Ringtail
By the Pakkrat
Chapter 1
Dzuerongvoe (Gvurrdon 1413) B664997-C Hi Pr VSEq
At 129 years of age at the end of the century, the Dame Qithka Cannagrrh was not long for the world. The sound of monitors was a monotone ticking of the last moments of her long life. The Blooded Fang Vargr female had been signed out of Dzuerongvoe General against medical advice or AMA so she could die in the comfort of her bed at home at Cannagrrh Villa. Gathered about her deathbed were the closest family of Pack Cannagrrh. On one side of the bed was Qithka’s sister-in-law, Zhevra Cannagrrh. The Red Pelt – scratch that, thought the dying mind of Qithka – the Suedzuk Vargr held her right claw. Even in her last moments the Dame was journaling her next adventure. It made her chuckle a little in the irony. Here she was, the story instead of the field correspondent covering the story. But the act made her cough in fits. Qithka risked opening her eyes barely to see the far wall of the bedroom. The vertical banner of the Pack Cannagrrh Villa, a purple velvet field with a silver, embroidered mansche in the likeness of a spiral galaxy, hung from the wall and was framed by those who had come at her last moments. The Dame smiled weakly. She had done her terms as Alpha. Her debts paid. The Pack was safe, though her brother Gevaudan Cannagrrh too was dying slowly a few rooms down the hall from her. It seemed fitting that the firstborn of the white cubs should go first.
The siblings had lived an exceeding number of years thanks to taking anagathics, life-extending drugs shortly after the two left home. Gevaudan had acquired a source earlier than Qithka, despite her high-profile fame and Charisma. The Scout-Courier had slowed his aging before the Entertainer sister. But he got his comeuppance. In his three years of maddened self-exile, Gevaudan had repeated aging crises without the drugs. In those years he had aged and eventually caught up to Qithka in appearance when his wife Zhevra rescued him from the uninhabited Farside of mainworld Tagnaghoutsozaeng (Gvurrdon 2123). The Suedzuk Vargr female had brought home her mate-husband, unaffected by his aged appearance. She knew he was already old enough to be her grandsire.
But now, in these advanced years, the makeshift anagathics he had prepared in the wild were failing him, just as over-the-counter drugs had failed Qithka. Fitting that the two were both on their deathbeds, ready to cross over in proximity. The journalist had ever followed her younger brother across sectors of space and through a century of adventures, wars, and discoveries. It was a full life, Qithka had to admit from inside the fog of her dying mind.
To her left, her long-time assistant, secretary, friend Uthka Varzeekh sat in reverent silence. It was her culture’s tradition to remain silent in these last minutes. The old crone had slept from 1116 to 1184, sixty-something years, in a Low Berth cryo-sleep chamber embedded in a shielded vault and somewhat protected by as much psi-shielding as could be nested over the Psions of the day. Once the Mind Tsunami had passed Ksethu (Gvurrdon 1112), the precog was allowed to slowly revive and under weapons trained on her. So many other Psions had gone mad even in their long repose from the Wave’s effects despite the shielding. Uthka was either one of the lucky ones or she was very good at hiding whatever the Empress Wave did to her. Now at the apparent age of 76, the true age being too high for Qithka to calculate on her deathbed, Uthka sat beside her and held her free claw.
The old crone had done so much for the Dame, her brother, her brother’s Artemis Group mercenaries-for-hire, for Zhevra Cannagrrh and the Cannagrrh Villa. Now at such an advanced age, the psionic female had little else to do. She had advised the Alpha Gevaudan as a co-Vizier beside his wife Zhevra. The trio did not need the Entertainer to become a returning power on Dzuerongvoe. That was as it should be, thought the dying Qithka. Her life had been about covering the stories, exposing the truth, and distributing it to the interstellar community as a journalist. She had done her fair service as the Pack Alpha before her brother. It was his fault for pushing her to the throne, Qithka recalled through the haze of her last thoughts.
