Read Alien Romance: The Alien's Wonderland: A Sci-fi Alien Warrior Invasion Abduction Romance Online
Authors: Ruth Anne Scott
He hovered over her with the stealthy intent of a hawk over its prey. He judged the direction of the wind, he measured her expressions, her breathing, with masterful accuracy. Then he dropped out of the sky with his talons bared and seized her body, limp and ripe and ready.
She watched him swoop and her breath stuck in her throat, but she couldn’t resist. Before she knew what happened, she lay bare and open to his insatiable appetite. He filled her with the power of his presence until she couldn’t take another particle. In the end, no watery vision could compare with the complete union of their bodies and minds.
Frieda dissolved into him, into his body and his spirit. The vision she experienced in the meadow came back to her, and she never wanted anything so much as to be his, like this, the way the vision showed her she could be. If she only stayed there, in his arms, her body wrapped around him, she would never lose that vision, and she would be happy.
Frieda woke up the next morning and found Deek sitting on the edge of her bed. “I didn’t know you were up.”
He turned around. He had his pants on, but not his boots or shirt. He bent down and kissed her. “I have to go. I’m helping lay the foundation for the new hall today.”
“You weren’t going to sneak out without saying good-bye, were you?” she asked.
He took her in his arms. “You looked so peaceful sleeping, I didn’t want to wake you.”
“I would rather you woke me up before you leave,” she told him. “I wouldn’t want to wake up and find you gone.”
“Okay,” he told her. “Now I know.”
“Will you be at the work site all day?” she asked.
He nodded. “I’ll see you later. You’re coming to the gathering, aren’t you?”
“I’ll come to the gathering,” she replied, “as long as you understand I won’t be coming to the convocation.”
“I understand that,” he replied. “I still wish I could convince you....”
She cut him off with a shake of her head. “Don’t even try. You got me this far by respecting how I feel about it. Don’t spoil it by trying to convince me.”
He kissed her again. “Okay.”
She watched him pull his boots on, and then his shirt. At last, fully clothed, he stretched out next to her again on the bed. She lay under the covers and he lay on top of them with his arms around her. They kissed and cuddled for a long time before he got up again. “I’ll see you later.”
She nodded and watched his form get smaller in the meadow outside her door. Pretty soon, only the shimmering multi-coloured sunlight rippled over the grass outside.
Frieda lay in bed for a long time and listened to the wind murmuring over the land. Nothing could soothe her like that sound. Nothing disturbed the everlasting tranquillity of that day. She never had to get out of the bed. She would never get hungry or thirsty.
Only boredom could drive her out of bed, and in the end, it did. She couldn’t force herself to lie there any longer. Life demanded to be lived, even if you lived under the ocean with a symbiotic algae feeding oxygen into your cells. Not even a fantasy world could take the place of movement, life, purpose.
She got up and got dressed. She would have to get Deek to explain the secret of how he washed that dirt off himself. She couldn’t exactly take a shower under the sea, could she? Yet her body begged for one to refresh her after last night.
She worked around her house for the rest of the day until she happened to glance through the door and noticed Trin crossing the meadow in her direction. Trin stopped in front of Frieda’s house. “I’ve come to bring you to the gathering.”
“You didn’t need to go to the trouble,” Frieda told her. “I can find my way on my own.”
Trin shook her head. “Guests should be escorted through the door. Call it a tradition.”
Frieda laughed. “Kind of like the groom carrying the bride over the threshold?”
Trin frowned. “The.....what?”
Frieda waved her hand. “Never mind.”
Trin watched her set the room to rights before she left. “What are you doing?”
Frieda swept a bunch of fabric scraps into a pile on her table. “I’m working.”
“Working?” Trin repeated. “What kind of work is that?”
Frieda blushed and dropped her eyes. “I’m learning to sew.”
Trin’s eyes widened. “Sew? By yourself?”
“I thought I’d give it a shot,” Frieda explained. “I’ve never done anything like this before. I’m all thumbs.”
Trin glanced down at Frieda’s hands and blinked.
Frieda shifted on her feet. “It’s an expression we have on Earth. It means I’m not very good at it.”
