Date: Thu, 9 May 2013 17:53:56 -0500
From: Vic James <vicjames2@hotmail.com>
Subject: Peabody and the Host 23-24

                      Peabody and the Host
                            Vic James
                      vicjames2@hotmail.com
                   Copyright 2013 by Vic James
                       http://vicjames.com

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                          Twenty-Three

   The  next  day, Lin took Peabody to the clinic  to  check  the
babies. Lan went, too. One of them was his.

   "They don't look like potatoes anymore!"

   Lin chuckled.

   You  could  see  the head and the rear legs. The  rest  was  a
little indistinct still.

   Lin  ran some tests, one of which involved removing cells from
the babies.

   When  Lin  showed Peabody a long needle, Peabody  said,  "Lin,
you  are  completely mistaken if you think you are  pushing  that
thing inside me!"

   "It won't hurt."

   "I know it won't. That's because you aren't doing it."

   "I did not know you have a needle phobia."

   "That  is not a needle. Needles are not eighteen inches  long.
It's a dipstick."

   "It's that long for a reason."

   "I  am  happy for that-thing and its reason." Peabody got  off
the table and headed out of the clinic.

   "Peabody! I promise you that it will not hurt. If it  does,  I
will never have sex with you again."

   "Why  don't we not do it? That way we will definitely be  able
to have sex again."

   "I  have  to get a sample, and this is the only way. I  really
need to check the babies. Please, Peabody!"

   "Why  did you show it to him, Lin? If I didn't know what  that
was, I would run away, too," Lan said.

   "I  didn't  think," Lin said. "Peabody, this is  not  a  human
needle. It is a device. It actively hunts out a route which  will
cause  no pain and will destroy as few cells as possible  in  its
path. It avoids nerves completely. It is this long because it  is
not going to travel in a straight line. Trust me, please."

   Peabody sighed. He got back on the table and closed his  eyes,
tightly.

   Peabody  felt  a  hand  on him. He kept his  eyes  closed.  He
waited  and waited. After several minutes, he wondered  what  was
happening. He thought about opening his eyes, but he did not want
to watch Lin push it into him, even if it wasn't painful.

   "Peabody, it's done. Look at them, Lan."

   Peabody  opened  his  eyes. Lin and  Lan  were  looking  at  a
display.

   "The  babies are in perfect health, my love," Lin said.  "Your
body  is  doing  as  well as an Alaphin host's  would.  They  are
developing at a normal rate."

   "That's great!"

   They  had  a  little party that evening to celebrate.  Peabody
noticed Abbott looked sad.

   "Are you sad about losing yours?" Peabody asked him.

   "Yeah. I just hope-"

   "I  know. If you feel ready to start the supplements,  do  it.
It  is  much less dangerous than what you did before.  That  will
probably make you feel better. Emotionally, I mean."

   "That's true."

   Lin was sitting next to Peabody.

   "Lin,  will you start me on the supplements now?" Abbott asked
him.

   Peabody started stroking Lin's erection.

   "Please Lin? I'll have sex with you," Peabody said.

   They all laughed.

   "All right."

   Abbott became cheerful.

   Lan  was  sitting on the other side of Peabody. He pulled  him
close. Lan was proud of his love.

   "You are wonderful, Peabody."

   "So are you, big daddy."

   They kissed as Lin and Abbott headed for the clinic.



   Three  days  after the quake, Peabody and Abbott attended  the
`Grand Opening' of the first park expansion, the pool.

   "We  decided  to  save time by using the same  design  as  the
other pool," Pon said.

   "I  think  that  was  a great idea. It's a beautiful  design,"
Peabody said.

   The  new  room  had  a door and the front  wall  was  a  sheet
transparent  material Ban said was similar  to  plexiglass.  They
could look out at the park from the pool. Since it was in its own
room,  the  temperature could be raised and  lowered  easily  and
quickly.

   Peabody  looked around. The room was bigger than the  original
pool. There were banana and palm trees in the room, giving  it  a
tropical  look. There were several chairs and a table.  The  room
had  its  own toilet so they wouldn't have to go to  one  of  the
cabins to use one.

   "Can the dogs swim in it? Will the dog hair in the water be  a
problem?" Peabody asked.

