how she could be both fragile and strong at the same time. “Unless that is
what is going on now. Can you feel me? It’s like I didn’t just come.”
“I feel you.” Her lashes drifted shut and it was hard to tell if his
comment pleased her or not. “Sex isn’t the same thing as love, Larik.”
46
Annabel Wolfe
She was probably right, but he could hardly philosophize over it when
his throbbing cock held his complete attention. He began to move again,
sliding backwards and thrusting deep, each pumping motion of his lower
body making pleasure soar through his nerve-endings, flood his brain, and
center lower and lower until he felt his testicles tighten, signaling the
imminent rush of orgasmic release. This time, however, at least he was able
to wait for her to climax first, and if the bruising grip of her hands on his
shoulders and her low scream as it happened were any indication, it was
both intense and satisfying. He followed, filling her with a river of sperm,
his head dropping forward and a low groan coming up from deep in his
chest as he ejaculated.
Afterwards he lay sprawled in relaxed satisfaction next to her, trying to
still his erratic breathing. Aspen didn’t seem inclined to speak either, nude
and lax, the veil of her dropped lashes concealing her eyes.
He wanted to know what she was thinking.
Now that truly
was
unique in his experience.
* * * *
Trey dashed wine into his glass, mindful they had a limited supply. He
glanced up as Larik wandered out of the sleeping quarters, his hair a bit
disheveled. An aura of male satisfaction surrounded him like a cloak.
The engineer went and got a glass, poured the rest of the bottle of wine
into it, and sat down. “She’s sleeping.”
“Again?” Trey felt a little surprised, but maybe he shouldn’t be. In such
close quarters it was impossible not hear them, and it certainly sounded like
Larik might have worn her out. Aspen had taken to napping in the
afternoons, but then again, they kept her in bed half the day anyway, and
besides, there really wasn’t much to do. She was used to activity on a
constant basis, so the enforced sedentary lifestyle probably bothered her as
much as it bothered him. There was a running machine, but it wasn’t as
effective as being able to do the same thing, and though he wasn’t surprised
the quarantine berth was less than luxurious, he chafed to get out.
“She fell asleep a while ago.” Larik shrugged and picked up his glass to
take a drink.
The Covenant: The Starlight Chronicles 2
47
Trey knew that for it had gotten very quiet. What was interesting was
that his companion had stayed and simply watched her sleep. He’d done that
too before. Just admired her beauty in repose.
“At least if we can’t really exercise any other way, we have sex.” After
the lighthearted joke Trey studied the liquid in his cup for a moment in
abstraction. He glanced up. “Do you think Governor Kartel got your
message?”
Neither one of them had mentioned to Aspen it had even been sent.
They both knew she’d been ordered along to make sure military rules were
followed and contacting Kartel using the Rapt One government
communication system did not qualify as regulation. It did qualify as a
crime, though.
“I’m sure he got it.” Larik looked noncommittal. “Let’s see if he does
anything about it. It’ll be a moral dilemma for him because he does take his
responsibility seriously. If he does buy into the idea that maybe the infected
visitors might have been a ploy to keep me away from the energy station, he
may just use some muscle to get us out. But it’s optimistic to think he’ll do
it without more proof. Aspen is right. It’s also a stretch to think something
that drastic would be done just to keep me from looking at it.”
Trey agreed. He said slowly, “I’ve been sitting here thinking.”
“Are pilots supposed to do that?”
“Very funny. Shut up, Armada and listen.” Trey took a sip of wine,
waited a moment, and then said, “Answer me this, why
did
they call for
you?”
“What do you mean?”
He quirked a brow. “To look at the station. It seems like heavy hitting to
me. You’re a pretty expensive commodity and you’re being sent with a
military liaison. My orders were to sit on my ass here and wait until you’d
figured out the problem, no matter how long it took. It was very clear.
Normally I drop off transport passengers and then go pick up others. There
are always transports coming and going, so the official orders to wait
puzzled me at the time. It ties me up, and ties up my craft.”
“It all comes back to the station, doesn’t it?”
“That’s my guess.”
Larik surged to his feet and paced across the room. “I keep thinking that
maybe we do need to talk to the Governor of Rapt One again.”
48
Annabel Wolfe
“The only problem is that tricky little part about you breaking into the
system. He’s going to be pissed. If he finds out you used his name and code
specifically to contact Minoa, he’ll be even more fucking irate, I’m going to
guess. If he wanted, he could have you dragged out of here in about five
minutes flat, charge you with espionage, and you could even be euthanized.”
Trey wasn’t exaggerating. It bad enough to hack into the system,
because he knew if anyone could do it and go undetected it was Larik. It
was something else to admit it to a government official who had a state of
emergency on his hands and a lot of power. Aspen had gone positively pale
when she’d seen Armada had accessed the system on what was supposed to
be a simple communication device to access galactic news and transmit
generic messages.
“Kartel would never allow that.”
“He isn’t governor of this colony,” Trey pointed out flatly. “Yes, he has
influence and could probably help you, but the truth is, it could all be over
before he even heard about it. Prisoners of war don’t get much leniency, at a
guess, even if they are someone like you. What worries me more is that if
they wanted to implicate Aspen, they could charge her with dereliction of
duty. She’s supposed to keep you in line.”
“I don’t need a babysitter.” It was a mutter.
Trey cocked a brow in amusement at the defensive look on his friend’s
face. “I think it’s well known enough you view military policy as a bunch of
suggestions, not rules.”
