Chapter 2 #2
The word lands in the space between us, and I wait for the elaboration that will reveal the weakness in her position. She'll offer her body, perhaps, or her service in some unspecified capacity. She'll beg me to see her value without articulating what that value actually is.
“I've heard a hundred similar offers. Why should yours interest me?”
“Unlike the others, I’m offering my skills as a combat medic instead of my body.
” She speaks with the confidence of someone presenting a business case rather than begging for her life.
“I fought in the colony wars for two years. I have xenobiology training. Operated in conditions that kept soldiers alive through wounds that should have killed them.” She pauses, and her eyes never leave mine.
“I’m worth more than Tomás. We both know it. ”
“You're offering to work off his debt.”
“I'm offering to work off his debt as a medic. My skills, my training, my expertise. Not a mine worker. Not a pleasure contract.” The cortisol still sharpens her scent, her pulse still drums beneath that controlled exterior, but her voice gives nothing away.
“I'm offering House Draven a resource it can't replace.”
She's not wrong. House Draven has medics.
We've got access to the best medical technology Vahiri can provide.
We don't need one human female with a field kit and a military record, but our medics haven't been to Kepler IV.
They haven't held a position for eleven days while their patients died around them.
They haven't learned to improvise with nothing, to read different physiologies by instinct, to make the impossible choices that combat medicine demands.
She's a different breed, forged in circumstances that can't be replicated.
“The debt is two hundred thousand credits,” I say. “A medic's salary wouldn't clear that balance in your lifetime.”
“Then we negotiate the terms.” She doesn't flinch.
“I'm not asking you to be merciful. I'm asking you to be practical.
A combat medic with my qualifications is an asset who would never cross your path under normal circumstances, one who is willing to cover for a gambler who can't pay his losses.
I'm offering you a trade that benefits House Draven.”
The room seems smaller than it did when I entered.
The twilight presses against us, and her heartbeat has steadied over this conversation, the cortisol in her blood beginning to metabolize as the terror transforms into a state closer to determination.
She's still afraid. She's simply decided that fear won't govern her choices.
I've watched males and females make promises they couldn't keep, their courage evaporating the moment circumstances turned against them.
The female is not posturing. Nor putting on a brave show for others.
She's standing in the office of the most feared enforcer on Vahiri Prime, negotiating for her brother's worthless life, and she's treating me like a creature capable of logic rather than simple violence.
The distinction shouldn't matter, but it does.
“If I agree to this arrangement,” I say, and I'm aware that I'm considering it, that I've already moved past rejection and into negotiation, “you wouldn't belong to House Draven.”
Her brow furrows. The first crack in her composure, a flicker of confusion she can't quite suppress. “I don't understand.”
“House property can be reassigned. Traded. Sold to other operations.” I let the implication settle. “You'd belong to me. Not the house. You'd live in my compound, work only for me, go nowhere without my express permission. Your contract would be personal, not institutional.”
The fear spikes again in her scent. Her heart rate increases.
She understands what I'm proposing, the difference between being owned by an organization and being owned by a person.
An organization is impersonal, bureaucratic, a system that processes humans without particular malice or attention.
A person is specific. A person has desires and intentions and uses for the things he possesses.
“Why?” she asks.
It's not the response I expected. Most debtors accept whatever terms are offered without question, grateful for any arrangement that keeps them breathing. She's asking me to explain myself, expecting her approval to matter.
I don't owe her anything, but I give it anyway. “I don't share my assets and a medic with your qualifications isn't a resource I'd trust to the general pool. If you prove as valuable as you claim, I won't allow some minor functionary to reassign you to a position beneath your abilities.”
She processes this for a long moment, her dark eyes searching my face for answers I'm uncertain she'll find. The silence stretches between us, filled with the distant hum of the compound's systems and the beat of her heart slowing as she makes her calculations.
“I want to see my brother. Confirm he's alive and unharmed before I sign a contract.”
“Acceptable.”
“And I want the terms documented. The debt amount, the duration of service, the conditions under which my obligation ends.”
“Standard practice.”
“And I want your word.” She lifts her chin, and defiance flickers in the gesture, a refusal to accept that her position holds no power. “Your word that when the debt is paid, we both walk away. Free and clear.”
I should laugh. I should remind her that she has no leverage, no power, no ability to demand anything from me. My word is worth what I choose to make it worth, and she's got no means of enforcing any promise I give.
Instead, I say, “You have it.”
The words surprise me as they leave my mouth. I don't make promises to debtors. I don't offer assurances to humans who've sold themselves into my service. Yet she asked for my word and I gave it, because her bearing demanded a response that matched her own strange dignity.
She nods, and the negotiation is complete.
I summon a guard through the compound's communications system, and while we wait, I pull up the contract interface on my personal display.
The formalities take only moments. Her palm pressed to the scanner, the biometric data recorded, her status updated in the Syndicate databases.
Property of Drazex Draven. Duration: until debt is cleared or contract is transferred.
Terms: medical services as directed by contract holder.
The words appear on the display in cold blue light, and I dismiss them because they capture nothing of what just occurred.
They don't record the way she stood her ground when lesser beings would crumble.
Or note the steadiness of her voice or the terror she refused to let govern her actions.
They document a transaction, and transactions aren't supposed to leave resonance in their wake. The guard arrives. A junior enforcer.
“Take this female to the quarters in my private wing. See that she has what she needs for the night. She meets with her brother tomorrow morning.”
The guard nods and waits for her to follow. She moves toward the door, then pauses at the threshold. Turns back to face me one last time. The amber light catches her eyes, and for a moment I can't read what lives in them.
“Thank you,” she says. The words aren't grateful. They're an acknowledgment, a recognition that refusal was an option and I chose otherwise.
“Don't thank me yet. You haven't seen the work.”
An expression flickers across her face. Not fear or gratitude. Closer to assessment, the look of a soldier filing intelligence away for future reference. Then she turns and follows the guard into the corridor. The door slides shut behind her, and I'm alone.
The office is emptier than it was before she arrived. Surrounded by silence, I stand where she stood, gazing out the window at the neon-scattered darkness of the canyon below, as a rust-colored glow presses against the walls.
This is a practical arrangement. The female is a combat medic with qualifications worth acquiring.
She presented a logical case and I accepted it because the mathematics favor House Draven.
She is an asset while her brother is a liability.
And she's mine until the debt is paid. Mine to direct. Mine to use.
The satisfaction that settles in my chest has no place in a business transaction. Possession is a contractual state, not an emotional one, and she's an asset like any other asset who will be treated accordingly.
All of this is true, and still the thought lodges beneath my sternum, a weight that's been waiting for a place to land.
I let her come here because I was curious, and now that curiosity has grown wings.
My father's voice surfaces before I can silence it. Sentimental. He would call this decision sentimental. Would see weakness in negotiation where I could simply take. Would question why I gave my word to a human who had no leverage to demand it.
The decision was practical. Her skills justify the arrangement. The mathematics favor House Draven. Everything I told her was true.
And the satisfaction that settled in my chest when she agreed? The way I watched the door long after she'd gone through it? The word that surfaced when the contract registered her as mine?
Mine.
I bury the thought before it can take root. My father sees threats in every shadow. Not every choice that deviates from cruelty constitutes weakness. Sometimes practicality wears a different face than he expects.
The rationalization is thin. I know it's thin.
I choose not to examine it further.
I shouldn’t be interested in a human female I met twenty minutes ago. Or standing at a window thinking about tomorrow, about when she'll see her brother, about when she'll begin her work, about when I'll see her again. She's a complication I should never allow through my door.