Sebist was silent again for a few moments. His tone was quieter, but no less understanding. “You had no choice but to make such a deal, my friend. Your back was against the wall. Anyone would have done the same.”
Kels closed his eyes and allowed some of his worry to roll from the stiff set of his shoulders. “I’m relieved you understand.”
“Of course I do. All is not lost, after all.”
“What do you mean?”
“Maryam will be here on Kalquor when she gives birth. After all, I insist you survive and return home. Consider yourself under orders to do so.”
“I have a vested interest in making that happen.”
“I’m glad you see it my way. Once you’re here, my clan and I’ll do all in our power to show Maryam what wonderful clanmates we’d be to her. I might have to rely on your powers of persuasion so she’ll hear us out.”
Sebist planned to court her. As charming as the man was, Kels had the notion Maryam wouldn’t be receptive to his charisma.
Truth be told, he recoiled at the idea himself. Sebist and his clan were fine men, the best men outside Kels’s own clan, but thinking of Maryam with them bothered him.
What’s wrong with me? She’d be lucky to have such mates. It couldn’t hurt to convince her to see that. In fact, it made perfect sense since she couldn’t return to Earth.
Kels forced pleasantness into his voice. “You’d better brush up on your romancing skills in the meantime. She enjoys Noythy farces, so you might want to familiarize yourself with those.”
Sebist snorted. “I was never a fan of absurd comedy, but I’ll work on that. Be sure to note anything else she enjoys. Hopefully, her likes will match my clan’s, and we won’t have to cultivate too many offbeat interests.”
The Dramoks traded a few more pleasantries, then Kels signed off.
“Can you fulfill your promise if she doesn’t fall desperately in love with Clan Sebist?”
Kels flinched and scowled at Dergan, both for startling him and doubting his intentions. “I mean to take Maryam wherever she decides she wishes to go. Even if it costs me my friendship with Sebist.” He winced at that thought. Sebist was as precious as a brother to him; losing him would be devastating.
Dergan frowned with concern. “I’m not only concerned about Clan Sebist. The order from the empire was quite clear. They mean to have Earther females, no matter how they can claim them. Do you believe they’ll let Maryam go once she’s in our territory?”
Kels froze. He hadn’t considered the possibility Kalquor would insist on keeping Maryam against her wishes. Surely the empire should be glad to set her free after she’d made the sacrifice of carrying a Kalquorian child.
What if it doesn’t?
“You were under a lot of pressure when she offered to be our child’s surrogate. You were coping with the loss of Briel. You had no other chance of saving our child. No one can fault you for not anticipating such an outcome at the moment you agreed to it,” Dergan said, his fierce features composed.
“I have to keep my vow to her, Dergan. After what I did—”
“After what we did, my Dramok. I have to redeem my own wrongs, and I’m as determined as you. What are the chances we’d end up in the same prison if it comes to committing treason?”
Kels’s heart sank. Despite wanting to demand his Nobek stay out of the matter, Dergan wouldn’t be dissuaded. He’d suffer the consequences alongside his clan leader.
“Maybe it won’t come to that. Maybe the empire will uphold the bargain. Or maybe she’ll fall for Sebist’s clan. Our luck has to change at some point, doesn’t it?”
Dergan grinned, as if they weren’t discussing the highest treachery possible, the crime of disloyalty to Kalquor. “You’ve always been luckier than most. Let’s trust our child’s life being saved promises good fortune is smiling on you again.”
“I hope so. I can’t take anymore unpleasant surprises.”
* * * *
Two days after settling in their new “quarters” in the storage bay, another bin-walled section a few feet from Maryam’s, Kels and Dergan returned to the bridge. More of the computer pedestal stations were operational, which offered Kels optimism their escape plan might work.
It had to work. The Earther ships, over three dozen strong, were entering the ion storm to search for the damaged destroyer. Help from Kalquor was still far out of range.
Dergan assisted the weapons commander, manning a repaired auxiliary station. His computer had been converted to assist in operating the destroyer’s weapons array. Meanwhile, Kels stood by, determined to stay out of the crew’s way. He had command experience, but it would only be called upon if Odak fell during their attempt.
Several members of the command staff were either in Medical or dead after the first two battles. The first officer was among the most critically wounded, as was the second officer. Kels as captain was a worst-case scenario that could all too easily happen.
For now, his only task was to monitor sensor readings and be ready to serve as a backup should any of the primary crew become incapacitated. For the first time, he fully appreciated how the destroyer had suffered for following Kalquor’s orders to collect Maryam. It added to the guilt he already carried.
An indicator lit up on the large holoscreen at the front of the bridge, a depiction of the ion storm, the space beyond, and the threatening Earther vessels. Odak responded immediately. “That’s an explosion. Report.”
Weapons Commander Tiom answered with studied nonchalance. “An assault fighter discovered one of our mines and set it off.”
