Brave Enough (CC, Adult) AN 12/28 [WIP]

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Chione
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Brave Enough (CC, Adult) AN 12/28 [WIP]

Post by Chione »

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Brave Enough

Author: Chione

Rating: Mature

Category: M/L K/T I/A M/M

Disclaimer: I don’t own Roswell.

Summary: Picks up mid-Destiny. The gang rescues Max and, determined to get their lives back, set out to destroy Pierce and the Special Unit. But Pierce never underestimated them.

Author's Note: I'm a bad, bad person. I said I'd get the next chapter to Vegas out, but I really wanted to post this. I've already got several parts of this story written, but I will be posting them - for the most part - in rotation with my other stories, so please be patient. (Of course, as evidence by this, I'm horrible at following schedules, so you never know.)

PS. This is not going to be a happy story. It will be dreamer, and it will have a happily ever after, but it might be awhile.

------------------

<center>Fear no more the heat o’ the sun
Nor the furious winter’s rages;
Thou thy worthy task hast done,
Home art gone, and ta’en they wages;
Golden lads and girls all must
As chimney sweepers, come to dust.

Fear no more the frown o’ the great
Thou art past the tyrant’s stroke;
Care no more to clothe and eat
To thee the reed is as the oak.
The scepter learning, physic, must
All follow this, and come to dust.

Fear no more the lightning flash
Nor the all-dreaded thunder-stone;
Fear not slander, censure rash;
Thou hast finished joy and moan.
All lovers young, all lovers must
Consign to thee, and come to dust.

-William Shakespeare</center>

------------------

Prologue- Gray

She’d give anything to see red again.

She wasn’t even sure her eyes would be able to recognize warm colors anymore. After days of staring at the skin on her arm, the only warmth in the room, the color had dulled to a soft gray, matching the walls, the floor and the ceiling. If they hadn’t cut her hair to just below her ears, she knew she’d have held it before her eyes until it too turned cool and colorless. Brown was better than gray. Anything was better than gray.

They called it the White Room. In Max’s memories, it had been white. The robes they wore were white, the scrubs they’d forced on her were white, the bed and sheets and pillows were white. Water, when placed in a white cup or against a white wall, became white. But she discovered after awhile that the whites had subtle differences. The whites in her room, whether from the pale, fluorescent lighting or a tint to the paint, were more gray than completely white. (She’d prefer white.) Unlike the white plates, cubes and robes from outside, which hinted at a sickly, yellow green.

Shadows and highlights blended, shifted, fell away, and the world was flat. If she unfocused her eyes, the walls would cease to be standing and everything in existence was simply gray. Closing her eyes, not to go to sleep - she never slept - but to gaze at the marvelous kaleidoscope of colors, swirls and shapes, lights and darks, rainbows, explosions of hues that lived beneath her eyelids, became her escape.

Those, too, were fading.

Shades of gray. (She’d even prefer black and white.)

When the day came that her haven failed, she knew it’d be the end of her. Sanity depended on the fading colors in her mind.

She didn’t know how long it would take. She didn’t even know how long she’d been in the little gray room, with the little gray table, and the little gray bed. She’d rested four times with long periods of wakefulness in between. If that meant four days, she wouldn’t survive until the end of the week.

She didn’t even want to.

Gray hadn’t sucked out her life yet, but it’d destroyed her desire for it.

She’d give anything to see red again.

Bright yellow.

Orange.

As long as it wasn’t gray.

Resting her head against the tile of the wall, she waited for time to pass and the future to come. Anything was better than the present. Gray and frozen time.

There was a sound, the only other aside from her breathing, and a portion of the smooth, gray wall came open. Men stepped through, three of them, dressed in white with a sickly green tint, ready, arms out, to restrain her should she resist. They needn’t have bothered. If they intended to take her somewhere, she’d go willingly. No matter what lay in store, she’d deal, because it was a chance to move, to see. Pain she could fight; gray, she couldn’t.

They pulled her up by her arms, tugging at the joint in her shoulder, and ignoring her attempts to catch her footing. The men wore masks so she couldn’t see their faces, only their eyes, covered by shiny plastic and obscuring any colors there. Only the reflection of the lights above. More white.

Her feet were bare, the plastic floor burning where they stumbled and dragged.

The men’s grip on her arms was firm.

Even the hallways were gray, she observed with growing dismay, when it seemed as if she’d never escape it. Would she end up in another square room, nothing but walls in a world of no color?

She’d rather die.

A sharp jerk on her arm drew her left, down another hallway, identical to the last. As she passed the doors, some with windows, some without, she didn’t dare glance over, for fear of seeing what lay inside. Dread had filled her stomach in place of food since her capture, images and feelings she’d acquired from Max’s memories haunting her every thought. What would they do to her? Did they think she was an alien, or did they somehow know she’d been healed by one?

And worse, what would they do if they did find something different about her, after Max’s healing?

She wasn’t strong enough. If her imprisonment lasted much longer, she’d go mad, no matter how much love she had for Max, no matter her desire to protect him, to keep him safe. How could anyone, human or otherwise, survive in such conditions? How long could anyone last until the gray consumed them as well?

And that didn’t even include the pain.

She liked to think she was strong. She liked to think she was stubborn. She liked to think, if it came down to it, she’d have the courage to stand up to them.

But that was as much as lie as saying the guards were there to release her, to let her go home, and hug her parents once more in the door of the Crashdown, that door with the horrible blue paint she’d welcome if it were to greet her again. Fear had a way of overcoming the qualities you thought you had, until all you were was a bundle of fear, and ways to escape it.

Black was the first thing she became aware of outside the monotony of the gray and the circles in her thoughts. A solid, black door leading to heaven, or hell, or anywhere in between that she couldn’t yet see. The eternities that passed as she waited for the men to open it seemed to eat away at any hope she had left.

Then there was color, color everywhere, overwhelming color, and she swooned at the sight, nearly fainting, dizzy with the sensation of seeing.

Twirling about like a child at the beach for the first time, marveling at the expanse of water, at the colors and the unfamiliar surroundings, she basked in the color, the very warmth of the sun. How could she have forgotten this? Even if they locked her away for the rest of her life, she swore she’d never forget this rush. If ever she was able to escape, or was rescued, it was a lesson she’d never forget: such a simple appreciation, of such a simple thing. But oh so wonderful. Miraculous.

After too short a moment, a guard reached for her arm, slapping her across the face harshly, to bring her down to reality, and gray, once again. The same guard pushed her forward, and she caught herself, made sense of the colors before her, recognizing the face.

A beautiful face, or what would’ve been, without the dark circles, and the pale, white of her cheeks. But her eyes were still crystal blue, ocean blue, the only blue of its kind anywhere in sight. The curling locks on her shoulders had fallen from their neat, perfect ringlets; just waves, and thin, dirty at that, but still the warm blonde they had always been.

There’d been a time only too recently the image would’ve been a cause for alarm, for fear, and trepidation. Now it only brought joy, blinding, boundless joy, at something familiar. Something colorful. And something that, perhaps, made her a little less alone.

Tess Harding, standing just oppose her on a field of emerald grass and pale, blue sky.

Liz Parker closed her eyes, and memorized the sight.

* * * * *

Please, please, please tell me what you think. Feedback is much appreciated.
Last edited by Chione on Fri Dec 28, 2007 6:34 pm, edited 18 times in total.
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Chione
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Location: Wherever the Four Winds blow. . .

Post by Chione »

Wow. So where did October go? Obviously it passed my house. . . hmm. Anyway, I was really hoping to do better with this whole updating thing. Oh well. I'm trying. Next on my list is Children of Eden. Thank you all so much for your responses and feedback. They feed us writers with motivation and desire to get our butts in gear and write.

Note: This is rated Mature for a reason.

This story isn’t happy and won’t be pretty for a long while.

For those of you who are/will be confused, who have questions, just wait. You’ll get the answers. . . eventually.

