“Capital Acres. My husband worked in a research facility outside of Capital Acres, but I had been living in an apartment by myself within the huge city, as we had recently become estranged. In fact, I was set to return to Earth soon.”
Thousands of humans had lived in Capital Acres. My throat burns when I consider the massive loss of life. I shouldn’t ask the question that lingers on my tongue, but I do. “What was it like? The attack on Capital Acres?”
“Bloody and terrifying as hell,” she says with a deep sigh. “Kleaxian warriors stormed the streets and buildings, shooting men on sight. Women were rounded up in large hovercrafts. I thank God human children were never permitted to visit Tallia. I suspect the Kleaxians would have killed boy children as if they were men.” She cocks her head at me. “How old are you, Laylah?”
“Twenty-two.” I don’t want her to know I’m eighteen, because I don’t want her to pity me and look upon me as a child. Sure, I’m only claiming four additional years, but I doubt she’ll believe me if I claim to be older. Back home, people I met often found it difficult to believe my age, given my petite stature. Sheila, on the other hand, was tall, elegant, and with the help of carefully applied makeup could easily appear a decade older than her true age. On more than one occasion, she’d successfully purchased liquor without being carded. I sigh inwardly at the memory and return my attention to Joanna.
“Were you traveling with family?” she asks, her eyebrows lifting with concern.
“No, just me. A trip to Tallia was a graduation present from my aunt.” Guilt stabs at me for lying to her about my age. She’ll assume I recently graduated from college, and I hope she doesn’t ask what university I attended or what I majored in.
“I should be going soon,” she says with a glance over her shoulder, as if fearing her master would suddenly barge through the trees, demanding his berries.
“Wait. Are there many human females in the nearest town?”
“About two dozen. All but me and a sixty-year-old woman named Mariella are young enough to have been taken as mates.” She winks. “Never been so glad to be an old lady in my life.”
I wish I could do something to improve Joanna’s circumstances. The fading bruise on her cheek draws my attention once more. Noticing my stare, she touches it. “I got in the way when my master was preparing to beat his new human mate. Helena ran away, made it all the way outside of town near the docks, but he caught her and dragged her back to the house by her hair.” Her face pales.
“Are you all right? What about your master’s mate? How badly did he hurt her?”
“I am fine. Tougher than I look, I promise. It happened only two days after the attack. After he knocked me down, he spanked her and hit her with a belt a few times, but her bruises have already faded. It was the only time he’s beaten her, thank goodness. She’s too afraid to defy him now.”
I press my lips together and fight back a wave of emotion. I’d been so scared the first time Kenan punished me, only minutes after formally meeting him, and I can certainly empathize with the pain and fright Helena has endured, despite having never met her myself.
Careful to keep my expression neutral—I don’t want Joanna to ask if Kenan has ever raised a hand to me—I glance at the stone path. It’s still empty, no sign of my mate. Would he be angry if he caught me speaking with an elderly human woman, despite having never expressly forbidden it? I’m not sure, but I still don’t wish to find out.
“Does your master speak English?” I’m curious, because if she can’t always understand his orders, that makes her situation even more precarious. Helena’s too.
“Yes. He apparently spent a year in captivity in a laboratory outside Capital Acres before escaping. During that time, he was able to learn our language. He’s surprisingly fluent, and he’s been teaching English to the Kleaxians in town who’ve taken human mates.”
Somehow, this bit of information gives me hope. If Joanna’s master isn’t forcing his mate or his slaves to learn his tongue and is actively educating other Kleaxian males how to communicate with their human mates, perhaps he has some redeeming qualities, after all. His predisposition for violence notwithstanding, I think, with another glance at Joanna’s bruise. I wonder if Helena’s mate ever treats her with tenderness or plays sad Kleaxiancalling songsfor her.
“What do you know of the laboratories where Kleaxians were held?” Kenan hasn’t told me much about them, but I want to know how cruel the human scientists were to his people. If only to help me reconcile some of his anger toward my kind.
A glint of fury sparks in her eyes. She sighs deeply and shifts the basket of berries to her other hip. “The labs were awful. My husband worked in one. He was a leading scientist studying the DNA of Kleaxians. Though Kleaxians are much larger than humans, the males at least, and there are other obvious differences between our races, we share enough DNA that our two races are sexually compatible and can reproduce. Somehow, we share a common ancestor, or at least that’s what my husband believed. Other scientists believe another alien race, one even more advanced than the Kleaxians, must have seeded life on Earth and on Kleaxia—the planet on which Kleaxians evolved before settling on Tallia not so long ago. Once I discovered some of the Kleaxians were dying in the various experiments, I appealed to my husband to stop. If we’re so similar to their kind, why hurt them? But scientific curiosity was always more important to him than morals, and he wouldn’t stop. Even after I gave him an ultimatum—that I was going to leave him after forty-two years of marriage—he persisted in his unethical experiments.”
For a moment, I can only stare at her. I feel stupid for not realizing on my own that humans and Kleaxians must share the same DNA, otherwise it would have been impossible for Kenan’s human father to impregnate his Kleaxian mother.
“Why couldn’t Earth officials make contact with Kleaxians in a diplomatic way? It doesn’t make sense.”
“Well, Earth officials did attempt to be friendly with them at first,” she replied matter-of-factly. “However, the Kleaxians attacked us without any provocation during the first missions to Tallia, confidential missions the general population of Earth has never learned about. Eventually, we returned with larger numbers and more firepower. We had no idea the Kleaxians were actively building up their weaponry and that their technology actually surpassed ours, until of course, it was too late.”
“My mate told me that humans didn’t actually create the Anders-Perkins wormhole, and that we simply discovered a way to enlarge a naturally existing wormhole. Is that true?”
“I’m afraid so,” she says, her eyes sad. “I confess I took to snooping around my husband’s computer before I finally decided to leave him. I’m good with computers and had no trouble opening his encrypted files. It’s all true about the wormhole, and I’m also afraid there’s no hope of humans creating a new one to Tallia. We simply don’t have the technology. We’re probably hundreds of years away from such a discovery, at least according to the files I read.”
“So we really are stranded here? Forever?” Though I’d already known this to be true, I want to hear a human I trust confirm what Kenan’s told me. I trust Joanna. We’re on the same side, and besides, what reason would she have to lie to me?
“Oh yes, we are very much stranded here.Forever,” she says with a sigh. She tucks a strand of hair that’s escaped her bun behind her ear. Once again, she peers over her shoulder and scans the forest for signs that we’re not alone. “The Kleaxians destroyed the wormhole. It was the first sign of the attack. A brilliant glow in the night sky that lit up Capital Acres as if morning had come early.”
I knew from the brochures that the wormhole was only a speck of blue light from the surface of Tallia, that one couldn’t actually glimpse the intricate swirls of blue and white light, and her description of the event stuns me. I’d never considered that those in Capital Acres would’ve known something had happened to the wormhole before the attack began, but now it makes perfect sense. The flashes of light during the attack on theStargazerhad momentarily stolen my vision.
“Well, I really must go now.” Joanna turns to the forest.
“Will you visit again?” She’s my first human connection since the attack and I don’t want to lose her. The glint of mischief in her eye gives me hope, because even though she’s witnessed and endured violence, her spirit isn’t yet broken. I admire her strength.
“Of course, Laylah. Is your mate absent most mornings? I don’t think he would approve of you speaking with me. Slaves aren’t supposed to make friends with anyone above their status, or so I’ve been told.”