Read Icarus Rising Online

Authors: Bernadette Gardner

Icarus Rising (5 page)

hitting the ground, and then his body collapsing at the water's

edge.

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Icarus Rising

by Bernadette Gardner

The first few waves had washed over his head, and he

recalled welcoming the momentary silence.

Fortunately, the tide had receded, and each subsequent

wave had swirled over less and less of his body. Now only his

toes felt wet. The breakers tickled them, or maybe it was a

legion of marauding sand crabs preparing to feast on his

flesh.

"Help me..." A surge of panic at the thought of being eaten

alive forced the words from his lungs, followed by an

explosive cough. At least he'd made it to the beach.

Someone would hear him eventually. Assuming of course

he'd managed, in his blind, delirious flight, to reach the island

he'd been trying to find.

Hours past, it seemed, while he lay contemplating his fate.

The symbion seemed to be dead. He sensed nothing from it,

only a dull pain at the nape of his neck told him the creature

was still connected to his body.

It would have to be surgically removed, a process that, at

best, would leave Caleb paralyzed. For all he knew, maybe he

already was.

"Cleb ... Calb..." A muffled voiced reached him before he

could sink further into despair. His ears must be full of water.

He didn't recognize the voice, but it sounded like a woman.

"Omigod ... are you ohh ... cleb ... can you heeeer meee?"

He opened his mouth to respond and sand showered

across his tongue. He sputtered, and the disembodied voice

shrieked.

"Omigodmsorry ... clebcanyooo ... hear meee?"

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Icarus Rising

by Bernadette Gardner

"I ken ... I ken..." He spat out sand and cautiously pried

one eyelid open, fearing more sand would be kicked into his

face.

Cool hands brushed the crusted particles from his cheek

and forehead, and finally he caught a glimpse of his savior.

Zara!

Oh no. Why did it have to be her? Why did she have to be

the one to find him like this, helpless and broken, his useless

body imprisoned under the corpse of his symbion?

"Zara..."

"Lie still. I'll call for help."

"Noph ... no. Pleeeze..."

"Caleb, you've been gone for ten hours."

He wasn't sure why that mattered, but he knew he didn't

want everyone from the research station crowding around

him like they had during his disastrous joining ritual. The

embarrassment would kill him much faster than lying here

and rotting under the dead weight of his water-logged wings.

Zara seemed to be digging her way beneath his body,

scooping great armfuls of sand from under his left shoulder.

Maybe she was going to bury him. Smart girl. Hide the body

and spare him any further humiliation.

"Humph?"

She ignored his question and continued to dig while

muttering to herself or to him, he wasn't sure. "Dead ... no

one expected to find you alive." Rather than push him into

the hole she'd formed beneath his upper body, though, she

levered her own shoulder under his and with a mighty heave,

pushed him over onto his side.

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Icarus Rising

by Bernadette Gardner

Now he remembered he was naked and cold, but at least it

was dark.

On her hands and knees before him, Zara peered into his

face. Finally a rush of hot water drained from his right ear

into the sand, and he shivered with the return of normal

sound. At least he was able to hear her next question clearly.

"Are you in pain?"

He nodded. He'd been mostly numb up until this minute.

Now his whole body ached, and the ache became fiery agony

as his raw, exhaustion-deadened nerve endings began to

wake up.

"Takemehome."

"Dr. Danson's waiting at the station. He'll have everything

ready to help you."

Danson. Oh shit. He was in trouble. The worst had

happened, and it was Caleb's fault for not telling Danson the

whole truth.

"No!" His shout startled Zara. She slid an arm under his

and lifted his upper body onto her lap.

"What is it? What's wrong?"

"No Danson ... not yet. I need..."

"What? What do you need?"

"Female?"

His symbion woke then, and the nearly instantaneous

transition from lifelessness to full sexual awareness left Caleb

shaking. Behind him, his wings began to fold of their own

accord, dragging furrows of wet sand with them.

Strength surged through every muscle in his body,

including a few he wished would remain asleep. Undone by

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Icarus Rising

by Bernadette Gardner

the wave of emotions building in his brain, Caleb pushed

himself out of Zara's embrace and scrambled into a crouch on

the sand. His wings quivered, casting drops of water and grit

everywhere before settling themselves against his back.

Confused, he stared at her, and she stared back.

"Caleb—"

"I feel better. I'm all right."

Her gazed dipped to the massive erection now rising

between his legs, and she blushed. He wondered how he

could see the increased color of her cheeks so well in the dim

starlight. He hadn't expected to acquire Icarian night vision

along with his wings—that was a trait native to the dominant

race, not the symbions. Yet as Caleb's glance darted around

to the narrow strip of sand beneath the lighthouse station, he

realized the silvery light from above was more than adequate

for him to see every detail of the scene.

Ocean spray glittered on the nearby jetty rocks like a net

of diamonds. At the edge of the water, tiny crabs worked

their claws into the damp sand, digging up the minute

shellfish roe that lay a few centimeters beneath the

constantly shifting surface.

Zara's hazel eyes were dilated into wide pools of curious

black rimmed by thin rings of green—the same color as the

sand. Her sleeveless shirt was wet and clung to her breasts.

Under his brash scrutiny, her nipples began to harden.

Motivated by this sudden, uncontrolled rush of desire,

Caleb forced himself to look away. "I need to be alone," he

said. "I'm not ready to go back to the station."

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Icarus Rising

by Bernadette Gardner

"But everyone's looking for you. Jidar has been in the air

all day."

