“Granted. I’ll slow to a stop when we meet up.”
“Glad to hear your voice.”
“Yours as well.” Coal turned off communications.
Jill blinked back tears, not wanting Coal to see how upset it made her that he’d
found his friends. She’d been sure they had more time together. She knew they had
mere minutes left before the fast-approaching ships reached them. Her gaze shifted to
find Coal silently watching her.
“There’s no need for fear. You are safe and my people will not harm you. I am
keeping my word to return the shuttle and droids back to your control.”
She nodded, her throat too choked with emotion to dare speak for fear of revealing
her feelings. It would be better if he assumed she worried about her fate.
Coal rose to his feet, hovering over her, and then he pulled her into his arms. “It
will be fine. Don’t worry.”
The feel of his arms holding her, his wonderful masculine scent and hot skin
pressed against her cheek would be sorely missed. She hugged him back, hoping she
didn’t cling too tightly. She nodded rather than speak.
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Stealing Coal
His hands gently rubbed her lower back through her shirt. “They may seem
frightening but know I’d never allow anyone to hurt you.”
She nodded again.
“Let me dock to them and then we’ll greet them in the cargo hold.”
“Okay,” she said softly, making her arms release him although she regretted doing
it. She stepped away to give him room to move.
Coal dropped back into the pilot seat, his full focus on the controls. She took the
time to compose her unstable emotions. She would drink some of the strong booze her
father’s crew had kept aboard. She’d never touched it but after Coal left
,
she’d need it.
Getting drunk would be the only thing that might keep her from attempting to follow
him to whatever system he lived in just for a chance of a not-so-accidental meeting with
him in the near future.
“We’re slowing and turning for a soft dock,” he informed her minutes later.
“Their ships must really move fast to reach us so quickly.”
Lame response
, she
berated silently.
But it beats me begging him to open fire on his friends, disabling their ships
long enough for us to full burn so we can run away from them
.
The shuttle bumped into something softly, the deck of the floor vibrating slightly,
and she knew they’d docked. Coal grinned when he shut down the engines. He stood
and turned to address Fray.
“Stand down and inform the other droids that guests are boarding. They pose no
danger to anything on the shuttle. I want the three of you to shut down until I give
further orders.”
Fray nodded. “I will relay the order.” He claimed the pilot seat.
Coal held out his hand to Jill. “Come with me. Until they realize you are a friend do
not make any sudden movements. Just stay at my side.”
“Okay.” She tried to push down the fear that had her heart racing slightly.
Coal
happened to be a sweetheart but what if the other cyborgs weren’t?
That silent question left
her definitely disturbed. She repeated it aloud.
His squeezed her hand reassuringly. “I gave you my word to free you without
harm and they will have to honor it.”
That didn’t set her at ease by much but, despite her misgivings, she followed
alongside him when he moved toward the door. Her dread rose with each step until she
fought the urge to flee to her quarters to hide there until after Coal left. His firm hold on
her hand kept her at his side though. He walked to exterior loading door and released
the lock. The door slid open.
Four tall cyborgs stood waiting on the other side in the docking sleeve attached to
the
Jenny
. All of them wore tight, black leather uniforms that covered their bodies from
their gray-colored throats to their kickass, military-style, matching black boots. The man
in the lead had jet-black hair that fell to his wide, gigantic shoulders but his bright,
81
Laurann Dohner
piercing blue eyes captured Jill’s attention the most. His gaze pinned her where she
stood.
“This is Jill,” Coal’s voice deepened. “She rescued me. She’s our friend.”
The big, scary cyborg shifted his intense gaze from hers to stare calmly at Coal. “She
located and took the pod aboard?” He glanced around the cargo hold. “What happened
to Councilman Zorus then?” He frowned at Coal after visually searching the area.
“The life pod is on a damaged cargo freighter. The crew picked us up from space
and separated him from me.” Anger tightened Coal’s voice. “The humans who found
us weren’t friendly. Jill is a trader who came aboard their freighter where they held me
captive and stole me away from them. When they came after us I made certain not to
blow them up for fear Zorus remained onboard. I didn’t want to accidentally kill him
along with the human crew. I have memorized the coordinates of their last location to
give you to search their ship for him. I doubt they’ve traveled far, taking into
consideration the damage I caused their engines.” He paused. “I wasn’t able to go after
him myself. Jill’s ship is severely outdated, slow, and I needed more men for the odds
of a successful rescue to be favorable.”
“Um…” Jill whispered and she cleared her throat, trying to speak louder. Five pairs
of cyborg eyes turned on her. She looked up at Coal since he didn’t scare her. “That
captain of the freighter mentioned another cyborg but I forgot about it until this
moment. He said Earth Government sent a ship and they took him. The crew hid you to
keep them from taking you as well. Your friend is probably either on his way to Earth
or already there. I have no idea how long you were with them and the captain didn’t
say how long ago it happened.”
Coal winced, his thumb stroking the back of her hand while he gazed at her.
“You’re sure?”
“Captain Raul told me he decided to keep you because you looked meaner for
fighting on Arris. He said the other one looked kind of pretty and didn’t look as though
he’d fought much. It really pissed him off that Earth Government had taken your friend
without even paying him for finding a cyborg. He seemed sure a reward should have
been paid.”
“Damn,” one of the cyborgs muttered. “Well, we tried. If he’s reached Earth, he’s
lost to us forever. What a shame that is.” He chuckled. “Poor them. Imagine his
temperament after being around what he hates most.”
