Posted: Sat Jun 24, 2006 11:30 am
Part Twenty
“You’re not supposed to be here,” Alyssa whispered, though her eyes were creased at the corners with a smile.
Nate returned her grin and quietly closed the door behind him, grateful she had the room to herself and there was no roommate to rat him out. There was one dim light on above her bed, glowing down on her like a beacon from heaven. In her arms, a bundle of soft blankets and new-born baby.
“I couldn’t stay away,” Nate said in a hushed tone, his footsteps soundless as he approached her bed. Quietly, he pushed his boots from his feet, then slid onto the bed beside her.
Alyssa shifted onto her side, depositing the baby between them. Gently, she pushed the blankets back from the pink face within.
“She’s more beautiful now than the last time I saw her,” Nate whispered to his wife, reaching out to touch the child’s soft skin.
Alyssa nodded eagerly, proud of the newest addition to their family. “I think Emily was right – I think she might have your eyes.”
He turned his head this way and that, considering. “Do you think? Isn’t it too soon to tell?”
“I can see it,” she said.
“Well, let’s just hope she doesn’t get your temper,” he added.
At that, she smacked him playfully on the shoulder.
“See what I mean?” he laughed lightly. Then he settled into the pillow, his eyes fixed on the woman he loved more than life itself, his tone falling serious. “And you get more beautiful every time I see you, too.”
Even in the dim light and even though they’d been married five years and had already gone through the baby thing once, Nate could see a light blush color Alyssa’s cheeks. Reaching out, he cupped her face, caressed her cheek with his thumb.
“You do,” he confirmed. “And I love you more every day, Alyssa.”
Her smile was broad, her eyes a little moist. “I love you more every day, too, Nate.”
Being careful not to squish their new baby girl, he leaned over and kissed his wife, felt like for once everything was clicking into place. True, things had not been so good between them, what with Nate making a stupid time leap in an effort to try to save Liz and Emily from the Skins. Alyssa had felt it a betrayal of who they were, who he was, and more importantly, who their children were to be. She had assumed Nate was going to erase himself or a part of history that would have prevented any of them from being together. In reality, Nate had been so lost he really wasn’t sure what he was going to do. It had taken months to try to win back her trust and it broke his heart to think that perhaps even as they lay together in this hospital bed, she still didn’t trust him entirely.
“You know, she doesn’t have a name yet,” Alyssa said, breaking Nate from his reverie.
“What were you thinking?” he asked.
She shrugged lightly. “I don’t have a preference. It’s not like I want to name her after my mom or anything.” She gave a slight eye-roll and Nate knew she was still upset that Maria hadn’t made it to Boston for the birth. The baby had come suddenly and Maria’s Broadway show was still doing well enough that she simply couldn’t pick up and leave at the last minute.
“She might be here tomorrow,” Nate soothed.
“And she might not.” Alyssa frowned as she waved a hand in the air. “It doesn’t matter. What matters is that I don’t need to name my daughter after her.”
“Okay.” Inside, Nate felt a little sad that things never seemed to change between Alyssa and Maria, especially with the request he was about to make. “Could we name her after my mom?”
Surprisingly, Alyssa smiled, not seeming to be bitter that Nate’s relationship with his mother was better than hers would ever be. “Emma. I like it.”
“Not for a first name,” Nate corrected, shaking his head. “More like her middle.”
“What about the first?”
“I want to thank Aunt Isabel for all she’s done for me – for us.”
Alyssa’s eyebrows rose in surprise. “You want to name her Isabel?”
Nate shook his head again. “No, that doesn’t feel right. What’s Aunt Isabel’s middle name?”
Alyssa thought for a moment. “Amanda.”
Nate grinned. “I like that. I like Amanda.”
She gave him a nod and another smile. “Amanda it is then.”
“Amanda Emma,” he said, stringing the names together. Then he frowned in disappointment. “It doesn’t flow well. It doesn’t fit.”
But Alyssa kissed her baby, then kissed him, lingering at his lips. “I think it fits perfectly.”
Nate would recognize his gait anywhere – self-assured, cocky, definitely a man in control. A man who would pimp his daughter out to be an alien hunter. A man who would torture and maim to get what he wanted. A man who saw Nate as something less than human. Of course, he was also the only man in the crowd not wearing military apparel – oh, no, it was a five-thousand-dollar suit for Agent O’Donnell.
Nate shivered as he watched the agent move among the fallen Skins, stopping long enough to toe one of them with his shoe. If they hadn’t been such a vile race, Nate might have felt sorry for what was about to come the way of the Skins – his immediate elimination by fire had been much more humane than this FBI man would ever be.
