Between Darkness and Light (Sholan Alliance)

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Between Darkness and Light (Sholan Alliance) Page 79

by Lisanne Norman


  Aware of Banner stiffening, he rounded on him, first gesturing Q’almo to leave. “How was he killed?”

  Banner shook his head. “I don’t know.”

  Kezule remembered the way his mind had been assaulted just as Kusac had hit him the first time, and the glazed look that had come over the Sholan’s face as at the last possible minute before killing him, he’d stopped.

  “Burn it!” he swore, stamping his foot on the ground and swinging away from Banner in anger. “Bring my wife over!” he called out then rounded on Banner again. “He’s a mind reader again, isn’t he? He’s gotten his abilities back, damn it!”

  “Not to my knowledge,” said Banner as Zayshul was escorted over.

  Kezule rounded on her. “He’s a telepath, isn’t he? And he’s been teaching you. Why the hell didn’t you tell me?”

  “If he hadn’t taught me, I couldn’t have saved your life,” she retorted, pulling free of her guard. His crest began to lower. “You killed the guard?” he asked.

  “Yes,” she said, her eyes flicking briefly to Banner. “Be thankful I did. What idiot gave him a live gun?”

  “I intend to find out,” he said as Khadui, and Jayza, still carrying Shaidan, were escorted up to them.

  “Take Shaidan back down to the Command level, Zayshul,” he said, noticing the glazed look on the tear-stained face of the child.

  “I need to treat his father,” she said angrily. “He’ll be going into shock with a wound like that! He needs fluids, surgery to remove the dead tissue ...”

  “He brought it on himself,” interrupted Kezule coldly, taking Shaidan from Jayza and thrusting him at her. “He’ll get no treatment till I say so! See to the child and my son, that’s all you need to worry about.”

  “If he’s not treated, Kezule, he could lose his leg, if not his life,” she said, becoming distraught as she tried to hold onto Shaidan, who had suddenly come to life again and was demanding to see his father. “You can’t do that to him, especially when he’s morally in the right!”

  “You’re upsetting Shaidan,” he said, gesturing to the guard who’d brought her over. “Take them back to the Command level, see Shaidan settled in our quarters with Shishu, then escort my wife to the Officers level to operate on my son.”

  M’zynal arrived then, with a unit of six armed guards.

  “In the brig, strip-search them and scan them for weapons, the same with their quarters,” Kezule ordered. “Then return them to their quarters and search this level, the Officers’, and any rooms their Captain used on Command. He had a gun. They’ll have more weapons hidden somewhere.”

  “Aye, General. The Sholan Dzaou’s already there, and I left orders to process Captain Aldatan when he arrived. Their ship, too?” asked M’zynal.

  Kezule nodded. He was beginning to feel decidedly light-headed now.

  “May I suggest you go for medical treatment now, General?” said the Security chief as his men took charge of the Sholans.

  Reaction was setting in and his shoulder was stiffening up. “I will. Do we have security tapes on this level?” he asked, starting to walk back to the gate.

  “I believe so. I’ll get it checked out when we’re done and let you know. Relax, General, the situation’s contained now.”

  “Watch Kusac every minute,” he said tiredly. “Take no chances with him. No one goes into his cell alone, no matter the circumstances. No live weapons, only stunners without the capacity to kill.” He looked at his son. “He was as strong and as fast as me, M’zynal, that’s just not possible.”

  “I’ll brief Security accordingly, General.”

  “One more thing. The psi damper collars we took off the cubs—the ones locked in your office—put one on the Captain and set it to maximum strength. Make sure the Duty Officer always wears a control bracelet and have the other one brought to me.”

  “Yes, General.”

  As soon as the trank hit him, Kusac sagged against his guards, all the fight suddenly evaporating out of him. Unable to stand, his limbs feeling like dead weights apart from the fiery pain that still burned down his left side, he was manhandled across the field to the emergency door in the covered walkway. A short ride in the elevator, then he was dragged out into the brig.

