didn't answer right away. "That's not the way the Oversoul explained it to Luet."
"So, where is it engraved on stone that you have to do everything the Oversoul's way? As long as you do what he wants, the methodology hardly matters, does it?"
"Does Hushidh feel the same way?"
"She might. In a while."
"I won't take anyone's child without their agreement."
"Really? And what about the children themselves? Going to ask them?"
"I really ought to," said Nafai. "I'll think about this, Issib. Maybe this compromise will work."
"Good," said Issib. "Because I think the Oversoul's right. If we don't do this, if we don't give you strong young men and women to back you up, then when we get away from the starship, when the Oversoul's influence weakens, you'll be a dead man, and so will I."
"I'll think about it," said Nafai.
Issib rose up from the chair and leaned toward the door, then stepped lightly toward it, the floats bearing almost all of his weight. At the door he turned.
"And something else," said Issib.
"What?" asked Nafai.
"I know you better than you think."
"Do you?"
"For instance, I know that the Oversoul talked to you about this whole thing long before Luet ever let anything slip."
"Really?"
"And I know that you wanted it to happen all along. You just didn't want it to be your idea. You wanted it to be us persuading you. That way we can never blame you later. Because you tried to talk us out of it."
"Am I really that clever?" asked Nafai.
"Yes," said Issib. "And I'm really clever enough to figure it all out."
"Well, then, I'm not so clever after all."
"Yes you are," said Issib. "Because I really do want you to do it. And I never will be able to blame you if I don't like the results. So it worked."
Nafai smiled wanly. "I wish you were completely right," said Nafai.
"Oh? And how am I wrong?"
"I would rather, with all my heart, let all our children sleep through the voyage, Because I would rather have there be no division between us all in the new colony. Because I would rather make my brother Elemak the king of us all and let him rule over us, than to have him as my enemy."
"So why don't you?"
"Because he hates the Oversold. And when we get to Earth, he'll resist just as much whatever it is the Keeper of Earth wants us to do. He'll end up destroying us all because of his stubbornness. He can't be the ruler over us."
"I'm glad you understand that," said Issib, "Because if you ever start to think that he ought to rule, that's when he'll destroy you."
Volemak, Rasa, Hushidh, Issib; and then at last Shedemei and Zdorab came to him, only an hour before they were all supposed to go to sleep for the voyage. "I don't want to do it," said Zdorab.
"Then I won't waken your children," said Nafai. "I'm not sure yet that I'm going to waken anyone's children."
"Oh, you are," said Shedemei. "And you're going to waken us, too, from time to time, to help teach them. That's the deal."
"And when we get to Earth, and our children are all ten years older than Elya's and Meb's and Vasya's and Briya's, you'll stand up to them with me? You'll say, We thought it was a good idea? We asked him to do it?"
"I'll never say I thought it was a good idea," said Zdorab, "But I'll admit that I asked you to do it."
"Not good enough," said Nafai. "If you don't think it's a good idea, why are you asking me to let your only two children take part in it?"
"Because," said Zdorab, "my son would never forgive me if he knew that he had a chance to reach Earth as a man, and I made him arrive there as a boy."
Nafai nodded. "That's a good reason."
"But remember, Nafai," said Zdorab. "The same thing goes for the other children. Do you think that when Elya's boy Protchnu wakes up and finds that your younger son, Motya, is eight years older than him instead of two years younger, do you think that Protchnu will ever forgive you, or Motya either? This will cause hatred that will never be healed, generation after generation. They will always believe that something was stolen from them."
"And they'll be right," said Nafai. "But the thing that was stolen, it wasn't taken away until they had already rejected it."
"They'll never remember that."
"But will you?"
Zdorab thought about it for a moment.
"If he doesn't,"