“We made a promise and we intend to fulfill it.” Now V’terre smiled and calm washed over him. Gil was sure she was exerting the famous Mellurean mental powers to influence him but right now he didn’t care. The relief from his bleak depression was welcome. He needed to be in the right headspace when he returned to the ship and spoke to Maeve again—what he’d shared with her today was special and she didn’t need him tarnishing her joy with doubts.
V’terre leaned closer. “I give you my word the feat will be accomplished before you’re too old to enjoy the victory.”
He had to be satisfied with her declaration because in the next breath the Mellurean Mind winked out of existence. With another curse he left the suite and called his pilot. Time to get back to theNebula Zephyrand his crew and passengers and stop living in a dream world. Commanding an interstellar cruiser, even a civilian one, required him to be at his best, not wallowing in possibilities and dreams.
V’terre’s reassurances were all well and good and to his knowledge the Mellureans had never failed to deliver on any promise made to humans, but he had to live in the real world, in the here and now, and make the situation work for himself and for Maeve.
CHAPTER TWO
In the present time…
Gil Fleming was doing an inspection tour of theNebula Zephyr, stem to stern, all decks. He was accompanied by the Second Officer and a yeoman, who took prodigious notes on everything the captain said needed to be done. Overall he was quite satisfied. He ran a tight ship and his officers, selected for the most part by him, were top notch. Their departments, from the kitchen under Chef Stephanie to the cargo hold under Owen Embersson were efficient, with high crew morale and satisfactory adherence to CLC Line’s rules and the general regulations imposed by the Sectors Interstellar Commerce Commission.
The tour ended with the engines, on the lowest level of the ship. Chief Engineer Takkei ran a tight operation, with constant training going on. He and his officers managed the sometimes cranky engines perfectly, squeezing whatever speed and power out of the four modules the captain needed at any given time. Takkei was a Space Navy veteran with an outstanding record so Gil would have expected nothing less. After complimentingthe Chief on his department, Gil dismissed his retinue and proceeded to Level 10 on the gravlift by himself.
No one was allowed to access Level 10, aside from the captain. On extremely rare occasions Maeve had invited a few of his crew to meet here, when there was a dangerous mission being planned. For being a luxury cruise liner they’d certainly had their share of excitement and problems. Precisely why Gil maintained a Security group of former Special Forces operators on board. He believed in being prepared for anything which might threaten his ship or his passengers.
Walking through the empty corridor which led to the heart of Level 10, Gil steeled himself for the conversation to come. When he arrived at the room where Maeve allowed guests he walked to the center and faced the far wall. The huge black box in which her cortex was housed lay behind the bulkhead. Gil hadn’t seen it—her—since the day the Mellureans escorted the unit aboard the ship before she was commissioned and took her first trip into interstellar space.
He saw no point in dissembling. “I’m leaving tonight.”
Her voice was pleading. “Take me with you.”
“We’ve been through this,” he said wearily, although he’d known she’d argue. This discussion was the last in a long series of heated conversations about his plans. “It’s not possible.”
“You can’t go without backup. You need me.” Now she was defiant.
“It’s not the same as taking the oldGalateainto enemy territory in response to a distress call when you and I were the only sentients aboard,” Gil said. “I can’t take this ship with over 8000 souls and millions of tons of valuable cargo off into the hinterlands on my personal mission. Be reasonable. And besides what I need to do can only be done by one man, alone. We’ve been over this ad nauseum. I’m grateful for the bits of intel you were able to pull for me off the interstellar dark weband your old contacts in the military. The assistance was critical. At least now I have a specific place to start my search.”
Maeve was silent.
Gil had no desire to string this leave taking out.
“Wish me luck? I won’t be gone any longer than I have to be and I’m relying on you to keep things shipshape here on theNebula Zephyr. My Executive Officer is a good man?—”
“At passenger relations,” she said stubbornly.
“And Third Officer Aureli will move up temporarily to become the XO while I’m gone. I know you share my confidence inhimand his abilities. It’ll be all right, Maeve.”
“Nothing will be all right without you here,” she said. “I need you.”
Anger washed through Gil, caught between a rock and a hard place. “Right now my brother needs me more. You know what he means to me. I wasn’t able to do anything for my daughter all those years ago—I won’t leave my only living relative in the wind to die. My family has to come first.” He decided he was done talking and he pivoted on his heel and headed for the exit. She was never going to see reason on this decision of his and while he understood her point of view was rooted in her loving concern for him, he knew what he was doing was the only choice he could make.
Maeve remained silent until he was on his last few steps before entering the gravlft. “Be careful,” she said. “Good luck and hurry back to me.”
“I won’t be able to send any updates,” Gil reminded her. “I’m going to be deeply undercover. So don’t worry about me—I know what I’m doing.”
As he rose in the antigrav stream he heard a repressed sob and a whispered “I love you” through the subaural com but Gil bit his lip and said nothing. He wouldn’t change his mind and prolonging the moment wouldn’t help. He’d still leave. Hetrusted Maeve not to do anything to interfere with his departure in a few hours. She’d keep her ship safe and running properly in his absence.
CHAPTER THREE
Six months later…Nebula Zephyr Level 13…
“There’s someone here to see you. Says she knows you.”
Jake Dilon, ex Special Forces operator and current head of theNebula Zephyr’sSecurity Office, looked up in annoyance and frowned at his second in command, Red, currently lounging against the door to his office. “Does this person have a name? A passenger, I assume?” It was going to be awkward if this was someone he’d dated on a past voyage before he was married. His wife, the ship’s doctor, was aware he’d been something of a hard living playboy before they got together. She also knew she was the only woman for him now, for the rest of their lives but Jake didn’t want any issues with an infatuated past partner.
“I honestly don’t know.” Red scratched his head. “She seems familiar but I have no idea who she is.” He raised his hands as if to fend off Jake’s immediate disapproval. “I think you’d better see her—she’s intense.”