“I will know you to the marrow of your bones.” Murdrian Malmogat.
Ben
looked around his enclosure. Cramped, crowded with three
crates and a tarp, the floor was covered with sand. Looking behind
the crates, Ben found the desiccated remains of a mouse. It
would have been great if there had been a tunnel leading outside.
Ben looked up; the ceiling was narrow above the crates and wider above his blocked exit. Beginning near the exit and running
toward the pinched end, there was a small ridge. Hmm!
Suddenly,
Belebele called out. “Gunlah too quiet. No time for sleep. Compose
to meet Malmogat.” The armored spider skittered to the barrier and
looked inside. “What villainous human up to?”
Ben
stood calmly on his side of the barrier, crossed his arms
over his bare chest, and a smile spread on his face. “Oh,” said
he, “just planning my escape.”
“Hah!”
said Belebele. “Human play the comedian. Joke to face of
magnanimous M'd'ian. Belebele want to see.”
Ben
answered, “If you can call it a face.”
Jikza
called unseen. “Consume no pique on lowly detainee. Jikza's legs
entangled with antenna cable. Come quick and help untwine companion.”
Belebele
turned to face Jikza. “Let fall. Stand still. Wait.” He turned
back to Ben. “Now, you hit low. Make no jokes. Give mind to final
meditations. Belebele be so glad when gunlah off diffals. Meat such
pain in climsa!”
Belebele
turned and skittered away. Ben smiled to himself. He called after
Belebele, “Promise you won't forget me.”
Belebele
went to his comrade, who was indeed tangled in the long cable. He
bent to the task, holding the cable down. “Step over,” he said.
Ben
finished fleshing out his plan. He removed the smaller crates from
the larger and pulled it away from the back wall. He placed the tarp
on top of the large crate and spread it so that it went down the side
visible from the barrier. On the cave floor, Ben arranged the tarp so
that it appeared to trail behind the large crate. Just a little
something for the eye to follow.
He
stacked the medium crate on top of the larger, then, the small crate
atop the medium. Ben climbed in exaggerated silence to the top.
Placing his hands against the back wall, Ben was able to get a foot
on the small ledge. When he had both feet on the ledge, Ben moved
carefully to a position just over the exit. He took a breath and
called out.
“Hey,”
said Ben in a loud voice. “I bet you guys didn't know there was a
tunnel behind the crates. I wonder where it leads.”
The
two aliens skittered to the barrier. “Oh no! Oh no!” said
Belebele. “Switch off!” he commanded Jikza.
Weapons
drawn, Jikza said, “Not possible. You said cave locked.”
Belebele
answered. “Told you to check!”
Jikza
sounded as nervous as Belebele. “Quick!” he said. “Must not
allow human to escape.”
The
aliens entered the small enclosure side by side. They skittered
nervously in place, their small round weapons gripped tightly.
Belebele said to Jikza, “Look behind box.”
Ben
dropped from the ceiling. He landed on top of alien backs.
Belebele and Jikza fell beneath Ben's weight; they gasped and lay
silent. With a smile, Ben reached down and took their weapons.
Ben
ran through the trees, he ran easily, feeling stronger and faster
than he ever had. Weaving through trees, leaping over rocks, avoiding
shrubs; it almost seemed as if he flew. Ben felt an overwhelming
sense of elation, an almost spiritual experience where he imagined
himself bodiless; he was a set of eyes sailing swiftly through a
forest.
Heaven
returned from a search, clutching Ben's coat and picking bits of leaf
from the collar. She sat beside Sam and draped the coat over her
knees; looking between the coat and Sam, feeling small and lost. Ben
was missing and the clock was ticking. On the other hand, Sam was
hurt, and he sat right beside her.
“Any
better?” she asked.
Sam
answered. “It'll be more than a tree that takes this old pirate
down.”
A
voice spoke from Sam's wrist comm. “Sir, we're sending a transport
to your position.”
Sam
answered the call. “Understood.” He turned to Heaven and said,
“Don't worry. We're still going to search for Ben. Here. Help me
up.” Sam extended a hand for help.
Standing,
Heaven pulled Sam to his feet. He felt heavy and sluggish. Almost at
once, Sam placed a hand atop his head and reached around to brace
himself against the tree, blinking his eyes repeatedly.
“Take
your time,” said Heaven with evident concern in her voice. “maybe
you should just head back. I can search alone.”
“No.
No,” said Sam. “I want to help.”
Ben
left the forest and raced through the tall grass. Sam looked at
Heaven and spotted Ben running across the western end of the
clearing. He nodded in that direction. After a second nod, Heaven
turned to follow his line of sight. There ran Ben, shirtless in the
cold. Heaven gasped.
Heaven
called with a loud voice, “Ben! Ben!” She waved a hand above her
head for attention.
Ben
raised his arm and turned toward Heaven, racing like the wind. He
slowed as he neared, a broad smile on his face. Heaven dropped the
coat, ran to Ben, and threw her arms around him. Leaning against the
tree, Sam shook his head. Heaven looked happy, Ben smiled like a
Quokka,
but Sam felt a niggling sadness.
