Free short stories!

I’m not a big one for Valentine’s Day. I  think you should celebrate the love you feel for those around you every day. But tradition is tradition, so here’s some love from me to you.

 

The Love LotterShe’ll risk everything to stay in the magical town of Amores. He’ll do anything to stop her from gambling with their future.

The Love Lottery is a short story of 7,500 words.

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Out of the galactic equator comes a race intent on harvesting every last human on Earth. 2012 Winter Harvest-WEbNow on the longest night one man and one woman will find the key to prevent the human race’s extinction.

Short Story

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51y3d3clQRL._BO2,204,203,200_PIsitb-sticker-v3-big,TopRight,0,-55_SX278_SY278_PIkin4,BottomRight,1,22_AA300_SH20_OU01_Storm warning: Love is in the air on Cloud Nine.

Glynis Ahdeed is used to being pursued by every ambitious man on Cloud Nine. When tornado wrangler Roland James is nominated for the Meteorological Board, she doesn’t know if his pursuit is an attempt to ensure his position or if true love is blowing in the wind.

Short Story

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Syn-En: Pillar World, Chapter 4

Chapter 4

Bei pushed to his feet. His knees shook and his stomach roiled. Obviously the transition from hologram back to his real self had caused an anomaly in his systems. He ran a diagnostic check, focusing on his hearing.

On the mock triangular bridge, three of his command staff stared at him. Two ensigns hovered behind Rome, Shang’hai, and Doc. Both barely out of their teens, the two Syn-Ens had volunteered to assist in the sick bay. It was supposed to be simple work, but something had gone wrong. Richmond was missing patches of her brown hair, and Brooklyn’s right arm had been twisted backward at the elbow. Tears in their NDA skin and uniform slowly zipped together, covering the silver ‘bones’ underneath.

Bei’s systems flashed green. No problems. He locked gazes with Rome, his head of security. “Repeat.”

Rome swallowed hard. “Nell Stafford is not aboard.”

Bei’s lungs seized. His body switched to hypoxic conditions and slowed biologic functions. Anger prowled the Wireless Array and rattled the bars of his self-control. There was bound to be a simple reason behind his wife’s absence. One that they would discuss while he inserted a subroutine into her cerebral interface ensuring that she never left this ship without him at her side again. Ever. “Explain.”

Frown lines marred Doc’s tan forehead. The sclera of his brown eyes tinged gray. His avatar materialized in cyberspace and shot sedatives at Bei’s rampaging anger. “Nell Stafford was helping in sick bay, but she’d gone beyond her established time so I sent her back to your cabin for nourishment and rest.”

A reasonable request, but Nell was rarely reasonable. Biologics lacked the software in their logic processors, and his wife defied any attempts to program it in. Normal operations so far. Tension relaxed its grip on Bei’s shoulders. “Alone?”

“No.” Doc cleared his throat. The green diag beam in his wrist winked off and on. “I had my wife accompany her, along with two recently repaired refugees.”

Bei nodded. Despite being a pacifist, Davena shared one of Nell’s superpowers—control of the fermites. The atomic sized machines were capable of the most outlandish defenses, all courtesy of his wife’s imagination and Twentieth century movie clips. “Nell listens to your wife.”

As much as she listened to anyone.

His wife had a mind of her own and wasn’t afraid to use it. Even if it brought harm to herself and wore out his circuits.

Doc and Rome stepped back.

Richmond and Brooklyn marched forward. Standing at attention, the ensigns kept their eyes trained forward and stood ramrod straight.

Bei’s testicles drew up tight. Why the hell were they being so formal? Among the Syn-En there was no rank. “Speak.”

Brooklyn eased back a step.

Startled, Richmond glared at her co-worker. She raised her chin a notch and inhaled deeply. “We were transporting four critical refugees from the triage area in Docking Bay Six. All four were comatose with severe internal hemorrhaging.”

So the refugees were being carried. The gurneys would have been occupied and unconscious biologics wouldn’t feel pain. Bei clasped his hands behind his back. All standard operating procedure. “Go on.”

“We commandeered Lift alpha-delta-omega. The doors opened onto the sick bay deck and we exited. Nell Stafford, Davena Cabo, and two refugees stood aside as we passed.” Richmond exhaled slowly.

Bei’s sensors pinged from Richmond’s spiking blood pressure and the scent of fear on her breath. Brooklyn squeezed his eyes closed and clamped his lips together.

“We had traveled three-point-two meters when someone shouted yea-sayer.” Richmond’s avatar appeared in cyberspace. A black raincloud drenched her pixelated figure. She held up two soggy data boxes—hers and Brooklyn’s memory clips of the events.

Bei accepted the memory clips of the incident but didn’t open them. Instead he crossed referenced her words with the Combat Information Center. The archives rendered a definition from Earth circa Nineteen-Ten. “What is current meaning of a yea-sayer?”

Rome’s lip curled back. “A collaborator. Apparently, these slagheads snitch on their fellow Humans for favors from their masters, and their talking results in the deaths of one or more people.”

The worst sort of collaborator. Bei rolled his stiff shoulders. “Surely no one mistook Nell for one of these… these slagheads.”

The word fell short of describing the traitors and left a foul taste in his mouth. Enough enemies populated the universe, Humanity didn’t need to turn on itself.

Richmond’s teeth clicked together and the remnants of her pony tail slapped her shoulders when she shook her head. “No, Sir! Nell Stafford’s reputation precedes her. Even our allies are in awe of her superpowers.”

Bei’s lips twitched. Leave it to his wife to spread the word that technological advances were superpowers.

Brooklyn nudged Richmond out of the way. “Admiral, the refugees attacked our patients, not Nell Stafford.”

“But Nell tried to help you, didn’t she?” Bei swore under his breath. Of course, she did. His wife was always wading in the water without checking for sharks or piranhas. And her damned superpowers kept her safe or healed her. What would happen if they stopped? A glitch infected his cardiac subroutine.

Brooklyn’s hands clenched and unclenched. “I heard her calling and managed to work my way to the top of the dog pile. A female with a broken arm was reaching for Nell when she just disappeared.”

“Disappeared.” Bei couldn’t process the words or reconcile the meaning. “How does one disappear?”

No one just disappears. They go somewhere… Some place. In cyberspace, his avatar ripped open the memory clips and threw them up on the screen of his mind. He fast forwarded to the end. Both Richmond and Brooklyn’s optical implants had recorded the same event. Doc, Shang’hai, and Rome joined him in cyberspace.

Nell’s features had softened. Her outline blurred then a haze appeared around her. She faded like an old photograph exposed to direct sunlight. Her blue eyes widened. She raised her hand. Her mouth opened then she was gone.

Bei replayed it again and again. The ending didn’t change. “Son of a bitch.”

Nell had disappeared!

How the hell could this have happened? A third screen popped up. Groat, the Bug-ugly bastard clacked his mandibles. “…beg for your wife’s life.”

Bei’s armor locked and kept him from collapsing. He’d thought it was an empty threat… What if Nell died from his attack on the dreadnaught? Lightning bolts shot from his avatar.

The hair on Rome’s pixelated representation stood on end as he was repeatedly shocked. He slapped Bei on the back. “There’s no way the enemy could have gotten to her.”

The comfort of touch both in the WA and in person was a new development, one Nell had taught them. His wife had changed the Syn-En in so many ways… For the better, if she was gone…

“They’ll never get her.” Shang’hai set her ebony hand on Bei’s shoulder. “Every Syn-En would die first. And we’re not dead.”

An insidious idea infected Bei’s thoughts and rotted his hope. But there was a way. “A yea-sayer could have done it.”

They were Human and injured. What better way to get close to Nell? His Nell. Who thought everyone played by the rules. Who wanted to help everyone. His eyes leaked, distorting his vision. Storm clouds gathered over his avatar’s head and poured over him. God help everyone if Bei lost her.

“The only yea-sayers on board died in the corridor outside of sick bay. No one betrayed us. You’ll see. Nell Stafford will outlive us all.” Rome squeezed Bei’s shoulder. “Death’s probably afraid she’ll talk so much that all the lost souls will mutiny and return to the world of the living just to rest in peace.”

Shang’hai snorted. “The only technology that even comes close to what happened is in those movie clips Nell brought forward. None of the intel we have indicates the Founders have technology in development that can break someone into particles.”

Bei’s ears rang with silence. One of his lifelong friends wasn’t offering words of comfort. He turned around. “Doc?”

“I haven’t been able to get a good medical reading on your wife for over four months.” Doc’s shoulders sagged. “The instrumentation in the sick bay registers that everything is perfectly normal, and Davena says her fermites haven’t detected anything of concern.”

“But…” Bei braced himself for the worst.

Brooklyn and Richmond set their hands on Doc’s back, forming a snowflake of support.

Doc sighed. “It’s possible that the fermites dismantled Nell Stafford. We saw it on Surlat. When a person dies—”

“No!” Bei shoved them away and ripped his consciousness from cyberspace. He stormed across the mock bridge. A stool bent under his touch. He hailed her, opened the channel he’d sequestered for them. His words disappeared in a void. “My wife is not dead.”

