Captain’s Claimed Property Page 11
She was less than fifty feet from her own chambers when a door opened directly in front of her. In order to avoid running head on into the heavy steel, Sarah hopped quickly to the side and crashed right into the person who exited the room. Even though Reema had a good hundred pounds on Sarah, the Haraldie woman was pretty drunk and Sarah had been walking with a purpose, so the impact was enough to take them both down. Reema grabbed her by the shoulders and threw her off with shocking ease. The whole thing happened so quickly, Sarah wasn’t able to brace herself. Her limp body slammed against the wall with a hard thunk. My tailbone is never going to heal, Sarah thought sarcastically. The entire night had been so insane, Sarah almost felt as if she was a part of some intricate practical joke. The only coping method she had left was humour, so she decided to just lean into the ridiculousness of her situation.
Sarah watched from the ground as Reema struggled to stand up. She faltered once, clasping her hand over her mouth as if she were about to vomit, but the sickness passed and the Haraldie was able to establish a somewhat steady position.
“Get up,” Reema barked.
“Ugh.” Sarah rolled her eyes. “Are we still doing this?” She slowly pulled herself off the floor. “I get it, you’re big and scary, I’m tiny and weak, you could kill me with just your pinky finger, blah blah blah.”
“Are you mocking me?” Just as Sarah got to her feet, Reema shoved her back to the ground. “Get up,” she repeated.
“What a clever game you’ve cooked up here.” Sarah winced as she stood, the pain from her tailbone had begun radiating through her butt and lower back. “But you and I both know you can’t kill me. Grom’s orders.”
Reema didn’t push Sarah this time. Instead, she drew her trusty knife and brought it against Sarah’s throat. “And who exactly is here to witness it was me who opened that beautiful, freckled neck of yours?”
“Grom would figure it out.” Sarah’s back was against the wall now.
“Ha!” Reema moved her mouth right next to Sarah’s ear, close enough to bite it. “I hate to break it to you, sweetie, but Grom’s not exactly the brightest star in the galaxy. Now, don’t get me wrong, he’s a good captain, brutal and effective. But he’s not the putting two and two together type.”
“Brutal and effective, that’s a fair assessment,” Sarah agreed. “I wouldn’t put it past that brutal and effective Kylen to punish everyone involved in this house party once he found me dead.”
“Well, I think you’re overplaying your hand.” Reema pressed the knife a bit harder against Sarah’s skin. “You’re not his friend, you’re not his business colleague, you’re his pet. And pets die all the time. Sure, he’ll be sad for a day or two, but then we’ll pillage another ship and he’ll pick himself up a peppy new puppy and you’ll be old news.”
“I…I…” Sarah’s lip trembled. She realized that the time she spent with Grom had colored her perspective, and she had allowed herself, even for a second, to forget her position on the ship. For a moment, she forgot she was a prisoner and had made the mistake of seeing herself as important. As a person.
She did her best to mentally prepare herself for the pain to come and the eternal darkness that would follow. She was contemplating the afterlife when a voice erupted from the intercom speaker right next to her head. At first, Sarah thought the deed had already been done and this was a voice from the beyond, but the stern cadence with which the voice said, “no questions asked,” was all too familiar, and she realized she was still amongst the living.
Crewmembers came bursting out of bedchambers, many half dressed and holding half empty bottles. There were too many witnesses now. Reema screamed in aggravation and sheathed her knife. Sarah didn’t wait around to hear whatever Reema’s final, threatening words were going to be. She ducked under the arm the Haraldie was using to lean against the wall and ran to her chambers, looking back only once to see that Reema was not following her.
19
Bridging the Gap
Grom stopped himself from knocking three times. This is stupid. She’s not going to be happy to see me. He turned to go, then turned back. I’ll have to see her eventually. It’s better if I do it purposefully rather than awkwardly running into her in the hallway. His hand was shaking a little as he reached to knock. Fourth time’s the charm. The door opened quickly, as if Sarah had been waiting just on the other side.
“Oh.” She seemed surprised. “Hi.”
