Authors: Cyndi Friberg
“But
everyone
on Bilarri has some form of magical ability,” Lyrik said.
“There was a massive uprising, a civil war if you will. Those without magical abilities challenged those able to manifest magic, and the carnage was unimaginable.”
“How did the war end?” Saebin’s tone was hushed and respectful.
“Those with magical abilities gained the upper hand and exiled anyone without such abilities to a distant planet. They surrounded the planet with a shield that prevented anyone from leaving and warned others to stay away. The planet was called Rodymia.”
“The Rodytes are descendents of Bilarrians?” Saebin tried to keep the astonishment from her tone. She should have seen where the story was leading.
“Yes, and they have focused all their resentment and skill into completing the task they began so long ago.”
“Conquering Bilarri?” Lyrik asked.
Drakkin nodded. “For generations the shield held, and the Rodytes were contained. Many debated the morality of holding an entire race of people prisoner because of the actions of their ancestors.
“While the debate raged on, the Rodytes focused on two things, developing new technologies and expanding their numbers. By the time they blasted through the shield, they posed far more of a threat than they had when they were exiled. A second war ensued, and it rages to this day.” He turned to face them, the ring in his eyes so bright it cast a crimson glow over his features. “The overlord is but a pawn in this game. The Rodytes intend to conquer Ontariese, then use the vanquished army to attack Bilarri.”
Saebin adjusted her position on the chair for the hundredth time. Expectation pressed in on her from every side. Their operation was stalled, paralyzed by her inability to sense Seth.
Seth is the key. I’m not sure how, but he will lead me home.
As if she weren’t stressed out enough, Saebin heard the fervent echo of Krystabel’s voice.
She was a soldier, not a Mystic. Give her an attainable objective, someone to overpower or apprehend. How was she supposed to accomplish something that was intangible?
Her fingers dug into the chair’s arms, and her sensory inputs buzzed. “It isn’t working.” She hissed out a breath and opened her eyes. “They must have him in a shield suit, or I don’t know what the hell I’m doing. Take your pick.”
Without a word, Drakkin took her by the hand and led her off the bridge. “You come, too,” he said as they passed Lyrik.
“Keep scanning,” Lyrik told Dro Tar before stepping into the lift.
Drakkin led them down the corridor and stopped before Lyrik’s cabin. “She is trying too hard. When she summoned the metaphysical plane, yours was the first image she visualized. Strip her naked and distract her in any way you can. Once she relaxes, her power will do the rest.” He turned and walked back toward the lift.
Saebin covered her eyes with her hand. “He can’t seriously mean for us to …”
With a wicked chuckle, Lyrik pulled her inside the cabin. “You used me to stabilize your visualization?” He sounded inordinately pleased. “Were we naked?”
She slapped his hand away as he reached for the fasteners at the front of her suit. “Seth is at the mercy of those monsters. How am I supposed to —”
“You don’t have to do anything. I’m supposed to distract you. If you relax and let your energy flow naturally, the connection will come.” He laughed again. “Literally and figuratively.”
She had yet to recover from her brazen behavior in the planning hall. When had she become such a wanton? “If it doesn’t work the first time, we go back to the bridge. Agreed?”
“Whatever you say.” His sparkling eyes promised no mercy, but they had to do something. All her determination and concentration hadn’t accomplished anything.
She disengaged her input rings and unfastened her armor. He peeled it down her arms and sealed his mouth over hers. Pushing the stiff material past her hips, he paused to explore her bottom, while she worked her legs free of the suit.
His tongue stroked against hers, caressing the interior of her mouth. Her nipples tingled, and heat gathered between her thighs. She opened her mind — scanning, searching — while his hand moved across her flesh. He cupped her breast, his thumb teasing her nipple. His touch never failed to excite and thrill her.
“It was over way too soon,” he whispered against her lips. “I didn’t get my fill of you before.” He smiled into her eyes. “I’m still hungry.”
He slipped to his knees, and Saebin’s core clenched in greedy anticipation. Each touch, each experience was wonderful with Lyrik. She loved the way he used just a hint of teeth when he suckled her nipples. She craved the tender swirl of his tongue against her clit. And his … He lifted her leg to his shoulder, and her thoughts scattered.
Using only his fingertip, he traced her slit, forward and back, forward and back. She braced her hands against his shoulders, her leg trembling.
