Read i 0e57392105b539eb Online
Authors: Unknown
clenched fists. “What the serious fuck? What happened to you?”
“Uh, sir?”
Kai looked past his mate to the very uncomfortable captain. “It’s
okay, Tira. Leave us.”
“As you wish.”
“Okay, no. Stop right there.” Throwing her hands up, Ivy began
pacing the floor of the great hall. “You…you…have you seen you?”
“Please, come sit. I’m sure you’re hungry.”
“I’m not,” Ivy argued. “I’m tired, confused, and freaked the hell out,
but I’m not hungry.” Pausing in her strides, she turned to look at him,
her eyes narrowing into dangerous slits. “Why did you kiss me?”
“Please,” he implored again, “sit. I’ll explain everything.”
“Explanation first.”
“It’s quite a long story, I’m afraid. Are you sure you want to remain
standing for it?”
Folding her arms over her chest, Ivy popped one hip out to the side
and lifted her chin defiantly. “What’s the condensed version?”
“You’re my soulmate,” he blurted, and immediately wished he’d said
nothing.
Ivy didn’t deny it, try to retreat, or attempt to hit him again. The
tension in her shoulders and spine melted, and she lowered her arms to
her sides with a sigh.
“You’re right. This is going to require food.” She started toward him,
but stopped and shook her head. “And a lot of alcohol.”
Perplexed by her reaction, Kai said nothing as he rounded the end of
the table to hold the chair for her. Once they were both seated, he reached
out to take her small hand, encouraged when she didn’t jerk away from
him.
“You seem unsurprised by this news.”
“Well, you’d be wrong. However, I’ve been around enough D’Aire to
understand a little about this mating business.” Sliding her hand from
his grasp, she selected a pastry from the display and leaned back in her
chair as she picked at it. “This somehow relates to why you’re the size of
a battle cruiser now?”
“I agree I am larger, but I think nowhere near the size of any vessel.”
“Oh, for the love of…never mind. Let’s hear that lengthy
explanation.”
So, Kai took her back to the origins of their race, to the very first
legends of his people. “Millions of years ago, a beautiful priestess by the
name of Nolani fell in love with a thief. He was handsome, charming,
and he enchanted her with his poetic words.”
“Let me guess,” Ivy interrupted. “He totally double-crossed her, and
a whole lot of people got hurt because of it.”
“Intuitive. Yes, he used her magic to create a binding spell. Then he
forced her to do terrible things, even slaughter her own people.”
“Sounds like a real prince charming.”
“He was eventually defeated, but Nolani was so devastated by what
she’d done, she decreed that no Xenon would ever be hurt in the name
of love again.” Kai paused, waiting for Ivy to interrupt, but she said
nothing. “She wove a spell and cast it over all of Xenthian, decreeing that
each soul should have a match, a mate.”
“Impressive,” Ivy quipped, but she leaned forward in her seat, clearly
eager for more of the story.
“It is said that when these kindred souls are united, it forms an
intense, unbreakable bond.”
“That’s a nice story.” Ivy waved her hand up and down from his nose
to his hips. “It doesn’t explain all this, though.”
“It’s magic left over from a long ago age when females were to be
protected.” He’d grown up with the stories, but he imagined it could be
difficult for an outsider to believe or even understand.
“So, it’s a physical manifestation of…what?”
She looked so confused, but Kai pressed on, trying his best to put it
into relatable terms. “Soulmates are cherished above all else in our
world. Entire wars have been fought to protect a single mate. We feel
that missing piece of ourselves every day, and we long for the chance to
be whole.”
“And when you find your mates, you’ll do anything to protect them.”
Relieved by her response, Kai reached across the table and took her
hand again. “The males of our race undergo a transformation when we
find our mates. We become bigger, faster, and stronger, so that we are
better able to defend our beloveds.” He stroked the pad of his thumb
over her knuckles, reveling in the simple contact. “I’m sure this is all very
disconcerting, but I will never lie to you. You are my soulmate, Ivy
Dalton, as I am yours.”
“I believe you, and I’m honored, Kai. Really, I am.” A quiet sadness
filled her eyes as she pulled her hand away and rose to her feet. “It’s not
that simple, though. This is your world, not mine. I have a life on Earth,
on my ship, and I barely know you.”
“It’s fate. You can’t fight it.” Standing, he stepped to the side,
blocking her way when she made for the exit. “You can’t run from it.”
“I never said otherwise.” With a quiet huff of breath, she held his
upper arms and pushed up on her toes to kiss his cheek. “I just need
some time to think.”
“Take all the time you need, my lady. I won’t interfere, but do know
this.” Brushing her silky locks back from her face, he tilted her head up
to claim her lips in a soft kiss. “If you run, I will chase you.”
“Well, what did you say?” Cami demanded, bouncing a little on the edge
of her bed.
As the king’s mate—whether Ivy had accepted or not—she and her
friends had been released from the holding rooms. Instead, they’d been
given large, spacious suites, complete with the Xenons’ version of food
consoles, and big windows that opened to stunning views of the rear
gardens. The sentries still approached Tariq and Sion with some
reservation, but the males had been invited to use the training facility on
the ground floor, which they’d readily accepted.
“What was I supposed to say?” Pacing the room, Ivy waved her
hands around in wild, animated movements. “I told him I need some
time to think.”
“Well, I mean, it’s not like you can refuse.”
“To be his mate? No, I suppose not, but that doesn’t mean I have to
complete the bonding thing with him.”
Cami covered her mouth to muffle a giggle. “He’s very handsome.
You could do worse.”
Ivy paused on her next pass through the room to glare at her friend.
“You’re not helping. I don’t even know him! So, what? I’m supposed to
just throw myself into his arms and say, ‘Yes, I’m yours! Take me now!’
all because he says we’re mates?”
