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EXCERPT
Lords of the Var Book Two:
THE PLAYFUL PRINCE
By
Michelle M. Pillow
Dedication:
To Katie, for your enthusiasm and spirit.
“A man cannot bow to a woman and still call himself a man.”
- King Attor of the Var
Chapter One
Tori Elliot, the very dignified scientist, opened her mouth. Her heart beat
furiously in her chest, thumping so hard it echoed in her ears. For a moment, no
sound left her as she kept her eyes focused straight ahead. There was a dramatic
pause and all around her was dead silence. Suddenly, the twentieth century earth
music picked up and her naked body jerked into movement. She belted out the tune
into her mouth sanitizer turned microphone with her mirror as audience. After a
few bars, she dropped the mouth sanitizer and danced and sang around her metal
cabin. Her arms flung through the air, wild and carefree, as she slowly got
dressed.
The spaceship she was on belonged to the Exploratory Science Commission. The ESC
hired out staff and freelance scientists to large corporations, mostly
contracting ecological work with mining companies and wealthy environmentalist
groups. The ship had been traveling through deep space for weeks, just now
reaching the outer edge of the Y quadrant.
Tori didn’t really care where they were. Her last job, testing mineral compounds
fourteen thousand feet below the ice surface of Sintaz, had been a great
success. With the bonus the drilling company had given her, she’d made enough
space credits to support herself in high style for at least a couple years. She
was going to take that money and have a month long spa treatment on Quazer while
she figured out her next move.
The material of the black, skintight jumpsuit stretched as she pushed her arms
into it. The outfit molded to her body, covering her arms and legs completely.
Even though she didn’t technically work for ESC, but was a freelancer, she was
expected to dress in uniform when contracted through them. They all came with a
transmitter sewn into the v-neckline, so the company could find them if anyone
went missing. There was always a certain amount of risk in what she did, but the
scientific rewards were well worth it. Besides, she never took unnecessary
chances.
“Dr. Elliot.”
“Ah! Crap!” Tori jumped. The earth music was automatically turned off as the
voice invaded her privacy. Turning to the round cabin mirror, she quickly
smoothed down her wild hair and threw it over her shoulders. She stood, watching
the shiny surface. It glimmered slightly, fading into a view screen. Her
reflection was replaced by the ship’s senior ESC advisor, Dr. Fontaine.
“Good Morning, Dr. Fontaine,” Tori answered, keeping a rigidly professional
expression. Her heart skittered around in her chest from being frightened in the
middle of her impromptu dance number. That was the last thing she wanted her
colleagues seeing.
“Is everything all right, Dr. Elliot?” Fontaine asked. He was an older man with
graying black hair. He wore the black jumpsuit of the company covered by a white
lab coat. Tori hadn’t had much contact with him on Sintaz, as he stayed up on
the surface while she went below ground with her crew. “You look flushed.”
“I was logging in my fitness hours early.” Tori dutifully answered. Okay, so it
was a stretch of the truth, but she had worked up a sweat. Besides, she really
hated logging in fitness hours.
“Ah, quite right,” Fontaine answered, easily dismissing his question. “Listen,
we have a minor situation. The Human Intelligence Agency is coming aboard to
commandeer our ship. They’ve asked that all personnel records be turned over to
them immediately and we have complied. They have assured us that this should
only delay travel for a few days at most.”
“What does the HIA want with a bunch of scientists?” Tori asked, mildly
concerned. “Do they suspect something on board?”
“I don’t have all the details, doctor, but they seemed most insistent that it’s
an intergalactic emergency. They’ve requested you to head up the team.”
“Wait, what team?” Tori demanded. Damn it! She was on vacation as of last
assignment’s completion. She wasn’t ready to take another job so soon. Besides,
she hadn’t signed a contract with ESC. They couldn’t force her to do anything!
Keeping her voice level, she said, “I’m not personnel. Why were my private
records handed over? As of the completion of my last mission, I’m technically a
civilian passenger.”
