Read Love From A Star: A BWWM Alien Romance Online

Authors: Shifter Club,R S Holloway,BWWM Club

Love From A Star: A BWWM Alien Romance (9 page)

BOOK: Love From A Star: A BWWM Alien Romance
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Then he
slowly lifted her and set her on her trembling feet as he deftly
slipped from the overalls. She watched as his member grew before her
eyes, and she fell to her knees with delight as it reached a welcomed
length. As if hypnotized she held it and began stroking, slowly at
first, and when she saw his eyes peeling back, she started going
faster and in a circular motion. It seemed to grow even further and
soon Jalicia lowered her head and ran her tongue along the length of
it. The soft scales felt like silk now that he was wet, and when she
got to his peak, she brought her mouth down over it, covering more
than half inside her. He emitted a sound unfamiliar to humans, and
she smiled inwardly as she began playing with it as she moved her
head up and down.

Suddenly
he sprang from the ground and hoisted her in the air. She locked her
arms around his neck and her legs around his waist as their lips
collided, shattering everything impossible, and they embraced each
other as both something new and something desired. Then without her
realizing it, he slipped inside her, and soon he was stroking her,
slowly and gently, half way in, until she started trembling once
more. Her walls started closing in on him and soon her slippery slope
snared him, and he grew wild with desire. He started surging forward,
harder and faster, and she could not help screaming. He was quick to
quiet her with his lips as he continued pumping into her.

Almost
like an alien humanoid might be expected to act, he flipped her again
so quickly she didn’t realize it, and this time she found
herself on her knees, on a bale of hay, and Antash gripping her from
behind as he entered her again, and again, and again. Jalicia felt
like she was about to explode as she came time after time, filling
the barn with the sweet sounds of their love making and their call to
the wild. Then she heard him grunt and felt him sinking into her
deeper and deeper. Her nails dug into the straws before her as he
drove all the way home, and this time, deposited everything inside
her. He made one final stroke and then let go of her, and led her
back to the bed of straws they were sharing before.

“I
wish you never have to go,” Jalicia mused when her heart rate
had resumed its normalcy.

“Me
neither, but I can’t stay here,” he replied as he stroked
her hair.

“What
happens next?” she was curious to know.

“Well,
I am hoping in another few hours for my people to come for me. Beyond
that, I am hoping this doesn’t have to be the first and the
last time that I see you.”

“I
hope not either. Maybe one day I might see Solaris. Now that would be
something,” she said as she smiled, though melancholy.

“What
time is it?” Antash asked. “I can’t read the stars
from this angle here on Earth.”

“Okay,
we still use clocks,” she said and laughed. “It is a
little after one in the morning.”

“Hmm,
you should get some sleep Jalicia. Tomorrow may be a long day.”

“Maybe
for you,” she told him. “Nothing ever happens here. In
probably a hundred years, your coming here must have been the only
thing of note. You are the one who needs the rest; you may have a war
to fight.”

Antash
grunted, and before she could say another word he was breathing
deeply, indicating he was already asleep, and once more she envied
him; so complex in some matters and so simple in others. She squeezed
from under him when she felt he couldn’t be awakened again and
walked to one of the wooden boards that were loose in the walls. She
looked out at the stars, and wished that something would happen that
would keep him here next to her. But even as she wished it, she knew
that would only be a dream. He had to return. She could only hope she
would see him again.

Chapter 7

“I
wonder if they got the signal,” Antash said as he walked around
with the communicator in the air. “Hello, is anyone there?”
he called.

“Maybe
it is broken again,” Jalicia said.

“I
wouldn’t say that. This thing has always had a wiring problem.
Hello!” he barked again. Still there was nothing but static.

“Just
leave it on a little while longer,” Jalicia said. “Maybe
they got the signals crossed or something.”

Antash
walked around a while longer until he threw the communicator on the
ground. “This is useless,” he said.

“Let
me see,” said Ned, who had come along this particular morning
to see the spaceship and wave Antash goodbye. “It seems fine to
me,” he said as he examined it closely. “Oh, I see the
problem,” he said as he reconnected a wire in the back that had
gotten loose. “Here, try again.”

