Merlicious 1
Incredible Sea Hulk, Mae Powers
A mer-alien and a human must work
together to solve a crisis, but do they dare consummate
their fiery passions in reality?
Sea Dance, Leanne Strange
On her last day of a research
assignment, Kass finds herself attracted to a handsome alien
merman who won't take no for an answer.
Passion Storm, Megan Hussey
While overseeing a storm shelter,
Jill rescues a gorgeous man stranded on the beach.
Smitten
with her, Jaiden fails to disclose a
secret: his fins.
Plenty More Fish In The Sea,
Anna Fallon
Mermaid Marina can't find love.
After another reckless adventure, she meets sexy merman
Ceph.
But will their parents’ past
stop them from having a
future?
By Air and By Sea, Bridghid
Parkinson
Raging storms brought Hansen and
Mariah together. Now, the magical moonlight holds
the power
to bring the two hearts in sync,
shaping their lives
forever.
__________________________________________
EXCERPTS
Incredible Sea
Hulk
By
Mae Powers
Chapter One
Lieutenant Commander Kellah Franklin was about to step
inside the ship’s main tube-lift when, with a frightening
thud, her breath was temporarily knocked from her lungs.
Kellah let out a startled cry, finding herself staggering
backwards. Huge arms, like bands of steel, instantly encased
her, pulling her forward, lifting her tottering form against
a rock-hard body.
Time stood still as Kellah looked upwards, her astonished
gaze finally resting upon a face. Startling gold-flecked
amethyst eyes glared back at her as her body was lifted
higher so that her face came even with a strong, square
chin. The man's external but alien charisma was too
overpowering to her startled senses.
The man is an incredible sea hulk! Irrationally
appreciating the rich golden-green of his skin, she was
further discomfited when he pulled her more firmly against
his length, and her heart pounded madly at the close contact
of their bodies.
“Are you stable yet?” Amusement was evident in the fluid
smooth voice; the vibrations from his sexy voice, Kellah
could feel against her own breasts. She noticed he looked
for the telltale blue dot that showed whether a person wore
an intergalactic language translator implant in his or her
lobe.
She tried not to blush, knowing this powerful enigma was
more than aware of her rapidly beating heart. She saw little
strands of what looked like kelp, maybe even seaweed,
layering his dark gold hair, as if they were just mere wisps
of hair blowing about his face. His exotic looks tempted
her. Kellah forced herself to act more rationally.
“I'm fine,” she replied calmly, starting to find the
situation a bit awkward. “I should have watched where I was
going.”
The rumbling laugh came from deep within the Seamarrin. “It
was I who erred. I rushed out and nearly trampled you in the
process. I did not expect anyone to be about this late. I am
not sorry though. We seem to fit perfectly in all the right
places. But I must let you down. I have work to do. Perhaps
we shall meet again soon.”
Kellah knew he was teasing. The twinkle in the gold of his
eyes assured her of it. However, her heart once more
increased its tempo as his deep-set eyes kept dancing over
her form rakishly. It irritated her she could not share his
amusement, especially as no amount of wiggling on her part
would allow her feet to touch the ground. Though the slick
wetsuit he wore for clothing should have allowed her to
slide down his sexy length, he held her too close. She knew
Seamarrins wore the wetsuits to regulate their body
temperatures when out of water or in conditions adverse to
their native water environments. They lived under the oceans
of their world more than on top; the race was more water
breathers than air breathers. They also used air-tablets or
nose loops across the bridge of their noses for breathing
out of the water if they could not take the air tablets.
“As this is a large ship, I doubt it.” She intended her
voice to sound disinterested, but she didn’t think her tone
bland enough.
He only laughed at her again. “I can only hope you are
wrong and that we meet again, sweet sea nymph.” His voice
caressed her every bit as much as his body did when he
slowly slid her form down his length.
Finally, her feet rested none too steadily upon the ground.
And then he was gone, striding away from her as quickly as
he had come up against her. Kellah felt so totally shaken,
she did not know if their encounter had lasted a minute or
an hour. She did know her body would not quickly forget the
pulsating warmth and tingling caused by the Seamarrin.
