Chapter 25
CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE
She was in his arms.
Rhyx pulled Alina against his chest, breathing in the scent of her—that warm, human fragrance mixed with something uniquely her that had become more essential to him than air.
Three days. Three endless, agonizing days of waiting, of pacing Jeb and Mattie’s small habitat like a caged predator, of staring at the horizon and willing her to appear.
Never again, he vowed silently. We will never be apart again.
“Rhyx.” Her voice was muffled against his shoulder, her arms wound tight around his neck. “I missed you. I missed you so much.”
“Three days.” The words came out rough, scraping past the tightness in his throat. “It felt like three centuries.”
She laughed—a watery sound, half sob and half joy—and pulled back just enough to look up at him. Her brown eyes were bright with tears, her cheeks flushed, her hair escaping its practical bun in golden wisps that caught the dying light. She was the most beautiful thing he had ever seen.
“I know. Every minute felt like an hour.” Her hands moved to cup his face, her thumbs tracing the angular lines of his jaw. “But I’m here now. We’re together.”
“Together,” he echoed, the word a promise.
He kissed her.
The contact sent fire racing through his veins, igniting every nerve ending, awakening hungers he’d barely learned to name.
Her lips parted beneath his, soft and yielding, and he deepened the kiss with a groan that rumbled from somewhere deep in his chest. She tasted like home.
Like belonging. Like everything he’d been searching for through millennia of darkness.
Her fingers tangled in his hair, pulling him closer, and he responded by lifting her off her feet. She gasped against his mouth, her legs wrapping instinctively around his waist, and the movement pressed her body flush against his in ways that made coherent thought impossible.
“Inside,” she breathed between kisses. “The shelter—”
He was already moving, carrying her towards the portable habitat she’d erected. The structure was small, barely large enough for two, but it would serve their purposes. All he needed was privacy and her.
The shelter’s door sealed behind them, cutting off the thin Martian wind. Inside, the space was warm—heated by portable units that hummed softly in the gathering darkness. A sleeping platform dominated one corner, covered in thermal blankets. Basic. Functional. Perfect.
Rhyx set her down gently, but she didn’t release her grip on him. Instead, she pulled him down with her, drawing him onto the platform until they lay tangled together, her smaller frame fitting against his as if they’d been designed to interlock.
“I need you.” Her voice was breathless, urgent. “Please, Rhyx. I’ve needed you for three days.”
The words shattered whatever restraint he’d been maintaining.
He kissed her again, harder this time, claiming her mouth with an intensity that left them both gasping.
His hands found the fastenings of her suit—those practical, frustrating garments humans wore—and began working them free.
She helped him, fingers fumbling with clasps and seals, both of them desperate to remove the barriers between them.
Skin. Warm, smooth, impossibly soft human skin beneath his palms. He groaned at the contact, his scales prickling with sensation where their bodies touched.
She was so different from him—so delicate, so vulnerable—and yet there was strength in her too.
He could feel it in the way she arched into his touch, demanding rather than submitting.
“You are so beautiful,” he murmured against her throat. “My mate. My Alina.”
“Yours,” she agreed, the word a sigh of surrender. “Always yours.”
He explored her with hands and lips, mapping the contours of her body, learning anew all the places that made her gasp and moan. The curve of her waist. The swell of her breasts. The soft hollow at the base of her throat where her pulse fluttered like a trapped bird.
She was equally thorough in her exploration, her fingers tracing the ridged scales of his back, the thick muscles of his shoulders, the twin rises along his spine where his wings lay dormant beneath the skin.
Every touch sent sparks through his nervous system, pleasure and possession mingling until he couldn’t distinguish between them.
“I dreamed of this,” she confessed, her voice husky. “Every night while I was packing, while I was saying goodbye, I dreamed of being with you again.”
“I did more than dream.” He positioned himself above her, supporting his weight on his forearms. “I ached. Every moment apart was an agony.”
“Then end it.” Her legs wrapped around him, drawing him closer. “End the agony. Be with me.”
