Read Aedian: Alien Warrior: A Sci-Fi Alien Invasion Paranormal Romance Online

Authors: Ashley West

Tags: #Alien Paranormal Invasion Romance

Aedian: Alien Warrior: A Sci-Fi Alien Invasion Paranormal Romance (12 page)

BOOK: Aedian: Alien Warrior: A Sci-Fi Alien Invasion Paranormal Romance
6.14Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

He paused just before he entered her, though, looking at her with eyes that were clearly waiting for her to stop him if she wanted. He learned quickly, and Roxy just smiled and rolled over onto her front so she could push herself up onto her hands and knees, offering herself like a present for his eyes.

Strong hands gripped her butt and pulled her closer and then he was pressing into her, filling her up with all that cock and making her drop her head and
moan
.

No matter how many times they did this, it was never any less good. The feeling of all that length pressing into her always felt amazing, and she shuddered as the slow drag in and out set off little fires under her skin.

She was soaking wet by the time he was fully seated inside of her, feeling small and practically impaled on him, and she knew that she wasn't even going to have to touch herself before she was coming once he got started. It was just that good.

And since they didn't have anywhere to be just yet, and there was no real need to rush, Aedian took his time, giving it to her in long, slow strokes that made her toes curl and her fingers clench into fists.

He dragged those claws down her back, not hard enough to draw blood, but hard enough that she felt it, hard enough that her pleasure/pain response was triggered and she arched, going tight around him.

She didn't know how well sound carried in this compound, but she wasn't making any effort to keep herself quiet, crying out and moaning his name over and over again as she got closer and closer to coming.

With the white hot pleasure that was nearly molten at the core building up, she knew her orgasm was going to be strong and intense, and when it hit her, she nearly came undone, muffling her scream of pleasure in the mattress and going tight around him.

Roxy nearly collapsed as her arms started to shake, but Aedian kept stroking into her, his thrusts more erratic now that he was close, too. He muttered under his breath in his language, words that Roxy couldn't understand but that sounded fond and just a bit desperate to her ears.

And then he was hitting that peak with a snarl, pushing himself deep into her and losing himself, shaking and then taking care not to collapse on top of her.

 

In the aftermath, they laid there together, breathing hard and staring at the ceiling.

"We could do that every morning," Roxanne suggested with a wry smirk.

"I don't think your frail human body could handle it," Aedian replied, but there was a smile on his face.

She punched him in the arm and laughed.

 

It was a very good start to the day, all things considered. She left their rooms with a smile on her face later that morning, walking along the corridors with the vague intention of ending up at her car, but not really in any hurry to get there. If she was going to be living in this compound for, presumably, the rest of her life, then it made sense for her to know where things were, right? To know what there was to see.

Aside from the arena and the room she'd been bathed and dressed in, she hadn't seen much of it outside of the rooms she now shared with Aedian.

It was still relatively quiet, with not many of the Calphesians being out in the corridors. Those she did see looked tense and drawn, eying her before they quickly hurried away. That wasn't so strange, Roxanne supposed, after all, they didn't really know her, did they? And they didn't have any reason to, considering she was Aedian's prize and all that, but if she was going to live here, then it would probably be nice to actually know people.

But every time she made eye contact with one of them with the intent to smile and maybe introduce herself, they turned from her and rushed off. Maybe there was some kind of meeting or something, she didn't know.

What was truly worrying was the amount of them that she saw carrying weapons. Guns and axes and swords, just like when they'd arrived on Earth ten years before. And while Roxanne had never deluded herself that these beings were
tame
just because they lived on Earth now, she'd figured that there wasn't a need for them to be armed to the teeth anymore. But they were carrying the weapons to the same central location it seemed like, and the more of it she saw, the less she wanted to be there.

Her heart was racing in her chest, suspicions flying through her head, and all at once she turned back and walked quickly to her car.

Roxy sat there for a while, letting herself calm down. Just because she'd seen them with weapons didn't mean anything. It didn't mean that she couldn't trust them or that they were planning something. It didn't mean that she was in danger. They could just keep their weapons in a central location or be taking them to get cleaned or whatever. It could be weapon maintenance day in the Calphesian compound for all she knew.

But she couldn't shake the feeling that something was wrong, so she texted Samantha and then went to meet her for lunch at her apartment.

When her friend let her in, she took one look at Roxanne's face and steered her to the couch, making her sit down. In a matter of moments, a cup of tea was being pressed into her hands and Sam was sitting in the chair across from her. "Alright, spill."

"What makes you think there's anything to spill?" Roxy asked, trying to get a grip before she blurted the whole thing out.

"I've known you for five years, Roxy," Sam said. "I know when something's wrong. You look like you've seen a ghost or something. Is everything okay?"

"I don't...I don't know."

Sam scowled. "Did he do something to you?"

Roxanne frowned, glancing up. "Who?"

"Aedian! Did he try something again?"

She remembered that she had told Sam about what'd happened with Aedian when she'd stormed out on him, but she'd also told her about them making up. "No," she assured her. "No, he didn't. Things are fine with Aedian, actually. Better than I expected them to be, which is...weird."

"Weird how?"

"He's being...almost nice to me? He's..." Roxanne didn't know how to explain it. "We haven't really fought in days."

"That's a good thing, isn't it?" Samantha asked. "Why do you look like you just found out he's plotting to kill you?"

Her flippant words were a bit too close to home for Roxy's liking and she drank her tea, mind racing. They wouldn't, would they? It'd been ten years of peace, and she knew that Calphesians weren't used to it, but they wouldn't...

"They wouldn't break the treaty, would they?" she asked out loud.

Samantha looked taken aback, eyes wide and mouth open. "What?"

