by Jade Allen
Araimeer grinned at her, and it made his plain face charmingly handsome. He leaned forward slightly, and Allie had to fight the urge to plunge her hands into his hair. “Sounds like I would like this guy. I love cheery humans.”
“You love all humans,” Viseer said bitterly. He was bent back over the jumble of parts, tinkering away with an unseen tool.
Araimeer chuckled. “He’s good to have in a crisis, because he works when he panics.” His voice was as soft as his gaze, and Allie could see they’d been partners for a long time. His hand was right next to hers; she couldn’t resist her urges any longer, and she brushed her fingers up against his. There was a flare of energy between them, and he swung his face toward her, his lips dangerously close to hers.
He smiled. “It’s weird to say it’s nice to be stuck with someone, but…I think it’ll be nice to be stuck with you for a while.”
Allie giggled, then swore at herself internally. What is wrong with you? But she really couldn’t help it— and worse, she was curious despite herself; her Navy training had taught her to push past her discomfort to get to the meatier parts of life, and Allie wasn’t willing to stay on the sea floor with two incredibly humanoid aliens without asking a few questions first—even if one did seem oddly drawn to her.
“So, why did you guys come down here in the first place?”
“We could ask you the same thing,” Viseer grumbled from his place at the teleporter.
Allie looked at him bemusedly; he was so much more wound up than Araimeer. How did they work together on missions? She decided to try to mollify him to speed up her questioning. “I’ll tell you what I was doing,” she said.
Araimeer’s face lit up with joy, and Allie felt a sudden rush of warmth for him. “Oh, tell us! Tell us!”
She grinned and slipped her hand into his, intertwining their fingers as she spoke. It was far more comforting than it should have been, but she forced herself to ignore how surreal the situation was. “My ship sent me down to look for an old galleon—a ship from the Spanish Armada—called the Isadora. It probably has a ton of gold on it, or some rare spices, or—“
“An ancient artifact?”
Allie looked at Viseer, who was standing and staring at her now, his brown eyes narrowed but his expression far more open. “Yeah…or an ancient artifact.”
Araimeer looked stunned, but Viseer smiled at her genuinely for the first time since they’d met. It made his hawkish face striking, and his gaze was almost hungry. Where did that come from? “Well, what do you know? Maybe we’re not so different after all.”
Allie’s heart started to race. “What do you mean?”
“We’re down here looking for an artifact, too,” Araimeer said. “And we can’t leave until we get it.”
“What is it?”
Araimeer sighed. “It’s a chunk of a rare element that is, essentially, concentrated electricity.”
Allie blinked and then shook her head in disbelief. “That doesn’t sound possible.”
Viseer scoffed. “You’re talking to two alien travelers at the bottom of the ocean who rescued you from a murderous mutant jellyfish, and you’re having trouble believing electricity can be concentrated into something tangible?”
Allie blushed, and Araimeer laughed in surprise at Viseer’s bluntness. “I guess you’re right, but why would you even need that?”
“Our job is to jump around the galaxy and retrieve artifacts our people lent to one lifeform or another. Our artifacts are sought after because of their nature, though we can use them far better than humans. We’re actually partially electric,” Araimeer told her. He picked up a slim silver tool that looked like a wand and tapped it against the unfinished teleporter; a golden spark shot from the tip of the instrument to the blocky engine of the machine, and it emitted a short buzz that set Allie’s teeth on edge. “That’s only a little example of what we can do with any conductive material. But with the lightening stone, we’re far more powerful.”
“It’s like an enhancement,” Viseer supplied, and he looked so annoyed she almost laughed; Allie guessed he didn’t like sharing information with humans. “We’re at our weakest right now, which is why we appear so human. With the stone, we’re less humanoid and we can manipulate any form of electricity in any condition.”
Allie gaped at him. “Any amount of electricity?
Viseer looked thoughtful. “I think humans had a figure called Zeus who could throw lightning bolts, right? It’s like that.”
“What?” Allie squeaked, her heart in her throat. What would happen if they got out into open water?
