“But how can you do that?” Emily asked. “How can you run that fast, to run down an animal....?”
“I learned,” Chris told her. “I didn’t know anything when I came here. I didn’t even know as much as you do. I never spent six years with the mountain search and rescue. I trained horses and dogs for a living. I was a real greenhorn.” She burst out laughing and shook her head at the memory.
Turk gazed at her across the fire. “You had the will to learn and change, though.”
Chris beamed. She smiled at Emily. “We all do.”
Emily stared in the water flowing by their feet. “It’s amazing.”
“Not really,” Chris replied. “Anybody could have done the same thing in my place.”
Emily shook her head, but Faruk interrupted. “Why are you going back to your village now? Why aren’t you going back up to your mountain home?”
Chris pushed pebbles back and forth on the ground at her feet with a dead stick. “We have business in the village.”
“I understand,” Emily told her. “You don’t want to live alone on the mountain anymore. You wanted to spend some time alone with Turk when you first got together, but now that’s over and you want people around you again. Turk’s family is in the village, and now that you’re mates, they’re your family, too. Besides, there are other human women there. Aimee is there, and some other women from the crash. I can see why you would want them around you, too.”
Chris blushed. “Thanks. That means a lot coming from you.”
Faruk listened to her with his head on one side. His expression gave her a queer feeling. She couldn’t look at him. Turk said the words she read in Faruk’s face. “You sound like you’re talking about yourself.”
Emily shrugged. “I suppose I am. I wouldn’t want to live alone on that mountain. I’m amazed she’s lasted as long as she has. She must really love you and the woods to live out there alone all these months. I can see why she wants her family and friends around her now. What if she got pregnant up there? Who would help her? Who would talk to her and set her mind at ease? It’s one thing to run through the woods when you first get together, but she needs other people now.”
Chris and Turk gazed at each other. Neither responded.
Emily shifted in her seat. “After I find my sisters, I’m going back to the Ursidrean city. The only other human woman I’ll have to talk to is Aria, but that’s enough. I’ll make friends, and I’ll have the infirmary to take care of me when I give birth. I won’t be alone.”
Now all three of them sat in silence. No one answered her. Faruk still studied her with that searching expression on his face. What was he thinking right now? He would have to give up his beloved mountains to stay in Harbeiz with her.
The silence went on and on. No one broke it. In the end, Emily couldn’t sit there any longer. She stood up and stretched her legs. “I really appreciate you taking the time to take me to Avitras territory to find my sisters, Chris. I know how much it means to you to be back in your village. You probably didn’t want to trek all over creation to help me after coming home.”
Chris got to her feet, but her eyes radiated with joy. “I’m glad to take you. I love trekking all over creation, and once we get back to the village, I won’t be leaving it for a long time. This is the last chance I’ll have to get out.”
Emily’s eyes widened. “Why?”
Chris touched her arm. “I’m pregnant. That’s why we’re going back.”
Emily gasped. “But you can’t.....you shouldn’t.....why did you......you should go back!”
Chris shook her head. “I’m okay. Like I told you, we usually run this trail back and forth between the mountain and the village. I’m not straining myself by walking.” She laughed again, and a pure clear light shone from her eyes and cheeks.
Emily stared at her. Then she shook her head and turned away. “I never would have come if I had known.”
“You did me a favor.” Chris waved her hand at Turk. “Do you really think Turk would have let me come if I was in any danger?”
Emily glanced at Turk. He listened to their conversation with a perfectly relaxed expression on his face. “I guess not.”
“I’ll be living in the village for a long time,” Chris went on. “I’ll have my mother-in-law and my sisters-in-law in and out of my house many times a day. I’ll look up at the mountain from my front door with my baby on my hip, and I’ll wish I was up there.” She laughed again. “And I’ll remember this last trip we took, and I’ll be glad I met you when I did.”
Emily opened her mouth to answer, but no sound came out.
