Taken by the Aliens
Page 60
Out Of This World -
Alien Menage
Book 1: The War
Talia was only six years old when the whole world collapsed around her. She might not have been able to remember much of her life before the war, but that was the one day that she didn’t think she would ever forget. It was ingrained so deeply into her memory that it would probably be the last thing that she thought about before she died.
She was sitting in class, next to her best friend at the time – Bonnie Smith. They were giggling about something, not really concentrating on the lesson, until the teacher’s voice started to change enough to actually drag them out of their little friendship bubble.
Talia had never particularly liked Mr. Jones – he wasn’t passionate or interesting – and it was ironic that the first time he’d ever sparked any kind of reaction from her was when he was telling her the worst news ever. The news that would change her life forever.
“Everything is about to change,” he said, actually sounding passionate for the first time in his entire life, but also completely bizarre too. “Everything you ever knew is about to be no more.”
A murmur burst up around the class, and Talia had glanced towards her friend, but Bonnie was so sucked in by their teacher’s words that she didn’t even realize that her eyes were upon her.
“There has been a plan in place for generations. We have merely been biding our time, waiting for the time to strike. Now, finally, that time is upon us.”
Talia watched in a stunned silence as his skin took on a purplish hue and his face began to change shape. She blinked a few times, trying to make the terrifying image in front of her to finally disappear. This had to be a dream, some kind of nightmare and she needed desperately to wake up. Even though her young mind didn’t fully understand what was going on, it seemed to be able to grasp that she should be afraid. There was a cold terror coursing through her veins and fixing her to the seat.
“What’s happening?” she asked out of the side of her mouth, needing some kind of confirmation from Bonnie. “What is he doing?”
But as she spun around to look at her friend, to get the reassurance that she so desperately needed, she realized that not only was Bonnie taking on the same look as their teacher, but so were a few of the other members of the class too.
Talia scooted back in her seat, feeling more frightened than she ever had before, which only got worse as the teacher spoke out again.
“Now this will be too much for your young minds to comprehend, but I will tell you about it anyway.” His shape shifted over and over again, until Talia couldn’t keep up. She didn’t understand what he was at all, and that was almost worse than anything else. “We have been living among you for a very long time, taking your form. You didn’t ever recognize that there was something different about us. Of course, a few of us have gone rogue, but thankfully human nature is unpredictable enough so that no one realized.” Talia didn’t really understand the words, but they stuck firmly in her mind regardless. She could just tell that they would be important and that she needed to remember them to get her through the rest of her life. “And now it is time for us to act, to take you down. You might assume that because we have lived among you and we have adopted your ways, that we would have sympathy for you. But we don’t. Nor do we wish to continue living among you as we have been. That was never our end goal.” He began walking through the rows of children, focusing on the few remaining humans. “I think that you should know our race is far ahead of humans in every way possible. We have skills, talents, and abilities that you wouldn’t believe. It has been torture to hold ourselves back, to act like we are just these boring vessels. You will die at our hands, unless you make the smart choice right now.”
Die?! Her eyes flickered everywhere at that word. She didn’t want to die. Bonnie wouldn’t do that to her would she? They were friends, they shared secrets. But as she glanced over to Bonnie, all she saw was another terrifying beast that wanted her dead too. Everything that she’d ever thought in her life had been a lie, and that was utterly devastating.
“It is a shame for you to die, which is why I want you to join us, work for us, start your life in the right way for the time that the new regime is beginning.”
He looked at every one in turn, waiting for a response. Finally he got one from the youngest lad in the class… Johnny. “Can I ask my mommy first?”
“No,” Mr. Jones shot back firmly. “Definitely not!”
“Why?” Johnny whined, starting to cry. “Why are you doing this? Why can’t I see my mommy? I need to know what she says…”
Before he could even get the rest of his sentence out, Mr. Jones obliterated him in a massive flame ball, leaving only ashes behind.
The same happened to other children, as they began to cry too, finally realizing that this wasn’t a game. Talia was scared and very upset, but her life preservation kicked in and all she wanted to do was survive. She ducked under her desk and curled herself up into a ball while the chaos went on around her.
People fought, people died, and Talia remained put.
Just as the weird, shape-shifting people were about to leave, one of them leaned down to face her. For a split second, Talia’s heart raced and her mouth ran dry with fear. The thing cocked its head, looking at her, and just at the moment Talia became convinced that she was going to end up a spot of ash too, the figure zipped away, leaving her completely alone.
Bonnie – it had to be. Her friend had saved her life. Maybe some of their bond had been true after all…
Of all the horror that had surrounded her, of all the awful things that came afterwards, Talia would always remember her friend and the fact that she risked herself to let her live.
***
Talia wrestled the alien interloper, using her size to knock him down. She clawed at him with her fingers, then punched him with her elbow.
