For your patience, Frank...since you were apparently alone in holding down the fort for a while, there...
Chapter Three
“You call your communications officer by her first name all the time?”
Captain Sharp blinked as he glanced back at his silent comm officer and her guard. The two of them were moving with the crowd, conversing only a little as they worked.
“She’s Vulcan.”
Doctor Garvin giggled and leaned in on Jon’s arm as she led him.
“Oh, she’ll get a great response if those ears come out.”
“We were hoping they wouldn’t.”
“There won’t be a problem, if that’s what you’re worried about, but they’ll be curious. She’ll probably get a marriage proposal.”
“Just what the Lieutenant needs.”
“Oh, is that a joke from the stern captain?”
“Stern?”
Samantha smiled coyly at him.
“Well, you strike me as the type that has to be serious all the time. You wiped that grin off your face almost as fast as I put it there, earlier.”
“That was in front of my officers.”
“So they’re not permitted to see you smile?”
The captain halted and gave her a disparaging look. It only made her beam wider. Her cheeks glowed.
“I’m aggravating you!”
“Yes you are.”
“I’m sorry.”
“No you’re not.”
Sam shrugged and continued them on their way closer to the spit.
“No, I’m really not.”
“So, Ura and your husband were friends?”
Samantha’s eyes dropped to the ground. Her grin faded, but only a little. Jon wondered if he should have brought up her late husband, but he wanted to know more about their past here. His instincts said there was something important there.
They also told him that something important was going to happen on this planet. Soon.
“Yes, they were fast friends. At first, we were accepted only as strangers. Tolerated. We’d brought raw copper and tin to trade and that got us by among them to begin with. Then Rob started working with the smithy that lives near the mountain base, thirty kilometers northeast. That’s where Ura met him. He liked Rob’s style of making swords. He employed my husband to craft weapons for his small army.”
“Sounds mighty close to—“
“Influencing? Yeah…Rob thought so too. But you can argue that someone was going to build them swords and spearheads. And the opportunity was too good to pass up. With Ura’s acceptance and friendship, we had a lot more access to the real goings-on of native life on the socio-political level. And Ura, obviously, was the man in the area to watch. They were together so much that Rob learned to speak the local dialect without the UT.”
The two of them arrived at the cooking area. Samantha inclined her head to one of the servers, who cut them each a slice of juicy flank meat. The man stabbed a stick through the meat and handed it over with zeal. Sam thanked him in Varan and they stepped past.
Sharp smelt the meat before taking an experimental bite. It was sweet, totally without the taste of salt in it.
“Good, huh?”
He nodded.
“So, Sam. You mentioned he died. You never mentioned how.”
She kept smiling as she looked up into the darkness above them. Little could be seen of the stars for the firelight about them, save a twinkle here and there.
“He went to Ura’s most productive mine to try and identify a new ore they discovered. It was unknown to the Var, but Ura knew Rob would likely know what it was. By then, Rob wasn’t very worried about influencing the natives. If there was something there they could use, he didn’t see a problem with it. Turns out, it was silver…” She absently touched a small medallion hanging from a thong around her neck.
“Something happened?”
“The mine collapsed. Rob and three others were killed.”
“I’m sorry.”
Sam shrugged.
“It was five years ago, Captain. And a lot has happened here since then. I’ve seen a lot of social development and even a war since then.”
“You’ve had no trouble in the time since?”
“No. Ura saw himself as responsible for my troubles, since it was his mine and his friend. He made me something of a ward. Where my house sits, the property belongs to me as long as I live here. The captain of his guard lives within sight of me. My needs are cared for.”
“And no…marriage proposals?” Sharp was grinning again.
Samantha finished the meat on her skewer and tossed it into a fire pit. She grabbed up his arm again and leaned in once more. Jon could feel the warmth of her through his field jacket, which made him realize how cold it was growing in the night air.
“Nope. I’m seen as untouchable, since my husband died of accident. I’m damaged goods, Captain!”
Sharp shook his head, marveling at her mirth. She was certainly at home among these people, and wasn’t wallowing in sorrow, certainly. As she’s said, a lot had happened in all that time.
“So, the bulk of the work you’ve done was on your own?” He asked her.
