been thus, not only aboard the Mayflower but on the Viking ships; on the Ninafinta, and Santa Maria; on the first convoys sent off to explore Nadia, about which the people of Earth had harbored such extravagant hopes. It was nut jobs. It was hysterics and visionaries and petty criminals. The odes and monuments, the plaques and pageants, came later.

Simon could not settle. He could not find a plausible spot for himself. After meandering from place to place, trying to stay out of the way, trying not to look as idle as he was, he ran into Othea coming out of the barn. He spoke to her, though he knew she wouldn't welcome it. It was something for him to do. And he did, in fact, have a question or two only she could answer.

He said, 'Catareen is pretty weak today.'

'Yes,' she answered impatiently. He suspected she would have brushed him off entirely had he broached any other subject.

'Is there any chance she could rally? I mean, could she still have a good period before'

'No. There are no remissions. Some take longer than others, and frankly I suspect she could hang on for quite a while still. The more resilient individuals can take weeks and weeks.'

'We've decided we want to come along.' 'Good. Now, if you'll excuse me'

'Catareen will need a bed,' Simon said. 'Maybe I could go aboard with one of the technicians and figure out the best way to make her comfortable.'

'Oh, she can't come with us.' 'What do you mean?'

'I'm sorry. I'd assumed you understood. Our space is limited. We anticipate some mortality en route, and we've tried to allow for that. But we can't carry a dead body for thirty-eight years. I'm afraid it's out of the question.'

'You mean to leave her here, then.'

'In a short while, she won't even know where she is. She wouldn't be eating anymore, under any circumstances. We'll leave water for her on the off chance, but I doubt she'll want that, either.'

'You'll let her die alone.'

'It will mean something different for her from what it might mean to you. Nourtheans are more solitary. She'll be all right. Believe me.'

'Sure.'

'Now you really must excuse me. You can't imagine what all I've got to do.'

'Of course.'

She hurried toward the house.

* * *

The day passed. Luke finally appeared, riding the horse with Twyla. He seemed to have joined the children in some way that implied membership without trust or affection. Simon saw them approaching from beyond the house. Luke sat behind Twyla like a boy pharaoh, regal and indignant-looking, as the smaller children capered in the horse's wake. Twyla reined the horse in Simon's direction, brought it to a halt just shy of the place where he stood. The horse blinked and shook its head. It made a low snorting noise that sounded vaguely like the word 'hunk' played on an oboe.

Twyla said to Simon, 'Do you like horses?' 'Who doesn't?' he said.

'It seems that there will be no horses in the new world.'

Right, she was crazy, too. Still, she had her own version of Catareen's lambent lizard eyes and nervous, undulating nostrils. Her gaze made Simon's circuits buzz.

He said, 'Maybe there are horses there already.'

'I will never love a horse other than Hesperia,' Twyla announced. 'Not on any planet.'

'Give me a break,' Luke said.

'I'm not sure what you mean by that.'

'What I mean is, it's just an animal'

Twyla reined the horse around and kicked it into motion again. As they departed, followed by the other children, Simon could hear Twyla saying to Luke, 'You have a great deal to learn about the kingdom of animals. They are as various as any other race of beings.'

'They're food. Any being that can't open a bottle or loan you money is by definition…'

Simon watched them ride away. He understood that they would be carrying on this conversation together for the next eighty years or more. He wondered if Othea already had Luke in mind for Twyla. He wondered if they would have children.

He said a silent goodbye to Luke. He wished him luck.

* * *

Finally he returned to Catareen's room. There was nowhere else for him. He felt calmer there. It was the one place in which he seemed to be something other than a tourist.

She slept, mostly. He sat in the single chair at her bedside, watching her. He tried to imagine her life her long life, as it turned out before she came here. She would never, he thought, have been a particularly easy person. She must always have been defiant and stern, even by Nadian standards. She must always have harbored a privacy so deep it was almost audible, like the silence of a well. He suspected that her husband had been the friendlier one, the one with ease and amplitude. Simon thought he could picture them at home, in their hut of sticks and mud. The husband would have been forever welcoming others in, offering pipes and fermented drinks, warming the rooms by lighting fires with wood they could not easily spare.

He would have exasperated Catareen. His profligacy would have inspired countless arguments, some of them bantering, some of them bitter.

And yet, she must have loved him.

Simon knew this, somehow. He could feel the information swarming inside his head, one cell splitting into two, two into four, four into eight.

Here was Catareen's long union. Here were her children, five of them, three girls and two boys, endlessly undecided about which of their parents was more to blame for the errors and injustices in the family. Here were their days of labor. Here were their nights together, on a mattress stuffed with leaves and hay. Here was an afternoon of no particular consequence, when Catareen stood in the doorway of her hut, looking at her village, at the sharp peaks beyond, at the pewter-colored sky that would soon release its rain; here were the sounds of her children at some game, mixed with the steady rhythm of her husband's hoe in the garden out back; here was her sense of herself in the middle of a life that was hers and no one else's. Here was the bittersweet savor of it, the piercing somethingness of it the pure sensation of being Catareen Callatura, at that moment, on an afternoon of no consequence, just before a rain.

And here, many years later, was her decision to withhold crops from the king's collectors and to encourage others to do the same. Here were the doubts of her garrulous husband, a simpler soul than she. Here was his trust in her. Here were the children's arguments, with her and among themselves. (Some would have decided by then that she was the good parent, others that she was the bad.) Here were the arrests. Here were the executions. All of them. Not only the sweet, baffled husband but the grown children, the ones who loved her and the ones who resented her, and their children, too. All of them.

The room darkened with evening. Catareen woke several times, looked around uncertainly. She must have been surprised to find herself here, dying in an unfamiliar room on a strange planet. She must, in her sleep, have forgotten. Each time she woke, Simon leaned over her and said, 'It's all right,' which was not, of course, strictly true. It was something to say.

He didn't think she'd want him to touch her. Each time she looked at him with fading yellow eyes. Each time she drifted away again without speaking.

Presently, Luke came into the room. 'Hey,' he said. 'It's almost time to get aboard.'

Simon knew by then what he would do. He seemed to have entered a decision without quite making it. The process had occurred somewhere deep in his circuitry.

He said, 'I'm not going.'

'What?'

'I can't leave her here.'

Luke hesitated. Then he said, 'There's nothing we can do for her, you know.'

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