"Can I come in?" Mal asked from the doorway to shuttle one.

"Please," Inara called, putting the tray she carried down on the side and pulling her skirt down into a smooth line. She looked up to see the captain of Serenity standing looking at her.

"Hey."

"Hey." Inara smiled. "You don't normally ask."

"Well, I guess things have changed a mite."

"And you haven't been in here since I moved back in. And that was several weeks ago. I thought you were beginning to wish I hadn't."

"No. Not …"

"Oh."

They gazed at each other for a moment longer, then Mal conspicuously looked around the shuttle "Didn't take you long to put it all back," he said.

"Well, I know where everything goes," Inara said.

"That's new, though," Mal commented, pointing to a large brass table lamp that gave a warm glow to the surroundings.

"I bought it on Madrassa. I haven't used it until now."

"Right." He looked back at her.

"Would you … would you like some tea?" She indicated the tray.

"No. Thanks." He seemed to be searching for the right words. "Inara –"

"Then sit."

"Yeah." They both sat down, a safe distance apart. "I was … we're going to be arriving at Highgate in about an hour, if Freya can make the fuel cells last. We'll be taking on cargo then be off again."

"Oh? Well, there's not really any call for a Companion on that planet. Where will we be going after that?"

"Boros. You'll be able to … I'm sure you have clients waiting." He didn't look at her.

"A few," Inara admitted. "I can make a few appointments."

"Yeah." Suddenly he stood up, surprising her. "I have to go. Do captainy things."

She got to her feet a little slower, more gracefully. "Of course. I quite understand."

They were only a foot or so apart. "What you've done … it's nice to have it back the way it was," Mal said quietly. "I kinda missed having it occupied."

"I'm sure you could have found someone to rent it from you," Inara responded, her voice barely above a whisper.

"Wouldn't have seemed right." He moved closer, just a little.

She echoed his movement. "I shouldn't have left."

"I wish you hadn't." Slowly, almost of their own accord, his hands came up to touch her face, holding her head so that he could dip his and kiss her lips, soft and gentle. "Inara …"

"Mal …" She put her arms about him, pulling him in closer, until the kiss became deeper and more passionate.

When they broke apart both were panting slightly.

"Don't Companion rules have something to say about this?" Mal asked, running his fingers through her hair.

"They do … very specifically. And mostly they say … no." She didn't, however, move away.

"Really." He dipped to kiss her again. "What about this?" He reached down and cupped her breast, then stopped, backing away.

"What is it?" Inara asked. "Mal?"

"This ain't right … this ain't right at all."

"Mal?" She reached for him, then paused as he took another step backwards. "What is it?"

"It ain't right." He shook his head. "You're still a Companion. That ain't changed."

"I thought … I thought you accepted it," Inara said, her face confused. "You seemed to – "

"If I took you now … and believe me, I want to …" He glanced down at his crotch, and the purely physical reaction he was experiencing. "But it would be wrong."

"Why, Mal? You want me. I want you. What's wrong with that?" Inara asked, moving forward.

He put his hands on her shoulders, but it was just to hold her away from him. "I don't know," he admitted. "It just …"

"Do you want me to leave?" she asked, wanting him to kiss her again.

"No. Not asking that." He shook his head again. "I need to think, Inara. You've made me all turned around again, and I ain't sure I know how to deal with it."

"I can help you." She smiled a little, although her heart was breaking. "Is it me?"

"No, no, 'Nara," he said quickly, the use of her pet name tearing through them both. "If anything it's me. I don't know what I want anymore, what I believe in. If I could I'd go talk to the Shepherd, but that ain't gonna happen."

"He'd say you were doing the right thing in not sleeping with me, you know that."

"Yeah, maybe he would. But I know I could argue with him, maybe, even if I couldn't win." He dropped his hands. "It ain't the right time, Inara. Maybe later … when I understand it more myself …"

Inara pulled a smile she didn't feel from the depths of her soul. "We have time, Mal. Maybe we need to get to know each other better. Properly. Just a man and a woman."

