Mercenary Abduction (Alien Abduction) (2 page)

BOOK: Mercenary Abduction (Alien Abduction)
11.29Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

“My thanks.”

She expected him to work for free? He gnashed his sharpened teeth. “A generous gift. And from

Tren?”

Aunt Muna snorted.

Yeah, Tren would never frukxing thank him, not with words or credits. It just wasn’t his way, but

he might hold off killing him if Makl accidentally got on his bad side – which he tended to inadvertently do quite often.
Looks like I’m going to fetch a barbarian.
As if Makl possessed a choice. Free job or not, he’d do what his aunt asked because he liked – and feared – her.

He sighed. “How soon do you need it?”

“You mean her? Yesterday.”

“Anything else I need to know? Qualities I should look for?”

“How the frukx should I know? Just find us a human female to care for the child. Megan’s doing

her best, but she’s only one person and this child is demon possessed, bless his mighty heart.”

Makl made one last ditch effort to avoid the task. “You do realize I’m nowhere near that galaxy.”

“Then you better get moving. This errand is of utmost importance.” Aunt Muna shouted the last bit

over the strident screams of a baby. Ripping the earpiece from his head, Makl winced as the howl

bounced around inside his skull. Good lungs indeed.

Pocketing his earpiece, he turned his attention back to the building he’d studied over the course of

the last few days. He was finished here now. No point in observing it any further, not when he’d have to return at a later time to finish the job. And all because of a stupid errand – a free, no glory, no credits errand – he couldn’t refuse.

Pocketing his tools, he climbed down from the building he’d scaled, people not daring to say a

word despite him obviously being up to no good. Cowards. What did a miscreant have to do in order to

get noticed? With a snarl on his lips, he made his way to street level and grumbled under his breath as he stalked through the marketplace.

Sent on an errand indeed. Did his Aunt Muna not realize he had more important things to do than to

fetch a nanny for his stupid cousin? He was meant to do great things. Dastardly deeds, not act the part of errand boy. What was so hard about placing an ad and conducting interviews until someone could be

found to care for the spawn created by his egotistical cousin Tren and his barbarian female? Next thing he knew, they’d ask him to buy toys, or mind the child. How degrading.

Tren should find his own human.
He’d already accidentally abducted one, his mate, Megan. How hard could it be for him to mistakenly kidnap a second?

Although, the idea of flouting the laws and brazenly going to the barbarian planet to steal a female

did sound like fun. Earth was considered off limits, not that everyone obeyed that particular edict.

Disregarding the strictly enforced law might get him some recognition if word got around.

While his reputation as a fighter was building, Makl still had a ways to go before he came out

from under the shadow of his numerous cousins. The frukxing jerks. The problem with being born in an

illustrious family known for its misdeeds universe-wide was standing out. Everything he did had already been done before, and in many cases more flamboyantly – as family and officials liked to remind him.

But not for long. Soon I’ll do something so crazy, so clever, they won’t have a choice but to see
what a mighty mercenary I am.
Even if he had to go on a murderous rampage to achieve it.

The bazaar was in full swing as he blended back into the crowd. Clad in a shadowy grey cape that

swirled around his frame, the tip of it reaching the tops of his boots, he glared at those in his path. Most moved out of his way. Those that didn’t? He wisely left the bigger, meaner looking ones alone. Tough and seeking to make a name for himself didn’t mean Makl engaged in stupid battles –unless someone offered him the right price. Mercenary rule number one: don’t fight unless you’re getting paid. If it didn’t give you credits, then why waste the effort and chance of an injury? Of course, exceptions to the rule existed. Rule number eight stated no tolerance for insults or slurs. While number fifteen, which he personally felt should have been a sub-clause to number eight, advocated revenge at all cost.

Some might mock the rules of mercenary living, but Makl studied them religiously, memorizing his

handbook –
A Mercenary’s Guide to Prosperity.
Creased and worn, the mercenary rule book was a present from his father who’d seen how Makl idolized Tren. What male didn’t? As a child and a teen,

he’d hear about the exploits of his great cousin. The big and mean male brought massive amounts of honor and riches to their house, but what Makl truly coveted was the shining adulation in everyone’s eyes

whenever his deeds were recounted.