Rome shadowed Bei around the room. He straightened the mangled stool and set it in front of the communications console. “I’ve scanned for her cerebral interface signal, but didn’t find it.”

Bei drew up short. Best friend or not, if he said the words Bei would dismantle the messenger.

Rome skidded to a stop and raised his hands. “But the fermites could be causing interference.”

Damn fermites. Bei hated the atomic pests. Small wonder most of the species in the universe eschewed technology. Hope flickered like a candleflame inside his breast. Not everyone needed technology. “Where’s Iggy?”

The Amarooks could find Nell with their telepathy.

Doc scraped his hand down his face. “Maintaining the link messed up the featherhead’s brain.” He tapped his temple. “Her mate, Elvis, carried her back to their pack and their pups for some alien mojo that will heal her.”

Mojo. Another word from a century long gone. Pain seared Bei’s heart. Nell couldn’t be dead. He gripped the console; the metal bent under his fingers. His back up systems clicked on. Air filled his lungs. His heart resumed a normal rhythm.  The machine would continue to function. But what good was it without Nell at his side?

Shang’hai frowned at the damaged console. “We would have asked the Amarooks to find Nell Stafford, but they wouldn’t open the door. And we didn’t dare ask through the door. Too many ears.”

Rome nodded. “Nell Stafford is the connective tissue keeping the Alliance together. If word spread that—”

Bei wrapped his hand around his Security Chief’s throat and raised him on his tiptoes. “My wife is not connective tissue.”

“Feel better now?” Rome rolled his eyes. “I’d let you dangle me from your fourteenth generation upgrades for days if I thought it would help.”

But it wouldn’t. Bei set his best friend on his feet. If Nell could evade their technology, then they would have to search the old fashioned way. His wife would appreciate it. “I want Syn-En eyes on every inch of this ship.”

“Asshole.” Rome shoved Bei’s shoulder. “A security detail is nit-picking the Picaroon transport that carried the refugees here. It won’t leave the cargo bay until we’ve uncovered every dirty secret.”

Doc paced in front of the door to the hallway. “I’ve interrupted all Syn-En’s sleep cycles. They’ve searched decks one through three. No trace of her yet.”

It was a good start.

The door opened and Davena stumbled inside. Blue and gold robes fluttered around her willowy frame. A halo of fermites surrounded her bouncing curls. Her eyes were silver ball bearings in her cinnamon face.

“Davena…” Doc picked a path toward his wife.

“Stay away.” She raised her hand. An arc of blue light sprang from her palm, hitting her husband squarely in the chest.

The impact knocked Doc backward. He collided against Shang’hai. The pink haired engineer wrapped her arms around his waist then they both collapsed. Excessive energy danced along the deck like blue snakes and the acrid stench of burning NDA filled the room.

Davena blinked. Her eyes returned to their normal black color, and she raised a hand to her mouth. “Oh! Oh! I’m sorry. I was just so distressed.” She clutched the skirt of her robes, wringing it. “Nell Stafford is with the Meek.”

The Meek—Davena and her people’s version of God. Bei stiffened. It wasn’t just his fail safes talking. Nell Stafford wasn’t dead. He would know it. Screw his logic subroutines and the evidence. He would find his wife. And someone would be busted down to enlisted for tattling. He checked on his men’s progress on the search. No one else seemed to know that his wife was AWOL.

Doc coughed a cloud of smoke from the electrical burst of fermites. Shaking his head, he untangled himself from Shang’hai and rose. “Davena was with Nell when….”

How many other witnesses reported the same thing? Bei ground his teeth. His men were right, many of the alliance looked at Nell as a guiding star. There’d be plenty of yea-sayers if word spread that she’d disappeared. “Quarantine all witnesses of the event.”

Doc nodded and thumped his healing chest to dispel the last of the smoke from his lungs. “There’s always an outbreak of some disease or other.”

Shang’hai dusted her hands on her pants before standing. “I’ll see if I can configure the sensors to find a concentration of fermites. I’ll use Davena as my baseline.”

Bei nodded. It was a start. “I’ll talk to Elvis. Once the Amarook finish healing Iggy, he should be able to find Nell.”

Rome shook his head. “You’ll have to trust us to do that. The NSA brass want a briefing on how the mission went.” The Security Chief tapped an imaginary wristwatch. “You know they don’t believe anything unless it comes from you.”

Curse words blistered cyberspace. The Alliance leaders were bound to notice Nell’s absence. With a thought, Bei located the files of the riot in sick bay. He deleted them and scrubbed the recordings. Not that rumors needed evidence. “Inform everyone that Nell is under Doc’s orders to rest for a full twenty-four hours.”

He could buy the Syn-En time.

But if they failed, it would be every species for itself.

And the war would be lost.

With Humanity once more enslaved.

Or worse.

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Friday Funny—New Work Rules

To ALL Employees – Effective Immediately – NEW Work Rules – From HR

TO ALL EMPLOYEES [EFFECTIVE IMMEDIATELY]

DRESS CODE
-It is advised that you come to work dressed according to your salary. If we see you wearing Prada shoes and carrying a Gucci bag, we assume you are doing well financially and therefore do not need a pay raise.

-If you dress poorly, you need to learn to manage your money better, so that you may buy nicer clothes, and therefore you do not need a pay raise.

-If you dress just right, you are right where you need to be and therefore you do not need a pay raise.

SICK DAYS
-We will no longer accept a doctor’s certificate as proof of sickness. If you are able to go to the doctor, you are able to come to work.

HOLIDAY DAYS
-Each employee will receive 104 personal days a year. They are called Saturday and Sunday.

COMPASSIONATE LEAVE
-This is no excuse for missing work. There is nothing you can do for dead friends, relatives or co-workers. Every effort should be made to have non-employees attend to the arrangements. In rare cases where employee involvement is necessary, the funeral should be scheduled in the late afternoon. We will be glad to allow you to work through your lunch hour and subsequently leave one hour early.

TOILET USE
-Entirely too much time is being spent in the toilet. There is now a strict three minute time limit in the cubicles.

-At the end of three minutes, an alarm will sound, the toilet paper roll will retract, the cubicle door will open, and your picture will be taken.

-After your second offence, your picture will be posted on the company notice board under the “Chronic Offenders” category.

-Anyone caught smiling in the picture will be sanctioned under the company’s mental health policy.

LUNCH BREAK
-Skinny people get 30 minutes for lunch, as they need to eat more so that they can look healthy.

-Normal size people get 15 minutes for lunch to get a balanced meal to maintain their average figure.

-Chubby people get 5 minutes for lunch, because that’s all the time needed to drink a Slim-Fast.

SURGERY
As long as you are an employee here, you need all your organs. You should not consider removing anything. We hired you intact. To have something removed constitutes a breach of employment.

SEXUAL HARASSMENT AND WORKPLACE BULLYING
-Any employee caught filing complaints to these matters will be framed and terminated expeditiously.

INTERNET USAGE
All personal Internet usage will be recorded and charges will be deducted from your bonus (if any) and if we decide not to give you any, charges will be deducted from your salary. Note: charges applicable as $3 per minute as we have a fast connection.

-73% of staff will not be entitled to any salary for next 3 months as their Internet charges have exceeded their 3 months salary.

PREGNANCY
-In the event of labour pains, you will be allowed to go to the first aid room when the pains are FIVE MINUTES apart. If it is false labour, you will have to take an hour’s leave without pay.

DEATH
This will be accepted as an excuse, BUT two weeks’ notice is required as we feel it is your duty to teach someone your job.

Thank you for your loyalty to our company. Remember we are an employer of choice and we are here to provide a positive employment experience. Therefore, all questions, comments, concerns, complaints, frustrations, irritations, aggravations, insinuations, allegations, accusations, contemplations, consternation and input should be directed elsewhere.

Regards, HR Department

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Chocolate Affaire 2015

I thought I’d share some pictures of the brave ladies who came out to sign at the 2015 Chocolate Affaire. It rained for 5 hours and chased the crowds away (I blame those Seattle folks even if the storm came from Mexico)

mybooksandArabella

Arabella Thorn guarded my books which I thoughtfully wrapped in plastic wrap to keep from getting all pruney in the rain.

KayceeTinaBrenda

Further on down the line, Tina Gerow/Cassie Ryan, Kaycee Lassiter and Brenda Whiteside kept their spirits up with some lively conversation.

SMAnnMarieSandra

I wished for better whether for the newest authors to sign at the event: SM Knowles, AnnMarie Stone and Sandra Floyd.

