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he would say -- often.
“Look at other lands
that were once more
civilized than we.
Egypt! Asia Minor!
Syria! Phoenicia! The
Arabs came with their
big black rock god
that they pretended
was not idolatry, and
what happened? The
Egyptians became
so Muslim that they
called themselves Arab and forgot their own
language. So did the Syrians! So did the Leba-
nese! So did ancient Carthage and Lydia and
Phrygia, Pontus and Macedonia! They gave up.
They converted.” He always said that word as if
it were a mouthful of mud.
on her altar of compost! Cristo is a good god,
he makes people peaceful with each other but
ierce with their enemies.”
Artwork by Jin Han
No point in arguing when Amaro had a case to
make. For he was a lawyer. No, he was a poet
who was licensed and paid as a lawyer. His per-
orations in court were legendary. People would
come to boring court actions, just to hear him
-- not a lot of people, but most of them other
lawyers or idealistic citizens or women held
spellbound by his ire and the lood of words
that sounded like wisdom and sometimes were.
Enough that he was something of a celebrity in
Toledo. Enough that his house was always full
of people wanting to engage him in conversa-
tion.
Pretty Boy
The Story of Bonzo Madrid
This was the father at whose knee the pam-
pered Bonito would sit, listening wide-eyed as
pilgrims came to this living shrine to the lost
religion of Spanish patriotism. Only gradually
did Bonito come to realize that his father was
not just its prophet, but its sole communicant
as well.
by Orson Scott Card
“But Spain -- we retreated up into the Pyrenees.
Navarre, Aragon, Leon, Galicia. They could
not get us out of the hills. And slowly, year by
year, city by city, village by village, orchard by
orchard, we won it back. 1492. We drove the
last of the Moors out of Spain, we puriied the
Spanish civilization, and then we went out and
conquered a world!”
How do you systematically destroy a child with
love? It’s not something that any parent aspires
to do, yet a surprising number come perilously
close to achieving it. Many a child escapes de-
struction only through his own disbelief in his
parents’ worship. If I am a god, these children
say, then there are no gods, or such gods as
there be are weak and feeble things.
Except, of course, Bonito. He was a remarkably
bright child, verbal before he was a year old,
and Amaro swore that his son understood every
word he said before he was eighteen months
old.
To goad him, friends would remind him that
Columbus was Italian. “Yes, but he had to come
to Spain before he accomplished a damn thing!
It was Spanish money and Spanish bottoms that
loated him west, and we all know it was really
Spanish sailors who did the navigation and dis-
covered the new world. It was Spaniards who in
their dozens conquered armies that numbered in
the millions!”
In short, it is their own depressive personalities
that save them. They are self-atheists.
Not every word, but close enough. Word
spread, as it always did, about this infant who
listened to his brilliant father and was not
merely dazzled, but seemed to understand.
You know you have begun badly when you
parents name you Bonito -- “Pretty Boy.”
So before Bonito was two years old, they came
from the International Fleet to begin their tests.
“You would steal my son from me? More im-
portantly, you would steal him from Spain?”
Well, perhaps they named you after a species of
tuna. But when you are pampered and coddled
and adored, you soon become quite sure that
the tuna was named after you, and not the other
way around.
“So,” the daring ones would say, “so what hap-
pened? Why did Spain topple from its place?”
“Spain never toppled. Spain had the tragic
misfortune to get captured by foreign kings. A
pawn of the miserable Hapsburgs. Austrians!
Germans. They spent the blood and treasure
of Spain on what? Dynastic wars! Squabbles
in the Netherlands. What a waste! We should
have been conquering China. China would
have been better off speaking Spanish like Peru
and Mexico. They’d have an alphabet! They’d
eat with forks! They’d pray to the god on the
cross!”
The young oficer patiently explained to him
that Spain was, in fact, part of the human
race, and the whole human race was searching
among its children to ind the most brilliant
military minds to lead the struggle for survival
against the formics, that hideous race that
had come two generations before and scoured
humans out of the way like mildew until great
heroes destroyed them. “It was a near thing,”
said the oficer. “What if your son is the next
Mazer Rackham, only you withhold him. Do
you think the formics will stop at the border of
Spain?”
