
An alarm blared, warning of a malfunction. The captain immediately turned her attention to jury-rigging a
repair. Sitting back, Roca silently urged fate to let her survive this trip. She was uneasy enough to lower
her mental barriers and let the captain’s mood wash over her. Normally Roca recoiled from opening her
mind so much; it exposed her to mental injury and trespassed on the privacy of others. As much as she
disliked it now, too much depended on the success of this mission for her to take chances in her
judgment of the captain’s intentions.
Her companion wasn’t a psion of any strength, so it was hard to pick up much, but a sense of her
thoughts came through. She resented Roca but would honor her word. She believed the cover that
Director Vammond had created to protect Roca’s identity. Roca flushed, already knowing the story;
Vammond had described her as a runaway wife who had tired of her aging but wealthy husband and
wanted to see her lover. It was a dismal tale, but if it helped her reach the Assembly in time, she could
live with it.
Roca thought of her first husband, Tokaba Ryestar, an explorer who had scouted new worlds. Her
parents had arranged the marriage in her youth. Roca resisted it at first, but she and Tokaba had soon
discovered they suited each other. Kurj’s birth overjoyed them. For the next six years they had lived a
contented life.
Then tragedy hit, when Tokaba’s ship crashed on a world he was exploring. Roca had never forgotten
the devastating night they brought his body home. Nor had Kurj; at the age of six, a bewildered,
heartbroken child had lost his beloved father to a violent death the boy couldn’t understand.
It had taken a long time to recover, but eventually, several years later, Roca had remarried, this time
choosing for herself. Darr Hammerjackson had been handsome and charming, everything a lonely widow
could want. Roca swore to love him forever, certain she and Kurj had found an end to the loneliness.
The first time Darr had hit her, she hadn’t believed he meant it. She learned the hard way how wrong she
had been. Roca flinched at the memory, the flash of his hand, his incomprehensible fury. The impact of his
rage on her mind had been even more debilitating than the blows. But Ruby Dynasty heirs didn’t divorce.
No public disgraces were allowed; they kept their private hells out of sight. In private, she had done
everything she could to stop the violence, and when nothing worked, she had tried for over a year to
accommodate the nightmare.
Then he had beaten Kurj.
That night, Roca had taken her nine-year-old son and left Darr. Nothing swayed her: no excuses, no
promises, no threats. No one—no one—hit her son. She began legal proceedings the next day. In the
years after, as she had recovered her sense of self-worth, she came to realize she should have protected
herself with the same ferocity she protected her child, regardless of what five millennia of tradition
dictated about the behavior of Ruby heirs.
Kurj had never revealed what Darr said to him that day, when the two of them fought. But it had changed
her son. And that was only the beginning. As a Jag pilot, he had lived far too many horrors in the
constant, undeclared shadow war between the Skolian Imperialate and the Eubian Traders. Over the
years it had turned him into a hardened stranger. Now he was a phenomenon, the towering warrior
prince respected by his officers, admired by women, and feared by many. But beneath his square-jawed,
golden exterior, his rage festered, threatening to explode. In that, he had become like Darr, with an
outward self-possession that hid his seething anger.
Roca exhaled. Dwelling on the past would help nothing. This looming threat of all-out war was insanity.
Kurj was wrong if he believed they could win. He knew what they risked—and he welcomed that