"Maybe. But right now I ain't gonna take advantage of you." He took a step towards the door to the shuttle. "I'm sorry, Inara."

"You've nothing to be sorry for, Mal," she said, all her training allowing her to keep her composure. "And you're right – the Guild wouldn't approve either. Not unless you paid me."

Mal looked at her, understanding her need to hurt, to strike out. He'd held something out to her, and now he'd snatched it back. "And I ain't likely to be doing that in the foreseeable future," he said gently. "If I do, though, I'll know where to come."

"Only if I choose it, Captain," Inara said, returning to her formality as a shield to protect herself.

"Always," Mal said, and left the shuttle.

Inara stared after him, long after he'd walked back to his bunk, just trying to control her feelings. There was something else, she knew that. Something holding him back, something that had always held him back, and it wasn't that she was a Companion. Well, not just that. If she didn't know better she'd say it was another woman, but the only other regular females on board were either too young for him, starting a new relationship, or grieving. That left Freya. It had to be her. He'd known her for so long, and there was no doubt about her feelings for him. He must feel the same way, even if he hadn't admitted it to himself.

She managed to get to the bed, sitting down on the satin counterpane, her knees too weak to hold her. She'd lost him, somehow, before she'd even had him. All this time, to come so close and have it torn away from her. She wiped the tears angrily from her cheeks. Perhaps it was time to do something about her.

Inara sought out Freya, finding her on the bridge, staring out at the stars.

"Are we going to make it to Highgate?" she asked, stepping over the sill. "I'd hate for us to be drifting."

Freya turned in her seat and smiled at the Companion. "No, we'll be shiny. Mal's arranged to refuel there, so everything's fine."

"Fine." Inara repeated. She moved forward. "Could you bear for some company?"

"Sure," Freya said, pointing to the co-pilot's chair. "Take a pew."

"We've never really talked, have we?" Inara asked, sitting down gracefully, her bright brocades in extreme contrast to Freya's flannel shirt and serviceable trousers. "Not in the time we've known each other."

"Not really," Freya agreed. "You want to now?"

"Well, I've nothing better to do. Do you?" She smiled kindly.

"What do you want to talk about?" Freya asked, sitting upright a little more, running her hands through her short dark hair to make it lay flat. She couldn't help it – this woman always made her feel inferior.

"Oh, I don't know," Inara said, looking out at the expanse of space. "How about your ship?"

"My ship?" Freya laughed. "I don't have one anymore. Not even worth towing to the scrap belt."

"Do you miss it? Being captain, I mean. It must be difficult taking orders again, even from Mal."

"He's okay," Freya asserted. "Better than some I've known."

"Worse than others?" Inara suggested.

"No. Not really." Freya laughed again, a deep throaty chuckle. "There's a few I would cheerfully have put out the airlock, if you must know. It's been a while since I felt that way about Mal. Not saying it won't happen, but not so far."

"Really?" Inara took a breath, wanting to stay on the subject in hand. "Wouldn't you like your own ship again?"

"You mean leave Serenity?"

"Start afresh. New horizons."

Freya looked at her. "You're not talking about my boat, are you?" she asked.

"I'm just talking, Freya."

"No, you're not." Freya turned the seat so she could look at Inara fully in the face. "You're suggesting I leave Serenity."

"I didn't say that." Inara coloured.

"Not in so many words, no. But it's pretty obvious, Inara." She shook her head, feeling anger building inside her. "What, were you going to offer to buy me a new ship? Pay me off so I'd go?"

"I never –"

"Do you feel that threatened by me?"

The words hung in the air between them, almost visible, raw-edged and sharp.

"I don't feel threatened at all," Inara finally replied, her voice low, keeping herself in check.

"No, of course not. You usually have conversations like this with the rest of the crew," Freya mocked. "Damn it, Inara. If he wants you, that's his choice."

"Whose?"

"Mal's. That's who we're talking about, isn't it?"

