Reclaiming Mystique (SpaceStalker Saga Book 2) (13 page)

Read Reclaiming Mystique (SpaceStalker Saga Book 2) Online

Authors: Bevan Greer

Tags: #Science Fiction Romance

BOOK: Reclaiming Mystique (SpaceStalker Saga Book 2)
10.23Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“I hope so.” Jace sighed. “I can only hope his mind heals as fast. I’m curious to know what they did to him.”

“Me too. But I’m happy to wait until he’s ready to speak.”

Jace nodded. They talked for a while more, discussing Koneru’s family on Rovi and the new political system in FenBy. By all accounts his friend Dare and her new husband were very involved in resolving any civil disputes, and their king worked tirelessly to bring their people together. Mikhel, when—not if—he survived, would have a true home to return to after sailing the sea of stars with the SpaceStalker. Koneru, Nesham, and too could find peace on the planet now united under a beneficent leader. But Jace had no homeworld.

His frustration mounted, needing Mystique more every day. He—

The com in the galley buzzed and Nesham spoke, excitement lacing his voice. “Jace? We picked up something extra in Dark World all right. It took a while but the lifescan in the control room is reading seven lifeforms—six alive. One…not.”

-8-

 

“Naria, wake up.” Carinna tugged her sister’s arm, but Naria wouldn’t move. Carinna stared in concern at her sister. Though Naria had used a great deal of energy to save the crew of the
SpaceStalker
, she should have regained her wits by now.

Carinna, excited, nervous and scared, needed badly to talk to her sister. By now their father and all of Lysst would know they’d escaped the planet. She hadn’t thought it would feel so exhilarating to be free, but now that she’d left the dark planet and seen such captivating creatures like Nesham, she couldn’t imagine going back.

Following Nesham around the ship had afforded her a glimpse into the lives of his crewmates and allowed her to study her new surroundings. She retained her wraith form, though it was starting to wear on her. She’d change back just as soon as she talked to Naria. She needed a safe place to hide, but more than that, she wanted to feel not so alone.

Her adventure was proving a fun, yet frightening as well. What if the crew found out about her? Would the men torture her—a Dark World creature? Would they scuttle her from the ship and from her sister’s side? She wished she understood them better. Despite her strange fascination for Nesham, she didn’t know him that well. He was a strong warrior who wore sadness like a second skin. Other than that, she knew little.

Naria would help her, tell her what to do. Her sister always made her feel better. If only she’d wake.

“Naria, please. Wake up!” She slapped her sister’s cheek.

Naria moaned and blinked her eyes, and Carinna could have danced with glee. “Finally,” she breathed in relief and morphed back into human flesh.

She helped her sister to slowly sit up. Naria’s eyes had started to lose that cloudy black color that she wore when tired and returned to the shiny purple of health.

“Carinna?” Naria asked and rolling her head on her neck. “
Carinna,
” she exclaimed. “What are you doing here? I thought I’d never see you again.” She hugged Carinna tightly, and the contact made Carinna’s eyes blur.

“Yeah, well.” Carinna hugged her sister in return. “At the last minute I just couldn’t let you go. I think we’re a lot more alike than I wanted to admit. I just couldn’t stay in Dark World without you. I mean, who else could I share Xeche stories with if not you?”

Naria grinned. “How wonderful! Does the crew know you’re here?”

“I don’t think so, though I think Nesham might sense my presence. I’ve seen him looking toward me at odd moments when he shouldn’t be able to see me.”

“Don’t you think you should announce your presence?”

“I don’t know. They might be happy that I helped save them. But then again, they might blame me for everything that happened on Dark World.”

“Why do you think I planned my rescue this way? I am considered part of the surviving instead of a murderous Dark Worlder.” Naria sighed. “I just wish I knew where to go from here. For all my studies, I know very little about the real world beyond Dark World. Only what’s been in books.”

Carinna patted her shoulder. “Don’t worry. You’ve got me. Between us we should be able to get everything we need.”

Including discovery by the crew, it turned out.

 

 

Jace and the others teleported into the room, blasters aimed at Naria and Carinna—their uninvited guest. Naria groaned. Just what she wasn’t ready to deal with, and she had little time to come up with a viable excuse for Carinna’s presence.

“Would one of you care to explain this?” Jace kept his weapon trained on them, his dark gaze now lined with a glint of suspicion…along with something else.

She had the disconcerting thought that her recent dream might not have been entirely in her head. He studied her with possession, and she flushed, moving closer to Carinna.

