his gaze flicked to Jill’s. “Yes. He regretted giving you to Darren and had no idea that
asshole would abuse you. He wanted you with a man he trusted without question,
someone who’d never hurt you in any way. That’s why he chose me.”
Jill had no words. None.
“It’s going to be fine,” the captain swore softly. He gave her a soft smile. “I’m going
to take care of you and keep you safe. I’m so damn glad I found you, Jillian. I’ve been
told so much about you from your dad that I feel as though I already know you. Your
aunt knew about the pact. Mary didn’t tell you?”
“She died on the
Viking
right after Dad’s crew turned on us.” Jill still couldn’t
believe what the man said. It had to be some kind of sick, cosmic joke, but then anger at
her father set in. “He had no right to tell you I’d marry you.”
“I promise I’ll make you happy, sweetheart.” The captain gave her a soft smile.
“She’s not your sweetheart.” Coal’s voice deepened into a rough, harsh tone. “I’ll
kill you if you come any closer to her.”
The captain’s shocked gaze glanced between Jill and Coal, paling again. “Shit.” He
took a step back as his attention jerked back to Jill. “Call him off. You have nothing to
fear from me.” He cleared his throat. “Are you sleeping with that?”
“Him,” Sky ground out. “We’re not things. We’re people.”
The captain turned his head to shoot a frown at Sky. “Sorry.” He faced Jill again.
“It’s fine with me if you allowed him to touch you. I’m not angry. You did whatever
you had to do to survive. Nobody needs to tell me what a miracle it is that you’re still
alive.”
Flint moved forward suddenly. “Can we have councilman Zorus now? You can
resolve your issue with the female after he’s been returned to us. We are ready to pay
you.”
Captain Varel hesitated. “On one condition.”
Flint growled under his breath. “We already made a deal. We hired you for a price
we intend to pay when you return him to us.”
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Laurann Dohner
“I’ll allow your man to come aboard after you transfer the payment if I can talk to
Jillian alone.”
“No,” Coal snarled. The hand gripping the weapon tensed.
“Holster your weapon,” Flint ordered. “Now, Coal. That’s a direct order.”
Jill rubbed Coal’s arm. “It’s okay.” She frowned at the captain. “Why do you want
to talk to me?”
“No,” Coal snarled again but he put away the gun. “You aren’t speaking with him
without me present.”
“And that’s why I want to talk to her alone.” Captain Varel turned his attention to
Flint. “Her father and I were best friends for over thirty years. If she wants to stay with
you then I’ll accept that happily. I just need an assurance that’s what she wants.” The
captain jerked his head in Coal’s direction. “With him acting that way, you should
understand my need to ask her questions without the fear of him intimidating her. I
won’t believe what she says with him ready to shoot me if he hears something he
doesn’t like.”
Jill opened her mouth to tell him that was plain stupid and how Coal wouldn’t do
that but Flint spoke first.
“Do you believe he knew your father, Jill?”
Her gaze locked on the captain. He appeared about the right age as her father had
been, perhaps a few years younger, but he knew she looked similar to her mother. She’d
heard that from her aunt her entire life. The sisters had different coloring so the guy
couldn’t have just seen her aunt and assumed they resembled each other. Her aunt had
been blonde with dark-green eyes while Jill’s mother had strawberry-blonde, almost-
red hair and bright-blue eyes. He also obviously knew about Darren’s abuse and her
aunt’s name.
“He called you his pumpkin,” the man said softly. “When you were born, your hair
looked more orange than anything else.”
“I believe him,” Jill announced. “Only my father would have shared that story and
only with someone he trusted. It’s also just like my father to have tried to give me to
another man in marriage. He always had an annoying way of thinking he knew what
would be best for me no matter how misguided it turned out to be.”
Flint hesitated. “You will not undock with the
Jenny
but I will allow you to speak to
her privately after you return the councilman to us. Once he is safely aboard we’ll send
her to talk to you on your ship…alone.”
“No!” Coal glared at Flint. “He could harm her.”
