Read Kaitlyn O'Connor Online

Authors: Enslaved III: The Gladiators

Kaitlyn O'Connor (25 page)

“Can you translate that, computer?”

“It is a request for identification of this ship. I responded.”

Relief flickered through her. “What did they say?”

“The ship is denied access to the port.”

Dismay filled her. “You

re saying they won

t let us land?”

“Affirmative.”

“There

s no telling what that snake did the last time he was in port!” Karen snapped angrily.

“Probably stole something! What are we going to do now?”

“Tell we trade for ship,” Kael said sharply. “No old trader. Tell we hab trade tings.”

Nodding shakily, Loren relayed the message and added that they were in dire need of food supplies.

Kael spoke to the computer in his own language. Loren didn

t have a clue of what he

d said and the computer apparently didn

t either.

“This language is not in my data banks.”

His face twisted with frustration. “No should tell dat. Make trade only if dey tink good deal for dem.”

Loren winced. “Did you already relay the message I gave you, computer?”

“Affirmative. The response is that they will fire upon this vessel if it does not turn off.”

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“Oh my god!” Karen exclaimed. “They

re going to blow us to pieces!”

That time when Kael burst into speech Loren was pretty sure that he was cursing. The other men began to talk agitatedly, as well.

“Can find udder place land on dis planet?”

“Is there any way we can land on the planet without going through the port?”

“Negative. The
Poliz
have issued their final warning.”

“Go back,” Kael said explosively. Turning abruptly, he stalked from the bridge.

“Computer, turn the ship around and set a course for the next port,” Loren said unhappily, wondering if they were going to get chased away from every port.

“Don

t tell me there isn

t anywhere in this whole damned solar system that we can

t land this ship!” Karen snapped angrily when the men had all left the bridge behind Kael.

“You did not request a landing site on another planet. My data indicates that it would be possible to land on the sixth planet. Shall I initiate the landing sequence?” the computer responded.

Karen and Loren looked at each other with wide eyed excitement.

“You

re saying there
is
a place to land?” Loren gasped hopefully.

“Affirmative. Your instructions?”

Doubt abruptly assailed Loren. “The port authority on that planet will let us land?”

“There is no port authority on the sixth planet.”

The two women exchanged a questioning look. “Inhabitants that might object?” Karen asked.

“There are no inhabitants on the sixth planet.”

“Is there any breathable air? Plants? Animals?”

“Negative. The ice is thick enough to support a landing, however.”

Loren rolled her eyes. “We need food, damn it, computer! What

s the closest planet that would have food and water—and breathable air for us—that wouldn

t have a port authority to run us off?”

“Checking data.”

Loren felt another rise of hopefulness.

“PKL4 in the Mater034 system.”

“This is a planet that would support the life-forms aboard this ship? I mean me and the others like or similar to me?” Loren asked cautiously.

“Affirmative. Petenz traded with the life-forms there and took on supplies as needed.”

“But they couldn

t blow up the ship?” Karen added.

“Negative. They have no advanced weaponry capable of penetrating the shields.”

“Let

s go there, then,” Loren said decisively. “Set that course, computer, and kick it in the ass.”

“‟Kick it in the ass

does not compute.”

“Fastest, safest speed,” Karen put in.

“Affirmative. Plotting course. Course corrected. Initializing hyper-drive.”

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“How long…? Never mind.” Loren glanced at Karen and shrugged. “I sure wish I understood how this damned thing calculates time. It would be nice to know if we

ll still be alive by the time we get there.”

“It isn

t like the food would get better—or more plentiful,” Karen said fatalistically. “I guess we

ll just have to hope for the best.” She considered the situation. “Computer—when we get there, find a landing place that isn

t too close to where these life-forms live.”

“Distance required from population centers?”

“Well hell!” Karen muttered.

“We aren

t going there to trade. Just find a place to set the ship down two or three days walk from the population center. That should give the guys time to find food, don

t you think?” she added, turning to Karen.

Karen shrugged. “Damned if I know. I don

t know anything about hunting.”

“Well, we could always move the ship, I guess. Computer—twenty units of measurement according to the size of the planet.”

“You think that

ll be enough?” Karen asked doubtfully. “The computer could interpret that as inches.”

