CHAPTER 9

Despite his adamant stance that he did not socialize with Faey, he ended up with Tim and Symone after his martial arts class. They ate pizza and studied, which was to say Tim and Jason studied while Symone read another human romance novel. After that, Tim taught Symone how to play ping-ping in the rec room on the first floor as Jason got a little work done. Symone was very agile and had good hand-eye coordination, so she quickly became a viable threat to Tim's ping-pong supremacy.

"This is bullshit," Tim laughed after she took a five point lead on him. "You just learned how to play!"

"Take your beating like a woman," she said tauntingly. "Your serve."

"Well, I heard about it, but I had to come see for myself," Jyslin called from the doorway. She filed into the room, wearing the tank top and shorts she wore to work out, both black. "Do you have something nice picked out for Friday, Jason?" she asked with a sultry smile.

"I'll be ready," he said in a calm yet ominous tone. "I hope you enjoy it. It'll be the first and last date we have."

"Oh, so this is the one that started all this," Symone said with a laugh, putting the paddle down.

"Who are you?" Jyslin asked in Faey.

"I'm Tim's babe," she said with an outrageous grin.

"The one in the collar," Jyslin noted dryly.

"Yup. Two days hanging around Tim and Jason when you're naked makes you want to hang around some more," she said with a malicious grin. "They rocked me," she said breathlessly.

"Symone," Jason said sharply.

"Hey, I'm trying to give you a reputation here," she winked.

"He already has one," Jyslin told him with a grin. "He's that annoying human who the Marines can't beat."

"We didn't have much better luck," Symone laughed in agreement.

"Well, I got what I want, so I'm not going to rub it in," she told him.

"Enjoy it while it lasts," he said dryly.

"Oh, I will, believe me," she told him. "I got my foot in the door. All I have to do now is convince you I'm worth hanging around. Just like her," he said, pointing at Symone.

"Oh, I don't hang out with Jason," she said with an insincere grin. "I hang out with Tim. Jason just happens to be in the same room. And he'll stick to that story," she added with a wink.

"Semantics," Jyslin snorted. "Just admit that all Faey aren't the Imperium, and we won't have any trouble, Jason," she told him. "You don't seem to have any problem with her. Why do you have trouble with me?"

"She doesn't want to have a relationship," he said cooly.

"Not that I didn't try at first," she laughed honestly. "Well, not a relationship, actually. More like a wild night in bed."

"You never said any such thing," he snipped in reply.

"Would you shut up!" she said with a grin. "I'm trying to make you look studly!"

"I'm sure he doesn't appreciate it," Jyslin smiled. "He wants me to go away." She leaned against the doorframe and crossed her arms beneath her breasts. "He's not getting it, though. Friday, he's going out on a date with me. One date. He agreed to behave like a civilized person, and I agreed to be civilized. We're going to have a nice, civilized evening. Dinner, the opera, and an after-opera nightcap. Since we both agreed to be nice, it gives me one evening to convince him to go out with me again. I think I can do it."

"I think you won't," he said cooly.

"Oh, I think you're wrong," she smiled. "She proves that your vaunted ideals aren't as set in stone as you pretend. You take her as an individual, not as a representative of the evil conquering race. I'm going to prove to you that I'm interested in you. Not your politics, not your philosophy, not your positions. And I'm going to teach you that it's alright to be interested in me. Not my politics, not my philosophy, not my positions. I want to be your friend, Jason, and to be honest, I want to be more than that. You're an intelligent, fascinating man. I just have to show you that I'm an intelligent, fascinating woman under my armor. I'm not the Imperium, Jason. I'm Jyslin Shaddale. Until they put the crown on my head, don't blame me for how they do things."

She glanced at Symone, and Jason could feel…something, a fringe of something that passed between them. Were they using telepathy to communicate?

He winced slightly as a sharp pain lanced into his head. The headaches usually didn't come on so quickly.

"You alright, Jayce?" Tim asked, putting down the paddle.

"Just a headache," he said with a negligent wave of his hand, rubbing his temple.