“Sorry, doctor, they had an intergalactic warrant. We had no choice but to give
them the qualifications of all onboard scientists.” Fontaine’s expression gave
nothing away, but she didn’t expect it to.
If the HIA wanted her to head up a team, she knew she’d have to head up the
team. They might pay her, but she wasn’t happy about being forced to do a job.
Technically, she’d be given a ‘choice’, but if she refused they could make the
rest of her career a nightmare. When they were done with her, she’d be lucky to
get work teaching school children scientific categorizing on some remote planet.
Well, Fontaine said it was only a few days delay so it shouldn’t be that bad.
They probably had a liquid ore tanker ship crash in an isolated area or some
other type of ecological disaster. Why else would they need her? Her specialties
were alien biology and geology. Remaining professionally calm, she stated, “Very
well, Dr. Fontaine. Please inform me when they arrive. I’d like to be briefed on
my new assignment as soon as possible so I can prepare.”
“Thank you, doctor,” Fontaine said. “Your willingness is noted and appreciated.”
“Doctor,” Tori said, nodding. The mirror blipped and she was once more alone
with her reflection. Under her breath, she hissed, “Willingness my ass!”
What did the HIA want with her? She didn’t feel like working. She needed a
break--a long, relaxing vacation in a place that didn’t have artic temperatures
all year round.
Tori sighed, her good humor dampened by the turn of events. The music started
again where it’d left off, but she was no longer in the mood. Irritated, she
called, “Music off. Bed.”
The music turned off and a narrow bed slid out of the metal wall of the cabin.
She threw herself down on the stiff mattress with a thud. Groaning heavily, she
stared at the metal ceiling in dejection.
With a grumble, she turned her back on the room, facing the metal wall. “So much
for my time off.”
* * * *
“This is the planet of Qurilixen,” Franklin, as he told Tori to call him, said.
He pointed to a 3-D map floating above the desk. The small, transparent red
sphere rotated slowly between them. There weren’t many bodies of water that she
could see, but there was a mountain range and plenty of forest area. It was
quite possible the dense forest hid rivers and swampland. By the apparent height
of the trees, she’d guess they were surrounded by excessive moisture.
Franklin was a mission director with the HIA. According to him she was now a
temporary HIA employee and he was her new temporary boss. His shortly cropped,
dark brown hair was trimmed to militant perfection and he walked with rigid
purpose. He was young for a director, but that didn’t stop him from ordering
those around him about with confidence.
Tori had met his kind before--all work, no play. Not that there was anything
wrong with that. She was the same way while on the job--okay, mostly she was.
“And here,” Franklin continued, his hip perched on the edge of the desk, as he
pointed at the floating sphere, “is the Var palace. This is where we’ll land and
make contact with my agent.”
“Excuse me, sir,” Tori interrupted. She looked at the map and then at him. “But
what, exactly, are we landing on Qurilixen for? I need to choose and brief a
team, pack my supplies, work on securing permits. In order to do all that, I
need to know what we’re up against.”
“Everything you need has already been assembled for you, Dr. Elliot. As for your
team, you will command every scientist on board this ship for the duration of
this mission.” Franklin paused and Tori instantly filled the silence.
“But, there are nearly a hundred scientists on this ship, maybe more. You can’t
mean me to command them all.”
“Yes, I do,” he stated easily, as if it was an everyday occurrence to be handed
a huge, career breaking assignment such as this one.
Tori swallowed. Even if it was for only a few days, the fact that the HIA picked
her out of hundreds to handle their “intergalactic emergency” would do volumes
for her record, not to mention her pay demand. She tried not to be nervous. She
couldn’t mess this up--whatever it was. She wondered which part of her work
record had impressed them. The biological categorizing on Denat 7? The time she
was second in command and helped clean up the mineral spill on Merca? Her
numerous publications on DNA sequencing and its application to modern
exploratory science?
“It’s a simple assignment and you’ll be afforded with the best equipment and
protective gear the HIA has to offer.” Franklin smiled at her, but the look
hardly passed as pleasant. “I will offer you whatever assistance I can. All we
ask is that you be quick and efficient. I want you in and out of there fast.
