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Stealing Mercury (Arena Dogs Book 1)

Page 24

by Charlee Allden


  She might have protested the idea of leaving Mercury unfulfilled if her arms and legs weren’t limp as noodles. For a moment she let Lo’s strength support her, but Mercury still lay beneath them, lungs working like bellows, cock looking painfully hard. That didn’t seem right. No, not right at all, but Mercury didn’t seem worried or in a hurry. He looked pretty damn pleased with himself as he watched her, limp in Lo’s arms, Lo licking along her shoulder.

  Licking? Yes, he was definitely licking.

  About the time control of her limbs seem to be returning, Lo urged her to lean over Mercury, her lips brushing against the damp tip of his engorged cock.

  Lo said, “Take him in your mouth.”

  She blinked, uncertain. She wouldn’t want to place any bets on her chances of getting him very far past her lips, but Lo added, “No one’s ever done that for him.” She knew then that she’d give it her best try.

  The suggestion prompted another groan from Mercury. It hadn’t left her unaffected either. She steadied herself with one hand near his hip. She wrapped her other hand around the base of him and licked up the length. She laved her tongue around the crown and looked up to see him watching her with rapt attention. Her pussy clenched in response as if she hadn’t already had her pleasure.

  His hands gripped the blankets under him as if he might be fighting the urge to fist his hands in her hair and she wished he wouldn’t hold back. Or maybe he knew Lo would take care of it for them all. His hands were suddenly there, tight in her hair guiding her to take Mercury inside. His other arm still wrapped around her waist, keeping her ass snugged back against him. The hard length of Lo’s cock slipped between her thighs and pressed to her entrance.

  He let her work Mercury into her mouth to a point she could handle, then he slid his cock into her channel in one luxurious thrust. He managed to wrap all of her hair in one hand and trailed the other down her spine. For the first time, his claws brushed her skin, just enough to send prickles spiraling out across her back and tracing along her rib cage. Each thrust of his cock filling her up demanded she take Mercury deeper in her mouth until the velvet swell of the tip worked against the soft, sensitive palate at the back of her throat. She fought her gag reflex. She didn’t want to stop.

  What they were doing had all three of them desperate for release.

  It didn’t take long.

  Lo shifted his hands to her hips just as Mercury howled and filled her mouth. Lo changed the angle of his thrusts, pushing her off the edge to follow Mercury—her second orgasm a warm wave rolling through her. As her pussy clenched around Lo’s cock, he groaned, a throaty sound of satisfaction. Howling in perfect harmony with Mercury, he pulled out of her then coated her thigh with the sticky evidence of his pleasure.

  Together they collapsed on the bed in a pile of tangled limbs. It took a while for Samantha’s pulse to slow. Her mind was blank as if all the other parts of her body had taken all the oxygen and left her brainless—and for the moment, that was fine. On a purely instinctual level she knew she was safe. Someone passed her water and she drank. The lamps flickered off and she was wrapped up by two strong bodies. Nothing in her life had ever been so right. A tiny voice in the back of her mind whispered that it wouldn’t last. That it wasn’t real. But the voice was small and far away—a small stone beneath the overstuffed mattress, easily ignored.

  CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE

  Haverlee Refugee Camp, Krena

  Gollerra Sector

  2210.171

  Samantha jolted awake as Lo launched out of her arms and Mercury pushed her behind him. Lo took the man at the door to the ground. Carn had joined them to sleep sometime in the night. He leapt over Lo to dart into the main room.

  Samantha peeked around Mercury to see Lo snarling and snapping at a man in the drab gray of independent spacers and wearing freighter boots with silver toned straps—Knock.

  “Wait!” Samantha tugged at Mercury’s shoulder. He snarled in response. She wrapped one of the blankets around her body and struggled to get to her feet. She tripped over a pair of trouser that had been thrown off last night. One of the guys’, not hers, unfortunately. Mercury caught her.

  The volume of Lo’s snarling dimmed. Knock had finally smartened up, freezing stiff.