"I thought I told you you should go to the doctor," Tim told him.

"It's stress, Tim," he sighed. "I used to get them all the time when my father got sick."

He felt it ease into that dull ache quickly, which was much more tolerable. "Do you need some pain killer?" Jyslin asked in concern.

"I don't take medicine unless I don't have any other choice," he replied. "It'll pass in a little while. I'll be fine."

"Well, alright, but if it bothers you, go to a doctor," she told him. "I'm going to go get my workout in. I'll pick you up at six on Friday, Jason. I'll see you then."

After she was gone, Jason and Tim exchanged looks. He looked to Symone, his eyes curious. "What was that about?"

"She just came by to see what I was up to, that's all," she grinned. "After I told her that Tim was my guy, she was alright with it. Actually, she prefers it."

"Why?"

"She said that any friend of Jason deserves a Faey for a girlfriend," she winked, then she laughed delightedly.

"I never heard anything," Tim protested.

Symone tapped her head meaningfully.

"Oh. I meant to ask you something, Symone," he prompted.

"What?"

"Well, why do your people even speak?" he asked curiously. "You talk to my mind all the time. Why don't all Faey just do that?"

"Well, first off, because thinking requires a language," she said, sitting on the ping-pong table. "Think about it. If we didn't have a language, how would we form thoughts? Pictures?"

"I never thought of that," Tim admitted.

"I know. It's something of an abstract concept, isn't it?" she winked. "Second, the talent doesn't start to show up and express itself until around puberty. We have to teach our children to speak to communicate with us, and for many, it's a habit that sticks. Faey talk about as often as they send, but it depends on the Faey. Some Faey almost never speak. Some Faey almost never send. It's entirely personal." She held her hand out before her. "When I'm with other Faey, I tend to speak more than send, but that's because I'm not as strong as most other women. I guess I hide my inadequacy by not making it common knowledge. But sometimes we do have to speak," she explained. "Most Faey women have a telapathic range of about three human miles, on the average. Most men have a range of about a mile and a half. I'm not very strong at all," she admitted. "Barely stronger than the average man. I have a range of about two miles. The strongest have a range of like ten miles. Some of the strongest men are stronger than I am," she admitted candidly. "So, if we want to communicate outside our range, we have to use a communicator. Since no machine can receive and decipher telepathy, that means we have to use our voices. Even though we can send, and it is more efficient, we still have a need for our voices and our language."

"Wow, I didn't know that."

"Well, now you do," she smiled. "But that info isn't free, honey. I demand payment."

"What?" he asked in surprise.

She pointed to the floor immediately in front of her. "Come here and curl my toes," she told him with a mischievous leer.

"Oh. I think I can manage that," he grinned, then came around the table and tendered up her payment.

Jason ignored them as they started getting rather involved in their kissing, worrying a little about the upcoming date. He was worried more about how well he would hold onto his ideals than what kind of trouble Jyslin might give him. She was too right, and she kept grinding it into him that she was not the Imperium, that she was not directly responsible for his position. If anything, she was in the same fix as he, for she was stuck in a job she did not want, trying to get where she wanted to go. The commoner Faey were just as much slaves and thralls to the Empress as the humans; only the nobles were truly free. And Symone was going to make it even murkier for him. He did like Symone, and her constant presence these last few days had indeed kind of numbed him to the fact that she was Faey. Then again, she was just so damned likable that he really didn't have much of a defense against her. Nobody did. Despite the abject hatred that many humans had for Faey, even on campus, none of them hated Symone.

"Hands out of her pants in the common room," Jason said without looking up. He didn't have to look up to know what that change in the tone of her cooing hum meant.

"Yes, daddy," Symone taunted. "Let's go up to our room, Tim-Tim," she purred. "I'm feeling a tad hot and bothered."

"How can I say no to the world's most beautiful woman?" he returned.

"Flatterer. Say it again."

Jason tuned them out, and went back to studying.

Friday.

