Posted: Mon May 03, 2004 7:47 pm
I will comment on comments later.
Part Eleven
Where were they?
By now, it was apparent that the king and his chosen were not in Roswell. She’d scoured every corner, every alley way and had come up empty. All she’d been able to locate were the incompetent second and that ditzy floozy he liked to keep around. The fact that she was still in the picture was puzzling. Why would any member of royalty choose to be with her? She obviously had nothing to offer.
To make matters worse, the princess was missing as well. But she knew if she found one, she was bound to find the other. And when she did…
She’d already “found” them, sort of…Mentally, she’d honed in on him, but as of yet he hadn’t given up himself physically. The best part, though, had been the revelation that it had indeed started – he was weak.
Now she just needed to find him before he turned the corner. Before it was too late.
Brow furrowed, she realized that maybe she’d been looking for the wrong things. She’d been looking for a human and an alien. Perhaps she needed to look for someone who was neither.
Rising to her feet, she stretched her arms to the night sky, summoning all evil to her. There was work to be done.
* * * * *
When Liz awoke in the morning, the first thing she realized was that the room was very quiet. Then she realized that the reason the room was quiet was because she was alone. Panicked, she kicked the blankets from her body and raced through the apartment, slowing down long enough to sneak a peek into the empty bathroom.
She found Max sitting sideways on the couch, staring silently out of the window behind it. He didn’t seem distressed or sick or anything unusual…which made the whole thing very unusual. Liz stood motionlessly for a moment, trying to slow her panicked heart, then scratched her head in curiosity.
“What are you doing, Max?” she asked softly.
He turned to look at her and gave her a little smile. “Watching the sun come up.”
She studied him as he turned back to the window. A little cautious, she padded over to the couch and sat down facing him, glancing out the window at the lightening sky. It was going to be a clear, beautiful fall day.
“How are you?” was her next question.
“I feel a little better,” he said without looking at her, his eyes following a bird across the sky.
“How long have you been up?”
He shrugged carelessly. “A while. I made coffee…”
Liz glanced toward the kitchen and noted that the pot was indeed steaming. It had been days since Max had had the energy to even walk all of the way to the kitchen. “Why didn’t you wake me?”
“You looked tired.” He turned to her and held out his hand. “Come here.”
She slid into his embrace and laid her head against his chest. He’d lost weight, she realized. Then again, with what he’d been through, how could he not?
“I’ve had the strangest dreams,” he said over the top of her head. She could tell from the trajectory of his voice that he was looking out the window again.
“It was the fever,” she explained.
“Maybe…I dreamed that you were trying to betray me.”
She sat up quickly, her dark eyes round. “What did you just say?”
Max’s eyes were a little distant, his demeanor non-confrontational. “I heard a voice in my head, telling me that you were making me sick.”
Liz breathed an anxious laugh. “Max, you know that isn’t true. Please tell me you know that.”
He nodded faintly. “I believe that. But…it seemed so real.”
Once again, Liz’s heart was banging into her ribcage. “Have you stopped to think that someone is planting that thought in your head, that they might be taking this opportunity to split us apart?”
“Maybe.” His gaze drifted back to the window. “They’ll be coming soon.”
It was suddenly apparent that maybe Max was better physically, but there was something seriously amiss in his head.
“Who, Max? Who’s coming?”
He appeared to ignore her. “Destiny will be fulfilled,” he whispered. “The time is near.”
Liz swallowed hard, a threat of tears behind her eyes. For wont of a better thing to do, she reached out and grabbed him by the arm. He turned sharply to her and his eyes seemed suddenly clearer than they were a moment before.
“Hey,” he said, smiling. “I made coffee.”
Then she watched as he slid down to a prone position, picked up the remote and turned on the morning news. He appeared to have no recollection of the fact he’d just been talking to her about betrayals and destinies. Fighting off the shaking sensation in her limbs, she looked toward the window.
She had the feeling Max hadn’t really been watching the sun come up – he’d been waiting for something.
* * * * *
Adam was sipping his morning tea and pondering the meaning of his visitor’s strange message the day before when he heard a knock on his door. It was unusual for him to receive a visitor so early in the day – hell, it was unusual for him to receive a visitor at all. Strange visitor plus cryptic message plus unexpected visitor could only equal trouble.
