Thursday, March 7, 2024

2 cobra 1

 I got whimsical last night and finished the chapter I had started of this; as Cobra is fairly episodic, even though this one is tied by a theme, I thought I'd post it in lieu of much else being complete. I've probably got half a book worth of first to fourth chapters of things started and not got far yet; I need to settle to something.


Chapter 1

 

Tarquin Smith delicately sniffed, and appreciated the bouquet of the rather decent brandy I had acquired. Don’t ask; I do the odd pro bono case, and one had provided benefits as well as the data I was lifting for Dr. Elizabeth Barnard.

“I hear that Harry Schenk is running for senator,” he said, mildly.

Harry Schenk, that’s our mayor, no contacts with organised crime, merely married to a yakuza boss’s daughter. So sorry, honourable Japanese biznessman’s daughter. The sort of Japanese businessman father who has tattoos on his back, and likes the numbers ‘eight-nine-three.’ A worthless hand in a Japanese game, and a suitable name. In Japanese? Ya-ku-sa.

“Yes, I heard that, too,” I said, neutrally.

Our politics got some reforms along with the education last time we had more than half of congress who couldn’t count their braincells on the fingers of one hand. It was considered that senators voted in by their own states had too much chance of local shenanigans, which is of course true; so now every three states, or so, is arranged into a Senatorium, and returns five senators, which is supposed to do away with those local pressures.  Of course, where you have a powerful lot of backers cross states, it doesn’t work, but the theory is good. Our Senatorium was called West Coast, and was the whole rotten ribbon, Washington, Oregon, and California.

Tarquin smiled.

“The Black Rose Yakuza gumi has ties in California and a toe hold in Oregon,” he said.

“What do you want, the whole ruddy clan taken down?” I asked, facetiously. He was still smiling. “You can’t be serious!”

“We feel that there are half a dozen key men. And though killing them is the main thing, we want the rest of the clan to know that their untouchable top echelon is very touchable indeed.”

“It had better pay well,” I said.

“Ten per cent of all their assets seized as a result of their criminal activities being revealed,” said Tarquin.

“And ten per cent of any assets seized from others which comes out in relation to that,” I said. I wouldn’t be able to show all their criminal activities, after all.

“Deal,” said Tarquin, crisply.

Ever had a feeling you’ve been played?

It’s lucky for Tarquin that I actually like him.

 

 

I don’t normally like explosives; too indiscriminate. But sometimes the medium is the message, and Tarquin, who is as close to a buddy of mine as any G-man might be, wanted the message loud and clear.

I bet you’re thinking that I went out to get some C8 to make a shaped charge to deliver via some kind of cleaning bot, or broke in to wire it up in the mark’s apartment. Either one suits someone for whom loud bangs are the execution method of choice.  Me, I figure that such things are too full of the modus operandi of the assassin, and I like to keep enough distance not to leave my operational finger prints all over a job.

Tarquin wanted Akira Fukuhama-san as the start. A nephew of our mayor’s father-in-law, and operating out of Los Angeles.  Working upwards, I was to head for Kenichi Fukuhama, the said father-in-law, and see if the guvmint could cut a deal with him before I sanctioned him. A risky game, but Tarquin wanted the message to go home. There was, after all, no point in electoral reform if organised crime made a mockery of it.  I told Tarquin he’d been watching too many flat-screen black and white movies again and thought he was Elliott Ness. He told me he had no idea what I meant.

Like hell he had no idea what I meant.

Well, we share a taste for old books and flat screen shows as well as for Gilbert and Sullivan, so I was pretty sure he knew what I meant. But a guy is entitled to hold out, I suppose.

I suppose I should be flattered.

Elliott Ness had a whole team of Untouchables. Tarquin had given me a list of the half dozen or or so that he wanted wiped out, and their spheres of influence taken down; and I got to do it alone. Well, with the aid of my wife.

Willow had become an accomplished Gurfer, Guerilla Surfer, and had the street name ‘Neon Flower.’  It’s a tribute to an old music group called ‘Beast in Black.’  She can access pretty much any surveillance device you can imagine, as well as slipping through the internet like an Olympic skiier down a nursery slope. We worked well together, and she’d do her research thoroughly via the net whilst I looked over every apartment occupied by the quarry, every habit, every lifestyle, every hobby.