KrisMorganAnna

Kris Tualla, Morgan Kearns, and Anna Questerly anchored the last table and reeled in the customers with their bright smiles on a gloomy day.  I’m still waiting for my copy of Pangea by Anna Questerly—she has nice cannibals in her latest release

 

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Syn-En: Pillar World, Chapter 3

Chapter 3

“All systems go dark.” Bei clenched and unclenched his hands as the enemy’s dreadnaught shoved through the event horizon in front of them. A riptide of tension swept through the triangular bridge upon which his holoimage stood. He used his command codes and isolated him and his team from the rest of h is men.

“Weapon drones powering down to seventy-percent.” Seated in the station directly in front of Bei, Security Chief Rome skimmed his fingers down the LED control panel. On the forward view screens, the drones faded until they blended with the wreckage of the convoy.

“Taking nonessential systems off-line.” Sydney Shang’hai, Bei’s Chief Engineer, sent the power down signal via her cerebral interface. Lights on the command panels winked out. Air vents ticked as they stopped circulating oxygen to an empty ship.

In the forward station, Iggy shifted on her stool. Her pink and green tail drooped nearly to the floor. “Com systems at minimal.”

Bei stared at the view screens. The broken hulls of the enemy’s convoy were scattered like cracked eggs over the solar system. With a thought, he scrolled through the available sensors, scanning the space beyond his remote-controlled ship. Despite being located in another galactic quadrant, the remote controlled ship obeyed every command of his four-sentient crew. The pods with the Syn-En life signs melded with the glowing debris field. “Status of our people?”

“Minimal life signs.” Black filled Shang’hai’s almond-shaped eyes. Static filled her holographic projection before the image solidified. “I’m getting interference from the pods.”

Iggy’s tail curled around her hind quarters. Her pointy ears pricked and the feathers on her head stood on end. “It’s a human signal.”

“Patch it through.” Bei set course. His ship’s nacelle’s hummed as the small vessel skipped forward on an intercept course. He would retrieve his men and retreat. Bile flooded his mouth. After six months of war, he and his men were good at retreating.

He’d rather excel at advancing.

And he wasn’t alone.

The Syn-En hadn’t acquired a taste for defeat. It wasn’t in their circuits or their programming.

Rome’s hands curled into fists. The spherical drones zoomed across open space, heading for the cargo bay. “Stowing drones in the toy box. The bastard Founders aren’t going to know what they’re missing.”

The enemy better not. Retreat was a tactical strategy until Bei and his allies built up the NeoSentient Alliance’s defenses. Until they could stop losing battle after battle.

“Patching through.” Iggy cocked her head to the left. Her tiny four fingers drummed on the console. Fangs flashed in her muzzle. “Audio only. Visuals aren’t being transmitted.”

Static belched from the coms.

“Oh, thank God you’ve come,” a female voice rasped. “You’ve got to pick us up. Don’t let them get us again.”

A muscle flexed in Rome’s square jaw, and his short blond hair twitched. He pinged Bei. “What the hell? Sending message to Combat Information Center for voice recognition. Syn-En don’t cry.”

Syn-En kept their emotions in the Wireless Array, not out in public.

But the Founders were capable of atrocities Bei had never imagined. And he had access to a universal history archive full of atrocities. The room darkened as he switched part of his conscious into the WA. His avatar materialized, found the tail end of the message, and stepped on it. Data buzzed by his ears as he swept along the stream. “Identify yourself.”

“Oh, thank God you’ve come.”

Iggy howled. An instant later, she tackled him, knocking him off the data stream.

Bei rolled over and over in the blackness of uninhabited cyberspace. Catching the Amarook by the scruff, he kept her signal from breaking up.

She planted her paws on his chest and shook her head. Her ears slapped the side of her head. “Firewall. Gave me quite the headache.”

She leapt off his chest.

He held his breath, waiting for her to disappear.

Raising her muzzle, she sniffed the air then bounded toward the fluorescent green line in the distance.

Bei pushed to his feet. The emptiness sucked at his boots, snagging pixels with every step. Damn, he’d love to know how the Amarook’s telepathy worked. The void always left him with a migraine. Jogging, he closed the distance.

The SOS changed from a steady stream to a fuzzy line.

His avatar scattered like marbles then reformed. He swayed on his feet. “Report.”

“We’re taking fire, Admiral.” A pixelated Rome ghosted nearby. His nose wrinkled at the void.

Taking fire? Dammit! They were supposed to be cloaked. Bei stopped next to Iggy. “How are they targeting us?”

Iggy snapped at the SOS stream then sniffed the block wall that stopped her from tracking it to its point of origin. But in the air, she dug with her forepaws at the base of the firewall. Pieces of code formed a pile behind her. “Go. I’ll get through.”

Closing his eyes, Bei transferred back to the ship. “Rome?”

“They’re not.” Shang’hai’s holographic hands slipped through her console. “The Bug-Uglies are firing depth charges.”

On the forward screens, light burst from the Founder’s dreadnaught. Gun barrels bristled from nearly every meter of the hulking mass. Only docking ports and energy weapon batteries along her mid-deck remained smooth.

Bei’s synthetic skin prickled. It might be possible to locate the ship by searching for anomalies in the debris field. He slowed the vessel, keeping it clear of the hunks of smoldering hull. He’d have to find another way to salvage those life pods. He ordered the wardens to retrieve the lost men. Data showed the repair bots leaving the hull and skimming across space like black widow spiders.

An explosion blossomed on the screen. The deck bucked under his feet. Access panels popped off. One sliced through Iggy’s hunched over form. Sparks sprayed the metal floor. Static filled the forward screen.

“They’re damn accurate for guessing our location.” Too damn accurate. Was something giving away their position? Bei ran a quick diagnostic on the ship’s systems.

Shang’hai’s holoimage faded. “It’s possible that they recognize our engine signal.”

Bei swore under his breath. Such was the hazard of repurposing a ship. “Mask it.”

Another salvo punched the bulkhead. Alarms flared in Bei’s head, next to a scrolling list of damage to the vessel. “Rome bring out half your toys.”

Rome straightened and cracked his knuckles. “Let’s see how the Bug-Uglies like it to have my balls shoved up their bulkheads.”

“I think you might want to reword that.” Shang’hai snorted. “Bringing forward screens on line.”

“Fuck ’em.” Rome leaned forward as twenty-five spherical drones skipped across the space in front of their ship.

The image scattered.

“Dammit Shang’hai.” Rome glared at his companion. “Get your head in the game.”

Iggy rolled out of her seat. Four paws planted on the deck, she growled at the static.

An image formed.

Aricose Groat, Commander of the Founders Fleet, peered back at him. The Bug-Ugly Scraptor’s eyestalks twitched above his bullet-shaped head. His red, segmented armor glistened in the light of his bridge. “Hello little Syn-En. Are you too scared to come out of an play?”

Defensive ridges raced down Bei’s arms. His synthetic skin hardened into armor. “Groat.”

Iggy shook her body. “He can’t hear us or see us. He’s broadcasting on all Plenipoten frequencies.”

Plenipoten? This ship had been a Plenipoten vessel before its conversion. “How does he know we can recieve it?”

Iggy licked her furry hands and smoothed her pink and green feathers behind her ears. “All vessels are equipped with a Plenipoten receiver. They are the administrators of the Erwar Consortium. Or were, before the war.”

Another volley burst in the distance. Debris from the cargo ships fled before the concussive wave. The enemy was clueless.

“Any luck contacting the lost men?” Bei smoothed his defensive ridges. His uniform knit back together.

“The signal smelled of Scraptor.” Iggy spat up a furball. “I severed our connection so the enemy cannot use it to trace us.”

“Good thinking.” For a wolf-like creature. Bei’s men hadn’t considered it. But then, the Amarooks were natural predators and they knew the enemy.

Iggy sent an image of her and her pack annihilating a dozen of the extinct Earth animals. “We are not such pathetic creatures, even if we do harbor a fondness for Humans.”

A pulse of anger slammed against Bei’s temple. He released a shot of caffeine to ease the ache.

Rome winced. “Yeah. Yeah. We get it. You’re the Big, Bad Amarook coming to blow everyone’s house down. Now tame your wild side, Featherhead or my boot will plant itself in your furry posterior.”

Iggy plopped her hind end down and thumped her tail against the metal deck. “With the amount of time you consider posteriors, you could be part Amarook.”

Red tinged Rome’s Teutonic cheekbones. “You—”

Another salvo rocked their ship. Metal screamed. Bulkheads buckled. The fusion reactor breached its first level of containment. A coolant pipe burst and steam jacked up the temperature of the engine room.

Bei chucked the files at his engineer. “Fix it.”

Shang’hai turned toward the door leaving the bridge. She drew up short, pink dreadlocks slapping her back. Her curse words blistered the air. “I can’t fix the leaks, but I’ll try rerouting the coolant.”

Right. They were holograms and not physically on the ships. Bei jerked his head once.

The wardens confirmed they’d locked onto the lifepods. Each spun a Neo-Dynamic Armor cocoon around the vessels. Once activated the NDA camouflaged the pods, hiding them from the Scraptors’ attack.

Groat clacked the pinschers below the set of humanoid hands. “What’s the matter little Syn-En? Are you afraid?”

