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Their Invasion- Planet Athion
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Their Invasion
Planet Athion Series
(Darkest Skies Book #1)
Marissa Farrar
Their Invasion: Planet Athion
Darkest Skies, Volume 1
Marissa Farrar
Published by Warwick House Press, 2018.
Their Invasion: text copyright © Marissa Farrar 2018
All Rights Reserved
With the exception of quotes used in reviews, this book may not be reproduced or used in whole or in part by any means existing without written permission from Marissa Farrar.
Warning: The unauthorized reproduction or distribution of this copyrighted work is illegal. No part of this book may be scanned, uploaded or distributed via the Internet or any other means, electronic or print, without the author’s written permission.
This book is a work of fiction and any resemblance to persons, living or dead is purely coincidental. The characters are productions of the author’s imagination and used fictitiously.
Please note this book is intended for mature readers.
Artwork and Editing by Studioenp.
Table of Contents
Title Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Their Invasion: Planet Athion (Darkest Skies, #1)
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Her Resistance: Planet Athion | Darkest Skies Book Two | Chapter One
About the Author
Also by the Author
Don’t forget to FOLLOW Marissa Farrar on Amazon to be the first to hear of hot new releases including Planet Athion stories.
Back Cover Information
IT HAPPENED IN THE middle of the night.
Asteroids raining down on Earth, destroying buildings, killing people.
We thought that was the worst of it, but then women started to go missing, and we knew worse was yet to come...
I, Camille Harran, a planetary scientist at one of the world’s numerous Observatories, should have predicted it.
Together with my team of men—head of security, Aleandro, studious meteorologist, Casey, and tattooed, dark haired Mike, who is head of communications—we do everything we can to figure out what’s behind the attack on our planet.
But when the government decides the Observatories are best for coordinating their teams, we find ourselves having to deal with strangers as well. They’re army men, and government officials, and among them are men more beautiful than I’ve ever seen.
What secrets do they hide, and will I, or those I love, survive their invasion?
PLANET ATHION: A REVERSE HAREM SCI-FI ROMANCE
DARKEST SKIES: BOOK ONE
THEIR INVASION
Chapter One
“Hey, Camille, does this look strange to you?”
I lifted my gaze from my computer to where my colleague, Casey Steelman, studied his own screen. A frown marked his normally smooth brow, his eyes narrowed behind his black-framed glasses. There wasn’t much Casey wasn’t able to analyze himself, and immediately a jolt of unease ran through me.
“What do you mean?” I rose from my seat at my desk and crossed the room to stand behind his chair. His desk was one of five—including mine—that ran around the outskirts of the huge glass dome of the Observatory where we worked.
The Observatory was located about thirty minutes outside of Las Vegas in Red Rock Canyon. The dark, flat, expansive area of this part of the desert provided wide-open views of the night sky and was far enough away from the city that there was no problem of light pollution ruining the view of the seven thousand stars overhead.
There were hundreds of identical facilities all over the United States, and our team of scientists all came from multiple different backgrounds. There were planetary scientists, such as myself, meteorologists, like Casey, plus engineers and computer scientists, too.
Since space travel had become a modern-day equivalent of taking a luxury cruise, and now there was no doubt of life on other planets, our professions had become far more sought-after. Young, rising stars of the astrological society quickly made the knowledge of older members redundant, which meant most of our team was below the age of thirty-five. That worked fine by us. We were all workaholics who didn’t have time for a home life and families. We were married to the job.
Admittedly, the role was never going to be for everyone. My younger sister had always been more of the homely type, preferring to keep both feet firmly planted on Earth, but the moment I had learned of the actual, proven existence of life on other planets, I’d been obsessed with knowing more. And it wasn’t just one planet. Now we’d mastered the ability to travel light years to other solar systems, scientists had discovered numerous other planets that housed not only life, but intelligent life similar to our own. Communication had been made, and there was no turning back from that.
“These.” Casey pointed at the screen, pulling my thoughts back to him. “They appear to be asteroids, but they’ve only just shown up on the radar, and they’re traveling too fast.”
I followed the trajectory. “Looks like they’re going to travel right past us, though.” I patted his solid shoulder. “I’m sure we don’t have anything to worry about.”
He scrubbed his hand over his mouth. “It’s just strange how they weren’t there a couple of hours ago.”
“Maybe they were a larger mass that broke apart,” I suggested. “That would change their trajectory.”
He nodded. “Yeah, you’re probably right, and they don’t look like they’re going to cause us any problems.”
“And that’s all we have to worry about.”