“I’m going back for all the reasons you said,” Chris told her. “I’m going back to have my family around me, and to have the help and care of other women. I could never go through pregnancy and childbirth and raising my children alone on the mountain, and I’m not going to try.” She pressed Emily’s hand. “You shouldn’t, either.”
Emily cast a glance at Faruk and blushed.
“She won’t have to,” Faruk replied.
Emily dropped her eyes to the ground, and they all started walking without saying anything more. They walked until the sun sank below the trees and the air turned cold. Then Chris built a fire while Turk disappeared into the trees. He came back with the carcass of an animal Emily didn’t recognize. He roasted it over the fire.
Faruk sniffed the meat and raised his eyebrows. “Porkini? How did you kill it?”
“Chris told you before,” Turk replied. “I ran it down and broke its neck.”
Faruk frowned. “That’s impossible.”
Turk shrugged. “Lycaon run a lot faster than Ursidreans.”
Faruk glared at him. “How do you know that?”
Turk cocked his head. “Would you like to run a race and see?”
Faruk fixed him with a hard stare under his heavy brows. Then he turned his gaze at the meat dripping sizzling pearls of juice into the fire. “I don’t care to run a race against any man who can run down a porkini and kill it with his bare hands.”
Turk sat back on his heels, but he didn’t answer and he didn’t smile. Emily studied the two men. Turk was much too polite to gloat over the victory he won over Faruk without lifting a finger, and Faruk was intelligent and tactful enough to admit Turk’s superiority in this matter. Maybe the hostilities between the Angondran factions really could be solved by reasonable discourse.
Chris busied herself making camp and pretended not to notice the exchange between the men. The fire crackled, and the intoxicating aroma of roasting meat filled the camp. The party sat in silence until Turk took the carcass off its spit and tore it into four pieces. Chris brought him four large leaves from a nearby bush, and he set the pieces on them. Chris added dried berries and cut up tubers to the leaf plates and handed them to Faruk and Emily.
Emily broke the silence. “How far are we from Avitras territory?”
“Another two days’ walk,” Chris replied. “But it’s an easy walk. The country’s not as rugged as the terrain we crossed between Ursidrean territory and the village. We won’t have any trouble.”
“The Avitras will be guarding their border,” Faruk pointed out.
Chris nodded. “They keep their border much better guarded than we do. I wonder how they’re fixed for population. They might not have the same problems we do.”
Faruk waved his hand. “You never know. Aquilla is on good terms with Renier. He could have diverted his warriors from the Felsite border to guard this part of his territory.”
Turk spoke up. “What you mean to say is, he could have diverted his warriors to this part of his territory since the Ursidreans attacked the Felsite. He might anticipate a similar unprovoked attack by the Ursidreans against the Avitras.”
Faruk frowned. He stared into the fire and nodded. “That’s true.”
Turk watched him, but when Faruk didn’t say any more, Turk turned his attention to his food. Emily bristled. “No on
e knows better than Donen how ill-advised his attack on the Felsite was. I stayed with him and his family in the city, and he regrets it so much he sent word to Renier to ask for peace between our factions. He never would have attacked the Felsite if the Supreme Council hadn’t ordered him to do it.”
Turk listened, but Chris replied instead. “I’m sure all our factions have reasons for doing things the others don’t understand. We’ve all got a lot of work to do to make peace with each other.”
Emily raised her eyes to Chris’s face. The same clear light glowed out of Chris’s eyes. “Do you think all of us—the human women—could have some hand in bringing peace to Angondra? We’re a neutral force, and we’re in every faction. We could bring them back together.”
Chris smiled, but she shook her head. “It’s a nice idea, but I wouldn’t put too much hope into it if I was you. For one thing, the human women on this planet have integrated into their factions. I’m Lycaon now, as Lycaon as Turk or Caleb or any of his family. I know Marissa feels the same way. And Carmen, Renier’s mate, feels she’s fully Felsite. I’m sure Aria considers herself Ursidrean.”
Emily nodded. “She has four sons with Donen.”
