ENDER'S GAME  ENDER'S GAME
  by Orson Scott Card
  
  (c) 1985 by Orson Scott Card
  
  v1.0(Jan-24-1999)
  If you find and correct errors in the text, please update the version number 
by 0.1 and redistribute.
  
  
  
  
  Chapter 1 -- Third
  
  "I've watched through his eyes, I've listened through his ears, and tell you 
he's the one. Or at least as close as we're going to get."
  
  "That's what you said about the brother."
  
  "The brother tested out impossible. For other reasons. Nothing to do with his 
ability."
  
  "Same with the sister. And there are doubts about him. He's too malleable. Too 
willing to submerge himself in someone else's will."
  
  "Not if the other person is his enemy."
  
  "So what do we do? Surround him with enemies all the time?"
  
  "If we have to."
  
  "I thought you said you liked this kid."
  
  "If the buggers get him, they'll make me look like his favorite uncle."
  
  "All right. We're saving the world, after all. Take him."
  
  ***
  
  The monitor lady smiled very nicely and tousled his hair and said, "Andrew, I 
suppose by now you're just absolutely sick of having that horrid monitor. Well, 
I have good news for you. That monitor is going to come out today. We're going 
to just take it right out, and it won't hurt a bit."
  
  Ender nodded. It was a lie, of course, that it wouldn't hurt a bit. But since 
adults always said it when it was going to hurt, he could count on that 
statement as an accurate prediction of the future. Sometimes lies were more 
dependable than the truth.
  
  "So if you'll just come over here, Andrew, just sit right up here on the 
examining table. The doctor will be in to see you in a moment."
  
  The monitor gone. Ender tried to imagine the little device missing from the 
back of his neck. I'll roll over on my back in bed and it won't be pressing 
there. I won't feel it tingling and taking up the heat when I shower.
  
  And Peter won't hate me anymore. I'll come home and show him that the 
monitor's gone, and he'll see that I didn't make it, either. That I'll just be a 
normal kid now, like him. That won't be so bad then. He'll forgive me that I had 
my monitor a whole year longer than he had his. We'll be-- not friends, 
probably. No, Peter was too dangerous. Peter got so angry. Brothers, though. Not 
enemies, not friends, but brothers-- able to live in the same house. He won't 
hate me, he'll just leave me alone. And when he wants to play buggers and 
astronauts, maybe I won't have to play, maybe I can just go read a book.
  
  But Ender knew, even as he thought it, that Peter wouldn't leave him alone. 
There was something in Peter's eyes, when he was in his mad mood, and whenever 
Ender saw that look, that glint, he knew that the one thing Peter would not do 
was leave him alone. I'm practicing piano, Ender. Come turn the pages for me. 
Oh, is the monitor boy too busy to help his brother? Is he too smart? Got to go 
kill some buggers, astronaut? No, no, I don't want your help. I can do it on my 
own, you little bastard, you little Third.
  
  "This won't take long, Andrew," said the doctor.
  
  Ender nodded.
  
  "It's designed to be removed. Without infection, without damage. But there'll 
be some tickling, and some people say they have a feeling of something missing. 
You'll keep looking around for something. Something you were looking for, but 
you can't find it, and you can't remember what it was. So I'll tell you. It's 
the monitor you're looking for, and it isn't there. In a few days that feeling 
will pass."
  
  The doctor was twisting something at the back of Ender's head. Suddenly a pain 
stabbed through him like a needle from his neck to his groin. Ender felt his 
back spasm, and his body arched violently backward; hi head struck the bed. He 
could feel his legs thrashing, and his hands were clenching each other, wringing 
each other so tightly that they ached.
  
  "Deedee!" shouted the doctor. "I need you!" The nurse ran in, gasped.  "Got to 
relax these muscles. Get it to me, now! What are you waiting for!"
  
  Something changed hands; Ender could not see. He lurched to one side and fell 
off the examining table. "Catch him!" cried the nurse.
  
  "Just hold him steady."
  
  "You hold him, doctor, he's too strong for me."
  
  "Not the whole thing! You'll stop his heart."
  
  Ender felt a needle enter his back just above the neck of his shirt. It 
burned, but wherever in him the fire spread, his muscles gradually unclenched. 
Now he could cry for the fear and pain of it.
  
  "Are you all right, Andrew?" the nurse asked.
  
  Andrew could not remember how to speak. They lifted him onto the table. They 
checked his pulse, did other things; he did not understand it all.
  
  The doctor was trembling; his voice shook as he spoke. "They leave these 
things in the kids for three years, what do they expect? We could have switched 
him off, do you realize that? We could have unplugged his brain for all time."
  
  "When does the drug wear off'?" asked the nurse.
  
  "Keep him here for at least an hour. Watch him. If he doesn't start talking in 
fifteen minutes, call me. Could have unplugged him forever. I don't have the 
brains of a bugger."
  
  ***
  
  He got back to Miss Pumphrey's class only fifteen minutes before the closing 
bell. He was still a little unsteady on his feet.
  
  "Are you all right, Andrew?" asked Miss Pumphrey.
  
  He nodded.
  
  "Were you ill?"
  
  He shook his head.
  
  "You don't look well."
  
  "I'm OK."
  
  "You'd better sit down, Andrew."
  
  He started toward his seat, but stopped. Now what was I looking for? I can't 
think what I was looking for.
  
  "Your seat is over there," said Miss Pumphrey.
  
  He sat down, but it was something else he needed, something he had lost. I'll 
find it later.
  
  "Your monitor," whispered the girl behind him.
  
  Andrew shrugged.
  
  "His monitor," she whispered to the others.
  
  Andrew reached up and felt his neck. There was a bandaid. It was gone. He was 
just like everybody else now.
  
  "Washed out, Andy?" asked a boy who sat across the aisle and behind him. 
Couldn't think of his name. Peter. No, that was someone else.
  
  "Quiet, Mr. Stilson," said Miss Pumphrey. Stilson smirked.
  
  Miss Pumphrey talked about multiplication. Ender doodled on his desk, drawing 
contour maps of mountainous islands and then telling his desk to display them in 
three dimensions from every angle. The teacher would know, of course, that he 
wasn't paying attention, but she wouldn't bother him. He always knew the answer, 
even when she thought he wasn't paying attention.
  
  In the corner of his desk a word appeared and began marching around the 
perimeter of the desk. It was upside down and backward at first, but Ender knew 
what it said long before it reached the bottom of the desk and turned right side 
up.
  
  THIRD
  
  Ender smiled. He was the one who had figured out how to send messages and make 
them march-- even as his secret enemy called him names, the method of delivery 
praised him. It was not his fault he was a Third.  It was the government's idea, 
they were the ones who authorized it-- how else could a Third like Ender have 
got into school? And now the monitor was gone. The experiment entitled Andrew 
Wiggin hadn't worked out alter all. If they could, he was sure they would like 
to rescind the waivers that had allowed him to be born at all. Didn't work, so 
erase the experiment.
  
  The bell rang. Everyone signed off their desks or hurriedly typed in reminders 
to themselves. Some were dumping lessons or data into their computers at home. A 
few gathered at the printers while something they wanted to show was printed 
out. Ender spread his hands over the child-size keyboard near the edge of the 
desk and wondered what it would feel like to have hands as large as a 
grown-up's. They must feel so big and awkward, thick stubby fingers and beefy 
palms. Of course, they had bigger keyboards-- but how could their thick fingers 
draw a fine line, the way Ender could, a thin line so precise that he could make 
it spiral seventy-nine times from the center to the edge of the desk without the 
lines ever touching or overlapping. It gave him something to do while the 
teacher droned on about arithmetic. Arithmetic! Valentine had taught him 
arithmetic when he was three.
  
  "Are you all right. Andrew?"
  
  "Yes, ma'am."
  
  "You'll miss the bus."
  
  Ender nodded and got up. The other kids were gone. They would be waiting, 
though, the bad ones. His monitor wasn't perched on his neck, hearing what heard 
and seeing what he saw. They could say what they liked.  They might even hit him 
now-- no one could see anymore, and so no one would come to Ender's rescue. 
There were advantages to the monitor, and he would miss them.
  
  It was Stilson, of course. He wasn't bigger than most other kids, but he was 
bigger than Ender. And he had some others with him. He always did.
  
  "Hey, Third."
  
  Don't answer. Nothing to say.
  
  "Hey, Third, we're talkin to you, Third, hey bugger-lover, we're talkin to 
you."
  
  Can't think of anything to answer. Anything I say will make it worse. So will 
saying nothing.
  
  "Hey, Third, hey, turd, you flunked out, huh? Thought you were better than us, 
but you lost your little birdie, Thirdie, got a bandaid on your neck."
  
  "Are you going to let me through?" Ender asked.
  
  "Are we going to let him through? Should we let him through?" They all 
laughed. "Sure we'll let you through. First we'll let your arm through, then 
your butt through, then maybe a piece of your knee."
  
  The others chimed in now. "Lost your birdie, Thirdie.  Lost your birdie, 
Thirdie."
  
  Stilson began pushing him with one hand, someone behind him then pushed him 
toward Stilson.
  
  "See-saw, marjorie daw," somebody said.
  
  "Tennis!"
  
  "Ping-pong!"
  
  This would not have a happy ending. So Ender decided that he'd rather not be 
the unhappiest at the end. The next time Stilson's arm came out to push him, 
Ender grabbed at it. He missed.
  
  "Oh, gonna fight me, huh? Gonna fight me, Thirdie?"
  
  The people behind Ender grabbed at him, to hold him.
  
  Ender did not feel like laughing, but he laughed. "You mean it takes this many 
of you to fight one Third?"
  
  "We're people, not Thirds, turd face. You're about as strong as a fart!"
  
  But they let go of him. And as soon as they did, Ender kicked out high and 
hard, catching Stilson square in the breastbone. He dropped. It took Ender by 
surprise he hadn't thought to put Stilson on the ground with one kick. It didn't 
occur to him that Stilson didn't take a fight like this seriously, that he 
wasn't prepared for a truly desperate blow.
  
  For a moment, the others backed away and Stilson lay motionless. They were all 
wondering if he was dead. Ender, however, was trying to figure out a way to 
forestall vengeance. To keep them from taking him in a pack tomorrow. I have to 
win this now, and for all time, or I'll fight it every day and it will get worse 
and worse. Ender knew the unspoken rules of manly warfare, even though he was 
only six. It was forbidden to strike the opponent who lay helpless on the 
ground; only an animal would do that.
  
  So Ender walked to Stilson's supine body and kicked him again, viciously, in 
the ribs. Stilson groaned and rolled away from him. Ender walked around him and 
kicked him again, in the crotch. Stilson could not make a sound; he only doubled 
up and tears streamed out of his eyes.
  
  Then Ender looked at the others coldly. "You might be having some idea of 
ganging up on me. You could probably beat me up pretty bad. But just remember 
what I do to people who try to hurt me. From then on you'd be wondering when I'd 
get you, and how bad it would be." He kicked Stilson in the face. Blood from his 
nose spattered the ground nearby. "It wouldn't be this bad," Ender said. "It 
would be worse."
  
  He turned and walked away. Nobody followed him, He turned a corner into the 
corridor leading to the bus stop. He could hear the boys behind him saying, 
"Geez. Look at him. He's wasted." Ender leaned his head against the wall of the 
corridor and cried until the bus came. I am just like Peter. Take my monitor 
away, and I am just like Peter.
  
  
  
  Chapter 2 -- Peter
  
  "All right, it's off. How's he doing?"
  
  "You live inside somebody's body for a few years, you get used to it. I look 
at his face now, I can't tell what's going on. I'm not used to seeing his facial 
expressions. I'm used to feeling them."
  
  "Come on, we're not talking about psychoanalysis here. We're soldiers, not 
witch doctors. You just saw him beat the guts out of the leader of a gang."
  
  "He was thorough. He didn't just beat him, he beat him deep. Like Mazer 
Rackham at the--"
  
  "Spare me. So in the judgment of the committee, he passes.
  
  "Mostly. Let's see what he does with his brother, now that the monitor's off."
  
  "His brother. Aren't you afraid of what his brother will do to him?"
  
  "You were the one who told me that this wasn't a no-risk business."
  
  "I went back through some of the tapes. I can't help it. I like the kid. I 
think were going to screw him up."
  
  "Of course we are. It's our job. We're the wicked witch. We promise 
gingerbread, but we eat the little bastards alive."
  
  ***
  
  "I'm sorry, Ender," Valentine whispered. She was looking at the bandaid on his 
neck.
  
  Ender touched the wall and the door closed behind him. "I don't care. I'm glad 
it's gone."
  
  "What's gone?" Peter walked into the parlor, chewing on a mouthful of bread 
and peanut butter.
  
  Ender did not see Peter as the beautiful ten-year-old boy that grown-ups saw, 
with dark, thick, tousled hair and a face that could have belonged to Alexander 
the Great. Ender looked at Peter only to detect anger or boredom, the dangerous 
moods that almost always led to pain. Now as Peter's eyes discovered the bandaid 
on his neck, the telltale flicker of anger appeared.
  
  Valentine saw it too. "Now he's like us," she said, trying to soothe him 
before he had time to strike.
  
  But Peter would not be soothed. "Like us? He keeps the little sucker till he's 
six years old. When did you lose yours? You were three. I lost mine before I was 
five. He almost made it, little bastard, little bugger."
  
  This is all right, Ender thought. Talk and talk, Peter. Talk is fine.
  
  "Well, now your guardian angels aren't watching over you," Peter said. "Now 
they aren't checking to see if you feel pain, listening to hear what I'm saying, 
seeing what I'm doing to you. How about that? How about it?"
  
  Ender shrugged.
  
  Suddenly Peter smiled and clapped his hands together in a mockery of good 
cheer. "Let's play buggers and astronauts," he said.
  
  "Where's Mom?" asked Valentine.
  
  "Out," said Peter. "I'm in charge."
  
  "I think I'll call Daddy."
  
  "Call away," said Peter. "You know he's never in."
  
  "I'll play," Ender said.
  
  "You be the bugger," said Peter.
  
  "Let him be the astronaut for once," Valentine said.
  
  "Keep your fat face out of it, fart mouth," said Peter. "Come on upstairs and 
choose your weapons."
  
  It would not be a good game, Ender knew it was not a question of winning. When 
kids played in the corridors, whole troops of them, the buggers never won, and 
sometimes the games got mean. But here in their flat, the game would start mean, 
and the bugger couldn't just go empty and quit the way buggers did in the real 
wars. The bugger was in it until the astronaut decided it was over.
  
  Peter opened his bottom drawer and took out the bugger mask. Mother had got 
upset at him when Peter bought it, but Dad pointed out that the war wouldn't go 
away just because you hid bugger masks and wouldn't let your kids play with 
make-believe laser guns. The better to play the war games, and have a better 
chance of surviving when the buggers came again.
  
  If I survive the games, thought Ender. He put on the mask. It closed him in 
like a hand pressed tight against his face. But this isn't how it feels to he a 
bugger, thought Ender. They don't wear this face like a mask, it is their face. 
On their home worlds, do the buggers put on human masks, and play? And what do 
they call its? Slimies, because we're so soft and oily compared to them?
  
  "Watch out, Slimy," Ender said.
  
  He could barely see Peter through the eyeholes. Peter smiled at him. "Slimy, 
huh? Well, bugger-wugger, let's see how you break that face of yours."
  
  Ender couldn't see it coming, except a slight shift of Peter's weight; the 
mask cut our his peripheral vision. Suddenly there was the pain and pressure of 
a blow to the side of his head; he lost balance, fell that way.
  
  "Don't see too well, do you, bugger?" said Peter.
  
  Ender began to take off the mask. Peter put his toe against Ender's groin. 
"Don't take off the mask," Peter said.
  
  Ender pulled the mask down into place, took his hands away.
  
  Peter pressed with his foot. Pain shot through Ender; he doubled up.
  
  "Lie flat, bugger. We're gonna vivisect you, bugger. At long last we've got 
one of you alive, and we're going to see how you work."
  
  "Peter, stop it," Ender said.
  
  "Peter, stop it. Very good. So you buggers can guess our names. You can make 
yourselves sound like pathetic, cute little children so we'll love you and be 
nice to you. But it doesn't work. I can see you for what you really are. They 
meant you to be human, little Third, but you're really a bugger, and now it 
shows."
  
  He lifted his toot, took a step, and then knelt on Ender, his knee pressing 
into Ender's belly just below the breastbone. He put more and more of his weight 
on Ender. It became hard to breathe.
  
  "I could kill you like this," Peter whispered. "Just press and press until 
you're dead. And I could say that I didn't know it would hurt you, that we were 
just playing, and they'd believe me, and everything would be fine. And you'd be 
dead. Everything would be fine."
  
  Ender could not speak; the breath was being forced from his lungs. Peter might 
mean it. Probably didn't mean it, but then he might.
  
  "I do mean it," Peter said. "Whatever you think. I mean it. They only 
authorized you because I was so promising. But I didn't pan out. You did better. 
They think you're better. But I don't want a better little brother, Ender. I 
don't want a Third."
  
  "I'll tell," Valentine said.
  
  "No one would believe you."
  
  "They'd believe me."
  
  "Then you're dead, too, sweet little sister."
  
  "Oh, yes," said Valentine. "They'll believe that. 'I didn't know it would kill 
Andrew. And when he was dead, I didn't know it would kill Valentine too.'"
  
  The pressure let up a little.
  
  "So. Not today. But someday you two won't be together. And there'll be an 
accident."
  
  "You're all talk," Valentine said. "You don't mean any of it."
  
  "I don't?"
  
  "And do you know why you don't mean it?" Valentine asked. "Because you want to 
be in government someday. You want to be elected. And they won't elect you if 
your opponents can dig up the fact that your brother and sister both died in 
suspicious accidents when they were little. Especially because of the letter 
I've put in my secret file, which will be opened in the event of my death."
  
  "Don't give me that kind of crap," Peter said.
  
  "It says, I didn't die a natural death. Peter killed me, and if he hasn't 
already killed Andrew, he will soon. Not enough to convict you, but enough to 
keep you from ever getting elected."
  
  "You're his monitor now," said Peter. "You better watch him, day and night. 
You better be there."
  
  "Ender and I aren't stupid. We scored as well as you did on everything. Better 
on some things. We're all such wonderfully bright children. You're not the 
smartest, Peter, just the biggest."
  
  "Oh, I know. But there'll come a day when you aren't there with him, when you 
forget. And suddenly you'll remember, and you'll rush to him, and there he'll be 
perfectly all right. And the next time you won't worry so much, and you won't 
come so fast. And every time, he'll be all right. And you'll think that I 
forgot. Even though you'll remember that I said this, you'll think that I 
forgot. And years will pass. And then there'll be a terrible accident, and I'll 
find his body, and I'll cry and cry over him, and you'll remember this 
conversation, Vally, but you'll be ashamed of yourself for remembering, because 
you'll know that I changed, that it really was an accident, that it's cruel of 
you even to remember what I said in a childhood quarrel. Except that it'll be 
true. I'm gonna save this up, and he's gonna die, and you won't do a thing, not 
a thing. But you go on believing that I'm just the biggest."
  
  "The biggest asshole," Valentine said.
  
  Peter leaped to his feet and started for her. She shied away. Ender pried off 
his mask. Peter flopped back on his bed and started to laugh. Loud, but with 
real mirth, tears coming to his eyes. "Oh, you guys are just super, just the 
biggest suckers on the planet earth."
  
  "Now he's going to tell us it was all a joke," Valentine said.
  
  "Not a joke, a game. I can make you guys believe anything. I can make you 
dance around like puppets." In a phony monster yoice he said, "I'm going to kill 
you and chop you into little pieces and put you into the garbage hole." He 
laughed again. "Biggest suckers in the solar system."
  
  Ender stood there watching him laugh and thought of Stilson, thought of how it 
felt to crunch into his body. This is who needed it. This is who should have got 
it.
  
  As if she could read his mind, Valentine whispered, "No, Ender."
  
  Peter suddenly rolled to the side, flipped off the bed, and got in position 
for a fight. "Oh, yes, Ender," he said. "Any time, Ender."
  
  Ender lifted his right leg and took off the shoe. He held it up. "See there, 
on the toe? That's blood, Peter."
  
  "Ooh. Ooh, I'm gonna die, I'm gonna die. Ender killed a capper-tiller and now 
he's gonna kill me."
  
  There was no getting to him. Peter was a murderer at heart, and nobody knew it 
but Valentine and Ender.
  
  Mother came home and commiserated with Ender about the monitor. Father came 
home and kept saying it was such a wonderful surprise, they had such fantastic 
children that the government told them to have three and now the government 
didn't want to take any of them after all, so here they were with three, they 
still had a Third... until Ender wanted to scream at him, I know I'm a Third, I 
know it, if you want I'll go away so you don't have to be embarrassed in front 
of everybody, I'm sorry I lost the monitor and now you have three kids and no 
obvious explanation, so inconvenient for you, I'm sorry sorry sorry.
  
  He lay in bed staring upward into the darkness... On the bunk above him, he 
could hear Peter turning and tossing restlessly. Then Peter slid off the bunk 
and walked out of the room. Ender heard the hushing sound of the toilet 
clearing; then Peter stood silhouetted in the doorway.
  
  He thinks I'm asleep. He's going to kill me.
  
  Peter walked to the bed, and sure enough, he did not lift himself up to his 
bed. Instead he came and stood by Ender's head.
  
  But he did not reach for a pillow to smother Ender. He did not have a weapon.
  
  He whispered, "Ender, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I know how it feels. I'm sorry, 
I'm your brother. I love you."
  
  A long time later, Peter's even breathing said that he was asleep. Ender 
peeled the bandaid from his neck. And for the second time that day he cried.
  
  
  
  Chapter 3 -- Graff
  
  "The sister is our weak link. He really loves her."
  
  "I know. She can undo it all, from the start. He won't wont to leave her."
  
  "So, what are you going to do?"
  
  "Persuade him that he wants to come with us more than he wants to stay with 
her."
  
  "How will you do that?"
  
  "I'll lie to him."
  
  "And if that doesn't work?"
  
  "Then I'll tell the truth. We're allowed to do that in emergencies. We can't 
plan for everything, you know."
  
  ***
  
  Ender wasn't very hungry during breakfast. He kept wondering what it would be 
like at school. Facing Stilson after yesterday's fight. What Stilson's friends 
would do. Probably nothing, but he couldn't be sure. He didn't want to go.
  
  "You're not eating, Andrew," his mother said.
  
  Peter came into the room. "Morning. Ender. Thanks for leaving your slimy 
washcloth in the middle of the shower."
  
  "Just for you," Ender murmured.
  
  "Andrew, you have to eat."
  
  Ender held out his wrists, a gesture that said, So feed it to me through a 
needle.
  
  "Very funny." Mother said. "I try to be concerned, but it makes no difference 
to my genius children."
  
  "It was all your genes that made us, Mom." said Peter. "We sure didn't get any 
from Dad."
  
  "I heard that," Father said, not looking up from the news that was being 
displayed on the table while he ate.
  
  "It would've been wasted if you hadn't."
  
  The table beeped. Someone was at the door.
  
  "Who is it?" Mother asked.
  
  Father thumbed a key and a man appeared on hts video. He was wearing the only 
military uniform that meant anything anymore, the IF, the International Fleet.
  
  "I thought it was over," said Father.
  
  Peter said nothing, just poured milk over his cereal.
  
  And Ender thought, Maybe I won't have to go to school today after all.
  
  Father coded the door open and got up from the table. "I'll see to it," he 
said. "Stay and eat."
  
  They stayed, but they didn't eat. A few moments later, Father came back into 
the room and beckoned to Mother.
  
  "You're in deep poo," said Peter. "They found out what you did to Stilson, and 
now they're gonna make you do time out in the Belt."
  
  "I'm only six, moron. I'm a juvenile."
  
  "You're a Third, turd. You've got no rights."
  
  Valentine came in, her hair in a sleepy halo around her face. "Where's Mom and 
Dad? I'm too sick to go to school."
  
  "Another oral exam, huh?" Peter said.
  
  "Shut up, Peter," said Valentine.
  
  "You should relax and enjoy it," said Peter. "It could be worse."
  
  "I don't know how."
  
  "It could be an anal exam."
  
  "Hyuk hyuk," Valentine said. "Where are Mother and Father?"
  
  "Talking to a guy from IF."
  
  Instinctively she looked at Ender. After all, for years they had expected 
someone to come and tell them that Ender had passed, that Ender was needed.
  
  "That's right, look at him," Peter said. "But it might he me, you know. They 
might have realized I was the best of the lot after all." Peter's feelings were 
hurt, and so he was being a snot, as usual.
  
  The door opened. "Ender," said Father, "you better come in here."
  
  "Sorry, Peter," Valentine taunted.
  
  Father glowered. "Children, this is no laughing matter."
  
  Ender followed Father into the parlor. The IF officer rose to his feet when 
they entered, but he did not extend a hand to Ender.
  
  Mother was twisting her wedding band on her finger. "Andrew," she said. "I 
never thought you were the kind to get in a fight."
  
  "The Stilson boy is in the hospital," Father said. "You really did a number on 
him. With your shoe, Ender, that wasn't exactly fair."
  
  Ender shook his head. He had expected someone from the school to come about 
Stilson, not an officer of the fleet. This was more serious than he had thought. 
And yet he couldn't think what else he could have done.
  
  "Do you have any explanation for your behavior, young man?" asked the officer.
  
  Ender shook his head again. He didn't know what to say, and he was afraid to 
reveal himself to be any more monstrous than his actions had made him out to be. 
I'll take it, whatever the punishment is, he thought. Let's get it over with.
  
  "We're willing to consider extenuating circumstances," the officer said. "But 
I must tell you it doesn't look good. Kicking him in the groin, kicking him 
repeatedly in the face and body when he was down-- sounds like you really 
enjoyed it."
  
  "I didn't," Ender whispered.
  
  "Then why did you do it?"
  
  "He had his gang there," Ender said.
  
  "So? This excuses anything?"
  
  "No."
  
  "Tell me why you kept on kicking him. You had already won."
  
  "Knocking him down won the first fight. I wanted to win all the next ones, 
too, right then, so they'd leave me alone." Ender couldn't help it, he was too 
afraid, too ashamed of his own acts: though he tried not to, he cried again. 
Ender did not like to cry and rarely did; now, in less than a day, he had done 
it three times. And each time was worse. To cry in front of his mother and 
father and this military man, that was shameful. "You took away the monitor," 
Ender said. "I had to take care of myself, didn't I?"
  
  "Ender, you should have asked a grown-up for help," Father began.
  
  But the officer stood up and stepped across the room to Ender. He held out his 
hand. "My name is Graff. Ender. Colonel Hyrum Graff. I'm director of primary 
training at Battle School in the Belt. I've come to invite you to enter the 
school."
  
  After all. "But the monitor--"
  
  "The final step in your testing was to see what would happen if the monitor 
comes off. We don't always do it that way, but in your case--"
  
  "And I passed?"
  
  Mother was incredulous. "Putting the Stilson boy in the hospital? What would 
you have done if Andrew had killed him, given him a medal?"
  
  "It isn't what he did, Mrs. Wiggin. It's why." Colonel Graff handed her a 
folder full of papers. "Here are the requisitions. Your son has been cleared by 
the IF Selective Service. Of course we already have your consent, granted in 
writing at the time conception was confirmed, or he could not have been born. He 
has been ours from then, if he qualified."
  
  Father's voice was trembling as he spoke. "It's not very kind of you, to let 
us think you didn't want him, and then to take him after all."
  
  "And this charade about the Stilson boy," Mother said.
  
  "It wasn't a charade, Mrs. Wiggin. Until we knew what Ender's motivation was, 
we couldn't be sure he wasn't another-- we had to know what the action meant. Or 
at least what Ender believed that it meant."
  
  "Must you call him that stupid nickname?" Mother began to cry.
  
  "I'm sorry, Mrs. Wiggin. But that's the name he calls himself."
  
  "What are you going to do, Colonel Graff?" Father asked. "Walk out the door 
with him now?"
  
  "That depends," said Graff.
  
  "On what?"
  
  "On whether Ender wants to come."
  
  Mother's weeping turned to bitter laughter. "Oh, so it's voluntary after all, 
how sweet!"
  
  "For the two of you, the choice was made when Ender was conceived. But for 
Ender, the choice has not been made at all. Conscripts make good cannon fodder, 
but for officers we need volunteers."
  
  "Officers?" Ender asked. At the sound of his voice, the others fell silent.
  
  "Yes," said Graff. "Battle School is for training future starship captains and 
commodores of flotillas and admirals of the fleet."
  
  "Let's not have any deception herc!" Father said angrily. "How many of the 
boy's at the Battle School actually end up in command of ships!"
  
  "Unfortunately, Mr. Wiggin, that is classified information. But I can say that 
none of our boys who makes it through the first year has ever failed to receive 
a commission as an officer. And none has served in a position of lower rank than 
chief executive officer of an interplanetary vessel. Even in the domestic 
defense forces within our own solar system, there's honor to be had."
  
  "How many make it through the first year?" asked Ender.
  
  "All who want to," said Graff.
  
  Ender almost said, I want to. But he held his tongue. This would keep him out 
of school, but that was stupid, that was just a problem for a few days. It would 
keep him away from Peter-- that was more important, that might be a matter of 
life itself. But to leave Mother and Father, and above all, to leave Valentine. 
And become a soldier. Ender didn't like fighting. He didn't like Peter's kind, 
the strong against the weak, and he didn't like his own kind either, the smart 
against the stupid.
  
  "I think," Graff said, "that Ender and I should have a private conversation."
  
  "No," Father said.
  
  "I won't take him without letting you speak to him again," Graff said. "And 
you really can't stop me."
  
  Father glared at Graff a moment longer, then got up and left the room. Mother 
paused to squeeze Ender's hand. She closed the door behind her when she left.
  
  "Ender," Graff said, "if you come with me, you won't be back here for a long 
time. There aren't any vacations from Battle School. No visitors, either. A full 
course of training lasts until you're sixteen years old-- you get your first 
leave, under certain circumstances, when you're twelve. Believe me, Ender, 
people change in six years, in ten years. Your sister Valentine will be a woman 
when you see her again, if you come with me. You'll be strangers. You'll still 
love her, Ender, but you won't know her. You see I'm not pretending it's easy."
  
  "Mom and Daddy?"
  
  "I know you, Ender. I've been watching the monitor disks for some time. You 
won't miss your mother and father, not much, not for long. And they won't miss 
you long, either."
  
  Tears came to Ender's eyes, in spite of himself. He turned his face away, but 
would not reach up to wipe them.
  
  "They do love you, Ender. But you have to understand what your life has cost 
them. They were born religious, you know. Your father was baptized with the name 
John Paul Wieczorek. Catholic. The seventh of nine children."
  
  Nine children. That was unthinkable. Criminal.
  
  "Yes, well, people do strange things for religion. You know the sanctions, 
Ender-- they were not as harsh then, but still not easy. Only the first two 
children had a free education. Taxes steadily rose with each new child. Your 
father turned sixteen and invoked the Noncomplying Families Act to separate 
himself from his family. He changed his name, renounced his religion, and vowed 
never to have more than the allotted two children. He meant it. All the shame 
and persecution he went through as a child-- he vowed no child of his would go 
through it. Do you understand?"
  
  "He didn't want me."
  
  "Well, no one wants a Third anymore. You can't expect them to be glad. But 
your father and mother are a special case. They both renounced their religions-- 
your mother was a Mormon-- but in fact their feelings are still ambiguous. Do 
you know what ambiguous means?"
  
  "They feel both ways."
  
  "They're ashamed of having come from noncompliant families. They conceal it. 
To the degree that your mother refuses to admit to anyone that she was born in 
Utah, lest they suspect. Your father denies his Polish ancestry, since Poland is 
still a noncompliant nation, and under international sanction because of it. So, 
you see, having a Third, even under the government's direct instructions, undoes 
everything they've been trying to do."
  
  "I know that."
  
  "But it's more complicated than that. Your father still named you with 
legitimate saints' names. In fact, he baptized all three of you himself as soon 
as he got you home after you were born. And your mother objected. They quarreled 
over it each time, not because she didn't want you baptized, but because she 
didn't want you baptized Catholic. They haven't really given up their religion. 
They look at you and see you as a badge of pride, because they were able to 
circumvent the law and have a Third. But you're also a badge of cowardice, 
because they dare not go further and practice the noncompliance they still feel 
is right. And you're a badge of public shame, because at every step you 
interfere with their efforts at assimilation into normal complying society."
  
  "How can you know all this?"
  
  "We monitored your brother and sister, Ender. You'd be amazed at how sensitive 
the instruments are. We were connected directly to your brain. We heard all that 
you heard, whether you were listening carefully or not. Whether you understood 
or not. We understand."
  
  "So my parents love me and don't love me?"
  
  "They love you. The question is whether they want you here. Your presence in 
this house is a constant disruption. A source of tension. Do you understand?"
  
  "I'm not the one who causes tension."
  
  "Not anything you do, Ender. Your life itself. Your brother hates you because 
you are living proof that he wasn't good enough. Your parents resent you because 
of all the past they are trying to evade."
  
  "Valentine loves me."
  
  "With all her heart. Completely, unstintingly, she's devoted to you, and you 
adore her. I told you it wouldn't be easy."
  
  "What is it like, there?"
  
  "Hard work. Studies, just like school here, except we put you into mathematics 
and computers much more heavily. Military history. Strategy and tactics. And 
above all, the Battle Room."
  
  "What's that?"
  
  "War games. All the boys are organized into armies. Day after day, in zero 
gravity, there are mock battles. Nobody gets hurt, but winning and losing 
matter. Everybody starts as a common soldier, taking orders. Older boys are your 
officers, and it's their duty to train you and command you in battle. More than 
that I can't tell you. It's like playing buggers and astronauts-- except that 
you have weapons that work, and fellow soldiers fighting beside you, and your 
whole future and the future of the human race depends on how well you learn, how 
well you fight. It's a hard life, and you won't have a normal childhood. Of 
course, with your mind, and as a Third to boot, you wouldn't have a particularly 
normal childhood anyway."
  
  "All boys?"
  
  "A few girls. They don't often pass the tests to get in. Too many centuries of 
evolution are working against them. None of them will be like Valentine, anyway. 
But there'll be brothers there, Ender."
  
  "Like Peter?"
  
  "Peter wasn't accepted, Ender, for the very reasons that you hate him."
  
  "I don't hate him. I'm just--"
  
  "Afraid of him. Well, Peter isn't all bad, you know. He was the best we'd seen 
in a long time. We asked your parents to choose a daughter next they would have 
anyway hoping that Valentine would be Peter, but milder. She was too mild. And 
so we requisitioned you."
  
  "To be half Peter and half Valentine."
  
  "If things worked out right."
  
  "Am I?"
  
  "As far as we can tell. Our tests are very good, Ender. But they don't tell us 
everything. In fact, when it comes down to it, they hardly tell us anything. But 
they're better than nothing." Graff leaned over and took Ender's hands in his. 
"Ender Wiggin, if it were just a matter of choosing the best and happiest future 
for you, I'd tell you to stay home. Stay here, grow up, be happy. There are 
worse things than being a Third, worse things than a big brother who can't make 
up his mind whether to be a human being or a jackal. Battle School is one of 
those worse things. But we need you. The buggers may seem like a game to you 
now, Ender, but they damn near wiped us out last time. But it wasn't enough. 
They had us cold, outnumbered and outweaponed. The only thing that saved us was 
that we had the most brilliant military commander we've ever found. Call it 
fate, call it God, call it damnfool luck, we had Mazer Rackham."
  
  "But we don't have him now, Ender. We've scraped together everything mankind 
could produce, a fleet that makes the one they sent against us last time seem 
like a bunch of kids playing in a swimming pool. We have some new weapons, too. 
But it might not be enough, even so. Because in the eighty years since the last 
war, they've had as much time to prepare as we have. We need the best we can 
get, and we need them fast. Maybe you're not going to work out for us, and maybe 
you are. Maybe you'll break down under the pressure, maybe it'll ruin your life, 
maybe you'll hate me for coming here to your house today. But if there's a 
chance that because you're with the fleet, mankind might survive and the buggers 
might leave us alone forever then I'm going to ask you to do it. To come with 
me."
  
  Ender had trouble focusing on Colonel Graff. The man looked far away and very 
small, as if Ender could pick him up with tweezers and drop him in a pocket. To 
leave everything here, arid go to a place that was very hard, with no Valentine, 
no Mom and Dad.
  
  And then he thought of the films of the buggers that everyone had to see at 
least once a year. The Scathing of China. The Battle of the Belt. Death and 
suffering and terror. And Mazer Rackham and his brilliant maneuvers, destroying 
an enemy fleet twice his size and twice his firepower, using the little human 
ships that seemed so frail and weak. Like children fighting with grown-ups. And 
we won.
  
  "I'm afraid," said Ender quietly. "But I'll go with you."
  
  "Tell me again," said Graff.
  
  "It's what I was born for, isn't it? If I don't go, why am I alive?"
  
  "Not good enough," said Graff.
  
  "I don't want to go," said Ender, "but I will."
  
  Graff nodded. "You can change your mind. Up until the time you get in my car 
with me, you can change your mind. After that, you stay at the pleasure of the 
International Fleet. Do you understand that?"
  
  Ender nodded.
  
  "All right. Let's tell them."
  
  Mother cried. Father held Ender tight. Peter shook his hand and said, "You 
lucky little pinheaded fart-eater." Valentine kissed him and left her tears on 
his cheek.
  
  There was nothing to pack. No belongings to take. "The school provides 
everything you need, from uniforms to school supplies. And as for toys-- there's 
only one game."
  
  "Good-bye," Ender said to his family. He reached up and took Colonel Graff's 
hand and walked out the door with him.
  
  "Kill some buggers for me!" Peter shouted.
  
  "I love you, Andrew!" Mother called.
  
  "We'll write to you!" Father said.
  
  And as he got into the car that waited silently in the corridor, he heard 
Valentine's anguished cry. "Come back to me! I love you forever!"
  
  
  
  Chapter 4 -- Launch
  
  "With Ender, we have to strike a delicate balance. Isolate him enough that he 
remains creative-- otherwise he'll adopt the system here and we'll lose him. At 
the same time, we need to make sure he keeps a strong ability to lead."
  
  "If he earns rank, he'll lead."
  
  "lt isn't that simple. Mazer Rackham could handle his little fleet and win. By 
the time this war happens, there'll be too much, even for a genius. Too many 
little coats. He has to work smoothly with his subordinates."
  
  "Oh. good. He has to be a genius and nice. too."
  
  "Not nice. Nice will let the buggers have us all,"
  
  "So you're going to isolate him."
  
  "I'll have him completely separated from the rest of the boys by the time we 
get to the School."
  
  "I have no doubt of it. I'll be waiting for you to get here. I watched the 
vids of what he did to the Stilson boy. This is not a sweet little kid you're 
bringing up here."
  
  "That's where you're mistaken. He's even sweeter. But don't worry. We'll purge 
that in a hurry."
  
  "Sometimes I think you enjoy breaking these little geniuses."
  
  "There is an art to it, and I'm very, very good at it. But enjoy? Well, maybe. 
When they put back the pieces afterward, and it makes them better."
  
  "You're a monster."
  
  "Thanks. Does this mean I get a raise?"
  
  "Just a medal. The budget isn't inexhaustible."
  
  ***
  
  They say that weightlessness can cause disorientation, especially in children, 
whose sense of direction isn't yet secure. But Ender was disoriented before he 
left Earth's gravity. Before the shuttle launch even began.
  
  There were nineteen other boys in his launch. They filed out of the bus and 
into the elevator. They talked and joked and bragged and laughed. Ender kept his 
silence. He noticed how Graff and the other officers were watching them. 
Analyzing. Everything we do means something, Ender realized. Them laughing. Me 
not laughing.
  
  He toyed with the idea of trying to be like the other boys. But he couldn't 
think of any jokes, and none of theirs seemed funny. Wherever their laughter 
came from, Ender couldn't find such a place in himself.  He was afraid, and fear 
made him serious.
  
  They had dressed him in a uniform, all in a single piece; it felt funny not to 
have a belt cinched around his waist. He felt baggy and naked, dressed like 
that. There were TV cameras going, perched like animals on the shoulders of 
crouching, prowling men. The men moved slowly, catlike, so the camera motion 
would be smooth. Ender caught himself moving smoothly, too.
  
  He imagined himself being on TV, in an interview. The announcer asking him, 
How do you feel, Mr. Wiggin? Actually quite well, except hungry. Hungry? Oh, 
yes, they don't let you eat for twenty hours before the launch. How interesting, 
I never knew that.  All of us are quite hungry, actually. And all the while, 
during the interview, Ender and the TV guy would slink along smoothly in front 
of the cameraman, taking long, lithe strides. For the first time, Ender felt 
like laughing. He smiled. The other boys near him were laughing at the moment, 
too, for another reason. They think I'm smiling at their joke, thought Ender. 
But I'm smiling at something much funnier.
  
  "Go up the ladder one at a time," said an officer. "When you come to an aisle 
with empty seats, take one. There aren't any window seats."
  
  It was a joke. The other boys laughed.
  
  Ender was near the last, but not the very last. The TV cameras did not give 
up, though. Will Valentine see me disappear into the shuttle? He thought of 
waving at her, of running to the cameraman and saying, "Can I tell Valentine 
good-bye?" He didn't know that it would be censored out of the tape if he did, 
for the boys soaring out to Battle School were all supposed to be heroes. They 
weren't supposed to miss anybody. Ender didn't know about the censorship, but he 
did know that running to the cameras would be wrong.
  
  He walked the short bridge to the door in the shuttle. He noticed that the 
wall to his right was carpeted like a floor. That was where the disorientation 
began. The moment he thought of the wall as a floor, he began to feel like he 
was walking on a wall. He got to the ladder, and noticed that the vertical 
surface behind it was also carpeted. I am climbing up the floor. Hand over hand, 
step by step.
  
  And then, for fun, he pretended that he was climbing down the wall. He did it 
almost instantly in his mind, convinced himself against the best evidence of 
gravity. He found himself gripping the seat tightly, even though gravity pulled 
him firmly against it.
  
  The other boys were bouncing on their seats a little, poking and pushing, 
shouting. Ender carefully found the straps, figured out how they fit together to 
hold him at crotch, waist, and shoulders. He imagined the ship dangling upside 
down on the undersurface of the Earth, the giant fingers of gravity holding them 
firmly in place. But we will slip away, he thought. We are going to fall off 
this planet.
  
  He did not know its significance at the time. Later, though, he would remember 
that it was even before he left Earth that he first thought of it as a planet, 
like any other, not particularly his own.
  
  "Oh, already figured it out," said Graff. He was standing on the ladder.
  
  "Coming with us?" Ender asked.
  
  "I don't usually come down for recruiting," Graff said. "I'm kind of in charge 
there. Administrator of the School. Like a principal. They told me I had to come 
back or I'd lose my job." He smiled.
  
  Ender smiled back. He felt comfortable with Graff. Graff was good. And he was 
principal of the Battle School. Ender relaxed a little. He would have a friend 
there.
  
  The other boys were belted in place, those who hadn't done as Ender did. Then 
they waited for an hour while a TV at the front of the shuttle introduced them 
to shuttle flight, the history of space flight, and their possible future with 
the great starships of the IF. Very boring stuff. Ender had seen such films 
before.
  
  Except that he had not been belted into a seat inside the shuttle. Hanging 
upside down from the belly of Earth.
  
  The launch wasn't bad. A little scary. Some jolting, a few moments of panic 
that this might be the first failed launch in the history of the shuttle. The 
movies hadn't made it plain how much violence you could experience, lying on 
your back in a soft chair.
  
  Then it was over, and he really was hanging by the straps, no gravity 
anywhere.
  
  But because he had already reoriented himself, he was not surprised when Graff 
came up the ladder backward, as if he were climbing down to the front of the 
shuttle. Nor did it bother him when Graff hooked his feet under a rung and 
pushed off with his hands, so that suddenly he swung upright, as if this were an 
ordinary airplane.
  
  The reorientations were too much for some. One boy gagged; Ender understood 
then why they had been forbidden to eat anything for twenty hours before the 
launch. Vomit in null gravity wouldn't be fun.
  
  But for Ender, Graff's gravity game was fun, And he carried it further, 
imagining that Graff was actually hanging upside down from the center aisle, and 
then picturing him sticking straight out from a side wall. Gravity could go any 
which way. However I want it to go. I can make Graff stand on his head and he 
doesn't even know it.
  
  "What do you think is so funny, Wiggin?"
  
  Graff's voice was sharp and angry. What did I do wrong, thought Ender. Did I 
laugh out loud?
  
  "I asked you a question, soldier!" barked Graff.
  
  Oh yes. This is the beginning of the training routine. Ender had seen some 
military shows on TV, and they always shouted a lot at the beginning of training 
before the soldier and the officer became good friends.
  
  "Yes sir," Ender said.
  
  "Well answer it, then!"
  
  "I thought of you hanging upside down by your feet. I thought it was funny."
  
  It sounded stupid, now, with Graff looking at him coldly. "To you I suppose it 
is funny. Is it funny to anybody else here?"
  
  Murmurs of no.
  
  "Well why isn't it?" Graff looked at them all with contempt. "Scumbrains, 
that's what we've got in this launch. Pinheaded little morons. Only one of you 
had the brains to realize that in null gravity directions are whatever you 
conceive them to be. Do you understand that, Shafts?"
  
  The boy nodded.
  
  "No you didn't. Of course you didn't. Not only stupid, but a liar too. There's 
only one boy on this launch with any brains at all, and that's Ender Wiggin. 
Take a good look at him, little boys. He's going to he a commander when you're 
still in diapers up there. Because he knows how to think in null gravity, and 
you just want to throw up."
  
  This wasn't the way the show was supposed to go. Graff was supposed to pick on 
him, not set him up as the best. They were supposed to be against each other at 
first, so they could become friends later.
  
  "Most of you are going to ice out. Get used to that, little boys. Most of you 
are going to end up in Combat School, because you don't have the brains to 
handle deep-space piloting. Most of you aren't worth the price of bringing you 
up here to Battle School because you don't have what it takes. Some of you might 
make it. Some of you might be wotth something to humanity. But don't bet on it. 
I'm betting on only one."
  
  Suddenly Graff did a backflip and caught the ladder with his hands, then swung 
his feet away from the ladder. Doing a handstand, if the floor was down. 
Dangling by his hands, if the floor was up. Hand over hand he swung himself back 
along the aisle to his seat.
  
  "Looks like you've got it made here," whispered the boy next to him.
  
  Ender shook his head.
  
  "Oh, won't even talk to me?" the boy said.
  
  "I didn't ask him to say that stuff," Ender whispered.
  
  He felt a sharp pain on the top of his head. Then again. Some giggles from 
behind him. The boy in the next seat back must have unfastened his straps. Again 
a blow to the head. Go away, Ender thought. I didn't do anything to you.
  
  Again a blow to the head. Laughter from the boys. Didn't Graff see this? 
Wasn't he going to stop it? Another blow. Harder. It really hurt. Where was 
Graff?
  
  Then it became clear. Graff had deliberately caused it. It was worse than the 
abuse in the shows. When the sergeant picked on you, the others liked you 
better. But when the officer prefers you, the others hate you.
  
  "Hey, fart-eater," came the whisper from behind him. He was hit in the head 
again. "Do you like this? Hey, super-brain, this is fun?" Another blow, this one 
so hard that Ender cried out softly with the pain.
  
  If Graff was setting him up, there'd be no help unless he helped himself. He 
waited until he thought another blow was about to come. Now, he thought. And 
yes, the blow was there. It hurt, but Ender was already trying to sense the 
coming of the next blow. Now. And yes, right on time. I've got you, Ender 
thought.
  
  Just as the next blow was coming, Ender reached up with both hands, snatched 
the boy by the wrist, and then pulled down on the arm, hard.
  
  In gravity, the boy would have been jammed against Ender's seat back, hurting 
his chest. In null gravity, however, he flipped over the seat completely, up 
toward the ceiling. Ender wasn't expecting it. He hadn't realized how null 
gravity magnified even a child's strength. The boy sailed through the air, 
bouncing against the ceiling, then down against another boy in his seat, then 
out into the aisle, his arms flailing until he screamed as his body slammed into 
the bulkhead at the front of the compartment, his left arm twisted under him.
  
  It took only seconds. Graff was already there, snatching the boy out of the 
air. Deftly he propelled him down the aisle toward the other man. "Left arm. 
Broken. I think," he said. In moments the boy had been given a drug and lay 
quietly in the air as the officer ballooned a splint around his arm.
  
  Ender felt sick. He had only meant to catch the boy's arm. No. No, he had 
meant to hurt him, and had pulled with all his strength. He hadn't meant it to 
be so public, but the boy was feeling exactly the pain Ender had meant him to 
feel. Null gravity had betrayed him, that was all. I am Peter. I'm just like 
him. And Ender hated himself.
  
  Graff stayed at the front of the cabin. "What are you, slow learners? In your 
feeble little minds, hayen't you picked up one little fact? You were brought 
here to be soldiers. In your old schools, in your old families, maybe you were 
the big shot, maybe you were tough, maybe you were smart. But we chose the best 
of the best, and that's the only kind of kid you're going to meet now. And when 
I tell you Ender Wiggin is the best in this launch, take the hint, pinheads. 
Don't mess with him. Little boys have died in Battle School before. Do I make 
myself clear?"
  
  There was silence the rest of the launch. The boy sitting next to Ender was 
scrupulously careful not to touch him.
  
  I am not a killer, Ender said to himself over and over. I am not Peter. No 
matter what he says, I wouldn't. I'm not. I was defending myself. I bore it a 
long time. I was patient. I'm not what he said.
  
  A voice over the speaker told them they were approaching the school; it took 
twenty minutes to decelerate and dock. Ender lagged behind the others.
  
  They were not unwilling to let him be the last to leave the shuttle, climbing 
upward in the direction that had been down when they embarked. Graff was waiting 
at the end of the narrow tube that led from the shuttle into the heart of the 
Battle School.
  
  "Was it a good flight, Ender?" Graff asked cheerfully.
  
  "I thought you were my friend." Despite himself, Ender's voice trembled.
  
  Graff looked puzzled. "Whatever gave you that idea, Ender?"
  
  "Because you--" Because you spoke nicely to me, and honestly. "You didn't 
lie."
  
  "I won't lie now, either," said Graff. "My job isn't to be friends. My job is 
to produce the best soldiers in the world. In the whole history of the world. We 
need a Napoleon. An Alexander. Except that Napoleon lost in the end, and 
Alexander flamed out and died young. We need a Julius Caesar, except that he 
made himself dictator, and died for it. My job is to produce such a creature, 
and all the men and women he'll need to help him. Nowhere in that does it say I 
have to make friends with children."
  
  "You made them hate me."
  
  "So? What will you do about it? Crawl into a corner? Start kissing their 
little backsides so they'll love you again? There's only one thing that will 
make them stop hating you. And that's being so good at what you do that they 
can't ignore you. I told them you were the best. Now you damn well better be."
  
  "What if I can't?"
  
  "Then too bad. Look, Ender. I'm sorry if you're lonely and afraid. But the 
buggers are out there. Ten billion, a hundred billion, a million billion of 
them, for all we know. With as many ships, for all we know. With weapons we 
can't understand. And a willingness to use those weapons to wipe us out. It 
isn't the world at stake, Ender. Just us. Just humankind. As far as the rest of 
the earth is concerned, we could be wiped out and it would adjust, it would get 
on with the next step in evolution. But humanity doesn't want to die. As a 
species, we have evolved to survive. And the way we do it is by straining and 
straining and, at last, every few generations, giving birth to genius. The one 
who invents the wheel. And light. And flight. The one who builds a city, a 
nation, an empire. Do you understand any of this?"
  
  Ender thought he did, but wasn't sure, and so said nothing.
  
  "No. Of course not. So I'll put it bluntly. Human beings are free except when 
humanity needs them. Maybe humanity needs you. To do something. I think humanity 
needs me-- to find out what you're good for. We might both do despicable things, 
Ender, but if humankind survives, then we were good tools."
  
  "Is that all? Just tools?"
  
  "Individual human beings are all tools, that the others use to help us all 
survive."
  
  "That's a lie."
  
  "No. It's just a half truth. You can worry about the other half after we win 
this war."
  
  "It'll be over before I grow up," Ender said.
  
  "I hope you're wrong," said Grail. "By the way, you aren't helping yourself at 
all, talking to me. The other boys are no doubt telling each other that old 
Ender Wiggin is back there licking up to Graff. If word once gets around that 
you're a teachers' boy, you're iced for sure."
  
  In other words, go away and leave me alone. "Goodbye," Ender said. He pulled 
himself hand over hand along the tube where the other boys had gone.
  
  Graff watched him go.
  
  One of the teachers near him said, "Is that the one?"
  
  "God knows," said Graff. "If it isn't Ender, then he'd better show up soon."
  
  "Maybe it's nobody," said the teacher.
  
  "Maybe. But if that's the case, Anderson, then in my opinion God is a bugger. 
You can quote me on that."
  
  "I will."
  
  They stood in silence a while longer.
  
  "Anderson."
  
  "Mmm."
  
  "The kid's wrong. I am his friend."
  
  "I know."
  
  "He's clean. Right to the heart, he's good."
  
  "I've read the reports."
  
  "Anderson, think what we're going to do to him."
  
  Anderson was defiant. "We're going to make him the best military commander in 
history."
  
  "And then put the fate of the world on his shoulders. For his sake, I hope it 
isn't him. I do."
  
  "Cheer up. The buggers may kill us all before he graduates."
  
  Graff smiled. "You're right. I feel better already."
  
  
  
  Chapter 5 -- Games
  
  "You have my admiration. Breaking an arm-- that was a master stroke."
  
  "That was an accident."
  
  "Really? And I've already commended you in your official report."
  
  "It's too strong. It makes that other little bastard into a hero. It could 
screw up training for a lot of kids. I thought he might call for help."
  
  "Call for help? I thought that was what you valued most in him that he settles 
his own problems. When he's out there surrounded by an enemy fleet, there ain't 
gonna be nobody to help him if he calls."
  
  "Who would have guessed the little sucker'd be out of hs seat? And that he'd 
land just wrong against the bulkhead?"
  
  "Just one more example of the stupidity of the military. If you had any 
brains, you'd be in a real career, like selling life insurance."
  
  "You, too, mastermind."
  
  "We've just got to face the fact that we're second rate. With the fate of 
humanity in our hands. Gives you a delicious feeling of power, doesn't it? 
Especially because this time if we lose there won't be any criticism of us at 
all."
  
  "I never thought of it that way. But let's not lose."
  
  "See how Ender handles it. If we've already lost him, if he can't handle this, 
who next? Who else?"
  
  "I'll make up a list."
  
  "In the meantime, figure out how to unlose Ender."
  
  "I told you. His isolation can't be broken. He can never come to believe that 
anybody will ever help him out. ever. If he once thinks there's an easy way out, 
he's wrecked."
  
  "You're right. That would be terrible, if he believed he had a friend."
  
  "He can have friends. It's parents he can't have."
  
  ***
  
  The other boys had already chosen their bunks when Ender arrived. Ender 
stopped in the doorway of the dormitory, looking for the sole remaining bed. The 
ceiling was low Ender could reach up and touch it. A child-size room, with the 
bottom bunk resting on the floor. The other boys were watching him, cornerwise. 
Sure enough, the bottom bunk right by the door was the only empty bed. For a 
moment it occurred to Ender that by letting the others put him in the worst 
place, he was inviting later bullying. Yet he couldn't very well oust someone 
else.
  
  So he smiled broadly. "Hey, thanks," he said. Not sarcastically at all. He 
said it as sincerely as if they had reserved for him the best position. "I 
thought I was going to have to ask for low bunk by the door."
  
  He sat down and looked in the locker that stood open at the foot of the bunk. 
There was a paper taped to the inside of the door.
  
  Place your hand on the scanner at the head of your bunk
  and speak your name twice.
  
  Ender found the scanner, a sheet of opaque plastic. He put his left hand on it 
and said, "Ender Wiggin. Ender Wiggin."
  
  The scanner glowed green for a moment. Ender closed his locker and tried to 
reopen it. He couldn't. Then he put his hand on the scanner and said, "Ender 
Wiggin." The locker popped open. So did three other compartments.
  
  One of them contained four jumpsuits like the one he was wearing, and one 
white one. Another compartment contained a small desk, just like the ones at 
school. So they weren't through with studies yet.
  
  It was the largest compartment that contained the prize. It looked like a 
spacesuit at first glance, complete with helmet and gloves. But it wasn't. There 
was no airtight seal. Still, it would effectively cover the whole body. It was 
thickly padded. It was also a little stiff.
  
  And there was a pistol with it. A lasergun, it looked like, since the end was 
solid, clear glass. But surely they wouldn't let children have lethal weapons--
  
  "Not laser," said a man. Ender looked up. It was one he hadn't seen before. A 
young and kind-looking man. "But it has a tight enough beam. Well-focused. You 
can aim it and make a three-inch circle of light on a wall a hundred meters 
off."
  
  "What's it for?" Ender asked.
  
  "One of the games we play during recreation. Does anyone else have his locker 
open?" The man looked around. "I mean, have you followed directions and coded in 
your voices and hands? You can't get into the lockers until you do. This room is 
your home for the first year or so here at the Battle School, so get the bunk 
you want and stay with it. Ordinarily we let you elect your chief officer and 
install him in the lower bunk by the door, but apparently that position has been 
taken. Can't recode the lockers now. So think about whom you want to choose. 
Dinner in seven minutes. Follow the lighted dots on the floor. Your color code 
is red yellow yellow-- whenever you're assigned a path to follow, it will be red 
yellow yellow, three dots side by side-- go where those lights indicate. What's 
your color code, boys?"
  
  "Red, yellow, yellow."
  
  "Very good. My name is Dap. I'm your mom for the next few months."
  
  The boys laughed.
  
  "Laugh all you like, but keep it in mind. If you get lost in the school, which 
is quite possible, don't go opening doors. Some of them lead outside." More 
laughter. "Instead just tell someone that your mom is Dap, and they'll call me. 
Or tell them your color, and they'll light up a path for you to get home. If you 
have a problem, come talk to me. Remember, I'm the only person here who's paid 
to be nice to you, but not too nice. Give me any lip and I'll break your face, 
OK?"
  
  They laughed again. Dap had a room full of friends, Frightened children are so 
easy to win.
  
  "Which way is down, anybody tell me?"
  
  They told him.
  
  "OK, that's true. But that direction is toward the outside. The ship is 
spinning, and that's what makes it feel like that is down. The floor actually 
curves around in that direction. Keep going long enough that way, and you come 
back to where you started. Except don't try it. Because up that way is teachers' 
quarters, and up that way is the bigger kids. And the bigger kids don't like 
Launchies butting in. You might get pushed around. In fact, you will get pushed 
around. And when you do, don't come crying to me. Got it? This is Battle School, 
not nursery school."
  
  "What are we supposed to do, then?" asked a boy, a really small black kid who 
had a top hunk near Ender's.
  
  "If you don't like getting pushed around, figure out for yourself what to do 
about it, but I warn you-- murder is strictly against the rules. So is any 
deliberate injury. I understand there was one attempted murder on the was up 
here. A broken arm. That kind of thing happens again, somebody ices out. You got 
it?"
  
  "What's icing out?" asked the boy with his arm puffed up in a splint.
  
  "Ice. Put out in the cold. Sent Earthside. Finished at Battle School."
  
  Nobody looked at Ender.
  
  "So, boys, if any of you are thinking of being troublemakers, at least be 
clever about it. OK?"
  
  Dap left. They still didn't look at Ender.
  
  Ender felt the fear growing in his belly. The kid whose arm he broke-- Ender 
didn't feel sorry for him. He was a Stilson. And like Stilson, he was already 
gathering a gang. A little knot of kids, several of the bigger ones, they were 
laughing at the far end of the room, and every now and then one of them would 
turn to look at Ender.
  
  With all his heart, Ender wanted to go home. What did any of this have to do 
with saving the world? There was no monitor now. It was Ender against the gang 
again, only they were right in his room. Peter again, but without Valentine.
  
  The fear stayed, all through dinner as no one sat by him in the mess hall. The 
other boys were talking about things-- the big scoreboard on one wall, the food, 
the bigger kids. Ender could only watch in isolation.
  
  The scoreboards were team standings. Won-loss records, with the most recent 
scores. Some of the bigger boy's apparently had bets on the most recent games. 
Two teams, Manticore and Asp, had no recent score-- that box was flashing. Ender 
decided they must be playing right now.
  
  He noticed that the older boys were divided into groups, according to the 
uniforms they wore. Some with different uniforms were talking together, but 
generally the groups each had thcir own area. Launchies-- their own group, and 
the two or three next older groups all had plain blue uniforms. But the big 
kids, the ones that were on teams, they were wearing much more flamboyant 
clothing. Ender tried to guess which ones went with which name. Scorpion and 
Spider were easy. So were Flame and Tide.
  
  A bigger boy came to sit by him. Not just a little bigger- he looked to be 
twelve or thirteen. Getting his man's growth started.
  
  "Hi," he said.
  
  "Hi," Ender said.
  
  "I'm Mick."
  
  "Ender."
  
  "That's a name?"
  
  "Since I was little. It's what my sister called me."
  
  "Not a bad name here. Ender. Finisher. Hey."
  
  "Hope so."
  
  "Ender, you the bugger in your launch?"
  
  Ender shrugged.
  
  "I noticed you eating all alone. Every launch has one like that. Kid that 
nobody takes to right away. Sometimes I think the teachers do it on purpose. The 
teachers aren't very nice. You'll notice that."
  
  "Yeah."
  
  "So you the bugger?"
  
  "I guess so."
  
  "Hey. Nothing to cry about, you know?" He gave Ender his roll, and took 
Ender's pudding. "Eat nutritious stuff. It'll keep you strong." Mick dug into 
the pudding.
  
  "What about you?" asked Ender.
  
  "Me? I'm nothing. I'm a fart in the air conditioning. I'm always there, but 
most of the time nobody knows it."
  
