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aeryncrichton
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« on: January 04, 2009, 09:58:05 PM »

Originally posted 3/12/07

At last, the long-promised "Family Ties" fic.   ;D  This is set about 6 weeks after "Reentry."  If you haven't read them, all the "Family Ties" stories are posted here, but the easiest way to find them all is to check out my site.  (The stories are posted in roughly reverse order there.)

Setting: About 13 cycles after PK Wars
Rating: PG
Spoilers: Through PK Wars
Disclaimer: I don't own anything about this universe, and I'm not making any money here, I'm just indulging in a little more Farscape....  :D

Many thanks to imloco2, MadScientist and Shipsister for encouragement and beta duties!  You're the best! hug2

This is a longish story, for me, over 10,000 words, with actual plot! I'm going to try to get away with breaking it into just two chunks to post here, one after the other.

I hope you'll enjoy it.



Fun and Games

A sharp rap on her bedroom door brought Chiana to a state of drowsy wakefulness.

“Chiana? If you want breakfast while it’s hot, you’d better come now!”

The Nebari groaned and rolled over in bed, hoping Aeryn Sun would go away and leave her to sleep.

“Chiana? Are you all right?”

In the six weekens since Chiana’s arrival, Aeryn had taken to treating her much like her fourteen-cycle-old son, D’Argo – with a mixture of no-nonsense discipline, and the caution one might show around unexploded ordinance. When Chiana had first realized the similarity, she’d been pretty tinked, but then she thought, Why not? After all, she’d never quite had the opportunity to grow out of her own Terrible Teens. No, wait, that was Terrible Twos. But little Nelja was two, and she wasn’t terrible at all, she was really pretty sweet....

“Chiana!” Even muffled by the closed door, Aeryn’s irritation came through loud and clear.

“Don’t get your knickers in a twist,” Chiana called back grumpily. “I’ll be there.” Presumably that satisfied the warden, since Aeryn didn’t say anything more.

Chiana threw back her covers and climbed out of bed and went to get dressed. It was still a novelty to sleep in nightclothes, instead of being prepared to leap out of bed and run immediately, should trouble find them in the middle of the night. Collecting fresh clothing, she wondered briefly how Nerri was, if their last, terrible raid on Acknar Prime had had any fallout...and then she shook her head and headed for the washroom that was adjacent to her sleeping quarters.

She dawdled a bit, at least half hoping to miss the family breakfast. Despite Crichton and Aeryn’s welcome (once they’d decided she wasn’t going to run off with Pippin the microt their backs were turned), she sometimes felt more than a little like she had back when she’d first arrived on Moya – when everyone else (it had seemed to her, anyway), was bonded together, and she was the outsider. Crichton kept repeating that she was “family,” but she had a feeling he was trying to convince himself of that more than her.

Despite her half-hearted efforts, Crichton and Aeryn and the whole brood were still finishing up their morning meal when she arrived in the dining chamber. She stifled some hurt feelings when D’Argo and Hope got up and excused themselves the microt she entered the room. After all, it could have been a coincidence. Who was she kidding? The two older Crichton kids didn’t trust her any more than they’d have trusted a Scarran or a Peacekeeper.... They weren’t rude about it – neither of their parents would have permitted that – but they were kids; they weren’t exactly subtle, and she’d spent her whole life reading people’s reactions to her. Chiana sniffed and pretended she didn’t give a frell. She was incredibly grateful that Pippin, at least, greeted her cheerfully before he went back to shoveling food into his mouth.

“Mornin’, Chi.” Crichton saluted her with a cup of what he persisted in calling coffee, though Chiana thought its only resemblance to the Earth drink was its color.

“Hey,” she replied, tossing her head to the side as nonchalantly as possible.

“There you are,” Aeryn said to Chiana, looking up from trying to clean food off of Nel. It never ceased to amaze Chiana how messy the runt of the litter was. Chi gave the little one an involuntary smile, and focused back on what Aeryn was saying. “The nevek’s still warm, and I don’t think D’Argo ate all the fresa berries. Help yourself.”

Without comment, Chiana collected some food, dodging around Crichton when he headed for the kitchen. Plate loaded, she sat down next to Pippin. With a grin, her boy stuck his hand out her way, palm up, and she returned his “high five.” The exchange picked up her spirits some, because it always made her think of Crichton and Ka D’Argo, cycles ago back on Moya, sharing the same silly ritual. She knew it meant something to Pip to share it with her, ‘cos he’d learned it from his (adoptive) father, and considering how she’d missed most of the kid’s life, she was grateful for any closeness she could get. After a rocky start, the two of them were getting along pretty well.

“Hey, kid,” she said impulsively, “how about we practice some of those bleeka surl moves after breakfast? You’ve gotta work hard if you’re gonna beat me!”

Pippin’s dark eyes sparkled, and she knew he was going to say yes, but Aeryn interrupted. “Chiana, it’s a school day.”

Pippin’s attention went straight to Aeryn. “Mom—” But it was a half-hearted protest on his part, dropped immediately, because that was how things were around here. You didn’t skip school just because you wanted to do something fun, you did what you were told, like a good little soldier. He looked back at Chiana and shrugged with a casual smile. “We can practice after school, Chimama.”

“Yeah. That’ll be good,” she agreed, forcing a smile, and tried to tell herself not to be tinked because the boy was actually thriving with all of Aeryn’s rules. Chiana went back to eating, and shortly thereafter Pippin excused himself to go get his gear together, taking his dishes with him as the older kids had done.

As he left, Aeryn finally deposited the narl on the floor near Chiana’s seat. “Your father will get you in a microt,” she told the child, then looked at Chi and elaborated, “John doesn’t have any classes scheduled today, so he’s going to take her with him to his lab. I’ve got a full schedule.”

Chiana looked down at the little girl, the only one in the family who'd greeted her without reservation when she first arrived. Nel leaned her head back and gave her a wide, toothy grin. Impulsively, Chiana looked back at Aeryn and offered, “You could leave her here with me.”

Aeryn frowned and started to shake her head.

“Chi-ma! Chi-ma! Chi-ma!” Nelja chimed in, her voice a joyous high-pitched shriek. She crouched down and jumped up, arms outstretched; then, black hair flying, she flung herself on Chiana.

“Aw, come on, Aeryn," she said, settling the little one in her lap. "We’ll be fine here. We’ll have fun!”

Aeryn’s frown softened, but before she could say anything, Crichton stuck his head in the room. “Hey, baby girl,” he called. “Come to Papa! We gotta go!”

