“No problem, General. What can I do for you?”
“How bad is it?”
Short and to the point. Well, he didn’t really blame the man. “I assume
we are talking about Rapt One. Please, sit down. I’ll tell you what I can.”
“I’m cleared on the highest security levels, sir.” Thorne chose a chair
and sank into it, his gaze direct.
Ran had the ability to tell what other people were thinking with uncanny
precision and he could feel the other’s man’s tension, his worry, and
underneath it all, a sense of outrage under the calm façade.
He didn’t really blame him.
28
Annabel Wolfe
“I know your clearance, General. Rest assured, I’ll tell you what I know,
but it really isn’t much. I received a communiqué recently that there was
what we think might have been terrorist activity directed at the Rapt One
colony. I’ve spoken with the governor there and he feels the problem is
contained, but we are at a loss as to who might have been behind it. As you
know, it’s one of the outermost planets, so we monitor security there at the
highest level.”
“I hope so. I understand my daughter is there. I am not happy about that
on several levels at this moment. I came to request she be recalled.”
Ran had a feeling that was what this visit was about. Unfortunately,
even though he understood the general’s point of view clearly enough—he
had a daughter himself—his hands were tied on the matter. “The quarantine
is a necessary step, wouldn’t you agree? Until we figure out how and why
the first contaminated individuals became infected, we can’t trust the fate of
thousands of citizens on the hope no one else has been exposed.”
“She’s an officer with a spotless record of service.”
“Yes, she is I understand. Congratulations, you must be quite proud of
her. But,” Ran paused, searching for the right thing to say, because he truly
was sympathetic, before continuing quietly, “but it does not make her
exempt from possible contamination. The virus could have come from
anywhere. It’s been substantiated it’s synthetically engineered, it’s fatal, and
no risks are being taken.”
“I could pull York’s personnel file but know nothing about Armada,
except his reputation as a talented engineer. He isn’t a solider.” The general
stated the words without inflection but the unspoken question was there.
Well, Ran supposed if his daughter was trapped on a distant planet
locked in with two S-species males, he’d also be damned concerned about
her welfare. “I know nothing about the pilot myself, but I can tell you
Armada is not only brilliant intellectually but he will treat your daughter
well.”
“You sound sure.”
“I know it to be a fact,” Ran said bluntly. “I traveled with Armada on a
diplomatic mission and we became good friends. I trust him.”
Thorne sighed. “She’s half-human,” he admitted, and added on a
murmur, “and very beautiful.”
The Covenant: The Starlight Chronicles 2
29
Not something either male would likely overlook, not for that length of
time.
Sometimes it was hell to be a father, Ran thought with silent sympathy.
* * * *
The warm water ran in streams over her skin and Aspen tilted her head
back, wetting her long hair, one hand braced on the wall of the washing
cubicle. The dried residue on her thighs was sticky and she rinsed it off,
amazed at the prodigious amount of sperm produced by S-species males.
Doing her duty hadn’t been quite as much of a sacrifice as she thought.
To her chagrin, it had turned out to be disturbingly wonderful.
All her life she’d been taught the merits of order and control. There had
been very little control in the way she’d responded to first Larik’s
lovemaking, and then succumbed to the impudent F-level pilot, no doubt
fueling his already formidable confidence. By the stars he’d even tasted her
pussy and she was pretty sure there wasn’t an inch of her he hadn’t touched.
They’d promised she would enjoy it and she had. Both males knew it.
Surely there were worse things in the universe than having two wildly
attractive, considerate lovers, wasn’t there? Of course there were, she told
herself with prosaic meditation, but the trouble was she had always
imagined her sexual life would be in tune with her emotional one. Maybe it
was her human side, but Trey was right, she did have a romantic ideal over
what she wanted when it came to choosing a mate. Physical desire was
important, of course, but she liked the notion of love. Her father had mated
with her mother for strict procreation purposes and after her birth, they had
gone their separate ways. Like most half-breeds, she had been given to her
father to raise because humans were considered inferior and given very few
rights. He had graciously allowed her to actually journey to earth and meet
her birth mother, but she knew many half-bred children not given that
opportunity.
In her opinion, both Larik Armada and Trey York typified their
dominant race. They were highly intelligent, confident, virile males.
Apparently they were
her
males for the next eight weeks.
Or rather, she thought with wry resignation, she was theirs. They had
each mated twice with her the night before and she had the feeling that
30
Annabel Wolfe
however inexperienced she’d been before their arrival on Rapt One, by the
time the quarantine was over, she would have made up for lost time.
She finished bathing and stepped out, drying off and following the
instructions on the plaque on the wall, much like in the cubicles where
they’d changed their clothes. Nothing would be brought in so they had to be
careful so they would have clean linens and clothing the entire duration of
their captivity. The same thing with food and drink. There was plenty as
long as they didn’t waste any or overindulge.
She slipped into the regulation issue generic pants and shirt, brushed out
her damp hair, and left the cubicle for the main area of their sparse quarters.
There she found York in the galley, and Armada at one of the screens, a
slight frown on his face as he stared at what looked like a computer model
of the inside of a building. He glanced up as she came into the room. “Good
morning, Lieutenant.”
By the stars, she blushed like an idiot. “Good morning,” she said
briskly, trying to ignore the warmth in her face.
“Hungry?” Trey rummaged in the cooling unit and took out a package.
He set it on a shining metal ledge flanked by chairs supposed to serve as the
eating area and gave her one his devastating smiles, a hint of cocky male in
the lift of one brow.
