....You ready?? Here is Chapter One of Chasing Earth (coming June-ish 2018). Be forewarned, this is unedited (Look away, Eagle! Look away!! đđ). It's about 1/3 of the way finished right now and I am just loving it so far đ Feel free to post your comments/thoughts/feedback below.
And away we go!
Chapter One:
Tori slowly pried her eyes open; the pain had finally stopped. Thank Gaia.
Something told her sheâd been down a while and she felt disoriented as she looked about the room, noting the soft sounds of medical equipment nearby. This wasnât the same one she remembered. It was bigger, with a full-length glass wall, sealed alloy doors and soft lighting. She frowned, trying to push herself up, surprised by how weak she was. Why had they moved her?
Then Tori remembered and gasped, reaching up to touch her eyelids.
âWelcome back, Doctor. How do you feel? Please, donât tax yourself.â The voice startled her. It wasnât one she recognized. The man stood on the other side of the glass, the brighter illumination high-lighting his features.
âIâm Dr. Yin.â
He looked older, dark hair graying at his temples.
âWhatâs going on? How long have I been out?â Tori asked, struggling to sit up, her voice low and rasping.
âYouâve been in and out of consciousness for three days. And weâre still trying to figure that out. Though, we were somewhat prepared for the scenario.â
Tori closed her eyes and touched her forehead. âI donât understand. My eyesâŚâ.
âYes, your eyes are the most telling symptom. But be assured, weâre running every test imaginable. The alien covering did make things more difficult, but we were able to get you to drink at least.â Tori looked down at Henry and fingered the material. It pulsed softly back at her. The thought they hadnât been able to stick an IV scared her.
âWould someone please just tell me plainly, whatâs going on?â She said, growing more alarmed by the second.
As if on cue, Wells entered. âAh, youâre awake. How are you feeling?â He said brightly.
âConfused. Afraid. Annoyed. All of the above.â She answered testily. âWhatâs wrong with me?â
Wells sighed. âWe were hoping you could tell us that, Doctor.â He said, staring her down. Tori blinked.
âDid you really think we wouldnât know?â
She felt her stomach drop and her fingers curled into the bedding. âI donât know what youâre talking about.â She murmured.
âOh, come now. We had you more closely monitored than any human being in history. Vid, audio. Hell, even remote viewing. If you believe in that sort of thing.â He added, brow puckering.
Remote viewing. Like ESP? Then Tori realized what he said. âYou had the feeds running even when you said youâd turned them off.â She voiced torpidly.
âOf course, we did.â His tone was scolding, as if she were a child.
âThatâs ⌠not right.â
âThis is the real world, Dr. Davis. Earth governments donât deal in chance, or courtesy, or fair play when it comes to the safety and security of our planet and its people.â
âThey wonât be happy youâve been deceiving them.â She said evenly, her indignation coming through as she thought of Aderus, surprised that she felt more upset for him and the others than for herself.
âIf they donât already know then theyâre not nearly as advanced or intelligent as we thought they were. And I hardly think spying on your romantic tryst is cause for concern. What should concern you, however, is that you seem to have been infected with some type of alien virus.â
âWhat?â Her heart skipped at his words.
âWeâve brought in experts in genetics and virology, and as best we can tell, youâve been altered on a molecular level.â Tori stared at him dumbly. âYour DNA, Doctor. The changes are slight but theyâre there.â
Her eyes. They resembled Askari eyes⌠more like a cross between the two, actually. But a virus? Altered DNA? She felt her heart pick up as she struggled not to panic. What the hell had she gotten herself into?
âWe need you to remain calm.â She heard Yin say soothingly. âWeâre still analyzing data, gathering information. Which will be much easier now that youâre awake.â
Tori swallowed and looked down at her hands, then gingerly felt her face. Everything seemed normal, felt normal. Try not to overreact, she thought, fighting to calm herself⌠until thereâs cause to.
âOkay.â She said, licking her lips and looking at them. âI feel fine. Better than I did. The pain is gone.â
âThatâs good.â Dr. Yin replied. âIt was most likely the virus asserting itself. There are no detrimental effects weâve been able to detect, yet. Your eyes are really the only telling feature.â
Tori fingered her lids again. Goddess, this was terrifying. Three days? Her brain immediately latched onto the one person whom her world seemed to suddenly revolve around.
***
Aderus waited at the gate to the Earth vessel, Jadar and Xaphan by his side. He had asked the healer to join him because he was the most level-headed among them. And he chose Xaphan, precisely because he was not. It had been three sols since they had seen the little khurzha, and with each one that passed, he grew more restlessâŚ
Something had happened; the feeling was visceral and surprisingly strong. The humans had been rebuffing him each time, their attempts to explain away her absence only increasing his suspicions. They had said she wasnât feeling well and needed rest, asked if his kind ever got sick or "caught viruses". Then Wells approached him about giving his blood for them to study. Of course, heâd refused. But Aderus didnât like the sense he got. As if the diplomat knew something he sought to hold over him.
It had all made him irritated and peevish, and he forcibly clicked his claws as they waited for the Earthers.
The gates parted, and Aderusâs sharp gold eyes locked onto the group facing them. His snout twitched. The number of human guards had increased and more wearing the coverings that Tori sometimes donned were also present.
