If ancient animosities
are finally laid to rest,
will new ones take
their place?
I
Silver Tide
Lieutenant
Colonel Jess Fernбndez was sick. She sat in her chair at the end of a
giant robot arm that could swing anywhere within the large hemisphere
around her. Although she could act as captain from many locations
within the ship, she spent most shifts here on the bridge.
She
rubbed her eyes, exhausted after having worked late the previous
evening, ship’s time. Her queasy stomach didn’t help. She also had a
cold, of all the absurd anachronisms, and she felt like hell.
Holoscreens
covered the surface of the kilometer-wide dome that formed the bridge.
Right now they showed the planet Athena, a gas giant banded by blue and
red clouds, glowing against the spangled backdrop of space. The view to
starboard lifted her spirits. It came from a satellite orbiting Athena
and showed her ship, Silver Tide, a scientific research
facility. The vessel glistened, a rotating cylinder several kilometers
long. Lights sparkled along its body, on antennae, pods, struts, and
towers.
Jess always got a kick out of watching Silver Tide
from within the ship. She had never lost the awe she felt that first
time she boarded, coming to assume her command. In the five years
since, Silver Tide had become part of her.
Her
stomach interrupted her enjoyment with an unwelcome lurch. Trying to
divert her thoughts, she magnified the screen images. Now they revealed
a small spacecraft on approach, a Bolt transport. On Silver Tide,
the pod on a docking tube was opening like a giant flower. The Bolt
sailed inside and the pod closed, swallowing the craft. Jess recognized
the Bolt; it carried Jack O’Brien and his Allied Services team, which
tracked the interstellar black market. They were hitching a ride on Silver Tide, headed out across space to bust smugglers.
Jess
sniffled, distracted by her stuffy nose. Pah. This was absurd. She had
all her inoculations. Granted, none were 100 percent effective, but
humans had cured most strains of the common cold. It irked her no end
to have caught one anyway.
She still had to do her job. To the computer, she said, "Spin her up."
"Done,"
it answered. The bridge began to turn, its screens adjusting to keep
the view stationary. She rotated the bridge during part of each shift
so her crew at the consoles on the hull weren’t always in
micro-gravity. Against the immensity of space, their stations were tiny
wedges moving past the stars. Usually Jess reveled in that glorious
vista. Unfortunately, seeing those consoles zip by today did nothing
glorious for her stomach. Bloody hell. Captains weren’t supposed to get
sick.
Jess
sent her chair humming toward a hatch on the hull. To match speed and
position with the moving hatch, the chair turned upside down, making
her dismayed stomach flip-flop. She gulped bile as she shoved out of
her seat. Then she rendezvoused with the Bridge Renewal and Refresher
Chamber, otherwise known as the loo.
As
she squeezed into the cubicle, a med-holo of her face formed in front
of the opposite panel showing a woman with black hair tousled around
her shoulders. Dark smudges showed below her eyes.
She barely had time to lean over the sink before she lost her lunch.
"You
work too hard." Dr. George Mai stood by the bed in the exam room,
scanning his holopad. A heavy-set man of average height, he had a kind
face and brown eyes. He frowned at Jess, who was sitting on the end of
the bed, her booted legs almost touching the floor. "You should come in
more often for a check-up," he admonished.
Jess
barely held back her grimace. She had never liked hospitals. "I’m not
working any harder than usual. I’ve no reason to be sick."
"I’m
still checking a few tests, but I can already give you the diagnosis."
He turned off his holopad. "You have a cold, Captain. You need rest.
Relaxation."
Jess glowered at him. "I’m perfectly relaxed."
He started to answer, then seemed to think better of it. Instead he said, "I’ll let you know if anything else turns up."
"Thank you." She slid off the bed, standing half a head taller than him.
"You really could use a rest," he said. "Doctor Bolton would say the same."
Gads. He was pulling out the big guns. She could just hear Sandra Bolton, the senior physician at Claymore Hospital: I
insist you relax, Jess. Take a vacation, find a hobby, meet some
people. You’re an intelligent, accomplished, attractive woman. All
right, so you’re also stubborn as all hell. But you still need a social
life.
Stubborn, pah. Sandra didn’t seem to understand the words, I’m fine, go away.
Jess had great respect for the doctor’s abilities, but she had no wish
to hear Sandra’s unsolicited advice on her personal life, or lack
thereof.
Especially not now.
Jess
hurried through the secluded woods around the medical park. She had
changed back into her uniform, the blue trousers and shirt of a
lieutenant colonel in the Space Corps of the Allied Worlds of Earth. At
six-foot-two, with long legs, she devoured distance as she strode along
a gravel path. The trees and flowering bushes on both sides tended to
make her forget she lived on a star ship. Then she reached an open area
and saw the forest sloping up the distant curve of the cylinder. The
"sky" consisted of light panels in the overhead deck.
Silver Tide
was a self-sufficient habitat, with its own towns and countryside. It
carried thousands of people, primarily civilians, though Jess and her
officers served in the Space Corps. The scientists onboard did research
related to space, studying everything from genetically altered
colonists on other planets to star formation. Researchers throughout
the Allied Worlds of Earth regularly applied for grants to work on Silver Tide.
Jess
sighed. Cold or no cold, she had work to do. She headed for the
administrative park where her staff had their offices. The gleaming
buildings were scattered among lawns and parks, with abstract
sculptures that had never made a whit of sense to Jess. The modern art
looked ugly to her, but perhaps she was too pragmatic to appreciate its
nuances.
For
the rest of the day, she met with the heads of science divisions,
working on the ship’s itinerary. They had just picked up several
astrophysicists who would study interstellar dust clouds for the next
few months. Several weeks ago Silver Tide had dropped off a
team of anthropologists on the world Icelos, and Jess wanted to check
on them. Other groups had other itinerary requests.
Normally
Jess enjoyed this part of her job, but today she felt too queasy to do
more than function. During a meeting with the Microbiology division,
she started to sneeze. She wished the med-patch George had given her
would take effect. This was embarrassing.
After
a full day, she headed home for a few hours of sleep. As she walked,
she brooded on the discord among her staff. Several argued against
returning to Icelos to check on the anthropologists. They claimed it
would take valuable time other research teams needed. Jess found that
hard to credit, given how often Silver Tide made such checks. Far more likely, their reluctance came about because Icelos was a Cephean world.
Cepheans
had once been human. Six thousand years ago, an unknown race had moved
humans from Earth to another planet, then vanished with no explanation.
The stranded humans learned genetic engineering in desperation; without
it, their population would have been too small to maintain a viable
gene pool. Driven by memories of their lost home, they also developed
space travel and went in search of Earth. So it was that five millennia
ago, Earth’s displaced children built an interstellar empire.
But
the empire soon collapsed, stranding its colonies. Although its
descendants took thousands of years to regain space travel, they
eventually succeeded, this time building a formidable civilization, the
Skolian Imperialate. When Earth’s people finally reached the stars,
they found their lost siblings already there, busily building empires.
The Skolians had recovered many of their ancient colonies–including
Cepheus.
The
name was actually an Earth word. Unable to reproduce Cephean speech,
Earth’s humans called the world Cepheus after a mythological king
descended from Zeus, because the parent star appeared in the direction
of the constellation Cepheus when seen from Earth.
However,
Cepheus was a Skolian world. Its colonists had altered themselves,
though now, millennia later, no one knew why. If they had intended to
expand their gene pool, they failed miserably; Cepheans could neither
reproduce with humans nor had any interest in doing so. Perhaps the
changes adapted their harsh new world. They had two extra arms,
modifications to accommodate the limbs, and luxuriant pelts.
Entrepreneurs on Earth had spent millions trying to synthesize the fur,
but that was all most humans liked about their altered neighbors.
Cepheans evoked ancient terrors: Yeti, golems, stalkers in the night, a
child’s nightmare.
Initially
Cepheans had liked humans, responding on an instinctual level. Earth’s
children looked like pretty pets to them. They turned wary as they
discovered their long-lost siblings were anything but simple or
malleable. When they realized how much humans reviled them, their
unease became hostility.
A
few decades ago, the Cepheans had settled Icelos, a planet in a system
near their home. The colony’s scientific nature made it amenable to
interaction with humans, and scientists on Earth and Icelos soon set up
an exchange program. Silver Tide had carried Earth’s research
team to Icelos, and Jess felt responsible for them. The exchange
offered a symbol, proof that humans and Cepheans could work together.
But the tenuous accord could unravel all too easily.
Dusk
spread over the landscape as the panels dimmed overhead. Weary, Jess
sat on a large boulder by the path and folded her arms across her
torso. She leaned forward, swallowing the bile in her throat; either
George’s medicine wasn’t working or else she needed new thoughts. She
felt like hell.
Better not to think of Icelos.
With
her arms crossed on her polished desk, Jess nodded pleasantly to the
man sprawled in a leather armchair of her office. "I hope your
accommodations are acceptable, Mr. O’Brien."
Jack
O’Brien gave her a rakish grin, more like a pirate than a security
officer in the Allied Services. "Top shape, Cap’n." A black curl fell
over his forehead as he took a swig of his coffee. "After our military
transport didn’t show up, we figured we were stranded at Epsilani
Station. Your ship was a godsend.
"I’m
glad we could help." Although the Space Corps had no formal connection
to the Allied Services, Jess had no objection to their agents hitching
a ride on her ship.
The comm in her desk buzzed. Touching a panel, she said, "Fernбndez here."
Sandra Bolton’s voice crackled. "Captain, I need to see you as soon as possible."
Jess
held back her groan. She had no wish to see Sandra now or ever, but she
knew the doctor; the more Jess balked, the more Sandra would persist.
The last thing she needed right now was to have a verbal duel with the
head of Claymore Hospital in front of a visitor.
Jack O’Brien stood up, setting his mug on her desk, and mouthed, Thanks for the coffee.
Relieved by his tact, Jess raised her hand to him as he left. When she
was alone, she spoke into the comm. "I’ll stop by the hospital later if
I have time." She had a lot of work to finish today. In fact, she had
just remembered more she had to do. Incredible amounts.
Sandra wasn’t buying it. "This can’t wait."
Jess frowned. "Why not?"
"You should come here."
That gave Jess pause. Sandra wasn’t usually this oblique. It might bear checking out. Grudgingly, she said, "All right."
Sandra
stood at a bench surrounded by monitors. The doctor was five-foot-six
and had gained weight over the years, nothing drastic, but enough to
make her round. Her short, stylish hair gleamed silver in the harsh
light.
As
Jess entered the exam room, Sandra turned and regarded her with a
neutral expression. Bland. Sandra never looked bland. Something was up.
Jess stopped just inside the room, even more wary now. "Yes?"
Sandra studied her face. "We need to talk."
"How about some other time?" Like in a century.
"Jess, listen." The doctor cleared her throat. "It’s about the suggestions I gave you."
"Which ones? You give a lot." Sandra’s inventory of lectures was formidable.
"About socializing."
Jess
would have laughed if she hadn’t been so astounded. "Is that why you
called me here so urgently? To find out if I’ve gone to any parties?"
"No.
I just hadn’t expected you to actually take my advice." Sandra laid her
hand on the exam table, as if for support. Then she took a deep breath.
"Jess–you’re pregnant."
Jess
stared at her, at a loss for a reply. It was simply too ludicrous.
Finally she found her voice. "Is this some sort of tasteless joke?"
