Excerpt from The Invention of Motherhood

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Later, Asto and I were in our quarters.  He’s a tall, thin Guardian; the body type sometimes known as ‘hound’ on Earth.  Six feet six, broad shoulders, long legs, and thin as a whip, except for tiny little bulges here and there, intended to give him a reserve of energy if he needed it.  He’d changed his skin color, darkened it slightly and added a touch more bronze than when we married, so it looked rather more like what my Earth family would think of as pure indiorather than mestizo, but his face was still on the aristocratic Northern European mold, hawk-faced and sharp, with eyes that were always alive with light whenever I saw them.  That was amusing, love, he told me, watching Whelsed try and talk you out of something you’ve had your mind set on for most of twenty years.  It was a tribute to my resolve, of sorts.  Ending my commitment at twenty years had been part of our agreement with each other to work as Eyes.  They might move him to solo work as a Finger, but he wasn’t so much as going to hint at me changing my mind.  We kept our promises to each other, always.

You do seem amused,I observed.

We’ve been in rapport for twentyfive years now, love.  I know better than totry to wiggle out of an agreement, but I do confess I was less than fully convinced you wouldn’t agree to what someone else pretended to need from you.  You do sometimes let yourself be led astray by others’ expectations.

Guilty as charged,I said.  Of course, if I hadn’t been, my life would have been completely different, and much poorer.  I would never have met my wonderful husband, for instance.  I take it I passed the test?

Can’t ask a better score than perfect,he replied.  The mental subtext was playful, and I gathered he’d changed his mind about starting early.  If you still want to, how about adding one to the head of the line?he askedHe hadn’t wanted to before.  He’d been concerned I might change my mind when they tried to persuade me to extend, and then I’d be pregnant with more time to serve.  I could always transfer the baby to artificial gestation or halt development – I was a Guardian and just as capable as any other healer – but both had their drawbacks.  We had four fertilized eggs in storage, just in case.  In the Empire, it was standard to use artificial gestation, but being a barbarian from Earth I didn’t think I could look my sisters in the eye and call myself a mother if I hadn’t done it the same way they had at least once.  Besides, I’d like to surprise Anara and Gilras (and Helene and Scimtar) with an extra child to the four we had planned and in frozen storage.

What else could I do?  I attacked him before he could change his mind.

Afterwards, we lay there in happy communion making certain the newly fertilized boy would be healthy, adding the last little touches to what he would become.  When we were satisfied, we made love again, slow and passionate, each possessive of the other in a way that said both ‘mine’ and ‘yours’ simultaneously.  We belonged to each other in ways that no Earth human would have understood before Imperial contact.  We might live separate for years at a time – given that he was remaining in the military and I wasn’t, we’d have no choice on some occasions – but for me, ‘home’ was where Asto was.  And vice versa.  We weren’t necessarily all demonstrative about it out in public, but we didn’t need to be.  Our rapport, a constant mental connection to each other, left no doubts.  Not that we shied away from demonstrations, either.

Copyright 2021 Dan Melson. All Rights Reserved.


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