Groggy and shivering, Thalia found the blanket floating above her and herself floating a good foot above the bed. Startled, she tried to sit up but spun in place, slowly turning like a roast on a spit. She closed her eyes, fighting dizziness. The blanket tangled around her legs. There had to be something she could do.
The straps.
Thalia thrashed her arms until she came in contact with the nylon straps. Holding on for dear life, she stopped her rotisserie spinning and righted herself. She kicked the blanket free and it drifted slowly across the room.
“Computer,” she said. It chimed in response. “What is happening?”
“Gravity is currently offline. Restoring gravity function is advised,” the computer said in a flat tone.
“Ya think?” she muttered.
Worries about gravity coming back online and her slamming back down onto the mattress made sleep impossible. She had spent the last two days in her cabin, being ignored by Havik and Ren, only emerging for food and the bathroom.
If she couldn’t sleep, she might as well try to be helpful. No reason to sit and continue to do nothing. Thalia fumbled to get on a pair of stretchy pants and her shoes. Pulling the shoes on sent her into another rotisserie-style spin.
Not cool. Good thing she didn’t get motion sick.
Her glasses floated above the dresser.
Thalia frowned, knowing she’d never be able to keep them on her face, and when gravity came back, she didn’t want them lying in the middle of the floor, waiting to be stepped on. If they broke, who knows how long she’d wait to get a replacement pair? Those might as well have been the last pair of glasses in the universe, as far as she was concerned. Carefully, she pulled herself across the room, clutching straps and furniture, until she reached the dresser and secured the glasses in the top drawer for safe keeping.
She experimented with moving about the cabin, pushing off walls and aware of how her arms and legs sent her off course. By the time she made it to the corridor, she felt confident enough that she might be of assistance. Sure, the gravity was offline, which was a mechanical problem and she knew nothing about mechanics or spaceships. She could fetch tools and hold stuff, though. Basically, that’s what she did for Doc.
The computer directed her to the front of the ship. The corridor widened into an open space. Monitors and important-looking machines lined the walls, the screens all blurred to her eyes and illegible. In the center of the room was a cluster of four vinyl orange chairs around a pillar. Green stuff bubbled inside the pillar, and the buckle and straps of the safety harnesses, which normally dangled from the chairs, floated above.
Thalia grabbed a strap and pulled herself to the chair. Age had worn the orange vinyl thin. She knew the fabric was probably a super high-tech composite blend of nanocarbon and other indestructible material, but it was glossy and orange, not even a nice orange, like sweet apricots or summer sunsets. This was the deep, burnt orange of tacky nightclubs that forever stank of weed and was sticky no matter how many times you wiped it down.
Vinyl. Totally vinyl.
Floor panels had been removed and were secured attached to the wall. Muttering and clanging drifted from the void below. On his belly, Havik dangled over the edge. One hand gripped the edge while his legs drifted up, along with the length of his braid. His tail flicked from side to side, as if annoyed.
His tail.
“Ohmigod, you have a tail!”
It. Was. Adorable.
Deep red and segmented like a scorpion’s tail, it curled at the end with a barb. Okay, okay. Maybe adorable wasn’t the correct word.
“This is the greatest thing I’ve ever seen!” She moved closer for a better look.
Havik sat up, holding a wrench. The details of his face were blurry but there was no missing that frown. His lips pulled down, and he seemed to show more of his bottom teeth than usual. She was sure he’d appear quite horrible if she wore her glasses.
“What do you use your tail for? Can you gouge out the eyes of your enemies with it?”
He turned, angling himself, and his tail, away. “Do not…That is not what my tail is for.”
“What is it for?”
His cheeks darkened. A scoffing laugh came from the floor. That had to be Ren.
“How did you hide that thing? It’s massive. I find it hard to believe you were smuggling that in your pants because there’s not much left to the imagination, if you know what I mean.”
