Alien Paladin's Woman: SciFi Alien-Human Military Suspense Romance (4 page)

BOOK: Alien Paladin's Woman: SciFi Alien-Human Military Suspense Romance
6.64Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

He stepped into the hall again. The whole fight hadn't taken more than a few minutes, but it had seemed like ages.

Pelar came back in, her eyes wide on her pale face.

"Commander," she breathed. "I thought we'd lost you."

"Not today," Tieran said, letting his armor flow back into its regular form, now that he no longer needed all his agility.

"That was incredible," Pelar went on. "I wouldn’t have believed it was possible to kill something like that."

Tieran turned back to watch as the AI of the hall cleaned up the remnants of the mech.

"That was one of the smaller ones," he said. "Much slower, much less vicious. Nowhere near as dangerous as the real one. And since no two have ever been completely alike, it's more of an exercise than practice. Is there any information about what the new one is like?"

Turning back to her, Tieran saw honest concern in her eyes. Pelar's entire body language spoke of unease and fear and he couldn't really blame her.

"Have no fear," he told her, his deep voice bearing such certainty she immediately stood up straighter. "We have always found ways to deal with the Fearless. We will deal with this new one too. Now you should really leave, there will be more of these—"

A voice interrupted him, but it wasn't Pelar's.

"Commander," the control center said. "Something has happened down in the mines. We think the lifestone stores are in danger."

3
Audrey

I
t was
the single most beautiful thing Audrey had ever seen.

Like gold buried under layers of dirt and mud, a stone peeked out from under the dark rock of the mountain itself.

Around her, everyone seemed to be in similar awe. Terran and Palian alike stood with their mouths open, staring at that wonder. It was amazing.

Upon closer inspection, it wasn't even golden. It wasn't anything at all, almost transparent in its light, gentle glow.

Audrey had no words to describe it. The closest she could think of was the way people sometimes imagined spirits – a white glow, so pure and clear it nearly hurt to look upon it. All of that was captured there in the form of a stone, almost at the core of an icy planet, more translucent than the brightest day on the surface.

She reached out her arm to touch it, to feel if it felt as divine as it looked, but her Palian guard immediately snatched her hand away. More rudely than she would have expected from one of his species. They were never that sudden.

"This is an amazing discovery," the guard said carefully. "But we must be careful, Governor."

"Is that what you have been looking for?" Audrey asked, pointing to the glowing stone. "If it's dangerous, you should have told me."

"Not dangerous," the Palian said, shaking his head. "Simply mysterious, even to us. We should approach it with caution. If our sources are correct, that mineral contains tremendous amounts of energy. We think the entire station could be powered for a year with a stone that fits into your palm.

“But until we're sure, the commander thinks we shouldn't play around with it."

Him again. I wonder if this discovery will warrant me with some face-to-face time at last.

Audrey nodded.

Facing away from the stone, only seeing the glow behind her, dancing on the walls around them, she realized how cold it was. While her eyes were on the stone, she'd forgotten how deep in the mines she'd come.

She had never been at the lowest level before and she started to feel the effect again. She'd need some warm tea when she got back upstairs.

"So this is it?" she asked the Palians around her. "You've been very mysterious about what it is exactly that we're looking for. Does this mean Verien is valuable to the Union?"

"Yes," her guard responded, and Audrey didn't remember when the last time was that she saw any of them smile, other than Pelar. "Verien will become one of the most important planets in the Union. Congratulations, governor."

Audrey smiled.

"Me?" she asked, raising her voice. "I've barely been down here. You guys have done all the work and it has finally paid off. The whole year we've spent here, the hardships we've endured. The congratulations are all yours.

“I'll make sure there will be plenty of rewards at the feast today. The kitchen better break out their best stuff."

Which wasn’t saying much, considering their austere settings, but it would have to do.

The miners around her cheered wildly and even the otherwise stern Palians were smiling. Audrey was sure she knew what the Terran part of her people wanted for their feast – she had been keeping a score of nice whiskey for just the occasion – but she had honestly no idea what she could do for the Palians.

"Now, now," she said, smiling. "Before you get all cheerful about this, remember that this means we are staying here for good. You better start investing in a very warm wardrobe from here on out."

More laughter answered her. Audrey smiled, raising her hand to make them settle down.

"Jokes aside," she said seriously. "This is a great day for all of us. Verien hasn't always been kind to us, but now it has rewarded us tenfold. So we better treat it well now and make this a colony that will make everyone in the Union want to dust off their snow coats and come live here!"