Rome shook his head. “I’ll teach him the meaning of fear.”

The Bug-Ugly’s image disappeared from the starboard screen. In his place,  the battlefield came into view. Partial schematics overlaid the dreadnaught and crosshairs overlaid the vulnerable soft points. Twenty-five spheres plunged through the convoy debris field and circled back toward the hulking dreadnaught.

Bei smiled. The enemy would think the attack came from the wrong direction.

Groat’s eyestalks twitched “Are you a coward like your leader, Beijing York?”

Spittle drizzled from the Scraptor’s mandibles.

“This is almost insulting.” Bei placed his hands on his hips.

Sensors switched to green. Shang’hai had repaired the engine’s coolant system.  “What that he thinks we’re two year olds vulnerable to taunts? Biologics are far better at insulting us.”

“Indeed.” Not that Bei would thank any of them. Their words had caused him to doubt his humanity, even tempted him to deny it and take revenge on others. He hadn’t. His programming was engraved on his hardware.

Rome’s lip curled back. “Does the man even know how ugly he looks? I mean, really that armor makes him look like a scorpion. I ate a scorpion once. It was as nasty as it looked.”

Iggy leapt back onto her stool. Her ears flattened against her head. “Admiral, I’m receiving a message.”

She materialized in cyberspace just as a ball of light shot through it. She leapt through the air toward it.

Bei sucked in a breath. “We’re supposed to be radio silent.”

A single transmission would give away their. He’d have the upgrades of whatever moron sent that transmission, then he’d beat the lesson into the Syn-En’s plated skull.

Iggy pounced on the ball, wrapped her body around it.

“Fire when ready.”

“I’m ready.” Rome’s fingers twitched. The drone’s blazed white hot on the screen. Black fissure lines appeared in the drones. Per their design, they splintered apart, heading toward the enemy battleship.

A bouquet of red blossoms filled the screen.

“They can’t penetrate the enemy’s energy shields.” Bei’s fists shook and compression sensors blazed in his head until he relaxed his grip.

“Ten made it through.” Rome crossed his hands over his chest.

Iggy yelped. The message bundle dragged her across cyberspace. Feathers and fur smeared a trail behind her.

Groat’s image tilted. A klaxon sounded before being switched off. His mandibles peeled away, revealing sharp incisors. “Ah, so you are there. Now we can play. For keeps.”

Bei shook out his fists. “Status on those pods?”

“Ten A.U. and closing.” Shang’hai opened and closed her fingernail, revealing the screwdriver inside the prosthetic appendage. “ETA to wormhole: five minutes.”

An eternity then. At least the Bug-Uglies didn’t know where they were. “Prepare next salvo.”

“Preparing next salvo.” Rome bared his teeth.

Iggy’s hologram stiffened then melted.

Bei stepped toward her last position. Had the strain of maintaining the hologram been too much for her? The base of his skull burned from the energy to maintain the link. What would happen to the Amarooks if their leader was brain dead?

The screen with the battlefield dissolved. Guenoc, the leader of the Plenipoten people stared back at them with all four of his black eyes. “Ah, there you are?”

“End message.” The ship’s computers rejected Bei’s orders.

“Well!” Guenoc’s nostril flaps quivered. “I simply want an update on the status of the operation. As the senior sentient of the alliance, I—”

“Desist.” In cyberspace, Bei mentally yanked on all transmission lines.

Shang’hai  materialized next to him. She wrapped her hands around a large blue tube. “This one.”

The screen fell dark.

That had not been on his schematic. The Skaperian techs had a lot to answer for. Bei quarantined his anger. He’d deal with interfering politicians later.

“Admiral, we’ve been detected.” Rome rose from his seat. “They’ve locked on.”

“Abandon ship.” Bei snatched the controls of weapons drone from Rome’s hands. A clock counted down inside his head. Only two minutes twenty-nine seconds until the lifepods reach the event horizon. He’d give them two minutes, thirty.

Rome’s lips thinned. “You know if you die here or are cut off from your body, you’re body shuts down. Permanently.”

“I know the risks.” But they were his to take. He was in charge. Behind Bei, the elevator doors chimed and opened. Drones drifted through the holograms to fill the bridge.

“God, Bei, don’t leave me stuck explaining things to your wife. With her superpowers, I know parts of me will go missing. Parts I love. Parts my wife loves.” Shaking his head, Rome faded away.

Shang’hai shook her finger at him. “No chariot rides. Get out before the reactor loses containment in two minutes thirty.”

He would not die today. Neither would the enemy. But Bei would inflict some damage. Silence blanketed him. Tactics and his available armaments streamed through his head. He laid out his plan.

Twenty-three-point-six percent chance of success. It was better than Twenty-three-point-five. Bei shunted extra power to the forward shields.

Light burst from the side of the dreadnaught.

He checked the sensors. Twenty torpedoes. He unleashed an space age  flashbang. The small missile streamed directly into converging barrage.

“At least tell me your name little Syn-En.” Groat picked a piece of meat from his teeth. “I’ll carve it into your carcass while the others dissect you.”

Dissect this. Bei detonated the flashbang. The electronic signature on the torpedoes flickered. Using the com, he amplified the Wireless Array and tapped into the guidance system while the weapons rebooted. One. Three. Six. Ten. Fifteen. Twenty-one missiles hacked. He overrode their kill codes and returned them to sender.

Four more torpedoes resumed course. He counted down. Less than a minute.

“Time for a little housecleaning.” He authorized the sloughing off of the crystalline structure that provided their cloaking. It wouldn’t do for the technology to fall into the Founder’s hands. He rolled his shoulders.

“Ah, there you are little Syn-En.” Grout threw back his head and laughed. The sound was sugar in a paper cut. “Such a tiny vessel. I wouldn’t have wasted so many torpedoes if I had known.”

Groat’s bullet-shaped head whipped about. “What do you mean we’ve been targeted? By whom?”

Bei braced his feet on the deck. The first three torpedoes exploded when they hit his energy shield. The concussive wave punched the bridge. Bulkheads crumbled.

The fourth torpedo slammed into his starboard side. Wind screamed through the elevator shaft as he vented atmosphere.

Bei threw energy reserves behind his ship. Accelerating, the vessel shook. Vibrations dislodged panels that clanged against the deck. The fusion engines approached critical mass. He charged across space, closing the distance between himself and the enemy’s torpedoes.

The dreadnaught’s guns barked fire. Projectiles strafed his hull. A torpedo exploded off his port bow.

He adjusted his course.

Groat pounded his humanoid fist into his palm. Beneath them, his pinscher claws trembled. “Not this time little Syn-En. We are wise to your tactics.”

Wise maybe, but that didn’t mean they had the defenses to stop it. Bei fully charged the drones hovering about him. He overrode the failsafes and splintered the warheads. Once his ship breached the dreadnaught, they would travel forward for five seconds before exploding.

Bei played his last card and opened a channel. Instead of displaying the full bridge, he projected his image back on the NSA flagship.  “Here I thought you’d roll out the welcome mat for me, Grouse.”

He deliberately messed up Groat’s name. Would the Bug-Ugly know he was being compared to an Earth bird? Food?

“Groat, Beijing York. I’m not surprised you’re defective. Too much technology.”

“So are you going to let me in or are you chicken?”

Groat’s segmented armor expanded as he inhaled the insult. “Such a little ship. Have you come to plead for your pathetic race? Or maybe your wife’s life?”

Bei’s cardiac sensors broke free of his programming. He sent a dose of Serotonin to counter it.

Groat steepled his fingers. “Our scientists can’t wait to get their hands on Nell Stafford. They have many experiments planned. But that’s after we have a little… fun with her.”

Scraptor chuckles soiled the com system.

Bei hoped the fire he caused would cleanse it. The wormhole swallowed the lifepods. The wardens were through. His men had been rescued. Bei’s skin prickled. The idiots had let him inside their energy shields.Their pride was a powerful weapon for him. “I have a message for you.”

“I look forward to receiving it.”

“Go to hell.” He severed the connection. The ship slammed against another energy barrier. Shit. He hadn’t been so clever after all. The bulkhead crumpled. Black space appeared in the tears in the hull. His systems recorded the damage and the danger. The fusion reactor overloaded. Metal curled away from the fireball. The MIRVed drones pierced the hull, turning it into a colander.

Prepare for system shutdown.

Bei slammed back into his body. His legs crumpled and his eyes rolled back into his head. His systems tried to reconcile the damage it registered to this new reality. Shoving his command codes at his failsafe, he remained conscious.

Rome and Shang’hai stomped over to his.

Another set of boots shoved them out of the way. Doc’s face appeared. Concern lined his brow and a green diagnostic beam shot out of his wrist. “Are you shutting down, Admiral?”

“No. No.” Bei cleared his throat and blinked. It took a moment for his optic sensors to realign with the mock bridge on the NSA flagship. The contradiction were a vice squeezing his skull. He raised his arm to rub the back of his neck. His hand trembled. “Well, it worked, but the remote controlled ship will need some tweaking.”