But this first one, Tarquin wanted to get their attention.

 

And for that, I wanted explosives.

And I decided that low tech would do the job very nicely, thank you, as well as being less easy to trace.

I went to Portland on the elevated bullet train to buy a shotgun. I was a bit gormless in the shop, and mentioned a problem I had with bears. This got me a nice big-bore shotgun.  I bought some cartridges and a box of 45 calibre.

Why?

Well, you can’t buy bullets singly, and I needed a detonator.

Back home, in Seattle, I found a hardware store, where I bought a broom, and a couple of bits of pipe. They’ve gone back to metal ones these days to reduce the microplastics.                        

So, the pipes welded together made the body of the bomb; the 45 in the end to detonate on impact, and a piece of the broom handle at the other end of the bomb which would both act as a stabiliser, like the stick in a firework, and to fit down the smoothbore barrel as the firing mechanism for my home-made grenade launcher.

Real low tech; back to the 20th century.

If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.

The mark-one human skull still cracks when assaulted by the mark-one big rock.  Of course, nowadays the mark-one human skull may well have upgrades, like sub-dermal armour. However, the mark-one human skull is a delicate thing, and too much armour can cause more problems than it solves... since the mark-one human skull attaches to the mark-one human spine, which is distressingly easily damaged. And there’s a little process on one vertebra which, if broken, means death if not treated. Anyone who has done parachute training should know about this, as it’s the most common way this bone is broken. And brain-dead paratroops who are tough men who can ignore a little headache tend to end up dead-dead.

Which may seem irrelevant, but my point is, reliance on high technology can be as much of a liability as it is a solver of problems. And sometimes, simple is best.

 

And Akira Fukuhama was about to be hit with a slight upgrade on the proverbial blunt instrument. With added explosives.

 

However, I am jumping in to the middle, indeed, almost the end.

Those of you who know me are well aware that I consider causing collateral damage to be amateurish. I pride myself on taking down my target and only my target. And that means that I tend to take longer than some trigger-happy button man.

But button men are a dime a dozen. If you want a job done properly, get an expert, pay for his expertise at a fair rate, and expect excellence over speed.

I had Willow run me a superficial internet search on Akira, and discover what his interests were. Akira was an acknowledged expert on puppetry; not just Japanese puppetry, but western marionettes as well. That he also ran a number of bunraku brothels, puppet brothels, where the poor girls were controlled by headware implants into fulfilling their customers’ dreams, was probably inevitable.

It would almost have been too easy to have reprogrammed one of the girls to kill him, and perhaps poetic as well; but then, she would have been collateral.

Equally, I might have sent him a puppet, with a query, as if from a collector, and detonated a bomb inside; but I’d have to guarantee he was alone, because leaving it with him too long would have him find any explosives. If, that is, he didn’t have a chem sniffer for all his mail, as anyone sensible does.

Yes, of course Willow and I have such things. Also monofilament net curtains to bounce back missiles. The only house on Queen Anne heights to have net curtains outside the windows.  I claim it’s mosquito bar, and everyone nods, wisely. It works against mosquitoes too. The windows are armoured glass.

What? Do you think I am not going to protect all that is dear to me? You’ll be saying next that it’s paranoia to have a pop-up minigun in the gate posts.

And just in case, we have a whole network of tunnels to other places.

That, however, is incidental.

We jandered into Los Angeles off the elevated railway, which joins up with the BART, or Bay-Area Rapid Transit, which was revamped about the time the El was conceived, and wonder of wonders, the linkage actually worked. Sometimes having an uplifted ape for a mayor is an advantage; less political interference in public projects, and the mayor can be distracted with a banana, making him much cheaper than our mayor, who only takes bribes big enough to make the bulge in his pocket resemble a priapic whale. I had to agree with Tarquin;  Harry Schenk would not be a good senator.

