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The Course of Empire by Eric Flint & K. D. Wentworth. Part seven. Chapter 43, 44, epilogue

The collective posture of the crowd visibly eased. This was, suddenly and unexpectedly, going quite well. The worst immediate danger, a sharp and open clash between Narvo and Pluthrak, had now been averted. Caitlin could practically see them all rubbing their hands, like so many human horse-traders about to get down to serious dickering.

And that needs to be headed off at the pass, before it even gets started. Brace yourself, girl. Here comes the hardest part. Well . . . the second-to-hardest.

As if on cue, the Preceptor spoke again. As always, his stance impossible to read.

“You wish to suggest another kochan altogether then? Perhaps Jak or Hij or Dano?”

“No, not another kochan. I think the Naukra should grant status to Terra as a taif. Two taifs, rather, one human and one Jao—and both affiliated directly to the Bond of Ebezon.”

Finish it. The hardest part. Sorry, boss, but sometimes the road forward requires a stab in the back.

She forced herself to turn and gaze directly at Aille, standing not far away. “And I think you should not remove Aille’s status as kroudh. His affiliation with Pluthrak must be severed forever. Not to punish him, but to free him. So that he can be adopted, if he and they so choose, by the new Jao taif to be formed on Terra. That alone would give the new taifs the stature they need, among Jao and humans both, while dishonoring no one.”

Chapter 44

Wrot immediately stepped forward. “It is a superb proposal. Hemm supports it completely. So will all of Wathnak, I am sure.” He reached up and stroked the bauta on his cheek. “Indeed, I will give up my bauta and seek adoption into this new taif myself.”

He gave Aille a benign gaze. “This one is so impulsive he will need sage elders to advise him. Of course, he will have to release me from his service first. Unseemly, otherwise. How could anyone possibly be sure I was selecting his mates for their valuable qualities instead of”—he waggled ears and whiskers simultaneously, conveying a comically-exaggerated version of suspected-impropriety—”those petty matters of comeliness which matter so much to callow youngsters.”

Most of the Naukra’s members were elders themselves, familiar, as Aille was not, with the secretive workings of kochan-parents. Wrot’s amusement was shared, for a moment, by many of them.

Aille himself had been too surprised by Caitlin’s proposal to think clearly, much less appreciate the humor involved in Wrot’s jest. He was still trying to grapple with the idea of being severed forever from Pluthrak, even though that outcome had been at least half-expected. He was in no position to start thinking about the needs of a newly formed taif. Any taif, much less one as peculiar as this would be.

Him? At his young age? Already a kochan-parent?

Absurd.

He pushed that personal matter aside, to concentrate on the proposal as a whole. It was . . .

Intriguing. That much, for a certainty. Aille could immediately see a multitude of problems, but he could also see an even greater multitude of possibilities.

His intrigue, Nikau immediately made clear, was not shared by the Narvo elder. Her posture, in fact, bordered on indignant-disbelief.

“It is a ridiculous idea!” she exclaimed. Then, catching herself, shifted quickly to a stance of skeptical-consideration.

“A new Jao taif . . . perhaps.” She gave Aille a glance. Then, a much longer and considering look at Dau krinnu ava Pluthrak.

“Narvo would not object to that,” she said abruptly, “as a way to avoid unnecessary humiliation of Pluthrak as well as Narvo. Whereas we would object—strongly—were Pluthrak to demand the removal of its scion’s kroudh status and his return to Pluthrak. Narvo alone will not pay the price for resolving this crisis.” Her eyes began to move toward Oppuk’s corpse, but shied away. For a moment, even her fierce figure held a hint of grief. “The one we lost here was once namth camiti, whatever he became. Let Pluthrak balance that loss with one of its own.”

Aille had already seen that advantage himself. So, obviously, had Dau—and Yaut, for that matter, judging from his stance. To restore Aille to Pluthrak at this point would be to place all blame upon Narvo. On Oppuk, at least. But even cast out and his life given, Oppuk still reflected on his kochan of origin. Whereas retaining kroudh status for Aille would satisfy Narvo that his personal rebellion was being adequately punished. No self-stated kroudh in Jao history had ever had that status removed by the Naukra, after all, for precisely that reason. It would have been too great an insult to the kochan who had been his or her opponents.

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