Free Read Novels Online Home

Hunted by the Cyborg with Bonus by Cara Bristol (10)

Chapter Ten

 

“Beth?” Carter nudged her ribs.

She turned her attention away from President Mikala Aaron and the strikingly attractive man beside her to look at Carter, whose forehead furrowed with concern. “What?” she asked. Why was he staring at her?

He jerked his head slightly, and she turned back to the president to shake her outstretched hand. “It’s an honor to meet you, Madam President,” she said.

Mikala Aaron didn’t look old enough to be president or to have an adult daughter. No gray streaked her shiny auburn hair, and her complexion was unlined except for a few crinkles when she smiled, a grin that seemed warm and genuine.

“Please call me, Mikala. Besides, if I’m not mistaken, I believe we’ve already met.” She tilted her head. “You knew me as Professor Aaron.”

Uh…Beth didn’t know how to respond. Fortunately, Carter intervened. “Actually, Mikala, you’re thinking of Liza O’Shea, Beth’s twin sister. She’s the one who was enrolled in your Interplanetary Relations class.”

He looked at Beth. “Before going into politics, Mikala taught at the Terran Technical Institute.”

“My mistake. I had no idea she had a twin,” Mikala said. “It’s nice to meet you.”

“No reason you should have known,” Beth replied. “My…sister and I moved in different orbits.”

“Have you met AOP Secretary General Benson Vincere?” The president motioned to the vid-star handsome man.

“We’ve never had a class together.” Vincere clasped her hand in a firm grip and flashed a supernova bright grin.

This was the infamous obstructionist secretary general? “It’s nice to meet you,” she said. “I’ve heard a lot about you.”

“All good, I hope.” He glanced at Carter and chuckled.

“Of course,” she lied. After what she’d heard, she’d assumed she’d dislike him on sight, but she didn’t. Carter had warned of Benson Vincere’s charisma. No wonder he could persuade the members of the AOP. Mikala had her work cut out for her.

“What is it you do with Aym-Sec, Beth?” Vincere asked.

“Ms. O’Shea is our new logistics coordinator,” Carter answered. “She’ll be part of the team handling security for the Summit.”

“So you’re in charge of the equipment,” he said.

“That’s correct.”

“Have you been to Luna Center before?”

“No, this is my first time.” In preparation for the Summit, she’d studied virtual renditions, but those hadn’t prepared her for the grandeur of the real thing. Located in Mare Tranquillitatis, the Sea of Tranquility, the massive, multipurpose domed structure was an architectural, astronautical wonder. Part theater, part sports stadium, it looked like a crystal palace. Visible from space, Luna Center appeared even larger from inside. The glass dome soared so high overhead, it disappeared, leaving the blue-and-white orb of Terra unobscured.

“I’ve been fortunate to visit most of our member planets.” Vincere motioned to the flags and statues erected in the lobby. “The most desolate celestial body offers something positive to recommend it, but this facility on Earth’s moon is awe-inspiring. It’s the perfect venue for the Summit…”

A small, slight man scurried toward their group.

Vincere waved him over. “Cornelius, come meet Mr. Carter Aymes, the director of Aym-Sec, and his logistics coordinator, Ms. Beth O’Shea.” He glanced between them. “This is my aide, Cornelius Corvalis.”

The aide’s handshake was limp and sweaty.

“Beth?” Carter nudged her in the ribs again.

Why did he keep poking her? “Nice to meet you,” she said to Cornelius, checking the urge to wipe her palm on her tunic.

“So, is this your first visit to Luna Center? Have you had time to check out the facility?” Vincere asked.

“No, we just arrived,” she answered.

The secretary general looked at Beth. “If it’s all right with your boss, perhaps I could give you a tour? Show you where the Summit will convene, where sidebar meetings will be held, the banquet, the gala.”

Perfect! That’s what they’d been hoping for. “Thank you. I would like that,” she responded, but when she glanced at Carter, he frowned. “Wouldn’t I?” she said.

“Yes, but I need a minute alone with you first.” He beckoned and nodded at the others. “Excuse us a moment.”

He moved a distance away to stand beside a huge hologram resembling a horse with antlers. Yacuni. Xenia. The identifier spelled out the species and the planet of origin.

