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Space Invaders

Page 30

by Amber Kell


  “Ready for a new adventure?” Kain asked.

  “I’m ready for you. That’s all the adventure I need.”

  Rave smiled at the truth of his statement. Life moved on, and he was going with it, full speed ahead.

  About the Author

  Jambrea wanted to be the youngest romance author published, but life impeded the dreams. She put her writing aside and went to college briefly, then enlisted in the Air Force. After serving in the military, she returned home to Indiana to start her family. A few years later, she discovered yahoo groups and book reviews. There was no turning back. She was bit by the writing bug.

  She enjoys spending time with her son when not writing and loves to receive reader feedback. She’s addicted to the internet so feel free to email her anytime.

  Email: Jambrea@jambrea.com

  Jambrea loves to hear from readers. You can find her contact information, website and author biography at http://www.totallybound.com

  Also by Jambrea Jo Jones

  Love by Design

  Wishing Star

  Tell Me Now

  Rayne’s Wild Ride

  Seeds of Dawn: Dreams

  Seeds of Dawn: Secrets

  Seeds of Dawn: Inequities

  Seeds of Dawn: Origins

  Seeds of Dawn: Redemption

  Seeds of Dawn: Absolution

  Alliance: Retribution

  Alliance: Salvation

  Alliance: Freedom

  Alliance: Reward

  Alliance: Annihilation

  Alliance: Avenger

  Dark Encounters: Dominate Me

  Dark Encounters: Feel Me

  Semper Fi: Magnus

  Semper Fi: Ben

  Saddle Up N Ride: A Fistful of Emmett

  Stealing My Heart: Stealing Michael

  Unconventional at Best: Operation: Get Spencer

  Unconventional in Atlanta: Where Tomorrow Shines

  The Borders War

  ONE BREATH, ONE BULLET

  S.A. McAuley

  Dedication

  To Katie and Elizabeth. So much Detroit love for you both.

  And to Amanda. Gifs, gummy bears, and gay love. You make me smile.

  Chapter One

  Year 2546

  The Dark Continental Republic

  I hated the heat of the desert.

  The mask on my face was confining, filling with the condensation of each breath I dragged into my lungs and forced back out in shallow gasps. The goggles over my eyes should have protected me from the yellow and grey cloud of Chemsense the Dark Continental Republic Army had unleashed on our battalion, but I could feel my eyes watering, the liquid gathering in pools that threatened to make my skin too damp to maintain the protective seal.

  I was on my knees and I couldn’t remember when I’d stopped walking. I wasn’t far enough away yet. The shouts of the DCR soldiers—and the sonicpops of their weapons as they picked off States soldiers—were muffled but still too close. My body tilted, and I planted my hands into the sand without thought. I collapsed into the dune when my right shoulder ground together, bone against bone, tendons ripping. I thought those DCR goons had only managed to dislocate it, but this pain was worse than that—a grinding impact of racking, vision-blackening pain that didn’t ebb even when I flopped onto my back and let my arm lie unmoving in the scorching sand.

  My mantra, pounded into me through years of training, repeated in my head as I consciously stilled my body.

  One breath.

  Inhale.

  Hesitation is my enemy.

  Solitude my ally.

  Death the only real victory.

  Exhale.

  A ferocious hot wind whipped around and over me, driving sand into my open wounds, like a million simultaneous pricks of a pin. If the wind kept up like this it was going to drive away the lingering cloud of Chemsense. And I needed the thick, toxic cover if I was going to make it over the dune and out of sight of the DCR forces.

  If I was going to survive, I had to keep moving.

  My body was drenched in sweat—mine and the ripe remnants of the soldiers I’d fought hand to hand. My ribs on the right side were crushed and with each breath I wondered if this would be the inhalation that sent a spear of bone into the soft, vulnerable flesh of my lung, collapsing it and killing me before backup could arrive.

