remember that before she tries to fight with me."
"All you're doing," said Nafai, "is using up the oxygen that your children need to breathe."
"You can end it at any time, Nyef," said Elemak. "All you have to do is die."
"And then what?" asked Volemak. "You'll just start hating the next best man, and for the same reason. Because he's better than you. And when you kill him, you'll find still another better than you. It will go on and on forever, Elemak, because each act of bullying cruelty you commit makes you smaller and smaller until finally you'll have to kill every human being and every animal and even then you'll look at yourself with such contempt that you won't be able to bear it-"
The rod smashed down right in Nafai's face. He felt it cave in all the bones erf'the front of his head, and then everything went black.
A moment later? It could have been; it could have been hours or days. He was conscious again, and his face was not broken. Nafai wondered if he was alone.
Wondered what had happened to Father and Mother. To Luet. To Elemak.
Someone was in the room. Someone was breathing.
"All better," said the voice. A whisper. Hard to identify. No, not hard. Elemak. "The Oversoul wins again."
Then the lights went out again and the door closed and he was alone.
Eiadh was singing softly to the little ones, Yista and Menya and Zhivya, when Protchnu came to her. She heard him come into the room, the door sliding open and then sliding dosed again behind him. She did not stop singing.
When the light returns again Will I remember how to see? Will I recognize my mother's face? Will she know me?
When the light returns again Then nothing will I fear; So I close my eyes and dream of day In darkness here.
"Singing is a waste of oxygen," said Protchnu softly.
"So is crying," Eiadh answered quietly. "Three children are not crying now because one person sang. If you came to stop my singing, go away. Report my crime to your father. Maybe he'll get angry enough to beat me. Maybe he'll let you help."
Still she didn't turn to look at him. She heard him breathing a little more heavily. Raggedly, perhaps. But she was surprised that when he spoke again, his voice was high with barely contained weeping. "It's not my feult you turned against Father."
She had been so stung by his repudiation of her in the library that she hadn't spoken to him since, and had avoided dunking of him, Protchnu, her eldest, saying such terrible things to his own mother. The boy had looked so savage at that moment, so much like Elemak, that she had felt as though she didn't know him. But she did know him, didn't she? He was only eight years old. It was wrong for him to have been torn between quarreling parents like this.
"I didn't turn against your father," she said softly. "I turned against what he's doing."
"Nafai cheated us."
"The Oversoul did. And all the parents of those children did. Not just Nafai."
Protchnu was silent. She thought maybe she had carried the point with him. But no, he was thinking of something else. "Do you love him?"
"I love your father, yes. But when he lets anger rule him, he does bad things. I reject those bad things."
"I didn't mean Father."
It was plain that he expected her to know already. That he had the idea somehow that she loved another man.
And, of course, she did. But it was a hopeless love and one that she had never, never shown to anyone.
"Whom did you mean, then?"
"Him."
"Say the name, Proya. Names aren't magic. It won't poison you to put the name on your lips,"
"Nafai."
"Uncle Nafai," she corrected. "Have respect for your elders."
"You love him."
"I would hope that I have a decent love for all my brothers-in-law, as I hope you will also love all your uncles. It would be nice if your father had a decent love for all his brothers. But perhaps you don't sec it that way. Look at Mcnya, lying there asleep. He is the fourth son in our family. He stands in relation to you as Nafai stands to your father. Tell me, Proya, are you planning someday to tie up little Menya and break his bones with a rod?"
Protchnu started to cry in earnest now. Relenting, Eiadh sat up and reached out for him, gathered him into her arms, pulling him down to sit beside