Domestic Duet: Domestic Alliance & Asset

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Authors: Cora Blu

Tags: #Romantic Sci-fi

BOOK: Domestic Duet: Domestic Alliance & Asset
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DOMESTIC ALLIANCE

©2015 Cora Blu

Prequel to Domestic Asset

Romantic Sci-fi

Published 2015 by Cora Blu Books LLC

 

 

Acknowledgment

Editor: Deadra Krieger

Cover Illustrator: Cora Blu Books LLC

Proofreader: Arianne Cruz

Beta readers: Special ladies

 

Dedication

Janice McGhee

Grandma Cora McGhee

Table of Contents

Title Page

Copyright and Trademark acknowledgment

DOMESTIC DUET

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Domestic Asset © 2014 Cora Blu

Copyright 2014 Cora Blu

1961

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Epilogue

(To read about this underwater world, read Brothers of Element Series, by Cora Blu)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Copyright and Trademark acknowledgment

Etta James: 1960 Rhythm and Blues release, At Last.

Bromo Seltzer

Formica

Old Spice Cologne

 

Copyright 2015 Cora Blu

This is a work of fiction. Names characters, places, brands, media, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any similarity to persons living or dead is purely coincidental.

All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise) without prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book.

DOMESTIC DUET

Domestic Alliance & Asset

 

Sadie Ochi Alexander, maid and trained nurse, grew up like every other woman in the 1960’s, with aspirations and dreams. Sharing a brownstone with her sister in Georgia and working for one of the wealthiest families in Beacon Heights, she had few qualms. Perhaps one, the day she buried her parents. After a horrific accident on I-75 takes both of her parents, an alien abducts her from her backyard. Yet, what this seven-foot tall mammoth of muscle and brutish charm wants from her keeps her from turning her back on him. Of course, if more women knew the differences between him and men from Earth, the space station would be flooded with women looking to share their weekends with a karuntee.

However, now she’s fallen in love with him. One of the things he’s offering isn’t love, but friendship—an alliance. An alliance to benefit the Treaty between humankind and the karuntee. Can they be friends after everything that’s happened?

In 1958, Captain Aroc Farkus, of the Karuntee clan of moon dwellers, has lost everything in the matter of a heartbeat. Faced with a dilemma only a human female could assist him with, he sets his attention on one particular female on Earth. She had one role in his life, yet he had no idea that position would affect every aspect of his world. Not able to keep his promise to return her to Earth, he makes her an offer that will change both of their lives forever.

A secret sect of domestics on Earth is not what they seem. Sadie Ochi Alexander will become his weapon of choice to bring down those dealing in black-market fuel trade. If he can move past an old pain every time he sees her with her new partner, he’ll gain back the family he lost three years ago. Her one request will test the love he had for his deceased mate and a promising future with Sadie.

Chapter 1

 

Space Station Hospital…1958

In the sterile room, he pressed his mouth to hers for a final kiss. The warmth of her once pink lips faded fast, leaving them dull and cool to the touch. Inhaling her delicate scent for the last time deep into his lungs, he could taste the memory of her kiss on his breath.

Sweet fire.

Aroc’s knuckles bleached out under his tight grip on the hem of the sheet as he draped it over her lifeless body. He’d loved the curve of her shoulders, the dip at the base of her slender throat. Her narrow chin, near white skin, and hair red as a flame made up the shell that contained his world. The pain brought him to his knees beside the gurney where his grip on the sheet tightened. They were gone and nothing he did could have saved his family. Not even the wet streaks trailing down his face would reverse this tragedy.

In the space station's hospital lobby, he sat surrounded by sad yellow chairs and sterile gray walls. Around him, a vicious pulse emanated from the humans and karuntee on the brink of war with so much emotion saturating the room. A pain so great he wanted to die. Without his life mate, Katherine, and their child, Aroc had no fight.

Captain Aroc Farkus of the Karuntian Clan of Moon Dwellers threw his head back and bellowed. The crushing pain of loss tore at his heart.

In a bloody moment, he’d lost two of his loves. The biggest crush of all was never seeing his daughter’s eyes, never touching her face, or holding her hands in his.

Consumed by grief, Aroc laced his fingers together setting them on top of his smooth head, the image of Katherine’s cheek resting on his chest as they watched her belly move at night swam through his mind. He loved feeling his daughter wiggle when Katherine pressed her belly against his stomach in bed. How would he ever sleep again without Katherine in his arms?

Now he waited to hold their lifeless bodies one last time, before sending them off into the atmosphere.

