Read Your Planet or Mine? Online

Authors: Susan Grant

Tags: #Women Politicians, #Fantasy, #Humorous, #Extraterrestrial Beings, #Space Opera, #Contemporary, #General, #Romance, #Science Fiction, #Human-Alien Encounters, #Suspense, #Space Travelers, #California, #Fiction, #Love Stories

Your Planet or Mine? (27 page)

“He poisoned your friends, the ones he could influence, like Brace, who was actually a legitimate businessman, not a Mafioso, and good cover for Alex. And he broke into your apartment looking for dirt. Except there wasn’t any dirt, Girl Scout that you are, so he had to make some.”

“What about Viktor?”

“Viktor is an idiot.”

“Tell me something I don’t know,” she muttered.

“He had no idea Alex was using the restaurant for money laundering. The profits from the Russian smuggling had to go somewhere.”

“I don’t understand why Alex confessed to all this, though. And so fast. Okay, so there was the cell phone, but why not have his day in court?”

“He made some sort of plea deal.”

“How come I don’t get to deal with him?” Alex would be singing soprano by the time she was done with him. Where was a plasma sword when you needed one?

“Apparently he pointed fingers at all his Mafia buddies. Dumb, huh? I wouldn’t feel too sorry for the guy. With the Russian Mafia after him, he’s going to be a lot safer in jail than he’ll be out of it.”

Something dragged Jana’s attention to the rearview mirror. A black sedan with tinted windows followed them on the deserted highway. “Jared…I gotta go. Talk later.” She hung up and focused on the car. If she sped up, it did, too. She slowed, and so did the sedan. Her first thought was the Russian Mafia. Her second was the men in black. “Cavin,” she said with dread. “We have company.”

CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE

“S
TOP THE CAR
, J
ANA
. This is our chance to talk to them.”

“What if they want to hurt you?”

“Continuing to drive won’t change that. This is our chance, our chance to convince them to give us access to the ship through legal means, so we don’t have to go to Plan C.”

“No. No Plan C.” She pulled over to the shoulder. The sedan drove up behind them with an ominous popping of gravel under its tires. And then it was quiet, very quiet. For miles around them stretched empty desert. In the distance were the snowy peaks of the White Mountains. The area was riddled with tiny towns and mines. Somewhere to the east was Nellis Air Force Base.

They weren’t far from Area 51. These men might be their ticket onto that base—if she could convince them to take them there. But what would she say to them?

Feeling helpless, she scraped a hand over her face. Up until now, she’d let her family do the talking for her: the initial contact with Mahoney and President Ramos. It was as if she were once again the mute little girl who let everyone speak for her. What kind of politician, what kind of
leader
was she if she couldn’t speak for herself?

You feel this way because you were never supposed to talk. The gift of gab was something you wished for, but you weren’t born with it. You’re a phony. Did you really think you could keep fooling everyone forever?

She dropped her hand. “I can’t do this. I’m not qualified to do this—to talk, to convince the world to get behind us. To keep these men from killing you.”

Cavin pressed his thumb to her chin and turned her to face him. “You have the only qualifications needed—heart and your ability for public speaking.”

“Only because you gave it to me, Cavin—the gift of gab. I wouldn’t have had it otherwise.”

He shook his head, confused. Didn’t he remember?

“I grew up not being able to talk. I was mute. I had to leave school to be educated at home. I had no friends except for my family. I was a freak. You—” her voice caught “—you were the first friend I had who didn’t care that I couldn’t speak. I didn’t have to with you. We didn’t need to talk. You liked me the way I was. And then, the night you left, you gave me the most wonderful gift of all. You healed me. That homeless vet might call what you do a miracle, but to me it was magic. Magic, Cavin.”

Cavin concentrated, clearly thinking back to that starry summer night. “I healed your knee. Is that what you mean?”

“No. I thought you were like a genie, and that when I freed you, you’d grant me three wishes. I wished for a first kiss, which you gave me. I wished that I’d see you again,” she blushed, “well, that I’d marry you, actually. And I wished that I could talk. You touched my knee and healed it. Then you kissed me, and from then on, I was able to talk. You changed my life forever, Cavin. I went on to do everything I’d dreamed of doing.” She glanced at the black sedan. “One problem. I’m a fake. I’ve achieved a lot, but it wasn’t because of me. It was because of you.”

“All these years, you believed this?” he asked, incredulous.

“Well, yeah. Why wouldn’t I?”

“Ah, Squee…” He heaved a sigh and moved her hair back from where it had fallen over her cheek, gazing at her with deep green eyes so full of love it made her throat ache. “I didn’t give you your gift of gab. You were born with it. I healed your knee using simple bioregeneration. I never did anything to your voice.”

“But you—”

“I kissed you. That’s all.’