“The Earthers on that side of the cloud are congregating at the explosion site,” Dergan reported.
“Another detonation. They’re definitely scanning and destroying the explosives we deployed.”
“Other ships are concentrating on the cloud opposite that site.”
Odak exchanged a glance with Kels. “They suspect the mines are a distraction meant to draw them as far from our exit point as possible.”
“As we anticipated. Too bad they’re looking for us in the wrong place.” Kels tried not to feel smug that their ruse was working so far. It wasn’t hard. There were too many avenues through which the plan could fail.
“Helm, keep an eye on the enemy’s movements. The moment they’re out of our exit point’s scanning range, get us out of here.”
“Yes, Captain.”
* * * *
In the storage bay, Maryam and Pana stood side by side in her “bedroom”, looking at the window vid the Imdiko had set up on the wall over the sleeping mat.
Maryam stared at the astounding view of the ion storm outside. Seeming mist drifted past, rendering the few visible stars dreamlike. Occasional bolts of charged ions streamed past, resembling lightning. She jumped with each streak that lit the panorama of space, sure the destroyer must be struck and reduced to cinders, though Kels and Dergan had assured her the destroyer’s shielding kept them safe.
The mix of safety and perceived threat was akin to riding the tallest rollercoaster. It exhilarated Maryam, and she grinned at Pana. “It’s beautiful.”
“Just think, if my clan hadn’t kidnapped you, you’d have missed out on this,” he teased.
She attempted a disapproving frown but couldn’t pull it off. Giving up, she laughed.
She’d done more of t
hat the last couple of days than she would have expected. Maryam was forced to admit Pana was a welcome companion. Wonderful, actually. According to Dergan, Pana was a leader in weapons systems research and development, and his intelligence tested in the genius range. Even so, he never talked down to her. They shared the same slapstick sense of humor, finding hilarity in pratfalls and physical comedy. His moments of brooding were less and less. He had a tendency to be overly solicitous, but Maryam only had to remind him she wasn’t a child, and he backed off.
Dergan was another bright spot, attentive without being overbearing. He wasn’t prone to laughter, but he wasn’t moody either. Maryam’s assessment of the Nobek was that he was sturdy in mind as well as body and followed a code that normally wouldn’t have turned him into a kidnapper. He felt keenly, as evidenced by the pain he exhibited when Briel was brought up in conversation, but he didn’t wallow in despair. He’d sworn to keep Maryam safe from Earthers, or die trying. She hoped he wouldn’t get the opportunity to prove such a thing.
As for Kels, the jury was still out on the clan’s leader. He was polite but distant to Maryam. She often thought it was guilt over what had happened. Remorse clung to him like a black cloud. She wondered if he’d ever get over his error.
Shaking off the sadness she often suffered when thoughts of Kels entered her head, she wagged a playful finger at Pana. “Tell me you’re not waiting for me to say thank you for the opportunity to see the ion storm due to my captivity.”
Pana nudged her good-humoredly. “Of course not. You should know better.”
Maryam directed her attention to the view. “It is gorgeous. I don’t believe I’ve ever seen anything more incredible.”
“Nor I.”
His reverent tone drew her gaze. Pana stared at her, not the window vid.
Maryam warmed. Was it wrong that she’d begun to see him as a man—an incredibly attractive man whose company she enjoyed—rather than Briel’s widower? Was it disrespectful to her friend to delight in his smiles, in his stories, in his company?
Maybe it was the pregnancy hormones. Maryam had experienced increased libido during her earlier pregnancies. She would have preferred to believe her reaction to Pana was purely because of physical fluctuations. Dergan had that effect too—all right, so did Kels, despite the fact he’d been behind her abduction and now did his best to maintain his distance. Yes, the fascination she had had for the Kalquorian men could be chalked up to good old sinful lust, thanks to hormones.
You know better than that. Each of them, in his own fashion, has touched you.
Pana’s contemplative gaze shifted to concern, and Maryam realized she’d been staring at him for too long. “Are you all right? Your face is flushed all of the sudden.”
Maryam forced an easy smile. “I’m fine.”
“Okay. See? I’m not smothering you with concern. It’s killing me, but I’m doing it.” He grimaced dramatically to earn a chuckle from her.
“You’ve shown great restraint.”
“What were you thinking about?”
That I want what I have no business desiring.
She shoved that aside, opting for an answer that wasn’t a betrayal to Briel. “It’s only been a few days, but I enjoy being pregnant. I feel—” She paused, searching for the perfect word.
“Complete?”
Ugh, why did people equate a woman having children with achieving life’s greatest goal? “I don’t believe you have to have someone else in your life or a baby to be complete. Though it’s been a goal of mine, which the repeated failures of have caused great grief, I’m a perfectly whole person on my own.”
“I’ve struck a nerve. No offense was intended.”