<center>Will no one stay awake with me?
Peter, John, James?
Will none of you wait with me?
Peter, John, James. . .
-The Last Supper, Jesus Christ Superstar


Chapter One: Stay Awake With Me</center>

Tess paced across the expanse of the room, directly in front of the two-way mirror she knew was there, even if she couldn’t see it. In all honesty, she didn’t know why she was pacing, that wasn’t her thing. Ever since she was a little girl, she’d been prepared for this eventuality. Nasedo had never been gentle with the reality of what the FBI, what the human race, was capable of.

But she found that pacing kept her from thinking, and that was something she didn’t want to do. She’d spent the first week of her imprisonment evaluating escape plans - she wasn’t deluded enough to believe the others would rescue her. They’d wanted her gone from the moment she’d shown up. Oh, they’d pretend to care, make halfhearted attempts at rescue, but they’d be better off - so they thought - without her.

She was on her own, and she’d known it. Even among her own kind, she was alone. It made her stronger than all of them.

But then, she’d seen Liz being dragged through the door, and in an instant knew that no matter how long it took, no matter what lengths he had to go to, Max would come for Liz, and in the process, Tess. She’d be saved too. It’d given her a bit of hope, seeing Liz ragged though she had been, despite her hate for the brunette. Tess hadn’t known quite what to expect, when for the first time, the guards had escorted her out of her cell, and into a small, enclosed field. She’d seen the sun, the sky, felt grass and fresh air and hadn’t cared. It got her no closer to freedom (she’d taken a speculative look at the fencing, the security. Not a viable exit).

But then the door had opened to the same building she’d emerged from, and Liz Parker's bedraggled hair had appeared against the gray of the wall.

Amazing how human she’d become, that a familiar sight gave her some measure of peace.

And perhaps if she were a little more pathetic, she’d be jealous that Max cared so much for the human girl when he was her husband. After all, she’d been inside his mind, she knew exactly how much he loved little Lizzie Parker. It was sickening.

It made him weak.

But in this case, it worked to her advantage. Ironically, it was his foolish love for the girl that would be Tess’s saving grace. Once she was safe, she’d worry about winning over her husband. Seducing a teenage boy was certainly not a great challenge.

She’d do anything to escape.

But she was pacing so she couldn’t think, and she hurried her steps, hoping it would shut up her mind and her fears.

* * * * *

A light hung in the center of the room, swinging, casting a single cone of light in the pitch black of the space. She couldn’t see her feet as they moved in front of her, apart from the occasional flash when the light swung in her direction. Liz frowned, wondering when the walls would rise before her, and trap her again.

She knew she was dreaming. It was an awareness that she shouldn’t be where she was; so long as she remained asleep she’d be in the darkness, and if she were to wake, the world would be white and shades of gray. Why weren’t her dreams, at the very least, pleasant, bright and colorful like they used to be? The one time in her life she truly needed her vivid, expressive dreams, and she winds up with this blackness.

But she kept walking, and the light kept swinging.

A whisper of sound brushed her ears, inaudible, but echoing in her mind. It touched again, softer, then once more, distinct. The sound became a voice, high and feminine, shouting from far off.

“Liz!”

She whirled around, the world about her moving, the light still tilting back and forth though her feet were planted.

“Liz!” The voice had grown distant.

Liz shouted, grasping at the pain in her stomach, the fear, throwing it into sound and helpless gestures. She didn’t want to be alone anymore! Anyone’s company, Tess’s, Pam Troy’s, would’ve been welcome. To talk to someone. “Wait, please! Someone! Who are you? Please don’t go! I’m over here!”

Even in dreams, her voice was hoarse, and cracked with disuse. She kept shouting, rushing off into the shadow, in any direction. There were no walls to keep her caged, no guards to restrain her, and finally, finally, she might speak to a person.

“Liz!”

The single light grew, spread, and engulfed the world.

She woke up.

Blinking, the room remained out of focus, gray. Gray, with a puff of brown.

A woman stood - her short, mousy hair clouded around her face - hovering over Liz on a cold, metal table. Her hands clutched a needle.

Liz shrieked, jerking her body away, only to find each limb restricted by thick bands attached to the table. Panic, fear flooded her senses, and without thought, she struggled, straining her wrists and ankles against the cold clasps. What were they doing? Why hadn’t she noticed? How could she have gone to sleep, let her guard down?

The woman’s pale green eyes widened as they settled on Liz, and she gasped. “You’re not supposed to be awake yet,” she cooed, rubbing the skin on Liz’s arm before slipping in the needle.

It burned; Liz fought the scream in her throat.

“Back to sleep, dear. We’re not quite through.”

Vaguely, Liz remembered uttering protests, then her body turned to lead, and her mind drifted back to the stars.

* * * * *

Through the slits of her eyes, carefully angled low, Tess watched the men in suits as they bustled around, mumbling brief statements to one another, completely oblivious of her lucidity. They’d drugged her for awhile, believing it would last long enough for their task. They were wrong, but she wasn’t about to alert them to that fact. She let her eyes fall closed; not too tight. Whatever they were doing, she’d rather be awake to know what it was, even if she couldn’t escape. The bindings were too strong, and she was too weak. The serum they used to knock out her powers kept her relatively drowsy, and a week on basic, occasional meals left her a kitten in their grasp.

She had to know what they were doing to her, if she was to devise an escape plan. So far, it’d been the usual: taking blood, hair, skin samples. Painful, but bearable. That she could handle. Nasedo’s tales had spoken of true horrors.

This was nothing. She’d survive, escape, and fulfill her destiny. She’d be queen of a powerful people, and Earth, nothing but a distant dream.

Briefly, she spared a thought to the human girl. Liz. Had they discovered she was useless and killed her? Was she enduring a situation similar to Tess’s? Had she broken under the isolation, the fear, the silence?

She hoped so. It’d make her job easier in the long run.

Tess pitied the human. And she pitied Max.

But she had a destiny.

A faint grinding rose from beneath the surface of the table. She resisted the instinct to open her eyes. She wanted to be awake.

The table began to move, to tilt, at first she couldn’t decide what direction, until her head pressed back against the cool metal, and her feet were brought up toward the ceiling lights. What were they doing? she wanted to scream. The muscles in her hands spasmed as she fought to keep them still. Run. She wanted to run. Scream for help. For mercy.

She was a queen. Queens were strong. They didn’t scream, and they didn’t run.

What did they want, she laughed in her head, to see what would happen if all the blood rushed to her head? They’d be sorely disappointed, it was nothing alien.

Tendons in her arms trembled, fighting instinct and desire.

The bindings on her legs loosened, but didn’t let go. Her breath hitched before she could stop it. What were they doing?

A cold, long-fingered touch gripped her thigh, encased in a secure, tacky plastic glove. Heaven forbid they touch the alien skin-to-skin. Harsh, quick pressuring forced her legs apart, and the hospital gown she wore slid up around her waist. One eye flickered open, objected to the light, and slammed shut again; she no longer cared if they gave her the drug.

Air rushed forward, leaving a chill against her sensitive skin, and she bit down on her tongue, spilling her own blood in place of the men around her. Her blood didn’t taste like copper, it was sweeter.

Strange, careful digits - covered in the plastic that caught on her skin - pried her apart.

Did they think being alien was a disease they’d catch if they touched her without protective covering? If only. . .

They inserted a smooth, warmed object. A pulse of liquid, gooey and thick and dripping.

Her eyes snapped open, and she screamed.

* * * * *

She blinked bleary, brown eyes at the ceiling. Where was she? There were no lights like that in her bedroom, bright, white, and blinding.

Liz turned her head, memories rushed back at the sight of the walls, the small table and chair. She was in her cell, in her little, gray cell. When had she fallen asleep? She’d sworn she wouldn’t let her guard down! What had they done while she was asleep? Her entire body seemed sore, and limp. How long had she been lying there?