Nel turned her head towards her father. “Stay wiv Chi-ma!” she said brightly.

“Chiana’s offered to watch her,” Aeryn told him, a hint of questioning in her voice. Their eyes met in that way they had of discussing things without words. After a few microts, Aeryn nodded.

“‘Preciate the offer, Chiana,” Crichton said, “but I think she’d better come with me today.” He patted the bag he had slung over his shoulder. “I’ve already got all her junk packed up, and we’re running late as it is.”

Stung, because she knew a lame excuse when she heard one, Chiana lifted the little girl and set her on the floor. “You heard your sires,” she told the kid. “Scoot!” Determined not to look upset, she sat at the table and focused on the rest of her food while Crichton scooped up his daughter and shooed the rest of the kids out the door. A few microts later, Aeryn called her goodbyes and left as well.

With the whirlwind that was morning at the Crichtons’ finally over, Chiana abruptly threw her plate across the room, and followed it with her cup. They made a very satisfying crashing sound hitting the wall. She wavered between penitence and satisfaction, and after a few microts, she got up and stalked out of the room without bothering to check and see how much damage she’d caused.

Microts later, she stomped out of the house with no clear idea of where she was heading.

* * * * * * * *

Chiana walked the streets in an aimless spiral outwards from the Crichton home, trying to work off her anger and frustration. She'd seen enough and matured enough over way too many cycles in the Resistance so that she got it that Crichton and Aeryn had their own way of doin' things, and it worked for them and for their brood. But it made her heart ache to see how different Pippin's life was from what she would have given him, if she'd kept him with her after she’d birthed him....

If he'd been with her, he'd know how to have fun!

A tiny voice inside her said he was actually a really happy kid with lots of interests, but she slapped it down. Any kid who chose to go to school when he coulda ditched was definitely being repressed. Oppressed. Some kind of pressed!

So much for walking off her anger. She was more tinked now than she’d been when she left Crichton’s place, which was saying something. Her heart was pounding, she could feel it in her chest, and she was trembling, too. Frell!

She stopped for a microt to assess where in the city her feet had taken her. There was enough pedestrian traffic that she quickly decided it was safest to move to one side of the walkway to avoid being run down while she looked. Scanning the skyline, she recognized the building where Crichton and Aeryn lived, off to her left. So, that meant...the spaceport was about ten metras in the other direction, not really that far. She’d walked it the day she arrived, injured leg and all.... She continued scanning the street, and with a start, she realized that she was at most half a metra from the school where her son was, at this very moment, being turned into an obedient little robot. She brooded on that fact for all of three microts before deciding that for once in his life, the kid needed to have some frelling fun!

Determined to make that happen, she took off at the fastest pace she judged wouldn’t attract undue attention. When she reached the school, she kept moving, circling the block and checking the place out. The entire square block was surrounded by a solid, transparent fence. Through it, she could see a single large building with three, maybe four levels, sitting in the center of a good-sized play area which at the moment was unoccupied by kids or oppressors, either one. The fence didn’t worry her much. In her experience, schools were more interested in keeping students in than in keeping parents out. However, she thought with a pang, this school wouldn’t consider her a parent, so she was going to have to be a little creative to get the boy out.

After a second circuit of the premises, she felt sure that she’d spotted all the components of the security system on the main entryway as well as two secondary gates. Coming in through one of the side gates would mean crossing the open play area without cover, but the front gate would have more surveillance, which was always a pain to deal with. It might have been better to wait for physical training time and hustle the kid off the playground in the midst of a crowd, but she had no idea when that was, and she was in no mood to wait. She made her decision. She wasn’t exactly sure how she’d get him to come away with her once she got to him, but she’d think of something! With a quick glance up and down the street, Chiana took a deep breath, then with practiced efficiency, disabled the alarm and the lock, and opened the gate.

Once inside, she felt much better immediately. She was taking action, much needed action, on behalf of her kid! Keeping an eye out for security of any sort, she crossed quickly to the building. She opened the entry door quietly and slipped inside. No one materialized to challenge her, so she headed resolutely towards the second level, where she knew her son’s class was.

Unfortunately, she wasn’t sure exactly which of the mind-numbingly similar rooms was his. There were no windows in the doors so she couldn’t peep in looking for a little Nebari boy...probably the only Nebari in the school, she thought, even though Crichton and Aeryn had settled in a trading center with just about every species you could think of in it. She’d give ‘em credit for that, anyway. Well, there was nothing for it except to stick her head into as many rooms as it took to find him – and hope she didn’t stick her head into Hope’s class first and get recognized. At least she didn’t have to worry about D’Argo sounding the alarm, she thought sourly; the older boy went to a different school.

She opened the first door and popped her head in. No sign of Pippin’s unruly mop of black hair, and the kids there looked older than he was, anyway. She was closing the door by the time the instructor turned to see what the interruption was. “Sorry,” she called, and moved on to the next door. The next two classrooms also had no sign of Pip, but the children appeared to be getting younger. At the fourth door, she hit pay dirt.

About fifteen children of half a dozen races sat in the room, each quietly studying his or her lesson pad. A blond sebacean male, evidently the instructor, was bent down speaking to one of the children. Pippin was sitting near the back of the room, and she picked him out instantly. She let out a breath in relief, and then, unsure of what to do next, she stood there, half in and half out of the room, until one by one the children noticed her and stared. Pip cocked his head and frowned with curiosity, just like Aeryn did when she wanted to know what was going on.

The instructor turned an inquiring gaze on her.

It had been cycles since Chiana was a schoolgirl, but she remembered that haughtier than thou look all the same. It rattled her slightly, Hezmana only knew why, it wasn’t like she was a kid anymore, and she announced, “I’m here to pick up Arpella.” It came out more as a question than a statement, and she could have kicked herself, especially when the instructor narrowed his eyes and asked, “Who?”

Frell! What had possessed her to use the name she’d given him? It’s not like anyone around here called him that! “Pippin,” she amended, jerking her head towards her son. And then, just like that, she had a frelling brilliant idea. “I’m sorry,” she said. “His real name’s a secret, I shouldn’t have blurted it out like that. You guys all forget you ever heard that, okay?” She bobbed her head at the other kids, who began to smile.

Less impressed, the instructor looked from her to Pippin and back again. The man crossed his arms and waited.

“No, really, I have to take him!” she said earnestly, waving her hand towards Pip. “He’s, he’s secretly a Prince of Dessia, yeah, Dessia, and he was hidden here for his own safety, but now we need him to save his people from the Evil Empire!”

