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Aeon War: Alien Menage Romance (Sensual Abduction Series Book 3) by Amelia Wilson (18)

 

Trucks from Mexico City filled with soldiers and Mexican special forces came to the site, and a group of heavily-armed men in black tactical jumpsuits kept the archaeological team back while they blasted through one of the uncleared sides of the pyramid and carried the sarcophagus away. Sera watched in disbelief as the army truck rumbled away, packed with everything from inside the pyramid, including large sections of the burial chamber wall. She wiped tears of anger away and swore under her breath in fury, her cell phone pressed to her ear.

She called everyone she could think of. She called the university, the American consulate, Rodriguez’s superiors at the National Autonomous University of Mexico, the United Nations, National Geographic, the Smithsonian, the BBC, and even the White House. Nobody took her calls. The closest she got was her boss’s bored secretary, who took a message to call her back. She nearly threw her cell across the courtyard in disgust.

“Dr. Cooper,” a voice called.

She turned, surprised to see Rodriguez standing there. “Come with me. I can’t keep this find a secret, and I can’t turn it over to you, but I can get you accepted as a subject matter expert consultant.”

It was better than nothing. Joely nodded to her. “Asa and I will check out the damage to the site. You go with them.”

She nodded to Rodriguez. “Okay. I’m coming.”

The Mexican official led her to his car, which was already pumping A/C. She sat in the front passenger seat, wringing her baseball cap in her hands. He climbed in behind the wheel and started to drive.

“What the fuck is going on, Rodriguez?” she demanded. “Nobody will tell me anything.”

“The Government of Mexico has appropriated this very valuable artifact,” he said. “It and its contents are being taken to the Hospital México Americano. He’ll get a full physical exam and our doctors will determine next steps.”

She slapped her thigh with her cap. “Your people blasted a hole in my pyramid.”

“I’m sorry. The military considered this a matter of national security.”

“He’s been buried there since the end of the Classic Period,” she snapped. “I think if he was planning on attacking your government, he would have done it by now.”

“We don’t know if that’s true. For all we know, he is a plant by some foreign entity. Nobody could survive for seventeen hundred years out here with no electricity and no food. It’s impossible.”

Her own rational mind was telling her the same thing, but she had seen him. He was alive. He had obviously survived long enough, floating in a metal tube encased in a Mayan sarcophagus. “Do you have any idea what we’ve really found here?” she asked.

“I have no idea at all.” He wrestled the car as it bumped and swerved around potholes and topes in the road. He was going fast, trying to catch up with the military convoy.

“He was in suspended animation,” she said. “That sarcophagus was sealed when it was buried. There was no indication of anyone else digging into that pyramid. It’s been untouched since it was abandoned by the Maya in the 900s.”

“That’s impossible.”

“Did you see the tech in that burial chamber? Did you? We were joking about ancient aliens, but Rodriguez, that’s got to be the only answer. Nothing else makes sense on the basis of the evidence.”

He looked at her in astonishment, and he almost lost control of the car. His sunglasses bounced off of his face as he grappled with the wheel. “That’s preposterous!”

“Nothing else even begins to explain it. The simplest answer is the right answer, and the simple truth is that he was buried in that pyramid before 900 CE.”

“But…”

“The tech,” she reiterated. “We don’t have anything like it. It’s too advanced.”

“Maybe. Maybe that’s what the government wants to find out.”

She looked out the window, fuming. She was furious about the destruction of her site, the demolition of her work, and the absolute torpedoing of her entire career. She was also worried about the man in the coffin. She had been the one to disturb his resting place, and that made her responsible for what happened to him. Now he was in the clutches of shadowy government operatives, headed for who knew what fate. If they turned him into some sort of lab animal, she would scream. The injustice would be just too much to bear.

***

They reached the hospital fifteen minutes after the convoy. The man had been trundled immediately into the depths of the hospital, and Sera and Rodriguez were stopped at the front desk, prevented from following any further.

Rodriguez presented all of his credentials and pulled every string at his disposal, even making a private call to the Mexican president’s cell phone. Sera wondered how someone like Rodriguez had that kind of access, but she let it go.

No matter what he said, and no matter whom he called, Rodriguez was unable to get them access to the man. They admitted defeat after five fruitless hours, retiring to the hospital cafeteria for some much-needed food and coffee.

Rodriguez sighed. “I’m sorry,” he said. “I didn’t expect this to happen.”

She sipped her coffee and leaned forward. “What do you think they’re doing to him?”

“I wish I knew.”

His cell phone rang, and he grabbed it immediately. She tried to eavesdrop without looking too interested, but he was speaking too quietly for her to hear what he was saying. Finally, he nodded and ended the call.

“We are forbidden from accessing our ancient friend,” he said grimly. “He is now the property of the Mexican government.”

She fumed. “Property? He’s a human being… or some kind of person, anyway.”

“There’s nothing I can do.”

Sera drummed her fingers on the table. “Not officially, anyway.”

“What do you mean?”

She smiled wickedly. “Can you get me an army uniform?”

