Endurance (19 page)

Read Endurance Online

Authors: Richard Chizmar

BOOK: Endurance
6.45Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

GothVar’s repulsive presence seemed to fade away.

No, Cherijo. You can breathe. Breathe
.

My pulse roared out of control. Icy sweat glazed over my face. That voice behind my wide eyes was wrong, I
couldn’t
breathe. Couldn’t unlock the paralyzed muscles. I was going to die here, like this, frozen, trapped, helpless.

Cherijo, breathe
.

I couldn’t comprehend what was happening. I wasn’t having a seizure. Nothing was strangling me. The beast wasn’t touching me. There
was nothing there

Lack of oxygen made the room transform into a shifting, vague blur. Eventually it left me, all of it, the room, the thresher, the pain. Trapped inside my own body, listening to the sound of my heart as it slowed, beat by beat, I didn’t care anymore, not knowing …

Cherijo!

Someone pried my mouth open and filled it with something hard and round. Delicious, sweet oxygen pumped into my lungs. I drew it in eagerly, then shuddered at the resulting rawness as it left me on a ragged exhalation.

Breathe
.

The voice in my head forced another breath into my lungs. I wasn’t sure I wanted to do that. The other way was easy, I wouldn’t have to deal with the Hsktskt or the arm he’d hacked off my body by now. I wouldn’t have to be a slave.

Breathe for me
.

Another rush of oxygen poured down my throat. It reconnected me with more than I wanted—the horrible pain of my arm, the wrenched, contorted muscles of my body, and the force that held me between two solid struts … not struts … arms.

Human arms.

Reever?

Old memories flashed in brief, swift sequence.

Ana Hansen, smiling.
Cherijo Grey Veil, this is Duncan Reever, our chief linguist
.

Jenner, winding in and out of Reever’s ankles.
That’s why they’re called pet, Reever. You pet them
.

Hands that carried the scars of a terrified child.
I think of the ritual often now
.

A birthday present I’d received while serving on the
Sunlace. It’s to keep my hair tidy
.

A list of dead and wounded, one that didn’t have Reever’s name on it.
What have you done to yourself?

My own face, for once open and alive with yearning.
We belong together. I can feel it, when I touch you, when I look at you. When I hear your voice
.

Reever, the first time I’d seen him. Sitting alone, dressed in black, looking at me. The cold, handsome face that never changed. The eyes that never stayed the same.

Touch me, Cherijo
. Someone pressed my hands against warm, smooth skin.
Look at me
. I opened my eyes, saw his face.
Listen to my voice
.

Gently he removed the tube from my mouth. “Breathe, beloved.”

My petrified lungs slowly expanded, dragging in a shallow breath that rasped over the swollen tissues of my throat. As I released the burning gulp of air, I knew I would live.

The problem now was wanting to.

C
HAPTER
E
IGHT

Catopsa

A few days after GothVar’s attempt to part me from my right forearm (which failed), the L.T.F.
Perpetua
arrived at Catopsa.

The OverCenturon, according to Reever, had been reprimanded about his actions in the launch bay. Apparently he wasn’t subject to discipline for branding me with the PIC, as that was standard Faction regulation.

Pity. I would have liked to watch him get chopped to pieces.

Reever had ordered me to remain in his quarters, but I ignored that. Work kept me busy. I made daily rounds in Medical and the Detainment Area. FurreVa and her infants were kept in an isolation chamber, and I performed a somewhat delayed postpartum. She would need more skin work, and two of the infants suffered from continued respiratory distress, which I treated.

“You would have me thank you for this,” the OverSeer said as she gazed over at the reinforced incubators housing her vicious offspring.

“Not really.” A ghost of my former humor emerged briefly. “After all, you’re going to have to raise the little monsters.”

I dealt with the rest of the caseload without much problem. Someone had assigned a pair of centurons to shadow me, and they kept the League prisoners from getting out of hand. Much was muttered about that as I made my rounds, by both patients and League staffers. None of it good.

