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Crystal Powers 1 

Crystals & Disappearing Cats, Barbara Donlon Bradley
Glenda’s name has plagued her forever. Then she inherits a crystal that takes her to another world where witches are real, and she’s mistaken for one.

Purple Power, Jane Carver
Queen Celina dies only to live again through the amethyst crystal. Prince
Walon wishes to marry her, but first Celina must find her killer.

 A Girl’s Other Best Friend, Megan Hussey
Leila discovers a crystal that delivers power and orgasmic bliss, but Cason,
a gorgeous, exotic alien, shows her that she ain’t seen nothin’ yet.

Kunzite Crystals, Nikki Hale
Guided by her father’s knowledge of crystals, Peri and Stone will learn that love has no boundaries or become a madman’s victims. 

Samsons And Delilah, Denise Jeffries
Delilah, Intergalactic Space Cop hates Earth and the idea of having to save it…until she’s partnered with Jordan Samsons, who’s nothing he pretends to be.
 

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Excerpts

Crystals and Disappearing Cats
By
Barbara Donlon Bradley

  

Chapter One

Present Day, Virginia Beach, VA 

“And now back to our special The Wizard of Oz.”

“Nope. Not for this girl.” Glenda grabbed the remote and clicked the TV off. “I’ve had enough of Glenda the Good Witch to last me a life time.”

Silence wrapped her in a cocoon as she headed to the kitchen. She had a few dishes to clean before she had to face the box that arrived this morning. Her inheritance. “I’m sure going to miss you, Grandma.”

Too quickly she found herself sitting in front of the medium-sized brown box with a steak knife in her hand. It didn’t look like much but she knew it held precious parts of her grandmother’s life. Opening it broke her heart, her grief was still very raw, but she needed to move past the death of her grandmother. Grandma wouldn’t want her to mourn but celebrate her life.

Her heart constricted when she sliced through the tape and pulled back the flaps. A sigh escaped her when she found the box lined with several sets of sheets. Good old mom. Instead of using newspaper like normal people she used things her daughter might need. Like she didn’t know how to buy these things herself.

Moving aside a couple of the sheets she found bundles. Whatever grandma had left, her Mom had wrapped them in some sort of cloth. “Oh come on, Mom, shirts? Do I not know how to clothe myself?”

The first package she opened revealed an old Stief teddy bear. It was missing one eye and some of its felt, but she felt all warm and fuzzy inside as she remembered playing with this bear at her grandma’s house.

Each gift brought back a beautiful memory. Some brought tears to her eyes. She knew she’d be pulling each out later to enjoy again. The last item she pulled out was a small velvet box. A frown creased her brow. Opening the box she found a crystal pendant. What was this? A Christmas present? It sure wasn’t familiar. Just as she was going to call her mom and ask about it, she found a yellowed piece of paper tucked in the lid.

Dearest granddaughter,

 

This heirloom has been passed down from grandmothers to granddaughters for generations. It isn’t for the lighthearted. It can grant your heart’s desire. It can also make your worst dreams come true. Be careful when you wear it, to lose it at the wrong time will be your undoing. May all your wishes come true.

Glenda flipped the paper around. No signature. “Very weird.”

She looked at the clock. “Oh crap! I’ve got to get ready.”

Glenda faced her first date in about four months and he was due in less than an hour. After racing through her shower and applying her makeup in record time she stared at her closet, wondering what she should wear. First dinner in a nice restaurant then a stand up comedy show. She ended up wearing a pair of black slacks with a silk pink blouse. Not too dressy or too desperate.

The doorbell rang before she could decide on jewelry. All she had in sight was the crystal necklace and her simple gold hoops. Grabbing them, she headed toward the door. “That’ll have to do.”

* * * *

It didn’t take her very long to figure out the date was a mistake. Her date Brian did nothing but laugh at his own jokes and tell her how much ‘stuff’ he had. She wasn’t sure if she could handle much more. Excusing herself, she went to the bathroom to get a little reprieve.

Her reflection stared back at her. The crystal bounced softly against her soft silk shirt. “Watch what I wish for, huh? This is the one time I wish I had the power to change my life. I want adventure and true love and I won’t find it with these men my friends keep setting me up with. I wish I could leave here and leave all the cares of life behind.”

She felt the crystal grow warm against her chest. At first she thought the light in the bathroom caught in its facets, making the necklace glow but when it grew so bright she couldn’t see anything else she knew something strange was going on. The light overpowered her senses.

Her world disappeared.

