his coffee with his curly dark hair over one brown eye, and gave his daughter a wry grin. “They were certifiable crazy-cases by our standards, pumpkin,” he replied. “But after all, there wasn’t anyone around to apply those standards back then.”
“And no Board of Mental Health to enforce them,” Pota added, her thin, delicate face creasing with a puckish smile. “Remember, oh curious little chick, they were not the ones that had the most influence on Alexander. That was left to his tutors—Aristotle, of course, being the main one—and nurses. I think he succeeded in spite of his parents, personally, and not because of them.”
Tia nodded sagely. “Can I come help at the dig today?” she asked eagerly. This was one of the best things about the fact that her parents had picked the EsKays to specialize in. With next to no atmosphere, there were no indigenous life-forms to worry about. By the time Tia was five, she had pressure-suit protocol down pat, and there was no reason why she couldn’t come to the digs, or even wander about within specified limits on her own. “The biggest sandbox in the universe,” Braddon called it; so long as she stayed within eye- and earshot, neither of them minded having her about outside.
“Not today, dearest,” Pota said apologetically. “We’ve found some glassware, and we’re making holos. As soon as we’re done with that, we’ll make the castings, and after that you can come run errands for us.” In the thin atmosphere and chill of the site, castings were tricky to make; one reason why Pota discarded so many. But no artifact could be moved without first making a good casting of it, as well as holos from all possible angles—too many times the artifacts crumbled to nothing, despite the most careful handling, once they were moved.
She sighed; holos and castings meant she couldn’t even come near the site, lest the vibrations she made walking interfere. “All right,” she agreed. “Can I go outside, though? As long as I stay close to the airlock?”
“Stay close to the lock and keep the emergency cart nearby, and I don’t see any reason why you can’t play outside,” Pota said after a moment. Then she smiled. “And how is your dig coming?”
“You mean really, or for pretend?” she asked.
“Pretend, of course,” said Braddon. “Pretend is always more fun than really. That’s why we became archeologists in the first place—because we get to play pretend for months at a time until we have to be serious and write papers!”
He gave her a conspiratorial grin, and she giggled.
“We-ell,” she said, and drew her face down into a frown just like Doctor Heinz Marius-Llewellyn, when he was about to put everyone to sleep. “I’ve found the village site of a race of flint-using primitives who were used as slave labor by the EsKays at your site.”
“Have you!” Pota fell right in with the pretense, as Braddon nodded seriously. “Well that certainly explains why we haven’t found any servos. They must have used slaves to do all their manual labor!”
“Yes. And the Flint People worshipped them as gods from the sky,” Tia continued. “That was why they didn’t revolt; all the slave labor was a form of worship. They’d go back to their village and then they’d try to make flint tools just like the things that the sky-gods used. They probably made pottery things, too, but I haven’t found anything but shards.”
“Well, pottery doesn’t hold up well in conditions like this,” Pota agreed. “It goes brittle very quickly under the extremes of surface temperature. What have you got so far?”
“A flint disruptor-pistol, a flint wrist-com, a flint flashlight, and some more things,” she said solemnly. “I haven’t found any arrowheads or spear-points or things like that, but that’s because there’s nothing to hunt here. They were vegetarians, and they ate nothing but lichen.”
Braddon made a face. “Awful. Worse than the food at the
Heidi Hunter, Bad Boy Team