by T. R. Harris
Amick burst out laughing, a deep, violent shaking that rocked his entire body. Adam had thought Seton was having a seizure when he had first seen him laugh many months ago, but it was simply how Castorian’s did it. Adam kept his lips shut, but spread his mouth in a wide grin as he joined in the alien’s jovial mood.
“Come, my friend. I will get you your money.”
Amick lead him down a wide hallway and through a double-door entry into his office. Encased in the solid rock of the room’s far wall was an electronic safe. Adam waited patiently as Amick open the safe and began to count out stacks of thin Juirean credits, which were all about the size of a credit card; they even appeared to be made of a plastic material. Each card was encoded with a specific denomination and was legal tender throughout The Expansion. After counting out a sizeable stack, Amick brought the credits to his desk and set them down. Twenty-thousand credits for the hit on Bundnet. Not a bad payday for about two weeks of work.
Adam didn’t bother to count the credits, but instead simply picked up the 10-centimeter-tall stack and placed it in a satchel he wore on the holster belt for his MK-47.
“Did you get the message about Bundnet threatening you?” Adam asked once the transaction was complete.
Amick grew serious. “Yes, I did. And thank you for that. Now that he’s dead, I’m hoping the threat does not materialize. Without someone to collect a fee from, it would make no sense to carry out the action.”
“Hopefully they weren’t paid in advance.”
Amick laughed again, but this time not so enthusiastically. “That’s another reason I wish you would stay around a little longer. I can recall at least two specific times, when you first came to work for me, that you were instrumental in saving my life.”
It was true. Only a few weeks after the explosion of the Klin starship, Kaylor had introduced the two of them, with Kaylor singing the praises of Adam’s worth as a bodyguard and/or assassin. Adam kept very tight-lipped back in those days, and hid his abilities as best he could.
He began by doing freelance bodyguard work for Amick, choosing to live aboard the Cassie-1 rather than risk losing his strength advantage over time to the lighter gravity of Castor. In fact, Amick had actually used Adam’s ship to transport him to Silea and Nimor on a couple of occasions to tend to business there. And it was during one of these trips to Silea that Adam had managed to foil two determined assassination attempts on the crime lord. This action had helped ingratiate Adam into Amick’s organization.
But Adam chose to remain independent rather than take a more active role in Amick’s criminal empire, so the crime boss instead offered him freelance wet work — and paid him generously for it. It was this arrangement that allowed Adam to survive in this alien universe and pursue his hunt for the Klin — and for Earth. When he thought about it, Adam actually owed Amick a large debt of gratitude.
About half an hour later, Adam left Amick’s residence, having graciously declined an elaborate meal and more conversation. The respirator really did irritate his skin, and the sooner he got back aboard the Cassie-1 the better. He also had to pick up some supplies before the markets closed for the night.
The artificial lighting was beginning to dim in the neighborhood, signifying the coming of night in the underground world. As he stepped out of the residence, he felt the soft breeze and heard the rustling of the branches on the spectacular trees lining the grounds, ablaze in the accent lighting for the estate. For a moment, Adam almost forgot he was on an alien planet and hundreds, if not thousands of light years from home. But reality quickly returned — as it always did — and along with it the familiar pang of homesickness that welled up inside him.
He walked down the brick sidewalk toward the front gate, feeling slightly melancholy and distracted. In his saddened state, he hardly noticed when no guards came out to greet him at the gate. However, they had appeared out of nowhere when he first arrived, so they were probably just lurking somewhere just out of sight. At the open gate, he stopped and waited, hoping someone would come out and give him his ’47. After a few moments, and still no guards, he walked to the safety box and removed the weapon himself.
A transport had been called for him and was waiting at the head of the street, its Castorian driver standing outside the vehicle, inhaling a drag off either a smokestick or one of its tamer cousins. Since he would be driving, Adam hoped it was the latter.
