by Iris Astres
The Body House:
ALIEN TERRAIN
Iris Astres
www.loose-id.com
The Body House: Alien Terrain
Copyright © April 2013 by Iris Astres
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eISBN 9781623003173
Editor: Rory Olsen
Cover Artist: Dar Albert
Published in the United States of America
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This e-book is a work of fiction. While reference might be made to actual historical events or existing locations, the names, characters, places and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
Warning
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Dedication
To Christopher—A man who’s always known the power of the pancake.
Acknowledgment
Thanks to my amazing cheerleading squad: Terri, Chuck, Sabine, Jenny, Cheryl, Katya, Lieza, Matt, and Christopher and Oliver.
Chapter One
The smell of bacon took the edge off Jane’s sense of disaster. Enough to make her think the day might go as planned. She stared into the waves of heat that rose up from the skillet and coached herself one final time. Just walk away and don’t look back. Good-bye Rick. Good-bye marriage. Hello brand-new life.
“You sure about that bacon, Janey?” Her husband grabbed a handful of her belly, jiggled it, and let it go. “Pig’s the universal sign for fat, you know.”
“Ha-ha,” said Jane. She watched while Rick poured out some coffee, then sat down, smirking at her from his chair. The stomach grabbing was her least favorite example of his teasing, but there was no point saying anything about it. He’d only swear he liked her chubby, which was probably true. She made a plate for him and set it down, taking her place opposite the man she’d married.
If she left him today, this was the end. Their last breakfast together, the last words they’d ever say. Her last look into Rick Bard’s face. Five years ago, when he’d proposed, she thought she’d hit the jackpot. What a cutie he had been—so sweet and shy.
The cute part had been true enough. She still liked men with gangly, boyish looks. But as for sweet and shy, well, there she might have missed the mark with her assessment. Sweet turned out to be the rosy, love-struck version of Rick’s personality. Five years of experience had shown her he was only sweet when everyone agreed with him. If not, he was childish and sulky, prone to snipes and silences that put a halt on any real communication.
The shy part was still true, but that timidity was souring a little too. Desperate for approval, Rick had turned into a follower. Which might not be so bad if there were better people in these parts that he could follow.
“I need you to stay out of the garage today.”
Those words not only stopped Jane’s thoughts, they stopped her heart for half a second. She took a long, slow sip of coffee, loosening up her throat. “Why’s that?”
“No big deal. Just more work than the boys can handle in the shop.”
Rick was a bad liar. Every time he tried it, he just hunched and fidgeted and made up shit no one believed. Jane knew there wasn’t any extra work in the garage. She also knew her presence there would not be a distraction. Something else was going on.
She got up, grabbed the coffeepot, and studied his expression while she poured into her mug. “I’ll need the car,” she said. “I have to go to Crackerjack’s or we’ll be out of milk and bread by supper. We’re also damn near out of beer.”
“Nothing’s stopping you from doing that. I pulled the car out for you last night. Parked it round the back.”
“How am I supposed to get out back and not go into the garage?”
He tilted his face up at her. “You go around the side.”
Jane put the coffeepot back in its cradle and started thinking fast. Did Rick know she was leaving? Was that possible? Why else would he be doing this to her? He knew she couldn’t stand to walk through all those weeds.
Rick’s chair moved on the tile and she tensed. He put his arm around her, his fingers wriggling, spiderlike, over her skin. Jane jerked away and whimpered—she just couldn’t help herself.
“Come on.” He pulled her close. “It’s cold as hell out there at night. The bugs are dead. You won’t get crawled on, scaredy-cat.”
He went to the door and grabbed his coat. “Get extra beer,” he said. “Enough to fill that second fridge. And make a pot of chili and some cornbread.”
“Are we having a party?” Jane’s stomach sank a little lower. She glanced up at her husband, who had that weird grin on his face, the one he wore when he was covering his nerves with fake enthusiasm.
“Dancer’s coming over with the guys,” he said. “He wants to make Rick’s Body Shop the Earth First headquarters for all of Southwest Outlands. That’s awesome, right?”
Just great. If Jane had wanted one last reason, there it was. No better motivation for her absence than Bill Dancer’s presence in their life.
She took Rick’s plate to the sink, washed the yolk away before it could congeal.
“You still going out to look at that old Ford today?”
Rick grunted an affirmative, got his cap on, and pulled at the door. “Jake’s coming with me but the other guys will be around.”
“What time do you want dinner?”
The screen door slammed behind Rick as he called “sundown” over his shoulder. She watched him walk across the dirt and gravel to the barn.
“’Bye, Rick,” she said. And that was it. By sundown she’d be gone.
But she’d still make the chili for him.