Most of the incapacitated Skins had been unceremoniously tossed into the back of the military trucks and now only a few remained on the ground. Nate had to wonder what chemicals the soldiers had used to detain them; it seemed that the government was reaping the benefits of years of experimentation on alien species because the hybrids didn’t have the technology to wipe out a garrison of Skins with a couple of cans of gas.
Nate’s tired eyes followed Annie’s father as he gesticulated toward a couple of soldiers. Still hidden near the boulder, he was too far away to hear the man’s orders, but he got the gist when the two men snapped to attention – they were being left behind to guard whatever the Skins were protecting.
Nate knew that O’Donnell hadn’t found the entrance to the hiding place – he and his men had been searching and poking here and there for the last couple of hours. It had to have been baffling to them why a whole legion of Skins had decided to congregate in the middle of the desert for no apparent reason. The agent wasn’t stupid – he knew there was significance to this place even if he couldn’t figure out why.
A few more orders were barked, then the agent strode over to one of the Hummers and climbed into the passenger side. Nate sat up straight, watched as the army men hoisted the remaining few Skins into the back of one of the trucks. With a rumble, all but one of the trucks lurched forward, their headlights growing fainter into the horizon, the sun starting to come up over the mountains. The final truck had been left behind for the guards.
With a growing sense of anticipation, Nate’s attention went back to the two men who had been left as guard. As soon as the vehicles were out of sight and could no longer be heard, they relaxed, one of them lighting a cigarette. Nate could imagine their conversation – laughing that they’d been stranded in the desert waiting for the alien invasion. If they only knew…
Creeping on sore bones and muscles, Nate descended from the perch he’d held for most of the night. Max had taught him well how to be stealthy – no sand was displaced, no rocks tumbled down the incline. Nate was as silent as fog creeping across the bay in Boston.
At the bottom of the hill, Nate paused behind another cluster of rocks, surveying the scene up close. The men were near the entrance to the hiding place even if they weren’t aware of it. He was only one person and he couldn’t incapacitate one of the soldiers without the other knowing and having time to react. He was going to need help.
Nate’s eyes shifted to the entrance. There was no telling what lay beyond. It could be that the cone was simply inside the doorway. Or it could be that the cone was down an intricate series of tunnels and not easily found. He had no way to tell how long he would need to get the cone and activate it. He found himself in the uncomfortable position of needing to gamble.
Closing his eyes and nearly wincing against the word, he whispered, “Aubrey,” knowing that she would come as soon as he called. In a matter of seconds, his plan would be exposed to the Skin.
True to her vows to protect, Aubrey appeared beside him in a whoosh of air. “Sir.”
Nate grinned, knowing that his protector was still alive, that she’d survived her stint as his replacement. “Are you okay?” he asked. “Did they hurt you?”
She shook her head. “There was a distraction of some kind. They never came for me.”
Inside, he was relieved in knowing that she was unharmed and that his plan had worked.
“We need to get past them,” he explained, pointing to the men in military garb. “I’ll take the one on the left, you take the one on the right.”
“Sir.”
Nate liked that she never argued, never questioned, only did what she was told. At a time like this, having cooperation was key. “Don’t kill them,” he added. “They’re honest men.”
“Yes, sir.”
Silently, Nate counted down using his fingers, then he and Aubrey sprang from the rock. One of the soldiers had time to shout, “What the –” before both of them were on the ground, unconscious.
“Guard the door,” Nate said to Aubrey. “If anyone comes, or anything looks suspicious at all, let me know immediately.”
Aubrey spun on her heel and stood with her back to the entrance of the hiding place. Nate felt a tug of remorse that this would probably be the last time he saw her in this altered lifetime. In all that had happened to him, she had been his only spark of hope.
“Thank you, Aubrey,” he said.
She looked at him curiously, nodded her head and resumed her vigil.
Drawing in a deep breath, Nate waved his hand over the rock. In the breaking light of dawn, a series of glowing purple symbols shined beneath his hand. He could understand none of them, but he recognized one and touched it with his palm. There was a grinding of rock on rock and the entrance slid obediently open.
The doorway wasn’t as large as that of the pod chamber and Nate had to slide through feet-first. He found that he could stand up fully, however, once he was inside. It was dark, so he picked up a rock and held it until it glowed.
Which way to go? The cave branched in two directions, like a Y. He decided on going right, soon found that it was a dead end. Back-tracking, he returned to the entrance and took the left leg. He had to hurry – by now surely the Skin knew Aubrey was gone.
