Marauder Fenrir: Scifi Alien Invasion Romance (Mating Wars)

Home > Other > Marauder Fenrir: Scifi Alien Invasion Romance (Mating Wars) > Page 1
Marauder Fenrir: Scifi Alien Invasion Romance (Mating Wars) Page 1

by Aya Morningstar




  Marauder Fenrir

  Mating Wars Book 2

  Aya Morningstar

  Contents

  Copyright

  1. Fiona

  2. Fenrir

  3. Fiona

  4. Fenrir

  5. Fiona

  6. Fenrir

  7. Fiona

  8. Fenrir

  9. Fiona

  10. Fenrir

  11. Fiona

  12. Fenrir

  13. Fiona

  14. Fenrir

  15. Fiona

  16. Fenrir

  17. Fiona

  18. Fenrir

  19. Fiona

  20. Fenrir

  21. Fiona

  22. Fiona

  23. Fenrir

  24. Fiona

  25. Fenrir

  26. Aegus

  Preview of Book 3 - Marauder Aegus

  1. Anya

  2. Aegus

  3. Anya

  Join Aya Morningstar’s Sexy Shifters!

  More From Aya Morningstar

  Also by Aya Morningstar

  Want more sci-fi? Aya Recommends…

  About the Author

  Copyright © 2016 by Aya Morningstar

  All rights reserved.

  No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.

  Created with Vellum

  1 Fiona

  “All hands on guns,” Captain Manta shouts across the gunship.

  I fidget as the civilian ship floats silently into view. I bite my lip as my ponytail pops out from under the collar of my uniform. It floats up, rising above my head in zero-g. I take my hands off the turret controls to push my hair back in to my uniform, trying to adjust it quickly, before –

  “Airwoman!” Manta snarls at me.

  “Captain!” I shout, putting both hands securely back on the turret controls. “All hands on guns, Captain!”

  “Fucking useless,” he grumbles.

  The Martians have been using EMP attacks lately that shorted our ships’ electric and computer systems, and in response, Earth has started sending out old gunships to patrol the asteroid belt. A ship of this size with four turrets used to be fully run by one human pilot and a specialized A.I. But now there’s Captain Manta, and four of us lowly gunners, crammed into a ship the size of a small apartment building.

  Captain Manta is not pleased with this arrangement. He’s gone from commanding an advanced, state-of-the-art gunship, to being in charge of a cramped and sweaty flying bucket. Probably the only time I see him smile is when I’m changing my clothes–when I catch him leering at me.

  I shudder just thinking about his beady eyes, and my sweaty palms slip against the turret controls, but I don’t dare let go of them again.

  “Identify yourselves!” Manta shouts into his headset.

  He grumbles, then shouts to me. “Airwoman!”

  I’m the only woman on the ship, so I know that’s he’s talking to me.

  “Yes, Captain?”

  “The headset’s not working. Come fix it!”

  I’m the only one on the ship with a knack for repairing the older technology. It should work to my advantage and give me an edge over the others, but lately it only gives Manta more reason to order me around. And to get close to me.

  I remove my harness, kick off the seat, and float toward him.

  I brake against the wall of the cockpit, checking the hard-wire from the console where it connects to Manta’s headset.

  “No,” he says, “I think it’s on this end.” He points to his headset.

  I wait for him to remove the headset and hand it to me, but he leans back instead. I draw in a deep breath and check the connection where it hooks onto his headset. I have to lean in close to him. He smells vile–as all of us do with no shower on the ship–but it’s not the smell that bothers me, it’s his breathing.

  As I unscrew the cable, his breathing gets heavier, and his icy blue eyes seem to stare straight through me. A small grin creeps across his face.

  I finally get the cable out of the headset, and immediately I shrink away from him. I exhale, thankful to be away from him.

  When I check the cable, I can see it’s not only corroded, but bent.

  “Cable’s no good,” I say. “Captain.”

  I turn the knob on the console, and the voice from the approaching ship crackles. “We’re just passing through. We’re unarmed...but we have valuables on board. Maybe you can look the other way?”

  I point toward a button on the console, and nod to Manta. “Hold this to talk.”

  “Fix the fucking headset, airwoman!” he hisses. “This correspondence is above your security clearance!”

  The other three gunners shoot me knowing looks, but no one speaks up for me. They’re all assholes too, but next to Manta, they’re at least bearable to be around.

  “Captain,” I say, trying to keep the frustration from seeping into my voice. “It’s broken. If you gave me ten, twenty minutes I could fix it, but–.”

  He swats a hand at me and holds down the button. “I am Officer Manta of the Imperial Earth Space Force! Are you insulting me with a bribe?”

  I use the opportunity to push away from the console and float back toward my turret. Manta is in a sour mood, and it’s best to get away from him while I can.

  “No, no,” the voice crackles back in response. “Nothing like that. It’s just…we only want to pass through. We have no ill intent–.”

  Manta slams the button back down so he can issue a retort. “No ill intent? Tell me, where are you from?”

  The static cracks off, and there’s a pause.

  “Fucking cowards,” Benson mutters from the turret next to me. “Abandoning their home planet to go red.”

