Olivera's POV:
It was a smaller field, than the one Jeremy was working at, and as I walked behind Leonard, I wondered what my work here would be.
We walked for a couple of more minutes across the field till we came upon girls in the same funny attire in a very large opening in the field, numbering not less than thirty, wheezing around, involved in one activity or the other, ranging from washing to cooking to threshing, and they all acted like we weren't there, like we were invisible.
I was already uncomfortable with the atmosphere, sensing a brewing trouble.
"This is simpler than Jeremy's work, but still tasking." Leonard said, interrupting my thoughts.
" Yeah." I muttered.
"But why are there so many clothes?" I asked, noticing the large heaps of clothes which I was sure was dirty, standing by the corner of a girl, who couldn't be more than 17 years of age.
Was she going to wash all that? I thought, still waiting for an answer from my captor.
"Clothes of pack members. I think I should explain your work better. You would be at the beck and call of the members of this pack, the Omegas included. You do whatever they ask you to do, and of course no payment is involved. That's the cost of you being alive as a rogue in the pack." He replied, staring at me keenly.
So practically, I'm a slave then.
"Is that all there is?" I asked, referring to the throng of activities going on before me.
"Not really. There's the farm work. Some members of the pack prefer to grow their own food, so most times, they get the prisoners to work in their farms for them." He answered, with a shrug.
Farm work? In these modern times? This pack was really crazy. I thought.
"Anything else?" I asked, putting up a strong face, while already fainting on the inside. How was I going to cope here? I just have to though, to survive. And then I remembered my parents and sister. Where were they? Were they alive? And if they were, how were they coping? How were the other fifty rogues coping?
Well, I wouldn't know the answers to this if I'm dead. I have to stay alive, no matter what.
"I don't think so. Remember you could be asked for anything here. I will just advice you to be quick witted and careful, submissive when necessary." Leonard answered, pulling me away from my thoughts.
"And water rushes from that tap over there." He cited with an amused look on his face.
"Okay, thank you." I muttered, grateful that he had spared some time to make me understand, and of course the water. It made me wonder if he would have done the same, if I had a wolf and wasn't attacked by seizures.
"You're welcome, although I don't understand why you're thanking me. I'm not saving you from this work hole, I just told you what I told the others on their arrival. No difference." He said.
I had a feeling it wasn't so.
"About the attire..." I said, dropping the statement halfway, while looking at him quizzically, knowing he would understand.
"The taskmaster here would give it to you. You wear it always, except perhaps when you retire back to your cell." He stated, looking ahead.
"Oh, here comes your taskmaster. Remember, don't question or argue with her ever." Leonard said, causing me to look away from him, to the duo coming towards us, although still at quite a far distance.
A beautiful tall woman, and a….
Oh my God! I shouted in my mind, almost peeing on my pants. The bulky man. The evil bulky man from last night was with her. I shivered uncontrollably, trying to contain and stop the seizures which I could sense was surfacing.
"Hey, pull yourself together. What's the problem?" Leonard asked, staring at me blankly.
" That man…" I stuttered, still racked up by chills. "Is he also a taskmaster here?" I asked, breaking my gaze from the duo, looking everywhere, but at them.
"No. But he does come around sometimes." He replied blandly.
And I could swear that there was a note of contempt in his voice.
I don’t think the bulky man was in his good books. It brought me a small relief, for reasons I couldn't explain.
"Okay." I said, slightly relieved at his answer. I couldn't bare seeing the man every day.
As they neared close to us, I could see the features of the woman clearly. She had good curves quite alright, but her eyes stood out. They were cold; cold dark green orbs, a good fit for the evil man who was smirking at me.
A smirk that gave me chills.
"A new one?" The woman asked Leonard, when she got to us.
"Yeah, arrived last night." Leonard replied, holding her cold gaze.
" I see." She said, trailing her eyes over me, from head to toe, till I felt naked and scared.
"So, the slave clothes..." Leonard was saying, when she cut him off.
"I think there is one left, at the house." She said, finally taking her eyes from me.
My sharp intake of breath in relief as she diverted her gaze from me, was cut off when my eyes ran into that of the bulky strange man.
He was looking at me lustfully, and I knew that he was going to be a big problem. A very big problem.
I thought of perhaps telling Leonard later, but I wasn't sure if he would still give me audience in front of his pack members. After all, who would want to be associated with a slave. And I didn't think he could save me from his fellow pack member too; I was a rogue.
But then, I resolved to take his advice even as I darted my eyes away from the man; to be careful and quick-witted. I would avoid the strange man at all costs.
"Hello, what's your name?" The woman, now my taskmaster, asked; interrupting my thoughts.
I blinked my eyes repeatedly, as I stared at Leonard. The quizzical look on his face told me that it wasn't the first time that the woman had called for my attention. I had spaced out again.
"My name is Olivera." I answered, putting up a strong front, determined to survive whatever she might throw my way; at least to see Jeremy again.