“I’d say about half of it. We did a lot in those two years. We were always so busy. One day, I just passed out while we were travelling between villages… Turns out, I’d forgotten to sleep for two days!”
Sharp laughed out loud.
“My captain laughs?!” Garvin cried out in mock amazement. They had wandered to the far edge of the village now, and could make out more of the stars and the rolling hills beyond the firelight.
“I don’t have any problem laughing, Doc—“
She stepped back from him, hands still entwined with his right, and looked at him severely once more.
“—Sam.”
Sam smiled and tucked herself in close once again. She breathed in deeply, and the captain noticed that he could feel her breasts pressing against his arm. The soft sensation brought a rise to his blood. He wondered if the happenstance were an innocent one.
“How long have you decided to stay, Captain?” She asked him then.
“Why don’t you call me Jon?”
“Jon?” She glanced up at him wide eyes twinkling in reflected torchlight. He nodded.
“Jon Sharp… Okay. I think I will.”
She hugged his arm again, this time convincing him that the contact wasn’t incidental. Her soft flesh moved up and down far too convincingly and her little sigh made him want to pull her tighter to him.
He’d just met her, literally only an hour or so ago, but this woman’s sensual abandon and at times ridiculous mannerisms were alluring to him. He had to be rigid and by-the-book at all times, much as she’d mentioned earlier. She cut against that grain, and being beside her felt good. He wondered at her interest in him, but she’d essentially explained that already. She’d been alone here, apparently without such close companionship, for five years. To those around her, possibly even Ura, she was ‘damaged goods’.
Samantha played her hands about in his larger one, still moving her bosom about luxuriantly against him. They were enticingly alone. Her cheek came to rest just beneath his shoulder. She was almost two heads shorter than he. Her breath soaked through the fabric of his jacket.
Sharp looked down, locking eyes with her. Hers had come searching for his at just the right time. He eased down, face coming closer to hers. He saw acceptance there. Her eyes gently closed, lips pursing just a bit. She trembled against his arm.
“Sehr to Captain!”
“What?!”
Samantha was blinking in shock. The captain felt like cursing. What had he been thinking anyway? He snatched out his communicator.
“My gunnery officer,” he explained. “I left him in command.”
Sam calmed, separating from him to let him do what was needed. She still looked somewhat indignant. He flipped open the device.
“Go ahead, Mister Sehr.”
“Captain, spaceborne contact on long range sensors. Headed this way at high warp.”
“Identification?”
“Negative as yet. We’re running it.”
“Understood, Mister Sehr. Stand by to beam me aboard.” Sharp closed down his communicator and turned to the doctor. “I’m sorry, we’re going to have to postpone for a bit.”
“As long as it’s only a rain check, Captain.” She toyed with him, hands finding his again. She sensed the tension that was in him now. “What’s going to happen?”
“I’ll go up there to evaluate the situation. A ship running at high warp isn’t completely unheard of. For all we know, they’re clearing the cobwebs out of their drive. Or our definition of high warp may only be their cruising speed.”
“Oh.”
“I’m assuming beaming out of the middle of town would be unwise?”
Sam looked back into the town.
“Well, they’ve seen it happen before, but I think that under the circumstances, beaming out in the middle of their gathering would be seen as rude.”
“Alright, then. I need you to do me a favor.”
She looked back at him with mischief.
“I was just about to.”
Jon laughed. If only Sehr’s call had been an hour later…
“I need you to gather my people and get them to a good beam out site. I don’t know if I’ll need them, but I would rather not cause your efforts here any problems.”
“Thanks. I’ll go get them.”
She lingered just a bit, half-turning away to start toward the village. He winked at her as he flipped open the comm again.
“Bring me up, Mister Sehr.”
The captain trotted from the transporter room to the bridge turbolift. He resumed a normal walk as he exited the elevator and made for the science station. His blue-skinned gunnery officer was waiting on him.
“Contact still in-coming, moving at warp seven.”
“No ID?”
Sehr looked down at the quickly rotating field patterns on the science monitors. The technician manning Andreavich’s post was still trying to match the pattern.
“Not yet.”
“Is it bearing straight for us?”
“It’s aligned for orbital approach with Akurra, sir.”
“Have you hailed them?”
“Ignored.”
