Chris nodded and took Sasha’s hand. “Are you sure you don’t want to come with us? There are other human women in our factions. You wouldn't have to be alone with the Aqinas.”
Sasha shook her head, but her eyes already drifted back toward Fritz and the river. “No one is alone among the Aqinas. Everyone knows your thoughts and feelings, and everyone loves you with a pure open love. It’s nothing like the way people live outside the water.”
Chris let her go and turned away. “I guess no one can understand it who hasn’t experienced it for themselves.”
Sasha nodded and took a step back. Her feet touched the water, and the faint light of human comprehension evaporated from her face. She took her place in the line of Aqinas and became part of them again. Chris’s shoulders slumped, and she and Emily moved away from the water.
The black stain rippled out of the water to envelope the Aqinas, and in another moment, they vanished into the foaming turbulence of the river.
Chapter 17
The Ursidrean column crossed the rocky steppes leading back to their own territory. Chris paused on the ridge and laid her hand on Emily’s arm. “This is where we separate.”
Emily stopped. “Do you have to go?”
Chris nodded. “This is the last place we can turn off to enter our own territory, and we’ve been gone too long already. If we wait much longer, I won’t be able to travel at all.”
Emily squeezed her hand. “I wish you didn’t have to go. These weeks we’ve spent together have been so precious to me. You can’t imagine....” She broke off.
Chris gazed into her eyes. “I feel the same way. You don’t know how grateful I am to you for bringing us out here.”
Emily glanced around. “Really? I don’t know why you’re grateful for me dragging you away from your family to stop a war that was never going to start.”
Chris shook her head. “If you hadn’t, our factions wouldn’t be talking peace right now. Because of you, we’ll spend the next hundred years working together to make Angondra a better place for everyone. I know Turk is grateful, too.”
Emily tried to laugh, but she had to swallow the lump in her throat just to talk. “He says he doesn’t want to be Alpha, but now he’s on his way home to take over the negotiations. He’ll be more Alpha than Caleb.”
Chris smiled. “That’s why he’s grateful. He always thought he was happy by himself in the mountains—with me, I mean. But now he has a new sense of purpose. He has more hope for our future, and he’s inspired to lead our people into a new era of peace. I’ve never seen him like this before. He’s a different person.”
“What about you?” Emily asked. “Are you going to be happy in the village, being the Alpha’s wife?”
“I’ll have Marissa to commiserate with,” Chris replied. “And I’ll have the rest of my family, too. It’s you I’m worried about.”
“Me? Why?” Emily asked.
“You’re going back to Harbeiz,” Chris replied. “Faruk will be just as mixed up in politics as Donen. Donen is making him his right-hand man renegotiating the borders between the three factions. You might not see much of him, and he was always unhappy in the city. He loved the mountains as much as Turk loved the forest.”
“He may not have liked the city much,” Emily agreed, “but his heart was always on the border. Now the border means something different. It doesn’t mean war and conflict and destruction. It means cooperation and friendship. Faruk is as excited about the future as the rest of us.” She laughed. “I’m as excited about the future as the rest of us, too.”
“Do you think you’ll see Frieda again?” Chris asked.
“I don’t know,” Emily replied. “But in a way, I found her the way I wanted to. I know where she is, and I know she’s happy and settled there. If I really need to see her and talk to her, I know where to find her.”
“Traveling to Aqinas territory would be a much bigger trip than this one,” Chris told her. “It’s a lot farther away.”
“Going into the water and finding out how the Aqinas live would be a much bigger challenge than traveling there,” Emily replied. “I still don’t understand half of what Fritz and Sasha told us.”
Chris nodded. “It sounds like the water dissolves all the barriers between people we take for granted. They know everything everyone else is thinking and feeling, and there’s nothing to separate anybody from everyone else.” She shivered. “It's sounds scary.”
Emily shrugged. “Sasha said it was wonderful, and they were most insistent that Frieda was happy there. Maybe once you get used to it, it’s better than being separate the way we are. It wouldn't be as lonely, anyway.”
