"No, Valerian. I don't think your father was fighting aliens."
"So who was he fighting?"
"Thai's kind of hard to answer," said Ailin, trying to think of a way to explain where Valerian's father had been and what he had been doing without upsetting the youngster. As much as Ailin hated the Institution of the Confederate Marine Corps, he did not want to rob Valerian of his idealized image of his father before he'd even met the man properly and formed his own opinion.
Arcturus would disabuse the boy of any heroic notions soon enough anyway, he thought.
"I bet my dad's a war hero," said Valerian. "I bet he killed hundreds of men."
"I'm sure he did," said Ailin.
"But he's not a soldier anymore, is he?"
"No, not anymore."
"So what does he do now?" asked Valerian. "Mum just tells me he's doing great work, but I don't really know what that means."
"I'm told he's been a prospector out on the fringe worlds since he left the army," said Ailin. "Quite a good one, too, by all accounts."
"Is he rich?"
"I'm not sure, but from the sound of it, I think he might be soon."
"Good," declared Valerian. "I want to be rich too."
Ailin smiled. "You know, we're not exactly poor here, Valerian."
"I know, but I want to find aliens when I grow up and I'm going to need a lot of money to do that, aren't I?"
"I suspect you might," Ailin said, laughing. "You'll need a fleet of spaceships, the best archaeologists money can buy, and all sorts of tools."
"Oh, I won't need archaeologists. I want to do the digging myself."
"Really?"
"Of course," said Valerian. "If anyone's going to find aliens I don't want it to be anyone except me. Where would the fun be in that?"
"I suppose you're right: I hadn't thought of that," said Ailin, pride and love filling his heart at the excitement in Valerian's face. "Now, go to sleep, Val. You've got a big day tomorrow."
"Yes...." said Valerian, pulling the covers tightly around him with a contented smile as his eyes drifted shut. "I'm going to meet my dad tomorrow."
Ailin Pasteur rose from the bed and turned off the light beside Valerian's bed. He made his way to the door and slipped from his grandson's room.
"Yes," he said. "You're going to meet your father. I just hope he's all you hope for."
Arcturus still couldn't quite believe it. He was a father...?
He was a father?
How was the first question that leapt to mind, swiftly followed by a mental kick to the backside. How do you think it happened, idiot?
He wanted to say something, but the words wouldn't come. He wanted to deny it, but the cast of the boy's countenance was unmistakable. Every curve of feature was that of a Mengsk and the analytical part of Arcturus's brain had seen that the boy was a handsome lad indeed, obscenely gifted with the best genes his parents had to offer.
No sooner had Ailin led the boy away than Juliana said something.
Arcturus didn't hear it.
His head was filled with the white noise of a million questions and the rush of blood around his body. The crackling of the fire was like the roar of a great inferno, and he fell the air in his lungs rasping along his throat and from his mouth.
Juliana rose from her chair with a pained expression and crossed the room toward him with her arms outstretched. Without thinking, he took her in his arms and held her as she rested her head on his shoulder and whispered things he couldn't understand.
He stood like that for several moments before the reality of the situation washed over him in a tsunami of anger and betrayal. Arcturus took hold of Juliana's arms and pushed her away, as though she were contaminated with some vile plague.
"I have a son?" he said, striding away from her.
"Yes," said Juliana, smiling broadly. "You have a wonderful son. His name is Valerian."
"A good name," said Arcturus. "Strong."
Juliana nodded. "I knew you'd be pleased with that. It suits him too."
Arcturus was pleased with the name, but more pressing concerns needed to be addressed.
“Why the hell didn't you tell me?" he said. "You kept this from me for all these years? Why would you do that, Juliana? Why?"
She recoiled from his anger, and he saw the fear in her eyes. Normally such behavior would have repulsed him, but now he relished it, wanting to hurt her for the insult of keeping a secret from him. And what a secret...
"Answer me, damn you!" snapped Arcturus when she turned away from him and stepped close to the fireplace. She held on to the mantelpiece and coughed into a handkerchief before turning to face him.
"I thought you'd be pleased," she said.
"Pleased? That you've lied to me and kept the fact that I...that we have a child together? What the hell did you expect? That I'd be pleased with this? That I'd be happy to know I was a father just when my life is taking off the way I've always dreamed?"
"That's why I couldn't tell you before now!" cried Juliana. "All those great plans and dreams you told me—I knew I couldn't get in the way until you were ready to realize them. I know you just joined the Marine Corps to punish your father, and I couldn't tell you about Valerian while you were fighting in the Guild Wars."
"Why not?" said Arcturus, spying a drinks tray on the sideboard and pouring himself a hefty measure of something amber and pungent.
"Knowing you had a son would have made your life so much harder."
Arcturus took a belt of strong liquor. "What are you talking about?"
"I didn't want you thinking of anything except staying alive, Arcturus. I didn't want to do anything that might distract you and get you killed. But now you're out of the military and I asked my father to keep tabs on how you were doing."
Arcturus poured himself another glass of liquor, deciding that it was some kind of brandy. He hoped it was expensive and old.
"If you've been keeping tabs on me then you'll know we just hit the biggest mineral find I've ever heard of. My mining crew are working it as we speak, and I should be with them. I'm on the brink of achieving everything I wanted and you drop this in my lap. Well, thank you very much for that, Juliana. Your timing is exquisite!"
A fire flashed to life in her eyes. "You don't think I had dreams too, Arcturus? Remember I had just started with that law firm as a paralegal? I was doing well therem and I had a promising career there until I fell pregnant."
"Not a very progressive firm if they fired you for something like that," said Arcturus. "You should have sued."
"They didn't fire me, thank you very much," snapped Juliana. "They wanted me to come back after Valerian was born, but I wanted to devote myself to our child."
"Very commendable," said Arcturus, pouring a third drink. He could already feel the spikes of his anger being worn smooth by its patency.
"Valerian is very like you, Arcturus. He's brilliant, charming, and utterly determined in everything he does. You'll like him, I know you will."
Arcturus brushed that thought aside, still reeling from the idea of having a young son and the fact that he didn't know him at all. Seven years of the boy's life had passed and until now, neither he nor Valerian had ever laid eyes on the other.
"Does my father know? My mother? Dorothy?"