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Science Friction: 15 Book MEGA Sci-Fi Romance Bundle (Excite Spice Boxed Sets)

Page 56

by Selena Kitt


  Unfortunately for him, his body also became aware of her closeness.

  “Crut.”

  Hope hadn’t been surprised to find Cord had fallen asleep while she set camp up around him. After seeing to Keela’s needs and quieting both of their rumbling bellies, Hope had let him have the side closest to the fire and pulled the blankets over them. Keela had trotted over and lay down with her, offering warmth to her outward facing side.

  She had awakened before Cord had and watched as he replenished the fire and rolled to face her. He seemed surprised to find her there and made one of the noises he made when he was irritated with her. That made her frown. Why was he annoyed that she had taken care of him? She knew he needed more heat than she did, which was why he was next to the fire. How could he be upset with her catering to one of his weaknesses?

  Something poked her hip and she jerked away, startled at the unknown contact. The next thing she knew Cord was throwing the blankets off them and marching across their camp and into a copse of trees. Concerned and curious, she ran after him on silent Camo feet.

  Hope halted just inside the copse when she saw him unbuckle and reach into his pants. Her alien was fine. He needed to relieve himself. She wanted to let him have his privacy, but her body disobeyed. Instead, she remained rooted in place, taking in every movement, hearing every sound, and it was obvious he was not relieving himself in the way she had originally thought. Fascinated, she stepped closer.

  Cord reached into his pants and grabbed his throbbing cock. This couldn’t be happening. It had been mere days since he and Cass had fucked. It was morning wood. Had to be. Because if it wasn’t then the alternative was—he quashed that thought as he strangled the sound of his climax.

  A twig snapped and Cord’s orgasmic euphoria sobered instantly. His gaze locked in the direction of the sound as he silently made himself presentable. Had Hope followed him? Had she been spying on him while he jerked off in the snow? He didn’t want to think about it. His cock, however, seemed to like the idea. He grabbed a handful of snow and showed it the consequences of those thoughts.

  He endured his soggy walk back to the camp and instead of finding Hope curled up with Keela, where he had left her, both were gone. His fingers ghosted over his weapons to assure himself they were still there while he visually scanned their camp.

  Had she taken Keela and gone for the mountain without him, abandoning him without his mount but leaving him all the supplies? According to the scientist’s journal, she needed one of her own to end winter. She didn’t need him. His usefulness to her had ended.

  His shoulders drooped and if it weren’t for the appearance of Keela shuffling toward him, his dour thoughts would have continued.

  “Keela,” he said, calling her over. The beast eagerly lumbered toward him. After assuring himself his longtime companion was uninjured, he returned his attention to the campsite and identified signs of a struggle. Supplies kicked over, faint scuff marks in the hard, cold ground. And of course, the familiar prints of a man and farther away, another mount.

  Cord put his booted foot on Keela’s bent knee and vaulted onto her back. She complied with his request for speed and they raced after the tracks he was certain had been purposely left for him to follow.

  He lay low against Keela’s back and admonished himself for not killing Gerrit when he had the chance.

  Hope pulled on the rope that bound her wrists, but it was no use. The alien who had taken her from Cord had the other end of the rope tied to the horn of his mount’s saddle. All her yanking accomplished was to slightly alter the animal’s course. Dragging her feet had a worse outcome. The alien would encourage his mount to speed up and if Hope wasn’t careful she would be dragged through the snow.

  She hissed but he either ignored her or barked at her discomfort.

  Gerrit nudged his mount, forcing Hope to trudge alongside the scant path and not on it. The rocky terrain was hidden by snow and he enjoyed the sound of the Camo as she tripped and hissed.

  “Teach you to make me bleed, bitch,” he called over his shoulder at her.

  He traced his fingertips gingerly along the cuts under his eye and sneered. Declawing her was first on his agenda, then whatever else took his fancy before Cord caught up. And once he did, his friend was a dead man.

  Keela slowed and chuffed the air, tasting it. Cord leaned over to see what had caught her attention. A trail of blood dotted the churned-up snow. For the first time it struck him how similar Camo and human blood looked.

  Having no way of knowing whether the blood belonged to Gerrit or Hope, he growled.

  “If he’s hurt her...” he vowed out loud. Yet another reason to kill the man. First he had taken his wife and son and now he had foolishly taken Hope. Didn’t the bastard know she was the only hope they had of coming out of this forsaken winter?

  He grunted as realization dawned on him. Cord had finally figured out why the scientist had called her that. Sometimes he was slow but it was usually down to the alcohol, something he hadn’t touched—or even thought about—in days.

  The thought of losing Hope forever didn’t sit well with him, but he wasn’t willing to contemplate why. Instead, he urged Keela on. They didn’t have far to go.

  “This looks like as good a spot as any,” Gerrit announced. He stopped his mount and slipped from its back. With a jerk on the rope, Hope was forced to follow.

