Bethany's Heart (Unearthly World Book 3)
Page 1
UNEARTHLY WORLD
BOOK 3:
BETHANY’S HEART
by
C.L. Scholey
TORRID BOOKS
www.torrid books.com
Published by
TORRID BOOKS
An Imprint of Whiskey Creek Press LLC
Whiskey Creek Press
PO Box 51052
Casper, WY 82605-1052
www.whiskeycreekpress.com
Copyright © 2014 by C.L. Scholey
Warning: The unauthorized reproduction or distribution of this copyrighted work is illegal. Criminal copyright infringement, including infringement without monetary gain, is investigated by the FBI and is punishable by up to 5 (five) years in federal prison and a fine of $250,000.
Names, characters and incidents depicted in this book are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental and beyond the intent of the author or the publisher.
No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
ISBN: 978-1-61160-780-2
Cover Artist: Vinessa Riley
Editor: Melanie Billings
Printed in the United States of America
WHAT THEY ARE SAYING ABOUT
GAME ON!
This is one married couple whose appetites for each other grow ever stronger with each passing year. They thoroughly enjoy discovering new ways to keep the spark alive and thriving. Allowing another couple to share in their fun only seems to increase the possibilities. Keeping the love alive is certainly not a problem for Mac and Jenney, which makes their escapades deliciously fun to read.
~ Coffee Time Romance
ENGULF – NEW WORLD BK 5
Abri is a strong female heroine. She didn't let deafness de-fine who she is. Raiden is a likeable guy. Why? Even though Abri is deaf, Raiden picked her for his female.
C.L. Scholey has done a terrific job of creating this futuristic romance series. We have action, romance, adventure & mystery all in 102 pages.
~ Romance Bookaholic Traveler
THE BRETHREN OF TAVISH – VAMPIRE COVEN BK 1
The Brethren of Tavish is a wonderfully written book. The characters are well rounded and bring you into the story as if you were really there. The story flows smoothly tying one part to the next. The plot is well thought out, giving you plenty of action...
~ Night Owl Reviews
Other Books by Author Available at Torrid Books:
www.torridbooks.com
Game on!
Enslaved
Timeless Witch
New World Series
Shield
Armor
Impenetrable
Apparition
Engulf
Guardian
Vampire Coven Series
The Brethren of Tavish
A Vampire to Watch Over Me
Vampire’s Embrace
Unearthly World Series
Bay’s Mercenary
Zuri’s Zargonnii Warrior
Elements Series
Fire’s Flame
Viking Warriors Series
Constantine De Bohon
Valhalla Hott
Valhalla Wolf
Valerie Heat
Norse Valor
Viking Warriors Mega Book
New World Series Package Set – Books 1 to 5
Chapter 1
“If you had to pick an area to search why the hell did it have to be this area? We’ve been walking forever.”
Finn smiled at his companion who was brushing snow from his shoulders, chest and snowflake-dotted black pants. Clearly, with a blizzard beginning, Blu was engaged in a losing battle. Both warriors were over ankle deep in snow. Their thick dark boots were almost completely covered. The material inside the boots kept their feet warm and dry in the cold. It was the same material their black pants were made of. The clothing was a favorite among warriors in their sector. The fabric was durable, flexible, fire retardant, water resistant; impervious to any type of attack, but most importantly it was designed for a warrior’s large weight and height.
“Most of Earth is under water except the frozen areas. You saw it yourself from the ship as we slid over the terrain.”
Finn repressed a shudder, as he had witnessed from the bridge of their Zargonnii vessel a small island in the middle of nowhere, suddenly sucked under. He could almost hear the noise as it slid beneath the surface, the shoreline seemingly dragging and kicking its way down. Trees waved as though pleading for help. The lone volcano erupted in chaos, crumbling as the lava oozed down its sides.
The ocean gripped the island without mercy, the water churning, bubbling, then settling. Leaving no trace it ever existed aside from the few pieces of debris left aimlessly floating in any direction the current took them. Finn had shuddered off a feeling of the hand of evil. It was as if the world was living for one purpose—destroy, death by drowning.
“Humans aren’t exactly amphibians, they can swim but they don’t live in the water,” Finn said.
Hands on hips, Blu stared up at the sky where dark surreal clouds billowed ominously, rolling, an evil twin to the ocean, or a mirror of mimicry. Grey was Earth’s eternal heavenward cover. A blanket of despair for lives chilled within a bed of disaster.
“Do I need to remind you I’m a Southern Zargonnii?” Blu grouched.
“Blu, you have no sense of adventure.”
“I’m a mercenary,” Blu replied with a great deal of sarcasm, a flourish of his arms, then snorted and batted his face when a snowflake flew up his nose. “I live for adventure, I’m built for adventure.”
“Embrace your new adventure.” Finn spread his arms wide indicating their surroundings.
The white substance beneath their booted feet crunched. Finn knew what snow was. He had tasted it, smelled it, played in it, yet this was an ice haven. Every direction was a sea of white endless nothingness. Icebergs rose in the distance, the wind whistled in a desolate fashion. Ship sensors had indicated a number of heat sources. They had to be coming from something in this mess. Titus, leader of the Southern Zargonnii decided with all of the frozen tundra, a human should be easy to discover.
