Short SF story. Females use stingers to implant eggs in yearfathers












4















I can't think of any other stories in the anthology and have no memories of the book cover.



The story is told from an adolescent girl's viewpoint in what appears to be a low tech agricultural society.



She lives with her mother, grandmother, a couple of aunts and some younger sisters. Also some man who is known as the yearfather.



The narrative reveals that every two or three years of her life there has been a new yearfather for twelve months or so, always quietly spoken young men who are nevertheless bubbly and entertaining. Then one day they are gone.



Due to circumstances, I think a younger sister has a minor accident, the girl protagonist finds herself alone in the house for most of an afternoon with the current yearfather. Nothing much happens, just some casual conversation.



However, when her older female relatives realise she's been with him they get her alone and ask if, at any time, her stinger had felt funny. Obviously, at this point, the reader realises they are not quite humans.



They make an issue of carefully keeping her away from the dayfather for a few weeks and then decide she is now mature enough for the revelation.



As always by this wintertime, the dayfather is acting unwell, her aunts and mother chain him in the root cellar (I think they do but not certain) and she is taken to witness. He starts whimpering and ends up screaming as big grubs burst out of his body, then bore right back in and begin eating him as he dies.



She is told the facts of life, very soon she will want to sting a male, a dayfather will be procured for her and she will want to mate and then implant, then she too will be a mother.



(Question also posted in SFF Chronicles)



Note: There are some similarities but this is NOT 'Bloodchild'.










share|improve this question

























  • First thought was "Bloodchild" but there is enough difference that I doubt it.

    – Organic Marble
    2 hours ago






  • 1





    Nope. I read Bloodchild for the first time yesterday and I thought "hey, this reminds me of the yearfather story" ... that's why I posted this query. I will edit not Bloodchild into the question, thanks

    – Danny3414
    1 hour ago


















4















I can't think of any other stories in the anthology and have no memories of the book cover.



The story is told from an adolescent girl's viewpoint in what appears to be a low tech agricultural society.



She lives with her mother, grandmother, a couple of aunts and some younger sisters. Also some man who is known as the yearfather.



The narrative reveals that every two or three years of her life there has been a new yearfather for twelve months or so, always quietly spoken young men who are nevertheless bubbly and entertaining. Then one day they are gone.



Due to circumstances, I think a younger sister has a minor accident, the girl protagonist finds herself alone in the house for most of an afternoon with the current yearfather. Nothing much happens, just some casual conversation.



However, when her older female relatives realise she's been with him they get her alone and ask if, at any time, her stinger had felt funny. Obviously, at this point, the reader realises they are not quite humans.



They make an issue of carefully keeping her away from the dayfather for a few weeks and then decide she is now mature enough for the revelation.



As always by this wintertime, the dayfather is acting unwell, her aunts and mother chain him in the root cellar (I think they do but not certain) and she is taken to witness. He starts whimpering and ends up screaming as big grubs burst out of his body, then bore right back in and begin eating him as he dies.



She is told the facts of life, very soon she will want to sting a male, a dayfather will be procured for her and she will want to mate and then implant, then she too will be a mother.



(Question also posted in SFF Chronicles)



Note: There are some similarities but this is NOT 'Bloodchild'.










share|improve this question

























  • First thought was "Bloodchild" but there is enough difference that I doubt it.

    – Organic Marble
    2 hours ago






  • 1





    Nope. I read Bloodchild for the first time yesterday and I thought "hey, this reminds me of the yearfather story" ... that's why I posted this query. I will edit not Bloodchild into the question, thanks

    – Danny3414
    1 hour ago
















4












4








4








I can't think of any other stories in the anthology and have no memories of the book cover.



The story is told from an adolescent girl's viewpoint in what appears to be a low tech agricultural society.



She lives with her mother, grandmother, a couple of aunts and some younger sisters. Also some man who is known as the yearfather.



The narrative reveals that every two or three years of her life there has been a new yearfather for twelve months or so, always quietly spoken young men who are nevertheless bubbly and entertaining. Then one day they are gone.



Due to circumstances, I think a younger sister has a minor accident, the girl protagonist finds herself alone in the house for most of an afternoon with the current yearfather. Nothing much happens, just some casual conversation.



However, when her older female relatives realise she's been with him they get her alone and ask if, at any time, her stinger had felt funny. Obviously, at this point, the reader realises they are not quite humans.