 

 

The itinerant shadow-puppet operator and the series of lenses to project his art had cost a small fortune. Worth every penny, mind you. I was taking an idea from an old Chinese story where the shadow of a man walking behind a screen was nothing more than the cardboard cuttout of some celebrated immortal projected by a lamp, blowing in the wind. I wanted that damned Yakusa to sent his wife and children out of the room; and the shadow of a figure on the outer shoji screen of his garden should achieve that objective.

I had picked a tea-house as my headquarters for the hit; it leased rooms upstairs by the hour, and I turned up with my wife, heavily muffled, and my ‘servant.’ That was the puppeteer.  And a bunraku puppet to bring in? I had carried that in, dressed in women’s outer clothing, as if I had an unconscious second partner for my assignation; the tea-house owner did not turn a hair.

I might just set fire to the place a little bit on my way out.

I had scouted the place well before picking it. Akira Fukuhama had his house covered from guzzle to zorch, as the saying goes; a stone wall around his garden, with razor wire on top of it, electrified lines as well, and a series of infra-red sensors attached to pop-up miniguns. The teahouse overlooked it, to be sure, but anyone putting any kind of ladder over the wall was doomed to be filled fuller of holes than a Swiss cheese. But there was an operational flaw in his defences with regards to passing over the wall, which I tested by flying a drone over. There was a gap between those sensors guarding against flying over the wall, and those protecting from flying objects. If carefully set up, I could do all I wanted. Why not fly in a drone full of explosives? Because drones are numbered, in case of this very use of them. And yes, I could build my own, but the other solution was good to go.

First, to fire a heavy dart into a beautiful almond tree in the garden, attached to a loose line. A heavier line would make a zip line.

Down that zipline descended a human-sized bunraku puppet. He was attached by a noose round his neck at one end, and by his feet at the other end, on a piece of guncotton which should burn away after he passed through the narrow corridor above the wall, making his feet fall.

So, Hanged Harigata slid down on the noose to his neck, which was more securely attached than usual.  Harigata means ‘Man emulator.’ It’s what the Japanese call a dildo. It tickled my sense of humour, anyway. He fetched up against the dart, looking for all the world as if he dangled from the branch where it was lodged.

 

If Akira Fukuhama ran true to type, he would almost certainly turn out his own lights when he had shooed out his family after he saw the shadow, and step out into the garden, ready to confront an assassin. You couldn’t fault his personal courage.

The hanged bunraku puppet resembling him should then get his attention; and he would wonder, briefly, if it was this which had looked like a figure projected onto the screen.

He would have to be remarkable not to at least take a step towards the hanged puppet.  But he might take only a step. So filling the thing with explosives might not work. Hence the brute-force, but aimed method. One step would bring him to a point where I could bring the side wall down on him. And it was high, thick, and very solid.

And it should produce plenty of shrapnel in terms of broken stone and concrete fragments. If he survived the blast, which was doubtful, he would likely bleed out from wounds.

Of course, things can go wrong, and I had a sniper’s rifle in case he showed signs of being distressingly alive.

 

My puppet-master set up his lamp, trembling as he did so.  I had done all the math on the optics, to work out how big his puppet needed to be in order to project at human size on the shoji screen; I was moderately pleased with myself for this level of mathematical expertise.  I thought that perhaps I did deserve that emeritus degree after all. I am good when I have a practical purpose; it’s just the application of academe which makes me shaky.

And that wasn’t all that was shaky.

“Keep it steady, man, your shadow has the shakes,” I snarled at my little puppeteer. I had had enough problems with him wanting to make the figure fanciful, and with coloured cellophane to make fantastical clothes. I could do without him getting creative, and I could do without him getting cold feet as well. He gave a little whinny of fear.

“You’ll be leaving before it gets noisy,” I said.  I only needed him to make the movements realistic; once the shadow had passed across the screen, he could go.

He seemed to pull himself together, and manipulated his cardboard figure.

The shadow slunk onto the shoji, exactly as it was supposed to do.  It was about twenty seconds before the light inside went off; and the shadow froze.

This was actually my puppeteer freezing in fright, and then the shadowy figure dropped, as he dropped the sticks.

“You can get the hell out, now,” I said.

