Punished by the Admiral
Page 4
Before she could protest, he stepped to the side of her and delivered the extra spanks, one hard slap on each of her naughty cheeks. She howled and jumped around on the flat stones, but this time she didn’t reach around and rub her backside.
“Are you going to be a good girl today, Lia? Or do I need to take you back in the house and give you a more thorough lesson in obedience?”
She gulped and her eyes went wide. Shaking her head, she said, “I’ll be good today, sir. I don’t need any lessons in obedience.”
“All right.” He nodded at the path ahead. “We’ll walk west today. I have a special surprise for you.”
She smiled, no longer appearing upset over her nudity or her stinging bottom. She’d always liked surprises. Every time he gave her a gift or took her somewhere without telling her where they were headed, she practically burst with excitement. “I love surprises.”
“I know you do.” He stroked the side of her face and kissed her forehead. “I have enjoyed our time on the island, Lia. We will come again soon.”
She grasped his hand and laced her fingers through his. “I’ve enjoyed our vacation too. Sometimes I get so busy taking care of Melanie that I fear I’m neglecting our relationship. There are days where we hardly get to say more than a few words to one another.”
He wrapped an arm around her and pulled her close. “You are a wonderful mother and a wonderful wife. You have never made me feel neglected. If anything, you give too much of yourself. That’s one reason I wanted to take this vacation. I wanted to see you relax for a change. You deserve it, my sweet.”
A bashful smile lit up her face. “Well, I’m glad that’s how you feel. You’re a wonderful husband too. I couldn’t imagine life without you. You are my heart, Cavvik,” she said, uttering the Varishan equivalent of I love you.
“And you are my heart, Lia. Always.”
They walked down the beach together until they reached a break in the tree line of the nearby forest. Cavvik urged Lia away from the waves that were lapping at their feet and up to the opening in the trees. From each side of the entrance, the trees curved overhead together, blocking out most of the sun.
“Where are we going?”
“You’ll see.”
She sighed and lifted her neck up, peering ahead down the dim path that was brimming with greenery and exotic flowers. Finally, the path ahead grew brighter and they came into a clearing where a waterfall flowed down into a clear blue river. Five yellow nikya birds were seated on a large rock in the middle of the river. They took flight when they noticed Cavvik and Lia approaching, disappearing above the trees in a chorus of caws.
“A waterfall!” Lia clapped her hands in delight and ran ahead. “I’ve never seen a waterfall in person before. It’s beautiful!”
Her excitement clearly pleased Cavvik, and he jogged to catch up to her. They both came to a stop at the edge of the river. The spray from the waterfall sent a cool mist over them, the tiny droplets clinging to Lia’s bare flesh, and the sunlight sparkled off each tiny droplet, making her look positively radiant as she stood next to him with a joyful look on her face.
“I was looking at a map of the island last night and came across this river and this waterfall.”
He ran a hand through her silky golden locks and kissed the top of her head.
“Thank you, Cavvik.” She smiled up at him. “Thank you for bringing me here.”
“Anything for you, my sweet.” He gave her bottom a squeeze and leaned down, putting his lips at her ear. “Now, go bend over that tree stump over there, spread your legs, and offer your pussy to me like an obedient little wife. I’m going to claim you over and over again until you can’t walk straight, until you are so exhausted from pleasure that I must carry you back to the beach house.”
“Yes, sir.”
The End
Bonus: Chapter One of Taken by the Admiral
Lia ran her hands along a crack in the corridor wall. A chill swept through the air and the overhead lights flickered. The constant power fluctuations and environmental control glitches didn’t bode well for the Constantina, the massive worldship that housed the last of the human race. She doubted they would survive one more attack by the Varishans, and the frequent sensor malfunctions made locating the nearest habitable planet difficult.
She paused at the dining hall entrance to peer out the expansive window. Stars sparkled in the vast blackness of space. Somewhere out there a blue-green planet similar to Earth had to exist. It was just a matter of finding it and hoping it wasn’t already occupied by an alien race, particularly a race as barbaric as the Varishans.
A shiver coursed through her and a sense of foreboding put a knot in her stomach. Were the warmongering aliens nearby, cloaked and waiting for the right moment to strike? She worked in the aeroponics center and didn’t have clearance high enough to view detailed information about the Varishans, but perhaps that was for the best. The rumors about them were the stuff of nightmares.
Lia’s roommate, Nicole, claimed the aliens derived a sick pleasure from torturing their enemies, often attacked without provocation, and forced all females captured during battle into sexual slavery. The rumors came from those in command positions who were privy to the captains’ communications with the aliens, and from the threats the captain said the Varishans made against the humans. It was said that each time the Varishans attacked, the captain had to surrender via a view screen. Her grandfather had spoken to the aliens before, had seen them on a view screen, and she shuddered at the memory of his description of the barbaric alien race.
She prayed the Constantina reached a lush, habitable planet soon, because she had no wish to discover whether or not the rumors held any truth.
A screeching groan from above increased her nerves. The hull had taken so much damage it moaned as they traveled full speed through space, desperately searching for a salvation that might be out of reach. The energy cells were almost depleted, and if they didn’t find a new energy source within the next thirty days, the Constantina would come to a standstill and all would be lost. Their situation had never been so dire.