In the twenty-three years since the first tourist ship left Earth, we’d made huge advances in space travel. Now people thought nothing to booking a trip to another planet, just the same as they’d booked a trip to a different country for a break back in the early 2000s. Of course, it had been a huge shock to us when not just one, but multiple other intelligent lifeforms were discovered, lifeforms that were often humanoid and already well aware of the existence of humans. Humanity was left feeling like the last child to discover that Santa Claus was actually Mom and Dad, but, once everyone had calmed down and realized they posed no threat, the new way of things was quickly accepted. I remembered how it had been when the first tourist ship went into space, and then the first images of aliens—who we now thought of as ‘alternate races’—were discovered. It was like living inside a movie, and we’d all hovered on the edge of fascination and terror, wondering if this was the start of the end. People speculated, of course, and there were plenty who’d cried about the end of the world, but when nothing had changed, everyone had eventually got bored, and things continued as they always had.
“Everything okay, guys?”
We both turned as our communications guy, Mike Fitzgerald, sauntered over, a can of Diet Coke held in one hand. His dark hair needed a cut and flopped down over one eye. His fitted gray t-shirt highlighted the compact but defined muscles beneath the material. Mike might spend a lot of time around computers, but he was no geek. Tattoos ran in sleeves down both arms, but I hadn’t seen enough of the rest of him to know what else was tattooed.
I swept my own dark hair over to one side and glanced over my shoulder at him. “Casey saw something strange on the radar, that’s all.”
&nb
sp; “Yeah, like what?”
Casey spun his chair around to face Mike. “Nothing that involves contacting an alternate race, so you won’t be interested.”
Mike took a final chug of his Coke and threw the empty can at Casey’s head. Casey reached up and easily snatched it out of the air before depositing it in the trash can beside him.
“Nice try,” Casey replied with a smug grin. “But seriously, it’s only a few asteroids that must have broken off a larger mass and changed trajectory.”
“Toward us?” Mike’s eyebrows lifted.
“Nah. Looks like they’ll fly straight past.”
I understood Mike’s curiosity. It had been a quiet evening so far, and anything to liven things up was going to be jumped on. My shift was already over, but the guys had only just started work. The Observatory worked twenty-four hours a day, and there always needed to be someone here. I’d been here since eight that morning and should have gone home a couple of hours ago, but I’d got to working on something and had wanted to get it finished before I left for home. It wasn’t as though I had much to go home to. My younger sister, Molly, was staying with me at the moment, but that was only supposed to be a temporary thing after she’d broken up with her boyfriend. That had been almost six months ago now, but I didn’t plan on kicking her out any time soon. I’d never have told her, but I liked having her around. I preferred coming home knowing there was someone there, and deep down I dreaded the day when she announced she was moving out. Not that I expected her to move out any time soon. Molly was getting free rent in a big apartment with a view of the Las Vegas skyline. She’d be nuts to move.
“That’s weird,” Casey said as he spun back around on his chair to face his computer screen again.
I glanced down at the top of his blond head. “What is?”
He tapped the screen. “They’ve completely gone now.”
I frowned and leaned in. “They have?”
“Yep. There one minute, gone the next.”
“Burned up in the atmosphere, perhaps?”
His lips twisted, and I tried not to stare at them. They were good lips—not too full, not too thin. “Must have. There’s no other explanation.”
All three of us fell silent and lifted our faces to gaze up at the dark sky, beyond the glass dome overhead, toward the vast expanse of stars that winked and blinked above us. The beauty of the night sky never ceased to amaze me. I thought perhaps the lure would diminish once the mystery of it all was removed, but it had only heightened my obsession.
I looked away and exhaled a sigh. “Well, I need to get home, guys. I should have left two hours ago.”
“Admit it, you just like being with us,” Mike teased me.
Casey jumped in. “Nah, she just doesn’t have a life outside of the Observatory.”
I rolled my eyes at their banter. “Not like either of you have anywhere better to be either.”
They both laughed, knowing I was speaking the truth.
I made my way back over to my desk, shut down my computer, and picked up my purse. It was still warm out, even though the desert temperature could seriously drop overnight, so I didn’t have a coat with me.
I had no choice but to live in the city, as did most of the people who worked here. There wasn’t exactly a huge amount of housing out here in the desert. My SUV was parked outside, and, as the dome of the Observatory where our desks were located was on the top floor, I had to take the elevator down to the ground floor in order to leave. There were other people who worked here who were parts of different teams—mainly admin staff—and had offices on the ground floor, but they mostly worked nine-to-five, and we didn’t have a huge amount to do with them.
Behind the security desk at the front doors sat a man in a suit which stretched across his massive shoulders. His dark curls, just a shade before black, were cropped short to his head. Aleandro Levy was head of security, and he must have heard my boots clipping on the polished floors as he turned toward me with a wide smile.
“Night, Camille,” he said as I approached.
“Night, Aleandro. You just come on for the night?”
“Yup. Here until seven a.m.”
I pulled a face. “Rather you than me.”
He grinned, revealing a row of straight white teeth. “Thanks.”