  Gerrit led them off the path and into the snow-covered wasteland, each step more laborious than the last as they sunk up to their knees in the frigid whiteness.

  “Awful planet you have,” he told her. He didn’t care that she wouldn’t understand. She was just bait. An object. A thing. But this thing obviously meant something to his friend, making it something he could use to his advantage. And maybe he could have some fun with it too, as he had with Cord’s wife.

  “C’mon Cord. Come and get it.”

  Cord found Gerrit’s mount snuffling in the snow, looking for ground feed. He ignored it. The beast could fend for itself. They were hardy creatures and more used to the harsh realities of this planet’s winter than he was. Keela also gave it no heed, more interested in following the path Gerrit and Hope had eked into the snow.

  He raised his hand to shield his eyes and scanned the distance for them. There they were. Slowly they trudged away, one leading the other on a tether. Cord ground his back molars, incensed by what he saw. He jumped from Keela’s back and left her, knowing she would be more hindrance than help, and followed in their footsteps.

  He walked where they had, making the way easier. It didn’t stop the sweat and vapor in his breath from forming icicles around his beard as he trudged forward. The snow dampened his supposedly waterproof leggings, draining his energy with every step. He took comfort in the fact Gerrit would be worse off. Still, what shape would Hope be in when he caught up to them?

  When he was within shooting range, he stopped, cupped his hands around his mouth, and yelled.

  He saw Gerrit nonchalantly turn and wave. Cord noted the jerky way he moved his arm and the corner of his lip curled at the memory of Keela trampling the bastard. She had broken Gerrit’s preferred gun hand.

  “Good girl,” he murmured.

  Gerrit yanked on the rope, coiling it like a makeshift fishing line as he reeled Hope to him. Not only was she the bait but he knew Gerrit would use her as a shield.

  Cord considered shooting through Hope to get to Gerrit, but dismissed the notion. None of them had the energy required for Hope to heal herself. One or all of them would die, hopefully Gerrit, which meant Cord had few options to choose from.

  “How about you toss your guns away and I won’t kill her?” Gerrit offered.

  Cord ran his fingers through his beard, disturbing the ice that clung to it as he pretended to think it over.

  “I might,” he said, “if I knew you wouldn’t kill her.”

  “Ah, it was worth a shot.”

  Minutes passed in silence, the lack of noise almost deafening in the c
old white desert as the two men regarded each other. Gerrit, never able to take Cord’s silence for long, broke first.

  “Nice weather we’re having this winter. This goddamn long, accursed winter.”

  “If you let her go, it’ll end.”

  “What? This Camo bitch will stop winter?” Gerrit asked. “If she could do that why the crut hasn’t she done it already?”

  Cord shrugged.

  Gerrit sighed. “Why’d we even come to this shithole?”

  Cord didn’t reply. He knew Gerrit would rant for ages if he let him and the more worked up the man got, the more likely he was to make a mistake. A mistake Cord could use to his advantage. For that to happen he had to be patient, so he focused his attention on Hope. He needed her to somehow get away from Gerrit so he could end this.

  “All they wanted was the Camo,” Gerrit continued, saying something that caught Cord’s attention. “You’re a drunk with nothing left, Cord. You didn’t have to do anything. So why’d you have to side with them?”

  Gerrit punctuated his question by shoving Hope. Cord whipped his gun out and fired.

  Hope hissed.

  “Don’t worry. You only grazed her,” Gerrit helpfully informed him. “She’s pretty pissed, though.”

  Cord winced. Gerrit might be angry and injured, but he still had the presence of mind to keep her between them.

  “But seriously, Cord. You ruined everything. Well, you and that asshole governor. Both of you screwed it up. But I don’t buy this shit that this Camo is special or that she can end winter. What about science? Shouldn’t the planet tilt on its dammed axis? Or doesn’t it do that? Ever? What were they thinking when they approved this shithole for colonization?”

  They were the questions Cord had asked himself, many times. It had been summer when they first arrived on the planet, so he knew that summer was real. The existence of the Camo proved it. But Hope didn’t seem to notice the cold, at least not that Cord could tell. And she was always cold. The Camo were built for winters on this planet. Humans weren’t.

  Pain had always been a part of Hope’s life. Her main purpose was to take pain from others, bury it within herself, and let it go back out into the world. Her other purpose, her destiny, was waiting for her at the top of the mountains, the ones she could see behind Cord. The pull to go to them was strong. The physical hold the alien had on her kept her in place, causing pain of another kind. Longing.

  The anger around and within Hope grew as the two males polluted the air with their animosity. She knew this would only be resolved with bloodshed. She knew him well enough by now to know it would come to that. Still, she was not impressed that her blood had been spilled first.

  Cord’s bullet had burned a searing trail across her cheek, making it sting. He had hit her instead of his intended target. She let her body heal but worried her alien would be effected by the harm he had unintentionally caused. He had to realize though that there were more important things at stake than a graze.

