Click here to read Chapter One, if you missed it last Friday.
CHAPTER TWO
Alezandros shielded his eyes from the lukewarm sun. His two
nephews, Karros and Madden, leapt over the barren ground like giant bulltoads.
He smiled faintly. It’d been a while since they had a reason to enjoy surface
time. Alezandros glanced over to his sister as he adjusted his bag upon his
back. The breathing mask hid most of her expression, except for the twinkle in
her green eyes.
“Look at them go! They have more energy than a red giant.”
He nudged her arm with his elbow.
Quick, hissing laughter burst from her lips and puffed the
mask’s soft material. “Little brother, you haven’t gotten that old, have you?”
“Of course not! Let’s show them what we Underdwellers can
do.”
They jogged after the boys into the old city. Forgotten
buildings stood as crumbled relics. Kaire and he had been the first generation
of Underdwellers. Her children and her grandchildren would suffer the same fate,
if they didn’t find a new planet soon. Despite their vast underground cities,
living underground without a real sun depressed Alezandros. He would do
anything to prevent his family from growing up under mounds of dirt and rock. A
silent curse flitted upon his forked tongue, but he held it in. He saw no point
in upsetting their outing.
Her gloved fingertips trailed along one forgotten wall while
she hummed a simple tune. Oh, no. He
knew that look. “Boys, not too far. Stay in our view,” she called to the
children before cocking her head to the side. “Have you heard from Sophisa
lately?”
Ugh, not this again.
His eyes rolled, and he resisted the urge to smack himself in the forehead, or
his sister for mentioning his former pairing. “There’s nothing we have to say
about her.”
“Has she dropped by?” She halted beside him. “She was good
for you. You shouldn’t have parted from her.”
He hadn’t had the heart to tell her that she parted from
him. “She’s dwelling with someone else the last I’ve heard. And, no, I don’t
know his name. Sophisa and I don’t talk. Final.”
She held up her hands. “Fine. Final. Not another word.”
“Good.”
“So when are you going to settle down?” She threw the
question over her shoulder as she strolled farther into the city.
If she wasn’t his sister, he would strangle her. “Never, if
I can help it. Besides, why are you so interested in this?”
“Well, I was thinking—”
“That’s dangerous for you, and the answer is no.”
She crossed her arms and huffed. “But I haven’t even asked
you yet.”
“I’m sure it’s another screened pairing, and the answer is
no.” It’d taken three months to get his singed hair back in place after the
last one.
“Oh, come on, Alezandros. She’s really nice.”
Translation: She’s as boring as a hibernating slog. Were
there any of those furry-stomach walkers left on the planet’s surface?
“No.” He leaned over and picked up a rusted bowl. If he
could clean it, perhaps they could sell it on the market.
“Why not?”
He tucked the object into his bag and ignored her question.
She didn’t need to know his reasons. In fact, he should tell her, but he
couldn’t. Not today.
She shifted closer to him. “What’s going on? You don’t pair
up anymore. Surely you haven’t gone through all the eligible women in Medusa.”
“I’m just bored with them.” And he was. He needed adventure,
excitement, a life above the ordinary. It’s one reason he took his family on
these trysts to the surface. The women were boring, complacent, drained of all
life from the drudgery of living underground.
“Bored.” She scoffed at him, and his fists clenched from a
flash of anger. “Little brother, you just need to grow up.”
“I’m tired of this . . .” He spotted his nephews picking
through a pile of rubble nearby and edited his curses. “. . . this stuff,
Kaire. It’s why I’ve joined the army.”
Merdre! He’d told
her his secret already.
Her eyes widened and she stumbled back as if he punched her.
“The army? Why?”
“Oh, I don’t know. To serve my planet, perhaps. I’m training
on the space cruisers.” Plus, he loved flying fast and hard.
“But they’re talking of war again, stealing a new planet.
After what happened to mom and dad, I can’t believe you’d do this.” Tears
brightened her eyes.
He expected anger but not that fear, that sadness. A lump
formed in his throat as his heart cracked in two. “I won’t die like they did in
the wars. I’m not a hands-on fighter, and I’m a merdre good flyer too.”
“Boys, come here now. We’re going back.” Her voice was
shrill. She wouldn’t even look at Alezandros now.
“Aw, do we have to go?” Their voices chorused as one.
“Yes. Now.” She spun around and stalked off.
“We don’t have to leave yet,” Alezandros said when the boys
passed him and neared their mother.
“Yes, we do.” She grabbed her children’s hands and left him
to catch up.
If you've enjoyed what you've read, you can purchase and continue reading the rest of Defying Gravity at these retailers: iTunes Kobo Nook Smashwords Amazon US Amazon UK Amazon DE Amazon FR Amazon IT Amazon ES.
Next Friday, we'll meet Phoebus in Chapter One of Fighting Gravity.
Next Friday, we'll meet Phoebus in Chapter One of Fighting Gravity.
15 comments:
Hibernating slog - funny!
I just got to Chapter Two in the book, so I'm gonna skip the excerpt for now ;)
Great excerpt! It tells you so much about his character.
I just got to Chapter Two in the book, so I'm gonna skip the excerpt for now ;)
I just got to Chapter Two in the book, so I'm gonna skip the excerpt for now ;)
Funny, I swear I had a similar conversation with my 14 year old today. I want to...
No.
But I didn't even...
LOL
They're gonna steal a planet?! Who's gonna drive the getaway spaceship?
I love the voice! Alezandros has attitude. LOL.
Awesome excerpt! I really like Alezandros.
I love the characters names- I'm so bad at that. I can totally picture the sibling meddling. Great excerpt.
Nice opening descriptions and dialogue. You really set the stage for the rest of the excerpt.
Hey Cherie!!
I finally got a chance to read the whole book, and it's awesome!! I love the world and language you have created. It's very fun to read:)
I enjoyed this sibling banter. Great piece.
very good post
good comment
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