Say something to them,
Carinna insisted.
They look like they’re going to shoot me!

Nesham took a step closer and his weapon buzzed louder. Grim satisfaction lined his face.

“This is Carinna,” Naria blurted, and Nesham’s blue eyes glowed brighter. What did that mean? “Er, she, um, saved us on Dark World.”

Jace and the others studied Carinna, and Naria knew what they saw. A stunning Dark World female in a short wraith robe and sandals. She looked vulnerable, but the men knew she was anything but.

“Carinna, that’s Jace, the captain. Nesham, Koneru, and Castor,” Naria continued, praying Jace would relax. He appeared calm, but behind the façade was enough rage to fill a demon horde.

After a moment, he stepped closer and ordered, “Lower your weapons. Carinna, is it?”

Her sister nodded.

“How did you get here?”

“When you jumped from the cell to your ship on Lysst,” Carinna answered. At their confused looks, she explained, “Lysst is the moon you were imprisoned on after you landed on Dark World. I managed to latch on to you as you transectored back to your ship.”

“Transectored?” Nesham asked.

“You remember the dark blue circles on the ground?” Carinna asked him.

“Oh. Those.”

“Still waiting to understand,” Jace said. To Naria, he sounded at the end of his patience.

“The blue circles on my world are used to transport across distances,” Carinna said quickly. “I’m sorry for coming uninvited, but I couldn’t leave my sis—I mean, I, well, it was… Lord Demise, he…” She trailed off, unable to speak the truth without telling them about Naria.

Naria tried to help. “You probably couldn’t stay there after helping us, could you?”

“No.” Carinna gave her a thankful smile.

“Such help we appreciate,” Jace said slowly, studying her and Naria far too intently for Naria’s peace of mind. “Well, for whatever reason you helped us, we’re thankful. I doubt we’d still be alive had you not aided us on that hellhole.” After a pause, he added, “You’re free to stay as our guest until we can take you somewhere you’d like to go. That goes for you too, Naria. Where was it you were supposed to be going before your ship crashed in Dark World?”

Though he sounded reasonable, pleasant even, Naria felt his distrust. If only he hadn’t found Carinna with her.

Naria’s mind froze as everyone stared at her.
Pick a planet, pick a planet…

She rubbed her temple. “I—I don’t remember.” She tried to look helpless. “The stress of my imprisonment must have jarred something. I’m just so glad to be off Dark World, I hadn’t considered anything else.”

“No worries.” Jace smiled, though the expression didn’t reach his eyes. “We’ve plenty of time for you to remember.”

Everyone stared at her, and she had no idea what to relieve the tension.

Carinna broke the sudden silence. “Where is your other crewmember?”

“Mikhel’s in a med-unit.” Jace frowned. “Your people did a lot of damage to our friend.”

Naria glanced away, full of guilt. She felt as if she’d committed the heinous acts her halfsisters had perpetrated. She should have done more to help them when she’d first realized the situation.

“Carinna, do you have any reason to suspect that Lord Demise will send anyone after you?” Jace asked the question Naria didn’t want answered.

Carinna shook her head, but Naria wasn’t so sure. Her father’s daughters—the progeny of Zena—had vanished along with his prisoners. For them he might make an exception and set forth his Searchers. And that would not be a good thing. At. All.

“Fine then.” Jace nodded. “For the rest of your stay, please stay visible while you’re with us. That’s all I ask.”

Carinna blushed. “Oh. Of course.”

“I’ll show you to your quarters,” Nesham offered.

Jace narrowed his eyes at him but nodded. “Yes, do that.”

Carinna, in silence, followed Nesham out of the room. Naria watched her go, feeling very alone when the others continued to stare at her. They really were three very large men. Koneru seemed curious, Castor wary, and Jace too calm.

“You two can go back to the control room. I’ll handle Naria.”

The men gave her a last look, then left.

“Tell you what, Naria,” Jace said pleasantly.
Too
pleasantly. “Why don’t you make use of the lav, clean up, and I’ll be back to take you to find something to eat. Will that work?”

She nodded and turned to go.

Jace’s hand closed around hers, stopping her. He brought her closer to him. Naria swallowed loudly and waited for the worst.

“Do you remember anything about this morning?”

Shoot. Her cheeks felt hot, and she couldn’t believe she’d allowed him such liberties
again
. Maybe she was a closet succubus. “I thought I was dreaming,” she mumbled.