  Samantha resisted Mercury’s efforts to again push her behind him. “I know him,” she explained. “He’s not a threat.”

  Mercury released her and made a barking sound she hadn’t heard him make before. Lo responded, easing back then off his chosen prey.

  “Uh, can I move now?” Knock, with his familiar spiked white hair and narrow features, spoke without moving an extra muscle.

  “Sammie!” She recognized the desperate shriek as a stressed version of Mikal’s voice. He’d apparently waited in the next room.

  “Oh dear.” Moira’s voice trailed in. She appeared in the doorway her eyes wide. “I’ll, ah, put out some food, but you should tell Carn to let Mikal go. I’ve never seen him so pale.”

  Mercury let out another bark and an answering bay came from the other room. Her mother disappeared as quickly as she’d appeared.

  Knock sat up, but stayed on the floor. “I can see now why I wasn’t man enough for you, Sammie. Three men? I’m sure one of the guys would’ve been willing for a threesome but I can’t say I’d be willing to go farther than that.”

  Lo launched himself at him again.

  “Knock, you idiot.” Samantha scrambled over the pile of bedding to put a fist in Lo’s hair. She pulled his head back. Red fire danced in his eyes. “He’s not a threat and you’re not going to kill him for being an ass.”

  Lo growled a wordless response that communicated frustration.

  She grinned at him. “You know...” She spoke softly, not wanting Mikal or her mother to overhear. “Your eyes looked just like that the first time you were inside me.” Lo’s snarl died away and his features softened. She let go of his hair and stroked his head. “Let him up, please.”

  Lo eased back and was on his feet in another blur of motion. He put an arm around her and pulled her to his side. Samantha glanced back to Mercury. His look was approving. He was still alert and wary of Knock as the man held his hands up and muttered an apology.

  “Joking,” he said. “Just joking.”

  “Mercury, Lo, meet Knock, a member of my father’s crew. The man in the other room is Mikal, the tool slinger on the Bucket.” She started to introduce Mercury and her throat tightened. She knew what he wanted her to say, but she couldn’t. She swallowed hard and took a steadying breath. “Knock, this is Mercury and his pack brothers Lo and, in the other room, Carn.”

  Mercury pressed along her back, a quiver of emotion rippling through his body.

  Knock held his hands out in a show of surrender. “Sure, sure, whatever, but can you tell them to put something on, or at least cover up those monster dicks.” He made a shivering motion. “All that meat swinging around gives a man the willies.”

  Samantha chuckled. “Jealous?”

  “Hell yes. After this I may develop a complex or something.”

  Samantha remembered that Carn had actually been wearing something as he’d flashed by on his way out of the room. That was some consolation, since her mother was out there with him.

  She sent Knock out to wait with Mikal and Carn, then pulled on her own indie-gray pants and paired them with a soft yellow top that clung to her curves. She fingered the soft material. One of the perks of coming home was a vast improvement in her wardrobe. She tugged on her freighter boots and smoothed the trim that matched Knock’s. Her father had bought his whole crew new boots as a celebration a week before his death. Knock and Mikal’s visit meant the Bucket was at the port. She couldn’t help but wonder if Shred still wore the same boots.

  Samantha helped Mercury and Lo with the unfamiliar clothes her Mother had secured for them. They looked almost normal in the full length trousers and loose shirts. Mercury pulled his hair back with a small tie. The effect was startling. He looked more civi
lized and less human. Without the fall of hair around his face all the angles of his face appeared sharper and more pronounced.

  Civilized or savage, he became more a part of her every day. What would be left when he ripped those parts away?

  “Why are you here?” Samantha put her hands on her hips and stared Knock down. He sat at her mother’s table, stuffing a biscuit into his mouth. He had to work it down and chase it with fruit-water before he could answer.

  “Moira, I never understood how you always seem to have the best foodstuffs from Serona.” Knock wiped his mouth with his sleeve.

  His comment struck her as funny, considering it was her father’s connections that ensured her mother’s regular shipments from Haverlee’s sister city—an Eden nestled on the planet’s most verdant continent.