“What’s wrong?” she whispered. “Isn’t this what we wanted? For me to distract the secretary general so Mikala could meet with the others?”

“That’s not it. What I want to know is, are you all right?” He surveyed her face.

“Why wouldn’t I be?”

“How’s your head?”

She’d experienced a few twinges, but nothing major. “Fine. Why?”

“You…spaced out.”

“No, I didn’t—what do you mean?”

“Mikala had her hand out there for a while before you shook it.”

Had she made a faux pas? Was there a time limit to shaking hands? Like you had to do so within so many seconds or risk insulting the person you were meeting? “You’re used to all of this.” She gestured at the grand lobby. “It’s new to me. I met the president of Terra United and the secretary general of the Association of Planets. I’m a little starstruck.”

“You didn’t let go of the aide’s hand. You kind of hung onto it.”

The sweaty-palmed wonder? “I don’t think so,” she disagreed, quite certain. “I made it as brief as I could while still being polite.”

He didn’t look convinced, but he said, “Well…as long as you’re all right. You have your PerComm?”

“Right here.” She patted her side, wondering where he kept his communication device. His uniform fit neat and trim on his frame. Maybe he carried a mini model? They manufactured them small enough to be worn on the wrist like Vincere did, but Carter didn’t wear one of those, either.

“Contact me if you need me. Keep Vincere busy as long as you can. When you finish the tour, ping me, and I’ll come find you.”

“Got it.” It felt good to have a purpose, to assist in a concrete way. She started to return to the group then halted. “Thank you for not telling Mikala I’m a clone. For covering for me.” She hoped she wouldn’t encounter too many more people who’d mistake her for Liza.

“Mikala knew my father. Liza and I met in her class. I wouldn’t violate your privacy by sharing your personal information unless I had a critical reason. It’s your choice who to tell and when.”

“It’s…awkward. People…judge clones differently. They see me as something other than human.”

“You are human,” he said huskily. The simple comment uttered in his rough tone stirred all kinds of emotions it shouldn’t. She caught herself before she swayed toward him. What it would be like to be held in his strong arms, to be kissed, to move together as one, to hear his gravelly voice whisper senseless, passionate words? Her face burned, and she tore her gaze away before she did something stupid. He’s my boss. He’d be out of my league if he wasn’t my boss. “Thank you. I’d, uh, better get the tour started now.”

They rejoined the group. Cornelius had disappeared.

“All set?” Vincere smiled.

“I’m ready. Cornelius won’t be joining us?”

“No, he has his own work to attend to, so it will be just you and me.”

She could have sworn she’d heard Carter’s teeth snap together but knew it was her imagination. “I appreciate you taking time out of your busy schedule to give me a tour, Mr. Vincere.” She smiled, hoping her grin looked open and friendly and not sneaky.

“It’s my pleasure, but please call me Benson or Ben.”

 

* * * *

 

Beth led Vincere away. Carter preferred to think of it like that and not the other way around. Please call me Benson or Ben…

“Well, that was fortuitous. Vincere or his aide or both have stuck to me like Arcanian tar since I got here,” Mikala murmured.

Had he fed a lamb to the wolf? Just because Vincere had no history of sexual misconduct, didn’t mean he couldn’t start some. Cy-Ops had profiled him as honest but naïve, open-minded to a stubborn fault, charming and engaging, dedicated to his work. Carter didn’t find much charming or engaging about the man. “She volunteered to keep Vincere busy.” He gnashed his teeth. Smarmy bastard.

“Is she all right?”

“Yeah, why do you ask?”

“She seemed to almost blank out there for a moment. Once with me then with Cornelius.”

So it hadn’t been his imagination! “I think she was just feeling out of her element, and somewhat in awe of you,” Carter said. He hoped that was all it was.

“I’m embarrassed to have mistaken her for Liza, but they’re identical.”

“You think?”

Mikala arched her brows. “You don’t?”

He shrugged. “Zygomatic twins do share physical features, but I see more differences than similarities.” Beth was a unique person. The way she carried herself, flipped her hair, the inflection in her voice, her reserved smiles. Shy, except for the leading one she gave Ben. What was that all about?

“Okay, right.” Skepticism laced Mikala’s voice. “What a coincidence she’d come to work for you. Or did Liza encourage her? What’s she doing these days?”