Makl wanted that glory, to bring that smile of pride to his family’s face. It was why he worked so

hard to achieve evil success and why he lived by the mercenary rules. With the mantras he lived by

guiding his steps and his fortune, he gained notoriety. He also still lived to fight another day and his credit account grew. Now if only he could achieve a big score. Something to really make him the number-one-wanted-male in the universe.

He’d hoped to accomplish that here. And he still would, just not today, apparently. Stupid frukxing

family.

Grumbling some more, Makl headed toward his favorite brothel, determined to relieve his cock

before undertaking the stupidly long voyage to the planet Earth. Rule number five – keep your cock

exercised lest lust cloud your judgment. Makl took this dictum very seriously, most males he knew did.

Prone to long space voyages, often alone or with a handful of other males, all good mercenaries spent a good chunk of time and their fortune when docked emptying their cocks. Each time Makl came, he could

swear he felt himself getting more clear-headed and smarter, so was it any wonder he never neglected this part of his training?

Intent on attaining that state of
clarity,
he did his best to ignore the booths of wares. Not an easy task. Tasseled and painted with bright colors, displaying riches and rarities from around the universe, everything served to distract – and tempted his twitching fingers. Spices, their aromas lifting the mood in some cases, dulling the spirit in others. Gems and jewelry, some with boulder-sized stones to please even the most avarice minded of mistresses, gleamed. Stalls with displays of fabric so bright it hurt the eyes, in more colors than the universe intended, were hard to view without the protection of glasses. But it was the noise that was the worst. Everything seemed to pile together to create an unpleasant rumble of sound.

Even some of the delicate finery added to the cacophony. How, you ask? In the Obsidian galaxy, legal or not, you could find actual living, breathing skeins of silk. You heard that right. Living fabric existed, very rare, forbidden, and expensive, but ridiculously comfortable, or so he’d heard. At least the tissue stopped screaming once the seamstresses finished their stitching and cutting the illegal stuff into a garment.

Although, Makl had heard the occasional whimper when he removed a more delicate piece with his teeth.

But he digressed. Not a good idea amidst the madness of the market where the hundreds of voices

begged listening, movement bore watching, and danger possibly sneaked up on him. He hoped. In a place like this, there were always predators looking to make victims of the newcomers. The weak.

Makl didn’t fall into that category. Strong as any alien present – for his weight class – he didn’t

doubt his ability to prevail. Although, keeping his hunger in check? His belly rumbled at the smells…

Mmm, the temptation to gorge himself almost slowed his steps. Food abounded all around, freshly made

and enhanced to tempt every palette. Some were upfront kiosks, hawking their steaming or smoking

dishes. In some cases, the decadent aromas sifted out from restaurants in the tightly packed buildings where one took the chance of becoming part of the menu. No one ever starved in the marketplace where

every
hunger
could be fed, legal or not.

In the center of all the aisles of chaos, winding streets intentionally built to funnel traffic, an open area existed, but was crowded at the moment. An auction was obviously in progress, which meant no

getting across quickly to the other side. Stupid design. Either he waited it out, or he had to back track and take a more circuitous path, which would totally cut into his fornicating time.

Not for the first time, Makl wished he’d not gotten booted from the Hairy Dual Cleft on this side

of the plaza. Alas, combining his business – the messy kill of a space captain whose wife caught him

cheating – and his pleasure – a lovely gal he should have probably paid in retrospect – meant he now had to travel a little farther to ease his sexual needs.

An unmarried male had two choices in the cities he visited: take his chances with a female fighter,

or find a whore. Females of the races most compatible to his kind were for some reason always scarcer than the males. Odd, but true, unless you counted the Zonian planet where a violent female class held sway. But no sane male ever went there expecting to leave alive.

Too many beings with cocks meant laws existed to protect the females, from strangers at least.

Single women were not to be bothered under penalty of death. Fathers took their role as chaperone

seriously, but the mothers were fanatic. Virginity went for a high price, and seeing as how there were always males seeking mates to birth their own sons, a family could make a pretty penny with the right marriage or sale.