  Just like my sister Aura, I think. She would have come to Mars on a ship like this, smuggled in as a refugee. I got off Earth by joining the Space Forces, but every day I regret my choice. My sister made the smarter decision.

  The static cuts back in, and then the voice speaks once again. “Captain, with respect, we are trying to start a new life on Mars. We have no interest in joining the war effort. If you let the rest of these people go...I’ll join the war on your side. I fought in the invasion of Greenland, I know how to fight. The rest of these people are women and children, they just want a safe place to raise their kids–.”

  Manta cackles, but forgets to hold down the button. He slams it on mid-laugh, but he loses his breath and starts coughing into the speaker.

  “Captain?” the voice says. “Do we have a deal?”

  “We do not,” Manta says, and he lets go of the button.

  “Airwoman,” Manta orders. “Shoot them down.”

  “Sir,” I say, “he said they are mostly women and children, we–.”

  He slams his hand on the console and turns his chair to face me. Everyone else looks intently out their windows, leaving me to fend for myself. “This is war! Women can fight, or so I thought! Not all are as soft as you. And children? We were all children once! The bastards who bombed New Reykjavik, they were children once, too!”

  He leans forward and points to me. “Now, if you refuse the order, I’ll court martial you and make someone else shoot them down.”

  I cross my arms in defiance. “Court martial me then.”

  2 Fenrir

  My ship awakens, and so do I.

  There are finally two ships within range of my limited fuel reserves, and one l
ooks ideally suited for entry into the red planet’s atmosphere.

  My pod arrived before the other two assassins, but with limited fuel, I had to coast slowly toward a place with traffic, but not too much traffic.

  And now the situation is ideal. The pod’s computer informs me no other ships are anywhere within range, so I order it to initiate a small burst of acceleration.

  The pod jolts for a moment, and then it begins floating on an intercept course toward the two ships.

  One ship looks like a military craft, and it’s too large for atmospheric entry. I’m not interested in stealing it, but first I’ll need to get onboard and kill all the humans inside. Only then can I safely hijack the civilian shuttle without triggering any alarms.

  My pod is sealed and windowless, but the computer overlays the view from outside directly onto the pod walls, and it feels as if I’m naked and drifting through space.

  The two ships grow, filling my field of view. The pod makes micro adjustments to intercept the military craft.

  The humans’ technology is not far enough advanced to notice my approach. If they were watching for me, they might be able to see me, but they’re distracted as my pod latches itself to the outside of their airlock without difficulty.

  The pod’s wall slowly melts open and fuses itself to their airlock. I’ve used nearly all my remaining biofuel to move the pod into position, but my biosuit has just enough extra fuel remaining to make short work of any humans inside.

  The biosuit covers me, though it’s too drained to shield me from more than a few attacks. I will need it to melt partially through the small seal in the airlock, and once enough of my liquefied suit has seeped through, I solidify it on the other side of the airlock–like a third hand. I grasp the airlock with the biosuit, and pull.

  The airlock opens, and I melt my third hand back into myself. I open the airlock wide and float inside.

  Before I shut the hatch again, I order my pod to detach and disappear once I’m sealed back inside.

  I shut the hatch and seal the airlock. The pod detaches and floats away. There’s no going back now. I watch the pod float away...the last link to my race. The other assassins may not arrive for several cycles–if at all–and the full fleet is still two years away. If my biosuit were fully stocked with anti-matter, I might be able to move around in a vacuum for a few hours, but it wouldn’t be enough to get to a planet from here. I need this civilian shuttle.

  From the edge of the window, I see the shuttle float into view. Its engines are turned off, and I can only see it because of a faint glint of sunlight reflecting off its hull.

  Suddenly, a gaping hole blasts open on the gleaming metal of the shuttle, and black figures are sucked out into space. One. Two. Three. The shuttle explodes before more humans are sucked out through the hole.

  The explosion propels the humans who were sucked out farther into space, and I see their arms flail back and forth for a few moments, until they finally grasp at their necks and stop moving. They’re dead.

  I slam my fist into the window and roar. My pod is gone, and now the shuttle is, too. What good is the military craft if it can’t get me to the red planet and the traitor I’m meant to kill?

  I calm my breathing and consider my options. There’s little to do but kill the crew of this craft and do what I can with their ship. And the sooner, the better.

  I fuse my blade to my upper shoulder, then pull the hatch on the inner-door of the airlock.

  I enter what looks like a crew’s living quarters. The smell is alien and revolting, but under the thick blanket of that alien funk, I smell something else...something incredible.

  I sniff, but then the source of the wonderful scent shakes.

  There’s some kind of fabric bag attached to the wall, and the human inside is screaming and shaking. Is it really so weak that it cannot tear itself out?

  3 Fiona

  “O’Shea!” Manta says in a level voice. “Take her to the crew’s quarters and restrain her.”

  “Yes, Captain!” O’Shea says, undoing his harness. He pushes off his seat and floats toward me.

