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Dark Cure

Page 20

by Cynthia Sax


  He nodded. “It’s your mother’s design.”

  He had used all of his influence to convince his Warlord to fabricate the ship. His males had supported him.

  And the risk had reaped rewards. Qulpa had already tested the vessel. Its speed and agility were unparalleled.

  “Many more will be fabricated.” The design would become the new standard, increasing Chameles’ prowess in battle. “This is merely the first one.”

  “But-but the schematics were destroyed in the crash.” His gerel’s eyes glistened with unshed tears. “I thought they were all gone.”

  Although she’d never mentioned it, not once speaking of her loss, it had hurt her. His heart squeezed. He heard that in her voice, had known that in his soul.

  “I had sent an image of them to Qulpa.” That had been done the first sunrise they shared. “There are replicas of her designs on board, in our private chambers.”

  “I shared the schematics with a ship designer I knew…with my Second’s permission, of course.” Qulpa widened his stance. “She was impressed, said she’d never seen anything like them.”

  “My mother knew they were good.” Gisella’s lips quivered. “It was her dream to see them fabricated.” She gazed at the ship with wonder. “And they have. Her dream—” Her voice broke.

  She turned to Oghul, pressed her face against his chest. He strapped his arms around her, partially concealing her as she sobbed. His strong gerel wouldn’t want others to view her that way.

  He didn’t want to view her that way. Panic swelled within him. Had he made a mistake? Would she have preferred her mother’s dreams not be brought to life?

  “Zondoo.” Yesun expressed what he was thinking. “She’s crying.”

  The other males hushed the youth. The tone of the group turned somber. Everyone was concerned about Gisella’s reaction.

  Including himself. “Was I wrong to do this, gerel?” Oghul murmured into her hair. “I never wanted to hurt you. You’re a part of me.”

  She was the best part.

  “You weren’t wrong to do this, you big barbarian.” She slapped his chest.

  Her response eased some of the tension inside him. He had been trained to deal with violence, preferred that to weeping.

  “My mother wanted her designs fabricated. It was all she ever wanted.” His gerel looked up at him. Tear tracks ran down her cheeks. “That you did this for her—”

  “I did this for you.” He brushed the wetness off her skin. “We did this for you.” Now that he knew she liked the results, he shared the credit with his entire team. “It took the efforts of all of us.”

  “You made my mother’s dream come true,” she whispered as though she worried relaying that truth louder would make the ship disappear. “Oh, Oghul.” She leaned against him.

  “I’m not sure, but I think she likes it.” Yesun stated that conclusion. Loudly.

  “She cried.” Qulpa shook his head. “She doesn’t like it.”

  “My sisters sometimes cry when they’re happy.” The youth argued back.

  “She likes it.” Oghul put his males’ minds at ease.

  “I love it.” His gerel turned within the circle of his arms. “Thank you.” She addressed the warriors. “This means the universe to me.”

  “I knew she liked it,” Yesun crowed, lifting his arms in victory.

  The rest of the males smiled, their stances relaxing.

  Gisella gazed up at Oghul. “When I first met you, I believed a female could either have love or her dreams. She couldn’t have both.” She grasped his hands. “You showed me I was wrong. Love doesn’t require giving up our aspirations. It means achieving them.” She glanced pointedly at the ship. “And more together.” She leaned against him. “I love you, barbarian.”

  “I love you, gerel.” He kissed his lead medic soundly.

  # # #

  If you enjoyed Dark Cure and would like to receive updates on characters plus a notification when Dark Arsenal, Vicuska’s story, becomes available, sign up for Cynthia Sax’s monthly newsletter at http://tasteofcyn.com/2014/05/28/newsletter/

  Keep in touch with Cynthia using the following links:

  Website: CynthiaSax.com

  Newsletter: Taste of Cyn newsletter

  Facebook: cynthia.sax

  Twitter: @CynthiaSax

  Blog: TasteOfCyn.com

  Other Books by Cynthia Sax

  Refuge Series

  Dark Thoughts

  Dark Flight

  Dark Strength

  Dark Fire

  Dark Warlord

  Cyborg Sizzle Series

  Releasing Rage

  Breathing Vapor

  Being Green

  Crash And Burn

  Defying Death

  Chasing Mayhem

  Jumping Barrel

  Hers To Command

  Ghost of a Machine

  Seeking Vector

  Knowing Zip

  Taking Vengeance

  The Cyborg’s Secret Baby

  Releasing Rage - Excerpt

  Kralj, the hero of Dark Thoughts, appears briefly in the Cyborg Sizzle series. Here is an excerpt from Releasing Rage, the first story in that series.

