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Cat Star 03 - Rogue

Page 25

by Brooks, Cheryl - Cat Star 03


  Even so, the need for scent notwithstanding, I didn't see how any man, Zetithian or otherwise, could have ridden double on a drayl with Nindala and not wanted to screw her silly, whether she smelled right or not. I mean, she was beautiful, and she was naked, for heaven's sake! Trag had his hands resting on her hips and could have easily reached up to fondle her spectacular tits. There was only the sheet he was wearing between his cock and her ass, and, sure, we were running for our lives, but still...

  Experimentally, I shifted my weight backward and felt Tychar's hard cock pressing against my tailbone. You couldn't hide anything from those guys: if you were in the mood, they knew it, no matter how much you might try to deny it.

  "And when we reach safety," Tychar whispered in my ear, "I will do my best to make you very pleased that you chose me instead of my brother."

  If there was anything he hadn't already done to con­vince me of that, it must've been some minute detail that I'd never have missed. "I think you already have," I said. "But I have no problem with being convinced again."

  Leaning back against him with a sigh, I sincerely wished every dire fate anyone could imagine to befall Dobraton for making this trek across the desert neces­sary. I would have been waking up in my bed after a night of love with Tychar right about now if it hadn't been for her—the bitch! Still, her actions had made it possible, however unintentionally, for the two brothers to be free. It seemed ironic that they had been enslaved by a queen who had admired them greatly, but were sub­sequently freed by someone who would prefer that they had never set foot on her planet.

  By this time, Wazak had recovered from his bout of mirth and got us moving once again, and it was surpris­ing just how much better I felt. It hadn't been a very long rest—a couple of days wouldn't have been amiss—but a good laugh will often do wonders for morale.

  Purring softly, Tychar settled me against his chest, secure in his arms. His cock was getting wet, and I could feel it sliding up my backbone with every step the drayl took. I wondered idly if he would ejaculate at some point, and if he did, I wanted a taste of it; a little euphoria would have been nice after the kind of night we'd had. Maybe that would be what it would take to get Nindala interested in Trag. So far, I hadn't had the opportunity to explain to her just how fabulous my tigers were. She was stupid not to want Trag on sight, though—they were both irresistible! Then again, she had been admired by men all her life, and perhaps it would take more to sway her than it had with me. I couldn't begin to imagine why, though, because even the most jaded beauty would have to admit that they were devastatingly attractive—espe­cially Tychar.

  "Sleep now, Kyra," he purred. "And when you awaken, the desert will be behind us."

  Relaxing against my purring tiger, I fell asleep think­ing about what truly was behind me, and it certainly wasn't the desert!

  Chapter 16

  My dreams were wild and fitful as we rode on. One moment I was safe and warm in my lover's arms, and the next, I was watching Dragus ejaculate all over Dobraton. Then I dreamed that Trag was fucking Nindala for all he was worth, groaning as sweat dripped from his body, his balls slapping hard against her ass as he pounded into her. She was screaming for more, but he was all played out. When the inevitable happened and he lost his erection, she hissed at him like a snake and struck him full across the face.

  I awoke with a shout forming in my throat, but the mountains looming ahead of us terrified me more than any dream could have done. There were huge boulders among the foothills that could have concealed any num­ber of enemies, and the mountains themselves seemed to be closing in on us as though they couldn't wait to lure us in for the kill.

  "Spooky place," I said to no one in particular.

  "And to think, this is where I would have gone if I ever escaped from the palace," Tychar said grimly. "There isn't a drop of water anywhere."

  "The water is on the other side," Wazak said. "It is the mountains which stop the rains from reaching the desert."

  "Are you saying we have to climb over these moun­tains to find water?" Trag gasped in horror. "We'll never make it!"

  Despite the fact that they were acrobats and could have made mountain climbing look easy, the Edraitians began grumbling, too.

  "We do not have to climb the mountains," Wazak said patiently. "There is a tunnel through them, though it may be defended against us."

  "Well, that's just great, isn't it?" Trag said in a voice heavily laced with sarcasm. "We've somehow managed to cross this cursed desert and we still aren't safe!"

  "I thought there were mines," I said, looking around in bewilderment. "If that's the case, then where are the miners?"

  I had no more gotten the words out of my mouth than what seemed like hundreds of heavily armed Darconians emerged from behind nearly every rock—and there were a lot of rocks—completely surrounding us. No wonder I'd gotten so spooked! "The next time I feel like I'm walking into a trap," I muttered, "somebody be sure and kick me for going blindly forth."

  As I've said before, one Darconian looks much like another, and without uniforms to distinguish one sort from another, it's difficult to tell just who you're dealing with. I'd gotten better at recognizing palace guards by their insignia, but this was virgin territory as far as I was concerned. These could have been Dobraton's soldiers or the miners, either one.

  "Do not move," one of our captors shouted.

  As none of us had so much as blinked, this order was completely unnecessary.

  Moving closer, he added, "Throw down your weapons."