On the heels of his arousal, anger boiled up, laced with an

unnatural fear that he knew came from the symbion. This

particular one had been captured once and examined by

Danson. The geneticist had done his best to cause as little

pain as possible while collecting blood and DNA samples from

the terrified creature, but still it recalled the discomfort and

uncertainty of its brief captivity at the research station along

with the somewhat forced nature of its bonding. Caleb

suspected it would balk at returning to the lab now while it

was still recovering from their manic virgin flight.

"I can't now, Zara. I need time."

"Female?"
The symbion wanted Zara, almost as much as

Caleb did. It craved release too as an outlet for the

unregulated flow of unfamiliar hormones from its new host

body.

Caleb fought the urge to lunge across the beach and tackle

her.

"Okay." Zara put her hands up in a calming gesture. "We

can rest here for a little while, and when you're ready to go

back—"

"No!" He straightened to his full height, his wings sweeping

out to the side. All he needed to do was jump into the air, and

his symbion would take him far away again where no one

could hurt either of them.

Zara backed away a step, which put her foot right into the

depression she'd dug in the sand. With a gasp, she toppled

backward.

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Icarus Rising

by Bernadette Gardner

Caleb's human instinct was to reach for her and break her

fall, but his reflexes worked too fast for his brain. His wings

flapped once, propelling him forward. Instinctively, he

scooped Zara up under her arms and lifted her off the ground

before she could fall.

Two more strokes and they rose above the beach, clearing

ten meters in the blink of an eye.

Triumph washed through Caleb's brain. The symbion had

proudly captured a mate and was now searching for a quiet,

secluded place to claim its prize.

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Icarus Rising

by Bernadette Gardner

Chapter Five

Zara's heart leapt into her throat the moment her feet left

the ground. One minute she'd been tumbling backward in the

uneven sand, and the next she found herself careening over

the dark beach, suspended in Caleb's arms.

For a moment she couldn't speak. Fear of plummeting to

the jagged rocks of the jetty held her mute. How did Caleb

have the strength to lift himself, let alone her, into the air

after a ten-hour flight?

She didn't dare struggle for fear he'd lose his grip, so she

held her breath and tensed all her muscles, hoping to make

herself a little bit lighter, at least until he cleared the rocks.

Finally, when he swooped lower toward the sand, she was

able to squeak out her demands. "Put me ... Caleb! Put me

down."

Some of the other research-station staff had flown with

Icarians on occasion, but she'd never accepted an invitation

to soar over the ocean. Now, looking down at the undulating

waves, she understood the awe her colleagues had felt, yet

she still clung to her belief that this was not a safe or

effective way to travel. For humans, at least.

"Caleb! Please."

In response, he banked to the south, carrying them once

again over the jetty and passing the spot where she'd found

him washed ashore. The tiny, little-used southeastern beach

fell away as Caleb climbed higher into the air. Low scrub

replaced soft sand, and Zara tensed again. A patch of

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Icarus Rising

by Bernadette Gardner

brambles half a kilometer wide separated the beach from the

southern living quarters. Half a dozen individual bungalows

provided private and shared living space for members of the

station staff. Another dozen small buildings took up the

northern side of the island running along the station's only

paved road.

Don't drop me now, she prayed as the scraggly foliage

loomed beneath her bare feet. Her shoes had fallen off when

they'd first left the ground. If she fell now, not only would the

stiff, sharp-edged leaves of the brambles cut her skin to

ribbons, their gnarled roots would be impossible to walk over

without protection.

"Caleb!"

The first of the bungalows came into view, a pale, boxy

shape against the blue-green sea grass that took over where

the bramble patch ended.

This was Caleb's home and he was heading toward it.

Zara tightened her grip on Caleb's arms. Did he know how

to land while carrying someone? If she called out for help

would anyone hear her? All the bungalows stretching west in

the line along the island's rugged southern coast were dark.

No lights blazed from within any of the cubical structures. Not

surprising. Everyone was probably at the lab complex, waiting

anxiously for news from the Icarian search parties.

It didn't matter. Once Caleb set her down, if that was his

intention, she could run inside his hut and use the radio to

call the lab.

Again, Caleb banked, circling above his quarters. Once he

came around the small square of asphalt in front of the

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Icarus Rising

by Bernadette Gardner

bungalow, he dropped quickly and set Zara down. Her feet

touched the ground with no greater impact than if she'd

simply taken a step, and Caleb slipped his arms from beneath

hers. He soared over her head and landed himself a few feet

in front of her.

Awed by his instinctive skill, she gawked at the sight he

made. A magnificent winged man, naked and muscular—he

looked like an angel.

During her tenure at the station, Zara had grown

accustomed to the spectacle of winged humanoids, but now,

staring at Caleb, she had a new appreciation for the exotic

beauty of this race.

Her heart thundered, and something warm stirred in her

belly when he turned to face her. She licked her lips

involuntarily at the sight of his still semi-erect cock.

Unbidden, her thoughts returned to those few chaotic

moments of his joining when, at the mercy of a wave of alien

biochemistry, he'd experienced a violent orgasm under her

touch.

Her face heated, and she looked away. "That was ...

amazing, but please, don't do it again."

He took one step toward her then stopped, seeming to

battle with himself over whether he wanted to come any

closer. "I'm sorry. It was a reflex. My symbion took over."

She nodded and wondered who was in charge of his

actions now. How much of Caleb's will remained, and how

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