  I ripped the transport chip out of the hidden pocket where it was sewed into my tattered uniform. My thumb hovered over the button as my mind warred with the instinct just to press it. But I couldn’t simply transport out of this clusterfuck. The transition would be too much of a shock to my mangled body.

  If I was going to succeed, I had to keep moving.

  The thought was all that propelled me. There was no desire to survive left in me. No want of more from life. It was my orders, my mission, that forced me to sit up, shift to my knees and stumble to my feet.

  My right arm hung loosely at my side. My firing arm. Without it I could never be a sniper again. And that should have been the least of my concerns, but I couldn’t silence the part of me that contended that death would be preferential over never shooting my rifle again.

  I staggered, then caught myself before falling again. The pain of my disconnected shoulder was almost too much to bear—a jolt of red, angry agony that sliced across my vision with each step forward. Silver droplets swam in my peripheral eyesight, a sign that my already throbbing head was on the verge of erupting.

  I trudged through the unending sand of the DCR desert because I had no other choice. To stop was to fail. And I didn’t fail. The sand felt thicker than the detritus of an American Federation riverbed. My feet sank deeper than into the suck of a United Union bog. I moved slower than the day I’d taken my first tentative steps off the hospital bed in the States when I was five years old and my legs had nearly been taken by the sonic explosion that had destroyed the only home I would ever know.

  And I knew this desert was worse than all of those places because I was dying.

  I was closer to death than I’d been in the People’s Republic of Singapore the night Armise took a blade to my throat.

  Armise.

  The name rushed through me like endorphins, heating my already boiling blood. I barely had enough brain cells left active and firing to stand, let alone move, but my hate for Armise fed me like a vial of surge emptied into my bloodstream.

  That I’d fucked him more times in the last year than I wanted to count didn’t matter.

  That there had been a part of me anticipating he would be on the ground in the DCR when I arrived was like a psychotic practical joke.

  He’d had the infochip I was seeking the entire time.

  It had been inches from my fingers when I drove into him last night. But he had waited until my soldiers and me were trapped in a standoff with DCR forces—sonicrifle to sonicrifle—to let me in on that vital piece of intel.

  I wouldn’t let him so easily get under my skin again.

  I might not have eliminated him, but I’d obtained the infochip I’d been sent to extract. And I’d taken Armise’s finger in the process. I choked on the laughter that bubbled up in my throat. Too bad the missing digit wasn’t on his firing hand.

  If nothing else, I would survive to kill him.

  Whatever this was between Armise and me ended here. Now.

  But even in my haze I was aware of how irresolute that promise sounded.

  I kept moving.

  Until I wasn’t anymore.

  Blackness overtook me in an uncontrollable instant.

  * * * *

  There were snippets of fading consciousness. Voices, all male except one—floating, flying—how was that possible?—hands, caresses—water, fresh not treated—fingers poking, exploring, and I was unable to protest or question their invasion. My throat was on fire, my tongue thick, desert dry and swollen. Then the distinctive beep of a hand held medical sensor. More voices, never speaking directly to me. Then pain. Singeing, harrowing, mind-imploding torment. I
tried to scream, but couldn’t make a sound. My chest burned from the effort. My body arched off the table—bed?—and then someone was there, at my side, plunging a needle into the curve of my arm. The medicine—surge or something else?—was cool water dousing the fevered burn. Inch by soothing inch, the elixir travelled through me.

  My vision swam as the medicine slammed into my consciousness and tried to drag me under. I fought to keep my eyes open, to see where I was and with whom. I no longer wore my goggles or my respirator. The air I dragged in between my parched lips was clean, free of the sickly sweet tinge of Chemsense or the choking thickness of urban pollution. I didn’t know if I was a prisoner or among allies, but I had to assume I was still in the DCR.

  The room was dark. The wooden walls appeared to bend and twist and then I realised it was my eyes that were moving, not the room. I didn’t know how much of what I was seeing was reality. Figures moved around where I lay, calming hands, hunched shoulders, unintelligible whispers and a cool brush of cloth across my forehead.

