“Sh’ree did say she was coming tonight, didn’t she?”
Edrilli shrugged, “I haven’t spoken to her this afternoon. But,
the last I checked, she didn’t say she wasn’t.”
The Tellarite woman tutted in reply. “We can leave it a bit
longer, I guess,” said Lugmilla, “I’ll call her if she’s not here soon,
though.”
It was unlike Sh’ree not to leave any kind of message, thought
Edrilli, so most likely she had just been delayed somewhere along the route.
The Bolian shuffled the deck absently, having nothing better to do as they
waited. The four of them met up every now and then for a game, taking turns
between entertainments native to each of their worlds – one of the advantages
of such a multi-racial starship as the Endeavour.
Tonight was the turn of an Earth game, in honour of the
human member of the group. This time, Sumati had picked poker, a game she had
apparently come across at the Academy, since it wasn’t native to her part of
the planet. Ironically, it was Sh’ree who was the best of the four women at
playing the game, although sometimes the Andorian’s betting became too aggressive, giving one of
the others a chance to wipe her out.
At last the door swished open. “About time,” said Lugmilla,
grumpily, “I was about to…”
The she trailed off, as she registered what the other two
women had already seen: it wasn’t Sh’ree.
“I apologise if I was not sufficiently prompt in my arrival,”
said the newcomer, calmly.
The Tellarite crossed her arms, and frowned, adopting the
pugnacious stance that everyone who was familiar with her race grew to expect
at the slightest provocation. Edrilli shrank back a little in her seat; this
wasn’t likely to end well.
“What are you doing here, Varok?” said Lugmilla, frowning.
The Vulcan looked back at her impassively, entirely unfazed
by her apparent hostility. “I understand that you had an assignation with
Lieutenant Sh’ree,” he said, “which she has had to cancel due to an unforeseen
development in an ongoing xeno-acarological
research project.”
Lugmilla looked across at Edrilli in puzzlement. The Bolian
was the only other scientist among the group.
“Ticks,” offered Edrilli, “she’s studying alien ticks.”
“Why?”
It was Varok who answered, “Lieutenant Sh’ree is a
zoologist.”
“Thank you for that insight, Ensign Varok,” muttered the
Tellarite – Edrilli couldn’t help noticing how she had stressed the newcomer’s
junior rank, “I think you can interpret my question as having been a little
more specific.”
The sarcasm was evidently lost on the young Vulcan man, “I
am afraid that I am unable to offer further insight into her motivations or the
precise nature of her circumstances. They were, as I said, unforeseen in
nature.”
Lugmilla glanced across at Edrilli again, a questioning look
on her rounded face. The Bolian woman
shrugged. “Beats me. I haven’t been over to the biology labs recently.”
Apparently as satisfied with that as she was ever likely to
be, Lugmilla turned back to Varok. “And you are telling us this why? I mean,”
she added quickly, before he could come up with some overly literal response,
“why send you? She’s got a communicator.”
“Lieutenant Sh’ree did not wish to disrupt your intended
leisure activities for the evening. She asked me to take her place.”
Edrilli was about to object. This was supposed to be a
gathering of friends. She hardly knew Varok, and he was hardly likely to be
entertaining company. In fact, from the little she did know, he was fairly
stuck up even for a Vulcan. Not that any of his species were exactly a bundle
of laughs, but they didn’t all have to be quite so smug about their supposed
intellectual and cultural superiority.
The other two probably didn’t even know Varok as well as she
did. Indeed, Edrilli had been a little impressed when Lugmilla had actually
remembered his name. But it seemed they were just as uneasy about this
arrangement as they were. And, if it came to it, it was at least possible to
play poker with only three players.
It was, unsurprisingly, Lugmilla who again chose to act as
the group’s spokesperson. “It’s a
women’s get-together,” she pointed out, heavy eyebrows frowning.
“She did make reference to that arrangement,” conceded the
Vulcan. “However, my research suggests that poker is not game in which the gender
of the participants is relevant.”
“Your research?” asked Edrilli, puzzled.
“Indeed. My team leader intimated that I might benefit from
a greater appreciation of and interaction with, the cultures of more emotional
species. To this end I formulated a plan whereby I would study the various
forms of ‘entertainment’,” he said the word with what might almost be called
disdain, “employed by such species. I believe that I understand the
mathematical formulae underlying the game of poker, and that I would therefore
make a superior player.”
The perfect poker face couldn’t hurt, either, thought
Edrilli, who wasn’t liking the sound of this.
“Therefore, when I learned that Lieutenant Sh’ree was unable
to attend this event, I nominated myself as a replacement. She appeared
somewhat engrossed in her work at the time, but she made a reply that I
interpreted in the affirmative. I am therefore ready to engage in
socialisation.”
Edrilli was unclear whether Varok was simply oblivious, or
was just pretending not to notice, but it was hard to imagine that anyone else
could have failed to interpret Lugmilla’s expression. Her eyes were narrowed,
and her lips pursed, one booted foot tapping the ground in irritation. And
there wasn’t an Ensign in Starfleet who wouldn’t end up regretting being on the
Tellarite’s wrong side.
Edrilli waited for the inevitable explosion, but suddenly
Lugmilla’s face brightened, and she leaned back in her chair, looking relaxed.
This, in the Bolian’s opinion, was likely even worse. She liked Lugmilla, who
was, for all the traits of her race, a good friend, and quite a fun person to
be around. More than once, she had bent the rules to help out a colleague. But
if she was looking relaxed when somebody had just annoyed her… she had thought
of a plan. And, whatever it was, Varok was unlikely to appreciate it.
“I’ll just have a quick word with the others,” the Tellarite
said, smiling in a way that ought to unnerve anyone who could actually read
emotions, “make sure we’re okay with it. Could you wait outside for a second…
Ensign?”
As soon as he was out of the door, Sumati turned on her.
“You can’t seriously be considering this? He’s hardly going to be the most
amusing company, not to mention the fact that he’ll probably beat us.”
And then Lugmilla explained.
“That’s… that’s a bit cruel, isn’t it?” asked Sumati when
she had finished.
“I like it,” said Edrilli. Varok had evidently thought he would
get the better of them. By the sounds of things, his last performance review
had identified the need to get on better with the other crew – and all he was
using it for was another attempt to demonstrate his superiority over them.
“Oh, I didn’t say I didn’t like it…” giggled the human
woman, apparently having the same
thought, “I just said it was a bit cruel.”
“Be good to see his reaction,” agreed the Bolian, grinning
despite herself, “or if he can hide it.”
“Besides,” said Lugmilla, “it’s not exactly unfair. He’s
still got as much chance of winning as any of us. It just evens up the odds.”
“I’m in, then,” agreed Sumati, “let’s go for it.”
A short while later, the four were sitting round the table,
and the Tellarite was dealing out the cards. Varok sat across from her,
apparently unaware that the eyes of the three women were on him, waiting to see
how he responded to the coming revelation. They didn’t have to wait long.
“Do we not require poker chips?” asked the Vulcan, after
examining his cards, “it was my understanding that this is a vital part of the
game, even in the present post-monetary economy.”
“You must have missed the variant of poker we are playing
tonight in your research,” Lugmilla informed him.
“I believe you said ‘five card draw’. It is my recollection
from my research that, while this is an unusually basic form of the game, it is
still one that requires the use of betting tokens.”
“Normally, yes,” conceded the Tellarite woman, “but tonight
we’re playing strip poker.”
“You are correct that my research did not uncover this
particular variant of the game,” said Varok, clearly still oblivious, “could
you explain the exact nature of the game play?”
Edrilli managed to suppress a snigger, although Sumati was a
little less successful, and had to pretend to be smothering a cough. Lugmilla’s
face was perfectly straight though, and Varok looked no more than mildly
curious. She wondered how long he’d be able to keep up that detachment when the
game got underway. Yes, he was a Vulcan, but, as everyone knew, Vulcans had emotions;
they just didn’t like showing them. And, from her experience of him, Varok was
one of the ones who struggled with that.
“Instead of rounds of betting, and chips, and all of that,”
explained the Tellarite, “whoever has the lowest hand after the draw removes an
item of clothing. Which remains off for the duration of the game.”
There were, Edrilli was sure, other variations of ‘strip
poker’ beyond this one, not that she knew of the game by anything more than
rumour. But this was the one that Lugmilla had suggested, and the Vulcan was,
surely, about to put his finger on the reason why.
To his credit, however, Varok’s only reaction was a raised
eyebrow. “With no potential variation in the bet offered, I can see that this
would lead to a speedier resolution of the game, although it seems a most
unusual procedure.”
“That’s okay,” said Sumati, “we don’t mind.”
“And the fact that we are all in uniform would lead to
parity,” agreed Varok. “However, I see a flaw in the logic.” Here it comes,
thought Edrilli. “A fold would be mathematically equivalent to a win, since the
winner of the hand merely fails to make a forfeit, rather than acquiring a
specific profit. Therefore, the logical tactic is always to fold regardless of
one’s hand.”
“There’s no folding,” Lugmilla told him sternly.
“Then I fail to see the tactical element in the game. Beyond
the simple calculation of odds inherent in the ‘draw’ process, the game
essentially becomes one of luck alone.”
“Yes, it does, doesn’t it?” said the Tellarite innocently, “Sumati,
your draw?”
The coffee-skinned human looked at her cards, and discarded
two. “Two, please.”
“A most curious form,” said Varok, “however, I believe I
will take three cards.”
You had to hand it to him for keeping his Vulcan cool, Edrilli
thought to herself. She wondered how long that would continue… assuming, of
course, he did not prove lucky.
They went round the table, and then revealed their cards. It
was not a bad start for the Vulcan, beating Sumati’s pair with three of a kind.
Edrilli, of course, didn’t have to actually win in order to retain her modesty,
but she was none the less pleased to be able to place her own cards down, and
reveal three jacks, beating Varok’s three twos. On the other hand, the first
loss, at least, was going to befall one of her friends.
Hopefully the night wouldn’t continue like that. But, she
had to reflect, it was a possibility. They had evened the odds up, yes, but
that was all. It could be any one of the four who was the first to strip to
their underwear, and concede the game.
“Ah, well,” said Sumati
with a slight grin, after Lugmilla had revealed her hand, “me first, then.” She
reached down, and pulled off her boots, placing them together at the side of
the table.
“That would appear to be two items,” pointed out Varok.
“Shoes and socks count as one item each,” said Lugmilla,
“when you think about it, it’s only logical.”
The Vulcan tilted his head to one side, and seemed about to
say something, before apparently thinking better of it. Presumably, he couldn’t
see the supposed ‘logic’. Serves him right, thought Edrilli, as Lugmilla passed
the deck on to Sumati for the next deal.
This time, Lugmilla won with two pairs – queens and nines – with
Sumati coming close with two pairs of her own. Indeed, Varok was the only one
to fail to develop a hand… a high jack, and nothing more. He made no comment
and showed no reaction as he removed his boots, although it was clear that he
was becoming somewhat bemused at the game.
He lost the next hand, too; the second in a row. He
carefully removed his socks, and tucked them inside his boots, before sitting
down again. Edrilli thought she detected a hint of irritation in his manner,
but it was hard to tell, and it might just have been her imagination. Still,
she knew, from past experience, that, while he would never make an emotional
display, there were times when he could act in a way that betrayed the burning
emotions underneath – usually involving frustration at the supposed
irrationality of others. Perhaps tonight would be such a night, and they would
have, at least, a moral victory.
Sumati’s socks went next, and Edrilli met the eyes of her
Tellarite friend as she passed the deck back to her.
“It’s between us at the moment,” she said.
“The game has barely started,” pointed out Lugmilla, as she
shuffled the cards, “but, yes, we’ll see.”
“And if not,” said Sumati, “it might just be a couple of
hands before things start to get interesting. Right, Varok?”
The Vulcan raised an eyebrow, but said nothing. Oh, yes, he
was the life and soul of the party.
Another hand, and Varok stood up, looking down at his pair
of deuces. “I assume that my jacket is the next item to be forfeit?” he said,
his voice still as even as ever.
“It’s up to you,” said Sumati, “but… yeah, that would make
sense.”
Edrilli smiled as the Vulcan stripped to his short-sleeved
vest. It occurred to her that the game was already moving swiftly. Varok was losing;
his skill at calculating odds and statistics useless here, and the Bolian
herself was still fully dressed. Of course, she realised, if he did lose, the
game would still continue. The smile dropped from her face as she realised she
might have to strip to her underwear in front of him no matter how well the
game went. Please let the cards fall in my, favour, she thought, angry with
herself for not really having thought this through.
Sumati dealt out the cards. Edrilli had a pair of tens,
which wasn’t bad for a start. However, even after her draw, the hand hadn’t
improved. This might be it, she thought, as Varok turned over a pair of kings.
And… yes… Lugmilla had won with three-of-a-kind.
Ah, well, she thought as she stood up, at least it’s only my
boots. Hardly worth worrying about, and Lugmilla’s luck can’t last forever, no
matter how smug she looks right now. Most importantly, though, Varok was still losing…
just two more defeats, and he’d be out.
Two hands later, though, and that was showing no sign of
happening. Edrilli dug her bare toes into the carpet as Sumati threw her hands
up in mock despair, the grin on her face showing that the human woman was
actually quite enjoying this.
“Hey, Varok,” she said, “let me show you how it’s done.”
Edrilli found herself grinning, caught up in the moment as
Sumati shrugged the gold-and-black jacket off her shoulders, and struck a
sultry pose. With a wriggling motion, the tight sleeveless vest beneath showing
the curves of her body, she shucked it off, twirled it around as she moved her
hips from side to side, and tossed it casually into the corner of the room.
Varok, of course, didn’t react at all, but Edrilli saw that
even Lugmilla was smiling to herself. Sumati leaned forward, resting an arm on
the table, and waggled a finger at the Tellarite. “Hope you’re not going to let
the side down when it’s your turn,” she said, “assuming you ever lose a hand.”
“Just you wait,” Lugmilla promised, picking up the deck for
her next deal.