She wondered if there would be bruises in the morning where
his large hands had gripped her upper arms so tightly. If
there were not, she might be tempted to believe she had
dreamed the entire incident. More aroused than she cared to
admit, she entered the elevator and pushed the proper
button. Feeling completely, sensually alive, she realized
that the Seamarrin had awakened a hunger in her flesh she
thought she was no longer capable of. Kellah forced
delicious thoughts of the eye-catching alien out of her mind
as she left the ship’s elevator, making her way to the
intergalactic library on the Earthstar exploration ship,
Quintar.
Also stories by Mae in these digest
from :www.midnightshowcase.com
Jaded
Destinies, Alien Seduction
Email Mae at: mssubmissions @ yahoo.com
________________________________________
Sea Dance
by
Leanne Strange
Chapter
One
Kass Martijn yawned and rubbed her aching neck while
hurrying down the long corridor in the first leg of the maze
that led from her suite in the visitor complex to the
trans-chute. Today was the last full day of Kass’ three-day
research visa on the world of Seamyst. She’d spent most of
her time fighting bureaucratic red tape with the Archive
Council of Aquinia. The permission code had finally come
through in the middle of the night, which was why Kass found
herself up and out before dawn. She wanted to transfer a
copy of the data to her research team back on Earth before
the council changed its mind.
Space travel had never bothered
Kass much, because it seemed like moving through a sea of
stars. The water became her milieu, though—sailing,
swimming, studying—and Seamyst was a water baby’s dream come
true. Saltwater covered ninety-seven percent of the planet’s
surface, though hundreds of mountain-islands rose from the
floor of the ocean like towers. A city was built on each
mountain-island by the Aquinian race of Seamystians, and a
spaceport had been constructed on each mountain plateau.
Three separate races evolved on
Seamyst. Two of them lived almost completely in the
water—the Uni-Fins and the Bi-Fins. The Unis, as they were
mostly referred as, were most like the merfolk of Earth myth
and legend. Their humanoid torsos turned into scale-covered
icthian tails instead of legs. The Bis’ humanoid torso
became two separate leg-like appendages, each ending in a
fin.
The third, called the Aquinians
after the English translation of the name of their capital
city, were the most humanoid of all. They walked upright on
two legs with humanoid heels and broad webbed toes. They
breathed air, but could survive under water for extended
periods of time.
Political unrest among the three
races kept the world of Seamyst unstable for a long time.
The Unis and Bis each thought themselves superior to the
other two while both resented the Aquinians’ ability to walk
on land and create a lucrative tourist trade with
landwalkers from other planets.
Lately though, other aquatic and
amphibious species began to visit Seamyst, taking advantage
of the underwater cities and attractions, easing the
cultural tensions somewhat. The research team Kass worked
with decided to take advantage of the calmer atmosphere to
access older data unavailable through modern communications
systems.
Kass had spent the better part of the past two days filling
out request forms and being shuffled from one office to
another until she came full circle back to the Aquinian
Archive Council. She’d finally had enough and told them in
no uncertain terms she would file reports with the Alien
Information Exchange League, the Seamyst-Earth Liaison
Office, and the Earth Consulate if they tried to shunt her
off again.
The aggressive strategy worked, although Kass spent a
restless evening worrying they would deny her and she’d
disappoint her team. The information was vital to a research
project that had been ongoing for over five years, and, once
denied, a second request wouldn’t be accepted for two years.
Fortunately, they agreed.
She took a few more twists and turns down the shiny
corridors. The floors were coated with a thin layer of water
so that the Seamystians and other aquatic beings could soak
up the liquid they vitally needed for survival. Fortunately,
she’d been warned to wear only rubber-soled shoes or she
definitely would have gone sprawling more than once.
Finally, she arrived at the trans-chute. She hit the button
and waited for a car while shrugging her shoulders to get
the kink out of her neck. She could see herself living on
Seamyst, exploring the mountain cities and underwater
villages, studying the exotic aquatic flora and fauna—some
of it so like Earth’s, but much of it completely different.