  "Great Mother of the Desert!" Trag mumbled as he pulled off the pulse rifle he had slung over his shoulder.

  "I finally get a gun and have to give it up before I've even had a chance to use it!" Tychar handed over his own pulse rifle, but since no one could see my own pis­tol, I opted to keep it right where it was until someone insisted that I give it to them.

  "Silence!" the Darconian shouted. "You, there," he went on, with a gesture toward Wazak. "What business do you have here?"

  Obviously, these had to be the miners, since it was a given that anyone in Dobraton's army would have opened fire on us without bothering to ask.

  "The Queen has been overthrown," Wazak said. "We have fled the city."

  "Scalia overthrown?" the man scoffed. "By whom?"

  "Dobraton," Wazak replied. "The Queen was assas­sinated last night."

  There was some muttering among our opponents fol­lowing that revelation, though I had an idea it merely confirmed some suspicions they already had. "Yes," the Darconian said, "Soldiers came yesterday in an attempt to take over the mines."

  "So, you're miners, then?" I asked impulsively, for­getting I should probably keep my mouth shut. "How did you escape?"

  "We did not escape, offworlder," he spat out con­temptuously. "We defeated them."

  "Oh," I said, duly impressed. "Cool! Think you could do it again?"

  Wazak threw me a look that said in no uncertain terms that I should shut up and let him handle the negotiations. Still, if Dobraton had sent soldiers to take over the mines, obviously this was why we hadn't been pursued, for, had her forces been victorious, we would have been captured and undoubtedly executed once we reached the mountains. She must not have sent enough, though, keeping the bulk of her force to take the palace. Her mistake...

  I wondered what else Dobraton had targeted and decided that the spaceport would have been my first choice, and, if so, there might have been others who had also headed for the mountains. "Are there any off­worlders with you?"

  In reply, a small group of men—who were obviously not Darconians—stepped out, all bristling with weap­ons. They were some of the scariest-looking guys I'd ever seen in person—and I'd not only traveled halfway across the galaxy, but I'd also met plenty of Darconians! Each one was decked out in weapons, boots, and bits of garb that had probably once belonged to soldiers in someone's army, along with plenty of scars and tattoos. Their dress suggested the military, but, unless I missed my guess,
I was looking at a band of interplanetary mer­cenaries—or arms dealers.

  "Oh, let me guess," I said wearily. "Gun runners?" So, that was how the miners had won out against an army! They'd been warned—and subsequently armed— by these guys. I wondered how many glowstones it cost them. "Always out to make a credit or two, aren't you?" I chided them. "What'd you guys do? Sell weapons to both sides?"

  One of them, presumably their leader, who was hooded and cloaked against the sun, stepped forward. From what I could see of him—and I could only see the lower half of his face at the time—he appeared to be at least partly human. What the other parts were, I couldn't have said, because he had a tail like a lion's that was twitching from beneath his robes with barely concealed anger, frustration, or irritation—or perhaps all three. He shrugged contemptuously and said with a smirk, "Which is why we always demand payment in advance. That way, it doesn't matter who wins."

  I thought it mattered a great deal—and, being off­worlders, it should have mattered to them, as well. It wouldn't have surprised me if Dobraton had bought weapons from them and then had them either killed or booted off the face of Darconia. But perhaps she'd tried, which might have been why, out of spite, they'd sold weapons to the miners.

  "Well, if you've already been paid, then why are you still here?" Without waiting for a reply, I taunted, "Aw, what's the matter? Can't get to the spaceport?"

  "And just who are you, woman?" he demanded an­grily. "The Queen's handmaiden?" Obviously he wanted me to shut up just as much as Wazak did. I happened to catch a glimpse of Nindala just then, who was staring at me as though I'd suddenly sprouted horns, obviously thinking that this wasn't the same meek little woman she'd met on the cruiser.

  I almost called him a sexist pig out loud, though I doubted he would have understood my meaning. Even if he had, I figured the worst they could do was kill me— but this was another of those times when I couldn't seem to keep my mouth shut. "Well, no," I replied, completely unperturbed. "Actually, I'm the piano teacher."

  Pushing back his hood with an angry gesture, the man glared at me with dark, flashing eyes. He was quite handsome, really; dark-skinned with high cheekbones and a sharp, aquiline nose. There was some sort of rune tattooed on his left temple, where, even from where I sat upon my drayl, I could see his pulse beating. This man might have been a ruthless weapons dealer, but things hadn't gone so well for him this time, and he was upset. It was probably unwise to press him much further, since the weapon he was holding looked as though it could have launched a missile and blown up the palace from where he stood.

  "The piano teacher," he repeated, as though he didn't quite believe me. "And just who were you teaching?"

  "The Queen's children," I replied.

  Nodding dismissively, his eyes then swept over our group, landing on Uragus.

  "One of your students, perhaps?"

  "Yes, and quite the little prodigy," I said proudly. "You should hear him play!"

  While the man didn't quite roll his eyes, he was obvi­ously not one who cared much for music. "What about them?" he went on, with a gesture towards the Edraitians. I waited for their manager to speak and then realized he wasn't with us anymore. He must have been the one shot down in the palace.

