* * * *
Pana sat next to Briel as Dr. Ihas communicated with specialists on Kalquor. Kels frequently interrupted them with questions, casting about for any option of saving mother and child.
Pana had no words. He stared at his injured mate’s hand, which he held in his own. Looking at Briel’s face was impossible. Not because of the horrific injury that had crushed part of her head, but because he couldn’t stand how her features, once avid with animation, had become still. Blank. Almost unfamiliar.
Medical was half-full of injured crewman. Their voices rose and fell, a background hum that Pana stopped noticing after a few minutes. He was barely aware of the three medics who continued to attend Briel. They checked the medi-bed’s readouts, the machines that kept her body functioning, those that kept track of the unborn’s vitals. They worked around Pana, who sat like a rock that had somehow been cast upon the edge of Briel’s bed.
The Imdiko rubbed his thumb over the slim hand in his. Soft and warm, with fingers that tapered gracefully. The hand of the woman who’d deserved an Imdiko who loved her.
He’d tried to. With all his being, he’d done his best to love Briel. He’d been sure it would happen eventually. While Pana had waited for that moment when a mere glance or the sound of her voice would set his heart alight, he’d put forth his utmost effort to be a good mate to her. She’d accused him of smothering her, and perhaps he had—but he’d overwhelmed her with care to compensate for the adoration his heart hadn’t yet discovered.
Why couldn’t I love her? Briel was smart. Exuberant. Adventurous. Eager to discover pleasures, carnal and otherwise. Was something amiss within himself? He should have been able to find that elusive spark, yet it hadn’t happened.
Maryam, an alien stranger, had elicited more fascination in a few seconds than Briel had after two years of courtship and clanship. He’d wished Briel was more like the Earther. The recollection filled him with guilt, though he already drowned in it.
“I’m so sorry, my Matara. I thought I had plenty of time to love you. You deserved so much better than what I gave,” he whispered.
Another wave of sadness filled him. Pana bowed his head and wept for what had never been. His sobs interrupted the hum of conversation in the room.
Someone gripped his shoulder. Without looking, Pana knew it was Kels. He didn’t need to glance at his Dramok’s expression, sure it would mirror the devastation he felt. Like him, Kels was no doubt overcome by the guilt of having failed their lifebringer.
* * * *
Dergan ushered Maryam to Medical, navigating familiar corridors though it was his first trip on that particular destroyer. All ships of that class were the same, down to the beige flooring, computers set in the walls, and light-emitting ceiling panels. The crewmembers seemed familiar too, with their black armored formsuits and their businesslike manner as they hurried here and there to perform their duties.
Dergan’s thoughts were far from past assignments on destroyers. They centered on the woman at his side, the lovely Earther he’d devastated his clan for.
It wasn’t her fault, he reminded himself. The empire had issued the order to take her, and he’d fouled up the assignment to do so. Dergan wasn’t sure if his execution of the mission or the fact he’d taken it on had led to the tragedy. In any case, he was at fault.
Even as he castigated himself for all that had happened, Dergan acknowledged how impressed he was with Maryam. Odak might have been fooled by her steady voice and assured manner as she’d recorded the message to Captain Miller, but Dergan had caught how her gaze shifted and the way she’d tapped her fingers against her legs. Maryam believed her plea to be allowed to return to her own kind would fall on deaf ears.
She’d poured earnest effort into it anyhow. Aware of Earth’s dim view of women in questionable situations, Dergan gave her credit for trying.
Her request to return to Briel afterward had impressed him greater still. Despite the destruction his clan had brought upon themselves, she continued to care about the friend she’d made.
Maryam would pay a heavy price, though she was innocent of wrongdoing. If they didn’t kill her by attacking the destroyer, Earth would imprison her for crimes she didn’t commit.
I brought her to this.
Dergan’s strength wavered, on the brink of failing. He grasped Maryam’s shoulder. She jerked, gazing up at him with blue-sky eyes.
“As much as you hate me, it’s nothing compared to how much I hate myself,” he rasped.
Maryam’s startled expression deepened to greater shock. She halted to face him. “It’s hard to get a handle on how I feel. I’m angry, yes. Heartbroken. Scared.”
“Earth won’t take you back, will they?” He knew the answer but couldn’t keep from asking to hear the awful truth.
“If they do, it’ll be to execute me.”
Dergan’s heart stuttered. Kels had heard rumors that such judgments had been handed down, but they hadn’t been able to believe it. When Odak had passed along the message from Miller, that Maryam was to die with her abductors, Dergan hadn’t been able to credit such a heinous stance.
A death sentence for being abducted, just because sexual intercourse might have occurred? Even if against a woman’s will?
“What the hell is wrong with your government?”
“Good question. When you find the answer, let me know.” Maryam twitched a humorless smile.
