"I can't leave Theo with Ella," she finished, finally raising her eyes to meet his.
"I understand," he murmured. "Certainly you would not wish to place your daughter into a position of potential peril." He frowned slightly. "What I fail to understand is why you must leave Theo on Delgado."
She stared at him. "But – take Theo to Melchiza?"
"Melchiza is hardly the end of the galaxy," Jen Sar observed dryly.
"I... Her education; I'd have to remove her from her team just when she's coming to understand consensus. She'd miss – "
"I do not for a moment believe," he interrupted, "that Professor Kamele Waitley would find the oversight of her minor daughter's education inconvenient in the least. Surely the school will provide a curricula, exercises, reading lists, self-tests."
"I – "
"Kamele..." He extended a hand and put it over hers. "Think! This solves – many problems. It preserves custom, removes Theo from peril, and expands both your base and hers. Sub-chair Waitley of course accompanies the forensic team on its mission. Of course she has her daughter, the precocious and alarming Theo, at her side. It is mete. Theo is, after all, expected to follow her mother's path. Such a trip, with its insights into collegial collaboration and the ethics of scholarship must be invaluable to her education."
He did make it sound a like a tenured opportunity, Kamele thought. She sat back, delicately slipping her hand out from beneath his.
"Speaking of expanding bases," she murmured pointedly, and had the rare opportunity of seeing him chagrined.
"Your pardon." He inclined his head briefly, then looked into her eyes. "Over-enthusiasm aside, it does answer many difficulties."
She sipped her wine, considering. "It seems to," she said slowly. "But when we come home – Jen Sar, she'd be odder than ever! And an absence will give the Safety Office time to write a recommendation. Without me here to deny it – "
"Yes – exactly so. Which is why you will be canny and schedule her Gigneri immediately you are both returned."
Kamele stared at him. A sister's understanding, indeed! she thought, anger sparking.
"She's too young!" she snapped. "If I won't drug my daughter for expedience, what makes you think that I'll push her into a – "
"Allow me to be utterly sympathetic to your concern," he interrupted. He pulled out his mumu and tapped the screen.
"I put my time to profit while awaiting your return," he said. "And I find that – you may contrive."
"Excuse me?"
"There's a loophole," he explained, putting the mumu on the table before her, pointing at the screen. "Look."
"As recently as fifty years ago, the Gigneri and the First Pair were distinct as rites of passage. First, one is entrusted with the full tale of one's genes. Then, when one has had a bit of time to adjust and to – expand one's base – one fully participates in a celebration of joy, as a new and potent adult." He sat back. "Much more rational than piling every shock and discovery into one event."
Kamele listened to him with one ear while she read his précis.
"You might remember that I told you of my mother's best friend," she murmured, most of her mind on reading. "She came from Alpensward, where they kept to the older ways." She looked up, eyes bright. "She was a secondmother to me, and I miss her still."
"I remember." Jen Sar smiled. "What better tribute to her memory than to induct your daughter into adulthood as she would have wished?"
Kamele nodded, chewing her lip, then handed the mumu back to him. "Send me the cites, if you will."
"Of course." He touched a quick series of keys. "Done."
"Thank you." She reached for another cracker and some cheese.
"When will the committee depart?" Jen Sar asked.
Kamele sighed. "We need to get Hafley's approval, the dean's approval, the directors' approval, then the Bursar's office – you know the procedure. We could have something in two days – or by the end of the semester."
He nodded, looking thoughtful.
"I believe, then, that we must address my topic." He gave her a wry look. "I do know that it is late, but I must plead necessity."
Necessity, as Kamele had learned, was not invoked lightly. For Jen Sar to do so must signal an overwhelming concern.
She nodded, and held out her cup. "Pour, then speak."
He poured, going so far as to refresh his own cup, though the wine must be even more dreadful for him, Kamele thought, than for her. He did not, however, immediately speak, but sat for some few moments, his hands curled 'round his cup, staring into the unsatisfactory depths.
Kamele sipped, and recruited herself to patience.
At last, he looked up.
"Theo has given me what I believe to be the round tale of her last few encounters with the Safety Office," he said slowly. "In addition, this evening I took the liberty of administering a few very small tests of physical reaction." He paused, looking at her.
Kamele nodded for him to continue.
"Based on Theo's report and my own tests, I believe her to be... quite near to that point we had discussed previously, where all of her powers align. In my view of the matter, it would be... tragic for the Safety Office to be allowed to interfere at this juncture. I therefore proposed to Theo, and now to you, that she enroll in a dance class."
"A – dance class," Kamele repeated, blinking at him. Had she drunk that much wine, she wondered? But, no; Jen Sar's points were often oblique. "Please explain."
"Gladly. Dance is a marriage of mind, body, and – soul, if you will. Taking such a class will demonstrate to the Safety Office that you are seeking to treat Theo's 'agility problems.' Indeed, dance is a well-documented therapy for clumsiness and certain so-called 'physical limitations.' "
"It is," Kamele noted, "mid-term. And I'm afraid, my friend, that I am not acquainted with anyone in Dance."
"But I am," Jen Sar said, not altogether surprisingly. "I have this evening been in communication with Visiting Expert of Dance Professor Noni, who tells me that she has room for a novice in her Practical Dance class, and will be pleased to send the student's mother the necessary card."
Kamele shook her head. Jen Sar did meddle, though usually not so blatantly as this. He must, she thought, be very worried.
"If Professor Noni will still agree to include Theo in her class after she is informed of the... uncertainty of her continued attendance," she said slowly, "I'll be pleased to receive the card and to approve the change in my daughter's academic schedule."
"I will relay that message to her." He picked up his mumu, tapped a rapid message, thumbed send, and slipped the device away.
"Thank you, Jen Sar," Kamele said, and smiled when he looked up. "It's late," she added.
"...and neither propriety nor our current circumstances allows me to remain for what is left of the night," he finished lightly, and slid to his feet. "I believe I may repair to my office and get some work done. Do you think you will have the matter with the Chapelia settled by the time I leave the Wall... later today?"
"Yes; I'll take care of it first thing," she promised, slipping off her stool and walking with him to the door. "Was Theo – very alarmed?"
"Curious, rather. Though..." He paused and turned to face her. "I fear that I have made a misstep. She now knows that it's possible to turn off the emitter."
"Oh," Kamele said, feeling slightly giddy, "no!"
"I trust it will take her a few days at least to puzzle out the method."
"A few days – " She looked at him helplessly, then giggled.
"Well," she said. "It ought to keep her out of trouble." She giggled again and shook her head.