  Through the fog in his mind, he recognized the guards who took over as more of Kezule’s commandos. A chair was brought and they tried to get him to sit. When he yowled in pain, they stopped to examine his wound.

  As he clutched the one holding him up, he knew they were talking but the words weren’t clear. He fought to concentrate, pushing back the mists as they carefully stripped him of his clothing.

  “I’m putting a pressure dressing on those wounds,” he heard a voice he knew say.

  “He’s to have no treatment,” objected another.

  A string of expletives that made even him blink followed. “Kusac, hold still. It’ll hurt but I need to put a dressing on your wounds.”

  He peered at the figure kneeling before him. Female from the coloring. His nose told him nothing as all he could smell was the stench of his own singed fur and burned flesh. His heart begin to race and he felt suddenly cold and clammy. The nausea he’d been feeling began to increase, but his mind was clearing as his system fought back against the trank.

  “Zhalmo,” he said.

  She looked up and nodded. “Hold him still,” she said as she tore open the dressing pack.

  He was shivering but could feel sweat running down his back. Looking down, he wished he hadn’t when he saw the swollen and charred hole on the top of his thigh. Feeling faint, he looked quickly away.

  She pressed gently against his inner thigh, holding the outer edge of the dressing there with one hand as she wrapped it round the entry point to the other side to cover the exit wound. Even that slight touch was too much as he clutched the wooden chair and tried to bite back a low moan of pain.

  He heard a loud snap as the chair back broke, then hands grasped him as he began to fall, but the pain continued as she swiftly bound the dressing in place.

  “Carry him into his cell and put him on the bed,” she ordered. “We’ll finish the search there.”

  He swam in and out of consciousness until they finished, then she was helping him sit up and holding a bowl of water to his lips.

  “Drink, Kusac,” she said as he put a shaking hand up to catch hold of it. “You’re losing body fluids. You need to replace them. Drink as much as you can, do you hear me?”

  “I hear,” he said, suddenly aware just how thirsty he was despite the nausea.

  The door closed behind her, leaving him alone. He let the empty bowl fall from his hands to the bed beside him. He felt sick from more than the effects of the wound—he’d failed, and now any prospect of leaving here with his son was gone, probably for good. His vision began to fade and he slumped back on the bed, unconscious.

  Ghidd’ah was finishing off dressing Kezule’s shoulder in the treatment room when Zayshul entered, still wearing her surgical clothes.

  “How is he?” he asked, looking up at her.

  She sat down on the chair by her monitor. “There was no bullet in him,” she said. “As far as I can tell, it was designed to dissolve inside the wound.”

  “Excuse me?”

  “Kusac wasn’t using a straightforward weapon,” she said. “It was a drug delivery system.”

  “Has he been poisoned?” Kezule demanded, starting to rise out of the chair.

  “General!” exclaimed Ghidd’ah. “Please, sit still!”

  “No, not a poison, exactly,” said Zayshul. “What it did do was knock him out, now it’s systematically targeting and destroying the Warrior glands that give him the extra speed and strength and allow him to heal faster.”

  “This drug is killing him!”

  “No, he’s in no danger, Kezule,” she said hurriedly, seeing him about to pull away from Ghidd’ah again. “He’s becoming the same as us Primes, that’s all. Still a Warrior, but without the extra physical adv
antages of your caste.”

  “Then stop it!” he demanded. “That’s enough,” he snapped, turning on Ghidd’ah and reaching past her to grab the clean shirt that had been brought for him.

  “I can’t,” she said. “The drug’s in his system, there’s nothing I can do. It’s very clever, actually, because it does no other damage. As for his arm, there’s no permanent harm. The bone was chipped slightly as the pellet hit it, but I’ve taken the pieces out. He’ll need a sling for about a week, then he’ll be fine.”

  “He won’t be fine,” hissed Kezule angrily, standing up and pulling his shirt on, wincing as he moved his injured shoulder and the stitches in the deep holes and slashes caused by Kusac’s claws pulled. “He’s been crippled as a Warrior!”

  “He’s alive and physically whole apart from that, and so are you,” she snapped back. “And you have both been treated! I have to see to Kusac, Kezule. If you leave him untreated, he really could die.”