Chris gazed at the horizon. “I like it the way it is. If we weren’t separate, coming together with other people wouldn't be so precious and wonderful.”
Emily touched her arm. “You mean like you and Turk? I understand what you mean.”
“And you, too,” Chris replied. “I wouldn’t give up the connection between you and me for anything.”
Emily gave her a hug. “Me, too.”
Chris took a step back. “Promise me we’ll see each other again. In a few years, when your children get older, you'll come and find me, won't you?”
Emily laid her hand on her cheek. “I promise.”
“Faruk will come to Lycaon territory to negotiate the border with Caleb and Turk,” Chris went on. “You’ll come with him, and we'll spend some time together.”
Emily nodded, but she couldn’t speak with the lump in her throat. Her eyes stung, but she couldn’t stop smiling.
“I know Faruk will take good care of you.” Chris tore herself out of Emily’s arms and took another step away.
Emily raised her hand. “I love you. I’ll see you soon.”
Turk took Chris’s hand, and they headed down the hill. They waved at the corner where the path angled into the trees, and then they were gone. Emily turned back to join the Ursidrean column and found Faruk standing behind her. She took his hand and started walking.
He fell in at her side. “We could go with them. We could spend some time in the village with her and Caleb.”
Emily shook her head. “Let’s go home. We've been gone too long already.”
( The End )
Book 4 – The Alien’s Captive
Prologue
At eleven o’clock on the night of April 24, 2043, astronomers at Lick Observatory in the California Coast Mountains tracked the path of a comet through the atmosphere. To their surprise, it seemed to rise through the atmosphere instead of falling to earth, but they lost sight of it over the Pacific Northwest. The mystery was never explained, but in actual fact, the object was no comet.
The astronomers didn’t know an alien ship passed through Earth’s atmosphere that night, and instead of burning up in the atmosphere, it broke orbit and jetted away into deep space with more than three hundred human captives.
The Romarie were notorious smugglers drawn to Earth by huge prices for human females at markets in distant galaxies. An interplanetary plague wiped out the female populations of numerous planets, leaving their male counterparts desperate for mates.
Only one planet resisted the temptation to buy in replacement females. Angondra had a proud history of space travel and advanced technology, but the five Angondran factions put aside their differences to forge a solemn agreement they would have nothing to do with the Romarie’s stolen females. They staked their honor as a people on rebuilding their population without tainting their planet with any such contraband, and they sacrificed their space flight capability to back up their resolution.
On its way to the distant galactic marketplace, the Romarie ship lost power, and during an attempted emergency landing, broke up in the Angondran atmosphere. The ship crashed, leaving the four Romarie pilots dead and the women stranded.
The women found themselves on a beautiful, Earth-like planet inhabited by one species divided into five distinct subspecies. All Angondrans
stood erect on two legs, with two arms, two eyes, one nose and one mouth like humans, and with the aid of telekinetic implants supplied by the Romarie, the women could communicate with the Angondrans easily.
The Felsite faction dwell in cities constructed on the open plains, but besides their architecture, they retained none of Angondra’s advanced technology. The Felsite eat raw meat and use oil lamps only for light. All Angondrans stand several inches taller than the average human, and the Felsite males have manes of shaggy fur around their heads.
Members of the Lycaon faction are not as tall or husky as the Felsite, and they have rough hair covering their heads and running down their necks and backs. They have pointed ears and sharp teeth. They live and hunt in packs in the deep forest on the eastern side of the Angondran continent, and they dwell in temporary shelters constructed of sticks, leaves, and thatch that facilitate their nomadic lifestyle.
The Ursidrean faction dwell in huge caves dug out of the northern mountains. The Ursidreans keep most of the old Angondran technology alive, as well as adding new developments of their own to enhance their quality of life. The Ursidreans have the most advanced medical care of all the factions, as well as the most advanced weapons and war machines. The Ursidreans are the heaviest Angondrans, with rough fur around their heads and shoulders. They move more slowly than the fast-running Lycaon and the powerful Felsite, but they are the strongest of all Angondrans.
