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Evex_Warriors Of Ition

Page 80

by Maia Starr


  I pursed my lips and did a quick survey of the area before darting into the tent, securing the opening behind me. I walked over to the makeshift bed and looked down at the scraps of blanket Reina was laying on.

  “This will be much less awkward if you are also laying down,” she teased, giving the first genuine smile I’d ever seen from her. Her hair was a mess of blonde tangles up above her head, along with her arms.

  “Oh, uh,” I blushed, feeling stupid. “Right.”

  I lay down behind her, spooning my body into hers and setting my hand on the side of her body where her hip met the curve of her side. I pulled her into me, wondering if she could feel how hard I was, and breathed into her hair. She felt so small against me.

  “I was… really scared out there,” she said, calmer now. Maybe it was easier to be vulnerable with me so long as she wasn’t looking at my face. “I’m glad you were able to fight them off.”

  “Sorry?” I said, my voice going comically high. I set my chin in the crook of her neck so I could whisper in her ear: “Was that a backward, ‘Thank you?’”

  She laughed quietly and shook her head stubbornly. “No.”

  “And for the record, while I was busy saving your life, you ran.” I paused and grabbed her side with my large hands, almost like a tickle. “You ran!” I said again, hoping to make her laugh.

  She did. “Can you blame me?”

  “You would have run and left me to get torn apart by those… those things!” I said, fighting off my own laughter as I said, “It isn’t funny!”

  We both chuckled at that and then, in that single moment, she didn’t seem so afraid anymore.

  “Life in Bolmore won’t be as wretched as you’re thinking,” I said, stupidly.

  Her defenses shot up again and, in an irritated tone, she said, “Ah, yes. My uncontrollable fate. And what exactly will I be doing there?”

  “I…” I blanched, unsure how to answer her. “I will bring you before my king, and he will take you as his chosen.”

  “Why would he want that?” she asked firmly.

  I paused, nestling my chin back into the crook of her neck and taking in her smell. My hand moved down her side, and she pressed into me: for warmth or for something else, I wasn’t sure.

  “He feels the calling,” I explained.

  “For?”

  I laughed. “For you.”

  “Well, why don’t you tell him that the feeling isn’t reciprocated and we can all call it a day?” she snipped quickly. I didn’t respond.

  “What’s the city like?” she said, breaking the silence once more.

  “It’s a flurry of light,” I said.

  I could hear her lips part, and then a long silence ensued. Finally, she said, “What does that mean?”

  “Bolmore is one of the most intensely built-up cities in the region. Unlike some of the other packs, we haven't squandered your resources.” I explained.

  “I always heard that the Vithohn were living in old ruins?” she asked, genuinely.

  I smirked, clearly catching her in a previous lie about having no contact with humans. “Heard that from whom?”

  Her stomach tightened, and I could hear her smile again. “Willow,” she said.

  “Mm-hmm.” I said, unbelieving.

  “Is it big?”

  “It’s the largest city run by the Vithohn,” I explained, telling her of its gothic structures and the reflective buildings with their spires and towers that went up into the clouds. “We’d found it being used as a base called Mercer by the remaining humans. We’d wiped them out and rebuilt the city from there.”

  There was a long silence that followed, and for a minute I wondered if the shy girl had fallen asleep. I craned my neck to look at her, but her brown eyes were still wide open.

  “My father fought in that war,” she said with a hollow tone, and my stomach sank.

  “Then I’m sorry,” I said tersely. “See? I actually know how to apologize.”

  She let out a laugh that was all breath and no voice.

  “Why were you really at the base of that cliff?” I asked, tracing my fingers up and down her side.

  “I collect scraps,” she said softly. “Tech and things. Debris.”

  “For what?”

  “To build with,” she answered.

  “Wow, what a great explanation,” I mocked. “I never would have guessed.”

  “I…” she shrugged against me and gave a wide yawn. “My father taught me how to use them to build things like shelters, guns, other gadgets. But I don’t really feel like sharing that with you.”

