Sacred Planet: Book One of the Dominion Series
Page 36
“Don’t! Please don’t!” He struggled to think, too numbed by shock. “My life for hers. Please. Let her go and kill me. Justice will be served better that way.”
“I don’t think you fully understand the concept of justice, my friend,” Guarin said as he tightened his grasp on Seraphina. “Let me teach you.”
She struggled against him in vain as he pressed the gun barrel against her skull.
“Let her go, Guarin!” a new voice echoed from across the chamber. Deep and rich—characteristic of a nobleman—and vaguely familiar.
Abelard turned to find another offworlder he recognized—Kastor—rushing toward them in a combat-ready stance, dripping wet in a half-charred nanoflex suit. Like Guarin, he held a glossy black rifle, aiming it at the Swan warrior. He paused by the fallen chandelier, face pressed against the stock of his gun.
Guarin’s eyes lit up when he saw the newcomer. He swiveled to keep Seraphina between himself and Kastor. His gun remained against her head.
“Ah, Kastor, my old sparring partner. I’m glad you made it, even if you’re a bit late.”
“Let her go, Guarin,” Kastor repeated. “I’ll end your life if you pull that trigger.”
Guarin let out a raucous, open-mouthed laugh. “I don’t give a fuck!” he exclaimed with vindictive joy. He shook his head. “I’m all out of fucks to give.”
“The Swan army has taken the palace,” Kastor said. “Upraad is in their hands. Release the girl and go join in their victory. Freyz will be pleased to see you.”
Guarin grinned and flicked his eyes up at the ceiling for a split second. “Swan’s victory is up there. Mine’s right here.”
“Your life is worth more than hers,” Kastor said. “I don’t believe you would throw it away so easily.”
Guarin squinted at Kastor, thinking. “Why did you return to Upraad?”
Kastor’s lips remained sealed.
“Why return to a planet as it’s being annexed?” Guarin asked. “Surely you didn’t expect to repulse a full-out attack. Unless . . .” His eyes widened with comprehension. “You had an ace on this planet left to play. Such as an heir of Radovan.” Guarin’s grin returned. “Zantorian sent you back for her, didn’t he? He sent you back to crown her queen. Block Swan through legality. Smart move. But it requires a living heir, doesn’t it?”
Kastor planted a foot forward. “In the name of the Grand Lumis, I demand you release her!”
“The chance to defy Zantorian only makes this moment all the sweeter.”
Abelard held out his hands pleadingly. Desperation gripped him. “Guarin, please! I beg you!”
Guarin’s eyes turned to Seraphina, his head pressed against hers. “What do you think, my lady? Shall we taste the kiss of death together?”
“Guarin, stop!” Kastor shouted.
“For Guerlain.” Guarin raised the combat rifle to make it level against Seraphina’s temple, and on the other side he kissed her cheek.
Abelard’s adrenaline slowed time. The moment crawled by as if caught in molasses.
The rifle blared deafening shots as it rocked back in Guarin’s hand. At the same time, both Seraphina and Guarin’s heads exploded in a savage spume of blood and brains and bits of skull. Bullets tore through bone and gray matter alike, ripping messy holes through ears and hair. Dark crimson painted the table and chairs in the path of the rounds.
Guarin’s arm loosened from Seraphina’s neck, and both bodies collapsed to the ground, sapped of life.
Kastor lowered his weapon. The gunshot reverberations quieted in the vast hall, but they rang on in Abelard’s skin, seeping into his bones. He stared in shock. Disbelief. Gripped in an utter daze. A lack of feeling or thought. A lightheadedness. A dreamlike paralysis. A nightmare.
The kiss of death had claimed two souls at once. His beloved sister was gone.
The Champion
Chapter Seventy-Five
The ground trembled under Kastor’s feet. Whether from a far-off explosion or his own imagination, he couldn’t tell. But his world had changed, that much he knew. His heart dropped to a depth lower than he’d felt in a long time.
Since Pollaena.
