Quaranteam - Cover

Quaranteam

Copyright© 2026 by CorruptingPower

Chapter 34

Science Fiction Sex Story: Chapter 34 - When a global pandemic begins to wipe out all the men on the planet, a C-list fantasy author stumbles into a government research program designed to help keep men alive by partnering them up with as many women as possible.

Caution: This Science Fiction Sex Story contains strong sexual content, including Fa/Fa   Mult   Romantic   BiSexual   Heterosexual   Fiction   Rags To Riches   Science Fiction   Post Apocalypse   Harem   Polygamy/Polyamory   Interracial   Oriental Female   Hispanic Female   Indian Female   Anal Sex   Cream Pie   Exhibitionism   First   Oral Sex   Squirting   Politics  

November 15th, 2020

Uncharacteristically, Andy woke up at around 6 AM, noticing that Fiona wasn’t in the bed with all of them. He’d suspected that both she and Moira would wake up sometime in the middle of the night, but he’d hoped that they’d still sleep in some and get accustomed to local time a bit more. Fi, it seemed, couldn’t do that.

As carefully as he could, Andy extricated himself from the pile of naked female bodies around him and slipped out of bed. When it had been just him, Ash, Lauren, and Niko, in the early days, anyone trying to leave the bed would wake everyone up, but now, after the last month or so of constant additions, people had grown much more acclimated to people moving, sliding in and out of the bed during the night without waking up.

Currently the bed held Moira, Niko, Sarah, Emily, Tala, Sheridan, Lauren, and Jade. He’d been a little surprised the night before when both Sheridan and Lauren had crawled into the bed as everyone was shutting down for the night, but both women insisted they each wanted their friend to have a familiar face nearby when they woke up in the house for the first time. He said he completely understood and respected that.

He grabbed one his big t-shirts, this one for the Chapterhouse album “Whirlpool,” pulled on some boxers and some sweatpants and went to go find where Fiona had gotten herself to.

Andy didn’t have far to look. When he pulled the shirt on, he could see motion on the covered balcony just outside of the master bedroom, and figured it had to be her.

He opened the sliding door as quietly as he possible, hearing the sound of heavy raindrops falling just feet away from the balcony, the wind not heavy enough to force them beneath the overhang. Fiona was wearing a cable knit sweater and Lululemon yoga pants, leaning against the railing, it still cool enough outside for her breath to leave a telltale cloud in the air in front of her.

“This is California,” she said, her voice laying plain her amusement with the weather. “I was promised sunshine and warm weather all the damn time.”

“It’s raining,” he said, moving to stand beside her. “And we need it, so don’t jinx it and make it stop. Besides, it was raining the day you asked me and Xander to move in with you.”

She laughed a little bit, shaking her head slightly. “I can’t believe you remember that,” she said. “And, for the record, I asked you to move in with me, and I knew that Xander came as part of the deal at the time, because you weren’t going to leave him hanging. How’s he doing, anyway? I haven’t talked to him since college.”

“You can ask him yourself when he gets here in a while.”

Fi turned to look at him, arching one of her impeccably well-kept eyebrows in his direction. “He is not moving into this house, Andrew. This isn’t the old days.”

Andy laughed, shaking his head. “I didn’t mean here here, as in Rook Manor, but he’s moving into New Eden, so he won’t be too far away.” He went to slide an arm around her waist, just a little hesitation in his motion, but she immediately slid in firmly against him, pressing her body against his.

“I knew that, Andy. I was fucking with you. Jesus, you’re an idiot sometimes,” she sighed with a wide smile on her face. “It’s lucky you’re so goddamn cute.”

He rolled his eyes a little bit. “Nobody thinks I’m cute but you.”

“Bullshit. Moira thinks you’re cute.”

Fine. Nobody but you and Moira.”

And Niko and Emily and...”

“Okay, okay, I get the point,” he laughed, leaning down to kiss her forehead. “God, I missed you, Fi.”

“Me too. So next time, maybe call, huh?”

He smirked. “You’re gonna hold this over my head for a while, aren’t you?”

She giggled a little, nodding. “Oh yeah, bigtime. But you know me. I’ll get bored with it at some point, and tease you about something new, once I have something new.” Her right hand rested on his left arm, which was folded and pressed against the railing. “How the hell did we get to here, Andy?”