The instructor’s eyes narrowed, but the children, including Pippin, were giggling. Chiana was sure none of them believed her for a microt, but, feeling relieved that Pippin was joining in the laughter, she continued to play to her young audience. “No? Well, uh, how about, how about, he’s gotta go to practice because he’s the starter in the rudek game tonight? If we don’t have him on our team, we’ll lose for sure! Pip’s our only hope!” She paused dramatically and added, “You don’t want us to lose, do you?”

“No!” the kids squealed, and Pippin pumped the air in “victory.”

The instructor, fascist that he was, told them to settle down, and then fixed Chiana with a glare worthy of her childhood instructors back on Nebari Prime.

She judged she’d dragged this out long enough. “All right,” she “admitted” reluctantly. She nodded towards Pippin again. “He needs to see a medic for an inoculation or something boring like that! His mom sent me to get him.”

“Did she give you his release token?”

Chiana blinked. Ah, frell. She’d been counting on being able to talk her way through this. “What?” she asked, stalling for time to think.

“I need his token to release him from class.”

“Ah, she must’a forgot I needed it.” Banking that the rule-bound frellnik was tired of having his class disrupted, she wheedled, “Look, can we just go? If I have to go all the way back and get some stupid chip, he’ll be late! We’ll bring the token when he comes back, okay?”

With a sigh, the instructor looked at Pippin. “Is that true, Pippin?” he asked. “Do you have an appointment?”

Apparently unsure what to say, Pip shrugged. He slid his eyes towards Chiana and she mouthed, “Say yes!”

She held her breath while he gazed at her for a microt, weighing his options. Then, eyes sparkling, he turned to his teacher with his most earnest, wide-eyed expression. “Yes, sir, it’s true. I forgot, but my mom told me about it this morning!”

With a sigh, the instructor gestured towards the door. “If you stop by the administrator’s office, you can sign out there,” he said. “Next time,” he added sternly, “be sure to get the token from his parents!”

While Pippin grabbed his gear and scurried up to the front of the room, Chiana clapped once and gave the jailer her best bulldren. “That’s great! We, we’re heading right there! Thanks!”

Once outside the classroom, she leaned over and whispered, “Keep quiet till we get out of this place, okay?” Pippin nodded conspiratorially, and scooted along right beside her down the hall and out the door. They stopped simultaneously and scanned the play area to make sure it was empty. “Three, two, one....” she counted down, and when she hit, “Go!” they raced across the play area, not stopping till they were outside of the school and the gate was locked behind them.

Standing on the sidewalk, the two of them bent over laughing with the sheer exhilaration of the escape. “So,” she said when she could finally talk, “Where do you want to go, Your Highness?”

Pippin’s unrestrained giggle was music to her ears.

* * * * * * * *

“Can we get neeva cakes?” Pippin asked eagerly.

Chiana restrained herself from groaning at the thought of the sickeningly sweet pastry. She should have guessed that Pip’s choice of amusement would involve food. Crichton said the boy had a hollow leg, a colorful saying she’d filed away in the back of her mind for future use, and he did seem to eat constantly. Unfortunately, his request only served to remind her that in leaving the house the way she had, she’d neglected to bring any currency – which was going to put a bit of a crimp in their good times. Frell! Of course, there were other ways of procuring treats besides paying for them, but she already knew that Pippin had been soundly indoctrinated against stealing. Well, against keeping what he snurched, anyway, which made it not such a good way of acquiring food, ‘cos you couldn’t eat food and then give it back....

As the silence stretched, Pippin must have figured out she didn’t have any cash, because he rolled his eyes and dug into his pack. He fished out a small handful of ceramic coins and held them out to her. “This should be enough for two cakes each!”

A better mom might have refused them, or at least apologized for taking his pocket money, but frell, you couldn’t party without a little cash, and she could replace his money when they got home! Chiana took the credits from him and shoved them in her pocket. “Thanks, kid! I’m good for it, you know that, right?”

He tilted his head sideways and examined her thoroughly, in a way that made her feel uncomfortably like he was the adult and she was the child. And then he broke into a large grin and nodded. “I know.” He grabbed her hand, tugging her in the direction of the commerce center that was within easy walking distance of the school they’d just escaped from.

The center was a big open air market with foods and specialty items from all the worlds in the sector, and some that were considerably further away. The merchants were as varied as their merchandise, which was displayed in everything from push carts to well-built permanent structures. On a school day, as Aeryn had called it, most of the customers were adults, some with a narl or two in tow. Chiana had been here once or twice since her arrival, but she hadn’t done any real exploring. She just hadn’t been in the mood....

“This place is frelling huge!” she told Pippin, shaking her head, when he’d led them past several food stalls without even slowing. She dodged a slow-moving toddler. “How are we supposed to find these neeva cakes of yours, huh?”

“This way,” he said insistently, and she shrugged and followed him. After all, he was the native guide on this planet.

Several times her eyes were drawn to a rack of bright clothing or carefully-watched displays of jewelry, but this outing was for Pippin, not for her, and she pushed avaricious thoughts out of her mind. Still, she couldn’t help noticing that there seemed to be little in the way of center-wide security – no cameras, no bouncers....

Pip stopped so suddenly that she nearly ran into him, and did some arm-waving to catch her balance. “Hey, watch where you’re going!” she said, cheerfully, and ruffled his hair.

He scowled, as he did whenever anyone did that, and then pointed to a cart loaded down with pastries. “See! Neeva cakes! This place has the best ones in the whole zocolo!”

Chiana scanned the area briefly. They were just off the central plaza, and not far from a collection of tables that seemed to be intended for the use of customers with food. The tables were shaded by brightly colored awnings, which was a good thing, because the sun was really shining down now. Some shade would be nice while they ate Pip’s choice of junk food.

She dug deep into her pocket and handed Pippin his own coins back. “Go buy what you want! I’ll get us a seat.”

Grinning from ear to ear, he scooted off to the cart. Chi watched him, grinning herself. He really had a spring in his step that was great to see! The vendor – an Ilanic, she noted, and that was near enough to Luxan to give her a quick pang of loss, even after so many cycles – didn’t see him immediately, and he hopped up and down a couple of times to attract the man’s attention. The vendor took his currency gravely and handed him a pair of disposable plates containing two pastries each. The boy made sure he had a good grip on the plates, and walked carefully over to the table.

“There,” he said gleefully, setting one plate down in front of Chiana, and the other in front of himself. He dug right in without waiting to see what she was going to do.