In the cathedral in Toledo, he was baptized with
the name Tomas Benedito Bonito de Madrid y
Valencia.
“An alliance between two cities!” his father
proclaimed, though everyone knew that to have
two cities in your name was a sign of low, not
high, pedigree. Only if his ancestors had been
lords of those cities would the names have
meant anything except that somebody’s ances-
tors were a butcher from Madrid and an orange
picker from Valencia who moved somewhere
else and came to be known by their city of
origin.
“But you don’t pray to the god on the cross.”
“Si, pero yo lo respecto! Yo lo adoro! Es muer-
to, pero es verdaderamente mi redentor ainda
lo mismo!” I respect him, I worship him. He’s
dead, but he’s truly my redeemer all the same.
“We will do as we did before,” said Amaro.
“We will hide in our mountain fortresses and
then come back to reclaim Earth, city by city,
village by village, until --”
But in truth Bonito’s father, Amaro, did not
care for his ancestry, or at least not his speciic
ancestry. It was enough for him to claim Spain
as his family.
Don’t ever get Amaro de Madrid started on
religion. “The people must have their god, or
they’ll make gods of whatever you give them.
Look at the environmentalists, serving the god
Gaia, sacriicing the prosperity of the world
But this young oficer had studied history and
only smiled. “The Moors captured the villages
of Spain and ruled over them. The formics
would obliterate them; what then will you re-
capture? Christians remained in Spain for your
“We are a people who were once conquered by
Islam, and yet we would not stay conquered,”
131492874.001.png
ancestors to liberate. Will you convert formics
to rebel against their hive queen and join your
struggle? You might as well try to persuade a
man’s hands to rebel against his brain.”
ones, learning to overcome his fear of falling
and to avoid injury. And he began to understand
that he was not nocturnal afterward, that what
he read in the daze of sleepiness was ill-remem-
bered by morning, but what he read by daylight
after a good night of sleep stayed with him.
my own garden and share it with my wife.”
With a sweet eagerness, Mother wrapped up
most of what remained and gave it to the man,
who bowed over the paper bag as she handed
it to him. “You,” the man said, “are the secret
treasure of this house.”
To which Amaro only laughed and said, “I
know many a man whose hands rebelled
against him -- and other parts as well!”
For Bonito was, in fact, born to be a disciple,
and if his mentor imposed no discipline on him,
Bonito would ind it in his teachings all the
same. Bonito heard everything, even that which
was not actually said.
Amaro was a lawyer. More to the point, he was
not stupid. So he knew the futility of trying
to resist the I.F. Nor was he insensitive to the
great honor of having a son that the I.F. wanted
to take away from him. In fact, when he railed
to everyone about the tyranny of these “child-
stealing internationalists,” it was really his way
of boasting that he had spawned a possible
savior of the world. The tiny blinking monitor
implanted in his son’s spine just below the skull
was a badge for his father.
At those words, Mother’s shyness became
cold. Bonito realized at once that the man had
crossed some invisible line; the man realized
it as well. “Señora, I am not lirting with you.
I spoke from the heart. What your husband
says, I could read, or hear from others. What
you have made here, I can have only from your
hand.” Then he bowed again, and left
When Bonito was ive, he inally became aware
of his mother.
Oh, he had known her all along. He had run to
her with his scrapes and his hungers. Her hands
had been on him, caressing him, her soft voice
also a caress, all the days of his life. She was
like the air he breathed. Father was the dazzling
sun in the bright blue sky; Mother was the earth
beneath his feet. Everything came from her, but
he did not see her, he was so dazzled.
Bonito knew the orange latbread was delicious.
What he had not realized till now was that it
was unusually so. That strangers would value it.
Then Amaro set about destroying his son with
love.
Mother began to sing a little song in the kitchen
after the man left the room.
Nothing was to be denied this boy that the
world wanted to take away from Amaro. He
went with his father everywhere -- as soon as
he could walk and use a toilet, so there was no
burden or mess to deal with. And when Amaro
was at home, young Bonito was indulged in all
his whims. “The boy wants to play in the trees,
so let him.”
Until one day, Bonito’s attention wandered
from one of his father’s familiar sermons to
one of the visitors who had come to hear him.