  He shifted his focus to Samantha and stopped eating. “Sammie, I came to say I was wrong. Wrong to let Shred leave you behind. Wrong not to tell you so sooner.” He smoothed his hands along the table, until he realized what he was doing, then he stopped and held still. “Aren’t you going to say something?”

  She straightened. “Sure. I’m going to say, if that’s all, you’re done and you can go. ”

  “You’re skeptical.” He put a hand to his heart. “I’m hurt.”

  “You’re a soft spined letch with a hard head and no common sense, Knock. I doubt I could hurt you if I dropped a skipdrive on your head.”

  “Now that’s mean, Sammie. I’d have thought you’d be in a better mood after...” He waved a hand at Mercury and Lo who flanked her.

  “I want a serious answer, Knock.”

  He leaned so far forward he almost landed in his plate. “I mean it, Samantha. I tried to talk Shred out of it before and I tried to talk him into going back after. I left the ship at the next port.”

  “I didn’t,” said Mikal. He looked much the same as she remembered, tall and rangy with a face that had seen too many bar brawls. The streaks of gray had nearly taken over his once auburn hair—that was new. “Sorry Sammie, but work is work. But you should believe him.” He nodded to Knock. The idiot even spent his own credits to go after you. Leastways, he said he was going to. He did leave the ship for a few months. That much I know.”

  Samantha sat in one of the chairs and reached for the sugared grain and nut mix her mother had set out. “Is that true, Knock?”

  He frowned, drawing his browse together and puffing out his slender cheeks. “For all the good it did me. You’d already gotten off planet by the time I got there. We were friends, Sammie. Real friends. You know I never had anybody give a damn about me before your dad and you.”

  Mikal cleared his throat, but left a ring of sugar around his mouth. “Chief told us you might be looking for a ride off this ball of sand.”

  “He had no business telling you anything.” She poured cream over the grain and nut mix and passed it to Mercury who’d taken a seat between her and Mikal.

  “Look at you—” Mikal snickered. “Feeding your man. I didn’t know you had any of your mom’s domestic, man-pleaser genes.”

  Samantha froze. His words had a chilling effect on the entire room. She met Moira’s gaze where she hovered next to a storage chest. “Be careful how you talk about my mother. I’d be damn proud to be half as strong and wise as Moira.” She wouldn’t admit aloud that she saw her mother’s relationship with her father as weak. It had been her only weakness. And Samantha wouldn’t explain that she peeled the fruit or poured cream over the grain because the food at her mother’s table was unfamiliar to Mercury and his pack brothers.

  “We were talking about helping Sammie.” Knock piped up. “In case anyone wanted to get back on topic.”

  “Right,” said Mikal. “So we heard you scuttled one of Roma’s ships and stole a Raptor class transport.”

  “Chief didn’t tell you that.”

  “No,” said Knock. “That’s in all the latest Alliance bulletins.”

  This news rang in her ears like the reverberation of a hangar door slamming shut.

  Mikal swallowed a mouthful of the grain and nut mixture. “We were worried about you, Sammie.”

  “Right.” She laughed, a mirthless sound that came more from grief than humor. Mikal had been the first one of her father’s crew to acknowledge her. He’d taught her tool slinging and made it possible for her to join her father’s ship. “Like you were worried about me on Sydney-3?”

  “I was worried. But I’m not a young man and I knew when your old man died my retirement plan died with him. I needed the job.”

  “Right. Gods forbid anyone get in the way of your retirement. ” Samantha pushed away the year old hurt. The touch of Mercury’s hand steadied her. “Okay. Let’s pretend for one minute you really came because you were worried about me, or what was the first excuse, oh yea, to ask for my forgiveness. Well, you can see I’m fine and forgiveness isn’t in the cards for today, so feel free to leave any time.”

  Knock fingered the edge of his plate then pushed back from the table. “Okay, Sammie. You have good reason to be furious with us all.” He got to his feet and swatted Mikal on his way past. “Come on.”