She picked up one of the two pastries on her plate between thumb and forefinger and examined it. Yep, it looked like what she had thought a neeva cake was: a layer of thin, spongy cake, spread with gooey filling, then rolled up into a cylinder. The whole thing was covered in a fruit-flavored glaze. Sticky, and sweet – and, she had to admit, exactly the kind of thing she had loved to eat when she was Pippin’s age. She didn’t want to hurt his feelings, but she’d really outgrown this kind of stuff. She’d just taken a tentative bite when Pippin shoved the last of his first cake into his mouth.

When he finished chewing and swallowing, he picked up the second one and waved it at her triumphantly. “This is great! Thanks, Chimama! Mom never lets me have more than one!”

Aha, she thought, the perfect way to get rid of one of hers. “Well, since your mom’s not here, I think....I think you should have three!” She shoved her plate across at him, making a show of holding back the one that was still in her hand.

Pippin considered refusing for just a microt, but greed won out. “Thanks!” he mumbled with his mouth full.

They finished eating and washed their hands, and then got a drink to share as they walked along, looking for something interesting. A stall selling children’s toys caught Chiana’s eye, and she and Pip stopped to look at the offerings. The boy’s eyes lit up when he saw a heap of small toy spaceships. She would have liked to buy him one, but....they didn’t have any money. Ah, frell, he had lots of toys anyway. But, she could see his hands twitching. One thing she’d learned about him in the last few weekens was that he liked the thrill of snurching things. Crichton and Aeryn had clearly done all they could to discourage it, but it definitely hadn’t taken. That was one of the things Crichton had meant when he’d said, “We see you in him every day, and I don’t mean just because he’s gray!” Yep, he’d definitely inherited that from her, and she couldn’t help but be pleased!

Hmmm.... Remembering the lack of security, she had a sudden idea for a game. She pulled the kid across the street into a quiet place and whispered, “Hey, Pip! You think you can get one of those ships without getting caught?”

“I’m not supposed to snurch things,” he said, but she could tell by the longing look in his eyes that he wanted to.

“No, no, I get that!” she assured him. “It’ll just be a contest! You take something, and I’ll put it back. Then you pick something for me to take, and you can put it back! I bet we’re good enough we can take lots of stuff and no one will ever notice!”

His black eyes sparkled and his smile widened. “Deal!” he said, and gave her a high five. She watched while he scooted back to the stall. He pretended to examine some throwing sticks until the proprietor was distracted with another customer. Then he moved quickly –but not so quickly as to attract attention – and slipped one of the shiny spaceships into a pocket in his pack. He sidled back across the street with a barely-suppressed grin of triumph.

“Good job, kid!” Chiana said proudly. Fulfilling her part of the bargain, she made sure no one was looking and then took the ship from him and walked him back across the street. As they passed the stall she deftly slipped it back into the pile, no one the wiser. “Okay, now you pick something for me!” she said when they were in the clear.

Chewing on his lower lip, Pippin considered as they walked, looking with apparent casualness at the shops and stalls they passed. “That!” he said at last, nodding at a stall containing all manner of cosmetics in jars, bottles, and shiny boxes. “Something from there.”

“Right,” she agreed, and brought him with her while she checked it out. Since they weren’t going to keep it anyway, she picked out a pretty bottle of scent without regard to whether it was something she’d actually use. It was really too easy, because the proprietor was busy with something at the back of his stall. She slipped the bottle into her hand and then dropped her hand to her side, sliding the container partway under the edge of her sleeve and cupping the rest of it in her hand. From there, she rested her hand against her thigh, where the bottle was pretty much unnoticeable to casual scrutiny. Satisfied, she jerked her head down the street and said, “Come on, kid, let’s go see what they have at the next place, huh?”

The keeper of the cosmetics stall didn’t even turn around to make sure she wasn’t walking off with something. She checked over her shoulder just in case someone was watching or following, but they were clear. Definitely too easy!

When they turned a corner, she extricated the bottle from her sleeve. She couldn’t resist taking a sniff just to see what it smelled like, but it was too flowery for her taste, and she stoppered it again and tossed the container to Pippin. He caught it deftly, and examined it with glee. “This is really drad!” he said, tracing the metallic design with his finger.

“Yeah. Yeah, it is pretty drad at that,” she said, adding a bit of a swagger when he looked up at her with shining eyes. Take that, Aeryn! she thought with just a hint of malice. “So, go on, what are you waiting for? Put it back!”

He threaded his way confidently through the modest foot traffic, and she followed him at a discreet distance. He wasn’t tall enough to use her walk-by approach to returning the item, but he waited until the proprietor was distracted again, and simply reached up and put the bottle back on the display.

He scooted back to her, and when they cleared the corner again, he snorted. “That was too easy!”

Pleased that he understood their mark had been an easy one, she pointed out with a straight face, “Yeah, well, you picked him, didn’t’cha?”

“I didn’t know he was going to be as stupid as a werry! I woulda picked someone else if I knew!”

He was so indignant, she found it hard not to laugh, but she remembered how much she’d hated it when her sires had laughed at something she’d done or said because they thought it was “cute,” when she’d been deadly serious. So she distracted herself from chuckling by promising to try to find a more challenging target.

She upped the ante by choosing an actual enclosed store that made it harder to just fade into the crowd with their booty. Pip returned promptly with the ball she’d chosen, and she replaced it equally promptly. They continued down the road, popping in and out of stores, looking at carts and stalls, and taking and returning several more items smoothly, until disaster struck.

Pip had upped the ante yet again, by choosing an item from an actual enclosed store front, one with several minders instead of just one. Chiana removed the palm-sized jeweled trinket box from the premises with no problem. It was really beautiful, and she couldn’t help thinking that it wouldn’t hurt if they just kept this one thing, would it? But she could see Pippin beginning to frown, and she handed it over to him with a sigh.

She lurked in the doorway, keeping an eye on him to make sure he was alright. Just as he pulled the box out of his pack to slip it back on the pile, one of the shop minders turned around. Chiana watched with horror as the slegnot took two large steps across the room and grabbed Pip’s arm, pulling so hard that the boy had to stand on tiptoe to touch the floor. The box, unfortunately, was clearly visible in Pippin’s fist.

“Caught you, you little meega!” the man said in satisfaction.

Chiana’s heart caught in her throat, but she held herself back for a microt. Pip could bluff like the best of them, and she waited tensely, hoping he could talk his way out of this. “I was just looking at it! I was thinking about buying it for my mom!” Pippin screeched. “I have credits!”

The proprietor wasn’t having any of it. “You were stealing this!” he said, snatching the box from the boy’s hand and giving him a shake.

