Gabriel's Ghost (8 page)

Read Gabriel's Ghost Online

Authors: Megan Sybil Baker

Tags: #Fantasy, #Romance, #Fiction, #General, #Science Fiction

I don’t know what frightened me more. The very real hunger I saw in his eyes when his gaze flicked back up. Or the fact that the hunger wasn’t only his.

I bolted up from the bench.
You’re losing your mind. It’s the stress. Lack of sleep.
And an overabundance of one extremely enigmatic, very sexy, sensual male.

Why are all the handsome ones always such bastards?

I buried my unbidden emotions. Mentally ran down the list of names I called myself whenever I found myself doing something stupid. I forced myself to refocus on the real problem: the M.O.C., the stripers, the reappearance of the jukors.

“Time’s not on our side right now, Sullivan.” I adopted my official Fleet-issue-the-captain-is-speaking-now tone. “Station can wait, put us all in a lock-down, peel back ID by ID. This is what they do every time it’s even hinted the Farosians are involved. I know the routine.” I crossed my arms over my chest.

His only response was a slightly surprised expression. Did he think I didn’t understand the problems we faced?

“Staying together,” I told him, “is the biggest risk. You, me, Ren, Drogue. You might as well hand them your whole operation in a duro-hard.”

I hoped his silence meant he was considering my words. But there was that slight puzzlement in his expression. Something in his heated gaze again sent a little flare up inside me. Finally, he shook his head.

“I’m not sending you back down.”

“Why not?”

“I have my reasons.”

“Which are?”

He studied me for a long moment. “Valid ones.”

I wanted to call him an idiot. I wanted him angry, not offering me this odd mixture of patience and something I couldn’t define. I wanted him to see what I saw, the lives he risked, including his own. I didn’t want his to be one of them. I wasn’t worth it.

I was on Moabar for a valid reason. Whether or not I remembered, whether or not I believed the Empire’s evidence against me, fourteen people were dead because of a decision I’d made while in command.

And now Nathaniel Milo. Make that fifteen. I didn’t want to count the Takan guard. He’d attacked me first.

“Reach Newlin. Or anyone. Send me back while you still can.”

Megan Sybil Baker - 37

His chin lifted. “I never pegged you for a coward.”

“I’m not,” I snapped. “I’m an Imperial Fleet officer, trained to assess and make decisions, based on facts. There’s no shame in pulling back, regrouping.”

He rose. “Martyr doesn’t suit you, either, my angel.”

His flippant use of the affectionate term grated at me. “Damn you, Gabriel Sullivan, listen to me!”

He grabbed my shoulders so quickly I didn’t have time to step back. His eyes were dark yet empty—his touch almost searing. When he spoke, bitterness, pain, and frustration mixed in his deep, harsh tone. “Gabriel’s already damned. He’s been consigned to a Hell he can never escape. It haunts him, consumes him. Until all that’s left are things that make him angry. Things that make him feel a pain I hope to God you never have to feel. Anger and pain are very valid reasons for what Gabriel does. Remember that.”

He released me and turned abruptly away.

I hugged my arms tightly around my middle. In all the years, in all the situations I’d faced Gabriel Ross Sullivan, I’d never seen him as deeply angry, as deeply hurt as I had just now.

The sound of the door sliding open startled me. Ren followed Drogue in. The Guardian’s round face showed clear signs of tension. “This is most disturbing,” he was saying.

I slanted a glance toward Sully, wondering if he were still angry and caught his gaze fixed on Ren. Ren’s face tilted, questioningly and out of the corner of my eye I saw the slightest shake of Sully’s head. A dismissive shrug of his shoulders.

A sharp chill crept up my spine.

I’d seen a vid, in training years ago. Two Stolorth telepaths having a conversation. To the listener, the questions and answers were disjointed. Until the teacher pointed out to watch for movement. All humans and most humanoids unconsciously tilt their heads when listening. All humans and most humanoids nod, even in response to their own silent thoughts. Stolorth
Ragkirils
were no different. Certain gestures stubbornly remained, even if the words were silent.

I started adding up the gestures, the answers to questions unspoken. Something I sensed but couldn’t before define.

Ren might be more than an empath. In spite of Sully’s protestations, in spite of what Fleet had us believe, Ren might have the ability to communication telepathically. Link his mind to another’s. To Sully’s, I was beginning to suspect.

Ren stated he couldn’t link with his own people. He never said whether he could link minds with a human.