“Uh, hi.” Regret immediately poured down on him like a cold shower. “I thought maybe we should talk.”
“Yeah, I think that’s probably a good idea.” Sarah moved to let Grom inside. He breathed her scent in as he passed her, and it made him feel more intoxicated than any of the Hexa-Juice he had drunk earlier. Unsure of where to sit, Grom opted to lean against the far wall and let Sarah have the bunk.
“Watchu got there?” Sarah asked, sitting down on the edge of the bed furthest away from the captain.
“Oh, right!” Grom held the wine and candy out to show her. “I brought some wine and, well, it’s called a cocoa-bean bar, but I think it’s basically chocolate. That’s what humans call it, right? Chocolate?”
Sarah nodded as she took the food and drink from Grom. Their hands grazed, and the touch sent electricity through every inch of his body.
Sarah put the chocolate aside and opted for the wine. She inspected the cork and frowned. A corkscrew, dammit! Grom chastised himself. How could you forget a corkscrew?
“Here, let me run to the kitchen and—” but Sarah was already reaching into her pocket. She withdrew her trusty, dull knife and plunged the point deep into the cork. She twisted it back and forth aggressively, digging the steel as deep as she could. Once it was dug about a half inch in, Sarah put the bottle in between her legs and lifted upwards with both hands. It was slow going at first, then suddenly the pressure changed, and the cork was released with a pop.
“Huh.” Grom gave Sarah an impressed smile.
“I promise, I’m not an alcoholic,” Sarah joked. “I’m just a good problem solver. Although,” Sarah looked around the room, “there doesn’t seem to be an obvious solution to our lack of cups problem.”
“Dammit! Cups!” You’re zero for two. Let’s try not to strike out here. “I’ll go—”
“Don’t bother.” Sarah drank right from the bottle. “I think we’re well past avoiding each other’s germs.” She handed the bottle to Grom and put her knife away. “That’s good stuff. Where’d you get it?”
“I, uh.” Grom was suddenly very embarrassed, but he wasn’t sure what was worse: telling Sarah he had stolen it during one of his many raids, or lying to her.
“You stole it,” Sarah said, making his decision for him.
“Yes.” Grom looked at his feet. “Sorry.”
“Don’t apologize to me.” Sarah reached again for the bottle. “Apologize to whatever rich asshole you nabbed it from.”
“How do you know he’s an asshole?”
Sarah pointed to the price on the bottle’s label. “Only an asshole pays three hundred pinches for a bottle of wine. I mean, it’s good, but it’s not better than a brand new 10k projection screen.”
Grom’s eyebrows raised in confusion.
“They run about two ninety,” Sarah explained, “which still leaves you ten pinches left to grab a decent bottle of wine that I bet said asshole couldn’t differentiate from this one.” She took another swig, this one much larger than the first.
Grom laughed. “Yeah, you don’t have to convince me. I never understood lavishness.”
“Says the guy with incredibly lush, silk sheets.” Sarah’s cheeks immediately flushed after she said this. The subject had been broached, albeit indirectly, and there was no turning back.
Grom cleared his throat. “Those were the old captain’s sheets. Though I can’t say I don’t enjoy them.”
They said nothing for a while. Sarah took a few more sips of wine, then with excitement said, “Oh! Sorry! I’m totally hogging this
.” She handed the wine to Grom.
“That’s alright.” Grom gave it back to her without having any. “I may have had a shot or two…or three of Hexa-Juice before dropping by.”
“Ah. Okay.” Again they were quiet.
They both went to talk at the same time, both of them starting their sentence with “I’m sorry.” They stopped in unison, then laughed.
“Let me go first,” Grom said. “I’m sorry for yelling at you. And for dragging you into my bedroom. That must have been terrifying—”
“Don’t flatter yourself, I wasn’t terrified.” Grom gave Sarah a look. “Okay, okay, I was pretty scared.”