“Nice. Not dramatic at all.” Cami rolled her eyes and snorted. “That’s
not what it, and you’ve seen enough mated pairs to know it. You don’t
have to decide right this minute, but I do think you should give him a
chance.”
“Apparently, I don’t have a choice.”
“Of course you have a choice.” Grabbing one of the decorative
pillows from the mattress, she sent it sailing across the room, missing Ivy
by a foot and knocking over a lamp instead. “Oh, shoot. Do you think
that was expensive?”
Ivy shrugged. “Don’t change the subject. So, you really think I should
consider this…this mating business?”
“You make it sound like a trade contract or a prison sentence, which
it’s neither, but yes, I think you should.” She leaned back on her elbows
and crossed her slender legs at the ankles. “Do you feel it, even a little?”
While she might not want to admit it, she definitely felt something
for the king. It explained why he’d seemed so familiar to her during their
first meeting, why she’d been so eager to see him during the morning.
Even when she hadn’t known who held her in the dining hall, her body
had responded to their kiss with fervor before her brain had caught up
with her libido.
She and Kai had spent very little time together, knew practically
nothing about one another, and yet, she couldn’t seem to get him out of
her head. Her attraction to him was purely superficial, or so she told
herself. A small, pale voice in the back of her mind called her a liar, but
she gagged the little bitch and shoved her deeper into the well of her
subconscious.
In theory, she understood the concept of destined mates. In practice,
she felt like she was drowning in the middle of an endless sea.
“Ivy, breathe,” Cami encouraged, crossing the room to take her
hands. “Look, we’re stuck here until we can either repair the
Dreamweaver
or reach the Alliance, right? What can it hurt to just talk to
him?”
“Don’t be logical. It pisses me off.” Pinching the bridge of her nose
between thumb and forefinger, Ivy closed her eyes and breathed deeply
through her mouth. “Okay, fine. I’m not saying you’re right. You’re just
not wrong.”
“Thank the stars for small victories.”
After a few more calming breaths, Ivy dropped her hands to her sides
and opened her eyes. As a child, she’d never been afraid of the dark,
imaginary monsters under her bed, or the legendary boogeyman in her
closet. In fact, throughout her life, there hadn’t been much that
frightened her.
But Kai Blackthorn scared the sweet Jesus out of her.
“Right, then.” Spinning to face the door, she squared her shoulders,
and held her head high. “I’ll find you later.”
After a hurried goodbye, she left Cami to go in search of her…mate,
only to realize she had no idea where to find him. In the middle part of
the day, he’d likely be doing kingly things, whatever that entailed. The
errant thought made her laugh aloud, her voice echoing through the
empty hallway. She couldn’t name one responsibility of the king, and he
wanted her to be his queen.
“My lady.” A male guard appeared from seemingly nowhere and
bowed his head. “Forgive me for saying, but you appear a little lost.”
“Forgiven, and I’m completely lost. Do you know where I can find
Kai?”
“I believe he’s in the library. Would you like me to escort you?”
Ivy grinned politely but shook her head. “I’d like to explore some,
but if you could point me in the right direction, that’d be great.”
The sentry explained the best path to take to the library, bowed again,
and continued around the corner on his patrol. Ivy wound her way
through the maze of corridors in the direction he’d indicated until she
found the wide staircase lit by crystalline lanterns on both sides of each
step. Descending to the first-floor landing, she slid her fingers along the
intricate carvings in the wood railing and curled her bare toes in the
thick, red carpet that lined the stairs.
On the bottom step, she paused to watch the twinkling lights in the
glass orbs that sat atop the banister. It reminded her of the stars that lit
the night sky back on Earth. She missed the stars.
Commanding her own ship and traversing the galaxies had always
been her dream. The
Dreamweaver
was her home, and her crew was her
family. She had no ties to Earth, not really, but sometimes, she missed
the little things, like the warmth of the sun on her face, or the smell of
new spring grass.
Pushing away those thoughts, she continued toward the library
doors at the end of the dimly lit hallway. At measured intervals, tasseled
pillows floated in the air above white, stone pedestals, each holding the
biggest, most beautiful gems she’d ever seen. The jewels glittered in the
white spotlights positioned over each pillow, their glow casting rainbow
prisms across the barren walls.
Ivy found a number of excuses to linger in the corridor, but she forced
herself to keep walking until she reached the frosted, double glass doors.
Blue lights flashed on the pressure pad to her right, but the staff hadn’t
entered her fingerprints into the castle’s bio-locks yet. Praying she’d
found the right room, she pressed the silver button just below the pad
and leaned closer to the speaker.
“Kai, please tell me you’re in there.”
“Ivy?” The king’s voice came back to her through the speaker.
“Yeah, it’s me. I was hoping you had some time to talk.” Ivy chewed
her bottom lip while she waited for a response. “If it’s not a good time, I
can—”
The glass doors slid open with a quiet whir, and Kai stepped out into
the hallway to wrap her in his massive arms. “It’s always a good time,
dove.”
She meant to step away, but instead, Ivy found herself pressing closer
to his broad chest. Kai’s warmth enveloped her, chasing away the stress
and weariness that had plagued her since landing on the beach. It had
been a long time since someone had held her like this, like she mattered
as a woman, a person, and not just a soldier.
“Did I interrupt something important?” she mumbled against the soft
fabric of his tunic. “I can come back.”
“Something of utmost importance,” he confirmed, a smile in his
voice. “Come, I’ll show you.” He stepped back to allow her to enter the
library, but kept a hand on the small of her back as he followed. “Ivy,
you know Captain Meadowlark.”
Smiling, Ivy waved at the sentry. “Hey, Tira. How’s it hanging?”