by Jaleta Clegg
An Indecent Proposal
The Fall of the Altairan Empire, Book 9
Jaleta Clegg
Copyright 2014 by Jaleta Clegg
Smashwords edition
©2014
Please do not copy or distribute this book without the permission of the author.
A complete listing of works can be found at http://www.jaletac.com
The Fall of the Altairan Empire series can be found at http://www.altairanempire.com
Book 1: Nexus Point
Book 2: Priestess of the Eggstone
Book 3: Poisoned Pawn
Book 4: Kumadai Run
Book 5: Cold Revenge
Book 6: Jericho Falling
Book 7: Obsidian Tears
Book 8: Chain of Secrets
Book 9: An Indecent Proposal
Book 10: Phoenix in Flames
Book 11: Redemption
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Chapter 46
Chapter 47
Chapter 48
Chapter 49
Chapter 50
Chapter 51
Chapter 52
Chapter 53
Chapter 54
Chapter 55
Chapter 56
Chapter 57
Chapter 58
Chapter 59
Chapter 60
Chapter 61
Chapter 62
Chapter 63
Chapter 64
Chapter 65
Chapter 66
Author's Note
Chapter 1
The pain woke me. Every breath shot like fire away from my middle. I smelled the odd mix of antiseptics and bad food that told me I was in a hospital, as if the bland paint job and medical equipment weren't a dead giveaway. The tasteful Patrol logo on the sheets was depressing. It meant I was still in the Patrol. I expected Lowell to show up sooner rather than later. People talked outside the door, muffled and distorted.
I breathed through another burst of pain. What was my last conscious memory?
Sunlight and clouds, birds soaring into multicolored rainbows breaking into silver light.
No, that couldn't be right. That had to have been induced by drugs. I had the grandfather of all pain patch hangovers.
"You're finally awake, Admiral," a cheerful voice called from the door. "How are you feeling?" An incredibly happy medic loomed over me. He was big, all muscles and teeth. "Admiral?"
I closed my eyes. Still in the Patrol or they wouldn't be calling me Admiral.
I'd enlisted as an admiral. Lowell hadn't given me a choice. I had to go back to Trythia to rescue Tayvis. Only he'd died. Lowell hadn't let me resign afterwards. He'd ordered me to Tivor.
The medic bustled around the room, checking monitors and wires. He loomed over me again as the bed rumbled into a more upright position.
"Thirsty?"
He didn't wait for my answer. He jammed a straw between my lips. I pulled in a mouthful of thick fluid before I could think not to. It was a protein replenishment drink that the Patrol concocted as a supplement for injured personnel. The taste was sweet and tart and cloying all at once. I gagged down the single mouthful then spit the straw out.
The medic smiled his cardboard smile. "You'll feel better if you can get it down."
"No, I won't."
Opening my mouth was a mistake. He got the straw in before I could clamp it closed. It hurt too much to try to fight him. I gave in and swallowed the nasty stuff.
As I suspected, it was drugged. My whole body went limp. My mind drifted away into fuzzy places. I was vaguely aware of the medic pulling the sheet back and checking my side. The pain was there, bright and hot and stabbing, but I couldn't do anything about it.
I dozed for while.
The light was different when I woke again, the reddish glow of sunset painted a stripe across my wall. The sounds in the hall told me dinner hour was well underway.
The medic came back and fussed around me for a while before forcing more of the sticky drink down my throat.
I dreamed of a great bird, with fire for wings, that flew in front of me through space. I reached to catch it, calling desperately for it to wait. But the bird never heard. It kept flying, faster and faster, until it was a blur in the distance, a burning light that became a blinking indicator on the equipment next to my head.
I blinked, drowsy and muzzy and restless. It was the middle of the night. The halls were dark. I heard only quiet murmurs, blurred by distance and walls.
Machines beeped on both sides of the bed. I shifted, wincing at the pain shooting from my side. A thick layer of bandaging covered me from my ribs to my hipbone. It hurt just to brush across my side. I didn't try to peel it up to see why. I wasn't that stupid.
My door swung open. A medic, a woman this time, let herself in the room when she saw me awake. She shut the door behind herself.
"How are you feeling?" she asked, with none of the toothy smiles the other medic had used on me.
"Lousy."
"That's to be expected. According to your charts," she bent over me, checking the monitors on the equipment, "you had a bad reaction to the medgel they used. And to the regen unit you were plugged into." She made notes on a hand pad then tucked it into her pocket. "They kept switching you back and forth, in the medunit until you started reacting, then in a regen unit until you reacted there, then back into the medunit. You spent a day or so in a bed every few days, letting the drugs wear off. I've never seen anything quite like it. You had half the staff coming by for updates several times a day. Good teaching experience for the ones aiming to be xeno medics. Your profile showed human, but I'm beginning to wonder."
