The Wild One (3 page)

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Authors: Melinda Metz

BOOK: The Wild One
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“Do you think I'm stupid?” she yelled. “Do you think I don't remember how close Valenti got to finding us? Do you think I'd risk everything to … to … Do you think I want Valenti …” Isabel pulled in a long, shaky breath. She felt tears sting her eyes, and she blinked them away. She wasn't going to do this. She wasn't. She wasn't going to let just the
thought
of Valenti turn her into a pathetic, quivering mess.

“Hey, Iz …” Michael reached for her hand and gently stroked it. “I thought I felt power being used, but maybe my foot fell asleep or something. That could have been the prickly feeling I felt. I shouldn't have just assumed it was you.”

Isabel gave a tiny nod. For Michael that was a pretty big apology.

“It's okay, Isabel,” Liz put in. “We didn't mean to get you all upset. We shouldn't have jumped to conclusions. Right, Max?”

Everybody looked at Max.

“Right, Max?” Liz repeated.

Max sighed. “I'm sorry, Izzy. I know I felt power. But it was wrong to jump all over you without even asking you what happened.”

One thing Isabel had to say for Max—when he was wrong, he admitted he was wrong. “Okay, I feel the need for a group hug,” Michael announced.

Alex pretended to wipe his eyes. “I love you guys.”

“I would love you all a lot more if you would stop assuming
I'm
always going to be the one doing something stupid,” Isabel muttered. They were supposed to be her best friends, and this is the kind of trust she got?

Didn't they have a clue how careful she had been lately? Careful could be her middle name. Careful could be her favorite perfume. Careful could be the name of her favorite song. How come they didn't know that?

Sure, she used to be pretty out of control. She used to use her power whenever she felt like it. Just because it was fun. But that was before they found out about Project Clean Slate, before they knew Valenti was an alien hunter.

She would have to be crazy to use her power now.
It would be like sending Valenti an invitation to come and get her. Isabel suddenly wished she had worn her heavier coat. Thinking about Valenti always made her feel cold all over.

“Max, can you think of any explanation for what you felt?” Liz asked. “Some kind of electrical current or, I don't know, some change in the weather?”

It would have been nice if Liz had asked those questions before everyone started accusing me, Isabel thought.

Max shook his head. “Power has a really distinct feeling. It's not something I could confuse with anything else.”

“Could there be another alien in Roswell?” Maria asked.

Isabel choked back a hysterical burst of laughter. “I wish,” she muttered. When she was a kid, she used to hope there were other aliens. Maybe a girl who would be her best friend. But she had never gotten even the tiniest hint that there was anyone else like herself.

And when they realized how they'd gotten here, when they realized that their parents' ship had crashed, they'd known the truth. She and Max and Michael were alone. They were totally on their own.

At least until Alex, Liz, and Maria found out the truth about them.

“If there were others on Earth, they would have felt our power. They would have contacted us,” Max explained.

“It's not something you can keep a secret from
another alien,” Michael agreed. “We feel each other's emotions. It just happens. It's not something we can control.”

“And we've never felt anyone but the three of us,” Isabel murmured.

“I only felt the sensation of power use for a second. I must have been wrong. I must have felt something else,” Max said.

But Isabel noticed that the little wrinkle had appeared between his eyebrows, the way it always did when he was worried.

UFO H2O. Translation: bottled water with an alien on the label. Man, tourists will buy anything, Michael thought. He used the label gun to stick prices on all the bottles. He had to hand it to his boss, Kristen Pettit. Kristen said the alienophiles would pay $6.99 for water, and she was right.

Space Supplies really raked in the bucks. At the back it was just a regular convenience store where the locals could buy milk and soda and stuff. But the front of the store was crammed with overpriced junk the touristas couldn't seem to resist—stuff like alien-head toothbrushes, glow-in-the-dark alien jewelry, boxing alien puppets, and coffee mugs that said things like, Six Ways to Tell If Your Coworker Is an Alien.

Michael figured he could be a millionaire in about a week if he told everyone the truth about himself. He could probably sell a single hair from his head for a thousand bucks. And nose hair; forget about it. He could probably even sell the lint from his belly button.

Of course there was a little problem with this getrich-instaneously scheme. If he told anyone that he was an alien, he'd probably end up dead. Or in a cage somewhere being studied by a team of scientists.
Come see the world's biggest millionaire alien lab rat.
Yeah, right.

The little alien-face wind chime on the front door jangled. Michael didn't bother turning around. He knew the customer would find him soon enough. Michael geared up to answer the four billion questions about the Roswell Incident every tourist seemed to have.

He should just record a little speech: “Welcome to Space Supplies. Let me give you a short history of the Roswell Incident. We're all right proud of it around here. See, back in the forties a spaceship crashed right outside town. Well, actually more like seventy-five miles out of town, but we don't like to tell folks that because it might limit the amount of money we could suck out of tourists' pockets. Anyhoo, there are citizens, a few still hying in town today, who claim to have seen the ship and the bodies of several alien beings. Why aren't the ship and those little alien bodies in our own UFO museum? Well, I'll tell you. The government covered the whole thing up. They told everyone all they had seen was a weather balloon. And—”

“I have a question for you,” a voice said from behind Michael.

Yeah, big surprise, Michael thought. He turned around to find Mr. Cuddihy standing behind him. Michael suppressed a groan. Why couldn't he have one of those apathetic social workers? The kind that wouldn't even notice if you missed an appointment?

“You want to know if I think that alien autopsy tape is a phony?” Michael asked.