“Even you are doing it now,” Chris pointed out. “You refer to the Ursidreans as your own faction. We’ll all work to defend our factions. Look at your cousin Aimee. She joined the Lycaon warriors to defend our border. I’m sure others will do the same thing.”
Emily stared into the fire. “You’re right. I would take up arms to defend the Ursidreans if I had to.”
“And another thing,” Chris went on, “there aren’t any human women with the Aqinas. We wouldn’t be able to get them on board your Peace Train.”
Emily’s head shot up. Then she lowered her eyes and smiled. “I suppose it is an idealistic pipe dream.”
“But a good one,” Chris replied. “You should be proud of yourself for wanting what’s best for all Angondra.”
“This is my home now, isn’t it?” Emily asked. “I’m going to live here for the rest of my life, and I’m going to have family here the way the rest of you are. I don’t want to think about my people or anybody else going to war if there’s anything I can do about it.”
Chris lay back on the ground with the flames flickering on her cheeks. “We’ll see Aquilla in a few days. We’ll find out if he feels the same way.”
“Do you know his mate?” Emily asked. “Do you know the woman who went to live with him?”
Chris shook her head. “I know her name’s Penelope Ann. That’s all I know about her.”
Emily closed her eyes against the penetrating heat. “Aria knows her.”
Chapter 11
“This is it.” Turk pulled his short curved blade out of his tunic. Chris pulled out a blade, too, and Faruk charged his reciprocator. “This is Avitras Territory.”
Emily gazed down the rocky precipice into a lush garden of flowering trees dripping with vines. The screech of animal calls echoed through the canopy, but nothing else moved down there. Rocks dotted the landscape.
Emily didn’t want to enter Avitras territory on a hostile footing, but she copied the others and took out her reciprocator. She still didn’t know how to use it, but at least she would have it out and in her hand in case something happened. Turk started down the slope. He jumped from boulder to boulder with light springs. He and Chris waited at the bottom for Faruk and Emily to climb down, which took much longer.
At the bottom, Turk paused and fixed Emily with a hard glare. “Listen to me. When we get into those trees, the Avitras border guards will surround us. When they demand to know what we’re doing here, it’s all up to you. You have to step forward and convince them you’re here looking for your sisters. Understand?”
Emily nodded, too surprised to say anything.
“When they see a Lycaon and an Ursidrean on their side of the border,” he went on, “they’ll assume the worst. You have to take the lead and start talking fast before they kill us all.”
Emily stared at him, but Chris put out her hand to him. “You’re scaring her.”
“She should be scared,” Turk shot back. “I only hope she’s as scared as I am. What you said back at the stream was right, Emily. You human women can negotiate with different factions in a way no Angondran can. The border guards will listen to you. They won’t listen to us. All our lives are in your hands.”
Emily swallowed. “I understand. I’ll convince them.”
“Good. I think you better lead the way.” He pointed into the trees. “Go straight on. Those trees are in Avitras territory. You can’t go wrong, and the border guards won’t let us pass very far into their territory before they show themselves and try to stop us.”
Emily nodded in mute reply and turned. Chris murmured in her ear. “We’ll be right behind you.”
Emily kept her eyes fixed on the trees. The Avitras waited for her there. From her experience of Angondra so far, they were probably watching the strangers approaching right now.
“One more thing.” Turk kept his voice to a husky whisper. “The Avitras don’t have any weapons as advanced as yours. They use spears and staffs with blades on the ends. If it comes to a fight, we’ll be fighting hand to hand.”
“I won’t be.” Faruk hefted his reciprocator.
Turk chopped the air with his hand. “If they attack us, fall back to our border. They won’t cross into Lycaon territory. Don’t be a hero. Save your lives and fall back. Do you hear me?”
Emily and Chris nodded. Not even the reciprocator in Emily’s hand gave her any comfort. Even Faruk nodded. “We’ll fall back.”
Emily cleared her parched throat. “It won’t come to a fight because I’ll convince them. If we intended to invade, we wouldn’t have brought one Lycaon, one Ursidrean, and two human females. The Avitras are intelligent, just like the rest of the Angondran people. They’ll listen to me.”
