Help! My Male Employees Are Having Babies!-Chapter 147: Going Live
Ruth was a reporter from the olden days, still sharp as a tack—she had all of her wits about her.
"Ruth, did you realize that you had Genmen living right down the hall?" Lori asked.
"Well my goodness, yes I did. I remember the first time I recognized the touch of his hand when he handed me my sack that I dropped." Ruth’s eyes grew distant with memory. "He was never going to hurt anybody. Genmen are capable of that—they’re peaceful and pleasurable people. I was never concerned for my safety. In fact, I knew that they would put their life on the line for my safety, forgetting all of theirs. I’ve known that for over 50 years when I met the first one at the crash site."
"So, Ruth, you had interaction with Genmen before?"
"Yes, I have. I was attached to a reporting team that went out to the crash site. We were bound by rules that we could not report anything that we saw, but I’m old now and I don’t give a damn about no government rules." Ruth’s voice carried decades of suppressed truth. 𝓯𝙧𝙚𝙚𝔀𝒆𝓫𝓷𝙤𝓿𝒆𝙡.𝒄𝙤𝓶
"What did you exactly see at that crash that changed you in the way you felt about another species here, particularly the Genmen?"
Ruth took a deep breath before beginning. "Oh, there were so many dead bodies everywhere, Lori. Cages that were crushed containing several Genmen at a time. Some of the cages had come open and the men were injured—some of them very badly—and they didn’t survive. But they were all locked in collars around their necks, still in collars with chains that went down to their wrists and shackles on their feet. And bellies that were swollen so bad."
She paused, her hands trembling slightly. "It wasn’t until I happened upon one who was struggling to give birth after the crash that I realized these weren’t fat people—these were all pregnant Genmen. I helped bring a baby Genmen into this world, and I believe it was the first one born on this planet. I handed him to his birthing parent who let him nurse as he lay dying."
"Other Genmen took over when the parent finally perished. There were evil women there too—they were screaming and hollering to round up the stock. They needed the stock for the new planet that they were headed to, not to let any of them get away." Ruth’s voice grew bitter. "These were the ruling class females—they were horrible bitches. Our government didn’t help anybody really. The only thing they did was they helped those evil bitches lock up those poor gentlemen. There were a few of the outlying rural areas that had transports and picked up as many as they could that were able to live, and they transported them back to farms and nursed them to good health."
"I left and went out to a friend of mine and convinced him to assist in any way he could. He took several hundred in and placed them on his farm. They were workers—they helped him every way they could. They were strong, they were very intelligent and gentle."
Ruth continued, her voice growing heavy with remembered pain. "They always asked for permission to do anything because in the ship, locked up in cages, they were slaves of the females. The only time they were removed was to work or to procreate with a female who would come into her cycle and she wished to be bred by a certain Genmen. And what they did to that poor thing after he got through was horrible. They had this silver pistol-looking thing that they attached to his male anatomy and removed his testicles. He didn’t feel anything because whatever it did to him, it cut them off and removed them, and he was no longer able to produce children. But he was used as a broodmare by any and all."
"The females, slowly realizing that they didn’t have any control—they couldn’t get off this planet—faded into the background and moved in with the human males to procreate to carry forth their population. But with so few of them, who knows if any of them have survived."
Ruth’s expression softened as she shifted to more recent memories. "I went over to the boys’ condo as their guest on several occasions. They were so happy together—they knew that they didn’t have to hide themselves from me because I told them exactly who I was, what I knew, and who they were. And I thought that they were fabulous together."
"When I heard about Alec, it broke my heart. I know that Arlen will grieve for him forever, just as everybody else does that loses a loved one to a tragic situation. But the baby that he carries will be a very lucky young man because he has one hell of a dad." Her voice grew fierce. "I hope that the young men who did this pay dearly. They never need to see the light of day—I don’t care whose children they are and how much power they have in the government. They need to pay for their crime."
Lori ended the interview thanking Ms. Mankiewicz for her truthfulness and her informative insight into the crash that happened over 50 years ago of a slave ship containing the 50,000 survivors of Genmen who were now their neighbors and friends.
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Zack approached Jonathan for his help in contacting Lori Alston for an interview with Arlen. Since Jonathan was in the business of publishing and worked as a professional model, maybe he could help.
Jonathan didn’t have a problem with the request. He made two phone calls and the interview was set—she should be there the next day at 10 AM with a limited crew, just her and the cameraman. No one else would be brought, no one else should be on the interview. She wanted to do a live feed that way nothing could be altered or edited because there would be no time delay—it would be live. This wasn’t Lori’s first go around the block, and with a senator’s son involved as the one that killed Alec, she wanted to get this story out to the public. It would be a breaking live feed special report. Unless they shut the entire system down, there was no way that one person could shut it off because it would be broadcast simultaneously on all channels.
Robbie wasn’t so sure about the camera. He was glad that his father-in-law was there with them and would be there throughout the entire interview in case Lori had any questions about the Z1. Robbie would do this for his son, his grandson, and for Alec—never to know the joy of his child growing up.
Lori started the interview by introducing herself to the audience and then her guest.