Below, Ren’s laughter turned into howls of mirth, and Havik looked like he wanted to smash stuff with the wrench he kept squeezing with his meaty paws.
She didn’t know why she enjoyed poking at Havik so much. He was big, grumpy, and never smiled. Had to be the unreasonable attraction of the Danger Bang. She just wanted his attention, any way she could get it.
One day she’d make him smile. It’d probably be all teeth and snarling, maybe a little terrifying, but worth it.
“Where are your spectacles?” Havik asked.
“I couldn’t keep them in place. I should get a strap or safety glasses if gravity goes out often,” she answered.
“It does not,” Ren said from below, offense obvious in his tone.
“This is a hazardous environment. Return to your room,” Havik said.
“I’m not blind. I just can’t see the fine details or read what’s on those monitors.” Thalia waved a hand to the monitors on the wall. “But I want to help.”
“Are you an astromechanic?”
“No.” She was barely anything.
“Then you cannot help. Return to your cabin.”
She lifted her chin, smarting from the blow of his harsh words. “Come on. I’m small. I can get into places you can’t.” She wiggled her shoulders, miming how she would shimmy through the…whatever. Ducts. Service tubes. And she wouldn’t even need the lube.
That sounded wrong, even to her.
Ren poked his head up. He exchanged something that looked like a high-tech probe for Havik’s very low-tech wrench. Astromechanics made no sense.
“I have a drone to access what is too small for me,” Ren said, before ducking below.
“I can do your running and bring you tools,” she said.
“You do not know the tools’ locations or their description. In the time it took to explain what I needed and where to find it, I could fetch it myself.” Havik said.
“Then let me watch. I want to learn.”
“Why?” His eyes were dark, almost black. The length of his braid drifted out to his left, and Thalia strongly considered strangling him with it.
A thousand reasons. Because she wasn’t useless. Because sitting in her cabin was boring and she had caught up on all the Galactic Queen episodes. Because she needed to make a living. Because this was a freaking spaceship and she knew nothing about spaceships.
She shrugged her shoulders. “I dunno. Maybe I want to do what you do, as a career.”
His eyes narrowed. “And what is it you think I do?”
“Run cargo.” If he was going to be an ass, all he deserved were asshole answers.
“This vessel is too small to turn a profit with cargo.”
“Space cop?”
“No.” He crossed his arms over his chest, his biceps flexing.
Damn. Unfair.
“Space marshal.”
He did not respond.
“Space cowboy.”
He blinked. “A what?”
“Gangster of love?”
“You are putting random words together that convey no meaning,” he huffed, all teeth and bad attitude, but Thalia saw the corner of his mouth twitch.
This was so much fun. “It’s a song. You know, there’s a surprising number of songs with that title. But my point is that I can help. You clearly need help with public relations. I can’t imagine that,” she wiggled her fingers at his face, “opens a lot of doors.”
The clanking intensified below, followed by cursing. “I have to go down a level. Try not to let your flirting ge
t in the way of this crisis. It’s fine.”
“We are not flirting,” Havik snarled.
She totally was. One hundred percent.
Thalia rested her chin on her folded arms over the back of the chair. “You’re on a secret mission from Earth, right, to catch the human traffickers—”
“Sentient being traffickers.”
“I know how criminals think.”
“Because you are one.”
His words stung, but she refused to let him see that. If he thought being nasty would drive her away, he had the wrong idea.
“If you think you’re not flirting, you are so wrong.” She winked. “Anyway, you can deputize me. That’s cool. I don’t mind starting at the bottom as long as I get a gun.” She mimed finger pistols, complete with sound effects.
His tail lashed from side to side and he growled.
“No projectile weapons! A stray shot could damage a critical system. The consequences could be disastrous.”
“I wouldn’t be aiming for a critical system. I’d aim for a critical organ,” she said, sarcasm dripping off every word. “If you don’t use guns or blasters, then what weapons do you use? I’m guessing you don’t calmly make for the nearest planet for a duel at dawn.”