As the miners clapped their hands together and congratulated each other, Audrey looked around with pride.

It was a glorious moment, all the hard work of the past year coming together. She could finally admit that she'd had had doubts in the last few months about the future of the colony. Knowing they were unfounded let her take a deeper breath, at last. For a while, as they were nearing the point where digging would become impossible, it had felt like every day was a step closer to the last.

But it had all been worth it. Verien would become a Union mining world and she would be its governor until they found a new challenge for her.

Her eyes drifted over the people around her. All the miners seemed to feel the same relief and gratitude she was. Audrey was sure she had never seen some of them smile before, but there it was.

The Terrans in particular brought her joy. Palians might have been satisfied with contributing to the galactic well-being, but she knew for a fact the Terran miners were thinking of the fat reward that would be waiting for them.

Some would bring their families to Verien as soon as the station began to grow, and she could see the anticipation on their faces already. So far only essential personnel were allowed to the surface to preserve vital energy.

And then her eyes stopped on a face she didn't recognize.

All at once, Audrey's heart went cold. She knew each and every person in her station, including the pilots who brought them supplies from the
Evela
, their support ship on the orbit of Verien. The miner closest to her, for example, was Erik. The one behind him was named Jacob, he had two kids.

But the stranger definitely wasn't anyone she knew, nor the mysterious Palian commander. Audrey squinted slightly, a horrible realization dawning on her. No, she did know the person before her. It was Joseph, a miner who had joined not too long ago with a batch of volunteers… but he looked as if he had somehow been broken and put back together again from the inside.

He was grinning ear to ear. It hadn't alerted Audrey before, because everyone around her was happy, but there was something wrong with Joseph’s smile.

It was completely empty, like someone was holding the corners of his mouth up with strings without there being any emotion in the man himself at all.

"That man," Audrey told Aznim with a hushed voice, pointing. "He is… I don’t know what he is. He’s a miner of ours, but he doesn’t look like himself. I can’t explain it."

She immediately drew her gun and the guard by her side did too. Aznim's expression was thunderous as they stared the man down. Suddenly, the cheerful mood in the space changed completely, turning to apprehension as people began to notice Audrey’s reaction, and then the stranger.

The miners cleared the path between them, looking at Joseph with surprise and suspicion.

"Control," Aznim spoke to his comm link. "We have a situation down in the mines. We need the paladins."

If Audrey had thought the situation was odd before, now she knew it was completely fucked. The Palian paladins never showed themselves and now her guard was calling them down to the mines.

It meant… it meant the plain little man standing in front of them was the most dangerous being she'd probably ever met.

"Identify yourself," Audrey ordered, forcing her voice not to shake. "Joseph, has something been done to you?”

She had been prepared for all kinds of answers. She had expected him to offer excuses or anything normal, really. But she hadn’t been prepared for what happened next.

She almost screamed when the man split open like a body bag. One moment, he was standing there, looking at her with that dead expression of his, and then Joseph split in half straight down the middle, flesh and intestines and blood tumbling to the cave floor.

Instead of the miner that had been there a second ago, a large, sprawling, brown centipede-like creature undulated in its place, clicking and hissing at Audrey.

"A Jorcossi!" the Palian guard yelled by her side. "Protect the stone!"

Audrey had no idea what was going on, but she instinctively stood in front of their discovery, the mysterious stone, along with everyone else. A few Terran miners were confused, trying to run away from the monstrosity that unfolded from the human skin it had worn, but all Palians stood their ground.

Unarmed or not, they defended the stone with their own bodies.

She didn't know what a Jorcossi was, but it was damned ugly. From the man it had been crawled forth a brown, sluggish creature that reminded her of a snake standing on two legs. It was tall and lean, covered in scales and slime.

It didn't look that dangerous until it started growing. Audrey thought it was going to burst until she realized it was growing others on its own flesh. The creatures spawned from the first with horrible speed, dropping to the ground before standing up again. The rest were shorter than the first, a bit stockier but no less hideous to look at.

"Open fire!" Aznim ordered.

Audrey raised her gun and fired, trying to recall all the lessons she'd ever taken about physics, wondering if they were about to bring the mountain down upon their heads.

The creatures burst apart under the fire, but more were coming. Only the guard, Audrey and a few of the miners had anything to shoot with, after all. They beat back the first wave, but by then the Jorcossi were crowding them and the biggest one was approaching with the same horrible grin on its snake face.

