Marauder Kain: Scifi Alien Invasion Romance (Mating Wars Book 5)

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Marauder Kain: Scifi Alien Invasion Romance (Mating Wars Book 5) Page 3

by Aya Morningstar


  “I wanted to at least have a small break from fighting tooth and nail to survive. These last few weeks have been rough.”

  I shake my head. “Do you have any idea how rough it can get as a prisoner on Darkstar? No, you don’t, because no one has ever, ever, come back from being held captive there.”

  I see Felicia’s neck bulge as she swallows.

  “So as soon as that sexy skin-flayer gets back,” I say, “we press him, hard.”

  Felicia grins. “Maybe he’ll press you, hard.”

  I kick the back of her chair, and it tips forward on its pivot, dumping her onto the console.

  She starts laughing. “You asshole!”

  The airlock wheel starts to turn, and Kain bursts back inside.

  He drops the crate down onto the ground. “I have food.”

  Felicia and I nearly dive into the crate.

  It’s full of dried fruit, jerky, vacuum-packed curry, rice, chocolate…everything I’ve ever dreamed of while slowly starving the past few weeks.

  I tear into the chocolate and bite into it. I feel a crunch. “Oh, my, God,” I say, my mouth still full.

  “What?” Felicia says, tearing the chocolate out of my hands.

  I point at the bar. “Almonds!”

  She wolfs it down even more greedily than I was doing.

  Kain removes his helmet and bites into a stick of jerky.

  Felicia swallows the chocolate in her mouth, then elbows me. “Press him hard,” she whispers, then takes another monstrous bite of the chocolate.

  “Kain,” I say, looking up at him. “Can you tell us exactly what will happen once we are on Darkstar?”

  He furrows his eyebrows, and his ears pull all the way back. He doesn’t speak.

  “It’s going to happen whether you tell us or not,” I say. “If you tell us, we’ll at least be prepared. Escaping is going to require work on both ends– yours and ours.”

  Kain’s ears are still pressed back all the way against his head. Like a dog who was just caught tearing up a pair of shoes.

  “Come on,” Felicia says. “It can’t be that bad…”

  “The good news...,” Kain says.

  We both groan.

  “Marauders, despite their name, will not force themselves onto you.”

  “Wow!” Felicia says, elbowing me. “Great news!”

  I punch her arm.

  “However,” Kain says, “they will recycle you if you are not providing sufficient value.”

  “Gross,” Felicia says.

  “I have two questions,” I say. “First, what does ‘recycle’ mean, and second, is being a sex slave the only way to provide value?”

  “Recycle is self-explanatory,” Kain says. “You will be broken down in the bio-reorganizer, and your organic matter will be redistributed through our life support systems. So if you break, you get too old to work, or show you lack sufficient work ethic...you are recycled.”

  “They’ll eat us?” Felicia asks.

  “The reorganizer will break you down molecule by molecule, sometimes atom by atom, so there won’t be a you left for us to eat.”

  “Wonderful,” I say. “And my second question?”

  “The human slaves are a taboo subject on Darkstar,” Kain says. “It’s very hippo...I forget this word. Hippocratic?”

  “Hypocritical.”

  “Yes,” he nods. “It’s hypocritical. Darkstar’s stated mission is to eradicate humanity. Though in recent years, there’s been a push to focus instead on simply leaving. I stayed with Darkstar because I was in favor of leaving. But the ‘eradicate humanity’ idea is gaining fresh traction once again. So the human captives– many of whom are sex slaves– are...a contradiction.”

  “Fucking assholes,” Felicia says, leaning back in her chair.

  “Yes,” Kain says. “Sometimes they do that– only in the ass– to avoid the taboo of ‘mating with a human.’”

  “What?” Felicia shouts. “I was calling them assholes! Not–”

  “Oh,” Kain says, “sorry, that was likely too much information. But anyway, it’s not widely spoken of within Darkstar society. The prisoners are kept on Darkstar itself rather than on the two colony ships.”

  “What is the main difference between Darkstar and the ships?” I ask.

