Dark Abyss Kaitlyn O'Connor (best fiction books of all time .TXT) š
- Author: Kaitlyn O'Connor
Book online Ā«Dark Abyss Kaitlyn O'Connor (best fiction books of all time .TXT) šĀ». Author Kaitlyn O'Connor
The man moved away. A few moments later, the kitchen light came on, blinding her. She clamped her eyes closed instinctively the moment the glaring light hit her pupils and then squinted to see. Another jolt went through her. There were four men standing around her and not one of them had on a stitch of clothing!
Her eyes widened as the shock of discovery went through her. The light glistened on their skin. Sweat from wrestling with her? Or water?
The man standing by the light switch, the one she realized had been issuing all of the orders, was exceptionally tallāover six feet, she was sureāand broad shouldered.
His black hair hung around his shoulders in damp, faintly curling locks that ended just at the tops of his bulging male breasts. Wedge shaped muscles formed blocks all the way down his belly to the light nest of black hair that cupped his genitals. He was still semi-erect, leaving her in no doubt of where her face had been.
Even as heat began to creep into her cheeks, she registered something that made the blood rush from her face.
His skin from just below the waist to his feet was patternedānot smooth and even as the rest of his skin. It almost looked like a tattooāexcept she knew it wasnāt even before she caught a glimpse at the feathery looking fins at his wrists and elbows and his ankles. Her gaze swept upward to his face again of its own accord and then, with barely time to actually register his features, moved from him to the other men within her view.
She couldnāt see the one holding her, but she could feel the hard ridges of his flesh digging into her through her thin nightgown and knew he was the same.
They were all tall, with hard, elegantly delineated muscles that gave them the grace and beauty of sculptures depicting the perfect male body rather than the appearance of actual, flawed human beings.
Because they werenāt human beings at all.
āMutants,ā Anna breathed in shock, scarcely realizing sheād spoken aloud until she saw their handsome faces freeze and harden.
The man she was staring at glanced toward the one sheād realized must be their leader and her gaze automatically followed the movement.
She had the impression that heād been studying her with equal thoroughness while sheād looked at them. It was hard to say what heād thought of his assessment, though, because, clearly, sheād managed to insult and anger all of them.
āShe either isnāt very bright,ā he said coolly, āor she has some sort of false sense of superiority that not being a āmutantā somehow protects her from the consequences of pissing off men who arenāt in a very forgiving mood at the moment.ā
Anna swallowed convulsively several times, blushing at the insult, struggling to think of a response. āIām not very bright,ā she agreed shakily. āCould I ā¦ uh ā¦ just give you directions?ā
He narrowed his eyes at her. āAnd apparently, she doesnāt think weāre very bright either,ā he said dryly.
Irritation flickered through her. āIām not deaf! I do understand English, although I have to say yours is damned hard to understand!ā
He moved toward her, bending down and pushing his face close to hers. āIt comes from being a water breather,ā he growled, enunciating each word slowly, and then added. āBorn one.ā
Her eyes widened.
He lifted a hand and skimmed a finger lightly along her cheek. āYes, we breed .
Is that why your father decided to step things up? He figured if he didnāt start blowing us up thereād be too many to kill all of us?ā
If heād punched her in the stomach he couldnāt have more surely jolted her or deprived her of air or sent her mind into complete chaos. She felt dizzy with the rush of blood away from her head. āBlow up?ā she managed to whisper through lips that didnāt seem to want to cooperate in forming the words.
āSimon! We need to move!ā
Simon straightened and turned to look at the man whoād spoken. They seemed to exchange a silent communication and the one named Simon turned to look at her again.
This time his expression was speculative. āTake us to him. Mind you, if this is a trap, you wonāt live long enough to regret it.ā
* * * *
Anna stared in disbelief at the spot where the mansion of Miles Cavendish had been moored less than a week earlier. After turning all the way around and studying the houses, though, she finally had to accept that she was in the right place. The house wasnāt.
That was the problem with a floating city, she thought fearfully. There was never any telling when someone might decide to move their property to another city altogether!
She sent a terrified look at Simon. āIt was right here! I swear to god! Donāt hurt me! It was here!ā
His face looked like stone. āWhen?ā
Anna blinked at him, trying to jog her memory. āA few days ago! Iām not sure.
Paul brought me. There was a party and ā¦ and I met Miles Cavendish.ā
āNo doubt celebrating their victory!ā Simon spat in furious disgust. āTwo hundred people dead! Two hundred! Fifty of them āhumanā, just like you, tourists whose only mistake was getting in the way! Another three hundred wounded, a lot of them fucked up for life!ā
Anna gaped at him, thinking for several moments that she might throw up.
āMet?ā one demanded sharply.
She looked at him, vaguely recalled Simon calling him by nameāsomething Biblical? Caleb!
āWhat do you mean āmetā?ā
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