Biting back his cowardice, Adam set his tea cup on top of the stack of comic books and reached for a ball bat he kept concealed behind the drapes – just in case. He was an alien being without powers on a foreign planet – if it took a good Louisville Slugger to defend himself, then so be it.
Tiptoeing to the door, he swung the bat over his shoulder, then opened the door as far as the chain lock would allow. To his surprise, his visitor wasn’t strange. A mystery perhaps, but never strange. Quickly, he pushed the door shut, released the chain and started to give Isabel a huge smile – that was, until his eyes settled on Nikita, slung across one of her arms. Immediately recognizing him, the feline let out a chirp and began to purr.
Isabel eyed the bat. “Are you going somewhere?” she asked tentatively.
Adam followed her line of sight, then gave a nervous laugh and propped the bat against the wall. “Uh, no. Not really.” He pointed to Nikita, afraid Isabel was returning his gift. “Is she okay?”
“Oh, she’s fine,” Isabel said happily as Adam stepped aside to let her into his apartment. “I was wondering if I…might be able to ask a favor…” Her dark eyes flitted to the side self-consciously.
Adam felt a twinge of excitement in his gut. She appreciated him enough to ask for a favor! Of course, he’d give her anything! Blood, a kidney, most of his brain cells…
“Sure,” he said aloud. “Anything.”
“Well, Thanksgiving is tomorrow. And I know your landlady doesn’t want Nikita to live here permanently, but I was wondering…”
Adam raised his eyebrows. “You’d like me to keep her?” he concluded.
Isabel smiled in relief. “Yes. I would. You see, I have to do this family thing and I’m not sure I should take her with me…”
As her voice trailed off, Adam wondered why she all of a sudden looked uncomfortable. He’d already said yes – what was she worried about?
Finally, Isabel shook her head. “You don’t have a family, do you?”
He thought for a moment, then shook his head in return. It didn’t bother him that he was alone – he’d been alone for many decades now.
“Oh, that’s very selfish of me,” Isabel mumbled, stroking her kitten absent-mindedly. “And Maria’s in Roswell, too…”
Adam waited patiently, curious at her self-musings.
Then Isabel beamed her cover-girl smile and he felt his stomach flip all over again. “You’ll come home with me.”
“Excuse me?” He couldn’t have heard correctly.
“Yes, why not?” she decided triumphantly. “No one should be alone on a holiday.”
“But, Isabel, I don’t even celebrate most earth holidays.” Not that he didn’t want to go with her…
“Maybe because you’ve never been shown how to do it. I’ll show you.”
“About Thanksgiving?” One corner of his mouth rose skeptically.
She gave a quick nod of her head. “Then we’ll work on Christmas. You have no idea what I can teach you about Christmas!”
“But…but what about your room mate?” That was always an issue – that mean Guerin guy and his threatening looks.
Isabel laughed. “We probably won’t even see Michael.” Her gaze softened and she reached out to touch his arm. “Please say you’ll come with me.”
Being with an alien with powers was reassurance that Strange Café Man wouldn’t harm him, true. But Adam’s decision to go to Roswell had more to do with Isabel’s kind eyes and soft touch than protecting himself ever would.
* * * * *
At the doorway to the apartment, Liz tugged on her coat and looked solemnly back to Max, who was sleeping quietly on the couch. She hated to leave him alone, but just that morning, she’d convinced Isabel it was okay to go home for the holiday. Of course, that had been before he’d acted so strangely, practically accusing her of trying to harm him. If that incident had happened before Isabel left Albuquerque, there was no way Liz would have felt comfortable letting her go.
Liz had thought about calling off work and staying home, but Mr. Palmer had been watching her like a hawk; she knew that her drawing the closing shift the night before a holiday was punishment of some kind. Unfortunately, with Max under the weather and showing little signs of returning to his old self any time soon, Liz needed that job to support them.
Pausing, her hands at her buttons, she gave a small frown and walked quietly over to the couch. She laid a delicate kiss on his forehead, then moved for the door. In a few hours she’d be home again, she reminded herself.
She just hoped everything would be okay until then.
* * * * *
As the sun set over the desert, her blue eyes popped open in surprise. One of her minions had found the non-alien/non-human and was keeping it under surveillance. Her smile stretched evilly and victoriously from one ear to the other.