Doc focused on the readouts.

Bei’s gut clenched. No Syn-En needed readouts. He sat up. “What’s wrong?”

Rome clamped a hand on Bei’s shoulder. “There was a riot in sickbay. Nell Stafford has vanished.”

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Glendale Chocolate Affaire—Friday and Saturday Only

I will be signing my books and facilitating a series of free writing workshop this weekend at the Glendale Chocolate Affaire So if you’re in the neighborhood for the Superbowl or just love chocolate, stop by and see me.

Here are the list of fabulous workshops, I’ve lined up:

10 AM Workshop:

Isabelle Clayton

Bio: Isabella Clayton is a psychic medium, paranormal investigator, writer, artist and speaker.  She has seen human spirits, non-human entities and things that go bump in the night since childhood.  Her psychic abilities have always been a part of her.  At three, she would speak with relatives or friends on her play telephone and tell her Mom when they would be having company.  Mom always made sure she scrambled to clean the house.

Throughout the years, Isabella has continued to develop her abilities so that she could help people.  She has helped people (adults and children) with night terrors, with any kind of haunting, readings or by speaking with friends/family that have passed to the other side.

A few years ago she wanted to understand the science side and has since joined several paranormal investigating groups.  This has helped her with debunking skills, and has increased her exposure with the spiritual possession.

When she’s not traveling around the country with her guy, she’s at home with her cats, friends and family having the time of her life.

Workshop: Separating Fact from Fiction in the Paranormal World

Avoid the pitfalls when writing about the paranormal world. We’ll explore the differences in the entities and explain the latest investigation techniques.

11AM Workshop: Shake that Booty by Carolyn Hughey/K.T. Roberts

SYLLABUS

Communication is at the very heart of everything we do regardless of whether it’s verbal or non-verbal. In this inter-active workshop, K. T. Roberts focuses on teaching you how to read signals to help you make your characters jump off the pages of your next novel.

BIO

Multi-published author Carolyn Hughey aka K. T. Roberts has a varied background where from time-to-time, public speaking played a role. From training cooking classes in her home, to teaching young chefs how to operate their businesses, she enjoyed sharing her knowledge with her students in a fun-filled classroom environment.

12PM (Noon) Workshop: Ethan Erway

Biography:

 

Ethan Russell Erway is the author of the ADVENTURES OF MICHAEL BELMONT, a young adult fantasy/adventure series, THE BLEEDING STAR CHRONICLES, a Science Fiction adult novella serial, and BLOWING OFF STEAM, a Western Steampunk adventure series.  He has been a #1 amazon bestselling author in several categories, including Young Adult Religious Fiction and Science Fiction- Space Opera.

 

Ethan has been a life-long fan of science fiction and fantasy, and began writing short comedic stories in middle school.  He published his first novel in 2011.  He is a regular participant in Phoenix Comicon and other sci-fi/fantasy conventions.  He is currently the Minister at Agua Fria Christian Church in Humboldt, AZ where he lives with his wife and children.

 

Blurb

Movie Arcs for Novels- How to Write the Best Stories in Your Genre

Have you ever been watching your favorite movie and thought, “I wish I could write something this great”?  The good news is, you can!  Join #1 amazon bestselling author Ethan Russell Erway as he discusses how to extract essential plot points from your favorite works of fiction, whatever the genre.  From Romance to Action/Adventure, from Paranormal Romance to Science Fiction, you’ll learn how to mix the essential ingredients to form your own best selling work of fiction.

1PM Workshop Cathy McDavid

Bio: In the third grade, NY Times and USA Today bestselling author Cathy McDavid made it her goal to read every Walter Farley book ever written. Who knew such an illustrious ambition would eventually lead to a lifelong love of all things western and a career writing contemporary ranch stories for Harlequin American? Much too active in her local Romance Writers of America chapters for her own good, she currently resides in Tempe, AZ, where she gets to pen stories about good looking cowboys riding the range or busting a bronc. It a tough job, but she’s willing to make the sacrifice.

 

Workshop: Riveting dialogue, let’s talk about it!

They say (no pun intended) that dialogue is one of a writer’s best tools to maintain a reader’s interest. Dull dialogue, or a lack of it, can slow the story’s pacing to a crawl. Learn to make the most of your dialogue in this hands on workshop.

SPEAKING OF WHICH…

Riveting dialogue, let’s talk about it!

2PM Workshop: Tina Gerow

BIO: Tina Gerow has always had a passion for romance and anything paranormal.

And even in school, was encouraged to put her writing skills to good use, but always with the admonishment to ‘stop writing the weird stuff and tone down the sarcasm.’  But what fun is that?!  So, in 2003, she finally decided to try her hand at writing a novel, but still firmly embracing the ‘weird stuff and the sarcasm.’  Her first book, Into a Dangerous Mind, won the award for Romantic Times Best Small Press Contemporary Paranormal for 2006.

 

 

Since then, Tina has published several more books, including her latest release, Sleeping With Shadows, the popular Maiden series, the Seduction Series for Kensington’s Aphrodisia line as Cassie Ryan, and the Sisters of Darkness series with Berkley, also as Cassie Ryan.

Workshop: The Art of Writing Love Scenes

Writing love scenes is so much more than describing whose lips are where, doing what.  Good love scenes should read smoothly and clearly, and communicate who is doing what to whom as well as when and how, but without sounding like a How-To manual.

It should convey emotions and passion, and reveal new insights into the characters as well as advance the plot.  Sound like brain surgery or rocket science?  Nope – no Doctorate degree required – I promise!  So hold on tight for some no-nonsense discussions about how to thread all of this together into love scenes that readers will devour, and you will love to write – regardless of if you write sweet or smokin’ hot.

3PM Workshop: Kiki Swanson

BIO: Kiki grew up happily, playing the piano, working in a library and close to her church. Near-by Chicago offered enriching opportunities. With degrees from Smith College and San Francisco Theological Seminary she taught high school English and Journalism. The family arrived in Scottsdale in 1959. While Don owned businesses and served on the school board, Kiki traveled as a capital campaign consultant for the national church.

Most recently she directed the senior adult ministry in Valley Presbyterian Church living in Scottsdale with her husband and close to three sons and their families.

Kiki’s novels revolve around a strong woman who reminds readers of their relatives or neighbors or school friends. Their life stories come out in conversation and their relationships to others. She weaves in historic research, her own love of music, cooking and sewing, and geographic settings from her own life.

Workshop: Writing your Memories

Start right now to record some of your precious

memories for your heirs! You will find ideas and

inspiration in this group, guided by hand-outs to

keep you writing until next year! There are

several approaches to the project, and it is

guaranteed to start your creative thinking. You

will want to take notes, so bring a pen! However,

no tests or grades.

4PM Workshop: Maria Crimi Speth

BIO: Maria Crimi Speth, a shareholder in the law firm of Jaburg & Wilk, P.C., practices in the areas of intellectual property, internet law, and commercial litigation, representing clients throughout the United States. She is in the Top Lawyers list published by Arizona Business Magazine and the American Trial Lawyer’s Association. She has been practicing law for 25 years and is admitted in dozens of state and federal courts around the country. Maria is the author of Protect Your Writings: A Legal Guide for Authors and Apple v. Samsung, The Balance Between Patent Rights and the Free Market..  She has numerous published articles and dozens of published court cases.

Workshop: Protect Your Writings

It’s the weekend of the big game, in the host city, surrounded by the delicious taste and aroma of chocolate.  What better setting to learn the sweet lessons of legal offense and defense to best protect your manuscripts, articles, blogs and other writings?  If you think copyright law is boring, you haven’t heard it taught by Maria Crimi Speth, Intellectual Property attorney and author of Protect Your Writings.  Join us for a comprehensive, yet easy-to-understand, presentation of applicable laws that affect writers and their creative work. You will learn everything you need to know about the laws relating to writing, including how to AVOID making common, costly legal mistakes. This will be a sure touchdown!

5PM Workshop: Caris Roane

BIO: Hi, Everyone!  Caris Roane here!  I’m a USA Today Bestselling Author and I write super-sexy paranormal romance fiction designed to be as much an adventure as a soul-satisfying experience.  With every book I write, I try to give a taste of real life, despite the fact that I’m writing about hunky vampire warriors.  You’ll come away engrossed in the lives of my vampires as they wage war, as they make love, and as they answer the tough questions of life in terms of purpose, eternity, and how to raise a family!  I began my career with Kensington Publishing writing Regency Romance as Valerie King.  In 2005, Romantic Times Magazine honored me with a career achievement award in Regency Romance.  I’ve published fourteen paranormal novels to-date, some self-published and some for St. Martin’s Press!  I’ve also branched out into Contemporary Romance with A SEDUCTIVE PROPOSITION!

