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Resident Alien: Department of Homeworld Security, Book 2

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by Cassandra Chandler




  He reached for the stars and touched her heart…and a whole lot more.

  The Department of Homeworld Security, Book 2

  Kira excels in her role as a planetary observer, but two years is a long time to be alone on the listening station orbiting Earth. In a moment of weakness, she answers one of the many voices reaching for deep space.

  Brendan Sloan never thought he’d get a response to his transmissions. He suspects Kira is simply a government lackey keeping an eye on him between his top-secret communications projects. Still, her sultry voice is a geeky dream come true.

  He’s stunned when an escape pod lands in his back yard, even more so when the alien who emerges removes her helmet and opens her luscious lips to speak. He knows that voice. It’s Kira, and she’s had to destroy her station to keep it out of enemy hands.

  Their meeting of the minds—and of the flesh—is beyond anything they ever dreamed. But when they discover what the Tau Ceti are really after, they may not have a nanite’s chance in hell of saving Earth, much less their love.

  Warning: Contains a hot geeky billionaire, an alien just learning what she can do with her lady parts, and vampire space frogs. Yeah, you heard me.

  Resident Alien

  Cassandra Chandler

  Dedication

  For Allie S.—a great listener.

  Chapter One

  “Greetings, my fellow interstellar travelers. This is Brendan Sloan, speaking to you from the little blue marble third from Sol. Without context, that doesn’t give you much of a clue as to where I am, but if you’re advanced enough to pick up this signal, I’m betting you can trace the source.”

  Brendan picked up the toy rocket that he kept on his desk and fidgeted with the stabilizers on its base. His stomach was full of butterflies—not the good kind—from his conversation with his sister, Paige.

  She had been scheduled for a flight out of Louisiana earlier that day, but ran late at a cleanup site her environmental restoration team was working on. The plane had crashed. No survivors.

  He felt terrible for the people who had been on board and for their families. And at the same time, he was grateful beyond measure that his baby sister had been spared. He was still having trouble wrapping his head—and his heart—around the situation.

  “I’m keeping it short today, as I have something of a date.” He hoped that Kira was listening. He needed to talk to her immediately—to hear her voice and know that she was okay as well. He spoke his mind, eager to finish the transmission.

  “Humans have a need to bond. We bond with a partner, with our friends and family. With comrades-in-arms and comrades-in-ideas. It’s part of what makes us strong as a species and something I hope our cultures will share. And if not, perhaps we can teach each other and grow through our own interactions.”

  He set the rocket down in front of a picture of him and Paige. He had his arms around her shoulders and was hugging her tight. Her expression was equal parts amused and annoyed.

  They had the same blue eyes and red hair, same smile and scientific curiosity, but what they each added to the world was so different. She fought for the planet, hands on—often from the inside of a hazmat suit. Trying to get people to stop damaging their homeworld.

  He worked with the government to create technology that was decades ahead of anything on Earth—tech that was supposed to be used to improve everyone’s lives, but was usually turned into weapons to use against others. Hence his hiatus from his most recent project.

  He ran his hands over his face, careful not to knock his headset out of place, then let out a sigh and leaned back in his chair.

  “I look up at night and my eyes show me a sky filled with thousands of stars. My instruments let me know there are so many more out there, galaxies full of them in an infinite universe. And my reason tells me this—we cannot be alone. This is my official request to parlay. Please come in peace.”

  It was a silly dream and a waste of time—sending transmissions into deep space in the hopes that he might get lucky and reach an alien civilization, maybe hitch a ride and find a more peaceful home. But it kept him distracted from the problems on Earth and how very little he had been able to change anything. Yet.

  Time and distance would help him come back to the communications project he was working on refreshed and with new perspective. Maybe he’d even figure out how to use their results to benefit all of humanity instead of only the people he worked for.

  And thanks to taking time off, he had met Kira.

  Officially, Brendan had been told that Eric was his liaison. Eric checked in with Brendan once a month. Their conversations were superficial, but Brendan was sure Eric was under pressure from his superiors to get Brendan back on the project. Eric knew Brendan needed a break and more time to unwind. Brendan was pretty sure that was why they had assigned Kira to be a sort of handler for him. She talked to Brendan every day—pretending to be an alien.

  His government sure was going the extra mile to help him recharge and get back on the job. He didn’t want to admit how well it was working. If he knew he’d be working with Kira—that they might meet face-to-face—he’d ditch his lakeside cabin and head back to civilization in a heartbeat.

  He wasn’t sure when it had happened or how, but their talks had become the highlight of his day. He thought about her all the time. He even dreamed about her. Maybe today was the day he would tell her how he felt. After Paige’s brush with death, he didn’t want to risk never telling Kira the truth. Even if it made him feel like an idiot.

  Falling for his handler was bad enough, but somehow he’d convinced himself that she felt the same way about him. He was probably going to make a royal fool of himself.

