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Sunlight Moonlight

Chapter Fourteen

   



Muffled voices.
Darkness.
Pain.
Micah lay perfectly still, listening to the sounds around him, not wanting his captors to know he had regained consciousness. His whole body felt heavy; he was so groggy, he could scarcely think.
Awareness came to him in fragments. There was a needle in his left arm.
Cold metal straps encircled his wrists and ankles, shackling him to an equally cold metal table.
He was naked.
There was some sort of covering over his face.
Stark fear congealed in the pit of his stomach and a violent tremor wracked his body as he surmised that he was in a laboratory of some sort.
Gradually, the muffled voices grew more distinct, and he deduced that there were three men in the room, quietly discussing him as if he were a creature without understanding or feelings. Bits and pieces of their conversation filtered into his mind.
"Remarkably well-formed..."
"Not injured like the other one..."
"... should be able to keep this one alive..."
He felt the sharp prick of a needle as someone drew blood from his right arm, and then rough hands began to measure the width of his chest, his neck, the length of his arms and legs. One man called out the measurements, presumably so one of the other men could write them down. Fingers probed the webbing between his thumb and forefinger.
Someone removed the covering from his face, and Micah blinked against the bright glare of the overhead light.
A tall man with dark red hair peered down at Micah, his pale blue eyes magnified by the thick glasses he wore.
"I'm gonna take his vitals," Red Hair said. "Mac, jot this down. Blood pressure, eighty over forty. Pulse, thirty-five. Respiration, twelve."
Micah gagged as Red Hair forced his mouth open and placed a glass tube under his tongue.
A short time later, Red Hair removed the tube. He studied the numbers a moment, then grunted softly.
"Temp's ninety-six." Red Hair glanced at the other man. "Got all that?"
"Eighty over forty. Thirty-five. Twelve. Ninety-six. Got it."
Next, Red Hair pulled on a pair of rubber gloves and proceeded to examine Micah's ears, his eyes, his nose, stopping now and then to make copious notes in a thick black book.
Micah grimaced as the red-haired man forced his mouth open so he could examine his teeth, his tongue.
"Easy on the blood, Mac," Red Hair admonished. "You took too much last time and the creature died."
"Yeah, yeah, I'll be careful," Mac muttered.
Micah grunted softly as the man called Mac carelessly jabbed a needle into his right arm.
"We'll need a couple of hair samples, too," Red Hair said. "Gene, you wanna take care of that?''
"Right," the man called Gene replied. "We'll need urine, too."
"Damn!" Mac exclaimed as the syringe filled with fluid. "That brown blood throws me every time."
"Always thought Martian blood was supposed to be green," Gene said, grinning as he poked Micah in the side. "That's where you're from, isn't it, fella? Mars?"
"Do you suppose brown is its natural color?" Red Hair asked.
Mac shook his head. "Maybe, maybe not. Might be a chemical reaction to our atmosphere."
"The other one had brown blood, too," Red Hair remarked. "That idiot, Herb, never did find out what caused it, or what made the alien's skin glow, either."
"I'll find out," Mac said confidently, and callously jabbed another needle into the vein in Micah's right arm.
For a moment, Gene and Red Hair moved away from the table, their heads bent over a large book, and Micah felt a twinge of hope. Maybe they were through with him.
But they weren't. Micah's entire body went rigid when Red Hair began an extensive examination of his genitals.
Micah stared at the man, focusing his mind, his energy, on destroying the man, but nothing happened. It took him several minutes to realize that whatever drug they were using to keep him sedated had rendered him powerless; it also made coherent thought difficult, but it didn't interfere with his ability to hear, to see, to feel.
He felt suddenly nauseated as he realized he was helpless, that these men could do whatever they wished to him and there was nothing - nothing - he could do to stop them.
Micah glanced at the syringe slowly filling with his blood.Not like the other one... keep this one alive . What other one? he wondered dully.