It was the day, the day of the date. But that was going to take place at the end of the day. The problem was, the day got off to a very weird start that, in Jason's mind, was something of a bad omen.

Simply put, when he woke up, he had a message waiting in his panel, sent during the night. It was from the Ministry of Technology itself, and it reported, in flowery language, that the Empire had bought out his patent for his sonic inducer.

Not taken, not assumed control over…bought.

Since it was considered a low-priority technology, the message read, considered for possibilities in hypersonic short-range communications, the rights were purchased for a very modest sum.

Seventy five thousand credits.

Seventy five thousand credits.

For the Ministry of Technology, that was considered a modest sum.

For Jason, it was an absolutely bloody fucking fortune.

With that much money, he could buy a hovercar. Hell, he could buy an older model, used airskimmer, a civilian craft akin to a Cessna. He could buy a truckload of components and toys and set up a killer workshop, or he could even buy a small house in the city. It was a monstrous amount of money for someone who received a weekly stipend of fifty credits. A credit's value was different than the old, unused dollar; a credit was worth about a dollar and a half. In old American money, it was a sum of nearly a hundred and twenty thousand dollars.

That threw off his entire day, even more so than the worry about the impending date did. That date was common knowledge all over the campus, even if the circumstances of it were not. Some thought Jason had finally caved in to the Faey, but not many actually blamed him. After all, it really was only a matter of time before they finally forced him to obey. His weeklong battle with the Marines was entertaining, it gave the humans a little hope and some pride in themselves again, and everyone knew that it eventually would end. He had no concentration in his classes, and he got another one of those stupid headaches during lunch, and it didn't go away for the rest of his time at school. Students gave him words of encouragement as they passed, and a surprisingly large concentration of Army regulars and black-armored Marines who were patrolling the campus gave him teasing smiles and offered to make bets on just how thoroughly Jyslin would own him by midnight.

He was totally disgusted by the end of his last class, which Professor Tia mercifully allowed him to leave from early. They were practicing Faey pronunciation, and since he sounded virtually fluent, she decided that he didn't need to hang around and be bored. He went home and paced nervously in his tiny dorm, then went down to the room's bathroom and took a shower. The shower eased the headache quite a bit, and he felt less surly by the time he went back to his room and did some of his homework, still scattered by both the doom of the impending date and the staggering sum of money that was now residing in the brand new account that had been made for him at the Imperial Bank. The passcodes for the account had been sent to his panel while he was at school, and now he had access to that money. All it took was a thumbprint at any shop or store, or he could visit a branch bank and withdraw hard currency, which for Faey were small plastic coins encoded with their value.

He had no idea what to do with that money. He wasn't even sure he felt right in spending any of it. It was money paid to him by the Imperium. Not only had he not done anything to kick them off Earth, now they were paying him for things that he invented. He had become a part of the system, even if it was absolutley unintentional, the fault of that meddling Lieutenant Lana.

But, on the other hand, since it was absolutely unintentional, that meant that the money was a windfall, not pay. He didn't submit the inducer. He didn't send it off to the Ministry. Lana did. That they had paid to buy the rights to the design meant that it was an occasion of good fortune, not a conscious selling out to the Faey. In that respect, he did have a right to use that money without feeling guiltly about it.

Not that he really knew what to do with it.

He glanced at the clock and cursed. Where was the time going? It was five o'clock, and Jyslin would be there in an hour. He did not want to go, but he made a deal, gave his word, and Jason did not break his word. He changed into the only nice clothes he had, a white long-sleeve dress shirt, the sleeves of which he rolled up past his elbows, since he detested the feel of sleeves on his forearms, a pair of black slacks, and a pair of very old black loafers. A gray tie with geometric designs done in red and white was around his neck, loosened around the undone top button of the shirt, and over that went a simple black vest that was left unbuttoned.