“You’ll die, you scum!” she cried. The alien struggled back, but Talia had been in this position before, many times. She was confident.
Talia was pretty sure that it was her birthday. Somewhere along the line she had lost track of days, but she definitely felt like it could have been. If so, that made her eighteen years old, which she was pretty certain would be the type of birthday that she should have been celebrating with a big party with all of her friends, but of course the world wasn’t like that. Not anymore.
Now she was spending her days by herself, fighting off aliens, and wondering how different things would be if her life was normal, if the aliens hadn't invaded Earth. She still didn’t fully understand why this race – the Ec’dua, they called themselves – felt the need to take over the planet in such a horrendous fashion, but to be honest she didn’t really care.
All she did was fight… fight for her survival. Like her fight against this alien, whose neck she now held tightly in her strong, battle-hardened hands, and whose face showed that he was running out of oxygen.
Okay, so the aliens had proven time and time again that their technology was much better than humans, which meant they had some seriously amazing weapons, but if you could get them one on one, in hand-to-hand combat, they were quite a bit easier to defeat.
Especially for Talia, who had grown up in the war. She had quickly become a badass fighter, defending herself in the best way that she could.
When she raced home that dreaded day, when she was only six and the entire world had turned on its feet, she found her mother dead and there was absolutely no sign of her father – that was the day that she’d learned that she was truly alone. She never did discover what had become of her dad. She simply focused on what needed to be done to keep her alive.
Bonnie had lied to her, betrayed her, and although she had allowed her to live, she still felt like she could no longer trust anyone. She was alone. As time passed, she realized she was going to stay alone. She got used to it.
It didn’t help that it was really difficult to tell if the shape shifting Ec’dua race were humans or not, wh
en they were playing that role. How could she trust any human, when they might be an alien? The only one she could really trust was herself.
She felt the life leave the alien’s body. She’d beaten him. “Go to hell,” she muttered to herself as the alien melted beneath her. That’s what happened when they died.
It was frustrating to her to know that the human race could easily win this war, if it wasn’t for their technology… that was the one thing she had no idea how to overcome. Of course it was amazing that the human race had managed to keep on going for so many years. But the war was exhausting, and Talia just wasn’t sure how long they could continue.
The fight over, Talia slumped onto a nearby rock to rest. But she did not have long. While still catching her breath, she suddenly found herself surrounded… which was the absolute last thing that she needed.
“Ugh,” she groaned, getting back up, trying to find it within herself to keep on going.
“Well, well, well,” one of the aliens said. He had mostly a stereotypical handsome human guy look about him… all except for his eyes that had the intense blackness that seemed to be their natural look. “Aren’t you a sight for sore eyes?”
“What’s that supposed to mean?” Talia growled back, not having time for the mind games.
“You…” He trawled his eyes up and down her body, making her feel a little vulnerable and exposed. She guessed that he was obviously trying to disarm her emotionally, and she hated to think that it might actually be working. She hadn't built up her thick walls for nothing!
“What?” she demanded.
“You really are something else… it’s a shame that you’re human. If you were a shape shifter like us, I would be all over you. I like my women with a little more meat on them.”
“Don’t be so disgusting,” she yelled angrily, wanting him to get off her back. “You’re just doing all this to toy with me. Will you just get on with whatever it is that you have planned?”
“You know that you’re outnumbered, right?” he drawled at her, a smirk playing on his lips.
She glanced around, thinking that they obviously didn’t realize how tough she was, and that she would have no trouble taking down all four of them.
“Oh, this isn’t it!” The alien laughed loudly and happily. “Take a look around.”
Then she glanced up and spotted hundreds of them appearing, as if from every angle.
What was she going to do now?
***
“Okay, so what do you want from me?” Talia asked, trying to keep the wobble out of her voice. “What’s the point of all this?” She waved her arms around, trying to act like she wasn’t as bothered as she really was. “What do you want with me?”
“Oh, I don’t know,” said the alien. He started to circle her, ramping up the intimidation. “Maybe we just stumbled across you by mistake, or maybe we picked you on purpose, does it really matter?”
“Of course it does.” She suddenly sensed that the longer she could keep this guy talking, the more time she would have had to make a plan in her mind. Although she was certain that there was no way out of this one. She’d never ever in her entire life found herself in such a bad position before.
By the time Talia started to hear about refugee camps that the humans had set up, in the knowledge that they would be safer together, she had her guard too far up even to consider going to one. She was too self-reliant and far too untrusting to even think about going near anyone else.
But right now she felt like she could have really used some other humans around her. She should have let down her wall and allowed herself to grow a bond with other people. She shouldn’t have been so determined to be alone. Now when she really needed backup, she had no one to turn to, and she felt it.
She was going to die alone, and no one would even know. That was the worst part of it all. Her death wouldn’t be a great loss to the world, there wouldn’t be anyone to mourn her, and that was actually really sad.