  Ender smiled tentatively.
  
  "Yeah, funny, but no joke. I got nowhere here. I'm getting big now. They're 
going to send me to my next school pretty soon. No way it'll be Tactical School 
for me. I've never been a leader, you see. Only the guys who get to be leaders 
have a shot at it."
  
  "How do you get to be a leader?"
  
  "Hey, if I knew, you think I'd be like this? How many guys my size you see in 
here?"
  
  Not many. Ender didn't say it.
  
  "A few. I'm not the only half-iced bugger-fodder. A few of us. The other 
guys-- they're all commanders. All the guys from my launch have their own teams 
now. Not me."
  
  Ender nodded.
  
  "Listen, little guy. I'm doing you a favor. Make friends. Be a leader. Kiss 
butts if you've got to, but if the other guys despise you-- you know what I 
mean?"
  
  Ender nodded again.
  
  "Naw, you don't know anything. You Launchies are all alike. You don't know 
nothing. Minds like space. Nothing there. And if anything hits you, you fall 
apart. Look, when you end up like me, don't forget that somebody warned you. 
It's the last nice thing anybody's going to do for you."
  
  "So why did you tell me?" asked Ender.
  
  "What are you, a smart mouth? Shut up and eat."
  
  Ender shut up and ate. He didn't like Mick. And he knew there was no chance he 
would end up like that. Maybe that was what the teachers were planning, but 
Ender didn't intend to fit in with their plans.
  
  I will not be the bugger of my group, Ender thought. I didn't leave Valentine 
and Mother and Father to come here just to be iced.
  
  As he lifted the fork to his mouth, he could feel his family around him, as 
they always had been. He knew just which way to turn his head to look up and see 
Mother, trying to get Valentine not to slurp. He knew just where Father would 
be, scanning the news on the table while pretending to be part of the dinner 
conversation. Peter, pretending to take a crushed pea out of his nose-- even 
Peter could he funny.
  
  It was a mistake to think of them. He felt a sob rise in his throat and 
swallowed it down; he could not see his plate.
  
  He could not cry. There was no chance that he would be treated with 
compassion. Dap was not Mother. Any sign of weakness would tell the Stilsons and 
Peters that this boy could be broken. Ender did what he always did when Peter 
tormented him. He began to count doubles. One, two, four, eight. sixteen, 
thirty-two, sixty-four. And on, as high as he could hold the numbers in his 
head: 128, 256, 512, 1024, 2048, 4096, 8192, 16384, 32768, 65536, 131072, 
262144. At 67108864 he began to be unsure-- had he slipped out a digit? Should 
he be in the ten millions or the hundred millions or just the millions? He tried 
doubling again and lost it. 1342 something. 16? Or 17738? It was gone. Start 
over again. All the doubling he could hold. The pain was gone. The tears were 
gone. He would not cry.
  
  Until that night, when the lights went dim, and in the distance he could hear 
several boys whimpering for their mothers or fathers or dogs. He could not help 
himself. His lips formed Valentine's name. He could hear her voice laughing in 
the distance, just down the hall. He could see Mother passing his door, looking 
in to he sure he was all right. He could hear Father laughing at the video. It 
was all so clear, and it would never he that way again. I'll be old when I ever 
see them again, twelve at the earliest. Why did I say yes? What was I such a 
fool for? Going to school would have been nothing. Facing Stilson every day. And 
Peter. He was a pissant. Ender wasn't afraid of him.
  
  I want to go home, he whispered.
  
  But his whisper was the whisper he used when he cried out in pain when Peter 
tormented him. The sound didn't travel farther than his own ears, and sometimes 
not that far.
  
  And his tears could fall unwanted on his sheet, but his sobs were so gentle 
that they did not shake the bed; so quiet they could not be heard. But the ache 
was there, thick in his throat and the front of his face, hot in his chest and 
in his eyes. I want to go home.
  
  Dap came to the door that night and moved quietly among the beds, touching a 
hand here. Where he went there was more crying, not less. The touch of kindness 
in this frightening place was enough to push some over the edge into tears. Not 
Ender, though. When Dap came, his crying was over, and his face was dry. It was 
the lying face he presented to Mother and Father, when Peter had been cruel to 
him and he dared not let it show. Thank you for this, Peter. For dry eyes and 
silent weeping. You taught me how to hide anything I felt. More than ever, I 
need that now.
  
  ***
  
  There was school. Every day, hours of classes. Reading. Numbers. History. 
Videos of the bloody battles in space, the Marines spraying their guts all over 
the walls of the bugger ships. Holos of clean wars of the fleet, ships turning 
into puffs of light as the spacecraft killed each other deftly in the deep 
night. Many things to learn. Ender worked as hard as anyone; all of them 
struggled for the first time in their lives, as for the first time in their 
lives they competed with classmates who were at least as bright as they,
  
  But the games-- that was what they lived for. That was what filled the hours 
between waking and sleeping.
  
  Dap introduced them to the game room on their second day. It was up, way above 
the decks where the boys lived and worked. They climbed ladders to where the 
gravity weakened, and there in the cavern they saw the dazzling lights of the 
games.
  
  Some of the games they knew; some they had even played at home. Simple ones 
and hard ones. Ender walked past the two-dimensional games on video and began to 
study the games the bigger boys played, the holographic games with objects 
hovering in the air. He was the only Launchy in that part of the room, and every 
now and then one of the bigger boys would shove him out of the way. What're you 
doing here? Get lost. Fly off. And of course he would fly, in the lower gravity 
here, leave his feet and soar until he ran into something or someone.
  
  Every time, though, he extricated himself and went back, perhaps to a 
different spot, to get a different angle on the game. He was too small to see 
the controls, how the game was actually done. That didn't matter. He got the 
movement of it in the air. The way the player dug tunnels in the darkness, 
tunnels of light, which the enemy ships would search for and then follow 
mercilessly until they caught the player's ship. The player could make traps: 
mines, drifting bombs, loops in the air that forced the enemy ships to repeat 
endlessly. Some of the players were clever. Others lost quickly.
  
  Ender liked it better, though, when two boys played against each other. Then 
they had to use each other's tunnels, and it quickly became clear which of them 
were worth anything at the strategy of it.
  
  Within an hour or so, it began to pall. Ender understood the regularities by 
then. Understood the rules the computer was following, so that he knew he could 
always, once he mastered the controls, outmaneuver the enemy. Spirals when the 
enemy was like this; loops when the enemy was like that. Lie in wait at one 
trap. Lay seven traps and then lure them like this. There was no challenge to 
it, then, just a matter of playing until the computer got so fast that no human 
reflexes could overcome it. That wasn't fun. It was the other boys he wanted to 
play. The boys who had been so trained by the computer that even when they 
played against each other they each tried to emulate the computer. Think like a 
machine instead of a boy.
  
  I could beat them this way. I could beat them that way.
  
  "I'd like a turn against you," he said to the boy who had just won.
  
  "Lawsy me, what is this?" asked the boy. "Is it a bug or a bugger?"
  
  "A new flock of dwarfs just came aboard," said another boy.
  
  "But it talks. Did you know they could talk?"
  
  "I see," said Ender. "You're afraid to play me two out of three."
  
  "Beating you," said the boy, "would be as easy as pissing in the shower."
  
  "And not half as fun," said another.
  
  "I'm Ender Wiggin."
  
  "Listen up, scrunchface. You nobody. Got that?  You nobody, got that? You not 
anybody till you gots you first kill. Got that?"
  
  The slang of the older boys had its own rhythm. Ender picked it up quick 
enough. "If I'm nobody, then how come you scared to play me two out of three?"
  
  Now the other guys were impatient. "Kill the squirt quick and let's get on 
with it."
  
  So Ender took his place at the unfamiliar controls. His hands were small, but 
the controls were simple enough. It took only a little experimentation to find 
out which buttons used certain weapons. Movement control was a standard 
wireball. His reflexes were slow at first. The other boy, whose name he still 
didn't know, got ahead quickly. But Ender learned a lot and was doing much 
better by the time the game ended.
  
  "Satisfied, launchy?"
  
  "Two out of three."
  
  "We don't allow two out of three games."
  
  "So you beat me the first time I ever touched the game," Ender said. "If you 
can't do it twice, you can't do it at all."
  
  They played again, and this time Ender was deft enough to pull off a few 
maneuvers that the boy had obviously never seen before. His patterns couldn't 
cope with them. Ender didn't win easily, but he won.
  
  The bigger boys stopped laughing and joking then. The third game went in total 
silence, Ender won it quickly and efficiently.
  
  When the game ended, one of the older boys said, "Bout time they replaced this 
machine. Getting so any pinbrain can beat it now."
  
  Not a word of congratulation. Just total silence as Ender walked away.
  
  He didn't go far. Just stood off in the near distance and watched as the next 
players tried to use the things he had shown them. Any pinbrain? Ender smiled 
inwardly. They won't forget me.
  
  He felt good. He had won something, and against older boys. Probably not the 
best of the older boys, but he no longer had the panicked feeling that he might 
be out of his depth, that Battle School might he too much for him. All he had to 
do was watch the game and understand how things worked, and then he could use 
the system, and even excel.
  
  It was the waiting and watching that cost the most. For during that time he 
had to endure. The boy whose arm he had broken was out for vengeance. His name, 
Ender quickly learned, was Bernard. He spoke his own name with a French accent, 
since the French, with their arrogant Separatism, insisted that the teaching of 
Standard not begin until the age of four, when the French language patterns were 
already set. His accent made him exotic and interesting; his broken arm made him 
a martyr; his sadism made him a natural focus for all those who loved pain in 
others.
  
  Ender became their enemy.
  
  Little things. Kicking his bed every time they went in and out of the door. 
Jostling him with his meal tray. Tripping him on the ladders. Ender learned 
quickly not to leave anything of his outside his lockers; he also learned to be 
quick on his feet, to catch himself. "Maladroit," Bernard called him once, and 
the name stuck.
  
  There were times when Ender was very angry. With Bernard, of course, anger was 
inadequate. It was the kind of person he was-- a tormentor. What enraged Ender 
was how willingly the others went along with him. Surely they knew there was no 
justice in Bernard's revenge. Surely they knew that he had struck first at Ender 
in the shuttle, that Ender had only been responding to violence. If they knew, 
they acted as if they didn't; even if they did not know, they should be able to 
tell from Bernard himself that he was a snake.
  
  After all, Ender wasn't his only target. Bernard was setting up a kingdom, 
wasn't he?
  
  Ender watched from the fringes of the group as Bernard established the 
hierarchy. Some of the boys were useful to him, and he flattered them 
outrageously. Some of the boys were willing servants, doing whatever he wanted 
even though he treated them with contempt.
  
  But a few chafed under Bernard's rule.
  
  Ender, watching, knew who resented Bernard. Shem was small, ambitious, and 
easily needled. Bernard had discovered that quickly, and started calling him 
Worm. "Because he's so small," Bernard said, "and because he wriggles. Look how 
he shimmies his butt when he walks."
  
  Shen stormed off, but they only laughed louder. "Look at his butt. Seeya, 
Worm!"
  
  Ender said nothing to Shen-- it would be too obvious, then, that he was 
starting his own competing gang. He just sat with his desk on his lap, looking 
as studious as possible.
  
  He was not studying. He was telling his desk to keep sending a message into 
the interrupt queue every thirty seconds. The message was to everyone, and it 
was short and to the point. What made it hard was figuring out how to disguise 
who it was from, the way the teachers could. Messages from one of the boys 
always had their name automatically inserted. Ender hadn't cracked the teachers 
security system yet, so he couldn't pretend to be a teacher. But he was able to 
set up a file for a nonexistent student, whom he whimsically named God.
  
  Only when the message was ready to go did he try to catch Shen's eye. Like all 
the other boys, he was watching Bernard and his cronies latigh and joke, making 
fun of the math teacher, who often stopped in midsentence and looked around as 
if he had been let off the bus at the wrong stop and didn't know where he was.
  
  Eventually, though, Shen glanced around. Ender nodded to him, pointed to his 
desk, and smiled. Shen looked puzzled. Ender held up his desk a little and then 
pointed at it. Shen reached for his own desk. Ender sent the message then, Shen 
saw it almost at once. Shen read it, then laughed aloud. He looked at Ender as 
if to say, Did you do this? Ender shrugged, to say, I don't know who did it but 
it sure wasn't me.
  
  Shen laughed again, and several of the other boys who were not close to 
Bernard's group got out their desks and looked. Every thirty seconds the message 
appeared on every desk, marched around the screen quickly, then disappeared. The 
boys laughed together.
  
  "What's so funny?" Bernard asked, Ender made sure he was not smiling when 
Bernard looked around the room, imitating the fear that so many others felt. 
Shen, of course, smiled all the more defiantly. It took a moment; then Bernard 
told one of his boy's to bring out a desk. Together they read the message.
  
  COVER YOUR BUTT. BERNARD IS WATCHING.
  
  --GOD
  
  Bernard went red with anger. "Who did this!" he shouted.
  
  "God," said Shen.
  
  "It sure as hell wasn't you," Bernard said. "This takes too much brains for a 
worm."
  
  Ender's message expired after five minutes. After a while, a message from 
Bernard appeared on his desk.
  
  I KNOW IT WAS YOU.
  
  --BERNARD
  
  Ender didn't look up. He acted, in fact, as if he hadn't seen the message. 
Bernard just wants to catch me looking guilty. He doesn't know.
  
  Of course, it didn't matter if he knew. Bernard would punish him all the more, 
because he had to rebuild his position. The one thing he couldn't stand was 
having the other boys laughing at him. He had to make clear who was boss. So 
Ender got knocked down in the shower that morning. One of Bernard's boys 
pretended to trip over him, and managed to plant a knee in his belly. Ender took 
it in silence. He was still watching, as far as the open war was concerned. He 
would do nothing.
  
  But in the other war, the war of desks, he already had his next attack in 
place. When he got back from the shower, Bernard was raging, kicking beds and 
yelling at boys. "I didn't write it! Shut up!"
  
  Marching constantly around every boy's desk was this message:
  
  I LOVE YOUR BUTT. LET ME KISS IT.
  
  --BERNARD
  
  "I didn't write that message!" Bernard shouted. After the shouting had been 
going on for some time, Dap appeared at the door.
  
  "What's the fuss?" he asked.
  
  "Somebody's been writing messages using my name." Bernard was sullen.
  
  "What message."
  
  "It doesn't matter what message!"
  
  "It does to me." Dap picked up the nearest desk, which happened to belong to 
the boy' who bunked above Ender. Dap read it, smiled very slightly, gave back 
the desk.
  
  "Interesting," he said.
  
  "Aren't you going to find out who did it?" demanded Bernard.
  
  "Oh, I know who did it," Dap said.
  
  Yes, Ender thought. The system was too easily broken. They mean us to break 
it, or sections of it. They know it was me.
  
  "Well, who, then?" Bernard shouted.
  
  "Are you shouting at me, soldier?" asked Dap, very softly.
  
  At once the mood in the room changed. From rage on the part of Bernard's 
closest friends and barely contained mirth among the rest, all became somber. 
Authority was about to speak.
  
  "No, sir," said Bernard.
  
  "Everybody knows that the system automatically puts on the name of the 
sender."
  
  "I didn't write that!" Bernard said.
  
  "Shouting?" asked Dap.
  
  "Yesterday someone sent a message that was signed GOD," Bernard said.
  
  "Really?" said Dap. "I didn't know he was signed onto the system." Dap turned 
and left, and the room filled with laughter.
  
  Bernard's attempt to be ruler of the room was broken-- only a few stayed with 
him now. But they were the most vicious. And Ender knew that until he was 
through watching, it would go hard on him. Still, the tampering with the system 
had done its work, Bernard was contained, and all the boys who had some quality 
were free of him. Best of all, Ender had done it without sending him to the 
hospital. Much better this way.
  
  Then he settled down to the serious business of designing a security system 
for his own desk, since the safeguards built into the system were obviously 
inadequate. If a six-year-old could break them down, they were obviously put 
there as a plaything, not serious security. Just another game that the teachers 
set up for us. And this is one I'm good at.
  
  "How did you do that?" Shen asked him at breakfast.
  
  Ender noted quietly that this was the first time another Launchy from his own 
class had sat with him at a meal. "Do what?" he asked.
  
  "Send a message with a fake name. And Bernard's name! That was great. They're 
calling him Buttwatcher now. Just Watcher in front of the teachers, but 
everybody knows what he's watching."
  
  "Poor Bernard," Ender murmured. "And he's so sensitive."
  
  "Come on, Ender. You broke into the system. How'd you do it?"
  
  Ender shook his head and smiled. "Thanks for thinking I'm bright enough to do 
that. I just happened to see it first, that's all."
  
  "OK, you don't have to tell me," said Shen. "Still, it was great." They ate in 
silence fora moment. "Do I wiggle my butt when I walk?"
  
  "Naw." Ender said. "Just a little. Just don't take such big long steps, that's 
all."
  
  Shen nodded.
  
  "The only person who'd ever notice was Bernard."
  
  "He's a pig," said Shen.
  
  Ender shrugged. "On the whole, pigs aren't so bad."
  
  Shen laughed. "You're right. I wasn't being fair to the pigs."
  
  They laughed together, and two other Launchies joined them. Ender's isolation 
was over. The war was just beginning.
  
  
  
  Chapter 6 -- The Giant's Drink
  
  "We've had our disappointments in the past, hanging on for years, hoping 
they'll pull through, and then they don't. Nice thing about Ender, he's 
determined to ice within the first six months."
  
  "Oh?"
  
  "Don't you see what's going on here? He's stuck at the Giant's Drink in the 
mind game. Is the boy suicidal? You never mentioned it."
  
  "Everybody gets the Giant sometime."
  
  "But Ender won't leave it alone. Like Pinual."
  
  "Everybody looks like Pinual at one time or another. But he's the only one who 
killed himself. I don't think it had anything to do with the Giant's Drink."
  
  "You're betting my life on that. And look what he's done with his launch 
group."
  
  "Wasn't his fault, you know."
  
  "I don't care. His fault or not, he's poisoning that group. They're supposed 
to bond, and right where he stands there's a chasm a mile wide."
  
  "I don't plan to leave him there very long, anyway."
  
  "Then you'd better plan again. That launch is sick, and he's the source of the 
disease. He stays till it's cured."
  
  "I was the source of the disease. I was isolating him, and it worked."
  
  "Give him time. To see what he does with it."
  
  "We don't have time."
  
  "We don't have time to rush a kid ahead who has as much chance of being a 
monster as a military genius."
  
  "Is this an order?"
  
  "The recorders on, it's always on, your ass is covered, go to hell."
  
  "If it's an order, then I'll--"
  
  "It's an order. Hold him where he is until we see now he handles things in his 
launch group. Graff, you give me ulcers."
  
  "You wouldn't have ulcers if you'd leave the school to me and take care of the 
fleet yourself."
  
  "The fleet is looking for a battle commander. There's nothing to take care of 
until you get me that."
  
  ***
  
  They filed clumsily into the battleroom, like children in a swimming pool for 
the first time, clinging to the handholds along the side. Null gravity was 
frightening, disorienting; they soon found that things went better if they 
didn't use their feet at all.
  
  Worse, the suits were confining. It was harder to make precise movements, 
since the suits bent just a bit slower, resisted a bit more than any clothing 
they had ever worn before.
  
  Ender gripped the handhold and flexed his knees. He noticed that along with 
the sluggishness, the suit had an amplifying effect on movement. It was hard to 
get them started, but the suit's legs kept moving, and strongly, after his 
muscles had stopped. Give them a push this strong, and the suit pushes with 
twice the force. I'll be clumsy for a while. Better get started.
  
  So, still grasping the handhold, he pushed off strongly with his feet.
  
  Instantly he flipped around, his feet flying over his head, and landed fiat on 
his back against the wall. The rebound was stronger, it seemed, and his hands 
tore loose from the handhold. He flew across the battleroom, tumbling over and 
over.
  
  For a sickening moment he tried to retain his old up-and-down orientation, his 
body attempting to right itself, searching for the gravity that wasn't there. 
Then he forced himself to change his view. He was hurtling toward a wall. That 
was down. And at once he had control of himself. He wasn't flying, he was 
falling. This was a dive. He could choose how he would hit the surface.
  
  I'm going too fast to catch ahold and stay, but I can soften the impact, can 
fly off at an angle if I roll when I hit and use my feet--
  
  It didn't work at all the way he had planned. He went off at an angle, but it 
was not the one he had predicted. Nor did he have time to consider. He hit 
another wall, this time too soon to have prepared for it. But quite accidently 
he discovered a way to use his feet to control the rebound angle. Now he was 
soaring across the room again, toward the other boys who still clung to the 
wall. This time he had slowed enough to be able to grip a rung. He was at a 
crazy angle in relation to the other boys, but once again his orientation had 
changed, and as far as he could tell, they were all lying on the floor, not 
hanging on a wall, and he was no more upside down than they were.
  
  "What are you trying to do, kill yourself?" asked Shen.
  
  "Try it," Ender said. "The suit keeps you from hurting yourself, and you can 
control your bouncing with your legs, like this." He approximated the movement 
he had made.
  
  Shen shook his head-- he wasn't trying any fool stunt like that. But one boy 
did take off, not as fast as Ender had, because he didn't begin with a flip, but 
fast enough. Ender didn't even have to see his face to know that it was Bernard. 
And right after him, Bernard's best friend, Alai.
  
  Ender watched them cross the huge room, Bernard struggling to orient himself 
to the direction he thought of as the floor, Alai surrendering to the movement 
and preparing to rebound from the wall. No wonder Bernard broke his arm in the 
shuttle, Ender thought. He tightens up when he's flying. He panics. Ender stored 
the information away for future reference.
  
  And another bit of information, too. Alai did not push off in the same 
direction as Bernard. He aimed for a corner of the room. Their paths diverged 
more and more as they flew, and where Bernard made a clumsy, crunching landing 
and bounce on his wall, Alai did a glancing triple bounce on three surfaces near 
the corner that left him most of his speed and sent him flying off at a 
surprising angle. Alai shouted and whooped, and so did the boys watching him. 
Some of them forgot they were weightless and let go of the wall to clap their 
hands. Now they drifted lazily in many directions, waving their arms, trying to 
swim.
  
  Now, that's a problem, thought Ender. What if you catch yourself drifting? 
There's no way to push off.
  
  He was tempted to set himself adrift and try to solve the problem by trial and 
error. But he could see the others, their useless efforts at control, and he 
couldn't think of what he would do that they weren't already doing.
  
  Holding onto the floor with one hand, he fiddled idly with the toy gun that 
was attached to his suit in front, just below the shoulder. Then he remembered 
the hand rockets sometimes used by marines when they did a boarding assault on 
an enemy station. He pulled the gun from his suit and examined it. He had pushed 
all the buttons back in the room, but the gun did nothing there. Maybe here in 
the battleroom it would work. There were no instructions on it. No labels on the 
controls. The trigger was obvious-- he had had toy guns, as all children had, 
almost since infancy. There were two buttons that his thumb could easily reach, 
and several others along the bottom of the shaft that were almost inaccessible 
without using two hands. Obviously, the two buttons near his thumb were meant to 
be instantly usable.
  
  He aimed the gun at the floor and pulled back on the trigger. He felt the gun 
grow instantly warm; when he let go of the trigger, it cooled at once. Also, a 
tiny circle of light appeared on the floor where he was aiming.
  
  He thumbed the red button at the top of the gun, and pulled the trigger again. 
Same thing.
  
  Then he pushed the white button. It gave a bright flash of light that 
illuminated a wide area, but not as intensely. The gun was quite cold when the 
button was pressed.
  
  The red button makes it like a laser-- but it is not a laser, Dap had said-- 
while the white button makes it a lamp. Neither will be much help when it comes 
to maneuvering.
  
  So everything depends on how you push off, the course you set when you start. 
It means we're going to have to get very good at controlling our launches and 
rebounds or we're all going to end up floating around in the middle of nowhere. 
Ender looked around the room. A few of the boys were drifting close to walls 
now, flailing their arms to catch a handhold. Most were bumping into each other 
and laughing; some were holding hands and going around in circles. Only a few, 
like Ender, were calmly holding onto the walls and watching.
  
  One of them, he saw, was Alai. He had ended up on another wall not too far 
from Ender. On impulse, Ender pushed off and moved quickly toward Alai. Once in 
the air, he wondered what he would say. Alai was Bernard's friend. What did 
Ender have to say to him?
  
  Still, there was no changing course now. So he watched straight ahead, and 
practiced making tiny leg and hand movements to control which way he was facing 
as he drifted. Too late, he realized that he had aimed too well. He was not 
going to land near Alai-- he was going to hit him.
  
  "Here, snag my hand!" Alai called.
  
  Ender held out his hand. Alai took the shock of impact and helped Ender make a 
fairly gentle landing against the wall.
  
  "That's good," Ender said. "We ought to practice that kind of thing."
  
  "That's what I thought, only everybody's turning to butter out there," Alai 
said. "What happens if we get out there together? We should be able to shove 
each other in opposite directions."
  
  "Yeah."
  
  "OK?"
  
  It was an admission that all might not be right between them. Is it OK for us 
to do something together? Ender's answer was to take Alai by the wrist and get 
ready to push off.
  
  "Ready?" said Alai. "Go."
  
  Since they pushed off with different amounts of force, they began to circle 
each other. Ender made some small hand movements, then shifted a leg. They 
slowed. He did it again. They stopped orbiting. Now they were drifting evenly.
  
  "Packed head, Ender." Alai said. It was high praise. "Let's push off before we 
run into that bunch."
  
  "And then let's meet over in that corner." Ender did not want this bridge into 
the enemy camp to fail.
  
  "Last one there saves farts in a milk bottle," Alai said.
  
  Then, slowly, steadily, they maneuvered until they faced each other, 
spread-eagled, hand to hand, knee to knee.
  
  "And then we just scrunch?" asked Alai.
  
  "I've never done this before either," said Ender.
  
  They pushed off. It propelled them faster than they expected. Ender ran into a 
couple of boys and ended up on a wall that he hadn't expected. It took him a 
moment to reorient and find the corner where he and Alai were to meet. Alai was 
already headed toward it. Ender plotted a course that would include two 
rebounds, to avoid the largest clusters of boys.
  
  When Ender reached the corner, Alai had hooked his arms through two adjacent 
handholds and was pretending to doze.
  
  "You win."
  
  "I want to see your fart collection," Alai said.
  
  "I stored it in your locker. Didn't you notice?"
  
  "I thought it was my socks."
  
  "We don't wear socks anymore."
  
  "Oh yeah." A reminder that they were both far from home. It took some of the 
fun out of having mastered a bit of navigation.
  
  Ender took his pistol and demonstrated what he had learned about the two thumb 
buttons.
  
  "What does it do when you aim at a person?" asked Alai.
  
  "I don't know."
  
  "Why don't we find out?"
  
  Ender shook his head. "We might hurt somebody."
  
  "I meant why don't we shoot each other in the foot or something. I'm not 
Bernard, I never tortured cats for fun."
  
  "Oh."
  
  "It can't be too dangerous, or they wouldn't give these guns to kids."
  
  "We're soldiers now."
  
  "Shoot me in the foot."
  
  "No, you shoot me."
  
  "Let's shoot each other."
  
  They did. Immediately Ender felt the leg of the suit grow stiff, immobile at 
the knee and ankle joints.
  
  "You frozen?" asked Alai.
  
  "Stiff as a board."
  
  "Let's freeze a few," Alai said. "Let's have our first war. Us against them."
  
  They grinned. Then Ender said, "Better invite Bernard."
  
  Alai cocked an eyebrow. "Oh?"
  
  "And Shen."
  
  "That little slanty-eyed butt-wiggler?"
  
  Ender decided that Alai was joking. "Hey, we can't all be niggers."
  
  Alai grinned. "My grandpa would've killed you for that."
  
  "My great great grandpa would have sold him first,"
  
  "Let's go get Bernard and Shen and freeze these bugger-lovers."
  
  In twenty minutes, everyone in the room was frozen except Ender, Bernard, 
Shen, and Alai. The four of them sat there whooping and laughing until Dap came 
in.
  
  "I see you've learned how to use your equipment," he said. Then he did 
something to a control he held in his hand. Everybody drifted slowly toward the 
wall he was standing on. He went among the frozen boys, touching them and 
thawing their suits. There was a tumult of complaint that it wasn't fair how 
Bernard and Alai had shot them all when they weren't ready.
  
  "Why weren't you ready?" asked Dap. "You had your suits just as long as they 
did. You had just as many minutes flapping around like drunken ducks. Stop 
moaning and we'll begin."
  
  Ender noticed that it was assumed that Bernard and Alai were the leaders of 
the battle. Well, that was fine. Bernard knew that Ender and Alai had learned to 
use the guns together. And Ender and Alai were friends. Bernard might believe 
that Ender had joined his group, but it wasn't so. Ender had joined a new group. 
Alai's group. Bernard had joined it too.
  
  It wasn't obvious to everyone; Bernard still blustered and sent his cronies on 
errands. But Alai now moved freely through the whole room, and when Bernard was 
crazy, Alai could joke a little and calm him down. When it came time to choose 
their launch leader, Alai was the almost unanimous choice. Bernard sulked for a 
few days and then he was fine, and everyone settled into the new pattern. The 
launch was no longer divided into Bernard's in-group and Ender's outcasts. Alai 
was the bridge.
  
  ***
  
  Ender sat on his bed with his desk on his knees. lt was private study time, 
and Ender was doing Free Play. It was a shifting, crazy kind of game in which 
the school computer kept bringing up new things, building a maze that you could 
explore. You could go back to events that you liked, for a while; if you left 
them alone too long, they disappeared and something else took its place.
  
  Sometimes funny things. Sometimes exciting, and he had to be quick to stay 
alive. He had lots of deaths, but that was OK, games were like that, you died a 
lot until you got the hang of it.
  
  His figure on the screen had started out as a little boy. For a while it had 
changed into a bear. Now it was a large mouse, with long and delicate hands. He 
ran his figure under a lot of large items of furniture. He had played with the 
cat a lot, but now it was boring-- too easy to dodge, he knew all the furniture.
  
  Not through the mousehole this time, he told himself. I'm sick of the Giant. 
It's a dumb game and I can't ever win. Whatever I choose is wrong.
  
  But he went through the mousehole anyway, and over the small bridge in the 
garden. He avoided the ducks and the divebombing mosquitoes-- he had tried 
playing with them but they were too easy, and if he played with the ducks too 
long he turned into a fish, which he didn't like. Being a fish reminded him too 
much of being frozen in the battleroom, his whole body rigid, waiting for the 
practice to end so Dap would thaw him. So, as usual, he found himself going up 
the rolling hills.
  
  The landslides began. At first he had got caught again and again, crushed in 
an exaggerated blot of gore oozing out from under a rock pile. Now, though, he 
had mastered the skill of running up the slopes at an angle to avoid the crush, 
always seeking higher ground.
  
  And, as always, the landslides finally stopped being jumbles of rock. The face 
of the hill broke open and instead of shale it was white bread, puffy, rising 
like dough as the crust broke away and fell. It was soft and spongy; his figure 
moved more slowly. And when he jumped down off the bread, he as standing on a 
table. Giant loaf of bread behind him; giant stick of butter beside him. And the 
Giant himself leaning his chin in his hands, looking at him. Ender's figure was 
about as tall as the Giant's head from chin to brow.
  
  "I think I'll bite your head off," said the Giant, as he always did.
  
  This time, instead of running away or standing there, Ender walked his figure 
up to the Giant's face and kicked him in the chin.
  
  The Giant stuck out his tongue and Ender fell to the ground.
  
  "How about a guessing game?" asked the Giant. So it didn't make any 
difference-- the Giant only played the guessing game. Stupid computer. Millions 
of possible scenarios in its memory, and the Giant could only play one stupid 
game.
  
  The Giant, as always, set two huge shot glasses, as tall as Ender's knees, on 
the table in front of him. As always, the two were filled with different 
liquids. The computer was good enough that the liquids had never repeated, not 
that he could remember. This time the one had a thick, creamy looking liquid. 
The other hissed and foamed.
  
  "One is poison and one is not," said the Giant. "Guess right and I'll take you 
into Fairyland."
  
  Guessing meant sticking his head into one of the glasses to drink. He never 
guessed right. Sometimes his head was dissolved. Sometimes he caught on fire. 
Sometimes he fell in and drowned. Sometimes he fell out, turned green, and 
rotted away. It was always ghastly, and the Giant always laughed.
  
  Ender knew that whatever he chose he would die. The game was rigged. On the 
first death, his figure would reappear on the Giant's table, to play again. On 
the second death, he'd come back to the landslides. Then to the garden bridge. 
Then to the mousehole. And then, if he still went back to the Giant and played 
again, and died again, his desk would go dark, "Free Play Over" would march 
around the desk and Ender would lie back on his bed and tremble until he could 
finally go to sleep. The game was rigged but still the Giant talked about 
Fairyland, some stupid childish three-year-old's Fairyland that probably had 
some stupid Mother Goose or Pac-Man or Peter Pan, it wasn't even worth getting 
to, but he had to find some way of beating the Giant to get there.
  
  He drank the creamy liquid. Immediately he began to inflate and rise like a 
balloon. The Giant laughed. He was dead again.
  
  He played again, and this time the liquid set, like concrete, and held his 
head down while the Giant cut him open along the spine, deboned him like a fish, 
and began to eat while his arms and legs quivered.
  
  He reappeared at the landslides and decided not to go on. He even let the 
landslides cover him once. But even though he was sweating and he felt cold, 
with his next life he went back up the hills till then turned into bread, and 
stood on the Giant's table as the shot glasses were set before him.
  
  He stared at the two liquids. The one foaming, the other with waves in it like 
the sea. He tried to guess what kind of death each one held. Probably a fish 
will come out of the ocean one and eat me. The foamy one will probably 
asphyxiate me. I hate this game. It isn't fair. It's stupid. It's rotten.
  
  And instead of pushing his face into one of the liquids, he kicked one over, 
then the other, and dodged the Giant's huge hands as the Giant shouted, 
"Cheater, cheater!"  He jumped at the Giant's face, clambered up his lip and 
nose, and began to dig in the Giant's eye. The stuff came away like cottage 
cheese, and as the Giant screamed, Ender's figure burrowed into the eye, climbed 
right in, burrowed in and in.
  
  The Giant fell over backward, the view shifted as he fell, and when the Giant 
came to rest on the ground, there were intricate, lacy trees all around. A bat 
flew up and landed on the dead Giant's nose. Ender brought his figure up out of 
the Giant's eye.
  
  "How did you get here?" the bat asked. "Nobody ever comes here."
  
  Ender could not answer, of course. So he reached down, took a handful of the 
Giant's eyestuff, and offered it to the bat.
  
  The bat took it and flew off, shouting as it went, "Welcome to Fairyland."
  
  He had made it. He ought to explore. He ought to climb down from the Giant's 
face and see what he had finally achieved.
  
  Instead he signed off, put his desk in his locker, stripped off his clothes 
and pulled his blanket over him. He hadn't meant to kill the Giant. This was 
supposed to be a game. Not a choice between his own grisly death and an even 
worse murder. I'm a murderer, even when I play. Peter would be proud of me.
  
  
  
  Chapter 7 -- Salamander
  
  "Isn't it nice to know that Ender can do the impossible?"'
  
  "The player's deaths have always been sickening. I've always thought the 
Giant's Drink was the most perverted part at the whole mind game, but going for 
the eye like that-- this is the one we want to put in command of our fleets?"
  
  "What matters is that he won the game that couldn't be won."
  
  "I suppose you'll move him now."
  
  "We were waiting to see how he handled the thing with Bernard. He handled it 
perfectly."
  
  "So as soon as he can cope with a situation, you move him to one he can't cope 
with. Doesn't he get any rest?"
  
  "He'll have a month or two, maybe three, with his launch group. That's really 
quite a long time in a child's life."
  
  "Does it ever seem to you that these boys aren't children? I look at what they 
do, the way they talk, and they don't seem like little kids."
  
  "They're the most brilliant children in the world, each in his own way."
  
  "But shouldn't they still act like children? They aren't normal. They act 
like-- history. Napoleon and Wellington. Caesar and Brutus."
  
  "We're trying to save the world, not heal the wounded heart. You're too 
compassionate."
  
  "General Levy has no pity for anyone. All the videos say so. But don't hurt 
this boy."
  
  "Are you joking?"
  
  "I mean, don't hurt him more than you have to."
  
  ***
  
  Alai sat across from Ender at dinner. "I finally figured out how you sent that 
message. Using Bernard's name."
  
  "Me?" asked Ender.
  
  "Come on. who else? It sure wasn't Bernard. And Shen isn't too hot on the 
computer. And I know it wasn't me. Who else? Doesn't matter. I figured out how 
to fake a new student entry. You just created a student named Bernard-blank, 
B-E-R-N-A-R-D-space, so the computer didn't kick it out as a repeat of another 
student."
  
  "Sounds like that might work," said Ender.
  
  "OK, OK. It does work. But you did that practically on the first day."
  
  "Or somebody. Maybe Dap did it, to keep Bernard from getting too much 
control."
  
  "I found something else. I can't do it with your name."
  
  "Oh?"
  
  "Anything with Ender in it gets kicked out. I can't get inside your files at 
all, either. You made your own security system."
  
  "Maybe."
  
  Alai grinned. "I just got in and trashed somebody's files. He's right behind 
me on cracking the system. I need protection, Ender. I need your system."
  
  "If I give you my system, you'll know how I do it and you'll get in and trash 
me."
  
  "You say me?" Alai asked. "I the sweetest friend you got!"
  
  Ender laughed. "I'll setup a system for you."
  
  "Now?"
  
  "Can I finish eating?"
  
  "You never finish eating."
  
  It was true. Ender's tray always had food on it after a meal. Ender looked at 
the plate and decided he was through. "Let's go then."
  
  When they got to the barracks. Ender squatted down by his bed and said, "Get 
your desk and bring it over here. I'll show you how." But when Alai brought his 
desk to Ender's bed, Ender was just sitting there, his lockers still closed.
  
  "What up?" asked Alai.
  
  In answer Ender palmed his locker. "Unauthorized Access Attempt," it said. It 
didn't open.
  
  "Somebody done a dance on your head, mama," Alai said. "Somebody eated your 
face."
  
  "You sure you want my security system now?" Ender got up and walked away from 
his bed.
  
  "Ender," said Alai.
  
  Ender turned around. Alai was holding a little piece of paper.
  
  "What is it?"
  
  Alai looked up at him. "Don't you know? This was on your bed. You must have 
sat on it."
  
  Ender took it from him.
  
  
  ENDER WIGGIN -- ASSIGNED SALAMANDER ARMY -- COMMANDER BONZO MADRID -- 
EFFECTIVE IMMEDIATELY -- CODE GREEN GREEN BROWN -- NO POSSESSIONS TRANSFERRED
  
  "You're smart, Ender, but you don't do the battle-room any better than me."
  
  Ender shook his head. It was the stupidest thing he could think of, to promote 
him now. Nobody got promoted before they were eight years old. Ender wasn't even 
seven yet. And launches usually moved into the armies together, with most armies 
getting a new kid at the same time. There were no transfer slips on any of the 
other beds.
  
  Just when things were finally coming together. Just when Bernard was getting 
along with everybody, even Ender. Just when Ender was beginning to make a real 
friend out of Alai. Just when his life was finally getting livable.
  
  Ender reached down to pull Alai up from the bed.
  
  "Salamander Army's in contention, anyway," Alai said.
  
  Ender was so angry at the unfairness of the transfer that tears were coming to 
his eyes. Mustn't cry, he told himself.
  
  Alai saw the tears but had the grace not to say so. "They're fartheads, Ender, 
they won't even let you take anything you own."
  
  Ender grinned and didn't cry after all. "Think I should strip and go naked?"
  
  Alai laughed, too.
  
  On impulse Ender hugged him, tight, almost as if he were Valentine. He even 
thought of Valentine then and wanted to go home. "I don't want to go," he said.
  
  Alai hugged him back. "I understand them, Ender. You are the best of us. Maybe 
they're in a hurry to teach you everything."
  
  "They don't want to teach me everything," Ender said. "I wanted to learn what 
it was like to have a friend."
  
  Alai nodded soberly. "Always my friend, always the best of my friends," he 
said. Then he grinned. "Go slice up the buggers."
  
  "Yeah." Ender smiled back.
  
  Alai suddenly kissed Ender on the cheek and whispered in his ear. "Salaam." 
Then, red faced, he turned away and walked to his own bed at the back of the 
barracks. Ender guessed that the kiss and the word were somehow forbidden. A 
suppressed religion, perhaps. Or maybe the word had some private and powerful 
meaning for Alai alone. Whatever it meant to Alai, Ender knew that it was 
sacred; that he had uncovered himself for Ender, as once Ender's mother had done 
when he was very young, before they put the monitor in his neck, and she had put 
her hands on his head when she thought he was asleep, and prayed over him. Ender 
had never spoken of that to anyone, not even to Mother, but had kept it as a 
memory of holiness, of how his mother loved him when she thought that no one, 
not even he, could see or hear. That was what Alai had given him: a gift so 
sacred that even Ender could not be allowed to understand what it meant.
  
  After such a thing nothing could be said. Alai reached his bed and turned 
around to see Ender. Their eyes held for only a moment, locked in understanding. 
Then Ender left.
  
  ***
  
  There would be no green green brown in this part of the school; he would have 
to pick up the colors in one of the public areas. The others would be finished 
with dinner very soon; he didn't want to go near the mess hall. The game room 
would be nearly empty.
  
  None of the games appealed to him, the way he felt now. So he went to the bank 
of public desks at the back of the room and signed on to his own private game. 
He went quickly to Fairyland. The Giant was dead when he arrived now; he had to 
climb carefully down the table, jump to the leg of the Giant's overturned chair, 
and then make the drop to the ground. For a while there had been rats gnawing at 
the Giant's body, but Ender had killed one with a pin from the Giant's ragged 
shirt, and they had left him alone after that.
  
  The Giant's corpse had essentially finished its decay. What could be torn by 
the small scavengers was torn; the maggots had done their work on the organs, 
now it was a dessicated mummy, hollowed-out, teeth in a rigid grin, eyes empty, 
fingers curled. Ender remembered burrowing through the eye when it had been 
alive and malicious and intelligent. Angry and frustrated as he was, Ender 
wished to do such murder again. But the Giant had become part of the landscape 
now, and so there could be no rage against him.
  
  Ender had always gone over the bridge to the castle of the Queen of Hearts, 
where there were games enough for him; but none of those appealed to him now. He 
went around the giant's corpse and followed the brook upstream, to where it 
emerged from the forest. There was a playground there, slides and monkeybars, 
teeter-totters and merry-go-rounds, with a dozen children laughing as they 
played. Ender came and found that in the game he had become a child, though 
usually his figure in the games was adult. In fact, he was smaller than the 
other children.
  
  He got in line for the slide. The other children ignored him. He climbed up to 
the top, watched the boy before him whirl down the long spiral to the ground. 
Then he sat and began to slide.
  
  He had not slid for a moment when he fell right through the slide and landed 
on the ground under the ladder. The slide would not hold him.
  
  Neither would the monkey bars. He could climb a ways, but then at random a bar 
seemed to be insubstantial and he fell. He could sit on the see-saw until he 
rose to the apex; then he fell. When the merry-go-round went fast, he could not 
hold onto any of the bars, and centrifugal force hurled him off.
  
  And the other children: their laughter was raucous, offensive. They circled 
around him and pointed and laughed for many seconds before they went back to 
their play.
  
  Ender wanted to hit them, to throw them in the brook. Instead he walked into 
the forest. He found a path, which soon became an ancient brick road, much 
overgrown with weeds but still usable. There were hints of possible games off to 
either side, but Ender followed none of them. He wanted to see where the path 
led.
  
  It led to a clearing, with a well in the middle, and a sign that said, "Drink, 
traveler." Ender went forward and looked at the well. Almost at once, he heard a 
snarl. Out of the woods emerged a dozen slavering wolves with human faces. Ender 
recognized them-- they were the children from the playground. Only now their 
teeth could tear; Ender, weaponless, was quickly devoured.
  
  His next figure appeared, as usual, in the same spot, and was eaten again, 
though Ender tried to climb down into the well.
  
  The next appearance, though, was at the playground. Again the children laughed 
at him. Laugh all you like, Ender thought. I know what you are. He pushed one of 
them. She followed him, angry. Ender led her up the slide. Of course he fell 
through; but this time, following so closely behind him, she also fell through. 
When she hit the ground, she turned into a wolf and lay there, dead or stunned.
  
  One by one Ender led each of the others into a trap. But before he had 
finished off the last of them, the wolves began reviving, and were no longer 
children. Ender was torn apart again.
  
  This time, shaking and sweating, Ender found his figure revived on the Giant's 
table. I should quit, he told himself. I should go to my new army.
  
  But instead he made his figure drop down from the table and walk around the 
Giant's body to the playground.
  
  This time, as soon as the child hit the ground and turned into a wolf, Ender 
dragged the body to the brook and pulled it in. Each time, the body sizzled as 
though the water were acid; the wolf was consumed, and a dark cloud of smoke 
arose and drifted away. The children were easily dispatched, though they began 
following him in twos and threes at the end. Ender found no wolves waiting for 
him in the clearing, and he lowered himself into the well on the bucket rope.
  
  The light in the cavern was dim, but he could see piles of jewels. He passed 
them by, noting that, behind him, eyes glinted among the gems. A table covered 
with food did not interest him. He passed through a group of cages hanging from 
the ceiling of the cave, each containing some exotic, friendly-looking creature. 
I'll play with you later, Ender thought. At last he came to a door, with these 
words in glowing emeralds:
  
  THE END OF THE WORLD
  
  He did not hesitate. He opened the door and stepped through.
  
  He stood on a small ledge, high on a cliff overlooking a terrain of bright and 
deep green forest with dashes of autumn color and patches here and there of 
cleared land, with oxdrawn plows and small villages, a castle on a rise in the 
distance, and clouds riding currents of air below him. Above him, the sky was 
the ceiling of a vast cavern, with crystals dangling in bright stalactites.
  
  The door closed behind him. Ender studied the scene intently. With the beauty 
of it, he cared less for survival than usual. He cared little, at the moment, 
what the game of this place might be. He had found it, and seeing it was its own 
reward. And so, with no thought of consequences, he jumped from the ledge.
  
  Now he plummeted downward toward a roiling river and savage rocks; but a cloud 
came between him and the ground as he fell, and caught him, and carried him 
away.
  
  It took him to the tower of the castle, and through the open window, bearing 
him in. There it left him, in a room with no apparent door in floor or ceiling, 
and windows looking out over a certainly fatal fall.
  
  A moment ago he had thrown himself from a ledge carelessly; this time he 
hesitated.
  
  The small rug before the fire unraxeled itself into a long, slender serpent 
with wicked teeth.
  
  "I am your only escape," it said. "Death is your only escape.
  
  Ender looked around the room for a weapon, when suddenly the screen went dark. 
Words flashed around the rim of the desk.
  
  REPORT TO COMMANDER IMMEDIATELY. YOU ARE LATE. -- GREEN GREEN BROWN.
  
  Furious, Ender snapped off the desk and went to the color wall, where he found 
the ribbon of green green brown, touched it, and followed it as it lit up before 
him. The dark green, light green, and brown of the ribbon reminded him of the 
early autumn kingdom he had found in the game. I must go back there, he told 
himself. The serpent is a long thread; I can let myself down from the tower and 
find my way through that place. Perhaps it's called the end of the world because 
it's the end of the games, because I can go to one of the villages and become 
one of the little boys working and playing there, with nothing to kill and 
nothing to kill me, just living there.
  
  As he thought of it, though, he could not imagine what "just living" might 
actually be. He had never done it in his life. But he wanted to do it anyway.
  
  ***
  
  Armies were larger than launch groups, and the army barracks room was larger, 
too. It was long and narrow, with bunks on both sides; so long, in fact, that 
you could see the curvature of the floor as the far end bent upward, part of the 
wheel of the Battle School.
  
  Ender stood at the door. A few boys near the door glanced at him, but they 
were older, and it seemed as though they hadn't even seen him. They went on with 
their conversations, lying and leaning on bunks. They were discussing battles, 
of course; the older boys always did. They were all much larger than Ender. The 
ten- and eleven-year-olds towered over him; even the youngest were eight, and 
Ender was not large for his age.
  
  He tried to see which of the boys was the commander, but most were somewhere 
between battle dress and what the soldiers always called their sleep uniform-- 
skin from head to toe. Many of them had desks out, but few were studying.
  
  Ender stepped into the room. The moment he did, he was noticed.
  
  "What do you want?" demanded the boy who had the upper bunk by the door. He 
was the largest of them. Ender had noticed him before, a young giant who had 
whiskers growing raggedly on his chin. "You're not a Salamander."
  
  "I'm supposed to be, I think," Ender said. "Green green brown, right? I was 
transferred." He showed the boy, obviously the doorguard, his paper.
  
  The doorguard reached for it. Ender withdrew it just out of reach.  "I'm 
supposed to give it to Bonzo Madrid."
  
  Now another boy joined the conversation, a smaller boy, but still larger than 
Ender, "Not bahn-zoe, pisshead. Bone-So. The name's Spanish. Bonzo Madrid. Aqui 
nosotros hablamos espaol, Seor Gran Fedor."
  
  "You must be Bonzo, then?" Ender asked, pronouncing the name correctly.
  
  "No, just a brilliant and talented polyglot. Petra Arkanian. The only girl in 
Salamander Army. With more balls than anybody else in the room."
  
  "Mother Petra she talking?" said one of the boys. "She talking, she talking."
  
  Another one chimed in. "Shit talking ... shit talking, shit talking!"
  
  Quite a few laughed.
  
  "Just between you and me," Petra said, "if they gave the Battle School an 
enema, they'd stick it in at green green brown."
  
  Ender despaired. He already had nothing going for him: grossly undertrained, 
small, inexperienced, doomed to be resented for early advancement. And now, by 
chance, he had made exactly the wrong friend. An outcast in Salamander Army, and 
she had just linked him with her in the minds of the rest of the army. A good 
day's work. For a moment, as Ender looked around at the laughing, jeering faces, 
he imagined their bodies covered with hair, their teeth pointed for tearing. Am 
I the only human being in this place? Are all the others animals, waiting only 
to devour?
  
  Then he remembered Alai. In every army, surely, there was at least one worth 
knowing.
  
  Studdenly, though no one said to be quiet, the laughter stopped and the group 
fell silent. Ender turned to the door. A boy stood there, tall and dark and 
slender, with beautiful black eyes and slender lips that hinted at refinement. I 
would follow such beauty, said something inside Ender. I would see as those eyes 
see.
  
  "Who are you?" asked the boy quietly.
  
  "Ender Wiggin, sir," Ender said. "Reassigned from launch to Salamander Army." 
He held out the orders.
  
  The boy took the paper in a swift, sure movement, without touching Ender's 
hand. "How old are you, Wiggin?" he asked.
  
  "Almost seven."
  
  Still quietly, he said, "I asked how old you are, not how old you almost are."
  
  "I am six years, nine months, and twelve days old."
  
  "How long have you been working in the batle room?"
  
  "A few months, now. My aim is better."
  
  "Any training in battle maneuvers? Have you ever been part of a toon? Have you 
ever carried out a joint exercise?"
  
  Ender had never heard of such things. He shook his head.
  
  Madrid looked at him steadily. "I see. As you will quickly learn, the officers 
in command of this school, most notably Major Anderson, who runs the game, are 
fond of playing tricks. Salamander Army is just beginning to emerge from 
indecent obscurity. We have won twelve of our last twenty games. We have 
surprised Rat and Scorpion and Hound, and we are ready to play for leadership in 
the game. So of course, of course I am given such a useless, untrained, hopeless 
specimen of of underdevelopment as yourself."
  
  Petra said, quietly, "He isn't glad to meet you."
  
  "Shut up, Arkanian," Madrid said. "To one trial we now add another. But 
whatever obstacles our officers choose to fling in our path, we are still--"
  
  "Salamander!" cried the soldiers, in one voice. Instinctively, Ender's 
perception of these events changed. It was a pattern, a ritual. Madrid was not 
trying to hurt him, merely taking control of a surprising event and using it to 
strengthen his control of his army.
  
  "We are the fire that will consume them, belly and bowel, head and heart, many 
flames of us, but one fire."
  
  "Salamander!" they cried again.
  
  "Even this one will not weaken us."
  
  For a moment, Ender allowed himself to hope. "I'll work hard and learn 
quickly," he said.
  
  "I didn't give you permission to speak," Madrid answered. "I intend to trade 
you away as quickly as I can. I'll probably huve to give up someone valuable 
along with you, but as small as you are you are worse than useless. One more 
frozen, inevitably, in every battle, that's all you are, and we're now at a 
point where every frozen soldier makes a difference in the standings. Nothing 
personal, Wiggin, but I'm sure you can get your training at someone else's 
expense."
  
  "He's all heart," Petra said.
  
  Madrid stepped closer to the girl and slapped her across the face with the 
back of his hand. It made little sound, for only his fingernails had hit her. 
But there were bright red marks, four of them, on her cheek, and little pricks 
of blood marked where the tips of his fingernails had struck.
  
  "Here are your instructions, Wiggin. I expect that it is the last time I'll 
need to speak to you. You will stay out of the way when we're training in the 
battleroom. You have to be there, of course, but you will not belong to any toon 
and you will not take part in any maneuvers. When we're called to battle, you 
will dress quickly and present yourself at the gate with everyone else. But you 
will not pass through the gate until four full minutes after the beginning of 
the game, and then you will remain at the gate, with your weapon undrawn and 
unfired, until such time as the game ends."
  
  Ender nodded. So he was to be a nothing. He hoped the trade happened soon.
  
  He also noticed that Petra did not so much as cry out in pain, or touch her 
cheek, though one spot of blood had beaded and run, making a streak down to her 
jaw. Outcast she may be, but since Bonzo Madrid was not going to be Ender's 
friend, no matter what, he might as well make friends with Petra.
  
  He was assigned a bunk at the far end of the room. The upper bunk, so that 
when he lay on his bed he couldn't even seen the door; the curve of the ceiling 
blocked it. There were other boys near him, tired-looking boys, sullen, the ones 
least valued. They had nothing of welcome to say to Ender.
  
  Ender tried to palm his locker open, but nothing happened. Then he realized 
the lockers were not secured. All four of them had rings on them, to pull them 
open. Nothing would be private, then, now that he was in an army.
  
  There was a uniform in the locker. Not the pale green of the Launchies, but 
the orange-trimmed dark green uniform of Salamander Army. It did not fit well. 
But then, they had probably never had to provide such a uniform for a boy so 
young.
  
  He was starting to take it off when he noticed Petra walking down the aisle 
toward his bed. He slid off the bunk and stood on the floor to greet her.
  
  "Relax," she said. "I'm not an officer."
  
  "You're a toon leader, aren't you?"
  
  Someone nearby snickered.
  
  "Whatever gave you that idea, Wiggin?"
  
  "You have a bunk in the front."
  
  "I bunk in the front because I'm the best sharpshooter in Salamander Army, and 
because Bonzo is afraid I'll start a revolution if the toon leaders don't keep 
an eye on me. As if I could start anything with boys like these." She indicated 
the sullen-faced boys on the nearby bunks.
  
  What was she trying to do, make it worse than it already was?
  
  "Everybody's better than I am," Ender said, trying to dissociate himself from 
her contempt for the boys who would, after all, be his near bunkmates.
  
  "I'm a girl," she said, "and you're a pissant of a six-year-old. We have so 
much in common, why don't we be friends?"
  
  "I won't do your deskwork for you," he said.
  
  In a moment she realized it was a joke. "Ha," she said. "It's all so military, 
when you're in the game. School isn't like it is for Launchies. Histories and 
strategy and tactics and buggers and math and stars, things you'll need as a 
pilot or a commander. You'll see."
  
  "So you're my friend. Do I get a prize?" Ender asked. He was imitating her 
swaggering way of speaking, as if she cared about nothing.
  
  "Bonzo isn't going to let you practice. He's going to make you take your desk 
to the battleroom and study. He's right, in a way-- he doesn't want a totally 
untrained little kid start screwing up his precision maneuvers." She lapsed into 
giria, the slangy talk that imitated the pidgin English of uneducated people. 
"Bonzo, he pre-cise. He so careful, he piss on a plate and never splash."
  
  Ender grinned.
  
  "The battleroom is open all the time. If you want, I'll take you in the off 
hours and show you some of the things I know, I'm not a great soldier, but I'm 
pretty good, and I sure know more than you."
  
  "If you want," Ender said.
  
  "Starting tomorrow morning after breakfast."
  
  "What if somebody's using the room? We alway's went right after breakfast, in 
my launch."
  
  "No problem. There are really nine battlerooms."
  
  "I never heard of any others."
  
  "They all have the same entrance. The whole center of the battle school, the 
hub of the wheel, is battlerooms. They don't rotate with the rest of the 
station. That's how they do the nullg, the no-gravity-- it just holds still. No 
spin, no down. But they can set it up so that any one of the rooms is at the 
battleroom entrance corridor that we all use. Once you're inside, they move it 
along and another battleroom's in position."
  
  "Oh."
  
  "Like I said. Right after breakfast."
  
  "Right," Ender said.
  
  She started to walk away.
  
  "Petra," he said.
  
  She turned back.
  
  "Thanks."
  
  She said nothing, just turned around again and walked down the aisle.
  
  Ender climbed back up on his bunk and finished taking off his uniform. He lay 
naked on the bed, doodling with his new desk, trying to decide if they had done 
anything to his access codes. Sure enough, they had wiped out his security 
system. He couldn't own anything here, not even his desk.
  
  The lights dimmed a little. Getting toward bedtime. Ender didn't know which 
bathroom to use.
  
  "Go left out of the door," said the boy on the next bunk. "We share it with 
Rat, Condor, and Squirrel."
  
  Ender thanked him and started to walk on past.
  
  "Hey," said the boy. "You can't go like that. Uniforms at all times out of 
this room."
  
  "Even going to the toilet?"
  
  "Especially. And you're forbidden to speak to anyone from any other army. At 
meals or in the toilet. You can get away with it sometimes in the game room, and 
of course whenever a teacher tells you to, but if Bonzo catch you, you dead, 
eh?"
  
  "Thanks."
  
  "And, uh, Bonzo get mad if you skin by Petra."
  
  "She was naked when I came in, wasn't she?"
  
  "She do what she like, but you keep you clothes on. Bonzo's orders."
  
  That was stupid. Petra still looked like a boy, it was a stupid rule. It set 
her apart, made her different, split the army. Stupid stupid. How did Bonzo get 
to be a commander, if he didn't know better than that? Alai would be a better 
commander than Bonzo. He knew how to bring a group together.
  
  I know how to bring a group together, too, thought Ender. Maybe I'll be 
commander someday.
  
  In the bathroom, he was washing his hands when somebody spoke to hmm. "Hey, 
they putting babies in Salamander uniforms now?"
  
  Ender didn't answer just dried off his hands.
  
  "Hey, look! Salamander's getting babies now! Look at this! He could walk 
between my legs without touching my balls!"
  
  "Cause you got none, Dink, that's why," somebody answered.
  
  As Ender left the room, he heard somebody else say, "It's Wiggin. You know, 
the smartass from the game room."
  
  He walked down the corridor smiling. He may be short, but they knew his name. 
From the game room, of course, so it meant nothing. But they'd see. He'd be a 
good soldier, too. They'd all know his name soon enough. Not in Salamander Army, 
maybe, but soon enough.
  
  ***
  
  Petra was waiting in the corridor that led to the battleroom. "Wait a minute," 
she said to Ender. "Rabbit Army just went in, and it takes a few minutes to 
change to the next battleroom."
  
  Ender sat down beside her. "There's more to the battleroom than just switching 
from one to the next," he said. "For instance, why is there gravity in the 
corridor outside the room, just before we go in?"
  
  Petra closed her eyes. "And if the battlerooms are really free-floating, what 
happens when one is connected? Why doesn't it start to move with the rotation of 
the school?"
  
  Ender nodded.
  
  "These are the mysteries," Petra said in a deep whisper. "Do not pry into 
them. Terrible things happened to the last soldier who tried. He was discovered 
hanging by his feet from the ceiling of the bathroom, with his head stuffed in 
the toilet."
  
  "So I'm not the first person to ask the question."
  
  "You remember this, little boy." When she said little boy it sounded friendly, 
not contemptuous. "They never tell you any more truth than they have to. But any 
kid with brains knows that there've been some changes in science since the days 
of old Mazer Rackham and the Victorious Fleet. Obviously we can now control 
gravity. Turn it on and off, change the direction, maybe reflect it-- I've 
thought of lots of neat things you could do with gravity weapons and gravity 
drives on starships. And think how starships could move near planets. Maybe tear 
big chunks out of them by reflecting the planet's own gravity back on itself, 
only from another direction, and focused down to a smaller point. But they say 
nothing."
  
  Ender understood more than she said. Manipulation of gravity was one thing; 
deception by the officers was another; but the most important message was this: 
the adults are the enemy, not the other armies. They do not tell us the truth.
  
  "Come, little boy," she said. "The battleroom is ready. Petra's hands are 
steady. The enemy is deady." She giggled. "Petra the poet, they call me."
  
  "They also say you're crazy as a loon."
  
  "Better believe it, baby butt." She had ten target balls in a bag. Ender held 
onto her suit with one hand and the wall with the other, to steady her as she 
threw them, hard, in different directions. In the null gravity, they bounced 
every which way. "Let go of me," she said. She shoved off, spinning 
deliberately; with a few deft hand moves she steadied herself, and began aiming 
carefully at ball after ball. When she shot one, its glow changed from white to 
red. Ender knew that the color change lasted less than two minutes. Only one 
ball had changed back to white when she got the last one.
  
  She rebounded accurately from a wall and came at high speed back to Ender. He 
caught her and held her against her own rebound, one of the first techniques 
they had taught him as a Launchy.
  
  "You're good," he said.
  