“I’m a civilian.” He paused by the table and picked up his glass but still
stood.
“Well, she isn’t and it doesn’t take a genius to figure out her career is
important to her. She’s not only a female, but half-bred, besides being young
for her rank. It’s clear she’s worked hard to get where she is. I think you’d
better come up with an alternative plan.”
“Well, shit, maybe you’re right.” Long fingers ruffled blond hair even
further into a state of disarray in a frustrated gesture. Larik gave him a direct
look, his sapphire eyes glimmering. “We’re both starting to get attached to
her, aren’t we?”
Trey was afraid it might be true. The fascination he felt for their
beautiful companion wasn’t just sexual any longer. Half the time they were
in bed now he spent talking to her, coaxing out details of her childhood, just
The Covenant: The Starlight Chronicles 2
49
touching her, sometimes even holding her hand. He liked to listen to her
breathe, for God’s sakes, and the way he felt a complication he didn’t
expect. “Yes,” he admitted.
“When we get out of here it might be a bit of a problem.”
“I know,” Trey agreed and drank the rest of his wine in a single gulp.
“In the meantime, let’s worry about getting out.”
“Fine. I’m open to any ideas.”
“Hack back in. Let’s read all the governor’s communications and look at
the energy station again. If you think that’s the key, Armada, I’m with you.”
50
Annabel Wolfe
Chapter 5
The speculative look on the faces of the rest of the council did not
escape him. Ran took his seat at the table and folded his hands in front of
him. Very rarely did he not know precisely what to say when addressing the
most powerful body in interstellar politics, but at this moment, he wasn’t
sure.
Damn Armada and his cryptic messages.
He cleared his throat and began. “Recently I have received some
information that might be pertinent to our current alarm over the possible
attack on Rapt One. Security measures have been drastically tightened as
you all know, and there is a possibility that the procedures now in place
might be just exactly what the enemy wanted.”
One of the elders, a statesman who had sat on the council since before
Ran was born, lifted a bushy brow. “Do you mind telling me, Governor, just
how
increased
security would aid whoever tried to infect the colony?”
“Well, for one, it would detain anyone coming in. The current
quarantine time is two months. The question we need to ask ourselves is
whether or not the virus—which was caught quickly and contained the first
time because it is so virulent the victims sickened and died within a day—is
the real threat.”
“It depends on the incubation period. As I understand it we have
scientists on almost all allied planets studying it.”
“I agree the virus isn’t to be dismissed lightly, but shouldn’t we make
sure we aren’t doing exactly the expected and thereby causing a greater
danger to not only Rapt One but all the colonies?”
One of the other members spoke up, a frown on his face. “Who
specifically would it detain, Governor Kartel?”
“The engineer sent to repair their failing energy station, Larik Armada.
He’s there now, trapped in seclusion for at least four more weeks. If it is
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51
necessary to rebuild the facility, the hope is, of course, he can design it
faster than anyone else. I’m sure you all know his name.”
Several of the Council nodded, but none of them looked particularly
convinced. Ran continued, even as he articulated the words becoming more
and more certain maybe Larik was right, and his confinement deliberate. He
looked around the room. “We all know terrorists often do not hesitate to
sacrifice their own. It’s not a covenant I understand, but it exists. How easy
would it be to infect several of their members, or even innocent civilians and
send them into Rapt One, knowing there would be a panic and a shut down?
It’s a simple plan, really. It buys time, costs almost nothing, and distracts us
from the real objective.”
“What’s the real objective, Governor?” one of the members asked.
He’d pondered almost nothing else for the past week once he’d finally
figured out what Larik really said through his infuriating code, and come to
an interesting hypothesis. The Latin message roughly translated to “It’s
about you” and Larik had modified it in the next sentence by saying ‘or in
this case me.”. If his old friend thought this was all about him, there had to
be an important reason.
Close investigation had revealed a chilling possibility.
“The energy grid provided by the station includes several government
buildings,” he said slowly. “At first I wondered if they had been targeted in
some way. One of them is a museum full of artifacts from when the colony
was first settled. There is an entire set of administrative offices, and even a
colony banking headquarters, but they all have reserve power back ups and
no one has reported any suspicious activity during the series of power
outages. However, I did notice something interesting when studying the map
of the grid area. There’s the original mantonium site in the grid. And no, it
does not have a working reserve power source.”
The silence following his disclosure told him they processed the
implications. Finally the elder said, “I thought the mine was sealed.”
“So did I,” Ran agreed. “But I spent considerable time talking to every
official I could locate on Rapt One who might know something about it.
Since it is abandoned and the material considered useless because of its
instability, they have it safeguarded by a security perimeter, but that’s all.
With the project such a dismal failure, the private company that ran the mine
itself simply pulled out.”
52
Annabel Wolfe
“You’re telling us every time the power goes out anyone could have
access to
mantonium
?”
Ran nodded, his face grim. “I’m saying more than that. I have evidence
that the power station was designed deliberately to give opportunity for
catastrophic failure at the flip of a switch. I’d guess the reason for the
frequent failures and the mysterious sudden restorations is that the substance
is so highly toxic and unstable if someone is secretly taking it out of the
mine, they have to do so in very small amounts at a time.”
One of the members, a seasoned retired soldier named Tercel with the
highest rank possible ever awarded a commander, gave him a
straightforward look. His mouth set in a thin, tight line. “The weapons we