<?xml version="1.0" encoding="windows-1251" ?>
<?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="http://www.liveinternet.ru/rss.xsl"?>
<rss xmlns:yablogs="urn:yandex-blogs" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/" xmlns:wfw="http://wellformedweb.org/CommentAPI/" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" xmlns:sy="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/syndication/" xmlns:slash="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/slash/" version="2.0"><channel>  <title><![CDATA[]]></title>  <link>http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post/</link>  <description><![CDATA[Êîììåíòàðèè ê ñîîáùåíèþ ""]]></description>  <generator>LiveInternet / LiveInternet.ru</generator>  <sy:updatePeriod>hourly</sy:updatePeriod>  <sy:updateFrequency>1</sy:updateFrequency>  <language>ru</language>  <yablogs:count></yablogs:count>  <copyright>êíèãîëþá</copyright>


<image>
 <url>http://av.li.ru/796394_394895.jpg</url>
 <title>÷èòàòåëè...</title>
 <link>http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/</link>
</image>

<item><title><![CDATA[Ôðàíöèñêà Âóëüô "Òàéíà äî÷åðè ïðîðîêà"]]></title>
<link><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post102805518/#BlCom537089178]]></link>
<description><![CDATA[ | ÇÀÌÅ×ÀÒÅËÜÍÛÅ  ÊÍÈÃÈ!!!!!!<br /> <p><small><a href='http://www.liveinternet.ru/users/anne_miller/'>(Äîáàâèë ññûëêó ê ñåáå â äíåâíèê)</a></small></p>]]></description>
<pubDate><![CDATA[Wed, 18 Nov 2009 21:38:31 +0300]]></pubDate>
<comments><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post102805518/]]></comments>
<guid><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post102805518/#BlCom537089178]]></guid>
<author><![CDATA[ANNE_MILLER]]></author>
</item>
<item><title><![CDATA[Ôðàíöèñêà Âóëüô "Òàéíà äî÷åðè ïðîðîêà"]]></title>
<link><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post102805518/#BlCom532427039]]></link>
<description><![CDATA[ | Ó ìåíÿ åñòü 3 êíèãà, çàõâàòûâàþùàÿÿÿ....æåñòü....÷èòàëà ïî íåñêîëüêó ðàç]]></description>
<pubDate><![CDATA[Fri, 02 Oct 2009 21:48:35 +0400]]></pubDate>
<comments><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post102805518/]]></comments>
<guid><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post102805518/#BlCom532427039]]></guid>
<author><![CDATA[]]></author>
</item>
<item><title><![CDATA[õîðîøî, êîãäà êîëè÷åñòâî ïðî÷òåííîãî ïåðåõîäèò â êà÷åñòâî !!!]]></title>
<link><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post110231112/#BlCom530795603]]></link>
<description><![CDATA[ | Íåïëîõîé íàñòîé÷èâûé ïèàð, äàæå íå ïðèãëàæåííûé êàê ñëåäóåò<br /> <br /> Âîò êñòàòè, ðóññêèé ÷åëîâåê èçäðåâëå îáëàäàåò èñêóññòâîì to-fuck-it-all, òîëüêî ÷àñòî ïðèìåíÿåò íåïðàâèëüíî. íî åñëè óæ ó÷èòüñÿ ýòîìó çàíîâî (åñëè âîîáùå íóæíî), òî ñêîðåå ó ïåðâîèñòî÷íèêîâ, íîñèòåëåé òåõ ñàìûõ "âîñòî÷íûõ èäåé äóõîâíîãî îñâîáîæäåíèÿ"... âäîõíîâåííî, ïðîâîêàöèîííî è þìîðíî ó íàñ óæå óìåþò, çíàåòå ëè]]></description>
<pubDate><![CDATA[Tue, 15 Sep 2009 09:03:41 +0400]]></pubDate>
<comments><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post110231112/]]></comments>
<guid><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post110231112/#BlCom530795603]]></guid>
<author><![CDATA[Wereangel]]></author>
</item>
<item><title><![CDATA[Ïîìîãèòå]]></title>
<link><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post57322496/#BlCom519200081]]></link>
<description><![CDATA[è êîíåö... | No more time for conversation. He couldn’t help but smile as he<br />     maneuvered the craft carefully into position, coming up behind the<br /> enemy<br />     vessel as  quickly  as he  could.  There were  lumps  of  metaform<br /> hastily<br />     welded to the surface of the  shuttle. It was hoped they’d  shield<br /> the<br />     little ship from detection.<br />     Denys was happy to note that the METAFORM stayed intent on the<br />     much larger prey of the mining ship as they drew closer and closer<br /> to<br />     it. The HATTON tumbled a mile above Stickney Crater, the METAFORM<br />     hovered over it, like a hawk  above its helpless prey. The  mining<br /> ship<br />     looked like  it was  heading for  certain doom,  from the  enemy’s<br /> weapons,<br />     or impact with the moon.<br />     Denys checked his instruments very carefully, then checked again,<br />     concerned that  his physical  condition was  interfering with  his<br /> judgment.<br />     He wanted to get this over with, to grab Claudia and make quick,<br />     passionate love to her. Not the Sirens, but Claudia. The enemy was<br />     responsible for the burning need  that was driving him crazy,  but<br /> the<br />     need wasn’t focused on them.  Maybe it was the metaform  shielding<br /> him.<br />     Maybe it was just love. He couldn’t let himself think about it. He<br /> could<br />     not let that longing get out of control.<br />     He licked dry lips, scanned all the readings on the control panel,<br />     then spoke one word. "Now."<br />     The HATTON’s engines roared to sudden life. The ship veered<br />     sharply away from the moon in an incredible rush of speed, leaving<br /> the<br />     METAFORM silhouetted  against  the  dead background  of  the  deep<br /> crater.<br />     "Got it?" Denys asked Claudia.<br />     "In my sights."<br />     "Fire!"<br />     She had aimed for what she hoped was the enemy ship’s weapons<br />     array, a  rounded  projection  on  the  front  of  the  METAFORM’s<br /> wedge-shaped<br />     hull. Her guess must  have been correct  because a bright,  silent<br /> explosion<br />     destroyed the projection the instant the laser beam touched it.<br />     "All right!" she shouted triumphantly.<br />     "Keep firing," Denys advised.<br />     She did, intensifying the beam, slicing it back and forth across<br />     the alien ship. The metal began to melt like butter. The ship  was<br /> close<br />     enough to Phobos’s slight gravity  field so that the molten  metal<br /> fell<br />     down into the crater instead of dispersing into space.<br />     "It’s working," Denys said. His sigh of relief sounded loudly in<br />     the shuttle cockpit.<br />     Claudia barely heard him above her own muttered mantra of, "It has<br />     to work. It did work. It’s working."<br />     She repeated it continually until the last of the METAFORM<br />     disappeared into the crater . where, next week, it would be  mined<br /> as<br />     the metaform  now  sitting in  the  HATTON’s hold.  Time  paradox.<br /> Claudia<br />     decided she didn’t want to think about it.<br />     Instead she sat back in her chair, grinned at Denys and said, "Now<br />     I know how Luke Skywalker felt when he blew up the Deathstar."<br />     Denys soared with the elation. "We did it!" he crowed, beaming<br />     joyfully at Claudia. "You did it!"<br />     He set the controls to auto-pilot on a slow orbit of Phobos. Then<br />     he jumped out of his seat and  pulled Claudia up out of hers.  She<br /> came<br />     into his embrace and he kissed her with eager hunger.<br />     She responded with possessive thoroughness, all her nerve endings<br />     sizzling. She held him tight,  reveling in the smooth hardness  of<br /> the<br />     body beneath her hands. They were alive! They were together -- and<br />     nothing and no one meant as much to her as Denys Duchamp!<br />     "Did you mean it?" he questioned when they came up for air.<br />     Claudia didn’t  understand him  at first.  "Mean what?  Oh.  Marry<br /> you?"<br />     "Yes." He looked worried.<br />     "Of course I meant it," she assured him.<br />     The teasing light came back into his eyes, mingling<br />     with the  heat of  desire. He  pulled her  closer. "Good.  Because<br /> this," he<br />     said, pressing his  masculine hardness against  her thigh,  "isn’t<br /> just<br />     metaform I’ve got in my pocket."<br />     "You’re happy to see me," she announced with sultry humor.<br />     He ran his hands swiftly over her, heating her blood with his<br />     touch while he expertly unfastened her blue coverall. He quickly<br />     repeated the same process with his own.<br />     Claudia began to shake -- with laughter, with joy, with relief.<br />     She brushed her lips lightly  across his and said, "You’re  crazy,<br /> and I<br />     love you."<br />     "I need you," he told her.<br />     "Won’t the captain be worried if we don’t get right back to the<br />     ship?"<br />     He arched one pale eyebrow at her. "Do you care?" he intoned, in a<br />     perfect mimic of Charlie’s sarcastic drawl.<br />     "No," she admitted. "I don’t care." After the fear and danger and<br />     excitement of the last hour, she needed the release as much as  he<br /> did.<br />     She welcomed the  physical confirmation  that his  desire was  for<br /> her, and<br />     not caused by the Siren Song. "Charlie can wait."<br />     He smiled knowingly, and guided her to one of the passenger seats.<br />     He adjusted  it  to horizontal.  They  lay down  together,  bodies<br /> joining<br />     immediately in quick, urgent arousal. He covered her and she  rose<br /> to<br />     meet his swift  entry. She gasped  at the shock  of flesh  against<br /> flesh,<br />     and soared out of her self.<br />     Desire built with hurricane swiftness, coiling into tighter and<br />     tighter spirals  of raging  pleasure  until the  tension  exploded<br /> through<br />     her in a lightning flash of release.<br />     She held Denys tightly as his passion followed hers to completion<br />     moments later.<br />     It ebbed into a sweet, sweaty afterglow, leaving them sated,<br />     gently cuddling, exchanging slow, enervated kisses and whispered<br />     endearments.<br />     Meanwhile, the shuttle swung in a slow orbit around Mars’s little<br />     moon. And Captain Andrews voice occasionally squawked for their<br />     attention over the communicator.<br />     ##<br />     Charlie was waiting for them in the main corridor when they<br />     stepped hand in hand through the hangar airlock. He was a big,<br />     distinguished looking man, all hawk nose and arrogant dignity.  As<br /> she<br />     looked at  him  now, Claudia  was  surprised she  hadn’t  realized<br /> sooner who<br />     her tea-drinking friend must be.<br />     He gave them a typically scathing once over as they stopped before<br />     him. "About bloody  time," he  announced. "I assume  you made  the<br /> most of<br />     this little interval?"<br />     Claudia blushed. Of course what they’d been doing was probably<br />     obvious, but  he didn’t  have to  be so  -- She  tossed her  head,<br /> ignored the<br />     jibe, and said, "Hello, Charlie."<br />     "Hello, m’dear," he answered, a familiar, paternal smile breaking<br />     over his stern features.  "Nice to see you  two have finally  made<br /> up. I<br />     was quite worried for a time."<br />     Denys looked at the captain in blank confusion. "You were worried<br />     about us?"<br />     "Most desperately concerned," Charlie told him. "Didn’t want to<br />     risk changing the future."<br />     "Huh?" Claudia asked.<br />     "What?" Denys added.<br />     Charlie waved them into the nearest elevator. "Let’s have a spot<br />     of tea while we get on with the debriefing, shall we?"<br />     They followed him to the kitchen in stunned silence, where a pot<br />     of tea and a plate of  scones was waiting. They took seats  around<br /> the<br />     central counter and Captain Charles Andrews, terror of the Space<br />     Service, ceremoniously poured the strong, hot liquid into cups for<br /> them.<br />     "Cheers," he said, raising his own cup. "Congratulations on saving<br />     the Federated Community of Worlds."<br />     "And our behinds," Claudia added.<br />     "The destruction of the METAFORM was spectacular," Charlie said,<br />     looking at  them with  fond pride.  "You did  a fine  job. So  did<br /> Cleary and<br />     I," he pointed out. "Did you know Cleary was a navigation  officer<br /> before<br />     he was busted for insubordination?  I’ve offered to recommend  him<br /> for<br />     promotion, but he  says he prefers  his present employment,  thank<br /> you.<br />     He’d rather have cash."<br />     Claudia giggled. "That’s Cleary all right."<br />     "I’d be happy to take a promotion," Denys offered. He gave Claudia<br />     a significant look. "I’ll be needing the extra income."<br />     Which left Claudia wondering just what she was going to do to earn<br />     her keep once  she got  to the future.  She decided  not to  think<br /> about it<br />     just now, not when there was a victory celebration to get on with.<br />     It was a subdued celebration, but she figured Charlie had arranged<br />     this little  get together  so she  and Denys  could satisfy  their<br /> curiosity.<br />     Well, she had plenty of questions  for now. And plenty of time  to<br /> worry<br />     about the future later. Maybe if she had some of her questions<br />     answered, she wouldn’t have so much worrying to do.<br />     "What are you going to do with the new metaform?" she wondered. "I<br />     mean, you’ve already mined  the metaform once  but now it’s  there<br /> again.<br />     Only now it’s there for the first time waiting for you to come and<br /> get<br />     it. So  you could  mine it  again right  now. Or  could you?"  She<br /> scratched<br />     her head. "Or... if you  mine it now, would  it be there when  you<br /> came<br />     back to mine it the first time, which you did in the past but you<br />     haven’t yet done in the future. But the future -- "<br />     Charlie reached over to pat he hand. "There there, m’dear. It’s<br />     all right. Let’s  not worry about  it. I have  every intention  of<br /> leaving<br />     the remains of the  Siren ship in Stickney  Crater. I’m taking  my<br /> load of<br />     metaform and going home. Where," he concluded, "I’m going to  turn<br /> it<br />     over to the Admiralty and give up time traveling for good. I think<br /> I’ll<br />     retire and go to cooking school. Always wanted to be a chef.  Runs<br /> in the<br />     family, you know."<br />     "Does it?" Denys inquired politely.<br />     "Oh, yes. Famous for it on me mum’s side."<br />     "Why did you help me escape?" Claudia asked, suddenly remembering<br />     their scheming,  and his  gift  of silversilk.  "If you  knew  you<br /> needed me<br />     to destroy the Sirens -- "<br />     "I didn’t know I needed you to destroy the Sirens," Charlie<br />     corrected her. "The attack wasn’t in the Book. We’re lucky you did<br /> come<br />     back. I  didn’t even  know you  would come  back. Thought  Duchamp<br /> might stay<br />     with you."<br />     "Sir!" Denys exclaimed indignantly. "Why would I -- ?"<br />     "And why did the Book mention me in the first place?" Claudia cut<br />     in over Denys’s protest.<br />     "One question at a time," Charlie chided. "If you must know about<br />     our little escape drama," he went on. "I suppose I’ll have to<br />     confess that I  was trying  my hand  at matchmaking.  You were  so<br /> miserable,<br />     m’dear. Crying and making  a fool of  yourself because you  didn’t<br /> think<br />     Duchamp loved you."<br />     "You were?"<br />     "Be quiet, Duchamp. Well, I helped you get back to Earth because I<br />     assumed Denys would go after you."<br />     "You did?"<br />     "Yes. I thought Claudia’s home in Iowa might prove to be a neutral<br />     ground where you  could work  out your differences,  but I  didn’t<br /> think<br />     Denys would then bring you back to the HATTON."<br />     "I thought she’d change the future if she stayed on Earth."<br />     "Hmmph. You weren’t thinking with your head, either. Not that I’m<br />     complaining now, of course. If it weren’t for Claudia, we wouldn’t<br /> be<br />     alive. Don’t blush, m’dear, it’s true."<br />     "But what do we do now?" Denys wondered.<br />     "First off, I think you should make an honest woman of her.<br />     Especially since your most recent amorous episode in the shuttle."<br />     Claudia giggled. She was not normally given to giggling, but she<br />     felt as giddy as a teenager.  "Yes, Denys," she said. "You  really<br /> must<br />     make an honest woman of me. And I’ll do the same for you."<br />     "I’m not a woman."<br />     "An honest man, then."<br />     "Good," Charlie said. "We’ll make it official right away. Won’t<br />     we, Duchamp?"<br />     "Yes, sir," Denys acknowledged. "As soon as possible, sir."<br />     "I shall be delighted to officiate."<br />     Claudia and Denys exchanged a quick hug. "Wait a minute," she<br />     said, curiosity reasserting itself. "How  did the Book know  about<br /> me? It<br />     was all an  accident. Wasn’t it?  The men did  just get drunk  and<br /> throw me<br />     into  the  box  by  mistake  or  because  they’re  idiots,   or...<br /> whatever."<br />     "Fate," Denys said. "It must have been meant to be."<br />     "What do you mean, ’meant to be’? Meant to be what?" She eyed<br />     Charlie suspiciously. "How could your Book know about me?"<br />     He was looking at her with bland amusement. "The author of the<br />     Book knew every detail of the mission," he told her. "Every little<br />     thing." He gave  a Denys  a sour  look. "He  just left  out a  few<br /> pertinent<br />     details toward the end."<br />     "You really didn’t know the Sirens were going to attack?" Denys<br />     questioned. "The author probably wanted to save it as a  surprise.<br /> Add a bit of<br />     dramatic  tension  to  my  otherwise  calm  life,"  Charlie   said<br /> sarcastically. "The<br />     bastard."<br />     Claudia was still very confused. "But how could the Book know<br />     everything?"<br />     Denys gently stroked her cheek. "That’s the question we’ve been<br />     asking for two hundred years."<br />     "But who wrote the Book?" she wondered. "How was it transmitted to<br />     your time?"<br />     Denys shrugged. "No one knows."<br />     "Ahem."<br />     They looked at Charlie.<br />     "I know," he reminded them. "My destiny and all that."<br />     "Well," Claudia demanded. "Who wrote it?"<br />     The Captain of the HATTON took a sip of tea. He pushed the plate<br />     of scones toward her. She realized  she was starving and bit  into<br /> one of<br />     the currant-dotted buns. It tasted marvelous. The silence grew  as<br /> she<br />     drank her tea and  finished the scone  and gazed questioningly  at<br /> the<br />     Captain. Charlie  gave  her  a  teasing  smile.  It  was  familiar<br /> expression,<br />     though she was used to seeing it on Denys’s face.<br />     "I’ll get to that presently," he promised.<br />     "I’m glad this is over," Denys said. He put his arm around her<br />     shoulder. "I just want to take Claudia home to New Sydney and  get<br /> on<br />     with life."<br />     Charlie scratched  his beak  of  a nose  with a  long  forefinger.<br /> "Hmm."<br />     "Hmm?" Claudia echoed suspiciously. "What do you mean, ’hmm’?"<br />     "I mean," Charlie explained, "that you won’t be going home to New<br />     Sydney with Denys. You’re going  back to Earth, Dr. Cameron.  It’s<br /> in the<br />     Book," he added, trying to cut off Denys’s shocked protested.<br />     He didn’t cut it off for more than a second.<br />     "I don’t bloody care what’s in the Book! Claudia’s coming home<br />     with me. We’re going to get married."<br />     "Yeah!" Claudia agreed loudly. "You volunteered to perform the<br />     ceremony. Remember?"<br />     Charlie gave a firm nod. "So I shall. It will be a lovely wedding.<br />     It will be on the Captain’s Walk. A very romantic setting.  Cleary<br /> will<br />     catch the bridal  bouquet. We  will all  cry. Then  we will  drink<br /> toasts<br />     with the Greek wine Cleary smuggled on board. It will be a  lovely<br /> party."<br />     "Is all that in the Book?" Denys asked.<br />     "No," Charlie replied. "I have a vivid imagination. And Dr.<br />     Cameron is still returning to Earth."<br />     "No," Denys stated, rising to glare down at the still seated<br />     Captain Andrews.  "I  won’t  let  you send  her  back.  We  belong<br /> together."<br />     "Especially after such a nice wedding," Claudia agreed. She was<br />     beginning to be amused. She could see where this was leading.<br />     Denys didn’t know what to think. "But -- She --I -- We belong<br />     together. Claudia Cameron, what are you smirking about?"<br />     She covered her mouth and mumbled, "Nothing." She decided he<br />     deserved a bit of teasing, since he was so good at it himself.<br />     Denys’s arms came around her. "If you send her back, I’m going<br />     with her.  The  hell  with  the mission.  I’m  staying  on  Earth.<br /> Besides," he<br />     added, whispering in her ear. "I really like your house and family<br /> and<br />     wouldn’t mind living in  Bradden Falls -- or  anywhere as long  as<br /> you’re<br />     there with me. Can we have a dog?"<br />     She looked into Denys’s eyes and said, "I feel the same way about<br />     you. Anywhere’s fine as  long as you’re there  with me. I  suppose<br /> so."<br />     "Oh, Lord, spare me," Charlie snorted in disgust. He waited until<br />     they looked back at him before adding, "Of course you’re going  to<br /> Earth<br />     with Dr. Cameron, Duchamp. Who do you think wrote the Book?"<br />     "Who?" Denys asked, eyes narrowed suspiciously.<br />     "My great great, great, grandfather, that’s who," Charlie<br />     answered. He pointed at Denys. "You."<br />     "Me?"<br />     "You. Denys Duchamp is the author of the Book. And it’s been<br />     handed down with due ceremony from generation to generation  until<br /> it was<br />     dumped in my lap. We’ve circled through time and come back to the<br />     beginning. You have to write the Book because you’ve already  told<br /> us in<br />     the Book that you did. Will. Whatever. It’s all a load of rubbish,<br />     really."<br />     "Make’s perfect sense to me," Claudia said. She looked Charlie<br />     over suspiciously. "You’re our descendant?"<br />     "Why do you think I took the trouble to play matchmaker for the<br />     pair of  you?" Charlie  demanded.  "Because I  want to  get  born,<br /> that’s<br />     why."<br />     "Ah."<br />     "Besides, you make a charming couple."<br />     "I’m going to write the Book?" Denys was really too stunned to be<br />     paying much attention to the rest  of what was going on. The  Book<br /> was the<br />     most important thing in his life. He couldn’t quite equate himself<br /> with<br />     authorship of such an important, world-shaping document. It didn’t<br /> make<br />     any sense. He couldn’t deal with it.<br />     So he ignored this bit of information and concentrated on the most<br />     important aspect of his trip through  time. He’d met the woman  of<br /> his<br />     dreams. They were going to be together. Have a home. Have  babies.<br /> Who<br />     cared where or when it was? It just was. It was wonderful.<br />     "I’m going to return to Earth with Claudia?"<br />     "Yes, you do," Charlie said, speaking slowly and gently, as though<br />     Denys were a little simple-minded.  "We will leave you in  Greece,<br /> where<br />     you will have a long, peaceful honeymoon. You will then return to<br />     Bradden Falls and have many children. And a dog. All the documents<br /> you<br />     need to get  along on  Earth are prepared.  New passports,  Social<br /> Security<br />     Number, academic credentials,  that sort of  thing. You’ll end  up<br /> teaching<br />     engineering at the  local college. You’ll  have a wonderful  time.<br /> Then,<br />     when you’re  eighty or  so you’ll  write the  Book, including  the<br /> access<br />     codes I’ll  give  you so  our  computers will  verify  the  Book’s<br /> authenticity<br />     to future generations.  Nothing to  worry about. So  you can  stop<br /> looking<br />     as if a large weight just dropped on your head."<br />     Denys smiled wanly. "I’ll pull myself together in a moment," he<br />     promised Claudia.<br />     She kissed his cheek. "I’m sure this will take a while to get used<br />     to. It’ll be fine. We’re going home."<br />     "Yes. Home," he agreed. "I don’t care about the Book. I care about<br /> you."<br />     "I know."<br />     Claudia didn’t care about the Book, either. She didn’t care about<br />     the future. At least,  not the grand scheme  of things. She  cared<br /> about<br />     the fact  that  she’d set  off  for  Greece to  find  romance  and<br /> adventure.<br />     She’d found more than she’d bargained for. Her heart was full  and<br /> her<br />     life was full and she and Denys were going to be together  forever<br /> and<br />     ever.<br />     She sighed contentedly, and kissed him, deeply and passionately.<br />     And to think, it was all because she made a great bowl of chili.<br />     The End.]]></description>
<pubDate><![CDATA[Fri, 15 May 2009 20:22:14 +0400]]></pubDate>
<comments><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post57322496/]]></comments>
<guid><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post57322496/#BlCom519200081]]></guid>
<author><![CDATA[]]></author>
</item>
<item><title><![CDATA[Ïîìîãèòå]]></title>
<link><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post57322496/#BlCom519200010]]></link>
<description><![CDATA[ïðîäîëæåíèå>>> | shooting through her.<br />     "Denys," she said, and covered his mouth with hers before he could<br />     answer.<br />     Claudia’s tongue slid smoothly against his, teasing and erotically<br />     demanding at once.  His hands moved  from her breasts  to cup  her<br /> buttocks<br />     and pull her closer. Her  bare breasts pressed against his  chest,<br /> the<br />     peaks pebble hard against his sensitized skin.<br />     He groaned, and pulled his lips reluctantly from hers. "If we keep<br />     this up," he warned, "we’ll drown."<br />     She wrapped her thighs around his, letting the water and his hands<br />     support her. "Good," she murmured, then began kissing his throat.<br />     His wet, clinging jeans were growing very uncomfortable as his<br />     body responded to her every seductive movement.<br />     "Claudia."<br />     Her mouth moved up to nibble on his earlobe. "Hmm?"<br />     He didn’t want to think. He didn’t want to talk. He wanted to drag<br />     her out of the water and make love to her for hours and hours. But<br /> he<br />     couldn’t, because love, not just sex, was the issue here.<br />     It took all his willpower, but Denys firmly pushed her away. He<br />     kept his hands around her waist, lifted her and settled her on a<br />     flat boulder which thrust out into the stream. It took him a few<br />     fumbling seconds to pull himself out of the water and join her. By<br /> the<br />     time he did she’d readjusted her clothes, and he was able to  move<br /> more<br />     comfortably in the clinging denim which constricted his thighs.<br />     Sunlight was pouring down onto the boulder. Claudia turned her<br />     face up to it. A stiff breeze combined with the heat was already<br />     starting to dry her clothing. She felt both cool and warm, and the<br />     sensations  were  utterly  wonderful.   Denys  had  felt   utterly<br /> wonderful. She was still<br />     tingling, inside and  out, from  their watery  embrace. She  still<br /> wanted him, she<br />     didn’t know  why he’d  stopped. She  didn’t know  whether she  was<br /> angry or glad<br />     they hadn’t gone any further. She  shouldn’t want to make love  to<br /> him. She was<br />     supposed to hate him.<br />     She didn’t hate him. She just didn’t want to run off to some other<br />     time and planet with him. She wished he could stay here with her.<br />     And why hadn’t he wanted to make love to her?<br />     She opened her eyes and gave him a baleful look. "Afraid of<br />     scaring the fish?"<br />     He looked down at the water. "Are there fish in there?"<br />     "Yes."<br />     "I love to fish."<br />     "Denys!" she hissed. "What is the matter with you?" What’s the<br />     matter with me? she meant, but didn’t dare ask him that.<br />     He took her by the shoulders, turning her so they were face to<br />     face. "I love you, Claudia,"  he said, earnest sincerity in  every<br /> line of<br />     his face. It filled his bright blue eyes.<br />     A melting sensation spread from her brain to her toes. "You do?"<br />     "I want to marry you," he went on, more earnest still. "To be with<br />     you forever."<br />     "Oh." She sighed happily. She leaned forward to kiss him.<br />     "And I want you to come back to the ship with me right now," he<br />     added before her lips could touch his.<br />     "Damn!" She jerked back. All the sincerity had disappeared from<br />     his expression, like it  had never been there  at all. He’d  lied.<br /> And he<br />     was letting her know he’d lied.<br />     "How could you -- you -- " Indignation overwhelmed speech.<br />     He was smiling a little, but his eyes were serious. "I see you<br />     take my point."<br />     "P-p-point?!" His thumbs began stroking her collarbone slowly. It<br />     did nothing to help calm her down. But it felt nice.<br />     "If I tell you I love you," he explained, slowly, as if speaking<br />     to a child. "If  I make love  to you, you’re  bound to think  it’s<br /> because<br />     I’m trying to get you back to the ship. And to be honest, it  will<br /> be."<br />     "It will?"<br />     Not really. Not entirely. Hardly at all, actually, he thought. He<br />     didn’t share his thoughts with her. He watched the hurt and anger<br />     growing in  her eyes  and hurried  to explain.  "I don’t  want  to<br /> seduce you<br />     into returning to the HATTON with me.  I don’t want to do that  to<br /> you. I<br />     do care for you."<br />     More than you know, he added silently, but I won’t use love to<br />     manipulate you. What chance would we have later if I told you  the<br /> truth<br />     now? Even if I  didn’t try to  use it, you’d  think that that  was<br /> what I<br />     was doing. That’s what I’d think if  you tried to use love to  get<br /> me to<br />     stay here with you. Which, he had to add though he didn’t like the<br />     thought, you might be trying to do. Not consciously, of course, he<br />     automatically defended her theoretical  behavior. You’re not  like<br /> that.<br />     "You care for me?"<br />     He nodded. "You know I do."<br />     "Then leave me alone!"<br />     The words exploded out of her. She wanted to hit him, and might<br />     have if he hadn’t grabbed her  wrists. He was very strong. He  was<br /> very<br />     masculine and  very confusing  and she  didn’t know  what she  was<br /> going to<br />     do about it. She wished he hadn’t followed her, not to Earth,  not<br /> into<br />     the woods. She wished she hadn’t followed him into the water.  She<br /> wished<br />     he hadn’t tossed her right back out.<br />     "Leave me alone," she repeated. "Go away."<br />     "I can’t, Claudia."<br />     "You don’t love me." She didn’t know why she was harping on this.<br />     It’s not as if love is  the most important thing in the  universe,<br /> she<br />     told herself  sternly. My  freedom’s at  stake here.  That’s  more<br /> important.<br />     Isn’t it? If he said he loved me, I might go with him.<br />     "I didn’t say I don’t love you," he pointed out, voice coolly<br />     reasonable. "I just said  I wasn’t going to  use it to  manipulate<br /> you."<br />     "You love me?"<br />     He frowned. "I didn’t say that, either." He was so frustrated he<br />     was tempted  to  shake  her.  Where  was  the  sensible  woman  he<br /> remembered?<br />     "Don’t you see what I’m getting at?"<br />     "No."<br />     "Bloody hell! Why not?"<br />     "Just go away, Denys."<br />     "That’s no answer."<br />     "No, it isn’t," she agreed. "I don’t have an answer. All I’ve got<br />     is this --  longing. Which, by  the way, I  don’t like one  little<br /> bit.<br />     You’re an alien lizard  terrorist and I don’t  want to be in  love<br /> with<br />     you. Go away."<br />     She didn’t want to talk about it. Fine. She didn’t want to be in<br />     love with him. Well, that was fine, too. It wasn’t, of course, but<br /> he’d<br />     deal with the pain of it later. Right now, he had to remember the<br />     Mission. He had to get her out of here.<br />     "I should never have come to this picnic. I thought it would help<br />     to let you say good-bye to your family. It was a stupid, bloody,<br />     sentimental mistake."<br />     "I’m not saying good-bye to my family. You shouldn’t have followed<br />     me."<br />     "I didn’t have any choice."<br />     "I’m not going back," she told him firmly. "I’m just going to run<br />     away again. Run so far and hide so well, you won’t be able to find<br /> me.<br />     You’ll have to  go back  to the  HATTON eventually."  She gave  an<br /> emphatic<br />     nod. "Then the captain will kill you for taking so long with the<br />     supplies. And I’ll get on with my life."<br />     "The captain will probably kill me," he agreed. "But I’m not going<br />     back without you." He ran his fingertips up her cheeks and through<br /> her<br />     damp hair. He  couldn’t help the  gesture, and she  didn’t try  to<br /> pull<br />     away. "I’ll follow you wherever you go, love."<br />     She wished his words were a declaration of undying devotion<br />     instead of a declaration of his nuisance value. "Oh, yeah?" she<br />     challenged. "How you gonna find me?"<br />     "The tracer implant I -- " Denys bit down hard on any further<br />     explanation.<br />     Claudia grasped on to what he’d just said. "Tracer? Implant?<br />     You’ve got some alien whatchmathingy inside me?"<br />     He nodded, bleakly.<br />     She thought she’d been angry with him before, but this new<br />     revelation of his duplicity, of his need to control her life,  was<br /> more<br />     than she could take. Her skin was suddenly itching all over.<br />     "Take it out," she demanded, voice cold and hard. "Right now."<br />     "I can’t. And I wouldn’t if I could," he added. "I don’t know how<br />     you managed to block the  transmission yesterday. You had to  come<br /> into<br />     contact with silversilk somehow,  that stuff’s the only  substance<br /> that’ll<br />     block it.  But  there’s no  silversilk  on Earth  and  you’re  not<br /> getting away<br />     from me again."<br />     Silversilk? Charlie’s scarf was silver. Was it made of this<br />     silversilk stuff?  Could Charlie’s  scarf  block the  signal  from<br /> whatever<br />     Denys had put in  her? How’d he  done it? Where’d  he put it?  And<br /> why’d she<br />     forget and leave the scarf in an Athens bathroom?<br />     "Go away," she told him.<br />     "Come with me."<br />     "No."<br />     "Yes."<br />     They glared at each other, both equally still, both equally<br />     determined, equally silent while the sun beat down, the stream<br />     gurgled, and brown and black butterflies flitted between the wood<br />     lilies. They might have gone on like this for hours if a  hesitant<br /> voice<br />     hadn’t eventually intruded upon their wordless argument.<br />     "Ahem. Excuse me. Dear. CLAUDIA LIVINIA CAMERON!"<br />     Claudia winced and turned her head. "Yes, mother?"<br />     "Livinia?"<br />     She shot a scathing look over her shoulder at Denys. "My<br />     grandfather Tiberius was into Roman history, all right?"<br />     "Sure." He snickered. "Fine. Claudia Livinia."<br />     She ignored him and said sweetly to her mother, "Yes?" She got to<br />     her feet. "Want me to come help with the food?"<br />     Her mother stepped off the path and up to them. "Not exactly."<br />     Denys got up and took Claudia’s hand, tightly. "What can we do for<br />     you, Mrs.<br />     Cameron?<br />     She beamed at Denys. "Don’t be so formal, dear. I think Mom’s<br />     appropriate,<br />     don’t you?"<br />     "No," Claudia said.<br />     "Mom it is, then," Denys said over her objection.<br />     She snarled at him. Her mother ignored her. She was smiling<br />     benignly at  Denys.  Claudia  wanted to  object  to  her  mother’s<br /> obvious<br />     affection for Denys, but how could she tell her the truth without<br />     sounding like she ought to be locked in a padded room?<br />     "What do you want, Mom?" she questioned sharply instead.<br />     "She gets jet lag," her mother said, explaining Claudia’s tone to<br />     Denys. "Makes her grumpy."<br />     "I’ve noticed," he answered agreeably, as though it was a secret<br />     they’d agreed to share.<br />     "What do you want, Mother?" she tried again.<br />     "I was hoping I could get the two of you to run to the grocery<br />     store. The Mactaggert clan just showed up and they totally  forgot<br /> to<br />     bring food."<br />     "What do you mean, ’forgot’?" Claudia questioned irritably. "All<br />     fifteen of them?"<br />     "They’re a forgetful family," her mother apologized. To Denys. "So<br />     we thought we’d  send to the  store for some  more hamburgers  and<br /> buns and,<br />     well, you  know, everything.  And since  you brought  your  truck,<br /> dear, and<br />     Claudia’s such  a wonderful  shopper  -- did  you know  she’s  the<br /> thriftiest<br />     shopper you’ll ever want to meet -- and you’d probably like to see<br /> more<br />     of Bradden Falls and be alone together -- "<br />     "We’d love to run your errands, Mom," Denys interrupted this flow<br />     of words. He squeezed Claudia’s hand. "Wouldn’t we, love?"<br />     "No, we wouldn’t." No way was she letting him get her alone in the<br />     shuttle.<br />     "No even for your mother’s sake?"<br />     The question was put gently, he was looking at her with open<br />     warmth and affection. And she got the distinct impression he was<br />     threatening her mother. He was a desperate man. She knew he had a<br />     temper.<br />     Was it possible? Was Denys -- ? Could Denys -- ?<br />     "Nooo..." She said the word on a long, drawn out breath.<br />     He nodded slowly. The glint in his eyes was icy, despite the sweet<br />     tone of his next words. "You know I’ll do whatever’s necessary,<br />     Claudia."<br />     It was a bluff. Had to be. But she didn’t dare call it, did she?<br />     This was her mother -- who was smiling at him like he was her long<br /> lost<br />     darling and had no idea what  a vicious rat she was dealing  with.<br /> She had<br />     to protect her mother.<br />     "You lizard," she said softly.<br />     He tugged her forward along the path. "Come along, love. We better<br />     hurry. Wouldn’t want the Mactaggart  clan to starve," he added  to<br /> her<br />     mother. "Back shortly."<br />     "I should have threatened bodily harm sooner," he whispered in her<br />     ear as he hustled  her toward the roadside  where the shuttle  was<br /> parked.<br />     "I’m sorry," he added. "But this is really for the best."<br />     "I hate you."<br />     "I know. You should." When they reached the shuttle, he added,<br />     "Let’s go."<br />     Chapter Twelve<br />     Denys supposed he should be elated to finally have Claudia’s<br />     cooperation, but all he felt was a nasty sense of guilt. He didn’t<br /> know<br />     what he would have done if she’d called his bluff. He supposed  it<br /> didn’t<br />     matter now, since Claudia was seated beside him in the cockpit  of<br /> the<br />     shuttle.<br />     She glared at him and said, "Lizard."<br />     He flinched and started the engine. The engine itself was silent,<br />     but the  simulated rumbling  of a  mighty diesel  engine could  be<br /> heard by<br />     the picnickers as he drove slowly away.<br />     "First to Athens," he said, trying to sound cheerful about the<br />     prospect of the journey.<br />     "Nope."<br />     "Claudia," he snarled in exasperation. "This in not the time to<br />     start fighting about it again."<br />     "I’m not fighting with you," she answered coldly. "I’m going back<br />     to the HATTON, and I hope you’re happy."<br />     "Not really," he admitted. "About your -- "<br />     "We’re going to a grocery store," she cut him off. "Just a quick<br />     stop for some fresh  vegetables, then we can  be on our way."  She<br /> crossed<br />     her arms,  set  her jaw,  and  looked stubbornly  out  the  window<br /> instead of<br />     at him.<br />     "Vegetables? What do you want vegetables for?" You’re just trying<br />     to make my life  miserable and complicated,  he added to  himself.<br /> And he<br />     didn’t blame her a bit.<br />     "Smid asked me to pick up some carrots," she explained.<br />     "Carrots. I see."<br />     "And I might as well pick up a few other things while we’re<br />     there," she added. "If I’m going back to work as the ship’s  cook,<br /> I<br />     want to use ingredients I know for awhile."<br />     Denys considered while he carefully drove the shuttle down the<br />     empty country road from  the park toward  Bradden Falls. He  could<br /> just<br />     take off, there was nothing  but cornfields out here, no  traffic.<br /> No one<br />     to see the shuttle disappear from regular to Stealth mode. But  he<br /> had<br />     Claudia’s psychological well-being  to consider.  And the  crew’s.<br /> And his<br />     own. Especially his own, as rooming  with Claudia was going to  be<br /> really<br />     miserable for awhile anyway. The less upset she was, the easier it<br /> was<br />     going to  be  on both  of  them. Might  as  well make  a  friendly<br /> gesture, let<br />     her have her vegetables.<br />     It’ll help her adjust to the inevitable, he told himself. And it<br />     won’t take all that long.<br />     "All right," he agreed. "We’ll stop at the store before we leave."<br />     "Fine."<br />     "Then you can call your folks from Athens."<br />     She finally looked at him. "What?"<br />     "To explain our disappearance," he said as the shuttle reached the<br />     outskirts of the small  town. He spotted a  large building with  a<br /> Super<br />     Foods sign on top and a large parking lot. He turned in to the lot<br /> as he<br />     continued. "You can tell them we decided to elope and<br />     are heading for Australia."<br />     "Australia." She sighed, and went on listlessly. "Yes, of course.<br />     Australia." She sighed again. "Let’s just get the carrots and  get<br /> out of<br />     here." Before I start crying, she added to herself. Not that he’d<br />     understand.<br />     ##<br />     There was a lot of crowd noise in the background, music and<br />     laughter and  the  occasional  dismayed shout.  Claudia  tried  to<br /> ignore it<br />     all. Sakretis was  standing next  to her  in the  alcove near  the<br /> doorway,<br />     doing guard duty while Denys rounded up the rest of the crew.  She<br /> didn’t<br />     know how he’d  tracked them to  this small taverna  in one of  the<br /> less<br />     savory neighborhoods of Athens, and she didn’t particularly  care.<br /> She<br />     was tired and  suffering from jet  lag, though the  trip from  the<br /> grocery<br />     parking lot  to Greece  had  only taken  two hours.  They’d  still<br /> crossed<br />     several time zones and she was feeling the effects.<br />     The alcove had a pay phone. She was trying to make an overseas<br />     call.<br />     "Retsina?" she heard Denys’s voice clearly cutting through every<br />     other noise, including the echoing ring  of the phone she held  to<br /> her<br />     ear. "Didn’t I tell you to stay away from -- "<br />     "Ouzo," Cleary finished for him. "We did. This is different. It’s<br />     wine."<br />     "Sneaks up on you," Fox added. "But we were ready for it. We’re<br />     sober."<br />     "Almost," Harcort added.<br />     "Hello?" her mother’s voice finally answered.<br />     Claudia gave Sakretis a quick look. He was alert and sober and<br />     knew what she was supposed to say. "Mom," she said cheerfully.<br />     "Where have you been? The Mactaggert’s -- "<br />     "Sorry. We forgot about the groceries."<br />     "You forgot?"<br />     "And those ladies," Morrison’s voice came from the bar. "Why do<br />     they keep taking off their clothes?"<br />     It’s a strip joint, she thought. I’m not sure those guys are<br />     really sailors. She made herself stop thinking about the crew to<br />     concentrate on talking to her mother.<br />     "Denys and I -- "<br />     "Where are Denys and you?"<br />     "We tried paying them to put their clothes back on," Toffler said.<br />     "It was embarrassing. We didn’t  want any trouble. Cleary said  he<br /> liked it."<br />     "Uh. At O’Hare," Claudia improvised. "Waiting for a flight to<br />     Australia. We talked it over and decided to elope."<br />     "Elope!"<br />     "Sorry. We -- we decided -- Mom." She couldn’t go through with<br />     this. "I love you, Mom. I -- "<br />     "When will you be coming home?"<br />     Sakretis must have heard the question, because he shook his head.<br />     Denys herded the others through  a bead-curtained doorway and  she<br /> was<br />     suddenly surrounded  by the  crew. Denys’s  hand came  around  her<br /> wrist.<br />     "Claudia?" her mother’s faraway voice questioned.<br />     "I don’t know," she answered. She met Denys’s eyes. The look of<br />     sympathy in them almost overwhelmed her hatred of him. Why did his<br /> touch<br />     feel so  reassuring?  Why  was  his  presence  beside  her  almost<br /> welcome? He<br />     was dragging her  off to an  unknown fate in  the far future.  She<br /> should be<br />     yelling into the  phone for  help. Instead, she  had the  distinct<br /> feeling<br />     she wouldn’t be minding this at all if he had seduced her into it.<br />     Did she love him enough to abandon her home and family for him?<br />     The disturbing answer was, yes, maybe she did.<br />     Not that she was going to let him know it. What he was doing was<br />     wrong, it was foolish, it was completely unnecessary. He was  just<br /> being<br />     paranoid about his damn fool Mission.<br />     "I love you, Mom. Tell Dad I love him, too. I’ll miss you. Have to<br />     go. Bye."  She hung  up the  phone and  glared at  Denys.  "There.<br /> Happy?"<br />     "Lovely. All right," he addressed the crew. "Let’s get back to the<br />     airport and finish loading the supplies."<br />     They all looked at him as if he were crazy. Which, Claudia agreed,<br />     he was.<br />     "We were finished loading," Cleary said.<br />     "That’s why we thought it was kind of crazy when you took off<br />     without us," Sakretis explained.<br />     Denys’s fair skin colored as his lips thinned to a narrow line.<br />     "Right. I forgot."<br />     "You were acting pretty crazy," Fox commiserated.<br />     "We could have helped you look for Dr. Cameron," Harcort said.<br />     "But you -- "<br />     "Let’s just get in the shuttle and go," Denys announced loudly.<br />     "Right now."<br />     "Calm down, Duchamp," Cleary advised. "We’re going."<br />     "I get the copilot’s seat," Claudia chimed in as Denys tugged her<br />     out the door with the others. Denys didn’t argue, but she defended<br /> her<br />     choice of seat anyway. "If I have to abandon my homeworld, I  want<br /> a good<br />     last view of it."<br />     He groaned as they took their seats. "Go ahead. Make me feel more<br />     guilty than I already do."<br />     She settled in the chair beside him. The crew stumbled with half-<br />     drunken gracelessness into the other seats.<br />     "Am I making you feel guilty?" she asked with acid sweetness.<br />     "You know you are."<br />     She sighed again, this time with a certain amount of feigned<br />     contentment. "Good."<br />     ##<br />     Three days after leaving Earth to return to Phobos, Denys was<br />     still suffering the affects of the tongue lashing Captain  Andrews<br /> had<br />     given him.  He’d told  the  captain they’d  had  to wait  for  the<br /> supplies to<br />     arrive at  the Athens  warehouse. The  Shift crew  had backed  his<br /> story.<br />     They’d been dismissed.  Captain Andrews’s reprimand  had been  for<br /> him<br />     alone. He’d been accused of goldbricking, dereliction of duty,<br />     misconduct,  incompetence,  lying,  sightseeing  and  fraternizing<br /> intimately<br />     with the female natives in the captain’s cold, precise tones. He’d<br />     gotten off with a  dire warning and threats  about black marks  on<br /> his<br />     permanent record.<br />     "But only because you’re the only mining, electrical, laser, and<br />     mechanical engineer I’ve  got. Now  get out of  my sight,  rebuild<br /> your<br />     bloody laser cannon and make sure  it works ten times better  than<br /> the<br />     last one. We’re just going to have to backtrack those days through<br /> the<br />     time spiral to get back on schedule -- and you know how  expensive<br /> that<br />     is."<br />     Denys had hurried off the bridge, and stayed in the design shop<br />     most of  the flight  to  Phobos, doing  exactly what  the  captain<br /> ordered. It<br />     was done, and it  was going to be  the best, most efficient  laser<br /> cannon<br />     built out of antiquated parts  anybody had ever seen. Building  it<br /> had<br />     been the perfect excuse to stay out of his quarters and away from<br />     Claudia.<br />     He couldn’t stop thinking about what the captain had said, though.<br />     The worst part was that Andrews  was correct on all counts.  Denys<br /> had<br />     almost been tempted to tell him  what was really going on, to  ask<br /> for his<br />     advice and help,  to turn Claudia  and the situation  over to  the<br /> captain’s<br />     competent hands. It  was only the  fear of certain  death for  all<br /> concerned<br />     that kept him from spilling  his guts to the fierce,  high-handed,<br /> older<br />     man.<br />     Of course, he realized as he sat alone with the newly complete<br />     laser cannon,  competent as  the captain  was, he  couldn’t  solve<br /> Denys’s<br />     problem with Claudia.<br />     Denys ran his hands through his hair and said, "Claudia."<br />     Her name echoed through the open, empty space of the big room.<br />     He’d been doing nothing  but think about  Claudia while he  worked<br /> the days<br />     away. The work had been a good excuse to stay out of her presence.<br /> Not<br />     that she was in the cabin the few times he. d come in to shower<br />     or change or sleep. The ship  was very nearly at Phobos, and  they<br /> hadn’t<br />     spoken at all during the journey. She’d kept to the kitchen, he<br />     supposed. He  knew  the men  were  well-fed and  content.  He  was<br /> anything but<br />     content. He was lonely and miserable and confused.<br />     "And it’s got to stop," he said, coming to the decision he’d been<br />     working toward all through this lonely period. He stood and dusted<br />     imaginary grime off his long-fingered  hands. "And it has to  stop<br /> right<br />     now..<br />     He took a deep breath, squared his shoulders and walked with<br />     determined strides to the kitchen.<br />     She was sitting in front of the cooking computer when the door<br />     opened, chin resting  on her  raised fist, staring  glumly at  the<br /> screen.<br />     "Claudia," he announced, stepping up to her. "I love you."<br />     Perhaps he should have started with more explanation, but he<br />     somehow didn’t feel as if he had much time.<br />     She jumped to her feet, and turned to face him. "Pardon me?"<br />     "I love you," he repeated. He crossed his arms over his chest and<br />     went on determinedly.  "I may  have been wrong  --not letting  you<br /> stay on<br />     Earth, I mean. The more I think about it, the more irrational my<br />     behavior seems. Maybe  you were right.  Maybe you couldn’t  affect<br /> history.<br />     I don’t know. Maybe I just couldn’t let you go."<br />     She was staring, blue eyes getting wider and wider. "Excuse me?"<br />     she questioned. "Did you say -- "<br />     "I’m sorry I took you from a place and people you love," he went<br />     on earnestly. "You have every right to hate me for what I did. But<br /> I<br />     don’t want you  to hate me.  I -- "  He gulped. "I  love you,"  he<br /> repeated.<br />     He was vulnerable and afraid  of rejection, but he forced  himself<br /> to<br />     speak his mind and his heart. "I want us to spend the rest of  our<br /> lives<br />     together. I know  we’re from  different times and  worlds and  you<br /> feel like<br />     I betrayed you  and perhaps I  did. But I’ve  loved you since  the<br /> moment I<br />     saw you and I think  we belong together. I’d  like to try to  make<br /> you<br />     happy if you’ll have me."<br />     Then, courage spent, he turned and walked from the kitchen before<br />     the stunned  woman  could  say  a word,  either  of  rejection  or<br /> acceptance.<br />     Claudia sat down again, mostly because she was shaking too hard to<br />     stand. It was a struggle to even try to speak and by the time  her<br /> tongue<br />     was able to form words he was long gone.<br />     "Denys?" she said. "Oh, my."<br />     She sighed, folded her hands in her lap and stopped thinking.<br />     She’d been thinking for days while, all the time, her emotions had<br />     been struggling to  come to grips  with just how  she really  felt<br /> about<br />     Denys Duchamp. She’d tried to  ignore her emotions. Tried to  make<br /> the<br />     fiery love she felt for him turn into cold ash. It would seem  the<br /> ashes<br />     had no intention of burning out. All the man had to do was say  ’I<br /> love<br />     you’ and all the heat and intensity sprang instantly back to life.<br />     "But --He -- I --"<br />     She banged a fist in frustration on the cool, white counter. Her<br />     fingers brushed  across  the  keyboard  and  the  computer  beeped<br /> reprovingly<br />     at her. She stuck her tongue out at the screen.<br />     "Denys."<br />     She just said the name, and feelings and repressed memories of the<br />     man came tumbling to fill her mind.<br />     Denys trying to calm a terrified stranger he’d just pulled out of<br />     a  storage  chest.  Denys  teasingly  whipping  off  a  towel   to<br /> shamelessly<br />     display his gorgeous body. Denys saving her life and dragging  her<br /> off in<br />     monumental,  righteous  fury.  Denys  making  love  to  her.   She<br /> remembered his<br />     touch and  taste,  smooth  skin and  hard  muscles,  the  sculpted<br /> tension of<br />     his face transformed by passion.<br />     Denys --manipulating and high-handed and self-righteous and<br />     obsessed with duty and responsibility.<br />     Denys -- who made the best of a crazy situation. Who did what he<br />     thought was right. Did the best he could.<br />     At what cost to him? she wondered, at last.<br />     He says he loves me. Do I love him? Is love enough? You’re<br />     thinking too hard,  her emotions  accused. Will you  just go  with<br /> your gut<br />     reaction for once, Claudia Cameron, and get on with your life?<br />     You’re stuck in Denys. s time. Could you ask for more than to be<br />     stuck with him?<br />     She didn’t know. She did know she had to see him.<br />     She found him in a room that reminded her of a high school shop<br />     class, only more  high tech.  He was  sitting next  to a  complex,<br /> dangerous-<br />     looking device. He was gazing into a heads-up display on the<br />     device’s control panel. He didn’t look up as she approached.<br />     "I know a weapon when I see one," she said. Though that wasn’t<br />     what she’d intended to say.<br />     "Of course you do," he answered. "You’re a girl. Besides, it’s not<br />     meant to be used as a weapon. It’s for mining."<br />     "Oh."<br />     "Our laser cannon was hit by an asteroid."<br />     "Cleary told me."<br />     "Oh."<br />     "He told me I’d find you here, too."<br />     Denys finally raised his head to look at her. "Oh."<br />     The unhappiness in his expression, the bleak chill in his pale<br />     blue eyes hurt her. She  instinctively rushed forward, taking  his<br /> hands<br />     comfortingly in hers.<br />     "You said you love me," she told him.<br />     "I do."<br />     "I love you, too," she admitted. The words came easily. She<br />     smiled, as much in surprise as in joy.<br />     Some of the pain left his eyes. "You do?"<br />     She nodded. "I wish we’d met differently. No, I don’t," she added,<br />     the sudden recollection striking her sense of humor. She chuckled.<br /> "No.<br />     It  was  perfect."  He  was  looking  at  her  curiously,  so  she<br /> explained, "I<br />     just remembered  that I  went to  Greece  to find  the man  of  my<br /> dreams."<br />     He tilted his head to one side, causing blond bangs to fall across<br /> his<br />     forehead. A teasing tilt captured his  lips. "I’m the man of  your<br /> dreams?"<br />     "I think, maybe -- "<br />     "Mr. Duchamp," a cool, familiar voice announced over the ship’s<br />     intercom, "I will be wanting you on the bridge immediately."<br />     Denys pulled his hands from hers. "The captain!"<br />     "Captain?" Claudia felt as if she should quickly find a place to<br />     hide. "What does he want?"<br />     He gave her a reassuring smile and pat on the shoulder. "Nothing<br />     important. Probably just wants to discuss setting up the new laser<br />     cannon at the Stickney mine. He always sounds like it’s the end of<br /> the<br />     world." Denys started toward  the door. He threw  her a look  over<br /> his<br />     shoulder. "When I get back, we’ll -- "<br />     "And do bring Dr. Cameron with you, Duchamp," Captain Andrews<br />     added, his cool, precise drawl filling the room.<br />     And chilling both their bones.<br />     ##<br />     "I’m not going in there," Claudia said as the elevator reached the<br />     bridge. She pressed the hold button and looked around desperately.<br /> She<br />     suspected she was as  pale as Denys, but  not as resigned to  meet<br /> her<br />     fate. Or the captain. She’d  heard too much about Captain  Andrews<br /> to want<br />     to meet him. All right, once she’d demanded to meet him, but she’d<br /> been<br />     hysterical at  the  time. Upon  hearing  her name  spoken  by  the<br /> dreaded<br />     Captain Andrews, all she had wanted to do was hide.<br />     Denys had squared his shoulders and insisted they face the<br />     consequences manfully. She’d  pointed out she  wasn’t a man.  He’d<br /> dragged<br />     her to the elevator anyway. She’d sworn at him a lot.<br />     He gave her an exasperated look. "Let’s just get it over with," he<br />     insisted. "What’s the worst he can do?"<br />     "I don’t know. You tell me."<br />     He shrugged. "Maybe he’ll send you home. And he can’t kill me<br />     until after the mission’s over. He needs me."<br />     "But Denys I don’t want to go -- "<br />     "Will you two stop bickering and get in here?" the caustic voice<br />     of the captain came through the elevator’s communications speaker.<br /> The<br />     door slid open despite her finger pressing firmly against the hold<br />     button.<br />     Denys took her hand, gave her a reassuring smile and stepped<br />     bravely forward. She sighed, and followed after.<br />     The room was dominated by a giant viewscreen showing Mars, its<br />     moons, and  a  small streak  of  silver light.  Claudia  gave  the<br /> impressive<br />     view a cursory  glance, then took  in the rest  of the place.  The<br /> room was<br />     cool, and chillingly silent, even though there were people at  the<br /> rows<br />     of workstations that curved around the bridge. The people came  in<br /> two<br />     categories, she noted, those staring at her openly, and those<br />     concentrating determinedly  at their  consoles. The  ones  staring<br /> wore<br />     mingled expressions of shock, horror and hope.<br />     She didn’t get it.<br />     She didn’t have time to stop and ask anyone as Denys led her<br />     swiftly to the man standing by a chair in the exact center of  the<br /> room.<br />     The man was tall, big-boned but slender, silver-haired and hawked-<br />     nosed, his  expression  stern  and commanding.  He  exuded  fierce<br /> energy and<br />     intelligence, and a definite impatience with lesser beings.<br />     He held out his hands and smiled as she approached. "Claudia, my<br />     dear. So good to see you."<br />     Claudia stopped before him. "Charlie," she demanded. "What are you<br />     doing here?"<br />     "Got drafted," her tea-drinking friend answered affably. He rubbed<br />     his forefinger along the length of his nose, and winked. "Then an<br />     admiral handed me the bloody Book and told me it was my destiny to<br /> save<br />     the Federated Community of  Worlds. I’ve been  a bit difficult  to<br /> live<br />     with ever since."<br />     "Difficult! That’s putting it mildly," Denys muttered under his<br />     breath. "Wait  a  moment," he  went  on, addressing  the  captain.<br /> "You’re<br />     Claudia’s Charlie?" For  some reason his  fear of Captain  Charles<br /> Andrews<br />     had disappeared. For some reason Claudia’s being involved with the<br />     captain made perfect sense. It was as if there was some reason for<br /> it.<br />     The light  was dawning  on him.  "You  knew she  was going  to  be<br /> brought on<br />     board," he accused Captain Andrews. "It’s in the Book, isn’t it?"<br />     "Precisely, my boy," Andrews answered with an encouraging nod.<br />     Claudia wasn’t sure what to make of any of this. She wasn’t sure<br />     if she was outraged or amused. She was certainly confused. "You’re<br /> the<br />     captain? But you helped me escape!"<br />     "He did?"<br />     "We’ll discuss all that later," Charlie said, brushing both her<br />     and Denys’s comments aside. "If there is a later," he added.<br />     The serious tone of his last words sent a chill up Claudia’s<br />     spine. "What do you mean, if?"<br />     Charlie faced the screen. "Look at this. Magnify."<br />     There was an audible gulp from one of the men at the control<br />     consoles. Charlie send  the man a  vehement look which  galvanized<br /> him<br />     enough to get his fingers moving over his keypad.<br />     "Can’t get decent help," Charlie grumbled as the image on the<br />     screen altered, concentrating  and magnifying  the silver  streak,<br /> showing<br />     it to be a sleek-hulled starship.<br />     Fear nearly overwhelmed Denys. He did not scream. He wanted to. He<br />     grabbed Claudia instead, and held her close. "Sirens! Don’t look!"<br />     Claudia pushed away from Denys’s chest. She saw the terror in his<br />     eyes, and  the struggle  to  remain calm.  "It’s all  right,"  she<br /> soothed.<br />     She touched his cheek. "What’s the problem?"<br />     Somebody said, "I can hear them."<br />     "Nonsense," Charlie answered the shaky voice. "That’s your<br />     imagination. They aren’t close enough yet."<br />     "They followed us," Denys said. "Somehow caught on to what we’re<br />     doing. Followed us through the time vortex."<br />     "Afraid so," Charlie answered. He favored Denys with a reproving<br />     look. "Nothing in the Book  about this, my boy. Any  suggestions?"<br /> The<br />     question wasn’t for Denys, but for Claudia.<br />     "What’s a Siren?"<br />     Everyone gaped at her, but no one rushed to give any explanations.<br />     She knew there was a war on with the Sirens, and that the HATTON’s<br />     mission was to acquire a weapon  to use against them. That  wasn’t<br /> very<br />     much information.  Claudia grimaced  in exasperation  back at  the<br /> staring<br />     men. She looked at the screen. She had no idea how close the enemy<br /> ship<br />     was. Hopefully much further  than the screen’s magnification  made<br /> it look<br />     like.<br />     "Why aren’t you doing something?" she demanded of Charlie.<br />     "Calling a red alert or whatever."<br />     "This isn’t a fighting ship," Denys told her. He took her hand.<br />     "There’s nothing we can do against  the Sirens. We don’t have  any<br /> women<br />     on board, so we’re going to die. I’m sorry."<br />     "Of course we have a woman on board," Charlie pointed out. "What<br />     I’m doing about the approaching Sirens, Dr. Cameron, is relying on<br /> you."<br />     "What?"<br />     "She’s not a fighter," Denys told Charlie. "She’s not like our<br />     women. She can’t help us."<br />     "What do you mean, I can’t help?"<br />     "I’m sorry, darling."<br />     As she looked at Denys, she saw his eyes were full of protective<br />     tenderness and  sorrow. She  wanted to  slug him.  "What’s  having<br /> women on<br />     board got to do  with anything?" she  demanded. "Why won’t  anyone<br /> explain<br />     about the Sirens? Wait a minute," she remembered. "Men can’t fight<br /> them,<br />     can they?"<br />     Charlie cleared his throat. She returned her attention to the<br />     captain. He was blushing  bright red from his  silver hair to  the<br /> collar<br />     of his blue uniform.<br />     "It’s a hormonal problem, you see. When we hear the Sirens’ call<br />     we become, um, uh, how can I put this? Preoccupied."<br />     "Preoccupied?"<br />     She didn’t get it. She looked from Charlie, to Denys, to the rest<br />     of the  men on  the bridge.  None  of them  would meet  her  eyes.<br /> Everyone but<br />     Denys and Charlie were staring in blank terror at the  approaching<br /> ship.<br />     And there  was a  noise. As  she waited  in confused  silence  for<br /> someone to<br />     offer her a  proper explanation, she  began to become  aware of  a<br /> faint,<br />     almost imagined, humming.<br />     She swung to face Denys. "What’s that?" she questioned.<br />     A languid, seductive smile quirked the corners of his lips.<br />     "Sirens," he said.  He didn’t  seem terrified  anymore. "It’s  the<br /> Siren<br />     Song beginning."<br />     All she could hear was an irritating buzz which had grown just a<br />     bit louder as Denys spoke.<br />     "Siren Song? Wait a minute." She grabbed him by the shoulders and<br />     shook him as the explanation became clear to her. "Like the Sirens<br /> in<br />     Greek mythology? The creatures who lured men to their deaths  with<br /> their<br />     singing? The ones whose song no man could resist?"<br />     "Got it in one, love," Charlie answered. "Help us. You’re the only<br />     one who can."<br />     Help them? How could she help them? "Do they drive you mad? Or<br />     what?"<br />     A faint sheen of sweat was forming on Denys’s skin. "Mad," he<br />     agreed hoarsely. "With longing."<br />     "For them. Only for them," someone’s voice said in the background.<br />     The noise  was  growing. Several  of  the men  began  humming  and<br /> swaying back<br />     and forth. "Beautiful. So beautiful. It’s beautiful."<br />     Claudia closed her eyes. She listened, and tried to concentrate.<br />     She  supposed  that  all  over  the  ship  the  crew  was  hearing<br /> beautiful,<br />     seductive music. Hearing and being paralyzed by the aching longing<br /> of<br />     the Siren Song. She didn’t hear it. She heard noise all right, but<br /> it<br />     wasn’t beautiful.  What  she heard  were  words. Words  spoken  in<br /> harsh,<br />     arrogant demand.<br />     "This is the ship METAFORM. Alien vessel you will surrender to us<br />     and die.  This  is  the  ship  METAFORM.  Alien  vessel  you  will<br /> surrender to<br />     us and  die. This  is the  ship METAFORM.  Alien vessel  you  will<br /> surrender<br />     to us and die. This is the ship -- "<br />     "Metaform?" She shook Denys’s shoulders again. "Did you hear that?<br />     The enemy ship’s called the METAFORM."<br />     But the metal they were mining was called metaform -- The metal<br />     Denys had told  her looked  like it  had been  poured molten  into<br /> Stickney<br />     Crater. If metaform  the metal was  also METAFORM the  ship --  An<br /> idea was<br />     beginning to occur to her.<br />     "Denys!"<br />     He blinked stupidly at her. "What?"<br />     Charlie touched her shoulder. "What did you say?" She could hear<br />     the fight for control in his strained voice.<br />     She turned her attention to Charlie. "Has any Siren ship ever been<br />     captured?"<br />     He took several deep breaths and shook his head as if trying to<br />     clear it. "No,"  he said. "Never.  They self-destruct before  they<br /> can be<br />     captured."<br />     "Atomize themselves," Denys added.<br />     More of the men were humming along to the Siren call. It reminded<br />     Claudia of a bad  a capella version of  ’Stairway to Heaven’.  She<br /> ignored<br />     the noise.<br />     Denys licked his lips. The look in his eyes was sultry. She felt<br />     his skin  growing  warm with  desire  under the  material  of  his<br /> uniform.<br />     Thankfully, he managed to give her a few pertinent facts despite<br />     his  condition.  "We   think  the  Siren   ships  are   completely<br /> computerized.<br />     That the Song is a  computer program. They’ve enslaved races  with<br /> the<br />     Song, but no one’s actually seen a Siren. We haven’t been able to<br />     communicate with the  ships. Haven’t been  able to shield  against<br /> them. Or<br />     bounce the Song back to them off our own shielding."<br />     "The Book says the metaform will shield us from the Song," Charlie<br />     added.<br />     Because it’s made from the same material as a Siren ship, Claudia<br />     thought. No. "It is the Siren ship. That’s the time paradox. You<br />     destroyed the METAFORM  so you could  mine the metaform,"  Claudia<br /> told<br />     them triumphantly.  She pointed  at the  screen. "So  destroy  the<br /> ship,<br />     already!"<br />     Charlie and Denys just gaped at her. The rest of the bridge crew<br />     continued  humming,  with  eyes   glazed  and  lascivious   smiles<br /> plastered on<br />     their red faces. She began to  realize that the men weren’t  going<br /> to be<br />     any help at all.<br />     "This is women’s work," Charlie told her.<br />     She wanted to scream. Instead, she recalled that mission analysis<br />     - - military strategy and tactics -- used to be her job. This  was<br /> woman’s<br />     work -- since she was the only woman around and the men were going<br /> to be<br />     writhing on the deck in orgasmic ecstasy pretty soon. She wondered<br /> how<br />     long they had before the Sirens opened fire on the helpless mining<br /> ship.<br />     Was there time enough to set a trap? Time? Time. Time was<br />     the answer, wasn’t it? She had an  idea, but she had to have  help<br /> if she<br />     was going to be able to pull it off.<br />     "Listen," she said earnestly, "you’ve got a hold full of metaform<br />     and a brand new laser cannon."<br />     "Yes?" Charlie asked eagerly.<br />     "What do you want us to do?" Denys wanted to know. "Hurry. We<br />     can’t hold on much longer."<br />     "Charlie, you said you the ship has to go backward in time before<br />     it could spring forward to the future."<br />     "Yes."<br />     "Can you do that now? Go back to before you arrived? Can you get<br />     the METAFORM to chase the HATTON back through time?"<br />     Charlie nodded slowly. The effort to concentrate was evident on<br />     his strained  features. "We’re  already on  a backward  spiral.  I<br /> could<br />     speed it up. It would look like an evasive tactic."<br />     "Good. Do it. First get non-essential crew into the hold with the<br />     metaform," Claudia suggested. "Denys and I will work on  modifying<br /> the<br />     shuttle. We can modify the shuttle, can’t we?"<br />     "Yes," Denys said.<br />     "Right," Charlie agreed. "We better get moving. Not much time."<br />     He turned to the communicator and began bellowing orders. Claudia<br />     hoped fear of the Dread Captain Andrews would overcome the Siren<br />     Song long enough to get the  men to the hold. She grabbed  Denys’s<br /> hand<br />     and pulled him toward the elevator.<br />     "I’ll fill you in on the rest of my idea on the way to the hold,"<br />     she told him as they ran.<br />     Chapter Thirteen<br />     This will work. It did work. It has to work. The words rolled over<br />     and over in her  head. She was  scared, and using  the words as  a<br /> focus for<br />     all her nervous emotion.<br />     "Please, God, let it work," Claudia prayed fervently as the<br />     shuttle sank into the darker-than-night shadows under the belly of<br />     the gigantic mining ship. To all intents and purposes, the  HATTON<br /> was<br />     dead in space, all its systems abandoned, the men completely under<br />     control of the Siren Song  after the short, futile chase.  Claudia<br /> just<br />     hoped it wasn’t true. The HATTON was supposed to look like it was<br />     drifting toward Phobos, about ready to crash into the wide  crater<br /> at the<br />     moon’s north pole.<br />     In reality, all the men but Charlie and Cleary were in the hold<br />     with the metaform.  Charlie was carefully  piloting the ship  with<br /> the aid<br />     of backup systems.  Cleary had volunteered  to help him  navigate,<br /> claiming<br />     his sense of direction was better than any multibillion credit<br />     navigation system.  Both  men  were  wearing  lumps  of  metaform,<br /> imperfectly<br />     shielding themselves from the Siren Song.<br />     She and Denys were out here in the shuttle. With the laser cannon<br />     hastily attached to  the front.  It stuck  out at  a sharp  point,<br /> reminding<br />     her of a mosquito’s stinger. She just hoped it was more  effective<br /> than a<br />     mosquito against the oncoming menace of the METAFORM.<br />     "Please, God," she repeated. "Let this work."<br />     "Amen," Denys added. He was beside her, in the pilot’s seat.<br />     She looked at him. He was sweating, his features strained, but he<br />     gave her an encouraging smile.<br />     She smiled back. She looked at him, drinking in his form and<br />     presence, just in  case they were  about to die  and this was  the<br /> last time<br />     she ever  saw  him.  Then,  refusing to  be  maudlin,  she  looked<br /> pointedly at<br />     the conspicuous bulge near his thigh and asked, "Is that a lump of<br />     metaform in your pocket, or are you just happy to see me?"<br />     He looked surprised for a moment, then he threw back his head and<br />     laughed. "Claudia Cameron,"  he declared.  "I love  you, but  it’s<br /> mostly metaform.".<br />     He  turned  his  attention  back  to  the  controls.  "I  have  to<br /> concentrate. I can still hear<br />     them. My body’s going crazy with  need, but at least I can  think.<br /> Can you hear<br />     them?"<br />     "Yes." Not the Song, but the message, over and over. It made her<br />     very angry. Angry enough to almost forget being scared. Angry and<br />     possessive. How dare the Sirens do this to her man! How dare these<br />     creatures try to  capture Denys with  their mechanical  seduction?<br /> Not only<br />     were they trying to strip away  his free will, they were  stealing<br /> the<br />     sexual attraction that was rightfully hers to evoke from the man<br />     she loved. And it was a computer program doing it!<br />     "I want to melt that ship," she said angrily.<br />     "We will," Denys assured her. He gave her a quick, sidelong<br />     glance. "They get to you, don’t  they? Make you furious? Make  you<br /> want to<br />     destroy them? That’s how our women react."<br />     She nodded. "Oh, yes. I’ve never been so angry in my life."<br />     "Now you know how our women got to be so mean. Now you know why<br />     we men don’t want  to talk about it.  It’s humiliating to have  to<br /> give in to<br />     the Siren Call. When we take the metaform back we’ll finally  have<br /> a<br />     chance to fight for ourselves. They’re closing," he added.<br />     The shuttle had been hiding beneath the HATTON, waiting to swing<br />     up behind the  Siren ship when  it came in  to attack. The  HATTON<br /> appearing<br />     dead in  space  was a  diversion.  The diversion  appeared  to  be<br /> working. It<br />     was time to set the counterattack in motion.<br />     Denys wished he could spare another quick look at Claudia as he<br />     piloted the shuttle away from the HATTON, but his hands were full,<br />     controlling the overburdened little ship. Her job was to fire  the<br /> laser<br />     from a jerryrigged remote control panel. "Just point the thing and<br /> push<br />     the button," he reminded her.<br />     "I know," was the tense reply.<br />     "You remember which button?"<br />     "I remember!"<br />     "Fine. Will you marry me?"<br />     "Yes."<br />     "Good."]]></description>
<pubDate><![CDATA[Fri, 15 May 2009 20:21:38 +0400]]></pubDate>
<comments><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post57322496/]]></comments>
<guid><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post57322496/#BlCom519200010]]></guid>
<author><![CDATA[]]></author>
</item>
<item><title><![CDATA[Ïîìîãèòå]]></title>
<link><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post57322496/#BlCom519199733]]></link>
<description><![CDATA[ïðîäîëæåíèå>>> | he certainly didn’t  blame<br /> her for<br />     running back here the first chance she got. He looked at<br />     the white and  blue house  with its  spreading oak  tree and  rose<br /> bushes and<br />     gave a  wistful  sigh.  The  house  and  grounds  were  hopelessly<br /> old-fashioned, of<br />     course, even  in this  time. There  was certainly  nothing on  New<br /> Syndey to compare<br />     with this place’s  rustic charm. Still,  it was just  the sort  of<br /> place he’d like to come<br />     home to. Especially if there was someone like Claudia waiting  for<br /> him there.<br />     No. Not someone like Claudia. Just Claudia.<br />     He sighed, and cautiously made his way to the door. If she saw him<br />     and ran  screaming for  help, he  didn’t know  what he’d  do.  The<br /> nearest<br />     house was about a quarter mile away, but if she made a loud  fuss,<br /> that<br />     quarter mile wasn’t very far. The last thing Denys intended to  do<br /> was<br />     call attention to his  presence. The point was  to get in,  snatch<br /> Claudia,<br />     and get out as quickly and quietly as possible. It was a shame  he<br /> didn’t<br />     have a sleepray on him. They hadn’t expected to need any  weaponry<br /> on<br />     this supply run.<br />     The porch steps creaked. His steps sounded far louder in his  ears<br /> then they<br />     actually were. No dogs barked, no alarm systems went off. The door<br /> wasn’t even<br />     locked. He moved cautiously into  the hallway. The floor was  some<br /> golden,<br />     polished hardwood with a long, rose-patterned runner leading  down<br /> a long<br />     hall. A wide doorway to the left  of the entrance led to a  living<br /> room,<br />     one  on  the  right  to  a  dining  room  with  a  bay  window.  A<br /> rose-carpeted<br />     staircase with a wooden banister led to the house’s second  floor.<br /> There<br />     was another doorway  at the  end of the  hall and  two more  doors<br /> halfway to<br />     the kitchen entrance, on opposite sides of the hallway.<br />     Denys heard nothing. The house might as well have been deserted.<br />     His sensor told  him Claudia  was on the  second floor.  He did  a<br /> quick<br />     search of the downstairs to make  sure she was alone. Besides,  he<br /> was<br />     curious to see the rest of her  home, to know how she lived,  what<br /> her<br />     taste was like, what sort of things were important to her.<br />     One of the rooms was a library/office. There was a computer on the<br />     desk; the  books  on  the  many  shelves  were  a  combination  of<br /> cookbooks and<br />     military history texts. There  was a game board  set up on a  side<br /> table<br />     with maps  and miniature  metal figures  in ancient  armor.  After<br /> examining<br />     the pieces, Denys  decided the  display had something  to do  with<br /> Alexander<br />     the Great. He  moved on  to the other  room off  the hallway,  and<br /> found a small<br />     bathroom. He went on to the kitchen.<br />     Denys smiled as he stepped into the big room. The color scheme was<br />     gray and mauve and copper, and as complex as the kitchen on  board<br /> the<br />     HATTON. No, more complex, he decided after he took in some of the<br />     details of the place. A big window over the triple sink looked out<br /> at a<br />     vegetable garden;  a  window shelf  held  small pots  of  fragrant<br /> herbs. The<br />     stove was  in the  middle of  a long  center island,  it had  more<br /> controls<br />     than the  cockpit  of the  shuttle.  There  was a  wall  oven  and<br /> microwave and<br />     a gigantic refrigerator/freezer. Lots  of cabinets and work  space<br /> held<br />     what was probably every cooking appliance and gadget known to  the<br /> late<br />     twentieth century.<br />     "I’ve seen less complicated ship’s bridges," he murmured. He<br />     smiled fondly  as  he added,  "I  think I’ve  just  found  Claudia<br /> Cameron’s<br />     true home."  A stab  of  regret accompanied  the words.  He  hated<br /> dragging<br />     her away from this comfortable, creative place.<br />     He could only hope he’d be able to give her something like it<br />     someday. If she’d let him. They had to talk. She had to be made to<br />     understand that he wanted  her in the future  with him. It  wasn’t<br /> just the<br />     need to  protect history,  though, of  course, that  was the  most<br /> important<br />     reason she had to return with him. Would return with him,  whether<br /> she<br />     wanted to or not. He had  no intention of kidnapping her a  second<br /> time<br />     just because he  desperately needed  her. Duty,  he told  himself,<br /> though he<br />     had no intention of  examining just how honest  he was being  with<br /> himself.<br />     He headed determinedly toward the front stairs. Fortunately, they<br />     didn’t squeak. He, however, had to stop near the top of the stairs<br /> to<br />     contend with a jaw-cracking yawn.<br />     I am so tired, he thought as he wearily finished the climb to the<br />     second floor. He didn’t  know how many hours  it had taken him  to<br /> finally<br />     catch up with  Claudia but he’d  had to be  intensely alert  every<br /> minute.<br />     What with  concentrating  on  the sensor,  following  the  various<br /> airplanes,<br />     monitoring the  Stealth field,  and avoiding  getting hit  by  air<br /> traffic<br />     which couldn’t see him, he’d had one hell of a day.<br />     He didn’t think he could repeat the performance any time in the<br />     near future.<br />     When he found the empty bedroom at the top of the stairs, the<br />     temptation to take a short  nap almost overwhelmed him  instantly.<br /> Instead<br />     he followed the sensor signal down the hall to the second bedroom.<br />     The door was open, and Claudia was there, in the middle of the<br />     four poster bed. Fast asleep.<br />     "Lucky woman," he grumbled.<br />     She was curled up on top of a white-on-white, lacy bedspread,<br />     her head buried in a thick pile of pillows.<br />     Denys stood frozen in the doorway, drinking in the sight of her as<br />     she turned onto her back.  She sighed, and mumbled something,  but<br /> remained<br />     soundly asleep. She  was dressed  in the  familiar clothing  she’d<br /> worn onboard, but<br />     she looked different. Her tousled brown hair was spread out around<br /> her in a dark<br />     silk  wave,  the  white  bedcovering  emphasized  the  length  and<br /> shapeliness of her tan<br />     legs and thighs. He  was intensely fascinated  by the gentle  rise<br /> and fall of her<br />     breasts as she breathed. She was beautiful.<br />     She’d always been beautiful. He thought she was the most beautiful<br />     woman in the world. Not just on this world, but on any world. But,<br />     somehow, maybe because  this setting was  where she belonged,  she<br /> was most<br />     beautiful to Denys right here on Earth.<br />     He shook his head tiredly. He was disoriented, the dregs of the<br />     adrenaline which had fueled his chase of Claudia were giving  out.<br /> His<br />     head was buzzing and his body  wanted desperately to just drop  to<br /> the<br />     floor and get on  with being unconscious. He  knew he should  wake<br /> her,<br />     force her into the shuttle and take off.<br />     Only he didn’t have the strength for a fight. And, assuming she<br />     came peacefully, he’d probably crash the shuttle into a  cornfield<br /> during<br />     takeoff while trying to stifle a yawn.<br />     No, he decided, we aren’t going anywhere for awhile. He had to get<br />     some rest.<br />     The temptation was to lie down beside Claudia, wrap his arms<br />     around her, and sleep for a week. He opted for the spare bedroom<br />     instead. No use waking her when he wasn’t up to dealing with her<br />     hysteria. He dragged himself  to the other  bedroom and fell  onto<br /> the<br />     mattress. He just barely remembered the bed would have no interest<br /> in<br />     his well being and set the sensor to sound an alert in seven hours<br />     before he fell deeply asleep.<br />     ##<br />     Claudia woke, thought unhappy thoughts about Denys, took a shower,<br />     and dressed to  the smell of  coffee. She didn’t  even notice  the<br /> aroma<br />     until she’d finished  combing her  hair. Somehow,  it just  seemed<br /> like a<br />     normal part of the atmosphere, something that ought to be mixed<br />     with oxygen and the scent of roses from the garden.<br />     When she realized someone was in the house, in her kitchen,<br />     messing with her coffeemaker she  wasn’t the least bit  surprised.<br /> Or<br />     worried. She wasn’t quite  sure what the day  was, but if  someone<br /> was in<br />     the house, it was probably Monday or Thursday and the light<br />     housekeeping chores were being neatly attended to.<br />     It’s probably Lana Kosmiki, she decided, as she went downstairs to<br />     join the housekeeper for breakfast. Marki, Elsbeth and Roger,  her<br /> other<br />     permanent employees, were all tea drinkers. Except for Marki,  who<br /> was<br />     from Bradden  Falls,  the students  she  employed from  the  local<br /> college<br />     were all off for summer vacation.<br />     "That’s the problem with hiring college kids," she was saying to<br />     herself as she entered the  kitchen. "They insist on leaving  town<br /> when<br />     school’s out."<br />     And then she was standing in the doorway, gaping like a fool, as<br />     Denys Duchamp turned away from the counter and smiled at her.  His<br /> pale<br />     hair was highlighted by a shaft of sunlight from the window. Tight<br /> jeans<br />     and a t-shirt snugly outlined his wiry, muscled form. This was  no<br /> dream.<br />     This was Denys all right, with his blade-sharp cheekbones and cool<br />     blue eyes. Her heart lurched at the sight of him, and her body lit<br /> up<br />     with a confusing combination of fear, surprise, and longing.<br />     His lips curled up in a friendly smile. He held a mug of coffee<br />     out to  her.  "I figured  out  how to  work  the thing,"  he  said<br /> proudly. "We<br />     have time for a cup before we’re on our way."<br />     "What are you doing here?" she shrieked. "Get out of my house!"<br />     "Soon," he agreed affably. "Nice house." He added, "I’ll give you<br />     time to pack a few things, and grab something to eat, but we  have<br /> to be<br />     going soon." His tone was very no-nonsense.<br />     She didn’t pay it any mind. "How did you find me?" she demanded.<br />     His smiled turned to a satisfied smirk. "We have our little ways."<br />     She was furious. Not only was she furious, she was happy to see<br />     him. Elated.  Overjoyed.  Being happy  to  see him  was  the  most<br /> annoying<br />     part of all. She took an angry step toward him, not sure what  she<br /> was<br />     going to do. Their eyes met.<br />     She ended up taking the offered cup of coffee and downing a long,<br />     bracing gulp. "Damn!" she sputtered when she was done.<br />     "What?" he asked anxiously. He took a step closer to her. They<br />     were standing nose to nose next to the center island.<br />     "This stuff tastes great. How dare you make great coffee as well<br />     as be the most gorgeous thing I have ever -- "<br />     "You think I’m gorgeous?"<br />     He blushed. He actually blushed. She certainly did. She didn’t<br />     bother to answer. She drank some more coffee.<br />     He took the cup from her hand and put it on the island. "Claudia,"<br />     he said, voice low  and intense. "Surely  you understand we  can’t<br /> stay<br />     here."<br />     "’Don’t call me Shirley.’" It was a dumb line from an old movie,<br />     but it was the only  thing she could think  to say. Having him  so<br /> close,<br />     his eyes looking deeply into hers, his presence so very  masculine<br /> and<br />     compelling, was  totally  confusing. Totally  wonderful.  He  came<br /> closer.<br />     Their bodies touched,  heated and totally  attuned to each  other.<br /> She<br />     forgot her anger as his lips covered hers.<br />     They were deep in a passionate kiss when the kitchen door loudly<br />     slammed shut. Marki’s shocked voice exclaimed "Boss!"<br />     It took a few seconds for the interruption to penetrate Denys’s<br />     consciousness. When it did, he jumped, then lifted his head to<br />     glare angrily at the pretty  young woman standing just inside  the<br /> room.<br />     His senses were reeling and his body was demanding for him to  get<br /> on<br />     with making love to the woman he loved, and he growled out,  "What<br /> the<br />     devil do you want?"  before he recalled where  they were and  what<br /> they<br />     were supposed to be doing.<br />     What they were supposed to be doing was leaving. He’d momentarily<br />     lost sight of the intended goal.  But Claudia’s lips were so  soft<br /> and<br />     willing and her body fit so perfectly against his...<br />     Stupid, incredibly stupid! And now he had this girl to get rid of<br />     before he could hustle Claudia out of the house.<br />     "Excuse me," the flustered girl said, red from her hairline down<br />     to the base  of her  throat. "I...  that is...  uh. Claudia."  She<br /> seemed to<br />     catch onto the name like a lifeline.<br />     Denys grabbed Claudia around the waist. He had no intention of<br />     letting her go. The girl would assume it was a sign of  affection.<br /> He<br />     shot Claudia  a warning  glance to  make sure  she didn’t  let  on<br /> otherwise.<br />     The girl came into the kitchen, looking worriedly at them as she<br />     did so. "Boss, are you all right?"<br />     "She’s fine," Denys answered for her. "We were just leaving..<br />     Claudia’s friend ignored him. "We’ve been so worried," she went<br />     on. "You didn’t even send any postcards. And then your car turned<br />     up in that Greek town where the UFO was sighted."<br />     "UFO?" Denys and Claudia spoke together. They exchanged looks. She<br />     grinned. Denys felt himself going red.<br />     "What UFO?" Claudia asked.<br />     "Who’s your friend?" he asked before the girl could go on.<br />     "Marki Anderson. I’ve told you about Marki."<br />     "The college senior you let run your business. I remember now. I’m<br />     Denys," he said, with as friendly  a smile as he could manage.  He<br /> pulled<br />     Claudia even closer. She grunted softly at the pressure.<br />     "We’re very close," she said. He wasn’t sure if this was a<br />     complaint or some sort of explanation for Marki. "What UFO?" she<br />     questioned again. "What are you talking about?"