by E. A. James
“They’re coming,” he said, but it was too late. Suddenly there were humans in his cell, streaming in with fire arms pointed at him. Someone had shut of the damn alarm, finally.
“No, don’t shoot!” Hannah cried out. It looked bad, Bane knew that. He was a specimen from a foreign country, a dragon that was deemed dangerous. Hannah was on the floor covered in blood. It definitely didn’t look good.
“He saved me,” Hannah said. That seemed to get their attention, but there was a lot of tension and nervousness in the air. It was so thick Bane could draw his fingers through it.
The guns were all trained on him. He could taste the gun powder on his tongue, a toxic mix with the smell of the anger and the fear and the shock in the room. Emotions were running high. Dangerous.
The soldiers moved slowly. They all wore protective gear and kept those guns trained on Bane. In the circle they were forming he couldn’t see all of them at the same time. The ones in front made a move to come closer. Bane took a step forward, but they jumped on him from behind. They’d tried to distract him and succeeded. He should have known better.
“Stop it!” Hannah’s voice rang through the cell but they weren’t listening to her. The butt of a gun came down on Bane’s head, sending him to his knees. They started hitting him with their guns, blows raining down on him. The anger pushed to the surface. If they didn’t stop soon he was going to lose it and a lot of them were going to die.
He didn’t want to kill in front of Hannah.
“Leave him alone!” Hannah was crying now and the sound of her distress pushed Bane so close to the edge he saw red. He was going to lose it in a second and then there would be chaos.
“That’s enough,” a deep voice boomed from the door behind the soldiers. The attack on Bane stopped abruptly. He curled into a ball on the floor, trying to cradle himself. He hurt everywhere.
“Mr. Stirling,” one of the soldiers said. There was reverence in his tone and a touch of fear, but it felt different from the fear that had ruled until this man had come in.
“Dad,” Hannah said in a thin voice. There were no more tears, but her fear was apparent, too. She feared this man that she called father.
“Have you all lost your minds? That thing,” he pointed at Bane, “has the ability to kill all of us. Secure him.”
“Daddy, no,” Hannah pleaded. She hoisted herself up even though it obviously caused her pain. “He saved me. He isn’t here to cause a war. They just want peace. The only reason he’s fighting is because we’re pushing him.”
“Be quiet, Hannah.”
His tone was dismissive. Bane got the feeling she usually complied. But something was resolute inside her now, something hard and icy in her gut.
“You can’t keep doing this,” she said. Her voice had taken on a stern quality of her own. Bane wondered if she knew how much she sounded like him. It was apparent she hated him, but they were similar in their stubbornness. “You’re not going to beat everything by acting like you rule the universe.”
Stirling looked at her. His face twisted in a snarl and for a moment it looked like he was going to agree. He lifted his hand and slapped her across the face instead. Her blond hair, tangled from the struggle, fell over her face.
Bane wanted to run to her but the soldiers grabbed him. He wanted to fight but the struggle with the creature had drained him and he wasn’t angry now. There was so much pain in the air – Hannah’s pain – and it drained him. They forced him to his knees.
Hannah wiped her hair out of her face. There were no tears. Her face was an expressionless mask. If only she knew what a clear map her emotions were to what was really going on inside her head. Pain, anguish, fear, fury. It was a dangerous mix. She looked at Bane with eyes that flashed with something – the fury? She walked out of the cell, following her father.
CHAPTER SEVEN
Hannah was a disappointment. Part of her had always known it – her father reminded her whenever he thought maybe she would be able to forget. But there were times when it was worse. She’d let the gorilla-creature escape and now it was destroyed.
Months of research – pointless. Money and time – gone. And it was all because of her. She wasn’t cut out for this job. She made him look bad. She did everything wrong. What would her mother say if she were alive?
Maybe her mother would have asked her if she was alright after she’d nearly been killed by an alien. Maybe her mother would have asked about the handsome man in cell four. Maybe her mother would have understood.
Hannah shook off the thoughts and focused on the microscope. She’d been assigned to testing only. Sampling had been taken away because it was obvious she’s been given too much responsibility too quickly. Not even Doyle had disagreed with Stirling. Whether that was because he agreed or because he was too scared to challenge the man was a different story. Either way, she was almost like an assistant now. Hannah wasn’t a true biologist.
The upside was that she could stay late now without there being any questions asked. Her work piled up during the day. She was expected to stay late most evenings, anyway. When the other employees left – some of them ignoring her, some shaking their head in pity, which was worse – Hannah had the lab to herself.
She didn’t take samples anymore which meant she didn’t have to hurt them anymore. And when she was the only one left she could spend time with Bane even if she didn’t go in there to take her samples. It was a win-win even if she’d lost her dignity.
