Kyele's Passion: A World Beyond Book 4 (11 page)

Chapter 14

 

The nightmare started innocently enough. Joni hugged her brother, Drew, then her dad as she prepared to leave for her trip in the Singles Program. When she leaned over to pick up her suitcase, Joni pretended not to see her dad’s eyes water before he tipped his head back and wiped his cheeks.

Drew curved an arm about her neck and yanked her close. With his free hand, he rubbed his knuckles over the top of the sleek wave she’d styled her hair into. “Don’t fall for anything less than an alien prince, Princess.”

Joni shoved at his hold, but he didn’t release her until their dad called out. After straightening her one shoulder top and adjusting her skinny jeans, she stuck her tongue out at her brother. “Ass.”

Her dad snorted and smiled wryly. “No wonder he’s always called you princess.”

Joni giggled and accepted one last hug from her dad. Her brother started the stupid nickname after their mother died when Joni was seven and Drew five. Her parents hadn’t been together but they shared a friendship, and he’d helped financially throughout her life despite the fact men were often free of any obligation regarding children. A virus had wiped out a large chunk of the male population leaving men on Earth in the enviable position of being able to sleep around to their heart’s content without repercussion.

Her mother, Gabriella, paid Douglas Miller in order to get pregnant with Joni. A common occurrence but their relationship had been anything but common. When her mom wanted to have another child, Douglas had traveled seven hours by air making the trip without question. He hadn’t asked for monetary compensation the second time around.

Her parents might not have been in love with each other but mutual respect existed. As a result, there was no doubt in her mom’s mind who would raise her children when she was diagnosed with one of the few diseases modern science hadn’t cured.

“Do you have everything?” Her dad asked, standing near the passenger door of the car they’d rode in.

“I’m good Daddy. Promise.”

His eyes misted and they waved as she turned and left.

The dream shifted, leaving Joni crouched on the rough stained floor of a familiar cell when she looked around. Her breath picked up and her heart slammed into her chest. Denial rose but she bit back a scream.

“Are you ready for another trial? I have something new for us today. You’ll really like it.” Maniacal laughter followed the announcement.

Shame twisted her insides as Joni pushed to her bare feet and leaned against the bars of her cage. Dr. Kirkem, her fifth and hopefully last owner. For all his human appearance, he was far from humane.

“No comment?” He arched a scruffy brow, plump cheeks giving him a deceptively innocent appearance.

Dr, Kirkem was evil. True evil and Joni hoped he burned in hell one day for the things he did to her.

“Alright then. It looks like we are skipping our manners this morning.” He held up a stainless steel tray, brimming with surgical implements and placed them on a table near the edge of her cage.

Sweat trickled down Joni’s back, but she met his amused stare with a heated glare of her own. “Fuck. You.”

He lost the smile, skin darkening with an anger he’d originally managed to hide from her. In the beginning he didn’t understand her insults and profanity no matter the implanted translator but Joni said the phrases enough he grasped exactly what she meant now.

“Bastard. Snotty fucker.” She continued to hurl the words as if they had power.

The doctor’s frown deepened. “Well, I think we’ll go right to the main test today, my lovely Joni.”

Then he hurt her.

Again. And again.

Until Joni screamed.

Thunder boomed.

Joni sat up, a choked cry dying in her throat as she panted in her bed. Her bed. At home on Enotia. She pressed a hand to her chest, the thump thump faster than a race horse. A sharp crack of lightning preceded a bright flash then faded as the storm outside raged.

“God,” she gasped, rolling her legs to the side of the bed.

Her feet hit the cold tile of the floor. The rumpled sheets behind her attested to the fact she’d fought a hard battle. Bowing low with her elbows braced on her thighs and hair about her face, Joni took a moment to get her breathing under control. Each steady breath made her yearn for the reassuring presence of one man. Kyele.

A hoarse laugh escaped Joni’s throat. It figured she’d want the one man who left her high and dry after their last encounter and practically ignored her in the training room. Crazy as it seemed, the times he showed during her nightmares were the ones when she got the best sleep.