She knew she had to return to Earth the next day. There was
no way to extend her visa, not on the company’s dime, and
she sure didn’t have the spare intergalactic credits to
spring for even an extra day or two.
Now, she needed to concentrate on her work, and her mind
spun with the possibilities of what she’d find in the old
archives. She was only barely aware of the swoosh, when the
chute door opened and she automatically stepped inside.
Something solid slammed into her, the force temporarily
knocking the breath out of her lungs. She staggered back,
and a man’s large hands shot out to steady her at the same
time as she grabbed hold of his upper arms. Every nerve
ending in her body crackled with awareness from standing so
close to him.
http://www.laniaames.com/leanne/leannestrange.html
Also By Leanne Strange at
www.midnightshowcase.com:
Spellfire NYE,
Spellfire Hearts
________________________________________
Passion Storm
by
Megan Hussey
Chapter One
The usually smooth, golden sands of Port Emerald Beach
stirred with a certain fury, matched only by the intense
quaking of the palm trees above them.
Standing within the relative safety of a crowded, noisy
community center, Jillian Gregory cringed as she stared out
a wide bay window at the spectacle that was her home.
The normally beautiful azure waves that defined Port Emerald
Bay seemed a furious tempest of wind and water tonight. Even
the seagulls seemed to cower in the face of the rising storm
sweeping through the area at a breakneck pace.
Jill remained quiet and stoic in the face of every city
manager’s nightmare—a Florida tropical storm that quickly
closed the businesses and offices of Port Emerald. What’s
more, the storm had driven some residents into the city’s
community center, a casual recreation site that had been
transformed into a makeshift shelter.
Compelled to tend to her citizens during this tumultuous
time, Jill had surrendered a long-planned vacation at a
distant tropical haven.
It’s just as well. She ran a weary hand through a
disheveled crop of long-neglected hair. “After planning a
luxury cruise with my fiancé, he up and runs off with our
travel agent to enjoy the trip I helped fund.” She shook her
head and frowned. “When they dock in that exotic island
paradise, I hope they ‘drink the water’¾lots
of it. Even Miss Patty Perfect won’t look so hot as she
guzzles down an hourly ration of maximum strength laxative.”
“Jill!”
Looking sharply upward, Jill’s eyes widened as they beheld
the vision of her chronically disapproving superior, Mayor
Lydia Cone.
“Was I venting aloud again, Mayor?” Jill raised her
eyebrows.
Lydia nodded and patted Jill’s shoulder. “In yet another
attempt to curb your rampant angst, I’m assigning you
evening snack duty.” The petite redhead handed Jillian a
cardboard box overflowing with potato chips, cheese snacks
and chocolate bars. “Have fun.”
Smiling dryly, Jill turned to distribute her evening’s
supply of refreshments among the refugees of Tropical Storm
Blaine, the severe natural phenomenon that, while thankfully
sparing the lives and properties of Port Emerald residents,
had left many with minor flooding and without electrical
services.
While the storm no longer posed a serious threat to the area
and its people, Blaine’s strong winds still painted a scary
picture across Port Emerald Beach, accented by flying sheets
of sand and dirt. An unearthly blend of ebony and azure
tinged with a daunting hint of blood red colored the angry
skies.
Even so, nothing prepared Jill for the sight that met her
disbelieving gaze as she returned from her evening chore.
Casting a casual glance out a nearby window, she froze as
her eyes beheld a jarring sight: the fallen figure of a man
lying alone on the beach, a tattered blanket his only
defense against the mercy of the battering winds.
Mouth agape, Jill dropped the cardboard box and ran from the
building with quick, frantic steps. Ignoring the warning
cries of those behind her, she raced across the beach toward
the fallen man, the hard wind like an unforgiving wall that
blocked and slowed her every move.
When she finally reached him, Jill fell to her knees and
gathered his limp form into her desperate arms. Startled by
the power of nature, she gritted her teeth as the raw
violence of the incoming rain drove her sturdy body
backward.