Why not admit that? He was obviously blind. I still believed that negated his ability to rip a mind apart. So why not admit to a limited telepathy? I didn’t have answers. And didn’t like when I didn’t have answers.

“We must sit, discuss things,” Drogue said.

I sat, somewhat more cautious, on the end of the bench. I didn’t like being lied to. But there was nothing I could do about it right now. I recognized it could all just be conjecture, an overreaction on my part.

However, the first chance I had, I was going to ask some serious questions. And not of Sully; we had a shared past that raised other issues, dragging us off topic. I had to talk to Ren.

I took a deep breath, settled myself down, calm. Professional.

Megan Sybil Baker - 38

Sully leaned back against the desk, his arms folded much as mine had been a few minutes ago. Classic defensive posture. Ren sat on his bed, drew the curtain back to the wall. Drogue stood in the middle of us.

“We have lost brother Nathaniel. This saddens me, as I know it saddens both of you. And you, Chasidah, had you known him. But we have greater concerns.”

“What’s the status on the
Diligent
?” Sully asked.

“She has eluded pursuit to this point, I am told. At least, her capture has not been announced. The Fleet has been alerted.”

“What did the M.O.C. learn?” Ren asked. “And from whom?”

Drogue shook his head. “The stars, in their wisdom, have not yet convinced the authorities on station to share that with me. I only know at the moment the Temple is not under suspicion; they still seek Blaine’s people and we have no ties with Tos Faros. They stated we were free to continue with the festivities and rituals for Peyhar’s Week. I strongly suggest we do so.”

Peyhar’s Week. Non-Human Cultures Class 101 again. It wasn’t one of the more serious Englarian holidays, full of chastisement, but a time of celebration and renewal. Glory-seeds, honeylace would be shared. A station full of mellow, happy eight-foot tall guards wasn’t a bad idea at all.

Still, I wanted off Moabar Station. “Can we get another ship in that time?”

“Of course.” A Sully-like smirk accompanied his words.

“Is there somewhere I can stay until then?” I asked Drogue. “I don’t think my ID will pass a second scan. I’d prefer it if the M.O.C. and the stripers could forget they ever saw Sister Berri here.”

“The wisdom of the stars blessed me with a different idea. If you’ll permit me?” Drogue motioned to Sully, who nodded, obviously curious. Ren sat forward on the bed.

“The stripers, as you call our security force, would find it odd that Sister Berri Solaria not participate in Peyhar’s. You have been seen on station, as has Brother Ren Ackravaro. Your absence would cause remarkings. Your person, would not.”

“Best place to hide is in full view,” Sully quipped.

“Wait a minute.” I held up one hand. “I can talk the basic lingo. Praise the stars. Blessings of the hour. But I’ve never been to a Peyhar’s celebration and my Non-Human Cultures class was a long time ago. I’ll sweep out the Temple, fold prayer rugs, whatever. But I’m an obvious amateur—”

“Virgin,” Sully put in.

“And not a sacrificial one,” I snapped back. Damn him! He was baiting me again.

“She has a point,” Ren said. I thought I began to see a pattern. Sully gets me riled and then Ren empathically reads me like a datascreen on max-download. Wonderful.

I didn’t care that Ren knew I was afraid. I was hardly a virgin but my ignorance of the Englarians was wide and vast. I hated going in to something without the facts, unprepared. No details.

Sully was disagreeing. “She’ll be functioning as an acolyte. Most of the focus will be on Drogue and Clement. She just has to put in a few appearances. If a ship gets here that we can use, we’ll just say we had the call to meditation.” He shrugged, shot a glance at Ren, who turned, almost as if he could feel Sully’s gaze on him.

Megan Sybil Baker - 39

“Brother Sudral sees well.” Drogue turned to me. “Formal festivities start tomorrow. I suggest we all get some rest. I can assure you the Temple is secure. I’ll provide you with some basic descriptives of the ceremonies, if you like, Captain Bergren.”

“Please.”

Ren stood. “You may have my quarters. They’re clean. The office has room for a cot which will serve me well.”

“No, I can’t put you out.” My answer was automatic. Yet even as I declined his offer, I knew it was more than that. Of all of us, Ren was the least adapted to a human environment, the most in need of special accommodations. In spite of my suspicions, I had no desire to see him inconvenienced. I doubted the office had a bathtub.

The Stolorth offered me a small smile. “The Temple has a baptismal pool, if that’s your concern.”