Mother had brought in a tray of simple food
-- cut-up fruits and raw vegetables. But she had
included a plate of the sweet orange latbread
she sometimes made, and it happened that
Bonito noticed the moment when the visitor
picked up one of the crackers and broke off a
piece and put it in his mouth.
Bonito went back out into the salon to see how
the man merely waved a brief good-bye to Fa-
ther, and then rushed away clutching his prize,
the bag of latbread.
A tiny part of Bonito was jealous. That latbread
would have been his to eat all through the next
day.
“But he’s so little, and he climbs so high, the
fall would be so far.”
But another part of Bonito was proud. Proud
of his mother. It had never happened before.
It was Father one was supposed to be proud
of. He understood that instinctively, and it had
been reinforced by so many visitors who had
turned to him while waiting for their chance to
say good-bye to Father, and said something like
this: “You’re so lucky to live in the house of
this great man.” Or, more obliquely, “You live
here in the heartbeat of Spain.” But always, it
was about Father.
“Boys climb, they fall. Do you think my Bonito
is not tough enough to deal with it? How else
will he learn?”
The visitor had been nodding at the things that
Father was saying. But he stopped. Stopped
chewing, as well. For a moment, Bonito
thought the man intended to take the bite of
latbread out of his mouth. But no, he was
savoring it. His eyebrows rose. He looked at
the latbread that remained in his hand, and
there was reverence in his attitude when he put
another piece in his mouth.
When Bonito refused to go to bed, or to turn
his light out when he inally did, because he
wanted to read, then Amaro said, “Will you
stile genius? If nighttime is when his mind is
active, then you no more curtail him than you
would demand that an owl can only hunt in the
day!”
Not this time.
Bonito watched the man’s face. Ecstasy? No,
perhaps mere delight.
From that moment, Bonito began to be aware
of his mother. He actually noticed the work she
did to make Father’s life happen. The way she
dealt with all the tradesmen, the gardener and
the maid who also helped her in the kitchen.
How she shopped in the market, how she talked
with the neighbors, graciously making their
house a part of the neighborhood. The world
came to their house to see Father; Mother went
out and blessed the neighborhood with kindness
and concern. Father talked. Mother listened.
Father was admired. Mother was loved and
trusted and needed.
And when Bonito demanded sweets, well,
Amaro made sure that there was an endless
supply of them in the house. “He’ll get tired of
them,” said Amaro.
And when the man left, he stepped apart from
the circle of admirers around his father and
went to the kitchen.
But these things did not always lead where one
might have thought, for Bonito, without know-
ing it, was determined to rescue himself from
his father’s love. Listening to his father and
understanding more than even Amaro guessed,
Bonito realized that getting tired of sweets was
what his father expected -- so he no longer
asked for them. The boxes of candy languished
and were inally contributed to a local orphan-
age.
Bonito followed him, leaving his father’s con-
versation behind in order to hear this one:
“Señora, may I take more of this latbread with
me?”
Mother blushed and smiled shyly. “Did you like
it?”
It took a while for Father to notice that Bonito
was not always with him anymore, that he
sometimes did not want to go. “Of course,” he
said, laughing. “Court must be boring for you!”
But he was a little disappointed; Bonito saw it;
“I will not insult you by asking for the recipe,”
the man said. “I know that no description can
capture what you put into this bread. But I beg
you to let me carry some away so I can eat it in
Likewise, Bonito deliberately fell from trees
-- low branches at irst, then higher and higher
he was sorry for it. But he got as much pleasure
from going about with his mother, for now he
saw what an artist she was in her own right.
with Mother after that, not for a long while.
He was devotedly with his father, and Amaro
seemed happier and prouder than ever be-
fore. Mother never said anything about it, not
directly. Only one day did she say, “I paid bills
today, and I thought I heard you singing to me,
and it made me so happy, my pretty boy.” She
smiled and caressed him, but she was not hurt,
only wistful and loving, and Bonito knew that
Father needed to have him close at hand more
than Mother did.
“We thought it was important that you know
two things. First, you’re right. You are the true
ruler of the house. But second, you are an only
child, so you had no way of knowing that in
any healthy family, the children are the true
rulers.”