“Liza died.”

Mikala sucked in a breath. “Died? When? How?”

“Almost fifteen years ago. An accident on the safari she went on.”

“I had no idea. Did you know?”

He shook his head. “Not until I met Beth.” He exhaled. “You make any headway with the AOP?”

Mikala grimaced. “Not as much as I’d hoped. Benson has a sixth sense for showing up at the right time. It’s not my intention to disparage the man. He means well. He truly does. But his policies won’t lead us in the right direction. I’m trying to suggest the ambassadors analyze the information, consider what’s happened in the past and where current policies will lead in the future, and vote accordingly, but it’s awkward when he’s standing right there.”

She lifted her shoulders. “I doubt I can sway enough votes to change the outcome of this Summit, but if I can wake people to the seriousness of the situation, maybe by the next one or the one after that, the AOP will take action. I just hope it will be soon enough.”

“Well, sooner would be better than later, but Cy-Ops can keep Lamis-Odg in check until then,” he said.

“It seems impossible one tiny nation planet could conquer an entire galaxy. A hundred years ago, Lamis-Odg people lived in tents in the desert and believed in sand demons. Now, they have space stations, fighter craft, MEDs, and the technology to wipe out their neighbors. The only thing remaining the same is their belief in sand demons.”

“Iwani.” He nodded. “Who will attack them if they don’t follow their god’s commands to eradicate the nonbelievers of the galaxy, which means anyone who isn’t Odgidian.”

Mikala shook her head. “How can they not see none of it is real, that their primitive ancestors created mythological beings to explain natural phenomena they didn’t understand. Has anyone ever seen an iwani?”

“Well…” Carter said. “Two of my cyborgs who infiltrated Lamis-Odg encountered one in the desert.” His male/female cyborg team, Sonny Masters and Amanda Mansfield, had almost been killed.

Mikala’s jaw dropped. “They’re real?”

“As real as robots. Iwani are manufactured sand demon bots.”

“You’re joking!”

“Wish I were,” he said. “My agents destroyed the bot but brought back a sample. The material predates Lamani, but how far back, is anybody’s guess. My agents were able to determine the mechanical serpents are programmed to rise out of the dunes at specific intervals and kill whatever happens to be in the vicinity. Sightings and killings reinforce the myths.”

“There must be people who realize what they are.”

“I doubt anyone gets close enough to see. When an iwani appears, people don’t stick around to examine it.”

“It’s the ultimate icon—it offers proof of faith while ensuring the people don’t look too closely at it,” Mikala commented. “Religions throughout history have employed icons to strengthen the belief of their followers. Faith alone is group think ideation without physical manifestation. An icon provides believers something concrete to focus on, something they can see and touch that is the same for everyone.”

Carter nodded. “The Odgidian religion manipulates fear and hope, threats and rewards to maintain its following.”

“Their beliefs have always been strange, but they didn’t used to be a threat,” Mikala said. “They kept to themselves and didn’t bother anybody.”

“Their religion created a culture of isolationism. They’ve always believed the Great One favors them and them alone, so they saw no reason to interact with anyone else.”

“What changed? What caused them to go on a terrorist rampage?” she mused.

“Lamani. The people believe he is both the living embodiment of their god and his prophet. He’s convinced them his visions instruct them to smite the doubters and dissenters.”

“Why does a god need his creation to do his dirty work? He could wipe out infidels with a solar flare or an asteroid.” Mikala snapped her fingers.

“That kind of logic is only obvious to the nonbeliever,” he said. “Cy-Ops profiling indicates Lamani is a cunning opportunist, a manipulator who turns his people’s beliefs against them to appease his hunger for power. For him to believe he’s a god would make him insane, but someone mentally unbalanced wouldn’t have the wherewithal to execute such tactical terrorism. His attacks have been strategic, focused, and probably planned years in advance.”

 

* * * *

 

Vincere pointed at the glass-domed ceiling to the white-and-blue orb in the sky. “It gives me the shivers,” he said. “To see Terra from the moon takes my breath away.”

“It’s beautiful,” Beth agreed. Terra represented hope, possibilities. Through the massive viewing windows of the O’Sheas’ satellite, she’d seen the planet in all its blue-and-white glory. Earth had birthed a dream of a better life, had beckoned her to set foot on its soil.

