"How long?" Amos ben Sierra Nueva said desperately



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A transmitter and space facility? Re-usable hulls for

the craft the Kolnari had fused. Amos began to feel less

despondent, though half of him resisted.
"Humanitarian aid will be sufficient to see your

people through the on-coming winter," Agrum went

on, "using whatever shelters your culture prefers..."
"We cannot land alter-culturals on Bethel, of

course," Fusto half-interrupted, "but orbital staff is not

considered by Central Worlds Authority to com-

promise indigenous integrity..."


"If you wish, you may request additional colonials of

your own persuasion..." from Nilsdotter.


Amos turned from one speaker to the other, half dazed.
"Give the kid a break," Simeon said suddenly. "Why

don't you let him read the reports so he knows what

you're talking about, huh?"
"Of course," said SPRIM.
"Our intention, I assure you, Station Simeon," MM

said defensively.


"Then let it be so," Admiral Questar-Benn said, smil-

ing encouragingly at Amos as she handed him several

disk files and led him to another room where he could

digest the information in private.


"Not over until it's over," the Admiral remarked to
THE CTTY WHO FOUGHT
423
the commodore as they watched the sometimes con-

tentious delegation leave their quarters.


"And it's never over," Tellin-Makie replied, pouring

them both snifters of brandy in the flag quarters. "I

didn't have the heart to remind them that those aren't

the only bunch of Kolnari running around loose."


"And if you leave a pair, they breed up again," she

said wearily. "They know that. Which is the reason I

suspect we'll have Simeon and the others on die rolls in

a couple of years. The Kolnari will be a menace as long

as two of them are left alive."
"The Psych people swear they can be rehabilitated."
"Rehabilitated to E equals M and C squared," she

said, taking a sip. "Dam" cockroaches." Another sigh.

"Maybe this little atrocity will get us some resources."
"For a while, until the general public become inured

to these particular atrocities," Tellin-Makie said, "then

we can go back to peeing on bonfires. It's not as if they

were the only serious problem, either."


"Would that it were so. Would that it were so, my friend."
She looked at the screen, which showed an exterior

view of SSS-900-C. Repair servos and suited figures were

already working on some of the more urgent damage,

though it would be a generation before the devastation

was fully repaired. She made a mental note to have En-

gineering help out while the task force was on station here.


"All in all, though, I'm glad we don't have their

problems, poor heroic sods," she said.


"Amen."
"Yes, yes," Joseph said eagerly when Amos finished

telling him of the help promised by SPRIM and MM, up

to and including a Brain Planetary manager to replace

Guiyon. "Wemustreturnasquicklyaspossible."


"Yes, you and Rachel must"
"Rachel and I?" Joseph repeated, staring in sudden

alarm at Amos.


424
ArmeMcCajfiq& SJtf. Stirling
"Yes, because there is much to organize on the

ground before we may accept the beneficence..."


"But it is you, Amos ben Sierra Nuevo, who must

return!" Joseph's face was stricken. "Itisyour duty. Our

world is but a lake of mourning. They need^ow. They

need a heroNand their Prophet"


Amos paced, hands behind his back, clenching and

unclenching, up and down the floor of his room in

Simeon's quarters.
"They need a hero, granted, Joseph," he said, stop-

ping in front of his friend, "but if I am a hero, then so

are you!"
"Me?" Joseph laughed. "I am your henchman. Your

right hand, and proud to be so. Your friend, and

prouder still of that But you are the prophet, the hero,

the one the people follow."


Amos took him by the shoulders. "You are my

brother, as truly as if the same mother bore us."


Joseph blinked as Amos drew him into the double

cheek-touch of close kin to emphasize his words. "And

it is you who will return while I deal with these infidels

and make certain that what charity they would foist on

us will not weaken our people but allow them to

become strong in such ways that no other scavenger

can ever catch us unawares." Who saves the saved from the

savior he thought


"And I ... I wonder," Amos went on aloud. I

wonder if it is good, that the new leader is of the old

Prophet's line N may God smile on him! Too many

generations have the people followed the old families."

He winced. "And followed them to ruin."
"You would lead us to greatness!" Joseph said forceful-

ly. The more so if you doubted yourself less, he added to

himself. "You have shown your strengths as a self-

thinker, a defender of his planet, a guileful strategist..."


"History does not show many battle-leaders who had

the same talent for being peace-leaders!"