“Was not!” Pippin countered, his voice rising in what Chiana suspected was very real fear.

Furious with herself as much as the bully man-handling a six cycle old, she abandoned the doorway and strode into the room and gave the man a shove, hands planted firmly on his chest. “Hey, what are you doing with my kid? Get your hands off him!”

He let go of Pip’s arm, but declared, “I’m calling the garda!”

Aw, frell! That’s all they needed! When the man turned around to direct his partner to use the comms, she grabbed Pippin by the shoulders and spun him around, hissing, “Run for it, kid! I’m right behind you!” Pip didn’t need to be told twice, and the two of them were out the door before the outraged shopkeeper could react to their movement.

There was a lot of shouting behind them, as they ran and dodged their way into the maze of the marketplace. Apparently the law abiding citizens of this planet didn’t feel the need to interfere, because no one tried to stop them, even though the mark was bellowing about theft. Once again Chiana found herself following Pippin’s lead, while listening to the diminishing sounds of pursuit. At last they emerged back onto the regular streets. Her heart was pounding and her breath was coming hard when she finally signaled Pip to duck into a side street that was little more than an alley, and stop.

They bent over with their hands on their knees and breathed deeply, but the fact that they were both giggling with glee over having escaped made it hard to catch a proper breath.

Pip was facing in her direction, back the way they’d come, and abruptly he stopped laughing, and his eyes widened.

“Hello, Chiana,” came a familiar voice from behind her.

Frell! she thought with dismay.

* * * * * * * *
« Last Edit: January 05, 2009, 02:43:45 AM by aeryncrichton » Logged


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« Reply #1 on: January 04, 2009, 10:00:09 PM »

Well, it could have been worse. It could have been Aeryn...or Crichton, for that matter. Chiana set her jaw and turned around slowly. There, almost near enough to touch, stood her sib. Her heart leaped to see him, as it always did, but she was still really tinked at him, and it wasn’t easy trying to think of something to say that wasn’t bitter.

Pippin stared up at the tall, pale gray figure, at the black eyes and the thatch of black hair that was just like his own, and then turned to Chiana. “Is that my Nebari dad?”

Chiana shook her head. “Nope. That’s your Nebari uncle. He’s my brother, Nerri.” Pippin studied Nerri without speaking, and something in her son’s reserved stance loosened her tongue. “What the frell are you doing here, Nerri? I told you I was through with you!”

Ignoring her outburst as if it didn’t matter, Nerri nodded towards the boy at her side. “Is this your son?”

Cautiously, she shifted her stance. Lifting her chin, she said, “Pippin. He’s called Pippin.”

Big brother and little sister looked at each other in silence, and Nerri finally said, “Chi, I need you. I need your help.”

“No frelling way,” she snapped, angry at the presumption. “I told you I was done with all that, Nerri, and I, I really meant it!”

“Just listen, okay,” Nerri began. “You were—” He stopped speaking when Pippin yanked on China’s arm, demanding her attention.

Chiana tore her eyes away from the brother who wasn’t even supposed to be there, and looked down at her son. Pip’s small body was all coiled tension, and his eyes radiated fear. “I want to go back to school,” he declared with another, gentler, tug on her arm.

Chiana cocked her head and looked at him some more. She realized with dismay that her giggling partner in crime had turned into a scared little kid, and she sure as hezmana knew what that felt like. “Okay,” she told him without hesitation. “We’ll go right now.” She nodded for emphasis, and he sighed in relief. Frell. That was one more thing she had to blame Nerri for – he’d just ruined their day of fun. “Go away, Nerri,” she said.

Resolutely, she took Pip’s hand and turned her back on her brother, considering their options. She wasn’t completely sure where they were, hadn’t had time to get her bearings yet, but she decided on general principles it was probably safer to continue down the small street they were on. When they got a bit further away from the commerce center, they’d stop and figure out the way back to the school.

She and Pip had only taken a few steps when the blast of a pulse weapon came from behind them and hit the wall to their right. What the frell? She pulled Pippin in front of her to shelter him, thinking for just a microt that their last mark must have been pretty kranked to come after them with weapons, and then her brain caught up with her hearing and told her the blast had come from a Nebari weapon. Frelling Nerri! This was his fault! She pushed Pip to the opposite wall and crouched down to cover his body, as her brother, the only one of the three of them who was armed, returned fire, and was fired upon in return. The noise was deafening, and several blasts hit near enough to shower them all with flying bits of stone and dust.

Curled up in a fetal position, Pip whimpered, “What’s happening?” though he had to know they were being shot at.

Chiana wrapped her arms around him and held him tight. “It’s okay, it’s okay,” she repeated as pulse blasts echoed up and down the street, trying to convince herself as much as reassure the kid – all the while waiting for the searing pain of a blast catching her back. Where the frell was the garda? She heard a scream as one of Nerri’s blasts hit its target.

“Chiana,” Nerri roared in the sudden lull, “go that way! Go!”

Unsure what “that way” was, she took a microt to look behind her, where Nerri was. A blue-spattered gray form writhed on the ground near one corner of the intersection, and additional members of the cleansing squad – it had to be a Nebari cleansing squad – popped out from behind the cover of the building on the opposite corner to take aim at Nerri. Her sib fired off a shot and then flung a glance behind his shoulder.

“Go, Chiana,” he bellowed, waving towards the far end of the street.

At the same moment, Pip grabbed her hand and tugged. “Come on!”

It killed her to abandon Nerri, but her responsibility was to her son, and with a prayer to the whole frelling universe to protect her brother, she scrambled to her feet and rushed forward with Pippin. They ran for their lives, their already-stressed lungs burning with the effort of pulling in enough air to keep them going. Pulse fire continued behind them, but the sound wasn’t getting quieter, so she assumed that someone was following them. She hoped that “someone” included Nerri....

Chi and Pip burst out into a larger street. There were vehicles on the move, and some foot traffic, too. She hoped that would inhibit the cleansing squad and give them the chance they needed to get away. She kept them moving, but, nearing exhaustion, the boy stumbled and fell. Chiana stopped long enough to scoop him up. He wrapped his legs around her waist and his arms around her neck tightly, and she soldiered on as best she could, looking for a place to hide. Frell, how could a little kid be so heavy!