“The secretary general should be impartial and not favor one nation over another, but I have to admit, my home planet holds a special place in my heart,” he confided in a whisper.

“So you’re a native-born Terran?” she asked.

He drew back, looking surprised. “You can’t tell?”

Had she insulted him? She hadn’t meant to! “I knew you were Terran by race, but many Earth citizens are born other places…I’m sorry.”

He touched her arm. “I apologize. I was teasing. You’re smart to not assume. My mother is from the south of France, and my father is from Texas. How about you?” he asked.

With his family background he was probably quite familiar with Terra. She’d studied Earth as much as she could, but had seen little of the planet other than a spaceport, the hotel, and Aym-Sec, none of which counted. “I’m human, but I was born off world.” She stuck to the technical truth.

“Did you live off world long?” he asked as they walked.

“A while,” she said.

“Is this your first trip to the moon?”

It was her first trip anywhere. “Yes.”

He swept his arm in an arc to encompass the facility “This is the grand lobby. It surrounds the inner arena where the general assembly of ambassadors will convene.” They stopped beside a gleaming door as wide as it was high, which was about three times her height. “There are forty doors like this.”

“Forty-two,” she corrected. She’d counted on the schematic.

“I was speaking in generalities,” he said, but nodded approvingly. “You’ve done your homework.”

“It’s my job to know this stuff. Will some of them be locked off or will all forty-two be used during the Summit?”

“They’ll all be used. Luna Center is massive, and I want it as convenient as possible for Summit attendees.”

She keyed a notation into her PerComm. Forty-two doors meant forty-two weapon/gen scan combos, and a human-android team to man each of them.

“Ready to see inside?” He moved to swipe his palm over the wall screen.

“I’d like to walk the perimeter first, if you wouldn’t mind.” One door was pretty much like the next, but the longer she kept him busy, the more time Mikala would have.

He smiled. “Why would I mind a stroll with an intelligent, attractive woman?”

“You flatter me.” She smiled at him but moved quickly to a life-size virtual statue. “What can you tell me about the holos?” The woman appeared solid and real, but when Beth touched the shoulder, her hand moved right through it.

“Each one represents a member planet of the AOP.”

“So they’re not holograms of real people like specific ambassadors?”

Benson shook his head. “No. Each one depicts a typical or generic life form from the planet.” He leaned in close and said in a conspiratorial whisper, “It’s like a cheat sheet. It’s almost impossible to know what every life form looks like, but each planet has its own protocol for how to address one another. To avoid committing a faux pas, members can peek out here and identify the planet of origin.”

“I can see where that would be very useful. This is a good idea.”

“Thank you.”

“It was your idea?”

He shrugged. “My greatest wish is to foster friendship and cooperation. We have big issues to deal with. It would be a shame for one person to insult another with an unintended rude gesture or greeting.”

She peered at the holo. Although the woman had appeared to be human at first glance, now she noted her pupil-less solid-black eyes. “She’s a Xenian,” Benson commented, and pointed to the identifier.

He gestured to the adjacent holo of a winged man. “Faria.”

“Wow.” She stared, amazed by the man’s beauty. “It’s like he glows.”

“Their skin is iridescent. I think if we Terrans had met the Farian people before our languages evolved, we’d use the word Farian to mean beauty.” Benson moved on to the next holo. “This woman is Arcanian.” She had six independently moving eyes and web-fingered hands.

“What happened here?” Beth stopped beside a puddle. “We should call the janitorial robos.”

Benson chuckled. “That, too, is a hologram, and it’s not a puddle, it’s a slime crawler.”

So that’s what they looked like. She’d heard of the gelatinous aliens. They moved by oozing, flowing from one place to another. “They’re members of the AOP? Aren’t they nonverbal?”

“That’s no reason to exclude them.”

“What about the Malodonian?” She pointed to the blue being with rough features and a thick neck. “They were ejected from the AOP, weren’t they? Why is a nonmember included?”

Benson’s eyes flashed. “The general assembly ejected Malodonia, but ambassadors don’t have input into which statues I pick. I oppose any act or policy which excludes.” She could hear the anger in his voice. “All life formed from the Big Bang. No matter what our planet of origin, we originated from the same source. Down deep we are all the same; no one is beyond redemption.”

