Chapter 11

Yeah, shit was real awkward the following day.

If Serena knew what went on the night before, she didn’t say anything, but the slivers of red sliding through her aura was driving me bat-shit crazy with unquenched lust. And that need fed another. It wasn’t like I could leave. So I was stuck here, and with every passing hour I was getting more and more agitated.

This wasn’t going to last long.

It was like winning the lottery when Serena dozed off on the couch in the afternoon, sleeping away several hours, providing a respite of sorts. I checked my cell a dozen times over. Nothing from the dipshit officers, and the only way I could get the officers here and Serena out of my house was to get information from her.

And I needed to get her out of the house sooner than later.

Wanting to crawl out of my human skin, I started to make dinner. Cooking… cooking was one of the few calming things in my life. My brother gave me shit about it, so did Dex. Fuck them, because I was a great cook.

What I really needed to do was take my true form for a few hours.

Serena entered the kitchen then, looking disheveled and rubbing the sleep out of her eyes. She bent over in front of the fridge and grabbed a bottle of water. The thin material of her cotton shorts strained over her ass.

Nah, what I really needed was to fuck Serena senseless and then take my true form for a few hours.

My cock was all kinds of happy about the idea, and I wanted to pick her up, strip the clothes off her, and lay her bare on the kitchen island. Discover a different kind of taste, and then sink into her repeatedly. Lose myself in her softness and warmth.

“You’re making dinner?” Serena’s voice shattered my fantasy.

I blinked and looked down. There was a knife in my hands, chicken cutlets on the cutting board, and a box of pasta ready to be boiled. Huh. I’d completely forgotten what I’d been doing.

“I guess so,” I said. “Pasta with chicken.”

“Sounds good.” She stood on the other side of the island, sliding the water bottle back and forth in her hands. “Can I help?”

My first response was to tell her no, but this could be beneficial. I’d wasted enough time fucking around, staring at sandwiches, stealing kisses and touches, and feeding from a human female. Yeah, it was time to get this show on the road. “You can grab the skillet and the olive oil.”

Serena grabbed a pan from the rack, placed it on the stove, and then started rummaging through the cabinets. When she found the bottle of oil, she regarded me cautiously. “Do you like to cook?”

“I do.”

Tossing the thick length of hair over her shoulder, she then poured the oil. I wondered how dark her hair was wet. I bet it was a light brown, matching the delicate brows arched over her eyes.

Delicate brows? What the fuck was happening to my brain? Returning my attention to the last chicken breasts, I slammed the knife through them, nearly embedding the blade into the cutting board.

“I like to cook, too,” Serena said tentatively, as if she wasn’t sure if she should continue to speak after my samurai swing. “I’m not that good, though. I tried making Rice Krispies treats once while Footloose was on the TV, and it was the big dance scene in the warehouse, so I didn’t want to miss it. I left the spatula in the pan and when I got back, half of it had melted into the mix.”

I arched a brow. “That will happen.”

“In my defense, I was fourteen and easily distracted. My mom wouldn’t let me near the stove for years after that.” She inched her way to the island and went back to messing with the water bottle. A faint blue aura shimmered around her. She was nervous. “I’m mostly a microwave and carry-out type of girl, but I always wished I could be like the cooks on TV.”

My gaze slid over her downturned face. A faint blush covered her cheeks. Thick lashes swept up and her eyes met mine for a moment, then she quickly looked away.

Tucking her hair back behind one ear, she pressed her lips together. The air around her vibrated a deeper blue.

“Here,” I said, my mouth doing the flapping thing again as I pointed the knife toward the chicken and then the two bowls. “Dip the chicken in the eggs first, then roll them in the bowl with the bread crumbs.”

Her chin jerked up, surprise flickering across her face. For a moment, she didn’t move and then she nodded. “Let me wash my hands first.”

I wasn’t worried about germs. Wasn’t like I could get sick, not like Serena could.

When she returned to the island, she squeezed in next to me as she arranged the bowls —eggs first and then the crumbs. The space was crowded and I could’ve moved over to give her more room, but I didn’t.

I liked crowding her.

“Go ahead,” I urged when her hands hovered over the chicken. “It’s not that hard and I won’t turn the TV on.”