   "It  will  be fine. The water goes through the sewage  system,
so it can handle almost anything," Pon said.

   "Please don't pee in the pool, Abbott. That is one of  my  pet
peeves," Peabody said.

   Abbott  laughed.  "That will be an easy  promise  to  keep.  I
didn't do it when I was a kid. The whole idea is gross."

   They  both  admired  the pool and the room  loudly  for  their
mates.

   Neither human had swimsuits, so they went in nude. They  spent
most  of  the day in the pool. Oscar and Tina swam around  for  a
while, but then went to play in the park.

   The  bathhouse was built between the two cabins. It  connected
the  cabins and after they removed part of the cabin walls,  they
could walk from one cabin to the other through the bathhouse.

   "I  like  that. It makes it seem more like one family and  one
house," Peabody said.

   "I agree," Abbott said.

   "There is one more thing that bothers me," Peabody said.

   "What is that, beautiful?"

   "Pon  and Mun are sleeping all alone on the other side of  the
park."

   "What do you suggest?" Lan asked.

   "I  thought maybe we could add a bedroom or two to our  cabin.
Mun  and  Pon,  what  do you think? Do you prefer  your  existing
rooms?"

   "I want to be closer to you," Mun said.

   "I  would like it, too," Pon said. "Plus we can add artificial
gravity to the cabin. We can't to our new quarters in the park."

   "We will do it, then," Lan said.

   They added the rooms.

   Both cabins were near the walls of the cavern, in a corner  of
the  park. The new rooms were even closer to the wall. Once  when
Peabody was outside, staring at the rock wall, Pon walked  up  to
him.

   "We should enlarge the park here, Peabody."

   "Do  you  think so? You will have a better view  outside  your
window!" Pon chuckled. His window faced a rock wall.

   "Yes.  If  you  don't  mind,  I would  like  to  get  everyone
together to discuss an idea of mine."

   "Of course, Pon!"

   They all met outside in front of Peabody's cabin.

   "I  have  a  suggestion," Pon started. "We have  talked  about
expanding the park. I think we should enlarge it right here."  He
pointed  at  the  wall behind the cabin. "And I think  we  should
consider using part of the new area to grow crops."

   Peabody  grinned. "I would love to see that!"  Peabody  looked
around  and  saw Abbott and the others seemed to like  the  idea,
too.

   "We  have  found that many Earth plants grow well  in  Martian
soil.  Right  now,  almost  all  the  plants  in  the  park   are
ornamental.  There  is no reason they all have  to  be.  We  have
discussed growing crops. I think we should start now."

   "How  much  time  would be required to care  for  the  crops?"
Peabody asked.

   "I  think  we  should start small and expand slowly.  We  will
learn the answer to questions like that," Pon said.

   "A lot of it can be automated," Ban said.

   Peabody thought about it.

   "Won't the birds try to eat the crops?" he asked.

   "I  don't know. I suppose they would," Pon said. He paused. "I
am  not sure it matters that much. We aren't doing it because  we
need  food. If the time comes when we need what we grow,  we  can
deal with the problem then."

    "I like the idea," Ban said. The others agreed.

   "We'll get started!" Pon said.

   Peabody walked up to Pon.

   "Pon, I was just admiring part of your anatomy."

   Pon chuckled. "I was hoping you would notice."

   "That  beautiful  candy bar is huge! It's  impossible  not  to
notice." Peabody wrapped his arms around him and smiled.

   "What are you thinking?" Pon asked.

   "I  was  thinking  of  the first time  I  sucked  you  in  the
illuminated cavern."

   "I remember that often."

   "Do you?"

   "Oh, yes!"

   "This cavern is illuminated, too," Peabody said.

   Pon  chuckled  as  Peabody pulled Pon's hand and  they  walked
behind his cabin.

   "Lie down on the grass, will you?" Peabody asked.

   Pon smiled and did it.

   Peabody squatted between his legs and licked Pon's candy  bar.
Pon groaned.

   "You taste good, Pon."

   "I am so glad, my love!"

   Peabody  took  his  large erection in  both  hands  and  began
licking  it  thoroughly. He then rubbed his cheek on it  and  Pon
moaned.

   "Oh, my love!"

