“I’m going to go check the controls, make sure we’re good,” Leo said. “You guys keep brainstorming.”
With that he tugged Annie out of her chair and down the hallway.
They stopped at the entrance to the cockpit. Leo turned to face Annie and tilted her head up with a gentle hand.
“Hey, we’re going to get out of this, okay?” Leo said. “We’ve got people all over the galaxy. Don’t worry.”
Annie was about to point out that she’d have to be an idiot not to worry when a blinking light on the dash caught her attention.
“I can’t promise it’s going to be fun,” Leo went on, “but hey, we’ll make it out okay. Strathmore’s powerful, but he’s not omnipotent.”
“Leo—” Annie started.
“Just one more thing. I said I’d protect you, and I don’t go back on my word. I want you to know that,” Leo said softly.
“That’s great, but Leo, look,” she said, pointing.
Leo straightened when he saw the light flashing.
“We’re being hailed? By who?” he said, stalking over to the dash. “No one who we don’t know should be able to hail us. Strathmore clearly had the resources to get through anyways, but there’s no way anyone else is getting through.”
He hit a button and a holoscreen flickered to life. Leo blinked in surprise as he looked over the information. “What the… that’s the Honorable’s signature. I wouldn’t have thought Captain Lurk was the type to work for Strathmore.”
“Captain Lurk? You mean Josephine Lurk?” Annie asked incredulously.
“That’s the one. You know her?” Leo said, turning back to her.
Annie nodded. “She traded banned whisky to bars around where I lived for years when I was a kid. My mom was a ship mechanic, helped patch up the Honorable a few dozen times.”
Leo raised an eyebrow and accepted the call.
Seconds later, Josie Lurk was peering at them through the holoscreen. Annie felt an unexpected rush of relief course through her at the sight of the familiar captain, taking in the dark skin and curly black hair of the woman who brought her a model SK-class Destroyer for her ninth birthday and told her that one day she’d be piloting one as her mother squawked in outrage. She smiled.
“Hey, Jo,” she said.
“Hey there baby doll, Captain Ingram,” she said, nodded at them. “So I just got a bounty for a truly ridiculous amount of credits in exchange for your heads on pikes. A sum which Captain Strathmore has generously offered to double for you to be given to him alive.”
The story poured out of Annie, from coming home from a twelve hour shift to find her father waiting for her to Strathmore calmly detailing exactly what he’d do to her if she resisted him to her escape. At some point, Leo grabbed her hand and held on tightly. She threw a grateful smile at him and continued. Josie looked calm throughout the entire explanation, but Annie recognized the tightening of her jaw.
“I think,” she said after Annie had finished, “that I’m going to kill your daddy.”
“That doesn’t really help anyone,” Annie said, shrugging. “Otherwise, I might have tried myself. As it is, I yelled at him until he ran off to get him out of the way when I ran. I just hope Strathmore hasn’t been able to find him.”
“Goddamn.” Josie shook her head. “Layla was one of the good ones, you know? It’s not right for her daughter to end up like this.”
The panic had receded to the point where Annie was able to think again and an idea slowly began to take form.
“In that case, do you want to help us get out?” Annie asked.
“You know I want to, but I don’t know what I can do to help you get away from Strathmore,” Josie said.
“Oh, I don’t want you to get me away from Strathmore,” Annie told her. “I want you to give me to him.”
She looked around at the dash as Leo and Josie let out a startled “what?” at the same time. She found the button she wanted and pressed it.
“Can you hear me?” she asked over the intercom system.
There was a brief pause, followed by Hyde’s voice coming over the line. “We can hear you. Something happen?”
“Yes, but I have a question first. When Custer said we should just kill Strathmore, you said that was a bad plan because there was no way to get close to him. But if there was a way, would it be possible?”
“Yeah, as long as we could get back out without dying horribly,” Hyde said. “I’m assuming you’ve got a plan?”
“I think so. It depends on if Captain Lurk is in. Jo, can you arrange a meeting with Strathmore? Tell him you tricked us or something, but now you have us all in custody. He’s horrifically prideful, he wouldn’t imagine anyone daring to cross him,” Annie said.
“That’s because crossing him is suicidal,” Josie said.
“Tell him to meet you planetside somewhere so you’re on neutral ground. His guards are trained better than freelancers and pirates and he knows it. He’ll agree to humor you, and then we’ll have the advantage.”
“Only if—Custer, back off I swear to God—only if there wasn’t footage of the captain and this nutjob shifting to deal with the guards on the beach. You’re going for the element of surprise, yeah? That’s not going to work if they know.”