“He knew her father, they were friends, and he seems reasonable. I understand the
logic of him wishing to speak to her without us present to sway her answers.” Flint took
a deep breath. “He won’t undock from us and it will alleviate any concerns he may
have.”
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Stealing Coal
Jill realized Coal looked about ready to snap. Killing the captain who had
possession of the cyborg would be bad. The crew would probably kill the cyborg in
retaliation, attack the
Jenny
, and the captain had a much better ship than her shuttle. She
stepped forward and turned to face Coal.
“He won’t hurt me, Coal. I’ll be fine. It’s one short conversation and then I’ll be
right back.” Her voice lowered. “I need you to trust me, calm down, and don’t lose
control, okay?”
She watched him take deep breaths, emotions battling across his handsome
features, and it touched her how worried he obviously felt for her. She forced a smile
and nodded at him.
He swallowed hard, his Adam’s apple showing, and rage finally won dominance in
his expression. “A short conversation and if you aren’t back soon,” his gaze lifted to
narrow on the other shuttle’s captain, his look turning ice cold and deadly, “I will come
for you.”
“Good enough.” Relief had her relaxing. She nodded at Flint. “We have a deal.”
Captain Varel backed up. “Transfer the payment and I’ll have your man come
aboard. I’ll be waiting for Jillian on the other side of the docking sleeve. No harm will
come to her. You have my word as a gentleman.”
Jill resisted rolling her eyes. Her father never hung out with men of good standing
or even decent people. She didn’t think the guy posed a threat to her though. Big Jim
wouldn’t have trusted just anyone. She inched closer to Coal and faced the docking
doors, curious to see what a cyborg councilman looked like.
“Payment is transferred,” Onyx said softly. “Check your account.”
The captain gaped. “How? You haven’t gone near a terminal.”
Flint sighed. “We don’t need to. Please check your account. You’ll find the payment
transferred.”
One of the captain’s crew lifted a pad to enter commands to their bank. It only took
a few seconds for him to get confirmation. “It’s been paid in full. I signaled for them to
transfer him.”
“Your man is on his way.” Captain Varel smiled at Jill. “I’ll see you in a few
minutes when you’ve had time to catch up with your friend, Jillian.”
She didn’t correct the guy who obviously thought she knew the councilman. She
watched the crew of the other shuttle back out of the
Jenny
’s cargo hold. The tension in
the room seemed to grow stronger instead of lessoning. Flint turned to meet Jill’s gaze.
“Zorus isn’t friendly toward humans. Why don’t you please go wait in the
hallway?”
She shook her head. “I’m fine.”
He frowned. “Fine. Stay far away from him.” His gaze shifted to Coal. “Don’t allow
her to speak to the councilman. It will only make him irritated and you want that family
unit request to be approved easily. He’ll have a say in it now that he’s back.”
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Laurann Dohner
Jill held her tongue but a dozen questions filled her head. She glanced around the
room, seeing a lot of tension. Sky walked toward the other door to meet the councilman
and show him to his room. Jill had been asked to give up her room in order for the man
to have privacy. She’d agreed since it seemed important. If she were going to live with
cyborgs, she didn’t want to start by pissing off some bigwig in Coal’s world.
All of a sudden, a tall, black-haired cyborg strolled into her cargo hold. A human
woman followed him, looking a bit stunned and perhaps frightened. Flint and the man
spoke but Jill couldn’t hear much at all. They kept their tones soft and with her all the
way across the room with Coal mostly blocking her, only a few words were
distinguishable.
“Why does it look as if they are going to deck each other?” she whispered softly to
Coal.
He backed up, touching her, and lowered his tone. “Councilman Zorus isn’t well
liked. He’s made enemies.”
“Well, he is some big-shot council guy. I’ve never met a politician yet that I liked
but somebody has to do that job.”