“You’re up late.”
Lia turned at the sound of Nicole’s voice, then smiled and followed her roommate to a vacant table amidst the murmuring late night crowd.
“I can’t sleep.” She glanced over her shoulder and out the window again. The Varishans were out there, biding their time and preparing for one final attack. She sensed it. Maybe she’d gone completely paranoid, but she thought if she stared long enough, their ships might materialize amidst the stars. Red lights would flash and alarms would blare. The ship would rock under the impact of weapons fire as another battle commenced. She felt powerless to stop it, and frustration welled up inside her. To think the human race had traveled so far and lasted for generations on a worldship only to perish in the middle of space, decades after their ancestors had fled Earth… the possibility of such a profound failure wrenched at her heart.
“Something wrong?” Nicole stirred the soup on her tray with a look of disgust. The aeroponics center wasn’t producing at optimum levels, and what fruit and vegetables were harvested usually withered within days. Meals had become unappetizing and at times barely edible.
“They could attack at any moment.” Lia ran a hand over her braided ponytail. “I had hoped our generation would be the first to set foot on a habitable planet. My grandfather always promised it would happen in my lifetime.”
Nicole pushed her soup away and blew out a deep breath. “Your grandfather was an excellent captain. I wish he was still here.”
“Me too. I miss him. I just wish I knew what the Varishans wanted. They’ll leave us alone sometimes for years at a time, but then they’ll return and try to kill us all over again. I overheard my grandfather talking to my father about them once, and he claimed they’d offered to help us in some way, but my grandfather insisted they weren’t sincere and were likely trying to lure us into a trap. He said no alien should be trusted. Jud
ging by how many times they’ve attacked us, he was probably right. I mean, remember the first aliens the Constantina encountered after leaving Earth? The Branzians? The stories about them beaming aboard the worldship and trying to conquer us in hand-to-hand combat are horrific. We’re lucky to have prevailed against them.”
“All aliens are savages, Lia, and the Varishans are no different. They don’t want anything but the perverse satisfaction of our blood on their hands.” Nicole’s expression turned comforting. “Try not to worry, hon. You should get some sleep. You have an early shift tomorrow.”
“Tell me the truth, Nicole.” Lia leaned back in her chair, emotion tightening her throat. She felt like she was mourning the demise of the human race as if it had already happened. The premature grief weighed on her heavier and heavier as of late. “Do you think we’re going to make it? Do you think any of us are going to make it?”
The sorrow in Nicole’s dark eyes confirmed Lia’s worst fears. The ship was falling apart, the supplies were dwindling, and the crew had tried to mutiny three times during the last two weeks. The brig teemed with some of the most gifted science officers, security officers, and engineers. Captain Renard struggled to hold the remainder of the crew together.
“Yeah, me neither,” Lia said. “But sometimes I like to pretend we’re not doomed. I imagine I’m walking barefoot through a grassy field while the sun is beaming down upon me, and I imagine I live in a secluded cottage in the woods, like from a children’s fairytale book. I can escape there and be alone whenever I wish. The air is fresh and fragrant. Not stale and recirculated.”
The Constantina housed over ten thousand people, all descendants of those who’d fled Earth before the Errtazins arrived in their warships to claim the planet. Two other worldships had been under construction, but tragically, they weren’t space travel ready by the time humans had to abandon Earth. The aliens had given humans a five-year warning to evacuate, promising to annihilate all those left behind. To back up their threat, they had sent missiles barreling into New York City, Tokyo, Moscow, London, and Shanghai, demolishing all five cities and killing over one billion souls in a single day. Anyone who hadn’t left Earth on the Constantina was presumed dead, and only a tiny fraction had been lucky enough to be chosen for the voyage. Some had been selected through a lottery system, while others had been picked because of their scientific backgrounds.
Lia stared out the window. Blackness. Stars. Nothingness. It was all she’d ever known, but she yearned for more. She ached to experience a warm, sunny day on an exotic beach while listening to the ocean waves lap at the shore. She’d read about such places in books and watched nature documentaries from Earth, but oh, how she longed to experience it for herself. Surely there was more to life than gray corridors, tasteless food, cramped quarters, and increasing hopelessness. Blackouts occurred frequently on most decks, and in the hours between darkness and light, Lia teetered on the edge of madness.
“Another woman vanished during the last attack,” Nicole said in a hushed tone. “That makes it forty-five women gone missing since the Constantina first encountered the Varishans over fifty years ago. That’s why some crewmembers mutinied after the last attack. It was Security Officer Hendricks’ sister this time. He rallied his friends against the captain, and now they’ll all be in the brig for God knows how long.”
Curling one hand into a fist, Lia pounded the table, rattling the untouched bowl of soup. “We can’t just sit here and do nothing.” If only she hadn’t scored low on the command portion of the aptitude test she’d taken at age ten. Maybe she could’ve made a difference. Instead, she was doomed to work in aeroponics and remain in her quarters during an attack, per regulations for all nonessential personnel.
“We’re not sitting anywhere. The Constantina is traveling at full speed. Don’t you hear the ship groaning?”