Sandra showed no sign of laughing. "George and I did three independent checks. They all give the same result."
Jess scowled. "Then your procedures have some problem."
"When George saw the result during your exam earlier, he thought it was a mistake too. But we checked. It’s true."
"Sandra, for crying out loud. I can’t be pregnant."
The doctor spoke dryly. "You aren’t the first woman to say those words. Nor the first to be wrong."
"I’m not saying it’s unlikely. It’s impossible."
"No birth control method is one hundred percent effective."
Jess
wished she were somewhere else. Anywhere. Discussing her sex life, or
lack thereof, was about as high on her list of preferred activities as
having a tooth pulled without benefit of modern dentistry. She crossed
her arms. "It requires a merger to effect the result you attribute to
the sole capacity of my reproductive organs."
The doctor smiled. "Does that have a translation into something I can understand?"
So much for subtlety. Jess felt herself redden. "It means I haven’t, uh–been with a man."
Her tormentor shrugged. "Maybe you forgot."
"Forgot?" Jess couldn’t believe she was having this conversation. "That’s ridiculous. And no, I didn’t go to a sperm bank."
"So how did you get pregnant?"
"I didn’t."
Sandra
continued as if Jess hadn’t spoken. "You caught a cold because your
resistance is down. You need more rest now and you’re not getting it.
And it’s why you’ve felt nauseated. You have morning sickness."
"I have it all day," Jess grumbled.
"You must have missed two cycles by now. Didn’t you notice?"
"I’m always irregular when I’m off-planet."
Sandra scrutinized her. "Could you have had sex without knowing it?"
This felt more surreal by the moment. "I think I would have noticed."
Sandra motioned at the bed. "Lie down."
Jess scowled at her.
The doctor smiled. "I don’t bite, you know."
"You
do worse," Jess muttered. "You give advice." But she went to the bed
and lay on her back. Her feet hung over the bottom edge.
Sandra
clicked up an extension to support Jess’s feet. Then she moved to a
monitor and said, "Scan one, Jazmнn Fernбndez." It was one of Sandra’s
few redeeming qualities: she knew how to say her captain’s name. It
wasn’t that Jess didn’t like her nickname; she had answered to Jess
since her childhood in London. But she still appreciated it when
someone pronounced Jazmнn right.
"Type
R scan," Sandra said. She unhooked a cable from the monitor, rolled up
Jess’s shirt, and proceeded to slide the disk across her abdomen.
"Hey." Jess stiffened. "What are you doing?"
"Relax. It’s just an image processor." Sandra motioned at the monitor. "Look."
Jess
peered at the screen. A color image was forming, set against a dark
background. It showed a sac holding a tiny figure with a huge head and
a flutter inside its body. "What is that?"
"Your baby," Sandra said. "The motion is its heartbeat."
Jess blinked. Could she truly have conceived a child? How?
Sandra studied a panel below the monitor. "This verifies the tests. You’re nine weeks pregnant."
"Nine weeks?" Jess sat up suddenly. "That’s when we took those anthropologists to Icelos."
Dryly Sandra said, "Your memory coming back?"
Jess flushed. "I still can’t be pregnant."
The
doctor gentled her voice. "In a situation like this, denial isn’t
unusual. But you need to accept it, Jess. You need to decide what you
intend to do."
Jess
stared at the monitor, watching her baby’s heart beat. A new life.
Incredible. Protective instincts surged in her, similar to what she
felt for Silver Tide.
She glanced at Sandra. "If you’re asking do I want to give up the child or end the pregnancy, the answer is no."
Sandra didn’t look surprised. "Shall I contact the anthropologists?"
Jess’s voice came out sharper than she intended. "My child’s father is not on Icelos." She slid off the bed and paced away from the doctor. "I don’t know how this happened."
Sandra made a frustrated noise. "Fine. I give up. You had no lover. You conceived out of nothing."
Jess turned around. "I didn’t say I had no lover."
"Ah." Sandra came over to her. "Now we’re getting somewhere."
"He can’t be the father."
"You have other candidates?"
"No." Jess fixed Sandra with what she hoped was a quelling stare. "But he can’t be the father."
Sandra didn’t look the least bit quelled. "You know mistakes can happen."
"Not in this case."
"What kind of birth control did you use?"
"I didn’t."
Sandra snorted. "And you’re surprised you’re pregnant?"
"I didn’t need any."
"Why? Is he sterile?"
"No. I just didn’t need it."
"I don’t believe you could be that naпve."
Jess glared at her. "Damn it, Sandra, let it go."
"Let what go?"
"All right!" Jess crossed her arms again. "My companion was Ghar Ko. Satisfied?"
Sandra stared at her. "You mean the Cephean Ambassador?"
Jess wished she could disappear. "Yes."
Sandra finally closed her mouth. "Lord Almighty."
"What I just told you is confidential."
"Yes,
yes, of course." Sandra looked as if she couldn’t decide whether to be
fascinated or appalled. "And yes, you’re right. Human beings cannot
have babies with Cepheans."
"Are you sure the child is human?" Maybe the scientists were wrong. Maybe hybrid offspring could exist.
"Completely human." Sandra rubbed her chin. "A Cephean male couldn’t impregnate you. Too many differences exist in the DNA."
"I
don’t know what to say." Jess had yet to sort out how she felt about
what had happened. She certainly didn’t want to discuss it with Sandra.
But she had to file a report, even if she declined to name the
nonexistent father. Although maternity no longer meant an end to active
duty on a ship like Silver Tide, a pregnant captain was hardly
routine, especially an unmarried one. If she didn’t handle this right,
she could lose her command.
Sandra seemed curious now, instead of flabbergasted. "How does Ambassador Ko feel about it?"
"I don’t know," Jess admitted. "It just–happened. Then we fell asleep. I woke up, wrote him a note, and left." Silver Tide
had been scheduled to depart and she couldn’t hold up the ship for her
personal life. Or so she told herself. But she and Ghar could have sent
messages later, via starship. That neither of them had done so
suggested she wasn’t the only one at a loss for words.
Sandra frowned. "I’ve never known you to be a coward."
"I’m
not. I needed time to think." Ghar probably had too. She had no idea if
their liaison appalled, embarrassed, or shamed him. "If his people
learn about this, it will cause him problems. Cepheans don’t much care
for humans." To put it mildly.
"Apparently
one of them does," Sandra said dryly. "This could blow up on you big
time. Humans are just as xenophobic towards Cepheans."
"That’s why I haven’t said anything."
"What are you going to do?"
Good question. Too bad she had no answer. "What should I do for the baby?"
Although
Sandra obviously wanted to continue the topic of Ghar, she held back,
at least for now. Instead, she switched into her most professional
tone. "No alcohol or caffeine. Sleep more. Avoid zero-g; otherwise the
cells in the fetus might not orient correctly. On the bridge, minimize
how long you spend weightless. No EVAs. Even inside the ship, make sure
you always have radiation protection. If the nausea gets so bad you
can’t eat, let me know."
"All right." That all sounded manageable.
Sandra spoke more softly. "And Jess."
"Yes?"
"What happened would be difficult for anyone to handle. Especially if you had no choice. . . ."
It
took Jess a moment to decipher her meaning. Startled, she said, "It was
consensual." She couldn’t imagine Ghar forcing her. With relations
between Earth and Cepheus already so strained, it would have been
madness. It would shatter the brittle concord between their peoples.
"Could it have happened while you slept?" Sandra asked. "By someone else?"
Jess blinked. "Of course not."
"Are you sure?"
Jess
glanced at the monitor. It gave the time of conception as the night she
had spent with Ghar. But she couldn’t believe Ghar would be involved in
such a strange deception. She turned back to Sandra. "I’m sure."
"It
is hard to imagine," Sandra admitted. "If you remember anything, let me
know." In a gentler voice she added, "And if you need to talk, I’m
here."
"Thank you." Jess heard the stiffness in her voice. "But I’m fine. Really."
She wished she believed that.
Jess
walked through the woods in a deepening twilight. She kept thinking
about Sandra’s question: could this have happened while she slept that
night? But how? Someone would have had to enter Ghar’s home and
impregnate her while he was there. Regardless of whether they used
artificial means or sexual, they would have had to drug her or find
some other way to ensure she didn’t wake up. She didn’t see how they
could have silenced Ghar, and she couldn’t believe he would allow such
violations. To what purpose? It was just too bizarre.
If
Ghar had left for a while after she went to sleep, someone might have
broken in during his absence. But that didn’t make much sense either.
If someone in the village had wanted sex, easier ways existed to find
it than sneaking up to the Cephean ambassador’s home and ravishing his
guest in her sleep. Even if the person had sought the thrill of danger,
Jess didn’t see how he could have infiltrated the well-guarded Cephean
colony or Ghar’s home. And she knew Ghar too well to believe he would
have left her alone long enough for such an outlandish event to occur.
She
had last seen Ghar on Icelos, during a reception to welcome the
anthropologists from Earth. Jess had never been comfortable at such
gatherings. It had been a relief to leave with Ghar, the two of them
deep in conversation. She wasn’t sure how they had ended up at his
home. They had settled on a soft rug and proceeded to get drunk on that
sharp brandy the Icelos colony produced for export.
Eventually
Jess had slumped against his huge frame, no longer able to sit
straight, and he had pulled her against his chest with his lower arms.
He had been using all four hands to talk by then. Cepheans couldn’t
replicate human speech, and humans couldn’t mimic their language, so
the two of them had conversed by signing. For some reason, they had
decided to "talk" by pressing signs against each other’s torso. Or
maybe that had just been an excuse for their curiosity. It had soon
grown more intimate.
Jess
touched the comm on her gauntlet. Then she leaned against a tree,
feeling the roughness of the bark through her shirt, and gazed into the
dusk. The stillness of the night in the secluded forest helped calm her
turmoil.
Her comm chimed. Touching the receive panel, she said, "Fernбndez."
"Captain, this is Sandra Bolton. I received your page."
Jess rested her head against the tree. "I was wondering how extensive a database you have for DNA records."
"It’s
a big one." Sandra didn’t sound surprised by the inquiry. "Every time
we link into a major medical system, we update ours. We probably have
over eighty percent of the database for citizens of the Allied Worlds
of Earth."
Jess spoke softly. "So if an Allied citizen has ever had a medical record made of his DNA, you’ve a good chance of having it."
"That’s right." Sandra paused. "We only have a few records from Skolian databases. Our Icelos files are pretty skimpy."
"Check what you can." Jess swallowed. "See if you can match my child’s DNA."
"I’ll go through everything we have."
"Thank you." Jess paused, unsure what to add. "Good night."
"Good night." In a kindly voice, Sandra added, "Jess, go home and rest. Don’t brood."
"Thank you. But I’m fine. Really."
After
they signed off, Jess stood watching the night. She couldn’t handle
this compassionate side of Sandra; it was easier to be annoyed when the
doctor was giving a lecture. Confronted by a gentle Sandra, Jess feared
she might drop her emotional guards. It would be tantamount to
admitting she wasn’t self-sufficient. She had spent a lifetime proving
herself; she couldn’t bear to ask for help now.
No
matter how ill at ease she felt, she had to see Ghar. He might know
what had happened. It wasn’t something she could tackle long-distance;
she needed to see him in person. And going to Icelos would make it
easier to check their medical databases. But it would take a fortnight
to reach the colony, using most of the leeway in Silver Tide’s schedule.
