âYou can say anything in front of Jasper and the crew you can say to me,â Natalya said.
âStillâ¦â Ptolemy said, and motioned for Natalya to open the door to her quarters.
A fear came over Natalya, a primal terror for Ptolemyâs intentions. She shook away the thought as ludicrous, knowing the man was far weaker than Ambassador Montenegro had been, and opened the door.
Ptolemy followed her inside and closed the hatch behind him. Natalya didnât bother sitting. She stopped by the door and crossed her arms.
âYou figured out that the reason we transported those refugees off Puqi was to collect Jasper,â Ptolemy began. âIt wasnât just his skills as a Prophet or his knowledge of Teal City we needed. It was what he is.â
âWhat is he?â Natalya asked.
âWanted. The Prophets are working to keep the peace between the colonies and Prosper. They want the Farbind ruins to remain a demilitarized zone. Itâs not just defense drones we have to penetrate, itâs the Prophets themselves. Theyâre monitoring the area with that White Prophet power of theirs.â
âCan Jasper stop it?â
âI donât know exactly how Prophet weapons work, or even how theyâre made. But I know well enough that White Prophetsâ scientifically impossible abilities can detect life forms. I donât believe Jasperâs Gold power has the ability to stop it.â
âI donât understand. I thought you said we had all we needed to get past the Prophets.â
âWe do. Jasper is the only other thing in the galaxy besides incursions into Farbind the White Prophets are constantly scanning for. And if we give him up, it will give us a chance to enter the Farbind system while the Prophets are focused on him,â Ptolemy said, his words slow, his eyes locked with Natalyaâs.
âGive him up,â Natalya said, her voice slapping Ptolemy in the face with a replication of his tone. âYou mean hand him over. To who?â
âThe whom is not the question,â Ptolemy said. âThe if is what Iâm concerned with.â
âThe if might change depending on the whom.â
âWould you be willing to hand Jasper over to anyone to secure this mission, Captain?â
Natalya blinked.
âI see the way the two of you look at each other. I see your reactions to his presence,â Ptolemy said. âThere is a point where emotions can override sense, and Iâm not sure where you are on that spectrum.â
Natalya turned away from Ptolemy, staring at the door with the desire to run from the man as fast as she could. She had to clench her fists to keep her feet planted, and heard the soft steps of Ptolemy backing away from her.
âJust tell me your plan,â Natalya said, still facing the door.
âMy plan is to give the Prophets what they want,â Ptolemy explained. âJasper is wanted for the assassination of Zhou Chairwoman Xia. It doesnât matter if Qin framed him or not, heâs wanted for it. All of Prosper, even the colonies threatened to ban the Prophets from the galaxy and hunt them down as criminals over the event.â
Natalya turned around. She didnât like Prophets all that much, meddling philosophers. Banning them didnât seem like such a bad idea. Most people shared this opinion, making Prophets unpopular even in the best of times.
âThe only reason they werenât is that they agreed to use every ounce of their strength to hunt down Jasper,â Ptolemy continued. âWhite Prophets teleporting and scanning the galaxy. Red Prophets waiting to kill him like Red Prophets do best. And the Golds are relentless in their duty to bring a renegade of their own to justice. Heâs clever to have avoided them for so long. But he canât run forever.â
âWhich is why if we prove heâs innocent he wonât have to,â Natalya said.
âDonât be naïve, Natalya. Qin isnât our enemy.â
Natalya laughed. âIâd disagree with that.â
âAn enemy is someone who needs to be defeated. I have no concern for Qin save that he stands between me and what I want. Once he is no longer a barrier, Qin will be of no concern.â
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âAgain, I disagree.â
âDisagree enough to risk your life? Is your desire to keep Jasper safe strong enough to sacrifice our new world?â
Natalya grimaced.
âMy plan is to give Jasperâs location to the Prophets,â Ptolemy said. âTheyâre watching the Farbind system, but if they were focused on Jasper, they would no longer be able to monitor so much space. We could slip through while they hunt him down.â
Natalya crossed her arms.
âWe drop him off in one of the shuttles, make it look like heâs trying to enter the Farbind DMZ on his own,â Ptolemy explained. âWe send his coordinates to Prosper, the Whites teleport to him, and we slip through right as theyâre making the pickup. If heâs innocent, he can plead his case to the courts. But weâll be out of the galaxy by then.â
âThe same courts that ruled me a traitor?â Natalya asked.
âProphet courts might be different.â
Natalya snorted.
âIn any case, this is immaterial depending on your decision. It doesnât matter what happens to him ifââ Ptolemy said.
