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Frost
Maiden
by Michelle
M Pillow
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Futuristic
Romance
Space
Lords 1
|
Empath
and
space
pirate,
Evan
Cormier
is
obsessed
with
decoding
an
ominous
premonition
about
his
future.
When
a
fellow
crewman
angered
a
spirit,
the
vengeful
Zhang
An
took
her
wrath
out
on
everyone
in
the
vicinity.
Evan
just
happened
to
be
one
of
them.
He’s
now
facing
a
future
in
which
he’ll
be
forever
alone.
Lady
Josselyn
of
the
House
of
Craven
has
been
betrayed.
With
her
home
world
on a
Florencian
moon
under
attack
and
her
family
dead,
she
finds
herself
at
the
mercy
of
the
one
who
deceived
them.
There
is
only
one
thing
left
to
do—die
with
honor.
But
before
she
can
join
her
family
in
the
afterlife,
she
must
first
avenge
all
that
she
held
dear.
Falling
in
love
with
a
pirate
was
never
in
the
plan.
Evan
and
his
thieving
crewmates
might
have
delayed
her
fate,
but
they
can’t
stop
destiny.
Rating:
Contains
graphic
sexual
content,
adult
language,
and
violence.
|
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Space
Lords
FROST
MAIDEN
By
Michelle
M Pillow
Note
from
Author
Dear
Readers,
I'm
pleased
to
present
you with
the next
installment
of my
ongoing
futuristic
series,
Space
Lords.
These
books
continue
the
Bestselling
Dragon
Lords,
Lords of
the Var
and
Zhang
Dynasty
saga.
For
those of
you
catching
up on
the
series,
a
complete
reading
order
list is
available
on my
website,
www.michellepillow.com.
There
you will
also
find
quizzes,
games,
fun
facts,
and more
about
this
futuristic
galaxy.
And, for
up to
the
minute
updates
on the
latest
futuristic
book
news,
visit my
blog,
www.michellepillow.com/blog.
Thank
you for
your
continual
support
of this
project
and your
wonderful
emails.
Prologue
Craven
Estates,
Earth
Settlement,
Florencia's
Fifth
Moon
"Josselyn
Craven,
you
stand
accused
of
crimes
against
the
human
race.
Your
title,
family
property,
and your
wealth
is
hereby
stripped."
The
intricate
patterns
of the
old
woven
carpet
came
into
focus
under
Josselyn's
face.
Though
each
curve
was as
familiar
to her
as the
bricks
of her
home,
she had
never
seen
them so
close.
Nor had
she seen
the
sticky
crimson
stain
now
marring
the once
rich
texture.
Her hand
shaking,
she ran
it by
her
face,
knowing
before
she
looked
that it
was
blood.
The
acrid
smell
was all
too
potent
as it
curled
into her
nostrils.
There
was too
much of
it to be
her
blood.
But
whose? A
servant?
Were
they all
to be
slaughtered?
Sacrelue!
Her
muscles
ached
from the
hours
spent
running
around
her
large
castle
home,
fighting
off her
attackers.
She'd
lost her
sword
below in
the
corridor
by the
main
hall and
now had
no
weapon-not
that she
had the
energy
to lift
much
beyond
her own
weight.
Josselyn's
father
had seen
to it
she was
trained
as well
as any
man, but
she
couldn't
fight
off the
endless
stream
of
soldiers
that
seemed
to fill
the
halls.
Sneaking
through
secret
passages--those
hidden
behind
the
stone
walls--she
made her
way from
her
bedchamber
only to
nearly
escape
through
a high
window.
Her
sides
were
scraped
from the
tight
fit, but
the ache
was dull
compared
to the
sharp
stab of
her
broken
ribs,
the
burning
pull of
a
dislocated
shoulder,
and the
myriad
of
bruises.
All
injuries
were
left by
her
Florencia
Moon
Coalition
peers
turned
Federation
lackeys.
How some
of the
men
looked
like
they
enjoyed
hitting
her,
watching
as the
last of
the
mighty
Craven
family
fell.
Though
they
claimed
it was
the
Florencian
government,
the
so-called
rebels
knew the
truth.
The
Federation
was
behind
the new
policies
ruining
their
freedom
and
their
lives.
Like the
classic
Earth
tale of
the
nobleman
who hid
his true
nature
in order
to save
his
people
from a
corrupt
government,
so too
had her
family
hid in
the
limelight
of
society.
Now, for
their
troubles,
there
were
only
three
Cravens
left.
She'd
seen her
father
fall,
her
three
older
brothers,
too. The
oldest,
Jonathan,
to a
sword,
the next
in line,
Peter,
to an
axe, and
Ralphe
to a
dagger.
Their
dead
bodies
were
strewn
all over
the
castle,
their
blood
staining
the
floors,
marring
her gown
from
where
she'd
held
them.
Hopefully
one
brother,
the one
whose
body she
had yet
to find,
had
escaped.
Rainier
was the
youngest
at ten
and two
years,
but
resourceful.
Then
there
was her
mother,
Lady
Craven,
who
thankfully
was off
planet.
At least
she was
safe.
Lady
Craven
was not
a
fighter.
She was
a good,
gentle
woman
with a
heart
big
enough
for the
whole
galaxy.
The lady
was
protected
by her
family
from
most of
their
rebellious
affairs.
If only
Rainier
had gone
with
Lady
Craven,
as had
been the
original
plan,
then
Josselyn
wouldn't
have to
worry
about
the
boy's
safety.
Even as
she
thought
it, she
knew the
most
likely
scenario
was that
Rainier
lay on a
bloody,
stone
deathbed.
The idea
of him,
alone
and
dying,
tore at
her.
Even
this
blood
stained
carpet
beneath
her
could
have
been his
resting
place.
Shaking,
she
pushed
up, her
heart
aching
with the
carnage
she'd
seen.
Grief
overwhelmed
her
spirit,
even as
it drove
her body
angrily
on. She
didn't
think on
tomorrow,
to the
time
when
she'd
have to
face
what had
happened.
It was
all
gone.
Her
life.
Destroyed.
Empty.
It's
only a
matter
of time
before
they
kill the
rest,
her mind
whispered.
Rainier
and your
mother
will
fall. We
will all
fall.
What
point is
there in
fighting?
Live,
fight,
and die
with
honor,
her
father's
voice
answered,
a
distant
memory
translating
the
family
crest.
Her eyes
lifted
to the
doorway,
to the
old
Latin
words
etched
into the
stone,
'Ago
pugna
quod
intereo
per
veneration'.
They
gave her
strength
as
nothing
else at
the
moment
could.
All
around
her, the
chamber
was in
shambles.
They'd
ransacked
her
father's
old
study,
knocking
aside
the
candelabras
and
overturning
the
furniture
she'd
sat on
so many
hours as
a child.
Taking a
blue
candle
that
rested
by her
hand,
she
flung it
at the
man who
spoke,
knocking
his foot
with the
hunk of
wax. He
merely
laughed
at the
weak
defense,
kicking
the
candle
aside.
Shiny
white
boots
stepped
closer,
now
smudged
with the
faintest
trace of
blue.
The man
leaned
down,
the low
bass of
his
voice
just
above a
whisper.