“Anyway, I’m really sorry.” Grom’s embarrassment melted into shame as he recalled how he had manhandled the poor girl. “It’s just that here, on this ship, on the outskirts of society, it’s kill or be killed. This crew is full of cruel, backstabbing devils who will pounce at the first sign of weakness. I couldn’t let them see me be defied like that. Especially by a…a…”
“A slave?”
Grom could only repeat himself. “I’m sorry.”
“So you’re saying you took no pleasure in it?” Sarah asked.
“What?” The question pierced Grom like a sword. Not because the assertion was outlandish, but because he couldn’t truthfully deny it.
“I understand that it was your duty, that you had to ‘put me in my place’ to demonstrate strength to your monstrous crew, but I saw the look in your eyes.” Sarah’s voice demonstrated anger, but the tears in her eyes were undoubtedly from fear. “Enjoyment…is that part of your duty, too?”
“I…I don’t know what to say.” Grom held his hand out for the wine. Sarah gave it to him without hesitation, and he took a long sip. “Except that…well, I know it’s a stupid and convenient excuse, but that wasn’t me. That was the dragon. I was angry, yes, and I wanted to teach you a lesson. But dragging you against your will, throwing you to the ground…that was all him.”
“And what about the sex?”
Grom paused. He took a second to finish off the last fourth or so of the bottle then spoke. “That was him, at first. He kissed you. But once you kissed back, you were kissing me.”
Sarah’s cheeks grew even redder and Grom could feel his own face getting hot. The memory of that first kiss reawoke his desire.
“So everything we did after that first kiss, that was all Grom?” Sarah eyed him with suspicion and a bit of flirtation.
“Yes.”
“Then I say kudos to you.” Sarah smiled coyly.
Grom ignored her comment out of sheer humiliation. “So you forgive me?”
Sarah laughed. “Uh, no.”
“No?”
“Grom, you violently dragged me into your room, threw me to the ground, and then forcibly kissed me. And what would you have done if I hadn’t kissed you back huh? What would the dragon have done if I hadn’t consented?”
Grom had not considered that. He’d like to think he wouldn’t have taken her by force, but he couldn’t say for sure. Instead of entertaining the idea, he tried turning the tables on her. “But you did kiss me back. You did consent.”
“Yeah, but you didn’t know I was going to when you kissed me. I’ve gone over it in my head and I gave you no indication that’s what I wanted. You just did whatever you wanted. And that scares me.”
“I…I understand.” Grom sighed. “You don’t trust me.”
“Not a single bit.”
“And you don’t forgive me.”
“I don’t forgive the dragon. And until you can demonstrate to me that there is a clear division between you and it, that you can control the dragon when it comes to me, I cannot forgive you either.”
“That’s fair.”
In the awkward silence that followed, Sarah reached for the cocoa-bean bar and went about trying to read the label. The confused expression on her face told Grom that she, too, could not decipher a single word, but she opened the thing anyway. Although she only took the smallest, most tentative bite, apparently that was enough for her to experience the bar’s full, intense flavor. She immediately spat the ‘chocolate’ out of her mouth and onto the ground right near Grom’s feet.
“That’s horrible!” Sarah’s face contorted with disgust. “And it’s definitely not chocolate.”
“Oh. Sorry. I didn’t know. I can’t read the label.” Grom reached for the bar. He smelled it first, then took a bite himself. He was prepared to spit his bite out as well, but found that it actually tasted quite good. It was not unlike this one type of candy they had on his home planet. He savored the first bite then greedily took another.
“You like it?” Sarah gawked at the captain.
“Yes, very much. I can’t believe you don’t.”
The young woman watched in horror as Grom finished off half the bar. Deciding he wanted to save some for later, however, he wrapped up what remained and tucked it gently into his pocket.
“Anyway, I should be on my way.” Grom licked some leftovers from his fingers and went to leave.
“Hang on.” Sarah stopped him. “What’s next?”
“What do you mean?”
“I mean, what are we doing? What am I doing?”
“Hm.” Grom thought this over. “Well, I don’t need you for any negotiations, and we’re not planning on needing any repairs in the near future. You could work with Wex?”
“You mean help him on the ship?”