<br />     "In Doros," Marki said. "Don’t you know about it? The tabloids<br />     reported that a whole town was put to sleep by a UFO and that  you<br /> were<br />     kidnapped by space aliens." She grinned at Denys as she looked him<br /> over<br />     from head to foot. "You don’t look like a space alien to me." She<br />     glanced back at Claudia. "Where have you been, boss?"<br />     "To Mars and back," she answered. "Well, on one of Mars’s moons,<br />     actually."<br />     Marki laughed. "Yeah, right."<br />     "We were on my ship," Denys explained. "A romantic Mediterranean<br />     interlude."<br />     Marki gave a wide, understanding and slightly leering smile. "I<br />     bet," she agreed. "I’m sorry I interrupted, but I was so surprised<br /> to<br />     see the boss. I saw your car in the driveway," she added. "And the<br /> fancy<br />     semi, and I didn’t know what  to think. Why the truck? You  moving<br /> or<br />     something?"<br />     "Truck?" Claudia questioned.<br />     "My truck," Denys reminded her. "I chased her all the way home,"<br />     he said to Marki.  "I almost caught up  to you around O’Hare,"  he<br /> told<br />     Claudia. "But I couldn’t find a place to park."<br />     Marki laughed again. "He’s cute, boss."<br />     "Oh, he’s cute all right," Claudia agreed. She shot Denys an angry<br />     look. "Will you let go of me?"<br />     "If you promise not to run away."<br />     She batted her eyelashes at him. "Would I do that?"<br />     "Yes."<br />     She shrugged. "I promise not to run away, Denys."<br />     Of course I’m not going to run away, she said to herself as he<br />     gave her one more tight squeeze, then stepped away from her.  This<br /> is my<br />     home and I’m staying right here. You’re the one who’s going to  go<br /> away,<br />     and without me.<br />     But how could she keep him from dragging her off when no one was<br />     looking? The answer seemed  obvious. He wouldn’t  drag her off  as<br /> long as<br />     there were  witnesses.  He was  determined  to keep  history  from<br /> changing in<br />     any way. If  he kidnapped  her from the  middle of  a crowd  there<br /> would be<br />     questions, a manhunt, media coverage, a segment on Sightings.<br />     Surely, such goings on  would have some  small effect on  history.<br /> Denys<br />     must realize that. So, Denys wouldn’t think of kidnapping her with<br />     anyone around. All she had to do was make sure she was constantly<br />     surrounded by people.  Marki was only  one person, but  she was  a<br /> start.<br />     What I need is a crowd, Claudia thought. A big crowd. "I know,"<br />     she said to Marki, as she crossed the room to throw open the wide<br />     freezer door. "Let’s have a picnic. Call all the relatives and the<br /> staff<br />     - - everybody in town -- and get  them out here for a party."  She<br /> grinned<br />     triumphantly at Denys. "A welcome home party. Right now."<br />     Denys had been content to bide his time, be friendly and wait<br />     until Marki left. "Now, wait a moment -- "<br />     "We are having a picnic," Marki chimed in. She bounced over to<br />     join Claudia at the freezer. Marki, Denys observed, was nothing if<br /> not<br />     perky. She reminded him, somehow, of Cleary.<br />     Cleary. And the others. What were they doing? He’d let them loose<br />     on an unsuspecting city.  Well, Athens was just  going to have  to<br /> manage<br />     to survive on its own. He had to get Claudia away from here.<br />     "A picnic?" Claudia questioned brightly. "Who? Where?"<br />     "At Chatswell Pond. It was your Mom’s idea. The whole town’s going<br />     to be  there. I  came  by to  get a  few  dozen of  your  homemade<br /> hamburger<br />     buns from the freezer."<br />     "Oh, Denys," Claudia gushed. "We can go too!"<br />     She began pulling out plastic bags full of baked goods. She smiled<br />     over her shoulder at him as she and Marki began packing them in  a<br /> canvas<br />     bag Marki had with her. "Isn’t that wonderful? I can hardly  wait.<br /> You<br />     can meet my folks."<br />     Claudia never gushed. She was doing this to him on purpose. He<br />     knew what she was up  to. And he couldn’t see  any way out of  it.<br /> Not<br />     without causing a scene that was sure to be remarked on. The whole<br /> point<br />     of this fiasco was that he  wanted to leave history alone, not  to<br /> cause a<br />     single ripple in time. He couldn’t  hit her over the head and  run<br /> off<br />     with her with people watching --  as tempting as it might be.  And<br /> she<br />     knew it,  too. Very  clever, Dr.  Cameron, he  thought, with  grim<br /> amusement.<br />     But it won’t work. Not for long, anyway.<br />     "All right," he agreed, forcing his tone to be cheerful. "We’ll go<br />     on your picnic. I can hardly wait to meet your folks."<br />     It didn’t help his mood to realize that there was a part of him<br />     that was happy  to have an  excuse to  stay on Earth  a few  hours<br /> longer.<br />     There was a little boy inside, jumping up and down with glee at<br />     the prospect of going on a picnic.<br />     He did, however, insist on driving his ’truck’ to the picnic<br />     sight, just  so  he’d  be  ready for  a  quick  getaway  once  the<br /> festivities<br />     were over.<br />     Chapter Eleven<br />     There was one out, and Cousin Joey was at bat. The pitcher stood<br />     slim and poised on the  mound, considering the situation with  all<br /> the<br />     gravity it deserved.  Claudia strained forward  from her perch  on<br /> the<br />     picnic table to watch. She could feel the tension mounting in  the<br /> two<br />     people flanking her. Her  mother was holding  her breath, and  Dad<br /> was<br />     muttering under his.<br />     Cousin Joey was already responsible for the opposing team’s three<br />     runs. He had two strikes and three balls. The next pitch would be<br />     decisive. The score was three to two and it was the bottom of the<br />     seventh. The  game  was dragging  on  through the  middle  of  the<br /> afternoon as<br />     the sun  and the  barbecue  grills were  heating up.  The  mingled<br /> aromas of<br />     hot dogs, hamburgers and brats permeated the air.<br />     Claudia’s stomach was of the opinion that it was time for the game<br />     to be over.  Just about everybody  in town was  either playing  or<br /> gathered<br />     around the field to watch. The shouting was loud and partisan. The<br />     members of the two teams were among the loudest and rudest of the<br />     noisemakers.<br />     The pitcher coolly ignored all the activity around him. He nodded<br />     to the catcher’s signal, wound up, and threw.<br />     "Strike three!" Uncle Carl shouted.<br />     Joey threw down the bat and stomped away amid loud boos and<br />     cheering.<br />     Claudia was nudged in the ribs by a bony elbow. "That boy of yours<br />     sure throws a mean fastball."<br />     Claudia eyed her father worriedly. This was the first time in<br />     living memory Sergeant Marcus Cameron, US Marines, Ret., had ever<br />     expressed any approval of a man she’d brought home.<br />     And it had to be Denys. Dad liked an alien lizard terrorist<br />     kidnapper when his opinions of  two university professors, a  race<br /> car<br />     driver and a photographer had been  that they were all lower  than<br /> pond<br />     silt. Denys he liked.<br />     So did she, of course, which only served to make her father’s<br />     approval of  Denys Duchamp  even  more disconcerting.  Of  course,<br /> Denys<br />     had been  absolutely charming  to both  her parents.  He’d  kissed<br /> Mom’s<br />     hand. And Aunt Kate’s, and Grandma’s, too. To make things more<br />     embarrassing, the  Tysan  twins,  who were  sixteen  and  full  of<br /> hormones,<br />     had been flirting with him all  day. They’d nearly died when  he’d<br /> helped<br />     them shuck a couple bushels of  corn. She knew from the looks  she<br /> was<br />     getting from everybody that Marki had spread the story<br />     about finding them kissing in the kitchen to the entire population<br /> of<br />     Bradden Falls. She’ll probably fax it all over the state tomorrow,<br />     Claudia concluded with a dismal sigh.<br />     "I like him," her mother contributed.<br />     "Looks like Claudia’s got a good one this time," her father<br />     judged.<br />     "About time." The senior Camerons had always had this way of<br />     holding discussion  as  if  their children  weren’t  present.  The<br /> children<br />     were  used  to  it.  Claudia   sighed,  almost  not  hearing   the<br /> conversation<br />     that went on as if she weren’t sitting between the older couple.<br />     "She met him on a Greek island," her mother said. "How romantic."<br />     "No. It was on the mainland," her dad corrected. "The one the<br />     Enquirer wrote all that UFO nonsense about."<br />     "That’s right." Her mother reached across her to pat her dad’s<br />     hand. "You’re right, dear."<br />     Dad’s right, Claudia agreed silently. We met on the mainland. And<br />     the tabloids got it right for  once, there was a UFO involved.  Or<br /> maybe<br />     it was an identified  flying object. And  what would the  tabloids<br /> make of<br />     our kissing in the kitchen? she wondered. Would the headlines read<br /> Alien<br />     Follows Lover to Iowa?<br />     She glanced at the cloud-dotted blue sky overhead, then to the<br />     pond where a  group of shrilly-shouting  kids were splashing.  She<br /> looked<br />     at the laden picnic  tables under the  trees, the barbecue  grills<br /> set up<br />     downwind of the tables, the edges of the field where most of the<br />     community was  gathered, and  finally back  at the  center of  the<br /> baseball<br />     field. Denys stood  there, in  the center  of it  all, poised  and<br /> slender<br />     and  incredibly  handsome,  the   intense  concentration  of   his<br /> expression<br />     emphasizing the severe attractiveness of his features.<br />     What’s he doing out there? she wondered. How did he get to be in<br />     the center of it all?  Of my town? My life?  And why does he  look<br /> like he<br />     belongs there? She sighed  heartily, exasperated, though her  toes<br /> were<br />     curling with  longing  at  the  sight  of  him  and  there  was  a<br /> fluttering<br />     around her heart she thought was pride and she also had a feeling<br />     there was a  certain smug  possessiveness about the  way her  lips<br /> couldn’t<br />     help but curl into a smile at him every now and then.<br />     It didn’t make much sense. She’d forced him to come to a crowded<br />     picnic to escape being kidnapped by him, and here she was, feeling<br />     like she was showing him off to all her relatives and the populace<br /> in<br />     general. And he  was acting  like he was  having the  time of  his<br /> life.<br />     Shouldn’t he be trying to hustle her off to the HATTON?<br />     "He’s got such a lovely accent," her mother went on. "Doesn’t<br />     sound at all like I expected an Australian to sound."<br />     "Australian?" her father questioned. "He from Australia?"<br />     "He told me he’s from somewhere around Sydney. That’s the place<br />     with the opera house, dear."<br />     "I know that."<br />     "He must have gone to college. I mean, most Australians talk like<br />     Crocodile Dundee, don’t they?"<br />     "Mother!"<br />     "Says he’s an engineer," Dad went on over Claudia’s exclamation.<br />     "It’s about time Claudia brought home somebody with a decent  job.<br /> Knew<br />     she’d get sick of those artsy fartsy types eventually."<br />     "Dad!"<br />     "Not that Claudia isn’t doing very well supporting herself," her<br />     mother went on.  "But she’s thirty  four and the  only one of  the<br /> children<br />     who isn’t settled down yet."<br />     "I have mortgage payments. People with mortgage payments are<br />     settled down!"<br />     "You just want more grandchildren, woman," her father teased her<br />     mother.<br />     "Nothing wrong with that. Denys is gorgeous. Just think what<br />     handsome grandsons he and Claudia will give you." Dad chortled.<br />     Claudia decided she couldn’t take any more of this. She got up and<br />     strode purposefully away. Denys had just struck out Uncle Tony and<br /> the<br />     teams were switching on the field for the eight inning.<br />     Denys was standing by the bench gulping Gatorade from the bottle<br />     when she came  up to him.  One of the  Tysan twins, Brittany,  she<br /> thought,<br />     was standing next to  him, watching him  with adoration. She  gave<br /> the girl a stern<br />     warning  look,  which  the  teenager  promptly  ignored.  Brittany<br /> remained close by<br />     even after Denys finished drinking  and handed the bottle back  to<br /> her.<br />     Claudia knew she should be glad there was no privacy to be had in<br />     the vicinity. She had, after all, arranged for them to be spending<br /> the<br />     day in the  most public  place possible.  She knew  she should  be<br /> delighted<br />     she was  here among  her friends  and family,  foiling Denys  from<br /> dragging<br />     her off. She was having a good time. It was just galling her  that<br /> he was<br />     too.<br />     "Why aren’t you gnashing your teeth in frustration?" she demanded,<br />     ignoring Brittany since  she couldn’t  get rid of  her. The  Tysan<br /> twins<br />     were known for sneaking off to  rock concerts in Chicago and  were<br /> widely<br />     supposed to be deaf as posts anyway.<br />     "Why? We’re  winning  the  game," he  answered.  He  looked  slyly<br /> amused,<br />     with just a hint of triumphant glee in the curl of his lips.<br />     "And where did you learn to play baseball?"<br />     "I’ve played baseball all my life. It’s New Sydney’s national<br />     sport. Well, surfing is, actually, but baseball’s very popular."<br />     "My parents like you."<br />     "I like them too." To demonstrate this, he leaned around her and<br />     waved in the direction of her family’s picnic table. "Nice people.<br />     Lovely town. I like big families. Come from a big family myself. I<br /> like<br />     small towns, though towns  on New Sidney  don’t exactly look  like<br /> this.<br />     Geography and architecture’s different but -- "<br />     He rambled on. She tried not to be effected by the wistful<br />     pleasure he was taking in the day. She tried to stay angry at him,<br />     instead. He obviously  didn’t understand  that she  was trying  to<br /> warn him.<br />     "You better get out of here," she said.<br />     "Not without you, love."<br />     "I’m not going anywhere."<br />     "Then neither am I. Besides, I’m hungry and I’m looking forward to<br />     sampling the potato sala-- "<br />     "Fine. I hope you won’t mind large weddings."<br />     "Large weddings are lovely."<br />     He was grinning at her, totally oblivious to the danger he was in.<br />     "You had better get on your ship and never see me again."<br />     "Can’t do it. You’re coming with me."<br />     "No, I’m not."<br />     "Then I’m staying here until you change your mind."<br />     Claudia crossed her arms and gave an emphatic nod. "I see. Would<br />     you prefer a short or a long engagement?"<br />     "A short or long what?"<br />     "I don’t know about where you come from, but around here an<br />     engagement is  a  period of  time  between the  proposal  and  the<br /> wedding."<br />     He rubbed his jaw thoughtfully. "I see. What’s that got to do with<br /> us?"<br />     It was her turn to give him a triumphant smile. "My family has<br />     decided we’re engaged," she informed him. "You better get in your<br />     shuttle and get out of here before they drag us off to the altar."<br />     He rubbed his jaw again. He didn’t seem the least bit terrified of<br />     the scenario  she’d  just  presented.  "Your  father  did  mention<br /> something<br />     about your starting to get a little long in the tooth, and that it<br /> might<br />     be wise if we hurried along the courtship so we could start having<br />     babies before it was too late," he answered. "So I suppose a short<br />     engagement’s what he was getting at whe-- "<br />     "My father said what?" Claudia exploded.<br />     "Shhh," Denys advised. He looked around.<br />     She followed his glance. Brittany had become just one member of<br />     the crowd gathered around them.  A crowd of friends and  relatives<br /> who<br />     were all watching and listening avidly and had probably heard most<br /> of<br />     the conversation. Most of them were grinning like idiots.<br />     She’d completely forgotten they weren’t alone. She’d arranged for<br />     them not to be alone. This public scene was all her doing. It was<br />     Denys’s fault,  but it  was her  doing. Denys  who she  wanted  to<br /> strangle<br />     and kiss at the same time. Her mother had once told her that she<br />     frequently felt the same way about her father.<br />     She decided to ignore the crowd.<br />     "My father said what?" she repeated.<br />     Denys gave a quick glance at the listeners, and then concentrated<br />     his attention on Claudia. She was looking both furious and lovely.<br /> He<br />     liked the combination. Her combativeness didn’t bother him, and he<br /> found<br />     her flustered confusion adorable. He liked her stubbornness, her<br />     resourcefulness -- He knew he liked  her long legs and her  really<br /> great<br />     behind and the way the vee neck of the red blouse she was  wearing<br /> dipped<br />     down to show the cleft between her firm -- Which had nothing to do<br /> with<br />     this conversation. But was distracting nonetheless.<br />     He wanted to put his hands around her slim waist and pull her<br />     close. He didn’t care if they were in the middle of an amused and<br />     gawking crowd, her mouth  looked luscious and he  was going to  do<br /> it.<br />     But just as he started to reach for yer, his name was called.<br />     It was his turn at bat.<br />     "Where are  you going?"  Claudia demanded  as he  started to  turn<br /> away.<br />     "I’ll be right back," he promised, and trotted off, determined to<br />     promptly strike out.<br />     He hadn’t been  paying attention, it  turned out to  be the  third<br /> strike out and<br />     he was back on the mound to pitch the bottom of the inning  before<br /> he could get<br />     back to Claudia. By the time he  got a chance to look over at  the<br /> crowd, she wasn’t<br />     there. He swore, but the catcher  called for his attention and  he<br /> decided the best<br />     way to get back to Claudia was to get the game over as quickly  as<br /> possible.<br />     "Why’d I ever get involved in this stupid sport anyway?" he asked<br />     himself as he wound up for the pitch.<br />     Claudia, he answered himself. Obviously. Claudia had been skittish<br />     and suspicious  and altogether  too  brightly cheerful  when  they<br /> arrived at<br />     the picnic. She had made effusive introductions, and made sure  he<br /> was<br />     surrounded constantly by her kith and kin. He’d known what she was<br />     doing, known she was just trying to put as many people and as much<br /> time<br />     between his getting her alone again as possible.<br />     He’d known it, and he’d still gotten caught up in the spirit of<br />     the day. He liked her  family, he liked the community  atmosphere,<br /> he<br />     found himself having a wonderful time. It was a beautiful day, the<br />     picnic was set  in a park  with rolling hills,  a nice-sized  pond<br /> with<br />     woods behind it. There was a playground and the baseball diamond;<br />     everything was green and  blue and earthy.  It was different  than<br /> home,<br />     but it still felt like home, and he was a very homesick man. So he<br /> got<br />     caught up in the spirit of the day.<br />     And he was enjoying impressing Claudia’s family and friends.<br />     Somehow, for  some insane  reason,  it was  important for  him  to<br /> impress the<br />     people she loved. Maybe  it was the way  she kept looking at  him.<br /> First<br />     with annoyance which relaxed grudgingly throughout the day to the<br />     pleased and  affectionate and  occasionally jealous  glances  he’d<br /> been<br />     catching when she didn’t  think he was looking  at her looking  at<br /> him.<br />     And he enjoyed looking at her whether she was looking at him or<br />     not. She was in her element here,  even more than in a kitchen  or<br /> in her<br />     lovely house. Here in Bradden Falls, surrounded by her family, was<br />     obviously where Claudia Cameron really belonged.<br />     It really was too bad they couldn’t stay. Too bad she couldn’t<br />     stay, rather. Of course he couldn’t stay. While he was having  the<br /> time<br />     of his life, he had  to get back to his  men and his ship and  his<br /> mission.<br />     And Claudia was coming with him.<br />     He was just glad she would have this perfect day with her family<br />     to remember once she was living in the future. He just had to  get<br /> her<br />     back to the  future and it  was taking more  time and energy  than<br /> he’d been<br />     prepared for. God knew  what was going on  in Athens and on  board<br /> the<br />     HATTON while he  was pitching a  friendly game of  baseball in  an<br /> Iowa<br />     community.<br />     "What am I going to tell Captain Andrews?" he muttered. He made it<br />     a quick three up and three down inning then told the coach he  was<br /> out of<br />     the game.<br />     The coach was Claudia’s sister, Julie. She favored him with a<br />     pleased smile. "I heard the news. Congratulations. Make it a short<br />     engagement. And  don’t let  Claudia do  the catering  for her  own<br /> reception.<br />     She’ll have enough to do just being the bride." She patted him  on<br /> the<br />     rear as he turned away. "You go find her and we’ll finish pitching<br /> the<br />     game."<br />     Her family likes me, he thought. The knowledge was warmly<br />     pleasing. He headed  toward the  picnic tables, but  a half  dozen<br /> people<br />     pointed toward the  path leading  into the  woods. Several  called<br /> out, "She<br />     went that way."<br />     He headed into the woods to the sound of applause and cheering. He<br />     savored the moment,  but was also  aware that, if  he and  Claudia<br /> didn’t<br />     emerge from  the  woods  with a  formal  engagement  announcement,<br /> things<br />     could get ugly. He  found himself wondering  if lynchings were  as<br /> much a<br />     form of  entertainment  as  baseball  in  rustic  backwaters  like<br /> Bradden<br />     Falls. Probably  not, but  he  had run  across the  term  ’shotgun<br /> wedding’ in<br />     his exhaustive research for his liaison duties between the  HATTON<br /> and<br />     twentieth century  Earth. He  hoped he  wasn’t about  to find  out<br /> exactly<br />     what the term meant.<br />     "Not that I mind marrying you," he said as he turned a corner,<br />     pushed aside  a  low hanging  tree  branch, and  caught  sight  of<br /> Claudia<br />     perched glumly on a boulder beside the path.<br />     She jumped to her feet. "What do you mean you don’t ’mind’?"<br />     "I mean I don’t mind." He stepped up to her. "Your family thinks<br />     I’m going to marry you and I don’t mind them thinking it."<br />     "Of course you don’t mind," she countered. "You won’t be here much<br />     longer. You can make them believe whatever you like and then  just<br /> go<br />     back to the future and leave me with all the explaining to do."<br />     "You won’t have anything to explain. You’re coming with me."<br />     "Am not."<br />     "Are too."<br />     Denys realized that while the intelligence level of this<br />     conversation wasn’t high,  there really  wasn’t any  other way  of<br /> stating<br />     their positions. She was determined to stay. He was determined she<br />     return. There was no room for compromise on either side.<br />     He could hear the gurgling of a stream not far away. The air<br />     smelled of  moss  and wildflowers.  The  droning of  insects,  the<br /> occasional<br />     call of birds, and  the shouts and laughter  from the picnic  area<br /> filled<br />     the background. It was all very soothing. He didn’t want to fight.<br />     Denys held out his hand. "Come with me," he suggested.<br />     Claudia bristled. "Back to the HATTON?"<br />     "Not right now. Come on," he coaxed. "Show me the stream. Please."<br />     She couldn’t resist the look in his eyes. The way he said ’please’<br />     melted her inside. He  managed to combine the  tone of a  helpless<br /> little<br />     boy with the sultry suggestiveness of  a lover with just one  word<br /> and the<br />     way he ducked his head and looked at her from under half&lt;->lowered<br />     eyelids. If he ever said please about returning to the ship, she<br />     supposed she would be lost. She had it bad. Very bad. If it wasn’t<br /> for<br />     the little matter of  his wanting to take  her away from her  home<br /> without<br />     her permission, everything about Denys Duchamp would be perfect.<br />     She stood and took his hand. It was very warm and strong and<br />     masculine. "This way," she  said, and guided  him down the  narrow<br /> path<br />     down to the  stream bank. He  didn’t follow her,  but put his  arm<br /> around<br />     her waist, fitting his body close to hers so they could walk  side<br /> by<br />     side. She could  feel every slender  muscle on his  wiry frame  as<br /> they<br />     moved along. She was very tempted to stop and explore every muscle<br /> in<br />     loving detail.<br />     When they reached the stream bank Denys gave a contented sigh.<br />     "Water," he said. The  stream was narrow  and quick running  here,<br /> the<br />     banks covered  in velvety  moss and  deep orange  wood lilies.  He<br /> knelt on a<br />     flat boulder and dipped  his palm in the  cool water. He turned  a<br /> bright<br />     smile on Claudia. "I like it here," he told her.<br />     "It’s pretty," she agreed. "I remember swimming here when I was  a<br /> kid."<br />     He bounced to his feet. "Can we go for a swim?"<br />     Claudia looked around the small clearing. She was delighted with<br />     the suggestion, but -- "Aren’t you supposed to be kidnapping me?"<br />     "Later." He gave her his coaxing look again. "I’m sweaty and<br />     sticky and hot and  I love water. This  is a hundred times  better<br /> than a<br />     sonic shower."<br />     That was certainly the truth. "Okay," she agreed. "We can go for a<br />     swim."<br />     She gave him a wicked smile, put her hand flat on his chest, and<br />     shoved. He  landed  with a  whoop  and a  mighty  splash.  Claudia<br /> cackled,<br />     kicked off her sandals and jumped in after him. She bobbed to  her<br /> feet<br />     in chin high water. He surfaced beside her and grabbed her  around<br /> the<br />     waist, his  laughter filling  the air,  his presence  filling  her<br /> senses.<br />     She thought she might be in for a dunking, until their hips<br />     touched and his hand came sliding up, pushing aside the clinging<br />     material of her blouse. His hands covered her breasts, her nipples<br />     growing hard against the pressure of his touch. The combination of<br /> cold<br />     water and the heated texture of his palms sent a shiver of desire<br />     shooting through her.<br />     "Denys," she said, and covered his mouth with hers before he could<br />     answer.<br />     Claudia’s tongue slid smoothly against his, teasing and erotically<br />     demanding at once.  His hands moved  from her breasts  to cup  her<br /> buttocks<br />     and pull her closer. Her  bare breasts pressed against his  chest,<br /> the<br />     peaks pebble hard against his sensitized skin.<br />     He groaned, and pulled his lips reluctantly from hers. "If we keep<br />     this up," he warned, "we’ll drown."<br />     She wrapped her thighs around his, letting the water and his hands<br />     support her. "Good," she murmured, then began kissing his throat.<br />     His wet, clinging jeans were growing very uncomfortable as his<br />     body responded to her every seductive movement.<br />     "Claudia."<br />     Her mouth moved up to nibble on his earlobe. "Hmm?"<br />     He didn’t want to think. He didn’t want to talk. He wanted to drag<br />     her out of the water and make love to her for hours and hours. But<br /> he<br />     couldn’t, because love, not just sex, was the issue here.<br />     It took all his willpower, but Denys firmly pushed her away. He<br />     kept his hands around her waist, lifted her and settled her on a<br />     flat boulder which thrust out into the stream. It took him a few<br />     fumbling seconds to pull himself out of the water and join her. By<br /> the<br />     time he did she’d readjusted her clothes, and he was able to  move<br /> more<br />     comfortably in the clinging denim which constricted his thighs.<br />     Sunlight was pouring down onto the boulder. Claudia turned her<br />     face up to it. A stiff breeze combined with the heat was already<br />     starting to dry her clothing. She felt both cool and warm, and the<br />     sensations  were  utterly  wonderful.   Denys  had  felt   utterly<br /> wonderful. She was still<br />     tingling, inside and  out, from  their watery  embrace. She  still<br /> wanted him, she<br />     didn’t know  why he’d  stopped. She  didn’t know  whether she  was<br /> angry or glad<br />     they hadn’t gone any further. She  shouldn’t want to make love  to<br /> him. She was<br />     supposed to hate him.<br />     She didn’t hate him. She just didn’t want to run off to some other<br />     time and planet with him. She wished he could stay here with her.<br />     And why hadn’t he wanted to make love to her?<br />     She opened her eyes and gave him a baleful look. "Afraid of<br />     scaring the fish?"<br />     He looked down at the water. "Are there fish in there?"<br />     "Yes."<br />     "I love to fish."<br />     "Denys!" she hissed. "What is the matter with you?" What’s the<br />     matter with me? she meant, but didn’t dare ask him that.<br />     He took her by the shoulders, turning her so they were face to<br />     face. "I love you, Claudia,"  he said, earnest sincerity in  every<br /> line of<br />     his face. It filled his bright blue eyes.<br />     A melting sensation spread from her brain to her toes. "You do?"<br />     "I want to marry you," he went on, more earnest still. "To be with<br />     you forever."<br />     "Oh." She sighed happily. She leaned forward to kiss him.<br />     "And I want you to come back to the ship with me right now," he<br />     added before her lips could touch his.<br />     "Damn!" She jerked back. All the sincerity had disappeared from<br />     his expression, like it  had never been there  at all. He’d  lied.<br /> And he<br />     was letting her know he’d lied.<br />     "How could you -- you -- " Indignation overwhelmed speech.<br />     He was smiling a little, but his eyes were serious. "I see you<br />     take my point."<br />     "P-p-point?!" His thumbs began stroking her collarbone slowly. It<br />     did nothing to help calm her down. But it felt nice.<br />     "If I tell you I love you," he explained, slowly, as if speaking<br />     to a child. "If  I make love  to you, you’re  bound to think  it’s<br /> because<br />     I’m trying to get you back to the ship. And to be honest, it  will<br /> be."<br />     "It will?"<br />     Not really. Not entirely. Hardly at all, actually, he thought. He<br />     didn’t share his thoughts with her. He watched the hurt and anger<br />     growing in  her eyes  and hurried  to explain.  "I don’t  want  to<br /> seduce you<br />     into returning to the HATTON with me.  I don’t want to do that  to<br /> you. I<br />     do care for you."<br />     More than you know, he added silently, but I won’t use love to<br />     manipulate you. What chance would we have later if I told you  the<br /> truth<br />     now? Even if I  didn’t try to  use it, you’d  think that that  was<br /> what I<br />     was doing. That’s what I’d think if  you tried to use love to  get<br /> me to<br />     stay here with you. Which, he had to add though he didn’t like the<br />     thought, you might be trying to do. Not consciously, of course, he<br />     automatically defended her theoretical  behavior. You’re not  like<br /> that.<br />     "You care for me?"<br />     He nodded. "You know I do."<br />     "Then leave me alone!"<br />     The words exploded out of her. She wanted to hit him, and might<br />     have if he hadn’t grabbed her  wrists. He was very strong. He  was<br /> very<br />     masculine and  very confusing  and she  didn’t know  what she  was<br /> going to<br />     do about it. She wished he hadn’t followed her, not to Earth,  not<br /> into<br />     the woods. She wished she hadn’t followed him into the water.  She<br /> wished<br />     he hadn’t tossed her right back out.<br />     "Leave me alone," she repeated. "Go away."<br />     "I can’t, Claudia."<br />     "You don’t love me." She didn’t know why she was harping on this.<br />     It’s not as if love is  the most important thing in the  universe,<br /> she<br />     told herself  sternly. My  freedom’s at  stake here.  That’s  more<br /> important.<br />     Isn’t it? If he said he loved me, I might go with him.<br />     "I didn’t say I don’t love you," he pointed out, voice coolly<br />     reasonable. "I just said  I wasn’t going to  use it to  manipulate<br /> you."<br />     "You love me?"<br />     He frowned. "I didn’t say that, either." He was so frustrated he<br />     was tempted  to  shake  her.  Where  was  the  sensible  woman  he<br /> remembered?<br />     "Don’t you see what I’m getting at?"<br />     "No."<br />     "Bloody hell! Why not?"<br />     "Just go away, Denys."<br />     "That’s no answer."<br />     "No, it isn’t," she agreed. "I don’t have an answer. All I’ve got<br />     is this --  longing. Which, by  the way, I  don’t like one  little<br /> bit.<br />     You’re an alien lizard  terrorist and I don’t  want to be in  love<br /> with<br />     you. Go away."<br />     She didn’t want to talk about it. Fine. She didn’t want to be in<br />     love with him. Well, that was fine, too. It wasn’t, of course, but<br /> he’d<br />     deal with the pain of it later. Right now, he had to remember the<br />     Mission. He had to get her out of here.<br />     "I should never have come to this picnic. I thought it would help<br />     to let you say good-bye to your family. It was a stupid, bloody,<br />     sentimental mistake."<br />     "I’m not saying good-bye to my family. You shouldn’t have followed<br />     me."<br />     "I didn’t have any choice."<br />     "I’m not going back," she told him firmly. "I’m just going to run<br />     away again. Run so far and hide so well, you won’t be able to find<br /> me.<br />     You’ll have to  go back  to the  HATTON eventually."  She gave  an<br /> emphatic<br />     nod. "Then the captain will kill you for taking so long with the<br />     supplies. And I’ll get on with my life."<br />     "The captain will probably kill me," he agreed. "But I’m not going<br />     back without you." He ran his fingertips up her cheeks and through<br /> her<br />     damp hair. He  couldn’t help the  gesture, and she  didn’t try  to<br /> pull<br />     away. "I’ll follow you wherever you go, love."<br />     She wished his words were a declaration of undying devotion<br />     instead of a declaration of his nuisance value. "Oh, yeah?" she<br />     challenged. "How you gonna find me?"<br />     "The tracer implant I -- " Denys bit down hard on any further<br />     explanation.<br />     Claudia grasped on to what he’d just said. "Tracer? Implant?<br />     You’ve got some alien whatchmathingy inside me?"<br />     He nodded, bleakly.<br />     She thought she’d been angry with him before, but this new<br />     revelation of his duplicity, of his need to control her life,  was<br /> more<br />     than she could take. Her skin was suddenly itching all over.<br />     "Take it out," she demanded, voice cold and hard. "Right now."<br />     "I can’t. And I wouldn’t if I could," he added. "I don’t know how<br />     you managed to block the  transmission yesterday. You had to  come<br /> into<br />     contact with silversilk somehow,  that stuff’s the only  substance<br /> that’ll<br />     block it.  But  there’s no  silversilk  on Earth  and  you’re  not<br /> getting away<br />     from me again."<br />     Silversilk? Charlie’s scarf was silver. Was it made of this<br />     silversilk stuff?  Could Charlie’s  scarf  block the  signal  from<br /> whatever<br />     Denys had put in  her? How’d he  done it? Where’d  he put it?  And<br /> why’d she<br />     forget and leave the scarf in an Athens bathroom?<br />     "Go away," she told him.<br />     "Come with me."<br />     "No."<br />     "Yes."<br />     They glared at each other, both equally still, both equally<br />     determined, equally silent while the sun beat down, the stream<br />     gurgled, and brown and black butterflies flitted between the wood<br />     lilies. They might have gone on like this for hours if a  hesitant<br /> voice<br />     hadn’t eventually intruded upon their wordless argument.<br />     "Ahem. Excuse me. Dear. CLAUDIA LIVINIA CAMERON!"<br />     Claudia winced and turned her head. "Yes, mother?"<br />     "Livinia?"<br />     She shot a scathing look over her shoulder at Denys. "My<br />     grandfather Tiberius was into Roman history, all right?"<br />     "Sure." He snickered. "Fine. Claudia Livinia."<br />     She ignored him and said sweetly to her mother, "Yes?" She got to<br />     her feet. "Want me to come help with the food?"<br />     Her mother stepped off the path and up to them. "Not exactly."<br />     Denys got up and took Claudia’s hand, tightly. "What can we do for<br />     you, Mrs.<br />     Cameron?<br />     She beamed at Denys. "Don’t be so formal, dear. I think Mom’s<br />     appropriate,<br />     don’t you?"<br />     "No," Claudia said.<br />     "Mom it is, then," Denys said over her objection.<br />     She snarled at him. Her mother ignored her. She was smiling<br />     benignly at  Denys.  Claudia  wanted to  object  to  her  mother’s<br /> obvious<br />     affection for Denys, but how could she tell her the truth without<br />     sounding like she ought to be locked in a padded room?<br />     "What do you want, Mom?" she questioned sharply instead.<br />     "She gets jet lag," her mother said, explaining Claudia’s tone to<br />     Denys. "Makes her grumpy."<br />     "I’ve noticed," he answered agreeably, as though it was a secret<br />     they’d agreed to share.<br />     "What do you want, Mother?" she tried again.<br />     "I was hoping I could get the two of you to run to the grocery<br />     store. The Mactaggert clan just showed up and they totally  forgot<br /> to<br />     bring food."<br />     "What do you mean, ’forgot’?" Claudia questioned irritably. "All<br />     fifteen of them?"<br />     "They’re a forgetful family," her mother apologized. To Denys. "So<br />     we thought we’d  send to the  store for some  more hamburgers  and<br /> buns and,<br />     well, you  know, everything.  And since  you brought  your  truck,<br /> dear, and<br />     Claudia’s such  a wonderful  shopper  -- did  you know  she’s  the<br /> thriftiest<br />     shopper you’ll ever want to meet -- and you’d probably like to see<br /> more<br />     of Bradden Falls and be alone together -- "<br />     "We’d love to run your errands, Mom," Denys interrupted this flow<br />     of words. He squeezed Claudia’s hand. "Wouldn’t we, love?"<br />     "No, we wouldn’t." No way was she letting him get her alone in the<br />     shuttle.<br />     "No even for your mother’s sake?"<br />     The question was put gently, he was looking at her with open<br />     warmth and affection. And she got the distinct impression he was<br />     threatening her mother. He was a desperate man. She knew he had a<br />     temper.<br />     Was it possible? Was Denys -- ? Could Denys -- ?<br />     "Nooo..." She said the word on a long, drawn out breath.<br />     He nodded slowly. The glint in his eyes was icy, despite the sweet<br />     tone of his next words. "You know I’ll do whatever’s necessary,<br />     Claudia."<br />     It was a bluff. Had to be. But she didn’t dare call it, did she?<br />     This was her mother -- who was smiling at him like he was her long<br /> lost<br />     darling and had no idea what  a vicious rat she was dealing  with.<br /> She had<br />     to protect her mother.<br />     "You lizard," she said softly.<br />     He tugged her forward along the path. "Come along, love. We better<br />     hurry. Wouldn’t want the Mactaggart  clan to starve," he added  to<br /> her<br />     mother. "Back shortly."<br />     "I should have threatened bodily harm sooner," he whispered in her<br />     ear as he hustled  her toward the roadside  where the shuttle  was<br /> parked.<br />     "I’m sorry," he added. "But this is really for the best."<br />     "I hate you."<br />     "I know. You should." When they reached the shuttle, he added,<br />     "Let’s go."<br />     Chapter Twelve<br />     Denys supposed he should be elated to finally have Claudia’s<br />     cooperation, but all he felt was a nasty sense of guilt. He didn’t<br /> know<br />     what he would have done if she’d called his bluff. He supposed  it<br /> didn’t<br />     matter now, since Claudia was seated beside him in the cockpit  of<br /> the<br />     shuttle.<br />     She glared at him and said, "Lizard."<br />     He flinched and started the engine. The engine itself was silent,<br />     but the  simulated rumbling  of a  mighty diesel  engine could  be<br /> heard by<br />     the picnickers as he drove slowly away.<br />     "First to Athens," he said, trying to sound cheerful about the<br />     prospect of the journey.<br />     "Nope."<br />     "Claudia," he snarled in exasperation. "This in not the time to<br />     start fighting about it again."<br />     "I’m not fighting with you," she answered coldly. "I’m going back<br />     to the HATTON, and I hope you’re happy."<br />     "Not really," he admitted. "About your -- "<br />     "We’re going to a grocery store," she cut him off. "Just a quick<br />     stop for some fresh  vegetables, then we can  be on our way."  She<br /> crossed<br />     her arms,  set  her jaw,  and  looked stubbornly  out  the  window<br /> instead of<br />     at him.<br />     "Vegetables? What do you want vegetables for?" You’re just trying<br />     to make my life  miserable and complicated,  he added to  himself.<br /> And he<br />     didn’t blame her a bit.<br />     "Smid asked me to pick up some carrots," she explained.<br />     "Carrots. I see."<br />     "And I might as well pick up a few other things while we’re<br />     there," she added. "If I’m going back to work as the ship’s  cook,<br /> I<br />     want to use ingredients I know for awhile."<br />     Denys considered while he carefully drove the shuttle down the<br />     empty country road from  the park toward  Bradden Falls. He  could<br /> just<br />     take off, there was nothing  but cornfields out here, no  traffic.<br /> No one<br />     to see the shuttle disappear from regular to Stealth mode. But  he<br /> had<br />     Claudia’s psychological well-being  to consider.  And the  crew’s.<br /> And his<br />     own. Especially his own, as rooming  with Claudia was going to  be<br /> really<br />     miserable for awhile anyway. The less upset she was, the easier it<br /> was<br />     going to  be  on both  of  them. Might  as  well make  a  friendly<br /> gesture, let<br />     her have her vegetables.<br />     It’ll help her adjust to the inevitable, he told himself. And it<br />     won’t take all that long.<br />     "All right," he agreed. "We’ll stop at the store before we leave."<br />     "Fine."<br />     "Then you can call your folks from Athens."<br />     She finally looked at him. "What?"<br />     "To explain our disappearance," he said as the shuttle reached the<br />     outskirts of the small  town. He spotted a  large building with  a<br /> Super<br />     Foods sign on top and a large parking lot. He turned in to the lot<br /> as he<br />     continued. "You can tell them we decided to elope and<br />     are heading for Australia."<br />     "Australia." She sighed, and went on listlessly. "Yes, of course.<br />     Australia." She sighed again. "Let’s just get the carrots and  get<br /> out of<br />     here." Before I start crying, she added to herself. Not that he’d<br />     understand.<br />     ##<br />     There was a lot of crowd noise in the background, music and<br />     laughter and  the  occasional  dismayed shout.  Claudia  tried  to<br /> ignore it<br />     all. Sakretis was  standing next  to her  in the  alcove near  the<br /> doorway,<br />     doing guard duty while Denys rounded up the rest of the crew.  She<br /> didn’t<br />     know how he’d  tracked them to  this small taverna  in one of  the<br /> less<br />     savory neighborhoods of Athens, and she didn’t particularly  care.<br /> She<br />     was tired and  suffering from jet  lag, though the  trip from  the<br /> grocery<br />     parking lot  to Greece  had  only taken  two hours.  They’d  still<br /> crossed<br />     several time zones and she was feeling the effects.<br />     The alcove had a pay phone. She was trying to make an overseas<br />     call.<br />     "Retsina?" she heard Denys’s voice clearly cutting through every<br />     other noise, including the echoing ring  of the phone she held  to<br /> her<br />     ear. "Didn’t I tell you to stay away from -- "<br />     "Ouzo," Cleary finished for him. "We did. This is different. It’s<br />     wine."<br />     "Sneaks up on you," Fox added. "But we were ready for it. We’re<br />     sober."<br />     "Almost," Harcort added.<br />     "Hello?" her mother’s voice finally answered.<br />     Claudia gave Sakretis a quick look. He was alert and sober and<br />     knew what she was supposed to say. "Mom," she said cheerfully.