Give him  a  bit  of  time, apologise,  explain,  talk  to  him for  Christ'  sake!  He  will understand, just give him time."
	"We do not have time," she whispered.
	For that I had no reply.  Again I touched the luxuriant  fur of her mane; so soft. "How old are you?" I asked.
	"Fifteen years."
	So young!  God,  a soldier at the age of fifteen. Perhaps be killed in battle at the age of fifteen.
	She  was  still trembling as I touched the  bunched  muscles around  her  shoulder blades,  then  her  neck,  started  rubbing them. . . 
	She started in surprise. "What are you doing?"
	"It is to help you calm down," I told her as I kept kneading her  muscles.  I  felt her flex inquisitively under  my  fingertips,  then, one muscle after another, the tension  begin to drain away.  The young female. . . woman. . . slowly straightened out,  rumbling slightly,  until she was sprawled out on her stomach.
	"Feeling better?"
	"That is. . .wonderful," she murmured drowsily.  "Can you  not go lower?"
	I flushed: "That is not for me, Rhasct."	
	She  gave a small snarl of mock protest but  didn't  protest again as I kept my hands up out of those dangerous areas.
	"How long have you known Chirthi?" I inquired carefully.
	Her  voice  was steady this time.  "Ahhhh,  since I  enlisted,"  she said.  "We were in basic training together,  then assigned to the same garrison-house in Mainport. That was. . . ah, two years now."
	"Two  years. . . You took your time getting serious about  your relationship," I said.  "There must have been better times to ask him."
	"Uh. . . Yes," she shuddered under my hands. "We have copulated a couple of times.  It was some of the best I remember.  I should have asked then,  but it was not serious.  I always thought  that there would be a better time. Now it seems, perhaps not."
	"It is not impossible," I somehow managed to sound assuring. "The Gulf forces are getting nowhere fast.  We just have to  hold them back until reinforcements arrive."
	"And  when  will that be?" she hissed.  "Perhaps  not  until after the Gulf realm have overrun the walls."
	It  was my turn to shudder.  Past run-ins with  Gulf  forces were still black scars across my memories.
	"Saaa!" R'R'Rhasct hissed. "Not so hard!"
	"Sorry." I eased off.
	"Where did you learn to do this?"
	"A female of my kind, she taught me."
	"Back at Mainport, that one?" the Sathe rumbled.
	"No, not her. Years ago. I was still going through school."
	"She must have taught you well."
	I  chuckled.  "I am almost less than an amateur.  There  are those who do this professionally.  I would not try and compare my skills to theirs'. Also your. . . bodies are different."
	"And  fur  must be different from bare flesh,"  she  hissed, then turned her head and reached up to touch my hand where it was rubbing her shoulder.  "Your skin is so thin. What does it feel like to have no fur? Cold?"
	"Sometimes,"  I admitted.  "Very cold sometimes. But I feel more than you do: the wind, sun, rain. . . and I do not have to worry about fleas so much."
	Her  ears flagged amusement before she settled down and  was quiet. I let my hands move in their own patterns. Why was I doing this for her?  I was supposed to be her superior,  and here I was giving  her a rub-down!  Also there was the little matter of  the fact that she'd drugged me, played nursemaid. I know it was under Tahr's orders, but how was I supposed to get anything done if she kept deciding it was too dangerous?
	Well,  despite  all that,  I still liked her;  she  and  her seemingly  stormy  relationship with Chirthi.  Give them  both  a little  time. . . God  and the Gulf willing.  Chirthi was  a  little pissed with her at the moment,  but they were both right for each other, they just needed to realise it.
	Or was it right to encourage this? They were part of a team, and  what  we  didn't need at this time  was  someone's  personal feelings distracting them from their duty.  If one was in trouble I didn't  want  the other doing something stupid and  risking  more lives.
	Damnation! The Sathe army had no segregation of the sexes in its ranks.  Males and females bunked in the same barracks.  If  a pair wanted to screw:  fine.  They went for it. They didn't worry about pregnancy: outside of their Times it was impossible for a female to get knocked up. Even during their Times it was a mixture of hard work and luck. Because the sexes were so evenly matched physically, a single male couldn't force a female, nor vice versa.
	However, that was just a casual hump. I didn't know just what their pair bonding entails.  I knew it was more relaxed than marriage, but not much more than that. Was it for life? Did they divorce? How would it affect their. . . 
	I  was so wrapped up in my own thoughts I never noticed the floorboards creak behind me.  A wordless snarl, claws grabbed my neck and  sent me sprawling over the bed and onto the floor, rolling to scuttle away from whoever was attacking me.
	Chirthi. Furious.
	"Get  away from her!" he almost howled and launched  himself again as I tried to clamber to my feet. I scrambled backwards. "Chirthi! Hold it! Goddam it! I don't want to fight. . . "
	He lashed out.  Claws stung on my arm as I raised it to block. "Shit! Chirthi. . . "
	"Chirthi. . . stop!" R'R'Rhasct caught his arm,  drawing him up. "He was not trying to harm me," she tried to explain. "It was not sex!"
	Chirthi  stopped  but  still  glared  at  me,  burning  with something  I had never seen in a Sathe before.  This was a  Sathe who  knew me,  knew how I fought,  and he was armed  with  claws and teeth.  I was scared and he could smell it,  his  nostrils twitching violently as he scented the air, my sweat. "Do you want to challenge me for her?" he growled.
	"No!" I gasped,  hands out before me.  "Chirthi,  I was  not trying to do anything!"
	He  snarled  at me - a rumbling,  bass roar  that  froze  my muscles -  then turned to R'R'Rhasct, kneeling down beside her and laying  his cheek against hers.  "R'R'Rhasct,  what you asked  me earlier. . . I  accept." He moved his head and gently bit her  neck. R'R'Rhasct looked at me over his back, her eyes wide in surprise. Then her eyes closed and she nuzzled him in return.
	I stared at the pair for a second, then made a break for the door.

******

	The air on the keep's battlements was clear,  the night  sky glittering with stars while the fireflies that were the campfires of  the  Gulf  camp seemed like harmless sparks  on  the  distant horizon. The scratch on my arm had crusted over. I picked idly at the  scab.  I  don't know how Chirthi found me up  there,  but  I started in fright when a hand touched my shoulder.
	"No, Sir, I will not do that again," Chirthi said, glancing at my cocked fist. "I am sorry about what happened today."
	"I was not trying to hurt her," I said. "I was not trying to do anything with her. . ."
	"Sir,"  he  waved  me  to  silence.   "I  know,"  he   said. "R'R'Rhasct explained.  I am sorry. . . I came  in and saw you and I misunderstood."
	"Why?" I couldn't understand this. "Do you think I would try to. . . steal her from you?!"
	He looked at me,  then twitched his ears in rueful  laughter and moved back a couple of steps until all I could see of him was his  silhouette  against the grey nimbus  surrounding  the  moon. "Your wording is strange.  No, I think you would not, but another Sathe male might try. . . I am afraid I was thinking of you  as  a Sathe.  There  was  that  female in the Red Sails  whom  you  had howling  the  walls down," I saw his ears  flicker  again,  "then there was the reputation you have."
	Reputation?!
	"You  do not know?!" he laughed incredulously as I shook  my head.  "That way you have with females.  We have kept our  mouths shut,  I  swear it,  but it was all over the citadel how you  had both the Marshal and the Shirai vying after your services.  There have been suggestions going around the female quarters  that you have a 'way' with sex. Quite a few have been curious about that." He leaned against a merlon and grinned when he said that.
	"Oh, Christ  on  a crutch!" I grimaced and  leaned  my  head against cool stones.
	"What is wrong?"
	I rubbed my hand across my face.  "I never knew about that," I told him. "That is the last thing that I need."
	"What is the matter with that?"
	"Just  say that I do not WANT females chasing after  me,"  I muttered. Well, not Sathe females anyway. 
	"Do  not want. . . !" Chirthi hissed incredulously, scratched industriously at his crotch.  "You  are  beyond understanding,  K'hy. . . but  you  know  why I  was  worried  about R'R'Rhasct?"
	"Yeah,  I understand," I replied.  "She told me why she  was sharp  with you and I think that not all of the blame  lies  with her.  I  am sorry Chirthi,  I should have told her about what  we were going to do, about the armour I was wearing."
	Chirthi  cocked his head to one side.  "How did you know  he would do that?"
	"He is an asshole," I explained.  "I was expecting something like that,  but not the gun." I had an all too vivid recollection of that pistol's barrel.
	"I  heard what he was saying about that  other. . . H'man  they found,"  Chirthi  said.  "I am sorry." I heard him sigh  and  his ears,  silhouetted against the sky,  flicked and dipped.  Then he looked directly at me: "How many have come here from your land?"
	"I wish I knew," I shrugged.
	
******

	I  skidded  around  a corner,  gasping out  a  curse  as  my shoulder slammed against a wall, staggering me.
	The  news  from the balloon was not  good: Gulf  forces  were amassing  for  another attack against the town and  although  the fields  were strewn with their dead like wheat after  harvesting, there were still thousands of them.
	They were preparing themselves on two fronts,  getting ready to  assault sections of the walls weakened by  previous  attacks. When  we put the data the Sathe aeronauts had complied  onto  the maps of the area,  there was one fact that was instantly obvious: "I think we're up Shit Creek!"	 
	It was midday when they made their move.
	There'd  been reports from the North gate.  The  few  guards who'd been posted there had seen Gulf troops out beyond the walls skulking about, watching the town.
	I'd gone to check it out.
	Now I was headed south again.  As fast as my feet could move me.
	My boots beat a tattoo against the flagstones on the  bridge and the sounds of battle grew louder:  the clashing of steel, the sound  of battle cries and death screams.  Like the sound of  the sea  it was;  a continuous roaring,  a riot of white noise  mixed with clashing of metal.
	I sprinted around the corner of a blackened and gutted house to  find  myself  in  the  middle  of  the  fighting  around  the gatehouse.  A young Weather Rock soldier was being pushed back by the  vicious  onslaught  of an obviously  more  experienced  Gulf warrior.  The black and red armoured warrior tried to turn as  he heard  something behind him and his jaws shut with a  sharp  CLOP when  I  hit him with an uppercut.  He dropped his sword  as  the Eastern  warrior ran him through,  then left him to die  noisily, scrabbling at the hole in his gut.
	My  rifle was on the wall,  the south wall,  and there  were Gulf  between us.  The Gulf Warrior's sword  felt  insubstantial, like  a toothpick.  However,  those toothpicks were lethal and  a Sathe could wield one a hell of a lot better than I ever could. I threw the scimitar aside and cast around for something a bit more substantial.  The  only thing that immediately came to  hand  was an iron bar, about six feet long, rusty, but it had reach and heft.
	The  Gulf forces had broken through the wall to the east  of the gate and every second that went by more of them clambered  to the  top  of the wall.  Militia reinforcements  and  Greens  with grenades and automatic weapons were rushing to defend the  breech and the fighting on the ramparts and on the ground below it was a small war unto itself; bloody and fierce.
	A Gulf warrior finished off his opponent with a slash of his claws and turned to face me,  his eyes burning with  battle-lust. He  was  so  far  gone  my appearance  didn't  faze  him  in  the slightest.  His  scimitar struck sparks off my bar as he  slashed and  lunged and I parried for my life,  blocking a stroke  at  my neck,  dodging back, then swinging the bar like a baseball bat in a move S'sahr or Remae would've chewed me out for.
	Hell, it worked.
	He was good,  but he couldn't block the raw power behind  my blow; the bar punched right through his guard, clipping his head, stunning  him.  My boot came up into his stomach and  he  doubled over.  A  blow on the back of his head and he was sprawled at  my feet, blood seeping into his mane.
	Almost  immediately  I  found  myself  facing  another  Gulf soldier with blood on her sword and fur.  More cautious this one. She jabbed and I knocked the blade away.  My return blow  scraped her jaw,  making her jump back. Blocking her again, I almost lost my  fingers  in the process.  Again her sword came around  and  I kicked  out at her wrist.  She dodged that and fell back a  step, looking surprised then wary.
	As  she sized me up,  a Gulf Warrior behind her brought  his blade  around  in  a shimmering backhanded arc  that  caught  his Eastern  opponent  by  surprise,  slashing  across  his  forearm, cutting to the bone.  With one arm out,  the hapless soldier  was quickly disarmed, then dispatched by a chop across his neck as he turned to run.
	The  Gulf  warrior looked around then moved to aid  the  one attacking me.
	Shit! Two on one. . . that's not fair !
	Fair  or not,  those two didn't look like they gave a  damn. They  spread  out to give each other room to  work  and  advanced slowly on me.  I retreated before them, waving the bar before me, until  I  found I was backing into the ruins of a  gutted  house, rubble crunching under my boots. Maybe they'd step on a nail. . . 
	The one on my left attacked, her scimitar a flickering blur in the midday sun. I frantically spun the bar out and the sword spanged! away in a flurry of sparks. That was when the other one moved and I was barely able to bring the metal around to block his swing. I felt the jar go up my arm when metal met metal and his sword had a notch in it when he drew it away.
	The two went back to circling me, their swords still describing slow patterns in the air before them, trying to distract me. I took another step backwards and found myself  up against a crumbling wall. The two Sathe slowly spread their lips in vicious grins and their movements became more deliberate.
	I licked my own parched lips and my hands were sweaty on the bar, I could feel iron flakes sticking to my palm. Suddenly things seemed to go into slow motion; the Sathe both moved, one aiming high and the other low. The bar in my hands spun wildly and the impacts struck sparks from the iron. Several more times they attacked with blinding speed and somehow I managed to  turn or dodge the worst of their blows, but when they did drop back, I was gasping for air and bleeding from a minor gash on my leg  and another across my shoulder. There was no way I was going to win this.
	Frantically I looked around.  I was in a cul-de-sac, the shell of a gutted building,  with broken, sooty walls on either side hiding this   particular   little   tussle  from  the   Sathe   on   the fortifications. . . 
	My foot stumbled against something, a length of two by four. Clutching my bar in my right hand,  I scooped the wood up with my left. . . just as the Sathe attacked again.
	The female's sword flashed around on my left and I threw  my left hand up,  feeling splinters lance at my hand as the wood was torn from my grasp.  In my other hand the metal bar rang and  was knocked  against my neck.  I gripped it tightly with both  white-knuckled hands.
	The female cursed loudly,  her sword stuck in the wood.  In the second she spent trying to  shake it loose,  I spun the bar and landed a solid blow across the side of her face,  another into her stomach,  across the bridge of the muzzle, on the back of her head. . . 
	There  was a faint look of puzzlement on her ruined face  as she fell.
	The male stepped aside as she collapsed.  I shifted my  grip on my weapon and parried as he feinted at me. His blade flickered around  my  guard like a live thing and caressed  my  arm.  Blood welled, reluctantly at first, then flowing freely down my arm.
	I winced and he plastered his ears flat against his head and grinned.
	It was then I realised I really didn't have a  chance.  Only my reach and the strength in my blows were holding him back,  but I was tiring.  I clipped him a couple of times,  he recovered too fast.  It  was only a matter of time,  that time coming too  soon when  I stepped on something that rolled treacherously  under  my feet,  taking  other pieces of rubble with it.  My feet shot  out from  under  me  and my only defence flew out  of  my  grasp  and clattered loudly to the ground as I went over backwards.
	With  sweat running down my face I faced the Sathe and  knew that  I was going to die;  everything but the Sathe went  out  of focus. I opened my mouth. . . 
	He gave a triumphant yowl and lunged,  then his cry cut  off and  he  sprawled across my body with a force  that  knocked  the breath out of me, then lay in a twitching heap over my stomach. I just  lay there for a second,  then frantically shoved  him  off, scrambled  away and crouched staring at the feathered shaft  that protruded  from the back of his neck then looked up at the  Sathe who stood on a pile of rubble, still holding a spent crossbow, an M-16 slung over her shoulder, grenades at her belt.
	"My  Ancestors. . . You  just cannot stay out  of  trouble  can you?"
	Then  she  rushed forward in concern as I doubled  over  and threw up.

******

	The arrangement of copper tubes and the brass kettle hanging over the fire hissed and dripped. I winced and twitched as Fen bandaged  my arm. "Hold still," he muttered as he tightened and tied it off. I flexed my hand; stiff and sore, but it still worked.
	"Will I be able to play the mandolin when this comes off?" I asked.
	"Of course," Fen said.
	"Incredible!  I have never been able to play it before," I  said, straight faced.  He looked uncertain, then laughed. Old joke, but new here. I grinned, then flexed my hand again, "Damn!"
	R'R'Rhasct was sitting on a pallet nearby, staring at me.
	"I guess I had better thank you," I said to her.
	That was enough to set her off.  Her ears flattened and she hissed,  teeth bared.  "What were you thinking!?" she exploded.  "Attacking Gulf warriors  without  even  armour or  sword!  Where  was  your  own weapon?"
	"Sitting  on  the  other side of a  couple-dozen  Sathe  who wanted to make sushi out of me!" I retorted,  taken aback at  the outburst.
	"You are crazy!" Her eyes were wide.
	"You must be the hundredth person to tell me  that.  Perhaps there  is  something in it." Some of the things that I  had  done recently would get me locked up in an asylum back home.  I was doing what  the Sathe were doing,  almost imitating them,  maybe I  had gone further than I had realised in trying to be accepted.  Would the old Kelly Davies have rushed into a burning building?  Maybe. Would he have raced headlong  to almost get himself killed?
	I doubt it. But things have changed and I am one of them.
	"I guess I owe you one," I said to R'R'Rhasct.
	"One what?" she looked suspicious.
	"Anything," I said. "You did save my life."
	"That is not necessary," she said, but her mane fluffed up.
	"I think that it is.  I am rather attached to this life  you know. I have got used to it and it fits me well."
	She twitched her ears.  "It is my job to protect you. You do not make it an easy one."
	One of the Greens,  Hraisc,  had stopped a crossbow  quarrel with his shoulder.  He was in a lot of pain as the steel tip grated against bone, but getting the thing out had to wait until we could get him relatively clean and have a patch ready. The few physicians  that Weather Rock had were working on the many  other wounded but Chir  had done stuff like this before - God only  knows where - so the task of removing the quarrel fell to her.
	Hraisc's  teeth clenched on the solid lump of  wood  between his jaws and he spasmed as Chir worked the bolt.  She paused in  her work: "Sir, he's going to have to be held down."
	"Oath," R'R'Rhasch muttered,  then looked at me:  "K'hy,  do you think you could make your size useful?"
	So I held his arms while R'R'Rhasct sat on his legs.
	Hraisc  was breathing heavily and his jaws quivered as  Chir grasped the slippery quarrel with both hands, braced herself, and yanked.  The  sticky  tearing  of  the  quarrel  coming  out  was accompanied  by  a crackling sound as Hraisc bit the  wood  clean through.  Two  pieces of tooth-mutilated wood fell from  Hraisc's suddenly slack mouth to lie beside his head on the pallet.
	The bloodstained shaft clattered to the floor as Chir  moved to staunch the blood that pumped from the shoulder.  The bandages were still steaming from their boiling. Until my makeshift still bore fruit - so to speak - we'd have to make do with heat.
	The    unconscious   Sathe   twitched as Chir tied the bandages in place.  He was  not the  only one suffering.  In the town outside there  were  thirty dead Sathe and over forty more wounded.
	That  left  us with about two hundred trained  soldiers  and another three hundred possibly unreliable militia to hold against perhaps ten thousand experienced opponents.  We had very little ammunition for the rifles left - about sixty rounds for each  of the eleven remaining Greens.  The defences outside the walls  had been breached in two places, and then there were the ridiculously low walls themselves.
	Through the windows horizon was starting to turn red and  the sky  to cirrus-streaked blood.  I was drowsily tending  the  fire, watching almost pure alcohol plunking drop at a time into a small bowl, steady as a water clock.
	"Is it working?" R'R'Rhasct knelt down beside me and blinked at the arrangement.
	"Yes."
	She gingerly sniffed the glass bowl then drew her head  back quickly,  wrinkling her muzzle.  She sneezed once then looked  at me.  "It takes its time.  That is supposed to be a medicine?" she said with suspicion. "It smells like it can peel paint."
	"Uh-huh. You can use it for that too," I agreed. "Or you can drink it."
	She  stared  at the miniature still and made  a  sound  like 'ugh',  then was quiet for a while before speaking.  "That  thing you were doing to my back the other night,  would you be willing to do that again?" she asked hopefully.
	"Would Chirthi object?"
	"Go ahead, K'hy," a voice from behind us called out.
	The  firelight washed across her,  waking gold ripples  from her  fur  as  she lay on her stomach before  the  hearth.  A  low rumbling  sounding from deep within her throat as I rubbed her shoulders.  Despite our situation she was lax,  completely relaxed,  almost boneless in fact. Occasionally she gave vent to a Sathe 'ouch' as I touched a sensitive area, then sank back again with a sigh. "You could make a living doing this," she murmured after a time.
	"You serious?"
	"Very.  I would that you could teach this to me, but. . . " the low  rumble in her throat stopped.  "K'hy,  before the sun  rises tomorrow, you leave."
	"Oh. You. . . "My hands froze when what she'd said clicked. "Say what?"
	She twisted around so she could see me better. "Tomorrow you go,"  she said firmly,  staunching any protest I tried  to  make. "You said that you owed me; now I am calling your debt."
	She sure didn't wait around. I swallowed: "You are sure?"
	"Absolutely."
	"But. . . "
	"Your word."
	I simply couldn't think of anything to say.  Finally I  just nodded, "And what will you do?"
	"Before it is light there will be some troops taking the last of the cubs and as many wounded as possible out.  You go with them and try to get them past the Gulf forces to the north."
	"The rest of you. . . ?"	
	"The rest of us will stay and fight."
	"And die."
	Her muzzle wrinkled but she said nothing.  The fire crackled away happily,  highlights from the copper kettle gleaming in red, orange,  and gold. "My Ancestors, Rhasct! There is nothing you can do now. Get everyone out of the town."
	"No," she simply said. "We swore to protect the Realm and we swore to protect you.  We will do both;  We protect you by sending you back to Mainport; we protect the Realm by staying to fight."
	I  turned  to the rest of the  Greens, "You are all of the same mind?"
	They were.
	"It would seem I have a mutiny on my hands," I sighed and looked at the glass bowl; it was almost full of a colourless liquid.  I  dashed a bit on a hearthstone and touched  a  glowing splint to it: an almost invisible blue flame sprang up. Good, the stuff was pure enough.
	Hraisc  was sleeping.  He stirred and opened his eyes  as  I moved the bandages aside.  "This will sting," I warned  him,  but couldn't be sure he understood me.
	He whimpered when I poured raw alcohol over the wound in his shoulder,  but  that  was all.  I washed the red flesh  out  with boiled  water  and dashed a bit more alcohol over the  hole  then replaced the dirty bandages with freshly sterilised cloth. All I could do.	
	A  hand  touched my arm.  "K'hy?"  R'R'Rhasct  was  kneeling beside me. "You will go? You will not try any tricks?"
	"Yeah," I said in English.
	"What was that noise?"
	"Yes," I reluctantly rephrased my answer. "I will go." 
	I didn't know how I felt about that. It was a chance to get out alive, but in doing so I'd be deserting my squad. Hell, I didn't want to die! But the Sathe soldiers seemed to have  death wish;  a loyalty to their Realm that went beyond  all logical  bounds. As if they didn't have any thoughts of the future. But I'd lived with them, I'd fought alongside them; I knew they had lives and dreams and hopes and fears. Why were they so willing to throw them away? To  their minds it was something that was perfectly  natural to do, to die protecting their territory. I couldn't compete with their single-minded devotion to duty.
	
******

	The  sun hadn't yet even appeared as a glow on the horizon but Weather Rock's northern gate was bustling with activity. Llamas bleated and complained, axles squealed, wheels rumbled. Milling Sathe stood aside to let the small caravan leave, silently watching after it.
	I  watched the dark shadows of the town walls  falling  back behind us.  Above the walls hung a giant Chinese lantern, the technicolor envelope lit from within  glowing softly. Seen against the dawn sky it was an impressively beautiful sight. I began to get an inkling of how the Gulf Sathe saw it, but it wouldn't stop them from storming the walls again, for what would probably be the last time. Perhaps the balloonists would be able to get away. At the least they would burn the balloon, as they would poison the wells and food supplies. Except for the swords of the soldiers, there was nothing else to hold the Gulf Sathe back.
	Several boxes sat near my feet. In those boxes were the M-16s and machine guns.
	"Take  them  with  you," Chirthi  had  said.  "It  would  be disaster for them to fall into Gulf hands.  You will likely  need them  if  you  should  run  into  any  Gulf  bandits.   With  our ammunition, I think you will be alright."
	The convoy rattled and squeaked through the early dawn;  the last  convoy that would be leaving the town.  I looked around  at the  cubs. The oldest were also staring back  at  their home, the youngest keening in distress, unable to understand what was happening.
	Why wouldn't the Sathe leave?
	The  question persecuted me as we drew further  and  further away from the doomed Weather Rock.  I hung my legs over the  back of  the wagon and put my head in my hands,  rubbing  my  temples. They  were  cats - highly evolved cats - but  cats  nevertheless. They  still  had very strong feline instincts,  as  their  mating habits showed. I guessed that their territorial instincts were just as strong, perhaps even linked in some way.
	You  may wonder how a race that is governed by its  hormones could  survive.  Well,  there are more than a few  humans  who're ruled by their glands:  what about phobias?  And as for being socially oriented, humans are perhaps more so than Sathe. We flock together in herds of millions,  we have a strong family instinct, and also a strong instinct to propagate the species. We live in a perpetual,  almost hard-wired distrust of  each other.  Every  human claims to hold a wish for world peace and brotherly love,  but when you get large groups of them together, there is almost always some kind of argument involved. About the only time when people get together to enjoy themselves without some kind of conflict would be at concerts.
	Are we really so different? Are THEY really so different?
	It was a moot subject. I pushed my thoughts into a corner of my  mind and closed the door on the musty chambers of  memory  to draw  out  and  ponder over  later.  Meantime  there  were  other worries. Gulf Sathe to the north of Weather Rock. I knew they were there; somewhere. Where?
	As the sky to the east brightened, sunlight cycling from red through orange to yellow-white dashing across distant altocumulus clouds,  the  town  was  ten klicks behind  us.  I  kept  looking back, but saw nothing but the wilderness around us.  It was one of the  adolescent  cubs who grabbed my sleeve and pointed  out  the armed Sathe riders blocking the road in front of us.
	I  cursed and grabbed for the loaded M-60 at my feet, readying the weapon while the riders milled and reined their beasts toward us. Then I hesitated:  The riders were  wearing armour of grey with  green embossing, colours that I had never seen before. . . who the hell were they?!
	Then  I  saw  the blue and silver armour  of  Eastern  Realm troops amongst the grey riders.