"Just
like
your
father
and your
brothers.
Fighters
all
until
the very
end. Is
it fear
or pride
that
drives
you on?"
The end?
At that
she
managed
to lift
her
head,
though
her eyes
were
still on
the
white
boots.
"Rain?"
"Even
the
boy,"
the
General
in white
answered.
Josselyn
caught
her
battered
reflection
in the
boot, a
stretched
version
of her
face.
His tone
soft as
a
lover's,
he added
so only
Josselyn
could
hear,
"He died
well.
Have no
fear of
that."
Then it
was
true.
The last
of her
family
had
fallen,
save for
the
mother
who
would
come
home to
a dried
crimson
river
that was
once her
life.
Would
they
wait for
her
mother?
Would
they
kill
her,
too?
Even as
she
thought
it, she
knew the
answer.
It was
etched
into the
irritated
lines of
the
General's
face. A
tear
slipped
over
Josselyn's
cheek.
It would
seem she
still
had
energy
enough
to cry,
even if
she
couldn't
push all
the way
up from
the
floor on
her own.
Josselyn
gave a
cold
laugh.
What
else
could
she do?
Tell him
she
hated
him?
Tell him
he was a
monster?
Call him
names
and
curse
his
children's
children?
She'd
already
done as
much
when he
and his
men were
beating
her
senseless.
They
wanted
names
and she
could
die
knowing
she
never
gave
them.
Ago
pugna
quod
intereo
per
veneration.
"Get it
over
with,"
she
croaked.
No part
of her
wanted
to die a
failure,
but her
family
was gone
and she
knew
they had
failed
to win
an
impossible
war. All
that was
left was
to die
well.
Was it
wrong to
be tired
of the
fight?
To want
death so
she may
again be
with
those
who
loved
her? How
could
she live
with the
loss of
so much?
Forget
that
they'd
failed.
Forget
that
soldiers
were
taking
over the
land and
there
was no
one left
to stand
up to
them.
How
could
she live
knowing
everything
she
loved
was
gone?
Pain
rippled
through
her at
the
thought.
"Lift
her,"
the
General
ordered,
his
shiny
boots
walking
away
from
her,
taking
her
reflection
with it.
Two men
hauled
her to
her
feet,
holding
her up
by her
arms.
Josselyn
suppressed
a cry as
they
jerked
her
dislocated
shoulder.
She
couldn't
see
their
faces,
didn't
need to.
Her body
hurt so
badly
she
couldn't
tell
where
the pain
was
coming
from
anymore.
The one
who'd
betrayed
them
stood
before
her.
General
Jack
Stephans.
He'd
deceived
her
family
and the
fifth
moon
settlement.
He'd
traded
them in
for
money
and
power.
Josselyn
lifted
her gaze
briefly
to the
hard
depths
of the
steel
green
eyes
before
her. She
wanted
to kick,
to give
one last
good
blow, to
go down
fighting,
but she
couldn't
raise
her
limbs.
"Poor
little
Josselyn,
so
heartbreaking,"
the
General
grabbed
her chin
and
swiped
beneath
her eye.
He
looked
young,
was in
fact
very
young
for his
position,
only a
few
years
older
than her
six and
twenty.
And yet
they all
knew so
much
more of
fighting
than
anyone
their
age
should,
than
anyone
ever
should.
"We gave
you a
home,"
she
whispered.
"How
could
you do
this?
How
could
you join
them?"
"You
gave me
a place
in your
stables,"
he spat,
his grip
tightening
on her
chin,
bruisingly
so. "Not
a place
at your
table.
Not a
place by
your
side.
Not
equal.
They
gave me
a rank,
a title.
They
give me
respect.
They
give me
a place
in this
world."
"Jack,"
she
said,
her
voice
softening
for the
orphan
boy
they'd
found
over
twenty
years
ago. If
she
begged
him,
maybe
fate
could be
turned
around;
maybe
this day
could be
erased.
Fate had
spit
them out
in a
whirlwind
of
chance
and
deceit.
Maybe
all that
had
happened
wasn't
his
fault.
Maybe it
wasn't
hers.
None of
it
mattered.
None of
it
changed
the fact
that he
had
taken
everything
she held
dear,
everyone,
and now
he was
robbing
her of
her
family
home.
Her tone
hardened
and she
closed
her
eyes.
"General."
"Look at
me,
Josselyn,"
he said.
His tone
caught
even as
his grip
on her
face
tightened
until
his
fingers
pressed
the
inside
of her
cheeks
against
her
teeth.
"You're
so cold.
Even
now,
your
face is
composed.
Is one,
lonely
tear all
the
passion
you can
muster?"
"I am
Lady
Josselyn
of the
House of
Craven."
Her eyes
opened
slowly,
focusing
on the
shiny
white of
his
uniform.
It
gleamed
with the
orange
glow
coming
from the
fireplace.
The
material
looked
odd in
the
drabber
earth
tones
many on
the
fifth
moon
wore.
Theirs
was a
world
based on
Medieval
Earth.
Each
moon in
the
Florencian
system
was
different,
each
settlement
patterned
off a
singular
time in
the
human
past,
times
that
history
had
almost
forgotten.
But the
principals
of the
ancestors
who'd
established
the
colonies
no
longer
applied.
Times
were
different
now.
What had
started
as
preservation
of
history
had
turned
into
reality,
into
laws and
a way of
life
they all
believed
in as
generation
after
generation
was
raised
into the
worlds
of the
Florencian
moons.
The
General
shook
her by
the face
until
finally
she
forced
her eyes
to meet
his. He
looked
angry,
hurt,
wildly
hopeful.
"I can
save
you. I
can say
you had
nothing
to do
with the
treachery
of your
family.
No one
wants to
kill a
woman of
noble
blood.
The line
of
Craven
doesn't
have to
die. I
will
take
your
name;
the name
denied
me by
your
father."
Was he
serious?
She knew
he'd
asked
her
father
for her
hand in
marriage.
In fact,
she'd
dismissed
the
proposal
with the
full
knowledge
he only
asked
because
he
wanted
power.
Did he
think
she
could
love him
now?
Want
him?
Take him
into her
bed?
He must
have
read the
answer
on her
face
because
his own
expression
hardened.
She knew
Jack. He
wouldn't
ask
again.
"I
suppose
not," he
said,
almost
sad.
"Even if
you
agreed,
I could
never
trust
you not
to take
a blade
to my
back.
Not
after
today."
He
sighed
heavily.
"Not
after
this."
"Ago,"
she
whispered,
even her
voice
beginning
to fail
in its
strength,
"pugna
quod int-"
"Quiet
your
tongue!
This
house is
mine.
Mine."
He let
go of
her chin
and her
head
drooped.
"And you
can die
knowing
that I
have
taken
more
than
what you
all
refused
to give
me in
life."
"A place
at our
table,"
Josselyn
said,
her tone
softer
still,
the will
to live
leaving
her. Her
heart
called
out to
her
ancestors,
to her
dead
family,
begging
them to
come and
get her.
"My
table,"
he
answered,
stepping
away.
The
General
lifted a
gun,
pointing
it at
her
head.
She
heard
the
telltale
click of
metal on
metal.
The
weapon
was not
one
found on
the
fifth
moon.