Araimeer saw her panic and poked Viseer’s shoulder to silence him. “It’s not what you’re thinking! We can control it completely. It’s not all that scary. We’re not monsters or anything. We’re more like…”
“Gods,” Allie finished for him, and her voice was a whisper. Viseer and Araimeer exchanged a long look; Finally, Viseer closed his eyes and sighed, while Araimeer bit his lip and slid deep into thought. Suddenly, Allie had the feeling that this wasn’t the first time a human had come to this conclusion. Maybe that was why Viseer was so eager to keep her in the dark. Allie thought about Collin, and how quick he’d been to slip back into a subordinate role when he thought she was upset with him. What would it be like to have every person you met treat you that way? If she felt lonely on the ship sometimes, how must two aliens travelling the galaxies feel?
Her heart swelled with compassion at the same moment her sense of unreality finally settled in. Allie decided that there was one thing to do: move forward. They needed the artifact, and she would help them get it; they’d figure out the rest later. She remembered what Viseer said earlier, about her ship assuming she was dead; she felt a rush of gut-wrenching pain as she thought of Carter’s reaction, but she shoved it away before it could take hold of her.
“So, this artifact. Do you know what it looks like?” Allie got to her feet and started to look at the bowels of the ship, staring into every exposed nook and cranny in case the two aliens had left something behind during their scavenge. “Or where it could be?”
Araimeer stood and looked at Viseer, and there was a pregnant pause. “Yes,” he said finally. His tone made Allie turn toward him, and his expression was pained. “To both questions, actually.”
Allie tugged at her ripped orange diving suit impatiently, looking from one cloaked alien to the other. “Well? What are you waiting for? Let’s get it.”
Araimeer laughed. “Well, thanks for your spunk, Allie. It’s gonna be a little harder than just picking it up.”
“Why?”
Viseer went back to tinkering with the engine, and Araimeer smiled wanly. “It currently belongs to that jellyfish you met earlier.”
Allie stared at him. I can’t believe this. I should have called in sick. “So how the hell are you going to get it back?”
Araimeer walked over to her, and she could see the lines around his eyes in startling clarity. How long had they been without sleep? “We just need to draw it against the dome. It will stun it long enough for one of us to be able to stab through its stomach and rip out the stone—I know,” Araimeer said apologetically at the look of disgust on Allie’s face. “But it’s the only way. We can’t get it to come back, though. It won’t follow the bubbles. The stone made it into some power-hungry beast. It’s only drawn by electricity or nuclear energy, apparently.”
Allie looked at Viseer, then back to Araimeer. He saw her train of thought immediately and answered the question before she could form it. “We could try to generate electricity, but we need to activate our electroglands.”
Allie looked at him, mystified. “Electroglands? Glands that produce electricity? Like with the endocrine system?”
“Yes,” Araimeer said, sounding impressed. “It’s hard to get both of our heartrates up for long enough, though. We could try fighting, but that would cause too much damage to our bodies and our surroundings. The only other thing is…”
He sudden
ly stopped talking, and his blue eyes widened in regret. “I don’t want you think I’m suggesting—I didn’t—never mind!”
Allie watched in confusion as Araimeer walked away from her and crouched over the transporter with Viseer, who didn’t move or even acknowledge the other alien. She narrowed her eyes and stepped over the stacks of books until she was behind them, waiting until Araimeer looked up to crouch next to him and smile warmly.
“What is it, Araimeer?”
Araimeer shook his head. “We’re not supposed to mate with humans.” He raised his eyes to hers, and Allie shivered—there was emotion held there that he couldn’t possibly feel after knowing her for so little time.
Allie ignored the quickening of her pulse and sat next to him on the soft soil, feeling the cool sand beneath her diving suit. “Why not?”
“We could hurt you,” he said quietly. “Even kill you.”
Allie heard his words, but all she could focus on was the delicious surge of adrenaline coursing through her body as she watched his strong hands work on the machine. All she could think of was what she’d said earlier that day—she wasn’t feeling challenged by the Navy anymore. She was missing the passion, the rush—the spark. Here was that spark, in spades.