He fled without needing a second invitation. Willow thoughtfully stowed the puppet, turned of the lamp, and stowed that, too. One never knew if we might need it again. And Willow had been watching how he did it.

A darker shadow slid out of the now dark house; ambient light flashed on the katana he carried. He was looking cautiously for the fellow who had realised his shadow had given him away and who must have dropped below the level of the veranda. Really, our puppeteer’s panic had worked out rather well.

I heard the hiss of breath as Akira Fukuhama saw the hanged man, his own features painted on the mask-like face, the red makeup indicating a villain.

He took an involuntary step nearer the tree.

I fired.

I could hardly miss: I was aiming at a wall.

The explosion was actually quite impressive; I had not expected it to be quite so extensive. The wall disintegrated.

I waited for the dust to settle, and scoped out the body with my infra-red rifle sight.

It was starting to cool measurably, if not visibly yet; my scope told me it was below 37⁰C, which meant that Akira Fukuhama had probably come down with a very nasty case of death.

Willow and I slipped out of a back door. It might take the proprietor a while to notice that his establishment was on fire; but there was nobody left upstairs. Going to each room and whispering, ‘Police raid!’ had taken care of that.

We returned to our rooming house and were seen at dinner, if anyone cared.

The gumi would be watching every way out of the city, of course; but only an amateur leaves in a hurried manner.

My wife and I would spend a day or two sight-seeing, and then return the way we had came.

 

Wednesday, March 6, 2024

And speaking of Simon, and Castamir...

here's a taster with a Dwarven drinking song. A bit rough as yet, but you have to understand that Castamir made a free translation for everyone as I doubt anyone speaks Dwarven.

No?  didn't think so. 

 

 

Dwarven drinking song

 

Raise your cups my brothers

Let the mead keep flowing

We have foes to fight

Feel our axes bite

And our runestones glowing

 

Drink to death or glory

Fill your horns for drinking

To our victories

Through eternity

And our foemen slinking

 

Deeply drink, my brothers

Let the mead flow steady

As each axe drinks blood

Foemen hewn like wood

By our bright steel deadly

 

 

Tuesday, March 5, 2024

fan art for Simon

 So, there's this lovely bloke called Seamus, aka Eshtan, find him here: https://creator.nightcafe.studio/u/Seamus_H_7 who read 'The Unexpected Demon' and has created some fan art - he posted the slight bishes as well as the near perfect one.  

isn't it gorgeous? it encapsulates that love at first sight thing.  Eshtan has made Simon a present of these pics, because he's a very generous guy - only I am not sure that I could expand this for the paramaters of a book cover.  I did my own messing about [I'll show you presently] but Simon and I were deeply touched. 

 

I love his surprise in this one!

this one very much encapsulates Chessina's essential innocence and air of being untouched by the evil she has lived with.

AI has a tendency to mess with the descriptions of two people - giving Castamir red eyes in several, and here, giving him tiny horns all over his head. In a way, the poses in this one are the best though.

 

So, I tried to come up with something in the 9:16 format, which is close and takes least sodding about, but in the end, I picked one of Castamir I was working on for the evil elves [and this has stimulated Simon no end, he was sitting up in bed with pencil and notebook scribbling]  so I thank Eshtan for that too! 

Anyway, this is what I did:


took this, airbrushed out birds and rocks, so I could make a whole background grey

made some swirling smoke

got a Chessina I liked - funnily enough the free engine did this better. When I had her enlarged I used another image to touch up her face and another to add a raised hand 




I regret there's no eye contact, but we can see both faces, she's looking around in confusion and fear and Castamir is in a slightly bemused state   


Anyway, I have an image or two which might prove useful, and a heap that probably won't, AI hates combining two people in an image if not actually romantically involved in the pic.

Go give Seamus's work a look - I'm on the same site as CardinalBiggles https://creator.nightcafe.studio/game/V03Yu5YPIR8P9CMqG4Ub/entry/Q1foNFUA9WfCyBaJK3kD?ru=CardinalBiggles


Wednesday, February 28, 2024

A Cavalier approach to Murder is now finally live

 

At long last! the Civil War [ours not American] branch of the De Curtney family has its debut in murder solving.
 