They
fought
with
swords
and
axes,
like the
old
medieval
ways.
Though
technology
was
available,
not
using it
was a
point of
honor.
He must
have
brought
the
weapon
from
another
moon.
Perhaps
the
Victorians?
The
Elizabethans?
It
appeared
to be
too old
to be
from
much
later in
time.
"Do it,
Jack."
She
didn't
look at
him as
she
waited
for the
final
discharge
of the
gun, the
loud
bang
before
the end.
When it
didn't
come,
she
repeated,
the
words a
mere
mouthing
of her
lips,
"Do it."
"Speed
you to a
quick
end,
Josselyn
Craven,"
Jack
whispered.
"You all
brought
this on
yourselves."
Chapter
One
The
Conqueror,
Deep
Space,
103
years
later
"Ah-choo!"
Evan
Cormier
glanced
up from
his
handheld
electronic
book
toward
the
metal
ceiling
of the
ship
commons'
area.
The
lounge
was
equipped
with a
viewing
screen,
gaming
tables,
couches
and
chairs.
The crew
normally
spent a
lot of
time in
there,
when
they
didn't
want to
be alone
in their
quarters.
Deep
space
travel
could be
boring
and they
often
resorted
to
extreme
measures
to
alleviate
the
restlessness.
It was
rare
that
Evan
found
himself
without
company,
but he
didn't
mind the
others
being
around.
Coming
to the
commons
got him
out of
his room
and
afforded
him time
to read
in his
favorite
chair.
"Princess,"
he
acknowledged,
nodding
once at
the
metal
ceiling,
even
though
he
couldn't
see the
petite
Líntianese
woman
hidden
behind
it. A
loud
scrape
sounded
over him
and
within
seconds
the
royal
lady
jumped
down
from
behind a
displaced
grate.
She
landed
gracefully
on the
floor,
crouched
near the
ground
as she
looked
around
the
room.
Seeing
that
Evan had
been
alone
until
her
arrival,
the
woman's
dark
eyes
finally
met his.
He gave
an
amused
half-smile
and set
his book
aside as
he
studied
the
intruder.
"What
are you
up to,
Mei?"
Seeing
Princess
Mei come
down
from the
above
ducts
was
nothing
new. She
had
discovered
the
wire-filled
crawlspace
when she
first
came
aboard
the
spacecraft.
It ran
along
the
entire
length
of their
ship.
Back
then,
she'd
been
trying
to
escape
Captain
Jarek.
Evan
gave a
small
laugh at
the
thought.
Jarek
did
eventually
catch
her and
later
married
her.
If truth
were
known,
she
still
jumped
into the
ducts to
escape
her
husband
and his
all male
crew.
Since
the rest
of them
couldn't
fit
there,
they had
become
her
private
sanctuary.
He
couldn't
blame
the
princess.
Being
aboard a
ship,
floating
in deep
space
with
nothing
but men,
had to
get
tiring
for a
lady.
Though,
she
diplomatically
claimed
she was
fascinated
with
mapping
out the
dusty,
overhead
electronics
graveyard
of The
Conqueror.
"Moving
like the
wind,"
Mei
answered,
giving a
slight
smile.
Evan
wasn't
exactly
sure how
much of
what she
said was
the
literal
truth,
for Mei
did have
an
almost
supernatural
connection
to the
breeze.
She
claimed
it
whispered
secrets
to her.
Mei
sneezed
and
rubbed
the tip
of her
nose.
Dust
streaked
a cheek
and she
hardly
looked
like the
genteel
royal
they'd
first
encountered.
Before,
she'd
been in
silken
robes
and had
her
long,
dark
hair
plaited
and
pulled
immaculately
up on
both
sides of
her
head.
Now her
hair was
pulled
back to
fall in
a trail
from the
nape of
her
neck,
hanging
long
down the
line of
her
spine.
She wore
black,
tight
pants
and a
dark
crimson
shirt.
Both
hugged
her like
a second
skin.
Whenever
they
went
onto a
planet,
she wore
the low
slinging
gun belt
Jarek
had
given
her.
Mei
sneezed
again,
her eyes
watery.
"You
should
go spend
some
time in
the
medical
unit."
Evan
glanced
back
down to
his
book.
"All
that
dust
can't be
good for
your
lungs.
Who
knows
what
they
used to
store up
there
before
the
captain
bought
the
ship?"
Mei
frowned,
and he
sensed a
wave of
irritation.
It was a
strong
emotion,
too
strong
to have
come
just
from his
suggestion.
She was
mad at
her
husband.
Jarek
did tend
to be
overprotective
of her,
but Evan
knew it
was only
because
he loved
her so
much.
Besides,
being of
Var
descent,
Captain
Jarek
was
taught
that
women
were the
more
fragile
of the
sexes
and had
to be
taken
care of.
The
delicate
little
Mei
hardly
needed
caring
for.
She'd
been
raised
in the
Imperial
palace
on her
planet,
born
into not
only the
power of
her
family's
rule,
but into
actual
power.
She was
like the
wind,
free-spirited
and
hearing
its
confidences.
Acting
on
instinct,
she
could
handle
herself
and had
been
training
in the
Virtual
Reality
rooms to
prove
it.
Evan
grimaced
as he
realized
he was
picking
up on
Mei's
emotions
again.
For the
most
part, he
tried
not to
use his
'gift'
to read
into the
other
crew
members'
personal
feelings,
but
sometimes
it was
unavoidable.
"Your
husband
is
exasperating
you
again,
isn't
he?"
Evan
asked,
resigning
himself
to the
interruption.
Mei
nodded.
"Still
fighting
over
what you
named
the
baby?"
he
continued.
Again,
she
nodded.
"I know
that's
not
what's
really
bothering
you."
Evan
gave her
a
meaningful
look. He
picked
up on
several
things
from her
lately,
but most
predominate
was the
need for
privacy
and
space on
certain
issues.
Mei
shook
her
head.
"No,
it's
not."
"He
loves
you. He
will
listen."
"I know,
but I
must
first
discover
what it
is I
wish to
say.
There is
no air
here. I
cannot
listen
to my
own
thoughts
blowing
through
me."
"He's
coming
this
way."
Evan
glanced
meaningfully
toward
the
door.
"Help
me?" Mei
asked,
her tone
soft and
still
burred
with the
accent
of her
birth.
There
was just
something
about
the tiny
woman
that
begged
to be
taken
care of,
and each
and
every
member
of the
crew
felt it.
She was
like
their
little
sister.
Evan
sighed
and
stood.
Threading
his
hands
together,
he held
them
like a
step.
Mei
placed
her foot
in his
palms
and
lifted
up,
jumping
to catch
the end
of the
grate.
She
moved
with
incredible
agility,
especially
for a
woman
who'd
just had
a baby
six
months
ago.
Poking
her head
over the
side,
she
whispered,
"You
didn't
see me."
"Mei!"
Jarek
yelled,
sliding
to a
stop at
the
doorway.
Long,
waist-length
dark
hair
flew
about
his
shoulders
from
where it
was
bound at
the nape
of his
tattooed
neck. It
was
clear
he'd
been
running
around
the
ship,
chasing
his
wife.
His eyes
glowed,
threatening
with the
tiger he
could
shift
into at
will.
