Authors: Marion Zimmer Bradley
But Lew was called away almost before he had time to get out of his riding boots, and
she was relieved to be totally alone. Margaret bathed, put on fresh garments, and asked
her maid, Piedra, to bring her a tray of supper. She knew she really should go find
Lady Linnea and be properly social, but she was too tired and too sad to want
company.
Instead, after she had eaten, Margaret got out her recorder and listened to the notes she
had made four months before, on the trail with Rafaella. She had added to it while she
was at Arilinn, for she had discovered an entire body of songs that were sung only in
Towers, written by Keepers and monitors and technicians, that no one had ever
bothered to mention to her. The music was beautiful, closer to ancient plain chant than
most Darkovan songs, and there was a quality of isolation in it that drew her. Margaret
could almost picture long-dead Keepers whiling away cold nights over their rylls and
guitars, creating the pieces to comfort themselves.
It was the first chance she had really had to concentrate on her work in a long time, and
she was deep in thought, writing a few lines for what she hoped would someday be a
monograph, when Lew finally returned. Part of her mind was completely absorbed,
and while aware of his presence, she did not stop until she had her thoughts down.
Then she started a little, and felt a little guilty. She turned off her machine and bit her
lower lip anxiously.
"What are you up to," he asked cheerfully.
"I was just trying to organize my notes. Between trying to learn how to control my
telepathy and the headaches I got from being around all those matrices, I haven't had
the energy until now. I can't tell you how relieved I am to be away from the Tower, and
I do not look forward to going to Neskaya, even though I will be with Istvana
Ridenow."
"You seemed very far away when I came in. Tell me,
chiya,
do you miss it?"
"University? Yes, I do. I have spent a third of my life there. It has become a habit with
me. I miss the discourse, the intense curiosity of other scholars, the opportunity for
contrasts."
"Contrasts?"
"Well, all information at University gets analyzed through the parameters of
comparison and interrelationship. Darkover has some pretty interesting variations on
the human norm, and I don't have anyone to discuss them with! Oh, Mikhail always
tries to understand what I am talking about—he is very curious about the places I've
been—but he often doesn't see what is so fascinating to me. He accepts Darkovan
customs as the norm of
how human beings behave,
instead of being merely one point
along a broad spectrum of behavior."
"I understand completely! When I first went to the Senate, I was constantly shocked by
the wide variety of human behavioral "norms." And, for a Darkovan, I was fairly
sophisticated. Some of the things I encountered seemed so strange, and I could not for
the life of me figure out why some people did the things they did. But, I got used to it,
after a couple of months of getting glared at for passing a Medinite on the left in the
hall, instead of staying to the right. After some years acceptance of variation became
second nature to me—now I have more trouble with the un-
yielding nature of my fellow Comyn than ever!" He smiled wryly. "This telefax came
for you while I was away."
Margaret held out her hand for the thin sheet. She took it and saw that the sender's
code was that of the University. Maybe they were revoking her fellowship. She tore it
open and read through the script rapidly.
Then she grinned and looked up at her father. "It is from Ida Davidson. She thinks she
can get passage to Darkover soon, to claim Ivor's body. There is some problem with
travel permits."
"I am not surprised." Lew sounded almost angry.
"Why?"
"The Expansionists in the lower house are trying to prevent travel to Protectorate
worlds, as a way to force them to become member worlds. They have tried to get two
bills passed since I left the Senate to limit or exclude trade from worlds which are not
willing to open their doors to Expansionist policies. The Senate has managed to defeat
both of them, but it was a close thing."
"But that's crazy."
Lew shook his head. "I spent a lot of time while I was in the Senate studying the
history of governments—without, I confess, the benefit of your scholarly training. Tell
me— do they still use Kostemeyer's text on the life of empires at University?"
Margaret held back her sense of surprise. Somehow she had never thought of her father
as a person who would have read the hoary central text of the Socio-Historists. It had
been written two hundred years before, by a Centauri, and while it had been
superseded by more recent works, it was still a classic. "Yes, and it is required, too. It
is part of the core reading for History of Civilization, which everyone has to take—
much to the annoyance of the engineering and technical students, who seem to think
that history is something that happens to other people." Margaret realized that she was
still thinking of Lew as the man he had been when she was very young, not the
informed and intelligent Senator from Darkover. Of course, when she had left for
University, they had never had discussions like this one. How wonderful to discover
this man, this father she had been denied as a girl, and to find out that he was so
interesting!
"Do you remember what he says about the cycles—what does he call them?"
"The tides, Father."
"Yes, that's it. Now I remember—'To ignore the ebb and neep of the tidal flow of all
forms of governance is the folly of empires.' Rather grand, isn't it? He had a lovely
way with the language. In my opinion, just now, the Terran Federation is in the
beginning of an ebb, which is characterized by both oppression and various sorts of
decadence."
"Decadence? I don't understand."
"When a culture runs out of ideas, it becomes decadent. And, in my opinion, the
Federation is rapidly running out of both ideas and sense!" His face reddened a little
along his cheekbones, and his eyes glittered with passion. "Instead of recognizing that
each world is a unique and wonderful place, they have started to believe that imposing
Terran technology and behavior on the member worlds is the road to control. What
they do not appear to understand is that rather than gain control, they will only cause
rebellion!"