He sat back down again and surfed around on CivNet on his panel. He did have something in mind for that money, and that was an airskimmer. He didn't know how to fly one, but he was sure he could figure it out, or pay for lessons. As long as it was a civilian model, he had every right to buy one. The idea of an airskimmer appealed to him for one simple reason, and that was the fact that it could fly. His father had had a Cessna, but Jason had been forced to sell it when the parking fees became more than his part-time job when he went to school in Michigan could support. Before that, Jason had absolutely loved that plane, and the sense of freedom that came with it. As long as he could afford the gas, Jason could jump in his Cessna and go just about anywhere. Before the parking fees overwhelmed him, he was quite popular with some of the other guys because they'd all pile into his plane and fly places during the weekends. Distance made going somewhere warm and balmy out of the question—a flight to Los Angeles or Florida was a twelve hour journey—but they could go to places like Saint Louis, or Chicago, or Ottowa, somewhere other than the campus of the University of Michigan. There was such a sense of freedom that came with knowing that, at any time, you could chuck a pack into your plane and go virtually anywhere you wanted.

Selling that plane had been one of the low points of his life since his father died. It had been an admission that things couldn't be the same, a realization that he, like his father, could lose control of his life, and a loss of both a feeling of freedom and one of his father's most prized possessions, but there had been no helping it. He'd had a breakdown in Indiana and had to shell out nearly a thousand dollars in repairs, and that had been the death knell that had put him behind. The bills kept mounting up on him, and he'd been forced to sell his beloved plane or avoid having it chained to the tarmac for non-payment of his parking fees down at the county airport. If there was any satisfaction in it at all for him, he sold it to a flight school at the airport, who allowed him to borrow it from time to time without charging him for its use. Old Sam down at the airport understood the jam he was in, and sympathized with him and the pain it caused him to have to sell it. All he had to pay for was the fuel and the parking fees of the airport where he landed if it wasn't that one. They wanted him to come work for them on weekends as a flight instructor, but that required getting certifications that he didn't have the time to get, because of the demands of school and football.

The airskimmer wouldn't be his dad's old Cessna, but it would be the same thing, the sense of freedom that he'd once had, and it would make him happy. He'd have to find out where he could keep it, and pay for the parking fees, but he figured he could make enough money between his stipend and the unofficial work he got playing piano down at Patty O's to cover those fees. This time, he would not lose his plane. He'd just have to find an exceeding cheap airskimmer and put back enough money to cover the fees. He could do some of the maintenance on it himself, since the schematics of an airskimmer were easily obtainable on CivNet, and he'd probably get a maintenance manual with the airskimmer.

That sense of freedom would mean a great deal to him. In this damned mouse trap he was in now, it would be one of the very few things that would make him feel free.

Probably for the first time ever, Jyslin knocked on his door. Somehow, he just knew it was her. It opened without him calling, and she stepped inside. He glanced at her, then looked back when her appearance struck him like a hammer. She was stunning! She wore a sleek, elegantly simple gown made of what looked like liquid gold, with threads so fine that he couldn't see their weaving. Each thread was burnished, and the effect was a radiant gown of a wondrous golden color that both clashed against and accented her blue skin in an amazing manner, as well as perfectly displaying her sensual, voluptuous hips, slender waist, and her full breasts. It had two slender straps that attached to the bodice of the moderately low cut neckline and flowed over her shoulders, with a sloped hem that rose to the knee of her left leg yet dipped to the ankle of her right leg. It didn't sparkle in the light of his dorm room, it seemed to radiate a warm light that was like an aura that drew every eye to her, drew his eye to the fact that she was a vision of absolute, shockingly feminine beauty. It was the first time he'd thought of her as feminine. She was definitely a woman, but never acted feminine. That gown made her look gorgeous. She had her hair combed back away from her face, held by a pair of elegantly simple silver barettes over each slender, pointed ear, with a gold chain woven into her auburn hair that ran just above the hairline over her forehead. She had on a pair of simple diamond (or some clear crystal) earrings, and a single gold chain around her neck with no amulet or pendant, an adornment of elegant simplicity that only heightened his awareness of her exceptional beauty.

