by Drew Avera
 
   The Alorian Wars
   Books 1-5 Plus a Prequel Novella
   Drew Avera
   Copyright © 2019 by Drew Avera
   All rights reserved.
   www.drewavera.com
   No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.
   Contents
   ORBITAL DECAY
   1. Deis
   2. Crase
   3. Malikea
   4. Crase
   5. Deis
   6. Crase
   7. Malikea
   Epilogue: Neular
   BROKEN WORLDS
   1. Anki
   2. Brendle
   3. Anki
   4. Brendle
   5. Anki
   6. Brendle
   7. Anki
   8. Brendle
   9. Anki
   10. Brendle
   11. Anki
   12. Brendle
   13. Anki
   14. Brendle
   15. Anki
   16. Brendle
   17. Anki
   18. Brendle
   19. Anki
   20. Brendle
   21. Anki
   22. Brendle
   23. Anki
   24. Brendle
   25. Anki
   26. Brendle
   27. Anki
   28. Brendle
   Epilogue: Anki
   DEADLY REFUGE
   1. Crase
   2. Anki
   3. Crase
   4. Anki
   5. Malikea
   6. Crase
   7. Anki
   8. Brendle
   9. Crase
   10. Anki
   11. Crase
   12. Brendle
   13. Anki
   14. Crase
   15. Malikea
   16. Crase
   17. Anki
   18. Crase
   19. Malikea
   20. Anki
   21. Crase
   22. Brendle
   23. Malikea
   24. Crase
   25. Brendle
   26. Crase
   27. Anki
   28. Brendle
   Epilogue: Ilium
   MUTINY RISING
   1. Ilium
   2. Anki
   3. Carista
   4. Ilium
   5. Brendle
   6. Deis
   7. Ilium
   8. Deis
   9. Anki
   10. Ilium
   11. Deis
   12. Brendle
   13. Anki
   14. Ilium
   15. Carista
   16. Deis
   17. Anki
   18. Ilium
   19. Deis
   20. Brendle
   21. Anki
   22. Ilium
   23. Anki
   24. Brendle
   25. Ilium
   Epilogue: T'anoi
   SHADOW EMPIRE
   1. Ilium
   2. Hespha
   3. Anki
   4. Ilium
   5. Brendle
   6. Hespha
   7. Anki
   8. Ilium
   9. Brendle
   10. Hespha
   11. Anki
   12. Ilium
   13. Brendle
   14. Hespha
   15. Anki
   16. Ilium
   17. Brendle
   18. Hespha
   19. Anki
   20. Ilium
   21. Brendle
   22. Anki
   23. Hespha
   24. Ilium
   25. Brendle
   26. Anki
   27. Hespha
   28. Ilium
   29. Brendle
   30. Anki
   31. Hespha
   32. Ilium
   33. Brendle
   34. Anki
   35. Hespha
   36. Ilium
   37. Brendle
   38. Hespha
   39. Ilium
   40. Brendle
   41. Ilium
   42. Hespha
   43. Ilium
   44. Brendle
   45. Ilium
   46. Hespha
   47. Ilium
   48. Brendle
   Epilogue: Hathlene
   REGIME CHANGE
   1. Gen-Taiku
   2. Brendle
   3. Crase
   4. Ilium
   5. Gen-Taiku
   6. Brendle
   7. Crase
   8. Brendle
   9. Gen-Taiku
   10. Brendle
   11. Ilium
   12. Crase
   13. Gen-Taiku
   14. Brendle
   15. Ilium
   16. Crase
   17. Gen-Taiku
   18. Brendle
   19. Ilium
   20. Gen-Taiku
   21. Brendle
   22. Ilium
   23. Crase
   24. Gen-Taiku
   25. Brendle
   26. Ilium
   27. Crase
   28. Gen-Taiku
   29. Brendle
   30. Ilium
   31. Crase
   32. Gen-Taiku
   33. Brendle
   34. Ilium
   35. Crase
   36. Gen-Taiku
   37. Brendle
   38. Crase
   Epilogue: Emperor Direla
   Next in the Alorian Wars
   About Drew Avera
   Also by Drew Avera
   ORBITAL DECAY
   1
   Deis
   The howling echoes of torture reverberated through the corridors of Lechushe’ as Deis’s eyes flittered in and out of consciousness while two guards dragged his dangling body back to his cell. For weeks he endured pain and suffering at the hands of uncaring men seeking financial reward for his eventual slavery. Deis wanted to die, but instead, he held onto hope that one day he and his husband, Malikea, would be saved.
