Deep Penetration; Alien Breeders I Read Online Free

Deep Penetration; Alien Breeders I
Book: Deep Penetration; Alien Breeders I Read Online Free
Author: Stacey St. James
Tags: Fiction, Erótica, Romance, Sex, BDSM, Sci-Fi, rough sex, Alien, futuristic, slave, Erotic, forced seduction, sex slave, Toys, breed, penetration, breeders, anunnaki, deep penetration, alien breeder, alien toys, multilple heroes
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memories. Unfortunately, his orders were
clear cut and not open to interpretation. “Prepare the implant,” he
said tightly. “That way it’ll be ready if we see it’s necessary. In
the mean time, we’ll keep her under close observation.”
    “ What do you suggest?”
Koryn asked slowly.
    Tariq glanced at him sharply, feeling
his belly tighten with reluctance. He swallowed with an effort
against the knot that rose in his throat, a mixture of frustration
and disgust and anger. “What the hell happened here?” he
growled.
    It was a rhetorical question Koryn
made no attempt to answer. None of them knew what had happened, had
so much as an inkling. They’d been trying to find answers to their
questions since they’d arrived weeks earlier to find a garden of
Eden bereft of the children left in her care.
    “ Study her personality and
try to work up something as close as you can,” Tariq said tiredly.
“I think there’s a good chance that she had a military background
and, if that’s true, she’s the first we’ve recovered that might
have some of the answers we’re looking for.”
    * * * *
    Emerald was so sleepy when she
finished drinking the soup that she immediately suspected they’d
laced it with something to knock her out. She discarded the thought
after a few moments’ reflection. She hadn’t noticed anything
‘strange’ about the taste and she felt sure she would have if
there’d been any sort of drug added.
    For a while, she resisted the pull,
too unnerved by her situation to feel safe to sleep, but it was a
losing battle. Finally, she got up, climbed into the bunk and
yielded. She had no idea how long she slept, but she woke feeling
far more alert than before and not nearly as weak. Deciding the
soup and the nap had been beneficial, she got up and explored her
cabin. There wasn’t much to explore, unfortunately, but she did
discover that there was a private facility that included a shower
attached to the small cabin.
    The long, hot shower sapped a good bit
of the energy she’d woken up with, unfortunately, even while it
seemed to ease some of the soreness from her muscles and invigorate
her. Wrapping up in the sheet again when she’d dried off, she
returned to the main room and settled in a chair to
think.
    She’d had another nightmare.
Unfortunately, from the moment she woke it was just as elusive as
the one before except that it left her with the sense, right or
wrong, that it wasn’t just a ‘generic’ nightmare. She struggled
with her memory for a little while and finally gave up. She
couldn’t be certain the nightmare had any basis in reality at all.
It might, as she suspected, be the result of something she’d
experienced, but she had no way of determining that even if she
could remember the details of the dream.
    She didn’t know what to think about
her situation. It just seemed too pat that aliens had come to visit
the Earth and run across her and decided to rescue her even if not
for the fact that she could tell they were withholding a great deal
from her. It was possible, she supposed, that the Anunnaki were a
benevolent race and such things were commonplace to them—assisting
others—and yet she couldn’t imagine that they would travel so far
merely to ‘visit’. They would almost certainly have an agenda. She
just couldn’t figure out what that might be.
    She knew, though, that they’d traveled
a tremendous distance. Even if not for the fact that that ‘felt’
true, they’d implied it themselves.
    So, they were here for a reason. Did
she have anything to do with that reason, she wondered? Or had they
come across her purely by accident?
    It seemed to her that she could safely
discard the suspicion that they were enemies of the people of
Earth. What would be the point in taking care of her if they were?
They’d said she wasn’t a prisoner—or Koryn had, although there’d
been something about Tariq’s manner that made her question it. They
certainly hadn’t treated
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