  I blinked and smiled up against her skin. “You don’t like me,” I said with a smile.

  “No?” she scoffed, as though it should be obvious.

  “You hate me!” I announced, gripping her tighter and feeling the sudden urge to burst out laughing.

  “I hate you,” she said evenly.

  “Why?” I asked, knowing the answer but wanting so badly to hear her to keep speaking.

  She sat up and turned to me with a deep scowl on her face. “You took me away from my friend. She could be hurt.”

  I scoffed. “Or she could be nursing the man, who was clearly another one of your associates, back to health, grateful that you’re not around to drag her into even more trouble.”

  “You scare me,” she said, and I felt her whole body light up with goosebumps. “I’m afraid.”

  “This from the girl I saw dumping one of my people into a well? Killing him?” I snorted. “How do you think I felt coming up to you after that?”

  She drew her head back so that her chin doubled: the surprise that crossed her face evident.

  “You were watching us?” she breathed out carefully.

  “You’re not hard to watch,” I said lowly.

  She looked puzzled and shrugged helplessly. She looked absolutely perfect.

  “I don’t know anything about you,” she said.

  With a huff, I closed my eyes and said, “You’re really pushing it.”

  She was lucky I was even trying to make her feel better. I didn’t even know why I was bothered.

  “My name is Oron. I am a fourteenth-cycle Vithohn. I was forced off my planet Udrenahine by a rival clan.”

  She pursed her lips at the comment and tilted her beautiful face to the side to better inspect me.

  “You have… rivals?” she asked.

  “What?” I made a noise close to a ‘humph’ and shrugged, saying, “Did you think we came to Earth because it looked like fun? Fought for this planet on a whim?”

  She shook her head, processing something. “I never really thought about it, I guess. Though I’m not really sure you could classify what we did as putting up a fight.”

  “If your father really did fight against us,” I began with a breath, “then he was a brave human. Because that was one D’shu’na of a fight.”

  I swore in my native tongue, and she squinted her eyes at me. “Hell of a fight?” she offered, and I shrugged with a smile.

  “Sure,” I said and repeated, “One hell of a fight.”

  I didn't know why I said it. Why I was oversharing. I wanted to rip her clothes off: to fulfill this animal desire rising up in me. Yet, at the same time, all I wanted to do was make her feel better. Make her feel like she had something to be proud of with her people.

  “Is that right?” she said with a grin forming on her thin, pink lips.

  My legs drew together as I sat up, meeting her upright posture. “See this?” I said, bringing my limp spire in front of me and putting her hands on it. My spire was a deep black and yellow, but a white scar was sliced from the back of my neck down a third of the tentacle.

  “That was from a human,” I offered.

  “They slit you open?” she gasped.

  She ran her hands along the tentacle, and I felt a rush of adrenaline through my body: a lusty tingle that intensified as her fingertips barely grazed my skin.

  “Please!” I winced. “Not so
graphic. But, yeah. They got me.”

  She looked down at the scar and then looked up at me, shocked that her people could have put up a fight. I hoped it brought her comfort knowing how hard they fought.

  “Huh,” she said in a concluding tone. “I still don’t like you,” she said with a shrug and then lay back down, pulling me to the blankets and curving her backside into my warmth.

  I knew part of what she was saying must have been true, yet her smile stayed firmly curved at her lips. I looked across her beautiful face, her smooth skin and angled jaw, and it made me feel sick to my stomach.

  Chapter Seven

  Reina

  Things had changed immeasurably in the last twelve hours. We were just outside the Vithohn city when I really noticed the difference in Oron.

  Aggression used to be hidden just below his skin: trickling and bubbling and waiting to snap at a moment’s notice. Now he was calm: curious about me. He asked me endless questions and always had a pensive look on his face.

  It made me feel… at ease. Not that I was thrilled about arriving at Bolmore, the city whose skyline could be seen from a mile away, but I was starting to feel that sense of adventure I first longed for when I climbed down the side of the mountain.

