Grabbed by Vicious
Hallie has never run so fast in her life. One of the
frightening sky warriors from the warship
Valiant
is hot
on her heels and intent on capturing her as his bride. He
takes her down, places his collar around her neck. With
one word, he claims her.
Mine
.
Born and bred for the military, Vicious has spent years
rising through the ranks. Hallie is his reward, the beautiful
sprite ensnaring him with a glance.
Despite her fear of Vicious, Hallie surrenders under his
skillful hands and mouth. If she’ll submit, he promises
pleasure and comfort. After a lifetime of hardship, his
offer tempts her greatly.
One night with Hallie and Vicious feels his protective
instincts flaring. He’ll do anything to make her happy and
keep her safe, even if that means surrendering his heart.
Though he intended to master her, Vicious realizes it may
be his sweet Hallie who masters
him
.
Inside Scoop:
Our heroine endures trials and violence
with strength equal to that of her warrior mate. (She also
witnesses F/F play, and endures a collar and light BDSM.
Fortunately she likes that part.)
A Romantica®
sci-fi erotic romance
from Ellora’s Cave
Grabbed by Vicious
Lolita Lopez
Chapter One
She’d never run so fast in her life. Lungs burning and
ribs aching, Hallie leapt over a downed log and hit the
mossy ground running. Her heart raced as she sprinted
through the woods.
She couldn’t get caught. She had to evade the wild-
eyed, vicious-looking man hot on her tail.
Her gaze darted around the forest for natural markers.
She’d studied the grid all morning and had mentally
mapped out various routes through the woods, all of them
leading her straight to the safe zone. If she reached that
space of refuge first, she couldn’t be Grabbed, couldn’t be
claimed by one of those fearsome warriors from the sky
ships.
Panic gripped her belly at the sound of snapping twigs
and rustling brush behind her. She kicked up her pace,
bare feet pounding the ground even quicker. Though her
thighs and calves were on fire, she had to go faster. She
might collapse when she reached the safe zone but that
was better than being captured by that blue-eyed devil.
They were a strange people, these Harcos warriors.
Unlike her ancestors who had arrived in this star system
aboard a generational ship from Earth, the Harcos people
were native to this sector. They were a warrior race of
incredibly technologically advanced humans. They were
larger than the average Earth descendant and ascribed to a
rigid, militaristic society.
But they’d given Hallie’s ancestors this small planet
named Calyx. Instead of firing upon the generational ship
that had limped into their solar system, they’d rendered
aid and brought her ancestors here to this beautiful, wild
place. They’d established a sort of quarantine around the
planet and viewed those Earth pioneers as an endangered
species of sorts. No one came on to the planet, and no one
got off, for nearly four hundred years.
Until the war raging in the system spilled on to Calyx
and the insurgents came…
Hallie’s ears perked to the crunch of twigs and ground
cover under heavy boots. She gulped but kept running. The
image of the massive warrior made her belly tremble.
She’d noticed him watching her from the dais before the
Grab began. One glimpse of the white-haired man who
towered over the others had struck fear in her heart. She’d
never seen a shade of hair that pale on a man in his prime,
nor had she ever seen arms so thick and corded. The all-
black military garb didn’t do much to soften his
intimidating image. She’d noticed the insignia on the left
side of his chest. He wasn’t a mere soldier. The man was
an officer, which meant he was the most ruthless of the
ruthless, one so brutal and vicious he’d managed to
survive countless battles and proved himself more
merciless than the other men.
And he wanted
her
.
She’d known the second their gazes clashed that he was
going to chase her. Her only advantage? Her small size
and speed. All those late-night runs for the political
dissidents who called themselves Red Feather, and the
early morning training runs, had finally paid off. She’d
always known this day would arrive and had always
known her only chance to escape her village and this
backward planet was to survive the Grab, earn her rights
as a free woman and buy passage on a transport ship to the
colonies.
Of course, she hadn’t planned on it happening so soon.
She had her sister to thank for this nightmare, but those
troubling thoughts could wait. Right now, Hallie had to
focus on survival and evasion.