“You’re late tonight,” he said when she opened the door to his cell with her keypad. He sat on his bed, blankets dragged over his lap to hide his nakedness. Hannah was relieved. He didn’t seem to think that being naked was a big deal, but it made her nervous around him and he seemed to understand that. Maybe he’d read her mind. With Bane, anything was possible.
“I had to finish work. There’s a reason I stay late, you know.” She couldn’t help but smile. The sexy alien with his pitch black hair and diamond eyes uplifted her mood the moment she saw him, no matter how bad her day was.
Bane patted the bed next to him, invited her to sit down. When she did she pulled a cloth and disinfectant from her pocket. When they’d beat him they’d caused damage – his skin was split in various places. Hannah had been taking care of him.
She couldn’t bandage him, which would make it obvious that she’d been with him, but she could make sure that there were no infections.
At first, the open wound had fascinated her. It was like he had silver scales just under his skin. The dragon, he’d explained, but it didn’t make sense. Very little about him did. It was part of what she liked about him. He was unpredictable, a breath of fresh air.
“What are you working on?” he asked.
“You, actually. I have to study the samples. Your blood. You tissue. That kind of thing.”
“And what did you find?”
He didn’t sound upset. He sounded curious like maybe something interesting would come up.
“I found out that even if you look like us you’re not like us at all.”
“Does that scare you?”
She looked at him. His eyes were the color of ice and dead serious. She shook her head. She was sure he would be able to tell if something scared her – he always seemed to know what she was thinking or feeling. But he wanted her to say it.
“It doesn’t.” And it really didn’t. In fact, being with him was wonderful because he was nothing like anything she knew. Which meant the chances that he would be as horrible as the rest of her life was slim. “In fact, I like it.”
He looked at her for a moment and then nodded.
“Your dragon scares me, though,” she said, her mouth tugging into a smile. She was joking, but deep down a small part of it was true. She knew that Bane would never do anything to hurt her, but the dragon had a feeling of dread that surrounded it. Long teeth, scales, fire, and those diamond eyes that had no humanity in them when Bane shifted – it wasn’t a party.
“It’s supp
osed to be scary. I’m a warrior. It would do no good if I looked like your kittens.”
Hannah chuckled and finished with the wounds. They were healing. Slower than she would have liked, but healing.
“What does it feel like to fear nothing?” she asked.
Bane leaned back on the bed, stretching. The muscles in his arms and shoulders rippled under his skin. Hannah stared. Heat washed through her body. She couldn’t help it. When he looked at her she forced her eyes back to his and blushed, caught in the act.
“Sorry.”
“Don’t be,” he said. His lips were slightly parted, eyes dilated, and he had a feeling he was thinking about something entirely different from what they were talking about. He breathed in as if he smelled something.
“I fear things, just as you do,” he said. His face still didn’t match the topic.
“Like what?”
“Losing loved ones. It’s a fear of anything with a life force.” He looked down at his lap, shifted the blankets. “And when they attack, I fear that I will lose you.”
Right. The pending war. Hannah still had made no progress warning her superiors about what Bane was telling her. She believed him with her heart and soul, but they all said that any prisoner would try to threaten to buy freedom. They weren’t falling for it. They told her it was her weak heart, her soft soul, which caused her downfall in the industry. More criticism.
“I try,” she said. “I’ll keep trying to warn them.”
“I know.”
His voice was husky when he said it. His mind was definitely not on the conversation. The blankets were bundled in his lap, hiding his body. The effort to conceal it made it that much more obvious.
Hannah felt more heat. It rushed through her body, pooled between her leg. She wanted Bane. She ached for Bane. She didn’t know why an alien was so attractive to her, but in the week after the attack, she’d come to feel that he was the only creature in the universe that understood her, the only one that actually cared.
Hannah swallowed. Her mouth was dry. Her breathing came in erratic bursts. She rubbed the palms of her hands on her jeans.
Bane looked at her and his eyes flashed. His eyes slid down to her lips. It made her look at his, too. Everything about him was strong and able. His face was masculine, a square jaw, a straight nose, and deep thoughtful eyes. He was a prime specimen for a GQ model.
He shifted closer to her so that they sat side by side. His shoulder lightly touched hers and a current flew through her body. Since he’d kissed her after the attack – almost a dream she’d been so out of it – they hadn’t touched again. She’d been scared he would regret it. She hadn’t known why he’d kept his distance.
He didn’t keep it now. He lifted his hand, put it on her cheek and turned her head toward him. He lowered his mouth onto hers and this time, she gave herself over to him. His lips were soft and supple, and raw and powerful, all at the same time. He parted her lips with his and slid his tongue into her mouth. It was hot and slick and she moaned into his mouth.
Her body was flushed with heat. Her nipples tightened in her bra and she scissored her thighs together, drying to get rid of the energy build up that would be the end of her.