  I sit still with my arms crossed defiantly, and O’Shea grabs my shoulder and whispers. “It’s war, Fiona, we can’t disobey orders. Tell him you’ll do what he says and he might–”

  I tear off my harness. “I refuse the order! Do what you must, O’Shea.”

  He nods and pulls me toward the door heading to the crews’ quarters. The cockpit and the turret controls cover most of the ship, and the cramped crews’ quarters barely have enough space for three people to sleep, so we do it in shifts. Beyond the crews’ quarters is an airlock, but it’s small and used only for exiting into vacuum to do emergency repairs.

  There’s no brig of any kind, so the crew’s quarters is their only option to confine me. It’s better than getting thrown out of the airlock, at least.

  O’Shea opens the door to the crew’s quarters, and starts to shove me to move faster.

  “Fire! Airman!” I hear Manta shout, and then then the ship jostles as the turret fires its big railguns at the civilian shuttle.

  In the quiet vacuum of space, I can’t hear the civilian ship explode, or even feel the vibrations as they succumb to horrible deaths, but I know they’re gone.

  I resist O’Shea as he manhandles me into the crews’ quarters, and shout back into the cockpit. “You’re all fucking killers! War doesn’t justify murder, you–”

  O’Shea shoves me through into the crews’ quarters.

  I start fighting back, hitting him, but he gut punches me. Before I can even gasp for breath, he has shoved me into an equipment bag. He pokes at me, forcing me into a fetal position before he fastens the zipper on the top of the bag.

  When he closes the bag, it blocks out nearly all the light, and then I hear the sound of a lock and then chains rattling.

  Moments later, the door to the cockpit slams shut, and I’m trapped in near darkness.

  I hear nothing but my own heavy panicked breathing and cursing, and the sound of my body rustling against the confines of the bag. When I stop moving, the eerie quiet echoes in my head.

  I kick and shake, but the bag seems to be chained to a handrail. I try to pry open the top of the bag, but it won’t budge. At least there’s air coming through the material. I’ll get to breathe a while longer before they vent me out of the airlock.

  I keep struggling against the bag. I know it’s futile, but I’m not the kind of woman who just gives up. Even if I get out of the bag, then what am I going to do? The gunship has no shuttle, and no one will take my side in this disagreement. They’ll just restrain me again, but at least I’ll get a chance to take a clean shot at Manta. Preferably it will be a shot to his balls.

  I continue shaking, but then I hear something. It’s not the door to the turret room and cockpit. It’s the airlock.

  Could someone from the civilian ship have escaped undetected? But how would they have had time to suit up, and have the skill to break into our ship’s airlock? Putting myself in their shoes, why the hell would they walk right into the lion’s den rather than turn tail and bolt?

  The hissing stops, and I hear the bolts of the door squeak open.

  I shake and scream. Whoever has broken in, if they’re an enemy of Manta, I’m going to get their attention and help them. It’s my only chance to get out of here.

  I feel something pull on the bag, and I hear the chains rattle. Light floods in from above, and I look up to see the last thing I expected.

  An alien’s face.

  It furrows its brows at me, and despite its purple skin, the expression looks almost human. And it’s definitely a he. He has high cheekbones and strong brows. His face is all hard, confident, and angular planes, and his expression breaks into what almost looks like a smirk as he peers down at me. His expression oozes confidence, but there’s also a hint of curiosity and wonder.

  Then it speaks. In English. The accent is unlike anything I’ve heard before...the vowels are too
long and the consonants are clipped.

  “Press the bag out away from your body,” he says.

  I obey. Something in his voice makes me feel compelled to follow his orders.

  As soon as I push the bag out, something hits it, and light floods through just below my hands. I hear the bag ripping, and soon I see a sharp blade tearing through the bag.

  The bag breaks open and strong hands grab hold of me. I can’t even get a good look at him before he spins me around and shoves me, face forward, into the wall. He presses a muscular arm into my back and head, not to inflict any pain or damage, but hard enough that I can’t turn my head to look back at him.

  “You’re from the invading fleet?” I ask. “How could you have arrived so much--?”

  “Quiet! Female!” he rasps. “I ask the questions.”

  I struggle against him, but he pushes me more forcefully into the wall. “How many human males are through that door?”

  “Four,” I say. “I’ll help you–.”

  He flips me around, and I finally get a good look at him.

  He tilts his head at me, and I see that not only is his face purple, but he has bear-like ears on top of his head. Aside from the ears and purple skin, he looks...mostly human. But I feel my heart racing as I look down the length of his body, which is covered by some kind of skin-tight armor. It’s teal in color, and it hugs his eight-pack abs and all his other bulging muscles, leaving little to the imagination. The crotch armor has a huge bulge, and my own eyes bulge at that sight, but then I realize it must be purely decorative–exaggerating his masculine features–as there’s no way his cock could actually be that large.

  His ears pull back, and his head tilts. His nostrils flare, and he invades way too far into my personal bubble when he shoves his nose right up next to my face and inhales. He sniffs further and further down my body, and I feel...uncomfortable? I should be creeped out, but instead I feel my heart racing, and I can’t keep my eyes from admiring his chiseled body and beautiful face.

 

‹ Prev