If she wanted to see Ghar, she couldn’t hesitate.
II
Stalactite City
Icelos.
Jess felt welcomed by the small world. After she left the starport, she
headed into town. She could have taken a magrail or hitched a ride on a
cargo lorry, but she preferred to go on foot. Warm within her
climate-controlled jacket, she enjoyed walking in the three-quarters
gravity.
The
Cepheans were biosculpting the planet, adapting it for settlement.
Although Icelos now supported humanoid life, the environment wasn’t yet
comfortable. Even here at the equator, the warmest zone of the planet,
the temperature usually hovered around freezing. The village resembled
a ski town, with alpine bungalows capped by peaked roofs. Putting her
hands in her pockets, she crunched through the snow, avoiding icy
patches on the cobbled lanes.
The
village had a crystalline, glittering beauty. Jess took a deep breath,
savoring the crisp air. Although she had chafed when Sandra prescribed
shore leave, she was secretly glad the doctor insisted. During the last
fortnight, as Silver Tide had traveled here, Jess had debated whether or not to send Ghar a message. Her doubts had stopped her. If he had
somehow caused her strange condition, she didn’t want to warn him that
she was coming, lest he find a reason to cut short his visit to Icelos
and return to Earth, where he served as ambassador. So she had held off.
She
had spent the afternoon taking care of her duties; now she had two days
to herself. Of course two days didn’t amount to much on Icelos, which
rotated in only eleven hours. Regardless, she would make her best
effort to see Ghar. Her emotions tumbled over one another, conflicted
and awkward, but she still looked forward to the visit. As difficult as
it was to admit, she missed Ghar.
When
Jess came around a house, her stride faltered and she stared along the
street to the land beyond the town. Cliffs sheered into a cobalt blue
sky, and above them, jagged mountains rose in cold, primeval splendor.
The sunset edged their crowns like tubes of hot-pink neon. Here in the
village, the snow drifted against the bungalows had turned a luminous
pink. Ice hung in frozen lace from the houses, glittering like rubies.
With
an appreciative sigh, she set off again. Exhaling, she watched her
breath condense in the air. As she passed a bungalow, a spray of ice
fell from its roof. Icelos had slumbered for eons; now the Cepheans
were awakening the world. It seemed fitting; in Greek mythology, Icelos
had been the son of Somnus, the god of sleep. But she suspected Earth’s
name for this world came from deeper in the human subconscious. The
mythical Icelos had been a shape-changer who could turn into different
animals; she often wondered if the name was an oblique, even
unconscious acknowledgement by humans that their Cephean cousins had
once been human and now were Other.
After
a while, her gait slowed. She began to wish she had taken a hovercar.
How had the human race survived so long, when incubating little humans
took so much energy? She trudged on, trying not to think how far it was
to home. A few years ago, the Allied embassy had arranged an apartment
here for her, after the Cepheans requested her diplomatic services. The
Cephean science commission and its Earth counterpart needed a liaison,
someone who regularly traveled between Earth and Icelos, and the
Cepheans already knew Jess from the visits Silver Tide had made.
She
smiled wryly, remembering the dubious response from the Earth
commission. As much as her taciturn bluntness appealed to the Cepheans,
it annoyed humans. However, Allied Space Command liked that she got
things done with efficiency and no fuss, so in the end she had become
the liaison.
As
sunset faded into a silvered dusk, Jess plodded to the intersection at
Starfarer’s Lane. The sign at the crossroads looked the same as always,
a stone rectangle hanging from a pole. She had never paid it much
attention before, but today its carved words jumped out at her.
Childcare. The arrow pointed right.
She knew she should continue on home, rest, eat, sleep. But instead she found herself turning right.
A
simple bungalow housed the childcare center. When Jess opened the door,
young voices burbled over her. She found a cheerful room inside, with
white walls adorned by cartoons in bright red, blue, and yellow. Toys
were strewn across the carpeted floor. Three toddlers played there,
watched by a blond woman with a kind face. The woman glanced at Jess,
then did a double-take, her gaze widening.
Jess hesitated. Self-conscious, acutely aware of her uniform jacket and trousers, she closed the door.
The woman recovered her composure and approached with a friendly smile. "Hello, Captain. What can I do for you?"
Good question.
To cover her uncertainty, Jess said, "We’re expanding a childcare
facility on my ship. I’m interested in how other sites organize their
centers." It was true, actually. A community on Silver Tide had
requested a new center, and Jess had been meaning to have someone
attend the matter. It occurred to her that she ought to do the
attending herself; she might soon be using that center.
"I
would be happy to give you a tour." The woman glanced at the insignia
on Jess’s jacket. With diffidence, she added, "On a ship as big as
yours, though, I’m sure you have much more extensive facilities."
Jess felt more out of her depth here than she ever had on Silver Tide. She managed a smile. "Size and quality aren’t the same. I’ve heard yours is a well-run operation."
The woman beamed. "That it is, ma’am." She motioned with her hand, inviting Jess forward.
So
Jess went on a tour of the center. In one room, a girl and boy were
stacking holographic blocks. Seeing them, she felt an odd constriction
in her chest. Would her baby have dark curls like the boy? Or perhaps
she would be like the girl, her eyes huge and dark, her sweet face
shaped like a heart. But how could she imagine her child’s appearance
when the only paternal candidate was impossible? So far Sandra had
found no genetic match for the baby, but the DNA was undeniably human.
Jess
thought of her parents, their youth and energy drained from raising
five children when they had resources for no more than one. The
unrelenting demands of borderline urban poverty had ground the joy out
of their lives. It had always made Jess uneasy about starting a family.
Now an undefined longing tugged at her, feelings she had no name for,
except that they came with a flavor of loneliness.
"Captain?" the woman asked.
Startled, Jess realized she had been standing there, gazing at the children. She spoke softly. "They seem so happy."
The woman’s voice gentled. "We do our best."
When
the tour finished, Jess and the woman returned to the main room. About
that time, a young couple came into the center, stamping snow from
their boots, laughing together as they hung their jackets on a peg by
the door. One of the toddlers ran to them, a strapping boy in a blue
jumpsuit. The woman swung him into her arms, grinning when the boy
laughed. As she sat in a rocking chair, the man settled in an armchair
next to her, and they chatted companionably while the woman nursed the
child.
After
Jess left the center, images of the family stayed in her mind. She
wanted to share this pregnancy with someone. Ghar. But she feared to
tell him. She hated to think he might have betrayed her trust. If he hadn’t
caused this to happen, he would make the only logical assumption, that
she had taken a human lover that same night. Although she had no way to
know how much he would care, if at all, she didn’t want him to believe
she would betray his trust either.
Hell, what could she say when she had no idea herself what had happened?
The
penthouse took up the top floor of The Conners, one of the tallest
structures in the village, an elegant tower seven stories high. As Jess
entered her darkened apartment, the curtains across the room parted,
probably responding to a command from Matrix, the Evolving Intelligence
that ran the place. He often altered the ambience, which meant she came
home to unexpected changes. She tended to enjoy it; over the years, he
had developed a sense of her preferences.
The
curtains opened on a window that took up most of the wall. Night had
fallen outside, and light from the star-encrusted sky poured through
the window, making the white carpet glow. Standing in the center of her
sunken living room, Jess gazed out at the night’s beauty. Usually she
savored the spacious dimensions of the place, which fit her height, but
tonight it just made her more aware of its emptiness.
"Matrix," she murmured. "It’s too dark."
The
lights came up slowly, letting her eyes adjust. The room had simple
furniture, elegant and sleek, with silver accents and plants in
blue-glass pots. Relieved to be home, Jess dropped onto the sofa and
pulled off her boots. She stretched her legs across the blue-glass
coffee table, her feet reaching the other side. Legs that go on forever. A man she had known ten years ago had told her that.
Her husband.
He
had come to London from Norway. They had spent five years together,
with a renewable marriage contract. Then she became captain of Silver Tide.
He didn’t want to leave Earth and she didn’t want to give up her
command, so they had let their contract lapse. Although they had parted
amicably, the loss had affected Jess deeply, far more than she wanted
to admit. Since then, she had guarded her emotions even more.
Until Ghar.
Perhaps
it had been the brandy, or the unreality of that night. Or maybe she
just liked him better than anyone else she had met, despite his being
Cephean. She shook her head at her folly. You never do things the easy way, do you? Exhausted, she slumped back and closed her eyes. She knew she should have dinner, but the thought made her stomach rebel.
Jess
sighed. For the baby, she should eat. Opening her eyes, she noticed a
light on a fingertip panel in the sofa arm. "Yes?" she asked.
"Welcome back, Captain Fernбndez," Matrix said pleasantly. "Can I get you anything?"
"A new stomach," Jess grumbled.
"I’m sorry, but I can’t do organ transplants."
She smiled. "How about food? Something bland. Skim milk to drink."
"I
can have the kitchen prepare a superb bland meal," Matrix assured her.
"Would you like your mail while you wait? You have a message from
Doctor Bolton."
Jess almost groaned, but she knew she shouldn’t avoid her doctor. "Go ahead."
Sandra’s voice crackled. "Captain, please contact me immediately."
Jess waited. "That’s it?"
"That is it," Matrix said.
She rubbed her chin. "All right. Contact Doctor Bolton. She’s on the Silver Tide, in orbit."
"Message sent. Would you like anything else?"
Jess
still felt unprepared for this, even after thinking about it for days.
But she made herself answer. "Yes. Get me the Allied embassy."
"One
moment, please." After several minutes, during which Jess sat like a
lump, Matrix said, "I have Paige Lowell from the embassy."
"Thanks.
Put her on audio." Although Jess had always liked Paige, right now she
didn’t feel up to facing the young woman’s flawless perfection. Somehow
the incomparably beautiful Paige managed simultaneously to appear as
elegant as an old-money heiress and as wholesome as the girl next door.
Add to that her formidable education and rapid advancement in the
diplomatic corps, and she could give even the most confident person an
inferiority complex.
A lovely voice floated into the air, cultured and gracious. "Hello, Captain Fernбndez. Welcome back to Icelos."
"Hi,
Paige," Jess said. Then she winced. She had never quite figured out
when she and Paige were on a first name basis and when they were being
formal. So she added, "Please call me Jess."
"It would be my pleasure. What can we do for you?"
Jess
steeled herself. "I’d like to see Ambassador Ko. If he’s still here."
Cephean protocol required the Allied embassy on Icelos contact the
Cephean embassy here if Jess wanted to talk to Ghar, even though she
already knew the code for his private comm.
"I will be happy to inquire if his Excellency can meet with you," Paige said.
"Thanks. I appreciate it." Jess paused, too tired to think of small talk. "Good-night."
"Good-night, Jess. Have a pleasant evening."
After
they cut the connection, Jess raked her hand through her hair. Would
Ghar respond? More likely, he wanted to forget their night together.
Matrix suddenly spoke. "I have Doctor Bolton waiting."
Jess winced. "Just put her on audio. No visual." If Sandra saw her fatigue, she would launch into a lecture.
"Incoming," Matrix said.
Sandra’s voice cut the air. "Jess, are you all right?"
"I’m fine." Jess shifted on the couch. "Why?"
"You’ve been sick so much it triggered an alert in your quarters on the ship. Why didn’t you tell me how bad it was?"
Jess shrugged, then remembered Sandra couldn’t see. "It’s not bad. I’ve kept some food down."