  Thank you, I had the urge to say. But no sound came out.

  A hand on my head, the graze of a coarser fabric on my cooling skin, and my eyes started to close.

  Then the wet rag was gone and I saw a bandaged left hand pull away, the fifth finger missing, and I knew for certain that I was hallucinating.

  I let myself slip into the darkness again.

  * * * *

  When I woke up I was alone in a white tiled room, the distinctive high of surge blasting through my veins. I was more than awake. I was alive—whole, I could feel the strength in the tension of my muscles—and immediately antsy. The need to move was palpable. I scanned the room. I was in a bed, wires and tubes snaking from my arms, which were pinned to the bed with beige cloth straps. Under the white blanket that covered me I moved my feet. They were tethered as well.

  I wasn’t in the DCR anymore, of that I could be sure. Only the States had medical facilities this advanced.

  Which meant that somehow I’d made it back home.

  I struggled against the bindings holding me to the bed and a man appeared at my side. I remembered his face but not his name. A doctor for the States. I’d seen him before for routine physicals. He was the one who had stitched Jegs’ slashed face back together after her rescue in Singapore.

  I stopped fighting the restraints when the doctor stepped back from the bed and eyed me. I swallowed and cleared my throat.

  “How long?” I croaked out. My voice was thick, it took effort to push the words from my lungs, up my throat and out of my mouth, as if I hadn’t spoken in a long time.

  The doctor worked at the bindings on one side then the other until my arms were free. “We’ve had you under for almost two months. We repaired your shoulder and ribs as thoroughly as possible. We tried to give you titanalloy ribs, but your body rejected the material quite severely. Regardless, they’re also healed by now.” He moved to my feet, throwing off the blanket and undoing the restraints there. “I wanted to remove your entire right arm and give you a synth, but Neveed refused to let me take it off.”

  I glared at the doctor and tried to sit up. Synthetic limbs, synths for short, were commonplace but having one would have eliminated me from active duty. At least someone had been thinking about the long term when I’d ended up here.

  Two months. I’d been out for two months.

  I ran my fingers through my brown hair. It was longer now. Not the shave job I’d had done for my mission in the blistering heat of the DCR. I moved my hands over my eyebrow, my lip and the shell of my left ear, counting the hoops and studs. All of my piercings remained. That, too, was probably the work of Coach.

  “How many made it out?” I asked as the harsh reality of my situation settled in.

  The doctor shook his head. “Only you.”

  I cringed. Fuck. Over one hundred Peacemakers had gone into that village. But I was used to losing soldiers. It happened every mission. This particular mission had one goal though, and it was the battalion’s job to make sure I achieved it.

  “Who has the infochip?” I asked.

  The doctor’s face went blank. Unreadable. “I don’t know,” he replied, and I could tell his answer was a lie.

  I ground my teeth together. If all those soldiers had died and I hadn’t made it out with that chip I was going to have hell to pay. “It did come with me, right?”

  The doctor started removing the wires from my arm. “It’s here. But you didn’t hear that from me. Now sit still. I know you want to move. That’s normal. But you’re not getting out of this bed unless you comply.”

  I narrowed my eyes at him and held out my left arm, pleased to see it didn’t shake with the effort to hold it still. “What else do you know?”

  The doctor pulled the IV needle free from the crook of my arm and put a bandage over the drop of blood that appeared. He crossed his arms and stepped back from the table. “You’re going to have to talk to Neveed.”

  I snorted. Yeah, right. Coach was the last person I wanted to talk to after sending me to that hellhole that I’d barely survived.

  “How did I get here?”

  “Can’t answer that one either. A whole lot about you is classified.”

  I lifted my right arm, testing my strength. I’d definitely lost muscle mass but that would be easy to replace. Months at the most to regain my full strength. It would have taken years for me to adjust to a synth.

