Read o ed4c3e33dafa4d72 Online
Authors: Sylvie Pepos
It made the blood pound in his temples to rip the silky transparent gown from her
shapely body; the sound of the material ripping in his hands excited him and he threw
back his head and howled in triumph.
"Kam!" she pleaded with him. "Please!" Her hips writhed on the bed in a wanton
display of her own arousal. Her arms came up to receive him.
He fell on her, splaying her legs wide with his knees. His jutting member stabbed
unerringly upward into the moist center of her, striving for the core of her internal heat
and she closed around him: imprisoning his cock inside her body.
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With a brutal thrust that sent them both over the edge of sanity, he rammed into her as
far as his shaft would go and his world burst around him like a nova. His seed spurted
deep into her and took hold: he had claimed her as his own. Throwing back his head, he
bellowed with the release of his passion, feeling her nails drag wickedly down his bare
back.
"Mine!" He shouted to the heavens and all the gods who had denied him this pleasure
for so long. When he lowered his head, he saw her staring up at him with rapt wonder
and knew beyond any shadow of a doubt that he had fulfilled and sated his woman as he
had been meant to do. And he knew she would be his forever; that he would move heaven
and hell to keep her at his side; that he would do whatever it took to make her his.
"I love you, Kam," she whispered to him.
He lowered his head and took her mouth, plying feather-soft kisses on her bruised lips.
"I love you, too, Bridget," he whispered back.
THE HEALER reluctantly put her hand on her patient's forehead and pushed aside
his sweat-dampened hair. His devastating handsomeness was not lost on Dr. Imogene
Mathis nor was the sharpness of his gaze as his lids suddenly snapped open. She snatched
away her hand as though he had tried to bite her.
"D-don't try moving," she told him "You were stabbed and I had to remove one of your kidneys."
Cree felt as though a red-hot poker was pressing into his lower right side. The pain was
excruciating, but there was a deeper, rawer agony lapping at his consciousness that made
him try to push himself up. When he did, agony rocketed through his body and he gasped
with the force of it. Every muscle in his body was cramping and every bone throbbed
deep in its marrow.
"I said not to move, Captain," the Healer snapped. "Try that again and I'll have you clamped to the table!"
"What did you do to me, woman?" he gasped. He gripped the edges of the table. "How long have I been out?"
"Two days," she answered and watched the disbelief cloud his eyes.
"I have to get up," he said and tried again only to find he was too weak and in too much pain.
Why can't I block out this pain? I should be able to block it out.
"You aren't going anywhere," Dr. Mathis informed him. "As a matter of fact, I doubt you will be able to be transported back to FSK-14 at the designated time."
"You have no idea what you've done to me," he grated. "What you've set in motion!"
"I saved your life."
"Leave me," he ordered. "Now!"
"I most certainly will not! I have to—"
Cree swung his head toward her and his eyes were wild. "I am going into Transition,
bitch! Do you want to be in here with me when that happens?"
The Healer gawked at him, saw him begin to transform right before her eyes and
barely made it out the door before the most godsawful sound she would ever hear sent her
screaming for help.
"Lock him in!" she shrieked. "Lock him in! He's going through Transition!"
The guards made no move toward the medical hut door. Not a one of them wanted to
be anywhere near a Reaper going into Transition. To a man, they ran in the opposite
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direction, shoving each other aside as they made for safety.
Lares grabbed Raine's arm as the young man made to go to Cree. "We may have
developed a friendship with the Reaper, but he would not know that now." He cast a look
toward the medical hut from which an undulating howl came. "He would not know us
now."
"Listen to him!" Raine breathed. "It sounds as though he is dying. We have to help him!"
The dark man shook his head. "He is transforming from human to beast, son of the
McGregor. He has done it many times and will continue to do so as long as he draws
breath." He shuddered. "There is no help for him in this world."
Raine hung his head. "How can he bear it?" he asked, his voice breaking.
The hopeless howl of an animal in extreme agony pierced the hot solar wind around
them and made men put their hands to their ears to blot out the sound. It was a tormented
cry, filled with loneliness and burden, rife with bleak acceptance of its own strangeness.
Lares returned his attention to the medical hut. "I don't think he can."
Part II
SHE WAS not at the door awaiting him with open arms when he returned to FSK-14
two months later; he had been gone a month longer than planned and she had had no way
of knowing why or when he would return. She did not hear him enter his quarters for she
was occupied with, and his arrival drowned out by, the sounds coming from the antique
music device she so cherished.
He flung his flight bag on the sofa and walked to her door. She was lying across the
bed on her back, the earphones of the old CD player clapped over her ears. Her eyes were
closed and she was gripping one of his old utility shirts to her chest. He was stunned to
see tears running down her cheeks. The sight of her sorrow cut right through his soul.
"Bridget?" he called out, but she did not hear him. He called again and when she still did not respond, he looked around for the CD player, spied it, and then walked over to
turn it off. When he did, she opened her eyes, saw him and gasped. The look on her face
hurt him deeply. As she scrambled off the bed, putting distance between them, her hand
going up to ward him off, the pain deepened.
"How long have you been standing there?" Cree started toward her, wanting
desperately to take her in his arms, but when he took that first step, she whimpered. He
would have had to be deaf not to hear the terror in the sound.
"When did you get back?" she asked, tossing his old utility shirt to the bed.