   Peabody pressed his face into Pon's groin and sniffed. It  was
a  wonderful  smell.  To  Peabody,  it  smelled  like  home,  and
happiness, and love.

   Then  he began sucking Pon. Pon moaned loudly. Peabody noticed
motion  and looked around. Mun was standing nearby, stroking  his
erection. Peabody was happy.

   He  spent quite a while sucking Pon. He wanted to make it last
for him. Finally, Pon begged him to make him come.

   Peabody sucked on what would fit in his mouth and stroked  the
shaft  with his two hands. Pon moaned loudly and Peabody's  mouth
filled  with Pon's sweet ejaculate. Peabody swallowed  and  Pon's
erection disappeared.

   Peabody smiled at the expression on Pon's face.

   "How was that?" he asked Pon.

   "Oh! Incredible!"

   "It was! I loved it!" Peabody said.

   Pon laughed and got up.

   Peabody looked over to Mun.

   "I don't suppose you would let me-"

   Peabody chuckled as Mun ran over and lay right where Pon had.

   "Fucking  is  great, but I have been wanting to  get  sucked,"
Mun told his love.

   "You  should  have  told  me, Mun!  I  thought  you  preferred
fucking."

   "I love it, but I love it when you suck me, too."

   "Well,  I love sucking you at least as much as getting fucked.
Maybe more. Just tell me."

   "I will, my love."

   Peabody spent just as much time giving Mun pleasure as he  had
Pon.  By  the  time  Mun came in his mouth, Peabody  was  getting
tired. Once Mun was finished, he stood up and helped Peabody  up.
They walked around to the front of the cabin, hand-in-hand.

   "I love you, Peabody," Mun said.

   Peabody hugged him tightly.

   "I love you, too, Mun.

   "Time for a nap!"

   Mun  grinned at him. Peabody went into the cabin and lay down.
Oscar jumped up on the bed and they took a nap together.



   Before  they  could begin the park expansion, they  needed  to
figure where to put all the rock they would be removing. The area
where  the  expansion would be was solid rock, and every  bit  of
rock  they  removed had to go somewhere. Ban sent  a  probe  into
cavern seventeen, where they had dumped the rubble from Peabody's
Park, to see how much space was still available. The answer  was,
not that much. They considered all of their options: taking it to
the  surface,  transporting  it to  another  unused  cavern,  and
compacting  it.  None  of them were ideal. They  were  far  below
ground.  There  were no caverns nearby that they  weren't  using.
Compacting  required  power.  Once  the  power  died,  the   rock
expanded.

   Ban  decided to experiment with using high gravity  fields  to
try  and  create permanent, much denser rock. He found that  when
exposed  to  the  maximum gravity field he  could  generate,  the
compressed  rock turned black and remained compressed  after  the
gravity  field  was  turned  off. He calculated  the  size  of  a
compressed  block  made from the amount or  rock  they  would  be
removing.  It  would be small enough to load on a floater  to  be
left on the surface, although it would take an enormous amount of
power  for the floater to lift of the ground. He started building
the equipment.

   The  next  morning, they all walked over to the wall that  was
about to disappear.

   "I  have  been considering leaving this rock for last.  If  we
work  through a tunnel into the area, the noise will  not  be  so
disruptive. We can basically finish the extension before removing
this last bit of rock," Ban said.

   "That  sounds  good. I was a little worried about  the  noise.
The cabin is right next to it."

   "It  won't  be  that  noisy, Peabody," Pon  said.  "We  aren't
blowing  anything  up. The rock cutter uses noise-suppression  to
keep from ruining our ears."

   Peabody  nodded.  He wondered if all of them  would  disappear
like  they  did when they built the park. But he knew where  they
would  be and it was only a short walk to check on their progress
or just visit with them.



   Abbott had no trouble with the supplements, so Lin raised  the
level. He was still able to handle it.

   When  his  doses  of  the supplements had been  raised  twice,
Peabody asked, "Do you feel any different at all? You don't  seem
to be nauseous."

   "No.  I  don't think I have as much energy, but I  feel  fine,
otherwise. Lin, how long do you think we should take to get me to
full supplementation?" Abbott asked Lin.

   "We  will see how you tolerate it. I would prefer to give  you
at  least  a  week  between increases. When  you  start  to  feel
physically  stressed, we will not raise the dose until  you  feel
better. It is up to your body how fast we go."

