Stealing Mercury (Arena Dogs Book 1) (35 page)

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Authors: Charlee Allden

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BOOK: Stealing Mercury (Arena Dogs Book 1)
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“Samantha is here.” The words rushed out and worry danced in the red flames of Lo’s eyes. “She was with Rachel and one of the whips.” Lo’s chest heaved as he spoke. “They were headed toward the Lady’s wall.”

Mercury’s world stopped for a heartbeat. He met Saber’s eyes and dropped the override Knock had made for him through the bars. “Be ready.”

“Good luck.” Saber’s whispered words faded away as he and Lo raced toward the scent of his mate.

 

 

Rachel giggled loudly then leaned in to whisper in Samantha’s ear. “You remember what to do?”

“Yes.” Stomach roiling at the sight of the men—the Arena Dogs—stripped bare for any cruel human that would pay to see them this way, men like Mercury and Lo, she wanted the whole thing over. “You go first.”

Rachel giggled again. She traced her fingers over one of the muscled creatures chained to the tilting contraption. She gripped his already engorged cock drawing a moan. She pressed her body close and lifted one leg as if she’d climb him.

She’d been right about the guards. They were all too busy watching Rachel to notice when Samantha pressed the small mask over her mouth and nose, biting hard on the mouth piece. She slipped the small air delivery strip from beneath her belt. Her arm swung out in an arc, spraying them all with the anesthetic.

They dropped quickly. She reached out for Rachel and managed to soften her fall. Easing Rachel to the ground, she made sure her limbs weren’t twisted.

“Thank you.” She knew the woman was unconscious, but she hoped somehow her appreciation would get through.

Samantha wished she could free the chained men, but freeing them might only get them killed. She quickly divested the guard of his weapon. She traced her fingers over the patterned walls until she found the seam of the hidden door Rachel had promised would be there. At her touch the mechanism released the latches, letting the door swing freely. Samantha shoved through then climbed down the ladder leading into the darkness. As she dropped the last few feet she found herself in another transport-tube station. This one was underground, cramped and obviously not recently used. Tubes led out in several directions and a map, a stunner, and a uniform lay in a shadowed corner, right where Rachel promised they would be. She pulled the uniform on quickly and transferred all of the gear she’d carefully hidden on her person into the pockets of the uniform. The fit was terrible, but it only needed to fool the guards from a distance.

Samantha slapped the map-display against her wrist and turned on the projection. The map flashed into life and Samantha set out to find the juvenile center and Hera. She quickly worked her way through the tunnel system until she could see the platform that the map had been programmed to find. There had been surface access shafts at regular intervals along the path and she stopped under the last one before the station and began to climb. Rachel had warned that the shafts were secured by metal grates, but Samantha wanted to try to get a look around before walking into the station.

At the top, she was able to get a glimpse of the compound above. The quiet three story building, mostly abandoned now, sprawled across a barren plain.

Halfway between the grate and the building, a high charged fence surrounded the facility. She couldn’t see any guards, but they’d be there. A minimum of three, according to Rachel. Satisfied that everything was as described, Samantha climbed back down into the tunnel and made her way to the empty station. The doors to the stairs had been welded shut, but one blast from her purloined weapon on full force managed to break the hinges on one side. Samantha squeezed through the small opening then moved quickly up the stairs.

She waited at the top, listening for any sign of the guards. She wondered again what she thought she was doing. She had no business going after Hera. What if she made things worse? She should’ve waited for help. No. According to Rachel, Owens had plans underway to move Hera tonight.

She heard Mercury’s voice in her head. How many times had he called her courageous? She had to do this for him. For all of them. She gave the last set of doors between her and the juvenile center a gentle shove and cringed at the racket it made as it slid open.

She squeezed through the gap and pushed the door back into place. A quick look around showed no sign of patrols. Rachel had promised the surveillance cameras weren’t operational. If she’d been wrong she’d know soon enough. Samantha sprinted down the corridor to the first turn and stopped, back pressed against the wall, waiting for some alarm to sound or for a group of armed men to come charging out, but she heard nothing.

