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Star Trek - Sarek

Page 8

by A. C. Crispin


  stables. "You know nothing of what excites a male ..." he said

  caressingly, obviously enjoying her humiliation. "But have no fear ...

  innocence excites me greatly. Do not worry, my targhoy. There is beauty

  in you. With the flowering of your womanhood, it will come, Valdyr-oy.

  When you are my wife, your beauty will blossom like chal flowers in

  spring."

  His endearments and the love suffix attached to her name made the young

  woman long to shriek with fury. Her mind filled with images of her

  plunging the dagger she wore strapped to her forearm into his heart.

  As his fingers touched her cheek, Valdyr could not repress a shudder of

  disgust. "Look, Kamarag, she trembles for me already? Karg chortled;

  then he seized her in a bruising embrace and pressed his face into her

  neck, his teeth fastening on her throat so hard that the woman gasped

  from the pain.

  "Enough, Karg!" Kamarag ordered, and the captain released her. Raising

  her hand, Valdyr touched her throat, then stared unbelievingly at the

  smear of blood on her fingers. "I know you are hot to take a bride, but

  the wedding will not take place until after our triumph. The taste of

  victory will add extra savor to your wedding night, Karg."

  The captain was breathing hard as his eyes ran over Valdyr's body, and

  his voice, when he spoke, was thick.

  "Very well, Kamarag. But she is sweet enough to tempt any male ... "He

  addressed the young woman then. "Do not concern yourself about your

  fitness to be my wife, Valdyr-oy.

  Just as the beauty will come, you will learn the intricacies of society,

  until you are ready to take your place with me, to help my advancement.

  Your uncle assures me that you possess high intelligence, for a female."

  Valdyr wanted to flay him alive for his words, but she held herself

  back. She must be clever, use all of her wits to escape this fate that

  loomed before her. Allowing Karg to see her true feelings would only

  make them watch her closely until the day of the wedding.

  Perhaps she could run away. Or, if she could not refuse Karg, perhaps

  she could postpone the marriage for a while.

  Karg was a warrior. Perhaps he would be killed. The thought made her

  smile.

  So, steeling herself, Valdyr forced herself to say, "At the moment,

  school occupies all my time. Perhaps when I finish this term, I will

  find myself more ... prepared for marriage, Uncle."

  Kamarag frowned. "You will not need further schooling now that I have

  arranged such a successful match for you, aldyr. Better you should turn

  your attention to the management of households. That in itself is a

  demanding life."

  "Your uncle is right, Valdyr-oy. I have a large house, but it has

  suffered from the lack of a woman to care for it," Karg added.

  "No further schooling?" Valdyr struggled to control her temper. If she

  made her uncle angry, it would bode ill for her brothers, as well as for

  her. She must not allow them to know what was in her mind. "But, Uncle

  ..."

  Perhaps sensing her distress, her uncle said, "You may finish out this

  term, as long as it does not interfere with your duties here, and with

  your spending more time in the kitchens, learning the duties of a wife."

  He gave Karg a smug glance. "I will not have Karg say that you did not

  come to him properly trained for your new role."

  "In addition to the kitchens," Karg said, his gaze roving over her body

  again, "do not forget that you must learn the ways of the nursery,

  Valdyr-oy." With a toothy grin, he slapped her uncle on the back and

  left the chamber.

  Once they were alone, Kamarag regarded his niece with a touch of

  impatience. "Well, girl?" he barked, finally. "Have you nothing to say?"

  The young woman exerted rigid control as she forced herself to reply

  quietly, "Uncle, I will do as you say."

  "See that you do," he grumbled. "You do not want to appear ungrateful,

  do you, niece?"

  "No, sir." Relaxing visibly, her uncle rocked back on his heels, and

  smiled as he changed the subject. "The meeting went well today, did it

  not?"

  "They all seemed to share your point of view," Valdyr said, treading a

  careful verbal path. "All except Keraz." Her uncle dismissed the

  commander with a wave of one blunt-fingered hand. "Hundreds of years

  from now, our names will be remembered as the ones who saved the Empire

  and the Klingon way of life," he said, earnestly, his deep-set eyes

  gleaming.

  "But ... current policy of our government is to make peace with the

  Federation," Valdyr reminded him. "Peace with the Federation, friendship

  with our old enemies--even peace with James Kirk, who saved the

  chancellor's--"

  "Kirk!" roared Kamarag so loudly that Valdyr started.

  "Niece, I cannot hear that name without anger--do not think to provoke

  me by letting it fall from your lips so casually! May Kirk be devoured

  by ten thousand demons on his way to oblivion! Kirk lives still, and I

  have no peace!" Furious, the ambassador strode back and forth in the

  small chamber, his boots resounding on the floor like ancient war drums.

