Read Seven Days - A Space Romance Online
Authors: Jill Myles
Zoey was free to go, though her job with the university was long gone—they’d filled it months ago when the report of her death had been filed. That was fine. She didn’t feel like going back to work. Not just yet.
The first thing she’d done was check for Kaden’s records. She’d gone to a terminal on base and pulled up his contact info, only to find his file listed as “Officer fallen in line of duty.” She closed the file without looking further, her heart aching. She didn’t need to know any more.
He’d died, knowing that there would be only one of them in the stasis pod.
She checked her bank account and sure enough, the stipend of hazard pay had been dumped into her account—the military’s way of apologizing for trouble aboard one of their ships. It was a decent enough sum, though she’d have to go back to work eventually. For now, though... she was going to go to Europa 13. Spend some time on the beach, relax and recover, and try not to think about the man she’d loved and lost.
With a heavy heart, she packed her small bag and left the base. No one had stopped her as she’d flashed her temporary badge. She’d been given full clearance to leave. Free to go. Alone.
Zoey’d gotten on a public transport, headed for the closest spaceport. Maybe a few weeks on the beach would stop the ache in her heart. Or at least dull it a bit.
#
“One, please,” she said to the ticket-broker AI as she pushed her thumb onto the ID pad and waited for it to scan her eye.
“Identity confirmed,” it said warmly. “Passport accepted. Where would you like to go today, Zoey Maldonado?”
“Europa 13,” she told it. “One ticket.”
“I am confirming the availability of that trip,” it told her pleasantly. “Please wait.”
She drummed her fingers on the counter, glancing over at a nearby boarding ship. Everyone looked so happy and excited at the prospect of a vacation. All she was feeling was a vague, unhappy bitterness.
She felt as if she’s just gotten off a damn ship, and here she was, boarding another.
“One ticket aboard the
Sunlight Dragon
, first class to Europa 13,” it told her cheerfully. “This ship leaves in two hours and the price for the journey is thirteen thousand credits. Shall I make this reservation for you?”
“Yes,” she told it tersely. It chirped out some other information, and then spit a ticket at her, and she snatched it up, barely looking around. Gate C-22, the ticket said, and she began to stalk down the long hall of the spaceport, toward that gate. Toward Europa 13.
Toward her first step of forgetting Kaden Aziz.
The problem was, she didn’t
want
to forget him, she realized as she got to the gate and sat with the rest of the waiting passengers. She wanted to burrow into her memories of him and never forget. As she had so many times a day, she put in her earbuds and flicked on the vid, just so she could watch him one more time.
“Zoey. If you get this message and I’m not standing right next to you, well... I knew when we got in the chambers that this was a one-way trip...”
“Zoey,” a voice bellowed, achingly familiar. She stared at the vidpic, frowning. Oh no. Was her file corrupted? Please no. This was all she had left of him. She paused it, then started it again, holding her breath.
“Zoey,” came the call again, a hoarse shout. “Zoey Maldonado?”
It... wasn’t coming from the vidpic? She tugged the buds from her ears and frowned, looking around.
“Zoey Maldonado,” a man yelled at the top of his lungs somewhere in the distance. “Zoey!”
That was... familiar. Hope burst through her.
She stood.
People turned, stared, whispering. She wasn’t entirely sure she was awake. This was a dream, wasn’t it? Zoey walked forward. Scanned the crowd of travelers, looking for a big, tattooed man with disheveled hair and didn’t see him.
But her gaze stopped and her heart stuttered at the sight of a man in the distance, heavily limping down one of the electronic walkways, dressed in a Tribunal uniform that covered his tattoos. He leaned on a cane, his leg making jerky motions as he moved forward, scanning the crowd wildly. His head was shaved, she noted in shock, an enormous scar tracing around one side of his scalp and along his ear.
“Zoey,” Kaden bellowed again. “Where are you?”
Tears welled in her eyes, slid down her face. She began to sob, dropping her bag and rushing for him. “Kaden?”
He turned at the sound of her voice, and she saw him—his eyes, those beautiful brown eyes, that smile that lit up his entire face. And he began to rush toward her as fast as his bad leg would allow, wincing with pain each time.
She ran for him, pushing people aside in her haste to get to him. “Kaden!” she sobbed loudly, not caring who heard. “Kaden, I’m here!”
When she got to him, she flung herself in his arms at the same time that he tossed his cane aside. He wrapped his arms around her and they crashed to the ground and she didn’t care, because she was kissing him frantically, wildly.
He was alive!
“Why were you leaving?” he said between kisses. “I was waiting for you at sick bay. You were leaving without me.”
She sobbed harder, shaking her head and kissing him. “Your records say that you’re dead. Kaden, I got your vidpic.
You
said you were a dead man. I thought you were dead,” she whispered. “I thought you’d left me.”