She set off for the trees. She kept her attention ahead of her and blocked out the sound of footsteps behind her. Turk’s words rang in her ears. Her friends were depending on her. She strode through the trees, but before she got there, she had an idea. She tucked her reciprocator into her shirt where it couldn’t be seen. When she faced the Avitras, they would see she was unarmed.
The trees closed over her head, and the leaves blocked the sun. Her skin crawled from the cold, and she walked faster. Any moment now......She expected to hear a snap of branches or a rustle of leaves, but when the confrontation came, the Avitras appeared out of nowhere without a sound. They materialized out of thin air, and in a fraction of an instant, they surrounded the party. Their staffs formed a ring around them so they couldn’t move.
The travelers instinctively formed another ring facing out to confront their captors, and Turk and Chris brandished their weapons. Faruk alone kept his composure and held his reciprocator down next to his leg. Emily recovered from her surprise and held up both her empty hands with the palms exposed for the Avitras to see. She didn’t dare step forward.
Large wreaths of feathers encircled the Avitras’ heads instead of hair. Some had brightly colored feathers, while others had more muted colors of grey, brown and tan. Feathers ran down the sides of their arms and legs, and every member of the group stood taller even than Faruk. They menaced the group with their spears. “You invaded our territory. Prepare to pay the penalty.”
Emily raised her voice. “I’m Emily Allen. I was on the Romarie transport that crashed in Lycaon territory. My sisters Frieda and Anna came to your faction, and I’m trying to find them. Please listen to me. We come in peace. We never intended to invade your territory. I only want to find my sisters.”
The Avitras with the brightest feathers swung his staff, and the blades on both ends whistled through the air. Something about his demeanor told Emily he was the leader of this group. Could this be Aquilla, the Avitras Alpha? She had to tread lightly here and keep his attention diverted away from Faruk.
“How da
re you enter our territory without permission?” he thundered. “The penalty for invading our territory is death.” Emily opened her mouth to speak, but he cut her off with a slice of his staff. “If you wanted to find your sisters, you could have sent word.”
Emily held her hands up in open submission. The position made her feel like a criminal under arrest. She had to change this conversation. “Are you Aquilla? Could you take me to my sisters? You must know which females entered your faction from the Lycaon. Do you know any females named Frieda and Anna Evans?”
He frowned, but he didn’t attack. “I am not Aquilla. I am Piwaka, Captain of the Guard. Aquilla is patrolling the other side of our territory at the moment. But his mate Penelope Ann knows every human female who entered our territory. If your sisters are here, she will know where they are.”
Emily’s spirits soared. “Can you take me to her? My friends and I come in peace. We will leave our weapons behind to prove it if you want us to.”
Turk shot her a terrible glance, but Emily stood her ground. She had to offer this man some assurance of their intentions. He would never listen to her with weapons drawn for battle. Piwaka scanned the group, but he didn’t move. Emily read the thoughts running through his mind. She touched Chris on the elbow. “Lower your weapons.”
Turk let out a vicious growl, and one of the guards jabbed at him with a spear. Emily raised her voice and roared at Turk. “Lower your weapons!”
He obeyed her instantly. His blade hung at his side, and the hair on the back of his neck laid down. The growl died on his lips. Chris lowered her blade, too. Emily surveyed the group. Then she nudged Faruk with her elbow. “Put your reciprocator away, Faruk. We have to show them our intentions are peaceful.”
He hesitated. “We’ll be at their mercy.”
Emily nodded. “That’s the only way they’re going to trust us.”
Faruk fixed his eyes on Piwaka. Then he stuck his reciprocator inside his clothes. Emily turned to the Captain of the Guard. “We won’t fight you or any other Avitras. We only came to find my sisters, and once I see they’re all right, we’ll leave. I swear it.”
Alien Romance: The Alien's Wonderland: A Sci-fi Alien Warrior Invasion Abduction Romance Page 34