It was time.
tbc
Part Eleven
Where were they?
By now, it was apparent that the king and his chosen were not in Roswell. She’d scoured every corner, every alley way and had come up empty. All she’d been able to locate were the incompetent second and that ditzy floozy he liked to keep around. The fact that she was still in the picture was puzzling. Why would any member of royalty choose to be with her? She obviously had nothing to offer.
To make matters worse, the princess was missing as well. But she knew if she found one, she was bound to find the other. And when she did…
She’d already “found” them, sort of…Mentally, she’d honed in on him, but as of yet he hadn’t given up himself physically. The best part, though, had been the revelation that it had indeed started – he was weak.
Now she just needed to find him before he turned the corner. Before it was too late.
Brow furrowed, she realized that maybe she’d been looking for the wrong things. She’d been looking for a human and an alien. Perhaps she needed to look for someone who was neither.
Rising to her feet, she stretched her arms to the night sky, summoning all evil to her. There was work to be done.
* * * * *
When Liz awoke in the morning, the first thing she realized was that the room was very quiet. Then she realized that the reason the room was quiet was because she was alone. Panicked, she kicked the blankets from her body and raced through the apartment, slowing down long enough to sneak a peek into the empty bathroom.
She found Max sitting sideways on the couch, staring silently out of the window behind it. He didn’t seem distressed or sick or anything unusual…which made the whole thing very unusual. Liz stood motionlessly for a moment, trying to slow her panicked heart, then scratched her head in curiosity.
“What are you doing, Max?” she asked softly.
He turned to look at her and gave her a little smile. “Watching the sun come up.”
She studied him as he turned back to the window. A little cautious, she padded over to the couch and sat down facing him, glancing out the window at the lightening sky. It was going to be a clear, beautiful fall day.
“How are you?” was her next question.
“I feel a little better,” he said without looking at her, his eyes following a bird across the sky.
“How long have you been up?”
He shrugged carelessly. “A while. I made coffee…”
Liz glanced toward the kitchen and noted that the pot was indeed steaming. It had been days since Max had had the energy to even walk all of the way to the kitchen. “Why didn’t you wake me?”
“You looked tired.” He turned to her and held out his hand. “Come here.”
She slid into his embrace and laid her head against his chest. He’d lost weight, she realized. Then again, with what he’d been through, how could he not?
“I’ve had the strangest dreams,” he said over the top of her head. She could tell from the trajectory of his voice that he was looking out the window again.
“It was the fever,” she explained.
“Maybe…I dreamed that you were trying to betray me.”
She sat up quickly, her dark eyes round. “What did you just say?”
Max’s eyes were a little distant, his demeanor non-confrontational. “I heard a voice in my head, telling me that you were making me sick.”
Liz breathed an anxious laugh. “Max, you know that isn’t true. Please tell me you know that.”
He nodded faintly. “I believe that. But…it seemed so real.”
Once again, Liz’s heart was banging into her ribcage. “Have you stopped to think that someone is planting that thought in your head, that they might be taking this opportunity to split us apart?”
“Maybe.” His gaze drifted back to the window. “They’ll be coming soon.”
It was suddenly apparent that maybe Max was better physically, but there was something seriously amiss in his head.
“Who, Max? Who’s coming?”
He appeared to ignore her. “Destiny will be fulfilled,” he whispered. “The time is near.”
Liz swallowed hard, a threat of tears behind her eyes. For wont of a better thing to do, she reached out and grabbed him by the arm. He turned sharply to her and his eyes seemed suddenly clearer than they were a moment before.
“Hey,” he said, smiling. “I made coffee.”
Then she watched as he slid down to a prone position, picked up the remote and turned on the morning news. He appeared to have no recollection of the fact he’d just been talking to her about betrayals and destinies. Fighting off the shaking sensation in her limbs, she looked toward the window.
She had the feeling Max hadn’t really been watching the sun come up – he’d been waiting for something.
* * * * *
Adam was sipping his morning tea and pondering the meaning of his visitor’s strange message the day before when he heard a knock on his door. It was unusual for him to receive a visitor so early in the day – hell, it was unusual for him to receive a visitor at all. Strange visitor plus cryptic message plus unexpected visitor could only equal trouble.