The new cyborg walked across the cargo hold, moving closer to them with the
human woman in tow but instead of opening the door to the corridor to lead the couple
to the captain’s quarters, Sky suddenly blocked the door. The couple stopped. The
woman looked irritated and yanked against the hold of the cyborg who gripped her.
She jerked out of his grasp.
“What did he mean about buying me?” The woman definitely didn’t sound happy.
The black-haired councilman turned his gaze on her. “I had to buy you from the
humans to obtain your release.”
Coal tensed when it seemed the human and the council guy started to argue about
how much he’d paid for her and she wanted to repay him. Jill’s eyebrows rose. The
council guy intimidated her but the woman stood up to him, though he towered over
her. He looked mean, cold, and then he ignored her, asking which shuttle they were on.
The woman grabbed the guy.
“Talk to me. How much do I owe you?”
Flint ignored her too, explaining to Councilman Zorus that the ship belonged to Jill
and that she and Coal were a couple. He also explained why they’d needed the shuttle
to get them closer to Earth and gave Zorus a message the council had asked Flint to
relay. A bored expression remained on the other cyborg’s features. He finally nodded.
“I want clothing and a secure com link to the council.”
“Fine.” Flint moved closer. “Who is she and what do you want done with her?”
“She belongs to me.” The new cyborg stated. “She isn’t your concern.”
The tension level in the room jumped by leaps and bounds. Even Coal seemed to
turn to stone. Jill didn’t know why it alarmed everyone so much but she knew she
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Stealing Coal
didn’t like someone saying they had bought and now owned another person as if that
woman didn’t have a say in the matter.
Sky suddenly moved. “Give her to me, Councilman Zorus. I’ve taken enough of
your shit for you to owe me. I’ll even buy her from you.”
Their voices lowered too much for Jill to hear but she could see raw anger on Sky’s
features. They argued softly and then suddenly Sky lunged, nearly slamming his chest
against the councilman’s. His words rang clear in the cargo hold.
“You’re a sick bastard who gets off on killing humans. You even made a few of
them believe you were their friend before you attacked. You’re the one who demanded
all humans be made nothing but property on our planet and you’ve tried to order every
female killed who hooked up with one of us. I’m sorry you survived, if you want the
truth. I’d have been happier if you’d died on Earth. I won’t stand by and watch you
turn on this female. You’ve killed your last damn human.” He pushed Zorus hard. “I
want ownership of her and I’ll fight you for it.”
The human woman backed up as the two men went at each other. Jill gasped,
stunned at seeing two cyborgs exchanging punches. Coal spun, an arm gripping her
waist, and she suddenly found herself pinned against the bulkhead with his body
pressing her tightly against it. She had to wiggle a little but when she finally freed her
head enough to peer around him, what she saw made her gasp.
The human woman had a weapon aimed at the cyborgs, a terrified expression on
her features, and the councilman yelled out a warning for no one to fire. He threatened
to kill anyone who shot the woman. The crazy guy then stepped directly into the path
of her weapon, shielding her from the other weapons pointed at her, including Coal’s,
which he’d drawn, then twisted to take aim, keeping Jill pinned at the same time.
“Move out of the way. We don’t have a clear shot.” Flint ordered Zorus.
“Let her shoot him,” Sky offered. “Just don’t kill her. Aim for her shoulder so she’ll
survive. She’s just scared.”
The crazy new cyborg didn’t move but instead spoke softly to the woman. Jill
strained to hear the conversation but she was too far away. Whatever the cyborg said
had the woman’s hand wavering, the gun lowering slightly but not enough not to shoot
him if he came at her. Jill pushed hard on Coal.
“Let me go. I can talk to her. She’s scared and I don’t blame her.”
“Stay out of it,” Coal whispered. “It’s a dangerous situation. I don’t want you hurt.”
Frustration had her biting back a curse but sudden movement drew her attention.
The woman had been distracted by something. It gave the councilman an opportunity
to lunge. He tackled the smaller woman and both of them hit the floor. Jill saw the man
tear the weapon from the woman’s fingers and then yell out.
“Get a medic. Her head is bleeding.”