A once-beautiful girl sprawled on the ground beside Kastor’s greatest nemesis. Newfound cavities in their heads leaked blood and spongy, grayish clumps of brain. The flow of vitriol had ceased from the Swan warrior’s lips, replaced by an absolute and unalterable silence. Kastor felt no joy in Guarin’s death. No satisfaction. Guarin had stolen what remained of Kastor’s dignity. He’d shamed Kastor probably more than he knew. He’d made Pollaena’s death worthless. He’d made it impossible to wash her blood from Kastor’s hands.
There would be no recovery from this blow.
Abelard—face frozen in horror—staggered backward and slumped against a fauxwood table. He reached up to his temple with a trembling hand. Fingers slid down to his chin and stayed, half covering his slack lips.
Kastor stepped through the maze of tables and chairs and stalagmites to the bodies, looked down on Guarin, then Seraphina, and back at Guarin. The Swan had already taken quite a beating from someone else. It showed in cuts and bruises. A broken finger. Tattered clothing.
The bullets had gone right through his forehead, tearing a chaotic hole in the back of his skull. Seraphina’s face had been spared. Her eyelids still hung half-open, her jaw loose, that final moment of panic and terror faintly preserved in her features. Funny how fragile life was. A few small pieces of metal could snuff it out in seconds.
A blue light blinked in the neckband of Kastor’s suit. It had been blinking for a while, but he’d ignored it when he had more pressing concerns. Now those concerns were dead. He pressed the button on the outside of his neckband to turn his comm back on.
“—can’t make our way to you yet,” Gregor, the new drop team leader, said. “Maybe your input device has been damaged. If you can hear me but can’t reply, signal by switching your comm feed on and off.”
“Gregor, I can hear you,” Kastor replied. “Do you read me?”
“Yes! Yes, Master Champion, I read you. Are you alright? Your vitals tracker puts you down in . . . some big room by the river.”
“It’s the palace banquet hall,” Kastor said. “Yes, I’m alright. How many of us made it down?”
“Uh, elev—well, there are six of us now. That’s all that matters. We managed to get six clean kills and put on some Swan combat suits. We’re about to commandeer a shuttle from the landing pad. Once we have it we’ll find a place to pick you up. Do you have the princess?”
Kastor’s eyes flicked to Seraphina’s corpse.
“She’s dead.”
“Shit. I’m sorry, Master Champion. What do you want us to do?”
“Get the shuttle,” Kastor said. “Pick me up by the river. We need to slip through the blockade before Swan discovers I’m here. They probably think I stayed on the Aegis.”
“Yes, Master Champion. On our way.”
Kastor locked eyes with Abelard. For a long time, neither spoke. No words seemed appropriate.
“You should go,” Kastor said finally. “Swan troops will sweep every room of the palace.”
Abelard’s lips moved for a moment without forming speech. “Sera . . .”
Kastor inhaled a long breath. He and this halfblood bastard now suffered the same fate—lifemates taken from them far sooner than they should have been. Only Abelard’s lifemate was a half-sister, and Kastor’s was a lover. His eyes drifted to Guarin, and Kastor realized that the Swan warrior had tasted this bitter fate, too. Their mates had all perished by violence.
Kastor staggered when he realized another bond that connected them. Each of the four of them—living or dead—had killed nobility. Kastor had killed his beloved Pollaena. Abelard had killed Radovan. Seraphina killed Guerlain. And now Guarin had put a bullet through Seraphina’s head—along with his own.
A cycle of death, ending in death.
Kastor knelt over Seraphina’s body, grabbed her roug
h-woven shirt, and ripped a strip off the bottom, wide enough to cover her face. He wrapped the cloth around her head and tied it in the back. It hid the gruesome wounds well enough. Kastor slid his hands under her neck and knees and lifted. He noticed that her head felt especially light as he made his way to Abelard.
The Upraadi man straightened. His forlorn eyes watched Seraphina approach. Kastor eased her body into Abelard’s arms and stepped back. Abelard stared at the cloth that traced the contours of Seraphina’s face. He looked far older now with such deep lines in his forehead and cheeks. Aged by death and defeat.
“Go,” Kastor commanded.
He watched as Abelard hobbled away, Seraphina’s slender form pressed against his chest, returning to what little world he had left.
But if Kastor’s own life was any guide, even that would crumble soon enough.
The Lord General
Chapter Seventy-Six
Freyz held his folded cloak with one arm and took ginger steps across the battlefield, now quiet and still.
