by Kate Rudolph
The Detyen settlement. For some reason Doryan had forgotten that Dekon had been working on the very same place he was due to report to in a few days. Since Doryan and Manda had arrived, Dekon had spent several weeks in New York working on getting the settlement set up, and then he’d spent even more time traveling to spend news of the place. He’d thrown his heart into it, or so Brax said, and from the dawning smiles around the room, his family was happy to see it succeed.
“We’re having a preview for a few days before the grand opening next week and you’re all on the guest list. Can you make it?” He looked at his older brother with big eyes. Even Doryan could read the hopeful emotions he was exuding.
“Of course,” said Shayn. “We’d be happy to come.”
“I’ve been ordered to report to the settlement,” Doryan interrupted. He didn’t know what possessed him to do it, but it seemed like the right moment. They were talking about it, at least. “Captain NaPyrsee wants to speak with me. I’ll most likely return to the Legion once we’ve met.”
“Or you’ll be retired,” Vita muttered.
Manda sucked in a breath and looked at him like he’d betrayed her. Doryan didn’t know what to say. It was true. Death was a likely outcome from the upcoming meeting. Soulless Detyens didn’t have long lifespans, and his was already longer than most. He’d once told everyone just what his future might entail, and no one had been happy about it.
But there was nothing he could do about that.
“That is a possibility,” he agreed, “but I’ll be evaluated before the Legion makes any decisions.”
Manda pushed up from the table and Deke called after her to stop, but she didn’t listen. No one seemed to know what to do next, so Doryan quietly finished his food before excusing himself. He found Manda sitting in her room, the door cracked open a slice as if she knew he’d find her.
“You’re going to die,” she said when he stepped in.
“Everything dies,” he replied. What was he supposed to say?
Manda pulled in a deep, shuddering breath and her eyes shined with unshed tears. “How can you just say that?”
Doryan lowered himself onto the little stool beside the door. This wasn’t a conversation to be had standing up. “I’m different than Shayn and Brax and Deke.”
“Duh.” The eye roll must have hurt.
Whether Manda wanted to hear this or not, Doryan had to get it out. He was determined to make her understand. “I made a choice a long time ago, one that extended my life long beyond what I should have been allowed. And now I might be at the end of my time. If that is the case, you need to prepare yourself.”
“The end of your time?” Manda narrowed her eyes. “You’re old, but you’re not old old.”
“When you have a minute, ask about the denya price.” He didn’t have the capacity to explain it to her.
“You are coming back,” Manda said, like her determination could make it so. “We are going to find my parents and then you’re going to meet them and keep being the weirdo who keeps me safe, got it?”
His heart would have clenched if it could have, and Doryan didn’t know how to respond. So he just nodded and sat silently while Manda told him about the future he couldn’t have.
HER IMPRESSION THAT the Detyen settlement was a summer camp continued when Amy stepped out of her rented vehicle and onto the gravel of the parking lot. There were wooden cabins smattered along the tree line and the whole placed smelled green.
It was nice.
A change of pace. But she was going to be screaming to get back to the city if she was stuck here for too long. She’d never been a country girl.
A door slammed and a man’s voice carried across the handful of spaces separating them. “Let’s get this over with so we can go home. I don’t see why we need to spend the weekend here. I was supposed to be hosting that barbecue.” He seemed to be around Amy’s age with sun-kissed skin and hair starting to go gray at the temples. Human. And another city dweller, given his suit and his aversion to the camp.
“Peter, you’re more than welcome to leave after the photo-op, but I’m going to enjoy my weekend.” The woman was a little younger, with long blonde hair falling down in waves and a perfectly made up face.
Politicians. Living in D.C. she could smell them from a mile away.
And when Peter spotted her all of the frustration melted from his face, replaced by a calculated smile. “Good afternoon, lovely day,” he said, projecting happiness.
Not just a politician, a campaigning politician.
“That it is,” Amy agreed.