THE CITY WHO FOUGHT
425
"But you are of a peaceful nature until roused to

defend what you hold dear," Joseph said, "even as you

have seen your duty now to protect us against those who

wish to protect us!" Joseph turned sternly grim now. "It is

the blind face of Channa dt hides your way."
Amos looked so fiercely at him that Joseph turned

his face away, his shoulders sagging in acknow-

ledgement.
"I also cannot abandon these here to whom we, for

our very lives, owe a debt of gratitude. If, in this one

instance, duty and honor are both served, let me serve

it." Amos sighed deeply, torn between love and duty.

"Are Simeon, Joat and Channa to be merely a chapter

of my life because fourteen generations ago the

Prophet fathered my many-times great granddather?

We saw on Bethel what comes of that"


"Yes, Amos, in all truth we did. And you are right to

wish to be indebted to all," and Joseph laid a subtle

emphasis on the word, "the stationers even though the

need for your special role is now over."


"Yes, that is over. In its place, I must assume several

roles and do each well in all honor." Then he gave the

younger man a sudden smile, the sort that had always

drawn the required response from any recipient "And I

give Rachel the chance to restore honor to her name."
Joseph gave him a sudden stare as fierce as the one

Amos had given him. "What do you mean?"


"She was, after all, trained as an infosystems

administrator. It is her duty to assist you in calling our

people from their hiding places, to organize the

reports that I must receive to know what is most

needed. With you two side by side N that is what you

wish, is it not, Joseph? Rachel by your side?"


The younger man laughed and blushed, which

seemed to embarrass him more.


"You know it is what I wish but, Amos, do not blame

her for what she did."


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ArmtMcCaffrty&SM. Stating
"I do not," Amos lied stoutly, "but she will need to

redeem herself in her own eyes!"


"Ah, yes," said Joseph with a sigh. "She is anxious to

do that. She talks to me about it," he went on in a softer

voice. "She talks of you but she aldb talks of you to me."
"Then go to her, Joseph my brother, my friend. If you

insist on making me wear the mantel of a leader, then I

have issued an order to you. But think also of what I have

told you, brother hero. You return to Bethel as my brother

and my equal, not my retainerNnot even first among my

retainers. The time forthoae petty protocolsis past"


"I go," Joseph said. He turned on the threshold.

"And you, too, have earned a litde happiness, I think.

God willing, may you find it!"
Channa had insisted on returning to her brawn's

quarters, pointing out that there was nothing else

Chaundra or his staff could do for her in sickbay.
"I'll be much better off there," she told him, "because

I know my way around. Simeon can remind me where

I put things so I can find what I need. Only time will

make a difference now."


Once Simeon had angled the chair float beside her

satin-draped bed, she lay down, not seeing, not speak-

ing, absorbing the most recent events. Not that she

wasn't overwhelmingly relieved that Seld had been

granted a reprieve. But there were so many decisions

to be made, hanging in the air, over her head, where

she could feel them, even if she couldn't see them. She

could feel a trickle down her cheek and, with a gesture

she hoped masked the real reason, she blotted the

cheek on the gray satin cover.


"Penny for your thoughts?"
Because Simeon had picked exacdy the appropriate

light tone, she gave him a wan smile though she wondered

how he had noticed such a small thing as a tear
"I've none to sell," she said, "justbits and pieces float-
THE CTTY WHO FOUGHT
427
jug around. Like, Happy endings suck the galactic muffin.

It's enough to give you a headache."

"D'you have one?" Instant concern colored his voice.

"No, no," she said, shaking her head on the pillow.

"Look, Channa, youlwfl be all right," he said in the

firm tone one uses when one is hoping against hope

one's statement is correct.
She nodded once sharply, minding her temper and

her manners. "Yes, I'm sure I will." Her voice was tight


"I've scanned every report I could find on this kind

of temporary blindness, Channa," he went, infusing

his voice with confidence. I'd give anything to be able to

hold you in arms and comfort you but all I've got is voice con-

tact. Talk to me, Channa. "Worse scenario and you'll still

see N through my sensors. Remember that, Channa.

And I see real good and wherever I need to!"
She had stiffened and cut through his opening

words in a rather shrill voice. "Simeon, spare me the...

Could you do that for me?"
"Sure," he said, both surprised and testy. "But surely

you knew that You've been using my senses for the last

two weeks!"
Her jaw dropped and then a tremulous smile

crossed her lips. "So I have, haven't I?" she said in a

broken voice. After a moment's silence, she added in a

contrite voice, "I owe you, and everyone else an apol-

ogy, for acting like a self-pitying wuss!"
"Well, after all, you've had quite an adjustment to

make."
"But I didn't have to snarl at you."