I had problems over the lettering in the plan of the house; but finally they are satisfied 

Monday, February 12, 2024

The Absent Assassin 1

 another Quester story - I'm a good few chapters ahead which is just as well as I've not been doing too well.

I hope you will all enjoy exploring a bit more of Quester's rather watery world.

 

The Absent Assassin

 

Chapter 1

 

“So why does the Empire even need assassins?” asked Kiliana. “Isn’t there rule of law?”

Quester sighed.

“Yes... and no,” he said. “I... would prefer that there was no need for Assassins. Or the Purge. Or the Annihilation. I am sure that it pains the Blessed Abe. But there is a need to make sure that wrong thinking and Heresy are stamped out; it was wrong thinking which brought about the Cataclysm in the first place.  In the days in which the Blessed Abe, our God-Hero, walked on the earth, you might have walked dry-shod clear from Jinnya isles, which were a mountain range, to the Imperial mainland. And down south to the Chilbrasil archipeligo.”

“That seems incredible,” said Kiliana.

“The Cataclysm tore the earth apart as well as all the ice melting. The people of the time were caught between fire and water as many volcanoes erupted, and when the tattered remains of the first hussars got together and formed a government in the name of the Blessed Abe, they swore that they would not permit the false thinking to cause such trouble again, and they banned all religions which could not produce a photograph of their gods, and wiped out those who ignored the warnings, many of whom had been wealthy enough to retire to their own havens. Those havens became the seats of new growth. Then the Commutants set off terrible devices, some of which aided the volcanic dust in putting a stop to the heating of the earth; but most of them failed, for the Blessed Abe willed it so, and the only people they harmed were themselves; and still they believe themselves the chosen of Commin and his demons, Starl-in and Pyut-in, and they cause much trouble. But,” he sighed, “Though our own Hussars, not at first High Bred, took the rest of the world under the loving aegis of the God-Hero, at times they want independence and cause trouble. And it cannot be allowed, lest they start more cataclysm.”

“You make me understand it, Leo,” said Kiliana. “I’ve never had it explained so clearly before.  And I know so little!”

“You will learn, my child,” said Quester.  “There are four types of education, and a Justiciar covers all of them, the lowest the least.”

“And what are they?” asked Kiliana.

“The lowest is the vocational skill most people learn,” said Quester. “Even as you have learned to cook well, and make simple medicines from your time with the comfort-bringing auxillia. As I am sure you are aware, unless the Empire chooses to take a child or adolescent for training to higher position, everyone follows the trade of their father, unless they choose to join the militia instead. Yes, there are female militia units.  They tend to form whole units because it’s easier from the point of view of supplies.”

“People in the militia follow their fathers but the girls don’t all join the cooker-and-hooker units,” said Kiliana.

“There are other auxilia trades, as well as marrying other soldiers,” said Quester.  “And some offspring of the military return to their grandsire’s trades as it is learning by doing.  I’m trying to tell you about the three branches of academic learning that you need to know,” he added, testily.

“I’m sorry, Leo,” said Kiliana. “I like to know how and why things work.”

He nodded.

“I know; but the freighter will be here for us soon, and I want to get the basics out of the way before we go to Yurup.”

“Yurup?” she was startled.

“Yes,” he said. “I’m supposed to be an expert.”

“Aren’t they all barbarians there?”

“I was born in Yurup, you know, Kiliana. No, not barbarians, but less willing to embrace the ways of the God-Hero.  But they do not often rise up without a charismatic leader, and if such is removed, any revolt  is generally short-lived and not too harmful.”

“Oh!” said Kiliana. “Sorry.”

He ruffled her effulgent locks.

“The aristocracy learn their own form of education,” he said. “This is about management, law, leadership, and that may be specialised into military education, since most militia units are officered by the aristocracy, or into politics, for those who will be the rulers of their islands or extents, and many also have the leisure to learn about the arts as well. Oh!” he said.

“An idea, Leo?” asked Kiliana.

