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“A man must be strong, if not,
He must be smart, if not,
He must be fast, if not,
He must be clever, if not,
He must be wise, if not,
He must die.”
The
Path of Man
The journey home was uneventful. Alfred made some small
talk about life on the farm but did not ask any questions about Jenny. Boris
was glad; he’ll have a hard enough time as it is with his father.
When you say ‘desert planet’, people from Earth always have
images of soft sand and beautiful dunes under a yellow sun. That was
unfortunately not Thordaw. Baked under the twin suns of its system, the ground
is filled with cracks, as if a million small earthquakes have hit the planet. Rocks
of various sizes littered the ground beyond the city, ensuring that any mode of
transport needs to be flying or hovering. Anyone driving on wheels will have a
very sore ass the next morning and anyone walking ant distance was most likely
to die before he reached his destination. The heat and soil content also made
it impossible to grow anything on the planet. A planet like this make hard,
mean men…like his father.
Boris thought of the time, 5 years ago when he first left
the Patriarch
Alliance. He left filled with the dreams of youth. He dreamt of
a time when all humans in the galaxy under one state. Of a time when united,
humans would reclaimed their long lost status as a powerful people. Of a time,
when humanity would put aside their differences and worked for a glorious
future. That was why he left for studies in Titan. The dreams of youth and, he
now admits, the dreams of a fool.
It did not take him long to see how difficult his task
would be. Citizens of the Terran Empire believe that people in the Outer Rims were
primitives. Without the long culture and enlightenment of Earth, all they could
do was copy the culture of the Waliens and the Corans. Even Terrans who had the
same dreams as him, firmly believed that the people of the Outer Rims must rid
themselves of aliens’ influences…in order to be truly human. The fact that
humans might have something to learn from the Waliens and the Corans was
something that their Terran pride would never accept.
And so he found himself. An alien among humans.
Then he met Jenny. Social Studies class. He was in front of
the class, telling them about life in the
The family farm was near
“Hello mother,” Boris
whispered to the cow. The one person in the family he wanted to see more than
anyone.
“I thought you were never
coming back,” the cow said in a voice that was nearly breaking.
“Of course I’ll come back,” in
truth, Boris thought the same thing when he left. He pulled his mother off him.
“This is home.”
The
face of his mother could have lit up every city in the
Looking
around, Boris saw that every female in the garage, excluding Jenny, had
followed his mother’s example. Females acknowledging the fact that as a male,
he is superior to them in everyway. Alfred was smiling at the side. A wave of
power swept through Boris. 5 years ago, he would have been embarrassed by the
situation, now he felt that this was only right. “All cows may rise.” he said. The
Family Position was how a Thordawan female greet a male member of her family. Even
a mother greeting a son she has not met in 5 years.
Waiting
for them to get to their feet, Boris called Jenny over, “Jenny.” Jenny went up
behind him.
“Mother,
this is Jenny. I’ll make her my first. Jenny, this is my mother.” The look on
both women’s face was priceless. His mother because her son finally decided to
take a first wife, Jenny because she just saw a mother debasing herself to her
own son. “Jenny will learn the rules of the family and you will teach her,
Mother.” Boris continued without pause. “Jenny, you learn from my mother and
learn her lessons well. Am I clear?” Both women, Jenny after a short
hesitation, bowed their heads.
“Boris,” Boris looked over at
Alfred. “Father want to see you.” No reason to delay the inevitable. Boris
walked over to his brother at the side of the garage and saw a lift.
“This is new. When did you
guys put this in?” Boris asked
“2 years ago. The man who
married Siti as his second put it in for us as a marriage gift.”
“Where is our sister now?”
“Kadir.
“Boris”
“Father”
“Alfred said you bought a
woman back. An Earth woman?” Just like that an argument would begin; Boris
wondered why he thought this time will be different. Abram Frings has not
changed a bit.
“Yes, she will be my first.
And she is from Talon, not Earth”
“An Empire woman cannot be a
first wife of a Thordawan man. Problems always follow.”
“Jenny understands the
culture and agrees to the marriage. I am not a slaver; no one is forcing anyone
to do anything she do not agree to.”
“Jenny?” The question was to
Alfred.
“Blond hair, hazel eyes,
thing of beauty. And half a head taller than me any of us.” Boris wondered
about Alfred’s reply. How his brother really felt about Jenny. Time to finish
this before it got any worse.
“I’m not asking for your
permission, father.”
“What?” The surprise was
genuine. His father was never a good actor.
“I can take anyone I want as my
wife. I ask for your blessing and I would like to stay here with the family…but
if you are displeased, I’ll take Jenny and live in the City.”
“You will live in
“No. I rather live here but I
have no desire to work on the energy farm father. I will work in the city but
live here, with your permission of course.”
“Your first?”
“She will work on the farm.
There’s always work to be done here”
“She agreed to be a Thordawan
cow. To work on the farm out of her own free will?”
“Yes. We will live as the
holy books said. Husbands as masters, females as the animals they are.”
“What if I work her to
death?”
“You work her more than you
should and I will take her and leave for the city.”
“You threatening me, boy?”
His father was beyond surprise, well into the realm of shock.
“Your blessing father. Not
your permission.” Boris looked at his father eyes and knew he had won. Abram
Frings looked at his second son as if he has never seemed him before. In a way,
that was true.
“Done. You can stay and the
Earth woman...”
“Talonese”
“…ok, Talonese woman can stay
as well. But I will not give my blessing until I see her work. And how well she
can follow the rules.”
“I expect nothing less.” It
was actually better than Boris expected.
“Told you,” this was from
Alfred. A big smile on his face. “The boy has returned a man.”
“Yes, you did,” his father
still sounded surprise. “What happened Boris? You are different. What cause the
change?”
His
father used his name. Which meant that he accept him as a man, not a boy as he
always called him. “I learned the ways of the Empire,” he finally said, “and
how different I truly am from them.” Both men looked at Boris. “It will be a
long story.”
“The night is still young.”
Alfred is not taking no for an answer.
“Start talking Boris.”
Neither is his father. And so he told, about the 5 years of disappointment and
the one good thing of his life in that dark time.