
had been Johansen's gift, and he drank it with the pleasure she deserved of him. He tilted his glass,
admiring the play of light in the ruby liquid. "Then I will tell you something, Lieutenant. Do you know what
we Zheeerlikou'valkhannaieee call our two wars with you?"
"Yes, Captain," Johansen said softly. " 'The Wars of Shame.' "
"Precisely." He sipped delicately. "I find that apt even though we are now allies. We had twice the
systems, ten times the population, and a navy, and you had—what? A few dozen lightly-armed survey
vessels? Should not any warrior feel shame for losing to an enemy so much weaker than he?"
Johansen met his eyes calmly, and the least claw approved. Even among his own people, many
would have sought to hide their discomfort with some polite nothing; this Human merely waited.
"But you were not weaker where it mattered most, Saahmaantha," he said seriously. "For your
people, war was a matter for planning and discipline; for mine, it was a chance to win honor by individual
bravery. Your First Fang Aandersaahn lured us into traps, ambushed us, and massed his fire to burn us
down as we charged against him, and to the Zheeerlikou'valkhannaieee those were coward's tactics.
My grandsire, the first Lord Talphon, fought in both Wars of Shame. He was an intelligent officer, one of
Varnik'sheerino's protégés, but even he thought your people's way of war fit only for chofaki."
Johansen still said nothing, though her eyes flickered. Literally, the term meant "dirt-eaters";
figuratively, it implied beings so lost to courage and honor they could not even recognize them as
concepts.
"Yet I have read his journal many times, Saahmaantha, and he learned better." Khardanish watched
his guest relax. "He was not at Aklumar, but his ship was the sole survivor of the First Battle of Ophiuchi
Junction, and he fought in every major engagement of the Junction Campaign. By the end, he had learned
what your Federation Navy taught us so well; that the duty of a warrior must be to win, not to count
coup. So if you are like one of us, perhaps that is in part because my people have grown more like
yours."
"And is that a good thing, Captain?" Johansen asked.
"Yes, Saahmaantha." He refilled her empty glass and raised his own to her in the Terran manner. "We
owe you much for teaching us there is no cowardice in forethought. Some might argue that point even
now—they remember only the shame of defeat and prefer still to think of Humans as chofaki—but my
grandsire died defending Tanama against the Rigelian First Fleet with a single Alliance task group, and his
Terran units died with him. None fled, and the names of their commanders are inscribed among my clan's
fathers and mothers in honor." He regarded Johansen levelly. "I believe he would approve of you."
"Your words do me honor, litter master," Johansen said quietly.
"True honor is in the heart which understands them, cubling," Khardanish returned the formality, then
twitched his tufted ears in humor. "But listen to us! We grow too grave, Lieutenant."
"Perhaps." Samantha sipped her own wine, leaning back from the low table on the cushions which
served Orions in lieu of chairs, then grinned wryly. "But if we're growing more like one another, we've
paid enough along the way, sir. This very system's history is proof of that.
Khardanish nodded. A hundred and fifty Orion years before, a Terran fleet in Lorelei had cut off and
trapped a third of the Khanate's battle-line. Forty years before that, an Orion flotilla had penetrated the
Terran frontier undetected during ISW-1 and surprised an entire Human colony fleet here. There had
been no survivors.
"Perhaps," he suggested dryly, "that is because we have always been alike in at least one regard,
Saahmaantha." His liaison officer raised an eyebrow in the Human expression of interrogation, and he
gave another chuckle. "Both of us are incredibly stubborn," he said simply.
* * *
A gentle vibration quivered through the superdreadnougnt Alois Saint-Just as Engineering ran her
final drive test, and her captain watched his read-outs with profound satisfaction. There was honor in