"You'll stay away from my boy, damn you," said Aven's voice.
"I can heal his leg, Aven," said another voice, "and you have no right to stop me."
"Jason knows you've done enough!" Aven said, his voice rising.
"And you've done more than enough!" came back the savage retort. "At least let someone who really loves the boy care for him now!"
Hoom recognized the other voice. It was Stipock. But now Grandfather Noyock's voice came, soothing, gentling. "Aven, the law is the law. And if a man injures his child, the child is no longer in his care."
A moan, a cry. "I didn't mean to hurt him!" Aven said, his voice twisted and bent with weeping. Father weeping! The thought was incomprehensible to Hoom. "You know I didn't mean to hurt him, father!"
But Noyock said nothing to him, only told Stipock to go ahead.
Hoom felt the blanket come off him. The cold air was biting. Gentle hands touched his leg — fire ran up his spine.
"This is terrible, terrible," Stipock said softly.
"Can you heal him?" Noyock asked. "We've never had an injury this bad, at least not one that left the poor fellow alive."
"I'll need help."
Aven spoke up from the corner. "I'll help you."
"No!" Hoom hissed from his pain–clenched teeth. "Don't let him touch me."
Hoom couldn't see Aven turn away, or Esten put her arm around her husband to comfort his remorse. All he could see behind his closed eyes was the hatred on his father's face.
"You help me then, Noyock. Is that all right, Hoom?"
Hoom nodded, or tried to. Apparently Stipock understood his assent, for he began giving instructions. "You'll have to hold the boy by the armpits, from above. And don't try to spare him any pain. Gentleness won't help him now."
"What's happening to me? What are you doing?"
"Trust me now," Stipock said. "This is going to hurt like hell, Hoom, but it's the only way we can fix it so you'll ever walk again."
And then a hand gripped him at the ankle, which made Hoom moan, and another hand gripped him just below the break, high on his shin, which made him cry out in pain.
"Don't hurt him —" began his mother, and then silence, as Stipock said, "Now pull with all your strength, Noyock," and Hoom felt as if he were being pulled apart. The pain rose and rose and rose, until, suddenly, Hoom could feel no more pain, except that he knew he was virtually dead with it. Above the pain he floated, and felt the dispassionate movement of his body as Stipock pushed the fragment of shin back into place, where it fit again with a terrible snap (I don't feel it; it isn't me); as Stipock slid the kneecap back into position, forced the joint to fit again; as the leg, already used to the torture of the bones out of place, now began to feel the worse torture of the bones back together.
"Is that it?" he heard Noyock ask, from a great distance.
"We need wood and cloth strips," Stipock said. "Straight firm wood, no twigs or branches or green wood."
"I'll get it," Aven said, and "I'll get the cloth," said Esten, Hoom's mother. And then, at last, Hoom fell back down into the sea of pain and drowned in it, drifted down to the bottom, and slept.
He woke again, and it was dark. A tallow lamp sputtered by the bed. His head ached, and his broken leg throbbed dully; but the pain was much better, much eased, much gone, and he could leave his eyes open.
The room focused, and he saw Stipock sitting by his bed. "Hi," he said, and Stipock smiled. "How do you feel?" Stipock asked softly.
"The pain's not as bad."
"Good. We've done all we can do. Now it's up to your leg to heal."
Hoom smiled wanly.
Stipock turned toward somewhere else — a door, Hoom assumed — and said, "He's awake now. You can call the others." Then he turned back to Hoom and said, "I know you don't feel well, but some decisions have to be made, that only you can make."
Footsteps coming into the room, and one by one they came into Hoom's range of vision. First Noyock, looking grave. Then Esten, her eyes red from crying. And then Aven.
Seeing his father, Hoom turned his head upward, to the ceiling.
"Hoom," said Noyock,
"Yes," Hoom answered, his voice soft and husky.
"Stipock wants to take care of you," Noyock said. "He wants to take you out of your father's home, if you want to, and take care of you until you can walk again."
Hoom tried to control them, but the tears dripped out of the corners of his eyes anyway.
"But, Hoom, your father also wants to take care of you."
"No," Hoom said.
"Your father wants to say something to you."
"No."
"Please," said Aven. "Please listen to me, son."
"I'm not your son," Hoom said softly. "You told me so."
"I'm sorry for that. You know how it was. I went crazy for a minute."
"I want to go with Stipock," Hoom said.
Silence for a few moments, and then Aven bitterly spat out his feelings about Stipock, who came to steal children away from their parents. "I won't let you take the boy!" Aven said, and might have said more except that Noyock's voice, harsh with anger, cut through.
"Yes, you will, Aven!"
"Father!" Aven cried out, anguished.
"The law says that after a father has injured his child, the child must be taken by another family, for its own protection."
"Stipock isn't a family," Aven said.
"I will be," Stipock said, "when your son is living with me."
"It only makes sense, Aven," Noyock said. "Stipock can help the boy now — you can't."
"I can help him," Aven insisted.
"By pushing him out of windows?" Stipock quietly asked.
"Shut up, Stipock," Noyock answered mildly. "I'll ask Hoom one more time, and then that's it, and there'll be no complaint, no more discussion, and no resistance, or I swear I'll have you bound up and kept in a locked room until Jason comes again. Now, Hoom, will you stay with Stipock, or with your father?"
Hoom half–smiled. He felt a glow of satisfaction: the broken leg would be worth it, for the chance to make this choice. "Stipock is my father," Hoom said. And Aven's low moan of pain was some measure of repayment, Hoom felt, for the pain he had gone through. With that thought he closed his eyes and dozed.
But he became vaguely alert again a few minutes later. It seemed that Noyock and Stipock were alone in the room, and they were arguing.
"You see the harm it caused," Stipock said.
"The law didn't give you any power to take this boy out of his father's home until his father nearly killed him."
"The law is the law," Noyock said, "and only Jason can change it."
"That's the point!" Stipock insisted. "The law needs to be changed. If Jason were here, he'd change it, wouldn't he?"
"Maybe," Noyock said.
"Then why can't we? Not just you and me, but all the people. Vote. Let the majority change the law."
Noyock sighed. "It's what you've wanted all along, Stipock. To let the majority of people in Heaven City change any one of Jason's laws they want."
"Just this law," Stipock said. "Just the law that lets fathers beat their children."
"Just this law? I'm not a fool, Stipock, though you seem to feel that everyone in Heaven City is stupider than a newborn pig. Once we've changed one law that way, there'll be other laws to change, and people will begin to think all the laws are changeable."
"Aren't they?" Stipock asked. "Why don't you just ask them? On Jason's Day, when they gather at First field, call a council, ask them to vote on whether voting should be allowed. See what they decide."
"I said, Stipock, that I'm not a fool. If I let them vote on anything, that becomes a lawful way for decisions to be made."
"So you aren't going to change the law?"
"Just let me think, Stipock."
"Let you? I'm begging you to. Do you really think the majority of people in this colony will decide stupidly? Don't you trust them?"