Emotion crashed over his features. He slapped his hands over his face and bent, rocking in the seat. His shoulders heaved up and down, though he made no sound.
His sorrow plunged Maryam into her own. For a few minutes, tears tracked down her cheeks as she rubbed Pana’s back. To hell with personal space. They both needed consolation.
After a while, the tension bled from the Imdiko’s trembling frame. He sat up and moved his chair so that Maryam’s hand fell away. Anger mixed freely with misery as he continued to avoid looking at her.
“Don’t be nice to me. I don’t deserve it, not when I failed to care enough for my lifemate.”
“How can you think that? From what Briel said, you were too devoted.”
He groaned, as his voice grew raspy with anguish. “No, no, I didn’t love her. Not even a little. I respected her. I liked her. I had hopes of falling in love with her because what decent man wouldn’t? She was intelligent, she was funny, she was lovely. I should have loved her.”
Maryam drew a deep breath. No wonder he was suffering. From what she understood, the Imdiko breed was compassion personified. Loving supposedly came easily to the men categorized as such. Yet Pana hadn’t found true passion for Briel, no more than she had for him.
“Something was missing,” she guessed. “A fundamental part that made you right for each other.”
“I did my best to redeem myself by overwhelming her with attention. I thought if I pretended long enough, it would happen.”
“Fake it until you make it. We say that on Earth.”
“She deserved an Imdiko who adored her. It’s almost as if she was taken because I couldn’t.”
The poor guy. He beat himself up over an issue he had no control over. “The guilt of having failed…even when you did your best. It’s enough to make you want to jump off a cliff, isn’t it?”
“You understand this?” Wonder eased some of his angst.
“Every miscarriage, I’d pick myself apart for what I’d done wrong. I shouldn’t have eaten those sweets, or I didn’t get enough rest, or I forgot to take my vitamins. Worse was wondering if I was such a terrible person that God had decided to punish me by taking the babies I wanted.”
Pana gazed at her, his expression verging on affronted. “That’s ridiculous. I can’t imagine you thinking that about yourself. You’re possibly the most admirable person I’ve met.”
“I doubt that.” Maryam chuckled at his effusive compliment.
“Don’t. After what my clan put you through, you were still willing to carry our child. Yes, I know you did it for Briel.”
“And to win my freedom.”
His shadowed gaze narrowed. “Somehow I don’t believe that was the priority. So again, I thank you. You’re an amazing person.”
The sincerity warmed her. Pana was better than decent; he was wonderful. In the midst of his own suffering and insecurity, he’d wasted no time to lift her up.
“I bet you’re going to be an terrific father. Do you have a name picked out for this wee one?”
A sweet smile ghosted his lips. He gazed at her stomach, openly marveling at the prospect of being a father. Before she could second guess the impulse, Maryam leaned over, grasped his hand, and placed it over where his child lived.
Pana gasped, delight suffusing his features. He moved to kneel at her feet, his fingers spreading wide over her belly. His hand was warm, the heat sinking from his flesh deep into her, until Maryam imagined the fetus could feel it too. When the baby chose that moment to move, Pana laughed out loud.
Grinning so hard her cheeks ached, Maryam laughed with him.
* * * *
Kels frowned as Odak brought up a massive vid at the front of the destroyer’s half-circle bridge. He saw the problem before the captain pointed it out.
“I sent out undetectable microsensors to track beyond the border of the storm. You see how the Earther ships are surrounding the ion cloud.”
As if anyone could miss it. The ion storm cloud was a dense gray mass on the star-filled projection, but more than a dozen Earther warships with their long-range sensors did a fine job of surrounding it. If the destroyer bolted from the storm, at least half the enemy’s vessels would be on it within minutes.
Odak enlarged the screen, bringing more distant points of the surrounding space into view. Another two dozen blips indicated Earther ships on their way.
Kels didn’t sugarcoat his assessment of the situation. “My guess is once these other ships join them, they’ll start coming in. They’ll squeeze us out into the open where they can finish us off.”
“That’s what I believe too. We have a few days to continue repairs before they get here. We’ll have to make a run for it before they close off all avenues of escape.” Odak glared at Kels. “Now that the Earther Matara carries your child, there’s no hope whatsoever of bargaining with the Earthers. They’ll be more determined than ever to destroy us. Was your mission worth killing my entire crew?”
A low growl trickled from Dergan, who stood behind Kels. The Dramok had his own flash of anger. “Maryam is no pawn in a game, Captain. She’s more than a mission.”
He wished he’d figured that out sooner, so he wouldn’t have allowed duty to override his better judgment.
He wasn’t about to tell Odak that. Instead, he declared, “The immediate situation demands we save the blame game for later. We have to find a way to survive.”
Recovering from his momentary aggression, Dergan added, “I offer my assistance once again to your weapons commander, since his second died in the attack.”