His transgression was worse than he’d believed. Dergan motioned helplessly, unable to grasp how it had all gone wrong. “I can’t apologize, because it won’t be enough. I can’t possibly atone for what I’ve done.”
“I appreciate you realizing that.” Her demeanor had softened. She looked at him with something resembling compassion and seemed ready to say more.
Instead, she twisted around and resumed her course down the corridor, hurrying to reach Briel. Lost in a fog of despair, Dergan followed her.
* * * *
Choosing the side of the bed opposite Pana, Maryam sat next to Briel. Computerized panels lay over the senseless woman’s torso, blinking secret codes Maryam couldn’t begin to guess the meanings of. Yet they were easier to stare at than the horrific injury Briel had suffered.
It was difficult to look at her suffering clan too. Dergan was the most stoic of the trio, probably because he had to wear the persona of the tough warrior. Yet hurt dulled his purple eyes and made his muscled shoulders droop.
Kels stared into the distance. His strong features weren’t formed for the lost-little-boy expression he wore. It sat oddly on his face, somehow making him more compelling than Maryam should have found him.
Tears leaked down Pana’s cheeks as he held Briel’s hand. The Imdiko appeared absolutely destroyed. The occasional sob tore loose, an agonized groan that filled the quiet medical department.
They were a clan in pain. Losing Briel was horrific, but with the baby doomed too, the mourning was overwhelming.
It reminded Maryam of her own losses. There had been a short supply of hope during the dark time she’d tried and failed to have children. With so few women on Kalquor, Briel had represented Clan Kels’s one opportunity to realize their own desire for offspring.
Would it help them to hear of how eager she’d been for the baby? Had Briel been as remiss in telling her clan of how she anticipated traveling with thei
r son as she’d been with Maryam?
“She said the trip to Pelk Station was to be the last before she gave birth. Briel was ready to put it all on hold for her son. She was excited to discover everything alongside him instead. She couldn’t think of anything more wonderful than that future.”
Their startled gazes told Maryam they’d indeed had no idea of their clanmate’s feelings on the matter. Pana, in particular, gazed at her with less despair. “Really?”
“She told me. I could see how she looked forward to sharing the adventure with her child.”
He swallowed hard. More tears shimmered in his eyes, but he managed a hint of a smile. “I’m glad she felt that way.”
“We would have done all in our power to make it happen. I wanted her to have the life she deserved—though I admit to some concerns about whether she’d have been capable of the responsibility.” Kels grimaced, no doubt hating to criticize his Matara.
“You would have been pleasantly surprised. I believe that with all my heart.”
Kels considered Maryam for a moment before nodding. Emotion warmed his visage as he glanced at Briel. “Thank you for telling us. It means a lot.”
Hurt and care for his wounded mate warred freely for supremacy. Maryam watched him with dawning realization: kidnapping aside, Kels was a good man. Though perhaps overly strict with Briel, he’d have done right by her in the end. It was there in how he gazed at her, naked for the universe to see. He’d have gone to the ends of the galaxy to make her happy.
A man of morals, devoted to honor, he must surely regret abducting Maryam. It had led to the tragedy they now grappled with. Kels was ripe for redemption.
“Dramok Kels, Captain Miller of the Chosen won’t accept surrender. This ship is in no shape to fight it off, and help won’t arrive before we’re under attack again. We’re in a no-win situation.”
“I served on a destroyer. I’ve had my share of those circumstances.”
“It only takes one to go badly,” Dergan said in dark tones. “They’ll execute Matara Maryam whether we surrender or they defeat us.”
Maryam blinked at him in surprise. He was on her side? The regret he’d expressed in the hall hadn’t seemed like an act; now she was certain of it.
“I see one path out of this.” Maryam spoke with confidence she didn’t feel despite Dergan’s contrition. What she would propose had little probability of success, but it was her only option.
“I’m listening.” Kels watched her carefully, his demeanor suspicious.
“Let me go. I’m sure Captain Odak would give me a shuttle on the off-chance the Earth ship would break off pursuit. His crew would survive, and you might reach help and save your child.”
“You’d have us leave you to your fate? Or do you believe you can talk sense to this Captain Miller?”
Recalling how his security team had ransacked her quarters, Maryam held no illusions on that matter. “I love shuttle races. I’ve considered competing on the amateur circuit. On Pelk Station, I took advantage of the race pilot courses that were offered. I’m pretty good, if I say so myself. I might be able to elude the Chosen, especially if Captain Odak consents to a few modifications to the shuttle he gives me.”
Dergan alone appeared impressed with her credentials. Surprised approval twisted the corner of his mouth up.
“Where would you go?” Pana asked, his tone fearful. On her behalf?
“Dantovon? Alneusia? Galactic Council space is open to expatriate Earthers, and they don’t extradite without just cause.”
Kels’s visage seemed etched of stone. “On Kalquor, clanned to the councilman, you won’t have to worry about Earth either.”