Annie shook her head, excited despite herself. “That’s one of the things I looked at when I was figuring out how to get away. The comm system for the guard teams works as an open link. It’s like any comm call, it’s constant. But they have to contact the ship to check in, so if they didn’t have time to do that—”
“—then no one knows about us. Huh,” Hyde said. “That still leaves getting away without dying. Even if we kill his whole ground team, someone on the ship could still come after us.”
“We could come down in a pod,” Annie said. “Have one person left on the Breakwater and land her somewhere close, somewhere we can reach her but that Strathmore’s people won’t see her. I don’t know. But the rest of us port over to the Honorable and act as prisoners. Then once Strathmore’s dead, the Honorable can take off to distract the Appomattox. Hopefully they won’t realize there were two ships until it’s too late.”
“But where can you land a ship that’s got enough cover Strathmore’s won’t stop it but is still open enough to be able to maneuver?” Josie said.
“A lot of places, actually,” Leo said, breaking into a wide grin. “Annie, have I told you why our bird is called the Breakwater?”
“You have not,” Annie said as she quirked an eyebrow at him. “Please, enlighten me.”
“It’s because she has a special talent. See, smuggling requires a--” Leo began grandly.
“She can go underwater. It’s because she can go underwater,” Hyde said. “So we leave someone on board—Dom, I’m assuming that’s going to be you—to get her underwater, then go down in a pod, kill the son of a bitch, and book it. That could work. It could also get us killed horribly, but it could work. We’ll get the ship ready, you two figure things out with Captain Lurk.”
The connection cut off, and Annie turned back to Leo, who had visibly deflated at not getting to reveal the ship’s secret, and Josie, who had a faint smirk on her face.
“There’s a Destroyer out there with your name on it whenever you’re ready, baby doll.”
Annie laughed. “I’d get bored.”
The three of them figured out all the details they would need to get in order to trick one of the most powerful men in the galaxy. There were less than Annie imagined. She’d thought there’d be precise scripts, hours of minutia, and exact calibrations. In the end, it was going over a general idea of what to do, agreeing to talk it over with their respective crews, and bidding each other goodbye so Josie could contact Strathmore and Annie and Leo could prepare.
They ended up back in the kitchen. Annie wasn’t hungry, but Leo had insisted she not have an empty stomach for what was about to happen. She choked down the noodles without tasting them, her mind going over a thousand ways eve
rything could go wrong. She was caught somewhere between hope and abject terror and the contrasting emotions were making her dizzy. When Josie checked in to let them know everything was ready, it was almost a relief. Meeting Strathmore again might kill her, but the wait was torture.
“Alright, remember,” Leo said as they stood gathered around the pod that would take them planetside, “we’ve been drugged, so act out of it. Stumble around a little, slur your words if you try to say anything. Now, we’ve got five minutes before we load in. If anyone wants to announce their undying love to me before we’re all trapped in a metal pod and hurtled towards what may be our doom, this is the time.”
Custer leaned towards Annie. “I think that means you.”
Leo batted his eyes. “Aww, you know I’m not picky. Hyde? Rick?”
Rick snorted and shook his head. Hyde just flipped Leo off.
Annie patted him on the arm. “I’ll swear my eternal love to you if you get me back off this planet alive. That work?”
“It’s a plan,” Leo said. “Alright, Captain Lurk, I think this is the part where you tie us up. Custer, try not to get too excited.”
“Can’t promise that, Captain,” Custer said, winking at Josie.
“I’d smack you upside the head for that if I didn’t think it’d turn you on,” Josie said coolly as she clamped a set of restraints around Leo’s wrists. The cuffs looked convincing enough, but even Annie’s human strength could get them open again. They would be no match for the four shifters.
Annie and the others dutifully stood still as they were cuffed and looked over to make sure they looked “imprisoned” enough to get close to Strathmore. Once they passed muster, they were loaded into the back of the pod with Josie and two of her men in the front.
“I bet you weren’t expecting to be doing this twice in less than forty-eight hours,” Leo joked as the interior back door slowly lifted.
“Hopefully I won’t have to do it again for awhile,” she replied, staring ahead.
The trip down to the planet was over faster than Annie would have liked. She craned her neck as they drew near, eyes resting on the purple lake Dominic had hidden the Breakwater in and then on the clearing a quarter mile away where she’d soon be meeting Strathmore again. Their landing was much smoother than her crashing the Needle into the lake had been, and yet it made her feel twice as sick. She forced herself to swallow it down. She had imposed on these people, and now they were in danger. She didn’t have the luxury of backing out.
