Maryam’s surprise was real. “Oh my gosh. Kalquorians were involved?”
“It’s not been verified, but in all the missing cases, Kalquorian ships had recently left those areas. I get a bad feeling to see that destroyer sitting out there, with you here.” He frowned and glanced back at the shopping level’s concourse through the open door.
“I’ll alert security if I feel threatened in any way.”
“You do that. Thanks for the gingersnaps and blanket. My sister will love this.”
Captain Miller left, a purposeful stride replacing his saunter. Maryam stared after him, musing over his warning.
Though Kalquorian ships had docked at Pelk in the past, Maryam had only seen the aliens at a distance, at least until Briel and her clan had shown up. Shops catering to their species were at the opposite end from Maryam’s store. With the exception of Briel’s interest in the baby items, Kalquorians had no motive to shop for Earther tastes in snacks, souvenirs, or clothes.
Even when no Earthers were present on Pelk, Maryam had known not to go near the aliens her government spoke so often against. More importantly, she knew better than to give Earth any cause to suspect her of questionable acts, whether the men she encountered were Kalquorian or not.
Her mother’s execution so long ago had taught Maryam not to give any hint of wrongdoing.
* * * *
The curtains hanging in the opening of the alcove Dergan hid in that late evening were usually parted to show a display of high-priced electronics, available for sale at a nearby shop. Since the niche supplied an excellent view of the store Maryam worked in, Dergan had closed the drapes, except for a thin slit through which he could observe without being observed.
He scowled as members of the Earther space fleet wandered the eight open levels of the station he could see from his hiding place. The section was a cylinder, with the central space open and each floor visible from the ground level to the roof. Tube-shaped elevators rose and fell in the middle, with each level’s corridors fanning out like spokes from the center.
Checking with the Solns in charge had confirmed the destroyer-sized Earther assault craft had made an unscheduled stop at Pelk, diverting from its usual route to do so. Observing tension when Kalquorians and Earthers crossed paths verified his fears—the situation had been brought on by the sudden disappearances of Earther women who lived off their home planet. Hands were settled too damned close to blasters on both species’ accounts, issuing wordless warnings. With only a couple of knives secreted on his person, Dergan felt naked in the face of such aggression.
The assault ship’s sudden appearance had done more than put the visiting Kalquorian destroyer’s crew on edge. It had forced Kels’s hand in the matter of Maryam. In order to secure her, time was of the essence. There’d be no bargaining or bribery, no opportunity to persuade her to come with them. Either she’d immediately say yes, or Dergan would have to commit an unpalatable act of cruelty.
His misgivings fell away as Maryam locked and left the store, replaced by laserlike focus. He watched as she walked to the interstation transport tube. Her steps were purposeful, the ankle-length skirt of her blue dress swishing around her legs. She walked as if she had an appointment and was in danger of being late, her gaze trained forward. She didn’t dawdle or glance around even once. Dergan wondered if she always hurried to her quarters in such a fashion or if the Earther crew had put her on guard. Or was it the Kalquorians who made her determined to reach home in a quick manner?
Guilt was heavy in his gut. She had good reason to fear his people. Him, in particular. He had his orders, however, plus the weight of Kalquor’s desperation. The empire’s need was far greater than the future plans of a single woman, no matter how kindly she’d treated his Matara.
Brushing aside the notion that a single person’s freedom shouldn’t be tossed aside for any excuse, Dergan pulled on duty as he would an armored formsuit. Clarity returned, at least for the moment.
Dergan spied on Maryam as she entered the transport. It traveled up five levels to the residential floor. She got out, heading into the corridor nearest to the elevator car. Seconds later, she was out of the Nobek’s sight.
He noted two uniformed Earthers on that level emerge from their own curtained alcove. They hurried to the corridor and halted, looking down its length. Dergan wasn’t the only man spying on Maryam.
Keeping an eye on the Earthers, Dergan pulled out his com. Without having to look, he clicked it to a familiar frequency.
* * * *
Maryam hummed to herself as she spooned quinoa into a bowl, then heaped it with grilled vegetables. A shipment had arrived that afternoon from Earth. Though she enjoyed alien fare, it was always a delight to eat dishes she was familiar with.
She took her dinner from the tiny kitchenette to the sitting area and sank onto the lounger. She thought about putting music on. Her surroundings were quiet without bubbly Briel to keep her company during her meal. Funny how a week’s worth of friendship changed her outlook. Maryam was lonely for the first time in a long while.
Her door announce went off, and Maryam dared to hope the Kalquorian woman—without her clanmates—had dropped by. “Yes?”
The gruff voice answering destroyed all anticipation. “Security officers from the assault ship Chosen. You’re ordered to open the door and submit to a search.”
Maryam’s heart jumped in her throat. She set her bowl on the table. “Coming.”
She’d no sooner stood when the door beeped and opened. Two black-uniformed men burst in, blasters drawn.
