by John Scalzi
"You don't wear a hat," I said.
"I will buy a hat and eat it, then," Dad said.
"I'm going to come back," I said. "I'm going to take this message to General Gau, and then I'm going to get back here. I'm not sure how I'm going to convince the Obin of that, but I'm going to do it. I promise you, Dad."
"Good," Dad said. "Bring an army with you. And guns. And battle cruisers."
"Guns, cruisers, army," I said, running down the checklist. "Anything else? I mean, as long as I'm going shopping."
"Rumor is that I might be in the market for a hat," Dad said.
"Hat, right," I said.
"Make it a jaunty hat," he said.
"I promise nothing," I said.
"Fine," Dad said. "But if you have to choose between the hat and the army, pick the army. And make it a good one. We're going to need it."
* * *
"Where is Gretchen?" Jane asked me. We stood outside the small Obin transport. I had already said good-bye to Dad. Hickory and Dickory waited for me inside the transport.
"I didn't tell her I was leaving," I said.
"She is going to be very upset about that," Mom said.
"I don't intend to be away long enough for her to miss me," I said. Mom didn't say anything to that.
"I wrote her a note," I said, finally. "It's scheduled for delivery tomorrow morning. I told her what I thought I could tell her about why I left. I told her to talk to you about the rest of it. So she might come by to see you."
"I'll talk to her about it," Jane said. "I'll try to make her understand."
"Thanks," I said.
"How are you?" Mom asked.
"I'm terrified," I said. "I'm scared I'll never see you or Dad or Gretchen again. I'm scared I'm going to screw this up. I'm scared that even if I don't screw this up it won't matter. I feel like I'm going to pass out, and I've felt that way since this thing landed."
Jane gave me a hug and then looked to my neck, puzzled. "You're not taking your jade elephant pendant?" she said.
"Oh," I said. "It's a long story. Tell Gretchen I said for her to tell it to you. You need to know about it anyway."
"Did you lose it?" Jane asked.
"It's not lost," I said. "It's just not with me anymore."
"Oh," Jane said.
"I don't need it anymore," I said. "I know who in this world loves me, and has loved me."
"Good," Jane said. "What I was going to tell you is that as well as remembering who loves you, you should remember who you are. And everything about who you are. And everything about what you are."
"What I am," I said, and smirked. "It's because of what I am that I'm leaving. What I am has been more trouble than it's worth, if you ask me."
"That doesn't surprise me," Jane said. "I have to tell you, Zoë, that there have been times when I have felt sorry for you. So much of your life has been completely out of your control. You've lived your life under the gaze of an entire race of people, and they have made their demands on you right from the beginning. I'm always amazed you've stayed sane through all of it."
"Well, you know," I said. "Good parents help."
"Thank you," Jane said. "We tried to keep your life as normal as possible. And I think we've raised you well enough that I can tell you this and have you understand it: What you are has made demands of you all your life. Now it's time to demand something back. Do you understand?"
"I'm not sure," I said.
"Who you are has always had to make room for what you are," Jane said. "You know that."
I nodded. It had.
"Part of that was because you were young, and what you are is so much larger than who you are," Jane said. "You can't expect a normal eight-year-old or even a fourteen-year-old to understand what it means to be something like what you are. But you're old enough now to understand it. To get an appreciation for it. To know how you can use it, for something besides trying to stay up late."
I smiled, amazed that Jane remembered me trying to use the treaty to stay up past my bedtime.
"I've watched you in the last year," Jane said. "I've seen how you interact with Hickory and Dickory. They've imposed a lot on you because of what you are. All that training and practicing. But you've also started asking more of them. All those documents you've had them give you."
"I didn't know you knew about that," I said.
"I was an information officer," Jane said. "This sort of thing is my job. My point is that you've become more willing to use that power. You are finally taking control of your life. What you are is starting to make room for who you are."
"It's a start," I said.
"Keep going," Jane said. "We need who you are, Zoë. We need you to take what you are—every part of what you are—and use it to save us. To save Roanoke. And to come back to us."
"How do I do it?" I asked.
Jane smiled. "Like I said: Demand something back," she said.
"That's unhelpfully vague," I said.
"Perhaps," Jane said, and then kissed me on the cheek. "Or maybe I just have faith that you're smart enough to figure it out on your own."
Mom got a hug for that.
Ten minutes later I was fifteen klicks above Roanoke and climbing, heading for an Obin transport, thinking about what Jane had said.
"You will find that our Obin ships travel far more quickly than your Colonial Union ships," Hickory said.
"Is that right," I said. I wandered over to where Hickory and Dickory had placed my luggage and picked out one of the suitcases.
"Yes," Hickory said. "Far more efficient engines and better artificial gravity management. We will reach skip distance from Roanoke in a little under two days. It would take one of your ships five or six days to reach the same distance."
"Good," I said. "The sooner we get to General Gau the better." I unzipped the suitcase.
"This is a very exciting moment for us," Hickory said. "This is the first time since you have lived with Major Perry and Lieutenant Sagan that you will meet other Obin in person."
"But they know all about me," I said.