“Sky,” Flint turned his head to shoot an irritated look at a gray-haired cyborg with
really scary, unusually pale-blue eyes that had an odd look to them. “We still have to
attempt to retrieve him. I’m not fond of the councilman either but he’s one of our
brothers. He also knows everything about us. They could torture him until his mind
snaps and then he might give them all the information they wish to gain about us.”
“Or,” Sky grinned widely. “They’ll believe he’s an example of what we’ve become
and decide we’re too damn sadistic to fuck with. If anyone could make Earth decide to
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Stealing Coal
avoid cyborgs at any cost, it would be Zorus. I know, after spending time with him, that
I would do nearly anything to avoid further contact.”
A dark-haired cyborg laughed. “He makes a valid point, Flint.”
Annoyance flashed on Flint’s face. “Don’t encourage him, Onyx.” He turned to face
Sky. “You know more about humans than anyone. How would we obtain him from
Earth Government? I need solutions instead of snide comments. Shut off your
personality traits this instant and answer me. That’s a direct order.”
The cyborg sobered, his pale, strange eyes locking with Flint’s. “First we’d have to
locate where they sent him. They could be keeping him prisoner on one of their war
vessels but my estimation would be that they wouldn’t wish him contained near all that
technology with his active implants. On a ship they couldn’t effectively shield all the
access points to the main computers. If it were me, I’d keep him drugged while
transporting him to a secure location on Earth where they could restrict his abilities.
Their smartest move would be to hold him in one of the detention centers where they
kept us once if any of them are still operational. We know the locations of them if that’s
what they’ve done. It’s also logical they wouldn’t believe we’d willingly risk returning
to Earth under any circumstances to retrieve him. It means surprise would be in our
favor.”
“If he’s there, what is next? Hacking into their security systems to find him
shouldn’t be too difficult. Humans were always too dependent on them to store all their
information.” Flint took a deep breath. “It’s getting on and off Earth to break him out
that will provide a challenge.”
“We can’t take the
Star
or the
Rally
within range of Earth. They obviously know we
didn’t legally obtain them after that insurance company tried to retrieve one of them
once. They’d send a warship to intercept us as soon as we entered the system.”
Flint’s blue gaze locked on Jill. “Coal did say she’s in the trading business. We
could use this shuttle to reach Earth without triggering alarm. They allow Earth ships to
land on the planet.”
Jill’s mouth dropped open in astonishment. An instant protest formed but she never
got the words out. Coal released her hand and stepped in front of her to block the stare
of the other cyborg.
“No. She believes Earth Government has a warrant issued for her arrest. She once
had a run-in with a few of them. I won’t put her at risk in any way. Think of something
else, Flint. She saved my life and I gave her my word no harm would come to her.”
“Belief and fact are not the same.” Flint’s voice grew cold. “Rescuing Councilman
Zorus is paramount.”
“Not to me.” Coal’s body tensed, his arms tightening until the ridges of muscle
seemed to strain. “Her safety and well-being are my priority.”
Jill inched to the left a little to peer at the four cyborgs facing off against Coal. Flint
had an angry frown fixed on his features and his eyes seemed to darken. He held Coal’s
gaze, never even glancing her way, and then crossed his arms.
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Laurann Dohner
“I sympathize. I don’t wish any harm to come to the female but we must go after
Zorus.”
“Find another way.” Coal’s deep voice sounded his anger. “She’s done enough
already to risk her life for a cyborg. That freighter came after this shuttle intent on
killing her for taking me away from them. She had no reason to do what she did yet she
still stole me from them. I’m sure they reported my theft to Earth Government.”
“That wouldn’t be logical,” Onyx spoke. “She stated the captain of the freighter
didn’t hand you over to the authorities and hid your existence. It would be detrimental
for them to admit they’d done that. They can’t report a theft of something they refused
to state they were in possession of in the first place.”
Chilly dark-blue eyes shifted to Jill. “Why do you believe you’re wanted by Earth
Government?”
She hesitated. “About ten months ago I did a trade with a small government
outpost. They realized I didn’t have a crew and decided they could force me to return
the payment they’d made, figuring they could pocket it themselves, and wanted to sell
me into one of the nearby whorehouse ships to gain some extra profit. I wasn’t stupid
enough not to go in armed and managed to get to my shuttle but they followed me
straight into an asteroid field. I couldn’t outrun them, they were gaining on me, and I’d
grown desperate enough to fly into it, thinking they wouldn’t follow. They did. Their
newer shuttle didn’t have as much shielding as these older models, which have it to
make up for the sluggish navigational controls. They blew up after a few direct hits
from the asteroids while I just suffered a lot of dents to the hull. I’m sure they reported
it before they came after me.”
Onyx shook his head. “It sounds as if they were attempting to steal money from the
government and ruin a trade contact. They wouldn’t have reported any illegal actions
they took to their superiors. It would be foolish. We know enough about Earth
Government to be certain they would have taken swift action to make an example out
of their men for disobeying their code of conduct.”
“They search all incoming and outgoing vessels that want to land on Earth,” she
warned them. “Even if I’m not wanted, there’s no way to get you to the surface
undetected. They’d board the
Jenny
and find you when they scan it for illegal
contraband. It’s protocol to do that to anything incoming.”
“I’m not risking her life.” Coal shook his head and directed a furious glare at Flint.
“Your argument isn’t valid, considering humans are not known for being logical. She
could very well be wanted by Earth Government and therefore, that is putting her at
risk of arrest or death.”
Flint took a deep breath and said, “I see. She means something to you.”
Coal jerked his head. “She does.”
Jill’s heart soared when he said the words but his next ones left her feeling cold.
“I gave her my word that I’d release her shuttle as soon as I found you. I swore on