-----------------------------------------------------

Purple Power
By
Jane Carver
 

 

“She is dead, my Lord Counselor.” The physician laid the delicate hand on the cream-colored cover and let his head fall forward in grief.

Lord Counselor Jeffrey hung on to the stout bedpost and tried to imagine the future of the small kingdom, but his mind could only think of one thing, the death of his queen.

The darkened bedchamber held too many spirits as far as he was concerned. Her father and mother, sister and brother. All gone—mysteriously. Only Queen Celina had survived. Jeffrey suspected a villain among the nobles, but his spies could find no one who might have managed to eliminate the entire royal household and make it look accidental.

His sigh of distress mingled with the physician’s soft sobs. Both loved their queen dearly, having served her and her family for decades. Though anything but calm, she tended to bouts of anxiety and often appeared susceptible to the will of others, despite Jeffrey’s counsel. Still she was beloved by her people in spite of her foibles.

What would become of their small island kingdom now? How could he tell the people that the last member of their ruling house was gone? Who would help them survive the late 1800s in a world where one government had no problem swallowing up another?

Through the muddle of his thoughts, the most important question finally surged forward…what would he say to Prince Walon, who was due to arrive the following day? What could he say to a man come to marry the queen and unite the strength of two small countries?

As concern for the immediate future occupied Jeffrey’s mind, a sudden breeze carrying the fresh scent of the ocean swept through the almost palatable suffering in the room. Deep purple curtains at the tall open windows billowed inward, and light from the sun yet to break over the sea’s horizon filtered in to streak over the bed where Celina’s body lay cooling.

From out of the billowing purple material stepped Graton, old beyond reckoning, grizzled, cantankerous, mysterious, magical…and late. “Damn, timepieces are not what they used to be,” he muttered as he thumped a huge pocket watch in his hand. Stuffing it into the folds of the oversized ankle-length coat he wore, he removed his cane from where he had hooked it over his arm and stumped forward. As he approached the bed, he held up a hand, palm out. “Don’t say it. I already know. I am late.” Regret filtered through his words, and sorrow shadowed his face.

Jeffrey accepted the rebuke silently. “Could you have saved her?” What good was a family mage if he could not protect the family?

“No, I could not have undone the poisonous evil wrought here.” His words fell heavy and slow. “However I can protect the kingdom.” Graton stepped closer to the bed, and one finger touched the young woman’s hand.

Jeffrey’s anguish turned to anger, his face contorted with drawn brows and thinning lips. He leaned over the end of the bed, closer to the mage. “Just how can we save Raylendorf if our queen lies dead? Tell me that, old man!” Jeffrey left the bedside, stomped to the windows, thrust aside the drapes and watched the sun break over the horizon with streaks of gold, pink and orange. Another day dawned, full of hope and possibilities, but not for him, not for Celina and certainly not for the tiny kingdom of Raylendorf.

“Do you not remember who I am, Lord Counselor Jeffrey?” Graton’s words no longer carried tones of mourning. Now his words rang out clearly, strong, as if he called troops to battle.

“Yes, old man! I remember.” Jeffrey practically ran back to the mage and shook his finger under the old man’s nose. “You are the oldest living man I’ve ever known, retained by this family to protect and secure their realm from harm, yet here you are…too late to do either.” He rammed his palm against the solid wooden bedpost, his gaze falling on Celina once again. “I remember who you are, my Lord Mage Graton. And I find no comfort in your presence.” He waved one hand toward the mage, as if he would shoo the elder from the room.

“My lords?” Physician Morran rose, his knees so stiff that all heard them crack as each straightened. The man had spent the last day and night seated at his queen’s side. “I must prepare her body for burial while you, Lord Jeffrey, must tell the people. Lord Graton, I would appreciate your help.” Morran was old, though not nearly as old as Graton, and at the moment, he looked small, withered and bowed with such grief as takes the spirit out of a man.

----------------------------------------------
A Girl’s Other Best Friend
By
Megan Hussey
 

Chapter One

The pure azure hue of the descending crystal merged with the surrounding sky, creating a spectacle that ensnared the attention of its lone beholder.

Leila Moore regarded the crystalline orb with wide, wonder-filled eyes, silently welcoming its ethereal descent through her atmosphere.

Then the blasted thing conked her right between the eyes. Suddenly it didn’t seem so ethereal.

“Ouch!” Jumping from the warm, sheltering waves of her back yard swimming pool, Leila clutched her forehead and gritted her teeth in unmitigated agony.

Looking down, she saw that the mysterious, and damned painful, crystal now floated in her swimming pool; its accents lending a luminous cast to the waters that surrounded it.