They make an issue of carefully keeping her away from the dayfather for a few weeks and then decide she is now mature enough for the revelation.



As always by this wintertime, the dayfather is acting unwell, her aunts and mother chain him in the root cellar (I think they do but not certain) and she is taken to witness. He starts whimpering and ends up screaming as big grubs burst out of his body, then bore right back in and begin eating him as he dies.



She is told the facts of life, very soon she will want to sting a male, a dayfather will be procured for her and she will want to mate and then implant, then she too will be a mother.



(Question also posted in SFF Chronicles)



Note: There are some similarities but this is NOT 'Bloodchild'.










share|improve this question
















I can't think of any other stories in the anthology and have no memories of the book cover.



The story is told from an adolescent girl's viewpoint in what appears to be a low tech agricultural society.



She lives with her mother, grandmother, a couple of aunts and some younger sisters. Also some man who is known as the yearfather.



The narrative reveals that every two or three years of her life there has been a new yearfather for twelve months or so, always quietly spoken young men who are nevertheless bubbly and entertaining. Then one day they are gone.



Due to circumstances, I think a younger sister has a minor accident, the girl protagonist finds herself alone in the house for most of an afternoon with the current yearfather. Nothing much happens, just some casual conversation.



However, when her older female relatives realise she's been with him they get her alone and ask if, at any time, her stinger had felt funny. Obviously, at this point, the reader realises they are not quite humans.



They make an issue of carefully keeping her away from the dayfather for a few weeks and then decide she is now mature enough for the revelation.



As always by this wintertime, the dayfather is acting unwell, her aunts and mother chain him in the root cellar (I think they do but not certain) and she is taken to witness. He starts whimpering and ends up screaming as big grubs burst out of his body, then bore right back in and begin eating him as he dies.



She is told the facts of life, very soon she will want to sting a male, a dayfather will be procured for her and she will want to mate and then implant, then she too will be a mother.



(Question also posted in SFF Chronicles)



Note: There are some similarities but this is NOT 'Bloodchild'.







story-identification short-stories






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 56 mins ago







Danny3414

















asked 2 hours ago









Danny3414Danny3414

3,47012165




3,47012165













  • First thought was "Bloodchild" but there is enough difference that I doubt it.

    – Organic Marble
    2 hours ago






  • 1





    Nope. I read Bloodchild for the first time yesterday and I thought "hey, this reminds me of the yearfather story" ... that's why I posted this query. I will edit not Bloodchild into the question, thanks

    – Danny3414
    1 hour ago





















  • First thought was "Bloodchild" but there is enough difference that I doubt it.

    – Organic Marble
    2 hours ago






  • 1





    Nope. I read Bloodchild for the first time yesterday and I thought "hey, this reminds me of the yearfather story" ... that's why I posted this query. I will edit not Bloodchild into the question, thanks

    – Danny3414
    1 hour ago



















First thought was "Bloodchild" but there is enough difference that I doubt it.

– Organic Marble
2 hours ago





First thought was "Bloodchild" but there is enough difference that I doubt it.

– Organic Marble
2 hours ago




1




1





Nope. I read Bloodchild for the first time yesterday and I thought "hey, this reminds me of the yearfather story" ... that's why I posted this query. I will edit not Bloodchild into the question, thanks

– Danny3414
1 hour ago







Nope. I read Bloodchild for the first time yesterday and I thought "hey, this reminds me of the yearfather story" ... that's why I posted this query. I will edit not Bloodchild into the question, thanks

– Danny3414
1 hour ago












1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















4














This is The Cabbage Patch, which I found in The First Theodore R. Cogswell MEGAPACK ®: 16 Classic Science Fiction Stories. You can read it on the Internet Archive here as part of a Fantasy and Science Fiction magazine. As for where you read it, you can check ISFDB for publications where it appeared.




However, when her older female relatives realise she's been with him they get her alone and ask if, at any time, her stinger had felt funny.




Here's this part:




Once Aunt Hester caught me
alone with [the year-father] and her face got
all hard and twisted and she was
going to call the patrol and have
him beaten, but Mother came in
just then. She sent the year-father
to his room and then took me
into the parlor. I knew that she
was getting ready for one of her
heart-to-heart talks but there
wasn’t anything I could do about
it, so I just sat there and listened.
Mother’s talks always got so
wound in on themselves that when
she was through I usually couldn’t
figure out what all the fuss had
been about.