<br />     "Where have you been? The Mactaggert’s -- "<br />     "Sorry. We forgot about the groceries."<br />     "You forgot?"<br />     "And those ladies," Morrison’s voice came from the bar. "Why do<br />     they keep taking off their clothes?"<br />     It’s a strip joint, she thought. I’m not sure those guys are<br />     really sailors. She made herself stop thinking about the crew to<br />     concentrate on talking to her mother.<br />     "Denys and I -- "<br />     "Where are Denys and you?"<br />     "We tried paying them to put their clothes back on," Toffler said.<br />     "It was embarrassing. We didn’t  want any trouble. Cleary said  he<br /> liked it."<br />     "Uh. At O’Hare," Claudia improvised. "Waiting for a flight to<br />     Australia. We talked it over and decided to elope."<br />     "Elope!"<br />     "Sorry. We -- we decided -- Mom." She couldn’t go through with<br />     this. "I love you, Mom. I -- "<br />     "When will you be coming home?"<br />     Sakretis must have heard the question, because he shook his head.<br />     Denys herded the others through  a bead-curtained doorway and  she<br /> was<br />     suddenly surrounded  by the  crew. Denys’s  hand came  around  her<br /> wrist.<br />     "Claudia?" her mother’s faraway voice questioned.<br />     "I don’t know," she answered. She met Denys’s eyes. The look of<br />     sympathy in them almost overwhelmed her hatred of him. Why did his<br /> touch<br />     feel so  reassuring?  Why  was  his  presence  beside  her  almost<br /> welcome? He<br />     was dragging her  off to an  unknown fate in  the far future.  She<br /> should be<br />     yelling into the  phone for  help. Instead, she  had the  distinct<br /> feeling<br />     she wouldn’t be minding this at all if he had seduced her into it.<br />     Did she love him enough to abandon her home and family for him?<br />     The disturbing answer was, yes, maybe she did.<br />     Not that she was going to let him know it. What he was doing was<br />     wrong, it was foolish, it was completely unnecessary. He was  just<br /> being<br />     paranoid about his damn fool Mission.<br />     "I love you, Mom. Tell Dad I love him, too. I’ll miss you. Have to<br />     go. Bye."  She hung  up the  phone and  glared at  Denys.  "There.<br /> Happy?"<br />     "Lovely. All right," he addressed the crew. "Let’s get back to the<br />     airport and finish loading the supplies."<br />     They all looked at him as if he were crazy. Which, Claudia agreed,<br />     he was.<br />     "We were finished loading," Cleary said.<br />     "That’s why we thought it was kind of crazy when you took off<br />     without us," Sakretis explained.<br />     Denys’s fair skin colored as his lips thinned to a narrow line.<br />     "Right. I forgot."<br />     "You were acting pretty crazy," Fox commiserated.<br />     "We could have helped you look for Dr. Cameron," Harcort said.<br />     "But you -- "<br />     "Let’s just get in the shuttle and go," Denys announced loudly.<br />     "Right now."<br />     "Calm down, Duchamp," Cleary advised. "We’re going."<br />     "I get the copilot’s seat," Claudia chimed in as Denys tugged her<br />     out the door with the others. Denys didn’t argue, but she defended<br /> her<br />     choice of seat anyway. "If I have to abandon my homeworld, I  want<br /> a good<br />     last view of it."<br />     He groaned as they took their seats. "Go ahead. Make me feel more<br />     guilty than I already do."<br />     She settled in the chair beside him. The crew stumbled with half-<br />     drunken gracelessness into the other seats.<br />     "Am I making you feel guilty?" she asked with acid sweetness.<br />     "You know you are."<br />     She sighed again, this time with a certain amount of feigned<br />     contentment. "Good."<br />     ##<br />     Three days after leaving Earth to return to Phobos, Denys was<br />     still suffering the affects of the tongue lashing Captain  Andrews<br /> had<br />     given him.  He’d told  the  captain they’d  had  to wait  for  the<br /> supplies to<br />     arrive at  the Athens  warehouse. The  Shift crew  had backed  his<br /> story.<br />     They’d been dismissed.  Captain Andrews’s reprimand  had been  for<br /> him<br />     alone. He’d been accused of goldbricking, dereliction of duty,<br />     misconduct,  incompetence,  lying,  sightseeing  and  fraternizing<br /> intimately<br />     with the female natives in the captain’s cold, precise tones. He’d<br />     gotten off with a  dire warning and threats  about black marks  on<br /> his<br />     permanent record.<br />     "But only because you’re the only mining, electrical, laser, and<br />     mechanical engineer I’ve  got. Now  get out of  my sight,  rebuild<br /> your<br />     bloody laser cannon and make sure  it works ten times better  than<br /> the<br />     last one. We’re just going to have to backtrack those days through<br /> the<br />     time spiral to get back on schedule -- and you know how  expensive<br /> that<br />     is."<br />     Denys had hurried off the bridge, and stayed in the design shop<br />     most of  the flight  to  Phobos, doing  exactly what  the  captain<br /> ordered. It<br />     was done, and it  was going to be  the best, most efficient  laser<br /> cannon<br />     built out of antiquated parts  anybody had ever seen. Building  it<br /> had<br />     been the perfect excuse to stay out of his quarters and away from<br />     Claudia.<br />     He couldn’t stop thinking about what the captain had said, though.<br />     The worst part was that Andrews  was correct on all counts.  Denys<br /> had<br />     almost been tempted to tell him  what was really going on, to  ask<br /> for his<br />     advice and help,  to turn Claudia  and the situation  over to  the<br /> captain’s<br />     competent hands. It  was only the  fear of certain  death for  all<br /> concerned<br />     that kept him from spilling  his guts to the fierce,  high-handed,<br /> older<br />     man.<br />     Of course, he realized as he sat alone with the newly complete<br />     laser cannon,  competent as  the captain  was, he  couldn’t  solve<br /> Denys’s<br />     problem with Claudia.<br />     Denys ran his hands through his hair and said, "Claudia."<br />     Her name echoed through the open, empty space of the big room.<br />     He’d been doing nothing  but think about  Claudia while he  worked<br /> the days<br />     away. The work had been a good excuse to stay out of her presence.<br /> Not<br />     that she was in the cabin the few times he. d come in to shower<br />     or change or sleep. The ship  was very nearly at Phobos, and  they<br /> hadn’t<br />     spoken at all during the journey. She’d kept to the kitchen, he<br />     supposed. He  knew  the men  were  well-fed and  content.  He  was<br /> anything but<br />     content. He was lonely and miserable and confused.<br />     "And it’s got to stop," he said, coming to the decision he’d been<br />     working toward all through this lonely period. He stood and dusted<br />     imaginary grime off his long-fingered  hands. "And it has to  stop<br /> right<br />     now..<br />     He took a deep breath, squared his shoulders and walked with<br />     determined strides to the kitchen.<br />     She was sitting in front of the cooking computer when the door<br />     opened, chin resting  on her  raised fist, staring  glumly at  the<br /> screen.<br />     "Claudia," he announced, stepping up to her. "I love you."<br />     Perhaps he should have started with more explanation, but he<br />     somehow didn’t feel as if he had much time.<br />     She jumped to her feet, and turned to face him. "Pardon me?"<br />     "I love you," he repeated. He crossed his arms over his chest and<br />     went on determinedly.  "I may  have been wrong  --not letting  you<br /> stay on<br />     Earth, I mean. The more I think about it, the more irrational my<br />     behavior seems. Maybe  you were right.  Maybe you couldn’t  affect<br /> history.<br />     I don’t know. Maybe I just couldn’t let you go."<br />     She was staring, blue eyes getting wider and wider. "Excuse me?"<br />     she questioned. "Did you say -- "<br />     "I’m sorry I took you from a place and people you love," he went<br />     on earnestly. "You have every right to hate me for what I did. But<br /> I<br />     don’t want you  to hate me.  I -- "  He gulped. "I  love you,"  he<br /> repeated.<br />     He was vulnerable and afraid  of rejection, but he forced  himself<br /> to<br />     speak his mind and his heart. "I want us to spend the rest of  our<br /> lives<br />     together. I know  we’re from  different times and  worlds and  you<br /> feel like<br />     I betrayed you  and perhaps I  did. But I’ve  loved you since  the<br /> moment I<br />     saw you and I think  we belong together. I’d  like to try to  make<br /> you<br />     happy if you’ll have me."<br />     Then, courage spent, he turned and walked from the kitchen before<br />     the stunned  woman  could  say  a word,  either  of  rejection  or<br /> acceptance.<br />     Claudia sat down again, mostly because she was shaking too hard to<br />     stand. It was a struggle to even try to speak and by the time  her<br /> tongue<br />     was able to form words he was long gone.<br />     "Denys?" she said. "Oh, my."<br />     She sighed, folded her hands in her lap and stopped thinking.<br />     She’d been thinking for days while, all the time, her emotions had<br />     been struggling to  come to grips  with just how  she really  felt<br /> about<br />     Denys Duchamp. She’d tried to  ignore her emotions. Tried to  make<br /> the<br />     fiery love she felt for him]]></description>
<pubDate><![CDATA[Fri, 15 May 2009 20:19:18 +0400]]></pubDate>
<comments><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post57322496/]]></comments>
<guid><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post57322496/#BlCom519199733]]></guid>
<author><![CDATA[]]></author>
</item>
<item><title><![CDATA[Ïîìîãèòå]]></title>
<link><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post57322496/#BlCom519199358]]></link>
<description><![CDATA[ïðîäîëæåíèå>> | He  gave a knowing  smirk. "No wonder  he<br /> doesn’t<br />     go home much. Bet he can’t stand watching Sleeping Beauty  waiting<br /> for<br />     Prince Charming to come along."<br />     "He’s not exactly charming lately," Harcort agreed.<br />     "My point," said Sakretis. "They need a change of atmosphere."<br />     "An airlock?" Fox asked sarcastically.<br />     "I was thinking, maybe, of the Captain’s Walk," Sakretis<br />     suggested. Everyone looked at him.<br />     "But that’s up on top," Fox practically shouted. "Right next to<br />     the Captain’s quarters."<br />     "Yeah," Sakretis agreed. "But Captain Andrews is usually on the<br />     bridge."<br />     "I think it’s a good idea," assented Toffler. "The view’s got to<br />     be romantic."<br />     "It could work," Morrison agreed.<br />     "We’ve got to get her up there first," Sakretis said.<br />     "And Duchamp," Fox added.<br />     "We have to wake her up first," Cleary pointed out. "When Duchamp<br />     isn’t around."<br />     Everyone looked expectantly at Cleary.<br />     "All right," he agreed after a suitable two second pause for<br />     deliberation. "You create a diversion. I’ll go get Dr. Cameron."<br />     "When do we get Duchamp up to the Captain’s Walk?" Sakretis wanted<br />     to know.<br />     "Give me half an hour," Cleary decided. He got up to leave.<br />     "Someday he’s going to  thank us for this.  If he doesn’t kill  us<br /> first."<br />     ##<br />     The bed went BOING.<br />     As soon as Claudia heard it, she had the feeling she’d<br />     been waiting for the  sound for quite a  long time. She felt  like<br /> she’d<br />     been asleep for  days and  days. And  she’d had  the worst  dreams<br /> about<br />     yelling and screaming and pummeling  at Denys’s broad chest  while<br /> he<br />     insisted she stay still and go to sleep before he had to knock her<br /> out.<br />     Very weird dreams.<br />     Very realistic.<br />     The bed went BOING again.<br />     "Dr. Cameron? Are you all right?" She felt a gentle touch on the<br />     shoulder. "Dr. Cameron?" The voice was Cleary’s.<br />     She remembered promising the Second Shift crew chili. She must<br />     have overslept  and Cleary  had  come to  fetch her.  She  yawned.<br /> "Chili,"<br />     she said. "Coming."<br />     "I wasn’t thinking about chili right now, Dr. Cameron," he said.<br />     She cracked her eyelids open so she could give Cleary a skeptical<br />     look. "Oh, yeah?" She sat up before the bed got the chance to make<br /> that<br />     odd noise again.  She leaned forward  on the edge  of the bed  and<br /> rubbed<br />     her face with her hands. "I am so groggy."<br />     "The sonic shower’s pretty good for helping people wake up,"<br />     Cleary suggested. "Why  don’t I wait  here for you  while you  get<br /> cleaned<br />     up?"<br />     She stood up. Her legs felt mushy; like they could hardly hold her<br />     weight. Her mouth was full of cotton. "My teeth feel like they’re<br />     growing fur. You wait here. I’ll get cleaned up." Hadn’t  somebody<br /> just<br />     suggested that? She rubbed numb  fingers across her forehead.  "Be<br /> right back."<br />     He stopped her with a hand on her arm. "Take this." he held out a<br />     bundle to her. "Thought  you might like a  change of clothes,"  he<br /> offered.<br />     He shrugged  as she  took  the bundle.  "Found the  spidersilk  on<br /> Berengar.<br />     Been saving it for my girlfriend, but I think she’d rather have  a<br /> knife<br />     instead." He gave her a charming, encouraging smile.<br />     "Thanks," she said, accepting the gift happily. "Thank you very<br />     much, Cleary." Clutching  the bundle tightly  she stumbled off  to<br /> the<br />     head. She had to go to the bathroom really bad.<br />     By the time she got around to getting dressed, she was feeling<br />     much better, though still oddly disoriented. The physical  affects<br /> of too<br />     much sleep were cleared away and she was ready to face herself  in<br /> a<br />     mirror at  last.  She  slipped into  underwear,  and  then  opened<br /> Cleary’s<br />     gift. The short,  low-necked dress  she held  up was  made of  the<br /> softest<br />     silk she’d  ever felt.  It was  a deep,  shimmering scarlet,  shot<br /> through<br />     with copper and  gold threads.  When she  put it  on&lt;,> it  didn’t<br /> exactly<br />     cling to  her, rather  it  attached itself  sensuously,  accenting<br /> every<br />     curve and protrusion of her form.<br />     "I look like I’ve lost a couple of pounds," she observed, twirling<br />     around, enjoying how  she looked. "Not  bad," she concluded.  "Not<br /> exactly<br />     an outfit for cooking in -- at least not hearty meals for hungry<br />     miners,"  she  amended  with  a  giggle.  This  was  a   seductive<br /> champagne-<br />     and-cheesecake-on-a-moonlit-terrace sort of outfit.<br />     Cleary handed her sandals to her when she came out of the head.<br />     His eyes swept over her quickly; he gave an appreciative grin. She<br />     thought she heard him mutter, "If this doesn’t work..."<br />     "Where’s Denys?" she asked. She was being haunted by weird dreams<br />     featuring making  passionate love  and  fighting with  Denys.  She<br /> wanted to<br />     see him. She wasn’t sure what  had really happened. She wanted  to<br /> talk to<br />     Denys. She hoped and prayed Denys’s eyes would bug out when he saw<br /> her<br />     in the  red dress.  Especially  if the  dreams about  making  love<br /> weren’t<br />     dreams at all.<br />     "Denys wants you to meet him somewhere," Cleary explained. He took<br />     her by  the elbow,  directing her  toward the  door. "We  have  to<br /> hurry," he<br />     added. "Come along."<br />     She smiled amenably at him, the odd disorientation keeping her<br />     from questioning anything. "Okay."<br />     He took her along a confusing route to a dimly lit, narrow<br />     corridor with a glass wall. There was a rail along the glass  wall<br /> at<br />     waist height. The view was stunning. Through the large window  she<br /> could<br />     see Mars, almost as big as  she’d seen it from Phobos, and  Phobos<br /> itself,<br />     and a bright speck of light beyond that must have been the Sun.<br />     She leaned against the rail, pressing her nose to the glass, like<br />     a kid staring into a toy store. "Wow." She turned her head to grin<br /> at<br />     Cleary.<br />     "Pretty, isn’t it?" he asked.<br />     She nodded eagerly, then looked back at the view. "What’s that?"<br />     she wondered, as several objects crossed  in front of the sun  and<br /> were<br />     illuminated by  reflected sunlight.  The  objects appeared  to  be<br /> falling<br />     toward Mars and its little moons.<br />     "Asteroid shower," Cleary answered. "Hope our shields are up. Got<br />     to go," he added.<br />     "But, Denys...?"<br />     "He should be here any moment. I better not stick around. Bye."<br />     She was more interested in the asteroid shower than Cleary anyway.<br />     Though, after he left,  she wished she’d asked  him what he  meant<br /> when<br />     he said he  hoped shields  were up.  Oh, well,  maybe Denys  would<br /> explain<br />     it. Maybe Denys  had wanted her  to see the  asteroid shower.  She<br /> sighed<br />     fondly. How sweet of him.<br />     ##<br />     "All right, I’ve looked at the aft hullplates," Denys told Fox and<br />     Sakretis as he came  through the airlock from  the outside of  the<br /> ship. "I<br />     didn’t see any damage."<br />     Sakretis looked at the monitor box he held in his hands. "Must<br />     have been  a box  malfunction,"  he said.  "It’s not  showing  any<br /> damage<br />     now."<br />     "Maybe it’s interference from the asteroid shower," Fox suggested.<br />     Denys graced them with the most scathing look he could summon up<br />     while he removed the breather strip from under his nose. He pushed<br /> back<br />     the hood of his environmental suit and shook out his hair. The men<br />     looked uncomfortable. He was getting ready to order them to make a<br />     thorough check of every shipboard monitor when the scanner band he<br /> wore<br />     on his wrist signaled for his attention.<br />     "What the...?" He checked his wrist. "She’s awake." Awake and out<br />     of his quarters or the alarm  wouldn’t have signaled. He turned  a<br /> fierce<br />     glare on his men. The fierce glare only encountered empty space.<br />     Sakretis and Fox had already fled.<br />     "I’m going to kill them," he declared. "The Shift. Her. Myself.<br />     Why didn’t I think of that before? It’s the only possible solution<br /> to<br />     the whole impossible mess." While he was complaining, he<br />     carefully worked the tiny function key of the scanner to<br />     discover Claudia’s exact location. He was surprised to discover it<br />     wasn’t the  kitchen. A  jolt  of fear  went  through him  when  he<br /> discovered<br />     that she’d wandered into an off limits area.<br />     "The Captain’s Walk? What’s she doing there? What if Captain<br />     Andrews finds her? He’ll eat her alive! Oh my God!" He had to save<br /> her;<br />     get to her before  the poor lamb ended  up walking the plank  into<br /> the<br />     vacuum of space.<br />     ##<br />     Claudia was beginning to think Denys would never arrive when she<br />     heard the pounding  of running footsteps.  Before she could  turn,<br /> her<br />     shoulder was grabbed and she was spun violently around.<br />     "Claudia!" Denys hissed angrily as he grabbed her by both<br />     shoulders.<br />     She smiled a welcome to him, her groggy haze lifting enough for<br />     her to wonder how  anyone could hiss a  word with no sibilants  in<br /> it.<br />     "Denys," she said, "I’m so happy to see you." She kissed his chin.<br />     "Don’t do that." He held her at arm’s length. He looked like he<br />     was getting ready  to yell at  her, then his  eyes flicked up  and<br /> down her<br />     form.<br />     "I’ve been watching the asteroids. It’s sort of like a meteor<br />     shower. Very pretty." She gave him a radiant smile. "Thank you."<br />     She looked gorgeous. What was she thanking him for? There was a<br />     great deal of  soft, wonderfully curved,  soft skin showing.  What<br /> wasn’t<br />     showing might  as  well have  been  from the  way  the  shimmering<br /> spidersilk<br />     dress clung to her. The dress was magnificent. She looked stunning<br /> in<br />     it. He wanted desperately to take it off her.<br />     "Looking like that," he told her, knowing he should have<br />     been yelling at her, "is illegal on some planets."<br />     Her expression grew teasing and sensuous. She touched her tongue<br />     to her full lips. Her eyes glowed with warm humor. She looked ripe<br /> and<br />     ready to be kissed. "On yours?"<br />     He found himself shaking his head. He could hardly breathe for the<br />     heat rising between them. "No. We definitely approve of  beautiful<br /> women<br />     on New Sydney."<br />     She tilted her head. Her silky brown hair sifted across the backs<br />     of his  hands.  It sent  a  shiver  through him.  "You  think  I’m<br /> beautiful?"<br />     she asked, her tone more curious than vain.<br />     "The most beautiful woman I’ve ever seen," he admitted. He. d been<br />     holding her away from him, he  wasn’t quite sure when he’d  pulled<br /> her close. He<br />     ran his hands down her back and felt her breasts pressing  against<br /> his chest. He<br />     rubbed his  cheek against  her  head, reveling  in the  scent  and<br /> texture of her hair.<br />     She was the most beautiful woman he’d ever known.<br />     She was beautiful, the starry background of the setting was<br />     beautiful. The place and the woman were perfect. He’d missed her<br />     and worried about her for days. She fitted perfectly against  him.<br /> She<br />     tilted her face  up to  him, lips  parted, offering.  He held  her<br /> close and<br />     kissed her.<br />     They were on the Captain’s Walk and he was an idiot.<br />     There’s something familiar about this, Claudia thought when Denys<br />     jumped away from her as though he’d been burned. There’s something<br /> weird<br />     going on here. The way her lips tingled and heat singed her nerve<br />     endings she  certainly  felt  like  she’d  been  burned,  but  the<br /> pleasant fire<br />     wasn’t what bothered her.  She blinked as  real memories began  to<br /> separate<br />     themselves from dream images.<br />     He grabbed her shoulders again as he questioned angrily, "What are<br />     you doing here? What are you doing out of bed?"<br />     His fierce tone jogged her memory a bit more. "Cleary said you<br />     wanted to see me."  She began to suspect  seeing her was the  last<br /> thing<br />     Denys wanted.<br />     He groaned and stepped away. "Cleary. Of course. I should have<br />     known." He swooped toward her and grabbed her wrist. "Come on.  We<br /> have<br />     to get out of here."<br />     Denys. s deception became suddenly, painfully clear. She grabbed<br />     hold of the  guardrail with her  free hand and  refused to  budge.<br /> "You!"<br />     she yelled. "You rat!"<br />     "Shhh!"<br />     "I will not ’shhh’, you alien lizard, terrorist rat. You knocked<br />     me out," she accused. "You’re kidnapping me into the future."<br />     "I’m taking a shot  at it," he agreed,  pulling on her arm.  "Come<br /> on."<br />     "No."<br />     "You want us to get caught?" He looked desperately around the<br />     nearly dark, empty corridor.<br />     "Yes," she decided. "Take me to your leader."<br />     "No."<br />     "You can’t do this to me."<br />     "I’m doing it."<br />     "Not without a -- a fair trial, or something."<br />     "Claudia, you. re being unreasonable."<br />     "Damn right  I’m  being unreasonable.  You’re  trying to  ruin  my<br /> life."<br />     "I’m trying to save it."<br />     He gave an extra hard tug. She let go of the guardrail. The<br />     momentum propelled her forward. They crashed together and onto the<br /> deck,<br />     Claudia sprawling across him.<br />     "Mr. Duchamp," a bored-sounding voice drawled out of the intercom.<br />     "Please report to the bridge."<br />     "Oh, God." Denys closed his eyes as if he was in pain.<br />     "Immediately, if you please," the voice added.<br />     The disembodied voice sounded familiar to Claudia. "Who’s that?"<br />     "The Captain. Let me up."<br />     She stayed where she was, and looked him in the eye. "How<br />     long have I been asleep?"<br />     "Not long. A few days," he confessed.<br />     "A few... days... Denys!" she sputtered, fury and hurt fought for<br />     supremacy in her emotions. Hurt won. "How could you? I thought you<br /> cared."<br />     "I do. It was for your own good."<br />     "Let me be the judge of what’s for my own good. Or at least a<br />     participant in  the decision  making. Where’s  your captain?"  she<br /> insisted.<br />     "I want to meet him."<br />     "No." Several minutes passed in furious silence as they tried to<br />     stare each other down.<br />     She knew from his stubborn look he wasn’t going to change his<br />     mind. "Denys!"<br />     "I have to get to the bridge," he told her. He grabbed her by  the<br /> waist and<br />     pushed her off  him. "Believe  me," he  said, helping  her to  her<br /> feet, "you do not<br />     want to meet our captain. He’ll kill  you, me and the crew if  you<br /> get caught. He<br />     wouldn’t send you home, Claudia."<br />     "Kill me?" She gulped. "The crew? You?"<br />     "Maybe not kill, but we  could end up on  a prison colony. All  of<br /> us."<br />     "Mr. Duchamp," the captain’s voice drawled sarcastically from out<br />     of the air, "I’m waiting."<br />     Denys paled. "He doesn’t like to be kept waiting."<br />     "I can tell. Do you think he knows about me?"<br />     "I certainly hope not." Denys looked around as if he was expecting<br />     a posse to come bearing down on them at any moment. "You’ve got to<br /> get<br />     back to  my quarters,  and I’ve  got  to get  to the  bridge."  He<br /> stepped over<br />     to a communications outlet. "Cleary," he ordered.<br />     "Duchamp, you’re supposed to be on the bridge," came the immediate<br />     response.<br />     "And we both know why I’m not there," Denys answered in acid-<br />     etched tones.<br />     "I’m on my way to the Captain’s Walk," Cleary responded.<br />     "Good." Denys faced her. "Stay here," he ordered. "Cleary will see<br />     you get safely back to my quarters."<br />     She put her hands on her hips. "Then what? Another long nap?"<br />     "It was for your own good."<br />     "It was to keep me passive and obedient," she claimed angrily.<br />     "You thought it was  the only way you  could get me to  cooperate.<br /> You were<br />     wrong. I’ll never be sleepy again," she declared dramatically as a<br /> door<br />     at the  end  of the  corridor  opened. "I’ll  never  forgive  you,<br /> either."<br />     Cleary approached them at a quick trot. "I’ll take care of her,<br />     Duchamp."<br />     Denys rounded on the other man. "What did you mean by bringing her<br />     up here?"<br />     "Figure it out for yourself," Cleary answered. "Come on, Dr.<br />     Cameron," he said sympathetically to Claudia. "Let’s get you  back<br /> home."<br />     Denys would very much like to have stayed and argue with the pair<br />     of them. Unfortunately, there was somewhere more important he  had<br /> to be.<br />     ##<br />     "Here at last," Captain Andrews said as Denys saluted before him.<br />     The Captain ran a mocking eye over him.<br />     Denys tried very hard not to flinch at the man’s cool assessment.<br />     He’d been  told  his own  eyes  could look  as  cold as  ice.  The<br /> expression in<br />     Captain Andrews’s eyes was somewhere near absolute zero. The eyes,<br />     coupled  with   the  man’s   aristocratically  beaked   nose   and<br /> distinguished<br />     gray hair had  a devastating effect.  Without saying anything  the<br /> captain<br />     was able to make Denys want to confess his and the Shift’s<br />     transgressions of the  last few  weeks. He managed  not to.  Denys<br /> stood<br />     passively, just barely managing not to squirm with guilt.<br />     "I see by your outfit that you’ve been messing about on the hull,"<br />     Captain Andrew said at last.<br />     Denys had forgotten he was still in his environmental suit. "Yes,<br />     sir," he responded.<br />     "I suppose that explains your leisurely response to my summons."<br />     It was as good an excuse as any. "Yes, sir."<br />     "Hmm." He rubbed his forefinger across the bridge of his<br />     impressive nose.  "I  see.  Note  the  viewscreen,"  he  went  on,<br /> dropping the<br />     subject of Denys’s slow response.<br />     The ship’s main viewscreen covered one entire wall of the bridge.<br />     The workstations were grouped around the viewscreen in a double<br />     horseshoe, the  Captain’s Chair  and control  station set  in  the<br /> center of<br />     the uppermost semi-circle.  Denys observed  that the  rest of  the<br /> bridge<br />     Shift was studiously avoiding looking at him and Captain  Andrews.<br /> He<br />     concentrated on looking at the screen, while the captain’s fingers<br />     drummed briefly on the edge of his console.<br />     The view showed the clifftop and dark interior of Stickney Crater.<br />     "It’s the mine site," he said after it became evident the  captain<br /> wasn’t<br />     going to elaborate on anything before he got a response.<br />     "Quite. It was the mine site."<br />     "Was, sir?"<br />     "How are craters formed, young man?" Captain Andrews asked, his<br />     dreadful gaze still on the screen.<br />     "Impacts from space debris, usually," Denys answered quickly. He<br />     didn’t try to voice his confusion.<br />     "Just so. And could asteroids be classified as space debris, do<br />     you think?"<br />     "Yes, sir."<br />     "And is it possible for an asteroid to impact Stickney Crater at<br />     the exact spot you set up your mining apparatus?"<br />     Denys’s mind reeled. No. Impossible. "Yes, sir," he answered<br />     calmly, despite the panic trying to take over his brain.<br />     Captain Andrews sighed. "The sensors seem to indicate that is<br />     precisely what has just  happened. Do me a  favor, will you?"  the<br /> cool<br />     voice grated painfully  across Denys’s already  raw nerves.  "Take<br /> your<br />     Shift down and assess the damage for me, if you please."<br />     "Yes, sir," Denys repeated one more time, happy to flee the bridge<br />     and the mocking annoyance of the HATTON’s commanding officer.<br />     ##<br />     "I don’t get it," Fox said as they gathered around the damage.<br />     "How could it destroy  just the laser canon?  It doesn’t make  any<br /> sense."<br />     "Fate," Toffler said. "Karma."<br />     "Damn bad luck," Cleary added.<br />     "Right," Denys agreed. He shook his head. Not for the first<br />     time since they’d  arrived at  the mine  to discover  what a  tiny<br /> fragment<br />     of falling  asteroid had  done to  their most  important piece  of<br /> equipment:<br />     flattened it.<br />     "Nothing we can salvage," Morrison reported.<br />     "The thing didn’t work right anyway," Cleary pointed out. "What do<br />     we do now,  Duchamp?" he  wanted to know.  The rest  of the  Shift<br /> looked at<br />     him with the same question in their expressions.<br />     He shrugged. "We have to finish the job," he said. "We’ll have to<br />     rebuild it, I guess."<br />     "Out of what?" Fox asked. "The Earth ship didn’t deliver all the<br />     spare parts we ordered."<br />     "Yeah," Toffler recalled. "They replaced some important stuff with<br />     ’equivalent’ equipment. It didn’t work."<br />     Sakretis scratched his jaw. "I remember the hands on the freighter<br />     talking real fast about our order. I’ve been wondering what  ’back<br /> order’<br />     and SNAFU mean, too."<br />     Denys was getting a headache. "I better call the captain," he<br />     said. He left his men to finished checking over the bits of  fused<br /> metal and rock<br />     which had recently  been their laser  canon. He went  back to  the<br /> shuttle to use the<br />     communicator.<br />     The conversation was brief, pithy, and mostly one-sided. Denys got<br />     to say, "Yes, sir," a lot.<br />     The men were waiting by the shuttle door when he came out. "We’re<br />     going back to  Earth," he  told them.  "Ship’s computer’s  already<br /> working<br />     on ordering parts for a new canon. Let’s get back to the  HATTON."<br /> They<br />     followed him on board.<br />     Once strapped in, Cleary said, "What about Dr. Cameron?"<br />     "What about her?"<br />     "Well," Morrison ventured. "She can go home now. This is a stroke<br />     of good fortune for her."<br />     "You going to put her back to sleep?" Cleary questioned<br />     disapprovingly.<br />     It appeared Cleary was somewhat aware of his dilemma. "No," he<br />     answered. "I’m not going to put her back to sleep."<br />     Maybe I should, he thought, but I can’t. He let his hands work the<br />     controls of the shuttle while his mind ranged over the problem of<br />     what to do with Claudia Cameron. He couldn’t knock her out  again.<br /> It was<br />     a stupid idea, and  a cruel and  totally unacceptable solution.  I<br /> may be<br />     very stupid,  he  thought,  but  I  certainly  didn’t  intend  any<br /> cruelty. I<br />     robbed her of several days of her life. I hope she can forgive  me<br /> for<br />     it. I hope she’ll let me try to make up for it.<br />     Morrison was right. He should let her go home. This was a perfect<br />     chance. A Godsend. Or  it would be, if  she didn’t know too  much.<br /> She<br />     does. He couldn’t  risk it. He  didn’t want to  hurt her. He’d  do<br /> anything<br />     to keep from hurting her. Anything but take her back to Earth. How<br /> did<br />     he stop her? She was  sure to insist on  going home. Once the  men<br /> told her<br />     she was bound to find some  way of cajoling them into getting  her<br /> off the<br />     ship. She had them wrapped around her finger.<br />     What she doesn’t know won’t hurt her.<br />     He caught the stray thought as it flitted across his consciousness<br />     and held it up  for closer examination. I  tried to keep her  from<br /> knowing<br />     about Phobos, he reminded himself. She found out anyway. Look what<br />     happened then. He had fond, as well as frustrated, memories of the<br />     experience. It’s the only choice I’ve got, he decided. She has got<br /> to be<br />     kept completely in  the dark  this time. Somehow  these idiots  he<br /> called a<br />     Shift crew had to be made to understand that she needed to stay on<br /> board<br />     the HATTON.<br />     He suddenly remembered the aborted rendezvous on the Captain’s<br />     Walk. He remembered the stunning scarlet dress. It knew it  hadn’t<br /> been by her<br />     design, but it gave him an idea.<br />     "Cleary, men," he said as he brought the shuttle easily through<br />     the gaping bay  doors. "I need  your help. About  Dr. Cameron  and<br /> myself<br />     and her going back to Earth." The men waited for him to go on.<br />     The bay doors  closed and they  waited while air  pumped into  the<br /> hangar<br />     deck. "Claudia and I  are in love," he  explained, trying to  look<br /> soulful and<br />     lovestruck. He didn’t suppose it was hard.<br />     "We thought so," Sakretis told him.<br />     "If she goes back to Earth, I’ll never see her again."<br />     "True," Fox agreed.<br />     Denys sighed. "I don’t want her to go back. And she doesn’t want<br />     to. Not  really. But  she’s still  uncertain about  making such  a<br /> drastic<br />     change. She needs  time to think,"  he went on  sincerely. "I  was<br /> hoping to<br />     have more time to convince her to stay."<br />     "Which is why you put her to sleep, of course," Cleary said, not<br />     quite sarcastically, but very close.<br />     "It was a mistake," Denys said quickly. "I was trying to give<br />     her. us. myself some time to think. It’s not easy falling in  love<br /> with a woman<br />     out of the past."<br />     "Even if she’s a great cook." Cleary was not buying this. Denys<br />     was tempted to remind Cleary just whose fault this situation was.<br />     "Sure miss her cooking," Cleary added before Denys could say<br />     anything. "She was planning on  making us chili before you  tucked<br /> her<br />     into bed. Sure  would like to  have some of  that chili.  Wouldn’t<br /> you,<br />     boys?" There was a chorus of assent to Cleary’s question.<br />     Denys was beginning to understand there might be a price for<br />     Cleary and the crew’s cooperation.  Fair enough. "I’d be happy  to<br /> let her<br />     back in the kitchen if I can just get you to help me," he told the<br /> men.<br />     "Please."<br />     "You going to marry her?" Sakretis wanted to know. "This isn’t<br />     just a fling is it, Duchamp?"<br />     "She’s definitely the marrying kind," Fox added.<br />     "We wouldn’t want to see her get hurt," Morrison said.<br />     Denys sighed. He was willing to tell them anything to get their<br />     cooperation. "Of course I’m going  to marry her. I’m an  honorable<br /> man."<br />     The Shift Crew looked at each other. Nods were exchanged. "Okay,"<br />     Cleary spoke for the group. "We’ll do it."<br />     Chapter Nine<br />     Claudia was not only miserable, she was bored. She played with her<br />     dinner and wished she was anywhere but at the kitchen counter with<br /> only<br />     Denys Duchamp for company. Again. It was going to be another long,<br />     miserable evening without even the view of Mars on the living<br />     quarters’ screen to keep her company.<br />     The Captain, Cleary had explained, had, in his legendary<br />     dictatorial manner, revoked all viewing privileges for<br />     the duration of the mission because of some minor rule infraction.<br /> So<br />     she had nothing to look at but Denys. Normally this would not be a<br />     hardship, but looking at  him now just  made her miserable.  Maybe<br /> she<br />     should try working on a new recipe after dinner was over.<br />     The kitchen computer was about all she had to keep her company.<br />     Denys hadn’t put her back to sleep, but he was leaving her  alone.<br /> And<br />     she was leaving him alone. She was too angry with him to admit to<br />     craving his company, and  that seemed just  fine with him.  Except<br /> that<br />     they were always together.<br />     She wasn’t quite sure what was going on. She was being encouraged<br />     to cook,  but the  men were  keeping their  distance. They  smiled<br /> benignly<br />     at her  a lot,  but they  weren’t very  good company.  The  surly,<br /> silent<br />     presence of Denys Duchamp was all  she had. She did know that  she<br /> wasn’t<br />     going to talk first.  So she was being  surly and silent too.  She<br /> supposed<br />     she couldn’t blame the crew for  not wanting to come near her  and<br /> the<br />     Shift Officer.<br />     In the three days since she’d woken up, her constant guide to<br />     and from their quarters had been  Denys. He sat with her at  meals<br /> while<br />     the men took their trays and  disappeared she knew not where.  She<br /> was too<br />     stubborn to ask Denys and he didn’t volunteer any information.<br />     The truth was, she wanted to talk to him, but her tongue kept<br />     getting tangled up with seething anger at how he’d treated<br />     her. She wanted to talk to  him, but she wanted an apology  first.<br /> She<br />     wanted an explanation. She wanted him to hold her and make love to<br /> her<br />     and tell her he’d make it all better. She told herself this  last,<br /> aching<br />     want was ridiculous, superfluous and downright masochistic. He was<br /> not<br />     her lover or her friend or her confidant. He was a kidnapper, a<br />     dictator, a blond-haired, gorgeous fiend.<br />     She remembered how he used to tease her, how she’d enjoyed his<br />     company in her first  days on board the  HATTON. She’d been  happy<br /> then.<br />     Now they just sat across from  each other, in the kitchen, in  the<br /> living<br />     quarters, in frigid silence. She was not happy. She was not having<br /> a<br />     good time. The hours were dragging by so slowly, she almost wished<br /> she<br />     was back in her sound, dream-filled sleep again. Almost.<br />     Denys looked at his dinner rather than at Claudia. While it was<br />     true he didn’t think he could get enough of being with and looking<br /> at<br />     Claudia, he was going crazy from the way she’d been acting for the<br /> last<br />     few days. Not that he could  blame her, of course. She was  right;<br /> he was<br />     ruining her life. He couldn’t expect her to understand how it was<br />     necessary to  sacrifice  her  happiness for  the  success  of  the<br /> mission.<br />     Except She wasn’t alone. He was sacrificing his happiness as<br />     well. She was going to hate  him forever and he would always  bear<br /> the<br />     guilt of hurting her. He wanted to tell her how painful this was.<br />     He told himself he was just being maudlin; feeling sorry for<br />     himself. He knew his feelings weren’t important. The mission  was.<br /> He was<br />     also afraid that telling  her one little thing  about how he  felt<br /> would<br />     open a floodgate. Next he’d be  telling her how sorry he was,  how<br /> much he<br />     loved her, how he wanted her to  be happy and how the shuttle  was<br /> due to<br />     land at Athens  airport tomorrow  morning. He’d offer  her a  ride<br /> home just<br />     to see her smile. That would never do.<br />     At least the men were keeping out of this. They were leaving him<br />     alone to  bear the  brunt of  her fierce,  silent displeasure.  He<br /> sighed.<br />     She gave him an acid-etched look. She pushed her plate away. "I’m<br />     going to bed,"  she said.  These were her  first words  to him  in<br /> three<br />     days. He got up. "I don’t need your help."<br />     He trailed after her like a lost puppy anyway.<br />     Claudia didn’t really trust the bed anymore. She knew it wasn’t<br />     the mattress’s fault, but she was worried Denys would mess  around<br /> with<br />     the sleep programming again. She’d  tried sleeping on the deck  in<br /> front<br />     of the personal lockers. It  had proved very uncomfortable.  Denys<br /> had<br />     looked at her reproachfully, and stepped over her a lot. She’d<br />     eventually taken his point and moved back to the bed alcove. She’d<br />     finally decided on the alternative of instructing<br />     the bed  to wake  her up  every three  hours, just  in case  Denys<br /> decided to<br />     try anything. When she settled her head on the pillow, she knew it<br />     wouldn’t be long before the bed went -BOING.<br />     "Oh, lord, not again," she mumbled and turned over, clutching the<br />     pillow to her chest. She was dreaming of Denys, she didn’t want to<br /> be disturbed.<br />     BOING.<br />     "I’m awake," she whispered to the mattress. "Leave me alone." The<br />     noise subsided.<br />     She tried to drift off again. She turned over, put the pillow back<br />     under her head where  it belonged. She stared  at the ceiling  for<br /> awhile.<br />     She listened to Denys’s soft  breathing from the other bed  niche.<br /> She<br />     tried, but she couldn’t get back to sleep. She got out of bed  and<br /> got<br />     dressed.<br />     She went and stood by Denys’s bed, caught between the longing to<br />     throttle him  and the  longing to  brush his  pale bangs  off  his<br /> forehead<br />     and give him a soft  kiss. She wanted him.  She ached to crawl  in<br /> beside<br />     him and make love to him again. Instead, she put her hands  behind<br /> her<br />     and backed away  from his  bed. She couldn’t  touch him;  wouldn’t<br /> touch<br />     him. He didn’t stir.<br />     She decided to go down to the kitchen while she had a chance to be<br />     by herself. She didn’t know what she’d do when she got there,  but<br /> the<br />     chance of having  some time  alone to think  was enticing  enough.<br /> Hopefully<br />     she’d find some way not to think about Denys.<br />     She got to the kitchen and turned on the computer, but she wasn’t<br />     alone for long.  When the  door opened  she jumped,  she was  sure<br /> Denys<br />     had come to haul her away by the wrist once more. "I have every<br />     right...!" she began as she turned to the newcomer.<br />     It was Smid. He nodded to her and said, "I came for my dinner, Dr.<br />     Cameron." He took the place she’d  vacated at the console and  fed<br /> in the<br />     formula for his head  of lettuce. After he  retrieved it from  the<br /> serving<br />     slot, he spoke  to her  again. "Will  you be  bringing fresh  food<br /> supplies<br />     aboard tomorrow? I would like to request some fresh carrots if you<br /> are."<br />     Fresh food supplies? Tomorrow. She looked at the six and a half<br />     foot bunny in stunned consternation. "What?"<br />     "Carrots," he replied. "You will be accompanying the Shift Crew to<br />     Earth, will you not? To supervise loading the food provisions?"<br />     All she could think of for a few moments was that Denys had lied<br />     to her  again. Lied  to her  with silence.  It hurt  so badly  she<br /> couldn’t<br />     breathe, couldn’t think, couldn’t see anything but red.<br />     When she came to her senses, she was grasping the terrified Smid<br />     by the  front  of his  blue  coverall and  shouting,  "All  right,<br /> Thumper, I<br />     want to see the captain right now --or I’m going to be trying  out<br /> a<br />     recipe for hasenpfeffer!"