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Ghost Of A Machine (Cyborg Sizzle Book 9) by Cynthia Sax (5)


 

Five

Ghost gazed at the golden hair billowing over the console. Her female’s curls were loose, the strands capturing the light shining down on them, glowing like one of the distant stars displayed on the main viewscreen.

Her beautiful face was turned toward him. Her mouth was clamped shut. Her eyes were closed, her blonde eyelashes fanned over her skin.

Not even a planet rotation had passed and she already slept, her senses offline, her form vulnerable to attack. Ghost watched over his female, fascinated and frightened.

Cyborgs didn’t require rest. He’d inserted circuits into his wrists. That energy input should fuel him for planet rotations. He still wasn’t operating at optimal levels. He was too badly damaged to be restored to his original settings. But he was functional.

His female was not.

She gripped a dagger in her right hand, her tiny fingers curled around the hilt. Ghost shook his head. Any warrior with skill could disarm her.

She needed his protection. He wouldn’t fail her as he’d failed some of the other females.

Ghost pushed those painful memories aside, concentrated on monitoring their surroundings, on contemplating the mystery that was his female.

She had been on Mercury Minor when the Humanoid Alliance had first invaded. That had occurred many solar cycles ago. She would have been merely an offspring and she had been alone. Others had betrayed her, used her, forgotten her. That now caused her to doubt everyone.

He had taken part in first assaults. Some humans, when threatened, became wild beasts, acting on instinct, all sense of honor, of humanity, gone.

He had been that way when she first saw him. Ghost winced. It would take time to correct that initial impression, to show her he would die before harming her, to communicate that he would always return for her.

To earn the right to breed with her again.

He wanted her, his cock hard, his balls aching. And she wanted him also. Even in her sleep, the scent of her arousal coiled around him, taunting him, torturing him.

Being inside her, holding her in his arms had been one of the best moments of his life. Another moment had been when she cleaned him, her fingers light on his skin, gentle, caring.

He now had multiple good memories in his processors after a lifespan of pain, of violence, of death. That astounded him.

It also allowed him to deal with the darkness, the guilt. Ghost layered the footage over the faces of the females he’d failed. That made those images bearable.

Additional good memories would fade them even more. Maybe when his female awoke, she might deem him worthy of touching her. He could add more wonderful moments to his hoard.

A sensor was triggered and Ghost’s hopes of a breeding session vanished. Their warship was within monitoring range of another vessel. He removed the circuits from his wrists, raised the ship’s shields and slowed their speed, delaying the confrontation.

“Mine,” he rumbled. His female would want to be notified.

Her head jerked upward. “What?” She lifted the dagger in front of her face as though she strived to defend herself from an attacker, her knuckles whitening, her breath held.

“Yours.” Ghost reminded her. He would never damage her.

“Oh.” His female exhaled, her expression sheepish. “I thought I was back on… Never mind where I thought I was.” She set the weapon on the console. “Why have we stopped?”

She’d thought she was back on Mercury Minor, solitary and defenseless. His female didn’t have to say the words. He understood. “Ship.”

Ghost put the image on the main viewscreen. It appeared to be a merchant ship in disrepair, its panels dented and dull. It was unlikely to be a threat but he wasn’t taking any risks with his female.

He’d failed the others. He wouldn’t fail her.

“That’s not a Humanoid Alliance ship.” His female tapped her index finger against her lips. “It’s too old.” Her eyes narrowed at the main viewscreen. “Is it operational?”

“Moves.” The merchant ship was moving very slowly. He enlarged the image. Light shone from one of its portals.

Her nose wrinkled. “Is there a distress call?”

“No.” He reduced the image and charted their path on the main viewscreen. They could continue on their course and avoid the merchant ship.

“Then—”

Another sensor was triggered. A second ship was moving quickly toward the first one. He expanded that image.

His female gasped. “That’s a Humanoid Alliance warship and it’s headed toward the merchant ship. What is the status of the warship’s shields?”

“Up.” The enemy warship was preparing for a confrontation.

“And the merchant’s ships shields?”

“Down.” They might be non-functional.