“Welcome back, Ms. Parker.” the disembodied voice echoed in the square of her room, a slight static in the sound. “I hope you enjoyed your rest. You’ll find a change of clothes on the chair, and in two hours, you’ll be allowed to the courtyard for some exercise. You seem to be quite healthy, we’d like to keep it that way for now.”

She shuddered. Over the speaker, the voice was androgynous. But a woman’s soft whisper persisted in her ear. “We’re not quite through.”

“What did you do to me? If you want me healthy, let me go!” her voice broke twice, and she cleared her throat. “I’m a citizen. I know my rights! You can’t hold me here!”

The voice seemed to smile belligerently. “You are a citizen. Which is why we must protect you. You’ll find we only have your best interests at heart.”

“Bullshit! You don’t have the right to do this! You can’t keep me here anymore!”

No one answered.

“Don’t ignore me! Hello?! Hello!” One more hoarse call was all she could manage, before she clutched her mouth, coughing. Water. She needed water. She hadn’t spoken in too long, had been asleep too long, gone for too long without drink.

Reaching for the bottle on the table, she spun the cap off and chugged. Chugged until she coughed and spilled the excess down her chin. It was warm from sitting out for however long, or maybe they’d never chilled it in the first place. She didn’t care. It soothed the burning in her throat, the dry, thickness of her tongue.

After a moment, she sat back down on the bed, the mattress bouncing and the springs poking up uncomfortably. You’d think if they were spending so much money on the supplies, the protective gear, the security, they could at least afford decent mattresses, she mused angrily. It didn’t help to be mad, of course, but it was something to be mad at, instead of hopeless.

The problem was that she wasn’t hopeless. Hope, like a lead weight, sat in the bottom of her heart, causing her to jump at every sound, stare for hours at the doorway, waiting. Waiting, and every instant praying Max stepped through that door.

And every instant disappointed.

She didn’t blame him. She knew he would do anything he could to save her, and Tess too, and if he could, he’d have already gotten them out.

But that didn’t mean the waiting and the hoping didn’t kill her.
Last edited by Chione on Wed Nov 09, 2005 8:17 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Post by Chione »

:D I am so ridiculously proud of myself for getting this out today. You have no idea. To even get the time to sit down and write has been a battle, and then to finish something and to get around writer's block. . . but here it is, after far too long. . .

If any of you have stuck with me through all this, thank you so so so much. Please, tell me what you think. Feedback is still appreciated, even if I probably don't deserve any after such a long wait.

<center>Now my charms are all o’erthrown
And what strength I have’s mine own
Which is most faint. Now ‘tis true
I must be here confined by you
Or sent to Naples. Let me not,
Since I have my dukedom got,
And pardoned the deceiver, dwell
In this bare island by your spell;
But release me from my bands
With the help of your good hands.
Gentle breath of yours my sails
Must fill, or else my project fails
Which was to please. Now I want
Spirits to enforce, art to enchant;
And my ending is despair
Unless I be relieved by prayer,
Which pierces so, that it assaults
Mercy itself, and frees all faults.
As you from crimes would pardoned be,
Let your indulgence set me free.

-Prospero’s speech, The Tempest, William Shakespeare

Chapter Two: Sanctuary</center>

Their idea of exercise was allowing her an hour a day in a grassy field, enclosed on all four sides by the bleak, gray buildings of the compound. WIth their guns and their harsh, gloved hands, they encouraged her to run circles along the edge of the field. They ran her til collapse every afternoon, a greater physical workout than she’d ever had. The guards stood off to the side, laughing as she stumbled and hurling rocks and handfuls of dirt when she started to slow her pace. Finally, when she fell to the ground, they swarmed around her, kicking her legs - very specifically, only her legs - before picking her up and dragging her back to her little gray cell. There she was deposited on the floor, and left alone until the next afternoon.

Breakfast, lunch, and dinner were served on a strict schedule by a white-dressed, body-suited woman and two armed guards. (It made her feel powerful, to have four armed escorts whenever she left the cell, and anyone who entered it required, at minimum, two armed escorts. Did they believe she could harm them? Escape? In her mind, it was a comforting fantasy to think she could.) Breakfast was, without fail, a bowl of Cheerios with whole milk and a glass of orange juice. Lunch came at noon (she liked to think it was noon, though she had no outside concept of time), a bowl of vegetable soup and a chunk of nearly-stale bread. Water was her drink. Only dinner varied some, though she was always given a glass of milk and a pill that she never took. She didn’t know what it was, first of all, but mostly she didn’t take it because they wanted her to. A small rebellion.

Those two things, exercise and meals, made up the action of her life. The only thing she could do to pass the time was daydream. As a result, she had acquired an extensive, super-detailed fantasy world that thrived in her head. A psychologist would have a field day with her at that point, she was sure.

She’d lived a month that way. At least, she assumed it was a month, because they’d taken her out for exercise thirty times, and she knew that occurred only once a day. Thirty days she’d gone without speaking to anyone save the voices, the characters, she’d created in her mind.

Did that make her crazy? she wondered. Looney Liz. Looney, looney Liz.

But, she argued, who wouldn’t be driven mad by the circumstances? She felt fully justified in her growing insanity. It kept her from giving up.

On the thirty-first day of her exercise, she saw Tess for the second time.

The blonde looked rough. Liz knew she must look worse, but still, it was disconcerting. The curls had gone completely from the once perky hair; instead of the perfectly bright blonde, the locks were dark and stringy. She had black eyes from lack of sleep. When her eyes fell Liz, she hurried across the field of yellowed, dying grass. An already thin form had become emaciated, bony and pallid.

Liz waited.

“Did they do it to you?” Tess demanded, eyes in tiny, icy slits. She stopped just in front of the brunette, standing closer together than they had ever willingly stood before.

Liz furrowed her brow. “Do what?” They’d done so much to her, mentally, physically, she wasn’t sure she could pinpoint what ‘it’ Tess was referring to.

“You’d have been unconscious for a long period of time, probably strapped to a table or bed. They’d have drugged you, and of course you wouldn’t be able to fight it.” she explained, hands reaching to rest on her hips. She paused mid-motion, and let her arms fall. “Do you get a white pill with dinner every night?”

Liz nodded. “Yeah, I remember that happened awhile ago. Only once. Do you know what it was?”

“Do you get a white pill with dinner every night?”

“Yes, I do. What does that have to do with anything?”

Tess whirled around on her heels, a fragile hurricane of energy, cursing and jerking her head sharply.

“Tess!”

“It was artificial insemination! They did it to me too, only I was about to resist the drugs. They’re trying to get us pregnant, and I would bet a lot of money they did it with Max’s semen. Little hybrid brats for them to poke and prod from even before they’re born!” Finally, the blonde seemed to settle. “The pills are vitamins for pregnant women.”

Liz shut her thoughts down to a narrow focus. “How do we even know if it’s possible? For an alien to get a human pregnant? And why both of us? Because that way they’d have a half-alien child and a fully-alien child. They could test both of them, and compare the differences. To really see what makes you difference from us. That’s why they went after us, instead of getting Max again. And why they didn’t get Isabel, she’s Max’s sister. It makes sense.”

Tess glared, disgruntled. “Should’ve known you’d see it their way. You’re probably just as curious, aren’t you? Don’t you just wish they’d only taken me? That way you’d have your precious Max, and at the same time, you’d be able to find out more about ‘us’ without getting your hands dirty!”

“What?” Liz cocked her head to the side. “Are you nuts? I wouldn’t wish this on my worst enemy, and believe me, Tess, you are not my worst enemy. I don’t care what differences there are between us, I love Max. Alien, hybrid, human, mutant, it doesn’t matter! I’m trying to figure out why they want us. I figure the more we know, the more likely we are to find a way to escape.”