Panic rose in Lia and she stood up, feeling disoriented. She met Nicole’s worried gaze. “I think I’ll go to bed now. I’m suddenly exhausted.”
“Sure thing, roomie. I’ll see you later.”
Lia longed to rush to the bridge and give the captain a piece of her mind, but she would only end up in the brig with all the other crewmembers who had crossed him. Like her father.
Tears burned in her eyes at the memory of his mysterious death in the brig. She suspected the captain had had a hand in it, but she had no proof. Her mother had called for an investigation, but she had been silenced too, passing away in her quarters one evening, along with several others on her deck, due to a carbon monoxide leak.
Sleep was Lia’s only salvation, because if she was sleeping she might have a wondrous dream of running through a grassy field, barefoot and laughing while the wind blew through her hair. In her dreams, she wasn’t a passenger on the Constantina, nor was she the orphan daughter of parents who had challenged the captain and lost. She hoped sleep came quickly tonight.
But the moment she reached the corridor outside the dining hall, the ship rocked with an earsplitting blast that threw her to the floor and knocked the wind from her chest. A second later, red lights flashed and the familiar sound of the alarm blared in her ears, a deafening noise that always filled her with dread. This time was no different. Her heart raced and she scrambled to her feet, holding onto a rail as she gasped for breath.
She attempted to navigate her way through the chaos and back into the dining hall, but she couldn’t glimpse Nicole through the panicked crowd. Science officers rushed to their stations and security officers attempted to establish order, but to no avail. Bodies rammed into her from all directions. The air tensed with paralyzing fear. Everyone assumed this was the end. The last battle. The last few minutes of human life.
Six Varishan ships loomed in the distance, blasting red beams at the Constantina. Lia staggered amidst the crowd, stunned. The ship shuddered and she heard the unmistakable sound of the particle accelerators powering up as the Constantina’s antimatter cannons fired one last barrage, but she knew the worldship’s weapons were no match for the more advanced Varishan ships.
The end. The fucking end.
She stared out the window and her insides trembled as another round of weaponry shook the worldship. Sparks flew above her and smoke filled the air, burning her lungs. The hull groaned louder.
Her arms and legs felt weightless and she looked down at her hands, confusion sweeping through her. Dark spots clouded her vision and her knees hit the hard, cool surface of the dining hall floor.
She inhaled deeply and floated away into oblivion, believing she had just taken her last breath.
* * *
Admiral Cavvik glared at the human captain on the view screen. The admiral snarled and leaned forward. “We gave you a map of the Varishan regions of space you are expected to avoid. Your toxic fuel emissions are tainting the atmosphere of two of our nearby colonies. Perhaps it is time the Varishans eliminate the humans. We have been far too lenient with your kind.”
“Please, no,” the pale-faced human known as Captain Renard sputtered. “We were trying to take a shortcut to survey a group of planets on the far side of this sector that show promise.”
“And you thought if you traveled fast enough, Varishan protectors wouldn’t intercept you?”
The captain’s wide, frightened eyes told all.
“Please, give us another chance, Admiral Cavvik. We won’t travel too close to your territories again. Please, er, take another one of our females as compensation for your troubles.”
“I already have.”
The captain paled further and started coughing. He covered his mouth and turned away from the view screen until he got his outburst under control. “Good. Now, please, if you’ll allow us to alter course, we will continue on our way and make an effort to avoid traveling too close to your colonies.”
“See that you do.” Cavvik slammed his hand down on the controls. The view screen went black.
Cursed humans. He was sick of their careless pollution of the regions his people called h
ome, and their refusal to accept the Varishans’ clean energy resources grated on his nerves. Captain Renard was just as paranoid as the captains who had preceded him. They all believed the Varishans’ offer of clean fuel was a trap.
“Admiral Cavvik, the human female is waking up.”
Cavvik turned and met Protector Reuz’s gaze. The rest of his men fidgeted at their posts and cast eager glances at the door. The human female had been transported into a room a short distance down the corridor.
Before Varishans destroyed a ship, they transported all their enemies’ females aboard and took them as mates, but during the times they merely had a minor battle with another ship, they only took one or two females as compensation. Many Varishan protectors had a taste for the exotic and thrilled at claiming alien beauties from faraway worlds, and the possession of an alien mate was viewed as a status symbol among his kind.
Human females were soft and petite, and many of his protectors hungered for him to command the destruction of the Constantina so they would each be given a human female of their own. But Cavvik did not wish to be responsible for the destruction of thousands of lives, even if they were human males. He’d seen enough death to last a lifetime, and the humans would soon exit Varishan territories for good.
He passed command over to Protector Reuz and stalked into the corridor, his blood pumping with the thrill of another battle won, even if the humans had surrendered almost at once. The puny creatures were lucky they hadn’t ventured into the Franlians’ nearby territories during their search for a habitable planet. The Franlians weren’t so merciful, nor would they spare the females and children of their enemies.
Cavvik, however, wouldn’t be around to witness the fate of the Constantina and her passengers. Once his fleet reached their home world, in ten days, he was retiring his command in order to work as an adviser for the rest of his days.