“The merchant ship will be blown to pieces.” His female placed her hands on the control panel. “We’re intercepting the warship.” She adjusted their course and increased their speed. The floor tiles rattled under their feet.

“Not safe.” Ghost frowned at her. The two warships were evenly matched. His female could die in the firefight.

“I’m doing this, Ghost. With or without you.” She stuck out her chin, determination written all over her beautiful face. “If you truly want to protect me, you’ll help me.”

He hesitated. Being a cyborg, he was as one with the systems. He could commandeer the warship, physically restrain his female, stop her from battling the enemy warship, keep her safe from harm.

But that would damage her emotionally. The little trust she gave him would be gone.

Ghost performed a lifeform scan on the Humanoid Alliance vessel. All of the beings on board were human. This wouldn’t be a fight against any of his cyborg brethren.

They should be able to defeat the enemy warship.

He pushed away his doubts and helped his female stabilize their ship.

“I can’t fly and man our weapons at the same time.” Her gaze remained fixed on their target. “Which task do you want?”

Ghost was a cyborg. He could complete both tasks at once.

But that wasn’t necessary. His female’s flying skills appeared to be adequate.

“Guns.” He would kill the beings who threatened his female, blast them out of space. That thought gave him a savage satisfaction.

The communications system beeped. They were being hailed by the enemy warship.

“That’s the Humanoid Alliance hailing frequencies. Don’t answer it,” his female instructed. “They think we’re one of them.”

If they answered the hail, the enemy would know from the visual that they weren’t one of them. The Humanoid Alliance considered cyborgs to be unthinking machines, unable to operate on their own, and, in his many human lifespans of living, Ghost had never seen a female officer in their ranks.

“They’ll soon be surprised when they find out we’re not.” His female’s grin held no humor.

They didn’t slow as they approached the enemy’s ship. She had courage, his little female. Ghost’s chest expanded with pride.

“As soon as we get into range, start shooting.” She guided their warship toward their target. “Try to direct as many missiles as possible at the same spot on their shields. That will bring those shields down faster.”

“No try. Will.” Even a damaged cyborg could do as she requested.

She strapped herself to the chair. “Within range in… three, two, one.”

He hammered the enemy warship with missiles. Their ship shuddered with each volley.

There was a delay, a sweet spot of no response. That happened when cyborgs fought humans. Humans didn’t have as fast of a reaction time.

Ghost gave the enemy vessel everything they had.

The enemy returned fire. He stepped closer to his female as the first missile hit them, positioning himself to protect her if that was necessary. Their ship rocked. The shields held.

She veered their ship upward and sharply to the left. Ghost rotated the guns, readjusted the aim and continued to fire.

“Blast it all. You’re good.” His female’s voice was warm with admiration.

He stood taller. “Cyborg.”

“Hold on.”

He braced himself, holding onto the edge of the console with one hand.

She spun their ship, avoiding the missiles. Any item not secured was tossed around the bridge. His female’s dagger whizzed toward her face.

He lunged, catching it with his free hand before it could strike her. The blade cut into his palm, slicing his skin, the pain sharp and fleeting.

When the ship righted, he dropped the weapon. It clattered against the floor tiles. He pinned it in place with his foot and returned his focus to the battle before them.

“I’m increasing our speed.” His female leaned forward as they circled the enemy warship. “Can you handle it?”

“Yes.” Ghost questioned if she could. He had cyborg reflexes. She didn’t.

He directed missiles at the same point on the bow of the ship. The enemy’s shields held. They were going so fast; their own shields weren’t tested. The enemy couldn’t lock on them.

His female’s flying skills were more than adequate. They were superb.

“On Mercury Minor, I was trapped,” his female shared. “But no one can touch me in the sky.”

“Free.” No longer enslaved by the Humanoid Alliance, he was free also, free to protect his female, to kill for her.

“Yes, I’m free.” She laughed as they dodged more missiles.

They circled the enemy warship again and again. The Humanoid Alliance tried to move with them, seeking to lock onto them, yet couldn’t. His female steered their ship in erratic patterns, varying each rotation.