Foot traffic thinned again, making them way too easy to spot if anyone was following. They had to get off the street! Just when she was ready to give up and drag herself and her boy into the nearest occupied building and hope the squad wouldn’t follow and shoot up a bunch of innocent bystanders, she spied a dilapidated, apparently unoccupied building that took up at least a tenth of a metra’s length along the street. There were bound to be places to hide in there, and maybe a back way out. She paused beside an unlocked window, looking for a tell-tale flash of gray skin anywhere behind them. As soon as she decided they were unobserved, she pushed the window open and boosted Pip though, then climbed in after him.

The inside was dirty and cluttered with dusty-looking equipment, but it was dark enough to make the two of them hard to see, and it was quiet. For the moment, they were safe.

Pippin scooted behind something that had probably once been a lifter. She followed him and gathered him up in her arms and sat on the floor, holding him tight and rocking side to side. As their heart rates slowed, she managed to gather enough breath to speak. “That’s my brave Pip. You did great!” He continued to cling to her without reply, obviously still terrified. She fell back on her earlier mantra: “It’s okay. It’s okay.” After a while she promised, “We’ll just wait here a while till they go away, and then we’ll go home, okay?”

“I want my mom and dad,” he sniffled.

It broke her heart to hear, but she couldn’t really blame him. “We’ll go find them soon, I promise. We just have to wait till we’re sure those slegnots are gone.”

After a few ragged breaths, Pippin disentangled himself from her arms and sat down on the floor in front of her, cross-legged. He swiped the back of his hand across his eyes, wiping away a trace of tears, and then asked, “Why were they shooting at us?”

Glad that he seemed to be calming down, Chiana explained. “They weren’t shooting at you. They were shooting at Nerri. And maybe at me,” she allowed. “You saw they were Nebari?” When he nodded, she said, “Well, the Establishment, that’s the frellniks who run Nebari Prime, they’re not such nice people, see? And Nerri and me, we used to fight against them. And we, we frelled up their plans really good!” She couldn’t stop a pleased smile, because it still felt good to be able to say that.

Pip was watching her intently. “So they’re mad at you?”

“Yeah. They’re mad at us. And I think some of them must have followed Nerri here to punish him.” She couldn’t quite bring herself to use the word, “kill”....

Pippin was quiet for a while, and Chiana let him think. Finally he asked, in a tone that was more curious than anything else, “Did you shoot people when you were fighting?”

It was an honest question and she answered it honestly. “Sometimes. When I had to. And we blew things up sometimes, too. But mostly we just tried to find ways to stop them making a lot of people sick.” Pip took that in and nodded comfortably, and she couldn’t help but be relieved. She wondered suddenly what Crichton and Aeryn had told all the kids about their own violence-strewn past. She had a feeling they’d been at least as open as she had just been, because Pip didn’t seem to be disturbed by what she’d said.

Noise and movement at the window they’d come in through startled them both, and they scrambled to their knees, peeking over the lifter. As they watched, Nerri climbed into the room and closed the opening behind him. He had a blue trickle of dried blood on his forehead, but he looked otherwise unharmed.

Relief warred with concern in Chiana’s mind as she stood up so Nerri could see her. “Did you lose them?”

“I think so,” he said, but he took a microt to check the charge on his pulse pistol. From his grimace, Chiana suspected it was pretty low.

Annoyed, she went on the offensive. “What were you thinking, coming here?”

Nerri tilted his head and regarded her for a long time. He must have known she meant right here, right now, compromising their hiding place, but he shook his head and said, “You were right.”

Chiana’s head bounced backwards as if she’d been struck, and she opened her eyes wide. “I, I was what?”

“You were right about the raid on Acknar Prime. We shouldn’t have done it.”

Acutely aware of Pippin standing at her side, listening to every word, she snapped, “Too little, too late, Nerri. You shoulda listened to me then.”

Nerri stared at her until she looked away, then started talking again. “I should have. We can’t change the past, but we can change the future, Chi.” When she looked at him again, he said, “We’ve accomplished so much, little sis. No more Contagion. But we can’t stop till we’ve shaken up the whole Establishment, changed the way they work! Made sure no one else suffers just because they don’t conform!”

Chiana shook her head. “No more fighting, Nerri.”

“No. Not with weapons. With words. We can make sure people know the whole truth about what’s been done in the name of peace and harmony, we can call for a general election, support decent candidates....”

His voice grew louder and more enthusiastic as he spoke, and she almost believed it could work. Nerri always could talk her into just about anything.... She shook her head again, refusing to commit to anything just now. “That’s assuming you get out of here alive.” She looked down at Pippin, who’d been listening quietly. Maybe it was safe for them to get the frell out of here, take the kid back to school before anything worse happened.

Nerri read her mind, and started for the unlocked window to see if the coast looked clear. He’d taken about three steps, when a racket started up outside – pulse fire being concentrated on the sealed door, by the sound of it. Frell! In the dim light they could see the door begin to glow hot. If there was another way out of this place, now was the time to use it!

The windows on the other side of the building, away from the door, were all much smaller than the one they’d come in through. There wasn’t a chance either of the adults could make it out, even if they could get one open, but Chi thought it was just possible that Pippin could squeeze through. She exchanged a quick glance with Nerri, and saw he was in agreement. While Nerri took his pulse pistol and moved to where he had a good line of sight on the door, Chiana rushed Pip over to the nearest window. There was no indication that it was ever intended to open, and she simply lifted up a booted foot and kicked, hard. The translucent sheet crackled, then broke, and she kicked at it again and again to clear the opening as much as possible. When she’d finished, she knelt down in front of her son. “Okay, Pip, you’ve gotta get out of here. You can squeeze through that, I know you can.”

“I want to stay with you!” His lower lip stuck out defiantly.

Frell! “A microt ago you wanted to go home!” she snapped. “Look, kid, there’s no time to argue about this! I can’t get through there even if I wanted to, I’m not as small as you. And it’s not safe in here, so you have got to get the frell out! You got that?”

He looked at her with wide, frightened eyes, wrapped his arms around her waist in a tight hug, and then scrunched his way out the tiny window. She heard a grunt as he landed on the ground maybe two motras below. Trusting from his performance during their earlier adventures in the marketplace that he would have the sense to get away from the building and find somewhere to hide, she tried to ignore the lump of ice in her belly, and rushed over to Nerri.

He glared, and started to tell her to find someplace to hide, when two things happened at once: The door burst open with a crash, and from behind them, where Pippin had gone, came the sound of pulse fire, followed by a heart-rending, high-pitched scream....