“I mean, there’s all of my life before May of this year, and then there’s this year, and one of them is a lot more boring than the other, but I’ll tell you all about both, given enough time. I am sorry I didn’t try and find you after you cut me out, but to be fair, I didn’t think you wanted me to.”

She nodded, giving a little shrug. “I was angry, and I was dumb, Andy. It wasn’t a good combination. And when I was old enough to know better, I was too scared, thinking you’d just moved on and didn’t ever think about me anymore.”

He had a short bark of laughter, shaking his head. “Yeah, get that fucking idea right out of your head now. After we split, I only had one serious girlfriend, and that was because I was comparing them to you all the time and nobody ever lived up to you.”

“Not even the one serious girlfriend?”

Especially not the one serious girlfriend, but at that point, I thought maybe it was me, and I was the one doing things wrong, so I stuck with it longer than I should’ve. You’ll end up meeting her at some point around New Eden and then you’ll ask yourself how she and I ever dated as long as we did.”

“That bad, huh?” she said, giving his arm a squeeze. She always knew exactly the level of physical touch he needed to feel reassured or put at ease.

“That bad and a whole hell of a lot worse.”

That hung in the air for a minute or two with nobody saying anything.

“You seem to have done alright for yourself this year, though,” she teased. “Two actresses, two cheerleaders, an Irish lass, an Aussie, a Native knockout, a couple of athletes, an Indian knockout and your own personal staff including an honest to God French maid. I’m shocked you could find time to pencil me and Moira in.”

“I certainly never intended–”

She reached a fingertip up to his lips to stop him from talking. “I spent a great deal of time between my arrival at the base and my injection with the serum talking about you with Niko, and she assures me that you’ve done everything you can to be the best man anyone here can ask for, so whatever you intended, it doesn’t really matter anymore, does it? What matters now is that you’ve got a wonderful, if a bit immense, family, and that you wanted me and Moira to be a part of it.”

“Speaking of Moira, how long have you two been together?”

Fi grinned, leaning her head against his chest. “About four years now. It’s the reason I didn’t put anything about my relationship status on my Facebook page. Didn’t want Mom and Dad throwing a shitfit about it. Well, mostly Mom, I think.”

“So, it’s been serious for a while now.”

“Very,” she said. “And she’s the one who’s been bitching at me to reach out to you for the last couple of years, so don’t worry about her being jealous of you or anything. On our way here, she was telling me that it’s felt like the entire time we’ve been together, there’s been a part of me missing, and how she was sure that you had the missing part of me. I’m surprised you never reached out to her.”

“I never got her contact information all those years ago,” he chuckled. “Hell, I didn’t even get her last name. I still didn’t know it until Niko told me yesterday.”

“Oh my god, really?” Fi giggled. “I guess that makes sense, because I know you would’ve remembered it if you’d ever learned it. You loved that damn silly movie.”

“Madam, I will not permit you to impugn ’Highlander’ on these grounds.”

“Oh hush,” she said. “But yes, you’re going to be taking a bride from the Clan MacLeod, but there cannot only be one. You owe me a ring as well, mister.”

“You think that’ll satiate the bloodlust of Mr. & Mrs. Smith?” he said, referring to her parents.

“They already know you’re back in this picture and are ecstatic,” she said, kissing his cheek. “I mean, Mom’s a little less thrilled with how many wives you’re going to have, but I told her with all the deaths, that’s the way it’s going to work in this country for our generation. She’s still wrapping her head around it.”

“Everyone in your family okay? All your brothers?”

“All three were smart and locked down immediately, so everyone’s okay. I’m glad you asked.”

“And Moira’s family?”

“Her mom’s all that’s left, and Scotland’s not had a lot of problems with DuoHalo, since they seemed to take lockdown extremely seriously in the smaller villages. You can talk to her about her mom when she’s up. It’ll mean a lot to her that you’re asking.”

“How did you two hook up the second time around?”

Fiona sighed again, slumping into his body a little more. “How much of my writing career did you follow after we split?”

“Most of it?” he chuckled. “I set up a Google Alert to notify me whenever your byline appeared.”

“You stalker,” she giggled, waiting just the perfect beat before speaking again. “It’s okay; I had one set up on you as well. Uh, two, actually, one for your real name and one for your pen name, once I read an article about that. Thanks for making that hard on me.”