Two rounds later, and the other two women gave a small cheer
as a pair of chunky boots joined the others lying around the table. With that
out of the way, though, the Bolian’s mind began to turn back to Varok. The
Vulcan was beginning to look a little put out, seemingly wanting to object to
their emotional behaviour, but seeing no way to bow out of the situation.
Finally, he might just be beginning to crack, Edrilli thought, and hoped that
the cards might turn against him again, after what had been quite a long lucky
streak.
The cards continued to be dealt round the table, the game
going much faster than it normally would, especially since none of them really
felt inclined to chat with Varok around, as they would have on any other night.
At last, though, things began to get interesting.
Edrilli was trying not to show her nerves now that it was
becoming clear that things wouldn’t last much longer. She glanced across at
Varok, as he carefully shuffled the deck, shirtless now, and displaying a
smooth, nearly hairless, chest. He was doing well in covering up his
discomfort, with no fidgeting, or holding his arms about himself, as members of
most other species might. But she could see a small bead of sweat on his
forehead, and a flicker of his eyes that indicated he was no longer as in
control as he would like.
She could understand that, she thought, pressing her bare
legs together beneath the table, feet tapping on the floor as the Vulcan dealt
out the next hand. She took the opportunity to surreptitiously pull the hem of
her vest down a little further, trying to hide her knickers from view.
Although, if she lost even once more, that would all become a little pointless…
But, instead, once all the cards had been turned over, it
was Lugmilla who stood up. To Sumati’s applause, she tried to imitate the human
woman’s earlier actions as she removed her jacket. She didn’t know what Varok
made of it, but Edrilli reflected that, to males of her own race – and, to be
honest, most others – the effect would be somewhat spoiled by the Tellarite’s
ample frame and beefy arms.
But she still joined in the laughter when Lugmilla tossed
her uniform jacket across the table, landing it partly across the Vulcan’s
face. He said nothing as he brushed it aside, but Edrilli could see that he had
actually ground his teeth together, straining as hard as he could to maintain
his composure in the face of provocation.
“We’ll make a dancer of you yet,” said Sumati, grinning, and
leaning back against her chair.
Despite having lost as many hands as the Bolian, she looked
as comfortable as ever. She had even taken the other tack after her last
defeat, and so still wore her black uniform trousers. Her plain white bra
contrasted against the deep coppery brown of her skin, although it was
otherwise nothing sexy… just comfortable, as you would expect under a Starfleet
uniform.
The moment of truth, Edrilli reflected, was fast
approaching. Come on Varok, she thought, let’s see you lose again. Just once
more, and we’ve all beaten you. It would only be justice, after all.
She got three eights after the draw on her next hand. Varok
put his own cards down on the table, and all of the others craned to look.
Sumati and Lugmilla had a pair each; he had only a high king.
The Vulcan, resigned to his fate, stood once more, calmly
undid his trousers and stepped out of them. He wore a close-fitting grey pair
of shorts beneath them, Edrilli noted, as he carefully folded up the clothing
and placed it next to the remainder of his uniform.
“I believe,” he said, looking straight ahead, and refusing
to meet their eyes, “that this means my part in the proceedings has now
concluded. A curious game, of which I am not sure I see the attraction.” And
this, Edrilli reflected, he was saying in the company of one woman sitting in
bra and trousers, and another wearing little more than a sleeveless vest. “May
I enquire as to what happens next? I would assume re-robing and departure is
indicated?”
“Why, are you scared?” That was Lugmilla, leaning forward,
her jaw set.
“I do not follow your meaning.”
“She means,” said Sumati, “that the game has not finished.”
It was as Edrilli had feared: she still might end up in her
underwear. Unless, she realised, with an even greater shock, the other two were
assuming that…
Varok just looked puzzled. “Not for you, perhaps,” he said,
“but…”
Sumati was already shuffling the cards, as Lugmilla sternly
told the Vulcan, “not for you, either. You’ve still got a garment to bet.”
“It is getting late, though,” Edrilli broke in quickly,
“perhaps we should call it a night?”
Varok visibly relaxed as she said it. She hadn’t quite
realised how tense he had become. This was affecting him even more than he had
let on.
“I would concur,” he said, “and may I recommend a more
constructive use of your leisure periods in future? This game serves no logical
purpose, and is a poor use of my valuable time, and, I dare say, even of your
own.”
That did it. Now she wanted to see him really suffer. She
caught Lugmilla’s eye and gave her a quick nod.
“Two more hands,” said the Tellarite, “and we call it a
night. Sound fair?”
Varok sat down, evidently reluctant, as Sumati dealt out the
cards. Of course, thought Edrilli, two hands might not be enough, but the odds
weren’t bad. As she had time to reflect and calculate the probabilities,
though, she realised what she had just agreed to. The likelihood was that
either she or Sumati would end the night in bra and knickers, and there was
even a fair chance that she would have to… no, don’t even go there.
It did rather explain though, why Lugmilla, still in
trousers and vest, had decided on two hands, rather than, say, three.
But Varok, wearing nothing but his shorts… he only had to
lose once. Would he even go through with it? Perhaps not, for he was already
starting to look as nervous as she’d ever seen one of his race. And backing out
would, by definition, force him to show some sign of weakness or even true
emotion.
Served him right, thinking he could come here and beat the
women on their own game night.
Still, she thought to herself, you know what? I hope he
doesn’t back out. Let’s see.
“Three cards,” said Varok, stiffly.
Edrilli looked at her hand, and almost sighed with relief.
“Just two,” she said.
Lugmilla and Sumati took three each. Edrilli herself felt
safe; she might not win the hand, but she couldn’t believe she would come last
with what she was holding. Which meant that there had to be a one in three
chance that…
The door to the room swished open.
Edrilli was, as it happened, on the far side of the room,
the table hiding her bare legs from the new arrival. But, even so, she hunched
up, blue-grey calves and thighs pressed tightly together, hands suddenly
clasped below her knees. At least, she realised, as the others turned to look,
it wasn’t a man.
Having said which, it would have certainly have been better
had it not been Lieutenant Halvorsen.
“What is going on here?” snapped the security officer as she
stepped into the room, ice-cold eyes immediately taking in Sumati and Varok’s
state of undress, and the various items of clothing lying about the room.
“We…” began Varok, but she didn’t give him the chance.
“Stand up when I’m speaking to you! All of you!”
Lugmilla was the only one in the room that Halvorsen didn’t
outrank, but even she chose to comply, if a little more slowly than the others.
At least she was decently dressed, thought Edrilli, as she received another
glare from the security officer once the latter saw her bare legs, and the
rather skimpy black knickers that the hem of her vest could no longer properly
conceal.
“You may not be on duty,” growled Halvorsen, “but you are
serving on a Starfleet vessel. I have no idea what you thought you were doing,
or what debauchery you had planned for later, but this is a disgrace to the
uniform. You are officers, you should act like it!”
She looked Varok up and down, with a sneer that suggested
she wasn’t very impressed with what she saw. “By the looks of you, Ensign
Varok, it is as well that I arrived when I did. I would have thought that a
Vulcan would have had more sense.”
“I will be making a report to your department heads
tomorrow, and we shall see what they have to say about this.” Edrilli could not
help but think that the report would make things sound worse than they actually
were. Halvorsen was not only a stickler for rules, and a fanatic about the
‘honour’ of Starfleet, but also a major prude. “Now clean everything up, and…”
her lip curled with displeasure, “get dressed!”
They all rushed to comply.
Her trousers back on, Edrilli gathered up the cards from the
table. She couldn’t resist looking at the hands as she did so, just to see what
would have happened, had they not been interrupted.
Varok had lost the hand.
Damn it. She glanced across at Lugmilla, inclining her head
towards where the Vulcan had been sitting. The Tellarite seemed to get the
message, and pursed her lips with annoyance. But then she gave a small smile,
and a wink, before sitting to pull her boots back on.
Lugmilla, Edrill realised, had just come up with another
plan.
She looked at the fuming security officer, whose arms were
folded across her tall frame. I wouldn’t want to be in your shoes, she thought…
---***---
“Ready to beam across?” asked Ensign Sezrik, at the
transporter console.
Halvorsen nodded, and straightened her already immaculate
uniform. She was representing Starfleet, one of the greatest honours she could
imagine. If only other people realised that, rather than engaging in… well, she
didn’t like to think what kind of depravity those other officers had been up to
last night. Even had this not been a security mission, nobody would have picked
any of them for the sort of role she was about to undertake.
It was a pity that, because of the other ship arriving
early, she had not had time to put them on report, as she had promised. At
least they would sweat about it, which was some consolation.
The Saurian transporter officer gave her a nod, and she felt
the familiar sensation as the beam coalesced around her, and she vanished from
the Endeavour to re-appear…
…on the other ship.
The room was not as well lit as the one she had just left,
and it took her eyes a few seconds to adjust to the dimmer, redder, lighting.
It did not help that the walls were darker, bare metal in angular designs
rather than the smooth functionality of Starfleet design.
There were five people waiting in the room for her. One, of
course, was operating their transporter, and another stood near the exit, a
chunky gun very visible at his hip. The other three, two women and a man, were
standing in a group, an obviously formal welcoming party.
The man stepped forward, glancing her over. He did not seem
impressed.
“Welcome,” he said, “to the IKS Tarantula, starship
of the Imperial Klingon Defence Force.”
Not having had anything to do with the negotiations, she had
not seen the captain of the other vessel before. He seemed to be a typical
Klingon, tall and broad shouldered, with long hair and a short, but thick
beard. A narrow scar cut across the brown skin of his cheek, just below his
left eye. Even Klingon medicine ought to be able to seal that up, she thought,
so he had to have kept it purposefully, as a badge of honour from some past
conflict.
His armour seemed much the same as that she had seen on
other Klingons; if he had a rank badge, it wasn’t obvious. His gun, though, was
as bluntly visible as that of the guard at the door.
“I am Lieutenant Astrid Halvorsen of the USS Endeavour,”
she said, “I hope that our cooperation will lead to a swift resolution in both
our interests.”
“Of course,” he said, sounding a little reluctant, “but
remember this is a Klingon vessel. You are here to observe. And to observe the operation only.”
He was presumably warning her away from spending any time
looking over the engines or weapon capabilities of the ship. Not that she could
have told much without seeing them in action, which she was likely to do
anyway; she wasn’t an engineer. Halvorsen reflected that he did not seem happy
to see her here, which seemed odd, if he had agreed to it. But, even so, she
felt the need to remind him that her role was to do more than stand around and
watch.
“And to take custody of the prisoner,” she said.
He almost grimaced at that. Odd. “Of course,” he growled,
“but still…”
“But still, you are our guest.”
That was one of the female Klingons, who she had almost
forgotten. There were two of them, one a tall, bald woman whose skin was ebony
black, dark even for one of her race. She looked imperious, Halvorsen thought,
perhaps a senior officer. Yet, oddly, it was the other who had spoken, a small,
slender, coffee-skinned Klingon in tight, decorative leathers.
And, when she had spoken, the male Klingon had been
immediately silenced.
There was an uncomfortable pause, while they all stood,
watching one another – except for the transporter officer and the man she
assumed was a guard, both of them whom seemed to doing their best to pretend
they were somewhere else.
It was the man that she had assumed was the captain who
eventually broke the silence. “I am Commander Rel’kor, First Officer of the Tarantula,”
he said. “These, “ he stood to one side, giving her a clearer view of the
women, “are Captain Adjur zantai Khurless and Lieutenant –Commander Laska.”
The small Klingon woman stepped forward, and Halvorsen
realised with surprise that she was the captain. By human standards, she was
not particularly short, even if, at around 160 cm, she was quite a bit shorter
than Halvorsen herself. Compared with her fellow Klingons, though, she was
tiny.
And, yet… thought the security officer, appraising her
properly for the first time. There was something about her, something that
belied her size. It wasn’t just the air of confidence that was now apparent in
her, but a hardness in her eyes, a set to her jaw that said ‘here is a vicious
terrier that will tear you apart given the chance’. The body under the tight
leathers looked muscular too. Slender, yes, but compact and, Halvorsen
suspected, the body of a natural athlete.
Klingons, the human believed, prized height and visible
power. Even Laska showed that – the dark woman was over 180 cm tall, and built
like an Amazon. But what, Halvorsen, wondered, did you have to be like to
successfully take charge of a Klingon starship when everyone else towered above
you? Just how much would this woman have had to prove – at every stage of her
life – to have got anywhere near where she was today?
Halvorsen wondered how many Klingons had underestimated
Adjur in the past, and now lay littered on the floor of history.
“I am sure,” said the Klingon captain, her words clipped and
precise, her dark eyes watching the human woman with an intense gaze that was
almost unnerving, “that this will, as you say, prove beneficial to us both.”
She gave a small smile, a twitch of her lips that did not reach the rest of her
face. “But for now, Laska will show you to your room. We will be leaving
immediately.”
Apparently satisfied with whatever she had been looking for,
the small Klingon turned and left the room without another word, her first
officer in tow.
Laska smiled, managing a much better job of it than her
captain had. “Follow me,” she said, speaking for the first time.
Halvorsen followed the dark-skinned officer into the ship’s
corridors. The Tarantula – she reflected that somebody must have
programed the translator with that, since it clearly wasn’t a Klingon word –
was quite a bit smaller than the Endeavour. So far as she knew, it was a
long-distance exploration and patrol ship, somewhere between a Bird of Prey and
a full-size warship. Given that, it did not take long to reach the metal door
that led to her temporary quarters.
“These will be yours,” said Laska, “spartan, I know, but
sufficient.”
The room was decorated in the plain metal that Klingons
seemed to like. It actually had a porthole above the low and rather rigid
looking bed. That was an advantage of a small ship, she suspected; that it had
less interior rooms far from the hull. Other than the bed, though, the room
contained no more than a fold-down desk, a cupboard and a door leading to a
shower cubicle and what could only be a Klingon toilet.
“Dinner will be served in the mess in four hours,” Laska
informed her. “In the meantime, once you have settled in, I can show you
around. At least the parts of the ship that won’t upset the Commander, anyway.”
