Phoebe North - Starbreak

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Starbreak: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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The Asherah has finally reached Zehava, the long-promised planet. There, Terra finds harsh conditions and a familiar foe—Aleksandra Wolff, leader of her ship’s rebel forces. Terra and Aleksandra first lock horns with each other . . . but soon realize they face a much more dangerous enemy in violent alien beasts—and alien hunters.
Then Terra finally discovers Vadix. The boy who has haunted her dreams may be their key to survival—but his own dark past has yet to be revealed. And when Aleksandra gets humanity expelled from the planet, it’s up to Terra, with Vadix by her side, to unite her people—and to forge an alliance with the alien hosts, who want nothing more than to see humanity gone forever.

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“Ekku zheserazhi, ekku sesez vheseri.”

They moved fast, flanking her, pressing their weapons into the small of her back. She jumped back, struggled. But my lover’s face went blank—his expression, extraordinarily cold.

“It is the decision of the Grand Senate that you pose too great a threat to the people of Aur Evez to be permitted the liberty of life.”

Her skin went waxy, pale as a moon. “What?” she began, then craned her neck, glancing behind her. She called out, “Mordy! Mordecai!”

But Rebbe Davison wouldn’t look at her. He opened his arms, welcoming Ettie into them. The child pressed her face to his chest, hiding from what was about to transpire. Rebbe Davison rocked her, whispering words of comfort. But he did nothing to comfort Aleksandra. She cried out, an animal sound. Vadix flinched. I could still feel the turmoil deep down inside him. He didn’t want to give the command. But he had to. The senate had decided.

“May the god and goddess grant you many seedlings. Hunters, have your meat. Zhosora aivaz.

There was a great crack of sound, and the antechamber filled up with blue, blinding light. I heard a thud. Aleksandra, falling to the floor. She stared up at the ceiling, dead and empty. Beside me Mara Stone let out a breath of sound.

My chest was tight. I could hardly breathe as Mara stooped over and closed Aleksandra’s eyes. Soon Vadix was beside me. I felt his hand at my elbow, the pressure firm but insistent.

“Come,” he said, his voice husky with emotion. “I shall walk with you to the pier.”

“Vadix,” I said, and the name echoed in my mind. Vadix.

But he was still closed to me, to my words and thoughts and heart. He gave my arm a tug, not even daring to look me in the eye.

“We must go now,” he said, pulling me out of the room as the others were jostled to follow by Ahadizhi prods. “If we wish to say good-bye.”

* * *

The pier was on the city’s outskirts, past the warmth of the towering wall that contained Raza Ait. As we walked down the crowded thoroughfare, I winced at the cold air that cut through the robes I’d borrowed from Vadix. The sky overhead was full of heavy-bottomed clouds. And the sea in the distance churned, brackish and peaked with white. It stretched on and on until it disappeared against the horizon a curved, far-off place. It seemed this world was infinite, never ending. I wondered what was beyond my grasp, felt a knot in my throat at the thought that I’d never see any of it.

The others were flanked on all sides by guards, but they didn’t seem to notice. They trudged ahead with drawn expressions, with shadows under their eyes like bruises left in the wake of so much death—Aleksandra’s guards, Deklan, Laurel, now Aleksandra, too. I hadn’t participated in the bloodbath down at the quarantine camp; I hadn’t earned bound hands. But that didn’t mean I walked alone.

Vadix was beside me, his body shielding me from a southward wind. He kept one long hand draped across my back—but his mind might as well have been lost out there in the middle of the sea. It was distant, cold, and cloistered. Had I kissed those lips, pressed my body against his? It felt almost like a dream as we shouldered through the crowds to the end of the pier, where Mara Stone’s shuttle craft bobbed against the waves.

The others were pushed and jostled until they relented—then they slipped inside the dark recess of the shuttle. But I hesitated at the door. We were surrounded by guards, by fishermen, by people and voices going about their day. My companions still peered out at me, expectant, waiting within the confines of the shuttle. But it didn’t matter. I couldn’t leave, not yet, not after all we’d shared.

