Caleb waved her comments away. “He didn’t want to see ugly old me, not when he had you to keep him company. He knew I would only put him to work with the warriors again, the way I did before he left. I don’t blame him for spending a year in the mountains instead of coming home.”
Chris squeezed his hand. “He’s glad to be back. He missed all of you.”
Turk came back. “Your cousin is here. She’ll be able to tell you where your sisters are.”
“Are they alive?” Emily whispered.
“My mother says they both survived the crash,” Turk replied, “but only Aimee knows where they are now. Wait a minute. My nephew went to get her.” He squatted down next to his brother.
Caleb worked over the fire to brew tea while he and Turk chatted about faction politics. “Do you remember Ronin, the big grey who tried to beat you in the footrace last summer festival? He’s been covering for you on the border.”
Turk frowned. “I didn’t see him out there. I didn’t see any of our warriors out there. I hope you aren’t neglecting our border.”
Caleb shot a glance at Faruk. “He’s on the Avitras border, and no, I’m not neglecting our border. The warriors are all stationed on the heights to keep watch on the eastern line. They can see more from up there than they can in the valleys.”
Turk nodded. “I’ve stayed away too long. I’ll be glad to get my hand back into it.”
Caleb kept his eyes down. “What else did you see on the Ursidrean border?”
Turk clapped Faruk on the shoulder. “One whopping great Ursidrean.” He bellowed with laughter, and even Faruk had to smile.
Turk swallowed his laughter. “Really, Caleb. In all the time I’ve been away, the Ursidreans have never left their border unguarded. Don’t you think you should take the same precautions?”
Caleb looked Faruk straight in the eye. “I suppose there’s no use keeping it a secret anymore. We can’t guard all our borders all the time. We don’t have enough men. The truth is the plague hit us harder than anyone wants to admit. We don’t have enough females, and because of that, we don’t have enough young men coming up to replace the older warriors who don’t go out on patrol anymore. In a few years, we won’t be able to guard our border at all.”
Faruk sighed and spoke for the first time. “I give you my word of honor I won’t take it back to our leaders to be used against you, and to show my good will for you offering me hospitality, I will tell you something equally valuable. We don’t have enough young men—or young women—to guard all of our borders, either.”
Caleb stared at him. Then he and Turk exchanged glances.
“Our Alpha, Donen, never wanted to wage war against the Felsite for exactly that reason,” Faruk went on. “He spent weeks arguing with our Supreme Council, but they wouldn’t see reason. We don’t have enough men to guard our territory, and more were lost in the war. Now he’s overruled them by sending word to Renier with an offer of peace between our factions. It’s the only way we’ll survive.”
Everyone listened to him in rapt silence. The Caleb nodded. “The other factions must be in the same situation. Ever since these women crashed in our territory, we’ve received messages from all over Angondra, asking them to join with the other factions. All over the planet, men don’t have enough women to keep their populations going. Some women have answered these messages in the hopes of starting new lives.”
Faruk nodded back. “These women are treasures. Whoever wins one for himself can truly call himself fortunate.”
Caleb lowered his eyes. “I know it. There’s only one thing strange about all this. We never got word from the Aqinas. They never gave any indication they were short of females.”
Turk frowned. “But they attended the gathering where the Romarie brought Marissa and her friends. They must need females as much as we do.”
Just then, a figure blocked the light coming through the door and a woman Emily didn’t recognize stepped into the hut. She wore her hair cropped close to her head, and deep lines scored her face from long exposure to sun and wind. She wore rough skins for clothes, and black dirt discolored her hands and fingernails. Her body jutted sharp and angular under her clothes, without a scrap of fat on her. Then Emily gasped, “Aimee!”
Aimee gazed down at her and smiled. “There you are, Emily. I wondered when you would turn up.”
Emily leapt to her feet and threw her arms around Aimee. She wept for joy, but Aimee only smiled and patted her on the back. Then they both sat down by the fire. “What’s happened to you? You look.....” She broke off.
Aimee cocked her head. “I look different, don’t I? My life has been different since I came here. I’ve joined the warriors. I just came back with them from a long march through the woods. We made a sweep along the Black Tops, and cleared a track over the saddle toward Felsite territory.”
Emily stared at her. A dark fire burned in Aimee’s eyes. None of the softness Emily remembered remained in her. Her body had been tempered in a forge Emily couldn’t understand, and this was a different woman than the one she used to call her cousin.
“I came here to find you and my sisters,” she told her. “I’m so glad you’re alive and well. Do you know where Freida and Anna are?”
“They aren’t here,” Aimee replied. “They went to the Avitras.”
Emily cried out. “Oh, no! Now I’ll never find them.”
Aimee gazed at something far away, something beyond the reach of human sight. “They’re okay. You don’t need to worry about them.”
“Why did they go?” Emily asked.
Aimee shrugged. “Why do any of them go? After a year in this village, they wanted to take a chance on settling somewhere for good.”
Emily steadied her spinning head with her hand. “I have to find them. I have to find out what happened to them.”