Workshop: The Hero’s Journey

Ever wonder why the myths of old are still with us today or why STAR WARS became such a hit? Want to know how the answers to these two questions can impact your novel in an amazing way? Come hear my thoughts on the Hero’s Journey, what it is, why it will always be relevant to storytelling, and how to apply these concepts to the unfinished novel hiding under your bed.  

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Sneak Peek: Syn-En Pillar World, Chapter 2, coming February

Chapter 2

Nell Stafford blinked, clearing her swimming vision. In all her one hundred sixty-five years, she’d never seen anything so horrific. And she supposed to treat and heal people without getting emotional. A child lay on the gurney before her. A child. She could gladly live to be three hundred and fifty and be perfectly happy being ignorant of this cruelty. Heck, she’d even sleep for another century and a quarter, curled up next to her husband, if that would help. But it wouldn’t.

This was war.

Ugly, putrid war. With its deliberate infliction of pain and suffering on the  innocent.

In the cavernous prep area of sick bay, Syn-En orderlies triaged the badly wounded. Stretchers lay side by side, creating rows of mangled flesh thirty beds deep. Human first aid workers offered drinks of water, changed bandages, and monitored vitals. Lumps of people gathered along the bulkheads like pebbles cast ashore from the backwash of battle.

Nell cleared the lump from her throat. Focus on healing those you can. I need to focus. She inhaled deeply. Her knees trembled from fatigue and she yawned.

The pungent scent of body odor and blood mingled freely with the sharp sting of disinfectant. A passing orderly brushed her back, then shuffled toward the surgical bays without stopping. A patient moaned on his gurney.  More wounded groaned and bled out on the metal deck of the sick bay. The sounds of agony drowned out the hum of the engines of the NSA starship Nell Stafford. Across the receiving bay, a medic stepped back into a pile of severed synthetic limbs. An avalanche of Syn-En hands, arms, legs, and feet tumbled across the deck.

Most patients didn’t even notice.

The four year old on the gurney in front of Nell turned her head. A crooked index finger pointed to the severed limbs. “Uh-oh.”

“Uh-oh?” Some expressions must be universal. Or else the little girl’s parents had recently been abducted from Earth and sold to the Founders for medical experimentation.

“The Yea-Sayer will tattle.” The little girl’s hazel eyes widened, and the scar running across her forehead turned white.

Nell tried her best to ignore that scar and the scores of others. Four years old and the first time she’d seen the sun was on the starship’s view screens. Tears prickled Nell’s nose. Stupid, stupid Founders. She hoped the universe dropped a dungheap of bad juju on their collective heads. “What’s a Yea-Sayer?”

“A bad ‘un.” Dark circles ringed the little girl’s eyes and her cheeks were sunken. Malnutrition bowed her limbs and stained her baby teeth. One side of her head was shaved, revealing where the leads and the lines had fed her a trial drug cocktail. The sparse downy hair on the other side didn’t cover the barcode tattooed on her gray scalp.

The universe was full of bad ones. Most wore the skin of the Founding Five.

Time to get to work, to take away the little girl’s pain. Nell wiped her hands on her black uniform tunic then rubbed them together and hummed the theme song to Gilligan’s Island. Her favorite TV show from childhood didn’t comfort as it once had. Static electricity sparked blue between her palms before the fermites answered her call. A thin cloud at first, then it thickened. The air around her hands sparkled and misted with the atomic-sized particles. With a flick of Nell’s fingers, the fermites shrouded the little girl like floating lace.

Her gray skin glittered before the fermites disappeared inside her body. She giggled then clapped a hand over her mouth and glanced around.

“It’s okay.” Nell shifted her hand to the tot’s head. “You can laugh. You’re safe here.”

The girl flinched.

Nell’s fingers twitched and her stomach cramped. Touch should comfort, not bring the fear of pain. Clenching her teeth, she gently set her hand on the girl’s forehead then swept aside the downy brown hair. “Do you have a name?”

“Here.” The little girl pointed to the barcode. “Tahexa was learning me, but Odeha said no. I wouldna need it for long.”

“That’s because they knew you’d be rescued.” Curses exploded inside Nell’s head. The doctors had turned the little girl over to Nell because of all she had suffered. Nell’s fingers bucked and her skin tingled. Double dog damn, she detected an enemy’s passive sensor. As if using a child as a human lab rat wasn’t bad enough, the Founders had inserted a spybot in her abdomen to make sure the girl served them until the end of her short life. Nell would stock pile the radioactive material then shove it where the sun never shone, up the nearest Founder’s caboose.

The little girl blinked and cocked her head. Pink flushed her skin and her cheeks rounded. Little by little her bowed limbs straightened. Even her teeth turned white. “What is rescued?”

“Taken someplace where no one can hurt you again.” With their work done, some of the fermites streaked toward Nell’s hands. They formed silver rivulets writhing up her arms. An ache pulsed at her back and the pads of her feet.

“Oh. I dead?” The little girl bit her bottom lip. “You an angel to take me to my mother and father?”

Nell gulped cold air. When her knees wobbled, she braced her hands on the gurney. Cold metal leached the warmth from her palms. Death was synonymous with peace. Glancing at the patchwork of scars on the girl’s bare skin, Nell faced the ugly truth. She would have prayed for death if she’d spent her life as a lab rat.

Unfortunately, the Founders had a far worse fate in store for Nell, if the Syn-En lost the war.

And they were losing the war.

But that would change.

Maybe it already had. The few Syn-En soldiers who hadn’t been deployed to other posts walked a little lighter. Her husband, Bei, and his team must be making mincemeat out of the Founders’ convoy. She hoped he blew up one ship just for her.

And all the patients she’d seen today.

Nell had stopped counting at a hundred. Her back ached and her arms trembled from bending over patients all day. But her part was easy—the fermites did all the healing. Hearing her call, fermites left the little girl’s limbs and gathered in a haze around her hands. “You’re not dead, sweetie. And I’m no angel.”

Neither was she completely Human. Her skin and parts of her internal organs were made up of the same NeoDynamic armor that made up the Syn-Ens’ dermis. She even had silver patches when she became emotional. Which was… most of the time. Epecially lately, when the newest batch of refugees arrived. As for fermite commander—that superpower had manifested itself just as the Neo-Sentient Alliance declared war on the Founders.

Stupid move that.

The NSA wasn’t prepared.

And it showed in the hundreds of worlds lost to the enemy, and the faces of the refugees as the Syn-En had retreated again, and again, and again.

“Sweetie?” The little girl raised her hand as the last of her scars faded. Her bloated belly subsided, but fermites swirled around her belly button, visible above her cloth diaper.

Nell blew her blond bangs out of her eyes. How do you explain sugar to someone who’s never tasted it or anything sweet? “Yes, Sweetie. Because you’re a cutie pie.”

“OK.” The fermites repaired the little girl’s hair. Her barcode faded to gray. “I Sweetie Cutie Pie. It easier than…” She pointed to the disappearing numbers and letters.

Nell quickly tapped the code into the medical system. “And far more appropriate, too.”

She added the girl’s new name, Sweetie Cutie Pie and cross-referenced it with her details. If her parents were on one of the transport ships, they could find their daughter. Were they even looking? If she had a missing child, Nell would never stop until she found her. Her insides knotted. But she didn’t have a child, wasn’t even pregnant after six months of trying.

Perhaps it was for the best.

Now was not the time to bring a child into the world.

Nell’s shoulders bowed. Never might work. Could find the date on the calendar called never and pencil it in? She shook off her depression.

The fermites buzzed near Sweetie’s belly button where a black cube slowly emerged. Propping herself on her elbows, the little girl eyed her stomach. “What that?”

“It’s a spybot. The most despicable thing ever invented in the known universe.” And that included Tang. Nell shuddered. No way would she ever drink that stuff again. The astronauts could have it. She snapped her fingers and the spybot dissolved in a spray of fireworks. The fermites twinkled out to nothingness. But she felt them skitter along her skin.

Time for her reward. She reached under the gurney for the two chocolate shakes the first aid worker had handed as she passed. The pouches were warm, but it was chocolate. The all natural, all temperature treat. She handed one to Sweetie then wrapped her tongue around the straw sticking out of the other.

Sweetie accepted the silver pouch but kept her attention on the black cube. “What do?”

Chocolate and sugar flooded Nell’s mouth. Closing her eyes, she fell into the next best thing to Bei’s arms. Chocolate made everything better.

“What do?”

Too bad the magic didn’t last. Opening her eyes, Nell released the straw and finished her swallow. “It helps the bad guys.”

In so many awful ways.

She hoped the Devil created a brand new corner of Hell for the spybot’s creator. Nell would buy a ticket to see the jerkface suffer. Lots of tickets. And a pitchfork. The gift shop in Hell was bound to have some when she visited.

“Drink up.” Nell tapped the little girl’s pouch.

“Hurt lots?”

“No hurt, just goodness. Yum.” Nell rubbed her stomach.

Sweetie licked the straw, then wrinkled her nose.

“Not like that. Like this.” Nell demonstrated until her pouch collapsed. “Mmmm.”

