Read Coletti Warlords: Just Desserts Online
Authors: Gail Koger
Tags: #Fantasy; Futuristic; Science Fiction; Space Opera
The kids whimpered.
“You come now?”
“I’ll be right there.”
I strapped on my laser pistol and shoved my knives into my boots. Fatso was about to get a “come to Jesus” lesson.
Talree shifted restlessly in the hammock. I froze. Shit, what was wrong with me? I didn’t need his permission. I was a cop. I could deal with this all by my lonesome.
So why was I sneaking out? I sighed. The truth was he scared the living hell out of me. I knew deep down he would never harm me, but dammit, I needed to set some boundaries. He wasn’t my keeper. I slipped out the door and hurried down the stairs.
Following the kids’ psychic vibes, I stopped in front of a dilapidated building. A rusted-out sign proudly proclaimed KOTSOR BAR. Bet the owner was a sicko pervert who thought Kotsors were cute and cuddly. Ugh. More eight-legged freaks running amok.
I opened the swinging doors and surveyed the interior. Clumps of orange mold decorated the walls. The tables and chairs were so rickety, I was surprised they didn’t collapse under the weight of the hulking humanoids and other bug species sitting on them.
“Hurry. Hurry. It want eat Grandma,”
the kids shouted.
One look at the terrarium, and my stomach clenched. Holy hell. The Kotsor was the size of Godzilla.
Godzilla crawled toward an enormous golden tarantula. Why couldn’t it be itty-bitty spiders that I could squash under my boot? Was that too much to hope for?
My poor kids cowered behind Big Momma.
“Help us.”
Sucking in a calming breath, I hurried over to the battered counter. What do you know? Fatso was the bartender. Oh, gag me. His pants were hanging around his chubby ankles. His back to me, Fatso was energetically banging a three-breasted prostitute. Every time he slammed the poor thing against the bar, his ass quivered and jiggled like gelatin. It was enough to put you off sex permanently.
I crept in behind him, climbed up the short ladder, lifted the lid on the terrarium, and fried Godzilla with my laser pistol.
“C’mon, kids. Let’s blow this joint.”
“
Grandma stuck,”
they blubbered.
Godzilla had done a dandy job of webbing her to the floor. Which meant I had to go inside to free her. My skin crawled at the thought, but I couldn’t leave Grandma here. I took a quick look at Mister Wonderful. He was still going at it. Someone needed to neuter him.
A tremor shook me as I climbed inside. Thick webbing clung to every surface. Good thing Talree had mucked about in my head, or I’d be freaking big-time. Pulling my knife, I hacked my way through the sticky stuff and cut Grandma free. She wiggled her legs happily.
I bent down and held out my hand to the babies.
“Let’s get out of here.”
Chittering happily, the kids scurried up my arm. I grinned as they snuggled against my neck, their little tongues raining kisses on my chin. I stroked them.
“Love you too.”
“Saved us.”
“You do have a knack for getting into trouble.”
“Like you.”
“True.”
I eyed Grandma warily. I sure hoped she was friendly. Otherwise, it was going to get nasty fast. I plastered a smile on my face.
“I’m Kaylee, and it’s a pleasure to meet you.”
Intelligent emerald eyes surveyed me from head to toe, and a loud buzzing filled my head. Everything spun dizzily for a moment; then I heard her say,
“I am Tae. I owe you my life and those of Woo’s children.”
“You don’t owe me anything. Blasting the hell out of the Kotsors is very satisfying.”
Shit, that came out wrong.
“Uh, no offense meant, but I’m having a bit of a problem coping with all the wildlife.”
Tae crawled up the webbing.
“We frighten you?”
“Kinda. Sorta. I’m not real fond of eight-legged critters. Except for the kids. They’re adorable, and they’ve been such a big help. We have a bargain. I keep the Kotsors from eating them, and they keep the insects from eating me. A win-win situation.”
I tickled one of them.
“Huh, cutie?”
The little guy giggled. Spiders were ticklish? Who knew?
“You are a strange humanoid.”
“I am one of a kind. How did you end up as Fatso’s guest?”
“I was searching for Woo and her children when the fat one caught me. A most unpleasant encounter.”
“I bet it was.”
The bartender grunted as he shot his wad. His milky yellow semen ran down the prostitute’s legs.