Instead of letting go of her, letting her deal with what she was feeling, Bane slid his hand onto her leg and moved upward. When he touched her sex she shuddered. He didn’t waste time making it clear what he wanted, and God, Hannah wanted to give it to him.
Bane knew when she knew. He might have read her mind. Maybe it was just the sexual charge in the cell. Either way, he made short work of getting her undressed. He peeled off the coat, pulled her shirt over her head and made work of her bra like he’d dealt with one before. He pulled down her pants and her underwear, and then she was as naked as he was.
The blankets had slipped down, revealing his lust and his hunger and it seemed to match hers.
He touched her again, his hands on her breasts this time, making her gasp. Her body melted into his hands and she lay back on the bed, unwilling to keep herself upright again.
Bane crawled over her. He was all muscle and raw sexuality and in his eyes she saw the promise of sex and pleasure and closeness like she hadn’t felt before. Her skin was alive with an electric current that could only be coming from him and no matter where he touched her, a jolt traveled through her.
He positioned himself between her legs and her thighs fell open as if they had a mind of their own. He was at her entrance, and the next moment he slid into her and erased everything that she could be thinking about but him. He was everywhere. In her mind, over her body, all around the cell, deep inside her. She gasped and moaned as he started moving, and she gave herself to him completely.
This was what she wanted. She wanted him to have every part of her. Not just her body, but her heart too. He pumped in and out of her, pushing her closer and closer to an orgasm. Her body was hot and the sexual heat filled her up like a cup being filled with hot water. Any moment now she was going to spill over.
She’d just thought it when Bane put his lips on hers and pushed her over the edge. The orgasm shattered through her in a white light and she cried out against his mouth.
When she came down again he was right there with her, and she had the strange sensation that she was falling.
He would catch her. She didn’t know where the thought had come from, but it was right there. She could fall, and he would catch her. Every time.
CHAPTER EIGHT
They were on their way. Bane could feel them, inching closer to this planet, bringing their wrath and their vengeance with them. Hocus and Mage, his travel partners, had seen him captured. They had seen him taken by this planet’s cruel race and they’d gone back to the others to rally a rescue team.
Bane knew because it was what he would have done. You don’t leave a soldier behind. That was how they were trained; it was how they cared for each other.
They were going to destroy this planet. Most of the humans deserved it. What he’d seen of them was heartless and merciless and they deserved to suffer for the pain they’d caused him. At least, that was what he’d thought until Hannah had come along.
She was different. She was the kind of person that made him believe that there could be life without war. There was hope for peace when he looked into her eyes. But not for people like her father, and Bane got the feeling that the earth consisted of more people like him than like her. There were the few that were worth saving, but they didn’t outweigh the bad that Earth had to offer. It was hard to believe they could coexist with such cruelty, that there were people out there who believed it was acceptable.
“What’s wrong?” Hannah asked. She’d gotten dressed again after he’d taken her. It was the most powerful emotional response he’d ever had with someone. He’d never felt like that with anyone, not even of his own race, and he hadn’t felt like that about someone, either. Hannah was different. It was almost impossible to think that they were worlds removed from each other. It felt like she was the missing piece to Bane’s life and it had only been a matter of time before he’d found her.
It was the sex that had opened his feelings to the pending doom. He was troubled because he knew that if they arrived and he didn’t do something about it, everything Hannah loved, everything that made up her life, would be destroyed. He didn’t want to be the one to cause her such pain. He could tell by how her father treated her, by the pain and the distance she created when he was around, that she had grown up in a home of abuse.
She looked at him now with eyes that felt like they looked right into her soul, even though Bane knew that she couldn’t sense emotions or read minds the way he could.
“The others. They’re close now. If we don’t do anything they will destroy the earth and everything in it. It will be for me, for how I have been treated.”
Hannah nodded, looking at her hands. The tension in the air, the loaded sexual atmosphere, had changed into something more serious and quiet.
“Wh
at can I do to help?” she asked, looking up at him. The question caught him off guard even though he could usually sense what was going on in her mind. This was something else. This was genuine – her heart speaking to his.
“What would really help is if I can escape this facility. I can meet the troops and stop them.”
He looked up at her. Her face was closed and her emotions were too. He’d learned that she switched herself off when she was in deep thought or when she retreated into herself.
“I’ll help you,” she said, emerging again from some deep place inside her. “Tomorrow night.”
Another unexpected response. Sometimes she managed to say something he couldn’t guess at. Those were the times when it meant so much more.
“Really?”
She nodded. “You’re not just a specimen, and if I have to be honest with you, to hell with my father and his testing. I have spent my whole life aspiring to be good enough for him, and to do that I’ve realized I have to become a monster. No more.”