She was there, in mid-air, dagger poised. My weapon took her in the throat, and I felt the shock of the impact all the way to my shoulder. I released my hold on the weapon and rolled away as she crashed to the floor.
She tried to rise, my stick protruding from both sides of her throat. She turned hate-filled eyes in my direction, but I remained passively at a distance. Finally, the eyes glazed and she sank forward.
I waited for several minutes before moving. Then, satisfied that she was indeed dead, I limped painfully to the door and let myself out into the corridor.
The Planetary Commander was waiting there.
“It is finished,” I told him.
He nodded and began sealing the door. When he was finished, he pressed a button on the wall, and we both listened as the bay floor opened, dropping Shah’s body to the planet below.
In this, at least, she and I had agreed before the duel began. Whichever of us emerged triumphant would dispose of the other’s body in this manner. Normally, when possible, Tzen preferred to be buried in the slime of the Black Swamps, where their decomposing bodies would remingle with the mud and water from which our species first evolved.
The Insects had ended that. Their ships had dropped swarms of the Aquatics on the swamps. The Aquatics were the only omnivorous members of the Coalition, and they bred abnormally fast, even for insects.
The Black Swamps were gone now, denuded and lifeless after the devastating assault. As such, we simply disposed of Ssah’s body in the most convenient manner. With the Black Swamps gone, it really didn’t matter where our corpses went.