Eric felt his shoulders stiffen.
He straightened up. "Then you know that this"—he laid his hand on the box—"is basically all the two contraband runners who took me off the Realm knew about their ship."
He tapped the screen three times to bring up Kessa's image by itself. "What history I've got of this ship is in here, and if anyone could get past the Vitae, it was her." He pointed at Kessa's image and shook himself to try to chase away the memory of her lying dead on the deck plates.
Aria sat in the terminal's chair and drew one of her stones out of the pouch. "I can learn without the stone, but it makes rearranging things later much more difficult." She hit the PLAY key on the console and cupped the stone in her hand.
"Whaddaya want?" demanded Kessa.
"I want to know about the
Kessa started talking."
Eric watched Aria. Her eyes fastened on the recording without blinking or flickering. She sat like a Vitae Ambassador, not moving, barely even breathing. She wasn't watching what passed in front of her, she was absorbing it.
A strange awkwardness washed over him and he automatically retreated to the bridge. But it wasn't Cam in the pilot's chair, oblivious to his presence. Adu turned around and wrinkled the skin over his eye sockets in a jerky imitation of humans raising their eyebrows.
Eric turned away again and, trying not to see Aria, shut himself into his cabin.
"Garismit's Eyes!" He sank onto the bed and stared at the blank surface of the door. "What is the matter with me?"
Eric leaned against the side of the bunk's nook and rubbed his eyes wearily.
To his relief, exhaustion clouded his mind, wrapping his thoughts in thick velvet. Willingly, he relaxed into it and fell asleep.
Eric awoke several times to the uninterrupted sound of Kessa's voice vibrating softly through the cabin wall. When he woke to nothing but silence, he swung himself out of the bed and opened the door to the common room.
Aria still sat in front of the comm board. She was gently massaging her eyelids with her fingertips. The stone lay in her lap, gleaming in the light.
"Garismit's Eyes," she muttered, "I think mine are about to fall out of their sockets."
"Did you find it?" asked Eric.
"Eh?" Aria glanced Wearily at him. "I don't know." She sucked in a deep breath and picked the stone up. "Ask me again."
Eric sat on the sofa so he was eye level with Aria. "How can the
Her whole face changed. Her pupils dilated until her irises were almost lost behind black pools. Her jaw slackened, leaving her cheeks hollow and her bones pressing sharply against the inside of her skin. It was not a look of intelligence, or revelation. It was as if the woman inside had fled to make room for…what?