Battalion's Bride (Alien SciFi Romance) (Celestial Mates Series Book 8)
Page 46
As she fell asleep, she thought of everything. She thought of Drake’s face, she thought of the way he smiled. She thought of how powerful and vulnerable he looked all at once when they were together and naked in her apartment. She thought of the beauty of seeing him as he was, the gorgeous creature hiding beneath the shell of his skin. She thought of the fear she felt right after that. The terror at being invaded. It was a rollercoaster of emotions.
She needed to harness them though. She needed to make them fuel. Drake had been stolen away and she needed to get him back.
Chapter 16
Alessia did as he said. She popped out of bed to the sound of an alarm she didn’t need to set but did anyway. She had a lot of research she wanted to do before she and Erik met with whatever shady people he’d organized this meeting with later that day and wished that she had better tools than Google at her disposal but there was only so much she could do without arousing suspicion. She was fairly certain she was being watched. If she went into the library and started delving too deeply into the section of shifter history, they might take it as a sign of noncompliance on her part. And that was the last thing she needed.
She swallowed several cups of coffee while her eyes grew tired focusing in on the screen. She scrolled and scrolled, passing hits and articles but she wasn’t even sure what she was really looking for. Google keywords: “shifter”, “secret organization”, “kidnapping”, and “protests” didn’t really do much to help her out at all. She returned all sorts of news hits and book and movies with that same plot.
After about an hour of her aimless searching, she heard something shuffling behind her. She’d intended to leave half the pot of coffee for Erik when he eventually rolled out of bed but her jitters got the better of her and the next thing she knew she was an entire pot deep.
“Sorry,” she mumbled when she turned to face him.
She had to admit, there was something desirable about seeing him there with his hair in every direction, his t-shirt ruffled from sleep and his eyes still puffy. There was a domesticity to him that she never saw in class when he was constantly trying to outdo someone in the middle of a debate. This was Erik before he put on his ego. Somehow, she liked this version a lot better.
She walked over and worked and getting a new pot of coffee ready for him.
“I didn’t wake you did I?”
“With the incessant sounds of typing?” he asked with a smirk and she cringed. “Nah. I was in and out of sleep all night. That couch is…something else.”
“Sorry. It came with the apartment.”
“Hey, no harm no foul. At least it wasn’t the floor.”
“Yeah, but I made you stay. The least I could do was give you somewhere comfortable to sleep.”
“I’ve had worse. Trust me. You can make it up with a pot of coffee that you didn’t guzzle in some paranoid frenzy.”
“That I can do.”
She set to work pouring out water and measuring the pile of ground coffee beans while Erik dug through her cupboards looking for a bowl to pour his cereal into and then performed the same ritual looking for milk in the refrigerator. It could be just a regular morning for them both—apart from the fact that Erik had slept in his clothes and on the couch. But they could just be a couple waking up in the morning, performing that dance around each other in the kitchen to get substance and caffeine in their bodies before they parted for the day with a promise to see each other at dinner.
She didn’t know why she was thinking about that. She’d already refused Erik, flat out told him she wasn’t going to be pursuing anything more than friendship with him. Yet, here she was, thinking about waking up on Sunday mornings or busy workdays and having him there.
You’re lonely, she said to herself, and you’re a little bit emotionally amped up after what happened with Drake.
Self-diagnosing was never smart but it was the only way she could keep that nagging voice in the back of her mind at bay. She’d deal with her therapy issues later after they got some solid footing in this strange mess.
As Alessia watched the coffee maker drip and drip it’s way into a growing pot of ink black and steaming liquid, she thought. What they knew was this: Drake was part of some kind of shifter radical movement—how radical they were remained to be seen, Drake had been part of the protest and had secured her release when they took her, Drake was no kidnapped by a group of people who did not look like police. The question was: was this his own group of people hauling him in or was he now the victim of some kind of rival group?
She’d read that several shifter organizations existed: the Alliance, the Freedom Fighters, the Flames. And none of them were friends. Maybe that’s why the shifters never managed to get a cohesive movement actually going for longer than it took to set off a few fire crackers and get on the news, they were too busy fighting amongst each other over who had the best way to deal with their own lack of rights.
“So, these people we’re meeting today,” Alessia said. “Are these the helpful kind or the kind that I can’t look directly in the eye or they’ll get offended and take my kidney?”
“You’ve been watching too much Godfather,” Erik said, rolling his eyes and taking the pot out from its spout when it beeped that it was ready. “It’s just one guy. He’s got information on a group that might not even be relevant to what we’re doing, but some information is better than none.”
“Who is he?”
“A shifter. Wolf. He was part of a group, not sure which one. But he was thrown out just before those bombing attacks in July.”
“How’d you meet him?”
“In some unsavory internet chat rooms.”
“What the hell were you doing on those?”
That’s when Erik’s smile and apparent smugness of information ran out. His face got a little pale and he took a nervous sip of his coffee to occupy his mouth, burning his lips in the process. He winced but kept his mouth shut and his eyes focused ahead.
