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Authors: Anna Hackett

Tags: #Romance, #Fantasy, #Military, #Science Fiction

Lost in Barbarian Space (17 page)

BOOK: Lost in Barbarian Space
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“Bit like this big brute when we hurt you?”

Worry niggled at Honor. She hated seeing Colm so out of control, knew he’d hate it even more.

“If Darc is really out there, I think we’ll work to avoid her. So, girly, I think it’s best to lead us to the treasure as fast as you can.”

Honor shrugged. “The wreck’s down here…somewhere. We haven’t found it.”

“Well, luckily my very expensive syndroid can detect metal.”

Damn
. It was exactly the kind of tech Honor would’ve brought down, if this mission had gone as planned. “The ice is pretty thick. It’ll make it difficult to get good readings.”

Alara flashed her metal teeth. “I happen to make a living off difficult.” She nudged Honor with her boot. “Now get up. It’s time to move.”

Honor climbed to her feet. She started walking, but Alara still gave her another kick, apparently for good measure.

Behind her, she heard Colm jerking against his bindings. It took four pirates to hold him.

The syndroid floated into the lead of their unhappy little group.

They followed the droid through the ice tunnels. A few times they had to backtrack. Once, Alara had her pirates blow a hole right through an ice wall. But Honor got the impression they were going round in circles.

“Enough!” Alara kicked at an icy stalagmite on the floor. It shattered to pieces. Her gaze zeroed in on Honor. “You work for the Institute. You’re the expert at finding old things. I want you to find it for me, girly.”

“I don’t know where—”

Alara slammed a fist into Honor’s belly.

As the breath rushed out of her, Honor’s training kicked in. She snapped her elbow up, and caught Alara in the chin. As the pirate woman stumbled back, another pirate rushed in. Honor kicked this one in the gut. But two charged her and started to pummel her. With her hands behind her back, she was at a fucking disadvantage.

Suddenly, she heard screams. She turned. Colm had broken free of the laser ropes.

He’d gone wild.

He moved in a blur of speed. He jammed a fist into the face of the pirate closest to him. He turned with a roar and attacked the next pirates.

Bodies flew into the wall and pirates shouted.

Honor went to move, but then she felt the cold barrel of a laser weapon at the back of her neck.

“You talk him down, girly, or I’ll kill you right now. He’ll be next, and I’ll leave your bodies here to freeze.” Alara’s voice was strong and steady.

Honor nodded. She wouldn’t let Colm get slaughtered like an animal.

She wouldn’t let the man she loved die.

With that revelation echoing inside her, she called out. “Colm?”

No response.

She pulled away from Alara and stepped closer to him. Her warrior was standing there, chest heaving, his eyes a brilliant glowing gold, assessing the pirates cowering before him. She peered at him, trying to see her warrior in there, somewhere.

“Warrior?”

His head turned toward her.

She wished her hands were free so she could touch him. “It’s Honor. It’s okay. I need you to come back to me.”

She took another step closer. She could see his hands were flexing. They were covered in blood.

“Colm. I need you.”

In the gold of his eyes, she saw a flicker of response.

He reached out and grabbed her, hauling her to his chest. She heard the pirates protesting, but she ignored them. Colm nuzzled her hair.

Honor turned her head and pressed her lips against his neck. “I’m here, my warrior.” She rubbed her cheek against him and wished again that her hands were free.

She felt the tension drain out of him. She pulled back and looked up. The gold was leaking from his eyes, leaving them the warm brown she knew so well. “There you are.”

“Honor?” His voice was hoarse.

“Yeah.” She lowered her voice to a whisper. “The pirates will kill us if you keep fighting. We need to go along with them for now and wait for an opportunity to overpower them or escape.” She pressed her lips to his jaw. Felt a tremor run through him. “Understand?”

A slight nod. “But if they hurt you again, I’ll end them.”

She breathed deep, the scent of him filling her senses. They had a mission to complete, but she knew that after this was over, leaving this man would shatter something inside her.

 

Chapter Thirteen

Colm was barely holding on to his sanity.

His nanami were screaming through his body, crazed. His senses were fully expanded. He could hear every noise the pirates were making, even the rush of blood in their veins, and it was driving him mad.

No. He had to stay conscious. Stay sane. He had to protect Honor.

