"Pregnant?" I asked. I must have said the word at least five times while Tjen crossed her legs beneath her, my seed still flecking her thighs and gleaming from her sex. Tjen nodded mutely.
"But how?" I asked.
"The means seems obvious," she said, her voice flat.
I put my hands over my face. A foot trod on the ground before the cellar window, showing that people were walking past the abandoned Socialist Headquarters that we were sheltering in. I tried to not imagine all of them becoming aware of me and my hideous mistake. I brushed my hands along my face again, feeling the rough stubble of my unshaven face. I preferred to go without whiskers or beard, a style that had caught on during the Great War, when the desperate countermeasures against the black smoke had required a clean seal to the cheeks and face.
Thought of a hideous black fog rolling through town, suffocating all in its path did not seem quite seemly when it came to my future child. And yet, that was the image that stuck as I imagined all the things a child needed. At least, a child like me. My father might have had to flee England like the rest of our united kingdom, and but he had found a place to settle himself in New York. His writing had been deemed seditious and dangerous in the wake of the Great War by the King in Exile and his government, and so he had chosen to remain in the states. There, he had been supported by the socialist party and by an avaricious readership. In the topsy turvy culture that followed such hideous death and senseless slaughter, such overturning of many accepted human conditions...his ideas had brought some measure of sanity.
And now he was dead.
His funds were so much molten slag.
And here I was, a longshoreman whose only education had been spurned as disinterested. I had professed some idea of going to university - maybe Harvard or Red League, to become a Darwinist of some make or another. But those dreams were dashed. Instead, I had a child and a target on my back. I shook my head, then sprang to my feet.
"Who am I?" I snarled to the air.
"George Wells," Tjen said, simply.
"Exactly," I said, then turned to her. "I'm no son of a gun whose going to leave you in high and dry. I don't know
how
, but I will make sure you're safe, and this child too." I knelt beside her, squeezing her hand. "Please, though, tell me. What is a Red Martian childhood like?"
She sighed. "Well." Her face grew set. "For two months, I will swell up a great deal. Larger, more sensitive breasts, a growing belly. And then I will lay my egg." She nodded - ignoring my completely flummoxed expression. "Two months after, the egg shall hatch, and my child will be born. But I do not know how you being a human will alter this."
I blinked. "Why do...do you...milk? With eggs?"
She cocked her head. "Of course. It takes some time for the milk to attain the right properties. I do not see why this would be confusing to you."
I shook my head slowly, then lifted my hands. "Well. Ah. Will it make it hard to...to...uh...do things?"
She smiled. "We shall be able to enjoy making love until right before I lay my egg. Afterwards, I shall be-"
"No, I mean, running,jumping, climbing. We are being chased by the bloody KKK," I said, grinning shakily.
Tjen nodded. "Yes."
"All I needed to know. Lets get dressed. We have a flying machine to catch," I said, grinning at her - trying to seem jaunty and ready. Yanks seemed to act like they could take on the whole world, if they had the right motivation. I remembered the famous last words of the 76
th
Rifles:
These dumb bastards came an awful long way just to die.
Those words had been transcribed by the only survivor of the attack on the Washington infestation as several dozen regiments marched into heat rays and black smoke. But the thing that gave those words their
heft
?
That had been the fifteenth battle of the American front of the Great War.
Bravado, pure and simple. And yet, the 76
th
had dynamited three Tripods before their last was burned to the boots. If they could march cheerfully that way, I sure as well could charge cheerfully into the rest of my life - baby or not, KKK or not.
Once Tjen had dressed in what I would be charitable and call clothes, I tossed on my own shirt, wishing that I had kept hold of the stolen service revolver. Even if it had been hotter than hades, it would have been useful in a pinch. As it was, I poked around the abandoned place and found a machining tool that had been built to lever the printing press open. Somewhere between a crowbar and a T-junction, I hefted it, swung it a few times, then tucked it into my belt, adjusting my jacket to ensure it was covered. I smiled at Tjen and she smiled back at me. Together, we headed for the door. Feeling a crackling nerves along my scalp. Sure I would feel nothing but a searing blast of superheated plasma through my forehead, I peeked out.
Instead, I saw nothing but an open stairwell.
Tjen and I emerged, and together, we walked down the sidewalk. The police had cleared out the wreckage from down the block, and I could see the trams were already running again. The pedestrians we were walking past didn't seem to notice us - they were all New Yorkers, and were focused entirely on getting to their next place of work, their next hustle. Tjen hunched her shoulders and walked with me as I looped an arm around her arm, hooking us together. I didn't know if someone might judge us, but...well, I was a male, and she was a female Red Martian. At least we'd be excused.
"We just need to get to the flying machine port," I whispered. "Just another few blocks. We just need to avoid attracting any attention."
We walked past an alleyway, and there, I could see a huddled figure being kicked by a few ruffians. There were three of them, and they had the nasty look of men...well...of men that I would work with normally. Smudged faces, heavy clothing. One of them even had a puffy, half healed burn along his cheek, the kind one could get from careless use of a flamer. The person they were kicking was too hard to make out, but I didn't care if they were white, black, red or green. That kind of kicking could kill, remarkably quickly. I sighed and stepped forward.
"Gentlemen," I said, trying to sound as posh as I could.
"Ah yes, this is a sound way to evade attention," Tjen whispered. But I could hear pride in her voice.