We’d shared some
information I’d learned and what the team had compile so far, so there were
more than a few murmurs when Bouncer made his little threat display. Of course,
he’d promptly yawned and then lay down at my feet again right afterward. Lazy
little shit caused problems and then left me to fix them.
“Yes, he is dangerous, and
he does have natural defenses that could harm others. But so do a great many
aliens or creatures from their planets that accompany them among Galactic
space. He cannot be separated from me.” In fact, now that I thought about it, the
farthest we’d been apart since I’d gotten him out of stasis on Garjah’s ship
was the night we’d spent in his house and Bouncer had spent time among the
plants. “Bouncer is usually within sight of me at all times. I don’t know what
he’d do if you tried to make him leave; he’s not a domesticated pet, he’s a
wild animal who is connected to me by choice.” My voice had more steel in it
than I expected, but what harm was he doing? Why the talk to move him out of
the council room all of a sudden?
An Aelqaed stood from her
seat midway up the chamber. “This being you call Bouncer is not just a simple animal.
His sentience his hidden, but it is there.”
Sentient? I cranked my head
back, frowning. “I think I would know if he was sentient. He’s with me all
the time.”
“Would you? I can literally
see inside his mind. He is not what he seems.”
Bouncer still sat at my feet,
seemingly relaxed, and only flicked one ear in her direction. He didn’t even
look at her. “So he’s an advanced, thinking being? I mean, he thinks about where
his last meal is coming from sure, but that’s not higher order.”
“So you think.”
The Aelqaed said they could
see into minds, but it wasn’t telepathy and it wasn’t scientific. They sensed
things and expected others to take what they couldn’t—or wouldn’t—explain on their
word alone. “And if his kind is sentient why didn’t anyone else register this
on the survey team?”
“We do not go to heavy
planets. The gravity is too extreme.”
I scoffed internally but
tried to keep my inner derision off my face. Years of experience suppressing my
emotions helped as I wasn’t sanctioned immediately for insubordination. “So
then any heavy planet we explore and potentially include in the Galactic could
have sentient beings we don’t know about because you haven’t figured out a way
to make your woowoo work within a transport that would equalize the gravity for
you?” So maybe I wasn’t hiding the derision all that well.
“We do not believe that is
likely.”
They didn’t? So Ardra is
somehow magically different? I held back that argument since it didn’t bear on
why we were there. “That still doesn’t explain why Bouncer’s presence is in
question.”
“If he’s sentient, he
should not be in a closed meeting with the Council regarding inclusion with a
new species.” This came from the Tolgoi who’d reentered the chamber. He’d
donned a heavy outer robe that tucked his wings down without damaging them.
“You are not serious. Not
only is the planet in contention the one he—a supposed sentient being—is a native
to that clearly has no issue with Garjah’s people since they’ve never had a
conflict, if he’s sentient this a process the council will have to repeat with
his people. Which kind of first contact do you want to have?”
“It is not protocol.” The Tolgoi
were a pedantic bunch at the best of times.
“Very little of my life has
been protocol lately. What I’ve learned is that you do the best with what you are
presented with. We—I pointed to Garjah and Bouncer with a swirl of my finger
that ended pointing back at myself—“will not be separated. Garjah’s people have
been on Ardra beyond the statutes of prior claim, and yet he is here willing to
negotiate a treaty that would allow for study and potential use by members also
within the treaty. So do you want to continue to bicker about protocol or do
you want to make some actual headway anytime soon?”
I hadn’t meant to speak so bluntly,
but then again, I was a scientist and not a politician. Garjah was a security
specialist, so he wasn’t a politician either. A strategist, though, that he
was. He’d anticipated some push back and decided that revealing our overall agenda
up front might be necessary.
“Essell.” That was my
mother’s hiss from behind me.
Yes, yes, I knew what she
would say. “One does not speak to their betters in that tone.”
Screw it. We’d already been
there for forever, the chair was beginning to feel like a torture device, and I
was getting a crick in my neck from looking up. I leaned forward, sweeping my
gaze across the Council members assembled across the room from us in their
seats looking down.
“Garjah is here as a
representative of his people. While I will not assume anything about Bouncer he
doesn’t show me personally, he may be here as a representative of his kind as
well. I’ve done the best I can to be an ambassador. I’d like for the Galactic Council
to prove its worth so they know it’s the right choice to join.”
Impromptu speech over, I
sank back into my chair. One just did not ask their rules to prove they were
fit to rule over them, but in this case, I was firmly on Garjah’s side.
There was a flurry of side
conversation, and then the Aqnars took the lead. “We would like to hear more
about Garjah’s people, and what they expect from a treaty as part of the
Galactic.”
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