I think I still have a couple of chapters ready to finish this week of updates

This is one of my favorite chapters

Do you guys have any favorite so far?
begonia, just to keep it clear, this AU deals with the "what if..." the shapeshifters didn't survive the '47 crash. It means that Antar is somewhere up there waiting for their king, and that the 2 sets of pods were taken by the military and never rescued. So, John is Zan, but why is he so much older is a tale for another chapter
July 6th, 2011 – Day 1739 and counting
The thing about trusting people is that it requires…
trust. There's no other way to phrase it, really. It means you tell them something that they won't unhear. See things they won't unsee. Bottom line is, once you give them your trust, there's no way to get it back.
For the longest time, I have always been told who to trust. It isn't a matter of choosing for me. Parker taking it away by recruiting Whitman is just one more reminder that trusting is not something that comes easily—or freely—in my life.
The irony being, of course, that the one and only person I have ever trusted without being told to, is Dr. Parker herself.
Chapter Twenty-Four
Haunted
Once Alex Whitman saw what he saw, there was no point in holding it back. Later, Max would think that all he had to do was take the USB and storm out of that place. Leave Parker with the mess to explain what was going on, wait a few weeks to come back, and hope she wouldn't follow through with that attempted slap.
The truth was, seeing that frozen frame with an obvious spaceship triggered all kinds of emotions within himself.
He'd been lied to, but that wasn't new. What was new was the scale at what had been told to him. The first thing he thought was:
So, Parker was right. They couldn't have created me thirty years ago…
The second thought was that John had also been telling the truth. Aliens. Half-aliens, anyway, but certainly not entirely human. Never that.
And once that realization hit him, a million others threatened to bury him underneath. He had always had a purpose. Before tonight, that had always been clear: he was created by the US Government to see the potential of the human brain. He was a weapon, a strategy. An
advantage.
Now he was none of those things. At least, his origin point had never intended him to be. He just didn't know his intended orders right now, his intended purpose, and that left him feeling hollow.
"Do you want to… keep watching?" Alex half whispered, his hand hovering over the mouse.
"Max…?" Liz asked,
now giving him the choice.
"Is it long?" he heard himself asking. Alex moved the mouse below the video, and the timing stated: 6:23. How much information could six minutes and twenty-three seconds tell him?
Hell, I'm just looking at a frozen frame and that has already destroyed the bases of my existence.
He nodded.
Alex hit play, the three of them getting closer to the monitor.
The first minute went by with nothing changing much. People middling around, calling each other for things. In the back, tables with many pieces were neatly arranged.
A very young Summers made an appearance then, making Max's blood run cold. He couldn't be older than 30 years then. Maybe not even 25.
"As you can see, we’re very busy today. The ship has been receiving radio transmission that we’re unable to decode. Once every four months and six days, to be precise. And, today's the day, as they say. Since our last two attempts to decode this signal, we have learned a whole lot more. We’re confident this time, we'll get something right."
The next three minutes went into detail about their data, how they had intercepted the first signals ten years ago. It was all rather technical and…
boring. Only Alex nodded in understanding.
"This makes sense to you?" Max asked.
"Yeah. Well, some of it is rather old fashioned, but then again, this is forty years old. The principles still apply, but they would use other technology now."
"You think they managed the signal?" Parker asked.
"Only one way to know," Alex said, calling up the file window with the other twenty-six videos in it. "We'll have to watch them all."
She turned to look at Max, and Alex followed suit two seconds later.
"We might as well watch them," he said with a heavy sigh. He looked at the clock in the wall. It was late, and someone at the base was bound to ask questions.
Maybe just a couple of videos, then.
The second video started with a shaky camera being focused and placed in position. It was strange, really, to anticipate this so much while dreading it in equal measure.
Max frowned as two men in lab coats appeared. That was Frank, all right, with beard and glasses he no longer wore. Hadn't he said something about an eye surgery? Or had that been a flash?
It didn't matter. Frank smiled and nervously fidgeted with the clipboard, while the other lab coat talked to someone off the camera.
"We're rolling," someone yelled from behind the lens.
"After so much consideration," the man who wasn't Frank started, someone Max had never seen in his life, "we believe that the decrease in oxygen inside the fluid in the pod is deteriorating at an alarming rate. The subject inside won't survive longer than a few more weeks."
"Since our one and only success is this hybrid's counterpart, we're pretty optimistic that the subject will survive." Frank said with a smile, his shaking hands now clasped. "We're as ready as we're ever going to be."
"Can you detail what went wrong with the other hybrids' emergence?" the off camera man asked. Frank frowned. The man beside him didn't look pleased.
"Lung development. We're expecting the same underdevelopment from our eighth subject, of course, but we're better prepared this time around. Even better than we were with John. This should be a success."
"Can you—" whatever the question, it was interrupted by a nurse coming to Frank. She said something on his ear, and he nodded, all serious now.
"It seems we might have been off. I don't think our subject should wait any longer, do you?"
Frank and his partner moved to a crystal panel that overlooked a wide room where a dozen people mingled around. A hospital gurney waited alongside what looked like a standard OR. But all the commotion was around a dark object, something that didn't belong in the pristine whiteness of everything else.