"And if it is?" Inara stuck out her chin. "Are you telling me that you're not staying here on this ship because of him?"

"He asked me, Inara!" Freya shouted, throwing her hands into the air in exasperation. "He asked me!"

"You didn't have to say yes!" Inara shouted back.

"Gorramit, Inara, he's my friend! Doesn't that mean anything?"

"Not if you want more than that! And you damn well couldn't make it any plainer!"

There was a highly strung, very pregnant pause, then a voice from outside the bridge called, "If you two're gonna come to blows, can I watch?" It was Jayne, leaning on the handrail at the bottom of the stairs.

The women maintained eye contact a moment longer, then Freya turned to look at the big mercenary. "Not today, Jayne."

"Shame." He stood upright. "Best you keep it down, though. Lucky it was just me, not the Cap that heard you. Don't think he'd take too kindly to you fighting, least of all over him." He walked back to his bunk, dropping down the ladder. "Less'n I can watch," he added over his shoulder as he disappeared.

Freya turned back to Inara. "There is no way I am having this conversation with you." She got up and strode off the bridge.

Inara followed, her heels clattering on the metal stairs. Just outside the dining area she grabbed hold of Freya's arm. "And I say we are."

Freya turned slowly, looking down at Inara's hand. "If you don't let go you won't be using it for a while. And how would that please your clients?"

"Are you threatening me?" Inara asked, letting go nevertheless.

"Seems like all I was doing was making a suggestion. Pretty much like you were." Freya stepped into the kitchen, heading for the counter and picking up a metal cup.

"Don't you care?" Inara asked, lifting her skirts to step over the sill.

"Care about what?"

"That I … that I love him?" There. She'd said it. Told someone else how she felt about Mal.

"Tzao gao!" Freya said to herself. "You think you're the only one?"

"He doesn't want you!" Inara knew her voice sounded shrill, unladylike, but right now she didn't care.

"I know!" Freya threw the cup across the room, watching it bounce from the bulkhead. She took a deep breath, trying to control herself. "Damn it, Inara. I've known for a long time."

"Then why are you here?"

Freya glared at her. "Because, despite everything else, I don't have anywhere else to be," she said quietly. "I don't have a home to go back to, a family to take me in … I lost all that a long time ago." She pointed down towards the cargo bay. "When I told Mal that all I owned was in my bag, I wasn't lying."

"And this is important … how?"

"I … I need a place to be for a while. Somewhere amongst friends." She laughed, only there was no humour in it. "Well, mostly friends. To get my bearings again."

"And that has to be here?" Inara bent down and picked up the cup, noting idly that it was bent somewhat from its contact with the wall. "I have friends: perhaps I could –"

"You really are trying to buy me off, aren't you?" Freya said, shaking her head in disbelief. "And if I don't go? You gonna poison me?"

"What?" Now Inara was totally confused.

"I've heard about Companions back in the day. Working as assassins for the men who owned them."

Even Inara was shocked at this. "That's just stories from Earth-that-Was. And even if it did happen, it was before the Guild, before the rules …"

"You saying you don't know how to kill me without anyone finding out?" Freya asked. "That Companion training doesn't cover that sort of thing?"

"You're insane."

"Oh, come off it, Inara. A woman will do anything to get the man she loves." She came out from behind the counter, moving towards the other woman. "Isn't that the way of things?"

"And that's what you'd do? Kill me?" Inara suggested.

"Maybe I was wrong," Freya said. "Telling Jayne we weren't going to come to blows. Is that what you want, Inara? You want to fight me for Mal's affections?" She stepped closer to the Companion, the scent of her in her nostrils. "You think you'd win?"

"Companion training is very thorough," Inara said succinctly.

"Oh, I know. But I've been through war. Got the scars to prove it. You ever wondered why old soldiers are covered in them? Because they survived. And they survived because they were good. I was good, Inara. Better than I had a right to be. And if you think I couldn't kill you, think again."

"Oh, I know you could. But you think Mal would like that?" Inara asked, defiance radiating from every fibre of her being.