Taking quick steps, he hurried down the left corridor, watching his feet to make sure he didn’t inadvertently run into a drop-off. A sense of panic started to twist in his stomach at what he was about to do. One more trip through time, one more chance to do the right thing.
As he ran, he thought about all that was to come, all that he would have to relive. There was joy – the birth of his baby girl – but there was plenty of pain. Hurt between father and son. Anger and disappointment between husband and wife. The death of a kind old man who had once taken in a half-alien baby without knowing it. Nate had lived through those things and was a stronger man for them, he just wasn’t sure he wanted to live through them again.
But he didn’t have a choice. If he didn’t do this, if he let things stand as they were, then the world was sure to come to darkness. Everyone he loved was dead or soon would be. Even though the FBI had imprisoned most of them, the Skins would dominate the world, he had no doubt. For the greater good, it was Nate’s heart that needed to be sacrificed.
Before he reached the end of the left tunnel, Nate stopped in his tracks. He could feel it as though it was calling to him, begging to be used. Pivoting, he fixed his eyes on the dark wall of the cave, then stepped closer to it. In a recess sat a stone box of sorts. He knew that cone was inside.
Fingers trembling, Nate reached into the alcove and pulled out the box, felt its weight against this arm. Before he could talk himself out of it, he shoved the heavy lid from the box, found the cone inside. Mustering another burst of courage, he snatched the device from the box and let the container fall to the floor with a loud crack of rock on rock.
In mere seconds, he would be back in time, fixing a blatant wrong, setting things back on track. He couldn’t think about the agony of being ripped through time, so he thought about those he’d lost – Liz’s laugh, Emily’s beautiful eyes, Jeremy’s unflappable loyalty, Isabel’s strength, Jesse’s hospitality, Max’s gentle soul. And he thought of his children – the easy-going, always happy Jake and the temperamental, demanding diva that was Amanda. While Jake had adored his father unconditionally, Nate would have to work to gain his daughter’s affections. The pain would be worth it, if he could get all of that back.
His muscles tensing, Nate grasped the cone between his hands, preparing to activate it. One small twist and he would be off to a time not so long ago. Just one small –
“Oh, little Zan.” The voice was sudden, the tone condescending. “I am so disappointed in you.”
Nate’s head whipped up, startled, to find the Skin blocking the tunnel.
tbc
“You’re not supposed to be here,” Alyssa whispered, though her eyes were creased at the corners with a smile.
Nate returned her grin and quietly closed the door behind him, grateful she had the room to herself and there was no roommate to rat him out. There was one dim light on above her bed, glowing down on her like a beacon from heaven. In her arms, a bundle of soft blankets and new-born baby.
“I couldn’t stay away,” Nate said in a hushed tone, his footsteps soundless as he approached her bed. Quietly, he pushed his boots from his feet, then slid onto the bed beside her.
Alyssa shifted onto her side, depositing the baby between them. Gently, she pushed the blankets back from the pink face within.
“She’s more beautiful now than the last time I saw her,” Nate whispered to his wife, reaching out to touch the child’s soft skin.
Alyssa nodded eagerly, proud of the newest addition to their family. “I think Emily was right – I think she might have your eyes.”
He turned his head this way and that, considering. “Do you think? Isn’t it too soon to tell?”
“I can see it,” she said.
“Well, let’s just hope she doesn’t get your temper,” he added.
At that, she smacked him playfully on the shoulder.
“See what I mean?” he laughed lightly. Then he settled into the pillow, his eyes fixed on the woman he loved more than life itself, his tone falling serious. “And you get more beautiful every time I see you, too.”
Even in the dim light and even though they’d been married five years and had already gone through the baby thing once, Nate could see a light blush color Alyssa’s cheeks. Reaching out, he cupped her face, caressed her cheek with his thumb.
“You do,” he confirmed. “And I love you more every day, Alyssa.”
Her smile was broad, her eyes a little moist. “I love you more every day, too, Nate.”
Being careful not to squish their new baby girl, he leaned over and kissed his wife, felt like for once everything was clicking into place. True, things had not been so good between them, what with Nate making a stupid time leap in an effort to try to save Liz and Emily from the Skins. Alyssa had felt it a betrayal of who they were, who he was, and more importantly, who their children were to be. She had assumed Nate was going to erase himself or a part of history that would have prevented any of them from being together. In reality, Nate had been so lost he really wasn’t sure what he was going to do. It had taken months to try to win back her trust and it broke his heart to think that perhaps even as they lay together in this hospital bed, she still didn’t trust him entirely.