"Sacred
Cats!
Woman,
get down
here and
talk to
me!"
"There
is
nothing
to talk
about,
ten nai,"
Mei
yelled
just as
loudly.
"We are
not
calling
our son
Parker
anymore!"
"But
that's
his
name,"
Jarek
protested,
his tone
giving
away how
exasperated
he was.
"Besides,
you
liked it
when we
were at
your
parents'
house.
Your
father
even
announced
it as
the
baby's
name
before
he was
born.
What
else are
we to
call
him?"
"Well,
it
annoys
me now.
If you
keep
saying
it to
him,
he'll
think it
is his
name for
real!"
Mei's
voice
was
muffled,
and they
could
hear her
crawling
away
from
them.
"Well,"
Jarek
paused,
sending
a wave
of
frustration
over
Evan.
"It is
his name
for
real.
Read the
birth
announcements."
"You put
those
out
before I
could
agree to
it,
before
he was
even
born!"
Her
voice
had
gotten
faint
and Evan
knew she
was
already
quite a
long
ways
down the
duct.
"Irritating
fea,"
Jarek
mumbled.
"I
cannot
help it
if I was
excited.
He was
halfway
born
when I
sent the
transmission
to my
family."
Evan
laughed,
taking
his seat
once
more. "I
thought
you'd
decided
on
Parker
before
the
birth."
"We
did,"
Jarek
grumbled.
"Emperor
Zhang is
pressuring
her for
a family
name to
be added
to
Parker.
I told
her we
could
name him
after my
twin
brother,
Reid.
Sacred
Cats,
any of
my
brothers
for that
matter,
but she
wants a
Líntianese
royal
name.
I'm
sorry,
but I'm
not
calling
my son
Jin. I
knew a
Je'en
once and
she was
three-hundred
pounds
of
slime.
I'm not
calling
my son
that.
His Var
cousins
will
beat him
up for
it."
"It's
only a
second
name,"
Evan
reasoned,
knowing
that
Jarek's
nieces
and
nephews
would do
no such
thing-at
least
not in
earnest.
Var
family
ties
were too
strong.
Evan
often
felt
jealousy
when
Jarek
was near
his
family,
not
jealousy
on the
Captain's
part,
but his
own.
Aside
from his
friends,
Evan had
no true
family.
It
wasn't
so much
that his
friends
weren't
good
enough,
as they
were
family
in a
way, but
only
being
around
Jarek
and his
brothers
made him
miss the
family
he'd
lost.
"I know.
I'll
probably
give in,
but the
woman
keeps
running
away
from me
whenever
I try to
discuss
it."
Jarek
sighed.
"I want
to know
what
this is
really
about
first
before I
start
agreeing
to
changing
my son's
name or
adding
to it,
or
whatever
other
crazy
idea she
has in
mind. I
know
Parker's
name
really
isn't
what's
troubling
her, but
she
won't
talk to
me."
Evan
didn't
answer.
He knew
better
than to
get into
the
middle
of
people's
affairs,
especially
when the
heart
was
involved.
Jarek
looked
at him,
hopeful.
His
voice
flat, he
said,
"I'm not
reading
your
wife, so
don't
ask."
Jarek
gave him
a funny
look and
said
dryly,
"Enough
about
me. What
you
reading
now?"
Evan
passed
his
handheld
reader
over to
Jarek so
the
captain
could
see the
screen.
"The
Practical
Impact
of
Líntianese
Elements
on
Everyday
Life-a
translation
from the
original
text,"
Jarek
read,
shaking
his
head.
"You're
still
dwelling
on that
prediction,
aren't
you?"
"Just
trying
to make
sense
out of
what
Zhang An
said."
Evan
sighed,
taking
the
handheld
from
Jarek.
Zhang An
was the
ancestral
spirit
of Mei's
Imperial
family.
Rick
Hayes,
their
pilot,
had
angered
the
spirit
and, as
a
punishment
for his
insults,
she had
partially
predicted
some of
the
crews'
futures.
The
punishment
part
wasn't
the
reading,
but the
cryptic
way in
which it
was
done.
Truth
was,
Evan
didn't
think
there
was any
way to
translate
the
ominous
divination.
He'd
come to
the
conclusion
that An
had only
said
what she
did to
mess
with
them. It
was
working.
He could
think of
little
else
since.
Closing
his
eyes,
Evan
leaned
back in
his
cushioned
seat as
he
remembered
the day
An had
predicted
their
futures.
The
ability
to
remember
things
with
crystal
clarity
was one
of his
gifts-or
so he
was
told.
There
were
some
memories
he
wished
would
fade
with
time,
some
things
he'd
rather
not see
again,
and it
was hard
to
consider
those
vivid
memories
a gift.
A wave
passed
over the
darkness
under
his lids
and a
blurry
vision
of what
had once
been
came to
him. The
image of
the past
cleared,
and he
could
see
things
just as
he'd
seen
them
when
they
happened.
Jarek
had just
brought
Mei home
to her
parents.
The two
had been
in love,
but
didn't
think
they
could be
together.
Mei was
a
Líntianese
princess
and
Jarek
was a
Var
prince
who, for
all
intents
and
purposes,
didn't
use his
title.
Instead,
he went
by
Captain
and kept
to the
high
skies as
a
borderline
pirate
balancing
on the
edge
between
law and
outlaw.
Jarek
was
still
loyal to
his
family,
but the
prince
knew he
had to
live his
own
life. It
took Mei
awhile
to learn
the
same,
but here
she was
with all
of them,
wandering
the
universes
in
search
of
whatever
it was
they all
sought.
Evan
took a
deep
breath,
listening
to the
past for
clues
and
knowing
it would
bring
none.
'Whoa,
easy
there,
ghostly
sweetness,'
a
remembered
voice
whispered
in his
head. It
had been
Rick
speaking,
insulting
the
ancestral
spirit.
He was
the
ship's
pilot
and a
talented
one at
that.
For all
his
devil-may-care
attitude
and
rakish
demeanor,
Rick
really
was a
good
man.
He'd
give his
life for
anyone
of his
friends,
just as
they
would
give
their
life for
him. But
caring
for the
man like
a
brother
didn't
change
the fact
that he
was
downright
infuriating
at
times.
Evan
knew
Rick
only
said
what he
did to
the old
spirit
to draw
attention
away
from the
captain
at a
tense
moment,
but the
spirit
hadn't
taken
kindly
to the
insolent
tone.
Evan
kept his
eyes
closed,
trying
to
remember
each
detail
of what
had
happened.
It
wasn't
hard. He
thought
about it
every
day.
'I will
teach
you
respect,
little
man. You
will bow
in the
presence
of my
greatness
... Do
not make
me curse
you.'
An's
spectral
figure
had
glistened
with
light as
her
anger
grew.
Long,
dark
hair
streaked
with
white
flowed
around
her
shoulders.
Her
sleeves
swept
over the
ground
as she
drifted
slightly
over
them.
The
delicate
silk of
her gown
was made
even
more so
by the
fact
that it
traveled
on air.
Every
movement
was
silent,
like the
breeze.
Evan had
tried to
get Rick
to be
quiet,
but it
didn't
work.