  “Oron?” came the call of another Vithohn, traveling with yet another associate. The one speaking had his spire cut off: his face full of jagged plates ribbed in rows on his forehead.

  Oron looked at me and then stepped in front of my body ever so slightly. “Vasaraask’u,” he greeted.

  “What… are you doing here?” the man asked, sounding genuinely puzzled. He held a large bow slung over his shoulder, but I couldn’t see any arrows. The man looked at me then and ran his eyes up and down my body, stopping at my blood-stained shirt. “Sparing another human?”

  My eyes flicked up to Oron, and he said, “What are you doing here?”

  “You didn’t hear?” he said and pointed to the large gates guarding the city. They were metallic and shimmering with black sludge.

  “A war broke out in Bolmore,” Vasaraask’u said.

  Oron’s eyes roved over the gates, and he ran a thick finger against the dark gloss.

  “There’s bloodshed everywhere,” Vasaraask’u continued: his eyes never leaving me. “The colonies are calling us the red city.”

  “That’s festive,” Oron snorted. “Does that mean we won?”

  “Yeah, but…” Vasaraask’u gave a pointed look in my direction, obviously not wanting to speak in front of me. He began speaking in the Vithohn’s native tongue then: his accent thick. I couldn’t understand a word of it, but I looked between their faces for some indication of emotion or motive.

  Oron nodded to the man but spoke English in his responses, grabbing my hand as he did so. “They’re calling everyone back to base?” he said, possibly repeating the information being given to him.

  Vasaraask’u drew out a long breath and ran a hand along the back of his head before saying something else I couldn’t understand.

  “I’ve felt it for moons now,” Oron said.

  “Who is this?” the third Vithohn, a black and silver spired alien asked, interrupting the others.

  “Didn’t you hear?” Vasaraask’u scoffed. “Sylas want a human prize.”

  “Can you blame him?” the third one said, looking at me with such desire that I wanted to take out my pistol and fire a burning pink shot into his skull. Or burrow underground. Either one would do just fine.

  “I’ve had one,” Vasaraask’u said in a husky tone. “So no. I cannot.”

  “You’re had one?” Oron said fiercely.

  Vasaraask’u took a step forward, circling me. I tilted my head and watched him from side-eyes as he made his way around my body.

  “Oh yeah,” he said, still looking me up and down.

  Oron’s spire went thick with a yellow glow, fighting to burst from within its restraints as he lurched forward, grabbing the bow from Vasaraask’u’s arm and pulling the string back. As he did so, a laser-based arrow formed inside the bow and Oron aimed it perfectly, moving it between Vasaraask’u and the other Vithohn.

  “Enough,” he seethed. “She is for Sylas. No one else.”

  The unnamed Vithohn looked frightened, but Vasaraask’u merely snarled and grabbed his bow from Oron, ripping it out of his hands and walking back the way they came.

  I lurched back into Oron’s arms and whispered out a thank you.

  The city was immense and black, with buildings and gothic towers reaching up into the sky. They had gargoyles atop them, which made me wonder if this city was here before they invaded our planet or if this was something they had designed themselves.

  Bolmore was lit up with electricity: a city perpetually awake.

  I couldn't help but breathe in a breathy gasp as we walked by the pointed archways, flying buttresses, ribbed vaults, and immense paned windows of the city.

  I looked up at the slits of sky that could be seen in between the city skyscrapers at the setting sun and the flat pink clouds that could be scarcely seen.

  "It's beautiful," I said, and Oron squeezed my hand.

  "We're going to meet Sylas now," he said and I felt torn.

  On the one hand, I felt disgust at knowing I would be given to a creature for sex and for having been taken in the first place. Just like Kennedy said I would be; oh hell, just like everybody warned me about.

  But, part of me wondered if I wasn't about to stumble upon a potential opportunity. If this 'Sylas' person really wanted a human female around and genuinely felt some sort of... otherworldly connection to me, was there are a chance I could sway him? Cause him to favor the humans and give our people peace?