The large one had reminded her almost of some cross between a meaty centipede and a serpent, but far slimier and thicker. It was huge, too, seeming to grow exponentially with every moment before it burst into the tinier ones.

How the hell do we fight these things?
she thought, dodging.

Audrey calculated in her mind. If the paladins had started moving the second they got the message, they were still long, long minutes away. The bottom of the mountain wasn't easily accessed, but it also wasn't easily escaped.

She hoped they had the sense to try and set up a perimeter not to let the enemy run.

None of it did anything to better their current situation, however. She was firing as fast as she could, thankful to Franco for all his gun instruction.

No matter who the bastards were, they were on her planet and she wasn't going to let them get away with robbing her.

The Palians without weapons were fighting the smaller Jorcossi with their bare hands and Audrey noticed Terrans joining in too. Jorcossi were small, but fast and vicious, trying to choke their victims to death with their long hands.

While they were mostly serpentine in shape, they had these skinny, spindly arms that were surprisingly strong. Slimy, fast, and sinewy, they were not easy to fight, even if they seemed skinny and frail at first glance.

Gritting her teeth, Audrey shot as precisely as she could, but she didn't dare to turn her gun on those already engaged, fearing she'd hit one of her own.

"Are the paladins coming?" she asked Aznim over the sounds of fighting.

"Yes," the Palian replied, never taking his eyes off the big, central Jorcossi, but the creature somehow dodged every shot. "They are, but they have to hurry. If that thing gets the stone…"

Audrey didn't get to hear what was going to happen then, because one of the smaller ones jumped to tackle her guard, sending him stumbling back.

She suddenly found herself alone between the Jorcossi and the glowing stone behind her. Aznim was being held down by a horde of the smaller creatures and all the miners were under attack too. A few were approaching her as well, but Audrey kept picking them off one by one with frantic shots.

None of it did anything to discourage the big Jorcossi. Audrey had no idea how she could keep missing him at point-blank range, until she noticed the creature's body wiggling, twisting, and undulating out of the way. It was so fast it nearly seemed to teleport a few inches to the right or left every time she thought she'd gotten a clean shot.

When the creature reached her, it simply threw her aside with surprising strength for his thin form. Audrey landed with a pained grunt and fought to stand back up on her feet, scrambling out of the way of a Jorcossi that tried to pin her down. In the next second, she was already running back to the big one who was reaching for the gleaming stone.

Since shooting hadn't seemed to help, Audrey did the next best thing. She tackled him.

It can't dodge the whole of me, can it?

The creature saw her coming and turned to her with an angry hiss. Audrey knocked him away from the stone and they fell together. Again she got to feel how strong the alien was despite his looks.

Long fingers closed around her throat and her eyes went wide, realizing that might have been the end of her.

Her instincts kicked in. Franco had taught them that all species had different weaknesses, but generally eyes were a pretty safe bet. She jammed her fingers into the Jorcossi's eyes, pushing down with disgust.

With a shrill scream, the creature let go of her to peel her hands away, but by then Aznim was there.

He pulled the Jorcossi off her, taking aim with his gun, but the Jorcossi slithered away so fast Audrey barely saw him move. It was like something out of nightmares, constantly just out of reach. One moment he was right there in front of them and in the next, he reached for the stone.

Shortly, Audrey realized that the Jorcossi never actually touched the stone. He picked up one of the containers from the ground, meant for sorting through the smaller findings and used it as a shovel to peel the stone out.

Aznim ran to stop him, but every Jorcossi still standing jumped in his way, pushing him back. She waited for a few moments while the big creature dug, making sure the smaller ones had forgotten about her.

The white cloak she was wearing made being stealthy difficult, but everyone seemed to be too caught up in their own fights to see her rush to the big one the second he got the stone free.

Audrey grabbed it out of the container, her hands closing around the ghostly glowing stone.

In a heartbeat, it felt like she had no heart at all. Audrey's conscious mind struggled to keep itself intact, losing track of who or where she was. Her hand shook, her fingers closing around the stone desperately as her entire being quaked down to her soul.

Other books

El Libro de los Tres by Lloyd Alexander
Sunshine and the Shadowmaster by CHRISTINE RIMMER
To Rescue Tanelorn by Michael Moorcock
Cannot Unite by Jackie Ivie
Cited to Death by Meg Perry
Reservation Road by John Burnham Schwartz
The Harrowing of Gwynedd by Katherine Kurtz