My stomach rolled.
“Time to leave.”
Tae dropped on my shoulder. I stiffened. I could do this. I really could. If only Talree could see me now, he would be so proud. Nah, he be pissed. Real pissed. I climbed out of the terrarium.
Fatso pulled his pants up and turned. His gaze zeroed in on me.
I waved all friendly like.
The kids did too.
Fatso’s eyes bulged.
I guess it wasn’t every day he saw a human female with spiders hanging all over her. Oh yeah, and he probably wasn’t happy with the Kotsor bits decorating his terrarium.
“You fucking bitch! You killed Buddy.”
Buddy? Really?
“So?”
“Now you die,”
he screamed, reaching for a rifle.
“Yeah, like that’s gonna happen.”
I did a fast draw and vaporized his weapon with my laser pistol. I guess Fatso was too drunk to notice I was armed.
The furious bartender lumbered toward me.
“I’m going to give you a beating you will never forget.”
Seriously? The guy could barely walk.
“Give it up. You’d never catch me.”
Gasping for breath, Fatso stopped and smirked.
“I will give a hundred credits to anyone who kills the female.”
Did I have a big mouth or what?
A squat, smashed-nosed humanoid stepped in front of the doorway and grinned.
“Deal.”
Yikes. He seriously needed some dental work and a boatload of floss to get the whatever out of his front teeth.
Three lizard men pushed away from their table. The larger one snarled,
“Your mate killed our brothers. Now we kill you.”
“Anyone else want a piece of me?”
I cracked my knuckles and looked around the bar.
“No? You are aware the odds are in my favor?”
The men burst into laughter.
I stroked the trembling baby Tabors.
“Do you kids know how to find our room again?”
“Yes.”
“Good. I want you to go there as fast as you can. Talree will protect you and your grandmother.”
Tae’s horrified astonishment was obvious.
“You want to fight them?”
“You betcha. I need to vent, and there’s nothing like a good fight to get rid of all that built-up hostility.”
The idiots started toward me.
I held out my right arm.
“Go.”
Tae and the kids scurried down my arm and up the wall.
The smashed-nosed humanoid charged me. I stepped to the side and rammed my fist into his stomach. As he doubled over, I hooked my left foot behind his heel and in a fast sweep maneuver, knocked him flat. Before dumbass could get up, I kicked him in the face.
I grabbed a metal pole off the wall and twirled it around my head.
“You guys ever heard of Nin-po?”
Fatso yelled,
“Kill the bitch!”
The lizards rushed me.
“Guess not.”
I swung the pole, catching the first one square in the face. His head snapped back, and he went down hard.
I swung again and nailed the second one in the balls. He doubled over with a gagging squeal. A follow-up blow to the base of the skull sent him crashing to the sticky floor.
The third yanked out his laser pistol.
“Shit.” I raised my hands.
“Easy there.”
A web ball engulfed his head. Making frantic grunting noises, the lizard tried to free himself.
“Thanks, Tae.”
“My pleasure.”
I put the scaly punk out of his misery with a hard blow to the back of the head.
“Anyone else think they can take me?”
Fatso gasped in terror and fled out the back door.
“Guess not.”
My Spidey sense shrieked a warning. I spun around and froze. Oh, crap.
Talree stood in the doorway, arms folded across his chest and wearing his best scary face. “Enjoying yourself?”
“Yep. Best fun I’ve had in ages.”
He stalked me like a predatory beast. “You are never to leave my side without permission.”
“Not even to go to the bathroom? That seems a little harsh.”
Menace radiated from Talree as he enunciated clearly, “You are
never
to leave my side without permission. Do you understand me?”
For a moment, I considered whacking him with the pole. I could get in a few good licks before he took me down.
Talree’s eyes narrowed, his arms dropped to his sides, and his stance shifted.
Ha. I had him worried.
Tae added her two cents.
“Attacking a Warlord is never a good idea.”
“Not unless you’re incredibly stupid and suicidal.”
I placed the pole on the bar. “Let’s get something straight, buster. I don’t take orders from you. I make my own decisions.”
“Explain this decision.”
He was starting to get on my last nerve. “Fine. The bartender captured my kids and was going to feed them and their grandmother to the biggest friggin’ Kotsor I’ve ever seen. I rescued them and fried the eight-legged freak. That pissed off Fatso. He offered a hundred credits to anyone who killed me.” I gestured to the groaning trappers. “And I kicked their asses. End of story.”