It took effort to open his eyes. Aroc blinked to gain focus. Humans and karuntee, halted mid-motion, silently observing him mourn his wife and child.

With a quick nod, he set his partially focused vision to watch them moving slowly around the space. He leaned forward, elbows resting on his knees, and shuffled the empty cups of coffee around on the white table.

The nurse’s station had cleared down to one cowering body, eyes wide, staring over the Formica laminated counter. She stayed shielded behind a bowl of yellow Karuntian daises filling a fish bowl the size of a bowling ball. Under the glow of the bright lights, the flowers appeared gaudy in the somber atmosphere.

Drained, he moved with lethargy to stand and peer out of the window. He rested his head against the cool surface of the glass and imagined Katherine’s shuttle hovering before the bay doors, awaiting clearance. She’d glance up, giving him a quick tip of her chin. Excellent pilot, commander, wife, and friend—the only human female he could stomach.

Broken hearted; he’d never mate again.

***

“You did this to her, alien. And I knew this day would come,” the belligerent voice, full of venom, came from behind across the room. Aroc pivoted on the soles of his black boots squeaking now on the tile floor. He knew the voice of Katherine’s work partner from the human space station. A man Aroc despised for his arrogance. The commander cautioned Katherine not to involve herself with an alien.

“Not today, Commander,” he warned. Aroc’s anger held tethered to a gas line ready to ignite within his heart.

Oliver shoved a hand through his short black hair. His nostrils flared. “Stick to your kind. Katherine trusted you.” His voice came out a growl, “against everything I warned her would happen messing with an alien, she trusted you with her life.”

“Questioning my ability to take care of my wife, Commander?” Aroc’s fists clenched—a sign he needed to step away to avoid a fight. “You disgrace Katherine’s friendship, ranting like a spoiled little boy while she lies dead.”

“She was the best commander out there to come out of the academy,” Oliver shouted, slapping a hand over his heart in a manic gesture of anger and loss. “She became a sister to me…family.”

To avoid a fight, and no particular direction in mind, Aroc let his feet take charge moving him away from the temptation to fight.

He never understood Katherine’s soft spot in her heart for the commander. She helped to integrate him into living on a space station and becoming a pilot while working out his troubled past to get his position. That didn’t give Oliver the right to place blame on Aroc for her death.

Twenty feet away on the other side of the room, giving himself space to think, Aroc heard the stomping of boots approaching across the floor. Couldn’t he have a moment’s peace? He whirled around, braced for a fight. A fist caught him on the cheek, the angle sending the blow to glance the bottom of his right eye. The skin burned. An immediate swelling sprang up under the skin. Through the ache, he plowed his fist forward to connect with Oliver's nose.

Oliver’s head snapped back, blood spewing down his face. He staggered a few feet clutching his nose, cursing into his hands, creating a muffled sound of his voice.

Security swarmed through the room, breaking up fights exploding in every corner.

A grunting sound whizzed through the air. Aroc shifted to the left, bending back and throwing his arms out for balance. The uncapped end on the leg of the overturned chair caught his forearm, tearing a gash in his upper arm. Blue blood seeped out of the slit. Grinding his teeth against the sting splintering down his arm, he staunched the bleeding; gripping the cut with his hand for a second, then dodged a table coming at him from across the room. Ducking to the floor, he missed the next blow while searching for a clear shot at Oliver. Without a weapon, Aroc exploded across the room, and then rushed him to the ground. They hit the floor with a bone-crushing thud and slammed into the wall. Grunts, guttural moans, and vile curses filled the air. The room pulsed with anger and unarmed men fighting hand to hand.

A hiss of unhardened bone emerging soft and slick from the backs of karuntee filled the waiting room. He knew that sound and studied the room. Karuntee threw humans like dolls against the walls and chairs. This had to stop. He released the commander, dropping him to the floor where Oliver coughed and choked while getting to his feet. A quick scan of the room revealed his males were on the brink of raw and feral. Spikes emerged on a few, hungry for battle karuntee. Dead bodies would litter the floors and end the treaty. As much as he hated to admit it, they needed the agreement. He reined in his anger.

Aroc, calling his males to order, focused his attention on his spikes slowly emerging from his spine—a reaction to the adrenaline rush.

“Captain…” Oliver barked, his bright blue eyes full of hatred.

“Don’t do it, Commander,” Captain Ryner Holston over Sector Five Space Station, shouted a warning.

Aroc’s fists were in the air, preparing for the next hit, seconds before deciding to allow Holston to handle matters. His mind was set on revenge and that was not Katherine’s way of dealing with disputes. He had to calm down.

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