   Abbott nodded.



   A  month  later, Peabody was aware of the little  ones  inside
him.  His abdomen was bulging. So was Tina's. Peabody was  almost
as excited about Oscar's and Tina's pups as he was about his own.

   "How  much  will  my two weigh when they are born?"  he  asked
Lin.

   "Three  or  four  pounds each. Since there are  two,  it  will
probably be closer to three pounds."

   "That's  small,  considering  you  are  bigger  than  humans,"
Peabody said.

   "Our  young are not as fully developed when they are  born  as
most Earth mammals are."

   Peabody  thought  bearing Alaphin was much, much  easier  than
carrying human babies.

   Abbott  took  Tina  to Earth for a vet to check  her.  Peabody
stayed  in  the  shuttle with Lan. They had a lot more  fun  than
Abbott did. Tina checked out fine.

   The  puppies  were  born  and  were  mostly  kept  indoors  in
Abbott's  cabin,  with  Earth gravity,  so  their  muscles  would
develop  normally.  The three puppies were  adorable.  The  whole
colony agreed on that. There were two males and a female.




                           Twenty-Four

   Several  weeks  later, Peabody walked over  to  view  the  new
section  of the park. He walked down the short hallway  and  into
the  open.  The  new  section was almost half  the  size  of  the
existing  park.  Ornately carved stone  pillars  had  been  left,
scattered  throughout the new are, connecting the  floor  to  the
ceiling. They were decorative and Peabody loved them. Vines would
be  planted  on  some  of the pillars. The  ceiling  hadn't  been
painted  yet,  but  the lights were on and the  ground  had  been
worked.  He could see where the crops would be grown.  There  was
playground equipment in one area. Peabody was looking forward  to
seeing  his  children  on it. There was  a  large  tarp  covering
something.

   He  walked  over to the black rock. There was a  fence  around
it. Ban saw him and walked over.

   "So  this  is  all  the  rock  you  removed?"  Peabody  asked,
pointing to the black rock.

   "Yes. It is very tightly compressed," Ban said.

   "The  new  area  is huge! It's hard to believe all  that  rock
went into this one."

   "I  know,  but  that  is what thousands of gravities  can  do,
Peabody."

   "How is Abbott?" Ban asked.

   "He's fine. He is taking a nap."

   "Good."

   Pon   and  Fon  joined  them.  Then  Peabody  saw  the  others
approaching. Lan walked up to him and put his arm around him.

   "Pon said you had a surprise, Ban."

   Ban  smiled. "We do. Actually, there are two. The  section  of
the  park  where  the  playground  equipment  is  has  artificial
gravity."

    "Oh, that's great!"

   "Yes.  The children can play there and exercise their  muscles
at the same time."

   "You  were  able  to  mount the gravity  generator  under  the
rock?"

   "Sadly,  no. I tried, but gave up. I realized the area  didn't
need  to have rock immediately under the grass. I simply built  a
false floor over the generator. It is a very sturdy plastic.  The
soil  will go on top of it, and the grass in the soil. Come  with
me."

   Peabody and the others followed Ban. They walked over  to  the
tarp. As they got closer, Peabody realized it was larger than  he
thought.

   "Ready, Peabody?" Ban asked.

   "No. I'm pretty sure I'm not."

   They all laughed.

   Several  of them pulled on the tarp. It came off, and  Peabody
gasped.  It was an enormous statue of him. He stared straight  up
at  it.  One  arm was held up and the statue's face  was  looking
down. It was looking at Peabody! Peabody shivered.

   "How tall is it?"

   "Just over thirty-four feet," Mun said.

   It  was  made of polished, native rock. Peabody's  brain  went
numb. He stared open-mouthed at it.

   "Peabody?" Lan said, "Peabody?"

   Lan  took  Peabody in his arms and hugged him. Peabody  rested
his head on Lan's chest. He sighed. He supposed he would get used
to  it,  but it was-too, too much.  Thirty-four feet of much  too
much.  A  life-sized  statue would have made  him  uncomfortable.
This. It was like a statue of some god.

   "Is there going to be one of Abbott?" Peabody asked.

   "No. Just you," Ban said.