<br />     Smid’s nose twitched furiously, but he showed no other signs of<br />     distress.<br />     Claudia let go of Smid, thoroughly ashamed of her outburst and<br />     threatening the poor bunny. "I’m sorry." She took a deep,<br />     calming breath, and  went on, "I  would like to  see the  captain,<br /> Smid. If<br />     you don’t mind."<br />     "I do not mind. But I’m sure the captain would. He would not wish<br />     to be disturbed during Third Shift. I will go now."<br />     Smid left before she could protest, or beg for his help. She stood<br />     in the middle of the kitchen  after he left, feeling helpless  and<br /> utterly<br />     alone. Denys was determined to save his precious mission, and  the<br /> crew<br />     was on his side.  Which was only right  and proper, she  supposed,<br /> saving their<br />     world was more important to  them than her personal problems.  But<br /> it left her with<br />     no one to turn to, nowhere to  go, powerless. She had no place  in<br /> the scheme of<br />     things.<br />     Place. She remembered the view of Mars from a glass-walled<br />     corridor. What was the place  called? The Captain’s Walk. If  it’s<br /> called<br />     the Captain’s Walk,  she wondered,  does that  mean the  Captain’s<br /> quarters<br />     are nearby? Or maybe  it means he hangs  out there looking at  the<br /> view. It<br />     may mean nothing.<br />     She paced, and thought frantically. She had to do something. Her<br />     heart ached at the  thought of never seeing  Denys again, but  she<br /> knew she<br />     had to get back to Earth somehow.  But how? The Captain had to  be<br /> the<br />     answer.<br />     "I’ll have to find the Captain’s Walk," she said to herself. "I<br />     can’t  depend  on  Smid,  he’s  not  quite  connected  with  human<br /> concerns. I’ll<br />     have to do it myself."<br />     She remembered Second Shift’s fear of Captain Andrews. Fear on her<br />     behalf. She told  herself the  man couldn’t really  be a  monster.<br /> That<br />     they’d just  been  using him  as  a  bogeyman to  keep  her  under<br /> control. She<br />     took her  courage in  hand  and left  the  kitchen. As  she  began<br /> skulking<br />     down the corridor, she thought, I  suppose I’ll just have to  find<br /> out<br />     for myself if he really is a man-eating minotaur after all.<br />     She was totally lost within minutes of leaving the kitchen. In her<br />     travels with Denys and the crew, she hadn’t had any conception  of<br /> the<br />     size of  the HATTON.  A  few minutes  alone  hunting up  and  down<br /> unfamiliar<br />     corridors soon convinced her the mining ship was enormous. It  was<br /> in the<br />     middle of the ship’s night and she already knew her chances of<br />     encountering anyone this late  were practically nil. Normally  she<br /> was<br />     glad the corridors  and elevators were  so deserted. Normally  the<br /> last<br />     thing she wanted  was to  be seen by  anyone from  First or  Third<br /> shift.<br />     Normally. Now that she was lost and completely confused, she would<br />     have been delighted for the captain to arrive in the nearest cross<br />     corridor accompanied by a squad of heavily armed marines.<br />     She looked bleakly around and muttered, "This is all Denys’s<br />     fault." She was seriously considering  sitting down in the  middle<br /> of the<br />     lonely intersection and having a  good cry when a nearby  elevator<br /> opened<br />     its doors.  Charlie  emerged into  the  corridor. He  smiled  upon<br /> seeing her,<br />     looking both dapper  and elegant in  the simple jumpsuit  uniform.<br /> Denys,<br />     she thought as Charlie approached her, looks sexy in his uniform.<br />     Charlie stopped before her, his elderly face a mask of avuncular<br />     concern. "What’s wrong, m’dear?" he asked.<br />     Claudia couldn’t stop the tears.<br />     "He doesn’t love me!" she wailed and threw herself into Charlie’s<br />     arms. It wasn’t  at all what  she’d meant to  say, but her  misery<br /> suddenly<br />     overwhelmed her. She needed a strong shoulder to cry on.<br />     Charlie didn’t seem to mind her soaking his uniform with<br />     tears. He patted  her back  and murmured  the occasional,  "There,<br /> there,<br />     poor lamb,"  until Claudia  was  able to  get her  outburst  under<br /> control.<br />     "I don’t know why I did that," she confessed as she stepped away<br />     from him. He produced a  large, silver lame handkerchief from  his<br /> pocket<br />     and gallantly handed it to her. "Thanks." She wiped her tears  and<br /> held<br />     it out to him.<br />     "Keep it," he said with a negligent wave. "A present."<br />     "Thanks." She stuffed the crumbled cloth into her pocket.<br />     "Who doesn’t love you?" he wanted to know in well-mannered<br />     outrage. "Is he a blind fool? Shall I thrash him for you?"<br />     She almost laughed. "It’s all so complicated."<br />     "Tell me all about it."<br />     She did. Starting with the clandestine trip to Phobos when Denys<br />     saved her life and then their making love and his deciding<br />     she might wreck the future so  she couldn’t go home, not that  she<br /> was<br />     sure she wanted to go home because she really loved<br />     Denys. Or she did until he. d put her to sleep and then didn’t let<br />     anyone tell her they were back at Earth because he couldn’t  trust<br /> her<br />     not to run  away because he  didn’t think she  was an  intelligent<br /> human<br />     being, but some child who needed  to be protected, which was  sort<br /> of<br />     sweet, but completely politically incorrect, and he could at least<br />     discuss the situation with her if  he cared for her at all.  Which<br /> he<br />     didn’t.<br />     "So I want to go home," she concluded breathlessly. "And never see<br />     or think about Denys Duchamp again."<br />     "I see," he said, though from the way he was looking at her she<br />     didn’t think he did. Not really.<br />     Because she didn’t.<br />     "I’ve never been so confused in my life."<br />     "I can tell."<br />     "Charlie, what am I going to do?"<br />     He rubbed his chin thoughtfully. "I think you should have some tea<br />     and a lie down."<br />     "I’ve slept quite enough lately," she retorted.<br />     He nodded. "Yes, I suppose you’re right. In that case," he went<br />     on, "I think you should go home. Get away from the whole situation<br />     and think it through."<br />     Go home. Back to Earth. Away from this madhouse. "Yes," she said.<br />     "That’s exactly what I want. I have to escape." She grasped him by<br /> the<br />     front of his  jumpsuit, looking  up at him  pleadingly. "Will  you<br /> help me?<br />     Please? I have to get away from Denys."<br />     She knew she had to get away before it was too late... Before I<br />     can’t stand the silence anymore, she thought feverishly. Before I<br />     apologize for making so much trouble for him just because I  can’t<br /> stand<br />     him looking hurt anymore. It’s not my fault all this happened. I’m<br /> the<br />     one who’s been wronged. I want out of here. Really.<br />     "Please," she pleaded again. "I have to get off the ship. You can<br />     help me  do that,  can’t you?"  She stepped  back to  look at  him<br /> hopefully.<br />     "I was looking  for the Captain,  but I really  don’t want to  get<br /> anyone<br />     into trouble," she went  on. "It’s much better  to have someone  I<br /> know and<br />     trust help me than throw myself on the mercy of a tyrant like<br />     Captain Andrews. He might do something horrible -- not just to me,<br /> but<br />     to the  whole  Shift.  Please, Charlie,"  she  ended,  once  again<br /> breathless.<br />     He was frowning. "Tyrant? Denys told you Captain Andrews is a<br />     tyrant?" She nodded. "Well, I suppose he is," Charlie conceded.<br />     "Wouldn’t want  you to  be found,  could be  very bad,  officially<br /> speaking.<br />     You being a stowaway and all."<br />     "I am not a stowaway," she corrected him indignantly. "I’m a<br />     kidnap victim. They stuffed me in the cargo locker!"<br />     "Very impolite of them," he acknowledged. He ran his fingers<br />     thoughtfully up and down his long beak. "Perhaps you could  return<br /> home the way<br />     you were brought aboard."<br />     "I’ve thought of that," Claudia said. "But I don’t know how. I<br />     don’t even know how  to find the  hangar bay so  I could sneak  on<br /> board<br />     without anybody spotting me. Even Cleary won’t help me."<br />     "Yes. I see your problem. You have to get past the Shift crew as<br />     well as young Duchamp." He lapsed into another short silence, then<br />     said, "I suppose I could arrange it."<br />     "You could? Will you?"<br />     "Hmm. Of course, you’d need a supply of breather strips."<br />     Claudia remembered the breather strips she’d been handed when<br />     she’d gone to the mining site. "I’ve got those," she told Charlie.<br /> "And<br />     an environmental suit."<br />     "Useful, that." He rubbed his nose again, and gave her a confident<br />     smile. "Let me think a moment."<br />     As Claudia waited, she found herself beginning to believe the<br />     distinguished older man was capable of performing miracles. It was<br /> just<br />     something about him.<br />     "Tell you what we’ll do," he went on. "You wait in your quarters<br />     in the morning until young Duchamp has gone. Then I’ll come  fetch<br /> you<br />     and get you on board the shuttle before it leaves."<br />     "But won’t they see me in the hangar bay?"<br />     "Oh, I’ll manage some sort of diversion." He took her hand and<br />     patted it comfortingly. "Never fear. We’ll get you in the back  of<br /> the<br />     cargo bay  while  they’re fussing  with  something in  the  front.<br /> They’ve<br />     been busy  adding  more  Stealth shielding  to  the  shuttle.  The<br /> projectors<br />     are mostly forward of the cockpit. I’m sure those fussy old men in<br /> Third<br />     shift -- " He smiled winningly. "  -- will want them to carry  out<br /> one<br />     last equipment inspection on the  forward shields before they  let<br /> the<br />     shuttle lift off."<br />     He was very clever, indeed. She hugged him. "Thank you. I won’t<br />     ever forget this." She grinned happily. "I’m going home."<br />     "Indeed, you are. Now," he offered her his arm. "Let me escort you<br />     at least part of the way back to your quarters."<br />     Claudia was glad to take his arm and accept his guidance. The<br />     HATTON was just too big and  complicated to try to travel  through<br /> without<br />     a guide. As  they went  along&lt;,> he  asked her  about Earth.  He’d<br /> never been<br />     there. It turned out he was from New Sydney.<br />     Denys was from New Sydney.<br />     Denys. She was really going to leave Denys. It hurt. So she tried<br />     not to think  about it.  She tried  to convince  herself that  she<br /> didn’t<br />     belong anywhere but on Earth, in her own time. She was going home.<br />     Alone.<br />     I want to go, she told herself as she accompanied Charlie through<br />     the maze of corridors. I want to go home. And it’s going to hurt.<br />     It already hurt.<br />     ##<br />     Claudia was sleeping when Denys left their quarters. He paused to<br />     kiss her cheek before  he left, and gazed  back at her still  form<br /> for just<br />     a moment. He wanted to do more  than kiss her cheek. He wanted  to<br /> make<br />     love to  her again.  Then he  wanted to  talk to  her, get  things<br /> settled.<br />     Or maybe, he told himself ruefully as he headed to the hangar<br />     deck, what we  should do first  is talk to  each other, then  make<br /> love.<br />     Whatever. He wanted her so badly that sharing a room with her was<br />     driving him insane.  He wondered  if the Siren  Song was  anything<br /> like the<br />     pull he felt  toward Claudia.  No. He  would not  equate her  with<br /> those<br />     things. They  were  monsters.  She was  wonderful.  He  should  be<br /> ashamed of<br />     himself for the comparison.  It was proof of  how crazy with  need<br /> for her<br />     he’d become that he could compare Claudia to the mindless reaction<br /> men<br />     had to the Siren Song.<br />     He thought he was lucky to be getting some time away from the<br />     ship, and Claudia. Maybe by the time the shuttle made the trip  to<br /> Earth<br />     and back  he’d be  able  to get  his  raging emotions  under  some<br /> control. He<br />     hoped distance and a little time would help him gain some<br />     perspective on his relationship with Claudia. Such as it was.<br />     The Second Shift crew were already gathered by the shuttle when<br />     Denys arrived in the bay. Once again, it had been adapted to  look<br /> like<br />     a 20th  century  truck. He  approached  them  and gave  a  nod  in<br /> greeting.<br />     "Think I’ll inspect the cargo bay and all the boxes," he told<br />     them. He got groans and pained looks in response. "Never know what<br /> might<br />     be tucked in one of those boxes," he added as he climbed on  board<br /> the<br />     small ship  to begin  the inspection.  "Let’s pull  them all  out,<br /> shall we?"<br />     The men followed him truculently. They wanted to get the trip over<br />     with. So did he. He also knew he’d left Claudia asleep in her  own<br /> bed.<br />     He was wearing a  sensor which would warn  him the moment she  set<br /> foot<br />     outside the small area of the ship he’d decided was safe for  her.<br /> He<br />     also wasn’t taking any  risks that she  might have somehow  fooled<br /> him<br />     and managed to sneak on board the shuttle. Call me paranoid, he<br />     reasoned, but he was not taking any chances on losing her.<br />     It took about twenty minutes for him to be satisfied there was no<br />     possibility she  could be  on board.  Cleary and  the others  were<br /> looking<br />     smug, as well as disgruntled, by this time.<br />     "Can we go now?" Cleary wanted to know.<br />     Denys would have been happy to answer in the affirmative<br />     but, before he could, the hangar’s intercom sounded and a no-<br />     nonsense voice announced,  "Final inspection of  Stealth Field  is<br /> required<br />     before permission to lift off."<br />     There were more groans, Denys’s among them this time.<br />     "All right," he said to the grumbling men. "Up front everybody.<br />     The sooner  we check  it out,  the sooner  we can  go looking  for<br /> dolmata and<br />     baklava."<br />     And the sooner I can get back to Claudia, he added to himself. All<br />     right, she doesn’t  speak to me,  but at least  she’s safe.  Maybe<br /> someday<br />     she’ll forgive me.<br />     ##<br />     Claudia jumped out of bed as soon as Denys was out the door. It<br />     had taken all of her willpower not to watch him as he got  dressed<br /> and<br />     moved around the room. To take one more memory of the sight of him<br /> with<br />     her. She  was depressed  as  she put  on  the clothes  she’d  been<br /> wearing when<br />     she drove into  Doros, then managed  to squeeze the  environmental<br /> suit on<br />     over her  Earth clothing.  She checked  her purse  for wallet  and<br /> passport,<br />     glad the drunken  crew had stuffed  the leather bag  into the  box<br /> with her.<br />     As  a  final,  jaunty  touch,  she  decided  to  tie  the   silver<br /> handkerchief<br />     from Charlie cravat-style around her throat. She checked a  mirror<br /> and<br />     decided the effect was dashing.<br />     She didn’t feel dashing. In fact, she felt just awful. She tried<br />     to cheer herself up  with the knowledge that  she was going  home;<br /> that<br />     she’d had the adventure of a lifetime. Instead, she kept  thinking<br /> about<br />     never seeing Denys again.<br />     She was almost ready to tell Charlie to forget the escape when he<br />     knocked on her door. It was only by sternly reminding herself that<br /> Denys<br />     had betrayed  her trust  that bolstered  her determination  to  go<br /> through<br />     with this. Besides, he didn’t love her.<br />     She sighed, and glumly accompanied Charlie to the shuttle hangar.<br />     They hid behind  a storage locker  until Denys and  the crew  were<br /> diverted<br />     to the front of the shuttle.<br />     Charlie took the time to kiss her on the forehead. "This is it,<br />     m’dear. Can’t say I won’t miss you."<br />     She gave him a hug. "Thanks for everything."<br />     "Always happy to help a young lady in distress."<br />     Why couldn’t Denys be this charming? She scrubbed a quick<br />     tear from her eye. Actually, she was well aware that Denys<br />     could be terribly  charming, but  she couldn’t let  it affect  her<br /> choice.<br />     "Let’s do it."<br />     It was a simple process to sprint across the open deck of the bay<br />     and sneak into the rear of the shuttle. Charlie showed her how  to<br /> open<br />     the cargo doors from  the inside, pointed out  a hiding place  and<br /> was<br />     gone. A few  minutes later she  felt the shuttle  rising from  the<br /> hangar<br />     deck. She tried not  to cry as  the journey began.  A part of  her<br /> really<br />     was elated. She was going home. But the elation didn’t cancel  out<br /> her<br />     misery at knowing she’d never see Denys Duchamp again.<br />     Chapter Ten<br />     The Stealth shielding did its job flawlessly Denys was happy<br />     to note as he brought the shuttle to a halt on the hot tarmac.  No<br /> one at<br />     the Athens airport had noticed him land the truck-shaped  shuttle.<br /> He<br />     parked it at the specified hangar in a far corner of the airport<br />     grounds. All was going as it should. They hadn’t been detected  on<br /> their<br />     way down from the orbiting ship, either. No radar had picked  them<br /> up<br />     over Europe. He  sighed with relief.  Now all they  had to do  was<br /> collect<br />     the supplies that waited  for them in the  hangar and get back  to<br /> the<br />     HATTON. It shouldn’t take more than a few hours.<br />     He and the men moved efficiently to get on with the job. Safety<br />     belts were soon unhooked and they piled out to stand blinking  for<br /> a few<br />     moments while  they got  used  to the  bright afternoon  glare  of<br /> Earth’s<br />     yellow sun.<br />     "Hot," Cleary commented, wiping the back of his hand across his<br />     forehead.<br />     "Real hot," Morrison added.<br />     "So hot you could -- "<br />     "Knock it off," Denys interrupted before Fox could finish his<br />     contribution to this scintillating  conversation. "Let’s just  get<br /> to it,<br />     shall we?"<br />     There were offended looks from the crew. Someone muttered, "Sounds<br />     just like the Captain, sometimes,"  but they were happy enough  to<br /> shuffle<br />     into the relative coolness of the hangar.<br />     Denys went to deal with the paperwork, the crew went to check the<br />     contents of  the  waiting boxes.  Everything,  so far,  was  going<br /> according<br />     to schedule.<br />     ##<br />     Claudia had the door opened, was outside the hold, and the door<br />     sealed again just as the passenger door on the side of the shuttle<br />     opened. She ran, telling herself  that freedom was more  important<br /> than<br />     trying to look  back for  one last glimpse  of Denys.  It was  too<br /> late.<br />     Besides, he might  see her  and the  escape attempt  would be  for<br /> nothing.<br />     The heat and light from the sun seemed unnatural to her as she<br />     sprinted across the hot tarmac toward a terminal building. The air<br /> was<br />     full of dust and jet fuel fumes.  The air felt wrong in her  lungs<br /> after<br />     she ripped the  breather strip from  under her nose.  After a  few<br /> seconds<br />     exposure to the polluted Earth  atmosphere, she was wishing  she’d<br /> left<br />     the breather strip on a few minutes longer.<br />     It’s too late now, she thought as she reached turned a corner of a<br />     building and found herself at the entrance of the international<br />     terminal. Everything’s too late. Damn  it, she was thinking  about<br /> Denys<br />     again!<br />     She joined a crowd of people heading for the door instead of<br />     obeying the impulse  to return to  the shuttle and  the man  she’d<br /> left<br />     behind.<br />     I’m back, she thought, I’m home. She looked around her. The people<br />     were all strangers, the place was foreign. She felt miserable and<br />     lonesome. But she was home.<br />     I’m just tired, she reasoned as she walked through the high-<br />     ceilinged, bustling terminal. She felt disoriented. There were too<br /> many<br />     people. They jostled  her and  looked at her  strangely and  spoke<br /> languages<br />     she didn’t understand.  I’m just  a tourist who’s  been away  from<br /> home for<br />     too long,  she told  herself. She  tried to  make herself  believe<br /> she’d be<br />     fine as soon as she got home. To Iowa. To her own house. Her empty<br />     house. With its empty bed.<br />     "Home is all I need," she said, and stepped up to an airline<br />     counter, Mastercard ready.<br />     She was in luck, a flight for Chicago was leaving in less than an<br />     hour. She’d worry about connecting flights once she got to O’Hare.<br /> She’d<br />     worry about the  price of the  flight later, well  aware that  the<br /> price was<br />     both monetary and emotional.<br />     As she waited for her tickets to be processed she began to notice<br />     the looks her skin tight environmental suit was drawing. Most were<br />     curious, some were outright admiring. It was embarrassing, and she<br />     didn’t want  to  do  anything to  make  herself  conspicuous.  She<br /> supposed she<br />     was being paranoid. There was no one from the HATTON anywhere near<br /> this<br />     terminal.<br />     The attention was enough to make her slip into the nearest ladies<br />     room to peel off the environmental suit and the pretty silver<br />     handkerchief she’d been wearing around  her neck. Once she had  it<br /> off,<br />     she wasn’t quite sure  what to do with  the shiny black  jumpsuit.<br /> She<br />     stood in the middle of the  washroom, thankful she was alone,  and<br /> held<br />     the clothing up before her. In the big wall mirror&lt;,> Claudia  saw<br /> the<br />     reflection of a  woman in shorts  and a simple  gauze blouse,  her<br /> slightly<br />     ruffled brown hair  dusting her  cheeks and  shoulders. The  woman<br /> looked a<br />     little tired,  there was  unhappiness in  her blue  eyes, but  she<br /> looked<br />     normal. A very normal,  everyday sort of  person. She didn’t  look<br /> like the<br />     sort of person  who had adventures,  who stood on  alien moons  or<br /> talked to<br />     six foot rabbits. Or fell in  love with mining engineers from  far<br /> future<br />     colony worlds.<br />     Had she really done all those things? The jumpsuit was proof she<br />     had, a reminder of wild times, both good and bad. She sighed.  She<br /> didn’t<br />     need or want any reminders of her time on the HATTON to intrude on<br /> her<br />     future. She was going back  to a quiet life  in a small town.  She<br /> was<br />     going to do her best to forget that the whole incident had ever<br />     happened. She  was going  to work  very hard  at forgetting  Denys<br /> Duchamp.<br />     She didn’t need any reminders.<br />     She stuffed the jumpsuit into the trash container next to the row<br />     of sinks and walked out the door. Checking her watch, she realized<br /> she<br />     had to hurry to catch her plane.<br />     She was firmly belted into a window seat near the wing when she<br />     remembered that  she’d stuffed  Charlie’s  silver scarf  into  the<br /> pocket of<br />     the jumpsuit when she’d  taken it off. She  had meant to keep  his<br /> present,<br />     now it was too late to try to retrieve it.<br />     She sighed, and settled back to wait in lonely misery for the<br />     airplane to take off.<br />     ##<br />     Denys had just signed the last of the shipping forms when his<br />     wrist went off. He looked at the vibrating sensor strapped to<br />     his wrist and swore.<br />     The man standing beside him looked at him strangely. "Odd looking<br />     beeper."<br />     Denys tapped the indicator control on the sensor. "Damn the<br />     woman!" he  muttered in  a  low, angry  growl. "What’s  she  doing<br /> here?"<br />     "Huh?" the man questioned as the sensor continued its steady<br />     bleeping.<br />     "Have to call the home office," Denys improvised the explanation.<br />     He shut off the audio, keeping the tracking function lit.  "Excuse<br /> me."<br />     He ran out of the hangar yelling, "Cleary!"<br />     Cleary jumped out of the cargo bay. "Yeah, Duchamp?"<br />     Denys stalked angrily up to him. "Where is she?"<br />     Cleary blinked. "Who, sir?"<br />     Denys held his wrist up to show the crewman the activated sensor.<br />     "Claudia. Where is she?"<br />     "Back on the HATTON, sir," was the swift response.<br />     "No she isn’t. Where’d you hide her?"<br />     Sakretis followed Cleary out of the shuttle. "We didn’t bring her<br />     with us," he told Denys.<br />     "No, sir," Fox said, putting in an appearance.<br />     "You got her bugged?" Morrison asked. He gave Denys a fatuous<br />     grin. "Ah, love."<br />     "He worries about her," Toffler added as he joined the crowd<br />     around Denys.<br />     "You’ve got a sensor," Harcort pointed out. "If you want to find<br />     her all you have to do is -- "<br />     "I know what I have to do!" Denys shouted. He raced off, following<br />     the sensor coordinates.<br />     He’d only gone about a dozen yards when he thought better of his<br />     quick exit.  He halted  just  long enough  to order,  "Finish  the<br /> loading and<br />     don’t move from this spot until I get back." He didn’t trust them,<br /> not<br />     for a single minute.<br />     He followed the sensor light into a busy terminal, then pushed<br />     through a thick crowd until he reached an empty loading gate.  The<br /> hard<br />     plastic seats were empty, the desk  in the center of the gate  was<br /> empty.<br />     The sensor blinked steadily, indicating she was no more than a few<br /> yards<br />     away. Denys looked around frantically.<br />     "Claudia!" he shouted, as worried as he was angry. He had to get<br />     her back. He had to get her home. He didn’t know what he was going<br /> to do<br />     if he didn’t get her home. He was going to have to drag her out of<br /> the<br />     building in  front of  a crowd,  wasn’t he?  How was  he going  to<br /> manage to<br />     get her away from the airport without getting himself arrested?<br />     "Claudia!"<br />     Heads turned his way. He didn’t pay any attention to anyone that<br />     was not Claudia. Where the devil was she?<br />     Then he noticed the jet easing slowly away from the building. He<br />     watched helplessly as it taxied toward a nearby runway, blinding<br />     sunlight glinted off its wide wings. The indicator readings  began<br /> to<br />     show his target receding, moving  away from the building.  Claudia<br /> was on<br />     the jet.<br />     Of course Claudia was on the airplane. She wanted to go home.<br />     How was he supposed to get her off a moving airplane? Denys swore<br />     again, and  made  his  way  as quickly  as  possible  out  of  the<br /> building. Once<br />     outside he tore at top speed across the baking tarmac, sweating in<br /> the<br />     hot sunlight.<br />     Back at the shuttle, he shouted at the gaping crew. "Wait here!"<br />     He rushed  into the  cockpit  and started  the engine.  While  the<br /> systems<br />     came on line he made one more quick dash outside. "Don’t," he<br />     ordered the stunned  sextet, "touch anything.  And stay away  from<br /> the<br />     ouzo."<br />     With those words of wisdom spoken, he hurried back to the control<br />     board, switched on the Stealth shield and lifted the shuttle  from<br /> the<br />     ground at breakneck speed. He made detailed and inventive promises<br /> about<br />     what he was going to do to  Claudia Cameron once he got his  hands<br /> on her<br />     as he set off chasing the unsuspecting airliner.<br />     ##<br />     Claudia slept through most of the flight, waking up occasionally<br />     to complain that the bed wasn’t doing its job. Then she’d remember<br /> she<br />     wasn’t on board the HATTON, and that the seat was just a seat. An<br />     impersonal, inanimate  object  with  no dutiful  interest  in  the<br /> comfort of<br />     its occupant. Which was as it should be, she’d remind herself, and<br /> drift<br />     off again.<br />     At O’Hare she got through Customs quickly. Lord knew she had<br />     nothing to  declare  but  a  broken heart,  and  nobody  would  be<br /> interested in<br />     hearing about that. She splashed lots of cold water on her face in<br /> a<br />     washroom, drank some  very bad,  overpriced coffee in  one of  the<br /> airport<br />     cafeterias, then boarded a commuter plane for Dubuque. Her own car<br /> was<br />     waiting in the airport’s long term parking lot for the three  hour<br /> drive<br />     home to  Bradden Falls.  She was  exhausted, but  she made  it  to<br /> Bradden<br />     Falls on a fistful of candybars  and the radio tuned to a  station<br /> playing<br />     Alternative rock music, which she couldn’t stand. Sugar and sheer<br />     dislike kept her awake long enough to pull into her driveway.<br />     She got out, unsteady on her feet, and looked with bleary vision<br />     at the beautiful,  two-story restored farmhouse  she called  home.<br /> The<br />     house was painted  white, with  blue trim.  A wide  porch full  of<br /> mismatched<br />     lawn furniture wrapped around the  front, a bay window thrust  out<br /> on the<br />     side. The house was  set on wooded land,  with roses in the  front<br /> and a<br />     big vegetable garden  out back. A  huge oak tree  shaded the  side<br /> with the bay<br />     window.<br />     She liked to watch the squirrels and birds gathered around the<br />     feeder hung on a tree branch from the bay window. She had a<br />     peaceful, normal life, and she loved  it. She canned a lot of  her<br /> own<br />     vegetables, baked bread in her high-tech kitchen, and built<br />     fires in the  living room  fireplace in  the winter.  There was  a<br /> braided<br />     rug her grandmother had made in front of the brick hearth.<br />     She’d worked very hard to make it a picture-perfect, American<br />     folktale,  Midwestern  sort  of  home.  Home.  She  found  herself<br /> beginning<br />     to sniff. She had a rocking  chair. She’d always thought it  would<br /> come in<br />     handy if she ever got around to having a baby.<br />     But she was never going to have a baby because Denys was on a<br />     starship hundreds of  years in  the future  and she  was stuck  in<br /> Nowhere,<br />     Iowa all  by  herself!  How could  she  go  back to  such  a  dull<br /> existence<br />     after her  adventures on  the HATTON?  How could  she bear  to  be<br /> alone? Even<br />     in a picture-perfect,  Midwestern sort of  house. The picture  was<br /> all<br />     wrong because instead of having anyone  to share it with, she  was<br /> all<br />     alone.<br />     "I’m tired," she said, shaking tears off her cheeks. "That’s all.<br />     Just tired. He  didn’t dump me  here, I came  back voluntarily.  I<br /> don’t<br />     belong in his world."<br />     She’d forgotten for a moment that this was where she really<br />     belonged,  not  on  board  the  HATTON.  Certainly  not  in  Denys<br /> Duchamp’s bed.<br />     She knew she was just suffering  from exhaustion or stress or  jet<br /> lag.<br />     Probably all three. Reaction was making her feel weak and lost and<br />     lonely. She told herself she’d be delighted to be home as soon  as<br /> she<br />     got a good night’s sleep. All  she needed was some rest, and  time<br /> to put<br />     the whole experience on the mining ship into some perspective.<br />     A couple hundred years would probably be all she needed to sort<br />     out her feelings for Denys Duchamp.<br />     She dragged herself wearily up the porch steps, found the spare<br />     key in the mailbox  and trudged into the  house. She didn’t  waste<br /> time looking<br />     around her home. She  knew it was neat  and clean, after all,  her<br /> own cleaning<br />     service was contracted to show up twice a week. She didn’t  bother<br /> with checking<br />     her voicemail, or the pile of mail  on the hall table next to  the<br /> phone. She had no<br />     interest in checking her computer for e-mail messages, either. She<br /> didn’t care<br />     about anything but getting some rest.<br />     He’s so handsome, she found herself recalling as she climbed the<br />     stairs to  her bedroom.  She missed  him. Even  though she  hadn’t<br /> talked to<br />     him for a few days, she missed the sound of his voice. Even though<br /> he<br />     was a rat who never gave her any choices and thought he knew  what<br /> was<br />     best for her and  treated her like an  idiot, she couldn’t  forget<br /> that he was handsome.<br />     And protective, and caring,  and intelligent. And handsome.  Sexy,<br /> too. Incredibly<br />     sexy. And a wonderful lover.<br />     Damn.<br />     She entered the bedroom at the top of the stairs and threw herself<br />     on the Battenburg lace spread without bothering to<br />     slip her sandals off. She grabbed a pillow and buried her face  in<br /> it.<br />     He had the most devastating cheekbones I’ve ever seen, she thought<br />     as she waited for sleep. And such  a nice little rear end. It  was<br /> always<br />     so cute when he forgot his towel and I....<br />     ##<br />     Denys parked the shuttle outside the blue and white house and<br />     climbed out cautiously to look around. The sensor beeped<br />     quietly,  its  indicator  light   pulsed  rapidly,  the   distance<br /> indicator<br />     telling him Claudia was inside. He could only hope no one else<br />     was with her.<br />     He stretched tiredly as he squinted in the late afternoon<br />     sunlight. If this  was Claudia’s home,  he certainly]]></description>
<pubDate><![CDATA[Fri, 15 May 2009 20:15:54 +0400]]></pubDate>
<comments><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post57322496/]]></comments>
<guid><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post57322496/#BlCom519199358]]></guid>
<author><![CDATA[]]></author>
</item>
<item><title><![CDATA[Ïîìîãèòå]]></title>
<link><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post57322496/#BlCom519199171]]></link>
<description><![CDATA[ïðîäîëæåíèå> | I found you asleep in Maureen’s  bed.<br /> So I<br />     thought we should  talk." He  peered at her  closely. "What’s  the<br /> problem?"<br />     Her eyes narrowed. "Who’s Maureen?"<br />     This was hardly relevant, but Denys answered anyway. "She was the<br />     ship’s cook, but she got transferred to -- "<br />     "Put some clothes on."<br />     Claudia’s voice was shrill, and she was still blushing. He didn’t<br />     like her being so uncomfortable. He got the impression she  wasn’t<br /> going<br />     to calm down  until he was  dressed. He supposed  there were  some<br /> cultural<br />     signals he didn’t understand despite his knowledge of her time’s<br />     history.<br />     Must be some sort of body taboo, he decided. Maybe she found<br />     waking  up  to  find  a   nearly  naked  male  looming  over   her<br /> threatening. No,<br />     she hadn’t looked threatened when she’d first woken up. Well,  she<br /> was<br />     acting that way now. The last thing he needed was her rushing  out<br /> the<br />     door and yelling for help.<br />     He went to his locker and quickly donned his uniform once more. He<br />     moved slowly  and  carefully, not  wanting  to provoke  any  panic<br /> reaction.<br />     Claudia watched him warily as he teased his way through a reverse<br />     strip tease. She didn’t know why the man was moving so seductively<br /> but<br />     she tried not to pay attention. She concentrated on trying to  get<br /> a look<br />     inside the closet-sized  personal locker he  pulled garments  from<br /> while it<br />     was open. Gather data, she told herself, it’s more important than<br />     watching Denys Duchamp.<br />     She saw more uniforms, shoes and a hat on a top shelf, what she<br />     thought was the shirt he’d been wearing when they met on the beach<br /> hung<br />     among the uniforms and  other civilian garb.  The contents of  the<br /> locker<br />     left her in no doubt she was in Denys room.<br />     "Why did Cleary bring me here?" she questioned when Denys turned<br />     back to her. "What’s going on here?"<br />     "Cleary." He said the name as though it was explanation enough for<br />     everything that could possibly go  wrong in the universe. Then  he<br /> went<br />     on, "I was  confused about it  myself at first.  Have a seat."  He<br /> waved her<br />     to the pair of chairs at the room’s small table. She tried not  to<br /> notice<br />     how gracefully he moved as they  took chairs on opposite sides  of<br /> the<br />     table. Once they  were seated,  he told her,  "It makes  a lot  of<br /> sense,<br />     really."<br />     He liked the way her eyes went round with surprise when he said<br />     their being in the same room made sense. They both knew  perfectly<br /> well<br />     nothing about  this situation  made sense.  He shouldn’t  even  be<br /> talking to<br />     her. The less information she had the safer it would be for all of<br /> them.<br />     He also  liked the  way her  sleep-tousled brown  hair framed  her<br /> face. She<br />     rested her  hands on  the tabletop  and leaned  forward a  little,<br /> giving him<br />     a better view  of her cleavage  as her gauze  blouse gaped open  a<br /> little<br />     bit.  He  had  no  body  taboos,  just  an  appreciation  of   the<br /> differences<br />     between the genders.<br />     His gaze drifted to the top of her breasts and stayed there as she<br />     asked, "What makes sense, really?"<br />     Some massage oil would make a great deal of sense, he thought.<br />     Some warm, spicy scent, like capthera flowers. He’d like to  spill<br /> just a<br />     drop, right there, at the spot at the base of her throat and watch<br /> it<br />     slide down into the soft shadows between her breasts, following it<br /> with<br />     just a fingertip, smoothing and gliding around and under and up to<br /> --<br />     "Denys? Are you all right? Are you hungry?" she repeated his<br />     question from earlier.<br />     "Starving," he answered, aware of the tight ache in his groin.<br />     He cleared his throat and sat up straight. He looked at the<br />     tabletop rather than at her breasts or meeting her eyes. He had to<br /> keep<br />     himself under control or this was  going to be one painfully  long<br /> trip.<br />     He had to remember that  she was a danger  to the mission, to  the<br /> crew.<br />     Her lush, inviting body was definitely a danger to him.<br />     "Cleary," he said, determined to get on with an explanation. "He<br />     must have realized Smid, or someone else from Third Shift would<br />     eventually  notice  someone  using  unoccupied  quarters.   Energy<br /> consumption,<br />     that sort of thing. So the most  sensible thing to do was put  you<br /> into an<br />     already occupied  room. Somewhere  where  any extra  energy  usage<br /> won’t be<br />     easily noticed." He  managed to  finally look at  her, and  smile.<br /> "I’ve got<br />     room, the crew doesn’t," he told her. "So this really is the most<br />     logical solution. I just wish Cleary’d asked my permission first,"<br /> he<br />     added. "You took me by surprise when I first walked in."<br />     She looked around the room, gave a thoughtful nod, then back at<br />     him. "It  also looks  to me  as  if Cleary’s  putting me  in  here<br /> incriminates<br />     you first if I get caught."<br />     He nodded his agreement. "I’ve thought of that, too."<br />     "Explains why he didn’t ask first."<br />     "You have a devious mind, Dr. Cameron."<br />     "Yes, I do." He was glad she chose to take his words as a<br />     compliment. She sat back in her chair. "I don’t like this."<br />     "I’m sorry." Actually, he was getting tired of apologizing for his<br />     crew imbecile behavior. It wasn’t  the woman’s fault, he  reminded<br /> himself<br />     sternly. But she was the outsider, the wild element that put  them<br /> all at<br />     risk. He had to keep his dealings with her professional.<br />     He should be polite, no more, fight the temptation to relax his<br />     guard. He  didn’t know  why being  with her  made him  want to  be<br /> charming<br />     and accommodating,  but  he  knew  it couldn’t  be  good  for  the<br /> mission.<br />     "We’re both going to be inconvenienced by this, Dr. Cameron," he<br />     said. "We might as well make the best of the situation, don’t you<br />     think?"<br />     His tone was reasonable, with just a hint of cool condescension.<br />     Claudia chafed under his more  reasonable than thou attitude,  but<br /> she had<br />     to agree with his assessment.  "Fine," she said. "But we’re  going<br /> to need<br />     some groundrules  if we’re  going  to be  sharing quarters  for  a<br /> while."<br />     She looked as if she was uncomfortable with the idea of him as a<br />     roommate. She seemed to assume some sexual connotations to the<br />     arrangement. Not  that  he wouldn’t  have  minded getting  into  a<br /> sexual<br />     situation with her under other circumstances, but sex and living<br />     arrangements had nothing to do with each other. Not in his  world.<br /> Not<br />     that he could expect her to understand that. He was going to  have<br /> to be<br />     patient, and he really  wasn’t that patient a  man. He would  just<br /> have to<br />     humor her as much as he could.<br />     "Of course," he said agreeably. "I’ll do whatever I can to make<br />     you completely happy, Dr. Cameron."<br />     Her eyes went round again, and the pink blush returned to her<br />     cheeks. "You will? I mean... thank you."<br />     He wondered if he’d used an inappropriate term, but didn’t ask for<br />     clarification. It would be better if he didn’t try to get to  know<br /> her.<br />     He kept his tone formal as he asked, "What do you want me to do?"<br />     She bit her lip, then cleared her throat, then said in a tight<br />     voice as  though  the  subject  were  somehow  embarrassing.  "I’d<br /> appreciate<br />     it if you didn’t walk around in just your underwear."<br />     It was on the tip of his tongue to ask why, then he remembered<br />     about her body taboo. "All right,"  he agreed. It seemed a  simple<br /> enough<br />     request.<br />     He just hoped he had the willpower to remember her culture instead<br />     of reacting to his  own behavior patterns.  Besides, he wanted  to<br /> take his<br />     clothes off around her, and wanted her to do the same. Maybe  this<br /> was a<br />     case of  there  being  sexual  connotations  to  being  roommates.<br /> Connotations<br />     that he was going to ignore. Somehow.<br />     It was Claudia who voiced his thoughts when she said, "It’s going<br />     to be two very long months, Mr. Duchamp."<br />     "I’ll drink to that, Dr. Cameron," he answered, and got up to get<br />     them some of  the tasteless  hot beverage  they laughingly  called<br /> coffee<br />     aboard the HATTON.<br />     Chapter Four<br />     "I’m beginning to have suspicions about the bed," Claudia told<br />     Denys as he came into the room.<br />     "Lunch," he announced, holding up a laden tray for her inspection.<br />     Claudia smiled weakly, and tried not to look. Her stomach curdled<br />     anyway. "Thank you. About the bed..."<br />     "What about it?"<br />     "I think it likes me." She looked over her shoulder at the bed<br />     alcove. "I mean, it’s got a mind of its own, doesn’t it?"<br />     In the last few nights she’d found that it was very hard to lie<br />     down on the comfortable mattress without falling into almost<br />     instantaneous, peaceful slumber. There was something odd about it.<br /> She<br />     always woke refreshed, and with a sense that the bed got an almost<br /> smug<br />     sense of satisfaction  at her  rested state. It  was beginning  to<br /> bother<br />     her.<br />     "A mind?" He gave her a winning smile. "No. It is equipped with a<br />     medisensor, though. It’s got an empathic... never mind."<br />     Denys did that a lot; started to explain something, then trailed<br />     off and told her  not to mind. That  was beginning to bother  her,<br /> too. She<br />     was a person who thrived on information. She was, and<br />     admittedly, without shame, nosy. Explore Your World, as they<br />     said on the Discovery Channel.  Or, in this case, explore  someone<br /> else’s<br />     world. Which she’d be happy to do if Denys would just let her.<br />     The door swished closed behind him as he carried the dinner tray<br />     to the table.  "Oh, good," she  muttered under her  breath as  she<br /> joined<br />     him at the  table. "Glop again."  She’d been served  gray glop  at<br /> every<br />     meal. Three  days worth  of glop  so  far. "You  seem to  have  an<br /> endless<br />     supply of it."<br />     He turned on the smile again as they sat. She concentrated on his<br />     face, rather than look at the gray mess on her plate. "That is the<br />     point. Of your being here, I  mean," he said. "We have an  endless<br /> supply<br />     of generative nutritional matter, and no one who knows how to do<br />     anything with it. Except you, of course."