“I’m sure they’re happy where they are,” Aimee murmured.
Emily studied her. “What about you, Aimee? Are you happy where you are?”
Aimee nodded, but an unearthly veil blocked Emily from looking directly into her heart. “I’m happy.”
“Have you found a mate among the warriors?” Emily asked. “Is that why you joined them?”
“I don’t have a mate,” Aimee replied. “I joined the warriors because they needed me. The Lycaon needed warriors, and I suppose I heard the call to join. It was the best decision I ever made.”
She rose and left the hut. Emily stared after her with her mind reeling. “I can’t believe how much she’s changed. I didn’t recognize her when she first came in.”
“Most of us changed a lot when we first came here,” Chris replied. “I know I did.”
Emily started to her hands. “I have to go. I have to find my sisters.”
Faruk laid a hand on her arm. “Wait a minute. We just got here. We can’t go trekking all the way to Avitras territory just like that.”
“Stay here a few days,” Caleb told her. “Make sure you have your strategy worked out before you go all that way.”
Chris shifted in her seat. “I’ll come with you.”
Turk stood up. “If you’re going, I’m going, too.”
Chris smiled at him. “Thank you. I knew we could count on you.”
Faruk nodded. “If you’re going to Avitras territory, you’ll need someone to show you the way. I’m coming, too.”
Emily smiled at her friends. “Thank you. You don’t know what this means to me.”
Caleb stood up. “I’ll show you some huts where you can rest up for your trip.”
Chapter 8
Chris and Turk went to visit his mother and sisters. Caleb showed Emily to an empty hut near his own and Faruk to another hut across the village near the warriors’ huts. “Come to my house again at sundown, and we’ll share a meal.” Then he left them to their own devices.
Emily gazed after him. “I didn’t think he’d be so happy to welcome us. I thought they would treat us as enemie
s.”
Faruk followed her gaze. “If we’re right, there are no more enemies on Angondra. We’re all in serious trouble, and the only way our people will survive is to put aside all our hostilities and work together to build our population.”
Emily chose her words with care. “This could mean the end of the border patrol.”
Faruk nodded. “Caleb’s nothing like his father, Rufus. The old man would have gunned us down for even looking across the border.”
“Do you think there’s any hope for peace with the other factions?” she asked.
He turned toward his hut. “As soon as word gets out that we’re all in the same boat and we don’t have the men to waste on fighting anymore, the others will come around, too.”
“How did you separate into different factions in the first place?” she asked. “You have enough similarities that anyone would know you’re the same species, but you look so different from each other.”
“Wait until you see the Avitras and the Felsite,” he replied. “We’ve been separate so long I don’t think anybody remembers how it happened.”
“But you could come together again as one people,” she pointed out. “If you put your differences aside, you could combine into one Angondran race again.”
“That’s not likely to happen.” He strolled between the huts and observed the village life on all sides.
Emily hurried to catch up with him. “Why couldn’t it happen? You must still have the ability to mate with each other.”
He snorted. “We wouldn’t mate with each other. No one mates outside their factions. Maybe that’s how we wound up separating in the first place.”
“But you mate with human beings, and we’re not even the same species,” she argued. “Donen has a human mate, and so have Turk and Caleb. Maybe the human women on this planet could serve as a bridge to bring the factions together.”
He cocked his head. “Anything is possible.”
She took his hand. “It’s more than possible. Like you said, it could be your only hope of survival.”
He smiled down at her. “Not only the Angondrans' hope for survival, but all of ours. You and the other human women are part of Angondra now. What happens to us will happen to you, too.”
“All the more reason why we should work to make it happen,” she replied.
He started walking again, and she went with him. “Are you sure you want to go all the way to Avitras territory to find your sisters? We could just sit tight and send word. You wouldn’t want to travel all that way just to find out they aren’t there after all.”
“If I had any doubts about the trip,” she replied, “Chris and Turk offering to go with us made up my mind.”
Faruk gazed across the camp. “I have to admit I’m surprised by their hospitality, too. I didn’t think I’d be taken out and shot, but I wasn’t expecting to be treated as an honored guest.”
“Caleb realizes the need to put aside hostilities,” Emily replied. “If all the other Alphas are as sensible as Caleb and Donen, bringing the factions together could happen sooner than you think.”
“Don’t forget, though,” he countered, “Donen and Renier just finished trying to kill each other in a war. Donen had to flee for his life. They won’t be so quick to make peace.”
“From what Donen said behind closed doors,” Emily told him, “he never wanted to fight and he sent word to Renier to make peace. He’s even willing to stand against the Supreme Council to do it.”
“What about Renier?” he asked. “The Ursidreans invaded his territory for ridiculous political reasons. He won’t forgive us so fast. And Aquilla won’t forget the Ursidreans killed his brother.”
“The Ursidreans didn’t kill his brother,” she pointed out. “You killed his brother.”
He shrugged. “That’s what happens in war. Relatives of mine died in the war, too, but I wouldn’t hold a grudge against the Avitras or any other faction for that.”