  "Kirk! Kirk is the enemy, and I will never regain my honor until he is

  dead, until I can dip my hands in his warm blood and dye them scarlet--I

  will never rest until Kirk and all his line are wiped out!"

  "But, Uncle." Valdyr was taken aback. Kamarag's temper was legendary,

  but she'd never seen her uncle in such a rage.

  "Kirk saved Azetbur's life. She will never agree to having him killed."

  "I care nothing for her!" Kamarag was livid. "She is the spineless

  daughter of a spineless coward. She will not stop me, niece."

  "Stop you in what, Uncle?" Valdyr asked, curious and repelled at the

  same moment.

  "Stop me from carrying out my plan," the ambassador said, and smiled.

  The sight of that smile chilled her, even though her chamber was warm.

  "What plan?" she asked.

  His smile broadened, revealing a mouthful of teeth. A cunning, predatory

  expression replaced the anger that had been there. "You will see,

  Valdyr," he promised softly. "Just wait, and you will see ... "

  Journal of Amanda Grayson Sarek September 16,2293 What is it like to

  die?

  Vulcan& of course, have their katras ... a word no one has ever been

  able to translate with any degree of precision. Not quite a soul, not

  exactly a personality, more than a memory, less than a living being ...

  I suppose one has to be born Vulcan to have any hope of understanding

  Vulcan mysticism.

  Spock and Sarek will live on, after their deaths. Will I?

  Many of Earth religions hold that I will ... but there is no certainty.

  And if there is an afterlife, would individuals from different worlds

  mingle there?

  Now I am getting metaphysical--and silly. Speculating about such things

  is fruitless ... illogical. Life after death will either happen, or it

  won't, and there is nothing I can do about it either way ... except

  bephilosophical.

  I dread Sarek return from Freelan, even as I long for it. I suspect

  T'Mal conta
cted him, and that she was as blunt with him as she was

  evasive with me. No doubt she was concerned that the truth would be too

  much for a human to bear.

  Little does she know this particular human. I have known what is

  happening to me for months, now. I can't remember when I first realized

  that my body was

  running down, sputtering to its inevitable halt ... the knowledge just

  grew in me, day by day.

  It seems that I have Reyerson's disease. It isn't always fatal,

  especially to those in the prime of life--but I am ninety-three.

  Luckily, itg not an illness that causes a great deal of pain. Its main

  symptom is continuous exhaustion, which, at my age, is fairly common

  anyway.

  I've spent time these past few days reading over my old journals. The

  moments come back so clearly, it almost seems as though the past is the

  reality, and this present, with its exhaustion and inevitable ending, is

  merely a bad dream.

  When I read about them, the memories revive, as fresh as if they

  happened only yesterday. I cannot believe I have lived this long--it all

  seems to have gone by at great speed. Every time I look in a mirror

  these days, I am shocked to see a woman who is, beyond a doubt ... old.

  I don't FEEL old.t--not inside. The aches and pains remind me of my true

  age, but my mind and my heart feel as young as ever. Young Amanda is in

  here with me, in my head, and Old Amanda has trapped us within this

  shell of aged bone and flesh.

  Curious, isn't it? I wonder if every human feels this way ... or am I

  unusual? l,'ulcans, of course, feel exactly as om as their chronological

  age. Anything else would be illogical ... Can I really be ... dying?

  At times I have to fight off panic, but those episodes are growing less

  and less frequent. They are simply too tiring, I suppose, for a body

  that is ... shutting down.

  Of course, I would not want to live forever ... but I don't want to

  die, either. I want to live--there are still so many things to do, so

  many places to go, so many things to see-- I want to live ... yet Iam

  coming to realize that I will not, at least, not for much longer. By

  this time next year, probably much sooner, the universe will be going on

  without me. Amanda Grayson, Madam Sarek, the Lady Amanda ... I will be

  gone, will be no more.

  I am dying.

  There, I've admitted it. Writing it out in black and white like that has

  actually been a relief. Facing the worst the future has to offer is

  better than mincing around, shying away from an all-too-possible

  reality.

  Of course, the Healers are treating me, trying to arrest the disease.

  But I know without asking that my progno-sis is dismal. And, even if a

  miracle happened, and I were cured of this particular illness, at my

  age, the inevitable can only be staved off for a short time.

  There is one journal entry that I've been saving as a treat, for when I

  feel particularly low. I believe that tonight is the night to read it

  ...