******

	"This is K'hy," Tahr said.
	One wall of the blue pavilion was drawn aside,  providing  a vista  of wind-stirred treetops surrounding  the  hill.  Sun streamed  in  through small holes in the sides and  roof  of  the tent,  speckling the inhabitants with tiny spots of light, moving as the tent fabric moved in the breeze.
	Two guards stood on duty just outside the entrance, hands resting on their sword pommels;  one dressed in blue and silver, the other in grey and green.
	Inside  the tent,  I was standing facing  five  Sathe.  Tahr glittered in her gold and silver jewellery and blue breeks, two rings jingling in her ear. Remae in  her comparatively drab  armour waited a  respectful  distance behind her.  The male to whom Tahr was speaking stared at me, his heavy pelt of red-brown   fur  turning  grey  in  places, but  it  gave  him   a distinguished air.  He was only wearing jewellery: a single silver wristguard.
	A male and a female - his marshal and advisor - both wearing their  grey and green and an occasional piece of silver  or  gold decoration, stood behind him.
	"Tahr ai Shirai,  I had heard reports, but even seeing it in the  fur,  it is hard to believe," the male  wondered,  his  eyes taking in the details of my face and uniform.
	"You grow accustomed to him," Tahr responded airily.
	"He talks?"
	"He talks," Tahr gestured to me. "High one, this is K'hy, a H'man and a guest of our Realm. K'hy, I am honoured to introduce you to K'Soo ai Sthr't." His first title, it sounded like a sneeze. "Commander of our Lake Trader allies."
	I bowed, a little stiffly. "Sir, it is an honour."
	K'Soo's eyes widened and his claws peeked out of his fingertips, but he bowed in return; also stiffly. "He sounds strange, but perfectly comprehensible," he said to Tahr then looked back at me. "I never believed. . . "  He made an obscure gesture with his hands and  Tahr gave a subdued hiss of laughter.
	I ground my teeth. What were they doing? Every second wasted was one Weather Rock could not afford. "Tahr! Please!"
	The Sathe looked at me, K'Soo's ears flattened a bit and he glanced at Tahr. "Forgive him," she appealed. "There are some things he cannot understand." She turned to me and gestured at a corner of the pavilion strewn with colourful cushions. "Sit."
	I did so, followed by the two Sathe. The others remained standing unobtrusively against the tent walls.
	"Now, K'hy, what has happened?"
	I  took  a  deep breath and managed to  compress  the  major events  of  the past couple of weeks into a  few  sentences.  The Sathe listened to what I had to say, but not all of them took me at my word.
	"It is impossible!" K'soo snorted. "You cannot seriously expect me to believe that?!"
	Tahr touched his arm. "Sir, when you have known K'hy as long as I have, you will find out that he does something impossible or at least highly improbable almost every day."
	For  a second he stared at her as if she'd flipped her  lid, then  at me.  "How could twelve Sathe and. . . him, stop the Gulf Forces dead?"
	"He just told us," Tahr said, deadpan.
	He opened his mouth, then snapped it shut again and growled. "All right. The  fastest  scouts can be there within  two  hours."  He flowed to his feet and swept from the tent,  his two  lieutenants in tow.
	Tahr  turned to her Marshal.  "Remae,  I want the First  and Second  scouts on their way already. Get the  Shoso,  R'sest, and Sireth clans ready for forced march. The others are to break camp and start after them as soon as possible."
	Remae  bowed,  then  was gone,  the two guards at  the  door moving aside to let her pass.
	Suddenly warm, furry arms were flung around my neck. "We got a single message from you, then nothing," Tahr rumbled against my chest. "I thought we were too late."
	The  guards  at the entrance exchanged  brief  glances  then turned their gaze outwards again.
	Beneath the midday sun, the grass on the gentle hillside was swaying in the breeze,  spreading like waves or ripples on water, two faint tracks of trampled stalks following us to the crest.
	In the valley below, an army was on the move.
	Columns  of soldiers,  like ants,  were marching away from circular clusters of tents,  pennants and flags emblazoned with garish clan devices fluttering in the breeze.  The lines of troops,  the wagons and carts,  the mounted scouts, stretched off as far as I could see,  until they were lost beneath the  foliage of the trees to the north.
	Rank  upon  rank  of  swordsathe,   archers,  engineers  and messengers  scurrying around between clusters  of  troops.  Tents were  being  broken down and stowed  away.  Several  squads  were shifting wagons stacked with pikes. Hah, that brought on a twinge of pride.  Now I knew pikes WOULD work. They were practical.  Gulf tactics were  to rush and overwhelm their opposition,  their forces spreading  out as  the  faster outpaced the rest.  They didn't hit as  a  solid, cohesive unit;  the proverbial irresistible force.  But the Sathe pikes fully intended being the Immovable Object. With archers and regulars  in support,  they should be able to stand  against  any infantry charge.
	In the valley below there was a disturbance, troops moving aside as over a hundred Sathe on llamas passed them at what on a llama passed for a canter. On their backs the riders wore bulky cylinders. Real firepower. I hoped they'd make it in time.
	Tahr  had  flopped  down in the  long  grass,  her  nostrils flaring  as  she tested the breeze,  the  distinct  duskiness  of sunbleached grass and airborne pollen.  Then she sneezed and blinked up at me. I sank down beside her and watched the distant troops.
	"You never did say why you left," she said.
	"I did not have much choice. Rhasct. . . she had me by a promise I made.  Anyway, I think that if I had not agreed to go that way, I would have woken to find myself drugged and chained in the back of a wagon." I looked at Tahr.  "Why did you do it?"
	"Their  orders. . . is  that what you mean?" She  was  suddenly interested in her hands, stubby fingers busy plaiting three strands of grass.
	"You know it is."
	"Perhaps I care about you." She threw the small braid  aside and looked directly at me,  "K'hy,  you are a troublemaker.  I do not know if you do it deliberately,  but you always seem to be in the thick of something.  I gave the other Greens explicit  orders to make sure that nothing befalls you. But I never expected anything like this.
	"All our  intelligence told  us their main forces were pushing up through the centre  of the Realm," she moved her hands to illustrate her point. "If your messenger had not arrived, we would be marching to the west while the  Gulf  forces stepped neatly around us and tripped us from behind. They would hold the only river crossing for hundreds of kilometres."
	"Maybe  they  do," I said,  staring at the  marching  troops below.  Clouds  of dust were being raised by  feet,  hooves,  and wheels. They were moving, but it was so fucking slow!
	"We are trying," Tahr growled.
	"Yeah,  I  know," I absently agreed, noticing her ear. I'd seen it before, but it hadn't registered. I reached over and brushed the fur in her ear. "Where did the new ring come from?"
	"You  finally noticed." She smiled and the two rings  chimed delicately. "I am now mated to H'rrasch," she proudly stated.
	That  rocked me.  I blinked stupidly.  Pleasure at her  good fortune?  There  was  that,  but  also. . . disappointment?  I never thought she would go so far as to take him as her mate; I'd kind of thought of him as my stunt-double, filling in where I couldn't. I  kept staring, unable to think of anything to say.
	Tahr cocked her head, giving me a funny look. "What?"
	"Uh. . . I had hoped that you two would get along,  but this  I did  not expect," I shook my head,  then broke into  a  grin,  "I think that congratulations are in order, Tahr."
	She  laughed  and rolled on her back in the sunlight. "I thank you."
	"Where is H'rrasch?"
	"Still at mainport." She swiped at a bug and her jaw set,  "I will  not  lose another."
	It  was  simple enough.  She'd lost too  many  already:  old friends, her father, a lover murdered while she watched. There been too many deaths all round.
	"You will not," I promised her and smiled:  "I hope that you will both be very happy together."
	"We will!" she hissed, and rolling onto her stomach,  she linked her fingers, planted her elbows on the ground, and rested her  head on her laced fingers.  "K'hy,  you are truly  the  most incredible thing that has ever happened to me."
	Again  I  was lost for words and Tahr laughed  again  at  my flustered expression.
	Below  and to our right,  a group of blue and silver  guards appeared  from  amongst a group  of  tents,  looked  around,  and doubletimed it our way.
	"Huh!" Tahr snorted.  "That is the problem with  leadership: everyone is always following you."
	I  plucked a stem of grass and chewed on it  while  watching the soldiers running toward us.

******

	R'R'Rhasct had changed out of her camouflage fatigues into a 'normal' flanged kilt and ribbed leather armour,  as had the rest of  the Greens;  outfits better suited for swordplay. Fur  still matted with dust and dirt and blood,  reeking of smoke and blood, she  stood  to attention as Tahr and Remae swept into  the  room, then flinched when she saw me.
	Tahr saw that.  "It is all right. I ordered him to return with us,"  she  told R'R'Rhasct.  "He has told me that  you  tried  to follow  my orders,  but as you know,  he is a difficult thing  to keep out of trouble."
	I glared at R'R'Rhasct, then looked around at the other Greens and my heart sank: two missing. Wounded? Dead?
	There wasn't time to find out. An  orderly swung the ornate double doors at the far end  of the room open and signalled us to enter. Tahr took point into  Fres's's  study, with Remae and I bringing up  the  rear.  I caught a glimpse of R'R'Rhasct sagging in relief before the closing doors hid her from view.
	The Clan Lord of Weather Rock was standing over at the window but she turned as the Shirai entered and returned to her desk. "High  One,  I thank you for coming." Shit,  she looked exhausted. Her eyes were wide,  her milky-white third eyelids were just visible,  covering the  corners of her green pupils,  and her mane had been  hastily raked back. "Please, sit," she gestured to us.
	"Thank  you,"  Tahr replied as she chose one of  the  chairs facing  the  desk.  The Clan Lord sank down into the leather and  carved  wood monstrosity behind the desk.  Remae and I quietly took  the two chairs flanking Tahr. Damn Sathe furniture, still doesn't feel comfortable
	"Honoured  Shirai,"  Fres's sounded  as tired as she looked.  "On the behalf of my Clan, I lay my arms at your feet and bare my throat for your claws. We shall follow your tail and may none stray from the path you lead."
	The litany had been recited in a sing-song, in her eagerness to get it over and done with. I got the vague impression that she wasn't  all that impressed with either Tahr or  the  formalities. With her town at stake, who could blame her?
	I watched as Tahr touched her fingertips to Fres's's throat, just once,  just enough to drag her claws lightly through fur. "Hystf Fres's. I return your arms to you. I stay my hand. I accept your submission. Now," she  cocked  her head as she regarded the Fres's  Clan  Lord,  "I would know exactly what has happened here."
	Fres's  took  a  shuddering breath and  began  her  tale.  I listened  as  she described the days leading up  to  the  Greens' arrival.  They had heard tales and rumours of destruction in  the south,  but little was being done until the night when a  quarter of  the town was razed to the ground by the torches of  the  Gulf Realm. Tahr looked at me when she heard about the part I'd played that night, but she said nothing.
	For  over an hour Fres's went on,  answering  questions  and reeling  off  figures and facts that meant  little  to  me.  Even though I thought that I was fluent in Sathe,  her steady  talking and  frequent references to people,  places,  and  politics  that meant nothing to me often left me behind.  There were still a lot of words I didn't know.
	". . . it was this morning when I ordered that the cubs remaining in the town evacuated. It was only a couple of hours later.  We had scarcely three hundred warriors on the walls  when they attacked again." She took a deep breath and licked her  thin black lips.
	"They came as they had before, from two directions and we simply did not have the numbers to cover both approaches. They grew bolder when only crossbows were fired and they were on the walls almost immediately. It was like trying to hold  the  tide with your hands. . . We could not stop them.
	"High  One,  if  it had not been for your scouts and their flame weapons. . .  We would have fallen.  When  your banners  started  to fly from the  ramparts,  they  were  routed. Still,  it  was  not without a high cost." She  opened  a  drawer beside  in  the desk and pulled out a  bundle  of  thick,  yellow papers. She dropped them on the desk and quickly put her hands on the desk,  one resting on top of the other, but I had time enough to see how unsteady they were.  "High One,  this is a list of our casualties. The ones we know of."
	Tahr  silently picked up the bulky manuscript and turned  to the first page. All the Sathe who had died protecting their home, immortalised and impersonalised on pieces of yellowing paper.
	She was still holding the book and just staring at it when a scratch sounded at the door.  At a gesture from Fres's, Remae was at the door, opening it on the steward waiting there.
	"My apologies High Ones," he bowed.  "The Gulf Commander  is waiting beyond the south gate. He has called Challenge."
	Tahr snarled softly and flexed the remaining fingers of  her maimed left hand.

******

	From the small room in the gatehouse I could hear the  gates squeal as they swung wide.  Through the arrow slit in  the south  wall a swathe of the road was visible,  a group  of  three Gulf warriors waiting there with their llamas shifting nervously.
	Off in the distance, the masses of the Gulf army watched.
	The  sound of hoofbeats in the tunnel under  the  gate.  Six more Sathe appeared in my field of vision,  riding  towards  the waiting delegation. Tahr was one of those riders and Hraasa had a gun.
	My hands and armpits were damp and clammy with sweat. Beside me  R'R'Rhasct's nostrils twitched as she caught scent-traces  of my distress, but she said nothing.
	The Eastern delegation met the Gulf riders.  Terse bows were exchanged,  then they talked.  Whatever was said it was swallowed by the distance,  but there were gestures:  ears flattening,  the twitch of a hand upon the pommel of a sword,  movements stiffened by anger and hostility.
	The  sun  had  moved several degrees by the  time  they'd finished. As the two groups started to move away from each other, Hraasa  called  out  and  the  Eastern  delegates  stopped,  Tahr rearmost turning her mount to face him.  The Gulf Commander  said something that caused Tahr's ears to flatten.
	She spat something back at him and reined  about,  galloping past  the  waiting  Eastern Sathe and leading them  back  to  the safety of the town walls.
	The  Gulf  Warriors followed their leader back  through  the fields of death to their camps.

******

	"Tahr, please! I am lost! What is going to happen?"
	It  was dark outside,  and the small study in the  keep  was dimly  lit  by a single flickering candle.  Tahr was  honing  her claws  on a piece of wood while poring over reports scattered  on her  low desk.  She looked up at me and twitched her ears in  mild annoyance.  "K'hy,  at  some times your ignorance can amaze  even me."
	I was on the floor, sitting on a brightly coloured cushion, my back against the wall. Besides the desk and chair, it was the only furniture in the room.  Chagrined by her words,  I hung  my head, "I-am-sorry Tahr."
	Those slitted emerald and gold eyes watched me for a second, then  she ran her fingers through her mane and gave a faint  hiss of amusement;  or was it exasperation?  "Do not do that, K'hy. It makes  you look like a half-drowned cub." She sighed  and  pushed the papers aside,  stretching with a crackling of  joints:  "Very well.  Hraasa knows that he cannot be sure of a victory. He knows how  many  of  his  troops will die if  he  continues  with  this conflict,  so he has called a Challenge.  It will be as it was at Mainport,  at the Choosing.  Two individuals will fight: tooth to tooth,  claw  to claw,  to the death. The winner," She tilted her hands in  a shrug, "The winner will survive. The winner's Realm will survive."
	"The losing side will just. . . surrender?"
	She looked pained. "The losing Clan will surrender, clans allied with them. . . it depends. Most will sway their alliances, others might ccontinue to fight, others will grab for the opening, but they will lose. Without doubt they will lose."
	"Then why bother with the armies?" I protested. "Why not just  have  the  Challenge at the beginning  and  save  all  this bloodshed?"
	Her  claw tore a deep gouge in the piece of wood  she  held. "K'hy,  it is an ancient prerogative of the Clan Lords.  Fighting with armies always leaves some  options:  escape,  retreat. . . This leaves  nothing  save  complete domination  for  the  victor  and complete  submission for the loser.  If I recall  correctly,  the last  time it was used was two hundred and twenty five years  ago in the dispute between the Shirai and N'Fense clans;  two  rather insignificant clans."
	"Shirai insignificant?!"
	"Please,   tell  nobody  I  said  that,"  she  told  me, then continued.  "After  Syfee ai Shirai defeated  his  opponent,  the N'Fense  clan merged with the Shirai.  His descendant became  the first Shirai to stand above the Eastern Realm."
	"'Stand above'? What does that mean?"
	"Why. . . uh. . . it  is a term used to show. . . dominance."  Tahr's muzzle  wrinkled as she tried to explain something she'd always taken for granted. "From long ago. A chief would force any challengers  to  lie on their backs,  baring  their  throats  and stomachs in submission. Do you understand?"
	"Uh. . . Yes," I replied.  "When you are called High One,  does that mean the same thing?"
	"These days it is just a term of respect,  but yes,  it does mean  the  same  thing." Her claws  were  making  scritch-scratch sounds  on  the bit of wood.  "Ah,  K'hy,  you  wander  from  the trail. . . you were asking about the Challenge."
	"Yes. . . you said that two individuals would fight."
	"I did," she agreed.
	"Who?"
	She looked at the stick in her hands,  then deliberately set it down on the desk and came around to squat down beside me,  her hands dangling between her knees.  "K'hy, we will have the choice of  selecting champions,  or fighting claw to claw;  him  against me."
	I'd grabbed her arm before she could move,  making her gasp. "Champions!  Tahr,  I want to fight him.  Dammit,  I want to kill him!"
	"K'hy."
	"Look, I. . . "
	"You are hurting me!"
	I looked down and saw how deeply my fingers were pressing into her arm.  She fell back when I let go,  rubbing the spot and staring at me;  the remaining claws on her left hand were poking out.  Again I hung my head whilst my stomach sank,  "I  am sorry, Tahr."
	Her  pupils flared,  then contracted and she laid  her  left hand upon my knee. Slowly, the claws flexed. "You will not fight. I  do not know if Hraasa would fight personally.  He  may  simply choose  another  champion  to  oppose  you;  and  whoever  Hraasa chooses,  you can be certain that they will be good.  I know that you  can  fight  - in your own way - but could  you  have  bested Thraest if he had used his claws and you had to fight naked?"
	Remembering that fight,  I shook my head.  No. He would have taken me to pieces.
	"I thought not. . . K'hy,  your opponent would be just as  good as Thraest,  perhaps better.  He would slice you to shreds at his leisure."  To  emphasize her point she jabbed her claws  into  my leg, making me wince.
	"Perhaps  more importantly there is also the fact  that  you are not Shirai,  Eastern,  or even Sathe," she continued. "If you did  manage to win - and with your luck that is a  possibility  - Hraasa  or other Gulf Lords would doubtless claim  the  Challenge forfeit. You would simply waste your time."
	Defeated,  I slumped back against the wall and realised what could happen.  "Tahr, if Hraasa does win, what will happen to the Eastern Realm?"
	She sighed, a slow hissing like the life was leaking out of her.  "The Shirai clan will be taken into the  Mharah Clan.  Dissolved. The Realm would collapse. My defeat would be the defeat of the Shirai Clan. Shirai is the Realm. Without the Born Ruler, there is no cohesion, no Realm. Clans would fall aprt: Some might continue to fight, some would lie down for the Gulf Realm, others might decide they are the ones to replace the Shirai clan. Lords would argue, clans would fight amongst themselves.
	"Given time they would settle, a new Born Ruler would stand above the rest to bring the Clans together. There would be no time. The Lake Traders would return to their own lands and there would be nothing to stand before the Gulf Realm.
	"The Lake Traders would return to their own lands. The Eastern Realm would be carved up among the Gulf Clans, any Lords who resist would be executed along with their kin. Few would choose to do so.
	"It  is  traditional  to destroy the symbol  of  a  defeated Clan's, the heart of their strength. They would have the right to march  into  Mainport and destroy it until there is no  trace  of Eastern power left.  Small towns and villages would have to  turn to  Gulf clans for protection against  bandits,  animals,  and other  Realms  while  any remaining  Eastern  warriors  would  be branded as outlaws and hunted to death.
	"The  Eastern  Realm would be only a memory, and memories eventually fade."
	A whole nation gone, just. . . gone. As Carthage was levelled by the Romans;  when even the rubble of the city was ploughed  level and  sown with salt so nothing could grow there,  so  the  Hraasa would do to the Eastern capital.
	And  what would happen to me?  I was sure that Hraasa  would not let me rest easy. . . and what about Maxine?  Goddamn it,  there was no way he was going to get to her! If I had to commit suicide by walking into his tent and gunning him down, I'd do it. . . 
	"What?" I looked up; Tahr had spoken.
	"You have a problem," she repeated..
	"No, it is nothing," I tried to shrug it off.
	"You worry about what will happen to yourself and Mas?"
	That startled me. "That transparent?"
	"I  have had time to learn to see through  you,  K'hy."  Her ears  danced and the rings chimed.  "I have also given that  some thought.  If the worst does transpire, make all possible haste in returning to Mainport.  Take Mas and flee.  Go  north,  west. . . it does not matter, just leave this Realm."
	"But. . . "
	"Do not argue,  just do it! K'hy, consider it my dying wish, alright?"
	I  started to say something,  then swallowed the lump in  my throat. "Alright," I whispered.
	"Your word?"
	"My word."
	"Good."  She relaxed;  satisfied.  "Huh. . . Just stay  out  of sight  and you will not have to worry about pursuit;  they  think that you are dead."
	I blinked. "What?"
	"Hraasa  boasted  to me how he had rid the world  of  the. . .  Well,  what  he  said is not important," nor - I guessed  -  very flattering, "but the Gulf Realm believes that you are dead."
	But surely I had been seen  by  Gulf  Warriors   since then!. . . Hadn't I?
	"He seemed sure you were dead," Tahr assured me.
	Ah  me.  If only the Sathe were superstitious,  believed  in ghosts or something, then maybe I could just jump out in front of Hraasa and yell "BOO!" and he would keel over. . . 
	While  I'm at it,  if only an aircraft carrier would  happen by.  Ifs  are nice to dream about,  but they aren't  always  very practical.
	"K'hy?"
	"Yeah?"
	"You will go?" she beseeched me.
	A  small  question,  how could it hurt  so  much?  I  nodded minutely, "Yeah."
	She  reached out for my face and I felt a clawtip  touch  my cheek;  it came away with a droplet of moisture hanging from  it. The  tear  glittered as Tahr turned her  hand,  examining  it  as though it were a rare gem, then she stared at me.
	"Good luck, Tahr," I choked.
	She  didn't say anything,  she just hugged me. In return I drew her close, just holding her, feeling her muzzle press against my cheek, then a rough tongue rasp against my skin.
	"Salt," she murmured almost to herself.

******

	The shadows among the ruined buildings of Weather Rock  were deep.  The  darkness and the piles and latticeworks of  shattered masonry and timbers themselves sheltering me from wandering Sathe eyes. I wrapped the cloak tighter against the cool evening breeze that  stirred  the soot and the leaves of small  plants  starting  to  sprout amongst the debris.
	In the space before the south gate of the town,  inside  the walls,  a  circle had been marked out on the ground;  about  five metres radius. It was deserted.
	Far  enough  from  the  circle to  escape  scent  and  sound detection I crouched down in the shadows on a pile of rubble  and leaned against a wall to wait.
	A squirrel scampered into the circle.  Start, stop, test the air, scamper onwards. It sat up in the circle and quickly preened itself,  then suddenly bolted and disappeared over the town  wall as though the obstacle wasn't there.
	An  even dozen red and black armoured warriors who  appeared in  the town gates.  After all we'd been through to keep them  on the other side of the walls,  now they just walked in  unopposed. Equipment  creaked and jangled as the warriors crossed the  court to  form a crescent on one side of the circle.  They  stood  like obsidian statues, even their ears motionless.
	Blue and silver troops marched into view.  Just as  silently they  took up positions facing the Gulf warriors,  hands  resting upon sword pommels.
	It was so still that I found I was holding my breath.  I let it out as silently as I could.  Still it seemed as if they  would hear me.
	I  wasn't supposed to be there.  Except for these bodyguards, nobody was. They were the elite from both sides,  impartial witnesses.  By now the rest of the town would be deserted.  The confusion as the populace left had been more than enough to cover my tracks as I slipped away, and now. . . I waited.
	My  field of view was limited to the  circle,  the  soldiers flanking it,  and the gateway beyond. The soldiers stiffened as a cloaked  figure  materialised  from  the  darkness  beneath   the gatehouse and approached.  From the other direction came another, the  pair stalking toward each other from opposite sides  of  the circle.
	Tahr and Hraasa.
	They  stepped within the boundary lines and  slowly  circled until  Tahr was on the side nearest the Gulf soldiers and  Hraasa the Eastern soldiers.  Briefly they spoke; the soft words carried away from me by the breeze,  then they stripped off their cloaks, throwing them aside. But for their fur they were both naked
	My heart fell when I saw them together.  Not only was Hraasa taller than Tahr, but he was broader and must have outweighed her by fifteen kilos,  and judging from the way he moved none of it was fat.
	Tahr was worried as well. Her hands flexed; clenching and unclenching as she and her opponent exchanged stiff bows. When the claws came out and fangs were bared, I knew with a sick despair why Hraasa had declined a Challenge of champions.
	There was a storm in the circle;  the lightning  strokes  of claws  slashed out and the thunder of snarls reverberated  almost subsonically amongst the quiescent ruins.  Tahr was fighting with every  ounce of her speed and skill,  and I could see  it  wasn't enough.
	Dodging past Hraasa after the initial onslaught,  Tahr  fell back to the opposite side of the circle, panting heavily. The fur on her arms was starting to turn several shades darker as  liquid seeped  through it.  Hraasa turned and advanced slowly upon  her, and again Tahr darted past him,  landing a raking blow across his ribs.
	Looking  surprised,  Hraasa touched the mark and glanced  at his hand, then quickly back at Tahr.
	Tahr just hissed, jaws wide.
	His ears flicking,  Hraasa moved on his smaller opponent and again she tried to dart past him,  but he moved, fast, and a blow from  his hand snagged her shoulder.  For a second he  held  her, then she twisted, slashing back at him and the skin and fur gave way and she ripped free.
	Another rivulet started down her arm.
	I watched helplessly. I'd been unable to get my hands upon my  gun unnoticed,  and if I tried to interfere the guards would doubtless  cut  me down and declare the contest forfeit  to  the Gulf Realm. Hraasa had only a few superficial scratches, but Tahr was being sliced and diced. . . slowly.
	Tahr was faltering badly,  unable to block many of  Hraasa's strikes.  For a second he paused as she shook her head, then went for  her  again.   She  dodged  the  first  slashing  left,   and sidestepped  a  right,  but then Hraasa was upon  her,  his  jaws gaping, saliva glistening.
	Their snarls were punctuated by cries of pain,  too many  of them Tahr's, and then they were rolling in the dust near the edge of the circle; grappling to keep claws and fangs at bay. Tahr was pinned and shaken like a dog,  the back of her head impacting the ground with an audible thud.
	Dark drops spattered on the ground and she stilled.
	Hraasa climbed to his feet,  his chest heaving and his  eyes glued on Tahr's prostrate form.  For a couple of seconds she just lay  there,  then her chest heaved and she rolled over  onto  her hands and knees,  spitting blood.  Hraasa gave her a second, then kicked  her in the head:  hard.  Tahr was flipped over  onto  her back,  spasming like a beached fish in a mixture of dust and  her own blood, coating herself.
	Her nemesis took a step back,  falling into a combat stance, watching as she slowly recovered,  sucked air, and hauled herself to her feet.
	My God, after that pounding, she could barely stand!
	I stared,  horrified,  unable to do anything.  It must  have been willpower alone keeping her on her feet, and Hraasa knew it.
	He snarled at her,  circling her slowly like a waiting shark and she turned, staggering wildly with her head rolling as she tried to focus on him.  Deliberately he stepped away from  her,  moving close  to  edge of the circle.  There,  he lowered his  arms  and grinned  at her,  taunting.  She almost took a step but  her  leg betrayed her and she went down, kneeling before Hraasa with the blood covering her head and shoulders glistening like oil.
	In  his  triumph Hraasa threw his head back as if  to  howl. 
	Perhaps it was the moonlight on my skin, or just that he was at  exactly  the right angle,  or the  shadows  shifting  enough. Whatever it was, he saw me.
	And froze solid, staring straight at me.
	I  don't  know  how she did it,  nor  where  she  found  the strength. Her lunge was feeble, but enough; her claws hooked into his  chest  and ripped down,  just scratching,  but  pushing  him back a step. . . 
	. . . out of the circle.
	He didn't even notice.
	Ignoring  Tahr moving weakly on the ground  before  him,  he spun to his guards, and I was gone. As I ducked out of sight into the  shadows  of the ruined houses,  I could hear  him  screaming orders to his bodyguard.
	And  the  soldiers as they scrambled over the  rubble  scant metres  from  where I hid,  trying to stop my  teeth  chattering: "What is he talking about? Did you see anything? There is nothing here!"

******

	"I  know  what  I saw!  It was  that. . . that  thing!"  Hraasa hissed,  then rounded on his aide and snarled,  "And do not  dare say that my mind must have wandered!"
	The  other Sathe cringed.  "Sir,  nobody saw  anything.  The warriors found no trace of it. I myself saw you kill it, I saw it fall.  I  saw  the holes in it.  How could it  possibly  be  here tonight?"
	On  the other side of the tumbled wall,  I pressed  my  back against the masonry and tried to melt into the stones. Turning my head,  I  could just see through holes made by fallen  bricks  to where  Hraasa  in  his grey and black cloak  was  snarling  at  a subordinate.
	"How  do  you  expect  me to know  what  tricks  that  thing holds. . . perhaps it had armour."
	There was a pause.  "Sir, you have seen what that weapon can do; it ignores armour." There was another pause, even longer. "It did say it had powers. . . "
	"Shut it!" Hraasa turned on the other, eyes blazing and his ears laid back tight against his skull. "I will hear nothing of talk about 'powers'. That. . . thing is as alive as you or I, and I swear that its revolting head will lie on the ground before me, no matter what I must do to get it!"
	"Sir! You forfeited! The Lords are going to be. . ."
	"There are still paths open to me," he snarled.  "Some  care only  about the gold and silver in their hands;  the  affairs  of Clans they could not care less about.  They will remain loyal  to whomever  holds their payment and they are the path I shall  take. Saaa!  I swear: for all it has done to me, it is going to suffer. That creature's female will go first. . . "
	My heart stopped. No! Oh Christ,  no!  He couldn't!  He'd lost! It was supposed to be over. It was supposed to be done with. Feeling faint I leaned against fire-blackened brickwork, clenching my eyes shut. After everything. . . the bastard had threatened  Maxine. He wasn't  going to stop; I saw that then. He'd never stop.  Wherever we went in the Realms, Hraasa's agents would dog our heels.
	Their  voices  died away as Hraasa strode through  the  arch beneath the gatehouse, his retinue strung out behind him. After a while there came the sound of many hoofbeats, fading off into the distance.
	As long as I lived he would hunt me. . . us.
	I leaned my head back against the wall and looked up at  the clouds  pushing  across  in front of the  moon.  The  stars  were glimmering like things alive; laughing at me, a lunatic.
	As long as I lived. . . 
	. . . or as long as he lived.
	My fist slammed against the wall as I made my decision, then I was off: South.