She had tracked and chased after Gevaudan Cannagrrh, Pilot-Astrogator in the Artemis Group, finding him just before the outbreak of the Fifth Frontier War in 1107 Imperial Calendar. The Entertainer and propaganda actress rode along and recorded the mercenaries and her magazine’s robot Witness had uploaded and sent back packets of its recordings for editing. It was the high times of Qithka’s field correspondence. But eventually the message from Dzuerongvoe reached the ears of the siblings to return home. In that exiled flight home, Gevaudan had tricked her into stepping from his Fast Far Scout, the Sixth Horizon, so he could lift and leave her to ascend the throne and become the next Alpha of Pack Cannagrrh. The two were meant to Infight for the seat, but her loving brother had schemed a way out of hurting his older sister in a melee combat to decide the successor. Qithka had fumed, thrown tantrums and hated her brother for decades as she ruled the Pack. She was the grounded field correspondent in those years. The Scout-Courier escaped such a seated fate to later become the Vargrtarian of the Collapse. The Alpha Qithka Cannagrrh had been denied covering that secret project as well.
The old, white spacer Gevaudan Cannagrrh had taken upon himself to utilize the legalized slavery laws to buy slaves from the Wilds of the Vargr Splinters and sell them inside the Safe worlds of the Dzen Aeng Kho or Society of Equals. His stock consisted mostly of female concubines, legal prostitutes, who made new lives away from the terror of Virus that had spread across Charted Space and slaughtered trillions of sophonts. Gevaudan had used those decades as the Dame sat as Alpha to save lives. Many of the concubines were able to purchase their freedoms after being delivered to the Safe worlds inside their communist polity. Gevaudan married four of his stock, each in their turn. Three were amicably divorced and went on with their emancipated lives. His fourth wife, Zhevra proved to be his final and best mate. The Suedzuk had shown the Pack a higher quality than the Equals, Unequals, Inequals and slaves of the Dzen Aeng Kho. The female, despite her own challenges of racism, sexism, medical and psychological hurdles had stopped the Pack from destroying itself. At the ascension of Zhevra’s mate-husband to the throne and releasing Dame Qithka to new adventures after so many decades of administration, Qithka took to the stars once more.
Now, at the end of the century, in 1199, Qithka was about to bid farewell to her life. She opened her eyes fully and looked to the Psion in purple robes, orich-colored Unequal sash belts on her waist and muzzle. The Unequal crone leveled her silent gaze at the dying Dame. Wordlessly, the seer smiled and nodded once, assuring Qithka. The old precognizant female from Ngoerrgh had remained silent about the future or futures she saw with her mental powers. In what the gray Vargr female termed quietus, the oracular Psion refused to reveal the time track’s chapters. A true Cassandra, Uthka Varzeekh refused to be further burned by Cassandra’s Conundrum, the dilemma of whether or not to speak prophesies to those who could not handle predictions. The Vargr beside the dying white Dame squeezed Qithka’s claw.
I want my brother, Qithka thought. “I want my brother,” she rasped quietly through ragged vocal cords. But the Alpha of Pack Cannagrrh could not attend his sister’s passing, so sick was he. A coughing fit was herald to a muscular seizure that followed. Her claws grip was answered by the assuring hold of Zhevra Cannagrrh to her right and Uthka Varzeekh to her left. Then Qithka gave up and fell back into soft pillows and translated at last.
* * *
Flat lines appeared on the monitors and were accompanied by a whine of monitor alarms. Doctors on call at the Villa entered at the alarms with at least three nurses. Measurements with manual touch and with devices were taken. Then the call came from the physician who checked his pocket computer.
“The Dame Qithka Cannagrrh has di-…translated at 1532 hours, Dzuerongvoe local on 323-1199,” declared the Vargr doctor who then whispered his condolences to the females and the other Pack members in the room at the time. Then his team respectfully left the room.
A howl of the gathered was heard in the halls of Cannagrrh Villa. It was long, sorrowful, respectful and at last exultant. The Vargr were paying vocal tribute to the Dame in her passing. The medical team waited in the hall with muzzles tilted to the floor. First to appear outside the room was the gray and white female in purple robes lined with coins and the strange gold-orange embroidery. By now the team had learned that there was a Psion on the grounds.