“Mmmm.” Humming first, Sweetie mimicked Nell. Her cheeks tightened and the straw darkened. Then her hazel eyes lit up. “Mmmmm.”

“Mmmm.” Chocolate was its own special language. Lowering her pouch, Nell winked then glanced across the room.

A dark haired woman stood in the corner. Her green eyes locked with Nell’s.

The hair on her nape stood straight up, and her throat tightened. In the span of a heartbeat her hands flashed the same silver as her pouch. Yet it wasn’t fear that trickled through her but curiosity and familiarity. Was this Sweetie Cutie Pie’s mother? Nell raised a hand to wave her over. The pouch filled her vision.

“Nell Stafford!” Doc shouted behind her.

She jumped at the sound of her name and fumbled with her pouch. She caught it and squeezed. Chocolate bubbled out the straw. She licked it up. With the way the war was going, chocolate might soon be rationed. Keeping, she looked across the armada of occupied gurneys for Doc.

A green diagnostic beam shot out of the Chief Medical Officer’s wrist, heading for her. Doc Cabo frowned and a lock of black hair flapped against his forehead. The sclera of his brown eyes darkened as he merged with the Wireless Array.

Nell stiffened. Great. The rat fink was probably telling her husband she was in the sick bay. All the Syn-En tattled her every movement to Bei. Life sucked with two thousand over-protective mothers constantly hovering nearby. She held up her drink. “I ate lunch.”

Two bites before she couldn’t swallow anymore because of the pressing guilt. She could do so much more, and there was always something to do. Wounded were everywhere. She could help them.

Doc’s beam died and his lips pursed. “How much did you eat?”

“Enough.” She wiggled the straw to reach the drink pooled in the corners of the pouch.

On the gurney, Sweetie sat up, the motion transmitted through the gurney despite the locked wheels.

He stopped in front of Nell and planted his hands on his hips. “Two bites is not enough.”

Darn it. There hadn’t been a Syn-En in the lunchroom. So who else was spying on her? She resisted the urge to squirm. She was an adult. It was her lunch hour, she could eat if she wanted to. “I was full. And they were really big bites.”

“Your power cells are at twenty-five percent. You need to sleep for eight hours and eat, then repeat it before your next shift.” Black stubble dusted his rounded jaw, an effect he cultivated because his new bride liked it. Doc pointed toward the doors. “Out.”

She reached behind her to clutch the gurney. “I have patients.”

Sweetie’s warm leg brushed her fingers.

“And I’m out of patience.” Doc’s brown eyes narrowed. “Go. Now.”

Working on a preteen boy behind her husband, Davena Cabo dusted fermites from her cinnamon-colored hands. Ebony corkscrew curls bobbed around her oval face and her ever-present smile widened as she helped the boy down. “Come. We’ll take our patients to their rooms.” Her black eyes twinkled. “You two get to go to school and learn all sorts of amazing things.”

Her slender hand waved away her cloud of fermites before she helped the preteen down from the metal bed.

Flesh padded the boy and a healthy color flooded his cheeks. Although he slid off the gurney, he held tight to the edges as if not expecting his legs to hold him. They hadn’t when he’d been brought in. “Does school hurt?”

Nell raked a hand through her hair and tugged the tie from her ponytail. The edges brushed her shoulders just as they had six months ago. It didn’t grow anymore. A side effect of the fermites infusing her blood.

Davena blinked. “I don’t think school hurts. Nell?”

“Not usually. But peer pressure can be a pain.” Turning back to her patient, Nell mentally cast aside her thoughts and slid her hands under Sweetie’s arms.

The little girl hung limply in Nell’s grip.

Anger surged through her veins. Was Sweetie so used to be posed and moved around like a rag doll that she didn’t even try to help herself? The Founders had a lot to answer for. Once the Syn-En and NeoSentient Alliance started to win this war, she’d suggest holding the bad guys accountable. War Crimes at Erwar. She pictured the headlines and the Bug-Ugly Scraptors and the evil elves squirming on the stand.

“Is something wrong?” Davena cocked her head to the left.

“No.” Nell focused on the present and carefully lowered Sweetie.

Her bare toes curled on the metal deck and her diaper hung low on her thin hips. Sweetie bent over and raised one leg then the other. “Doesn’t hurt.”

The boy held out his hand to her. She staggered over to him and thudded against his side. He swayed a bit then set his hand on her back and laughed. “That used to knock me over. Remember?”

Nodding, Sweetie tucked her thumb inside her mouth. “I like this experiment.”

Nell’s mouth opened. Experiment, her aunt’s hairy tush! What she did wasn’t in anyway related to the Founders’ evilness. How could anyone even think such a thing?

Davena rose on tiptoes and kissed her husband’s cheek.

Doc glanced around the room. A few of the Syn-En orderlies smiled. He grinned and skimmed his knuckle down her forearm before holding her hand. Energy caused the synthetic hair on his arms to stand up straight. “Use your fermites and tie her to the bed to get her to rest. Bei will have my implants if anything happens to her.”

“I’m rather fond of your…implants.” Davena squeezed his hand before releasing him. “I’ll be back soon.”

Doc snorted and turned away from his wife. “Back to work, people. There’s nothing to see here.”

Medic Queens snorted. “That’s because all the interesting bits are in the WA.”

Davena ducked her head, using the curtain of curls to shield her blush.

Nell tucked her hand through her friend’s arm and dragged her toward the double doors. “You’ll get used to it. In about a hundred years.”

“Thanks. It’s not that I’m ashamed of what we do…”

Nell could almost feel sorry for those Twenty-first century celebrities. Nah, they volunteered to be recorded. “Yeah, but it’s not like you want that video out there for every Tom, Dick, and Harry to watch.”

“I don’t think I’ve met those Syn-En.”

Right. That was an Earth saying, and Davena’s people had been removed from the planet only God knew when and had been transplanted to Surlat. She was learning. Everyone was. Nell raised her free hand. Fermites sparkled on her skin like body glitter but a strip of silver remained. She peeked in the corner.

Drat the woman had left. Guess she wasn’t Sweetie’s mother. Nell yawned.

“Nell?” Davena lowered her voice to a whisper. The double doors opened.

Sweetie and the boy walked through and turned left.

“The other way.” Nell directed them. When they glanced back at her, she pointed to the right. “That way.”

Heads bent together, they swung about and headed toward the school rooms.

Nell held her breath and entered the corridor.

Skeletal Humans lined the hallway, three rows deep on each side. Those who could, stood. Most sat in tight fetal balls on the floor. Body odor, offal, and blood overwhelmed the air scrubbers. Most people gazed listlessly into nothing.

Nell shuddered. If there were flies, she’d have thought this was some commercial for a charity in a third world country. Save the Humans. For only a dollar a day, you can make a difference in the life of some man or woman lost in space. A dollar will buy freedom, two meals a day, and—

“Nell?” Davena squeezed her arm.

“Sorry. I was thinking.” Unpleasant thoughts. That seemed to be happening a lot lately. Maybe the fermites could perk up her thoughts. Nell snapped the hair tie around her wrist.

“I’m concerned about you. Your fermites don’t disappear anymore and Los Alamos says he can’t read you with his diag beam.”

They weren’t the only thing that were hanging around after the party ended. Nell stared at her hand and willed her skin to return to its normal peach color. The silver strip widened. Maybe she should embrace her inner zebra. “Los Alamos?”

“My husband.”

“Right. Sorry.” That explained why she’d been given extra watchers. Nell’s cheeks heated in embarrassment. Doc Los Alamos Cabo was always Doc. All the Syn-En were named after places according to their regional identity, the ultimate way to dehumanize them. Bei rarely talked about his induction days.  He didn’t remember his birth name, nor could he look it up. Only the Syn-En, their original civilian crew and Nell knew that they couldn’t return to Earth again.

God help them if their allies ever found out.

Ahead, the children paused at a tee. Sweetie bounced on her heels, looked both ways then glanced back at Nell.

Nell pointed to the right.

The children skipped away.

Nell didn’t hurry to keep up with them. The corridor ended in the elevator. Only crew members could access it.

“Are you feeling well?” Davena sent a wave of fermites toward Nell.

Nell’s fermites slapped them away. She hadn’t done that. “Whoa! Has that ever happened before?”

The last thing she needed was the fermites having a death match while inside her body. She was running out of flesh and blood parts to replace.

“No.” Davena shook her hand. Her red fingers glistened for a moment before returning to her normal cinnamon color. “But then there have never been two Oracles at the same time.”

“I’m not an oracle.” Nor had Nell ever played one on TV. “And to answer your question, I’m a little worried. You know how things are going.”

Davena pressed her lips together, then glanced left then right. “I know a little. Los Alamos says I’m better off not knowing.”

Some days, she’d give a million fermites not to know. Turning at the tee, Nell spied the children waiting by the elevator.

A bell chimed through the Public Address system.

“All staff, please prepare for the arrival of refugees.” The computer voice drifted down the hall. “All staff, please prepare for the arrival of refugees.”