For a moment, she imagined Havik in the starched cravat and the overly formal clothes of a bygone era, like out of a historical romance, and she really liked that picture. Like, a lot, a lot, especially that red tail peeking out from under a fitted tailcoat. She needed to get him into a cravat, pronto.
“Hand to hand and blades, mostly.” His hand moved to the knife strapped to his thigh, then shook his head, as if remembering that he found her annoying. “Leave. Now.”
“I want to help. Let me help.”
“You are a distraction. You cannot.” What little warmth his voice held vanished. He glared at her with hardened, cold eyes.
The mood in the room shifted. Thalia shivered. She enjoyed teasing him and she thought he enjoyed their verbal sparring. Apparently, she read the situation wrong.
“Fine.” She pushed off the chair a little harder than necessary. Havik had an ex-wife. He didn’t talk about it and she hadn’t asked, but she could understand how his grumpy ass had an ex-wife. “For the record, I’m not useless, I’m not helpless, and I can do a hell of a lot more for you than pretend to be bait.”
Holding out a hand, she touched the ceiling and redirected herself toward the corridor. She underestimated the force of her push and rocketed into a wall. Frustrated, she kicked the panel. Only then did she see that the panel held onto the wall with one loose screw.
The panel wobbled and broke free, heading right toward her at an alarming velocity.
Havik
This female. She smiled and teased and promised many a delightful distraction, none of which he deserved or desired.
The faster they completed this mission, the better.
She kicked at a panel. It broke free, every edge jagged metal, harboring bacteria her immune system had no capacity to fight.
Unacceptable.
He moved too fast for his mind to question why he identified the hazard and why he disliked the idea of her inevitable injury. This was why she could not be trusted to do more than lure sentient being traffickers into a trap. In an instant, he pushed her out of the way and took the blow from the panel. She hit the wall with a gasp as the panel sliced across his upper arm, cutting both cloth and skin.
Her eyes were wide, and her hair fanned out, dark blonde at the base and toxic green at the end.
“You’re bleeding,” she said, shoving off the wall toward him.
She removed her tank top and tore it in half before he could respond with a gruff, “It’s nothing. I will heal.”
“Off,” she commanded, tugging at the collar of his tunic. He complied, removing the garment. “Hold this here.” She pressed the wadded cloth to the gash. When his hand covered hers, she pushed away. “You might heal fast, but I’m sure gunking up the ship’s innards with blood is bad for our health.”
Nimbly, she collected the droplets of his blood that floated in the immediate area. “There,” he said, pointing up.
Without a word, she placed a hand on his shoulder and pushed, launching herself up. She touched the walls and ceilings to redirect herself and cleaned up the splatter. Spotting a bright red box strapped to the wall, she worked her way across the room. With the kit in hand, she bit her bottom lip and her nose scrunched.
It was adorable. Not that he was studying her face, because he was not even looking at her or the way she wore only a brassiere and her hair floated around her like she was a mythological creature of the water, a dencadiz. Those stories had fascinated Havik when he was young. The idea of so much water that a person could live in it, breathe it, baffled him. He had yet to see the ocean at that point and he studied the illustrations in his book of fables. The dencadiz were beautiful creatures but deadly. They sang a sweet melody to lure people into the water. Sometimes the dencadiz loved the person and they lived together under the water. Sometimes they feasted on the bones of their victims.
He knew which type she was.
Thalia tucked her knees to her chest and slowly spun until her head pointed toward him. She pushed off the ceiling and drifted down. “Give me a hand,” she said.
“I thought this was your first time in space,” he said, reaching for her outstretched hand.
“Never been off the planet before. Those three years frozen in a tube don’t count.”
“You maneuvered quite skillfully,” he admitted. Color rose to her cheeks, a pleasing pink that brightened her otherwise dull complexion.
She opened the medical kit. Straps held the contents in place. Her focus grew intense as she inspected the contents. One by one, she removed the supplies and read the labels.