“What makes you think I’d work with you in escaping? You’re human, the most you’re good for is punching someone, and you’re so scrawny I don’t think you can even do that! Besides, if you are pregnant, all you’ll do is slow me down!”

“What about you? What if you’re pregnant? We’re stuck here, Tess, and I may not like you, but we have a better chance of getting out of here if we do it together!”

Tess paused, her eyes shifting to the grass beneath their feet. “I’m not pregnant. I’d know by now, it’s been a month. Alien pregnancies are shorter than human ones. Whatever they did, it didn’t work.”

“You sound almost disappointed.”

“I’m not! I’m grateful!” she snapped. “You’re the one who’s gonna have to deal with being pregnant! And you know what? It sucks. You’ll have morning sickness, and insomnia, and back pain, and swollen feet, and you’ll have to pee all the time! And the worst part will be? You’ll be all alone, in your little cell. And I’ll get to laugh, and be grateful it didn’t work with me.”

Liz shook her head. “I’m probably not even pregnant. And we won’t be here that long. I won’t last nine months more here. I won’t.”

“Of course you won’t.” Tess looked down from an imagined throne. “You’re human. You’re weak.”

Liz’s jaw clenched. “You’re half human, if I’m weak, you’re weak. I’ll last at least as long as you. Being part alien doesn’t make you any better. You still bleed, you still sweat, you still cry. Get over this superiority complex you have, Tess. We’re both in the same position here, and it sucks. You’re the only other person I have to talk to, and you’re part of our group, whether I like it or not. Can we please, just, try to get along? Neither of us is going to have Max from in here. We need to get out before one of us can win, if that’s what your problem is.”

The blonde was silent for several moments, eyes narrowed. Her voice was quiet when she responded. “More likely than not, you are pregnant. They monitored us for when we’d be at our most fertile. And even if you’re not, they’ll just do it again until we both are. Or until they run out of semen, then they’ll try with human seed, and they’ll forget about you, only trying with me. That way at least they’ll have another hybrid to play their games with.”

“Hey!” A guard shouted from across the courtyard. “Enough, you two!” He motioned to the other guards, and as a group, they moved into a circle around the girls. Slowly, guns raised, they advanced.

“Time to go back to your rooms.”

Both girls stood still, unresisting as the guards gripped them by the arms and hauled them apart. Liz was lead back into the doorway she’d passed on every trip in and out of the field, turned her head at the last instant to glance the retreating figure of Tess across the grass. And she wondered how long it’d be til they were allowed to see one another again. They may have only argued, but it was something. Something different. Something that stirred anger, frustration, and strangely, hope. It felt good to feel something again, whatever it was.

Her little gray room was the same as always. Her dinner tray was waiting on the table for her, complete with the glass of milk and the white pill. A vitamin pill.

Walking over to the tray, she gazed down at the plate of chicken and corn. A hesitant hand moved toward the pill, gripping it between two fingers, holding it before her eyes. No distinctive markings. How did Tess know what it was anyway?

She dropped it back on the tray, watching as it bounced a few times, then rocked, then was still.

------

I know I probably don't deserve it, but, pleeeease leave feedback! Please?
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I figured a short chapter was better than none. . . so here ya go. Just a short little bit, more to come when I have some more time.

<center>All day, staring at the ceiling
Making friends with shadows on my wall
All night, hearing voices telling me
That I should get some sleep
Because tomorrow might be good for something
Hold on, I’m feeling like I’m headed for a breakdown
I don’t know why
I’m not crazy, I’m just a little unwell
I know, right now you can’t tell
But stay awhile and maybe then you’ll see
A different side of me . . .
Talking to myself in public
Dodging glances on the train
I know, I know they’ve all been talking ‘bout me
I can hear them whisper
And it makes me think there must be something wrong with me
Out of all the hours thinking
Somehow, I’ve lost my mind
I’m not crazy, I’m just a little unwell . . .

-Unwell, Matchbox 20

Chapter Three: Part A Unwell</center>

Tess rolled over on her cot. Hardly what she’d call a bed. It sank down in the middle, almost to the cold floor beneath, when she placed any weight on it. The mattress was thinner than a video tape, nothing at all to cushion her as she slept. Grey sheets surrounded her, and drowned her in her dreams.

She wanted out. Days were tolerable; months were not.

After her time in the courtyard, her “exercise and fresh air”, they would take her in and poke her with needles. Peel open her arms and legs like bananas and see what happened. She bled, of course, did they think she would just close up and heal as they watched? Only Max could make that happen, and for her he wouldn’t. For Liz, of course. They wouldn’t be doing that to Liz, though. She was the lucky one. Lucky Liz, had everything. She had Max. And now, she had his child which would give her protection from the harsher treatment. The “scientists” didn’t want to harm their future test subject.

Why hadn’t she been able to conceive?

On her thirteenth birthday, Nasedo had given her the first birthday gift she’d ever received. With a brief and curt explanation, he’d handed her a small, white pill and told her to take it. She’d be taking them from now on. They were prenatal vitamins, he said, and they’d make her ready for bearing the king’s child. They’d be a habitual thing, to prepare her for her eventual duty.

But when the opportunity had been forced upon her to become with child, she’d failed. Seven times the doctors had tried, seven injections, seven times she’d woken up on the table with the innate knowledge that she wouldn’t be giving birth. Could it be possible that she was sterile? Her purpose as queen, and she couldn’t complete it?

Liz could. Liz had gotten pregnant on their first try. Always Liz.

The breakfast tray on her table mocked her. There, sitting right beside her glass of water, was a tiny white pill.

She hated white. Couldn’t they be pink? Everything pregnancy was either pink or blue. Pastels. Tess was more of a jewel-tone girl. Pastels were for the soft and sweet. Give her bright; blues, reds, greens, and purples.

That’s why she couldn’t get pregnant. She was in control. She’d conceive a child when and where she was ready; no human doctor would force a baby in her. And they certainly wouldn’t be using that child as a science experiment. Her child would be a king.

That’s why she wasn’t weak.

With more energy than she felt, she swung her legs up and over the side of the bed. Her bare feet hit the tiles and shivered as she forced them down. It was almost time for the lunch delivery, and she hadn’t eaten breakfast. She was no fool. She’d eat what they provided; even aliens need sustenance. And when the time came, she’d be strong enough to escape.

The Cheerios in the bowl had been sitting in milk too long and were soggy, breaking into tiny flecks and floating away. The milk had turned a sandy brown. Was she supposed to eat this? She would if it killed her. Forcing a spoonful past her lips, she suppressed the reflect to gag. Warm milk was not meant for consumption, she decided. It soured her tongue and seemed to stick even as she swallowed. Chunks of cereal grated the roof of her mouth.

Strong. She would only be stronger for this.

* * * * *

Liz woke up in the middle of the night - she pretended it was night, though she was rarely ever sure of when that was - with the idea that if she stayed perfectly still, the contents of her stomach would follow suit. Somehow the idea was ingrained that curling up and remaining that way would prevent her from throwing up. When the feeling persisted, kept her from going back to sleep, and began to rise in her throat, some basic instinct warned her that it was probably safer to head toward the toilet.

Halfway there, she vomited in her hand and continued as her knees hit the floor of the bathroom. Tears poured down her cheeks at the burning, churning, heaving; the helplessness of her situation.

No one was there to hold a cold wash clothe to her head.

She cried for her parents, and for Max, and for herself. For the baby that was growing inside her and making her sick.

It was hard to deny what she’d been taught, what her logical thought processes led her to conclude regarding her condition. No period in two months since she arrived, increased appetite, and now morning sickness. They’d waited 'til she would be most fertile. It had all been planned. She had to get her mind and heart to accept the fact that more likely than not, she was pregnant. It was easier to deal with if she looked at it rationally. To see it as not just a possibility, but a definite thing. That way, if she was wrong, she wouldn’t have to worry about dealing then

The rest of the morning was spent curled in a ball on the tile, too tired to carry herself back to bed and too scared to get too far from the toilet. Her throat was on fire every time she swallowed, and it felt like she’d done a marathon of sit-ups. The toothbrush looked inviting but trying to sit up evoked more nausea.