âRepresentatives Aderus, Jadar.â Wells said, looking at them with a smile that didnât touch his half-colorless orbs. The gesture was unique to humans but Aderus could now recognize when it was genuine, and when it was not.
âErm, Xaphan, is it?â He said, glancing toward the scarred male.
Xaphan raised his lip in a silent show of teeth and the flesh of Wellsâ face grew pallid.
âIf youâll follow me.â
The group led them to a bright corridor inside the Earth vessel and stopped in front of a large transparent barrier. The connecting chamber was dim, so Aderus had not noticed movement at first. But when his eyes caught on the small figure he started, ears pushing forward. Tori was turned away from them, sitting on what Earthers called a bed. It looked like she fiddled with something in front of her. Food or drink, he realized, as he watched her raise it to her mouth. A small feeling of relief stole over him at seeing she wore the havat. It would have protected her from his worst imaginings.
She looked up as more humans filed in behind them and her slight, overly expressive features came alive when she saw him. She dropped her foodthings and pushed herself up but halted when her gaze found the others, the expression dropping from her face. Aderus looked to them; he would know what had happened, he vowed.
âAderus.â Her soft mono-tone voice drew his gaze back. She had stepped up to the barrier and was staring up at himâŚ
His limbs stiffened, and his nostrils puffed, even as his breathing went still.
***
Tori watched Aderus react. His tresses flattened against his head and his irises dilated. Yeah, that was about her same reaction too. His apparent shock helped to dispel her greatest worry- that he had knowingly infected her with something. She hadnât wanted to believe that, but it needed to be ruled out. Or so said the handful of doctors and scientists that were now diligently studying âthe phenomenonâ. She, was a phenomenon.
She jumped when he stepped forward, clawed fingers thumping against the glass. He rumbled something in Askari, which is when she noticed Jadar and Xaphan. She slowly raised her hand to the cool, hard surface, opposite his, and met his gaze.
âIâm okay.â She said with a small smile. âJust, shocked and a little afraid.â Not to mention embarrassed. Sheâd just assumed that because they were so advanced, there was nothing to worry about in that capacity. Communicable diseases were extremely rare anymore, if thatâs in fact how sheâd contracted it.
Her focus moved to Jadar and Xaphan as they too stepped forward, their nostrils flaring as if they could smell her through the glass.
âNow that weâre all reacquainted...â Wells said, interrupting them. âAh, good.â He added, looking down the corridor.
A woman with dark hair rushed up to him moments later. She was about Toriâs height, shapely. âSorry, Iâm late!â She breathed, pushing a stray curl back from her face. Tori looked between them, wondering what was going on.
âThis is Dr. Kemina Perez.â Wells said. âSheâs one of our experts.â
Tori stared at the pair of black-rimmed glasses that sat atop the other womanâs nose. Her grandmother used to wear glasses to read, but it was something rarely seen anymore. Tori frowned, wondering what would necessitate them.
âHola.â The other woman waved and looked around nervously. Tori could tell it was the first time sheâd interacted with the Askari; they definitely had that effect on a person. Her gaze kept fixing on them, as if in awe, but also not daring to stare. Aderus had stepped back from the glass and was looking toward the newcomer as well.
âEm, Iâll get right to the point.â She continued, a slight quiver in her voice. âAs of right now, she doesnât seem to be contagious. Other than potentially, blood to blood contact. We havenât detected any detrimental effects, but itâs definitely not from Earth. I would⌠need a blood sample from the original vectors.â She said, looking to Jadar and Xaphan.
Dr. Perez jumped when the scarred male hissed, flashing both sets of teeth.
âIâm sure we can work something out.â Wells interrupted smoothly. âThough, ideally, it would be the individual who likely infected her to give the sample.â He added, looking meaningfully to Aderus.
âIdeally.â Perez seconded. âWe need to see the virus in its original environment to help us know what to expect in a human host, as well as how it might mutate or spread. Though, like I said, right now Dr. Davis is stable.â She said, looking to Tori with a small smile.
Jadar said something clipped and the air grew heavy as the three of them communicated in that way unique to their kind.
âHas this ever happened before? To another species you interact with?â Tori asked through the glass, looking up at Aderus. She didnât want to force them to do anything they were uncomfortable with, and understood the type of vulnerabilities it could expose, but Tori also didnât want to die a horrible death or suffer some painful deformity. Who knew what could happen with this thing in her body.
Aderus stared down at her. âTheir technologies prevent such things.â He rumbled then grew quiet, calculating.
âYour expert can gain the information she seeks aboard our vesselâ, he finally said, pinning Wells with a molten look.
Wait. Did he mean what she thought he meant? Holy Goddess, she had started to wonder if sheâd ever see the day!! Aderus had curled his lip when sheâd suggested he was a diplomat, but a tiny ribbon of pride tickled her chest at his words. It meant they could take control of the situation, while also appeasing Earthâs endless demands for allowing other people aboard their vessel.
Wells eyes flared in triumph, but it was quickly masked. âAnd if we still need a sample?â
He jerked when Xaphan let loose a snarled, clicking growl.
.....To be continued
Chasing Earth by J.M. Link
Copyright 2018, J.M. Link
All rights reserved.