Prime Obsession (11 page)

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Authors: Monette Michaels

BOOK: Prime Obsession
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“Physically well? Is this separation life-threatening?” asked the Admiral.

“Possibly,” Wulf’s father stated. “Already her mental state might be such that she’d take reckless actions, endangering herself. Gentlemen, we can’t let that happen. Besides being Wulf’s mate, she is a battle-mate. The Prime have not had a battle-mate in several centuries.”

His father paused, then heaved a great sigh. “She is vitally important to the future of our planet. My son will lead after me—and, if he and Melina are blessed, their son after them. We need the strong battle-mate line to give our people a proud link to their past as we forge ahead and intermarry with other humanoid species to save our future.” The Admiral nodded. “She went home to Obam IV. She told me that she needed to talk to her parents … uh, the people who raised her.”

“Admiral!” Nowicki turned to his superior, anger in every line of his body. “She doesn’t want to see him.”

“That’s not true, Commander,” the Admiral said. “She confided all to me before she left. She knew you would come after her, Wulf. She pretty much described the feelings you’ve just attributed to her.”

“What was her mental state? Was she depressed?” Wulf closed his eyes and groaned.

She needed him and still she’d left. His eyes flashed open as a further, even more horrifying thought entered his mind. “Is she afraid of me?”

“Melina Dmitros has never been afraid of anything that our training or Alliance enemies have ever thrown at her, including you,” the Admiral said with an amused grin.

“By the way, she said to tell you that you’ll have to court her. That there would be no shortcuts because of some genetic code she had no control over.” The Admiral paused, his eyes glinting with suppressed laughter. “She also said you had to
earn
her; she is
not
a gift.
Her
words, not mine.”

Wulf’s lips twisted into the first smile he’d had since he realized that Melina had left the safety of the
Galanti
. He turned toward his father and Maren. “I told you she was a fighter.”

“Yes, you did, son.” His father slapped Maren on the back. “Maren told me the bloodlines through his mother’s side had many battle-mates in the past. We are a very lucky family.”

Hugging Wulf, his father added, “Go, woo your battle-mate. And then bring her to Cejuru Prime. I wish to meet my new daughter.” He turned and skewered the Admiral with a piercing gaze. “I assume Melina has enough leave so that she can visit her home planet and be introduced to her people?”

The Admiral nodded. “She expected that would happen. She has taken an open-ended leave of absence.”

Nowicki gasped at that news. The man’s gaze turned bleak.

Melina’s superior hesitated. “Will she be coming back to the Alliance military? We need her, Premier Caradoc. She is one of our most effective squadron leaders.” Wulf’s father turned his head. “Son?”

“I expect so, father.” Wulf frowned. He’d rather she didn’t, but he knew asking her to give up her career would not be the way to woo her into accepting him as her mate.

“I’ve seen her fight. I’ve felt the battle symbiosis. It is … unbelievable.” Wulf rubbed his hands over his face. “She’ll want to come back. But, we would have to serve on the same ship because of the bond.”

“That can be arranged, Wulf,” Admiral Nelson said. “I’ll put together a proposal and send it to you as you travel to Obam IV.”

“That would be fine, but,” Wulf shrugged, “I can’t speak for Melina as much as I would like. As Maren has so pointedly told me time and time again, she is not a typical Prime mate. She and I will discuss how that will work alongside her other duties.”

“And what would those other duties be, Caradoc?” Nowicki asked with a snarl.

“Why being my mate, or wife as you Terrans call it,” he smiled, “and bearing my children, of course.”

“I almost pity you, Caradoc,” growled Nowicki. “Melina is one hundred percent a soldier. Babies have no place on a battle-cruiser.”

“I quite agree, Commander. My children will not be raised on a battle-cruiser.” Let the jealous bastard chew on that one.

Nowicki lied. The man did not pity him, he envied what Wulf would possess. The Terran had never possessed Melina; Wulf had sensed no intimate connection when she was around Nowicki. All proprietary feelings were on the Terran’s side. Wulf would ensure that the Commander would never get a chance to act on his feelings for his mate.

Melina would
know
only him in the future—no other.

“She was a soldier before the bond awakened,” Wulf added. “Once we fully consummate the bond, she’ll be forced to make choices.”

“Will they be her choices, Caradoc?” Nowicki asked.

“That is none of your business, Commander.”

Wulf had only shared what he had because Maren and his father had felt the Alliance Military needed to know the genetically imperative nature of the bond. There would be compromises on both sides, and he and Melina would deal with those as they arose. That would be their private business, and no one else’s, especially a jealous wannabe lover such as the Commander.

