Read Starseed Online

Authors: Liz Gruder

Starseed (7 page)

“The highland area at the equator,” Jordyn pointed, “is Aphrodite Terra. Do you remember Aphrodite?”

Kaila scanned her memory.
Aphrodite is the Greek goddess of love, beauty, pleasure, and procreation.

“Ah, you remember,” said Jordyn. His face and body appeared red-orange in the fierce glow emitted from Venus. “
We
are the gods and goddesses, Kaila. Know that, remember that. And now, here, before me, is Aphrodite reborn.” Jordyn stared at Kaila earnestly; his fingers tightened over hers. “She was quite beautiful, as you are.”

Kaila flushed; no one had ever told her she was beautiful. She faced Jordyn, whose eyes again looked like an intelligent owl’s with immense black pupils. His eyes devoured her every nuance. She felt inexplicably drawn toward this boy-man, wise beyond his years. She wanted to dive deeper into those unfathomable eyes. She sensed if she dropped into those eyes she’d travel through a portal into the beyond, some place like she hovered in now. She would face herself, through him, realizing union and home.

“We are not all human,” Jordyn spoke to Kaila’s mind. “We are a blend of human and what you call alien—beings from another place in the universe. This is what makes us special. And what makes us different. You are like us, Kaila. This is why we feel connected from the moment we meet. You’ve always felt different—and lonely—we know. We understand.”

They floated in space, between Venus and the sun. Kaila’s heart glowed, warm as that sun.
He knew her; he understood her
. She projected gratitude out from her mind and heart. Here, now, she knew the heart and the mind projecting out to its intended source formed a triangle.

“A triangle is powerful,” Jordyn said. “If you combine the energy of your heart with the energy of your mind and project intention out, you have magic that no other creatures in the universe can emulate.”

He faced her, caressing her warm hands as they floated. She felt dazzling energy emanating from the middle of his chest and from the space between his eyes.

Then, she felt her own heart and mind forces tunneling out to Jordyn. As their energies touched, they ignited blissful sparks. Their bodies vibrated and shimmered. They were enveloped in a golden field that merged to one synchronized vibration.

“This is incredible,” Jordyn murmured. “We never felt this before.”

They held hands, basking in the warmth of their combined energy, radiant with golden light while floating peacefully in space.

Kaila grew overwhelmed; the sensation was so powerful, she felt like a supernova just prior to its luminous explosion, scattering across the universe. She averted her gaze to the dormant volcanoes jutting from Venus’s rugged surface.

“We are going to tell you some things,” Jordyn said. “You will not remember them all, but you will soon. Do you trust us?”

She nodded. Inside, fireworks of bliss erupted, more joyous than anything she’d experienced in her entire life.

“I’ve flown in my dreams before,” Kaila said. “Now I fly with you. This has to be a dream.” She rested her head on his shoulder, compelled toward him, as a moth flies toward the light. “A beautiful dream.”

Jordyn drew her closer. His arms felt warm and strong.

Every cell in her body vibrated. The vibration felt warm and fiercely alive. As Jordyn held her, they merged to one blissful energy field. No words existed to describe this incredible joy.

Kaila realized then that her heart had opened. In this break in time and space, without judgment or constriction, she loved with every beat of her radiating heart.

Simultaneously, she felt a blacking out and everything receding. The edges of Jordyn’s spiky hair softened, the outlines of his shoulders and thighs blurred. He was evaporating to nothing.

“Wait!” she called. “Don’t leave.”

“Less emotion,” Jordyn counseled. “Emotions confuse and make you less powerful. We have to maintain control.” He closed his eyes as if trying to suppress something foreign and alien rising within himself.

“Is that really true?” Kaila wondered as blackness engulfed her.

“If you remember anything,” Jordyn said, his voice trailing away. “Remember this: you are much more powerful than you know.”

The iPhone chimed an alarm. Kaila sleepily gazed at the wooden slats draped with white eyelet on the canopy. What had she dreamed? Something about an owl. Or was it Jordyn? She sighed, feeling soft and languorous with the thought of him.

The phone chimed again. Kaila sat up in bed. She hadn’t time to think of owls. She had to hurry or she’d miss the bus.

She dressed and applied her new makeup. Wow, now this looked good. She was transformed, like a magazine model with her cute black skirt, hot pink blouse, and violet eyeliner. Stupid wig, though. She sighed, loathing the binding black plastic and artificial blonde hair. She put on a black headband to match her skirt.

She cocked her head. Something scratched at the balcony door. She ran to open the door. Lucy and Woofy raced inside. How on earth had they gotten locked on the balcony?

The dogs wagged their tails as she petted them. Lucy barked at Kaila.

“Quit,” Kaila said, breezing past Lucy. “I don’t have time.”

Kaila ignored Lucy’s persistent barks as she leaned over the wrought-iron railing in the morning humidity, peering out to the fields. Her mother, Mike and Nan were out there inspecting the grasses. From up here on the second-story gallery, Kaila saw an odd shape had been molded or cut in the grass. It was a circle near large as the old house with a cross attached.