“Relax. I’ve got you.” His breath wafted across her damp folds, and she closed her eyes, the tension mounting within her core.
I’ve got you
. Such a comforting thought. She wasn’t alone. He had her back. He would fight beside her.
He parted her folds and closed his lips around her clit, tapping the very tip with his tongue. Sensation curled up through her core and blossomed in her abdomen. Reaching up, he cupped her breasts, rolling her nipples as he lavished attention on her swollen nub.
“I love your taste and the throaty moan you make just before you come.” His mouth moved against her as he spoke, heightening her arousal. “Moan for me, sweetheart. I love you.”
He sucked her clit between his lips, leaving her to wonder if she’d imagined the last phrase. Did he love her? She was modified, changed, ruined. How could he love her?
Tracing her slit with the flat of his tongue, he used the tip to circle her clit. Over and over, until she slumped against the wall, her leg shaking. He pressed against her, supported her, as pleasure washed her anxiety away. He pushed two fingers into her throbbing core, prolonging her release.
As if launched by the push of his fingers, her mind expanded its search. The signal was faint at first, tiny, yet intense. Gradually fear and confusion traveled across the fragile link.
Seth?
The pleasure of her orgasm receded, and she latched on to the signal. Lyrik looked up at her. “Did it work?”
“I … think so.” She panted.
He eased his fingers from inside her and lifted her into his arms. Cradling her against his chest, he moved to the bed. “I’ve got you,” he repeated in a passion-roughened tone.
Supported by Lyrik’s strong arms, she focused entirely on Seth, strengthening the telepathic link.
We’re here, little one. Don’t be afraid. Open your eyes and show me where you are
.
* * * * *
“There are two adults in the lab, one male and one female,” Lyrik stated. He had assembled the crew in the planning hall for the final briefing. “The soldiers are not free to move about the complex. There are eight Rodyte guards equipped with standard pulse rifles. Six have specific patrol patterns; the other two protect the Stirate. That’s the Rodyte word for head honcho. So, the odds aren’t wonderful, but they aren’t impossible either.”
“How can you possibly know all that?” Hermlin shook his head.
“Seth told Saebin what to expect.”
“Seth?” Hermlin scrunched up his face in a disbelieving frown. “Isn’t he the baby we’re here to rescue?”
“Seth is no ordinary child,” Lor replied. “He is the son of two of the most powerful Mystics Ontariese has ever known.”
“And his natural abilities are enhanced by genetic and technological augmentations,” Saebin said. “Picture my implants and body armor only integrated at the cellular level.”
“Holy shit,” Hermlin muttered.
“I second that,” Dro Tar said.
Lyrik looked at Drakkin. “How many of us can you get inside?”
“As many as you need.”
“All right.” He scrubbed his jaw as he debated the details. “Seth is our primary concern, but I’d like to recover the soldiers, if it’s possible. Somehow I don’t think they volunteered for their present assignment.”
“I’ll teleport everyone into the lab and send Dro Tar back to the ship with Seth.”
“No, friggin’ way. I don’t want to miss out on —”
“You’re the logical choice,” Lyrik agreed. “No more arguments. Hermlin, we’ll need you on the ship in case things go badly. Lor, have you ever used your abilities in a destructive capacity?”
“No, but I have no problem doing so.”
Lyrik accepted his statement with a nod. “Any questions?”
“Why can’t the teenagers babysit?” Dro Tar narrowed her eyes in a mutinous glare.
“Zane shoots better than I do, and that’s saying a lot. Lor is a Pyrokin.” Lyrik shook his head. “Why am I arguing with you? Any
other
questions?”
Dro Tar harrumphed.
“The next move is yours,” Lyrik told Drakkin.
Hermlin returned to the bridge, and Drakkin instructed everyone else to congregate in the middle of the planning hall. Unlike Ontarian transport conduits, Bilarrian teleportation was instantaneous.
Lyrik looked into the male’s eyes, confirming he was Rodyte, before he dropped him with a single blast to the chest. The female screamed, and Saebin fired precariously close to her head. Seth was strapped to a treatment table in front of Ensley.
“D-159 cease and desist!” Ensley’s voice was shrill.
“My
name
is Saebin, you heartless bitch.” Saebin shot out her knee and watched with dispassionate eyes as Ensley writhed on the floor.
“Get the baby out of here,” Lyrik ordered. “The fun has just begun.”
