Lunar Lovers

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Authors: Emma Abbiss

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Lunar Lovers

Emma Abbiss

 

On an ancient space station, Samius recognizes Achelle, a
half-human, half-Rane female, as his mate the moment he smells her sexy scent.
Knowing their lust for each other will soon become uncontrollable, he races to
get them home to his brothers so all seven of them can complete the Rane
bonding ritual—mating and marking her as part of their family.

Samius’ brothers accept Achelle as his mate and she accepts
them into her body, but is horrified at what she’s done when she wakes the next
morning. Before Samius can explain her heritage and their culture, Achelle runs
from him—and right into trouble, leaving her wondering if she’ll ever find a
place where she belongs.

 

Ellora’s Cave Publishing

www.ellorascave.com

 

 

 

Lunar Lovers

 

ISBN 9781419934285

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

Lunar Lovers Copyright © 2011 Emma Abbiss

 

Edited by Jillian Bell

Cover art by Syneca

 

Electronic book publication July 2011

 

The terms Romantica® and Quickies® are registered trademarks of
Ellora’s Cave Publishing.

 

With the exception of quotes used in reviews, this book may not
be reproduced or used in whole or in part by any means existing without written
permission from the publisher, Ellora’s Cave Publishing, Inc.® 1056 Home
Avenue, Akron OH 44310-3502.

 

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This book is a work of fiction and any resemblance to persons,
living or dead, or places, events or locales is purely coincidental. The
characters are productions of the author’s imagination and used fictitiously.

 

The publisher and author(s) acknowledge the trademark status and
trademark ownership of all trademarks, service marks and word marks mentioned
in this book.

 

The publisher does not have any control over, and does not assume
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Lunar Lovers

Emma Abbiss

 

Chapter One

 

Achelle peered out of a small, circular window as the
limping spaceship finally docked for repairs at an ancient space station that
proclaimed itself Ploice Two in flashing blue block letters. The seal on the
circular port door opened with a hacking cough that turned into a wheeze,
allowing the stale, sanitized air from the ship to mingle with the thick,
polluted air from the station. The resulting smoggy smell forced Achelle to
hold her breath until she was out of the port and into the connect tunnel.

The ship hadn’t stopped at a station for over a month so
Achelle and her fellow travelers, all exhausted, appreciated the opportunity to
disembark—even for a few short hours while one of the ship’s engines was
repaired. She watched their wan faces and stiff frames as they shuffled like
the walking dead into the busy station’s vibrant shopping ring.

As happy as she and the other space-fatigued passengers were
to leave the limping ship, they didn’t have the energy to explore and mingle
with what had to be thousands of other travelers from dozens of foreign
planets. Shoulders sagging, they found what they needed, made their purchases
and shambled back to their tiny rooms onboard.

Achelle forced herself to remain alert, tucking her chin
into her small chest so the long neck and too-large eyes that she’d inherited
from her Rane father would not set her apart from her mother’s people, the
humans she traveled with. She forced her feet to do a slow slip and slide on
the station’s shiny walk surface while her heart pounded out a fast and furious
rhythm made for running.

Unable to hear due to an industrial-sized exhaust fan
whirring a few yards away, Achelle glanced over her narrow shoulder, checking
to see if anyone followed her.

Ploice Two was the lucky station she fixed her hopes on now.
On the last six stations, the only available positions were strippers and
prostitutes. Achelle had nothing against the women who took such positions, but
just weeks ago she had promised her prostitute mother on her deathbed that she
would not follow in the family tradition. This was why she needed to find a way
off the damn ship and away from the obsessed captain who had become
increasingly difficult to fend off.

Flattening herself against the knobby side of a low,
fluorescent-yellow building, she watched with narrowed eyes as two greasy
crewmen from her ship sauntered into the one blue-black bar crammed in among
the expansive yet polite shops. No way was she going into that waste of space.
She could smell the bitter scent of gut-rot alcohol and the bleak smell of
cheap latex and lubricant from her hiding place across the wide walk.

She rubbed at her watery eyes. After so much time on the
spaceship, which employed low, energy-saving lighting, it felt as though the
bright, fluorescing illumination on the station was searing her retinas.

After counting down from ten, she peered around the corner,
anxiously holding her breath until her lungs burned. Finding the way clear, she
took a breath and waited for a small human family of four to draw near, then
stepped in behind the father and blended, pretending to be the eldest daughter
as she decided where to go next.

The squat, spherical clothing store up on the right was as
good a place as any. She pictured herself walking inside the bubble-shaped
building, head held up, hands folded calmly in front of her, a confident smile
plastered on her otherwise desperate face. She would impress the owner with her
sales experience, energy and intelligence.

As she approached the wavering shield doors, her chest
tightened and her hands began to shake. So much rode on her finding a job. Last
sleep cycle, she had barely escaped the large, grasping hands of the infatuated
captain to run and hide the rest of the remaining five sleep hours in a tight
cubby in the grungy children’s play area on deck two.

She shivered in fear just thinking about the towering,
muscular man who she’d evaded only through desperate speed and frantic
inventiveness. When he’d gripped her arms with bruising force and pulled her
against his bulging-muscled body, his pale, blue eyes had flashed with fixated
arousal, as if he was possessed or suffering from space madness.

Gods, she missed her mother…and had counted on her far more
than she’d realized. Her mom was world-wise and vicious as venom. In her
childish innocence, Achelle had believed her mother would always be there for
her, that she would never have to fend for herself. They had planned to make a
new life—one where her mom would have a respectable job and Achelle could
finish her education—on a newly founded planet at the edge of the galaxy. To
lose her one family member unexpectedly had left Achelle in an almost comatose
state for thousands of light-years. Until, that is, the captain expressed his
false regret and forcefully “offered” his protection if she took a new position
as his sexual companion.