“I suddenly realised why that preposterous popinjay I demoted was so disparaging of the art of Reef Teeg, the private soldier who painted that exquisite picture of the God-Hero , and the other paintings I was able to find,” said Quester.

“I can’t see why he didn’t realise what an amazing piece of work it was,” said Kiliana. “Why, the God-Hero seems almost about to speak!”

“Exactly,” said Quester. “And I am sure that... Strong, that was his name... studied art because an aristocrat is expected to be rounded as an individual, and he resented that the work of a private soldier should be praised. I suspect the other daubs hung on the walls were his.”

“Oh!” said Kiliana. “That would explain a lot. Why should he get education in things he doesn’t deserve?” she asked, resentfully.

“Because aristocrats are supposed to be in the position they are because their bloodlines are strong and suited for the role; but it doesn’t always pan out that way,” said Quester, cynically. “Which is why the cleverer proletariat women are supposed to be chosen to be made consorts to those in power, to bring hybrid vigour and an injection of new blood to the bloodlines as their children will be noble, and are educated further to that end.  And it was fortunate that Governor Lussus chose Astelliana, who is shrewd, for her conversation as well as her looks, because when nobles are allowed to choose their own consort, most of the fools pick a pretty girl with as much brain as any Augsheep, thereby instilling even more incipient moronity into an overbred line already tending to imbecility.”

“But don’t hold back, Leo, tell me what you really think,” said Kiliana.

He gave a bark of embarrassed laughter.

“Oh, I let my prejudices speak,” he said.

“It right, though,” Burdock, Quester’s huge manservant, spoke up. He was an Ogroid, a metatype of humanity who had come about from the early experiments in making the High Bred as perfect soldiers; the Ogroids had the strength and size required, but tended to be slow-witted, not having the extra heart the High Bred had, to pump blood more readily to the brain, and with large fangs of uneven size rather than the razor-sharp teeth of the High-Bred, who were human weapons even naked, before they put on their armour and picked up weapons. Burdock showed signs of exceptional intellect for one of his kind, and liked learning. Quester hoped to get him an augmented heart, to give him a better chance of living to more than about thirty five.

“We all agree,” said Kiliana. “So what are the other two branches of education?”

“Science and Philosophy,” said Quester. “Both consider the other holds a lot of fallacy, and both are wrong. As a Justiciar, I have had to cover all three major academic branches, to be able to understand all, specialising in law, and there are branches of both science and philosophy which overlap. You will learn the same, Kiliana; but I’ll get you started, so you are not too far behind. I started in the Justice academy when I was thirteen.”

“What happens if you fail?” asked Kiliana.

“Usually you would be sent to a noble family as their atty, which is a word meaning law specialist,” said Quester. “Or work in the halls of justice covering lesser crimes than heresy.”

“Is it hereditary to be a science priest or a lit priest?” asked Kiliana.

“No, and again, often those of the proletariat who show signs of higher intellect are removed from their environment and relocated into an appropriate family,” Quester explained. “Which is not to say that there are not families who have been in the same field of study time out of mind, for there are. But it’s more flexible than either the aristocracy or the proletariat.”

“What does philosophy do?” asked Kiliana.

“To be honest, it’s a form of science which studies people, but as it’s not always exact and fully reproducible, the science priests look down on it,” said Quester. “I use it to solve mysteries, and in questioning people, finding out what will make them speak up. It’s more subtle and more certain than the crudities of torture, even if it may not be as clear cut as some scientific subjects. And I pray in my heart to the Blessed Abe to guide me in reading individual hearts rather than chant formulaic prayers to Benfranklin to make a machine go.”

“I thought the prayers were just a memory aid for the steps in using technology,” said Kiliana.

“Personally, I agree, but never say so to anyone else; the Geek Priests would hang you by your heels,” said Quester. “The problem is that they can reproduce much lost-tech, but don’t know what makes it go, so they use the prayers and formulae to make sure it works, and there are few enough with the time and inclination to research.”

“Am I wrong to think it is a little... counterproductive?” asked Kiliana.

“No, but again, be careful to whom you voice such opinions,” said Quester.

“Very well, Leo. Leo?”

