went to space because my people once went to sea. I gave my sons to space, and you’ll give yours to space, because that’s where the next civilization will be! And you’ll learn the history and the language of our people—your people—you’ll learn what it means to be one of us!”
His words rang away into emptiness. For a while only the wind and a few tiny flames had voice. Down on the strand, the sea worried the island like a terrier with a rat.
Tamara said finally: “I already know what it means. It cost me David, but I know.”
He faced her again, lowered his head and stared as if at an enemy.
“You murdered him,” she said, not loudly. “You sent him to a dead sun to die. Because you—”
“You’re overwrought,” he broke in with tight-held anger. “I urged him to try just one space expedition. And this one was important. It could have meant a deal to science. He would have been proud afterward, whatever he did for a career, to say, ‘I was on the Cross.’”
“So he should die for his pride?” she said. “It’s as senseless a reason as the real one. But I’ll tell you why you really made him go . . . and if you deny you forced him, I’ll say you lie! You couldn’t stand the idea that one child of yours had broken away—was not going to be wrenched into your image—had penetrated this obscene farce of space exploration, covering distance for its own sake, as if there were some virtue in a large number of kilometers. David was going to live as nature meant him to live, on a living soil, with untanked air to breathe and with mountains to walk on instead of a spinning coffin . . . and his children would too . . . we would have been happy! And that was what you couldn’t stand to have happen!”
Magnus grinned without humor. “There’s a lot of meaningless noise for a symbolics professor’s daughter to make,” he said. “To begin at the end, what proof have you we were meant to be happy?”
“What proof have you we were meant to jump across lightyears?” she spat. “It’s another way of running from yourself— no more. It’s not even a practical thing. If the ships only looked for planets to colonize, I could understand. But . . . the Cross
herself was aimed for three giants! She was diverted to a black clinker! And now David is dead . . . for what? Scientific curiosity? You’re not a research scientist, neither was he, and you know it. Wealth? He wasn’t being paid more than he could earn on Earth. Glory? Few enough people on Earth care about exploration; not many more on Rama; he, not at all. Adventure? You can have more adventure in an hour’s walk through a forest than in a year on a spaceship. I say you murdered your son because you saw him becoming sane!”
“Now that’s enough,” growled Magnus. He took a step toward her. “I’ve heard enough out of you. In my own house. And I never did hold with this new-fangled notion of letting a woman yap—”
“Stand back!” she yelled. “I’m not your wife!”
He halted. The lines in his face grew suddenly blurred. He raised his artificial hand as if against a blow.
“You’re my son’s wife,” he said, quite gently. “You’re a Ryerson too . . . now.”
“Not if this is what it means.” She had found the resolution she sought. She went to the wall and took her cloak off its peg. “You’ll lend me your aircar for a hop to Stornoway, I trust. I will send it back on auto-pilot and get transport for myself from there.”
“But where are you going?” His voice was like a hurt child’s. “I don’t know,” she snapped. “To some place with a bearable climate. David’s salary is payable to me till he’s declared dead, and then there will be a pension. When I’ve waited long enough to be sure he won’t come back, I’m going to Rama.”
“But, lass . . . propriety—”
“Propriety be damned. I’d rather have David’s child, alive.” She slipped her boots back on, took a flashlight from the cupboard, and went out the door. As she opened it, the wind came straight in and hit Magnus across the face.