“Not quite,” he said with a grin. “So... where are we going?”
“Europa 13,” she said before kissing him again. “You said you wanted to go to the beach.”
He grinned down at her. “I said I wanted to go to the beach
with you
.”
“So you did,” she whispered, still dazed. “So you did.”
#
It was hard to stop kissing him long enough to purchase a second ticket and then board the tiny space-liner, but once they did, they claimed a private cabin. It was half the size of her old one on the
Alcestis
, but that didn’t matter.
All she needed was Kaden.
As soon as they were alone, she began to tug at his clothing with quick, frantic motions, and he reached for hers.
“I love you,” she whispered against his mouth. “I didn’t get a chance to tell you that I loved you. That was dumb. So I’m telling you now. I love you. Love you so much.”
“I love you too,” he told her. “I’ve missed you.”
God, she’d missed him too. So much that she felt as if she never wanted him to leave her sight again. She tore at his belt, pressing a kiss to the skin she exposed.
“Zoey, wait,” he said in hesitation. “I don’t know if you want to see that—”
She didn’t care. His leg could be torn to shit and she didn’t care. Her fingers paused as she undid the belt of his uniform and slid his pants down... revealing a leg badly scarred and half-mech.
Cyborg?
She looked up at him in surprise.
He sighed heavily. “There’s a reason why my public files were classified. The military hasn’t sanctioned cyborg replacement for the masses yet. They think I’ll make a good poster boy for it.” He looked unhappy at her reaction. “I’m sorry. I know it’s not attractive. I died on the table, twice. By the time they pulled me out of stasis, my body was infected from a combination of stasis and frostbite and I was losing more of my body than they could save. This was the only way.”
She didn’t care. It brought him back to her. So she kissed the mech on his big thigh and slid back up to him, her fingers grazing along the scar on the side of his head. Likely more mech there, too. “Where else?” she asked him.
“Here,” he said, tapping his chest, and she noticed a new scar along his pectoral. “And some in my back. I know it must change things, for you. It’s not... natural.”
It changed nothing. “What about here?” she asked huskily, her hand moving to cup his cock. Thick, engorged, and heavy in her hand. “All Kaden here?”
His eyes grew dark with heat. “All Kaden.”
Her hand trailed up his chest, past the network of tattoos on his broad body. “And here?” she asked, tapping his forehead lightly. “All Kaden here?”
“All Kaden,” he repeated. “And I love you. That hasn’t changed a bit. Not in the weeks we’ve been apart.”
“I love you too,” she said softly and leaned in to kiss the new scar on his chest, nearly weeping with pleasure when he knotted his fingers in her hair in a familiar gesture. “Kaden, it doesn’t change a thing for me. I don’t care. All I care is that you’re back with me.”
“I’m all yours,” he said, and then amended slowly, “for the next month.”
She stiffened in surprise. “What happens in a month?”
“The military conscripted two more years from me in exchange for the cyborg parts,” he said with a heavy sigh. “I’m going to be their spokesman for a bit. Do a lot of public service, a lot of interviews putting a positive military spin on things. Showing them that living with mech in your body isn’t a bad thing. You have to admit that it’s a great story. Meathead saves the life of a pretty scientist at the expense of his own ass.” He tilted his head, staring down at her with possessiveness. “The brass love it. I get to be their dog and pony show for a bit and then I’m free.”
Two more years. “I’m sorry,” she said. “I know you were close to being out.”
He shrugged, his big hand skating up her back and tugging at the fastening of her uniform, sliding it down. “All I care about right now is you in my arms.”
But now that she had him back, she wasn’t going to be able to rest. That month deadline loomed over her head. She didn’t have him back only to lose him so quickly again. A month wouldn’t be enough.
She leaned in to kiss him again, stepping out of her uniform and groaned when he cupped her breast. “Kaden,” she said softly. “What happens to us when that month is up?”
He stilled and looked into her eyes. “Well, I kind of thought about spending twenty-nine days on the beaches and making love to you. And then on day thirty, I thought I might see if you wanted to get married. The brass can’t separate a soldier from his wife, after all.”
Now that was more like it. She wrapped her arms around his neck and pressed her breasts to his chest. “Why wait for day thirty?”
He grinned. “Have you always been this impatient?”
“Only at the thought of being separated from you again,” she said softly, leaning in to kiss him again. “Never again. Promise me.”
“I promise,” he said slowly, “that next time, if I’m in the stasis pod with you, this time I won’t get out.”
“Deal,” she said with a giddy laugh. “I don’t care if they find the science officer with the meathead’s cock crammed into her body,” she said, throwing his words back at him.
He got a devilish glint in his eyes. “Would you care to test that theory, science officer?”
She pushed him down on the bed with a smile. “Absolutely.”