"Why?"
"Because the Federation cannot know what's best for everyone, and particularly not for
Darkover and other Protectorate worlds! There is this perception that Protectorate
worlds are taking resources from the Federation and giving back nothing in return."
"Was that one of the reasons you gave up your seat in the Senate?"
"You mean did I see it coming?"
"Yes."
"Perhaps. I noticed that the bureaucracy was becoming more complex, which is"
always a signal of oppression, in my understanding of history. There has been a
proliferation of permits, taxes, and laws concerning the movement of goods and
people. It has grown slowly, beginning just about the time you left for University, and
at first it did not appear to be anything malignant. By the time Dio got ill, however, I
could see the handwriting on the wall, and I knew that I could no longer function in the
increasingly hostile environment of the Senate. The travel tax alone has been raised
three times in the past nine years."
"I know. Don't forget, I made all the arrangements when Ivor and I went from world to
world."
"Of course you did. I just didn't think of that."
"What I noticed was that our funding kept dwindling. When I began traveling with
Ivor, we could go second class, but on the last two trips we had to go third because
there were almost no travel funds. And I couldn't understand it. My fellowship grant
was being eaten up with new taxes, and the stipend was less each year. They will
probably revoke my grant eventually ... if I don't go back. And I don't suppose I will,
ever." She felt more despondent than she would have thought possible.
"But, Marguerida, you don't need the grant. You are the heir to the Alton Domain, and
you will never. ..."
"I earned that grant, Father! I worked for it. It isn't a great deal of money, of course, but
it was mine. I don't want some damned Expansionist taking it away from me!"
He sighed. "I know it is important to you, but . . ."
"Father, I cannot submit papers to the University if I am no longer a Fellow. I could not
complete Ivor's work, or do any of my own. That would be intolerable."
"You really loved it, didn't you?"
Margaret knitted her fingers together. "It was not exactly that I loved it, but it was
totally mine. I was not a Fellow because of you or even because of Ivor. It was not
something I could inherit. I had to work very hard to create an original piece of
scholarship that earned me my fellowship, and while it is a rather obscure thesis that
few people will ever dig out of the archives, it was completely original. I don't want to
lose that. It isn't logical—I just don't!"
"There is something more to this than your fellowship, isn't there?"
"I am never going to be a 'good' Darkovan woman, Father. I am never going to be
willing to submit meekly to men like
Dom
Gabriel, who imagine they know what is
best for me. If you had sent me back here when I was an adolescent, I might have
learned to be another sort of person. Now, it is too late. I am too used to being able to
do what I like, regardless of my gender, and I resent the restrictions of having to have a
chaperone or a groom and all the rest of it. The only reason I put up with it is because
it would reflect badly on you if I behaved as I normally would on University."
"I didn't realize how much you chafed under Darkover's rein," Lew said slowly.
"There is nothing anyone can do about it. Oh, certainly sometimes I think about giving
up my claim to the Domain, getting on the first ship I can find, and shaking the dust of
Darkover from my skirts. Do you know, when I came here, I was very happy. Things
smelled
right and
sounded
right for the first time in my adult life. I had been longing
for Darkover without even knowing it. That was before I really understood that I was
only a pawn in a local game of chess, that I am Marguerida Alton, not just plain
Margaret."
She took a deep breath and plunged ahead, releasing the
tension that had preyed on her for months. "I am an heir
ess." The words tasted foul in her mouth. "I am a thing to
be used for your purposes or Regis', to thwart
Dom
Gabriel
or someone else. I am not free to marry as I wish, to pursue
my own ends. I am not a person, but only an object." She
tried to keep the bitterness from showing in her vocal tone,
but she could not help it.
"I think you are mistaken in that."
"What would you do if I decided to become a Renunciate?"
He stared at her, astonished. "Anything in my power to stop you."
"Exactly!"
"But you love Mikhail, and you want to marry him, don't you?"
"And that is supposed to be enough? Marriage? Shall I wear a shackle on my arm until
I die in childbed or just get old and doddering?"
He ran the fingers of his single hand through his hair, tumbling the tresses across his
furrowed brow. "Well, I
do
wish to see you settled down, and—"
"And let my mind be blunted by counting linens, arranging meals and directing the
servants! I do love Mikhail, but I do not think that being married to him, even if you
can arrange that miracle, will ever satisfy me completely. I am too used to
thinking,
to
studying and learning." She stood up from behind the desk. "We are never going to be
able to see eye to eye on this, Father. I will do my best to be a dutiful daughter, but I
cannot promise to enjoy it." She sighed and looked slyly at her father. "Now, is there
any-
thing you can do to make it easier for Ida Davidson to travel to Darkover? I must send
her the disks I've done, and a better guide to the language than I had when I arrived. I
want her to feel as comfortable here as possible, and if she can get the basic language
down before she lands, that will help enormously. I am sure Uncle Rafe Scott can help
me—he enjoys making himself useful, and I have no hesitation in taking advantage of
it." She grinned at her father.
Lew looked bemused. "Termagant," he said affectionately.
"By all accounts, I come by it very honestly. Thyra was my mother."
"And you have never reminded me more of her than in this moment. Give me the
telefax. I'll go over to Terran HQ tomorrow and see what I can do. Don't expect much."
"Thank you."