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She understood the Armenian easily enough, if that's what he was asking, because
he had caught on, he was speaking in simple language and separating his words a little so
she would not get lost in the stream of conversation. She was grateful for this, but also
embarrassed that it was so obvious she needed such help.
What she did not understand was a fear of crowds that could keep a mother from
coming to meet her daughter after nine years.
Petra knew that it was not the crowds or the cameras that Mother was afraid of.
It was Petra herself. The lost five-year-old who would never be five again, who had had
her first period with the help of a Fleet nurse, whose mother had never bent over her
homework with her, or taught her how to cook. No, wait. She had baked pies with her
mother. She had helped roll out the dough. Thinking back, she could see that her
mother had not actually let her do anything that mattered. But to Petra it had seemed
that she was the one baking. That her mother trusted her.
That turned her thoughts to the way Ender had coddled her at the end,
pretending to trust her as before but actually keeping control.
And because that was an unbearable thought, Petra looked out the window of the
flivver. "Are we in the part of town where I used to play?"
"Not yet," said Father. "But nearly. Maralik is still not such a large town."
"It all seems new to me," said Petra.
"But it isn't. It never changes. Only the architecture. There are Armenians all
over the world, but only because they were forced to leave to save their lives. By nature,
Armenians stay at home. The hills are the womb, and we have no desire to be born."
He chuckled at his joke.
Had he always chuckled like that? It sounded to Petra less like amusement than
like nervousness. Mother was not the only one afraid of her.
At last the flivver reached home. And here at last she recognized where she was.
It was small and shabby compared to what she had remembered, but in truth she had
not even thought of the place in many years. It stopped haunting her dreams by the
time she was ten. But now, coming home again, it all returned to her, the tears she had
shed in those first weeks and months in Ground School, and again when she left Earth
and went up to Battle School. This was what she had yearned for, and at last she was
here again, she had it back ... and knew that she no longer needed it, no longer really
wanted it. The nervous man in the car beside her was not the tall god who had led her
through the streets of Maralik so proudly. And the woman waiting inside the house
would not be the goddess from whom came warm food and a cool hand on her forehead
when she was sick.
But she had nowhere else to go.
Her mother was standing at the window as Petra emerged from the flivver.
Father palmed the scanner to accept the charges. Petra raised a hand and gave a small
wave to her mother, a shy smile that quickly grew into a grin. Her mother smiled back
and gave her own small wave in reply. Petra took her father's hand and walked with
him to the house.
The door opened as they approached. It was Stefan, her brother. She would not
have known him from her memories of a two-year-old, still creased with baby fat. And
he, of course, did not know her at all. He beamed the way the children from the school
group had beamed at her, thrilled to meet a celebrity but not really aware of her as a
person. He was her brother, though, and so she hugged him and he hugged her back.
"You're really Petra!" he said.
"You're really Stefan!" she answered. Then she turned to her mother. She was
still standing at the window, looking out.
"Mother?"
The woman turned, tears streaking her cheeks. "I'm so glad to see you, Petra,"
she said.
But she made no move to come to Petra, or even to reach out to her.
"But you're still looking for the little girl who left nine years ago," said Petra.
Mother burst into tears, and now she reached out her arms and Petra strode to
her, to be enfolded in her embrace. "You're a woman now," said Mother. "I don't know
you, but I love you."
"I love you too, Mother," said Petra. And was pleased to realize that it was true.
They had about an hour, the four of them -- five, once the baby woke up. Petra
shunted aside their questions -- "Oh, everything about me has already been published or
broadcast. It's you that I want to hear about" -- and learned that her father was still
editing textbooks and supervising translations, and her mother was still the shepherd of
the neighborhood, watching out for everyone, bringing food when someone was sick,
taking care of children while parents ran errands, and providing lunch for any child who
showed up. "I remember once that Mother and I had lunch alone, just the two of us,"
Stefan joked. "We didn't know what to say, and there was so much food left over."
"It was already that way when I was little," Petra said. "I remember being so
proud of how the other kids loved my mother. And so jealous of the way she loved
them!"
"Never as much as I loved my own girl and boy," said Mother. "But I do love
children, I admit it, every one of them is precious in the sight of God, every one of them
is welcome in my house."
"Oh, I've known a few you wouldn't love," said Petra.
"Maybe," said Mother, not wishing to argue, but plainly not believing that there
could be such a child.
The baby gurgled and Mother lifted her shirt to tuck the baby to her breast.
"Did I slurp so noisily?" asked Petra.
"Not really," said Mother.
"Oh, tell the truth," said Father. "She woke the neighbors."
"So I was a glutton."
"No, merely a barbarian," said Father. "No table manners."
Petra decided to ask the delicate question boldly and have done with it. "The
baby was born only a month after the population restrictions were lifted."
Father and Mother looked at each other, Mother with a beatific expression,
Father with a wince. "Yes, well, we missed you. We wanted another little girl."
"You would have lost your job," said Petra.
"Not right away," said Father.
"Armenian officials have always been a little slow about enforcing those laws,"
said Mother.
"But eventually, you could have lost everything."
"No," said Mother. "When you left, we lost half of everything. Children are
everything. The rest is ... nothing."
Stefan laughed. "Except when I'm hungry. Food is something!"
"You're always hungry," said Father.
"Food is always something," said Stefan.
They laughed, but Petra could see that Stefan had had no illusions about what the
birth of this child would have meant. "It's a good thing we won the war."
"Better than losing it," said Stefan.
"It's nice to have the baby and obey the law, too," said Mother.
"But you didn't get your little girl."