  "None better. And you're going to learn how to do it."
  
  Petra taught him to hold his arm straight, to aim with the whole arm. 
"Something most soldiers don't realize is that the farther away your target is, 
the longer you have to hold the beam within about a two-centimeter circle. It's 
the difference between a tenth of a second and a half a second, but in battle 
that's a long time. A lot of soldiers think they missed when they were right on 
target, but they moved away too fast. So you can't use your gun like a sword, 
swish swish slice-em-in-half. You got to aim."
  
  She used the ballcaller to bring the targets back, then launched them slowly, 
one by one. Ender fired at them. He missed every one.
  
  "Good," she said. "You don't have any bad habits."
  
  "I don't have any good ones, either," he pointed out.
  
  "I give you those."
  
  They didn't accomplish much that first morning. Mostly talk. How to think 
while you were aiming. You've got to hold your own motion and your enemy's 
motion in your mind at the same time. You've got to hold your arm straight out 
and aim with your body, so in case your arm is frozen you can still shoot. Learn 
where your trigger actually fires and ride the edge, so you don't have to pull 
so far each time you fire. Relax your body, don't tense up; it makes you 
tremble.
  
  It was the only practice Ender got that day. During the army's drills in the 
afternoon, Ender was ordered to bring his desk and do his schoolwork, sitting in 
a corner of the room. Bonzo had to have all his soldiers in the battleroom, but 
he didn't have to use them.
  
  Ender did not do his schoolwork, however. If he couldn't have drill as a 
soldier, he could study Bonzo as a tactician. Salamander Army was divided into 
the standard four toons of ten soldiers each. Some commanders set up their toons 
so that A toon consisted of the best soldiers, and D toon had the worst. Bonzo 
had mixed them, so that each consisted of good soldiers and weaker ones.
  
  Except that B toon had only nine boys. Ender wondered who had been transferred 
to make room for him. It soon became plain that the leader of toon B was new. No 
wonder Bonzo was so disgusted-- he had lost a toon leader to get Ender.
  
  And Bonzo was right about another thing. Ender was not ready.
  
  All the practice time was spent working on maneuvers. Toons that couldn't see 
each other practiced performing precision operations together with exact timing; 
toons practiced using each other to make sudden changes of direction without 
losing formation. All these soldiers took for granted skills that Ender didn't 
have. The ability to make a soft landing and absorb most of the shock. Accurate 
flight. Course adjustment using the frozen soldiers floating randomly through 
the room. Rolls, spins, dodges. Sliding along the walls-- a very difficult 
maneuver and yet one of the most valuable, since the enemy couldn't get behind 
you.
  
  Even as Ender learned how much he did not know, he also saw things that he 
could improve on. The well-rehearsed formations were a mistake. It allowed the 
soldiers to obey shouted orders instantly, but it also meant they were 
predictable. Also, the individual soldiers were given little initiative. Once a 
pattern was set, they were to follow it through. There was no room for 
adjustmemmt to what the enemy did against the formation. Ender studied Bonzo's 
formations like an enemy commander would, noting ways to disrupt the formation.
  
  During free play that night, Ender asked Petra to practice with him.
  
  "No," she said. "I want to be a commander someday, so I've got to play the 
game room." It was a common belief that the teachers monitored the games and 
spotted potential commanders there. Ender doubted it, though. Toon leaders had a 
better chance to show what they might do as commanders than any video player.
  
  But he didn't argue with Petra. The after-breakfast practice was generous 
enough. Still, he had to practice. And he couldn't practice alone, except a few 
of the basic skills. Most of the hard things required partners or teams. If only 
he still had Alai or Shen to practice with.
  
  Well, why shouldn't he practice with them? He had never heard of a soldier 
practicing with Launchies, but there was no rule against it. It just wasn't 
done; Launchies were held in too much contempt. Well, Ender was still being 
treated like a Launchy anyway. He needed someone to practice with, and in return 
he could help them learn some of the things he saw the older boys doing.
  
  "Hey, the great soldier returns!" said Bernard. Ender stood in the doorway of 
his old barracks. He'd only been away for a day, but already it seemed like an 
alien place, and the others of his launch group were strangers. Almost he turned 
around and left. But there was Alai, who had made their friendship sacred. Alai 
was not a stranger.
  
  Ender made no effort to conceal how he was treated in Salamander Army. "And 
they're right. I'm about as useful as a sneeze in a spacesuit." Alai laughed, 
and other Launchies started to gather around. Ender proposed his bargain. Free 
play, every day, working hard in the battleroom, under Ender's direction. They 
would learn things from the armies, from the battles Ender would see; he would 
get the practice he needed in developing soldier skills. "We'll get ready 
together."
  
  A lot of boys wanted to come, too. "Sure," Ender said. "If you're coming to 
work. If you're just farting around, you're out. I don't have any time to 
waste."
  
  They didn't waste any time. Ender was clumsy, trying to describe what he had 
seen, working out ways to do it. But by the time free play ended, they had 
learned some things. They were tired, but they were getting the knack of a few 
techniques.
  
  "Where were you?" asked Bonzo.
  
  Ender stood stiffly by his commander's bunk. "Practicing in a battleroom."
  
  "I hear you had some of your oid Launchy group with you."
  
  "I couldn't practice alone."
  
  "I won't have any soldiers in Salamander Army hanging around with Launchies. 
You're a soldier now."
  
  Ender regarded him in silence.
  
  "Did you hear me, Wiggin?"
  
  "Yes, sir."
  
  "No more practicing with those little farts."
  
  "May I speak to you privately?" asked Ender.
  
  It was a request that commanders were required to allow. Bonzo's face went 
angry, and he led Ender out into the corridor. "Listen, Wiggin, I don't want 
you, I'm trying to get rid of you, but don't give me any problems or I'll paste 
you to the wall."
  
  A good commander, thought Ender, doesn't have to make stupid threats.
  
  Bonzo grew annoyed at Ender's silence. "Look, you asked me to come out here, 
now talk."
  
  "Sir, you were correct not to place me in a toon. I don't know how to do 
anything."
  
  "I don't need you to tell me when I'm correct."
  
  "But I'm going to become a good soldier. I won't screw up your regular drill, 
but I'm going to practice, and I'm going to practice with the only people who 
will practice with me, and that's my Launchies."
  
  "You'll do what I tell you, you little bastard."
  
  "That's right, sir. I'll follow all the orders that you're authorized to give. 
But free play is free. No assignments can be given. None. By anyone.
  
  He could see Bonzo's anger growing hot. Hot anger was bad. Ender's anger was 
cold, and he could use it. Bonzo's was hot, and so it used him.
  
  "Sir, I've got my own career to think of. I won't interfere in your training 
and your battles, but I've got to learn sometime. I didn't ask to be put into 
your army, you're trying to trade me as soon as you can. But nobody will take me 
if I don't know anything, will they? Let me learn something, and then you can 
get rid of me all the sooner and get a soldier you can really use."
  
  Bonzo was not such a fool that anger kept him from recognizing good sense when 
he heard it. Still, he couldn't let go of his anger immediately.
  
  "While you're in Salamander Army, you'll obey me."
  
  "If you try to control my free play, I can get you iced."
  
  It probably wasn't true. But it was possible. Certainly if Ender made a fuss 
about it, interfering with free play could conceivably get Bonzo removed from 
command. Also, there was the fact that the officers obviously saw something in 
Ender, since they had promoted him. Maybe Ender did have influence enough with 
the teachers to ice somebody. "Bastard," said Bonzo.
  
  "It isn't my fault you gave me that order in front of everybody," Ender said. 
"But if you want, I'll pretend you won this argument. Then tomorrow you can tell 
me you changed your mind."
  
  "I don't need you to tell me what to do."
  
  "I don't want the other guys to think you backed down. You wouldn't be able to 
command as well."
  
  Bonzo hated him for it, for the kindness. It was as if Ender were granting him 
his command as a favor. Galling, and yet he had no choice. No choice about 
anything. It didn't occur to Bonzo that it was his own fault, for giving Ender 
an unreasonable order. He only knew that Ender had beaten him, and then rubbed 
his nose in it by being magnanimous.
  
  "I'll have your ass someday," Bonzo said.
  
  "Probably," said Ender. The lights out buzzer sounded. Ender walked back into 
the room, looking dejected. Beaten. Angry. The other boy's drew the obvious 
conclusion.
  
  And in the morning, as Ender was leaving for breakfast, Bonzo stopped him and 
spoke loudly. "I changed my mind, pinprick. Maybe by practicing with your 
Launchies you'll learn something, and I can trade you easier. Anything to get 
rid of you faster."
  
  "Thank you, sir," Ender said.
  
  "Anything," whispered Boozo. "I hope you're iced." Ender smiled gratefully and 
left the room. After breakfast he practiced again with Petra. All afternoon he 
watched Bonzo drill and figured out ways to destroy his army. During free play 
he and Alai and the others worked themselves to exhaustion. I can do this, 
thought Ender as he lay in his bed, his muscles throbbing, unknotting 
themselves. I can handle it.
  
  ***
  
  Salamander Army had a battle four days later. Ender followed behind the real 
soldiers as they jogged along the corridors to the battleroom. There were two 
ribbons along the walls, the green green brown of Salamander and the black white 
black of Condor. When they came to the place where the battleroom had always 
been, the corridor split instead, with green green brown heading to the left and 
black white black to the right. Around another turn to the right, and the army 
stopped in front of a blank wall.
  
  The toons formed up in silence. Ender stayed behind them all. Bonzo was giving 
his instructions. "A take the handles and go up. B left, C right, D down." He 
saw that the toons were oriented to follow instructions, then added, "And you, 
pinprick, wait four minutes, then come just inside the door. Don't even take 
your gun off your suit."
  
  Ender nodded. Suddenly the wall behind Bonzo became transparent. Not a wall at 
all, then, but a forcefield. The battleroom was different, too. Huge brown boxes 
were suspended in midair, partially obstructing the view. So these were the 
obstacles that the soldiers called stars. They were distributed seemingly at 
random. Bonzo seemed not to care where they were.
  
  Apparently the soldiers already knew how to handle the stars.
  
  But it soon became clear to Ender, as he sat and watched the battle from the 
corridor, that they did not know how to handle the stars. They did know how to 
softland on one and use it for cover, the tactics of assaulting the enemy's 
position on a star. They showed no sense at all of which stars mattered. They 
persisted in assaulting stars that could have been bypassed by wall-sliding to a 
more advanced position.
  
  The other commander was taking advantage of Bonzo's neglect of strategy. 
Condor Army forced the Salamanders into costly assaults. Fewer and fewer 
Salamanders were unfrozen for the attack on the next star. It was clear, after 
only five or six minutes, that Salamander Army could not defeat the enemy by 
attacking.
  
  Ender stepped through the gate. He drifted slightly downward. The battlerooms 
he had practiced in always had their doors at floor level. For real battles, 
however, the door was set in the middle of the wall, as far from the floor as 
from the ceiling.
  
  Abruptly he felt himself reorient, as he had in the shuttle. What had been 
down was now up, and now sideways. In null-g, there was no reason to stay 
oriented the way he had been in the corridor. It was impossible to tell, looking 
at the perfectly square doors, which way had been up. And it didn't matter. For 
now Ender had found the orientation that made sense. The enemy's gate was down. 
The object of the game was to fall toward the enemy's home.
  
  Ender made the motions that oriented himself in his new direction. Instead of 
being spread out, his whole body presented to the enemy, now Ender's legs 
pointed toward them. He was a much smaller target.
  
  Someone saw him. He was, after all, drifting aimlessly in the open. 
Instinctively he pulled his legs up under him. At that moment he was flashed and 
the legs of his suit froze in position. His arms remained unfrozen, for without 
a direct body hit, only the limbs that were shot froze up. It occurred to Ender 
that if he had not been presenting his legs to the enemy, it would have been his 
body they hit. He would have been immobilized.
  
  Since Bonzo had ordered him not to draw his weapon, Ender continued to drift, 
not moving his head or arms, as if they had been frozen, too. The enemy ignored 
him and concentrated their fire on the soldiers who were firing at them. It was 
a bitter battle. Outnumbered now, Salamander Army gave ground stubbornly. The 
battle disintegrated into a dozen individual shootouts. Bonzo's discipline paid 
off now, for each Salamander that froze took at least one enemy with him. No one 
ran or panicked, everyone remained calm and aimed carefully.
  
  Petra was especially deadly. Condor Army noticed it and took great effort to 
freeze her. They froze her shooting arm first, and her stream of curses was only 
interrupted when they froze her completely and the helmet clamped down on her 
jaw. In a few minutes it was over. Salamander Army offered no more resistance.
  
  Ender noted with pleasure that Condor could only muster the minimal five 
soldiers necessary to open the gate to victory. Four of them touched their 
helmets to the lighted spots at the four corners of Salamander's door, while the 
fifth passed through the forcefield. That ended the game. The lights came back 
on to their full brightness, and Anderson came out of the teacher door.
  
  I could have drawn my gun, thought Ender, as the enemy approached the door. l 
could have drawn my gun and shot just one of them, and they would have been too 
few. The game would have been a draw. Without four men to touch the four corners 
and a fifth man to pass through the gate, Condor would have had no victory. 
Bonzo, you ass, I could have saved you from this defeat. Maybe even turned it to 
victory, since they were sitting there, easy targets, and they wouldn't have 
known at first where the shots were coining from. I'm a good enough shot for 
that.
  
  But orders were orders, and Ender had promised to obey. He did get some 
satisfaction out of the fact that on the official tally Salamandem Army 
recorded, not the expected forty-one disabled or eliminated, but rather forty 
eliminated and one damaged. Bonzo couldn't understand it, until he consulted 
Anderson's book and realized who it was. Damaged, Bonzo, thought Ender. I could 
still shoot,
  
  He expected Bonzo to come to him and say, "Next time, when it's like that, you 
can shoot." But Bonzo didn't say anything to him at all until the next morning 
after breakfast. Of course, Bonzo ate in the commanders mess, but Ender was 
pretty sure the odd score would cause as much stir there as it did in the 
soldiers dining hall. In every other game that wasn't a draw, every member of 
the losing team was either eliminated-- totally frozen-- or disabled, which 
meant they had some body parts still unfrozen, but were unable to shoot or 
inflict damage on the enemy. Salamander was the only losing army with one man in 
the Damaged but Active category.
  
  Ender volunteered no explanation, but the other members of Salamander Army let 
it be known why it had happened. And when other boys asked him why he hadn't 
disobeyed orders and fired, he calmly answered, "I obey orders."
  
  After breakfast, Bonzo looked for him. "The order still stands," he said, "and 
don't you forget it."
  
  It will cost you, you fool. I may not be a good soldier, but I can still help 
and there's no reason you shouldn't let me.
  
  Ender said nothing.
  
  An interesting side effect of the battle was that Ender emerged at the top of 
the soldier efficiecies list. Since he hadn't fired a shot, he had a perfect 
record on shooting-- no misses at all. And since he had never been eliminated or 
disabled, his percentage there was excellent. No one else came close. It made a 
lot of boys laugh, and others were angry, but on the prized efficiency list, 
Ender was now the leader.
  
  He kept sitting out the army practice sessions, and kept working hard on his 
own, with Petra in the mornings and his friends at night. More Launchies were 
joining them now, not on a lark but because they could see results-- they were 
getting better and better. Ender and Alai stayed ahead of them, though. In part, 
it was because Alai kept trying new things, which forced Ender to think of new 
tactics to cope with them. In part it was because they kept making stupid 
mistakes, which suggested things to do that no self-respecting, well-trained 
soldier would even have tried. Many of the things they attempted turned out to 
be useless. But it was always fun, always exciting, and enough things worked 
that they knew it was helping them. Evening was the best time of the day.
  
  The next two battles were easy Salamander victories; Ender came in after five 
minutes and remained untouched by the defeated enemy. Ender began to realize 
that Condor Army, which had beaten them, was unusually good; Salamander, weak as 
Bonzo's grasp of strategy might be, was one of the better teams, climbing 
steadily in the ratings, clawing for fourth place with Rat Army.
  
  Ender turned seven. They weren't much for dates and calendars at the Battle 
School, but Ender had found out how to bring up the date on his desk, and he 
noticed has birthday. The school noticed it, too: they took his measurements and 
issued him a new Salamander uniform and a new flash suit for the battleroom. He 
went back to the barracks with the new clothing on. It felt strange and loose, 
like his skin no longer fit properly.
  
  He wanted to stop at Petra's bunk and tell her about his home, about what his 
birthdays weme usually like, just tell her it was his birthday so she'd say 
something about it being a happy one. But nobody told birthdays. It was 
childish. It was what landsiders did. Cakes and silly customs. Valentine baked 
him his cake on his sixth birthday. It fell and it was terrible. Nobody knew how 
to cook anymore; it was the kind of crazy thing Valentine would do. Everybody 
teased Valentine about it, but Ender saved a little bit of it in his cupboard. 
Then they took out his monitor and he left and for all he knew, it was still 
there, a little piece of greasy yellow dust. Nobody talked about home, not among 
the soldiers; there had been no life before Battle School. Nobody got letters, 
and nobody wrote any. Everybody pretended that they didn't care.
  
  But I do care, thought Ender. The only reason I'm here is so that a bugger 
won't shoot out Valentine's eye, won't blast her head open like the soldiers in 
the videos of the first battles with the buggers. Won't split her head with a 
beam so hot that her brains burst the skull and spill out like rising bread 
dough, the way it happens in my worst nightmares, in my worst nights, when I 
wake up trembling but silent, must keep silent or they'll hear that I miss my 
family. I want to go home.
  
  It was better in the morning. Home was merely a dull ache in the back of his 
memory. A tiredness in his eyes. That morning Bonzo came in as they were 
dressing. "Flash suits!" he called. It was a battle. Ender's fourth game.
  
  The enemy was Leopard Army. It would be easy. Leopard was new, and it was 
always in the bottom quarter in the standings. It had been organized only six 
months ago, with Pol Slattery as its commander. Ender put on his new battle suit 
and got into line; Bonzo pulled him roughly out of line and made him march at 
the end. You didn't need to do that, Ender said silently. You could have let me 
stay in line.
  
  Ender watched from the corridor. Pol Slattery was young, but he was sharp, he 
had some new ideas. He kept his soldiers moving, darting from star to star, 
wallsliding to get behind and above the stolid Salamanders. Ender smiled. Bonzo 
was hopelessly confused, and so were his men. Leopard seemed to have men in 
every direction. However, the battle was not as lopsided as it seemed. Ender 
noticed that Leopard was losing a lot of men, too-- their reckless tactics 
exposed them too much. What mattered, however, was that Salamander was defeated. 
They had surrendered the initiative completely. Though they were still fairly 
evenly matched with the enemy, they huddled together like the last survisors of 
a massacre, as if they hoped the enemy would overlook them in the carnage.
  
  Ender slipped slowly through the gate, oriented himself so the enemy's gate 
was down, and drifted slowly eastward to a corner where he wouidn't be noticed. 
He even fired at his own legs, to hold them in the kneeling position that 
offered him the best protection. He looked to any casual glance like another 
frozen soldier who had drifted helplessly out of the battle.
  
  With Salamander Army waiting abjectly for destrucdon, Leopard obligingly 
destroyed them. Tney had nine boys left when Salamander finally stopped firing. 
They formed up and started to open the Salamander gate.
  
  Ender aimed carefully with a straight arm, as Petra had taught him. Before 
anyone knew what was happening, he froze three of the soldiers who were about to 
press their helmets against the lighted corners of the door. Then some of the 
others spotted him and fired-- but at first they hit only his already frozen 
legs. It gave him time to get the last two men at the gate. Leopard had only 
four men left unfrozen when Ender was finally hit in the arm and disabled. The 
game was a draw, and they never had hit him in the body.
  
  Pol Slattery was furious, but there had been nothing unfair about it. Everyone 
in Leopard Army assumed that it bad been a strategy of Bonzo's, to leave a man 
till the last minute. It didn't occur to them that little Ender had fired 
against orders. But Salamander Army knew. Bonzo knew, and Ender could see from 
the way the commander looked at him that Bouzo hated him for rescuing him from 
total defeat. I don't care, Ender told himself. It will just make me easier to 
trade away, and in the meantime you won't drop so far in the standings. You 
trade me. I've learned all I'm ever going to learn from you. How to fail with 
style, that's all you know, Bonzo.
  
  What have I learned so far? Ender listed things in his mind as he undressed by 
his bunk. The enemy's gate is down. Use my legs as a shield in battle. A small 
reserve, held back until the end of the game, can be decisive. And soldiers can 
sometimes make decisions that are smarter than the orders they've been given.
  
  Naked, he was about to climb into bed when Bonzo came toward him, his face 
hard and set. I have seen Peter like this, thought Ender, silent with murder in 
his eye. But Bonzo is not Peter. Bonzo has more fear.
  
  "Wiggin, I finally traded you. I was able to persuade Rat Army that your 
incredible place on the efficiency list is more than an accident. You go over 
there tomorrow."
  
  "Thank you, sir," Ender said.
  
  Perhaps he sounded too grateful. Suddenly Bonzo swung at him, caught his jaw 
with a vicious open-handed slap. It knocked Ender sideways, into his bunk, and 
he almost fell. Then Bonzo slugged him, hard, in the stomach. Ender dropped to 
his knees.
  
  "You disobeyed me," Bonzo said. Loudly, for all to hear. "No good soldier ever 
disobeys."
  
  Even as he cried from the pain, Ender could not help but take vengeful 
pleasure in the murmurs he heard rising through the barracks. You fool, Bonzo. 
You aren't enforcing discipline, you're destroying it. They know I turned defeat 
into a draw. And now they see how you repay me. You made yourself look stupid in 
front of everyone. What is your discipline worth now?
  
  The next day, Ender told Petra that for her sake the shooting practice in the 
morning would have to end. Bonzo didn't need anything that looked like a 
challenge now, and so she'd better stay clear of Ender for a while. She 
understood perfectly. "Besides," she said, "you're as close to being a good shot 
as you'll ever be."
  
  He left his desk and flash suit in the locker. He would wear his Salamander 
uniform until he could get to the commissary and change it for the brown and 
black of Rat. He had brought no possessions with him; he would take none away. 
There were none to have-- everything of value was in the school computer or his 
own head and hands.
  
  He used one of the public desks in the game room to register for an 
earth-gravity personal combat course during the hour immediately after 
breakfast. He didn't plan to get vengeance on Bonzo for hitting him. But he did 
intend that no one would he able to do that to him again.
  
  
  
  Chapter 8 -- Rat
  
  "Colonel Graff, the games have always been run fairly before. Either random 
distribution of stars, or symmetrical."
  
  "Fairness is a wonderful attribute, Major Anderson. It has nothing to do with 
war."
  
  "The game will be compromised. The comparative standings will become 
meaningless."
  
  "Alas."
  
  "It will take months. Years, to develop the new battlerooms and run the 
simulations."
  
  "That's why I'm asking you now. To begin. Be creative. Think of every stacked, 
impossible, unfair star arrangement you can. Think of other ways to bend the 
rules. Late notification. Unequal forces. Then run the simulations and see which 
ones are hardest, which easiest. We want an intelligent progression here. We 
want to bring him along."
  
  "When do you plan to make him a commander? When he's eight?"
  
  "Of course not. I haven't even assembled his army yet."
  
  "Oh, so you're stacking it that way, too?"
  
  "You're getting too close to the game, Anderson. You're forgetting that it is 
merely a training exercise.
  
  "It's also status, identity, purpose, name; all that makes these children who 
they are comes out of this game. When it becomes known that the game can be 
manipulated, weighted, cheated, it will undo this whole school. I'm not 
exaggerating."
  
  "I know."
  
  "So I hope Ender Wiggin truly is the one, because you'll have defeated the 
effectiveness of our training method for a long time to come."
  
  "If Ender isn't the one, if his peak of military brilliance does not coincide 
with the arrival of our fleets at the bugger homeworlds, then it doesn't really 
matter what our training method is or isn't."
  
  "I hope you will forgive me, Colonel Graff, but I feel that I must report your 
orders and my opinion of their consequences to the Strategos and the Hegemon."
  
  "Why not our dear Polemarch?"
  
  "Everybody knows you have him in your pocket."
  
  "Such hostility Major Anderson. And I thought we were friends."
  
  "We are. And I think you may ne right about Ender. I just don't believe you, 
and you alone, should decide the fate of the world."
  
  "I don't even think it's right for me to decide the fate of Ender Wiggin."
  
  "So you won't mind if I notify them?"
  
  "Of course I mind, you meddlesome ass. This is something to be decided by 
people who know what they're doing, not these frightened politicians who got 
their office because they happen to be politically potent in the country they 
came from."
  
  "But you understand why I'm doing it."
  
  "Because you're such a short-sighted little bureaucratic bastard that you 
think you need to cover yourself in case things go wrong. Well, if things go 
wrong we'll all be bugger meat. So trust me now, Anderson, and don't bring the 
whole damn Hegemony down on review. What I'm doing is hard enough without them."
  
  "Oh, is it unfair? Are things stacked against you? You can do it to Ender, but 
you can't take it, is that it?"
  
  "Ender Wiggin is ten times smarter and stronger than am. What I'm doing to him 
will bring out his genius. If I had to go through it myself, it would crush me. 
Major Anderson, I know I'm wrecking the game, and I know you love it better than 
any of the boys who play. Hate me if you like, but don't stop me."
  
  "I reserve the right to communicate with the Hegemony and the Strategoi at any 
time. But for now do what you want."
  
  "Thank you ever so kindly."
  
  ***
  
  "Ender Wiggin, the little farthead who leads the standings, what a pleasure to 
have you with us." The commander of Rat Army lay sprawled on a lower bunk 
wearing only his desk. "With you around, how can any army lose?" Several of the 
boys nearby laughed.
  
  There could not here been two more opposite armies than Samamander and Rat. 
The room was rumpled, cluttered, noisy. Alter Bonzo Ender had thought that 
indiscipline would be a welcome relief. Instead, he found that he had come to 
expet quiet and order, and the disorder here made him uncomfortable.
  
  "We doing OK, Ender Bender. I Rose de Nose, Jewboy extraordinaire, and you 
ain't nothin but a pinheaded pinprick of a goy. Don't you forget it."
  
  Since the IF was formed the Strategos of the military forces had always been a 
Jew. There was a myth that Jewish generals didn't lose wars. And so far it was 
still true. It made any Jew at the Battle School dream of being Strategos, and 
conferred prestige on him from the start. It also caused resentment. Rat Army 
was often called the Kike Force, half in parody of Mazer Rackham's Strike Force. 
 There were many who liked to remember that during the Second Invasion, even 
though an American Jew, as President, was Hegemon of the alliance, an Israeli 
Jew was Strategos in overall command of IF, and a Russian Jew was Polemarch of 
the fleet, it was Mazer Rackham, a little-known, twice-court-martialled, 
half-Maori New Zealander whose Strike Force broke up and finally destroyed the 
bugger fleet in the action around Saturn.
  
  If Mazer Rackham could save the world, then it didn't matter a bit whether you 
were a Jew or not, people said.
  
  But it did matter, and Rose the Nose knew it. He mocked himself to forestall 
the mocking comments of anti-semites-- almost everyone he defeated in battle 
became, at least for a time, a Jew-hater-- but he also made sure everyone knew 
what he was. His army was in second place, bucking for first.
  
  "I took you on, goy, because I didn't want people to think I only win because 
I got great soldiers. I want them to know that even with a little puke of a 
soldier like you I can still win. We only got three rules here. Do what I tell 
you and don't piss in the bed."
  
  Ender nodded. He knew that Rose wanted him to ask what the third rule was. So 
he did.
  
  "That was three rules. We don't do too good in math here."
  
  The message was clear. Winning is more important than anything.
  
  "Your practice sessions with half-assed little Launchies are over, Wiggin. 
Done. You're in a big boys' army now. I'm putting you in Dink Meeker's toon. 
From now on, as far as you're concerned, Dink Meeker is God."
  
  "Then who are you?"
  
  "The personnel officer who hired God." Rose grinned. "And you are forbidden to 
use your desk again until you've frozen two enemy soldiers in the same battle. 
This order is out of self-defense. I hear you're a genius programmer. I don't 
want you screwing around with my desk.
  
  Everybody erupted in laughter. It took Ender a moment to understand why. Rose 
had programmed his desk to display-- and animate-- a bigger-than-life sized 
picture of male genitals, which waggled back and forth as Rose held the desk on 
his naked lap. This is just the sort of commander Bonzo would trade me to, 
thought Ender. How does a boy who spends his time like this win battles?
  
  Ender found Dink Meeker in the game room, not playing, just sitting and 
watching. "A guy pointed you out," Ender said. "I'm Ender Wiggin."
  
  "I know," said Meeker.
  
  "I'm in your toon."
  
  "I know," he said again.
  
  "I'm pretty inexperienced."
  
  Dink looked up at him. "Look, Wiggin, I know all this. Why do you think I 
asked Rose to get you for me?"
  
  He had not been dumped, he had been picked up, he had been asked for. Meeker 
wanted him. "Why?" asked Ender.
  
  "I've watched your practice sessions with the Launchies. I think you show some 
promise. Bonzo is stupid and I wanted you to get better training than Petra 
could give you. All she can do is shoot."
  
  "I needed to learn that."
  
  "You still move like you were afraid to wet your pants."
  
  "So teach me."
  
  "So learn."
  
  "I'm not going to quit my freetime practice sessions."
  
  "I don't want you to quit them."
  
  "Rose the Nose does."
  
  "Rose the Nose can't stop you. Likewise, he can't stop you from using your 
desk."
  
  "I thought commanders could order anything."
  
  "They can order the moon to turn blue, too, but it doesn't happen. Listen, 
Ender, commanders have just as much authority as you let them have. The more you 
obey them, the more power they have over you."
  
  "What's to stop them from hurting me?" Ender remembered Bonzo's blow.
  
  "I thought that was why you were taking personal attack classes."
  
  "You've really been watching me, haven't you?"
  
  Dink didn't answer.
  
  "I don't want to get Rose mad at me. I want to be part of the battles now, I'm 
tired of sitting out till the end."
  
  "Your standings will go down."
  
  This time Ender didn't answer.
  
  "Listen, Ender, as long as you're part of my toon, you're part of the battle."
  
  Ender soon learned why. Dink trained his toon independently from the rest of 
Rat Army, with discipline and vigor; he never consulted with Rose, and only 
rarely did the whole army maneuver together. It was as if Rose commanded one 
army, and Dink commanded a much smaller one that happened to practice in the 
battleroom at the same time.
  
  Dink started out the first practice by asking Ender to demonstrate his 
feet-first attack position. The other boys didn't like it. "How can we attack 
lying on our backs?" they asked.
  
  To Ender's surprise, Dink didn't correct them, didn't say, "You aren't 
attacking on your back, you're dropping downward toward them." He had seen what 
Ender was doing, but he had not understood the orientation that it implied. It 
soon became clear to Ender that even though Dink was very, very good, his 
persistence in holding onto the corridor gravity orientation instead of thinking 
of the enemy gate as downward was limiting his thinking.
  
  They practiced attacking an enemy-held star. Before trying Ender's feet-first 
method, they had always gone in standing up, their whole bodies available as a 
target. Even now, though, they reached the star and then assaulted the enemy 
from one direction only; "Over the top," cried Dink, and over they went. To his 
credit, he then repeated the exercise, calling, "Again, upside down," but 
because of their insistence on a gravity that didn't exist, the boys became 
awkward when the maneuver was under, as if vertigo seized them.
  
  They hated the feet-first attack. Dink insisted that they use it. As a result, 
they hated Ender. "Do we have to learn how to fight from a Launchy?" one of them 
muttered, making sure Ender could hear. "Yes," answered Dink. They kept working.
  
  And they learned it. In practice skirmishes, they began to realize how much 
harder it was to shoot an enemy attacking feet first. As soon as they were 
convinced of that, they practiced the maneuver more willingly.
  
  That night was the first time Ender had come to a practice session after a 
whole afternoon of work. He was tired.
  
  "Now you're in a real army," said Alai. "You don't have to keep practicing 
with us."
  
  "From you I can learn things that nobody knows," said Ender.
  
  "Dink Meeker is the best. I hear he's your toon leader."
  
  "Then let's get busy. I'll teach you what I learned from him today."
  
  He put Alai and two dozen others through the same exercises that had worn him 
out all afternoon. But he put new touches on the patterns, made the boys try the 
maneuvers with one leg frozen, with both legs frozen, or using frozen boys for 
leverage to change directions.
  
  Halfway through the practice, Ender noticed Petra and Dink together, standing 
in the doorway, watching. Later, when he looked again, they were gone.
  
  So they're watching me, and what we're doing is known. He did not know whether 
Dink was his friend; he believed that Petra was, but nothing could be sure. They 
might be angry that he was dome what only commanders and toon leaders were 
supposed to do-- drilling and training soldiers. They might be offended that a 
soldier would associate so closely with Launchies. It made him uneasy, to have 
older chiidrcn watching.
  
  "I thought I told you not to use your desk." Rose the Nose stood by Ender's 
bunk.
  
  Ender did not look up. "I'm completing the trigonometry assignment for 
tomorrow."
  
  Rose bumped his knee into Ender's desk. "I said not to use it."
  
  Ender set the desk on his bunk and stood up. "I need trigonometry more than I 
need you."
  
  Rose was taller than Ender by at least forty centimeters. But Ender was not 
particularly worried. It would not come to physical violence, and if it did, 
Ender thought he could hold his own. Rose was lazy and didn't know personal 
combat.
  
  "You're going down in the standings, boy," said Rose.
  
  "I expect to. I was only leading the list because of the stupid way Salamander 
Army was using me."
  
  "Stupid? Bonzo's strategy won a couple of key games."
  
  "Bonzo's strategy wouldn't win a salad fight. I was violating orders every 
time I fired my gun."
  
  Rose hadn't known that. It made him angry. "So everything Bonzo said about you 
was a lie. You're not only short and incompetent, you're insubordinate, too."
  
  "But I turned defeat into stalemate, all by myself."
  
  "We'll see how you do all by yourself next time." Rose went away.
  
  One of Ender's toonmates shook his head. "You dumb as a thumb."
  
  Ender looked at Dink, who was doodling on his desk. Dink looked up, noticed 
Ender watching him, and gazed steadily back at him. No expression. Nothing. OK, 
thought Ender, I can take care of myself.
  
  Battle came two day's later. It was Ender's first time fighting as part of a 
toon; he was nervous. Dink's toon lined up against the right-hand wall of the 
corridor and Ender was very careful not to lean, not to let his weight slip to 
either side. Stay balanced.
  
  "Wiggin!" called Rose the Nose.
  
  Ender felt dread come over him from throat to groin. a tingle of fear that 
made him shudder. Rose saw it.
  
  "Shivering? Trembling? Don't wet your pants, little Launchy." Rose hooked a 
finger over the butt of Ender's gun and pulled him to the forcefield that hid 
the battleroom from view. "We'll see how well you do now, Ender. As soon as that 
door opens, you jump through, go straight ahead toward the enemy's door."
  
  Suicide. Pointless, meaningless self-destruction. But he had to follow orders 
now, this was battle, not school. For a moment Ender raged silently; then he 
calmed himself. "Excellent, sir," he said. "The direction I fire my gun is the 
direction of their main contingent."
  
  Rose laughed. "You won't have time to fire anything, pinprick."
  
  The wall vanished. Ender jumped up, took hold of the ceiling handholds, and 
threw himself out and down, speeding toward the enemy door.
  
  It was Centipede Army, and they only beginning to emerge from their door when 
Ender was halfway across the battleroom. Many of them were able to get under 
cover of stars quickly but Ender had doubled up his legs under him and, holding 
his pistol at his crotch, he was firing between his legs and freezing many of 
them as they emerged.
  
  They flashed his legs, but he had three precious seconds before they coud hit 
his body and put him out of action. He froze several more, then flung out his 
arms in equal and opposite directions. The hand that held his gun ended up 
pointing toward the main body of Centipede Army. He fired into the mass of the 
enemy, and then they froze him.
  
  A second later he smashed into the forcefield of the enemy's door and 
rebounded with a crazy spin. He landed in a group of enemy soldiers behind a 
star; they shoved him off and spun him even more rapidly. He rebounded out of 
control through the rest of the battle, though gradually friction with the air 
slowed him down. He had no way of knowing how many men he had frozen before 
getting iced himself, but he did get the general idea that Rat Army won again, 
as usual.
  
  After the battle Rose didn't speak to him. Ender was still first in the 
standings, since he had frozen three, disabled two, and damaged seven. There was 
no more talk about insubordination and whether Ender could use his desk. Rose 
stayed in his part of the barracks, and left Ender alone.
  
  Dink Meeker began to practice instant emergence from the corridor-- Ender's 
attack on the enemy while they were still coming out of the door had been 
devastating. "If one man can do that much damage, think what a toon can do." 
Dink got Major Anderson to open a door in the middle of a wall, even during 
practice sessions, instead of just the floor level door, so they could practice 
launching under battle conditions. Word got around. From now on no one could 
take five or ten ar fifteen seconds in the corridor to size things up. The game 
had changed.
  
  More battles. This time Ender played a proper role within a toon. He made 
mistakes. Skirmishes were lost. He dropped from first to second in the 
standings, then to fourth. Then he made fewer mistakes, and began to feel 
comfortable within the framework of the toon, and he went back up to third, then 
second, then first.
  
  After practice one afternoon, Ender stayed in the battleroom. He had noticed 
that Dink Meeker usually came late to dinner, and he assumed it was for extra 
practice. Ender wasn't very hungry, and he wanted to see what it was Dink 
practiced when no one else could see.
  
  But Dink didn't practice. He stood near the door, watching Ender.
  
  Ender stood across the room, watching Dink.
  
  Neither spoke. It was plain Dink expected Ender to leave. It was just as plain 
that Ender was saying no.
  
  Dink turned his back on Ender, methodically took off his flash suit, and 
gently pushed off from the floor. He drifted slowly toward the center of the 
room, very slowly, his body relaxing almost completely, so that his hands and 
arms seemed to be caught by almost nonexistent air currents in the room.
  
  After the speed and tension of practice, the exhaustion, the alertness, it was 
restful just to watch him drift. He did it for ten minutes or so before he 
reached another wall. Then he pushed off rather sharply, returned to his flash 
suit, and pulled it on.
  
  "Come on," he said to Ender.
  
  They went to the barracks. The room was empty, since all the boys were at 
dinner. Each went to his own bunk and changed into regular uniforms. Ender 
walked to Dink's bunk and waited for a moment till Dink was ready to go.
  
  "Why did you wait?" asked Dink.
  
  "Wasn't hungry."
  
  "Well, now you know why I'm not a commander."
  
  Ender had wondered.
  
  "Acttually, they promoted me twice, and I refused."
  
  "Refused?"
  
  "They took away my old locker and bunk and desk, assigned me to a commander 
cabin and gave me an army. But I just stayed in the cabin until they gave in and 
put me back into somebody else's army."
  
  "Why?"
  
  "Because I won't let them do it to me. I can't believe you haven't seen 
through all this crap yet, Ender. But I guess you're young. These other armies, 
they aren't the enemy. It's the teachers, they're the enemy. They get us to 
fight each other, to hate each other. The game is everything. Win win win, it 
amounts to nothing. We kill ourselves, go crazy trying to beat each other, and 
all the time the old bastards are watching us, studying us, discovering our weak 
points, deciding whether we're good enough or not. Well, good enough for what? I 
was six years old when they brought me here. What the hell did I know? They 
decided I was right for the program, but nobody ever asked me if the program was 
right for me."
  
  "So why don't you go home?"
  
  Dink smiled crookedly. "Because I can't give up the game." He tugged at the 
fabric of his flash suit, which lay on the bunk beside him. "Because I love 
this."
  
  "So why not be a commander?"
  
  Dink shook his head. "Never. Look what it does to Rosen. The boy's crazy. Rose 
de Nose. Sleeps in here with us instead of in his cabin. Why? Because he's 
scared to be alone, Ender. Scared of the dark."
  
  "Rose?"
  
  "But they made him a commander and so he has to act like one. He doesn't know 
what he's doing. He's winning, but that scares him worst of all, because he 
doesn't know what he's winning, except that I have something to do with it. Any 
minute somebody could find out that Rosen isn't some magic Israeli general who 
can win no matter what. He doesn't know why anybody wins or loses. Nobody does."
  
  "It doesn't mean he's crazy, Dink."
  
  "I know, you've been here a year, you think these people are normal. Well, 
they're not. We're not. I look in the library, I call up books on my desk. Old 
ones, because they won't let us have anything new, but I've got a pretty good 
idea what children are, and we're not children. Children can lose sometimes, and 
nobody cares. Children aren't in armies, they aren't commanders, they don't rule 
over forty other kids, it's more than anybody can take and not get a little 
crazy."
  
  Ender tried to remember what other children were like, in his class at school, 
back in the city. But all he could think of was Stilson.
  
  "I had a brother. Just a normal guy. All he cared about was girls. And flying. 
He wanted to fly. He used to play ball with the guys. A pickup game, shooting 
balls at a hoop, dribbling down the corridors until the peace officers 
confiscated your ball. We had a great time. He was teaching me how to dribble 
when I was taken."
  
  Ender remembered his own brother, and the memory was not fond.
  
  Dink misunderstood the expression on Ender's face. "Hey, I know, nobody's 
supposed to talk about home. But we came from somewhere. The Battle School 
didn't create us, you know. The Battle School doesn't create anything. It just 
destroys. And we all remember things from home. Maybe not good things, but we 
remember and then we lie and pretend that-- look, Ender, why is that nobody 
talks about home, ever? Doesn't that tell you how important it is? That nobody 
even admits that-- oh hell."
  
  "No, it's all right," Ender said. "I was just thinking about Valentine. My 
sister."
  
  "I wasn't trying to make you upset."
  
  "It's OK. I don't think of hut very much, because I always get like this."
  
  "That's right, we never cry. Christ, I never thought of that. Nobody ever 
cries. We really are trying to be adult. Just like our fathers. I bet your 
father was like you. I bet he was quiet and took it, and then busted out and--"
  
  "I'm not like my father."
  
  "So maybe I'm wrong. But look at Bonzo, your old commander. He's got an 
advanced case of Spanish honor. He can't allow himself to have weaknesses. To be 
better than him, that's an insult. To be stronger, that's like cutting off his 
balls. That's why he hates you, because you didn't suffer when he tried to 
punish you. He hates you for that, he honestly wants to kill you. He's crazy. 
They're all crazy."
  
  "And you aren't?"
  
  "I be crazy too, little buddy, but at least when I be craziest, I be floating 
all alone in space and the crazy, she float out of me, she soak into the walls, 
and she don't come out till there be battles and little boy's bump into the 
walls and squish out de crazy."
  
  Ender smiled.
  
  "And you be crazy too," said Dink. "Come on, let's go eat."
  
  "Maybe you can be a commander and not be crazy. Maybe knowing about the 
craziness means you don't have to fall for it."
  
  "I'm not going to let the bastards run me, Ender. They've got you pegged, too, 
and they don't plan to treat you kindly, look what they've done to you so far."
  
  "They haven't done anything except promote me."
  
  "And she make you life so easy, neh?"
  
  Ender laughed and shook his head. "So maybe you're right."
  
  "They think they got you on ice. Don't let them."
  
  "But that's what I came for," Ender said. "For them to make me into a tool. To 
save the world."
  
  "I can't believe you still believe it."
  
  "Believe what?"
  
  "The bugger menace. Save the world. Listen. Ender, if the buggers were coming 
back to get us, they'd he here. They aren't invading again. We beat them and 
they're gone.
  
  "But the videos--"
  
  "All from the First and Second Invasions. Your grandparents weren't born yet 
when Mazer Rackham wiped them out. You watch. It's all a fake. There is no war, 
and they're just screwing around with us."
  
  "But why?"
  
  "Because as long as people are afraid ot the buggers, the IF can stay in 
power, and as long as the IF is in power, certain countries can keep their 
hegemony. But keep watching the vids, Ender. People will catch onto this game 
pretty soon, and there'll be a civil war to end all wars. That is the menace, 
Ender, not the buggers. And in that war, when it comes, you and I won't be 
friends. Because you're American, just like our dear teachers. And I am not."
  
  They went to the mess hall and ate, talking about other things. But Ender 
could not stop thinking about what Dink had said. The Battle School was so 
enclosed, the game so important in the minds of the children, that Ender had 
forgotten there was a world outside. Spanish honor. Civil war. Politics. The 
Battle School was really a very small place, wasn't it?
  
  But Ender did not reach Dink's conclusions. The buggers were real. The threat 
was real. The IF controlled a lot of things, but it didn't control the videos 
and the nets. Not where Ender had grown up. In Dink's home in the Netherlands, 
with three generations under Russian hegemony, perhaps it was all controlled, 
but Ender knew that lies could not last long in America. So he believed.
  
  Believed, but the seed of doubt was there, and it stayed, and every now and 
then sent out a little root. It changed everything, to have that seed growing. 
It made Ender listen more carefully to what people meant, instead of what they 
said. It made him wise.
  
  ***
  
  There weren't as many boys at the evening practice, not by half.
  
  "Where's Bernard?" asked Ender.
  
  Alai grinned. Shen closed his eves and assumed a look of blissful meditation.
  
  "Haven't you heard?" said another boy, a Launchy from a younger group. "Word's 
out that any Launchy who comes to your practice sessions won't ever amount to 
anything in anybody's army. Word's out that the commanders don't want any 
soldiers who've been damaged by your training."
  
  Ender nodded.
  
  "But the way I brain it," said the Launchy, "I be the best soldier I can, and 
any commander worth a damn, he take me. Neh?"
  
  "Eh," said Ender, with finality.
  
  They went on with practice. About a half hour into it, when they were 
practicing throwing off collisions with frozen soldiers, several commanders in 
different uniforms came in. They ostentatiously took down names.
  
  "Hey," shouted Alai. "Make sure you spell my name right!"
  
  The next night there were even fewer boys. Now Ender was hearing the stories 
little Launchies getting slapped around in the bathrooms, or having accidents in 
the mess hall and the game room, or getting their files trashed by older boys 
who had broken the primitive security system that guarded the Launchies' desks.
  
  "No practice tonight," Ender said.
  
  "The hell there's not," said Alai.
  
  "Give it a few days. I don't want any of the little kids getting hurt."
  
  "If you stop, even one night, they'll figure it works to do this kind of 
thing. Just like if you'd ever backed down to Bernard back when he was being a 
swine."
  
  "Besides," said Shen. "We aren't scared and we don't care, so you owe it to us 
to go on. We need the practice and so do you."
  
  Ender remembered what Dink had said. The game was trivial compared to the 
whole world. Why should anybody give every night of his life to this stupid, 
stupid game?
  
  "We don't accomplish that much anyway," Ender said. He started to leave.
  
  Aiai stopped him. "They scare you, too? They slap you up in the bathroom? 
Stick you head in the pissah? Somebody gots a gun up you bung?"
  
  "No," Ender said.
  
  "You still my friend?" asked Alai, more quietly.
  
  "Yes."
  
  "Then I still you friend, Ender, and I stay here and practice with you."
  
  The older boys came again, but fewer of them were commanders. Most were 
members of a couple of armies. Ender recognized Salamander uniforms. Even a 
couple of Rats. They didn't take names this time. Instead, they mocked and 
shouted and ridiculed as the Launchies tried to master difficult skills with 
untrained muscles. It began to get to a few of the boys.
  
  "Listen to them," Ender said to the other boys. "Remember the words. If you 
ever want to make your enemy crazy, shout that kind of stuff at them. It makes 
them do dumb things, to be mad. But we don't get mad."
  
  Shen took the idea to heart, and after each jibe from the older boys, he had a 
group of four Launchies recite the words, loudly, five or six times. When they 
started singing the taunts like nursery rhymes, some of the older boys launched 
themselves from the wall and came out for a fight.
  
  The flash suits were designed for wars fought with harmless light; they 
offered little protection and seriously hampered movement if it came to 
hand-to-hand fighting in nullo. Half the boys were flashed, anyway, and couldn't 
fight; but the stiffness of their suits made them potentially useful. Ender 
quickly ordered his Launchies to gather in one corner of the room. The older 
boys laughed at them even more, and some who had waited by the wall came forward 
to join in the attack, seeing Ender's group in retreat.
  
  Ender and Alai decided to throw a frozen soldier in the face of an enemy. The 
frozen Launchy struck helmet first, and the two careened off each other. The 
older boy clutched his chest whcrc the helmet had hit him, and screamed in pain.
  
  The mockery was over. The rest of the older boys launched themselves to enter 
the battle. Ender didn't really have much hope of any of the boy's getting away 
without some injury. But the enemy was coming haphazardly, uncoordinatedly; they 
had never worked together before, while Ender's little practice army, though 
there were only a dozen of them now, knew each other well and knew how to work 
together.
  
  "Go nova!" shouted Ender. The other boys laughed. They gathered into three 
groups, feet together, squatting, holding hands so they formed small stars 
against the back wall. "We'll go around them and make for the door. Now!"
  
  At his signal, the three stars burst apart, each boy launching in a different 
direction, but angled so he could rebound off a wall and head for the door. 
Since all of the enemy were in the middle of the room, where course changes were 
far more difficult, it was an easy maneuver to carry out.
  
  Ender had positioned himself so that when he launched, he would rendezvous 
with the frozen soldier he had just used as a missile. The boy wasn't frozen 
now, and he let Ender catch him, whirl him around and send him toward the door, 
Unfortunately, the necessary result of the action was for Ender to head in the 
opposite direction, and at a reduced speed. Alone of all his soldiers, he was 
drifting fairly slowly, and at the end of the battleroom where the older boys 
were gathered. He shifted himself so he could see that all his soldiers were 
sarely gathered at the far wall.
  
  In the meantime, the furious and disorganized enemy had just spotted him. 
Ender calculated how soon he would reach the wall so he could launch again. Not 
soon enough. Several enemies had already rebounded toward him. Ender was 
startled to see Stilson's face among them. Then he shuddered and realized he had 
been wrong. Still, it was the same situation, and this time they wouldn't sit 
still for a single combat settlement. There was no leader, as far as Ender knew, 
and these boys were a lot bigger than him.
  
  Still, he had learned some things about weightshifting in personal combat 
class, and about the physics of moving objects. Game battles almost never got to 
hand-to-hand combat-- you never bumped into an enemy that wasn't frozen. So in 
the few seconds he had, Ender tried to position himself to receive his guests.
  
  Fortunately, they knew as little about nullo fighting as he did, and the few 
that tried to punch him found that throwing a punch was pretty ineffective when 
their bodies moved backward just as quickly as their fists moved forward. But 
there were some in the group who had bone-breaking on their minds, as Ender 
quickly saw. He didn't plan to be there for it, though.
  
  He caught one of the punchers by the arm and threw him as hard as he could. It 
hurled Ender out of the way of the rest of the first onslaught, though he still 
wasn't getting any closer to the door. "Stay there!" he shouted at his friends, 
who obviously were forming up to come and rescue him. "Just stay there!"
  
  Someone caught Ender by the foot. The tight grip gave Ender some leverage; he 
was able to stamp firmly on the other boy's ear and shoulder, making him cry out 
and let go. If the boy had let go just as Ender kicked downward, it would have 
hurt much less and allowed Ender to use the maneuver as a launch. Instead, the 
boy had hung on too well; his ear was torn and scattering blood in the air, and 
Ender was drifting even more slowly.
  
  I'm doing it again, thought Ender. I'm hurting people again, just to save 
myself. Why don't they leave me alone, so I don't have to hurt them?
  
  Three more boys were converging on him now, and this time they were acting 
together. Still, they had to grab him before they could hurt him. Ender 
positioned himself quickly so that two of them would take his feet, leaving his 
hands free to deal with the third.
  
  Sure enough, they took the bait. Ender grasped the shoulders of the third 
boy's shirt and pulled him up sharply, butting him in the face with his helmet. 
Again a scream and a shower of blood. The two boys who had his legs were 
wrenching at them, twisting him. Ender threw the boy with the bleeding nose at 
one of them; they entangled, and Ender's leg came free. It was a simple matter 
then to use the other boy's hold for leverage to kick him firmly in the groin, 
then shove off him in the direction of the door. He didn't get that good a 
launch, so that his speed was nothing special, but it didn't matter. No one was 
following him.
  
  He got to his friends at the door. They caught him and handed him along to the 
door. They were laughing and slapping him playfully. "You bad!" they said. "You 
scary! You flame!"
  
  "Practice is over for the day," Ender said.
  
  "They'll be back tomorrow," said Shen.
  
  "Won't do them any good," said Ender. "If they come without suits, we'll do 
this again. If they come with suits, we can flash them."
  
  "Besides," said Alai, "the teachers won't let it happen."
  
  Ender remembered what Dink had told him, and wondered if AIai was right.
  
  "Hey Ender!" shouted one of the older boys as Ender left the battleroom. "You 
nothing, man! You be nothing!"
  
  "My old corornander Bonzo," said Ender. "I think he doesn't like me."
  
  Ender checked the rosters on his desk that night. Four boys turned up on 
medical report. One with bruised ribs, one with a bruised testicle, one with a 
torn ear, and one with a broken nose and a loose tooth. The cause of injury was 
the same in all cases:
  
  ACCIDENTAL COLLISION IN NULL G
  
  If the teachers were allowing that to turn up on the official report, it was 
obvious they didn't intend to punish anyone for the nasty little skirmish in the 
battleroom. Aren't they going to do anything? Don't they care what goes on in 
this school?
  
  Since he was back to the barracks earlier than usual, Ender called up the 
fantasy game on his desk. It had been a while since he last used it. Long enough 
that it didn't start him where he had left off. Instead, he began by the Giant's 
corpse. Only now, it was hardly identifiable as a corpse at all, unless you 
stood off a ways and studied it. The body had eroded into a hill, entwined with 
grass and vines. Only the crest of the Giant's face was still visible, and it 
was white bone, like limestone protruding from a discouraged, withering 
mountain.
  
  Ender did not look forward to fighting with the wolf-children again, but to 
his surprise they weren't there. Perhaps, killed once, they were gone forever. 
It made him a little sad.
  
  He made his way down underground, through the tunnels, to the cliff ledge 
overlooking the beautiful forest. Again he threw himself down, and again a cloud 
caught him and carried him into the castle turret room.
  
  The snake began to unweave itself from the rug again, only this time Ender did 
not hesitate. He stepped on the head of the snake and crushed it under his foot. 
It writhed and twisted under him, and in response he twisted and ground it 
deeper into the stone floor. Finally it was still. Ender picked it up and shook 
it, until it unwove itself and the pattern in the rug was gone. Then, still 
dragging the snake behind him, he began to look for a way out.
  
  Instead, he found a mirror. And in the mirror he saw a face that he easily 
recognized. It was Peter, with blood dripping down his chin and a snake's tail 
protruding from a corner of his mouth.
  
  Ender shouted and thrust his desk from him. The few boys in the barracks were 
alarmed at the noise, but he apologized and told them it was nothing. They went 
away. He looked again into his desk. His figure was still there, staring into 
the mirror. He tried to pick up some of the furniture, to break the nurror, but 
it could not be moved. The mirror would not come off the wall, either. Finally 
Ender threw the snake at it. The mirror shattered, leaving a hole in the wail 
behind it. Out of the hole came dozens of tiny snakes which quickly bit Ender's 
figure again and again. Tearing the snakes frantically from itself, the figure 
collapsed and died in a writhing heap of small serpents.
  
  The screen went blank, and words appeared.
  
  PLAY AGAIN?
  
  Ender signed off and put the desk away.
  
  ***
  
  The next day, several commanders came to Ender or sent soldiers to tell him 
not to worry, most of them thought the extra practice sessions were a good idea, 
he should keep it up. And to make sure nobody bothered him, they were sending a 
few of their older soldiers who needed extra practice to come join him. "They're 
as big as most of the buggers who attacked you last night. They'll think twice."
  
  Instead of a dozen boys, there were forty-five that night, more than an army, 
and whether it was because of the presence of older boys on Ender's side or 
because they had had enough the night before, none of their enemies came.
  
  Ender didn't go back to the fantasy game. But it lived in his dreams. He kept 
remembering how it felt to kill the snake, grinding it in, the way he tore the 
ear off that boy, the way he destroyed Stilson, the way he broke Bernard's arm. 
And then to stand up, holding the corpse of his enemy, and find Peter's face 
looking out at him from the mirror, This game knows too much about me. This game 
tells filthy lies. I am not Peter. I don't have murder in my heart.
  
  And then the worse fear, that he was a killer, only better at it than Peter 
ever was; that it was this very trait that pleased the teachers. It's killers 
they need for the bugger wars. It's people who can grind the enemy's face into 
the dust and spatter their blood all over space.
  
  Well, l'm your man. I'm the bloody bastard you wanted when you had me spawned. 
I'm your tool, and what difference does it make if I hate the part of me that 
you most need? What difference does it make that when the little serpents killed 
me in the game, I agreed with them, and was glad.
  
  
  
  Chapter 9 -- Locke and Demosthenes
  
  "I didn't call you in here to waste time. How in hell did the computer do 
that?"
  
  "I don't know."
  
  "How could it pick up a picture of Ender's brother and put it into the 
graphics in this Fairyland routine?"
  
  "Colonel Graff, I wasn't there when it was programmed. All I know is that the 
computer's never taken anyone to this place before. Fairyland was strange 
enough, but this isn't Fairyland anymore. It's beyond the End of the World, 
and--"
  
  "I know the names of the places, I just don't know what ney mean."
  
  "Fairyland was programmed in. It's mentioned in a few other places. But 
nothing talks about the End of the World. We don't have any experience with it."
  
  "I don't like having the computer screw around with Ender's mind that way. 
Peter Wiggin is the most potent person in his life, except maybe his sister 
Valentine."
  
  "And the mind game is designed to help shape them, help them find worlds they 
can be comfortable in."
  
  "You don't get it, do you, Major Imbu? I don't want Ender being comfortable 
with the end of the world. Our business here is not to be comfortable with the 
end of the world!"
  
  "The End of the World in the game isn't necessarily the end of humanity in the 
bugger wars. It has a private meaning to Ender."
  
  "Good. What meaning?"
  
  "I don't know, sir. I'm not the kid. Ask him."
  
  "Major Imbu, I'm asking you."
  
  "There could be a thousand meanings."
  
  "Try one."
  
  "You've been isolating the boy. Maybe he's wishing for the end of this world, 
the Battle School. Or maybe it's about the end of the world he grew up with as a 
little boy, his home, coming here. Or maybe it's his way of coping with having 
broken up so many other kids here. Ender's a sensitive kid, you know, and he's 
done some pretty bad things to people's bodies, he might be wishing for the end 
of that world."
  
  "Or none of the above."
  
  "The mind game is a relationship between the child and the computer. Together 
they create stories. The stories are true, in the sense that they reflect the 
reality of the child's life. That's all I know."
  
  "And I'll tell you what I know, Major Imbu. That picture of Peter Wiggin was 
not one that could have been taken from our files here at the school. We have 
nothing on him, electronically or otherwise, since Ender came here. And that 
picture is more recent."
  
  "It's only been a year and a half, sir, how much can the boy change?"
  
  "He's wearing his hair completely differently now. His mouth was redone with 
orthodontia. I got a recent photograph from landside and compared. The only way 
the computer here in the Battle School could have got that picture was by 
requisitioning it from a landside computer. And not even one connected with the 
IF. That takes requisitionary powers. We can't just go into Guilford County 
North Carolina and pluck a picture out of school files. Did anyone at this 
school authorize getting this?"
  
  "You don't understand, sir. Our Battle School computer is only a part of the 
IF network. lf we want a picture, we have to get a requisition, but if the mind 
game program determines that the picture is necessary--"
  
  "It can just go take it."
  
  "Not just every day. Only when it's for the child's own good."
  
  "OK, it's for his good. But why. His brother is dangerous, his brother was 
rejected for this program because he's one of the worst human beings we've laid 
hands on. Why is he so important to Ender? Why, after all his time?"
  
  "Honestly, sir. I don't know. And the mind game program is designed so that it 
can't tell us. It may not know itself, actually. This is uncharted territory."
  
  "You mean the computer's making this up as it goes along?"
  
  "You might put it that way."
  
  "Well, that does make me feel a little better. I thought l was the only one."
  
  ***
  
  Valentine celebrated Ender's eighth birthday alone, in the wooded back yard of 
their new home in Greensboro. She scraped a patch of ground bare of pine needles 
and leaves, and there scratched his name in the dirt with a twig. Then she made 
a small teepee of twigs and needles and lit a small fire. It made smoke that 
interwove with the branches and needles of the pine overhead. All the way into 
space, she said silently. All the way to the Battle School.
  
  No letters had ever come, and as far as they knew their own letters had never 
reached him. When he first was taken, Father and Mother sat at the table and 
keyed in long letters to him every few days. Soon, tnough, it was once a week, 
and when no answers came, once a month. Now it had been two years since he went, 
and there were no letters, none at all, and no remembrance on his birhday. He is 
dead, she thought bitterly, because we have forgotten him.
  
  But Valentine had not forgotten him. She did not let her parents know, and 
above all never hinted to Peter how often she thought about Ender, how often she 
wrote him letters that she knew he would not answer. And when Mother and Father 
announced to them that they were leaving the city to move to North Carolina, of 
all places, Valentine knew that they never expected to see Ender again. They 
were leaving the only place where he knew to find them. How would Ender find 
them here, among these trees, under this changeable and heavy sky? He had lived 
deep in corridors all his life, and if he was still in the Battle School, there 
was less of nature there. What would he make of this?
  
  Valentine knew why they had moved here. It was for Peter, so that living among 
trees and small animals, so that nature in as raw a form as Mother and Father 
could conceive of it, might have a softening influence on their strange and 
frightening son. And, in a way, it had. Peter took to it right away. Long walks 
out in the open, cutting through woods and out into the open country-- going 
sometimes for a whole day, with only a sandwich or two sharing space with his 
desk in the pack on his back, with only a small pocket knife in his pocket.
  