I didn’t care. I could do my job without much conversation. When someone stepped over the line, TssVar’s guards made the appropriate threatening gestures. FlatHead never showed his ugly face in Medical. Reever left me alone.

As long as that remained the status quo, I’d be fine.

Why I suddenly had guards didn’t concern me. Thoughts of what GothVar had done hovered on the fringe of my mind, but I didn’t dwell on it. I functioned quite well in a safe, comfortable haze, and I had absolutely no intentions of leaving it.

I liked the status quo.

Shropana’s former ship went into orbit above Catopsa just before I came off my shift, or so Reever informed me when I walked into his quarters.

“That’s nice.” I went to the cleanser and stripped. The soft support brace on my forearm was waterproof, so I didn’t have to remove that. Judging from the slight problem I was having with lateral mobility, I’d have to deal with it later. For now, I was content to let it heal on its own.

Reever’s voice drifted in over the hiss of the sprayers. “We will be transporting everyone to the surface.”

I frowned, vaguely annoyed. Couldn’t I take a shower in peace? “That’s nice.”

The hot jets felt good against my skin, and I stood under the port for a long time before I attended to the business of deconning. When I got out, I dried off and noticed absently that I’d lost more weight. Weight I could put back on, of course. After I got around to fixing my arm. It didn’t matter.

Nothing
really
mattered.

Reever waited until I was dry, then handed me a fresh set of garments. He always seemed to be doing helpful little things like that lately. When he wasn’t bugging me.

“Cherijo, we have arrived at Catopsa and are scheduled to jaunt to the compound within the hour.”

“I heard you.”

I pulled on my clothes, went to the prep unit, and absently prepared Jenner’s evening meal. He ignored it and started weaving around my ankles, rubbing his head against me. I gently pushed him toward the dish, then drifted over to my vanity unit.

Should cut my hair, I thought, surveying the excessive, damp length. It tangled like crazy, and was such a chore to brush out and braid every day. Where had I put my trimmer?

I searched through my storage unit until I found it, then sat down and carefully applied the comb to the mess. This was going to take awhile; there were knots upon knots.

Reever took the comb and trimmer out of my hands and set them aside. “I want to talk to you.”

He wanted to start an argument. So I’d do the trim job another time. I got up and cruised past him toward the prep unit. I wasn’t hungry, but a server of tea might be nice.

Hard hands spun me around and shook me. “Cherijo!”

I eased out from under his grip. Maybe I should try being more direct and polite. “Please don’t do that.”

He didn’t let up. “What did the OverCenturon do to you before I arrived at the launch bay?”

The launch bay. No, I didn’t want to think about what had happened there. I backed up a wary step.

“Cherijo?” Reever came at me again. “
Answer me
.”

“Nothing.” Nothing I wanted to remember. The throbbing in my arm got worse. So did the tightness in my chest. Why did he insist on continuously
yelling
at me?

“You’re lying. Tell me.”

Something trickled into my veins, something hot and fast. I resisted the pull of the unreasonable anger. I wanted to go back into my fuzzy, safe lethargy, and he wasn’t letting me. “Leave me alone.”

Instead of turning me loose, he dragged me over to the viewport. “Look.”

Below the
Perpetua
, there was an immense, sparkling white sphere. At first I thought it was a dwarf star, then realized we couldn’t be this close to one and remain unimpaired. A satellite? I glanced from side to side, but spotted no mother planet. No icy plume trailed from it, so it wasn’t a comet. An asteroid then.

Just another hunk of space rock. “Okay. I see it.”

“That is Catopsa.”

Correction. Just another slave-depot.

“We leave on the first launch to the surface in one hour.”

Jenner came between us and started meowing plaintively, rubbing against Reever’s shins. My cat had lousy taste in men. Just like me. I lost interest in the view. “Then I’d better pack.”

Reever said some other things, but I didn’t listen. I floated away from the viewport and concentrated on deciding what to pack for a lifetime of enslavement.