"Yes," Hickory said. "The recordings of the last year have made their way to all Obin, both in unedited and digest form. The unedited versions will take time to process."
"I'll bet," I said. "Here we are." I found what I was looking for: the stone knife, given to me by my werewolf. I had packed it quickly, when no one was looking. I was just making sure that I didn't imagine packing it.
"You brought your stone knife," Hickory said.
"I did," I said. "I have plans for it."
"What plans?" Hickory asked.
"I'll tell you later," I said. "But tell me, Hickory," I said. "This ship we're going to. Is there anyone important on it?"
"Yes," Hickory said. "Because it is the first time that you have been in the presence of other Obin since you were a child, one of the members of Obin's governing council will be there to greet you. It very much wants to meet with you."
"Good," I said, and glanced at the knife. "I very much want to meet with it, too."
I think I actually made Hickory nervous right then.
TWENTY-TWO
"Demand something back," I said to myself as I waited for the Obin council member to greet me in my state-room. "Demand something back. Demand something back."
I'm definitely going to throw up, I thought.
You can't throw up, I answered myself. You haven't figured out the plumbing yet. You don't know what to throw up into.
That at least was true. The Obin don't excrete or take care of their personal hygiene the same way humans do, and they don't have the same issues with modesty that we do when they're with others of their own race. In the corner of my stateroom was an interesting array of holes and spigots that looked like something that you would probably use for bathroom purposes. But I had no idea what was what. I didn't want to use the thing that I thought was the sink, only to find out later it was supposed to be the toilet. Drinking from the toilet was fine for Babar, bu
t I like to think I have higher standards.
This was definitely going to be an issue in another hour or two. I would have to ask Hickory or Dickory about it.
They weren't with me because I asked to be taken directly to my stateroom when we took off and then asked to be alone for an hour, at which point I wanted to see the council member. I think that by doing that, I messed up some sort of ceremonial welcome from the crew of the Obin transport (called Obin Transport 8532, in typical and boring Obin efficiency), but I didn't let that bother me. It did have the effect I was going for at the moment: I had decided I was going to be a little bit difficult. Being a little bit difficult was going to make it easier, I hoped, to do what I needed to do next. Which was to try to save Roanoke.
My dad had his own plan to do that, and I was going to help him with it. But I was thinking up a plan of my own. All it needed me to do was to demand something back.
Something really, really, really big.
Oh, well, my brain said. If this doesn't work at least you can ask this council guy where you're supposed to pee. Yes, well, that would be something.
There was a knock on my stateroom door, and the door then slid open. There was no lock on the door because Obin among themselves didn't have much of a concept of privacy (no signal on the door, either, for the same reason). Three Obin entered the room: Hickory and Dickory, and a third Obin who was new to me.
"Welcome, Zoë," it said to me. "We welcome you at the start of your time with the Obin."
"Thank you," I said. "Are you the council member?"
"I am," it said. "My name is Dock."
I tried very hard to keep a smile off my face and failed miserably. "You said your name was Dock," I said.
"Yes," it said.
"As in 'Hickory, Dickory, Dock,'" I said.
"That is correct," it said.
"That's quite a coincidence," I said, once I got my face back under control.
"It is not a coincidence," Dock said. "When you named Hickory and Dickory, we learned of the nursery rhyme from which you derived the names. When I and many other Obin chose names for ourselves, we chose words from the rhyme."
"I knew there were other Hickorys and Dickorys," I said. "But you're telling me that there are other Obin named 'Dock,' too."
"Yes," said Dock.
"And 'Mouse' and 'Clock,'" I said.
"Yes," said Dock.
"What about 'Ran,' 'Up,' and 'The'?" I asked.
"Every word in the rhyme is popular as a name," said Dock.
"I hope some of the Obin know they've named themselves after a definite article," I said.
"We are all aware of the meaning of the words," Dock said. "What was important is the association to you. You named these two 'Hickory' and 'Dickory.' Everything followed from there."
I had been getting sidetracked by the idea that an entire fearsome race of aliens had given themselves goofy names because of the names I had thoughtlessly given two of them more than a decade before; this comment by Dock snapped me back into focus. It was a reminder that the Obin, with their new consciousness, had so identified with me, so imprinted on me, even as a child, that even a nursery rhyme I liked carried weight.
Demand something back.
My stomach cramped up. I ignored it.
"Hickory," I said. "Are you and Dickory recording right now?"
"Yes," Hickory said.
"Stop please," I said. "Councilor Dock, are you recording this right now?"
"I am," it said. "Although only for my personal recollection."
"Please stop," I said. They all stopped recording.
"Have we offended you?" Dock asked.
"No," I said. "But I don't think you'll want this as part of the permanent record." I took a deep breath. "I require something from the Obin, Councilor."
"Tell me what it is," Dock said. "I will try to find it for you."
"I require the Obin to help me defend Roanoke," I said.
"I am afraid we are unable to help you with that request," Dock said.
"It's not a request," I said.
"I do not understand," Dock said.
"I said, it's not a request. I didn't request the Obin's help, Councilor. I said I require it. There's a difference."