   But hope was a mockery, and he spat on the notion of faith despite his upbringing into the priesthood.
   “Open block eighteen,” one of the guards said, his voice muffled by the mask on his dark face. In Deis’s nightmare, the mask was a representation of the demonic beings torturing him daily. But being awake did little to mar the wicked portrayals which haunted his dreams. These were not men, they were Kelah Wa: demons.
   The clanking sound of metal shifting slowly on rusted rollers filled Deis’s ears. The screeching resonance pierced into his mind as the ritual of his return from the daily meeting ended. Before him lay two more of his kind: his husband, Malikea, and their cellmate, Neular. Malikea looked as battered as Deis felt, but Neular squatted in the corner, fear fixing his face into a grim, pale stupor. He was next, and he knew it.
   The guards dropped Deis unceremoniously to the ground. His head landed hard on the stone floor, the metallic taste in his mouth returning, along with the familiar sense of nausea he’d grown accustomed to through the beatings he endured at the hands of faceless aggressors.
   “Let’s go,” a guard said, as he reached down and grabbed Neular by the arm. The gray man clawed at his oppressor, his voice raspy as he screamed incoherently. Deis looked at his cellmate, their eyes locking momentarily in mutual pain; the one coming and the one going.
   “Just knock him out and let’s go,” the other guard said, handing a baton to the one struggling with his prisoner. “The boss doesn’t care what condition we bring him in anymore. He’s too sickly to be sold, anyhow.”
   The dismissive tone of the man’s voice was not lost on Deis. He knew the chains of slavery awaited them all, or death. It appeared for Neular, it would be the later.
   The dull thud of a baton striking Neular
 filled the small prison cell, further causing the bile in Deis stomach to reach his throat. The sound of the strike was less of a knock and more of a soggy thud and Deis knew they fractured his friend’s skull with the blow. Gods help us, he thought before feeling ashamed to call upon his dying faith.
   “I told you, it’s easier this way,” the guard said as they reached down to grab Neular’s arms and drag his limp body across the stone floor and out of the cell where Deis and Malikea were left in darkness. For the first time in Deis’s life, darkness was a welcomed retreat from reality.
   In the quiet, he felt a hand touch his. He did not have to turn his head to know it was his husband meekly taking hold of him. “How bad was it?”
   Deis fought back a choke as he heard the fragile sound of his lover’s voice. “Worse than yesterday,” he answered, not wanting to embellish, but refusing to lie.
   “Same,“ Malikea replied, his voice sounding more like a groan than anything else.
   “Someone will come for us,” Deis said, breaking his resolve to not lie. Without hope, what do we have?
   “No one knows we’re here,” Malikea said, but not accusingly. At least not to Deis’s ears. Though he doubted either of them had the energy to argue.
   “Maybe a miracle will happen then,” Deis said after a moment, but he noticed a sound coming from Malikea before he could improvise a story. That sound was his husband choking on something and the iron scent of blood wafting in the air around them.
   “Mal,” Deis said, the urgent sound no more than a whispered moan as he struggled to shift his body closer to Malikea. He struggled to turn the other man’s body, to allow an unobstructed airway through which Malikea could breathe, but the man was too heavy. Crying through pain, Deis forced himself onto his knees, trying to leverage as much strength as he could to help his love. “Mal, I’m here, just help me turn you over,” he pleaded as the sharp stone dug into his knees while he fought to roll the choking man. But Malikea was not responsive.
   “Mal!” Deis screamed, his voice cracking as his body strained to lift his husband’s upper body and get him into a position so he could breathe again. Deis cleared Malikea’s throat and squeezed him tightly, trying to support the weight as best he could to keep from dropping him. “Come back to me,” he whispered.
   “I’m not going anywhere,” Malikea croaked. His voice was weak, but present, and Deis let out a sigh of relief as he held his husband in the dark hell they were forced to endure.
   “Thank the gods,” Deis said, lightly kissing the side of Malikea’s face as he rocked back and forth, grimacing from the pain of sharp rock digging into his ashy flesh. “Thank the gods.”
