Kin
by Bruce McAllister
The alien did not sit on the bed, but remained in the doorway. The boy did not have trouble looking at him this time.
"You know more about us," the alien said suddenly, severely, "than you wished me to understand.... Is this not true?"
The boy did not answer. The creature's eyes -- huge and catlike -- held his.
"Answer me," the alien said.
When the boy finally spoke, he said only, "Did you do it?"
The alien ignored him.
"Did you kill him?" the boy said.
"Answer me," the alien repeated, perfectly still.
"Yes..." the boy said, looking away at last.
"How?" the alien asked.
The boy did not answer. There was, the alien could see, defeat in the way the boy sat on the stool.
"You will answer me...or I will...damage this room."
The boy did nothing for a moment, then got up and moved slowly to the terminal where he studied each day.
"I've done a lot of work on your star," the boy said. There was little energy in his voice now.
"It is more than that," the alien said.
"Yes. I've studied Antalouan history." The boy paused and the alien felt the energy rise a little. "For school, I mean." There was feeling again -- a little -- to the boy's voice.
The boy hit the keyboard once, then twice, and the screen flickered to life. The alien saw a map of the northern hemisphere of Antalou, the trade routes of the ancient Seventh Empire, the fragmented continent, and the deadly seas that had doomed it.
"More than this...I think," the alien said.
"Yes," the boy said. "I did a report last year -- on my own, not for school -- about the fossil record on Antalou. There were a lot of animals that wanted the same food you wanted -- that your kind wanted. On Antalou, I mean."
Yes, the alien thought.
"I ran across others things, too," the boy went on, and the alien heard the energy die again, heard in the boy's voice the suppressive feeling his kind called "despair." The boy believed that the man named Ortega-Mambay would still kill his sister, and so the boy "despaired."
Again the boy hit the keyboard. A new diagram appeared. It was familiar, though the alien had not seen one like it -- so clinical, detailed, and ornate -- in half a lifetime.
It was the Antalouan family cluster, and though the alien could not read them, he knew what the labels described: The "kinship obligation bonds" and their respective "motivational weights," the "defense-need parameters" and "bond-loss consequences" for identity and group membership. There was an inset, too, which gave -- in animated three-dimensional display -- the survival model human exopsychologists believed could explain all Antalouan behavior.
The boy hit the keyboard and an iconographic list of the "totemic bequeaths" and "kinships inheritances" from ancient burial sites near Toloa and Mantok appeared.
"You thought you knew," the alien said, "what an Antalou feels."
The boy kept his eyes on the floor. "Yes."
The alien did not speak for a moment, but when he did, it was to say:
"You were not wrong...Tuckey-Yatsen."
The boy looked up, not understanding.