“Hello!
Jaquar! Mekhi!” he called repeatedly, but other than the
crackling, there was nothing else.

“And
hello to you too,” they heard a voice further away say. But
there was no one there, and the sound did not originate from the
radio.

They all
looked into the nothingness until they heard a hiss, the same hissing
sound they had heard two days ago. Then two Brocoy aliens stepped
onto the grass and started walking towards them.

“Run!”
Antash told Jalicia and Ned as he sped across the clearing and
towards the barn.

In a
flash, one of them materialized before them, its ugly face contorted
into what should be conceived as a smug smile. “Not so fast
Solarian,” he said to Antash, even though he was sporting his
human appearance.

“Let
us go,” Antash demanded as he tried to push Jalicia away from
the creature.

“On
the contrary,” one of them said. “I know you,” he
said as he walked over to Antash. “You have grown up,” he
grinned, revealing slimy matter between his teeth. “Now what
are you doing here?”

“I
don’t believe that is of any concern to you,” Antash
replied.

“Oh
but it is,” he replied. “It was you who was there that
night outside of Varen. You heard us didn’t you?”

“I
heard nothing. I only saw you and ran,” Antash said.

“Oh
you only saw us and ran,” he echoed. “That easily scared
for such a great warrior?”

“I
couldn’t take you on alone. I tried to pass, but you were too
many,” Antash replied.

“And
so you ran, further into space, and then you disappeared. I told them
you must have come to Earth, but we couldn’t follow you that
night until we refueled. But you kept ditching us.”

“That
was the idea,” Antash replied boldly.

“Oh,
I see. So, tell me,” he said as he came close enough for Antash
to inhale the stench of his breath. “What have you told your
leaders?”

“Nothing,”
he was quick to say. “I’ve been stuck here for days.”

“But
I see you made some human friends. I wonder how slippery your tongue
would be if I took hers,” he said as a wicked gleam came to his
eyes and he dashed over to Jalicia.

“No,
don’t hurt her,” Antash said. “I only got the
communicator fixed yesterday. I told them what I had heard.”

“And
what did you hear?” he asked impatiently.

“Something
about taking over Solaris,” Antash said, his eyes focused on
Jalicia. “That is all I know.”

“But
that is everything. Because of you, we lost the element of surprise,”
he glared. “Now, what to do to make up for that,” his
voice boomed. “Maybe we will take the girl and force their
surrender.”

Antash
started laughing then. “Take the what? Do you really think the
Ackach would trade Solaris for one human girl? That may be a better
situation if you were holding her ransom for me, but not Solaris, and
they wouldn’t hand over Solaris for me either.”

“Well
then, I guess there is no use for you three after all,” he said
as his sword started to blink blue and a light escaped it, hitting
and burning a black hole in the ground.

Jalicia
jumped, but the thing held her tightly. It lifted its hand and
pointed the sword at Antash. “Any last words?” he asked.

Just
then there was a crackling sound from the communicator, and Mekhi’s
voice came over. “Antash, we are now entering Earth’s
atmosphere,” he said, and then there was silence. Antash looked
at the angry face of the Brocoy alien and smiled. “Company’s
coming.”

“Get
them in the vessel,” he commanded his other men. But none of
the three were willing to go without a fight, even after witnessing
the power of the weapon. Earth wasn’t that bad, and they wanted
to travel, but not to a Brocoy dungeon or prison.

Antash
acted as if he had fallen in line, behaving very docile and obedient,
until the last minute. He signaled to Jalicia with his eyes to trip,
and when she did, he was by the Brocoy alien, its wrist in his hand
and his sword easily wrestled from him. Before he got a chance to
move, Antash fired the weapon, hitting the other standing not so far
off.

“Quick,
follow me,” he told Ned and Jalicia as they made off for the
barn.

“Get
them,” they heard a voice say, and as they ran, Antash
occasionally looked back and fired shots that kept them at bay.

As soon
as they got into the yard, Samuel came running out. “What in
the name of heavens is going on here? What is that?”

“Dad,
get back inside,” Jalicia shouted as she waved and ran.

Just
then there was an explosion and Samuel flew into the air and fell
onto the ground.

