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Alien Attraction by Cara Bristol (21)

Chapter Twenty-One

Sunny

 

I waited until Torg and Starr were fast asleep before tiptoeing out. Like an illuvian lamp, the damn moon spotlighted the compound. Anyone glancing out their hut door would see me sneaking to the ward.

Two weeks had passed since Darq had been sent to the big house, er, cave. They could call it a “ward” if they wanted to, but it was jailSunny marries a felon. Wouldn’t that be an exciting episode of the show?

I yanked the hood over my head and faked a masculine stomp so if some busybody was spying on me, he’d mistake me for a male. I carried a bowl of stew. If anybody asked, I’d been instructed to deliver meals to the prisoner. That was my story, and I was sticking to it.

Everybody should be asleep anyway, but that didn’t apply to the cameras. They were still operational, although they’d kept a low profile, and I didn’t see them often. However, I didn’t trust Apogee. After spilling the beans to Romando, my producer would rat me out to Torg in a heartbeat if he thought it would boost ratings.

To avoid leaving fresh tracks, I took care to step in the footprints already leading to the ward.

Arriving at the cave, safe and sound, I scooted inside.

It was a tight squeeze to get to a small roundish chamber tall enough to permit me to stand upright. A small fire that barely knocked back the chill flickered off damp walls spotted with suspicious-looking dark spots. The cave had all the appearances of a dungeon.

On the stony ground, Darq lay wrapped in a kel. He sprang up. “What are you doing here?”

“I came to visit you. Have you eaten? I brought you a file,” I joked, holding out the bowl of kel stew. He didn’t need to saw his way out; if he wanted to escape, he could walk out. A Dakonian ward brought new meaning to minimum security penitentiary.

“You shouldn’t be here,” he said, but took the bowl of stew, set it down, and hugged me. “I’ve missed you so much.” He squeezed so tight, I could hardly breathe. “Did anyone see you?”

“I don’t think so. It’s late.”

“You shouldn’t be here.” He kissed me. “It’s against the rules.” Kiss. “You need to leave.” Kiss.

I melted against him. The two weeks we’d been apart had seemed like months. I’d missed his big, solid warm body next to me in bed at night, his deep rumbling voice, his growls, his smell, his company. “I had to see you.”

“Is something wrong? What happened?”

“I was just going crazy without you.”

“I’m sorry for putting you through this.”

I shook my head. “We’re together because of what you did. Seeing you now will help me through the separation. Now that I know I can sneak away and come see you, it will be bet—”

“No!” He shook his head. “You can’t come again. It’s too risky. If you got caught, Torg might ward you.”

“Then we’d be together!”

“In a different cave. This isn’t the only one.”

“Oh.” My heart sank. I thought I’d discovered a perfect solution. The only thing worse than longing for Darq would be being stuck in a cold, dank cave while doing it. I hadn’t appreciated the extent of the modifications to our living cave until I saw this place. “Do they ever let you out of here?” I glanced around.

“Once a week, I go to the bath cave.”

“I could meet you there!” I said. I’d intended my visit to be a conjugal one, but the dampness, the mold, the hard cold stone caused me to rethink that idea. But the bath cave? That would do, quite nicely.

He groaned and hugged me. “I wish…I wish I could, but the chances of being caught there are much greater than here.” He set me away from him. “How are you? What have you been doing?”

“I’ve been doing the cooking, practicing sewing so I can help you with the kel. I did go to the meeting place one day—”

“Alone?” He glowered.

“Not alone.” I planted my hands on my hips and glared back. “I wouldn’t do that. Getting lost in a snowstorm and falling into a latrine once is plenty for me. Starr and Torg took me.”

“Okay. Sorry,” he said.

“I talked to my sister and Devon again. She did get accepted into the program and will arrive in the next group of women.”

“I’m very happy for you. I’m looking forward to meeting them.”

“That’s all my news.” I didn’t tell him about my loneliness, how often I cried because I missed him so much. I tried to keep busy, but it was hard.

“And your show is over now?”