  * * *

  Joan pressed her hands against the exterior wall panel of his chambers. The thick metal door slid open. She stepped into the firewall square. The door behind her closed and she authorized the interior door to open.

  A buzz swept over her. No, not simply over her. Into her. She gasped, her inhalation of air drawing more of this unknown presence inside her.

  It was too much, almost suffocating. Joan swayed, lightheaded. “Do not faint. Do not faint,” she repeated to herself, closing her eyes.

  The rolling under her feet gradually stopped. She opened her eyes and wished she hadn’t. Crimson spray covered everywhere she looked. Gore was splattered into the farthest corners, hanging from the ceiling. Cleaner bots scrubbed the walls and floor.

  This was why she felt dizzy, she reasoned. She smelled and sensed this butchery.

  C899321, the being she had been told was responsible, stood in his uploading dock, a cable inserted into his nape, his towering form naked, covered with blood, his long black hair dripping with it.

  He turned his head, locked his gaze with hers and she sucked in her breath. There were worlds of agony, of rage, in those bright blue eyes. This was no rational, logic-driven cyborg. This was a man, an animal, crazed by bloodlust and pain.

  “They thought to pacify me with the use of a human female?” he thundered, his deep gravelly voice clawing across her skin, awakening parts in her she didn’t realize slept. “I’d kill you before I allowed you to touch me.”

  This insult didn’t hurt her the way he’d intended. Joan knew she wasn’t the slim tiny female males desired. She was solidly built, good breeding stock, as her mother had once said.

  She discarded his words and focused on the torment in his tones. He hurt. Horrifically. Her fingers twitched, the urge to reach out to him, to comfort him, tremendous. Judging by the flex of his powerful biceps and thigh muscles, by the anger radiating from him, he wouldn’t appreciate that response.

  He also wouldn’t listen to any command she issued. A reprimand, verbal or physical, would add to his hostility. Some being had already tried to restrain him and failed. The reportedly unbreakable wrist and ankle cuffs attached to the frame of the uploading dock had been shattered, rendered useless.

  Joan discarded four solar cycles’ worth of theory on how to handle malfunctioning cyborgs, realizing now that the academy experts knew nothing.

  Her late father, however, had taught her how to deal with wild beasts.

  “I would never touch you without your permission.” She lowered her gaze, showing submission, recognizing C899321 as the dominant male he was. He’d seek to harm any aggressor, to protect himself and his territory. If she wasn’t female, she suspected she’d already be dead.

  “I also would never hurt you.” Joan stuffed a
couple of cleaning cloths into her pockets and dropped to her knees, into a puddle of red. The moisture soaked through her flight suit. “I’m here to serve you, to clean you.”

  She slowly crawled forward through the liquefied remains of the previous engineer. Having lived on an agri lot and spending the last solar cycle in the waste processing chambers, guck no longer fazed her.

  “You don’t want to be dirty.” Joan kept her head bowed, her voice calm and soft. “That would interfere with your mechanics.”

  She filled the silence with a flow of reassuring words, telling him she meant him no harm, that she was there to help him. Joan kept her gaze lowered, concentrating on his feet. He stood with them braced apart, preparing for an attack, ready to defend himself. His feet appeared human except much, much larger, his metal frame concealed with skin. When not covered with blood, that skin would be gray.

  The current J models could pass for human, designed not to frighten the general population. The C models were clearly cyborg, from their giant stature to their unnatural skin tone. Some engineers found them to be scary and primitive. Joan didn’t. She associated C models with safety, with caring, with C345925’s unexpected act of kindness.

  Joan knelt in front of C899321. Her heart pounded so loudly, she suspected with his superior senses, he could hear her.

