keep Renna attended.

They’re the idiots, Maia thought, noting that other clusters of women could be seen following any ship’s officer who stepped off the sacrosanct quarterdeck. All this had been provoked by the morning’s glory fall. She doubted any of the vars actually wanted to get pregnant here and now. Not without a niche and bankroll to raise a child securely. Maia had seen women putting pinches of ovop leaf in their cheeks, as a safeguard against conception.

Even if pleasure was the sole objective, however, their hopes were ill-fated. Great clans spent fortunes entertaining men in winter, getting them in the mood. Without incentives, most of Manitou’s sailors would choose whittling and games over providing exertive services free of charge. Well… I’ve seen exceptions, Maia admitted. But Tizbe Beller’s drug was doubtless far too dear for rads to afford, even if they had the right contacts.

“Go on,” one of the young women urged Renna. It was the slim blonde Maia had overheard earlier, now leaning against Renna’s shoulder to look at the game board, hoping to distract his attention back from Maia. “You were talking about ecology,” the rad said in a low voice. “Explain again what that has to do with the patterns of dots.”

She’s acting stupid on purpose. Maia watched Renna shift uncomfortably. And it’s going to backfire on her.

Sure enough, Renna lifted his eyes in a silent sigh, and gave Maia an apologetic glance before answering. “What I meant was that each individual organism in an ecosystem interacts primarily with its neighbors, just like in the game, though, of course, the rules are vastly more complex …”

Maia felt a moment of triumph. His look meant he preferred her conversation to the others’ close-pressed attentions, no matter that they were older, physically more mature. Naturally, his reaction would have been different in summer, when rut turned all men into—

Wait a minute. Maia stopped short suddenly. We talked about seasonal sexuality on Stratos. Deep-down, though, I kept assuming that it applied to him.

Does it, though? Would summer and winter have anything to do with what Renna feels?

Maia backed away, watching as the Earthman patiently described how the array of black or white cells crudely simulated a kind of “life.” Despite the simple level of his explanation, he seemed intent to look only at the game board, avoiding direct contact with his audience. For the first time, Maia noticed a sheen of perspiration on his brow.

“They got plans for him, you know.”

Maia whirled. A tall, fair-haired woman had come up from behind. The rugged easterner, Baltha, picked her teeth with a wood sliver and leaned against the aft capstan. She grinned at Maia. “Your Earthman is worth a lot more to these rads than they’re lettin’ on, y’know.”

Maia felt torn between curiosity and her dislike of the woman. “I know they need information, and advice from his ship’s library. They want to know if something in it can help make Stratos more like other worlds.”

Baltha raised an eyebrow. Perhaps the acknowledgment was mocking. “Information’s nice. But I bet they seek help of a quicker sort.”

“What do you mean?”

Baltha tossed the toothpick in an arc that carried it overboard. “Think about it, virgie. You see how they’re already workin’ on him. He’ll be asked to earn his keep, in Ursulaborg. An’ I just bet he’s able.”

Maia’s face felt warm. “So? So he sparks a few—”

Baltha interrupted. “Sparks, hell! You just can’t see, can you? Think, girlie. He’s an alien! Now that may mean he’s too different even to spark Strato-fems like us. Can’t tell unless they try. But what about th’ other extreme? What if his seed works, all right? What if it works the old- fashioned way, even in winter?”

Maia blinked as she worked out what Baltha meant. “You mean, his sperm might not spark clones … but instead go all the way and make vars?” She looked up. “No matter what time of year it is?”

Baltha nodded. “Then, what if his var-sons inherited that knack? An’ their sons? An’ so on? Now wouldn’t that throw a spanner in Lysos’s plan?” She spat over the side.

Maia shook her head. “Something sounds wrong about that—”

“You bet it’s wrong!” the big var cut in again. “Meddlin’ with the design set down by our foremothers an’ betters. Arrogant rad bitches.”

Actually, Maia hadn’t meant “wrong” in that sense. Although she couldn’t spot the flaw at that moment, she felt certain there was something cockeyed with Baltha’s reasoning. It struck Maia intuitively that the design of human life on Stratos wouldn’t be so easily diverted, not even by seed taken from a man from the stars.

“I thought you hated the way things are, as much as the rads do,” she asked, curious about the venom in Baltha’s voice. “You helped them get Renna away from the Perkinites.”

“Alliance of convenience, virgie. Sure, my mates an’ me hate Perkies. Stuck-up clans that want a lock on everything without keepin’ on earnin’ it. Lysos never meant that to happen. But from there on, we an’ the rads part. Bleedin’ heretics. We just want to shake things up, not change the laws o’ nature!”

Why is she telling me this? Maia wondered, seeing a gleam in Baltha’s eyes as she regarded Renna. “You have ideas about using him, too,” Maia surmised.

The blonde var turned to look at her. “Don’t know what you mean.”

“I saw what you collected in your little box,” Maia blurted, eager to see how Baltha would react when confronted. “Back in the canyon, while we were escaping.”

“Why, you little sneak…” the woman growled. Then she stopped and a slow grin spread across her rugged features. “Well, good for you. Spyin’s one of th’ true arts. Might even be your niche, sweetums, if you ever learn to tell enemies from friends.”

“I know the difference, thanks.”

“Do you?”

“Like I can tell you’d use Renna for your own ends, at least as much as the rads want to.”

Baltha sighed. “Everybody uses everybody else. Take your friends, Kiel an’ Thalla. They used you, kiddo. Sold you to th’ Bellers, in hopes of trackin’ you to jail, an’ maybe findin’ their Starman wherever you were stashed.”

Maia stared. “But … I thought Calma Lerner…”

“Think what you like, citizen,” Baltha answered sarcastically. “I know better than tryin’ to tell nothin’ to a upstart fiver, who’s so sure she knows who’s her good pals, who ain’t.”

The eastlander turned and sauntered away, wandering the railing that overlooked the cargo deck, where she began a low conversation with a large blonde woman, one of the female deckhands serving aboard the Manitou. Below, on the main deck, Naroin’s voice could be heard, pulling a small band of women away from bothering sailors to take their turn at obligatory combat practice. Baltha grinned back at Maia, then picked up her own polished short-trepp, and slid down the gangway to join the session. Soon there came a staccato clicking of sticks, and a thump as somebody hit the ground.

Maia’s thoughts rolled. She saw Thalla, about to take her turn in the practice ring, pluck a bill from the weapons rack. Glancing up, Thalla smiled at her, and in a rush, Maia was filled with an outraged sense of confirmation. Baltha’s right, damn her! Kiel and Thalla must have used me.

A tidal surge of hurt and betrayal caused each breath to catch painfully in her throat. She had been angry with her former cottage-mates for trying to leave her behind in Grange Head, but this was worse. Far worse. I … can’t trust anybody.

The sense of perfidy hurt terribly. Yet, what strangely came to mind most strongly right then was the memory of cursing Calma Lerner and her doomed clan. I’m sorry, she thought. Even if Baltha turned out to be wrong, or lying, Maia felt ashamed of what she’d said in wrath, invoking maledictions on the hapless smithy family, whose members had never done her any real harm.

In the background, contrasting to her dark brooding, Renna’s voice continued blithely, describing his strategy for the evening’s match. “…so I was thinking, I could put a pinwheel at each end of the board, near the boundary…”

The voice was an irritation, scraping away at Maia’s guilt-wallow. Even if Baltha lied, I’ll never

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