“I didn’t expect anyone to be following my fiction writing, Fi. But carry on with your story.”

“Do you remember that story I wrote about about five years back on the Syrian civil war?”

“I remember you wrote a whole series of them. What, seven or eight different pieces?”

She smiled up at him. “Gold star for robot boy,” she said with a smirk. “You really were paying attention. That’s nice to know. Anyway, the one about the Doctors Without Borders that were crossing into the firefights to provide medical aid to civilians caught in the crossfire.”

“Oh yeah,” he said. “Those people sounded amazingly brave.”

“Moira was one of those people,” Fi said. “Running out into firefights, scooping up kids and pulling shrapnel out of them. One of the bravest people I’d ever met, but she’s been doing it for a few years, and it was starting to take a real toll on her, so I invited her to come and visit DC. A few weeks later she’d gotten a job at a hospital in Georgetown. A couple of months later we started dating. Half a year later, she moved in with me. About two years ago, we decided we both wanted to get the fuck out of DC forever but weren’t sure where to go.”

“Around the time you added me and Xander on Facebook.”

“Actually, I have a confession to make – Moira sent you the friend request from my account,” she sighed. “I was convinced you didn’t even think about me anymore, so one day when we were fighting, she just sat down at my computer, found you on Facebook and sent you the friend request before I could stop her.”

“And then you and I played the biggest, dumbest game of virtual chicken ever, waiting for the other one to reach out first,” he sighed. “God, we’re both fucking stupid some days.”

She giggled once more. “I think since we were both being stupid about it, it cancels each other out. Some, anyway. But then I got this message from Captain Linda Hayes in the Air Force, telling me that a request had been put in for me to be paired up with you out here in California, if I was interested in that.”

“Well,” he said, teasing her back, “you did say you wanted me to reach out...”

“I did, and you agreed to my condition, because there was no way I was coming without bringing Moira.”

“Thanks for that.”

“I did my homework first, though,” she chided. “Even after I’d accepted, I still had about a day to change my mind, so I reached out to Xander and spent about five hours talking to him on the phone.”

“I thought you said you hadn’t talked to him?”

“Yeah, well, I was lying about that I guess, but most of the time I was talking to him, I was asking about you, so I didn’t hear much how he’s been.”

“Oh, and that was enough to convince you?”

“Well, he answered a lot of questions, but the only thing I really cared about was if you were still, y’know, you. Doing good deeds without thinking too much about them in advance, trying to help every lost soul you bump into. He said of course you were still you, and probably even more you now than you’d ever been.” She paused for a minute, then continued. “He actually told me all about the poker game, and how you were just trying to help one of Niko’s friends and had to do your best to save nearly every damn person that you could, and the more about it he told me, the more I knew that you hadn’t changed a bit. Still jumping face first into the firing line, just like Moira.”

“I wish I could say I’d gotten a little wiser over the years, but I don’t know if that’s true.”

“If Niko, Ash and Emily are to be believed, I’d say so,” she said. “They certainly grilled the hell out of us before they were okay letting us into the household. Emily’s quite the little spitfire, considering how short of a time she’s known you. Very protective of you, although maybe that’s as much protective of Sarah as it is of you.”

“Yeah, that’s definitely a possibility,” Andy admitted. “Sarah’s so insanely optimistic about things, maybe she needs Em to keep her down to earth. And the poker game caused lots of ripples out here, so everyone was a little on edge about all of it. Well, that and the fact that I just made the decision to invite you entirely on my own without talking to anyone in the household first. I mean, they’d told me to make sure I invited someone of my own choosing, but I think they thought I would’ve talked it out with them a little bit beforehand.”

“And you didn’t?”

“Didn’t need to.”

“That confident, were we?” she chuckled. “I see we haven’t entirely shed the overconfidence problem we had back in high school.”

“It was me taking a bit of agency back in my life, Fi. And while it surprised everyone a bit around here, I don’t think anyone really complained, other than they hated waiting to learn more. I just figured, if you said no, there was no reason getting everyone excited for nothing.”

“Did you honestly think I would’ve said no?”

Andy shrugged a little. “It’d been over a decade, Fi. I figured anything was possible.”

 
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