She should have known the attack a week ago would bring back the bad dreams stronger than ever. She could almost taste the metallic bite of blood filling her mouth as she’d tried to hold in her cries of pain. No way she could doze back after this one.

Wind and rain lashed at her window. Storms such as this one were rare but somehow fit her mood tonight. She shook her head at her flighty thoughts. Maybe a hot drink would settle her.

When she heard it, Joni heaved to her feet. A click and shuffle. Muted footstep? Her dream fueled panic returned in a blink. She edged near her cracked bedroom door, using one hand to hold down the bottom of the thin bronze night gown she’d slept in. Staying hidden as much as possible, she peeked around the corner of the jamb to see a shadowy figure moving around her living area.

The stranger bent over her table riffling through the things she’d left out earlier. An electronic game, a recipe Faye sent her for some special Enotian treat and a cute statue she’d picked up on her last shopping trip. There wasn’t much to her apartment. A living area, small kitchen, the bathroom and her bedroom which meant in no time he’d discover her presence.

Sliding the bedroom door closed without letting it latch, Joni darted back to her bedside and the communicator. When she’d first moved in, Bane from Team Three had patiently explained the numbers programmed in. He’d been very specific about which button would route her to Jaron in case of an emergency, but it wasn’t Jaron on her mind as Joni hit another button.

Please pick up, please pick up
. Joni bit her lip, mouth dry as she waited for her call to connect.

With one hand on the unit, she tore at the sheets and blanket and uncovered her two knives from the mound of pillows. A burst of strength countered the fear pounding at her temples now that she’d armed herself. She kept her eyes on the door, wondering how long she had.

“Greetings, Joni.”

She closed her eyes on a dizzying wave of relief. “K-Kyele.”

“What is wrong, Joni?” Kyele’s voice changed in an instant. “Did you have another nightmare?”

A lump lodged in her throat. Sincere Kyele was as hot as dangerous Kyele. “No. Yes. I mean…I did.”

“Did you mean to contact Sylvie?”

Joni pulled the comm unit from her face and took a deep breath. Of course he’d think that. She’d never asked Kyele for anything before yet he’d always been there when she needed him. She pressed the communicator back to her ear. “I know we have this thing between us—”

“Thing?” Was that humor?

How often did she see Kyele amused? Never came the immediate answer.

Glass shattered in the outer room coinciding with a fierce roll of thunder. Joni jumped and clamped her hand over her mouth to muffle her scream before she could speak again. Her eyes stayed on the thin frame of the door. Little protection against whoever was on the other side. “Oh, God. Kyele, someone’s in my place. I-I need you to be the baddest bad ass and get here now.”

“Get out.” Whisper soft, the harsh command snapped her spine straight nonetheless.

“Ky—”

“Get out, Joni or you won’t like my reaction if something happens to you.”

Definitely no signs of humor now. Liquid heat filled her veins to replace the terror. The anger he directed her way gave her strength. “In case you forgot, I’m on the seventeenth floor but I’m open to suggestions.”

How she found the energy to be sarcastic in this situation Joni would never know.

“The vent. Above your bed, remove the grate.”

Her head tipped up. The large slotted square was exactly where he said. How had he known?

“Stand on your bed and pull up. Close the grate behind you and start making your way through the shaft to the main part of the building.”

Joni judged the distance. It was doable. Except. “I’ll have to get off the communicator.”

“Yes.” No lies. No buttering her up with false platitudes.

The thought of breaking her connection to him stole Joni’s breath and spots danced in front of her vision as she lost her momentary surge of bravado. Her hold on the knives tightened. She licked her lips and made her decision. “Hurry.”

“Don’t you know, Joni?” She heard the arrogance in his question. “I was on my way the moment you called.”

His words claimed another piece of her and Joni faltered. She’d known. God, she’d known the moment she called him that he’d come. Her eyes burned and her heart tripped, missing several beats before resuming its pattern. She wanted to say something but this wasn’t the time.

