She was the last Kalquorian female to have been born alive and healthy. And fertile. The child she carried was a boy, but it was possible she might have a girl in the future. Another healthy female, a new version of herself.
Twenty years since she was born. What were the chances another girl, unaffected by the genetic damage from the virus, could exist for the Kalquorian people?
Off the point. Focus. “Your behavior is unacceptable. Putting our child at risk is unacceptable.”
“What risk? I took a trip that hundreds go on every day. I went shopping. I ate meals in restaurants. I saw shows.”
“Did you take your vitamins? Eat food that wasn’t garbage?” Pana brought in a plate boasting healthy portions of lean meat, leafy vegetables, and fruit. He set it on the table before Briel and returned to the kitchen, taking the other tray she’d picked at, his lip curled in disgust at the unwholesome fare.
She yelled after him, “I ate what I wanted, and I enjoyed it. Maryam claims her cravings were far worse than mine, and she indulged. She says most women she knew did so too, with no ill effects.”
Pana returned with a cup of water that Kels suspected was vitamin-infused. “Matara Maryam is an Earther. She can drop dozens of babes effortlessly.”
“Why don’t you tell her that when you see her again? Be ready to duck when you do.”
Kels returned to the most significant concern with dogged determination. “The point is, you’re a Kalquorian woman. Your pregnancy is not only rare, but precious to our people. You can’t behave like an Earther or an Adraf or a Plasian.”
“No, I’m to be set on a shelf to collect dust. Unless you plan to put me under glass as well. Mother of All forbid I get smudged by a normal life.” Her eyes brightened with tears that clawed at Kels’s heart.
“Don’t cry. No harm was done.” Too late, he tried to de-escalate the situation.
“No harm? Really? ‘Don’t go there, Briel, it’s too dangerous. Don’t eat that, Briel, it’s not healthy. Don’t enjoy your life or do anything but sit quietly, because all that matters is that you shove out a child for Kalquor.’ I might as well be in a prison, doing nothing but breeding babies.”
She jumped to her feet and stormed out of the room. The click of the lock to what Kels supposed was the sleeping quarters was loud in her wake.
As Kels met his male clanmates’ gazes he saw his frustrations and confusion reflected back at him.
And guilt. Don’t forget the guilt.
Chapter Two
Maryam paused in her knitting to tuck an errant red curl behind her ear. She hummed under her breath, contented. She snuggled in her favorite quilt while working to finish the blanket for Briel’s bundle of joy. Her legs curled under her on the lounger that also served as her bed. A fragrant cup of herbal tea balanced on the corner of the table before her, a leaning pile of fabrics threatening to topple over on it.
The station’s owners, the Solns, were tiny creatures. It was reflected on Pelk Space Station, which served as a stop for pleasure-cruise voyagers, as well as a multicultural center. Maryam’s quarters, located on the station’s residential level, were miniscule and nowhere as luxurious as the temporary apartments on the guest levels, two floors up.
Maryam’s apartment had felt claustrophobic until she’d gotten used to them. Now she regarded her two rooms and bath as a cozy retreat. It was made cozier still by knitting and sewing projects in various stages of completion, piled on most surfaces and the floor too.
Briel had visited only once. After watching Maryam haul bibs, rompers, sleepers, and pillows off one of the two chairs so her visitor could sit, she’d declared they’d meet in her guest quarters from then on.
As Maryam worked to finish Briel’s present, she wondered how her friend’s reunion with her clan was going. The young Kalquorian often operated at full-tilt energy, her personality excitable and reckless. Fortunately, her clanmates appeared as if they could handle Briel’s liveliness. Maybe Maryam had judged them too swiftly concerning the age disparity. It was hard not to judge men as a rule, however. Not when one was a woman coming from patriarchal Earth.
Plenty of older men from her home planet married younger females. They often tossed aside the wives who’d aged with them for the chance to wed a girl twenty or thirty years their juniors. Younger men weren’t innocent of discarding their wives either, not when they found women who played more into their images of what a marriage partner should be.
Women couldn’t play such games on Earth. Not if they wanted to live.
It was fascinating to Maryam how Briel seemed to have as few choices. She was an endangered species after all, a Kalquorian woman who could have children. She should have been able to have her pick of men. Yet her parents had chosen for her, determined to find clanmates with rank and power. No doubt they’d done so out of love for their daughter, but too much sheltering had left Briel desperate to stretch her wings. Now her men paid the price. With all those muscles, they’d not been able to keep Briel from flying off to a foreign space station.
Ah yes, those muscles. As hard as Maryam had tried to not gawk, the men had been an eyeful. Kels, built for power, his body a delicious menu of strength and sinew. The smaller but no less impressive Dergan, a taut specimen of contained force. Lovely Pana, a vision of graceful masculinity, solid but lithe. All wearing those formsuits, leaving very little to the imagination.