“But, Cavin, I—”

“Jana, I didn’t know you couldn’t speak! You were silent, yes, but so was I. I thought it was because we didn’t know each other’s languages. I healed your knee, but I didn’t give you the ability to speak. That gift is yours, and yours alone.”

She sat still, frozen in shock. Everything she’d ever assumed about herself had been knocked on its head. Then she gave Cavin a hard stare. “You’re not kidding, right? You’re telling the truth.”

“I swear to you. Your beginning to speak at that time was coincidence. From the sheer novelty of our meeting, perhaps, or new confidence.”

Doctors would agree with Cavin. They’d say she was a delayed speaker because something hadn’t been working quite right in her brain. They’d explain away her sudden chattiness as a result of the excitement from meeting Cavin and her desire to tell Evie about the experience. But Jana shook her head. “No, Cavin. It was magic.” She touched his incredible mouth with shaking fingers and whispered, “Magic may be how we explain what we don’t understand, but it’s magic all the same.”

His good hand curved behind her head to pull her close for a kiss. A poignantly tender kiss.

The cell phone rang. Her eyes tracked to the phone number. “It’s the general!” She made sure the headset was fitted firmly in her ear and said, “Jana Jasper here.”

“Hold on, Jana. I have Colonel Connick on the line…”

“Senator, this is Tom Connick. I’m the commander of the base that contains the hangar known as Area 51. I wanted you to hear it from me. There’s no ship hidden there.”

“Yes, there is. I know there is.”

“No, there’s not.”

They sounded like petulant four-year-olds fighting over a teddy bear rather than adults debating the fate of the world.

She steadied herself.
The gift of gab is yours. Yours!
“We’re about to be invaded by an army intent on evicting all six-plus billion of us from this planet, and you can’t cough up the truth? No ship at Area 51? Bullshit. Even in our darkest hour, you and your associates insist on perpetuating the lie, Colonel. How shameful is that? We’re going to be invaded. If this isn’t an example of a threat to national security, I don’t know what is. Maybe we Earthlings deserve to lose our home. We certainly aren’t fighting very hard to keep it!” Shaking, she hung up.

Cavin gaped at her. “What did you just do, Jana?”

“I used Grandpa’s brand of diplomacy.” She frowned at the sedan in the mirror. It just sat there, doors closed. What were the goons doing—waiting for Connick’s kill order? “Men like Connick, the ones who won’t bend the rules, they’re going to allow the invasion. I can’t wrap my mind around the unimaginable horror of that. I know you told me that Coalition policy discourages civilian casualties when acquiring populated worlds, but death and destruction are inevitable. Inevitable when it doesn’t have to be. Inevitable because no one has the backbone to make a fucking decision!”

The phone rang again. Jana’s mouth curved into a smile. Oh, yeah. The boys are eating out of my hand.

Astonishment and respect lit up Cavin’s eyes. “You sure you never served in the Coalition Army?”

Jana snorted and took the call. Connick said, “Perhaps we can talk about this.”

“Where? We don’t have a lot of time, Colonel.”

“We’re, uh, closer than you think.”

The sedan honked. Jana jumped and glanced in the rearview mirror. “Omigod. It’s them, Cavin. They’re in the car, the general and the colonel.”

The sedan pulled up beside them. The window slid down. Behind the wheel was a handsome, silver-haired air force officer sporting a pair of Oakley sunglasses. In the passenger seat was an elderly man dressed in a pale denim shirt and crisp Dockers. His smile revealed perfect teeth. She remembered that Hollywood smile. “General Mahoney,” she said. “Or should I call you Baloney?”

The old man ignored her sarcasm. “Let me introduce you to Colonel Tom Connick.”

She shook both men’s hands. But it was Cavin they seemed eager to see, staring across the seat at him. “I’ll go meet them,” he said, taking off his seat belt and opening the door.

“Don’t be too trusting,” she warned him under her breath. “If they ask if you want to see their puppy, run.”

Cavin gave her a funny look.

“Just be careful.”

He nodded. The men got out of the car to shake his hand. Despite how ill he was, Cavin greeted them with a proud, military stance. The colonel opened a folder of photos to show him. Cavin beckoned to her. “Jana, you may want to see this.”

She climbed down from the Jeep. It was silent outside, no traffic noise. A dry wind stirred what little brush there was eking an existence from the hard-packed dirt. Three military men, one active, two former, and one politician huddled around classified photographs on an isolated stretch of highway. It could be a scene out of a Tom Clancy novel, or a 007 movie, but definitely nothing resembling her former life.

The colonel’s folder contained four black-and-white photos: close-ups of machinery, or aircraft parts. “If one of these was a photo taken of an alien ship, which do you think it would be?”

Cavin answered without hesitation. “I see two photos that fit your description, not one.”

The slightest movement of the colonel’s mouth told her Cavin had chosen the right answer. “Which two?”