First she asked me if I’d felt
anything funny when I was alone
with the year-father. I asked her
what she meant by “funny” and
she sort of stuttered and her face
got all red. Finally she asked me
a funny question about my stinger
and I said “no,” Then she started
to tell me a story about the wasps
and the meem but she didn’t get
very far with that either. She
wanted to but she got all flustered
and her tongue wouldn’t work.
Aunt Hester said nonsense, that
I was still a little girl and next
year would be soon enough.
Mother said she wished she could
be sure, then she made me promise
that if ever my stinger felt funny
when I was around a year-father.
I’d run and tell her about it right
away because if I didn’t, something
terrible might happen.







share|improve this answer


























  • Good answer! I had read it, in A Shocking Thing.

    – Organic Marble
    44 mins ago











Your Answer








StackExchange.ready(function() {
var channelOptions = {
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "186"
};
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
createEditor();
});
}
else {
createEditor();
}
});

function createEditor() {
StackExchange.prepareEditor({
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader: {
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
},
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
});


}
});














draft saved

draft discarded


















StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fscifi.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f206941%2fshort-sf-story-females-use-stingers-to-implant-eggs-in-yearfathers%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown

























1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









4














This is The Cabbage Patch, which I found in The First Theodore R. Cogswell MEGAPACK ®: 16 Classic Science Fiction Stories. You can read it on the Internet Archive here as part of a Fantasy and Science Fiction magazine. As for where you read it, you can check ISFDB for publications where it appeared.




However, when her older female relatives realise she's been with him they get her alone and ask if, at any time, her stinger had felt funny.




Here's this part:




Once Aunt Hester caught me
alone with [the year-father] and her face got
all hard and twisted and she was
going to call the patrol and have
him beaten, but Mother came in
just then. She sent the year-father
to his room and then took me
into the parlor. I knew that she
was getting ready for one of her
heart-to-heart talks but there
wasn’t anything I could do about
it, so I just sat there and listened.
Mother’s talks always got so
wound in on themselves that when
she was through I usually couldn’t
figure out what all the fuss had
been about.



First she asked me if I’d felt
anything funny when I was alone
with the year-father. I asked her
what she meant by “funny” and
she sort of stuttered and her face
got all red. Finally she asked me
a funny question about my stinger
and I said “no,” Then she started
to tell me a story about the wasps
and the meem but she didn’t get
very far with that either. She
wanted to but she got all flustered
and her tongue wouldn’t work.
Aunt Hester said nonsense, that
I was still a little girl and next
year would be soon enough.
Mother said she wished she could
be sure, then she made me promise
that if ever my stinger felt funny
when I was around a year-father.
I’d run and tell her about it right
away because if I didn’t, something
terrible might happen.







share|improve this answer


























  • Good answer! I had read it, in A Shocking Thing.

    – Organic Marble
    44 mins ago
















4














This is The Cabbage Patch, which I found in The First Theodore R. Cogswell MEGAPACK ®: 16 Classic Science Fiction Stories. You can read it on the Internet Archive here as part of a Fantasy and Science Fiction magazine. As for where you read it, you can check ISFDB for publications where it appeared.




However, when her older female relatives realise she's been with him they get her alone and ask if, at any time, her stinger had felt funny.




Here's this part:




Once Aunt Hester caught me
alone with [the year-father] and her face got
all hard and twisted and she was
going to call the patrol and have
him beaten, but Mother came in
just then. She sent the year-father
to his room and then took me
into the parlor. I knew that she
was getting ready for one of her
heart-to-heart talks but there
wasn’t anything I could do about
it, so I just sat there and listened.
Mother’s talks always got so
wound in on themselves that when
she was through I usually couldn’t
figure out what all the fuss had
been about.



First she asked me if I’d felt
anything funny when I was alone
with the year-father. I asked her
what she meant by “funny” and
she sort of stuttered and her face
got all red. Finally she asked me
a funny question about my stinger
and I said “no,” Then she started
to tell me a story about the wasps
and the meem but she didn’t get
very far with that either. She
wanted to but she got all flustered
and her tongue wouldn’t work.
Aunt Hester said nonsense, that
I was still a little girl and next
year would be soon enough.
Mother said she wished she could
be sure, then she made me promise
that if ever my stinger felt funny
when I was around a year-father.
I’d run and tell her about it right
away because if I didn’t, something
terrible might happen.







share|improve this answer


























  • Good answer! I had read it, in A Shocking Thing.