Biting back his cowardice, Adam set his tea cup on top of the stack of comic books and reached for a ball bat he kept concealed behind the drapes – just in case. He was an alien being without powers on a foreign planet – if it took a good Louisville Slugger to defend himself, then so be it.
Tiptoeing to the door, he swung the bat over his shoulder, then opened the door as far as the chain lock would allow. To his surprise, his visitor wasn’t strange. A mystery perhaps, but never strange. Quickly, he pushed the door shut, released the chain and started to give Isabel a huge smile – that was, until his eyes settled on Nikita, slung across one of her arms. Immediately recognizing him, the feline let out a chirp and began to purr.
Isabel eyed the bat. “Are you going somewhere?” she asked tentatively.
Adam followed her line of sight, then gave a nervous laugh and propped the bat against the wall. “Uh, no. Not really.” He pointed to Nikita, afraid Isabel was returning his gift. “Is she okay?”
“Oh, she’s fine,” Isabel said happily as Adam stepped aside to let her into his apartment. “I was wondering if I…might be able to ask a favor…” Her dark eyes flitted to the side self-consciously.
Adam felt a twinge of excitement in his gut. She appreciated him enough to ask for a favor! Of course, he’d give her anything! Blood, a kidney, most of his brain cells…
“Sure,” he said aloud. “Anything.”
“Well, Thanksgiving is tomorrow. And I know your landlady doesn’t want Nikita to live here permanently, but I was wondering…”
Adam raised his eyebrows. “You’d like me to keep her?” he concluded.
Isabel smiled in relief. “Yes. I would. You see, I have to do this family thing and I’m not sure I should take her with me…”
As her voice trailed off, Adam wondered why she all of a sudden looked uncomfortable. He’d already said yes – what was she worried about?
Finally, Isabel shook her head. “You don’t have a family, do you?”
He thought for a moment, then shook his head in return. It didn’t bother him that he was alone – he’d been alone for many decades now.
“Oh, that’s very selfish of me,” Isabel mumbled, stroking her kitten absent-mindedly. “And Maria’s in Roswell, too…”
Adam waited patiently, curious at her self-musings.
Then Isabel beamed her cover-girl smile and he felt his stomach flip all over again. “You’ll come home with me.”
“Excuse me?” He couldn’t have heard correctly.
“Yes, why not?” she decided triumphantly. “No one should be alone on a holiday.”
“But, Isabel, I don’t even celebrate most earth holidays.” Not that he didn’t want to go with her…
“Maybe because you’ve never been shown how to do it. I’ll show you.”
“About Thanksgiving?” One corner of his mouth rose skeptically.
She gave a quick nod of her head. “Then we’ll work on Christmas. You have no idea what I can teach you about Christmas!”
“But…but what about your room mate?” That was always an issue – that mean Guerin guy and his threatening looks.
Isabel laughed. “We probably won’t even see Michael.” Her gaze softened and she reached out to touch his arm. “Please say you’ll come with me.”
Being with an alien with powers was reassurance that Strange Café Man wouldn’t harm him, true. But Adam’s decision to go to Roswell had more to do with Isabel’s kind eyes and soft touch than protecting himself ever would.
* * * * *
At the doorway to the apartment, Liz tugged on her coat and looked solemnly back to Max, who was sleeping quietly on the couch. She hated to leave him alone, but just that morning, she’d convinced Isabel it was okay to go home for the holiday. Of course, that had been before he’d acted so strangely, practically accusing her of trying to harm him. If that incident had happened before Isabel left Albuquerque, there was no way Liz would have felt comfortable letting her go.
Liz had thought about calling off work and staying home, but Mr. Palmer had been watching her like a hawk; she knew that her drawing the closing shift the night before a holiday was punishment of some kind. Unfortunately, with Max under the weather and showing little signs of returning to his old self any time soon, Liz needed that job to support them.
Pausing, her hands at her buttons, she gave a small frown and walked quietly over to the couch. She laid a delicate kiss on his forehead, then moved for the door. In a few hours she’d be home again, she reminded herself.
She just hoped everything would be okay until then.
* * * * *
As the sun set over the desert, her blue eyes popped open in surprise. One of her minions had found the non-alien/non-human and was keeping it under surveillance. Her smile stretched evilly and victoriously from one ear to the other.
It was time.
tbc