For this mission, Finn and Blu wore a homing device secured to the outside of their boots. A tiny black button which was undetectable. The presence of the homing device was a clear indication of the level of their mission—dangerous. The mother ship wanted to remain in contact at all times. The war within the universe was progressing; sides had been drawn between the many factions in the different galaxies. The mind-battling Gorgano were gaining ground in some areas and becoming bolder with new allies. The Zargonnii found it hard to mind battle, leaving them vulnerable; theirs was more a brute strength. Titus wanted his men safe. One of the main reasons Titus was interested in human females was their ability to kill the Gorgano mind fighters. This mission, if successful, would give the Zargonnii an advantage—human females weren’t simply a wanted commodity by a few warriors, they were weapons.
The warriors’ surroundings were oddly quiet despite the whistling wind and with the exception of the sound of thick snow and ice underfoot. Finn was used to noise on his planet and many of the others he visited. This planet was so lifeless and empty…sad. Expelled heated breath hovered in the air, exclamation points of testimony the warriors were air-breathing, warm-blooded aliens. Finn gazed left then right, uncertain which direction to take. Titus indicate
d heat sources in either course. If they remained standing where they were, they would accomplish nothing.
“Pick a direction and move your feet,” Finn muttered out loud. The deep baritone of his growling voice was out of place amidst the vast white emptiness.
Simultaneously, the warriors turned, each in a different direction, took two steps, turned and with exasperation Blu changed course to follow Finn. Finn chuckled his amusement at Blu’s low growl of annoyance. Once they were astride, their pace increased, both equally matched in speed if not height, Finn was a few inches taller when in battle mode. They were both strong seasoned warriors, ready for anything. When the ground beneath them shifted, both males stopped and adjusted quickly to remain standing.
“The ground moves,” Blu said.
“It’s the water under the ice, it’s shifting. A dangerous place to be.”
As he spoke, the ice creaked and a huge crack formed in front of them, breaking the ice, slithering across the snowy surface. The large piece of ice slipped away with water swirling in its wake. The rumbling of the ice reminded Finn of a death cry. The warriors changed course slightly until the ground beneath their feet remained solid. In the distance, jagged hunks of ice bobbed and weaved in a come-hither motion. Finn’s gaze wandered and he realized this part of the earth was as doomed as the others. Soon the vast frozen land would be covered in water.
Off in the distance were large mounds of snow resembling the north Zargonnii homes. Rounded, white, strong in appearance. Finally, something and hopefully someone. As they drew closer, the mounds appeared smaller than what Finn had first speculated. There were many rooms in a Zargonnii home, high ceilings, backyards which kept out predators. Finn highly doubted the ice chunks were as strong as a pelt and bones of a massive cyron beast the Zargonnii used on their lodgings. Cyrons were the strongest creatures on Finn’s planet, his sister-in-law referred to them as razor teeth rabid mammoths. As they approached, the warriors slowed to proceed with caution. Their large size and different looks would frighten humans to begin with; suddenly appearing would set any human into hysterics.
Zargonnii were mercenary warriors, enormous, powerful and fearless. Nothing frightened Finn; why would anything frighten him when he was walking danger. Finn’s red eyes could set an opponent to flames. When in battle mode, his fingernails were two-inch-long black talons; he was over seven feet in height. His snow white, thick hair was long; the tips which rested long enough to cover the bottom of his ass went wild in battle mode. The idea was to terrify an enemy, a trick that never ceased to take the opposition by surprise.
“Come out, come out wherever you are,” Finn whispered and cast a fast grin at Blu.
Come to me, human females, was what Finn was really thinking. His thoughts were illogical, of that he was well aware. Human females needed warmth; they were bald, tiny, defenseless. A human needed a place of lodging in this cold. Finn, on the other hand, could curl into a ball and be his own safe haven. He knew he was commanding, a strong warrior, a brilliant mercenary and healer, what he hadn’t known until recently dumbfounded him. Finn had been stunned to learn a few new things about his family’s past when he first discovered he had a brother.
Kobe had shown up on Finn’s friend, Zane’s, door with a human female, Zuri. Finn was stunned when he scented his mother on Kobe. It meant only one thing, they were related. It was unusual to say the least, having a brother from the north when Finn lived in the south. Finn was sorry to hear of the sad circumstances leading to their family’s separation and their mother, Unna’s, heartbreak.
Finn had learned he once had two sisters, but both died shortly after birth. In Unna’s devastation, his mother had wandered the continents. He learned the death of a male or female Zargonnii child was almost unheard of. To suffer two losses of two females was indescribable. His mother ostracized herself, unable to bear the looks of pity. Finn suspected it might have been unbearable to live with so many mothers with daughters.
Finn was under the impression he had no family. Mothers did their best to keep sibling males together; his mother was again devastated she had failed. It was why she stayed near Kobe and his mate and their babe.