The Avitras stand the tallest of all Angondrans, with light, slender bodies and iridescent feathers surrounding their heads in spectacular frills. Feathers running down the outsides of their arms and lower legs enable them to fly short distances in their treetop homes in the western forests. They build light houses in the upper canopy where they cannot be seen from the ground. Though the Avitras have no advanced technology, they maintain a detailed oral record of Angondra’s history, including all the political relationships between the factions. They consider themselves the guardians of Angondra and the makers of laws.
The fifth faction, the Aqinas, remain elusive and hidden in their watery home on the coasts southwest of the Felsite plains. They live in tidal pools on the edge of the sea where they maintain constant contact with the water. Little is known about them, even among other Angondrans. They appear to move through any body of water, no matter how meager or shallow, and they communicate chemically through the medium of water. No one understands how this mechanism works, but the Aqinas somehow seem to know where other Angondrans are and what they are doing at all times. The Aqinas have negotiated peace agreements between the other factions in times of war and strife, but some Angondrans suspect them of manipulating the other factions for their own gain, including provoking wars they can then mediate for their own benefit.
This is the world into which the women on the Romarie ship crashed. The ship crashed in Lycaon territory, and within minutes, a Lycaon scouting party surrounded the crash site and took charge of the survivors. After a grueling march over rough terrain, the Lycaon brought the women to their village, where they tended their injuries and made them as comfortable as possible.
In the months that followed, messages poured in from the other factions, begging the women to join them and help rebuild the Angondran population. Many left to seek new futures in the other factions, while others remained behind.
Chapter 1
Penelope Ann King burst into her house in the treetops. Her cheeks glowed with excitement, and her long blonde hair whipped around her head. Anna Evans jumped to her feet, but she didn’t stand higher than Penelope Ann’s shoulder. “What’s going on?”
“Aquilla’s back!” Penelope Ann breathed.
Anna froze. “Did they find Frieda?”
Penelope Ann waved her question away. “Of course not. It’s hopeless.”
Anna narrowed her eyes at her hostess. “How can you be so flippant? This is my sister we’re talking about.”
Penelope Ann bustled around, putting the house in order. “Your sister disappeared. No one can explain what happened to her, but the Avitras searched the whole forest several times and didn’t find her. You can’t expect our people to do anything more.”
“Frieda disappeared under mysterious circumstances,” Anna replied. “She was standing on a balcony near an Avitras house, and the next minute, she was gone. No trace of her body was ever found. I don’t expect the Avitras to keep looking for her indefinitely, but you don’t have to be so callus about it.”
Penelope Ann stopped in her tracks, and her expression softened. “I’m sorry. You and your sister just got here, and now she’s disappeared. I’m sorry. I’m just excited about seeing my mate again after so long.”
Anna sank onto the low couch against the wall. “I appreciate how hard Aquilla worked to find Frieda. No one could ask for more. He’s a good Alpha. You’re lucky to have him as a mate.”
Penelope Ann blushed with pride. “We all got lucky when we came to Angondra. The way the Angondran people took us in after the Romarie abducted us from Earth would make anyone proud to be one of them.”
Anna gazed out the window. The setting sun streaked through the leaves of the forest canopy. “I know. I just wonder sometimes.....”
Penelope Ann studied her. “What do you wonder?”
“I wonder if Frieda and I made a mistake leaving the Lycaon to come to the Avitras,” Anna replied. “Maybe we should have been happy with what we had and stayed where we were.”
Penelope Ann ran to the couch and sat down next to her. She gazed into Anna’s face with her brilliant blue eyes. “Don’t ever think that! Do you hear me? You made the right decision to leave the Lycaon, and you’ve been happy here ever since, haven’t you?”
“Sure, but....” Anna began.
Penelope Ann waved her hand. “I’m not talking about Frieda disappearing. You’ve been happy here with the Avitras except for that, haven’t you? Of course, you have. Who could be happy with the Lycaon? They’re savages.”