   "I'll  be  lonely. I want statues of the rest of  you  crowded
around it."

   Pon chuckled. "Why?"

   Peabody  decided not to say, "So I won't have to look at  it."
It  would  hurt  their feelings. The statue made  him  incredibly
uncomfortable,  however.  He would  have  to  remember  to  avoid
looking at it.

   "Do you like it?" Mun asked.

   Oh,  lord! Peabody thought. What could he say? That  he  hated
it,  and  would  enjoy blowing it up with dynamite?  Or  that  he
wanted  Ban  to compress it down to a black smudge?  He  couldn't
hurt  any  of them, but especially not Mun. He forced himself  to
look at it and he pretended it was Abbott. That helped a lot.  He
looked up and saw they didn't quite have Abbott's face, but maybe
it  was their first statue. The rock was beautiful, the pose  (of
Abbott) was nice.

   "It's very attractive," he said, finally.

   He looked around and they looked pleased.

   Peabody headed back for the cabin. Lan came with him.

   Once  they  left the new cavern, Lan said, "I knew  you  would
hate it."

   "Did you tell them?"

   "Yes. Peabody, the statue isn't for you. It's for us."

   "I  don't  understand. I'm not dead. I'm right here with  you.
Why do you need an enormous statue?"

   "That's how we see you."

   Peabody   didn't  understand  that,  and  he  was  getting   a
headache.

   "We  wanted to have the statue in the main park, but  we  knew
you  were  getting impatient when we were building the  park.  So
now, we finally have our statue."

   "Why is it so big? Wouldn't a life-sized statue have worked?"

   "We  don't see you that way. I know you love us, but  I  don't
think  you know how important you are. You are important  to  our
species,  not  just to the six of us. We are the only  colony  in
this  galaxy. Because of you, there will be a future with Alaphin
in your galaxy. That is big!"

   "What about Abbott? He is doing just as much."

   "No.  He  isn't. You are making the decisions. Abbott  doesn't
want  to  make  them. He wants you or us to make  them.  I'm  not
saying  that's a bad thing. If the two of you were arguing  about
things, it would be terrible. It is your colony, Peabody. We  all
agree  and you agree. Even Abbott agrees. You felt that way  from
the  start. When you met the brothers in the conference room, you
made  the colony yours. You said you hoped we would have a large,
and  very  happy  family. You expressed  all  our  hopes  in  one
sentence.  Then you proceeded to try to make them real."  Peabody
just  shook his head. "Abbott will have a statue someday,  if  he
can host successfully. But it won't be as large."

   Peabody sighed.

   "OK,  Lan. I don't plan to look at it, but if you like  it,  I
am glad it is there."



   As  the  pregnancy progressed, Peabody gradually  changed  his
mind  about  it  being  easier than a human pregnancy.  He  began
having  trouble  walking, keeping food down,  sleeping,  and  his
blood  pressure was all over the map. Fortunately his kidney  had
not  failed,  even temporarily. They lowered the gravity  in  the
house. That helped his symptoms quite a bit.

   One  morning a few months later, Lin was performing his  daily
check of them. "I can remove them now. They are old enough."

   "Are  you  sure?  I  can live with it for a  few  more  days,"
Peabody said.

   "No, they should be fine."

   Everyone  was present for the removal. When Lin explained  the
procedure  to Peabody, it sounded to him like a fancy  C-section.
Alaphin  hosts  delivered  out of their  single  opening.  Humans
weren't set up to give birth through their butt, though. Lin  was
able to remove them without cutting muscles.

   Peabody was groggy, but conscious.

   Abbott   was  watching  carefully.  He  was  almost  on   full
supplementation, so he was hoping Lin would allow him  to  become
impregnated by Ban and Fon. Lin wanted him to carry only one, but
Abbott  wanted to carry two at a time. He really did not want  to
disappoint one of his mates.

   Lin  removed  one and Peabody noticed there was  no  umbilical
cord. Lin wiped the baby down and it coughed up blood. He held it
face  down and let the blood drain out of its lungs into  a  pan.
Then  he  wiped the baby down again, wrapped it in a blanket  and
handed him to Peabody.