He turned his head to the side to avoid the bright light that was making his head ache, felt his stomach churn at what he saw.
There was a long wooden shelf on the far wall, and on the shelf were numerous jars containing various Xanthian internal organs. A brain floated in a large bottle of clear liquid, webbed hands could be seen in a second jar. A Xanthian skeleton stood in the corner. Its empty eye sockets seemed to be looking at him with pity.
Micah knew of three Xanthian pilots who had disappeared while flying through earth's atmosphere. Was this skeleton one of those men, men he had worked with, laughed with?
For the next hour, the three men poked and prodded, measuring every inch of Micah's body. It was humiliating in the extreme, feeling their hands on him, listening while they made crude jests about the webbing on his hands, the size of his ears, the blue glow that shimmered around him, darker and more obvious now that he was in an agitated state.
They took pictures of him from every conceivable angle, taking close-ups of his hands, his ears, his eyes, making jokes about his ability to procreate as they snapped photos of his genitals.
"Too bad he destroyed the spaceship before we got there," Gene remarked as Red Hair took yet another picture. "That would have been a real coup."
"Next time," Red Hair said. "Next time we'll be better prepared."
"Yeah, next time," Gene muttered. "Your ass will be grass if SETI finds out about this. You know whatBergen said about going off on your own. And he'll burn us right along with you."
Red Hair shrugged as he picked up a scalpel and forceps. "We'll worry about that if and when it happens. Swab his chest with alcohol. I want to take a skin sample."
"Right."
Micah strained against his bonds as Red Hair lifted a section of skin with the forceps, then cut off a small slice, which he dropped into a glass vial. Gene quickly swabbed the area with alcohol, then slapped a bandage in place.
"We'll need a tissue sample, too."
"Maybe we should anesthetize him," Mac suggested.
Red Hair dismissed the idea with a shake of his head. "It'll only take a minute. Besides, it'll give us a chance to see how he reacts to pain."
Micah stared at the three men in horror. Lainey had accused his people of callously experimenting on humans, but his people had never done anything like this. Xanthians had an innate reverence for life forms of all kinds. They abhorred brutality and bloodshed.
He couldn't take his gaze from the knife in Red Hair's hand, couldn't control the violent tremors that wracked his body as he waited for the earthling to cut into his flesh.
Nausea rose in Micah's throat as Red Hair took a pair of surgical scissors and made a shallow incision in the muscle of his right arm. He drew a harsh breath between his clenched teeth as pain seared through him. Hands clenched, his body rigid, he choked back a scream as Red Hair removed a small piece of tissue.
He was sweating profusely now, his hands clenched into tight fists, his body throbbing with pain, his muscles taut with a deep-seated primal fear of the unknown.
There was a sharp, stinging sensation as Gene poured disinfectant over the cut, then wrapped it with a bandage. Micah stared at the strip of white cloth, which was quickly turning brown with blood.
But they weren't through with him yet. They took a sample of his sweat, then pared his fingernails.
"Well, that does it for me," Red Hair said. "You two have everything you need?"
"For now," Gene said.
"I might need some more blood later."
Red Hair nodded. "Let's call it a night, then. Gene, why don't you and Mac go get us some dinner while I finish up here?"
"Right. Come on," Gene said. "We'll take my car."
Red Hair walked around the table, stopping occasionally to take another picture, or write something in his big black notebook.
"Damn," Red Hair murmured, "you're gonna make us famous. And richer than hell." He poked Micah in the chest with a stubby fingertip. "Who are you? Where are you from?"
Micah stared up at him. He could feel the drug coursing through him, rendering him powerless, making it difficult to think.
"You can talk. I know you can," Red Hair said. "Of course, there's always the possibility that you don't speak English, but somehow I think you do." He changed the bloody bandage on Micah's arm, then pulled off his gloves and tossed them in a wastebasket. "Well, we've got lots of time." He laughed as he jerked a spatulate thumb at the skeleton in the corner. "He was stubborn, too."