Sharp didn’t like that. He hadn’t mentioned his concern for the contact’s apparent course to Samantha. He hadn’t wanted to worry her unnecessarily. The fact that they were ignoring communications could turn out to be an additional precursor to trouble.
Jonathan looked more closely at the waveforms on the main science monitor. The readings struck a nerve. He leaned in and brought up an older identification file from the computer. It found a match almost immediately.
“Klingon!” The science tech exclaimed.
“D-5 Class cruiser.” Sharp added. “IKS Durok.”
“You know the ship?” Asked the gunnery officer.
“And its captain.”
The Andorian nodded, said nothing further. He looked down at the sensor readings and began to regard them from a tactical standpoint. Sharp was doing the same.
“The D-5 isn’t one of the two ships listed in our sector brief.” The science tech said then.
“No. I think its captain takes his orders straight from the Klingon counsel. He’s harder to track that way.”
Sehr looked up to Sharp then, likely wondering how his CO knew such information. He figured the gunnery officer would be reading up on the Durok at his earliest opportunity.
Sharp inclined his head to the science tech.
“Technician, monitor our landing party. They should be making their way to a secluded area for beam out soon. Watch for it.”
“Aye, sir.”
Commander Jeremy couldn’t help but watch was the science officer bent over to scan the lowest few lines of inscriptions on the law stone. Unlike Lieutenant Lania, Andreavich had elected to remain in her uniform dress. On the bridge, she was always fighting to keep that tiny skirt beneath the curve of her splendid buttocks. Right now, such a battle was a losing proposition.
Ursula’s hose added a seductive measure to her appearance, offsetting the unstrapped field jacket that was draped about her shoulders. Daniel couldn’t help but watch her. And he wasn’t the only one.
Several of the natives had noticed her. One in particular was keeping a close eye on her every move. Jeremy took a moment to send him a serious glare.
“Enjoying the view, Commander?”
“What?”
“Were you enjoying the view, Commander?”
The XO looked back to Andreavich in time to see her straighten and give that naughty skirt a trademark tug. Those silky bits of lace slid out of view once again. He looked away suddenly.
“No!”
Ursula smirked and sauntered close to him.
“I’m offended.”
Daniel looked back, about to demand some sort of explanation, and half tempted to ask if she wanted him to look. She was already changing the subject.
“I’ve completed the study of the pictographs. The symbols represent ideas more than regular words. It’s a relatively simple language system, but it’d probably take a lot of practice to learn it.”
“Doctor Garvin said she could understand it.”
“She’s lived here a while, and speaks the verbal form. I imagine there are similarities in structure.”
“Man’anya’ma.”
Daniel turned to see that the villager he’d tried to dissuade had gathered up the daring to walk over and tap his science officer on the shoulder. The greasy looking little man was smiling beneath his thin mustaches, his spiked eyebrows bobbing in Machiavellian comedy. His teeth were stained brown, and his breath smelled like the south end of a northbound mule.
Ursula gaped and turned to face the man, who quite blatantly ran his hand over the firm contour of her ass. She jumped in surprise, lips half curled into a smirk at his audacity. He put his hand firmly atop her breasts.
Jeremy found himself pulling her back by the arm, rather roughly.
“Watch it there, hillbilly!”
“Can’manna a’wei? Pan’a man!”
Daniel stepped in between the two, causing Andreavich to stumble back into a low stool she hadn’t noticed near the law stone. The little villager chuckled to himself and attempted to push past the commander to get to her. Her reached out for her once more.
“I don’t think so, bud!”
Jeremy smacked the offensive hand away even as Ursula was recoiling from it, off-balance. The native snarled something unpleasant and swung back on the human. His fist came up and caught Jeremy on the jaw. The force of the blow was only enough to knock the commander back. It didn’t even cause pain.
It served quite well to make Jeremy angry, though.
With a simple shove and a sweep of his boot, the exec sent the man tumbling to the dusty ground. This by-play brought on the attention of the near crowd. The murmur of a happy gathering came to an abrupt end.
The little man was up on his feet in a second, charging. He shouted shrilly. Two much larger men separated themselves from the throng and approached the two combatants. Jeremy saw them and measured them up. His jeopardy had just increased. Andreavich came up in a defensive crouch beside him just as the first offender crashed into the commander.