“Thank you,” replied the human. Laska probably just wanted
to keep an eye on her, but it seemed as good an idea as any. Besides, she could
do with some sort of an ally, even if it was one she could not completely
trust.
Halvorsen had originally assumed that the Klingon woman was
bald. In fact, as had become apparent since she had turned to lead the human
out of the transporter room, she had a shoulder-length pony-tail growing from
the back of an otherwise shaven head, and bound with a leather cord. It leant
at least something of an air of femininity to her, if only by default.
“You are a warrior, I understand?” asked the Klingon, “or
security officer. Whatever the term is.” Halvorsen nodded. “Good. Just remember
that, and keep your wits about you. There will be some on this ship who want to
show themselves superior to humans. They won’t try anything directly, not while
you’re under the Captain’s protection, but don’t show weakness, or wander about
where you shouldn’t.”
“And if you do somehow get injured… well, I’m the ship’s
medical officer.”
---***---
The Tarantula was, as it turned out, not so different
from a medium-sized Federation starship. Certainly the décor was different, but
Klingons were basically humanoid, and seemed to have similar needs to any other
humanoid race. Lighting, artificial gravity, crew quarters… the differences
were all superficial, and even the organisation of the crew was similar to that
on a Starfleet tactical vessel, if not a science ship like the Endeavour.
As she had indicated, Laska did not show Halvorsen the
engine rooms or the torpedo launch tubes, nor, for that matter, the bridge. But
she at least learned the basic layout of the ship, and which corridors she was
probably better off not wandering down if she didn’t want to be thought a spy.
The medical centre was, perhaps unsurprisingly, one of the first items on the
agenda, and, while it was smaller than she might have expected, it didn’t look
notably under-equipped to her – admittedly inexpert – eye.
And why not? Klingons might be happy to keep scars as tokens
of past battles, but it made sense to get them back onto the front lines again
if you could. It was hard to remember sometimes that the Klingons were a
technically advanced race, with engineering almost the equal of the
Federation’s own. In human history, war had often been a spur to technological
advancement, and the Klingons had plenty of the former, so why not the latter?
She recalled, from her lectures at the Academy, that you couldn’t build something
like a disruptor beam bank without a sound understanding of electromagnetic wave
theory, computing, and quantum mechanics. Even if the only thing you wanted to
do was build a bigger gun, the knowledge you gained in doing so had knock-on
effects elsewhere.
“These are recreation areas,” said Laska, as another door
slid open, “you might…”
“Ha! I had heard there was a human on board! What do you
think you can possibly gain here, other than a quick death?”
The speaker was a squat, heavily built man, one of two
Klingons in the room they had just entered. It was clearly a combat training
area, with a wide open space in the centre, and a rack of bat’leths and other hand
weapons on one wall. It looked as if the two warriors has just finished a bout,
and that it was the silent man who had just lost – the bruises and contusions
showed that it had been a rather rougher fight than would have been normal on a
Starfleet vessel.
“The human officer is here at the Captain’s invitation,”
said Laska stiffly.
The squat Klingon snorted. He was ugly, even for a Klingon,
with a couple of scars across his face and chest that did nothing to add to his
looks, at least from a human perspective. He was currently, like his companion,
stripped to the waist, a sheen of sweat across his muscular torso, and still
holding his bat’leth – with specks of blood on it, she noticed – in one hand.
He snorted derisively. “Of course,” he said, “but then, such
a coward and weakling would need protection, would she not? You can see she is
no warrior… but then, no human truly is. They hide inside their ships or behind
their phasers, never willing to enter true combat. The entire race are an
evolutionary dead-end, little better than Ferengi.”
“Come on,” Laska said to Halvorsen, “we don’t need to…”
“I’m not frightened of you,” said the human security
officer, taking a step forward into the room. “So there’s no point in trying to
provoke me.”
“This might not be…” began Laska, before being interrupted
for the third time.
“Not frightened? Ha! I can smell the fear on you. The
cringing terror that fills your very being. If you were truly as brave as you
say, you would fight me, one on one, but you have not the guts, nor the
strength to do so.”
Halvorsen looked him straight in the eye, noting that she
was actually a couple of centimetres taller than he. “I accept your challenge,”
she said, simply.
At that, Laska took a step back, away from them, her face
suddenly formal. It was clear she would not intervene now. Halvorsen needed to
show her character to these people, for her own safety, and for the honour of
Starfleet. She could only hope that she had not made a mistake in choosing to
do so at this point.
“Very well,” said the Klingon, with a grin, readying his
bat’leth as his former sparring partner also left the fighting area.
Halvorsen took off her tunic and passed it to Laska before
walking forward onto the mat. She had no experience with a bat’leth, and the
Klingon surely knew it.
“You can put that away,” she told him, dropping into a
fighting crouch, “unless, of course, you’re too frightened to face me without a
weapon.”
That did it. The Klingon dropped the bat’leth and hurled
himself at her, a roar of fury on his lips. Perhaps he was blinded by anger, or
perhaps by his own overconfidence and bias about human weakness. Perhaps he had
just taken more of a battering from his sparring partner than was visible at
first glance. Maybe it was even a combination of all of these, but either way,
he left himself wide open for a counterstrike.
Halvorsen kicked out at his leg, grabbed an arm, and threw
him over her shoulder in a classic move. The Klingon’s speed and strength
counted against him, slamming him hard into the floor with a loud crash that
actually shook the metal plating beneath the mat.
Any human would have been at least momentarily stunned by
the force of that impact, but her opponent was not human. He rolled over and
prepared to rise to his feet… just as Halvorsen spun round and kicked him with
all her might in his jaw.
His head snapped back, and she wondered for a second if
she’d overdone it. A human would have been seriously injured by a blow like
that, and certainly should have been out cold. But not, it seemed, a Klingon.
He shook his head, and staggered to his feet, visibly groggy, but more
conscious than he had any right to be.
He lunged for her, and this time she could not quite evade
him, caught with his arm about her shoulder. But she had the advantage now,
after that last blow. They wrestled, her vest rucking and coming loose from her
trousers as she kicked at his legs and pulled at his arms.
He stumbled at one of her blows, and she threw him down
again as his arm came free. She was on top of him immediately, locking her arm
under his shoulder and rapidly catching him in a three-quarter nelson. He bucked
underneath her, legs kicking out and trying to break the hold. Halvorsen’s
muscles were straining, but she just about managed to keep him pinned.
He shouted out something incoherent, spitting onto the floor.
The human didn’t budge, the hold secure, but her opponent did not seem about to
submit, and while he seemed weakened, he was hardly about to collapse.
Halvorsen gritted her teeth and held on for dear life, wondering how long she
would need to keep this up for, and whether she could.
She had forgotten the other Klingons in the room, but
remembered when the other man shouted something short and incomprehensible and
banged his fist three times hard on the wall of the room. Laska joined in,
stepping onto the mat in front of the struggling pair. At first nothing
happened, but after another shout from the medical officer, the scarred warrior
finally went limp.
Halvorsen climbed off him, panting, face red from the
exertion, tucking her shirt back in as she did so. The Klingon was not moving
except to draw ragged breaths, his face invisible to her, down towards the
floor as it was.
The other Klingon man clapped her on the back, and she saw a
wide grin on his face. “Qapla’!” he said, before walking out of the
room.
Laska, she saw, was also smiling, teeth white against her
dark face. The medical officer handed
over Halvorsen’s uniform tunic, and motioned for them both to leave the room.
The defeated warrior remained where he was, making no move to follow them,
although she fancied she heard him grunting and moving to get up as the door
slid shut behind them.
“Murakh is unpopular,” Laska said to her, her voice lowered,
“which means that, as soon as word of this gets around, you will not be. You
made the right decision. Qapla’, indeed.”
---***---
The ships ‘mess hall’ was, as it turned out, Halvorsen’s
first clear example of how Klingon ships really did differ from Federation ones
in matters other than aesthetics. In Starfleet, even on one of the larger
ships, like the Endeavour, most food was replicated. Indeed, for humans
and many of the other races, that was the way it often was on their homeworlds,
too. Cooking and manual food preparation wasn’t entirely a lost art, but it was
hardy a common skill, either. The security officer had to admit that she hadn’t
had food that wasn’t replicated for well over a year.
But the Tarantula had a kitchen. It seemed wasteful,
with all that need to carry supplies, but it seemed that the Klingons thought
nothing of it. All the food available at the counter was decidedly real, and
some of it hadn’t quite stopped moving yet.
Halvorsen was relieved, however, to discover it wasn’t all
quite as bad as rumour had it. Most of it was actually cooked, at least
partially, although much of it would have alarmed a vegetarian. She selected a
steak, which came with some small alien vegetables and odd-looking greyish
brown items that, honestly, could have been anything. She didn’t like to ask
what sort of animal the steak had come from, and it probably wouldn’t have
meant much to her if she had. But, still, it was surprisingly normal food,
compared with what her imagination had conjured up.
The mess hall was also, she reflected as she sat down
opposite Laska, rather noisier than anywhere on the Endeavour. Klingons
were a boisterous lot, and the fact that, at least tonight, warnog ale seemed
to be the only drink available might have had something to do with that. At any
rate, there was loud singing, good natured shouting and raucous laughter.
It wasn’t really her idea of a good time; she preferred
discipline and focus. A Vulcan ship would have been preferable to this, but she
was here for a reason, and she had to put up with what she had. Fortunately it
seemed that, as Laska had predicted, word of the incident with Murakh had got
round, and seemed to have done her reputation the power of good. The Klingons
were evidently respectful of her, if not exactly friendly, and there was no
open hostility, nor any attempt to call her out again.
She wondered how long that would last.
“A little after midday tomorrow, ship time,” said Laska.
Halvorsen blinked, before realising that she hadn’t spoken out loud, and the
Klingon woman had to be referring to something else. “We should reach the
planet then, and begin our operation. If all goes well, you will be back on
board your own ship in three days’ time. In the meantime, try to look like
you’re enjoying yourself, will you? I don’t know what it’s like in Starfleet,
but we like to let our hair down off duty.”
“I’ll try to bear that in mind,” she replied, somewhat
stiffly. She didn’t really do that sort of relaxation, and, frankly, didn’t
much approve of it in others. But these were aliens, and, if the Federation
insisted on anything, it was that you didn’t interfere with foreign cultures.
As she spoke, another Klingon moved up to the table and sat
down next to her. He was a young officer, with somewhat paler skin than many of
his fellows, a trimmed beard and pure black, shoulder-length hair.
“We have other forms of entertainment,” said the newcomer,
“there is rarely a quiet moment on a Klingon ship. You will find something that
you like.”
“True,” said Laska, “there is a quartet from engineering
performing a section of Shevok’tah gish here tomorrow evening. If we’re
back in time. “ Halvorsen’s thoughts on spending an evening listening to
Klingon opera must have registered to the Klingon woman because she quickly
added, “although it’s not mandatory, and, frankly,” she leaned over the table,
and said in a quieter voice, “they’re not actually very good, so you won’t be alone
if you stay away.”
“There might be other experiences you might want to try,”
said the young man, “you might find some things to be more pleasurable than you
might think.”
Halvorsen realised with shock that he had paused in his
eating to sweep his eyes up and down her body, visibly admiring the tight fit
of her uniform and the curves beneath. She put down her knife and glared at him,
a stare that would have quelled any junior officer on the Endeavour.
Somewhat surprisingly, it actually seemed to work on him,
and he looked a little taken aback, and, she had to say, somewhat disappointed.
“Not all the same,” he muttered cryptically, and turned to listen to the
conversation of his fellows further down the table, his interest in her
apparently over.
Laska leaned over again, “Kurdok is a young man,” she
whispered, “rather a hothead. But Klingons are an honourable people, nobody
will try anything.”
They had better bloody not, thought Halvorsen to herself.
She was not one for fraternising, even with her own species, let alone another.
---***---
The mattress on the bed in her quarters was thin and stiff,
but Halvorsen had no problem with that, and managed to get a surprisingly good
night’s sleep. She followed her usual routine in the morning; a series of
callisthenic exercises followed by a freezing cold shower. There were, in her
opinion, a few Starfleet officers who could do with the same; it might keep
their minds off of more immoral pursuits.
At first, she thought it best to remain in her cabin,
avoiding any provocation of the Klingon crew. But after an hour of sheer
boredom, she decided that it would do better to be seen about. This afternoon,
she might need them to guard her back, and that was going to be hard enough to
do without them thinking she spent her days hiding.
As it turned out, she faced no further challenges that day.
The Klingons seemed to have accepted her presence, at least for the time being.
She caught a few resentful looks, but for the most part, the crew just got on
with whatever they were doing. One young Klingon woman even gave her a quick
smile and what seemed to be a victory gesture before turning away. Laska had said that the warrior she had
defeated yesterday in the gym was unpopular, and Halvorsen suspected that this
might well relate to that.
The call to the bridge came slightly earlier than she had
been expecting it, but Halvorsen never relaxed on duty, and was as ready for it
then as she would have been later. She went up to the bridge strait away,
pressing down her uniform again as she did so, the Starfleet com badge already
gleaming.
The bridge was about what she would expect for a ship the
size of the Tarantula if, like the rest of the vessel, dimly lit by
Starfleet standards. It had all the usual consoles, in the angular metallic
style that Klingons seemed to find aesthetically pleasing, red and orange
symbols scrolling across the screens. The console that appeared to control the
weapons was proportionately larger and more prominent than she would expect,
but whether that was because the ship was better armed than similar Starfleet vessels,
or the designers had just thought it was more important, she couldn’t tell.
Starfleet would, naturally, be interested in what she could
tell them of her host’s tactics and capabilities, but they knew there would be
nothing she could tell them about Klingon engineering and control systems that
they did not already know. She really wasn’t here as a spy.
Captain Adjur stood in the centre of the room, somehow dominating
it with her presence despite her small stature. Her dark eyes were hard,
sometimes darting about the room to keep an eye on all of the bridge crew,
gloved hands clasped behind her back. Her first officer stood to one side,
watching the planet displayed in the viewscreen ahead of them, and the small
freighter orbiting above it. Laska was nowhere to be seen.