Red Hair checked the IV bag at the head of the table, then nodded. The solution dripped steadily into Micah's arm.
Red Hair patted the plastic bag. "You won't be giving us any trouble," he said conversationally. "Mac invented this concoction. Keeps guys like you as helpless as newborn babes, but still allows us to see how you react to different stimuli." He chuckled softly. "Yeah, we know all about those death-ray eyes of yours. We've been studying your kind for years. Kind of funny, when you think about it. People on earth running around worrying about being abducted and studied by aliens when we've been studying you guys for years."
Red Hair walked slowly around the table, his gaze narrowed.
Micah clenched his jaw, hating the way the man looked at him, studying him as though he were no more than a bug under a microscope.
"The similarities between your people and ours are amazing, but it's the differences that intrigue me," Red Hair murmured softly, and then he looked at Micah and grinned. "Better get some rest, space man. You're gonna need it."
And with that cryptic warning, Red Hair switched off the overhead light, went into the adjoining room, and shut the door.
Left alone at last, Micah closed his eyes, wishing he could banish the pain that throbbed in his chest, his arm. If only he could think clearly! If only he wasn't so weak, so dizzy.
Rousing himself, he tugged at the bindings on his hands and feet, but he was too weak to do more than pull at them a few times, too dazed to think clearly, too heavily drugged to be able to concentrate on anything for more than a few seconds.
He shivered as the room grew colder. Closing his eyes, he surrendered to the darkness that hovered around him. His last conscious thought was that he'd never see Lainey again...
Lainey's apprehension grew with the passing of each hour. Three times, she'd walked past the old building where they'd taken Micah. Once, she had crept up to a window, hoping to get a glimpse of Micah, but the windows had been blacked out from the inside. Now, sitting in the car, her gaze riveted on the building, she wondered what to do next.
She thought of calling the police, but somehow that didn't seem like a smart move. What could she say? Three men have kidnapped my boyfriend, who just happens to be from another planet? They'd either laugh, or lock her up in a rubber room. And even if they believed her, Micah probably wouldn't be any better off in the hands of the police, who would, no doubt, turn him over to the Air Force or the CIA or whoever it was who handled alien invaders.
Damn, she thought, this was like something out of that TV show,The X-Files . She just wished Agents Mulder and Scully were there with her. They'd know what to do. She wished she did.
Closing her eyes, she tried to contact Micah, but she encountered only a vague sense of emptiness. Did that mean he was dead? There was no way to tell what they were doing to him in there.
She remembered the headlines she'd read in some of the more sensational tabloids in the last year:
GOVERNMENT COVERUPS DISCLOSED.
SPACESHIP KEPT UNDER WRAPS INSECRETDESERT
LABORATORY.
AUTOPSY REVEALS STRANGE ALIEN PHYSIOLOGY.
She shivered as she imagined Micah being examined by a battery of doctors, subjected to a variety of inhumane tests. But surely, if these men were connected to the government, or SETI, they would have taken Micah somewhere besides what seemed to be an abandoned building. If these men were on the up and up, there would be men in uniform, some kind of security.
With a sigh of exasperation, she snuggled deeper into her coat, her gaze fixed on the building.
Twenty minutes later, she saw two men get in a car and drive away.
It was now or never.
Resolutely, she opened the trunk, took out the tire iron, and made her way toward the building, hoping, praying, that there had only been three men inside.
He was drifting in a black fog, hovering on the brink of unconsciousness, when he heard Lainey's voice calling his name.
Ah, Lainey, he thought groggily.If only you were really here .
He winced as someone removed the needle from his arm.
"Micah! Micah, please, wake up!"
"Lainey?" Slowly, he opened his eyes to see a blurred shape hovering over him.
"Micah! We've got to get you out of here." She was unfastening the metal cuffs that bound his hands and feet as she spoke. "Can you sit up?"
"Don't... know."
