Aeon War: Alien Menage Romance (Sensual Abduction Series Book 3)
Page 7
“Hello, love,” Henry said.
THE END
You've enjoyed the Sensual Abduction story, and now it's time for it to end. Aeon End is the fourth and final entry into the steamy series, where Sarah and her alien lover Gar fight to end the Aeon terror once and for all, while striving to keep the passion between them burning.
Next Book in Sensual Abduction Series
Aeon Ending
Sensual Abduction Series Book 4
By:
Amelia Wilson
Blurb
Sarah has done it. She’s ended the Aeon threat, or has she?
Sending the crystal into the pit of the Aeon weapon was supposed to end the war, but Sarah finds herself prisoner of Henry, the Aeon who was there when she was first abducted, the alien who forced her to love him, and fell for her himself.
After escaping from Henry the first time, Sarah fell for another alien named Gar. A gray skinned Zaytarian who was good and strong and loved her back. He’s on the hunt for Sarah, determined to get to her and save her from Henry’s clutches no matter the cost. When the chance to find Sarah her takes Gar and his companions to a hostile asteroid home to a species of undead androids, the chances of the two lover’s meeting anywhere other than the afterlife become slim.
Will Sarah escape the deranged alien Henry? And can Gar survive long enough to be reunited with his love? The answers are contained within Sensual Abduction Book 4: Aeon End, the exciting conclusion to the Sensual Abduction series.
Chapter One
Sarah Ellison had gotten used to the dark. It was all she had known since being taken aboard Henry’s ship. No, that wasn't quite right, she was sure to remind herself, whenever she thought about being taken aboard. He hadn’t taken her, not again, not like before, back on Earth, so long ago, or at least it felt like years and years, but was better measured in months.
No, the alien had not abducted her. She had boarded his ship.
Sarah felt like an idiot, like a fly which lands willing at the center of a spider’s web, dismayed by the fact that it can no longer take off, it’s twitching legs stuck to the glue like strands of webbing as the spider crept close and closer, ready to pounce upon its new victim.
The young woman from Earth was like the fly. Stuck in a web she had landed on. The only problem was the dark, the pitch black nothingness that swallowed her up. Was the spider with her? Was it creeping closer?
When she had stepped onto the ship days (she was pretty sure) ago, she had been shocked to see Henry. Her mouth had fallen open, and words had begun to form in her brain, a brain which attempted to spur her mouth into speech, her tongue feeling fat and heavy and dumb, and before she had managed to say anything, and with Fib, the female Zaytarian who had followed her to a massive volcano to end the madness once and for all tensing and preparing to fight, Henry had lifted his arm and pointed a gun at her. Even as he fired, she had said nothing. A bright blue flash of light and Sarah saw no more. When she woke, just the darkness.
Her body had ached at first, and every time she had tried to stand she could not, her head pounding and swimming and buzzing all at once. But eventually she felt better, and she had pushed off from the hard ground on which she had lay, cold like metal with a bit of reverb flowing through it, making Sarah think she was still upon a ship in space, the vibrations the engines hurtling them forward. Towards what, she did not know.
The room was small, she had found one wall quickly and then had walked to her left, trailing her fingertips against the cool hard surface she had found. The room was circular, she never found a corner, but she had to keep stepping away from the wall lest she walk right into it. She felt nothing on the wall as she walked, no panel full of buttons, no doorway, and as she circled around against and again she moved her hands up and down, trying to reach something, anything, near the ceiling or the floor. There was nothing for her to feel.
She had to pee. She was thirsty. She was hungry. Not a peep from Henry. That bastard, the thought of him brought a raw anger to her heart, hot tears burning her eyes. If she saw him again, she would kill him. She was going to kill that psychic asshole, for everything he had done to her.
And, of course, she thought of Gar. She hoped he was okay. He had been grievously injured the last she had seen him, evacuated from their mission early in an attempt to save his life. Now where was he? Was he alive? And if he was, did he know she had not returned from the Aeon home world? She was off of it, she was sure of that, thanks to the shaking floor, but she had not returned, not to her lover.
All of these thoughts and emotions swirled through her as hours turned to days. Then, finally, light.
A panel in the wall slid up. Henry was there. Beyond, Sarah could hear someone screaming. Fib. And then the door slammed shut and she could hear her no more, and she could see nothing, not until a dim blue light shone from above. Dim as it was Sarah had to shield her eyes to look up and see that it was set in a ceiling ten feet above her head. She looked to Henry.
“You asshole,” she said.
Henry shook his head softly, the two antennae there bobbing back and forth. Henry didn’t speak with his mouth, he never had, instead when Sarah heard his reply it was one sent directly to her brain.
“That does not sound like gratitude,” the alien said.
Sarah scoffed audibly. “Is that what you expect? Gratitude? For what?”