“Good heavens, stop perving on your friend’s husbands,” she rebuked herself. “Not nice, Maryam. Not nice at all.”
Not to mention how she was proving Earth’s government right about how sinful women were. On the heels of that thought, she scowled at the notion she was being immoral. Earth’s restrictions on females were bullshit. Leaving her home planet and the ridiculous but severe pseudo-religious laws had been the best move she’d ever made.
Thank heavens that Earther patrol ship had left the day before. Even in Soln space, Earth authorities could haul her in for questioning—at the very least. She’d been on the receiving end of glares from the patrol vessel’s crew merely for lunching in public with Briel.
“Screw Earth. Those jerks would have fallen all over themselves if Briel had given them a second glance, and no one would have said a word about it.”
Maryam sighed over the double standard. Women on her home planet had it so much worse than the men. The longer she stayed away, the more certain she was that she wouldn’t return. There was nothing for her there except memories of loss and disappointment, including an ex-husband who didn’t mind parading the success of his second marriage to a woman who offered all Maryam couldn’t.
Her ruminations were depressing. Maryam chased them away, concentrating on her knitting. The click of the needles soothed her. She began humming again.
She wasn’t aware when her mind began to stray toward Clan Kels once more. Several minutes had passed when she realized she was ogling them in her head. Her panties were damp.
Stop it. Friends don’t lust after friends’ men. No more.
Poor Briel. Lucky in so many respects, but she’d confessed she couldn’t appreciate it. One moment the Kalquorian complained about her clan, only to compliment them in the next breath. She’d been frank in her admission that she didn’t loved them, but she respected her clanmates. Liked them, perhaps with a smidge of affection.
At least the intimate s
ide of the relationship worked. Briel had classified it as “magnificent”. She claimed to climax several times with each encounter.
“Several times,” Maryam marveled, trying to imagine it. Her ex-husband hadn’t been bad in bed. At least not in the beginning, when they hadn’t been slaves to Maryam’s cycle in the hopes of a successful pregnancy. He’d satisfied Maryam more often than not, but she’d never reached more than a single orgasm per romp. She wondered if Briel’s good fortune had to do with Kalquorian physiology, rather than masterful technique.
Coping with three men must be exhausting. Maryam wondered how Briel managed it. She’d not possessed the brazenness to ask.
“If I had three of them and they looked like that, I’d find a way. Though the two naughty parts per guy would be overdoing it.”
Two cocks, standard equipment for the Kalquorian male. Briel had insisted the anal stimulation was astounding. “If it hurts and you don’t want it to, then he’s doing it wrong,” she’d chortled as Maryam had flushed a brilliant scarlet.
Scary…but worth a try. Maryam giggled at her outrageous inclinations. Yes, it was fortunate no Earther captain or security officer was around to interrogate her. She’d be in trouble for sure.
“They’re just jealous they don’t have as much to offer.”
Maryam snickered again, but on the heels of her potentially illegal ruminations, she recalled how little she had to offer any man. That brought the hilarity to an abrupt halt.
Without conscious effort, she glanced at the sole shelf that didn’t have an ongoing project or five littering its surface. Instead, a lone teddy bear, its golden fur fluffy and inviting a cuddle, sat alone. Its brown glass eyes regarded her somberly despite its hand-stitched smile.
Sadness struck, overwhelming as it sometimes was. After eighteen years, that first broken dream continued to hurt. The many that came after added to it, rather than existing on their own.
Before the pain could engulf her, Maryam forced her gaze away from the bear. She bent to her knitting, pretending not to notice the tears falling on the baby blanket.
* * * *
Kels sat alone on the lounger in the suite’s common room, rubbing his temples to soothe the never-ending pounding headache. What was he to do about his Matara?
Apparently, it was his question alone to wrestle with. Dergan had left shortly after Briel locked herself in the sleeping room. No doubt the Nobek was roaming the station in a temper, perhaps picking a fight with some Tragoom.
For a change, Pana wasn’t fussing over Briel. He’d gone out to buy food to last them until they headed home to Kalquor. Fortunately, a destroyer was in dock that would return to the planet in a couple of days, so the clan wouldn’t be forced to wait a week for the next commercial transport. Clan Kels could have easily afforded to lease a private vessel, but shuttles were slower than commercial transports, and time had been of the essence when it came to reaching Briel and returning her to Kalquor.
Kels had to find a way to keep Briel from dashing off again. What could he offer to ease the wanderlust that drove her? Not for the first time, he thought her parents had done them all a great disservice by confining her to their farm until she’d clanned.
He could sympathize with his Matara’s wish to experience the adventures she’d been denied. If only Briel would calm down until the baby was born and at a reasonable age to travel. If she’d accept the situation and cultivate some patience, they’d be a much happier clan.
Despite his low spirits, Kels remained convinced life would improve once the baby was born. Briel’s priorities would fall into place, and she’d settle down into motherhood. Pana would stop smothering her. Dergan wouldn’t feel the need to stalk her every move. Kels could sleep through an entire night, free of worries.