"I'll help you," Lainey said, slipping her arm under his shoulders. "Come on, we've got to go."
Micah sat up, then slid his legs over the side of the table. The room tilted crazily, and he stumbled against Lainey, who grabbed him and held on tight.
"Are you okay?" she asked, staggering under his weight.
"No. They..." He rested his head on her shoulder and closed his eyes. "Needle... drugged me..."
"Well, hang on, we've got to get out of here before the other two come back."
And before the red-haired man in the other room regained consciousness. She wasn't normally given to violence, and hitting the man over the head with a tire iron while his back was turned hadn't been easy. At the time, she'd worried about hitting him too hard; now, seeing what they had done to Micah, she wished she had hit the man harder.
It was all she could do to get Micah out of the building. He was so weak, he had to stop several times on the short walk to her car. Once, he dropped to his knees and began to retch violently.
Helpless, Lainey could only stand there, watching, her gaze darting constantly toward the street, always afraid the other two men would return, or that someone would pass by and call the police. That was all she needed, she thought wryly, wondering how she'd explain a naked man who was obviously under the influence of drugs.
She was a bundle of nerves by the time she managed to get Micah safely inside the car. Removing her coat, she draped it over his shivering form, threw the car in drive, and got the hell out of there.
Micah was unconscious when they reached home. Parking the car in the garage, she hurried into the house, threw several changes of clothes for the two of them into a bag, grabbed her toothbrush, a couple of pillows, her laptop computer, some sheets and blankets. She checked her first-aid kit to be sure it was fully supplied, then ran back out to the car.
Micah was as she had left him, his head propped against the door, his eyes closed. His naturally dark skin seemed pale, the blue aura darker than usual.
"Lainey?"
"I'm here."
"Transmitter... must get... transmitter."
With a sigh of exasperation, she ran back into the house, fished the little black box out from under the sofa, and hurried back to the car.
She was praying earnestly as she started the engine and pulled out of the driveway, praying for help, praying that Micah would be all right, wondering where they would be safe.
She drove slowly down the darkened streets, the same prayer repeating itself in her heart.Help me, please help me. Please don't let him die. I don't know what to do. I don't know where to go .
And then it came to her, as loud and clear as if a voice had spoken to her mind.
The mountains. Take him to the cabin in Chadds Creek.
Of course, she thought. Grandma St. John's cabin. It had been vacant for over five years, ever since Grandpa died. Her folks were always talking about going up there and restoring the place, but they'd never done it.
Murmuring a fervent prayer of thanks, she pulled onto the freeway and headed north, toward the small mountain community of Chadds Creek.
It was almost dawn when Lainey parked the car in the ramshackle garage behind the cabin. She had made one stop on the way up the mountain, stopping at a market to buy enough canned and dry food to last for at least a month.
"Micah?" She shook his shoulder gently. "Micah?"
Slowly, his eyelids fluttered open. "Lainey?" A faint smile touched his lips. "Thought... I had... dreamed you."
"No, I'm here." She brushed her fingers across his cheek, noticing that his skin felt hot and dry.
"Transmitter... ?"
"I've got it. Come on, I want to get you into bed."
"Don't think... I'd be... much good... right now."
In spite of the seriousness of their situation, she burst out laughing. "Micah! You made a joke."
"Not...joking..."
"Come on, you big lug, let's get you inside."
Five years made for a lot of dust and cobwebs, Lainey thought as she swept the kitchen floor. Earlier, she had found a rat's nest, several small piles of bones, and assorted animal droppings. All were gone now, picked up and scrubbed away.
Micah was sleeping, tucked between clean sheets and the blankets from her bed at home. She had changed the bandage on his arm, realizing, as she did so, that they had deliberately cut into him, taking little bits and pieces to study, she guessed. The thought made her sick to her stomach. Thank God she'd gotten him out of there before they did any real damage, she thought, and then wondered if she had. He had a low fever, but didn't seem to be in any pain in spite of the raw place on his chest and the shallow incision on his arm. He was still dizzy, groggy, a little disoriented. He said he had been drugged. What if the drug had permanent adverse effects on him?