<br />     She look at the glop, then poked it with a fork. It writhed a<br />     little. "I haven’t the faintest notion of what to do with glop. I<br />     remember eating that  pasty white  glue back  in kindergarten.  It<br /> tasted<br />     better than this."<br />     "You could try to learn how to program the kitchen computer, I<br />     suppose." He said it with strained artlessness. "I mean, if you’re<br />     really bored."<br />     He knew she was really bored. It was mostly his fault she was<br />     really bored. He’d let  her play computer  games, but he  wouldn’t<br /> let her<br />     read history books. He’d let her watch the view as they approached<br /> Mars<br />     - - at least space was getting to be a little more interesting  --<br /> but he<br />     wouldn’t let her play entertainment tapes from his century. He was<br />     willing to let her  learn how to use  a cooking computer, but  not<br /> learn<br />     anything else about how the ship  was run. He hadn’t said so,  but<br /> she<br />     suspected he was trying to protect  her. Or trying to protect  the<br /> future<br />     by keeping  her from  learning too  much about  it. Maybe  he  was<br /> afraid<br />     she’d inadvertently do something to change the future once she was<br /> back<br />     home if she knew  what the future was  suppose to be. Well,  maybe<br /> she<br />     would.<br />     And what was a mining ship from the future doing running around<br />     the solar system in the 20th Century anyway? She was dying to know<br />     what was really going  on. She looked at  the inoffensive glop  on<br /> the<br />     plate. And she was dying for a decent meal. Maybe she could make a<br /> deal<br />     with him.<br />     There’s so much I want to tell you, Denys thought as Claudia<br />     distastefully considered  her meal.  But he  couldn’t. Not  if  he<br /> wanted to<br />     get her back to Earth. Not that  he really wanted her to go  back.<br /> He<br />     liked having someone to come home to.<br />     But I’m just lonely, he told himself. And you’re an attractive<br />     woman who’s easy to be  with and talk to  and tease and listen  to<br /> and take<br />     care of. I’m going to take care of you, Claudia Cameron. I’m going<br /> to<br />     ignore this instinct, longing, whatever  it is that makes me  want<br /> to keep<br />     you with me, growing in me to be with you all the time. I’m  going<br /> to get<br />     you back to Earth even if I  end up hating myself for doing it.  I<br /> owe it<br />     to you.  I’m not  falling in  love  with you.  I’m just  a  lonely<br /> sailor.<br />     At first he hadn’t realized how dangerous it is was for her to be<br />     on board the HATTON. Never mind  the Captain, Claudia was her  own<br /> worst<br />     enemy here. She was too smart,  too curious, too devious. She  had<br /> this<br />     wonderful knack for putting facts together and figuring out the<br />     ramifications faster than  most computers.  If she  found out  too<br /> many<br />     facts and figured out too much and, he couldn’t let her go home.<br />     I’m sorry if you’re bored, Claudia, he thought as he watched her<br />     pushing her meal around her plate. But bored is safer than being<br />     permanently stranded  in  your own  future  because you  have  the<br /> ability to<br />     change it if I let you loose  with too much knowledge in your  own<br /> time.<br />     What he had to do was keep her busy. He knew how. It’d be good for<br />     her. Good for the men and morale. He knew what she’d said about<br />     not cooking a crumb for her kidnappers. He didn’t blame her for<br />     being angry with the men.<br />     But, face it, Denys admitted, Cleary had a pretty good idea what<br />     the crew needed when he kidnapped her. He wished Cleary hadn’t<br />     done it, but he was glad that he had because Denys knew he and his<br /> men<br />     could really use some decent food. He believed that the chili lady<br /> would<br />     see it that way soon. He  was hoping she’d get bored and  restless<br /> enough<br />     to reconsider poking her nose into  the kitchen. That was the  one<br /> place<br />     on the ship where her presence could help rather than endanger the<br />     mission.<br />     "So, what happened to your cook?" she asked, hoping this was a<br />     topic he’d  been  wanting to  bring  up. "Maureen  was  her  name,<br /> right?"<br />     He nodded. "Maureen Lansky. Best cook in the FCW. That’s what<br />     Admiral Delvecchio  said  when  Maureen was  transferred  off  the<br /> HATTON."<br />     She stirred the glop slowly as an unhappy thought crossed<br />     her mind,  not  for the  first  time.  "Women are  the  cooks  and<br /> housekeepers<br />     of the future?" She certainly hadn’t noticed any women among her<br />     kidnappers. "Is that all we do?"<br />     "No!" he said quickly. He threw back his head and gave a short,<br />     harsh laugh. "If you only knew... never mind."<br />     "What do you mean, ’never mind’? I do mind. If women are going to<br />     make it into space we have a right to make it on equal terms  with<br /> the<br />     men who -- "<br />     "It was Admiral Shirley Delvecchio who snatched Maureen," he<br />     interrupted. "Women don’t just cook, our cook just happened to  be<br /> a<br />     woman. All right?" he questioned. His icy blue eyes were hard with<br />     annoyance, but  she  got the  distinct  feeling the  anger  wasn’t<br /> completely<br />     directed at her.<br />     She relaxed, and gave Denys a conciliatory smile. "Well, I worry."<br />     He nodded, and went on briskly. "Maureen took her recipe codes<br />     with her. Erased the files  from the computer. We complained,  but<br /> Captain<br />     Andrews agreed with her that she owned the data. She’s like you --<br /> won<br />     lots of cooking prizes and so forth. But not like you, I mean," he<br />     hastily explained. "You’re not  selfish or petty  or that sort  of<br /> thing."<br />     The ice in his eyes had been melting as he spoke. The look he gave<br /> her<br />     now was warming, his smile mildly teasing. "You’d never deny a man<br /> a<br />     decent meal, would you,  Dr. Cameron? If you  were ship’s cook,  I<br /> mean?<br />     Which you’re not, of course."<br />     Claudia escaped from his charm by hastily looking down at her<br />     plate. "This stuff is some kind of nutritional proto-food, right?"<br />     "Correct."<br />     "Where does it come from?"<br />     "Do you really want to know?"<br />     "No. Okay, is cooking in the future done by using a computer to<br />     turn glop into food?"<br />     "Essentially."<br />     "It’s a cross between computer programming and chemistry, right?"<br />     "Right," he answered cheerfully. "I guess. I’m no good at it<br />     myself. Maureen says it’s an art form."<br />     "Of course cooking’s an art form," Claudia said, half indignant,<br />     half amused. "I thought you were French."<br />     He gave a very French shrug. "My family’s been on -- never mind --<br />     a long time."<br />     "You’ve never heard of Escoffier, I don’t suppose? Never mind,"<br />     she added. "I’m not terribly good at French cuisine, anyway."<br />     "How about Greek cooking?" he wondered.<br />     His tone was so deliberately casual she had to smile. His lack of<br />     subtlety was endearing. It didn’t hurt that his casually inquiring<br />     expression was worn on a face she thought was the handsomest she’d<br /> ever<br />     seen. She’d enjoyed every minute they’d been together in the  last<br /> three<br />     days. It wasn’t just  that he was her  only diversion, or that  he<br /> was<br />     gorgeous. She liked him. He was fun to be with. She was  beginning<br /> to<br />     suspect she more than liked him.<br />     If it wasn’t for the bed’s friendly determination to give her a<br />     good night’s sleep, she wasn’t sure how she could stand sharing  a<br /> room<br />     with  such  a  thoroughly  masculine  creature.  It  was  so  very<br /> tempting,<br />     having him in the bed just a few feet from hers. Right now he  was<br /> only<br />     inches away, and it was very tempting.<br />     Things fluttered; her heart, her stomach, her eyelashes. She tried<br />     to ignore the pleasant, tingling,  warm feeling she got from  just<br /> looking<br />     at Denys Duchamp. She dragged her attention back to the subject of<br /> food.<br />     "Of course, you’re talking about the supplies I came with. I’d<br />     forgotten that there’s real food on board."<br />     "I haven’t. Neither has the crew. But they’re getting tired of<br />     olives and tins of fish."<br />     "I’d kill for an olive," she told him.<br />     "Women are so aggressive," he teased back. At least she thought he<br />     was teasing.<br />     "And a sliver of goat cheese," she added wistfully. "I bet I could<br />     do a lot with the supplies they stuffed into the box with me."<br />     He leaned toward her and said in a low, seductive, conspiratorial<br />     voice, "I bet you could do a lot with whatever you set your  hands<br /> to."<br />     His voice, the softly spoken, beautifully accented words flowed<br />     over her; made her  feel like she was  melting. And all they  were<br /> talking<br />     about was cooking. She wondered how she’d react to more personal<br />     comments. Remembering the<br />     table was between  them, and  they were really  talking about  her<br /> cooking<br />     skills, kept Claudia from closing her eyes and waiting for him  to<br /> kiss<br />     her.<br />     What the man is offering you, she forced herself to think<br />     logically, is a chance to get out of this room. Getting out of<br />     this room would be the best thing for her. She had to do something<br /> to<br />     get her  mind off  of  Denys Duchamp.  Get  out, meet  people,  do<br /> things, work<br />     off some energy. She needed to  remind herself that he wasn’t  the<br /> only<br />     person in the world.<br />     I’m only  feeling attracted  to  him due  to  his being  the  only<br /> contact I’ve had<br />     with the  rest  of  the  world, she  told  herself  sternly.  This<br /> delightful ache I get from<br />     looking at him  is only because  he’s the only  thing I’ve had  to<br /> look at. I’ll go<br />     crazy -- and jump his bones -- long before two months are up if  I<br /> can’t<br />     get out of this room and away from him once in a while.<br />     That’s it. That’s all it is. Claustrophobia. Okay, it was also<br />     good old-fashioned lust. She could deal with lust if she could get<br /> some<br />     breathing space.<br />     "You want me to cook for the crew?" Before he even had a chance to<br />     nod, she said, "I’ll do it. Take me," she ordered firmly, "to your<br />     kitchen."<br />     ##<br />     Cleary and the others were already there when they arrived. The<br />     big, white room  she assumed  had to  be the  kitchen was  several<br /> decks<br />     below the  quarters  she shared  with  Denys. They  arrived  by  a<br /> roundabout<br />     route involving service hatches and catwalks and ladders. Claudia<br />     thought it was mysterious and fun.<br />     The door slid closed silently behind her and Denys, just like Star<br />     Trek --or at a grocery store. The crew stood in the center of  the<br /> room,<br />     gathered around  a narrow  central island  stacked high  with  the<br /> foodstuffs<br />     they’d liberated from Doros.<br />     She ignored the food while she made a slow inspection tour of the<br />     room. Denys tagged  along behind;  she felt the  other men’s  eyes<br /> following<br />     her.<br />     The room was white on white on white. More like a NASA lab than a<br />     kitchen, she thought. It didn’t look a thing like a kitchen, she<br />     concluded after a few minutes. She saw control panels and computer<br />     monitors instead of stovetops and prep equipment.<br />     "There has to be a stove in here somewhere," she grumbled. "One of<br />     those panels has got to be  a microwave." She looked to Denys  for<br /> help.<br />     "Doesn’t it?"<br />     "We can ask the computer where and what everything is," he assured<br />     her. He sat down at a control board. "Just tell me what you need."<br /> The<br />     men came up behind them as a blank screen above the board turned a<br />     pleasant shade of blue.<br />     She thought for a few moments, then said, "I’ll settle for a few<br />     pots and pans and a good ten-inch French knife."<br />     "Knife?" one of the men questioned incredulously. "Why do women<br />     always have to be so aggressive?"<br />     "It’s to chop up onions and things with, you twit," She heard<br />     Cleary answer. "Cooking, the old-fashioned way."<br />     "Oh."<br />     Claudia turned to face the crowd. "Who are you people, anyway?"<br />     she demanded. Introductions were quickly made. Everyone gave her a<br />     friendly, hopeful smile. She got a strong impression of a pack of<br />     helpful puppies.<br />     "I’ve found a kitchen inventory file," Denys said.<br />     She turned back to face the screen and ran her eyes down the list<br />     Denys had  called  up. Within  seconds  she was  reading  off  her<br /> selections<br />     and the crew was scurrying to  storage bins and cabinet panels  to<br /> fill<br />     her order. She soon discovered  that there was indeed a  microwave<br /> --like<br />     everything else  she requested,  it  was considered  an  emergency<br /> backup<br />     unit.<br />     "Amazing," she said and went off to examine the utensils the crew<br />     had piled next  to the  supplies. It  wasn’t long  before she  was<br /> chopping<br />     onions and eggplant and measuring olive oil and trying to remember<br />     exactly how much nutmeg went into moussaka. Not that she needed a<br />     cookbook  for  every  little  detail  of  a  recipe.  Cooking  was<br /> chemistry and<br />     art, after all.<br />     Denys breathed a satisfied sigh as he watched Claudia work. She<br />     was definitely in her element at  last. He wouldn’t have to  worry<br /> about<br />     her curiosity as long  as he could keep  her cooking, he  decided.<br /> Though<br />     it was best not to trust completely in her love of cooking to keep<br /> her occupied.<br />     He noticed how the Shift Crew were all watching her with rapt<br />     devotion and sighed again. He also  had to admit to a slight  pang<br /> of<br />     jealousy, but he was able to  control it easily enough. She’s  not<br /> mine to<br />     be jealous of, he reminded himself. Or any of theirs, either.<br />     It took some effort, but he managed to get the group. s<br />     attention. He had them follow him to the door, far enough from the<br />     preoccupied Claudia to be out of her hearing.<br />     "First," he told them in a quiet, firm voice once he had most of<br />     their attention,  "hands off."  He received  six blank  stares  in<br /> reply.<br />     Sakretis’s stare was not  only blank, he  was loudly sniffing  the<br /> pungent<br />     aroma coming from the microwave.<br />     "Hands off the food, Duchamp?" Fox asked. "But, sir..."<br />     "No, not the food," Denys answered. "Dr. Cameron. She’s to be<br />     treated with the utmost respect. Am I understood?"<br />     "We’re not supposed to put any moves on her," Cleary clarified for<br />     him.<br />     "Oh," Morrison said, nodding his understanding. "Of course not,<br />     Duchamp."<br />     "My wife wouldn’t like it," Toffler said. He glanced back over his<br />     shoulder at Claudia, who was doing something with the knife and  a<br /> clove<br />     of garlic. "She likes knives too. My wife, I mean."<br />     "Mine’s into tae kwan do," Harcort said.<br />     "Isabella’s learning small arms," said Fox. "She said she’s<br />     getting special forces training in her last letter."<br />     "Never mind your wives," Denys said in some exasperation. "We’re<br />     talking about Dr. Cameron. I just wanted it understood that  she’s<br /> to be<br />     treated as a lady at all times."<br />     "He wants her for himself," said Cleary.<br />     "That’s nice," said Toffler. "They make a nice couple."<br />     "I do not want -- never mind." It seemed useless to Denys to try<br />     to argue with the crew. "More  importantly," he went on, "I  don’t<br /> want<br />     any of  you discussing  any  history, or  current events,  or  our<br /> mission<br />     with Dr. Cameron. This is for her  own good. If we want to  return<br /> her to<br />     her own time  we have  to keep her  ignorant of  ours." He  looked<br /> around sternly.<br />     "Got it?"<br />     There were five thoughtful nods. Sakretis managed to nod<br />     while continuing his appreciative sniffing. "Yes, sir," several of<br /> the<br />     men muttered. He  supposed they  must be taking  him seriously  if<br /> they went<br />     so far as to acknowledge his rank.<br />     "Good," Denys said, and smiled at his crew.<br />     "Hey, you guys," Claudia called as the group turned back toward<br />     her. "Enough of this  male bonding." She pointed  at a dish  she’d<br /> set on<br />     the table. "Gentlemen, dinner’s ready."<br />     There was a collective sigh, and rush for the central counter.<br />     This was going to work out just fine, Denys decided as he followed<br /> his<br />     men. Claudia met his gaze and  they smiled at each other over  the<br /> heads<br />     of the crew. Better  than fine, he thought,  pleased to have  made<br /> her<br />     happy.<br />     ##<br />     There was a six foot bunny in the doorway. Closer to seven,<br />     Claudia decided as she  noted the length of  the bunny’s ears.  He<br /> had soft<br />     gray fur, big brown  eyes, and a pink,  twitching nose. The  bunny<br /> was<br />     standing upright.  He was  wearing a  blue coverall  uniform  like<br /> everyone<br />     else on board the  ship, and carrying  a clipboard. Not  carrying,<br /> she<br />     decided, cradling it  lovingly. A bunny.  In the kitchen  doorway.<br /> She<br />     blinked, but the apparition didn’t go away.<br />     "Oh my ears and whiskers," she whispered hoarsely, and tugged<br />     on Cleary’s arm.<br />     He was standing with his back to the door, having just opened the<br />     microwave to peer inside. Denys made sure someone from the crew<br />     accompanied her whenever she came to the kitchen. She had no<br />     chance to explore  on her  own. Now that  she was  faced with  her<br /> first<br />     alien, for the apparition had to be an alien of some kind, she was<br />     rather glad she wasn’t alone.<br />     She tugged on her companion’s sleeve again. "It’s night of the<br />     lepus, Cleary. I really wish you’d pay attention."<br />     She really wished she had taken Cleary’s advice and<br />     left the kitchen an hour ago. He’d warned her that the members  of<br /> Third<br />     Shift weren’t like Second Shift and it would be best to try not to<br /> run<br />     into  any  of  them.  The  furry  gentleman  in  the  doorway  was<br /> definitely not<br />     like any member of Second Shift.<br />     Cleary finally turned around. "Hello, Smid," he said. "What are<br />     you doing here?"<br />     The bunny came over to the counter. He peered closely at Claudia.<br />     "A human female," he said. He looked at his clipboard. "She’s  not<br /> on<br />     your cargo manifest."<br />     Cleary gave his most innocent smile. Claudia was warned by it,<br />     she’d gotten to know Cleary’s rascally ways quite well in the four<br /> days<br />     she’d been cooking for the crew. She just hoped the bunny wouldn’t<br /> be<br />     warned by his sudden excess of blarney. "She’s cargo, Smid," he<br />     explained. "Part of the extra two hundred pounds you were  worried<br /> about.<br />     She came from Earth with the rest of the supplies."<br />     He was telling the truth, more or less. Which was the best you<br />     could expect from Cleary. She  couldn’t believe it. She stared  at<br /> Cleary<br />     in dumbfounded  consternation.  Was he  turning  her over  to  the<br /> Captain?<br />     She’d been given to understand  that Captain Charles Andrews  made<br /> Captain<br />     Bligh seem about as cold and cruel as Mickey Mouse.<br />     Or maybe I was told he looks like Mickey Mouse, she thought,<br />     eyeing Smid warily.<br />     "The Book said we were supposed to pick up all necessary supplies<br />     for the  mission from  Earth," Cleary  went on.  "Dr. Cameron’s  a<br /> necessary<br />     supply. We’re just going by the Book."<br />     Claudia listened closely to Cleary’s words. Book. Mission.<br />     Necessary supplies. She was dying to find out what the HATTON  was<br /> up to,<br />     what the mission was, but no one  would tell her a thing. She  was<br /> willing<br />     to bet Denys wouldn’t let them. Need to know and other security<br />     nonsense. She’d always hated security nonsense, it was part of the<br />     reason she’d left her post  with the university think tank.  Never<br /> mind<br />     worrying about  the mission  now, she  cautioned herself  sternly.<br /> You’ve<br />     got to worry about the rabbit right now.<br />     She managed to dredge up a wan smile for Smid. "Hello," she<br />     managed. "I’m happy to meet you."<br />     She wished she had some fresh vegetables to offer him, but they<br />     were pretty much  out of supplies  of any kind.  She and  Cleary’d<br /> been<br />     discussing her trying to  learn how to  program the food  computer<br /> when<br />     Smid walked in on them.<br />     "Care for a snack?" she offered the rabbit. "I think there’s a<br />     couple of olives left."<br />     "I have come for my dinner," Smid told her. "Welcome to the<br />     mission, Dr. Cameron." Apparently  he was satisfied with  Cleary’s<br /> clearly<br />     lame explanation.  "It’s nice  to finally  have the  extra  weight<br /> explained.<br />     Humans," he added with a disdainful  twitch of whiskers as he  sat<br /> down at<br />     one of the computer consoles. He carefully placed his clipboard to<br /> one<br />     side.<br />     Smid had four&lt;->fingered hands; they moved with sure knowledge<br />     over the wide rows of keypads  on the control board. The  computer<br /> screen<br />     lit, the image  of something  which looked a  lot like  a head  of<br /> lettuce<br />     slowly took  form  on the  screen.  Claudia and  Cleary  exchanged<br /> surprised<br />     glances and drifted over to watch Smid at work.<br />     "You know how to run the food computer?" Cleary asked him as a<br />     panel opened near the console,  revealing a fresh-looking head  of<br /> lettuce<br />     on a serving tray. "You know how to run it and you never told us?"<br />     Cleary added with a pathetic whine.<br />     "Maureen gave me some rudimentary instruction before she left,"<br />     Smid replied. He turned in his seat to look at Cleary and Claudia.<br />     "Maureen knew I was not interested in stealing any of her special<br />     recipes."<br />     Maureen sounds a tad paranoid if you ask me, Claudia<br />     thought. She stepped back as Smid went to pick up his dinner tray.<br /> She<br />     knew the  lettuce was  formed somehow  from the  nutritional  gray<br /> glop. What<br />     she needed to know was how the rabbit had done it. She’d tried  to<br /> follow<br />     what he was doing with the computer, but knew she’d never be  able<br /> to<br />     recreate the sequence on her own.<br />     It’s a code, she thought. If she could get a few pieces of the<br />     code she  could figure  out how  to break  it. She  was good  with<br /> puzzles.<br />     Besides, she wasn’t in this alone. There were seven hungry men who<br /> were<br />     willing to help with the code breaking. All she had<br />     to do was convince Smid to show her how he did it. She thought she<br /> knew<br />     how.<br />     She smiled slowly and stepped forward once, blocking the tall<br />     rabbit’s exit. "I need your help," she said firmly. "For the  good<br /> of the<br />     mission. By the Book," she added.<br />     Cleary  caught  on  immediately  to  what  she  was  up  to,   and<br /> persuasively<br />     jumped in to explain to Smid just exactly what it<br />     was she and the  Book required of him.  With the authority of  the<br /> Book as<br />     incentive, Smid  was more  than happy  to put  off his  meal  long<br /> enough to<br />     teach her all he knew about the food program.<br />     ##<br />     "You’re naked again," Claudia pointed out as Denys came out of the<br />     head. She was sitting on the side of her bed, having already taken<br /> her<br />     turn at the  sonic shower and  put on the  pilfered tee-shirt  she<br /> used as a<br />     nightgown.<br />     "I’m wearing a towel," he said. Then he smiled, looked her in the<br />     eye, and slowly dropped the  towel. "Now I’m naked." Watching  her<br /> cheeks and<br />     other parts of her anatomy flame,  he added, "You really must  get<br /> over this body<br />     taboo, Claudia."<br />     Denys knew he shouldn’t be teasing her, but he liked the way her<br />     nipples were stirring beneath the  tight fitting tee-shirt as  she<br /> stared<br />     at him. Living with  her was driving him  crazy. He couldn’t  help<br /> but<br />     tease occasionally. She was such a lovely woman. He’d never been<br />     attracted to Maureen, though  she was an  attractive woman in  her<br /> own way.<br />     But not like Claudia. Nobody he’d ever met was like Claudia.<br />     He struck a bodybuilder’s pose and said, "There’s really nothing<br />     wrong with looking."<br />     "No," she agreed, and looked away. "I really wish you’d<br />     stop it.. What she really wished was that he’d come<br />     over to her  so she could  run her  hands and mouth  all over  his<br /> spare,<br />     leanly muscled frame. She wanted to touch and taste every inch  of<br /> him.<br />     "Go to bed, Denys Duchamp," she ordered. "Before you wreck all my<br />     cultural taboos, and completely spoil me for Earth men forever."<br />     "I wouldn’t want that." She heard the smirk in his voice, even<br />     though she wasn’t looking at the one on his face. "Or would I?"<br />     "You’re the one who doesn’t want me to know anything about your<br />     time." And in a biblical sense,  I really would love to know  you,<br /> she<br />     added silently. She lay down on her bed and turned her back to the<br /> room.<br />     "Goodnight," she said firmly.<br />     He laughed softly, said, "Sorry about the teasing. Sleep well,<br />     Claudia."<br />     Do I have a choice? she wondered, what with the magic empathic<br />     mattress here to  lull me  off to  dreamland the  first chance  it<br /> gets.<br />     Empathic. Responsive? Could the thing be programmed, she wondered.<br /> It<br />     was sort of alive. Maybe it took orders. She rolled onto her  back<br /> as<br />     Denys told the lights in the room to dim. What if the bed actually<br />     functioned like  an  alarm  clock? Or  had  an  emergency  wake-up<br /> setting? Was<br />     it voice activated, like the lights?<br />     "Okay," she whispered, "let’s see what this baby can do. Wake me<br />     up in four hours," she instructed, speaking slowly and  carefully.<br /> Four<br />     hours would be deep in the  middle of Third Shift. Denys would  be<br /> safely,<br />     deeply asleep. She might, if she  was careful, be able to get  out<br /> of<br />     their quarters and actually see  something of the ship. Alone.  On<br /> her<br />     own. What a wonderful idea.<br />     If this worked she could go down to the kitchen and play<br />     with the computer  all by  herself, she  thought as  she began  to<br /> drift off<br />     to sleep. The boys had been a lot of help. They’d learned a lot<br />     in the last couple of days, but she’d like some time to play  with<br /> the<br />     combinations all by herself. She couldn’t really create recipes in<br /> a<br />     crowd. She needed privacy to practice her art.<br />     And maybe she could get the kitchen computer to talk to other ship<br />     computers while nobody was looking. Maybe she could finally  start<br /> to<br />     indulge her curiosity. Wouldn’t that be wonderful. To finally find<br /> out<br />     what was really going on.<br />     She yawned. Her eyes were getting heavy. Very heavy. All right,<br />     she conceded to the  mattress. I give in.  Have your way with  me.<br /> Just<br />     please remember to wake me up in -<br />     Chapter Five<br />     BOING.<br />     What a strange noise, Claudia thought.<br />     BOING, it came again.<br />     The reading light came on.<br />     As she opened her eyes to the pitiless glare, she realized the<br />     bed was bouncing.  Well, not  bouncing, precisely.  The water,  or<br /> whatever<br />     material  filled  the  mattress,  was  swaying  in  a  gentle  but<br /> persistent<br />     rhythm. The blanket slithered its way down her torso, leaving  her<br /> legs<br />     bare as it folded itself neatly at the foot of the bed.<br />     BOI--<br />     "I’m awake, already," Claudia cut off the sound. The bed<br />     immediately desisted from its wakeup efforts; the light dimmed and<br /> the<br />     mattress stopped moving. "Thank you,  Thing," she muttered as  she<br /> swung<br />     her legs over the side of the bed.<br />     She dressed as quickly and as quietly as possible, all too aware<br />     of the deeply breathing mound occupying the other bed. He’s such a<br /> nice,<br />     protective mound, she thought  fondly of Denys  as she tiptoed  to<br /> the<br />     door. Only she didn’t need protecting, she added as she tossed one<br /> last<br />     look his way before slipping through the doorway.<br />     Once out in the empty corridor she felt almost lost for a second,<br />     slightly disoriented not to have Denys or one of the other crewmen<br /> at<br />     her side. "What’s your problem, girl?" she whispered to herself as<br /> she<br />     turned left  and headed  for  the hatch  that covered  the  nearby<br /> service<br />     duct. "This is what you wanted. Don’t be nervous now." Yeah, but<br />     Third Shift’s supposed to be weird, she argued with herself as she<br />     hurried along the well-known route. She spend some time going up a<br />     ladder  and  then  down  another  service  passage.  She   counted<br /> far-spaced<br />     light panels and service hatches as she moved nervously along.<br />     "What have I got to be nervous about?" she muttered to herself as<br />     she ventured alone through the  HATTON for the first time.  "Maybe<br /> there<br />     are more aliens  on board,"  she answered  her question  promptly.<br /> "You<br />     know, aliens  like  in Aliens  and  Independence Day.  Big,  nasty<br /> things<br />     with dripping fangs,  lots of dripping  fangs. With acid.  Ripley,<br /> I’m<br />     not." Oh, come on, she  countered silently, the only alien  you’ve<br /> met so<br />     far is a bunny rabbit. And if you want to talk movies, Smid’s  not<br /> a<br />     thing like Harvey, or Bugs Bunny  or Roger Rabbit. He’s quiet  and<br /> totally<br />     uninterested in us humans. She told herself that any other  aliens<br /> she<br />     met were  going to  be the  same way.  That she  was just  nervous<br /> because<br />     Denys  was  overprotective.  The  way  he  acted,  while  somewhat<br /> endearing,<br />     did make  her  suspect that  there  was  stuff she  needed  to  be<br /> protected<br />     from.<br />     "There’s nothing to be worried about," she told herself as she<br />     climbed one last ladder and pushed  open the hatch on the  kitchen<br /> deck.<br />     She gave a quick,  cautious scan of  the corridor. Nobody  around.<br /> With a<br />     sigh of relief, she scuttled out of the hatchway, across the<br />     corridor and into her own private domain of the kitchen.<br />     "Lights," Claudia called, and the overheads came dutifully on. She<br />     rubbed her hands together as she approached the computer and added<br />     cheerfully, "Camera. Action." She sat down to play.<br />     Time passed, and she managed to figure out a recipe for cream<br />     sauce. It  was  frustrating  because  she  was  trying  to  access<br /> different<br />     programs, not come up  with a bland  variation of bechamel  sauce.<br /> She had to<br />     console herself with the thought that  any new thing she could  do<br /> with<br />     the  computer  was  progress.  "If  only  Marki  were  here,"  she<br /> muttered,<br />     thinking longingly of her faithful assistant back at her catering<br />     business. "Marki’s a computer science major."<br />     "Is that so?" a masculine voice said from behind her.<br />     It was a British-accented voice, but with a very different<br />     inflection than Denys’s, a much  deeper timbre, older. A  stranger<br /> had<br />     entered her domain, and she been too intent on what she was  doing<br /> to<br />     notice anyone was there. Claudia’s fingers froze on the  keyboard,<br /> her<br />     back stiffened tensely.<br />     The voice went on pleasantly. "Studying artificial computer<br />     intelligence is this Marki?  She’d need some  background in it  to<br /> play<br />     with our toys here."<br />     Claudia gulped and forced herself to swivel the chair around to<br />     face the speaker. "Uh, yes," she croaked. "I guess she would."<br />     He was tall, strongly built and looked to be about sixty. He had<br />     silver hair,  a strong  beak of  a nose  and twinkling  blue  eyes<br /> surrounded<br />     by deep crowsfeet.  He smiled and  gave her a  cheerful nod,  then<br /> tugged on<br />     a lock of silver hair falling  across his forehead and said,  "You<br /> can<br />     call me Charlie, miss." He pulled up a chair and lowered his  long<br /> frame<br />     into it.<br />     Claudia was glad not to have to look so far up to see his face.<br />     "Good evening, Charlie,"  she said politely.  "Have you been  here<br /> long?"<br />     "I was hoping for a cup of tea," was his answer. "I generally come<br />     in about  this  time every  evening  in hopes  the  computer  will<br /> remember<br />     what tea is." He  looked at her hopefully.  "Think you might  have<br /> any luck<br />     with it, miss? I’ve information that you’re quite a hand with  the<br /> food<br />     synthesizer."<br />     Charlie looked so plaintive she couldn’t help but turn back to the<br /> computer<br />     and give  it a  try. Since  Smid had  shown her  how to  work  the<br /> program, she and her<br />     helpers had been able to figure out any number of fruits and<br />     vegetables, something  resembling  fund-raising  banquet  chicken,<br /> tuna<br />     pot pie and  quite a few  herbs and spices.  She fiddled with  the<br /> herb<br />     matrices, looking for  a tea combination  while Charlie moved  his<br /> chair<br />     closer and peered over her shoulder.<br />     "You are good at this," he commented as pictures formed and<br />     reformed on the screen.<br />     "Thank you.  You’re  Third Shift,  then?"  she questioned  as  she<br /> continued to<br />     work.<br />     "Oh, I get around," he replied. "The crew’s duties overlap a good<br />     deal, you know..<br />     "No, I don’t know," she answered, a bit petulantly. "Nobody tells<br />     me anything."<br />     "Is that so?" Charlie sat back and crossed his long legs. "That<br />     doesn’t seem  fair.  A  lass who  works  hard  to feed  a  lot  of<br /> ungrateful,<br />     hungry men ought to know what’s what on a ship."<br />     "I quite agree," Claudia responded. She found herself having to<br />     repress the urge toward a self-pitying sniff. It was nice to  have<br /> <at last="last" found="found" someone="someone" at="at" who="who" understood="understood" her="her" hate="hate" it="it" that="that" no="no" will="will" tell="tell" me="me" charlie="charlie" patted="patted" be="be" happy="happy" to="to" you="you" anything="anything" like="like" your="your" she="she" reached="reached" into="into" the="the" serving="serving" station="station" next="next" console="console" and="and" handed="handed" him="him" a="a" steaming="steaming" it="it" smelled="smelled" looked="looked" she="she" was="was" prepared="prepared" play="play" with="with" controls="controls" thank="thank" he="he" raised="raised" mug="mug" his="his" aristocratic="aristocratic" nose="nose" breathed="breathed" than="than" he="he" announced="announced" gave="gave" grateful="grateful" then="then" nodded="nodded" earl="earl" my="my" stars="stars" are="are" yours="yours" command="command" for="for" added="added" gallantly="gallantly" after="after" taken="taken" few="few" more="more" appreciative="appreciative" felt="felt" herself="herself" quite="quite" opened="opened" mouth="mouth" start="start" asking="asking" before="before" could="could" ask="ask" shift="shift" is="is" bridge="bridge" they="they" work="work" all="all" three="three" of="of" from="from" every="every" just="just" called="called" first="first" because="because" what="what" they="they" do="do" supposedly="supposedly" most="most" important="important" second="second" went="went" mining="mining" responsible="responsible" supply="supply" runs="runs" hull="hull" maintenance="maintenance" engine="engine" equipment="equipment" very="very" obscurely="obscurely" proud="proud" men="men" upon="upon" hearing="hearing" explanation="explanation" their="their" an="an" very="very" fine="fine" best="best" this="this" metaform="metaform" the="the" been="been" gathering="gathering" crew="crew" together="together" training="training" two="two" years="years" pity="pity" about="about" having="having" leave="leave" ladies="ladies" but="but" quadrant="quadrant" alert="alert" even="even" fleet="fleet" protecting="protecting" our="our" we="we" were="were" chased="chased" way="way" forward="forward" transition="transition" book="book" cover="cover" third="third" administrative="administrative" bureaucratic="bureaucratic" clerks="clerks" or="or" as="as" case="case" may="may" claudia="claudia" interested="interested" in="in" her="her" attention="attention" concentrated="concentrated" some="some" other="other" tantalizing="tantalizing" things="things" had="had" quadrant="quadrant" transition="transition" more="more" accepted="accepted" another="another" sat="sat" stickney="stickney" crater="crater" mine="mine" largest="largest" martian="martian" odd="odd" source="source" human="human" home="home" faintest="faintest" replied="replied" not="not" exactly="exactly" need="need" know="know" groaned="groaned" thought="thought" going="going" answering="answering" your="your" dear="dear" stop="stop" wrong="wrong" questions="questions" let="let" i="i" look="look" tone="tone" so="so" help="help" brisk="brisk" clearly="clearly" states="states" war="war" we="we" think="think" can="can" used="used" form="form" shielding="shielding" device="device" against="against" enemy="enemy" communications="communications" at="at" least="least" hope="hope" good="good" enough="enough" time="time" test="test" much="much" ore="ore" should="should" prove="prove" provide="provide" trip="trip" certainly="certainly" worth="worth" risk="risk" traveling="traveling" back="back" twentieth="twentieth" time="time" travel="travel" first="first" ship="ship" try="try" all="all" go="go" confusing="confusing" drop="drop" bit="bit" information="information" held="held" out="out" cup="cup" burning="burning" kept="kept" shut="shut" dutifully="dutifully" provided="provided" tricky="tricky" assure="assure" always="always" theory="theory" space="space"></at>time can<br />     be fiddled with  and a  properly navigated  ship can  jump out  at<br /> precise<br />     points in time -- past, present  or future. The effect is sort  of<br /> like<br />     winding an antique watch. As the engineers and physicists  explain<br /> it,<br />     the actual time jump was accomplished by a dynamic tension we  got<br /> from<br />     winding our way slowly  into the past  and then springing  forward<br /> into the<br />     future. Actually,  the  jumping  into the  future  part  is  still<br /> theoretical.<br />     We’ve managed  to trip  to the  past, so  we’ll probably  make  it<br /> back."<br />     "By winding into the past in order to spring into the future?"<br />     He flashed her an edged smile. "Supposedly. We’ll find out about<br />     that in a few weeks, won’t we?"<br />     "We?" she questioned back, in a small voice. "I thought I was<br />     going home."<br />     "Oh, not you, m’dear." He waved her sudden worry aside. "I meant<br />     the HATTON.  We’ll  be  the  first  ship  in  history  to  attempt<br /> traveling both<br />     ways in time. The Book assures us we’ll make it. But what does the<br />     bloody Book know, I ask you? It’s author lived and died a good two<br />     centuries ago."<br />     "What is this book?" Claudia asked with sudden suspicion. "Is it<br />     some sort of mystical book of predictions? Like Nostrodamus?"<br />     Charlie’s eyes twinkled merrily. "I think you’re probably right,"<br />     he agreed.  "But it’s  more  than my  job’s  worth to  utter  such<br /> heresy. The<br />     Book," he  explained. "Is  a computer  disk --  a CD  ROM sort  of<br /> thingy -which<br />     has been passed down with due ceremony from generation to<br />     generation from your time to ours. It was addressed to our beloved<br />     captain, and  no one  but  that august  personage knows  its  full<br /> contents.<br />     Which hasn’t stopped generations of speculation about the  mission<br /> and<br />     the destiny of the FCW. Book analysis is quite a lucrative  field,<br /> or so<br />     I’m given to understand. There’s all the data you could ever  want<br /> to<br />     read about the Book stored in  the ship’s computer. Why don’t  you<br /> get<br />     your young man to access it for you when he gets back from Phobos<br />     tonight?" he added helpfully. Charlie  put his cup on the  console<br /> and<br />     stood. "Time for me to turn in." He stretched and yawned. "We must<br /> chat<br />     again." He turned to go.<br />     Claudia had sat in frozen surprise as soon as he mentioned her<br />     ’young man’. "Denys?"  she asked as  Charlie made as  if to  exit.<br /> "Phobos?<br />     What’s Denys doing on Phobos?"<br />     "Directing the mining team," he answered. "As he did yesterday."<br />     The members of Second Shift had seemed tired at supper. Tired and<br />     too quiet. "But we haven’t reached Phobos yet."<br />     She remembered the viewscreen in her and Denys’s quarters. She’d<br />     been watching them approach Mars. She’d been getting more and more<br />     excited about the prospect of seeing the surface of another  world<br /> as the<br />     red ball grew slowly to fill the night sky. She’d chattered on  at<br /> Denys<br />     about her dreams of space travel and adventure and seeing  distant<br /> worlds<br />     and times. She even told him about the Star Trek convention  she’d<br /> gone<br />     to  dressed  as  a  Klingon.  She’d  never  told  anybody  at  the<br /> university about that. She<br />     hadn’t been embarrassed to tell Denys.<br />     Denys listened and smiled and told her space travel really wasn’t<br />     adventurous and not to get her hopes up about setting foot on Mars<br /> when<br />     they got there because they weren’t going to Mars, anyway. But she<br /> was<br />     determined, and said  a Martian  moon was  almost as  good as  the<br /> planet<br />     itself. Denys frowned and she ignored the frown, becoming more<br />     determined as the red ball grew slowly larger on the screen.<br />     The red ball had been growing very slowly lately. Too slowly, she<br />     realized now. Denys had been fiddling with the screen, hadn’t he?<br />     Running a tape, probably. Making her think they were on their  way<br /> to<br />     Mars when they  had, in  fact, already arrived.  Denys. Denys  who<br /> tried to<br />     hide everything from her, but couldn’t completely succeed.  Denys,<br /> who<br />     for some  stupid reason,  she thought  understood her  dreams.  He<br /> didn’t<br />     care about dreams, he was worried about security. He knew she knew<br /> their<br />     destination, but he’d be damned if he’d let her know any more than<br /> that.<br />     "Damn you, Denys Duchamp!" she snarled. She swiveled the chair<br />     around and hit the console an  angry blow with her fist. "I  spend<br /> my time<br />     slaving over a hot computer to make you a decent meal and this  is<br /> all<br />     the thanks I get!? You lie to me! You treat me like a child! You,<br />     you..."<br />     "I seem to have said something wrong," Charlie interjected<br />     smoothly. "Forgive  me."  He  sidled toward  the  door,  his  wary<br /> expression<br />     clearly saying he was afraid she  was going to do something  rash.<br /> "Good<br />     night." The door opened and closed and he was gone.<br />     She felt like doing something rash. But not to Charlie. Charlie<br />     was intelligent and  civilized and  treated her like  she was  the<br /> same. Denys didn’t<br />     deserve thinking  about. "I’m  going  to get  you for  this,"  she<br /> vowed, thinking about<br />     Denys anyway. "And  I’m going to  find a  way to get  to Mars.  Or<br /> Phobos, at least.<br />     It’s only a little moon,  but I’ll take what  I can get. And  you,<br /> Denys<br />     Duchamp, are not going to stop me."<br />     She stared at the computer screen. As her fingers played idly over<br />     the keypads, she began to come up with a plan.<br />     ##<br />     Denys woke up thinking about Claudia. There was nothing new in<br />     this. He thought about Claudia all the time. He thought about  her<br /> smile<br />     and her walk and how her body would respond if he gave in and let<br />     himself  touch  her.  He  thought  about  her  bright,   inquiring<br /> intelligence.<br />     He liked the way she was so insightful and adaptable. There was so<br /> much he<br />     wanted to tell her, and so much  he had to keep to himself. So  he<br /> listened to her,<br />     encouraged her to tell him about  herself and her world. The  more<br /> he got to know<br />     her, the better  he liked her.  