“Dad,”
Jalicia screamed as she ran towards him.

Antash
was forced to go over, his weapon pointed and firing at the
relentless approach of the enemy. They seem to have multiplied, and
they now swarmed the yard, firing at will. Ned was able to run to the
back of the house, but Jalicia remained next to her father, whom she
chose to believe was only unconscious. “Hold your fire,”
Antash pleaded, but his cries only fell on deaf ears. The blue lights
danced all over the yard as the Brocoy continued their assault.

Jalicia
looked to Antash, and the tears in her eyes melted him. Then there
were other yellow lights raining down on them from the sky. Antash
quickly swept Samuel from the ground and hurried inside with Jalicia
on his heels. He placed Samuel on the sofa as they flinched every now
and again in response to the sound of the lasers hitting their marks.

“He
will be alright,” he told Jalicia. “He is still
breathing.”

She
heaved a sigh of relief that was quickly replaced by fear as she
turned her head towards the noise that continued outside. Antash
walked over to the window, pulled the curtain back, and was pleased
to see that the Brocoy were no longer attacking but were now either
dead on the ground or retreating.

“I
will soon be back. I need to go outside,” he said as he kissed
her brow and hurried away.

“Dad,”
Jalicia sobbed after he had gone through the door and she heard the
click when it shut. “Dad,” she called again.

Slowly
he opened his eyes, and then bolted upright. “Jalicia?”
he asked. “What happened?” He tried to move but she held
him there.

“No,
don’t get up yet; you may have a concussion,” she told
him.

“A
what?” he asked with a puzzled look on his face. “What is
that?” he asked as he heard the sounds of lasers.

“Dad,”
Jalicia said as she tried to get him to sit still, but he was a
stubborn man and she couldn’t keep him there.

“Unhand
me,” he huffed as he got up. He went to the window and looked
outside and almost collapsed. “What is going on?” he
asked.

“You
may not believe it if I tell you,” she said.

“Try
me, because you really think you are too smart for me Jalicia,”
he said. “I saw you so many nights slipping into the barn, but
I couldn’t figure out why and I didn’t want to go down
there and find something I didn’t like. Now, I know you are a
sensible woman and your mother and I tried to raise you right, but if
you meet someone I think the proper thing to do would be to introduce
him to me rather than sneaking him into the barn.”

“Dad,
you have no idea how complicated that was,” she told him as she
sat down. “Do you see what’s going on outside? Those are
alien ships firing alien weapons.”

“What
do you mean alien?” he asked as he moved the curtain once more
and looked harder. “Oh my...” he began as the words got
cut short. “Aliens?”

“Yes
dad, and that is what I have been hiding in the barn. He crash landed
here a little over a week ago. I saw it the same night Ned came over
for dinner. I was emptying the trash when I saw a strange light in
the field, so I went to investigate. It was then that I found him,
but he was wounded so I took him to the barn and helped him. I didn’t
want to trouble you with it.”

“I
can’t believe what you are saying,” he said as he moved
the curtain back once more for confirmation. He gasped when he saw
one of the beings alight one of the ships. “It’s coming
over here.”

“Jalicia,
is everything alright?” Ned asked as he came through the back
door.

“Yes,”
she said. “He seems to be fine,” she said as she motioned
to her father.

“So
you knew about the aliens too Ned?” Samuel asked.

“I
helped to fix their communicator,” he beamed. “I mean,
yes Sir,” he said as he corrected himself. Samuel was staring
down both of them.

“Are
you two crazy? Do you see the damage that was done because of these
aliens, and you had one locked away in my barn for days? Do you
realize how dangerous they might be? Look at my yard!”

Jalicia
jumped as he barked at them. “Dad they aren’t all
dangerous, just like humans aren’t all dangerous. He found out
some of the evil aliens were planning to attack his home planet. He
tried to get back home and was forced to crash land here instead when
he ran out of fuel. Since then, Ned has been trying to fix his
communicator so he could tell his people where to find them and to
warn them about danger. He is no different than us dad; he just comes
from a different place.” She walked to the door as Samuel stood
gaping after her.

BOOK: Love From A Star: A BWWM Alien Romance
12.98Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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