Vitalis Omnibus (52 page)

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Authors: Jason Halstead

BOOK: Vitalis Omnibus
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The human settlers on Vitalis believed the planet offered incredible benefits to the human body. Remarkable recovery from injuries, increased strength and endurance, and even immunity to viruses and diseases. Fiona had discovered the dark side of the blessing. In the right situations Vitalian gifts could serve as curses more cruel than anything humanity had ever imagined.

After she ate she let her head fall back to the floor. Her arms and legs were tied with vines, preventing escape. Adam took his new children out, leaving her. The others followed, though they all stopped by before they left and touched her in a reverent fashion. She was their mother. Their queen. The one who’d given them life. Fiona fought back the bitter laugh and waited, battling the darkness that threatened to take her.

After she judged enough time had passed, nearly half an hour, she worked her right hand free of the vines that encircled it. Adam hadn’t bothered changing them since he’d first captured her. They’d grown brittle and withered, giving her the room she needed to wiggle herself free. She’d been waiting for her chance and now, at last, she had it.

Using her free hand she worked the other vines loose enough to allow her to escape. Once free she stretched her body and rubbed her tortured and unused muscles. Her back and butt had sores from lying on the ground for so long. She grimaced at the leftover soreness in her groin. It would pass, she knew, but even with the miraculous rate of rejuvenation living on Vitalis gave her she’d be weak for at least a few hours.

She stared deeper into the cave. She wasn’t sure but she’d thought many times over the past three months that she’d seen a faint glow coming deeper from the passage. She wanted to check it out even now, but she knew time was not her ally. She turned away and headed up the passage to the mouth of the cave.

The bright star field in the night sky lit up the landscape. She looked around, seeing the region for the first time. When Adam had brought her to the cave she’d been unconscious from the venom of his bite. He’d continued biting her until she’d built up a resistance to it, but that was after she’d given birth to the first of his children. She shuddered at the memory, then refocused on the scenery before her.

The cave was high in the side of a mountain. A path led down to a small valley below. It was the only way out, high to either side cliffs rose to mountains above. Fiona peered at the sky again. She knew the sun had only recently set and that she was on the northeastern edge of whatever mountain chain she’d been taken too. A swamp lay to the east until it rose into hills and then mountains to the northwest. Greater details were impossible to make out in the starlight.

She didn’t recognize the landscape, but from what she remembered, Treetown had to be to the north. Except the north looked nothing like the jungle where her friends were hidden. Even the jungle to the east was wrong.

She started down, her body aching as she asked it to do things it hadn’t done in months. She’d been the second or third most dangerous person on Vitalis before she’d been captured. She could be that person again, she just needed time to heal. She shuddered again and felt a twinge in her belly. She needed time to forget as well.

On the valley floor she moved through the trees favoring speed more than stealth. She had no idea where her new family had gone. She hesitated, briefly wondering if Adam would be able to provide for his newest sons. She shook her head. They were abominations. Products of violence and rape. She shouldn’t want any part of them! She started again. If she could bear children she could have her own, human, children now. That would fill the empty pit she felt in her belly.

She pulled up short when she saw Adam’s silhouette standing ahead of her in the darkness. She couldn’t tell if he was facing towards or away from her. A glance around caused Fiona to gasp. Other hybrids stood in the trees. They were facing her. Watching her. She counted seven of them, all hybrids and not the creatures she’d given birth to.

How could there be seven? Only one had survived, unless Kira had failed to find and defeat the one she’d tracked. Or had there been more infected hosts they hadn’t found? Another thought sent caused her stomach to cramp and a cold sweat to break on her brow. Had some, or all, of the humans at Treetown been captured?

She turned around slowly, seeing the seventh hybrid walking up to her. That would be Adam. He stopped before her and waited. “Fuck you,” Fiona spat at him.

He didn’t move. “Come,” he said.

Fiona glanced around. “Yeah, I can’t wait to be tied up in a cave and raped once a month so I can spit out more of your ugly fucking kids!”

Too far away to be an immediate threat, he reached out gestured with his hand. “Come.”

The other spitter hybrids moved in closer, drawing the circle tight around her. Her children were nowhere to be seen, only the same nightmare fuckers that were just like Adam. She turned back to him, the flame of hope dying in her chest. “What are you going to do? Did you kill my friends? You’re breeding an army, aren’t you? You’re going to wipe out my people and rule this planet. You son of a bitch. No way I’m going to allow that. No way!”

“Come.”

“Stop fucking saying that!” Fiona yelled at him. She stomped towards him and smacked his hand out of her way then punched the thick shell over his chest. Adam backed up a step, then took another blow from her that failed to stagger him as much as it hurt her hand.

“Come….mother.”

She’d ranted at him whenever she’d seen him and he’d listened. His ability to speak was mangled, but he’d been learning. She suspected his vocabulary was larger than he let on.  It made her sick to think of it, but the respect showed to her by her offspring reminded her of how virtually every species on the planet was matriarchal. The females of the species often called the shots, even if they were barely smart enough to keep themselves from shitting in the same water they drank from. “My people, did you hurt them?”

It stared at her. “Humminz safe.”

Humminz? As much as she wanted to scowl and punch him again, the relief at his words made her heart skip a beat. She relaxed, turning to see the circle of hybrids around them. If they hadn’t overran Treetown then they must have come from other hosts, Marines that had survived crashing into the planet long enough to be infected by the spitters. As much as she wanted to hate them she knew it wasn’t their fault. No more than it was a human baby’s fault if its mother died during childbirth.

A noise drew her attention beyond the ring of hybrid flesh around her. She saw the pregnant girl holding one of the babies but it was being fussy. Something tugged at her, she knew why the baby was upset. A moment later she realized her body was reacting to it, wetness ran down her breast and dripped onto her belly.