“So did I.” He lowered his mouth to hers. The kiss was brief, but the lingering warmth of his mouth refused to fade. “Clean up, sweet. I’ll be back soon.”

 

 

Jace paced in the control room while Castor and Koneru watched him.

Castor sighed. “Spit it out, Captain.”

“Something about these two doesn’t feel right.” His senses were on high alert. “I don’t buy Carinna’s story. I trust Nesham volunteered to watch her?” At Koneru’s nod, he huffed. “I figured as much. What really botheres me is Naria. I was sure she was as much a victim as the rest of us. But now I’m not convinced. She seemed awfully chummy with Carinna, didn’t she?”

His crewmen nodded.

“But she doesn’t look like any demon I’ve ever seen,” Castor said with a wry grin. “In fact, she looks more like a Vembi pleasure goddess with the sensual appeal of a Fenturi.”Not pleased Castor had noted that much, Jace nevertheless agreed with his assessment. Naria’s exotic features and pleasing build had captured more than just his eye.

“I’ll say,” Koneru added.

“Right, well.” Jace cleared his throat. “I want you two to steer clear of her until we find out just who she is and what she really wants.” He saw Castor try to hide a grin and snapped, “What?”

“Not at thing
, Captain
.”

When Castor called him “Captain” in that tone of voice, something sarcastic normally followed.

“It’s just that this is the first time I’ve seen you hot for a woman, is all. You normally don’t seem like you care one way or the other.”

Jace strove for patience. “It’s not that I’m interested in Naria.” He ignored Koneru’s muttered disbelief. “Not in that way. There’s something about her that’s not quite right.”

“You mean, besides the fact she’s still clothed?” Koneru said.

Castor broke into laughter. “You know, my gray-skinned friend, I think Dark World was good for you.” Castor ribbed the Rovi, and the two continued to make fun of him while they monitored the control panels.

Jace sank down in a nearby chair, aware he’d made a bigger fool of himself by not being honest. Hel, a male would have to be a eunuch not to feel the sensuality Naria wore like a perfume.

The feel of her against him that morning… Sheer bliss. He wondered about her shyness. An act or her real feelings?
I wish I knew.

He gave her a few more minutes before heading back to his room to fetch her. He found her sitting on his bed, frowning over a book on Dark World mythology. She snapped it shut the moment he entered and cleared her expression.

Like clockwork, his heart raced, and he spent a moment trying to calm down.

She had cleaned up very well, was all he could think. She’d been beautiful before, but now she shone. Her pale white skin glowed like honeyed cream, soft and rich. Her dark hair lay long and straight behind her small ears. She studied him cautiously, the purple depths of her eyes teeming with untapped sensuality. He could feel it calling out to him.

As he stared, she shifted her gaze to the floor, her cheeks flushed, the sense of her unease easy to read on the physical and psychic planes.

He continued to peruse her, liking the way the tan trousers Dare had left behind on the ship fitted her long legs and trim curves. The green shirt billowed over her, exposing a shoulder when she shifted. The small curve of one breast teased him before she hunched her shoulders and tugged the shirt back so that it met her throat, gaping at the behind her.

“Sorry,” Jace said, unable to change the husky quality of his voice. “That’s the best I can do unless you’d rather swim in one of my shirts.”

“No, this is fine,” she said as the shirt shifted again.

Don’t think about her shirt. Think about anything but her delectable breasts.
“How about we get you some food, and you can fill us in on how you ended up on Dark World? We didn’t get too much of a chance to talk in that cell.”

“O-okay.”

He waited for her to precede him into the corridor. Naria walked before him and Jace was conscious of how perfectly she complemented him. Her build fit into his nicely, the top of her head just even with his chin, her thin waist easily spanned by his hands.

They walked to the galley, and she sighed. “That smells good.”

They entered to see that Castor had prepared a bowl of porridge for her, as well as a group of fruits from Pith. “Please, Naria.” Castor motioned to the food. “Help yourself.”

Koneru entered the galley and sat by Castor, glancing from Jace to Naria with an amusement Jace could all but see, despite the Rovi’s expressionless features.

Other books

Wired (Skinned, Book 3) by Robin Wasserman
Frost and the Mailman by Cecil Castellucci
She Painted her Face by Dornford Yates
The Firefighter Daddy by Margaret Daley
The Last Adam by James Gould Cozzens
Deadfall by Henry, Sue
A Vintage From Atlantis by Clark Ashton Smith
SVH10-Wrong Kind of Girl by Francine Pascal