“Peter Marino,” he offered, “and my wife, Linda.” He nodded towards the blonde, who was now all smiles as well.
“Amy,” she offered. She pointed up the path. “I’m meeting someone. Hope you have a good weekend.” She hurried away from her car, forgetting to even grab her overnight bag. Oh well, she’d get it when there wasn’t a risk of being pulled into a conversation about road repairs or whatever Peter might pitch as why he needed her vote.
She didn’t actually have a meeting, but Peter and Linda didn’t know that, and she did need to get a feel for the place. She sucked in deep breaths of fresh air until she was practically drunk on it. She never noticed how polluted the city was until she was outside of it. Not that it was bad, but here it was just clean.
Something squelched under her foot and she could feel mud soaking through the cloth of her shoes.
Ew. Okay, not clean. Just a different kind of dirty.
“Are you okay?” a man with greenish-blue skin and dark marks peeking out of his black shirt asked. Some of the skin of his neck was discolored and scars climbed up his face. One of the Detyens she’d heard so much about. “We had a bit of rain last week and there’s plenty of mud to go around.”
Amy eased her foot out of the mud and was happy that she didn’t leave the shoe behind. “Nothing a towel won’t fix.”
He pulled one seemingly from nowhere and offered it.
“Thanks.” Amy wiped off as best she could and then looked at the mess of the towel and back to the Detyen. “Um…”
“It’s okay,” he responded and grabbed the dirty cloth. “I’m Reikal. Welcome to the settlement.”
“Amy. I was expecting to see more people.” It was beautiful outside, even with the mud, but she didn’t see anyone.
Reikal shrugged and looked around. “We’ve had workers in and out for the last few weeks trying to get this place ready. I expect by next week we’ll have plenty of visitors. And already I know a few of the homesteads are spoken for.”
“By Detyens?”
He nodded. “I think there might be one or two with human denyai.”
“Denyai?” She’d never heard that word before and her subdermal translator didn’t seem to know it.
“Fated mates,” he corrected. “Sorry, what brings you here?” He didn’t seem standoffish, but perhaps Amy was a bit of an oddity.
“Curiosity,” she admitted. She kept the desire for clients to herself.
“Penny can answer a lot of your questions. She’s up in the central lodge sorting out some details.” He pointed to a large building at the head of the path. “Should be unlocked, you can’t miss it.”
Amy thanked him and took off for the lodge. When she got there she expected a Detyen, so she was surprised to find a smiling human who looked right at home. “Welcome! I’m Penny. Can I get you checked in? Nicole’s supposed to be minding the desk but she’s disappeared.”
A statement like that might have disturbed Amy, but judging by Penny’s attitude, Nicole had a habit of not minding the desk.
Amy gave her the reservation info and Penny pulled it up before handing over a key. “Your cabin is just off the east path. It’s great, I kind of wanted us to take that one for ourselves, but we’ve got the house, so you’re in luck.”
“Us?” Amy asked.
Penny shook her head. “Sorry, my mind is all over the place today. My mate and I. And my sisters. This i
s our place.”
Mate. Okay, that made sense. Though the idea of a mate was strange and did something weird to Amy’s stomach if she thought about it too long. But it would be kind of nice to have a perfect match, handpicked by fate.
Before Amy and Penny could talk anymore boots tromped against the wood outside and the door flew open. Two Detyen men in uniforms walked in. Both stood straight as statues and one of them scowled hard enough that Amy was concerned his face would freeze that way. He gave her a once over before dismissing her and turning to Penny.
“I have a reservation under NaPyrsee. Captain. Of the Detyen Legion. This is my lieutenant, NaMasee.” He added the identifiers as if they would gain him perks.
This was who Amy was supposed to try and work for? He had at least one, if not a dozen, sticks up his ass and she got the idea he wasn’t too keen on humans. Not to mention the fact that he was a bit young to be a captain. She had to have nearly a decade on him. Then again, maybe Detyens aged differently than humans.
Well, nothing ventured. Amy sucked in a breath to speak but the man next to the captain stepped up and blocked her path.