"So I'm a freakshow for the Patrol?" It was like waking up naked in the middle of a crowded room with people staring at you, not that I've ever done that.
Her smile faded around the edges. She messed with one of the machines next to me. "No, your situation was unique, at least as far as our records show. Sorry about invading your privacy, Admiral, but watching you may have saved lives in the future."
She reached for the bandage on my side. I flinched away.
"You want more pain meds?"
"No." If they pushed any more drugs into my system, I was going to have a headache for the next year.
"You're obviously in pain. There are no medals for being stupid."
"Which is why I don't want more drugs. Half the pain is overload from taking pain meds too long. They aren't going to help me much at this point."
She studied me, her eyebrows knit into a single line. She finally shrugged and started dis
connecting wires.
"You don't need these any more." She removed several sticky patches from my arms. She turned machines off and wheeled them away from my bed.
"What time is it?"
"Just past four in the morning." It was completely true, but totally unhelpful.
"Where am I?"
"Room one seventeen, eighth floor."
"What planet?"
She stopped messing with the equipment. "Do you know your name?"
"I know my name."
"Well?"
"Dace. Happy?"
"Are you?"
"Are you some kind of psych tech here to see if I'm completely nuts?"
"Are you?"
I exercised my extensive vocabulary of profanity. Her eyebrows crept up her forehead.
She suddenly laughed. "They said you were different. Nobody warned me just how different. I haven't heard that kind of language since we had the head engineer in here from the Endeavour. Some cadet left the engine drive unit hot while he was checking it. He spent a week regrowing skin over burns."
"Was his name Sandover?"
"You know him?" She started on the other bank of equipment. The tension in the room dropped dramatically.
"I was on that flight. I wasn't the cadet who left the drive unit on."
"That was only seven years back," she said, watching me as she unplugged equipment. "Were you his assistant?"
"Engineering Cadet."
"How did you make Admiral in less than seven years? The Patrol, unlike some branches of the government, does not sell commissions."
"It's a long story." I had no idea how much of it was classified. I wondered what she'd say if she knew I'd enlisted at that rank.
"You want to try walking around?" she asked when the room was clear.
"Just to the bathroom," I told her.
"Then let's go."
It took me half an hour to make it the eight feet to the bathroom and back to the bed. My legs wouldn't work right. My coordination was nonexistent. I was weak and trembling long before she helped me back into bed. I'd been a lot sicker than I thought.
"So what planet am I on?" I asked while she pulled the sheet back over me, straightening edges.
"Besht. I heard about the stasis unit they brought you in. Must have been some action."
"I was on Tivor." My eyes were already starting to close. If I lay perfectly still, the pain was bearable. "I think someone shot me."
"Point blank. It's a wonder you're alive."
I didn't answer. Her last words echoed in my head as I slid into sleep.
Chapter 2
The clatter of dishes woke me. Sunlight streamed through the window. I tried to sit by myself. I didn't make it. Every muscle screamed in protest. I lay back on the bed, cursing my weakness and the pain.
The hulking medic of the day before came smiling into my room. "Breakfast," he announced, pushing a straw at my face.
I turned my head away. "Not if it's drugged."
"It's got a mild relaxant in it. To keep you from locking up. Most patients who don't take their pain meds have muscle spasms that get worse and worse."
"Until what? They tie themselves into knots? I've had enough. I have to get them out of my system or I'll just keep getting worse."
He stirred the straw in the cup. "It's just a mild relaxant, nothing more."
I gave in. He was big enough to force feed me if I resisted. It didn't look like I was going to get anything else for breakfast. I drank it.
I dozed for a while. I almost didn't hurt when I woke up.
The medic came back and made me get up and move. I cursed him the whole time. He kept after me, making me walk. I don't know if he was really doing his job or making me suffer for the fun of it. I was glad when night came and he went off shift.
Three days of his bullying and the thick drinks went by. I gradually got better. I still hurt, horribly, but I could walk by myself, as long as it wasn't far. The night medic was a lot nicer, but she still made me get up whenever she caught me awake.
I was starting to wonder about my situation. I hadn't had any visitors. None. Not even Lowell. I saw my two medics and no one else.
I watched the other patients ambling past my door. It was too frustrating. Most of them went home within a day or two. I didn't know where my home was. I wanted my cabin on the Phoenix. I wanted out, of the hospital and the Patrol. I had to talk to Lowell to do that. My medics kept telling me to concentrate on getting well. I wanted to throw things, except I hurt too much to even try.
Movement out the door caught my eye. Someone had just walked past, someone in a silver uniform, not the blue the medics wore. Someone's visitor, not mine, I thought. I was deep in a pity party for myself. The someone stopped just past my door and came back. He stuck his head in the door and stared at me in surprise.
"Dace? What are you doing here?"
"Having the time of my life, Vance. What are you doing here?"