  She hoped he could control his emotions long enough to see this through. If he were to falter, then all would be lost. Yes, the alien had killed her alien’s flesh and blood. Even her people would seek retribution and atonement. Death, however, was not something one came back from. Even someone with her ability couldn’t cheat death. But if death was the only way to end this and stop him from coming after them again, so be it. And if she played a small part in it, then that was her burden to bear.

  Time wasn’t on their side. So Hope decided to act. She threw her head back, hard, and hissed out her frustration.

  Cord’s concentration wavered when Hope unleashed such an inhuman noise. Her sudden attack surprised them all, especially Gerrit, who staggered back at the force of the blow to his face. Even Cord heard the cringe-inducing sound of cartilage as it broke. He had been on the receiving end of the back of her head before. It wasn’t fun.

  A mere quarter of a second passed between the audible crunch and the crack of Cord’s second shot.

  Gerrit’s body jerked. He reached blindly for Hope, who had dropped to her knees the moment he had loosened his grip. She hissed when skin-to-skin contact was made. He wrapped his fingers around her wrist and gasped in pleasant surprise at the warmth that blossomed from her.

  Cord swore. He wouldn’t let the bastard siphon the life from her. He didn’t have time to savor the moment or to think about avenging his family. Cord’s actions were automatic. His time as a soldier came back to him, and he hurled himself forward, into the moment. With his gun in the lead, he emptied the remaining bullets into Gerrit’s flailing body.

  He hadn’t realized he had been yelling, not until his voice went hoarse in the bone-chilling air. He wondered for a moment what he had called out. Whatever it was, it didn’t matter. What did matter was getting Hope to safety. Cord grabbed Hope by the shoulders and heaved them both backward, away from Gerrit, who was desperately still clinging to life.

  Exhausted, Cord grunted at the impact and closed his eyes. He had little energy left, so he let himself drift away in the cold, for just a moment.

  Hope carefully lifted her head. She pushed the pain aside and concentrated on her surroundings. The last thing she remembered was her alien running toward her, death erupting from his weapon. He had also made noises as he ran. She slowed the memory in her mind and while moving her lips to repeat the patterns he had made, recognized the way his mouth said the name his kind had given her.

  It perplexed her. Why would he do that?

  She looked down at the familiar face. He had pulled them away, breaking the healing connection that had been forced on her. For that, she was grateful. Death was not something she was ready to experience.

  He was still unconscious. He hadn’t opened his eyes and when his breathing slowed and became shallower, she started to worry. Hope brushed away the icicles and snow from his beard that had fallen while they had been unconscious. He needed to wake up. He had to.

  Hope tapped his forehead. No response.

  She knew he hadn’t been injured, but the cold and exhaustion would claim him if he didn’t wake soon. She needed to act.

  A puff of warm air tickled Cord’s nose. He tried to ignore it. But after the second and third puff, something told him it wouldn’t stop. His eyelids fluttered open and found himself nose-to-nose with Hope.

  “Crut,” he muttered, cross-eyed.

  She pushed herself back on her heels.

  Cord looked up at her as she sat astride him and he sighed.

  “I see you’re alive,” he said and gestured for her to get up. Once she did, it took him a few tries to get back to his feet. She had knocked the wind out of him when they had landed on his back after he had pulled her away from Gerrit.

  He stared down at the body of his former friend. The bastard had been the cause of so much sorrow, yet killing him hadn’t relinquished its hold on him. He had always known it wouldn’t be as simple as that. After a kick to assure himself he would never be bothered by the man again, he trudged away. There was no point in burying him. The ground was frozen solid and it was better this way. The animals could eat him. If there were any left out here, that was.

  Besides, Cord still had one Camo to deliver. And after that? Well, he didn’t know.

  Having returned to the path, Hope and Cord started their ascent of the Ashula Mountains. Heavy drifts of snow mixed with patches of ice increased the higher they went. The usually sure-footed Keela made her way slowly along the slippery slope. Cord dismounted and led them upward. He picked their way along the treacherous path as the winds buffeted around them. Hope hugged tightly to Keela’s hairy hide as they wound their way to the cave located somewhere above.

  Cord stepped on a slick spot and his foot skittered out from under him. He flung his arms out and grabbed at the rocky mountain wall. His gloved fingers found purchase in a crag and his sigh of relief puffed through the folds of his scarf.

  “Keela halt!” he said but the order was too late.

  Cord wat
ched in horror as his longtime companion seemed to flounder in slow motion on the same spot he had. Hope’s expression imprinted itself into his mind as she and Keela went over the ledge.

  Without thinking Cord hurled himself after them, stumbling and bouncing down the steep incline. He rolled to a stop on a part of the path they had passed a few hours ago. Panting, he crawled to the hairy but still form of his beloved Keela. Warm air snorted from her stubby nose. She was alive. Keela tried to stand. The usually silent animal wailed before flopping back down. The source of her pain was clear. She had two broken legs.

 

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