Kept by the Zandian Read online Renee Rose, Rebel West (Zandian Brides #5)

Categories Genre: BDSM, Erotic, Fantasy/Sci-fi, Paranormal, Romance Tags Authors: , Series: Zandian Brides Series by Renee Rose
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Total pages in book: 61
Estimated words: 58483 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 292(@200wpm)___ 234(@250wpm)___ 195(@300wpm)
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“The young you told me about?”

“Yes. He’s the only living being who saw me leave Romon-3. He’s not going to hurt us.”

“How can you be so sure?” Domm asks.

“I trust her judgment.” It is as much a shock to me that an Ocretion knew she left Romon-3. This is what she was keeping from me. But I also know how much she values her bond with Leylah.

“I trust her.” And it’s true. I know in my heart that Taisha is a good being. If she kept this a secret, it must be for a reason.

“His name is Marshan. I saved his life once, and then he saved mine. He let me escape from Romon-3 and kept my secret. He covered for me.” She steps forward and offers her hand to the Ocretion. “I do not believe he means us harm.”

“All Ocretions mean us harm. It is a trick or a mistake if you think otherwise,” Mirelle says, clearly speaking from her own experience.

“I agree. We cannot follow your gut on this one.” Domm backs up his mate.

My own instincts align with Taisha’s, but logic makes me unsure.

“I am not here to stop you.” The young speaks Ocretion, but with a strange musical undertone. When I look closer, I see a hint of otherness around the eyes, which are oddly blue and more oval than typical Ocretion features.

“Marshan.”

“Taisha.”

The two of them stare at each other, and all of us hold our breaths.

“What are you doing here?” Domm demands.

“I wish to leave Romon-3 with you. I must leave Ocretia.” He gestures to his chest, where the insignia gleams. As we watch, he rips it from his vest and tosses it to the ground. “I renounce the Ocretion way of life. I am part Wark, and I wish to join their coalition.”

Every being is stunned at this development.

“Wark?” I lean forward to examine him better.

Then I see it. “Your eyes. They are not Ocretion.”

He tilts his head.

Taisha gasps. “Your eyes looked a little different at the river. But you were Ocretion. Now you’ve changed.” She steps forward. “How did you change?”

He lifts his chin. “It’s in my genes.”

“Explain.” Domm’s voice is brusque. “Because to me it sounds absurd. How can an Ocretion change into another being?”

Marshan touches his face. “I did not know I was not a full-blooded Ocretion. That my mother was Wark. All I knew was that I felt different, even though I looked like all the others, and that my father distrusted me.”

I’m spellbound. I’ve never heard of such a thing.

“Wark genes do not always express in a half-breed but stay dormant until puberty. Then they either die out by the time a young reaches maturity, or they take over. Usually they die out, if a being with Wark genes is raised as a different species. My father planned to turn me into a full Ocretion, as I am his only young, and he is incapable of siring more. He killed my mother and obtained an Ocretion female to raise me, hoping that my genes would not express.”

As much as I hate Ocretions, I feel some sympathy for his situation, especially because it seems—against all odds—that he’s not really Ocretion after all.

He continues. “But he was not successful. The planet rotation Taisha saved me from the river, I discovered there was something different about me—something I liked—and I desired to let that thing loose. Since then, each planet rotation, I feel the Wark presence more fully in my body. I need to escape before it’s noticed and I am killed.”

“I knew there was something about you. I felt it in my bones.” Taisha breathes the words. “It’s why you saved me.”

“It’s why you saved me.” He blinks at her, those intelligent eyes. “You could tell I was different, almost before I knew it myself.”

Then he holds up something. “Leylah said to show this to you when it was time. She told me to keep it inside an orange fruit, to make it shiny. To match, she said. I didn’t understand.”

“Leylah spoke to you?” Taisha trembles. “When?” Her eyes, still trained on Marshan on the screen, fill with tears.

“The planet rotation she died. The planet rotation you left. She found me alone and slid it into my hand.” He holds the item out to Taisha.

Taisha unfurls her fingers, a flower unfolding, to reveal a coin of her own. She lifts it to his, and we see the two coins. Identical.

“She had two.” Taisha whispers it. “I had no idea.”

“How did you know we would be here?” Domm demands. After all, the being is just a child.

Marshan shakes his head. “Leylah told me I would know when the time came. And I did.”

It’s the oddest thing, but as he speaks, his face seems to shimmer and change. A trick of the light? In the few minutes we’ve been talking to him, his jaw looks narrower. His skin a paler blue, instead of pure gray.


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