“Hey! I said I was coming.” She was too angry to pay heed to their weapons. That changed when the taller of the pair pointed his blaster at her.
“Sit down. Don’t move. We’re here to search for evidence you’ve been entertaining men.”
She had no choice but to comply. With a disgruntled huff, she flopped down and watched the pair take her living space apart.
They yanked her projects off shelves and kicked piles of blankets all over the floor. The shorter officer swept everything off the table in front of her, including her dinner. Quinoa and vegetables flew over her handiwork, the sauce staining lovingly sewn pillows.
“What is wrong with you? There’s no reason for a search to be so excessive.”
She should have kept her mouth shut. At her protest, the pair shoved her table over, then both the chairs. They smirked at her.
“Any other complaints?”
Her pulse pounded in her temples, but Maryam said nothing else. No doubt if she did, their next step would be to smash breakables and rip her projects apart.
She’d endured searches before, but they’d been cursory, little more than minor irritations. This was downright hateful. She tried to remember what she might have said to make Captain Miller order such abuse. When she came up with nothing, she decided that for all his smiles, maybe Captain Miller wasn’t such a nice guy after all.
She hoped his sister despised the blanket he’d bought despite the hours of work she’d put into it.
One of the asshats knocked a glass bowl from the kitchenette’s counter to the floor. When it didn’t shatter, Maryam was tempted to correct that by smashing it over their skulls.
Keep cool. It’ll be over in a few minutes. They’ll be gone in a few days. I don’t have to put up with half the crap that happens o
n Earth, so I can deal with this.
“Room’s clear. Move on to the next.”
They headed toward the bathroom, full of bottles of toiletries for them to break. Maryam was forcing herself to breathe deep in readiness when both their coms blared an alert.
“Attention all personnel on the station. Report to the second level Olosna Cantina to contain Kalquorian aggression against our crew. Repeat, report to the—”
The rest was cut off by the pair running out of Maryam’s quarters and the door shutting behind them. Maryam jumped up and locked the door. She turned to stare at the mess of her apartment.
“I hope the Kalquorians kick your asses.” It would be better if those Kalquorians were Kels, Pana, and Dergan. The thought brought a nasty smile to her face.
It didn’t calm her anger, however. At least being furious leant her energy to clean. Muttering under her breath, she picked up the tumbled furniture and spilled food.
She readied to scrub the stained projects her quinoa bowl had been dumped on when her visitor announce went off. Maryam leveled a livid glare at the entrance, but what could she do? Pelk Station allowed home planet jurisdiction over its residents.
“Enter!” she shouted, unable to contain her impotent rage.
Instead of arrogant Earther security, Briel walked in. She gasped as she stared at the chaos of the apartment. Before Maryam could react, her friend rushed over and grabbed her in a hug.
“This is horrible! Were you robbed? Are you all right?”
Maryam patted her friend’s back before extricating herself. “It would seem Earth takes exception to our friendship.”
Briel looked around again. Drawing a breath, her expression offended, she picked up Maryam’s teddy bear. “Assholes. I’ll have Dergan rip their heads off for this.”
Maryam had bigger concerns. “You need to go, Briel. If they return and find you here, I’m afraid of what might happen. I doubt they’d hurt you, but they’d no doubt be nasty. We don’t want a blowup between our people.” Though she gathered from the alert that had drawn off her tormentors, a blowup of some sort had already occurred.
As she attempted to tug Briel to the exit, the Kalquorian resisted. “That’s ludicrous. This situation is unbearable. You shouldn’t have to put up with it.”
“I have no choice. We must say goodbye now. Please take care of yourself.”
Briel planted her feet instead. Her tone took on a wheedling timbre. “Come with me.”
“Where, to your suite? Those security guards from Earth would really be my best buds if I hung out with your clanmates. That’ll win me lots of friends back home.”
“Come with me to Kalquor. You can meet a nice clan. Our medical expertise is second to none. You could have babies, Maryam.”
Her words made Maryam’s stomach churn. She could have screamed at the false hope Briel offered. Yet the other woman meant well. She was genuinely upset on Maryam’s behalf.
“Thank you for the suggestion, Briel, but you really have to go now. Take care of yourself, okay?”
“I’m not joking. This proposition is real. Please come with me.”
“I can’t. It’s impossible. Besides, children are not in my destiny.”
“You don’t know that for sure. My people can give you the chance.”
Maryam wasn’t sure whether to hug Briel or slug her. Both were equally tempting, so she stood with her arms stiff at her sides, hands curled into fists. “I’ve built a life here. Maybe it’s not much, but it’s okay.”
“Maryam—”
“Goodbye, Briel.” She stepped close to the door, triggering it to open. Grim-faced Kels and Dergan stood on the other side, filling the opening. Maryam jerked back and nearly fell, but Dergan’s hand shot out and grabbed her, steadying her.
“What’s her answer?” Kels demanded, looking past Maryam to Briel.