  Samantha stood to watch him walk out, but he stopped at the opening to Moira’s tent. “One more thing. You should check your father’s lock box. Whatever’s in there has Shred worried. And keep it in the back of your head that, if there is ever anything you need, anything, I won’t let you down again.”

  Mikal surprised her when he faced her with real emotion on his face. “And don’t forget, the indies are here for you, too. We were all sad when you joined up on one of them fancy corporate haulers. I mean, don’t expect anything from Shred, but just about anyone else would spin a moon for you. We all loved your old man and you’re the chip off the block.”

  Samantha closed her eyes as they left. Her mother’s scent filled the tent and her gown swished softly as she moved. Blinking rapidly, Samantha opened her eyes to take in the subtle hues of color decorating her mother’s skin. How many times had she wished to be more like her serene mother? Instead she became more and more like her father. Even Mikal could see it. Ironically, she was no longer sure exactly who her father had been.

  CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX

  The Treasure, Haverlee, Krena

  Gollerra Sector

  2210.171

  Most buildings outside the port itself had been made of scraps or converted from one purpose to another. The Treasure was housed in a building that had once been a gambling house. The previous owner had installed extra security measures to keep the place honest and to protect profits. Now it protected whatever the indies who frequented the port considered valuable. For some it was credit markers or account numbers. For others it was halo-vid projectors or alien artifacts they hoped would be worth something one day. Samantha didn’t know what her father had considered valuable, but she was about to find out.

  She didn’t recognize the guard at the door, but she recognized the one inside.

  “Jebedi.” She’d been prepared to be ignored or looked at with pity, but he did neither. His face scrunched in a grin.

  “Hey short stuff! Been too long.” He reached over to rub her head the way he had when she’d been thirteen and hanging around the port after her shift at the wormarie.

  Mercury tensed beside her, but he managed to let Jebedi finish the motion and withdraw his hand. It was a good thing Lo had waited outside.

  “Jebedi, this is Mercury.” She reached over and squeezed Mercury’s hand. “Jebedi has worked here as long as I remember.”

  Jebedi laughed, rocking back on his heels. “Surely, not so long as that. I remember you already had engine grease under your nails by the time I first laid eyes on you.”

  The familiar teasing went a long way toward putting her at ease when she hadn’t expected anything about clearing her father’s box to be easy. “You’re probably right about that.”

  Mercury shifted to edge between them. “We’re here to open her father’s box.”

  “S
o much for easing into the process,” Samantha muttered.

  Jebedi kept his smile in place, but he crossed his beefy arms over his barrel chest. He’d picked up on the disapproval of their reminiscing that was radiating from Mercury like a soundless warning siren. “Well, nothing to fear in that box, short stuff. Even if your father stuck a sand-viper in there it’d be dead by now. Those boxes have an airtight seal and no one’s been in his box for at least a year.”

  A year. Her father had been gone more than a year. “Is that your way of telling me I put this off too long?” And she’d probably have left it forever if she’d stayed on the Reliable slinging tools for some mammoth corporation.

  “Na.” He sobered. “You have a right to take your time with something like that.”

  Mercury huffed. “Well she’s made up her mind to do it and it’s best to get on with it now that we’re here.”

  His hurry surprised her. She didn’t ever recall Mercury rushing her about anything. Even when Knock brought up the topic of the box, Mercury had seemed interested only in so far as she cared.

  His voice softened. “Once it’s open you’ll be able to deal with it and your fear will be gone.”

  Of course. He could probably smell her apprehension and he always knew what she needed. He was right. Once she knew what she was dealing with, there wouldn’t be anything left to fear. “Good point. Let’s do it.”

  “Back wall,” said Jebedi. “Number fifty-two. It’s all set for you.”

  She swallowed and nodded.

  Samantha led the way. Rows of small doors reached from floor to ceiling. Each one DNA coded. She scanned the numbers and found the box. “This is it.”

  She put her hand in position just millimeters from the pad.

  She pulled her hand away. “I don’t think—”

  “Will it hurt?” Mercury looped one arm around her waist and pulled her back to press all along his chest and thighs.

 

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