  It was Nindala who spoke up. "We are performers," she said haughtily.

  "Well, you certainly looklike you could perform," he remarked dryly, which prompted a rather forced laugh from his companions, who were obviously just as upset as he was by the recent turn of events. "And the others?" he added, looking pointedly at Sladnil.

  "We were slaves to the Queen," Tychar replied.

  "I see," he said. "And now you are free?" "Not really," Tychar admitted. "How so?"

  "Well, you're the one holding the bazooka," Tychar said reasonably. "You tell me."

  Tipping his head to one side, I could see that this guy was just about to decide to trust us and lower his weapon. "What about the Darconians among you?" he asked finally. "How do we know we can trust them?"

  "We are palace guards, loyal to the Queen and the remaining members of the royal family," Wazak said with a gesture toward the children. "Dobraton is now our enemy."

  The weapons dealer appeared openly skeptical. "Loy­alty can be bought, my friend," he knowingly. "That coup was an inside job."

  "Yes, and Dragus killed at least one of them," I piped up. "Well... sort of..."

  "My loyalty cannot be bought!" Wazak said angrily. "I was Chief of Security for the Palace." He sounded as if he might have said more, but stopped himself there.

  "And...?" our opponent prompted—obviously hav­ing felt there was more to it than that, as well.

  Wazak took a deep breath and stood up a little taller— if that was possible. "I was also the Queen's consort," he replied. "And these," he added with another gesture toward the young ones, "are my children."

  "Ah," the other man said, and though he didn't ex­actly lower his weapon, he seemed to relax his stance ever so slightly.

  Our captors might have relaxed a bit, but everyone else just about had a cow.

  "You're our father?" Zealon gasped in surprise. "I never knew!"

  "You were not supposed to know," Wazak said shortly. "It is... traditional, and also the Queen's wish."

  "Wow!" I said admiringly. "All six of 'em? Way to go, Wazak!"

  I could see he was having a very hard time trying not to smile. It was becoming increasingly clear that Wazak had disapproved of Scalia's slave boys on grounds other than the usual moral objections to slavery. He was un­derstandably jealous of them, but Scalia had been Queen, and there wasn't a damn thing he could do about it.

  Then I remembered that the Queen was dead, and Wazak had probably watched her die. "Oh, Wazak!" I whispered. "I'm so sorry! You loved Scalia, didn't you?"

  "That is no longer important," he said gruffly, but didn't bother to deny it. "What is important now is to protect the children."

  "Well, then," I said briskly, "the way I see it, there are two ways to do that. We can retake the palace and establish Zealon as Queen, or retake the spaceport and leave this planet."

  "Leave Darconia?" Zealon exclaimed. "We can't do that!"

  "Okay, then," I said with conviction. "We retake the palace."

  Our captor laughed. "What is your name, piano teacher?"

  "Kyra Aramis," I replied. "Hopefully soon to be Kyra—" Suddenly, I realized I had no idea—I didn't even know if the tigers had surnames. Twisting around to look at Tychar, I asked: "What's your last name?"

  "Vladatonsk," he replied with a wry smile.

  I stared at him for a long moment before I could speak. "You're kidding me, right?" I said. "Your name is Tycharian Vladatonsk?"

  "No, he's not kidding," Trag assured me. "You've never heard my full name, either, have you? It's Tragonathon Vladatonsk."

  "Great Mother of the Desert!" I exclaimed, feeling thankful that at least my first name was reasonably short.

  "While we're making introductions," the arms dealer said with an expression of amusement, "my name is Lerotan Kanotay." Lowering his weapon at last, he stepped closer to Wazak, holding out a hand. "And you are...?"

  "Wazak," he replied, shaking Lerotan's hand. "Just Wazak."

  "Thank God!" I said roundly. "The rest of these names are about to choke me."

  A murmur of laughter went through the ranks of the Darconian miners, who were lowering their weapons as well.

  "So, Leroy," I began. "Ever try to infiltrate a pal­ace?" Then I laughed as I remembered an important fact. "We've got the keys."

  "That would be helpful," he said, "but not required. And no, I have yet to try to infiltrate a palace."

  "Think you can?" I asked.

  Lerotan grinned delightedly. "Without question." "How about overthrowing a would-be queen?" Tychar put in.

  "No problem whatsoever."

  "Cocky fellow, aren't you?" Tychar observed.

  Lerotan shrugged. "I have been called that."

  "Don't happen t
o need a pilot, do you?" Trag piped up.

  "Not at the moment," Lerotan replied. "Our ship has been impounded."

  "I'm surprised that would stop a resourceful fellow like you," I said dryly.

  "Let's just say that's next on my list of things to do," Lerotan said. "However, if I get the rightful queen rein­stated, that problem will solve itself."

  "True," I agreed. "So, Leroy, are we friends now?" This might have been a bit of a stretch, but at least we were fighting a common enemy.

 

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