Hell, maybe the female wasn’t a Creation. Maybe Sernal was just on an undercover mission and not in serious trouble somewhere out of reach. And maybe this extended visit between Isa and his mother wouldn’t result in yet another argument about Catam leaving the bounty hunting business.
“Catam, first watch. And it’s a long one,” Mara ordered as the rest of them settled in.
Nu and Set chuckled, Lurin shot him a look of sympathy, and Catam sighed. It really wasn’t his day.
Chapter Seven
Rafe swore to himself as he caught the faint impression of a boot print in the soft dirt.
The sparse moonlight gave his quarry that much more cover, and damn her, but Erin knew how to avoid capture like nobody’s business. For two days he’d been tracking her through the Eron Forest and into the Fields of Flor. At this rate she’d enter the jungle by dawn, considering she hadn’t yet stopped for a break, an impossible feat for anyone not Xema, or apparently, not a Creation.
The little witch had thoughtfully left him half their provisions, and once he’d woken from her incredibly powerful chokehold and broken free from the rope holding him tight, he’d furiously chased after her.
Perhaps if Erin had known about Rafe’s heritage, and thus his capabilities, she wouldn’t have knocked him out… again. The Xema never quit. Rafe would pursue her tirelessly for as long as it took. Mardu huntsmen had a reputation as tough, but the Xema were legendary for their tenacity, daring and ruthlessness. The rare clan of warriors accounted for a mere two percent of the entire Mardu population, but that two percent could do what normal System inhabitants couldn’t. With enhanced physical senses, they could forego sleep and rest periods when keyed up, their bodies on autopilot while they hunted.
That Erin had run for as long as she had both surprised and thrilled the predator within him. Rafe loved a challenge, and Erin proved to be the best he’d yet to come across. She constantly intrigued him, and he used the time tracking her to ponder the many problems she presented.
First and foremost, Erin shouldn’t exist. Every now and again the scientists on Eyra toyed with nature, and they lost. Their first group of Creations had almost destroyed the System. And the few subsequent attempts to manufacture unauthorised humans met with death for both Creator and Creation. But those instances had involved true monsters. Erin was anything but. She had the strength and skill to destroy. Three times now she could have killed ‘Cheltam’, yet she hadn’t. Instead she’d run.
By rights, as a lawman, Rafe had a duty to terminate a Creation. But he tempered that obligation with the fact that Erin was the key witness in an ongoing investigation. Her escape from Blue Rim made her the one person who could bring down that monstrous conglomerate, if the truth of her story could be believed, that Blue Rim kidnapped and exploited prisoners for the sake of science. And exposing the lab for what it was would be a battle, because Blue Rim had connections System-wide as well as the currency to fight the law for a very, very long time.
Rationally, the excuse that Erin was a witness made more sense to keep her alive than that he felt something for a woman he’d just met. Because beyond all explanation, Rafe felt affection for Erin, a Creation, for Flor’s sake, who’d taken him to wainu. She was in so many ways a stranger, yet as familiar to him as his own soul. And it made no sense any way he looked at it.
Rafe nimbly dodged a huge tree root and skirted a gaggle of poisonous nettles, anxiety for Erin angering him even more. The little fool might be quick and strong, but she didn’t know the vegetation like he did. And the wildlife grew bolder with the coming dark.
Thankfully, he hadn’t heard any kethra or raptor cries, or he surely would have encountered one by now. Another glance at the diminishing distance between Erin’s footprints showed her lagging pace. Finally, fatigue slowed his quarry. Pleased, Rafe lengthened his stride, nearly panting with excitement, the scent of victory within reach.
He had every intention of claiming his prize. Through several brief conversations with Gar using his com unit, Rafe had learned many interesting details about Creations he hadn’t previously known. Apparently, Gar seemed stuck on the notion that Erin was a Creation.
And though Rafe should have confirmed the fact with his brother, he found himself unable to do so. Until he talked with Erin again, he remained silent about any details, to include the fact that he’d lost her.
Gar, never much a talker, had filled Rafe’s head with minutia about Eyran science and their mistakes. The early attempts at Creation hadn’t worked. Their initial subjects displayed too many submissive tendencies. They’d been intended to serve as sexual surrogates, military tools, and basic helpers in varied fields from construction to law enforcement. But their inability to function independently on any level marked them as failures.
Unfortunately, Eyran science struck pay dirt on their next batch, or so they thought. Their second wave of Creations had the intelligence, backbone, and power to accomplish the tasks assigned them. They also possessed such a strong will to control everything that they devolved into genius psychotic killers with a need to destroy everyone around them. In months they had effectively enslaved nearly half their planet before anyone else in the System caught wind of what had been happening.
With the Eyran scientists forced to duplicate more and more of the humanoids using advanced maturation, chemical and mechanical construction and stimulus, the Creations built a formidable army in no time at all, and nearly wiped out a good portion of the System’s population before the peacemakers stepped in and stopped them.
Rafe ducked under an overhanging branch and swore he caught the scent of Erin just ahead. As he ran, he wondered just where Erin fell into the Creations’ evolution. In their short time together she’d wanted to be in control at all times…until she experienced a woman’s pleasure. He nearly stumbled as the notion dawned. Erin had been incredibly firm with him on every front, up until he’d given her ecstasy. In his arms, she melted, becoming a softer, malleable woman who catered to his needs. Rafe hadn’t thought much of it at the time, too involved in feeding their desires. The excitement in finding such a strong yet pliable woman overwhelmed the intriguing contrasts in her behaviour.
But as he neared her, he thought he may have found his answer. In Erin, it seemed the Eyran scientists had created a masterpiece. She functioned on her own and had the presence of mind to call her own shots. Yet with the right stimulus, she’d been his for the taking. Rafe grinned and sped up, the jungle around him a blur of heat flashes and darkness as he sought his prey.
Finding her now was only half the fun. Because when he caught her, he intended to get the rest of his answers, and teach Erin a thing or two about obedience in the process.
Erin couldn’t move another step. She’d pushed herself to the limit, sure Rafe would be hot on her trail the moment he regained consciousness. And since the last time she’d put him down he’d revived in half the time she’d thought, she’d made extra sure to give herself the advantage by tying him up. Surely those knots had given him fits.
She frowned as she bent over at the waist to catch her breath. Hopefully, Rafe wouldn’t be too upset about her escape. Erin still couldn’t believe she’d confessed the truth of her identity. Why the hell had she admitted to being a Creation? The prison ploy was perfect.
Experimented on with those other hapless souls. When pressed, she’d mask most of her abilities to lend credence to such fiction.