She smiled at his surprised and nearly awed gaze. "You like?" she asked in Faey, quite demurely, turning this way and that so he could admire her from all angles. "I bought it this morning. It cost me a month's pay, but it was worth it."

"You're beautiful," he said with utter honesty. There was no way he could lie to her about that.

She gave him a wonderful smile. "Stand up. Let me see." He did so, and she put a finger to her chin as she appraised his appearance. "Well, you make slouchy look chic, Jason. I like it."

"It's all I have," he admitted.

"Well, it suits you. The vest is definitely a pefect touch." She stepped up and grabbed his tie, tightening it just a little, smiling up into his blue eyes. "I'm a little early. I wanted to make sure you weren't wearing a tutu or something," she said with a wink.

"I gave my word."

"I'm starting to understand how seriously you take that," she told him.

"A month's pay?" he asked, finally realizing what she'd said.

"Wasn't it worth it?" she asked, turning around slowly for him, modelling her gown with a mysterious smile.

"Jyslin, you shouldn't have done that," he said disapprovingly. "Not for me."

"I say you're worth it. Prove me wrong," she said challengingly.

"You bought a dress that cost you a month's pay for one date," he said bluntly.

"True. But it was worth every credit for that look you gave me when I came in," she smiled. "Don't worry about me, Jason. I'm very tight with money, I had plenty held back. I could afford it." She put her hands on his shoulders. "Now, since you're ready to go, we might as well get started. I have a limousine waiting outside for us."

"A limo!" he protested.

"Hush," she said with a light, amused smile, putting two fingers over his lips.

"But that's too expensive!" he said loudly when she moved her hand.

"I told you, don't worry about the money," she told him firmly. "I haven't so much as bought a new pair of shoes for a year, Jason. I have the money."

"But—"

"There is no but," she said, silencing him again with two fingers to his lips. "It's my money, and I can spend it any way I please. I wanted to look good for you, so I bought the dress. I wanted us to not worry about driving, so I hired a limo. Well I also wanted us to get around in style," she added with a smile. "I'm not trying to impress you with my vast riches," she winked. "I bought the dress and hired the limo because I wanted to, not to impress you."

"I don't like it too much, Jyslin," he told her honestly. "You shouldn't have spent so much money. I'm not worth that much."

She laughed delightedly. "Jason, hon, I don't have enough in my bank account to cover what I think you're worth."

Jason flushed slightly, but said nothing more on the subject. There was little that he could say, or at least say without starting a fight. He didn't want her to spend so much on him, invest in him, because he didn't want to pursue a relationship. If he had his way, there would be virtually no contact between them after tonight. If that happened, then she would have spent all that money on the dress, the limo, the dinner, the opera, all of it for nothing. If he didn't like Jyslin so much, maybe he would feel differently. It would be easy to ignore the amount of money she'd shelled out if he didn't care about how it might put her into a financial bind.

She slid the hand on his shoulder down his arm, then took a gentle grip on the back of his hand. "Now, since we're both ready, why don't we just go ahead and go on?" she asked. "If we get to Copeland's early, we can get our pick of tables."

"I, alright," he said quietly. He almost didn't want to go through with this. Not because he was worried that she was going to be a pain, he was more afraid of spending time with her and giving her that much more time and opportunity to wear down his defenses.

She smiled slyly. "Don't worry about it," she said with a wink. "I don't need extra time."

He gave her a hard, flat look.

She put up her hands. "I also didn't need telepathy to see that," she told him. "You forget, I know you know when we're doing that. Do you think I'm fool enough to ruin this date by doing the one thing you can't stand?"

She was right, of course. Damned Jyslin, she always seemed to be right!

"Now, come on, Jason," she said. "Let's get started."

He wasn't entirely sure what to expect on this date, and he wasn't sure about what was going to happen. They were going to be going to a Faey opera, and that meant that the odds were that there would be many Faey there. It said much that Jyslin was willing to bring him to a function that would be filled with her own people, where he would have the opportunity to make a fool out of her, humiliate her, in front of more than just her Marine squad. He hoped that it wasn't going to be too long. He had no real interest in opera, and even less interest for a Faey opera, and he didn't want to be bored stiff. Before and after that, he knew, Jyslin would want to talk. Talk over dinner, talk over the nightcap, talk in the limo. He wasn't quite sure what she would want to talk about, but he knew it was coming.