“Sure, you’d be like an…an apprentice.”
“Oh great.” Sarah folded her arms. “Everywhere I go, I’m still only an apprentice.”
“We can call it something else if you want. You can be Wex’s….pupil.”
“Apprentice is fine,” Sarah grumbled.
“Great. I’ll let the crew know about your new position. Make sure no one messes with you.”
Sarah smirked. “Yeah, like that’ll make a difference.”
“What do you mean?” Grom’s mouth turned downward. “Has the crew been bothering you?”
“No, it’s fine. Forget I said anything.”
“Tell me. If someone is hurting you or threatening you in any way…”
“No one is doing anything. Seriously. I’m fine.”
Grom remained unconvinced, but he could tell Sarah wasn’t in a sharing mood. “Alright. But you’ll let me know if anyone tries anything?”
“Sure.” Sarah’s tone of voice evoked little confidence in Grom. “Now can you let me get some sleep? That wine is starting to hit me.”
“Of course.” Grom hesitated before leaving. A part of him wanted to reach for her, pull her into his arms and never let go. But now wasn’t the time, and Grom had to accept the fact that the time may never come. She may never forgive him. She may never stop being afraid of him. Instead, Grom awkwardly reached his hand out for a shake. He knew it was odd, but he couldn’t stand the thought of leaving without getting to touch her one last time. She took his big, rough hand into her soft, delicate one and gave him a firm squeeze. He held on for a second longer than would be deemed socially acceptable, then let go.
“Good night, Sarah,” he said as he opened the door. It was the first he had ever called her by her name, and for some reason, the gesture felt very intimate.
“Good night, Grom.” She closed the door softly behind him.
20
Working Girl
Sarah’s apprenticeship with Wex proved to be almost entirely opposite to her arrangement with Bernie. Not only did Wex allow her to actually work on the ship, he insisted that she do everything. At first, Sarah thought Wex was testing her, trying to gauge her abilities, but it quickly became apparent to her that the alien was, in fact, just very lazy, and was more than happy to shrug off his responsibilities and let her carry the load. She didn’t mind, however, as she was grateful for the distraction.
Sarah spent four straight days slaving away on the Slipsteam while Wex lounged nearby, every so often calling out to inform her she had done something wrong. During the ev
enings, they would meet up with Nickle for dinner, and then the three of them would slink off to Wex’s quarters where Sarah would tinker with the transmitter while the doctor and the maintenance man played cards.
On the night of the fourth day, while Sarah was fiddling with the transmitter’s battery, which she had been doing for over an hour, a loud crackling sound emitted from the speaker.
“Did you hear that?” Sarah interrupted her friends’ poker game.
“Hear what?” Wex didn’t even look up from his hand.
“The transmitter.” She held it out for Wex to hold. “It made a noise. Like it has a signal.”
Wex took the trinket from her and inspected it. “Are you sure—” the sound came through again.
“See!” Sarah snatched it back.
Nickle and Wex put their cards down and watched as Sarah tentatively pressed the call button. “Uh, hello? Do you read me? Is anyone there?”
The communicator was silent for a few moments, and then the crackling sound was heard followed by a fuzzy female voice. “Yes. Hello. I read you. Who is this?”
Sarah frowned, unsure of how to answer. “Who is this?”
“My name is Marcelle. I work for ground control on the planet Kinichi.”
“Kinichi?” Sarah recalled hearing the name said in the kitchen yesterday afternoon. That must be where we are stopping next to refuel. “The big orange planet?”
“Yes. That is the one. My receiver here is showing that your signal is coming from the Slipsteam approaching at a steady 200c, is that correct?”
“Yeah, we are on that ship.”
“Are you calling to report an approximate landing time and request a dock?”
“Uh, no. Actually…” Sarah looked up from the radio and took her finger off the call button. “You guys, what should I say?”
“You could tell her you’re being held prisoner,” Wex suggested.
“Oh! Mention me, too!” Nickle added.
“I don’t see what she is going to be able to do about it.” Sarah took a moment to think.