Mr. Cuddihy shook his head. “At our appointment—you know, the one you blew off—I wanted to ask you how things were going with the Hughes family”

Michael shrugged. “Okay, I guess.” His foster father was a jerk, always playing little power games, but Michael could handle it. None of the foster parents he'd had over the years had been perfect.

“Mr. Hughes mentioned something about a truck the last time we spoke,” Mr. Cuddihy commented.

Michael didn't answer. What was he supposed to say? He knew exactly what truck Mr. Cuddihy was talking about. The old hunk of junk Mr. Hughes kept up on blocks in the backyard. At least he used to—until Michael decided to liberate it.

Michael and Max had sent the truck to the bottom of Lake Lee. Sheriff Valenti had gotten way too close to figuring out Max was an alien. So Michael had come up with a plan to make Valenti think the alien he was looking for was dead—drowned in the bottom of the lake. Unfortunately for Mr. Hughes, the plan involved his truck.

“Mr. Hughes said this truck mysteriously disappeared a few weeks ago,” Mr. Cuddihy continued.

“He should talk to Mrs. Hughes,” Michael answered. “She hates the thing. She calls it the world's ugliest lawn ornament. She keeps threatening to glue little plaster elves and stuff to it to pretty it up or something.”

It was true. Taking the truck was like doing a favor for Mrs. Hughes. And she was much cooler than her husband.

Mr. Cuddihy laughed. “So you don't know anything about the truck?”

Michael shrugged again. “I don't know how anyone managed to get the thing out of the yard. The engine won't even turn over.” Of course, if you happened to have powers like he and Max, you could easily shove the truck through space just by concentrating. But he didn't share that fact with the social worker.

“Okay, I told Mr. Hughes I'd mention it, and I did,” Mr. Cuddihy said. “But I really came by to see how things were going for you at home. I'm not sure that the Hugheses are a great match for you. I was thinking maybe I'd move you to a new spot.”

Translation: The Hughes family didn't want Michael living with them anymore.

Michael felt himself stiffen, all his muscles tightening up. What do you care? he thought. It was just a place to crash.

“So when should I be packed?” he asked.

“Hey, you're getting ahead of me,” Mr. Cuddihy protested. “If you think things are working out with the Hugheses, maybe I could set up a few group counseling sessions, and—”

“No, you're right. We aren't the best matchup or whatever.” Michael raked his black hair out of his eyes. “Is that all? Because my boss has a ton of stuff for me to do.”

“That's all,” Mr. Cuddihy answered. “I'll get back to you with details in a couple of days. We can set up another appointment then—and I expect you to show up.”

“Yeah, I will. Definitely.” Just get out of here already, Michael thought. Mr. Cuddihy was decent enough, but Michael would be very glad when he never had to see the guy again. As soon as he hit his eighteenth birthday it would be good-bye, Mr. Cuddihy And good-bye, foster families.

Not that he knew exactly when his eighteenth birthday really was. He'd broken out of his incubation pod sometime in the winter. He knew that. But he'd already looked like a human who was around seven years old. So did that mean he broke out of the pod on his seventh birthday, or on his
first
birthday, or what?

There was no use thinking about it, really. All he cared about was the date social services had assigned him for his birthday. Less than six months away That's the day he would finally get his freedom.

“I'll call you soon.” Mr. Cuddihy headed out the door.

Yeah, he'd call, and the whole foster family garbage would start again. All the little getting-to-know-you talks. All the rules-of-this-house crap. Michael sighed and started stickering the water bottles again. At least he wouldn't have to see Mr. Hughes's superior little smirk anymore. And he was finally getting near the end of the whole fake family thing. That's what he hated the most. If foster families were just like motels or something, it would be okay. But there was always this idea that you were supposed to care about them. And that they were supposed to care about you. As if that ever really happened.

Well, maybe it did happen sometimes. He'd seen a few kids down at social services who seemed close with their foster families. But they were mostly little kids. Cute little kids.

When Michael was a little kid, he wasn't cute. He was weird. He was “seven years old,” but he didn't know how to talk or use a fork or use a toilet or anything. He learned fast, but he still wasn't exactly the kind of kid that adults looked at and went “awww” over.

The alien wind chime jangled again, and Max walked in. Michael checked his watch. Quitting time.

“I'm out of here, okay?” he called.

“See you tomorrow,” Kristen called back from her office.

Michael grabbed his jacket. “Let's go.”

“Hey, I wanted to do a little shopping first,” Max protested. “Do you have any of those maps of where the aliens live?”

Michael snorted. “A lady actually asked me that once,” he said as they headed outside and over to Max'ss Jeep.

Max swung himself into the driver's seat. “Okay, where to tonight?” He pulled out of the parking lot and headed out of town.

Michael took his map out of his pocket. He studied all the little shaded sections, all the places he and Max had searched for their parents' spaceship over the years. He figured the government—or Project Clean Slate—had moved the ship to a Storage facility somewhere near the crash site. He didn't think they
would have risked transporting it too far. Michael planned to keep looking until he found it.

But what was he going to do when he'd shaded in the whole state on his map? Would he just give up the search? How could he? The ship was his only way back to his planet, his real home. No, there was no way he was giving up. If he shaded in the whole state, he'd just start over and check every inch of the desert again and again and again.

“I heard there are some caves about fifteen miles southwest of the crash site,” Michael said. “I want to see if we can find any of them. Maybe there's one big enough to hide the ship. They're supposed to be hard to see. The mouths are just cracks in the desert floor—like our cave.”

Michael, Max, and Isabel didn't know much about their past. But they had figured out that their parents were on board the ship that crashed in the desert in 1947. The markings on their incubation pods matched markings on debris found near the site. They didn't know how their pods got from the ship to the cave where they broke free. Maybe one of their parents managed to save them before they died.

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