  “Go ahead,” the doctor instructed. “Rotate it around. Your shoulder is not going to be as strong as you remember. It was too badly damaged and you were away from care for too long. But I think you will see an almost full recovery. Not that it matters quite as much as anymore. They have called a truce.”

  My eyes met his. “To the war?”

  The doctor frowned. “What else is there?”

  I shook my head and dismissed him with a wave.

  That the Borders War had been waged for three hundred years and was finally over was of little consequence to me. I knew there would be celebration—a citizenry grateful to its leaders for ending the strife that had wiped four hundred million people from the planet. But their joy was premature. Unfounded.

  I steeled myself. It didn’t matter whether the Borders War was over or not. My mission, the one I’d been preparing for my entire life, hadn’t ended with my acquisition of the infochip. It wouldn’t end with a truce. And whether anyone wanted to believe it or not, I knew the real war was only beginning.

  * * * *

  It was another two years before active combat finally stopped.

  The world was in the midst of a tenuous peace. After three centuries of brutal fighting, and the territorial lines of our world under constant shifts, the treaty—signed by the five leaders in the crumbling parliamentary building of the United Union—was hesitant at best. Fury still simmered just below the surface.

  With peace came more strife. This time in the rebuilding. In the awakening that was the aftermath. As if the world was collectively blinking the dust from their eyes, seeing their existence for the hell it was and finally realising how inequitable our society had become. An undying will to break free was barely restrained by the governments of the five countries that had been the victors in the end—if anyone could actually be called victorious in a war that had wiped out half of the world’s population.

  I was just one lightning strike in the gathering storm.

  In the time since the States had gained possession of the infochip I’d nearly lost my life over, the encryption hadn’t been broken.

  The information it was fabled to contain couldn’t be verified, let alone studied. And it was these details that were coveted by every government.

  So my superiors sent me after the only man who could be definitively tied to it.

  Armise didn’t seem surprised to see me.

  Maybe it was because he was in Bogotá. Of all the places in the world, he had to be in the city where I’d first met him.

  The city was different than
the last time I’d been here. No longer as war-torn, no longer as destroyed. There were signs of rebuilding. The American Federation had emerged from the war stronger than anyone had anticipated.

  I remembered a Bogotá of crumbling ancient architecture. But Armise sat in a cafe that could only be called modern and genteel. Wire tables and chairs outside of a low angular metal building. A glass vase of spring flowers sat in the centre of the table. Armise was sipping from a white cup that looked ridiculous in his massive hands. But even that couldn’t belie his aura of power.

  Passersby gave Armise a wide berth for good reason. The man’s inscrutable face was scarred with marks that ran across his temple, and down his cheek. There were slashes on his jaw and neck I had given him. Then other marks I only knew the stories about from classified files. His frame was mammoth in comparison to the diminutive thinness of the citizens surrounding him. In the distance, the mountains surrounding the city towered high above the cranes that projected from the skyline.

  His left hand lay on the table, that missing fifth digit a reminder that should have brought disturbing and angry memories to the forefront, but instead made my lip twitch in a smirk.

  He wasn’t yet thirty years old but silver streaked from his temples. He wore a plain grey sweater against the lingering chill of winter. It clung to him. To his broad shoulders. He was bigger than I remembered, as if time had attempted to diminish him in my memory.

  Bogotá was a cloud-covered city that rarely saw sunshine, but the sun blazed in the sky, dissipating the pollution haze that hovered above every major city touched by war. I was sure the only reason for the blinding brightness was to mock me. Because I shouldn’t have felt as drawn to Armise as I was walking to that table.

  The feet of the chair screeched on the concrete as I pulled it out and settled across from him. My expression was flat, disinterested, when every nerve in my body was on edge. Armise was just as outwardly calm. Which was normal. And it shouldn’t have mattered that I knew that, but it did.

 

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