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EXCERPT
Dragon Lords: Book Two
THE PERFECT PRINCE
By
Michelle M. Pillow
Dedication:
To Mandy Roth
A wonderful Author and Friend
Nadja Aleksander inhaled a troubled breath
as she took one last look around her room aboard the medic ship. Silk draped the
walls, rich and luxurious. Every modern convenience known to space was at her
disposal. She had a beauty bed, maid service, and a personal medic unit that
checked her blood levels every morning and automatically wrote out her diet for
the day.
Nadja had grown up in spacious rooms just
like this one, traveling the galaxy with her surgeon father as he moved from
medic assignment to medic assignment. She had seen many things, discovered many
cultures and places. She had been accepted into the most royal of homes. She had
been given everything she could ever want, except her freedom. It was a prison
of gilded bars, but a prison nonetheless.
She wrapped her light brown hair into a
bun at the nape of her neck and whipped a cape around her shoulders. Her heart
thudded nervously as she contemplated what she was going to do. She had never
been on her own before, never been without family close by.
She set a letter on her dresser for her
mother and hoped the woman would forgive her, even if Nadja knew she would never
understand her need to leave. The thick folds of the cloak enveloped her
completely with its fur lining. Going to the metal door, she slid it open with
the push of a button, and then paused to listen.
Below her deck level she could hear the
celebration that would last late into the morning hours. It was her engagement
party and no one had noticed that the bride-to-be had been missing for nearly
two hours. It wasn’t about her anyway. It was about the joining of two men--her
father and Hank, his Medical Alliance associate.
She grabbed her bags, flung them over her
shoulders and made her way across the ship’s hall to the elevator shaft that led
down to the docks.
With a press of a button, she was whizzed
down to the docks. No one seemed to notice her as she rushed from the medic
spacecraft, through the hanger darkened with night. When she crawled under the
pilot’s window, she heard a woman giggling within the cockpit. Irvette would be
keeping the pilot occupied for the rest of the night, so Nadja had nothing to
worry about. She hurried past the small luxury crafts and the personal units
waiting in line for their maintenance the next morning.
Nadja came to a corner but just kept
walking, not knowing where she would go. A guard smiled kindly at her as she
passed. He glanced at her bags and motioned her to move further down the
corridor to a carpeted docking plank reserved for first class. She followed his
direction curiously and saw a bunch of women loading into a nearby craft. Above
them was a banner that read Galaxy Brides in curving script. She took a deep
breath and pulled down the hood of the cape.
A uniformed man with a clipboard looked
her over and smiled.
"Are you here for a last minute
replacement?" he asked.
Nadja nodded.
"Sign here," he said, handing over the
clipboard. "We are several short so they will take care of your health
screenings in flight. You’ll have room 206 on platform two. It’s the room all
the way to the back. Ship orientation is tomorrow at 9:00 AM."
Nadja signed her name and handed the
clipboard back. Her fingers shook nervously.
"Galactic identification?" he asked. Nadja
gave him the card and he barely glanced at it. "Perfect, Miss--ah--Aleksander.
Welcome aboard the flight to your future!"
"Excuse me." Nadja’s voice was soft and
low. The man turned to look at her. "Do I owe you anything for the flight?"
"No, Miss. Galaxy Brides Corporation owes
you." He smiled happily.
"I wish to evoke the right of privacy law.
If anyone asks, I’m not here," she said. Her voice was soft and demure.
"Police?" the man questioned in surprise,
though the idea didn’t seem to concern him. He had a quota to fill.
"Stalker," she whispered. The man nodded
in understanding. Nadja glanced around and saw a red headed woman standing in
line behind her. She lowered her voice, and said, "He won’t leave me alone, so I
am leaving."
"I’ll make a note, Miss. That won’t be a
problem." He began writing on her file.
"And, by the way, where are we going?" she
asked, her voice again mild and unwavering.
The man laughed. "Most women ask before
they come down here. It must be some maniac you are trying to get away from."