“We have confirmed,” said the Captain, her voice clipped and
precise, “that the vessel is O’Leary’s ship. From intercepted communications,
we believe that he is currently on the planet’s surface, engaged in his trade.”
“He should die,” said Rel’kor, succinctly.
“Yes,” agreed the Captain, “but today is not that day.
Starfleet have given us the information to locate him, and in, return, we allow
them to capture him, and do whatever it is that they do with their prisoners.
There are times that cooperation is useful, and the House of Khurless also
gains from this operation in other ways. So, today, we take him alive, and hand
him over, as we have agreed. Our House keeps its word, does it not?”
“Of course, Captain.”
“I understand, Lieutenant Halvorsen, that Patrick O’Leary
has evaded capture by your people many times?”
“He is devious,” she agreed, not pointing out that the gun
runner had done the same to the Klingons. The Federation was more concerned
that O’Leary sold advanced weapons to cultures not ready for them, but the
Klingon Empire, she suspected, was more concerned about the challenge to its
own power. “Are we sure that we have got him this time?”
“We are currently under cloak, so his vessel cannot see us. The
moment we drop the cloak, we beam down, then put a jamming field in place to
stop him – or anyone else – beaming off the planet. Then we blow his ship out
of the sky. The survival of his crew was, after all, not part of our deal. Then
it will be up to the away team to capture him, and ensure that, this time, he
does not escape.”
“I am ready,” replied the security officer.
“Good. I have seen what I need to. Rel’kor, you have the
bridge. Halvorsen, with me.”
“You’re going on the away team?”
The corner of Adjur’s mouth twitched, in what might have
been as close as she could get to a smile. “Wouldn’t miss it,” she said,
patting the pistol at her hip. It wasn’t a design the human recognised. A
custom made sniper’s pistol, perhaps, with an enlarged power pack to boost the
punch. She wondered if it had a stun setting.
---***---
Halvorsen ducked down behind a stack of crates as a disruptor
shot blasted into the wall just behind where her head had been. O’Leary and his
Gorn mercenaries had been waiting for them, and the firefight had begun in
earnest before they had even reached the pre-fab dome from which the gun
runners had been operating. The only positive sign was that they clearly hadn’t
been able to beam out, and Halvorsen could only imagine that the Tarantula
was currently engaging their souped-up freighter in orbit.
The criminals were, at least, trapped down here with five
angry Klingons and a Starfleet security officer.
Or they had been to begin with. One of the four warriors
that the Captain had brought down was already out of action, caught by some
automated defence. Nobody had bothered to provide him with medical aid, and, naturally
enough, he hadn’t asked for any, so he was still lying out in the scrubby
desert outside, too injured to stand. Although, so far as Halvorsen could tell,
he’d probably live if the fight didn’t go on for too much longer.
A couple of blasts thudded into the crate, but it seemed
solid enough to take it for now. An explosion rang out from somewhere, shaking
the whole of the dome. Another trap, perhaps, or else one of the Gorn had hand
grenades. Halvorsen took the opportunity to pop her head up from her hiding
place, scanning the area, phaser ready.
She saw one of the Gorn, and fired at him, but he ducked
away just in time, and the shot went wide. Halvorsen ducked down again, and ran
along behind the crates, in the alien’s direction, keeping her head low, but
hoping to approach him from another direction.
As she did so, she spotted a panel that had come loose from
one wall of the dome. It looked to have been popped out deliberately, with no
sign of weapon fire, but it was quite hidden from the direction from which the
Klingon team had entered the dome. She glanced out of it, and saw boot prints
in the rough sand, heading away.
She paused for a moment, unsure of which direction she
should go. But the sound of more firing from behind her persuaded her that the
remaining Klingons were still holding their own against the Gorn. Meanwhile one
of their opponents – and one with human-sized feet – was making his getaway
across the desert. Halvorsen ducked through the hole in the wall, and headed
out.
She was facing a rocky slope, some distance away across open
ground that would leave her exposed to anyone looking from up above. The
Captain had sent one of her warriors round the back when they entered the dome,
in case of just such an eventuality, but he was nowhere to be seen. Neither was
O’Leary, who had obviously vanished somewhere into the rocks up above. If only
the sand had been softer and deeper here, she could have followed his foot
prints, but she wasn’t that skilled a tracker.
She spun as she heard a sound behind her, and found her gun
levelled at Captain Adjur, stepping through the gap in the dome wall, the sun
bright on her coffee-brown skin.
“Two of my warriors still standing,” said the Captain, “one
of his Gorn. Won’t last long. So let’s go get him. Cover me.”
Without another word, the small Klingon was sprinting across
the open space towards the foot of the ridge. Acting from instinct, Halvorsen
crouched down, phaser held high as she scanned the rocks above. Nobody fired
back, and soon the Klingon was in cover, beckoning at her to follow.
She ran as fast as she could, feeling the adrenaline rush as
her long legs carried her across the gap in less time than it had taken the
Captain. Once again, fortunately, nobody took a shot, and soon she was skidding
in the dust, ducking behind the rock that concealed the Klingon woman.
“Now where?” she asked, barely out of breath from the run,
and eager to continue the fight.
It must have showed in her eyes, because she caught an
approving look from her alien fellow, before her face went hard again, and she
scanned the slope above them with her dark eyes.
“That way,” she said, pointing with a gloved hand, “broken
twig on one of the bushes. Recent. Scuff mark on the edge of the flat rock just
above it. Follow me.”
Halvorsen followed the leather-clad figure ahead of her as
they both scrambled up the slope. It was rough and rocky, a difficult passage
if you did not know exactly where you were going, but Adjur seemed to have it
all perfectly in hand, pausing at intervals to pick up on her quarry’s trail.
The human woman could do nothing but follow, her phaser at the ready… although
it was clear which of them would get the first shot off if O’Leary came in
sight, and she held no doubts about the Klingon’s marksmanship.
As it happened, though, it was their target that fired
first. The beam blasted into a bush, setting it on fire as Adjur rolled out of
the way behind a large rock. The path up ahead looked even steeper than that so
far, and, having just dropped a metre or so behind when her foot slipped on a
loose stone, Halvorsen realised that that same slope now hid her own presence
from whomever had just fired.
She froze in place, even before Adjur held out her free hand
in a ‘stop’ motion, the other still gripping her pistol.
“I can see you,” called out a voice from up ahead.
It was human and male, leaving Halvorsen in no doubt as to
who it belonged, even if the accent was hidden by the universal translator’s
rendering of the words into her native Norwegian.
“Not quite, or you’d be shooting now,” replied Adjur,
gesturing back at the human.
Halvorsen immediately got the gist of what the Klingon
wanted her to do. The gestures might not have been exactly the same as the hand
signals used by Starfleet, but they were close enough that the meaning was
clear. She crept a little further back down the hill.
“Enough to know you’re on your own; my tricorder only picks
up one of you. Did my Gorn friends pick off the rest of you, or did you just
leave them behind? Either way, one of you, one of me, and I’ve got the
advantage.”
Halvorsen grinned to herself, realising just how O’Leary had
made such a crucial error. Adjur had doubtless worked it out, too, but now it
was time for the human to carry out the Klingon’s plan. A plan that had just
been made that much easier.
“Think I’m just going to sit here?” called out the Captain,
from behind the rock.
Halvorsen knew that her ally had to keep O’Leary talking,
but fortunately, that wasn’t proving too hard. She continued to move.
‘Ally’? Had she really just thought that about a Klingon?
The camaraderie of action and shared threat did odd things to you sometimes.
But, yeah, why not? For the moment, there was no reason she couldn’t trust the
other woman, no matter her origin and ultimate loyalties.
“Wondering where your
other warrior went? I left him down near the bottom of the slope, but not
without a little gift. See, I strapped a bomb to his chest after I stunned him.
I’ve got the trigger right here. If you get close, I’ll use it. Hardly an
honourable death, I’d say. I mean, you might not care for your warriors’ lives,
but I’m guessing dishonourable death, that’s not something you’d want for them,
am I right?”
“Might kill you before you hit the trigger.”
“Nah, you’d be out
from behind that rock if you thought that was the case. Though, to be honest,
maybe you will, and I get to pick you off. Blast a hole through your forehead.
Even Klingon skulls aren’t that thick.”
“You’d know that from the other warrior.”
“No, he’s stunned. I told you.”
“You’re not the type. He’s already dead, and we both know
it. There’s no bomb.” There was silence; she’d obviously got him there, and
Halvorsen felt slightly more at ease with the plan. “So there’s no threat,”
called Adjur, “for what it was worth.”
“I can still blow your head off.”
“Which is your other mistake.”
“Try it and see. Come out where I can shoot you. You’re not
scared, are you?”
“Honour does not mean stupidity. And you still made a
mistake. Saw me coming so far off because you’ve got that tricorder rigged to
signal the presence of Klingons, ignoring any other life forms. Which is how
you know there’s no others with me.”
“Yeah, so?”
Halvorsen dropped on him.
She had been lucky, as she scrambled up the slope to the
side, that she had not dislodged any stones or otherwise made any noises that
would have given her away. She had been even more lucky that O’Leary had been
partly sheltering beneath an overhanging rock, giving her the chance to get
above him.
The landing was heavy, partly knocking the wind out of both
of them. O’Leary’s pistol dropped from his hand as her weight slammed him into
the ground, falling out of easy reach. But the fight was far from over.
They grappled on the ground, kicking up sand and small stones
as they did so. At last, O’Leary managed to push her away, and they both leapt
to their feet, facing each other. Halvorsen realised that her phaser had come
loose in the struggle – and only now wondered why she just hadn’t shot him when
she had the chance. It had fallen away down the slope, and O’Leary lunged for
his own fallen weapon instead.
He snatched his hand away as a beam of energy hit the
blaster, and it exploded in a shower of sparks. He looked up to see Adjur
standing there, a short distance away, already holstering her pistol. O’Leary
looked puzzled, but Halvorsen realised what had just happened.
This was a duel, like the one in the gym, or so Adjur saw
it. She had just been evening up the odds. She wouldn’t interfere now, not
until one of them had fallen.
O’Leary evidently had no such compunction, and pulled a
knife from his belt, lunging at the human woman, sweeping it in a wide arc, and
forcing her to dodge out of the way. He slashed a couple more times, but with
no more luck, and she managed to kick a leg out, trying to knock him over.
The move failed, but it unbalanced him just enough for her
to step behind him, and grab onto his knife arm. He kicked back, and jabbed his
free hand towards her eyes. This was a man who clearly fought dirty, and there
would be no referee to break up the fight this time. O’Leary would fight on for
as long as he was able.
Halvorsen dodged out of the way of her opponent’s attempted
eye-gouge, spinning him round as she still gripped onto his right arm. For a
second, she was back in the gym, fighting an enraged Klingon, and blind
instinct took over.
She kicked the man’s legs out from under him, flinging them
both to the ground, twisting his arm around, smashing into his elbow with her
free hand with enough force to hurt even a Klingon. There was an audible snap,
and O’Leary screamed in agony.
“You broke my fucking arm!” he yelled, letting out a stream
of further profanity as he writhed on the ground.
Halvorsen got to her feet, kicking the fallen knife away,
although she suspected there was no further need to do so.
“I thought you’d shoot him,” said Adjur, walking up to join
her standing over their prisoner, pistol now levelled again.
“Maybe I’m getting a little bit Klingon.”
“Didn’t say I didn’t approve.”
---***---
Halvorsen had cleaned her uniform down, and was wondering
what to do for the evening, when the buzzer at the door to her cabin sounded.
She opened it to see Laska standing there, a slight smile on her face. “I hear congratulations are in order,” she said.
“Thank you,” replied the human, “O’Leary is now in custody,
and we should be transferring him to the Endeavour tomorrow night for
trial and punishment.”
“Yes. He’s in a secure area near my sick bay. It’s where we
hold disgraced warriors. We don’t have much call for other prisoners. And his
arm will heal in time. Although he keeps asking for something called ‘pain-killers’.
I imagine that those are not as interesting as they sound.”
“No, I shouldn’t think so.”
“Anyway, I came to see you because the Captain wants to
thank you for a mission completed. You are honoured; she will see you in her
quarters.”
“Of course. I am honoured, indeed. Lead the way.”
The Captain, it turned out, warranted a proper suite on
board the Tarantula. The main room was decorated in what Halvorsen
supposed must be Klingon style, with decorative tapestries on the walls, along
with a bat’leth, a selection of knives, and what appeared to be a number of
trophies. Two doors led off it, presumably leading to a bedroom and bathroom,
although both were, of course, shut.
Rel’kor was already there, holding a goblet in his hand, and
looking slightly put out. There were three similar goblets on the table in the
centre of the room, and, as she entered, the Captain stepped forward to hand
one to Halvorsen, gesturing to Laska to take a third, before she picked up the
remaining one herself. The human woman caught
a frown on the First Officer’s face as this happened, glancing at Laska as if
he had not expected her to be joining them. If the medic noticed, though, she
gave no sign.
“A great success,” said Adjur, “now we have Starfleet on our
side, at least for a little while. A prudent warrior welcomes allies as much as
she does foes to fight. Qapla’!”
So saying, she downed the contents of the goblet in one
gulp, and the other Klingons joined in, prompting Halvorsen to do so as well.
It was fiery, obviously alcoholic, yet with some fruity flavour behind the kick
that was not entirely unpleasant. Even so, she barely managed to rasp out the “Qapla’!”
response as it burned its way down her throat.
“I know that you require no reward beyond our prisoner
himself,” said the Captain, “but it is the Klingon way to celebrate after
victory, and after new alliances. So, why not an evening’s entertainment?” Rel’kor
stiffened, and she waved a hand towards him, “not the opera quartet, I think.”
He visibly relaxed, and even Halvorsen had to stifle a small grin.
“No, something different,” Adjur went on, “in honour of our
guest. I received a communication from your vessel, Lt. Halvorsen. When we
collected you. Details of a human pastime. Quite different to those of my
people, but why not?”
Halvorsen frowned. What was this? It made no sense.
“Tonight,” said Adjur, “we play the human game of ‘poker’.
One of your pilots kindly sent me the rules,” she pulled what looked like a
newly replicated deck of cards from a pocket, and held it up.