The mountains formed a rocky bowl, sloping to the downed spaceplane on the far side of the valley. Bodies still donning proud, white combat armor littered the uneven path downward. Well-placed shots had punctured their suit joints and left wine-red stains smearing chestplates and running down the rocks. Hundreds of Swan soldiers had come to rest in this valley, sacrificed for their lord. Only a few dozen still stood, lining the ridge or searching the smoldering plane.
Once at level ground, Freyz let his cloak fall behind his back to its normal length, no longer afraid of tainting it with blood. He couldn’t detect any more bodies in the field of boulders protruding up past each other like tombstones. Neither had he seen a single stalk of flora on this barren planet, nothing that could snag or soil his appearance. Soldiers needed a vision of glory after a hard-fought battle. As their Lord General, Freyz owed them that.
He leaped over a gap between rocks and walked into a new scene: metallic bodies, half-hidden behind their rocky cover, strewn around the wrecked plane. Mechanical hands and fingers and vacant black eyes. Machines in the shape of men and women. Broken and damaged parts—limbs, heads, armor pieces—were scattered amongst thicker plane debris. Burn marks and chips in the rock whispered of the battle that had taken place here. Whatever those machine-men were, they had not gone down easy.
A loyalite captain waited by the tail end of the plane. Freyz surveyed the gray craft, finding nothing of interest.
“Where is it?” he asked the captain.
“Up here, m’lord,” the captain replied. “You have to look at it from where I’m standing.”
Freyz stepped across the rocks and came to a stop beside the captain, breathing fast inside his breather mask. He dialed up the power so it would filter faster.
The captain pointed his black-gloved finger at the plane’s tail rudder, dust-coated and damaged from the crash. “It’s there, m’lord. Didn’t notice it at first. Looks like they painted over it.”
Freyz took a few strides closer, narrowing his eyes at the faint color peeking out of the gray. At first, he saw only a sphere, a few splotches of green and blue, a curve of gold. Then he made out letters: “TC.” The symbol became familiar—still lost in a haze of memory, but familiar. He’d seen it before, but where?
The realization cast a dark spell over him. It was obvious. It couldn’t have been anything else. His skin prickled in anger, tempered only by confusion.
“I can’t be sure, m’lord, but it looks like—”
“The Terran Confederacy,” Freyz said.
“That’s what I thought.” The captain stepped closer. “But what would they want with Lagoon?”
“It isn’t your job to ask questions,” Freyz hissed between clamped teeth, annoyed that he didn’t have an answer. “Hail the Cygnus. Tell them what you found. Lord Velasco will want to know.”
“Right away, m’lord.” The captain turned and headed back up the slope.
Freyz couldn’t tear his eyes from the symbol, painted over in a quick attempt to conceal its identity. The Terrans thought they could repel Swan’s attack, or at least that they could escape in these planes before anyone could get a good look at them. They thought they could act anonymously—interfere in foreign affairs and reshape the galaxy without consequence or identification.
Freyz made a silent, solemn oath to himself. He would find out why the Terrans did this, and he would make them pay dearly for their vile meddling. He would rain a deluge of death on Earth and any planet allied with them for their subversion.
He would teach them what came from opposing Swan.
The Scavenger
Chapter Seventy-Seven
Earth, at the South Levant Spaceport . . .
The cityscape of Jerusalem, shimmering and gleaming in the northern distance, inspired a bizarre mix of emotions in Davin. A rolling wave of relief tingled through his skin, but a deep-seated panic also simmered in his chest. Their swashbuckling adventure was about to end. Sierra would link up with her fellow Carinians and go home. War would be averted. The galaxy would breathe a sigh of relief and kick its feet up. Everybody would go back to business as usual.
And Davin could start making money again. At least that. His crew hadn’t gone this long without selling loot in a while.
His nexband vibrated. A vizchat call from none other than Ernie Kyger. His panic doubled. Davin pushed off the suspension bar spanning from the edge of the Fossa’s ramp up to the fuselage. He stepped inside the airlock and tried to channel a professional demeanor.
Ernie’s image beamed against a blank space on the wall. Same old Latino face. Same old salt-and-pepper mustache and goatee. He smiled vaguely, leaning back in his desk chair with the Dubai skyline outside the window behind him. Looked like his office was pretty high up.