A smile played over her lips. “I’m not that easily distracted now.”

I bent down, so that my lips were a hairbreadth from her cheek. “I bet you’re just as easily distracted as you were at fourteen.”

Serena dropped the slice of chicken in the bowl. Watery yolk splattered across the counter as her cheeks went bloodred. “You are so wrong,” she muttered.

I chuckled. “I know.”

Watching Serena dutifully dip the slices of chicken was sort of amusing in a weird way. I never cooked with anyone before. Hell, I never cooked for anyone before. Not that I was cooking for Serena in the first place. I was hungry and I ate a lot.

As I turned the stove on and watched the oil start to bubble, Serena chatted about her mom, stopping every few moments to glance at me, as if she were testing my annoyance level.

I was fine.

“So you never met your father?” I asked.

She shook her head as she carried the plate of breaded chicken to the stove. “Nope.

Absentee sperm donor. What about you? I mean, your kind has parents, right?”

“We’re not hatched from an egg, Serena. Our reproduction is much like a human’s.

As is the Luxen. But I didn’t know my parents.”

Her brows knitted as she picked up a piece of chicken. “What do you mean?”

I pulled her hand away from the skillet. “You’ll burn yourself.” I took the chicken from her and placed it into the skillet. Grease snapped and popped.

“I guess you don’t burn?”

“Not like you will.” I took another slice from the plate she held. “My parents died when I was young.”

Her soft inhale filled the silence and then, “I’m—”

“Don’t say you’re sorry, Serena. You didn’t kill my parents. You have nothing to apologize for.” I removed the last slice, plopped it into the oil, and then took the plate from her. “My parents were killed by the Luxen, like many of our kind were. And don’t say you’re sorry again.”

She snapped her mouth shut. “What is it with you and apologies?”

“I don’t like when people apologize for something they had nothing to do with.”

“I get that, but when people say they’re sorry—like for the loss of a loved one—

they are saying that they’re sorry for you having to go through that pain.”

“I’m fine,” I said, and Serena rolled her eyes. “Wash your hands. You’ll get salmonella or something.”

“Yes, Dad.” Serena spun toward the sink.

My gaze dropped to her plump ass and I fought the urge to come up behind her, grab her hips, and… Where my thoughts were going meant I’d get nothing accomplished. Maybe I just needed to fuck her out of my system.

That sounded like the best plan ever.

Serena looked over her shoulder. “Why did the Luxen kill your parents?”

And that killed my hard-on. “Like I’ve said before, the Luxen are power-hungry assholes.”

She turned around slowly, gripping the rim of the counter behind her. “That really tells me nothing.”

I took a step forward, and her lips parted. I liked that. “You really want a history lesson?”

“Yes.”

But I really wanted to touch her. I took another step, and my gaze traveled over the front of her shirt. The thin cotton and bra did nothing to hide the hardened tips of her breasts.

Aw, fuck.

Chicken needed flipping.

Spinning around, I grabbed the tongs and flipped the chicken, ignoring every instinct that demanded I claim her. The true part of me, the darkness that I was, couldn’t understand why I was fighting this. It didn’t care about repercussions or if Serena ended up in a vegetative state.

It just wanted, always wanted.

I cleared my throat. “Here’s the quick and dirty version. The Luxen have been around for thousands of years and are obviously far more advanced than the human race. They liked to travel. They also liked to subjugate any other race they came into contact with that was viewed as a threat. They ruled the universe—many galaxies you’ve never heard of. They became power hungry and destructive. You know what they say about absolute power.”

“It corrupts absolutely.”

“Exactly. And for a long time, there was nothing that could defeat them. Nothing could stand against them, until my kind came along.”

“And how did that happen?” She folded her arms.

I flipped another piece of chicken. “Evolution’s way of keeping balance. That’s one thing that is universal. The Arum were bred to be the only predator of the Luxen. That doesn’t mean we’re always more powerful than them, but we’re the only creatures that can go toe to toe with them. We absorb energy and they are bursting with it.”

“So you guys just went after them?”

I turned to her, brows raised. “Not at first. For many generations, our kind policed the Luxen, held them back from swallowing up entire planets and destroying every living creature there.”