Allie put her hands on Araimeer’s shoulders, and she heard his breath hitch. “Araimeer, I’m going to die down here if you guys don’t do something. I can’t stay down here forever, and by the look of those bags under your eyes, neither can you.”
Araimeer’s eyes bored into hers, and the silence stretched between them for so long that Allie briefly wondered if she should shake him. Her skin tingled with need, but she forced herself to wait, to make him come to her. His eyes dropped to the curve of her lips, and she saw the desire register in his eyes, the hunger that had been plain there since they first met. They were drawn to each other, and it was more than physical; Allie wondered if they’d been pulled together by fate. If every step she’d taken had been leading up to this moment, then what harm could taking this step be? She heard a faint hum, and she shivered as the sound slithered across her skin.
Viseer stood abruptly and spoke without looking at either of them. “I’m finished.”
Araimeer twisted around and looked at the engine, blue eyes moving frantically as they examined the teleporter. “It’s ready for the stone?”
Viseer nodded. “As soon as we can get it.”
Araimeer turned back to Allie and swallowed, hard. She could see him forming excuses, but she could also see him fighting to beat those excuses into the ground; he clenched his fists and groaned, shaking his head of shaggy brown hair in frustration.
“Viseer?”
Viseer sighed. “I think it’s the only way, Araimeer. She’s right. We have to get out of here.”
Araimeer nodded, excitement plain on his face. “But what are we going to do afterward?”
Viseer smiled and turned to Araimeer, his brown eyes twinkling as he started to unclasp his robe. “Oh, we’ll figure something out.”
Araimeer looked surprised, but he laughed softly and watched Viseer’s robe fall to his feet, revealing a slim body built like a swimmer’s—all broad shoulders and narrow waist, muscled thighs and long calves. Allie shivered, her eyes moving down his body to rest between his legs and at the patch of curly black hair surrounding his member.
This is going so fast, she thought, and when she looked back at Araimeer, he was standing and pushing his robe to the sea floor, too. His body was wider, more powerfully built, and a shock of ginger curls surrounded his long, thick shaft. Allie felt a rush of moisture between her legs, and her breath started to quicken.
Araimeer held out a hand. “Come on. We’ll be gentle.”
Viseer was smiling faintly at her as Araimeer began to unzip her suit, peeling it away from her slim shoulders as he pressed gentle kisses into her back. “Are you okay with this?” Viseer asked, and his voice was filled with desire. “Both of us at the same time?”
Allie was taken aback, both by his question and the urgency in his voice. She saw how much he’d been holding himself back from her, then; his grouchiness really had been a front. Araimeer hands were on her hips now, and his lips were brushing across the bare skin of her round ass. She nodded at Viseer, and he moved forward and kissed her, one hand wrapped around the base of his erection as his tongue gently massaged hers.
Allie leaned into the kiss, thrusting her right breast forward into Viseer’s hand as he cupped her flesh and ran his thumb across her nipple. She let out a soft moan and moved his hand away from his shaft, wrapping her own hand around his thickness to gently tug on the base.
Araimeer pulled her to her hands and knees, and Viseer followed, leaning his head back and closing his eyes, his mouth slack with pleasure as Allie stroked him toward his climax. She watched in awe as streaks of gold started to appear on his muscles, flashing in the light of the dome, and she was overcome by how beautiful he was; the next moment, her focus was stolen by the feeling of Araimeer gripping her waist and pressing himself against her slick opening.
Allie gasped and threw her head back, catching a glimpse of Araimeer’s lustful gaze as he thrusted himself inside her from behind, filling her body with a pleasure so intense that her legs weakened. Allie bent forward on her hands, and Araimeer gripped her waist as he thrust against her, his breath coming hard and heavy as her wet walls swallowed his shaft.