The man
always
pushed
things a
little
too far,
going on
to
comment
about
the
woman's
gown
getting
twisted
or some
such
nonsense.
Since
Rick had
a thing
for
twenty-first
century
Earth
memorabilia
and
sayings,
they
couldn't
always
figure
out what
some of
his
expressions
meant.
The old
spirit
might
have
just let
him go
with a
small
personal
curse,
but Rick
then
made
some
comment
about
her
powers
or lack
thereof.
Instead
of just
bringing
her
curse
upon
himself,
Rick
caused
her
wrath to
turn to
the
other
members
of
Jarek's
crew-at
least
those
unfortunate
enough
to be
present
at the
time.
Evan,
Lochlann,
Jackson,
and Dev
still
didn't
fully
forgive
Rick for
what had
happened
next.
An's
eyes had
turned
white,
as she
foretold
just a
tiny
piece of
their
future,
'Together
you
travel
and
together
you'll
remain.
Tied and
joined
like the
five
elements
of our
people.
The road
to
happiness
is very
rocky
for all
of you.'
When her
eyes had
cleared,
indicating
she'd
come out
of her
vision,
she'd
smiled
vindictively
at them.
'You
will
find
your
love
hidden
within
the
mystery
of the
five
elements.
One
element
for each
of you.
The
corresponding
element
will
hold the
secret
to your
future
happiness.
But fate
is not
clear.
If you
do not
recognize
it, you
will
lose it
and be
forever
alone.'
Since
Evan was
unable
to
psychically
read
spirits,
he
didn't
know if
she was
lying or
not.
Part of
him
hoped
she was,
but in
truth it
didn't
matter.
Her
words
served
their
purpose.
They
tormented
with
just a
glimpse
of the
unknown
and no
real
guidance
as to
what it
could
mean.
That was
the true
curse,
not
knowing
the rest
or what
could be
done
about
it.
Zhang An
obviously
had
great
powers.
She
could
have
told
them
more,
could
have
said
which
element
was
assigned
to each
man,
could
have
said
when,
where,
more of
the how.
No, all
they got
was the
ominous,
'If you
do not
recognize
it, you
will
lose it
and be
forever
alone.'
Now, the
secret
to their
future
happiness
rested
in the
mystery
of the
five
Líntinese
elements.
"Mei
says it
will
come to
you as
soon as
you stop
dwelling
on it,"
Jarek
offered,
drawing
Evan
from his
thoughts,
back
into the
present.
"She
also
said
that the
words
are not
literal,
but
figurative.
It could
be a
nuance
of the
intended's
personality
or she
could
love
water or
fire.
Sacred
Cats,
the wood
element
could
merely
mean the
woman
was born
at the
same
time a
tree was
felled
outside
her
birth
room
door. It
is
impossible
to tell.
You
should
take
your
mind
from it
and live
as you
have.
Nothing
has
changed."
Nothing?
Evan
wanted
to laugh
and
scream
at the
same
time.
"How?
There is
nothing
to do on
this
ship and
seeing
you
happily
married
doesn't
help
matters."
Evan
shut off
the
reader
and set
it
aside.
He had
read
book
after
book and
they all
said the
same
thing.
Five
Elements-fire,
earth,
wood,
water,
and
metal.
Simple
and
complex.
Infinite
possibilities.
Ultimate
insanity.
But how
could
Evan
stop
looking?
Zhang
An's
words
threatened
the very
thing he
wanted
most-to
once
again
have a
family.
He
wanted a
family
of his
own so
badly
that the
idea of
missing
his
chance,
of
walking
by the
woman he
should
be
looking
for,
tore at
him.
Jarek
laughed
dryly as
he
looked
to where
his wife
had
disappeared.
"Yeah,
right.
Happy."
"Love
her.
That is
all you
can do."
Evan
relented
a little
as he
said
just
enough
to ease
Jarek's
overbearing
worry
for his
wife. "I
think we
all need
a
diversion,
even Mei."
"Such
as?"
"We need
to find
some
mischief
to
occupy
our
time."
Evan
gave a
sly
grin.
"Want to
go
kidnap
your
brother
again?
That was
entertaining."
"Again?"
Jarek
shook
his
head.
"No, you
are not
laying
that
deed
upon my
head.
That was
under
Samantha's
command.
She was
your
captain
on that
fated
mission."
"At
least it
was
fated to
end
well."
Evan
chuckled.
"Samantha
and
Falke
did
marry."
"This
will end
well,
too."
Jarek
motioned
toward
the book
Evan had
turned
off.
"You're
too good
for the
gods not
to bless
you."
Evan
wished
he had
such
blind
certainty.
The Var
never
seemed
to
struggle
when it
came to
faith in
a higher
power.
To them
it just
was, as
real as
the
green-tinted
sky
stretching
over
their
planet
of
Qurilixen.
Evan
watched
the
captain
leave,
knowing
Jarek
was
going to
try and
track
his
wayward
wife
down.
'If you
do not
recognize
it, you
will
lose it
and be
forever
alone.'
That
statement
haunted
his
dreams.
Five
elements
for the
five
single
crewmen
who had
stood
before
her.
Unluckily,
Evan was
one of
the
five. If
Rick
hadn't
saved
his life
so many
times in
the
past, he
would've
thrown
him off
the
spaceship
thousands
of miles
away
from any
planet.
The
others
were in
the
exact
same
situation
as he
was.
Rick had
saved
them all
more
times
than
they
could
count,
and that
wasn't
including
the
numerous
times
he'd
flown
them out
of a
dangerous
chase.
Well,
admittedly,
the
number
was
significantly
lower
for the
crewmen
Lochlann
and
Jackson.
The two
men were
originally
part of
Captain
Jarek's
crew.
Evan,
Rick,
Dev and
the two
brothers,
Lucien
and
Viktor,
were all
originally
part of
Captain
Samantha
Dorsey's
crew.
When Sam
married
the
kidnapped
Prince
Falke
and
chose to
stay
with him
on his
home
planet,
they
were
left
without
a ship
or a
captain.
Prince
Jarek,
Falke's
brother,
needed a
crew and
they
needed a
captain.
It
worked
out
perfectly
for all.
Evan's
stomach
tightened
as his
thoughts
turned
to Sam
in
perfect
detail.
She had
saved
his life
long
ago. It
was an
old,
painful
wound
and a
memory
he
didn't
like to
visit.
In that
memory,
he'd
lost
everything-his
family,
wealth,
legacy.
Sam had
been his
bright
spot,
his
reason
for
living.
She'd
nearly
died to
save
him, and
in turn,
he'd
nursed
her back
to
health.
Out of
all the
things
he had,
she was
the most
important.
Though
she was
happily
married
and well
taken
care of,
living
like a
princess,
Evan
missed
her.
Even so,
he
wouldn't
change
her
fate.
Never
would he
take a
friend's
happiness
for his
own.
"Holy
Space
Balls!"
Rick's
voice
intruded
on
Evan's
thoughts,
startling
him. The
pilot
grimaced,
halfway
into the
commons
as his
brown
eyes
widen in
mock
concern.
"You're
dwelling,
aren't
you?
Now,
don't
lie. I
can see
it in
your
furrowed
brow.
You're
not
going to
try and
beat me
up
again,
are
you?"