***

Rodriguez provided the uniform and forged military ID cards two days later, although he pointedly avoiding saying how he obtained them. She suited up and Sera did her best to hide her blonde curls under the army cap. Rodriguez shook his head.

“I don’t think anyone will buy this,” he said anxiously.

“It’s not in how it looks, it’s how it’s sold,” she reassured him. “If we walk in like we own the place, then we’ll be fine. I just need you to distract the guards while I walk past.”

He chewed on his bottom lip, then said, “All right, but if you get caught, I’m going to deny any knowledge of this foolishness.”

She laughed. “My hero.”

Rodriguez scowled, but he had no riposte. Instead, he led the way through the hospital to the ward where they were holding their guest.

The entire ward had been transformed into a secure area, with armed guards on both sides of the hallway. Rodriguez approached first, flashing his credentials and demanding to be allowed to see the subject, as they were calling him. Sera gave him a minute to completely antagonize the guards, then walked up at a clip, her jaw set in an all-business attitude. The two guards at the checkpoint had their hands full with Rodriguez, who was being particularly dramatic and loud, and when she flashed her forged ID, they barely spared it a look before nodding her through.

The ward they had taken over had been an isolation unit, and the airlock style doors were all closed. There were more guards, but they were distracted by the fuss at the entryway that Rodriguez was causing. They, too, let her pass, although one of them took a moment to rake her body with his gaze as she walked by.

She went further into the ward and finally made it to the room in the back where they were holding the man from the tomb. He was still unconscious, but she couldn’t tell if that was because they were drugging him or if he was ill. A nurse was typing notes into a laptop when she came in, and she barely acknowledged Sera at all.

The room was quiet and dim, the lights down low as if they were encouraging the man to stay asleep. She went to the foot of his bed and really looked at him for the first time. He looked remarkably human. From where she stood, there was nothing about him that would indicate either his antiquity or his possible extraterrestrial origin.

He was blond, with thick wavy hair that flopped over his forehead and brushed his shoulders. His nose was straight and his jaw was strong, but his lips were soft and gave an impression of gentleness. His left ear was pierced, and if he had been wearing any jewelry, it had been taken from him. His golden eyelashes fanned out over his high cheekbones, and he breathed slowly. His shoulders were broad, and the arms that were resting at his sides on top of the sheet were muscular and strong. He was studded with IV tubes and wires, every possible piece of his anatomy being listened to by the horde of machines that surrounded his bed.

As he breathed, she saw the skin over his chest shimmer as if it were studded with diamonds. She moved around the bed and looked closer, and she saw that he was covered in a thin layer of iridescence that looked almost like translucent scales. Every inch of his body was sheathed in these strange objects, but the scales over his chest were larger and…glowing.

“Get away from him.”

The voice was low and gravelly, and the accent was strange.

She straightened. “I wasn’t going to – ”

“Get. Away. From. Him.”

She backed up and turned to face the speaker. She expected a Mexican soldier or maybe a doctor. To her surprise, a man in a black running suit and dark glasses stood there, his face hidden in the shadows cast by the hood of his jacket. He had a square silver object in his hand, and he was pointing it at her. It looked almost like a cell phone, but something told her that it was something entirely different.

“Step away from the bed,” he ordered again.

She obeyed. “I wasn’t going to hurt him,” she tried again. “I was just…”

“Experimenting on him?” he accused. “Running tests?”

“No.” She took a deep breath. “I know this looks really bad, but I swear to you, I’m on his side.”

The man stepped forward, still pointing the silver object at her. He placed one hand, clad in a strange gray glove, onto the instrument nearest him. It stopped functioning with a ‘pop’, but no alarms sounded. He did the same to the other instruments, one by one.

“What are you doing?” she asked, alarmed. “He might be sick.”

He ignored her and finished killing the equipment. He gestured to her with the thing in his hand. “Unhook him.”

“I’m not a nurse.”

“Do it anyway.”

She licked her lips nervously, then disconnected the IVs to the best of her ability. She had been in the hospital herself a time or two, thanks to a chronic illness she’d been battling since childhood, and she’d watched some episodes of ER.  That was extent of her medical experience. She hoped she wasn’t hurting him.

The man gestured with whatever he was holding. “Now get away from him.”

She obeyed, more curious than anything. She watched as the man put his gloved hand onto the other man’s sleeping chest, and a flash of light burst out where they touched. The man in the bed jerked, and the glow in his chest intensified. The man with the glove growled something that must have been a curse, but was in no language she had ever heard. He pressed again, and this time, the man in the bed took a sharp breath and winced. His eyes fluttered open, and Sera gasped.

He had no pupil and no iris. His eyes were solid, luminescent blue, shining brightly in the dimness of the room. He opened his mouth to speak, but his throat was dry, and he could barely make a sound. The gloved man helped him to sit up, speaking rapidly in that unfamiliar tongue. The man in the bed embraced him briefly, then noticed her.

He spoke to his companion, and the gloved man responded, his gaze toward Sera suspicious. They conferred briefly, and then the man raised his silver square and pressed a button.

A wave of energy arced out of the thing and struck Sera in the chest. She barely had time to be surprised before she was unconscious.

 

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