Authors: Bernadette Gardner
much influence did the alien now fused to his body have over
his actions?
44
Icarus Rising
by Bernadette Gardner
"Let's go inside," he said. "I don't want them to find me."
He didn't wait for her response, just whirled around and
stalked toward the entrance of his bungalow.
Zara watched his strong, confident strides. Minutes ago
he'd been unconscious, lying face down in the sand. When
she'd first realized the dark form sprawled on the beach was
him, she'd been certain he was dead. His body had been ice
cold to the touch and eerily still before he'd taken one
convulsive breath and miraculously come back to life.
Now he seemed completely recovered, physically hale and
mentally in command. If only she could believe it was true.
She'd witnessed his disastrous joining, and she believed, just
as Ray Danson did, that Caleb's ordeal was far from over.
She could have run now to the next bungalow. It would be
open since no one used locks on the island. She could call the
lab with the radio there, or she could merely take off on her
still-trembling legs and head down the paved road toward the
bulbous western end of the island where the lab buildings lay.
Instead she bowed her head and resolutely followed Caleb
into the hut.
Her first obligation was to him as her patient. He wanted
privacy and a reprieve from the questions and tests that
awaited him once Danson found out he'd returned. She had a
duty to give him what he wanted, what he needed, no matter
what the consequences for anyone else.
Though he still feared Zara would turn him over to
Danson, he was grateful that she didn't follow him
immediately into his bungalow. The hyper-aroused symbion
seemed to be pumping an endless stream of sex hormones
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Icarus Rising
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into his body, and urging him to mate with the nearest
female.
Not that Caleb hadn't thought about that very thing
numerous times himself since the day he'd met his sexy
socio-therapist, but what the symbion wanted wasn't a
candlelit dinner and a romantic stroll on a secluded beach.
The animal on his back wanted to claim a female, to take
ownership of a lifelong mate and impregnate her.
He wasn't sure how long he could fight the overwhelming
urge, especially if they'd continued to stand facing each other
in the cool night air. With her chest heaving from fear after
their short flight and her nipples straining against her tight
shirt, she looked, at least to his symbion's feral perception,
both ready and willing to be taken.
"Wrong. That's wrong thinking," he told his new and
constant companion as he rummaged through his small
storage area for a pair of pants. "We ...
I
cannot just jump on
her and have sex. It's not right."
"The female is aroused. Mating is necessary for survival."
"I know that. I know that's the whole freaking point of his
experiment, but Zara is not Icarian, and she's my therapist,
and a colleague, and she'll kick me in the nuts if I go after her
waving my dick like a crazed madman. So
back off
."
Caleb sat on his bed and jammed his legs into a pair of
shorts. Covering up at least part of his body gave him a little
peace of mind, though it did nothing to calm the anxious
symbion.
"The female is aroused. Mating is necessary."
"I said, shut up already!"
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Icarus Rising
by Bernadette Gardner
"Caleb? Who are you talking to?"
Zara stood in the doorway of the tiny alcove that served as
his bedroom. In the soft, yellow glow of the bungalow's
automatic lighting, she looked amazing. Her hair was
windblown and partially damp. It hung in ringlets around her
face. Barefoot, in shorts, she was all legs. Her pink lips parted
in a question, and her eyes held boundless concern, made
more urgent by his insane outburst.
Of course, what was normal about talking to a voice in
your head?
"Nothing. I mean, no one. I'm fine. I feel better." Being
partially dressed definitely helped. For the first time since the
joining, he felt human.
"Good. Do you want to tell me about it? What happened to
you this morning? Where have you been all day?"
"I'm thirsty." That had come from the symbion, always
concerned with bodily needs. "Yeah. I guess I am thirsty."
She gave him a suspicious look, as if caught off guard by
his half internal conversation. "I'll get you some water."
Clearly reluctant to leave him alone, Zara backed out of
the sleeping alcove and headed toward his food storage unit.
She never took her eyes off him, moving mechanically to find
and fill an empty water pod from the purifier. "Here, it's cold."
She handed him the plastic bulb, and he drank gratefully,
gulping the liquid as though he'd spent the day in the desert.
"You must be hungry too," she said.
"Not really. I should probably eat something, but not right
now. I need to think."
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Icarus Rising
by Bernadette Gardner
"You need to talk, Caleb. We need to understand what
happened today. Obviously the joining was agonizing for you,
and it shouldn't have been. That means something isn't right.
You need to see Dr. Danson and have your biochemistry
analyzed. We have no idea what's happening inside you, but
it could be very dangerous."
Caleb finished the water and sighed. He turned the empty
bottle over in his hands and tried to concentrate on the few
clear drops still rolling around inside the container rather than
the allure of Zara's slender ankles, her shapely calves, her
perfect thighs...
"Caleb?"
"I can't go to the lab, Zara."
"Why not?" She dropped to her knees in front of him, a
submissive posture that had his symbion practically slavering.
"Female! Take her!"
Caleb bit the inside of his cheek to distract himself from
the tantrum taking place in his brain. "Danson will want to
remove the symbion."
"No he won't." She offered him a faint, reassuring smile.
"You're alive. You're walking around. Sure something isn't
quite right, but once he understands where the problem is, he
can fix it."
"The problem is in
me
. I'm the reason the joining didn't go
right."