Was I that easy to read? Obviously. “None of us can afford to be less than optimum right now.”

“Then know that I would do nothing to jeopardize your safety, or my own.”

Or Sully’s?

It hit me. They didn’t trust me. That’s why Ren was here, to see if Chaz Bergren, former Imperial Fleet officer, would cooperate. As if I’d say no, let me stay on Moabar. It was just starting to get cozy down there.

I had to get Ren alone. Surprisingly, that thought didn’t discomfort me as much as it should have. As it had even a few hours earlier. Amazing how three weeks on Moabar can suddenly make one more receptive to a wide range of ideas and experiences.

“I’ll compromise,” I told him. “Bring the cot in here. I’ll use it. It’s probably more my size, anyway. Then you can have your own bed, and bath. It shouldn’t be for more than a day or two, at best. Unless you’d feel uncomfortable with me here?”

I felt and heard, more than saw, Sully straighten and push away from the desk. He hadn’t counted on my offer. Good. Nothing works better than divide and conquer.

Ren’s reaction surprised me. His mouth softened, some of the lines disappeared from around his clouded eyes. His face tilted slightly, as if he weren’t sure if he should be amused by my offer, or even believe it at all.

Several hours ago I’d run from him in fear, unwrapped my dagger in defense. Now I was telling him that I, a human female, trusted him, a Stolorth male. Or rather, I knew I had to convince him to trust me.

I had a feeling he knew that as well.

* * *

We ate a small meal in the Temple common room at about the time those on station would be having dinner. It was a way to force our bodies into the station’s rhythm. And if we couldn’t sleep, perhaps a small draught of honeylace. Strictly to enhance prayer and meditation, Drogue said.

I knew I’d decline. I never touched narcotics, illegal or legal. I like my beers, my Imperial brown ales just fine. A gin and soda on occasion, but I was very particular about the gin. Glory seeds, honeylace or a dozen other chemical combinations held no interest for me.

Megan Sybil Baker - 40

Another man in monk’s garb that Drogue introduced as Brother Clement came in just as we were dishing out the stew. He greeted me with a reassuring pat on my shoulder and a promise that the stars would keep me safe. But he called Sully ‘Brother Sudral,’ so I was unsure of exactly what Clement knew, or didn’t. Or, like Sully said, the less everyone knew, the safer we all were.

Thick slices of bread—baked, not replicator issue—were stacked in the center of a round table not unlike the one at the monastery, dirtside. Clement led the Prayer of Thanksgiving. He was about Drogue’s age, mid-fifties, with skin the color of my favorite Imperial ale and glossy silver curls. He had a wiry build, a rumbling laugh and a demeanor that was much less serious than Drogue’s.

He ate a bowl of stew then wrapped some bread in a napkin and left, pleading a file full of unread theological treatises in his quarters.

“He’s quite the scholar,” Ren told me. He’d relaxed noticeably since our pact to be roommates. Sully alternated between unconcern and dropping into long, serious conversations with Drogue. I heard ship names mentioned. None were familiar to me, and I knew a fair amount of the freighters that worked the Empire’s rim worlds.

We finished the stew, the bread and a bottle of dry wine. It was a meal, six months ago, I never thought I’d have again. Prison rations were replicator issue, square bars with no flavor but, we were told, more than sufficient nutrition. Moabar offered the same.

I helped Drogue stack the dishes in the scrub-unit, swiped down the table with a handvac. Sully and Ren were by the door, talking. By all appearances it was a friendly discussion.

Then Drogue headed for the Temple. Last minute preparations for the festival to be checked one more time. He declined any offer of help. “You know where the cot is in the storage room, Brother Sudral? Good. Blessings of the hour, my friends. Morning meditations at six. Listen for the chimes at quarter of.”

I followed Ren to his quarters. “You don’t use a cane on station?” I remember he’d left it in his quarters.

Ren seemed slightly puzzled. “You thought it was for guidance. No, Moabar’s climate disagrees with my body. I find my legs and my back much weakened by the cold.”

“Makes me do all the work,” Sully intoned, but his voice was light. The anger and darkness I’d sensed in him earlier were gone. He flipped the latch on a narrow closet door next to his quarters. “I’ll get the cot while you rest your aching bones.”

Ren chuckled as we stepped inside, then tabbed off the auto-door so it would stay open. “You’re tired,” he said as I sat on the bench.

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