Evan
frowned.
"I
didn't
try to
beat you
up."
"Yeah,
but you
didn't
stop
Jackson
and
Lochlann
from
having a
go at
me, did
you?"
Rick
grinned,
his
expression
saying
he was
hardly
concerned.
"You
talking
about
me?"
Lochlann
asked,
suddenly
appearing
at the
door. He
was a
dragon
shifter,
a Draig,
who came
from the
same
planet
as
Captain
Jarek.
The two
were
long
time
friends
who had
run away
from
home
while
their
two
races
were at
war.
Neither
one of
them had
wanted
to fight
so they
chose
the high
skies.
In
space,
things
like a
person's
race
didn't
matter
as much.
Everyone
was
different.
Though
the war
on
Qurilixen
was
over,
Lochlann
and
Jarek's
families
didn't
fully
accept
their
friendship.
"No,"
Rick
lied.
"Hmm,
'cause
I'll
beat
your ass
again."
Lochlann
laughed.
"Just
for the
fun of
it."
"I'll
help
him."
Jackson
joined
them,
falling
onto a
seat
with a
big
sigh. He
was a
security
officer
who kept
mostly
to
himself.
Evan
knew he
was a
good
man,
could
feel it
with his
'gifts'.
Jackson
spent a
lot of
his time
in the
Virtual
Reality
training
room
with
Dev,
fighting
computer
simulated
beasts.
Evan
knew
Jackson
had
plenty
of his
own
demons
to
fight.
"Ah."
Rick
waved
his hand
in
dismissal.
"Shut
your
black
holes."
"What's
all the
yelling
about?"
Viktor
asked,
carrying
a tray
of
Qurilixen
blue
bread
and a
steaming
bowl of
liquid
for
dipping.
Lucien
and
Viktor
had
gotten
lucky.
When the
rest of
the crew
was
cursed,
they'd
stayed
on the
ship
guarding
a
prisoner
while
the
others
were at
the
Zhang
palace.
"Lucky
bastards,"
Evan
mumbled
to
himself
at the
thought.
"Who's
the
bastard?"
Lucien
joined
them,
moving
by to
swipe
the tray
from his
brother
for
himself.
Viktor
protested,
as
Lochlann
and Rick
moved to
block
his
pursuit.
Lucien
tossed
pieces
of bread
to his
helpers,
only to
hand
Viktor
back the
empty
tray.
The two
brothers
constantly
bickered
even
though
they
were
really
quite
close.
They
were
half
human,
half
dere,
and had
a milky
white
complexion
which
contrasted
the
strangest
red-brown
and
red-green
of their
eyes.
Lucien
was a
communications
genius
and
Viktor
was one
hell of
a
mechanic.
"You
are,"
Viktor
grumbled,
eyeing
his
empty
tray.
Turning
toward
the
door, he
added,
"Good
thing I
fixed
the food
simulator."
"Hey,
bring me
something,"
Jackson
yelled.
Viktor
waved
his hand
over his
head by
way of
an
answer.
The
three
bread-thieving
men
chewed
on their
stolen
goods as
Jackson
and Evan
watched.
"So?
What's
the
yelling
about?"
Lucien
asked,
popping
the last
bit of
bread
into his
mouth.
"Jarek
and Mei."
Evan
didn't
need to
expand
upon the
comment.
"What's
with
you?"
Lucien
asked.
"He's
dwelling
on what
that old
bag of
air
said,"
Rick
answered.
Then to
Evan, he
added,
"Why
worry
about
it? I
bet she
couldn't
predict
her way
out of
the
palace,
let
alone
tell us
what our
future
holds.
Holy
space
balls,
she
couldn't
even
walk
toward
the
light
when she
died and
now is
stuck
annoying
people.
She's
just a
dead
broad,
that
doesn't
mean
she's
smart."
Evan
quirked
a brow.
"Then
why were
you
trying
to make
amends
with the
rest of
us last
time we
were on
Líntian?"
Rick
shrugged.
"She's
pretty
sexy for
an older
lady and
I've
never
done it
with a
ghost."
He
looked
so
sincere,
and they
couldn't
help but
laugh at
him.
"I'm
sure
it's
just
like
having
sex with
air,"
Jackson
said
thoughtfully.
"And
you've
done
that
often
enough."
Rick
lifted
his
hand,
wiggling
his
fingers.
"Never
air,
space
cadet.
I've got
my lady
right
here."
"Maybe
old
Zhang An
is your
fate,"
Lucien
teased.
The two
dere
brothers
had
enjoyed
tormenting
'the
cursed
ones' to
no end.
"You've
got the
element
of air."
Rick
shivered.
"Married
to an
old dove
like
that?
Spare me
the
horror."
"Dove?"
Jackson
asked.
"Broad?
Walking
toward
light?"
"It's
a-" Rick
began.
"Never
mind, I
don't
want to
know,"
Jackson
said. "I
think
it's
better
if we
don't
get your
meanings."
"I'm not
fated to
be air,"
Rick
informed
Lucien.
"It's
pretty
obvious
that I'm
metal."
He
pounded
his
chest.
"Hard as
ship's
steel."
"Your
head is
full of
air,"
Evan
mumbled.
If the
old
spirit
had
wanted
to drive
them to
madness,
she'd
picked a
brilliant
way of
doing
it.
Being
part
telepath,
Evan
knew the
dangers
of
revealing
too much
of the
future,
but
there
was also
danger
in not
saying
enough.
It's why
he often
said
nothing
about
what he
sensed
in
others,
or what
fate had
in
store.
In fact,
the
other
crew
members
didn't
exactly
know how
much of
the
future
he could
see.
But,
since
tomorrow
was
forever
changing,
it was
pointless
for him
to give
hints
and
change
fate.
Intentions
could be
misread.
Knowing
the
future
often
changed
the way
people
acted
and
could
sometimes
cause
dangerous
outcomes.
"Ah,
stop
being so
melancholy.
You
should
be happy
to know
how to
avoid
marriage,"
Rick
said.
"Can you
imagine?
Being
bound to
one
woman? I
like Mei,
but I
feel
sorry
for
Jarek.
Forced
to sleep
in one
woman's
bed for
the rest
of his
life,
stuck
banging
the same
old
piece
of-"
"Rick,"
Evan
warned.
"Hand?"
Lucien
finished
for
Rick,
chuckling.
Rick
gave
them an
ornery
look and
kissed
his
knuckles.
Whispering
to his
hand, he
said,
"He
didn't
mean
it."
"The
captain's
in love.
Why feel
sorry
for
him?"
Jackson
asked,
though
the look
on his
face
wasn't
as
certain
as his
tone.
"Jackson,
come.
I've
reset
the
program."
Dev
appeared
at the
entryway
and
Jackson
instantly
stood.
"Ah, lay
off,
would
you,
Dev,"
Rick
grumbled.
"I'm
trying
to start
a party
here."
"I don't
want any
part of
the
party
you're
trying
to
start,"
Viktor
teased.
"The
last
time you
started
something,
we
kidnapped
a
prince,"
Dev
answered.
He was
the
ship's
muscle
and a
bit of a
loner.
Being of
half
Belvon
descent,
Dev was
of a
demonic
looking
race
with red
skin and
a very
stern
temperament.