Tess was lucky. Liz had always wanted to be a mother, but not like this. Never in her wildest nightmares like this. The blonde only had one life to worry about now.

Liz had three. Despite herself, she could never leave Tess alone here. Was it normal to worry if Tess was being tortured, like they’d done to Max? Tess was her rival, she’d never been kind, or even polite, to Liz.

Tess was right; Liz was too human. Too soft.

There was a fury building up inside her stomach. Strong and forceful and pushing to get out. Overpowering the nausea and the misery and the loneliness, it burned a hole in her heart. Rage boiled in the darkest pits of her mind, and she swallowed back the growing tide everyday. No one had the right to do this to anyone. Human or alien or freak of nature. It was wrong. One day she would walk away from here, and revel as it burned to the ground.

She backed away from the thought. She’d never been violent. It had never been like her to wish harm on others. The anger frightened her. It was a separate entity, in her mind, a cancer that was not wanted, but needed. Not controlled, but reigned for a short time.

She prayed someone saved them before the fury became her.
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Hey, thanks for all your lovely feedback!

<center>Hope, like the gleaming taper’s light
Adorns and cheers our way;
And still, as darker grows the night,
Emits a brighter ray.

-Oliver Goldsmith

Chapter Three: Part B Light</center>

The light was swinging in her dream again. She wondered if that meant something profound. Maria’s mom had always been into dream interpretations and such mystic things. Maybe a swinging light was a sign? Was it her sanity, swaying back and forth on a thin string, ready to break at any instant? Did it mean she was lost, and the light that she could never reach was her way out?

Or maybe it was hope. The elusive light that haunted her day after day, wondering if at any moment she might be set free. Hope kept her from a resigned acceptance, kept her rebellious and kept thoughts of escape alive. It also stirred a hive of questions she’d rather have left alone.

Why had no one come for her? Why was Max not rescuing her? What had happened to the others? How were her parents, how much did they know about her disappearance, or did they just assume she’d run away? How were they to know any different? They had no reason to believe a secret government agency existed, much less that the agency wanted their daughter. They were in the dark.

Liz shook her head and followed the light further into darkness. Her dreams had been so bleak recently. Of course, dreams were the mind’s way of processing the world around it, and for two and a half months, her world had been shades of gray and barren rooms. It made sense.

“Liz?”

She whirled around, searching for the sound. Her name. It was a voice she knew. If only it accompanied a face. Surely she was there. Surely it was possible, after all, Isabel was an alien who could dreamwalk. Please, please let her have found a way to contact her! Liz prayed. She’d give whatever she had to hear the voice again.

“Isabel! Isabel, I’m here! Please, Isabel, please hear me!”

“Liz?” She sounded closer this time, just like she was in the adjacent room. “Oh god, Liz!” And from out of the dark her face appeared, bathed in glowing blonde hair. Then the rest of her stepped forward, dresses as impeccably as ever. “Are you alright? Do you know where you are?”

“Isabel!” Liz ran forward and grabbed her in a strangling hug, holding on to something real, someone real. Isabel’s arms came around her, stroking her back. She whispered crooning sounds meant to comfort, and they did their job. Liz’s struggle against her tears eased, and she slipped back a little, releasing her death-hold. “I don’t know where I am. Tess is here. They did tests and experiments like they did to Max. There’s a courtyard, and everything’s gray. Please, get me out of here. Get us out of here.”

“We’re trying.” Isabel assured. “We couldn’t get in contact with either of you. I could never catch you when you were asleep. Truly asleep. There was once when I almost had you but you woke up and were gone. Tess has just been blank the whole time. She’s there? And she’s alright?”

Liz nodded. “We’re both as alright as we can be. They let us see each other some, mostly during our exercise times. They let us go outside once a day.”

“You’re not at Eagle Rock. That was the first place we checked. Valenti looked into other bases in New Mexico, and you’re not at any of those either. Nasedo has been trying to infiltrate the FBI again so he can find you, but Pierce has gotten smart. We’ve gotten almost nowhere.” Isabel shook her head. “Max is going nuts. He thinks you’re dead. And he never sleeps anymore, his nightmares won’t let him. He needs you, Liz. Please tell me you have some sort of clue where you guys are. Geography, climate, something from one of the guard’s uniforms, anything.”

Liz was already shaking her head. “I don’t know. I’ve only seen the courtyard, and there’s just grass. You can’t see anything around the buildings. And it’s warm outside, but it could be warm anywhere. I remember when they brought us in, we spent a long time on the road. The road curved a lot because I kept getting knocked into the guards next to me when the truck turned.”

Isabel jumped on it. “That’s something at least. More than we have now. Is there anything else, even something small, that could help?”

Liz’s despair was palpable. She was shaking her head and fighting tears and biting her lip. “There’s nothing. They’ve been so careful, so calculated. They know exactly what they’re doing.”

Catching a strange note in Liz’s voice, Isabel tilted her head and looked down at her with fear. “Liz, what have they done?”

“I’m pregnant.” Her eyes were wide and uncertain.

“What?” Isabel’s eyes darted around, avoiding the subject. “Did they--did they rape you?”

“No!” Liz denied vehemently. “No. They used artificial insemination. I was drugged and they--.” She stopped, looking away. “When Max was captured they took samples of his sperm, and they want, they want alien hybrid children to see what will happen. They tried with Tess too, but for some reason it didn’t work.”

Isabel’s face was pallid in the swinging light. Almost green. She spoke in a hushed whisper. “I can’t tell Max. It’ll destroy him. He’s already--he can’t know. Not yet. Not 'til you’re out of there.”

Liz nodded. “I know. He’s got enough to worry about. Please, just get us out of here.”

“I will.” Isabel squeezed Liz’s hand in her own. “I promise, we’ll get you out of there.”

* * * * *

Liz lay awake, eyes trained on the ceiling. The tiles were all perfectly square, gray and lacking any variation from tile to tile. There were fifty-six of them; she’d counted one day. The squares frequently aggravated her nausea, staring a them too long sometimes sent them spiraling in her focus and she’d be sick. But this morning they helped her concentrate, because she didn’t have to look at them at all, they were so familiar. She could look past them.

She saw her mother and father, standing behind the counter at the Crashdown. Bright smiles lit their faces as they served customers, friendly greetings exchanged between people who’d known each other their whole lives in such a small town. Maria was busy flouncing from table to table, taking orders sometimes with a smile and sometimes with an irritated huff.

Liz could see it all clearly through the glass window on the door at the back. She was standing at the window on her tiptoes, watching them and thanking the sight. It was a world where she’d been rescued, and returned to her family, and the world had righted itself again. Everything was normal. Even the grumpy alien working in the kitchen and shouting curt orders at Maria every so often. Normal and safe and home.

It seemed so much more tangible this morning. Despite the voice in her stomach that said she’d never be there again, the world could never be fixed after this and rage was the only answer to getting out of her hell.

Because hope had grown once more to a swell in her breast. It had been crushed so many times in the ten weeks she’d been locked away, but hope wasn’t like a heart. No matter how many times it was broken, it always came back whole and happy and ready to try again.

* * * * *

“Well, it seems as if everything is functioning normally.” The doctor peeled off his gloves with a snap. “So what could be the problem?”

Pierce stepped away from the wall he’d been lounging against. “The problem is that we don’t know what’s normal for her, do we?” He playfully poked the freshly stitched cut on her abdomen. He grinned down at Tess. “For all we know, it might not be capable of reproduction.”

The doctor looked at him uncertainly. “But her organs are all functioning, they’re behaving exactly like--”

“They’re designed to do that! To mimic humans, but that doesn’t make them human. They’re aliens.” Pierce cut him off with a sharp glare that had the doctor stammering to apologize.

