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Out of the Ashes (Maji 1)

Page 21

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“Don’t ‘easy’ me,” I snapped at him. “She just called me ugly!”

He shook his head. “She said it in jest.”

“Yeah, well, she is ugly to me!” I countered. “Her and her huge pink eye, which, by the way, is a sign of an infection on Earth!”

Kol laughed, and to the alien, he said, “She said you’re very beautiful, and it angers her not to resemble a beauty such as yourself.”

The alien’s cheeks flushed a dark green colour. She then giggled as she said something to me before bowing her head to Kol and leaving the room with a spring in her step.

“You’re an asshole,” I growled to Kol. “Why did you tell her that lie?”

“Because,” he said, “she is a princess.”

I continued to glare at him, and he rolled his violet eyes.

“I mean that literally,” he continued. “In the past one hundred years, your species has vacated the title of the largest populated species. You were a ten billion strong race, and Adus’s species, Vaneer, was the second largest in the cosmos with six billion, but now they’re the largest and to insult the only heir to their throne is not a war my people are willing to fight. Besides, she is beautiful. Just because she isn’t the beauty you’re used to does not mean she is not beautiful. I told her the same thing about you, and she agreed.”

I hated that he was right. I also hated that my heart pounded at the mention of him thinking I was beautiful.

“Yeah, I guess,” I mumbled and looked down at my feet.

I practically felt Kol’s smile, and it bugged me.

“Why’re they here?” I asked. “On Earth?”

“They’re passing through on a mission of their own and want to extract some resources from the Earth before it dies. They’re leaving momentarily. Adus just wanted to meet a human in case you all die, and I figured you’d be perfect.”

Perfect to annoy.

“What’d she say?” I quizzed. “You know, before she left?”

“She said she likes humans and is going to talk to her father about keeping you even if you’re ugly.”

Horror slammed into me, and I’m sure my expression conveyed it perfectly. I felt like I would be sick until Kol suddenly burst into laughter. I forgot about my near panic attack and focused on him.

“You should have seen your face.” He laughed and slapped his knee.

I felt my eye twitch in anger.

“What the hell are you talking about?”

“Adus said thank you for your compliment, and she wished you a happy life before she left. I was playing a game. I wanted to see what your reaction would be.”

“You think that’s funny?” I asked, my voice hollow. “You think it’s funny to scare me like that when I’ve already been kidnapped?”

Kol dropped his smile, and for a moment, I thought I saw regret on his face.

“I didn’t mean to upset you,” he said.

“Well, you did.”

“I apologise.”

“I don’t accept it.”

“I don’t care.” He shrugged. “I mean my apology, and if you don’t accept it, that’s your issue. Not mine.”

Anger swirled within me.

“Why humans?” I suddenly demanded to know. “Why us? It is because we’re compatible, or was that a lie too?”

Kol’s set his square jaw, and he stared me down.

“That was the truth,” he said. “So far we have managed to rescue two thousand seven hundred and ninety-three healthy human women—”

“What?” I gasped. “You really have only chosen to save women?”

“Maji males outnumber our females ten to one. We needed more females, not males.”

My stomach churned as I digested the information.

“This displeases you,” Kol commented. “Do you think us heartless?”

I nodded before I could help myself.

“I am sorry you feel that way, but we need females to ensure Maji survival, not males.”

“What about human survival?” I demanded. “What about my people?”

Kol sighed and pinched the bridge of his nose like I was an annoyance.

“It ensures your survival, too. The offspring will be half Maji and half human.”

That’s not good enough.

“Bullshit. You said your genes would probably be more dominant so the babies would be more Maji.”

Kol shrugged, not bothering to reply.

“I can’t believe this,” I said more to myself. “I knew this would happen; I knew you Maji would be like everyone else. Just out for yourselves.”

“Stop this, Nova,” Kol angrily demanded. “Earth is going to implode. It’s not a matter of if, it’s a matter of when. We saved your human women, and—”

“You only ‘saved’ us because we serve a purpose.” I cut Kol off, my rage matching his.