Despite that, she maintained her hold on the unconscious
man, a tall, muscular being who felt like an unyielding rock
in her arms.
“Let’s go, big guy.” Jill cringed as she struggled to drag
his massive form back across the beach toward a shelter that
at this point seemed a distant destination.
It was only as Jill approached the open doorway of the
shelter that she was able to inspect the stranger in her
arms, a young man whose sandy blond hair extended in soaked
luxury to his waist. His skin held the tint of sunshine; his
face was planed and perfectly sculpted. His eyes remained
unopened.
“Sam!” With a high-pitched screech, Jill summoned the
shelter’s resident medic. “We need you!”
Nodding sharply, the unusually solemn older man immediately
claimed his new patient and carried his body to a nearby cot
in the shelter lobby. He administered CPR as a nervous Jill
said a silent prayer of hope.
For the next hour, she watched with uncertainty as Sam
revived and tended to the mysterious visitor, apparently
knocked unconscious by some errant debris.
When his eyes finally opened, the man’s dark-eyed gaze
immediately swept the room around him.
“Who?” His words escaped a pair of full and sumptuous lips
in even, honeyed tones. “Who is the angel that saved me?”
Jill’s own eyes widened substantially as she heard the
stranger’s words. Then she started laughing. Hard. “Me? An
angel? Cha. Good one,” she smirked.
Her laughter subsided as the man’s ebony-eyed stare grew
deeper and more luminous, reflecting his apparent awe. Her
fiancé certainly never regarded her with such unbridled, uh,
admiration? Yeah. That must be it.
“I’m Jill Gregory, city manager of Port Emerald,” she
greeted. The city manager who didn’t have time to put on
a shred of makeup this morning. Drat it.
The stranger looked at her with what seemed to be
unconcealed admiration, as though she were the most
beautiful woman in the world.
“You saved me.” He gifted her with a soft gentle smile that
was quite angelic.
“Hey!” Sam, now seated at a nearby refreshment table,
totally blew the mood. “Don’t forget me, buddy. I didn’t
particularly enjoy giving mouth-to-mouth to another guy.
Give me some credit here.”
The stranger nodded politely to the smirking medic then
returned his attentions to Jill.
“You are a brave woman.” Although still strained, his deeply
toned voice gained infinite strength as he spoke. “I am in
your debt.”
Shrugging, Jill took a seat beside the reclining man and
squeezed his masculine hand.
“It’s nothing,” she said.
She gasped as
the man sat up abruptly and planted his scrumptious lips on
her cheek.
Visit Megan's website...http://goldenmuse.tripod.com/
Also by Megan Hussey at
Midnight Showcase:
Irish Intimacies 2,
Azure Masquerade
_________________________________
Plenty More Fish In The Sea
by
Anna Fallon
“If you say it, I
swear I’ll fillet you.”
“Oh, such violence from a sweet young thing.”
“I am not a sweet young thing. I am a mature female, ready
to breed at any given moment. And I would’ve been breeding
if that slimy eel hadn’t swum off with that red-tailed sea
cucumber.”
“Sea cucumbers don’t have tails, and you better not let your
parents hear you talk that way.”
“You know what I mean. And what do my parents know? I fully
matured five hundred tides ago, and all they want to do is
hide me under a shell like some sun-baked moron.” Marina
swished her tail in annoyance at her best friend’s apparent
humor over her losing her one true love.
“I’ll have you know that hiding under a shell has its
merits. Some of my friends are hermit crabs. Besides, eels
are not slimy, it’s a common misconception.”
Marina screwed up her face and stuck her tongue out at
Shock. Seeing as he was an electric eel, she probably
shouldn’t have referenced slimy eels.
“Oh, yes. That face will certainly convince your parents
about how mature you are.”
“Why are you always on their side? You are supposed to be my
friend, but you never support me. I’m heartbroken here.”
Marina sulked.
“Marina, being a good friend doesn’t mean I just agree with
everything you want to do. I care for you, just like your
parents do, and I don’t want to see you make a silly
mistake. Besides, that Moby is just a rogue fish.”
