your cavalry into position,' she said.
'Fuck it,' the prince said in a flat voice. 'Let Ther tell Chim what to do. And Turkol. I'm done giving orders, or even making requests. All I ever do is fuck things up. Even us.'
He looked up over his shoulder at last, and the sergeant almost stepped back at his expression.
'Look at us, what there is of 'us.' ' He snorted bitterly. 'I can't even carry on a fucking conversation with a woman I love without totally screwing up.'
'You didn't screw up, Roger,' the sergeant said, sitting down at his side. Her heart had taken a tremendous lurch at the word 'love' but she knew he didn't need her throwing herself at him at the moment. 'I did. I realize that now. In fact, I've realized it all along—I just didn't want to admit I have, because it was so much easier to go on being mad at you, instead. But all you were trying to say was that fraternization is a bad idea, and you were right. If you don't watch it, it screws up a unit faster than anything else ever could.'
'That wasn't what I was trying to say,' the prince said. 'It
'So what did you mean to say?' Despreaux asked warily. 'I assume you
'No.' Roger rubbed his face and looked out on the water again. 'What I meant to say was: I don't fool around. Put a period on the end of that sentence. I did a couple of times, and they were outright disasters. And I felt like a shit each time. All I could think about was that I didn't want another bastard in the world. I didn't want to betray someone like my father and mother had.'
He pulled his helmet off and set it on the ground. The river bank was covered in a low, soft ground cover, somewhat like short clover, under the shade of a massive jungle giant. It was as comfortable a place as any on the planet to deal with bleak despair.
'I didn't know what the relationship was between my mother and the bastard formerly known as 'my father,' ' he said. 'But I did know that wondering what the relationship was, and blaming myself for whatever it
'At all?' the incredulous sergeant asked. 'For how long? And, I mean, uh . . .'
'I lost my virginity when I was fifteen. To a younger daughter of the Duke of New Antioch. A very ambitious daughter.'
'I've heard about that one,' Despreaux said carefully. The 'scene' was a minor legend in the Emperor's Own and the cause of one of the few resignations of a company commander in its history. 'And I've heard that nobody had ever seen you 'with' anyone else. But, I mean, what do you—I mean, that's a looong time.'
'Yes, it is. Thank you for pointing that out.'
'It's not good for you, you know,' the Marine said. 'It's not healthy. You can develop an enlarged prostate even while you're young. Sure, they can fix it, but prevention is a much, much better alternative.'
'Do I really have to discuss the details of my non-sex life with you?' the prince asked. 'Especially right now?'
'No, you don't,' Despreaux admitted. 'But didn't anybody ever talk to you about it? Didn't you have a counselor?'
'Oh, sure. Plenty of them. And they all took the same position: I needed to release my bonds to my father, put my sense of his betrayal of me behind me, and take responsibility for my own life. This is referred to as 'reality therapy' or 'quit being such a fucking whiner.' Which would have worked real well, except that it wasn't my
'Oh.' The sergeant tugged at an earlobe. 'That has to be weird. Everybody in the Empire regards the Empress like, well, like a goddess, I guess.'
'Yep,' Roger said bitterly. 'Everyone but her son. I never, ever forgave her for the fact that I didn't have a dad. She at least could have remarried or something. I finally figured out that was one of the reasons I went into sports—look at all those father figures.'
'Oh,' Despreaux said again, and then, very, very carefully, 'And Kostas?'
'Sort of,' Roger said with something halfway between a chuckle and a sob, then drew a deep breath. 'Kostas was hard to see as the kind of larger-than-life pattern kids want in their fathers, I guess. But in every other way that counted, he was the closest I ever got. Could have gotten, maybe. He was always there when I needed him . . . and I wasn't there when
Despreaux's arms twitched as she listened to his ragged breathing, but she made herself pause and think very carefully about what she was going to do. The intensity of Roger's emotions, and the jagged edges of his grief and self-hatred hit her like a fist, and she was more than a little frightened by the dark, pain-filled depths which stretched out before her. But fear was only a part of what she felt, and not the greatest part, and so, finally, she gave a slight shrug and gently took the rifle out of his hands and set it on the ground. Wordlessly, she wrapped her arms around him and pulled him down to lie with his head on her lap . . . and ran her fingers through his sweaty hair as he began, very quietly, to cry.
Her own eyes burned, and she wondered how many lonely years it had been since he had ever let anyone see him weep. Her heart ached with the need to reach out to him, but she was a Marine, a warrior. She knew what needed to be said, but not how to say it, and so she crooned wordlessly to him, instead, and somehow, he seemed to understand the words she couldn't find.
'I don't know what to do, Nimashet,' he told her. 'I . . . I just can't kill anybody else. I've killed so many of you already. I just can't do that anymore.'
'You didn't kill anybody, Roger,' she said gently, the words coming at last because she needed them so very badly. 'We're Marines. We all volunteered for the Corps, and we volunteered again for the Empress' Own. We knew the score when we signed up, and we could've quit at any time.'
'You didn't sign up to be marooned on a planet full of four-armed barbarians while trying to protect a deadbeat prince!'
She smiled, and if that smile was a bit misty, that was her own business.
'Not a deadbeat—more like a dead-shot. Your Highness, there are so many ways to die as a Marine that it's not really funny. This is near the top of the list of odd places and ways, but it's not clear at the top.'
'Kostas didn't sign up to be a Marine,' he said softly. 'He didn't sign on to die.'
'People die all the time, Roger.' The sergeant combed the tangles out of his hair with her fingers. 'They die in aircar accidents, and of old age. They die from too much parsan, and from falling in the shower. They die in shipwrecks, and from radiation poisoning, and by drowning. Kostas didn't have a monopoly on dying.'
'He had a monopoly on dying from my mistake,' Roger said in tones of quiet, utter bitterness. 'I made a simple request and didn't think about the consequences. How many times have I done that—and not just to him? How many times on this march have you Marines been put in jeopardy—or killed—because of my stupid actions? My stupid
'Quite a few,' Despreaux said. 'But I think you're being a bit unfair to yourself. For one thing, I've talked to Turkol and Chim. You didn't ask Kostas to get you water; he
'What are you saying? That it was
'I'm saying it wasn't