“But no matter what path she chooses, Commander,” Wulf stated, a warning in his eyes and voice for the Terran who loved his woman. “We will be side-by-side, a unit. No
gemate
bond has ever been broken while the mated pair both lived. She is mine—

forever.”

Nowicki growled, shot Wulf one last killing glare, and stormed out of the room.

* * * *

 

Obam IV dig, one standard week later

“Where the hell
is
the man?” Mel viciously wielded a small brush to dust off an artifact so that she could classify it. If she’d known how strong the bond already was between her and Wulf, she’d have stayed on Tooh 10 with the protective might of the military between them and duked this out sooner.

“Did you say something, Mellie?” Irina Dmitros, the only mother she’d ever known, sat next to her, occupied with a larger piece of the same artifact. An early Prime weapon.

“Nothing, Mama.” Mel threw the brush onto the table and gently placed the artifact in the correct specimen box. No use taking her erratic emotions out on an innocent artifact.

“Mellie, your father and I told you that Wulf will come to claim you. If all you told us is true, one of your female ancestors could’ve worn that breast plate over there,” her mother pointed to a beautifully worked piece of metal and with inlaid semi-precious stones lying on a table, “in battle on this very planet. No Prime male in the history of Cejuru Prime has ever abandoned a
gemat
e, especially a battle-mate.” Her parents had quickly clarified Mel’s position
vis á vis
Wulf. She was his by genetics. Neither of them could fight it. Her parents had also told her that the current status of Prime females as protected possessions had not been the norm. They’d concluded that the low birth rate and the loss of females had driven the Prime males to turn their back on their battle-mate heritage. Losing fertile women to war was not an option where the survival of a species was concerned.

It would be up to Mel, they said, to kick some Prime male butt and convince Wulf that she could still be a Captain in the Alliance Military and meet his needs as a mate.

After all, battle-mates had fought alongside their mates during the Berean wars and had managed to bear children. Her father had copied several battle-mate diaries to her personal computer for her to read and use to bolster her argument about continuing her military career.

Logically, it sounded like a great argument, but her parents had not met Wulf. He was an
über
-alpha-male. She was pretty sure the word “compromise” was not in his vocabulary.

Her mother put down her part of the ancient weapon she’d cleaned and reached for Mel’s hands. “Have you truly forgiven your father and I for not telling you how we found you?”

“Yes, Mama.” Mel pulled her mother into her arms and hugged her tightly. The familiar scents of dust and her mother’s favorite jasmine perfume comforted her. “I couldn’t have asked for better parents.”

She’d been rescued from the wreckage of a Prime ship. The only survivor. Her Prime mother had sheltered her infant’s body with her own and saved Mel’s life.

Mel held her mother away from her. “Besides you and Papa taught me everything I know about the Prime. You gave me my heritage.” She grinned. “Now, I’ll be able to help you with your work. You’ll have an inside source to all their libraries and museums.”

Her mother laughed. “Your papa is already making a list of questions for your Wulf.

And an even longer list of treatises he wants to find to supplement the ones he has found on the Prime digs.”

Her Wulf
.

Just the thought sent a shiver down her spine. He was hers as much as she was his.

Somehow that seemed only fair. If he were as half as uncomfortable as she’d been in the two standard weeks since she’d left the
Galanti
, he was in deep pain. She felt as if someone had ripped out half her heart and had set fire to her womb.

“Mellie.” Her mother touched her cheek. “When you first arrived here, well … you were angry with the whole situation. With Wulf. Now, you seem more resigned to his mating with you.”

“It’s the bond,
agape mou
.” Mel’s father stood in the doorway, smiling fondly at his two women as he always called them. “She is missing him, eh, my little Mellie?”

“Yes, Papa.” Tears filled her eyes and she never cried—ever. She blamed the hormones rioting through her blood. Emotionally, she’d been a frigging mess. “I just want him here so we can have this out and do whatever we need to do to move on.”

“That means physically mating, Melina. Did you read the manuscripts I gave you on this bond?”

 

“Yes, Papa.” She sighed and shifted in her seat. Just the thought of making love with Wulf had her wet and aching. “I’m restless. I think I’ll go into the catacombs and dig some. Work off some of this energy.”

Work off the sexual frustration, was more like it.

Her father nodded. “Good idea, Melina
mou.
I’ll send one of the Obam workers to call you for dinner.”

“Thanks, Papa.”

The last sight Mel had of her parents was them embracing. The love they shared glowed like a halo around them in the late afternoon sun. She smiled and wondered if she and Wulf would ever look that way at each other.