Mal, coming up the stairs from the infirmary, heard the tail end. "What in the tyen shiao duh is going on here?" he demanded as he stepped into the galley.

"Nothing," Freya said, turning away from Inara and going to sit at the table.

"Didn't sound like nothing." He crossed his arms. "What's going on?" he asked again. Neither of the two women answered, but the atmosphere was so thick he could have cut it with a spoon, let alone a knife. "I am the captain, here," he went on. "When I say I want to know something, then you damn well tell me."

"I'm not your crew, Mal," Inara said, moving to walk past him.

"Whoa," he said, catching her arm. "No-one's going anywhere until we get this sorted out." He pushed her towards the table. "Sit down."

"Mal –"

"You're on my boat, so you have to obey my orders. Now, sit down." His tone of voice, his sergeant's voice, would brook no objection, and Inara, with surprisingly bad grace for a Companion, did as she was told. "Right," he went on, standing and looking down at the pair of them. "Who's going to start?"

"It was just a disagreement, Mal," Inara said, not looking at Freya.

"Really? And do disagreements usually end up with one of you threatening to kill the other?"

"Sometimes. But it was just something and nothing," Freya put in, wondering exactly how much he'd heard.

His next words made it plain. "Sounded more than that. And I don't appreciate members of my crew fighting over me. Particularly when there's nothing to fight over."

"No?" Inara said, feeling a blush creep up her neck. "You reject me and say there's nothing to fight over?"

"That's it? Because I wouldn't lay with you?" Mal didn't know whether to laugh or order them both to the brig. He did neither, since he didn't think they would appreciate him finding it amusing, and he didn't have a brig to throw them into. Instead he looked from Inara to Freya. "And you? Why were you threatening Inara with physical harm?"

"I wasn't threatening," Freya pointed out. "Just making a statement."

"A statement that you could kill her with no problem whatsoever." Mal shook his head. "You're my pilot. Relationships complicate things, and … I ain't gonna sleep with you, Frey."

"I know!" Freya said, anger bubbling up inside her, his contraction of her name hurting more than she would care to admit. "I know it, Mal. I was just trying to tell Inara the same thing when you walked in."

"By saying you could kill her."

"Nee ta ma duh tyen-shia suo-yo duh num doh gai si," Freya muttered, her head down, and when she looked back up her eyes were bright, and two red marks stained her cheeks. "That's the whole point, Mal. The whole damn point! You won't sleep with her, so she thinks you have feelings for me!" She stood up, pushing her chair back so hard it squealed. "I tried to tell her, but she wouldn't listen! Dammit, Mal, you don't have to rub it in quite so hard! I know I ain't who you want, and I know you want her! I've known it for so long it's like one of my scars, always there! So go and sleep with her!" She almost ran out of the room, away from his gaze, away from both of them.

Mal watched her go, his mouth open slightly. This wasn't a joke to her, he realised. No matter that he'd never really taken her infatuation seriously, it was of grave importance to her. And she'd been telling him long enough … His mind skittered away from the possibilities, and his eyes came back to Inara. "I won't have this on my boat," he said at last. "We're cramped enough as it is most days, and I won't have fighting amongst my crew." He held up a hand to forestall Inara's objection. "As long as you rent my shuttle, you're crew. Thought you'd figured that out by now." He glanced back the way Freya had gone. "You sort it out. Now. One way or the other. Preferably with not too much bloodshed." He hitched his thumbs into his belt. "You learn to play nicely, or you're off my ship. Both of you." Inara stared at him until he added, "Go."

Inara nodded and stood up, leaving the dining area with her head high.

Mal watched her go, her grace and beauty, but found his mind going back to Freya, her passion, her … He shook himself. He was captain. He had no right to think like that.

Freya was back on the bridge, the door closed but not locked.

"Can I come in?" Inara asked, sliding the door open a little.

"Free 'verse." Freya was staring out at the stars, her booted foot on the edge of the flight console. "This bit of it, anyway."