    – Organic Marble
    44 mins ago














4












4








4







This is The Cabbage Patch, which I found in The First Theodore R. Cogswell MEGAPACK ®: 16 Classic Science Fiction Stories. You can read it on the Internet Archive here as part of a Fantasy and Science Fiction magazine. As for where you read it, you can check ISFDB for publications where it appeared.




However, when her older female relatives realise she's been with him they get her alone and ask if, at any time, her stinger had felt funny.




Here's this part:




Once Aunt Hester caught me
alone with [the year-father] and her face got
all hard and twisted and she was
going to call the patrol and have
him beaten, but Mother came in
just then. She sent the year-father
to his room and then took me
into the parlor. I knew that she
was getting ready for one of her
heart-to-heart talks but there
wasn’t anything I could do about
it, so I just sat there and listened.
Mother’s talks always got so
wound in on themselves that when
she was through I usually couldn’t
figure out what all the fuss had
been about.



First she asked me if I’d felt
anything funny when I was alone
with the year-father. I asked her
what she meant by “funny” and
she sort of stuttered and her face
got all red. Finally she asked me
a funny question about my stinger
and I said “no,” Then she started
to tell me a story about the wasps
and the meem but she didn’t get
very far with that either. She
wanted to but she got all flustered
and her tongue wouldn’t work.
Aunt Hester said nonsense, that
I was still a little girl and next
year would be soon enough.
Mother said she wished she could
be sure, then she made me promise
that if ever my stinger felt funny
when I was around a year-father.
I’d run and tell her about it right
away because if I didn’t, something
terrible might happen.







share|improve this answer















This is The Cabbage Patch, which I found in The First Theodore R. Cogswell MEGAPACK ®: 16 Classic Science Fiction Stories. You can read it on the Internet Archive here as part of a Fantasy and Science Fiction magazine. As for where you read it, you can check ISFDB for publications where it appeared.




However, when her older female relatives realise she's been with him they get her alone and ask if, at any time, her stinger had felt funny.




Here's this part:




Once Aunt Hester caught me
alone with [the year-father] and her face got
all hard and twisted and she was
going to call the patrol and have
him beaten, but Mother came in
just then. She sent the year-father
to his room and then took me
into the parlor. I knew that she
was getting ready for one of her
heart-to-heart talks but there
wasn’t anything I could do about
it, so I just sat there and listened.
Mother’s talks always got so
wound in on themselves that when
she was through I usually couldn’t
figure out what all the fuss had
been about.



First she asked me if I’d felt
anything funny when I was alone
with the year-father. I asked her
what she meant by “funny” and
she sort of stuttered and her face
got all red. Finally she asked me
a funny question about my stinger
and I said “no,” Then she started
to tell me a story about the wasps
and the meem but she didn’t get
very far with that either. She
wanted to but she got all flustered
and her tongue wouldn’t work.
Aunt Hester said nonsense, that
I was still a little girl and next
year would be soon enough.
Mother said she wished she could
be sure, then she made me promise
that if ever my stinger felt funny
when I was around a year-father.
I’d run and tell her about it right
away because if I didn’t, something
terrible might happen.








share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 19 mins ago

























answered 1 hour ago









LaurelLaurel

6,34412146




6,34412146













  • Good answer! I had read it, in A Shocking Thing.

    – Organic Marble
    44 mins ago



















  • Good answer! I had read it, in A Shocking Thing.

    – Organic Marble
    44 mins ago

















Good answer! I had read it, in A Shocking Thing.

– Organic Marble
44 mins ago





Good answer! I had read it, in A Shocking Thing.

– Organic Marble
44 mins ago


















draft saved

draft discarded




















































Thanks for contributing an answer to Science Fiction & Fantasy Stack Exchange!


  • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

But avoid



  • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

  • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.


To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




draft saved


draft discarded














StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fscifi.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f206941%2fshort-sf-story-females-use-stingers-to-implant-eggs-in-yearfathers%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown





















































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown

































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown







Popular posts from this blog

A CLEAN and SIMPLE way to add appendices to Table of Contents and bookmarks

Calculate evaluation metrics using cross_val_predict sklearn

Insert data from modal to MySQL (multiple modal on website)