Discretion is a very vital key in this matter.”
Tori hid her smile. How discreet was sending down a hundred scientists to a
primitive planet?
“And what would that ‘simple’ assignment be?” she insisted.
“One of our agents has detected biological weaponry from Ranoz. They believe to
have found the weapon intact. It will be your job to test the Var palace and
everyone who’s come in contact with that crate to see if they have been
contaminated. It will also be your job to make sure the situation is contained.”
Franklin again paused and Tori wondered if he was doing it for dramatic effect.
It really wasn’t necessary. What he said was dramatic enough on its own. “You’ll
have the team down with you for one day. I expect you to utilize them
efficiently and get the job done in that time.”
Tori nodded, already making a chain of command list in her head. “Is that all?”
“No,” Franklin continued. “After one day the majority of scientists will be
coming back on board. We’d like you to stay behind with a team of no more than
three. We need you to run a scan of the surrounding marshland to see if there is
anything my agent might have missed. I estimate it should only take a little
over a month to test the surrounding area.”
Tori listened to him with a sense of astonishment. “You’re joking. I was told
the assignment was only for a few days. I don’t have time for--”
“I never joke about something so serious,” Franklin answered sternly. Tori
doubted the man joked about anything. “And ESC assures me you aren’t due
anywhere else. They said you refused to sign another contract and were planning
to take a vacation. I’d say saving lives takes precedence over those plans, Dr.
Elliot. I took the liberty of canceling your hotel room on Quazer and all flight
plans. Refunds have been credited to your account, as well as a hefty HIA
advance for doing this. I suggest you volunteer for the assignment, Dr. Elliot.
If we have to force you to do it, you won’t get paid.”
Tori frowned. Those were lovely options. Do it and get paid, do it and don’t get
paid. In her head she laughed sarcastically, but she didn’t dare make a sound to
him.
“But ... why me?” She asked, confused. “I’ve never dealt with a biological
weapons threat before. I specialize in chemical spills and environ tests. I
think there has been a mistake. Surely there is someone else on board more
qualified to handle--”
“There is, but you have unique qualifications we feel will help in this
particular situation. We want you in charge.” Franklin stood, looking
uncomfortable. He reached over, picking up an electronic clipboard. He pushed a
button and began to look over her file. “Your record as a scientist is
impeccable and you are qualified in the fields we need for this particular
assignment. Your records state that you are a leading authority on physical
geography and biogeography, not to mention your experience in a wide array of
areas--atmospheric sciences, chemistry, oceanography, physics, botany, and
microbiology. We also feel your background in bio--”
“Yes,” Tori interrupted. “I’m well aware of my field of study. I don’t really
need my educational past and work history read for me. What I do need to know is
what exactly my unique qualifications are that would make me the best candidate
for this job.”
Franklin cleared his throat and set the clipboard on the desk. He hit the button
to draw down the 3D map. The red sphere disappeared.
“Director?” she insisted when he was quiet.
“How much do you know about Qurilixen?” Franklin rubbed the bridge of his nose.
“Not much,” Tori admitted. “I don’t think I’ve even heard it mentioned before
today.”
“Qurilixen is a planet predominately of males. Due to the blue radiation of one
of their threes suns, it’s nearly genetically impossible for them to produce
female children. There are two main races--the Var, who we will be in contact
with, and the Draig. Both are monarchies.” Franklin lifted a paper folder off
his desk and handed it to her. “Here, I had intelligence put this together for
you. Since this planet is not part of the intergalactic treaty, we don’t have
much else to go on. But, we’ve had an agent working on the planet for several
months and are assured the Var will be cooperative in our efforts. What we do
have on them will be in there. I suggest you read it over carefully.”
Tori nodded once and tucked the folder under her arm.
“We need you to get a scientific proposal ready to present to the Var king and
any other officials there might be. As I said, they aren’t a part of the
intergalactic treaty. It would be best for all concerned if we got permission to
check their marshes and caves first. It would severely decrease the risk to
anyone poking around down there to have that permission. I’ll be blunt. If we
have to do this covertly, we will, but the life risk greatly increases.”