“That’s exactly why you should get someone to teach you,” Trin pointed out. “You should tell my mother. If she can’t teach you herself, she will find someone who can.”
“I’m sure she could,” Frieda replied, “and I’m sure I would make better progress if I had someone like that to teach me. But I can’t do that—not yet.”
Trin stared at her in blank wonder. “Why ever not? How long to you plan to stumble along by yourself before you ask for help?”
Frieda smiled at her. “I’m not afraid to ask for help. It isn’t that. I’ve just never worked with my hands before. I want to try it on my own before I set out to learn to do it right.”
Trin shook her head. “I don’t understand you at all.”
“I’m not trying to be an expert sewer,” Frieda explained. “I just want to start on something. It doesn’t really matter what. I don’t know if I’m really even interested in sewing. I just want to do something with my hands, and I’m not ready to learn from one of your people yet. That would mean....” She stopped herself.
Trin waited. “That would mean....what? That you’re really Aqinas now?”
Frieda looked down at the floor. “Something like that.”
Trin pursed her lips. Then she took a step across the room and took Frieda’s hand. “Never mind. You’ll never be Aqinas until you decide for yourself that you want to be.”
She guided Frieda out of the house and into the meadow. Frieda surveyed the familiar scene. “I must be crazy not to want to stay here.”
“I understand why you don’t.” Trin shrugged. “I mean, I understand why you haven’t made up your mind to. I wouldn’t want to leave to go live on land. Making the adjustment from land to the ocean must be very difficult. If I left the ocean for the land, I don’t think I would ever stop dreaming of a way to go back.”
Frieda cast a sidelong glance at her. “Not even if you found a man you loved there?”
Trin squeezed her hand. “It’s hard to say, since I’m mated here to a man who matches me perfectly. On land, you don’t have the water to match you with your mate. You might mate with the wrong man. But yes, even if I found a man I loved on land, I would still want to come back. I belong to the water. I’ve never lived anywhere else, and I don’t want to.”
“It’s nice of you to say that,” Frieda replied. “All the Aqinas have been so kind and caring. No one could ask for nicer people.”
“Not even that makes a difference, does it?” Trin asked. “Nice people, a strong, loving man, a beautiful environment—none of it can take the place of the land.”
“You hit the nail on the head there,” Frieda replied. “I was born and raised on land, the way you were born and raised in the water. I’m like a tree that grows in rocky soil. Putting me in the water would drown me.”
“And yet,” Trin returned, “here you are. You’re not drowned. You’re getting closer to Deek and all the rest of us. You’re even learning to sew. It looks like you might be making the adjustment to life under the water after all.”
Frieda shook her head. “Then there’s the convocation. I’ll never adjust to that.”
Trin started back. “What’s wrong with the convocation?”
“Only someone who lived on land could understand,” Frieda replied. “Ask Sasha. She’ll tell you. People who live on land don’t look in on each other like that, and I don’t think the other factions will appreciate it if they find out you’re doing it.”
Trin furrowed her brow in deep thought. “I never thought of that.”
“I’ll bet no Aqinas ever has,” Frieda replied. “You must have seen in this convocation of yours how much the other factions mistrust the Aqinas. Now you know why.”
“But they couldn’t know about the convocation,” Trin pointed out. “They couldn’t know we looked in on them without their knowledge.”
Frieda shook her head. “They mistrust you without knowing why. They only have a vague sense that something isn’t right with you. Maybe the fact that you know so much about them gives them a hint that you have ways of gathering information about them that they don’t know about. A lot makes sense to me now that I know about the convocation.”
Trin walked in silence for a while. “I wonder if Sasha has told Fritz about this. Maybe if he knew, he wouldn’t allow the convocation anymore.”
“That won’t happen,” Frieda replied. “Deek said it was your most sacred institution.”
Trin nodded, but didn’t answer. The two women crossed the meadow, but when they got to the edge of the forest, Trin stopped and turned toward Frieda. “I want to say I’m really glad you’re here.”
“I understand,” Frieda replied. “Your people need all the females you can get. It must be a relief to see Deek finally meet a woman he can connect with.”