“You’re very open-minded,” she said, but retreated, surprised by the strength of his vehemence.

Instantly, he became a picture of contrition. “Forgive my outburst, for making you uncomfortable.” He raked a hand through his perfect hair, messing it up into an attractive tousle. “I feel deeply, but that gives me no excuse to be rude.”

“No need to apologize,” she said. “You’re committed to your principles.”

He sighed. “Thank you for understanding. I’m aware your boss thinks I don’t place enough emphasis on security. The galaxy’s safety is paramount to me, but I believe we can safeguard individual rights while allowing individual expression to flourish. Every being can evolve into his, her, or its highest self—but not if we give up on them.”

She eyed the statue of the Malodonian. Benson cared deeply, but she couldn’t set aside the reality of the Malodonians abetting atrocities committed by Lamis-Odg. “How can the galaxy stay safe if individual members intend to do harm?”

“We must continue to reach out to those with whom we disagree to try to show them a better way.”

“How do you do that when they’re trying to kill you? The peoples of the galaxy aren’t attacking Lamis-Odg. Lamis-Odg is attacking them.” Perhaps she shouldn’t debate him, but she did work for the firm responsible for Summit security.

“We must be consistent, persistent, and inclusive,” he said. “Lamis-Odg has been excluded and marginalized since the founding of the AOP. Perhaps, if they had been involved at the outset, and had a voice, the unpleasantness could have been avoided.”

Unpleasantness? Not following the proper protocol to address an alien species created unpleasantness. Planting MEDs, launching guerilla attacks, firing on space stations and freighters, kidnapping and executing hostages amounted to more than unpleasantness. No wonder Carter and this man had differences.

Benson fixed his gaze on her face. “You think I’m naïve,” he said.

She schooled her expression. “Idealistic.”

“I am,” he admitted. He waved his hands. “But, you see? You and I disagree, but we can talk about our differences. If we could all do that, it would be a big start.” He smiled then, his grin engaging and disarming. If she hadn’t been so taken by a certain security firm director, she might have fallen under Benson’s spell. As it was, she could certainly see how his charm and charisma could influence the AOP membership.

“A good beginning,” she agreed. “I think I’m ready to see the general assembly area.”

“Absolutely,” he said. “Come this way.”

Five tiers of console seating ringed the amphitheater oval. In the center of the floor was a large dais. “Do you stand there?” she asked.

“Yes. The platform is raised and lowered and moves around the theater.” He pointed to the consoles in the tiers. “Members use comm screens to vote and place a request to address the assembly. There’s a protocol to follow. Higher-ranking members get higher priority.”

“Who decides that?”

“The AOP-AI. The artificial intelligence unit directs the traffic, but I see the requests on my dais and can override the AI.”

“Why would you override?”

“To be fair to everyone. If many people requested to speak, there might not be enough time for everyone to do so. If only the AOP-AI were involved, lower-ranking ambassadors might never have an opportunity. The newer members of the AOP wouldn’t have a voice. It’s important for everyone to be heard.”

That paralleled his opinion on relations with Malodonia and Lamis-Odg. “If you choose, then why have an AI at all?”

“Because there are too many members for a simple human like me to keep track of. The AI can record and analyze participation much faster than I can,” he explained.

“That makes sense,” she said, and then winced when a sharp stab of pain shot through her head.

“Is something wrong? Are you all right?” Benson’s eyes narrowed with concern.

She rubbed her temple. “I’m fine. A bit of a headache. They come and go.”

“Sit down.” He urged her toward one of the seats. “I’ll call a medtech.” He tapped into his wrist comm unit.

“No, please, don’t!” She grabbed his wrist. “I’m all right. The headache is fading already,” she said truthfully. “Besides, I underwent a complete scan, and they found nothing wrong.”

“You did? When? Where?” His brows drew together. “So much depends on the facility and the supervising physician. I can refer you to the best medical center in the galaxy.”

“Thank you, but I was at a top-notch facility,” she said.

“Which one?”