She shook her head, refusing to think about the worst until it happened. For now, all that mattered was that Micah was there.
It took twelve hours for the drug they had given him to wear off.
Micah slept most of that time. Lainey sat beside his bed, afraid to leave him alone for more than a few minutes at a time in case he woke up and needed something. She touched him frequently, assuring herself that he was really there. His color was good. His fever was gone; the faint blue glow that had emanated from his skin seemed almost nonexistent and that worried her because she didn't know if it was a good sign or not.
Once, he cried out as though he were in pain and she took his hand in hers and held it tightly. He quieted instantly at her touch, and then he murmured her name.
She wept then, tears of gratitude because he was alive, tears of despair because she was afraid of what the future held.
"Lainey?"
Her head jerked up at the sound of his voice. "Micah! You're awake."
He nodded groggily. "Where are we?"
"At my grandmother's cabin in the mountains. We'll be safe here. No one knows about this place except my folks, and even they don't know we're here."
Lainey chewed on the inside of her lip, knowing how worried her parents would be when they didn't hear from her. In a day or two, she would have to drive down to Chadds Creek and call home.
Micah glanced around the room. It was small and square, with blue walls and checked curtains at the windows. "How did we get here?''
Lainey tilted her head to one side. "You don't remember?"
"No."
"It doesn't matter. We're here, and we're safe."
"The transmitter!" Micah exclaimed. "I've got to go back..."
She laid a hand on his shoulder. "Calm down, Micah. I've got it with me."
He relaxed visibly, and she wondered what was so important about a broken radio.
"How do you feel?" she asked.
"Weak."
"Maybe you should eat something?"
"I'm not hungry."
"Well, I'm going to fix you some tea and toast just the same."
She brought him a tray a few minutes later and he obediently ate the dry toast and drank the tea, only to have it all come up again.
Lainey quickly cleaned up the mess, then changed the sheets.
"I'm sorry," Micah said. He refused to meet her gaze, embarrassed by his weakness, and by the fact that she had seen it.
"No," Lainey said, "I'm sorry. You said you weren't hungry. I should have listened. I just wish I knew what to do to make you feel better."
"Your being here makes me feel better," he murmured. "Come, sit beside me."
He didn't have to ask her twice. She sat down beside him, and he pillowed his head in her lap and closed his eyes.
"Micah? Your blue glow is almost gone."
"Is it?" He opened his eyes and studied his arm, surprised to see that the glow was, indeed, very faint.
"What does it mean?"
"I'm not sure." He closed his eyes again and burrowed deeper into Lainey's lap. "It might be a reaction to the drug they gave me," he murmured after a while, "or maybe it's fading because I'm becoming accustomed to the earth's atmosphere."
Lainey felt a little thrill of hope. If the blue glow disappeared altogether, he'd look pretty much like any other man except for the webbing on his hands and the size of his ears. But those things could be explained away as a birth defect, she thought, or maybe surgically corrected.
Gently, she stroked his brow, his hair. How had she grown to love him so dearly in such a short time? It was almost as if they had been destined to be together, as if Fate, realizing Her mistake in having them born on separate planets, had sought to rectify that error by bringing Micah to Earth. It sounded bizarre, even to Lainey's wild imagination, and yet the pieces all fell into place so neatly - her going out to the old Grayson place, her car refusing to start, the storm that had compelled her to take shelter inside the mansion.
She gazed at Micah, studying his profile, loving the strong, masculine planes and angles of his face, the sensual shape of his lips, the line of his jaw. His brows were thick without being bushy, his nose was long and straight, his cheekbones high and well defined. He was, she thought, nothing short of perfect.
"Lainey..."
"I'm here."
"Maybe you should leave. You're in danger as long as you stay with me."
"I'm not going anywhere, mister, so just put that idea right out of your mind."