Fiona took a deep breath and let it out, shuddering slightly as she did so. She knew what she had to do. “You want me to cooperate? You leave me free. You show me some fucking respect! You let me call the shots. I’m smarter than you and I’m capable of a lot more. You won’t lay a hand on any humans without my permission either.”

“Children?”

She blinked. He understood her. What Adam was asking her made her close her eyes. She didn’t want any more fucking mutant kids. She felt drawn to the ones she had, but more of them? No. She shook her head. “Not a fucking chance! You’ve got six of them, two are girls and one of them is about to give birth. They’ll keep breeding and you’ll have your army.” Fiona stopped, her eyes narrowing. “No, I’ll have my army. You’ll lead it, but you’ll do what I tell you.”

Adam reached out to her, not to grab her or take her, but with the same type of soft gesture her offspring had used to show respect for her. Fiona shook her head and stepped back from him. “Don’t fucking touch me! You kneel and call me your Queen.”

Fiona heard faint scuffles of movement, drawing her attention. She turned around slowly, eventually coming back to face Adam. Every one of them was kneeling on both knees and staring at her. Tears ran unchecked down her cheeks.

 

 

 

 

Chapter 2

 

“These are amazing,” Eric muttered, running his hand gently across the large crystal. It was longer than he was tall and as thick as his midsection. It had taken Tarn and Barry both to bring it back from the cave Kira’d found.

“I’ll show you amazing,” Kira said, breathing into his ear.

“Must have been a lot of work, you seem hotter than usual.”

Kira nipped his ear and pulled away, grinning. “Still no sign of Fiona or the hybrids.”

“Weird how they just up and left us alone after trying so hard to capture somebody.”

She nodded, then turned and rubbed the crystal, adding a fresh surge of pinkish light to it as it absorbed her heat and energy. She had nothing she wanted to add to the conversation. Fiona had been her friend. Her closest friend, aside from Eric. She’d trusted the woman and made her aware of practically everything she thought and knew. To have her disappear left her with a hole in her heart that she hadn’t figured out how to fill yet. She knew one of the new breed of spitters had gotten her, she just hadn’t been able to find any proof of it.

“The little ones can channel energy that’s fed into them and they do some amazing things. This one’s too big; it needs a lot more juice than we can give it.”

“What do they do?” Kira picked up her spear and tapped the crystal at the tip with her finger. It glowed faintly, matching the larger crystal. “Other than being really sharp?”

Eric shook his head at the wicked grin on her face. “You scare me sometimes, you know?”

“Have to keep you in line. I’ve seen the way some of the women look at you.”

Eric snorted. “Like they’ve got a chance. I’m not the only one you scare, the difference is you scare me in a good way.”

“Good, now hurry up before I give you a real reason to be afraid.”

Eric sighed. “Jeremy and Klous have both been getting crazy over these things. Ling’s been trying to keep them informed but he’s in over his head with this kind of stuff. Electronics and running engines are where he’s best, though he’s proven good with math and construction.”

“Why not Sasha?” Kira asked. Sasha was Klous’s partner. Before that she’d been a mechanic or a maintenance worker on his ship, Kira’d never really cared enough to remember.

Eric smirked. “He’s afraid these things might have some sort of radiation or harmful energy. Doesn’t want her near them since she’s pregnant again.”

Kira rolled her eyes. “He doesn’t need to scheme up some plan to take things over, those two are going to breed us out!”

“Two kids in three years? Doesn’t seem that big of a threat,” Eric said after he finished laughing. “You just don’t like them.”

Kira shrugged. It was true, she didn’t like Klous. She’d never hidden that fact from anyone either. It made Sasha cool towards her and strained relations with the rest of the crew from his ship, the
Black Hole
. Only Aran seemed to not care about it, but he was that way with just about everything and everyone.

“I’m not really sure about the crystals. The effects vary based on the frequency. I think if we could shape some of them we could use them to generate some powerful lasers. Small scale, not weapons.”

Kira grunted to show she was listening even though he’d lost her interest. Lasers like that would be useful only for medicine or some utilitarian tasks, nothing she needed.

“There’s plenty more, Queen of the Jungle,” Eric quipped.

She furrowed her brows at him pretending to be annoyed at the honorific. It was an act and they both knew it. She loved the jungle and loved being such a force to reckon with. In her opinion the only thing higher on the food chain than her was Mother Vitalis herself, and she was just a concept that Kira talked about. “Such as?”

“Fields that display properties of altering space-time.”

“Altering what?”

“Space-time. It’s four-dimensional. The basic tools we have that still work seem to show that there’s something amazing happening when the right frequency of energy is fed into the crystals. I can’t really be sure without a lot more testing and better equipment.”

Kira sighed. “Hasn’t Klous weaseled the TC ship in orbit out of more junk to test with? At the rate he’s going they’ll be sending their hull and engines down for him soon.”

Eric let a laugh slip. “The new comm. gear Ben got in the last supply drop has been working great. So great that he picked up more ships in system.”

“What?” Kira stiffened, alarmed by the news. More ships meant more military. Another invasion would get a lot of people killed and those that weren’t would either end up as hosts for the spitters or more refugees forced to learn how to survive in Treetown.

“They claim two more frigates and two transports, their plan is to establish an outpost. I don’t know more beyond that.”

“An outpost?” Kira swore. She rushed out of the primitive apartment muttering, “I’ve got to see Sharp.”

“Must be serious,” Eric said as his lover stormed off. She barely ever allowed him to work when she returned from a foray into the jungle. Her first priority involved a lot more sweating and bodily fluids. He sighed and turned back to the crystal, wondering if there was a way he could rig up something primitive to do some spatial testing.

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