Cavin pointed to the lower left image. “That’s the ship’s identification number.” He translated the blocky little hieroglyphics using his fingers. “And its name.
Shakree
.” He wrinkled his forehead. “It translates roughly to a type of seedpod that is distributed by the wind.” Then he pointed to the lower right photo. “And that is part of the forward instrument panel.”

“This is an alien ship?” Jana glared at the officers. “You said there was no spacecraft hidden at Area 51.”

Connick’s expression didn’t change. “There isn’t. But I’m going to tell you where it is, and how to get there.”

 

A
LONE AGAIN
,
THEY SPED
along a road they’d taken from Highway 6 East. There were some ranches, but little else. Someone pulling a horse trailer had been behind them for some time. No one else was on the road. “Scratch what I said about being able to
see
the middle of nowhere from here, Cavin. This
is
the middle of nowhere.”

First they were supposed to find a farmhouse. There, they were to meet up with someone Connick called the Gatekeeper, a name that was satisfyingly mysterious. He’d given no other directions except that they had to find exit 17 and take the unmarked road immediately following.

Jana veered into the right lane. The horse trailer followed. If only it would pass them already. She was in no mood for tailgaters.

A small road marker came into view. “There it is,” Jana called out, her heart leaping. “Seventeen.”

“I confirm that,” Cavin said. He’d rolled his window partway open. The wind ruffled his hair and he seemed to welcome the air. His skin was pasty. Likely he was sick to his stomach.

“Tell me if you need to stop,” she said.

He shook his head, and the movement seemed to cause him pain. He grimaced, sucking in some air. “Keep going. Not much time.”

Not much time for whom? For Cavin or for Earth? Or both?
Gods.
Her stomach hurt.

The turnoff came quicker than she expected. Worse, the horse trailer was right on her butt. Idiot! She didn’t want to slam on the brakes and cause an accident, nor did she want to miss the turnoff. Letting off on the gas pedal, she jerked the wheel to the right. Tires skidding, she fought to stay on the road which was hard-baked dirt. The second the tires got traction, she sped up. There was no time to waste.

Cavin’s expression didn’t change in reaction to her wild driving. It told her how much pain he was in. All his concentration was on survival.

But as soon as she was headed straight again, the sound of scraping and skidding echoed behind them. “I don’t believe it. That horse trailer just followed us off the road.”

Cavin was instantly alert. He turned in his seat, and his lips compressed. “It’s him.”

She threw an alarmed glance at the rearview mirror. She couldn’t see who was behind the wheel, only the silhouette of a lone man, unmoving as he bore down on them. Her stomach sank with dread. It was the REEF. “But I thought he was gone.”

“He’s a REEF.”

No time to reason it out now
. She shoved the gas pedal to the floor, but the assassin pulled up even with the Jeep. Side by side, they were road racing on what was little more than a dirt path.

The REEF rammed into the Jeep’s driver’s side. Wind whistled through broken glass as Jana fought wildly to keep the Jeep on the road. She ground her foot to the floor, trying to squeeze every last bit of speed from the poor Jeep, and pulled ahead of the heavier vehicle. The horse trailer swung from side to side, causing the truck to fishtail, but he gained on them. This time he hit the Jeep even harder. Her door caved in, shoving her sideways in the seat.

“Faster, Jana.”

The damaged Jeep shook, sending vibrations up her arms to rattle her teeth. “I’m giving it all she’s got.” She couldn’t believe she’d said that. It was as if she’d fallen into a cheesy sci-fi thriller.

But everything depended on her being able to evade the REEF.
Everything
: Cavin, the fate of the world, their future.

Perspiration ran into her eyes. Her legs quivered with adrenaline. But her only thoughts were the gas pedal under her foot and the road ahead. If she kept control of both, she kept Cavin alive.

The horse trailer pulled up alongside them. Ready for the next hit, Jana braced herself. Thick seconds clicked past and no crash. She glanced over at the REEF. He pointed something at her. It glinted in his hand as he took wobbly aim. Fear flared in her chest. “Cavin,” she yelled. “He’s got a gun!”

Cavin grabbed her by the back of the collar and yanked her lower in the seat. Jana spun the wheel, hoping to cause a miss when the assassin shot at them. A sharp bang rang out, followed by a whistling hiss. The Jeep pulled hard to the left. Somehow, she stayed on the road. The stench of burning rubber made her eyes water. She gritted her teeth, squeezed the steering wheel, and kept the gas pedal jammed to the floor. The car was shaking violently now, riding on a bare rim. It sounded as if it were coming apart.

Another shot boomed. A geyser of water gushed out from under the hood and splattered all over the windshield, turning the dust to mud. “We’re going to have to ditch this baby!” she yelled. It sounded like something her fighter-pilot brother would say. For a woman who never had any desire to be in the military, she’d seen enough combat in one week to last a lifetime.

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