“Saving your life,” Henry said. His name was not Henry, not really, an alien would not have such a mundane name, but the Aeon’s had no names, since they spoke telepathically they simply all felt a bit different, and the speaker could always speak directly to whomever they wanted, and so names had not been needed. Henry was a name from Sarah’s youth, an old friend, and a name which has seemed to fit the blue skinned alien when she had first met him.
She had fallen for him quickly, and they had made love on the ship that had abducted her from Earth, all for a crystal she wore on a fine chain around her neck. That crystal was no more, having been cast into a volcano to end the threat the Aeon species represented to the galaxy at large.
And Sarah had come to find that the feelings she thought she had felt for Henry had been implanted in her mind, put there by the alien himself. She had slept with him. He had forced her to.
Anger bubbled up within her once more, and she flew forward.
ZAP!
Halfway across the small room Sarah hit...something. Something she could not see, a forcefield which buzzed with current that she heard right before she felt it, sending shocks through her body and throwing her back against the rounded wall.
“Please, do not do this,” Henry said. He was holding a box in one hand, and so he used the other to gesture with. “You are a guest here. I gave you time to cool off. You are hungry, and thirsty, and I can make you comfortable. I did save you, even after you destroyed my planet. It’s gone now, do you understand? If anyone knew I had you here, they would kill both of us. I love you, Sarah from Earth. That is why I came for you.”
“I don’t love you,” the girl snarled from the floor.
“You did.”
“I did not. You forced me to.”
The antennae on the alien’s head waved in a way that Sarah remembered represented laughter. Then Henry shook his head.
“Is that what they told you? Is that what he told you? Your new lover? Is that how he took you from me? I did no such thing. It is against a deep moral code my people have to do something like that. We understand the power we could possess, and we work to never possess it.”
Sarah didn’t believe Henry, not for a minute.
“You lie,” she told him.
Henry seemed to respect the fact that he was not going to change her mind. And how could he, he had kept her shut in the dark for two and a half days without light, or food, or water, or a place to relieve herself. He was rectifying that now, however.
Sarah wondered if they were truly alone, Henry had made it seem that way, as though he was the only Aeon on the
ship, but Sarah wasn’t convinced. She had heard Fib screaming. Surely someone was torturing her. Of course her life had been like a big budget science fiction film lately, she had seen many wondrous things. There could be a robot, or a machine doing the dirty work for Henry.
“This light will stay on. And…” he added as he waved his hand, and a whirring from behind Sarah made her turn, as she saw a box slide out from the wall, a box she had been unable to feel the edges of in her inspections. Inside was a toilet and a shower head.
“Also, here is some food. Every time that door opens a shield will keep you from me. I will bring more, every day. Please don’t test the shield, I don’t want to see you hurt. I want to earn your trust back.”
Sarah shook her head. “You never had my trust,” she said.
Henry looked sad at that, his antennae drooping. But he did not send a response to her mind. Instead he bent and placed the box on the floor, and then turned, the door sliding open behind him. Sarah could hear Fib screaming once more.
“What are you doing to my friend?” Sarah asked.
“She is our enemy,” Henry said simply, and then he stepped out, and the door slid shut behind him.
Sarah waited a moment, not wanting to seem too eager to any cameras in her room, and then she stood and hurried to the box, the shield in the center of the room gone. She knelt down and opened the box, pulling out warm bread that was a pleasant purple color, and a meat salad of some sort, dark red and with the texture of ham salad. It was salty and delicious, and Sarah ate it by spreading it upon the bread.
Exploring the small shower cube at the back of the room revealed a faucet and a cup, and Sara drank water that way. Stepping out of the cube there was another hum and a bed slid out from the wall.
Sarah ignored it. She had to eat and drink and use the restroom. She didn’t have to use Henry’s bed. She lay instead on the hard floor, and folded her hands beneath her head. She hoped he could see her. She would never bend to his will, she wouldn’t even let him force her. Not again.
Chapter Two
Gar tried to stand, but his head swam and his vision grew dim and he lay back down quickly, worried that he was going to pass out.
“You can’t push yourself like that,” A voice said from the doorway. Gar turned his head to look. It was Char, the younger of the two. He liked to remind Gar of that, and he smiled. “You’re getting old,” he said.
“I’ll always be able to kick your ass, no matter my age,” Gar said in their guttural language, smiling but then wiping it quickly from his face. He couldn’t joke, not a time like the one he found himself in. Sarah. She was in danger, and none of his people seemed to be taking it seriously.
“You won’t be getting out of that bed for at least a week,” Char said. “Even you.”
“I have to save her,” Gar said. “They took her. He took her. I know he did. The one she calls Henry. He’s behind this, I can feel it. They took her, and I have to save her.”
Char nodded, much to Gar’s surprise. “I know,” he said, and then he stepped back into the hall for a moment and returned, pushing a hovering chair before him. “That’s why I’m getting you out of here. You can heal in space.”
“You’re getting me out of here?” Gar asked a bit stupidly. Had he heard right or was the many doses of medication coursing through his broken and battered body messing with him? Just last night he thought he had seen a bright orange Helephant riding a rocket bike around his room and singing songs from his childhood.