  “Uh,” Felicia says, “one is a big rock, and the others are ships? Seems obvious.”

  “Yes,” Kain says, “but Kara’s question is important. The ships orbit Darkstar, but the ships are total luxury compared to the planet itself. Darkstar is typically reserved for training soldiers, resource mining, and so on. Higher ranking officers, for instance, are stationed on one of the ships. For him to give into temptation and take a human slave, he’ll typically say that he is going to supervise training, or observe the mining operations– some excuse– and everyone will look the other way.”

  “So,” I say, “it sounds like rescuing us won’t be impossible.”

  “Rescuing you will not be impossible, though it will be difficult,” Kain says. “There are a number of issues...I will need to gain Darkstar’s trust enough to be given a biosuit, for one. If I had one now, I would destroy the approaching ship. But because they have biosuits, I don’t dare fight them.”

  “So take one off the rack once we get to Darkstar,” Felicia says.

  “While my father was still alive, I may have been able to easily gain access to one. But I have no idea what my position will be on Darkstar after all that’s happened.”

  “Maybe they won’t come,” I say. “Can you just ignore the signal?”

  “I already told them I was here with two prisoners,” Kain says.

  “You couldn’t have just,” I say, “like, not done that?”

  “They already heard your distress beacon, and they already saw me landing. Their scanners can detect that I’m a Marauder and that you’re two living human females. I needed to get them to believe I’m still on their side. It’s your best hope.”

  “How long do we have?”

  Kain looks at his wrist. “Only a few minutes more.”

  “Any final thoughts?” I ask. “Pieces of advice?”

  “Back to your question,” Kain says. “You can avoid recycling by providing value. Show a willingness to do manual labor, if you would not like to have sex, that is.”

  I try to swallow, but my saliva catches in my throat, and I end up coughing.

  “I can claim one of you,” Kain says. “Once claimed, it will be assumed we are fucking each other, and you will be seen as having value.”

  “Wonderful culture you have there,” Felicia says.

  “Claim Felicia,” I say. “She’s not well-suited to manual labor.”

  Felicia jumps to her feet. “I’m not going to–” She sucks air in through her teeth, looks at Kain, and shakes her head. “Ignore what I said earlier, about him being...damn it, Kara, I told you! You, should do...that.”

  “What language is she speaking?” Kain asks, cocking his head. “All the important words are missing.”

  “She’s saying that she doesn’t want to have sex with you,” I say.

  Kain narrows his eyes. “I see. I’ve had many human women on Venus offer themselves to me, but my friend Ramses taught me that I must wait for my true mate. Felicia...you are not my true mate.”

  “Well, I didn’t want to fuck you anyway!” Felicia says, throwing up her hands.

  Then Felicia starts to smile and looks at me with devious eyes.

  “Don’t,” I say, raising a finger.

  “Why don’t you claim Kara?” she asks. “Had you thought of that?”

  Kain grins and looks down at me. “I have indeed.”

  My face burns hot, and I look away. I can imagine exactly what Felicia’s face looks like right now, and I don’t even want to know how Kain is looking at me.

  “If you claim me,” I say, still looking down at the floor, “no one has to know what is happening behind closed doors. We can just plan the escape...we don’t have t
o...do anything.”

  “She does not want to have sex with me,” Kain says. “I appreciate your attempt to be my ‘wing man,’ Felicia.”

  Felicia bursts out laughing. “Where the hell did you learn that phrase?”

  “I often acted as wingman on Venus, at the peacekeeper academy. I helped many of my human friends get their dicks wet.”

  Now I burst out laughing. “Were they all playing a joke on you to get you to talk like that with a straight face?”

  “Talk like what?” Kain asks. “Human men’s dicks are not self-lubricating, so it’s a logical expression, as the vaginal fluids will–”

  “Jesus,” I say, cutting him off. “Please stop.”

  Felicia laughs again. “It’s awesome, he talks either like the biggest asshole, or like a biology textbook. There’s no in between.”

  Kain taps on the window, and we look outside.

  We see a blue glow of engine thrust in the distance.