   Peabody   held   his  son  and  decided  he  was   absolutely,
completely, and totally adorable. His baby looked a  lot  like  a
newborn  puppy,  but with human (or Alaphin) features,  also.  He
kept   that  to  himself.  He  wasn't  sure  the  brothers  would
appreciate being compared to puppies.

   Lin  then removed the second baby. He repeated the process and
gave Peabody the second baby.

   He sealed Peabody up and removed the drip from my arms.

   "They're  so  beautiful!"  Peabody  said.  Peabody  had   been
looking  at  the babies, but then he looked up and  saw  all  the
brothers. They were ecstatic! Abbott was grinning, too.

   Lan  sniffed  both of them and said "This one is mine!  Mine!"
The others just nodded.

   "Have you chosen a name, Lan?"

   Lin  said  "It  is customary to wait until they  eat  for  the
first time to name them."

   Lin  had  told  Peabody they wouldn't eat until tomorrow.  All
Peabody  had to do was hold them and they would figure out  where
the  food was. He assured Peabody that their bites would  not  be
painful,  but  Peabody still nervous about them  biting  him  and
drinking his blood.

   "Do you want to try to stand?" he asked Peabody.

   "I still feel a little dizzy."

   Peabody  knew the skin was already healed, thanks to  advanced
Alaphin medical knowledge. And because there were no cut muscles,
he knew he should be able to move around easily.

   Lin  weighed  them.  They each weighed  a  little  over  three
pounds.

   After  about  ten  minutes, he was able to walk.  He  let  the
parents carry their babies. Their third arm allowed them to carry
them, while still having two arms available. He climbed carefully
into the electric vehicle and Lan drove them to the park.

   Peabody realized he didn't know if these were Lin's and  Lan's
first babies. If they had others, they were home on Tarsina,  and
they  would never see them again. He was afraid to ask. He didn't
want to open old wounds.



   The  babies were placed in a crib in an enclosed corner of the
bedroom.  When  they built the enclosure with the  crib,  Peabody
asked if it was because of the babies' crying.

   "No.  Our babies don't cry. Unlike adults, infant Alaphin need
to be kept quite warm," Lin said.

   "How warm?"

   "We will keep their room around eight-five degrees."

   "Oh. That must be unpleasant for you," Peabody said.

   "It is normal. We expect it."

   "How do you know if they need something if they don't cry?"

   "What would they need? They have warmth, food, and love."

   "What about diapers?"

   "They  won't  need them. By the time they are on  solid  food,
they will be capable of using a box." Lin paused. "It is a little
like a litter box."

   "Oh. OK."

   Pon  smiled at Peabody and said "Have you had enough? Have you
changed  your mind about having more? There was a time  when  two
more of us seemed an impossible dream."

   Peabody  smiled at him and said "Ask me tomorrow.  After  they
bite me!"

   The  brothers  all  laughed. Then they all  shouted  "We  love
Peabody! We love Peabody! We love Peabody!" Abbott joined in.

   "I love you, too."

   Peabody  spent the day admiring them. Once their hair  or  fur
dried, they were the color of milk chocolate. Their eyes were not
open yet. Lin told him it would be about a month before they did.
Peabody  lifted  their little third arms which were  little  more
than  tiny hands on their backs. He stroked each of them and  got
little smiles (he thought) from each. It occurred to him, at that
very  late point, that he knew absolutely nothing about newborns,
human or Alaphin.

   He chuckled.

   "What is it, beautiful?"

   "I  just  realized I have two babies and I know nothing  about
babies!"

   "That's  OK. We are the parents," Lin said. "We will tell  you
everything you need to know. You already know the most  important
thing and you are doing it perfectly."

   "What is that?"

   "Loving them."

   "Oh, yes! I can do that!"



   The  next  morning, Lin handed Peabody one of the  babies.  He
smiled  and  said  "Ready?"  He  laughed  at  the  expression  on
Peabody's face.

   Peabody took the adorable baby from him. He kissed it  on  the
top of his head. Peabody sat in a chair next to the crib.

   "Where should I put it?"

   "Hold it so you are comfortable." He laughed again.

   Peabody  held  it  up against his upper body with  the  baby's
head  near his shoulder. The baby nosed around a little and  then
stopped. Then Peabody could feel the baby licking him. It tickled
a little.

   "When will he bite me?"