More than liked  her. Which was  a<br /> very tricky<br />     problem. As the  days went  past, he  was becoming  more and  more<br /> anxious<br />     about the time when he’d have to let her go. And he was determined<br /> to<br />     let her go. He owed  it to her. She  didn’t belong in the  future.<br /> She<br />     deserved to have her life  back. To be happy  in her own time  and<br /> world.<br />     He was going  to make  sure she  was happy,  even if  he ended  up<br /> miserable<br />     doing it.<br />     Claudia, he thought, as he swung out of bed. Sweet, funny Claudia.<br />     She was going to hate  him if she found  out how he’d tricked  her<br /> about<br />     Phobos. He wouldn’t blame her if she  did, but it was for her  own<br /> good.<br />     She’d see that eventually.<br />     It’s my problem that the woman of my dreams is from the wrong<br />     century, he thought. I’ll take the responsibility for your  safety<br /> and<br />     keep my feelings to myself.  He sighed unhappily, threw a  longing<br /> gaze<br />     toward the other side of the room, and hurried to get dressed.<br />     When Denys had still been somewhere on the far edge of sleep, with<br />     the bed was in its initial, slow stage of the waking process he<br />     preferred,  he’d  heard  the  door  open  and  her  moving  about,<br /> muttering.<br />     That must have been a dream  image, he decided, because of  course<br /> she<br />     hadn’t left their quarters while  he slept. He finished  dressing,<br /> his<br />     mind still on the woman who slept peacefully in the other alcove.<br />     He considered himself lucky that the dreams hadn’t been the<br />     erotic ones last night. He really should be ashamed of some of the<br />     things he and Claudia got up to in his dreams. He smiled to<br />     himself as he stepped out into the corridor. I should be  ashamed,<br /> he<br />     thought as he headed quickly for the hangar bay, but I’m not.<br />     It was Sakretis’s turn to spend the day on board ship, to keep a<br />     careful eye on Claudia.  The rest of Second  Shift headed back  to<br /> the cold<br />     wasteland of Phobos and  continued the work  of digging chunks  of<br /> strange<br />     metal out of  the mine  they’d set up  at the  bottom of  Stickney<br /> Crater.<br />     The process  was time  consuming, and  a hard  day was  put in  by<br /> everyone,<br />     but the metaform wasn’t difficult to extract. In fact, it was to<br />     be found mostly on or very near the rocky surface of the crater.<br />     "I don’t know where this stuff came from," Denys mentioned to<br />     Cleary as they  piled into the  shuttle for the  trip back to  the<br /> HATTON,<br />     "but I’m beginning to  think somebody took a  big scoop of  molten<br /> metal<br />     and poured it into the crater. And not that long ago, either."<br />     "Weird," Cleary agreed, settling into the seat next to Denys. It<br />     was the only opinion of the metaform the crewman had to offer.  He<br /> gave a<br />     tired grunt, and stared out the front port as the shuttle ascended<br />     toward the hangar bay. "Wonder if  Dr. Cameron was able to  figure<br /> out the<br />     biscuit recipe she said she was going  to try. I’d kill for a  big<br /> plate<br />     of hot biscuits."<br />     So much for any hope of scientific speculation, Denys thought as<br />     he brought the  ship into the  hangar bay. He  gave a  disgruntled<br /> frown.<br />       She<br /> wasn’t<br />     interested in safety, just information. "It’s too late," he said<br />     unhappily. He sat down  at the counter and  drank down his tea  in<br /> long,<br />     miserable gulps. It needed sugar. It didn’t help.<br />     She could see he was distressed, but she ignored it for the<br />     moment. She perched on the stool opposite him and pressed on. "Why<br /> is it<br />     unavailable?"<br />     "Because it gets mined out by us. It doesn’t exist in the future<br />     because we came to the past to get it. You see?"<br />     "No." She wrinkled her brow in thought. "Yes. It’s a time paradox.<br />     Or time loop.  Whichever. You go  back in time  to make  something<br /> happen<br />     the right way in  the future. And  if you don’t  do it right  back<br /> here,<br />     the future will  be all screwed  up when you  get back home.  I’ve<br /> seen all<br />     the Back to the Future movies,  and Time Cop, and Deep Space  Nine<br /> and Voyager<br />     do time-travel episodes all the time,  and Bab5 has a time  travel<br /> thing going where<br />     John and Delenn and  Lando. never mind, that.  s all fiction"  she<br /> added, though<br />     she didn’t suppose it was a very sensible explanation. Of  course,<br /> time travel<br />     wasn’t a very sensible subject, really.<br />     "I can’t let it be screwed up," he said.<br />     He looked miserable. She wanted to hug him. "You won’t screw it<br />     up," she reassured him.<br />     "No," he agreed. The acknowledgment certainly didn’t seem to make<br />     him feel any better. "I can’t  let you go home, Claudia. You  know<br /> too<br />     much. You’re a danger to the future now. I’m sorry, but you  can’t<br /> go<br />     home again."<br />     "What?"<br />     "Claudia." He reached for her hands. She jumped out of her seat,<br />     not the least bit interested in his comforting touch. He stood and<br />     started to come around the counter toward her.<br />     "Hold it right there," she said before he got too close. She<br />     glared. He  stayed on  his  side of  the  counter. Good  God,  she<br /> thought.<br />     Dealing with this  man was like  being taken on  a roller  coaster<br /> ride.<br />     First he saves my life, then he scares me to death, then he  makes<br /> love<br />     to me like nobody ever has before, then he tells me he can’t do it<br />     again, now he’s telling me I can’t go back to Earth.<br />     His decision, not mine.<br />     "Are you telling me I have no choice in the matter?"<br />     "You made the choice," he countered. "You asked too many<br />     questions. You could change the future if I let you go back now."<br />     "How could I possibly change the future?" she countered back.<br />     "You know what’s going to happen."<br />     "Right. And who’d believe me if I told them?"<br />     "I can’t take the chance."<br />     "You can’t take the chance. What do you mean you can’t take the<br />     chance? I’m responsible for my own actions, Duchamp." I might want<br /> to<br />     stay with you, she was thinking, but I will not be forced into it.<br /> "I<br />     will not be treated like an irresponsible child. Do you treat your<br /> own<br />     women like that? Do all those admirals and starship captains  have<br /> to<br />     wait around for your decisions?"<br />     "No. But you’re not from our time. You need someone to look after<br />     you. You are irresponsible. And you know too much." He knew he was<br />     putting this  badly. He  was  letting himself  get angry,  he  was<br /> getting her<br />     angry. This was not  the calm, rational  discussion it should  be.<br /> Nothing<br />     was as it should be.  He wanted to tell her  why he wanted her  to<br /> stay,<br />     why he needed her to stay. But those were personal reasons and had<br />     nothing to  do  with  the situation  her  curiosity  had  created.<br /> "Claudia."<br />     "Don’t you Claudia me!"<br />     "Dr. Cameron, then. I -- "<br />     "There is no way I could change history," she interrupted,<br />     inexorable and furious. "I run a small business in a small town in<br /> the<br />     middle of a  state full of  pigs and cornfields.  About the  worst<br /> damage I<br />     could do if  I told  the world about  what’s going  to happen  two<br /> hundred<br />     years from now is get written up on the back pages of the National<br />     Enquirer. No  one would  care. No  one would  believe me.  Science<br /> fiction<br />     movies are a  hell of a  lot more interesting  than what’s  really<br /> going to<br />     happen."<br />     "I’m not going to argue about it," he said.<br />     She planted her fists on her hips. "Well, I am."<br />     "No," Denys said, coming determinedly toward her. "What you’re<br />     going to do is come home with  me and get a good night’s sleep.  A<br /> good,<br />     long night’s  sleep," he  added,  grabbing her  by the  wrist  and<br /> pulling her<br />     toward the door.<br />     Chapter Eight<br />     The Shift Crew had adjourned to the recreation room rather than<br />     the kitchen to eat their evening meal. It was glop again.  Duchamp<br /> wasn’t<br />     allowing them anything but glop. The  fact that he was sharing  it<br /> with<br />     them didn’t add any sense of camaraderie to the meal. In fact, his<br />     presence didn’t help  the general  dark mood at  all. Duchamp  was<br /> sulking,<br />     he was surly; he was angry and despondent by turns. He  complained<br /> or he<br />     said nothing. He was acting like a Donakian bear<br />     with a toothache  and it was  driving the men  who worked for  him<br /> crazy.<br />     Cleary had ventured to suggest Duchamp was in love. He hadn’t said<br /> it<br />     very loudly, and  certainly not in  Duchamp’s presence.  Jefferson<br /> Cleary<br />     was not a suicidal man.<br />     The crew missed Dr. Cameron. It wasn’t just the food. They missed<br />     her company. From the furtive glances they dared turn his way, the<br />     general consensus was  that Duchamp missed  Dr. Cameron more  than<br /> they<br />     did. He sat glumly at the far end of the table, shoulders slumped<br />     tiredly, eyes on his untouched plate of glop. He’d developed this<br />     annoying habit of  sighing loudly about  once an hour.  He did  it<br /> now.<br />     It had to be connected with Dr. Cameron.<br />     It had been four days since anyone had seen her. It had been noted<br />     that Duchamp didn’t return to his quarters very often. No one knew<br /> what<br />     he’d done to her, but they were getting worried.<br />     Cleary put his fork carefully on the table, looked at the anxious<br />     men seated around  the table, summoned  up the necessary  courage,<br /> and<br />     ventured to ask, "How’s Dr. Cameron, Duchamp?"<br />     Six sets of shoulders flinched as Duchamp’s icy blue gaze rose<br />     slowly to  take  them all  in.  "Sleeping," he  responded.  "She’s<br /> having a<br />     nice, quiet little nap." Each word was spoken with clear, cold<br />     precision. His gaze dropped slowly back to his plate.<br />     "Oh," was all Cleary said.<br />     Which was about all there was to say considering Duchamp’s present<br />     mood. Fortunately for  everyone’s’ digestion,  Duchamp threw  down<br /> his fork<br />     and stormed out, grumbling, a few minutes later.<br />     "What’s he mean, sleeping?" Sakretis wondered after he was gone.<br />     "He’s off his feed," Fox said. "Looks terrible."<br />     "The sighing’s the worst part," Morrison complained.<br />     "Yeah," said Toffler. "Kind of reminds me of me when I first<br />     met my wife."<br />     "What’s he done to her?" Sakretis persisted. "I worry."<br />     "He wouldn’t hurt her," Harcort pointed out. "He’s miserable. It<br />     probably hurts him more than it does her."<br />     "Whatever it is," Cleary added.<br />     "He’s avoiding her," Fox decided. "I remember that phase with my<br />     own missus.  Ran till  she  caught me."  He  smiled at  some  fond<br /> private<br />     memories.<br />     "Dr. Cameron didn’t do anything wrong," Sakretis said.<br />     "We never did get our chili," Cleary added. He looked down at his<br />     half-eaten glop. "Sweet woman like Dr. Cameron doesn’t deserve him<br />     locking her away."<br />     "She certainly doesn’t," Toffler agreed. "Why won’t he let us use<br />     the recipe files she created?"<br />     "Cause he’s suffering," Fox declared. "And wants us to suffer<br />     too."<br />     "It’s our fault he met her," Morrison pointed out. "Personally, I<br />     think he ought to be thanking us."<br />     "She’s the best thing that ever happened to him," Harcort agreed.<br />     "He’s a lonesome sort," said Toffler. "Could use a wife. Dr.<br />     Cameron’s not married, is she?"<br />     "No. I remember she said she wasn’t on the cooking show," Fox<br />     explained.<br />     "Maybe we could get them together," Morrison suggested. "Somehow."<br />     "Yeah," Sakretis agreed. "Somewhere with starlight and a romantic<br />     atmosphere."<br />     "What about their quarters?" Harcort asked. "They see each other<br />     all the time."<br />     "No," Sakretis protested. "It has to be somewhere neutral.<br />     Somewhere romantic."<br />     "She’s probably in no condition to talk," Cleary commented.<br />     "Unless it’s in her sleep."<br />     They all looked at him.<br />     "Bet he changed the programming on her sleep unit," Cleary said<br />     decisively. "Easiest way to keep her out of trouble."<br />     "Should have thought of that sooner," Morrison said. "Before he<br />     fell in love  with her." He  g]]></description>
<pubDate><![CDATA[Fri, 15 May 2009 20:14:14 +0400]]></pubDate>
<comments><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post57322496/]]></comments>
<guid><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post57322496/#BlCom519199171]]></guid>
<author><![CDATA[]]></author>
</item>
<item><title><![CDATA[Ïîìîãèòå]]></title>
<link><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post57322496/#BlCom519198728]]></link>
<description><![CDATA[ | Ýòà êíèãà íàïèñàíà Ñüþçàí Ñàéçìîð, íà àíãëèéñêîì<br /> _###ICE#BOOK#READER#PROFESSIONAL#HEADER#START###_<br /> AUTHOR: <br /> TITLE: [Romance] Sizemore, Susan Walking On The Moon<br /> CODEPAGE: 1251<br /> _###ICE#BOOK#READER#PROFESSIONAL#HEADER#FINISH###_<br /> <br />     WalkingontheMoon<br />     Walking on the Moon<br />     By<br />     Susan Sizemore<br />     Chapter One<br />     "I’m hungry."<br />     Shift Officer Denys Duchamp tried not to listen as he walked past<br />     the men  surrounding  the  information  station;  he’d  heard  the<br /> complaint<br />     too many times in the last month. The crew wasn’t hungry, not for<br />     nutrition at least. It was lack of variety, lack of interest, lack<br /> of<br />     female companionship sublimated into food cravings. Or so the<br />     medicomputer assured him.  A third  of the crew  had been  drafted<br /> onto<br />     military vessels,  leaving  the  men of  the  mining  ship  HATTON<br /> overworked<br />     as well as bored. Boredom was starting to breed a sort of restless<br />     discontent the captain  didn’t want  to hear  about. Denys  didn’t<br /> much like<br />     hearing about it, either, but he was the one who had to deal  with<br /> it.<br />     He took the food tray from the serving niche and carried it to the<br />     nearest table. He was careful not to look at or smell the glop  on<br /> the<br />     tray as he wolfed it down. It was tasteless; it was good for him.<br />     "I’m hungry," he complained under his breath after he was done.<br />     It was an emotional not a physical lack. The words were a mantra<br />     he repeated  frequently with  every tasteless  meal. He  liked  to<br /> think of<br />     it as a sort of salt substitute. He sighed, and joined the rest of<br /> the<br />     men of Second Shift in watching the newscreens.<br />     While the First Shift bridge crew was responsible for monitoring<br />     the planet they orbited’s information networks for any sign of<br />     detection, everybody else on the ship was spending their free time<br /> glued<br />     to old  Earth  broadcasts  for entertainment.  There  was  nothing<br /> better to<br />     do. Besides, it was educational; what they were watching was like<br />     viewing living history.  Except for the  reruns of M*A*S*H,  which<br /> they’d<br />     all grown up with anyway.<br />     Denys slid into one of the seats placed in a semi-circle around<br />     the bank of  nine screens. Every  one of them  showed a  different<br /> channel.<br />     The big main  screen featured  a bland-faced  commentator on  CNN.<br /> Cartoons,<br />     sports, a film with  lots of explosions,  music videos, a  cooking<br /> show, a<br />     talk  show  and  a  weather  channel  filled  the  other  screens.<br /> Predictably,<br />     the sound was turned on for the cooking show.<br />     Denys decided to try for a bit of conversation with his men. "We<br />     been spotted yet?"<br />     "No," six voices answered. No ones eyes left the video screen,<br />     which  showed  someone’s  sure  hands  enthusiastically   chopping<br /> onions.<br />     "Good," he answered. "The Stealth field’s working." He rubbed his<br />     jaw thoughtfully. He felt like  he was talking to himself.  "You’d<br /> think<br />     somebody’d notice something. The HATTON’s  over a mile long.  I’ll<br /> be glad<br />     when we make the supply run and get out of here."<br />     No one offered an opinion. Cleary made a shushing gesture in his<br />     direction.<br />     "Chili," said Harcort wistfully. "I haven’t had chili since..."<br />     "Hotter ’n hell," Sakretis said. "That’s what she told the<br />     interviewer."<br />     "I’d love to meet her," Cleary added. "She’s gorgeous, and she can<br />     cook. I’m in love."<br />     "Who’s gorgeous?" Denys asked, completely puzzled by his men’s<br />     comments.<br />     "Claudia Cameron," Toffler said reverently. He pointed toward the<br />     screen. "Her name’s  Claudia. We’ve  watched this  tape for  three<br /> days.<br />     Over and over and over." He sighed heavily.<br />     "That’s her," Morrison said as the sight of sizzling onions was<br />     replaced by the face of a dark-haired young woman.<br />     "Beautiful," Cleary intoned.<br />     "It’s been a long time since you’ve seen a woman, hasn’t it?" Fox<br />     asked Cleary  sarcastically. "She’s  not that  beautiful. But  she<br /> makes<br />     prize-winning chili," he added fondly.<br />     She  was   very  attractive,   Denys  decided,   in  an   average,<br /> brown-haired, blue-<br />     eyed, button-nosed sort of way. It was kind of interesting,<br />     how the pink sweater she wore clung to all the right proportion of<br />     curves. A very  nice double handful  of curves. He  felt his  body<br /> heating<br />     up as he stared at the woman on the flat view screen. How long has<br /> it<br />     been since I’ve seen a woman? he wondered, blinking rapidly to try<br /> to<br />     break the spell.  Only a  few weeks,  he reminded  himself. Get  a<br /> grip,<br />     Duchamp. Set an example for your men, and all that.<br />     She was still stimulating senses when he focused his attention on<br />     her again, but this time it was his tastebuds that took notice.<br />     "Chili’s about the perfect food," she said to the unseen<br />     interviewer. "Deep red and  brown and fragrant  with all the  heat<br /> and<br />     spice of the desert  at high noon. I  serve it with cornbread  and<br /> cheddar<br />     wedges, and tart apples dipped in a caramel sauce."<br />     Denys wiped the back of his hand across his watering mouth. He<br />     agreed with Cleary; he was in love.<br />     "It sounds like it’s worth every penny of your ten thousand dollar<br />     cooking prize," the interviewer’s  voice commented cheerily.  "And<br /> how are<br />     you going to spend your prize money? Start a three star restaurant<br /> in<br />     Bradden Falls?"<br />     "Oh, no. I’m going on a long, luxurious vacation."<br />     "Someplace romantic?"<br />     The cook smiled, it held a hint of mystery, a touch of<br />     wistfulness, and a lot of sardonic amusement. "Who knows?"<br />     That smile, and the touch of sultriness in her voice, had the<br />     impact of a nova bomb on Deny’s tired brain. His breath caught  in<br /> his<br />     throat. It wasn’t just his tastebuds reacting, but his whole  body<br /> warmed<br />     in the  glow of  her smile.  Of her  taped and  frequently  re-run<br /> smile, he<br />     forced  himself  to  recall.  The   woman  might  have  a   strong<br /> personality, but<br />     it was canned,  she was on  a video that  had probably been  taped<br /> weeks<br />     ago, it wasn’t like he was ever going to experience that smile  or<br /> voice<br />     in any live-action, interactive sort of way. Which was a pity,<br />     really.<br />     Denys gave his head a hard shake. "I’m definitely going stir<br />     crazy."<br />     "You’re just hungry," Cleary sympathized.<br />     Before he could answer, the ship’s comm sounded, "Second Shift to<br />     the hangar bay," the captain’s voice said. "The shipment is in,<br />     gentlemen. We can pick it  up and blow orbit  as soon as you  lads<br /> get<br />     back."<br />     Sakretis jumped to his feet first. "We’re about to touch the Earth<br />     of our  ancestors," he  declared. Sakretis  was the  poetic  sort.<br /> "Greece.<br />     My  great-grandparents  left  Greece  in  the  21st  Century.  I’m<br /> returning<br />     to the home  of my  people." He rubbed  his stubbly  jaw as  Denys<br /> herded<br />     them to the door. "I wonder if there’s anywhere good to eat?"<br />     Everyone in the crew perked up at the question.<br />     "Food." Cleary breathed reverently. "Hey, Duchamp, can we stop<br />     somewhere to eat Earthside?"<br />     Denys didn’t like the idea of interaction with the<br />     planet natives, there was  too much at stake  for the crew of  the<br /> HATTON<br />     to risk contaminating their  own history, but  he also figured  he<br /> might<br />     have a mutiny on his hands if he didn’t let the men have at  least<br /> a<br />     quick meal. There was morale to consider, here.<br />     "Affirmative," he answered, hoping it wasn’t a mistake.<br />     A cheer went up and everyone’s pace quickened as they hurried to<br />     the catch the slidecar for the hangar deck.<br />     "Ouzo," Sakretis said to the group as they climbed aboard the<br />     slidecar. "My great-grandpa told me about ouzo."<br />     ##<br />     Greece was everything Claudia expected, almost. The sun was<br />     bright, the sea sparkled by day, and at sunset the water truly was<br /> wine<br />     dark. The  scenery  was starkly  beautiful;  ancient and  full  of<br /> mystery.<br />     Olive groves glowed dull silver-green in the heat haze and<br />     the air smelled of verbena.<br />     And exhaust fumes, she remembered as she strolled down the dusty<br />     street of the little  seaside town, a  big carry-all purse  tucked<br /> under<br />     her arm. She’d pulled  off the winding mountain  road onto a  side<br /> track<br />     after following an ancient, wheezing bus for most of the  morning.<br /> She<br />     coughed and swore a great deal as she followed the side road until<br /> she<br />     reached the little town her guide book said was Doros.<br />     It was supposed to be a bustling sea port. If this was bustling,<br />     she’d hate to see what the book would describe as a sleepy little<br />     hamlet. She’d parked her rented car outside the town’s small hotel<br /> and<br />     walked down  an empty  main  street to  the harbor.  Bustling  was<br /> apparently<br />     defined by the presence of some fishing boats and one small<br />     freighter tied up  at an  ancient stone  quay. A  large truck  was<br /> parked<br />     alongside the ship. A  very large truck, about  the size of  three<br /> tractor<br />     trailers. The sun  glinted off  its smooth, unmarked  sides in  an<br /> almost<br />     otherworldly way.<br />     Funny looking truck, she thought. Sort of futuristic. She had<br />     never seen anything so sleek and silver in the States. It was sort<br /> of<br />     like a space shuttle  without the wings.  Only much bigger.  She’d<br /> seen a<br />     space shuttle landing  on a visit  to Edwards Air  Force Base  and<br /> this<br />     thing could easily hold the shuttle  in its cargo bay. She  didn’t<br /> know<br />     how it managed to maneuver on  narrow European roads, but it  must<br /> handle<br />     just fine or it wouldn’t have made it as far as the ancient dock.<br />     "Must have one hell of a driver," she mused, then turned away to<br />     enjoy the sights. "Wonder what kind of mileage it gets?"<br />     There was a tang of salt and drying fishing nets in the air.<br />     Claudia tilted her face up to the warm Mediterranean sun for a few<br />     moments, then scrambled down a  short slope to the harbor’s  rocky<br /> beach.<br />     There was no one in sight, not  a fishing boat in the distance  or<br /> any<br />     kids playing  on the  shingle. Nothing.  It was  spooky. She  told<br /> herself<br />     that she liked being alone, she  really did. It was just that  she<br /> wasn’t<br />     used to it.<br />     She had a big family back home in Iowa. Everyone in the small<br />     college town knew her, and she played mother and confidant to the<br />     college kids who worked for her. She was hardly ever alone,  which<br /> was<br />     one of the reasons she’d decided that a month or two on her own in<br /> a<br />     place she’d always dreamed of seeing would do her a world of good.<br /> Only,<br />     she admitted to herself, that  seeing Greece with Mr. Right  would<br /> be ever<br />     so much better. She’d had a firm image of what Mr. Right would  be<br /> like<br />     ever since she  was a kid  and she’d  read a lot  of Mary  Stewart<br /> mysteries<br />     set in Greece. Maybe she’d secretly hoped she’d come to Greece and<br /> Her<br />     Destiny would  walk  out  of  a  novel  and  into  her  life.  She<br /> daydreamed of<br />     sharing a moonlight  rendezvous with  destiny on the  shores of  a<br /> wine dark<br />     sea as she walked through Doros. Destiny would be about six  foot,<br /> blond,<br />     and have  a British  accent, of  course. Well,  it never  hurt  to<br /> dream. In<br />     the meantime, she’d enjoy the scenery.<br />     She’d already figured out that Doros wasn’t the most bustling<br />     metropolis in Greece despite the glowing words of the guide  book.<br /> So far<br />     the only activity she’d seen had been from a group of half a dozen<br />     sailors getting happily  drunk at the  outdoor cafe she’d  passed,<br /> and a<br />     lot of sea gulls occupying the quay. She hadn’t seen anyone  else,<br /> and<br />     that didn’t seem right. Maybe it was siesta time, she guessed, or<br />     whatever the  Greek word  was for  it. The  natives probably  knew<br /> enough<br />     to stay out of the midday sun.<br />     I feel like I’m the only person in the world, she thought, as she<br />     walked the  quiet stretch  of  beach. Except  for him,  she  added<br /> ruefully as<br />     she  came  around  a  tall   boulder  and  noticed  the   slender,<br /> fair-haired man<br />     a few feet  ahead of  her. He gazed  out to  sea with  narrow-eyed<br /> intensity.<br />     His hair was windblown, his  complexion pink from exposure to  the<br /> sun,<br />     and he was totally oblivious to her presence.<br />     It’s him! she thought, stopping in her tracks to stare, her heart<br />     pounding hard  in  her  chest.  Destiny.  Mr.  Right  in  need  of<br /> sunblock.<br />     She was thinking with her imagination, her heart and her hormones,<br />     not wanting her logical  brain to start  making sense. Still,  she<br /> knew,<br />     deep in her bones, that this was the man she came to Greece<br />     to meet. She knew,  with unreasonable certainty,  that he was  the<br /> one<br />     whose mysterious  call had  brought her  from half  a world  away.<br /> Romance.<br />     Adventure. Velvet nights  in far away  lands... or something  like<br /> that.<br />     Which was all nonsense, of course. But as long as he wasn’t<br />     looking, she could  pretend in destined  love accompanied by  soft<br /> music.<br />     Eric Clapton Unplugged would do nicely, she thought.<br />     She smiled. It was a soft, gooey smile; she could feel it<br />     spreading itself  across her  face  as a  warm glow  started  much<br /> farther<br />     down her anatomy. She couldn’t help  it. He was just so  handsome.<br /> And he<br />     was here....<br />     Probably waiting for his wife...<br />     Even as this cooling thought washed over her Claudia couldn’t stop<br />     staring. She  couldn’t  help  moving  closer.  She  couldn’t  help<br /> looking at<br />     him. Her  view was  of a  sharp-edged profile:  sharp chin,  sharp<br /> nose,<br />     sharp cheekbones,  sharply tilted  eyebrows, sharply  intelligent,<br /> bright<br />     blue  eyes  beneath   long  fair   lashes.  Faded   jeans  and   a<br /> tight-fitting<br />     knit shirt  emphasized his  tall,  wiry frame.  He was  about  the<br /> handsomest<br />     man she’d ever seen. And so strangely familiar.<br />     No. Not strange at all. I’ve been waiting for him all my....<br />     Which was ridiculous, since she’d never seen him before in her<br />     life. Though he  did sort  of look like  Sting when  he still  had<br /> hair, she<br />     decided. Maybe he was  Apollo --though you’d  think Apollo’d be  a<br /> little<br />     more beefy... sort of  the body of  Arnold Schwarzenegger and  the<br /> face of,<br />     well, Sting. Did sun gods wear old jeans, and very nicely too?<br />     Greek gods  generally  hung out  in  the nude,  as  she  recalled,<br /> chasing<br />     hysterical dryads and nymphs who  seemed to prefer getting  turned<br /> into<br />     trees or mud puddles than  fooling around with gorgeous nude  gods<br /> for<br />     some reason Claudia  had never  been able to  figure out.  Ancient<br /> Greek<br />     women’s lib, maybe. Which meant  that the women of ancient  Greece<br /> were<br />     more sensible than she was at the moment. She knew very well that<br />     romance was just fine and dandy in theory, but the reality was far<br /> too<br />     emotionally messy  to deal  with.  So, dream  on, girl,  she  told<br /> herself.<br />     It’s okay to  look, but  the best  thing to  do is  leave the  man<br /> alone.<br />     She took a mental deep breath and started to turn away just as the<br />     man looked at her. Since it  was too late to escape without  being<br /> rude,<br />     she gazed squarely into his ice blue eyes, and said, "Hello. Sorry<br /> if<br />     I’m disturbing you."<br />     The man turned pale beneath his light sunburn and looked like he<br />     was going to faint when she spoke to him. "Wh- what -- "<br />     "I didn’t mean to startle you," she added in a determinedly<br />     pleasant voice.<br />     It’s her! Denys realized as she spoke.<br />     It’s the chili woman. In the flesh. On the beach. Standing in<br />     front of  him. This  wasn’t possible.  What happened  to her  pink<br /> sweater?<br />     No, that was the tape and that thin gauze blouse she’s wearing  is<br /> very<br />     nice, too. Very clinging. She has such lovely, round....<br />     He’d been minding his own business, and marveling at the HATTON’s<br />     computer’s ability  to order  supplies by  tapping into  twentieth<br /> century<br />     computer networks. He’d  also been  watching the  waves and  being<br /> homesick<br />     when he’d noticed someone  standing next to  him. He’d assumed  it<br /> was<br />     Cleary or someone else from the crew, come to announce their  meal<br /> was at<br />     an end. Then he’d turned to find a beautiful woman staring at  him<br /> and<br />     his reason  had  fled  for  a moment.  It  kept  wanting  to  flee<br /> again*STILL<br />     HADN’T  RETURNED?  and  urged  him   to  take  advantage  of   the<br /> opportunity of<br />     meeting a beautiful woman on a romantic beach.<br />     "What are you doing here?" he demanded of the apparition. She<br />     jumped back a good three feet at his harsh, near-shout. She looked<br /> like<br />     she was going to turn and run. He stepped quickly after her.  "I’m<br /> sorry.<br />     I didn’t mean to startle you."<br />     He had a British accent. Claudia took a step back toward him. She<br />     couldn’t help it. A British accent on a Greek beach, he was like a<br /> hero<br />     in a Mary Stewart  novel. Like the man  of her dreams. He  reached<br /> out a<br />     hand to steady her, and the contact of his fingers on the flesh of<br /> her<br />     upper arm sent a buzz of  heat through her. She wasn’t sure  which<br /> of them<br />     stepped back first.<br />     She did catch her breath first. "I’m Claudia Cameron," she said,<br />     voice not particularly steady. "American tourist."<br />     He smiled, it lit his severely handsome face like a searchlight.<br />     Are you married? she thought. Would you like to be?<br />     "Denys Duchamp," he replied.<br />     "Sounds French."<br />     "I am French. My ancestry’s French."<br />     "But with a British accent. Sort of like Captain Picard on Star<br />     Trek." I sound like a complete  idiot, she added to herself  while<br /> she<br />     tried unsuccessfully to get her mind  off the way his brief  touch<br /> still<br />     had her  tingling from  head to  foot. Maybe  it wasn’t  just  his<br /> touch,<br />     but the added jolt she’d gotten from his smile.<br />     Denys heard her speak, but his mind was momentarily disconnected<br />     from his body  as it absorbed  the impact from  just the sight  of<br /> her. Her<br />     skin was so soft, with an almost golden glow in the bright  light.<br /> The<br />     sunlight also brought out  deep red highlights  in her dark  brown<br /> hair. He<br />     wanted to touch her hair, run his fingers through it. He wanted to<br /> step closer to<br />     her, to see if the glow from her skin would<br />     warm him the  way he  knew it  would. Even  from a  distance of  a<br /> couple of<br />     feet -Then<br />     Denys’s mind finally kicked back into working mode and he<br />     caught the reference to what she’d said about spacemen with French<br /> names<br />     and English accents. He’d  been watching a  lot of old  television<br /> lately.<br />     He almost let out a hysterical laugh. "Something like that. I’m...<br /> Canadian," he<br />     added, as he<br />     remembered  the  forged  papers  he’d  signed  when  they’d  taken<br /> possession of<br />     the  freighter’s  cargo.  The   equipment  they’d  purchased   was<br /> supposedly<br />     heading for Canada, wherever that was.<br />     "Ah, that explains it." Not that the man’s accent needed<br />     explanation. What was the matter with your her tongue? Why was it<br />     mouthing such nonsense? Wasn’t she supposed to be a  sophisticated<br /> ex-<br />     college professor turned businesswoman? Didn’t she know dream<br />     men didn’t exist? Even if he  was standing right in front of  her,<br /> big as<br />     life and twice as gorgeous. "I’m here on vacation," she told him.<br />     "I’m here on business," he answered. His gaze strayed past her,<br />     looking up toward the quay. "We’re leaving any minute now."<br />     She hoped her disappointment didn’t show. She’d been hoping he’d<br />     be staying at the  hotel. Hoping he was  free for a moonlit  walk,<br /> dinner,<br />     dancing, fathering  her  children.  Goodness,  but  her  mind  was<br /> leaping<br />     about in an uncontrolled frenzy all of a sudden.<br />     She cleared her throat. She tried not to feel disappointed; she<br />     tried to ignore her instant, overwhelming, ridiculous,  attraction<br /> to<br />     Denys Duchamp.  She tried  to make  commonplace conversation.  "Is<br /> that your<br />     truck? What make is it? I’ve never seen anything like it before."<br />     The implication of her comments hit Denys like a hammer. Wait a<br />     minute,  wasn’t  this  attractive,  distracting,  charming   woman<br /> supposed to<br />     be asleep? Where had she come from? They had put a wide beam sleep<br /> ray<br />     on the  whole village.  Were people  waking up?  He realized  he’d<br /> better<br />     stop thinking about Claudia Cameron and  get the crew and get  out<br /> of<br />     here.<br />     "Yes," he answered, surprised at how calm he sounded. Years of<br />     dealing with the  captain, he  supposed. "It’s my  truck. Did  you<br /> just get<br />     to Doros?"<br />     "Yes. I drove in a few minutes ago. Sleepy little place, isn’t<br />     it?"<br />     "It better be. Excuse me, I have to go."<br />     He sketched her a quick bow and ran up the beach.<br />     He would have liked to have spent a few weeks taking long walks,<br />     watching sunsets, and  fooling around  on the beach  and in  every<br /> other<br />     lovely spot in the village with her, but this was not a  vacation.<br /> Duty<br />     came first. He had to  round up Second Shift  and get out of  here<br /> before<br />     everyone woke up and witnessed a UFO taking off from their harbor.<br />     Claudia stared wistfully after the running man. His long, powerful<br />     legs moving effortlessly across the hard-packed sand were a joy to<br />     watch. He had a beautiful,  athlete’s body. Everything else  about<br /> him was<br />     totally confusing.<br />     Why’d he take off like that? Why’d he bow? Maybe Canadians were<br />     more formal  than she  thought.  She shrugged.  Maybe this  was  a<br /> dream. Or<br />     one of them was crazy.  Better for her, really,  that he was in  a<br /> hurry to<br />     leave, even if his  absence left an immediate  lonely spot in  her<br /> being.<br />     How odd, she thought, and how silly.<br />     She decided she was just hungry as he disappeared from sight. A<br />     picnic would be nice, she thought.  She would not think about  how<br /> much<br />     nicer a picnic might  have been if  Denys Duchamp had  accompanied<br /> her on<br />     it. She thought she’d seen a food store on her way into town.  She<br /> would<br />     buy some groceries then come back to the beach. Maybe bring  along<br /> a<br />     bottle of wine and toast the beauty  of the day and the memory  of<br /> having<br />     met her  notion  of a  hero,  even if  only  for a  few  confusing<br /> minutes.<br />     Too bad Mr. Duchamp didn’t hang around long enough to find out<br />     what a great cook  I am, she mused  as she followed his  footsteps<br /> back<br />     toward Doros. The French, and she assumed this applied to French<br />     Canadians as well, were supposed to appreciate good cooking.<br />     ##<br />     "You mean it’s alcoholic?" Morrison asked in shock, and slid under<br />     the checkered tablecloth. "Ouzo is liquor?"<br />     They’d been passing the ouzo bottles to slake their thirst for<br />     nearly an hour.  Hand loading  a cargo hauler  was mighty  thirsty<br /> work.<br />     "Tastes like licorice-flavored tar," Cleary contributed, voice<br />     slurred. He held up his half-full bottle. "I like it."<br />     "I’ve never had real alcohol before," Fox said. "You know, this<br />     planet looks funny." He squinted,  peering into the distance.  The<br /> flat-<br />     roofed houses, the big pots of red flowers bordering the perimeter<br /> of<br />     the outdoor cafe where they sat, the boats in the harbor below all<br />     wavered hazily in and out of focus.<br />     "Are we drunk?" Toffler questioned.<br />     "Not like a happy pill," Harcort contributed.<br />     Sakretis smiled benignly. "No, it isn’t. These ancestors of mine<br />     have a good thing here." He  poked a fragrant mound on his  plate.<br /> "This<br />     grape leaf  stuff is  good, too.  But it’s  not chili,"  he  added<br /> wistfully.<br />     "I could really go for a bowl of chili."<br />     "Me too," several voices chimed in.<br />     It took him a couple of tries, but Morrison managed to pull<br />     himself out from under  the table. "Where’s  Duchamp? My legs  are<br /> all<br />     funny."<br />     "Took a walk by the water," Fox said. "New Sydney’s a water world.<br />     He’s homesick.  I like  the  desert. Heat."  He licked  his  lips.<br /> "Chili."<br />     "I’ve got an idea." Cleary declared, climbing unsteadily to his<br />     feet. "Let’s go grocery shopping while everybody’s still asleep.<br />     Sleepray’s a wonderful thing," he added. "While everyone’s  asleep<br /> we can<br />     raid the commissary  we saw  up the  street. Take  back some  real<br /> food."<br />     "Duchamp won’t like that," Harcort said.<br />     "Don’t have to tell him," Fox contributed.<br />     "We got an empty storage chest on the shuttle," Morrison added<br />     encouragingly.<br />     "Let’s do it," Sakretis assented.<br />     "Yeah," Toffler chimed in, then gulped down the rest of the bottle<br />     of ouzo.<br />     They wobbled to their feet and trooped drunkenly a few doors up<br />     the street. All was quiet and  dark inside the little store.  They<br /> found<br />     baskets and began filling them  with anything on the shelves  that<br /> looked<br />     like it might be food. Not that the crew’s vision or judgment  was<br /> any<br />     too clear by this time.<br />     They laughed and joked and made two trips to the shuttle and were<br />     back for a third when the  door opened behind them. Cans and  bags<br /> crashed<br />     noisily to the  floor as  three of  the drunken  crewmen went  for<br /> their<br />     sleeprays while the others began to speak all at once.<br />     "Duchamp!"<br />     "We’ll put it back!"<br />     "We’ll leave cash for the supplies!"<br />     "That’s not Duchamp!" Fox declared.<br />     Long seconds went by as they came to realize there was a startled<br />     woman standing in the shaft of sunlight by the open door.<br />     She was a vision.<br />     The answer to a hungry, drunken man’s dreams.<br />     Six desperate men suddenly believed there was indeed justice in<br />     the universe.<br />     "It’s her!"<br />     "Claudia!"<br />     "Chili!"<br />     "Get her!" Cleary shouted.<br />     Three sleeprays fired as one.<br />     Chapter Two<br />     "Where have you been?" Denys demanded as he climbed into the<br />     shuttle from the storage bay’s rear entrance.<br />     He’d looked all over the small village for his shift crew before<br />     giving up and heading  back to use the  ship’s recall signal.  The<br /> last<br />     place he’d  expected  to find  the  crewmen was  where  they  were<br /> supposed to<br />     be.<br />     Three of them sat down hastily on a storage chest as he entered.<br />     The other three started  guiltily as he  came toward them.  Cleary<br /> gave him<br />     an innocent  grin.  The one  he  always gave  when  he was  up  to<br /> something.<br />     Fox began tunelessly whistling. They all smelled of alcohol.<br />     Hmmm. Denys rubbed his chin as he tried to decide whether or not<br />     to find out what  they’d just stowed in  the chest. It’s food,  he<br /> decided.<br />     It’s what he would have pilfered if his Shift Officer had left him<br /> on<br />     his own long enough.<br />     Should he confiscate it? Did they have time? There was a wide<br />     awake woman running  around Doros.  She’d probably  noticed a  few<br /> sleeping<br />     citizens by  now. Why  hadn’t  he thought  to  put her  under?  It<br /> wouldn’t<br />     have hurt her.  He felt a  pang of guilt  for something he  hadn’t<br /> even done<br />     to Claudia Cameron. It would have just put her to sleep -- but  it<br /> would<br />     have seemed too much like hurting her, or cheating her. Never mind<br />     Claudia Cameron. Think  of duty. It’s  better to just  get out  of<br /> here, he<br />     decided. Away from  Claudia. He’d  already had  too many  thoughts<br /> about the<br />     woman from the cooking  show, even before he  met her. Having  met<br /> her, all<br />     he could do was flee the scene  before he had an urge to grab  her<br /> and<br />     bring her back to the ship to warm his nights with something  more<br /> than<br />     her spicy cooking.<br />     To keep from thinking about that improper fantasy&lt;,> he looked<br />     sternly at his men. "You better have paid for whatever you  took,"<br /> he<br />     told the crew.<br />     Several of them turned various shades of red. There were several<br />     nods. Fox’s eyes closed, and he quietly passed out. The<br />     men had  either not  done the  required research  about  twentieth<br /> century<br />     Earth, or  they  had  and had  decided  to  try out  some  of  the<br /> available<br />     stimulants. Duchamp  sighed.  Good  thing he  was  the  designated<br /> driver.<br />     "Let’s get these supplies to the HATTON. Strap in."<br />     "Yes, sir!" five voices declared enthusiastically. Fox began<br />     gently to snore as he  was carried into the passenger  compartment<br /> by<br />     Harcort and Sakretis. Denys followed after them, thinking how glad<br /> he’d<br />     be to get this mission over and get back home to the twenty second<br />     century.<br />     ##<br />     "Your load is two hundred pounds on the heavy side," Deck Officer<br />     Smid told Denys as he stepped onto the hangar bay deck.<br />     He’d seen Smid waiting for him as he opened the hatchway. Smid had<br />     his beloved databoard clutched in his arms and the usual severe<br />     expression on his rabbity face. The hangar bay was bustling with<br />     activity as robot scooters hurried forward to unload the shuttle.<br />     His drunken crew staggered out the hatch behind him. Denys ignored<br />     Smid for the moment. "Head to  Medical for some rays," he  ordered<br /> the<br />     men.<br />     There were nods and "Yes, sirs," and they lumbered off. Cleary<br />     started singing.<br />     Denys sighed, and turned his attention to the Deck Officer. "They<br />     tried a local beverage," he explained.<br />     Smid was glancing at the readings on his databoard. Smid rarely<br />     took note of human activity. "Never mind the Shift crew," he said.<br /> "What<br />     about that extra weight?"<br />     Probably the food, Denys thought. To Smid he explained, "The<br />     electronic and computer parts we picked up aren’t as sophisticated<br /> as<br />     ours. Our weight guesses were only approximate."