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Knowing Zip
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Knowing Zip
Cynthia Sax
Abducted by the warrior of her dreams.
Zip is the last of his friends to find his female, the one being meant for him. He isn’t certain she exists until he hears her voice over a transmission. A self-proclaimed systems deity, he researches his curvy little human and discovers she dreams of being abducted by a big, strong warrior. Zip plans to make his female’s fantasies come true.
Ryssa wants one gift for her birthing planet rotation—to be captured by a warrior, preferably a tall, muscular cyborg with black hair, gray skin, and brilliant blue eyes. When Zip arrives on her planet, claiming to be her male, Ryssa assumes one of her friends has ordered the experience for her, and throws herself into the encounter, losing herself in Zip’s hot kisses, sensual touch, dominant embrace.
When the fantasy fades, will their love survive?
* * *
Knowing Zip is a short companion story in the Cyborg Sizzle series and is meant to be read after Seeking Vector.
It is also a BBW Cyborg SciFi Romance.
Knowing Zip
Published by Cynthia Sax at Smashwords
Copyright 2017 Cynthia Sax
Ebook design by Mark's Ebook Formatting
Cover Design by Amanda Kelsey at Razzle Dazzle Design
Discover more books by Cynthia Sax at her website
www.CynthiaSax.com
Smashwords Edition, License Notes
This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to your favorite ebook retailer and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
This is a work of fiction. All of the characters, organizations, and events portrayed in this story are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual events, locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
First edition: December 2017
For more information contact Cynthia Sax at
www.CynthiaSax.com
Table of Contents
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Afterword
Note to Readers
A New Addition to Earth Minor
About The Author
Chapter One
Some warriors would never find their females, the unique beings genetically compatible with them.
Zip wouldn’t be one of those warriors.
His female was out there, waiting for him somewhere in the universe. He would locate her, claim her, protect her.
Earth Minor’s solitary sun warmed Zip’s body armor-clad shoulders as he marched along a well-beaten path, patrolling the area he had been assigned to protect. Stones crunched under his big boots. Insects hummed. Leaves rustled.
Being a cyborg and a systems deity, capable of performing multiple tasks at once, Zip scanned Rebel and Humanoid Alliance systems as he walked, listening to snippets of conversations, hoping to hear the one voice that would make his body react.
His female’s.
He had searched the databases for four hundred and fifty-one planet rotations, operating at inhumanly fast speed, never slowing, never stopping.
He was determined to track her down.
Ahead of him, Vapor battled Green in a makeshift dirt ring. Vapor was a more advanced model, smaller, quicker, more strategic in his fighting. Green, a fellow D Model, relied on his brute strength.
He charged Vapor. Their bodies smacked together. Vapor flew across the ring, skidding along his back in the dirt. The K Model jumped to his feet and surged forward. His right fist plowed into Green’s face, shattering his nose. The warrior spat blood and counterattacked.
Vapor’s female, Green’s female, and their offspring, some natural, some war orphans, cheered and winced and hollered advice. They sat on rows of fallen tree trunks, the audience divided into teams.
When Zip found his female, he too, would have someone to cheer for him. He would have a being in the audience.
“You can fight me next, D Model.” Vapor called out to him as he passed the ring. The warrior continued to block Green’s punches, not missing a beat, the slap of fists against skin reverberating across the space.
“I’ll defeat you later, K Model.” Zip laughed. He had a female to find.
Both of the warriors paused in their fighting to frown at him.
They were worried about him. Zip heard their transmissions, saw their shared glances. He had been spending too much of each planet rotation alone and that was unlike cyborgs.
They didn’t know about his search. Uncertain of its success, he hadn’t shared that information with them.
Ka-Na is asking about you, Barrel transmitted mere moments later. Join us by the river.
His friend had planned that outing for his female and the offspring they’d claimed as theirs. It was a family event.
Zip didn’t belong at the river and he preferred to concentrate on the database scanning. I’ll see Ka-Na before she starts her rest cycle.
Zip stomped along the path. Butterflies flew upward, a cloud of brilliant yellow coloring the breeze. Vegetation swayed, bending walls of green positioned around him. Bees buzzed from flower to flower.
The planet was an oasis in a war-torn universe. He was free, was no longer under the Humanoid Alliance’s harsh control. His brethren, their females, offspring surrounded him, cared for him.
That should be all any warrior needed.
It wasn’t sufficient for him. He craved the type of love, the connection only his female could give him, yearned for offspring of his own, longed for a future shared with another being.
Having completed his perimeter check, Zip sat under a tree, leaned against the trunk, gazed unseeingly at the nature before him.
He wasn’t an aberration. There were other female-less warriors on Earth Minor. They were transient visitors, however, leaving for assignments on the Homeland and in the vast expanse of space.