“Good.” He expressed his admiration.

Her cheeks turned an intriguing shade of pink. “The Humanoid Alliance prides itself on being rational. They study their opponents, determine how the average being will react, and base their strategy on that. The solution is not to be average, not to be predictable.”

Ghost grunted his agreement. The cyborgs had learned that tactic also.

“I discovered that after the invasion.” His female’s lips flattened. “The Humanoid Alliance operated on three shifts a planet rotation. Every shift the routine would be the same—bombing, ground raids, no activity, bombing, ground raids, no activity. It was like they had a quota, a designated number of beings to kill.” Her voice was bitter. “Once they reached it they stopped.”

The Humanoid Alliance did have a quota. He, as a cyborg, had been given one too. A set number of beings to kill or a square of terrain to clear.

“My quota for this planet rotation is one Humanoid Alliance warship.” His female tossed her hair over her shoulders, the riot of blonde curls glistening under the lights.

“Ours,” he corrected. They were a team, bound together until the end of time.

“Our quota.” She didn’t deny their connection.

That pleased him. The ship rocked and his female cursed. The shields held. There was no damage to his little human, to their vessel.

The enemy warship, in contrast, suffered severe damage to their defenses. “Shields down soon.” Ghost was punching a hole through them, directing missile after missile at the bow.

“Don’t get cocky.” His female gave him unnecessary advice.

Ghost would never be overconfident, especially when it came to her safety. He had seen too much, failed too many times.

“This battle isn’t over until one of our ships is in pieces.” She jutted her jaw, flying their warship over the enemy once more.

He grunted. The ship in pieces wouldn’t be theirs.

His female increased the distance between the two ships, lessening the risk that, once the shields went down, the exploding enemy warship would damage their own vessel. “Are there any signs of a second warship?”

“No signs.” He constantly monitored the space around them. There was no second warship, which meant the enemy was operating solo. The Humanoid Alliance officers in the first warship would have called for reinforcements if there had been another vessel in the sector.

“Is the merchant ship out of range?” His female guided their ship around the enemy’s warship for another pass at the bow.

“Safe.” Whoever was in the merchant ship, friend or foe, would be unaffected.

Their safe status was due to his female leading the enemy away from them, not due to actions by the beings in the merchant ship. That vessel hadn’t ventured far from its original location.

Either it was damaged or the crew wasn’t concerned about the Humanoid Alliance warship.

“We’re finishing this battle.” His female accelerated, flying toward the other warship. “Now.”

Ghost pounded them with a barrage of missiles. The enemy ship retreated. His fearless female pushed their ship forward. The communications system beeped.

“No mercy.” His female ignored the hail. “They wouldn’t show us any.”

She was correct. The Humanoid Alliance wouldn’t show them any mercy. They also had no honor. If she relented, they would wait until her defenses were lowered and strike, disregarding any vows of peace.

Ghost had seen that with his own vision system. He had been one of the weapons the Humanoid Alliance had wielded against the more trusting.

He was thankful his female saw through those tricks. She fought like a warrior, no lenience for the enemy.

The Humanoid Alliance shields fell. “Down.”

“End them.” She steered their ship away from the enemy’s vessel.

Ghost spread the missiles over the entire warship. Bursts of orange and yellow lit the darkness, traveling from bow to stern, growing in brightness. There was a flare and debris blasted outward.

He wrapped his arms around his seated female, protecting her with his body. She yelled against his chest, her words muffled by his skin, and beat his shoulders with her tiny fists.

Their ship rocked, creaking and groaning, then became still.

He straightened.

“You can’t block my view.” She glared up at him. “I’m flying the blasted ship.”

“Clear.” There was nothing in their path to hit. The merchant ship was located to their left.

“And if the enemy had—” She gazed at the main viewscreen and her jaw dropped.

“No enemy.”

“No enemy,” she repeated, cutting the engines. “We won.” She jumped to her feet. “Ghost, we won.” She threw herself at him. He caught his tiny human, bemused by her reaction. “We won.” She hugged him, bouncing up and down.

“We won.” Ghost held her, relishing the feel of her jiggling curves against his hard muscle, enraptured by her excitement.