Acting normal was important. Keeping busy was too. Jane pulled her biggest pot down from the rack and started dicing onions. Three more hours, then she’d use the bribe of turkey-bacon clubs to occupy the rest of the mechanics while she got into her car and disappeared. Not a moment too soon if Earth First was on its way.
Earth Firsters made her skin crawl.
They called themselves protectors of the planet on a sacred mission to rid Earth of so-called alien invaders. A threat existing largely in their heads, so far as Jane could see. Four years ago no one had ever heard of a planet called Backus. Most people would still go a whole lifetime without setting eyes on a real Bod. The interplanetary visitors had come to Earth to work in Body Houses—alien brothels where women could hand over money in exchange for screaming orgasms. Hardly grounds for all the hatred aimed against the men.
If anyone asked for Jane’s opinion, which didn’t ever happen, she’d say she’d shoot herself before she paid a man to stick his dick into her. B
ut hell, if that was what these women were into, she was damned if she could see the harm. Men had been sleeping with strangers for money since the dawn of time. How Earth Firsters managed to act scandalized that women did it too was beyond her.
Of course, Bill Dancer’s talk of sexual vampirism, mind control, and imminent world domination didn’t do too much to calm anyone down. She’d heard that madman talk a few times now. Watched while Rick and his buddies tipped beer bottles back and grumbled their assent.
Dancer was a psycho, but that didn’t mean he couldn’t captivate a crowd. He knew just how to package things for Outland men—all of them too bored to dream up better days without someone to show the way. And so he showed them viciousness and called it bravery. He touted ignorance as a great source of pride. In just a few weeks he’d convinced them it was their great mission to go out and kidnap aliens. Tie them up. Beat them. Mutilate and kill them. “This is the first step,” he told them. “Later we’ll blow up those brothels—take the fuckers out in one fell swoop.”
Jane finished with the onions, turned the heat on underneath the pot, and threw them in. On her way back from the pantry, she stopped, staring out toward the old converted barn.
“Don’t go in there,” Rick had said.
She got some ground beef out of the fridge, opened up the canned tomatoes. Every fifty seconds her gaze drifted back toward the window.
Don’t go in there.
This was where she’d stood that night. The house had been dark and she’d been cold in just her nightgown, but she’d watched. She’d made herself bear witness to it all. They’d dragged the broken body out of the garage. Already dead. She knew that right away. His limbs had sprawled in ways they wouldn’t have if he’d still been alive. Two of the boys had tossed him like a sack of dung into the back of Dancer’s truck. After that, they’d laughed and spit and slapped each other on the back.
Over all the weeks that followed, Jane had heard them whisper to each other. Sound carried in the drafty, old garage. Each trip she made out there brought more than she wanted to know. What they’d done. What they’d do the next time.
Don’t go in there.
Was it happening again? Was there a living, breathing man out there, waiting to be butchered like the other one?
Jane turned the heat off underneath the pot. A patch of sunlight hit the countertop, and she leaned into it, face buried in her hands. What had happened to her life? Christ Jesus, what the hell was happening to the world?
Chapter Two
Breathe. Raj focused on the next slow breath, the easing of his aching muscles, and the sharpening of his senses. He was alone. The men had gone and left his temporary prison empty. Now was the time to pool what was left of his stamina and see if there was some way to survive.
The beating he’d received had been severe. With niggling curiosity he tried again to name the thing they’d used to bring him down so quickly. A plank of wood? Some iron gardening tool? Whatever it had been, it was surprisingly effective. The following cascade of boots was relegated to his dimmest memory. And now there was a rope around his neck, the length just long enough to keep him raised up on the balls of his feet, muscles tense and cramping.
As a second option, he could just relax and let the rope around his neck keep him from breathing. Neither was particularly pleasant, and so for the moment he was alternating back and forth between the two. To distract himself from that grim exercise, he worked against the cord that kept his hands behind his back.
In the temple where he’d grown up, Raj had learned transcendence of the body. He’d been an able student, his character well suited to the principles of timeless vision. Now that the adrenaline of the attack had dissipated, he worked to calm his mind, preparing for an honorable death.
From what he’d understood, that death would come from blood loss after a crude sexual mutilation. Not the death he’d hoped for, obviously. Certainly he would prefer not to leave this world surrounded by the unpleasant men he’d encountered on that deserted highway. But if this was his fate, Raj knew that he could meet it bravely.
On the other hand, he thought with an experimental tug against the cord, if he could free himself and fight, that would be infinitely better.
The light was dim wherever he was, and one of his eyes was swollen shut, but with what vision he had left, he examined his surroundings for a possible escape. The beam that held the rope around his throat was at least fifteen feet above his head. No chance of swinging himself up that high. He’d have to climb it. Did he have the strength? He rose up high enough to draw a slow, deep breath. Miraculously only one or two of his ribs felt seriously injured. He was also troubled by great pain in his right knee. The rest of him could still be counted on.