“He’s not a fish… He’s a mammal.” She weakly defended the
young merman who just ran off with an older, more
experienced mermaid.
“That is a matter of opinion. The right merman for you will
come when the time is right. Moby isn’t the only choice. Why
don’t you just concentrate on your studies and forget males.
Your father would be so much happier, and, as I always say,
there are plenty more fish in the sea…”
“Argh! I told you not to say that!” Marina picked up a sea
snail shell and threw it at Shock. After a short blue buzz,
the shell dropped to the sea bed, and a snail popped its
head out.
“Ouch…what did I do?” it asked.
“Sorry, an accident.” Shock apologized to the snail and swam
over to Marina. “Don’t do that. You know how dangerous it
can be.”
“Sorry. I forgot.”
“See, missy, this is half your problem. You are far too
impulsive, and that leads to reckless behavior. You not only
endanger your life, you completely disregard the safety of
others. You need to think before you act, Marina. Then your
parents might take you seriously.” Shock waved his body back
and forth in front of her.
“It’s not like your zap can kill anything. You are too
young.”
“That’s not the point. It will be one day soon, and when
do you take care, after you have barbequed some innocent
sea dweller?” Shock’s squirming became more agitated.
“Bet you wish you had arms to wave around right now, huh?”
she asked, lifting her arms up and down and shaking her
finger at Shock, finally planting her hands on her hips. She
loved to tease him when he became passionate about
something.
“Yes I do. Don’t change the subject. Now, life would be so
much easier for you if you just listened to those older…”
“I’m two-thousand and fifty-tides old. I know what I am
doing. I’m sick of everyone making my decisions for me.”
“Well, your parents are fifty-thousand tides old, and I’m
sure they have learned a thing or two by now,” Shock argued.
“You might be too scared to live your life, always wanting
to do the right thing, but I want to really live. I want to
feel love. I want to live happily ever after. Can’t you just
lighten up a little, Shock?” Marina gave him her most
pleading look.
“I am not scared to live my life…” Shock replied, looking
defiant.
“Yes, you are. You are a scaredy-catfish.”
“I am not!”
“Prove it.” Marina knew she had Shock right where she wanted
him now.
“All right, I will…how?”
“Let’s go down into the dark waters.”
“Marina…that is just downright dangerous.”
“I knew you’d be too scared to do it.”
“I’m not scared…just careful,” Shock defended.
“Fraidy-catfish.” Marina taunted and swam off. “I’ll go on
my own then.” She knew he would follow; he always did.
* * * *
“Do you know who
that is…?” Ceph asked his father as he peeked around the
large rock at a mermaid he had never seen before. His father
took a long look and shook his head.
“Nope, no idea…
There must be plenty of merfolk in Green Waters you haven’t
met yet.”
But Ceph knew his
father too well, and that tone meant, ‘I know, but I’m not
telling you.’
“Dad…I know every
single mermaid in Green Waters, and she isn’t one of them.
If you don’t tell me, I’m going to ask her myself.”
“No…don’t. I
don’t know who she is. I only know who she belongs to, and
that is enough.”
“Oh, she has a
mate. I can see why.”
“I don’t mean a
mate. I mean her father. See the double fins at the end of
her tail. Only one man can pass that on. Trust me, you do
not want to go there. Her father has been a rival of my
kingdom since I was a youth.”
“Really? Why?”
Ceph was now very curious and completely taken by the
blue-green tailed female.
“Because he is a
stubborn idiot. They are different from us. That is all.”
“But we are all
merfolk. Did he kill someone or something?” Ceph hadn’t
taken his eyes off her. None of the females he knew captured
his interest this way.
“Ceph…forget you
saw her. There are plenty more fish in the sea,” his father
stated.
Visit
Anna's website...http://www.annaf.net/
Also
by Anna at Midnight Showcase:
RAT of Fury,
Spellfire Season’ s 2-
______________________________________
By Air and By Sea
by
Bridghid Parkinson
“I can still see the pain in her eyes!” Hansen paced the
bowery floors, careful of where he stepped because of the
water that still dripped from his wings. “I’m telling you
she’s real. She was as real as you are to me now!”