The little man screamed aloud as he passed through the air, upside down, from the throw Jeremy employed. He’d aimed the villager toward his friends, but he just didn’t make it. But his companions were enticed to break into a charge of their own, their eyes glinting with malice.
Ursula burst forth toward the one coming from their right. She ducked low and spun into a spinning leg sweep that took the huge native off his feet. The second leapt over the crashing one and came hurtling down on Jeremy. There was no stopping the massive man. Two fists slammed down into the XO’s face as he toppled backward.
“Number One!” Daniel could hear Jackson’s concerned shout, but couldn’t tell where it had come from. As three tremendous punches came crashing down on him, he hoped the security chief was close by. The smell of alcohol was persistent from his opponent.
Jeremy shifted beneath his pinning adversary and pushed with his right leg. The alien nearly rolled from atop of him and moved to compensate. But Daniel had already capitalized and was forcing the brute further. He freed a hand to punch the native in his ear. The big man grabbed at the side of his head and fell away.
The exec looked to the side to see about Andreavich and found Jackson tackling her antagonist to the ground, smashing the little stool she’d tripped on a second earlier. The huge security man pummeled the oaf half-senseless and rose with an energetic leap to look about for further targets. Two men moved in to try and grab his arms, but were rebuffed by two right crosses that left them unconscious on the ground beside their friends.
Jeremy and Jackson stood their ground, legs planted firmly apart as they stared down any further attempts at combat. The XO could make out Headman Ura and a small party of swordsmen pushing their way through the crowd. He didn’t expect trouble from that quarter. In fact, he figured the leader would smack some sense into these idiots. His breathing began to slow.
“What the hell are you doing?!”
The piercing shout from Doctor Garvin made Jeremy look to the side. His heart plummeted, and he had no idea why. The sociologist was looking at him as though he’d committed murder in front of her.
“Just a tussle, Doctor.”
“Like hell, Commander! They don’t get involved in other men’s private fights unless honor has been insulted! What did you do?!”
Jeremy gawked, unable to believe he was somehow the offender.
“He came up and grabbed her ass and was trying to grope—“
“He put his hand on my breasts!” Andreavich added angrily.
Garvin halted, slapping a hand palm-down on her own chest.
“Like this?”
They blinked as one.
“Yes.”
Garvin scoffed. Her look told them this was no laughing matter.
“It was a marriage proposal.”
“What?!”
“Var men are permitted and expected to propose to any female he has a mind to. Any unattached woman is fair game.”
“And he can just come up and grab whatever he wants to?” Ursula turned on Garvin as though she were the offender now. The doctor stared a hole straight through her.
“Yes, science officer! It’s a male dominated society! You’re a woman. He can touch what he likes here. He was showing you what he liked, and the touch on your tits was the beginning of his proposal. A proposal that you only had to refuse.”
“How the hell was I supposed to know that?!”
Garvin looked at the ground before her, jaw working in frustration. Jeremy looked back and saw that the headman had emerged from the crowds and was entering the clearing about them. All but one of the combatants were now on their feet, including the little guy who started the entire mess. He went up to Ura and pointed Jeremy out.
“He’s telling Ura about your offense to his honor.” Samantha translated for them.
“Everything he did was pretty damn offensive, Doctor.” Jeremy put in.
“It’s their world, Commander.” She told him, still listening to the plaintive speech spewing forth from the gesticulating little man. “And I think we’ve just started a bunch of trouble.”
Chapter Four
Captain Sharp kept his eyes on the science monitor that showed the approach of the Klingon vessel outside the starsystem. The enemy had yet to slow or alter its approach. He noted the ETA listed beside the contact.
“Has Commander Jeremy’s party moved to a secluded area yet?”
“Negative, Captain.” The science technician replied. “In fact, there are even more people around his position than before.”
To cover his aggravation, Sharp whirled and took his place at the conn. “Communications, get me the first officer.”
“I have him, sir.”
“Commander Jeremy, what’s your status?”
“We’ve had a…bit of a problem down here, sir.”
“Then clear it up, Number One. We have a Klingon vessel inbound to our position. ETA two hours, present speed.”
“One of the ships from our mission brief?”
“Negative, Number One. It’s Rell.”
“Rell? Here?”
“That’s right, Commander. I need you back up here.”