He grinned and came into my room, taking my question as an invitation. "Just some paperwork I had to finish up. Medical records are on the other side of this floor. This was a shortcut." His grin vanished, replaced by concern. "What happened to you?"
Vance Shiropi wasn't the person I wanted to see but I was hungry for any familiar face.
He pulled a chair next to the bed and straddled it. "You don't look so great."
"I hope I look better than I feel."
It was the most natural thing when he took my hand. His felt warm, strong, and comforting. He squeezed gently. "I got back from that mess on Trythia and spent a while in the hospital. When I tried to track you down, no one knew what had happened to you." His dark eyes were full of concern.
"Lowell sent me to Tivor. I don't know how I ended up in here. I think I was shot, but I can't remember."
His face pinched in outrage. "Lowell should have never made you enlist. Admiral or not, you should have gotten a discharge after Trythia. Most of us did."
"I wasn't thinking," I admitted. "I was past caring. Tayvis died in the last fight."
"I'm so sorry," he said and squeezed my hand again. "I know what he meant to you."
I looked out the window. I wasn't going to cry, not now. I'd cried enough tears over the last year to fill a tanker. It was a struggle not to, Vance was so sympathetic. His hand on mine warmed my whole body.
"So when is your discharge coming through?" he asked, pretending he didn't see the tear that managed to escape.
"What discharge?" I asked, surprised out of my pity.
"Medical discharge. You're obviously in bad shape. A medical discharge is almost automatic in cases like yours."
"I don't know anything about it."
"Don't tell me Lowell is trying to keep you in the Patrol." His protectiveness felt good.
"I haven't seen him since he sent me to Tivor."
"He hasn't left you messages or anything?"
"I couldn't tell you. I feel like a prisoner here. They won't tell me anything," I added in a quiet voice as my daytime hulk of a medic entered the room.
"This room is posted no visitors," the hulk informed Vance. "You'll have to leave."
"What if I don't want him to?" I said.
The medic ignored me. He folded his beefy arms and glared.
Vance stood, squeezing my hand. "Be ready," he whispered as he leaned close over me. He winked as he sauntered past the medic.
The medic turned to watch him all the way down the hall. His fierce glare hadn't changed when he turned back to me.
"Why is my room posted no visitors?"
"For your privacy," the medic said, his scowl relaxing into his usual toothy smile. "Time for you to get up again." He had a clean hospital robe over his arm.
"Lowell had something to do with it, didn't he." The medic ignored my flat statement.
I spent a whole second debating whether to argue with him before giving in. I made it out of bed with only a little help. I shuffled into the bathroom and the shower.
&n
bsp; I was settled back in the bed again for only a few moments when Vance appeared in my doorway. My medic rumbled his way over to the door. Vance held his ground. He produced a paper from his pocket.
"Medical discharge," he informed the medic. "She's coming with me."
The medic folded his arms and glared at the paper. He finally shrugged. "I'll have to clear it."
"You do that," Vance told him. He watched the medic leave then pushed the door mostly shut before he came over to the bed. He reminded me of a little kid with a secret. He grinned and held up a silver uniform. "We have to hurry."
"You didn't really get me a discharge," I said, disappointed.
"It takes weeks to get one of those finalized. Mine just came through this morning. That's why I was here, to pick up the papers. Put this on." He shoved the uniform at me and retreated to the door. He opened it far enough to look down the hall. "Hurry," he added.
I made my decision in a split second. Stay here, cut off from everyone, or go with Vance, wherever he was headed. It wasn't much of a decision. I'd face the music later, when Lowell caught up with me.
The pain was horrible. I struggled my way into the uniform, biting my lip to keep from groaning. He'd brought me an Admiral's dress uniform. It even fit. The boots were a little large, but close enough that I wasn't going to complain. The lack of underwear was a bit disconcerting. I managed to get it fastened before I collapsed onto the bed. Vance heard my sigh of relief and turned around.
"He's coming back," he said. "We've got to go now. But you can't go barefoot."
He was by the bed, slipping a pair of boots over my feet, before I could blink.
"Ready?" he asked with a grin.
I was already having second thoughts. "Vance, I can't go far."
"Then I'll carry you if I have to, although it will look less suspicious if you can walk. It's only to the elevators. I've got a car waiting downstairs."
"To go where?"
His look made me feel warm and fuzzy inside. What would it matter where we went? It was out of the hospital. He slid his arm around me and helped me off the bed. It felt good to be standing on my own feet and wearing boots again.
He helped me over to the door. "Ready?" he asked as he risked a peek out the door. "We're clear."
He waited until I nodded before he moved his arm. I couldn't lean on him too obviously or it would give our subterfuge away. I felt a bubble of excitement and nerves ripple through my gut along with a stab of pain. I pushed the pain away and concentrated on walking normally.