“Go, Joni!” All tenderness gone.

She ended the call and climbed on her bed. The snaps around the corner of the grate easily slid back with a brush of her fingers. Joni pushed her knives in first, wincing at the rustling sound from her hall. Her intruder drew closer. What if he wasn’t alone?

Using the buoyancy of her mattress, Joni jumped. Her legs twisted in the air as she gripped tight to the edge then hauled her body through the cubed opening, scraping her belly. She fit. The narrow space allowed for little adjustment as she smoothed the grate back in place. The latches were on the outside so she could only hope they held.

Her fingers scrambled to feel for her knives in the dark but they skidded sideways. Lightening lit her room in an eerie shade of white violet accompanied by a crack of thunder. In horror, she watched as her only source of protection fell through the horizontal slits of the frate to land harmlessly on her bed below.

The floorboard outside her door creaked sending the drum-like beat of her heart soaring. No time to retrieve her talismans. Joni scooted backward and bumped her head on the low ceiling. She paused but she sensed no sign the person below heard. Since her bedroom ended against a main wall, Joni turned in the opposite direction, hoping the shaft would lead her out at some point if she continued this way.

A virulent curse rose through the walls as her bedroom door slammed open all the way. Dread raced through her pores but Joni continued her retreat one slow inch at a time, praying all the while Kyele got here in time.

 

***

 

Kyele shifted the hover car to hover mode and sped through the wet-slick vacant streets once the wheels retracted. The upgrades on the Jutak vehicle allowed him to go faster than legal as he whipped through the night, his throat locked tight. Rain splattered on the windshield, blurring his vision. A simple flick of one of the multitude of switches on the dash activated the sensors to keep it clear.

Joni needed him. Someone had invaded her home while she slept. What if he hadn’t returned from his mission an hour ago? A shudder rocked his body at the thought and the hover car wavered as his grip slipped. He righted the vehicle and pushed it faster. The moment Joni called, Kyele heard the nervous waver she couldn’t hide. He would have made his way to her regardless, because he knew what the nightmares did to her.

Unlike Sylvie, Joni refused to share all of the details surrounding her experience with the Marenians and her imprisonment. Sometimes Kyele was glad of this. Otherwise he’d have left a trail of dead bodies in his wake.

He slowed and parked down the street from Joni’s building, leaping from the vehicle before the hover car came to a complete stop. Rain drenched his clothes the moment he stepped out, his boots slogging across the flooded stones of the walkway. The attendants in the lobby tried to stop him as he barged through the front doors.

“Jutak,” he barked, not slowing his pace.

No one gave chase or tried to stop him. It probably helped that he still wore his uniform. Joni’s call had come as soon as ‘d settled in his room preparing to take a shower to clean the grime of his last mission from his body. To think she’d almost missed him.

Kyele raced up the electronic stairway cursing the idea to have the females live on one of the higher floors. How much time had passed? Had Joni managed to escape undetected? Half-way up, Kyele threw out the idea to conserve his strength and misted. He flew up the remaining distance like the ill winds of the storm outside, coming to an abrupt halt in his physical form at the front door to Joni’s apartment.

And her open door.

Panting, he slid along the wall beside the entrance and narrowed his focus. He could see nothing in the darkened interior. Back pressed against the wall, Kyele listened but no sounds emitted from inside. He relaxed his clenched fists and withdrew his laser blaster in one hand and his knife in the other.

Calming the rapid beat of his heart, he kicked the door all the way open. “Jutak warrior!”

Other books

Bound to Me by Jeannette Medina, Karla Bostic, Stephanie White
Hope of Earth by Piers Anthony
Spectacle: Stories by Susan Steinberg
Heiress by Janet Dailey
Gathering of Pearls by Sook Nyul Choi
Wolf Tales IV by Kate Douglas
In the Shadow of the Lamp by Susanne Dunlap
Space and Time Issue 121 by Hildy Silverman
Prince of Outcasts by S. M. Stirling