"No," said Father. "We got our David."
"We didn't need a little girl after all," said Mother. "We got you back."
Not really, thought Petra. And not for long. Four years, maybe fewer, and I'll
be off to university. And you won't miss me by then, because you'll know that I'm not
the little girl you love, just this bloody-handed veteran of a nasty military school that
turned out to have real battles to fight.
After the first hour, neighbors and cousins and friends from Father's work began
dropping by, and it was not until after midnight that Father had to announce that
tomorrow was not a national holiday and he needed to have some sleep before work. It
took yet another hour to shoo everyone out of the house, and by then all Petra wanted
was to curl up in bed and hide from the world for at least a week.
But by the end of the next day, she knew she had to get out of the house. She
didn't fit into the routines. Mother loved her, yes, but her life centered around the baby
and the neighborhood, and while she kept trying to engage Petra in conversation, Petra
could see that she was a distraction, that it would be a relief for Mother when Petra went
to school during the day as Stefan did, returning only at the scheduled time. Petra
understood, and that night announced that she wanted to register for school and begin
class the next day.
"Actually," said Father, "the people from the IF said that you could probably go
right on to university."
"I'm fourteen," said Petra. "And there are serious gaps in my education."
"She never even heard of Dog," said Stefan.
"What?" said Father. "What dog?"
"Dog," said Stefan. "The zip orchestra. You know."
"Very famous group," said Mother. "If you heard them, you'd take the car in for
major repairs."
"Oh, that Dog," said Father. "I hardly think that's the education Petra was
talking about."
"Actually, it is," said Petra.
"It's like she's from another planet," said Stefan. "Last night I realized she never
heard of anybody."
"I am from another planet. Or, properly speaking, asteroid."
"Of course," said Mother. "You need to join your generation."
Petra smiled, but inwardly she winced. Her generation? She had no generation,
except the few thousand kids who had once been in Battle School, and now were
scattered over the surface of the Earth, trying to find out where they belonged in a world
at peace.
School would not be easy, Petra soon discovered. There were no courses in
military history and military strategy. The mathematics was pathetic compared to what
she had mastered in Battle School, but with literature and grammar she was downright
backward -- her knowledge of Armenian was indeed childish, and while she was fluent in
the version of English used in Battle School -- including the slang that the kids used
there -- she had little knowledge of the rules of grammar and no understanding at all of
the mixed Armenian and English slang that the kids used with each other at school.
Everyone was very nice to her, of course -- the most popular girls immediately
took possession of her, and the teachers treated her like a celebrity. Petra allowed herself
to be led around and shown everything, and studied the chatter of her new friends very
carefully, so she could learn the slang and hear how school English and Armenian were
nuanced. She knew that soon enough the popular girls would tire of her -- especially
when they realized how bluntly outspoken Petra was, a trait that she had no intention of
changing. Petra was quite used to the fact that people who cared about the social
hierarchy usually ended up hating her and, if they were wise, fearing her, since
pretensions didn't last long in her presence. She would find her real friends over the
next few weeks -- if, in fact, there were any here who would value her for what she was.
It didn't matter. All the friendships here, all the social concerns seemed so trivial to her.
There was nothing at stake here, except each student's own social life and academic
future, and what did that matter? Petra's previous schooling had all been conducted in
the shadow of war, with the fate of humanity riding on the outcome of her studies and
the quality of her skills. Now, what did it matter? She would read Armenian literature
because she wanted to learn Armenian, not because she thought it actually mattered
what some expatriate like Saroyan thought about the lives of children in a long-lost era
of a far-off country.
The only part of school that she truly loved was physical education. To have sky
over her head as she ran, to have the track lie flat before her, to be able to run and run
for the sheer joy of it and without a clock ticking out her allotted time for aerobic
exercise -- such a luxury. She could not compete, physically, with most of the other
girls. It would take time for her body to reconstruct itself for high gravity, for despite
the great pains that the IF went to to make sure that soldiers' bodies did not deteriorate
too much during long months and years in space, nothing trained you for living on a
planet's surface except living there. But Petra didn't care that she was one of the last to
complete every race, that she couldn't leap even the lowest hurdle. It felt good simply to
run freely, and her weakness gave her goals to meet. She would be competitive soon
enough. That was one of the aspects of her innate personality that had taken her to
Battle School in the first place -- that she had no particular interest in competition
because she always started from the assumption that, if it mattered, she would find a way
to win.
And so she settled in to her new life. Within weeks she was fluent in Armenian
and had mastered the local slang. As she had expected, the popular girls dropped her in
about the same amount of time, and a few weeks later, the brainy girls had cooled
toward her as well. It was among the rebels and misfits that she found her friends, and
soon she had a circle of confidants and co-conspirators that she called her "jeesh," her
private army. Not that she was the commander or anything, but they were all loyal to
each other and amused at the antics of the teachers and the other students, and when a
school counselor called her in to tell her that the administration was growing concerned
about the fact that Petra seemed to be associating with an anti-social element in school,
she knew that she was truly at home in Maralik.
Then one day she came home from school to find the front door locked. She
carried no house key -- no one did in their neighborhood because no one locked up, or
even, in good weather, closed their doors. She could hear the baby crying inside the
house, so instead of making her mother come to the front door to let her in, she walked
around back and came into the kitchen to find that her mother was tied to a chair,
gagged, her eyes wide and frantic with fear.
Before Petra had time to react, a hypostick was slapped against her arm and,
without ever seeing who had done it, she slipped into darkness.
Copyright © 2000 Orson Scott Card
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