Anna shrugged. “I don’t know. I know a few women who are very happy there. Marissa....”
Penelope Ann jumped up. “I’m not talking about Marissa. I’m talking about you. You could never be happy with the Lycaon. They live in huts. They sit on the ground. They eat nothing but raw meat. No sane person could be happy there.”
“They don’t eat raw meat,” Anna murmured. “They do cook it first, and they...”
Penelope Ann went back to hurrying around the room. “No, you did the right thing by coming here. The Avitras are the most advanced faction on the planet. No one could be happy with any of the other factions. You’ve been here long enough to realize that for yourself.”
Anna kept her eyes on the distant sunlight streaming through the canopy. They’d been through this same conversation a dozen times in the weeks since she moved from the Lycaon village to the Avitras territory in the treetops. “I wonder sometimes what the other factions are like. Marissa says the Felsite live in cities, and we hear reports about the Ursidreans having advanced technology in their mountain caves.”
Penelope Ann snorted, but she didn’t turn around. She kept dusting and tidying the house. “You wouldn’t want to have anything to do with the Felsite with their shaggy manes of hair and their heavy limbs. Yuck! And the Ursidreans? You might as well mate with a goat.”
Anna’s voice dropped almost to a whisper. “I’ve heard that they’re more like bears than goats.”
Penelope Ann pretended not to hear. “I thank heaven I came to the Avitras first. I couldn’t stand any other faction. The Avitras are the only faction with any advanced social structure. The others are toads.”
Before Anna could answer, a shout went up from outside. Penelope Ann ran outside and leaned over the railing. “They’re coming!”
Anna hung back. Penelope Ann looked down into the shadowy canopy. All at once, a whirlwind whipped Anna’s brown hair back from her face, and a tall man sailed through the air and landed on his feet on the balcony. His eyes flashed,
but he broke into a grin when he spotted Penelope Ann.
She rushed into his arms. “You’re home!”
He planted a passionate kiss on her lips. Then he threw back his head and laughed out loud. He hooked his arm around Penelope Ann’s shoulders and headed for the house. He didn’t stop smiling when he met Anna at the door. “Hello there.”
She smiled back at him. “Hello, Aquilla. Welcome home.”
His smile dimmed. “I’m sorry we didn’t find your sister.”
Anna made room for the happy couple to come inside. “I appreciate your trying.”
Aquilla threw himself on the couch, and Penelope Ann went back to whizzing around the room. “What a week! You don’t know how good it is to be home. I have less tolerance for the frontier every time I go out there. I think I’ll promote Piwaka to manage all the Border Guards from now on. I don’t have the stomach for it.”
Penelope Ann smiled at him over her shoulder. “There must be some advantage to being Alpha. If you don’t want to troop out to the frontier every time somebody stubs their toe, why should you?”
He lunged forward. “I’m sure glad I went this time, though. Even if this was the last time I ever had to go, it paid off. You won’t believe the prize we brought back.”
Penelope Ann spun around with a wooden bowl of mixed nuts and seeds in her hand. “What did you get?”
He jumped off the couch and kissed her again. “Just wait until you see.”
He strode out of the house, but before he got to the balcony railing, an even more powerful flurry of wind shook the treetops. Half a dozen Avitras men flew over the railing and landed in front of him. Aquilla pointed at one of them. “Bring him in here.”
He led the way into the house, and the other Avitras followed him. Then Anna noticed another man with them—and this man was not Avitras. He stood almost as tall as the Avitras, but he had no feathers and his muscular heavy body made him move slower.
He was unmistakably Angondran, but unlike any Angondran Anna had ever seen. He was too big to be Lycaon, and he had rough, short, dark fur around his head instead of a flowing golden mane like the Felsite. He was a big hunk of a man, heavy brows hung low over his eyes, but they snapped around the room and took in every detail. His expression brightened when he saw Penelope Ann and Anna in the room.
Rohn (Dragons of Kratak Book 1) Page 41