The rooms on the ground level all appeared to be schoolrooms. Instead of miniature chairs and tables, stacks of gear and wrestling mats sat in a corner waiting for children to need them again. If she had her way, not another child would be allowed to grow up in those dreary rooms.

Once she felt confident there was no guard at this end of the building, Samantha headed for the stairwell that led to the second level. The moment she got to the top she heard the guard patrolling the corridor. Samantha waited for him to round the corner and get a good distance away then headed for the nearest window. She took in the narrow ledge and decided it was better than a wide hall where she’d have to face at least one guard.

She made her way along the ledge and to the bedroom window of the building’s only resident. She found Hera sitting on her bed—no evidence of the child in the shape of her body.

Hera wore familiar black pants and a matching tunic. Her long, ebony hair had been pulled back from her face in a tight braid. The severity of the style emphasized her high cheekbones and wide, black eyes. Her nostrils flared as Samantha dropped into the room. Holding a finger to her lips in the universal sign for quiet, she approached the woman and sat on the bed.

“I’m a friend of Carn’s. I’m here to help you.”

“You shouldn’t be here,” Hera whispered, panic flaring in her eyes. “Carn can’t come here. Don’t let him come here.”

“He doesn’t know where we are. We’re going to have to go to him, okay?”

“I can’t leave. There are guards and a fence and no way off the planet. Please go before they find you here.”

Samantha had known Hera had been created and trained to be submissive, but she hadn’t expected her to be timid to the point of refusing to participate in her own rescue. She put her arm around Hera’s shoulders.

“I know you’re afraid, but you have to be brave. We need to get your baby out of here. Okay?”

“Baby?” Hera’s eyes widened as she edged away from Samantha’s touch. She stopped at the end of the bed, but continued shifting like a tethered camule unable to get out of the path of an approaching sandstorm. “There are no babies here.”

Samantha allowed her eyelids to slip down over her tired eyes. Why would Rachel have lied? Or had Roma used her to bait a trap?

Samantha pushed to her feet. If it was the latter, she was in real trouble. “We have to get out of here now. Is there more than one guard on this floor?”

“I don’t know. I’m sorry.”

“It’s okay.” Samantha considered the window ledge, but this time she chose speed over stealth. “I’m going to go stand over in the corner. When I give the signal, you call out. I’ll stun them when they come in.” And she’d have to hope catching them by surprise was a big enough advantage. “As soon as the guard is down, you have to be ready.”

“The fence?”

“I have a different way out. You follow me.”

“Okay.” Hera visibly straightened. “I’m ready.”

Samantha stepped softly across the room and froze as a symbol carved into the wall caught her eye. She traced her fingers over the rough etching. It was one the symbols from the terraformers back on G45987. Mercury had been right. The terraformers and the surrogates must have been one and the same. She stored that bit of knowledge for later.

Turning back to Hera, she gave the signal. Hera shouted out for help. The door banged open and a uniformed guard strode through.

Samantha waited. If there was more than one, she wanted them both to come through, but no one followed and the first guard was already starting to turn. Samantha fired. He fell to the ground like a stone and she wanted to jump for joy, but there would be time for celebration later.

Samantha took a deep breath then peered into the hall. No one. Could she be that lucky?

She started to wave Hera forward, but instinct told her to be methodical, take every weapon available. She dashed over to the fallen guard and dropped to her knees. She took his weapon first then rifled through his pockets and came up with some keys and a remote unit that looked right for the fence. It was always good to have more options. She shoved the remote and keys into her jacket pocket and pressed the weapon into Hera’s hands.

“I couldn’t.”

“It’s point and shoot. Easy.”

Hera shook her head frantically. “Please, I can’t.”

“Okay.” Samantha shoved one of the weapons into her belt and kept the other and the stunner in her hands as she led Hera into the hall. They made it to the stairwell and down. Her pulse was pounding so loud in her ears she knew she wouldn’t be able to hear a guard patrolling if there was one. She’d have to hope Hera would have the sense to warn her, if she heard something.

The hall was clear.