Maryam drew a breath. “Sorry. Being seen as less of a woman because I couldn’t have children has made me sensitive to the subject. I didn’t mean to bite your head off.”
Pana patted his skull. “Head still intact. Whew.”
She laughed. How had Briel missed so much of the good in him?
He returned to the earlier subject. “You were saying you enjoy being pregnant, that it makes you feel—?”
“Expansive. Yes, that’s what I wanted to say. That I have more than I did before, even though it’s not my child.”
Pana grew serious, his gaze contemplative once again. “You carry him. That means he’s partly yours, in some sense. You might not have conceived him, but you give him life. It looks good on you.”
Again, Maryam was reminded of the clandestine attraction she had for him. She abruptly realized she leaned toward him, yearning drawing her close, against her conscious will.
He must have felt it too, because he moved in her direction, leaning down. His purple eyes filled her vision.
This can’t happen. Step away, Maryam. Put distance between the two of you at once.
Instead, she rose up on her toes to meet him. His arms were powerful around her, pressing her against himself. His lips were soft and cautious, making her lightheaded as they drifted against hers.
All thought disappeared as she gave herself to Pana’s kiss.
Chapter Eleven
Maryam moved her hands over Pana, tracing the muscles of his neck, shoulders, back, buttocks. Strong. So incredibly strong, his corded body thrumming beneath her palms like a live wire. She sought to devour him by touch, rocked by the realization she was starved for physical contact.
Pana did the same, his hands rough with eagerness as he traced her contours, molding her softer flesh with desperate abandon. He pulled her close, and she felt the hard prod of his desire. A bolt of passion struck between her legs, so fervent that she gasped as they continued to kiss.
The kiss had gone from gentleness to voracious, their mouths working with bruising force, tongues tugging at each other. They breathed into one another, a hurricane as they grasped and clawed at the clothing shielding their flesh, threatening to rip the fabric barrier keeping them apart.
Maryam had missed erotic contact more than she’d realized. Akin to a woman in the desert reaching an oasis and plunging into a pool of water, she sought to drown herself in Pana. She wanted to saturate her parched flesh in him, wanted to consume and be consumed.
He moaned in response. Pana abruptly swung her up in his arms without breaking the kiss. The next instant, they were on the bed, grinding so the fierce hardness of his want moved against her crotch. Maryam flung her legs wide, then closed around his gyrating ass to pull him closer.
She pulled at his clothes, trying to figure out how to get the formsuit off him. The front seam at his throat purred apart, greeting her eager fingers with warm skin beneath. She moaned at the discovery of smooth, firm flesh and shoved the outfit down his shoulders, past corded biceps. Once she had his arms free, her touch roamed, discovering all she could of his bared torso. His nipples were diamond points, and he gasped when she brushed them.
Spurred by her investigation, he performed his own. Pana shoved her blouse and bra up to her throat, at last ending the rapacious kiss to stare down at her. His gaze intent, he traced the scatter of freckles over her chest and breasts. His fingertips were scalding.
“Ever had a woman with spots before?” Maryam asked, wondering what he thought of them.
“My life wouldn’t have been complete until you,” he snickered. “What a fantastic pattern. I wonder how they taste?”
&
nbsp; He proceeded to sample, licking along her collarbone, across the flatter area from there to the swells of her breasts, then the breasts themselves. Maryam was enthralled to discover his tongue was coarser than her ex-husband’s, a fine sandpaper rasp that brought alive nerve endings she hadn’t known she possessed. Not soft, not silky, but slightly abrasive. She wondered that she enjoyed it so much.
It was particularly exciting when he traced circles around her breast, sweeping closer and closer to the flushed nipple that jutted in a point. She jerked when he captured the tip between his teeth and lashed it.
“Yes!” she shouted as sensation zapped from the contact straight to her womanhood. Then another shout, this time wordless, as his mouth closed over her and sucked hard. She grabbed the back of his head, yanking him closer.
Without pausing the sucking and tonguing for an instant, Pana grasped her wrists and pinned her arms on either side of her head. She was helpless as he feasted on her, as he moved from breast to breast to consume the voluptuous mounds. The vulnerability was shocking in how it excited her. The only term that fit what he did to her was old-fashioned, but there was no other description for his assault: ravishment. She melted under his show of strength.
He didn’t stop with her chest, though he spent a long while possessing the soft mounds. When he at last left her breasts, marked with pink from his ardent attentions, he kissed, licked and nipped a path down her slightly rounded belly, rough but reverent with appreciation. There were no freckles there, and Maryam was excited by how well the pink marks of his abrasive tongue, teeth, and light beard scruff showed up on the lily-toned flesh. He marked her, left undeniable proof he’d taken advantage. It was almost as thrilling as him keeping her wrists imprisoned so she couldn’t stop him.
As if she would do such a thing.
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