******

	Scratching at my door. I  gritted my teeth and wrapped the sheets a  little  closer before  answering.  Remae's dark  form was waiting outside.  Sickly dawn light glowed through the  small window at the end of the corridor. "God!  Remae! How is she? What happened?"
	"I  knew that would be the first thing you would  ask." She pushed passed me, closing the door and leaning against it.  "The  Shirai is. . . badly hurt."
	"What? How badly?! REMAE. . . "
	"Do  not  shout,"  the  Marshal said  as  she  gathered  her thoughts.  "She has lost a lot of blood,  her collarbone and  jaw have maybe been fractured, and she has  been  badly  bruised, especially around her face. She sleeps now. The physicians cannot say. . . "
	I  sat down on the edge of the circular bed and hitched  the sheets up, trying to hide the discomfort that caused. It wouldn't do to have them slip down. "She won?"
	"Yes,  she won,  but I cannot fathom out why.  She was  more than three wholes dead while Hraasa was hardly scratched. Then. . .  something happened: he seemed to freeze.  She caught him unawares and pushed him  out of the circle." She waved her hands in a shrug,  "He was winning. He  had her.  I cannot understand why he would falter like  that, can you?" Remae was suddenly watching me intently, sniffing.
	"How  should  I know?" I hastily provided,  trying  to  look innocent.
	"Some have been saying he saw something."
	"What?"
	"I am not sure. Something that startled him enough to throw away the Challenge. Where were you last night, K'hy?"
	My guts clenched. "Around. Worrying."
	"Ah. I do not recall seeing you."
	"Why, I did not see you either. What a coincidence."
	"You were not anywhere near the Challenge?"
	"You know nobody was supposed to be around there . . . Wait. You think I was . . . Damnation!  If you want to know what Hraasa saw, why do you not just ask him?!"
	She studied me, then carefully sniffed  the air and her  muzzle wrinkled,  "An excellent suggestion. You do not know that Hraasa is dead?"
	"Wha. . . What? When? How?!"
	"There  have  been rumours from the Gulf camp  that  he  was found  dead early this morning.  He died in  the  night.  Perhaps honourable suicide after what happened last night?"
	"That would sound reasonable."	That  look again:  "The rumours also say that he  was  found dead in his bed, still warm; and but for the cuts Tahr had given him, there wasn't a scratch on his body,  however his throat had been crushed.  Completely crushed.  I would wonder how he managed to do that to himself. . .  In fact, I would wonder how anyone could manage to do it; and the guards saw and heard nothing.
	  "I have never heard of anything like it. . . And there was  a purse of gold right beside the bed.  It had not been touched. Who would pass by something like that?!" She paused, then grinned, "I suppose nobody would wish to take that furball's foul money."
	"You do not sound like you will miss him."
	Remae  hissed,  missing  my  sarcasm.  "Miss  that  impotent bastard?! He was responsible for the destruction of my home! Miss him?. . . Huh!" she snorted in disgust at the thought.
	I was quiet for a while. "Would I be able to see Tahr?"
	"I thought you would also ask that," she sighed and scrubbed at  her  facial fur.  "I do not know. . . I will tell you  when  she wakes. The  physicians still are not sure. . . are you  all  right? You look. . . strange."
	"Yes, I am fine. . . just worried." I smiled at her.
	"I  understand,"  she grimaced in an imitation human-style smile and then the door was swinging shut behind her.
	I stood there,  just staring at the carved wooden panels  of the door.  Shit,  she suspected me.  If she'd arrived just a  few minutes  earlier. . .   Shaking my head I returned to the  desk, sat down  and opened the drawer where'd I'd swept the small bottle and bloodstained cloths when Remae had scratched at the door. Letting the  sheets drop to the floor I laid my bare arm on the desk.
	My arms,  my shoulders,  my chest were slashed and  streaked with burning red lacerations where claws had flailed at me; first in disbelief, then in utter desperation.
	The alcohol ached terribly as I rubbed the contents into the wounds,  but  there  were limits to what it could  wash  away.  I grimaced,  salt  water  running through my  beard,  dripping  and stinging as much as the alcohol.

******

	Two more weeks on the road.
	Two  weeks  of  making sure I stayed  covered  up  to  avoid awkward questions about the new wounds that adorned my arms;  the painful  red  ribbons  wrapping themselves around  and  over  old scars.  Keeping them clean was hard; almost impossible. I'd had my tetanus jabs, but nevertheless my right arm started to stiffen up, the muscles around a slash on my biceps twitching.
	Mercifully,  that was all that happened.  My muscles bunched up  and my whole left arm ached abominably for a  while,  but  it went no further than that.
	The  allied armies were moving north  again,  their  numbers much depleted,  but not by losses.  About seventy percent of  the Eastern forces had continued southwards, sweeping the Realm clean of  any remaining pockets of Gulf troops.  Twenty percent of  the forces  of the Lake Trader alliance had gone with them  and  they would march to the southern border between the Eastern Realm  and the Gulf territories.  They would draw Eastern Clans to them  as  they passed the remaining small southern settlements and towns of  the occupied territories, further bolstering their numbers with conscripts and garrison troops.
	I guessed that they wouldn't stop at the Borderline River.
	The army of the Gulf Realm had collapsed like a house of cards. A couple of Clans tried to rally and fight, but. . .they never had a chance. Weather Rock was litered with surrendered weapons and armour, shocked and confused Gulf Troopers hundreds of kilometres from their homes just dropping them were they stood. Now the few hundred being escorted nortward had nothing, not even clothing.  The few light tunics were tattered and  torn. They  were fortunate that in the heat of summer clothing was  not really a problem.
	It  was  difficult for me to  understand,  to  accept.  They just. . . surrendered.  Remae  had reared back in disbelief  when  I asked what would happen if they reneged on their surrender.
	"K'hy, they would not!"
	It was gospel. Whether it was a single individual or a whole realm;  if you surrendered,  you surrendered.  There were no ifs, whys, or buts.
	The Gulf warriors were a formidable force no  longer.  Their Clans  had been torn apart by their captors,  their  Clan  crests burned and the ashes trampled into the dirt, then their left ears were lopped off to show they were POWs.  Frightened and  homeless Sathe  were  then  taken into Eastern and Lake  trader  clans  as slaves.  No. . . I  think serfs would be a better word.  They  would work on the land and in the holdings of their foster Clans.  They would have very few rights:  Being forbidden to possess  weapons, living in conditions bordering upon poverty,  but they were bound by oath to their Clan Lord, and in turn to the Realm itself.
	Oh,   in  time  they  could  gain  status.   Perhaps   their grandchildren  would become successful traders  and  landholders. Perhaps they would see the land their ancestors had left  behind. Perhaps. . . 
	But in the meantime,  these soldiers were soldiers no  more. They could try to forget about any families they might have,  but I wondered if any of them would succeed.
	For the lower clans and families, their loss in the conflict just  meant a change of bosses,  not too much of a change in  the daily routines of life.
	However the larger,  older, and more influential clans would not alter their allegiances so readily.  There would be  fighting and  probably Challenges and certainly more deaths. . . But the  war was all but over.
	Yes,  the war was over.  Those few words are easy enough  to say,  but  always  there were reminders.  Reminders such  as  the twenty five wagons in the train behind us.
	On  bad  nights  I sometimes still have nightmares  about  what  those wagons carried.
	 The  army  stopped for a day or so,  taking  on  water  and hunting food.  You'd be amazed how much it took to feed this many hungry Sathe,  and that food had to be hunted. It was during this break that Remae had come to me asking if I could help their physicians.  I protested that I was no doctor, especially when it came  to Sathe,  but she persisted.  Sathe were still dying  from wounds that the physicians had no experience with.
	I  finally gave in to her requests. While we camped the wounded were tended to in  shelters set up well away from the  bustle  of  the central  camp.  You  could  hear the moans and  cries and smell the stench from  well outside the tents. Inside. . . 
	I burst out again, retching and gasping. "Shit! Oh, Jesus!"
	If just the smells had been indescribable,  the things I saw in those tents were in another reality, straight out of the worst slasher flick..
	A favourite target of the sword is the gut.  Large and soft, the blade flickers in and out, often without killing, but leaving the victim open for the killing blow.  If that blow doesn't  come,  the agony before death would be maddening.
	Sathe  lay  in  that  sweltering  tent  with  dressings  and bandages the only things holding their intestines in: Peritonitis would  be  inevitable for most of them.  In  others  cases  sword strokes  had  laid the flesh on arms bare to the bone - like  whittling  with limbs.
	Sathe  with glazed and dull eyes watched me.  Many  of  them were Gulf. When the Eastern Realm had defeated them, so they had  taken  their wounded, and the Gulf  Realm  had  many,  many wounded.  Teeth and bone jutted from torn skin and fur.  The  air was  thick,  hot  and muggy,  a heavy cloying smell  floating  in it. . . like   a  slaughterhouse  on  a  hot  day.   My  gorge   did somersaults.  I swallowed hard to keep my last meal down and  pay attention as Remae introduced me to a harrased, be-spattered Sathe medic.
	They  were trying,  working to the best of their  ability, but there just wasn't much they could do. The physicians and their assistants had patched the wounded as best they could and now all they could do was hope they'd heal.
	Hope they'd heal.
	Jesus. For those Sathe troopers, being patched up could mean anything from having a banage slapped on to a limb sawn off. After that it was even odds if they lived or died. Infection got some, shock and blood loss others. I don't know what the mortality rate was, but in one hour three died. To make matters worse, they were dealing with a new kind of wound: the entry holes were small, but they shattered bones, pulversied organs and left a hole the size of a tennis ball on the way out.
	The physicians took me around the tents, a guided tour of things I hoped I'd be able to forget. I was shown cases with gunshot wounds who just weren't improving. Most were laid out with torso wounds. They'd been sutured or bandaged, but the Sathe physicians had to be shown the fragments of  metal and splintered bone floating around the body cavity;  the  lethal slivers  that  could rupture vital organs.  As time  went  on,  I fought  my queasiness and began fishing pieces out  myself;  Ape-descended  fingertips were more nimble than Sathe  pads  burdened with their retractile claws. 
	There were a few other suggestions I could give, seeing  about  getting some clean air in there. Tearing the flaps covering the entrances torn  into vertical strips let fresh air in and kept  flies  out. Bandages  and  instruments and water needed  sterilizing.  Hands  and  what bedding they had needed washing. Sulfur could be used as an antiseptic, as could alcohol. Not much, I know, but it was all I had to offer.
	Of  course,  there  were a few not exactly ecstatic  for  my help.
	I  remember a female,  her fur almost bronze  colored.  Her upper-right  arm  had  been smashed by  a  bullet.  The  compound fracture  had been hastily set in a crude splint;  if  left  like that  she would probably have had to lose the arm,  an  operation that would in all likelihood kill her.
	Screaming imprecations and struggling wildly,  she had to be held  down by several guards while I cut the splint off her  arm. She gasped once and passed out when the bones clicked into place. The scabbed-over wound where the bone had punctured the hide had to be cut open again and cleaned out. Probably just as well she wasn't conscious to feel that.
	I  did my best at helping,  but it isn't easy when  although you know that a limb could be saved,  there is no way you can  do it  when there is no operating theatre,  no skilled  doctors,  no blood  transfusion  or  I.V.   feeding  facilities,   no  sterile instruments,  no oxygen;  just knives,  saws,  and bandages  that were seldom clean. The Sathe did have drugs that could be used as crude anaesthetics in an emergency,  but not nearly enough to go around.  They were reserved for the very worst cases amongst the elite.
	For the two days we camped I spent time working in that hell of  shattered bodies.  Two days of slaving over wounds I  knew  I could have caused.  Every bullet that I pulled out was one that I could have fired and without a doubt, some of them were. But there were so many of them, and the simple soldiers weren't the only casualties of war.

******

	A bloated fly buzzed drunkenly around in the stuffy heat of the covered wagon, repeatedly butting against the canvass roof.
	"Tahr?"
	The  gaunt figure lying on the cushions moved her  head  and opened her eyes, trying to focus on me. Her fur was coming away in tufts,  patches  of bare skin showing around the bandages that covered the worst of her wounds.  But for the bruising and swelling, her naked skin was paler and greyer than mine. "Hmmph?. . . Hello, K'hy."
	"How are you feeling?"
	Through the bandages,  her ears twitched mirthlessly and she grimaced as the wagon lurched. "I have. . . been better."
	That fight had nearly killed her. It still might.
	She  was  covered  with scratches  and  bruises,  minor  and serious.  Her jaw was fractured, and I was no doctor but I knew concussion when I saw it.  Half dead after the  fight, she had insisted she was alright, then promptly collapsed.
	She went downhill from there,  losing weight at an alarming rate.  We  had to practically force water into her and  food  she couldn't handle at all.  Consciousness came and  went.  Sometimes she was lucid; others she mumbled with glazed eyes.
	I  had watched over her while she slept,  listening  to  her chirr in pain as the wagon bumped her around. . . 
	"Do you feel like eating?"
	She gagged slightly. "No. . . "
	Tufts of fur stuck to my hand when I stroked her mane.
	Tahr saw.  "If. . . goes on. . . I'll look like you," she tried to joke, but it fell flat. "You think I'll make it?"
	"Course you will!"
	She  smiled slightly;  ever so slightly.  "Huh. . . don't  hold your breath," she breathed.  "Oh,  K'hy. The strangest dreams. . . " Then the light in her eyes faded and her muscles sagged.
	"Tahr!" I grabbed for her wrist,  then her neck.  The  pulse was there, but faint. For Christ's sake, this can't go on!
	When  we stopped for the evening,  Remae was at  the  wagon, anxious for news.
	"It  is  not good," I told her,  then looked  at  Tahr.  She twitched  in her sleep.  I took Remae outside:  even  unconscious ears can hear.  "She is. . . She took a lot of punishment.  I do not know  how serious it is,  but she needs time to recover.  Not  in THAT thing though,  the ride is killing her.  She needs somewhere quiet, clean, and still."
	Remae  hugged herself and laid her ears flat.  "There  is  a town: Ice Blue. But it is off our path."
	"It is the nearest?"
	"Yes."
	I  rubbed  the side of my head,  hissing through  my  teeth. "Nothing for it then. How far?"
	"Perhaps a day's ride."
	And it was that and a bit more. It was the middle of the night when we arrived: a troop of soldiers and a single wagon riding into the small town of Ice Blue.

******

	The inn was a simple, single-floor half-timber construction - not large  - and  the innkeeper was not happy about being roused out of his sleep in the  small hours. He tried to take out his annoyance on Remae, haggling over the  price  with her,  until I stepped into the  room  with  Tahr slumped in my arms and a pair of armed guards at my side.
	"Good sir." I  reined in my temper with difficulty. "The price can be settled later. We require any available room immediately. And hurry; I am tired and hungry." I placed particular emphasis on the last word and grinned.
	He didn't even notice the other Sathe, just gaped up at me,  his ears going flat against his  skull. "Saaa. . . of course, of course. Here, this way madam. Here. . . a fine room. . . "  he prattled on as he scurried into a back hall. Remae threw me a warning look and followed. I trialed after. The innkeeper took great care to keep the Marshal between us
as he led us to a room. "This is what you are wanting?"
	I  pushed  past  him into the small room and set Tahr down on the circular bed of animal  furs as gently as possible.  She stirred, as if she was waking, then slipped back under again.
	"All right?" Remae asked me.
	"It will do." I'd have preferred an emergency room in a proper hospital.
	"Very well." She looked at Tahr and I saw the worry crawling across her face. "I  will get the others settled down and arrange  a  guard. She will be as safe with you as with anyone."
	"Guards!?" the innkeeper yelped.  "Good lady,  what is going on?  You  are  not leaving THAT here?  High One?. . . " He  cast  me a terrified look and dashed off after her.
	The rickety door creaked shut by itself. Slumping down to the floor beside the bed, I watched over my friend.

******

	Remae came in with the sun, bearing a tray laden with food: A loaf of meal and meat, some fruit, and water. "How is she?"
	I  glanced  at  Tahr, the skin showing through the patchy fuzz on her muzzle, her ribs like sticks under fabric.  "She  slept better last night," I said. "Quieter."
	Remae  handed me the tray and watched as I tore a hunk off the loaf and bit into it.  "Did you have to say that to the innkeeper last night?"
	"What?"
	"About you being hungry.  You scared him half to  moult.  He called the local guard and I had to answer some questions by  the Clan Lord."
	"Well," I shrugged, "I was hungry. . . I just didn't say what I ate."
	"K'hy!" Remae warned.
	"I  am sorry," I said,  feeling a deep ache when I looked at Tahr's emaciated  figure.  It'd  been  a  typical  male  human reaction:  When worried,  act flippant.  Be tough,  be  macho.  I stared at the half-eaten bun in my hand then at Remae. "It worked out did it? That business with the Clan Lord I mean."
	"Of  course.  We have their full cooperation," she looked  a little surprised. "Who would refuse to help the Shirai?"
	"Oh yeah, of course," I muttered as I took a bite out of the bun.	
	"We  have  been offered shelter in the town's  Keep,"  Remae said, "but I am thinking that this inn will serve us well enough. And it is better that we do not move her too much."
	Sounds  from  outside drifted  into  the  room:Sathe,  draft animals, wagons. The sounds of a town.
	"K'hy,"  Remae  asked,  her head tipped to one  side  and  a thoughtful expression on her face,  "I wanted to ask you: are you happy about Tahr and H'rrasch?"
	I  stopped  chewing for a second;the question had  taken  me unaware.  I  swallowed the mouthful.  "Uh. . . What exactly  do  you mean?  I am pleased that she found a mate with whom she is happy. They seemed to get on well enough. . . "
	"Yes," she agreed,  "They do.  I just know you were close to her and was wondering if perhaps you might be slightly. . . ah. . . "
	"Envious?"  I chuckled.  "You are right.  I am.  I envy  him because  I know that anything between Tahr and I would have  been impossible.  He is something that I could never  replace. She is Sathe and I am human. East is east and west is west.  It could never have worked."
	Remae's head tilted to one side as she regarded the  Shirai. "True.  Still  it is strange that one of her status would take  a mate who is no more than just a common soldier."
	I also looked at Tahr.  "Does it really matter who it is  as long as they are right for each other?"
	"I suppose it does not.  Still, it is uncommon," she sighed, then scratched her muzzle.  "I wonder what caused them to meet in the first place.  She was with you during her Time, then suddenly he appeared. . . "
	Remae  stopped  as two and two fell into  place  with  an almost  audible  click.  She stared at  me  with emerald eyes: "You. . . you had a hand in this?"
	I considered lying,  just for a second. "Uh. . . sort of. I did not actually think it would go this far."
	She was staring at me in open amusement.  "My Ancestors, you seem  to have a claw in the flesh of everyones'  lives.  I  would wonder how else you have affected her life."
	I laughed with her then.  More than you  know,  Remae.  More than you know.	 

******

	I shook Tahr gently to try to wake her up.  Her jaw quivered, then her eyes opened, her milky-white third eyelid half extruded. Propping her up gently I tried to persuade her to take a bit of soup. She mumbled incoherent protests, struggled weakly, her eyes closing again.
	"No!  Tahr,  don't!"  I dampened a cloth and dabbed  at  her face, wiping the crusting stuff around her eyes and nose,  trying  to keep her awake.  "Tahr you  must  eat!  Please! C'mon, just a sip. A little, please."
	She tried to turn her head aside, but I held her and put the spout of the mug between her lips.  She swallowed a few drops and I gently stroked her threadbare mane whilst waiting for the  soup to settle on her empty stomach.
	After  a few minutes,  I made her take a bit more, then a bit more, until  the mug  was half-empty and she raised her hand to clumsily  paw  it away.
	"That  was good,  Tahr,  very good," I whispered softly  and patted her shoulder as she snored and muttered.  It was the first sustenance she'd had in days.

******

	It was a slow,  anxious time patched with moments of  alarm, but over the following days she continued to improve, starting to become more aware of her surroundings. Sometimes I think she recognised me in her lucid moments.  I stayed in her room, eating my meals there and sleeping on a pallet on the floor beside her sickbed, only occasionally taking a brief walk outside when Remae insisted I stretch and get some air.
	The  reactions of the townspeople were the usual  and  still succeeded in making me remember what I was.
	Tahr slept soundly and heavily,  but often she would wake me in the middle of the night when her breathing became laboured and she cried out;  sometimes in what sounded like pain, sometimes in something else. Occasionally I heard my name. For hours after she had  settled  down  again I would lie awake  and  listen  to  her rasping snores. What was she dreaming?
	The  weather  that day had been  miserable.  Low-lying  grey clouds  looking like lumps of half-molten lead roiled across  the sky.  Strong gusts of wind rattled the shutters in their  frames, driving  the  rain  against the slate roof with  such  vigour  it sounded like hail.
	That was the way it stayed all day.  At night I leaned  back in the darkness,  dozing, listening to the sounds of the wind, the creaking of the building, and Tahr's measured breathing.
	The steady rhythm sped up, became deeper. There was a small, puzzled-sounding mewl, then a silence, not even breathing:
	"Tahr?" Fear clutched at me. "Tahr!"
	"Who. . . ? K'hy?"
	I groped after my jacket and fumbled the lighter out of  the pocket, touching the flame to a lamp. The walls danced with red ochre light as the flame sputtered, spat, and caught. Tahr was flat on her back, her  head  turned to watch me.  Her eyes glowed  when  the  light struck them,  the pupils contracting slightly. Threadbare patches in  her fur and mane shone dull against the her tawny  pelt.  The swelling  of her jaw had gone down but there were still  bruises. Slowly, she blinked at me: "How long have you been there?"
	"A while. You have not been at your best."
	"Oh." She looked up to where the invisible rain was drumming a  steady tattoo on the roof.  Distant thunder rolled,  long  and low. "Where is this place?"
	  "A  town  called  Ice Blue.  We  had  to  stop  here.  The travelling was not doing you any good."
	She  kept staring at the roof.  "I remember. . .   I have  been sick some time."
	Sick? Oh, Jesus, Tahr. "Over a week. How do you feel?"	
	A sigh,  then her head lolled over. "Alive," she replied and raised  a stick-thin arm,  staring at it as if it wasn't part  of her own body. "I look like an old rug."
	"No. . . "
	"Yes.  Look  at me.  You could have kept the moths  off  me, K'hy." Then she smiled and those eyes flickered with a vibrancy I hadn't seen for too long. "We talk?"
	After  those  days of lying there playing tag with  the  old Reaper,  she suddenly wanted to chat.  "You are sure?  Your mouth looks sore. You do not want to rest?"
	"No," she said calmly, meaning it.
	"All right," I nodded slowly. "If you think you can manage it,  Okay,  talk. Talk about what?"
	"Huh," she looked up at the roof, gathering her thoughts. "What has happened? The armies? What are the Lake Traders doing? Hraasa? Has he been taken? Why did he forfeit like that?"
	I tried to answer as best I could, telling her what I knew. What I didn't know Remae could fill in later. Tahr listened, staring up at the ceiling while her chest moved slowly. When I told her about Hraasa she stiffened then squinted at me. "Dead?"
	"Yes."
	"Suicide?"
	"No. Remae said he was murdered." I filled her in on those details also, what Remae had told me, keeping it brief.
	"Rot his honour," Tahr hissed when I was finished. "I wanted the privilege. No ideas who did it?"
	"No. There was a lot of confusion that night. Please, are you sure you do not want to rest."
	She raised her hand in a feeble swipe at me. "Ah! Do not mother me. You look too strange for that." There was a hesitation,  a faint clicking sound audible over the rain:  Tahr tapping her claws together,  then she said, "K'hy. What are you going to do now? You and your female."
	I blinked.  "Why that?" Twenty Questions time and the  first thing she asks about's my private life.
	She squirmed, a pink tongue running over sharp teeth. "I. . . I had some strange dreams. You and Mas. . ." she searched for words, then surrendered. "I cannot explain. What are you going to do with her?"
	"You make her sound like a possession.  Not MY female,  Tahr. She has a will of her own. I am not even sure what her opinion of me is."
	Tahr out on the balcony watching Maxine and I arguing. . . 
	"You are afraid," Tahr said abruptly.  "Our mating.  You are afraid of what she thinks."
	I sat up and crossed my legs,  leaning back against the rough wooden planks of the wall while staring at the flickering lamp flame.  Dammit,  what had  she been dreaming about in that delirium?  She'd hit the nail on  the head.  That WAS what I was worried about! How could I ever expect Maxine to accept me after what I had done.
	"I am sorry, my strange one."
	I looked up, surprised. "What? Why"
	"I  never realised how it would affect you.  I had  no  idea that  anyone could be upset by what we did." She lolled her  head back, staring up at the rafters. "I was wrong to lead you on as I did. At first. . . I thought it a game."
	"Tahr. . . " The floor creaked as I hauled myseelf to my feet and perched myself on the edge of the bed. Her fur was still soft under my hand. "Look, do not go around blaming yourself.  I was as much a part of  that as  you were.  I enjoyed it as much as you,  and I do not  regret it."
	God, how to explain it to the human woman? I didn't know how Maxine thought of the Sathe.  Did she regard them as just  exotic animals,  or did she see them as people in their own rights? Pray she'd learned to identify with that side of them. After all, what is wrong with love between two people?
	I  patted the fur beneath my hand.  "I worry about what  she thinks,  but I may be worrying over nothing.  I do not know. . . After all, who can understand the workings of the female mind?"
	"You. . . !" Tahr gave a mock-hiss and swiped weakly at my arm; claws pulled. "How can YOU say that?" she sputtered in amusement.
	"It  is  true!  You  are  female and  many  times  I  cannot understand how your mind. . . "
	Although still weak,  the hand that grabbed my shoulder  and pulled  me  over  backwards onto the bed  didn't  feel  like  one belonging to someone who had been semi-comatose for over a  week. The  room seemed to lurch,  and suddenly I was lying on  my  back staring up into brilliant emerald eyes. She was panting after the exertion,  her  breath warm as blood and harsh enough to blister paint as she lightly  nuzzled  my bearded  cheek  and neck.  "K'hy,  why could you  not  have  been Sathe?"
	I  touched  her tufted ears and ran my fingers down  into  her mane. "Or you Human?"
	It  was soothing to just lie there;  her  fur  warm,  moving slightly with every breath she took.  I sighed and relaxed,  with her  weight against me like a warm and heavy blanket, my arms  around  her,  just holding her  close,  feeling  her  heart beating.
	"Anyway,  K'hy. What will you and Mas do now?" Tahr murmured after too short a time.
	I  twisted around and looked at her face.  "The fighting  is over?"
	"I believe so."
	"I have given it little thought, actually," I said, glancing at the window as a gust rattled the shutters. "I think that maybe it  would be  best if we went out on  our  own. Away  from  the Citadel, Mainport."
	"What?" She started slightly in surprise. "K'hy, why?"
	I  swallowed and swirled the fur on her stomach  between  my thumb and forefinger. "You have a life to lead, and the two of us hanging around you may be a. . . burden."
	"No! K'hy, you would never be a. . . "
	"Yes,  Tahr! I. . . we would be just that," I interjected. "You know things are never easy with us around. The way Sathe react to us. . . You could not live a normal life with us around and Maxine and I will have to  learn  to live without your help."
	She drew back slightly.  "Why? I can provide for you as long as. . . " she trailed off as she remembered. "Oh."
	The  difference  in  our  lifespans.   Although  perhaps  we couldn't  expect to live as long as we would back  home,  barring accidents we could live to sixty, maybe seventy, maybe more.
	And the average Sathe lifespan is what? Forty five?
	"You cannot always be around;  we will have to learn to fend for ourselves. Between us there must be some skills or knowledge we can scrape a living from."
	"I think that you will manage.  I was told that you built  a flying device. Is that true?"
	"We got lucky," I smiled.
	"K'hy,  just building and selling those devices alone would make you wealthy for life."
	"Maybe,  but any idiot can look at one of those and see  how to build another."
	"True,  but  they  would not understand it.  You  built  it. You  know how and why it works and how to use  it.  Perhaps  they could be used to go to the moon."
	I  laughed  at that,  and she growled,  then  pushed  closer against  me.  Difficult to carry out a constructive  conversation with  a hot,  soft body like that rubbing against your  own.  She also knew a few things about me. . . like where and how to touch  to elicit a response.
	"Tahr!"  I caught her wrist and pushed her hand  away.  "No! You are supposed to be sick for Christ's sake!  Besides,  you are mated now."
	She hissed and pushed back against my hand.  "So?  How could H'rrasch be jealous of you?  It would be ridiculous." She tried a smile with her mouth. I could just about count her back teeth.
	"Ridiculous, huh?" I grinned back. "Well, I will tell you an interesting tale. Something ridiculous happened to me not so long ago.  I almost got my face ripped off by a male who thought I was trying to. . . ah. . . seduce his female."
	"You?!" Tahr did a poor job of stifling a laugh.
	"He  did have a good reason," I continued.  "It  would  seem there  is a rumour going around the citadel.  Something  about  a 'reputation' I have."
	"A. . . a  reputation?"  Tahr  asked,  suddenly  cautious. She wasn't laughing anymore.
	"Uh-huh.  Something about the way I am built.  Also,  that I have  'a  way with sex'." I propped myself up on  my  elbows  and raised an eyebrow, "I would wonder where that came from, eh?"
	"Oh," said Tahr.
	"Tahr,  I  am flattered by the praise,  but it makes  things most  difficult  for me when Maxine hears of  our  exploits  from Sathe I do not even know,  and when angry males feel the urge  to rebuild my face with their claws."
	Her ears went back in a hesitant,  almost sheepish smile. "I was wrong. I had no idea that it would go this far."
	"Just  please  do  not  talk about  us  anymore,"  I  asked. "Please."
	"Very well, K'hy," she sighed, then hissed in her version of a giggle. "It will cost you," she smiled.
	I sat up; wary. "How much?"
	For  a  reply she stiffly rolled over onto her  stomach  and wriggled her shoulders, "Please, ease my muscles."
	"You have a nerve," I half-snorted,  half-laughed, amused at her  gall,  then  settled  beside her and  started  kneading  the threadbare hide of her back.  With a low sigh she went limp under my hands,  luxuriating in the massage.  Those times I'd  been bed-ridden sprang  to mind.  God,  could  I  have  used something like this back then. Maybe it was fifteen minutes later when the scratch at the flimsy door disturbed us.
	Remae was waiting there. The  faint,  flickering,  reddish-orange  from the guttering oil lamp out there did weird things to her black  fur  and  green eyes. Off down the corridor from the common room came the muted background sound of crockery and ironmongery rattling, Sathe talking, laughing.
	"High One," Remae murmured,  ducking her head in surprise  and respect when she saw Tahr sprawled on the bed, half-awake and watching her. "How are you feeling?"
	Tahr smiled back.  "Tired,  stiff and sore, but much better, thank you."
	"I am pleased," Remae smiled. "I came to tell K'hy that food is  ready  and to. . . " She looked from Tahr to me to  the  rumpled sheets,  back to me,  and realization dawned in her eyes that she may have committed a boo-boo. "Saaa. . . I did not mean to intrude."
	For a second both Sathe were watching me.  Then Tahr's  ears flicked back in amusement,  "No,  Remae,  there was nothing going on.  Please,  come in. . . and,  K'hy, there is no need to look like that."
	I  felt  heat  rising  into  my  face  like  mercury  in   a thermometer.  Hastily I backed out of the room,  closing the door behind me. I tried not to imagine the two friends laughing.
	The inn was busy that night. Other travellers sheltering from the unseasonal  downpour. They  kept  pretty  much  to  themselves,  but  they  choked  and sputtered on their food when I made my appearance.  The fare  was simple:  a  meat  and vegetable stew,  bread,  and  a  choice  of  water (a risky choice from a village well),  llama milk,  or ale, but the Eastern soldiers seemed to enjoy it enough. I wondered if they ever got splinters in their tongues from licking the  wooden bowls clean.
    