  He flipped off his transmission, watching the power draw levels drop. Waiting—but never for long. He adjusted his headset and leaned forward.

  “Brendan Sloan.” Kira’s voice flowed into his ears, rich and deep and sexy as hell.

  He closed his eyes and smiled before responding. “Kira I’m-too-mysterious-for-a-last-name.”

  A hint of laughter laced her words when she spoke again. “I thought today’s broadcast was going to be about your theories on the best spots in the Sol system for setting up extra-terrestrial bases.”

  “I changed my mind.”

  “That’s a shame. I’m looking to build a summer home.”

  He let out a laugh. Talking to Kira always made him feel…less alone in the universe.

  “For you, only the best,” he said. “Earth all the way.”

  “No bias there?”

  “Come on. Try to stop and smell the roses on Jupiter, and you get a chest-full of ammonia crystals.”

  He was encouraged when she let out a little snort, so he continued.

  “Then there’s Mars,” he said, “with its barely-there atmosphere and all those satellites taking pictures. How’s anyone supposed to have any privacy? And robots running around on the surface, poking and prodding everything. I wouldn’t want to live there.”

  “Right. Because once robots move in, there goes the neighborhood.”

  “They’re up all hours whirring and running around. They pretend they’re collecting samples, but you know they’re just partying.”

  She laughed and it about did him in. He wanted to see the face that belonged to that steel-and-brandy voice. He could imagine her sitting across from him on the couch, leaning her elbow on the back of the cushions as they talked long into the night.

  “Besides, yo
u don’t need to build a summer house in the Sol system—you’re welcome in my cabin any time. There’s no guest room, but it has a big bed.”

  He cringed the moment the words left his lips. Smooth.

  Still, his mind leapt at the chance to add him to the scenario in a very carnal way. He shifted in his seat.

  “And a very comfortable couch,” he said. “Which is where I would be…in that event.”

  “It’s a tempting offer, but I’m kind of stuck here.”

  “Right.”

  Wherever here happened to be. Probably a bunker outside of Bethesda.

  He imagined her working in a sort of call center for handlers—everyone with headphones on, sitting in their cubicles and listening to their assigned assets while they shot rubber-bands at homemade dartboards.

  “You sounded a little tense,” she said.

  “Picked up on that, did you?” Of course she did. Nothing seemed to slip past her notice.

  “Do you want to talk about it?”

  He shook his head, even though he knew she couldn’t see him. “Just had a close call. Too close for comfort. It’s made me think about not taking things for granted. Or letting opportunities pass.”

  She was silent, so he went on.

  “Look, I know you’re my handler.”

  “I have said no such thing.”

  “Right. I forgot. You’re an alien.” Because that was more likely.

  “I’ve never confirmed that, either.”

  “Yeah, and you haven’t denied it. When you first responded to my transmission, you wouldn’t tell me how you picked it up and the only people capable of doing that are the ones in the group I work with.”

  “Or the advanced alien civilization you’re trying to reach.”

  “There you go teasing me again.”

  “Sorry.”

  He could practically hear the smile in her words. It was contagious.

  “I may just be a nerd to you—”

  “You’re not just anything to me,” she said.

  There was heat to her words. That was much worse than teasing him about being an alien. If she didn’t care, why would she get so worked up? Why would she say something like that? He expected her to backpedal, but her tone was still serious when she went on.

  “I wasn’t supposed to talk to you,” she said. “I’m just here to listen. But I couldn’t…not respond. I had to talk to you, to get to know you. And I don’t regret it. No matter what happens next, I’ll never regret getting to know you.”

  His heart picked up. It sounded like she was saying goodbye.

  “What’s going on?”

  “There have been some changes here,” she said. “Big changes. I don’t know when it will happen, but it’s only a matter of time before I’m removed.” Her voice cracked and she coughed as if she was clearing her throat.

  His stomach felt like it had suddenly turned to lead. No daily talks with Kira to look forward to? No one to bounce ridiculous ideas off of and philosophize about society’s ills and strengths?

  The loneliness that had plagued him throughout his life started pushing back into his heart. He knew she had been lonely too, before they started talking. He could hear it in her voice. It was part of what bound them together. In all the world—in all the universe—they had found each other. He didn’t want to lose her.

  “I’m shocked they haven’t already shut me down,” she said.

  His dread increased.

  If she was anything like Eric, she’d been trained as a spy—received the full package. Brendan never let himself consider the baggage associated with being a handler. Sure, he considered that she might be using techniques to win his heart and seduce him into a course of action that might not be his own choice, like going back to work early. But hearing her talk about being shut down brought other aspects of her role to light. Ugly possibilities.

  “Are you safe?”

  “Yeah, just in deep trouble. But I don’t care.” Her voice was strong—almost harsh. But it softened as she went on. “Talking to you, getting to know you…has been the greatest experience of my life. I wouldn’t trade it for anything.”