"I just. Aedian's being really nice to me. Well, I mean, not
really
nice, but nice for him, you know. And it was such an abrupt change. One minute he was practically trying to force himself on me and the next he was coming to my parents' house to apologize. I didn't even think they knew how to apologize, and then today when I was wandering around, I saw them gathering weapons. They all had them, Sam. Massive axes and guns just like they had when they came here. I don't know if there were any regulations placed on them about their weapons, but it looked like they were trying to be secretive about it. None of them would look me in the eye when I was there, and they all practically ran away when they saw me."

"You think they're planning to break the treaty?" Samantha asked. "Why would they do that? There's no benefit for them. They need us, don't they?" But she didn't sound so sure, and the idea was already running away with Roxanne.

"What if that's why he's being so nice to me? Because he's trying to lull me into a false sense of security. What if that's what they've been doing this whole time?"

The room was silent for a moment and then Sam shook her head. "I don't know, Roxy. I mean, I know you tend to think the worst about them, but that's bad even for them. And I'm not sure
planning
is really their thing, anyway. Maybe you should just ask Aedian about the weapons before you get all worked up about it?"

It was a fair point. After all, she didn't know enough about them to say for sure what they were doing. She just had the sinking feeling that something
wasn't right.

"Yeah," she said. "Yeah, I guess that's a good idea."

Unless he lied to her, of course. She'd never had any reason to trust them before, after all, and Roxy was a bit surprised that she'd forgotten that so easily. Apparently the sex had gone to her head.

They changed the topic of conversation, but Roxanne knew that Sam knew that she hadn't forgotten about it. When she took her leave, she promised that she'd talk to Aedian before doing anything rash, and she meant that.

Well, she meant that she wasn't going to do anything rash. Wandering into a situation she couldn't get out of was a terrible idea, and she didn't plan on doing it. But she needed more information either way.

So she took to watching them, claiming that she wanted to learn more about them and the way they did things, she made a point to be out in the corridors more. She talked to the other human women she met along the way, asking them about their dealings with the Calphesians. The three women who had been chosen five years before had their children already and didn't seem to think that the Calphesians were a real threat. The two who had been chosen with her were less sure, but also seemed to think that they were safe.

It should have been enough to assuage her, but it wasn't.

She knew what she'd seen, and as the days passed, she saw more and more of it. Hilts on their waists, axes strapped to their backs, guns being charged and loaded and gathered. It was all so blatant, and she knew that they didn't excel at subtlety, but she didn't understand.

There was something going on, and she was going to get to the bottom of it, one way or another.

 

 

Chapter 10: A Matter of Transparency

If Aedian thought they had been making progress before, it was like they had gone back to square one over the next several days. He was on edge because of what he knew and couldn't tell Roxanne, and there was obviously something bothering her. She was snippy and rude to him when he spoke to her, and he found that she would watch him when she didn't think he was paying attention, but he couldn't figure out what she was looking for.

It was almost like she thought he was hiding something from her, which he was, he supposed, and he didn't really know what to do about that. The head had decreed that the humans weren't to be told, and going against the word of the head wasn't something someone did.

But he found that he was more bothered than he'd been expecting to be by the way she seemed not to trust him. If there was one thing a Calphesian had, it was honor, and perhaps hiding things from his soon to be life mate wasn't the way to behave honorably.

Maybe she was hiding something, too, though.

Roxanne would leave for longer than she used to, seeming to sneak around the compound like
she
had a secret. When he asked where she was going, she would snap at him that she wasn't a prisoner and she could go wherever she wanted and there wasn't anything he could do to keep her there, unless he had some reason to want to have her caged.

And then she would wait to see if he had a rebuttal, which he never did, and she'd leave, returning some hours later, looking wary and convinced of something.

He didn't understand her or humans at all, for that matter, but he didn't think that this was normal behavior, and he didn't think that it was a coincidence that it'd happened right when he found out about the Platoks.

But there was no way she could know that, was there? She hadn't been at the meeting, and unless she'd heard it from someone else, there was no way for her to have found out.

It wasn't beyond the realm of possibility that one of the other champions had told their women and they had in turn told Roxy, but when Aedian saw them, they didn't look like they were worried about anything. They certainly didn't seem like they knew that their planet might soon be invaded, at the very least.

So it was baffling and annoying to feel like he didn't know what was going on, and it made him snappish and rude right back.

When he came back from sparring one day to find Roxy talking to one of the other human women, he marched right up to them, looming over them with narrowed eyes and folded arms.

"Oh!" said the woman, whose name Aedian didn't know and was sure he'd never been told (not that he would have remembered it anyway). "Hello."

Roxanne whirled to see who she was talking to, and her face when she saw that it was Aedian made him sure that there was something going on. She hadn't even looked that unhappy to see him when she'd been presented to him all those weeks ago.

"What do you want?" she asked, folding her arms in return.

Aedian felt irritation flare hot in him, but he kept his composure, not wanting to lash out right there in the corridor with another human watching. "I was going back to our rooms and wondered if you would accompany me."

That wasn't an unusual request. Sometimes before when she'd see him sweaty and fresh from sparring, she'd decide that she wanted him, and that was just fine with him. But it had been a while since they'd done anything, really, which convinced him that there was definitely something wrong.

BOOK: Aedian: Alien Warrior: A Sci-Fi Alien Invasion Paranormal Romance
6.14Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

La conquista de un imperio by George H. White
Harbor Nocturne by Wambaugh, Joseph
Rabid by T K Kenyon
HandsOn by Jaci Burton
Insatiable by Allison Hobbs
Ink by Amanda Sun
The Beauty and the Spy by Gayle Callen