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Mrs. Hayes’ eyes opened wide. “An engineer?” she asked in tones of flat surprise. “A psychotronic engineer?”

A wild desire to shock this saccharine woman took possession of her. “I did my practicum work on the Bolo.”

Her mouth fell open. “I see,” she said faintly. Mrs. Hayes was staring at her, had to make a heroic effort to marshal her scattered thoughts. “I see. You must understand, most of the mothers whose children come here are military wives. They don’t work, almost as a rule, or if they do, it’s doing fluffy sort of things, hair-dressing, fancy sewing, manicures. The usual.”

Kafari couldn’t quite believe what she was hearing. Granted, she hadn’t spent a great deal of time with other military wives, mostly because her work at the spaceport had taken up so much of her time during the past three years. Simon was not really in the thick of the military social life, either. Partly, that was simply because he wasn’t in the same league as other officers, who felt uncomfortable around him. It was difficult to be completely at ease around a man who commanded the kind of firepower Sonny represented, did not fall into the ordinary chain of command, and was answerable solely to the president and the Brigade.

Simon received very few invitations to Nineveh Base social affairs.

She hadn’t realized, during her idyllic girlhood, that Brigade officers, the most heroic and legendary figures ever produced by a human military organization, were also its loneliest. As cliched as it was, they really were a breed of men apart, both figuratively and literally.

Mrs. Hayes, recovered enough composure to ask, “Will you be working on Ziva Two? Or the spaceport?”

“The port. I’m going back to the job I left about a month ago, to devote more time to Yalena. When the new legislation went through, I couldn’t justify sitting in the house all day when psychotronic engineers are needed so urgently. So I’m going back to work, this afternoon.”

“That’s very commendable of you, my dear. Such initiative and patriotism! I’m sure the girls on the staff will be delighted to hear that you’re doing your part to rebuild our lovely world.”

“Thank you, Mrs. Hayes. If that’s everything, I’ll just say goodbye to Yalena and head out to the spaceport.”

“Of course. I’ll give you a brief tour, if you have time?”

Kafari nodded. “I’d like to see the facilities,” she answered with unfeigned honesty.

It was, she had to admit, everything the brochures had promised, a first-rate center with everything spotlessly clean and new. The walls were brightly painted with educational murals. There were dress-up clothes, toys appropriate to every conceivable interest, except, Kafari noted with an inward frown, anything remotely military in nature. She found that odd, considering the circumstances. These were the children of soldiers, but there wasn’t a single toy gun, a single dress-up uniform, a single warplane or toy tank anywhere to be seen. She filed the information away for future reference, already wondering at the motivation behind that omission.

Otherwise, it was satisfactory in every way. Even the kitchen was first-rate, serving healthy snacks on demand, at no cost to the children or their parents. For the older kids, datascreens and hookups into the datanet were available for after-school study or educational computer games. “We get a fair number of school-age children,” Mrs. Hayes explained, “who come here for recreation, sports, dance classes, equipment for science projects, that sort of thing. We’re trying to serve the entire community, so parents won’t have the added burden of expensive equipment at home. That can be very hard on a single-income family living on a soldier’s pay.”

Kafari nodded. That was true enough, but she was totting up the cost in her head, again. She didn’t like the answers. Aloud, she said only, “It’s a very nice facility, Mrs. Hayes. I’m sure Yalena will enjoy her time here.”

Mrs. Hayes glowed with motherly pride. “That is quite a compliment, coming from a colonel’s wife, my dear. You really should be invited to more of our social events. I’m sure the officer’s wives would enjoy meeting you.”

“That’s very kind of you, Mrs. Hayes.”

“Not at all. Not at all, my dear. Well, let’s look up Yalena, so you can be on your way.”

She found her daughter playing with a colorful puzzle, absorbed in trying to fit the pieces together in a way that made sense. “That’s a very nice puzzle, Yalena. Do you like it here?”

Her little girl smiled. “Yes!”

“I’m glad. Mommy has to go to work, sweetheart. I’ll come back in a few hours. You can play here with the toys and the other children.” She kissed her daughter’s hair and smiled when Yalena scrambled up to give her a hug.

“Bye-bye, sweetheart. I’ll see you in a little while.”

“Bye-bye.”

Her daughter was already absorbed in the puzzle again when Kafari paused in the doorway leading to the parking lot. The director’s daughter was helping her, smiling and praising Yalena’s efforts. Well, she thought on her way to the Airdart, it could’ve been a lot worse. Given the draconian wording of the letters they had received on the subject, she’d expected to find a regimented military school with children drilled into marching lockstep, responding to orders barked by a socially correct matron in uniform, wielding a bullhorn and a bullwhip as badges of office.

It was not a comforting thought to realize things might’ve been better, in the long run, if Jefferson’s children had been herded into such places. People would’ve protested sharply, maybe enough to call a halt to the madness. As it was… Only time would tell. And that was the best Kafari could do, without running for the nearest off-world ship that docked at Ziva Two. As she lifted off, flying toward Madison and the spaceport, she couldn’t help wondering if she were making a serious mistake.

Chapter Fourteen

I

Simon fidgeted in his chair, staring out the window from his computer terminal, trying without much success to find a way out of his dilemma. The familiar sounds of Nineveh Base — the roar of vehicles, the counted cadence and slapping feet of training marches, the distant crack of rifle fire from the practice ranges — were missing. Their absence left a strange hole in the air, filled only by silence. The unaccustomed hush distracted him.

At least Nineveh had survived POPPA’s purge, which had shut down nearly every military base world-wide. Simon had tried to persuade Gifre Zeloc that deactivating ninety percent of Jefferson’s army and air forces and closing practically every military installation on Jefferson was folly. The president’s response had been scathing in the extreme.

“It’s been five and a half years since the Deng invasion. If the Deng were going to hit us again, they’d have done it by now. And don’t try to scare me with talk about a Melconian boogeyman on the other side of the Void. The Melconians don’t give a wood rat’s ass about us. If they did, they’d have been here by now. Frankly, Colonel, nobody cares a spit about us. Not even your precious Brigade. So take your protest, stuff it someplace interesting, and let me do my job. You might try doing yours, for a change, instead of drawing a fat paycheck for sitting on your ass.”

Simon had dealt with rude officials before, but Gifre Zeloc won the prize.

Simon had not been in touch with him, since. The House of Law and Senate, naturally, had agreed with the president, exhibiting a delight that was almost obscene as they passed the legislation that officially destroyed Jefferson’s military. He’d watched in cold, disapproving silence while field artillery guns by the hundreds — including the surviving mobile Hellbores General Hightower had used to defend Madison — were mothballed in armory yards scattered across Jefferson. Vast tonnages of other equipment had been cannibalized, melted down, or diverted to civilian use, leaving nothing but reserve units and Sonny to defend Jefferson if anything did go wrong.