******

	It  was another three days before the storm abated  and  the mud  on the roads had dried out enough to make  travel  possible. The  innkeeper was not unhappy to see us depart,  even though  he made a handsome profit from our layover.
	Very  quickly the fields and pastures surrounding the  small town gave way to wilderness. The road forded small creeks swollen from the rain,  wound its way through evergreen woodland, crossed broad stretches of gold and green grassland.
	We  worked  our  way  north;  a  single  covered  wagon  and seventeen housecarls mounted upon lamas. We took our time; taking it slow and easy.  The weather remained fine after the storm, the skies were crystal clear and the nights warm.
	And  Tahr had recovered with a vengeance.  During the  first few  days  she ate enough for two,  rapidly filling out  the  gap beneath her ribs that she'd cultivated during her  convalescence. When we stopped for  the night, her almost hyperactive restlessness would  often  lead  her  to  disappear  into   the wilderness, causing consternation amongst her guard.
	And I had a lot of thinking to do.
	Light shifted through the intertwining branches of the trees above  the small pool,  playing across the surface of  the  water that  rippled every so slightly as invisible cat's  paws  stirred it.  A  rivulet  of water trickled  through  moss-covered  rocks; sparkling  and glittering as it dropped the metre or so into  the pond.
	A soft splash. Ripples spread.    
	Settled in a patch of grass, my back against the solid trunk of a sugar maple, I flicked another pebble from the small horde I clutched in my hand. Light twinkled as more ripples spread before the first had entirely stilled.
	Tahr had been in the right with her questioning at the  inn; what WAS I going to do with my life now?
	I'd  been born and raised in a culture where it  was  always someone  else  who had the  knowledge,  the  skills.  Whatever  I needed,  I just went out and bought and all the skill needed  was the ability to drive a car and write a cheque.
	Oh,  I was pretty mechanically inclined.  More than average. Certainly  I  was no technical prodigy,  but  I  was  comfortable around machinery.  My general knowledge was pretty good,  I  knew how things worked and how they were made.  I was capable in metal and woodworking,  but that was with tools far more advanced  than anything the Sathe used. I could easily plane a length of wood or weld up sheet metal,  but would I be as effective if all I had to work with was an adze or forge?
	And how many gaps were there in my knowledge?
	Another stone plunked into the water.
	For  my entire life up to the point when I arrived  here,  I had  been deluged with the continual flood of disjointed  snippets of  information I picked up from television,  radio,  and  casual reading. I could draw a detailed diagram of an internal combustion engine and how it's supposed to work,  but what of the materials it's made from?  How exactly do you make a magneto?
	I shifted the M-16 into my lap,  running a finger along  the scratched  and scarred stock.  The gun had taken a lot of  abuse, the metal itself was nicked in places;  gleaming steel exposed on the  raised sections of the mat black surfaces.  I wasn't sure  I knew  how to forge a metal like that,  let alone how to make  the synthetic compounds that made the stock and foregrip.
	No, I frowned, that was still not the real problem.
	Would  I. . . we  - aliens -  be able to make a  home  in  this society;  not live out our entire, overly long lives as freaks on display for all to see?  I mean,  we couldn't exactly settle down in the town, could we. . . 
	I say, George. Look what's just moved in next door.
	Oh, shit. There goes the neighbourhood.	 
	No.
	And what about children. . . 
	My God, children.
	My thoughts were interrupted by a splash. I looked up to see ripples spreading out across the water. I hadn't thrown that. . . 
	"Why  so dour,  K'hy?"
	Tahr got up from where she  had  been crouched on a boulder across the other side of the small pool,  her head cocked to one side in her study of me.
	"You followed me," I accused her.
	There  wasn't a sound as she dropped from a rock  onto  deep moss.  The  worn blue and brown cuirass and kilt she wore  didn't quite  blend in with the foliage behind her:  "No.  I was out  by myself. I just found you here."
	My thumb flicked the safety catch back on as I looked up  at her.  Twigs and small leaves were matted into her mane as  though she'd  been lying on the ground.  "You have been running  off  by yourself a lot lately. Any reason?"
	She laughed and flopped down beside me,  leaning up  against my arm.  "Just restless.  My legs just want to stretch after  all that  time doing nothing." I reached out and plucked a twig  from her  fur.  "It  is good to have a chance to run,  to  hunt."  She stretched,  then craned around to look at me.  "Do you never have the urge to do that?"
	I blinked. "To run. . . sometimes, but not usually to hunt."
	She  gave  a  half-hearted snort and watched  as  I  flipped another pebble into the water.  "I was watching you for a while," she said. "What was troubling you?"
	"Troubling me?"
	"Oh,  K'hy."  She flashed teeth in annoyance.  "No  games! Your  face has more expressions tucked away than a piece of  soft clay. I think I can read many of them well enough to see that you were. . . well. . . not happy."
	"Okay, point taken," I sighed and told her.
	"Children?" she was puzzled. "I do not think I understand."
	I got up and paced a couple of times before slumping against a boulder.  "Tahr,  if Maxine and I reproduce, the result will be human children."
	"'Reproduce'," Tahr's ears twitched in a smile while the velvet of her nose wrinkled  at the same time.  "You  know,  there  are  words for that  which  bear  more warmth."
	"I was not trying to be poetic."
	"Sorry. Please continue."
	"If we have children, they will be human. Eventually Max and I will both die and they would be alone here.  Absolutely alone." I  swung around to face Tahr.  "Do you understand now?  All  they would  know of where they originally came from would be what  Max and  I told them.  They would be. . . different.  All their lives."
	Tahr got up and slowly ambled past me. Leaves rustled as she pushed aside a branch. "Yes, I can understand that."
	I  fell in beside her as she padded through the  forest.  My boots  made a lot more noise than her bare pads.  Aside from  the wind and the incidental sounds of nature, that was the only noise there  was for a quite a while,  then:  "K'hy,  what do you  know about Hraasa's death?"
	Ohshit!
	"Well, Remae told me he had died in his sleep."
	She  paused before answering.  "He was killed in his  sleep; yes,"  she  agreed.   "Strangled. . . his  throat  crushed.  Not  an accidental  death.  There is no assassin I know of who would  use such  tactics."  Her  green eyes latched  upon  mine.  "No  Sathe assassin."
	I stopped in my tracks and stared at her.
	She also drew up short,  folding her arms,  hands hooked over her shoulders.  "K'hy,  the Marshal has done some asking around, and the thing that strikes both her and myself as peculiar is the fact  that  nobody can remember seeing you on the  night  of  the Challenge."
	I felt my jaw twitch.
	"Remae  has  also seen Hraasa's  corpse.  She  inspected  it perhaps  a little more thoroughly than did the guards  who  found him. He did not die peacefully; he fought. His bedding was soiled with blood that did not come from the scratches I had given  him. There were traces of a strange scent on his body.  There was more blood  on his fingers and claws and chest.  She also found shreds of  flesh under  his claws that did not come from the challenge.  They  did not come from a Sathe. She saw you the next day. You smelt of blood and medicine.
	"K'hy, your tunic. Take it off."
	I  swallowed  and stepped back a pace,  backed up against  a  tree. "Tahr. . . I. . . ." I shook my head and bit my lip.
	"I  thought  as  much," she  rumbled.  "Did  you  also  have something to do with his loss in the Challenge?"
	My shoulders sagged. I gave her a feeble, glum nod.
	"Saaaa ! "
	Birds startled by her cry flapped into the air.  "K'hy!" she blazed,  turning  to howl at the forest.  "You could have  ruined everything!  Why,  in  the name of my Ancestors!  Why did you  do it?!"
	I shook my head helplessly, despairing at her anger. "He was going to kill Maxine."
	Tahr  stopped in mid snarl,  half-turning with bared  teeth. "No, K'hy, impossible! Hraasa gave his surrender! His troops saw! He could not have!"
	"He  was going to use a Scirth Warrior," I  told  her.  "Are they  not  outside  the agreements that bind you  and  the  other Clans?"
	"Scirth Warriors?!" she choked on the title. "K'hy, they are lethal!  I  hold  no  power over them;  no Clan  does!"  Her  jaw twitched violently. "If he has hired one to kill Mas she is. . . "
	"I took care of it," I said.
	She gaped at me,  her expressions spinning between fury  and astonishment  at a mile a minute.  Finally:  "I am  lost.  Now  - from the beginning - tell me what happened that night."
	We started walking again while I talked.  I reluctantly told her  about the accidental part I had played in Hraasa losing  the Challenge  and went on to tell her about the conversation  I  had later overheard.
	"I swam the river.  Your kind are not the best swimmers,  so there  were very few guards.  Hraasa's tent was around the  other side  of their camp. . . Anyway,  I dodged the sentries and  circled around.
	"He had a physician come to dress his wounds,  then  someone in a black cloak was brought to see him.  I was able  to get close enough to hear their conversation.  He was talking with a Scirth Warrior,  hiring him. . .  Did you know that the going rate for the assassination of a human is twenty five gold pieces?"
	Tahr said nothing.
	"Well, anyway, I followed the Scirth Warrior when he left. I caught  up with him and managed to persuade him to  forget  about his job."
	"How did you do that?" Tahr queried.  "I cannot see even you defeating a Scirth warrior unarmed and walking away from it."
	I  fished a small metal circlet out of my pocket and tossed  it  to her.
	She snatched the ring out of the air,  turned it  over,  and stared in surprise again. "This. . . Where did you get this?!"
	"Hymath. Remember her? She gave it to me."
	Tahr  stared at the ring,  then slowly gave it back  to  me. "When? Why did you not tell me?"
	"You never asked."
	Tahr made a disgusted noise.  "K'hy,  take good care of that ring. I think that you do not know just how valuable it is."
	That ring;  the tiny silver Sathe's head baring minute fangs in  a snarl.  She was absolutely right;  it was valuable in  ways that went far beyond just the exquisite craftsmanship.  I  closed my hand over it and slipped it back within my pocket.  "Where was I? Oh yeah. He was reluctant about going back on his word, but he agreed not to take the assignment. Before he left, he gave me the gold he had accepted. . . to return to Hraasa.
	"I went back to the camp and hid until the lamp in  Hraasa's tent  went  out.  Their whole camp was. . . it was  like  they  were going mad.  There were fires and fights all over the  place.  The guards were watching a group fighting nearby. I got in under the side of the tent. They never saw  me.
	"There  was just enough light for me to see by.  I  guess  I wasn't  as  quiet as I should have been," I licked  my  lips  and turned away from Tahr,  suddenly finding something of interest in the patterns of pine bark.  "He must have heard me. . . he  woke.  I hit him hard. . . here,  in the throat. I crushed his throat, but it took   time.   He  was. . . was  awake  -  fighting  -   the   whole time. . . I. . . he. . . "
	I choked off and slumped against a tree.  Tahr said  nothing while I pulled myself together again. "I left the money there and just. . . put  my hood up and just walked away. . . nobody noticed  me. That was the only reason I got away. . . Nobody noticed. Sheer, dumb luck.  I swam across the river and circled around to come back in the northern gate."
	"K'hy," Tahr stared at me. "It was suicide."
	I didn't respond. I had known.
	Her  ears  went back flat against her skull  and  she  moved closer,  her eyes about level with my shoulders.  Reaching up she fumbled  with my shirt buttons.  I caught her hand.  "K'hy,"  she almost growled, her ears going down.
	I let my hand drop.
	Buttons,  one  at a time down my chest,  then she spread  my shirt open.  "My Ancestors!" Another tug and my arms were  bared. Her wide eyes met mine, like pain-filled greenstone. "K'hy!"
	The smooth curve of a claw traced a line of red  scar and scab up my chest to the point where it ended  just below my throat.  Just one of a multitude.  "My Strange One," she  moaned, gently  touching my chest again,  then stepping away.  "It is  an ancient  tradition  you  have violated.  It is not  so  much  you killing  him,  as  the fact that you biased the  outcome  of  the Challenge. . . you were NOT supposed to be there!"
	I  started walking again,  rebuttoning my shirt.  Tahr  fell into  step, slightly behind me.  High above us the wind set  the  treetops swaying and rustling. "What will you do with me now?" I asked.
	Tahr  grimaced  and  took a swipe at a  pine  tree  she  was passing.  Four horizontal scrapes appeared across the bark. "I am not  sure.  In a sense I am the law,  but there are limits to  my jurisdiction.  I am the Shirai, but even I cannot change what has always been, and what will probably always be."
	"I understand."
	"Did you understand before?"
	I bit my lip and studied the ground in front of me. "Yeah."
	She breathed a steam-kettle hiss, her lips pulling away from her  teeth.  "And  if you were found?!  Did you think  what  your discovery  could have meant for the Shirai clan,  for the  entire Eastern Realm?!  You could have destroyed everything that we have fought  to achieve!  All the loss and sacrifice,  all  the  death, everything would have been for nothing!"
	I  flinched away from the claws that were now hovering  near  my face,  turned  and sat on a fallen log smothered  in  moss.  Tahr stood,  keeping her distance, a shaft of sunlight cutting the air between  us,  glittering  on the wings  of  insects.  Suddenly  I remembered a time a headstrong creature had tried to make her own way  back to her people with her side held together  with  string and  a  prayer.  Memories of chasing after her  and  finding  her waiting for me, calmly waiting with her wound seeping blood.
	Now her eyes burned with anger.
	"Tahr," I said, "look at me."
	She tossed her mane,  her teeth flaring white.  "I have been looking at you for the best part of two years now. What else. . . "
	"Damnation!  LOOK  AT ME!" I exploded.  "Look at me  as other Sathe see me!"
	Her eyes narrowed,  then she spun and took a few steps  away before turning back to study me again.  Then she slowly  squatted and took a stick in her hands,  twisting it in her fingers. "What are you trying to say?"
	I sighed. "You have grown too familiar with me. What am I? I am not of the Shirai clan.  I am not of the Eastern Realm.  I  am not  even  Sathe!  I am as an animal under your  laws!  If  a. . . a squirrel  had made Hraasa forfeit the challenge,  could he  blame the Eastern Realm?"
	The Shirai stabbed at the ground with her stick, then slowly twitched her ears: "No, I think not."
	"I  made  my decision and I am prepared to stand by  it  and take  the  consequences.  I think that you would  have  done  the same."
	The  stick moved again as Tahr pondered.  "You  have  thought this out, haven't you," she growled.
	"I tried to. It happened so fast."
	"Then  you  know  that  while  your. . . status  may  give  you immunity from the laws of the Realms and Clans - and even that  I am not sure of - it also means that you have no rights at all  in our Realm,  that you are,  in fact,  an animal in the care of the Shirai Clan. You could be brought and sold or even killed without the  stigma  that  would  be attached  to  such  treatment  of  a normal. . . person."
	I nodded. "I had suspected."
	Tahr's  muzzle wrinkled so as much of her teeth and gums  as possible  were  bared.  Her ears vanished into her mane  and  the stick scratched violent patterns into the forest floor, then she snarled and sent the stick bouncing off a tree trunk, splitting into two pieces. When she looked at me it was the look predator gave prey. "Rot it all, K'hy! When I think you understand, you go and do something like this. If anyone learns. . . "
	I stood, carefully went to lay a hand on her shoulder. "He would have killed you. I . . ."
	She snarled again and her hand whipped up, catching me across the side of the head. I yelped and staggered back. My face burned. I touched that place and there was blood on my hand. I stared at her in shock.
	Tahr's snarl evaporated, turning to confusion, then. . . something else. She opened her mouth, then turned and bolted into the forest. Undergrowth hissed around her, then the foilage stilled and she was gone.
	"Shit." I said, touched my bleeding face again, winced. Gone. No way I could catch her. Did I want to? I turned and set off back to camp.
	Remae caught me as I walked back into camp. "K'hy, they need. . . what happened to your face?"
	"Branch scratched it," I mumbled.
	"Angry branch," she observed. She knew. Of course she knew, but she let it lie.
	I went and sat by myself. The Sathe muttered and gossiped, glancing at me, but they left me alone. I touched the scratches on my face again. Why had she done that?
	Anger? Fear? Exasperation?
	Perhaps everything. Perhaps I deserved it. I didn't  know. And she's never told me.
	Goddamn it! A Sathe might be able to stand aside and watch while a friend was torn apart, but I'm not a Sathe. What I did I did of my own volition. If it came down to it I would take the blame, but no-one could drag Tahr or her clan into it. Hell, if someone  wanted to they could pick a fight with the Davies clan. Good luck to finding them.
	Tahr returned that night. A stiff wind whipped sparks into the night sky while we ate. I never noticed until Remae flinched, then laid her platter aside and went to join a figure standing in the gloom of the treeline. They exchanged a few words and eyes flashed metallic light as they glanced my way. I stared down at my meal. When I looked up again they were gone, into the trees: out of sight and earshot. I put my plate aside, not hungry anymore.

******

	The Citadel loomed above us as the tiny convoy made its  way along  the  narrow lane between massive inner  and  outer  walls. Covered  walkways spanned the gap high above our  heads,  arching over  from  one towering vertice to another.  It was a  lot  like being in an alley between two skyscrapers.
	The  inner  gate was open,  the uphill-sloping tunnel beneath the gatehouse  dark  and chill.  The  sounds  of  llamas'  hooves  and  iron-bound  wheels clattering  and grinding echoed from the walls of solid  granite, then we were through.
	For a second the sunlight breaking through the clouds  above the  vast courtyard dazzled me,  then the  monumental bulk of the Citadel's Keep blotted out the sky;  layer upon layer of walls and towers enveloping the granite crown of the hill, dwarfing even the outer walls.
	Tahr's small fist tapped my shoulder: "Home." Her ears flicked in her smile. I blinked blearily and twitched my own lips at her.
	The last few days and nights had been spent on the road, travelling nonstop, doing our best to catch forty winks in the wagons. I hadn't got much sleep. None of us had. The walking dead, that was us.  I just wanted to lie down and die for a week  or two.

	The  stir  we'd caused in the town below had  reached  the Citadel ahead of us.  Two ranks of Citadel Guards lined the steps and  approach to the Keep.  Faces massed at windows and  parapets all around the courtyard as the small convoy drew to a halt.
	As Tahr adjusted her armour and dropped from the back of the wagon, Remae caught my arm. "Walk with me." It wasn't a request.
	Tahr  preceeded us,  her head held high and the  clean armour  she  had materialised from  God-knows-where  flashing  as inlaid silver caught the sun.  Remae had no clean armour, but the blue and silver cloak she wore hid the scars,  nicks,  and stains in  the purely functional battle dress she was  wearing.  Against them, I stood out like a cow in church.
	Head and shoulders above the Sathe, my hair had grown so long the last couple of months that it resembled a Sathe  mane escaping  from  beneath  my helmet,  even if the  copper  was  so different   from  the  more  subdued, earthy  tones  of   Sathe coloration. My cloak flapped around my ankles, not quite hiding my tattered, stained fatigues. I looked around at the continuously growing crowd and nervously hitched up the battle-scarred assault rifle, feeling exposed and vulnerable crossing that huge courtyard.
	Cheering  had started as soon as Tahr had appeared from  the wagon,  the  howling sound of Sathe cheering.  With Remae's  claw hooked  into my sleeve,  I stepped out into a confusion of  faces and sound.  The Marshal noticed my nervousness.  "K'hy, this way!" she  hissed and  tugged  me  along. "Don't worry so."
	I'd been shot at, burned and beaten and given a choice I'd have rather been on the battlefield than in that courtyard anyday. Sathe everywhere, more than I'd ever seen in one place before, the entire population of the Citadel it appeared and most of them were looking at me. I scanned the balconies and ramparts and windows and doors, looking for distinctive non-Sathe features. If she was there I didn't see her.
	More Sathe awaited us within the massive doors of the  Keep. The entry hall echoed with hushed Sathe voices, the clatter of claws and metal accessories. Expansive  cloaks  with  clan crests  embroidered  in  glittering thread brushed against the lacquered parquetry in the wooden floor as their wearers bowed their heads before Tahr.
	"High  One," the honorific murmured from the  tapestry-hung walls  of  the  chamber,   resounding  among  the  galleries  and balconies that rose to the vaulted ceiling far above.
	Tahr respectfully returned the bows to the Clan Lords ranked before  her and murmured something that caused ears to twitch  in amusement;  quickly suppressed.  Finally Tahr approached the red-robed figure patiently awaiting her.  "Shirai," he bowed when she stopped in front of him.
	And there was one more Sathe waiting for her. Not a Clan Lord or high-ranking official.  It took a second to sink in just who he was. A far cry from the embarrassed trooper who had worried about Tahr in the corridor so long ago. Now wearing the armour of the royal guards, a silver ring in his ear.
	H'rrasch bowed.  "Shirai," he said, and  there was  an  emotion running far deeper than  respect  there.  She touched his shoulder and he looked up. "I am glad you made it back," then he ducked his head again as though he was embarrassed. Tahr gave a stuttering hiss, then they were embracing  and nuzzling each other.
	Been doing some matchmaking, Kelly ?
	Behind them,  Rehr made an Excuse-Me-For-Butting-In kind  of sound,   interrupting  Tahr's  personal  homecoming.  "Excuse  me, Shirai, but there are a few thousand people clamouring to see you."
	Welcome home, Tahr ai Shirai.

******

	I was exhausted and hungry and exhausted and tired. The dust of the weeks on the road had ground its way into my very pores; a gritty feeling like sandpaper rubbing against my flesh. That last day had been the toughest,  travelling all night so that we would make it to Mainport while there was still light.
	The sounds of cheering and jubilation were swallowed by  the tremendous solidity of the walls of the Keep; the stone absorbing sounds so that none reached the deserted corridor where I  walked. Occasionally a servant would scurry past, but otherwise the place had all the air of a mausoleum. All along the corridors the walls between the doors were  carved  in  bas-relief, ancient depictions  of tailed Sathe:  living and dying,  laughing and  crying.  The  joy  and sheer  exuberance  of  felinoid  life immortalized in stone. I gave a jaw-cracking yawned and concentrated on planting one foot in front of the other.
	The  corridor  opened  into a T-junction  in  a  groin  vault serving as a landing for a broad,  dimly-lit staircase. The steps were bare, undressed rock stairs cut directly into the hill and worn to almost-marble smoothness by the buffing of countless feet.  How long ago had this part of the Keep been hewn? A passage to be measured in centuries or millennia?
	"Kelly!"
	The  shout echoed down the corridor behind me,  followed  by the  pounding  of footsteps as a  figure  in checkered  flannel  shirt and blue jeans ran  towards  me.  I lowered  my pack to the floor and gave her a weary smile  as  she slowed  down to a walk,  staring as she approached.  "I know,"  I forestalled her with an upraised hand, "I look like shit."
	She  flinched  and gave me rueful grin.  "Sorry."  Then  she stepped close and hugged me.  I stiffened, then slowly hugged her back,  uncomfortably  aware of the feelings her human femininity sparked off inside me. Her hair  was  clean,  soft,  and  smelling of. . . womanhood.
	She suddenly stepped back,  nervously avoiding my  eyes, then smiled shyly. "Welcome home."
	I blinked. "Last I knew you weren't talking to me."
	She flashed a tight smile, like the ones I did with Sathe; trying not to show teeth. Was she developing that habit also? Whatever it was she smiled and said, "I'm just glad you made it back in one piece."
	I managed a smile in return. "Thanks. . . Max."
	"Here,  I'll take that," she said and before I could protest she'd caught up my pack and slung it over her shoulder.  "I tried to catch you back there with the others, but you took off alone."
	"Yeah, well I wasn't expecting anyone to meet me. I  thought  I'd  skip   the homecoming. They  won't  miss  me, and I'm beat."
	It was a familiar route, one I'd walked many times before. The corridors became better lit, the tapestries, murals, and friezes covering the bare stone of the walls became more and more ornate  and well-kept;  banishing the spartan atmosphere  of  the less-populated areas of the Keep.
	Maxine  was keeping up a cheerful banter all the way  to  my rooms,  but by then I was too tired to reply in more than monosyllables between the yawns. I fumbled with the latch, then stumbled inside.
	The room was just as I had left it: papers sitting on the desk,  a  pair of breeches carelessly draped over the back  of  a chair.  Although  the air was stuffy with an atmosphere like a house that hasn't been lived in for a while, there wasn't a  speck  of dust to be seen anywhere.
	". . . realised  what  you must have felt like  when  you  were here," Maxine was saying.  "I wasn't sure if you were coming back or not."
	I  looked  at her,  then unslung the rifle  and  propped  it against the desk. It overbalanced, clattering to the floor. "Hold on.  Sorry,  I've just got to sit down for a while. . . I'm stuffed."  I nearly collapsed into a chair.
	Maxine  was  suddenly kneeling beside me in  a  near  panic. "Hey, c'mon! Don't flake out on me here! I can't carry you!"
	I mumbled an incoherent protest as she hauled me to my  feet again and guided me as I stumbled through to the bedroom. I don't even remember hitting the bed.

******

	I was still rubbing my hair dry as I approached my quarters, whistling cheerfully. With the layers of  grime  I'd  collected  on the  roads  sloughed  off  in  a blissfully hot bath, I felt ready to take on the world: any of them, or even all at once. That morning there was someone  waiting at my door.  I broke into  a  grin  and called out, "Morning, Ms Wayne."
	"Afternoon you mean. I've never seen anyone go out like that."
	She  didn't blame me for sleeping in.  I had - she agreed  - looked  like shit.  While I changed in the bedroom  we  exchanged smalltalk through the open door.  I had countless shirts,  all in a stylish shade of olive drab:  part of the cargo from the  wreck of  the truck,  but only a single pair of  pants.  The  hardships these'd  been through were beginning to show in the  worn  knees, the stains and holes in the heavy fabric. I glumly poked a finger through  a  rent in the seat,  then chucked the pants  aside  and fished  a pair of Sathe-made breeches from the chest.  They  were the  type that finished around the knees,  and I felt  absolutely ridiculous in them.
	"Why don't you try one of those kilts?" Maxine giggled.
	"Too  cold," I replied.  "You know what the draughts in  this place are like."
	She  laughed  and watched as I tied the laces on  my  boots. "You know,  I learned a lot about them while you were  away.  The Sathe that is."
	I looked up at her. "You feel better about them now?"
	"I don't really know.  They're easier to get along with, but they're still . . . weird. Sometimes I just feel like it's not real, like it's all just a dream."  She  sighed deeply and looked at me. "How was it for you?"
	"Eating,  sleeping, drinking and crapping together. You have to get used to them," I replied absently,  then looked up at her. "I never said it was easy, Max."
	"Was the fighting bad?"
	I felt my jaw tighten. There's no way I'll ever forget those weeks.  "How can it ever be good?  You know:  war is hell and the food sucks."
	She forced a smile,  then said,  "If you don't want to  talk about it. . . "
	"Thanks," I pushed my fingers through my overgrown thatch of hair, "Maybe. . . later, I think."
	The rifle was on the desk,  black and vicious  against the  creamy  sheets of parchment lying underneath it.  I  picked  the weapon up and touched the scarred and nicked receiver. There were gouges  in the stock and the paint had chipped off  the  selector switch.
	"So what do I do with this?" I asked myself.