Only a stupid warrior messed with a prized virgin. Makl didn’t need to rub his posterior to

remember the errors of his way. So whores it was, seeing as how the female fighters he’d encountered

could often pass for men –
shudder
. And since the Hairy Dual Cleft fiasco, Makl even remembered to pay his sexual partners and tip them – with credits instead of just orgasms.

As he stood on the edge of the crowd, debating whether to wait or skirt the disturbance, he finally

took note of the sight on stage.

“I’ll be frukxed,” he muttered.

It seemed the minor goddess of Karma – from the lost galaxy no one could remember – was

smiling his way because standing on the raised dais, dressed in a floor-length cloak, head bowed, hands clasped, was a human, or so the announcer claimed as he extolled her many virtues. What a long list of attributes – trained dancer, accomplished chef, a player of nine instruments – the demure human came

with a certificate vouching for her maidenhead, which would make her fetch a hefty price.

Not that Makl planned to pay for her.

As the Galactic Avenger, he would take her from right under her new owner’s nose. And maybe

laugh while he did it. He didn’t think Tren or Jaro ever did that. Tren usually glowered. Jaro gave people a toothy grin. Makl would chuckle menacingly. Or should he just smile coldly? He really needed to

decide on his look so people would have something to talk about when they recounted his daring deeds.

But he got ahead of himself. First, he needed to acquire a certain human.

Settling on an expression of bored disinterest, he skulked on the edge of the crowd, noting who

seemed most intent on bidding, sizing up the competition. It vaguely occurred to him that his Aunt Muna probably wouldn’t approve of him hiring a virgin trained in the finest of the erotic arts, but then again, she didn’t give him exactly much of a list.
Besides, surely a female trained to deal with difficult men should
have no problem handling a baby.

And it would save him the cost of a trip to the outer reaches…

If the whole virgin thing was a problem, Makl knew of a way to get rid of it. And save hard

earned credits in the process.

Could his luck get any better?

It could. Makl’s exhale of breath halted as the female on stage lifted her head, the delicate draping of cloth over her hair framing a perfectly oval face. Sporting two eyes, one nose and a set of lips like him but in a pinkish hue, she was enchanting. Pure. Perfect. Her skin…ooh her skin gleamed a pale, icy white.

It contrasted nicely with her dark, delicately arched brows and her full, kissable lips. How easy to

imagine her flesh as a light foil for his dark purple tone. The thought was enough to make his cock stir.

Yet, her delicate beauty wasn’t the only thing that drew him. Eyes of velvety chocolate – a

decadent sweet treat he’d stumbled across a time or two– big and startled, stared at him, and he ogled her right back. Maybe this whole nanny thing wouldn’t end up such a chore after all. By abducting the human on stage, he would shave days off his schedule. He could even take his time, to save fuel of course, and add several galactic revolutions to his trip back to Aunt Muna’s. Plenty of time to deflower the virgin and ruin her for all other males. Megan would probably thank him.

I’ll be a frukxing hero.
In more ways than one.

Chapter Two

Olivia fluttered her lashes, keeping them demurely downcast lest the men in the crowd – and the

things with too many arms, eyes, and appendages she’d prefer not dwell on – think her too forward. It was important to her benefactor that she appear well behaved, gentle, and soft spoken. The perfect female.

Fetch the highest price possible; that was the plan. She’d not spent all her time training, then getting groomed – plucked, shaved, skin sanded and moisturized by too many tentacles on the beautician to count

– to not succeed. She just hoped she earned a high price.

She, make that they, had worked hard to get her here, the infamous Obsidian Galaxy marketplace,

a place avoided by all but the bravest—stupidest—and richest. A lawless world ruled by thieves and

murderers, whose warped idea of honor changed from day to day, where anything could be bought and

BOOK: Mercenary Abduction (Alien Abduction)
11.29Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Endymion by Dan Simmons
Florida Heatwave by Michael Lister
Club Vampire by Jordyn Tracey
30 Seconds by Chrys Fey
Shadows on the Stars by T. A. Barron
Kids of Kabul by Deborah Ellis
A History of the Crusades by Riley-Smith, Jonathan