  I knew it sounded naive, but it was a chance I had to take.

  Once inside the immense city, we found our way to a neighborhood in the north end, where a massive clearing was. It was a helipad, surrounded by buildings.

  It was there that I first met Sylas.

  He was handsome and fearsome all at the same time.

  With his animal dotting and bright green and yellow patches, there was something fun about Oron’s appearance: playful and sexy.

  But Sylas was just handsome.

  He was tall, taller than the rest of the Vithohn, and had skin the same color as mine. He was the only Vithohn I’d seen so far with vertical plating under his skin. The plates were above his temples and didn’t jut out far, looking more like a pattern from afar than actual raised skin.

  His pale skin color faded back in a gradient of grays and finally pure black, flowing up his horns and down into his spire.

  I swallowed nervously at the sight of him, unsure what to do.

  Curtsey? Shake his hand?

  He was leaving the city. Going to get some of the Vithohn who were supposed to meet in Bolmore. So we were to meet him in front of his mech: a red-colored robot that looked immensely fast.

  “Hello,” I said as Oron and I walked up to this great Vithohn leader.

  His eyes were aglow as he looked at me, giving a broad, playboy smile as he caught sight of me.

  “Sylas,” Oron said, kneeling down in front of him with his head bowed. “I present you Reina Lennox.”

  “My, my, my,” he said, his words practically tasting me. He took my hand in his, and I thought for a moment he would kiss it or introduce himself, but instead, he kissed me.

  It was simple and soft with just a flick of his tongue against mine. I opened my mouth unsurely and felt my heart speed up as our mouths kept moving together. I could feel him get hard and press against me.

  I found myself looking down at Oron, feeling confused about how he might feel about this interaction now.

  Sylas set both his hands on my cheeks and pulled me in closer to the kiss and then said, “It is my pleasure to finally have you.”

  I wanted to spit back, I bet.

  Instead, I said, “Thank you very much.”

  “I have to go,” he said, running his hand down my side. “But I will be
back soon, and we will get better acquainted then. I want to know everything about you, Reina Lennox. Until then, I hope you make a home for yourself here.”

  Then, without another word to me, though looking immensely thrilled, the leader looked over at Oron and pulled him up off the ground. He gave him a curt nod and said, “It is well.”

  Oron was then welcomed back into the city, no longer a fugitive, which I didn’t know anything about.

  Sylas told him to keep watch over me while he was away and I was given a tower all my own.

  How fitting, I thought, that the girl from the mountain would be made to live in such a tall, remote, lonely tower.

  Not much happened while Sylas was away: not for the first few days, anyway. I spent my days with Oron, talking and never really leaving my tower much. Until the fifth day, when I began wandering the town on my own one night.

  I’d made my way into a remote area of the district that was devoted to laboratories and had come across a strange room flashing with white lights and a long table.

  Laid out on the table was a beautiful Native American woman with immense braids and shimmering blue eyeshadow. Her forehead dipped in severely at her eyes, giving her nose a graceful, elegant appearance.

  I looked down at her lifeless form, and then realized she wasn’t dead at all. She was a robot: deactivated.

  Her body was petite and heavily armored with plating and wires, and I set my hands over them, thinking how strange it was to see such a unique piece of tech that I had only ever heard about.

  I ran my hand over the graceful woman’s arm, completely unattached to the rest of her body, and then picked it up.

  “What are you doing?” came a shout that startled me so much I let out an embarrassing noise close to a ‘GYUUUAHHH’ and jumped back.

  I looked around for the source of the scold and found myself looking down.

  In the doorway stood a short alien, though I wasn’t sure what origin. He wasn’t Vithohn; I knew that much. He came up to my middle and had a higher-pitched voice than I was used to hearing from a man.

  He had long, wispy arms and thick stubby legs and walked slowly—deathly slow—over to where I was standing.

  “I’m sorry,” I said, taken aback.

 

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