Dipping her hands into the water, Leila retrieved the renegade crystal and regarded it with admiring eyes.

Combined with the light of the overhead sun, the crystal shone from her fingers; warming her from head to toe and creating pleasant, though unexplainable, sensations in her nether regions.

The mysterious orb also gave her a novel idea.

“Joe’s birthday is tomorrow, and he always makes a practice of uniformly hating all the gifts I give him.” With a cringe, she visualized the unpleasant image of her smirking, sardonic boyfriend. “But he loves shiny things, which explains his taste in clothes and automobiles. And his taste in my cousin Moana, the swimsuit model, whom he constantly ogles.” She gritted her teeth, casting an uneasy glance down the length of her own Rubenesque form. “Surely he’ll love this crystal.” 

CChapter Two 

Valaria Jinga, president of the planet Eternia, admired the luminous sky that shone over her land; a sky boasting a pure azure hue that likened to freshly cut diamonds. That same hue cast a shine on tall, luminous skyscrapers and the surreal, emerald green meadows with rainbow-colored ferns around them.

This sight was always a calming one for Valaria, ruler of a planet where women reigned supreme; where beautiful young men, known as pleasure ambassadors, served and satisfied their feminine superiors.

And when dealing with Cason, her newest ambassador, she needed all the ‘calm’ she could get.

“You pesky alien he babe!” Valaria now turned to face the blond, pouting Cason, slapping the palm of her hand against the surface of her hard cherry wood desk, the centerpiece in her office at the Eternian embassy. “I give you one assignment that involves something other than seducing some lust-stricken woman, and you botch it up!”

Cason folded his arms across his chest and lifted his chin.

“With all due respect, your Excellency, I was trained to seduce and entertain the female visitors and residents of this planet.” He shook his head. “I’m not a jewel courier.”

Valaria sighed. “I know, Cason. And as a pleasure ambassador,” with this her eyes took a leisurely walk across his carved, flawless face and tall muscular frame, “you pretty much rule.”

Leaning forward, she pinned him with a penetrating gaze. “What you need to understand, though, is that this crystal is a pleasure device. Another means by which we can show our women the true meaning of ecstasy.”

She grinned as Cason’s emerald eyes widened in obvious interest.

“You didn’t tell me this before, your Excellency. You told me only to steer my spaceship onto the twelfth Muldivian moon and retrieve the shiniest rock on its surface.” Again he shook his lush blond head. “You didn’t tell me the rock was a tool of pleasure.”

---------------------------------------------
Kunzite Crystals
By
Nikki Hale
 

Chapter One 

The heavy accented standard Federation language floated into his subconscious dream state. 

“Is the human slut prepared?” The Vattian alien’s voice hissed, and its long thin fingers stroked the chained naked body.

He opened his eyes and glanced down at his skin. The tiny stingers on the gloved hand left droplets of blood and a burning sensation. He forced himself not to flinch. Down the scarred chest, over the buttocks, and between the legs, heat pulsed toward his groin. He wrestled to control the lust racing through him, dropped his chin and struggled to shut down his brain.

Another Vat stopped, pulled his head up by his hair and looked into his eyes. “Yes, Sir,” the male stroked the prisoner until his cock was engorged. “This is the last time we can use him or the drug.”

Zite struggled against the restraints. The metal and piri-reptilian leather cuffs and waist belt prevented any movement. Fear lodged in his throat.

Zite snapped awake. He wiped the sweat from his face and took several deep breaths in an attempt to control his heartbeat. Shit. Three years, reconstructive surgery and the nightmares still wouldn’t let go. The relaxation techniques and other mediation crap didn’t work. Nothing worked except the stuff. He reached for the prepared dispenser beside the chair. Zite injected himself through the second skin and waited for it to take effect. After a few moments, the black market Vattian drug slowed his breathing, and his heart rate returned to normal.

“Urgent priority level Zania transmission for Commander Zite,” the synthetic humanoid voice on the Halo-com purred.

“Damn it, I’m off-duty,” muttered Stone Zite, as he hid the hypodermic and pushed up from his chair. He knew if he checked the mirror he looked worse than an ogre after mating season. Hell, he even smelled like one. The constant recon work the past month was getting to him. He placed his hand on the scanner.

“Additional security measures in effect, retina scan required.”

“Vamp-crap.” The sinking feeling in his gut built. A cold sweat coated his body, and he crashed from the effect of the drug. Something must have happened to the Emperor while he was getting royally fucked. A silver cube levitated to his eyes and moved from one to the other.