Yeah, screw that. Achelle would rather jump out an airlock
than jump in Captain Grab-Ass’ bed.

A metallic chirp sounded when she breached the transparent
shield door and walked in to the trendy clothing store called Spaced. The
inside was small and the clothing shelves mostly empty. She appeared to be the
only customer. With a sigh, she approached the purchase station and waited for
a curvaceous redhead to acknowledge her.

With a sniff, the woman turned and looked Achelle up and
down with bored, unimpressed eyes. “Something I can help you with, Mar?” she
asked, using the common, polite term for “Miss” when her body language and
voice were anything but polite.

Achelle lifted her chin and smiled. “Hello. I’m looking for
a sales position and—”

“Sorry,” the woman interrupted, sounding anything but. “We
don’t have any openings. If you come back at the beginning of traveling season,
we might have a position available.”

Right. As if Achelle could simply wait around for three
months. The woman was either an idiot or unkind. “Can you tell me if anyone
else is hiring on the station?”

“Misty’s had an advert up last time I dined there. It’s the
restaurant in the four-hundred curve of the ring.”

Well, at least I have a lead
, Achelle thought as she
left Spaced and quickly walked away. Realizing she wasn’t blending, she forced
herself to slow to the same speed of the foot traffic and refused to look over
her shoulder as the crowd flowed like a humanoid river down the metallic bed of
the walkway. Overhead, in blazing block letters a sign read Three Hundred
Circle.

Not far to go
, she thought, blinking at the bright
sign and promptly tripping over a squat, rusted-out trash bot.

The bot, no bigger than her head, righted itself on crooked
legs, lifted its angular head and spit a greasy, green residue all over her
slim ankles and old shoes. She kicked the bot away from her but the
sharp-smelling slime worked like acid, eating through her skirt and shoes to
burn her skin.

“Hey!” shouted a short man with an oblong head full of
tangled hair. Unshaven and gruff-looking, he stood in front of the shield door
of a ship strip-down shop that was pretending to be a repair shop. “That bot’s
private property. If you damage it, you’ll pay for repairs.”

Not wanting to draw more attention to herself, Achelle
bolted into a nearby alley to jerk off her shoes and rip off the bottom of her
worn skirt. She threw them away from her, panting with pain. Raw chemical burns
festered on the tops of her feet, her ankles and the tips of her fingers.

Stupid bot…stupid her for tripping over the damn thing.
Trash bots used an acidic fluid to decompose the trash they ingested and didn’t
hesitate to use the fluid in self-defense protocols. Never mind the fact that
the little bot belonged to ship thieves.

Back on Earth, she’d seen a team of four thieves strip a
stolen ship of all its valuable parts in less than five minutes. Then they had
made themselves disappear without a trace.

Too bad she couldn’t do the same. Gods, she sucked at this
furtive, stealthy crap. Grimacing at her bare ankles and feet, she groaned.

“I look like space trash,” she complained to herself. “Now
no one will want me.”

Yet she had no choice but to keep going. She checked left
and right before leaving the alley, then walked with purpose through the busy
three-hundred curve of the ring. Long minutes later, the four-hundred curve
sign hovered overhead.

She slowed to check the name of each establishment. At last
she saw a small sign that said Misty’s in understated silver letters. There was
no green hiring symbol—a humanoid with one hand raised and one by its
side—beneath the name though. Maybe Misty’s was too high class to advertise an
open position that way.

Before she could step through the blue-tinted shield door, a
tall man with sharp features stepped out and looked her over, his eyes
lingering on her torn skirt and bare feet.

“This establishment requires a standard of dress that you do
not meet, Mar,” he said in a crisp, condescending tone. “Please return when you
are properly attired.”

He turned his narrow back, dismissing her, but Achelle let
her anger take her by the hand. She stepped around the man and glared up into
his sallow face.

“I’m looking for a job and was told Misty’s might have an
opening.”

The corners of his nearly lipless mouth lifted ever so
slightly, as if he were amused. “You were misled, Mar, but even if we did have
an open position…” He cleared his throat, glancing down at her burned feet. “We
would be unable to offer a position to…you.”

He lifted his gaze to meet hers and smiled openly, revealing
four rows of oblique, serrated teeth. “Perhaps you should check with the local
brothels? They are located on the eight-hundred curve—on the opposite side of
the ring—and are always looking for new bodies to fill their beds.”

Achelle stepped back from the arrogant Krahs male but
refused to drop her gaze. She waited until, with a lift of his thin eyebrows,
he lost his toothy grin, broke eye contact and went into the restaurant. Then
she walked away. She might be naïve about, well, a lot of things, but one thing
she did know was never to turn her back on a Krahs whose teeth are showing.

An itching between her shoulder blades told her that the
Krahs male was watching her through the cloudy shield door—at least she hoped
it was him and not the captain.

When she and her mother had started the journey, Achelle had
been excited to meet people of other races, maybe even Ranes. She was half-Rane
after all. She had their same larger-than-human eyes and longer-than-human
neck. But the more people she met, the less she wanted to know.

With a forced show of pride, she lifted her chin, fisted her
hands at her side and marched toward the upper hundred curves of the ring. So
what if the brothels were located in the eight hundreds. She was sure there
were plenty of other respectable jobs to be found there as well, and she
wouldn’t let some Krahs snob keep her from looking.

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