A cold chill ran down the human’s spine, as she realised
what had happened. Lugmilla. She was going to kill the Tellarite woman
when she got back. But what could she say now? If she explained what had
happened, it would put Starfleet in a bad light, and, worse still, might even
make the Klingon captain look a fool in front of two of her officers. Doubly
so, if, as she suspected, Lugmilla had sent across the rules for the variant
that she had been playing with the other three so recently.
Which, knowing her, was guaranteed.
Halvorsen had only one hope, which was that one of the other
Klingons would decline, letting her avoid the game with honour.
“Cards?” asked Rel’kor suspiciously, “they don’t look
dangerous. Where is the sport? How does this game work?”
“You arrange the cards in patterns. The objective is to have
matching numbers, or sequential ones. I have written out the scoring,” Adjur
tapped a PADD lying on the table. “It is simple enough.”
“And the sport…?” prompted the first officer again.
“It is a human game. They divert themselves with things
other than physical contest.”
“Tokens? Like Ferengi?” He did not sound impressed, and
Halvorsen silently prayed for him to back out.
“Not quite. Whoever has the lowest score removes an item of
clothing. And so it continues. An unusual game to us, but perhaps not by human
standards.”
There was a long silence. Rel’kor’s initial reaction was
clearly that this was not a proper game. Even if Halvorsen could not persuade
the Captain that three players were insufficient, at least it would be much
better with him out of the room. He had to leave. He just had to.
But then, the first officer looked across at Laska, eyeing
up the Amazonian Klingon’s figure. “And it finishes, when…?” he asked.
“When one of the players has just a single item of clothing
remaining, the game ends. And whoever retains the most at that point wins.”
Rel’kor’s eyes dropped to Laska’s chest, which the human
realised, was somewhat prominent even beneath the armour that the medic wore.
“One item?” mused the Klingon man, and then grinned widely,
“as you say, why not?”
Halvorsen looked across at Laska in desperation. Surely the
medical officer was not going to allow herself to be ogled in that way? If
Adjur, for whatever reason, had already decided to go along with this, surely
Laska would not do the same?
“Sounds different,” said Laska, crushing the human’s last
glimmer of hope, “I’m in.”
“Good. Then we are agreed.”
Adjur pulled out a chair, and sat down at the table,
indicating to the others to take the three chairs already arranged around it. Rel’kor
immediately took the one opposite Laska, leaving Halvorsen facing the Captain.
She sat down, her hands suddenly clammy. There was no way to
avoid this. With rising horror, she realised that she could not even report
Lugmilla for what she had done. To do that would require an admission, actually
giving evidence. She could not let anyone else know about this. Ever.
“Why don’t you make the first deal?” asked Adjur, sliding
the deck across the metal surface of the table towards Halvorsen. The human
woman felt those dark eyes boring into her like phaser beams, appraising how
she acted. She had no choice but to continue.
The shuffled the deck a little uncertainly, never having
played any form of card game since childhood, and then dealt the cards round to
each of the Klingons. Each of them examined their hands, and Rel’kor grimaced,
growling under his breath. The concept of a ‘poker face’ evidently eluded him,
although, to be fair, it was hard to see how much difference it would make to
this particular game.
Halvorsen herself had a pair of nines, which she suspected
wasn’t that bad for a first deal. It probably meant that she was ahead of Rel’kor
at least, which would be a relief. She had no desire to see him even partly
undressed, but, all things considered, it was better than the alternatives. Her
objective, she realised, trying to think now that the initial anger had faded,
was to end up with at least her vest and trousers by the time somebody else
stripped to their last garment. And, for the sake of moral decency, it would be
best if that somebody was the first officer.
The draw proceeded around the table, and Rel’kor glared at
his new cards with anger, actually glancing across at her, as if wondering if
she’d deliberately slipped him a bad hand. She tried to ignore that; she wouldn’t
have had any idea how to fix the hand, even if she had wanted to. He’d have the
deal next himself, anyway.
When she received a second eight, giving her two pairs,
Halvorsen actually thought she’d won the first round. But then Laska turned
over three queens, her wide grin a flash of white teeth against her dark face.
Neither the Captain nor Rel’kor had developed any hand at all, which showed
that the former, at least, really did have a poker face. But then, Adjur at
least had an Ace.
“A pair of boots counts as one item,” said the Captain, as
the male Klingon stood, a sour expression on his face, “I don’t know why.
Perhaps it’s to just to make the game go quicker.”
Rel’kor pulled off his heavy combat boots with obvious bad
grace. It looked for a moment as if he would angrily throw them across the
room, but then he evidently remembered whose room it was, and placed them down
by his chair with a heavy thud instead.
The Klingon, it turned out, was not wearing any socks,
revealing a pair of bare feet that were, unsurprisingly, as human as his hands.
It was a minor point, but, Halvorsen realised, a small advantage in her favour.
In fact, since he didn’t have one of those great sashes that some Klingons
wore, she wondered how many items of clothing Rel’kor was actually wearing.
Perhaps this potential humiliation might be over quicker than she’d thought.
Fingers crossed, anyway.
“Now it is my turn,” said the first officer, as she passed
the deck over to him.
He fumbled the first shuffle, dropping some of the cards and
had to pick them up again for a second attempt, heavy eyebrows scowling as he
did so. He was obviously even less familiar with them than Halvorsen herself,
but even so, he succeeded on the second attempt and dealt them round the table.
After the draw, she had two pairs. They were low – fives and
threes – but that had to be enough, didn’t it? Rel’Kor had a grin on his face
this time, so maybe not. She looked across at the Klingon Captain, unflappable
as always, and hoped she didn’t look as nervous as she felt. Adjur turned over
her cards.
Three jacks.
Halvorsen turned to Laska, a sinking feeling in the pit of
her stomach. She rather liked the medical officer, but right now she needed her
to lose the hand. Yet, instead, she was leaning back in her chair, a slight
smile on her face. She casually flipped the cards over.
“High Queen,” she said, unnecessarily, her voice showing a
complete lack of concern that Halvorsen couldn’t help but think showed a lack
of moral decency under the circumstances, “could be me.”
Rel’kor let out a barking laugh, and Halvorsen felt as if a
weight had been lifted from her shoulders. She showed her two pair, and after
the first officer revealed that he had only slightly better himself, Laska
stood up, still looking quite relaxed – at least so far as she’d ever noticed
Klingons were.
The medical officer placed one of her feet on the chair, and
slid her hands slowly down the tight leather of her trousers to the boot,
before sliding it off. She wasn’t wearing socks, either, but Halvorsen had
mixed feelings about the way the Klingon woman had chosen to take her boots
off. On the one hand, it looked provocative, hardly the sort of appropriate
behaviour she approved of, but, on the other hand, it seemed to entrance Rel’kor,
which at least meant his attention was off the human. Hopefully it would stay
that way, especially if – heaven forfend – the next few hands went badly for
her.
Adjur was the next to take the deck, shuffling it
thoroughly, with far greater dexterity than her first officer had managed. She
dealt the cards swiftly round the table, before lifting her own hand, and
looking at it expressionlessly. A professional poker player could doubtless
read the little Klingon, but Halvorsen certainly couldn’t.
She had no clue what the Captain was thinking, although the
same couldn’t be said for the other two.
Laska let out what appeared to be a sarcastic huff, and shook her head
slightly, while the first officer leaned across the table to her, evidently
delighted with whatever he had just been handed.
“Looks like you’ll be out of your armour before I am,” he
told the medic.
“Ha! The game’s still early yet, you know. There’s plenty of
time for you to lose.”
“We’ll see.”
“Anyway… gah, four cards for me.”
“Huh, got to be bad.”
Laska made the draw. “Better now, though,” she said, leaning
back with a sneer, “but we’ll see.”
Even after the draw, though, Halvorsen had no better than a
pair of Kings. That wouldn’t have been a winning hand in either of the previous
rounds, but it wouldn’t have lost, either. Nonetheless, she felt relief when
Laska revealed – to Rel’kor’s evident delight – that she only had a pair of
sixes.
With three jacks, it turned out that he had the right to
look smug, but then his smile faded.
“Pair of fours,” said Adjur, calmly as she revealed her own
hand.
Everyone looked to her, her first officer looking slightly
embarrassed, Laska’s expression unreadable. Halvorsen wasn’t sure what she felt
herself.
“So,” said the captain.
She placed her elbows on the table, hands raised… and pulled
off her gloves, laying them down by her side. Her mouth twitched, and, for
once, Halvorsen could actually see a twinkle of humour in those dark eyes. The
other two Klingons looked relieved, seemingly having forgotten about the gloves
as much as the human had.
“Your deal, Laska.”
When she looked at her cards, Halvorsen realised that her
luck might finally have run out. She had nothing, just a high queen. She
reflected that each of the Klingons had lost once each so far, and that it was
arguably her turn to do so. Statistically, of course, assuming that nobody
messed up their decision on the draw, she was no more likely to lose than
anyone else. But it didn’t feel like that, and it was only Rel’kor’s evident
look of disgust and Laska’s pursed lips and frown that gave her any hope.
Her hand failed to develop after the draw, although none of
the Klingons looked very happy with what they’d got either. Not that you could
tell with Adjur, admittedly. With a sinking feeling she turned over her cards,
revealing the high queen.
“Huh,” said Laska, frowning, but didn’t elaborate.
Rel’kor, on the other hand, didn’t respond, just grunted
with distaste as he revealed that he only had a pair of fives himself. What had
he got to be displeased with? He hadn’t lost, and that was all that really
mattered in this game. The reason for Laska’s apparent confusion, however,
became apparent when she became the last of the four to reveal her hand –
another high queen.
“What happens?” asked the medical officer, looking between
Adjur and Halvorsen, apparently thinking that the latter at least, had played
the game before and knew what the rules were.
“It’s a tie,” observed Rel’kor, “perhaps they both…?”
Adjur jabbed a finger at her PADD, looking at it intently.
“Hmm,” she said, after a little while, “that makes sense.” Her dark eyes swept
over the revealed cards. “Second highest card decides the tie. So… ahah… our
human guest.”
It could be a lot worse, reflected Halvorsen, as she stood
up. The problem was, it quite likely would later on. She had put this off for
three hands, and it had been inevitable she would lose eventually. Perhaps,
though, she should have said something earlier? She couldn’t think how, without
making Starfleet look bad, and avoiding that that was surely her highest
priority.
Trying to look as calm as possible, she removed her boots
and slid them under the table. Laska raised her eyebrows, and Rel’kor followed
her gaze downwards. Oh, yes, her socks.
“What are those for?” asked the first officer.
“It’s… just a human custom.”
“Well, clothing is clothing,” observed Adjur, “your deal, I
believe.”
If Rel’kor had really harboured any suspicions that she had
somehow rigged the cards against him on her first deal, they clearly vanished
this time round. “Qa’pla!” he shouted cheerfully as he threw his cards
down at the end of the hand to reveal, of all things, a flush.
It turned out that Laska was the only one to fail to develop
a hand that round, to the first officer’s evident delight. “I told you that you
wouldn’t need that armour much longer,” he said, leaning back in his chair and
grinning, as if his victory was somehow due to more than mere luck, as seemed
likely.
Laska stood, and Halvorsen realised that what had appeared
to be a wide leather belt around her waist was actually a fastening for the
medic’s moulded body armour; she couldn’t take off one without the other. She
undid the heavy buckle slowly, with what the security officer couldn’t help but
feel was entirely too much relish, and separated the parts of her armour,
thrusting her chest forward as she did so.
The human glanced across at Rel’kor, her lip curling in
disapproval at his evident interest at just how taut the dark grey cloth of
Laska’s shirt was across her buxom figure. Men could be so crude, and Laska
seemed to be playing to that, in a way that was surely inappropriate for one of
her rank. But then, looking back at the medic, she saw the dark Klingon give a
quick wink in her direction – Rel’kor’s focus of attention was apparently too
low for him to notice – and she thought she understood.
Laska, perhaps, was deliberately distracting her fellow
Klingon’s attention from the human in the room. It didn’t matter too much yet,
but it might be helpful later on. Halvorsen did not appreciate being eyed up by
anyone, but the first officer would have been low on her list even if she did.
She managed to make a small smile in reply, grateful for what little protection
she might gain.
The male Klingon did not seem too disappointed when he lost
the following hand, his own armour going to lie behind his chair. He flexed his
arms, making his broad chest muscles ripple beneath the black undershirt, his
bearded face grinning. He was certainly coming round to the appeal of the game,
thought Halvorsen, who couldn’t agree with that perspective.
Adjur lost next, becoming the final member of the group to
take off her boots. So far, thought the security officer as she looked at the
hand Laska had just dealt her, it was even between everyone. By the looks of
what she was holding now, that looked set to continue. But, she realised, with
a sudden leap of hope, that was all she needed. Two more defeats for her, and
she would still be holding onto her treasured modesty, while two more defeats
for the male Klingon would mean that the game would be over.
One could only hope that that was the way it would be. She
had a chance to get out of this yet.
So resigned was she to having to remove her socks –
fortunately no great sacrifice – that she didn’t even notice Laska’s hand until
Rel’kor let out a bark of delight, and gave a little punch into the air. It was
she, not Halvorsen, that had just lost the round. The human set her jaw, trying
to ignore the first officer as he edged forward in his seat, as if that would
somehow give him a better view. Disgusting.
Laska stood up once more, and even the human couldn’t help
but notice how the fabric of her shirt seemed to be positively bursting with
the strain of holding her upper body in. The dark Klingon woman ran her hands
around the waistband of her trousers, even running a thumb along the inside,
before apparently changing her mind.
She pulled the shirt up, bunching it beneath her ample
bosom, revealing a muscular six-pack better defined than that of many human
men. She held the position for a moment, looking down at her male colleague,
white teeth flashing another grin, “I’m still going to beat you, you know,” she
said.
“I don’t think so. Now stop stalling.”