  But Valentine knew. She had seen a squirrel half-skinned, spiked by its little 
hands and feet with twigs pushed into the dirt. She pictured Peter trapping it, 
staking it, then carefully parting and peeling back the skin without breaking 
into the abdomen, watching the muscles twist and ripple. How long had it taken 
the squirrel to die? And all the while Peter had sat nearby, leaning against the 
tree where perhaps the squirrel had nested, playing with his desk while the 
squirrel's life seeped away.
  
  At first she was horrified, and nearly threw up at dinner, watching how Peter 
ate so vigorously, talked so cheerfully. But later she thought about it and 
realized that perhaps, for Peter, it was a kind of magic, like her little fires; 
a sacrifice that somehow stilled the dark gods that hunted for his soul. Better 
to torture squirrels than other children. Peter has always been a husbandman of 
pain, planting it, nurturing it, devouring it greedily when it was ripe; better 
he should take it in these small, sharp doses than with dull cruelty to chldren 
in the school.
  
  "A model student," said his teachers. "I wish we had a hundred others in the 
school just like him. Studies all the tlme, turns in all his work on time. He 
loves to learn."
  
  But Valentine knew it was a fraud. Peter loved to learn, all right, but the 
teachers hadn't taught him anything, ever. He did his learning through his desk 
at home, tapping into libraries ano databases, studying and thinking and, above 
all, talking to Valentine. Yet at school he acted as though he were excited 
about the puerile lesson of the day. Oh, wow, I never knew that frogs looked 
like this inside, he'd say, and then at home he studied the binding of celIs 
into organisms through the philotic collation of DNA. Peter was a master ot 
flattery, and all his teachers bought it.
  
  Still, it was good. Peter never fought anymore. Never bullied. Got along well 
with everybody. It was a new Peter.
  
  Everyone believed it. Father and Mother said it so often it made Valentine 
want to scream at them.  It isn't the new Peter! It's the old Peter, only 
smarter!
  
  How smart? Smarter than you, Father. Smarter than you, Mother. Smarter than 
anybody you have ever met.
  
  But not smarter than me.
  
  "I've been deciding," said Peter, "whether to kill you or what."
  
  Valentine leaned against the trunk of the pine tree, her little fire a few 
smoldering ashes. "I love you, too, Peter."
  
  "It would be so easy. You always make these stupid little fires. It's just a 
matter of knocking you out and burning you up. You're such a firebug."
  
  "I've been thinking of castrating you in your sleep."
  
  "No you haven't. You only think of things like that when I'm with you. I bring 
out the best in you. No, Valentine, I've decided not to kill you. I've decided 
that you're going to help me."
  
  "I am?" A few years ago, Valentine would have been terrified at Peter's 
threats. Now, though, she was not so afraid. Not that she doubted that he was 
capable of killing her. She couldn't think of anything so terrible that she 
didn't believe Peter might do it. She also knew, though, that Peter was not 
insane, not in the sense that he wasn't in control of himself. He was in better 
control of himself than anyone she knew. Except perhaps herself. Peter could 
delay any desire as long as be needed to; he could conceal any emotion. And so 
Valentine knew that he would never hurt her in a fit of rage. He would only do 
it if the advantages outweighed the risks. And they did not. In a way, she 
actually preferred Peter to other people because of this. He always, always 
acted out of intelligent self-interest. And so, to keep herself safe, all she 
had to do was make sure it was more in Peter's interest to keep her alive than 
to have her dead.
  
  "Valentine, things are coming to a head. I've been tracking troop movements in 
Russia."
  
  "What are we talking about?"
  
  "The world, Val. You know Russia? Big empire? Warsaw Pact? Rulers of Eurasia 
from the Netherlands to Pakistan?"
  
  "They don't publish their troop movements, Peter."
  
  "Of course not. But they do publish their passenger and freight train 
schedules. I've had my desk analyzing those schedules and figuring out when the 
secret troop trains are moving over the same tracks. Done it backward over the 
past three years. In the last six months, they've stepped up, they're getting 
ready for war. Land war."
  
  "But what about the League? What about the buggers?" Valentine didn't know 
what Peter was getting at, but he often launched discussions like this, 
practical discussions of world events. He used her to test his ideas, to refine 
them. In the process, she also refined her own thinking. She found that while 
she rarely agreed with Peter about what the world ought to be, they rarely 
disagreed about what the world actually was. They had become quite deft at 
sifting accurate information out of the stories of the hopelessly ignorant, 
gullible news writers. The news herd, as Peter called them.
  
  "The Polemarch is Russian, isn't he? And he knows what's happening with the 
fleet. Either they've found out the buggers aren't a threat after all, or we're 
about to have a big battle. One way or another, the bugger war is about to be 
over. They're getting ready for after the war."
  
  "If they're moving troops, it must be under the direction of the Strategos."
  
  "It's all internal, within the Warsaw Pact."
  
  This was disturbing. The facade of peace and cooperation had been undisturbed 
almost since the bugger wars began. What Peter had detected was a fundamental 
disturbance in the world order. She had a mental picture, as clear as memory, of 
the way the world had been before the buggers forced peace unon them. "So it's 
back to the way it was before."
  
  "A few changes. The shields make it so nobody bothers with nuclear weapons 
anymore. We have to kill each other thousands at a time instead of millions." 
Peter grinned. "Val, it was bound to happen. Right now there's a vast 
international fleet and army in existence, with American hegemony. When the 
bugger wars are over, all that power will vanish, because it's all built on fear 
of the buggers. And suddenly we'll look around and discover nat all the old 
alliances are gone, dead and gone, except one, the Warsaw Pact. And it'll be the 
dollar against five million lasers. We'll have the asteroid belt, but they'll 
have Earth, and you run out of raisins and celery kind of fast out there, 
without Earth."
  
  What disturbed Valentine most of all was that Peter did not seem at all 
worried. "Peter, why do I get the idea that you are thinking of this as a golden 
opportunity for Peter Wiggin?"
  
  "For both of us, Val."
  
  "Peter, you're twelve years old. I'm ten. They have a word for people our age. 
They call us children and they treat us like mice."
  
  "But we don't think like other children, do we, Val? We don't talk like other 
children. And above all, we don't write like other children."
  
  "For a discussion that began with death threats, Peter, we've strayed from the 
topic, I think." Still, Valentine found herself getting excited. Writing was 
something Val did better than Peter. They both knew it. Peter had even named it 
once, when he said that he could always see what other people hated most about 
themselvee, and bully them, while Val could always see what other people liked 
best about themselves, and flatter them. It was a cynical way of putting it, but 
it was true. Valentine could persuade other people to her point of view-- she 
could convince them that they wanted what she wanted them to want. Peter, on the 
other hand, could only make them fear what he wanted them to fear. When he first 
pointed this out to Val, she resented it. She had wanted to believe she was good 
at persuading people because she was right, not because she was clever. But no 
matter how much she told herself that she didn't ever want to exploit people the 
way Peter did, she enjoyed knowing that she could, in her way, control other 
people. And not just control what they did. She could control, in a way, what 
they wanted to do. She was ashamed that she took pleasure in this power, and yet 
she found herself using it sometimes. To get teachers to do what she wanted, and 
other students. To get Mother and Father to see things her way. Sometimes, she 
was able to persuade even Peter. That was the most frightening thing of all-- 
that she could understand Peter well enough, could empathize with him enough to 
get inside him that way. There was more Peter in her than she could bear to 
admit, though sometimes she dared to think ahout it anyway. This is what she 
thought as Peter spoke: You dream of power, Peter, but in my own way I am more 
powerful than you.
  
  "I've been studying history," Peter said. "I've been learning things about 
patterns in human behavior. There are times when the world is rearranging 
itself, and at times like that, the right words can change the world. Think what 
Pericles did in Athens, and Demosthenes--"
  
  "Yes, they managed to wreck Athens twice."
  
  "Pericles, yes, but Demosthenes was right about Philip--"
  
  "Or provoked him--"
  
  "See? This is what historians usually do, quibble about cause and effect when 
the point is, there are times when the world is in flux and the right voice in 
the right place can move the world. Thomas Paine and Ben Franklin, for instance. 
Bismarek. Lenin."
  
  "Not exactly parallel cases, Peter." Now she was disagreeing with him out of 
habit; she saw what he was getting at, and she thought it might just be 
possible.
  
  "I didn't expect you to understand. You still believe that teachers know 
something worth learning."
  
  I understand more than you think, Peter. "So you see yourself as Bismarck?"
  
  "I see myself as knowing how to insert ideas into the public mind. Haven't you 
ever thought of a phrase, Val, a clever thing to say, and said it, and then two 
weeks or a month later you hear some adult saying it to another adult, both of 
them strangers? Or you see it on a video or pick it up on a net?"
  
  "I always figured I heard it before and only thought I was making it up."
  
  "You were wrong. There are maybe two or three thousand people in the world as 
smart as us, little sister. Most of them are making a living somewhere. 
Teaching, the poor bastards, or doing research. Precious few of them are 
actually in positions of power."
  
  "I guess we're the lucky few."
  
  "Funny as a one-legged rabbit, Val."
  
  "Of which there are no doubt several in these woods."
  
  "Hopping in neat little circles."
  
  Valentine laughed at the gruesome image and hated herself for thinking it was 
funny.
  
  "Val, we can say the words that everyone else will be saying two weeks later. 
We can do that. We don't have to wait until we're grown up and safely put away 
in some career."
  
  "Peter, you're twelve."
  
  "Not on the nets I'm not. On the nets I can name myself anything I want, and 
so can you."
  
  "On the nets we are clearly identified as students, and we can't even get into 
the real discussions except in audience mode, which means we can't say anything 
anyway."
  
  "I have a plan."
  
  "You always do." She pretended nonchalance but she listened eagerly.
  
  "We can get on the nets as full-fledged adults. with whatever net names we 
want to adopt, if Father gets us onto his citizen's access."
  
  "And why would he do that? We alreads have student access. What do you tell 
him, I need citizen's access so I can take over the world?"
  
  "No, Val. I won't tell him anything. You'll tell him how you're worried about 
me. How I'm trying so very hard to do well at school, but you know it's driving 
me crazy because I can never talk to anybody intelligent, everybody always talks 
down to me because I'm young, I never get to converse with my peers. You can 
prove that the stress is getting to me."
  
  Valentine thought of the corpse of the squirrel in the woods and realized that 
even that discovery was part of Peter's plan. Or at least he had made it part of 
his plan, after it happened.
  
  "So you get him to authorize us to share his citizen's access. To adopt our 
own identities there, to conceal who we are so people will give us the 
intellectual respect we deserve."
  
  Valentine could challenge him on ideas, but never on things like this. She 
could not say, What makes you think you deserve respect? She had read about 
Adolf Hitler. She wondered what he was like at the age of twelve. Not this 
smart, not like Peter that way, but craving honor, probably that. And what would 
it have meant to the world if in childhood he had been caught in a thresher or 
trampled by a horse?
  
  "Val," Peter said. "I know what you think of me. I'm not a nice person, you 
think."
  
  Valentine threw a pine needle at him. "An arrow through your heart."
  
  "I've been planning to come talk to you for a long time. But I kept being 
afraid."
  
  She put a pine needle in her mouth and blew it at him. It dropped almost 
straight down. "Another failed launch." Why was he pretending to be weak?
  
  "Val, I was afraid you wouldn't believe me. That you wouldn't believe I could 
do it."
  
  "Peter, I believe you could do anything, and probably will."
  
  "But I was even more afraid that you'd believe me and try to stop me."
  
  "Come on, threaten to kill me again, Peter." Did he actually believe she could 
be fooled by his nice-and-humble-kid act?
  
  "So I've got a sick sense of humor. I'm sorry. You know I was teasing. I need 
your help."
  
  "You're just what the world needs. A twelve-year-old to solve all our 
problems."
  
  "It's not my fault I'm twelve right now. And it's not my fault that right now 
is when the opportunity is open. Right now is the time when I can shape events. 
The world is always a democracy in times of flux, and the man with the best 
voice will win. Everybody thinks Hitler got to power because of his armies, 
because they were willing to kill, and that's partly true, because in the real 
world power is always built on the threat of death and dishonor. But mostly he 
got to power on words-- on the right words at the right time."
  
  "I was just thinking of comparing you to him."
  
  "I don't hate Jews, Val. I don't want to destroy anybody. And I don't want 
war, either. I want the world to hold together. Is that so bad? I don't want us 
to go back to the old way. Have you read about the world wars?"
  
  "Yes."
  
  "We can go back to that again. Or worse. We could find ourselves locked into 
the Warsaw Pact. Now, there's a cheerful thought."
  
  "Peter, we're children, don't you understand that? We're going to school, 
we're growing up--" But even as she resisted, she wanted him to persuade her. 
She had wanted him to persuade her from the beginning.
  
  But Peter didn't know that he had already won. "If I believe that, if I accept 
that, then I've got to sit back and watch while all the opportunities vanish, 
and then when I'm old enough it's too late. Val, listen to me. I know how you 
feel about me, you always have. I was a vicious, nasty brother. I was cruel to 
you and crueler to Ender before they took him. But I didn't hate you. I loved 
you both, I just had to be-- had to have control, do you understand that? lt's 
the most important thing to me, it's my greatest gift, I can see where the weak 
points are, I can see how to get in and use them, I just see those things 
without even trying. I could become a businessman and run some big corporation, 
I'd scramble and maneuver until I was at the top of everything and what would I 
have? Nothing. I'm going to rule, Val, I'm going to have control of something. 
But I want it to be something worth ruling. I want to accomplish something 
worthwhile. A Pax Americana through the whole world. So that when somebody else 
comes, after we beat the buggers, when somebody else comes here to defeat us, 
they'll find we've already spread over a thousand worlds, we're at peace with 
ourselves and impossible to destroy. Do you understand? I want to save mankind 
from self-destruction."
  
  She had never seen him speak with such sincerity. With no hint of mockery, no 
trace of a lie in his voice. He was getting better at this. Or maybe he was 
actually touching on the truth. "So a twelve-year-old boy and his kid sister are 
going to save the world?"
  
  "How old was Alexander? I'm not going to do it overnight. I'm just going to 
start now. If you'll help me."
  
  "I don't believe what you did to those squirrels was part of an act. I think 
you did it because you love to do it."
  
  Suddenly Peter wept into his hands. Val assumed that he was pretending, but 
then she wondered. It was possible, wasn't it, that he loved her, and that in 
this time of terrifying opportunity he was willing to weaken himself before her 
in order to win her love. He's manipulating me, she thought, but that doesn't 
mean he isn't sincere. His cheeks were wet when he took his hands away, his eyes 
rimmed in red. "I know," he said. "It's what I'm most afraid of. That I really 
am a monster. I don't want to be a killer but I just can't help it."
  
  She had never seen him show such weakness. You're so clever, Peter. You saved 
your weakness so you could use it to move me now. And yet it did move her. 
Because if it were true, even partly true. then Peter was not a monster, and so 
she could satisfy her Peter-like love of power without fear of becoming 
monstrous herself. She knew that Peter was calculating even now, but she 
believed that under the calculations he was telling the truth. It had been 
hidden layers deep, but he had probed her until he found her trust.
  
  "Val, if you don't help me, l don't know what I'll become. But if you're 
there, my partner in everything, you can keep me from becoming -- like that. 
Like the bad ones."
  
  She nodded. You are only pretending to share power with me, she thought, but 
in fact i have power over you. even though you don't know it. "I will. I'll help 
you."
  
  ***
  
  As soon as Father got them both onto his citizen's access, they began testing 
he waters. They staved away from the nets that required use of a real name. That 
wasn't hard because real names only had to do with money. They didn't need 
money. They needed respect, and that they could earn. With false names, on the 
right nets, they could be anybody. Old men, middle-aged women, anybody, as long 
as they were careful about the way they wrote. All that anyone would see were 
their words, their ideas. Every citizen started equal, on the nets.
  
  They used throwaway names with their early efforts. not the identities that 
Peter planned to make famous and influential. Of course they were not invited to 
take part in the great national and international political forums -- they could 
only be audiences there until they were invited or elected to take part. But 
they signed on and watched, reading some of the essays published by the great 
names, witnessing the debates that played across their desks.
  
  And in the lesser conferences, where common people commented about the great 
debates, they began to insert their comments. At first Peter insisted that they 
be deliberately inflammatory. "We can't learn how our style of writing is 
working unless we get responses -- and if we're bland, no one will answer."
  
  They were not bland, and people answered. The responses that got posted on the 
public nets were vinegar; the responses that were sent as mail, for Peter and 
Valentine to read privately, were poisonous. But they did learn what attributes 
of their writing were seized upon as childish and immature. And they got better.
  
  When Peter was satisfied that they knew how to sound adult, he killed the old 
identities and they began to prepare to attract real attention.
  
  "We have to seem completely separate. We'll write about different things at 
different times. We'll never refer to each other. You'll mostly work on the west 
coast nets, and I'll mostly work in the south. Regional issues, too. So do your 
homework."
  
  They did their homework. Mother and Father worried sometimes, with Peter and 
Valentine constantly together, their desks tucked under their arms. But they 
couldn't complain-- their grades were good, and Valentine was such a good 
influence on Peter. She had changed his whole attitude toward everything. And 
Peter and Valentine sat together in the woods, in good weather, and in pocket 
restaurants and indoor parks when it rained, and they composed their political 
commentaries. Peter carefully designed both characters so neither one had all of 
his ideas; there were even some spare identities that they used to drop in third 
party opinions. "Let both of them find a following as they can," said Peter.
  
  Once, tired of writing and rewriting until Peter was satisfied, Val despaired 
and said, "Write it yourself, then!"
  
  "I can't," he answered. "They can't both sound alike. Ever. You forget that 
someday we'll be famous enough that somebody will start running analyses. We 
have to come up as different people every time."
  
  So she wrote on. Her main identity on the nets was Demosthenes -- Peter chose 
the name. He called himself Locke. They were obvious pseudonyms, but that was 
part of the plan. "With any luck, they'll start trying to guess who we are."
  
  "If we get famous enough, the government can always get access and find out 
who we really are."
  
  "When that happens, we'll be too entrenched to suffer much loss. People will 
be shocked that Demosthenes and Locke are two kids, hut they'll already be used 
to listening to us."
  
  They began composing debates for their characters. Valentine would prepare en 
opening statement, and Peter would invent a throwaway name to answer her. His 
answer would be intelilgent and the dehate would be lively, lots of clever 
invective and good political rhetoric. Valentine had a knack for alliteration 
that made her phrases memorable. Then they would enter the debate into the 
network, separated by a reasonable amount of time, as if they were actually 
making them up on the spot. Sometimes a few other netters would interposee 
comments, but Peter and Val would usually ignore them or change their own 
comments only slightly to accommodate what had been said.
  
  Peter took careful note of all their most memorable phrases and then did 
searches from time to time to find those phrases cropping up in other nlaces. 
Not all of them did, but most of them were repeated here and there, and some of 
them even showed up in the major debates on the prestige nets. "We're being 
read," Peter said. "The ideas are seeping out."
  
  "The phrases, anyway."
  
  "That's just the measure. Look, we're having some influence. Nobody quotes us 
by name, yet, but they're discussing the points we raise. We're helping set the 
agenda. We're getting there."
  
  "Should we try to get into the main debates?"
  
  "No. We'll wait until they ask us."
  
  They had been doing it only seven months when one of the west coast nets sent 
Demosthenes a message. An offer for a weekly column in a pretty good newsnet.
  
  "I can't do a weekly column," Valentine said. "I don't even have a monthly 
period yet."
  
  "The two aren't related," Peter said.
  
  "They are to me. I'm still a kid."
  
  "Tell them yes, but since you prefer not to have your true identity revealed, 
you want them to pay you in network time. A new access code through their 
corporate identity."
  
  "So when the government traces me--"
  
  "You'll just be a person who can sign on through CalNet. Father's citizen's 
access doesn't get involved. What I can't figure out is why they wanted 
Demosthenes before Locke."
  
  "Talent rises to the top."
  
  As a game, it was fun. But Valentine didn't like some of the positions Peter 
made Demosthenes take. Demosthenes began to develop as a fairly paranoid 
anti-Warsaw writer. It bothered her because Peter was the one who knew how to 
exploit fear in his writing -- she had to keep coming to him for ideas on how to 
do it. Meanwhile, his Locke followed her moderate, empathic strategies. It made 
sense, in a way. By having her write Demosthenes, it meant he also had some 
empathy, just as Locke also could play on others fears. But the main effect was 
to keep her inextricably tied to Peter. She couldn't go off and use Demosthenes 
for her own purposes. She wouldn't know how to use him. Still, it worked both 
ways. He couldn't write Locke without her. Or could he?
  
  "I thought the idea was to unify the world. If I write this like you say I 
should, Peter, I'm pretty much calling for war to break up the Warsaw Pact."
  
  "Not war, just open nets and prohibition of interception. Free flow of 
information. Compliance with the League rules, for heaven's sake."
  
  Without meaning to, Valentine started talking in Demosthenes' voice, even 
though she certainly wasn't speaking Demosthenes' opinions. Everyone knows that 
from the beginning the Warsaw Pact was to be regarded as a single entity where 
those rules were concerned. International free flow is still open. But between 
the Warsaw Pact nations these things are internal matters. That was why they 
were willing to allow American hegemony in the League."
  
  "You're arguing Locke's part, Val. Trust me. You have to call for the Warsaw 
Pact to lose official status. You have to get a lot of people really angry. 
Then, later, when you begin to recognize the need for compromise--"
  
  "Then they stop listening to me and go off and fight a war."
  
  "Val, trust me. I know what I'm doing."
  
  "How do you know? You're not any smarter than me, and you've never done this 
before either."
  
  "I'm thirteen and you're ten."
  
  "Almost eleven."
  
  "And I know how these things work."
  
  "All right, I'll do it your way.  But I won't do any of these liberty or death 
things."
  
  "You will too."
  
  "And someday when they catch us and they wonder why your sister was such a 
warmonger. I can just bet you'll tell them that you told me to do it."
  
  "Are you sure you're not having a period, little woman?"
  
  "I hate you, Peter Wiggin."
  
  What bothered Valentine most was when her column got syndicated into several 
other regional newsnets, and Father started reading it and quoting from it at 
table. "Finally, a man with some sense," he said. Then he quoted some of the 
passages Valentine hated worst in her own work. "It's fine to work with these 
hegemonist Russians with the buggers out there, but after we win, I can't see 
leaving half the civilized world as virtual helots, can you, dear?"
  
  "I think you're taking this all too seriously," said Mother.
  
  "I like this Demosthenes. I like the way he thinks. I'm surprised he isn't in 
the major nets. I looked for him in the international relations debates and you 
know, he's never taken part in any of them."
  
  Valentine lost her appetite and left the table. Peter followed her after a 
respectable interval.
  
  "So you don't like lying to Father." he said. "So what? You're not lying to 
him. He doesn't think that you're really Demosthenes, and Demosthenes isn't 
saying things you really believe. They cancel each other out, they amount to 
nothing."
  
  "That's the kind of reasoning that makes Locke such an ass." But what really 
bothered her was not that she was lying to Father -- it was the fact that Father 
actually agreed with Demosthenes. She had thought that only fools would follow 
him.
  
  A few days later Locke got picked up for a column in a New England newsnet, 
specifically to provide a contrasting view for their popular column from 
Demosthenes. "Not bad for two kids who've only got about eight pubic hairs 
between them," Peter said.
  
  "It's a long way between writng a newsnet column and ruling the world," 
Valentine reminded him. "It's such a long way that no one has ever done it."
  
  "They have, though. Or the moral equivalent. I'm going to say snide things 
about Demosthenes in my first column."
  
  "Well, Demosthenes isn't even going to notice that Locke exists. Ever."
  
  "For now."
  
  With their identities now fully supported by their income from writing 
columns, they used Father's access now only for the throwaway identities. Mother 
commented that they were spending too much time on the nets. "All work and no 
play makes Jack a dull boy," she reminded Peter.
  
  Peter let his hand tremhle a little, and he said, "If you think I should stop, 
I think I might be able to keep things under control this time.  I really do."
  
  "No, no," Mother said. "I don't want you to stop. Just be careful, that's 
all."
  
  "I'm careful, Mom."
  
  ***
  
  Nothing was different -- nothing had changed in a year. Ender was sure of it, 
and yet it all seemed to have gone sour. He was stil the leading soldier in the 
standings, and no one doutbted that he deserved it now. At the age of nine he 
was a toon leader in the Phoenix Army, with Petra Arkanian as his commander. He 
still led his evening practice sessions, and now they were attended by an elite 
group of soldiers nominated by their commanders, though any Launchy who wanted 
to could still come. Alai was also a toon leader, in another army, and they were 
still good friends; Shen was not a leader, but that was no barrier. Dink Meeker 
had finally accepted command and succeeded Rose the Nose in Rat Army's command. 
All is going well, very well, I couldn't ask for anything better--
  
  So why do I hate my life?
  
  He went through the paces of the practices and games. He liked teaching the 
boys in his toon, and they followed him loyally. He had the respect of everyone, 
and he was treated with deference in his evening practices. Commanders came to 
study what he did. Other soldiers approached his table at mess and asked 
permission to sit down. Even the teachers were respectful.
  
  He had so much damn respect he wanted to scream.
  
  He watched the young kids in his army, fresh out of their launch groups, 
watched how they played, how they made fun of their leaders when they thought no 
one was looking. He watched the camaraderie of old friends who had known each 
other in the Battle School for years, who talked and laughed about old battles 
and long-graduated soldiers and commanders.
  
  But with his old friends there was no laughter, no remembering. Just work. 
Just intelligence and excitement about the game, but nothing beyond that. 
Tonight it had come to a head in the evening practice. Ender and Alai were 
discussing the nuances of open-space maneuvers when Shen came up and listened 
for a few moments, then suddenly took Alai by the shoulders and shouted, "Nova! 
Nova! Nova!" Alai burst out laughing, and for a moment or two Ender watched them 
remember together the battle where open-room maneuvering had been for real, and 
they had dodged past the older boys and--
  
  Suddenly they remembered that Ender was tnere. "Sorry, Ender," Shen said.
  
  Sorry. For what? For being friends? "I was there, too, you know," Ender said.
  
  And they apologized again. Back to business. Back to respect. And Ender 
realized that in their laughter, in their friendship, it had not occurred to 
them that he was included.
  
  How could they think I was part of it? Did I laugh? Did I join in? Just stood 
there, watching, like a teacher.
  
  Thats how they think of me, too. Teacher. Legendary soldier. Not one of them. 
Not someone that you embrace and whisper Salaam in his ear. That only lasted 
while Ender still seemed a victim. Still seemed vulnerable. Now he was the 
master soldier, and he was completely, utterly alone.
  
  Feel sorry for yourself, Ender. He typed the words on his desk as he lay on 
his bunk. POOR ENDER. Then he laughed at himself and cleared away the words. Not 
a boy or girl in this school who wouldn't he glad to trade places with me.
  
  He called up the fantasy game. He walked as he often did through the village 
that the dwarves had built in the hill made by the Giant's corpse. It was easy 
to build sturdy walls, with the ribs already curved just right, just enough 
space between them to leave windows. The whole corpse was cut into apartments, 
opening onto the path down the Giant's spine, The public amphitheatre was carved 
into the pelvic bowl, and the common herd of ponies was pastured between the 
Giant's legs. Ender was never sure what the dwarves were doing as they went 
about their business, but they left him alone as he picked his way through the 
village, and in return he did them no harm either.
  
  He vaulted the pelvic bone at the base of the public square, and walked 
through the pasture. The ponies shied away from him. He did not pursue them. 
Ender did not understand how the game functioned anymore. In the old days, 
before he had first gone to the End of the World, everything was combat and 
puzzles to solve defeat the enemy before he kills you, or figure out how to get 
past the obstacle. Now, though, no one attacked, there was no war, and wherever 
he went, there was no obstacle at all.
  
  Except, of course, in the room in the castle at the End of the World. It was 
the one dangerous place left. And Ender, however often he vowed that he would 
not, always went back there, always killed the snake, always looked his brother 
in the face, and always, no matter what he did next, died.
  
  It was no different this time. He tried to use the knife on the table to pry 
through the mortar and pull out a stone from the wall. As soon as he breached 
the seal of the mortar, water began to gush in through the crack, and Ender 
watched his death as his figure, now out of his control, struggled madly to stay 
alive, to keep from drowning. The windows of his room were gone, the water rose, 
and his figure drowned. All the while, the face of Peter Wiggin in the mirror 
stayed and looked at him.
  
  I'm trapped here, Ender thought, trapped at the End of the World with no way 
out. And he knew at last the sour taste that had come to him, despite all his 
successes in the Battle School. lt was despair.
  
  ***
  
  There were uniformed men at the entrances to the school when Valentine 
arrived. They weren't standing like guards, but rather slouched around as if 
they were waiting for someone inside to finish his business. They wore the 
uniforms of IF Marines, the same uniforms that exeryone saw in bloody combat on 
the videos. It lent an air of romance to that day at school: all the other kids 
where excited about it.
  
  Valentine was not. It made her think of Ender, for one thing. And for anotther 
it made her afraid. Someone had recently published a savage commentary on the 
Demosthenes' collected writings. The commentary, and therefore her work, had 
been discussed on te open conference of the international relations net, with 
some of the most important people of the day attacking and defending 
Demosthenes. What worried her most was the comnuent of an Englishman: "Whether 
he likes it or not, Demosthenes cannot remain incognito forever. He has outraged 
too many wise men and pleased too many fools to hide behind his too-appropriate 
pseudonym much longer. Either he will unmask himself in order to assume 
leadership of the forces of stupidity he has marshalled, or his enemies will 
unmask him in order to better understand the disease that has produced such a 
warped and twisted mind."
  
  Peter had been delighted, but then he would be. Valentine was afraid, that 
enough powerful people had been annoyed by the vicious persona of Demosthenes 
that she would indeed be tracked down. The IF could do it, even if the American 
government was constitutionally bound not to. And here were IF troops gathered 
at Western Guilford Middle School, of all places. Nor exactly the regular 
recruiting grounds for the IF Marines.
  
  So she was not surprised to find a message marching around her desk as soon as 
she logged in.
  
  PLEASE LOG OFF AND GO TO DR. LINEBERRY'S OFFICE AT ONCE.
  
  Valentine waited nervously outside the principal's office until Dr. Lineberry 
opened the door and beckoned her inside. Her last doubt was removed when she saw 
the soft-bellied man in the uniform of an IF colonel sitting in the one 
comfortable chair in the room.
  
  "You're Valentine Wiggin," he said.
  
  "Yes," she whisnered.
  
  "I'm Colonel Graff. We've met before."
  
  Before? When had she had any dealings with the IF?
  
  "I've come to talk to you in confidence, about your brother."
  
  It's not just me, then, she thought. They have Peter. Or is this something 
new? Has he done something crazy? I thought he stopped doing crazy things.
  
  "Valentine, you seem frightened. There's no need to be. Please, sit down. I 
assure you that your brother is well. He has more than fulfilled our 
expectations."
  
  And now, with a great inward gush of relief, she realized that it was Ender 
they had come about. Ender. It wasn't punishment at all, it was little Ender, 
who had disappeared so long ago, who was no part of Peter's plots now. You were 
the lucky one, Ender. You got away before Peter could trap you into his 
conspiracy.
  
  "How do you feel about your brother, Valentine?"
  
  "Ender?"
  
  "Of course."
  
  "How can I feel about him? I haven't seen him or heard from him since I was 
eight."
  
  "Dr. Lineberry, will you excuse us?"
  
  Lineberry was annoyed.
  
  "On second thought, Dr. Lineberry, I think Valentine and I will have a much 
more productive conversation if we walk outside. Away from the recording devices 
that your assistant principal has placed in this room."
  
  It was the first time Valentine had seen Dr. Lineberry speechless. Colonel 
Graff lifted a picture out from the wall and peeled a sound-sensitive membrane 
from the wall, along with its small broadcast unit. "Cheap," said Graff, "but 
effective. I thought you knew."
  
  Lineberry took the device and sat down heavily at her desk. Graff led 
Valentine outside,
  
  They walked out into the football field. The soldiers followed at a discreet 
distance: they split up and formed a large circle, to guard them from the widest 
possible perimeter.
  
  "Valentine, we need your help for Ender."
  
  "What kind of help?"
  
  "We aren't even sure of that. We need you to help us figure out how you can 
help us."
  
  "Well, what's wrong?"
  
  "That's part of the problem. We don't know."
  
  Valentine couldn't help but laugh. "I haven't seen him in three years! You've 
got him up there with you all the time!"
  
  "Valentine, it costs more nuoney than your father will make in his lifetime 
for me to fly to Earth and back to the Battle School again. I don't commute 
casually."
  
  "The king had a dream," said Valentine, "but he forgot what it was, so he told 
his wise men to interpret the dream or they'd die. Only Daniel could interpret 
it, because he was a prophet."
  
  "You read the Bible?"
  
  "We're doing classics this year in advanced English. I'm not a prophet."
  
  "I wish I could tell you everything about Ender's situation. But it would take 
hours, maybe days, and afterward I'd have to put you in protective confinement 
because so much of it is strictly confidential. So let's see what we can do with 
limited information. There's a game that our students play with the computer." 
And he told her about the End of the World and the closed room and the picture 
of Peter in the mirror.
  
  "It's the computer that puts the picture there, not Ender. Why not ask the 
computer?"
  
  "The computer doesn't know."
  
  "I'm supposed to know?"
  
  "This is the second time since Ender's been with us that he's taken this game 
to a dead end. To a game that seems to have no solution.".
  
  "Did he solve the first one?"
  
  "Eventually."
  
  "Then give him time, he'll probably solve this one."
  
  "I'm not sure. Valentine, your brother is a very unhappy little boy."
  
  "Why?"
  
  "I don't know."
  
  "You don't know much, do you?"
  
  Valentine thought for a moment that the man might get angry. Instead, though, 
he decided to laugh. "No, not much. Valentine, why would Ender keep seeing your 
brother Peter in the mirror?"
  
  "He shouldn't. It's stupid."
  
  "Why is it stupid?"
  
  "Because if there's ever anybody who was the opposite of Ender, it's Peter."
  
  "How?"
  
  Valentine could not think of a way to answer that wasn't dangerous. Too much 
questioning about Peter could lead to real trouble. Valentine knew enough about 
the world to know that no one would take Peter's plans for world domination 
seriously, as a danger to existing governments. But they might well decide he 
was insane and needed treatment for his megalomania.
  
  "You're preparing to lie to me," Graff said.
  
  "I'm preparing not to talk to you anymore," Valentine answered.
  
  "And you're afraid. Why are you afraid?"
  
  "I don't like questions about my family. Just leave my family out of this."
  
  "Valentine, I'm trying to leave your family out of this. I'm coming to you so 
I don't have to start a battery of tests on Peter and question your parents. I'm 
trying to solve this problem now, with the person Ender loves and trusts most in 
the world, perhaps the only person he loves and trusts at all. If we can't solve 
it this way, then we'll sequester your family and do as we like from then on. 
This is not a trivial matter, and I won't just go away."
  
  The only person Ender loves and trusts at all. She felt a deep stab of pain, 
of regret, of shame that now it was Peter she was close to. Peter who was the 
center of her life. For you, Ender, I light fires en your birthday. For Peter I 
help fulfil all his dreams. "I never thought you were a nice man. Not when you 
came to take Ender away, and not now."
  
  "Don't pretend to be an ignorant little girl. I saw your tests when you were 
little, and at the present moment there aren't very many college professors who 
could keep up with you."
  
  "Ender and Peter hate each other."
  
  "I knew that. You said they were opposites. Why?"
  
  "Peter -- can be hateful sometimes."
  
  "Hateful in what way?"
  
  "Mean. Just mean, that's all."
  
  "Valentine, for Ender's sake, tell me what he does when he's being mean."
  
  "He threatens to kill people a lot. He doesn't mean it. But when we were 
little, Ender and I were both afraid of him. He told us he'd kill us. Actually, 
he told us he'd kill Ender."
  
  "We monitored some of that."
  
  "It was because of the monitor."
  
  "Is that all? Tell me more about Peter."
  
  So she told him about the children in every school that Peter attended. He 
never hit them, but he tortured them just the same. Found what they were most 
ashamed of and told it to the person whose respect they most wanted. Found what 
they most feared and made sure they faced it often.
  
  "Did he do this with Ender?"
  
  Valentine shook her head.
  
  "Are you sure? Didn't Ender have a weak place? A thing he feared most, or that 
he was ashamed of?"
  
  "Ender never did anything to be ashamed of." And suddenly, deep in her own 
shame for having forgotten and betrayed Ender, she started to cry.
  
  "Why are you crying?"
  
  She shook her head. She couldn't explain what it was like to think of her 
little brother, who was so good, whom she had protected for so long, and then 
remember that now she was Peter's ally, Peter's helper, Peter's slave in a 
scheme that was completely out of her control. Ender never surrendered to Peter, 
but I have turned, I've become part of him, as Ender never was. "Ender never 
gave in," she said.
  
  "To what?"
  
  "To Peter. To being like Peter."
  
  They walked in silence along the goal line.
  
  "How would Ender ever be like Peter?"
  
  Valentine shuddered, "I already told you."
  
  "But Ender never did that kind of thing. He was just a little boy."
  
  "We both wanted to, though. We both wanted to to kill Peter."
  
  "Ah."
  
  "No, that isn't true. We never said it, Ender never said that he wanted to do 
that. I just -- thought it. It was me, not Ender. He never said that he wanted 
to kill him."
  
  "What did he want?"
  
  "He just didn't want to be--"
  
  "To be what?"
  
  "Peter tortures squirrels. He stakes them out on the ground and skins them 
alive and sits and watches them until they die. He did that, he doesn't do it 
now. But he did it. If Ender knew that, if Ender saw him, I think that he'd--"
  
  "He'd what? Rescue the squirrels? Try to heal them?"
  
  "No, in those days you didn't undo what Peter did. You didn't cross him. But 
Ender would be kind to squirrels. Do you understand? He'd feed them."
  
  "But if he fed them, they'd become tame, and that much easier for Peter to 
catch."
  
  Valentine began to cry again. "No matter what you do, it always helps Peter. 
Everything helps Peter, everything, you just can't get away, no matter what."
  
  "Are you helping Peter?" asked Graff.
  
  She didn't answer.
  
  "Is Peter such a very bad person, Valentine?"
  
  She nodded.
  
  "Is Peter the worst person in the world?"
  
  "How can he be? I don't know. He's the worst person I know."
  
  "And yet you and Ender are his brother and sister. You have the same genes, 
the same parents, how can he be so bad if--"
  
  Valentine turned and screamed at him, screamed as if he were killing her. 
"Ender is not like Peter! He is not like Peter in any way! Except that he's 
smart, that's all-- in every other way a person could possibly be like Peter he 
is nothing nothing nothing like Peter! Nothing!"
  
  "I see," said Graff.
  
  "I know what you're thinking, you bastard, you're thinking that I'm wrong, 
that Ender's like Peter. Well maybe I'm like Peter, but Ender isn't, he isn't at 
all, I used to tell him that when he cried, I told him that lots of times, 
you're not like Peter, you never like to hurt people, you're kind and good and 
not like Peter at all!"
  
  "And it's true."
  
  His acquiescence calmed her. "Damn right it's true. It's true."
  
  "Valentine, will you help Ender?"
  
  "I can't do anything for him now."
  
  "It's really the same thing you always did for him before. Just comfort him 
and tell him that he never likes to hurt people, that he's good and kind and not 
like Peter at all, That's the most important thing. That he's not like Peter at 
all."
  
  "I can see him?"
  
  "No. I want you to write a letter."
  
  "What good does that do? Ender never answered a single letter I sent."
  
  Graff sighed. "He answered every letter he got."
  
  It took only a second for her to understand. "You really stink."
  
  "Isolation is -- the optimum environment for creativity. It was *his* ideas we 
wanted, not the -- never mind, I don't have to defend myself to you."
  
  Then why are you doing it, she did not ask.
  
  "But he's slacking off. He's coasting. We want to push him forward, and he 
won't go."
  
  "Maybe I'd be doing Ender a favor if I told you to go stuff yourself."
  
  "You've already helped me. You can help me more. Write to him."
  
  "Promise you won't cut out anything I write."
  
  "I won't promise any such thing."
  
  "Then forget it."
  
  "No problem. I'll write your letter myself. We can use your other letters to 
reconcile the writing styles. Simple matter."
  
  "I want to see him."
  
  "He gets his first leave when he's eighteen."
  
  "You told him it would be when he was twelve."
  
  "We changed the rules."
  
  "Why should I help you!"
  
  "Don't help me. Help Ender. What does it matter if that helps us, too?"
  
  "What kind of terrible things are you doing to him up there?"
  
  Graff chuckled. "Valentine, my dear little girl, the terrible things are only 
about to begin."
  
  ***
  
  Ender was four lines into the letter before he realized that it wasn't from 
one of the other soldiers in the Battle School. It had come in the regular way 
-- a MAIL WAlTING message when he signed into his desk. He read four lines into 
it, then skipped to the end and read the signature. Then he went back to the 
beginning, and curled up on his bed to read the words over and over again.
  
  ENDER,
  
  THE BASTARDS WOULDN'T PUT ANY OF MY LETTERS THROUGH TILL NOW. I MUST HAVE 
WRITTEN A HUNDRED TIMES BUT YOU MUST HAVE THOUGHT I NEVER DID. WELL, I DID. I 
HAVEN'T FORGOTTEN YOU. I REMEMBER YOUR BIRTHDAY. I REMEMBER EVERYTHING. SOME 
PEOPLE MIGHT THINK THAT BECAUSE YOU'RE BEING A SOLDIER YOU ARE NOW A CRUEL AND 
HARD PERSON WHO LIKES TO HURT PEOPLE, LIKE THE MARINES IN THE VIDEOS, BUT I KNOW 
THAT ISN'T TRUE. YOU ARE NOTHING LIKE YOU-KNOW-WHO. HE'S NICER-SEEMING BUT HE'S 
STILL A SLUMBITCH INSIDE. MAYBE YOU SEEM MEAN, BUT IT WON'T FOOL ME. STILL 
PADDLING THE OLD KNEW, ALL MY LOVE TURKEY LIPS,
  
  VAL
  
  DON'T WRITE BACK THEY'LL PROBLY SIKOWANALIZE YOUR LETTER.
  
  Obviously it was written with the full approval of the teachers. But there was 
no doubt it was written by Val. The spelling of psychoanalyze, the epithet 
slumbitch for Peter, the joke about pronouncing knew like canoe were all things 
that no one could know but Val.
  
  And yet they came pretty thick, as though someone wanted to make very sure 
that Ender believed that the letter was genuine. Why should thry be so eager if 
it's the real thing?
  
  It isn't the real thing anyway. Even if she wrote it in her own blood, it 
isn't the real thing because they made her write it. She'd written before, and 
they didn't let any of those letters through. Those might have been real, but 
this was asked for, this was part of their manipulation.
  
  And the despair filled him again. Now he knew why. Now he knew what he hated 
so much. He had no control over his own life. They ran everything. They made all 
the choices. Only the game was left to him, that was all, everything else was 
them and their rules and plans and lessons and programs, and all he could do was 
go this way or that way in battle. The one real thing, the one precious real 
thing was his memory of Valentine, the person who loved him before he ever 
played a game, who loved him whether there was a bugger war or not, and they had 
taken her and put her on their side. She was one of them now.
  
  He hated them and all their games. Hated them so badly that he cried, reading 
Val's empty asked-for letter again. The other boys in Phoenix Army noticed and 
looked away. Ender Wiggin crying? That was disturbing. Something terrible was 
going on. The best soldier in any army, lying on his bunk crying. The silence in 
the room was deep.
  
  Ender deleted the letter, wiped it out of menuory and then punched up the 
fantasy game. He was not sure why he was so eager to play the game, to get to 
the End of the World, but he wasted no time getting there. Only when he coasted 
on the cloud, skimming over the autumnal colors of the pastoral world, only then 
did he realize what he hated most about Val's letter. All that it said was about 
Peter. About how he was not at all like Peter. The words she had said so often 
as she held him, comforted him as he trembled in fear and rage and loathing 
after Peter had tortured him, that was all that the letter had said.
  
  And that was what they had asked for. The bastards knew about that, and they 
knew about Peter in the mirror in the castle room, they knew about everything 
and to them Val was just one more tool to use to control him, just one more 
trick to play. Dink was right, they were the enemy, they loved nothing and cared 
for nothing and he was not going to do what they wanted, he was damn well not 
going to do anything for them. He had had only one memory that was safe, one 
good thing, and those bastards had plowed it into him  with the rest of the 
manure -- and so he was finished, he wasn't going to play.
  
  As always the serpent waited in the tower room, unraveling itself from the rug 
on the floor. But this time Ender didn't grind it underfoot. This time he caught 
it in his hands, knelt before it, and gently, so gently, brought the snake's 
gaping mouth to his lips.
  
  And kissed.
  
  He had not meant to do that. He had meant to let the snake bite him on the 
mouth.  Or perhaps he had meant to eat the snake alive, as Peter in the mirror 
had done, with his bloody chin and the snake's tail dangling from his lips. But 
he kissed it instead.
  
  And the snake in his hands thickened and bent into another shape. A human 
shape. It was Valentine, and she kissed him again.
  
  The snake could not be Valentine. He had killed it too often for it to be his 
sister. Peter had devoured it too often to bear it that it might have been 
Valentine all along.
  
  Was this what they planned when they let him read her letter? He didn't care.
  
  She arose from the floor of the tower room and walked to the mirror. Ender 
made his figure also rise and go with her. They stood before the mirror, where 
instead of Peter's cruel reflection there stood a dragon and a unicorn. Ender 
reached out his hand and touched the mirror; the wall fell open and revealed a 
great stairway downward, carpeted and lined with shouting, cheering multitudes. 
Together, arm in arm, he and Valentine walked down the stairs. Tears filled his 
eyes, tears of relief that at last he had broken free of the End of the World. 
And because of the tears, he didn't notice that every member of the multitude 
wore Peter's face. He only knew that wherever he went in this world, Valentine 
was with him.
  
  ***
  
  Valentine read the letter that Dr. Lineberry had given her. "Dear Valentine," 
it said, "We thank you and commend you for your efforts on behalf of the war 
effort. You are hereby notified that you have been awarded the Star of the Order 
of the League of Humanity, First Class, which is the highest military award that 
can be given to a civilian. Unfortunately, IF security forbids us to make this 
award public until after the successful conclusion of current operations, but we 
want you to know that your efforts resulted in complete success. Sincerely, 
General Shimon Levy, Strategos."
  
  When she had read it twice Dr. Lineberry took it from her hands. "I was 
instructed to let you read it, and then destroy it." She took a cigarette 
lighter from a drawer and set the paper afire. It burned brightly in the 
ashtray. "Was it good or bad news?" she asked.
  
  "I sold my brother," Valentine said, "and they paid me for it."
  
  "That's a bit melodramatic, isn't it, Valentine?"
  
  Valentine went back to class without answering.
  
  That night Demosthenes published a scathing denunctalion of the population 
limitation laws. People should be allowed to have as many children as they like, 
and the surplus population should be sent to other worlds, to spread mankind so 
far across the galaxy that no disaster, no invasion could ever threaten the 
human race with annihilation. "The most noble title any child can have," 
Demosthenes wrote, "is Third."
  
  For you, Ender, she said to herself as she wrote.
  
  Peter laughed in delight when he read it. "That'll make them sit up and take 
notice. Third! A noble title! Oh, you have a wicked streak."
  
  
  
  Chapter 10 -- Dragon
  
  "Now?"
  
  "I suppose so.
  
  "It has to be an order, Colonel Graff. Armies don't move because a commander 
says 'I suppose it's time to attack.'"
  
  "I'm not a commander. I'm a teacher of little children."
  
  "Colonel, sir, I admit I was on you, I admit I was a pain in the ass, but it 
worked, everything worked just like you wanted it to. The last few weeks Ender's 
even been, been--"
  
  "Happy."
  
  "Content. He's doing well. His mind is keen, his play is excellent. Young as 
he is. we've never had a boy better prepared for command. Usually they go at 
eleven. but at nine and a half he's top flight."
  
  "Well, yes. For a few minutes there, it actually occurred to me to wonder what 
kind of a man would heal a broken child of some of his hurt, just so he could 
throw him back into battle again. A little private moral dilemma. Please 
overlook it. I was tired."
  
  "Saving the world, remember?"
  
  "Call him in."
  
  "We're doing what must be done, Colonel Graff."
  
  "Come on, Anderson, you're just dying to see how he handles all those rigged 
games I had you work out."
  
  "That's a pretty low thing to--"
  
  "So I'm a low kind of guy. Come on, Major. We're both the scum of the earth. 
I'm dying to see how he handles them, too. After all, our lives depend on him 
doing real well. Neh?"
  
  "You're not starting to use the boys' slang, are you?"
  
  "Call him in, Major. I'll dump the rosters into his files and give him his 
security system. What we're doing to him isn't all bad, you know. He gets his 
privacy again."
  
  "Isolation, you mean."
  
  "The loneliness of power. Go call him in."
  
  "Yes sir. I'll be back with him in fifteen minutes."
  
  "Good-bye. Yes sir yessir yezzir. I hope you had fun, I hope you had a nice, 
nice time being happy, Ender. It might be the last time in your life. Welcome, 
little boy. Your dear Uncle Graff has plans for you."
  
  ***
  
  Ender knew what was happening from the moment they brought him in. Everyone 
expected him to go commander early. Perhaps not this early, but he had topped 
the standings almost continuously for three years, no one else was remotely 
close to him, and his evening practices had become the most prestigious group in 
the school. There were some who wondered why the teachers had waited this long.
  
  He wondered which army they'd give him. Three commanders were graduating soon, 
including Petra, but it was beyond hope for them to give him Phoenix Army. No 
one ever succeeded to command of the same army he was in when he was promoted.
  
  Anderson took him first to his new quarters. That sealed it -- only commanders 
had private rooms. Then he had him fitted for new uniforms and a new flash suit. 
He looked on the forms to discover the name of his army.
  
  Dragon, said the form. There was no Dragon Army.
  
  "I've never heard of Dragon Army," Ender said.
  
  "That's because there hasn't been a Dragon Army in four years. We discontinued 
the name because there was a superstition about it. No Dragon Army in the 
history of the Battle School ever won even a third of its games. It got to be a 
joke."
  
  "Well, why are you reviving it now?"
  
  "We had a lot of extra uniforms to use up."
  
  Graffsat at his desk, looking fatter and wearier than the last time Ender had 
seen him. He handed Ender his hook, the small box that commanders used to go 
where they wanted in the battleroom during practices. Many times during his 
evening practice sessions Ender wished that he had a hook, instead of having to 
rebound off walls to get where he wanteu to go. Now that he'd got quite deft at 
maneuvering without one, here it was. "It only works," Anderson pointed out, 
"during your regularly scheduled practice sessions."  Since Ender already 
planned to have extra practices, it meant the hook would only be useful some of 
the time.  It also explained why so many commanders never held extra practices. 
They depended on the hook, and it wouldn't do anything for them during the extra 
times. If they felt that the hook was their authority, their power over the 
other boys, then they were even less likely to work without it. That's an 
advantage I'll have over some of my enemies, Ender thought.
  
  Graff's official welcome speech sounded bored and over-rehearsed. Only at the 
end did he begin to sound interested in his own words. "We're doing something 
unusual with Dragon Army. I hope you don't mind. We've assembled a new army by 
advancing the equivalent of an entire launch course early and delaying the 
graduation of quite a few advanced students. I think you'll be pleased with the 
quality of your soldiers. I hope you are, because we're forbidding you to 
transfer any of them."
  
  "No trades?" asked Ender. It was how commanders always shored up their weak 
points, by trading around.
  
  "None. You see, you have been conducting your extra practice sessions for 
three years now. You have a following. Many good soldiers would put unfair 
pressure on their commanders to trade them into your army. We've given you an 
army that can, in time, be competitive. We have no intention of letting you 
dominate unfairly."
  
  "What if I've got a soldier I just can't get along with?"
  
  "Get along with him." Graff closed his eyes. Anderson stood up and the 
interview was over.
  
  Dragon was assigned the colors grey, orange, grey; Ender changed into his 
flash suit, then followed the ribbons of light until he came to the barracks 
that contained his army. They were there already, milling around near the 
entrance. Ender took charge at once. "Bunking will be arranged by seniority. 
Veterans to the back of the room, newest soldiers to the front."
  
  It was the reverse of the usual pattern, and Ender knew it. He also knew that 
he didn't intend to be like many commanders, who never even saw the younger boys 
because they were always in the back.
  
  As they sorted themselves out according to their arrival dates, Ender walked 
up and down the aisle. Almost thirty of his soldiers were new, straight out of 
their launch group. completely inexperienced in battle. Some were even underage 
-- the ones nearest the door were pathetically small. Ender reminded himself 
that that's how he must have looked to Bonzo Madrid when he first arrived. 
Still, Bonzo had had only one underage soldier to cope with.
  
  Not one of the veterans belonged to Ender's elite practice group. None had 
ever been a toon leader. None, in fact, was older than Ender himself, which 
meant that even his veterans didn't have more than eighteen months' experience. 
Some he didn't even recogmze, they had made so little impression.
  
  They recognized Ender, of course, since he was the most celebrated soldier in 
the school. And some, Ender could see, resented him. At least they did me one 
favor -- none of my soldiers is older than me.
  
  As soon as each soldier had a bunk, Ender ordered them to put on their flash 
suits and come to practice. "We're on the morning schedule, straight to practice 
after breakfast. Officially you have a free hour between breakfast and practice. 
 We'll see what happens after I find out how good you are." After three minutes, 
though many of them still weren't dressed, he ordered them out of the room.
  
  "But I'm naked!" said one boy.
  
  "Dress faster next time. Three minutes from first call to running out the door 
-- that's the rule this week. Next week the rule is two minutes. Move!" lt would 
soon be a joke in the rest of the school that Dragon Army was so dumb they had 
to practice getting dressed.
  
  Five of the boys were completely naked, carrying their flash suits as they ran 
through the corridors; few were fully dressed. They attracted a lot of attention 
as they passed open classroom doors. No one would be late again if he could help 
it.
  
  In the corridors leading to the battleroom, Eider made them run back and forth 
in the halls, fast, so they were sweating a little, while the naked ones got 
dresseo. Then he led them to the upper door, the one that opened into the middle 
of the battleroom just like the doors in the actual games. Then he made them 
jump up and use the ceiling handholds to hurl themselves into the room. 
"Assemble on the far wall," he said.  "As if you were going for the enemy's 
gate."
  
  They revealed themselves as they jumped, four at a time, through the door. 
Almost none of them knew how to establish a direct line to the target, and when 
they reached the far wall few of the new ones had any idea how to catch on or 
even control their rebounds.
  
  The last boy out was a small kid, obviously underage. There was no way he was 
going to reach the ceiling handhold.
  
  "You can use a side handhold if you want," Ender said.
  
  "Go suck on it," said the boy. He took a flying leap, touched the ceiling 
handhold with a finger tip, and hurtled through the door with no control at all, 
spinning in three directions at once. Ender tried to decide whether to like the 
little kid for refusing to take a concession or to be annoyed at his 
insubordinate attitude.
  
  They finally got themselves together along the wall. Ender noticed that 
without exception they had lined up with their heads still in the directioiu 
that had been up in the corridor. So Ender deliberately took hold of what they 
were treating as a floor and dangled from it upside down. "Why are you upside 
down, soldiers?" he demanded.
  
  Some ot them started to turn the other way.
  
  "Attention!" They held still. "I said why are you upside down!"
  
  No one answered. They didn't know what he expected.
  
  "I said why does every one of you have his feet in the air and his head toward 
the ground!"
  
  Finally one of them spoke. "Sir, this is the direction we were in coming out 
of the door."
  
  "Well what difference is that supposed to make! What difference does it make 
what the gravity was back in the corridor! Are we going to fight in the 
corridor? Is there any gravity here?"
  
  No sir. No *sir*.
  
  "From now on, you forget about gravity before you go through that door. The 
old gravity is gone, erased. Understand me? Whatever your gravity is when you 
get to the door, remember -- the enemy's gate is down.  Your feet are toward the 
enemy's gate. Up is toward your own gate. North is that way, south is that way, 
east is that way, west is -- what way?"
  
  They pointed.
  
  "That's what I expected. The only process you've mastered is the process of 
elimination, and the only reason you've mastered that is because you can do it 
in the toilet. What was the circus I saw out here! Did you call that forming up? 
Did you call that flying?  Now everybody, launch and form up on the ceiling! 
Right now! Move!"
  
  As Ender expected, a good number of them instinctively launched, not toward 
the wall with the door in it, but toward the wall that Ender had called north, 
the direction that had been up when they were in the corridor.  Of course they 
quickly realized their mistakem, but too late -- they had to wait to change 
things until they had rebounded off the north wall.
  
  In the meantime, Ender was mentally grouping them into slow learners and fast 
learners. The littlest kid, the one who had been last out of the door, was the 
first to arrive at the correct wall, and he caught himself adroitly. They had 
been right to advance him. He'd do well. He was also cocky and reheltious, and 
probably resented the fact that he had been one of the ones Ender had sent naked 
through the corridors.
  
  "You!" Ender said, pointing at the small one. "Which way is down?"
  
  "Toward the enemy door." The answer was quick. It was also surly, as if to 
say, OK, OK, now get on with the important stuff.
  
  "Name, kid?"
  
  "This soldier's name is Bean, sir."
  
  "Get that for size or for brains?" The other boys laughed a little. "Well, 
Bean, you're right onto things. Now listen to me, because this matters. Nobody's 
going to get through that door without a good chance of getting hit. In the old 
days, you had ten, twenty seconds before you even had to move. Now if you aren't 
already streaming out of the door when the enemy comes out, you're frozen. Now, 
what happens when you're frozen?"
  
  "Can't move," one of the boys said.
  
  "That's what frozen means," Enden said. "But what happens to you?"
  
  It was Bean, not intimidated at all, who answered intelligently. "You keep 
going in the direction you started in. At the speed you were going when you were 
flashed."
  
  "That's true. You five, there on the end, move!"
  
  Startled, the boys looked at each other, Ender flashed them all. "The next 
five, move!"
  
  They moved. Ender flashed them, too, but they kept moving, heading toward the 
walls. The first five, though, were drifting uselessly near the main group.
  
  "Look at these so-called soldiers," Ender said. "Their commander ordered them 
to move, and now look at them. Not only are they frozen, they're frozen right 
here, where they can get in the way. While the others, because they moved when 
they were ordered, are frozen down there, plugging up the enemy's lanes, 
blocking the enemy's vision. I imagine that about five of you have understood 
the point of this. And no doubt Bean is one of them. Right, Bean?"
  
  He didn't answer at first. Ender looked at him until he said, "Right, sir."
  
  "Then what is the point?"
  
  "When you are ordered to move, move fast, so if you get iced you'll bounce 
around instead of getting in the way of your own army's operations."
  
  "Excellent. At least I have one soldier who can figure things out." Ender 
could see resentment growing in the way the other soldiers shifted their weight 
and glanced at each other, the way' they avoided looking at Bean. Why am I doing 
this? What does this have to do with being a good commander, making one boy the 
target of all the others? Just because they did it to me, why should I do it to 
him? Ender wanted to undo his taunting of the boy, wanted to tell the others 
that the little one needed their help and friendship more than anyone else. But 
of course Ender couldn't do that. Not on the first day. On the first day even 
his mistakes had to look like part of a brilliant plan.
  
  Ender hooked himself nearer the wall and pulled one of the boys away from the 
others. "Keep your body straight," said Ender. He rotated the boy in midair so 
his feet pointed toward the others. When the boy kept moving his body, Ender 
flashed him. The others laughed. "How much of his body could you shoot?" Ender 
asked a boy directly under the frozen soldier's feet.
  
  "Mostly all I can hit is his feet."
  
  Enden turned to the boy next to him. "What about you?"
  
  "I can see his body."
  
  "And you?"
  
  A boy a little farther down the wall answered. "All of him."
  
  "Feet aren't very big. Not much protection." Ender pushed the frozen soldier 
out of the way. Then he doubled his legs under him, as if he were kneeling in 
midair, and flashed his own legs. Immediately the legs of his suit went rigid, 
holding them in that position.
  
  Ender twisted himself in the air so that he knelt above the other boys.
  
  "What do you see?" he asked.
  
  A lot less, they said.
  
  Ender thrust his gun between his legs. "I can see tine," he said, and 
proceeded to flash the boys directly under him. "Stop me!" he shouted. "Try and 
flash me!"
  
  They finally did, but not until he had flashed more than a third of them. He 
thumbed his hook and thawed himself and every other frozen soldier. "Now," he 
said "which way is the enemy's gate?"
  
  "Down!"
  
  "And what is our attack position?"
  
  Some started to answer with words, but Bean answered by flipping himself away 
from the wall with his legs doubled under him, straight toward the opposite 
wall, flashing between his legs all the way.
  
  For a moment Ender wanted to shout at him, to punish him; then he caught 
himself, rejected the ungenerous impulse. Why should I be so angry at this 
little boy? "Is Bean the only one who knows how?" Ender shouted.
  
  Immediately the entire army pushed off toward the opposiie wall, kneeling in 
the air, firing between their legs, shouting at the top of their lungs. There 
may be a time, thought Ender, when this is exactly the strategy I'll need -- 
forty screaming boys in an unbalancing attack.
  
  When they were all at the other side, Ender called for them to attack him, all 
at once. Yes, thought Ender. Not bad. They gave me an untrained army, with no 
excellent veterans, but at least it isn't a crop of fools. I can work with this.
  
  When they were assembled again, laughing and exhilarated, Ender began the real 
work. He had them freeze their legs in the kneeling position. "Now, what are 
your legs good for, in combat?"
  
  Nothing, said some boys.
  
  "Bean doesn't think so," said Ender.
  
  "They're the best way to push off walls."
  
  "Right," Ender said, The other boy's started to complain that pushing off 
walls was movement, not combat.
  