“I’m not glad about that,” Trin replied. “I mean, I am glad about that, but that’s not why I said I’m glad you’re here. I’m glad it was you who came and not someone else. You have a way of speaking right out and saying the plain truth that’s refreshing even for the Aqinas. I’ve never met anyone like you before.”
Frieda brightened up. “Thanks. That means a lot.”
Trin started walking, but much slower. She took a long time to walk around the forest. “You’re the only person who could have told us about the convocation causing a problem between the Aqinas and the other factions. You’ve done our people an immense service by pointing that out to us.”
“Sasha told you the same thing,” Frieda told her. “Why wouldn’t you have understood it from her?”
“She never told us that,” Trin replied. “She said she wasn’t comfortable with the convocation, but she didn’t say exactly that people on land would find it offensive. Besides, she eventually came around to sharing the convocation with us, so we discounted her reluctance to take part. We thought it was just a process of adjustment to our environment, like everything else.”
Frieda nodded. “That makes sense.”
Trin started walking faster. “I’m going to tell Fritz what you told me. This is too important to keep quiet.”
“Are you sure that’s a good idea?” Frieda asked. “He might not listen.”
“If he doesn’t listen,” Trin replied, “we haven’t lost anything. Anyway, he might listen and decide there’s nothing to worry about. Or he might decide there is something to worry about and we should consider changing something.”
They came in sight of the village. Jen and Deek stood at the door of their house. They broke off their conversation when Trin and Frieda appeared. Frieda dropped her voice to a murmur. “If you need help convincing Fritz, let me know. I’d be happy to tell him what I told you if it makes any difference.”
“I’ll let you know,” Trin replied. “We might also call on Sasha. She can explain to him why she found the convocation offensive when she first came here. Two of you together would carry more weight than just one.”
They climbed the hill, and their conversation ended when Deek hailed them. “I thought you’d never get here.”
“We had something to discuss,” Trin told him.
“Not sewing, I hope,” Deek countered.
Trin laughed. “No, not sewing.”
“Don’t you dare say anything against my sewing,” Frieda shot back.
“I wouldn’t say anything against it,” Deek replied. “Just tell me you finally figured out how to thread the needle.”
“I can thread the needle,” Frieda told him. “And I can knot the end of the thread and sew two pieces of fabric together. It’s not the neatest sewing in the world, but at least it really is sewing.”
Trin spun around. “And you figured out all that on your own, with no help from anybody?”
Frieda swelled with pride. “Yep.”
Trin shook her head. Jen smiled at Frieda. “I’m ready whenever you want someone to show you how to do anything.”
Frieda beamed back at her. “As long as I’m making progress on my own, I want to keep challenging myself. When I’m ready for a lesson in how to do it right, you’ll be the first to know.”
The group entered the house. People crowded the room, and several children barrelled between the adults’ legs. They screamed and bellowed and crashed into people before tearing outside and disappearing into the village.
Frieda stared after them. The adults the children ran into continued their conversations as if nothing had happened. The general hubbub in the room returned to a steady pitch. Two of the women who escorted Frieda to this house the first time emerged from the crowd and pulled Frieda into it. They talked to her in turns about her house, her work, her impressions of the construction on the next hill, and a thousand other topics. Frieda’s head swam. She couldn’t keep track of what all they occupied her with.
Then another bunch of people joined that conversation and one of the women drifted away. Hours later, Frieda remembered to look around for Deek or anyone else she knew. She met so many new people. She got swept into a million discussions on every subject with all of them, and experienced an instant connection with all of them. She never experienced anything like it in her life.
Toward the middle of the afternoon, a group of young people filed into the house, and all conversation died to a hushed whisper. The company moved back against one wall of the house. The older family members sat on benches, but most stood where they were. Then the young people sang and danced, and the performance ended, not with wild applause, but with the whole family joining in song. Their voices raised the ceiling with the harmonies and choruses before everyone joined hands and danced together through the house.
The young people led the line of relatives out through the door into the village byways. The whole company followed, one behind the other. Frieda danced along with them, and her heart danced in exhilaration until she noticed the line moving toward the meadow. A lightning bolt shot through her. She spotted Deek, and his eyes bored into her soul. They could only be on their way to the convocation.