  “She’s right, General,” said Ghidd’ah as she cleared up.

  “You need him alive,” said Zayshul.

  “Not any longer,” he said coldly, buttoning his shirt and stuffing it into the waistband of his trousers.

  “Ghidd’ah, would you excuse us?” asked Zayshul.

  “If you let him die,” she said when they were alone, “you’ll have to kill them all because they won’t rest until they’ve been revenged, and that includes Shaidan. You have no idea of how deep their family ties go.”

  “He tried to kill me, Zayshul! Where’s your sympathy for me?” he demanded. “Or are you that besotted with him? I know what happened while I was away!”

  “I have none for you,” she said, hardening her voice. “Kusac was the victim here. I warned you to tell him about the female, and what he’d do if you didn’t when he found out. He even gave you a chance to admit it to him. Your Security guard panicked and shot him. Kusac’s shot was merely reflexive, he had no intention of harming you, never mind M’kou. He only wanted you as a hostage.”

  “I’m not talking about the gun, I’m talking about how he went for my throat! Dammit, Zayshul, I would have been within my rights to have had him executed on the spot!”

  “Had you done so—and if you let him die—you will alienate yourself from all of us who came with you! They know him, Kezule! He isn’t a feared enemy, he’s someone they’ve worked and played with, so is his crew!”

  “His wound is not life threatening,” he hissed, grabbing his jacket. “I’ve seen civilians survive worse in battle. He will not be treated, that’s final, and he’ll be punished for this, that I promise!”

  He was heading for the door when Giyarishis arrived. “What do you want?” he demanded. “To plead for his life, too? It’s with his Gods now,” he snarled, pushing the small alien aside and stalking off down the corridor.

  Zayshul sat there blinking back tears, frustrated and furious with both Kezule, and Kusac.

  “Must live,” hummed Giyarishis’ translator as he hovered in the doorway. “Cooperate they must!”

  Kezule looked at the contents of the box that M’zynal had emptied onto the table in his office in amazement. Reaching out, he picked up a small unit that resembled a reader.

  “What does this do?”

  “It can hack into the engineering station on their level and trigger anything from blackouts to changing the addresses of our internal communications system,” his Security chief said. “Somehow he also managed to access the station and set it up to respond to signals from his device. Very clever, actually.”

  Kezule put it to one side and picked through the various gadgets. “Garrotes,” he said, touching one of the pieces of wire.

  “And lockpicks,” agreed M’zynal, reaching for another device which he held up for the General. “They’d made five one-shot stun guns like this,” he said, putting it back. “There are several small explosive devices—plenty of smoke and some damage, good for getting out of tight situations. And a couple of small welding devices.”

  He picked up a bag of gray powder. “This?”

  “Nitrogen-based fertilizer, an explosive compound when mixed with items such as fuel. Placed in the right areas, there’s enough there to cause serious damage to Kij’ik.”

  “Who had that?”

  “We found it hidden in the Captain’s quarters. As well as the gun you were given earlier, he was also carrying a spray of the same chemical as the pellets.”

  “So all of them were preparing an attack,” he said, sitting back down, his jaw tightening. “Are you sure you found everything?”

  “Their quarters are clean, but as for the rest of their level, we swept it as thoroughly as we could, but I can’t guarantee we found everything.”

  “Return them to their quarters and lock them in. Post guards outside.”

  “Aye, sir,” said M’zynal, scooping the contents carefully back into the box and leaving.

  Kezule sat back in his chair, staring into space. Now that some of his initial rage had burned off, his conscience was beginning to nag him. Much of what Zayshul had said was true, but Kusac’s behavior had made it impossible for him to do anything other than what he’d done. Frankly, he didn’t trust himself near the Sholan in the near future. Staring death at his hands—or teeth—in the face the way he had, had rattled him more than he liked. And what the pellet had done to his son, he couldn’t forgive. The temptation to tear Kusac limb from limb was too strong right now. Whatever the provocation, and he had to admit there had been enough, there had been no excuse for the Sholan to react as violently as he had.