By the Pakkrat

Chapter 1
Dzuerongvoe (Gvurrdon 1413) B664997-C Hi Pr VSEq
At 129 years of age at the end of the century, the Dame Qithka Cannagrrh was not long for the world. The sound of monitors was a monotone ticking of the last moments of her long life. The Blooded Fang Vargr female had been signed out of Dzuerongvoe General against medical advice or AMA so she could die in the comfort of her bed at home at Cannagrrh Villa. Gathered about her deathbed were the closest family of Pack Cannagrrh. On one side of the bed was Qithka’s sister-in-law, Zhevra Cannagrrh. The Red Pelt – scratch that, thought the dying mind of Qithka – the Suedzuk Vargr held her right claw. Even in her last moments the Dame was journaling her next adventure. It made her chuckle a little in the irony. Here she was, the story instead of the field correspondent covering the story. But the act made her cough in fits. Qithka risked opening her eyes barely to see the far wall of the bedroom. The vertical banner of the Pack Cannagrrh Villa, a purple velvet field with a silver, embroidered mansche in the likeness of a spiral galaxy, hung from the wall and was framed by those who had come at her last moments. The Dame smiled weakly. She had done her terms as Alpha. Her debts paid. The Pack was safe, though her brother Gevaudan Cannagrrh too was dying slowly a few rooms down the hall from her. It seemed fitting that the firstborn of the white cubs should go first.
The siblings had lived an exceeding number of years thanks to taking anagathics, life-extending drugs shortly after the two left home. Gevaudan had acquired a source earlier than Qithka, despite her high-profile fame and Charisma. The Scout-Courier had slowed his aging before the Entertainer sister. But he got his comeuppance. In his three years of maddened self-exile, Gevaudan had repeated aging crises without the drugs. In those years he had aged and eventually caught up to Qithka in appearance when his wife Zhevra rescued him from the uninhabited Farside of mainworld Tagnaghoutsozaeng (Gvurrdon 2123). The Suedzuk Vargr female had brought home her mate-husband, unaffected by his aged appearance. She knew he was already old enough to be her grandsire.
But now, in these advanced years, the makeshift anagathics he had prepared in the wild were failing him, just as over-the-counter drugs had failed Qithka. Fitting that the two were both on their deathbeds, ready to cross over in proximity. The journalist had ever followed her younger brother across sectors of space and through a century of adventures, wars, and discoveries. It was a full life, Qithka had to admit from inside the fog of her dying mind.
To her left, her long-time assistant, secretary, friend Uthka Varzeekh sat in reverent silence. It was her culture’s tradition to remain silent in these last minutes. The old crone had slept from 1116 to 1184, sixty-something years, in a Low Berth cryo-sleep chamber embedded in a shielded vault and somewhat protected by as much psi-shielding as could be nested over the Psions of the day. Once the Mind Tsunami had passed Ksethu (Gvurrdon 1112), the precog was allowed to slowly revive and under weapons trained on her. So many other Psions had gone mad even in their long repose from the Wave’s effects despite the shielding. Uthka was either one of the lucky ones or she was very good at hiding whatever the Empress Wave did to her. Now at the apparent age of 76, the true age being too high for Qithka to calculate on her deathbed, Uthka sat beside her and held her free claw.
The old crone had done so much for the Dame, her brother, her brother’s Artemis Group mercenaries-for-hire, for Zhevra Cannagrrh and the Cannagrrh Villa. Now at such an advanced age, the psionic female had little else to do. She had advised the Alpha Gevaudan as a co-Vizier beside his wife Zhevra. The trio did not need the Entertainer to become a returning power on Dzuerongvoe. That was as it should be, thought the dying Qithka. Her life had been about covering the stories, exposing the truth, and distributing it to the interstellar community as a journalist. She had done her fair service as the Pack Alpha before her brother. It was his fault for pushing her to the throne, Qithka recalled through the haze of her last thoughts.