The doctor clucked at her. "You’re too stoic. I gave Matrix an anti-nausea prescription. Take it."
Jess was too tired to argue. "All right."
More gently, Sandra said, "Are you really okay?"
Jess felt her emotional defenses going up. "I’m fine."
"You keep telling me that. Why don’t I believe it?"
Because you know me too well.
Jess saw a tray rising up inside a glass column that supported the
table. A panel in the table slid open and the tray came to the top.
Dinner sat before her, pasta and vegetables on china. Milk filled a
crystal goblet, and a vase held an orchid.
Jess
shook her head, incredulous. She had grown up with so little, the fifth
child of a Spanish father and Portuguese mother who lived in London.
Her parents had been wanderers, only two in the millions of displaced
tech workers, all scratching for jobs while unemployment in the
information sector spiraled. With more and more intelligent machines
able to replace humans, the need for infotech workers had plunged. Like
many others, her parents ended up in an arbitrary urban center,
scraping by with low-level jobs.
But
in this modern age, a wealth of new jobs existed, including those on
the frontier among the stars. Hard work and scholarships had made it
possible for Jess to overcome her circumstances, yet even after buying
her parents and siblings a new house in an upscale London neighborhood,
she found it hard to believe this new life she had earned for her
family.
"Jess?" Sandra asked.
She rubbed her eyes. "My dinner is here. I have to go."
The doctor spoke kindly. "Don’t push yourself so hard. You deserve a rest. Give yourself some slack."
"All right." The words didn’t feel like enough, so she added, "Thanks for the concern."
"You’re welcome." Sandra’s voice had an odd note, as if she were surprised to hear Jess thank her.
Am I that difficult a patient?
Jess wondered if Sandra found their interactions painful too. But if
so, why did the doctor persist in giving unasked-for advice? Their
lives would be far easier if Sandra would let up on Jess’s personal
life. Jess doubted that would happen, though. She didn’t understand why
it mattered to Sandra. Maybe the doctor considered it important to
Jess’s job performance; ensuring Silver Tide’s captain could carry out her duties was one of Sandra’s primary responsibilities.
Enough
brooding. Jess lifted the tray into her lap, settled back, and made
herself eat. True to his word, Matrix had arranged an excellent dinner.
The pasta almost melted in her mouth. She wished she could enjoy it
more.
Matrix
had put a patch with the anti-nausea medicine on the tray. When Jess
applied it to her inner elbow, it blended into her skin, turning
golden-brown. She rubbed her fingers over the patch, remembering how
her skin had evoked taunts in her youth. As the world grew more
cosmopolitan, acceptance among races and cultures had improved, but it
still wasn’t perfect. Jess had learned that lesson the hard way.
Circumstances had forced her to become a fighter at a young age, aided
by her height, strength, and stubborn refusal to back down from
bullies. Friendship had been hard for her in those years, and it had
never become easier.
It
was strange how life could change. She had always perceived herself as
rough-edged, but years later a top modeling agency had offered her a
contract, lauding her purportedly "long-limbed grace and exotic style."
Her height, unusual even for a high-fashion model, had intrigued them,
as had her military rank. That had been the rage back then: sleek,
svelte fashion with an undertone of soldierly power. Flustered, she had
thanked them but turned down the job, far more at home with starship
engines than runways.
"I have Ambassador Ko on your private line," Matrix announced.
Jess swallowed so fast she choked. Sitting up, she cleared her throat. "Put him on."
"Audio, visual, or both?"
She
wasn’t ready to face him on visual. But they couldn’t talk, and to use
sign language they had to see each other. "Did the ambassador request
visual?"
"His human translator contacted me by audio," Matrix said.
Thank you, Ghar. "Just put on the audio then."
"Incoming," Matrix said.
Ghar’s translator spoke, his resonant voice filling the air. "My greetings, Captain Fernбndez."
"Good evening, Your Excellency."
"How long does Icelos have the fortune of your company?"
That sounded like he was glad to hear from her. Then again, Ghar was a diplomat. He had to sound pleasant.
"I’m
here two days." Jess hesitated. "I thought if you were free, we might,
uh . . . meet for dinner." She winced at the clumsy invitation. As the
Ambassador from Cepheus to the Allied Worlds, Ghar spent most of his
time on Earth. When he traveled, he booked his commitments far in
advance, and his visits to Icelos were packed with obligations. She
waited, her shoulders hunched in anticipation of his refusal.
"Dinner would be acceptable," he answered. "Shall we meet at the Junction in half an hour?"
Jess
released the breath she had been holding. He didn’t exactly sound
overjoyed, but at least he hadn’t refused. "Yes. Half an hour."
The
Junction reminded Jess of a ski lodge, with its big fireplace and
old-fashioned bar. Located at the base of the cliffs outside town, it
served the human visitors on Icelos, a sort of last stop before
striking out into Cephean territory. Jess doubted Ghar wanted to eat
here; he couldn’t sit in the chairs and he disliked the food. More
likely, he wanted to take her to the Cephean settlement where he lived
when visiting Icelos.
Jess
waited by the bar, watching musicians play on the stage across the
room. She was too restless to stand still for long. The med patch was
working; she hadn’t felt this good in weeks. Finally she decided to
head into the cliffs. She knew the route Ghar took, so she could meet
him on the way. Despite the strange situation, she looked forward to
seeing him.
Cold
air hit her face as she left the lodge. She had worn a sweater over her
uniform, a long coat, and heavy boots, but she still shivered with the
chill. It never ceased to amaze her how Cepheans thrived in this
climate. Of course, she didn’t have a four-inch pelt covering her body.
The
road wound steeply up into the mountains. Gold posts stood at
intervals, made from fluted metal, with smoked-glass lamps hanging from
their tops, casting ghostly light. On her left, a cliff rose into the
darkness: on the right, a wall at chest height bordered the road.
Beyond it, a canyon plunged down for over a kilometer, fading into a
heavy mist. Snow crunched under her boots, deeper here where no
machines cleared the lane. Cepheans liked it this way.
Eons
ago this land had been flat. Underground rivers had hollowed it into a
maze of buried limestone caverns. Water rich with bicarbonate and
calcium ions dripped from cavern ceilings, hardening into stalactites
like huge icicles of rock, or falling to the ground and building up
conical stalagmites. Eventually the land sheered upward, buckling into
mountains honeycombed by caves. It made an eerily beautiful landscape,
haunting and unforgettable.
Jess
had seen how it unsettled human visitors here to know the Cepheans
chose this forbidding landscape for their home when they could easily
have settled the plains instead. Cepheans lived vertically instead of
horizontally, a difference hard to fathom for a species with only two
arms. The Cepheans’ blunt refusal to acknowledge that their way of life
might not suit everyone exacerbated the unease they created in their
human neighbors.
A
distant voice startled Jess out of her reverie. She paused, listening.
The voice hadn’t sounded Cephean, but few humans came up here even in
the day, and at night they avoided the desolate road like a plague.
Up
ahead, a path branched off this main one. She went over and peered down
the trail, but the dim light made it hard to see. Was someone in
trouble? Concerned, she headed down the path. The cliffs on either side
leaned inward and met about a meter above her head. Stretching out her
arms, she could touch the walls of rock on either side. Limestone caves
glistened on either side, with stalactites and stalagmites glazed by
frost like stone icicles, a wonderland of sparkling stone lace. She
doubted any human explorer had yet mapped the full warren of passages
up here. The serenity and deep silence appealed to her, reminding her
of the silent expanses of interstellar space.
She
neither saw nor heard anyone, though, and she couldn’t spend too long
here, lest she miss Ghar on the main path. Finally she headed back. As
she passed a cave on her right, a glint behind a stalagmite caught her
eye. It came from . . . what? A small cage? It was so well hidden, she
had missed it before. Pausing, she stepped into the cave and knelt by
the cage.
Mewling
greeted her. A furry white animal butted its head against the bars, its
pointed ears quirked forward. It resembled a comalkos, a popular pet
among Cepheans, possibly descended from an early form of Earth feline.
Looking more closely, she realized it actually was a kitten.
"What are you doing out here?" She scratched its head, pushing her fingers through the bars. It purred at her.
Scraping
sounds caught her attention. Peering around, she realized the cave held
many cages, all with cats. She doubted they belonged here. And she had
heard a voice before–
Responding
with instincts tempered by decades of experience, Jess jumped up and
took off, striding back to the main road. She could come back with
security officers from town. If the animals were legal, no problem. But
hiding cats in these mountains was too strange to ignore.
Her
footsteps crunched on rock. The natural chambers on either side of the
path magnified sound–and so Jess distinctly heard the words, even from
some distance behind her:
"Shit. She saw the cages."
Jess didn’t pause to question–she just burst into a run.
She
never heard the knife sing through the air, but she couldn’t miss the
crackle as it sliced her overcoat and sweater. The blade cut deep into
her side. Another knife hit her leg, ripping through her uniform. Lord
only knew how those blades were made, if they could so easily rip
through layers of reinforced cloth. Part of her mind instinctively
recoiled from the attack, but the rest of her concentration narrowed
into a tight focus as her training took over. It happened too fast for
her to feel pain. Yet.
As
she ran, the tatters of her overcoat flapped around her legs, making
her stumble. Jess yanked off the coat and threw it down, never slowing.
Her injured leg felt like putty, and dizziness threatened. At the back
of her mind, she thought of the life she had to protect, the child
inside of her, and she managed another spurt of speed.
By
the time Jess reached the main path, her sprint had turned into a
stagger. Her heart was pounding so hard, her entire body shook with it.
She lurched across the road and hit the wall that separated it from the
chasm. Before she could catch her balance, hands grabbed her from
behind and swung her around, slamming her against the wall. Jess found
herself staring at a tall man who looked like his name ought to be
Buzz, as in an electrified chain-saw,
"Now
you’ve done it," he said through clenched teeth. Two more people came
out of the side path and sprinted toward them, a stocky man with red
hair and a gaunt woman.
Jess strained to breathe. "What do you want?"
Instead
of answering, Buzz heaved her upward. In that instant, the woman
reached them. Without hesitation, she aided Buzz, yanking up Jess’s
legs, sending pain blazing through the wound. Jess’s icy calm snapped
into the cold fury that came over her in combat. She smacked her hands
against Buzz’s elbows and shoved inward, breaking his hold. At the same
time, she brought up her knee hard. He choked, dropping his
arms and doubling up, his face contorted. As the woman shoved Jess up
the wall, Jess kicked out at her. A loud crack rent the air and the
woman shouted, falling backward, her left hand clenched on her right
arm, which was bent now at an odd angle.
Jess
had no time to wonder why the bloody hell they wanted to kill her. The
second man was already lunging at her, bringing down the knife-edge of
his hand. He mistimed the blow, as fighters often did in unfamiliar
gravity. With her more extensive training, Jess easily blocked it, but
she still reeled under the impact when the blow hit her arm.
Buzz
was coming back at her now, his face set in hard lines, and the woman
wasn’t far behind him. As Jess fought off the second man, her muscles
straining, Buzz caught her again. With the woman’s help, he pushed Jess
up the wall. Jess tried to stop them, tried to wrench free, but she
couldn’t take on three at once, not with her injuries. Her leg
responded only sluggishly and a deep burning seared her side. They
pushed her up the wall–
And her hips cleared the top.