   "He  already  did.  You bled and the baby is  licking  up  the
blood."

   "That's it?"

   "Yes. I kept telling you it wasn't awful!"

   "I  know,  but  I  thought  you were  lying!"   Peabody  said,
laughing.

   "You really need to trust me, my love! Remember the needle?"

   "How could I forget your two foot long needle?"

   Several of them laughed.

   Lin  continued,  "The baby's saliva has an  anticoagulant.  As
soon  as he stops licking, you will stop bleeding. The holes  are
very small."

   "Do you want to take the other one now, or wait?"

   "You know better than I do how much blood I can lose."

   "They  won't drink that much. Unlike human babies, these  will
not gain much weight until they are weaned. Hunger is what causes
them to accept other food. They will each probably want about  an
ounce  of  blood  every twelve hours. Your body  should  have  no
problem producing that. If it does, there is artificial blood."

   "I'll take the other one. I love them again."

   He laughed and handed him to Peabody.

   "They  are  beautiful. And they look just  like  me,"  Peabody
said, with a grin.

   Lin didn't say anything.

   "Don't you agree?" Peabody asked him.

   "Yes, they are beautiful."

   Peabody laughed.

   "I  haven't figured how to tell them apart yet? Can you two do
it?" Peabody asked.

   "The  eyes on mine look a little wider. You can only tell when
they  are  together, though. They look like babies, though.  Even
human babies tend to look a lot alike. They will eventually  look
different," Lan replied.

   "You and Lan look different, so I guess so."

   "Everyone can't be cute," Lan said.

   "Or have the biggest candy bar," Peabody added.

   "Exactly."

   "On  the  other hand," Peabody said. "Lin was my  first  love.
Non-human, non-pet love, that it."

   "And a first love is special," Lin said.

   Lin leaned forward and kissed him.

   "I love you," Peabody told him.

   "I love you."

   "So! What are their names?"

   "I am naming mine Robert," Lan said, pointing to his baby.

   Peabody was shocked. He had no idea Lan was going to do that.

   "Thank you, Lan," he said.

   "Lin, how about yours?"

   "If it's OK with you, I thought I would name him John."

   Peabody's  eyes  watered and he said "Thank  you.  Thank  you,
both." Peabody smiled and wiped his eyes.

   "Oh,  my love. It is you we should thank. Because of you, Mars
is  now a growing colony rather than merely our crash site,"  Lin
said. Lan nodded his agreement.

   The babies both finished. They just stopping licking.

   Peabody  took  one and handed it to Lan. Then  he  handed  the
other  to  Lin. He watched his two lovers gaze lovingly at  their
kids.

   "Do you feel like a nap, my love?" Lin asked him.

   "Yes,  I  think  so.  Can you stay,  or  do  you  need  to  do
anything?"

   "I will stay with you, Peabody," Lan said.

   "I will stay, too," Lin said.

   Peabody  lay down. Lan put his baby in the crib and  then  got
undressed and joined his love in bed. Lin did the same. Lin faced
Peabody  and  kissed him softly on the lips. Then he stroked  his
love's  hair. Peabody was still weak from the pregnancy and  fell
asleep quickly and with a smile on his face, which pleased Lin.

   Lan  and Lin lay with him, but were too excited to sleep.  All
of  them  had secretly feared their young would not feed  from  a
human  once they were born. Peabody was externally very different
from  an Alaphin host. There was no fur and he smelled different.
Lin  didn't  think  it  likely,  but  they  all  knew  it  was  a
possibility. Once again, their luck held. Their young looked very
healthy and they fed very well.

   "Did you check the teaching equipment?" Lan asked Lin softly.

   "Yes. It is ready. I shudder to think what would happen if  we
had  to  teach  our  young. I don't think I  would  make  a  good
teacher.  I  kept  wanting to strangle students  in  the  medical
classes I took." Lan barked softly in laughter.

   "I suppose you will have John learn medicine," Lan said.

   "Yes, we will need to have more than one medic if the size  of
our  family is to increase as much as it seems it will. Peabody's
success  means Abbott may very well be able to host successfully,
as well."

   "I've been thinking of having Rob learn agriculture. Now  that
we  have  a real colony and an area for crops, we should  try  to
lessen  our  dependence  on  Earth. Relations  with  Earth  could
deteriorate at any time."