“Kind of like NATO?”

I chuckled at that. “I guess it was like that, but it was before my time. But they invaded our planet, enslaved our kind, and killed without discretion. The attack blindsided us. It was genocide. Who knows what made them do it, but the war started long before I was even a thought, and it’s never ended.”

She tucked her hair back. “What happened to your…to your planets?”

I met her stare. “We destroyed our planets. Literally. So both of our kinds needed a new home. Earth looked mighty welcoming. We don’t need spaceships.” I laughed.

“That shit’s bunk. Luxen travel at the speed of light—faster than that. So can we, if we’re…fed.”

Her skin paled. “Like when you do the arm thing?”

“And that’s what makes us so useful to the DOD. We kill the Luxen who get out of hand. When one or more of them do something the DOD doesn’t like, we go in and take care of the situation. Most of the Arum find that it’s a great job. After all, there’s real bad blood between us. Others don’t think it’s enough. They continue to hunt the Luxen without DOD permission.”

“Wow.” She shook her head. “So you’re basically an assassin?”

There wasn’t any judgment in Serena’s tone. “You could call me that.”

She was quiet for a moment. “What are the different things that you all can do? And the Luxen?”

“We can bend space and time, which allows us to travel faster than the speed of light. The Luxen are like us in that aspect. What you said you saw the night your friend was killed? Luxen can control energy, manipulate it to move and stop objects.

They can freeze things, people included. They can also use that energy in its purest form as a weapon.”

“Holy…”

“Yep. We absorb their abilities to manipulate light and energy. They call it the Source. We have to feed a lot to travel, especially as far as it was to Earth.”

“How did you end up here?”

“Some of us scattered to other parts of the universe, some came here, because both the Luxen and my kind have been to Earth before.”

“When?”

I shrugged. “Thousands of times since the dawn of man, I am sure.”

Her nose wrinkled. “Then why didn’t they try to enslave us?”

“They never viewed humans as a threat, not until now.”

Her features pinched. “I don’t know if I should be offended by that or worried.”

“Probably a little of both.” Flipping the last chicken breast over, I placed the tongs aside and turned. “The Luxen came here first and were discovered by the government, and then we came. For the longest time, the government couldn’t tell us apart, which worked in our benefit. While they were rounding up Luxen, studying them, and then releasing them into controlled communities to assimilate, we pretty much had free rein. But soon they realized we were different species. That in a way we were more dangerous.”

“More dangerous?” When I didn’t answer, she took a deep breath. “I want to know, no matter how bad it might be.”

“There are things that we can do—things that the DOD have a use for. When they discovered we were different from the Luxen, they started searching for us. And when they find us, they give us a choice: work for them or die.”

“Geez,” she murmured. “Like the Mafia?”

“Something like that. Your government was smart. They have some of the more powerful Arum on their side. How? Who knows. I’m sure they are well provided for.

And if we don’t feed, we are weak. Many of us were pulled into the DOD that way.

Used our need against us, to control us. Not to mention they know our weakness.” I paused, watching interest flicker over her face. No way in hell I was going to tell her that the quickest way to take out an Arum was by simply picking up a piece of obsidian and cutting us with it. Bad enough you could find it anywhere and the DOD had already adapted their weapons, encasing bullets in obsidian. Killing an Arum, like a Luxen, wasn’t as hard as one thought if you knew how to take us out. “Not all of the Luxen came to Earth when our planets were destroyed. Tens of thousands are here, but there are hundreds of thousands out there. They will come eventually.”

“And?” she asked, her arms loosening and falling to her sides.

“And humans will be glad that there are Arum on this planet when that day comes.”

Her fingers tapped on her thighs in a nervous gesture. “Holy shit…”

“Exactly,” I replied. An odd emotion wiggled inside me. I felt a heaviness in my chest, like a lead ball. I felt…bad for her. This was some heavy shit. “Back to my cooking lesson?”

Several moments passed, and then Serena appeared at my side. She was still several shades paler than normal. “So what are we doing now? The chicken looks almost done.”

“It is.” I grabbed a pot. “Can you boil water?”

“Ha ha.” Serena snatched the pot and padded back to the sink in her bare feet. She was like that a lot, I realized, barefoot.