As Kaila approached her family examining the grasses in the field, her mother shouted, “Kaila, go on in to breakfast.”

No
, Kaila thought. She would not be protected like a kid anymore. She joined her mother, step-father and grandmother who stood with folded arms as they peered at the flattened grasses.

“It is
not
a crop circle, Lee,” Mike said. “All that stuff is bogus.”

“Grasses don’t flatten into shapes on their own,” her mother countered.

Kaila bent, touched the grass. Each blade bent perfectly straight. A gigantic circle and attached cross.

“Jeez,” Mike said. “All this talk of aliens and crop circles is ridiculous.” He turned to Kaila. “I bet you a thousand to one there’s some boy who likes you and is trying to impress you.”

Dew glistened on the bent grasses in the rising sun.

“And look at you, all dolled up,” Mike added. “Yep,” he said, guiding Lee and Nan. “Let’s get back to the house and get this girl to school. From the way she looks, I guarantee we have a whole lot more coming.”

In a flash of clarity, Kaila realized Jordyn had come in the night. She and he and this grass thing were connected . . . somehow. A veil was lifting.

“Don’t worry, Mom,” Kaila said. “This is the sign for Venus. It’s a hoax. Nothing from outer space would make something like this.”

Her mother clutched her baseball cap tightly on her head.

“See, I told you,” Mike said, his arm draped across Lee’s shoulders. “What’s next? Boys serenading outside the house?”

“Well, I think it’s a strange way to romance . . .” her mother’s voice trailed off.

Kaila stared at the morning dew on the bent grasses. She smiled, recalling that the symbol of Venus was the sign of love.

“Kaila! Back here!” On the school bus, Kaila spotted Melissa and Pia sitting in the back.

“Look at you,” Melissa said, her long dark bangs swept at an angle over her face.

“You look hot, girl,” Pia said. She had gel in her auburn hair. She wore an orange t-shirt, black skinny jeans, and Converse shoes. “You get a makeover last night?”

“I was feeling like a hick yesterday. So my grandfather took me to the mall.”

“Be a hick,” Melissa said, smiling. “We don’t care.”

“Just don’t be a poser,” Pia warned.

“Is that bad?” Kaila asked.

“Little Miss Innocent,” Pia said, squeezing Kaila’s shoulder. “Have fun, be yourself. And that’s exactly what you’re doing. So that’s cool.”

Kaila smiled back at Pia. It felt good to have friends.

Pia blew a huge pink bubble of chewing gum. Too much to resist, Kaila popped the bubble gum on Pia’s nose and lips.

“Okay,” Pia said, peeling the gum from her nose. “Not so innocent after all.” She balled up the gum and pried open Kaila’s lips. “But now you’re gonna eat it!”

“Stop!” Kaila said, laughing.

Too late. The gum was in her mouth. She pulled the gum from her mouth and tried to push it into Pia’s. Pia curled her lips over her teeth and lowered her head, shaking with laughter.

They wrestled, Kaila saying, “Take it, take it!” while Pia shook her head.

“It’s goin’ up your nose, then,” Kaila cried.

Pia snatched the gum and threw it. The gum splatted against a window two seats up and stuck. People turned around and looked. Kaila and Pia ducked, laughing until they cried.

When the bus pulled into the parking lot, Kaila was dying to go to the back of the school. She inexplicably longed to be with Jordyn. She knew she had dreamed of him, but she couldn’t remember much other than it felt good to dream about him. She sensed there was something poignant to reclaim like a beautiful melody she’d heard and forgotten.

She explained to Melissa and Pia that she had something to do.

“Hey,” Pia said, wagging her finger, bracelets jangling. “You can’t fool us. We know what you’re up to.”

“We’ll go with you,” Melissa said.

So, the three girls trudged to the back of the school where it was humid and hot as all Louisiana August mornings. Kaila was unused to wearing heels and worried that they might get muddy.

“Oh well,” Pia said once they turned the corner. They were greeted by nothing but the hum of lazy, chirping crickets. “No aliens. Strike three.”

Yet Kaila knew they were coming. She sensed the invading energy. Gooseflesh rose on her arms. She faced out to the back field with the rising sun and modular units as Pia and Melissa faced her. Behind them, the six aliens appeared, seemingly from thin air.

They stood in a line, their silhouettes blocking the sunlight. Kaila recalled Jordyn’s voice in her dream. “Less emotion.”

He observed her with large golden eyes, a sun god emerging from the skies.

Other books

The Color of Hope by Kim Cash Tate
SANCTION: A Thriller by S.M. Harkness
Moron by Todd Millar
The Solitude of Thomas Cave by Georgina Harding
Devil You Know by Cathy MacPhail
Life of Elizabeth I by Alison Weir
Wings over Delft by Aubrey Flegg
Unstitched by Jacquie Underdown
As Night Falls by Jenny Milchman