   "That is true."



   "What?"

   Peabody  woke  to that shouted word. There were raised  voices
in  the  other room. He got out of bed and walked into the living
room. Abbott, Ban, and Fon were talking to Lin.

   "Why risk it?" Lin asked Abbott.

   "I wanted to do it, Lin," Abbott said.

   "What's going on?" Peabody asked.

   "Ban and Fon both just impregnated Abbott," Lin said.

   Peabody smiled. "Oh! Congratulations!"

   Abbott grinned.

   "Lin,  he wants to do it. It is his life. Abbott is definitely
aware of what will happen if his body can't cope. Right, Abbott?"
Peabody asked.

   "Right!  But  meanwhile, these two will each be half  Ban  and
half Fon. We need that, Lin. More than we need clones of them."

   "They aren't clones," Lin said.

   "You  know what I mean. Your baby is practically identical  to
you.  These won't be duplicates of one parent. These two may have
new  strengths. Those strengths could be important to the colony.
And  the  only  way  we could do that was to have  both  of  them
impregnate me at the same time. If I lose one, the remaining baby
will still be half-Ban and half-Fon."

   Peabody  approved.  It  was a solution  which  didn't  require
Abbott to pick Ban over Fon.

   "Well,  it's done. There is no point in arguing about what  is
already done. I need to bump you up to full supplementation."

   "I  know. I feel pretty good and I am almost on full now.  The
higher  level  may make me nauseous, but I am willing  to  accept
that. I feel a hundred times better than I did before, and as the
babies  begin feeding, I will have lower levels of the chemicals,
anyway."

   Lin nodded.

   Pon and Mun walked into the cabin while they were talking.

   "Lin,  do  you  think  I should do that  with  Pon  and  Mun?"
Peabody asked.

   "Do what?" Mun asked.

   "Abbott just got impregnated by both Ban and Fon," Lin said.

   "Oh. I think we should. What do you think, Pon?" Mun asked.

   "It  is fine with me," Pon said. "Peabody, that is really your
decision.  The  host  decides such things for  the  good  of  the
family."

   "Well,  I don't necessarily know what is best for the  family,
but I like the idea."

   "We will do it, then," Mun said.

   Pon nodded.



   The  babies  continued eating several times a day. They  grew,
but they didn't gain any weight. Peabody worried about that. They
looked thinner and thinner as they grew.

   "Are you sure they are eating enough?" he asked Lin.

   "No.  They  aren't,  but that is good. The sooner  they  start
accepting other food, the better. They need more protein now than
they  get from your blood. Hunger is what makes them switch  from
drinking blood to eating, and going on a high protein diet  after
the switch will speed their growth. They are perfectly normal.

   Peabody  spent  most of each day with the babies.  He  worried
about neglecting his mates. He mentioned it to Lan.

   "Beautiful,  they need you more than we do, right now.  Please
don't worry about it. Alaphin hosts are the same way. We want you
to love them and spend time with them."

   "Lan,  I  hope I am not opening old wounds, but  do  you  have
other children?"

   "No. This is my first. None of us have children. Aracatal  was
pregnant  when  we  were stranded here, but he and  our  brother,
whose baby Aracatal carried both died in an explosion."



   They  were  all  gathered in a conference room on  Earth.  The
babies  were six weeks old and their eyes were open. At Peabody's
request,  they  were having a family portrait made.  One  of  the
lawyers  who was an avid photographer was arranging them for  the
photo.  Peabody and Abbott were in front with the Alaphin  behind
him. Abbott was six weeks pregnant and wasn't having any problems
so  far.  Peabody  was  holding  the  babies  who  were  watching
everything with a great deal of interest. Fortunately, they  were
completely happy being in his arms. Neither of them struggled  or
squirmed.

   Peabody  turned  around and looked at  the  back  drop  behind
them.  It  was  an  outdoor shot of Mars' surface.  It  would  be
hundreds  of  years  before they could actually  go  out  on  the
surface. Still, it was appropriate, he thought. He looked down at
his beautiful babies.

   "All  right.  I think we are ready," the lawyer said.  "Please
look ahead."

   Peabody smiled. He did.



                         The End