Still, something didn’t feel quite right. He stopped midway down the street and turned to look back at the estate. The gate was still open, having not even closed automatically after he passed through. And he had never had to recover his own weapon before…
Placing a hand on the butt of his MK-47, Adam returned to the estate. As he passed through the gate — and still no guards — he immediately knew something was up. Leaving the estate without escort was common, but just walking through the front gate uncontested was unheard of.
Adam moved to his left and skirted the side of the estate, making his way toward the entrance while avoiding the main walkway. Quietly opening the front door, he crouched and slipped inside as stealthily as possible, drawing his weapon as he did so. No sound, no presence. Hell, he’d only left the home a few minutes before. Where was everyone?
Just then he heard the distinctive pop of a bolt launcher, and his eyes were drawn to the electric blue flash coming from the other end of the long hallway to the left of the Great Room. Then he heard footsteps, running on the hard stone floors, in the direction of the office.
Two more quick pops — then silence.
Moving swiftly through the Great Room, Adam slid past the bar area and did a quick glance around the corner of the hallway leading to the office. There was just a slight blue haze hanging in the air, but no one was in the hallway. Still in a crouch, Adam entered the corridor, hugging the right side wall as he began to move cautiously toward the office.
Just then, a hand appeared from low down on the doorframe to the office and tossed something into the hallway. The metal object skidded along the floor toward Adam. Recognizing the grenade immediately, Adam took two quick steps back the way he’d came and dove around the corner — just as the grenade exploded.
The heat and concussion threw him over the bar and into the Great Room, where he landed on the back of a soft fabric sofa. He rolled over and came to his feet, then immediately ran back to the hallway. The stone walls had withstood most of the blast, but now the corridor was filled with thick smoke and burning material from the decorations that had lined the walls.
Using the smoke as cover, Adam was at the office doorway in a flash. He dove inside, rolling on this shoulder and coming up on one knee, his ’47 held by both hands at eye level. He quickly scanned the room for any movement, but found none. What he did find were two of Amick’s guards lying dead to his right. And there at the desk, leaning back in his chair, was Seton Amick, his eyes wide open and his jaw slack. A splash of red blood stained his brightly colored shirt, emanating from a level-one bolt-hole burned into the fabric at about mid-chest.
Adam locked his jaw and shook his head. There goes my gravy-train, Adam thought as he looked at the body of his benefactor. And then he noticed the open safe in the wall…
Adam jumped to his feet and ran to it. It was apparent some of the credits had been taken, but Adam’s arrival had cut short the robbery/assassination. Never one to let an opportunity pass him by, Adam began to scoop up stacks of credits and cram them into his satchel. When that was full, he stuffed more into his pockets There came the sound of a slamming door; Adam froze and brought the ’47 to bear on the door to the office. Then he heard the sound of light running, growing fainter as the sprinter added distance.
There was side entrance to the estate not too far from Amick’s office. Adam ran for the exit, just in time to see a thin, dark figure shoot through the open gate of the estate. Adam took off after the dark figure.
The assassin was extremely fast and reached the end of the street just as Adam was passing thr
ough the front gate. His cab driver was standing next to his vehicle, watching the assassin dart around the corner to Adam’s right. Adam reached the end of the street only a breath later, just as another vehicle sped off. Turning to the confused driver, Adam shoved him hard in the chest, sending him tumbling over a low stone wall and into a crop of bushes.
“I need to borrow your car,” Adam shouted at him as he slipped into the driver’s seat. He grasped the center joystick and twisted the top toggle to his right as he shoved the stick forward. The transport spun around 180 degrees; Adam corrected the turn and took off after the other vehicle, the whining of the electric motor reverberating throughout the darkening and once-quiet neighborhood.
The other driver was good, weaving in and out of traffic like a NASCAR driver back home. Definitely not a Castorian, Adam thought. In fact, Castorians were notorious for their bad driving habits. Since the subterranean cities were so over-crowed, and their roads clogged with traffic, all of their vehicles were lined with thick rubber bumpers that encircled the entire car. As they drove through traffic, Castorians would continually bounce off one another like some bizarre, over-the-top Disney ride. It didn’t seem to bother the Castorians much, but it sure made weaving through their chaotic traffic a challenge.