And that was probably the greatest danger. He couldn't get too close to her, couldn't let her get herself too close to him, or she was going to end up like another Symone, a Faey that he liked, and allowed himself to like too much. They were Faey, they were the enemy, and he should not be socializing with the enemy. But Symone wasn't an enemy in his eyes anymore, he had to admit that to himself. He had gotten to know her, and had accepted her because he felt that she was truly a friend. She liked him, he liked her. He could never imagine Symone on the other side of a battlefield, pointing a plasma rifle at him. He knew that were they actually fighting each other, she would, but he just couldn't imagine it. Then again, he really couldn't imagine Symone pointing a plasma rifle at anyone. If there was ever a Faey who had been utterly wronged when they assigned jobs to Faey conscripts, it was Symone. Symone didn't have the temperament to be a soldier, because she would rather go out and have a beer with the enemy than try to kill him.

The limo was a stretch one, but not too large. Jyslin opened the door for him and gave him a sly smile, waving him in, and he couldn't really say anything. He didn't want to prolong this, because he noticed that quite a few people were watching from discrete distances. Many knew about this date, and he didn't want to cause a scene. He wanted to get himself, Jyslin, and the limo out of there. She got him with him and closed the door, and the black limo pulled away from the curb.

"So," she said, leaning against the side of the limo and smiling at him. "Now comes all that boring conversation."

It turned out to be not boring at all, which Jason both cursed and enjoyed. He didn't want to get to know her, but he found her to be a fascinating and engaging woman. He found out that she was born on a Faey mining colony called Rokan IV, which was nothing but a rock orbiting a blue star. It was enclosed in domes, and her parents were both miners. It surprised him that Faey actually mined, but he found out from her that Faey did just about every job that humans did. There were Faey farmers, miners, servants, factory workers, the whole gambit. They didn't make their conquered races do all the dirty and dangerous jobs, they did the jobs for which they were qualified. Faey who weren't too bright ended up in those kinds of jobs. But her father was definitely smart, as he was one of the mine's engineers, while her mother worked as a secretary in the office of the mining company. She grew up in a sterile world of steel and glass, with no plants, no open air. She stayed there until she was twelve, and then her father was transferred to an arctic planet called Novira IX. Because of that, Jyslin now absolutely detested cold weather. They where there until she reached the official adult age of twenty five, when she was required by Faey law to serve five years in the military. She'd always been a very strong telepath, and since she couldn't find any open slots in engineering school, she ended up in the Marines.

While she grew up, she had what she called a normal childhood. Her parents loved her, and since she was an only child, they may have spoiled her just a little bit. She grew up with many friends, and had always been popular in school because she was funny and she was smart. To Faey, smart kids were as popular in school as attractive humans were in human schools. Since most Faey were handsome or pretty, physical appearance wasn't as important to them as it was to humans. She'd expressed her telepathic powers at a very young age, a sign of her impressive power, and that was also a reason why she was so popular in school. Telepathic power was the basic measuring stick by which all Faey compared themselves to one another. While the other kids were only just starting to express, she had already gained a grasp of the basics.

Telepathy was amazing and formidable to Jason, but it was just normal to Jyslin. They had courses in high school that taught telepathic skills like a human would have a math or chemistry class, classes that Jyslin took when she was still four years younger than most of the other people in the class. By the time all her friends were just starting Telepathy I, she had received her certificate proclaiming her to be a competent telepath. Telepathy was an innate power, but it didn't come with an innate ability to use it. There were quite a few skills that a telepath had to learn, skills to protect their own minds and deal with the constant noise of background thoughts that the non-telepathic races gave off. They had to learn how to send their thoughts to others, or just send as they called it, which was itself an art form more than a skill. They had to learn the basics of how to defend themselves against a telepathic attack, how to maintain a defense against unwanted intrusion while at the same time allowing others to be able to send to them, which was a delicate skill that took quite a bit of practice to learn. They also had to learn how to attack other minds. It seemed odd to Jason that they taught their children how to use their power as a weapon against other Faey, but then he realized that they could use those same attacking techniques against non-telepathic creatures, and they also were simply formally training them in something that they may be required to do later in life in case they ever found themselves in a fight with another Faey. Humans brawled. Faey battled on the mindscape of telepathic power.

