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Jasih: Paranormal Sci-Fi Alien Romance (Àlien Mates Book 2)

Page 15

by Ashley L. Hunt


  “Okay, okay. You’re right. It’s just that you’re a pretty unusual bunch, that’s all. Well, you and Eladia are somehow normal, but your friends, aren’t.”

  He’s closer to me now. He raises the thin sheet covering my body and touches my left foot with a cold, metal thing. After hearing a beep, the doctor takes a step back, he nods and then turns his back to me. I hear his steps get weaker while drawing away from me.

  So now, the only thing obstructing my escape is that stupid, morphing android. I never quite liked her, not the same way I like Zan or Eladia.

  You don't like Eladia either.

  For a moment, my mind feels crowded. I know that I was the one that made that thought just now, but at the same time, I’m not sure. I feel puzzled and certain at the same time. I don’t know if this is a dream or reality anymore.

  There is a thumping coming from deep inside my head that it’s strong enough to make me feel dizzy. I stop and try to open my eyes to ease the pressure, but it doesn’t help. The thumping gets louder and more intense, and it soon shakes my whole body.

  It’s when I hear a scream coming from the hallway that I know that the thumping isn’t only in my head. Zan seems to have noticed it too.

  “What was that?” the young boy says.

  “What was what Zan? Did you have a bad dream?” Silver asks him.

  Maybe if I stay silent a little bit longer, they’ll leave the room and let me escape silently. But the thumping is now louder than before and soon I figure that this isn’t a simple thump; this is a march.

  “Wake up! Eladia, Zan, wake up!!!”

  The familiar voice of Doctor Cross echoes inside the room. He’s just barely heard above the cacophony of steps marching down the hallway. Eladia is the last one to wake up.

  “What’s wrong? What’s that sound?”

  I keep acting that I’m still asleep, hoping they leave without me, but I’m not off the hook so easily.

  “I...I don’t know what’s going on. I heard someone say that the lower floors are filled with reanimated corpses swarming the hallways,” the doctor says.

  He sounds panicked although he doesn’t feel panicked. I’m confused.

  “What? That can’t be possible. Zombies? Is that what you’re saying?” Eladia suddenly replies.

  “Well, I wouldn’t put it that way, but yes. Zombies can be a pretty inclusive term.”

  What are they talking about? Zom...bees? Are those some kind of bees? I don’t understand.

  And then it happens. The shriek of an otherworldly monster comes from just outside our room. I open my eyes and rise to see dead bodies walking. What in the world?

  Chapter Thirty-Three

  Eladia

  When I was younger, I used to meet all those actors and musicians, and they used to sign my shirt or mug to give me an autograph. Anyway, growing up at a politically involved house had its perks. Even some of the most famous actors were my buddies back then. So, when I was at the proper age to start visiting the setting to their movies and the backstage to their concerts, I quickly got disappointed.

  All those monsters in the films and the special effects in the concerts were products of computers and extras. Nothing was even the tiniest bit real.

  It wasn’t the same as watching the finished movie and believing that everything is possible. Visiting the setting and seeing that everything was a lie was a hard pill of truth I had to swallow back then. Now, though, seeing that zombies do exist and walk straight into our room, the first thing that crosses my mind is that I kinda wish that these things were fake.

  Silver was the one standing closer to the door so she tosses herself in front of the horde to stop them from hurting Dale. The doctor, being dumbstruck by the impossible sight, takes a step back but does nothing else to escape. He just looks at the monsters with a mixed expression of disgust and fear. The man that has pledged his life to protect and mend people is just standing still, motionless.

  Zan, the savage boy, snarls at the monsters, but Silver stops him. In what must have been a second, Silver morphed into a large, bulky object, fitting the door and pushing the corpses out. It was her fencing form, best used to stop wild animals from approaching the camp.

  Silver can buy us five to ten minutes before she runs out of power and the room is overrun with all those undead bodies. Dale is standing before her, shaking like a leaf, mumbling to himself.

