Raised to Kill (Kindred Tales)
“I…do not know what entertainment vids are, so I cannot answer as to why my people have not put them out,” Allara said apologetically. “But I can tell you that my culture has…strict rules about privacy. We do not speak about our customs—we simply keep them.”
In fact, among the Q’ess, males and females did not often converse, especially not as freely as she was currently talking to Brand. Though her father and aunt were brother and sister, Allara had never seen the two of them have a discussion like she was having with the big Kindred right now.
Married couples didn’t talk much either. The women stayed home and did the work of raising the children and keeping the house and the men went to work outside the home to earn a living. Their two worlds almost never intersected.
Well, until it comes time to make the children the women raise, I suppose, Allara thought uncomfortably. But she tried to push the thought out of her mind.
“We Beast Kindred don’t make much in the way of entertainment vids either,” Brand remarked, drawing her back to the present. “But the Earth vids can be very entertaining. I’ll show you a few, if you like.”
“I suppose…that would be all right.” Allara nodded hesitantly. He would never get the chance to show her these “vids” whatever they were, but of course she could not tell him that.
“I’m just trying to think of things we can do together,” Brand rumbled. They had entered the cool, white linen tent and come to the head table, where Kat had directed them to sit by now. He pulled out her chair attentively and helped her get seated before sitting himself.
“Do together?” Allara looked up at him uncertainly. Now that they were seated, the difference in their height wasn’t quite as noticeable, but it was still quite pronounced.
“I want us to get to know each other,” Brand told her softly, looking into her eyes. “I know I can’t expect you to love me right away, Allara. So I think it’s a good idea for us to get to be friends, first.”
“Friends?” Allara echoed. The idea was strange to her and not just because she planned to kill him later that night.
Among the Q’ess, there were friendships among women and friendships among men but almost no friendships between men and women. It would have been…unseemly. Strange. What could the big Kindred mean, asking her to be his friend? It would have been considered a mark of degradation for a man on Q’ess to claim a woman as a friend. Not even a man and wife would claim such a thing.
“How can we be friends?” she asked, honestly confused. “When you are a man and I am a woman? What would we have to speak of when I know only women’s matters and all your knowledge is of the man’s world?”
He frowned.
“Is that how they do it on your planet? Total separation between the male and female worlds?”
“Well…yes.” Allara shrugged. “It is the way things are. For what woman could work outside the home and what man would want to learn to do a woman’s chores?”
He raised an eyebrow at her.
“And what exactly are ‘women’s chores’ according to your people?”
“Oh, well…making bread, for instance,” Allara said. She herself had been taught how to do a woman’s work, as all girls of the Great Houses were. Just because they lived in grand domiciles and had impeccable bloodlines did not excuse anyone from learning their duty.
But Brand surprised her by saying,
“I can make bread.”
“What?” Allara stared at him blankly. “How did you learn?”
“My mother taught me.” He shrugged. “It was one of the first things I learned from her. In the Kindred culture, we believe that it’s important for a male to be able to cook and bake.”
“What? But why?” It seemed so strange that Allara could hardly understand it. Why would a man want to learn lowly women’s work?
“Well, so we can cook and care for our bride, when we find her,” Brand explained. “You see, in my culture, females are extremely rare due to the fact that my people are 95% male. We view females as valuable—to be cherished and taken care of.”
“That seems like…a strange way of thinking,” Allara said, frowning. “It is certainly different among the Q’ess.”
“We’ll both have to get used to each other’s ways,” Brand rumbled. “Maybe to start with, we can make bread together. You can show me your way and I’ll show you mine. Cooking together is a good way to get to know each other and build our friendship.”
“But are you not worried that the other men in the ship will think less of you for having a woman as a friend?” Allara demanded. “Will it not degrade your status to claim me as such?”
Brand raised an eyebrow at her.