Together we broke apart the noodles and then made a salad. By the time dinner was ready, the sun was setting, casting the sky in a wash of orange and red.

Serena glanced at the table. “Can we eat outside? I mean, it’s nice and—”

“We can.” Grabbing a wine bottle and two glasses, I motioned at her. “Lead the way.”

Smiling, she picked up our plates and went out on the deck through the sunroom.

The earlier humidity was gone from the slight breeze. “I hate eating at tables,” she said, watching me put the glasses down.

I stared at her a moment. “Me, too. Too formal—”

“And stiff,” she added, handing my plate over.

We dug into the chicken and pasta in companionable silence. Then slowly Serena wiggled one answer out of me after another. It was a rather remarkable talent, I thought, bemused by it.

“What happened when you got here?” she asked, twirling the pasta around her fork.

“I hid out with others of my kind. Fought and fucked with the Luxen whenever I could. Killed them.”

Her fork stilled.

“It’s what I am, Serena. It’s all I’ve ever known.” I shrugged. “We thought we were out of the government’s scope. We knew the Luxen weren’t. I was eventually rounded up in a raid.”

She picked up her wine. “So you worked with them to police the Luxen here?”

I laughed. “Fuck no. I escaped.”

“I don’t get it. You’re here…”

Looking away, my gaze settled on the trees. “That’s not the reason why I’m here.”

Serena was quiet for so long that I knew she was thinking of a way to ask why. I glanced over at her and she held my gaze for a moment before returning to her plate.

“How long did you know your friend Mel?”

The question caught her off guard, but after a few moments, she told me their history, an unlikely friendship that had stayed strong over the years. “So she would’ve told you everything, right?”

She nodded. “Mel did.”

“And the one time on the balcony was the only time she ever saw the senator’s kid do something strange?”

Taking a small bite, she chewed slowly. “It was . I always thought he was weird.

Who knew it was because he was an alien.”

My lips tipped up at the corners. “You’re handling all of this well.”

She paused, fork halfway to her pretty mouth. “There are minutes when I think I’ve got a handle on all of this, and then minutes where I think I’m actually insane and in a padded room, so I really don’t think I’m doing that great.”

Serena was handling it better than 98% of the population would. “What did Mel say they were arguing over—the brothers?”

“Something about Project Eagle and kids.”

“What was this project?”

With a little shake of her head, she patted her fork on a piece of chicken. “She didn’t say and I didn’t ask because I thought she lost her mind and…” She took a deep a breath. “I feel terrible about that. If I believed her, maybe I would’ve done something different and Mel—”

“She wouldn’t be alive, Serena. No matter what you did. By not believing her, you probably saved your life.”

Her eyes flicked up and met mine for a second. There was an endless amount of guilt in her eyes. That and sorrow for her friend. “Things are so freaking fuzzy. I feel like I wasn’t paying attention. That I’m forgetting things.”

“You might be.” And I needed her to remember, because then I could lure the officers back here and get her on her way. That’s what I wanted.

At least that’s what I needed to do.

So I went with the one thing I knew that would make her focus. “If you can remember something, remember more, then it’s going to help your friend.”

Serena’s gaze sharpened. “How?”

I was such a bastard. “If the Luxen were up to something and she was silenced because of what she overheard, and not so much what she saw, the senator and his sons might not be held accountable for her death, but they will be dealt with. And that’s better than nothing.”

“It is,” she said quietly. Her attention turned to the woods, head shaking a little.

Time passed, and I didn’t pester her. “I know there was—Pennsylvania!”

“Pennsylvania?”

Twisting toward me, she nodded eagerly. “Yes. She mentioned something about the kids being kept in Pennsylvania.”

I frowned. “Kids being kept in Pennsylvania? Luxen kids or…?”

“She didn’t elaborate, but she said Phillip and Elijah were arguing about that.”

Interesting. Or not. There had to be more, especially if the Luxen bypassed the DOD and took out Mel. What could the galactic glowworms be up to? Were they stashing Luxen kids away from the watchful eye of the DOD? Could be possible. There were hidden Arum and Luxen communities. Few, but they existed.

Serena blew out a frustrated breath. “I’m trying. I really—”

“I know.” I felt as frustrated as she looked.