Too late, she realized she’d stepped onto a slippery slope. She sensed she shouldn’t mention Aym-Sec’s medical capabilities, but Benson’s attempt to help did raise questions. Why did the company have such an installation? Why had she been brought there under blackout? What kind of injuries did employees sustain that they couldn’t be whisked to a regular hospital?

“I have complete confidence in the health assessment I received.” She sidestepped his question and changed the subject. “Would you show me some of the smaller meeting spaces now?” She didn’t need to see those. If everyone was screened before they arrived and went through the weapons detector as they entered Luna Center, additional scanners wouldn’t be required for the offshoot rooms.

Benson escorted her to an antechamber divided into segments. “All the units are pretty much the same. They’re just larger or smaller to accommodate varying group sizes,” he said.

At her request, he showed her a conference hall outfitted with holo and virtual reality stations as well as superluminal communication equipment. He pointed to the FTL modules. “If someone requires approval or guidance from their home world, the faster-than-light comm modules allow them to contact their planet in real time.” He grinned. “Negotiators can’t use time as a stalling technique.”

“I’d love to agree to your terms, ambassador, but the decision isn’t up to me. I’ll contact my home world and get back to you in three months,” she joked.

Benson laughed. “You understand.”

She hoped Mikala had achieved some success in her lobbying. Beth was running out of questions and things to do to keep the secretary general occupied. He was probably running out of patience—though he didn’t seem to be. He’d been so accommodating and charming, acted like he had nothing more important to do than show her around, which couldn’t be the case.

“Maybe we could return to the assembly area, and you could show me how your dais works?” This would be the last request. If she kept him any longer, her delaying tactics would become obvious.

“Perhaps you’d like to take a ride on the dais?”

“I’d love to do that!” she said.

“Let’s go, then.” As they exited, he asked, “How’s your head?”

“All better.”

“Glad to hear it,” he said.

“You’ve been so helpful and gracious to show me around. I can’t thank you enough.”

“Trust me, it’s been one of my more enjoyable tasks. Playing peacemaker and trying to get everyone to reach an agreement isn’t easy. Being secretary general isn’t the glam job most people assume.” He winked.

Beth laughed. She genuinely liked him and felt guilty for the deception, even though it was her job and she’d volunteered for it. His openness had given insight into the decisions Carter had disparaged. She couldn’t disagree with Benson’s motives, which were honest and well-intentioned. Diplomacy might neutralize Lamis-Odg. But, did they have enough time? Carter thought no. Mikala didn’t think so, either. It wasn’t Beth’s place to decide—and, in truth, she was damn glad she wasn’t the one making those life-or-death decisions.

They entered the main assembly area again and headed for the dais.

“When we were first introduced, your name struck a chord with me,” Benson said. “It seemed familiar, but I couldn’t place it. It just came to me. O’Shea is not an uncommon surname, so it’s probably a coincidence, but you’re not any relation to Georgetta and Reuben O’Shea, are you?”

“They’re my…parents.” The lie weighed heavy on her tongue. She wished she could divorce herself from the O’Sheas once and for all.

He rubbed his forehead. “I’m embarrassed, now. I’ve been bragging about how great this facility is when you’ve seen far grander installations.”

“Don’t be embarrassed.” She touched his arm. “My life was rather…sheltered. There is much I haven’t seen.”

He gave her a sidelong glance. “Sometimes parents have expectations outside our hopes and desires.”

She’d thought she’d spoken without rancor, but one couldn’t rise to the position of secretary general without being able to read people. I’d better be careful what I say.

“From what I’ve heard, the O’Sheas, although Terran citizens, don’t spend much time on Terra,” Benson said. “They have a lot of holdings. You said you’d grown up off world. You must have lived a lot of different places.”

She shook her head. “No, only on the space station. Until this job, I’d never been to Terra.”

Up close, the dais was larger than it had appeared from the upper tiers of the arena. A waist-high transparent barrier encompassed a three-by-two-meter platform. Benson slid the gate open and gestured for her to enter.

He punched some codes into a control panel. “Ready for blastoff?” The dais hummed and slowly rose into the air. The faint noise faded away as it climbed, one tier, two tiers, three tiers. The platform hovered at the fifth tier before moving to the left around the arena. Benson gripped a joystick that had popped out of the console.

“You’re piloting this,” she said.