  “Doctor, please, calm down. You’re the only one in this room that can find a way out of here,” Silver says, her voice distorted.

  The man doesn’t move an inch.

  “Doctor...Doct...Doc…” Silver keeps saying until she can’t speak anymore. She’s now using her whole power into keeping the fence functional and the zombies out.

  I turn my head and try to make a quick assessment of the situation. We’re trapped in a hospital room with a small army of dead bodies outside ready to infiltrate any moment now. Jay is still asleep and unable to move, while Zan can’t do much without his primitive spear. And we’re running out of time fast waiting for the Doctor to snap out of his shock.

  At that time, out of nowhere, I see Jay getting up on his feet and going to stand in front of the frozen doctor. He’s taller than Doctor Cross, but they’re similar in every other way. They’re both athletic, both strikingly handsome, and both fit to lead. Only that Jay has more experience in overcoming impossible situations.

  “Listen to me, human doctor. You have to find us a way out. I can’t die in here,” Jay says to him.

  The doctor suddenly looks like he reached the surface of a cold lake. He snaps off his shock and starts breathing hungrily.

  “Why...why are you awake? You shouldn’t be awake,” Dale says, mumbling.

  “It doesn’t matter now. Tell me, is there a way out of this mess? Can you find us a way out of here?”

  Dale looks around him and sees Zan snarling at the door, the morphed Silver into her fence form and me, still seated on the armchair in the back. To be honest, I don’t even dare move a muscle. Maybe this is all a dream, and if I move, the spell will break, and it will end up turning into reality.

  Oh, who am I kidding? The zombies are real!

  “I...well, there is a way out. But we have to get to the stairway down the hall. It’s the only way.”

  His voice sounds shaken but optimistic. His survival instincts start to kick in.

  “It might be possible, but we have to work together. What do you need, doctor?” Jay says.

  “Wait! Wait a minute. I’m still processing the thought. Maybe, after all, the stairway isn’t such a good idea. It might be better to use the elevator.”

  I’m confused. I still don’t know what he has in his mind, but I’m afraid that it won’t be enough. Us, five random people, one of them recently recovered from a serious injury and the other a Chronicler’s assistant, are we going to be able to make our way through all those dead bodies alive?

  I’m ready to express my concerns about this plan when I suddenly stop. Seeing them work together, Jay trusting another human except me, suddenly gives me hope. There is still a chance for us to get back together if we manage to get out of here alive, but that won’t happen if I don’t help them.

  Damn. Look at me, daydreaming. It’s impossible to get him out of my head even amidst a crisis.

  I stand up; I quickly realize that my feet are trembling. I don’t want to get closer to the door. I’m afraid. Right at that time, something wakes up inside me; I’m in shock as well.

  After seeing all these people dying two weeks ago, I’ve started being afraid of everything. I’ve spent a lot of time in the hospital trying to cope with my feelings of guilt towards those that died in our stead in the Great Embassy, but it seems that it was all for naught. Now, facing a true crisis, I’m useless.

  Two Originators, both of them my friends; one of the guards of the Great Embassy being at the wrong place, the wrong time; many people that we don’t know anything about them. All of them died because of my research.
In a sense, it’s my work that brought all this death and destruction; I brought chaos everywhere I went. Jay was just my luckiest victim to date, that’s all.

  “Okay. So, here is the plan. Jay and I will be your vanguard. We’ll stay in front of you and push the zombies away creating a path to the elevator. We’re going to have to use the elevator to get three floors down and then the stairway to get to the parking lot of the hospital,” Doctor Dale suddenly says.

  “Why don’t we use the elevator all the way to the parking lot? It would be faster and safer,” I hear myself saying.

  “The elevator of the hospital is programmed to stop at every floor and open the automated doors so that no one will get trapped inside by accident. It’s a safety thing, but if we don’t get off on the first floor, we’ll get attacked by over a hundred corpses in the morgue. Yes, you guessed it right. We have to pass through the morgue to get to the parking area. And no, I don’t know who designed this building.”