“We were told Krayter NaMoren was in charge,” said NaPyrsee. His eyes flicked up and down, taking in Penny as if she might magically transform into the Detyen he expected.
“Krayter is my mate, we run this place together. His brother, Kayleb, is also involved along with his denya, Tessa.” There was no emotion in Penny’s tone, and Amy wished her luck. She’d try her hand with getting Detyen attention later.
Amy left the lodge. Now would be a good time to retrieve her bag and check out her room. She’d just made it back to her vehicle when a large van pulled in and parked on the other side of the lot. Four Detyen men, two human women, and a teenage girl all piled out. Three of the Detyens were teal, though lighter in color than Reikal, but it was the fourth that caught her eye. Burnished gold and practically glowing in the sun, with dark hair that looked soft even from all the way across the lot.
Her mouth watered and she wanted to close the distance between them and introduce herself. Hell, she wanted to climb him like a tree.
She closed her eyes and shook her head. What the hell? All that talk of mates and human/Detyen pairings had clearly gone to her head. She’d never been an alien groupie, but looking at the gold one she could see the appeal.
He looked across the way and their gazes locked. Amy was frozen in place. Would he walk over to her? Should she go to him? Was his skin as warm as it looked? Could she kiss him without introducing herself? Then he looked away and the spell was broken.
Damn.
Did Detyens have some sort of super power that made humans go all lusty? Her skin tingled and she pressed her legs together, just imaging what it might feel like to be touched by that guy.
Okay, she was going crazy.
She tugged her bag out of the trunk and spared a look over at the gold guy one last time, but he and his group were already making their way up the central path and he didn’t look back.
Chapter Three
DORYAN LOOKED FOR CAPTAIN NaPyrsee when he and the NaZades arrived at the settlement. Instead he found Lieutenant NaMasee, who informed him that the captain was busy. Doryan didn’t ask anything else and the Lieutenant didn’t give him any orders.
He joined the NaZades and Manda in the cabin they’d been assigned and saw that his things had been placed in one of the rooms. Deke somehow snuck in and flopped down on the bed. “All done with the captain?” he asked.
“He was busy.” Doryan opened his bag and began transferring his clothes to the small closet. He didn’t know how long he’d be staying, but that was no reason to let things get wrinkled.
“Then come join us for lunch,” Deke insisted.
“I shouldn’t.” He should have never let the NaZades get so close to him in the first place, but now that he was most likely hours away from rejoining the Legion or retirement he needed to pull away.
“Don’t make me send Vita after you, I’m pretty sure she has a collection of handcuffs and I do not want to consider their other purposes.” He shuddered.
Vita had once been a bounty hunter, but she’d spent the last several months on Earth with her newly discovered mate. Doryan didn’t know if she and Brax had plans to return to the stars, it wasn’t his place to ask. But having seen Vita in action he didn’t doubt her prowess.
“Lead the way,” he said. There was no use fighting when Deke got an idea in his head. And soulless didn’t fight… not outside of battle.
Lunch, it turned out, was not a simple family affair. Instead, the seven of them made their way to one of the larger cabins which was set up to serve a variety of food. It wasn’t crowded, despite the prime hour, and Doryan made note of his surroundings: two humans sitting together at a table near the corner, a mixed group of aliens and humans with two girls as young as Manda in the center of the room, a handful of Detyens sitting close enough to talk but eating silently, and another table full of humans looking at the Detyens like they might start something.
No immediate threats, and the captain and lieutenant were nowhere to be seen.
Food was laid out along a table and they helped themselves. Doryan chose what looked to be the most nutritious with the least amount of flavor. The soulless were discouraged from eating flavorful food lest it trigger latent and dangerous emotions. He could go through the entire of handbook of rules that governed soulless existence: no flavorful food, no strong textures, avoid sexual stimulus, it was all there and all intended to make it so that the soulless didn’t fall into dangerous habits that led to fixation.
Fixation got people killed.