  "There is no combat without movement," Ender said. They fell silent and hated 
Bean a little more. "Now, with your legs frozen like this, can you push off 
walls?"
  
  No one dared answer, for fear they'd he wrong. "Bean?" asked Ender.
  
  "I've never tried it, but maybe if you faced the wall and doubled over at the 
waist--"
  
  "Right but wrong. Watch me. My back's to the wall, legs are frozen. Since I'm 
kneeling, my feet are against the wall. Usually, when you push off you have to 
push downward, so you sring out your body behind you like a string bean, right?"
  
  Laughter.
  
  "But with my legs frozen, I use pretty much the same force, pushing downward 
from the hips and thighs, only now it pushes my shoulders and my feet backward, 
shoots out my hips, and when I come loose my body's tight, nothing stringing out 
behind me. Watch this."
  
  Ender forced his hips forward, which shot him away from the wall; in a moment 
he readjusted his position and was kneeling, legs downward, rushing toward the 
opposite wall. He landed on his knees, flipped over on his back, and jackknifed 
off the wall in another direction. "Shoot me!" he shouted. Then he set himself 
spinning in the ar as he took a course roughly parallel to the boys alang the 
far wall. Because he was spinning, they couldn't get a continuous beam on him.
  
  He thawed his suit and hooked himself back to them. "That's what we're working 
on for the first half hour today. Build up some muscles you didn't know you had. 
Learn to use your legs as a shield and control your movements so you can get 
that spin. Spinning doesn't do any good up close, but far away, they can't hurt 
you if you're spinning -- at that distance the beam has to hit the same spot for 
a couple of moments, and if you're spinning it can't happen. Now freeze yourself 
and get started."
  
  "Aren't you going to assign lanes?" asked a boy.
  
  "No I'm not going to assign lanes. I want you bumping into each other and 
learning how to deal with it all the time, except when we're practicing 
formations, and then I'll usually have you bump into each other on purpose. Now 
move!"
  
  When he said move, they moved.
  
  Ender was the last one out after practice, since he stayed to help some of the 
slower ones improve on technique. They'd had good teachers, but the 
inexpenienced soldiers fresh out of their launch groups were completely helpless 
when it came to doing two or three things at the same time. It was fine to 
practice jackknifing with frozen legs, they had no trouble maneuvering in 
midair, but to launch in one direction, fire in another, spin twice, rebound 
with a jackknife off a wall, and come out firing, facing the right direction -- 
that was way beyond them. Drill drill drill, that was all Ender would be able to 
do with them for a while. Strategies and formations were nice, but they were 
nothing if the army didn't know how to handle themselves in battle.
  
  He had to get this army ready now. He was early at being a commander, and the 
teachers were changing the rules now, not letting him trade, giving him no 
top-notch veterans. There was no guarantee that they'd give him the usual three 
months to get his army together before sending them into battle.
  
  At least in the evenings he'd have Alai and Shen to help him train his new 
boys.
  
  He was still in the corridor leading out of the battleroom when he found 
himself face to face with little Bean. Bean looked angry. Ender didn't want 
problems right now.
  
  "Ho, Bean."
  
  "Ho, Ender."
  
  Pause.
  
  "*Sir*," Ender said softly.
  
  "I know what you're doing, Ender, sir, and I'm warning you."
  
  "Warning me?"
  
  "I can be the best man you've got, but don't play games with me."
  
  "Or what?"
  
  "Or I'll be the worst man you've got. One or the other,"
  
  "And what do you want, love and kisses?" Ender was getting angry now.
  
  Bean looked unworried. "I want a toon."
  
  Ender walked back to him and stood looking down into his eyes. "Why should you 
get a toon?"
  
  "Because I'd know what to do with it."
  
  "Knowing what to do with a toon is easy," Ender said. "It's getting them to do 
it that's hard. Why would any soldier want to follow a little pinprick like 
you?"
  
  "They used to call you that, I hear. I hear Bonzo Madrid still does."
  
  "I asked you a question, soldier."
  
  "I'll earn their respect, if you don't stop me."
  
  Ender grinned. "I'm helping you."
  
  "Like hell," said Bean.
  
  "Nobody would notice you, except to feel sorry for the little kid. But I made 
sure they all noticed you today. They'll be watching every move you make. All 
you have to do to earn their respect now is be perfect."
  
  "So I don't even get a chance to learn before I'm being judged."
  
  "Poor kid. Nobody's treatin him fair." Ender gently pushed Bean back against 
the wall. "I'll tell you how to get a toon. Prove to me you know what you're 
doing as a soldier. Prove to me you know how to use other soldiers. And then 
prove to me that somebody's willing to follow you into battle. Then you'll get 
your toon. But not bloody well until."
  
  Bean smiled. "That's fair. If you actually work that way, I'll be a toon 
leader in a month."
  
  Ender reached down and grabbed the front of his uniform and shoved him into 
the wall. "When I say I work a certain way, Bean, then that's the way I work."
  
  Bean just smiled. Ender let go of him and walked away. When he got to his room 
he lay down on his bed and trembled. What am I doing? My first practice session 
and I'm already bullying people the way Bonzo did. And Peter. Shoving people 
around. Picking on some poor little kid so the others'll have somebody they all 
hate. Sickening. Everything I hated in a commander, and I'm doing it.
  
  Is it some law of human nature that you inevitably become whatever your first 
commander was? I can quit right now, if that's so.
  
  Over and over he thought of the things he did and said in his first practice 
with his new army. Why couldn't he talk like he always did in his evening 
practice group? No authority except excellence. Never had to give orders, just 
made suggestions. But that wouldn't work, not with an army. His informal 
practice group didn't have to learn to do things together. They didn't have to 
develop a group feeling; they never had to learn how to hold together and trust 
each other in battle. They didn't have to respond instantly to command.
  
  And he could go to the other extreme, too. He could be as lax and incompetent 
as Rose the Nose, if he wanted. He could make stupid mistakes no matter what he 
did. He had to have discipline, and that meant demanding -- and getting -- 
quick, decisive obedience.  He had to have a well-trained army, and that meant 
drilling the soldiers over and over again, long after they thought they had 
mastered a technique, until it was so natural to them that they didn't have to 
think about it anymore.
  
  But what was this thing with Bean? Why had he gone for the smallest, weakest, 
and possibly the brightest of the boys? Why had he done to Bean what had been 
done to Ender by commanders that he despised.
  
  Then he remembered that it hadn't begun with his commanders.  Before Rose and 
Bonzo had treated him with contempt, he had been isolated in his launch group. 
And it wasn't Bernard who began that, either.  It was Graff.
  
  It was the teachers who had done it. And it wasn't an accident. Ender realized 
that now. It was a strategy. Graff had deliberately set him up to be separate 
from the other boys, made it impossible for him to be close to them. And he 
began now to suspect the reasons behind it. It wasn't to unify the rest of the 
group -- in fact, it was divisive. Graff had isolated Ender to make him 
struggle. To make him prove, not that he was competent, but that he was far 
better than everyone else. That was the only way he could win respect and 
friendship. It made him a better soldier than he would ever have been otherwise. 
It also made him lonely, afraid, angry, untrusting. And maybe those traits, too, 
made him a better soldier.
  
  That's what I'm doing to you, Bean. I'm hurting you to make you a better 
soldier in every way. To sharpen your wit. To intensify your effort. To keep you 
off balance, never sure what's going to happen next, so you always have to be 
ready for anything, ready to improvise, determined to win no matter what. I'm 
also making you miserable. That's why they brought you to me, Bean. So you could 
be just like me. So you could grow up to be just like the old man.
  
  And me -- am I supposed to grow up like Graff? Fat and sour and unfeeling, 
manipulating the lives of little boys so they turn out factory perfect, generals 
and admirals ready to lead the fleet in defense of the homeland. You get all the 
pleasures of the puppeteer. Until you get a soldier who can do more than anyone 
else. You can't have that. It spoils the symmetry. You must get him in line, 
break him down, isolate him, beat him until he gets in line with everyone else.
  
  Well, what I've done to you this day, Bean, I've done. But I'll be watching 
you, more compassionately than you know, and when the time is right you'll find 
that I'm your friend, and you are the soldier you want to be.
  
  Ender did not go to classes that afternoon. He lay on his bunk and wrote down 
his impressions of each of the boys in his army, the things he noticed right 
about them, the things that needed more work. In practce tonight, he would talk 
with Alai and they'd figure out ways to teach small groups the things they 
needed to know. At least he wouldn't be in this thing alone.
  
  But when Ender got to the battleroom that night, while most others were still 
eating, he found Major Anderson waiting for him. "There has been a rule change, 
Ender. From now on, only members of the same army may work together in a 
battleroom during freetime. And, therefore, battlerooms are available only on a 
scheduled basis. After tonight, your next turn is in four days."
  
  "Nobody else is holding extra practices."
  
  "They are row, Ender. Now that you command another army, they don't want their 
boys practicing with you. Surely you can understand that. So they'll conduct 
their own practices."
  
  "I've alway's been in another army from them. They still sent their soldiers 
to me for training."
  
  "You weren't commander then."
  
  "You gave me a completely green army, Major Anderson, sir--"
  
  "You have quite a few veterans."
  
  "They aren't any good."
  
  "Nobody gets here without being brilliant, Ender. Make them good."
  
  "I needed Alai and Shen to--"
  
  "It's about time you grew up and did some things on your own, Ender. You don't 
need these other boys to hold your hand. You're a commander now.  So kindly act 
like it, Ender."
  
  Ender walked past Anderson toward the battleroom. Then he stopped, turned, 
asked a question. "Since these evening practices are now regularly scheduled, 
does it mean I can use the hook?"
  
  Did Anderson almost smile? No. Not a chance of that. "We'll see," he said.
  
  Ender turned his back and went on into the battleroom. Soon his army arrived, 
and no one else; either Anderson waited around to intercept anyone coming to 
Ender's practice eroup, or word had already passed through the whole school that 
Ender's informal evenings were through.
  
  It was a good practice, they accomplished a lot, but at the end of it Ender 
was tired and lonely. There was a half hour before bedtime. He couldn't go into 
his army's barracks -- he had long since learned that the best commanders stay 
away unless they have some reason to visit. The boy's have to have a chance to 
be at peace, at rest, without someone listening to favor or despise them 
depending on the way they talk and act and think.
  
  So he wandered to the game room, where a few other boys were using the last 
half hour before final bell to settle bets or beat their previous scores on the 
games. None of the games looked interesting, but he played one anyway, an easy 
animated game designed for Launchies. Bored, he ignored the objectives of the 
game and used the little player-figure, a bear, to explore the animated scenery 
around him.
  
  "You'll never win that way."
  
  Ender smiled, "Missed you at practice, Alai."
  
  "I was there. But they had your army in a separate place. Looks like you're 
big time now, can't play with the little boys anymore."
  
  "You're a full cubit taller than I am."
  
  "Cubit! Has God been telling you to build a boat or something? Or are you in 
an archaic mood?"
  
  "Not archaic, just arcane. Secret, subtle, roundabout. I miss you already, you 
circumcised dog."
  
  "Don't you know? We're enemies now. Next time I meet you in battle, I'll whip 
your ass."
  
  It was banter, as always, but now there was too much truth behind it. Now when 
Ender heard Alai talk as if it were all a joke, he felt the pain of losing a 
friend, and the worse pain of wondering if Alai really felt as little pain as he 
showed.
  
  "You can try," said Ender. "I taught you everything you know. But I didn't 
teach you everything I know."
  
  "I knew all along that you were holding something back, Ender.
  
  A pause. Ender's bear was in trouble on the screen.  He climbed a tree. "I 
wasn't, Alai. Holding anything back."
  
  "I know." said Alai. "Neither was I."
  
  "Salaam, Alai."
  
  "Alas, it is not to be."
  
  "What isn't?"
  
  "Peace. It's what salaam means. Peace be unto you."
  
  The words brought forth an echo from Ender's memory. His mother's voice 
reading to him softly, when he was very young. Think not that I came to send 
peace on earth. I came not to send peace, but a sword. Ender had pictured his 
mother piercing Peter the Terrible with a bloody rapier, and the words had 
stayed in his mind along with the image.
  
  In the silence, the bear died. It was a cute death, with funny music. Ender 
turned around. Alai was already gone. He felt like part of himself had been 
taken away, an inward prop that was holding up his courage and confidence. With 
Alai, to a degree impossible even with Shen, Ender had come to feel a unity so 
strong that the word we came to his lips much more easily than I.
  
  But Alai had left something behind. Ender lay in bed, dozing into the night, 
and felt Alai's lips on his cheek as he muttered the word peace. The kiss, the 
word, the peace were with him still. I am only what I remember, and Alai is my 
friend in memories so intense that they can't tear him out. Like Valentine, the 
strongest memory of all.
  
  The next day he passeed Alai in the corridor, and they greeted each other, 
touched hands, talked, but they both knew that there was a wall now. It might be 
breached, that wall, sometime in the future, but for now the only real 
conversation between them was the roots that had already grown low and deep, 
under the wall, where they could not be broken.
  
  The most terrible thing, though, was the fear that the wall could never be 
breached, that in his heart Alai was glad of the separation, and was ready to be 
Ender's enemy. For now that they could not be together, they must be infinitely 
apart, and what had been sure and unshakable was now fragile and insubstantial; 
from the moment we are not together, Alai is a stranger, for he has a life now 
that will be no part of mine, and that means that when I see him we will not 
know each other.
  
  It made him sorrowful, but Ender did not weep. He was done with that. When 
they had turned Valentine into a stranger, when they had used her as a tool to 
work on Ender, from that day forward they could never hurt him deep enough to 
make him cry again. Ender was certain of that.
  
  And with that anger, he decided he was strong enough to defeat them, the 
teachers, his enemies.
  
  
  
  Chapter 11 -- Veni Vidi Vici
  
  "You can't be serious about this schedule of battles."
  
  "Yes I can."
  
  "He's only had his army three and a half weeks."
  
  "I told you. We did computer simulations on probable results. And here is what 
the computer estimated Ender would do."
  
  "We want to teach him, not give him a nervous breakdown."
  
  "The computer knows him better than we do."
  
  "The computer is also not famous for having mercy."
  
  "If you wanted to be merciful, you should have gone to a monastery."
  
  "You mean this isn't a monastery?"
  
  "This is best for Ender, too. We're bringing him to his full potential."
  
  "I thought we'd give him two years as commander. We usually give them a battle 
every two weeks, starting after three months. This is a little extreme."
  
  "Do we have two years to spare?"
  
  "I know. I just have this picture of Ender a year from now. Completely 
useless, worn out, because he was pushed farther than he or any living person 
could go."
  
  "We told the computer that our highest priority was having the subject remain 
useful after the training program."
  
  "Well, as long as he's usefull--"
  
  "Look, Colonel Graff, you're the one who made me prepare this, over my 
protests, if you'll remember."
  
  "I know, you're right, I shouldn't burden you with my conscience. But my 
eagerness to sacrifice little children in order to save mankind is wearing thin. 
The Polemarch has been to see the Hegemon. It seems Russian intelligence is 
concerned that some of the active citizens on the nets are already figuring how 
America ought to use the IF to destroy the Warsaw Pact as soon as the buggers 
are destroyed."
  
  "Seems premature."
  
  "It seems insane. Free speech is one thing, but to jeopardize the League over 
nationalistic rivalries -- and it's for people like that, short-sighted, 
suicidal people, that we're pushing Ender to tho edge of human endurance."
  
  "I think you underestimate Ender."
  
  "But I fear that I also underestimate the stupidity of the rest of mankind. 
Are we absolutely sure that we ought to win this war?"
  
  "Sir, those words sound like treason."
  
  "It was black humor."
  
  "It wasn't funny. When it comes to the buggers, nothing--"
  
  "Nothing is funny, I know."
  
  ***
  
  Euder Wiggin lay on his bed staring at the ceiling.  Since becoming commander, 
he never slept more than five hours a night.  But the lights went off at 2200 
and didn't come on again until 0600.  Sometimes he worked at his desk, anyway, 
straining his eyes to use the dim display. Usually, though, he stared at the 
invisible ceiling and thought.
  
  Either the the teachers had heen kind to him after all, or he was a better 
commander than he thought.  His ragged little group of veterans, utterly without 
honor in their previous armies, were blossoming into capable leaders. So much so 
that instead of the usual four toons, he had created five, each with a toon 
leader and a second; every veteran had a position. He had the army drill in 
eight man toon maneuvers and four-man half-toons, so that at a single command, 
his army could be assigned as many as ten separate maneuvers and carry them out 
at once. No army had ever fragmented itself like that before, but Ender was not 
planning to do anything that had been done before, either. Most armies practiced 
mass maneuvers, preformed strategies. Ender had none. Instead he trained his 
toon leaders to use their small units effectively in achieving limited goals. 
Unsupported, alone, on their own initiative. He staged mock wars after the first 
week, savage affairs in the practice room that left everybody exhausted. But he 
knew, with less than a mouth of training, that his army had the potential of 
being the best fighting group ever to play the game.
  
  How much of this did the teachers plan?  Did they know they were giving him 
obscure but excellent boys? Did they give him thirty Launchies, many of them 
underage, because they knew the little boys were quick learners, quick thinkers? 
Or was this what any similar group could become under a commander who knew what 
he wanted his army to do, and knew how to teach them to do it?
  
  The question bothered him, because he wasn't sure whether he was confounding 
or fulfilling their expectations.
  
  All he was sure of was that he was eager for battle. Most armies needed three 
months because they had to memorize dozens of elaboration formations. We're 
ready now. Get us into battle.
  
  The door opened in darknes. Ender listened. A shuffling step. The door closed.
  
  He rolled off his bunk and crawled in the darkness the two meters to the door. 
There was a slip of paper there. He couldn't read it, of course, but he knew 
what it was. Battle. How kind of them.  I wish, and they deliver.
  
  ***
  
  Ender was already dressed in his Dragon Army flash suit when the lights came 
on. He ran down the corridor at once, and by 0601 he was at the door of his 
army's barracks.
  
  "We have a battle with Rabbit Army at 0700. I want us warmed up in gravity and 
ready to go. Strip down and get to the gym. Bring your flash suits and we'll go 
to the battleroom from there."
  
  What about breakfast?
  
  "I don't want anybody throwing up in the battleroom."
  
  Can we at least take a leak first?
  
  "No more than a decaliter."
  
  They laughed. The ones who didn't sleep naked stripped down; everyone bundled 
up their flash suits and followed Ender at a jog through the corridors to the 
gym. He put them through the obstacle course twice, then split them into 
rotations on the tramp, the mat, and the bench. "Don't wear yourselves out, just 
wake yourselves up." He didn't need to worry about exhaustion. They were in good 
shape, light and agile, and above all excited about the battle to come. A few of 
them spontaneously began to wrestle -- the gym, instead of being tedious, was 
suddenly fun, because of the battle to come. Their confidence was the supreme 
confidence of those who have never been into the contest, and think they are 
ready. Well, why shouldn't they think so? They are. And so am I.
  
  At 0640 he had them dress out. He talked to the toon leaders and their seconds 
while they dressed. "Rabbit Army is mostly veterans, but Carn Carby was made 
their commander only five months ago, and I never fought them under him. He was 
a pretty good soldier, and Rabbit has done fairly well in the standings over the 
years. But I expect to see formations, and so I'm not worried."
  
  At 0650 he made them all lie down on the mats and relax. Then, at 0656, he 
ordered them up and they jogged along the corridor to the battleroom, Ender 
occasionally leaped up to touch the ceiling. The boys all jumped to touch the 
same spot on the ceiling. Their ribbon of color led to the left; Rabbit Army had 
already passed through to the right. And at 0658 they reached their gate to the 
battleroom.
  
  The toons lined up in five columns. A and F ready to grab the side handholds 
and flip themselves out toward the sides. B and D lined up to catch the two 
parallel ceiling holds and flip upward into nul gravity. C toon were ready to 
slap the sill of the doorway and flip downward.
  
  Up, down, left, right; Ender stood at front, between columns so he'd be out of 
the way and reoriented them. "Which way is the enemy's gate?"
  
  Down, they all said, laughing. And in that moment up became north, down became 
south, and left and right became east and west.
  
  The grey wall in front of them disappeared, and the battleroom was visible. It 
wasn't a dark game, but it wasn't a bright one either -- the lights were about 
half, like dusk. In the distance, in the dim light, he could see the enemy door, 
their lighted flash suits already pouring out. Ender knew a moment's pleasure. 
Everyone had learned the wrong lesson from Boozo's misuse of Ender Wiggin. They 
all dumped through the door immediately, so that there was no chance to do 
anything other than name the formation they would use. Commanders didn't have 
time to think. Well, Ender would take the time, and trust his soldiers' ability 
to fight with flashed legs to keep them intact as they came late through the 
door.
  
  Ender sized up the shape of the battleroom. The familiar open grid of most 
early games, like the monkey bars at the park, with seven or eight stars 
scattered through the grid. There were enough of them, and in forward enough 
positions, that they were worth going for. "Spread to the near stars," Ender 
said. "C try to slide the wall. If it works, A and F will follow. If it doesn't, 
I'll decide from there. I'll be with D. Move."
  
  All the soldiers knew what was happening, but tactical decisions were entirely 
up to the toon leaders. Even with Ender's instructions, they were only ten 
seconds late getting through the gate. Rabbit Army was already doing some 
elaborate dance down at their end of the room. In all the other armies Ender had 
fought in, he would have been worrying right now about making sure he and his 
toon were in their proper place in their own formation. Instead, he and all his 
men were only thinking of ways to slip around past the formation, control the 
stars and the corners of the room, and then break the enemy formation into 
meaningless chunks that didn't know what they were doing. Even with less than 
four weeks together, the way they fought already seemed like the only 
intelligent way, the only possible way. Ender was almost surprised that Rabbit 
Army didn't know already that they were hopelessly out of date.
  
  C toon slipped along the wall, coasting with their bent knees facing the 
enemy. Crazy Tom, the leader of C toon, had apparently ordered his men to flash 
their own legs already. It was a pretty good idea in this dim light, since the 
lighted flash suits went dark wherever they were frozen. It made them less 
easily visible. Ender would commend him for that.
  
  Rabbit Army was able to drive back C toon's attack, but not until Crazy Tom 
and his boys had carved them up, freezing a dozen Rabbits before they retreated 
to the safety of a star. But it was a star behind the Rabbit formation, which 
meant they were going to be easy pickings now.
  
  Han Tzu, commonly called Hot Soup, was the leader of D toon. He slid quickly 
along the lip of the star to where Ender knelt. "How about flipping off the 
north wall and kneeling on their faces?"
  
  "Do it." Ender said. "I'll take B south to get behind them." Then he shouted, 
"A and E slow on the rvalls!" He slid footward along the star, hooked his feet 
on the lip, and flipped himself up to the top wall, then rebounded down to E 
toon's star. In a moment he was leading them down against the south wall. They 
rebounded in near perfect unison and came up behind the two stars that Carn 
Carby's soldiers were defending. It was like cutting butter with a hot knife. 
Rabbit Army was gone, just a little cleanup left to do. Ender broke his toons up 
into half-toons to scour the corners for any enemy soldiers who were whole or 
merely damaged. In three minutes his toon leaders reported the room clean. Only 
one of Ender's boys was completely frozen -- one of C toon, which had borne the 
brunt of the assault -- and only five were disabled. Most were damaged, but 
those were leg shots and many of them were self-inflicted. All in all, it had 
gone even better than Ender expected.
  
  Ender had his toon leaders do the honors at the gate -- four helmets at the 
corners, and Crazy Tom to pass through the gate. Most eommanders took whoever 
was left alive to pass the gate; Ender could have picked practically anyone. A 
good battle.
  
  The lights went full, and Major Anderson himself came through the teachergate 
at the south end of the battleroom. He looked very solemn as he offered Ender 
the teacher hook that was ritually given to the victor in the game. Ender used 
it to thaw his own army's flash suits, of course, and he assembled them in toons 
before thawing the enemy. Crisp, military appearance, that's what he wanted when 
Carby and Rabbit Army got their bodies under control again. They may curse us 
and lie about us, but they'll remember that we destroyed them, and no matter 
what they say other soldiers and other commanders will see that in their eyes; 
in those Rabbit eyes, they'll see us in neat formation, victorious and almost 
undamaged in our first battle. Dragon Army isn't going to be an obscure name for 
long.
  
  Carn Carby came to Ender as soon as he was unfrozen. He was a twelve-year-old, 
who had apparently made commander only in his last year at the school. So he 
wasn't cocky, like the ones who made it at eleven. I will remember this, thought 
Ender, when I am defeated. To keep dignity, and give honor where it's due, so 
that defeat is not disgrace. And I hope I don't have to do it often.
  
  Anderson dismissed Dragon Army last, after Rabbit Army had straggled through 
the door that Ender's boy's had come through. Then Ender led his army through 
the enemy's door. The light along the bottom of the door reminded them of which 
way was down once they got back to gravity. They all landed lightly on their 
feet, running. They assembled in the corridor. "It's 0715," Ender said, "and 
that means you have fifteen minutes for breakfast before I see you all in the 
battleroom for the morning practice." He could hear them silently saying, Come 
on, we won, let us celebrate. All right, Ender answered, you may. "And you have 
your commander's permission to throw food at each other during breakfast."
  
  They laughed, they cheered, and then he dismissed them and sent them jogging 
on to the barracks. He caught his toon leaders on the way out and told them he 
wouldn't expect anyone to come to practice till 0745, and that practice would be 
over early so the boys could shower. Half an hour for breakfast, and no shower 
after a battle -- it was still stingy, but it would look lenient compared to 
fifteen minutes. And Ender liked having the announcement of the extra fifteen 
minutes come from the toon leaders. Let the boys learn that leniency comes from 
their toon leaders, and harshness from their commander -- it will bind them 
better in the small, tight knots of this fabric.
  
  Ender ate no breakfast. He wasn't hungryy. Instead he went to the bathroom and 
showered, putting his flash suit in the cleaner so it would be ready when he was 
dried off. He washed himself twice and let the water run and run on him. It 
would all be reycled. Let everybody drink some of my sweat today. They had given 
him an untrained army, and he had won, and not just nip and tuck, either. He had 
won with only six frozen or disabled. Let's see how long other commanders keep 
using their formations now that they've seen what a flexible strategy can do.
  
  He was floating in the middle of the battleroom when his soldiers began to 
arrive. No one spoke to him, of course. He would speak, they knew, when he was 
ready, and not before.
  
  When all were there, Ender hooked himself near them and looked at them, one by 
one. "Good first battle," he said, which was excuse enough for a cheer, and an 
attempt to start a chant of Dragon, Dragon, which he quickly stopped. "Dragon 
Army did all right against the Rabbits. But the enemy isn't always going to be 
that bad. If that had been a good army, C toon, your approach was so slow they 
would have had you from the flanks before you got into good position. You should 
have split and angled in from two directions, so they couldn't flank you. A and 
E, your aim was wretched. The tallies show that you averaged only one hit for 
every two soldiers. That means most of the hits were made by attacking soldiers 
close in. That can't go on -- a competent enemy would cut up the assault force 
unless they have much better cover from the soldiers at a distance. I want every 
toon to work on distance marksmanship at moving and unmoving targets. HaIf-toons 
take turns being targets. I'll thaw the flash suits every three minutes. Now 
move."
  
  "Will we have any stars to work with?" asked Hot Soup. "To steady our aim?"
  
  "I don't want you to get used to having something to steady your arms. If your 
arm isn't steady, freeze your elbows! Now move!"
  
  The toon leaders quickly got things going, and Ender moved from group to group 
to make suggestions and help soldiers who were having particular trouble. The 
soldiers knew by now that Ender could be brutal in the way he talked to groups, 
but when he worked with an individual he was always patient, explaining as often 
as necessary, making suggestions quietly, listening to questions and problems 
and explanations. But he never laughed when they tried to banter with him, and 
they soon stopped trying. He was commander every moment they were together. He 
never had to remind them of it; he simply was.
  
  They worked all day with the taste of victory in their mouths, and cheered 
again when they broke half an hour early for lunch. Ender held the toon leaders 
until the regular lunch hour, to talk about the tactics they had used and 
evaluate the work of their individual soldiers. Then he went to his own room and 
methodicaily changed into his uniform for lunch. He would enter the commanders' 
mess about ten minutes late. Exactly the timing that he wanted. Since this was 
his first victory, he had never seen the inside of the commanders' mess hall and 
had no idea what new commanders were expected to do, but he did know that he 
wanted to enter last today, when the scores of the morning's battles were 
already posted. Dragon Army will not be an obscure name now.
  
  There was no great stir when he came in. But when some of them noticed how 
small he was, and saw the Dragons on the sleeves of the uniform, they stared at 
him openly, and by the time he got his food and sat at at a table, the room was 
silent. Ender began to eat, slowly and carefully, pretending not to notice that 
he was the center of attention. Gradually conversation and noise started up 
again, and Ender could relax enough to look around.
  
  One entire wall of the room was a scoreboard. Soldiers were kept aware of an 
army's overall record for the past two years; in here, however, records were 
kept for each commander. A new commander couldn't inherit a good standing from 
his predecessor -- he was ranked according to what he had done.
  
  Ender had the best ranking. A perfect won-lost record, of course, but in the 
other categories he was far ahead. Average soldiers-disabled, average 
enemy-disabled, average time-elapsed-before-victory -- in every category he was 
ranked first.
  
  When he was nearly through eating, someone came up behind him and touched his 
shoulder.
  
  "Mind if I sit?" Ender didn't have to turn around to know it was Dink Meeker.
  
  "Ho Dink," said Ender. "Sit."
  
  "You gold-plated fart," said Dink cheerfully, "We're all trying to decide 
whether your scores up there are a miracle or a mistake."
  
  "A habit," said Ender.
  
  "One victory is not a habit," Dink said. "Don't get cocky. When you're new 
they seed you against weak commanders."
  
  "Carn Carby isn't exactly on the bottom of the rankings." It was true, Carby 
was just about in the middle.
  
  "He's OK," Dink said, "considering that he only just started. Shows some 
promise. You don't show promise. You show threat."
  
  "Threat to what? Do they feed you less if I win? I thought you told me this 
was all a stupid game and none of it mattered."
  
  Dink didn't like having his words thrown back at him, not under these 
circumstances. "You were the one who got me playing along with them. But I'm not 
playing games with you, Ender. You won't beat me."
  
  "Probably not," Ender said.
  
  "I taught you," Dink said.
  
  "Everything I know," said Ender. "I'm just playing it by ear right now.
  
  "Congratulations," said Dink.
  
  "It's good to know I have a friend here." But Ender wasn't sure Dink was his 
friend anymore. Neither was Dink. After a few empty sentences, Dink went back to 
his table.
  
  Ender looked around when he was through with his meal. There were quite a few 
small conversations going on. Ender spotted Bonzo, who was now one of the oldest 
commanders. Rose the Nose had graduated. Petra was with a group in a far corner, 
and she didn't look at him once. Since most of the others stole glances at him 
from time to time, including the ones Petra was talking with, Ender was pretty 
sure she was deliberately avoiding his glance. That's the problem with winning 
right from the start, thought Ender. You lose friends.
  
  Give them a few weeks to get used to it. By the time I have my next battle, 
things will have calmed down in here.
  
  Carn Carby made a point of coming to greet Ender before the lunch period 
ended. It was, again, a gracious gesture, and, unlike Dink, Carby did not seem 
wary. "Right now I'm in disgrace," he said frankly. "They won't believe me when 
I tell them you did things that nobody's ever seen before. So I hope you beat 
the snot out of the next army you fight. As a favor to me."
  
  "As a favor to you," Ender said. "And thanks for talking to me."
  
  "I think they're treating you pretty badly. Usually new commanders are cheered 
when they first join the mess. But then, usually a new commander has had a few 
defeats under his belt before he first makes it in here. I only got in here a 
month ago. If anybody deserves a cheer, it's you. But that's life. Make them eat 
dust."
  
  "I'll try." Carn Carby left, and Ender mentally added him to his private list 
of people who also qualified as human beings.
  
  That night, Ender slept better than he had in a long time. Slept so well, in 
fact, that he didn't wake up until the lights came on. He woke up feeling good, 
jogged on out to take his shower, and did not notice the piece of paper on his 
floor until he came back and started dressing in his uniform. He only saw the 
paper because it moved in the wind as he snapped out the uniform to put it on. 
He picked up the paper and read it.
  
  PETRA ARKANIAN, PHOENIX ARMY, 0700
  
  It was his old army, the one he had left less than four weeks before, and he 
knew their formations backward and forward. Partly because of Ender's influence, 
they were the most flexible of armies, responding relativeiy quickly to new 
situations. Phoenix Army would be the best able to cope with Ender's fluid, 
unpatterned attack. The teachers were determined to make life interesting for 
him.
  
  0700, said the paper, and it was already 0630. Some of his boys might already 
be heading for breakfast. Ender tossed his uniform aside, grabbed his flash 
suit, and in a moment stood in the doorway of his army's barracks.
  
  "Gentlemen, I hope you learned something yesterday, because today we're doing 
it again."
  
  It took a moment for them to realize that he meant a battle, not a practice. 
It had to be a mistake, they said. Nobody ever had battles two days in a row.
  
  He handed the paper to Fly Molo, the leader of A toon, who immediateiy shouted 
"Flash suits" and started changing clothes.
  
  "Why didn't you tell us earlier?" demanded Hot Soup. Hot had a way of asking 
Ender questions that nobody else dared ask.
  
  "I thought you needed the shower," Ender said. "Yesterday Rabbit Army claimed 
we only won because the stink knocked them out."
  
  The soldiers who heard him laughed.
  
  "Didn't find the paper till you got back from the showers, right?"
  
  Ender looked for the source of the voice. It was Bean, already in his flash 
suit, looking insolent. Time to repay old humiliations, is that it, Bean?
  
  "Of course," Ender said, contemptuously. "I'm not as close to the floor as you 
are.
  
  More laughter. Bean flushed with anger.
  
  "It's plain we can't count on old ways of doing things." Ender said. "So you'd 
better plan on battles anytime. And often. I can't pretend I like the way 
they're screwing around with us, but I do like one thing -- that I've got an 
army that can handle it."
  
  After that, if he had asked them to follow him to the moon without space 
suits, they would have done it.
  
  Petra was not Carn Carby; shc had more flexible patterns and responded much 
more quickly to Ender's darting, improvised, unpredictable attack. As a result, 
Ender had three boys flashed and nine disabied at the end of the battle. Petra 
was not gracious about bowing over his hand at the end, either. The anger in her 
eyes seemed to say, I was your friend, and you humiliate me like this?
  
  Ender pretended not to notice her fury. He figured that after a few more 
battles, she'd realize that in fact she had scored more hits against him than he 
expected anyone ever would again. And he was still learning from her. In 
practice today he would teach his toon leaders how to counter the tricks Petra 
had played on them. Soon they would be friends again.
  
  He hoped.
  
  ***
  
  At the end of the week Dragon Army had fought seven battles in seven days. The 
score stood 7 wins and 0 losses. Ender had never had more losses than in the 
battle with Phoenix Army, and in two battles he had suffered not one soldier 
frozen or disabled. No one believed anymore that it was a fluke that put him 
first in the standings. He had beaten top armies by unheard-of margins. It was 
no longer possible for the other commanders to ignore him. A few of them sat 
with him at every meal, carefully trying to learn from him how he had defeated 
his most recent opponents. He told them freely, confident that few of them would 
know how to train their soldiers and their toon leaders to duplicate what his 
could do. And while Ender talked with a few commanders, much larger groups 
gathered around the opponents Ender had defeated, trying to find out how Ender 
might be beaten.
  
  There were many who who hated him. Hated him for being young, for being 
excellent, for having made their victories look paltry and weak. Ender saw it 
first in their faces when he passed them in the corridors; then he began to 
notice that some boys would get up in a group and move to another table if he 
sat near them in the commanders' mess; and there began to be elbows that 
aecidently jostled him in the game room, feet that got entangled with his when 
he walked into and out of the gym, spittle and wads of wet paper that struck him 
from behind as he jogged through the corridors. They couldn't beat him in the 
battleroom, and knew it -- so instead they would attack him where it was safe, 
where he was not a giant but just a little boy. Ender despised them, but 
secretly, so secretly that he didn't even know it himself, he feared them. It 
was just such little torments that Peter had always used, and Ender was 
beginning to feel far too much at home.
  
  These annoyances were petty, though, and Ender persuaded himself to accept 
them as another form of praise. Already the other armies were beginning to 
imitate Ender. Now most soldiers attacked with knees tucked under them; 
formations were breaking up now, and more commanders were sending out toons to 
slip along the walls. None had caught on yet to Ender's five-toon organization 
-- it gave him the slight advantage that when they had accounted for the 
movements of four units, they wouldn't be looking for a fifth.
  
  Ender was teaching them all about null gravity tactics. But where could Ender 
go to learn new things?
  
  He began to use the video room, filled vsith propaganda vids about Mazer 
Rackham and other great commanders of the forces of humanity in the First and 
Second Invasion. Ender stopped the general practice an hour early, and allowed 
his toon leaders to conduct their own practice in his absence. Usually they 
staged skirmishes, toon against toon. Ender stayed long enough to see that 
things were going well, then left to watch the old battles.
  
  Most of the vids were a waste ot time. Heroic music, closeups of commanders 
and medal-winning soldiers, confused shots of marines invading bugger 
installations. But here and there he found useful sequences: ships, like points 
of light, maneuvering in the dark of space, or, better still, the lights on 
shipboard plotting screens, showing the whole of a battle. It was hard, from the 
videos, to see all three dimensions, and the scenes were often short and 
unexplained. But Ender began to see how well the buggers used seemingly random 
flight paths to create confusion, how they used decoys and false retreats to 
draw the IF ships into traps. Some battles had been cut into many scenes, which 
were scattered through the various videos; by watching them in sequence, Ender 
was able to reconstruct whole battles. He began to see things that the official 
commentators never mentioned. They were always trying to arouse pride in human 
accomplishments and loathing of the buggers, but Ender began to wonder how 
humanity had won at all. Human ships were sluggish; fleets responded to new 
circumstances unbearably slowly, while the bugger fleet seemed to act in perfect 
unity, responding to each challenge instantly. Of course, in the First Invasion 
the human ships were completely unsuited to fast combat, but then so were the 
bugger ships; it was only in the Second Invasion that the ships and weapons were 
swift and deadly.
  
  So it was from the buggers, not the humans, that Ender learned strategy. He 
felt ashamed and afraid of learning from them, since they were the most terrible 
enemy, ugly and murderous and loathsome. But they were also very good at what 
they did. To a point. They always seemed to follow one basic strategy only -- 
gather the greatest number of ships at the key point of conflict. They never did 
anything surprising, anything that seemed to show either brilliance or stupidity 
in a subordinate officer. Discipline was apparently very tight.
  
  And there was one oddity. There was plenty of talk about Mazer Rackham but 
precious little video of his actual battle. Some scenes from early in the 
battle, Rackham's tiny force looking pathetic against the vast power of the main 
bugger fleet. The buggers had already beaten the main human fleet out in the 
comet shield, wiping out the earliest starships and making a mockery of human 
attempts at high strategy -- that film was often shown, to arouse again and 
again the agony and terror of bugger victory. Then the fleet coming to Mazer 
Rackham's little force near Saturn, the hopeless odds, and then--
  
  Then one shot from Mazer Rackham's little cruiser, one enemy ship blowing up. 
That's all that was ever shown. Lots of film showing marines carving their way 
into bugger ships. Lots of bugger corpses lying around inside. But no film of 
buggers killing in personal combat, unless it was spliced in from the First 
Invasion. It frustrated Ender that Maser Rackham's victory was so obviously 
censored. Students in the Battle School had much to learn trom Mazer Rackham, 
and everything about his victory was concealed from view. The passion for 
secrecy was not very helpful to the children who had to learn to accomplish 
again what Mazer Rackham had done.
  
  Of course, as soon as word got around that Ender Wiggin was watching the war 
vids over and over again, the video room began to draw a crowd. Almost all were 
commanders, watching the same vids Ender watched, pretending they understood why 
he was watching and what he was getting out of it. Ender never explained 
anything. Even when he showed seven scenes from the same battle, but from 
different vids, only one boy asked, tentatively, "Are some of those from the 
same battle?"
  
  Ender only shrugged, as if it didn't matter.
  
  It was during the last hour of practice on the seventh day, only a few hours 
after Ender's army had won its seventh battle, that Major Anderson himself came 
into the video room. He handed a slip of paper to one of the commanders sitting 
there, and then spoke to Ender. "Colonel Graff wishes to see you in his office 
immediately."
  
  Ender got up and followed Anderson through the corridors. Anderson palmed the 
locks that kept students out of the officers' quarters; finally they came to 
where Graff had taken root on a swivel chair bolted to the steel floor. His 
belly spilled over both armrests now, even when he sat upright. Ender tried to 
remember. Graff hadn't seemed particularly fat at when Ender first met him, only 
four years ago. Time and tension were not being kind to the administrator of the 
Battle School.
  
  "Seven days since your first battle, Ender," said Graff.
  
  Ender did not reply.
  
  "And you've won seven battles, once a day."
  
  Ender nodded.
  
  "Your scores are unusually high, too."
  
  Ender blinked.
  
  "To what, commander, do you attribute your remarkable success?"
  
  "You gave me an army that does whatever I can think for it to do."
  
  "And what have you thought for it to do?"
  
  "We orient downward toward the enemy gate and use our lower legs as a shield. 
We avoid formations and keep our mobility. It helps that I've got five toons of 
eight instead of four of ten. Also, our enemies haven't had time to respond 
effectively to our new techniques, so we keep beating them with the same tricks. 
That won't hold up for long."
  
  "So you don't expect to keep winning."
  
  "Not with the same tricks."
  
  Graff nodded. "Sit down, Ender."
  
  Ender and Anderson both sat. Graff looked at Anderson, and Anderson spoke 
next. "What condition is your army in, fighting so often?"
  
  "They're all veterans now."
  
  "But how are they doing? Are they tired?"
  
  "If they are, they won't admit it."
  
  "Are they still alert?"
  
  "You're the ones with the computer games that play with people's minds. You 
tell me."
  
  "We know what we know. We want to know what you know."
  
  "These are very good soldiers, Major Anderson. I'm sure they have limits, but 
we haven't reached them yet. Some of the newer ones are having trouble because 
they never really mastered some basic techniques, but they're working hard and 
improving. What do you want me to say, that they need to rest? Of course they 
need to rest. They need a couple of weeks off.  Their studies are shot to hell, 
none of us are doing any good in our classes. But you know that, and apparently 
you don't care, so why should I?"
  
  Graff and Anderson exchanged glances. "Ender, why are you studying the videos 
of the bugger wars?"
  
  "To learn strategy, of course."
  
  "Those videos were created for propaganda purposes. All our strategies have 
been edited out."
  
  "I know."
  
  Graff and Anderson exchanged glances again. Graff drummed on his table. "You 
don't play the fantasy game anymore," he said.
  
  Erider didn't answer.
  
  "Tell me why you don't play it."
  
  "Because I won."
  
  "You never win everything in that game. There's always more."
  
  "I won everything."
  
  "Ender, we want to help you be as happy as possible, but if you--"
  
  "You want to make me the best soldier possible. Go down and look at the 
standings. Look at the all-time standings. So far you're doing an excellent job 
with me. Congratulations. Now when are you going to put me up against a good 
army?"
  
  Graff's set lips turned to a smile, and he shook a little with silent 
laughter.
  
  Anderson handed Ender a slip of paper. "Now," he said.
  
  BONZO MADRID, SALAMANDER ARMY, 1200
  
  "That's ten minutes from now," said Ender. "My army will be in the middle of 
showering up after practice."
  
  Graff smiled. "Better hurry, then, boy."
  
  ***
  
  He got to his army's barracks five minutes later. Most were dressing after 
their showers; some had already gone to the game room or the video room to wait 
for lunch. He sent three younger boys to call everyone in, and made everyone 
else dress for battle as quickly as they could.
  
  "This one's hot and there's no time," Ender said. "They gave Bonzo notice 
about twenty minutes ago, and by the time we get to the door they'll have been 
inside for a good five minutes at least."
  
  The boys were outraged, complaining loudly in the slang that they usually 
avoided around the commander. What they doing to us? They be crazy, neh?
  
  "Forget why, we'll worry about that tonight. Are you tired?"
  
  Fly Molo answered. "We worked our butts off in practice today. Not to mention 
beating the crap out of Ferret Army this morning."
  
  "Same day nobody ever do two batties!" said Crazy Tom.
  
  Ender answered in the same tone. "Nobody ever beat Dragon Army, either. This 
be your big chance to lose?" Ender's taunting question was the answer to their 
complaints. Win first, ask questions later.
  
  All of them were back in the room, and most of them were dressed. "Move!" 
shouted Ender, and they ran along behind him, some of them still dressing when 
they reached the corridor outside the battleroom. Many of them were panting, a 
bad sign; they were too tired for this battle. The door was already open. There 
were no stars at all. Just empty, empty space in a dazzlingly bright room. 
Nowhere to hide, not even in darkness.
  
  "My heart," said Crazy Tom, "they haven't come out yet, either."
  
  Ender put his hand across his own mouth, to tell them to be silent. With the 
door open, of course the enemy could hear every word they said. Ender pointed 
all around the door, to tell them that Salamander Army was undoubtedly deployed 
against the wall all around the door, where they couldn't be seen but could 
easily flash anyone who came out.
  
  Ender motioned for them all to back away from the door. Then he pulled forward 
a few of the taller boys, including Crazy Tom, and made them kneel, not 
squatting back to sit on their heels, but fully upright, so they formed an L 
with their bodies. He flashed them. In silence the army watched him. He selected 
tne smallest boy, Bean, handed him Tom's gun, and made Bean kneel on Tom's 
frozen legs. Then pulled Bean's hands, each holding a gun, through Tom's 
armpits.
  
  Now the boys understood.  Tom was a shield, an armored spacecraft, and Bean 
was hiding inside. He was certainly not invulnerable, but he would have time.
  
  Ender assigned two more boys to throw Tom and Bean through the door and 
signalled them to wait. He went on through the army quickly assigning groups of 
four -- a shield, a shooter, and two throwers. Then, when all were frozen or 
armed or ready to throw, he signalled the throwers to pick up their burdens, 
throw them through the door, and then jump through themselves.
  
  "Move!" shouted Ender.
  
  They moved. Two at a time the shield-pairs went through the door, backwards so 
that the shield would be between the shooter and the enemy. The enemy opened 
fire at once, but they mostly hit the frozen boy in front. In the meantime, with 
two guns to work with and their targets neatly lined up and spread flat along 
the wall, the Dragons had an easy time of it. It was almost impossible to miss. 
And as thc throwers also jumped through the door, they got handholds on the same 
wall with the enemy, shooting at a deadly angle so that the Salamanders couldn't 
figure out whether to shoot at the shield-pairs slaughtering them from above or 
the throwers shooting at them from their own level. By the time Ender himself 
came through the door, the battle was over. It hadn't taken a full minute from 
the time the first Dragon passed through the door until the shooting stopped. 
Dragon had lost twenty frozen or disabled, and only twelve boys were undamaged. 
It was their worst score yet, but they had won.
  
  When Major Anderson came out and gave Ender the hook, Ender could not contain 
his anger. "I thought you were going to put us against an army that could match 
us in a fair fight."
  
  "Congratulations on the victory, commander."
  
  "Bean!" shouted Ender. "If you had commanded Salamander Army, what would you 
have done?"
  
  Bean, disabled but not completely frozen, called out from where he drifted 
near the enemy door. "Keep a shifting pattern of movement going in front of the 
door. You never hold still when the enemy knows exactly where you are.
  
  "As long as you're cheating," Ender said to Anderson, "why don't you train the 
other army to cheat intelligently!"
  
  "I suggest that you remobilize your army," said Anderson.
  
  Ender pressed the buttons to thaw both armies at once. "Dragon Army 
dismissed!" he shouted immediately. There would be no elaborate formation to 
accept the surrender of the other army. This had not been a fair fight, even 
though they had won -- the teachers had meant them to lose, and it was only 
Bonzo's ineptitude that had saved them. There was no glory in that.
  
  Only as Ender himself was leaving the battleroom did he realize that Bonzo 
would not realize that Ender was angry at the teachers. Spanish honor. Bonzo 
would only know that he had byen defeated even when the odds were stacked in his 
favor; that Ender had had the youngest child in his army puolicly state what 
Bonzo should have done to win; and that Ender had not even stayed to receive 
Bonzo's dignified surrender. If Bonzo had not already hated Ender he would 
surely have begun; and hating him as he did, this would surely turn his rage 
murderous. Bonzo was the last person to strike me, thought Ender. I'm sure he 
has not forgotten that.
  
  Nor had he forgotten the bloody affair in the battleroom when the older boys 
tried to break up Ender's practice session. Nor had many others. They were 
hungry for blood then; Bonzo will be thirsting for it now. Ender toyed with the 
idea of going back to take advanced personal defense; but with battles now 
possible not only every day, but twice in the same day, Ender knew he could not 
spare the time. I'll have to take my chances. The teachers got me into this -- 
they can keep me safe.
  
  ***
  
  Bean flopped down on his bunk in utter exhaustion -- half the boys in the 
barracks were already asleep, and it was still fifteen minutes before lights 
out. Wearily he pulled his desk from its locker and signed on. There was a test 
tomorrow in geometry and Bean was woefully unprepared. He could always reason 
things out if he had enough time, and he had read Euclid when he was five, but 
the test had a time limit so there wouldn't be a chance to think. He had to 
know. And he didn't know. And he would probably do badly on the test. But they 
had won twice today, and so he felt good.
  
  As soon as he signed on, however, all thoughts of geometry were banished. A 
message paraded around the desk:
  
  SEE ME AT ONCE -- ENDER
  
  The time was 2150, only ten minutes before lights out. How long ago had Ender 
sent it? Still, he'd better not ignore it. There might be another battle in the 
morning -- the thought made him weary -- and whatever Ender wanted to talk to 
him about, there wouldn't be time then. So Bean rolled off the bunk and walked 
emptily through the corridor to Ender's room. He knocked.
  
  "Come in," said Ender.
  
  "Just saw your message."
  
  "Fine," said Ender.
  
  "It's near lights out."
  
  "I'll help you find your way in the dark."
  
  "I just didn't know if you knew what time it was--"
  
  "I always know what time it is."
  
  Bean sighed inwardly. It never failed. Whenever he had any conversation with 
Ender, it turned into an argument. Bean hated it. He recognized Ender's genius 
and honored him for it. Why couldn't Ender ever see anything good in him?
  
  "Remember four weeks ago, Bean? When you told me to make you a toon leader?"
  
  "Eh."
  
  "I've made five toon leaders and five assistants since then. And none of them 
was you." Ender raised his eyebrows. "Was I right?"
  
  "Yes, sir."
  
  "So tell me how you've done in these eight battles."
  
  "Today was the first time they disabled me, but the computer listed me as 
getting eleven hits, before I had to stop. I've never had less than five hits in 
a battle. l've also completed every assignment I've been given."
  
  "Why did they make you a soldier so young, Bean?"
  
  "No younger than you were."
  
  "But why?"
  
  "I don't know."
  
  "Yes you do, and so do I."
  
  "I've tried to guess, but they're just guesses. You're-- very good. They knew 
that, they pushed you ahead--"
  
  "Tell me why, Bean."
  
  "Because they need us, that's why." Bean sat down on the floor and stared at 
Enders feet. "Because they need somebody to beat the buggers. That's the only 
thing they care about."
  
  "It's important that you know that, Bean. Because most boys in this school 
think the game is important for itself-- but it isn't. It's only important 
because it helps them find kids who might grow up to be real commanders, in the 
real war. But as for the game, screw that. That's what they're doing. Screwing 
up the game."
  
  "Funny. I thought they were just doing it to us."
  
  "A game nine weeks earlier than it should have come. A game every day. And now 
two games in the same day. Bean, I don't know what the teachers are doing, but 
my army is getting tired, and l'm getting tired, and they don't care at all 
about the rules of the game. I've pulled the old charts up from the computer. No 
one has ever destroyed so many enemies and kept so many of his own soldiers 
whole in the history of the game."
  
  "You're the best, Ender."
  
  Ender shook his head. "Maybe. But it was no accident that I got the soldiers I 
got. Launchies, rejects from other armies, but put them together and my worst 
soldier could be a toon leader in another army. They've loaded things my way, 
but now they're loading it all against me. Bean, they want to break us down."
  
  "They can't break you."
  
  "You'd be surprised." Ender breathed sharply, suddenly, as if there were a 
stab of pain, or he had to catch a sudden breath in a wind; Bean looked at him 
and realized that the impossible was happening. Far from baiting him, Ender 
Wiggin was actually confiding in him. Not much. But a little. Ender was human 
and Bean had been allowed to see.
  
  "Maybe you'll be surprised," said Bean.
  
  "There's a limit to how many clever new ideas I can come up with every day. 
Somebody's going to come up with something to throw at me that I haven't thought 
of before, and I won't be ready."
  
  "What's the worst that could happen? You lose one game."
  
  "Yes. That's the worst that could happen. I can't lose any games. Because if I 
lose any--"
  
  He didn't explain himself, and Bean didn't ask.
  
  "I need you to be clever, Bean. I need you to think of solutions to problems 
we haven't seen yet. I want you to try things that no one has ever tried because 
they're absolutely stupid."
  
  "Why me?"
  
  "Because even though there are some better soldiers than you in Dragon Army -- 
not many, but some -- there's nobody who can think better and faster than you." 
Bean said nothing. They both knew it was true.
  
  Ender showed him his desk. On it were twelve names. Two or three from each 
toon. "Choose five of these," said Ender. "One from each toon. They're a special 
squad, and you'll train them. Only during the extra practice sessions. Talk to 
me about what you're training them to do. Don't spend too long on any one thing. 
Most of the time you and your squad will be part of the whole army, part of your 
regular toons. But when I need you. When there's something to be done that only 
you can do."
  
  "These are all new," said Bean. "No veterans."
  
  "After last week, Bean, all our soldiers are veterans. Don't you realize that 
on the individual soldier standings, all forty of our soldiers are in the top 
fifty? That you have to go down seventeen places to find a soldier who isn't a 
Dragon?"
  
  "What if I can't think of anything?"
  
  "Then I was wrong about you."
  
  Bean grinned. "You weren't wrong."
  
  The lights went out.
  
  "Can you find your way back, Bean?"
  
  "Probably not."
  
  "Then stay here. If you listen very carefully you can hear the good fairy come 
in the night and leave our assignment for tomorrow."
  
  "They won't give us another battle tomorrow, will they?"
  
  Ender didn't answer. Bean heard him climb into bed.
  
  He got up from the floor and did likewise. He thought of a half dozen ideas 
betore he went to sleep. Ender would be pleased -- every one of them was stupid.
  
  
  
  Chapter 12 -- Bonzo
  
  "General Pace, please sit down. I understand you have come to me about a 
matter of some urgency."
  
  "Ordinarily, Colonel Graff, I would not presume to interfere in the internal 
workings of the Battle School. Your autonomy is guaranteed, and despite our 
dfference in ranks I am quite aware that it is my authority only to advise, not 
to order, you to take action."
  
  "Action?"
  
  "Do not be disingenuous with me, Colonel Graff. Americans are quite apt at 
playing stupid when they choose to, but I am not to be deceived. You know why I 
am here."
  
  "Ah. I guess this means Dap filed a report?"
  
  "He feels paternal toward the students here. He feels your neglect of a 
potentially lethal situation is more than negligence -- that it borders on 
conspiracy to cause the death or serious injury of one of the students here."
  
  "This is a school for children, General Pace. Hardly a matter to bring the 
chief of IF military police here for."
  
  "Colonel Graff, the name of Ender Wiggin has percolated through the high 
command. It has even reached my ears -- I have heard him described modestly as 
our only hope of victory in the upcoming invasion. When it is his life or health 
that is in danger, I do not think it untoward that the military police take some 
interest in preserving and protecting the boy. Do you?"
  
  "Damn Dap and damn you too, sir, I know what I'm doing."
  
  "Do you?"
  
  "Better than anyone else."
  
  "Oh, that is obvious, since nobody else has the faintest idea what you're 
doing. You have known for eight days that there is a conspiracy among some of 
the more vicious of these 'children' to cause the beating of Ender Wiggin, if 
they can. And that some members of this conspiracy, notably the boy named Bonito 
de Madrid, commonly called Bonzo, are quite likely to exhibit no self-restraint 
when this punishment takes place, so that Ender Wiggin, an inestimably important 
international resource, will be placed in serious danger of having his brains 
pasted on the walls of your simple orbiting schoolhouse. And you, fully warned 
of this danger, propose to do exactly--"
  
  "Nothing."
  
  "You can see how this excites our puzzlement."
  
  "Ender Wiggin has been in this situation before. Bock on Earth, the day he 
lost his monitor, and again when a large group of older boys--"
  
  "I did not came here ignorant of the past. Ender Wiggin has provoked Bonzo 
Madrid beyond human endurance. And you have no military police standing by to 
break up disturbances. It is unconscionable."
  
  "When Ender Wiggin holds our fleets in his control, when he must make the 
decisions that bring us victory or destruction, will there be military police to 
came save him if things get out of hand?"
  
  "I fail to see the connection."
  
  "Obviously. But the connection is there Ender Wiggin must believe that no 
matter what happens, no adult will ever, ever step in to help him in any way. He 
must believe, to the core of his soul, that he can only do what he and the other 
children work out for themselves. If he does not believe that, then he will 
never reach the peak of his abilities."
  
  "He will also not reach the peak of his abilities if he is dead or permanently 
crippled."
  
  "He won't be."
  
  "Why don't you simply graduate Bonzo? He's old enough."
  
  "Because Ender knows that Bonzo plans to kill him. If we transfer Bonzo ahead 
of schedule, he'll know that we saved him. Heaven knows Bonzo isn't a good 
enough commander to be promoted on merit."
  
  "What about the other children? Getting them to help him?"
  
  "We'll see what happens. That is my first, final, and only decision."
  
  "God help you if you're wrong."
  
  "God help us all if I'm wrong."
  
  "I'll have you before a capital court martial. I'll have your name disgraced 
throughout the world if you're wrong."
  
  "Fair enough. But do remember if I happen to be right to make sure I get a few 
dozen medals."
  
  "For what?"
  
  "For keeping you from meddling."
  
  ***
  
  Ender sat in a corner of the battleroom, his arm hooked through a handhold 
watching Bean practice with his squad. Yesterday they had worked on attacks 
without guns, disarming enemies with their feet. Ender had helped them with some 
techniques from gravity personal combat --  many things had to be changed, but 
inertia in flight was a tool that could be used against the enemy as easily in 
nullo as in Earth gravity.
  
  Today, though, Bean had a new toy. It was a deadline, one of the thin, almost 
invisible twines used during construction in space to hold two objects together. 
Deadlines were sometimes kilometers long. This one was just a bit longer than a 
wall of the battleroom and yet it looped easily, almost invisibly, around Bean's 
wrist. He pulled it off like an article of clothing and handed one end to one of 
his soldiers.  "Hook it to a handhold and wind it around a few times." Bean 
carried the other end across the battle oom.
  
  As a tripwire it wasn't too useful, Bean decided. It was invisible enough, but 
one strand of twine wouldn't have much chance of stopping an enemy that could 
easily go above or below it. Then he got the idea of using it to change his 
direction of movement in midair. He fastened it around his waist, the other end 
still fastened to a handhold, slipped a few meters away, and launched himself 
straight out. The twine caught him, changed his direction abruptly, and swung 
him in an arc that crashed him brutally against the wall.
  
  He screamed and screamed. It took Ender a moment to realize that he wasn't 
screaming in pain. "Did you see how fast I went! Did you see how I changed 
direction!"
  
  Soon all of Dragon Army stopped work to watch Bean practice with the twine. 
The changes in direction were stunning, especially when you didn't know where to 
look for the twine, When he used the twine to wrap himself around a star, he 
attained speeds no one had ever seen before,
  
  It was 2140 when Ender dismissed the evening practice. Weary but delighted at 
having seen something new, his army walked through the corridors back to the 
barracks. Ender walked among them, not talking, but listening to their talk. 
They were tired, yes -- a battle every day for more than four weeks, often in 
situations that tested their abilities to the utmost. But they were proud, 
happy, close -- they had never lost, and they had learned to trust each other. 
Trust their fellow soldiers to fight hard and well; trust their leaders to use 
them rather than waste their efforts; above all trust Ender to prepare them for 
anything and everything that might happen.
  
  As they walked the corridor, Ender noticed several older boys seemingly 
engaged in conversations in branching corridors and ladderways; some were in 
their corridor, walking slowly in the other direction. It became too much of a 
coincidence, however, that so many of them were wearing Salamander uniforms, and 
that those who weren't were often older boys belonging to armies whose 
commanders most hated Ender Wiggin. A few of them looked at him, and looked away 
too quickly; others were too tense, too nervous as they pretended to be relaxed. 
What will I do if they attack my army here in the corridor? My boys are all 
young, all small, and completely untrained in gravity combat. When would they 
learn?
  
  "Ho, Ender!" someone called. Ender stopped and looked back, It was Petra. 
"Ender, can I talk to you?"
  
  Ender saw in a moment that if he stopped and talked, his army would quickly 
pass him by and he would be alone with Petra in the hallway. "Walk with me," 
Ender said.
  
  "It's just for a moment."
  
  Ender turned around and walked on with his army. He heard Petra running to 
catch up. "All right, I'll walk with you." Ender tensed when she came near. Was 
she one of them, one of the ones who hated him enough to hurt him?
  
  "A friend of yours wanted me to warn you. There are some boys who want to kill 
you."
  
  "Surprise," said Ender. Some of his soldiers seemed to perk up at this. Plots 
against their commander were interesting news, it seemed.
  
  "Ender, they can do it. He said they've been planning it ever since you went 
commander."
  
  "Ever since I beat Salamander, you mean."
  
  "I hated you after you beat Phoenix Army, too, Ender."
  
  "I didn't say I blamed anybody."
  