“Namely for me,” she said.
“Yes, doctor, namely for you and any with you.”
“Is there reason to believe this is hostile territory?” she asked, keeping her
voice calm, though inside she was tense with nerves.
“I honestly don’t know. If there is, they’re territorial skirmishes, isolated to
the planet itself.” Franklin cleared his throat, boldly meeting her gaze. “Stay
neutral and don’t take sides.”
“I still don’t understand how that makes me qualified for this,” Tori said,
pulling the folder from beneath her arm. She looked at the cover stamped top
secret, but didn’t open it. “I’m not trained for hostile territory and know very
little about intergalactic negotiations. Wouldn’t you need someone with a
political background for this?”
“It’s simple, Dr. Elliot.” Franklin did his best not to grin, but she could see
the humor in his eyes.
Great, now he decides to get a sense of humor, she thought.
“They’re a planet of men,” Franklin continued. “And you’re the youngest, most
attractive, most qualified female scientist we have.”
* * * *
Advanced scientific study since she could read, a doctorate in two scientific
fields by the time she was twelve and several masters in many others since that
time, ten years of intense on-the-job experience, countless brain uploads, and
here she was reduced to being pimped out by the HIA because she was a woman. If
her Galaxy Playmate sister, ‘Sapphire’, ever found out about this, she’d never
hear the end of it. It was just too humiliating for words.
“Oh, this is too good,” Tori mumbled. “They lose some stupid government weapon
and I’m reduced to simpering and flirting with a bunch of savages so they can
make sure they got it all back.”
Tori took a drink of wine and looked down at the contents of the “top secret”
folder she’d been given. Most of the photographs were aerial views taken from a
satellite. There were a few pages of specs about the planet’s surface, some
graphs of atmospheric readings, and miscellaneous notes about the weather and
culture. All of it was pretty basic and made her wonder just how intelligent the
HIA “intelligence” really was.
Tori snorted, reaching down to the floor to empty the wine bottle into her
glass. She was well on her way to getting drunk, but didn’t care. They weren’t
arriving on Qurilixen until the next morning and she’d have plenty of time to
sleep it off.
The Var were a race of shape-shifting cats. Apparently, not much was really
known about them, but that they were in the process of negotiating peace with
the Draig--their shape-shifting dragon neighbors. The Qurilixian in general were
classified as a warrior class that had many petty territorial skirmishes that
broke out every fifteen or so years between the rival kingdoms.
The best comparison anyone could make is that the men were like the barbaric
warriors of medieval earth. Both races worshipped many gods and favored natural
comforts to modern technological conveniences. Intelligence assumed, from the
concentrated areas of cropland and cow-like animal herds to the far north and
south, that they preferred to raise, grow, and cook their own food.
Tori sighed, pushing the papers away. None of the information was really helpful
to her. Unless, she was to assume by barbaric society, they would be easily
swayed by batting eyelashes and wiggling hips. What in the world did she know
about flirting? She wasn’t ugly, but she’d never be voted Galaxy Playmate of the
year like her bimbo of a sister either. When Sapphire was learning to put on
makeup, she’d been building model quasars and performing scientific tests while
restructuring their density.
“Medieval earth,” she mused, kicking the folder and contents off her bed with
her bare foot as she lay down. Reaching over the side of the bed, she placed the
wine glass on the floor. “Not exactly a flattering description--disease,
ignorance, superstition, bad hygiene, missing teeth, boils, pockmarks....”
Tori continued mumbling her long list, as she closed her eyes. The mental image
she had of the Qurilixian people wasn’t exactly flattering. She was used to
dealing with corporate business types and other scientists, not superstitious
peasants. In her mind, she decided to recap what she learned from the thin file.
The Var palace was a magnificent structure, dominating the surrounding Var city
in the valley beneath it. According to the human women who had come to live in
the palace over the centuries, it reminded them of the basic structure of the
medieval castles found long ago on earth, with an old Moroccan blend to the
architectural design.