Barrel and Green were his close friends. He’d miss them if he left. They were a part of him, his left and right hands, and Earth Minor was his home.
He had to locate his female. That was his number-one mission. Zip shut down all non-vital operations, redirecting that energy toward his search. The voices sped through his processors, racing faster and faster, a stream of chatter.
Vapor is boasting he can battle both of us at the same time and be victorious, Green transmitted. Shall we show the K Model he’s wrong?
Zip stifled his sigh. They were determined to include him in activities. I’m—
Planet rotation. Those two words caressed his processors, that snippet of a conversation stopping his words and hardening his cock.
You’re—what? Green prompted.
Zip’s circuits surged with excitement. Had he located his female? I can’t communicate at the moment.
You’re a cyborg. You can complete multiple tasks at—
He ended the transmission, severing his friend’s protest. Green, having found his female, would understand.
Zip backtracked the conversations he’d been monitoring, recovered the communication.
Had his female sent it? His heart pounded.
Battle had never scared him. He had been manufactured to fight, had confronted the specter of death again and again, always with a grin on his face. He loved it.
The possibility he was wrong about tracking down his female terrified him. It was everything he’d ever desired—love, companionship, a future.
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Zip closed his eyes and played the footage. The image of a human female filled his processors, her beautiful countenance hitting him like a punch to his gut.
Her eyes were as blue as a clear Earth Minor sky. Her curly brown hair was streaked with blonde, like sun rays streaming over the bark of a tree. Her full cheeks and upturned nose were speckled with flicks of brown pigment, he believed the humans called the spots freckles. He wanted to kiss each one.
There wasn’t a sharp angle on this gorgeous being; her chin was rounded, her curves clad in a plain brown flight suit, generous. She was the perfect female for a large D Model cyborg like himself.
He wanted her more than he wanted anyone or anything else.
“Hi, Leesa.” Her voice coiled around him, intensifying his need. “Sorry about missing your communication. Don’t worry about my birthing planet rotation. You’re constructing domiciles for needy families, making your new world habitable. You can’t trek across galaxies for an event that happens every solar cycle.”
Her smile didn’t reach her eyes. There was a sadness in their depths Zip yearned to dissipate.
“I’ll likely go out for a fermented beverage with the females at work.” She summoned a more cheerful tone. “And hope for that abduction we always joked about.” Her laugh was shaky. “I’m still waiting for a big strong warrior to take me away from all this.” She spread her arms. “I don’t think he’s ever coming for me, but a female can dream, can’t she?”
Zip’s eyes widened. He was a big strong warrior. His female had been waiting for him to retrieve her.
“I love you, my friend.” His female touched the recording device. “I hope to see you soon…or not.” Her lips twitched. “If you don’t hear from me, you know the warrior came for me.” The communication ended.
Her warrior would come for her. Zip was determined to make her dream a reality.
The message had been sent the previous planet rotation from Ryssa Athy on Erinome V. His female’s name was Ryssa. He rolled it on his tongue. It suited her, beautiful with an underlying strength.
She was a credit processor at a beverage outlet. Those credits would soon be processed by someone else. Unable to stop gazing at her, Zip displayed her image, along with her specs.
According to the Humanoid Alliance databases, she would celebrate another solar cycle of living in twenty-three planet rotations. He could arrive within that duration.
Zip jumped to his booted feet. Some of the warriors had been manufactured on Erinome V. Vapor’s female had called that planet home for a duration. He would contact them, compile data on the terrain, culture, landing procedures, other information.
I require use of our ship, he transmitted to Barrel and Green.
Are we under attack? Alarm edged Barrel’s question.
I’ll start the engines. Green didn’t wait for a response. Vapor will ready his ship. Did you notify the other warriors?
There’s no need to notify the other warriors. Zip tried to calm the males. We’re not under attack. He stalked toward the ships. I require the ship for a personal mission.
You have undertaken a personal mission? Vapor joined the transmission. One that urgently requires one of our ships?
You’ve found your female. Barrel guessed correctly. You’re retrieving her.
The three males waited by the warship. Green and Vapor were covered with blood, their faces bruised, their noses flattened, their lips split open. Barrel was suspiciously wet, a puddle of water forming around him.
“She’s on Erinome V.” Zip shared, not attempting to conceal his joy.
He was now one of them. A big smile stretched across his face. He had a female to love, to protect.
“Erinome V is a Humanoid Alliance planet, a former site of a cyborg manufacturing compound.” Vapor grimaced. “That will make it a challenging retrieval.”
His female’s friend’s planet would have been easier to land upon. It was sparsely populated and not heavily monitored by the Humanoid Alliance.
Abducting Ryssa from Erinome V would be more complex.
But that mission was still achievable.
“When you contact the cyborg council, requesting authorization for the mission, request additional warriors.” Barrel advised.
“I must retrieve her immediately.” Zip wasn’t waiting for authorization or additional warriors. He opened their warship, lowering the ramp.
