I wasn’t worried about germs. Wasn’t like I could get sick, not like Serena could.
When she returned to the island, she squeezed in next to me as she arranged the bowls —eggs first and then the crumbs. The space was crowded and I could’ve moved over to give her more room, but I didn’t.
I liked crowding her.
“Go ahead,” I urged when her hands hovered over the chicken. “It’s not that hard and I won’t turn the TV on.”
A smile played over her lips. “I’m not that easily distracted now.”
I bent down, so that my lips were a hairbreadth from her cheek. “I bet you’re just as easily distracted as you were at fourteen.”
Serena dropped the slice of chicken in the bowl. Watery yolk splattered across the counter as her cheeks went bloodred. “You are so wrong,” she muttered.
I chuckled. “I know.”
Watching Serena dutifully dip the slices of chicken was sort of amusing in a weird way. I never cooked with anyone before. Hell, I never cooked for anyone before. Not that I was cooking for Serena in the first place. I was hungry and I ate a lot.
As I turned the stove on and watched the oil start to bubble, Serena chatted about her mom, stopping every few moments to glance at me, as if she were testing my annoyance level.
I was fine.
“So you never met your father?” I asked.
She shook her head as she carried the plate of breaded chicken to the stove. “Nope.
Absentee sperm donor. What about you? I mean, your kind has parents, right?”
“We’re not hatched from an egg, Serena. Our reproduction is much like a human’s.
As is the Luxen. But I didn’t know my parents.”
Her brows knitted as she picked up a piece of chicken. “What do you mean?”
I pulled her hand away from the skillet. “You’ll burn yourself.” I took the chicken from her and placed it into the skillet. Grease snapped and popped.
“I guess you don’t burn?”
“Not like you will.” I took another slice from the plate she held. “My parents died when I was young.”
Her soft inhale filled the silence and then, “I’m—”
“Don’t say you’re sorry, Serena. You didn’t kill my parents. You have nothing to apologize for.” I removed the last slice, plopped it into the oil, and then took the plate from her. “My parents were killed by the Luxen, like many of our kind were. And don’t say you’re sorry again.”
She snapped her mouth shut. “What is it with you and apologies?”
“I don’t like when people apologize for something they had nothing to do with.”
“I get that, but when people say they’re sorry—like for the loss of a loved one—
they are saying that they’re sorry for you having to go through that pain.”
“I’m fine,” I said, and Serena rolled her eyes. “Wash your hands. You’ll get salmonella or something.”
“Yes, Dad.” Serena spun toward the sink.
My gaze dropped to her plump ass and I fought the urge to come up behind her, grab her hips, and… Where my thoughts were going meant I’d get nothing accomplished. Maybe I just needed to fuck her out of my system.
That sounded like the best plan ever.
Serena looked over her shoulder. “Why did the Luxen kill your parents?”
And that killed my hard-on. “Like I’ve said before, the Luxen are power-hungry assholes.”
She turned around slowly, gripping the rim of the counter behind her. “That really tells me nothing.”
I took a step forward, and her lips parted. I liked that. “You really want a history lesson?”
“Yes.”
But I really wanted to touch her. I took another step, and my gaze traveled over the front of her shirt. The thin cotton and bra did nothing to hide the hardened tips of her breasts.
Aw, fuck.
Chicken needed flipping.
Spinning around, I grabbed the tongs and flipped the chicken, ignoring every instinct that demanded I claim her. The true part of me, the darkness that I was, couldn’t understand why I was fighting this. It didn’t care about repercussions or if Serena ended up in a vegetative state.
It just wanted, always wanted.
I cleared my throat. “Here’s the quick and dirty version. The Luxen have been around for thousands of years and are obviously far more advanced than the human race. They liked to travel. They also liked to subjugate any other race they came into contact with that was viewed as a threat. They ruled the universe—many galaxies you’ve never heard of. They became power hungry and destructive. You know what they say about absolute power.”
“It corrupts absolutely.”
“Exactly. And for a long time, there was nothing that could defeat them. Nothing could stand against them, until my kind came along.”
“And how did that happen?” She folded her arms.
I flipped another piece of chicken. “Evolution’s way of keeping balance. That’s one thing that is universal. The Arum were bred to be the only predator of the Luxen. That doesn’t mean we’re always more powerful than them, but we’re the only creatures that can go toe to toe with them. We absorb energy and they are bursting with it.”
“So you guys just went after them?”
I turned to her, brows raised. “Not at first. For many generations, our kind policed the Luxen, held them back from swallowing up entire planets and destroying every living creature there.”
“Kind of like NATO?”
I chuckled at that. “I guess it was like that, but it was before my time. But they invaded our planet, enslaved our kind, and killed without discretion. The attack blindsided us. It was genocide. Who knows what made them do it, but the war started long before I was even a thought, and it’s never ended.”
She tucked her hair back. “What happened to your…to your planets?”
I met her stare. “We destroyed our planets. Literally. So both of our kinds needed a new home. Earth looked mighty welcoming. We don’t need spaceships.” I laughed.
“That shit’s bunk. Luxen travel at the speed of light—faster than that. So can we, if we’re…fed.”
Her skin paled. “Like when you do the arm thing?”
“And that’s what makes us so useful to the DOD. We kill the Luxen who get out of hand. When one or more of them do something the DOD doesn’t like, we go in and take care of the situation. Most of the Arum find that it’s a great job. After all, there’s real bad blood between us. Others don’t think it’s enough. They continue to hunt the Luxen without DOD permission.”
“Wow.” She shook her head. “So you’re basically an assassin?”
There wasn’t any judgment in Serena’s tone. “You could call me that.”
She was quiet for a moment. “What are the different things that you all can do? And the Luxen?”
“We can bend space and time, which allows us to travel faster than the speed of light. The Luxen are like us in that aspect. What you said you saw the night your friend was killed? Luxen can control energy, manipulate it to move and stop objects.
They can freeze things, people included. They can also use that energy in its purest form as a weapon.”
“Holy…”
“Yep. We absorb their abilities to manipulate light and energy. They call it the Source. We have to feed a lot to travel, especially as far as it was to Earth.”
“How did you end up here?”
“Some of us scattered to other parts of the universe, some came here, because both the Luxen and my kind have been to Earth before.”
“When?”
I shrugged. “Thousands of times since the dawn of man, I am sure.”
Her nose wrinkled. “Then why didn’t they try to enslave us?”
“They never viewed humans as a threat, not until now.”
Her features pinched. “I don’t know if I should be offended by that or worried.”