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And I still felt their cocks. Every last vein and warm throb as one or the other shot another thick load of seed up into me. It was spilling out of both holes too and dripping down and out of me in thick currents.

We stopped cumming slowly rather than abruptly. We eased out of it. Both men seemed to save their seed, switching from thick blasts to a steadily decreasing flow. Their cocks stayed mostly hard, but very slowly softened inside me.

My pussy gripped them tightly at first, but as our heart rates and breaths slowed, so too did my kitten’s tight, milking pulses.

They eased themselves out of me over several minutes. We kissed as they pulled out of me. There was no definite point where I could have said I stopped cumming. I couldn’t say exactly when the sex finished, but eventually we were all disentangled and separate once again. The bed was too small for the huge Khetar men to fit properly, so they let me lie down and sprawl out on the bed. Hive sat on the edge of the bed and stroked my thigh, while I ran my thumb across Kaav’s golden cock as he stood at my side and rested against the wall, his broad chest heaving.

“All evidence shows that a deep orgasm is 100% effective,” Hive said.

I got the impression he was mostly talking to Kaav rather than to me.

Kaav nodded, but his face was steely and grim.

I sat up. “What’s wrong?”

“Everything’s as it should be,” Hive said. “By tradition, the First’s seed must be established, and then the Third will have the female until she’s with children.”

I cocked my head at them. I understood what his words meant, but I didn’t understand the logic of it. The Third willhavethe female. Was Kaav leaving?

“You’re going to leave me alone?” I said, looking at Kaav. “With Hive?”

He nodded. “This is an important part of how we breed, My Weapon.”

“Wouldn’t it work better if we stayed together? Just like we were.”

Hive smirked. “I knew you could do it, Precious. I can’t wait to cum in your other hole. But no, that’s not how it works. They’re called First and Third for a reason. If I recall, I designed it like this from the beginning.”

“If you recall?” Kaav said, narrowing his eyes at Hive.

“I’m forgetting,” Hive said. “I kept a general sketch of everything I knew in my head when I transferred myself to this body, but a biological brain cannot hold this much information. Aside from a few key things I made sure to hard-lock in, I’ll forget 99.9% of most of what I once knew as the Hive Mind. Consciousness takes up most of the biological brain’s processing power. I still remember that, though I couldn’t tell you why. Now that I’ve spilled my seed, I’m fully biological. The Hive Mind is truly no more.”

I didn’t care about the Hive Mind right now. I cared only about my Khetar, and I wanted them both together with me. “Where is Kaav going to go?”

“He’s staying,” Hive said. “We’re the ones who are going. I’ve picked a good,safespot for us out on the surface of Eden. I picked it out while I still had full omniscience.”

“And Kaav?” I said, looking up at my other lover’s golden eyes.

“I’ll stay here,” he said, “My pack will arrive soon, and when they do, I’ll meet with them and explain the situation to them. My knowledge will give them a significant edge, because I’ll keep Thuliak in the dark about…aboutHive.”

Hive laughed. “I’m sure that teal-cocked bastard has noticed I’m gone.”

Kaav shook his head. “He’s noticed the Hive Mind is gone. He’ll never guess the reason why it happened. I’ll tell my scion what happened. And no one else.” Kaav had been speaking to me, but he looked up toward Hive. “I should be able to have theInseminatorson the ground early.”

“You’ll jump ahead of Thuliak’s pack in the Breeding Swarm?” Hive asked, grinning.

“If it benefits us. With you in this body, all the rules have changed. I don’t care if Thuliak is first. If you leave soon, you’ll be the first Khetar on the surface, Hive.”

“Thuliak is a rational scion,” Hive said. “He’ll understand that when it comes to landing on Eden, every pack will have to decide for itself when to land. The old rules won’t matter.”

“How long can the ships stay in space without the Hive Mind—without you?”

Hive shrugged. “I left pieces of what I once was lingering around, but they’ll decohere within a few weeks. There’s probably ways to make that last a good bit of time longer, but only the smartest packs will figure out how to keep a packship alive for more than a week or two.”

“Why isn’t Thuliak landing already?” Kaav asked. “If he realizes you’re gone and thatWrathis failing, wouldn’t he want to land as soon as possible, before another pack jumps ahead of him?”

“Denial,” Hive said. “Most packs will assume the Hive Mind is not gone forever. Why abandon ship over a temporary issue? It will become increasingly clear soon enough. The pirates’ attack will force the issue for many packships. Dozens of packs should be arriving within the next few weeks, and the Khetar body’s physical strength will be our greatest asset once we’ve lost our packships. We’ll want to fight them on the ground.”

The pirates were going to attack? Hive knew that and wasjust nowtelling us?

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