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Kor'ven (Warriors of the Karuvar Book 2) by Alana Serra, Juno Wells (4)

4

Kor'ven hoped with every fiber of his being that his stay at Waystation Helios would be a brief one.

It was pleasant enough, the station set into a wide canyon, the arching cliff-faces seeming to funnel the sun directly into the facility. Smatterings of wildflowers grew in the cracks, lending a much-needed sense of color beyond the stark browns and the clear blue sky. Selene, in contrast, was an all too forgettable location nestled within its shaded forest, one dark color bleeding into the next.

The Waystation was a fine sight, and if Kor'ven were merely sightseeing, he would have appreciated the opportunity. But he was not sightseeing. He had been called upon by his Pathfinder to fix what he hoped was a simple blunder.

Only from the moment he'd received the call, he'd known nothing about it was going to be simple. The very instant he'd seen the human woman's face, had heard her voice, he knew that as faithfully as he knew this galaxy’s planet’s orbited a single star.

She'd been lovely. Hair a shimmering gold, eyes a pale blue, skin creamy white, lips the faintest blush of pink. A manifestation of human beauty trapped within a screen. Her voice had a richness to it that stoked the fires of his imagination. He'd started to get hard in his lab like he was some unruly youngling, and Teiv's presence was the only thing that had kept him from taking himself in hand.

It was ridiculous. Positively absurd. Kor'ven was not blind in the literal or figurative sense. He had never disregarded the merits of the human form or how pleasing it could be. But human females had always been pleasing to him in the same way an arrangement of flowers might be pleasing. Attractive enough to admire for a few moments before he placed them upon the shelf, never to be considered again.

Adi'sun was something else entirely. She wasn't just beautiful, she was dangerous.

His one hope in arriving at Helios was that Drol'gan severely overestimated her abilities as a scientist. Females did not typically occupy the role, after all, and perhaps her talents lay elsewhere. He fully expected to find some issue--some glaring problem amongst her data that would set everything to rights. He was so confident in this thought that he'd left Teiv behind to man his station at Selene.

But when he arrived at the Waystation, after checking in through the intake facility, he found not a chaotic nest of untenable science, but a clean, orderly center that seemed to be at the very center of the Matchmaker efforts, if the many Karuvar and humans present were any indication.

He knew Helios was the Waystation where Verkiir had met his Mei'gahn. It was the Waystation that proved it was possible for humans and Karuvar to mate. He'd just expected something less… impressive.

Be that as it may, Helios as a whole did not speak to the credibility of Doctor Mun'roh or her work, neither of which he'd seen in person thus far. After several minutes of useless meandering, he was forced to ask someone.

"I am looking for Adi'sun Mun'roh," he said to a human youngling who was wearing a Helios badge.

The youngling arched one brow at him in an expression Kor'ven read as a wry sort of human amusement.

"You're the asshole from Selene." She looked him up and down. "Huh. Don't look like much of a scientist."

Kor'ven's lips pressed into a thin line. "I was not aware my area of study had a required look."

Her shoulders lifted in an exaggerated manner. "Just always expect science guys to be a little… scrawnier."

Ah, she was pointing out the differences between human and Karuvar physiology. Yes, their males were quite 'scrawny.' Kor'ven honestly had no idea how they sired kits of their own.

"Dr. Mun'roh's in a meeting right now, but she'll be out soon. You can wait in her office, I guess," the youngling said.

She led him to an office with large windows that exposed its interior for all to see. That, too, was tidy, with anatomical models and books arranged neatly, along with a shelf full of binders that immediately caught Kor'ven's interest.

"Don't touch anything," the youngling warned, as if she could read his mind.

But it was a scientist's prerogative to seek answers, and so the instant he was left alone, Kor'ven made his way to the shelf and opened one of the binders.

Neat, flowing, feminine handwriting greeted him. As he read over her notes, he could almost hear the words being said in her smoky, sultry voice. There was a brevity to her reporting; one Kor'ven could appreciate. But she wrote her observations as if she were witnessing the birth of a star.

Flipping several pages ahead, he found another account--this one written in the same manner, as if by an impassioned observer. It was so very… unscientific. And yet Kor'ven found himself oddly drawn to the words and the fire he saw in them.

He'd made it through three and a half binders before Adi'sun deigned to show. He hadn't read everything in them--that would be preposterous. But he had assembled a solid image of the woman he expected to greet him.

She would be what humans described as "bubbly," though he had never understood why such an epitaph existed. She would be incredibly biased, allowing her heart to rule her rather than her head. Another common human expression. She might be intelligent, but it would be a false sort of intelligence gained only from books, not from field knowledge.

Later, Kor'ven might wonder if he had formed this hypothesis for the sheer benefit of self-preservation, but in that moment, it seemed to fit the image he had of her, and indeed the image that greeted him when she opened her office door.