Heaven
pulled away and punched Ben in the shoulder. “Look at you!” she
said in a scolding tone. Then, she stooped to retrieve the coat from
where it fell. “Running around in the cold. Put this on.”
Ben
smiled and shook his head. “No. I'm fine,” he said. “Really.
It's nice out here.”
Ben
walked past Heaven to Sam. He held out the two strange orbs he had
taken from Belebele and Jikza. “What's this?” asked Sam, curious.
He took the orbs into his hands and cocked an eyebrow.
“Bug
guns,” said Ben. He smiled back at Heaven. With a frown on her
face, she held out Ben's coat, but he shook his head. “I woke up in
a cave with a lump on my head. Two foot soldiers were trying to sell
me to some guy named Malmogat.” He turned back to Sam and said, “I
escaped.”
Sam
looked from the orbs. “You did well,” he said to Ben. “Seems we
were worried for nothing.” Sam looked up and spotted a transport
descending through the sky.
Ben
turned back to Heaven; she held out the coat for him. He took the
coat and held it by his side. “Can we go back?” he asked Heaven.
“I'm kind of hungry.”
Ben
turned to watch the transport land in the clearing not far away.
Heaven turned to follow his gaze, and Sam stepped away from the tree.
Heaven
stood to Ben's right and Sam stood to his left as the three of them
watched the hatch on the side of the transport slide up and the ramp
extend.
Sam
said to Ben, “Son, nobody wants to see that scrawny adolescent
chest of yours. I don't care if you're not cold. Put your coat on.”
Ben
looked down at his chest. There was nothing wrong with his chest; in
fact, it was well-defined, thanks to the Jjarans. “Scrawny? He
asked.
“Please,”
said Sam. “Just do us the courtesy.”
Ben
looked into Sam's eyes, somewhat defiantly, and replied, “I think,
with a little effort, I'll have a chest as big as yours.”
“Ha!”
Sam's short laugh was a derisive snort. “If you want to sport a
man's chest, you need to flex the pecs.”
Sam
made his pecs dance. First the left, then the right, then together,
Sam's chest muscles sprang up and down. Sam glowered at Ben in an
unspoken challenge, as the pecs danced the Samba, then danced the
Rumba. Both Heaven and Ben stared wide-eyed.
Ben
said, “I can do that.”
Ben
did a perfect imitation of Sam's chest dance. Sam put on the special
moves and Ben followed with ease.
A
young man in a smart uniform stopped halfway down the ramp, turned,
and called into the Transport. “Flex off!”
Ben
said to Sam, “See. I can sport a man's chest.” He turned with a
broad smile and made his chest dance for Heaven.
Heaven
held out a warding hand and said, “Stop!”
Ben
turned back to Sam with the same happy face, flexing as if a child
with a new toy. Ben flexed, then Sam flexed. The game was on as both
men settled into their own determination. Who could out-flex the
other? Heaven turned away and covered her eyes with her hands.
The
young man in the smart uniform and two others approached smiling. Two
stood in the open hatch of the transport, one wore a pilot's uniform.
The young man called out, “Who's winning?”
Sam
replied, still flexing, “Me, of course. He's game but it's nothing
more than a boy's imitation of a man.”
Ben
turned and flexed in the direction of the young man, then stopped and
turned back to Sam. “What?” asked Ben in surprise.
Heaven
turned and walked toward the ship. She said to the young man in
passing, “It was a tie.”
Sam
stopped and said to Heaven, “You wound me.”
Heaven
replied, “Take me home.”
The
young man, listening to his earpiece, said to his King, “Sir,
we're tracking another alien vessel, cloaked and coming in from the
northwest.”
Sam
sighed as he turned to the young Lieutenant. “Have the Co'Hwaul
take it out. Let's ride.”
Heaven
led the way as the Lieutenant, his comrades, and Sam followed. Ben
looked between his coat and his chest. He ran to catch up with Sam
and match his stride. He looked into the big man's face and Sam
glanced back.
“That
was fun,” said Ben.
The
Lieutenant spoke into his wrist comm as they approached the
transport. Sam looked ahead as Heaven walked up the ramp. He confided
to Ben, “Heaven never really liked the chest thing.”
Seating in the Co'Hwaul general lounge never changed. Heaven sat on the sofa, her coat beside her, drumming her fingers on her knees. She waited for Ben's return. She and Ben had been through much, yet, here they were back at square one. They would need a new place to hide. She had asked to go back to the farm but Sam refused. Sam explained that the aliens now knew that location; she grudgingly gave him points for that.
Heaven
felt anxious. She did not like waiting. When did she let her
patience slip? Balling her fists, Heaven rose to her feet to
pace, then paused. She took a deep breath and exhaled slowly; she
needed to relax. She looked around the lounge, her eyes settling on
the back-to-back seats closest to the shower. She remembered sitting
there. It was after the old man had slept with Driscoll. Heaven felt
betrayed and angry.