* * * * * * * *

The scream could have been anyone or anything, even an animal, but Chiana completely lost it. She wrenched the pulse pistol from Nerri’s hand, barely noticing him wince in pain and not giving a frell about it anyway. With complete disregard for her own safety, yelling at the top of her lungs, she rushed the door. She fired blindly ahead of her as she ran, hoping one of the fekkiks would pop his head in and she’d hit him. Weapons fire echoed wildly from outside, along with a multitude of shouts that didn’t resolve into words, but no one actually entered the building, which seemed crazy, after all the trouble they’d gone to to get the door open.

Puzzled, Chiana put on the brakes and managed to stop before she skidded out into whatever was happening outside. She looked back at Nerri, who frowned in similar confusion over the behavior of their attackers. He started towards her, only to stop abruptly when a Nebari female toppled, dead or dying, into the doorway. Chiana scurried forward and relieved her of her weapon. A quick glance out the door showed no visible targets, so she ran back to Nerri and handed him the confiscated pulse pistol. With both of them armed, they began edging towards either side of the door. While they were moving, the gunfire outside slowed, and then stopped. Approaching footsteps had them looking at each other in alarm.

“Chiana?” Along with the satisfaction of a job well done, Aeryn’s voice carried a note of concern.

Saved! Chiana didn’t hesitate for a microt. “In here!” she called.

Aeryn, weapon at the ready, stepped over the body in the doorway without batting an eye and scanned the room.

“It’s just us,” Chiana assured her, and then blurted, “Is Pip okay?”

Aeryn’s eyes went steel hard. “He isn’t with you?”

Realizing she was probably very near death, but pissed anyway, ‘cos after all, it was her kid they were talking about, she almost mouthed off. But she was as worried about Pippin as Aeryn was, and this wasn’t the time to fight. “I, uh, I sent him out the back way. Through that window,” she explained, chin jutting in the general direction of Pip’s escape route. “It was too frelling dangerous in here with us, and, and, they were out there!” She whirled and pointed to the door Aeryn had just came in through.

Aeryn accepted that with a nod, but without any softening of her expression. She turned and headed back out the door, Chiana scrambling behind her past at least three bodies, apparently dead, all of them Nebari. The two women rushed around to the other side of the building, dreading what they would find. There wasn’t any point in saying it out loud, but they both knew that at least one member of the cleansing squad had fired at something on Pip’s side of the building. Nerri followed along closely behind them, but no one spoke.

The lot they entered was unpaved and partly overgrown with dry plants. There was no immediate sign of the boy, which could be taken as a good omen. “Pip!” Chiana yelled, heart in her throat. She tore into the vegetation in case he was hurt and hiding.

“Chi,” Nerri called softly. When he saw she was looking, he nudged the limp body of a small dark-furred animal with the toe of his boot. Aeryn walked over and studied the carcass herself, and some of the fear went out of her face.

“Pippin!” Chiana called again, hoping her companions were right, and the unfortunate critter had been the source of that terrible scream. Please let him be all right! Aeryn and Nerri took up the call as well, with their voices all tumbling over one another.

In a moment of silence, Aeryn called, “Pippin! Come here right now!”

As the echoes of her sharp voice died away, the object of their search struggled out from behind some bushes. “Mom!” Pippin yelped, as he let go of a dry branch and it smacked him in the face.

Chiana’s heart started beating again as she watched her son limp over to Aeryn, who holstered her weapon at last. She couldn’t quite bring herself to interfere as Aeryn knelt and spoke softly to Pip, frowned when he winced as she felt his ankle, examined his bloody palms, wiped the dust off his face....

Apparently satisfied that Pippin was relatively unharmed, Aeryn picked him up and stalked over to Chiana and Nerri. Pip gave her a weak smile, but Aeryn’s voice was cold. “Stay out of sight! Both of you!” she commanded. “Even in this neighborhood someone must have called the garda by now. I’ll get the transport and come around and get you!”

Aeryn turned and carried Pip away without waiting for a response.

Chiana felt the sting of tears in her eyes, and then her brother’s comforting hand on her shoulder. She wasn’t sure if that made her feel better, or worse....

* * * * * * * *

Chiana had no doubt that Aeryn was absolutely furious, but her words to Pip as they headed home had been mild, if firm.

“It was wrong to leave school, even with Chiana.”

“I know.”

“It won’t happen again.”

“No, ma’am,” he agreed.

“I mean it.”

“Yes, ma’am.”

“Good.”

That seemed to have settled the issue, which surprised Chiana no end. From her own childhood, she remembered endless scenes of great drama, emotional appeals not to embarrass the family, threats of mind-cleansing.... Obviously, the Crichtons handled these things very differently, or maybe Aeryn was just too relieved that Pip was okay to do any real yelling. On the other hand, Aeryn said not a word to Chiana or Nerri in the transport, which probably meant she was thinking of ways to skin them both alive.

Now, back at the house, Nerri brooded in the living area while Chiana stood in the doorway of Pip’s room, arms crossed, watching Aeryn tend to his injuries. The ankle seemed to be the worst. Apparently he’d twisted it landing badly on the ground below the window. He made a face when Aeryn probed it more thoroughly than she’d done earlier, and it was already swelling. It would probably need a medic to knit the bone. Chiana couldn’t help but feel guilty about that. If she’d left him in school he’d be fine now.

As Aeryn washed dried blue-black blood off of Pip’s palms and applied a dressing to the scrapes, Chiana decided to ask a question that had been bugging her since Aeryn had turned up. “So, uh, Aeryn.” When she left it hanging there, Aeryn turned and looked at her. In the face of the other woman’s stare, Chi bobbed her head to the side. “How’d you, you know, find us?”

Aeryn turned back to Pippin, apparently marshalling her thoughts. At last she said, “His teacher called me when he discovered you hadn’t signed him out properly.” She turned her head to look Chiana in the eye and shrugged. “After that I just followed the shouts about thieving, and the sounds of shooting.”

Ouch.... Chiana bit back a smart remark – something about following procedure next time she took Pip out to have a little fun – because she knew she owed Aeryn big time for saving all their eemas. Obviously Aeryn knew it, too, because she told Pippin to stay off his foot while she went and spoke to the medic, and then motioned Chiana ahead of her to the living area where Nerri was waiting. Time to face the music....

The anger was back in Aeryn’s eyes as she looked back and forth between the two sibs. “You can’t stay,” she told Nerri bluntly. “I’m not sure you should stay either,” she added, glaring at Chiana, but she stopped short of ordering Chi out of the house. “Someone must have known that squad was here. It’s not going to be safe.”