âIt does,â Natalya interrupted.
âThen youâve made your decision?â
âI didnât say that.â
âIt comes down to this: is one man worth all weâve worked for?â
âYouâve worked for.â
âLet me rephrase: is Jasper worth your life?â
Natalya opened her mouth to reject this line of thinking, but paused in thought. Theyâd been swimming upstream for months, fighting to stay alive, smuggling in warzones. She didnât have a goal of any kind, and part of her felt like she deserved the frantic existence. But she knew she couldnât get in gunfights smuggling refugees for long without taking a blast to the head, or Chimera wandering into too-hot space, unable to get away.
The math didnât add up to her living that long. Ptolemy offered a way out. Maybe it wasnât the most honorable path, but Farbind had destroyed any chance of honor she had.
âThink on it,â Ptolemy said. âWeâre enroute to Gaixia. Should take some time.â
âWhat happens if I say no?â Natalya asked.
âThen we are in great danger. If you say yes, all is well.â
Natalya saw the face of Montenegro, the Gaozu Ambassador smiling as he insisted heâd give her peace. A shudder ran through her body, and Ptolemy could tell she was uneasy.
âThis isnât Farbind, Captain Frazier,â Ptolemy insisted. âNo one is asking you to hurt yourself. No one is asking you to sacrifice anything of your own. All we need is that a wanted man be turned over to the authorities.â
Natalya took a deep breath.
âThere are billions of people in this galaxy, and until recently Jasper was just another refugee to you,â Ptolemy said. âWe must keep this station out of Qinâs hands. One man youâve known a handful of days is immaterial compared to what weâre after.â
Natalya did the math, and knew Ptolemy was right.
âThink on it, Captain. Thatâs all I ask,â Ptolemy said.
Natalya exhaled.
âIâll tell you my decision before we get to Gaixia,â Natalya said.
âThank you, Captain,â Ptolemy replied.
âNow go back to your quarters and get out of mine.â
âCertainly.â
Ptolemy moved swiftly out the door and didnât look back as he strode to his quarters. Natalya had no doubt the man was setting things in motion, getting ready for his new planet.
When she reached the bridge, Natalya found Augustus munching on a plate of dumplings, and Co snoring at the weapons console.
Natalya stared at the viewscreens, at the dazzling colors crossing the shipâs bow, the opalescents sending them far across the galaxy.
âWant one?â Augustus asked, presenting Natalya with a dumpling on an ornate, porcelain spoon.
Natalya took the offered dumpling and popped it in her mouth. Savory juices swirled across her tongue. âStatus?â she asked as she chewed.
âGot a power shortage on the upper hull, but it stopped after Co punched the console. Sometimes Chimy likes it rough,â Augustus answered.
Power shortages and surges plagued Chimera. It was to be expected from such a jalopy of a vessel. Still, Natalya checked the readings to make sure everything was sound. Didnât want a power flux to rip them to shreds during opalescent. Power fluctuated around the crew deck and cargo bay, likely from Ptolemy doing whatever he was doing and Sisi messing with things. Everything was sound, or as sound as Chimera could get.
âAugustus, I have a dilemma,â Natalya said.
âCaptain, the sexual tension between us is too strong. How about we just give each other a rubdown while we finish these dumplings?â Augustus replied.
Natalya smiled. âWhy donât you give Co a rubdown instead.â
âAlready tried. She said whatever part of me touched her sheâd tear off. This led to an interesting discussion over what piece of me Iâd be willing to part with. Looks like we both have a dilemma, Captain.â
Natalya stared at the beautiful colors of outer space flying by. âWould it be worth it? Tearing off that piece of you? Even if it was something you could part with and maybe even replace?â
âI love myself too much to see any part of me torn off,â Augustus answered. âEven if it was just my pinky toe, it is such a glorious toe it would be a tragedy to lose.â
Natalya nodded. âYou know, Iâm pretty sure Jasper can reattach limbs,â she pointed out.
âWhat? That changes everything!â
Augustus stood from the pilotâs seat. Before he could take a step toward her, Co leveled a shotgun at the manâs face.
âI only wanted to offer you a shoulder massage,â Augustus noted.
âAnd Iâll only blow your pretty little head off if you come near me. See if Jasper can heal that,â Co replied.
âDid you hear that, Captain? She thinks Iâm pretty!â Augustus laughed and sat back down.
Co returned to snoring, and Natalya realized she needed to do the same. She was over-thinking herself into a corner, and hoped sleep would make things clear.