******

	The vault was buried deep underground, as is a vault's wont. The air  was chill, the rough-hewn granite walls  and  vaulted  ceiling glittering with moisture, streaked  with soot from the sputtering torches in  sconces.  It was just one of a string of such rooms storing the wealth of a realm. Inside, in the dimness, I could catch the glitter of gold and silver: Bars of precious metal, ornate weapons slung in racks. Locked iron-bound chests  labelled with Sathe script were  everywhere. Maxine picked up a gold statue the size of her hand, weighing it. It looked like solid gold. Nearer  the door  olive-green  boxes  and crates were stacked  in  neat  rows around the walls, black stencilled letters and numbers seeming to twist and writhe in the shifting light.

	Sathe guards and a single human woman were watching me as  I checked the seals on the last case. The Sathe-made laminated box would remain airtight until either the wood rotted away or someone broke the seal around the lid.  The rifle and  ammunition inside  were  sealed in a solid block  of  wax,  preserving  both indefinitely.
	I hefted the box and set it on a rack with the other cases.
	The guards took the torches and swung the heavy door to as I left. The dull boom as it closed echoed down the dim corridor and the guards returned to their station.  It was a safe bet that  as soon  as Max and I were out of sight they would be back to  their game of dice.  You couldn't really blame them; it was a boring duty to pull.
	Maxine  flicked  on the electric lantern she  was  carrying, filling the corridor with a crisp,  bluish light that was strange after the faint orange illumination of the torches.
	I  had  that sensation you feel when you've been  wearing  a watch  for years and suddenly it comes off for some  reason:  You feel  as if part of your wrist is missing.  That rifle  had  been near at hand for so long it had almost seemed a part of  me.  Now it  was locked away behind more than a dozen metres  of  rock,  I felt. . . naked. A comforting and familiar weight was gone. My hand kept reaching for a shoulder strap that was no longer there.
	Maxine noticed my twitching.  "Withdrawal symptoms  already. You going to be all right without your little toy?"
	"No problem, I'll just use the one you're carrying."
	She looked startled. "How'd you know?"
	"If you want to keep it hidden,  you shouldn't bend over like that. Why are you carrying it anyway?"
	"After what happened down in the town, I didn't want to take any chances."
	THAT  wasn't  still  an issue,  was it?  I thought it was history, just 'a day in the life of' to me.  I  suppose  it had been a real shock for  her,  but  it concerned me that she was still nervous about it. How long had it been now? Months, at least.
	Sathe claws spattered on stone.  A servant dashed down a staircase ahead of us and pulled up short, blinking, in the glare of the electric lantern. "High one, the Shirai's advisor requests your  presence  as soon as is convenient." I saw him glance at Maxine. "Ah. . . alone."
	Maxine shrugged and held up the light. "You're going to need this. I'll walk you up a few levels."
	The guard was bobbing tensely.  "All right," I told him. "Lead on."

******

	There was no reply to my knock.
	"You are sure that he is here?" I asked.
	"He must be," the guard outside the door  replied,  puzzled. "He has not left."
	The  door  was unlocked,  opening easily when I  lifted  the latch.  The guard was close behind me  as  I stepped inside the room,  expecting the worst.  Rehr wasn't getting any younger. . . 
	He was sitting in his chair at the desk,  his back to me  as he stared out the window.  All I could see was the back of his head  and his pointed ears.  It was all  I  needed to see.  Grinning,  I assured  the guard everything was alright.  He  frowned,  but  he left.
	I  reached for the Sony DAC Walkman on the desk and switched  it off.
	The Advisor was fast for his age.  He jumped with a yelp  of surprise,  turning,  his shock turning to a glare. He plucked the earphones out.  "K'hy," he said softly;  dangerously.  "You could have thought about announcing yourself."
	"I  am  sorry,  sir," I bowed  my  head.  "I  did. . . scratch; several times. You did not answer and I was concerned for you."
	He glared  at me, then looked at the Walkman.   The thunderclouds  behind his eyes cleared and his  grey-tufted  ears flickered.  "Ah. . . No.  The fault was not yours. I borrowed this thing from your mate. She said it was music from your world."
	I  took the proffered earphones and held one to my ear;  the  music he'd  been so engrossed in was Nigel Kennedy's rendition  of  The Four  Seasons.  I pressed the reverse button.  The  flipside  was halfway through QueensRyche,  Silent Lucidity.  Hmmm,  eclectic tastes.
	"You like it?" I asked.
	"It is a change," he answered diplomatically.  "So many different kinds  of instruments,  different  music. . . " The Sathe gave a  steam-kettle hiss  as  he  laid  the  Walkman on  his  lap.  "Some  of  it  is appealing,  some of it is just. . . unusual." He tapped the stereo with a claw and looked up at me. "K'hy,  I look at this object and I am afraid.  Your  people can  make  objects like this.  They can build devices  like  that vehicle  of your mate's.  What would happen if your people  could find a way to travel between our worlds at will?"
	I shrugged helplessly and picked up a spare tape from the desk: Robert Plant, Fate of Nations. "I cannot say. I just do not know. In our exploration of our own world, we made many mistakes, but I am not certain that we would not make the same mistakes here."
	"You speak against your own people?!"
	"I  merely say what is the truth. . . or what I believe  to  be the truth."
	The Advisor rested his chin upon steepled fingers and stared at me, thoughtful. Had I said something wrong? Then his ears flicked like a fly had buzzed him and he asked, "What could your people do?"
	I stared back at him. That was one question I didn't want to answer, for several reasons, the least being the paranoia it might generate toward the humans who were here.  "I. . . I do not know exactly," I hedged. "I suppose it would depend on who found whom. Is this why you sent for me?"
	"Not entirely," he said,  looking momentarily  disappointed. "I  thought  that you would want this back." He  reached  into  a drawer  and pulled out a yellowish rectangle of parchment with  a glaring red wax seal:  the letter I given him for safekeeping. 
	"Thank  you,  Sir," I took the letter and tucked  it  safely inside my jacket.
	"I  am  pleased to be able to return it to you."  He  hissed again as he sank back into his chair,  then smiled.  "Hearing  of some of your. . . ah,  exploits,  I am mildly surprised that you are standing before me today."
	"I got lucky."
	"Lucky! Saaa! There is the understatement of a lifetime!" He pulled another scroll from a wooden stand beside the desk and held it up in front of me.  "Some of  your Greens have given a written report on your actions and the Shirai is still trying to decide just what is to be done with you."
	Oh shit!
	Seeing  me  stiffen,  he hastily set the  scroll  aside  and coughed,  almost apologetically. "Huh. . . I think that can wait. Ah yes,  there  was  one  other thing that I am not  sure  you  know about."
	In  five  days time there was to  be  a. . . a  party?  No, that wasn't the word for it; I think reception, or perhaps formal ball would  be  more accurate.  It was a celebration  of  the  Eastern Realms victory amongst the high fliers of Sathe society: the Clan Lords of surrounding towns and the most prominent merchants.
	"It  is  for  them to pay their respects  and  pledge  their loyalty to the Shirai," Rehr told me. "There will also be Gulfers present. A formal surrender of their Clan lands before an assembly after Tahr proved herself at the challenge."
	THAT  was something I'd screwed up royally.  If I hadn't interfered in Sathe business - in that Challenge - Tahr would be dead. However, I had, and she was alive. Did that make her any less capable of ruling the Eastern Realm?  I doubted it. Hraasa, now that was one I would definitely NOT like to see in the  White House. Having Gengis Khan as your lord would've been only marginally worse.
	"K'hy?"
	"Huh?"
	"Is something bothering you?"
	"Oh,  no.  No." I gave him a weak grin. "A party; and here I am without a thing to wear."
	"Something will be provided," he assured me.

******

	Lights,  torches and lanterns,  were burning throughout  the Citadel.  Windows  small  and  large all over the  faces  of  the ancient structure were lit;  thousands of points of light against the dark vertices of stone walls and towers.
	The air that night was warm. A breeze curling in through the open window made the lamps in my quarters flicker and carried the raucous sound of Sathe carrying out preparations for the night to come.
	Two  females,  each  so different  from  the  other,  turned together when I walked through the door.  Remae had never seen me in   anything   other   than  worn   army   fatigues   or   Sathe clothing, altered  and cobbled together to fit my frame.  Now  she blinked in surprise.
	Both tunic and trousers were black, with aquamarine trim, silver piping on sleeves and legs. The broad leather belt was glossy black with a simple silver buckle matching the buttons. The cut was a sort of cross between dress uniform and a tuxedo, except neither of those styles would have the cloak slung across my shoulder: night black.
	 "Isn't this overdoing it?" I asked Max. "Didn't you have a tux?"
	"Quit  complaining!" she snapped back. "You look great."  She fiddled  with something on my collar and asked Remae,  "That  is good?"
	The  Sathe  Marshal rubbed at the small tuft of fur  on  her chin while she cast a critical eye over me.  "Good," she  finally proclaimed it.  "Very good.  Muted,  yet suits him well,  but you will have to something about his fur. Rot you K'hy, stop squirming! You will be amongst some of the most influential individuals in the realms,  you  must make a good impression upon them. Now sit and be still!"
	I  was pushed down into a chair to endure their fussing over  me; adjusting this and that detail, what would look best. Fingers both hairless and furred yanked my head this way and that,  claws raked and tugged at  my hair  and  beard:  pulling and rearranging while  the  two  women debated between themselves what look I should have. A bit off here? no, it looked better long, like a mane. Tie it back. Did Sathe kids play with dolls? I didn't know.
	Maxine had indeed come a long way.  Her accent was still strong and her vocabulary was not quite as extensive as mine, but now  she was able to work hand in hand with a  Sathe.  It  wasn't that long ago that just a Sathe's touch made her shy away. 
	The sound of Sathe shouting drifted in through the window on the  breeze and Maxine started to go to work on my  patchy  beard with  a  pair of nail scissors she'd produced  from  somewhere. While her hands tilted my head this way and that I had to wonder what she would be wearing to the reception the next night.

******

	I  rapped  my knuckles against  the  door.  "Ms  Wayne?  You ready?"
	Sathe  Clan  Lords and their retinues had been  arriving  in Mainport for the past week and the town was buzzing as  merchants made  the  most of the sudden boom in  trade.  Further  down  the corridor a group of Sathe soldiers stopped to stare openly at us: probably  out-of-town troops just looking around the  Citadel.  I glared back and they hastily moved off again.
	The  door opened.  I turned back and began to say hello and left my jaw hanging open.
	"You like?" Max asked.
	I got a blurred impression of chiffon, lace, and flesh.
	"I   take  it  that  drooling  means  yes?"  Maxine   smiled innocently, disarmingly.
	I nodded stupidly, blinked several  times. She   was wearing. . . something  not quite like a jumpsuit,  not a blouse  or dress, but unlike any evening gown I had ever heard of: white and tantalisingly  semi-transparent  in  places.   An  intricate  and somewhat  daring  neckline that would be completely lost on Sathe,   looping  down  around  her   modest cleavage,  melding  with bloused sleeves.  Down the sides of  her thighs  and  hips the light fabric bloused out  again,  cut  into vertical slits that hid just enough.  Below the knees and  elbows the  white fabric was inlaid with silver and gold wire that  made it  hug  the contours of her forearms  and  calves.  More  silver filigree  wound  through  the  auburn hair  that  fell  about  her shoulders. Shoes must have been a problem as the Sathe don't have anything approaching a cobbler: she was wearing white leather moccasins.
	The evening-blue,  floor-length mantle was fastened at her shoulder with  a  small disk of engraved silver. It made her eyes seem to glow.
	"Well?" she smiled, "Are you going to stop gaping and escort me?" She didn't wait  for me to answer,  but hooked her arm  through  mine;  half-dragging me, the cloak swirling behind her, brushing and flirting with mine.
	There were guards waiting for us. They stared unabashedly as we passed, then hastily fell in behind us. More bodyguards.
	"Where the hell DID you get that from?!" I finally blurted.
	Maxine   laughed   and  touched  the  filmy  fabric   of   a sleeve. "Made  it. . . with a bit of help and a few suggestions  from friends."
	"Who? Delmonte de Sathe?"
	She didn't answer that,  just smiled at me in a way that had me wanting to climb the walls.
	The  corridors  throughout the uppermost tiers of  the  Keep were  flooded  with  light;  scores  of  servants  replacing  and relighting  torches and lamps that had burnt themselves out.  The smoke hung to the ceiling like inverted mist, escaping out open windows and doors. I could  feel Maxine  pressing  against  my  side  as  we  drew  nearer   our destination, then we ascended the final staircase and through the final doorway.
	If I had harboured any fears that maybe we were dressed a smidgen. . . flamboyantly,  those  doubts  were dispelled  upon  the first glimpse of the reception area ahead.
	One  entire wall of the massive room opened onto a  terraced garden that overlooked the central courtyard of the Keep. Flowing arches  and trellises wrapped in greenery blurred  the  interface between the interior and exterior,  almost making it difficult to tell where the marbled floors and walls ended and the long  grass of the garden began.
	The  doorway we were standing in was flanked on either  side by  columns  towering up to the vaulted  ceiling  high  above.  A totally different type of architecture to that used in the  great hall  where massive rafters supported the weight of the  roof  by brute force.  Here,  the magic of slender arches easily  shrugged off the mass of the ceiling. A cascade of broad marble steps paved the way down into a sea of furry bodies.
	The room was a riot of colour.  Clan devices and flags festooned the walls  and ceiling while  the  Sathe  themselves  were an insane palette of color and styles: breeches, parade armour, sashes, cloaks, furs, decorative splashes  of  paint on fur. . . all  manner of Sathe fashions  and  all  in brilliant colours: Reds,  greens,  blues,  pinks, yellows, purples, blacks. All these  colours and more swirled  and mixed while the sometimes-discordant,  sometimes-smooth sound  of Sathe  music  from a small knot of musicians drifted above the muted hiss of the  crowd.
	A  sea  of  catlike  faces  swinging  our  way,  green  eyes widening,  leathery nostrils flaring.  Sathe leaned towards their neighbours,  whispered  questions spreading in a susurrus  across the hall.  As we two humans moved down into the room Sathe stared at us, some moving away, others standing their ground, but laying their  ears back.  Claws slipped from fingertips  in  unconscious reflex  as  the  owners were faced with something  they  did  not understand.
	Many  of  them  had  heard  that  the  Shirai  had. . . strange. . . guests  but didn't realise just HOW  strange. Although nobody  felt inclined to start chatting with us we did  make  a nice topic of conversation and a babble of Sathe voices rose in our wake. Being alone in a crowded room isn't a pleasant feeling. 
	Maxine  and I moved across the room to an archway  bordering upon  the garden.  The Sathe ideal of an  aesthetically  pleasing garden  differed  from that of neatly trimmed lawns  favoured  by most humans;  they preferred the grass wild, burrs and weeds and all.
	I  snagged a couple of ales from a passing tray  and  handed one to Maxine. 
	"Thanks."
	"You're welcome." I took a sip and pulled a face. "If this's their best brew, it's going to be a long night."
	"Do you know anyone?"
	I looked back into the crowded room. "Can't see any famliar ears."
	"What about her?" Maxine indicated someone standing behind me.
	"K'hy, greetings."
	Surprised,  I turned and looked down at the  chocolate-brown Sathe  who raised her goblet in salute and smiled up at  me.  Her mane was still the rust-red it had been in Weather Rock, but this time  it was set off by golden strands of wire wound through  it, individual  strands  coming  together over  her  brow.  Both  her breeches  and the light leather harness entwined about her  torso were  coloured  brick-red  and  dark  green,  sometimes  blending into, sometimes in contrast to her fur. The needle-like slashes of brilliant yellow and crimson across her harness were not a  touch any human would have chosen. "It is good to see you again. There is so much that I did not get a chance to thank you for," Fres's said.
	"Please, High One"  I protested,  "that is not necessary.  It was  my job. If you must thank someone, thank Tahr. . . "
	"Ah,  no," she waved my words aside.  "You remember what Hraasa said?  This was not your fight, yet you so nearly gave your life for us.  For what you have done  the Fres's  Clan shall always thank you.  You are welcome within  our Clan circle and will always be welcome at any of our holdings."
	"High One. I. . . I thank you." I didn't know what else to say.
	The  Clan Lord showed amusement at my  confusion.  Her  ears flinched  and she looked back at the crowd of Sathe in the  room. "You would seem to be a little out of place here."
	"We  just do not seem to fit in,  High One," I  replied. " I cannot understand why."
	The ears of the Clan Lord of Weather Rock twitched in  mirth. "Aye,  I would wonder how that can be."  Then  she turned to Maxine; blinked. "This is your mate? I had no idea that she would look so different from you."
	Maxine looked sidelong at me. One of those 'give-me-a-break' looks.
	"Uh, she is not exactly my mate."
	"No?  I would have thought that you would not have much of a choice whom you took." Why did everyone say that? "Tell me, does she have a name?"
	"I-am-sorry.  High One, this is Maxine. Maxine; Fres's, Clan Lord of Weather Rock."
	Manners impeccable,  Maxine bowed her head.  "I am honoured, High One, but most Sathe find it easier to call me Mas."
	Fres's  ears  perked  up.   "She  speaks  as  well  as   you do!"		
	"Thank you," Maxine smiled.
	By that time we had attracted a small congregation of amused and  bemused  Sathe dignitaries.  A male decked  out  in  gaudily decorated leather armour that would only have been of use on  the parade ground stepped forwards:  cautiously.  "Fres's. . . you  KNOW these?!"
	Wrinkles formed up Fres's's muzzle.  "Of course. I make it a point to become acquainted with all potential customers. Honoured folks,  these are K'hy and Mas.  They are H'mans." She clapped  a hand on my shoulder - claws pulled - and grinned,  "I should  say they are more nervous of us than we are of them."
	As if that was a signal,  the Sathe moved closer,  curiosity beating  back their caution.  Soon I found myself sitting upon  a dark  granite bench,  one of several arranged in a circle in  the overgrown garden beneath the dark branches of a Red Maple.  Sathe clustered around on other benches,  questioning  me,  commenting, laughing.  I put up with curious hands touching my skin and hair, tracing unfamiliar bone structures, examining my hands.
	As  time  marched on,  Sathe drifted away,  but  there  were always more to take their places.  In so many ways these cream of the  Sathe aristocracy were identical to the Sathe cubs I'd  met: their curiosity,  their questioning and touching. Curiosity killed. . . etc. , etc. 
	Nearby, Maxine was engaged in conversation with a young male in greens and golds. I glanced their way in time to see him fondling her breasts.
	"HEY!"
	Sathe  eyes  went wide and ears laid back as I  vaulted  the back  of  the  bench and advanced  upon  the  youth,  my  fingers clenching  into  fists.  He turned at my shout  then  yelped  and retreated before my advance.  Sathe turned to watch.  Several who had been talking to me followed me and I couldn't be sure if they would help or hinder me.
	"Kelly!"  Maxine had my arm.  "What the hell're you  doing?! God's sake, calm down! He was just looking."	 
	"Dammit, he TOUCHED you!"
	"So?   They've all been touching you," she snapped,  then her brows shot up and she grinned, "Jealousy?"
	"What?"
	"Kelly,  are you actually jealous?"  She gave an incredulous laugh.
	I grimaced and scratched at my head as I turned to the Sathe youth. "Sir, the mistake was mine. I misunderstood. I-am-sorry."
	Maxine  smiled  at  the  Sathe.  "He  only  thought  he  was protecting me. Please understand; forgive."
	The youth looked from her to me,  then back again.  Abruptly his ears flicked.  "Ah. . . of course.  You are mated.  Of course  I understand."  He  stalked  off to the  watching  crowd  where  he explained  - loudly - to his friends that I was only thinking  to protect my mate. She was, after all, the only one I had.
	Embarrassed, I brushed through the long grass to lean on the railing of the garden.  Far below - beyond the multitude of tiers - the granite of the ancient monoliths of the Clan Circle gleamed in the moonlight.
	"Kelly?"
	I didn't answer.
	"Hey, it's nothing to get like that  over.  I  mean, I'm flattered that you cared enough.  You did stand up for what  you thought was right."
	I  started as I felt a hand come to rest upon  my  shoulder. Maxine was looking up at me,  amusement crinkling the corners of  her eyes.  God,  but she was beautiful that night.  Things, emotions, dreams stirred inside. Slowly,  I raised my hand to her cheek, brushing my knuckles over her skin. Wonder. Almost forgotten how soft it was.  She smiled,  pressed against my chest.  I bent to meet her upturned face.
	"K'hy! Mas!"
	It broke.
	That moment between us snapped and dissolved into the ether, fading as if it had never been.
	Remae stood nearby, waiting with a puzzled tilt of her head. The  Marshal  knew  she'd  interrupted  something,   but   didn't understand what. "K'hy?"
	Maxine stiffened and stepped away from me.
	I swear, Remae, this had better be good!
	"The Shirai has arrived. The ceremony is to begin."

******

	"Honoured Shirai. On the behalf of my Clan, I lay my arms at your feet and bare my throat for your claws. We shall follow your tail and may none stray from the path you lead."
	The voice of the Clan Lord echoed in the quiet of the  room. The musicians had fallen silent while the multitude of Sathe  had formed  into  ranked groups.  Individual Clans  gathered  beneath their  standards whilst listening to the litany being recited  on the raised dais at one end of the room.
	Tahr  raised her arm to his throat and I saw claws  stroking the fur there.  "I return your arms to you," she replied. "I stay my hand. I accept your submission and your allegiance. In return, as your protector,  I swear to defend you,  to aid you,  to watch over you and your kin. My food is yours. My drink is yours drink, and my roof is yours. All I ask of you is your allegiance."
	"High one, our hands are your own. We shall follow," he promised.
	Tahr leaned closer,  to breath into his face.  His  nostrils widened as he inhaled and she stepped back again.
	"Shirai,"  the  Clan Lord bowed then stepped down  from  the dais.
	Without  protraction  another Clan Lord  was  called  forth, toward the platform where Tahr ai Shirai awaited. She was wearing orange  and red breeches,  tied just below the knees and  at  the waist  with tassled cords.  Around her shoulders rested  a  high-collared  mantle:  a light reddish-ochre with patterns  of  black spots  like a leopards hide.  The clasps that fastened it at  her throat bore a blood-red stone the size of an egg.
	Again  and  again,  for  Lord  after  Lord  the  litany  was repeated.  Tahr  touched  claws to  throats,  breathed  into  the muzzles and accepted their allegiance, one after another.
	A Lord in red and black with a jagged ear.
	My jaw clenched: Gulf Realm.
	The Gulf Lord wasn't openly hostile,  but there were  hints: the stiffness in his posture,  his clipped replies as he took the oath  and  resigned  himself to the Claws of  the  Eastern Lord. Perhaps she applied a touch more pressure than she had upon  the previous Lords; the muzzle of the Gulf Lord twitched slightly, as if in discomfort.
	Finally  the last Clan Lord returned to his  retinue.  There was a pause, then the next name was called:
	"K'herry ai Yaviis."
	The  human name was pronounced with great strain,  a lot  of practice behind it.  And it took a second or so for me to realise that name was mine.
	Maxine nudged me out of my shock. "Go on, " she grinned.
	A corridor lined with dumbfounded Sathe had opened ahead  of me,  guiding the way to the dais.  My boots echoed on the marbled floor as I crossed the huge room, climbing the steps slowly until I was level with the green eyes of the Shirai.
	"For  an Outsider to be adopted by a Clan is  not  unknown," she said,  almost as if she were speaking intimately to  me,  yet loud enough for her voice to heard throughout the room. "However, for  a  Clan  to accept one who is not even  Sathe,  that  is  an unprecedented event."
	Tahr turned to confront the stares of the nobles below. "Not Sathe,  but  a person of intelligence and sensitivity  enough  to compare to any. It was nearly two years ago when this being and I first met.  He saved my life and agreed to aid me,  a time during which  we both came to know each other and I say that  he  became much more than a friend to me.  Were that he were Sathe,  I would have taken him for a mate," she met my eyes again; ice-cool green depths, nevertheless glowing with warmth.
	"That, however, was impossible.
	"He has been through great pain at the hands of  Sathe,  yet still  he bears us no malice,  freely sharing gifts of  knowledge from a distant and powerful civilization."
	That drew some subdued muttering.
	"And  it was through his courage and honour that this  Realm was  able  to hold its borders to itself.  He has saved Sathe land and  lives, putting his own at risk, more than once.
	"It  is  with great respect that I ask this one  whether  he would accept the protection and loyalty of the Shirai Clan. Would he offer himself to the Shirai Clan."
	I met her level gaze and swallowed.  "High One,  I would  be honoured."
	Claws touched my throat,  gently,  almost tickling.  Through the  pounding  in  my  ears I  heard  Tahr  speaking;  asking  me questions:  "Do  you  swear to follow the Clan  wherever  it  may lead?. . . You shall defend the common ground,  the  circle. . . Always uphold the name of the Ancestors. . . "
	Questions, a lot of them. The ritual went on for longer than the previous ones had.  It was a more important ceremony, for taking  an  Outsider into a Clan was not something  to  be  taken lightly,  the  Clan Lord had to have complete confidence  in  the other's character.
	Tahr  knew me,  knew me with the intimacy with which I  knew myself.  I could almost see memories flickering like pictures  in her  eyes as she gazed at my face.  She had to know that some  of the things she was asking of me were impossible,  meaningless.  A Sathe warrior would hold fast to these oaths until the end, but I couldn't place the same value on them.
	Her breath was warm and tartly sweet.
	"K'hy ai Shirai, you are now of the Clan."
	There  was  a  breath of silence,  then  hissing  cheers  of approval started. I turned to look out upon the hundreds of Sathe faces, the noise crescendoing until it sounded like a storm-swept sea  breaking upon a gravel shore.  It took an effort to keep  my face  in a neutral expression;  breaking into a grin could  prove disastrous  amongst  people to whom the baring of  teeth  was  an insult or challenge.
	There  were  individuals and  small,  scattered  groups  who weren't   so   happy;   looking  either  puzzled   or   downright dissatisfied.  Notably, several types in red and black turned and stalked from the room.