She led Hera back to the station entrance, a ball of worry growing in her belly. It was too easy. Too quickly they reached the door down into the station.

Samantha stopped.

She pressed her shoulder against the smooth surface.

She looked back to Hera wanting reassurance that Hera wasn’t hearing any movement.

Before the panic on Hera’s face registered the door was shoved against her. She’d been right there and the guard had shoved the door hard. It knocked her off her feet. The pistol went skittering across the floor.

The guard came at her, smooth and efficient. He kicked the stunner from her right hand. Pain exploded through her knuckles and wrist. She bit her tongue to hold back her scream. She didn’t want to alert any more guards and she didn’t want to frighten Hera. Carn’s mate had stepped back and plastered her body against the wall.

The guard made a grab for Samantha, but she rolled away and pulled herself toward the stunner that lay just out of reach.

A booted foot crushed the weapon then connected with her ribs and something snapped. For a heartbeat she stopped, unable even to breath. All the oxygen had been sucked out of her lungs and she couldn’t get anything back in. The pain eased then throbbed again as the guard pulled her up by the back of her collar.

Samantha reached blindly behind her, sliding the heel of her hand down his body until she found his cock. She dug her fingers into his balls and tightened with all her strength. He released her so fast she nearly fell. She got her feet under her and spun. Dots of light danced in her vision as she pulled back a fist and punched him hard in the nose.

He collapsed to the ground, not out completely, but dazed.

She pulled her last weapon from her belt and held out a hand for Hera. “Come on.”

The woman’s fingers trembled as they slid into hers. “There are more down those stairs,” Hera warned.

“Damn!” Samantha trusted Hera’s nose and hearing so she tugged the woman toward the nearest door out of the building, pain in every step. They’d have to find another way. Samantha pulled her through the door, muscles tensed and ready to run.

“No,” Hera warned, but too late.

 

 
CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE

 

Owens Juvenile Center, Roma

Earth Alliance Beta Sector

2210.185

 

Samantha stumbled as Hera slammed into her back.

She reached behind her to steady the clinging woman.

“I tried to tell you,” Hera murmured.

Less than fifty meters away, Drake and two guards stood between them and the gate in the high pulse-fence. In the back of her mind, she’d been thinking they could get out that way, but that was no longer a possibility. The guards only carried stun-sticks, but Drake had a pulse-pistol aimed at them, negating any advantage they might have gained from the distance between them. A smile spilt Drake’s face and he held his trademark whip in a loop in his other hand.

Samantha jerked her gaze away to search for another way out.

“Don’t even think of making a run for it,” Drake shouted. “Even if you could make it before I shot you, you’d be out the moment you touched the fence.”

This couldn’t be happening.

Had Rachel set her up or had Sevti broken under interrogation? She didn’t want to contemplate what they might have done to him to get the information. And Rachel…if she was working for Owens, there would be no one coming to help.

“What are we going to do?” Hera’s voice trembled.

“Do you see anyone outside the fence?” Samantha kept her voice low.

“No,” said Hera. “No one.”

“Stay behind me,” Samantha whispered. “Keep me between you and Drake.”

She pointed the pistol in Drake’s general direction, knowing the time had come to make the sort of life and death decision Mercury had faced over and over in the arena. Kill or be killed. If it were only her life, she might make a different decision. But Hera stood terrified behind her and Carn would never get over her death. Carn. Wise, kind Carn.

“Oh, no.” In a flash of insight, Samantha understood. Realization stabbed hard in her belly. It slithered under her ribcage and slogged upward, like a writhing snake forcing its way up her throat. Mercury hadn’t come back to Roma for Hera. He’d done it for Carn.

Samantha could hear the whoosh of her pulse in her ears.
Mercury had come back to Roma for Carn.
That bit of wisdom echoed loud above the sudden surge of her heart rate. She shut it away for later consideration and focused on the moment.

As long as there weren’t any guards beyond the fence, getting over it seemed like their best option. Beyond the dangerous barrier, the land was bereft of foliage, but it wasn’t level. A ditch or a rise could serve as cover, either for a rescuer or for them, if they could clear the fence.

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