She was hungry, actually. Aspen inclined her head, hoping she looked
cool and calm. “Thank you, yes.” The dignified effect was spoiled when she
went to sit down and winced.
“Sore?” he asked bluntly, unwrapping the food and setting it on a
serving disk.
An embarrassing question but he was right, she was a little tender. No
wonder, since they’d both been, well,
extremely
enthusiastic over the 051
regulation. “A little,” she admitted as she accepted the food. When he
handed her the disk, their fingers brushed and she couldn’t believe the
answering shiver that went through her body.
Trey York had very talented hands and it wasn’t confined to the controls
of a transport craft.
He looked thoughtful. “I’m going to bet there are lubrication capsules in
the med kit. I’ll look.”
“I’ll be fine,” she said hastily, wanting to change the subject.
The Covenant: The Starlight Chronicles 2
31
“Oh, Lieutenant, you are more than fine, let me tell you.” He winked,
the look in his crystal blue eyes telling her he found her morning after
embarrassment amusing. “Your enthusiasm for doing your duty has made
the next weeks trapped here sound like a vacation in paradise instead of a
prison sentence.”
“Is sex all you think about, Pilot?”
“That and flying,” he admitted, unrepentant and teasing. “Two of my
favorite things.”
Not a surprising answer. He was as good as lover as he was a pilot. Still,
Aspen wanted some measure of control over the situation. The night before,
she hadn’t had any. They’d taken over everything, her body, her senses, her
will…
“Aspen, when you’re done eating come look at this. Tell me I’m not
wrong here.”
The familiar use of her first name without her permission made her
stiffen, but then again, she supposed considering she’d been intimate with
him in the most basic of ways a female could be with a male, maybe
Armada felt entitled. She didn’t wait but got up and carried her plate over
and stood behind him where he sat by the screen, staring at the model.
“What am I supposed to be looking at?”
“I accessed the colony database. Here’s our energy station. This isn’t the
same—”
She interrupted, “You did
what
?”
Larik looked up at her, his sapphire eyes glimmering. “Broke in.
Hacked. Bypassed their defensive walls, whatever you want to call it.”
She swallowed because her mouth had been half-full and she stared at
him. “That’s impossible.”
“I was bored. It took me about two seconds. Anyway—”
“Armada, have lost your mind? It’s a capital offense.”
He shrugged his broad shoulders. “I used the governor’s link. Right now
the system thinks I’m him.”
She wasn’t sure whether to be impressed or horrified. That Larik
Armada was a genius wasn’t a surprise, but this recklessness was just why
she had been sent along, she guessed. It was supposed to be her job to make
him stick to regulations and impersonating the governor of a prestigious
colony was definitely not on the agenda. Besides, it really was punishable
32
Annabel Wolfe
by some not very desirable consequences and she found she didn’t want
anything like that to happen to Larik.
Shit.
She could also get into trouble for this.
“Sign out,” she ordered tersely. “Get off there before they trace this
breach back to us. Here.”
“They won’t.” He disregarded the order and pointed. “Stop worrying
and look at this.”
York had seated himself at the ledge. He said with a laugh, “If he says
they can’t trace it, Lieutenant, they can’t. Trust me on that one. I think his
brain is a machine.”
That neither of them was worried didn’t surprise her, for that same selfconfident bravado seemed to seep from their very pores. In resignation, she
leaned forward and focused on the image Armada wanted her to see.
It was the same energy station they’d been called in to assess, and at
first glance all seemed to be in order. The blueprint she’d been sent to look
at prior to their departure had a conventional design and gave no reason for
the constant failure she could see, hence the trip to actually look at it
firsthand.
“That’s the station,” she said slowly. “I’ve seen the design before. It
shouldn’t fail, but then again, there could be a defective part, a flawed
transom—”
“Or,” Armada said without inflection, “there could be some reason
there’s an extra circuit in the main control panel. It isn’t in the original plans
at all.”
Until he pointed at it, Aspen would never have seen it. She furrowed her
brows. It existed. A tiny innocuous line in the center of the screen.
No one
would notice it by glancing over the plans.
No one but Armada.
This was puzzling, no doubt about it. “What makes you think it doesn’t
have a purpose? Sometimes things are changed or added by the design
engineers, you know that.”
“Oh, I think it does have a purpose. It kills the power to entire thing.”
“In one switch?” she objected, shaking her head, her food forgotten.
“There’s no way. The system has a dozen safeguards.”
The Covenant: The Starlight Chronicles 2
33
“Sure it does.” He tapped a few buttons, and a new screen came up, an
entirely different angle of the same plans. “All of those safeguards are shut
down by this one small switch.”
“You can’t know that.”
“I can know it. I
do
know it.” Larik rubbed his jaw, narrowing those
remarkable eyes. “The question is why? It isn’t included in the plans
originally sent to us. Why does someone continually shut down the power?
Why would they want to?”
Aspen looked at the screen, her mind processing the information as a
feeling of unease settled in her stomach. Her hunger deserted her all at once.
“You think the failures are on purpose?”
“I think that someone put in a way to constantly shut off the entire grid
when it is absolutely against all regulations and that means two things.” His
handsome face was set. “At the very least the chief engineer is involved and
the governor has no clue what’s going on or he wouldn’t have sent for me.”
York said coolly, “Because you spotted it at a glance. It kind of makes
me wonder if we aren’t stuck here to keep you from seeing anything else.”
The same thought had already occurred to her. Unfortunately. She
looked at York. “You honestly think there would be a plot to infect an entire