  Dale is babbling, trying to make sense of an improbable situation. He seems kinda cute amidst this crisis.

  Damn. Stop doing this Eladia. You sound like a horny teenager.

  “Okay. There’s no time for second guesses. On the count of three. One--” Jay says.

  But it’s too late.

  Silver suddenly runs out of power. Slowly, she transforms into a tiny ball the size of a marble. It’s a black, metal ball on that falls on the floor, letting us stare straight into our deaths. In the moments it takes us to get in line and start pushing the zombies, I manage to get a better look at them.

  All of them are human with pale skins and white eyes. The color of their irises has been washed away and now they have two white eyeballs devoid of life instead of eyes. In the middle of their forehead, there is a round, flashing button, something resembling an on/off switch. I wonder if that is the thing that powers them up.

  Jay and Dale stand in the front, both using their hands to push the dead corpses away. The empty bodies gurgle when getting pushed backward. I want to run, but I know that getting freaked out now, of all the times, won’t help the others get to safety faster. Even so, we’re moving at a quick pace, making a good time to the other side of the room.

  It’s only after we have moved a few feet into the zombie-infested hallway that I notice that something seems off. This whole operation is way too easy. It’s like the monsters allow us to push them out of our way. At the same time, Jay seems way too passionate about kicking the corpses out of the way.

  I have a bad feeling about this.

  I check around me to see if there is any kind of weapon, something we can use against him if he changes, but it’s hopeless. All I can see is dead humans walking around gutted bodies lying the floor.

  Oh, my god, this is a massacre.

  Dale has slowed down now, watching Jay rage over the dead men from a distance. He seems confused. We all are confused as we watch him and try to see signs of his dark self, emerging, but there’s nothing.

  Right then I realize that his overly violent behavior is all him, no parasites taking over, not the need to protect someone. Jay just needs something to kill.

  That man, the one not able to control himself, it’s not the same man I met. Jay has changed, and I’m not sure I like what he’s become.

  Chapter Thirty-Four

  Jay

  You have to remember everything. For our sake, a voice whispers in my head.

  Or maybe not? Do my deepest thoughts emerge and talk to me? Or maybe I’m just getting crazy?

  I see my hands moving, but I don’t control them. I see my feet walking, but I don’t move an inch. My fists are full of blood, but I’m not the one using them. I’m a slave to my own body, and I can’t do anything but keep on hitting the dead, emotionless corpses. Every punch is a liberation, a small victory.

  I feel like when the last time I inhaled Timedisol, only that blood and adrenaline got me drunk this time.

  And I want more.

  I push some of them to the floor and start kicking them, them never resisting or making a move.

  I’m ready to take all of them if needed be when I turn my head and suddenly see the dark brown in the doctor’s eyes. He looks straight into my eyes, but I can’t stop in time from hitting him. It’s only a moment later that I see him falling to the floor, almost passing out. He’s a delicate human being after all, and I’m a mighty Esuh.

  An Esuh of the Two Faces.

  When these words appear in my mind, I snap out of my confusion. In a fraction of a second, I realize that I could have stopped if I wanted. Only that at the time, I didn’t.

  “Dale!” I hear Eladia yell.

  The motionless corpses now seem dead, although still standing. I watch the man trying to get up, but the force of my punch must have been way too strong for him. He’s just another victim of my wrath.

  Eladia slowly squats over him and after checking that he’s alright, she rises again to her feet. She now watches me straight in the eyes and almost whispers:

  “Enough Jay. Just...enough. I won’t let you harm another person anymore.”

  Don’t listen to her! Kill her! Get on with your rampage, I hear my voice command me, but I choose not to listen this time.

  For some reason, while watching her deep-set eyes condemn me, everything makes sense. My memories may not have returned, but my other self, the one that Eladia talked to me about, is starting to come to light.