  Moments passed. She remained motionless, allowing him to look at her, to smell her, to become accustomed to the sound of her voice.

  He shifted his weight from his right foot to his left, signaling his readiness and she spoke. “I have a cleaning cloth in my pocket.” She held up her hands, showing him her empty palms. “Can I remove it?”

  She waited and waited and waited. He said nothing.

  “I told you I wouldn’t take action without your consent.” She wasn’t foolish. Touching a wild thing without permission resulted in death.

  “Yes.” His voice was impossibly deep.

  “Thank you.” Joan slipped her fingers into her pocket, slowly as to not spook him, and extracted a blue cleaning cloth. “I value your trust.” She opened the enhanced fabric, stretching it tight, allowing him to examine it. “May I clean your feet?”

  There was another long pause.

  “Yes.”

  “Thank you.” No male should have a voice like that, like an endless night filled with decadence and sin. She resisted the urge to wiggle her ass, her pussy moistening, her nipples tightening, and focused on her task, cleaning his ankles, heels, every toe, talking as she did so. The cyborg lifted first one foot and then the other, allowing her to swipe the cloth over his soles.

  The fabric sucked up the blood, rearranging the molecules into air. His skin was soft, warm, surprisingly scarred. Joan frowned. “Your nanocybotics must have been suppressed when you were damaged. There should be no marks.”

  She traced a long slash on his right foot. It was an old wound. “The enemy found a way to do this.” That alarmed her. This flaw in his defenses put her cyborg at risk. “Why wasn’t this development covered in any of the information bulletins I’ve viewed?” Engineers should be working on a countermeasure.

  “Are you mentally deficient?” His tone was harsh. “You must be if you volunteered to breed with a C model cyborg.”

  Joan gritted her teeth at his assumption about her role. “I’m your engineer, not a breeding female.”

  “You lie.” He snorted softly. “Your uniform is gray, not blood-red, and if you were truly my engineer, as you claim, you’d know my damage was inflicted by my previous handlers.”

  “I was positioned in the waste processing chambers. That’s why I wear a gray uniform.” Signaling to everyone her lowly status. “And why would a handler hurt you? Our job is to ensure you operate at optimal efficiency.”

  “Why would they hurt me? Because they’re cruel humans and I’m a disposable cyborg. Because I operated outside specifications. Because they wished to duplicate my kill rates. Do you need more reasons?”

  They’d experimented on him. She gazed at his toes, absorbing this knowledge. Blood had dripped down his legs, coating them with crimson once more. “May I clean your legs?”

  He sighed, his muscles flexing and releasing. “You clearly need to be told everything. I must be cleaned from the top down.”

  She knew that. “You’d agree to me cleaning your face?”

  “Do I have a choice?” His words were bitter.

  “Yes.” Joan looked upward, meeting his gaze. “You know how best to maximize your kill rates. Within these chambers, I serve you.”

  His eyes flashed with blue currents of energy. “Stop with your lies. I won’t believe them.”

  “You’re bigger, stronger, think you’re more intelligent.” She lifted her chin. “Why would I lie to you?”

  “I’ll test you, little engineer, and if you fail, you’ll die.”

  * * *

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  About Cynthia Sax

  USA Today bestselling author Cynthia Sax writes contemporary, SciFi and paranormal erotic romances. Her stories have been featured in Star Magazine, Real Time With Bill Maher, and numerous best of erotic romance top ten lists.

  She lives in a world filled with magic and romance. Although her heroes may not always say, “I love you,” they will do anything for the women they adore. They live passionately. They play hard. They love the same women forever.

  Cynthia has loved the same wonderful man forever. Her supportive hubby offers himself up to the joys and pains of research, while they travel the world together, meeting fascinating people and finding inspiration in exotic places such as Istanbul, Bali, and Chicago.

  Sign up for her dirty-joke-filled release day newsletter and visit her on the web at www.CynthiaSax.com

  Keep in touch with Cynthia using the following links:

  Website: CynthiaSax.com

  Newsletter: Taste of Cyn newsletter

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  Twitter: @CynthiaSax

  Blog: TasteOfCyn.com

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