She had tracked and chased after Gevaudan Cannagrrh, Pilot-Astrogator in the Artemis Group, finding him just before the outbreak of the Fifth Frontier War in 1107 Imperial Calendar. The Entertainer and propaganda actress rode along and recorded the mercenaries and her magazine’s robot Witness had uploaded and sent back packets of its recordings for editing. It was the high times of Qithka’s field correspondence. But eventually the message from Dzuerongvoe reached the ears of the siblings to return home. In that exiled flight home, Gevaudan had tricked her into stepping from his Fast Far Scout, the Sixth Horizon, so he could lift and leave her to ascend the throne and become the next Alpha of Pack Cannagrrh. The two were meant to Infight for the seat, but her loving brother had schemed a way out of hurting his older sister in a melee combat to decide the successor. Qithka had fumed, thrown tantrums and hated her brother for decades as she ruled the Pack. She was the grounded field correspondent in those years. The Scout-Courier escaped such a seated fate to later become the Vargrtarian of the Collapse. The Alpha Qithka Cannagrrh had been denied covering that secret project as well.
The old, white spacer Gevaudan Cannagrrh had taken upon himself to utilize the legalized slavery laws to buy slaves from the Wilds of the Vargr Splinters and sell them inside the Safe worlds of the Dzen Aeng Kho or Society of Equals. His stock consisted mostly of female concubines, legal prostitutes, who made new lives away from the terror of Virus that had spread across Charted Space and slaughtered trillions of sophonts. Gevaudan had used those decades as the Dame sat as Alpha to save lives. Many of the concubines were able to purchase their freedoms after being delivered to the Safe worlds inside their communist polity. Gevaudan married four of his stock, each in their turn. Three were amicably divorced and went on with their emancipated lives. His fourth wife, Zhevra proved to be his final and best mate. The Suedzuk had shown the Pack a higher quality than the Equals, Unequals, Inequals and slaves of the Dzen Aeng Kho. The female, despite her own challenges of racism, sexism, medical and psychological hurdles had stopped the Pack from destroying itself. At the ascension of Zhevra’s mate-husband to the throne and releasing Dame Qithka to new adventures after so many decades of administration, Qithka took to the stars once more.
Now, at the end of the century, in 1199, Qithka was about to bid farewell to her life. She opened her eyes fully and looked to the Psion in purple robes, orich-colored Unequal sash belts on her waist and muzzle. The Unequal crone leveled her silent gaze at the dying Dame. Wordlessly, the seer smiled and nodded once, assuring Qithka. The old precognizant female from Ngoerrgh had remained silent about the future or futures she saw with her mental powers. In what the gray Vargr female termed quietus, the oracular Psion refused to reveal the time track’s chapters. A true Cassandra, Uthka Varzeekh refused to be further burned by Cassandra’s Conundrum, the dilemma of whether or not to speak prophesies to those who could not handle predictions. The Vargr beside the dying white Dame squeezed Qithka’s claw.
I want my brother, Qithka thought. “I want my brother,” she rasped quietly through ragged vocal cords. But the Alpha of Pack Cannagrrh could not attend his sister’s passing, so sick was he. A coughing fit was herald to a muscular seizure that followed. Her claws grip was answered by the assuring hold of Zhevra Cannagrrh to her right and Uthka Varzeekh to her left. Then Qithka gave up and fell back into soft pillows and translated at last.
* * *
Flat lines appeared on the monitors and were accompanied by a whine of monitor alarms. Doctors on call at the Villa entered at the alarms with at least three nurses. Measurements with manual touch and with devices were taken. Then the call came from the physician who checked his pocket computer.
“The Dame Qithka Cannagrrh has di-…translated at 1532 hours, Dzuerongvoe local on 323-1199,” declared the Vargr doctor who then whispered his condolences to the females and the other Pack members in the room at the time. Then his team respectfully left the room.
A howl of the gathered was heard in the halls of Cannagrrh Villa. It was long, sorrowful, respectful and at last exultant. The Vargr were paying vocal tribute to the Dame in her passing. The medical team waited in the hall with muzzles tilted to the floor. First to appear outside the room was the gray and white female in purple robes lined with coins and the strange gold-orange embroidery. By now the team had learned that there was a Psion on the grounds.
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