"Oh, that? I wouldn't know how to answer smartly if

you didn't Don't break that habit, Charma-mine."


Her smile was stronger. "Then I certainly won't"
"Because you like the challenge, don't you? And, by

and large, I'm good company."


"And so modest"
"So witty and intelligent," he reminded her.
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Anne McCaffrey & SM. Slitting
THE CITY WHO FOUGHT
429
"And so handsome."
"Do you really think so?"
"Oh yes," she said, "I especially like your dueling

scar, that's a nice touch."


"Thank you," he said, gratified. ""Sfeu're the first per-

son who's ever mentioned it I've been waiting for years

for someone to ask about it. Sometimes people think

it's dirt on the projector lens."


She grinned. "It goes well with the baseball cap."
He paused a moment, unsure, "Um..."
"No, really," she assured ftim, "That projection's a

perfect portrait of your personality. It's not based on a

chromosomal extrapolation, is it?"
"Naw," he said, putting a grin in his voice. "It's me as

I want to be. I'd have hated it if an extrap of me came

out with a receding chin and a big nose, so 1 never tried

to find out. I'm Simeon, the self-created!"


"Wise," she agreed, "very wise."
The door opened and Amos stood on the threshold.

"Channa!" he cried out in a passionate voice.


She sat bolt upright on the bed, her lips parted in

surprise. "I thought you'd left."


He rushed to her side and drew her into his arms.

"How can I leave you like this?" he said, stroking her hair.


Simeon cursed under his breath. Leave it to Amos to

undo all his hard work. Just when fve got her cheered up and

back to something near hernffrnudNforherNframe of mmd.
Channa put up a hand, found Amos' face and leaned

forward to kiss him, smiling because she had caught

the corner of his mouth and was working her way into

a position that satisfied her.


When the long kiss ended, Amos said with a sigh,

"You want me!"


No, you ass! She wants a double malt and a ticket to "Death

in the Twenty-First." Would that I had hands, Oh Amos ben

Sierra Nueva, to clout you up alongside the head with.
Channa didn't answer but held her head as though
looking at Amos through her bandages. Amos smiled

at her, the smile of a man who believes he can

accomplish anything, a smile that proclaimed the

beai^r to be the recipient of a miracle.

" I came to ask you to come with me," he said, laughing.

"You did?" she said ina dreamy tone. They kissed

again, more deeply, Channa burrowed deeper into his

embrace, sighing like someone relieved of a pain they

did not know they suffered.

"I love you, Channa," he said.

"I love you, Simeon," she murmured.

Amos stiffened. Channa raised her blind face to his

and whispered huskily again. "I love you."
He released her and moved back. She hesitated and

turned her head from side to side. "Amos? What is it? Is

someone here?"
"Yes,"he said stiffly, "someone who comesbetween us,"

Puzzled, Channa reached out blindly with one hand,

the other resting on Amos's chest. "There's no one

here but us. What are you talking about?"


"Simeon," he said the name with a hiss. "For whom

you have just declared your love."


Her face altered abruptly fromjoy to chagrin. "I... I..."

shebegan in confusion.


"A gentleman of the Sierra Nueva does not intrude. I

am in the way," Amos said, flinging off her hands and

jumping to his feet. "I will leave you alone together."

And he was gone.


Channa swung her legs from the bed and lunged

after him. She moved with unexpected speed and

before Simeon could warn her, she crashed into the

wall, just beside the door. Weeping, she stepped to the

right point and the door opened for her.
"Amos! Wait!" she shouted and this time Simeon

opened the outside door but she paused on the

threshold to get her bearings and heard, all too dearly,

the elevator's dosing.


430
Arme McCaffrey &f SM. Staling
THE Crry WHO FOUGHT
431
"Amos! Don't go!" she cried, and heard it engage.

She stood leaning her head against the metal, sobbing

gently, tears soaking the adhesive synthetic of her

bandages.


Inside the descending lift, j4teios leaned his head

against the wall, Channa's desperate voice echoing in

his mind. Almost, but not quite louder than her

whisper N "I love you, Simeon."


"Where do think you're going?" Simeon asked him.

He straightened and gritted his teeth. "To the

docks," he said crisply. "I>must return to Bethel!"
Simeon gave a dramatic sigh. "And who's to go

between Bethel and SPRIM and MM? Who saves the

saved from the savior?"
Amos was aghast at hearing his own thoughts come

back at him from Simeon.


"Someone has to handle them," Simeon continued.

"Rachel can. She's a trained infosystems spe..."