“We’ll talk about it later,” he said.
“Maybe we should talk about it now if this guy is dangerous,” Alessia said, crossing her arms and cocking out a hip to glare at him.
“Listen, we can have safe or we can have answers,” he said. “Take your pick.”
He was right. She hadn’t admitting that, even in her own head where he couldn’t hear her. But she couldn’t play it safe anymore. If she did, she’d never see Drake again, she was sure of that. If she wanted to get him back and get answers they had to do things out of their comfort zone. It’s just that when Alessia imagined doing things out of her comfort zone, she pictured sky diving or finally pulling the trigger on getting a tattoo. She never thought she’d get an adrenaline kick and a life experience out of a possibly illegal meeting with a likely terrorist on school property.
But times were strange, she should probably just roll with it.
So they drank their coffee and avoided each other’s eyes and Alessia wondered what exactly it was that Erik was hiding beneath his worried eyes and pale face.
***
They were jittery as they walked together out of Alessia’s apartment towards whatever dark alley Erik had arranged their meeting in. It was the middle of the day, the sun was out, people were out and around playing games in the quad and undergraduates were studying under the shade of trees and on benches. Music played from various speakers and open dorm windows. It was the perfect day at a Southern California college campus and yet Alessia felt like she was about to invite the devil himself into her life.
She was going to be doing something she couldn’t go back from. It would be worse than if her supposed watchers saw her researching in the library. If they were watching her now they’d see her heading straight for the lion’s den. She was told to stay out of it, to remain the quiet doctoral candidate and obedient citizen who didn’t know a thing about any of this. And now she was stoking the fire. But like Erik said, she could have it safe or she could try to make a
difference in all this.
The question that weighed on her mind was, of course, was it worth it? Drake was her friend, if nothing else. But he was also a terrorist and a liar. He cared for her, he tried to protect her, he got her to safety when it mattered. But was it worth throwing away her career and possibly changing the trajectory of her life by getting involved in a world she knew nothing about? She wasn’t a shifter. She studied them for years and worked with them but she’d never be one. Not to mention she might be making things worse for Drake if she continued.
“Let’s hustle,” Erik said when she’d lagged several feet behind him. “I gave this guy a strict meeting time and he’s jumpy as it is.”
“Have you ever met him before?”
“No. But I’ve watched him ghost out of online chats more times than I can count,” he said. “If we want to chase more leads, we need to not scare this guy away.”
So Alessia obeyed and trotted up along side him, trying to steal herself as they passed a group of young undergraduate freshman taking pictures of their ice cream cones to post on Instagram. It would be nice to have nothing but cares like those. And when Alessia was younger she did, maybe just a bit. She looked back and could see the spoiled college girl who was just interested in getting the best light for a picture and wondering who was throwing what party the next weekend.
Maybe that was the point of college, to kick your ass and harden you up. Maybe not harden you up into someone who was ready to delve into illegal political activities and maybe get kidnapped by a group of shifters, but at the very least it pointed you in the direction you needed to go. Alessia had become a doctoral candidate for shifter studies because she learned to truly believe in it and truly want. She wanted to help. She didn’t know if this was a start or something that was going to cause a whole world of more trouble. But she was going to see it through no matter what.
So she walked alongside Erik and held her head up high. She wouldn’t be scared. She wouldn’t show it, at least. Fear was the destroyer of thoughts and the logical mind.
They turned a corner and the world suddenly shifted. The fun of the campus was behind them. They could hear it in the distance but they seemed to have entered a bubble where they were separate from all that. It was a dingy alleyway between a couple of clubs that were quiet for the day before opening their doors after 9pm at night.
They weren’t alone in the alley. At the end of it was a figure that Alessia both hoped was and was not the man they were meeting, at the same time. He wasn’t horrifying, he was average height and seemed just as nervous as them. He wasn’t the kind of tattooed thug she imagined was waiting to pass them information. He was around their age, maybe a little older. He had dark hair and sad, dark eyes, and his skin was kissed by the sun. But in the alleyway, in the black clothes he wore and the hood he had pulled over his head, he looked like an unfriendly stranger.
“Diego?” Erik called out.
The face inside the hood turned towards them. Diego. He had a name. Naming something made it a little less dangerous in the mind, at least that’s what Alessia told herself. She could handle something that made its own mystique disappear by giving itself a name.
“You Erik?”
“Yes. We need information on a shifter.”
“Drake Tekkin?”
“Yeah.”
“I know him.”
Chapter 17
“That’s a good start,” Erik said. “How do you know him?”
Alessia just wanted to get to the point. She wanted to know if Diego knew where they’d taken Drake, who had taken him. She wanted to jump right in, she was anxious. But Erik put a strong hand on her wrist and squeezed. It hurt but she focused on the pressure. She needed to be calm. If they scared this guy away it would be the end of any chance to find Drake. And he looked like he was very easily going to be scared away.
“We had a mutual friend,” Diego said.