Jess
went rigid, with nothing but air and a canyon at her back. In that
moment, as she faced her death, she thought with cold clarity, You have no right. It enraged her that they could so cavalierly murder the mystery child she had come to treasure. She twisted hard, to the side, toward the road. Her efforts wrenched her out of their grip, but–ah, no!–she fell, fell, fell–
And
hit the road with a crash that slammed out the air in her lungs. A
man’s scream reverberated in the air, splitting the night. Jess jerked
up her head–
And froze.
Caught
in the light from a lamp, a giant towered above them. Fiery red-gold
fur covered his body and a mane of curls swept back from his face to
his shoulders. Huge muscles rippled in his legs and arms, visible
through his trousers and tunic. His shoulders had immense breadth and
width, with massive blades that extended down his body to accommodate
his second pair of arms. His lips were drawn back, baring fangs more
than two inches long. His tail whipped through the air, six feet long
and as thick as a man’s body where it met his back. His lower arms were
reaching for what his upper pair already held high over his head: the
man Buzz.
As Jess stared, the ambassador from Cepheus to Earth threw his human captive into the canyon.
III
Cavern of Ladders
Jess drifted awake, warm but unaccountably stiff. Why did her quarters have a musky scent? Silver Tide usually smelled sanitized. She stretched–and pain shot through her body.
"Ah!" She snapped awake. Oh, hell. She wasn’t on Silver Tide. She was about to be hefted into a canyon.
Opening
her eyes, she stared across a dimly lit room; no cliff, just a polished
stone chamber. The tables and desks were double-tiered, designed for
two pairs of arms, and a few feet taller than what humans would build.
She was lying on a stone floor, on a rug, with her back against a
padded wall. Another rug covered her, soft on her skin. Jess recognized
the furs. Cepheans made them from a silken material they sheared off an
animal called the abryr, one of the few Cephean words humans could
pronounce, said with a growl in the throat.
Despite
the cushion of blankets, the ground was rough beneath her. A ridge ran
under her waist and another under her torso. She wore nothing except a
shift and two bandages, one around her waist and the other around her
thigh.
Memory returned: cats, the attack, Ghar. She had lost so much blood; then she had lost consciousness.
The wall behind her shifted.
For
an instant Jess was too startled to move. Then she rolled onto her
back, carefully, favoring her injuries. The "wall" behind her was alive.
Oh,
Lord. She was staring at the chest of a Cephean sleeping on his side. A
large Cephean. The "ridges" she had felt under her body were his arms;
he was holding her around her waist and torso. She lay in a cage of
limbs, four to be exact. It was so strange, and so unexpected, that she
couldn’t even react at first.
Finally she said, "Ghar?" Her voice rasped.
He continued to sleep.
She tried again. "Ghar? Can you hear me?"
His
lashes lifted, revealing two brown eyes, dark and liquid. He blinked as
if trying to fathom her presence. Then his hands shifted, his claws
retracted so he didn’t jab her. He moved them against her back, signing
in the language used by the deaf. It was the method of conversing they
had tried before, a playful experiment that had ended up communicating
far more than they had intended, or at least more than they had been
willing to admit.
Do you hurt? he asked.
Jess
was too self-conscious to think how she felt about his touching her,
beyond her confusion at the situation and his presence. She signed
against his chest, her fingers buried in his fur. I’m all right. Where is this?
You came here the last time you visited. His fingers stilled. Then, carefully, he added, Maybe you forgot.
Oh.
Now she recognized the place. His rooms. They had spent the night here,
on this pile of blankets in fact. He had just offered her a chance to
pretend it never happened. She wondered how he would explain, if she
chose to develop amnesia, why she was in bed with him now.
I remember, she signed.
The rigid muscles in his arms relaxed. I too.
I have another memory, she signed. But it must be a mistake.
What memory?
You threw a man into the chasm.
His hand made a claw on her back. Your memory is not a mistake.
She stared at him. Ghar, why?
You were covered with blood, one breath from dying.
Grateful
as she was at his intervention, her unease grew as she absorbed the
implications of his actions. The few times a Cephean had injured a
human, it had provoked outrage on Earth; reports of the incidents
glittered with invective, their censure stretching like a metallic
tissue that looked strong but ripped easily, exposing the underlying
panic humans felt when confronted by neighbors who were just human
enough to make their immense differences terrifying. What would happen
when it became known that the Cephean ambassador, the one they were
supposed to trust, had murdered a man?
Jess signed slowly. If you hadn’t come, I would be dead. I am grateful, more than I can say. But we have trouble.
He answered tiredly. Your authorities demand my extradition.
How long have I’ve been here?
About two Icelos days.
Good Lord. Twenty-two hours. Her ship would be behind schedule now. Why didn’t my crew take me?
They wanted to.
What stopped them?
He paused. That answer connects to my second crime.
What second crime?
Holding a Space Corps officer hostage.
Bloody hell. I’m not a hostage.
They think you are.
You won’t let them see me?
His intransigence came through his signing. No.
Ghar, this is nuts.
They might harm you.
Jess
didn’t know what to think. She had believed he would want to forget
what happened; never had she expected him to react with the same
possessive intensity a Cephean would direct toward his Cephean mate.
He signed on her back. Why were those people trying to kill you?
I don’t know. I only saw a bunch of cats.
Cats?
In cages, hidden in a cave. She tensed. What happened after I saw you on the road?
Your other attackers ran. I pursued.
And then? Her hand clenched in his fur.
Ghar caught her fingers. I killed no one else.
Jess let out the breath she had been holding. That is good to know.
His growl rumbled. I might have killed them, if you hadn’t needed my attention more.
Well, no one had ever claimed Cepheans were peaceful. But she would have never predicted this from Ghar.
Your authorities want proof you still live, he added.
I’m not surprised.
She hoped Sandra hadn’t told them about the pregnancy, but she knew if
the doctor feared for Jess’s life, Sandra would speak up regardless of
how confidential Jess wanted the matter. The security people on Silver Tide
would make the obvious assumption: if they knew, Ghar probably did as
well. No one could fully predict his response, but he obviously was no
more likely than anyone else to believe he was the only candidate for
proud papa. Given his recent behavior, Security had good reason to
think Jess’s life might be at risk.
Although
Jess didn’t think Ghar would kill her, she couldn’t be sure. About one
thing she had no doubt: if Ghar murdered a lieutenant colonel in the
Space Corps, a starship commander who served as an Earth-Cepheus
liaison, all hell would break loose.
Jess signed against his chest. I must return to Silver Tide. She tried to sit up, and pain shot through her torso, followed by a rush of nausea. With a groan, she lay down again.
He set his lower arm across her waist, pinning her. You must go nowhere.
Jess
recognized her nausea. Apparently Sandra’s med patch wasn’t 100 percent
effective. Either that, or this was more serious than morning sickness.
What if she had lost the baby? No. She couldn’t have
miscarried. Surely Ghar would have known. But would he understand? Jess
didn’t know how to ask. She was vulnerable now, undefended if he
thought she had betrayed him.
Who patched me up after the attack? she asked.
Me.
So he hadn’t let a Cephean doctor see her. It made sense; it would have provoked questions he probably wanted to avoid. Did I have other injuries? she asked. Bleeding anywhere else?
No. Only the two wounds.
Relief poured over her. Still, she needed to be sure. I should be checked by a human doctor.
A growl rumbled in his throat. You should stay here.
She
tried to decipher his expression. Although fur covered his face, it
wasn’t long except where a human man would have a beard. Most humans
found Cephean faces difficult to read, but she had learned to judge
Ghar’s moods. Right now he looked uncertain.
She signed, Your government can’t like my being here any more than mine does.
His gaze didn’t waver. Bor supports my decisions.
Bor? As in Bor Chi? You mean the Cephean First Councilor?
Yes.
Good
Lord. If Ghar called one of the most influential leaders on his home
world by a personal name, he was placed even higher in his government
than she had realized. Bor Chi gives you his protection?
In public. His fingers slowed on her back. In private, he asks if I am insane.
But he stands by your decisions?
Yes.
Why?
He trusts my judgment. After a pause, Ghar added, He is also the older brother of my aunt’s husband.
So.
Kin ties. They were strong among Cepheans, apparently even in a hostage
situation. Except she wasn’t a hostage. At least she hoped she wasn’t.
Why won’t you let a human doctor see me? she asked.
He stiffened. Humans tried to kill you.
Three people tried to kill me. Not all humans.
Maybe.
Why do you suddenly distrust humans?
His claws scraped her back. I have always distrusted humans.
That gave her pause. It never showed.
My job was to overcome distrust.
What has changed?
Overcoming distrust is a euphemism for taking risks. He regarded her steadily. I have no intention to risk your life.
Jess
felt as if a crystal sculpture of great value were shattering before
her eyes, falling as she grabbed for it, her lunge too late to stop its
destruction. You can’t let the trust between our peoples–a trust you’ve worked for ten years to build–be destroyed this way.
I have no choice.
Yes, you do. Ghar, you do your job well. We need you. Both my people and yours.
It’s too late, Jess.
It isn’t! I can go back. Tell the truth.
A rumble thrummed within his chest. It isn’t safe.
Jess scowled at him, holding it long enough so he had plenty of time to decipher the expression. It is my decision. Not yours.
He
answered with only another rumble, but she recognized that growl. He
always made it in protest, when he was about to give in on an argument
but didn’t want to tell her.
I will talk to the authorities, she added. Tell them you saved my life.
I don’t want you to go back.
As
much as she wanted to deny his suspicions, Jess had to consider them.
Few humans visited this colony, and the Port Authority kept tabs on all
visitors, which probably meant they knew the identities of the people
who tried to kill her. If the PA had a more covert link to her
attackers, such as turning a blind eye to their activities in return
for bribes, she could end up dead if she contacted them, an unfortunate
"incident" that would be blamed on Ghar.
She
frowned. If she discussed the situation with anyone on her ship, over a
distance comm, the PA might have a way to eavesdrop. Considering, she
signed, We can bring someone here from Silver Tide.
It isn’t possible to contact them.
Jess
wasn’t buying it. Although Ghar had no obvious comm in his home, she
knew perfectly well that his apartment had modern technology; it was
just hidden to make his home fit with the spare ambiance of the colony.
She thumped her fist on his chest. We need to do this, Ghar.
After a silence, he signed, No military personnel.
All
right. She knew him well enough to recognize that his lack of an overt
refusal was the closest he would come to expressing his acceptance. She
thought about her crew. Who among the civilians could best deal with
what looked like some bizarre illegal import operation? Jack O’Brien,
possibly.
How about the Allied Services? she asked. They work with smugglers.
No more than three of them. Concern showed in his gaze. Do you hurt? They can bring medicine to blunt the pain.
I’m
fine. She didn’t want to risk any drugs during her pregnancy unless
they were absolutely necessary, but this wasn’t the time to explain why.
Just when was a good time, she had no idea.
Even
in the staid uniform of the Allied Services, with his unruly hair
combed, Jack O’Brien still looked like a pirate to Jess. He came with
two assistants, a man and woman, both in AS uniforms. All three settled
on a rug in the main room of Ghar’s home.
Jess
sat with them, wearing a shift made from one of Ghar’s tunics. Although
on him it reached only to his hips, on her it came below the knees. She
had put her arms through the upper sleeves, rolling them up to free her
hands. To pull in the billows of cloth, she tied the lower sleeves
behind her back–loosely. Even if her uniform hadn’t been ripped and
bloodied, its tight fit would have bothered her. She was almost three
months pregnant; soon she could no longer keep her situation private.
