Read o ed4c3e33dafa4d72 Online
Authors: Sylvie Pepos
gain his attention.
Rhye didn't notice the coldness in his inquisitor's eyes or the lack of warmth in his
polite query. He was eager to impress the man, wanted to be able to tell his shipmates that
he had conversed with the Prime Reaper, himself.
"We leave at the end of next week, Sir." He stood up a bit straighter. "We are going to Ionary for a shipment of domestic females."
A twinkle entered Cree's brown eyes. "That's what I am here for today." He looked
away from the Commander and settled his sharp gaze on the Bursar. "I take it everything
is in order?"
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The Bursar swallowed hard. "Sir, I think there's been a mistake."
Cree's brow lifted. "How so?"
"This is a live-in companion chit, Sir," the Bursar replied in a choked voice. His gaze pleaded with Cree to tell him there had been a mistake. Not only with the classification of
the female requested, but the identity of her, as well.
"Aye, I know that."
"Then perhaps there was a mix up in the names?" the Bursar asked hopefully. When
the Reaper's fierce gaze remained steady, vengeful, the Bursar swung an apologetic gaze
to the Commander.
Rhye felt a wiggle of worry slither down his spine at the look the Bursar gave him.
"No mistake has been made," Cree stated. He turned his head and stared right at Rhye.
"I came here personally to handle the matter since the female in question now belongs to me."
Konnor Rhye looked into those demon eyes and
knew
. "Who is the lady you have
come to buy, Sir?"
The Bursar moved back from the counter. The Keeper knew better than to question
Kamerone Cree!
"Do I know her, Captain?" Rhye insisted, feeling his insides tearing.
Cree smirked at Rhye and turned his attention to the Bursar. "I asked you if everything
was in order?"
"Ah, Captain Cree," the Bursar whined, feeling the hard, piercing cold of those dark orbs impaling him, "this particular female has already been purchased. She's..."
"Then, un-purchase her," Cree said pleasantly.
The Bursar whimpered. He cast Rhye one last look and took up the Keeper's chit and
ripped it down the middle.
"No," Rhye whispered. "I bought her! We are to be Joined."
Cree never straightened from where he leaned against the counter, didn't look at Rhye
as he spoke. "You are dismissed, Commander."
"I have already bought her," Rhye said again. "I have permission to take her to wife."
"Not any more you don't." For one wild, undisciplined moment, Konnor Rhye thought
about slamming his fist into that sneering, smug face. He made one last attempt to make
the Reaper see reason.
"Captain, we are in love. I know you don't understand what that means, but—"
"If you do not dismiss yourself, Commander," Cree interrupted, "you are going to spend the rest of your days incarcerated on a penal outpost in the nether regions of the
galaxy."
Rhye knew it wouldn't do him any good to plead with this man. The Iceman had no
heart. He would not understand the feelings Konnor and Bridget shared. "This isn't over."
"Aye, but it is," Cree assured him, taking the Requisition form from the trembling hand of the Bursar.
The Bursar winced as Commander Rhye spun around and rushed from the office. He
glanced uncertainly at Captain Cree and found the Reaper smiling: A physical
manifestation of pure revenge. As the Captain's eyes met him, the Bursar could have
sworn the Iceman was actually enjoying himself.
"WELL," DREWE said, placing a packet of forms on Cree's desk, "you've got her.
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It's been entered into the Registry at the data bank. These are the print outs if you want to read them." He let out a long breath through his pursed lips. "I hope you know what you're doing, Sir. She cost you a bundle."
"How much?" Cree asked as he folded an extra jumpsuit to take with him the next
morning.
"You're not going to like it." In their many years of working together, Cree had heard that same six-word phrase so many times he fancied he sometimes heard it in his
controlled sleep. He sighed. "Just tell me how much, Drewe."
Lona shrugged, knowing this would be one time that Cree wasn't going to be able to
either sneer away or shout away the consequences of something that was going to upset
him and upset him badly.
"Nine pay periods of credit."
Cree went rigid as stone. Slowly, he straightened and turned to face Drewe. "Say
again?"
"Nine pay periods of credit." Drewe watched the full realization set in on Cree's
shocked face. He nodded. "Aye, you heard me correctly. That is why it took Rhye so long
to purchase her. Even for you, with all your termination bonuses, that's a hell of a lot of
money, Sir."
"Why didn't you tell me this before?" Cree demanded. Not that it made any difference.
He would have paid anything to get what he wanted.
"I tried to, but you weren't listening," Drewe reminded him. "And the Bursar wanted me to make sure you understand that you won't be receiving any pay until the female is
paid for out of your account." His face scrunched up. "You do have that much in your account, don't you?"
Shock had turned Cree speechless. He sat down heavily on his bed.
"Cree?" Drewe asked. "You do have that much, don't you?"
The Reaper nodded absently. Nine pay periods? Three-quarters of a year's salary.
Mentally, he calculated the amount in Terran funds, thinking it only right since it was a
Terran he had bought.
"Seven hundred and fifty thousand dollars," he muttered, glancing up at Drewe. "That's seven hundred and fifty thousand dollars!" He was shocked at the amount. "Why so
much?"
"I told you: she's a Class Five female."
"Meaning?"
"Highly educated, highly trained medical personnel," Drewe explained. "The only thing higher is a Class Six like the Director of the Be-Mod 9 Unit."
"Sweet Merciful Alel," Cree whispered, missing the surprised look on his 2/IC's face.
"I told the Bursar you would pick up the woman when we return from Terra."
Cree looked up, still reeling from the price. "Huh?"
"The woman," Drewe said. "You did mean for her to stay in her present quarters until you returned, didn't you?"