She reached her age of majority on that frozen rock, and was conscripted for her mandatory five years of military service. She'd tried to get into engineering, since she had the grades and had made the scores on the test for it, but that was a non-combat position, and all the slots were bought by nobles and the few rich commoners for their children. Given that she was such a strong telepath, that made her high on the list for the Marines. They engaged in ship to ship combat, and those close quarters gave the telepathic Faey a major advantage. They were also usually the first armed force to hit the ground, just like the American Marines had been. First in, last out, that was their motto. They needed powerful telepaths who could find and try to mentally dominate the initial opposition, opposition who probably had anti-telepathy measures in place to try to dampen that advantage if they were expecting the Faey.

Of course, she wouldn't tell him what those measures were, and since he'd never found anything like that on CivNet—and he'd looked—it was something he was best off simply dropping.

She'd went through boot camp on homeworld, where it was warm, and had been a trooper for two years. She'd been posted on ships for six months, had occupied a disputed planet called Elvar III, one of the two systems that the Faey and the Skaa were fighting over. She'd only seen one battle, and it was little more than a skirmish between her squad and five Skaa guerillas. She'd had real armor then, and though the Skaa's Neutron weaponry was formidable, the Adamantium alloy armor she'd had had protected her from a hit on her left shoulder. Adamantium was one of the strongest metal alloys known, and it was dreadfully expensive. As a front-line unit, she'd been issued that armor, and it saved her from having her entire left arm and shoulder surgically replaced with bionics.

That was one of the few places where he could not fault the Imperium. When it came to protecting its soldiers, they did not play.

After a year rotating on and off Elvar III, she was reassigned to Terra. And here she was. "I was up in New York for a while, but it was too damned cold," she told him as the waiter set their food down before them. She ordered Cajun shrimp, a Copeland's specialty, and he had blackened steak. Faey had this thing for seafood, he'd noticed from their television. They'd gotten a table out on the patio, his favorite place to sit, and they sat there in view of the pedestrians on the sidewalk and the occupants of the cars. This bothered him a little bit, but when she found out he loved sitting on the patio, she wouldn't sit anywhere else. "The squad got reassigned here to New Orleans about two months ago, thank the gods," she sighed. "If I had to go through one more winter slogging through snow, I was going to scream."

"I hate heat," he grunted. "I grew up where it's usually cold."

"Oh? Tell me about it," she said as she took her first bite.

He knew he shouldn't tell her anything, but she had told him about her, and he felt it only fair to reciprocate. He was born on an airplane somewhere over the Atlantic ocean twenty two years ago, en route from Boston to Ramstein Air Force Base, in Germany. In a way, he'd been born between nations, and his mother always joked that he was one of a very few citizens of the world instead of a nation. His father was a fighter pilot in the Air Force, and his mother was a music teacher. He was a true military brat, spending the first two years in Germany, then moving for a year in Korea, then a year in Alaska, then they moved to Japan when he was five. They were there for four years, the longest they'd ever stayed in one place, and that was where his father had fallen in love with martial arts. In four short years, his father became a black belt in four different martial arts. He didn't see his father much for those four years, but his mother just smiled and told him that he was doing something he loved to do.

Jason had been there long enough to speak fairly decent Japanese, but it had been so long since he'd used it, he felt he'd probably forgotten it by now. He could still remember the kanji and the two phonetic writing systems, hiragana and katakana, though. Strange, sometimes, how memory worked.