Nadja gulped but said nothing.
The man reigned in his humor, and
answered, "You’re heading to Qurilixen, Miss."
Nadja nodded and the man left to check in
the redheaded latecomer. She hesitated, looking again at the banner. A droid
came forward to grab her bags and began leading them up the plank. This was it.
This was her ticket to freedom.
* * * *
One month later.…
Nadja smiled, looking nervously around the
spacecraft’s beauty parlor at the other brides. They hardly seemed like the same
women she had shyly met that first day of orientation. Since then, all of them
had been enhanced with beauty machines. Their breasts had been lifted and
enlarged using the latest technology in modern genetics. They’d been offered
permanent hair removal. The hair on their heads had been made to grow long,
which Nadja had learned from the Qurilixian uploads was the race’s traditional
style. The uploads were designed to teach the brides everything they needed to
know about their new home, through just a few short hours of brain wave
transfer.
When Nadja stepped aboard the ship, she
had no idea who the Qurilixian were. She only vaguely remembered learning the
planet’s name in astronomical geography as a student.
Since she signed her agreement without
even reading it, it hadn’t mattered to her. It was part of her new life of
taking chances. She had decided she was going to take the first ship she saw
that would have her and that is exactly what she had done. Her father and the
fiancé he had picked for her would never suspect her of such a bold move. She
was going to be free.
It appeared that taking chances was going
to pay off for Nadja. She didn’t miss the irony that she was running away from
one arranged marriage into another. But, at least this one would be of her doing
and her doing alone. She was the only person who had anything to gain or lose
Nadja couldn’t have been more pleased to
discover that she was off to the outer edge of the Y quadrant, to a place
inhabited by primitive males. It’s exactly what she would have asked for. It was
perfect. Qurilixen was far away from where her father would think to search for
her, and the Y quadrant didn't participate in the extradition act so he couldn’t
register her name and force her to come back without causing an intergalactic
incident.
Qurilixian women were rare since the
planet suffered from blue radiation. Over the generations it had altered the
men’s genetics to produce only strong, large, male, warrior heirs. Only once in
a thousand births was a Qurilixian female born. Since they had no women of their
own, the services of corporations like Galaxy Brides were invaluable to them. In
return, the Qurilixian would mine ore that was only found in their caves. The
ore was a great power source for long-voyaging starships, all but useless to the
Qurilixian, who were not space explorers.
Nadja smiled, liking that little fact as
well. Since she had been born on a ship that was doing light-speed, she was
tired of moving around. She wanted to stay put for once and develop roots. She
wanted to make a friend and keep her. It was too hard to develop friendships
when the other person realized exactly who her father was. She’d seen more
people pale and back away from her at that bit of news than she cared to
remember.
As to the grooms, she didn’t care what
they looked like. She wasn’t picky. The best comparison anyone could make was to
warriors of Medieval Earth. The Qurilixian worshipped many Gods, favored natural
comforts over modern technical conveniences, and actually preferred to raise,
grow, and cook their own food. They were classified as a warrior class, though
they had been peaceful for nearly a century, aside from petty territorial
skirmishes that broke out every fifteen or so years between a few of the rival
houses.
Anything was better than the balding
pervert her father had tried to force her hand into marriage. She should have
known something was up when their ship changed course and headed to another
region—one where law would permit her father to choose her husband for her.
Nadja glanced over to her side. Morrigan
Blake was looking in her general direction. The woman was quieter than the rest
and always seemed to be greatly distracted, as if her mind swam with thoughts
that had nothing to do with her surroundings. She had tried to talk to the woman
a few times over the last month and found her to be rather intelligent and
polite. Truthfully, Nadja was surprised that an independent woman like Morrigan
would choose to go to a place like Qurilixen as a bride.
She held still as six robotic hands flew
around her head, putting up her light brown hair into a traditional Qurilixian
upsweep. Still looking at Morrigan, curiosity got the better of her, and she
asked softly, "What about you, Rigan? Have you finished your Qurilixian
etiquette uploads?"
