His Human Hellion (Ultimate Passage Book 2) (9 page)

BOOK: His Human Hellion (Ultimate Passage Book 2)
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Chapter 20

 

Finn

 

Finn took Ali outside.

“Let’s get some distance
from the house,” Ali pulled on his arm.

“Why?”

“I don’t want anyone else to know about my wings.”

Anyone else?
“There’s only Kal here.”

“I know. I cannot start telling everyone this secret. Not yet.”

“I understand.” He didn’t fully, but a part of him did a bit, else he would have told Kal about his flying, about the intensity of his emotions—so different than it was on Kormia.

“What if you can’t teach me to hide my wings? To look completely human? Finn, my problem is two-fold. I have to hide my wings from Asazi, but I also need to hide my skin from humans. Unless I’m to remain underground or hidden forever.”

“I know. I control it, other soldiers control it. You can too.”

“Those other soldiers were all males.”

He knew that. He was hoping she’d not think of it. He didn’t want to have yet one more obstacle for her to overcome mentally. He’d been wanting to ask Ali for a favor, maybe now seemed as good a time as any. “What happened between us, in the bed—” He didn’t know how to say it or what to say.

“I won’t tell anyone.”

He breathed a sigh of relief.

“But, first
, I need something from you.”

“Wait, my teaching you how to blend with humans and how to hide your wings from
Asazi is not enough?”

Ali looked down. “No. I need your forgiveness
, too.”

He took a step back, prepared for the worst, but unsure what the worst could be. “Go on, forgiveness for what?”

“Your woman. Target 41.” Ali bit her lip. “Marissa. I saw her. I saw her in her cell. I went to see her. I know it wasn’t right. I know she’s not the reason you ended the Binding. But I was curious.”

Finn was confused. “Did you hurt her?”
Is that why Ali wanted forgiveness?

“No, but I did not help her. And then I came here and did what I did with you. It
is difficult to explain, but there are these urges, to mate.”

He understood. Finn thought of the first few hours, days after he left Kormia. Could he discuss it with Ali? She seemed like the only one who was going through what he went through.

“I think there is something in the food. Or maybe it’s something in the air on Kormia. I can’t figure it out. I want to ask someone, but don’t know who. You’re the only one I know who has gone through this.” Finn shook his head, made patterns in the dirt with the toes of his shoes. “Never mind. Let’s get you trained, we do not have a lot of time, and when Kal says the vessel is ready, I’m leaving.”

“About the vessel. Finn, I did not get in a pod. I was not unconscious like we are supposed to be.”

He snapped his head up from looking at the ground. “And what happened?”

“That is just it. Nothing. No feeling of motion. No feeling like it was in the car when you drove us here. It was like
I hardly moved. And it was not a long journey.”

She probably had fallen asleep and missed something.
“Of course it’s a long journey. The scientists have told us that it is. And that is why we have to be unconscious for it. And that is why—” Was anything that he thought to be true even true? His head pounded with the uncertainties, the questions. And the biggest contributor, finding Marissa. “We need to stay on track. Time to teach you.”

He stood across from her, facing her in the moonlight, the sliver of the moon casting shadows on her face, coloring her hair a darker shade of blond, making her Asazi skin shimmer. “You have to control your pulse. You must stay in touch with your heartbeat and breathing. After you have mastered that
, you will work on your skin. Our skin reflects our emotions because we are able to engage with it on a conscious level. This is something that humans don’t have.”

“Finn?” She shuffled her feet, ran her fingers through her hair. “You do not believe in the Sacred Writings?
Our future? Our past? How we came to be?”

“I don’t believe in anything.” He leaned against a fence post, careful of scorpions that might be seeking nighttime
victims. “I don’t think I believed after my father died. But the logical part of me knows that something is amiss. I don’t know what it is.” He pushed off the fence, looked Ali in the eye. “But you know what? I do not care. I care nothing for what is on Kormia. My future, my life is here on Earth, where things are simple.”

“I hope I feel the same for
Earth one day. I do not think I have a home, not anywhere. I ran away from Kormia, but I do not know where I am running to.”

Finn wished he understood what she was going through, but his problems were different. And right now, his were more acute. She was not in danger, Marissa was. And he was on a deadline. “We need to get to work. If Kal says it is time, I will go. I do not want to disappoint you.” He almost said they were like brother and sister, but rethought it, as what they’d done was not what siblings did. “I care for you, as a good friend. But if it is time to go, and you are not ready, I will still go.”

“Understood.” She nodded, her jaw set, that same look she had when they were young and she was told she couldn’t play with the older ones.

It wasn’
t easy, but by the time Kal came to get Finn, he and Ali had wrapped it up and were sitting in the living room. Sprawled was a better word for it, he was sprawled across the sofa, rest eluding him, and Ali was in the recliner, in a deep REM state.

“Ready?”

Finn jumped off the couch. “More than.”

“What’s going on? Thought you were in bed?”

Ali sat up, rubbed her eyes. “I wanted to talk. Finn has always been a good listener.”

Finn was glad she made up the lie, he didn’t want to
lie or have to explain it to Kal. He opened the front door.

Kal glanced at Finn’s hands. “Are you not taking a bag?”

“To what end? They will relieve me of it the moment I arrive.” Though he did want to take weapons. Did he ever.

Finn
needed to talk to Kal about flying, but he didn’t know if he should tell Alithera about it, if she should know. That sort of information could be dangerous if it ended up in the possession of someone who could not be trusted. He’d spent the rest of his time before he departed teaching her how to hide her wings. He abided by her request not to tell Kal. Not yet, because she wanted to tell him herself. Guilt-ridden from so very many secrets, Finn was ready to go, though his heart was heavy.