<br />     "This is higher than the final estimate. The Book states -- "<br />     "Captain Andrews give you a peek at the Book, did he?" Denys<br />     interrupted.<br />     "No, of course not."<br />     Smid did not recognize sarcasm. He did, however, recognize the<br />     authority of The Book.  The Book --the  HATTON’s secret orders  --<br /> was a<br />     two hundred year old document. It had been in a sealed vault at<br />     Government Prime for most of those two hundred years. Those sealed<br />     orders had had EYES  ONLY status printed on  the locked cover  for<br /> Captain<br />     Charles Andrews since long before he was born. No one but he  knew<br /> what<br />     was in the Book.  And Captain Andrews wasn’t  likely to share  any<br /> more<br />     knowledge than was necessary to his lowly crewmembers.<br />     "Our job was to pick up spare parts we can adapt for a mining<br />     operation," Denys reminded the Deck Officer. "We did our job.  Now<br /> it’s<br />     time to get on with the  mission." Denys planted his hands on  his<br /> hips<br />     and demanded, "You want me to take it all back because it’s a  few<br /> pounds<br />     overweight?" And miss the chance at my first decent meal in weeks?<br /> No<br />     way, Smid. "Or do I let Captain Andrews know you’re holding up our<br />     leaving Earth for Phobos?"<br />     Mentioning the Captain’s name had the desired effect. Smid’s nose<br />     twitched when he was perturbed. It twitched now. No one wanted  to<br /> deal<br />     with Charles the Terrible if they could help it.<br />     "No need to get drastic, Duchamp," Smid said hastily. He scratched<br />     an ear, then tapped a finger on the edge of his databoard. "But  I<br /> want<br />     an inventory done immediately. I want this discrepancy explained."<br />     "Fine," Denys agreed. "I’ll supervise the inventory myself. No<br />     problem." Anything  to  soothe Smid’s  little  bureaucrat’s  mind.<br /> Denys was<br />     sure they’d find some way to fudge the data; Cleary was an  expert<br /> at<br />     that sort of thing.  "Meanwhile," he said  as the loaded  scooters<br /> whizzed<br />     past them toward  the cargo bay,  "I want to  let the bridge  know<br /> we’re<br />     clear to leave, then get back in uniform."<br />     He didn’t wait for Smid’s reply before heading toward the hangar’s<br />     comm board. He was in a hurry.<br />     So was Captain Andrews. Within two minutes of Denys relaying the<br />     news of the shuttle’s safe unloading, the HATTON was on its way to<br /> the<br />     other side of the solar system, headed for Mars.<br />     ##<br />     Kalamata olives. The last thing she remembered was staring at a<br />     big glass  jar of  kalamata  olives. On  a  shelf. Just  inside  a<br /> doorway. Of a dim room.<br />     She’d blinked, waited for her eyes to adjust to the difference  in<br /> light. Loud,<br />     slurred voices came out of the dimness. There was a burst of light<br />     behind her eyes. Darkness. Dreams of flying.<br />     Claudia was pretty sure she was awake now, but she was still in<br />     darkness. In a small, enclosed space.  It felt like she was  lying<br /> on the<br />     jar of olives. She  felt like she had  a Band-Aid strapped  across<br /> the<br />     space between her lips and nose.<br />     Where was she? What was going on here?<br />     She tried pushing on the sides of the box, on the top. The<br />     darkness pressed in on her.  She yelled. There wasn’t enough  room<br /> to sit<br />     up. She was surrounded by jars and cans and cardboard and plastic<br />     containers. She could feel the papery smoothness of onions,  smell<br /> the<br />     sharp tang of  lemons. It  was like she’d  been packed  away in  a<br /> cupboard<br />     with a lot of groceries.<br />     "Light? I remember the light. I went into the light? Like I’ve<br />     read happens when you die?"  she questioned in a confused  mumble.<br /> "Don’t<br />     tell me I died  and the friend  waiting to greet  me on the  other<br /> side was<br />     a bag of onions! That’s the dumbest thing I’ve ever heard!"<br />     I am not dead. This was too ridiculous to be the afterlife.<br />     Afterdeath? "No. I’m alive and doing fine. I just don’t know where<br /> I am.<br />     I was in Greece.  In a grocery  store. So I’m  probably in a  food<br /> locker in<br />     a Greek grocery store. Which doesn’t  make as much sense as  being<br /> dead,<br />     but is slightly more cheering to contemplate. Why am I in a  Greek<br /> food<br />     locker? What’s the strategy behind my being here?"<br />     Only one use for locking up American tourists came immediately to<br />     mind. She sat up, hitting her head sharply on the top of the box.<br />     "Help!" Claudia screamed into the fragrant darkness. She began<br />     banging on  the walls  of her  tiny prison  with fists  and  feet.<br /> "Help!" she<br />     shouted, hoping someone would hear. "Help! I’ve been taken hostage<br /> by<br />     crazed terrorists!"<br />     ##<br />     Denys rushed to get to the cargo bay before his shift crew. He<br />     wanted to know what they’d brought aboard before they hid it  away<br /> from<br />     him. He hadn’t counted on  Smid’s interference when he’d turned  a<br /> blind<br />     eye to bringing supplies  on board. He  should have. He  shouldn’t<br /> have let<br />     his stomach overrule his reason.  What if the contraband was  full<br /> of<br />     disease-laden bacteria that would poison them all?<br />     What if Smid caught them? And told the captain.<br />     He didn’t know what the Captain would do if Smid reported any<br />     deviation from the Book’s directives.<br />     Deviation from the Book’s directives.<br />     Dire words. Everyone knew any deviation from the Book was a<br />     capital offense. Everything depended on their bringing back the<br />     metaform. It was  the edge they  needed to defeat  the Sirens.  He<br /> should<br />     never have let  this happen. How  was he going  to straighten  out<br /> this<br />     mess?<br />     Maybe he should find the storage container and flush it out the<br />     waste disposer.<br />     Good idea, he decided as he grabbed a databoard from the computer<br />     station by the bay door. He ordered the lights up and took a quick<br />     glance at  the  location map  on  the databoard’s  liquid  crystal<br /> screen.<br />     "I’m looking for cargo box DM-55," he told the cargo computer.  An<br /> orange<br />     light quickly appeared on the  map. He checked the grid  location.<br /> The box<br />     he wanted was located in the farthest corner of the stadium-sized<br />     hold. "Thanks," he  muttered, and  started down the  long rows  of<br /> storage<br />     aisles.<br />     DM-55 was a seven foot long, three foot square<br />     steel-gray box. It sat in a long stack of over one hundred other<br />     identical steel-gray boxes.  Second box, second  row, about  waist<br /> level on<br />     Denys.  He  approached  it  with  anxious  curiosity  and   quick,<br /> determined<br />     strides... until he heard the muffled banging and wailing.<br />     He halted in surprise when he first heard the noise, frozen in his<br />     tracks, thoughts  slammed  into incoherence.  What  the...  who...<br /> how... why... those<br />     idiots! Those fools! Those, those drunken...!<br />     "What have they done!"<br />     A pitiful, frightened wail issued from Box DM-55, the sound dulled<br />     by distance and the thick metal walls of the tiny prison.  "Please<br /> help<br />     me! I -- I can’t breathe."<br />     "Oh my God!" Denys sprang forward. He pulled the box out of its<br />     crib and pressed the  release in three quick  moves. The lid  slid<br /> back on<br />     a great, gulping gasp of air from the person trapped inside. "It’s<br /> the<br />     chili woman!" he exclaimed as he pulled her up and out of the box.<br />     She crumpled onto the deck, gasping and panting, as her blue-<br />     tinged skin quickly turned back to healthy tan. The breather strip<br />     someone had been thoughtful enough  to tape under her nose  stayed<br /> bright<br />     blue, indicating she’d  been on  her last minute  of oxygen.  He’d<br /> arrived<br />     literally in the nick of time.<br />     "What are you doing here?" he heard himself demanding for the<br />     second time today. Then he knelt beside her, concern overcoming<br />     annoyance. He tried to take her  in his arms as he hastily  added,<br /> "I’m<br />     sorry. I’m sure this isn’t your fault. But lady, we are in deep<br />     trouble."<br />     Claudia scooted backwards as the terrorist grabbed for her. The<br />     light hurt her eyes,  her head was  pounding, her cramped  muscles<br /> were<br />     screaming and she was so dizzy she could barely see. Her ears were<br />     ringing loudly. She  had to  get away from  the man.  What was  he<br /> babbling<br />     about? What did he want with her?<br />     "What do you want with me?" Her voice was a rasping croak. She was<br />     hysterical. She  knew  she  was hysterical  and  being  hysterical<br /> wasn’t<br />     going to help. She didn’t care at the moment. She wasn’t just<br />     hysterical, she was terrified and furious.<br />     "I don’t want anything with you!" Then Denys remembered that<br />     He. d actually thought about bringing her on board? and why he.  d<br /> wanted to be<br />     with her, and blushed deeply.  "Really. Not me. I wouldn’t  really<br /> -- I’m not that<br />     sort of -- Never mind."<br />     Claudia paid no attention  to the man’s  words as she  frantically<br /> looked for a<br />     way to  escape. They  were  in a  wide  aisle surrounded  by  tall<br /> shelves of metal<br />     boxes. Metal boxes just  like the one she’d  been trapped in.  The<br /> aisle looked like it<br />     stretched on for miles. The floor was metal, the ceiling high over<br /> their heads was<br />     also metal, crisscrossed by long strips of lighting tubes. The air<br /> felt<br />     and smelled subtly wrong. Were they on a ship? The freighter she’d<br /> seen<br />     tied at the Doros wharf?<br />     "This isn’t Doros. Where am I? How long was I out? What are you<br />     going to do with  me? Where are  you taking me?  What do you  want<br /> with all<br />     that goat cheese? Who are you?"<br />     "Denys Duchamp. We’ve met. Remember?" His light, British-accented<br />     voice was low, the tone attempting to be calm and soothing.<br />     She was quivering with fear. She remembered him now. Her dream<br />     man. She should have known that dreams had ways of turning into<br />     nightmares. She worked  hard to turn  terror into indignation.  If<br /> she<br />     could bury the panic, she could cope. She had to cope calmly and<br />     reasonably with this man, no matter how vicious he might turn  out<br /> to be.<br />     "Under  false  pretenses.   I  thought  you   were  exciting   and<br /> adventurous. I<br />     didn’t know you were a terrorist!"<br />     "A terrorist? Me?" His outraged expression was almost funny. "No!<br />     I can explain everything -- almost everything. No I can’t. Listen,<br /> no<br />     one is going  to harm you.  There’s been an  accident. A  mistake.<br /> There’s<br />     nothing to be afraid of. You’ll be -- Goat cheese?"<br />     She pointed at the hated box. "It’s full of goat cheese. And<br />     onions and olives and and... me!" She began to cry.<br />     Denys wished he hadn’t left his sleepray sitting on the recycler<br />     on top of his civilian clothes. Until Claudia started crying. He<br />     couldn’t stun a crying woman.  Especially one who looked like  she<br /> hated<br />     the idea of being reduced to helpless tears. Being trapped in that<br /> box<br />     had been bad enough, he couldn’t inflict another indignity on her<br />     strained emotions.<br />     He stepped toward her. She backed against a storage shelf. He put<br />     his arms out  on either side  of her, resting  them on the  shelf,<br /> trapping<br />     her in a protective circle. She flinched. He leaned closer and she<br />     looked up into his eyes.<br />     "No one is going to harm you," he said. Except maybe the Captain,<br />     he thought. No, he’d take care of her, Denys promised himself with<br /> grim<br />     determination. This was going to screw up his career. His and  the<br /> whole<br />     crew’s careers. They all deserved to be court-martialed. Them  for<br /> doing this, him<br />     for letting it  happen even  if he  hadn’t been  involved. He  was<br /> responsible.<br />     Never mind who’s was to blame, he told himself. The important<br />     thing was to take care of Claudia. He couldn’t let anything happen<br /> to<br />     her.<br />     "I won’t let anything happen," he repeated out loud. He didn’t<br />     know why he felt so fiercely  protective of her. Maybe it was  the<br /> tears<br />     rolling slowly down her soft cheeks, or because she was small and<br />     vulnerable and  lost.  He was  a  sucker for  lost  things.  Maybe<br /> because he<br />     wanted her, but this wasn’t the time or place for that kind of<br />     feeling. There would never be a time and place for it. She  needed<br /> his<br />     help. Helping her would have to be enough. And it would be so nice<br /> to be<br />     needed by a woman for once.  "Claudia." He liked the sound of  her<br /> name.<br />     It sounded of old Earth history. They gazed into each other’s eyes<br /> for<br />     what seemed a very long time. "Trust me."<br />     At some point she’d stopped being frightened of him, Claudia<br />     realized.  There  was  something...  nice  about  him.  He  looked<br /> dangerous<br />     enough, all sharp angles and nervous energy, but<br />     there was nothing cold or ruthless about him. Her instinct was  to<br /> trust<br />     him. Her instinct was probably wrong. She was going to have to  be<br /> on her<br />     guard. She was  going to have  to pull herself  together. She  was<br /> going to<br />     have to ignore the  concern shining out of  his bright blue  eyes.<br /> She was<br />     going to  have to  ignore  the visceral  reaction that  was  still<br /> telling her<br />     he was the handsomest man she’d ever seen. Visceral reactions and<br />     instincts had to be overruled.<br />     She wished she felt threatened by his closeness. The warm stirring<br />     she felt by his nearness was totally wrong, inappropriate for the<br />     situation.  He  wasn’t  touching   her,  but  she  found   herself<br /> half-wishing he<br />     would. Which  was  completely  ridiculous, of  course.  He  was  a<br /> kidnapper. A<br />     fiend. Trust me, he’d said, and she wanted to. She couldn’t.<br />     It’s just the English accent, she told herself harshly. She was  a<br /> sucker<br />     for English accents. She forced herself to be logical, rational.<br />     "Why should I trust you?"<br />     He tilted his head, his lips curling in a faint smile. "Because<br />     you have to, Claudia." His  hand approached her face. She  thought<br /> for a<br />     second he was going  to stroke her cheek.  Instead, he ripped  the<br /> Band-Aid<br />     out from under her nose.<br />     "Ow!"<br />     He held up a blue band of adhesive material for her to get a good<br />     look at.  "This  is  a  breather  strip.  It  converts  vacuum  to<br /> breathable air<br />     for a couple hours. I haven’t the faintest idea how. The magic  of<br /> modern<br />     science --only  it’s not  your modern  science, Claudia,  but  the<br /> science<br />     of two hundred  years in  your future. The  science that  produced<br /> this." He<br />     waved the strip then gestured to take in the room where they were<br />     standing. "This space ship, me, everything you see, is brought  to<br /> you by<br />     the Federated Community of Worlds."<br />     He looked at her expectantly after making this declaration.<br />     Claudia didn’t react immediately. She thought about these odd<br />     pronouncements  for  a  few  moments  first.  Suddenly  the  quiet<br /> surrounding<br />     Doros  became  ominous   and  unexplained.   She  remembered   the<br /> futuristic-<br />     looking truck on  the dock.  She thought of  the box  and the  odd<br /> shape and<br />     look of the  room where  they were  standing. She  had no  trouble<br /> believing<br />     she was  on a  space ship  and  that Denys  Duchamp was  from  the<br /> future. She<br />     should have, because it wasn’t logical, but deep in the  intuitive<br /> part<br />     of her soul she did believe.  Sometimes logic was for Vulcans  and<br /> Vulcans<br />     came from outer space -- yeah,  but Star Trek was fictional  outer<br /> space<br />     where parallel evolution  and other  non-scientific nonsense  made<br /> sense.<br />     This was real. And it was true. And it couldn’t be what it seemed.<br />     "Oh, my god!" she exclaimed as the full impact of the situation<br />     hit her. "You’re an alien!"<br />     "Well, technically, yes."<br />     If he was an alien, he couldn’t be what he seemed --tall, lean,<br />     blond and gorgeous. A man. Parallel evolution wasn’t possible.<br />     "What are you?" she demanded. "Some kind of lizard in a human<br />     suit?"<br />     ##<br />     "Our ancestors had a funny way of enjoying themselves," Toffler<br />     said as the effects of the ouzo slowly faded from his system.<br />     "Happy pill’s better," Sakretis agreed. "But they didn’t have it,<br />     did they?"<br />     Harcort stretched out on the diagnostic bed, skin glowing in the<br />     healing rays  from the  overhead medlights.  The medicomputer  was<br /> humming<br />     and tsking  to  itself, adjusting  the  lights for  their  various<br /> needs. The<br />     hum had a distinctly disapproving air to it. "The food was<br />     great, though," he added.<br />     "Yeah," Fox said.<br />     Morrison scratched his head. "There’s something I’m trying to<br />     remember."<br />     "Something we did," Toffler added.<br />     "Something about food," Sakretis recalled. "We raided a store."<br />     "Yeah." Toffler nodded. "Something else, too."<br />     "Chili." Harcort rubbed his jaw. "Something about the chili -- "<br />     "The Chili woman!" Cleary yelled. He groaned, then jumped to his<br />     feet. "What have we done? The chili woman’s in the storage box!"<br />     "In the hold?" Fox asked. "You’re joking?" There was a great deal<br />     of head shaking. "We didn’t?"<br />     "We did," Morrison declared. "I remember now."<br />     "We better go get her," Sakretis said.<br />     Cleary was already at  the door. "What are  we waiting for?  Let’s<br /> go!"<br />     They ran from the room, leaving the medicomputer to chitter on<br />     indignantly to itself.<br />     Chapter Three<br />     "You’re an alien lizard terrorist, aren’t you?"<br />     "You’ve been watching too many movies, lady," Denys told Claudia.<br />     "I’m an engineer.  I’m as human  as you are.  I’m from the  colony<br /> world of<br />     New Sydney."<br />     "What are you doing on a space ship?"<br />     "I was drafted."<br />     "Right," she answered skeptically. Claudia ducked under his arm<br />     and began backing down the aisle.<br />     He followed her. "Don’t be frightened. This is all a mistake."<br />     "Right," she said again. "Why did you bring me here?"<br />     A flash of annoyance crossed his sharply etched features. "I<br />     didn’t. You were drafted. By my shift crew."<br />     "What?"<br />     "Do you know about the effects of alcohol on judgment and reason?"<br />     "Of course I do."<br />     "Well, we don’t. Except as an historical footnote. We don’t use<br />     intoxicants in our time. At least,  not the same sort as you  use,<br /> not<br />     in the same ways. Never mind." He shook his head, and a heavy lock<br /> of<br />     blond hair fell across his forehead. He brushed it aside while the<br /> pair<br />     of them moved slowly toward the door. "What I think happened is --<br /> "<br />     The door opened behind her, six anxious men ran inside. Denys saw<br />     them coming.<br />     "She’s alive!" A bellowing cheer went up as the crew spotted<br />     Claudia.<br />     Claudia turned, and saw a mob of disheveled men rushing toward<br />     her, yelling loudly. She screamed, and found herself hiding behind<br /> Denys<br />     Duchamp. Her hands clutched nervously at his shoulders. "Help!"<br />     He threw an amused glance over his shoulder at her as the men<br />     surrounded them, but he didn’t try to peel her off as she clung to<br /> him.<br />     The soft heat of her  body felt more than  good in the cold  cargo<br /> bay.<br />     "Cleary," he yelled. "I want an explanation, Mister!"<br />     She peered from behind Denys as a red-haired, freckled man blushed<br />     bright pink and said, "Me, sir?"<br />     "Who else is responsible for screwups around here?" Denys’s<br />     question was etched in sarcastic acid.<br />     "Point taken, sir. Uh... It was an accident, sir."<br />     "She fell into the box?" one of the others offered sheepishly. He<br />     hung his head, and mumbled, "We’re  sorry. We didn’t know what  we<br /> were<br />     doing. It seemed like a good idea at the time. We’ll put her right<br /> back,<br />     sir. Promise."<br />     "How?" somebody asked. "We can’t just ask the Captain to turn<br />     around. Can we?"<br />     "No," several panicky voices said together.<br />     "We just wanted a decent meal," another one spoke up.<br />     "We’re sorry, chili lady. We recognized you from the newscast and<br />     thought you could come and cook for us."<br />     "That’s all," Cleary added. "No harm intended."<br />     Denys planted his fists on his hips. "No harm? This woman could<br />     have been killed."<br />     "She still might be if the Captain finds out," someone chimed in.<br />     Claudia gained courage as she listened to the mens’ raving. They<br />     seemed harmless, they seemed sincere. Most importantly, Denys’s<br />     indignation and  worry  seemed real  and  she was  having  trouble<br /> guarding<br />     herself against the emotional effect he had on her. Maybe she’d be<br /> able<br />     to think clearer if she  pried herself away from his  hard-muscled<br /> back.<br />     She made herself step  out from behind Denys  and address the  men<br /> who’d<br />     kidnapped her.<br />     "Let’s see if I’ve got this straight. You’re from the future?"<br />     They nodded. "Okay. Fine. I’ll buy that."<br />     "Oh, great," Denys muttered from behind her. "You’ll believe them,<br />     but I’m a lizard terrorist."<br />     She ignored him and went on. "Your ship was picking up broadcasts<br />     from Earth and  you saw  the cooking show  I was  on?" There  were<br /> nods.<br />     "Then you got drunk and accidentally kidnapped me?" More nods. "It<br /> was a<br />     coincidence -- my being in Doros the same time you were loading<br />     supplies?"<br />     "Fate," Cleary said. "Serendipity. Karma. Ouzo."<br />     And the ouzo accounted for a lot, she decided. Well, she went to<br />     Greece looking for adventure. "All  right. I’ll buy it," she  told<br /> them.<br />     "You believe them?" Denys demanded. "I mean, it’s true. But why do<br />     you believe them?"<br />     She turned to face him. "I walked in on them raiding a grocery<br />     store. I got hit by a beam of light and the light knocked me  out.<br /> I woke<br />     up in a high  tech warehouse wearing a  ’breather strip’. And  you<br /> all have<br />     FCWS HATTON  embroidered  on  the  breast  pocket  of  those  blue<br /> uniforms<br />     you’re wearing. So I’m going to assume I’m aboard the Federated<br />     Community of Worlds Ship HATTON." She crossed her arms and  lifted<br /> her<br />     chin determinedly. "Take me to your captain."<br />     There was a chorus of "NO!" Denys Duchamp’s voice was among them.<br />     "Are you  crazy!"  Then  her  kidnappers  began  to  gabble  among<br /> themselves.<br />     "She doesn’t know what she’s asking."<br />     "Does she want to walk back to Earth?"<br />     "And us with her?"<br />     "We’ll have to hide her."<br />     "Yeah, but where?"<br />     "The ship is mostly empty. What do you mean, where?"<br />     She exchanged a glance with Denys. He gave her an apologetic<br />     shrug. "They’re a good mining crew," he said. "but, I think -- "<br />     "I think I’ve been kidnapped by the six stooges," Claudia supplied<br />     for him. He looked vague for a moment, then nodded as he got the<br />     reference. He’d had the same look when she mentioned Star Trek  on<br /> the<br />     beach at Doros. She  found it, somehow,  endearing. She’d have  to<br /> guard<br />     herself from that particular emotional trap around Denys Duchamp.<br />     Without  any  conscious  decision,  they  stepped  away  from  the<br /> babbling<br />     mining crew. "Why can’t I talk to the captain?" she asked quietly.<br />     "We’re on a secret mission," he answered. "We can’t risk<br />     destroying our chance of success  by deviating from our orders  in<br /> any<br />     way." He gave her an ironic smile. "Of course, we’ve already  done<br /> that,<br />     haven’t we?"<br />     She nodded. "Looks like it to me."<br />     "But as long as the Captain doesn’t find out..." His voice trailed<br />     off, and he looked at her hopefully.<br />     Claudia waited for him to go on, tapping her sandal-shod foot on<br />     the slightly vibrating  metal deck. Deny’s  men gathered  silently<br /> around<br />     them. Tap tap tap. "Well?"  she finally demanded after Denys  just<br /> stood<br />     there looking thoughtful and pleading for a while. It was a very<br />     effective, boyish look.<br />     "We’re going to have to make another supply run when the back<br />     ordered parts come in," he said. "We could sneak you back to Earth<br /> then."<br />     His men nodded as one.<br />     Claudia continued angrily tapping her foot. "So? What does that<br />     mean?"<br />     "It means we’d probably be able to hide you from the rest of the<br />     crew for that long. The  ship is practically empty. We’re  working<br /> with a<br />     skeleton crew."<br />     "Why do you have to hide me?"<br />     "Because of the captain," the red-head named Cleary explained.<br />     "He’d kill you if you were found."<br />     "For the sake of the mission," someone else said.<br />     "Kill us, too."<br />     "Nah, he needs us."<br />     "At least until the mission’s complete. Then -- " The man<br />     dramatically drew a finger across his throat.<br />     Denys stepped between his men and her. He put his hands on her<br />     shoulders and looked her sincerely in the eye. "Captain Andrews is<br /> a<br />     tyrant. Your being on board won’t do any harm, but he wouldn’t see<br /> it<br />     that way." And he’d be right, Denys admitted to himself. Her being<br /> here<br />     could change  history somehow.  Maybe she  already had.  Not  her.<br /> Them. They<br />     were responsible. Do I want to protect you, Claudia Cameron? Or am<br /> I<br />     just  trying  to  protect  my  men,  and  my  career?  Better   to<br /> concentrate on<br />     protecting the mission. At all  cost. "You’ll have to promise  not<br /> to tell<br />     anyone on Earth about this," he went on.<br />     She laughed. She was very beautiful when she laughed. He had to<br />     keep from letting that beauty effect him.<br />     "Why shouldn’t I tell anyone?" she questioned. "People claim to be<br />     kidnapped by aliens in  UFOs all the time.  No one believes  them.<br /> They<br />     wouldn’t believe me, either. It’s not  like this is going to  show<br /> up on<br />     an episode of Sightings, or something."<br />     Denys wasn’t sure he believed her matter-of-fact statement. Why<br />     wouldn’t anyone believe  her? The  question bothered  him, but  he<br /> refrained<br />     from asking for now.<br />     "Fine. Wonderful. It’s decided," Cleary said. "We’ll hide you. No<br />     problem."<br />     Claudia rounded on Cleary. "I never said I was going along with<br />     this."<br />     "But you have to," Sakretis pleaded.<br />     "Please, chili lady," Fox put in.<br />     Denys watched as her eyes narrowed and her nostrils flared<br />     angrily. He was suddenly aware that  she might be little, but  she<br /> was no<br />     pushover. He could  tell she was  going to be  able to handle  his<br /> crew, and<br />     he liked her for it. Liked and resented it at the same time. Damn,<br /> the<br />     woman was confusing.<br />     "My name is Claudia," she told them. "No, Dr. Cameron to you<br />     louts. Forget this chili lady nonsense. I do not cook for my<br />     kidnappers."<br />     "Dr. Cameron?" Denys wondered. "Doctor of what?"<br />     "I didn’t always run a catering business," she said, still staring<br />     down the  eager looks  on the  crew’s faces.  She wagged  a  stern<br /> finger at<br />     them. "I have," she  informed them, "faced a  hall full of  rowdy,<br /> know-it-<br />     all fraternity jocks and beaten them into submission in less  time<br /> than<br />     it takes to  assign a  half dozen research  papers. I  cook and  I<br /> manage a<br />     cleaning business because I enjoy it,  not because I see it as  my<br /> natural<br />     place in the scheme of things. If you brought me on board thinking<br /> I was<br />     the perfect little woman  who would just love  to darn your  socks<br /> and stir<br />     your soup, you most definitely have another think coming!"<br />     "Yes, ma’am," a chorus of six voices answered.<br />     "What?"<br />     They came to attention. "Yes, ma’am, Dr. Cameron!"<br />     "Good." She threw a smug look over her shoulder at Denys. "My<br />     father was a drill sergeant," she told him.<br />     He covered his mouth in an attempt not to laugh. "Yes, ma’am," he<br />     said from behind his hand.<br />     "Uh, Dr. Cameron?" Harcort questioned tentatively.<br />     "Yes?"<br />     "You do promise not to talk to the Captain, though. Don’t you?"<br />     She grimaced, and tapped her foot a few more times, but finally<br />     gave a grudging nod. "I promise."<br />     There was a collective sigh of relief.<br />     "Thank you," Denys said. "It won’t be hard to hide you." Suddenly<br />     everyone’s  eyes  were  turned  eagerly  to  him  for  leadership,<br /> including<br />     Claudia’s. He smiled  into hers,  then caught  himself and  looked<br /> swiftly<br />     away. He spoke to the crew. "Maybe we can disguise her as a man."<br />     There was general laughter.<br />     He ran a critical eye over her small but lush form. Maybe we could<br />     disguise her as  a man from  the waist down,  he thought. No,  not<br /> with<br />     those lovely curved hips and that cute little heart-shaped --<br />     "Yeah, right," Cleary said.<br />     He got the distinct feeling the shift crew were sharing his exact<br />     thoughts. He didn’t like it. "Just check through stores and pilfer<br /> her<br />     some clothes that fit." There were nods. "All right, where can  we<br /> stash<br />     her?" he went on.<br />     Cleary spoke up. "Leave it to me, Duchamp. I know the perfect<br />     place."<br />     "Fine," Denys answered. Cleary, sober, was the one person he’d<br />     trust with getting away with murder. The man had been born to beat<br /> the<br />     system. "Get her settled somewhere no  one will think to look  for<br /> the<br />     next two months."<br />     "I will," he promised. "Leave it to me."<br />     ##<br />     Claudia suspected Cleary of being responsible for the whole thing.<br />     She distinctly remembered his voice saying, "Get her!" back in the<br />     grocery store. She knew she should be distrustful and resentful of<br /> the<br />     man. Instead she found she’d liked him almost instantly as soon as<br /> she<br />     got over being frightened and furious at the situation.<br />     She liked the  room he  brought her to  as well.  They reached  it<br /> after<br />     about half  an hour  of  skulking along  deserted blue  and  cream<br /> painted<br />     metal corridors. She liked the  room because she got an  immediate<br /> sense<br />     as she stepped inside that she was on board a spaceship. The<br />     furnishings, what little there were of them, were all curved and<br />     futuristic-looking. She  was  immediately drawn  to  the  viewport<br /> which<br />     looked out on the stars.<br />     "That’s a projection screen," Cleary explained as Claudia peered<br />     longingly out at  blacker than  black darkness  dotted with  cold,<br /> sharp<br />     pinpoints of light. "The only real viewport on the HATTON is the<br />     Captain’s Walk.  It’s a  corridor up  near the  bridge;  officers’<br /> country.<br />     This," he went on, running his  hand over a control panel next  to<br /> the<br />     fake window as she  gave a disappointed sigh,  "will show you  the<br /> view<br />     from any point on the ship." The picture changed several times  as<br /> he<br />     pressed the keypad. Actually it  wavered and then showed the  same<br /> dark<br />     image several times. "There’s not much to see at the moment," he<br />     admitted.<br />     Claudia sighed and moved away from the window. She let Cleary show<br />     her the rest of her temporary quarters.<br />     "What you’ve got here," he said, "is a living area. Table, chairs,<br />     entertainment/educational center, shelves, personal lockers,  head<br /> and<br />     bed alcoves." He pointed at each amenity as he told her about it.<br />     Claudia took it all in, then said, "This room’s meant for double<br />     occupancy."<br />     He nodded. "All quarters on this level are. We sleep six to a room<br />     on our deck. I  thought you’d be more  comfortable here." He  gave<br /> her a<br />     very charming smile, then showed her  how to open lockers and  run<br /> the<br />     sonic shower in the head and call up games and information on  the<br /> e/e<br />     screen.<br />     She caught on easily and Cleary soon gave her another of his ready<br />     supply of smiles. "Now I’ll go find you something to wear."<br />     After he left Claudia sat down on the bed in the sleeping alcove<br />     he’d suggested she use and tried not to think about the situation.<br /> Or at<br />     least not to think too  seriously about the situation. All  right,<br /> it’s<br />     not  exactly  believable,  she  admitted,  but  it’s  interesting.<br /> Unique. And<br />     they seemed to  be nice  people. She  felt like  she should  trust<br /> them, and<br />     decided she’d have to guard  against that feeling. They might  not<br /> be what<br />     they appeared at all. She was going to have to be careful of her<br />     emotions, especially around the formidably handsome Mr. Duchamp.<br />     Still, she was in space even if it might be some sort of sinister<br />     plot. She couldn’t help but be  happy about being in space.  Okay,<br /> the<br />     view wasn’t spectacular, or even real, but she was in space.<br />     She’d always wanted to be an astronaut when she was a kid. She’d<br />     even gone to Space Camp. She  was prepared... more or less.  Space<br /> Camp was<br />     back in college, though, when she was an undergrad. A lot of  time<br /> and<br />     changes had passed since those innocent, idealistic days.<br />     She was not going to worry about it, she decided, sliding back on<br />     the waterbed-like mattress. She was  going to take things as  they<br /> came<br />     and analyze the situation after she  had some more data. That  was<br /> all she<br />     could really do, anyway.<br />     The sleeping alcoves were niches in the wall set on opposite sides<br />     of the  personal  lockers. The  niche  contained a  shelf  and  an<br /> overhead<br />     light as well as the single width platform bed. She lay down.  The<br /> bed’s<br />     surface molded to her, soft and supporting at the same time.<br />     Very nice, she thought. It almost felt it was giving off<br />     comforting vibrations.  She  yawned and  curled  up on  her  side,<br /> tucking her<br />     hands beneath her cheek. She  was tired. It had  been a hell of  a<br /> day.<br />     This was nice.  It was as  if the bed  was trying to  lull her  to<br /> sleep, she<br />     thought, and fell asleep.<br />     She woke realizing she wasn’t alone in the room; Cleary back with<br />     some clothes, she supposed.  She rolled over  and opened her  eyes<br /> and<br />     immediately noticed that Denys Duchamp wasn’t wearing a shirt. His<br /> chest<br />     hair was  dark  gold, not  too  heavy,  but it  did  descend  over<br /> sculpted<br />     muscles in a tantalizing V to  his flat stomach. He was wearing  a<br /> tiny<br />     pair of knit briefs. Bright blue. With a pronounced bulge.<br />     Claudia licked dry lips, and forced her gaze to climb back above<br />     the man’s belt  buckle. Or,  rather, where the  man’s belt  buckle<br /> would be<br />     if he  were wearing  a belt,  or anything  other than  those  tiny<br /> little<br />     Calvin Klein’s.<br />     Claudia sat bolt upright. What the devil was she doing staring at<br />     a nearly-naked man as though it was the most natural thing in  the<br /> world?<br />     "Are you hungry?" Denys asked politely as Claudia’s gaze met his<br />     own. He’d  meant to  ask her  what  she was  doing in  his  former<br /> roommate’s<br />     bed, but from the expression on  her face the question he’d  asked<br /> seemed<br />     more appropriate. Besides, he could figure out for himself why she<br /> was<br />     in his quarters.<br />     He watched her face go bright red as she quickly sat up. "What are<br />     you doing here?" she yelled.<br />     "I live here," he explained. I..."<br />     "Get out!"<br />     She looked like she was getting ready to scream. "What’s the<br />     matter?" he  asked,  voice soothing,  trying  to make  his  manner<br /> reassuring.<br />     He took a step closer to the bed.<br />     Claudia launched herself to her feet and toward the door to the<br />     corridor. Denys Duchamp, most of his leanly muscled frame visible,<br />     stepped in front of her. "Why haven’t you got any clothes on?" she<br />     demanded.<br />     "I took off my uniform," he answered reasonably. "I just got off<br />     duty. I came home to relax]]></description>
<pubDate><![CDATA[Fri, 15 May 2009 20:10:14 +0400]]></pubDate>
<comments><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post57322496/]]></comments>
<guid><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post57322496/#BlCom519198728]]></guid>
<author><![CDATA[]]></author>
</item>
<item><title><![CDATA[Âåðáåð]]></title>
<link><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post17857035/#BlCom496481136]]></link>
<description><![CDATA[ | ×èòàëà "Àíãåëîâ" è "Ìû,Áîãè"! ÎÎÎ×ÅÍÜ ñèëüíî ïîíðàâèëîñü... Ïðî÷èòàëà â È-íåòå, ÷òî "òàíàòîíàâòû" è "Àíãåëû" -ýòî äèëîãèÿ... Äàëåå, òðèëîãèÿ, â êîòîðóþ âõîäÿò "Ìû,Áîãè", "Äûõàíèå Áîãîâ" è "Òàéíà Áîãîâ"... Ïîñëåäíèå äâå íå ïðî÷èòàëà - ðóêè íå äîõîäÿò...<br /> ÷èòàëà òðèëîãèþ ïðî ìóðàâüåâ... íó äîâîëüíî èíòåðåñíî. (õîòÿ, "àíãåëû" âïå÷àòëèëè áîëüøå) Åñëè Âû ÷èòàëè "Ìóðàâüåâ" è ïîíðàâèëîñü - òî äâå ñëåäóþùèå äîëæíû òîæå ïîíðàâèòüñÿ...) Óäà÷è!)]]></description>
<pubDate><![CDATA[Wed, 03 Dec 2008 20:29:08 +0300]]></pubDate>
<comments><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post17857035/]]></comments>
<guid><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post17857035/#BlCom496481136]]></guid>
<author><![CDATA[Ìàëåíüêèé_Áóðóíäó÷îê]]></author>
</item>
<item><title><![CDATA[-=òðåáóåòñÿ ïîìîùü=-]]></title>
<link><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post18314256/#BlCom496479778]]></link>
<description><![CDATA[ | ñîâðåìåííàÿ.. ñëîæíîâàòî... ïåðâîå, ÷òî ïðèõîäèò â ãîëîâó- Âëàäèìèð Êóíèí "Ìèêà è Àëüôðåä" (2000 .) - íåîáû÷íîå è çàõâàòûâàþùåå ïðîèçâåäåíèå... Î÷åíü ñèëüíî ïîíðàâèëîñü! êîãäà ïîêóïàëà - íå îæèäàëà òàêîãî!]]></description>
<pubDate><![CDATA[Wed, 03 Dec 2008 20:21:49 +0300]]></pubDate>
<comments><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post18314256/]]></comments>
<guid><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post18314256/#BlCom496479778]]></guid>
<author><![CDATA[Ìàëåíüêèé_Áóðóíäó÷îê]]></author>
</item>
<item><title><![CDATA[Â.Ñîëîâüåâ - Ïóòèí. Ïóòåâîäèòåëü äëÿ íåðàâíîäóøíûõ.]]></title>
<link><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post68415514/#BlCom493498650]]></link>
<description><![CDATA[ | Ê òîìó æå óæå ïî îáëîæêå ìîæíî ïîíÿòü, êàêîãî õàðàêòåðà êíèãà ;) Ïóòèíó åå áóäåò ïðèÿòíî ÷èòàòü íàâåðíÿêà, à âàì - íå çíàþ...]]></description>
<pubDate><![CDATA[Fri, 14 Nov 2008 14:39:21 +0300]]></pubDate>
<comments><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post68415514/]]></comments>
<guid><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post68415514/#BlCom493498650]]></guid>
<author><![CDATA[Mary_Shadow]]></author>
</item>
<item><title><![CDATA[Â.Ñîëîâüåâ - Ïóòèí. Ïóòåâîäèòåëü äëÿ íåðàâíîäóøíûõ.]]></title>
<link><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post68415514/#BlCom493498528]]></link>
<description><![CDATA[ | ×èòàëà, êàæåòñÿ, â Îãîíüêå íåëåñòíûé îòçûâ íà ýòó êíèãó.]]></description>
<pubDate><![CDATA[Fri, 14 Nov 2008 14:38:11 +0300]]></pubDate>
<comments><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post68415514/]]></comments>
<guid><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post68415514/#BlCom493498528]]></guid>
<author><![CDATA[Mary_Shadow]]></author>
</item>
<item><title><![CDATA[ëþáèìûé Ðåìàðê]]></title>
<link><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post6604480/#BlCom478991447]]></link>
<description><![CDATA[ | "Æèçíü âçàéìû" õîðîøàÿ êíèãà... íî ìíå òàê ïîêàçàëîñü,÷òî íàäî áû áûëî ìíå åå ïðî÷èòàòü ðàíüøå,â øêîëüíûå ãîäà - áîëüøå âïå÷àòëèëà áû.Äëÿ ìåíÿ ýòà êíèãà èç ðàçðÿäà "ïðî÷èòàòü â ñâîå âðåìÿ"))<br /> Â ëþáîì ñëó÷àå,ïîíðàâèëîñü.]]></description>
<pubDate><![CDATA[Tue, 12 Aug 2008 13:20:45 +0400]]></pubDate>
<comments><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post6604480/]]></comments>
<guid><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post6604480/#BlCom478991447]]></guid>
<author><![CDATA[ancienttoday]]></author>
</item>
<item><title><![CDATA[Â.Ñîëîâüåâ - Ïóòèí. Ïóòåâîäèòåëü äëÿ íåðàâíîäóøíûõ.]]></title>
<link><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post68415514/#BlCom437931103]]></link>
<description><![CDATA[ | Ìíå, ÷åñòíî ãîâîðÿ, áûëî áû ñòðàøíîâàòî ýòó êíèøøêó îòêðûòü.<br /> ß åäâà ïðîáëåâàëàñü ïîñëå åãî "Åâàíãåëèÿ" - íåò, âîò ïóñòü îí ëó÷øå ïðîãðàììêè âåäåò. Ýòî ó íåãî ïîëó÷àåòñÿ, è îòëè÷íî.<br /> À ïèñàòü îí íå óìååò, ÈÌÕÎ, äàæå åñëè î Ïóòèíå :)]]></description>
<pubDate><![CDATA[Sun, 02 Mar 2008 07:53:53 +0300]]></pubDate>
<comments><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post68415514/]]></comments>
<guid><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post68415514/#BlCom437931103]]></guid>
<author><![CDATA[Ïóëåìåò÷èöà]]></author>
</item>
<item><title><![CDATA[Â.Ñîëîâüåâ - Ïóòèí. Ïóòåâîäèòåëü äëÿ íåðàâíîäóøíûõ.]]></title>
<link><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post68415514/#BlCom437846484]]></link>
<description><![CDATA[ | Ñ óäîâîëüñòâèåì áû ïðî÷èòàëà. Ëþáëþ Ñîëîâüåâà]]></description>
<pubDate><![CDATA[Sat, 01 Mar 2008 23:01:17 +0300]]></pubDate>
<comments><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post68415514/]]></comments>
<guid><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post68415514/#BlCom437846484]]></guid>
<author><![CDATA[Áóêà_Ãðîçíàÿ]]></author>
</item>
<item><title><![CDATA[Êàçàêè â Ïàðèæå â 1814 ãîäó]]></title>
<link><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post51925116/#BlCom411489237]]></link>
<description><![CDATA[ | Ïðîäîëæåíèå òåìû <a href="http://www.liveinternet.ru/users/man-yak/post61394054/" target="_blank">çäåñü</a>]]></description>
<pubDate><![CDATA[Sun, 23 Dec 2007 23:00:26 +0300]]></pubDate>
<comments><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post51925116/]]></comments>
<guid><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post51925116/#BlCom411489237]]></guid>
<author><![CDATA[man-yak]]></author>
</item>
<item><title><![CDATA[ÏÐÎÑÜÁÀ È ÑÎÂÅÒ]]></title>
<link><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post55489420/#BlCom404441921]]></link>
<description><![CDATA[ | Åùå íå íàøëàñü êíèæêà? Åñëè íóæíà, ÿ çíàþ, ãäå åå êóïèòü.]]></description>
<pubDate><![CDATA[Tue, 04 Dec 2007 19:02:02 +0300]]></pubDate>
<comments><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post55489420/]]></comments>
<guid><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post55489420/#BlCom404441921]]></guid>
<author><![CDATA[Stellazh]]></author>
</item>
<item><title><![CDATA[Ïîìîãèòå]]></title>
<link><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post57322496/#BlCom397867124]]></link>
<description><![CDATA[ | Äîïîëíåíèå - "Walking on the moon" - êîðîòêèé ðàññêàç, íàõîäèòüñÿ â êíèãå (åñëè ñ àíãë ïåðåâîäèòü) "ãðóáûå àñòðîíàâòû"]]></description>
<pubDate><![CDATA[Sat, 17 Nov 2007 17:40:31 +0300]]></pubDate>
<comments><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post57322496/]]></comments>
<guid><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post57322496/#BlCom397867124]]></guid>
<author><![CDATA[Òîìñà]]></author>
</item>
<item><title><![CDATA[ïîñîâåòóéòå, ïîæàëóéñòà]]></title>
<link><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post56807773/#BlCom395583070]]></link>
<description><![CDATA[ | <b><a href="http://www.liveinternet.ru/users/banana_co/"><img style="margin:0px;" src="http://www.liveinternet.ru/images/w2.gif" width="20" height="16" border="0"></a><a href="http://www.liveinternet.ru/users/banana_co/profile/" target=_blank><b>banana_co</b></a></b>, ñïàñèáî :)<br /> <b><a href="http://www.liveinternet.ru/users/1081259/"><img style="margin:0px;" src="http://www.liveinternet.ru/images/w2.gif" width="20" height="16" border="0"></a><a href="http://www.liveinternet.ru/users/1081259/profile/" target=_blank><b>Îñêîëêè_æèçíè</b></a></b>, ïîïðîáóþ,ïàñèá]]></description>
<pubDate><![CDATA[Sat, 10 Nov 2007 19:36:02 +0300]]></pubDate>
<comments><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post56807773/]]></comments>
<guid><![CDATA[http://www.liveinternet.ru/community/796394/post56807773/#BlCom395583070]]></guid>
<author><![CDATA[Áàíäèòîñ]]></author>
</item>
</channel>
</rss>