From the smaller dome where the dig had offices and cleaned and stored artifacts, she entered the main dome where the living quarters were located. Obam IV had a thin, dry, dusty atmosphere, thus necessitating the domes for a clean, breathable environment.

The planet was dying, and the Alliance Space Archaeology Division wanted to record and preserve as much of the early Prime history as explorers in the Milky Way as possible. The theory was that Prime DNA could be found on every planet where humanoid life was found, or had existed in the past. So far, it had proven true. The Obamian population, now living on a more habitable planet in the same solar system, had a trace amount of Prime DNA. Obam IV had proven to be a major waystation for the Prime’s past exploration of the Milky Way.

Nodding to several of the dig members, she made her way to her room, where she picked up her personal breathing unit, her digging tools, and a laser pistol just in case any of the legendarily large Obam IV rodents, called ROUS for some obscure reason, still inhabited the catacombs. Rodents survived hardily even on dying planets.

“Hey, Mel,” called out one of the students. “Need any help?”

“No. Just going to work off some energy on the burial chamber.” The student laughed and waved. “Good luck. It’s a bitch of hard rock down there.” Mel smiled. Just what she needed to work up a sweat and sublimate all the hormones battling for supremacy in her body. If Wulf didn’t get there soon, she’d be using the self-pleasuring device the military issued to all female officers. She’d never used it before, but she sure as heck was tempted now.

* * * *

 

Obam IV, later the same day

The ground shook. Dust drifted over her from the catacomb’s packed dirt and rock ceiling.

Startled, Mel looked up from the carving she traced.

Earthquake? There’d never been any tectonic activity here.

Another shaking. The metallic support beams and wall liners in the burial chamber moaned as if in sympathy with the vibrating earth. Rocks tumbled off the trash pile to land close to her seated position.

“Better go topside and see what’s going on,” she muttered. She stood up, picked up her breathing unit, and put it back on. The normally clean, cool underground air was now thick with dust, making it hard to breathe. Besides she’d need it topside. It was an oddity on Obam IV that the underground usually had a more breathable mix of oxygen and nitrogen than the surface. The Prime had somehow set up a natural filtration system, the secret of which was still just that—a secret.

Another shaking. The tremors were too evenly spaced and of equal force for a natural occurrence.

Obam IV was under attack.

But who? And why? This was a dying hunk of rock. The archaeological dig was the only activity on it, and the finds were more of galactic historical value, than monetary.

Mel raced her way through the maze of catacombs she knew so well and ran out into the dying light of the day.

Against the orange and purple glow of the setting sun, a large Antarean battleship hovered in the sky. Its weapons aimed at the domes on the planet’s surface, decimating them.

“Mama! Papa!” she cried as she wound her way among the inadequate cover of rocks and debris toward the two main domes.

There was nothing here for an Antarean raider, not even enough humans to make it worth their while to rape and pillage.

Shocked realization halted her frantic forward motion for a split second. They’d come for
her
. A full-blooded Prime female. Wulf’s battle-mate. An Alliance officer. She knew it as surely as she knew that she had to get the people in the domes underground and send out a distress signal for the Alliance to come and rescue them.

Shoving through the broken door of the main dome, she stopped and choked back a cry of horror.

Bodies lay everywhere like broken pieces of artifacts. The Antareans had hit the main dome first—and hit it hard. Keeping an eye on the ship in her peripheral vision, she went from person to person to see if she could find anyone alive.

The ship fired once more, hitting the rock wall behind the dome. Mel dove under a heavy support column, covering her head until the debris shower ended. Cautiously, she crawled out from under the sturdy protection. No moaning. No rustling. No sound but the wind whistling through the holes in the dome and the whining sound of the laser cannon as the Antareans bombarded the area surrounding the domes.

She checked every body in the dome. No sign of her parents. They must still be in the secondary dome.

Anger, grief, along with desperate hope swept through her mind. The other dome had not been hit as hard. It was protected by a mountain of rock on two sides; her parents could still be alive.

Running from the death and massive destruction in the main dome, dodging and climbing over obstructions, she entered the smaller shelter. Dust devils fueled by the erratic winds of Obam IV whipped through the massive destruction.

Where were they? Moving forward, she tossed debris aside.

Groans came from the rubble. Near the back where the structure had the most natural protection. Hope beat back her despair.

Climbing over mangled support beams, she searched for the source of the sounds of life.

She found her parents under a large metal beam. A sharp cry left her throat. Her mother was dead. No neck had ever meant to be at that angle.