  "It's true. He told me to take you aside today and warn you, on the way back 
from the battleroom, to be careful tomorrow because--"
  
  "Petra, if you had actually taken me aside just now, there are about a dozen 
boys following along who would have taken me in the corridor. Can you tell me 
you didn't notice them?"
  
  Suddenly her face flushed. "No. I didn't. How can you think I did? Don't you 
know who your friends are?" She pushed her way through Dragon Army, got ahead of 
him, and scrambled up a ladderway to a higher deck.
  
  "Is it true?" asked Crazy Tom.
  
  "Is what true?" Ender scanned the room and shouted for two roughhousing boys 
to get to bed.
  
  "That some of the older boys want to kill you?"
  
  "All talk," said Ender. But be knew that it wasn't. Petra had known something, 
and what he saw on the way here tonight wasn't imagination.
  
  "It may be all talk, but I hope you'll understand when I say you've got five 
toon leaders who are going to escort you to your room tonight."
  
  "Completely unnecessary."
  
  "Humor us. You owe us a favor."
  
  "I owe you nothing." He'd be a fool to turn them down. "Do as you want." He 
turned and left. The toon leaders trotted along with him. One ran ahead and 
opened his door. They checked the room, made Ender promise to lock it, and left 
him just before lights out.
  
  There was a message on his desk.
  
  DON'T BE ALONE. EVER. -- DINK
  
  Ender grinned. So Dink was still his friend. Don't worry. They won't do 
anything to me. I have my army.
  
  But in the darkness he did not have his army. He dreamed that night of 
Stilson, only he saw now how small Stilson was, only six years old, how 
ridiculous his tough-guy posturing was; and yet in the dream Stilson and his 
friends tied Ender so he couldn't fight back, and then everything that Ender had 
done to Stilson in life, they did to Ender in the dream. And afterward Ender saw 
himself babbling like an idiot, trying hard to give orders to his army, but all 
his words came out as nonsense.
  
  He awoke in darkness, and he was afraid. Then he calmed himself by remembering 
that the teachers obviously valued him, or they wouldn't be putting so much 
pressure on him; they wouldn't let anything happen to him, nothing bad, anyway. 
Probably when the older kids attacked him in the battleroom years ago, there 
were teachers just outside the room, waiting to see what would happen; if things 
had got out of hand, they would have stepped in and stopped it. I probably could 
have sat here and done nothing, and they would have seen to it I came through 
all right. They'll push me as hard as they can in the game, but outside the game 
they'll keep me safe.
  
  With that assurance, he slept again, until the door opened softly and the 
morning's war was left on the floor for him to find.
  
  ***
  
  They won, of course, but it was a grueling affair, with the battleroom so 
filled with a labyrinth of stars that hunting down the enemy during mop-up took 
forty-five minutes. It was Pol Slattery's Badger Army, and they refused to give 
up. There was a new wrinkle in the game, too -- when they disabled or damaged an 
enemy, he thawed in about five minutes, the way it worked in practice. Only when 
the enemy was completely frozen did he stay out of action the whole time. But 
the gradual thawing did not work for Dragon Army. Crazy Tom was the one who 
realized what was happening, when they started getting hit from behind by people 
they thought were safely out of the way. And at the end of the battle, Slattery 
shook Ender's hand and said, "I'm glad you won. If I ever beat you, Ender, I 
want to do it fair."
  
  "Use what they give you," Ender said. "If you've ever got an advantage over 
the enemy, use it."
  
  "Oh, I did," said Slattery. He grinned. "I'm only fair-minded before and after 
battles."
  
  The battle took so long that breakfast was over. Ender looked at his hot, 
sweating, tired soldiers waiting in the corridor and said, "Today you know 
everything. No practice. Get some rest. Have some fun. Pass a test." It was a 
measure of their weariness that they didn't even cheer or laugh or smile, just 
walked into the barracks and stripped off their clothes. They would have 
practiced if he had asked them to, but they were reaching the end of their 
strength, and going without breakfast was one unfairness too many.
  
  Ender meant to shower right away, but he was also tired. He lay down on his 
bed in his flash suit, just for a moment, and woke up at the beginning of 
lunchtime. So much for his idea of studying more about the buggers this morning. 
Just time to clean up, go eat, and head for class.
  
  He peeled off his flash suit, which stank from his sweat. His body felt cold, 
his joints oddly weak. Shouldn't have slept in the middle of the day. I'm 
beginning to slack off. I'm beginning to wear down. Can't let it get to me.
  
  So he jogged to the gym and forced himself to climb the rope three times 
before going to the bathroom to shower. It didn't occur to him that his absence 
in the commanders' mess would be noticed, that showering during the noon hour, 
when his own army would be wolfing down their first meal of the day, he would he 
completely, helplessly alone.
  
  Even when he heard them come into the bathroom he paid no attention. He was 
letting the water pour over his head, over his body; the muffled sound of 
footsteps was hardly noticeable. Maybe lunch was over, he thought. He started to 
soap himself again. Maybe somebody finished practice late.
  
  And maybe not. He turned around, There were seven of them, leaning back 
against the metal sinks or standing closer to the showers, watching him. Bonzo 
stood in front of them, Many were smiling, the condescending leer of the hunter 
for his cornered victim. Bonzo was not smiling, however.
  
  "Ho," Ender said,
  
  Nobody answered.
  
  So Ender turned off the shower even though there was still soap on him, and 
reached for his towel. It wasn't there. One of the boys was holding it. It was 
Bernard. All it would take for the picture to be complete was for Stilson and 
Peter to be there, too. They needed Peter's smile; they needed Stilson's obvious 
stupidity.
  
  Ender recognized the towel as their opening point. Nothing would make him look 
weaker than to chase naked after the towel. That was what they wanted, to 
humiliate him, to break him down. He wasn't going to play. He refused to feel 
weak because he was wet and cold and unclothed. He stood strongly, facing them, 
his arms at his sides. He fastened his gaze on Bnnzo.
  
  "Your move," Ender said,
  
  "This is no game," said Bernard. "We're tired of you, Ender. You graduate 
today. On ice."
  
  Ender did not look at Bernard. It was Bonzo who hungered for his death, even 
though he was silent. The others were along for the ride, daring themselves to 
see how far they might go. Bonzo knew how far he would go.
  
  "Bonzo," Ender said softly. "Your father would be proud of you."
  
  Bonzo stifiened.
  
  "He would love to see you now, come to fight a naked boy in a shower, smaller 
than you, and you brought six friends. He would say, Oh, what honor."
  
  "Nobody came to fight you," said Bernard, "We just came to talk you into 
playing fair with the games. Maybe lose a couple now and then."
  
  The others laughed, but Bonzo didn't laugh, and neither did Ender.
  
  "Be proud, Bonito, pretty boy. You can go home and tell your father, Yes, I 
beat up Ender Wiggin, who was barely ten years old, and I was thirteen. And I 
had only six of my friends to help me, and somehow we managed to defeat him, 
even though he was naked and wet and alone -- Ender Wiggin is so dangerous and 
terrifying it was all we could do not to bring two hundred."
  
  "Shut your mouth, Wiggin," said one of the boys.
  
  "We didn't come to hear the little bastard talk," said another.
  
  "You shut up," said Bonzo. "Shut up and stand out of the way." He began to 
take off his uniform. "Naked and wet and alone, Ender, so we're even. I can't 
help that I'm bigger than you. You're such a genius, you figure out how to 
handle me." He turned to the others. "Watch the door. Don't let anyone else in."
  
  The bathroom wasn't large, and plumbing fixtures protruded everywhere, It had 
been launched in one piece, as a low-orbit satellite, packed full of the water 
reclamation equipment; it was designed to have no wasted space. It was obvious 
what their tactics would have to be. Throw the other boy against fixtures until 
one of them does enough damage that he stops.
  
  When Ender saw Bonzo's stance, his heart sank. Bonzo had also taken classes. 
And probably more recently than Ender. His reach was better, he was stronger, 
and he was full of hate. He would not be gentle. He will go for my head, thonght 
Ender. He will try above all to damage my brain. And if this fight is long, he's 
bound to win. His strength can control me. If I'm to walk away from here, I have 
to win quckly, and permanently. He could feel agan he sickening way that 
Stilson's bones had given way. But this time it will be my body that breaks, 
unless I can break him first.
  
  Ender stepped back, flipped the showerhead so it turned outward, and torned on 
pure hot water. Almost at once the steam began to rise. He turned on the next 
and the next.
  
  "I'm not afraid of hot water," said Bonzo. His voice was soft.
  
  But it wasn't the hot water that Ender wanted. It was the heat. His body still 
had soap on it, and his sweat moistened it, made his skin more slippery than 
Bonzo would expect.
  
  Suddenly there was a voice from the door. "Stop it!" For a moment Ender 
thought it was a teacher, come to stop the fight, but it was only Dink Meeker. 
Bonzo's friends caught him at the door held him. "Stop it, Bonzo!" Dink cried. 
"Don't hurt him!"
  
  "Why not?" asked Boozo, and for the first time he smiled. Ah, thought Ender, 
he loves to have someone recognize that he is the one in control, that he has 
power.
  
  "Because he's the best, that's why! Who else can fight the buggers! That's 
what matters, you fool, the buggers!"
  
  Bonzo stopped smiling. It was the thing he hated most about Ender, that Ender 
really mattered to other people, and in the end, Bonzo did not. You've killed me 
with those words, Dink. Bonzo doesn't want to hear that I might save the world.
  
  Where are the teachers? thought Ender. Don't they realize that the first 
contact between us in this fight might be the end of it? This isn't like the 
fight in the battleroom, where no one had the leverage to do any terrible 
damage. There's gravity in here, and the floor and walls are hard and jutted 
with metal. Stop this now or not at all.
  
  "If you touch him you're a buggerlover!" cried Dink. "You're a traitor, if you 
touch him you deserve to die!" They jammed Dink's face backward into the door 
and he was silent.
  
  The mist from the showers dimmed the room, and the sweat was streaming down 
Ender's body. Now, before the soap is carried off me. Now, while I'm still too 
slippery to hold.
  
  Ender stepped back, letting the fear he felt show in his face. "Bonzo, don't 
hurt me," he said. "Please."
  
  It was what Bonzo was waiting for, the confession that he was in power. For 
other boys it might have been enough that Ender had submitted; for Bonzo, it was 
only a sign that his victory was sure. He swung his leg as if to kick, but 
changed it to a leap at the last moment. Ender noticed the shifting weight and 
stooped lower, so that Bonzo would be more off-balance when he tried to grab 
Ender and throw him.
  
  Bonzo's tight, hard ribs came against Under's face, and his hands slapped 
against his back, trying to grip him. But Ender twisted, and Bonzo's hands 
slipped. In an instant Ender was completely turned, yet still inside Bonzo's 
grasp. The classic move at this moment would be to bring up his heel into 
Bonzo's crotch, but for that move to be effective required too much accuracy, 
and Bonzo expected it. He was already rising onto his toes, thrusting his hips 
backward to keep Ender from reaching his groin. Without seeing him, Ender knew 
it would bring his face closer, almost in Ender's hair; so instead of kicking he 
lunged upward off the floor, with the powerful lunge of the soldier bounding 
from the wall, and jammed his head into Bonzo's face.
  
  Ender whirled in time to see Bonzo stagger backward, his nose bleeding, 
gasping from surprise and pain. Ender knew that at this moment he might be able 
to walk out of the room and end the battle.  The way he had escaped from the 
battleroom after drawing blood. But the battle would only be fought again. Again 
and again until the will to fight was finished.  The only way to end things 
completely was to hurt Bonzo enough that his fear was stronger than his hate.
  
  So Ender leaned back against the wall behind him, then jumped up and pushed 
off with his arms. His feet landed in Bonzo's belly and chest.  Ender spun in 
the air and landed on his toes and hands; he flipped over, scooted under Bonzo, 
and this time when he kicked upward into Bonzo's crotch, he connected, hard and 
sure.
  
  Bonzo did not cry out in pain. He did not react at all, except that his body 
rose a little in the air. It was as if Ender had kicked a piece of furniture. 
Bonzo collapsed, fell to the side, and sprawled directly under the spray of 
streaming water from a shower. He made no movement whatever to escape the 
murderous heat.
  
  "My God!" someone shouted. Bonzo's friends leaped to turn off the water. Ender 
slowly rose to his feet. Someone thrust his towel at him. It was Dink. "Come on 
out of here," Dink said. He led Ender away. Behind them they heard the heavy 
clatter of adults running down a  ladderway. Now the teachers would come. The 
medical staff. To dress the wounds of Ender's enemy. Where were they before the 
fight, when there might have been no wounds at all?
  
  There was no doubt now in Ender's mind. There was no help for him. Whatever he 
faced, now and forever, no one would save him from it. Peter might be scum, but 
Peter had been right, always right; the power to cause pain is the only power 
that matters, the power to kill and destroy, because if you can't kill then you 
are always subject to those who can, and nothing and no one will ever save you.
  
  Dink led him to his room, made him lie on the bed. "Are you hurt anywhere?" he 
asked,
  
  Ender shook his head.
  
  "You took him apart. I thought you were dead meat, the way he grabbed you. But 
you took him apart. If he'd stood up longer, you would've killed him."
  
  "He meant to kill me."
  
  "I know it. I know him. Nobody hates like Bonzo. But not anymore. If they 
don't ice him for this and send him home, he'll never look you in the eye again. 
You or anybody. He had twenty centimeters on you, and you made him look like a 
crippled cow standing there chewing her cud."
  
  All Ender could see, though, was the way Bonzo looked as Ender kicked upward 
into his groin. The empty, dead look in his eyes. He was already finished then. 
Already unconscious. His eyes were open, but he wasn't thinking or moving 
anymore, just that dead, stupid look on his lace, that terrible look, the way 
Stilson looked when I finished with him.
  
  "They'll ice him, though," Dink said. "Everybody knows he started it. I saw 
them get up and leave the commanders' mess. Took me a couple of seconds to 
realize you weren't there, either, and then a minute more to find out where you 
had gone. I told you not to be alone."
  
  "Sorry."
  
  "They're bound to ice him. Troublemaker. Him and his stinking honor."
  
  Then, to Dink's surprise, Ender began to cry. Lying on his back, still soaking 
wet with sweat and water, he gasped his sobs, tears seeping out of his closed 
eyelids and disappearing in the water on his face.
  
  "Are you all right?"
  
  "I didn't want to hurt him!" Ender cried. "Why didn't he just leave me alone!"
  
  ***
  
  He heard his door open softly, then close. He knew at once that it was his 
battle instructions, He opened his eyes, expecting to find the darkness of early 
morning, before 0600. Instead, the lights were on, He was naked and when he 
moved the bed was soaking wet, His eyes were puffy and painful from crying. He 
looked at the clock on his desk. 1820, it said. It's the same day. I already had 
a battle today, I had two battles today -- the bastards know what I've been 
through, and they're doing this to me.
  
  WILLIAM BEE, GRIFFIN ARMY, TALO MOMOE, TIGER ARMY, 1900
  
  He sat on the edge of the bed. The note trembled in his hand. I can't do this, 
he said silently. And then not silently. "I can't do this."
  
  He got up, bleary, and looked for his flash suit. Then he remembered -- he had 
put it in the cleaner while he showered. It was still there.
  
  Holding the paper, he walked out of his room. Dinner was nearly over, and 
there were a few people in the corridor, but no one spoke to him, just watched 
him, perhaps in awe of what had happened at noon in the bathroom, perhaps 
because of the forbidding, terrible look on his face. Most of his boys were in 
the barracks.
  
  Ho, Ender. There gonna be a practice tonight?
  
  Ender handed the paper to Hot Soup. "Those sons of bitches," he said. "Two at 
once?"
  
  "Two armies!" shouted Crazy Tom.
  
  "They'll just trip over each other," said Bean.
  
  "I've got to clean up," Ender said. "Get them ready, get everybody together, 
I'll meet you there, at the gate."
  
  He walked out of the barracks. A tumult of conversation rose behind him. He 
heard Crazy Tom scream, "Two farteating armies! We'll whip their butts!"
  
  The bathroom was empty. All cleaned up. None of the blood that poured from 
Bonzo's nose into the shower water. All gone. Nothing bad ever happened here.
  
  Ender stepped under the water and rinsed himself, took the sweat of combat and 
let it run down the drain. All gone, except they recycled it and we'll be 
drinking Bonzo's bloodwater in the morning. All the life gone out of it, but his 
blood just the same, his blood and my sweat, washed down in their stupidity or 
cruelty or whatever it was that made them let it happen.
  
  He dried himself, dressed in his flash suit, and walked to the battleroom. His 
army was waiting in the corridor, the door still not opened. They watched him in 
silence as he walked to the front to stand by the blank grey forcefield. Of 
course they all knew about his fight in the bathroom today; that and their own 
weariness from the battle that morning kept them quiet, while the knowledge that 
they would be facing two armies filled them with dread.
  
  Everything they can do to beat me, thought Ender. Everything they can think 
of, change all the rules, they don't care, just so they beat me. Well, I'm sick 
of the game. No game is worth Bonzo's blood pinking the water on the bathroom 
floor. Ice me, send me home, I don't want to play anymore.
  
  The door disappeared. Only three meters out there were four stars together, 
completely blocking the view from the door.
  
  Two armies weren't enough. They had to make Ender deploy his forces blind.
  
  "Bean," said Ender. "Take your boys and tell me what's on the other side of 
this star."
  
  Bean pulled the coil of twine from his waist, tied one end around him, handed 
the other end to a boy in his squad, and stepped gently through the door. His 
squad quickly followed. They had practiced this several times, and it took only 
a moment before they were braced on the star, holding the end of the twine. Bean 
pushed off at great speed, in a line almost parallel to the door; when he 
reached the corner of the room, he pushed off again and rocketed straight out 
toward the enemy. The spots of light on the wall showed that the enemy was 
shooting at him. As the rope was stopped by each edge of the star in turn, his 
arc became tighter, his direction changed, and he became an impossible target to 
hit. His squad caught him neatly as he came around the star from the other side. 
He moved all his arms and legs so those waiting inside the door would know that 
the enems hadn't flashed him anywhere.
  
  Ender dropped through the gate.
  
  "It's really dim," said Bean, "but light enough you can't follow people easily 
by the lights on their suits. Worst possible for seeing. It's all open space 
from this star to the enemy side of the room. They've got eight stars making a 
square around their door. I didn't see anybody except the ones peeking around 
the boxes. They're just sitting there waiting for us."
  
  As if to corroborate Bean's statement, the enemy began to call out to them. 
"Hey! We be hungry, come and feed us! Your ass is draggin'! Your ass is Dragon!"
  
  Ender's mind felt dead. This was stupid. He didn't have a chance, outnumbered 
two to one and forced to attack a protected enemy. "In a real war, any commander 
with brains at all would retreat and save his army."
  
  "What the hell," said Bean. "It's only a game."
  
  "It stopped being a game when they threw away the rules."
  
  "So, you throw 'em away, too."
  
  Ender grinned. "OK. Why not, Let's see how they react to a formation."
  
  Bean was appalled. "A formation! We've never done a formation in the whole 
time we've been an army!"
  
  "We've still got a month to go before our training period is normally supposed 
to end. About time we started doing formations. Always have to know formations," 
He formed an A with his fingers, showed it to the blank door, and beckoned, A 
toon quickly emerged and Ender began arranging them behind the star. Three 
meters wasn't enough room to work in, the boys were frightened and confused, and 
it took nearly five minutes just to get them to understand what they were doing.
  
  Tiger and Griffin soldiers were reduced to chanting catcalls, while their 
commanders argued about whether to try to use their overwhelming force to attack 
Dragon Army while they were still behind the star. Momoe was all for attacking 
-- "We outnumber him two to one" -- while Bee said, "Sit tight and we can't 
lose, move out and he can figure out a way to beat us."
  
  So they sat tight, until finally in the dusky light they saw a large mass slip 
out from behind Ender's star. It held its shape, even when it abruptly stopped 
moving sideways and launched itself toward the dead center of the eight stars 
where eighty-two soldiers waited.
  
  "Doobie doe," said a Griffin. "They're doing a formation."
  
  "They must have been putting that together for all five minutes," said Momoe. 
"If we'd attacked while they were doing it, we could've destroyed them."
  
  "Eat it, Momoe," whispered Bee. "You saw the way that little kid flew. He went 
all the way around the star and back behind without ever touching a wall. Maybe 
they've all got hooks, did you think of that? They've got something new there."
  
  The formation was a strange one. A square formation of tightly-packed bodies 
in front, making a wall. Behind it, a cylinder, six boys in circumference and 
two boys deep, their limbs outstretched and frozen so they couldn't possibly be 
holding on to each other. Yet they held together as tightly as if they had been 
tied -- which, in fact, they were.
  
  From inside the formation, Dragon Army was firing with deadly accuracy, 
forcing Griffins and Tigers to stay tightly packed on their stars.
  
  "The back of that sucker is open,"said Bee. "As soon as they get between the 
stars, we can get around behind--"
  
  "Don't talk about it, do it!" said Momoe. Then he took his own advice and 
ordered his boys to launch against the wall and rebound out behind the Dragon 
formation.
  
  In the chaos of their takeoff, while Griffin Army held tight to their stars, 
the Dragon formation abruptly changed. Both the cylinder and the front wall 
split in two, as boys inside it pushed off; almost at once, the formations also 
reversed direction, heading back toward the Dragon gate. Most of the Griffins 
fired at the formations and the boys moving backward with them; and the Tigers 
took the survivors of Dragon Army from behind.
  
  But there was something wrong. William Bee thought for a moment and realized 
what it was. Those formations couldn't have reversed direction in midflight 
unless someone pushed off in the opposite direction, and if they took off with 
enough force to make that twenty-man formation move backward, they must be going 
fast.
  
  There they were, six small Dragon soldiers down near William Bee's own door. 
From the number of lights showing on their flash suits, Bee could see that three 
of them were disabled and two of them damaged; only one was whole. Nothing to be 
frightened of. Bee casually aimed at them, pressed the button, and--
  
  Nothing happened.
  
  The lights went on.
  
  The game was over.
  
  Even though he was looking right at them, it took Bee a moment to realize what 
had just happened. Four of the Dragon soldiers had their helmets pressed on the 
corners of the door. And one of them had just passed through. They had just 
carried out the victory ritual. They were getting destroyed, they had hardly 
inflicted any casualties, and they had the gall to perform the victory ritual 
and end the game right under their noses.
  
  Only then did it occur to William Bee that not only had Dragon Army ended the 
game, it was possihie that, under the rules, they had won it. After all, no 
matter what happened, you were not certified as the winner unless you had enough 
unfrozen soldiers to touch the corners of the gate and pass someone through into 
the enemy's corridor. Therefore, by one way of thinking. you could argue that 
the ending ritual was victory. The battleroom certainly recognized it as the end 
of the game.
  
  The teachergate opetied and Major Anderson came into the room. "Ender," he 
called, looking around.
  
  One of the frozen Dragon soldiers tried to answer him through jaws that were 
clamped shut by the flash suit. Anderson hooked over to him and thawed him.
  
  Ender was smiling. "I beat you again, sir," he said.
  
  "Nonsense, Ender," Anderson said softly. "Yout battle was with Griffin and 
Tiger."
  
  "How stupid do you think I am?" said Ender.
  
  Loudly, Anderson said, "After that little maneuver, the rules are being 
revised to require that all of the enemy's soldiers must be frozen or disabled 
before the gate can be reversed."
  
  "It could only work once anyway," Ender said.
  
  Anderson handed him the hook. Ender unfroze everyone at once. To hell with 
protocol. To hell with everything. "Hey!" he shouted as Anderson moved away. 
"What is it next time? My army in a cage without guns, with the rest of the 
Battle School against them? How about a little equality?"
  
  There was a loud murmur of agreement from the other boys, and not all of it 
came from Dragon Army. Anderson did not so much as turn around to acknowledge 
Ender's challenge. Finally, it was William Bee who answered. "Ender, if you're 
on one side of the battle, it won't be equal no matter what the conditions are."
  
  Right! called the boys. Many of them laughed. Talo Momoe began clapping his 
hands. "Ender Wiggin!" he shouted. The other boys also clapped and shouted 
Ender's name.
  
  Ender passed through the enemy gate. His soldiers followed him. The sound of 
them shouting his name followed him through the corridors.
  
  "Practice tonight?" asked Craty Tom.
  
  Ender shook his head.
  
  "Tomorrow morning then?"
  
  "No."
  
  "Well, when?"
  
  "Never again, as far as I'm concerned."
  
  He could hear the murmurs behind him.
  
  "Hey, that's not fair," said one of the boys. "It's not our fault the teachers 
are screwing up the game. You can't just stop teaching us stuff because--"
  
  Ender slammed his open hand against the wall and shouted at the boy. "I don't 
care about the game anymore!" His voice echoed through the corridor. Boys from 
other armies came to their doors. He spoke quietly into the silence -- "Do you 
understand that?" And he whispered. "The game is over."
  
  He walked back to his room alone. He wanted to lie down, but he couldn't 
because the bed was wet. It reminded him of all that had happened today, and in 
fury he tore the mattress and blankets from the bedframe and shoved them out 
into the corridor. Then he wadded up a unifortn to serve as a pillow and lay on 
the fabric of wires strung across the frame. It was uncomfortable, but Ender 
didn't care enough to get up.
  
  He had only been there a few minutes when someone knocked on his door.
  
  "Go away," he said softly. Whoever was knockine didn't hear him or didn't 
care. Finally, Ender said to come in.
  
  It was Bean.
  
  "Go away, Bean."
  
  Bean nodded but didn't leave. Instead he looked at his shoes. Ender almost 
yelled at him, cursed at him, screamed at him to leave. Instead he noticed how 
very tired Bean looked, his whole body bent with weariness, his eyes dark from 
lack of sleep; and yet his skin was still soft and translucent, the skin of a 
child, the soft curved cheek, the slender limbs of a little boy. He wasn't eight 
years old yet. It didn't matter he was brilliant und dedicated and good. He was 
a child. He was *young*.
  
  No he isn't, thought Ender. Small, yes. But Bean has been through a battle 
with a whole army depending on him and on the soldiers that he led, and he 
performed splendidly, and they won. There's no youth in that. No childhood.
  
  Taking Ender's silence and softening expression as permission to stay, Bean 
took another step into the room. Only then did Ender see the small slip of paper 
in his hand.
  
  "You're transferred?" asked Ender. He was incredulous, but his voice came out 
sounding uninterested, dead.
  
  "To Rabbit Army."
  
  Ender nodded. Of course. It was obvious. If I can't be defeated with my army, 
they'll take my army away. "Carn Carby's a good man," said Ender. "I hope he 
recognizes what you're worth."
  
  "Carn Carby was graduated today. He got his notice while we were fighting our 
battle."
  
  "Well, who's commanding Rabbit then?"
  
  Bean held his hands out helplessly. "Me."
  
  Ender looked at the ceiling and nodded. "Of course. After all, you're only 
four years younger than the regular age."
  
  "It isn't funny. I don't know what's going on here. All the changes in the 
game. And now this. I wasn't the only one transferred, you know. They graduated 
half the commanders, and transferred a lot of our guys to command their armies."
  
  "Which guys?"
  
  "It looks like -- every toon leader and every assistant."
  
  "Of course. If they decide to wreck my army, they'll cut it to the ground. 
Whatever they're doing, they're thorough.""
  
  "You'll still win, Ender. We all know that. Crazy Tom, he said, 'You mean I'm 
supposed to figure out how to beat Dragon Army?' Everybody knows you're the 
best. They can't break you down, no matter what they--"
  
  "They already have."
  
  "No, Ender, they can't--"
  
  "I don't care about their game anymore, Bean. I'm not going to play it 
anymore. No more practices. No more battles. They can put their little slips of 
paper on the floor all they want, but I won't go. I decided that before I went 
through the door today. That's why I had you go for the gate. I didn't think it 
would work, but I didn't care. I just wanted to go out in style."
  
  "You should've seen William Bee's face. He just stood there trying to figure 
out how he had lost when you only had seven boys who could wiggle their toes and 
he only had three who couldn't."
  
  "Why should I want to see William Bee's face? Why should I want to beat 
anybody?" Ender pressed his palms against his eyes. "I hurt Bonzo really bad 
today, Bean. I really hurt him bad."
  
  "He had it coming."
  
  "I knocked him out standing up. It was like he was dead, standing there. And I 
kept hurting him."
  
  Bean said nothing.
  
  "I just wanted to make sure he never hurt me again."
  
  "He won't," said Bean. "They sent him home."
  
  "Already?"
  
  "The teachers didn't say much, they never do. The official notice says he was 
graduated, but where they put the assignment -- you know, tactical schoot, 
support, precommand, navigation, that kind of thing -- it just said Cartagena, 
Spain. That's his home."
  
  "I'm glad they graduated him."
  
  "Hell, Ender, we're just glad he's gone. If we'd known what he was doing to 
you, we would've killed him on the spot. Was it true he had a whole bunch of 
guys gang up on you?"
  
  "No. It was just him and me. He fought with honor." If it weren't for his 
honor, he and the others would have beaten me together. They might have killed 
me, then. His sense of honor saved my life. "I didn't fight with honor," Ender 
added."I fought to win."
  
  Bean laughed. "And you did.  Kicked him right out of orbit."
  
  A knock on the door, Before Ender could answer, the door opened. Ender had 
been expecting more of his soldiers. Instead it was Major Anderson. And behind 
him came Colonel Graff.
  
  "Ender Wiggin," said Graff.
  
  Ender got to his feet. "Yes sir."
  
  "Your display of temper in the battleroom today was insubordinate and is not 
to be repeated."
  
  "Yes sir," said Ender,
  
  Bean was still feeling insubordinate, and he didn't think Ender deserved the 
rebuke. "I think it was about time somebody told a teacher how we felt about 
what you've been doing."
  
  The adults ignored him. Anderson handed Ender a sheet of paper. A full-sized 
sheet. Not one of the little slips of paper that served for internal orders 
within the Battle School; it was a full-fledged set of orders. Bean knew what it 
meant. Ender was being transferred out of the school.
  
  "Graduated?" asked Bean. Ender nodded. "What took them so long? You're only 
two or three years early. You've already learned how to walk and talk and dress 
yourself. What will they have left to teach you?"
  
  Ender shook his head, "All I know is, the game's over." He folded up the 
paper. "None too soon. Can I tell my army?"
  
  "There isn't time," said Graff. "Your shuttle leaves in twenty minutes. 
Besides, it's better not to talk to them after you get your orders. It makes it 
easier."
  
  "For them or for you?" Ender asked. He didn't wait for an answer. He turned 
quickly to Bean, took his hand for a moment, and then headed for the door.
  
  "Wait," said Bean. "Where are you going? Tactical? Navigational? Support?"
  
  "Command School," Ender answered.
  
  "Pre-command?"
  
  "Command," said Ender, and then he was out the door, Anderson followed him 
closely. Bean grabbed Colonel Graff by the sleeve. "Nobody goes to Command 
School until they're sixteen!"
  
  Graff shook off Bean's hand and left, closing the door behind him.
  
  Bean stood alone in the room, trying to grasp what this might mean. Nobody 
went to Command School without three years of Pre-command in either Tactical or 
Support. But then, nobody left Battle School without at least six years, and 
Ender had had only four.
  
  The system is breaking up. No doubt about it. Either somebody at the top is 
going crazy, or something's gone wrong with the war, the real war, the bugger 
war. Why else would they break down the training system like this, wreck tne 
game the way they did? Why else woud they put a little kid like me in command of 
an army?
  
  Bean wondered about it as he walked back down the corridor to his own bed. The 
lights went out just as he reached his bunk. He undressed in darkness, fumbling 
to put his clothing in a locker he couldn't see. He felt terrible. At first he 
thought he felt bad because he was afraid of leading an army, but it wasn't 
true. He knew he'd make a good commander. He felt himself wanting to cry. He 
hadn't cried since the first few days of homesickness after he got here. He 
tried to put a name on the feeling that put a lump in his throat and made him 
sob silently, however much he tried to hold it down. He bit down on his hand ta 
stop the feeling, to replace it with pain. It didn't heip. He would never sec 
Ender again.
  
  Once he named the feeling, he could control it. He lay back and forced himself 
to go through tne relaxing routine until he didn't feel like crying anymore. 
Then he drifted off to sleep. His hand was near his mouth. It lay on his pillow 
hesitantly, as if Bean couldn't decide whether to bite his nails or suck on his 
fingertips. His forehead was creased and furrowed. His breathing was quick and 
light. He was a soldier, and if anyone had asked him what he wanted to be when 
he grew up, he wouldn't have known what they meant.
  
  ***
  
  When he was crossing into the shuttle, Ender noticed for the lirst time that 
the insignia on Major Anderson's uniform had changed. "Yes, he's a colonel now," 
said Graff. "In fact, Major Anderson has been placed in command of the Battle 
School, as of this afternoon. I have been reassigned to other duties."
  
  Ender did not ask him what they were.
  
  Graff strapped himself into a seat across the aisle from him. There was only 
one other passenger, a quiet man in civilian clothes who was introduced as 
General Pace. Pace was carrying a briefcase, but carried no more luggage than 
Ender did. Somehow that was comforting to Ender, that Graff also came away 
empty.
  
  Ender spoke only once on the voyage home. "Why are we going home?" he asked. 
"I thought Command School was in the asteroids somewhere."
  
  "It is," said Graff. "But the Battle School has no facilities for docking 
long-range ships. So you get a short landside leave."
  
  Ender wanted to ask if that meant he could see his family. But suddenly, at 
the thought that it might be possible, he was afraid, and so he didn't ask. Just 
closed his eyes and tried to sleep. Behind him, General Pace was studying him; 
for what purpose, Ender could not guess.
  
  It was a hot summer afternoon in Florida when they landed. Ender had been so 
long without sunlight that the light nearly blinded him, He squinted and sneezed 
and wanted to get back indoors. Everything was far away and flat; the ground, 
lacking the upward curve of Battle School floors, seemed instead to fall away, 
so that on level ground Ender felt as though he were on a pinnacle. The pull of 
real gravity felt different and he scuffed his feet when he walked. He hated it. 
He wanted to go back home, back to the Battle School, the only place in the 
universe where he belonged.
  
  ***
  
  "Arrested?"
  
  "Well, it's a natural thought. General Pace is the head of the military 
police. There *was* a death in the Battle School."
  
  "They didn't tell me whether Colonel Graff was being promoted or 
court-martialed. Just transferred, with orders to report to the Polemarch."
  
  "Is that a good sign or bad?"
  
  "Who knows? On the one hand, Ender Wiggin not only survived, he passed a 
threshold, he graduated in dazzlingly good shape, you have to give old Graff 
credit for that. On the other hand, there's the fourth passenger on the shuttle. 
The one travelina in a bag."
  
  "Only the second death in the history of the school. At least it wasn't a 
suicide this time."
  
  "How is murder better, Major Imbu?"
  
  "It wasn't murder, Colonel. We have it on video from two angles. No one can 
blame Ender."
  
  "But they might blame Graff. After all this is over, the civilians can rake 
over our files and decide what was right and what was not. Give us medals where 
they think we were rignt, take away our pensions and put us in jail where they 
decide we were wrong. At leatt they had the good sense not to tell Ender that 
the boy died."
  
  "Its the second time, too."
  
  "They didn't tell him about Stilson, either."
  
  "The kid is scary."
  
  "Ender Wiggin isn't a killer. He just wins -- thoroughly. If anybody's going 
to be scared, let it be the buggers"
  
  "Makes you almost feel sorry for them, knowing Ender's going to be coming 
after them."
  
  "The only one I feel sorry for is Ender. But not sorry enough to suggest they 
ought to let up on him. I just got access to the material that Graff's been 
geffing all this time. About fleet movements, that sort of thing. I used to 
sleep easy at night."
  
  "Time's getting short?"
  
  "I shouldn't have mentioned it. I can't tell you secured information."
  
  "I know."
  
  "Let's leave it at this: they didn't get him to Command School a day too soon. 
And maybe a couple of years too late."
  
  
  
  Chapter 13 -- Valentine
  
  "Children?"
  
  "Brother and sister. They had layered themselves five times through the nets 
-- writing for companies that paid for their memberships, that sort of thing. 
Devil of a time tracking them down."
  
  "What are they hiding?"
  
  "Could be anything. The most obvious thing to hide, though, is their ages. The 
boy is fourteen, the girl is twelve."
  
  "Which one is Demosthenes?"
  
  "The girl. The twelve-year-old."
  
  "Pardon me. I don't really think it's funny, but I can't help but laugh. All 
this time we've been worried, all the time we've been trying to persuade the 
Russians not to take Demosthenes too seriously, we held up Locke as proof that 
Americans weren't all crazy warmongers. Brother and sister, prepubescent--"
  
  "And their last name is Wiggin."
  
  "Ah. Coincidence?"
  
  "*The* Wiggin is a third. They are one and two."
  
  "Oh, excellent. The Russians will never believe--"
  
  "That Demosthenes and Locke aren't as much under our control as *the* Wiggin."
  
  "Is there a conspiracy? Is someone controlling them?"
  
  "We have been able to detect no contact between these two children and any 
adutl who might be directing them."
  
  "That is not to say that someone might not have invented some method you can't 
detect. It's hard to believe that two children--"
  
  "I interviewed Colonel Graff when he arrived from the Battle School. It is his 
best judgment that nothing these children have done is out of their reach. Their 
abilities are virtually identical with -- *the* Wiggin. Only their temperaments 
are different. What surprised him, however, was the orientation of the two 
personas. Demosthenes is definitely the girl, but Graff says the girl was 
rejected for Battle School because she was too pacific, too conciliatory, and 
above all, too empathic."
  
  "Definitely not Demosthenes."
  
  "And the boy has the soul of a jackal."
  
  "Wasn't it Locke that was recently praised as 'The only truly open mind in 
America'?"
  
  "It's hard to know what's really happening. But Graff recommended, and I 
agree, that we should leave them alone. Not expose them. Make no report at this 
time except that we have determined that Locke and Dernosthenes have no foreign 
connections and have no connections with any domestic group, either, except 
those pubiicly declared on the nets."
  
  "In other words, give them a clean bill of health,"
  
  "I know Demosthenes seems dangerous, in part because he or she has such a wide 
following. But I think it's significant that the one of the two of them who is 
most ambitious has chosen the moderate, wise persona. And they're still just 
talking. They have influence, but no power."
  
  "In my experience, influence is power."
  
  "If we ever find them getting out of line, we can easily expose them."
  
  "Only in the next few years. The longer we wait, the older they get, and the 
less shocking it is to discover who they are."
  
  "You know what the Russian troop movements have been. There's always the 
chance that Demosthene is right. In which case--"
  
  "We'd better have Demosthones around. All right. We'll show them clean, for 
now. But watch them. And I, of course, have to find ways of keeping the Russians 
calm."
  
  ***
  
  In spite of all her misgivings, Valentine was having fun being Demosthenes. 
Her column was now being carried on practically every newsnet in the country, 
and it was fun to watch the money pile up in her attorney's accounts. Every now 
and then she and Peter would, in Demosthenes' name, donate a carefully 
calculated sum to a particular candidate or cause: enough money that the 
donation would be noticed, but not so much that the candidate would feel she was 
trying to buy a vote. She was getting so many letters now that her newsnet had 
hired a secretary to answer certain classes of routine correspondence for her. 
The fun fetters, from national and international leaders, sometimes hostile, 
sometimes friendly, always diplomatically trying to pry into Demosthenes' mind 
-- those she and Peter read together, laughing in delight sometimes that people 
like *this* were writing to children, and didn't know it.
  
  Sometimes, though, she was ashamed. Father was reading Demosthenes regularly; 
he never read Locke, or if he did, he said nothing about it. At dinner, though, 
he would often regale them with some telling point Demosthenes had made in that 
day's column. Peter loved it when Father did that -- "See, it shows that the 
common man is paying attention" -- but it made Valentine feel humiliated for 
Father. If he ever found out that all this time *I* was writine the columns he 
told us about, and that I didn't even believe half the things I wrote, he would 
be angry and ashamed.
  
  At school, she once nearly got them in trouble, when her history teacher 
assigned the class to write a paper contrasting the views of Demosthenes and 
Locke as expressed in two of their early columns. Valentine was careless, and 
did a brirrliant job of analysis. As a result, she had to work hard to talk the 
principal out of having her essay published on the very newsnet that carried 
Demosthenes' column. Peter was savage about it. "You write too much like 
Demosthenes, you can't get published, I should kill Demosthenes now, you're 
getting out of control."
  
  If he raged about that blunder, Peter frightened her still more when he went 
silent. It happened when Demosthenes was invited to take part in the President's 
Council on Education for the Future, a blue-ribbon panel that was designed to do 
nothing, but do it splendidly. Valentine thought Peter would take it as a 
triumph, but he did not. "Turn it down," he said,
  
  "Why should I?" she asked, "It's no work at all, and they even said that 
because of Demosthenes' well-known desire for privacy, they would net all the 
meetings. It makes Demosthenes into a respectable person, and--"
  
  "And you love it that you got that before I did."
  
  "Peter, it isn't you and me, it's Demosthenes and Locke. We made them up. They 
aren't real. Besides, this appointment doesn't mean they like Demosthenes better 
than Locke, it just means that Demosthenes has a much stronger base of support. 
You knew he would. Appointing him pleases a large number of Russian-haters and 
chauvinists."
  
  "It wasn't supposed to work this way. Locke was supposed to be the respected 
one."
  
  "He is! Real respect takes longer than official respect. Peter, don't be angry 
at me because I've done well with the things you told me to do."
  
  But he was angry, for days, and ever since then he had left her to think 
through all her own columns, instead of telling her what to write. He probably 
assumed that this would make the quality of Demosthenes' columns deteriorate, 
but if it did no one noticed. Perhaps it made him even angrier that she never 
came to him weeping tor help. She had been Demosthenes too long now to need 
anyone to tell her what Demosthenes would think about things.
  
  And as her correspondence with other politically active citizens grew, she 
began to learn things, information that simply wasn't available to the general 
public. Certain military people who corresponded with her dropped hints about 
things without meaning to, and she and Peter put them together to build up a 
fascinating and frightening picture of Warsaw Pact activity. They were indeed 
preparing for war, a vicious and bloods earthbound war. Demosthenes wasn't wrong 
to suspect that the Warsaw Pact was not abiding by the terms of the League.
  
  And the character of Demosthenes gradually took on a life of his own. At times 
she found herself thinking like Demosthenes at the end of a writing session, 
agreeing with ideas that were supposed to be calculated poses. And sometimes she 
read Peter's Locke essays and found herself annoyed at his obvious blindness to 
what was really going on.
  
  Perhaps it's impossible to wear an identity without becoming what you pretend 
to be. She thought of that, worried about it for a few days, and then wrote a 
column using that as a premise, to show that politicians who toadied to the 
Russians in order to keep the peace would inevitably end up subservient to them 
in everything.  It was a lovely bite at the party in power, and she got a lot of 
good mail about it. She also stopped being frightened of the idea of becoming, 
to a degree, Demosthenes. He's smarter than Peter and I ever gave him credit 
for, she thought.
  
  Graff was waiting for her after school. He stood leaning on his car. He was in 
civilian clothes, and he had gained weight, so she didn't recognize him at 
first. But he beckoned to her, and before he could introduce himself she 
remembered his name.
  
  "I won't write another letter," she said. "I never should have written that 
one.
  
  "You don't like medals, then, I guess."
  
  "Not much."
  
  "Come for a ride with me, Valentine."
  
  "I don't ride with strangers."
  
  He handed her a paper. It was a release form, and her parents had signed it.
  
  "I guess you're not a stranger. Where are we going?"
  
  "To see a young soldier who is in Greensboro on leave."
  
  She got in the car. "Ender's only ten years old," she said. "I thought you 
told us the first time he'd be eligible for a leave was when he was twelve."
  
  "He skipped a few grades."
  
  "So he's doing well?"
  
  "Ask him when you see him."
  
  "Why me? Why not the whole family?"
  
  Graff sighed. "Ender sees the world his own way. We had to persuade him to see 
you. As for Peter and your parents, he was not interested. Life at the Battle 
School was -- intense."
  
  "What do you mean, he's gone crazy?"
  
  "On the contrary, he's the sanest person I know. He's sane enough to know that 
his parents are not particularly eager to reopen a book of affection that was 
closed quite tightly four years ago. As for Peter -- we didn't even suggest a 
meeting, and so he didn't have a chance to tell us to go to hell."
  
  They went out Lake Brandt Road and turned offjust past the lake, following a 
road that wound down and up until they came to a white clapboard mansion that 
sprawled along the top of a hill. It looked over Lake Brandt on one side and a 
five-acre private lake on the other. "This is the house that Medly's Mist-E-Rub 
built," said Graff. "The IF picked it up in a tax sale about twenty years ago. 
Ender insisted that his conversation with you should not be bugged. I promised 
him it wouldn't be, and to help inspire confidence, the two of you are going out 
on a raft he built himself. I should warn you, though. I intend to ask you 
questions about your conversation when it is finished. You don't have to answer, 
but I hope you will."
  
  "I didn't bring a swimming suit."
  
  "We can provide one."
  
  "One that isn't bugged?"
  
  "At some point, there must be trust. For insance, I know who Demosthenes 
really is."
  
  She felt a thrill of fear run through her, hut said nothing.
  
  "I've known since I landed from the Battle School, There are, perhaps, six of 
us in the world who know his identity. Not counting the Russians -- God only 
knows what they know. But Demosthenes has nothing to fear from us. Demosthenes 
can trust our discretion. Just as I trust Demosthenes not to tell Locke what's 
going on here today. Mutual trust. We tell each other things."
  
  Valentine couldn't decide whether it was Demosthenes they approved of, or 
Valentine Wiggin. If the former, she would not trust them; if the latter, the 
perhaps she could. The fact that they did not want her to discuss this with 
Peter suggested that perhaps they knew the difference between them. She did not 
stop to wonder whether she herself knew the difference any more.
  
  "You said he built the raft. How long has be been here?"
  
  "Two months. We meant his leave to last only a few days. But you see, he 
doesn't seem interested in going on with his education."
  
  "Oh. So I'm therapy again."
  
  "This time we can't censor your letter, We're just taking our chances. We need 
your brother badly. Humanity is on the cusp."
  
  This time Val had grown up enough to know just how much danger the world was 
in. And she had been Demosthenes long enough that she didn't hesitate to do her 
duty. "Where is he?"
  
  "Down at the boat slip."
  
  "Where's the swimming suit?"
  
  Ender didn't wave when she walked down the hill toward him, didn't smile when 
she stepped onto the floating boat slip. But she knew that he was glad to see 
her, knew it because of the way his eyes never left her face.
  
  "You're bigger than I remembered," she said stupidly.
  
  "You too," he said. "I also remembered that you were beautiful."
  
  "Memory does play tricks on us."
  
  "No. Your face is the same, but I don't remember what beautiful means anymore. 
Come on. Let's go out into the lake."
  
  She looked at the small raft with misgivings.
  
  "Don't stand up on it, that's all," he said. He got on by crawling, 
spiderlike, on toes and fingers. "It's the first thing I built with my own hands 
since you and I used to build with blocks. Peter-proof buildings."
  
  She laughed. They used to take pleasure in building things that would stand up 
even when a lot of the obvious supports had been removed. Peter, in turn, liked 
to remove a block here or there, so the structure would be fragile enough that 
the next person to touch it would knock it down. Peter was an ass, but he did 
provide some focus to their childhood.
  
  "Peter's changed," she said.
  
   "Let's not talk about him," said Ender.
  
  "All right."
  
  She crawled onto the boat, not as deftly as Ender. He used a paddle to 
maneuver them slowly toward the center of the private lake. She noticed aloud 
that he was sunbrowned and strong.
  
  "The strong part comes from Battle School. The sunbrowning comes from this 
lake. I spend a lot of time on the water. When I'm swimming, it's like being 
weightless. I miss being weightless. Also, when I'm here on the lake, the land 
slopes up in every direction."
  
  "Like living in a bowl."
  
  "I've lived in a bowl for four years."
  
  "So we're strangers now?"
  
  "Aren't we, Valentine?"
  
  "No," she said. She reached out and touched his leg. Then, suddenly, she 
squeezed his knee, right where he had always been most ticklish.
  
  But almost at the same moment, he caught her wrist in his hand. His grip was 
very strong, even though hts hands were smaller than hers and his own arms were 
slender and tight. For a moment he looked dangerous; then he relaxed. "Oh, yes," 
he said. "You used to tickle me."
  
  In answer, she dropped herself over the side of the raft. The water was clear 
and clean, and there was no chlorine in it. She swam for a while, then returned 
to the raft and lay on it in the hazy sunlight. A wasp circled her, then landed 
on the raft beside her head. She knew it was there, and ordinarily would have 
been afraid of it. But not today. Let it walk on this raft, let it bake in the 
sun as I'm doing.
  
  Then the raft rocked, and she turned to see Ender calmly crushing the life out 
of the wasp with one finger. "These are a nasty breed," Ender said. "They sting 
you without waiting to be insulted first," He smiled. "I've been learning about 
preemptive strategies. I'm very good. No one ever beat me. I'm the best soldier 
they ever had."
  
  "Who would expect less?" she said. "You're a Wiggin."
  
  "Whatever that means," he said.
  
  "It means that you are going to make a difference in the world." And she told 
him what she and Peter were doing.
  
  "How old is Peter, fourteen? Already planning to take over the world?"
  
  "He thinks he's Alexander the Great. And why shouldn't he be? Why shouldn't 
you be, too?"
  
  "We can't both be Alexander."
  
  "Two faces of the same coin. And I am the metal in between." Even as she said 
it, she wondered if it was true. She had shared so much with Peter these last 
few years that even when she thought she despised him, she understood him. While 
Ender had been only a memory till now. A very small, fragile boy who needed her 
protection. Not this cold-eyed, dark-skinned manling who kills wasps with his 
fingers. Maybe he and Peter and I are all the same, and have been all along. 
Maybe we only thought we were different from each other out of jealousy.
  
  "The trouble with coins is, when one face is up, the other face is down."
  
  And right now you think you're down. "They want me to encourage you to go on 
with your studies."
  
  "They aren't studies, they're games. All games, from beginning to end, only 
they change the rules whenever they feel like it." He held up a limp hand. "See 
the strings?"
  
  "But you can use them, too."
  
  "Only if they want to be used. Only if they think they're using you. No, it's 
too hard, I don't want to play anymore. Just when I start to be happy, just when 
I think I can handle things, they stick in anothet knife. I keep having 
nightmares, now that I'm here. I dream I'm in the battleroom, only instead of 
being weightless, they're playing games with gravity. They keep changing its 
direction. So I never end up on the wall I launched for. I never end up where I 
meant to go. And I keep pleading with them just to let me get to the door, and 
they won't let me out, they keep sucking me back in."
  
  She heard the anger in his voice and assumed it was directed at her. "I 
suppose that's what I'm here for. To suck you back in."
  
  "I didn't want to see you."
  
  "They told me."
  
  "I was afraid that I'd still love you."
  
  "I hoped that you would."
  
  "My fear, your wish -- both granted."
  
  "Ender, it really is true. We may be young, but we're not powerless. We play 
by their rules long enough, and it becomes our game." She giggled. "I'm on a 
presidential commission. Peter is so angry."
  
  "They don't let me use the nets. There isn't a computer in the place, except 
the household machines that run the security system and the lighting. Ancient 
things. Installed back a century ago, when they made computers that didn't hook 
up with anything. They took away my army, they took away my desk, and you know 
something? I don't really mind."
  
  "You must be good company for yourself."
  
  "Not me. My memories."
  
  "Maybe that's who you are, what you remember."
  
  "No. My memories of strangers. My memories of the buggers."
  
  Valentine shivered, as if a cold breeze had suddenly passed. "I refuse to 
watch the bugger vids anymore. They're always the same.
  
  "I used to study them for hours. The way their ships move through space. And 
something funny, that only occurred to me lying out here on the lake. I realized 
that all the battles in which buggers and humans fought hand to hand, all those 
are from the First Invasion. All the scenes from the Second Invasion, when our 
soldiers are in IF uniforms, in those scenes the buggers are always already 
dead. Lying there, slumped over their controls. Not a sign of struggle or 
anything. And Mazer Rackham's battle -- they never show us any footage from that 
battle."
  
  "Maybe it's a secret weapon."
  
  "No, no, I don't care about how we killed them. It's the buggers themselves. I 
don't know anything about them, and yet someday I'm supposed to fight them. I've 
been through a lot of fights in my life, sometimes games, sometimes -- not 
games. Every time, I've won because I could understand the way my enemy thought. 
From what they *did*. I could tell what they thought I was doing, how they 
wanted the battle to take shape. And I played off of that. I'm very good at 
that. Understanding how other people think."
  
  "The curse of the Wiggin children." She joked, but it frightened her, that 
Ender might understand her as completely as he did his enemies. Peter always 
understood her, or at least thought he did, but he was such a moral sinkhole 
that she never had to feel embarrassed when he guessed even her worst thoughts. 
But Ender -- she did not want him to understand her. It would make her naked 
before him. She would be ashamed. "You don't think you can beat the buggers 
unless you know them."
  
  "It goes deeper than that. Being here alone with nothing to do, I've been 
thinking about myself, too. Trying to understand why I hate myself so badly."
  
  "No, Ender."
  
  "Don't tell me 'No, Ender.' It took me a long time to realize that I did, but 
believe me, I did. Do. And it came down to this: In the moment when I truly 
understand my enemy, understand him well enough to defeat him, then in that very 
moment I also love him. I think it's impossible to really understand somebody, 
what they want, what they believe, and not love them the way they love 
themselves. And then, in that very moment when I love them--"
  
  "You beat them." For a moment she was not afraid of his understanding.
  
  "No, you don't understand. I destroy them. I make it impossible for them to 
ever hurt me again. I grind them and grind them until they don't exist."
  
  "Of course you don't." And now the fear came again, worse than before. Peter 
has mellowed, but you, they've made you into a killer. Two sides of the same 
coin, but which side is which?
  
  "I've really hurt some people, Val. I'm not making this up."
  
  "I know, Ender." How will you hurt me?
  
  "See what I'm becoming, Val?" he said softly. "Even you are afraid of me." And 
he touched her cheek so gently that she wanted to cry. Like the touch of his 
soft baby hand when he was still an infant. She remembered that, the touch of 
his soft and innocent hand on her cheek.
  
  "I'm not," she said, and in that moment it was true.
  
  "You should be."
  
  No. I shouldn't. "You're going to shrivel up if you stay in the water. Also, 
the sharks might get you.
  
  He smiled. "The sharks learned to leave me alone a long time ago." But he 
pulled himself onto the raft, bringing a wash of water across it as it tipped. 
It was cold on Valentine's back.
  
  "Ender, Peter's going to do it. He's smart enough to take the time it takes, 
but he's going to win his way into power -- if not right now, then later. I'm 
not sure yet whether that'll be a good thing or a bad thing. Peter can be cruel, 
but he knows the getting and keeping of power, and there are signs that once the 
bugger war is over, and maybe even before it ends, the world will collapse into 
chaos again. The Warsaw Pact was on its way to hegemony before the First 
Invasion. If they try for it afterward--"
  
  "So even Peter might be a better alternative."
  
  "You've been discovering some of the destroyer in yourself, Ender. Well, so 
have I. Peter didn't have a monopoly on that, whatever the testers thought. And 
Peter has some of the builder in him. He isn't kind, but he doesn't break every 
good thing he sees anymore. Once you realize that power will always end up with 
the sort of people who crave it, I think that there are worse people who could 
have it than Peter."
  
  "With that strong a recommendation, I could vote for him myself."
  
  "Sometimes it seems absolutely silly. A fourteen-year-old boy and his kid 
sister plotting to take over the world." She tried to laugh. It wasn't funny. 
"We aren't just ordinary children, are we. None of us."
  
  "Don't you sometimes wish we were?"
  
  She tried to imagine herself being like the other girls at school. Tried to 
imagine life if she didn't feel responsible for the future of the world. "It 
would be so dull."
  
  "I don't think so." And he stretched out on the raft, as if he could lie on 
the water forever.
  
  It was true. Whatever they did to Ender in the Battle School, they had spent 
his ambition. He really did not want to leave the sun-warmed waters of this 
bowl.
  
  No, she realized. No, he *believes* that he doesn't want to leave here, but 
there is still too much of Peter in him. Or too much of me. None of us could be 
happy for long, doing nothing. Or perhaps it's just that none of us could be 
happy living with no other company than ourself.
  
  So she began to prod again. "What is the one name that everyone in the world 
knows?"
  
  "Mazer Rackham."
  
  "And what if you win the next war, the way Mazer did?"
  
  "Mazer Rackham was a fluke. A reserve. Nobody believed in him. He just 
happened to be in the right place at the right time."
  
  "But suppose you do it. Suppose you beat the buggers and your name is known 
the way Mazer Rackham's name is known."
  
  "Let somebody else be famous. Peter wants to be famous. Let him save the 
world."
  
  "I'm not talking about fame, Ender. I'm not talking about power, either. I'm 
talking about accidents, just like the accident that Mazer Rackham happened to 
be the one who was there when somebody had to stop the buggers."
  
  "If I'm here," said Ender, "then I won't be there. Somebody else will. Let 
them have the accident."
  
  His tone of weary unconcern infuriated her. "I'm talking about my life, you 
self-centered little bastard." If her words bothered him, he didn't show it. 
Just lay there, eyes closed. "When you were little and Peter tortured you, it's 
a good thing I didn't lie back and wait for Mom and Dad to save you. They never 
understood how dangerous Peter was. I knew you had the monitor, but I didn't 
wait for them, either. Do you know what Peter used to do to me because I stopped 
him from hurting you?"
  
  "Shut up," Ender whispered.
  
  Because she saw that his chest was trembling, because she knew that she had 
indeed hurt him, because she knew that just like Peter, she had found his 
weakest place and stabbed him there, she fell silent.
  
  "I can't beat them," Ender said softly, "I'll be out there like Mazer Rackham 
one day, and everybody will be depending on me, and I won't be able to do it."
  
  "If you can't, Ender, then nobody could. If you can't beat them, then they 
deserve to win because they're stronger and better than us. It won't be your 
fault."
  
  "Tell it to the dead."
  
  "If not you, then who?"
  
  "Anybody."
  
  "Nobody, Ender. I'll tell you something. If you try and lose then it isn't 
your fault. But if you don't try and we lose, then it's all your fault. You 
killed us all."
  
  "I'm a killer no matter what."
  
  "What else should you be? Human beings didn't evolve brains in order to lie 
around on lakes. Killing's the first thing we learned. And a good thing we did, 
or we'd be dead, and the tigers would own the earth."
  
  "I could never beat Peter. No matter what I said or did. I never could."
  
  So it came back to Peter. "He was years older than you. And stronger."
  
  "So are the buggers."
  
  She could see his reasoning. Or rather, his unreasoning. He could win all he 
wanted, but he knew in his heart that there was always someone who could destroy 
him, He always knew that he had not really won, because there was Peter, 
undefeated champion.
  
  "You want to beat Peter?" she asked.
  
  "No," he answered.
  
  "Beat the buggers. Then come home and see who notices Peter Wiggin anymore. 
Look him in the eye when all the world loves and reveres you. That'll be defeat 
in his eyes, Ender. That's how you win."
  
  "You don't understand," he said.
  
  "Yes I do."
  
  "No you don't. I don't want to beat Peter."
  
  "Then what do you want?"
  
  "I want him to love me."
  
  She had no answer. As far as she knew, Peter didn't love anybody.
  
  Ender said nothing more. Just lay there. And lay there.
  
  Finally Valentine, the sweat dripping off her, the mosquitos beginning to 
hover as the dusk came on, took one final dip in the water and then began to 
push the raft in to shore. Ender showed no sign that he knew what she was doing, 
but his irregular breathing told her that he was not asleep. When they got to 
shore, she climbed onto the dock and said, "I love you, Ender. More than ever. 
No matter what you decide."
  
  He didn't answer. She doubted that he believed her. She walked back up the 
hill, savagely angry at them for making her come to Ender like this. For she 
had, after all, done just what they wanted. She had talked Ender into going back 
into his training, and he wouldn't soon forgive her for that.
  
  ***
  
  Ender came in the door, still wet from his last dip in the lake. It was dark 
outside, and dark in the room where Graff waited for him.
  
  "Are we going now?" asked Ender.
  
  "If you want to," Graff said.
  
  "When?"
  
  "When you're ready."
  
  Ender showered and dressed. He was finally used to the way civilian clothes 
fit together, but he still didn't feel right without a uniform or a flash suit. 
I'll never wear a flash suit again, he thought. That was the Battle School game, 
and I'm through with that. He heard the crickets chirping madly in the woods; in 
the near distance he heard the crackling sound of a car driving slowly on 
gravel.
  
  What else should he take with him? He had read several of the books in the 
library. but they belonged to the house and he couldn't take them. The only 
thing he owned was the raft he had made with his own hands. That would stay 
here, too.
  
  The lights were on now in the room where Graff waited. He, too, had changed 
clothing. He was back to uniform.
  
  They sat in the back seat of the car together, driving along country roads to 
come at the airport from the back. "Back when the population was growing," said 
Graff, "they kept this area in woods and farms. Watershed land. The rainfall 
here starts a lot of rivers flowing, a lot of underground water moving around. 
The Earth is deep, and right to the heart it's alive, Ender. We people only live 
on the top, like the bugs that live on the scum of the still water near the 
shore."
  
  Ender said nothing.
  
  "We train our commanders the way we do because that's what it takes -- they 
have to think in certain ways. They can't be distracted by a lot of things, so 
we isolate them. You. Keep you separate. And it works. But it's so easy, when 
you never meet people, when you never know the Earth itself, when you live with 
metal walls keeping out the cold of space, it's easy to forget why Earth is 
worth saving. Why the world of people might be worth the price you pay."
  
  So that's why you brought me here, thought Ender. With all your hurry, that's 
why you took three months, to make me love Earth. Well, it worked. All your 
tricks worked. Valentine, too; she was another one of your tricks, to make me 
remember that I'm not going to school for myself. Well, I remember.
  