Protect his mate.

He closed his eyes. It felt so
right
…she made his nanami sing. She made him feel whole and powerful.

He opened his eyes. His gaze fell on the droid and he saw it pause. It moved toward a narrow tunnel entrance ahead. The pirates paused at the entrance, murmuring amongst themselves.

Alara nodded her head. “Shank. You go first.”

One tall pirate with long hair halfway down his back squeezed inside. He had to turn sideways to fit. The droid floated in behind him.

One of the pirates nudged Honor to go next, and she slipped inside. Colm pushed forward to go in so he wouldn’t be too far away from her. He also turned sideways, and for him, it was a very tight fit. The ice scratched along his skin.

They moved along the narrow space, the pirates’ lights flashing through the dark tunnel. Then Colm bumped into Honor. She’d stopped.

She was staring at the wall beside them.

Artifacts hung, encased in ice.

“Ooo, lookee here.” Alara jostled forward. “Cut ’em out of there.”

Colm and Honor were jostled further down the tunnel so the pirates with laser cutters could get in close to the artifacts.

It didn’t take them long to cut them out.

“Junk.” One pirate tossed an ancient artifact—what looked like a ceramic plate—over his shoulder, and it hit the ice, shattering into pieces.

“Crap.” Another one threw what looked like an item of clothing behind her.

“This stuff might not be valuable, but we’re getting close,” Alara said. “There’s treasure here. Keep moving.”

They came out of the narrow tunnel into a large cavern. Here, the walls were mostly white, and the ground was uneven, churned-up ice. Colm stared at it. It didn’t look quite right.

Ahead, the group of pirates move forward, crossing the space.

Colm and Honor followed at a slower pace. A second later, he heard a quiet creak from above.

“What is it?” Honor whispered.

“I’m not sure…”

The next instant, a huge hunk of ice slammed down from the roof and shattered across the floor ahead of them. The pirates started shouting.

More hunks of ice of all sizes rained down.

“Cave-in!” someone shouted.

As the pirates scattered in all directions, Colm grabbed Honor’s arm. They ran, ice hammering down around them.

As a sizable slab of ice smashed into his shoulder, Colm grunted. He pulled Honor in close, shielding her with his body.

Two steps ahead of them, a massive hunk of ice—the size of a hargon beast—slammed down right on top of a pirate.

Colm pivoted at the last second, his feet sliding out from under him. He held Honor tight against his chest as they skidded across the icy floor. As they hit the wall, he turned, covering her body with his own.

The ice continued to rain down for several minutes, and then, it stopped.

Slowly, he raised his head. Honor did the same.

She smiled at him. “Thanks.”

From nearby, Alara was coughing. “Fuck me.” Then the pirate leader went still, her gaze on the far wall. “By a space whore’s fat ass.”

He followed Alara’s gaze and saw that the ice fall had cracked the wall ahead.

Nestled in an exposed cavity was the wreck of a starship.

For a second, Colm felt quiet amazement. This was the ship of people who’d come along with the First Warriors. His ancestors.

The pirates had forgotten Colm and Honor. As a group, they climbed up and crawled into the hole, closer to the wreck.

“Nik will go nuts for this,” Honor said quietly, her face grim. “We need to find a way to keep these scavengers off it.”

Colm agreed. The ancient travelers who’d died on this ship hadn’t made it to Markaria, but they were inextricably linked to the First Warriors. He felt he owed it to them, and their memory.

“Ideas?” he asked.

“They’re down to five.” She scowled at the droid. It was hovering silently off to the side. “The syndroid is the wildcard. There’s no telling what kind of weapons it has.”

“I can destroy it,” he said darkly.

She grabbed him. “You’re not impervious to heavy lasers or explosives. Don’t underestimate it.”

He lifted a hand and touched her cheek. “It is my duty to protect you.”

“Well, you’ll have to settle for us protecting each other.”

“Hey?” Alara’s voice interrupted them. “You two get in here and look around this ship. If more ice falls, it can fall on you.”

The pirate leader was a bitch. Colm was going to enjoy making her pay for this.

Alara used a knife to slice through Honor’s ropes and free her hands. Then the pirate slapped a large, well-used flashlight into Honor’s palm.