Davin cleared his throat and spoke in a clear, even voice. “Hello, Ernie, this is Davin.”
Ernie’s face burst with joy as Davin came into view on his end. “Ha! It’s you! I don’t fuckeen believe it!” Same old amusing speech impediment. “Whadda hell are you doing on Earth, vato?”
Davin relaxed. Same old Ernie. “It’s a long story. I’ll explain it over drinks in a few days. Anyway, thanks for saving my ass with the Confed.”
Ernie waved it away. “They’re pesky, aren’t they?”
Sierra walked into the airlock wearing a gray peacoat down to her knees, cinched at the waist with a fabric belt. She had fresh facial tattoos again—colorful butterfly curls stretching from her jawline to her temples. She held her hands under her head as if displaying herself for Davin’s approval. A little smile crinkled her cheeks.
He saw a newfound calm in her eyes. A security. A sense of being just a few steps from home.
“Hey Ernie, listen, I gotta go,” Davin said, splitting his glances between Ernie and Sierra.
“Okay, okay,” Ernie said, leaning forward. “Before you go, just tell me this—serious question: you still pulling tens?”
Davin forced a laugh. Sierra gave him a face. “Uh, yeah, we’ll talk about that later.”
“Don’t tell me you’re out of the game, vato! You godda ball and chain around your ankle?”
“No, no, nothing like that,” Davin said, desperate to end the call. “We’ll talk soon.”
“Come down to Dubai!” His excitement grew every second. “I’ll introduce you to some girls that’ll blow your mind.”
“Alright, bye, Ernie!” Davin ended the call. The image on the wall blinked out. He didn’t even want to look at Sierra. When he finally did, he found her smirking.
The tatts made the twinkle in her blue-green eyes pop. “I think I see why you call him the ‘Sex Tiger.’ Sounds like you’re quite the tiger yourself.”
Davin let out his breath. No use trying to smooth it over. “Ernie and I . . . had some good times. He’s wild. When I’m around him, I just hang on tight and hope I wake up the next morning somewhere I recognize.”
Sierra’s eyes rolled as she shook her
head. Still kept the smile though. “I don’t think I could live that life.”
Davin felt a pang of shame. He couldn’t remember ever being around someone so pure, so genuine, so untainted by the dirty world he lived in. His eyes fled hers, resisting contact.
“I’m sorry,” she said. “I sounded like a prude just now, didn’t I?”
Davin pursed his lips. “Not at all. We come from different worlds. Different lives.” He managed to look at her again, examining Strange’s tatt work. A truly professional job. “Beautiful.”
Sierra’s lips twitched in a hesitant smile. She breathed a quiet laugh and took a step back.
“The . . . tattoos.” Davin pointed at her face. “Strange did a good job. Even better than last time, I think.”
“Oh, yeah, of course.” She exhaled. “She’s good. You should let her do your face sometime.”
Davin laughed. “You think so? Maybe some flowery vines. Big dragon lily on my cheek.”
“I was thinking more like one of those Scottish lions. Bright red.” Sierra stepped closer and touched a finger to his cheek. “One paw stretched out this way, then another going up over your eyebrow. The tail flicking out to your sideburn.”
Her fingers lingered on his face, just long enough to feel something, an openness where before there had been a barrier. A harmony, like guitar strings ringing the same note after hours of tuning. Tension unwound between them and fluttered away, dissipating into the air like steam. Sierra’s warm, sincere eyes looked up at him with no hint of pretense or agenda. Just the simple pleasure of being in his presence and laughing together.
But the moment stretched too long, and Davin hadn’t responded to her move—hadn’t reached out to touch her sides or made another joke to deflate the meaningful silence. He wanted to, and if she had been any other girl he would have. He’d touch her, pull her close, kiss her like he’d never kissed anyone before, let the real world melt away around them. But he didn’t. He froze stiff and did nothing. Why entertain the fantasy that his feelings could ever amount to anything? Why pretend that she wasn’t about to walk out of his life forever? Or that a girl like her and a guy like him could end up together anyway? Davin rummaged through wreckage for a living. Sierra was the prima filia of a galactic nation.