  “I need to go meet them outside,” Kain says. “You’ll need to both pretend that I was not kind to you when we next meet.”

  “You weren’t,” I say.

  Kain kicks the crate. “Then I will take this food away.”

  “Come on, Kara,” Felicia says. “He saved our asses and brought us chocolate.”

  “Okay, fine,” I say. “You were kind to us.”

  Kain nods. “You are both welcome.”

  Then he grabs my hand, squeezes it, and locks eyes with me. “And you are especially welcome, Kara.”

  I feel my chest tighten, and my throat goes dry. My heart pounds hard against my chest, and a warm surge of adrenaline floods through me, sending all the butterflies in my stomach fluttering.

  “Uhh,” I croak out. “Okay.”

  He twitches his ears at me, locks his helmet on, and exits through the airlock.

  When he’s gone, Felicia says in a mocking voice, “And you are especially welcome!”

  I try to punch her, but she jumps back and laughs at me.

  6 Kain

  I stand outside my ship, fully suited up and ready to rejoin Darkstar.

  But my body is still alight. It’s aflame.

  Kara.

  All of those long nights acting as wingman, seeing others engage in meaningless ‘hook-ups,’ and all that time I abstained. I waited for the right one.

  So many Seraphim– human Marauder hybrids– are suffering. They’re turning toward Darkstar, because they want only to leave this place. They are restless and in pain. When a human and Marauder who are not true mates produce a Seraph, this is what happens. Marauders must take care to only commit to their true mate, and I doubted I’d ever find mine.

  Until now.

  I will claim her, and I will save her.

  She may not want to mate with me now, but she won’t be able to resist me for long.

  The Darkstar ship begins its final descent. The dust kicks up and plinks against my faceplate, but I stand tall and wait.

  I push the thoughts of my mate out of my mind, and remember my peacekeeper training. I need to convince them I am still loyal and still ideologically pure. I need to convince myself, if I’m to act the part.

  The ramp on their ship lowers, and two biosuited figures walk down the ramp.

  I recognize them immediately. It’s Senka and Raius.

  It’s been over a year since I was stationed on Darkstar, but before I’d left, neither one of these two had earned the right to wear biosuits. I am the youngest remaining pure-blooded Marauder, but Senka and Raius are also among the youngest– they’re barely over 30.

  I salute them, and they salute back.

  Senka’s teal biosuit turns liquid at the shoulder, and a tendril snaps out toward me.

  I don’t flinch. If he somehow knows I’ve betrayed them and wants to kill me– he’ll kill me. There’s no hope of fighting these two with biosuits.

  But the tendril doesn’t impale me,. Instead it slides into my suit’s computer, and then suddenly I hear Senka’s voice.

  “Kain! Son of Grius!”

  “Senka,” I respond in turn. “Son of Senka.”

  Senka’s family is not very creative with names, his brother’s name is Benka.

  “We thought you were dead,” Raius says. “But now we find you...with two fresh prisoners.”

  “Yes,” I say. “They are young, too.”

  Senka licks his lips.

  The tendril pulls back into Senka’s suit, but it has permanently altered my suit’s computer so I can still communicate with them.

  Raius clears his throat and scowls. I remember he was never one to partake in the human slaves.

  They’ve both been promoted, but I don’t know which one is more powerful. I can gain favor with Senka by seeming sympathetic to his appetites, but that will distance me from Raius. Until I know who holds more sway, I will avoid committing.

  “I was on my way back,” I say, “and their beacon was within range. I knew it was a mining ship, so my main goal was to take their haul.”

  “Good call,” Raius says. “We scanned and saw a lot of platinum. We’ll take it all.”

  “Why the hard landing?” Senka asks, voice skeptical. “Must have wasted a lot of fuel. I’d be surprised if there was enough left in that thing to get back to Darkstar.”

  Shit. I didn’t think they’d seen me land.

  “Everything on Atlantis went wrong,” I say. “All of our forces, Marauder and Seraphim alike, were wiped out. My father included.”