“Heaven,”
said Besh. “I’m truly sorry if I’ve caused you any pain. Sam
set me straight. I really hate being such a big disappointment.”
“Stop,” said Heaven. Besh fell silent. “You’re fine. You did nothing wrong. I pulled Driscoll’s ear, and she pulled mine, but we settled the matter.”
Besh said, “I felt really guilty.”
Heaven
returned to the sofa with a shake of her head, a shake meant not for
the old man but for herself. Then, she thought of Ben, the new Besh,
a young man who occupied her waking thoughts. Heaven looked toward
the lounge exit and recalled.
When
Heaven entered the lounge, she saw Ben and Shi'nese sitting way too
close. She saw Ben smiling way too much. Shi'nese cut the steak and
handed the fork to Ben as if feeding a child. Heaven walked to the
table and pulled Shi'nese to her feet, turned her, and took her place
beside Ben.
“Off
limits,” she stated. “You may leave.”
Heaven
heard the lift open. She stood and faced the exit in anticipation.
Ben walked in with a smile. He examined the tactical T he wore,
seeming more than pleased. As Ben approached, Sam and Shi'nese
entered the lounge. Sam wore his King's face while Shi'nese looked
her usual cocky self.
Ben
said to Heaven, “Look what Sam gave me.”
“Very
nice,” said Heaven. “Come sit with me.”
Heaven
drew Ben to the sofa beside her as she watched Sam sit in the seat
beyond the table. Sam looked across at Heaven with an expression
difficult to read. Shi'nese stood behind the King with a proud smirk.
Much against the norm, Shi'nese wore a dress uniform.
Sam
took a breath, sat back, and relaxed. Cocking his head to one side,
the King said, “You keep pushing me away, but that just makes me
want to help more.”
“And
I appreciate your help,” Heaven replied, “but the task is mine
alone.”
“Fine,”
said Sam. He rubbed his eyes as a man wearied in service. “You
still need a place to stay.”
“We'll
find something,” said Heaven, calm but adamant. “I'd rather be on
the ground.”
Sam
stood and said, “I'll look around. In the meantime, I would like to
borrow Ben for a friendly chat.” Then he turned to Shi'nese with a
smile. “My new personal assistant will bring you a change of
clothing. Shower and dress. We'll eat before I set you down.”
Sam
led Ben into his private room. As the door closed without a sound, a
muscular mottled dog with a mane came to investigate. As he walked
uncertainly to the central chairs, hands raised above the dog's
reach, Ben's attention was divided between the animal and the
opulence of the King's room.
“I
didn't know you had a dog,” said Ben.
“He
used to be your dog,” said Sam. “His name is Warrior.” In
passing, Sam pointed to one of two facing chairs and said, “Sit.”
With
one eye on Sam and one eye on the large animal, Ben eased into the
padded chair, sitting straight and quiet. Warrior sat before him
looking expectantly into Ben's eyes. Sam walked to his liquor cabinet
and returned with a bottle and two glasses. He pressed one into Ben's
hand and poured a drink of dark amber.
“Alcohol?”
asked Ben.
“You
sat in that chair before and shared my whiskey,” said Sam taking
his drink in a single gulp. “Taste it.”
Ben
wet a finger and touched his tongue. “It's really strong,” said
Ben, then he asked, “Does Warrior bite?”
Sam
poured himself a second drink and downed it. He answered, “Only
when I tell him to. Listen to me, Besh. Ben. I'm only going to say
this once. Heaven likes you. God alone knows why, but she's into you.
You and I are friends, but don't ever let me hear that you've hurt
her.” Sam's eyes bored into Ben's without mercy. Intimidated and
wide-eyed, Ben held up a hand in pledge.
Heaven
sat in the double chair facing the lounge exit after a hot shower.
She wore a sleeveless top and light loose shorts. With a wet towel
across her lap, Heaven ran a large comb through cascading hair. The
lift opened and closed. Ben walked into the lounge on unsteady legs.
“You
alright?” asked Heaven.
Ben
sank to the carpet between Heaven's legs. He rolled back his head and
looked up into Heaven's face. “I drank whiskey,” he said.
Heaven
laid her comb aside and pulled Ben's hair back between her fingers.
She said, “I think we should get you a haircut.”
Ben
relaxed his neck and let his head rest in Heaven's lap. He closed his
eyes and inhaled deeply, releasing the breath slowly. He inhaled a
second time as Heaven tried to keep his hair from tumbling back over
his forehead.
“You
smell so good,” said Ben.
Heaven
replied with a smile, “Soap and shampoo.”
Ben
took a breath and pulled his head from Heaven's kneading. He said,
“Sam told me you never liked the chest thing. I'm sorry, Heaven.
I'll never do it again. Well, maybe when I'm alone in the shower.”
Heaven
laughed and tossed her hair. “We're good,” she said. “Here, lay
your head back.”
Ben
dropped his head back and sighed. “So sleepy.”
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