“You know, she doesn’t have a name yet,” Alyssa said, breaking Nate from his reverie.
“What were you thinking?” he asked.
She shrugged lightly. “I don’t have a preference. It’s not like I want to name her after my mom or anything.” She gave a slight eye-roll and Nate knew she was still upset that Maria hadn’t made it to Boston for the birth. The baby had come suddenly and Maria’s Broadway show was still doing well enough that she simply couldn’t pick up and leave at the last minute.
“She might be here tomorrow,” Nate soothed.
“And she might not.” Alyssa frowned as she waved a hand in the air. “It doesn’t matter. What matters is that I don’t need to name my daughter after her.”
“Okay.” Inside, Nate felt a little sad that things never seemed to change between Alyssa and Maria, especially with the request he was about to make. “Could we name her after my mom?”
Surprisingly, Alyssa smiled, not seeming to be bitter that Nate’s relationship with his mother was better than hers would ever be. “Emma. I like it.”
“Not for a first name,” Nate corrected, shaking his head. “More like her middle.”
“What about the first?”
“I want to thank Aunt Isabel for all she’s done for me – for us.”
Alyssa’s eyebrows rose in surprise. “You want to name her Isabel?”
Nate shook his head again. “No, that doesn’t feel right. What’s Aunt Isabel’s middle name?”
Alyssa thought for a moment. “Amanda.”
Nate grinned. “I like that. I like Amanda.”
She gave him a nod and another smile. “Amanda it is then.”
“Amanda Emma,” he said, stringing the names together. Then he frowned in disappointment. “It doesn’t flow well. It doesn’t fit.”
But Alyssa kissed her baby, then kissed him, lingering at his lips. “I think it fits perfectly.”
Nate would recognize his gait anywhere – self-assured, cocky, definitely a man in control. A man who would pimp his daughter out to be an alien hunter. A man who would torture and maim to get what he wanted. A man who saw Nate as something less than human. Of course, he was also the only man in the crowd not wearing military apparel – oh, no, it was a five-thousand-dollar suit for Agent O’Donnell.
Nate shivered as he watched the agent move among the fallen Skins, stopping long enough to toe one of them with his shoe. If they hadn’t been such a vile race, Nate might have felt sorry for what was about to come the way of the Skins – his immediate elimination by fire had been much more humane than this FBI man would ever be.
Most of the incapacitated Skins had been unceremoniously tossed into the back of the military trucks and now only a few remained on the ground. Nate had to wonder what chemicals the soldiers had used to detain them; it seemed that the government was reaping the benefits of years of experimentation on alien species because the hybrids didn’t have the technology to wipe out a garrison of Skins with a couple of cans of gas.
Nate’s tired eyes followed Annie’s father as he gesticulated toward a couple of soldiers. Still hidden near the boulder, he was too far away to hear the man’s orders, but he got the gist when the two men snapped to attention – they were being left behind to guard whatever the Skins were protecting.
Nate knew that O’Donnell hadn’t found the entrance to the hiding place – he and his men had been searching and poking here and there for the last couple of hours. It had to have been baffling to them why a whole legion of Skins had decided to congregate in the middle of the desert for no apparent reason. The agent wasn’t stupid – he knew there was significance to this place even if he couldn’t figure out why.
A few more orders were barked, then the agent strode over to one of the Hummers and climbed into the passenger side. Nate sat up straight, watched as the army men hoisted the remaining few Skins into the back of one of the trucks. With a rumble, all but one of the trucks lurched forward, their headlights growing fainter into the horizon, the sun starting to come up over the mountains. The final truck had been left behind for the guards.
With a growing sense of anticipation, Nate’s attention went back to the two men who had been left as guard. As soon as the vehicles were out of sight and could no longer be heard, they relaxed, one of them lighting a cigarette. Nate could imagine their conversation – laughing that they’d been stranded in the desert waiting for the alien invasion. If they only knew…
Creeping on sore bones and muscles, Nate descended from the perch he’d held for most of the night. Max had taught him well how to be stealthy – no sand was displaced, no rocks tumbled down the incline. Nate was as silent as fog creeping across the bay in Boston.
At the bottom of the hill, Nate paused behind another cluster of rocks, surveying the scene up close. The men were near the entrance to the hiding place even if they weren’t aware of it. He was only one person and he couldn’t incapacitate one of the soldiers without the other knowing and having time to react. He was going to need help.
Nate’s eyes shifted to the entrance. There was no telling what lay beyond. It could be that the cone was simply inside the doorway. Or it could be that the cone was down an intricate series of tunnels and not easily found. He had no way to tell how long he would need to get the cone and activate it. He found himself in the uncomfortable position of needing to gamble.