He entered her slowly, savoring the exquisite sensation of joining. She was warmth and wetness and welcome, her body accepting him as if they had been made for this—and perhaps they had. Perhaps, across all the eons that separated his people from hers, this connection had been fated.
She cried out as he filled her, her back arching, her nails raking down his arms. The slight sting only intensified his pleasure, reminding him that this was real. She was real. They were together, finally, completely.
He began to move, and she moved with him—a rhythm as old as existence itself, as primal as the stones beneath them. The shelter’s walls might have been the walls of a cave, the heated air the warmth of a dying sun. In this moment, there was no past, no future. Only now. Only them.
Her pleasure built in waves he could feel through their connection—some deep, instinctual bond that let him sense her responses as if they were his own. When she approached her peak, he felt it in his own body, a tightening coil of anticipation that demanded release.
“Rhyx—” Her voice broke on his name.
“I have you.” He drove deeper, claiming her completely. “Let go, my mate. I have you.”
She shattered beneath him, her release pulling him over the edge into his own. The world went white, then gold, then a darkness shot through with stars. He was flying, falling, dissolving into pure sensation—and through it all, she was there, anchoring him, keeping him whole.
When awareness returned, they were tangled together on the sleeping platform, limbs intertwined, breathing ragged. She was limp against him, her face pressed to his chest, her fingers drawing idle patterns on his scales.
“That was…” She trailed off, apparently unable to find adequate words.
“Yes,” he agreed. “It was.”
She laughed softly, the vibration pleasant against his skin. “I didn’t think it could get better. I was wrong.”
“We have much time to practice.” He tightened his arms around her, pulling her impossibly closer. “Many nights. Many years.”
“Many years,” she repeated, and he heard the wonder in her voice. The hope. The joy.
They lay in comfortable silence for a long while, letting their heartbeats slow and their breathing steady. Outside, the Martian night descended—cold, dark, hostile to unprotected life. But here, in this small shelter, they had created their own warmth.
“Tell me about the past few days,” she said finally. “What happened while I was packing up my life?”
Rhyx considered where to begin. The time at Jeb and Mattie’s claim had been both enlightening and challenging—a crash course in navigating a world he barely understood, guided by people whose very existence defied the natural order he remembered.
“I met others,” he said. “Other cyborgs.”
Alina lifted her head, her eyes curious in the dim light. “Others? How many?”
“Three. They came to speak with Jeb about… various things.” He struggled to find the right words. Human concepts didn’t always translate easily into his understanding. “Territory. Resources. Information.”
“And they met you?”
“Jeb told them I was a recent conversion. Someone who had been badly damaged, whose appearance had been… altered by the regeneration process.” A faint smile tugged at his lips. “They accepted the explanation. Cyborgs, it seems, are accustomed to unusual appearances.”
She was quiet for a moment, processing. “That’s actually brilliant. Zach looks almost human, but I’ve heard stories about others—ones whose transformations went wrong, or who were modified for specific purposes. You’d just be another variation.”
“That was Jeb’s reasoning.” Rhyx’s hand moved to stroke her hair, finding comfort in the simple contact.
“He also explained the situation. Not about me specifically—not what I truly am—but about the development of native flora. The plants in the cavern, the possibility of natural Martian life adapting to the terraforming process.”
“The samples I distributed,” she said, understanding dawning. “He’s laying groundwork.”
“Yes. The cyborgs have their own ways of sharing information that bypass corporate control. They will begin spreading the knowledge—quietly, carefully—to those who can be trusted to use it wisely.”
“And if they find more life? More plants, more organisms?”
“They will protect them.” His voice hardened. “As they would have protected me, had they known. Jeb made that very clear—the cyborg community has no love for GenCon or any corporation that would exploit new discoveries for profit.”
Alina settled her head back against his chest, her body relaxing. “That’s good. That’s really good. The samples I gave to Dr. Rodriguez and the others will help too, but having the cyborg network involved…” She trailed off, lost in thought.
“There is more.”
“More?”
Rhyx hesitated. This part was harder to explain, touching as it did on possibilities he wasn’t sure he wanted to consider. “Jeb and the others have been briefed about the possibility of other types of life. Other things that might be discovered.”
“Other things like you?”