  Both Senka and Raius bow their heads, which buys me some time to think up a reason why I burned so much fuel to land.

  “That ship,” I say, pointing to my ship. “It’s from Earth. When I was going in to land, the computer realized the two women were facing imminent threat of death–”

  “So what?” Raius asks. “All we really care about is the platinum. And what good is a bunch of heavy platinum if you don’t have the fuel to get it back to Darkstar?”

  “Yes,” I say. “Exactly what I told the computer–”

  “I dunno’,” Senka says. “Two young human females will do wonders for morale.”

  Raius side-eyes him, and I continue my story.

  “I told the computer to strike a balance– conserve enough fuel to make it back to Darkstar, but get me down fast. It overrode my decision.”

  “Harmony,” Raius says. “We’ll have to blow that ship to hell on our way out. I don’t think she could fit on such a small ship, but who knows what she’s capable of. That fucking thing has always preferred humanity to us.”

  “It was designed by humans,” Senka says.

  I feel my stomach knot up. The ship’s computer is designed to help me with my undercover operation. I have an implant that links directly to the ship’s computer, and even if I were on Darkstar and it were docked on one of the Marauder ships, I could still communicate with it.

  Now it’s going to be blown to pieces. I could try to argue a case to keep it for examination, but then they might find my implant. I’ll have to let it go.

  “The humans were malnourished,” I say, “so I gave them a crate of rations.

  “We have plenty of space and fuel,” Senka says. “We can carry both their mining haul and the humans themselves.”

  “I know which you’re happier about,” Raius says.

  Senka scoffs, and gives me a look.

  “I should congratulate you both on your promotions,” I say, pointing at their biosuits.

  Senka swells up with pride, sticking out his chest.

  Raius pokes him with his finger. “Don’t puff up like that, Senka! We have nothing to be proud of.”

  “Why’s that?” I ask.

  “Darkstar is on its last legs. We need new blood, and now that you’ve told us all of the Seraphim we spent years recruiting were killed on Atlantis….”

  Senka cuts in. “Raius thinks we were promoted because we’re among the few Marauders that aren’t old and grey. They need Marauders in peak physical condition to fi
ght, and I know I fit that description.”

  Raius shakes his head. “Would you rather have a permanent post on the Darkstar ships, in a nice, spacious command room? And the power to order around Marauders and Seraphim in peak physical condition? Or would you rather have these biosuits, at the cost of those commanders in their spacious rooms ordering you around? They give you a biosuit, at the cost of you having to take orders. Which gives greater power?”

  The gears in my head start to turn. I am in peak physical condition. That means I’ll likely be given a biosuit, but it also means I’ll be a grunt they order around. I need the biosuit to have any hope of escaping with Kara and Felicia, but the “ordering around” could be a real problem.

  What if they order me back to Atlantis?

  I grunt, then say, “Either way, let’s get this cargo loaded up. I’m sick of this rock.”

  Senka laughs. “Let’s get you off this dark rock and onto another one.”

  7 Kara

  The airlock opens, and only Kain enters.

  “Kain–”

  He widens his eyes at me, and shakes his head subtly. They must be able to hear us.

  “Just let us go!” I say, in my whiniest, weakest voice. “We can just wait here, hope someone else finds us–”

  “Quiet, woman!” he growls. “We’re going to load you in first, and then we’re taking your mining haul.”

  Felicia looks like she’s about to cry when I mention her mining haul.

  “We only have one suit,” I say.

  “Well, put it on then!”

  “You first,” Felicia says.

  I roll my eyes and start to get back into the suit.

  No one moves to help me. “I can’t get it on by myself.”

  Kain crosses his arms.

  Fucking asshole. “Felicia, come on!”

  She sighs and gets back up, then holds the legs of the suit out for me to step into.

  When the helmet is finally locked in place, Kain shoves me into the airlock.

  “Asshole,” I mutter, as he seals the door behind me.

  As soon as the pressure equalizes and the seal is tight, the outer door starts to open.

  Two more Marauders greet me, and by “greet,” I mean that one grabs me by the arm and starts to drag me.

 

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