She completely lost her cool and her gaze started to flicker everywhere, desperately looking for an escape. She wanted to die with dignity, to hold her head up high, but it seemed like that was never going to happen.
She needed to live, to keep on going. She couldn’t die like this. She didn’t want to depart having never had an impact on the planet, but it looked like she was going to.
Then she spotted a flash of light, and in an instant everything around her faded, then went black.
***
By the time Talia came back around, she was locked in what was very clearly a cell. Her brain was still foggy, and she didn’t fully feel like herself, which was clearly down to whatever damn alien technology had been used on her to make her unconscious.
“Ungh,” she groaned, forcing herself into a sitting position, despite the pain radiating through her body. Her head hurt, her body pulsated with agony, but what she really needed was to find out what was going on.
“Where am I?” she gasped, not recognizing her surroundings at all. “What’s going on?”
The room was dark, but she could see a light emanating from the other end, meaning that if there was an escape from this place, she would find it there.
She stood up and staggered across the cold, damp ground, forcing herself to move when her body was clearly too fatigued to do so. As she got to the bars, she could see a room filled with things that were completely unrecognizable to her. She had to be in the lair of the aliens. Right bang smack in the middle of danger.
How had she allowed that to happen? What an idiot she’d been!
“What’s going on?” she repeated to the alien, who was in his natural form. “Why am I here? Why aren’t you killing me? What do you want me for?”
But he said nothing. He simply remained standing there, staring at the wall, as if she didn’t exist. That angered her more than anything. She wanted to be acknowledged, to be heard. She wanted answers and she was God damn sure that she was going to get them.
“Why have you locked me up here!?” she yelled loudly. Then, almost as if she’d been heard by someone else, another alien entered the room too, though this one was in a human’s form. Talia ran her eyes over the sculpted, muscular form that this alien had taken, feeling a weird flutter in her heart even though she knew it wasn’t real. That didn’t matter, there was something about him… maybe this would be the kind of man she would be after had the world been a normal place. In that moment, it certainly felt like he would be her type!
She pleaded to the newcomer. “Will you tell me what’s happening?” She felt better about this one – if he was acting human, then maybe he would be more willing to speak to her. “Please just tell me why I’m here,” she begged, trying to allow her emotions to flow out through her eyes. “I think I at least deserve to know that much.”
“They need your DNA,” he said, turning to her. She had expected much more of a battle than that. “They need a lot of DNA from your species to be able to work out a way to defeat them.”
“What do you mean?” she gasped, mostly just for something to say. She hadn't been expecting that statement at all, and she needed some way to get her head around it. “Aren’t you guys winning anyway? Why do you need more from us? That just seems crazy.”
He paused thoughtfully for a second, before handing her a tray of very delicious looking food. For someone who lived on the road and on her own, eating whatever she could get her hands on, the smell of the meal was almost too tempting. But she had to keep her guard up, she knew that much. She couldn’t just eat something from the aliens. It could be poisoned, or anything. She had to be sensible. She didn’t want to lose her life just because she was too damn hungry to resist eating.
But… did it have to smell so amazing? Did it have to make her mouth salivate so intensely?
“It’s beef stew,” he reassured her, sitting by her cage. “It’s good, and only filled with the best ingredients.” He took a bite, just to prove it to her that it was okay, but that still wasn’t enough to co
nvince her – it could still kill her even if it didn’t kill him. How naïve did he think she was?
Then she watched intently as he turned to the other alien and made a dismissive gesture, sending him away. “It’s very nutritious for humans, and we really need you at top peak. I can assure you that it’s very good for you, and that it won’t harm you in anyway. If you’re hurt, they won’t be able to extract your DNA – you are important, you’re needed, so you won’t be harmed.”
She stared into his eyes, spotting an honesty there. She had not put any faith into anyone since she was a child, yet for some reason she inexplicably felt like she could here. She had the intuition that she wasn’t being lied to.
Soon the temptation became too much, and her body almost completely took over her mind. She groaned in pleasure as the delicious food fell past her lips as she realized just how good it was. She wasn’t even quite sure when she’d made the decision to eat it, just that all of a sudden it was happening, and she had no control over it.
“Did you make this?” she asked in surprise. He had to have, this wasn’t exactly the sort of food you found wild – it had somehow been cooked in an oven, which was amazing in a world that no longer had electricity. Clearly the alien race had a way to make amenities work without power stations. She couldn’t help but wonder if she might even be able to get a hot shower… she’d spent such a long time bathing in rivers and lakes that the thought of hot water running over her was almost like something in her imagination.
“During my years playing as a human, I actually learned how to cook quite well,” said the alien. He smiled at her, warming her up inside. “I’m glad it’s to your standards. I’m happy to be able to make your experience a little more pleasant. Now, to answer your other question, for years and years our race has been taking over planets, just like this one, trying to find the optimum atmosphere for us to survive in.”