“They want to save her. They do. Her and Fib both, but you know how long it takes our military to do anything. They’re having meeting after meeting. Meanwhile, they could be hurting them.”
“And so we’re going,” Gar said, and he did allow himself a smile then, as Char nodded.
Char pushed the floating chair over to the bed and then helped Gar into it, leaving him connected to the wires and machinery by the bed until he was settled. As soon as they took those things off the hospital staff would be alerted.
Gar wrapped his powerful hand around the cords, all in one go, and looked to Char. “Ready?” he asked.
“Ready,” the younger Zaytarian said, nodding his head. Gar pulled the wires, and then Char was pushing the chair, heading for the door.
In the halls they turned this way and that way, Char having walked them for half an hour before arriving at Gar’s room, learning the quickest possible path out of the building with the least chance of running into a nurse or doctor or anyone else.
“Hey!” a voice called out to them as they neared the exit, but Char didn’t slow the chair, and neither of the aliens turned. The door slid upwards as they approached, and then Gar was shielding his eyes against the bright sun, and Char was turning to the left.
With a roar of its engine a six wheeled vehicle screeched to a stop in front of them, and a door on the side slid open.
“Come on!” a female Zaytarian said, her skin blueish-green, her hair as white as snow. She came out of the open side door and helped guide the floating chair into the spacious back, climbing back in after Gar as Char opened another door further up so he could sit beside the driver, who was a Zaytarian male with pale red skin and yellow eyes.
“I’m Yelia,” the female said to Gar as the tires screamed against the pavement once more and then caught, the vehicle shooting forward. “Fib is my sister.”
“We’ll save her,” Gar said, nodding his head. “Thank you for this.”
Yelia didn’t say more, she just nodded solemnly.
Char turned in the seat ahead to look at Gar. “This is Bo,” he said, slapping the beeft red skinned driver. He looked powerful, but he had let himself go. His gut almost touched the steering wheel as he left the area of the hospital and entered into the city beyond. “Ex military, does some flying still. He’s going to get us up there.”
“That’s what I’m good at!” Bo said with a smile upon his face. “You won’t find a better driver.”
And with that, he hiccuped.
“Is he drunk?” Gar asked.
Char laughed. “He usually is,” the younger male said. “You get used to it. Really, there’s not a better flyer in the galaxy.”
“If you say so,” Gar said, clearly unconvinced.
“I got a nice little ship for us,” Bo said over his shoulder as he sped through the streets, going fast to stay ahead of any pursuers from the hospital (though there probably weren’t any. It’s not as though Gar was a prisoner) but slow enough not to get pulled over by local law enforcement. “I work out of a small airfield up North. Attracts little attention from anyone. We can figure everything out there before we go.”
“Nothing to figure out,” Gar said as he busied himself with pulling a needle from the skin of his arm. It had been feeding him with medicine, the tube being left behind in the hospital room when he had pulled everything out of him, but the needle was stubborn, and Gar had to try at it, gritting his teeth until it finally popped free. We get a ship, we go up, we find them, and bring them home.”
“We have no idea where they could be,” Char reminded him. “It’s going to be a little more than that.”
Gar nodded and said no more. He had to play this smart. Sarah’s life depended on it.
They left the city behind before long and drove along a lonely road that sliced through woods where the trees leaves were blue and yellow. Another hour or so and they were pulling off of the main road and onto a small dirt path with ruts that the tires of the van like vehicle fit snugly into.
The airfield was small, three long buildings at one end and a paved square to launch from. There was even an old fashioned length of runway though Gar figured nothing had been flown that needed speed to take off or space to de-accelerate when landing for decades.
They parked next to one of the buildings, the smallest of the three, and Char placed a guiding hand on the hover chair as Yelia pushed Gar out of the vehicle from behind.
“Come on in,” Bo said, opening a door in the si
de of the building. Inside they saw that the building was a hanger, as they had all guessed, through it was mostly empty. There was space for a number of ships, but only one sat inside, parked in the middle, a squat and ugly thing with multi colored panels about the body, no doubt hasty repairs. Bo waved them on and they followed, Yelia still pushing Gar. Near the back fo the building was another door, this one leading into a small office with a desk and a chair, and another door which opened up to a small living quarters. “Bathroom there,” Bo said, pointing to yet another door.
The living quarters were sparse, with a bed along one wall, a couch along another, and a table in the middle of the room. It suited Gar, he didn't plan on staying long.
“Well,” he said, looking around the room, “let’s get to work.”
About The Author
Amelia Wilson has dedicated her life to writing. She is a firm believer in the power of love to conquer all, and her works reflect this belief. Her paranormal romances are known for their love stories, action and suspense. She creates immersive worlds that are rich in detail and full of emotion.
Amelia can be contacted at her Facebook page or through her newsletter.
http://www.ameliawilsonauthor.com/
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