Aside
from the
intense
coloring,
he
appeared
humanoid,
only
larger.
Because
of his
human
features,
the
Belvon
rejected
him and,
because
of his
Belvon
features,
the
humans
feared
him. He
was an
outcast
to
either
race,
but on
this
ship, he
was a
brother.
Rick was
the
opposite
of Dev.
The
Bevlon
was all
about
maintaining
order
and Rick
was all
about
breaking
it.
"And Sam
got
married
to him,"
Lucien
said.
"It
worked
out."
Evan
felt his
gut
tighten
at the
mention
of her
name.
"That
gives me
an
idea."
Rick
winked
at the
group in
general,
as he
crossed
toward
the
gaming
table. "Wanna
play
Kiss My
Comet?
We could
always
see what
we
kidnap
next?
You
never
know, we
might
find a
sexy
woman
with
five
breasts
locked
in one
of our
quarters
tomorrow
morning."
"We're
not
drunk,"
Evan
said, by
way of
denying
the
request
to play
a kid's
game.
It's the
only
thing
the crew
could
remember
the
rules to
when
they
were
blitzed.
"Mm, not
yet,"
Rick
corrected,
reaching
behind a
seat and
pulling
out a
half-full
bottle
of Earth
whiskey.
"But
that's
easily
rectified."
"It's
early,"
Lochlann
protested,
even as
he
stood.
"Not on
the west
side of
Qurilixen."
Rick
grinned.
"Come
on,
it'll
take
your
mind off
of that
stupid
premonition."
"Jackson?"
Dev
asked.
"Yeah,
coming."
Jackson
followed
Dev out
of the
commons.
"You
need
space
credits
again,
don't
you?"
Evan
laughed.
"I do,"
Rick
admitted.
Then,
lowering
his
voice,
he said,
"I just
picked
up a
loose
transmission
wave in
the
cockpit.
Rumor
has it
the
Galaxy
Playmates
are
doing a
show
near the
Siren
Mining
Colony.
If we
have
just the
right
amount
of
engine
trouble,
his
royal
princeliness
will
have to
let us
land
there
for
repairs."
"You're
going to
sabotage
our
ship?"
Evan
quirked
a brow.
"Ah,
'sabotage'
is such
a harsh
word."
Rick
took a
long
pull off
the
whiskey
bottle.
"I'd
like to
think of
it as
saving
the
crew.
Ever
since
Jarek
got
married,
or
mated,
or
whatever
it is
those
Var do,
he
hasn't
put in
for any
shore
leave."
He
paused,
motioning
down to
his
crotch.
"Little
Rick is
feeling
mighty
neglected
these
days.
He's not
too
happy."
"Watch a
download,"
Evan
quipped,
reaching
for the
bottle.
He
paused,
looking
at the
old
fashioned
label on
it to
make
sure it
wasn't
anything
strange.
"Not as
fun as
the real
thing."
Rick
grabbed
the
bottle
back to
take
another
swig,
his look
telling
all that
the
whiskey
was
untainted.
He
started
to
drink,
but
Lucien
swiped
it from
him,
spilling
liquor
down
Rick's
chin. "I
keep
saving
up to
buy one
of those
pleasure
android
girls,
but I
can
never
seem to
hold
onto
enough
money.
In fact,
I think
I might
end up
lifting
one next
time I
get the
chance."
"We are
not
kidnapping
anyone
or
anything
tonight."
Lucien
took a
drink.
"I don't
want
that
kind of
adventure.
Besides,
pleasure
robots
...
droids,
whatever
you want
to call
them,
are
chipped.
I heard
if you
steal
one and
then try
to use
it
without
the
right
codes,
it'll
blow
your
manhood
right
off.
It's a
built in
security
measure."
Then to
Evan, he
added
under
his
breath,
"Unless
this
time the
adventure
leads to
Rick
getting
married
and left
behind."
"Ha,
ha."
Rick
pretended
to growl
as he
took the
bottle
of
whiskey
away and
passed
it again
to Evan.
"I miss
Sam. She
would've
played
cards
with me.
And she
would've
gone to
Siren
just for
the
adventure
of it.
She had
the best
ideas,
like the
time she
entered
us in
the
great
space
race."
All but
Lochlann
laughed.
He'd not
been
part of
their
crew
when it
happened.
"And, as
far as
the
future
Mrs.
Rick
Hayes is
concerned,"
Rick
continued.
"Viktor
can
overwrite
any
programming
glitch
she
might
have."
"You'd
put your
balls in
my
brother's
hands?"
Lucien
snickered,
knowing
just how
bad the
question
sounded.
Rick
growled
at him.
"Keep it
up,
space
cadet. I
know the
launch
codes to
the
pods.
I'll
shoot
you so
far into
deep
space
you'll-"
"Finally
get some
peace
because
I won't
have to
listen
to you
run your
mouth
all
day?"
Lucien
offered.
Evan
took a
drink
and then
another
before
handing
the
bottle
back.
"Sam and
Falke.
Funny
how
things
work
out,
eh?"
"Yeah.
Funny."
Rick's
face
turned
serious
for a
brief
moment
before
again
lifting
into an
easy
smile.
"I'll
deal."
Lucien
pulled a
chair to
the
gaming
table.
"You
cheat,"
Lochlann
said,
doing
the
same.
"I'll
deal."
"Do
not,"
Lucien
protested.
"Yeah,
you do,"
Viktor
said
from the
door.
This
time he
carried
a huge
tray,
overflowing
with
food. He
set it
down in
front of
them.
"Sam
wasn't
the
woman
for
you,"
Rick
said,
leaning
close so
only
Evan
could
hear.
Though
he
didn't
look it,
Evan
could
feel the
concern
in his
friend.
Rick
placed
his hand
on the
arm of
Evan's
chair,
leaning
over
him.
"She
never
was."
Evan
nodded.
"She is
Falke's
wife,
Jarek's
sister-by-marriage,"
Rick
reiterated,
handing
up the
bottle.
"And our
friend."
Evan
nodded
again.
He knew
all that
and
didn't
need the
reminder.
"Enough,
I'm fine
about
it."
Then
louder,
he said,
"Now,
let me
deal the
hand.
I'm the
only one
of us
who
doesn't
cheat
and I
don't
want to
stop
playing
until we
all pass
out."
"That's
the
spirit!"
Rick
clapped
his
hands.
"And I
promise
you
won't
regret
it!"
* * * *
Evan
didn't
move as
he
stared
up at
the
commons'
metal
ceiling.
Getting
drunk
had been
a rash,
horrible
decision
and he
regretted
making
it. His
head
throbbed,
radiating
pain
through
his
temples,
his
eyes,
his neck
and
shoulders.
Beyond
that, he
couldn't
feel
anything.
"All
right,
you've
suffered
enough."
Mei's
voice
came
from a
fog,
booming
abnormally
loud for
the
soft-spoken
woman.
Evan
felt a
tug on
his arm
and
several
burning
pokes.
By small
degrees,
he
started
to feel
better.
The ache
lessened
and his
eyes no
longer
hurt
when he
blinked.
Turning
his
clearing
head
toward
the
princess,
he saw
her
holding
the
handheld
medic
unit to
his arm
and
weakly
nodded
his
thanks.