“He’ll be glad to have you.” Odak dropped the aggrieved mood he’d worn since they’d joined him on the bridge. Dergan sketched a bow and headed toward the Nobek standing at the weapons command station—one of the few computer podiums that hadn’t taken damage. Most were dark, with repair crews clustered around them, trying to get them running once more. The now-dead subcommander’s station was a total loss, its stand blackened and twisted, having melted from the power surge that had left the bridge smelling of burnt metal. Helm, com, and navigation were somewhat better off. That was where the engineers focused their efforts.
Odak’s attention switched to Kels, and a hint of his earlier surliness reappeared. He jerked his head toward his own station, which had survived intact. “Let’s figure out our best hope for escape.”
* * * *
Hours later, after solidifying a plan with the captain, Kels left Dergan on the bridge. He went straight to Medical, where he verified with Dr. Ihas that Maryam and the unborn continued to perform beyond expectations.
“Given the latest test results, I may release her in a few hours. Matara Maryam will be wearing a monitor device if I do.” Ihas’s pleasure at the news couldn’t be mistaken.
While reassured by the doctor’s obvious certainty, Kels couldn’t help but worry that Maryam wouldn’t be where immediate medical assistance was available. However, with the destroyer’s upcoming exit of the ion storm looming, Medical would likely need all of its medi-beds—and then some. The injured and the dying would stack up unless the escape he and Odak had concocted worked.
Thanking Ihas, Kels went on to the private room Maryam had been assigned to. The door opened almost soundlessly, and the laughing pair within didn’t notice his arrival.
When was the last time he’d seen his Imdiko smile so broadly? Pana w
as handsome in any case, but happiness doubled his appeal. And Maryam—she was no Kalquorian, but calling her “lovely” would have been a compliment to the word rather than her. Her nose crinkled adorably as she beamed at her companion. Kels had the odd urge to cup her face in his palms, to frame her alien beauty.
Could he ever manage to make her as merry as Pana had? He gazed at them, struck by the vision of his Imdiko and the Earther sitting close, smiling as they gazed at each other. Like old friends.
Or lovers. Ancestors, they appear so perfect together.
Kels couldn’t remember Pana ever looking at Briel with such warmth. They’d never managed to develop real camaraderie. Had he achieved such a level of amity in the short time he’d known Maryam?
We weren’t the proper clan for Briel. Could it be any plainer?
Fighting off a searing jolt of conscience, Kels stepped into the room, gaining the pair’s attention. He bowed. “Matara, you look fantastic. Dr. Ihas’s report is glowing.”
“It’s almost frightening how well it’s going.” Her delight dimmed at his approach, becoming polite as tension seeped in. The change his presence brought troubled Kels.
Distressed, he couldn’t keep an effusive apology at bay. “If I could go back and change how this has turned out, I would. Not only for the life of my Matara, but to release you from the awful situation I put you in. My regret is meaningless at this point, but I’m truly sorry for abducting you.”
Pana gaped at him, his eyes rounding in surprise.
Maryam also stared. After an instant of stunned silence, her expression eased. Gentled. Kels fancied he spied a conciliatory smile tease her lips.
“Your apology isn’t meaningless, Dramok. I appreciate it.”
“You can never forgive me, but I hope you’ll find it in your heart to excuse my Nobek’s part in it. I ordered him to help me kidnap you. The fault rests with me alone.”
He bowed his head and wished he could turn back the days, so he could have acted as the man he’d thought he was. The years, so Briel could have found a clan more suited to her—and lived the full life she’d deserved.
Maryam fought to sort her confused feelings. Another man suffered before her. Kels’s anguish was so palpable, Maryam could have wept for him. He’d made a mistake, which some might have characterized as monstrous. He’d paid dearly for it, costing him Briel and almost his son.
Given the circumstances, he might still lose the child. If Earth’s forces caught up to them, he’d lose even more. After talking with Pana and hearing stories of the clan’s past, Maryam found it difficult to continue to judge Kels harshly, though vestiges of anger remained.
Choosing her words carefully, she said, “I can’t excuse the great wrong done to me. However, I understand the desperation driving you and the Kalquorian Empire to commit the crime you have. In all honesty, if it were Earth wrestling with the same decision, my people might do something similar. We have a terrible history of taking what isn’t ours.”
“I offer no excuse. I ask for no forgiveness for myself. Your being here, facing the same fate as we do should the Earth ships catch us, is a great wrong.” Agony filled every word he spoke.
“It’s where we are, though. I suppose we should take what we have and find what good we can do with it.” How often had she told herself that very thing?
Kels lifted his gaze to hers. Once more, Maryam was struck at how riveting he was, even with his features etched in shame and grief. “Thank you. For giving my son a chance. I didn’t understand Briel as well as I should have, but it’s obvious she had excellent taste in friends. I swear on my ancestors that whatever it takes, I’ll do all in my power to see you to safety.”
