Beyond the Interregnum

The Other World 11

eXtasy Books

Heat Rating: Sweet
Word Count: 47,146
0 Ratings (0.0)

Aayat Athar finds herself in an alternate dimension. She is saved by cousins Feedaa and Sae Sae, who inform her that she has landed in Faejenda, a city occupied by Djinns. They offer to help her find a way back. Sae Sae’s father was a researcher who has crossed the interregnum—the pathway joining the dimensions—and is now stranded in the human world. By helping Aayat, Sae Sae wants to reunite with his father.

A few Djinns in Faejenda, looking to open a permanent portal to the human world, are declared unruly by the government, and live in a community outside the gates of the city. 

Feedaa’s mother, Errumm, is the district head, and along with her team, she is planning an attack on the Djinns who love humans side. She is aided by Tenzen, a recently transferred, and his secret partner.

Aayat, Sae Sae, and Feedaa begin exploring the disappearances of others to understand the ways the crossover works. Meanwhile, Sae Sae secretly meets the human lovers, who ask him to bring them the details of the siege planned by Errumm and her team in return for the information about the interregnum.

Beyond the Interregnum
0 Ratings (0.0)

Beyond the Interregnum

The Other World 11

eXtasy Books

Heat Rating: Sweet
Word Count: 47,146
0 Ratings (0.0)
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Cover Art by Martine Jardin
Excerpt

Aayat looked at the ceiling with half-sleepy eyes, wondering if the day had dawned. Sucking in a sharp breath, she traced the bed to find her mobile phone to check the time. She was not ready to wake up yet. The fabric felt peculiar as she swept her fingers over it. Her skin sent an alien sensation to her brain. She had never touched something like that before.

Aayat snatched her hand away in horror. 

It banged against the frame of the bed.

She bolted upright. My bed doesn't have a frame. The sudden rush of blood to her head made her dizzy. Sleep vanished from her charcoal black eyes in an instant. She blinked them repeatedly to adjust to the prevailing semi-darkness and peered around.

She was in a wide cavity-like room with no windows. Countless devices sat around her. Some of them beeped and blinked, their monitors displaying indecipherable content. The absence of proper light made it look like she was in an ill-maintained hospital, but it didn’t smell like one―no pungent smell of chorine or bleach or blood. In fact, the room seemed neutral in that respect, no smell at all. Aayat focused her concentration on listening to the noises in her vicinity, but other than the beeping, there were none―no distant chatter, no click-clack of shoes, no sound of any movement whatsoever.

The air around her felt strange―sterile―as if she had been suspended in a vacuum.

Goosebumps stood out from her skin as panic rose in her throat. Where exactly am I?

Shaking the fear that had engulfed her being, calming her fiercely thumping heart, Aayat gathered her wits. She had to get out of there. With trembling legs, she got up from the bed and leaped towards the entrance, but weak as she was, she stumbled and fell on the floor. Somewhere an alarm blared loudly, and someone ran in. 

Strong hands picked her up and placed her on the bed again. “Don't try to move,” a robotic voice said, booming across the room.

Aayat raised her head. A tall girlish-looking creature with a slightly crooked nose and long cylindrical limbs smiled back at her. “Hello, I am Feedaa.”

It has a name?

“Are you all right? You look like you have seen a ghost. The concern underlying the creature’s robotic voice confused Aayat further.

She kept silent, looking at the creature with narrowed eyes.

“Say something.” The creature prodded her and said, “Can you speak? I hope you speak.”

“What are you?” Aayat moved towards the edge of the bed.

“Who, the correct word is who.” The creature corrected Aayat in the manner of a grammar teacher teaching her pupil different parts of speech.

“Huh?” Aayat looked at it, bewildered. Her breath became shallower. She swallowed with great difficulty, the dryness in her throat becoming imminent.

“You should ask who you are and not what... And I already told you I am Feedaa.” The creature placed its hands on its hips and tilted its head. 

“Not your name, I am asking what are you―robot? Humanoid? Or a new invention by some crazy scientist?” Aayat eyed the bizarre creature with suspicion. It was tall—about six feet, with turquoise-coloured eyes, full lips, skin that resembled that of humans, and no hair on its head. It smiled at her with what looked like genuine affection. 

“What's a humanoid?” the creature came closer and asked.

“Where am I?” Aayat inched further away, maintaining a distance of few feet between them.

“In my cousin's lab.”

“Why?”

“Because we brought you here,” the robotic creature replied, shrugging its broad shoulders.

“How can you have a cousin?” Aayat squinted her eyes.

“Why can't I?” Its words sounded more like banter than a response to someone's question.

The urge to hit that strange thing swelled in Aayat’s mind. “I need to leave,” she said, placing her feet on the floor in urgency.

“No, no, no, you can't.” The creature placed its hands on Aayat’s shoulders, applying great pressure to keep her seated. 

“Why?” Aayat widened her eyes, crushed under its weight. Was she being held hostage? This could not be. She was no one important―just a regular scholar who had shifted to Dehradun a few weeks back. She hadn't completed any worthwhile research yet, nor was her mentor working on a secret project that she knew of. She was no rich man's daughter, either. 

Absentmindedly, Aayat lifted her hand to scratch her head, but the creature shouted, “Don’t. The detectors attached to your scalp will fall off. As it is, we had a lot of trouble attaching them because of the outgrowth.”

“Why would you do that? Why? And what, what are you trying to achieve?” Aayat ran her long fingers through her hair frantically, trying to dislodge the detectors. They could not experiment on her without her consent. She was not a lab rat.

“Hold, hold. What are you trying to do? You cannot do that.” The creature grabbed her hands in one swift motion and tugged them away.

Aayat struggled to reclaim her hands―she twisted and twirled with all her might, but she was no match to the creature’s strength. The dimly lit room turned darker before her eyes. Her brain stopped responding for a few seconds, directing all its effort to prevent her system from collapsing. 

Gradually the creature loosened its grip and brought a chair near Aayat's bed.

“Breathe… Breathe... Why are you so scared? I am not going to harm you,” it said, trying to soothe her.

What's happening? Where am I? Why am I here? Who are you? What do you want? Aayat’s mind swirled with questions.

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