Raj lowered his body and waited for the blood and strength to come back to his limbs, so he could concentrate on freeing up his hands.
A sound behind him stopped him cold. He waited. Then he turned and looked.
It was a woman. She was coming toward him at a frantic pace. In her hands he saw the bulk of a metallic object and the gleam of something sharp.
“Quiet.” She was right beside him. A hand pressed to his mouth, the word a warm vibration on his skin. “I can get you out of here, but only if we’re fast.” The metal object she’d been carrying was a stool. She knelt on it, rising quickly to her feet.
Raj didn’t like it. Her position was precarious in half-a-dozen ways. The stool was swaying underneath her, and the metal grated on the concrete, loud enough for someone else to hear.
He turned to her, his lips a fraction of an inch from her rigid body. Above her waistband a smooth patch of skin appeared. Raj took a long breath, senses waking at her presence. Her scent was fresh without a hint of sweetness, like a garden with no bloom. She smelled of leaf and sunshine on tilled earth, but underneath that verdant odor there was fear. Her heart was pounding. Her breathing ragged. And for the first time since he could remember, Raj was frightened too. Stop this. Run to safety. He mouthed the words against her skin.
Then the rope snapped and Raj fell hard to the ground.
The woman scrambled down beside him, crawling forward on her knees. She untangled the makeshift noose and started sawing at the cord, her mouth close to his cheek. “I’m not going to ask if you can walk because you have to. I haven’t got the strength to carry you. Nod your head. I want to see that you can follow me.”
His wrists were free. Raj struggled to his knees. She leaned away. He felt her strength of will reach out to him. A warrior. Unfaltering. He smiled inwardly at his surprising luck. There was no better ally than an angry woman.
Raj got one foot beneath him. That sharp pain in his right knee almost brought him down again. The left was better, and he lurched upright. For his reward, her hand closed on his arm and pulled. He let her urgency flow through him. He used the pain as well. It was worse than imagined, so pervasive that he barely even limped, no longer certain which part of his body he should favor.
She pulled him through a doorway into open air and motioned to the back of a blue car. “It’ll have to be the trunk.” Again the urgent whisper, this time with her soft breasts brushing his side. He caught the fleshy scent of human breath and her crisp smell like winter turning into spring. Raj, who hated narrow spaces, doubled his broken body into the ill-smelling darkness she was offering.
A sheet of steel closed with an icy thud over his head. He listened while another heavy door opened and slammed. The engine roared to life.
Ruts and grooves of unpaved road slammed him painfully into the dark unknown. But his consciousness was clear and pleased. The woman had been very good. In his mind he heard her last words spoken in a choked and lovely whisper that still tingled just under his skin.
“It won’t be long.”
* * * *
The good thing about being plump and plain was that the world was always happy to ignore you. Somehow Jane had navigated the sedan along the narrow, weed-strewn passage separating the gara
ge from Rick’s new office trailer. None of the boys stopped chewing long enough to glance her way.
With eyes fixed on the road ahead, Jane still sent up a smoke screen of false thoughts. Just another boring trip to Crackerjack’s. Running out to pick up beer again.
When she got to the gate, she headed north, the way she always did. The wounded stranger in her trunk might not appreciate the added twenty minutes, but it was a lot better than tipping those boys off and sending someone speeding after them.
No one followed her.
Ten miles south of Nordhup, Jane veered right into the narrow stretch of dirt that circled the old power plant. Her tires kicked up clouds of dust that sifted through the windows, the dry dirt smell a heartening reminder of the other times she’d made the trip.
For almost six weeks, she’d been doubling back along this road. Each time she’d stored up more supplies. Now she had the hideout stocked. Almost cozy in its way. Food and drink had been the easiest to get. All she had to do was fill her trunk at Crackerjack’s and head home via this deserted detour. On one of those trips, she’d also thought to buy some clothes.
Sneaking her own stuff out of the house had been a little harder. Rick hardly had an eagle eye, but sometimes he noticed the weirdest things. She could just hear him asking her where that red vase of hers had gone. And so each tea cup, journal, book of poems slipped into her purse had made her nervous. In the long run, she’d decided not to risk it and left most of it behind.
Jane shook that off and told herself to focus on the worn-out track. What was left of the old road made a wide loop through abandoned fields and finally cut back across Route 68. Not once in all the times she’d done it had she passed a soul out here. Today was just the same.
When she’d made it back onto the highway, five miles south of where she’d started, Jane knew she’d pulled it off. The old sedan sped over ancient asphalt. Fifteen minutes later she was turning in to her new life. A different empty town. A different slice of nowhere.