It wasn’t a secret, not among the Legion. It was the unfortunate destiny that ended most of the soulless. They’d find something and it would latch onto their brains, and before they knew it they were violently clinging to whatever it was at the cost of all others. Innocent people died with the soulless fixated. Doryan would do whatever it took to make sure it didn’t happen to him.
Voices rose from one quarter, a human man and woman fighting. The blonde woman scooped up her plate and stormed out, leaving the man behind. The scarred Detyen he’d noted earlier walked out of the room a moment later; he wasn’t sure if he was following the woman or not.
Lieutenant NaMasee had a sour expression on his face when he walked up to Doryan’s table and noted who he was sitting with.
“NaVayn,” Lieutenant NaMasee greeted, “Captain NaPyrsee requires your presence.”
He knew he wouldn’t be able to escape for long. Doryan stood and nodded to the NaZades. He didn’t say goodbye, even if this might be the last time any of them saw him.
NaMasee led him out of the dining hall and down the path to another cabin. He opened the door but didn’t follow Doryan inside. NaPyrsee’s cabin was small, with a dining area off the kitchen that had been turned into an office and two closed doors, one, Doryan assumed, leading to a bedroom and another to a bathroom.
Doryan heard something squeak, like a door sliding open, but he didn’t know if the sound came from outside or the other room.
NaPyrsee stood and looked him over, keeping a healthy distance between them. The captain had never been comfortable around the soulless and he didn’t try and hide it.
“Doryan NaVayn, you survived. That’s surprising.”
Of anyone in the Detyen Legion, NaPyrsee knew Doryan’s circumstances best, but Doryan didn’t respond. There was nothing for him to say.
“You’ve been away from your duties for over a year. I could have you automatically retired for that, but I’ve decided that you should be subject to evaluation before such a decision is made.” He paused, as if he expected Doryan to respond.
Doryan remained silent. If he was going to ask anything, it would be why had the captain summoned him so far away from the Legion to have such a mundane discussion. But the soulless didn’t ask such questions.
“Meet me back here at midnight for your evaluation,” NaPyrsee conti
nued. “Then we will see if you are fit to be reintegrated into the Legion. If not, you will be retired.”
“Yes, sir.” If he’d still had emotions, Doryan would have described the deep pit inside of him as dread, but he’d given all that up a long time ago.
Would he pass evaluation? He didn’t know. He’d undergone it before, it was routine for soldiers like him, but there was no telling what evaluators were looking for at any moment.
When NaPyrsee dismissed him, he stepped out, careful to avoid the mud around NaPyrsee’s cabin, distantly noting that someone else hadn’t been so lucky and there were footsteps dragging through the muck.
On the path to his cabin he was alone and almost relieved. Almost, because relief was another thing he couldn’t feel. And one day he might admit that feeling nothing was exhausting.
The not-relief didn’t last for long. Neither did the solitude. Doryan nearly plowed into a woman heading towards another one of the cabins, but they both stopped just in time to avoid a collision. He’d seen her before, right when they arrived, and something about her had embedded in his memory. She’d pulled her long, dark hair back behind her but a strand had fallen out over her face. Her brown eyes narrowed as she took him in and her light brown skin had the strangest flush to it.
Had she been running?
It was none of his business.
“It’s you.” She breathed it out and then shook herself, the pink on her cheeks getting darker.
Doryan was frozen in the spot. Who was this woman? Why did his body want to step closer to her? Why did his hands ache to touch her? His stomach flipped and heat flashed through him. And the feeling traveled lower, bringing an impossible twitch to his groin.
He couldn’t be feeling anything. Not when he had an evaluation at midnight, not when a fixation could bring disaster.
But this woman.
“You’re one of the Detyens,” she stated and then her lips curled up into a false smile. “That was inane. Of course you are. This is a Detyen settlement. Apparently my brain is misfiring.” Her smile turned into something real. “I’m Amy Dalisay. This is a wonderful place. Are you one of the settlers?”