“I’m all for it, Captain…” There was the note to Jeremy’s voice that said he was embarrassed to admit something to his captain. “But Doctor Garvin believes it would be…counterproductive to her research here if I were to beam up right now.”
‘If I were…’ Sharp’s eyes narrowed as he caught those words. “What did you do, Commander?”
Samantha’s far-away voice intruded from the comm signal.
“He butted into a marriage proposal, Jon. He didn’t know it, but it’s not allowed, even for the woman’s family.”
“Who was being proposed to?”
“Andreavich. The rite involves some touching that neither of them took too kindly. I’m sorry, Jon, I wasn’t here to tell them—“
“What happens now, Sam?” He asked her. He noticed Sehr’s antennae twitch when he used her familiar name, and he silently rebuked himself.
“The aggrieved is allowed the opportunity to declare challenge, Jon. For a duel.”
Captain Sharp was out of his seat and rounding the conn, aimed for the aft lift. “Close channel. Mister Sehr, you have the conn. Have the transporter room ready to beam me down there.”
Again, Captain Jon Sharp appeared on the surface of Akurra. This time, however, he deigned it necessary to transport down within full sight of the natives. He wanted them to see their technology in operation, to see the trio of flanking security men he’d brought with him. Let them really understand what it was they were dealing with.
When the glowing cascade of golden energy released him and his men, the captain stepped forth and strode confidently in amongst the collected inhabitants. He could see his team and Doctor Garvin in the center, standing before the headman and his own guards.
Jon halted before the headman and bowed, giving obeisance. The gesture was not lost on Ura, who returned it. Sharp looked to Samantha.
“Sam, will the UT work well enough that we can make do without a translator?”
She looked at him warningly.
“No. It really won’t Jon. It gets too many things wrong. For instance, they have only one word for man and woman. The physical gestures and force of its saying actually denotes which is which.”
Sharp grimaced slightly.
“I see. Ask what the headman intends to do.”
Sam seemed to already know the answer, but turned and asked the question anyway. Ura pointed to a small man beside him and then his dust covered XO. Sam’s face showed little encouragement when she looked back.
“Ura says he intends to allow the challenge.”
“What challenge, exactly?”
“For intruding on his manly right, the aggrieved is allowed to call out his offender. It can be as simple as a fist fight, or a fight to the death.”
“And which is the aggrieved asking for?”
“Blades, Jon. To the death.”
Sharp nailed the little man indicated with the most severe glare he could elicit. The tiny man blanched just a bit, a point not lost on his friends behind him. One of them jostled him and rebutted his fear. This steeled his nerve. It seemed the little one’s friends were pressuring him into this display.
”Ask Ura if this is part of their new laws.”
Samantha asked the question. The answer was long and detailed.
“Ura answers that it is not. Should such a matter arise under the Pillar’s Law, the complaining parties would have to appear before a counsel, which has yet to be established. Only then would any request for a formal duel be reviewed and accepted. However, he adds, the Law does not supercede the old customs till tomorrow at high noon. If fact, it is only because Jeremy is an off-worlder that the aggrieved is required to come to him to finalize the duel.”
“And Ura has the power to deny his citizen the duel?”
Sam asked.
“He says that he can, but only if one of the parties is needed in time of war, harvest or to ensure his family line.”
“Tell him that Commander Jeremy is needed to continue his family line.”
“Is he married, Jon?”
“No.”
“Then the claim isn’t valid. Any exclusion has to be proven before all.”
Jon made fists of his large hands.
“Is there anything that we can do?”
Sam relayed again.
“Ura says that the decision is ultimately in Caza’s hands. Caza is the aggrieved. At any time till the duel, he can end the duel or alter its details.”
Sharp stepped forth and closed in on the smaller human. Caza looked up at Sharp, eyes growing wider and wider as the gray and black clad captain halted. Jon took his time, measuring the man for all he was worth. Many bouts in the ring had told him both how to size up an opponent and how to show them they didn’t have a chance. He then looked back to Commander Jeremy.
“He doesn’t have a chance against Jeremy.”
Sharp made sure to shake his head as he spoke, letting body language break the barrier his speech could not. The little Akurran understood all too well. He turned and talked in quiet but excited tones with his companions. They responded with smiles and turned to a figure at their heels.