Morrigan blinked in surprise at the sound
of her name and Nadja guessed she had disturbed the woman from her thoughts. It
took Morrigan’s dark eyes a moment to focus before she realized what had been
said. The woman gave her a light smile.
"Didn’t you know?"
Nadja carefully looked over to her other
side at the sound of trilling laughter. Gena’s red hair was finished and her
beauty droid was placing the customary short veil over the curly locks. "Rigan
finished her Qurilixian uploads first. It would seem she is most eager to please
her new husband."
"Or to be pleased by him," Nadja heard
someone say. This last comment was followed by nervous giggles. When Nadja
looked at Morrigan, she swore she saw the woman’s eyes roll in the back of her
head.
The brides were being prepared for the
Breeding Festival that night on Qurilixen. It was the one night of darkness on
the otherwise light planet and considered the only night the men could choose a
mate. It was a primitive ceremony to say the least, but Nadja thought it very
rooted and straight to the point. Just one night for engagement, wedding, and
honeymoon and presto, you were a married couple.
The other women spent the entire trip
speaking of marrying Princes and noblemen. The truth be told, Nadja wanted a
working man—someone with a small house and a garden. She didn’t want a pampered
life anymore, where society dictated her actions. She wanted to fade away from
the responsibility and spotlight and maybe help people. Marrying a small town
family doctor would be ideal. However, she would be happy with a farmer or miner
or anyone who could provide a decent enough life so they would never starve.
"I wish I could be so ambitious. I’m
afraid I didn’t watch a single one of those boring uploads."
Nadja had been so wrapped up in her
thoughts, that she didn’t see who spoke.
"I tried on my gown this afternoon," Gena
announced. Nadja flinched as the woman brazenly started poking at her chest.
"They are gorgeous, but I think I am going to go get my breasts enhanced
again—just a little bigger—and I’m going to have my nipples enlarged. Those
Princes won’t be able to resist me. Maybe, I’ll marry all four of them just for
fun."
"How will you know who the Princes are?"
came the cynical reasoning of Pia Korbin. Nadja was intrigued by the woman, who
was perhaps the most beautiful on the ship. A large part of the beauty came from
her not seeming to realize her own beauty, and that she was the envy of half the
passengers. "I’ve heard that all the men wear disguises. You could end up with a
royal guard."
"Or a gardener," a brunette offered with a
laugh.
"I hear they wear practically nothing at
all," a woman with flaming red hair and sparkling green eyes the color of
emeralds added. "Except the mask and some fur."
"You can’t miss royalty," Gena announced
with a bounce of excitement. You’ll see it in the way they move."
Nadja certainly hoped so. She wanted to
avoid them at all costs. Though she really doubted the Princes would be there.
Royal matches were hardly made by whim or chance. They were more of a political
maneuvering. A royal family would never take a gamble on a stranger. It was more
than likely an advertising ploy used by Galaxy Brides Corporation to make the
trip more enticing. If so, it was a good one, for it had worked on most of the
women.
Morrigan stood as her droid finished,
prompting Nadja to try and do the same. Her droid wasn’t done placing her short
veil and gently pushed her back down. Nadja sighed, resigned to remaining in her
chair.
The spacecraft was a nice one, though her
suite on the medic ship had been nearly twice the size as her one aboard this
ship. Nadja was used to the pampering and thought nothing of it. Some of the
women jokingly called their quarters the harem. The service was adequate and the
staff completely mechanical, so that none of the women could be compromised.
Besides, robot servants were cheaper than human ones. One lifecell battery would
keep them running for a century or more.
One by one the women finished their beauty
treatments, and went to get dressed. Nadja stood, and saw that Morrigan was
already gone. She sighed, guessing that was one mystery she wouldn’t be able to
solve. Too bad, she would have liked to have the intelligent Morrigan as a
friend. She had been too bashful around the other, bolder women to make too big
of an effort. Besides, they would never understand her desire to marry a
commoner and not a Prince.