   Malikea lifted a hand to Deis’s, where it sat under his chest and he whispered, “The gods had nothing to do with this.”
   I know, Deis thought, but he couldn’t bring himself to utter the words out loud. “Just rest,” he replied as time ticked slowly on, drawing them closer to eventual death.
   “Deis?”
   “Yes?”
   “I wish we had never come home.”
   Deis drew in a deep breath, having thought the same since their capture but not wanting to say it. There are too many things left unsaid, but I haven’t the energy to vocalize them. “This isn’t home—this is hell.”
   Deis felt Malikea chortle ever so softly. “It is, isn’t it?”
   In the cells around them, Deis heard the crying and wailing of the others captured by their anonymous oppressors. The sounds of women and children suffering caused his heart to beat rapidly and his anger to swell. Despite his weakened state, his capacity for rage grew uninhibited. “We have to get out of here,” he said, his voice low.
   “But no one is coming for us, Deis. We cannot escape unarmed.”
   Deis’s eyes narrowed and the small pinholes in the cell door allowed enough fragmented light to come into the cell for him to make out his husbands face as he looked longingly up at him. ‘We must make our own way,” he replied.
   “How?”
   “We fight when the guards return.”
   “We’ve tried that,” Malikea said, desperation painting his words into a tearful plea.
   We fight until we die, Deis thought coldly, but his husband shivering in his arms drew his attention away from the darkness of his mind. “Are you all right?”
   “I will be,” Malikea answered, “once we get out of here.”
   Deis felt his pride swell as his husband agreed with his undefined plan. “As soon as we hear the footsteps approach,” he said, “get ready to attack the guard closest to you. We may not get another chance.” Deis felt a pain in the back of his head and touched it with a shaky hand, pulling it back warm and sticky.
   “What’s the matter?”
   Deis looked on, wide eyed as the blood oozed down his arm. “I’m bleeding, and I hadn’t noticed until now.”
   Malikea sat up with his own strength and looked at Deis with a worried expression. “How bad?”
   Deis showed his hand to his husband as his vision blurred. “Oh, no,” he said, slumping forward, his head barely missing the floor before Malikea stopped it.
   “Deis, stay with me now,” Malikea said, holding Deis’s head in his hands as blood seeped from a spot just behind where the reddish phoenix tattoo on his head came to an end. The phoenix was a symbol of their people, rising from the ashes of destruction into a new existence and prosperity. An ideal that did not match their current predicament. If anything, they felt closer to extinction than ever before.
   Deis lay motionless, his breathing shallow as Malikea watched over him, his yellow eyes straining to see in the dim lighting of their prison. Malikea hummed a soft tune from their first meeting in the ceremonial court. It was where he first met his betrothed and, despite the arranged marriage, eventually fell in love with him. As was the tradition, they wed in that court as well, but it was the song playing softly on the night of their initial meeting that he now gave a melancholy tone. It was the only thing he found comfort in after their capture. That and the warm touch of his husband when they had the strength to endure another day.
   A tear ran down Malikea’s face as he watched his husband shudder. He knew the pain his love felt, but what were they to do when their oppressors were armed and dangerous? Lechuns were a peaceful people, not reared in the ideals of war. The battlefields of their world were developed by foreigners, traipsing the dirt of their planets with unholy indignity. Blood spilled on their planet was a disgrace to their gods, yet their gods did nothing to protect them. It was enough to make anyone lose faith, much less a man wed to a priest who was raised to uphold the teachings of their faith and display it for the next generation. If a priest was targeted and unprotected by the gods, then what of the faithful they served?
   “Deis?”
   “Yes?”
   “I’m just making sure you are still with me.”
   ”Where would I go?”
   Malikea grimaced as he considered the answer to that question. Death was not what he welcomed, but then, neither were the men holding them captive. It seemed to Malikea that life was beyond their control. He feared their crisis of faith might be to blame. “Why don’t you rest, and I’ll keep watch over you?”
   “And who will keep watch over you, my love?”
   “The gods,” Malikea answered coldly, not allowing himself to believe it because a god who would allow this to happen to them was not benevolent but a traitor to those who loved them.
   “I’m afraid the gods are dead,” Deis said.
   Better them than us, Malikea thought before trying to shake the idea from his head, but it wasn’t going anywhere.
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