His eyelids fluttered open and he gazed up at her, his silver-blue eyes bright with amusement. "Are all Earth women as stubborn as you?"
"Not all."
Lifting one hand, Micah cupped her cheek. "Looks like I owe you my life once again," he murmured.
"You don't owe me anything."
"I don't mind." His fingertips trailed down her cheek, and then he let his hand fall, as if he didn't have the strength to hold it up any longer. "Whatever happens. Lainey, I'm glad I met you."
"Nothing's going to happen."
He smiled at her for a long moment, wishing he was as sure of that as she was, and then his eyelids fluttered down and he was asleep.
He woke to find Lainey lying beside him, her head pillowed on his shoulder. How beautiful she was, this brave Earth woman. She had put her own life at risk to save his, not once, but twice.
Lying there, careful not to move lest he awaken her, he took stock of how he was feeling. His mind was clear, and except for a slight ache in his right arm, he felt strong. Turning his head to the side, he focused his energy on a glass of water sitting on the small table beside the bed. In a matter of seconds, the water started to boil and he glanced away, satisfied that his power had returned.
He would have to leave her soon, he thought sadly. The three men who had captured him would be searching for him. Scientists, whether human or Xanthian, were all the same, eager to explore the unknown, to poke and prod and examine every new specimen they encountered, whether that specimen was humanoid, animal, or mineral. As much as he loved Lainey, he could not stay here and put her life at risk. She thought they were safe, but he didn't share her optimism. Tomorrow, or the next day for sure, he would activate the distress signal, alerting Pergith to his whereabouts. Surely another day or two with Lainey wasn't too much to ask.
Lainey stirred beside him, her head burrowing deeper into his shoulder as she snuggled up against him, driving everything else from his mind but the supple curves of the woman beside him. The scent of her hair and skin wrapped around him, evoking memories of the many nights they had made love. The first time they had been intimate had been an experience unlike anything he had ever imagined. At the time, he had been certain nothing in his life would ever be more satisfying and yet, each time he had made love to her had been better than the last.
And he wanted her now. Desperately. Needed to feel her closeness, needed her sweetness to banish the feeling that he was utterly alone in a strange land.
In his mind, he whispered her name.
"I want you, too," replied a sleepy voice.
"Lainey, I didn't mean to wake you."
She smiled up at him, her brown eyes glowing with amusement. "Didn't you?"
"Maybe I did."
She stroked his cheek with her forefinger, then drew it lightly over his lower lip.
"I don't have to ask what's on your mind," she said, grinning broadly. "Your thoughts are coming through loud and clear."
"Is it all right?"
She couldn't help laughing. They'd made love countless times in the last few weeks, and he still felt the need to ask her permission. It was sweet, somehow, that he never took her for granted.
"Of course it's all right." Turning on her side, she began to drop light kisses on his cheeks, his nose, the curve of his jaw, his eyelids.
He made a soft sound of pleasure as her mouth settled over his, her tongue lightly stroking his lower lip.
Now that he had her permission, Micah made love to her ever so sweetly, his hands light and gentle as he adored her, his voice thick with desire as he whispered that he loved her, that she was the center of his universe, the sun in his sky.
His hands were like magic, softly caressing, filling her with wonder, carrying her to the heights and depths of ecstasy, and yet it was the words of endearment he spoke to her that brought her the most pleasure. He had never been in love before, and Lainey felt truly blessed to be able to share the newness of it, the wonder of it, with him.
Later, lying in the circle of Micah's arms, she tried to remember the words of an old Michael Bolton song, something about a man who told his girl he loved her but he lied, because it was more than love he felt inside. How true that was where Micah was concerned, she thought.
She had told Drew she loved him; at the time, she would have sworn it was true, but she knew now that comparing what she had felt for Drew to what she felt for Micah was like comparing the pale silver light of the moon to the blinding brilliance of the sun.
There was no comparison at all.