Faer’s Command: Scifi Alien Abduction Romance (Science Fiction Alien Romance) (Survival Wars Book 3)

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Authors: Hana Starr
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its many meanings in that moment hang there, and walked toward them
with a determined grin. “Shall we get started? I want to take a look at the
equipment you taught me about.” Faer nodded, taking her hand in theirs and
guiding her away.
     
                With a parting scritch on Momo's chin, they
exited Anne Claire's space, and returned to the clean, pristine white and
silver of the rest of Faer's home. It felt surreal, stepping out from a space
that so perfectly mimicked her home into the rest of the building, a stark
reminder that she was far, far from home. Still, she was impressed by the vast
expanse of the home, and how immaculately cleaned that it was in spite of that.
Faer led her out of the hallway, away from her area, and led her up a flight of
stairs that seemed to hover in place rather than be bolted to the wall or
attached to the floor. And yet, they felt as solid as if they were firmly
attached to something.
     
                Once they were on the next floor, Faer guided
her through the foyer of the floor and to a door that she noted seemed more
secure than the others; there was a green digital panel beside the door that
Faer placed their hand on. It was familiar enough to her security measures back
at her lab on Earth that it felt strangely comforting to see. They motioned for
her to enter the lab, and she did so, looking around Faer's laboratory in awe.
     
                Pearl white walls were only marred by the green
and orange digital displays that all showed the recent test results of
experiments that they had been running before her arrival. The tables and
panels with computers and equipment that she recalled being shown in Faer's
instructions, and she mentally ticked off which ones she would need to make use
of to test out her ideas as to what it could be. She walked into the lab and
sucked in a deep, slow breath. How strange, she noted – even a lab in another
galaxy smelled familiarly of antiseptic, and latex, and even the sounds of
whirring machines and the occasional soft beeping from the computers there made
her feel like she had stepped into her own lab.
     
                “Do you think that you can work in these
conditions?” Faer asked curiously.
     
                “This feels like home to me.” She cracked her
knuckles. “Almost as much as my actual home.” She turned to look at them. “I
think we're gonna do great work here, Faer. Let's get started,” she said
with a broad grin as she walked over to the main computer against the wall.
     
                “Where do you want to start?”
     
                “I want to see what you've done already, so I'm
not retreading old ground,” she explained as she tapped away at the keyboard
with the muscle memory of someone who had used this technology for years. “Like
I said, I have a few ideas, but I want to make sure they haven't been ruled out
already.” Faer walked up beside her.
     
                “I am ashamed to admit this, but there is little
that I have tried thus far.” They sighed and folded their arms across their
chest. “With so few volunteer test subjects, there is little to draw from.”
     
                “I thought about how to combat that,” she said
with a nod as she looked through their meticulous notes, few as they may have
been. After finishing, she turned to face them. “I was wondering if you would
let me take a sample of your blood, Faer.”
     
                “My blood?” They parroted with a tilt of their
head, surprised. “I take no issue with it, but I wonder what use it could have
– my people's blood is one of the few things not affected by the illness.”
     
                “Exactly!” She nodded. “I want to take a sample
of your blood, use it to generate a set of cloned organs – your generative cell
apparatus allows for organs to be grown in a matter of minutes based off of
your

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