“Then what would make us human? Getting sick pleasure out of cutting people up?” Tess spoke up. She was dizzy with the drugs they’d given her to keep her sedated. But the man was a sadist. Did he think they were that different? Biologically, she was entirely human, with a few bonuses in the mental arena. She was more human than he was. She didn’t like hurting people. Oh, she’d do it if she had to, to protect herself, but not for enjoyment. That was inhuman. That was unnatural.

Pierce tilted his head. “I suppose that would make you one kind of human. But if you’re attempting to attack me, then know I get no pleasure from this. I’m protecting my country. I’m protecting humanity.”

“And how exactly is getting a seventeen-year-old, entirely human girl pregnant saving humanity? I wonder what Liz’s parents would say about that. Or the rest of the country. Oh, I know,” She spat on him as best she could from her position on her back, tied down to an operating table. “They’d call you a monster.”
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Okay, so this is what little I already had written for Chapter Four. I know it's not much. I hopefully will come back and finish this one day, I don't know. Normally escaping into the world of Roswell would be good for me, but right now, the circumstances I'm in are a bit too similar, and it seems like every fic I read strikes just a little close to home. The whole Max/Liz/Tess thing.

But yes. I hope you enjoy this little piece, and hopefully there will be much more to come.



<center> -----------------------------

“Don’t cry, you had a bad dream, that’s all
Don’t cry, now it’s all gone
Don’t cry, they’re just shadows on the wall
Don’t cry, they always move on

All the children of Eve sleeping somewhere tonight
Dreams of days when the shadows are gone
All the children of Eve say a prayer every night
Praying there’ll be no dragons at dawn

One child, learning to take the fall
One child, living in war
No child, just shadows on the wall
One child, and millions more

Not all children of Eve sleep in peace every night
Not all nightmares are over at dawn
When the children of Eve become dragons and fight
Then the whole vicious circle rolls on

But all that matter now
Is finding some way, somehow
To leave this winter far behind!
I swear. . .
I’m scared of the shadows too
One day. . .
I’ll try to be there for you
Til there are no dragons in that sky

All the children of Eve sleeping somewhere tonight
Dreams of days when the shadows are gone
All the children of Eve say a prayer every night
Praying there’ll be no dragons at dawn

-Children of Eve, Linda Eder

--------------------------

Chapter Four Dragons</center>

Her legs were curled in the grass underneath her, hands bracing her as she leaned back to look at the sky. The grass had turned brown in the intense summer heat, but the sky was a brilliant royal blue. The guards didn’t make her run anymore, just dragged her outside and let her sit, gazing at the sky for her hour in the fresh air. She never realized how much she took for granted such a simple thing as air. The stuff they circulated through the vents of her cell could technically be considered “air”, as it allowed her to breath and kept her alive, but it wasn’t the same. There wasn’t a movement to it, no wind and no smell of . . . well, she supposed the closest description would be freshness. The air in her cell smelled stale and used. Trapped.

“Get up.”

Twisting around, she took a moment to register the voice as female and not the harsh grating sound of the guards. Behind her, having just been admitted into the field, was Tess. Her blonde hair whipped about her face in the wind, far longer than Liz had ever seen it. The ends were split and the bouncy curls had long since died. It did little to diminish the beauty of the alien queen. Through her pallor and torment, the blue of her gaze was striking, her figure powerful and strong.

“What do you want, Tess?”

“I said get up.” She approached, reaching Liz and slipping her arms under Liz’s armpits, heaving until the brunette was on her feet. “And stay up. Walk around if you have to.”

“I’m resting. I haven’t been sleeping well, and what’s wrong with sitting here?”

Tess stepped back. “They’ll win, you know. If you let them. If you let yourself waste away. Sitting here all day, and sitting around in your cell all day does nothing but weaken your muscles. Who knows when you’ll need them, and because you’re always sitting, they won’t be there.”

Liz felt the sting of a reprimand ringing true. Still, she defended herself, she was pregnant, and constantly watched, and there wasn’t much for her to do. “They won’t exactly let me run laps and do lunges. And since when did you care what happens to me?”

“Then walk. Pace around your cell, walk around in the grass when you’re out here. Just don’t sit all the time.” Tess glanced out at the afternoon sun. “I don’t care. But my only way out of here is if the others come for you. And there’s no way they’ll leave you behind. If you’re weak, it just makes getting out of here that much harder, and that much riskier.”

“They’ll come for you too.”

Snorting delicately, Tess started off toward the outside of the field. Liz followed, hurrying to keep pace.

“I’m not an idiot. I know what everyone thinks about me.” Tess spoke without looking away from ahead of her. “They’re right. I’m manipulative, I disrupted their normal lives, and I’ve come to talk them home. To follow destiny. The only reason why they’ll be rescuing me is because you’re here as well.”

Liz shook her head. Even if she agreed, even if she knew some of their group would be all for leaving Tess to rot, it would never actually happen. Max couldn’t abandon someone, especially not one of them. Not someone like him. In the end, their guilt would lead them to save Tess, if nothing else.

No one deserved this.

“That isn’t true, Tess. You’re one of them. One of us. You wouldn’t get left behind.”

Tess tossed her a skeptic glance. “I’m no more one of your little group than you are one of us.”

There was insult in that comment somewhere, but it didn’t bite as much as Liz suspected it once would’ve. “It doesn’t matter. We wouldn’t have left you to this.” She gestured around them. “No one with a conscience could do that. And believe me, Max has more than enough guilt over things he can’t control.”

The blond shrugged. “Maybe.”

They walked on in silence, rounding the small enclosure two more times before the guards finally came to take them inside.

Liz sat staring at her wall once she was returned. Was Tess right?

She stood up. Her legs ached at the movement; walking around the field this afternoon been that much of a strain on her muscles? Muscle atrophy happened to medical patients who were in bed for longs periods of time and unable to use their muscles. Or to patients with injuries that prevented them from doing so.

But there was nothing to do! She was locked away in a tiny cell! And pregnant. What could she do about it? They only cared about the health of the baby. If she died after birth, they wouldn’t care.

She would not be useless!

When the others came to rescue them, she would not be the one to hold them back. Even if she was as big as a whale, waddling about without being able to see her toes, her legs would work. Damn it, her legs would work.

Sliding her right foot forward, she leaned her weight on it, pushing til her knee was just over her toes. Stretching. That’s what she’d do, and when she was done stretching, she’d walk. Walk and walk and walk until she was strong enough to do more.

It was the smallest hope she’d ever had, that they would come and rescue her and Tess. The logistics of it seemed impossible.

But how do you imagine spending the rest of your life in a tiny cell? When does it ever sink in that you’ll die there?

And who was she to discount the impossible? So many times she’d been wrong. Being healed by an alien. Falling in love with an alien.

Being kidnapped by her own government. That one still didn’t seem reality, despite her surroundings. All her life, government was taught to be a protector, and now this? They may as well have raped her. This time, she wouldn’t dismiss anything. She wouldn’t be wrong.

She would be ready for the impossible.

----------------------------------------
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Hello! I'm back with this story! Got re-inspired.

Anyway, this chapter has the same warning as I gave at the onset of this story. It is not happy. It is rated Mature for a reason, and that isn't because it involves sex.

Just thought I should warn you now. Now, on with the show!

<center>Through me you pass into the city of woe:
Through me you pass into eternal pain:
Through me among the people lost for aye.

Justice the founder of my fabric mov'd:
To rear me was the task of power divine,
Supremest wisdom, and primeval love.

Before me things create were none, save things
Eternal, and eternal I endure.
All hope abandon ye who enter here.

Such characters in colour dim I mark'd
Over a portal's lofty arch inscrib'd:
Whereat I thus: Master, these words import.