  "I may have used Valenrine," said Graff, "and you may hate me for it, Ender, 
but keep this in mind -- it only works because what's between you, that's real, 
that's what matters. Billions of those connections between human beings. That's 
what you're fighting to keep alive."
  
  Ender turned his face to the window and watched the helicopters and dirigibles 
rise and fall.
  
  They took a helicopter to the IF spaceport at Stumpy Point. lt was officially 
named for a dead Hegemon, but everybody called it Stumpy Point, after the 
pitiful little town that had been paved over when they made the approaches to 
the vast islands of steel and concrete that dotted Pamlico Sound. There were 
still waterbirds taking their fastidious little steps in the saltwater, where 
mossy trees dipped down as if to drink. It began to rain lightly, and the 
concrete was black and slick; it was hard to tell where it left off and the 
Sound began.
  
  Graif led him through a maze of clearances. Authority was a little plastic 
ball that Graff carried. He dropped it into chutes, and doors opened and people 
stood up and saluted and the chutes spat out the ball and Graff went on. Ender 
noticed that at first everyone watched Graff, but as they penetrated deeper into 
the spaceport, people began watching Ender. At first it was the man of real 
authority they noticed, but later, where everyone had authority, it was his 
cargo they cared to see.
  
  Only when Graff strapped himself into the shuttle seat beside him hid Ender 
realize Graff was going to launch with him.
  
  "How far?" asked Ender. "How far are you going with me?"
  
  Graff smiled thinly. "All the way, Ender."
  
  "Are they making you administrator of Command School?"
  
  "No."
  
  So they had removed Graff from his post at Battle School solely to accompnany 
Ender to his next assignment. How important am I, he wondered. And like a 
whisper of Peter's-voice inside his mind, he heard the question, How can I use 
this?
  
  He shuddered and tried to think of something else. Peter could have fantasies 
about ruling the world, but Ender didn't have them. Still, thinking back on his 
life in Battle School, it occurred to him that although he bad never sought 
power, he had always had it. But he decided that it was a power born of 
excellence, not manipulation. He had no reason to be ashamed of it. He had 
never, except perhaps with Bean, used his power to hurt someone. And with Bean, 
things had worked well after all. Bean had become a friend, finally, to take the 
place of the lost Alai, who in turn took the place of Valentine. Valentine, who 
was helping Peter in his plotting. Valentine, who still loved Ender no matter 
what happened. And following that train of thought led him back to Earth, back 
to the quiet hours in the center of the clear water ringed by a bowl of 
tree-covered hills. That is Earth, he thought. Not a globe thousands of 
kilometers around, but a forest with a shining lake, a house hidden at the crest 
of the hill, high in the trees, a grassy slope leading upward from the water, 
fish leaping and birds strafing to take the bugs that lived at the border 
between water and sky. Earth was the constant noise of crickets and winds and 
birds. And the voice of one girl, who spoke to him out of his far-off childhood. 
The same voice that had once protected him from terror. The same voice that he 
would do anything to keep alive, even return to school, even leave Earth behind 
again for another four or forty or four thousand years. Even if she loved Peter 
more.
  
  His eyes were closed, and he had not made any sound but breathing; still, 
Graff reached out and touched his hand across the aisle. Ender stiffened in 
surprise, and Graff soon withdrew, but for a moment Ender was struck with the 
startling thought that perhaps Graff felt some affection for him. But no, it was 
just another calculated gesture. Graff was creating a commander out of a little 
boy. No doubt Unit 17 in the course of studies included an affectionate gesture 
from the teacher.
  
  The shuttle reached the IPL satellite in only a few hours. Inter-Planetary 
Launch was a city of three thousand inhabitants, breathing oxygen from the 
plants that also fed them, drinking water that had already passed through their 
bodies ten thousand times, living only to service the tugs that did all the 
oxwork in the solar system and the shuttles that took their cargos and 
passengers back to the Earth or the Moon. It was a world where, briefly, Ender 
felt at home, since its floors sloped upward as they did in the Battle School.
  
  Their tug was fairly new; the IF was constantly casting off its old vehicles 
and purchasing the latest models. It had just brought a vast load of drawn steel 
processed by a factory ship that was taking apart minor planets in the asteroid 
belt. The steel would be dropped to the Moon, and now the tug was linked to 
fourteen barges. Graff dropped his ball into the reader again, however, and the 
barges were uncoupled from the tug. It would be making a fast run this time, to 
a destination of Graff's specification, not to be stated until the tug had cut 
loose from IPL.
  
  "It's no great secret," said the tug's captain. "Whenever the destination is 
unknown, it's for ISL." By analogy with IPL, Ender decided the letters meant 
Inter-Stellar Launch.
  
  "This time it isn't," said Graff.
  
  "Where then?"
  
  "IF. Command."
  
  "I don't have security clearance even to know where that is, sir."
  
  "Your ship knows," said Graff. "Just let the computer have a look at this, and 
follow the course it plots." He handed the captain the plastic ball.
  
  "And I'm supposed to close my eyes during the whole voyage, so I don't figure 
out where we are?"
  
  "Oh, no, of course not. I.E. Command is on the minor planet Eros, which should 
be about three months away from here at the highest possible speed. Which is the 
speed you'll use, of course."
  
  "Eros? But I thought that the buggers burned that to a radioactive -- ah. When 
did I receive security clearance to know this?"
  
  "You didn't. So when we arrive at Eros, you will undoubtedly be assigned to 
permanent duty there."
  
  The captain understood immediately, and didn't like it. "I'm a pilot, you son 
of a bitch, and you got no right to lock me up on a rock!"
  
  "I will overlook your derisive language to a superior officer. I do apologize, 
but my orders were to take the fastest available military tug. At the moment I 
arrived, that was you. It isn't as though anyone were out to get you. Cheer up. 
The war may be over in another fifteen years, and then the location of IF 
Command won't have to be a secret anymore. By the way, you should be aware, in 
case you're one of those who relies on visuals for docking, that Eros has been 
blacked out. Its albedo is only slightly brighter than a black hole. You won't 
see it."
  
  "Thanks," said the captain.
  
  It was nearly a month into the voyage before he managed to speak civilly to 
Colonel Graff.
  
  The shipboard computer had a limited library -- it was geared primarily to 
entertainment rather than education. So during the voyage, after breakfast and 
morning exercises, Ender and Graff would usually talk. About Command School, 
About Earth. About astronomy and physics and whatever Ender wanted to know.
  
  And above all, he wanted to know about the buggers.
  
  "We don't know much," said Graff. "We've never had a live one in custody. Even 
when we caught one unarmed and alive, he died the moment it became obvious he 
was captured. Even the he is uncertain -- the most likely thing, in fact, is 
that most bugger soldiers are females, but with atrophied or vestigial sexual 
organs. We can't tell. It's their psychology that would be most useful to you, 
and we haven't exactly had a chance to interview them."
  
  "Tell me what you know, and maybe I'll learn something that I need."
  
  So Graff told him. The buggers were organisms that enuld conceivably have 
evolved on Earth, if things had gone a different way a billion years ago. At the 
molecular level, there were no surprises. Even the genetic material was the 
same. It was no accident that they looked insectlike to human beings.  Though 
their internal organs were now much more complex and specialized than any 
insects, and they had evolved an internal skeleton and shed most of the 
exoskeleton, their physical structure still echoed their ancestors, who could 
easily have been very much like Earth's ants. "But don't be fooled by that," 
said Graff. "It's just as meaningful to say that our ancestors could easily have 
been very much like squirrels."
  
  "If that's all we have to go on, that's somethig," said Ender.
  
  "Squirrels never built starships," said Graff. "There are usually a few 
changes on the way from gathering nuts and seeds to harvesting asteroids and 
putting permanent research stations on the moons of Saturn."
  
  The buggers could probably see about the same spectrum of light as human 
beings, and there was artificial lighting in their ships and ground 
installations. However, their antennae seemed airnost vestigial. There was no 
evidence from their bodies that smelling, tasting, or hearing were particularly 
important to them. "Of course, we can't be sure. But we can't see any way that 
they could have used sound for communication. The oddest thing of all was that 
they also don't have any communication devices on their ships. No radios, 
nothing that could transimit or receive any kind of signal."
  
  "They communicate ship to ship. I've seen the videos, they talk to each 
other."
  
  "True. But body to body, mind to mind. It's the most important thing we 
learned from them. Their communication, however they do it, is instantaneous. 
Lightspeed is no barrier. When Mazer Rackham defeated their invasion fleet, they 
all closed up shop. At once. There was no time for a signal. Everything just 
stopped."
  
  Ender remembered the videos of uninjured buggers lying dead at their posts.
  
  "We knew then that it was possible to communicate faster than light. That was 
seventy years ago, and once we knew it could be done, we did it. Not me, mind 
you, I wasn't born then."
  
  "How is it possible?"
  
  "I can't explain philotic physics to you. Half of it nobody understands 
anyway. What matters is we built the ansible. The official name is Philotic 
Parallax Instantaneous Communicator, but somebody dredged the name ansible out 
of an old book somewhere and it caught on. Not that most people even know the 
machine exists."
  
  "That means that ships could talk to each other even when they're across the 
solar system," said Ender.
  
  "It means," said Graff, "that ships could talk to each other even when they're 
across the galaxy. And the buggers can do it without machines."
  
  "So they knew about their defeat the moment it happened," said Ender. "I 
always figured -- everybody always said that they probably only found out they 
lost the battle twenty five years ago."
  
  "It keeps people from panicking," said Graff. "I'm telling you things that you 
can't know, by the way, if you're ever going to leave IF Command. Before the 
war's over."
  
  Ender was angry. "If you know me at all, you know I can keep a secret."
  
  "It's a regulation. People under twenty-five are assumed to be a security 
risk. It's very unjust to a good many responsible children, but it helps narrow 
the number of people who might let something slip."
  
  "What's all the secrecy for, anyway?"
  
  "Because we've taken some terrible risks, Ender, and we don't want to have 
every net on earth second-guessing those decisions. You see, as soon as we had a 
working ansible, we tucked it into our best starships and launched them to 
attack the buggers home systems."
  
  "Do we know where they are?"
  
  "Yes."
  
  "So we're not waiting for the Third Invasion."
  
  "We *are* the Third Invasion."
  
  "We're attacking them. Nobody says that. Everybody thinks we have a huge fleet 
of warships waiting in the comet shield--"
  
  "Not one. We're quite defenseless here."
  
  "What if they've sent a fleet to attack us?"
  
  "Then we're dead. But our ships haven't seen such a fleet, not a sign of one."
  
  "Maybe they gave up and they're planning to leave us alone."
  
  "Maybe. You've seen the videos. Would you bet the human race on the chance of 
them giving up and leaving us alone?"
  
  Ender tried to grasp the amounts of time that had gone by. "And the ships have 
been traveling for seventy years--"
  
  "Some of them. And some for thirty years, and some for twenty. We make better 
ships now. We're learning how to play with space a lttle better. But every 
starship that is not still under construction is on its way to a bugger world or 
outpost. Every starship, with cruisers and fighters tucked into its belly, is 
out there approaching the buggers. Decelerating. Because they're almost there. 
The first ships we sent to the most distant objectives, the more recent ships to 
the closer ones. Our timing was pretty good. They'll all be arriving in combat 
range within a few months of each other. Unfortunately, our most primitive, 
outdated equipment will be attacking their homeworld. Still, they're armed well 
enough -- we have some weapons the buggers never saw before."
  
  "When will they arrive?"
  
  "Within the next five years. Ender. Everything is ready at IF Command. The 
master ansible is there, in contact with all our invasion fleet; the ships are 
all working, ready to fight. All we lack, Ender, is the battle commander. 
Someone who knows what the hell to do with those ships when they get there."
  
  "And what if no one knows what to do with them?"
  
  "We'll just do our best, with the best commander we can get."
  
  Me, thought Ender, they want me to be ready in five years. "Colonel Graff, 
there isn't a chance I'll be ready to command a fleet in time."
  
  Graff shrugged. "So. Do your best. If you aren't ready, we'll make do with 
what we've got."
  
  That eased Ender's mind,
  
  But only for a moment, "Of course, Ender, what we've got right now is nobody."
  
  Ender knew that this was another of Graff's games. Make me believe that it all 
depends on me, so I can't slack off, so I push myself as hard as possible.
  
  Game or not, though, it might also be true. And so he would work as hard as 
possible. It was what Val had wanted of him. Five years. Only five years until 
the fleet arrives, and I don't know anything yet, "I'll only be fifteen in five 
years," Ender said.
  
  "Going on sixteen," said Graff. "It all depends on what you know."
  
  "Colonel Graff," he said. "I just want to go back and swim in the lake."
  
  "After we win the war," said Graff, "Or lose it. We'll have a few decades 
before they get back here to finish us off. The house will be there, and I 
promise you can swim to your heart's content."
  
  "But I'll still be too young for security clearance."
  
  "We'll keep you under armed guard at all times. The military knows how to 
handle these things."
  
  They both laughed, and Ender had to remind himself that Graff was only acting 
like a friend, that everything he did was a lie or a cheat calculated to turn 
Ender into an efficient fighting machine. I'll become exactly the tool you want 
me to be, said Ender silently, but at least I won't be *fooled* into it. I'll do 
it because I choose to, not because you tricked me, you sly bastard.
  
  The tug reached Eros before they could see it. The captain showed them the 
visual scan, then superimposed the heat scan on the same screen. They were 
practically on top of it -- only four thousand kilometers out -- but Eros, only 
twenty-four kilometers long, was invisible if it didn't shine with reflected 
sunlight.
  
  The captain docked the ship on one of the three landing platforms that circled 
Eros. It could not land directly because Eros had enhanced gravity, and the tug, 
designed for towing eargos, could never escape the gravity well. He bade them an 
irritable goodbye, but Ender and Graff remained cheerful. The captains was 
bitter at having to leave his tug; Ender and Graff felt like prisoners finally 
paroled from jail. When they boarded the shuttle that would take them to the 
surface of Eros they repeated perverse misquotations of lines from the videos 
that the captain had endlessly watched, and laughed like madmen. The captain 
grew surly and withdrew by pretending to go to sleep. Then, almost as an 
afterthought, Ender asked Graff one last question.
  
  "Why are we fighting the buggers?"
  
  "I've heard all kinds of reasons," said Graff. "Because they have an 
overcrowded system and they've got to colonize. Because they can't stand the 
thought of other intelligent life in the universe. Because they don't think we 
are intelligent life. Because they have some weird religion. Because they 
watched our old video broadcasts and decided we were hopelessly violent. All 
kinds of reasons."
  
  "What do you believe?"
  
  "It doesn't matter what I believe."
  
  "I want to know anyway."
  
  "They must talk to each other directly, Ender, mind to mind. What one thinks, 
another can also think; what one remembers, another can also remember. Why would 
they ever develop language? Why would they ever learn to read and write? How 
would they know what reading and writing were if they saw them? Or signals? Or 
numbers? Or anything that we use to communicate? This isn't just a matter of 
translating from one language to another. They don't have a language at all. We 
used every means we could think of to communicate with them, but they don't even 
have the machinery to know we're signaling. And maybe they've been trying to 
think to us, and they can't understand why we don't respond."
  
  "So the whole war is because we can't talk to each other."
  
  "If the other fellow can't tell you his story, you can never be sure he isn't 
trying to kill you."
  
  "What if we just left them alone?"
  
  "Ender, we didn't go to them first, they came to us. If they were going to 
leave us alone, they could have done it a hundred years ago, before the First 
Invasion."
  
  "Maybe they didn't know we were intelligent life. Maybe--"
  
  "Ender, believe me, there's a century of discussion on this very subject. 
Nobody knows the answer. When it comes down to it, though, the real decision is 
inevitable: if one of us has to be destroyed, let's make damn sure we're the 
ones alive at the end. Our genes won't let us decide any other way. Nature can't 
evolve a species that hasn't a will to survive. Individuals might be bred to 
sacrifice themselves, but the race as a whole can never decide to cease to 
exist. So if we can, we'll kill every last one of the buggers, and if they can 
they'll kill every last one of us."
  
  "As for me," said Ender, "I'm in favor of surviving."
  
  "I know," sail Graff. "That's why you're here."
  
  
  
  Chapter 14 -- Ender's Teacher
  
  "Took your time, didn't you, Graff? The voyage isn't short, but the three 
month vacation seems excessive."
  
  "I prefer not to deliver damaged merchandise."
  
  "Some men simply have no sense of hurry. Oh well, it's only the fate of the 
world. Never mind me, You must understand our anxiety. We're here with the 
ansible, receiving constant reports of the progress of our starships. We have to 
face the coming war every day. If you can call them days. He's such a very 
*little* boy."
  
  "There's greatness in him. A magnitude of spirit."
  
  "A killer instinct, too, I hope."
  
  "Yes."
  
  "We've planned out an impromptu course of study for him. All subject to your 
approval, of course."
  
  "I'll look at it. I don't pretend to know the subject matter, Admiral 
Chamrajnagar. I'm only here because I know Ender. So don't be afraid that I'll 
try to second guess the order of your presentation. Only the pace."
  
  "How much can we tell him?"
  
  "Don't waste his time on the physics of interstellar travel."
  
  "What about the ansible?"
  
  "I already told him about that, and the fleets. I said they would arrive at 
their destination within five years."
  
  "It seems there's very little left for us to tell him."
  
  "You can tell him about the weapons systems. He has to know enough to make 
intelligent decisions."
  
  "Ah. We can be useful after all, how very kind, We've devoted one of the five 
simulators to his exclusive use."
  
  "What about the others?"
  
  "The other simulators?"
  
  "The other children."
  
  "You were brought here to take care of Ender Wiggin."
  
  "Just curious. Remember, they were all my students at one time or another."
  
  "And now they are all mine. They are entering into the mysteries of the fleet, 
Colonel Graff, to which you, as a soldier, have never been introduced."
  
  "You make it sound like a priesthood."
  
  "And a god. And a religion. Even those of us who command by ansible know the 
majesty of flight among the stars. I can see you find my mysticism distasteful. 
I assure you that your distaste only reveals your ignorance. Soon enough Ender 
Wiggin will also know what I know; he will dance the graceful ghost dance 
through the stars, and whatever greatness there is within him will be unlocked, 
revealed, set forth before the universe far all to see. You have the soul of a 
stone, Colonel Graff, but I sing to a stone as easily as to another singer. You 
may go to your quarters and establish yourself."
  
  "I have nothing to establish except the clothing I'm wearing."
  
  "You own nothing?"
  
  "They keep my salary in an account somewhere on Earth. I've never needed it. 
Except to buy civilian clothes on my vacation."
  
  "A non-materialist. And yet you are unpleasantly fat. A gluttonous ascetic? 
Such a contradiction."
  
  "When I'm tense, I eat. Whereas when you're tense, you spout solid waste."
  
  "I like you, Colonel Graff. I think we shall get along."
  
  "I don't much care, Admiral Chamrajnagar. I came here for Ender. And neither 
of us came here for you."
  
  ***
  
  Ender hated Eros from the moment he shuttled down from the tug. He had been 
uncomfortable enough on Earth, where floors were flat; Eros was hopeless. It was 
a roughly spindle-shaped rock only six and a half kilometers thick at its 
narrowest point. Since the surface of the planet was entirely devoted to 
absorbing sunlight and converting it to energy, everyone lived in the 
smooth-walled rooms linked by tunnels that laced the interior of the asteroid. 
The closed-in space was no problem for Ender -- what bothered him was that all 
the tunnel floors noticeably sloped downward. From the start, Ender was plagued 
by vertigo as he walked through the tunnels, especially the ones that girldled 
Eros's narrow circumference. It did not help that gravity was only half of 
Earth-normal -- the illusion of being on the verge of falling was almost 
complete.
  
  There was also something disturbing about the proportions of the rooms -- the 
ceilings were too low for the width, the tunnels too narrow. It was not a 
comfortable place.
  
  Worst of all, though, was the number of people. Ender had no important 
memories of cities of Earth. His idea of a comfortable number of people was the 
Battle School, where he had known by sight every person who dwelt there. Here, 
though, ten thousand people lived within the rock. There was no crowding, 
despite the amount of space devoted to iife support and other machinery. What 
bothered Ender was that he was constantly surrounded hy strangers.
  
  They never let him come to know anyone. He saw the other Command School 
students often, but since be never attended any class regularly, they remained 
only faces. He would attend a lecture here or there, but usually he was tutored 
y one teacher after another, or occassionally helped to learn a process by 
another student, whom he met once and never saw again. He ate alone or with 
Colonel Graff. His recreation was in a gym, but he rarely saw the same people in 
it twice.
  
  He recognized that they were isolating him again, this time not by setting the 
other students to hating him, but rather by giving them no opportunity to become 
friends. He could hardly have been close to most of them anyway -- except for 
Ender, the other students were all well into adolescence.
  
  So Ender withdrew into his studies and learned quickly and well. Astrogation 
and military history he absorbed like water; abstract mathematics was more 
difficult, but whenever he was given a problem that involved patterns in space 
and time, he found that his intuition was more reliable than his calculation -- 
he often saw at once a solution that he could only prove after minutes or hours 
of manipulating numbers.
  
  And for pleasure, there was the simulator, the most perfect videogame he had 
ever played. Teachers and students trained him, step by step, in its use. At 
first, not knowing the awesome power of the game, he had played only at the 
tactical level, controlling a single fighter in continuous maneuvers to find and 
destroy an enemy. The computer-controlled enemy was devious and powerful, and 
whenever Ender tried a tactic he found the computer using it against him within 
minutes.
  
  The game was a holographic display, and his fighter was represented only by a 
tiny light. The enemy was another light of a different color, and they danced 
and spun and maneuvered through a cube of space that must have been ten meters 
to a side. The controls were powerful. He could rotate the display in any 
direction, so he could watch from any angle, and he could move the center so 
that the duel took place nearer or farther from him.
  
  Gradually, as he became more adept at controlling the fighter's speed, 
direction of movement, orientation, and weapons, the game was made more complex. 
He might have two enemy ships at once; there might be obstacles, the debris of 
space; he began to have to worry about fuel and limited weapons; the computer 
began to assign him particular things to destroy or accomplish, so that he had 
to avoid distractions and achieve an objective in order to win.
  
  When he had mastered the one-fighter game, they allowed him to step back into 
the four-fighter squadron. He spoke commands to simulated pilots of four 
fighters, and instead of merely carrying out the computer's instructions, he was 
allowed to determine tactics himself, deciding which of several objectives was 
the most valuable and directing his squadron accordingly. At any time he could 
take personal command of one of the fighters for a short time, and at first he 
did this often; when he did, however, the other three fighters in his squadron 
were soon destroyed, and as the games became harder and harder he had to spend 
more and more of his time commanding the squadron. When he did, he won more and 
more often.
  
  By the time he had been at Command School for year, he was adept at running 
the simulator at any of fifteen levels, from controlling an individual fighter 
to commanding a fleet. He had long since realized that as the battleroom was to 
Battle School, so the simulator was to Command School. The classes were 
valuable, but the real education was the game. People dropped in from time to 
time to watch him play. They never spoke -- hardly anyone ever did, unless they 
had something specific to teach him. The watchers would stay, silently, watching 
him run through a difficult simulation, and then leave just as he finished. What 
are you doing, he wanted to ask. Judging me? Determining whether you want to 
trust the fleet to me? Just remember that I didn't ask for it.
  
  He found that a great deal of what he learned at Battle School transferred to 
the simulator. He would routinely reorient the simulator every few minutes, 
rotating it so that he didn't get trapped into an up-down orientation, 
constantly reviewing his positoon from the enemy point of view. It was 
exhilarating at last to have such control over the battle, to be able to see 
every point of it.
  
  It was also frustrating to have so little control, too, for the 
computer-controlled fighters were only as good as the computer allowed. They 
took no initiative. They had no intelligence. He began to wish for his toon 
leaders, so that he could count on some of the squadrons doing well without 
having his constant supervision.
  
  At the end of his first year he was winning every battle on the simulator, and 
played the game as if the machine were a natural part of his body. One day, 
eating a meal with Graff, he asked, "Is that all the simulator does?"
  
  "Is what all?"
  
  "The way it plays now, It's easy, and it hasn't got any harder for a while."
  
  "Oh."
  
  Graff seemed unconcerned. But then, Graff always seemed unconcerned. The next 
day everything changed. Graff went away, and in his place they gave Ender a 
companion.
  
  ***
  
  He was in the room when Ender awoke in the morning. He was an old man, sitting 
cross-legged on the floor. Ender looked at him expectantly, waiting for the man 
to speak. He said nothing. Ender got up and showered and dressed, content to let 
the man keep his silence if he wanted. He had long since learned that when 
something unusual was going on, something that was part of someone else's plan 
and not his own, he would find out more information by waiting than by asking. 
Adults almost always lost their patience before Ender did.
  
  The man still hadn't spoken when Ender was ready and went to the door to leave 
the room. The door didn't open. Ender turned to face the man sitting on the 
floor. He looked to be about sixty, by far the oldest man Ender had seen on 
Eros. He had a day's growth of white whiskers that grizzled his face only 
slightly less than his close-cut hair. His face sagged a little and his eyes 
were surrounded by creases and lines. He looked at Ender with an expression that 
bespoke only apathy.
  
  Ender turned back to the door and tried again to open it.
  
  "All right," he said, giving up. "Why's the door locked?"
  
  The old man continued to look at him blankly.
  
  So this is a game, thought Ender. Well, if they want me to go to class, 
they'll unlock the door. If they don't, they won't. I don't care.
  
  Ender didn't like games where the rules could be anything and the objective 
was known to them alone. So he wouldn't play. He also refused to get angry. He 
went through a relaxing exercise as he leaned on the door, and soon he was calm 
again. The old man continued to watch him impassively.
  
  It seemed to go on for hours, Ender refusing to speak, the old man seeming to 
be a mindless mute.
  
  Sometimes Ender wondered if he were mentally ill, escaped from some medical 
ward somewhere in Eros, living out some insane fantasy here in Ender's room. But 
the longer it went on, with no one coming to the door, no one looking for him, 
the more certain he became that this was something deliberate, meant to 
disconcert him. Ender did not want to give the old man the victory. To pass the 
time he began to do exercises. Some were impossible without the gym equipment, 
but others, especially from his personal defense class, he could do without any 
aids.
  
  The exercises moved him around the room. He was practicing lunges and kicks. 
One move took him near the old man, as he had come near him before, but this 
time the old claw shot out and seized Ender's left leg in the middle of a kick. 
It pulled Ender off his feet and landed him heavily on the floor.
  
  Ender leapt to his feet immediately, furious. He found the old man sitting 
calmly, cross-legged, not breathing heavily, as if he had never moved. Ender 
stood poised to fight, but the other's immobility made it impossible for Ender 
to attack. What, kick the old man's head off? And then explain it to Graff -- 
oh, the old man kicked me, and I had to get even.
  
  He went back to his exercises; the old man kept watching.
  
  Finally, tired and angry at this wasted day, a prisoner in his room, Ender 
went back to his bed to get his desk. As he leaned over to pick up the desk, he 
felt a hand jab roughly between his thighs and another hand grab his hair. In a 
moment he had been turned upside down. His face and shoulders were being pressed 
into the floor by the old man's knee, while his back was excruciatingly bent and 
his legs were pinioned by the old man's arm.
  
  Ender was helpless to use his arms, he couldn't bend his back to gain slack so 
he could use his legs. In less than two seconds the old man had completely 
defeated Ender Wiggin.
  
  "All right," Ender gasped. "You win."
  
  The man's knee thrust painfully downward. "Since when," asked the man, his 
voice soft and rasping, "do you have to tell the enemy when be has won?"
  
  Ender remained silent.
  
  "I surprised you once, Ender Wiggin. Why didn't you destroy tne immediately 
afterward? Just because I looked peaceful? You turned your back on me. Stupid. 
You have learned nothing. You have never had a teacher."
  
  Ender was angry now, and made no attempt to control or conceal it. "I've had 
too many teachers, how was I supposed to know you'd turn out to be a--"
  
  "Au enemy, Ender Wiggin," whispered the old man. "I am your enemy, the first 
one you've ever had who was smarter than you. There is no teacher but the enemy. 
No one but the enemy will ever tell you what the enemy is going tu do. No one 
but the enemy will ever teach you how to destroy and conquer. Only the enemy 
shows you where you are weak. Only the enemy tells you where he is strong. And 
the only rules of the game are what you can do to him and what you can stop him 
from doing to you. I am your enemy from now on. From now on I am your teacher."
  
  Then the old man let Ender's legs fall. Because he still held Ender's head to 
the floor, the boy couldn't use his arms to compensate, and his legs hit the 
surface with a loud crack and a sickening pain. Then the old man stood and let 
Ender rise.
  
  Slowly Ender pulled his legs under him, with a faint groan of pain. He knelt 
on all fours for a moment, recovering. Then his right arm flashed out, reaching 
for his enemy. The old man quickly danced back, and Ender's hand closed on air 
as his teacher's foot shot forward to catch Ender on the chin.
  
  Ender's chin wasn't there. He was lying flat on his back, spinning on the 
floor, and during the moment that his teacher was off balance from his kick, 
Ender's feet smashed into the old man's other leg. He fell in a heap -- but 
close enough to strike out and hit Ender in the face. Ender couldn't find an arm 
or a leg that held still long enough to be grabbed, and in the meantime blows 
were landing on his back and arms. Ender was smaller -- he couldn't reach past 
the old man's flailing limbs. Finally he managed to pull away and scramble back 
near the door.
  
  The old man was sitting cross-leged again, but now the apathy was gone. He was 
smiling. "Better, this time, boy. But slow. You will have to be better with a 
fleet than you are with your body or no one will be safe with you in command. 
Lesson learned?"
  
  Ender nodded slowly. He ached in a hundred places.
  
  "Good," said the old man. "Then we'll never have to have such a battle again. 
All the rest with the simulator. I will program your battles now, not the 
computer; I will devise the strategy of your enemy, and you will learn to be 
quick and discover what tricks the enemy has for you. Remember, boy. From now on 
the enemy is more clever than you. From now on the enemy is stronger than you. 
From now on you are always about to lose."
  
  The old man's face grew serious again. "You will be about to lose, Ender, but 
you will win. You will learn to defeat the enemy. He will teach you how."
  
  The teacher got up. "In this school, it has always been the practice for a 
young student to be chosen by an older student. The two become companions, and 
the older boy teaches the younger one everything he knows. Always they fight, 
always they compete, always they are together. I have chosen you."
  
  Ender spoke as the old man walked to the door. "You're too old to be a 
student."
  
  "One is never too old to be a student of the enemy. I have learned from the 
buggers. You will learn from me."
  
  As the old man palmed the door open, Ender leaped into the air and kicked him 
in the small of the back with both feet. He hit hard enough that he rebounded 
onto his feet, as the old man cried out and collapsed on the floor.
  
  The old man got up slowly, holding onto the door handle, his face contorted 
with pain. He seemed disabled, but Ender didn't trust him. Yet in spite of his 
suspicion, he was caught off guard by the old man's speed. In a moment he found 
himself on the floor near the opposite wall, his nose and lip bleeding where his 
face had hit the bed. He was able to turn enough to see the old man standing in 
the doorway, wincing and holding his back. The old man grinned.
  
  Ender grinned back. "Teacher," he said. "Do you have a name?"
  
  "Mazer Rackham," said the old man. Then he was gone.
  
  ***
  
  From then on, Ender was either with Mazer Rackham or alone. The old man rarely 
spoke, but he was there; at meals, at tutorials, at the simulator, in his room 
at night. Sometimes Mazer would leave, but always, when Mazer wasn't there, the 
door was locked, and no one came until Mazer returned. Ender went through a week 
in which he called him Jailor Rackham, Mazer answered to the name as readily as 
to his own, and showed no sign that it bothered him at all. Ender soon gave it 
up.
  
  There were compensations -- Mazer took Ender through the videos of the old 
batties from the First Invasion and the disastrous defeats of the IF in the 
Second Invasion. These were not pieced together from the censored public videos, 
but whole and continuous. Since many videos were working in the major battles, 
they studied bugger tactics and strategies from many angles. For the first time 
in his life, a teacher was pointing out things that Ender had not already seen 
for himself. For the first time, Ender had found a living mind he could admire.
  
  "Why aren't you dead?" Ender asked him. "You fought your battle seventy years 
ago. I don't think you're even sixty years old."
  
  "The miracles of relativity," said Mazer. "They kept me here for twenty years 
after the battle, even though I begged them to let me command one of the 
starships they launched against the bugger home planet and the bugger colonies. 
Then they -- came to understand some things about the way soldiers behave in the 
stress of battle."
  
  "What things?"
  
  "You've never been taught enough psyholgy to understand. Enough to say that 
they realized that even though I would never be able to command the fleet -- I'd 
be dead before the fleet even arrived -- I was still the only person able to 
understand the things I understood about the buggers. I was, they realized, the 
only person who had ever defeated the bugeers by intelligence rather than luck. 
They needed me here to teach the person who *could* command the fleet."
  
  "So they sent you out in a starship, got you up to a relativistic speed--"
  
  "And then I turned around and came home. A very dull voyage, Ender. Fifty 
years in space. Officially, only eight years passed for me, but it felt like 
five hundred. All so I could teach the next commander everything I knew."
  
  "Am I to be the commander, then?"
  
  "Let's say that you're our best bet at present."
  
  "There are others being prepared, too?"
  
  "No."
  
  "That makes me the only choice, then, doesn't it'?"
  
  Mazer shrugged.
  
  "Except you. You're still alive, aren't you? Why not you?"
  
  Mazer shook his head.
  
  "Why not? You won before."
  
  "I cannot be the commander for good and sufficient reasons."
  
  "Show me how you beat the buggers, Mazer."
  
  Mayer's face went inscruta ble.
  
  "You've shown me every other battle seven times at least. I think I've seen 
ways to beat what the buggers did before, but you've never shown me how you 
actually did beat them."
  
  "The video is a very tightly kept secret, Ender."
  
  "I know. I've pieced it together, partly. You, with your tiny reserve force, 
and their armada, those great big heavy-bellied starships launching their swarms 
of fighters. You dart in at one ship, fire at it, an explosion. That's where 
they always stop the clips. After that, it's just soldiers going into bugger 
ships and already finding them dead inside."
  
  Mazer grinned. "So much for tightly kept secrets. Come on, let's watch the 
video."
  
  They were alone in the video room, and Ender palmed the door locked. "All 
right, let's watch."
  
  The video showed exactly what Ender had pieced together. Mazer's suicidal 
plunge into the heart of the enemy formation, the single explosion, and then--
  
  Nothing. Mazer's ship went on, dodged the shock wave, and wove his way among 
tOe other bugger ships. They did not fire on him. They did not change course. 
Two of them crashed into each other and exploded a needless collision that 
either pilot could have avoided. Neither made the slightest movement.
  
  Mazer sped up the action. Skipped ahead. "We waited for three hours," he said. 
"Nobody could believe it." Then the IF ships began approaching the bugger 
starships. Marines began their cutting and boarding operations. The videos 
showed the buggers already dead at their posts.
  
  "So you see," said Mazer, "you already knew all there was to see."
  
  "Why did it happen?"
  
  "Nobody knows. I have my personal opinions. But there are plenty of scientists 
who tell me I'm less than qualified to have opinions."
  
  "You're the one who won the battle."
  
  "I thought that qualified me to comment, too, but you know how it is. 
Xenobiologists and xenopsychologists can't accept the idea that a starpilot 
scooped them by sheer guesswork. I think they all hate me because, after they 
saw these videos, they had to live out the rest of their natural lives here on 
Eros. Security, you know. They weren't happy."
  
  "Tell me."
  
  "The buggers don't talk. They think to each other, and it's instantaneous like 
the philotic effect. Like the ansible. But most people always thought that meant 
a controlled comunication like language -- I think you a thought and then you 
answer me. I never believed that. It's too immediate, the way they respond 
together to things. You've seen the videos. They aren't conversing and deciding 
among possible courses of action. Every ship acts like part of a single 
organism. It responds the way your body responds during combat, different parts 
automatically, thoughtlessly doing everything they're supposed to do. They 
aren't having a mental conversation between peopie with different thought 
processes. All their thoughts are present, together, at once."
  
  "A single person, and each bugger is like a hand or a foot?"
  
  "Yes. I wasn't the first person to suggest it, but I was the first person to 
believe it. And something else. Something so childish and stupid that the 
xenobiologists laughed me to silence when I said it after the battle. The 
buggers are bugs. They're like ants and bees. A queen, the workers. That was 
maybe a hundred million years ago, but that's how they started, that kind of 
pattern. It's a sure thing none of the buggers we saw had any way of making more 
little buggers. So when they evolved this ability to think together, wouldn't 
they still keep the queen? Wouldn't the queen still be the center of the group? 
Why would that ever change?"
  
  "So it's the queen who controls the whole group."
  
  "I had evidence, too. Not evidence that any of them could see. lt wasn't there 
in the First Invasion, because that was exploratory. But the Second Invasion was 
a colony. To set up a new hive, or whatever."
  
  "And so they brought a queen."
  
  "The videos of the Second Invasion, when they were destroying our fleets out 
in the comet shell." He began to call them up and display the buggers' patterns. 
"Show me the queen's ship."
  
  It was subtle. Ender couldn't see it for a long time. The bugger ships kept 
moving, all of them. There was no obvious flagship, no apparent nerve center. 
But gradually, as Mazer played the videos over and over again, Ender began to 
see the way that all the movements focused on, radiated from a center point. The 
center point shifted, but it was obvious, after he looked long enough, that the 
eyes of the fleet, the *I* of the fleet, the perspective from which all 
decisions were being made, was one particular ship. He pointed it out.
  
  "You see it. I see it. That makes two people out of all of those who have seen 
this video. But it's true, isn't it."
  
  "They make that ship move just like any other ship."
  
  "They know it's their weak point."
  
  "But you're right. That's the queen. But then you'd think that when you went 
for it, they would have immediately focused all their power on you. They could 
have blown you out of the sky."
  
  "I know. That part I don't understand. Not that they didn't try to stop me -- 
they were firing at me. But it's as if they really couldn't believe, until it 
was too late, that I would actually kill the queen. Maybe in their world, queens 
are never killed, only captured, only checkmated. I did something they didn't 
think an enemy would ever do."
  
  "And when she died vhe others all died,"
  
  "No, they just went stupid. The first ships we boarded, the buggers were still 
alive. Organically. But they didn't move, didn't respond to anything, even when 
our scientists vivisected some of them to see if we could learn a few more 
things about buggers. After a while they all died. No will. There's nothing in 
those little bodies when the queen is gone."
  
  "Why don't they believe you?"
  
  "Because we didn't find a queen."
  
  "She got blown to pieces."
  
  "Fortunes of war. Biology takes second place to survival. But some of them are 
coming around to my way of thinking. You can't live in this place without the 
evidence staring you in the face."
  
  "What evidence is there in Eros?"
  
  "Ender, look around you. Human beings didn't carve this place. We like taller 
ceilings, for one thing. This was the buggers' advance post in the First 
Invasion. They carved this place out before we even knew they were here. We're 
living in a bugger hive. But we already paid our rent. lt cost the marines a 
thousand lives to clear them out of these honeycombs, room by room. The buggers 
fought for every meter of it."
  
  Now Ender understood why the rooms had always felt wrong to him. "I knew this 
wasn't a human place."
  
  "This was the treasure trove. If they had known we would win that first war, 
they probably' would never have built this place. We learned gravity 
manipulation because they enhanced the gravity here. We learned efficient use of 
stellar energy because they blacked out this planet. In fact, that's how we 
discovered them. In a period of three days, Eros gradually disappeared from 
telescopes. We sent a tug to find out why. It found out. The tug transmitted its 
videos, including the buggers boarding and slaughtering the crew. It kept right 
on transmitting through the entire bugger examination of the boat. Not until 
they finally dismantled the entire tug did the transmissions stop. It was their 
blindness -- they never had to transmit anything by machine, and so with the 
crew dead, it didn't occur to them that anybody could be watching."
  
  "Why did they kill the crew?"
  
  "Why not? To them, losing a few crew members would be like clipping your 
nails. Nothing to get upset about. They probably thought they were routinely 
shutting down our communications by turning off the workers running the tug. Not 
murdering living, sentient beings with an independent genetic future. Murder's 
no big deal to them. Only queen-killing, really, is murder, because only 
queen-killing closes off a genetic path."
  
  "So they didn't know what they were doing."
  
  "Don't start apologizing for them, Ender. Just because they didn't know they 
were killing human beings doesn't mean they weren't killing human beings. We do 
have a right to defend ourselves as best we can, and the only way we found that 
works is killing the buggers before they kill us. Think of it this way. In all 
the bugger wars so far, they've killed thousands and thousands of living, 
thinking beings. And in all those wars, we've killed only one."
  
  "If you hadn't killed the queen, Mazer, would we have lost the war?"
  
  "I'd say the odds would have been three to two against us. I still think I 
could have trashed their fleet pretty badly before they burned us out. They have 
great response time and a lot of firepower, but we have a few advantages, too. 
Every single one of our ships contains an intelligent human being who's thinking 
on his own. Every one of us is capable of coming up with a brilliant solution to 
a problem. They can only come up with one brilliant solution at a time. The 
buggers think fast, but they aren't smart all over. Even when some incredibly 
timid and stupid commanders lost the major battles of the Second Invasion, some 
of their subordinates were able to do real damage to the bugger fleet."
  
  "What about when our invasion reaches them? Will we just get the queen again?"
  
  "The buggers didn't learn interstellar travel by being dumb. That was a 
strategy that could work only once. I suspect that we'll never get near a queen 
unless we actually make it to their home planet. After all, the queen doesn't 
have to be with them to direct a battle. The queen only has to be present to 
have little baby buggers. The Second invasion was a colony -- the queen was 
coming to populate the Earth. But this time -- no, that won't work. We'll have 
to beat them fleet by fleet. And because they have the resources of dozens of 
star systems to draw on, my guess is they'll outnumber us by a lot, in every 
battle."
  
  Ender remembered his battle against two armies at once. And I thought they 
were cheating. When the real war begins, it'll be like that every time. And 
there won't be any gate I can go for.
  
  "We've only got two things going for us, Ender. We don't have to aim 
particularly well. Our weapons have great spread."
  
  "Then we aren't using the nuclear missiles from the First and Second 
Invasions?"
  
  "Dr. Device is much more powerful. Nuclear weapons, after all, were weak 
enough to be used on Earth at one time. The Little Doctor could never be used on 
a planet. Still, I wish I'd had one during the Second Invasion."
  
  "How does it work?"
  
  "I don't know, not well enough to build one. At the focal point of two beams, 
it sets up a field in which molecules can't hold together anymore. Electrons 
can't be shared. How much physics do you know, at that level?"
  
  "We spend most of our time on astrophysics, but I know enough to get the 
idea."
  
  "The field spreads out in a sphere, but it gets weaker the farther it spreads. 
Except that where it actually runs into a lot of molecules, it gets stronger and 
starts over. The bigger the ship, the stronger the new field."
  
  "So each time the field hits a ship, it sends out a new sphere--"
  
  "And if their ships are too close together, it can set up a chain that wipes 
them all out. Then the field dies down, the molecules come back together, and 
where you had a ship, you now have a lump of dirt with a lot of iron molecules 
in it. No radioactivity, no mess. Just dirt. We may be able to trap them close 
together on the first battle, but they learn fast. They'll keep their distance 
from each other."
  
  "So Dr. Device isn't a missile -- I can't shoot around corners.
  
  "That's right. Missiles wouldn't do any good now. We learned a lot from them 
in the First Invasion, but they also learned from us -- how to set up the 
Ecstatic Shield, for instance."
  
  "The Little Doctor penetrates the shield?"
  
  "As if it weren't there. You can't see through the shield to aim and focus the 
beams, but since the generator of the Ecstatic Shield is always in the exact 
center, it isn't hard to figure it out."
  
  "Why haven't I ever been trained with this?"
  
  "You always have. We just let the computer tend to it for you. Your job is to 
get into a superior strategic position and choose a target. The shipboard 
computers are much better at aiming the Doctor than you are."
  
  "Why is it called Dr. Device?"
  
  "When it was developed, it was called a Molecular Detachment Device. M.D. 
Device."
  
  Ender still didn't understand.
  
  "M.D. The initials stand for Medical Doctor, too. M.D. Device, therefore Dr. 
Device. It was a joke." Ender didn't see what was funny about it.
  
  ***
  
  They had changed the simulator. He could still control the perspective and the 
degree of detail, but there were no ship's controls anymore. Instead, it was a 
new panel of levers, and a small headset with earphones and a small microphone.
  
  The technician who was waiting there quickly explained how to wear the 
headset.
  
  "But how do I control the ships?" asked Ender.
  
  Mazer explained. He wasn't going to control ships anymore. "You've reached the 
next phase of your training. You have experience in every level of strategy, but 
now it's time for you to concentrate on commanding an entire fleet. As you 
worked with toon leaders in Battle School, so now you will work with squadron 
leaders. You have been assigned three dozen such leaders to train. You must 
teach them intelligent tactics; you must learn their strengths and limitations; 
you must make them into a whole."
  
  "When will they come here?"
  
  "They're already in place in their own simulators. You will speak to them 
through the headset. The new levers on your control panel enable you to see from 
the perspective of any of your squadron leaders. This more closely duplicates 
the conditions you might encounter in a real battle, where you will only know 
what your ships can see."
  
  "How can I work with squadron leaders I never see?"
  
  "And why would you need to see them?"
  
  "To know who they are, how they think--"
  
  "You'll learn who they are and how they think from the way they work with the 
simulator. But even so, I think you won't be concerned. They're listening to you 
right now. Put on the headset so you can hear them."
  
  Ender put on the headset.
  
  "Salaam," said a whisner in his ears.
  
  "Alai," said Ender.
  
  "And me, the dwarf."
  
  "Bean."
  
  And Petra, and Dink; Crazy Tom, Shen, Hot Soup, Fly Molo, all the best 
students Ender had fought with or fought against, everyone that Ender had 
trusted in Battle School. "I didn't know you were here," he said, "I didn't know 
you were coming."
  
  "They've been flogging us through the simulator for three months now," said 
Dink.
  
  "You'll find that I'm by far the best tactician," said Petra. "Dink tries, but 
he has the mind ot a child."
  
  So they began working together, each squadron leader commanding individual 
pilots, and Ender commanding the squadron leaders. They learned many ways of 
working together, as the simulator forced them to try different situations. 
Sometimes the simulator gave them a larger fleet to work with; Ender set them up 
then in three or four toons that consisted of three or four squadrons each. 
Sometimes the simulator gave them a single starship with its twelve fighters, 
and he chose three squadron leaders with four fighters each.
  
  It was pleasure; it was play. The computer-controlled enemy was none too 
bright, and they always won despite their mistakes, their miscommunications. But 
in the three weeks they practiced together, Ender came to know them very well. 
Dink, who deftly carried out instructions but was slow to improvise; Bean, who 
couldn't control large groups of ships effectively but could use only a few like 
a scalpel, reacting beautifully to anything the computer threw at him; Alai, who 
was almost as good a strategist as Ender and could be entrusted to do well with 
half a fleet and only vague instructions.
  
  The better Ender knew them, the faster he could deploy them, the better he 
could use them. The simulator would display the situation on the screen. In that 
moment Ender learned for the first time what his own fleet would consist of and 
how the enemy fleet was deployed. It took him only a few minutes now to call for 
the squadron leaders that he needed, assign them to certain ships or groups of 
ships, and give them their assignments. Then, as the battle progressed, he would 
skip from one leader's point of view to another's, making suggestions and, 
occasionally, giving orders as the need arose. Since the others could only see 
their own battle perspective, he would sometimes give them orders that made no 
sense to them; but they, too, learned to trust Ender. If he told them to 
withdraw, they withdrew, knowing that either they were in an exposed position, 
or their withdrawal might entice the enemy into a weakened posture. They also 
knew that Ender trusted them to do as they judged best when he gave them no 
orders. If their style of fighting were not right for the situation they were 
placed in, Ender would not have chosen them for that assignment.
  
  The trust was complete, the working of the fleet quick and responsive. And at 
the end of three weeks, Mazer showed him a replay of their most recent battle, 
only this time from the enemy's point of view.
  
  "This is what he saw as you attacked. What does it remind you of? The 
quickness of response, for instance?"
  
  "We look like a bugger fleet."
  
  "You match them, Ender. You're as fast as they are. And here -- look at this."
  
  Ender watched as all his squadrons moved at once, each responding to its own 
situation, all guided by Ender's overall command, but daring, improvising, 
feinting, attacking with an independence no bugger fleet had ever shown.
  
  "The bugger hive-mind is very good, but it can only concentrate on a few 
things at once. All your squadrons can concentrate a keen intelligence on what 
they're doing, and what they've been assigned to do is also guided by a clever 
mind. So you see that you do have some advantages. Superior, though not 
irresistible, weaponry; comparable speed and greater available intelligence. 
These are your advantages. Your disadvantage is that you will always, always be 
outnumbered, and after each battle your enemy will learn more about you, how to 
fight you, and those changes will be put into effect instantly."
  
  Ender waited for his conclusion.
  
  "So, Ender, we will now begin your education. We have programmed the computer 
to simulate the kinds of situations we might expect in encounters with the 
enemy. We are using the movement patterns we saw in the Second Invasion. But 
instead of mindlessly following these same patterns, I will be controlling the 
enemy simulation. At first you will see easy situations that you are expected to 
win handily. Learn from them, because I will always be there, one step ahead of 
you, programming more difficult and advanced patterns into the computer so that 
your next battle is more difficult, so that you are pushed to the limit of your 
abilities."
  
  "And beyond?"
  
  "The time is short. You must learn as quickly as you can. When gave myself to 
starship travel, just so I would still be alive when you appeared, my wife and 
children all died, and my grandchildren were my own age when I came back. I had 
nothing to say to them. I was cut off from all the people that I loved, 
everything I knew, living in this alien catacomb and forced to do nothing of 
importance but teach student after student, each one so hopeful, each one, 
ultimately, a weakling, a failure. I teach, I teach, but no one learns. You, 
too, have great promise, like so many students before you, but the seeds of 
failure may be in you, too. It's my job to find them, to destroy you if I can, 
and believe me, Ender, if you can be destroyed I can do it."
  
  "So I'm not the first."
  
  "No, of course you're not. But you're the last. If you don't learn, there'll 
be no time to find anyone else. So I have hope for you, only because you are the 
only one left to hope for."
  
  "What about the others? My squadron leaders?"
  
  "Which of them is fit to take your place?"
  
  "Alai."
  
  "Be honest."
  
  Ender had no answer, then.
  
  "I am not a happy man, Ender. Humanity does not ask us to be happy. It merely 
asks us to be brilliant on its behalf. Survival first, then happiness as we can 
manage it. So, Ender, I hope you do not bore me during your training with 
complaints that you are not having fun. Take what pleasure you can in the 
interstices of your work, but your work is first, learning is first, winning is 
everything because without it there is nothing. When you can give me back my 
dead wife, Ender, then you can complain to me about what this education costs 
you."
  
  "I wasn't trying to get out of anything."
  
  "But you will, Ender. Because I am going to grind you down to dust, if I can. 
I'm going to hit you with everything I can imagine, and I will have no mercy, 
because when you face the buggers they will think of things I can't imagine, and 
compassion for human beings is impossible for them."
  
  "You can't grind me down, Mazer."
  
  "Oh, can't I?"
  
  "Because I'm stronger than you."
  
  Mazer smiled. "We'll see about that, Ender."
  
  ***
  
  Mazer wakened him before morning; the clock said 0340, and Ender felt groggy 
as he padded along the corridor behind Mazer. "Early to bed and early to rise," 
Mazer intoned, "makes a man stupid and blind in the eyes."
  
  He had been dreaming that buggers were vivisecting him. Only instead of 
cutting open his body, they were cutting up his memories and displaying them 
like holographs and trying to make sense of them. It was a very odd dream, and 
Ender couldn't easily shake loose of it, even as he walked through the tunnels 
to the simulator room. The buggers tormented him in his sleep, and Mazer 
wouldn't leave him alone when he was awake. Between the two of them he had no 
rest. Ender forced himself awake. Apparently Mazer meant it when he said he 
meant to break Ender down -- and forcing him to play when tired and sleepy was 
just the sort of cheap and easy trick Ender should have expected. Well, today it 
wouldn't work.
  
  He got to the simulator and found his squadron leaders already on the wire, 
waiting for him. There was no enemy yet, so he divided them into two armies and 
began a mock battle, commanding both sides so he could control the test that 
each of his leaders was going through. They began slowly, but soon were vigorous 
and alert.
  
  Then the simulator field went blank, the ships disappeared, and everything 
changed at once. At the near edge of the simulator field they could see the 
shapes, drawn in holographic light, of three starships from the human fleet. 
Each would have twelve fighters. The enemy, obviously aware of the human 
presence, had formed a globe with a single ship at the center. Ender was not 
fooled -- it would not be a queen ship. The buggers outnumbered Ender's fighter 
force by two to one, but they were also grouped much closer together than they 
should have been -- Dr. Device would be able to do much more damage than the 
enemy expected.
  
  Ender selected one starship, made it blink in the simulator field, and spoke 
into the microphone. "Alai, this is yours; assign Petra and Vlad to the fighters 
as you wish." He assigned the other two starships with their fighter forces, 
except for one fighter from each starship that he reserved for Bean. "Slip the 
wall and get below them, Bean, unless they start chasing you -- then run back to 
the reserves for safety. Otherwise, get in a place where I can call on you for 
quick results. Alai, form your force into a compact assault at one point in 
their globe. Don't fire until I tell you. This is maneuver only."
  
  "This one's easy, Ender," Alai said.
  
  "It's easy, so why not be careful? I'd like to do this without the loss of a 
single ship."
  
  Ender grouped his reserves in two forces that shadowed Aiai at a safe 
distance; Bean was already off the simulator, though Ender occasionally flipped 
to Bean's point of view to keep track of where he was.
  
  It was Alai, however, who played the delicate game with the enemy. He was in a 
bullet-shaped formation, and probed the enemy globe. Wherever he came near, the 
bugger ships pulled back, as if to draw him in toward the ship in the center, 
Alai skimmed to the side; thc bugger ships kept up with him, withdrawing 
wherever he was close, returning to the sphere pattern when he had passed.
  
  Feint, withdraw, skim the globe to another point, withdraw again, feint again; 
and then Ender said "Go on in, Alai."
  
  His bullet started in, while he said to Ender, "You know they'll just let me 
through and surround me and eat me alive."
  
  "Just ignore that ship in the middle."
  
  "Whatever you say, boss."
  
  Sure enough, the globe began to contract, Ender brought the reserves forward: 
the enemy ships concentrated on the side of the globe nearer the reserves. 
"Attack them there, where they're most concentrated," Ender said.
  
  "This defies four thousand years of military history," said Alai, moving his 
fighters forward. "We're supposed to attack where we outnumber them."
  
  "In this simulation they obviously don't know what our weapons can do. It'll 
only work once, but let's make it spectacular. Fire at will."
  
  Alal did. The simulation responded beautifully: first one or two, then a 
dozen, then most of the enemy ships exploded in dazzling light as the field 
leapt from ship to ship in the tight formation. "Stay out of the way," Ender 
said.
  
  The ships on the far side of the globe formation were not affected by the 
chain reaction, but it was a simple matter hunting them down and destroying 
them. Bean took care of stragglers that tried to escape toward his end of space 
-- the batle was over. It had been easier than most of their recent exercises.
  
  Mazer shrugged when Ender told him so. "This is a simulation of a real 
invasion. There had to be one battle in which they didn't know what we could do. 
Now your work begins. Try not to be too arrogant about the victory. I'll give 
you the real challenges soon enough."
  
  Ender practiced ten hours a day with his squadron leaders, but not all at 
once; he gave them a few hours in the afternoon to rest. Simulated battles under 
Mazer's supervision came every two or three days, and as Mazer had promised, 
they were never so easy again. The enemy quickly abandoned its attempt to 
surround Ender, and never again grouped its forces closely enough to allow a 
chain reaction. There was something new every time, something harder. Sometimes 
Ender had only a single starship and eight fighters; once the enemy dodged 
through an asteroid belt; sometimes the enemy left stationary traps, large 
installations that blew up if Ender brought one of his squadrons too close, 
often crippling or destroying some of Ender's ships. "You cannot absorb losses!" 
Mazer shouted at him after one battle. "When you get into a real battle you 
won't have the luxury of an infinite supply of computer-generated fighters. 
You'll have what you brought with you and nothing more. Now get used to fighting 
without unnecessary waste."
  
  "lt wasn't unnecessary waste, Ender said. "I can't win battles if I'm so 
terrified of losing a ship that I never take any risks."
  
  Mazer smiled. "Excellent, Ender. You're begiioning to learn. But in a real 
battle, you would have superior officers and, worst of all, civilians shouting 
those things at you. Now, if the enemy had been at all bright, they would have 
caught you here, and taken Tom's squadron." Together they went over the battle; 
in the next practice, Ender would show his leaders what Mazer had shown him, and 
they'd learn to cope with it the next time they saw it.
  
  They thought they had been ready before, that they had worked smoothly 
together as a team. Now, though, having fought through real challenges together, 
they all began to trust each other more than ever, and battles became 
exhilarating. They told Ender that the ones who weren't actually playing would 
come into the simulator rooms and watch. Ender imagined what it would be like to 
have his friends there with him, cheering or laughing or gasping with 
apprehension; sometimes he thought it would be a great distraction, but other 
times he wished for it with all his heart. Even when he had spent his days lying 
out in the sunlight on a raft in a lake, he had not been so lonely. Mazer 
Rackham was his companion, was his teacher, but was not his friend.
  
  He said nothing, though. Mazer had told him there would be no pity, and his 
private unhappiness meant nothing to anyone. Most of the time it meant nothing 
even to Ender. He kept his mind on the game, trying to learn from the battles. 
And not just the particular lessons of that battle, but what the buggers might 
have done if they had been more clever, and how Ender would react if they did it 
in the future. He lived with past battles and future battles both, waking and 
sleeping, and he drove his squadron leaders with an intensity that occasionally 
provoked rebelliousness.
  
  "You're too kind to us," said Alai one day. "Why don't you get annoyed with us 
for not being brilliant every moment of every practice. If you keep coddling us 
like this we'll think you like us."
  
  Some of the others laughed into their microphones. Ender recognized the irony, 
of course, and answered with a long silence. When he finally spoke, he ignored 
Alai's complaint. "Again," he said, "and this time without self-pity." They did 
it again, and did it right.
  
  But as their trust in Ender as a commander grew, their friendship, remembered 
from the Battle School days, gradually disappeared. It was to each other that 
they became close; it was with each other that they exchanged confidences. Ender 
was their teacher and commander, as distant from them as Mazer was from him, and 
as demanding.
  
  They fought all the better for it. And Ender was not distracted from his work.
  
  At least, not while he was awake. As he drifted off to sleep each night, it 
was with thoughts of the simulator playing through his mind. But in the night he 
thought of other things. Often he remembered the corpse of the Giant, decaying 
steadily; he did not remember it, though, in the pixels of the picture on his 
desk. Instead it was real, the faint odor of death still lingering near it. 
Things were changed in his dreams. The little village that had grown up between 
the Giant's ribs was composed of buggers now, and they saluted him gravely, like 
gladiators greeting Caesar before they died for his entertainment. He did not 
hate the buggers in his dream; and even though he knew that they had hidden 
their queen from him, he did not try to search for her. He always left the 
Giant's body quickly, and when he got to the playground. the children were 
always there, wolven and mocking; they wore faces that he knew. Sometimes Peter 
and sometimes Bonzo, sometimes Stilson and Bernard; just as often, though, the 
savage creatures were Alai and Shen, Dink and Petra; sometimes one of them would 
be Valentine, and in his dream he also shoved her under the water and waited for 
her to drown. She writhed in his hands, fought to come up, but at last was 
still. He dragged her out of the lake and onto the raft, where she lay with her 
face in the rictus of death, he screamed and wept over her, crying again and 
again that it was a game, a game. he was only playing!--
  
  Then Mazer Rackharn shook him awake. "You were calling out in your sleep," he 
said.
  
  "Sorry," Ender said.
  
  "Never mind. It's time for another battle."
  
  Steadily the pace increased. There were usually two battles a day now, and 
Ender held practices to a minimum. He would use the time while the others rested 
to pore over the replays of past games, trying to spot his own weaknesses, 
trying to guess what would happen next. Sometimes he was fully prepared for the 
enemy's innovations; sometimes he was not.
  
  "I think you're cheating," Ender told Mazer one day,
  
  "Oh?"
  
  "You can observe my practice sessions. You can see what I'm working on. You 
seem to be ready for everything I do."
  
  "Most of what you see is computer simulations," Mazer said. "The computer is 
programmed to respond to your innovations only after you use them once in 
battle."
  
  "Then the computer is cheating."
  
  "You need to get more sleep, Ender."
  
  But he could not sleep. He lay awake longer and longer each night, and his 
sleep was less restful. He woke too often in the night. Whether he was waking up 
to think more about the game or to escape from his dreams, he wasn't sure. It 
was as if someone rode him in his sleep, forcing him to wander through his worst 
memories, to live in them again as if they were real. Nights were so real that 
days began to seem dreamlike to him. He began to worry that he would not think 
clearly enough, that he would be too tired when he played. Always when the game 
began, the intensity of it awoke him, but if his mental abilities began to slip, 
he wondered, would he notice it?
  
  And he seemed to be slipping. He never had a battle anymore in which he did 
not lose at least a few fighters. Several times the enemy was able to trick him 
into exposing more weakness than he meant to; other times the enemy was able to 
wear him down by attrition until his victory was as much a matter of luck as 
strategy. Mazer would go over the game with a look of contempt on his face. 
"Look at this," he would say. "You didn't have to do this." And Ender would 
return to practice with his leaders, trying to keep up their morale, but 
sometimes letting slip his disappointment with their weaknesses, the fact that 
they made mistakes.
  