Loren focused on trying to think of another way to indicate what they wanted and felt a surge of excitement. “One full day

s distance from the population center according to the planet

s rotation.”

“Affirmative. Checking data. Landing site located.”

 

* * * *

 

Dakaar

s mind was churning with conflict when he followed Kael to the room they

d come to think of as the gathering room. It would

ve been hard to say what emotion took precedence.

He was as filled with frustrated anger as Kael was that they could not land and as worried about Lau-ren. And yet he felt an odd sort of detachment, as well, almost as if he was moving through a dream and nothing was real.

Lau-ren was breeding. Despite her denials that it was possible, mayhap even to herself, he had seen the very moment that she had realized that she had a babe in her belly. He had seen it in her face and in the way she touched her belly. It was a gesture he was familiar with—that odd sort of way women had of acknowledging that they carried life within them, as if it was a source of awe to them.

He realized after a few moments that he was awed himself and that that was why he felt the strange sense almost of detachment—as if someone had knocked him senseless. That feeling intensified as it dawned on him that it might be his child there. He did not recall the mating with great clarity, but he could recall that he had been infuriated that Kael had reached her first and staked him claim and he could recall that he had seized the opportunity to plant his own seed directly after.

Kael had been before him, though, he thought with a surge of dissatisfaction. His seed would have had a head start—and Balen had been directly after. No doubt their seed had been racing to capture the prize just as the three of them had, and yet he knew from prior experience that there was never any guessing with these things. He had broken free in the last spawning 111

cycle before he had left Ach and managed to couple with one of the women of their village, and she had not borne fruit.

He had been relieved at the time. He would not have agreed to being restrained in the first place if he had not agreed with the others that they should not breed at all until and unless they could be certain that they could protect their mate and their offspring.

He might not have bred on Lau-ren—but it was the possibility that he had that made him dizzy with both fear and excitement at the same time.

Kael jerked him from his internal focus by slamming his fist against the wall in frustration.

“I could not protect my lover and I cannot feed my lover! I am worthless to her! She was right to spurn me!” he growled furiously. “She will starve. She is starving before my very eyes and I cannot do anything to stop it!”

The reminder demolished the brief sense of hopefulness he

d felt, replacing it with his own anger and frustration. He had been trying very hard to put the assault on Lau-ren from his mind because it was useless to allow it to tear at his gut when he could nothing to change it—useless beyond lingering as a lesson and reminder to him that a failure to act quickly enough was a complete failure.

“She forgave us,” he said, more because he needed to believe it than to reassure Kael. “She told me that she had not meant to spurn me and my gift, that she was only upset. She would not have said that if she blamed us for…not protecting her as we should have.”

Kael stopped pacing abruptly and turned to look at him. He could not help but notice the hopefulness in Kael

s eyes or the doubt and shame that followed. “I cannot forgive myself,” he muttered after a long moment. “I cannot even
redeem
myself in my own eyes or hers! If I had not chosen unwisely, we would not be in this mess! My only thought when I saw the trader was that he would have knowledge of Lau-ren

s world! I have doomed her…doomed all of us!”

Balen

s own anger boiled over. “You have no more right to condemn yourself than we do!”

he growled. “She took me as her lover, also!”

Briefly, amusement flickered in Kael

s eyes. “I will gladly share the shame and disgrace if you demand a piece of it!”

Balen wasn

t amused. “I have a piece of it whether you wish to share or not, gods damn it!

She took me as her lover, as well. I am not less welcome to her! No less responsible for her welfare! And I followed you instead of making my own decision. I
still
do not see that the decision to take this ship was faulty. There was not one who had docked there who was not a thief or a murderer! I cannot think that any of the ships would have been welcome and some far less! For the pirates attack and kill to take when the traders merely cheat and steal! Nor do I think the situation regarding the food would have been greatly different which ever machine we took! Only the pirates have larger crews and would have had more food and there was no way to determine which of the machines belonged to the pirates and which to the traders! Beyond that, the people of the space station were already piling onto the ships to save themselves. We could be worse off. We might have piled on board and discovered more refugees.”