"Rachel!" Simeon roared in surprise. "She wouldn't

know how to handle them. They'd twist her up into lit-

tle knots. Not that she isn't twisted right now."

"They say they cannot interfere..."

"They say, they say," Simeon chanted back at him.

"Use your wits, Amos, and don't suggest Joseph. He's

the guy you need on the planet, coaxing your people

out of whatever lairs they've hidden in. No, you're the

only one who can be johnny-on-the-spot here!"
"What I do now is my business," Amos said in a snarl-

ing tone. "You have no right to interfere either ..."

Only then did Amos notice that the elevator had

stopped moving. He crossed his arms. "So, do you

mean to hold me prisoner here until Joseph, Rachel

and the others have left?"


"Emotionally you've been a prisoner since you got

here. Why do think I went to so much trouble to get

SPRIM and MM involved with Bethel?"
"You did. But the Admiral and the Commodore..."
"Listened to what I had to tell them, which is more

than you ever do. You've got to be here..."


Outrage, indignation, disgust and fury raced

unchecked across Amos' fece. "So? You admit it


"Huh?"
"You admit that you only wish to make of me a sex

toy," Amos cried passionately, "a surrogate for yourself

with Channa!"
"I what?" Simeon's voice reverberated in the con-

fines of the small chamber. "You are bughouse!

Which is probably why it's such an interesting idea,"

he added in a reasonable, half-amused tone, "but

you said it, I didn't. However, it's not on my behalf

you've got to be here. It's Channa's. She really is in

love with you, Amos. Can't you get that through

your arrogant to-the-manor-born head?"


"Loves me? Loves me? Then why does she embrace

me and say, I love you, Simeon?"


"And, of course, she hasn't been calling you Simeon-

Amos for the past intense two weeks, has she?"


"BanchutT Amos smacked his forehead with the fiat

of his palm, his expression one of utter dismay.


"It sure wasn't me, or my holo, or even the shell of

me she was kissing just now! Cut her a litde slack. She's

been blinded, dammit! She's scared, she's exhausted,

she's under pressure. Don't cut the heart out of her for

a slip of the Up!"
"A slip?"
"A slip! You ego-centric rag-head selfish bastard!"
"But you love her, too!" Amos brandished his fist, glar-

ing about him to find a target for his frustration and wrath.


"Yes, I love her. Just as much as you do. No, probably a

lot more. And yes, she's in love with me a little, and I

treasure that But I can't touch her, Amos. I can't hold her

no matter how much I would like to. What are you wor-

rying about?
"That she dreams of you and wonders what it would
432
AmuMcCaffrey &f SJM. Stating
THE Cnv WHO FOUGHT
43S
be like to be inyour arms." In the confines of the elevator

Amos heard the sound of his angry jealous words echo

back at him. "I think that she would Hke to close her eyes

and hear your voice whisper to her as I make love to her. I

will not be that fantasy for her, no$for you."
"Well, I'll tell you what / think. I think that you are a

dirty-minded, fat-headed, parochial, small-minded,

jealous hunk of pig fat. Just let me give you a taste of

what she's going through and you stalking off and leav-

ing her alone with it."
Simeon turned off the lights in the elevator. Amos

was plunged into pitch blackness; just long enough to

reach the stage of imagining lights and colors to con-

sole himself. The human eye is not meant for complete

darkness. Even on an overcast night with eyes dosed

there is some ambient light


The darkness and motion were disorienting.
And frightening, the Bethelite admitted to himself.
"Stop it" Amos said calmly, but firmly. Simeon didn't

answer. "Stop it, I said," a trace of unease creeping into

his voice. An accident, who would doubt his word?
Simeon brought the elevator to a halt
"It's unpleasant, isn't it?" Simeon asked quietly.
"Yes," Amos said shordy, sullenly. "Please, would you

turn on the lights?"


"Channa can't," Simeon observed. "It's possible they

won't come back on and she'll have to get a prostheses,

one of those devices they set into your face. Yup, things

could look like this to her forever."


"What do you want me to do?" Amos demanded. "I

would give her my sight if 1 could."