Ghar
sat to her right on a blocky stool, looming over them, silent and
formidable. No one missed the hostility in his position or posture.
"Ambassador
Ko saved my life," Jess continued, speaking to Jack O’Brien. His female
assistant served as translator, signing for Ghar, while his male
assistant recorded their words on a palmtop.
Jack
regarded her intently, as if trying to decipher what lay behind her
words. "Then you and his Excellency were already planning to meet that
night?"
"That’s
right." She suspected Jack had been trained to read body language; in
his line of work, the skill would be invaluable. He might be able to
tell if she were lying or withholding information. So she just said,
"Ambassador Ko and I often work together."
Jack
nodded, his gestures restrained. He didn’t give the impression he
disbelieved her; his wariness seemed more due to Ghar’s presence. As he
spoke, his assistant signed. "We’ll give your full statement to the
authorities."
"Good." Jess exhaled. "This situation is already too volatile. We need to cool it down."
Jack
nodded. "Your talking to us ought to alleviate matters." He spoke with
an assurance probably meant more to ease Ghar’s enmity than to reassure
her.
"I hope so." Jess shook her head. "All over some cats. I don’t get it."
"They
aren’t cats." He leaned forward. "You stumbled into a delivery by a
cartel the AS has been after for years. My department has never worked
on that case, so our data is limited, but we do know the cartel has
moved business through here before. The port is small and no one pays
it much attention." Dryly he added, "The smugglers probably never
expected the captain of a major Allied starship to show up."
It still made no sense to Jess. "Why not just get a permit to import comalki? It can’t be all that expensive."
"Those aren’t comalki."
"They looked like cats."
Jack
pushed his hand through his hair, making them revert to their more
usual disheveled state. "The animals carry a virus. It’s what the
cartel actually sells. If the altered comalkos bites you, you’re sick."
Glancing at Ghar, he shifted his weight. "The virus is deadly to
Cepheans."
Ghar signed. "How deadly?"
Jack blew out a gust of air. "Let those animals loose here and you’d have a killer plague, fast and vicious."
Jess
stared at him. Was the cartel insane? Icelos was a world of the Skolian
Imperialate, which had a formidable military that protected its own
with legendary ferocity. Most Skolians were human, and Jess had no idea
how they felt about Cepheans–but if they learned an Earth cartel had
killed an entire colony of their citizens, any citizens, their retribution would be fast and harsh. The Allied Worlds of Earth would have little chance against them.
She clenched her hand in the cloth of her shift. "The cartel is out of their minds."
"Not
crazy. Greedy." Jack’s face had paled. "They’d have received a
monstrous payment for that shipment from a fanatic group that wants to
kill all the Cepheans. And hell, if it had started a war, it would’ve
benefited the cartel’s black market." Turning, he spoke more quietly to
Ghar. "Your Excellency, be assured that these extremists in no way
represent the Allied Worlds of Earth. We greatly value our relations
with your people and wish to continue in good will."
Ghar answered with sharp signs. Such fanatics also exist among my people. They feel similarly about humans.
Jess tried to gauge his mood, but she couldn’t read him. He made no sound as Jack’s assistant translated his signs.
Jack spoke grimly. "We’ll punish the cartel. Count on it."
Ghar
didn’t answer, he just watched the AS agents. Now Jess recognized his
stare; he was only thinking, but on the face of a Cephean, the
expression looked murderous. When Jack shifted uneasily, she spoke
quickly, to defuse the tension. "Are those altered comalki immune to
this virus?"
Jack glanced at her, relief in his gaze. "They aren’t really comalki either. They’re chimeras."
The word sounded vaguely familiar. "I take it you don’t mean that in the literary sense," Jess said.
"In a biological sense," Jack said. "To engineer a chimera, you mix DNA from two species."
She
finally remembered where she had heard the word, in a long-ago college
course. "Isn’t a chimera some kind of mythological beast–head of a
lion, tail of a dragon or something? Breathed fire at people it didn’t
like."
He
smiled slightly. "That’s where it originated. In biology it refers to a
hybrid animal. Chimeras are easiest to make using similar species, like
lions and tigers, or comalki and cats."
She could see where he was going. "So this virus would kill either a comalkos or a cat, but the chimera survives."
"That’s
right." He glanced uneasily at Ghar. "Cepheans like comalki, so the
cartel found a variant of the animal that could carry the virus."
"Gods," Jess muttered.
Ghar
growled deep in his throat, his lower hands fisted on his knees. He
signed with his upper. "Why don’t you stop these smugglers?"
Jack
sat up straighter, his posture stiffened as if he were preparing to
protect himself. "They’ve managed to stay a step ahead of us. But if
Captain Fernбndez testifies against them, it could give us the chink we
need to bring down their operation."
Jess
thought about three complete strangers trying to throw her into the
canyon, killing not only her, but also her child. She regarded Jack
steadily. "I will testify."
Ghar
snarled, and she needed no translator to know he said, ‘No!’ in
Cephean. His lips drew back and his teeth glinted like daggers. Then he
bared his claws, which were longer than his fangs.
Jack blanched, but he didn’t back down. "We need her testimony."
Jess signed to Ghar. I will be in no danger.
He
answered in his own language, a series of growls. She had trouble with
the words, but it sounded like the equivalent of "They will kill you."
"They
won’t hurt me." She spoke slowly so he could decipher what, to him, was
a high-pitched, sing-song lilt. "I will have protection."
Jack O’Brien was staring at her. "You understand him?"
Jess glanced at him, distracted. "Some."
He whistled. "That’s supposed to be impossible."
Thinking
of her child, she answered dryly. "Many things are impossible. That
doesn’t stop them from happening." She had to change the subject before
Ghar decided Jack was endangering her life and hefted him out a window.
"How did the cartel get started?"
"A wealthy collector set it up about thirty-five years ago," Jack said. "He wanted Cephean rugs in his collection."
"Why
didn’t he just buy them?" she asked, incredulous. Granted the rugs were
expensive, but their prices weren’t exorbitant, especially for the
wealthy.
"He didn’t want abryr rugs." Jack glanced at Ghar as if weighing whether to continue. "He wanted Cephean pelts."
Jess
stiffened as if she had been kicked. She had heard stories of people
who skinned Cepheans for their fur, but she had never credited them
before.
Ghar signed hard, using all four hands to emphasize his message. Humans are sick.
Please don’t judge us all by the aberrations of a few, Jess signed. I’m human too.
He answered in his own language. "You are unique."
Jack
was watching with them open curiosity–until Ghar fixed him with a
hostile glare. Flushing, Jack immediately recomposed his face to show a
lack of interest.
Ghar spoke through the translator. "Did this collector get his pelts?"
Jack
shook his head. "No. None. Our authorities caught the hunters he sent
to Cepheus. But none of the hunters would talk. We couldn’t gather the
evidence to convict him."
"He went free?" Ghar’s angry incredulity showed in his the motion of his hands. "To murder again?"
Jack hesitated. "He didn’t send any more hunters."
"You evade my question," Ghar said.
"You won’t like the answer."
"Tell it anyway."
Jack exhaled. "He wanted specialty pelts."
A foreboding was building within Jess, and this time her nausea didn’t come from pregnancy. "What kind of specialty?"
Jack
turned to her. "From Cephean-human chimeras. It would give fur with the
richness of Cephean pelts, the silkiness of human hair, and colors you
couldn’t get from a pure Cephean."
Jess
was gripping the sleeves of her shift so tightly, her fingernails
gouged her palms. "Are you telling me this madman created Cephean-human
chimeras and skinned them?"
Jack answered quietly. "No. His people never succeeded in making a viable chimera."
Ghar signed sharply. "Why didn’t you stop him?"
"We had no proof."
Frustration showed on Jack’s face. "To create a smooth pelt, the
chimera would have to express Cephean genes, yet still have the desired
human traits. That kind of selectivity requires methods more
sophisticated than we have now, decades later. Back then it couldn’t be
done at all." He shook his head. "What could we arrest him on?
Researching chimeras isn’t illegal."
The light glinted on Ghar’s fangs. "Only a human would let such a monster go free."
"He was arrested." Jack gave him a wintry smile. "For evading interstellar import taxes. He did time."
"Not enough." Ghar regarded him coldly. "It couldn’t have been enough."
No, Jess thought. It could never be enough.
Windows
in the main room of Ghar’s home overlooked a cavern. The Cephean
colonists lived in apartments cut from the walls of the great cave,
their homes stacked up for ten stories, Cephean stories, double the
height humans built. No lifts served the cavern; instead, vertical
staircases ran up the walls like ladders, forming throughways much as
humans built roads. Among the crowds of Cepheans climbing in the city
of ladders, Jess saw many pelt colors, from common browns to rarer
grays. None resembled the dramatic fiery color of Ghar’s fur.
A
rustle came from behind Jess. In her side vision, she saw Ghar join her
at the window. They stood together, gazing at the cavern. It felt odd
having him tower over her; Jess was used to being taller than most
people.
After a moment Jess turned to him. He signed to her. Do your injuries hurt?
I’m all right. Although she ached all over, she could handle it. You’ve been very quiet about what Jack O’Brien told us.
He unsheathed his claws, and they curved like miniature scythes. What is there to say? That I want to kill humans?
Jess stiffened.
Not you. His signing slowed, and he touched her cheek with his claw. I wish to do to humans what I hate them wanting to do to Cepheans.
Jess froze, acutely aware of the honed point against her skin.
Watching
her, Ghar sheathed his claws. Then he lowered himself onto a tall stool
by the window. Even seated, he was slightly taller than Jess. He drew
her forward until she was standing between his legs, then locked his
lower arms around her waist and signed with his upper. Bor Chi has
ruled that I have no guilt in the death of the smuggler, but your
people don’t agree. It means I can never return to the territory of the
Allied Worlds. When you leave here, I can see you no more. He paused. So you will not leave.
Jess knew he spoke in anger. If he forced her to stay, it would be a disaster, one she doubted he wanted any more than she did. I have to go. But I will find ways to visit you.
No.
You may not feel that way when you hear what I have to say.
Why?
Will you first answer a question?
His gaze searched her face. Ask.
Do you know your parents?
Of course.
That stopped her. If he knew his parents, her suspicions had no basis. Do you see them often?
They died.
Jess signed regret. I am sorry.
His tail twitched through the air. I never really knew them. It happened right after my birth. Our transport crashed in the snow. Hikers found me two days later.
Jess stared at him. How could a newborn survive alone, in the snow, for two days?
I don’t know. But I did.
She braced herself. I don’t believe the child in that transport lived. Someone took his body and put you in his place.
His lips drew back in an expression that, if Jess hadn’t known meant amusement, she would have believed was a snarl. Your imagination is fertile, he signed.
So is my body.
What?
Jess took a deep breath. During my last visit to the colony you were the only–She stopped. My only companion.
His tail curled over his shoulder and its tip stroked her hair. I know you don’t expect me to share you. I wouldn’t have been with you otherwise.
I’m glad you know that, Ghar. Because I’m pregnant.
He regarded her blankly. What?
I’m pregnant.
I have a trouble with your signing. I don’t understand your word.
Pregnant. I’m going to have a baby. Yours.
His growl rumbled. It isn’t amusing, Jess.
She laid his hand on her abdomen. I carry a child.