The thought of Bridget free to continue seeing Konnor Rhye shot through Cree's brain
like a laser blast. "Hell, no, I don't!" he snapped. "I want her here! In my quarters where she can't get into mischief!
"I was afraid you would say that."
"See to it, Lona!"
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"HIS SECOND in command will be here any moment," the Director said. She put a
calming hand on Bridget's shoulder. "If you remember nothing else, Bridie, remember
this: Under no circumstances will he ever hurt you. We made sure that prohibition was
instilled irrevocably in his subliminals. He can no more do you harm that a cybot can
harm its master. Do not forget that."
Bridget nodded. She looked down, her heart racing in her chest. She could not
remember ever being this afraid of anything in her life. Not even when she had found
herself aboard the Rysalian starship.
"He will not harm you," Dr. Dean stressed. She folded Bridget in her arms and held
her, uneasy with the young woman's violent tremors. "Do you think we would send you
to him if we thought there was a snowball's chance in Hell that he would hurt you,
Bridie?"
Bridget didn't reply because she knew to some of the women of the Resistance, any
means to gain their end might well be used. Up to and including sacrificing her life.
Though she, herself, had formed an alliance with Konnor Rhye—and to some extent had
feelings for the man—she had reluctantly accepted the Resistance's dictate of what now
had become the plan to bring Kamerone Cree to their way of thinking. What was at stake
here was more important than any possible future happiness with Rhye. She would do as
had been suggested and bear the consequences.
"Dr. Dean?" Ivonne announced over the Vid-Com. "Lieutenant Lona is here."
"Jesus, Mary and Joseph!" Bridget whispered, her eyes going wide with fear.
"Bridget," the Director said, sternly, pushing the young woman away. "You have to do this. There isn't time for us to put him in a position to be brought before the Tribunal
again. It has to be now."
"I...know," Bridget answered. She lifted a hand to her face. "It's just..."
"Go," Dr. Dean advised, "before you can think about it any further." She pushed Bridget toward her office door.
The women of the Behavioral Modification Unit were gathered around the reception
desk as Bridget came out of the black double doors. A few were visibly nervous, casting
sidelong glances at Drewe Lona, but most were resigned, their faces stoic, if not happy.
Each knew the importance of what Bridget Dunne was about to do and, although they
wished her well, not a one of them would have traded places with her for all the gold on
Ionary.
"You will come back and see us, won't you?" Ivonne asked, risking a worried look at Lona.
"I would think the Captain will allow that," Lona said magnanimously. He had no
doubt in his mind that the woman he was taking to Cree would be returned to Be-Mod
Nine once the attraction wore off. He reached out and lightly took Bridget's arm. "Are
you ready?"
Bridget nodded, hating the feel of the Lieutenant's hand on her flesh. Already she felt
imprisoned. Her freedom a thing of the past. Her future unknown. She didn't dare look at
Dorrie, Helen, or Tina and especially not Ivonne, who sobbed openly.
"You appear well-liked here," Drewe said, escorting her through the opened door to the corridor beyond.
"It has been my home for five years," Bridget said quietly.
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"And probably will be again."
Bridget glanced at him. "This isn't permanent?"
Drewe laughed. "I'd hardly think so." He glanced her, thinking the young woman quite pretty. No wonder Cree found her intriguing.
"You know him better than most. I hope you're right."
"Oh, he will be good to you."
"So I've been told."
"He will lose interest quickly, though," Drewe prophesied, nodding.
Bridget looked at him, a stunned look on her pretty face.
Pray God, not too soon!
At least not before she had accomplished what she had been sent to do! What would happen
to her if she should fail?
Drewe noticed the woman's sudden pallor; saw that she was trembling. By the gods! If
he brought a hysterical female to Cree's quarters, the Reaper might lop off his head. Lona
swallowed. "He certainly won't harm you and when he's through, I'm sure he'll return you to the Director."
"When he's through?" Bridget questioned, her voice quivering.
"Well, you know," he said lamely, flinging out a hand.
"No," Bridget denied. "I don't know."
Lona grimaced. Why was it left to him to explain things to this Terran female? He
shrugged. "You know. When he's through with you. When he's...After he's..." He stopped.
"Why don't you just wait and see, okay?"
Bridget studied the Shepherd's profile for a long time, but when it became clear he
would say nothing more, she looked at the long corridor down which they walked. When
they arrived at the elevator, several Keepers and a Shepherd or two nodded politely at
Lona and looked quizzically at Bridget.
"This is the one?" one of the Keepers asked. Keepers were low in the hierarchy of
Rysalian military. Glorified military police, their main job was to keep the females in
line.
"Aye," Drewe acknowledged.
"Not to my taste," a Shepherd remarked. "Too thin." His was the task of `herding' the females to pre-arranged pickup spots during retrieval operations. Shepherds tended to be
rather full of their own importance.
"Too tall," another Keeper decided.
"I hear Rhye is..." another of the Keepers started to say, but Lona sent him a quelling look and the man coughed, pretended to find something extraordinary about the titanium
wall beside him.
"He is all right, isn't he?" Bridget questioned and had to repeat her question for Lona had pretended not to hear her.
"Who?" Lona finally asked, though he knew well enough who she meant.
"Commander Rhye," she said softly.
Drewe met the eyes of one of the Shepherds and the two men exchanged superior
smiles. "Aye, as far as I know."
Bridget lowered her head. It would not do to let these warriors see how angry she was.
Or how hopeless she felt. She walked ahead of Lona into the elevator and felt even more
imprisoned as the other five warriors filed in and seemed to take up all the room in the
cage.
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"Would it be permissible for me to render the captain my compliments when the time
comes?" the oldest of the two Shepherds inquired.
"I shall tell him, Wynth."