“I’ll think of you while I’m snuggled up in bed,” I teased.
His grin grew knowing. “Will you now? That’s something I can use to distract me over the next ten hours.”
His words sent a little thrill through me, and I tried not to stare at the bulging biceps beneath his suit as I passed him, adding an extra little wiggle to my walk. Aleandro and I had been flirting for a while now, but nothing had happened. The Observatory had a strict ‘no fraternizing with the staff’ policy, and though it was frustrating working with a crew of gorgeous, smart men when I couldn’t act on anything, it was still fun flirting with them.
I stepped out of the main doors, feeling Aleandro’s gaze on my back but not giving him the satisfaction of glancing back at him. Fishing my car keys out of my purse, I headed over to where my SUV was parked in the lot.
It would only take me thirty minutes to get home, and then I planned on doing nothing more exciting than eating dinner, taking a long hot bath, and heading straight to bed.
Chapter Two
A boom and vibration shattered through the room, jerking me awake. At first, I wondered if I’d been dreaming and had somehow pulled the dream into the waking world with me, but then Molly’s shriek echoed from down the hall.
Quickly, I glanced at the bedside clock. The red LED light blinked: 2:52 a.m.
I was wide awake now. Molly?
I swung my legs out of bed, my heart pounding. Something felt different about the air around me, like an electromagnetic charge had affected the particles, and I smelled something, too. Burning. Was the apartment block on fire?
I got to my feet just as something else hit with a second massive boom. The blast sent the floors and walls shaking, throwing me off-balance. I clutched at my nightstand just as the glass of water on top of it toppled over and crashed to the floor, breaking into numerous sharp pieces.
My sister’s screech came again. “Camille!”
My heart catapulted, blood hammering in my ears, my breath trapped in the base of my throat. What was happening? Were we under attack? Terrorism, perhaps? I struggled to put my thoughts together. All I wanted to do was get to my sister.
The trembling had stopped for the moment. I staggered for the bedroom door, finding the handle and yanking it open. I expected to find Molly in her bedroom, but instead she was standing in our living room, the glass front of our apartment giving a view out across the city skyline.
“Molly?”
She was facing away from me, staring out to the city, so I was only able to see the back of her head, her dark hair a shade lighter than mine. I followed her line of sight beyond the floor-to-ceiling windows and over the city.
My mouth dropped open.
Bright, fiery balls of red, yellow, and orange plummeted through the night sky, their brilliance diminishing the hundreds of thousands of city lights below. In the distance, fires had erupted, and a couple of buildings were surrounded in flames.
Asteroids!
Hadn’t Casey pointed out something before I’d left the Observatory? But they’d not been headed our way, and from the number that seemed to be burning through the sky, these were nothing like the ones we had spotted.
My thoughts went to my work colleagues left at the Observatory. Had they seen these things on the radar? Had somebody been trying to get hold of me while I’d slept? I hadn’t thought to bring my phone with me when I’d run from the bedroom, but I also hadn’t heard it ringing. Or was it possible that things had somehow been hidden from our satellites?
The thought unnerved me.
My sister finally turned to me, her blue eyes wide and framed with dark lashes. “What’s happening, Camille?”
“I�
��m not sure...”
A third explosion happened somewhere nearby, the huge glass panes separating us from the city rattling in their frames. The vibrations caused from the blast sent us stumbling, so we ended up clutching each other to keep our balance.
“They look like meteors,” Molly cried. “Aren’t you guys supposed to predict this kind of thing?”
The fear was evident in her voice. I didn’t blame her. I was scared as well. If one of those things hit our building, we would be dead in an instant.
My heart went out to those in the places that had already been hit. How many were dead or injured? How many families separated? How many children desperately searching for their parents and vice versa? And the sky was still streaked with light as more of the things fell from the sky.
How far was this spread? Across the desert? Or farther still? Could it be across the whole country? The world, even?
No, it was most likely localized, but I hadn’t come across a strike that we hadn’t seen coming before, and right now, all bets were off. I needed to contact someone at the Observatory and find out what was going on. I didn’t know how much longer we’d have power for, so I needed to act quickly.
I turned to Molly. “Wait here. I need to get my phone.” I’d slept with it tucked beneath my pillow. “And stay away from the window.”
The view was both terrifying and mesmerizing. I could see us both standing there, transfixed by the light show, until one of the things either hit the building or somewhere so close by that it shattered the huge window and sliced us both to pieces.
But Molly shook her head. “No way. You’re not going anywhere without me.”
“Only to my room,” I insisted.
“I don’t care. I’m coming, too.”
I couldn’t see any reason to stop her.
With my heart thumping, I grabbed my sister’s hand, and together we ran for my bedroom. I was acutely aware that this whole place could blow apart within seconds. One moment, we’d be running, and the next we simply wouldn’t exist anymore.