“She said no, but my Dramok, I don’t think—”
“We have no choice. My apologies, Matara Maryam.”
His hand flashed out. Momentary pressure pushed against the side of Maryam’s neck. Then the room tilted, turned, so that she faced her trashed apartment again, looking at the crying Briel who hugged Maryam’s teddy bear to her chest.
She was aware of arms holding her, but the sensation was growing distant. Maryam was losing consciousness. Had Kels drugged her? Her gaze remained locked on Briel, disbelief growing fuzzy as her vision edged into blackness.
“Why?” she managed to croak as her knees unhinged.
She saw Briel bury her tear-streaked face against the stuffed animal an instant before fading into darkness.
Chapter Five
Maryam’s eyes opened. She stared at the unfamiliar gray ceiling over her head, registered the unfamiliar softness of the mattress beneath her, the cooler-than-usual temperature of her surroundings.
This was not her apartment.
She lifted her head and blinked at her surroundings. The bed she lay on was huge, big enough to accommodate a family of six, with cream-colored sheets and a black comforter. In stark contrast, the room was tiny, with tight walkways on each side and at the foot of the sleeping surface. The only other furnishings were shelves. Familiar toiletries lined those; shampoo, soap, and other items that had once taken up space in Maryam’s bathroom on Pelk. On others, she recognized clothing from her closet, neatly folded.
She’d no sooner thought, where am I? when the memory of Dergan and Kels looming before her returned. Briel begging her to go to Kalquor with her. Had she been abducted?
Maryam jerked to a sitting position, flinging the covers aside and examining herself. She still wore the clothes she’d had on when the Kalquorians had shown up at her quarters. They were rumpled, but no more so than she’d expect from having slept in them. She didn’t hurt anywhere—particularly not where a woman who’d not had sex in years might expect to feel pain. Rumors of sex-crazed Kalquorians eager to rape were rampant, but it seemed she hadn’t been attacked in such a fashion.
Her gaze went to the two closed doors in the light-paneled walls. The larger was three feet beyond the foot of the bed. The other was on the right. Maryam slid off the mattress and crept toward the smaller. It opened obligingly at her approach, revealing a toilet raised high enough that her toes wouldn’t touch the floor if she sat on it. It also had a small sink and a shower stall.
She moved on to the other door. It refused to open. Not hopeful about her chances in the least, she tried to order then force it. No dice. She was trapped.
Briel would never let anyone hurt me. It was small comfort, especially when Maryam compared her imposing friend to her even more imposing clanmates. Briel had cried when Kels and Dergan attacked her—she hadn’t wanted them to but had apparently been helpless to stop it. Little protection would come from that quarter. When it came to escape, Maryam had to assume she was on her own.
Was she even on the space station anymore? The quiet room wasn’t entirely silent; there was a soft throb of sound that was vaguely familiar. Engines? Was she on a ship? The idea gave her a sudden stab of terror that Captain Miller had taken her prisoner. Yet if that had been the case, he’d have hardly put her in quarters that, while cramped, were far more comfortable than a brig.
A space shuttle, then. That gave Maryam hope. If Clan Kels had booked passage on the first available shuttle, it wouldn’t necessarily be Kalquorian. She might find help from the crew—if she could get out of the room.
She inspected the space, both the sleeping area and the bath. She came up emptyhanded when it came to large objects she could beat the door down with.
Bang on it. Yell until someone investigates. Hopefully, it would be the right someone, and not her kidnappers.
Maryam was just about to do so when the door opened of its own accord. She gasped and flung herself away from Dramok Kels.
He entered, and the door closed behind him. “Lock,” he ordered.
Maryam’s blood ran cold.
However, he didn’t attack her. Instead, the monstrous male bowed. “I’m sorry to have startled you. How do you feel? Are there any unpleasant residual effects from the sedative?”
Unpleasant residual effects? Who was this guy kidding? “What’s going on? Where have you taken me?”
“You’re on a destroyer heading to Kalquor.”
A destroyer, the Kalquorian vessel of war. Only Earther battlecruisers were guaranteed to outfight such ships. There would be no sympathetic crew for Maryam to plead her case to.
Her options dwindling fast, she asked the only question that mattered. “Why?”
Kels’s expression flashed guilt for an instant before it smoothed into polite consideration. “Briel explained to you the death sentence that faces us. Few female children are born alive on our planet. In fact, Briel was the last fertile female to survive to adulthood.”
Maryam had heard stories that the Kalquorians were in danger of extinction, and Briel had shared a few details. She hadn’t revealed she was the youngest of the women.
Maryam set aside a stab of pity. “That has what to do with me?”
“We’ve discovered your race is compatible with ours. Kalquorians and Earthers can procreate together.”
Maryam’s heart slammed into overdrive. The aliens wanted Earther women to carry their children. It was the only answer to what had happened. If what Captain Miller had told her was correct, she was a single victim in a larger conspiracy to collect breeding slaves.
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