She bit down on her lip and turned her gaze to her plate. “This was nice,” she said eventually. “The dinner.”

“It was.” Surprise shuttled through me and I heard myself saying, “I don’t do this.”

“At all?” Curiosity marked her brown eyes, darkening them.

It reminded me of when she’d been aroused. Her eyes had turned the color of rich, untainted soil. Then again, for me everything pretty much circled back around to being aroused.

“No,” I said, dropping one leg off the chair. “I can’t remember the last time I ate with someone.”

“Surely it can’t be that long.”

“It has been very long ago.” I watched her set her plate aside and pick up the wineglass. “Full?”

“Stuffed,” she said, eyeing me above the rim of her glass. “Seriously, you do… socialize, right? Your kind does do that?”

I shrugged, my gaze settling on the darkening sky. Within moments, the sun set and twilight vanished into night. “We really don’t have a need to socialize.”

She lowered her glass. “But everyone—”

“Everyone who is human, Serena. I am not.”

A heartbeat passed. “What about the other Arum? The ones I ran into at the gazebo?

They were together.”

“When we are together, we are not socializing. We are mostly aligning ourselves with who we think is more powerful. It’s about survival. Not friendship.”

“Wow. That sounds really lonely.”

“We don’t get lonely.” My gaze followed Serena’s slender finger along the rim of her glass.

She glanced over at me. “Why…why do you keep staring at me?”

I barked out a short laugh. “Am I not allowed to?”

“I guess you are, but you’re always watching me.”

“I like watching you. It’s your hair.” Did I just say that?

“My hair?”

I had. “It’s the color. Whatever.”

A small smile appeared on her lips. “So, what do you do when you’re not working?”

I thought about that before answering, actually considered it. “I like to work with my hands.”

Serena’s gaze slid to mine. “Why do I have a feeling there’s an innuendo behind that?”

Thinking of where my hands hand been last night, I cracked a grin. Her cheeks heated and the red shaded the aura around her. I bet if I slipped my hand between her thighs right now she’d be wet and ready.

It took a lot to not find out. “I like to build things.”

Her mouth opened, and then her eyes widened. “Wait. Do you like to carve?”

My brow arched.

“Did you make the gazebo by the main part of the lodge?”

When I didn’t say anything, a wide smile broke out across her face.

“You did! Oh my God, Hunter, that is amazing.”

I shifted in the seat. “Not really.”

“It is! I wish I could do something like that. The design is so amazingly intricate. Do you do that a lot?”

Serena continued to pepper me with questions about the woodwork I did, and while I wished I hadn’t said a damn thing, I answered the questions without thinking, like she had my balls in a pair of vise grips. Yes, I had built the gazebo from scratch. It had taken an entire summer. No, I didn’t find it hard. Yes, I built other things. That had made me think of the horses with Serena’s breasts and I’d laughed, which had brought another smile to Serena’s face.

Damn, Serena was a really, really good-looking woman, but when she smiled? Hell, she was hands down beautiful.

In the lull of conversation, Serena sat up and pointed at the sky. “Oh look! Is that a falling star? Jesus. I’ve never seen one that close.”

My eyes searched out the trailing flash of white light zooming down to Earth at an ungodly speed. Instinct fired, causing my skin to tingle.

I shot to my feet. “That is not a falling star.”

“What is it?” Fear lanced her voice. “Is it one of them?”

“Serena?”

“Yes?” She was on her feet now, coming to my side. “It’s one of them, isn’t it?”

I turned to her. “Go inside.” When she hesitated, I leaned down, my lips close to hers as I spoke. “Go inside, Serena.”

When I pulled away, Serena didn’t move. Shit. I had a feeling she was going to stand right out here and argue with me until she got herself killed.

Keeping my voice low, I ushered her back toward the door. “It is one of them and you need to be inside.”

“But—”

“No buts.” I shoved her inside. “Keep the doors locked and the lights off. Don’t answer the door for anyone.”

With that I closed the door, shutting her inside. Separated by glass, I met Serena’s stare, willing her to listen to me. Then finally she reached out and the click of the lock being turned broke the silence.

I turned and smiled.

It was time to hunt.

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