  I move past her and head straight for the fallen doctor. I stretch my hand and wait for him to grab it. When he does, I pull him up on his feet and then walk away. Eladia was right all along. The only thing I did was push her away because she lied to me. Maybe it was better not knowing the truth after all.

  I’m dangerous when I turn to that monster, a monster I can’t control.

  I’m trying to find something to hold onto, some sort of sentiment that will sort out my thoughts, but it’s not easy when you’ve forgotten how to feel. I walk in, before the elevator doors close, and push the button next to them. I wait, but no one follows me.

  It figures; they’re afraid of me. The only one that dares come closer is the human doctor, his cheek swollen from my all-out punch.

  Hit him again, this time in the chest. It’ll shatter his heart in pieces, the voice inside me instructs me again, but this time, it’s hopeless.

  I turn and watch at him, only to see him smile in a twisted, crooked way. He’s in pain, I can tell, but he’s the one that tries to cheer me up.

  “Don’t worry over this. I’m a doctor. I can fix it as soon as we get on the shuttle.”

  Was it something in his voice or the sound of the elevator ascending from the lower floors? I’ll probably never know. But, as soon as he spoke, the corpses started moving again, this time, faster than before. They almost grab Zan and Eladia, but they manage to get away from them just in the nick of time.

  For a moment, seeing them almost getting captured by those monsters, I feel despair, even fear, filling my veins. I don’t want them to die because of my stupidity, that much is apparent. But Eladia...Eladia I want to see her smiling at me again, seeing me for what I truly am: a man deeply interested in her.

  We fight them for what it seems like half a minute when finally the elevator arrives. We all get inside at once, never looking back. Everything happens really fast from that moment on. The elevator gets us closer to our destination, but as the doctor correctly guessed, the morgue below us is crowded with zombies.

  Dale leads us to the stairway, and we quickly find our way to the parking lot. Passing just outside the cold room, I can hear the hollow cries of the undead. It’s a haunting melody, one that I will remember for the rest of my life. The dead keep howling as we make sure to stay silent and walk as fast as possible without making a sound.

  Our shuttle is located all the way to the other side of the lot, but we manage to get there fast, fast enough for the corpses not to be able to keep up. Outside of the building I can hear a recurrent sound, accompanied by
a blue-and-red light. Deep in my memories it kinda feels like I’ve heard that sound before, only that I can’t quite place it somewhere.

  Either way, we all get aboard. Eladia and me first, and the doctor and Zan later. Silver is still in her low-function mode, but as soon as Eladia links her up to the system, her voice returns, merry as ever.

  “Finally! It took you long enough to get here. Is everyone aboard?” she asks.

  “Yes. Set a route for Space Station 1. Planet Yaerus is not safe anymore,” Eladia says.

  I agree with her, but I never say a thing. Even though I’ve forgiven Eladia for all the lying, I have no way of connecting with her anymore. That’s a bridge I burned myself.

  And something inside me tells me that she feels the same way about me.

  Chapter Thirty-Five

  Eladia

  The trip to Space Station 1 is awfully quiet. The only sound comes from the engines that thrust us upwards in a slow and nonchalant rhythm. A constant vibration comes from the engines that would usually lull me to sleep. Today though, the atmosphere’s way too tense inside this small, metal box to allow for a tranquil trip.

  “Shuttle 2214, can you please confirm your ID?” A feminine voice suddenly comes from the radio.

  Silver quickly takes over and sends our identification signal. A moment later, a green light flashes from the main console of the shuttle. We’ve gotten a pass.

  “Thank you C.A. 12K4. You can use gate four to enter Space Station 1. Also, I must ask you to be patient while entering the station since we just encountered elevated activity due to an ongoing crisis on Yaerus. I hope you have a good journey.”

  A buzzing sound signals the end of the comm. link. The lady couldn’t have known that we were in the middle of this crisis, and we’re running away from it as well. Either way, it’s too late now to say something.

 

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