Emily turned away, but she kept hold of his hand. “At least we’re at peace with the Lycaon right now.”
He stopped at the edge of the trees and surveyed the village. “This is the first time I’ve seen their village up close. It isn’t what I expected.”
“What did you expect?” she asked.
“We hear all kinds of things about the Lycaon living in stick huts in the forest with no hot water or power,” he replied. “It makes you think they’re nothing more than animals. I never really thought of them as people. But now that I see them up close, I see their Angondran side. I see them as the same people as Ursidreans. They just live in a different environment. They build their houses differently and wear different clothes, but they treat their children the same and care for each other the same.”
“Isn’t that always the way with enemies?” she asked. “No one could see anybody else as an enemy if they saw them up close. That would dispel the myth that the enemy is something other. That’s how long-running feuds and wars come to an end.”
He nodded. “I suppose so. It still seems a long way off for the factions to put their differences aside and come together.”
Emily looked around. “What do you want to do now? We have a few hours before we share a meal with Caleb.”
“We could take a walk,” he suggested.
Emily nodded, and they slipped hand in hand into the trees, through dappled shade to a spring down the hill, out of sight of the village. Faruk looked back. “Amazing! You would never know it was there.”
“How did the Ursidreans wind up with all the technology while factions like the Lycaon have nothing?” Emily asked. “Why don’t you share it with them?”
“They don’t want it,” he replied. “When Angondra gave up space flight, the Lycaon, the Avitras, and the Aqinas gave up technology completely. The Avitras kept metals for spear heads and other tools, but the Lycaon reverted to stone technology. That was their choice.”
“What about the Felsite?” she asked. “Aria says they live in cities, too.”
“They do,” he replied. “But they don’t use technology the way we do. They don’t use advanced weapons, and they don’t have power. They use lamps, and they eat raw meat, so they don’t use fire to cook. When Angondra turned away from space, they threw the baby out with the bath water. They think our technology will lead us back into space. They think we’ll be dealing with the Romarie again if we keep on this way, and maybe they’re right.”
“What makes you say that?” she asked.
“When Donen realized the situation with the dwindling population really was as dire as it is,” he told her, “he invited the Romarie to bring a shipment of their females here. We had a gathering on the Southern continent.”
Emily gasped. “He didn’t! He couldn’t! How could he do that when he knew what scum the Romarie are?”
Faruk held up his hand. “We weren’t going to buy the women. We were just going to look at them and decide if we really needed to procure females from the Romarie to get our population back on track.”
Emily shook her head. “I didn’t think he could stoop so low.”
“Wait until you hear the rest of the story before you jump to conclusions,” he told her. “There were four women, and the Alphas of all the factions attended the gathering to see them for themselves. Some, like Renier, only came to make sure the Romarie didn’t try anything underhanded. Caleb was there, and so were Turk and Aquilla.”
“Were you there?” she asked.
He shook his head. “Only Donen and a few members of the Supreme Council went. A fight broke out between the Alphas and the Romarie. One of the women grabbed a weapon, and the four of them fought their way out of the building.”
She stared at him. “Wow.”
He nodded. “They had help. Renier helped them, and Caleb, too. Caleb risked his life to save Marissa, who afterwards became his mate. The Romarie couldn’t stand against all those people. They fled the planet and left the four women behind.�
�
She listened in silence.
“So you see,” he concluded, “we don’t have to procure women from the Romarie. You’re already here, and after your ship crashed, hundreds of human women are spreading all over the planet. We probably have more human females on this planet now than we ever could have gotten from the Romarie. Donen has no reason to get in touch with them again.”
“What happens when one of these women decides she wants to leave this planet?” she asked. “I’m sure some of them would like to get back to Earth. They’ll come knocking on the Ursidreans’ door to find out what technology you have.”
He smiled at her. “Are you talking about yourself, or somebody else?”
“I have no desire to leave.” She pressed his hand. “As long as my sisters and Aimee are safe, I’m content to stay here. I have nothing on Earth to go back to.”
“There’s no way off this planet,” he told her. “The Ursidreans have some advanced technology, but we gave up space flight—and every other kind of flight—a long time ago. Some of the human women don’t believe that when they first land, but they come to accept it after a while.”
“How do you know that?” she asked.
He shrugged and looked away. “Aria told me, and she ought to know.”
“What will the Ursidreans do if a woman comes forward who won’t accept it?” she asked. “What if someone wants to use your technology to resurrect space flight so she can go home to her husband and children?”
“I suppose we’ll deal with that when the time comes,” he replied.
He sat down next to the water and pulled her down next to him. “Tell me you aren’t going to resurrect space flight.”
She gazed at the sun shimmering on the water. “I wouldn’t do it myself, but I can understand why someone would want to. I wouldn’t want to walk away from the connection we have, but some other woman might not have that connection to keep her here. She might have left too much behind back home to settle here.”
He pressed her hand in both of his. “I hate to think of you leaving.”
“I won’t leave.” She sat in silence.
Damen (Dragons of Kratak Book 2) Page 35