Captain Sharp uttered a tiny curse. The man behind them could have been a fraternal twin of Jackson’s. The guy was huge, a muscle bound monster on oak legs. But he moved with practiced grace and bore a matched set of short, curved blades on his belt. He bore scars of obvious sword injuries and had a long black ponytail. He looked back at Sharp with a calm, deathliness that said he’d killed before.
“Caza has declared his Champion, Jon.” Sam informed him, though her could have guessed on his own. Her voice had finality to its tone. “Mura, known as the Skull Render.”
This man, Sharp didn’t need to size up, and any attempt at intimidation would have been a waste of time. He glanced back at Jeremy. The executive officer stared back with evident anxiety. Both he and the captain knew that he would not be able to defeat this man.
“What sort of weapons are allowed?”
“Swords or other melee weapons. Bare fists if the aggrieved decides.”
Sharp looked back to the headman. Ura gave him a small, understanding smile. He knew fully that Sharp’s people were not a dueling society. But he had his own standards to uphold. And Jon was sure he’d done what he could to dissuade Caza.
“Alright. We need some time to talk. When is the duel?”
“Daybreak, Captain.” Samantha replied. “Jeremy is not allowed to leave the city.”
“Any aspect change from target, Mister Sehr?”
Lieutenant Sehr gave the tactical monitor before the conn an unnecessary glance. He knew only too well what the target ship was doing.
“Negative, Captain. D-5 remains on an inbound course, warp factor seven. ETA one hour, seventeen minutes.”
“Keep him under surveillance, Lieutenant. For now, I’ve got to stay down here and deal with Mister Jeremy’s issue. Bring me aboard when the Klingons begin to enter the starsystem.”
“Understood, Captain.”
“Till I’m aboard, handle the situation as you see best. Captain out.”
“Aye, sir. Endeavour out.”
Sehr cast an eye toward the science monitors to his right. The Klingon cruiser was still on its flight to charge right at Endeavour. It gave every appearance of coming right in at the Federation starship. Why was it being so blatant? And why engage a Starfleet command ship with such an antiquated vessel. Endeavour would walk all over them.
“Helm, put us in a high orbit around Akurra. Align the main long range array with the target.”
The oriental kid at the helm began punching buttons. The planet hanging ‘above’ them dropped aside and fell away a bit. When the ensign was done, only a thin sliver of the planet showed on the main viewer.
“New orbit established. Apogee now fifty thousand kilometers.”
“Maintain. Science, probe the Klingons with an intensive tactical scan. I want to know what their captain had for dinner.”
“Roger that, Lieutenant.”
Sehr contemplated the situation further. Information was already beginning to fill the science screens and filter over to the gunnery console. The Andorian dismounted the conn and perused the intel as it came in. The ship was a highly modified D-5 cruiser, with all the expected upgrades such an old ship required to maintain its usefulness. She had powerful, dual particle disruptors mounted on a turret on her belly and modern photon torpedoes. Nothing unexpected.
“Comm officer. Hail the Klingons, standard challenge frequency.”
“You’re on, sir.”
“Klingon vessel Durok, this is the USS Endeavour. Your high speed run toward this system is being regarded as an act of aggression. Should you enter the system, you will be fired upon, do you understand?”
The lieutenant expected no response to the signal, and got none. He just stood between the helm and navigations console, watching the numbers change on his tactical map. The numbers began to change wildly.
“He’s turning aside, Mister Sehr!” Said the science technician. “Coming left to 237 Galactic. Reducing speed now to warp four. He’s returning scan.”
“There’s no way he didn’t know we were here.” The helm ensign muttered in a Southern US accent.
“No.” Sehr agreed with him. He returned to the command chair and sat, pressing the comm controls. “Sehr to Captain.”
“Go ahead, Endeavour.”
“Captain, Klingon contact changed course after a warning hail. They are now circling slowly around the limits of the system. They’re scanning.”
“Understood, Mister Sehr. Will their new course bring them into the system?”
“Negative.”
“Good work. Keep an eye on him. Inform me if there’s a further change. And switch to scrambler frequency till further notice.”
“Aye, sir. Endeavour out.”
Captain Sharp snapped shut his communicator and returned his attention to the Starfleet officers sitting around in the hut they’d been given. It seemed the orbital situation was on the theoretical back burner for now.