“Why do I feel like ‘friend’ is a lose term here?” Erik said, releasing Alessia’s wrist and crossing his arms. If she watched too much Godfather then he clearly watched too much 24. She tried not to roll her eyes at the tough guy act.
Diego was not going to give up his secrets so easily as he looked at Erik. He was sizing him up, looking for the bluff in the tough guy act. He was going to find it easily if he looked to far into it. Alessia stepped forward before she could stop herself.
“Drake got kidnapped,” she said. “He’s our friend and he risked hi life to help me and we think someone took him because of it.”
“Someone?” Diego repeated.
“A shifter group. We’re not sure.”
Diego sighed. He threw back his hood and massaged at his own face. His eyes looked tired, shadows seemed to be permanently hovering beneath equally dark eyes. His posture was slumped and it was obvious with the way his bones stuck out that he wasn’t eating the way he should be. Whoever he was, he might be in more danger than them.
“This isn’t about shifters vs. humans,” he said. “That’s how everyone paints it and wants to see it and, yeah, maybe it’s a little bit true. I mean, who doesn’t fear the other, right? And that goes for both sides. But the real war, the real fight? That’s the fights between each other. No one can pick a leader, no one can decide one way to fix things. We’re all scrambling for ways to try and better out lives and it’s turned into like a battle of ideologies.”
“So what does that mean for Tekkin?” Erik asked.
“The guy I used to answer to, he’s a bad man,” Diego said.
His face suddenly became incredibly haunted, incredibly scared. The space beneath his brow where eyes were moments ago turned into hallows where it seemed to he was afraid to even blink. He took a deep breath and let it out slowly. This was the deluge of memories across his mind, Alessia realized. He was seeing things in front of him. She recalled what Erik said about him being involved in the attacks in July and being expelled from the group he worked with.
Had he been a part of the attacks? Was she looked into the eyes of a murderer.
“If Damien Orlando has him, he’s in trouble,” Diego said. “I can take you to where our last known head quarters was. Chances are it’s been moved since then. But it’s a start.”
It seemed like all they were ever going to get was starts. But starts were better than nothing, so Alessia tried not to be too irritated. She took a calming breath.
“I’ll take you there,” he said. “But that’s as far as I go with this. I’ve already been a captive once. I lost a lot…I don’t plan on redoing things.”
Erik and Alessia looked at each other. It was as good as they could ask for. They sighed and nodded to each other and then turned to him.
“Lead the way,” Erik said.
Diego snorted something about getting things over with and moved past them, brushing their shoulders in the process. Alessia wondered was vodka bender they were keeping him from. He was a prime candidate for the alcoholic loner with the dark past. She bad for him, though she had no idea why. Still, she followed after him and hoped they weren’t about to walk into some kind of ambush.
Chapter 18
He took them to an old warehouse by the distillery block. That should have been a red flag. She’d seen this horror movie before. This is exactly where the man with a hook for a hand or a chainsaw jumped out from a broken window in a decrepit building and swinging a weapon into their unsuspecting faces and chopped some limbs off in the process. But they were alone. There was nothing here but the sound of the wind passing between the old brick buildings.
They tried to turn the block into something of a tourist destination a few times, installing flea markets and Christmas markets and places in the summer. It never worked out. It smelled too much like the stale beer that had once been brewed and bottled here. It also had a bit too much of a known reputation as a meth house and place where drugs deals had gone down.
Now it was desolate and if it weren’t for the
sounds of Los Angeles in the distance it would seem like some kind of dystopian film. They were the last three people on Earth. She didn’t know if that feeling was good or bad with all things considered. But she kept following after Diego who was walking in zigzags, seeming to be looking for something in the cracked concrete of the ground and the graffiti covered walls of the buildings around them.
“Here,” he said, pointing to a door that didn’t distinguish itself from any of the others but he seemed to know it.
He pointed to some carving at the top of the doorjamb. It was a symbol that Alessia did not recognize. It might have been a claw or it might be a flame. She wasn’t entirely sure. Erik, however, looked at it gravely. She wanted to ask him, but she couldn’t, not in front of Diego. And he seemed to consciously be avoiding her eyes as they stepped through the door that gave way for them easily.
“It’s been cleared out, just like I thought,” Diego said, stepping in and kicking an old chair out of the way. “But something might have been left behind. We don’t even know if this is where they took Tekkin, but, like I said. This is all I can offer you.”
Deigo seemed to be backing away, ready to leave. Alessia was going to let him. He’d done his part. They could comb this place for clues themselves and he could go back to whatever bar he normally hid in throughout the day. He was stepping away and we were moving towards the room, Alessia’s eyes already looking at a pile of papers on the floor that had been left and stepped over.
And then suddenly no one was going anywhere as the ground rushed up to smash Alessia right in the chest. How had she fallen on the ground? What was the weight on top of her? Someone was yelling. Several people were yelling. There were male voices all around her, Erik was cursing and yelling her name and she heard the sickening sound of something hitting flesh with a blunt head.