“What is that?” they demanded.
“Your armies. Your soldiers. What do you intend to do with them?”
The humans on both sides of the table glanced at one another. “Why, put them back in cryonic storage, of course. What else can we do with them?”
“Let them live,” I said.
“They don’t know how to live! They’ve been bred for soldiering and that’s all they know.”
“Find worlds that are not occupied and let them settle on them. You owe them that much.”
“They won’t know how to survive. The skills of farming and building and living peacefully have never been part of their training.”
“Then train them,” I said firmly. “Train them as you fly them out to these new worlds.”
“They would die off in a single generation,” a gruff-faced man pointed out. “They’re all sterile; bred that way, you know.”
“They can make children through cloning, the way you made them. And their children needn’t be sterile.”
“But if we sent the troops off to other planets, that would disarm us,” one of the women objected. “We would have no army to protect us in case of future need.”
“Let your own children train for soldiering,” I said. “Defend yourselves.”
“That’s a ghastly idea! My children, soldiers?”
I leaned on the table with both hands. “Only when your own children are soldiers will you understand that war is not something you play at. These men and women have fought for you and you’ve rewarded them with nothing. No rights, no privileges, nothing in all their lives to look forward to except more fighting.”
“But they were bred for that! They don’t know anything except the army.”
“They know that they want to live. They know that they want more than the prospect of pain and blood and killing. They are human beings, just as human as you are. You must accept them as such.”
“It’s impossible,” someone muttered.
“Do you have any idea of what it would cost to settle our soldiers on new worlds?”
“Ask our own children to join the military?”
I said, “That is my demand for this peace treaty. It is not negotiable. You will release your soldiers from their slavery and allow them to lead peaceful lives.”
“That is simply not possible. It can’t be done.”
I replied, “It will be done, or you’ll spend the rest of your lives at this table.”
“Now, really!”
“You will learn, in some small way, what it’s like to have nothing to look forward to. You will stay here until you realize that this form of slavery is no longer to be tolerated.”
One of the Skorpis said, “If you humans are worried that you will have no one to protect you, we can be hired to serve as your army.
“The Tsihn have a long tradition of honoring military prowess,” said the largest reptilian. “We could certainly make military arrangements with the Commonwealth.” It turned its slitted eyes across the table. “Or with the Hegemony, once we have agreed to end the present war.”
Several of the humans objected to hiring mercenaries or placing their safety in the hands of aliens on the strength of diplomatic agreements. Others shuddered at the thought of having their own children put on military uniforms.
“May I say a word or two?” Frede asked, from her station to one side of the table.
The politicians all turned to her, surprised to hear a military officer ask for permission to speak. Since the earliest days of this enforced conference, they had taken their guards for granted, as much a part of the background as the trees or energy bubble that protected us from the weather.
“I know that every soldier would be very grateful for the chance to start a new life, in peace. Maybe we don’t know anything except soldiering, but that includes a lot of survival skills, and we’d be happy for a chance to learn how to live normal lives. And—well, if you need us, we’d still be available.”
“You would leave your new homes and fight for the Commonwealth, if we called you?”
“If it’s necessary,” Frede said. “You’d have to tell us why it’s necessary.”
“The human armies of the Hegemony undoubtedly feel the same way,” I added.
It took further hours of debate. The humans asked to discuss the matter among themselves, and for the first time Commonwealth and Hegemony men and women walked off together, talking earnestly, trying to find a solution to a common problem.
The Tsihn reptilians seemed puzzled by my demand. “Why not freeze them if you don’t need them?” one of the lizards asked me.
“Because they are human beings,” I replied, “and entitled to all the rights that any other humans possess.”
A Skorpis commander shook her feline head. “Humans don’t understand the way of the warrior. They regard the warrior as an inferior person, a slave.”
“Regrettable,” said the Tsihn.
“That attitude is about to change,” I said.
“And we are all being held hostage here until it does,” the Skorpis commander replied.
“Regrettable,” the Tsihn repeated. I wondered if that was its idea of humor.
Neither the Commonwealth humans nor those of the Hegemony liked it, but at last they agreed to my demand: the existing human armies would remain alive and be resettled on unoccupied planets.
We had peace within our grasp. But only if I could make the Creators agree to it, I knew.
I returned the politicians to their homes, precisely to the times when I had kidnapped them. Frede and the other soldiers gaped when the whole group of them disappeared, together with their conference table and everything else.
“Matter transmission,” I told them.
They still shook their heads.
“I’m sending you back to Loris,” I told them. Before they could object, I added, “But not to your prison cells. You’ll be at the army base, in fairly luxurious quarters. If the politicians keep their word, the process of resettlement will begin soon.”
“And if it doesn’t?” Frede asked, with a veteran’s skepticism.
“I’ll come and get you,” I said.
She gazed into my eyes. “Who in the name of the seven levels of hell are you, Orion?”
“A soldier, just like you.”
“Dogshit you are.”
I grinned at her. “I’ve just been around longer. I know more tricks.”
“You’re not coming back to Loris with us?”
“No, I’ve got another problem to tackle,” I said.
She frowned slightly, then stepped up to me and, throwing her arms around my neck, gave me a very unmilitary kiss. “Thank you,” Frede said. “Thanks for our lives.”
I felt slightly flustered. The rest of the crew was grinning at us. I called them all to attention, then sent them back to Loris. They disappeared from the forest of Paradise as if they had never been there.
I took in a deep breath. The real test was facing me now. I translated myself to the city of the Creators.
This time I went right into the heart of the city, into its magnificent central square, bordered by temples from the highest human civilizations: a Sumerian ziggurat, a Mayan pyramid, the Parthenon in all of its original graceful beauty. The sun shone brightly through the shimmering golden energy dome that encased the Creators’ city; I could feel the breeze from the nearby sea wafting by.
They were all there, waiting for me, all of them in perfect glowing health. All of them in splendid robes, a pantheon of human physical perfection, the men handsome and grave, the women stunning and equally solemn. All except Anya.
“Where is she?”
The Golden One stepped forward, regarded me somberly.
“Where is she?” I repeated.
“All in due time, Orion. We have other matters to discuss first.”