Vas stepped between him and his wife, putting out a hand to restrain him. "This isn't a good time for violence," said Vas. "She's a free citizen, I think, and has the right to speak her mind,"
Mebbekew flung Vas's hand away from his chest.
"None of this will mean anything after Elemak comes back!"
Only a meter away from him, Eiadh rose to her feet. Immediately her oldest son, Protchnu, plucked at her sleeve to pull her back down. "After the crisis, I will submit to your authority, Volemak," she said.
Protchnu turned to the other children and shouted at them, "Don't you dare take the oath!" The children were obviously frightened of his rage.
"I recognize that your younger children are being intimidated into not taking the oath," said Volemak. "So they will be given a chance to take it freely at a later time."
"They'll never take it!" shouted Protchnu. "Am I the only one here who is loyai to my father? He's the only one who should lead us!"
Kokor stood up, her children with her. "We'll be citizens too," she said. "After the crisis."
"You will if you take the oath," said Volemak.
"Well, that's what I mean, of course," she said. "I take the oath."
Her children nodded or murmured their assent.
From the doorway, Elemak spoke softly. "Very well," he said. "Everyone has made their choice. Now sit down."
Immediately, Kokor sat down and urged her children to join her. Gradually the others also sat, except for Volemak, Rasa, and Eiadh, who turned to face her husband. "It's over, Elya," she said. "You're the only one who doesn't see that you can't possibly win."
"What I see," said Elemak, "is that I won't permit Nafai to rule over me or anyone else."
"Even if that means that your own children suffocate?"
"If Nafai's pet computer chooses to kill the weakest of us, I can't stop it. But it won't be me killing anyone."
"In other words, you don't care," said Eiadh. "As far as I'm concerned, that's the final proof that you aren't fit to rule this colony. You care about your pride more than the survival of our babies."
"That's enough from you," said Elemak.
"No," said Eiadh, "that's too much from you. Until you stop this childish display of masculine temper, you are not my husband."
"Oh, not renewing me, are you?" asked Elemak with a nasty smile. "What do you think of that, Proya?"
His eldest son, Protchnu, walked to his father. "I think that I have no mother," he said.
"How appropriate," said Elemak, "since I have no father and no wife. Have I also no friend?"
"I'm your friend," said Obring.
"I stand with you," said Meb. "But Vas here took the oath."
"Vas will take whatever oath you ask," said Elemak. "But his word has always been worthless. Everybody knows that."
Sevet laughed. "Look at your friends, you poor man," she said. "One deluded eight-year-old boy. And then what? Meb! Obring! They were both worthless back in Basilica."
"You didn't say that when you invited me into your bed!" Obring shouted at her.
"That had nothing to do with you," said Sevet contemptuously. "That was between me and my sister, and believe me, I have paid deeply for that mistake. Vas knows that since then I have been faithful to him, both in my heart and in my actions."
The children old enough to understand what was being revealed here would have plenty of family scandal to talk about later. Obring and Sevet had an affair? And how did Sevet pay for it? And what did she mean that it was between her and Kokor?
"Enough," said Elemak. "The old man has made his little play, but you'll notice he didn't have the courage to ask you to stand against me now. It was only in some imagined future that he rules over you. He knows, as you all know, that I rule over you now, and believe me, you will never see a future in which I do not." He turned to Obring. "Stay here and keep everyone in the library."
Obring grinned at Vas. "I guess you aren't going to be giving me orders anymore."
"Vas is still a guard," said Elemak. "I don't trust him, but he'll do what he's told. And now he'll do what yon tell him, Obring. Fight, Vas?"
"Yes," said Vas quietly. "I'll do what I'm told. But I'll also keep all my oaths."
"Yes yes, a man of honor and all that," said Elemak. "Now, Meb, let's take Father and his wife to visit Nafai. And while we're at it, let's bring