“Yes, Killie?”

“What are you supposed to do about this rogue assassin? And in what way is he a rogue?”

Quester gave a wintry smile.

“I’m supposed to bring him in, dead or alive; his task was to put down the leader of an uprising. He’s been killing the aristocracy instead.”

“Sah, if they’re as much use as them ones on Attu, I sees his point,” said Burdock.

“Unfortunately, so do I,” said Quester. “We shall see what we find.”

“Are you supposed to find out what you find, or just to deal with the assassin?” asked Kiliana, shrewdly.

“Well, my orders are to deal with the mess made by an assassin going rogue,” said Quester. “I choose to interpret that... liberally.”

Kiliana brightened.

“I’m glad you don’t have to bend your orders too much,” she said. “Doing that makes you all dour and grumpy, and not like the Leo we all love.”

“Honestly, my child!  I’m not lovable,” said Quester, wondering why he felt heat come to his cheeks. “I fear, however, that you will not be able to pass as a boy; in the last few days you have suddenly become a woman.”

Kiliana pulled a face.

“It’s a nuisance; but Astelliana helped me a lot,” she said.  “She took the clothes allowance you gave me and purchased all I need to, ah, provide a foundation. And more... you know, for sanitation.”

“Er...” said Quester.

“Oh, Leo! Pads to absorb blood.  Because it was a bit heavier this time than it has been, and suddenly I get boobies as well.  Astelliana says it’s not uncommon. She reckons I wasn’t having proper ones or developing fully because I was malnourished before, and now I’m properly fed, I’m becoming a woman properly. I almost wish I hadn’t eaten more when you took me on, but it is nice to feel properly full.”

“My dear child, of course you must eat properly!  It proved useful that you could pass as a boy, but I don’t intend to rely on that. As a woman... and you will be a beauty when you have grown into your body... you can use that just as well for getting young – and not so young – men to blurt things out.”

“Oh, I am glad it will be useful,” said Kiliana. “And that you don’t mind.”

“I value you for yourself, Kiliana,” said Quester. “And your looks are of no moment to me.”

“Oh. Don’t you like me being pretty?” asked Kiliana, devastated.

“Of course I am glad that you are attractive; it will help your feelings of self-worth,” said Quester, kindly, patting her on the shoulder.

“So, do you prefer boys?” asked Kiliana.

“I beg your pardon?” Quester was taken aback.

“Well, if you only care about my looks for my own self-worth, does that mean that you only like boys and are unaware of me as a woman?” persisted Kiliana.

“Any man who is not aware of you who is not... er, of the other persuation, has to be blind, crazy, or living under a rock,” said Quester. “And,” he added, savagely, “I’ll make sure to protect you from those who try to force themselves on you, and teach you to take care of yourself.  But for me to notice your looks too much would be most inappropriate, since I am in the position of a mentor to you, and you are in my care.”

“Oh!” said Kiliana. “Oh” she added, “I see.  I will be glad to learn how to escape from anyone grabbing me.”

“Indeed, and we will start, if there is enough room, on the freighter. Which I can, I believe, see approaching the islands; it’s a dirigible. I expect they will be unloading and loading for several hours, but we can settle into our quarters, and I can get on with your education. And I am sure Burdock wants to learn more, too, as he seems to have been untrained in much,” he added, kindly.

“Yes, sah!” said Burdock. “I wants to learn how to subdue people wivout hurtin’ dem, an’ I wants to learn about new places, an’ as much techery an’ flossyfurry an’ military stuff wot you can teach me.”

“Well, if you are interested in science and philosophy, I will do what I can to teach you,” said Quester, amazed again at how unusual Burdock was.

“I wants to learn to paint, too,” said Burdock. “I wants to make pretty pictures of the God-Hero too.”

“I am sure that we can get you some art things,” said Quester.

Even  if his efforts were a childish scrawl, thought the Justiciar, it was still a way the big ogroid could worship the God-Hero in his own way. And who was to say but that the Blessed Abe did not appreciate such honest dedication more than a well-executed piece of religious art by an artist who sold icons as a job of work, without putting devotion into each.