They might even fall in love with their lifebringer. She might fall in love with them. The trick was how to keep everyone happy—and safe at home—until then.
The hiss of the sleeping room’s door opening and the rustle of silky skirts woke Kels from his worries. He lifted his head as Briel entered, her contrite expression familiar. She paused, and they stared across the space at each other.
“Here we are again,” she said, her voice quiet.
“Again.”
His heart ached as he looked at her. Young. Beautiful. The smallest bump that indicated his clan’s child grew within her, pushing at her lace gown. Kels couldn’t help but admire her, but it was surface appreciation only. He felt affection for Briel, but no more.
He wished he could appreciate her for the wonderful woman she was. Unfortunately, their rough edges kept rubbing each other wrong. A yawning gulf separated them, and Kels couldn’t imagine how to bridge it.
Briel’s lips twitched in a sympathetic smile, as if she knew all that ran through his head. She approached him and knelt at his feet.
Kels knew where this was going—where it always went. She meant it as an apology, and her heart was in it. They’d enjoy each other for the next few minutes. They’d get along for a couple of weeks. Maybe a month. Yet their expectations of each other would eventually leave their barely-there relationship coming up short yet again. It was inevitable.
His body responded to the promise of what would soon happen anyway. Heat trickled into his groin. As tiresome as the dance had become, his libido was always ready to forgive.
“You’re a good man. A wonderful Dramok. Don’t doubt I recognize it.” The opening lines in the familiar scene.
“Thank you.” He tried to add “my Matara”, but the words stuck in his throat. Kels rushed to cover the awkwardness by adding, “I’ve been thinking about what you said earlier. I just want what’s best.”
“To keep me safe and the unborn healthy.” Briel sighed, regret furrowing her brow. “The problem is, I don’t want to be safe. Did you, when you were my age?”
Kels managed a rueful chuckle. “You should be exploring moons and space stations and having fun with your friends. Not stuck at home with clanmates far older than you.”
She traced the crease in his pants, close to the growing bulge at his crotch. “I’m sorry you think I feel that way about you. My parents chose well when it came to an established clan with rank and wealth. Though years separate us, you’re in the prime of life. I have nothing to complain about.”
His cocks were in agreement, swelling proudly to show just how in the “prime of life” they were. Yet physical vigor had little to do with their problems. Men with important jobs and scant time to pursue frivolity had no business clanning a young woman eager to explore vistas she’d only read about.
Yet he and his clanmates had agreed. Briel had agreed too. All they could do at this point was their best, and hope it would be enough in the end.
Inspiration struck, and Kels said, “We’ll take an extended vacation a few weeks after the baby is born. We’ll bring along someone to oversee the child’s care while we run around to your heart’s delight.”
Briel failed to brighten as much as he’d believed she would. “What about your schedules? You’re important in your fields.”
“But not indispensable. For you, the mother of our child, we’ll make it happen.”
She gave him a real smile, which never failed to charm him. Then she rubbed her cheek against his distended crotch, gazing up at him as mischief bloomed. “Thank you, my Dramok. Your generosity inspires me to
make amends. What does my handsome, understanding clanmate ask of his Matara?” She kissed his crotch, leaving a tantalizing blot of lipstick shining on the black fabric of his formsuit.
Her offer to let him take the lead was a gift. Kalquorian women were as demanding—often more so—than Dramoks when it came to sex. Briel didn’t grant control easily. She preferred to seize what she wanted, which often led to exciting struggles for dominance.
Kels cleared his throat, touched by the gesture. “Considering the position you’re in, you’ve already guessed what I’d enjoy most right now.”
Briel smirked. Her knowing gaze filled him with need, and his twin cocks pressed urgently against the seam of his pants.
Quickly, but with the utmost grace, she tossed her gown off. He groaned to see her magnificence—long, muscled arms and legs, proud breasts, the subtle but gorgeous roundness of her abdomen, her bare pussy gleaming with wetness. Licking her lips while watching his face, Briel pulled apart the resealable seam of his pants, allowing his shafts to jolt upright, eager for attention.
Kels groaned again as she sucked the throbbing lengths in turn. Whatever problems they had in their relationship, sex had never been among them. Glad to be distracted, he closed his eyes and let sensation mask his worries for a short while.
The gorgeous pull of her lips, the delicious lapping of her tongue—Briel had learned what enthralled Kels. He dove into the pleasure she gave, all concerns submerged in a tsunami of lust.
Experience had taught Kels how Briel looked when she doted on him in such a way. The black hair framing her lovely face, plump lips encircling one, then the other sex, her head bobbing over his groin. His eyes were closed, but he could call the vision to mind. He could picture it better than the real Briel, because he could imagine her staring up at him with love. He could pretend he loved her too, in these sweet, magical moments.
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