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Priestess of the Flame
by
I felt my own mouth set grimly.
“Where is she, Mr. Correy?” I asked quietly.
“In my quarters, under guard. It was my watch below, as you know, sir. I entered my stateroom, figuring on catching forty winks, and there she was, seated in my big chair, smiling at me.
“Well, for a second I couldn’t speak. I just stared at her, and she kept smiling back at me. ‘What are you doing here?’ I managed to ask her, at last. ‘Do you know where you are?’
“‘I’ll talk to your commanding officer,’ she told me, cool as you please. ‘Will you bring him, please?’
“‘You’ll see him plenty soon enough,’ I snapped at her, getting over my surprise somewhat by that time. I called in a couple of men to keep her from getting into mischief, and reported to you. What are your orders, sir?”
I hesitated a second, wondering. From Correy’s account, she must be a rather remarkable person.
“Bring her up here, if you will, Mr. Correy. I’d like to see her before we put her in the brig.” The brig, I might explain, was a small room well forward, where members of the crew were confined for discipline.
“Right, sir!” It seemed to me that there was a peculiar twinkle in Correy’s eyes as he went out, and I wondered about it while we waited for him to return with the prisoner.
“What an infernal nuisance, sir!” complained Hendricks, looking up from his glowing charts. “We’ll be the laughing-stock of the Service if this leaks out!”
“When it leaks out,” I corrected him glumly. I’d already thought of the unpleasant outcome he mentioned. “I’ll have to report it, of course, and the whole Service will know about it. We’ll just have to grin and make the most of it, I guess.” There was still another possibility which I didn’t mention: the silver-sleeves at Base would very likely call me on the carpet for permitting such a thing to happen. A commander was supposed to be responsible for everything that happened; no excuses available in the Service as it was in those days.
* * * * *
I scowled forbiddingly as I heard Correy open the door; at least I could make her very sorry she had selected the Ertak for her adventure. I am afraid, however, that it was a startled, rather than a scowling face to which she lifted her eyes.
“This is the stowaway, sir,” said Correy briskly, closing the door. He was watching my face, and I saw, now, the reason for the twinkle in his eye when I mentioned placing the stowaway in the brig.
The woman was startlingly beautiful; one of the most beautiful women I have ever seen, and I have roamed the outer limits of space, and seen the women of many worlds. Hendricks, standing behind me, gasped audibly as his eyes fell upon her.
The stowaway was regally tall and exquisitely modeled. Her hair was the color of pale morning sunlight on Earth; her eyes an amazing blue, the equal of which I have never seen.
She was beautiful, but not coldly so. Despite her imperious bearing, there was something seductive about the soft curves of her beautiful body; something to rouse the pulses of a man in the langour of her intensely blue eyes, and the full, sensuous lips, scarlet as a smear of fresh blood.
“So this is the stowaway,” I said, trying to keep my voice coolly indifferent. “What is your name?”
“I should prefer,” she replied, speaking the universal language with a sibilant accent that was very fascinating, “to speak with you privately.”
“You will speak with me,” I informed her crisply, “in the presence of these officers. I repeat: what is your name?”
She smiled faintly, her eyes compelling mine.
“I am called Liane,” she said. “Chief Priestess of the Flame. Mother of Life. Giver of Death. I believe my name and position are not unknown to you, Commander Hanson?”