Ghar pulled back his hand, his claws unsheathing, points glittering. If you have a child, it is not mine.
Jess hoped she hadn’t just signed her death warrant. There was no one else. It must be yours.
It cannot be. I am not human.
Yes. You are.
His tail snapped through the air like a whip. Stop mocking me.
I’m not. Jess pushed back the tendrils of hair that had curled around her face. Ever since I learned about the baby, I’ve been trying to understand. After we talked to Jack, I knew.
You think this sick collector made me for his collection.
Yes. But his people must have decided they couldn’t go through with it, raising you to be murdered for your fur.
This is how you explain your infidelity? His claws glinted as he signed. I would have expected better from you.
I can prove it. The doctor on my ship can compare our DNA with the fetus. She’ll know, Ghar.
She will say what you command her to say.
You know me better than that.
I thought I did. I was wrong.
You weren’t wrong.
So you claim. Ghar considered her. Very well. I will do these tests. His gaze turned implacable. Pray they don’t prove you a liar.
Jess
watched from Ghar’s apartment high in the cavern, while far below
Sandra walked with her Cephean escort. Next to their towering forms,
the doctor looked like a silver-haired child. Stairs led up to Ghar’s
apartment, turning into ladders as the walls became vertical. It took a
long time for Sandra and her escort to climb, but finally they
disappeared from Jess’s view behind a ridge in the cavern. She waited,
trying in vain to keep her muscles from knotting any tighter with her
tension.
The
front door of the apartment opened. A few moments later Sandra appeared
in the wide entrance of the room where Jess waited. The doctor was
alone; as instructed, the escort had left after delivering her. It was
the second time in the past day Jess had seen her.
A
heavy tread came from across the room. Turning, Jess saw Ghar in the
entrance to an inner chamber. He stood with his lower arms braced
against the sides of the doorway and his upper arms against the top.
His tail whipped around his body, then settled down.
Sandra’s
gaze flicked from Ghar to Jess. "I’ve finished the analysis." She
paused as Jess signed for Ghar. Then Sandra spoke directly to him. "I
am deeply sorry, your Excellency."
Ghar watched Jess sign, then turned to Sandra. "Why sorry?"
The
doctor spoke quietly. "Someone played with your genetics on a scale
like none I’ve ever seen. You have human DNA throughout your body. The
mingling is so extensive I doubt it can be fully mapped." She took a
breath. "You’re a chimera, Ambassador Ko. You combine the heredity of
two people. And one of those is human."
"No!" Ghar signed.
"I’m sorry," Sandra repeated softly.
He signed fast and sharp. "If my DNA had anomalies, it would have shown up in my ID scans."
"ID
scans don’t go into enough detail. Cephean DNA is barely different from
human, less than 2 percent." Sandra stopped while Jess caught up with
her signing. When the doctor spoke again, excitement leaked into her
voice. "Your DNA map is incredible. The subtlety is like nothing I’ve
ever seen. To reveal the differences between yours and that of a normal
Cephean, I had to do a much more extensive set of tests than any you’ve
probably had before."
Ghar said nothing, just stood like a statue.
"And the baby?" Jess was so wound up she forgot to sign her question. Then, remembering, she repeated it for Ghar.
"Most
of Ambassador Ko’s tissues express Cephean genes," Sandra said. "But
his germ cells are human. Chimeras are usually sterile, but they don’t
have to be. He produces some functional human sperm." She glanced at
Ghar. "Your Excellency, you are the father of Captain Fernбndez’s
child."
Ghar answered in his own language. "It is impossible." His growls rolled through the room.
As Sandra’s forehead furrowed, Jess said, "He doesn’t believe you."
Sandra
regarded them both with her painful compassion. "I can only give you
the results. I can’t make them what you want to hear."
Jess started to sign the words to Ghar, but he abruptly turned and left the room.
Sandra exhaled, looking at Jess. "I’m sorry. I know I keep saying that, but it’s true."
Jess just nodded. What could she say? That she wanted to ram Silver Tide down the throat of whoever had done this to Ghar? True as that might be, it solved nothing.
"The results probably explain a lot to him," Sandra said.
"What do you mean?"
"They
showed up a slew of anomalies." Sandra shook her head. "For one thing,
whoever played with his cells didn’t get the lower arms right.
Apparently he’s had them broken and reset in an attempt to fix them. He
has metal rods in both to extend their length to what’s normal for a
Cephean."
Jess
could imagine what Ghar’s people would do if they discovered the true
reason for his problems. "Sandra, you must keep this confidential."
"Unless you and Ambassador Ko choose otherwise, no one but the three of us will ever know."
Jess
hesitated to ask her next question; nothing Sandra could say would make
this easier. But her curiosity persisted. "Do you know what Ghar would
have been like as a human?"
"Irish,
I think. His hair and eyes would be the same color they are now." The
doctor looked apologetic. "That’s about all I can tell."
As hard as it was to imagine him as human, it wasn’t
impossible. In her mind, Jess could see a burly Irishman striding
across green hills on Earth, his red curls whipping back from his face,
his beard thick and full. It hurt to envision what could never be.
And
Ghar? She couldn’t imagine how he would deal with this, knowing he
carried within himself the identity of a people he distrusted, even
hated now. How would he reconcile his knowledge of the hostile parts
that constituted his whole?
"I have to talk to him," Jess said. "Alone."
"And then?"
"I’ll come back to Silver Tide."
Relief washed across Sandra’s face. "I’ll send up an air stretcher."
"I can walk."
Sandra gave a familiar scowl. "I have eyes. I can see you hurt."
The
last thing Jess wanted was people fussing over her. More than ever, she
and Ghar needed privacy now. "I’ll be all right." She thought of the
many staircases she had to navigate to reach the cavern floor. "I will
rest here first, though."
Sandra didn’t look thrilled, but she accepted the compromise. "One day. That’s all."
After
Sandra left, Jess limped through the apartment. She found Ghar in his
bedroom, sitting on a stool and staring at nothing. She almost stopped
out of reach of his claws; then she decided to trust her judgment and
went to stand before him.
Do you want to be alone? she asked.
No. He sheathed his claws and touched her face with his upper left hand. I thought you lied to explain the baby. I misjudged you. I am sorry.
She felt how much that admission cost him. I understand.
Will you go back to Silver Tide with your friend?
My friend?
The doctor.
She blinked. Where did you get the idea Sandra Bolton is my friend?
He moved his lower hands in a horizontal motion, palms down, the closest equivalent Cepheans had to a shrug. You interact with each other as do humans I have seen who call each other friend.
All we do is argue.
In my experience, this is not an unusual way for humans to express friendship.
Jess didn’t know what to make of that, at least in the context of Sandra. She drives me nuts.
She cares what happens to you.
Jess would never have used the word friendship
for her strained relationship with the doctor. And yet . . . she wasn’t
sure how to define friendship. She had guarded her emotions for so
long, maybe she could no longer see what lay in front of her.
Or sat.
She
regarded Ghar silently, aware of him watching her back. To grapple with
this business of love, she could have chosen a far less difficult path
than involvement with a Cephean. But this was the path she had to walk,
and so she would, if she could only figure out how.
Ghar brushed his fingers down her arm. Incredibly, you and I have made a child. At least for this I am pleased.
I
too. It was the truth. But she couldn’t relax with him. Not yet. When
he drew her forward, she put her palms against his shoulders, keeping
him at bay. He had his lower arms around her, his muscles ridged
against her back. She touched the two-inch fang that came down over his
lip, white against the curls of his beard. A slightly harder push on
the tip of that incisor would draw blood from her finger.
Pulling away her hand, she signed to him. Does this response of yours mean I need not fear for my life?
His
lips drew back in a snarl, though she knew he was showing dismay rather
than rage. Using his upper hands, he signed with determination. I would never kill you. Never.
Even if you thought I lied about the child’s father?
Even if that. A low rumble came from his chest, not anger, but another emotion, sorrow perhaps. I would have sent you away and advised Bor to cut ties with Earth.
I would never betray your trust. Jess spoke evenly. But if I had, it wouldn’t be worth destroying relations between our peoples.
It was a moment before Ghar responded. A
few days ago I would have agreed. Right now it is hard to remember why
I ever wanted to establish trust with your people. It would have been
the final blow to discover you had treated what passed between us with
such disregard as to end up with another man’s child on that same night. His signing slowed, as if his hands were weary. In time, my common sense would have prevailed. But by then, the damage may have been beyond repair.
She gentled her motions. I understand, Ghar. But I must return to Silver Tide.
After a long pause, he signed, You are free to leave.
Only then did her posture ease. Putting her arms around his neck, she laid her cheek against his shoulder.
He held her with all four arms and signed against her spine, his large hands covering most of her back. You should have the doctor send someone up with an air-stretcher.
I don’t need one. I’m okay.
You are not ‘okay.’
I’m fine.
He growled. You are as stubborn as a stalagmite.
Jess
tried to laugh, but it caught in her throat. She saw no end to this
mess. It had one glimmer of light, the baby. A miracle. But it would be
insane to reveal the child’s paternity. She had seen the hatred bred by
xenophobia. Had Ghar killed one of his own kind, Earth would never have
cared and Bor Chi would never have absolved him. She didn’t want to
imagine what their peoples would say to a child born of a human woman
and Cephean male.
Ghar pulled back so he could see her face. He held her shoulders with his upper arms and signed with his lower pair. Your ship is a metal hull. It can never hold you in the night when loneliness stalks your dreams.
It is my home.
This could become your home.
Come live with me on Silver Tide.
His growl rumbled. I would die in your silver cage.
Jess signed sorrow to him. If we live together, your people and mine will make our lives hell.
He watched her with his large eyes. Brown eyes. Human eyes. Then stay with me this one last night.
Jess touched his face. Tonight, I will stay.
IV
Bridge
Jess
maneuvered her bulk through the hatchway to the bridge and floated
forward. She had followed Sandra’s advice rigorously and rarely spent
time in free fall, so she savored these few moments the doctor allowed
her. Being weightless offered a much-appreciated relief; at more than
eight months pregnant, she was as unwieldy as a cargo barge.
She
hauled herself to the command chair and settled in with a grunt. Panels
shifted around her, adjusting to her size. In response to her commands,
the robot arm that supported the chair carried it through the
kilometer-wide bridge hemisphere. She passed a smaller robot arm ridden
by one of her officers. When the lieutenant lifted her hand in salute,
Jess grinned and saluted back. Then she moved on, until she stopped in
the center of the hemisphere.
Jess spoke into her wrist comm. "Commander Carson, have we finished loading the cargo for the Flanders team?"
The voice of Al Carson, her Exec, came out of the comm. "In about five minutes, Captain."
"Excellent." She shifted position, trying to get comfortable. The chair molded to her body, accommodating her efforts.
Suddenly
she stiffened, while muscular ripples moved down her abdomen. As if
eager to join in, her baby chose that moment to give a hearty kick.
Jess couldn’t help but laugh. "You’re a strong one."
"Ma’am?" Al asked over her comm. "I didn’t catch that."
She
wondered what Al would think if she told him she was having
Braxton-Hicks contractions, the "practice" a woman’s body underwent
toward the end of pregnancy as it prepared for labor. Knowing Al, he
would take it in stride. It wasn’t genuine labor; she wouldn’t give
birth for at least another three weeks.
"The Flanders personnel are aboard," she told Al. "As soon as we finish loading their equipment, we can leave orbit."