She couldn’t stop herself from snapping at him. “I’m not entering into slavery for any motive. Let me go. It’s the only real chance any of us have of coming out alive.”
Kels’s jaw set in stubborn lines. His brows drew tight over the bridge of his nose. “I refuse to allow Briel’s life to be over for no reason. I’ve sacrificed her and possibly my child, and I won’t have it be for nothing. You are going to Kalquor if I have to fight the whole damned universe to take you there.”
With that irate shout, he wheeled away and stormed out of Medical. Dergan shot Maryam a pained glance before he followed Kels’s exit.
She’d tried not to pin too much hope on Kels renouncing his actions, but the disappointment was nevertheless devastating. Maryam burst into tears.
She hated herself for the weakness, but she couldn’t keep from crying. On top of being taken against her will to be the sexual servant to three men, on top of being pursued by those determined to execute her for being a victim, in the wake of Briel’s mortal injury, her strength failed. Kels’s angry refusal to let her free opened the floodgates.
Strong arms enfolded her, and Maryam gasped. She glanced at Pana’s distressed face.
“Give him time,” the Imdiko whispered. “You’re right, Kels should let you go. That he won’t do so yet doesn’t mean he’s a monster. It’s just—our people are desperate, and with what’s happened—he’s feeling cornered.”
Though a part of her noted how wonderful it felt to be held, Maryam embraced anger instead. She pushed Pana away. “He’s feeling cornered? How do you think I feel? My choices are to live on the run, become a sex slave, or be executed by my own people.”
“I’m sorry. I don’t know what I can do to help you.” Pana raked his fingers through his sleek hair.
“How about the decent thing? Talk to your clanmates. Make them see reason.”
“We’ll be extinct within three centuries. What would you have me tell them? How can I talk them out of trying to save our species?”
As little as Maryam wanted to acknowledge their side of the equation, she was struck yet again by the Kalquorians’ predicament.
No. This was her life. Their problems weren’t hers, and they had no justification to do this to her.
“Your unfortunate fate doesn’t change that taking me against my choice is wrong. Spare me the worthless explanations.”
Maryam turned her back on him, the best way she knew how to end the conversation. She could have said a lot more, but Pana was the least guilty of the bunch. Besides, he’d lost Briel. She couldn’t be heartless when he so obviously hurt.
She pretended not to notice Pana’s miserable expression. When that failed, she pretended it didn’t bother her.
* * * *
Kels was unaware Dergan followed on his heels until his Nobek spoke up. “Where are you going?”
Kels followed his startled jerk with a scowl. “To talk to the captain. I want to know he’s doing everything possible to get us to Kalquor.”
“I have no doubt he is.” Dergan put a restraining hand on Kels’s shoulder. “My Dramok, we’ve placed Matara Maryam in an unspeakable situation.”
Kels wheeled about to face him. “All the more reason to succeed with our mission. How else am I supposed to make this right for her? For us? Our child?”
“I doubt we can. She doesn’t deserve to be clanned against her will.”
Kels’s heart lurched. Bile rose in his throat, but his anger wasn’t for his clanmate. Nevertheless, his tone was harsh. “Execution by her own people is preferable to her joining Sebist’s clan?”
“None of this good. Including sending her off as a refugee to Galactic Council space…but of all the choices, it’s the most dece
nt option we can offer after ripping her from the life she had.” Dergan’s stoicism crumbled, replaced by fury. Kels saw that side of him so seldom, he almost took a step back.
However, his Nobek’s ire was for the situation and their shared loss, not a threat against Kels. The Dramok had to maintain Dergan’s focus on the mission and their duty. “You agreed, for the sake of Kalquor—”
“I was wrong. We were wrong.”
Kels couldn’t accept that. If he did, then he’d have to admit his guilt for more than merely making a bad decision. Everything in him screamed against it.
“I didn’t sentence Briel and our child to death to not fulfill my responsibility to Kalquor.”
“My Dramok—”
Whatever his glowering clanmate was about to say was interrupted by the approach of Captain Odak. “Ah, Dramok Kels. I was coming to see you.”
The destroyer’s commander looked grim. Now what? Kels kept the building desperation out of his voice. “News?”
Odak glanced at the various crewman hurrying past them in the corridor. He jerked his head toward a nearby computer alcove. The trio stepped into the space meant for no more than two, putting Kels nearly nose-to-nose with the captain.
Odak spoke quietly. “I’ve spent the past hour trying to get the Earther ship to respond to Matara Maryam’s message. We transmitted it repeatedly until we received an answer.”
“And?”
“If we return her to them, they’ll examine her. If she shows no evidence of having been sexually intimate with a man, no aggression will be carried out against her or us.”
Plastered against Kels’s back, Dergan’s whisper was loud in the Dramok’s ear. “No evidence of sexual intimacy? She was married in the past. Pregnant on multiple occasions.”
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