Father spoke to rooms of people -- let them take
him how they would, he amused, delighted,
roused, even enraged them. Mother spoke with
one person at a time, and when she left, they
were, however temporarily, content.
“Fathers rule,” said Bonito, “and mothers are in
charge when they’re not home.”
“What did you do today?” Father asked him.
“That describes the outward functioning of your
home,” said the young oficer. “But you under-
stand that all they do is meant for you -- even
your father’s vast ambition is about achieving
greatness in his son’s eyes. He doesn’t know
this about himself. But you know it about him.”
Bonito made the mistake of answering can-
didly. “I went to market with Mama,” he said.
“We visited with Mrs. Ferreira, the Portuguese
lady? Her daughter has been making her very
unhappy but Mother told her all the ways that
the girl was showing good sense after all. Then
we came home and Mother and Nita made the
noodles for our soup, and I helped with the
dusting of lour because I’m very good and I
don’t get tired of sifting it. Then I sang songs to
her while she did the bills. I have a very sweet
voice, Papa.”
Now Bonito understood his own power in the
house. His attention was the prize. Where he
bestowed it mattered far too much to Father,
and only a little less to Mother.
But it worked the other way as well; it hurt
Bonito’s feelings a little that Mother could do
without him better than Father could.
Bonito nodded.
“Children rule in every home, but not in the
ways they might wish. Good parents try to help
their children, but not always to please them,
because sometimes what a child needs is not
what gives him pleasure. Cruel parents are jeal-
ous of their children’s power and rebel against
it, using them selishly, hurting them. Your
parents are not cruel.”
A family illed with love, Bonito knew, and yet
they still managed to hurt each other in little
ways, unthinking ways.
“I know you do,” he said. But he looked
puzzled. “Today I argued a very important case.
I won a poor family back the land that had been
unjustly taken by a bank because they would
not have the patience with the poor that they
showed to the wealthy. I made six rich men tes-
tify about the favors they had received from the
bank, the overdrafts, the late payments that had
been tolerated, and it did not even go to judg-
ment, the bankers backed down and restored the
land and forgave the back interest.”
Only I do think about it, Bonito realized. I see
what neither of my parents sees.
It frightened him. It exhilarated him. I am the
true ruler of this house. I am the only one who
understands it.
“I know that.” Was the man stupid?
“Then I’ve told you everything I came to say.”
He could not say this to anyone else. But he
wrote it down. Then he tore up the paper and
hid it at the bottom of the kitchen garbage, un-
der the orange rinds and meat scraps that would
go out into the compost pile.
“Not yet,” said Bonito.
“Oh?”
“Why is it that way?”
“Congratulations, Papa.”
“But Bonito, you did not go to see this. You
stayed home and went shopping and gossiping
and sifting lour and singing songs with your
mother.”
He forgot, for that moment, that he was not
actually alone. For he wore on the back of his
neck the monitor of the International Fleet. A
tiny transmitter that marked a child as one of
the chosen ones, being observed and evaluated.
The monitor connected to his neural centers.
The people from Battle School saw through his
eyes, heard through his ears. They read what he
wrote.
The young oficer looked pleased. Bonito
thought: Do I also rule him?
“The human race preserved itself,” said the
young oficer, “by evolving this hunger in par-
ents for the devotion of their children. Without
it, they starve. Nothing pleases them more
than their child’s smile or laughter. Nothing
makes them more anxious than a child’s frantic
cry. Childless people often do not know what
they’re starving for. Parents whose children
have grown, though, they know what they’re
missing.”
Bonito did not grasp his point. Until he realized
that Father did not grasp his own point, either.
He was envious. It was that simple. Father was
jealous that Bonito had chosen to spend his day
with his mother.
Soon after Bonito wrote his observation and
tore it up, the young oficer returned. “I need to
speak to young Bonito. Alone.”
“I’ll go with you tomorrow, Father.”
“Tomorrow is Saturday, and the great case was
today. It was today, and you missed it.”
Father made a bit of a fuss but then went off to
work without his son. Mother busied herself in
the kitchen; she was perhaps a bit noisier than
usual with the pots and pans and knives and
other implements, but the sound was a comfort
to Bonito as he faced this man that he did not
well remember having seen before.
Bonito nodded. “When you take me away to
Battle School, my parents will be very hungry.”