"Miss Korbin," a robotic voice said. "This
way, it’s time for your last treatment."
Nadja glanced over her shoulder. Pia, who
was behind her, seemed to frown in embarrassment. Nadja politely turned away
from the woman’s hazel stare.
Nadja didn’t look around again, slipping
down the metallic passageway to her own room. Once inside, she locked the door
behind her and took a deep breath. Seeing the wedding gown on her bed, she
blushed. Her heart beat erratically inside the walls of her chest and her eyes
teared up with nervous fear. Praying she did the right thing, she took a deep
breath. It was time to see her future.
© copyright Michelle M. Pillow, September
2004
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
"REVIEWER CHOICE! 5 FLAMES! Ms.
Pillow's strong characters, fast-paced plot, and steamy sexual encounters
made this an outstanding book... Ms. Pillow's talent for storytelling is
sure to make her a renowned author of the romance genre." Tanya, Sizzling
Romances
"RECOMMENDED READ! 5 ANGELS! Though
this is a sci-fi fantasy story, readers who don’t normally enjoy those genres
will find The Perfect Prince utterly enjoyable just because of the wonderful
characters and creative setting. ... This is a recommended read because it is
such a wonderful story that will really transport the reader to a totally
different world." Sarah W. Fallen Angel Reviews
"RECOMMENDED READ! Second in the
Dragon Lords series, Michelle Pillow has created a tale of patience and passion
between two people, each with their own flaws and perfection." Niniri, Road to
Romance
5 HEARTS! "This second book in the Dragon Lords
series is as exciting and sensual as the first.
...This reviewer enjoyed this book very much.
This was an exciting read that had her panting. Hopefully it won’t be long
before the next one is published." Valerie, Love Romances
"Michelle M. Pillow has told a wonderful
story, bringing us into another world far into the future and making us feel
a part of it. Dragon Lords: The Perfect Prince has characters so real
I feel as though I have gotten to know them."
Summer Lasaire, In the Library Reviews June 2006
4
1/2 UNICORNS!
"Michelle M.
Pillow has told a wonderful story, bringing us into another world far into
the future and making us feel a part of it. Dragon Lords: The Perfect
Prince has characters so real I feel as though I have gotten to know
them; I felt their passion, their pain and their frustrations as they tried
to understand one another. I found it hard to put down, as I had to find out
what was going to happen next to this couple and how their differences would
allow them to hopefully find happiness with each other. Dragon Lords:
The Perfect Prince is book two in this series. I can’t wait to read
book three!" Nikita, ENCHANTED IN ROMANCE
FOUR HEARTS!
"This is a very interesting story to read and one you will remember after you
have read it. Olek is a sexy barbarian prince who is used to having what he
wants and he wants Nadja, however she is not cooperating and making it very
difficult to seduce her. Nadja is very brave to give up everything she knows to
marry a complete stranger, but she is going to be setting some ground rules for
her new husband, of course she has no idea he's a prince. This is the perfect
duo both in and out of bed and will certainly keep you turning the pages. Nadja
and Olek's story is one to remember." Angel Brewer,
The Romance Studio
"Second in the Dragon
Lords series, THE PERFECT PRINCE is Olek's story -- and what a story it
is! Whether he's negotiating a peace treaty or trying to seduce Nadja, Olek is
a force to be reckoned with. Both power and sensuality ooze from every pore on
his gorgeous body....Michelle M. Pillow writes another intriguing futuristic
romance featuring the four princes of Draig. In THE PERFECT PRINCE readers get
to see Prince Olek and his chosen mate. We are also given glimpses of the
other princes and their wives. Next up is THE DARK PRINCE, Yusef's story, and
I can't wait to read it."
Sinclair Reid,
Romance
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#1 Bestselling Romance
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Oct 2004 Road to Romance Recommended Read Oct 2004
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