Inara stepped inside. "I'm sorry," she said quietly.

"What for?" Freya still didn't look at her, her voice flat.

"I should never have … I shouldn't have accused you of being the reason."

"The reason for what?"

"For Mal rejecting me."

"He really did that?" Freya said in surprise, her foot sliding from the metal and hitting the floor with a thump as she turned in the seat to stare at her.

"We …" For once Inara felt almost embarrassed. "He wouldn't sleep with me. Refused to, point blank. Oh, we kissed, but … something's holding him back."

"And you think it's me?"

"I … I didn't know what to think! You've never made a secret of your feelings, and I thought … he might … that he could …"

Freya shook her head. "That's crazy talk, Inara."

"Then let's talk crazy. He and I … we kissed but … why should he pull away?"

Freya stared back out at the stars. "Inara, I don't know. He cares about you. Yes, I know that, and I'm not stupid. But if you think I'm trying to take him away from you –"

"I don't have him for you to do that!" Inara said sharply, and instantly regretted it when she saw the look on Freya's face. "I'm sorry. I didn't mean … I just …"

Freya looked at her again. "Inara, I've known Mal a long time. What I feel for him is pretty much something I've grown to live with." She sighed. "I told him, Inara, I told him to sort things out with you."

"You told him?" Now it was Inara's turn to be astonished.

"I was drunk … well, pretty much," Freya admitted. "I told him to sort things out, then come to my bed. He refused. Said he wasn't going to take advantage of me. Hell, I wanted him to. I wanted him to in the worst possible way. But he said no. You think that doesn't mean something?" She leaned forward. "He doesn't want me, Inara. And if he doesn't want you either, well, we're pretty much in the same boat." She smiled slightly at the unintentional pun.

"It seems like we may be." Inara took a deep breath. "I thought –"

"You thought I'd be willing to kill you to get him."

"I don't know," Inara admitted after a moment, abashed. "But I'm pretty certain if I tried you would have killed me quite easily."

Freya shook her head, saying, "Oh, never easily, Inara. It's never that." She waved her hand around the Firefly's bridge. "'Sides, if anyone's stopping Mal from being with either of us it's Serenity. She means more to him than anything, and he'll do everything he can to keep her in the sky. Maybe that's the problem. Not me or you. Maybe it's the fact that he's in love with a spaceship."

Inara pondered for a moment then nodded. "It could be. I wouldn't put it past that man to be so stupid as to put a heap of metal in front of flesh and blood."

"Oh, I think there's more to it than that," Freya chided. "The crew comes next. Well, maybe Jayne a distant third. But I reckon I come a lot further down the list than that."

Inara smiled. "You and me both, then," she said, standing up. "I'm sorry."

Freya nodded. "Yeah, well, maybe we both need to take a step back from this. Mal's right – this ain't the place to be fighting."

"But I am sorry," Inara insisted. "I should never have tried to warn you off. Not you." She sighed. "I should have realised you'd know what I was doing. Mal's talked about your talents before, and I should have … I'm sorry."

Freya looked up into the Companion's face. "I don't know if this is over, Inara. Maybe it won't be until Mal takes you to his bed. But we can play nicely, like he wants. I'll even pretend to be your friend. And who knows, maybe it'll become true. But right now, I have to pretend."

"Sounds a little like being a Companion," Inara pointed out. "Pretending to care about the person you're servicing."

"Yeah, well, maybe." Freya turned back to the con, busying herself with the controls.

Inara gazed at her, wondering, then found herself stifling a yawn delicately behind her hand. "Well, I'm going to get some sleep," she said.

"I'll be a while yet. Got some course corrections to make." Freya glanced up at Inara and smiled a little at last.

"Goodnight, then."

"'Night."

Inara left the bridge, her mind still full of what had been said.

Freya watched her go, her bright colours glowing as she walked along the corridor past the bunks, and shook her head. Why did people have to get in their own way so much? Why couldn't they just say what they think, be with the person they wanted to be with? Why hadn't she just said no when he asked her to stay?