“Can this Caza be bought off?”
Jeremy looked back to Doctor Garvin hopefully. He was battling between acting as though he were aloof from the issue and fear for its outcome. As a Starfleet officer, the commander was trained in hand-to-hand combat. But he was rarely called upon to use more than the most rudimentary disciplines of it, and was out of practice. If he were to fight for his life…
“I don’t know. And what would we have to give him that would both interest him and not influence society on this planet?” The doctor asked with an expansive shrug.
“Maybe a supply of raw metals from ship stores or matter fabricators.” Commander Andreavich offered.
“Giving him wealth isn’t likely to be accepted. It’ll look as though his honor can be bought off.”
Sharp resisted the urge to glare at Sam. She wasn’t trying to be counter-productive, no matter how many times she shot down their ideas. She knew these people all to well, and most dueling societies worked in lots of bothersome caveats to their honor systems to prevent just what they were attempting.
“It’s looking more and more like I’m going to have to fight that guy.” Jeremy remarked. “Am I going to have to stay down here and take him on?”
Sharp shot him a dark look.
“He’ll cut you to pieces, Number One.”
“But I—“
“No, I’ll beam you to the ship before I let you fight a battle to the death.”
“Then that’ll be the end of my research here!” Samantha nearly shouted. “These people respect me because I respect them. If people I invited among them show them just what we think of their ways, then I’m not going to be welcome. Even Ura won’t be able to let me roam about freely.”
“What about a Champion?”
Lieutenant Jackson stood then, unable to stand at full height in the confines of the hand-built hut. He hunkered there before them, looking questioningly at his captain. “I can take that primate. No problem.”
“I’m not having you fight my battles, Lieutenant.” Jeremy retorted. His pride was being stepped on.
“You will if I allow it, Number One.” The captain rebuked. “But the danger isn’t much improved. You’ve never fought with bronze swords, Mister Jackson.”
“I’ll disarm him, then. Turn it into a fistfight. He won’t stand a chance.”
“I’ll consider it an option, Lieutenant.”
Samantha touched the captain’s leg. She sat very near to him in the dim firelight of the hut. He liked her touch, but felt conscious of it in front of his officers. He didn’t correct her, though.
“We should still talk to Caza, though. If we can’t convince him to end the challenge, then maybe we can get him to alter the stipulations.”
“He says no. This is the first challenge he has ever had to his honor, and he intends to deal with it in his people’s way.”
Sharp glowered at Doctor Garvin’s translation, his eyes directed at the tiny little Varan before him. The diminutive man was still flanked by his companions. He showed lots of backbone with their support.
If only he could separate the little guy from his friends…
“Ask him if honor allows for him to be magnanimous. To forgive those lesser than him. Surely he saves face even if he declares a non-lethal duel.”
Samantha transferred the question. Caza shook his head.
“He’s adamant, Jon. He’s got something to prove.”
“Even if someone else is doing the fighting?”
“Their system of champions has been established for generations. They see it as an honor to fight and risk death for their masters.”
“Masters?”
“Caza is the owner of a large herd of ke’inn. They’re like horses, but with horns. These men are both his friends and his employees.”
“I see.”
“And they just like to fight, Captain. For all the advancements they’ve brought about, they’re still a martial society. They see—“
“I understand martial societies, Doctor…” The captain didn’t correct the use of her title. She’d, after all, just called him captain. He stepped to the side of the smiling group of ruffians that flanked the littler man. “Tell them that Commander Jeremy has selected his own champion.”
Samantha’s face set into a stern, lecturing mask and she relayed the message. Caza blinked. The man he’d selected as his champion smiled and nodded. He burbled guttural tones though uneven teeth.
“Mura says good. He wants a real fight.”
Mura stepped out from behind his master and put a hand forth in a barring gesture. Sharp didn’t budge, and the hand ended up on his chest. Mura didn’t push, but he didn’t remove the hand either. He began to speak in warning tones.
“Mura says that there has been enough talk. He says that we infringe on Caza’s honor and disgrace ourselves by…by whining about the result when Jeremy was clearly in the wrong.”
Sharp stared hard at Mura before turning away from Caza’s broad stone and wood house. “Tell him to get his affairs in order, then.”