-Dante Alighieri, Divine Comedy, translated by H. F. Cary

Chapter Five: Eternal I Endure</center>

“I think I want to name her October. We’ll call her Toby for short.”

“Awful name to saddle a kid with. You’re not going to name her Hope or something equally sappy?” Tess asked, reclining in the grass and ignoring the itch on the back of her neck as thin blades poked up at exposed skin. Her breathing was quicker than normal and she had to swallow several times to finish her question. What was left of her once bountiful chest heaved up and down, slowing, steadying as she forced herself back to calm.

“No. I’ve never liked those names.” Liz shrugged, her shoulders scrapping the ground at her back. Her muscles screamed at her from the stillness of her legs; they were throbbing with exhertion, sweat dampening her scrub-like garments and heat radiating from her skin. She struggled to soothe her breathing. “And I knew a Hope once. We didn’t get along. What would you name her?”

The blonde gazed up at the clouds, to the blue of the sky beyond. It was a particularly hot day outside, though it’d been that way for awhile now and she guessed summer was nearing its end. But the sky today was spectacular, bright and deep and bluer than her own eyes. Like someone had taken the cerulean crayon and filled in the space around the clouds. “Cassandra. I’d call her Cassandra.”

Liz rolled the name around in her mind, feeling its weight. Cassandra. Like the cursed Trojan prophetess? They’d read Aeschylus’s Oresteia in 10th grade and she remembered the girl who screamed of fire and died a slave to the invading king. “Like Cassandra of Troy?”

“Yeah. The doomed princess.”

“I don’t think I like the idea of my daughter being doomed.” Though she was, Liz couldn’t bring herself to add. The three of them were doomed. She looked down across the small beginnings of a swell in her belly and wished it were as thin as Tess’ had become. Wished there was no child to be born in Hell. Wished Isabel had contacted her again and brought hope. Brought something to hold onto because everything else she had was quickly fading away. Hope, faith, love, even hate had become nothing more than indifference in the face of the power settling in her heart. A rage so vast she found herself lost in it more and more.

Tess rolled her eyes. “What makes you think you’ll even be able to name her?” She left unsaid the idea that the baby would be taken from her body and never given to her hold, must less see. Both girls already knew. Foolish human sentimentality kept Liz wondering on names and genders. Three months into the pregnacy, Tess had put her question to rest and informed her to expect a daughter. If it gave her motivation to keep exercising, then Tess didn’t care how much Liz indulged herself in fancy dreams. That’s all they were. Asinine hopes. Futile and stupid and childish.

She glanced to the brunette at her side and felt only pity.

“What about Charlotte? Charlie’d be a cute nickname.” Liz said instead of replying. It was useless to speculate.

“Why Charlotte? Isn’t that a city somewhere?”

“Yeah. In the east. It was the name of a queen and the city was named for her.” Liz felt her heartbeat slow to steady rhythms. The guards would interrupt them shortly. “It means free.”

Dragging herself upright, Tess kept her eyes on the doorway inside, the gateway to Hell, watching as the escort of guards emerged to fetch them. Abandon all hope, indeed. She’d never understood, really, the human ideas of Heaven and Hell. Antarian philosophy spoke only of unending life, always ending and always beginning. Everything in that world was cyclical, life and death included. There was no suffering for sins.

Here, though, this was Hell. Eternal damnation and firey pits, immense pain, torture, all those things she’d heard about and never given heed. Not literally (well, there weren’t any fire pits yet), of course. Nasedo had always taught her humans were weak, flimsy, and inconsequential. She was inclined to add sadistic to the list as well.

Shaking her head, she stood and turned back to face Liz. “Name her what you will.”

Guards moved in, pulling Liz to her feet and gripping Tess by her arms. It was time to go back.

This was the part Tess hated most. Being pulled inside by her arms, barely able to keep her footing and having no say whatsoever in when or where she was being taken. It was hard to feel like a queen. It was hard to feel like much of anything, really, other than a doll that was cursed by the ability to feel pain. Raggedy Ann never noticed when she was dragged about a house or thrown to the floor, never felt anything when she was chucked in a bin until she disintegrated.

Fucking self-pity. She didn’t need it, and she didn’t need sympathy for Liz. What she needed was to remember that no matter what happened, she was strong, she was powerful, and she was the queen of a planet. If it weren’t for the damn drugs and malnutrition, she could kill them all. That’s what she needed. To imagine Pierce’s face as she ripped him limb from limb, ground his extremities into nothing but chunks and fed it back to him for supper. To hear in her mind the sounds of the guards and scientists shrieking in pain as flames licked their flesh from their bones and stuffed their lungs with charcoal smoke.

Did that make her as sick as them? She didn’t give a damn. It was satisfying.

The door slammed shut behind her, and once again the world turned white.

---------------------------------------

It was to the point that she’d given up struggling as they strapped her to the table. If she lay perfectly still, she could almost imagine she was dead--and that was comforting. Because it got her out of here.

The sharp cut of the cold goo on her stomach startled her briefly but she tuned out her senses and went back to dreaming of a world without white or gray. She wasn’t suicidal, she reasoned, nor did she wish to be dead. But sometimes it seemed that was her only remaining alternative, and it was hard, harder than knowing Max was meant to be with Tess, harder than watching her grandmother die, it was so hard to keep hoping she’d make it out of here and get to live a normal life again. Impossible, really, considering even if she got out, there’d always be a child to remind her.

A plastic tube with a rounded end slid around the slimey surface of her belly. It pushed down against her full bladder, and she resisted the urge to soil herself. Humiliating as the thought would’ve been a few months ago, now it meant only that they’d have to change her clothes and clean her up. It’d disgust them, as they disgusted her, and though an unbalanced exchange, she deemed it better than nothing.

But she held out. Instead, her gaze fixed on the light above her, wondering not for the first time if the light at the end of the tunnel was indeed an oncoming train. Probably.

Mentally, she smacked herself. Tess’ voice rang loud and clear, biting, in her thoughts. Don’t be pathetic. That’s what they want. When we give into despair and hopelessness, they win. When we’re depressed, they succeed. And I refuse to let them. So stop fucking feeling sorry for yourself, stop asking “Why me?” and start fighting back. I don’t care if you sell your soul to do it, you will find a way to survive until Max comes for you. Turn all those pretty, stupid dreams of yours into hate, let it consume you, let your foolish innocence die, but do not give in to them.

It sounded pretty, like Tess had practiced it again and again til she got it right. Maybe she paced her tiny cell and recited the words she’d speak.

Regardless, Liz memorized them. Memorized the words, the feeling of being chided, the forceful anger in her tone. And whenever she had to, she repeated them silently, feeling the rage grow a little stronger, feeling her hopes turn dark and twisted, but feeling herself resolve to live a while longer.

“Looks like all is normal.” The nurse above her, with short, cropped hair and a face more like a man’s, informed her companion. Beside her stood a man with his clipboard held out in front of him like a shield, scribbling at every movement on the monitor and every word the woman tossed his way.

He snorted. “Normal? Hardly. It’s too normal. Obviously something is cloaking this thing’s true form from us. Once it’s out, we’ll have more room to work. Right now our concern is to make sure it survives the gestation period.”

Flushing, the woman pushed harder with the plastic stick, digging it into Liz’s abdomen and glaring at the blur of black and white on the monitor. “That’s what I meant by normal.”

“Of course.” His pencil smacked against the board. “Well, Pierce will wish to know the developments. Return her to her room.”

He made it sound civilized. Return her to her room. Like it had a comfortable bed, adorned with a flowery douvet and dust ruffle. Like it had paint on the walls, a cheerful color, a normal color, with a window, maybe, and blinds or curtains. Like maybe it had a bookshelf, or a dresser, or a picture or two on the walls.

Back in her “room”, she found none of those things. Only grey. Only a flimsy mattress and sheets seemingly made of paper. Only a bathroom, tucked into the corner, with a sink and a toilet.