Colm and Honor climbed in through the hole in the wall where the ship was nestled. The dull metal of its hull was covered in a slick layer of ice. Something had torn a hole in the back end of the ship and the front was badly damaged from the crash.

“We can go in through the tear,” Honor suggested.

There was jagged metal along the edge of the hole. Colm gripped the edges and bent them back, making it safer for Honor. Then he followed her inside.

Honor clicked on the light, shining it around.

“My God,” she breathed.

It was like the inside had been frozen in time. As though the occupants had just left. Colm saw benches topped with various tools, devices similar to Syncs, and even mugs and plates from someone’s half-finished snack. Things were jumbled around, clearly the result of the crash, but many things were still in place.

They moved out of the hangar and into a corridor. Through a glass window, Colm spotted chairs attached to the floor and pushed up against built-in desks. Cupboard doors hung open, revealing the jumbled items inside.

They moved deeper into the ship, eventually passing through a doorway into the cockpit.

Honor straightened. Ahead, sitting in the captain’s chair, was a body that had been preserved by the cold.

“By the warrior,” Colm breathed. He scanned the cockpit and saw there were more bodies, still strapped into their chairs.

“They never made it out,” Honor said. “They died right here.”

No, it wasn’t like on Markaria, where the survivors of the
Excalibur
had made it out and gone on to make some sort of life for themselves.

“It was too cold,” she said. “They had nowhere to go.” She looked around, her hands sliding over objects. She touched the comp system briefly, then she shook her head. “It’s frozen solid. Come on, let’s go look at the cargo bay.”

He followed her back through the ship. There was so much history here. How different things could have been if this ship hadn’t crashed, or if its sister ship hadn’t crash-landed on his world.

For a second, a part of him wondered what it would have been like if he hadn’t been cursed with the nanami sickness. But without the nanami his ancestors had granted his people, Markarians would never have existed. He wouldn’t have existed, and for this brief time, Honor wouldn’t have been his.

“Here it is,” Honor said. The double doors were closed. She pushed at them, trying to slide the heavy panels open. They didn’t budge.

Colm pulled her back. He wedged his fingers into the groove between the two doors and shoved outward with all his strength.

The doors opened with a screech.

The cargo bay loomed beyond. Their steps echoed on the floor as they entered.

“By the Warrior’s sword.” Colm had never seen anything like it before.

“Stars,” Honor murmured.

It filled the entire cargo bay.

Treasure.

***

Honor couldn’t believe it. It was an ancient Terran treasure trove. There were suits of armor, various weapons, gold, statues. It filled every inch of the space. Her gaze skimmed over it. The contents of the hold were worth a huge fortune.

Footsteps sounded behind them, and Alara walked into the cargo bay. “Woohoo!” She cackled with gleeful, greedy joy.

Her remaining pirates followed her in and started cheering. A few rushed forward, holding large bags. It took them mere seconds to start cramming the smaller treasures inside.

Anger swamped Honor. She watched a pirate carelessly drop an artifact on the floor. The golden statue broke in half.

“That is a piece of history you just destroyed,” Honor said, her voice tight.

Alara laughed and the sound echoed in the confines of the ship. “You mean it’s a mountain of e-creds he just ruined.” She reached out and backhanded the pirate who’d dropped the artifact. “Be more careful, or your share goes down.”

Honor’s hands curled into fists. It was her job to stop this and protect these artifacts. She glanced at Colm and saw the echoing glint in his eyes.

“Fighting with you will never get old, little warrior,” he said quietly.

“Ready?”

“Always.”

Together, they launched into an attack. With hard chops of her arms, Honor took down the pirate closest to her. Colm stormed forward, his massive fists weapons in themselves.

With a cry, the final pirates converged on them. Honor and Colm’s hands and feet moved in a deadly dance as they fought.

“Honor!” Colm grabbed her arms. “Behind you.” He swung her, lifting her off the floor.

When he let her go, she slammed into two pirates, knocking them to the ice. Two more hits made sure they weren’t getting up anytime soon.

She stood, ready for more, when a shot of green laser fire cut across her arm, and she cried out from the burn.

She ducked, and from the corner of her eye saw the droid floating closer. She glanced down, checking her arm, reassured that it wasn’t bad.

BOOK: Lost in Barbarian Space
13.1Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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