Bonito felt that he had let his father down. It
devastated him. Yet he had been so happy all
day with Mama. He cried. “I’m sorry, Papa. I’ll
never do it again.”
“If we take you,” the young oficer said gently.
Bonito smiled. “You must leave me here,” he
said. “My family needs me.”
“No, no, you spend your days as you want.”
Father picked him up and held him. “I never
meant to make you cry, my Bonito, my pretty
boy. Will you forgive your papa?”
“Bonito,” said the oficer softly. “You wrote
something down yesterday.”
“You may rule in this house, Bonito, but you
do not rule the International Fleet. Your smile
won’t tell me what to do. But when the time
comes, the choice will be yours.”
Bonito was at once ashamed. “I forgot that you
could see.”
Of course he did. But Bonito did not stay home
“Then I choose not to go.”
“When the time comes,” the oficer repeated.
Then he left.
It made Bonito wonder if they really loved each
other and if not, why they ever got married.
he watched the clock surreptitiously and then
made some excuse and left briskly.
Bonito understood that they would be judging
him, and what he did with the information the
young oficer had told him would be an im-
portant part of that judgment. In Battle School,
they trained children to become military lead-
ers. That meant that it would be important to
see what Bonito did with the inluence he had
discovered that he had with his parents.
It was disturbing and it made him upset a lot of
the time. Mother noticed that he was worried
about something and tried to get him to tell it,
but he knew better than to explain what he was
working on. He didn’t really have the words to
explain it, anyway.
For long months this was merely a nagging
uncertainty in Bonito’s mind. After all, he had
given up on trying to take responsibility for his
parents’ happiness, so there was no urgency to
igure it out. But the problem wouldn’t leave
him alone, and inally he realized why.
It was too much responsibility for a child, he
knew that. How could he possibly make his
parents happy? He couldn’t do anything about
what they needed. The only thing he controlled
was how he treated them. So gradually, not in
despair but in resignation, he stopped trying to
make their behavior and their relationship make
sense, and he stopped expecting himself to be
able to change anything. If his failure to help
them meant the I.F. didn’t take him into space,
well, that was ine with him, he didn’t want to
go.
Father was in a conspiracy. He was meeting
with people to do something dangerous or il-
legal. Was he planning to take over the Spanish
government? Start a revolution? But whom
could he meet with in Toledo that would make
a difference in the world? Toledo was not a city
where powerful people lived -- they were all
in Madrid and Barcelona, the cities his parents
were named for but rarely visited. These meet-
ings rarely lasted more than an hour and a half
and never more than three hours, so they had to
take place fairly close by.
Can I help them both to be happy?
What does it mean to be happy?
Mother helps both me and Father, doing things
for us all the time. Is that what makes her
happy? Or does she do it in hopes of our doing
things in return that would make her happy?
Father loves to talk about his dreams for Spain.
Does that mean he needs to actually achieve
them in order to be happy? Or does his happi-
ness come from having a cause to argue for?
Does it matter that it’s a lost cause, or does
that make Father even happier as its advocate?
Would I please him most by adopting that cause
as my own, or would he feel like I was compet-
ing with him?
But he still kept noticing things. He still kept
asking questions and trying to ind things out
about them.
How could a six-year-old -- for Bonito was
six now -- ind out what his father was doing?
Because now that he knew there was a mystery,
he had to have the answer to it. Maybe Father
was doing secret government work -- maybe
even for the I.F. Or maybe he was working on
a dangerous case that might get him killed if
anyone knew about it, so he only had meetings
about it in secret.
Which is why he noticed a certain pattern in his
father’s life. On various days of the week, but
usually at least once a week, Father would go
on errands or have meetings where he didn’t
try to bring Bonito -- where, indeed, he refused
to take him. Until this research project began,
Bonito had never thought anything of it -- he
didn’t even want to be in on everything his
father did, mostly because some of his meetings
could be really boring.
It was so confusing, to have responsibility for
other people’s happiness.
One day an opportunity came. Father checked
the time of day several times in the same morn-
ing without saying anything about it, and then
left for lunch a few minutes early, asking the
secretary to walk Bonito home for lunch. The
secretary agreed to and seemed cheerful enough
about it; but she was also very busy and clearly
did not want to leave the job uninished.