Zara put her hands on Caleb's bare knees. The contact
sent a stab of awareness through his body. His cock pulsed,
his balls tightened, and his symbion stirred, causing his wings
to ruffle. He shivered and pushed her hands away.
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Icarus Rising
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"You're in danger here with me."
"What do you mean? Caleb, we don't have secrets between
us. For the past year, you've told me every thought and
feeling you've had about this experiment. I've been with you
every step. Whatever you think is wrong, you can tell me."
Caleb hoisted himself up off the bed and quickly
maneuvered around Zara, who remained on the floor,
following him with her curious gaze only.
It had been a year of lies. More than a year, in fact. He'd
been fooling everyone, including himself, ever since his
diagnosis.
"There is one thing I never told you or Danson. One thing
that would have made it impossible for me to qualify for the
joining. I hid it from everyone because I was convinced this
was the only way for me."
"For you what? What haven't you told anyone, Caleb?"
He couldn't look at her. He'd never be able to look at
himself again either after this confession, but if he didn't let it
out now, he'd burst.
Fists clenched at his sides, head bowed, he took a deep
breath and said the words he hadn't been able to say before,
even to himself. "I didn't qualify for Danson's experiment
because I'm dying."
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Icarus Rising
by Bernadette Gardner
It seemed to Zara that she'd been drowning all day. The
first cold wave had taken her under on the north beach that
morning when Caleb had disappeared into the brilliant Icarian
sky.
She'd been gulping for air ever since while she waited for
word from the search parties. Now, after only a brief respite,
she felt as if the tide of events had dragged her under again.
In the wake of Caleb's confession, she put a shaking hand to
the middle of her chest and willed herself to breathe. "What
do you mean, dying?"
He faced her, but he didn't meet her gaze.
"I have Rennard's Syndrome."
"No." This statement made no sense. How could Danson
not have discovered the rare disorder during all his tests?
Caleb had been a virtual pincushion for the last four months.
The geneticist had mapped his entire DNA sequence at least
twice.
"I'm serious. I was diagnosed three years ago after I left
the Jovan system. I contracted it as a side effect of my
exposure to the Haldon Belts on Bradon's World when I
worked at the transfer station there as an intern."
A million questions swirled through Zara's mind, but all she
managed to do was gape.
"The disease is slow to manifest and difficult to detect.
That's why Danson never found it. Only people who have
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worked in the Haldon Belts get it ... and I never included that
in my work history when I applied for this post."
"But ... why? Why hide it? You look perfectly—" She
stopped short of saying "normal". The man had wings, after
all. He'd never be normal again.
"Denial. I knew I had five years before the symptoms
started. A month to live after that, but I figured I'd be done
with my work here by then and I could go find a hospice
somewhere."
Tears stung Zara's eyes, and she swallowed hard at the
thought of her vibrant, handsome Caleb slinking off to a
medical facility to die alone. She shook her head. "I don't
know much about Rennard's. How can you be symptom free
for five years and then die in a month?"
"The disease creates a resistance to certain enzymes in the
blood. At first the body compensates, but over time the
enzyme deficiency causes a catastrophic breakdown in cell
cohesion. Death is painful, but relatively fast".
"Is it ... transmittable?"
"No, it's not contagious."
"No. I mean through DNA."
Caleb stared at her now, seeming horrorstruck by her
insinuation that he might have planned to pass on the
disorder to his Icarian offspring. "No! No, it's not. It doesn't
affect the DNA, which is why I was able to hide it from
Danson. He knows everything about me, down to every cell in
my bone marrow, but he doesn't know this because the
enzyme deficiency doesn't appear significant until the end."
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Icarus Rising
by Bernadette Gardner
Zara allowed her shoulders to slump. How many more
times would she have to lose him? "Oh, Caleb. I'm sorry."
His wings shivered. "I should be sorry, not you. I'm a liar.
I'm a cheat. I was desperate to pretend it would just go
away. And then when I came to work with the Icarians and I
learned about the symbions, I started to think maybe I had a
chance to beat it."
"The symbions' regenerative abilities."
"Yes. It was hard to document in a race that's generally so
healthy, but the few cases we've seen where young Icarians
were injured or ill prior to joining and their symbions helped
them heal gave me the idea that maybe joining with a
symbion could cure the Rennard's." Caleb looked away again.
"I know I had no right. The symbion knows. He understands
something is missing from me, and that's why I felt so much
pain during the joining. I believed he would be able to
counteract the enzyme resistance."
"If you'd told Danson, he could have tested the theory. He
might have been able to tell you beforehand if it would have
worked or not."
Caleb paced and shook his head. "No. He would have
simply removed my name from the volunteer roster. I know
that's no excuse. I'm ashamed of what I did. I'm ashamed
that I've lied to you all this time."
Zara sat back and folded her legs in front of her. Resting
her hands in her lap, she sighed. Caleb's betrayal stung. The
trust they'd built over the past year had sustained her,
especially after she began helping him with the psychological
aspects of his decision to accept a symbion. She'd known
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Icarus Rising
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there would never be a next step in their relationship, but
she'd managed all this time to keep her personal feelings out
of the equation because their professional relationship was so
perfect. Finding out that all the emotions and dreams he'd
discussed with her might have been pure fabrication left her