He had never doubted they’d win the battle. He wouldn’t have allowed his female to enter the fight if he thought they’d lose.

She mustn’t have been as certain but she hadn’t shown her concern. He gazed down at the top of her head with pride. His female was strong and brave and skilled at flying. She deserved her role as captain.

“We made a good team, you and I.” She tilted her head back and gazed up at him. Gold specks danced in her brown eyes, the color matching her hair.

“Good team.” He sank his fingers into her soft curls. They would be a team for the rest of their now almost-unlimited lifespans.

As long as he protected her properly.

She blinked. “Your speech is improving.”

“Copy.” He had simply echoed her communications. The words were in his processors. Putting them together remained a challenge. When she did that for him, it was easier.

“Hmmm…” She hummed, her lips vibrating.

Ghost had to feel that movement, that softness. He caught her trembling bottom lip between his, pulled it into his mouth.

His female pressed her palms against his bare chest and pushed. He sucked on her, extending her flesh more and more, teasing it with his teeth.

Her fingers curled and she sighed, opening to him. He stroked into her with his tongue, his tempo hard and fast, a reckless taking of her mouth.

For one, two heartbeats, his female blocked him, jabbing back, trying to stop an unstoppable force, trying to deny their indisputable passion for each other.

Then she capitulated, inhaling his tongue, pressing her breasts, her hips, against his hard form, her warmth, her scent surrounding him.

His cock pushed against her stomach. Their tongues twined and tumbled, his lips slanted, sealed over hers. Her breath wafted against his cheeks, a delicate caress meeting skin that had previously known no softness.

Being a primitive C Model, an equivalent gentleness was beyond Ghost’s capabilities. He ruthlessly claimed her mouth as he’d earlier claimed her, demanding her submission. She whimpered against his lips, opened wider to him, offering more of her to take.

He plunged into her mouth, twisted her curls in his hands, securing her to him. She quivered, straining against him. He was naked. Only her garments separated them.

Ghost gripped her ass coverings, his savage soul telling him to rip them into two, remove that barrier between them. She’d then be his. Completely.

His female clasped his wrists. He paused. She didn’t have his strength to stop him, didn’t have the physical power to prevent him from tearing the fabric, and he wanted her more than he’d ever wanted anything or anyone.

But resisting her urging would damage her fragile trust in him. Ghost would never do that. He allowed her to move his hands, to place them on her garment-clad breasts. Her generous curves filled his palms, the most decadent consolation. He squeezed and released, squeezed and released.

She murmured encouragement against his lips, her words not decipherable yet their meaning understood. His nanocybotics bubbled in her mouth. Her eyes were darkened with desire.

For him. A sense of wonder filled Ghost. This enchanting being wanted him, belonged to him.

He was damaged. Speaking was a hardship for him. Tasks that would have been simple for other cyborgs were a challenge.

And he’d failed other females, females he should have protected. That guilt would always cling to him, should have rendered him unworthy of happiness.

Yet the universe had sent him this dazzling creature, his chance for redemption, for peace.

Ghost pulled his head back to look at her, his beautiful human. Her gaze was unfocused. Her lips were plumped with passion. “Mine.”

She stepped away from him. Cool air swept over his heated skin and he frowned, not liking the distance between them. Her gaze flicked to his hard cock and then back to his face.

“We had a deal.” She fidgeted.

“Ship yours.” Ghost gazed at her, confused over her comment. He wasn’t challenging her for control of the vessel. Why was she mentioning it?

“Yes. Yes.” She waved her hands dismissively. “I know you’ve held up your part of the deal.” She unfastened her chest covering. “I want to hold up mine.” She paused, looking adorably uncertain. “Unless you preferred that I didn’t?”

He preferred that she bred with him because she wanted to, not because she felt obliged to uphold her part of a deal he’d never sought to make.

Ghost studied her.

His female desired him. The scent of her arousal flavored the air. But she had desired him previously and not wanted to breed with him.

Should he turn down her request or did she want him to say ‘yes’?

He didn’t know.

Human females were complicated beings.