asked me why I was still asleep, and the answer is because I felt I had a long day. It doesnât matter how many hours it was; what matters is how it felt, and so why I was still sleepy.â
âWhy did it feel long?â she asked.
âWell I had lots of meetings, and lots of fishing. Itâs the time of year when fishing is the best, and that means itâs more work. Itâs good really.â
âSosothis says that people should only do one job, the job for which theyâre best suited. He says thatâs what Plato says, and that doing two jobs is un-Platonic.â She looked unhappy. Iâd heard this often enough from other people already.
âWorking on the boat with Jason and Hilfa is my recreation,â I said.
âBut maybe you wouldnât be so tired if you didnât do it?â
âI wouldnât, but I wouldnât have so much fun either. And we might not have as much fish, and fish is good. So Iâm going to carry on doing it whatever Sosothis says, or anyone else either. People complained about it when I was running for consul, but they elected me anyway, so there we are.â I could still hardly believe I was consul, consul in my year, at thirty-five, elected to planetary office at the youngest possible age.
âLetâs wash together!â Alkippe said, bouncing. She grinned at me, and I saw that she had lost a front tooth.
âYes, that will be fun.â She usually washed with Thetis. I rolled her around so that she was sitting on the edge of the bed. âYou used to be small enough that I could swing you up off my stomach. Now youâre getting almost too heavy for me to roll.â
âWas I really small? Was I as small as a walnut?â
âWhen you were as small as a walnut you were inside my belly. When you first came out you were the size of both of Granddadâs hands put together. But you keep on growing and growing.â I smiled at her.
âIâm seven and a half. Next Iâll be seven and three-quarters, then eight, then eight and a quarter, then eight and a half, thenââ
I stood and stretched as Alkippe demonstrated her grasp of counting by fractions, which was her favorite game this month. I prayed to Zeus, father of gods and men, that she would reach all those ages, and beyond them, ninety-nine and a half, ninety-nine and three-quarters ⦠Her empty bed was a crumpled mess. Thetisâs bed against the far wall was neatly made. I couldnât hear Ma and Dad moving around on the other side of the partition either. âWe must be really late. Come on, quick!â
We ran into the fountain room. âWhat are you doing today? Fishing or meetings? Or fishing and meetings?â Alkippe called.
âMeeting this morning, if I havenât missed it, and then fishing this afternoon.â
âGranddad would have woken you in time so you wouldnât miss the meeting,â Alkippe pointed out.
âTrue.â She was so smart, she lapped up learning, and she had that kind of common sense too, like Ma, because she was absolutely right, Dad wouldnât have let me miss the meeting.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
My life was good and full of daily pleasures. In addition to the satisfactions of my political work, I had valuable and healthy work fishing, where I could see Jason every day and keep an eye on Hilfa. I enjoyed my food. I loved Alkippe more and more each day as she came to the age of reason. I had Dadâs full approval, and now that I had been elected I felt worthy of it. I made a real effort to get on with Ma and Thetis, and even though they sometimes seemed more alien to me than the Saeli, I had been doing better at this recently. So things were going along smoothly and my life was good. Iâd hug Alkippe, or put my back into hauling nets with Jason and Hilfa, or get some groups to agree to a compromise in Chamber, and realize all at once that I was happy. I also felt I