The Var people were skilled craftsmen and it showed. Since a Var man would live
for hundreds of years, they had a lot of time to perfect their skills. Inside,
the palace had fantastically hand-woven rugs for the floors and beds. The
beautiful inlaid tile walls were of intricate symmetrical patterns. The tiles
showcased an exceptional display of colors--blue, red, orange, gold, green. The
arched doorways were carved to perfection and great detail.
But, not only was the palace beautiful, it was functional. The halls were like a
maze and it was easy for those not familiar with them to get lost. The mainframe
computer was engineered into every room and hall, even the center courtyard the
family used for privacy. Siren, the mainframe’s programmed name, could answer
questions, read life functions, open doors, prepare food--anything a busy Var
prince might need. With the right level of security clearance, a person could
even order Siren to locate anyone on the grounds or alert the palace guards. It
was here in this lush, cushy paradise that the five Var princes grew up.
The oldest, Kirill, was now king. He was recently named ruler after the death of
his father, King Attor. Next in line was Falke, the Commander of the Guards.
Reid was Commander of the Outlands and also had a twin brother named....
Tori frowned and sat up. Looking over the side of the bed, she saw the paper she
was looking for and picked it up. Scanning her eyes over the sheet in the dim
light, she read, “Twin brother named Jarek, personality and situation unknown.”
She dropped the paper and lay back down. The twins were the only princes with
the same mother. Jarek was in space so she didn’t have to worry about him.
“Lovely culture,” she mused, chuckling drunkenly. “Okay, Tori, focus. The more
facts you know, the better prepared you are.”
Prince Quinn, the youngest of the Var brothers, was the ambassador. Ambassadors,
in her experience, were usually bores--ugly, boring, tediously pompous bores.
“Hmm, Prince Quinn. Well, being as I’m a foreigner, I’ll probably have to deal
with you,” Tori mumbled thoughtfully. “Let’s just hope you have some semblance
of manners, shall we?”
Tori snorted, laughing to herself. She closed her eyes, really close to falling
asleep. Her mind swirled with the pleasant numbness of liquor.
“Mmm, let’s just hope you know how to bathe.”
© copyright Michelle M. Pillow, October
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.
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REVIEWS

4 STARS!
"4 STARS!
Readers will enjoy this return to planet Qurilixen for the
entertaining story of a second Var prince. Some of the characters may be
familiar, but the love story is not; this is a brand-new adventure. The main
characters are likable, and their romantic misadventures are touching and
humorous. The plot twists will entertain old and new readers alike. "—Gail
Pruszkowski,
Romantic Times
"5 STARS! Michelle Pillow has the ability to
weave her skillfully written words into an extraordinary story... With an
emotional storyline which is sensually stunning and adds an intriguing mystery
to the mix, I was held captive by every word in this book. LORDS OF THE VAR: The
Playful Prince proves that Ms. Pillow is a premier writer of passionate
romances."
Amelia Richard, EcataRomance Reviews, August 2005
"5 CUPS!
Ms. Pillow
weaves love into a tale of survival with a generous portion of humor. ...
written with a style uniquely belonging to the author." Candy, Coffee Time
Reviews, September 2005
"9/10,
As with the others in the series, The
Playful Prince has been very well written by Michelle M Pillow, her style,
particularly her ‘swear word’, being rather unique. This story occasionally
brings a smile of happiness to your face, and sometimes a frown of worry, but
you will always be engrossed in the storyline. Ms Pillow is definitely an author
to look out for!" Reviewed By Elizabeth © October 2005, Novelspot
"4 1/2 HEARTS! This is an awesome story
and I couldn't put it down until I finished it. The book is so exciting and
intriguing that it keeps you glued to the pages trying to figure out what will
happen next. The chemistry between Quinn and Tori is unbelievably hot and really
intense. The love scenes are erotic with an animalistic quality reader will
love. Michelle M. Pillow is fast making a name for herself with her creative and
erotic adventures. I can't wait to see what she comes up with next" Angel
Brewer, The Romance
Studuo May 31, 2005

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