We can’t end it this way, I said, stepping close to him. He turned his face away from me, scanning the horizon.

“Snow,” he said aloud. I turned too. The air around us seemed alive, sparked with tiny flakes. They drifted and swirled all around us, catching in updrafts, dotting the stone walk of the pier before disappearing—like they’d never been there at all. I felt them hit my cheeks, my sunburned arms, like a thousand tiny kisses. I saw them dot  Vadix, too. He flinched at the cold. “Only a few more moons until winter, and then the Xollu of the city sleep.”

“Will you be among them?” I asked, my voice breaking out, fresh and raw. He didn’t look at me, not yet. “It’s over for you now, isn’t it? We’re leaving. You did your job.”

Silence. Snow dotted my eyelashes, tangled in my hair. When I stretched out my mind to touch his, only frigid cold came back. The lump in my throat was huge; the one in my heart, even harder. I began to gather up my strength. I should have known better than to hang my hopes on him, to act like he was someone I could depend on.

I took the first step toward the shuttle, my robes brushing his. But his hand darted out and gripped mine.

“How can you say this?” he demanded. I twisted my body, looking back at him. At his endless, endless eyes, reflecting the falling snow like stars. “I made you a promise. Safe. I will see that you’re safe. Do you think I will break it?”

When I didn’t answer, he cradled my fingers against his body. Clutched so closely, it was almost as if they moved of their own accord—wriggling beneath the line of his sleek, heavy robes until they rested against his chest, red and bruisey. No warmth, as usual. No beating heart. But I felt the familiar sparking thrill of our connection. His mind opened to mine, and he saw what I had seen. My memories.

The riots. Men lifting fists. Women brandishing stones and sticks and kitchen knives. Windows exploding to pieces, and the pasture herds, once docile, widening their eyes at the sight. He saw me running through the dome, garbed in that harvest-gold dress, now long lost to the wilds. He saw me stumble through the cornfields, my breath and fear and urgency all a fury of white on the air. He felt the scratchy stalks, as dry as paper, as I drew them apart and stared down the row and watched Aleksandra Wolff fell her mother like an animal who had outlived her usefulness. I leaned in, letting my hair veil my face as he showed me what I already knew: the Asherah , falling to pieces, without me.

“The ship is not a safe place for you,” he murmured, wrapping his soft arms around my shoulders. “Or for your people.”

“We have nowhere left to go,” I whimpered. I saw the chaos over and over again, how the angry mob flooded the shuttle bay, desperately reaching for the freedom of the world beyond.

“I will find a place for you,” he said. “I will not rest until that day dawns when you are safe.”

It was enormous, what he was promising. Even now I could feel the urgency in the pit of his belly—the desperation that crawled over every centimeter of flesh. His body wanted to go, go, go and be with Velsa. But that didn’t matter. His mind , his spirit, the very essence of him was still mine, steady and unwavering beside me despite the force of the wind. He gazed down at me, his lips softening. Reaching up, I cupped a hand behind his slender neck and drew close.

Vadix gathered me into his long, cool arms. My heart beat furiously in the tangle of embroidered robes. I could feel the sea beneath us, the snow all around. I felt him . My bright, strange boy.

I knew by now that his people didn’t kiss one another. They were all hands, pollen, skin blossoming red. But he knew what a kiss meant, how it felt to open your mouth to someone else’s mouth, to taste their tongue, their breath. To be open and vulnerable, all liquid and heat. He pressed his lips to mine. My body seemed to melt into his. But somehow we were strong together. His arms wrapped around me, I didn’t feel the gazes of the Ahadizhi who watched—didn’t hear the shouts of the dock workers or the murmurs of the guards with their prods. They didn’t matter. We were one. If it had been summer, all the flowers of the world would have turned their faces toward our light. But outside the city’s walls it was the first gasp of winter, and snow had come, dusting my hair and his bare head. At first I thought his voice was my voice inside his mind. That’s how tangled up we were, how similar we had grown.

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