Now Finn was missing his brother, his brother’s mate and their baby daughter. Finn had gotten a chance to spend some time with his mother, another rarity for the Zargonnii males. Normally once a mother left her son for his father to find, they were out of their lives and stayed out. Her fascination with her female granddaughter drew her attention. Normally female grandchildren stayed with the females in a pod. Unna had expressed gratitude her son’s mate was able to carry a female child and have it live. Finn’s mother’s curiosity and love drove her to protect her female grandchild. Kobe’s situation as well as his friend Zane’s was without a doubt different.
Human females were certainly making an impact in his world. Finn adored his tiny little niece, Unna. She was named after Finn and Kobe’s mother. Half human and half Zargonnii she was gorgeous. Her mother Zuri was breathtaking, but the baby was a mixture of both parents with their better attributes. Zuri had tangled once with the feared and hated mind-battling Gorgano which caused stunning capabilities in Unna. Her powers had yet to be tested as she was just an infant and being female her father guarded her closely. Zuri had once referred to Kobe as a rabid grizzly—whatever that was—when any warrior came near the babe.
It was time Finn found his own female human. Earth was still suffering from Mother Nature’s assaults, so he was told by his sister-in-law. He now experienced the devastation firsthand. Granted, the weather wasn’t as volatile as it once was explained, but as their ship glided over the planet Finn was astounded with all the water. So were the other Zargonnii and many asked Finn if human females had gills for survival. Finn had scoffed at the warriors and told them females could swim but weren’t adapted to be aquatic, much like he repeated to Blu. They had many shades of hair and a few had different color eyes but their bodies were pinkish white, soft and delicate.
If exposed to water too long, their human flesh would wrinkle. After careful research, Finn discovered prolonged exposure to water would lead to health problems; humans suffered from hypothermia when exposed to cold. Too much heat and dehydration would kill them. As much as they needed water to ingest to survive internally, too much externally was deadly. They were somewhat odd fragile beings.
The humans had tried to escape the planet’s wrath when storms hit with a vengeance five years prior, by heading out into the universe. Some hadn’t been lucky. Many were spread over the galaxies and many species were in a race to hunt them down. There was a rumor the fierce Dalanee warriors were after human slaves, both male and female. Woe be to any human caught by those warriors. With any luck the merciless, dark-winged warriors of Dalanee would stay in their own universe. Humans had become an endangered species. After witnessing the destruction of the planet firsthand, Finn was feeling a bit grim. Earth was a wasteland; it was a shame an entire planet had to die. Any human left would be desperate for a reprieve, even it was from an alien; it was Finn’s ace in the hole.
Hopefully his mission would be a success and he wouldn’t head home empty handed. Finn and Blu were given one week by Titus, a day had already passed. Each area of a known heat source in the frigid weather was being examined by a number of warriors. When they first orbited Earth, Titus found a highly populated area where fifty human men had set up. The Zargonnii were only interested in the females. The human men were fearful and didn’t understand the Zargonnii meant them no harm. They attacked with pointed sticks and rocks and a few weapons that sounded like the ice popping after discharge. Tiny little pelts bounced harmlessly off of the Zargonnii ’s hard flesh. Titus merely raised his eyebrow and told his men never mind. It would be cruel to slaughter them when they were defenseless; all looked small and hungry, too pitiful to engage in an honorable battle. The warriors wouldn’t waste their time.
The human men would discover the Tonans or Gorgano eventually; may the universe help the
m when they did. Perhaps the Castians would take pity on them. A Castian warrior could scent honesty and loyalty. Some of the human men might be spared. Castian leader Cobra wanted to increase their numbers. With the exchange of a blood bite a human male could be turned Castian. Titus had sent a quick message to the Castian leader with the males’ whereabouts; it was up to Cobra if he wanted to investigate. But the skies were volatile with the enemy near Bagron, the Castians main planet. Cobra might not want to risk such a venture after his warriors’ recent battle.
Finn dismissed his thoughts of Castians, he was after a tastier venture. Finn’s long white hair was molded to his back for warmth, he didn’t need a shirt. His white fur-covered chest kept him warm enough. Finn had always wondered at his hair’s ability to cocoon around him. When in battle, a warrior’s hair could whip wildly around making him appear larger than life. Normally that’s all it did. Learning the trait had come from his northern mother was a revelation. In the frigid cold his hair cocooned his back as well as flying about eerily. He always seemed to have more than his fair share of hair than his southern brothers, now he understood why. Though when he cast a glance to Blu, it didn’t seem his partner was suffering.
“We need to split up,” Finn whispered to Blu. “Go around back and make certain there are no hidden escape routes. I’ll go around this way to check this side. I see the one entrance low to the ground up here.”
Stealthily, both warriors searched their perimeters. Finn studied each large mound, what he saw indicated a lodging. Smoke spiraled up from two, suggesting some type of warmth. The third appeared broken, the top had caved in and it was empty. He decided to wait and see if anyone would exit from the other two structures. Finn didn’t like the idea of smashing into a home. The way the broken mound had caved in, Finn knew the walls wouldn’t stand an assault by a Zargonnii warrior. If he crashed into the structure, he might inadvertently harm a human. The ice lodgings were too flimsy, obviously made up of the substances surrounding him, but the chunks could cause damage if falling from that height and landing on an unsuspecting human. Killing a future mate wasn’t an option.