He shook his head in answer, turned and walked to his bedsuite.
Bridget reached up to take the earphones from her head. She put them aside and, with
her heart thudding like a trip hammer in her chest, she looked down to see her hands
shaking. Clenching her fists, she stood there, waiting for him to call to her, to make good
on the bargain they had made before he left, but he didn't.
An hour passed. Two.
She heard nothing from his bedsuite. Going to her door, she listened, heart in her
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throat, but heard no sound from behind his closed door. Hesitantly, thinking perhaps he
meant for her to come to him, she went to his door, and after a long moment of
indecision, rapped lightly. "Captain?"
"Go away, Bridget."
She had spent two months wondering what would happen when he returned to FSK-14.
Since she had had no outside contact with those on board the station, she had no way of
knowing why he was staying away longer than the one month he had been ordered to
serve. When the time for him to return came and went, she began to wonder if he hadn't
been detained for some infraction of Hell-12 regulations; knowing Cree, that was entirely
possible. When the second month had nearly passed, she began to worry about him.
There were brutal men on Hell-12 and she had found herself fearing for his safety. Only
the night before, she had dreamed of him lying in a medical ward: hurt and alone, calling
out her name, needing her. She had awakened with a sense of unease and had gone to his
room where she had found an old shirt that still bore the scent of him. She had taken the
black garment back to her room, turned on the CD player to try to take her mind off her
concern for him, and took to her bed. As she lay there wondering where he was at that
moment, she had entertained the notion that he might never return. That knowledge had
hurt her more than she had been prepared to accept and she had begun to cry.
When had she lost her fear of him? When had she begun to see him as a man instead of
a Reaper? Was it the night he had found her with Konnor Rhye and she had seen such
deep hurt in his eyes? The night she thought sure he would beat her, but had kissed her
instead?
Yes. Of course it had to have been that night. What woman would not be thrilled to
have two handsome men fighting over her—the victor drag her home to his lair, his intent
clear? To see the wild possessiveness stamped across her captor's handsome face? Wasn't
that a fantasy of every woman: to be dominated by a male capable of claiming—and
holding—her in so dramatic a fashion? It was as ego satisfying to a woman as it was a
victory for the man.
That had been a part of it, she reasoned, the fierce possessiveness he'd shown that
night. But it had been more than that, too. It had been his gentleness, the way he had
touched her had sealed her own fate. It had been his tender kiss; the way his lips had
plied hers, brooking no denial that she was his to do with as he pleased. It had been the
way he had looked at her, lust smoldering in his dark eyes, that had made her cling to him
like a wanton.
Standing at his door, her hand on the smooth metal expanse, she leaned her forehead
against the coolness and called to him again. "Are you all right?"
"Aye."
He sounded tired. Tired and so infinitely lost. Had he misunderstood the alarm on her
face when she'd found him standing over her bed? Had he mistaken her look of surprise
as fear of him? Had he thought when she reached out to him that she was denying him?
And had he taken her whimper as one of fear instead of relief that he was well? Surely
not. But with a man like Cree....
"I have missed you," she told him through the door.
There was no answer.
"Captain?"
Again, there was no answer.
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Perhaps he had fallen asleep.
CREE LAY with his hands behind his head, listening to Bridget finally move away
from his door. No doubt she had expected him to rush out and fall on her like a crazed
beast, raping her into submission.
"Captain?"
He ignored the Vid-Com, annoyed more than ever by its interfering and—to his ears—
nagging voice.
"You are in pain, Sir," the computer said softly.
He turned his head and looked at the screen, but didn't answer. He knew his Controllers
were aware of his condition. When he had arrived back at FSK-14, he had been whisked
off immediately to the Ministry of Science and they had poked and prodded and pried
until they had assessed the damage caused by the loss of his kidney.
"We can not allow indiscriminate Transitions, Captain," one scientist had told him.
"That is exceptionally dangerous for anyone with whom you come into contact."
"A new kidney must be found for transplant," another had remarked. "Until then, he must be transfused frequently."
"When was the last time you were given blood, Captain?"
"An hour ago," Cree had lied. "Just before I left Hell-12."
"Good," they had all nodded. Smiling and making notations, they had concurred that
he would not need to be transfused again until morning.
Or so they—and he—had thought.
Now the pain was driving him mad. He turned over on his side, drew his legs up and
clasped them in the perimeter of his arms, deliberately trying to quash the growing thirst
in his gut.
"When was the last time you were given blood, Captain?" the Vid-Com inquired.
"Two hours ago," he lied.
The Vid-Com was silent for a moment and he knew it was checking with his
Controllers, and then it spoke again. "You are required to go to the Ancillary at this time, Sir."
"Go to hell," he ground out.
There was a change in the Vid-Com's tone.
"Captain, you would not want to awaken in the middle of the night in such pain that
you mistakenly take from the Terran female what you should not," it warned. "In that condition, you would have no control over the damage you could do to her."
The very thought of that happening brought Cree upright in the bed. That was the one
thing he had been worried would happen since he'd set foot back on the station. He had
made a vow to himself to fight the godsawful urges that were now running rampant
through his body for he was undergoing a drastic change that concerned him deeply.
"Captain?" the Vid-Com insisted.
Aye, he thought bitterly as he got up from the bed. There were changes, all right. Now