“Fish people have been a legend on the Selion continent
shores since the dawn of time! I heard about an elaborate
city under the sea where fish live like royalty. But, you
were running through the naval docks ranting about a fish
woman!”
“In all the times you were sailing, Father, you never once
saw a woman in the waters?”
“On a boat?” The King of Farnal stood proud, unshaken by his
son’s adamant questions. His white, perfectly groomed wings
didn’t flutter, nor did his stance offer any suggestion that
he might be concealing information. However, Hansen also
knew all royals were taught to reveal nothing.
“Father, it wasn’t a dream.” Hansen continued, “I heard
cries for help. I ran out, afraid that the storm had soaked
one of the guards, or they could have possibly been hit by a
branch and injured a wing.”
“It wasn’t a bad storm.”
“If someone needs help, would you turn away just because you
are the king?” Hansen demanded.
“No.”
“Neither can I.” The young prince took a deep breath. “The
cries I heard were the sounds of strangling. I heard the
waves crashing over the rocks of the breakers near the
lighthouse, and the screams came all over again. I thought
one of the citizens had fallen in the water and the waves
were pushing them against the rocks.”
“Where were the guards?”
“They sought the safety of castle walls, just as you
ordered,” Hansen eyed the man warily, “…even though it
wasn’t a bad storm.”
The old man nodded.
“I heard the cries from my window. The shutters blew open
under the force of the gale and I had to go around to the
veranda to secure them again. The cries were agonizing. I
could imagine broken wings and twisted legs from the way the
sobs sounded.”
“But you found something else.” The king paced the floor
during the tale. “You could have been killed!”
The admonishment fell on deaf ears. “Father, she was at the
base of the lighthouse. Her skin was the same color as ours,
but she possessed fins along her limbs and on her back. Her
hair shone a brilliant golden red, but it was tangled with
seaweed. She couldn’t speak, her mouth kept opening and
closing until the next wave came. When the water washed over
her, she screamed again and then held her hand out. She
pointed at the water.”
“So, you picked her up and took her into the waters pummeled
by gale force winds and crashing waves that could have
carried you out to sea in seconds?” The old man rapped his
cane on the marble floor. “You could have drowned!”
There was no point in trying to describe the rescue efforts.
Hansen could see the selfishness in the old man’s comment.
In his anger, he felt it wasn’t real concern for his safety;
his father worried over the throne. Hansen was the firstborn
of seven children and the only son, first heir in a lineage
of kings that stretched back a thousand years. His father’s
protective streak was countered with his adamancy in
insisting that he marry. “Father, I am still Captain of the
Fen Fleet. I will sail, just as you did. I will fight the
Gordwok when they breech our borders, and I will still lend
assistance if I think a citizen is in distress. Do you ask
any less of me?”
“No.”
“Have I ever given you reason to distrust me?”
“No.”
“Then hear me loud and clear. The woman I saw on the rocks
was not capable of breathing air. She clung to the rocks,
her wounds bled, and the only thing I could do was return
her to the water. I watched her swim in the protected area.
She spoke to me. Whether you choose to believe it, or not,
doesn’t make it any less real to me.”
“Could you please stop spreading talk through the guards?
They all think you suffered a head injury when you started
talking about sea creatures.” The king sagged against his
walking stick.
“Very well, but I would like one week’s leave, with no
questions asked about how or where I spend my time.”
“As you wish. I will have an entourage arranged to escort
you.”
“No! No spies, no entourage, not even a valet!”
The outburst caught his father by surprise.
“Father, I said ‘no questions.’ I mean that I don’t wish to
report, and I don’t wish to have any staff that would report
to you about the way I have enjoyed my leisure time. I think
you have heard the details of every lady that has ever
caught my eye, or sat on my loins. I want to enjoy a bath
and not worry about the valet watching over me when my penis
gets hard.”
“But the girls should service…”
Visit Bridghid's website...http://www.myspace.com/dbparkinson
Also by Bridghid Parkinson:
Egyptian Realms,
Initiation to the Legend
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