The Hsktskt loaded as many of us as they could fit into a launch, then sent it down to Catopsa. Reever went with my group, and I spent several minutes squashed between him and Jenner’s carrier. My cat swatted at the grid with his paws until I stuck my fingers through it and absently stroked what fur I could reach.

“Almost there, pal,” I said.

The asteroid appeared perfectly round, like a planetary body, but wasn’t really white. As the launch drew closer, I saw towering faceted structures paved the surface, and refracted light like prisms in every direction.

I squinted as the increasing brightness hurt my eyes and pierced the nimbus of indifference I’d wrapped myself in. “They built this prison?”

“No. The asteroid was discovered fully formed by the Faction centuries ago.”

Untouched by scaly limbs. “Why’d they pick this ball of plas for their little enterprise?”

“Catopsa is not made of plas. It is well within Faction territory, and convenient to the bond merchant routes.”

Location is everything, even in the slave trade. “If it’s not plas, what is it?”

“A mineral similar to silicon dioxide, but one hundred times as hard and possessing an equally higher specific gravity.”

We were close enough now for me to see tiny figures moving inside the clear pillars. “They hollowed it out?”

“No. The mineral develops natural recesses in its growth clusters.”

“Okay.” I didn’t want to get a lecture on quasi-quartz mineralogy. I noticed no star in the immediate vicinity. “All that light it reflects, where is it coming from?”

“The Hsktskt believe it is generated from phosphorescent material near the core of the planet. The nature of the mineral mantle prevents any confirmation.”

As the launch prepared to land, I saw an enormous array of artificial environment generators, which answered my only other question. Catopsa was the quintessential prison—cold and transparent, with glassy walls no one dared shatter, even if they could find a way to do it.

The Hsktskt once more displayed their efficiency as the League prisoners, now wearing prisoner uniform tunics in a disgusting shade of sickly yellow, disembarked from the launch into a portable passage, where the centurons distributed shaded eye protectors and swiftly scanned PICs using a portable database unit. Prisoners were then arranged in a line and shackled together by lengths of plasteel cable fastened to their slave collars.

Reever and I were the last to leave, which gave me time to process what I was seeing. I slid the shades over my eyes at once, suspecting overexposure to the asteroid’s natural light source would cause considerable damage.

I studied the interior, mostly so I wouldn’t have to look at all the League prisoners being marched in, chained like animals.

The passage ended inside an enormous chamber created by a dozen massive pillars that had grown together at different angles. More Hsktskt stood waiting, these dressed in heavier insulating uniforms. Even with the
evident atmospheric enhancements, Catopsan air felt cool, barely comfortable for a Terran.

The lizards didn’t bother with a prisoner indoctrination; they simply surrounded the League arrivals and began separating them into new, smaller groups to be re-chained together. Males, females, hermaphrodites, and various other genders were segregated and marched off in different directions to passages leading away from the tower.

No one who came off the launch went quietly.

“Well?” I could avoid the sights, but the sounds of weeping and despair that echoed through the icy corridors were harder to ignore. “Do you show me to my cell? Or—” I saw a blob of something ooze past my left foot and jumped away from it. “
What
is
that
?”

Reever prodded the moving, dun-colored puddle with his foot, and it instantly changed direction and moved away from us. “Lok-Teel fungus. They are indigenous to Catopsa.”

“Moving mold.” I made a disgusting sound when I spotted more of them moving along the sloping faces of the chamber. “Can this place possibly get any more offensive?”

“Centuron.” Reever took Jenner’s carrier from my hand, and gestured to one of the Hsktskt standing nearby. “Accompany the Doctor on an inspection of the facility, then report to me.”

Other books

Paper Airplanes by Monica Alexander
Colonization (Alien Invasion Book 3) by Truant, Johnny B., Platt, Sean, Realm, Sands
Immortal Dreams by Chrissy Peebles
Classic by Cecily von Ziegesar
Ghosts along the Texas Coast by Docia Schultz Williams
If Books Could Kill by Carlisle, Kate
Chicken Soup for the Teenage Soul II by Jack Canfield, Mark Victor Hansen, Kimberly Kirberger