A Wider Sky: Beyond Eclipse Series
by Talyis Bagley Ellison
Copyright first edition 2013, 2015
Chapter 4
The fresh sun rose. The street lights that had burned all night were now like heavy golden eyelids going to sleep.
Ben and I walked towards the inspection building and yet not a single soul was on the street. It being early morning still didn't convince me that the residents of this sleepy town ever came out.
Quiet Ben walked beside me with my duffle swung over his shoulder. I felt like I was sneaking away like a naughty secret from this new world.
It felt so unreal.
I moved hands from my jeans pockets to my coat pockets before settling at my sides for a moment then back into my jeans pockets. I hadn't slept the night before and now I felt like I had drank an entire gallon of caffeine.
I was going to meet aliens today. I was going to a college where I am going to surrounded by aliens Ben swore were not scary looking. I was going to be the only human on campus. I was most likely going to die today.
I shook my hands hard, but they still felt numb to me. My entire body felt numb, like I was walking in a dizzying haze. I didn't sleep well last night and I was to wired now.
Last night I tried to sleep. I even pulled the picture of my mother out of my jean jacket pocket and laid down to sleep next to it.
But I couldn't sleep. I realized it was the first time I was going to bed without my mother sharing the bed with me. She wasn't their to tuck me in and tell me she loved me. She wasn't there to hug me and remind me that she wouldn't let any aliens come and take me away. She wasn't here and I was alone.
She was far away in the colony, shivering in our cold dark apartment. I cried because I knew she was most likely feeling the same way I did, missing me. Wondering if I had been exterminated or was still alive. I knew that in that moment she was missing me as much as I her.
And now today, I was definitely going to meet my greatest fear head on, aliens. I was going to see them, live with them and even eat their food.
"Are you ready?" Ben spoke for the first time since leaving his home. He shifting my heavy bag to his other shoulder so he could look at me.
"What does Maddie do?"
Ben rolled his eyes, "You and these questions. Do me a favor. After I answer this one question. Don't ask too many questions especially once you get to college. OK?"
I nodded because he was right. My inquisitive nature was getting the best of me. It would be easy to tread on dangerous territory or be misunderstood which would result in deadly measures.
"She works for the aliens. She is a fusion meter maid."
I tried not to allow my astonishment seem like a judgement seem too visible. Why the president's daughter of the former world was a meter maid? Maddie lived in the realm, she went to the best schools in the old world that money could afford and now she was a meter maid.
"She sees them?" I asked and he raised an eyebrow warning me that I had maxed my question quota. "Ben, I am afraid of aliens," I blurted out, my time was running out. We were reaching the city limits heading towards the inspection building. Moments were ticking away for me to finish preparing for what I was going to experience within the next hour.
Ben's chuckle married his toothy charming grin, "Kiowa, you are going to be the only human at the college. I think you better get over that fear right now."
"You promise they look like humans."
"Yes, Kiowa I promise. They don't look like tall skin grey beings with big black, bottomless soulless eyes; and no, they are not green and slimy. Remember, they lived here for half a century before Eclipse, blending in with humans, living side by side with us, as they do now."
Side by Side? Were there aliens living next door to Maddie and Ben? I hadn't seen anyone in town ever; it was like a ghost town, but perhaps they were right.
"And to answer your question, no, Maddie works with humans. Don't worry Kiowa, they are expecting you - including the students - but the administrators have decided to not disclose that you are the human. They want to see how they interact with you and who can and cannot pinpoint that you are human." That actually sounds worse than little green or purple monsters. I chewed my lip because shifting my hands were not effectively calming me. "You see, nothing to worry about."
A chill ran over my body and Ben again shrugged, this time he pulled me in close and gave me a hug. He became a father figure in that short moment; I would never forget this moment. This is how I had imagined my father being like, trying to ease my fears.
"Don't talk about the Eclipse as much as possible. The Eclipse to aliens is old history, long gone. Don't talk about the colonies or how things are different and the colonies. Don't talk about aliens and humans in the same sentence as much as possible ok?"
"Or else they will exterminate me."
"Yes," he said simply, his tone was cold but he squeezed me tighter to him. "Don't worry. They look human, behave human other than they have some special powers-"
"Special powers?"
Ben shook his head and chuckled, "Girl you don't know anything about the Y'vroi do you?"
"They vaporized entire towns and people."
"Yes, they did but they wont vaporize you. They have benign powers as well. More everyday, not take-over-the-world powers. You'll see."
I sighed heavily and for a second my worries fell to the ground like flimsy shingles.
I remembered what my mother said about school integration during the Civil Rights Movement. The black students heard awful things about white people. Although, the white classmates did do awful things to the black teens, some of the white students were nice, kind and even helped - ignoring race. I just needed to have courage and find those people... aliens.
Ben stopped in front of the inspection building to gestured towards the hovercraft floating above ground a few yards away. It gearing up to take me to college or a nightmare.
He smiled, hiding his perfect mouth yet his eyes twinkled fatherly. He rubbed to top of my head. "You'll be fine kiddo. I will pick you up in time for you to miss the festivities. You'll be fine. Don't worry and don't fear." He passed my duffle bag to me and whispered in my ear. "Here comes one right now."
Like a bullet, I shot my eyes over his shoulder. Coming out of the double doors of the inspection building was a tall blonde women dress in a grey suit tailored like a slim airline stewardess. As she walked towards us my breath hitched.