“Ask her to meet you on a less-monitored planet.” Green suggested.
“That isn’t possible.”
“Why isn’t it possible?” Vapor stepped in front of him, blocking his access to the ramp.
They wouldn’t like his answer. Zip dropped his gaze, his smile wavering. “She doesn’t know I’m retrieving her.”
“What?” The warriors stared at him.
They were cyborgs with a cyborg’s enhanced auditory system. They heard him. “I haven’t communicated with her.”
Their mouths dropped open.
“You’re retrieving her and you haven’t communicated with her.” Barrel was the first to recover. “Females don’t like to be surprised like that.”
“My female will like it.” She dreamed of being abducted. “Your female didn’t know you were retrieving her.”
“I had spoken with her.” His friend straightened. “She wanted to be retrieved.”
“My female wants to be retrieved also.” Zip didn’t perceive any significant difference between the two situations.
“You’ve found your female?”
He turned. Barrel’s and Green’s females stood behind him, their faces flushed, their heaving chests clad in body armor.
He would have to craft a protective garment for his female also.
That thought gave him pleasure.
“You are supposed to be guarding the offspring.” Barrel moved to his female’s side.
“Mira, Gap, Red, and the other warriors are doing that.” She lifted her chin. “We came to help you.”
“This is our home also.” Green’s female declared, her tone daring the warriors to argue with her. “We have the right to defend it.”
“Defending our home isn’t necessary.” Zip stopped any rebuke from the males. “Yes, I’ve found my female. I plan to retrieve her.”
“What’s her name?”
“Does she have any plants?”
“What is she like?”
“Has she ever eaten ancient Earth nourishment?”
The two females peppered him with questions, their faces bright with curiosity. They thought he had all the answers and he didn’t.
“He doesn’t know.” Barrel’s voice was dry. “He has never spoken with her.”
Barrel’s female blinked once, twice. “You should speak with her.”
“That’s what we told him.” Barrel’s expression was smug.
“You’re changing her entire lifespan.” Green’s female nodded. “You have to at least give her the illusion of choice.”
Fraggin’ hole. Zip clenched his jaw. All five of them disagreed with his plan. His friends wouldn’t allow him to leave the planet if he didn’t convince them the mission was viable. “She dreams of being abducted by a big, strong warrior.”
“And you plan to make her dreams come true.” Green’s female’s lips rounded. “That’s very romantic.”
“Very.” Barrel’s female’s head dipped. “Then you can’t communicate with her.”
“What about the illusion of choice?” Barrel frowned.
“She’s made this choice.” Barrel’s female patted the warrior’s chest.
“But he should give her control over the other decisions.” Green’s female added. “He should capitulate to her wishes, if at all possible.”
“And if she wants to leave me?” Zip’s jaw jutted. He wouldn’t agree to that.
“She won’t.” Green’s female reassured him. “You’re a wonderful being, so careful with all of our plants.”
“You’re a systems deity.” Barrel’s female chim
ed in. “And she’s your female. She’ll feel your connection.”
“We felt the connection to our males.” Green’s female gazed at her warrior, her face soft with caring. “It will be the same for her.”
Zip had felt the connection. His shoulders lowered. His female would also.
“And we’ll make her feel welcome.” Barrel’s female added. “We’ll stock the ship with an assortment of nourishment bars and beverages.”
“A couple of flowering plants to brighten your chambers.” Green’s female wrinkled her forehead. “Ixora coccinea or perhaps Pelargonium peltatum.”
“Mira will choose garments for her. The offspring will create images for the walls and—”
“I’m leaving this planet rotation.” He curbed the flow of ideas.
The females gazed at him, then at each other. Green’s female looked up at the sky. “The sun is still low on the horizon. We can make the preparations in a planet rotation.”
“I’m leaving right now.” Zip amended, not wanting to wait one more moment to see his female.
Barrel’s female pressed her lips together the way she always did when one of the offspring gave her the wrong answer. “She knows nothing about you, Zip, and she might not know anything about cyborgs, other than you’re manufactured to kill beings and the faulty view that you’re a machine. She’ll be scared. Any intelligent female will be. A decorated chamber will ease her fears.”
“Bad beings don’t grow plants.” Green’s female added, her tone certain.
Zip gritted his teeth. He questioned the logic about bad beings and plants and he saw no need for the preparations they proposed.
Ryssa was his female. She would sense their link, wouldn’t fear him.
But denying his friends’ females this task would damage them emotionally and he would never do that. “Make the preparations quickly.”
“Yay.” The females cheered. “We’ll recruit Mira.” They hooked their arms and rushed away to find Vapor’s female, leaving the males gazing after them.
Vapor shook his head as though to clear his processors. “You’ll require weapons.”
That, Zip agreed on. A warrior could never have too many weapons.