"As you'll see," Frank said while dressing in scrubs, "the fluid inside the pod is almost translucent now."
"Have you named the subject?" the cameraman asked. Frank smiled.
"It was closed, but John broke the tie. He voted for Max."
The video ended there, Alex's monitor becoming black.
No one said anything.
Alex closed the player, and went for the next file. Max's heart accelerated. He didn't recognize the pod from the previous video, but this one was from inside the room.
Pod was an apt name for it. It was big, big enough to contain a six year old inside without much of a problem. Max had seen pictures of himself as a young kid, of course, remembered how he looked back then, but seeing himself now, floating inside, with his eyes closed and looking so vulnerable… It made him shiver.
He took a step back.
A lot of equipment was arranged in the room. A lot of bright lights. A lot of anticipation. Someone talked in the video, but Max couldn't hear it. He kept looking as a gloved hand took a scalpel, and slashed in the air, indicating where the cuts would happen.
A dozen electrodes were pasted to the translucent layer of the pod, giving feedback to a dozen monitors, where lines and beeps kept tabs on his biometrics. His younger self had been wistfully ignorant of all the commotion.
The scalpel made contact, and fluid poured out. Several gashes were carefully cut at the bottom. Inside, he didn't move.
A whole minute went by as people checked monitors, more fluid gushed out, and eager hands touched the outer layer. Eager to touch him. Eager to take him out from the only place he'd ever known.
He took another step back. His heart banged in his chest. Parker and Alex where indifferent to his anxiety, glued to what was happening on the monitor.
The same gloved hand cut right atop of him, and the layer gave up without any resistance. The scalpel was left behind. They reached for his head first, bringing it outside.
Max collided with the wall. It was as if he were trapped in a flash. He remembered… he remembered the sensation of something going through his mouth and throat. He remembered the discomfort, wanting to move but unable to do so.
In the video, his airways were being cleared. Someone supported his shoulders while someone else placed a heart monitor.
The light came afterwards. To his sensitive eyes, it hurt like hell. All he'd known was darkness, comfortable and warm, and now he was experiencing cold and light for the very first time. He tried to fight harder.
He wasn't looking at the video anymore. He was
trapped in it. His body was completely taken out and placed on the gurney. Hands, so many of them, touched him, prodded him. It was confusion to the nth degree, and the only reason Max was not losing it now was because his adult mind understood what had happened.
It didn't make a difference. He was scared. When the tube to help him breath entered his throat, Max's gag reflex took over.
Sitting on the floor, he tried to throw up. Unlike his six-year old self, he was not being sedated now. He couldn't breathe. He couldn't get away. Everything hurt, everything was horrible out here. He needed back!
"Max? Max?!"
He was hyperventilating, and he didn't care. He needed air more than he needed logic, and he was going to get it one way or another.
"Hey! HEY! Snap out of it!" Alex grabbed him by the shoulder. Cold broke through Max's skin. He turned feral eyes on his captor, and without even extending his hand he sent Alex flying half way the lab.
"MAX!" Parker yelled. "IT'S OVER! IT'S NOT YOU!"
But it was him. It had been. Parker kept talking and he couldn't follow. He didn't need to see more videos to recall what it had been like those days. He had felt so alone, so vulnerable… and Frank and Maggs…
A phone was showed in his face.
His phone. And it was showing an incoming call. Max blinked.
"They're calling you!" Parker said with urgency, trying to shake him awake without touching him. Behind her, Whitman sat with a perplexed look.
Max grabbed the phone on automatic. "Evans," he answered, closing his eyes and leaning his head against the wall. Frank's voice came loud and clear.
"Where are you?"
"At—"
Starbucks? He wildly looked for the clock on the wall. It was past midnight. "Still at Starbucks, something came up," he said dismissively. "I'm on my way there."
"You bet you are. Briefing starts in an hour, so you better be in here."
Frank hung up. Max stood up. A briefing at 1:00 a.m. meant he was going to be on a plane to somewhere in the middle of nowhere by 5:00 a.m. So much for revelations.
Nausea returned with a vengeance as he attempted to stand.
"Are you okay?" Parker asked, while Alex joined Liz, his eyes weary.
"I'm sorry… I was… I usually don't lose control that way," he said as Alex gave him a hand to stand up.
"Good to know. That was… that was pretty intense," Alex said, looking back at the paused video, which was thankfully showing an out of focus image of the general chaos that his birth had been. "Are you okay?"
"I will be. They want me back at the base. I—I probably won't be able to come back for a few nights."
"What do you want me to tell John?" Liz asked.
"Stay away from him, both of you. This hardly proves anything."
"That's gonna be hard to do," Alex said, sitting in front of his computer. "Since right now he's Liz's boss
and my partner."
"Find a way. Take extended leave. Do something. I'll contact you when I'm back, okay? Don't dig any further."
He turned around and went through the door. His heart jammed in his chest. He had absolutely no idea if this was going to be the last time he walked through this hall. And no idea if he wanted to keep watching.