“Identity confirmed. Authorized to receive Level Zania broadcast. Stand-by.”

The solid silver screen faded into the bright colors of the Imperial Guard uniform.

“Commander Zite.”

Rite-Commander Inajo. This was worse than he could’ve imagined. The bane of his existence was right there on Vid with him.

“Rite-Commander Inajo, is the Emperor alright?”

“Henrico is fine. I’m calling about your refusal to report to regeneration therapy.”

“I don’t understand the need to report for a bunch of mumbo jumbo crap, sir.”

“Zite, I don’t care how you feel about the treatment. I expect my top officer to follow a direct order. Headquarters wants me to serve your ass on a diode platter. If you don’t report to your assigned medical post within one nano-pulsar, I’ll not only serve you on the fucking plate, your blood will be the damn dipping sauce. Do I make myself clear, Commander?”

“Perfectly, sir.”

Zite looked at the dark screen. His time spent as a POW was beginning to look good. The trip to Planet Azalea would end his career. No one ever made it back. Orb, Hess and Nexus were perfect examples.

Shit, now me.

---------------------------------------------------
Samsons And Delilah
By
Denise Jeffries
 

Chapter One 

Delilah’s body screamed with pain. She’d tried to tuck and roll when she went flying through the air, but the cement wall she smashed into had other ideas. She didn’t have time to think, to breath before he was on her. Damn, she hated this part of her job. Dealing with deadhead aliens and insufferable humans was taking their toll.

Ignoring the pain in the torn muscles of her legs, she pulled them up to her chest and pushed out with everything she had, landing them dead center into the Man-Deran’s chest, pushing him back. But it wasn’t enough to take him down.

The floor and walls rumbled around her. Prisms of light fractured the air, shooting rays of red, green and blue across the sky.

“No!” Delilah’s gaze scanned the ground for the crystal. She and the man had wrestled for the gem, but with all the scuffling, both had lost their grip. There. It lay on the ground near her cruiser. She had to get the crystal. Destroy it. If not, if it landed in the wrong hands, any hands, astronomical disaster would happen. The Krugernaughts have searched for the crystal for years and still hadn’t found it. Delilah knew if they were to get their clawed hands on it, they would use its power to control every planet in the galaxy. The world wouldn’t be as people remembered, if it survived at all.

Pushing to her feet and leaping through the air, this time she did remember to roll. One hand closed around the glowing orb while the other closed around her pulsar. She only needed to get off one shot and take this man down. She’d explain later why she had to discharge her pulsar within the planet’s atmosphere and take whatever punishment rendered from the high council, but she wasn’t ready to lose mankind to the likes of this thing.

The portal was growing wider. Deeper. Darker. The gravitational pulling tugged at her gut, making the hairs stand on her arms. Turning on her back with her weapon primed to fire, she drew down and squeezed off a shot. But not before his foot connected with her head, shooting shards of pain and stars across her line of vision. She fired again. What was this thing? Two shots could have brought down the worst of star creatures, but this time they did nothing but slow it down. Another shot and he stumbled and then righted himself, kicked her in the stomach and then her hand.

“No!” The crystal flew from her grip and sailed through the air, hitting the top of her cruiser and then bouncing up and away. Before she could take another breath the gravity pull of the space hole sucked the crystal away and then just as quickly as it opened, it closed.

Disgusted with herself for letting this thing get in the way, Delilah pushed up to face off with what was left of the man thing. Her fingers moving rapidly over the weapon to ready it as she strolled over to him, “What the hell are you?” Her voice came out in a hiss. “I don’t like it when my job is interrupted.” She pulled off three more shots. “If it hadn’t been for you, I could be relaxing on Camp I with an ale, but no,” She squeezed off one more shot. “I’m stuck here tracking you down.”

The flesh bubbled and started to melt. Two more shots for prosperity and for the hell of it and the mass of mutilated flesh disintegrated. She’d have to answer for that, but right now she didn’t care. The only thing important was the crystal. Where did it go? What ungodly part of the universe had it landed in? It would be too easy for it to land on the planet Volcanus. That would insure its destruction; with temperatures greater than one thousand degrees on the surface, nothing survived.

But, Delilah didn’t have that kind of luck. Straightening her sweat and grime-covered body, she rotated her head from right to left in an attempt to ease the knots twisting her muscles. She ran her hand over her face, groaned when her fingers came back splattered with her blood and remnants of what was left of the thing she’d killed, and blew out a breath. Swallowing past the lump forming in her throat, she gathered herself and prepared to explain to the council why and how she had failed. Something she rarely did.

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