Alithera never allowed him a moment’s privacy with Kal, and still reluctant to tell her, Finn maintained silence on the subject of flying and his fully-functioning wings.
So he waved goodbye to them, after a quick hug to Kal, but not Alithera. He was not yet over his self-loathing about their sexual encounter, and no amount of justification could make him feel better. A big part of that was because he knew there was no justification for his act. Another part he couldn’t handle was that he had no one to discuss it with.

He deliberated wearing the mask that would make him unconscious. He wanted to avoid it and see what happened. But what if something happened to him and he couldn’t save Marissa? This was not the time to experiment with anything which may hinder his ability to find her.

He put the mask on and breathed deep.

 

*~*~*

 

He was awakening from the journey and expecting the vessel’s main door to open and someone to come in for him. He was getting impatient with the wait and the rigorous emotions that his thoughts were driving him toward. He was ready to catapult himself out of his pod and begin pounding on the door right before he heard the air pressure whooshing a release and signaling someone’s arrival.

He took a deep breath, stretched, and tried to put on a nonchalant look. He’d donned his Asazi uniform before he climbed into the pod for his return home. When he put it on he’d noticed that he’d lost some of his bulk, but was still muscular, just a bit leaner.

He forced himself to exhale, anxious to see who would be first in the vessel’s door.

Finn
could not contain the smile making its way to his face when he saw Nevim’s face. “Uncle—” It vanished as he saw the next Asazi to follow Nevim in. Another Governor-Select.

“Ornin,” Finn said, with a nod.

Ornin’s face flooded with a deep orange color. “That’s Governor-Select Ornin to you, insubordinate traitor.” Ornin’s words were drenched in toxicity.

Granted, Ornin had never been Finn’s friend, but this attack seemed unwarranted. Not eager to make more enemies, Finn clamped his lips shut, clenched his jaw, and looked to Nevim for guidance.

Nevim turned to Ornin. “We should let the Council of Governors-Select determine his guilt, rather than condemning him individually right now.”

What guilt? Finn turned to Nevim for an explanation. His uncle gave him a cautionary look, as if advising him to say nothing.

Finn slowed his breathing, tried to control his pulse, his forearms subsided from a hue of dark orange.

“Ornin, allow us a moment of privacy,” Nevim’s tone was patient.

“You do not outrank me.”

“That has no bearing. Out of respect for his father, my fallen brother who sacrificed his life for Asazi, you can do this.”

Ornin gave a tense nod, turned on his heel, and exited the vessel. Nevim turned to Finn. “How are you?”

Nevim
took measure of Finn. Finn felt certain he’d noticed the weight loss. He could probably see the bags under his eyes. Sleep he’d missed for more than a few nights, chasing Marissa and dealing with Alithera. Not to mention the stress of mentally preparing to come back to Kormia.

Marissa.
“Where’s Marissa?” He took his uncle’s hand to rise out of the tightfitting pod. He hadn’t expected her to be here to greet him, he knew better, but that hadn’t stopped him from hoping.

“She was taken into custody upon arrival.”

Something about his uncle’s tone told him that he was holding back. He’d heard that tone before, the day he told Finn his father had fallen in battle. “And?”

“The
Council met. They decided against a trial.”

Finn dropped to one knee. “That can’t be. When do they plan her release?”

“She was released not long ago.”

“What? Which exit?” Finn leapt to his feet, headed for the door. He’d just passed over the t
hreshold when two Asazi guards raised their weapons, blocking him.

“Finn, come back, please. Now.” Nevim had used his commander’s voice, from when he used to be in the field.

Finn had heard that tone when he served in a squadron next to the one Nevim commanded. He knew that tone well. He did an aboutface after giving the soldiers a look to let them know he wasn’t intimidated.

He approached Nevim. “What’s the meaning of this? Guards? For me?”

“Yes. You are to be escorted to the Council for a decision as well.” Nevim lowered his tone. “There are a few who are calling for action, an attempt to stop our assimilation and peaceful colonization on Earth. I do not have to tell you what side Ornin is on.”

“I
don’t care about all this. I only care for Marissa’s well-being. She is carrying my child.”

“Yes I know.” Nevim leaned in. “I gave her a
TripTip blade. She’s not completely unarmed. And she is quite a hellion, that human. You should see the bruises on Talik’s face.” His voice was as low as a whisper could be.


Yes, but she’s my hellion. And I won’t rest until I find her. She is not a soldier, Uncle. She is a—she had a restaurant—she cooked and served people. She has no skills at self-defense.” Though he wondered about Talik’s face. What could Marissa have done to him?

“Perhaps so, but she managed fairly well against Merck.”

“Probably luck,” Finn muttered. “I have to go to her. I will die trying. Or . . .” He paused, he didn’t want to say it, but he had no other choices. Of that he was convinced. “Or I will kill trying.”

“I believe you. Please. No more than an hour.”

“I can’t guarantee that. Go, Uncle. I do not want you here when—if—I disgrace my military oath. Go, now. Please.”

With a sigh and a shake of his head, Nevim headed for the door. “Finn, I will see you in
Council. This will be resolved.”

Finn saluted, sure this would be the last time he would do so. “Tell me one thing. What exit?”

“Lesser League.”

“Uncle, why did he call me traitor?”

“They are looking at treason.”

“A charge that egregious should have resulted in my banishment. I don’t understand why they want to bring me in.”

“Because they know it is what you do not want. They know you want to save her.”

“Who? How do they know?”

“Talik.”

“Thank you. I will see you on the brighter side of the lands.”

“Wings be with you.” Nevim made the sign over Finn.

BOOK: His Human Hellion (Ultimate Passage Book 2)
2.87Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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