"We cannot comply," Dock said. "The Colonial Union has requested that we provide no assistance to Roanoke."
"I don't care," I said. "What the Colonial Union wants at this point means absolutely nothing to me. The Colonial Union is planning to let everyone I care about die because it's decided Roanoke is more useful as a symbol than a colony. I don't give a crap about the symbolism. I care about the people. My friends and family. They need help. And I require it from you."
"Assisting you means breaking our treaty with the Colonial Union," Dock said.
"Your treaty," I said. "That would be the one that allows you access to me."
"Yes," Dickory said.
"You realize you have me," I said. "On this ship. Technically on Obin territory. You don't need Colonial Union permission to see me anymore."
"Our treaty with the Colonial Union is not only about access to you," Dock said. "It covers many issues, including our access to the consciousness machines we wear. We cannot go against this treaty, even for you."
"Then don't break it," I said, and this is where I mentally crossed my fingers. I knew the Obin would say they couldn't break their treaty with the Colonial Union; Hickory had said so before. This is where things were about to get really tricky. "I require the Obin help me defend Roanoke, Councilor. I didn't say the Obin had to do it themselves."
"I am afraid I do not understand you," Dock said.
"Get someone else to help me," I said. "Hint to them that the help would be appreciated. Do whatever you have to do."
"We would not be able to hide our influence," Dock said. "The Colonial Union will not be swayed by the argument that our forcing another race to act on your behalf does not constitute interference."
"Then ask someone the Colonial Union knows you can't force," I said.
"Whom do you suggest?" Dock asked.
There's an old expression for when you do something completely crazy. "Shooting the moon," it's called.
This was me raising my rifle.
"The Consu," I said.
Blam. There went my shot at a very faraway moon.
But it was a shot I had to take. The Obin were obsessed with the Consu, for perfectly excellent reasons: How could you not be obsessed with the creatures that gave you intelligence, and then ignored you for the rest of eternity? The Consu had spoken to the Obin only once since they gave them consciousness, and that conversation came at the high cost of half of all Obin, everywhere. I remembered that cost. I planned to use it to my advantage now.
"The Consu do not speak to us," Dock said.
"Make them," I said.
"We do not know how," Dock said.
"Find a way," I said. "I know how the Obin feel about the Consu, Councilor. I've studied them. I've studied you. Hickory and Dickory made a story about them. Obin's first creation myth, except it's true. I know how you got them to speak to you. And I know you've tried to get them to speak to you again since then. Tell me it's not true."
"It's true," Dock said.
"I'm willing to guess you're still working on it even now," I said.
"We are," Dock said. "We have been."
"Now is the time to make that happen," I said.
"There is no guarantee that the Consu would help you, even if we convinced them to speak to us and hear our plea on your behalf," Dock said. "The Consu are unknowable."
"I understand that," I said. "It's worth a try anyway."
"Even if what you ask were possible, it would come at a high cost," Dock said. "If you knew what it cost us the last time we spoke to the Consu—"
"I know exactly how much it cost," I said. "Hickory told me. And I know the Obin are used to paying for what they get. Let me ask you, Councilor. What did you get from my biological father? Wh
at did you get from Charles Boutin?"
"He gave us consciousness," Dock said, "as you well know. But it came at a price. Your father asked for a war."
"Which you never gave him," I said. "My father died before you could pay up. You got his gift for free."
"The Colonial Union asked for a price to finish his work," Dock said.
"That's between you and the Colonial Union," I said. "It doesn't take anything away from what my father did, or the fact you never paid for it. I am his daughter. I am his heir. The fact you are here says that the Obin give me the honor they would give him. I could say to you that you owe me what you owe him: a war, at least."
"I cannot say that we owe you what we owed your father," Dock said.
"Then what do you owe me?" I asked. "What do you owe me for what I've done for you? What is your name?"
"My name is Dock," it said.
"A name you have because one day I named those two Hickory and Dickory," I said, pointing at my two friends. "It's only the most obvious example of what you have through me. My father gave you consciousness, but you didn't know what to do with it, did you? None of you did. All of you learned what to do with your consciousness by watching me grow into mine, as a child and now as who I am today. Councilor, how many Obin have watched my life? Seen how I did things? Learned from me?"
"All of them," Dock said. "We have all learned from you, Zoë."
"What has it cost the Obin?" I asked. "From the time Hickory and Dickory came to live with me, until the moment I stepped onto this ship, what has it cost you? What have I ever asked of any Obin?"
"You have not asked for anything," Dock said.
I nodded. "So let's review. The Consu gave you intelligence and it cost you half of all the Obin when you came to ask them why they did it. My father gave you consciousness, and the price for it was a war, a price which you would have willingly paid had he lived. I have given you ten years of lessons on how to be conscious—on how to live. The bill for that has come due, Councilor. What price do I require? Do I require the lives of half the Obin in the universe? No. Do I require the Obin to commit to a war against an entire other race? No. I require only your help to save my family and friends. I don't even require that the Obin do it themselves, only that they find a way to have someone else do it for them. Councilor, given the Obin's history of what it's received and what it has cost, what I am requiring of the Obin now comes very cheap indeed."