So now Bonito embarked on his irst serious
course of study: His parents, and what they
wanted and needed in order to be happy.
Study meant research. He couldn’t igure things
out without learning more about them. He
began interviewing them, informally. He’d ask
them questions about their growing up, about
how they met, whatever came into his mind.
They both enjoyed answering his questions,
though they often dodged and didn’t give him
full explanations or stories. Still, the very fact
that on certain subjects they became evasive
was still data, it was still part of understanding
them.
But now he understood enough of his father’s
business to know that Father never hid his
regular work from Bonito. Oh, of course he met
with clients alone -- it would disturb them to
have a child listening to everything -- but those
meetings weren’t hidden. There were appoint-
ments that the secretary wrote down, and Bo-
nito sat out in the secretary’s ofice and wrote
or drew or read until Father was done.
“I can go home alone,” said Bonito. “I’m six,
you know.”
“Of course you can ind the way, you smart
little boy,” she answered. “But bad things some-
times happen to children who go off alone.”
These secret meeting always took place outside
the ofice, and outside of ofice hours. Some-
times they consisted of a long lunch, and the
secretary took Bonito home so Mother could
feed him. Sometimes Father would have an
evening meeting after he brought Bonito home.
“Not to me,” said Bonito.
But the more he learned, the less clearly he
understood anything. People were too compli-
cated. Adults did too many things that made
no sense, and remembered too many stories in
ways that did make sense but weren’t believ-
able, and Bonito couldn’t igure out whether
they were lying or had merely remembered
them wrong. Certainly Mother and Father
never told the same story in the same way --
Father’s version always made him the hero, and
Mother’s version always made her the suffering
victim. Which should have made the stories
identical, except that Mother never saw Father
as her savior, and Father never made Mother all
that important in the stories.
“Are you sure of that?” she answered, amused.
Bonito turned around and pointed to the moni-
tor on his neck. “They’re watching.”
Usually, Father loved to tell about whatever
he had done and especially what he had said
that made someone else angry or put him in his
place or made people laugh. But about these
secret meetings, he was never talkative. He’d
dismiss them as boring, pointless, tedious, he
hated to go.
“Oh,” said the secretary, as if she had complete-
ly forgotten that Bonito was being observed all
the time. “Well, then I guess you’re quite safe.
Still, I think it’s better if you ...”
Before she could say “wait until I’m done
here,” which was the inevitable conclusion of
her sentence, Bonito was out the door. “Don’t
worry I’ll be ine!” he shouted as he went.
Yet Father never seemed as though he hated to
go before the meeting. He was almost eager to
go -- not in some obvious way, but in the way
He could see Father walking along the street,
briskly but not actually fast. It was good that he
was walking instead of taking a cab or getting
the car -- then Bonito could not have followed
him. This way, Bonito could saunter along
looking in store windows, like a kid, and still
keep his father in view.
Mother.
Yet he knew, bit by bit, what had happened, and
what he had done. From the scraps of words
and phrases he could overhear, he knew there
was a “she” that Father was “keeping,” that it
was a terrible thing that Father had the key, and
that Mother didn’t know how she could bear it
or whether she could stay. And Grandma kept
saying, Hush, hush, it’s the way of the world,
women suffer while the men play, you have
your son and you can’t expect a strong man not
to wander, one woman could not contain him ...
Which left his question unanswered. That
meant the answer was very important. Father
was ashamed of something, ashamed in front of
Bonito. Or was that Mother’s kindly-intended
lie, and Father was actually very angry at Bo-
nito for spying on him?
Father came to a door between shops, one of
the sort that held stairs that led to walk-up
shops and ofices and apartments. Bonito got
to the door and it was already closed; it was
the kind that locked until somebody upstairs
pushed a button to let it open. Father was not in
sight.
For days, for weeks Bonito didn’t understand.
And then one day he did. By then he was in
school, and on the playground a boy was telling
jokes, and it involved a man doing something
bad with a woman that wasn’t his wife, and in
the middle of the joke it dawned on Bonito that
this was what Father had been doing with some
other woman that wasn’t Mother. The reaction
of the boys to the joke was obvious. Men were
supposed to laugh at this. Men were supposed
to think it was funny to ind a clever way to lie
to your wife and do strange things with strange
women. By the end of the joke both women
were deceived. The boys laughed as if it were
a triumph. As if there were a war between men
and women, both lying to each other.