Allie gripped Viseer’s shaft more tightly and moved her mouth over the head. Her body felt like a live wire, but the pleasure she felt from being filled by the two aliens was so intense she didn’t think she could stop if she wanted to; the energy she felt from their passion was stoking a flame in her that she thought had been extinguished long ago. She worked her mouth along Viseer’s shaft slowly, watching his reactions as Araimeer screamed in pleasure behind her. The flashes of gold were returning, and the heat in her body seemed to be building to a peak; Araimeer’s nails dug into her ass as he slammed into her, and each thrust came with a dizzying jolt of electricity. Viseer’s eyes were wild, and his hand was gripping the back of her head as he watched her head bob on his shaft.
“Allie!” Araimeer shouted, but it seemed to be coming from far away. Viseer’s breathing was getting far away too, but she could feel the energy welling up in her body as they neared their climaxes. Then both men thrusted into her one final time, and as they emptied themselves, the air in the dome was filled with static energy, and an ear-splitting crack! shot through the air. Allie felt like her heart was beating outside of her chest, but her skin was crackling with energy, too—as the aliens pulled out of her, she was startled to see that her once pale skin was emitting a soft light. Even the veins in her wrists were lit up with a golden tint; Araimeer and Viseer crowded around her to compare their glowing bodies.
“See?” Araimeer said, and Allie looked up to see that his eyes were a striking yellow-gold—and curiously moving, as though the pigment were alive. “We look a little less human now.”
Viseer stood up and helped Allie to her feet, and she tried not to stare too hard at his eyes, which were orange-red, like campfire. His expression was grim, but he seemed a lot more willing to be friendly with her now that he didn’t have to hide part of himself from her. “More dangerous, too. So let us handle the jellyfish when it comes.”
Allie laughed, and she was shocked to find that her voice sounded different to her ears—stronger, rougher. “Why would I try to jump in?” she felt curiosity well up inside her, but it was squashed when she saw something moving toward the dome. She gasped. “The jelly fish!”
The two men turned and ran toward the largest hole in the ship, watching the mutant jellyfish swim toward them, its fang-filled mouth gaping wide open. Allie felt oddly without fear, and she wondered if it had anything to do with the electricity surging through her veins.
“Do you see it?” Viseer was asking.
Araimeer nodded. “Yeah, right below its mouth. It’s glowing so bright I can see it right through the
skin.”
“Think the dome is strong enough to kill it?”
“Probably just stun it,” Araimeer answered. It was one hundred feet away now, and they both sank into crouched positions, readying their bodies for the fight. “It’ll thrash a little bit. Then just phase out, stab through its back—“
Allie’s eyes zeroed in on the jellyfish and the small spot of gold where the artifact had been embedded in its body, just below its mouth. She felt compelled to drift forward toward the two men, standing just behind their crouched forms and gazing at the monster as it came closer.
“Okay,” Viseer said, grim determination threading his voice. “Ten seconds. It’s almost as big as this damn ship. Maybe we can—“
Viseer’s voice was cut short as a low note filled the dome, like a huge gong had been struck. Allie felt her hands rise into the air, but she wasn’t moving them—what’s moving them? The low note intensified, vibrating every cell and fiber in her body, and the air thickened and started to heat up until it wasn’t breathable any longer. The two aliens turned to Allie, their eyes and mouths wide open with shock.
“Her eyes,” Araimeer said, his voice soft with awe and fear. “Her eyes are glowing.”
Allie felt something shift inside her, like a heavy switch being thrown, and there was a violent popping sound; there was a long, guttural scream, and Viseer and Araimeer turned forward in time to see a chunk of golden material burst forward from the mutant’s mouth when it was mere feet away from the dome. It hung suspended in the air for a moment, and Allie could see the vibrations of the note shaking the stone clean of jellyfish’s innards—then it sailed through the barrier to land right in Allie’s hands.
As soon as her hands closed around the stone, the humming stopped and the air returned to normal—but the scene outside the dome was far less peaceful. Allie collapsed to her knees and fell to her side as the huge creature exploded, sending clear, slimy liquid and a viscous slew of organs raining over the dome. Viseer and Araimeer crowded around Allie again, murmuring in hushed, panicked tones as they piled a robe underneath her head. All she could hear was the steady sound of their voices; none of the words were clearly audible at all.