******

	Things turned far less formal afterwards.  The music started up again and other stimulants were produced.  Some Sathe nobility added  powders  to their drinks,  others took  drags  from  small pipes,  producing  sickly-sweet clouds of smoke I went out of  my way to avoid.  The food was brought out on long tables  decorated with  patterned cloths and elaborate candelabra  were laden  with delicacies of all descriptions. . . well,  the Sathe would call them delicacies.  I'd have to be damn hungry before I'd get started on some of that stuff: raw and underdone meat, bowls of pinkish-grey things that looked suspiciously like brains;  other small,  round things that stared back at you,  internal organs, external organs. I tried a small pastie that looked safe,  but the meat inside was so tough I  had to swallow it nearly whole after chewing for a couple of minutes.
	Maxine was also exploring the tables. She'd found some other kind of pasties,  nibbled at one, then taken a larger bite. I was close enough to hear when she asked a servant what was in it. The Sathe gave a brief, one-word answer and bustled off in to the crowd.  Maxine  looked puzzled,  then saw me,  "What was that?  Thifki? I don't know that word."
	I swallowed, fighting a lurch in my guts. "Uh. . . You don't want to know."
	"Yes, I do."
	I shrugged and grimaced. "Alright. . . Testicles. Llamas'."
	Maxine coughed and gagged,  dropping the pastie like it  was burning and grabbing at her mouth.  Sathe  who'd  witnessed the exchange  gave  us  curious stares mingled with sporadic laughter.
	"You okay?" I asked.
	"I think I need some air," Maxine gulped,  looking decidedly green.
	It  was fresher outside.  We left the noise and  drug-stinks and lights behind as we walked the garden tier.  Off to the right the time-worn balustrade overlooked the other levels leading down to the inner circle;  like a stadium with the ranks of  bleachers rising up around the field.  Long, nightbound grasses parted like shadows before us as we walked,  the music losing to the sound of the  wind in the terrace trees and the soft voices of Sathe  also out walking. Flickering oil lamps on poles were dotted around the garden, throwing lonely little pools of light. More lights burned around  the  interior of the Keep,  far more  lamps  than  usual, sparkling in the darkness like a grotto of fireflies.
	"Feeling better?" I asked Max.
	"Uh. . . Yes. Thanks. Goddamn. I thought there was supposed to be food here tonight."
	"Same here," I sighed and looked up at the stars. They didn't twinkle in quite the same way as I remembered from back home. "You  knew  what was going to happen tonight," I  said.  Not  really accusing her.
	Maxine glanced at me.  "Uh-huh.  Tahr and Rehr talked to  me about it earlier."
	"Damnation, someone could have told me."
	A  grin creased her face.  Pure humour that almost  startled me. "We wanted it to be a surprise."
	"Well better luck next time," I said nonchalantly.
	"What?  Bullshit!"  she affected outrage.  "You should  have seen your face. If that wasn't surprise, I don't know what is."
	"Okay, you got me. Guilty as charged."
	"Those pledges you had to take.  What where they?  I  didn't get all the words."
	"Sort of like 'I pledge allegiance to the flag'.  The  Sathe version though,  with things about following the High Lord, never straying  from the trail,  share the kill with clan  and  hearth. Etcetera, etcetera."
	"They really are hunters," she breathed.
	"Yeah.  I  wonder how old that ceremony is?  As old  as  the Circle maybe."
	She gave me a sidelong look: "How old's that?"
	I  was mildly surprised she didn't know.  Still there was  a lot for both of us to learn about Sathe. So, as we walked through  the  wild grass and trees and trimmed  bushes  and occasional oasis of lamplight, I told her.
	It was peaceful out there. That garden ran around the interior of the Keep, a small park in itself. The Sathe we did meet - in pairs or small groups - sometimes greeted us, sometimes avoided us. The outer wall of the garden  was the upper level of the Keep, hidden behind ivy-covered trellises. Down the far end of the garden we came across a simple  railess staircase climbing upwards to the  top  of  the wall.
	Maxine gazed up to where the wall eclipsed the stars. "Shall we?"
	"Do you want to ruin that outfit?" I asked.
	"I'll chance it," she grinned  back.
	I followed close behind her up the narrow steps. The view was worth it.
	The  Keep's ramparts and roofs dropped away below us to  the courtyard where bonfires burned. Further out, like contours lines on a map,  the staggered walls of the Citadel wrapped the hill in concentric circles.  Then there were the lights of  Mainport,  as bright as I had ever remembered. North, boats at anchor bobbed in the  harbour  with  their lanterns shimmering on  the  water  and beyond that the unbroken heartland of the continent stretched off into   the  moonlight.   Millions  upon  millions  of  acres of unbroken wilderness. A new frontier.
	Maxine wrapped her cloak closer against the cool breeze that wound  its  way  amongst the towers  of  the  Citadel,  her  hair stirring softly.
	The light that fell upon the trees was such that it gave the illusion of moving water,as if the woodlands were some vast  sea. Dotted  around the horizon - indescribably faint - the lights  of small farms and settlements, like ships in the night.
	"Times like this I don't regret leaving the rest behind,"  I said.
	Maxine nodded agreement.  "Yeah,  I know what you mean. It's beautiful." For a while we stood there; just watching, then she asked, "How  did it happen?  All this I mean,"  she  amended, turning  and  sweeping  her arm in an arc  that  encompassed  the wilderness in front of us and the Sathe civilization behind. "The land,  the plants,  the animals, they're exactly the same as back home.  I mean,  if the Sathe evolved from native cats - something like the mountain lion or lynx - then wouldn't that've screwed up the food chain?  I  mean,  they were one of the major predators.  If  they became agrarian, what happened to the herbivores? "
	"Well, the Sathe still hunt  them, and there would have been a corresponding increase in the number  of other predators, you know: wolves and bears and all that."
	"Yeah," she sighed. "Still, there should have been changes - major changes - right through the ecosystem.  It's like  tumbling Dominoes,  you topple one,  and the whole lot goes, one after the other.  Something would've changed.  Maybe new species popping up or  something.  There's  also the  geography;  it's  pretty  much identical."
	"'Cept the Arthur Kill's gone," I pointed out. "This isn't an island  anymore.  More like Staten peninsula. There must be more changes.  I'd like to  get  a chance to see Arizona.  You know, that meteor crater. Even Niagara would do."
	"You could ask the Sathe about that. They've got settlements up there haven't they?"
	I nodded.
	The  sounds  of music drifted up  from  behind  us.  Sliding strains  of  an alien melody.  Almost  oriental.  I  crossed  the battlements to look down on the garden where the party was  still in  full swing.  Light spilled from the arches of the hall  where multicolored figures moved between the towering columns.  In the shadows  and darkness of the garden there were glimpses of  half-seen figures amongst the trees and bushes:  Sathe,  some walking, others  -  less inhibited than humans -  enjoying  themselves.  I could still smell the food on the air and despite everything,  it actually smelled pretty good.
	"Kelly?"
	"Hmmm?"
	Maxine  was  across  the  battlements,   leaning  against  a merlon stained by weather and moss.  "Can I ask something?  About the fighting?"
	That  wasn't  something  I  really  wanted  to  talk  about, nevertheless I shrugged, "What?"
	Her  eyes  looked really strange in  this  light.  I guess I'd  been seeing  only Sathe for far too long.  "I did some asking  around. Some of the things they say about you. . . are those things they say you  did  true?  Running into a burning building to save a cub, defeating ten warriors singlehanded?"
	I hesitated before answering. "Rumours."
	"Are they true?"
	"I  never defeated ten warriors in single  combat!  For  the most part I was just trying to stay alive."
	"But  you  did save a cub from a fire?" she  asked.  When I just shrugged vaguely,  she smiled and said,  "That does sound like  the kind  of stuff legends are made of.  Kelly,  why'd you  think  they cheered  you in there?  They've heard what you've done for  them, they respect you. Tahr  gave you what she feels is the greatest  honour  that can be given. What you've done won't be forgotten in a hurry."
	How  right  she was about that?  Was that  reason  Tahr  had adopted  me into the Clan?  Or was it something  else,  something political.  The  hierarchy  of  Sathe nobility  was  a  snarl  of intrigues,   alliances,   misdirections,  and  misconceptions, all buried  so deeply beneath facades of goodwill  that only  someone born  and  raised  into the system could truly  have  a  hope  of understanding it; let alone manipulating it.
	My interference in the Challenge had really pissed Tahr off. I still had the scratches. But there hadn't been just anger in her reations, there was also fear. I hadn't beent Eastern, not even Sathe; an enigma in the metaphorical eyes  of the law. How could a person be recognised as such if they didn't even have clan and family? The Sathe word  'animal' translates as 'not Sathe'. That was us. By  Sathe law I couldn't be called before a tribunal  to  be judged as a proper 'person' could but there was action could  be  taken against me. . . of an unofficial sort, a terminal sort, in a back room or side-street.
	Eliminate the only random factor:  Politics isn't a personal affair  - it's cold and remote.  Like an iceberg,  most  of  it's hidden  beneath  the surface,  and it's that part you  can't  see that's dangerous.
	Thinking about that clenched a cold hand around my guts.  If I was found out,  if Sathe learned what had actually learned what had happened at Weather Rock,  the best I could've hoped for  was that  caution to anger the Shirai Clan and reluctance to do  away with something that could prove an asset to the entire Sathe race would at least preserve my life. That ceremony wasn't just an honor; it was an insurance policy, a shield. It wrapped me in the protection of the Shirai Clan. 
	But what would be done with Maxine?
	"Max,  has  anyone said anything about getting you into  the clan?"
	She looked puzzled. "Uh. . . yeah. Tahr spoke about it earlier. She said that it'd 'take care of itself and in time you will join with the clan.' What'd she mean?"
	"I'm not sure," I frowned.  That certainly didn't sound like Tahr; too corny. What was she talking about. . . Then I put a couple of  those  words into the Sathe context.  That could be  what  it meant. . . Could it?  No. . . couldn't be.  Still,  thank God  Maxine's Sathe  wasn't quite up to nuances,  riddles and puns.  "You  sure that's what she said?"
	"Uh-huh. Word for word."
	I  shook  my head.  "I can't really say.  I think I  need  a little  talk with her." Again the smell of food drifted up to  us and my stomach tried to remind me of all the hours since I'd last had a good meal. "Say, you hungry?"
	She also sniffed the air. "Yeah, but not for Llama nuts."
	I grinned.  "Then how about we go somewhere we can get  some decent food."
	She brightened. "Sure. Where?"
	"Uh,  I  think the Red Sails is about the only place  in  town that'd serve us."
	At that her expression changed again.  "Oh.  What about what happened last time."
	"That  won't happen.  They were in the Gulf payroll  and  we don't have to worry about that anymore.  If you want we could get some Citadel guards to tag along."
	"No trouble?"
	I put one hand to my chest. "I swear. Scouts honour."
	She pursed her lips, then shrugged lightly. "Alright. You're on. I'd like to get out of here for a while."
	"You don't want the guards?"
	"Nah, but do you mind if I get changed out of this lot?" she indicated  the white eveningwear.  "It's not the best  stuff  for walking around town in."
	"Sure." To tell the truth,  I wanted to get into something a little less conspicuous.  I gave an exaggerated bow and held  out my arm. "May I escort you to your quarters, madam?"
	She  giggled and took my arm,  affecting a southern  accent, "Why, sah. I'd be downraht honoured."

******


	 Ten  minutes later I met Maxine at her door where  she  was still brushing her hair.  She'd changed into levis,  sweater, her leather bomber jacket,  and solid hiking boots, all human made. I painted quite a different picture in a mixture of human OD shirt, boots,  and my Sathe cloak and black breeches.  Max looked me  up and down.
	"Sorry," I shrugged apologetically.  "My other suit's at the cleaners."
	She laughed. "Don't worry. You look. . . uh, great."
	"Right.  'Uh,  great' she says.  Hell, who knows - maybe the look'll catch on. So, shall we go?" I fell into step beside her.
	"You know," she said as we walked, "I don't really know much about you. I mean, where're you from? What did you do? What about your family? Huh?"
	"Alright." I sighed and gathered my thoughts.  "I'm from New Jersey originally.  My parents, were killed in train crash when I was about two. I was adopted by friends of the family and grew up acros the water in New York."
	"Oh.  I'm  sorry," she said.  I'd heard that too  often.  It seemed to be an automatic response from anyone who heard I'd lost someone.
	"What? That I grew up in New York?"
	She looked surprised. "No, that your parents were killed."
	"There's no need  to  be.  My foster  parents were a great couple.  I had a childhood a lot  of kids would gladly trade their own parents to have. Anyway, it was a long time ago. Another world."
	"Oh," she said again. "Why'd you join up?"
	"Pay  my way through the final years of college  mostly,"  I said. "And I thought it'd be a change."
	"No shit? Was it?"
	"Well,  yeah. I tell you though, I'd never realised how much I hated other people telling me what to do. I wonder what they've got me down as now: missing, AWOL, deserter. . . "
	"I wouldn't worry about it," Maxine grinned.  "What are they going to do anyway. Arrest you?"	
	"I don't know.  If we ever get back there it could make  it difficult.  'Gee,  well you see Sarge,  there was this planet inhabited by cats and they had a war and I was invited. Did I miss anything?'"
	Max laughed.
	Guards   in   ornamental  armour   stationed   at   corridor intersections stared as we passed,  those who knew me standing to attention.
	"Anyway," I said.  "What about you? Your family? You told me your father's big in computer circles."
	"Yeah. Well, he's got his Integrated Solutions and  mom has her teaching job.  We don't really need the money, but she enjoys it. The last of the philanthropists, I guess."
	"Brothers or sisters?"
	"Nope.  Only  child.  I was on break from college  and  just wanted to get away from it all for a few days.  I've got. . . had  a thesis  due and thought I might get some inspirations out in  the mountains. Huh! Got a bit more than that, didn't I."
	"What're you studying?"
	"Ahhh. . . Textile designs, some of the soft sciences: biology, psychology, English, struggling through calculus."
	"Textile design," I noted. "That explains the dress."
	She laughed, "Yeah. I showed Tahr sketches from my portfolio and she picked it out. I don't know what she thought of the other stuff in there."
	The  main  entry hall of the Keep was  around  us  now,  our voices  taking  on the hollow tone they may acquire  in  a  great cathedral.  "I wish I could have seen that," I smiled,  picturing it. "I think we confuse her enough as it is."
	And  we were down the steps and in  the  courtyard,  walking through  the pools of heat surrounding the bonfires  that  burned there,  still  chatting and learning.  Servants  bustled  around, stacking  wagonload upon wagonload of wood and keeping the  fires stoked.
	"You want to take the ute down?" Maxine asked me.
	"Uhh. . . I  don't think that'd work very well;  we'd  probably start  a  riot.  Anyway,  the parking's  hopeless;  probably  get clamped. How about public transport instead?"
	"Huh? What public transport?"
	"I'll show you."
	A few minutes later and we were riding. It hadn't taken much fast talking to get one of the Sathe carting wood up to  give us a lift down; I think he was too terrified to argue. Anyway, he just sat there and drove,  holding the reigns and trembling violently while Maxine and I sat back on the bed chatting away. We got off at the bottom  of the switchback road down from the Citadel and  thanked him.  He didn't speak, just continued to sit and stare at us with a stupified expression.
	Despite the hour,  the town was busy and festive. There were stalls  in  the  streets  lit  with  strings  of  colorful  paper lanterns.  Merchants  shouted,  cheerfully praising  their  wares while decrying their competitors' produce. There were troubadours and  acrobats  performing.  Maxine and I paused to join  a  small crowd  watching a troupe tumbling and leaping with a little  less facility  than  human acrobats could achieve and when  we  turned away we found there was a larger crowd watching us.
	Oh, well. Only to be expected I suppose.
	The Red Sails was a welcome haven. I greeted the bouncers at the  door and they admitted us without a fifth glance.  From  the top of the stairs the crowd inside seemed about normal; the usual mix of wharfies,  traders,  craftsmen,  and a few guards on their off-shift. The smoke of cooking and the oil lamps used still gave the  place its own cloud ceiling.  The odours of Sathe  and  food mixed  and  mingled with the clatter of  mugs  and  cutlery,  the snarls and spats of voices.  Some Sathe stared,  which was usual, and some actually greeted me,  which wasn't. I suppose hearsay of the Red Sail's unusual patrons had spread.
	"Hi,  K'hy!"  The  cheerful greeting in a  familiar  mangled English came from behind the bar.  Dun colored fur and a flash of white   teeth  came  from  behind  a  pile  of  dishes   balanced precariously  on  a  tray.  "Be  right  with  you,"  she  called, navigating  with  the ease of long practice through  the  clutter behind the bar to the door leading to the kitchens.
	She returned half a minute later wiping her hands on a grimy rag  and  once again I wondered about the health  regulations  in this place.  "K'hy.  Mas.  It has been a long time.  Good to  see you."
	"Same here," I smiled back. "How is life treating you?"
	"A?"  she  blinked,  then  grinned and  leaned  against  the stained countertop.  "Ah!  Not too badly.  Not too badly at  all. Now, what have you been doing with yourselves?"
	"Not a lot. Max has been working on her speaking."
	She looked at Maxine. "Any improvement?"
	"I like to think so," Maxine replied.
	"Hah!"  the  Sathe female flinched back  in  surprise.  "She speaks as well as you!"
	"Well,"  I  waggled  my hand in an 'iffy' sort of way,  "almost  as well. . . uhnn!" I drew back as Max cocked her elbow  again."Alright! Uncle ! As well as I do!"
	"You  are lucky she does not have claws,  K'hy,"  the  Sathe chuckled. "Now, are you drinking?"
	"Oh, sure. Max?"
	"You have any Steinlager? Thought not. . . Ah, ale for me."
	"Same here,  two ales please," I asked.  "Also a meal if you could."
	"Ah," she grimaced.  "Your burnt meat? I thought there would be ample food at the Citadel this night."
	I glanced at Maxine who made a face  "It is not to our taste.  Too. . . fancy for us.  We prefer something simpler; like last time,  no internal organs. Oh, and you'll also want this." I handed my knife across.
	She took it, flipped it over, then slipped it under the bar. "Remind me to return it,  all right?  Very well. There is something cooking back there; I'll make sure it is dead and burnt. Find a table."
	"Thanks. . . " I started to say, but she was already skittering off to the kitchen.
	We found our table,  scratched black wood in a dim alcove. A single beeswax candle flickered, the wax running down the side to puddle on the tabletop.  Jeeze, against this just the formica and cheap  plastic  of  a  truck stop would  look  like  a  five-star restaurant.  Maxine squeezed in opposite me,  settling herself on the  rough planks that served for seats.  The candle  threw  deep shadows across her face,  but her eyes glittered.  "Kelly, what's her name?"
	I shrugged. "I don't know."
	"I thought so. How long have you known her?"
	I  scratched my head.  "Ahhh. . . Not sure.  I met her a  while back,  before you arrived. She almost put a quarrel through me. I guess things went uphill from there."
	"Friendly, though."
	"Yeah." God, that she was alright. No prejudices neither, as that night way back when had proven. "It helps, you know."
	"How do you mean?"
	I drummed a short tattoo on the claw-torn tabletop: "A Sathe being so openly friendly. I mean, you know the looks you get just walking around the Citadel. When they're friendly it makes me feel like a person."
	She nodded. "Oh. Gives you hope they'll maybe be able to treat us a human beings and not some kind of freaks?"
	The  two are kind of synonymous here,  but I knew  what  she meant.  "I  hope so.  Kind of weird though:  humans of  different races  still  haven't learned to live together and  here  we  are trying to do that with a different species."
	"You  really  think  we'll have  better  luck?"  she  asked, brushing a strand of dark hair back.
	"I hope so," I replied. "Damn, I hope so."
	We  were quiet a while,  watching the Sathe watching  us.  I wondered  what  they were thinking when they saw the  two  of  us sitting here.  So many of them covertly glanced our way,  met  my eye, then hastily turned away again.
	"Max."
	"Hmmm?" she turned back to me.
	"Something I picked up." I reached into  a  pocket  and pulled  out the heavy little circlet.  It glittered dully in  the candlelight,  the filigree head of the eagle shining  silver.  "I thought you might like it."
	She  blinked at me,  then picked up the amulet by  the  thin chain,  holding  it  dangling and twisting in  the  light  before breaking into a smile. "Kelly, it's. . . thank you."
	I smiled back. "Try it on."
	She did so,  tossing her hair forward to slip the chain over her  head - it didn't have a clasp - then she touched  the  dime-sized  circlet  where  it  nestled  against  her  throat.   "It's beautiful."
	"Yeah,  it is," I agreed,  meeting her eyes.  "But it  can't compete."
	I think she blushed then.  Damn candlelight: you can't see a thing.
	Two pewter mugs banged down in front of us, spilling liquid. Furry  muscular  arms  leaned on the table  and  a  muzzled  face grinned down.  After that brief normality of Maxine it came as  a slight shock.  "Alright," she said, "Two ales. Warm and honeyed." Then she spied the pendant. "Ah. . . Very nice. A gift?"
	"From Kelly," replied Maxine.
	"Sathe made?  I thought so, but I don't recognise the style. Not local?"
	Max shrugged:  "I do not know. Kelly? did you find this down south?"
	"Uh-huh."
	The Sathe started.  "South?  What were you doing down there? The war. . . " Then it clicked: "Weather Rock?"
	"Yes."
	"Then it WAS you!  My Ancestors! I heard stories coming back about  the fighting there.  There was talking about a handful  of Eastern warriors stopping the Gulf advance in its tracks and leaving the  fields  covered  with their  bodies.  They  said  there  was a  monst. . . uh,  something not-Sathe helping us and I thought  it might be you,  but every description I heard was different.  Hai, were  some  of  those things they  said  you  did  true?  Killing hundreds of them? Tearing a Gulf officer's heart out?"
	I flinched in shock. "Where did you hear THAT?"
	"I do not know. Just some troopers. Rumours."
	Rumours.  More  stories.  Lies.  I  felt a surge  of  anger. "Shit, rumours like that I do not need."
	I think she noticed my irritation;  Her nostrils flared.  "I get your food."
	I  watched her melt back into the crowd,  one cat  among  so many, then I sighed.
	"Hey." Maxine swatted at my hand. "Don't let it get you. Not all of those rumours are bullshit.  I mean,  you did save  lives. You had to take sides somewhere."
	A  flash  of  waves of Sathe  going  down  under  machinegun fire. . . 
	I shook my head: "Did I? We could've run."
	"Where?  They'd  just  come  after  us,  wouldn't  they?  We couldn't hide forever. . . What's so funny?"
	I shook my head.  "It's just an argument I had with myself a while back. Do I run? Where do I go?"
	"Oh." She glanced out of the booth at the room.  "You talked yourself out of it."
	"Yeah.  Like you said,  I couldn't spend the rest of my life running."
	"No." She took a sip from her mug,  grimaced. "If you hadn't got involved in the first place. . . "
	"Hmmm? How do you mean?"
	"Tahr.  When  you first saw her. . . I mean,  why did you  help her?"
	I tasted my own drink:  warm and malt and slightly sweet. I'd had a conversation along these lines before. "I didn't  have much of a choice at the time.  They were  trying  to kill me.  Afterwards. . . well,  she was almost dead and I wanted to find out just what the hell was going on.  I just couldn't  leave her."  I  watched another bead of wax run down the  side  of  the candle.
	"You weren't scared of her? I think I would've run."
	"Scared?  Of  her?" I chuckled.  "Bleeding, half-dead. . . Hell, yeah,  she scared  me shitless at first. I mean, I didn't know her language, I expected to   wake   up  with  my  throat  ripped  out.   It   took   time before. . . well. . . before we. . . before we knew each other."
	There was an awkward silence.  Maxine took a hasty drag from her  drink  and  I stared uncomfortably down at my  own  mug  and mentally  kicked myself in the head.  Why did THAT have  to  rear its head? however unintentionally?
	Then she cleared her throat. I saw something awkward coming. "Ah, Kelly. . .  I never really apologised."
	"Huh? What for?"
	"What I said about you and Tahr," she replied,  not able  to meet my gaze. "You were right: I didn't understand. I thought. . . I didn't know what you'd been through together. I'm sorry."
	Those words. Amazing how just that little bit of forgiveness lifted a weight. "Thank you."
	She  touched  the amulet.  "While you  were  gone,  she  was worried about you.  I've never seen her. . . She was scared,  Kelly, scared for you!"
	"So was I."
	And  our  food arrived ,  stacked high on  a  tray  adroitly waltzed through the crowded by the female bartender.  Back to  her buoyant self she handed out the steaming dishes.  "As you wanted: just flesh and burnt."
	Burnt. . . Now that was a relative turn.  Medium-rare was  more like it.  Still, it looked one hell of a lot more appetizing than that stuff lurking in the bowls back up at the citadel.  The meat was actually cooked,  and there were more plants than any  Sathe would want: potatoes and a leaf that looked a bit like lettuce. A thick  gravy  smelling like peanuts spread across  the  meat  and chunks of rough bread perched on the side of the dishes.
	"Hrilya  likes  a challenge,  but he cannot  understand  why you would want to ruin a perfectly good meal. 'Why not just throw it into the fire', he said."
	I poked at a steak. "It looks fine to me."
	She hissed.  "I would imagine they would have delicacies you could only dream at up there tonight. A rare occasion indeed."
	"Has this kind of occasion happened before?"
	She scratched her chin.  "Ahhh, I cannot say for sure. There was something.  It was way before my life though.  There was also the Lake Traders,  but they settled their differences.  Now  they are  gaining more land in the South.  You would have  seen  their representatives at the Citadel this night."
	"Yes, they took oaths from several Gulf Clan Lords."
	"Only fair. They helped us, so we repay them." She picked up the tray and seemed about to leave,  then stopped and cocked  her head  at me,  then at Maxine.  "What about you two.  How did  the Shirai thank you?"
	"A new name."
	She nearly dropped the tray: "You are serious?!"
	"Yes."
	She stared, the tip of her tongue lolling from a  corner of her mouth.  "I would never have believed it.  So,  now what is your name?"
	"Kelly ai Shirai."
	"The Shirai herself. K'hy, you have some powerful friends. I would   never  have  thought  anyone  would  bring. . . people,"   a hesitation there,  "like you and Mas into their clan. I mean, you are. . . " she trailed off, looking embarrassed.
	"Yeah  ," I nodded.  "But she only named me into  the  Clan. What about Mas?"
	"Huh?" she blinked,  then her ears flickered. "No, K'hy. You do not understand; You have been named into the Clan so your mate also carries the name."
	"But we are not mated."
	"What?" She looked taken aback at that. "Not mated?"
	"No."
	"I would have thought. . . "
	"HAI! FERHIA!"
	She looked up at the shout from across the room.  That  male who'd  stopped  me the first time I'd come here was  glaring  our way.  "Shave you, Ferhia! You are not paid to move your mouth all night!"
	"I'm  not  paid enough to do anything else!"  she  muttered. "Alright!" she called back, then gave us an apologetic smile as I paid her. "Sorry. If you need anything else. . . 
	"Ferhia!"
	"ALRIGHT!"  she  bellowed  back.   "Clear  the  way!  Coming through!"  and  she was weaving her ways through the  tables  and Sathe back toward the bar.
	We were quiet for a while.
	"Uh,  yeah, well." I picked up a rib and was about to take a mouthful.
	Max was just watching me,  ignoring her meal.  "That's  what Tahr was talking about, isn't it. That shit about 'in time'. I'm supposed to be your. . . mate, as she so delicately put it. Shit! Why'd she DO that?!"
	I shook my head.  "I don't know. Perhaps she thought she was helping us. . . "
	"Helping?!" she looked insulted.
	"Look.  She  was pretty torn up when she found out you  were upset  about. . . us  sleeping  together.  She  thought  she'd  been helping  me,  then  she  saw  you were so  shocked  by  what  had happened.  It  confused  her.  She would  never  deliberately  do anything that'd hurt us."
	"No."  Maxine quietened.  "She wouldn't." Then she  startled me: "She really loves you, you know."
	I  shrugged vaguely,  trying to damp down the  emotions  her words  stirred.  What had they talked about while I was  away?  A lot,  by  the sounds of things,  and Maxine had come to  learn  a little more about Sathe. . . and me.  "It. . . it wouldn't have  worked out."
	"No." A corner of her mouth twitched. "I don't think so."
	The next few minutes there wasn't much said.  Three meals  a day and not a lot of hope of anything in between, cold buildings, it all added up; You got hungry, and when food was available, you ate.
	We  ate.  In  silence.  Every so often I'd look up  to  meet Maxine's blue eyes,  watching me.  The amulet at her neck  burned warm  red-gold in the candlelight,  a circlet of  reflected  fire against the paleness of her skin.
	Not fur; skin.
	It wouldn't have worked.
	She  glanced up,  her eyes meeting mine,  then ducking  away again. Blue eyes, with their whites startling in the dimness. It wasn't fear; it was normal.
	Normal? What was normal?
	Two females,  one not even human,  the other. . . Well, when we first   met  she'd  tried  to  give  me  three adam's apples. Normal?
	But she was beautiful. Not in the same way Tahr  was;  it wasn't  that  lean,   predatory sleekness. It was something different: the delicacy of the face, the cheekbones and nose, the eyes, the waves of dark hair of a texture and sheen no Sathe mane could ever match.
	"Kelly?"
	"Huh?" I'd been staring. I blinked and smiled. "Yeah?"
	She  ran a piece of bread around the remnants of  her  meal, sponging up gravy.  "What're we going to do now?  I mean. . . can we go home?"
	Home. . . 
	I  shook my head.  "I don't know. . . Tahr. . . you know  a  while back  she offered some land.  I laughed then,  but  now. . . well  I might just take her up on that."
	"Land? What for?"
	"Make  our own home," I said.  "Get used to living here  and find some way to make it on our own. I can't keep freeloading off her forever."
	"Oh," she tore a piece of dark bread off and nibbled at  it. "Somehow  I can't see myself spending the rest of my  life  here, with them. It just doesn't. . . I mean, forever: it's a long time. . . "
	"Hey," I reached over to touch her hand as she trailed  off, getting  that anxious look about her.  She flinched,  but  didn't pull away.  "Look; you're one hell of a gutsy and beautiful woman. You're not the kind to let this get to you." I held her hand.
	She clenched mine back,  then mumbled,  "I can't," and  slid out  of  the  alcove, turning and stopping  like  she'd  forgotten something;  just standing staring across a smoky room of Sathe. A few  turned  to stare as she stood  there,  green  eyes  blinking curiously,  voices  muttering. More looked and she continued to  just  stand there,  frozen on the spot, like a kid out on stage for the first time staring  dumbly  back  at the  audience.  I saw her hand trembling.
	"Hey."
	Table  legs  squeaked  on the floor as I  pushed  it  aside, touched her shoulder. "Hey. Max?"
	She just grabbed me and held on,  her face  buried against  my  neck as if trying to block the world out and I was holding  her  tightly,  feeling her heart racing  and  her  hands digging into my back.
	The noise around us died.
	Damn!  I'd never thought! What had she been through? I'd had Tahr.  I'd had a close friend,  someone I could talk to,  someone who'd been a warm presence on those dark nights.  Soft words  and gentle hands to comfort me when I'd had enough of the world, when I didn't understand.  Max. . . she'd had no-one.  I'd gone away  and she hadn't known if I'd ever be coming back.  For her Tahr was  a stranger,  even stranger than me,  who'd had the best intentions, but who probably still frightened her.
	How often had she woken up from nightmares? as I'd done.
	So,  in  that crowded tavern,  reeking of food and  staring, overheated Sathe,  I just held her,  murmuring reassurances while she clutched me and shook. I don't know how long it was until a hand touched my shoulder. Greenstone eyes, ears tipped, concern:
	"You are all right?" the barkeeper - Ferhia - asked.
	"Max?" I whispered.
	She pulled back a little with eyes running water, nodded.
	"You want to go back now?"
	She flinched. "Kelly, it's cold. . . empty. . . "
	Cold. Yeah, it was. Perhaps I'd grown used to it. . . She'd never spoken and the Sathe had never known; how could they?
	"Ferhia?  Could  we. . . ?"  I glanced  toward  the ceiling. She understood.
	"Ah. . . certainly. Here, this way."
	We  followed and I felt eyes on us as we left and  I  really couldn't give a damn.
	It  was a different room.  She had the decorum for  that  at least. There was a window and a bed and a tiny fireplace. Ferhia lit a few  candles and pointed at the logs in the hearth.  "If you  are cold. . . " she trailed off, then gave me a subdued smile and closed the door behind her.
	Maxine slumped on the bed,  her English out of place in that dark little room. "Oh, God. I made a dork of myself down there."
	"I've done worse," I smiled as I checked the  window.  Quiet outside; Gibbous blue moon over the harbour. "Just get some rest, okay? It'll help."
	In the dim candlelight she nodded. That bowl-shaped bed creaked as she leaned back into the furs and sheets.  I moved to snuff a candle.  "I'll sleep on the floor, okay? Just get some blankets and that. Used to do it all the time when I was with Tahr. I'm used to it."
	"Kelly?"
	"Yeah?" I hesitated with my arm outstretched, ready to snuff another candle.
	"Would you stay? I mean, with me?. . . Please?"
	I clenched my fist to hide the sudden trembling in my hand. Unexpected? Of course the idea we'd get horizontal had popped up. How could it not? That 'if I was the last guy on Earth. . . ' line taken to extremes. But that's all they'd been: ideas. Dreams.