"I
should
leave
the lot
of you
to rot
in
misery,
but I
found
something,"
Mei
said.
Evan
mumbled,
but even
he
didn't
know
what he
was
trying
to say.
"In the
ducts,"
Mei
explained.
"It's
old.
Really
old.
Well,
old like
my
husband
at any
rate."
"I'm in
the
prime of
my
life,"
Jarek's
voice
protested.
"Mm, yes
you
are,"
Mei
agreed.
"I've
got
hundreds
of years
left in
me,"
Jarek
continued.
"Whatever
you say,
ten nai."
Mei
giggled,
teasing
him.
Evan
pulled
himself
up, the
slow
movements
of his
body
hampered
by the
lingering
grogginess
in his
head.
He'd
slept on
the
floor
and had
the
stiff
muscles
to prove
it.
Blinking
several
times,
Mei's
words
registered.
"What
did you
find?
Another
broken
communicator?
Or a
phaser?"
"No,"
Jarek
said.
"She
really
did find
something
this
time."
Evan
glanced
at the
captain.
He'd
spent
the
evening
with his
wife and
it
looked
like
they'd
worked
out
whatever
they'd
been
fighting
over.
"Fea,
get the
others
so we
can all
look at
its
contents,"
Jarek
told his
wife.
"Please."
She
nodded,
moving
toward
Lucien
and
Viktor
with a
handheld
medical
unit.
Soon the
others
were
moaning
as they
came to.
Evan
rubbed
the back
of his
neck.
"What
did she
find?"
"She
found an
old
holographic
box,"
Mei
answered.
"It
looks
political,
maybe
fifty or
so years
old,"
Jarek
added.
"What's
a
political
holo-box
doing on
this
ship?"
Evan
frowned.
"There
wasn't
any
mention
when you
bought
it that
it was
once a
Federation
ship,
was
there?"
"There
wasn't
mention
of
anything
when I
came in
possession
of this
ship,"
Jarek
admitted.
"The guy
who had
it
before
me
didn't
have the
original
ship's
logs so
we just
kind
of...."
"Made
them
up,"
Jackson
offered
bluntly.
"Made
them
up?" Mei
repeated.
Jarek
shrugged,
unapologetic.
"The
ship was
a
bargain."
"A holo-box?"
Lucien
and
Viktor
said in
unison.
"It
could be
weapon
schematics,"
Lucien
said.
"Or some
stolen
piece of
evidence."
"I'll
know if
it's a
weapon,"
Viktor
countered.
"There
is only
so much
the
Federation
could do
with
weaponry
that
long
ago."
"Fine,
but if
you blow
us up
with
that
old-"
Lucien
couldn't
finish.
"Hey,
fifty
years is
not that
long
ago,"
Jarek
protested.
"Whatever
you say,
pops,"
Rick
laughed.
"Pops?"
Jarek
repeated.
"I don't
know
what
you're
calling
me, but
I'm sure
I'll put
a fist
in your
face if
I ever
find
out."
"Ah,
stop
arguing,"
Rick
grouched.
"My head
still
hurts."
"No one
made you
down
that
entire
bottle
by
yourself,"
Lochlann
said.
"We need
Dev,"
Mei made
a move
for the
door.
"He's
with
Par-my
son.
I'll go
get
him."
"What's
with her
lately?"
Jackson
asked.
Jarek
waved
his hand
and they
all knew
better
than to
pry.
Jackson's
green
eyes
were
rimmed
with red
and he
looked
like
someone
had
punched
him in
the jaw.
Evan
vaguely
remembered
a
punching
game of
cards
the
night
before.
He
glanced
at Rick.
The man
had a
matching
bruise
near his
left
eye.
Yep,
they'd
had a
game
where
the
person
with the
losing
hand got
punched.
Good
thing he
was too
smart
for that
foolishness.
"You
guys
look
like
you've
been to
battle,"
Jarek
smirked,
motioning
to
Rick's
face.
"Now,
Rick I
understand.
We all
want to
hit
him."
"Hey!"
Rick
protested,
gingerly
touching
his eye.
"I can't
help it
you're
jealous
of my
dazzling
good
looks."
"And
Jackson
is
always
bruised
from the
VR
training."
Jarek
pointed
at
Jackson
before
giving a
pointed
look at
Evan.
"But
you,
Evan? I
expected
more out
of you."
Evan
frowned,
stood
up, and
went
toward
the
metal
wall
where
Rick had
buffed
it to a
sheen.
Seeing
his
reflection,
he
grimaced.
A sharp
pain
radiated
down the
side of
his
face,
and he
instantly
relaxed
the
muscles.
Both of
his eyes
were
bruised
and the
bridge
of his
nose
appeared
swollen.
No
wonder
he felt
like
he'd
been
dragged
behind a
space
ship. He
turned
back
around
to look
at the
other
crewmen.
"What?"
Rick
said to
him,
smiling
innocently.
"You had
a lousy
run of
luck."
"Come
on,
let's go
get some
food
into you
men,"
Jarek
said.
"You'll
think
better
with
clearer
heads
and
fuller
stomachs.
I'll
have Mei
meet us
in there
with the
holo-box."
As Jarek
left,
Evan
made a
move to
follow
behind.
Rick
came up
beside
him and
slung an
arm
around
his
shoulders.
"So, my
little
friend.
I hope
you
weren't
too
drunk
last
night
and
forgot
our
bet."
"Bet?"
Evan
repeated,
not
liking
the
sound of
that.
"Yes,
bet. You
promised
to read
the next
sexy
woman we
saw and
tell me
all her
deepest
sexual
fantasies."
Rick
grinned.
Evan
pushed
the
man's
arm off
of him.
"I would
never
bet any
such
thing."
As he
walked
toward
the
dining
hall,
curious
to see
Mei's
newest
treasure,
he heard
Rick
laugh,
"Well,
can't
blame me
for
trying."
©
copyright
Michelle
M.
Pillow,
2007-2011
This is
a work
of
fiction.
All
characters,
events,
and
places
are of
the
author’s
imagination
and not
to be
confused
with
fact.
Any
resemblance
to
living
persons
or
events
is
merely
coincidence.
REVIEWS
"5 CUPS!
Michelle
Pillow
shows us
the
scope of
just how
far a
faction
is
willing
to go to
control
the out
come of
a
situation.
This
story is
one of
misery,
death,
tragedy
and
hope.
The tale
she
paints
takes
you to
some
very
dark
places,
and then
pushes
you back
up into
hope,
love and
light.
Frost
Maiden
is
wonderfully
well
written,
and the
story
pulls at
your
heart
strings
in every
way
imaginable.
I can
not wait
to read
more
stories
by this
author,
and hope
that her
next
installment
of Space
Lords is
not to
far
off." -
Lee Ann,
Coffeetime
Romances,
March
2008
Additional
Book
Information
Amazon
ASIN:B00514J1DW
Electronic
ISBN:978-1-4524-2122-3
PRINT
ISBN-13:
978-1463531768
PRINT
ISBN-10:1463531761
Release
Date: May
2011
Available at the following vendors



Eros Ebooks, Smashwords
Print Version
(if applicable)

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