“That is unnecessary,” he said. “The wound is no longer bleeding.”
“Still needs to be cleaned or you’ll get an infection.”
Havik should have told her that his superior immune system would eradicate any germs as the Mahdfel did not easily pick up infections, but he selfishly wanted her intense gaze focused on him.
“I don’t suppose you know if this is a cleanser. It’s foam. Normally these things have swabs.” She held up a squat white bottle.
“I have never opened the medical kit. I do not know.”
“Right, right. Super soldiers don’t need no doctoring,” she muttered. “Do it for my peace of mind, please.” Opening the cap, she tested a little of the product in the palm of her hand. “Smells like alcohol. Now, hold this.” She shoved the kit into his hands. Grabbing onto his shoulder, she maneuvered behind him and wrapped her legs around his waist.
His tail reached for her.
“Sit still. I’m sure this will sting.”
Havik remained still as she covered the laceration with the foaming cleanser. The bubbles and fizz stung for a second. He kept his eyes focused on the kit in his hands because the female pressed her uncovered chest to his back.
It should not feel pleasant.
He should not enjoy the brush of her soft skin against his, and his tail would remain still, even if he had to chop the blasted thing off.
“Are you a medic?” he asked.
“I didn’t have time for medical school what with all the thievery.” Her voice warmed with amusement.
“But you are familiar with blood.”
“Familiar, yes.” A sterile cloth wiped away the foam. Gently, she applied a layer of gel to the wound and continued to speak. “I was apprenticed to a doctor, I guess you could say. I have no formal qualifications. Mostly I cleaned the equipment.”
“Apprenticeship sounds unusual.” He meant primitive. Advanced worlds had formal education and training, not a relic from the dark ages.
Thalia hummed, as if in agreement. “I sort of fell into it, but it was better than the alternatives.”
“Explain.”
“My mom wasn’t the best. Not abusive but
she just wasn’t able to take care of herself and a kid, so I mostly had to fend for myself. It was fine. I made my own food. I kept myself entertained.”
She covered the wound with a bandage, taping it down. In a day, the laceration would be completely healed, and he would not require such covering, but he kept that to himself.
“Then she died in the Invasion. Not from the Invasion, exactly. She got sick. The flu, I think. Lots of people had it. After that, I was on my own,” she said.
“There would be relief camps. Field hospitals.”
“Sure, but let me stress this, I was eleven. I spent my whole life dodging social workers. I wasn’t about to walk into an alien camp. They’d take me away from my mom.” She unwrapped her legs and Havik’s chest hitched at the loss of contact.
Thalia moved to position herself in front of him, her hair fanning out in the zero gravity. He handed his tunic to her. “You will grow cold,” he said.
“Thanks,” she muttered.
“If she required medical attention—”
“Enough with the Monday morning quarterbacking, Danger B.” She slipped the tunic over her head. The fabric swallowed her, but he felt enormous satisfaction seeing her in his shirt. “I don’t have a time machine. Bitching ain’t going to change anything,” she said.
He understood the individual words, but together they made little sense. Why would an athlete on a weekday morning imply she required a time machine? Terrans were odd.
A smudge of his blood marred her cheek, and his blood stained the right sleeve of the tunic. Where it fell on her frame gave the appearance of a scarlet armband. His chest swelled with unreasonable pleasure at seeing Thalia adorned with his blood. An injury sustained in combat would have been better, but he appreciated the way she did not hesitate before springing into action to mend him. His words had purposely been harsh, and she rightfully should have let him deal with his injury on his own, but Thalia had a compassionate heart.
She continued to speak, unaware of the effect she had on him. “So, Nicky took me and some other kids like me in.”
“He sounds charitable.”
She snorted. “He fed us and gave us a roof over our heads. All we had to do was a little burglary. Skinny kids are good for that.”
Havik: Warlord Brides (Warriors of Sangrin Book 9) Page 10