Slag: Book Four in the Galaxy Pirates Alien Abduction Romance Series (Shifter) Alana Khan (love letters to the dead .txt) š
- Author: Alana Khan
Book online Ā«Slag: Book Four in the Galaxy Pirates Alien Abduction Romance Series (Shifter) Alana Khan (love letters to the dead .txt) šĀ». Author Alana Khan
Now I get to work. Iām going to pull enough of these vines to make a rope to pull Slag out of the mine.
These things are tough. The really thick ones are impossible to yank away from the cavern walls, the leaves have stickers that cling to the rock. I pull the ones that arenāt stuck so tightly to the rock.
I pull vines for hours, then make several trips back to the little cave I originally bedded down in.
I allow myself a quick nap even though I feel guilty. Every minute I waste is a minute Slag is sitting in the cavern believing heāll never make it out alive. But Iām too tired to think and canāt do him any good in this state.
The pale sun wakes me a few hours later, and I start braiding immediately. The vines are inherently sturdy, but now that theyāre braided I donāt doubt theyāll be strong enough to hoist him. The only question isāwill I be?
I loop the heavy braids over my shoulders and begin the trek back to him. I tried to be mindful of the direction I traveled, realizing the barren landscape has few landmarks and fearing Iād never find my way back to Slag.
Miraculously, I finally see the little cairn of rocks I made to mark my way.
āSlag!ā I yell, wanting to give him hope. āSlag! Iām back!ā
I donāt know what he sees when I stick my head over the hole we made in the mineās ceiling. Iām probably just a dark blob backlit by the sun. But I see his face clear enough. At first, heās shocked, then the relief is written all over him as his shoulders relax. And then I see the corners of his mouth tip up in the tiniest smile.
āYep. I know. You wondered if I stopped for some McDonaldās and a latte. I took the time for a mani-pedi, too. But here I am,ā I tell him knowing he doesnāt understand a word, but wanting him to hear the happy sound of my voice.
From the pile of rocks that is not far from the hole, I select a boulder that I hope will be large enough to hold Slagās weight but that I can roll in my weakened state. I havenāt slept more than two hours in two days, the relentless heat means Iām thirsty, and I still have bouts of the swirlies from the radiation sickness. But I donāt stop for a minute because Iām so full of purpose, wanting to finally see Slag when I pull him out of the hole.
I thought I might have wasted my time braiding too many vines, but by the time I secure the braid around the boulder, thereās barely enough to hang half-way down the hole.
Slag ties the axe to the rope, which I pull up first. The effort of widening the hold for my huge friend leaves me sweating and panting, but Iām filled with purpose. Itās certainly easier to use the axe standing on the ground than it was reaching over my head. Iām going to get Slag out of there.
After securing his flute to his loincloth, he grabs the rope as soon as I lower it to him. With a grunt and all his upper body strength, he climbs out.
Now itās not a little smile tipping the corners of his mouthāheās beaming. And so am I.
As tired as he is, he lifts me under my armpits and whirls me in a circle, then clutches me to him so hard it leaves me breathless. I can only imagine his fear that Iād never come back for him. My chest clenches in happiness at seeing him. Weāve only known each other a few days and he hasnāt said a word, but I feel connected to him.
āWait ātill you see the room I rented us. Spacious and colorful. It doesnāt have cable, but it has running water and a light show.ā
Grabbing his hand, I pull him toward our new digs. I hadnāt allowed myself to think beyond this moment, but now I have all the time in the world to wonder how weāre going to survive on this hostile planet and how weāre going to get off it.
Slag
Mine.
KJ
The walk to the cave was grueling in the heat of the day, made even harder by the fact that Slag hasnāt had a drop to drink in two days. As soon as we were through the mouth of the outer cave, I pulled him toward the tiny opening to the magical inner cave.
It was a tight fit getting Slag through the opening to the water hole. Weāll have to make it bigger later, but it wonāt be a problem again, because I donāt think heāll want to ever leave.
I have no idea what his childhood was like or how long he spent in the mine, but I donāt think he had the opportunity to investigate bioluminescence on the Internet like I did. His mouth gapes open and a laugh bubbles up out of his throat when he sees our private light show.
Itās fun watching my huge giant act like an excited kid. He wants to touch every glowing thing and seems to have no innate fear of anything. He scrapes his hand against the lichen on the walls, reaches out to grab this planetās equivalent of a firefly, and touches the kudzu as if heās never seen a living plant.
He tears off his loincloth and wades into the water before I can pull him back to shore.
āSlag! No!ā I doubt he can understand explanations of all my fears of leviathans surfacing from the deep or scary alien piranha or microscopic bacteria that could harm him. And now he canāt hear me either, because heās dog-paddling to the other side of the cavern.
āSlag!ā
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