The assassin’s car merged onto the main thoroughfare for this section of Krune, bouncing hard off half a dozen vehicles and sending them, in turn, crashing into others. Adam did his best to keep up, but the remnants of the assassin’s passage were piling up exponentially as they proceeded deeper into the traffic.
Finally it happened. Up ahead, Adam saw the assassin’s vehicle fly into the air, turn on its side, then disappear in a mass of flying metal, bodies and smoke. Adam pulled back on the joystick, and his own transport skidded to a stop, but not before slamming broadside into another car. Adam was thrown through the thin glass of the windshield and flew through the air until he contacted the side of the vehicle he’d just hit. Momentarily stunned, he quickly shook off the cobwebs and jumped to his feet. Peering over the tops of the now-stopped traffic — looking like so many dominoes laid helter-skelter in the street — Adam spotted the assassin’s car. It was resting on its side, its wheels still turning and smoke drifting out of the rear motor compartment.
Adam set off for the car, hopping from hood to hood in the stalled traffic, MK-47 held tightly in his right hand. He arrived moments later and shoved the barrel of his weapon through the open window. The vehicle was empty.
Standing tall on the side of the car, Adam scanned the road and sidewalks in front of him. There! A disturbance on the pedestrian sidewalk, as aliens of all shapes and sizes were being thrown out of the way as the assassin barreled through the crowd. Then the disturbance stopped where a side alley intersected the main road.
Adam took off again, making excellent time hopping from car hood to car hood. Then he jumped, clearing the crush of screaming and upset alien pedestrians, and landed softly on the surface of the near-deserted alley.
Then a gaggle of upset creatures entered the alleyway behind him, but they quickly retreated when they spotted Adam’s MK-47.
Soon he was alone in the darkening alleyway. The street was about fifty meters long, ending as it intersected with another road; on each side of it were numerous dumpsters, crates, boxes and more — just as you would expect to see in any side alley on Earth.
Adam ducked behind a dumpster and listened for any movement. All was quiet, or as much as he could tell through the din of chaotic street noise filtering in from behind him. He moved further down the alley. He knew his reactions were quite a bit faster than any alien he’d yet encountered, but still, he could never be sure. Somewhere there had to be something that was faster.
Then he sensed a movement behind him. As he turned he felt a crushing blow strike the back of his head as splintered wood flew past his line of sight. He fell forward, hitting hard on the stone surface of the alley. Then a strong hand grasped his right shoulder and flipped him over. Still in a daze, Adam felt someone mount him, just as the warm barrel of a bolt launcher was shoved against his chin, just under the face mask.
His vision cleared, and he stared up at the creature straddling him. It, too, wore a full-face mask, but in the darkness of the alley, he could not see through the lens.
But then he felt the assassin tremble. The creature reached forward suddenly with its free hand and ripped off Adam’s mask. The effect was immediate. The creature recoiled as if hit by a bolt, and then it slowly began to pull the weapon from his chin. Next it slid off of him and stood in the middle of the alley — while lowering its weapon. Next, the creature reached up and slipped off its own face mask.
It was the face of a Human woman!
Adam lay in stunned disbelief for what seemed like an eternity, until the woman reached down and recovered his MK-47 and helped him to his feet. She handed him the weapon and then took a quick look around the alley. Behind them was the chaos and confusion of the main road they had caused moments before. At the other end of the alley was a more tranquil street setting.
Taking him by the hand, the woman pulled him along with her toward the street. Once there, she stopped and scanned the road. There, on the other side and about halfway down the block, her gaze focused on a Rest Facility — like a hotel on Earth — and she set off for it, pulling him along with her as she raced toward the building.