"Aye, Captain."
Jess
settled back and activated the holoscreens. The bridge went from a vast
metal cavern to–nothing. The crew consoles on the hull seemed suspended
in space. Dominating the view, a luminous blue world rotated, girdled
by silvery rings. Far more distant, a white star pierced space, the
parent sun for this iceball world, its light filtered by the screens. Silver Tide had stopped here to pick up a team of scientists headed back to Earth.
A
familiar longing came over Jess, the wanderlust that had stirred her
heart for as long as she could remember. She would have loved to go
down to the science station floating in the atmosphere of the planet,
don an environment suit, power up a fly-craft, and explore the world
firsthand. But she hadn’t left Silver Tide for months now.
Sandra didn’t want her to risk acceleration, and Jess’s presence
on-planet hadn’t been necessary during their stops.
"Such a beautiful sight," Al Carson murmured. "Like a sphere of turquoise and sapphire light."
"You sound poetic today," Jess said.
He chuckled. "It happens every now and then."
A
twinge of sorrow came to her, one that had caught her often these pasts
months, sometimes when she encountered a sight she would have liked to
have shared with Ghar, like this one, other times when she saw a family
together. She and Ghar spoke on occasion, but it was difficult to
arrange the interstellar communication. She wished he could be here, or
if not here, then someplace where they could see each other when they
had the chance.
They
didn’t have that option. Although the authorities on Earth had dropped
the kidnapping charge against Ghar, the murder accusation remained. At
least Jess’s testimony had helped bring down the cartel’s operation in
the colony and ease the outpouring of public anger against Ghar. For
all that Cepheans made them uneasy, the people of Earth were horrified
by the attempted genocide on Icelos.
Allied
Services had acted fast to wipe out the plague chimeras. It had kept
the Skolians from declaring open hostilities against Earth, but
relations between Cepheus and Earth had still deteriorated. Angered by
the murder charge against Ghar, one of their most prominent
citizens–one who had prevented the brutal death of an Allied Space
Corps officer–the Cephean authorities steadfastly refused to extradite
him. Cephean portrayals of Jess were scathing, which incensed the Space
Corps. So Ghar remained on Cepheus and the Cephean embassy on Earth
remained empty.
The
situation disheartened Jess. In the past, hatreds on Earth had burned
over race, religion, sexual orientation, and customs. Those differences
seemed to fade now, compared to the variations between humans and their
altered kin on other worlds. Although Jess and Ghar had never revealed
that their relationship went beyond friendship, their acquaintance
caused outrage anyway, a response Jess had never experienced in her
interracial marriage with the man from Norway.
Nor
did her pregnancy sit well with her superiors; she had broken an
unwritten code of the Space Corps by remaining pregnant without a
spouse. Although no regulations prohibited an officer in her position
from giving birth out of wedlock, the brass didn’t like it. But where
Ghar was concerned, she had few options. Even if her government hadn’t
considered him a criminal, she and Ghar might not have been able to
marry. No one knew; no legal precedents existed. And Jess had no
intention of taking vows with someone she didn’t love just for the sake
of being married.
At
her request, the Space Corps kept the identity of her child’s father
confidential. Although she managed to retain her command, she had been
passed over for promotion. She could only work hard and hope the
situation improved. She had agreed to the tests requested by the
medical team studying her child. It was unheard of for a chimera as
complex as Ghar to exist, let alone be fertile, but without him, their
studies were limited. Unless Cepheus and Earth reached a truce that
allowed their scientists to collaborate again, the secret of how Ghar
existed would remain a mystery to Earth.
Al’s voice came out of her comm. "Captain, we have the Flanders cargo on board."
"Great.
As soon–" Jess stopped, startled as another contraction began,
spreading from her lower back up into her abdomen. It was too long and
too intense.
"Bloody hell," Jess muttered when it finally eased.
"Captain?" Al asked.
"Commander Carson." Jess paused for a calming breath. "Switch to the contingency plan we discussed."
"Good God!" Al said. "Do you need help, ma’am?"
Jess
felt herself redden. "No, no. I’m fine." She was acutely aware of her
bridge officers listening. Everyone knew what "contingency plan" meant.
She tapped her gauntlet, starting up a procedure she had already
programmed into her wrist comp. Then, after another deep breath, she
said, "Commander Carson, you’re in charge." More softly, to the entire
bridge crew, she added, "Take her out gently, ladies and gentlemen.
Gently."
A
murmur of good wishes came from her crew. Al said, "Good luck,
Captain." As tense as he sounded, anticipation also sparked in his
words. Jess felt it too–until another pain wrenched through her, this
one sharper than the last.
"Ahhh . . ." She struggled to hold back her gasp.
Sandra’s voice suddenly snapped out of Jess’s comm. "Captain, I’m receiving a page on your emergency channel."
Jess gritted her teeth against the contraction. "I know. I sent it."
"Well, I’ll be cheddar in a chugger," Sandra said.
As
the pain eased, Jess wondered what the blazes was a "chugger." She
directed her chair toward the hatch at the back of the bridge. "I’m
coming in."
"Are you sure it’s time?" Sandra asked. "You aren’t due for weeks."
Jess started to answer, then groaned as another contraction hit.
"Uh . . . I take that as a ‘yes,’" Sandra said.
Somehow Jess managed, "You take it right."
"I’m sending an air stretcher for you," Sandra said crisply. "I’ve dispatched the orderlies."
"I
don’t need a stretcher." Remembering Ghar’s comments about friendship,
Jess resisted the urge to grumble at the doctor. "I’m fine. Really." As
the contraction finished, she maneuvered out of her chair, which had
reached the hatchway. "Just get ready for me, Doc."
"Now!" Sandra said again. "Push!"
Jess
pushed, clenching the handgrips on the bed. The waves of pain went on
and on, and even after they finally ebbed, the merciless pressure
remained.
Sandra swore. "That’s it. This baby doesn’t want to come out. I’m going to operate."
Jess struggled to sit up. "No."
Lines furrowed Sandra’s forehead. "You’ve been in labor for over a day. Jess, it’s enough. You don’t have to do this the way women did before modern medicine."
"Yes,
I do." At the moment, Jess had a hard time remembering why she had been
determined to carry through with natural childbirth. But damned if she
was going to let them cut her open. She moaned as another contraction
began. Steeling herself, she dredged up her strength. PUSH.
"It’s coming!" Sandra suddenly called. "Jess! Come on! You can do it!"
Jess
put in a gargantuan effort–and screamed as pain ripped through her
body. Gasping at the sudden release that followed, she heaved herself
up to look, breathing hard, her hair tousled wildly around her face–
"I
don’t believe it," Jess whispered. Sandra was holding a tiny girl with
a wrinkled face and a pointy head covered by red-gold curls. As Sandra
checked the baby’s nostrils, the infant gave a loud wail.
"She’s beautiful," Jess rasped. Then she collapsed back onto the bed.
The
next moments blurred, as nurses cleaned her up and shifted her to a
fresh bed. Then Sandra handed her a tiny, incredible bundle. Jess
cradled the baby, murmuring. The infant looked up with large blue eyes,
as if she recognized her mother’s voice. When Jess put her to her
breast, the child nursed with gusto. Jess was vaguely aware of Sandra
and the others, but her attention was only for this miracle. She closed
her eyes, astonished at the uncharacteristic tenderness she felt when
she held this small bundle in her combat-trained arms.
Jess
didn’t realize she had dozed off until someone tapped her shoulder. She
opened her eyes to see George Mai standing by her bed. The baby slept,
nestled against her side.
George beamed. "The crew sends their congratulations, ma’am."
Jess smiled drowsily. "Give them my thanks."
Sandra appeared next to George. "Captain, you have a message from Cepheus."
Jess came fully awake, her emotions a sudden jumble, apprehensive and eager all at once. "I’ll take it on my private line."
Sandra nodded. "I’ll set it up."
Jess
waited while Sandra made the arrangements. If George thought it strange
that the outlawed Cephean ambassador wished to speak with her at a time
like this, he kept his questions to himself.
After the doctors left, Jess sat up, holding the baby. She spoke to the air. "Put my call on audio."
The EI that monitored the hospital answered. "Would you like visual?"
Her
inclination was to say no, especially after just giving birth. But this
wasn’t something she and Ghar could do through a translator.
"Yes," she said. "Visual too."
The
wall across the room glowed blue, then cleared to show a large image of
Ghar. He was seated at a desk in a gleaming office far more modern than
his home on Icelos. His upper arms rested on the top of the desk, which
was a grid rather than a solid surface, and his lower arms were crossed
on a lower shelf visible through the grid. His human translator was
just leaving the room.
Ghar waited until he was alone. Then he signed, Hello, Jess.
Hello. She showed him the baby. I thought of naming her Alejandra Ko Fernбndez. What do you think?
A beautiful name. Ghar hesitated. I would say she is a beautiful baby, but I have no idea how human babies should look.
Jess’s face softened into a smile. She’s beautiful.
After your Doctor Bolton contacted me, I thought to come there, to be with you. He signed with stiff motions. But as soon as I enter human space, I will be taken into custody.
Then I will bring Alejandra to Cepheus.
Jess, no. Bring her to Earth. His motions became subdued. I have decided. I will go to your authorities. Better to resolve this issue of my guilt than have it dividing our peoples.
Jess
bit her lip, worried. As much as she wanted to see Ghar’s name cleared,
she knew a human court might convict him despite his having acted to
save her life. I will testify for you, she signed.
If you do, the truth about our child will probably become public. It will be hard to hide once the lawyers start digging.
Jess bit her lip. I know.
She doubted the news would be a complete surprise to either of their
peoples. When the friendship between she and Ghar had become known,
during the trial for the cartel, speculation had occurred.
Can you handle it? Ghar asked.
I think so. And you?
For myself I have no concern. But what of the child?
Jess finally spoke the conclusions she had come to after agonizing over that question for eight months. Alejandra
needs to know you as her father from as young an age as possible. If we
wait too long, fear could turn her from you. Better she knows from the
start than to have the truth shock her later.
He lifted his hand in a Cephean gesture of assent. I
have thought this also. But the decision must be yours. She is a human
child. You better than I know what she will deal with in human culture.
I think it is best to tell her.
Then you will come to Earth?
Yes. We will come. It could only be for visits, if she meant to retain command of Silver Tide, but she and Alejandra would always find a way to see Ghar, somehow, whether or not he was in prison.
Ghar’s large hands made word pictures as he signed. I do not know if marriage between us is possible. But if not, I will legally acknowledge our daughter.
Jess
swallowed, unable to define the emotion within her. Ghar’s life would
be infinitely easier if he never tried to acknowledge his child. That
he meant to anyway told her a great deal about him.
You honor us, she signed.
He moved his hands awkwardly. I am unsure of the proper way to say this. Were you Cephean, I would know. But in human terms I am lost.
I’m not sure what you mean.
His hands slowed. Wherever you go, whatever you do, my heart walks in silence until you touch my hand.
A
hotness came to Jess’s eyes. She recognized the verse; Cepheans used it
as a declaration of love. Finally she recognized the unfamiliar emotion
within her. She and Ghar had walked in silence, for years, afraid to
voice what they felt to each other.
She signed the traditional Cephean words back to him. I offer my heart to break your silence.
They
could never have what they wanted, a normal life. But perhaps they
could bridge the fear that separated their peoples. It wasn’t
everything.
But it was a start.