  A knock at the door broke his reverie.

  “Enter.”

  M’kou came in, still pale, his arm in a sling, but otherwise looking well.

  “Sit down,” he said, half rising. “You should still be in your bed.”

  “I’m fine. I came to tell you that my wound was an accident,” said M’kou, taking the seat beside his father’s desk. “When Kusac was hit, his gun went off as his hand clenched round the trigger. It was a reflex action, nothing more.”

  “He shouldn’t have been carrying a gun,” said Kezule grimly. “He’ll be punished for the damage he’s caused you and for attempting to kill me.”

  “That was after he’d been shot, Father. You’d have done the same. His wound is surely punishment enough.”

  “Have you come to tell me we need him, too?” he asked testily. “Seems everyone has an opinion that differs from mine!”

  “We don’t need the Sholans after us for killing him and his crew.”

  “You’ve been talking to Zayshul,” he said angrily, getting up. “Stop pressuring me, M’kou. It’s only making it more difficult for me to spare him.”

  “Then there’s no point in me asking you to give him medical treatment,” said his son, rising.

  “None,” Kezule snapped.

  “You do realize he’s just handed us a weapon we can use against the M’zullians, don’t you?”

  Kezule stared at him. “And you do realize what it’s doing to you, don’t you? Zayshul did tell you that his drug is destroying what sets you apart as a Warrior?”

  He nodded, a shadow crossing his face. “Our Gods at least have a sense of justice,” he said quietly. “My price could have been as bad as the one they’re exacting from Kusac, and there’s no reason for him to suffer.”

  “Enough!” Kezule hissed, pushing him aside as he left.

  He’d put off returning to his quarters as long as he could, but he couldn’t avoid it any longer he realized as he keyed open the door to his suite.

  Zayshul was in the lounge with Shaidan curled up on the sofa beside her, his head on her lap.

  “Shaidan, why didn’t you tell me your father had his telepathic abilities back?” he demanded, standing on the other side of the low table from them.

  “You didn’t ask me,” the child said sullenly.

  “Kezule, leave him alone. I’ve only just got him settled. You know he’s only programmed to answ
er direct questions,” said Zayshul.

  “So he’s still programmed, is he? Strange, he didn’t behave as if he was earlier! I thought that perhaps you’d taken it into your head to alter that too!”

  She looked up at him. “I haven’t done anything to him.” Shaidan sat up on his haunches. “I want to see my father. He’s hurt, he needs me.”

  “You’ll stay here where you belong,” said Kezule shortly. “Zayshul, put him in his room ...”

  “I don’t belong here! I belong with my father!” he said, springing at Kezule who instinctively caught him. The cub began to lash out with his fists and feet. “You hurt him! I hate you! I hate you!”

  “Stop this instantly!” Kezule roared, shaking him till Shaidan was so dizzy he was clutching at him for support. He thrust the cub at Zayshul. “Lock him in his room,” he ordered. “When he’s prepared to behave in a civilized way, he can come out! What is it with these damned Sholans? They go feral at the first opportunity!”

  She hesitated.

  “Do it now!” he roared at her.

  When she returned, he’d gone.

  Kusac surfaced about two hours later with a raging thirst and in acute pain. His leg had swollen to the point where the bandage was actually cutting into him. With shaking hands, he reached down and began to loosen it.

  Despite the dressing, his wounds were seeping so much fluid that his upper thigh and the bedding beneath him were saturated and beginning to stick to his pelt. He was cold to the point of shivering, an early sign he was starting a fever. His tongue was cleaving to the roof of his mouth and he knew he urgently needed to drink.

  Using his arms, he tried to push himself closer to the edge of the bed and swing his legs over the side, but his hip and groin muscles were so distended that flexing his left leg was impossible. To get off the bed, he was going to have to lower himself to the ground using his good leg.

  In the end, he fell off, pulling the bedding with him, but luckily landing on his good side. He lay there gasping for breath, praying for the pain to subside. Even with his heightened tolerance, this was beyond the pain J’koshuk had caused him.

 

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