Adam still couldn’t read alien very well, but he was able to recognize certain phrases. He could make out the lighted sign outside the entrance indicating Pressurized Rooms and Atmosphere Control. Then still without a word, and holding his hand firmly in hers, the woman entered the hotel, pulled a chip of credits out of a pocket and slammed it down on the counter.
“I need a room,” she said forcefully. Adam noticed a slight Southern accent as she spoke for the first time.
The stunned clerk took the chip and handed her a metal key, indicating room eight, down the corridor to their right. In a moment they were through the door and into the outer airlock. Entering the room proper, the blonde-haired woman finally released his hand and moved to the control panel. Almost instantly, Adam felt a rush of fresh, oxygen-rich air fill the room; the woman turned and removed her respirator.
Adam removed his as well, but just as he opened his mouth to speak, the woman fell against him and locked her lips on his.
Adam’s eyes rolled back in his head; it was an amazing feeling, the softness and warmth of her lips. It was greater than anything he could remember feeling before. What the hell, he thought as he pulled the woman tighter to his body. We can always talk later!
And with that, the two Humans tumbled onto the bed, shredding clothing as they did so.
Chapter Six
Forty minutes later and drenched in sweat, Adam rose from the crumpled sheets of the bed and made his way into the grooming station. After relieving himself, he took a moment to reflect on his image in the mirror. He had to admit, he’d let himself go. His hair was oily and stringy, and like his beard, long in places and short in others where he’d casually hacked away at it when it got in his way. His skin was sallow from not enough natural sunlight, and he’d acquired bags under his 27-year-old eyes. He did, however, brush his teeth on a regular basis, but that was mainly so he wouldn’t have to experience alien dentists, or whatever passed as dentists out here. The thought sent a shudder through his body. And on top of everything else, he hadn’t found anything that adequately passed as deodorant in nearly nine months.
My god, I must smell like shit!
He almost didn’t return to the room with the girl; he was embarrassed, not only for himself, but for all MAN-kind.
Wrapping a towel around his naked lower torso, Adam stood in the doorway of the grooming station and looked at the woman. She was sitting up in the bed, wrapping a sheet around her nakedness. For the first time since they’d met — a brief one hour ago — he took a really good look at her. Her hair was blonde, and like his, it too was long and oily with no curl in i
t whatsoever. She wore no make-up on her pale skin, which was understandable in an alien universe. He noticed hair under her armpits, and her exposed leg also displayed a generous amount of fuzzy blonde stubble. Still, she was the most glorious thing he’d seen in a long time…
A generous and dark-nippled breast presented itself to him as she attempted to wrap the sheet around her body, then noticing him standing in the doorway, he saw her blush and she pulled the sheet up over herself. He simply smiled back at her, raised his eyebrows a couple of times and shrugged. The woman coyishly smiled back, nodded yes, and let the sheet fall back on the bed.
And with that, Adam dropped the towel and dove back onto the bed, ready and willing for round two.
Now fully-exhausted, the two naked Humans lie wrapped in each other’s arms, the woman’s head resting on Adam’s chest. After awhile, she lifted herself away from him and looked into his eyes. He stared back.
Then simultaneously, they both burst into laughter.
With tears streaming down their faces, a flood of questions erupted from their throats.
“Who ARE you?” Adam asked first.
“I’m Sherri Valentine,” she answered in a sweet Southern accent. Seeing the reaction on his face, she quickly added, “I know, it sounds like a porn star. I’ve been dealing with that my whole life. What’s your name?”
“I’m Adam Cain.”
They shook hands.
“You’re from the south somewhere, right?”
“How’d you guess? Kentucky, actually. A little town called Owensboro. It’s still the South.”
“I know where Owensboro is,” Adam said a little too enthusiastically. “It’s near the Ohio border?”
Sherri nodded. “How ’bout you? What’s your story?”
“I’m from southern California, but I’m in the Navy now — or I was in the Navy. Now…I don’t know.” He was feeling as nervous as a schoolboy around her.