““In Elven society caring for the children is considered a task for the menfolk,” said Elliot, sighing and wondering why nobody ever bothered to read a book.
“Of course it is,” said Serene. “The woman goes through the physically taxing and bloody experience of childbirth. A woman’s experience of blood and pain is, naturally, what makes womankind particularly suited for the battlefield. Whereas men are the softer sex, squeamish about blood in the main. I know it is the same for human men, Luke was extremely disinclined to discuss my first experience of a woman’s menses.”
Luke stared ferociously into the middle distance, obviously trying to visualize himself somewhere else, having an entirely different conversation. Serene patted him on the back.
“Perfectly all right, I should have had more respect for you delicate masculine sensibilities.”
“Thank you,” said Luke, sounding very far away.
“What, you people expect a woman to tear apart their bodies and then go to all the bother of raising the children? That takes years, you know,” Serene remarked sternly. “The women’s labour is brief and agonizing, and the man’s is long and arduous. This seems only just. What on earth are men contributing to their children’s lives in the human world? Why would human woman agree to have a child?”
“The more she talks the more sense it all makes,’ said Elliot. “Has anyone else discovered this?””— Sarah Rees Brennan, In Other Lands