More wounded. More lost people. More people to fill the overflowing ship.

Nell squeezed her eyes closed. “Where are we going to put them?”

They stopped at the end of the hall.

Like an earthworm swallowing, the rows of humans tightened in waves. Room would be found. It had to be.

“Don’t worry about that. You need to rest.” Davena pressed her thumb against the button. “Elevator, please.”

The lights chimed to life as the voice recognition acknowledged her authority.

Nell rubbed her neck. Tension made the skin tight. “I can’t just switch off the thoughts. I’m responsible for them.”

She’d been elected. She hadn’t even known she was running for the position. If she’d known, she’d have hidden better.

“On Surlat, we were responsible for each other.” Davena frowned. “Foxtrot-one-five-zeda-Romeo is taking care of Sweetie without being asked.”

God. The boy had his barcode memorized. Nell forced her arm down to her side.

The elevator chimed. “Code red arrivals for sick bay. Stand clear.”

Nell reached for Sweetie’s shoulder to move her away from the door. Static electricity jumped in a blue arc from her fingers to the young girl’s shoulder.

Sweetie squeaked and pressed closer to the boy.

“Sorry.” Dang. That had been happening a lot lately. Nell sucked on her tingling fingers. Maybe all her technologies weren’t playing nice together anymore. Heaven help her if it turned into an all-out sibling rivalry. She grounded herself on the wall, then clasped the girl’s shoulder. “Let’s scooch back a bit. Some hurt people need to get by.”

Davena pressed against the elevator button.

The boy squeezed himself back into an opening, dragging Sweetie with him.

Nell eased closer.

The elevator doors chimed again. “Code red arrivals for sick bay. Stand clear.”

“It’s as clear as it’s going to get,” Nell muttered.

The woman on her left chuckled. She cradled a splinted arm against her shrunken chest. “Having this much room to move is a blessing.”

The doors parted.

Ensign Virginia Richmond had her arms wrapped around two healthy-looking men. She wore her hair in a pony tail like the teenager she was. But despite her full cheeks and smooth skin, her eyes revealed the hardened Syn-En soldier she had become. Thanks to her prosthetic arms and legs, she carried them both with ease.  Her gaze locked on Nell. “The Admiral says you are to rest, Leader.”

Admiral, not Bei. Leader, not Nell Stafford. As soon as the NSA declared war, all the Syn-Ens’ ass cheeks puckered. Nell understood, but she missed the down time.

“Aye, aye, Ensign.” She flashed her palm in an insulting salute.

Richmond winked before resuming her impartial mask.

On Nell’s right, the injured woman hissed through her teeth. “Yea-Sayers.”

The word echoed down the corridor.

The hair on Nell’s neck stood on end. Yea-Sayer. She’d heard that word before…

Medic Brooklyn hauled two more obese men behind Richmond.

Four walking wounded waited in the elevator, pressed against the back wall.

Nell stepped toward them. “It’s okay. You can come out. You’re safe.”

In unison, they raised their arms and pointed at the healthy-looking men. “Yea-Sayers!”

In the span of a heartbeat the hallway erupted into chaos. The three rows of people lining the corridor surged toward the obese men. Limbs flailed. Fists smacked flesh. Cries rent the air.

Richmond and Brooklyn disappeared under the writhing mass.

Nell’s heart leapt into her throat. The Syn-En protected people. They wouldn’t give up the men without a fight. A fight they would lose. “They’re going to be trampled.”

She headed toward the mound of people. She had to rescue Richmond and Brooklyn.

An elbow slammed against her cheek. A man backhanded her.

Stars danced in front of her. A foot hit her in the gut as the outside layer of Human skeletons body surfed over the others to get their ounce of justice. “Richmond! Brooklyn!”

A synthetic arm bobbed to the surface.

“Oh hell no! Stop it. Stop it this instance.” Nell swore. Like that had ever happened. Fermites swarmed, fogging the air. “Get off of them.”

Faces turned toward her.

Angry, twisted faces. Bloody fists were raised.

Richmond’s head poked through the seething mass.

Something collided with Nell’s temple. Warmth trickled down her cheek. She raised her hand to swipe at it. Instead, her hand disappeared and all went black.

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Trivia—Do you remember or know your commercial history

Since I am in the middle of proficency tests at the lab, I’m taking the easy blogging route this week. Enjoy!

THIS MAY BE HARDER THAN YOU THINK.

THE ANSWERS WILL BE ON THE TIP OF YOUR TONGUE, BUT CAN YOU REMEMBER THE CORRECT ANSWER.

DON’T LOOK BELOW FOR THE ANSWERS UNTIL YOU HAVE TRIED IT OUT.

A TEST FOR ‘OLDER’ KIDS.

I was picky who I sent this to. It had to be those who might actually remember. So have some fun my sharp-witted friends. This is a test for us ‘older kids’! The answers are printed below, (after the questions) but don’t cheat! answer them first…..

*****************

01. After the Lone Ranger saved the day and rode off into the sunset, the grateful citizens would ask, Who was that masked man? Invariably, someone would answer, I don’t know, but he left this behind. What did he leave behind?________________.

02. When the Beatles first came to the U.S. In early 1964, we all watched them on The ____ ___________ Show.

03. ‘Get your kicks, __ _________ _______.’

04. ‘The story you are about to see is true. The names have been changed to ___________________.

05. ‘In the jungle, the mighty jungle, ________________.’

06. After the Twist, The Mashed Potato, and the Watusi, we ‘danced’ under a stick that was lowered as low as we could go in a dance called the ‘_____________.’

07. Nestle’s makes the very best . .. . . _______________.’

08. Satchmo was America’s ‘Ambassador of Goodwill.’ Our parents shared this great jazz trumpet player with us. His name was _________________.

09. What takes a licking and keeps on ticking? _______________.

10. Red Skeleton’s hobo character was named __________________ and Red always ended his television show by saying, ‘Good Night, and ‘________

________… ‘

11. Some Americans who protested the Vietnam War did so by burning their______________.

12. The cute little car with the engine in the back and the trunk in the front was called the VW. What other names did it go by? ____________ &_______________.

13. In 1971, singer Don MacLean sang a song about, ‘the day the music died.’ This was a tribute to ___________________.

14. We can remember the first satellite placed into orbit. The Russians did it. It was called ___________________.

15. One of the big fads of the late 50’s and 60’s was a large plastic ring that we twirled around our waist. It was called the ___________     ____________.

16. Remember LS/MFT _____ _____/_____ _____ _____?

17. Hey Kids! What time is it? It’s _____ ______ _____!

18. Who knows what secrets lie in the hearts of men? The _____ Knows!

19. There was a song that came out in the 60’s that was “a grave yard smash”. It’s name was the ______ ______!

20. Alka Seltzer used a “boy with a tablet on his head” as it’s Logo/Representative. What was the boy’s name? ________

 

ANSWERS:

01.The Lone Ranger left behind a silver bullet.

02. The Ed Sullivan Show

03. On Route 66

04. To protect the innocent.

05. The Lion Sleeps Tonight

06. The limbo

07. Chocolate

08. Louis Armstrong

09. The Timex watch

10. Freddy, The Freeloader and ‘Good Night and God Bless.’

11. Draft cards (Bras were also burned. Not flags, as some have guessed)

12. Beetle or Bug

13. Buddy Holly

14. Sputnik

15. Hoola-hoop

16. Lucky Strike/Means Fine Tobacco

[or, LORD SAVE ME FROM TRUMAN]

17. Howdy Doody Time

18. Shadow

[ The Shadow  ….  DO ]

19. Monster Mash

20. Speedy

Send this to your ‘older’ friends, (Better known as Seniors.) It will drive them crazy! And keep them busy and let them forget their aches and pains for a few minutes.

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Friday Funny—Some Goodies

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One Potato, Two Potato, Three Potato

Yes, I seem to be obsessed with cleaning. I’m also sick of it too and we’re not out of January. There has to be a better way to clear out loads of stuff you’ve accumulated over the year(s) then by sorting it into piles. And for those of you who say don’t accumulate it, there’s a fork over there go sit on it and spin.

Back to the piles.

There’s pile to keep, to store, to recycle, and to shred.

Lots of piles everywhere. It takes up my bed and smooshes together so that I have to resort all again. (If you’re going to recommend bins, see fork comment above).

What’s worse is I find my husband’s pile sorting irritating. More irritating than my piles probably because I know I still have to go through his to pare it down.

Piles. Piles. Piles. I’ve never found hidden money in the piles, although I did find an oreo and cat toys.

I’ve never found a winning lottery ticket worth millions.

I’ve found bills I couldn’t find when I needed to pay them. Oops:D

And I’ve found report cards from my daughter’s kindergarten.

Yep, I’ve found lots of things, but mostly I’ve found more piles.

And then I learned that piles is an archaic reference to hemorrhoids.

Suddenly piles of stuff isn’t so bad:D

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