Milijun
Laura is willing to do whatever it takes for her son. When aliens kidnap
Jason, it’s going to take a lot more than a mother’s love to get him
back. After infiltrating a military research base, Laura discovers a
terrifying secret: their plans to impregnate women with alien DNA.
Jason, the mothers-to-be, and herself. But she
quickly realizes the aliens have their own mission for her, too. Soon
she faces a choice, take a chance at an impossible escape
or accept the aliens’ vision of a new humanity.
Milijun is the first installment of an action-packed
sci-fi
alien invasion story. If you like tales of first contact, secret
military operations, and the people caught in the middle, then you’ll
love Clayton Graham’s fast-paced sci-fi thrill ride.
future of evolution.
Jenna – Indie Book Reviewers
scientific foundation, in the tradition of Asimov, Niven, or Heinlein.”
youngster growing up in the cobbled streets of Stockport, UK,
Clayton Graham read a lot of Science Fiction. He loved the ‘old
school’ masters such as HG Wells, Jules Verne, Isaac Asimov andJohn Wyndham. As he left those formative years behind, he penned
short stories when he could find a rare quiet moment amidst life’s
usual distractions.
who worked in structural design and research, Clayton has always had
an interest in Science Fiction and where it places humankind within a
universe we are only just starting to understand.
world, and is a member of Australian Geographic.
his
first novel. Second novel, Saving Paludis, will be published early
2018. They are light years from each other, but share the future
adventures of mankind in an expansive universe as a common theme.
comfort would allow. Jason, emotionally exhausted, was asleep in the other bed and for the
first time in many hours she had the luxury of undisturbed time to think the day’s events
through. They had called a taxi from Robert’s house and directed it back to camp. Having
found Jason, she had no wish to chase into Caiguna and risk further confrontation with the
police, Janice Mepunga in particular. There was just no forgiving the policewoman for
leaving her stranded at Robert’s house with a laser-seared dead body on her hands.
Some semblance of inner strength returned. They would have to see Mepunga
tomorrow, of course, and learn what happened to Bradley Robert or, more accurately, how he
had ended up with a hole drilled in his chest.
Careful not to wake Jason, she made her way outside, in search of fresh air. Looking
up at the darkened sky she saw a pale moon rising and what could only be Venus shining
brightly. The air held a slight chill, and she shivered involuntarily.
Laura scanned the sky, half expecting something to emerge from the star-pricked
canopy and descend upon her with mischief in its heart. What was it Jason had said?
Sometimes when it touched me I didn’t even feel it. She didn’t know what to believe but
whatever it was, Janice Mepunga was the next step.
They had found the camera in a kitchen drawer, but it contained no record of Jason’s
pictures. Robert had obviously removed the stick. Or, of course, the alien had. Surprisingly
enough, observing Jason’s face at that moment of disappointment served to remove her
doubts concerning his version of events. She had totally believed, if only for a few seconds,
that an alien being had emerged from Bradley Robert and examined her son.
Tomorrow they would see Mepunga. And maybe get some answers.***
At the Eucla defence base the only source of light in the room came from a large wall screen
that portrayed the death throes of choppa flight 209 from Cape Pasley to Cocklebiddy on the
night of 17 January 2179. In the room were Assistant Commissioner Ray Parlane of the West
Australian Police, Major General Sebastian Ord, Air Vice-Marshal Jean Pescos and Sergeant
David Jameson Cooke of the Australian Defence Force. The whole flight cam episode had
run for no more than three minutes, and now the group were digesting, and struggling to
understand, what they had just seen.
“At least it ties in with the radar records,” Jean Pescos stated, a frown ageing her
otherwise smooth, olive complexion. “Definitely two …” she struggled for the right word,
“… attackers.”
Sebastian Ord raised his brow at the use of the word. “Could it have been an accident,
a collision?”
Cooke snorted and said, “No sir. The radar shows two objects peeling away from the
main group. Definitely intentional.”
“I agree,” Jean Pescos ventured. “Definitely intentional. Analysis of the short flight
path they took indicates an optimum trajectory for intersection with the choppa.”
“You mean it shows intelligence.” Ray Parlane looked incredulous. Short, with
luxurious eyebrows, he had obtained his rank by being down to earth and taking no nonsense.