Maryam nodded, wishing she could give him the pardon he obviously needed. Watching him flail in the sea of bad choices he’d made, she couldn’t despise Kels. Not even a little bit.
Chapter Ten
Though Maryam and the unborn continued to thrive following the fetal transfer, Dr. Ihas second-guessed himself and kept the Earther in Medical overnight. “Just to be sure,” he said, wiping his hands on his trousers. “I’m positive everything will continue as it should, but…just to be sure.”
The next morning, he couldn’t deny surrogate and child were fine by all parameters. “Superior recuperation to most Kalquorian surrogates,” he admitted.
Maryam held up the monitor strapped to her wrist. “You’ll know the instant if something goes wrong,” she reminded him.
“Stop in later this afternoon, all right? At least once a day after that. I realize it’s inconvenient—”
“No problem,” she reassured him. “Each morning after breakfast. How’s that? After all, I don’t have any pressing appointments in the foreseeable future.”
She took a shower before leaving with Kels and Pana. Her hair still damp, she wandered down the corridor, delighting in stretching her legs after being cooped up in Medical. The startled glances from the crewmembers they passed amused her, as did the scowls Kels leveled in their direction if they got less than a meter close to her. From her abductor to her protector—it was sweet in a weird fashion.
Pana chattered as they went, telling her about the new quarters he’d set up for her. “I hope it’s not too awful. Our quarters and yours were destroyed during the first attack, and only one of the sleeping mats was useable—it’s not exactly a pleasure cruiser’s guest cabin—”
He was still apologizing when they entered a massive storage bay. Maryam was greeted with the view of rows and rows of cargo bins and hover carts. Their footsteps echoed, as did Pana’s voice as she and Kels followed him to the corner of the bay.
“—but the hull here is reinforced because this particular bay is often used to transport hazardous materials—though I was assured there isn’t any such cargo now. There’s no sign it suffered damage during the attack. It’s probably the safest spot on the destroyer. Well, here we are.”
Pana stepped beyond a wall of stacked bins. Maryam joined him and gasped at the cozy nook he’d formed with two such partitions, which joined with the walls of the bay’s corner, creating a square of living space.
A sleeping mat was tucked in the corner, made up and heaped with pillows, on which Maryam’s teddy bear perched like a fuzzy king. She beamed at the Imdiko with undisguised delight.
“This is perfect, Pana. Thank you for going back for my bear. For setting this up.”
He’d also furnished the space with a small table and cushions to sit on, which took up another corner. A cooling unit had been brought in, along with some freestanding shelves that held Maryam’s few belongings.
“Whatever you need, let me know. If I can’t find it, I’ll make it for you.” Pana fairly danced in place, excited by her approval but nervous, as if fearing she’d find something wrong with what he’d done.
She noted the affectionate gaze Kels gave him. “You did a wonderful job, my Imdiko.” He looked to her, and his demeanor became as anxious as Pana’s. “As for supplying your needs, the same goes for me. Whatever I can do, though it won’t be enough.”
More and more, Maryam pitied Kels for the overt shame he displayed. “I’m showered and well fed. I have a place to sleep. All the bases are covered.”
“What about some entertainment? I can call up a few vids for you on the computer. Music, dramas?” Pana took a device from one of the shelves and placed it on the
table.
“I’ve had enough drama for a while. Do you have any Noythy comedies?”
“You enjoy Noythy? Really? I can’t believe I finally have someone to watch those shows with.”
Maryam and Pana sat on the seating cushions, settling in for a morning of slapstick entertainment. As Pana fussed with the computer, Kels stood apart, watching them. He looked so alone and lost that Maryam almost called him over to join them. She decided against it, not wanting to hear him say no.
As Maryam and Pana snickered over the vid they’d selected, Kels left the sleeping nook to com Sebist in privacy. He walked to the middle of the bay and activated the frequency, using audio only.
When Sebist answered, Kels quickly apprised him of the attack on the destroyer and the danger they faced.
When he was done exclaiming in horror and offering his condolences, Sebist vowed, “You have my word I’ll do all in my power to send help. Fortunately, it doesn’t matter how little Captain Odak likes you. You’re held in high esteem with the fleet, so I don’t have to undo any damage on that front.”
They managed strained chuckles for his weak joke. Sebist’s promise reminded Kels of his own. Swallowing hard, he told his friend, “I have more to tell you. My child is alive.”
“But you said Briel—I assumed with her dead—”
“Maryam carries the fetus.”
A beat of thunderstruck silence reigned, then Sebist’s joyous shout rang through the com. “Thank the Mother of All! That’s amazing, Kels! I’m so glad. For you to be able to retrieve some vestige of hope from this horror—I couldn’t be happier for you.”
“I agreed to a deal with Maryam.” Heartened by Sebist’s unrestrained elation that the unborn had been saved, Kels explained the death sentence hanging over Maryam’s head and her bargain for freedom from Earth and Kalquor in exchange for carrying the baby as close to term as possible.
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