In the distance, she heard a squeal of excitement. She
wasn’t surprised. Most of the women chosen in the lottery
saw it as a stroke of good luck. They’d twittered excitedly
when rounded up this morning and placed in the pen
hastily constructed in the village center. The men from the
sky ships
Valiant
and
Arctis
who had earned enough
points to participate in the mating ritual had stood atop a
raised stage to survey the stock. They’d leered down into
the pen in search of the tastiest morsels. Hallie and a few
of the other women who shared her view of the barbaric
Grab ritual had kept their gazes fixed on the race grids.
She understood why some women viewed the Grab as
an exciting prospect. Life in Harper’s Well wasn’t exactly
hell, but it wasn’t an easy existence. Backbreaking labor
in the fields and the monotony of housekeeping and
childrearing seemed never-ending. The town council
enforced an agrarian, pacifist and natural lifestyle. In
exchange for protection from the horrors lurking in this
end of the galaxy, they had agreed to provide the more
superior Harcos race with food, other goods and women
for breeding.
The life expectancy for a woman in Harper’s Well was
incredibly low. It wasn’t much better in The City. Her
own mother had died at just thirty-four years of age from a
complicated labor. She’d lost the baby too. Hallie didn’t
think she’d ever forget the bloody scene or the screams of
agony wrenched from her mother’s throat as the baby
descended breech. If they’d lived in The City, or even the
outlying outer space colonies, in places where medicine
and science were encouraged and actively practiced, her
mother would have lived. Here, though, there were no
hospitals and no doctors. To even consider such a thing
was akin to heresy.
Hallie wanted to escape all that. Watching her mother
die a senseless death had shown her what lay ahead in her
future. If she wasn’t Grabbed by a Harcos warrior, she’d
end up married to a farmer and have ten children by thirty,
if labor and delivery or some other illness didn’t kill her
first. Her daughters would endure the same fate. There
were no universities. There was no freedom of choice.
But the stories she’d heard about what happened to the
women taken away to the sky ships terrified Hallie even
more than the idea of facing a bleak future here. Belonging
to one of those ruthless killing machines was too
frightening. No. She had to win this race. She had to
escape the Grab zone and reach safe territory.
A menacing laugh echoed in the wilderness. Eyes wide,
she glanced over her shoulder and spotted the blue-eyed,
white-haired man. He flashed his teeth in a grin and
sprinted toward her. Her stomach lurched. She raced
forward. “No!”
Her gaze scanned for some place to hide, some way to
escape this man’s clutches. There was nowhere to go.
Even if she climbed a tree, she was sure he’d follow—or
simply knock it over. The man was built like a bull.
Knowing her luck, he’d probably throw his shoulder
against a tree trunk and uproot it with little effort.
The fine hairs on her arms and the back of her neck
stood on edge. She gritted her teeth as panic started to take
hold. Adrenaline saturated her blood stream. She had to
get away. She had to—
“Oof!”
Two burly arms wrapped around her waist and lifted
her from the ground. She screamed and kicked, refusing to
be taken quietly. Her violent thrashing knocked her captor
off balance. He started to fall forward and she flinched,
certain she was about to be smashed between his huge
body and the hard ground. Instead, he spun and bore the
brunt of their impact. They bounced twice and skidded a
few inches on the grass.
Something primal ignited in her brain. He’d gone down.
She was on top. She had to escape.
She slammed both elbows into his chest and scrambled
free from his grasp. She slipped and barely evaded his
clutching fingers.
In an instant, he was on his feet and chasing after her
again. She jumped a couple of logs and decided a zigzag
pattern was in her best interest. She just had to keep him at
bay a little longer.
The sight of the small stream up ahead filled her with
dread. It was just deep enough to slow her down if she
waded into it and tried to swim, but it wasn’t very wide.
She eyed the ancient tree she’d played in as a child. The
old knotted rope they’d all used to launch themselves into
the water still hung there.
Not bothering to slow down, she leapt onto one of the
boulders they’d used as a diving board and snatched the
rope. Her momentum carried her forward. She held tight to
the rope and prayed it would sling her close enough to the
other side. It was going to be a nasty jump but she didn’t
have a choice.
Hallie let go of the rope and flew like one of the tree
squirrels she’d laughed at as a child. She hit the opposite
bank at an odd angle. Mud squished between her bare
toes. She tumbled forward but quickly regained her
balance and started to run.
The sound of a branch snapping seized her attention.
She glanced over her shoulder just in time to see the man
falling into the stream as the rope slackened. At any other
time she would have laughed her ass off at the sight, but
right now it was her only chance to get free. Falling into