	Now, by the light of one candle she was mostly shadows, eyes watching me. Carefully, like I was walking on ice, I settled beside her, just sitting and putting an arm around her, holding her close. Strange muscles shifted and smooth fingertips stroked my arm, my hand. "Max." I choked. I didn't know how to tell her. "We can't. . . If you get. . ."
	Her hand took mine and guided it, touching her forearm and the tiny tube just under the skin. "Norplant." Her voice husked. "No kids, guaranteed."
	Now, by the light of one candle the shadows shifted, a corner of her mouth quirked in a smile, the rest of her face hidden behind a fan of hair.  Like mist on my hand when I brushed it aside. . . 


	******

	A warm morning.
	Sounds of the town woke me. Across the room, early light was trying to peek through cracks in the shutter, throwing dime-sized spots  of  light  on  the wall above  me.  Still  half  asleep  I stretched,  then  rolled,  draping  an arm across warm  skin  and spooning up to a smooth back,  lightly nuzzled the short hairs on the  nape  of a neck,  drinking in our  mingled  scents.  Married now. . . Well,  sort of married.  Funny,  but I'd always thought I'd have known when it happened.
	"Huhhnnn?" Maxine made a sleepy noise.
	"Morning and waking," I greeted her.
	Maxine stirred, yawned, rolling over and snugging up against me,  her breasts pressing against my side and an arm draped  over my chest.  "Morning to you too,  lover," she smiled lazily.  "How you doing?"
	"Ah. Not  too  bad. Better than I have for a while."  I replied.
	From outside came the cries of gulls,  a baker shouting that the  morning  bread was ready,  the best  in  the  Realm.  Llamas bleated   and   hooves  and  wheels  squealed  and   rattled   on cobblestones.
	A normal morning.
	"What day is it?" Maxine asked.
	"Dunno. Sunday?"
	"Huh? How'd you know?"
	"Feels like a sunday."
	She  giggled  and  slapped my arm and for a  long  while  we shared  pillow-talk.   You  know. . . the  kind  of  vital  nonsense relationships  are built from;  just chatting about the  weather, each other, whether or not Sathe could play baseball, why exactly do  escalator rails move just that bit faster than the thing  you stand on.  Those little nothings. While we talked and laughed and touched,  the  sounds outside grew louder and the light  brighter until the new day was something we just couldn't ignore.
	"Ah,  shit," I sighed,  lounging back into the warmth of the sheets.  "I guess we'd better start thinking about going back."
	"Awww. . . Why?"  she groaned and stroked my  chest,  carefully tracing  the raised tracks of the scars that had startled her  so much at first. "I was starting to like it here."
	"Must be the company."
	She looked thoughtful. "Nooo. . . I don't think so."
	"Hey!"  I affected hurt,  clasping hand to my  heart.  "That wounds."
	Her gentle touch turned to a playful thump on my chest, then she propped chin on fist and smiled down at me. "A good night?"
	I let my fingertips play across her cheek. "The best."
	"Better than a Sathe?"
	That hurt.
	"Hey! Sorry. Joke. All right?" she slapped my chest again and stared into my face, concerned. Blue eyes,  smooth skin, aburn hair soft like fur like green eyes white sharp teeth. . . 
	Maybe  Maxine saw the twitch in my eyes,  maybe it was  some other cue. Anyway, she smiled, then leaned forward to plant lips against  mine.  I responded and our breath mixed as  our  tongues wrestled until she pulled back,  panting and smiling.  "Is  there somewhere around here to clean up?"
	Ensuite  bathrooms  are not an option  in  Sathe  inns.  The nearest hot water would be down in the kitchens, and there was no room service.
	So  I  was  the one groping my way down a dark  stairwell, fumbling  with  the  buttons  on my shirt  and  trying  to  avoid splinters in my bare feet.  The door at the foot of  the  stairs opened  into the Red Sails tavern and I stepped through,  bracing myself for the stares and. . . 
	Tahr waiting.
	The room was empty.  Chairs were stacked on the tables as in any human bar after hours.  There were a couple of narrow, barred street-level  windows adding their dusty streams of  sunlight  to the feeble sputtering of oil lamps.  The fire that had roared in the hearth was just glowing embers now.  She was sitting at a  single table in the centre of the room, a pitcher and two mugs before her.
	"Morning, K'hy." Her voice was hollow in the empty room.
	I  stared in shock.  "What the hell..?  What are  you  doing here?"
	"You  vanished  last night.  No warning.  You had a  lot  of people worried."
	Not really an answer. "How did you find us?"
	She shrugged. "Sathe see things. They talk. . . "
	Floorboards  creaked as I wove my way through  the  deserted tables,  plucked  a  chair  and lowered  myself  into  it,  still nonplussed. "We were followed, right?"
	She actually shrugged, human style. "A drink? You sound dry."
	I nodded and took it.
	"So," she breathed, "Mas also has a new name this morning."
	"You know?"
	"I scent.  You reek of her.  It is hard not to notice."  Her hands toyed with the mug, batting it back and forth on the table. "I had thought you were worried about cubs."
	Yeah. I had been. Thank God for Norplant. "It. . . it is something we do not have to worry about for a while. "
	"And you claim not to be driven like us," she  smiled.  "You enjoyed yourself?"
	Second person that morning to ask me. . . 
	"Immensely. . . but,  Tahr, why did you have to play games with us like that?"
	"Games?"
	"At  the  ceremony,  could you not have done  the  same  for Maxine there and then? Why this way? It seems so. . . risky."
	"Risky?"  she  looked  confused.   "In  what  way?  It   is perfectly  normal for one of a pair of mates to take the oaths.  K'hy,  people  took you for  mates  from  the instant  they saw you.  It would have been. . . awkward to name  the pair of you. Questions would have been asked. Besides, what would we do if we had to name every bond servant in the Gulf  Realm?  I could never finish it in my lifetime!  Anyway, it worked: you are mated and she is Shirai."
	"But if we had not mated?"
	"Why  would you not?" she asked.  "You are the only  h'mans around. You are male, she is female. You are both leery of sex with Sathe. I think that limits your options."
	"Tahr. . . Oh, Damnation! Tahr. Please, believe me! It does not work like that."
	Her muzzle wrinkled,  then her right ear slowly drooped.  "I did wrong?"
	"Yes," I nodded, then smiled. "But thank you. Your heart was in the right place."
	She glanced down at her pelted chest,  but the ears came  up again.
	I took a taste from my mug: Wine, slightly tart. Uhnn. I put the  mug  down again and asked Tahr,  "How did things go  at  the Citadel?"
	"Southerners  gave  their oaths to the Realm  and  the  Lake Traders. The Northerners were pleased with that. Easy victory and easy  land:  a couple of lesser seaports around the  Gulf.  There were questions asked about Hraasa's death."
	"Oh."
	"It was not from their Born Ruler.  A couple of their  Lords were   asking  some  questions   that   were. . . well. . . enlightened guesses. They got no answers that could help them." She gave me a despairing  look,  "Strange One,  why could you not have  been  a little more circumspect?"
	My Furry One,  if I'd had the choice, I'd have taken him out with a fucking tactical nuke.
	However, I kept my mouth shut.
	"Ah,  well,"  she sighed.  "As long as they do not  try  and follow  the  scent further,  I think things will  be  interesting enough. Here, there is something I think you would like to see."
	Outside,  a body of royal guards was blockading  the front door;  that explained why the place was dead. Where was the staff?  The guards stiffened to attention as we stepped out, some glancing  at  my bare feet.  Tahr ignored  them  and pointed  up  the  street to where the walls  and  towers  of  the Citadel were visible over the shingle roofs. Beyond those walls a patchwork,  tear-drop shape was ponderously hauling its way  into the flat,  blue sky.  The mismatched colours,  the reds,  greens, purples, blues, greys, yellows caught the sun as it rose from the shadow of the Keep and gleamed like a technicolor  rainbow.  I could hear shouts rising from the surrounding town and even  jaws in the stolid Royal Guard dropped.
	"You  brought it back!" I stated the obvious,  in  case  she hadn't noticed.
	"Of course," Tahr's greenstone eyes were riveted on  the rag-tag orb hanging above the ramparts and towers of the Citadel.  "There were protests about your being brought into the Clan.  Now that  flies to  show what you can give us." She smiled,  "It has swayed  more than  a  few opinions in your favour.  Here,  inside. I have a  few  more words."
	Inside again. Tahr talking as she led the way back downstairs, "You see, that can be  your  future. There  is  no limit to what a Clan Lord would pay  for  knowledge like  that.  Enough trade goods or coinage to keep you in  luxury for the rest of your days.  It was a reason the Lake Traders  did not  press the land issue:  they saw what you were capable of  at Weather Rock and suddenly they are being uncommonly courteous  in their dealings with us.
	"You  built  that machine for the library and  the  scholars went mad over it. Already they are stretching the paper supplies, but  they  are  sending quality texts across  the  Realm."  She snorted,  "Huh! some of them even began printing sheets of gossip and  news compiled from traders and selling them around the  town and the Citadel."
	Huh?  I blinked.  Tabloids already? Sheesh, they didn't wait around.  I rubbed my chin.  "Tahr, bits and pieces here and there look  good and may be fun to play with,  but I would like  to  do more to help your people."
	She stared back at me for a long while. "Do we need help?"
	"Uh. . . I did not mean it to sound like that."
	"Then how did you mean it to sound?"
	"Knowledge like that is like a part of a puzzle,  but only a very  small part.  I do not know exactly how to put this. . . Umm. . . Humans  used to live to only  about  thirty  or forty years."
	"Wait," she tapped at her ear.  "I could have sworn you  told me you live to seventy or eighty."
	"Now  we  do," I explained.  "After many centuries  of  hard work." I went on to briefly recount the ages leading up to the time I had left  behind:The  Dark  Ages,  the  Renaissance,  the  Industrial Revolution,  up  to our own Atomic Era.  "They always took  us  a little  further  forward in our knowledge,  but we  had  to  make sacrifices. Tahr, I have given it some thought and I think we can show  you where some of the mistakes lie.  We can save a  lot  of lives."
	"But what does that leave us?" she replied gently.  "What of our dreams? How would your people feel if a more advanced culture suddenly  appeared on your world and told you how you should  run your lives?"
	"Yes," I wagged my head in a half-nod and shrugged,  "I  can understand that.  But look,  farmers may work themselves near  to death  just  to try and scratch out enough to  see  them  through winter.  If I know ways that would triple their crop yield, would that be interfering? I know that I could not just watch a cub die from  illness  or  injury when there are ways  of  preventing  or curing  it.  That would be murder.  Where do you cross  the  line between helping and interfering?"
	Tahr  stopped,  scratching her jaw while dust  motes  danced around each other in the sunbeam behind her.  "Well,  I think  we can  say  that you are not forcing us to adopt  your  customs.  I believe,  if  anything,  the opposite has occurred."  She  looked pointedly at my Sathe breeks, then stepped closer to reach up and brush her hand against my face,  stroke my hair where it hung  to my shoulder.
	"Kelly?" Maxine was at the door,  watching us.  I  should've guessed she'd walk in. . . "What are you doing?"
	"Having  a  mad,  passionate affair with Tahr,"  I  replied lightly. "Why do you ask?"
	"Oh,  no  reason,"  she  smiled as she  walked  towards  us, swinging  her  hips  and jutting breasts out  more  than  normal; trying to catch my attention. She saw Tahr as a threat? Possible. "What's  she doing here," she asked in English and that  question was silk wrapped around sharp steel.
	"I  asked her the same thing." I spoke Sathe.  "We  left  in rather a hurry last night. She came to see we are all right."
	"You  had  a good night?" Tahr asked  Maxine,  her  nostrils twitching.
	"Very good," Maxine smiled back. I put my arm around her and felt  her  relax against me.  Tahr's nose was  working  overtime. "What were you talking about?"
	"Our future," I provided.
	"With the things you already have you can be wealthy,"  Tahr said. "But K'hy had some other ideas."
	"Hmmm?" Maxine looked interested. "Like what, lover?"
	Tahr's  ears flicked like heliograph shutters and I  felt  my own burning.  "Ummm. . . starting from scratch,  from the beginning. Tahr,  you remember you said we may be able to gain some land  of our own?"
	"Yes. You laughed."
	I nodded.  "I remember. . . Tahr, I do not think we can stay at Mainport and live off your generosity.  We have to learn to  make our own way in your world.  What I am asking would take time  and effort before it started making a profit, but I think we can make it work. What I am asking for is a home."

******

	The  pressurised  oil lantern hanging over  my  desk  burned brightly. I'd copied Max's Coleman, improving on the Sathe design by putting a pale glass bulb and chimney around a hollow wick. My dinner sat on the edge of the desk,  practically untouched; cold. The light threw shadows around the cluttered room as I rubbed  my eyes, and sighed at the lines on the drawing board.
	Six  hours I'd been there,  working on a way to improve  our vacuum  pumps.  The  filaments  in the  lightbulbs  we'd  started manufacturing  kept burning up.  Filling the bulbs with an  inert gas was out of the question at the moment,  the best we could  do was  a vacuum,  but our current pumps weren't  efficient  enough. Yet.
	"Put that away,  lover," came a quiet voice from behind  me. "You've  been  working at that all day.  It's  nearly  midnight."
	"Oh,"  I stretched and glanced at my watch.  "God,  I  never noticed."
	Maxine  stepped up behind the chair and put her arms  around my neck. "Come to bed," she murmured in my ear.
	I  pushed the board away and reached up to hold those  arms. "Hmmm, alright. I'll just clear up here."
	"No, now."
	I  laughed and got up,  hugging her against my chest with  a mock  growl.  She  squealed and put up a  token  struggle  before relaxing and wrapping her arms around my waist. We just held each other for a while.
	"Told you we could make it," I murmured.
	"Know-it-all,"  she retorted and a Sathe  burst  through the door, ears flattening when he saw what he'd interrupted. "Ah, High Ones? There are alarms. Possibly bandits."
	"Oh, SHIT!"
	Outside  the skeleton of the windmill rose above the  packed dirt of the courtyard;  wooden bones cutting geometric shapes out of  the  night sky.  Beyond the felled trees on the edge  of  the lower meadow,  the forest was black,  the night as dark as night, the branches a wooden tangle shades darker than the nightblue  of the  sky behind them.  Faint light spilled onto the dirt  as  the doors to bunkhouses were thrown open,  the Sathe inside  spilling out,  still buckling their armour on and preparing their weapons. The  best  fighters drawing their swords while  the  rest  cocked their  repeating crossbows and took their posts on  rooftops  and lumber piles around the courtyard.
	The  fortified roof of the guard house overlooked the  whole area.  Sathe  waited  there in  absolute  blackness,  bleary-eyed workers. The officer in charge of the guards met us as we came up the  stairs.  "Sir,  the alarms on the main road gave them  away, then there were more on the game trails circling around."
	"Not animals?"
	"Not a chance."
	"Alright,"  I looked out toward the main road.  Clouds  were blowing  across the moon;  at some moments I could see as far  as the treeline across the meadow,  at other times hardly the  Sathe in the guard tower with me.  Sathe weren't so  handicapped.  "How many?"
	"They  must  be  feeling lucky." In the  dimness  his  teeth flashed.  "About twenty on the main trail, another fifteen around the back."
	Altogether  our forces numbered sixty-five,  but there  were only  a dozen professional guards.  We never intended to do  much fighting,  but  we  could look after ourselves if we  had  to.  I unlocked the cage covering a series of knife switches and pressed a  small button;  a needle clicked.  The cells were  charged  and ready.
	"Tell  me  when they reach the markers," I muttered  at  the officer.  He nodded;  a mannerism some of them had picked up from me  and  liked to copy for some reason I never had been  able  to figure out.
	We waited.	
	"There!" one of the Sathe pointed.
	They  coagulated from the utter darkness of the  trees.  One minute the meadow was empty,  the next silent shadows running  up the track towards us. Their hope was to take us by surprise.
	Fat Chance.
	"They are about to pass the markers. . . NOW!"
	I flipped half the switches down.
	Down in the field,  flashes of flame lit the night. Gouts of dirt and dust were flung into the air, preceding the pile-driver retorts  of  the  explosives.  The screams started before the echoes had died away.
	The  mines were intended as  anti-personnel  devices,  jury-rigged claymores.  Just an angled trench with a sealed barrel  of powder  at  the  bottom and a mixture of heavy  and  small  rocks stacked  on top.  When the mine was detonated it sent a spray  of debris  blasting out across the fields before it like  a  beehive round in a field piece.
	They were surprisingly effective.
	The echoes of the explosions resounded off the distant hills of  the  broad valley,  fading away,  leaving only the  cries  of wounded and shell-shocked raiders:  Piercing screams and whimpers that were even more horrible for all their helplessness. From the buildings behind us came a few final snaps and yells as crossbows finished  off the raiders.  Darkness is no great handicap  for  a Sathe archer.
	Howls  rang  out and metal-wielding silhouettes  dashed  out from  the buildings,  running towards the ruined figures  of  the raiders  where  they sprawled and huddled.  The few  raiders  who tried to flee were quickly brought down.
	I pulled the key from the console in front of me and  tucked it into my shirt before going to join the workers as they rounded up the survivors.
	All five of them.
	I  looked  down at them huddled in  the  dust,  hands  bound behind  their backs.  Their clothing was tatty scraps of  leather cobbled together to form some semblance of armour;  grime  seemed to  be the only thing preventing many of the filthy outfits  from falling  apart again.  All their swords were clean and  gleaming, showing  that care had been lavished upon the tools by which  the bandits hewed their living.  At least there weren't any  glimpses of Gulf armour beneath the rags.
	I  picked up the weapon of one survivor:  it was an  Eastern soldier's  scimitar.  The  wounded  owner  frantically  tried  to scramble away from me as I pulled the scabbard from his waist  and sheathed  the  weapon,  then lifted his kilt and  took  the  dirk concealed on the inside of the leather strips.  Seeing that,  the workers searched the other captives for hidden weapons.
	A small arsenal stacked up on the ground.
	"Sir?"  Tlase  - the Sathe I considered the  foreman  -  was waiting,  a  crossbow cradled in his arms.  "What do we  do  with them?" he asked, pointing at the bandits.
	"Lock them up under guard," I said.  "We will turn them over to  the garrison in Last Hunt tomorrow.  The bodies. . . Bury  them. They will make good fertiliser."
	The foreman signed assent and stalked off, hissing orders as he organized the workers into guard details. I grabbed one of the bandits by his scruff and hauled him to his feet. He whimpered at my  touch;  a pathetic sound.  They were locked away in a  small, sturdy building normally used to store wheelbarrows.
	There  was  a  commotion  from over  where  the  Sathe  were dragging corpses from the road and stripping them before  burial. I  started  over  in that direction and several of  them  saw  me coming, breaking off and running towards me. Their excited gabble came so fast I was swamped, unable to follow them:
	"SHUT UP!"
	They fell silent.
	"Now, what is the matter?"
	"Sir!"  One  of  the workers - a young  male,  grey  in  the darkness - held out a handful of trinkets: rings, a few strips of intricately embroidered cloth,  a small chain with pendant. "Sir, my  uncle. . . Nresan.  These are his. He has a farm just north of  here.  These  are his!"
	"Are you sure?"
	"Yes!  Sir, my father gave this armband to his mate just last summer!"
	My heart lurched. Were we the bandits only targets that night, or had they been busy. . ."When was the last time you saw them?"
	"Ah. . . A few days ago. It was after. . . " 
	"Oh,  shit!" I was already halfway to the shed where the ute was kept,  yelling over my shoulder:  "Tlase,  get four of  those guards! Now!"
	The engine ground a couple of times, then turned over with a growl I hadn't heard for a long time. I revved a couple of times, watching the gas needle climb and settle at just over half-full. The passenger door opened and Maxine jumped up into the cab,  the  VP-70  still clutched in her hand. "What's up?!"
	I  tried  to explain as I snapped the lights on, shifted into gear and floored it,  the  wheels spinning and throwing dirt against the shed walls. Tlase was running towards us with the four Sathe guards in tow. They all shied aside  as  the headlamps swept over them and the truck skidded  to  a halt. "Get in!" I bellowed out the window.
	The Sathe fumbled with the lock,  then yanked the door open. Three  piled into the back while the other two vaulted  into  the bed behind the cab.  I put my foot down weaving through the buildings that turned to forest  flashing through the  lights  as  the  truck barrelled  down  the narrow track,  trees whipping past  on  both sides.  Behind me, a Sathe in the back seat was keening in terror as the truck bounced and crashed on tortured suspension, the ruts twisted and wound in the headlights. For that split second it was something I'd been through before:  road gone, headlamps sweeping across bush and grass, metal protesting. . . 
	A Sathe yelled and a wagon appeared across the road in front of  us.  The  ute  slewed sideways,  not  far  enough,  and  wood splintered,  crashing across the hood and windscreen and then the smashed  remains of the wagon were vanishing in the glow  of  the taillights,  the llamas tangling themselves in their harnesses as they struggled in panic.

******

	The silence after the engine shut off was palpable. I stepped from the  cab,  one hand  resting  on  the door as I stared at  the  remains  of  the farmhouse.
	Fully a third of it was charred rubble.  By some fluke,  the fire  had  died  away,  but that hadn't saved  the  rest  of  the building.  The  door  was lying several  metres  away,  amid  the remains  of  smashed furniture and tattered  clothing  strewn  in front  of the small house.  The front porch had collapsed at  one end  where the supports had been eaten away by the fire and  what looked  like  a  bundle of rags had been wrapped  around  a  post flanking the steps.
	As we got nearer I saw they weren't rags.
	I've seen a lot of senseless, horrific things over the years; they've acclimatised me to violence, but things like that. . .it was the remains of the farmer  tied there.  He'd been  skinned and gutted, his innards dangling from the  gash in his stomach, castrated. What was tied there didn't resemble a Sathe at all. 
	There  were rumbling growls from the  Sathe.  Maxine  turned green and bit her lip.
	Tlase  and I found the remains of his mate in  the  bedroom. Naked,  stinking,  and skinned.  The remains tied spread-eagle on the stained furs of the small bed still had fur on the hands  and feet and head,  like her mate. . . Why? Why skin them!? Who the hell would buy a Sathe pelt?! It was sick.
	I didn't let Maxine go in there.
	We  staggered out of that charnel house and slumped down  in the  cold glare of the Ute's headlights.  I looked around at  the faces  of the other Sathe.  One of them was the one who had  said this had been his uncle. He stared at me with wide eyes and all I could do was shake my head. "I am sorry."
	"They had cubs," he said in a faint voice. "Two."
	What?!
	While  Maxine and three of the others searched the  outlying farm  buildings  -  the  barn and ploughshed -  the  rest  of  us searched the little farmhouse from top to bottom. Finally a shout from one of the Sathe brought us running.
	She  was kneeling over a hole in the floor of the  main  room. The cover that had concealed the crawlspace was flung  aside.  It had  been  hidden by smeared ash spilled from the  fireplace.  The  Sathe reached  in and lifted out a couple of bundles of cloth and  laid them on the floor then looked at me.
	I knelt and looked at the tiny balls of fur in the  bundles, neither larger than both my spread hands. The pair'd been inhumanly silent in their dark hiding place, now the little one mewled as I picked it up,  wrinkled face with shocking blue eyes baring its minuscule teeth in an instinctive snarl. The claws were still soft  as the hands grasped at my finger when I touched  the  thin fuzz of fur that covered its face. How long since they'd last been fed?
	"Kelly. . . "  Maxine stooped down beside me and gasped as  she saw the cubs.  "My God," she murmured and I smiled as she scooped the other bundle up,  cradling it against her breast and touching the tiny muzzle with a delicate finger. It chirred and nuzzled her finger.
	"Two  cubs,"  Tlase  was staring  openly.  "They  were  very lucky."
	Lucky. . . In some ways, yes.
	I looked up at the Sathe; the nephew of the deceased farmer. "Would your Clan take these in to care for them?" I asked him. He gaped back at me and his ears went back in shocked surprise.
	"Sir. . . it  is  impossible. . . you  know. . . "  he  trailed  off, nervous and uncomprehending, looking to Tlase for support.
	Oh,   shit.   Yeah,  I  remembered  about  Sathe  and  their offspring. No matter what happened, it was only a matter of time. Shocked and lost, I looked down at the mewling bundle in my arms, then  up  at the faces of the Sathe.  "They cannot just  be  left here. . . "
	"No," Tlase agreed with a mournful look at the cubs. "We can make it quick."
	"You cannot mean KILL them?!"
	"Well there is not much else we can do," he said sadly and with perhaps  a touch  of anger.  It was a deep-seated wound in the Sathe  psyche that I had touched;  their inability to nurse another's cubs.  It was  natural  -  a part of them - but they  were  never  able  to completely accept it.  Children were a rare and precious thing to them,  and  to be forced to kill them out mercy rather  than  let them die of neglect. . . that hurt deeply.
	"No!" Maxine stood up and put her foot down.
	Tlase stepped back, afraid of his employer's anger.
	"Max. . . " I started to say.
	"Kelly!" she snapped, horrified. "You can't! Look at them!"
	I did.  I looked down at the minuscule bundle of life I held in my arms. The tiny buzz of a purr was coming from its throat as it nuzzled up against me.  Maxine moved over to me and leaned her head against my shoulder, the two helpless cubs nestled between our bodies.
	I gritted my teeth and we made our decision.  For better or  for worse. . . 

******

	The  snow  was being driven before the wind  in  a  howling, opaque  blizzard.  From  the  windows of the house  it  was  only occasionally possible to see the dark blades of the mills and the warm  fireflies  that were lights in the other dwellings  as  the flurries shifted and moved. A few Sathe muffled in cloaks and  parkas  pushed their way through the drifts as  they  tended miscellaneous tasks.
	It  was amazing the way a small town had erupted  from  what had been a cluster group of buildings only two years  ago.  And it  was  still  growing.  There  were  Sathe  immigrants  of  all descriptions  and  professions,   many  of  whom  had  just  been drifters,  passing through on their way from nowhere to  nowhere, attracted  by  the  jobs and technology that  promised if not riches, at least a living. Even so, we were usually short-handed.
	I  let  the  heavy drapes fall back across  the  window  and turned to look around the room with pride.  The A-frame house was the  product  of two years hard work by  Sathe  and humans;  a test of the construction techniques used for the other buildings around the growing community. It was also our home.
	The  living room was large and open plan with a sunken living  area in  the  middle and a dining are situated off to  one  side.  The circular stove in the centre of the living space was  the first  fruit  of the cast iron industry we were  firing  up.  The copper coils encircling it were part of the wet-back water-heating  system, but would also become part of the central-heating once our steel-working  techniques  became  refined enough  to  manufacture  the necessary pumps. Above, the room stretched upwards to the peak of the roof while a mezzanine balcony led to the rooms on the second floor.
	Wood proliferated throughout the room.  The strong grain  of varnished  and  sanded oak softened and highlighted at  the  same time  by the illumination of gas and pale electric  lamps.  There were  rugs  on  the  bare wood  floor  and  pieces  of  furniture scattered about: a couch, cushions, a low table,  and a couple of chairs in the living area.  The stove door was wide  open, the fire inside throwing light and heat upon the massive bearskin lying before it.
	Maxine  and  I didn't have many possessions as  yet  and  we definitely  weren't  what you'd call  wealthy; both the funding we received and  all  the  profits we made  being  invested  in  new  ventures,  but  the  trade  our community was doing in textiles and other goods such as  cast-iron stoves, spinning wheels,  medicinal alcohol,  clothes pegs,  safety pins,  cement, lumber,  extruded wire, tools and a multitude of other utensils was booming.  I'd seen the  bearskin among the wares of a merchant passing through  Last Hunt and brought it on impulse.  For 'sentimental' reasons if you will.
	I  sank down on the cushions before the fire and relaxed  in the warmth that poured from the open door. Within the stove the coals were glowing red, orange, and white; like untouchable gem stones.
	"Dreaming again?"
	I  looked around and smiled as Maxine came down  the  stairs and  padded bare-footed across the room to curl up beside  me  on the  rug.  She  hadn't changed  much:  perhaps  slightly  taller, darker,  and more muscular. . . well,  we both were.  We had to work hard to live.
	"What are you staring at?" she murmured.
	"The only thing around here worth staring at," I smiled  and accepted her noncommittal 'hmmp' as my due. "How are they?"
	"Out like lights."
	"Busy day for them, huh?"
	"They loved the kite, lover. You know, you spoil them with those toys."
	"Huh," I chuckled and caught her around the waist, snuggling up, just lying there together in a warm glow. Now we had  a  home. Beside  me Maxine relaxed and for a while we both just stared  at the fire before I got up to fetch some wine from the rack.
	However  the  two goblets sat forgotten on  the  low  black-lacquered  table as we lay entwined in one another,  her  fingers playing  with the small hairs on the nape of my  neck.  The  wind moaned as it sought its way around the walls,  but from the  snow that  seared  the  sky outside in cold flurries  there  wasn't  a sound.
	But the woman beside me was warm,  so warm,  and my  fingers were beginning to wander. . . 
	Of course the doorbell jangled. "Oh, shit no!" I groaned. "Not now!  Who  the Hell's that?!"
	Snow  whipped into the small reception room as I pulled  the front door open. It was well below zero out there and already drifts over two metres deep were banked up.  Even with their fur, the  Sathe  waiting on the landing were bundled  up  against  the cold:  our guards wearing new quilted,  down-filled jackets and carrying crossbows,  the other pair  Sathe wearing ice-encrusted animal furs and cloaks, frost on the pieces of  cloth  pulled over their muzzles for what  little  protection they offered against the biting wind.
	One of them reached up wearily to snag the mask with a  claw and pull it down;  smiled stiffly at me through the frost beading her fur.
	"Tahr?!"