Aeryn was right about the danger. A backup cleansing squad would be coming after Nerri as soon as the special police heard what happened – and the local authorities here would no doubt send off a routine notice to the Establishment about the deaths of several of its citizens. For the first time, Chiana realized the difficult position Aeryn had placed herself in by coming in with weapons blazing. “What, what about you?” she asked anxiously. “Weren’t you seen? What about the garda? You live here, it’s not like you can pick up and run!”

“I might have been seen.” Aeryn shrugged dismissively. “I was protecting my son. If there’s a price to be paid, I’ll pay it.”

Oh, great. Chiana closed her eyes briefly and moaned. Crichton would kill her if Aeryn ended up in jail....

Aeryn shook her head. “It should be all right. Defense of young ones is the highest value in this culture. I probably won’t be charged.”

She tried to believe Aeryn was right. But now she’d better figure out what her own plans were. She had a sinking feeling she knew what she should do, but.... “Can you give me a few minutes to talk to Nerri before he leaves?”

An unexpected look of sympathy crossed Aeryn’s face. “All right. I need to talk to John anyway, and I should make arrangements to have Pippin’s ankle seen to.”

Chiana gave her a faint smile of gratitude, and turned to face her brother as Aeryn left the room.

Nerri broke into speech at last. “Chiana, I am so sorry, I didn’t know they were following me. I had no idea—”

Chiana cut him off. “Remember when I used to beg to come with you, to help you? And you wouldn’t let me come? Pretty funny now, huh?”

“Chi—”

“Just shut up for a microt, Nerri....” She chewed on her lower lip and tried to think. About what they’d accomplished in the past cycles, about what still needed to be done, about the son she’d given away for the cause. She looked up at her sib, stomach churning. “Do, d-do you really mean it?”

He looked at her blankly. “What?”

“About the rabble rousing. You know! All that ‘fighting the Establishment with words, not weapons,’ dren?”

Nerri nodded solemnly. “Yes. I swear.”

She searched his eyes carefully, looking for any sign that he didn’t mean what he said, totally and completely. “No matter what?” she asked.

“No matter what.”

She sighed. “All right. I’ll go with you.”

It was Nerri’s turn to question her commitment. “What about the boy? What we’re doing, it still won’t be safe for him. Can you leave him behind again?”

She closed her eyes, remembering what it had been like for six cycles of trying not to think about her son, not to wonder what he was like, what he was doing.... “Yeah,” she said, with unexpected relief. “He’s a really great kid, Nerri, I, I really love him and we’ve had lots of fun. But...he’s a little kid.” She gestured around the room. “He needs this. Not the stuff, but the stability. Two parents who love him, sibs....” She shook her head and added, “I don’t know how Aeryn does it. Crichton, he was always pretty domestic, but Aeryn....” And she laughed, for the first time since Nerri had turned up and frelled up her day. It was better than crying.

* * * * * * * *

Chiana’s laughter faded quickly, because the sooner she and Nerri got out of the house and off the planet, the safer it was going to be for everyone. The thought of saying goodbye to her son made her sick to her stomach, but she wasn’t going to do what she’d done when he was a narl, and run away without even a last look. Nope, he deserved a proper goodbye. She took the time to tell Aeryn what was what and fetch a handful of credits from her room, and then braced herself to face Pippin.

He was still in his room, sitting propped up in his bed. He had a deck of cards in his hand, and was sorting the cards halfheartedly into suits. He looked up and smiled when she entered the room.

She crossed over and sat down on the side of his bed. “Hold out your hand,” she said, and when he did, she dropped the coins into it.

“Thanks!”

“Told ya I was good for it.”

“I knew you were.”

She smiled at him, and looked him over from head to foot, storing up the thatch of black hair that looked so much like Nerri’s, the dark eyes and brows, the short, sturdy frame.... At least this time she wouldn’t have to wonder.

But she must have stared too long, because he frowned at her and said, “Chimama?”

“Did you have a good time today?”

He considered the question seriously. “Before the shooting?”

“Yeah, before the shooting.”

A wide grin split his face. “Yeah! It was really fun!”

“That’s really good,” she said softly, trying to work up the courage to tell him what she needed to. “I want you to remember today, huh? Remember how much fun we had.”

His dark eyes filled with tears. “Are you going away?”

Frell, he was perceptive! She pulled him into a sideways hug. “Yeah, I gotta. You saw what happened. Those guys, they followed Nerri here, but it coulda been me they were looking for. It’s not safe for you or your family for me to be here right now. And there’s some good I can do if I go with Nerri.”

The tears spilled over and ran down his cheeks. “But Mom, I’ll miss you!”

She gasped. It was the first time he’d called her “Mom,” and it just about tore her heart out, but it made her feel just a little good, too, to know she’d somehow earned it. She gave him another squeeze and promised, “I’ll miss you too, Pip! I’m going to miss you a lot!”

He wiped the tears off of his cheek and then dragged his sleeve across his nose to wipe away the snot. “When will I see you again?” he asked.

The question took her by surprise, because she hadn’t even thought about coming back, there hadn’t been time to think that far ahead. With a lump in her throat she heard herself saying, “I’ll be back every year, every year for your natal day, okay? More often if I can.” Pippin nodded, and she vowed she’d make it happen, whatever it took. “Practice your bleeka surl, huh? Next time I come, I bet you’ll be able to throw me!”

She’d hoped he’d smile, at least, but he turned his face away suddenly.

Well, she guessed she couldn’t blame him. Here she was, running out on him again after only a few short weekens.... Heart aching, but knowing she was doing the right thing, she stood up and turned back to face him. She bent over and kissed him on the top of the head. “I love you, Pip. Believe that, okay?”

He sniffled again, but looked at her and nodded solemnly. “I love you, too!”

“See ya, kid,” she whispered, and turned and fled the room.

She didn’t look back.
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Lee/ac bunny
Wait for the Wheel
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aeryncrichton
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« Reply #2 on: January 04, 2009, 10:00:49 PM »

Quote from: capt31 on 3/12/07
You "nailed" Chiana perfectly in this tale! You captured her.....and validated my previous views on the character.

The best part...and the most enlightening is the way you allow Aeryn to handle the situation with "her" son! They may not be related by flesh....but the connection is not weakened by that point. She and Pippin are a joy to watch how they interact. You show a firm handle of family life....but one that is also backed with the love for each other that can be felt. Liked how you implied that the older children were possibly making their feeling for Chiana's presence known. A tight family indeed!

Thanks for the tale....luved "Mom" Aeryn coming to the rescue for one of her children! :D
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Lee/ac bunny
Wait for the Wheel
Shippy Bunny
Loco's Psychic Plot Bunny Twin

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