This whole episode did not sit well on his shoulders.
“Perhaps even more to the point, what the hell are the damn things?” Sebastian Ord
asked. Tall and wiry with piercing blue eyes, he wore his neatly pressed uniform like a glove.
He started the video again and they watched as bright moonlight exposed a flock of large
creatures moving through the night sky. The choppa had hovered no more than two hundred
metres away, and its lights had picked out two of the objects breaking away to veer towards
the camera. They looked large, too large for any known species of bat. Strong white beams
highlighted their outstretched wings as they homed in on their target, revealing thin
reticulated arms as they grew closer. Large reflective eyes dominated the screen for a
moment and then focus was lost as the creatures appeared to collide intentionally with the
choppa’s canopy.
Ord ran the video back to show the best zoomed shot of the creatures as they
approached Pilot James Vanelli’s machine. He shook his head slowly. “Hands up those who
have seen animals like that before?” he said sardonically. “We need to let an expert look, but
I wouldn’t be confident of an identification.”
“And don’t forget the radar showed them descending from at least ten thousand
metres,” Cooke added. “Air is thin up there.”
The group grew silent as Parlane switched on the light and turned off the wall screen.
“So, what happens now?” he asked nobody in particular.
“One. Expert opinion on identification,” Ord replied, counting off on his fingers.
“Two. Find out if anyone else saw them that night.” He looked at everyone in turn before
raising a third finger. “Three. Try to find them.”
“Then what, after we find them?” Jean Pescos asked.
Parlane was swift to answer. “We must eradicate. Can’t have them bringing down air
traffic.”
Ord couldn’t help smiling. “Let’s give the scientists a say. If they’re a rare or unheard
of species it could be a different anecdote.”
The room became quiet again and Cooke stretched uncomfortably in his chair. He
wasn’t convinced. Other than Vanelli, there were no bodies at the crash site. And the aerial
attackers didn’t look like anything he had seen before; alien almost. Though nobody, of
course, had the balls to say so.
***
The road ribbon system took them directly to the front of the Caiguna police station, seaward
of the Eyre Highway along dusty, unkempt side streets. Mother and son dismounted as one
and strode resolutely up the path and through darkened glass doors. They found themselves in
a featureless foyer where a single three-metre plant was placed strategically in the middle of a
brown synthetic marble floor. A long black desk stood at the far end but there was no sign of
any other exit door or, for that matter, any other person. The walls were sky blue, the ceiling
white, and the effect austere.
Laura approached the desk and saw a white button labelled Press for immediate
attention. She did as requested. A flat screen rose from the desktop and the face of Janice
Mepunga stared out at them. An aura of total distrust immediately gripped Laura’s mind,
reinforced by unwelcome apprehension, but the image on the screen flashed a convivial smile
and said, “Oh hello you two. I’ve been expecting you. Just one moment.”
To the right of the desk, a mechanism hummed and a well-disguised door opened
within the blue wall to reveal a brightly lit office beyond.
“Come through. Come through,” Janice Mepunga called.
Jason seized his mother’s hand and looked at her questioningly. There was a strange
fear in his ashen face, and his eyes mirrored the foreboding that Laura felt within her own
heart.
“It’ll be fine,” Laura said quietly and gently guided him through into the inner office.
Janice instantly took the wind out of Laura’s sails by saying, “Look. I’m sorry about
yesterday. An emergency came up. I had to leave. Sorry about leaving you with Robert, too –
it was unavoidable. He tried to kill me. I knew Jason was around.” Her smile grew broader. “I
knew you would find him.”
Shaking her head, Laura said sharply, “Maybe you did, but in what condition? It was
absolutely unforgivable what you did.” She threw a challenging look at the policewoman.
“And Robert wasn’t dead when I found him.”
Janice’s face hardened and Jason noticed she slowly worked her hand down to her
pistol. “It was unavoidable,” the policewoman repeated.
“Are there any other officers here?” Laura asked.
Janice shook her head. “My partner went to Perth this morning. It’s normally pretty
quiet around here, you understand, and there’s plenty of air backup from Kalgoorlie.” She
cast a meaningful glance at her visitors before adding, “Should we require it.”