Saebin stared down at her former handler, targeting her with both fists. Lor stood in the doorway of the lab, his curly hair wild about his face. Two guards charged down the hallway. Lor drove them back with dense bursts of fire. Zane rattled off shots in the other direction, and Saebin slowly tightened her fists.
“You can’t kill her, sweetheart.” Lyrik said softly. “We might need her to control the soldiers.”
“That’s what she does best.” Logic restrained Saebin’s anger. If she surrendered to rage, she’d be no use to the mission.
In her peripheral vision, she watched Drakkin and Dro Tar unstrap the child. Joy surged across their telepathic link. Absorbing the emotion without being distracted by it, Saebin fixed her gaze on her former handler. “You are beneath contempt,
Ensley
.”
“You’ll never get out of here alive.” Saebin lunged forward, and Ensley scrambled back, clasping her knee with both hands. “The new soldiers are faster, smarter, and more powerful than the original D series. You’re already dead. You just don’t know it yet.”
Drakkin sent Dro Tar and Seth to the ship, then moved up beside Saebin. “Lor and Zane have incapacitated six of the guards. The other two won’t leave the Stirate. We’ll have to take the fight to him.”
“We can’t drag her along, and her implant makes her immune to my mental pulses.”
Drakkin smiled and glanced at Ensley. She moaned and toppled over onto her back.
Saebin looked at Lyrik. “You should have let me kill her. She deserves no better.”
Lyrik didn’t argue. “Let’s find the Stirate.”
Lor remained in the doorway to the lab as Zane fell in beside Drakkin. Saebin covered Lyrik as he carefully rounded each corner. “Any idea where he’s hiding?” Lyrik asked no one in particular.
Drakkin snorted. “Only a Rodyte would hide at the first sign of trouble.” The Rodytes didn’t hold the patent on cowardice, but Saebin wasn’t going to argue with Drakkin.
Lyrik eased his head past the next corner, and a shot grazed his face. He jerked back with a muttered curse. “I think we found them.” He pressed his fingers to the burn on his cheek.
Zane darted to the other side of the archway. Rapid bursts of energy followed in his wake. He tucked his rifle close against his shoulder and prepared to return fire. Waiting for Lyrik’s signal, the younger man aimed over Lyrik’s head as the commander lunged into the corridor.
Drakkin and Saebin followed close behind. The two guards sprawled on either side of a doorway long before Saebin reached the threshold.
“Come out with your hands up,” Lyrik ordered. “If we come in we won’t be nice.”
A moment passed in strained silence.
Drakkin’s gaze narrowed. “There are two people within, one male and one female.”
“Does he have one of the soldiers with him?” Lyrik asked.
Before anyone could answer, blasts exploded inside the office. Drakkin insinuated his fingers into the seam separating the two panels and forced the doors open. Lyrik and Zane hurried past, Saebin covered them from the corridor.
A woman, dressed in a Mystic’s robe struggled with the Stirate.
“You foolish bitch,” the Stirate shouted. “They won’t shoot you!”
Zane caught the Stirate around the throat as Lyrik wrested the pistol from his hand. One last shot burst from the weapon, and the Mystic rocked backward, grasping her abdomen.
“Why did you have to fight me?” the Stirate yelled. “They wouldn’t have hurt you.”
Drakkin rushed forward and knelt beside the Mystic. He looked at Lyrik and shook his head. “I can’t help her. Her being is slipping away.”
The Stirate jerked and tugged against their restraining hold. “Gema! I cannot sense her. What have you done with Gema?”
“Look at his eyes.” Saebin watched as the blue rings, so similar to Drakkin’s red, faded completely leaving a solid field of black.
“Who are you?” Drakkin looked at her, sending his thoughts directly to her mind.
He no longer scans as Rodyte
. “How should we address you?”
“My name is Berk. I can’t remain in control for long. This beast is very strong.” He panted, his voice reverberating with a deep, echoing timbre. “We were forced through the portal when the other barged in.”
“What portal?” Lyrik asked. “We don’t understand.”
“All I remember is the explosion. Ripples of power disrupted our dimension, creating a rip, a portal. We were forced into the female.”
Image swirled through Saebin’s mind, memories twisted with impressions. “Krystabel,” she whispered. She closed her eyes, retreating into the memory, gleaning details unavailable before. “He belongs where Krystabel is now.”