"Follow me then, Olivera." She said, before walking off.
When they clambered to the surface of the ground, away from the lab, the girls breathed in relief, freed from the nightmares they had been subjected to for years. It was then that Olivera took a blood bag from the polythene in her arms, feeling better in the night hair, and took a sip, wary of how the blood would taste. She had heard Jacob talking about the heady feeling, worse if it came from an ancient. But it still hadn’t prepared her for the kick of pleasure. She found herself moaning as she greedily drank the blood, until she drained the bag. When she was done, she looked at the others. They were staring at her with unexplainable emotions on their faces. At least it wasn’t disgust. Olivera thought with a shrug, before handing the bag over to Miriam. When her friend hesitated in collecting it, she piqued an eyebrow. “You want to do the dismantling of the structure, without alerting the soldiers?” Miriam huffed, and took the bag. As much as she had great magic, she didn’t want
The first thing Olivera saw when she stepped into the hole where the passageway stopped was the largeness of the space, which could contain more than five thousand people. Then she saw the tubes, the boiling liquids and the lab rats. A modern lab.‘Where are you?’ She asked the girl, needing to get out of here; it was making her nauseous. Ten more minutes here, and she might be vomiting all over the place. And there was the fact that she didn’t know when the soldiers would be waking up. ‘At the far end of the cave…’Olivera nodded as if the girl was speaking to her physically. And gesturing with her head, for Miriam to follow her, she sauntered toward the end of the hall, making sure not to look at the tubes housing different organs and parts of an organism. What the hell! She screamed mentally when she saw a full brain at a table which looked like a butchering table. “Oh, my god…what are they doing here?” She heard Miriam ask beside her and sighed. Whose brain was that? A human
Miriam’s heart pounded erratically as she followed Olivera, who seemed very confident on what she was doing, and on where she was going. Three times she thought of grabbing Olivera and walking away from the region, but she also knew it would have been a futile attempt. Her friend’s mind was already made up. She watched as the latter walked past the last barrack, and stopped by a pole, the only pole in the backyard. Behind it were the gates towering them. They have come to a dead end. “Olivera, there is nothing here? Are you sure this girl is real?” Olivera gave Miriam no answer, instead she concentrated on looking around her, waiting for the signal. When she got nothing, she traced the vibration residue, touching the girl’s mind. A jerk in her mind path told her that the girl was surprised she had breached her mind guards. But should she be surprised? Or was something else at play here? ‘Where next should I go?’ She continued, because she knew she was at the right place, that t
“How are we getting past that?” Olivera asked Miriam as they came to stand before a huge gate that towered many feet over them. She could now see why Miriam had wanted the journey to be done in the privacy of the night. As much as she could see—as they had zapped to this point—this area wasn’t open to the city dwellers, only to the special few. She looked around her again. Barracks with soldiers sleeping within. None was even standing guard at the gates. She didn’t believe such a thing would exist at this time. City gates. Where did it lead? She piqued an eyebrow when Miriam smirked. What was the latter thinking? “As if you don’t already know…which other way, if not by mist…there is no way I am climbing that. I don’t think I am ready to fly with you above it…” Miriam spoke, covering the distance between them, and wrapping her arms around Olivera, her mouth fixed in a pout. Olivera shook her head, yet unable to stop the smile that cascaded her lips. It seemed that her friend was g
A knock woke Olivera up from her deep slumber. After bathing and eating off the snacks she had bought earlier in the day, from the shops in the new city, she had fallen like a log of wood to the bed, and hadn’t even stirred after that. Still groggy from the smooth sleep, she let her hand search for her phone which was the only thing that had gone to bed with her, should Miriam call for her. She peered at the screen. It was one in the morning. It was time then. She yawned like a hyena, causing Miriam to chuckle from behind the door. The chuckle dissipated the remaining fog fostering around her head. Taking a deep breath in, she stood up from the bed, flung a sheet around her naked body, and walked to the door. When she opened it, she saw that Miriam was alone, and carrying a tray of steaming food. “You are a lifesaver.” She muttered, opening the door wider for her friend to come in; the rumbling sounds that emitted from her stomach in agreement with her. Miriam chuckled again, an
“Where are we heading next?” Olivera asked Miriam immediately they stepped out of the borders of the town, into a city sprawling with people. After they had left the males who had tried to detain them because of her eating habits, they had walked to the largest building in the town, because if Clooney was a big name, it was probably because the man was rich. They hadn’t been right in their deduction, but they had at least gotten away from the unsettling males. Olivera had taken her friend behind the building, and had quickly switched to her mist form, turning Miriam into the same, and together they had zapped the remainder of the city without stopping, till they were out of it, till they were in a new one which looked more modernized than the previous. She looked at Miriam, who was staring at the city with artificial skylights, and wondered if her friend had ever been here before. “I never get over the culture shock, you know, seeing the drabness of the town we just left. The cont