He sensed her first. Or rather, he sensed something that turned out to be her. He was drawn toward an undeniable presence in the same way space dust was drawn into a central point to form a star. Adi'sun pulled him into her orbit before she even appeared in his line of view.

When he finally saw her, though, every muscle in his body tensed and then leapt as if in attempt to propel him forward. His skin was aflame, as if he just happened to be standing next to an exploding supernova at the precise moment of detonation. His loins tightened, blood rushing southward as his cock stirred to immediate attention.

Everything he had witnessed on that screen was magnified a hundred fold. She was pure, concentrated sunlight, radiant in her beauty, and he wanted desperately to partake of her. No. Partake was too flowery a word. He wanted to possess her. He wanted to swipe the equipment from the table, grab hold of her luscious hips, and bury himself inside of her.

She felt it. He knew she felt it. Something magnetic resonated between them. Her vibrant eyes were glazed with a keen, intelligent desire, her lips wet and parted. She stood in stasis, yet he could feel the energy of her body as if she trembled against him.

There was only one thing that could signify such a response. One tiny, impossible thing.

Kor'ven managed to tear his gaze away from the endless pool of her eyes long enough to look down at her arm. Her implant--and thus her tattoo--was covered by a lab coat.

"Show me your arm," he commanded, the words coming out in a rough growl.

She didn't hesitate. She simply rolled up one sleeve, her gaze never leaving his. There was something so incredibly arousing about that simple defiance that he found himself wanting to cross the distance between them; to drop to his knees and worship this female with lips and tongue.

His implant would not allow it, though. His arm burned, a blistering heat singing along the outstretched tendrils of his tattoo. His gaze fell to hers, and he knew in an instant that they were a match.

This woman--this human scientist--was his mate.

And yet… a distant memory tugged at him, pulling hard enough to break him out of his stupor. He'd been here before. He'd experienced this before. It was… different then, but no less alarming.

And just as it was not real then, Kor'ven knew it could not be real now. Adi'sun was not his mate. She could not be.

He turned away from her, breaking that connection as surely as if he were severing some manner of symbiotic bond. He almost felt her gasp; almost felt her falter. The urge was strong to return to her--to wrap her in his arms and never let her fall again. Instead, he returned his attention to the binders.

"Your data is terribly outdated," he said, forcing all emotion from his voice.

She was silent for a long moment, then, "…I beg your pardon?"

That voice made him bite back a groan, his cock twitching beneath his pants. Would that he could make those lips caress the sounds of his name…

No. Never.

"Outdated and far from impartial. There is nothing scientific about this."

She crossed the room suddenly and Kor'ven's heart leapt into his throat. The scent of a meadow after a fresh rain accosted his senses.

"I don't remember giving you permission to go through my data," she asserted, snatching the binder from him.

"If I am to find a solution, I must know what you have done thus far so I do not waste my time."

"And what about my time?"

There was fire in her eyes, such an intense mix of loathing and lust that Kor'ven thought his soul was going to combust.

"I asked you to have your data ready, Doctor Mun'roh. If our time is mutually wasted, it is hardly my fault."

"Yes, and I spent the last three hours compiling my data for you." She withdrew a memory stick from her pocket and dropped it on the desk before him. "Unless this is too outdated for you, as well?"

He retrieved the stick and fit it into the tiny dock on her terminal. The screen was overtaken by a presentation slide. How very quaint.

"This will be fine, thank you."

She must have heard something in his tone because she positively balked at him. "You don't get to dismiss me from my own office."

Had he been dismissing her? Perhaps. There was some part of him that very much wanted her to go, if only to fight the part of him that wanted to pull her to him so that he could claim her lips for his own.

"It would be easier, would it not?"

He braved her eyes then, looking deep into those blue depths. Need shook through him, but he fought it with all the knowledge of a scientist who had studied--and manipulated--the various machinations behind mating. And when he managed that, he saw that Adi'sun was struggling just as much as he was.

She did not want this. She did not want him. Not beyond her very physical response.

Still, all she said was, "I'm here to ensure Vazik's implant takes. I'm not here to make your life or mine any easier," before she pulled a chair from another desk and took a seat.

What followed was an agonizing hour and a half of Adi'sun being far too close, the data she explained nearly lost in the jumble of his mind as he devoted every speck of brainpower to denying what would have otherwise been an undeniable connection.

"I will examine the kit and speak with the dam and sire," he concluded before she had finished, unable to stand the sweet caress of her voice any longer. "Then I will begin an independent study. I thank you for your information, Doctor Mun'roh."

Her mouth was open and he knew she was about to hurl fire his way, but he did not allow it. He fled that office as surely as he might flee an active volcano on the edge of eruption, knowing that if he stayed, he would be trapped.

As he made his way toward anyplace that was not in the vicinity of Adi'sun Mun'roh, Kor'ven pleaded with the Stars that this matter would be resolved soon.

He was not certain just how long he could control himself if it was not.