“What about a statement?” Laura asked. “Don’t you want one?”
“I certainly do,” Janice said, pointing to a terminal in the corner of her office. “Be my
guest.” She was all sweetness and roses again, in control of the situation.
While his mother typed, Jason waited his turn. He was nervous, upset about Bradley
Robert and about the loss of his photographs. His eyes hardly left Janice Mepunga, unsure in
his own heart whether the alien creature was harboured inside her or whether it had moved to
fresh pastures. On the drive to the station his mother had told him of Robert’s dying words,
and he had felt sick. He desperately wanted to know the truth but was afraid of another
confrontation. And worst of all, there was no proof of anything.
“How did the ranger threaten you?” Jason asked abruptly causing his mother to pause
her statement mid-sentence.
Mepunga glanced up, her face like stone. “He just did, and that’s enough these days.”
She gestured to Jason to sit down on the chair across the desk. “Let’s compile your statement
together while your mother finishes hers.” She initiated a recorder and leant back in her chair.
Jason shot a fleeting look at his mother and received a warning glance in return,
accompanied by a small shake of the head.
“How did you get to Robert’s house?” Janice asked.
“I was on the computer in the camp tourist centre,” Jason replied. “He knocked me
out and I awoke in a bedroom.”
Despite the recorder, Janice typed as she said, “And then what happened?”
“He made me something to eat, just eggs and toast. Then he made me shower and
took me into the basement.”
“What about his sister from next door? Did you see her at all?”
“No,” Jason said. “There was nobody else.”
Janice raised her eyebrows. “Did you try to escape?”
With a shake of his head, Jason said, “He was always in my face, and twice my size.”
“Even in the shower?”
Jason averted his eyes. “More or less.”
“He was naked when I found him,” Laura interjected. “In the basement.”
The policewoman looked hard at Jason. “Did he touch you? Molest you in any way?”
Jason bit his lip. “No, he didn’t.”
Laura stood up. “I’ve finished. It’s fairly short but to the point.”
Janice walked over and glanced down at the screen. “Not exactly flattering behaviour
on my part,” she said, pursing her lips. “My statement will give my story.”
Laura shrugged. “I’d still like to see—”
Jason interrupted her. “Can we go now, Mum? I need some air.”
Laura saw he looked pale and distressed. “I’m sorry,” she said to Janice. “Is that all
for now?”
“Sure. We have your vehicle tag. Stick around the district though.” She printed both
statements and laid them on the desk. “Just sign these for now.”
After they had signed Laura turned to leave but paused at the door. “What happened
to the body?”
“It’s been taken care of,” Janice replied. “Thanks for coming in.” It was the final
dismissal. Laura and Jason left without further discourse. They moved through the stark foyer
and once outside paused to breathe the fresh southern air, which was rapidly warming as the
sun rose higher in the sky.
“No alien for the lady,” Laura said. “Thank God you didn’t say anything about that.”
“Not to her,” Jason said, looking at his mother fearfully. “I think it’s still with her.”
***
In her office, Janice read the statements again and put them through the shredder. She stood,
swayed slightly, and pushed a floor panel with her foot to release the door into an adjacent
room. Moving through, she closed the door behind her and stared at the uniformed body of
her colleague. He was slumped face down on the desk, head resting in a pool of coagulated
blood.
Suddenly, the winged alien was outside her, standing two metres away, observing
with its head on one side. She sensed an instantaneous chill invade her body as the creature
emerged but, once free of it, Janice felt warmer and strangely fearless. No words or other
communication passed but Janice felt its mind boring into hers, trying to understand her
emotions. At least she thought she did. She didn’t really want to see it anymore, was not
interested in it at all, and wished it was light-years away.
“I’m sorry, Daniel,” she said to the motionless body of her partner. “I’m so sorry. I
really could not help it.”
A tangle of meaningless images ran through her mind, and she turned to face her
symbiotic disciple from another world. Something passed between them, intangible and
outside her scope of logical thought. She asked the question anyway.
“What do you want from me? What do you want from us?”
I enjoyed getting to know your book and thanks for the chance to win 🙂
Congrats on the tour and thanks so much for the opportunity to win. I enjoy getting to hear about new books that my family would enjoy reading.