"That's a safe offer," Simeon observed contempt-

uously, "she wouldn't accept such a sacrifice even if it

was needed."
"Then what would you have me do?" Amos was

nearly shouting now, flapping his arms hard against

his sides.
"Something a lot easier. Hold her. Just put your arms

around her and hold her close. You softshells need

that. I never had it so I don't miss it"
Amos shifted position, silent
"{ would hock my shel^if I could physically comfort

her B ut I can't. I can make sure she gets what she needs

from the one person she'll accept it from. And let me

tell you something, lordling, even to comfort Channa, I

wouldn't want to stay a softshell. You're cripples next to usl

You realize that? We have senses, abilities, that you

can't even begin to imagine. But yes, in this one area, I

am jealous of you. Despite that, I arranged... yes, noble

being that / am... arranged for you to have to stay on

this station to handle all the detaik the Bethelite leader

will have. So that you could also comfort the woman we

both love. There I've said it aloud!


"I've done all I can, Amos," and now Simeon's voice was

tinged with a helpless note. "I've been with her since she

was brought to the hospital I haven't left her. When she

wakes up, I wish her good morning and mine is the last

voice she hears at night I'm die one who guides her safely

across a room. I'm the one who tells her that what she's

looking for is a litde to the right I'm the one who makes

sure she gets her meals. I've put up with her bouts of

temper and self-pity and I've talked her through her mo-

ments of panic I'm with her constandy. But you walk into

the room N at long last I might add N and it's like I've

never existed. Did you see her? She lit up like a star going

nova. Andyou have the gall to walk out on her!"
Simeon turned the lights back on and Amos

squinted briefly as his vision adjusted.


The door opened and Channa raised her head, half-

disbelieving she heard the sound of his step, the

eagerness with which he approached her.
"Oh, Amos!" She reached out her arms tentatively

toward him.


434
AimeMcCaffrzy fc? SJVf. Staling
"Ah, Channa," and Amos took her hands and pulled

her into the circle of his arms. This only I may do, he

thought possessively, proudly and yet, because of that

brief darkness, sadly, too, because Simeon would never


have this.
#

I'm sorry. Forgive me," he whispered, stroking


her hair.
Channa sobbed once and tried to apologize, the words

stumbling over his, but he stopped her with a kiss.


Simeon watched them enter the lounge, but decided

not to follow them. This is going to be tough enough, he

thought, / think I'U work up to it gradually. But wasn't it a

great game I played ?


"Before... 1 came to tell you that I must stay longer

on the station than we had thought," Amos said.

"When I must return to Bethel..."
"Stay?" and the gladness in her face and voice reas-

sured Arnos as no argument from Simeon ever would,

how much Channa did indeed love him.
"Stay ... for now," he said, trailing caressing fingers

around her lovely face. This, too, I may do that he caTtnot.


"For now?" Then a return of her deep and genuine

fear caught at his heart.


"I must return to Bethel," he said slowly. "I have

obligations there."


"I have them here. I can't leave Simeon or Joat,"

Channa said piteously.


And Amos knew that she also meant these quarters

which she knew even in her blindness, and this station

which was surely now as much her heart's home as

Bethel was his.


"Neither can I leave my people, my planet Nor do I ask

such sacrifice of you," he said, using die force of his per-

sonality to reassure her. He smiled down at her, thumbs

caressing the velvety skin of her temples. She searched his

face with her fingertips and smiled in response.
THE CTTY WHO FOUGHT
435
"But several times in every year, I must return to this

station on the business of my people and my world," he

went on. "That, I may in all conscience do." A wry

shrug. "If my people cannot do without their prophet

now and then, then I will not have taught them well.

Perhaps the day will c&ne when they need no man to

stand between them and God, and I will be free to raise

my horses and roses in peace."


Her face lit. "And I could visit sometimes, couldn't

I?" she murmured.


"With Joat," Amos said, and then in a far more per-

suasive and loving tone, "although it is not well for a

child to be alone, without brothers and sisters..."
"Yes," she laughed as she sensed the change in his

stance, falling formally to one knee but before he

would speak. She held him upright with her hands.
"In a matter such as this, I should ask permission of

your father," Amos said, rising and drawing her close.

"But Simeon will do."
She fisted him lightly under the short ribs. "I'll speak

to Simeon on my own behalf."


"We will then both address Simeon the Father. But,"

Amos said in her ear, after a time. "There is one condi-

tion."
"What?"
"You must never call me Simeon again." She drew her

head back and nodded solemnly. He touched her chin

gently. "You may, however," he went on, wishing for once

that Simeon was listening, "call me Persephone."


EPILOGUE
The chills were less now, and the survivors recovering,

although a quarter of the crew had died of the fever and more

gone mad.
Belazir t'Marid clenched his rattling teeth against a

paroxysm as he fay in the darkened bridge, while the Dreadful



Bride fled outward all alone.
"Someday," he whispered.
THEEND
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