
Vision cleared first, bringing her shapes to associate with the confusing tangle of fragrances filling her
senses. Sibling shapes… four little wedge-shaped heads covered in tan and fawn fuzz, wobbling in
exploration. Mother shape… large and infinitely gentle, crooning sounds of love, pro-viding warmth and
nourishment as she stroked her babies and sang softly to them.
Her single female child she held often, nestling her atop her stomach and letting the tiny one wobble
and explore. A golden child with soft, downy baby fur and no markings at all save a light brown mask
across her eyes that would probably darken with maturity. All the males were striped in brown and fawn,
almost identical, fractious when to-gether yet furious if separated. The golden female, how-ever, was
placid and calm, content to interact with her mother yet adventurous enough to explore on her own.
"My golden one," the mother crooned to her, smoothing back the fur over sweet baby eyes. They all
lay together in the bed. A small lamp glowed, pushing back the surround-ing shadows. Many sounds
came from far away, muffled and unimportant.
"Brave and strong, my daughter will grow up to be. Look at you, bigger already than your brothers.
Straight-shouldered, you are. An Aaroun, you are, my darling, a daughter of a proud line of the Heva
clan. All your history, I will teach you. Our songs, you will learn that you may teach them to your sons
and daughters. Through you, we will go on."
Gentle, steady words. The golden one blinked up at her mother's loving face, drinking in the words
she did not as yet understand. But she could understand the love in those words, and the pride. Her own
heart opened in response, and she felt a sudden rush of feeling so intense it almost frightened her.
She mewed, and her mother kissed her, laughing softly.
"Yes, my golden one," her mother said. "Yes, you are wonderful and precious. I love you so much."
Love. The golden one blinked and rubbed her head against her mother's hand. It was her first lesson,
to learn this feeling.
Without warning, there came a perfunctory pounding on the door. Before the mother could move, the
door was slammed open, and a shaft of sunlight stabbed inside.
Startled, the golden one cried out. Her brothers awoke with screams. Their mother struggled up,
hastily scooping her babies behind her.
"Get out!" she roared. "This is a birthing room! I have the right to privacy for these first days."
A pebble-skinned, blue Vüs male in a dust-colored coat that hung long enough to cover his tail
stepped inside. He wore a voluminous hood that masked his rill and face ex-cept for his vivid green eyes,
and concealed his identity. Two Toth thugs carrying stun-sticks followed him.
Fear filled the Aaroun mother.
Standing well above two meters, nearly as tall as the Vüs, with massive heads and shoulders covered
in pelts of matted, curly hair, Toths were the worst kind of enforcers. Brutal, stupid, and dirty, they
entered with a cloud of flies buzzing about their heads, chewing lazily, now and then flicking a big, pale
tongue up inside their broad nostrils. They gazed at her with small, cruel eyes that danced with
anticipation. Toths enjoyed inflicting hurt. Mercy was un-known to them. For the first time in her life, the
mother felt the need to say the ancient Heva lamentations as a prayer rather than song-poetry. But her
mind went blank, unable to summon the words. In the name of the ancient gods, what were these
creatures doing here?
From outside her room, she could hear anguished screams down the row of cheap housing. Her fear
intensi-fied, and she began to pant. Whatever they intended, she would fight them to the death if
necessary.
She watched the three intruders fan out at the foot of the birthing bed, facing her. Again she shifted