Laska didn’t reply to that, and instead, with a few final
tugs, eased the shirt up onto her shoulders, and pulled it over her head. Her
bra was made of something that looked like thin leather, although it might have
been a mock effect. It was cut surprisingly low, with a design that emphasised
her impressive cleavage more than it offered protection. Although, the security
officer reflected, either Klingons were built differently than human women, or
it had some serious under-wiring for support.
Rel’kor clapped his hands in glee, Halvorsen doing her best
not to give him a disgusted look as he did so, and flexed his hands again. “Now
we’re getting somewhere,” he observed.
“Ah, but you are wearing as little as I. We cannot say yet
who will win this battle.”
“Perhaps,” said Adjur, glancing between the pair of them, “before
too long, we shall. Your deal, Lieutenant Halvorsen.”
The human’s luck continued to hold, as the captain lost the
next hand. Instead of standing, she simply reached her hands up to her neck,
and unclipped a leather band holding a triangular metal gorget in place. It
went on top of her gloves as Adjur revealed the bare skin of… her neck. It was
becoming apparent that she had started out wearing rather more items than
anyone else, but nobody, of course, dared say a thing. If anything, Laska
seemed amused, and Rel’kor was having difficulty dragging his gaze away from
the bust of the Amazon sitting opposite him, and so barely seemed to notice.
Although he might, Halvorsen supposed, be grateful that
there wasn’t anything much that he could notice yet…
The human’s socks were next to go, to, it seemed, nobody’s
great interest. The bare metal of the floor plating was warmer beneath her toes
than she might have expected, but she could not help reflecting that she could
afford to lose only once more. She had no real desire to see Rel’kor dressed
only in his underwear, but she prayed that something like that would happen
soon, and release her from this constant worry.
Her luck, however, had ended. For the second time in a row,
she failed to develop a hand, while everyone else had at least a pair. She did
not even stand as she removed her black-and-gold jacket in the least
provocative manner she could manage, hanging it over the back of her chair.
With it went her comm badge, useless here in its own right, perhaps, but
bearing the symbol of Starfleet, as well as her rank pips.
She was so proud of that uniform that taking off the jacket
had been a harder moment than she had anticipated. She had done it on the
Tarantula before, of course, when facing Murakh, but this was different in so
many ways.
Fortunately, only Adjur seemed to really be watching her,
dark eyes like gimlets as always, unfathomable thoughts passing beneath them.
The Starfleet officer could not afford to lose again, and she wished that was
some tactic she could employ to boost her chances, but beyond the minimal
possibilities of the draw, there was nothing.
She picked up the hand the captain had just dealt her. So
long as… no, no, no, no! How could she get such a bad hand for the third time
in a row? She couldn’t believe it, especially when the draw turned up nothing.
She felt a cold sweat break out on her brow, and a sinking feeling in her
stomach as she showed the cards to the others. This couldn’t be happening!
Rel’kor turned over a pair of threes. Even that had her beat,
although he didn’t particularly seem to have noticed, judging from the scowl on
his face. With Laska also ahead of her, that left just Adjur. The Klingon woman
paused for a while, contemplating her cards, making everyone wait. Then,
finally, she put them down.
“No hand,” she said, and Halvorsen’s heart leapt for a split
second, “high Ace, though.” Dark eyes flicked towards the human, but she needed
to say nothing.
Silently, she stood. She tried to think of something to say,
some excuse, but she knew there wasn’t one. In all her years as a security
officer, nothing had made her this nervous. She clenched and unclenched her
hands, the eyes of the other two women on her. Laska leaned forward slightly,
and the human noted that Rel’Kor was the only one not looking at her; if he had
any interest in what lay beneath Starfleet clothing, it evidently paled
compared to his interest in Laska’s increasingly visible cleavage.
Lieutenant Halvorsen undid her trousers, and dropped them to
the floor. She knew that her vest was not quite long enough to prevent the
others seeing a flash of white knickers above her long, pale, athletic thighs,
and she felt a blush creeping to her cheeks as she stepped out of the clothing,
and sat down again as quickly as possible.
She had failed in her objective at the start of this game,
and tried not to fidget as she clenched her legs together beneath the table.
The game was perverse… the Federation should ban it. She should have said so at
the outset, no matter the consequence, but it was too late now. Even Lugmilla,
she suspected, wouldn’t have expected that she’d actually go through with it.
Now she had only herself to blame.
She dragged her attention back to the game as Laska placed
another set of cards before her. Surely this couldn’t go on much longer? And
this time? A pair of twos! Let her have some luck in the draw for once…
Thankfully, she did, and was able to display the resulting
three twos with something like relief. It didn’t even need to be a winning hand
to let her keep what remained of her modesty, but as it turned out, it was –
only the second time she’d won in the whole of the game so far.
“Well,” said Adjur, displaying her own hand, “my turn
again.” She stood, before adding, “an interesting game, Lieutenant, for all its
lack of violence. It tells us something about humans, I am sure.”
This time, it seemed, even the captain had run out of minor
‘garments’ to remove, and carefully began undoing a series of straps on her
tight leather jacket. Halvorsen could see there was some armour plate
discretely sewn into it, although it looked light, and was perhaps present more
for the sake of Klingon decency than for any really protective value. Armour
was of little use against phasers, after all, and, with her small frame, speed
and agility would likely be Adjur’s main assets in hand-to-hand combat.
The captain was wearing a sleeveless brown cloth vest
beneath the jacket, tucked tightly into the top of her leather trousers. Even
so, Rel’kor avoided looking in her direction, although whether out of deference
or out of desire to continue looking at Laska’s more obvious assets was hard to
tell.
Focussed as she was on the discomfort of sitting with little
more than a vest to cover her own body, Halvorsen none the less almost sighed
with relief when Rel’kor lost the next hand. The Klingon lost no opportunity to
show off as he removed his vest, revealing a muscular and hairy chest.
“It actually feels better to be out of these clothes,” he
observed with a grin, as he sat down again, “As I’m sure you’ll agree, Laska.”
“As soon as those trousers come off, you’ve lost,” the medic
told him, “I can still afford to lose mine.”
“Which you will!”
“Ha! Do you think?”
“I’m a superior officer, I know these things,” he said,
apparently half-seriously, “two or three more deals, and you’ll be standing
there wearing nothing but your knickers.”
“We won’t know,” pointed out Adjur, “until you deal,
Rel’kor. It is your turn.”
“Of course, captain,” he said, although he did not look particularly
chastened.
Still leering, and evidently filled with thoughts of a
topless Laska, the Klingon dealt out the cards for what might, just possibly,
be the final time. Halvorsen certainly hoped so.
But then her heart sank as she turned over her cards. A
hopeless hand. Again! She had being doing all right to begin with, but of late,
everything seemed to be turning against her. Rel’kor grunted angrily at his
cards, and Laska smiled at hers. Adjur, as ever, was unreadable. Not, Halvorsen
reflected, that she had too much to worry about at this stage, being clearly in
the lead with little of the game remaining.
“Three cards,” said the captain.
“One card,” said Laska, with a smirk. She shrugged when she
looked at the one she had received. “You are going down, Rel’kor,” she said,
“by which I mean, your trousers are.”
Not necessarily, thought Halvorsen, wondering if the two had
even remembered that there was anyone else in the game. Even so, she managed to
keep a steady voice as she reluctantly said “four cards.” Laska would surely
win this hand, with whatever she had, but the real battle was in not being
last. The draw had just given the Starfleet lieutenant an ace, which was
something, but without any pairs, she could only hope that it would be enough.
The first officer replaced three of his cards, grunting with
evident dissatisfaction at what he had received. He looked across at Laska and
then, for one of the few times in the game, at the solitary human. “Maybe not,”
he said noncommittally, before pulling his gaze back to the usual focus of his
attention.
“Pair of aces,” said Adjur. So not her, this round.
“Two pair, nines and sevens.”
There was silence for a little while, everyone still.
“Your turn, Lieutenant,” said Adjur, and she realised she
had forgotten to turn her cards over.
She did so quickly, not trusting herself to say anything.
High ace. Lousy. But, on the other hand, it wasn’t impossible that Rel’kor had
something worse, and if he did…
“Pair of fours.”
Halvorsen felt a strange sense of calm wash over her. This
was the moment of humiliation she had dreaded all evening, and possibly just a
forerunner to one that was even greater. Yet, now that she actually faced it,
it wasn’t humiliating at all. The whole game, really, was just the luck of the
draw, with but minor elements of gambling and calculation. It wasn’t her fault
that she had ended up where she was.
Yes, she represented Starfleet, and had a hard time
imagining a worse advert for them than this. But that also meant she was proud,
and noble, and brave. If she could face the Borg without flinching, surely she
could face this? Let the Klingons see honour in action.
The lieutenant stood, although she did not really need to,
holding her chin up, and standing stiffly to attention for a second. Then she
lifted the hem of her vest, and pulled it up and over her head, dropping it
down beside her trousers. She remained standing for a moment, in plain white
bra and knickers, noting with detachment that all three of the others were
watching her, feeling the warm air of the room on the pale skin of her bare
stomach and back, her shoulders, arms, and thighs.
Then she sat down again, calm, yet conscious of the way her
slow deep breathing was moving her chest. Rel’kor had already lost interest,
and she grasped fully for the first time that he was no more interested in
aliens than she was. Adjur was actually smiling, a small smile to be sure, but,
it seemed, a real one. She rather thought that the captain approved of the way
she had just handled that.
“Your deal, Rel’kor,” said the captain.
So this was it. The odds were fifty-fifty that the game
would end right here, and it couldn’t possibly go on for longer than another
four hands.
“Commander Rel’kor,” she said out loud, feeling that odd
sense of detachment again, “it seems that it may well be between you and me.
May the best woman win.”
Laska snorted with amusement as Rel’kor shuffled the cards.
The mood was suddenly broken by a loud beeping sound.
Everyone was still for a moment, and then Laska bent down to
remove something from her discarded clothing. “Yes?” she said, speaking into
it. “I see. In that case, I will be right with you.” She looked up at the
others, “it seems I have a medical emergency. Some rather overzealous duelling,
and we really don’t want to be without our best beam weapons officer.”
“Of course,” said Adjur, leaning back in her chair, “do as
you have to. Disappointing, but still. It would have been interesting to see how
this turned out, but, as the evening has now ended, Rel’kor, go and see what
you can do. There may be a disciplinary offence, here.”
The first officer ground his teeth in frustration, his face
like thunder, before copping a last glance at Laska’s ample assets as she
pulled her shirt back on again. “Of course, captain,” he said, “although I
can’t promise that you will have only one patient tonight, Laska.”
“However, we still have some of the drink,” continued Adjur,
“so perhaps you could stay for a little while, Lieutenant? I apologise for the
disruption, of course, but so be it. Oh, and Rel’kor?”
“Captain?” he paused at the door, his hand already over the
control.
“You might want to your shirt back on, at least.”
---***---
Laska wondered how she was going to break it to Rel’Kor
without the first officer becoming violent. When the Captain had first
suggested the idea, her plan had been to make the ‘interruption’ rather more
subtle. But now Rel’Kor thought that
there had been a real disruption to the crew’s performance, and she could tell
from his expression that he was even more annoyed by what had apparently
happened than she had suspected.
She had, it seemed, overdone both the details of the fake
call and her seductive behaviour during the game itself. Distracting him from the
pale-skinned human woman, Halvorsen, had been even easier than she had
expected, and he seemed to have become quite fixated on Laska herself.
Which hadn’t been the plan. Except… now that she thought
about it, was it such a bad thing? A delicious possibility rose to her mind,
unbidden. If there was one way to break the news to a fuming Rel’Kor that she
had just lied to him (under Captain’s orders, but still…) then surely it would
be to give him what he wanted?
After all, he hadn’t looked that bad with his shirt off…
“I need something from my room,” she told him.
“What?” He scowled, growling out the question. “Why?”
“I just do. Medical matters.”
He snorted angrily. “Very well. Whatever. I will meet you in
the sick bay.”
“I’ll need you to carry some of it.”
“What? Seriously? What the baQa’ have you left in
your room?”
But she was already half way down the corridor, and declined
to answer. With a huff, he followed her, feet clanging heavily on the deck
plating. A junior officer hurriedly ducked out of the way as they approached,
evidently not wishing to be caught anywhere nearby.
Finally, they reached the door to her cabin, and she jabbed
the door open, stepped inside, and span around to face Rel’Kor. She grabbed
onto his loose armoured jacket and heaved, yanking him off his feet and into
the room. Another pirouette and she slammed him up against the wall beside the
door, hitting it hard enough to raise a considerable bang.
Instinctively, he reached for a dagger, but the next instant
she was pressed up against him, pressing her mouth against his, a passionate
kiss with tongues and teeth. He was frozen with surprise for a few seconds, but
then re-sheathed his knife and thumped the door control so that it slid shut,
closing them both in.
“I lied,” she said, pulling herself away from him,
forcefully pulling his jacket down around his shoulders, “there’s no medical
emergency. Nothing happened.”
“Uh…” he looked confused, heavy brows creased in puzzlement.
“I could see you liked what she saw,” she took a step back,
and threw off her own armour, “do you really think I didn’t too?” Her hands
pushed up inside his shirt, running over his muscular belly. “I don’t know if
you could wait, but I know I couldn’t.”
He growled again, but this time with a lusty rumble, before
pulling her back to him and pulling up her own shirt. They tussled, arms
grabbing at clothing and flesh, teeth nipping at lips, necks, and shoulders.
Soon, both their shirts were off, and Rel’Kor grabbed for the fastening of her
bra.
Instead of letting him do that, she ducked, crouching down
on her knees, reaching for his remaining clothes. He growled with approval,
shifting his hips away from the wall, making it easier for her. With a sudden
move, she yanked his trousers and shorts down around his knees, baring his
crotch.
According to the medical texts Laska had read, Klingon males
were better endowed than those of almost any other humanoid species. She had no
idea whether that was really true, or just boasting on the part of the authors,
as seemed entirely plausible. Whatever the truth of the matter, she did know,
as much from experience as from the text books, that the average erect Klingon
penis measured about 18 centimetres in length.
Rel’Kor, it seemed, was well above average.