Kael

s anger had settled to a simmer by the time Balen had finished. He scrubbed his hands over his face, struggling to relinquish the hold his frustration had on him. “You are saying that I should not feel ashamed and unmanned by my ineffectual efforts to take care of Lau-ren?”

Balen blew out an irritated breath. “I am not saying that. You cannot help that you feel that way anymore than I can. But I am not going to continue to flay myself for it if Lau-ren is willing 112

to forgive me. She is not just in need of more food. She needs the comfort of a lover as much as I do and to refuse to do that only to continue punish ourselves for our failure also punishes her.”

Kael and Dakaar exchanged a long look. Kael frowned, but thoughtfully. “I had not considered it in that light,” he admitted finally. “In all honesty, I am not certain that you are seeing it clearly yourself. Mayhap you wish to believe that because you want to?”

Anger churned in Balen. “I
do
want to believe that, but that does not mean that I am wrong.

We
have made her feel shame for something that she could not help. I have seen it in her eyes. I did not realize that she had told Dakaar that she had not meant to spurn us. If I had, I would have realized before that she did not have that look in her eyes because we had failed her but because we had rejected, in her eyes, the offer to take us back! All this time, I have thought that it was accusation for our failure that I saw in her eyes and it was hurt that we did not offer what we could have and should have.”

Dakaar squirmed inwardly when both Balen and Kael looked at him accusingly. Abruptly, he remembered the hurt in Lau-ren

s eyes when he had found the bruises on her and he knew that Balen was right. She had wanted him to hold her and give her comfort. He should have done that, he thought. He could have given her comfort and shown her that she was not less in his eyes. Instead, he had given in to his anger and allowed it to swallow him. “I did not think of that way!” he said angrily.

Kael nodded. “You are so right that I feel like throwing up,” he muttered. “This is what comes of being too self-centered to be a good lover! Instead of focusing on what I could do to offer her comfort, I have focused completely on my own failings and, in doing that, have failed her even more.” He grimaced. “She has shown poor judgment in accepting me.”

“Continue to berate yourself if you believe that will make you feel any better,” Balen said tightly. “I believe that I will go and see if I can find something to make peace with her and enjoy what I can while I can. There has been nothing for me to take any pleasure in since I was captured but my Lau-ren. If we are to die on this gods forsaken machine, I want whatever there is to be had.”

Dakaar and Kael exchanged a long look and followed Balen out. They met up with Lau-ren and Ka-ren and Shara before they had gone far and stopped abruptly at the excitement the women exuded.

“We

ve done it! We

ve done it!” all three women chanted excitedly.

Discomfort twisted in Kael

s gut when Lau-ren stopped abruptly and he saw that she had meant to rush to him. “Done what?” he said after a moment.

Loren dismissed her discomfort and grinned at the men happily. “I feel like a total idiot that I didn

t think of it before—and I should have. I mean, I despised that lizard-bastard myself. I should

ve considered that he might not be especially welcome to anybody else! Anyway, Karen and I were talking about the food situation and I finally thought to ask the computer if there was some place that we could get food and water without the possibility that they would shoot at us—and the computer plotted a course to this new place!”

Kael felt far more pleasure in Lau-ren

s excitement than her announcement, but he felt a surge of wary hopefulness, as well. “The machine believes that there is food in this place?”

Some of her excitement waned. “To hunt. You can hunt, right?”

Kael glanced at the others ruefully.
“She does not have much faith in us, does she?”

Balen glared at him.
“You are surprised when we have given her no reason to have faith?”

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He switched to the language she understood. “Yes. We hunt. Dere is food, we kill it an

feed our
shimone
. No be bones no more.”

Loren chuckled, hesitated and then surged toward him. Balen felt his heart swell with thankfulness as he gathered her against him, trying to ignore her frailty and the fact that she felt more insubstantial than before.

“I

m sorry. I should have thought of it before,” she muttered. “But at least we have some hope now, right?”

He squeezed her more tightly. “
It was not your place to provide
,
shimone
.
It is our place.

Loren pushed away enough to look at him questioningly when he reverted to his native language. “I guess…you don

t like me skinny, huh?”

Balen felt his chest tighten. “No like Lau-ren….” He paused, searching for the word. “Be hungry,” he finished when he couldn

t think of the word he wanted, “an

me no can help.”

114

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