And then they saw him a second time, sitting
directly under the window where Mother had
walked to get some air. Mother was furious.
“What did you hear?”
The buttons on the wall had name tags, most
of them, and a couple of them were ofices
rather than apartments. But Father would not
be having a manicure and he would not be get-
ting his future read by a psychic palm-reading
astrologer.
“Nothing,” said Bonito.
“The day you don’t hear words that are said
right in front of you, I’ll take you to a hearing
doctor to stick needles in your ears. What did
you hear?”
And, come to think of it, Father had not even
waited at the bottom long enough for somebody
to ring him up. Instead he had taken a long time
getting the door handle open ...
“I’m sorry I told you about Papa! I don’t want
to move here! Grandma’s a bad cook!”
That’s not how Mother is, thought Bonito. She
doesn’t lie to Father. When a man comes to her
and lirts with her, she sends him away. That’s
what happened with that man who liked her
latbread.
Father had keys. That’s what happened at the
door, he fumbled with keys and opened the
door directly without ringing anybody.
At which Mother laughed in the midst of tears,
Grandma was genuinely offended, and then
Mother promised him that they would not move
to Grandma’s, but they’d visit here for a few
days. They hadn’t packed anything, but there
were clothes left there from previous visits
-- too small for him now, but not so small he
couldn’t it into them.
Why would Father have a second ofice? Or a
second apartment? It made no sense to Bonito.
The inal piece fell into place when they were
visiting Grandma again -- briely, this time
-- and Grandma looked at him and sighed and
said, “You’ll just grow up to be another man.”
As if hombre were a dirty word. “There’s no
honor among men.”
So when he got home, he asked Mother about
it.
Father came that night and Grandma sent him
away. He was furious at irst but then she said
something in a low voice and Father fell silent
and drove away.
She looked like he had stabbed her in the heart.
And yet she refused to explain anything.
But I won’t grow up like Father. I won’t break
Mother’s heart.
After lunch he became aware that she had gone
to her room and was crying.
The next day he was back with lowers. Bonito
watched Mother and Father talk in the door-
way, and she refused to take his lowers., so
he dropped them on the ground and left again.
Mother crushed one of the lowers with her
shoe, but then she picked up the others and
cried over them for a long time while Grand-
mother said, over and over, “I told you it meant
nothing. I told you he didn’t want to lose you.”
But how could he know that? It wouldn’t be
Mother’s heart, anyway, it would be the woman
he eventually married; and how could he know
that he wasn’t just like his father?
I’ve made her unhappy, he thought. I shouldn’t
have been following Father, he thought.
And then she came out of her room holding a
note, her eyes red from crying. She put the note
on the kitchen table, folded, with Father’s name
on it, and then took Bonito to the car, which she
almost never drove, and drove to the railroad
station, where she parked it and got on the train
and they went to Grandma’s house. Mother’s
mother, who lived two hours away in a small
town in the middle of nowhere, but with orange
groves -- not very productive ones, but as
Grandma always said, her needs were few and
her son-in-law was generous.
Without honor.
It changed everything. It poisoned everything.
And when they came to him only a few day
before his seventh birthday, and took out the
monitor, and asked him if he’d like to go to
Battle School, he said yes.
It took a week before they moved back home,
and Father and Mother were not right with each
other. They talked little, except about the busi-
ness of the house. And Father stopped asking
Bonito to come with him.
At irst Bonito was angry at Mother, but when
he confronted her, Mother denied that she had
forbidden him to go. “He’s ashamed in front of
you,” she said.
____________________________________
from InterGalactic Medicine Show Issue 2
story ©Orson Scott Card
artwork ©Jin Han
Mother sent Bonito into the back yard and
then cried to her mother. Bonito tried to listen
but when they saw him edging closer to the
window they closed it and then got up and went
to another room where he couldn’t hear them
without making it obvious he was trying to spy.
“For what?” asked Bonito.
www.intergalacticmedicineshow.com
“He still loves you as much as ever,” said
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