Talree’s gaze scanned the room before settling on Tae. “Introduce me.”
“Tae, this is Talree, the marauding Warlord. Talree this is Tae, the kids’ grandmother.”
Talree clotheslined a fourth lizard as he rushed into the room, dropping him like a rock.
“It is an honor to meet a Tabor. Much has been said about your males’ battle skills.”
I muttered under my breath, "Just kill me now."
“The honor is mine,”
Tae responded politely.
The smashed-nosed humanoid tried to crawl away. Talree grabbed him and tossed him right through the friggin’ wall and into the swamp below.
My jaw dropped.
There was a loud splash.
The Afulas roared, and the smashed-nosed humanoid began to scream.
Color me impressed. Okay, the metal was corroded, but still. Wow!
One by one, Talree picked up the lizards and chucked them out the hole.
Okeydokey, someone was a bit worked up.
The babies chittered in alarm, and I could sense Tae’s growing fear that we were next.
“Calm down, big guy.”
Talree roared. “Calm down? You want me to calm down?”
“Yeah, I had the situation handled.”
“You could have been killed.”
“But I wasn’t.”
“In the future, I deal with all problems. Not you.”
My temper flared to life. “Listen, fang boy, if there’s one thing I know how to do, it’s fight.”
“I forbid it.”
I literally saw red. “Forbid?” I climbed up on a nearby chair and looked him dead in the eye. “I won’t be treated like some fluff-brained twit.” I punched him in the chest. “I’m a cop. A
very
good cop. I put my life on the line every fucking day to protect men, women, and children from the monsters. What part of that don’t you get?”
With a growl, Talree snatched me off the chair. “You will obey me.”
Oh shit! His eyes were doing the glowy thing. I kissed him.
His tongue delved into my mouth, possessing me, tasting me.
That was it. I stroked his hair. Make the nasty beast go away.
Talree stiffened and pulled away. “You’re trying to manipulate me.”
“Who, me?”
“You will obey me.”
Fat chance. “You know what you need?”
Talree’s mouth tightened. “No, but I’m sure you’re going to tell me.”
“You need one of those blow-up dolls you can fuck. It’ll never talk back, and it’ll stay where you put it.” I tried to wiggle out of his grip. “I’m nothing to you but a walking blood bank and whore.”
The red glow faded from his eyes. “I now understand your brothers’ continual bad tempers. Keeping you alive is a full-time job.”
I shoved against his chest. “Not funny. So I attract trouble. Big deal.”
“It’s a very big deal.”
“If you had returned me to Earth like I asked, you wouldn’t have to deal with me. Now would you?”
“Leaving you behind was never an option.”
I felt him rummaging around in my head. “Hey, that tickles.”
A satisfied smile curled Talree’s mouth. “On Earth before approaching an armed suspect, a police officer calls for backup. Correct?”
Busted. “Yeah. So?”
“You will tell me when you sense trouble. I am your backup and partner.” He shook me. “Do you understand?”
“Yes, sir.” God, he was worse than my family.
“You are never to call yourself a whore again. You are my life. My mate. If anything happened to you, the beast would be unleashed. I must keep you safe.” Talree nuzzled my neck. “Blood bank you’ll have to live with.”
I nipped his ear. “You do know life doesn’t come with any guarantees? I mean, you can get killed at any time. Life is dangerous, and it’s only a matter of time before the Rodan find us.”
My Siren senses went on red alert. I reached out mentally, searching for the source of the danger. Oh, crap. “Honey, we’ve got a big problem heading our way.”
Glaring like death himself, Talree nodded. “It seems the trappers did not heed my warning.”
“Yeah, all fifty of them. Running is good.”
“Is it?” Talree held out his arm to Tae and the kids.
“We must leave.”
The kids scooted up his arm and, dang it, settled on my head. To my relief, Tae perched on his shoulder.
The trappers stormed in.
We popped out.
Chapter Nine
An instant later, we appeared on the deck of a small, rusty barge. The string of running lights strung along the hull had attracted a cloud of flying insects.
Chittering in excitement, the kids and Tae jumped off and started chowing down.
“They’re worth their weight in gold.”