“Anybody’s guess,” I said. “Apogee said they’d keep filming as long as cameras were operational, but I don’t see them too often.” It was possible they were skulking around, but I’d written off Apogee and the show so totally, I’d stopped watching for the cameras. However, if one did cross my path, I’d make like a Dakonian and kill it.

“One has been visiting me. I’ve been talking to your…producer, is that what he’s called?”

“Yes. You shouldn’t talk to him. He can’t be trusted.”

“It helps to pass the time.”

“Well, then okay, but don’t tell him anything important.”

“He asks me about my life, how I felt when I saw you, why I picked you.”

“They call it a confessional—when you speak directly to the camera,” I explained. “They’ll dub in your interviews to explain the other footage they shot.” Apogee aroused my suspicion, but I couldn’t imagine they could cause any more damage. All our secrets were out. Darq was aware I’d come to Dakon for the show; everyone on his entire planet knew he’d misappropriated a chit intended for somebody else. All we had to do was wait out his incarceration, and we’d be home free.

* * * *

We kissed and hugged some more, but then Darq insisted I leave. He feared we’d get caught, and neither of us wanted to risk me getting incarcerated, his sentence being extended, or worst of all, him getting banished. He transferred the stew to his dish and gave me back the bowl to eliminate evidence of my visit. Seeing him had reassured me he was all right, but made me ache with greater longing. I’d be counting the days until his freedom, and we could get on with our lives.

Back in our cave, I listened outside the passage to Torg and Starr’s private chamber. Masculine snores drifted down the corridor. Nobody had awakened to discover I’d left. Good.

Too keyed up to sleep, I collected a towel, clean clothes, and body wash in hopes a hot soak would relax me.

At this time of night, it was unlikely anyone other than me would want to bathe, but to be sure, I dragged the three rocks in front of the entrance. I was no prude and had no body issues to speak of, but I wasn’t comfortable with the Dakonians’ total lack of modesty. Besides, I needed to be alone to mope properly.

It was steamy and warm at the mineral pools. Poor Darq. The ward hadn’t been freezing, but his tiny fire didn’t fully heat the cave. I’d asked him why he didn’t build a bigger one, and he’d said he had to ration the limited amount of firewood they brought him.

“Warding isn’t supposed to be comfortable,” he’d explained.

“Well, I’m going to have a word with Torg,” I’d said.

“And you’ll tell him you know what the conditions are like, how? Because you broke the rules and came for a visit? Besides, he knows. He can’t go easy on me, or the tribe will demand banishment.”

I slipped into the hot, frothing mineral spring and vowed to bring him another kel tomorrow night. He could conceal it under the one he had. I’d also sneak him a couple of logs. As long as he didn’t suddenly have a cord stockpiled, no one would know he’d gotten a few extra.

I understood Torg was caught between a chunk of ice and a block of frozen water. He had spared Darq the worst but had to maintain appearances with the tribe. However, if you couldn’t show a little favoritism to your own brother, what good was nepotism anyway?

I closed my eyes and leaned against the ledge. The swirling water warmed my body but did little to calm my mind. Thoughts and emotions ran on a loop through my brain. A big lump of loneliness and longing had formed in my throat. Being in the mineral spring reminded me of coming with Darq, how we splashed together, bathed each other, engaged in rip-roaring sex.

Don’t be such a wuss. Suck it up. You can get through this. Take it one day, one night at a time.

There was no point in lingering and getting pruney if Darq wasn’t here. I wiped off with the towel then donned clean clothing and my kel. I hadn’t dunked my head, but I used the illuvian-powered handheld heater to dry a few damp wisps. Once I’d gone out with wet hair, and even though I’d pulled up the hood of my kel, by the time I got back to the cave, icicles had formed. I’d learned to respect this planet and follow its rules. Be alert. Be prepared. Don’t go anywhere alone. Dry your hair.

Clouds had swallowed the moon. Large flakes tumbled from the sky. Another lesson learned: weather changed in minutes. Better get back to the cave quick! If anybody knew how easy it was to get lost, it was me. I set down my bag with the wet towel and old clothes so I could move the large, heavy signal rocks.

I stood up and reached for my stuff.

A hand clapped over my mouth, yanking me against an unforgiving body. My screams were muffled, and I was dragged, kicking and twisting, into the woods.