  June 14,2229 ... a few minutes past midnight My hand trembles as I

  write this ... I can scarcely believe what happened tonight!After all

  these months of seeing him, trying to make myself believe that his

  interest was not solely that of a diplomat befriending a student of his

  culture ... trying, but never quite succeeding--I can hardly believe

  what I am about to write--tonight Sarek kissed me/ It was not really a

  kiss as a human knows it--but it happened. Just the softest brush of his

  fingertips against my lips, but I trembled as we turned and walked home

  in silence. Even now, as I sit here writing, I feel as though I have

  caught some exotic fever.

  Is it possible that we have known each other for only four months? It

  seems incredible that my life could have changed so radically, so

  irrevocably, in such a short time. Four months, almost to the day.

  My work was everything to me ... teaching was my only passion. Being

  able to convey to my students the wonder and richness of alien cultures

  was my fondest dream, a goal to be striven for, my heart's greatest

  desire. The day I won the T'Relan Award for Excellence in Teaching was,

  I thought then, the pinnacle of my life.

  All this time, these past months, wondering, trying to fathom why such a

  distinguished diplomat wanted to spend time with a teacher who happened

  to win an award for teaching and thus was invited to an embassy

  reception ...

  Once or twice I thought, "Perhaps he's attracted to me," only to back

  awayjkom the thought at warp speed.

  Vulcans do not form romantic attachments, after all.

  Either they bond at a very young age, or they make a reasoned, logical

  decision later in life. Romance? Don't be ridiculous, Amanda.t But

  tonight ... was romantic. I believe that even Sarek felt it, was

  affected by the spell of the night ...

  The three-quarter moon was setting over the Pacific as the couple walked

  along the beach. Amanda Grayson picked her way over the wet sand,

  smiling as the white-tipped waves curled ever closer to her feet. Dinner

  had been excellent; Sarek had taken her to one of the finest restaurants

  in town.

  As they'd eaten, she'd caught curious glances from their fellow diners.

  It was unusual, she knew, for a human woman and a Vulcan male to be seen

  together. And her escort was a noted diplomat at the Vulcan Embassy--a

  well-known public figure.

  Thankfully, after they'd left the restaurant, none of the curious had

  followed them. Now, watching the moon slip down toward the waves, they

  were completely alone. The tide was coming in, lapping ever higher.

  Amanda watched her escort coverfly as he gazed at the ocean, his

  expression quiet and serene.

  She was so intent on watching Sarek that an importunate wave caught her

  unawares. Amanda jumped and gasped as cold water sloshed over her feet,

  and she bumped hard against the Vulcan. Automatically, he caught her arm

  and steadii her. It was the first time he had touched her in the four

  months since she'd met him.

  "Oh, thank you!" she exclaimed. "If I'd fallen in, I'd have gotten

  soaked." Glancing up at him diffidently, she caught her breath in

  surprise as she realized that he was ... smiling. There could be no

  doubt about it. Sarek's austere,

  aquiline features had softened, and his normally stern mouth curved

  upward on both ends. The Vulcan's dark eyes held an amused spark.

  Sarek is smiling. At me, she thought, amazed and touched.

  I didn't know he could smile.t

  She smiled back at him, feeling a rush of happiness so pure and strong

  that it was like some euphoria-inducing drug. As they stared at each

  other, their eyes locked, the next wave caught both of them in its wash.

  This time they both jumped. Amanda, glancing down, saw that the

  ambassador's boots were soaked. "Oh, dear.

  Your boots."

  "They will dry," Sarek said, ignoring his footwear.

  "Amanda ... tell me something."

  "What?"

  "Is there anyone ... special in your life?"

  He can'
t possibly know what that question means on Earth, she thought,

  blankly. "Of course there is," she said, struggling not to blush. "I

  have my parents, and my students, my family and my friends. They're all

  very special to me ... Sarek."

  It had been hard for her to call him by only his name without his

  title--he was such a formal person, so reserved.

  It was growing easier each time she did it. "And of course, back East I

  have several friends that I only see a few times a year, because

  they're--"

  "Amanda ..." She couldn't believe that he'd interrupted her. He'd never

  done that before. The Vulcan stepped closer to her, so close she could

  feel the heat of his body against her face and throat.

  "Yes, Sarek?"

  "I wanted to know whether there is a special male in your life."

  She stared at him unbelievingly, but managed to compose herself. "No,

  Sarek. There is no special ... male." Her heart was pounding harder

  than the surf.

  "So you are free to choose a ... mate?" he asked.

  "Yes," she whispered, but hardly any sound emerged from her throat. The

  Vulcan leaned closer, indicating that even his acute hearing had not

  picked up her answer. "Yes," she repeated. "Yes, I am."

  "That is good to hear, Amanda," he said quietly; then he leaned forward,

  slowly and deliberately, and kissed her mouth with his fingertips.

 

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