Three months of living like this. Living like a criminal, a sub-human experiement. A bitch meant only for breeding.

Isabel had been silent since their first conversation. Liz prayed they were all right. They were her only hope. Charlie and Tess’ only hope.
---------------------------------

Tess awoke to the sound of someone entering her cell. The lights had been dimmed hours earlier to indicate she was to sleep, and she had. They remained low, casting shadows across the floor as three figures stood in the doorway.

This was unusual. They never disturbed her during the night.

Her eyes adjusted quickly to the darkness and she scanned the intruders, noting the guns trained on the person in the middle. Two were guards, she recognized them as her usual captors. The other--the other was slumped in his shoulders, hair hanging across his forehead like it hadn’t been washed in weeks. He wore the same outfit she and Liz lived in, a set of white scrubs, feet bare.

At her startled gasp, he jerked his head up and met her eyes. Blue met amber, and Tess knew something had gone very, very wrong.
Last edited by Chione on Sun Sep 30, 2007 9:46 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Chione
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Location: Wherever the Four Winds blow. . .

Post by Chione »

Ok, here we go!

I warned already: this story is not nice. Back away and don't read if you have squeamish stomachs or are bothered by scenes of rape/molestation/abuse/etc.

Also, there are lines in here taken from the Destiny episode; they don't belong to me. Neither do the characters.

I never really planned for this story to be terribly long, but unlike Children of Eden, I have an absolute plan and know exactly where it is going and when. Which makes it somewhat easier to write.

<center>When to the sessions of sweet silent thought
I summon up remembrance of things past,
I sigh the lack of many a thing I sought,
And with old woes new wail my dear time's waste.
Then can I drown an eye unused to flow
For precious friends hid in death's dateless night,
And weep afresh love's long-since-cancelled woe,
And moan th' expense of many a vanished sight.
Then can I grieve at grievances foregone,
And heavily from woe to woe tell o'er
The sad account of fore-bemoaned moan,
Which I new pay as if not paid before.
But if the while I think on thee, dear friend,
All losses are restored, and sorrows end.


Chapter Six Death’s Dateless Night</center>

The door was once again shut and bolted, sealing them in without the hovering presence of the guards, before she spoke.

“Max?” It was not her he wanted to see, she knew, but his eyes were riveted on her, gaze piercing. She felt chills sweep through her bony limbs. “What happened?”

Millions more questions to ask. They beat against the interior of her skull but she breathed through her nose to keep calm, keep her thoughts only What happened?

He cleared his throat. “We have a plan.”

“Have or had? Did this plan include getting caught?” Fury long buried exploded in her belly. “Because you’re pretty damn useless from in here!”

Max ignored her, amber eyes bright in the low light. He hadn’t moved from his initial stance, and she growled. Months and months of near insanity, of pain renewed and renewed again, of waiting, waiting, waiting. For what? Hope, escape, a daring rescue? For Max to appear in her cell, as surely imprisoned as herself?

Fuck no.

“You rash, careless, moron!” she hissed, baring her teeth. From collected, powerful queen to feral beast. How she’d changed. And she didn’t even care. “Do you realize--”

He pushed her to the wall, knocking the back of her legs against the bed and taking her down on her back, his hands pressing her shoulders into the metal bars supporting the mattress.

“They want us to mate, Tessie,” he whispered in her ear and she told herself not to tremble even as her limbs betrayed her. “They wonder why the seed won’t sprout in you. But they don’t know an Antarian male’s seed choose only one woman to impregnate, only one woman who may bear his children, though he may lay that seed where he will.”

Liz was that woman and the flames within her burst, heating her flesh to burning and her eyes alight. The man pinning her with his eyes and hands--not Max, no, not the gentle boy king himself--ignored the fire beneath the hands that touched her skin. He felt no change.

“Nasedo.”

“You’ve failed, Tessie.” He nuzzled her ear and neck with his nose. “You’ll never be able to carry the heir. How are we supposed to go home without the king between your legs?”

She bit down a scream, drawing blood from her tongue. Sweeter than human blood. “How, exactly, is that my fault?”

“You’ve failed as a woman and a queen. How pathetic. Unable to bring a teenage, hormone-ruled boy to your bed and worse, unable to attract his seed to your womb when it was given to you on a silver platter!” Nasedo brought one hand and tore the paper-thin scrubs down the middle. Then he continued, riping away at her pants, reducing his own to shreads as his knees pried her legs apart.

Lightning struck her heart--she marveled at even having one. So much hatred inside it, rage, it had to be molten stone.

“You wouldn’t dare--”

He shoved his erection into her dry opening, and she screamed.

------------------------------------------

Liz walked in pitch darkness, no swinging light this time. Only black. And any moment the ground supporting her could cease. She wouldn’t see. Her legs kept moving, one after the other, heedless of her commands. Perhaps it was only her eyes having trouble adjusting to the surroundings--she’d grown used to white. How long had it been since she’d last seen the color black anyway? There wasn’t any outdoors in their exercise courtyard. Nor in the hallways, nor the examination rooms.

When would the dream end and did she even care anymore? Maybe this darkness was real, was reality, and the world of white and needles and monstrous government agents was merely a nightmare.

Nothing was really all that comforting anymore.

A flutter inside her--inside? Was it even her? It felt like she’d swallowed a butterfly--gave her pause, and her legs missed a step, picking up again a beat behind where she’d been. She glanced down at the feeling, seeing the large swell of her belly and the scrunching of her t-shirt around the protrusion that wouldn’t fit all the way under it.

Fuck.

When had that happened? Last time she’d checked, her belly was only slightly showing, a rounded bump in her otherwise thin frame. (She wasn’t quite emaciated--they wouldn’t allow it--but she’d long ago lost the healthy weight she used to be. Wiry muscles lined her arms and legs instead of fat, the result of Tess’ harsh instructions and her own determination not to wither away.)

Now she looked ready to burst.

Her unconscious mind had a sick sense of humor if this was how it was shaping her dreams.

Help!

She jerked around, facing the other way. Futile in the black.

“Hello? Isabel?”

Oh God, someone help! Max!

The voice was familiar, pleading and shrieking, laced with tears and fear. She couldn’t place it; the only voices she heard with any regularity were those of Tess and the nurse who attended her “examinations”.

Max! Max, please help!

Liz found herself falling as even the black faded.

----------------------------------------

“It’s time.”

“What’re you gonna do?”

“I’m gonna make them see Pierce.”

--

“You told them both at the same time to go to Hondo?”

Pierce told them to go to Hondo.”

“Can you just do that with everyone? Make them see things that aren’t even there?”

“Sometimes it’s easier to do that than make someone see something that’s right in front of her eyes.”

--------------------------

“If you’re here to kill me, Sheriff, it won’t do any good. There’ll be a new man in charge of the Unit in a few hours.”

“If I wanted to kill you, you’d be dead already.”

“Then why are you here?”

“Because I’m scared. For myself, for my son, for all of us.”

“You didn’t seem scared last night when you put a bullet six inches from my heart.”

“Yeah, well, there were things I didn’t know last night. Things that have changed everything.”

“I don’t think anything’s changed; I think they sent you here.”

--

“They’re disabling your agents, one by one. You don’t believe me? Go on, try and contact them.”

“Agent Bellow. Agent Bellow, come in.” After the silence stretched on the other end, Pierce lifted his chin and set the walkie-talkie down on the desk. Folding his hands on his lap, he tipped his hat to the Sheriff and smirked. “You can’t think I’d be that stupid. I know what those aliens are capable of. Nice try, though, Sheriff.”

A shot rang through the office and Pierce smiled once more as he picked up the walkie-talkie. “Agent Burnes, report.”

“Mission complete, sir.”

“Good.” He eyed the blood pooling on the floor. “Good.”

Last edited by Chione on Mon Oct 22, 2007 5:31 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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