“For now. I set the control to manual, but I can also key in a certain seat number and let the computer zip right to it.”

“Zip? How fast will this go?”

He chuckled. “Zip is a bit of an exaggeration. We’re not quite at max speed now, but the dais won’t go much faster than this.” His fingers flew over the console, and then he relinquished the controller. “There. The computer will take us for a spin around the arena.”

The dais had almost completed one revolution when Benson pointed. “Our tour is coming to an end.” Carter and Mikala had entered the arena.

He took over the controls and brought the dais to rest at ground level without so much as a bump.

“Did you see everything you wanted to see?” Mikala asked as Beth stepped off.

“Yes, I did. Benson was very informative,” she replied, wondering if the president had gotten her business taken care of. “Thank you so much for the tour—and the ride,” Beth said to him.

“My pleasure,” he replied.

Carter nodded in Mikala’s direction. “If something comes up, you know how to reach me.”

“Will do,” she replied and shook Beth’s hand. “I’m glad I got to meet you.”

“It was an honor to meet you both,” she said sincerely. How often did an ordinary citizen get to chat with the president of Terra United and the secretary general of the Association of Planets?

Benson gestured, and they all turned to see Cornelius heading in their direction with a purposeful stride. “Looks like duty calls.”

“We won’t keep you, then,” Carter replied, and beckoned for Beth to leave.

“I need to get back to work as well,” Mikala said.

The aide reached them. Up close, his face was devoid of expression, yet his body appeared tense as a spring.

Benson frowned. “What is it? What happened?”

The aide’s lips peeled back into a snarl. From a flap in his tunic, he pulled out a photon blaster, and pointed it at Mikala.

Blood drained from the president’s face.

Beth went cold all over. Would he shoot them all? Run. Run. Her body seemed to be made of lead, as if the gravity simulator had been cranked to the highest level. Her feet did not seem to want to move.

She tried to get out of the way, but she tripped and stumbled in front of Mikala.

“No!” Carter shouted.

Cornelius fired. The photon blast hit Beth in the chest.

Tentacles of white-hot agony streamed through her body.

 

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

Sam Crescent, Zoe Chant, Flora Ferrari, Mia Madison, Lexy Timms, Claire Adams, Alexa Riley, Sophie Stern, Leslie North, Amy Brent, Elizabeth Lennox, Frankie Love, Madison Faye, Jordan Silver, Jenika Snow, C.M. Steele, Bella Forrest, Mia Ford, Kathi S. Barton, Michelle Love, Delilah Devlin, Dale Mayer, Sloane Meyers, Amelia Jade, Penny Wylder,

Random Novels

Dragon Guardian's Match (Dragons of Mars Book 3) by Leslie Chase, Juno Wells

Health Nut Café (Shadowing Souls Book 1) by Rhonda Frankhouser

How to Live an Undead Lie (The Beginner's Guide to Necromancy Book 5) by Hailey Edwards

Michael: A Scrooged Christmas by F.G. Adams

Alien Zookeeper's Abduction: A Sci-Fi Alien Abduction Romance by Zara Zenia, Juno Wells

My Best Friend's Brother by Candy Gray

Rescued by an Earl (The Duke's Daughters Book 3) by Rose Pearson

Mr. Sheriff - A Cop Romance (Mr Series - Book #7) by Ivy Jordan

Special Forces: Operation Alpha: Burning Skies (Kindle Worlds Novella) (Fire Protection Specialists Book 3) by Jen Talty

Will & Patrick's Endless Honeymoon (Wake Up Married Book 7) by Leta Blake

Redemption by Emily Bishop

The Cowboy’s Outlaw Bride by Cora Seton

Sinful Intent (Alfa Pi Series Book 1) by Chelle Bliss

Grayson - A Scrooged Christmas by Regina Frame

Aiding the Dragon (Stonefire British Dragons Book 9) by Jessie Donovan

Dragon Lord by Miranda Martin, Nadia Hunter

Rebellion by Kass Morgan

Damnable Grace (Hades Hangmen Book 5) by Tillie Cole

Claimed by the Don (Contarini Crime Family Book 1) by Brook Wilder

THE WITCH'S CONSORT (The First Witch Book 2) by Meg Xuemei X