“No-o-o-!” she screamed. Grief coupled with rage almost drove her to her knees. Her heart bled at the loss of her mother. She struggled to calm herself, to shove the debilitating emotion to a place deep in her mind. Later, she would pull out the emotions and succumb to them. If she did so now, she’d be dead also—and wouldn’t be able to seek justice on behalf of the dead.

Another groan told her that her father still lived. His body curled around her mother’s. His arms caressed her. His tears drew streaks on her mother’s pale, dirt-covered, still face.

Mel knelt by his side. “Papa!” She touched the bloody gash on his head. It was not bad, but the piece of metal lodged in his chest just right of his sternum concerned her.

“Let me get you out of there.”

Tears welled in her eyes, obscuring her vision. She dashed them away.
Don’t be
weak, now, Mel.
Later, she could grieve later. Right now, she had to get her father out of here and into the catacombs, a much more defensible position. The cannon no longer fired. The Antareans would land and send out search parties for survivors.

“Go, Melina
mou
.” He coughed, frothy blood covered his lips and chin. “I’m dying—and I will not leave your mama.”

“Papa, no!” Her tears came back with a vengeance, streaming down her dirty cheeks.

“I need you. Come with me.” With a strength she hadn’t known she possessed, she pulled a large piece of the dome superstructure off him.

His bloody hand reached for her and brushed at her tears. “No crying, Melina
mou
.

You can’t let them find you. You can’t let them … win.” He smiled at her. “Be strong, Melina. Live well. Mama and I … will watch over you … from beyond.” He smiled at her, closed his eyes then turned his bloody face into her mother’s hair.

With his last breath, he sighed, “Irina.”

Screaming her anguish, she threw herself onto her parent’s bodies. Seconds passed.

Possibly minutes. Seconds or minutes she did not have. She didn’t want to leave them, but she had to. All her instincts and training told her to move.

Touching their dear faces, breathing in their familiar scent one last time, a calming warmth stole over her. Their souls had gone to be with their God now. They were safe—

no one could hurt them any longer.

Shoving away, she covered them as best she could. She didn’t want the Antareans to desecrate their bodies. She would come back and give them a proper burial.

Saying a silent prayer, she left them to check for any other survivors in the secondary dome. She found none.

After leaving the smaller structure, she hurried back through the main room. She packed some fresh food and water—there were other supplies hidden in the catacombs for just such an emergency. She could hide and survive until Wulf came for her, or the Alliance responded to the distress call.

Entering the communications room, which had somehow survived the blasts, she coded the distress call, put it on a permanent loop, and then fixed the equipment so the enemy couldn’t turn it off. She hid the machine inside a compartment built into the rock floor of the main dome. Then she set the booby trap. Any lizard-bastard that tried to open it would get an unwelcome, and fatal, surprise.

The Antarean ship was making its landing approach. Because of the size of the ship, they would have to land on the dry lake about fifty kilometers away. Depending on the land vehicles they carried, they could be here in less than thirty minutes. She wanted to be underground well before then; she had traps to arm.

They’d look for her body. Not finding it—they’d search for her. She looked forward to it. They would pay for killing her parents and the innocent scientists.

Someone had told them about her. But who? The rebels wanting to punish Wulf and his family for the treaty with the Alliance? Possibly. But why would the rebels deal with Antareans? No, it had to be someone else. Maybe someone who had it in for her? Hell, she had to have enemies after seven years in the military, who didn’t? But she couldn’t think of anyone in particular.

Whoever it was had access to her file, or to Wulf’s family—or to Alliance and Prime confidential communications.

Another traitor. She only hoped she’d live long enough to tell Wulf. He’d be furious.

She smiled grimly—it was nice to know that if she died, he’d avenge her.

Hefting a damaged door aside, she rushed into her room and picked up her military duffle, which she hadn’t totally unpacked. Shoving the precious data disks her parents had given her from the Prime ship that crashed with her all those years ago into the pack, she ran into the main dome.

Her last stop before entering a secret way into the catacombs was the dig’s cache of weapons and explosives, including the latest in Prime technology: a dart gun that pierced reptilian-species hides. It delivered a lethal poison, killing the bastards instantly. She hadn’t asked her father how he had come by it; she was just glad he had.

She holstered the dart gun and loaded ammunition for it, along with some of the explosives into another pack. Slipping out of the dome, she used the natural cover for as long as she could, then sprinted across the open area and entered the catacombs.

She knew the maze of tunnels well, having played hide-and-seek in them as a child with some of the other scientists’ children. She’d survive and take out as many of the enemy as she could. She had a feeling the Antarean ship had orders not to leave either without her or proof of her death.

She didn’t plan to oblige them either way.

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