  "Sometimes we make mistakes," Petra whispered to him once. It was a plea for 
help.
  
  "And sometimes we don't," Ender answered her. If she got help, it would not be 
from him. He would teach; let her find her friends among the others.
  
  Then came a battle that nearly ended in disaster. Petra led her force too far; 
they were exposed, and she discovered it in a moment when Ender wasn't with her. 
In only a few moments she had lost all but two of her ships.
  
  Ender found her then, ordered her to move them in a certain direction; she 
didn't answer. There was no movement. And in a moment those two fighters, too, 
would be lost.
  
  Ender knew at once that he had pushed her too hard because of her brilliance 
-- he had called on her to play far more often and under much more demanding 
circumstances than all but a few of the others. But he had no time now to worry 
about Petra, or to feel guilty about what he had done to her. He called on Crazy 
Tom to command the two remaining fighters, then went on, trying to salvage the 
battle; Petra had occupied a key position, and now all of Ender's strategy came 
apart. If the enemy had not been too eager and clumsy at exploiting their 
advantage, Ender would have lost. But Shen was able to catch a group of the 
enemy in too tight a formation and took them out with a single chain reaction. 
Crazy Tom brought his two surviving fighters in through the gap and caused havoc 
with the enemy, and though his ships and Shen's as well were finally destroyed, 
Fly Molo was able to mop up and complete the victory.
  
  At the end of the battle, he could hear Petra crying out, trying to get a 
microphone, "Tell him I'm sorry, I was just so tired, I couldn't think, that was 
all, tell Ender I'm sorry."
  
  She was not there for the next few practices, and when she did come back she 
was not as quick as she had been, not as daring. Much of what had made her a 
good commander was lost. Ender couldn't use her anymore, except in routine, 
closely supervised assignments. She was no fool. She knew what had happened. But 
she also knew that Ender had no other choice, and told him so.
  
  The fact remained that she had broken, and she was far from being the weakest 
of his squad leaders. It was a warning -- he could not press his commanders more 
than they could bear. Now, instead of using his leaders whenever he needed their 
skills, he had to keep in mind how often they had fought. He had to spell them 
off, which meant that sometimes he went into battle with commanders he trusted a 
little less. As he eased the pressure on them, he increased the pressure on 
himself.
  
  Late one night he woke up in pain. There was blood on his pillow, the taste of 
blood in his mouth. His fingers were throbbing. He saw that in his sleep he had 
been gnawing on his own fist. The blood was still flowing smoothly. "Mazer!" he 
called. Rackham woke up and called at once for a doctor.
  
  As the doctor treated the wound, Mazer said, "I don't care how much you eat, 
Ender, self-cannibalism won't get you out of this school."
  
  "I was asleep," Ender said. "I don't want to get out of Command School."
  
  "Good."
  
  "The others. The ones who didn't make it."
  
  "What are you talking about?"
  
  "Before me. Your other students, who didn't make it through the training. What 
happened to them?"
  
  "They didn't make it. That's all. We don't punish the ones who fail. They just 
-- don't go on."
  
  "Like Bonzo."
  
  "Bonzo?"
  
  "He went home."
  
  "Not like Bonzo."
  
  "What then? What happened to them? When they failed?"
  
  "Why does it matter, Ender?"
  
  Ender didn't answer.
  
  "None of them failed at this point in their course, Ender. You made a mistake 
with Petra. She'll recover. But Petra is Petra, and you are you."
  
  "Part of what I am is her. Is what she made me."
  
  "You won't fail, Ender. Not this early in the course. You've had some tight 
ones, but you've always won. You don't know what your limits are yet, but if 
you've reached them already you're a good deal feebler than I thought."
  
  "Do they die?"
  
  "Who?"
  
  "The ones who fail."
  
  "No, they don't die. Good heavens, boy, you're playing games."
  
  "I think that Bonzo died. I dreamed about it last night. I remembered the way 
he looked after I jammed his face with my head. I think I must have pushed his 
nose back into his brain. The blood was coming out of his eyes. I think he was 
dead right then."
  
  "It was just a dream."
  
  "Mazer, I don't want to keep dreaming these things. I'm afraid to sleep. I 
keep thinking of things that I don't want to remember. My whole life keeps 
playing out as if I were a recorder and someone else wanted to watch the most 
terrible parts of my life."
  
  "We can't drug you if that's what you're hoping for. I'm sorry if you have bad 
dreams. Should we leave the light on at night?"
  
  "Don't make fun of me!" Ender said. "I'm afraid I'm going crazy."
  
  The doctor was finished with the bandage. Mazer told him he could go. He went.
  
  "Are you really afraid of that?" Mazer asked.
  
  Ender thought about it and wasn't sure.
  
  "In my dreams," said Ender, "I'm never sure whether I'm really me."
  
  "Strange dreams are a safety valve, Ender. I'm putting you under a little 
pressure for the first time in your life. Your body is finding ways to 
compensate, that's all. You're a big boy now. It's time to stop being afraid of 
the night."
  
  "All right," Ender said. He decided then that he would never tell Mazer about 
his dreams again.
  
  The days wore on, with battles every day, until at last Ender settled into the 
routine of the destruction of himself. He began to have pains in his stomach. 
They put him on a bland diet, but soon he didn't have an appetite for anything 
at all. "Eat," Mazer said, and Ender would mechanically put food in his mouth. 
But if nobody told him to eat, he didn't eat.
  
  Two more of his squadron leaders collapsed the way that Petra had; the 
pressure on the rest became all the greater. The enemy outnumbered them by three 
or four to one in every battle now; the enemy also retreated more readily when 
things went badly, regrouping to keep the battle going longer and longer. 
Sometimes battles lasted for hours before they finally destroyed the last enemy 
ship. Ender began rotating his squadron leaders within the same battle, bringing 
in fresh and rested ones to take the place of those who were beginning to get 
sluggish.
  
  "You know," said Bean one time, as he took over command of Hot Soup's four 
remaining fighters, "this game isn't quite as fun as it used to be."
  
  Then one day in practice, as Ender was drilling his squadron leaders, the room 
went black and he woke up on the floor with his face bloody where he had hit the 
controls.
  
  They put him to bed then, and for three days he was very ill. He remembered 
seeing faces in his dreams, but they weren't real faces, and he knew it even 
while he thought he saw them. He thought he saw Valentine sometimes, and 
sometimes Peter; sometimes his friends from the Battle School, and sometimes the 
buggers vivisecting him. Once it seemed very real when he saw Colonel Graff 
bending over him speaking softly to him, like a kind father. But then he woke 
top and found only his enemy, Mazer Rackham.
  
  "I'm awake," said Ender.
  
  "So I see," Mazer answered. "Took you long enough. You have a battle today."
  
  So Ender got up and fought the battle and won it. But there was no second 
battle that day, and they let him go to bed earlier. His hands were shaking as 
be undressed.
  
  During the night he thought he felt hands touching him gently. Hands with 
affection in them, and gentleness. He dreamed he heard voices.
  
  "You haven't been kind to him."
  
  "That wasn't the assignment."
  
  "How long can he go on? He's breaking down."
  
  "Long enough. It's nearly finished."
  
  "So soon?"
  
  "A few days, and then he's through."
  
  "How will he do, when he's already like this?"
  
  "Fine. Even today, he fought better than ever."
  
  In his dream, the voices sounded like Colonel Graff and Mazer Rackham. But 
that was the way dreams were, the craziest things could happen, because he 
dreamed he heard one of the voices saying, "I can't bear to see what this is 
doing to him." And the other voice answered, "I know. I love him too." And then 
they changed into Valentine and Alai, and in his dream they were burying him, 
only a hill grew up where they laid his body down, and he dried out and became a 
home for buggers, like the Giant was.
  
  All dreams. If there was love or pity for him, it was only in his dreams.
  
  He woke up and fought another battle and won. Then he went to bed and slept 
again and dreamed again and then he woke up and won again and slept again and he 
hardly noticed when waking became sleeping. Nor did he care.
  
  The next day was his last day in Command School, though he didn't know it. 
Mazer Rackham was not in the room with him when he woke up. He showered and 
dressed and waited for Mazer to come unlock the door. He didn't come. Ender 
tried the door. It was open.
  
  Was it an accident that Mazer had let him be free this morning? No one with 
him to tell him he must eat, he must go to practice, he must sleep. Freedom. The 
trouble was, he didn't know what to do. He thought for a moment that he might 
find his squadron leaders, talk to them face to face, but he didn't know where 
they were. They could be twenty kilometers away, for all he knew. So, after 
wandering through the tunnels for a little while, he went to the mess hall and 
ate breakfast near a few marines who were telling dirty jokes that Ender could 
not begin to understand. Then he went to the simulator room for practice. Even 
though he was free, he could not think of anything else to do.
  
  Mazer was waiting for him. Ender walked slowly into the room. His step was 
slightly shuffling, and he felt tired and dull.
  
  Mazer frowned. "Are you awake, Ender?"
  
  There were other people in the simulator room. Ender wondered why they were 
there, but didn't bother to ask. It wasn't worth asking; no one would tell him 
anyway. He walked to the simulator controls and sat down, ready to start.
  
  "Ender Wiggin," said Mazer. "Please turn around. Today's game needs a little 
explanation."
  
  Ender turned around. He glanced at the men gathered at the back of the room. 
Most of them he had never seen before. Some were even dressed in civilian 
clothes. He saw Anderson and wondered what he was doing there, who was taking 
care of the Battle School if he was gone. He saw Graff and remembered the lake 
in the woods outside Greensboro, and wanted to go home. Take me home, he said 
silently to Graff. In my dream you said you loved me. Take me home.
  
  But Graff only nodded to him, a greeting, not a promise, and Anderson acted as 
though he didn't know him at all.
  
  "Pay attention, please, Ender. Today is your final examination in Command 
School. These observers are here to evaluate what you have learned. If you 
prefer not to have them in the room, we'll have them watch on another 
simulator."
  
  "They can stay." Final examination. After today, perhaps he could rest.
  
  "For this to be a fair test of your ability, not just to do what you have 
practiced many times, but also to meet challenges you have never seen before, 
today's battle introduces a new element. It is staged around a planet. This will 
affect the enemy's strategy, and will force you to improvise. Please concentrate 
on the game today."
  
  Ender beckoned Mazer closer, and asked him quietly, "Am I the first student to 
make it this far?"
  
  "If you win today, Ender, you will be the first student to do so. More than 
that I'm not at liberty to say."
  
  "Well, I'm at liberty to hear it."
  
  "You can be as petulant as you want, tomorrow. Today, though, I'd appreciate 
it if you would keep your mind on the examination. Let's not waste all that 
you've already done. Now, how will you deal with the planet?"
  
  "I have to get someone behind it, or it's a blind spot."
  
  "True."
  
  "And the gravity is going to affect fuel levels -- cheaper to go down than 
up."
  
  "Yes."
  
  "Does the Little Doctor work against a planet?"
  
  Mazer's face went rigid. "Ender, the buggers never attacked a civilian 
population in either invasion. You decide whether it would be wise to adopt a 
strategy that would invite reprisals."
  
  "Is the planet the only new thing?"
  
  "Can you remember the last time I've given you a battle with only one new 
thing? Let me assure you, Ender, that I will not be kind to you today. I have a 
responsibility to the fleet not to let a second-rate student graduate. I will do 
my best against you, Ender, and I have no desire to coddle you. Just keep in 
mind everything you know about yourself and everything you know about the 
buggers, and you have a fair chance of amounting to something."
  
  Mazer left the room.
  
  Ender spoke into the microphone. "Are you there?"
  
  "All of us," said Bean. "Kind of late for practice this morning, aren't you?"
  
  So they hadn't told the squadron leaders. Ender toyed with the idea of telling 
them how important this battle was to him, but decided it would not help them to 
have an extraneous concern on their minds. "Sorry," he said. "I overslept."
  
  They laughed. They didn't believe him.
  
  He led them through maneuvers, warming up for the battle ahead. It took him 
longer than usual to clear his mind, to concentrate on command, but soon enough 
he was up to speed, responding quickly, thinking well. Or at least, he told 
himself, thinking that I'm thinking well.
  
  The simulator field cleared. Ender waited for the game to appear. What will 
happen if I pass the test today?
  
  Is there another school? Another year or two of grueling training, another 
year of isoiation, another year of people pushing me this way and that way, 
another year without any control over my own life? He tried to remember how old 
he was. Eleven. How many years ago did he turn eleven? How many days? It must 
have happened here at the Command School, but he couldn't remember the day. 
Maybe he didn't even notice it at the time. Nobody noticed it, except perhaps 
Valentine.
  
  And as he waited for the game to appear, he wished he could simply lose it, 
lose the battle badly and completely so that they would remove him from 
training, like Bonzo, and let him go home. Bonzo had been assigned to Cartagena. 
He wanted to see travel orders that said Greensboro. Success meant it would go 
on. Failure meant he could go home.
  
  No, that isn't true, he told himself. They need me, and if I fail there might 
not be any home to return to.
  
  But he did not believe it. In his conscious mind he knew it was true, but in 
other places, deeper places, he doubted that they needed him. Mazer's urgency 
was just another trick. Just another way to make me do what they want me to do. 
Another way to keep him from resting. From doing nothing, for a long, long time.
  
  Then the enemy formation appeared, and Ender's weariness turned to despair.
  
  The enemy outnumbered him a thousand to one, the simulator glowed green with 
them. They were grouped in a dozen different formations shifting positions, 
changing shapes, moving in seemingly random patterns through the simulator 
field. He could not find a path through them -- a space that seemed open would 
close suddenly, and another appear, and a formation that seemed penetrable would 
suddenly change and be forbidding. The planet was at the far edge of the field, 
and for all Ender knew there were just as many enemy ships beyond it, out of the 
simulator's range.
  
  As for his own fleet, it consisted of twenty starships, each with only four 
fighters. He knew the four-fighter starships they were old-fashioned, sluggish, 
and the range of their Little Doctors was half that of the newer ones. Eighty 
fighters, against at least five thousand, perhaps ten thousand enemy ships.
  
  He heard his squadron leaders breathing heavily; he could also hear, from the 
observers behind him, a quiet curse. It was nice to know that one of the adults 
noticed that it wasn't a fair test. Not that it made any difference. Fairness 
wasn't part of the game, that was plain. There was no attempt to give him even a 
remote chance at success. All that I've been through, and they never meant to 
let me pass at all.
  
  He saw in his mind Bonzo and his vicious little knot of friends, confronting 
him, threatening him; he had been able to shame Bonzo into fighting him alone. 
That would hardly work here. And he could not surprise the enemy with his 
ability as he had done with the older boys in the battleroom. Mazer knew Ender's 
abilities inside and out.
  
  The observers behind him began to cough, to move nervously. They were 
beginning to realize that Ender didn't know what to do.
  
  I don't care anymore, thought Ender. You can keep your game. If you won't even 
give me a chance, why should I play?
  
  Like his last game in Battle School, when they put two armies against him.
  
  And just as he remembered that game, apparently Bean remembered it, too, for 
his voice came over the headset, saying, "Remember, the enemy's gate is *down*."
  
  Molo, Soup, Vlad, Dumper, and Crazy Tom all laughed. They remembered, too.
  
  And Ender also laughed. It was funny. The adults taking all this so seriously, 
and the children playing along, playing along, believing it too until suddenly 
the adults went too far, tried too hard, and the children could see through 
their game. Forget it, Mazer. I don't care if I pass your test, I don't care if 
I follow your rules, if you can cheat, so can I. I won't let you beat me 
unfairly -- I'll beat you unfairly first.
  
  In that final battle in Battle School, he had won by ignoring the enemy, 
ignoring his own losses; he had moved against the enemy's gate.
  
  And the enemy's gate was down.
  
  If I break this rule, they'll never let me be a commander. It would be too 
dangerous. I'll never have to play a game again. And that is victory.
  
  He whispered quickly into the microphone. His commanders took their parts of 
the fleet and grouped themselves into a thick projectile, a cylinder aimed at 
the nearest of the enemy formations. The enemy, far from trying to repel him, 
welcomed him in, so he could be thoroughly entrapped before they destroyed him. 
Mazer is at least taking into account the fact that by now they would have 
learned to respect me. thought Ender. And that does buy me time.
  
  Ender dodged downward, north, east, and down again, not seeming to follow any 
plan, but always ending up a little closer to the enemy planet. Finally the 
enemy began to close in on him too tightly. Then, suddenly, Ender's formation 
burst. His fleet seemed to melt into chaos. The eighty fighters seemed to follow 
no plan at all, firing at enemy ships at random, working their way into hopeless 
individual paths among the bugger craft.
  
  After a few minutes of battle, however, Ender whispered to his squadron 
leaders once more, and suddenly a dozen of the remaining fighters formed again 
into a formation. But now they were on the far side of one of the enemy's most 
formidable groups; they had, with terrible losses, passed through and now they 
had covered more than half the distance to the enemy's planet.
  
  The enemy sees now, thought Ender. Surely Mazer sees what I'm doing.
  
  Or perhaps Mazer cannot believe that I would do it. Well so much the better 
for me.
  
  Ender's tiny fleet darted this way and that, sending two or three fighters out 
as if to attack, then bringing them back. The enemy closed in, drawing in ships 
and formations that had been widely scattered, bringing them in for the kill. 
The enemy was most concentrated beyond Ender, so he could not escape back into 
open space, closing him in. Excellent, thought Ender. Closer. Come closer.
  
  Then he whispered a command and the ships dropped like rocks toward the 
planet's surface. They were starships and fighters, completely unequipped to 
handle the heat of passage through an atmosphere. But Ender never intended them 
to reach the atmosphere. Almost from the moment they began to drop, they were 
focusing their Little Doctors on one thing only. The planet itself.
  
  One, two, four, seven of his fighters were blown away. It was all a gamble 
now, whether any of his ships would survive long enough to get in range. It 
would not take long, once they could focus on the planet's surface. Just a 
moment with Dr, Device, that's all I want. It occurred to Ender that perhaps the 
computer wasn't even equipped to show what would happen to a planet if the 
Little Doctor attacked it. What will I do then, shout Bang, you're dead?
  
  Ender took his hands off the controls and leaned in to watch what happened. 
The perspective was close to the enemy planet now, as the ship hurtled into its 
well of gravity. Surely it's in range now, thought Ender. It must be in range 
and the computer can't handle it.
  
  Then the surface of the planet, which filled half the simulator field now, 
began to bubble; there was a gout ot explosion, hurling debris out toward 
Ender's fighters. Ender tried to imagine what was happening inside the planet. 
The field growing and growing, the molecules bursting apart but finding nowhere 
for the separate atoms to go.
  
  Within three seconds the entire planet burst apart, becoming a sphere of 
bright dust, hurtling outward. Ender's fighters were among the first to go: 
their perspective suddenly vanished, and now the simulator could only display 
the perspective of the starships waiting beyond the edges of the battle. It was 
as close as Ender wanted to be. The sphere of the exploding planet grew outward 
faster than the enemy ships could avoid it. And it carried with it the Little 
Doctor, not so little anymore, the field taking apart every ship in its path, 
erupting each one into a dot of light before it went on.
  
  Only at the very periphery of the simulator did the M.D. field weaken. Two or 
three enemy ships were drifting away. Ender's own starships did not explode. But 
where the vast enemy fleet had been, and the planet they protected, there was 
nothing meaningful. A lump of dirt was growing as gravity drew much of the 
debris downward again. It was glowing hot and spinning visibly; it was also much 
smaller than the world had been before. Much of its mass was now a cloud still 
flowing outward.
  
  Ender took off his headphones, filled with the cheers of his squadron leaders, 
and only then realized that there was just as much noise in the room with him. 
Men in uniform were hugging each other, laughing, shouting; others were weeping; 
some knelt or lay prostrate, and Ender knew they were caught up in prayer. Ender 
didn't understand. It seemed all wrong. They were supposed to be angry.
  
  Colonel Graff detached himself from the others and came to Ender. Tears 
streamed down his face, but he was smiling. He bent over, reached out his arms, 
and to Ender's surprise he embraced him, held him tightly, and whispered, "Thank 
you, thank you Ender. Thank God for you, Ender."
  
  The others soon came, too, shaking his hand, congratulating him. He tried to 
make sense of this. Had he passed the test after all? It was his victory, not 
theirs, and a hollow one at that, a cheat; why did they act as if he had won 
with honor?
  
  The crowd parted and Mazer Rackham walked through. He came straight to Ender 
and held out his hand.
  
  "You made the hard choice, boy. All or nothing. End them or end us. But heaven 
knows there was no other way you could have done it. Congratulations. You beat 
them, and it's all over."
  
  All over. Beat them. Ender didn't understand. "I beat *you*."
  
  Mazer laughed, a loud laugh that filled the room.
  
  "Ender, you never played *me*. You never played a *game* since I became your 
enemy."
  
  Ender didn't get the joke. He had played a great many games, at a terrible 
cost to himself. He began to get angry.
  
  Mazer reached out and touched his shoulder. Ender shrugged him off. Mazer then 
grew serious and said, "Ender, for the past few months you have been the battle 
commander of our fleets. This was the Third Invasion. There were no games, the 
battles were real, and the only enemy you fought was the buggers. You won every 
battle, and today you finally fought them at their home world, where the queen 
was, all the queens from all their colonies, they all were there and you 
destroyed them completely. They'll never attack us again. You did it. You."
  
  Real. Not a game. Ender's mind was too tired to cope with it all. They weren't 
just points of light in the air, they were real ships that he had fought with 
and real ships he had destroyed. And a real world that he had blasted into 
oblivion. He walked through the crowd, dodging their congratulations, ignoring 
their hands, their words, their rejoicing. When he got to his own room he 
stripped off his clothes, climbed into bed, and slept.
  
  ***
  
  Ender awoke when they shook him. It took a moment to recognize them. Graff and 
Rackham. He turned his back on them. Let me sleep.
  
  "Ender, we need to talk to you," said Graff. Ender rolled back to face them.
  
  "They've been playing out the videos on Earth all day, all night since the 
battle yesterday."
  
  "Yesterday?" He had slept through until the next day.
  
  "You're a hero. Ender. They've seen what you did. You and the others. I don't 
think there's a government on Earth that hasn't voted you their highest medal."
  
  "I killed them all, didn't I?" Ender asked.
  
  "All who?" asked Graff. "The buggers? That was the idea."
  
  Mazer leaned in close. "That's what the war was for."
  
  "All their queens. So I killed all their children, all of everything."
  
  "They decided that when they attacked us. It wasn't your fault. It's what had 
to happen."
  
  Ender grabbed Mazer's uniform and hung onto it, pulling him down so they were 
face to face. "I didn't want to kill them all. I didn't want to kill anybody! 
I'm not a killer! You didn't want me, you bastards, you wanted Peter, but you 
made me do it, you tricked me into it!" He was crying. He was out of control.
  
  "Of course we tricked you into it. That's the whole point," said Graff. "It 
had to be a trick or you couldn't have done it. It's the bind we were in. We had 
to have a commander with so much empathy that he would think like the buggers, 
understand them and anticipate them. So much compassion that he could win the 
love of his underlings and work with them like a perfect machine, as perfect as 
the buggers. But somebody with that much compassion could never be the killer we 
needed. Could never go into battle willing to win at all costs. If you knew, you 
couldn't do it. If you were the kind of person who would do it even if you knew, 
you could never have understood the buggers well enough."
  
  "And it had to be a child, Ender," said Mazer. "You were faster than me. 
Better than me. I was too old and cautious. Any decent person who knows what 
warfare is can never go into battle with a whole heart. But you didn't know. We 
made sure you didn't know. You were reckless and brilliant and young. It's what 
you were born for."
  
  "We had pilots with our ships, didn't we."
  
  "Yes."
  
  "I was ordering pilots to go in and die and I didn't even know it."
  
  "*They* knew it, Ender, and they went anyway. They knew what it was for."
  
  "You never asked me! You never told me the truth about anything!"
  
  "You had to be a weapon, Ender. Like a gun, like the Little Doctor, 
functioning perfectly but not knowing what you were aimed at. We aimed you. 
We're responsible. If there was something wrong, we did it."
  
  "Tell me later," Ender said. His eyes closed.
  
  Mazer Rackham shook him. "Don't go to sleep, Ender," he said. "It's very 
important."
  
  "You're finished with me," Ender said. "Now leave me alone."
  
  "That's why we're here." Mazer said, "We're trying to tell you. They're not 
through with you, not at all, it's crazy down there. They're going to start a 
war, Americans claiming the Warsaw Pact is about to attack, and the Pact saying 
the same thing about the Hegemon. The bugger war isn't twenty-four hours dead 
and the world down there is back to fighting again, as bad as ever. And all of 
them are worried about you. And all of them want you. The greatest military 
leader in history, they want you to lead their armies. The Americans. The 
Hegemon. Everybody but the Warsaw Pact, and they want you dead."
  
  "Fine with me," said Ender.
  
  "We have to take you away from here. There are Russian marines all over Eros, 
and the Polemarch is Russian. It could turn to bloodshed at any time."
  
  Ender turned his back on them again. This time they let him. He did not sleep, 
though. He listened to them.
  
  "I was afraid of this, Rackham. You pushed him too hard. Some of those lesser 
outposts could have waited until after. You could have given him some days to 
rest."
  
  "Are you doing it, too, Graff? Trying to decide how I could have done it 
better? You don't know what would have happened if I hadn't pushed. Nobody 
knows. I did it the way I did it, and it worked. Above all, it worked. Memorize 
that defense, Graff. You may have to use it, too."
  
  "Sorry."
  
  "I can see what it's done to him. Colonel Liki says there's a good chance 
he'll be permanently damaged, but I don't believe it. He's too strong. Winning 
meant a lot to him, and he won."
  
  "Don't tell me about strong. The kid's eleven. Give him some rest, Rackham. 
Things haven't exploded yet. We can post a guard outside his door."
  
  "Or post a guard outside another door and pretend that it's his."
  
  "Whatever."
  
  They went away. Ender slept again.
  
  ***
  
  Time passed without touching Ender, except with glancing blows. Once he awoke 
for a few minutes with something pressing his hand, pushing downward on it, with 
a dull, insistent pain. He reached over and touched it; it was a needle passing 
into a vein. He tried to pull it out, but it was taped on and he was too weak. 
Another time he awoke in darkness to hear people near him murmuring and cursing. 
His ears were ringing with the loud noise that had awakened him; he did not 
remember the noise. "Get the lights on," someone said. And another time he 
thought he heard someone crying softly near him.
  
  It might have been a single day; it might have been a week; from his dreams, 
it could have been months. He seemed to pass through lifetimes in his dreams. 
Through the Giant's Drink again, past the wolf-children, reliving the terrible 
deaths, the constant murders; he heard a voice whispering in the forest, You had 
to kill the children to get to the End of the World. And he tried to answer. I 
never wanted to kill anybody. Nobody ever asked me if I wanted to kill anybody. 
But the forest laughed at him. And when he leapt from the cliff at the End of 
the World, sometimes it was not clouds that caught him, but a fighter that 
carried him to a vantage point near the surface of the buggers' world, so he 
could watch, over and over, the eruption of death when Dr. Device set off a 
reaction on the planet's face; then closer and closer, until he could watch 
individual buggers explode, turn to light, then collapse into a pile of dirt 
before his eyes. And the queen, surrounded by infants; only the queen was 
Mother, and the infants were Valentine and all the children he had known in 
Battle School. One of them had Bonzo's face, and he lay there bleeding through 
the eyes and nose, saying, You have no honor. And always the dream ended with a 
mirror or a pool of water or the metal surface of ship, something that would 
reflect his face back to him.
  
  At first it was always Peter's face, with blood and a snake's tail coming from 
the mouth. After a while, though, it began to be his own face, old and sad, with 
eyes that grieved for a billion, billion murders -- but they were his own eyes, 
and he was content to wear them.
  
  That was the world Ender lived in for many lifetimes during the five days of 
the League War.
  
  When he awoke again he was lying in darkness. In the distance he could hear 
the thump, thump of explosions. He listened for a while. Then he heard a soft 
footstep.
  
  He turned over and flung out a hand, to grasp whoever was sneaking up on him. 
Sure enough, he caught someone's clothing and pulled him down toward his knees, 
ready to kill him if need be.
  
  "Ender, it's me, it's me!"
  
  He knew the voice. It came out of his memory as if it were a million years 
ago.
  
  "Alai."
  
  "Salaam, pinprick. What were you trying to do, kill me?"
  
  "Yes. I thought you were trying to kill *me*."
  
  "I was trying not to wake you up. Well, at least you have some survival 
instinct left. The way Mazer talks about it, you were becoming a vegetable."
  
  "I was trying to. What's the thumping."
  
  "There's a war going on here. Our section is blacked out to keep us safe."
  
  Ender swung his legs out to sit up. He couldn't do it, though. His head hurt 
too bad. He winced in pain."
  
  "Don't sit up, Ender. It's all right. It looks like we might win it. Not all 
the Warsaw Pact people went with the Polemarch. A lot of them came over when the 
Strategos told them you were loyal to the IF."
  
  "I was asleep."
  
  "So he lied. You weren't plotting treason in your dreams, were you? Some of 
the Russians who came in told us that when the Polemarch ordered them to find 
you and kill you, they almost killed him. Whatever they may feel about other 
people, Ender, they love you. The whole world watched our battles. Videos, day 
and night. I've seen some. Complete with your voice giving the orders. It's all 
there, nothing censored. Good stuff. You've got a career in the vids."
  
  "I don't think so," said Ender.
  
  "I was joking. Hey, can you believe it? We won the war. We were so eager to 
grow up so we could fight in it, and it was us all the time. I mean, we're kids. 
Ender. And it was us." AIai laughed. "It was you, anyway. You were good, bosh. I 
didn't know how you'd get us out of that last one. But you did. You were good."
  
  Ender noticed the way he spoke in the past good. "What am I now, Alai?"
  
  "Still good."
  
  "At what?"
  
  "At -- anything. There's a million soldiers who'd follow you to the end of the 
universe."
  
  "I don't want to go to the end of the universe."
  
  "So where do you want to go? They'll follow you."
  
  I want to go home, thought Ender, but I don't know where it is.
  
  The thumping went silent.
  
  "Listen to that," said Alai.
  
  They listened. The door opened. Someone stood there. Someone small. "It's 
over," he said. It was Bean. As if to prove it, the lights went on.
  
  "Ho, Bean," Ender said.
  
  "Ho, Ender."
  
  Petra followed him in, with Dink holding her hand. They came to Ender's bed. 
"Hey, the hero's awake," said Dink.
  
  "Who won?" asked Ender.
  
  "We did, Ender," said Bean. "You were there."
  
  "He's not *that* crazy, Bean. He meant who won just now." Petra took Ender's 
hand. "There was a truce on Earth. They've been negotiating for days. They 
finally agreed to accept the Locke Proposal."
  
  "He doesn't know about the Locke Proposal--"
  
  "It's very complicated, but what it means here is that the IF. will stay in 
existence, but without the Warsaw Pact in it. So the Warsaw Pact marines are 
going home. I think Russia agreed to it because they're having a revolt of the 
Slavic helots. Everybody's got troubles. About five hundred died here, but it 
was worse on Earth."
  
  "The Hegemon resigned," said Dink. "It's crazy down there. Who cares."
  
  "You OK?" Petra asked him, touching his head. "You scared us. They said you 
were crazy, and we said *they* were crazy."
  
  "I'm crazy," said Ender. "But I think I'm OK."
  
  "When did you decide that?" asked Alai.
  
  "When I thought you were about to kill me, and I decided to kill you first. I 
guess I'm just a killer to the core. But I'd rather be alive than dead."
  
  They laughed and agreed with him. Then Ender began to cry and embraced Bean 
and Petra, who were closest. "I missed you," he said. "I wanted to see you so 
bad."
  
  "You saw us pretty bad," Petra answered. She kissed his cheek.
  
  "I saw you magnificent," said Ender. "The ones I needed most, I used up 
soonest. Bad planning on my part."
  
  "Everybody's OK now," said Dink. "Nothing was wrong with any of us that five 
days of cowering in blacked-out rooms in the middle of a war couldn't cure."
  
  "I don't have to be your commander anymore, do I?" asked Ender. "I don't want 
to command anybody again."
  
  "You don't have to command anybody," said Dink, "but you're always our 
commander."
  
  Then they were silent for a while.
  
  "So what do we do now?" asked Alai. "The bugger war's over, and so's the war 
down there on Earth, and even the war here. What do we do now?"
  
  "We're kids," said Petra. "They'll probably make us go to school. It's a law. 
You have to go to school till you're seventeen."
  
  They all laughed at that. Laughed until tears streamed down their faces.
  
  
  
  Chapter 15 -- Speaker for the Dead
  
  The lake was still; there was no breeze. The two men sat together in chairs on 
the floating dock. A small wooden raft was tied up at the dock; Graff hooked his 
foot in the rope and pulled the raft in, then let it drift out, then pulled it 
in again.
  
  "You've lost weight."
  
  "One kind of stress puts it on, another takes it off. I m a creature of 
chemicals."
  
  "It must have heen hard."
  
  Graff shrugged. "Not really. I knew I'd be acquitted."
  
  "Some of us weren't so sure. People were crazy for a while there. Mistreatment 
of children, negligent homicide -- those videos of Bonzo's and Stilson's deaths 
were pretty gruesome. To watch one child do that to another."
  
  "As much as anything, I think the videos saved me. The prosecution edited 
them, but we showed the whole thing. It was plain that Ender was not the 
provocateur. After that, it was just a second-guessing game. I said I did what I 
believed was necessary for the preservation of the human race, and it worked; we 
got the judges to agree that the prosecution had to prove beyond doubt that 
Ender would have won the war without the training we gave him. After that, it 
was simple. The exigencies of war."
  
  "Anyway, Graff, it was a great relief to us. I know we quarreled, and I know 
the prosecution used tapes of our conversations against you. But by then I knew 
that you were right, and I offered to testify for you."
  
  "I know, Anderson. My lawyers told me."
  
  "So what will you do now?"
  
  "I don't know. Still relaxing. I have a few years of leave accrued. Enough to 
take me to retirement, and I have plenty of salary that I never used, sitting 
around in banks. I could live on the interest. Maybe I'll do nothing."
  
  "It sounds nice. But I couldn't stand it. I've been offered the presidency of 
three different universities, on the theory that I'm an educator. They don't 
believe me when I say that all I ever cared about at the Battle School was the 
game. I think I'll go with the other offer."
  
  "Commissioner?"
  
  "Now that the wars are over, it's time to play games again. It'll be almost 
like vacation, anyway. Only twenty-eight teams in the league. Though after years 
of watching those children flying, football is like watching slugs bash into 
each other."
  
  They laughed. Graff sighed and pusned the raft with his foot.
  
  "That raft. Surely you can't float on it."
  
  Graff shook his head. "Ender built it."
  
  "That's right. This is where you took him."
  
  "It's even been deeded over to him. I saw to it that he was amply rewarded. 
He'll have all the money he ever needs."
  
  "If they ever let him come back to use it."
  
  "They never will."
  
  "With Demosthenes agitating for him to come home?"
  
  "Demosthenes isn't on the nets anymore."
  
  Anderson raised an eyebrow. "What does that mean?"
  
  "Demosthenes has retired. Permanently."
  
  "You know something, you old farteater. You know who Demosthenes is."
  
  "Was."
  
  "Well, tell me!"
  
  "No."
  
  "You're no fun anymore, Graff."
  
  "I never was."
  
  "At least you can tell me why. There were a lot of us who thought Demosthenes 
would be Hegemon someday."
  
  "There was never a chance of that. No, even Demosthenes' mob of political 
cretins couldn't persuade the Hegemon to bring Ender back to Earth. Ender is far 
too dangerous."
  
  "He's only eleven. Twelve, now."
  
  "All the more dangerous because he could so easily be controlled. In all the 
world, the name of Ender is one to conjure with. The child-god, the miracle 
worker, with life and death in his hands. Every petty tyrant-to-be would like to 
have the boy, to set him in front of an army and watch the world either flock to 
join or cower in fear. If Ender came to Earth, he'd want to come here, to rest, 
to salvage what he can of his childhood. But they'd never let him rest."
  
  "I see. Someone explained that to Demosthenes?"
  
  Graff smiled. "Demosthenes explained it to someone else. Someone who could 
have used Ender as no one else could have, to rule the world and make the world 
like it."
  
  "Who?"
  
  "Locke."
  
  "Locke is the one who argued for Ender to stay on Eros."
  
  "All is not always as it seems."
  
  "It's too deep for me, Graff. Give me the game. Nice, neat rules. Referees. 
Beginnings and endings. Winners and losers and then everybody goes home to their 
wives."
  
  "Get me tickets to some games now and then, all right?"
  
  "You won't really stay here and retire, will you?"
  
  "No."
  
  "You're going into the Hegemony, aren't you?"
  
  "I'm the new Minister of Colonization."
  
  "So they're doing it."
  
  "As soon as we get the reports back on the bugger colony worlds. I mean, there 
they are, already fertile, with housing and industry in place, and all the 
buggers dead. Very convenient. We'll repeal the population limitation laws--"
  
  "Which everybody hates--"
  
  "And all those thirds and fourths and fifths get on starships and head out for 
worlds known and unknown."
  
  "Will people really go?"
  
  "People always go. Always. They always believe they can make a better life 
than in the old world."
  
  "What the hell, maybe they can."
  
  ***
  
  At first Ender believed that they would bring him back to Earth as soon as 
things quieted down. But things were quiet now, had been quiet for a year, and 
it was plain to him now that they would not bring him back at all, that he was 
much more useful as a name and a story than he would ever be as an inconvenient 
flesh-and-blood person.
  
  And there was the matter of the court martial on the crimes of Colonel Graff. 
Admiral Chamrajnagar tried to keep Ender from watching it, but failed -- Ender 
had been awarded the rank of admiral, too, and this was one of the few times he 
asserted the privileges the rank implied. So he watched the videos of the fights 
with Stilson and Bonzo, watched as the photographs of the corpses were 
displayed, listened as the psychologists and lawyers argued whether murder had 
been committed or the killing was in self-defense. Ender had his own opinion, 
but no one asked him, Throughout the trial, it was really Ender himself under 
attack. The prosecution was too clever to charge him directly, but there were 
attempts to make him look sick, perverted, criminally insane.
  
  "Never mind," said Mazer Rackham. "The politicians are afraid of you, but they 
can't destroy your reputation yet. That won't be done until the historians get 
at you in thirty years."
  
  Ender didn't care about his reputation. He watched the videos impassively, but 
in fact he was amused. In battle I killed ten billion buggers, who were as alive 
and wise as any man, who had not even launched a third attack against us, and no 
one thinks to call it a crime.
  
  All his crimes weighed heavy on him, the deaths of Stilson and Bonzo no 
heavier and no lighter than the rest.
  
  And so, with that burden, he waited through the empty months until the world 
that he had saved decided he could come home.
  
  One by one, his friends reluctantly left him, called home to their families, 
to be received with heroes' welcomes in their towns. Ender watched the videos of 
their homecomings, and was touched when they' spent much of their time praising 
Ender Wiggin, who taught them everything, they said, who taught them and led 
them into victory. But if they called for him to be brought home, the words were 
censored from the videos and no one heard the plea.
  
  For a time, the only work in Eros was cleaning up after the bloody League War 
and receiving the reports of the starships, once warships, that were now 
exploring the bugger colony worlds.
  
  But now Eros was busier than ever, more crowded than it bad ever been during 
the war, as colonists were brought here to prepare for their voyages to the 
empty bugger worlds. Ender took part in the work, as much as they would let him, 
but it did not occur to them that this twelve-year-old boy might be as gifted at 
peace as he was at war. But he was patient with their tendency to ignore him, 
and learned to make his proposals and suggest his plans through the few adults 
who listened to him, and let them present them as their own. He was concerned, 
not about getting credit, but about getting the job done.
  
  The one thing he could not bear was the worship of the colonists. He learned 
to avoid the tunnels where they lived, because they would always recognize him 
-- the world had memorized his face -- and the they would scream and shout and 
embrace him and congratulate him and show him the children they had named after 
him and tell him how he was so young it broke their hearts and *they* didn't 
blame him for any of his murders because it wasn't his fault he was just a 
*child*--
  
  He hid from them as best he could.
  
  There was one colonist, though, he couldn't hide from.
  
  He wasn't inside Eros that day. He had gone up with the shuttle to the new 
ISL, where he had been learning to do surface work on the starships; it was 
unbecoming to an officer to do mechanical labor, Chamrajnagar told him, but 
Ender answered that since the trade he had mastered wasn't much called for now, 
it was about time he learned another skill.
  
  They spoke to him through his helmet radio and told him that someone was 
waiting to see him as soon as he could come in. Ender couldn't think of anyone 
he wanted to see, and so he didn't hurry. He finished installing the shield for 
the ship's ansible and then hooked his way across the face of the ship and 
pulled himself up into the airlock.
  
  She was waiting for him outside the changing room. For a moment he was annoyed 
that they would let a colonist come to bother him here, where he came to be 
alone; then he looked again, and realized that if the young woman were a little 
girl, he would know her.
  
  "Valentine," he said.
  
  "Hi, Ender."
  
  "What are you doing here?"
  
  "Demosthenes retired. Now I'm going with the first colony."
  
  "It's fifty years to get there--"
  
  "Only two years if you're aboard the ship."
  
  "But if you ever came back, everybody you knew on Earth would be dead--"
  
  "That was what I had in mind. I was hoping, though, that someone I knew on 
Eros might come with me.
  
  "I don't want to go to a world we stole from the buggers. I just want to go 
home."
  
  "Ender, you're never going back to Earth. I saw to that before I left."
  
  He looked at her in silence.
  
  "I tell you that now, so that if you want to hate me, you can hate me from the 
beginning."
  
  They went to Ender's tiny compartment in the ISL and she explained. Peter 
wanted Ender back on Earth, under the protection of the Hegemon's Council. "The 
way things are right now, Ender, that would put you effectively under Peter's 
control, since half the council now does just what Peter wants. The ones that 
aren't Locke's lapdogs are under his thumb in other ways."
  
  "Do they know who he really is?"
  
  "Yes. He isn't publicly known,. but people in high places know him. It doesn't 
matter any more. He has too much power for them to worry about his age. He's 
done incredible things, Ender."
  
  "I noticed the treaty a year ago was named for Locke."
  
  "That was his breakthrough. He proposed it through his friends from the public 
policy nets, and then Demosthenes got behind it, too. It was the moment he had 
been waiting for, to use Demosthenes' influence with the mob and Locke's 
influence with the intelligentsia to accomplish something noteworthy. It 
forestalled a really vicious war that could have lasted for decades."
  
  "He decided to be a statesman?"
  
  "I think so. But in his cynical moments, of which there are many, he pointed 
out to me that if he had allowed the League to fall apart completely, he'd have 
to conquer the world piece by piece. As long as the Hegemony exists, he can do 
it in one lump."
  
  Ender nodded. "That's the Peter that I knew."
  
  "Funny, isn't it? That Peter would save millions of lives."
  
  "While I killed billions."
  
  "I wasn't going to say that."
  
  "So he wanted to use me?"
  
  "He had plans for you, Ender. He would publicly reveal himself when you 
arrived, going to meet you in front of all the videos. Ender Wiggin's older 
brother, who also happened to be the great Locke, the architect of peace. 
Standing next to you, he would look quite mature. And the physical resemblance 
between you is stronger than ever. It would be quite simple for him, then, to 
take over."
  
  "Why did you stop him?"
  
  "Ender, you wouldn't be happy spending the rest of your life as Peter's pawn."
  
  "Why not? I've spent my life as someone's pawn."
  
  "Me too. I showed Peter all the evidence that I had assembled, enough to prove 
in the eyes of the public that he was a psychotic killer. It included full-color 
pictures of tortured squirrels and some of the monitor videos of the way he 
treated you. It took some work to get it all together, but by the time he saw 
it, he was willing to give me what I wanted. What I wanted was your freedom and 
mine."
  
  "It's not my idea of freedom to go live in the house of the people that I 
killed."
  
  "Ender, what's done is done. Their worlds are empty now, and ours is full. And 
we can take with us what their worlds have never known -- cities full of people 
who live private, individual lives, who love and hate each other for their own 
reasons. In all the bugger worlds, there was never more than a single story to 
be told; when we're there, the world will be full of stories, and we'll 
improvise their endings day by day. Ender, Earth belongs to Peter. And if you 
don't go with me now, he'll have you there, and use you up until you wish you'd 
never been born. Now is the only chance you'll get to get away."
  
  Ender said nothing.
  
  "I know what you're thinking, Ender. You're thinking that I'm trying to 
control you just as much as Peter or Graff or any of the others."
  
  "It crossed my mind."
  
  "Welcome to the human race. Nobody controls his own life, Ender. The best you 
can do is choose to be controlled by good people, by people who love you. I 
didn't come here because I wanted to be a colonist. I came because I've spent my 
whole life in the company of the brother that I hated. Now I want a chance to 
know the brother that I loved, before it's too late, before we're not children 
anymore."
  
  "It's already too late for that."
  
  "You're wrong, Ender. You think you're grown up and tired and jaded with 
everything, but in your heart you're just as much a kid as I am. We can keep it 
secret from everybody else. While you're governing the colony and I'm writing 
political philosophy, they'll never guess that in the darkness of night we sneak 
into each other's room and play checkers and have pillowfights."
  
  Ender laughed, but he had noticed some things she dropped too casually for 
them to be accidental. "Governing?"
  
  "I'm Demosthenes, Ender, I went out with a bang. A public announcement that I 
believed so much in the colonization movement that I was going in the first ship 
myself. At the same time, the Minister of Colonization, a former colonel named 
Graff, announced that the pilot of the colony ship would be the great Mazer 
Rackham, and the governor of the colony would be Ender Wiggin."
  
  "They might have asked me."
  
  "I wanted to ask you myself."
  
  "But it's already announced."
  
  "No. They'll be announcing it tomorrow, if you accept. Mazer accepted a few 
hours ago, back in Eros."
  
  "You're telling everyone that you're Demosthenes? A fourteen-year-old girl?"
  
  "We're only telling them that Demosthenes is going with the colony. Let them 
spend the next fifty years poring over the passenger list, trying to figure out 
which one of them is the great demagogue of the Age of Locke."
  
  Ender laughed and shook his head. "You're actually having fun, Val."
  
  "I can't think why I shouldn't."
  
  "All right," said Ender. "I'll go. Maybe even as governor, as long as you and 
Mazer are there to help me. My abilities are a little underused at present."
  
  She squealed and hugged him, for all the world like a typical teenage girl who 
just got the present that she wanted from her little brother.
  
  "Val," he said, "I just want one thing clear. I'm not going for you. I'm not 
going in order to be governor, or because I'm bored here. I'm going because I 
know the buggers better than any other living soul, and maybe if I go there I 
can understand them better. I stole their future from them; I can only begin to 
repay by seeing what I can learn from their past."
  
  ***
  
  The voyage was long. By the end of it, Val had finished the first volume of 
her history of the bugger wars and transmitted it by ansible, under Demosthenes' 
name, back to Earth, and Ender had won something better than the adulation of 
the passengers. They knew him now, and he had won their love and their respect.
  
  He worked hard on the new world, governing by persuasion rather than fiat, and 
working as hard as anyone at the tasks involved in setting up a self-sustaining 
economy. But his most important work, as everyone agreed, was exploring what the 
buggers had left behind, trying to find among structures, machinery, and fields 
long untended some things that human beings could use, could learn from. There 
were no books to read -- the buggers never needed them. With all things present 
in their memories, all things spoken as they were thought, when the buggers died 
their knowledge died with them.
  
  And yet. From the sturdiness of the roofs that covered their animal sheds and 
their food supplies, Ender learned that winter would be hard, with heavy snows. 
From fences with sharpened stakes that pointed outward he learned that there 
were marauding animals that were a danger to the crops or the herds. From the 
mill he learned that the long, foul-tasting fruits that grew in the overgrown 
orchards were dried and ground into meal. And from the slings that once were 
used to carry infants along with adults into the fields, he learned that even 
thougn the buggers were not much for individuality, they did love their 
children.
  
  Life settled down, and years passed. The colony lived in wooden houses and 
used the tunnels of the bugger city for storage and manufactories. They were 
governed by a council now, and administrators were elected, so that Ender, 
though they still called him govertior, was in fact only a judge. There were 
crimes and quarrels alongside kindness and cooperation; there were people who 
loved each other and people who did not; it was a human world. They did not wait 
so eagerly for each new transmission from the ansible; the names that were 
famous on Earth meant little to them now. The only name they knew was that of 
Peter Wiggin, the Hegemon of Earth; the only news that came was news of peace, 
of prosperity, of great ships leaving the littoral of Earth's solar system, 
passing the comet shield and filling up the bugger worlds. Soon there would be 
other colonies on this world, Ender's World; soon there would be neighbors; 
already they were halfway here; but no one cared. They would help the newcomers 
when they came, teach them what they had learned, but what mattered in life now 
was who would marry whom, and who was sick, and when was planting time, and why 
should I pay him when the calf died three weeks after I got it.
  
  "They've become people of the land," said Valentine. "No one cares now that 
Demosthenes is sending the seventh volume of his history today. No one here will 
read it."
  
  Ender pressed a button and his desk showed him the next page. "Very 
insightful, Valentine. How many more volumes until you're through?"
  
  "Just one. The story of Ender Wiggin."
  
  "What will you do, wait to write it until I'm dead?"
  
  "No. Just write it, and when I've brought it up to the present day, I'll 
stop."
  
  "I have a better idea. Take it up to the day we won the final battle. Stop it 
there. Nothing that I've done since then is worth writing down."
  
  "Maybe," said Valentine. "And maybe not."
  
  ***
  
  The ansible had brought them word that the new colony ship was only a year 
away. They asked Ender to find a place for them to settle in, near enough to 
Ender's colony that the two colonies could trade, but far enough apart that they 
could be governed separately. Ender used the helicopter and began to explore. He 
took one of the children along, an eleven-year-old boy named Abra; he had been 
only three when the colony was founded, and he remembered no other world than 
this. He and Ender flew as far as the copter would carry them, then camped for 
the night and got a feel for the land on foot the next morning.
  
  It was on the third morning that Ender suddenly began to feel an uneasy sense 
that he had been in this place before. He looked around; it was new land, he had 
never seen it. He called out to Abra.
  
  "Ho, Ender!" Abra called. He was on top of a steep low hill. "Come up!"
  
  Ender scrambled up, the turves coming away from his feet in the soft ground. 
Abra was pointing downward.
  
  "Can you believe this?" he asked.
  
  The hill was hollow. A deep depression in the middle, partially filled with 
water, was ringed by concave slopes that cantilevered dangerously over the 
water. In one direction the hill gave way to two long ridges that made a 
V-shaped valley: in the other direction the rose to a piece of white rock, 
grinning like a skull with a tree growing out of its mouth.
  
  "It's like a giant died here," said Abra, "and the Earth grew up to cover his 
carcass,"
  
  Now Ender knew why it had looked familiar. The Giant's corpse. He had played 
here too many times as a child not to know this place. But it was not possible. 
The computer in the Battle School could not possibly have seen this place. He 
looked through his binoculars in a direction he knew well, fearing and hoping 
that he would see what belonged in that place.
  
  Swings and slides. Monkey bars. Now overgrown, but the shapes still 
unmistakable.
  
  "Somebody had to have built this," Abra said, "Look, this skull place, it's 
not rock, look at it. This is concrete."
  
  "I know," said Ender. "They built it for me."
  
  "What?"
  
  "I know this place, Abra. The buggers built it for me."
  
  "The buggers were all dead fifty years before we got here."
  
  "You're right, it's impossible, but I know what I know. Abra, I shouldn't take 
you with me. It might be dangerous. If they knew me well enough to build this 
place, they might be planning to--"
  
  "To get even with you."
  
  "For killing them."
  
  "So don't go, Ender. Don't do what they want you to do."
  
  "lf they want to get revenge, Abra, I don't mind. But perhaps they don't. 
Perhaps this is the closest they could come to talking. To writing me a note."
  
  "They didn't know how to read and write."
  
  "Maybe they were learning when they died."
  
  "Well, I'm sure as hell not sticking around here if you're taking off 
somewhere. I'm going with you."
  
  "No. You're too young to take the risk of--"
  
  "Come on! You're Ender Wiggin. Don't tell me what eleven-year-old kids can 
do!"
  
  Together they flew in the copter, over the playground, over the woods, over 
the well in the forest clearing. Then out to where there was, indeed, a cliff, 
with a cave in the cliff wall and a ledge right where the End of the World 
should be. And there in the distance, just where it should be in the fantasy 
game, was the castle tower.
  
  He left Abra with the copter. "Don't come after me, and go home in an hour if 
I don't come back."
  
  "Eat it, Ender, I'm coming with you."
  
  "Eat it yourself, Abra, or I'll stuff you with mud."
  
  Abra could tell, despite Ender's joking tone, that he meant it, and so he 
stayed.
  
  The walls of the tower were notched and ledged for easy climbing. They meant 
him to get in.
  
  The room was as it had always been. Ender remembered well enough to look for a 
snake on the floor, but there was only a rug with a carved snake's head at one 
corner. Imitation, not duplication; for a people who made no art, they had done 
well. They must have dragged these images from Ender's own mind, finding him and 
learning his darkest dreams across the lightyears. But why? To bring him to this 
room, of course. To leave a message for him. But where was the message, and how 
would he understand it?
  
  The mirror was waiting for him on the wall. It was a dull sheet of metal, in 
which the rough shape of a human face had been scratched. They tried to draw the 
image I should see in the picture.
  
  And looking at the mirror he could remember breaking it, pulling it from the 
wall, and snakes leaping out of the hidden place, attacking him, biting him 
wherever their poisonous fangs could find purchase.
  
  How well do they know me, wondered Ender. Well enough to know how often I have 
thought of death, to know that I am not afraid of it? Well enough to know that 
even if I feared death, it would not stop me from taking that mirror from the 
wall.
  
  He walked to the mirror, lifted, pulled away. Nothing jumped from the space 
behind it. Instead, in a hollowed-out place, there was a white ball of silk with 
a few frayed strands sticking out here and there. An egg? No. The pupa of a 
queen bugger, already fertilized by the larval males, ready, out of her own 
body, to hatch a hundred thousand buggers, including a few queens and males. 
Ender could see the slug-like males clinging to the walls of a dark tunnel, and 
the large adults carrying the infant queen to the mating room; each male in turn 
penetrated the larval queen, shuddered in ecstasy, and died, dropping to the 
tunnel floor and shriveling. Then the new queen was laid before the old, a 
magnificent creature clad in soft and shimmering wings, which had long since 
lost the power of flight but still contained the power of majesty. The old queen 
kissed her to sleep with the gentle poison in her lips, then wrapped her in 
threads from her belly, and commanded her to become herself, to become a new 
city, a new world, to give birth to many queens and many worlds.
  
  How do I know this, thought Ender. How can I see these things, like memories 
in my own mind.
  
  As if in answer, he saw the first of all his battles with e bugger fleets. He 
had seen it before on the simulator; now he saw it as the hive-queen saw it, 
through many different eyes. The buggers formed their globe of ships, and then 
the terrible fighters came out of the darkness and the Little Doctor destroyed 
them in a blaze of light. He felt then what the hive-queen felt, watching 
through her workers' eyes as death came to them too quickly to avoid, but not 
too quickly to be anticipated. There was no memory of pain or fear, though. What 
the hive-queen felt was sadness, a sense of resignation. She had not thought 
these words as she saw the humans coming to kill, but it was in words that Ender 
understood her: They did not forgive us, she thought. We will surely die.
  
  "How can you live again?" he asked.
  
  The queen in her silken cocoon had no words to give back; but when he closed 
his eyes and tried to remember, instead of memory came new images. Putting the 
cocoon in a cool place, a dark place, but with water, so she wasn't dry; no, not 
just water, but water mixed with the sap of a certain tree, and kept tepid so 
that certain reactions could take place in the cocoon. Then time. Days and 
weeks, for the pupa inside to change. And then, when the cocoon had changed to a 
dusty brown color, Ender saw himself splitting open the cocoon, and helping the 
small and fragile queen emerge. He saw himself taking her by the forelimb and 
helping her walk from her birthwater to a nesting place, soft with dried leaves 
on sand. Then I am alive, came the thought in his mind. Then I am awake. Then I 
make my ten thousand children.
  
  "No," said Ender. "I can't."
  
  Anguish.
  
  "Your children are the monsters of our nightmares now. If I awoke you, we 
would only kill you again."
  
  There flashed through his mind a dozen images of human beings being killed by 
buggers, but with the image came a grief so powerful he could not bear it, and 
he wept their tears for them.
  
  "If you could make them feel as you can make me feel, then perhaps they could 
forgive you."
  
  Only me, he realized. They found me through the ansible, followed it and dwelt 
in my mind. In the agony of my tortured dreams they came to know me, even as I 
spent my days destroying them; they found my fear of them, and found also that I 
had no knowledge I was killing them. In the few weeks they had, they built this 
place for me, and the Giant's corpse and the playground and the ledge at the End 
of the World, so I would find this place by the evidence of my eyes. I am the 
only one they know, and so they can only talk to me, and through me. We are like 
you; the thought pressed into his mind. We did not mean to murder, and when we 
understood, we never came again. We thought we were the only thinking beings in 
the universe, until we met you, but never did we dream that thought could arise 
from the lonely animals who cannot dream each other's dreams. How were we to 
know? We could live with you in peace. Believe us, believe us, believe us.
  
  He reached into the cavity and took out the cocoon. It was astonishingly 
light, to hold all the hope and future of a great race within it.
  
  "I'll carry you," said Ender, "I'll go from world to world until I find a time 
and a place where you can come awake in safety. And I'll tell your story to my 
people, so that perhaps in time they can forgive you, too. The way that you've 
forgiven me."
  
  He wrapped the queen's cocoon in his jacket and carried her from the tower.
  
  "What was in there?" asked Abra.
  
  "The answer," said Ender.
  
  "To what?"
  
  "My question." And that was all he said of the matter; they searched for five 
more days and chose a site for the new colony far to the east and south of the 
tower.
  
  Weeks later he came to Valentine and told her to read something he had 
written; she pulled the file he named from the ship's computer, and read it.
  
  It was written as if the hive-queen spoke, telling all that they had meant to 
do, and all that they had done. Here are our failures, and here is our 
greatness; we did not mean to hurt you, and we forgive you for our death. From 
their earliest awareness to the great wars that swept across their home world, 
Ender told the story quickly, as if it were an ancient memory. When he came to 
the tale of the great mother, the queen of all, who first learned to keep and 
teach the new queen instead of killing her or driving her away, then he 
lingered, telling how many times she had finally to destroy the child of her 
body, the new self that was not herself, until she bore one who understood her 
quest for harmony. This was a new thing in the world, two queens that loved and 
helped each other instead of battling, and together they were stronger than any 
other hive. They prospered; they had more daughters who joined them in peace; it 
was the beginning of wisdom.
  
  If only we could have talked to you, the hive-queen said in Ender's words. But 
since it could not be, we ask only this: that you remember us, not as enemies, 
but as tragic sisters, changed into a foul shape by Fate or God or Evolution. If 
we had kissed, it would have been the miracle to make us human in each other's 
eyes. Instead we killed each other. But still we welcome you now as 
guestfriends. Come into our home, daughters of Earth; dwell in our tunnels, 
harvest our fields; what we cannot do, you are now our hands to do for us. 
Blossom, trees; ripen, fields; be warm for them, suns; be fertile for them, 
planets: they are our adopted daughters, and they have come home.
  
  The book that Ender wrote was not long, but in it was all the good and all the 
evil that the hive-queen knew. And he signed it, not with his name, but with a 
title:
  
  SPEAKER FOR THE DEAD
  
  On Earth, the book was published quietly, and quietly it was passed from hand 
to hand, until it was hard to believe that anyone on Earth might not have read 
it.
  
  Most who read it found it interesting -- some who read it refused to set it 
aside. They began to live by it as best they could, and when their loved ones 
died, a believer would arise beside the grave to be the Speaker for the Dead, 
and say what the dead one would have said, but with full candor, hiding no 
faults and pretending no virtues. Those who came to such services sometimes 
found them painful and disturbing, but there were many who decided that their 
life was worthwhile enough, despite their errors, that when they died a Speaker 
should tell the truth for them.
  
  On Earth it remained a religion among many religions. But for those who 
traveled the great cave of space and lived their lives in the hive-queen's 
tunnels and harvested the hive-queen's fields, it was the only religion. There 
was no colony without its Speaker for the Dead.
  
  No one knew and no one really wanted to know who was the original Speaker. 
Ender was not inclined to tell them.
  
  When Valentine was twenty-five years old, she finished the last volume of her 
history of the bugger wars. She included at the end the complete text of Ender's 
little book, but did not say that Ender wrote it.
  
  By ansible she got an answer from the ancient Hegemon, Peter Wiggin, 
seventy-seven years old with a failing heart.
  
  "I know who wrote it," he said. "If he can speak for the buggers, surely he 
can speak for me."
  
  Back and forth across the ansible Ender and Peter spoke, with Peter pouring 
out the story of his days and years, his crimes and his kindnesses. And when he 
died, Ender wrote a second volume, again signed by the Speaker for the Dead. 
Together, his two books were called the Hive-Queen and the Hegemon, and they 
were holy writ.
  
  "Come on," he said to Valentine one day. "Let's fly away and live forever."
  
  "We can't," she said. "There are miracles even relativity can't pull off, 
Ender."
  
  "We have to go. I'm almost happy here."
  
  "So, stay."
  
  "I've lived too long with pain. I won't know who I am without it."
  
  So they boarded a starship and went from world to world. Wherever they 
stopped, he was always Andrew Wiggin, itinerant speaker for the dead, and she 
was always Valentine, historian errant, writing down the stories of the living 
while Ender spoke the stories of the dead. And always Ender carried with him a 
dry white cocoon, looking for the world where the hive-queen could awaken and 
thrive in peace. He looked a long time.
 
  