  “If your job was to convince me to come back, it worked. Tell them it worked. Tell them whatever they need to—”

  “Hang on a second.”

  There was a pause when all he heard was the blood rushing through his ears.

  “Something’s wrong,” she said. “I have to go.”

  “Kira, wait,” he said. “I love you.”

  The signal died.

  Chapter Two

  “I love you.”

  Kira was already shutting down their com-link as Brendan said the words. She sat stunned, staring at Earth through the main planetary viewport of listening station T5-Alpha.

  He loved her?

  When he’d started talking about pair-bonding in his transmission, she couldn’t resist the urge to imagine herself in that role with him. But it was a dream. There was no way they could be together—not after she’d broken Coalition protocol by making unauthorized contact. Her future was an eight-by-eight cell—if she was lucky.

  A normal soldier would get a mind-wipe and return to duty. Kira was not normal. She couldn’t let anyone find out how very not-normal she was.

  Her performance levels were low enough that the genetic engineers who created her considered her a glitch. Thankfully, they decided she was salvageable as long as she was augmented with a nanNet. She couldn’t be wiped unless they removed the network of nanites from her brain first, and if they tried…

  Her stomach cramped. If they found out how very wrong she had turned out, they would want to figure out where they made their mistakes. By any means necessary. She had a feeling a cell would be paradise in comparison.

  Thinking about it was too much. She needed to focus.

  She activated the control-band built into the forearm of her uniform. Her biodata displayed, showing everything within normal parameters. An image of her face rotated in the upper-right corner.

  The geneticists had selected brown hair, brown eyes, and skin that looked tanned even though she hadn’t been in direct sunlight…ever. It was really too bad that her levels were so low. At least she looked like the Sadirian ambassador they had hoped she would become.

  Shaking her head, she dismissed the screen and pointed the station’s scanners at the patch of clouds that held her attention. The vid-screen in the band gave her a magnified view.

  There it was again—light reflecting off something metal. Something rising out of the planet’s atmosphere.

  General Serath had departed on the Arbiter—the lead vessel in the Coalition’s fleet—only hours ago. There were no Coalition-approved spaceships on the planet. The vessel approaching—and she was sure it was approaching—wasn’t following protocol.

  Not that anything about this assignment had followed protocol.

  The Arbiter hadn’t even checked in with her while it was in orbit. If it hadn’t been for the monthly contact with the planetary liaison, she would think she had been forgotten. Observers normally were only assigned a planet for six months. She’d been listening to Earth for two years.

  After finding Brendan, she wasn’t eager to be reassigned. That was why she had waited for the Arbiter to contact her. When the Arbiter left orbit, she was confused but relieved. At least she would have a chance to tell Brendan goodbye. Glancing back at the approaching sliver of light, she wondered if that “goodbye” would be more permanent than she originally anticipated.

  “T5-Alpha, I need an ID on the vessel currently approaching the station.”

  After a brief delay, the station’s interface sounded through the communications output of her control-band, level and emotionless.

  “No vessels are on approach.”

  “What?” Kira looked back out t
he viewport that followed the curve of the small, disc-shaped station. The ship would reach them in minutes. It wasn’t even cloaked.

  Wait, the station was cloaked. How did they even know where she was?

  For a moment, she considered that it was a coincidence. An unknown ship was departing from Earth and just happened to be on a direct collision course for the invisible station.

  Unlikely.

  “I have visual contact. Scan again.”

  The delay was a bit longer, but the interface came back with, “No vessels detected.”

  Something had to be wrong with the scanners, but she didn’t have time to run a full diagnostic check. If the station wasn’t detecting a threat, it wouldn’t defend itself—or her. Not without her help.

  The approaching ship was close enough that she could make out its shape—a small equilateral triangle getting bigger by the moment. Adrenaline spiked through her system.

  “It’s the Tau Ceti!” Kira jumped to her feet and ran toward command, hunching over to stay clear of the low ceilings while shouting orders to the interface. “Raise shields. Send a distress call to the Arbiter.”

  “Shields inactive. Communications are offline.” The station made the statements casually, as if it wasn’t reciting their death sentences.

  “By whose order?”

  “Access code 471-PLT-113894—planetary liaison. Earth designation Todd Simms.”

  Kira’s fingers were slick with perspiration as she climbed the ladder that led to the upper deck. Coincidence was no longer a possibility.

  The Arbiter’s communications with the Coalition had been logged with the station while it was in orbit. She knew that the planetary liaison had been taken into custody. What she didn’t know was why his codes hadn’t been stripped or who was using them.

  The command deck was the most open and spacious part of the station, with a lowered circular area surrounded by monitors facing its center. One person standing in the middle of the circle could see everything, commanding the station as necessary. Kira ran to the center of the space. A chill swept through her as she looked around.

 

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