His father was a bit disappointed when they left Japan, going back to America. In a way, though, it was probably necessary, for their only son could barely speak English. He'd grown up speaking French to his mother and whatever the local language was for everyone else, speaking a mixture of English and French only with his father. He'd caught on quickly enough, but getting rid of his accent took nearly three years. They were stationed in Washington state for two years, then went back to Alaska for another year.

It was in Alaska, just a couple of weeks after he turned twelve, when his mother was killed in an auto accident. His father resigned from the Air Force soon afterward and moved them back to the ancestral home, in a little town northwest of Portland, Maine, called Durham. He started a flight instructor's school using his Cessna, earned a black belt and the credentials to open his own martial arts school, and Jason had to get used to living in one place. It wasn't that bad, actually. He made friends in school, stayed in one school for more than a couple of years, and everyone spoke the same language. He started getting interested in electronics about then, but he was determined to get into the Air Force Academy and be a fighter pilot, just like his father, so he buckled down in school and started bringing his grades up to the point where they'd consider him. He started playing soccer and football, and found out that he was rather good at sports, thanks to all the martial arts instruction that his father gave him.

Then his father got sick, and eventually died. Jason was sixteen at the time, and he had no aunts or uncles—both his parents were only children—and all four of his grandparents had already passed away. Instead of going into a foster family and selling the house, he won his emancipation in court by proving he was mature enough to live on his own. The inheritance he got wasn't that much, but it was enough to pay for him to get through high school without having to work, but it wasn't enough to get him through college. Luckily for him, though, the University of Michigan offered him a scholarship to play football, which he got because a scout had come to watch a game he played in, but was actually there to scout the quarterback of the opposing team.

It hadn't been easy, but Jason sold the house and moved to Michigan. The money he got from the house was enough to let him buy a car and support him as he went through college without having to work. He elected for a double major of electronics engineering and computer science, since the scholarship would pay for five years of college and he was more than willing to take summer classes. He did like to play football, but he didn't apply himself in football as much as he could have, and as a result ended up as a third-string safety and a special teams cover player. He was there for the education, not the football.

"That drove my coaches crazy," he admitted to her as he picked at his salad. Jason always ate his salad last, as for him it was the dessert. "They knew I was better than I played, but since I was always so involved with my classes, I just didn't have the time to develop my skills. Coach Dawson always told me that if I'd give him three months, he could make me a starter. He even told me that I might even be good enough to play in the NFL, but I just wasn't interested."

"It wasn't right for you to hold back on your team like that," she said critically.

"I never held back," he said bluntly. "I just didn't have as much experience as they did. Coach Dawson said that it was raw physical ability that let me play on their level. If I'd have had the time to learn the nuances of the game, I could have been a starter."

"Did you want to be?"

"Not really," he admitted. "I was there to learn, not to play."

"Well, what happened after that?"

"Nothing," he said grimly. "Your ships arrived just when I started my senior year. That put me in limbo for nearly a year as they tested everyone. After I was tested, I was sent to Boston, and after one semester, they moved me down here."

"And here we are," she said carefully, obviously seeking to avoid an argument. "Where is your car at?" she asked curiously.

"Still in Michigan," he growled. "They wouldn't let me bring it."

"Why not?"

"I have no idea. I just know that if it hasn't been towed away, it's still sitting in the student parking lot of the dorm up in Michigan."

"Did they pay you for it?"

He gave her a flat look. "You seem to fail to grasp the situation for humans. When they shipped me to Boston, I had one suitcase full of clothes. That's all. They made me leave everything else behind. Photo albums of my family, personal heirlooms, all my things, I couldn't bring any of it. Only clothes."

She frowned. "That's not right," she declared. "They shouldn't have done that."

"There are all sorts of things that they shouldn't do, but they did," he told her. "A friend of mine in Maine told me that a squad of Faey troopers came to her house, and while one of them asked her questions, the rest ransacked it. They took everything of value, even the silverware. Then they told her if she said anything, they'd come back and burn out her brain and make her a vegetable."