Once everyone was out of the pod, Annie and the Breakwater crew on their knees with Josie’s guards pointing blasters in their direction, Josie set off a flare. It whistled up into the sky and exploded in a flash of red. Within seconds, a black speck hovering against the sky began to grow larger and larger, gaining on them swiftly.
“Remember,” Leo told Annie, “everything is going to be okay.”
“Tell me that when we’re back on the Breakwater, okay?” Annie asked.
The pod from the Appomattox hovered, propulsion beams ruffling the grass, as the doors opened. Four guards leapt out, surveyed the scene, then moved forward so Strathmore could exit, helped down by one of his thugs.
He looked even more sinister than Annie remembered. His grey hair and pale eyes seemed to shine in the dusk light. The shadows cast across his face made his sharp features even more severe. The malevolence in the sneer that his mouth twisted into at the sight of Annie cuffed and on her knees, however, had nothing to do with the light.
“My, my,” he drawled. “You certainly have come through, Captain Lurk. And so quickly.”
Josie scoffed. “Leo here and I are old friends. I saw the bounty and offered to help him out of the system. Poor idiot didn’t even notice I’d drugged them until the blond over there collapsed face first on my bridge.”
“Fuckyoo,” Leo heaved out, like forming the independent syllables was a hardship.
“Oh, don’t be like that, baby,” Josie crooned. “I told you I’d get you away from this mess. Don’t blame me for not disclosing the way out was death.”
“Don’t worry, I’m not going to kill your friend just yet. He and I need to become… better acquainted first,” Strathmore said before turning his gaze on Annie. “Anyanka, darling, how delightful to see you again. I hope you’re prepared to repent for your recent actions.”
Annie couldn’t force her jaw to unlock and settled for glaring up at Strathmore.
Strathmore sighed. “I suppose it was too much to hope that this little exercise in failure would teach you your place. I suppose it’s no matter. I’ll just have to break you in myself.”
“Captain,” Josie said, drawing attention away from where Leo looked about ready to tear Strathmore in half then and there. “I’m afraid I need to ask for payment now. It’s rude, I know, but I’d like to go ahead and wash my hands of this.”
“Regretting turning on a friend?” Strathmore asked. “No matter. Excellent work, captain.” He pulled a sleek device of his jacket pocket and, with a flick of his wrist, pulled up a holoscreen. He tapped a few button and then put it back in his pocket.
“That should do it,” he said.
Josie opened her multitool, her eyes scanning the screen.
“Thank you for your generosity,” she said as she closed it back out. “Is that all you needed?”
“It is, thank you,” Strathmore said. “I’ll keep you in mind the next time I need something like this handled.”
“Somehow, I don’t think that’s going to matter much,” Josie said coolly as she unholstered her blaster and shot one of Strathmore’s guards in the chest. Her men both turned their weapons away from the shifters and began to fire on the soldiers. Four were dead before they reacted, but by then it was too late.
Annie rolled away from Leo and the others as soon as the shooting started to give them the room to shift. Within seconds, Strathmore’s men were facing four bears and three armed pirates.
Strathmore stumbled back a pace before tripping and falling on his ass. For the first time, he had an actual expression on his face. Abject terror was written all over his features as he gaped at the spectacle before him. Annie took a sick satisfaction in watching him scramble backwards as Leo advanced on him.
“What the—” he said before being cut off by way of Leo’s paw crashing into the side of his face. Annie closed her eyes just before the impact but the crunching sound let her know that she’d heard the last from Strathmore.
It was over quickly. The few remaining guards dropped like flies and Josie helped Annie up as they started for the lake. It left Annie with a kind of dissatisfaction. Surely it should have taken longer? This was Strathmore, after all. But she knew better. She knew death always happened too quickly, without regard for the status or wealth of its victims.
The bear that was Leo pressed against Annie’s side for the trek to the lake. She rested a hand on his furry shoulder, taking comfort in the contact even as her skin felt too tight and her mind buzzed.
Was it over? Was she free?
Josie radioed Dominic to let him know they were close and when they arrived at the lake, the Breakwater was waiting with her cargo ramp down. Annie was struck with a sense of déjà vu as she followed Leo into the ship. Almost as soon as they were inside, Dominic announced takeoff and the mechanical whirs of the ship working began to fill the air.
“Alright, baby doll,” Josie said as the shifters wandered off, presumably to find pants, “I doubt whoever takes over the Appomattox is going to waste time looking for you when whoever it is should be watching their back. That said, lay low. Now, I better get to the transport pad so the Honorable can get the hell out of here. Is there anything you need before I go?”
Edward (BBW Western Bear Shifter Romance) (Rodeo Bears Book 1) Page 12