******

	There  were guest quarters that any Sathe noble  would  have considered extravagantly luxurious with insulated  walls,  indoor plumbing,  centrally heated rooms,  double layers of glass in the windows  and  rugs  on the floor.  The guards at  the  gates  had already taken the liberty of having the Shirai's escorts  boarded there,  dripping melting ice and looking half-frozen and slightly numb  at  some of the devices around them.  It was  going  to  be necessary  to  provide a staff to assist the guests  who  had  no knowledge of stoves or electricity.
	Tahr and H'rrasch would stay in the house.
	I helped them hang up their frozen clothes to thaw off and dry out.  The ice and snow covering them was beginning to  melt, soaking  them  through and through.  Incredible that  they  could actually walk through that blizzard outside without any  footwear whatsoever, not a touch of frostbite.
	I opened the inner door and led them into the house  proper.  Their eyes went wide and they stared at the alien architecture and  the steady glow of the lamps.  "My Ancestors," Tahr rubbernecked.  "K'hy, you have been busy!"
	"There  is still much to do." I smiled then as she moved  to hug me.  Wet fur, but there was still a trace of that old,  familiar scent of sun-dried straw,  brushing against me as I returned the embrace. "Tahr, I have missed you."
	"A year is a long time," she agreed.
	Maxine  was waiting to greet them,  hugging both Sathe  with abandon,   then  offering  them  clothing.   The  Sathe  politely declined, they were quite warm enough in their fur. Together they sank into a chair before the fire with every indication of relief and H'rrasch stared at the cast iron oven with a wondering eye.
	"Now,"  I said.  "What the hell are you doing  out  here?  I doubt that you were just passing and decided to drop in.  What is up?"
	"Kelly," Maxine touched my arm. "Haven't you noticed?"
	 I blinked. "What?"
	"Dammit!" She punched my arm."Look at her. She is pregnant!"
	I  did.  My eyes wandered down to her midriff.  There WAS  a slight bulging. . . 
	"True?" I asked.
	"True,"   she  smiled  and  burrowed  a  little  nearer   to H'rrasch's  side as he slipped an arm around her and  nuzzled  at her neck. "I am surprised you did not notice, K'hy," she said.
	I realized I was still staring and broke into an uncontrolled, shit-eating grin.  Tahr would understand what it meant. "Congratulations!"
	"You  asked  why we are here," H'rrasch said."  That  is  the reason.  Would it be possible for Tahr to stay until her term  is done?"
	"It will be a few months.  I need a quiet place. Somewhere I can leave easily when the need takes me," Tahr added quietly.
	"Of  course!" Max answered instantly.  "I'll get  the  spare room ready."
	"Tahr,  H'rrasch. . . You  are always welcome  here,  you  know that," I said.
	They  thanked  us profusely and unnecessarily.  I  left  the Sathe  curled  up  on the chair together to  get  more  wine  and goblets.   Perhaps  some  day  we'd  have  crystal  glasses   and decanters,  but that would be way in the future. We sipped at the rather. . . ah. . . immature table wine whilst our guests recounted the affairs of Mainport and we reciprocated with news of what had been happening in our enclave.
	Tahr  suddenly  broke off and was staring past  us,  at  the staircase  where  two  small  faces  were  peering  through   the railings. "K'hy, Mas. . . who is that?" she asked.
	"Some members of our house you have not yet met. . . Kids, come over here!" I called.
	There  was a moments hesitation then the two cubs stood  and clattered down the stairs.  Brother and sister,  still with their thick spotted baby-fur,  neither of them taller than my hip. They scampered  across the room - forgetting their toe claws  again  - and stopped,  suddenly shy,  staring at our guests. I held out my arm and they burrowed in against my side, still staring.
	"This is our son, Shane, and his sister, Sasha," I smiled. "Adopted  of  course.  Kids,  this is the Shirai  and  her  mate, H'rrasch."
	"Tahr?" Sasha craned around to look up at me.
	"Yes. That's her."
	"You told us 'bout her," Sasha solemnly told me,  then  left my  side  to walk across to Tahr,  staring up at  her.  "You  are pretty," she said, "Like father said you were."
	Tahr  blinked at me,  then looked down at  Sasha's  upturned face  again  and slowly reached out to  stroke  her  muzzle,  obviously confused.  I could see the  questions and  incredulity  stirring;  questions  that  Maxine  and  I  had answered innumerable times before.  With a final ruffle of  the children's manes I said, "Come on, back to bed with you."
	"Aw, father," Shane protested.
	"Hey," I cautioned with a gentle tweak of his ears.  "It  is late  and there will be plenty of time to talk to them later  on, okay?"
	"'Kay,"  Sasha went willingly,  but Shane was a little  more truculent.
	"I'll take them," Maxine volunteered.
	"Shit!" Shane mumbled under his breath as Maxine herded  the pair of them back upstairs. Where'd he learned that?!
	"K'hy,"  Tahr  was still staring after them  with  her  ears wilted like dying plants,  "I do not understand?  How is it. . . Who are they?!"	
	I sighed and leaned forward. "Their parents were both killed - murdered.  We found them,  looked after them as best we  could. Tahr,  you know we are unable to have children of our  own. . . they are all we have; they are our family."
	"But how?!" she demanded.  Her fur was starting to  bristle. God  knew I'd done a lot of things Sathe found new  and  strange, but  this. . . I knew Sathe had been trying for so long.  For us  to succeed  where so many of them had failed,  it couldn't help  but touch some tender spots.
	"To raise another's children as your own. . . !  How did you do it?!"
	I shrugged.  "I am not entirely sure myself. Perhaps because we are not Sathe."
	"Explain."
	"You live by your noses," I said. "Your Times, reflexes, and childbirth  are  ruled by scent.  The way you  respond  has  been deeply. . . uh. . . built into your minds.  H'rrasch,  you know how you feel during Times. You cannot help yourself."
	He signed assent.
	"Sathe  cubs probably learn their mother's scent  when  they are born,  but it is not the absence of that scent that make them refuse to feed, I think that rather it is the presence of another Sathe scent." I looked at my hands then back up at the Sathe. "If the newborn cub scents a mature female who is not its mother  - perhaps even mature males - it just will not feed. I do not know why."
	"But why did that not happen to you?" H'rrasch asked.
	"As I said,  because we are not Sathe.  Neither Maxine or  I make  nor  respond to Sathe scents. . . You could say  that  we  are neutral,"  I gave a small grin.  "But that is just  a  theory.  I could be completely wrong."
	"K'hy  -  incorrect  or not. . . " Tahr  stopped  speaking  and huddled even closer to her mate staring at me with an  expression of  wonder.  "What  you have done  is  just. . . impossible!  It  is against everything I have ever. . . " again she trailed off and just stared at me.
	I sobered and met her eyes before sayng,  "I could never leave them to  die  without trying  to do something.  You know that." The fire had died to  a pile  of  small,  glowing coals that scattered into a  shower  of sparks  when  I threw a pair of logs in.  After a  few  seconds  they caught  and were soon blazing away.  I closed the door and  stood with  my  back  to the stove,  my hands clasped  behind  me, staring at the Sathe as they stared back at me.
	"Yes,"  Tahr  finally  acknowledged  as  Maxine  came   back downstairs,  "I know, but what about the cubs? I mean no offence, but  does  it not. . . uh. . . disturb them to call  you  'Father'  and 'Mother'?"
	"They know we are different from Sathe," Maxine said. "There are  enough  other Sathe and cubs out there for them to  see  the difference,  but  they  have grown up with us.  To  them  we  are family."
	Tahr's  head went back but she kept her eyes locked  on  us. Finally  her muzzle wrinkled as she said,  "And they are all  you have. I think I can only wish you well with them."
	Outside,  the snowstorm  had died away as quickly as it had sprung up. The black lid of the clouds were sliding aside and the stars were casting  their aloof light down over the countryside made  white; harsh angles softened by drifts.
	Inside,  the  fire  burned low while the Sathe ate  a  small meal,  then - warm,  full, and extremely tired - collapsed in the spare room we'd prepared. Tahr had caught a glimpse of our human-style bed in our room:
	"Alien,"  she  said,  shaking her head and grinning  in  her imitation  of  a human smile.  "Square beds. . . You never  told  me about that, K'hy. Does it make sex more interesting?"
	Max and I left them to laugh themselves to sleep.

******

	Spring  was  a  time of sudden  warmth  and  growing  things pushing  their way through the retreating crust  of  snow.  Grass grew,  foliage returned to trees' canopies,  and blooming flowers proliferated.
	The  mills  were  turning again and  the  foundries  coughed smoke,  steam,  and  gouts of molten metal.  They were  small  by modern  standards,  but  considered incredibly efficient  by  the Sathe of the day.  With the refinements in glass manufacturing  I had  introduced - the addition of sodium carbonate and  producing sheet glass by congealing it on a bed of molten tin - the  demand for  the  clear,  glass vessels and sheets we could  provide  had taken  off.  By employing mass-production techniques the  profits were  quite  considerable;  enough to build a school  and  employ Sathe teachers for the growing number of cubs in the community.
	That was something else that happened in spring.
	Sathe females began disappearing into the virgin forest that surrounded  us on all sides.  The remaining Sathe treated  it  as absolutely  normal and over the past years I had learned  not  to worry too much about it.
	Until Tahr vanished.
	"Do not fret so! She will manage," H'rrasch assured me as we stood  on the edge of a meadow at the outskirts of  town  looking out towards the tree-covered hills, the mountains blue shadows in the distance,  snow still heavy on their peaks. He had brought me the news that his mate had gone on her sabbatical.  "She will  be fine."
	I stared at the treeline. The last time I'd seen her she had been uncharacteristically crabby, almost hostile. Her abdomen was swollen,  her  six breasts had tumefied and turned  pink,  poking through  her  fur,  sometimes leaking  droplets  of  milk.  She'd vanished two days ago. I worried about her.
	Damnation,  it was dangerous out there and she was  unarmed, probably naked as she discarded clothing in her maternal madness, with only her claws and fur for protection.
	"It  will be enough," H'rrasch insisted.  He touched my  arm and looked at my face, as if trying to fathom my emotions. "There are  very few things out there that would want to tangle  with  a female near her term."
	A few bison - massive,  shaggy mountains of stupidity - eyed us  dispassionately as we stopped beside the fence  around  their pasture, then returned to tearing up mouthfuls of grass.
	"So, are you looking forward to being a father?" I asked the Sathe.
	He started to laugh then stopped and looked puzzled.  "I  do not really know," he confessed.
	"Come on," I said. "Yes or no."
	"Really,  I  do  not know." His  muzzle  wrinkled.  "I  have watched  you playing with Shane and Sasha and I envy you,  but  I also fear the responsibility. By my Ancestors, I do not know what to do!"
	That  took  me back to the problems we had had  raising  our Sathe  children;  those sleepless nights and the headaches.  But there  were also the fun times,  the happiness and pleasure  they brought Maxine and I.  We may have broken every rule in the Sathe child-raising book,  but  at least we'd done something,  we had something  to show for all our labours.
	"H'rrasch, you will know what to do. You can bet on that. It is hard work. . . " what was he smirking at. . . ?
	Something small, furry, and muscular tackled me around the knees from behind, knocking  me  over  into the grass and  another  furry  something landed on top of me.  I rolled aside,  roared with mock anger and scooped up the two squealing cubs, one under each arm.
	The  Shirai's  mate was leaning against  the  nearby  fence, hissing his amusement.
	"It can also be a lot of fun," I grinned at him as the  cubs hung themselves around my neck with furry little arms.

******

	It  was  seven days later,  the dead  of  night,  when  Tahr returned.
	Maxine heard the noise first,  dragging me out of bed by  an arm even as she was bolting for the door. I untangled myself from the sheets and stumbled after her.
	H'rrasch had beaten us both.
	Below  us,  in the living room,  Tahr was a  dirty,  haggard shape dressed only in scraps of clothing sitting cross-legged  on the  rug before the glowing remains of embers in  the  fireplace. She  looked  up  as H'rrasch slowly approached and her  muzzle suddenly  distorted  into a snarl,  the bundle she  was  cradling tucked protectively against her breast.
	Slowly, oh so slowly, her mate went to his knees in front of her and for a while they just stared at each other. Then her head lowered  and  in  the dying light from the  fire  she seemed to make up her mind, reverently passed her precious burden to H'rrasch.  He took one of the  tiny fists in his hand and bent his head low,  his muzzle touching  in what seemed an almost human kiss.
	I put my arm around Maxine and drew her close, taking in the scent of her hair as together we watched the silent ritual taking place  below.  It  was only when Tahr slowly  collapsed  into  an exhausted  heap on the floor that we went down to help  ease her off to bed.
	She wouldn't sleep soundly until the baby boy was placed in her arms and H'rrasch was curled protectively around them.
	Later that night as Maxine and I lay in bed, barely awake and listening to the wind in distant trees, Max touched my leg, "Kelly?"
	"Uhn?"
	"What do you think about having a child."
	"We have kids," I replied, stupid through doziness. Her hand lightly thumped me, "I mean have a child," she berated me. "One of our own. Human."
	Human. I didn't know how to answer that. A child. How could we. . . a child, here. What kind of a life would it be? I thought of our adopted offspring asleep down the hall, two children, not human but they were our children. We loved them. A human baby, part of us, raising it into this world.
	She caught my hesitation. "I never meant we should. Just asking."
	"Oh." It raised awkward feelings. "I don't know."
	"Just asking," she murmured, then in Sathe, "Just asking."
	Dreams that night: Sathe playing with human children, tall buildings of glass and steel and streets alive with people. Through it all the feeling of my wife as I moved close to her and went back to dreaming of a place I'd once called home.

******



AFTERWORD

	Introductions first I think. My name is Shane ai Davies.
	If  you have not heard of me,  then you have probably  heard tell of my parents: the most. . . unusual in the known world. As for myself,  my only claim to fame is that I am also somewhat  unique in  the  world,  being  the only person who  can  claim  to  even approach  fluency  in the noises and writings  that  humans  call English.
	It has not been easy.
	This,  the translation of the first of my father's journals, has been the real test of my abilities. The years of reading, re-reading,  referencing,  and  trying  to understand have -  as  my parents would say -  'paid off'. You have just read the result.
	And I can understand the shock you are probably feeling.
	It  came  as  just a great a blow to myself  to  learn  what really happened at the Battle of Weather Rock and I have  debated long and hard as whether or not to pass this on, finally deciding to   leave   this  particular  manuscript  where   it   will   be found. . . eventually, long after my parents are gone.
	I  only  yearn  that this revelation will  not  disrupt  the peaceful and productive relationships that have grown between our realms.  Many  Sathe and two humans have devoted their  lives  to this  cause and I would be loathe to see the  successful  results rendered  and  scattered to the wind by an incident  far  in  the past.
	And  the  future is not going to be kind  to  them.  In  the eighteen years since they adopted my sister and myself they  have hardly changed; perhaps their hides have grown darker and thicker in appearance, but that is all.
	I look at the Shirai - the one whom in my irreverent youth I knew  as aunt Tahr  - and I see how grey her fur has  grown,  the age  catching up to her.  She is still strong,  still many  years left, but I know the day is inevitable.
	And I know that with her end, a part of my father will die.
	Pain to be added on pain, it will not end there. I know that they  will  outlive all the Sathe friends they have  known  since their  arrival,  and  -  I am fairly certain  -  they  will  most probably outlive myself and Sasha.  They will have to suffer  the deaths of so many friends.
	But what they have done for us. . . 
	I  can look out my window and see how my home  has  changed; grown.  In  my  memories of a small town with few  buildings  and Sathe and many open spaces I was a cub,  carefree and living  for the  present.  Now,  in these memories of the present that  I  am chronicling,  I am an adult,  nineteen years and mated with a cub of my own, and I see a city made of dreams.
	The roads of New Home are broad and clean,  never  flooding. Buildings  of  stone,   wood  and  amounts  of  glass  and  metal unthinkable  ten  years ago flank the  tree-lined  thoroughfares, their  positioning,  shape,  and materials such that they  remain cool in the heat of summer and warm in winter. As darkness falls, the streets and buildings glow with lights that burn steadily  in wind  and rain.  A strange and wondrous place,  but  indisputably beautiful.
	And  the population has grown incredibly.  With the  trained healers and improved sanitation there has been a drastic drop  in the mortality rate due to illness and accident. Sathe are healthy and happy and well-fed,  with well-groomed coats wherever one looks.
	It  would seem that once the wheel of progress  has  started rolling,  it is self-perpetuating;  indeed,  it actually  gathers momentum. Cubs, adolescents, and no few adults are trained at the new  crafts and skills available.  Their invaluable labours  open time to such as myself, artisans and thinkers whose work does not directly contribute to the survival of the community.  That  work can  produce  more ideas to produce still more leisure  time  for thinking.
	Distant  clans  and  the great Clans  of  other  Realms  are willing to pay great amounts to have their craftsmen - even their cubs!  - sent the distances to be educated here.  To the surprise of  and consternation many in Mainport my  father  wholeheartedly endorses this,  steadfastly refusing to ban the other Realms from Home.  If it was not for his relationship with the Shirai and the prosperity  he  was bringing the Realm there would have  been  an outcry  demanding  a trial on the basis of  treason  against  the Realm.
	You really have to know him to understand that what he does he is doing for the good of all Sathe,  not just the Eastern  Realm. He freely shares his knowledge and ideas, but he makes a point of  encouraging  students  to think of new ways  to  utilise  and improve  the  tools. I suspect that several times he has deliberately designed inefficient devices to see if Sathe  could see the ways in which they could be improved.
	And  he  refuses to have anything to do with accepting commisions to produce anythings specifically intended for warfare,  although as he justly states, a toothpick could be used for murder.
	He learned that some students were attempting to emulate the substance he calls 'gunpowder'. On receiving the news he just bobbed his head, as if he had been expecting something like that. I know that that night he went to the university to speak with the students working on those projects. I do not know what he said to them, but from that time there was no further news of their work. It is not as if they stopped what they were doing, just that there was no news of successes, nor of failure. The deans claimed to know nothing of what was transpiring and I tend to believe that. If the students are working under anybody's direction, it is my father's. I think he knows what he is doing.
	The  maps he and my mother have drawn have led  great  ships across the seas to discover new lands and civilisations that are only now beginning to  be explored.  Huge vessels ply the skies between  Realms  and towns,  carrying  trade  goods  and  those  passengers  brave  or foolhardy  enough.  Messages cross the distances  between  cities with the speed of thought.
	Two  beings have given us the keys to a new age and with them they  have entrusted us with the vast responsibility of using it wisely. Let their faith in us not be in vain.

******


EPILOGUE


	The  final  page  of  text  on  the  wall  screen  faded  to whiteness.  With  ponderous, overly-dramatic slowness,  the tome swung  shut,  its cover gleaming with texture-mapped polished leather and gold  trim.  An arm reached out to tap a key on  the  board.  The screen  snapped  off  and  the only light in  the  room  was  the unobtrusive glow from the terminal monitor.
	There  was  a  moment of silence in which  the  hum  of  the ventilators seemed loud.
	"So?  What'd  you think?" he finally asked,  swivelling  his chair around to watch her.
	She  was highlighted in the muted glow from  the  screen,  a subtle  aurora  that changed her,  bringing her features  out  in sharp contrasts:  highlights and shadows, sharp bone and smoother curves.  The  chair's leather creaked and rustled mutedly as  she settled  back  into  it,   one  hand  coming  up  to  stroke  her angular cheek. "Strange. . . I guess. An outsiders view of us. Those are really his words?"
	"It probably lost something in the translation. And he makes references  to things nobody but nobody  understands;  like  that 'god', whatever or whoever that is."
	Mas nodded vaguely,  still staring at the wall.  He blinked, then leaned forward to touch her arm lightly.  "You all right?"  he ventured.
	"Huh?  Yes, fine. Just thinking." She abruptly glared at his intruding  fingers and he reluctantly pulled his hand  back.  Her fur,  a  deep blue-grey,  had a softness that belied  its  almost metallic  lustre.   Actually,  he  reflected,  he  wouldn't  mind touching her in a more tender manner, perhaps she. . . 
	"Don't even think about it! " she snapped, ears back.
	"I  can  wait until your Time," he said with  a  grin,  then ducked back to avoid a clawed hand that hissed through the  space his face had been occupying a heartbeat before.  "Just  kidding!" he yelped, casting oil on dangerous seas. "I'm sorry!"
	She  rumbled  a growl deep in  her  throat;  mollified,  but barely.
	There  it was again,  he reflected,  that damnable wall  she built around herself whenever anybody tried to approach  her.  He couldn't  believe that anyone with her looks could be  a  virgin, but  there  were  tales  about  her,   that  she  actually   took suppressives when her Time came around. He doubted that, but what did it take to reach her?  What kind of upbringing could possibly do this to someone?
	The growl faded but those eyes still smouldered.
	"I'm sorry," he repeated.  "Back to business.  Alright?  Any questions?"
	Mas  hissed and drew a deep breath.  "Does  anyone have any real idea of what happened to them?"
	"Nothing  you could build a house on,"  he  replied.  "Let's see. . . It was a hundred and fifty years ago,  fourteen years after Shane's translation. Tahr had acquiesced her titles, her only son winning the challenges and becoming the new Shirai. She lived to see her grandchildren born, then Tahr ai Shirai died in her sleep. Peacefully. Fifty-three years old.
	"The K'hy and your namesake left a few months later. Nobody knows where they went. One night they took an airship and headed west and vanished into history. The other h'mans couldn't or wouldn't say where they were going. People are still saying they've seen them; like that sighting last week."
	"That would make them about a hundred and eighty years old."
	"About that," he chuckled.
	"No other traces?"
	He scratched himself. "Nothing. But, it's a big continent. Maybe one day we'll find something."
	"Or perhaps they went home," she wondered aloud.
	"That's one theory. Home; or perhaps somewhere else." He waved a hand toward the screen. "As K'hy said, who knows how many other realities there are."
	Mas  reached  out for the keyboard  and  hesitated,  a  claw clicking  against  plastic  as  it  described  small,  indecisive circles on the console. She was drifting again. Thinking. Had that narrative actually touched her in some way? Now she leaned forward and began pulling more pictures  from the disk, displaying them on the wall screen. He settled back in his chair and watched, just an observer.
	Images.
	Light and colour: monochrome and truecolor.
	Oils  and  watercolours,   charcoal   sketches,   portraits, anatomical details, ancient photographs that - despite their poor definition  -  were made all the more forceful by  the  knowledge that  the subject before the lens was REALITY,  not an  elaborate costume.  They  flowed  past  in a mesmerising  collage  of  high resolution  images that imprinted themselves upon the retina  and in the memory.
	The student glanced sideways at his companion. Her profile illuminated with flickering reflections,  glowing eyes locked  on the screen.  Then her hand twitched,  freezing the display.  When his  eyes  returned  to the  monitor,  he  understood  why  she'd stopped.
	"That one," he nodded at the screen, "is hanging in the Hall of Memoirs. Very nice."
	It was a portrait. Two portraits actually. A strikingly beautiful middle-aged female gazed coolly outward,  levelly meeting the eyes of any observer.  The other figure stood at  her left side,  hairless fingertips lightly resting on the fur of her shoulder, gazing past her with the eyes that had captivated so many.
	"He looks so. . . terrified," Mas said.  "The white around  his eyes."
	He knew it was normal for humans, that forsaken gaze, but it certainly appealed to the females.  For some reason it drew them in like flotsam into a whirlpool. It fascinated  him too; the look of a lost cub.
	"You can see it there," Mas said.
	"What?"
	She flicked a hand toward the screen as if trying to  snatch the words out of the air: "That rapport between them. It's in the eyes,  the way he's touching her. . . Hard to explain  exactly what  it is." She stared at the picture,  her head cocked to  one side.  "You know,  the artist has done an incredible job on  him. Far better than the other pictures I've seen.  All the others make him look too. . . sathelike."
	The  student flicked his ears as he  answered.  "She  should have. Sasha ai Davies was quite familiar with the subject."
	"His daughter?"
	"The same."
	Mas slouched back into the chair.  "Saaa!  I had no idea  she was an artist."
	"Oath!  What planet've you been on?  Never mind.  She's done scores of portrayals of Sathe and humans. They're all down in the Hall  of Memories and the museum." He studied the picture again. Ah,  but Tahr had been beautiful:  lean,  muscular, ears with a few  nicks, her  mane  plain and unadorned  in  the  old  style. Beautiful and. . . 
	He  blinked.  Familiar?  He glanced at the female sitting beside him, back to the picture. Was it. . . 
	"What?" Mas was glaring at him.
	No. No way.
	"Uh, nothing." Coincidence, or a trick of the light. She was still watching him suspiciously and any resemblance was gone. He yawned and stretched - sinews crackling -  then glanced at his watch, blinking the glowing numerals into focus. He blinked again and swore,  "Chastity!  We've got lectures  tomorrow. . .   today. . .  whatever. The other volumes are going to have to wait."
	She hissed softly and slapped the arm of the chair. "I guess so. Do you think we'll have time to see them all?"
	His ears twitched. "You a fast writer?"
	"Yah."
	He shrugged. "Then we should be able to fit them in. You coming?"
	"Go ahead. I'll catch up."
	"All right. Don't forget the disk."
	Again Mas was staring at the wall screen,  the chromed  claw of  her  index finger idly scratching at the arm  of  the  chair. Almost   lazily   she  reached  out  and  pressed   two   keypads simultaneously. The printer hummed, spat out a glossy ten by ten. Mas took it and stared at it. Those eyes had round pupils.
	Human.
	Where are you?
	"You ready?" came a voice from the door.
	"What?  Huh!  Yes, coming," she slipped the picture into her bag and took the disk from the drive,  still thinking.  She'd learned a lot that  night, more than even her lessons back at the Manor had taught her:  things about the Sathe past,  and also some of her own history. They had told her there was a resemblance,  but she herself had never been able to see it.
	Still,  perhaps someone else had.  Thoughtfully she  touched her face as she left.
	He closed the door behind her,  sealed it. "I guess I'll see you in lectures, a?"
	"All right.  Oh, and thanks for your help."
	"Anytime,"  he smiled,  then took the  plunge.  "Ah,  I  was wondering:  are you going to be doing anything this coming break day?"
	Mas stared at him,  waiting as his ears slowly wilted under her scrutiny.  "You had something in mind?" she finally asked.
	"I. . . I thought maybe a meal? a play or film?"
	She stared again, then flashed a smile, "All right."
	"I just. . . All right?"
	She almost laughed at that befuddled expression.  "Why not? Just one condition."
	"What?"
	"You help me finish this. Work with me."
	"Done." That hopeful way his ears perked up again - her  own twitched.  He was useful: a little naive, but useful. It wouldn't hurt to humour him. Anyway, she found him less objectionable than many  of the other males - even some of the tutors - who'd  tried to paw her. Not unattractive - and cute; in his own naive sort of way.
	She smiled and patted his arm.  "Perhaps we should get  some rest now."
	He fell in beside her as they walked back across the library floor. "Good idea. Your place or mine?"
	"Don't push it, male."
	"Just asking. . . "
	The voices and padding footsteps of the Sathe faded into the vast silence of the Citadel,  the miles of  corridors.  Overhead, the  huge banks of lights snapped off,  one by one,  leaving  the broad   foyer  permeated  with  the  almost  imperceptible   glow filtering through the high dome and storm beyond.
	Rain drummed against old glass, but there was nobody to hear it. Away in the distance lightning flashed: once, then again and again . . .