She slid her hand along his length, rubbing the prominent
ridges against her fingers, before gripping the head and giving it a tight
squeeze, to Rel’Kor’s evident enjoyment. She moved her hand back down to the
base, where a thick hatch of hair surrounded the hard carapace of his scrotum,
before pulling his cock down slightly so that she could slip its tip between
her lips.
The first officer let out a groan of satisfaction, gripping
her shaven head with one hand as the other clenched and unclenched against the
wall. His hips began to move, forcing his length further into her mouth, her
tongue greedily feeling out the ridges on his shaft. She looked up, to see his
eyes fixed on hers, a hunger burning in them that had little to do with
affection, but much to do with raw animal desire.
No different from her previous lovers, then.
She popped his cock free from her mouth, and he grunted with
disappointment. She stood, reaching behind her back to find the clasp on her
bra, and he grinned, eyes fixed once more on her prominent assets. With a
flourish she pulled the bra aside, tossing it away into the corner of the room,
heavy breasts hanging free.
Growling deep in his throat, Rel’Kor gripped the firm
muscles of her abdomen and slid his hands up towards her chest, his breathing
heavy as his hands, rough from years of combat training, finally gripped and
fondled the objects of his desire. They kissed, passionately, as he handled her
roughly, squeezing her between his fingers with one hand, while the other dug into
her back, fingernails scraping the skin.
She pulled him away from the wall, moving towards the bed,
and he eagerly followed, releasing her at last in order to pull himself free
from the last of his clothing. Finally naked, he grabbed her shoulders, and threw
her down forcefully onto the mattress, before leaping on top of her, hands
fumbling at the hem of her trousers as they continued to kiss, his teeth
nipping at her lips.
She wrestled his hands away, although her trousers were down
around her hips now, and they grappled, wrestling together in passionate
combat. With a heave, she rolled him over onto his back, leaning on top of him,
pushing herself upwards until her legs straddled his belly, and her large breasts
swung before his face.
With another growl, he gave up his pursuit of removing her
trousers, and eagerly pulled her down, mouth fastening on one mound as a hand
gripped the other, twisting her large nipple round in a half circle. She let
out a growl of her own now, the pleasure mixed with a tint of pain, but did not
give up on her objective, grabbing his other arm and forcing it against the
head of the bed in a certain way.
His attention was elsewhere, and she adjusted herself so
that the hand on her breast broke free, and Rel’Kor’s face was forced into her
cleavage. With a sudden move, she had his other arm, and that too, clipped
against the head of the bed, the hidden handcuff snapping shut around his
wrist.
It was a moment or two before he noticed, but then he let
out a roar, of anger this time, his body thrashing beneath her as his powerful
arms strained against the cuffs that held him.
She leaned back, still gripping his torso between her
thighs, but otherwise free of his attentions.
“Release me!” he shouted, “I am your senior officer!”
She wriggled back, fingers running across his chest, digging
her nails in, scratching, and pulling at the hair there.
“I will if you order me to,” she told him, “but, if I do, it
ends here.” To emphasise the point, she pulled her trousers part way down her
thighs, black knickers barely visible against her skin. “Or would you rather
have more?”
He stopped his struggles, looking at her, eyes straying up
and down her body as he considered his options. No true Klingon would take a
woman by force; it was dishonourable and proved that you were not manly enough
to entice her willingly. Not to mention that most Klingon women were strong
enough, and ferocious enough, to deliver some quite serious injury to any
attacker.
She moved back again, so that she could grip his cock, and
press it against the inside of her thighs. “Well?”
“Is this what you do with all your men?”
“Invariably.”
He breathed heavily, chest rising and falling, then
evidently reached a decision. “Then… yes. As you wish it.”
Grinning, Laska raised herself up onto her knees, pulling
down her tight leather trousers, and struggling out of them, dumping them on
the floor at the foot of the bed. Teasing him, she rubbed her own breasts,
tweaking her nipples, watching his hands clench helplessly as he strained to
reach her, even though he knew it was impossible.
Laska dropped her hands to her hips, and slowly slid off her
knickers. For once, his gaze dropped from her chest, taking in the narrow strip
of hair at her groin; not many Klingon women shaved down there as she did. She
moved forward, spreading her legs, raising herself up above Rel’Kor’s large
cock, rubbing her hand along its ridged length. The first officer let out a
moan of frustration, and, at last, she relented.
Despite herself, she sighed with relief as she lowered
herself onto him, feeling each ridge of his member slide into her as she did
so. His own groan was louder, and she felt his hips convulsing, rising to meet
her as he pushed himself further between her powerful, muscular thighs. He
wasn’t just long, but thick, too, spreading her wide in a way that felt even
better than she had expected.
But she was setting the pace here, and began to move her
hips forcefully, until he was compelled to join her rhythm. She raked her
fingernails down his chest, scratching his nipples, making him hiss with pain
and pleasure as she slowly rode him, plunging him into her as deeply as she
could.
The bed creaked as she pounded herself up and down, her
tempo slowly increasing, large breasts bouncing to Rel’Kor’s evident delight.
He wriggled beneath her, arms straining against the handcuffs, still unable to
grab her, to take control.
“Release me…” he moaned, “it will be worth it… I will fuck
you ‘till you scream.”
She didn’t reply, just leaned forward, her breasts brushing
against his heaving chest, grinning her wildest grin as she continued to grind
herself against his body. She doubted there was anything he could do that would
be as good as this, no matter what he might think.
Despite his protestations, there was no doubt that he
enjoyed this, too, perhaps secretly savouring the difference of the experience,
and certainly entranced by the feel of her body and the vigour of her emotions.
Twice she climbed off him, sensing that he was getting too close, and wanting
to prolong this for longer than he appeared willing to.
Wiping a trickle of sweat from her forehead, and flicking
back the leather-bound pony tail that had somehow fallen over one shoulder, she
climbed back onto him for the third time. His cock filled her, stretched her,
yet she was so well lubricated now that she had no difficulty moving faster
than ever before, pounding up and down with renewed vigour.
This time she let herself go, vocally as well as physically.
She cried out in passion, deep, long groans of pleasure drowning out the
protests from the creaking bed and the loud slap of flesh on flesh. She leaned
back, grabbing Rel’Kor’s knees as she arched her body, throwing her head back
as she gave throat to the feelings flooding through her body.
He was growling too, a bass rumble, close to climax, yet at
a time of her choosing, not his. She released one of his knees, bringing her
free hand round to grasp a breast, tweaking her own nipple mercilessly just
seconds before Rel’Kor exploded inside her, roaring as he did so.
Laska’s body shook with the force of her orgasm, and she
felt him release his seed inside her again and again, a constant flood of
almost unbearable pleasure as her body involuntarily milked him for every drop.
She slid off him, panting to regain her breath as she
collapsed beside Rel’Kor’s still-manacled form. She wondered vaguely, as she
did so, whether humans ever had it so good. Somehow, she doubted it.
---***---
“Unfortunate,” said Adjur, “but so it is.” She took a drink
from her goblet, and gestured towards the one still sitting beside Halvorsen.
She had forgotten it was there, but, not wanting to appear
rude, took another sip. The stuff was fiery, that much was certain, and not
something she would normally drink at all, let alone on duty. She fidgeted a
little in her seat, glancing down at where her clothes lay, but since the
Klingon captain had made no move to re-robe, she wasn’t sure she should make
the first move. Although Adjur was wearing far more than the human was…
“Well, I had changed the rules, in any event,” said the
Klingon, standing up, and walking round the table, still in tight leather
trousers and sleeveless top, “the ‘one garment remaining’ part. It seemed
prudent.” She stood behind Halvorsen’s chair, and the security officer wondered
how she should be responding.
“Curious game,” Adjur went on, “different from anything of
ours, but then it would be. I can see the attraction… in the right company. Do
you mind if I ask a question?”
That was remarkably polite for a Klingon. How could she
answer in anything but the affirmative? “Of course, captain.”
“Hmm,” said Adjur, perhaps surprised by the use of the
honorific. “I was going to ask who you had hoped would lose the next hand.
Before the interruption.”
“I… hadn’t thought.” Rel’Kor, of course, because then the
game would have ended. But saying that would make it sound as if she wanted to
see the man strip to his underwear.
“We know what Rel’Kor wanted.” Halvorsen started as the
Klingon captain placed a finger on her shoulder, casually, as if she wasn’t
really thinking about it. She didn’t dare say anything. “Laska, too, if I am
any judge. But, no, I do not think you agreed with her.” The finger moved,
tracing up the back of Halvorsen’s neck. “Your eyes were… ahead.”
Well, yes, thought the security officer, but only because…
“Whereas I…” the finger traced down, between her shoulder
blades, as the little Klingon leant in,
her voice as soft as one of her race could manage, lips just centimetres from
the human’s ear, her breath warm. Halvorsen flushed, still frozen in place.
“I… must confess to a certain curiosity. Had you lost the
next hand, it would have been satisfied… in part.”
“I’m not sure what you mean,” said Halvorsen, finding her
voice at last.
With a deft motion, the Klingon popped the clasp on her bra,
her other hand brushing over a shoulder strap, pushing it away so the whole
garment came free, sliding down her arms. Halvorsen almost jumped out of her
seat, arms rising reflexively to cover her exposed breasts.
“I see nothing to hide,” said the Klingon, still whispering
in her ear. She took each of the human’s wrists, gently, but forcefully, moving
them away from her body. Halvorsen was too stunned to resist, although surely
she could have. Her breathing was coming fast now, so confused was she by the
turn of events.
“Hmm. So pale. And yet…”
“Captain, I don’t think this is…” she turned her head
towards the Klingon as she spoke, but
Adjur seemed to interpret the movement differently, and leaned in to silence
her words with a kiss.
Halvorsen’s blue eyes went wide, letting out a muffled gasp
that only enabled the other woman to slip her tongue in further. But she didn’t
struggle, her mind racing with confused and contradictory thoughts. The kiss
was far from unpleasant, and yet it wasn’t proper, wasn’t seemly.
She shouldn’t be kissing back. Was she kissing back? Well,
yes, but only because… actually, she couldn’t think of a good reason for that.
Adjur’s right hand slid down her body, fondling her bare breast, with more
gentleness than she could ever have expected a Klingon might.
The kiss ended, and Adjur moved away, moving to take one of
Halvorsen’s hands, so that she stood out of the chair, and then pulling her
towards one of the inner doors of the suite. Her other hand thumbed the switch,
sliding it open to reveal the bedroom beyond. The Klingon’s dark, unreadable,
eyes started into her wide blue ones.
“Ready to satisfy the rest of my curiosity?”
“Captain…”
“Call me Adjur.”
“Adjur… I’ve never done this before. Not with a…”
“With a Klingon? I would not think you had. It will be a
first for me, too, of course.”
“No! I meant with a…” she tried to steady her voice, “…with
a woman.”
“Oh.” Adjur sounded genuinely surprised, but recovered
quickly. “But you have thought about it. I can tell.”
“Well… uh…”
Of course she hadn’t.
Well, yes, perhaps she had. But not much.
Not recently, anyway. She was too busy; in fact, she kept
herself that way. It wasn’t right to think about such things, and she had been
younger then.
And she had never done anything about it. Of course not. She
was a Starfleet officer, not a… well, not that there was anything against that…
hadn’t been for centuries. But, still she hadn’t ever… not really… she didn’t
even have that much experience with men.
None of those words came out, nothing but a meaningless
mumble.
Adjur’s mouth twitched, a small smile. “Then time for me to
satisfy your curiosity, I think. Come over here,” she moved towards the bed, taking
Halvorsen with her, “and let us see what I can teach you.”
The human found herself pushed into a kneeling position on
top of the mattress. Adjur was not being forceful, but she was undoubtedly
firm, her arms deceptively strong, with firm muscles beneath the
coffee-coloured skin. The Klingon was short enough that she had to raise
herself slightly to reach Halvorsen’s eye level when she joined her on the bed,
her own dark orbs burning with a hard determination, as if boring into the
human’s soul.
“I don’t even know what to do,” said the human, almost
plaintively.
“You will,” said the captain simply, and kissed her again.
The kiss was firmer this time, more passionate, as one of
the Klingon’s hands ran through Halvorsen’s short blonde hair. The human felt
the other woman’s body against hers, leather-bound thighs against her bare
ones, and tentatively reached out, placing her hands behind Adjur’s back. Her
fingers twitched as they felt firm, warm, flesh through the fabric of the
captain’s top, uncertain of how to react. Her other hand brushed Adjur’s long
hair, soft beneath her fingertips.
The Klingon ducked her head, now running her lips over
Halvorsen’s chin. She gave a quiet growl, almost like a purr, as she moved
lower, kissing the human’s exposed throat, then down to the collarbone.
Halvorsen’s heart was beating hard, her eyes wide, but
staring only at the wall as warm lips and breath moved down her chest. She
should not be doing this, she knew that. Certainly not with a Klingon. How had
she got into this?
Lips brushed the swell of at the top of her left breast,
ridged nose rubbing lightly into her body. She shouldn’t feel this burning in
her loins, this aching for something so long denied. But she couldn’t help it.
With a light, yet throaty, growl, Adjur fastened her mouth
over one pink nipple, lips and tongue caressing it with evident delight.
Despite herself, Halvorsen let out a groan of pleasure, fingers clenching on Adjur’s
hair, dark strands running between the pale digits. This shouldn’t be so good…
but it was, it was…
The Klingon woman at last released her treat, squirming on
the bed to pull her head down lower, kisses now raining across the human’s
quivering stomach, tongue briefly darting into her navel before moving down to
her hips. Halvorsen’s hands slid from her partner’s body as the latter moved
down to her long thighs.
Adjur cupped the Starfleet officer’s buttocks, pushing her
upwards, before firmly separating her legs, lips pecking against the inner
surface. This was it… Halvorsen found herself transfixed, legs shaking
slightly, but otherwise unable to move as the Klingon woman pulled down her
knickers, exposing her. She tried to say something, but no words came.
Adjur let out another throaty growl, pressing her nose into
the human’s mound, one hand wrestling the knickers further down and out of the
way, while the other… Halvorsen gasped as a finger brushed along the length of
her most intimate area, flushed now, and damp with undeniable excitement.
