Hey again. So I keep writing on this... I can't seem to give it up. It's crazy. Anyway, I'm finishing my edits on my Ice Era Chronicle "A Holiday Cup Of Joe." Because I have a few things on that book to wrap up, I might have to take a mini-break from this. We will see. This has become my guilty pleasure! Anyway, if you are still here reading, coolzie! Thanks for hanging out with me.
*Chapter 6*
I know this isn't Earth.
Murry was expecting more alien sex. Expecting or hoping, he wasn't sure which. The way Keltrix pulled him all eager had Murry anticipating they were going to find a bed. What was in the other room, wasn't more sex. In fact, as Murry entered, he stopped in his tracks.
Behind Kel, Murry's jaw dropped. The all-pink room had been transformed. Now his prison cell was a replica of the group home where he lived on Earth. Everything was there down to the threadbare throw blanket over the back of the worn couch.
The coffee table was still in the room, but that furniture was the only thing that didn't match his old living space. Keltrix turned around.
"Now it is home? Not prison?"
Damn. Keltrix wasn't lying. The alien could truly see into his mind. Murry balked at that. Alien reading his mind was right out of a sci-fi horror movie. The alien had taken the memory of the day one of the other residents had broken a chair. The three-legged seat was tipped against the dining table because one of the workers planned to glue the leg back together. Murry shook his head as he walked on the gray carpeting.
This must be what a caterpillar felt like.
"Caterpillar? Is this another rescued animal?" Keltrix crossed his middle tentacles over his chest. "Explain."
"Human children will catch bugs like caterpillars. They stuff them in a jar. But they think to fool the caterpillar into thinking the jar is their world. They get a branch or a stick or a leaf and they think that will recreate their home." And they fail at it he added silently. The caterpillar must look around and think jerks.
"This does not please you?" Kel swept a glance at the items around the room like they meant nothing to him. "But this is your habitat, is it not?"