“You’re impossible to converse with,” he stated as he stood and began to pace back and forth like a caged animal. “We’re bringing you to Ealra, a new healthy planet, and we chose females to ensure your species’ survival, but you’re still unhappy? This is definitely a female trait. Maji females are terribly difficult and stubborn at times and seeing it in human females proves it is a flaw possibly in every race.”

I threw my hand sup in the air. “Almighty forbid I disagree with you.”

“There is disagreeing, and then there is being difficult. You’re the latter.”

“Tough shit. I’m not going to change just because you don’t like it.”

“You will,” Kol growled. “On Ealra, your sharp tongue will not be tolerated. I’ve allowed leeway with you and your fellow females because this is a traumatic event, knowing your world will soon die, but—”

“The traumatic event is being kidnapped by aliens.”

Kol snarled at me, and it frightened me to death. I sucked in a breath and remained still.

“Change your attitude,” he warned. “I will not be dealing with you any further if this is your behaviour. You will be rationed on food and confined to the group human holding for the rest of the journey to Ealra if you continue this… defiance.”

Panic surged inside me, and so did a fresh wave of anger. He was using my fear of humans against me, and it both terrified me and pissed me off.

“You’re horrible.”

“I can be worse.” Kol devilishly grinned. “Please, make me show you just how horrible I can be.”

My pulse spiked, and my natural sassy response died on the tip of my tongue. This piece of shit knew exactly how to play me, and if I wanted the quarters he gave to me, then I had better keep my mouth shut and do what he says… at least until I figured out an escape plan.

“That won’t be necessary,” I assured him. “I’ll… behave.”

“I sincerely doubt that.” Kol smirked

“You’re infuriating! The second I give in, you throw your stupid quips back in my face. You’re driving me barking mad!”

“Me?” he spluttered. “I am infuriating? Me?”

“Yes, you!”

“Thanas!” He laughed. “You are barking mad.”

“Don’t turn my words—”

“There is no pleasing you,” Kol cut me off with an angry shake of his head. “Maji offer you a haven and a loophole to ensure your species s

urvives longer than your home world, and you’re not happy in the slightest. Humans… you’re ungrateful.”

Before I could defend myself, and my people, Kol left the room. The door shut behind him but quickly reopened and revealed Echo… who was glaring at me.

“Hi,” I said, surprised to see her so soon. “Where is your sister?”

“Envi is with the lady healer getting her leg healed. She hurt it when we tried to escape.”

“Sorry to hear that.”

“You can be a real bitch; do you know that?”

I felt my jaw drop at Echo’s declaration.

“What’d I do?” I asked, confused.

“You lumped us in the same boat as you.”

I stared at her.

“I overheard your argument with the shipmaster,” she continued, “and I’m pissed at you.”

“Why?” I asked, shocked.

“Because you’re sabotaging our women,” Echo stated. “Where do you get off fighting against a species who wants to save their people and ours? Earth has been a lost cause for years. Even if it wasn’t dying, it hasn’t been considered safe since long before the war, especially for women. We were treated like slaves by our own people. Humans have attacked me and my sister, beat us, and treated us lesser than animals our entire lives. No other species has done that but our own, and you have the nerve to argue against the Maji for saving us from a hopeless fate? What the hell is wrong with you? I’m very grateful for them. Why they want us doesn’t matter because their reasons ensure we have a future. You’re bitching about someone saving your life and your species and giving us a future. You’re fucking stupid.”

My heart thrummed inside my chest, my abdomen churned, and my palms were itchy with sweat. Echo angrily shook her head as she turned away from me. She climbed into her bed and pulled her blanket over her body.

“And if you scare my sister,” she said as she adjusted her blanket, “like you did earlier, I’m going to beat the shit out of you.”

I believed her, but I didn’t fear her.

“I’m not scared of you, Echo.”

“Upset my sister again, and you will be.”

I said nothing further, and neither did Echo, which suited me fine. I got back into my bed, and I kept my back to the wall so I would be facing Echo, and Envi, when she returned, at all times. I didn’t believe they would attack me, but I wasn’t going to take any chances. An hour or so passed by before Echo moved, showing she had awoken from her slumber. She turned in her bed to face me, and when she saw I was looking at her, she stared right back at me. For a few moments, neither of spoke until Echo broke the silence.



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