Adjur moved again, now lying on her back. Still unable to
make any move of her own, Halvorsen found herself pulled into a new position,
pale thighs straddling the Klingon woman’s head. She looked down; saw the dark
hair spreading out like a halo around the ridged forehead, against the deep
russet of the bed’s blanket. The Klingon’s eyes met hers, a flash of white
teeth against brown skin as she grinned, and then…
A moan of unrestrained pleasure forced itself from Halvorsen’s
mouth before she clamped it shut. Her body felt weak as her hips bucked
involuntarily. She fell forward, hands slapping against the metal of the cabin
wall, chest heaving, body shivering in delight.
What Adjur was doing to her… she had never truly imagined
what it would be like. The way her tongue was probing so deep… flicking and
moving against every part of her… The Klingon was obviously entranced,
fascinated by the differences, savouring the taste of human juices on her
tongue, exploring every cranny, trying to find what would best please her alien
partner.
Halvorsen screwed her eyes shut, tried to keep herself
still, even as her body betrayed her. She was a Starfleet officer, and this was
a Klingon. She lived for discipline, for self-control, not for this. No matter
how good it felt, she couldn’t allow herself to climax. Not like this, it was
so wrong. She had to end it now, before it was too late.
“Please…” she begged, finding her true voice at last,
“please don’t…”
Adjur stopped, pulling herself free from the task.
Halvorsen’s eyes opened, looked down into the Klingon woman’s puzzled face.
“Please don’t what?”
In that instant, that moment that Adjur had released her,
the security officer felt an aching loss that she could give no words to. What
she said next was not at all what she had intended just seconds before, and she
would wonder why for many years to come.
“Please don’t stop.”
The little Klingon’s tongue was inside her again, if
anything more practiced than before. And what was she doing with her finger
now? Halvorsen’s prized self-control collapsed under the assault, mewling cries
of pleasure escaping her mouth as she ground her hips into her partner’s face.
Her chest heaved, her face flushed red as she clung onto the wall for dear
life, body responding to the delightful torment in ways she had never
experienced.
She had had sex before, when she was younger. Not often, and
always, of course, with human men. It had never felt like this. If it had,
could she have turned her back on it so thoroughly? What did it mean about her?
What did it say of this proud, disciplined, honourable Starfleet officer that a
Klingon captain was going to make her… going to make her… fy faen…
Her body convulsed, hands clenching tightly as she
surrendered every shred of inhibition to the overwhelming sensation that
flooded through her, cries echoing through the small cabin as she lost herself
to the power of her orgasm.
Adjur shifted beneath her, and Halvorsen’s legs collapsed,
dropping her onto the bed as she gasped for breath. It had been the most
incredible feeling, better even than she could have imagined. She rolled over
onto her back, basking in the afterglow, coming down from the high.
Adjur was gently fondling one of her nipples, moving up
beside her to plant a kiss at the base of her neck. They were silent for a
while, just lying together, before the Klingon woman spoke.
“Well?”
“That… that was…”
“I could tell. But I meant ‘are you ready’?”
Halvorsen frowned, turning towards her partner, the question
poised, but silenced as Adjur scowled, and raised herself up on one elbow to
look down on the human.
“Don’t think that wasn’t fun,” the Klingon said, “very
enjoyable. As it seemed…” she slowly licked her lips, “it was for you. But for
you more than I. It is, I think, your turn.”
“My turn? You mean…?”
“To show me what you have learned. Yes.” The Klingon’s voice
was harsh, her dark eyes cold and merciless.
“But I’ve never…”
“I know. You said. But now you will. Because you will not
leave this room until I am satisfied,” she spoke slowly, carefully, a hint of
menace in her voice; “Your. Turn. Starfleet.”
The little Klingon rolled over onto her back, and Halvorsen
pulled herself up to look down at her alien partner, heart thumping again as
she realised that she was uncertain what to do next. What did Adjur expect?
What if she couldn’t match the Klingon’s expectations?
But from the look on the captain’s dark face, there was
little time for such reflection. The Klingon was still dressed, if only
partially, and, since she was making no move to disrobe further on her own,
Halvorsen realised that she had to start there. Almost gingerly, she tugged at
the fabric of Adjur’s sleeveless top, pulling it free from her tight leather
trousers.
A little nervously, she raised it up, revealing a taut,
muscular belly, with a small metal stud in the navel. Otherwise, Adjur’s skin
was flawless, a smooth rich coffee colour that looked no different from the
skin tone of many humans. Halvorsen glanced up to the Klingon’s face, and saw
that she was being watched intently, Adjur’s lips slightly parted in
anticipation. The alien woman seemed to enjoy the human’s tentative actions.
Perhaps she even revelled in the slow corruption of a Starfleet officer.
But there she had already been victorious, even if she was
now pushing Halvorsen further into the abyss. Her honour had been taken from
her with that uninhibited cry as she climaxed, now she could only finish the
act, follow the Klingon’s remaining script.
She helped Adjur pull the top over her arms, discarding it
beside the bed, next to her own white knickers. Beneath, the Klingon wore a
leather bra, much like that Laska had worn, solid enough beneath the cups to
force her small breasts up into a prominent cleavage. Halvorsen fixed on it,
breath coming deeper again, as she placed one of her pale hands on the side of
the Klingon’s chest, feeling smooth skin and toned flesh beneath her fingertips,
as she slid them round to the back.
She was vaguely aware of Adjur undoing her trousers as she
slipper her hands round to the woman’s back, seeking the bra clasp. It was in
the same place that she had expected – there were no major differences between
human and Klingon clothing design in that respect, it seemed – and she
unclipped it in a single motion.
She felt small, warm, hands sliding up her flanks, moving
round to grip her shoulders, and glanced up to see that the captain still had
her eyes firmly fixed on her own, watching every flicker of emotion cross her
face. She pushed the bra up and out of the way, noting in passing the supple
soft nature of the treated leather, and Adjur tossed it away with a rapid
motion.
The Klingon’s breasts were, as she had previously noted,
small. Indeed, they were less prominent than her own, which were hardly
impressive. Her nipples were dark, with small aureoles, the colour of rich
chocolate. For a moment, Halvorsen was frozen, indecision again clouding her
mind. This was so far from her experience… should she help Adjur with her
trousers, or did she expect something else first?
One of the Klingon’s hands was on the back of her head,
fingers ruffling the blonde hair, pulling her downwards towards the dark body
beneath her. It was clear now what she wanted, and there was no purpose to
delaying.
Halvorsen lowered herself, brushing her lips against the
swell of Adjur’s breast, tasting the salt of the woman’s sheen of sweat. Taking
the initiative, she kissed again in the same spot, and then moved up, pressing
pink lips against the dark nub before her. The Klingon hissed, but with a
pleasant sound, an inhalation of breath closer to a gasp than the angry call of
a cat. It changed to a soft growl in the back of her throat as Halvorsen opened
her mouth, popping the erect nipple inside, sucking on it gently, teasing the
tip with her tongue.
It seemed all too short a time later that Adjur muttered a
throaty “lower… lower,” and Halvorsen reluctantly released the nub, shifting
her position on the bed to move her attentions down to the Klingon’s firm
stomach, and then lower still.
She struggled with the captain’s trousers, pulling them off
with some difficulty, before moving back to stroke the inside of her parted
thighs. So far, her partner seemed to be enjoying things, but, as the crux
approach, the human woman found herself nervous again.
Adjur’s knickers, it turned out, were not also made of
leather, but of black fabric, a drop of moisture at the crotch making it darker
still. Halvorsen pulled them down, at last exposing the Klingon fully to her
gaze.
She did not look so different from human women. The thatch
on her mound was thick, dark against the brown skin, her nether lips shaped as
any human would expect them, and clearly the source of the dampness on her
undergarment. The security officer was frozen again, too nervous, too confused,
to take the next step.
“Well?” came the captain’s voice, harsh again.
Halvorsen did not meet her gaze. “I…” was all she could say
in reply, face flushing a deep red at the thought of what was to come.
“I know. You haven’t done this before.” The Klingon’s hand
clenched in her hair, pulling at the roots. “Time you did. Taste me,
Starfleet.”
The hand pulled her head in closer, forcing her against her
partner’s most intimate parts. Halvorsen’s nose was almost tangled in the
Klingon’s bush, the bristly hairs tickling against it. Her lips were against
those other lips, muscular thighs either side of her head. She could taste the
moisture, odd yet distinct. Who knew how similar that taste was to that of
humans?
Adjur let out what sounded like a warning growl at
Halvorsen’s continued inaction, and it was clear she could remain so no longer.
Still blushing, mind still unable to grasp how she had got to this pass, the
security officer pushed out her tongue and probed the opening before her.
The taste filled her mouth, but she carried on, pressing
deeper, responding to quiet grunts of satisfaction. She had not really parted
Adjur’s nether lips for a view of where her tongue now explored, but there
seemed to be slight ridges there (surely that wasn’t the case with humans?) and
a clitoris that she suspected was larger than her own.
She continued, hoping only that she was doing it right. The
captain’s grunts seemed to be shifting to higher pitches of frustration now, as
if Halvorsen was still too… too what? Too hesitant? Too slow? Too fast? Missing
the right spots? What else could she do?
Yanking her hair, Adjur pulled her back, and Halvorsen
brushed some loose alien hairs from her mouth, and took a few breaths, her
nostrils no longer so filled with the scent of Klingon arousal.
“You need more guidance,” the captain told her, “and you
need to loosen up.” Halvorsen opened her mouth to speak, but the Klingon woman
scowled at her, “don’t even say it. But I already know how to relax you. Come
here.”
Halvorsen frowned, uncertain of the woman’s meaning, and,
with a grunt of annoyance, the little Klingon grabbed her armpits and pulled
her up the bed until the human was lying on top of her.
“Up on your knees and elbows.” The security officer obliged,
a hint of fear in her chest, wondering what came next, and at the Klingon’s
stern tone. “Stay there. Don’t move.”
She obeyed, even as her partner moved around on the bed
below her, until she was facing the opposite direction, and the Klingon’s dark hairy
mound was once again beneath her face. Strong hands gripped her buttocks,
fingernails digging into the flesh before jerking her down again, long legs
spread wide.
She was taller than Adjur, so that the Klingon’s ridged
forehead now lay against her crotch. She knew better now than to say anything,
but, as she had expected, the captain was not so silent.
“Fuck me,” came the commanding voice, slightly muffled now,
“while I loosen you up… like this!”
Halvorsen let out a sharp gasp as two fingers penetrated
her, forcefully inserting themselves between her own pink lips. Her elbows gave
way, and she dropped down, the Klingon’s groin in her face once again. If she
moved a little, she could just get her tongue into…
Adjur’s fingers were pumping in and out now, hard and fast,
perhaps motivated by a tint of Klingon anger. It felt good, much better than it
should have done, and the human moaned in pleasure and buried herself
enthusiastically into her partner’s damp slit.
The little Klingon’s hips bucked into her face, and she said
some word that the universal translator couldn’t cope with. “That’s better…
yes… now suck just there…” and then she dissolved into a long wordless moan,
and Halvorsen knew that this time, she was doing it right.
They lay together, the human on top, Adjur with one hand
round her waist, the other pressing two fingers into her, sliding in and out as
both their bodies found the same rhythm. The Klingon’s passionate groans were
interspersed with rumbling growls of obvious pleasure, and Halvorsen herself
was unable to suppress whimpers of ecstatic torment despite her mouth being so
desperate to complete its task.
Two, she suddenly realised, could play at that game. Roughly
pulling her partner’s thighs just a little further apart, she extended a finger
and plunged it between the damp lips, pressing as deep as she could, even as
she continued to suckle on Adjur’s swollen clit. The Klingon’s sharp cry of
delight told all she needed to know, and she pressed on, the tempo of their
bodies’ movements steadily increasing.
Halvorsen felt lost, in both the act and in the delightful
sensation of her partner’s fingers penetrating her own core. Gone was the proud
security officer, the woman who so prided herself on her restraint and decency,
on her dedication to ship and badge. Instead, she bucked and cried at each
thrust of Klingon digits into her depths, giving herself over to the undiluted
passion as she sought, with increasing urgency, to do whatever she could to
have her partner join in her pleasure.
A second finger joined the first, barely squeezing into the
smaller woman’s tight hole, pounding between dark thighs with all the vigour
she could muster as she mercilessly teased the Klingon’s clit. Adjur cried out,
a high-pitched shout of release, her body convulsing off the bed, vaginal
muscles contracting and gripping the human’s fingers so tightly it hurt. Fluid
gushed onto Halvorsen’s tongue, as her partners feet drummed on the wall above
the head of the bed.
For a moment, they were still, Adjur gasping from the force
of her climax. But then, the little woman seemed to remember her partner’s own
need. With a deep growl, she thrust a third finger between Halvorsen’s swollen
lips, stretching her wider than ever, hand slapping against the flesh with
increasing force. Her free hand moved from the human’s back, down to her
breast, gripping her hard, erect nipple, squeezing and tweaking it for all she
was worth.
Halvorsen screamed as she came, surprising herself with the
volume of her cry, unable to believe that this orgasm was even better, more
incredible than the last. She swore, knuckles white as they gripped the sheets.
Adjur moved beneath her, and Halvorsen’s face dropped into
the damp patch on the sheets between her partner’s legs as the Klingon’s tongue
replaced her fingers, licking every drop she could from her human lover’s
tormented hole.
---***---
“Did everything go well, Lieutenant?” asked the security
chief, as she stepped off the transporter platform, back onto the deck of the
USS Endeavour.
“Yes, sir. Prisoner delivered, as requested.” He was being
led away now, by her colleagues.
“So I see. No troubles with the Klingons, then?”
Halvorsen saw, as the door swished open to allow a dejected
O’Leary and his security escort to leave the room, a certain Tellarite standing
out in the corridor. The stocky woman’s dark eyes locked onto hers… this was no
chance meeting. But Lugmilla wouldn’t read anything there. Halvorsen had
control again.
“No, sir,” she replied, “I believe that I handled them
well.”
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