Closing his eyes and nearly wincing against the word, he whispered, “Aubrey,” knowing that she would come as soon as he called. In a matter of seconds, his plan would be exposed to the Skin.
True to her vows to protect, Aubrey appeared beside him in a whoosh of air. “Sir.”
Nate grinned, knowing that his protector was still alive, that she’d survived her stint as his replacement. “Are you okay?” he asked. “Did they hurt you?”
She shook her head. “There was a distraction of some kind. They never came for me.”
Inside, he was relieved in knowing that she was unharmed and that his plan had worked.
“We need to get past them,” he explained, pointing to the men in military garb. “I’ll take the one on the left, you take the one on the right.”
“Sir.”
Nate liked that she never argued, never questioned, only did what she was told. At a time like this, having cooperation was key. “Don’t kill them,” he added. “They’re honest men.”
“Yes, sir.”
Silently, Nate counted down using his fingers, then he and Aubrey sprang from the rock. One of the soldiers had time to shout, “What the –” before both of them were on the ground, unconscious.
“Guard the door,” Nate said to Aubrey. “If anyone comes, or anything looks suspicious at all, let me know immediately.”
Aubrey spun on her heel and stood with her back to the entrance of the hiding place. Nate felt a tug of remorse that this would probably be the last time he saw her in this altered lifetime. In all that had happened to him, she had been his only spark of hope.
“Thank you, Aubrey,” he said.
She looked at him curiously, nodded her head and resumed her vigil.
Drawing in a deep breath, Nate waved his hand over the rock. In the breaking light of dawn, a series of glowing purple symbols shined beneath his hand. He could understand none of them, but he recognized one and touched it with his palm. There was a grinding of rock on rock and the entrance slid obediently open.
The doorway wasn’t as large as that of the pod chamber and Nate had to slide through feet-first. He found that he could stand up fully, however, once he was inside. It was dark, so he picked up a rock and held it until it glowed.
Which way to go? The cave branched in two directions, like a Y. He decided on going right, soon found that it was a dead end. Back-tracking, he returned to the entrance and took the left leg. He had to hurry – by now surely the Skin knew Aubrey was gone.
Taking quick steps, he hurried down the left corridor, watching his feet to make sure he didn’t inadvertently run into a drop-off. A sense of panic started to twist in his stomach at what he was about to do. One more trip through time, one more chance to do the right thing.
As he ran, he thought about all that was to come, all that he would have to relive. There was joy – the birth of his baby girl – but there was plenty of pain. Hurt between father and son. Anger and disappointment between husband and wife. The death of a kind old man who had once taken in a half-alien baby without knowing it. Nate had lived through those things and was a stronger man for them, he just wasn’t sure he wanted to live through them again.
But he didn’t have a choice. If he didn’t do this, if he let things stand as they were, then the world was sure to come to darkness. Everyone he loved was dead or soon would be. Even though the FBI had imprisoned most of them, the Skins would dominate the world, he had no doubt. For the greater good, it was Nate’s heart that needed to be sacrificed.
Before he reached the end of the left tunnel, Nate stopped in his tracks. He could feel it as though it was calling to him, begging to be used. Pivoting, he fixed his eyes on the dark wall of the cave, then stepped closer to it. In a recess sat a stone box of sorts. He knew that cone was inside.
Fingers trembling, Nate reached into the alcove and pulled out the box, felt its weight against this arm. Before he could talk himself out of it, he shoved the heavy lid from the box, found the cone inside. Mustering another burst of courage, he snatched the device from the box and let the container fall to the floor with a loud crack of rock on rock.
In mere seconds, he would be back in time, fixing a blatant wrong, setting things back on track. He couldn’t think about the agony of being ripped through time, so he thought about those he’d lost – Liz’s laugh, Emily’s beautiful eyes, Jeremy’s unflappable loyalty, Isabel’s strength, Jesse’s hospitality, Max’s gentle soul. And he thought of his children – the easy-going, always happy Jake and the temperamental, demanding diva that was Amanda. While Jake had adored his father unconditionally, Nate would have to work to gain his daughter’s affections. The pain would be worth it, if he could get all of that back.
His muscles tensing, Nate grasped the cone between his hands, preparing to activate it. One small twist and he would be off to a time not so long ago. Just one small –
“Oh, little Zan.” The voice was sudden, the tone condescending. “I am so disappointed in you.”
Nate’s head whipped up, startled, to find the Skin blocking the tunnel.
tbc